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An idol in my heart.
The idol in my heart is the famous hero Paul Kochakin, he is the protagonist of the famous book "How Steel is Made", this book takes Paul's life as the main line, tells the deeds of an outstanding party member, the reason why this book can be immortal and enduring, is because it eulogizes the confidence and courage of people to continue to pursue peace, and it makes us future generations applaud its value!
Referring to this book, we cannot but mention that the author of this book, Nikolai Ostrovsky, is Russian, an ordinary worker, a soldier of the Red Army, a grassroots cadre of the Komsomol. Born in Ukraine in 1904. "How Steel is Made" is not his autobiography**, but it does have a lot of plot based on his own experience.
Like the protagonist Paul, he was poor and out of school when he was young, worked as a small worker, participated in the Red Army, was wounded, and later became blind and paralyzed. In a desperate situation, he was unwilling to eat, drink, breathe, and wait for death, so he picked up the only ** that could still be used - the pen, no, it is not accurate to say that, because later he couldn't even hold the pen, but relied on dictation, asked relatives and friends to write down, lasted three years, overcame unimaginable difficulties, created this immortal masterpiece, and realized the ideal of returning to combat posts.
How Steel is Made" is a popular read, and when I read it, I was often moved to tears by Nikolai's seemingly plain but connotative sentences. I read it over and over again, and I couldn't rush to understand how events developed and how they ended for the sake of twists and turns in the plot. I already know the development and outcome of events.
I have read this work again and again, and knowledge because it resonates strongly with me, violently** shakes my heart, and gives me infinite spiritual strength.
For more than half a century, how many young people have been educated and inspired by it. Like heroes such as Liu Hulan, Dong Cunrui, Huang Jiguang, Lei Feng, and Jiao Yulu, Paul Kochakin is revered and loved by us. His famous quote:
The most precious thing for a human being is life. There is only one life for everyone. This is how a person's life should be lived:
Looking back, he will not regret wasting his time, nor will he be ashamed of being vile and vulgar; On his deathbed, he added: "My whole life and all my energies have been devoted to the most magnificent cause in the world - the struggle for the liberation of all mankind." This phrase has been adopted by me as my life motto.
Indeed, as Paul said, we should look back when we are older, and not regret that we wasted our time, and not be ashamed of our inaction, and if we do, then I think we will also become qualified heroes.
Aren't you chasing stars? Then take Paul as your idol, only such a star will make us realize the true meaning of life, only such a star will not let you waste your time, only such a star will let you bravely impact the ...... towards the goal
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His feet stepped out of the room as heavy as lead and quietly closed the door. Walk to the gate ,..It was late at night and there were no lights upstairs. On the surface, everything is calm here.
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Life is only once for everyone, and it will be a great pity not to be able to realize the pursuit of self-prudence and self-service in this life. When the soldier's spear pierced the mathematician Archimedes, when the muzzle of the duel was aimed at the poet Pushkin, a war delay, an accident, a spear, a bullet, they went with regret. What is left behind are unfinished theorems and unfinished verses, which make the world sigh.
If Archimedes' regret is inevitable in the face of the most ignorant soldiers, then Pushkin's regret is more due to his own youthfulness, which could have been avoided. If Pushkin had known, I think he would have regretted his youthful recklessness. We are not great men, but we also have our own ideals and pursuits.
If we don't want to forge ahead, covet pleasure, and waste our time, in the end we will achieve nothing, and we can only look back on our youth with regret when we are arguing with gray hair. In order not to regret tomorrow for today, we must work hard to forge ahead and make people have no regrets in life.
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2 parts, one step is "How Steel is Made" and the other is the unfinished "Born of the Storm". They are all inspirational about the growth of young people in the revolutionary war.
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In 1850, he published the comedy "My Family is Good at Settling Accounts", which satirized the ignorance and mercenary interests of businessmen, and proposed the crisis of patriarchal business ethics. The response from readers was enthusiastic, but it was met with opposition from the business community, censorship bans, and writers under surveillance. Poverty is not a crime (1854) was influenced by the Slavophiles, and Chernyshevsky criticized it.
Fat Shortage (1856), especially The Great Thunderstorm (1859), marked the maturity of Ostrovsky's playmaking. In the 60s, his plays were diverse, both historical and realistic, among which the comedy "A Wise Man Must Make a Mistake" (1868) portrayed the image of a camper who would do anything to get a fortune in order to get promoted, as well as a typical example of the serf owners who opposed the reforms and the bombastic liberals. Works of the 70s, such as "The Forest" (1870), "The Wolf and the Sheep" (1875), "The Woman Without a Companion" (1878), etc., mainly reflect the decline of aristocratic morality and the essence of bourgeois plunder.
He also wrote the fairy tale The Snow Girl (1873), which was based on folk oral poetry. In his later years, dramatists paid great attention to the attitude of society towards art, and wrote "Famous Singers and Heroes" (1881) and "The Innocent Man" (1884), which depicted the lives of actors. Ostrovsky's play is slow, steady, and the language is concise and reflects the personalities of the characters.
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How Steel Is Made", "Born of the Storm", etc.; The themes of these works are set against the backdrop of the civil war, and they celebrate the heroes who grew up in the cause of the proletariat.
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"My Family is Good at Settling Accounts", "Fat Shortage", "Poverty is Not a Crime", "Thunderstorm", "Wolf and Sheep", "Forest".
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Ostrovsky, (1904-1936) Soviet writer. Born into a poor working family in Ukraine, he began working as a child worker at the age of 11. In 1919 he joined the Komsomol and immediately participated in the Civil War.
He joined the Communist Party in 1924. In 1929, he was paralyzed and blind.
In 1930, he used his own combat experience as material and began to write the long story "How Steel is Made" with tenacious will, which was completed in 1934. At the end of 1935, the Soviet Union awarded him the Order of Lenin in recognition of his creative work and outstanding contributions to literature.
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Nikolai Alekseevich Ostrovsky (1904-1936) Soviet writer. Nikolai Alekseyevich Ostrovsky was born on September 29, 1904, in a poor peasant family in the Ukrainian village of Vilya, and he was the fifth in line and began working as a child laborer at the age of 11. In 1919 he joined the Komsomol and immediately participated in the Civil War.
From 1923 to 1924 he was the leader of the Komsomol in the border regions of Ukraine, and in 1924 he joined the Communist Party. His health was severely damaged by his long and arduous struggle, and by 1927 his health had deteriorated dramatically, but he did not give in and fought the disease with astonishing perseverance. At the end of 1934, he set out to write a "historical lyrical heroic story" about Kotowsky's division ("Born of the Storm").
Unfortunately, the only manuscript was lost by the post office when it was sent to friends for review. This brutal blow did not dampen his strong will, but made him more tenacious in his fight against the disease.
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Answer Ostrovsky (September 29, 1904, December 22, 1936), a famous Soviet proletarian revolutionary, writer, and Bolshevik fighter, whose masterpieces include how steel is made, the birth of storms, Kochakin's happiness, and so on.
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N. Ostrovsky (1904-1936), a famous Soviet writer, was born in Ukraine to an ordinary working family, began his working career at the age of 12, joined the Communist Youth League at the age of 15, and participated in the civil war to defend Soviet power. In 1920, he was seriously injured and transferred to the trend of economic construction, and was successively responsible for the lower and middle leadership of the regiment and the party.
After being paralyzed and blinded by injury**, he embarked on the path of literary creation again, and in 1935 he was awarded the highest national honor - the Order of Lenin; He died in 1936. He wrote many books in his lifetime, the most famous of which is "How Steel is Made". The book is "Born of the Storm", and I don't know anything else.
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There are two main works in his life: "How Steel is Made", "Born of the Storm", etc. The themes of these works are set against the backdrop of the civil war, and they celebrate the heroes who grew up in the cause of the proletariat.
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The themes of the works "How Steel Is Made" and "Born of the Storm" are all set against the backdrop of the civil war, and they celebrate the heroes who grew up in the cause of the proletariat and sacrificed their lives for the revolution and the faith.
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"How Steel is Made" and "Hit by the Storm" Struggle, dedication to revolution and faith.
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How steel is made of the storm is born.
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Nikolai Alekseevich Ostrovsky, (1904-1936). Former Soviet writer, strong Bolshevik fighter, famous proletarian writer. Born on September 22, 1904 into a working-class family.
Due to the poverty of his family, he began to work as a child laborer at the age of 11, went to the battlefield at the age of 15, was seriously injured in the battle at the age of 16, lost his sight at the age of 23, was paralyzed at the age of 25, and died on December 22, 1936 at the age of 32.
Nikolai Alekseevich Ostrovsky was a studious man from an early age, and in addition to his heavy manual work, he diligently read all kinds of progressive literature and studied the entire curriculum of primary school. The future writer was very intellectually curious and endowed with great talent as a child, and he was very obsessed with literature.
At the beginning of 1927, at the age of 22, Ostrovsky was completely paralyzed and bedridden. He began to lose sight in both eyes. It was at this difficult time in his life that he decided to use literature to show the face of his time and personal life experience.
How Steel is Made" was an unprecedented success and exceeded all expectations. Back in 1934, the book was translated into Ukrainian, Polish, Moldovan and Chuvashi. Letters from readers poured in like snowflakes.
Nikolai Alekseevich Ostrovsky's life was a miracle: despite his illness, he never bowed to death. In the case of severe physical failure, he insisted on leaving this ** describing the fate of his generation to future generations.
Although he was only 32 years old when he died, he was already a world-famous proletarian writer.
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