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敬爱的老师、亲爱的同学:
大家好!
古人云:“开卷有益”,诗圣杜甫也曾说过:“读书破万卷,下笔如有神。”自古以来,人们都认为读书是有百利而无一害的。可我认为不能一概而论,这涉及到读书的目的、范围和方法等问题。
现在课外书种类繁多,良莠不齐。好的能让自己增长知识,提高写作能力;坏的能使自己不明事理,误入歧途。轻则“竹篮打水一场空”,学习一落千丈;重则走火入魔,盲目模仿书中大侠,走上了犯罪的道路。现在有些同学迷上了武侠或言情小说,整天看那些低级庸俗的书,而把功课“丢”在一边,学习成绩一降再降・・・・・・
做一个成功的读者,不但要选择性的读一些好书,更重要的是读过了要思考。有的人看书如同走马观花,一本书看下来记住的.知识并不多,应用时不是脑袋空空,就是人云亦云,我们绝不能做这种失败的读者。
书是人类进步的阶梯,书是传播文化的使者,书是收获知识的土地。同学们,辛勤耕耘吧!只有做一个成功的读者,才能收获更多的果实。
我的演讲完了,谢谢大家!
尊敬的各位教师,亲爱的同学们:
大家好!
我演讲的题目是《生命的硬度》
茫茫大漠,一棵树站不起来,展现出来的是一座丰碑的形象。
巍巍青山,千万棵树站起来,连成的是一条长城的宏伟。
悠悠河岸,所有的树站起来,缀成的是一条蛟龙的雄风。
我们象征着太多,又演绎着太多。但我相信,我的形象,绝不是手若柔荑,肤如凝脂的林黛玉,也绝不是蓬头垢面、衣衫褴褛的现代苏乞儿。我们象征着期望、朝气。所以我们展此刻别人面前的就应当是衣无褶、脸无垢、礼貌谦和的举手投足间散发着一股英气,朝气和活力的现代新青年的形象,一个融入了大自然的精灵的化身。
有人曾说,生命有一种硬度,气节和尊严是撑起生命硬度的骨骼。宁为玉碎,不为瓦全、仰不愧于天,俯不怍于地,这是历来中国的传统美德。李白的安能摧眉折腰事权贵,使我不得开心颜这一大气凛然的诗句又是否会让那些毫无自尊的人汗颜丧失了自尊的人是一个没出息的人,而我们作为时代的先锋,要是永远在黑暗中沉溺呢,还是要做一个顶天立地的好男儿,一朵绽放在风雨中的铿锵玫瑰。答案,不言而喻。大漠再荒凉也有丰碑的矗立,青山再孤高,也有长城的环绕,河水再平静,也有蛟龙的横卧。而时代再怎样变,我们的形象,我们的雄风依然如故。因为我们自尊,因为我们自信,因为我们有着鲜活的生命。而正因如此,河岸才悠悠,大漠才广袤,青山才长青,生命的硬度才长存。
亲爱的同学们:
你们好!
你一天天长大,可是你的父母却一天天变老了。你平时有没有看过他们的模样?你有没有仔细打量过他们?他们的模样已经老到什么程度了呢?你知道不知道?他们或许已经变得很老了,由于新陈代谢的缘故,人总会自然变老的,但如果老得太快衰老得太早那就不正常了。
这些年来,他们为生活奔奔波波,为工作劳劳碌碌,为孩子忧心忡忡。你或许还常常跟他们顶嘴、吵架,惹他们生气伤心,你的学习又不怎么理想,你的行为总让他们很不放心,他们常常为你将来的前途和出路担忧发愁,他们还能年轻到哪里去?况且他们身上可能还有很多病痛,他们又舍不得上医院看医生,怕检查怕住院,老这么硬撑着,他们的生命有没有危险?他们能活多久?无论如何你都要抽点时间,给自己一个机会好好看一看你的爸爸妈妈!是时候了!
如果你没有了父母你的学习和生活将会发生什么样的变化呢?父母是以什么样的方式挣钱供你读书的?他们过得好不好?他们对你好不好?你常惦记他们吗?你常问候他们吗?你还时常跟他们有说有笑吗?你还常常牵着他们的手上街吗?你很乐意让他们来学校看你吗?在同学面前你能很自豪地介绍他们吗?你知道他们的生日吗?你记住他们的生日吗?
你现在还是个学生,是个未成年人,是个消费者,还不需要为父母承担什么责任,如果你的父母生病住院,你去看一下他们,他们就很高兴了,甚至别人还夸你是个很懂事的.孩子。可是,在你长大成人,自立成家,你也有自己的孩子的时候,你的父母生病住院,你去看一下就行了吗?如果,需要开刀,需要几成几十万,才能治好他们的病,甚至才能保证他们的生命的时候,你将怎么办?你能拿得出多少?你肯不肯去借别人?为了他们健康和生命,你能不能全力以赴?就象当年他们对你一样?万一有一天,你的父母突然撒手离开了你,你哭一下,流几滴眼泪,别人或许也会夸你是个孝顺的孩子。可是,在很多后的将来,你回想起来,回想起父母的疼爱父母的恩情父母的容颜,你仅仅哭就行了吗就够了吗?
我的演讲完毕,谢谢大家!
尊敬的老师,亲爱的同学们:
大家好!
很荣幸能够站在这里演讲,我是xx班的xx。
首先请容许我问大家两个问题:大家知道全球气温为什么变暖吗?大家知道赖以生存的地球以后会怎么样吗?我来给大家讲讲吧!
动物――国际在线报道:中国,英国和澳洲等国家的14家研究机构预测,随着全球气温的变暖,大约xx年之后将有xx%至xx%的动物物种面临灭绝的危机。动物是什么,动物是人类的朋友,动物与人类是相互依存的啊!我们吃的肉类不都是动物的吗?没有了动物,我们靠什么来补充肉类方面的营养,我知道有人会说,预测只是xx年之后百分之xx至百分之xx的动物灭绝而已,可是想想,xx年呢!或许xx年之后还有动物可以和人类赖以生存,那么xx年呢!xx年呢!无法估量啊!
植物――经过各方面途径的调查,气候变暖正慢慢改变着我们的.生活:冬天的时候,居民家里都有蚊子出没,各种各样的害虫都大量出现,影响着植物,我们深知,没了植物,人类会怎样,这么简单的问题,我想不说也知道!最严重的是冰川,因为气候的变暖,冰川逐渐融化,后果是非常严重的。冰川的加速融化致使大块冰体划落冰川湖,冰川湖溃决引发水灾:由于喜马拉雅山的冰川退缩,xx年在xx的冰川湖溃决淹没了可耕用土地,冲毁了桥梁房屋和一座即将建成的水电站,造成了人员的伤亡和财产的损失。因为变暖造成的伤害还有很多很多!
说到这里,大家一定认为我说的太遥远,不现实,错!大家不要这样想,而是想想是什么造成的气温变暖?是二氧化碳的增多!为什么二氧化碳会增多?是人类造成的,主要原因是人类大量的燃烧矿物燃料,是绿色植被变少,吸收二氧化碳能力变差,从而造成了二氧化碳的增多,产生了厄尔尼诺现象,导致了全球气温变暖!想必大家听到这里已经有所感悟了,住手吧!不要再污染环境了,不需要大贡献,只要每人少用一个一次性纸杯,纸碗,筷子,草稿纸反复使用都可以减少植被的损害!觉醒吧!我呼吁,保护环境,从身边做起,从小事做起!播下一颗环保的种子,创造一片蔚蓝的天空!
我的演讲完毕!谢谢大家!
Good morning,ladies and gentlemen,today i am so happy to stand here to give you a rather, a real story of mine.
Though with time going by,i can still remember what you once told should be a brave ing,you looked into my in,year out,nearly most of my memories are fading little by only this simple sentence remained,without being forgotten in my life.
Again and again,i can not stop myself from thinking about ordinary,but so impressive,so moving,just like the brightest sunshine,it helps me go through the darkest night.I am such a sensitive girl in your said,my sorroful facial expression made feel so ver,there is one thing i never tell you,that is ,i am becoming a big girl gradually with your words and smiles.I never tell you about it,for i believe oneday,you can see the great changes of mine for is what i want to do in i know,that will be the best gift for you.
I suddenly think of a song named MY HEART WILL GO e is a beautiful sentence going like are safe in my than once,i was moved to tears by it.I know ,i am also safe in your heart.i have already forgotten when i told you i was going to leave for Australia this summer just smiled as usual,gently ever you decide to do,i will be in favor of it,but, just onething,remember,when you fell lonely abroad,do not forget we are here ,praying for are all around you,far across the distance and space between us.i closed my eyes,the flashback memories we had together,once we played games on the palyground,we played jokes on each other,you always wrote a lot of sentences on my articles to encourage the most unforgetable thing,you told me,you believed m i could be a big er or later.
At that specific moment,i suddenly understood the meaning of this sentence on that day,i smiled as you used to,looking at last words i said were,keep walking in sunshine.
Yes,keep walking in sunshine.I said to you ,also to myself.I know i am not alone wiht your company,and we can keep walking in sunshine till the last minute of our days.
I promise,i will be a big girl.
I promise,i will be a brave girl.
I promise,i will keep walking in sunshine.
That is my speech,thank you!
名人英语演讲稿
演讲稿要求内容充实,条理清楚,重点突出。在日新月异的现代社会中,能够利用到演讲稿的场合越来越多,那么一般演讲稿是怎么写的呢?下面是小编为大家整理的名人英语演讲稿,供大家参考借鉴,希望可以帮助到有需要的朋友。
Dare to compete. Dare to care. Dare to dream. Dare to love. Practice the art of making possible. And no matter what happens, even if you hear shouts behind, keep going.
It is such an honor and pleasure for me to be back at Yale, especially on the occasion of the 300th anniversary. I have had so many memories of my time here, and as Nick was speaking I thought about how I ended up at Yale Law School. And it tells a little bit about how much progress we’ve made.
What I think most about when I think of Yale is not just the politically charged atmosphere and not even just the superb legal education that I received. It was at Yale that I began work that has been at the core of what I have cared about ever since. I began working with New Haven legal services representing children. And I studied child development, abuse and neglect at the Yale New Haven Hospital and the Child Study Center. I was lucky enough to receive a civil rights internship with Marian Wright Edelman at the Children’s Defense Fund, where I went to work after I graduated. Those experiences fueled in me a passion to work for the benefit of children, particularly the most vulnerable.
Now, looking back, there is no way that I could have predicted what path my life would have taken. I didn’t sit around the law school, saying, well, you know, I think I’ll graduate and then I’ll go to work at the Children’s Defense Fund, and then the impeachment inquiry, and Nixon retired or resigns, I’ll go to Arkansas. I didn’t think like that. I was taking each day at a time.
But, I’ve been very fortunate because I’ve always had an idea in my mind about what I thought was important and what gave my life meaning and purpose. A set of values and beliefs that have helped me navigate the shoals, the sometimes very treacherous sea, to illuminate my own true desires, despite that others say about what l should care about and believe in. A passion to succeed at what l thought was important and children have always provided that lone star, that guiding light. Because l have that absolute conviction that every child, especially in this, the most blessed of nations that has ever existed on the face of earth, that every child deserves the opportunity to live up to his or her God-given potential.
But you know that belief and conviction-it may make for a personal mission statement, but standing alone, not translated into action, it means very little to anyone else, particularly to those for whom you have those concerns.
When I was thinking about running for the United States Senate-which was such an enormous decision to make, one I never could have dreamed that I would have been making when I was here on campus-I visited a school in New York City and I met a young woman, who was a star athlete.
I was there because of Billy Jean King promoting an HBO special about women in sports called “Dare to compete.” It was about Title IX and how we finally, thanks to government action, provided opportunities to girls and women in sports.
And although I played not very well at intramural sports, I have always been a strong supporter of women in sports. And I was introduced by this young woman, and as I went to shake her hand she obviously had been reading the newspapers about people saying I should or shouldn’t run for the Senate. And I was congratulating her on the speech she had just made and she held onto my hand and she said, “Dare to compete, Mrs. Clinton. Dare to compete.”
I took that to heart because it is hard to compete sometimes, especially in public ways, when your failures are there for everyone to see and you don’t know what is going to happen from one day to the next. And yet so much of life, whether we like to accept it or not, is competing with ourselves to be the best we can be, being involved in classes or professions or just life, where we know we are competing with others.
I took her advice and I did compete because I chose to do so. And the biggest choices that you’ll face in your life will be yours alone to make. I’m sure you’ll receive good advice. You’re got a great education to go back and reflect about what is right for you, but you eventually will have to choose and I hope that you will dare to compete. And by that I don’t mean the kind of cutthroat competition that is too often characterized by what is driving America today. I mean the small voice inside you that says to you, you can do it, you can take this risk, you can take this next step.
And it doesn’t mean that once having made that choice you will always succeed. In fact, you won’t. There are setbacks and you will experience difficult disappointments. You will be slowed down and sometimes the breath will just be knocked out of you. But if you carry with you the values and beliefs that you can make a difference in your own life, first and foremost, and then in the lives of others. You can get back up, you can keep going.
But it is also important, as I have found, not to take yourself too seriously, because after all, every one of us here today, none of us is deserving of full credit. I think every day of the blessings my birth gave me without any doing of my own. I chose neither my family nor my country, but they as much as anything I’ve ever done, determined my course.
You compare my or your circumstances with those of the majority of people who’ve ever lived or who are living right now, they too often are born knowing too well what their futures will be. They lack the freedom to choose their life’s path. They’re imprisoned by circumstances of poverty and ignorance, bigotry, disease, hunger, oppression and war.
So, dare to compete, yes, but maybe even more difficult, dare to care. Dare to care about people who need our help to succeed and fulfill their own lives. There are so many out there and sometimes all it takes is the simplest of gestures or helping hands and many of you understand that already. I know that the numbers of graduates in the last 20 years have worked in community organizations, have tutored, have committed themselves to religious activities.
You have been there trying to serve because you have believed both that it was the right thing to do and because it gave something back to you. You have dared to care.
Well, dare to care to fight for equal justice for all, for equal pay for women, against hate crimes and bigotry. Dare to care about public schools without qualified teachers or adequate resources. Dare to care about protecting our environment. Dare to care about the 10 million children in our country who lack health insurance. Dare to care about the one and a half million children who have a parent in jail. The seven million people who suffer from HIV/AIDS. And thank you for caring enough to demand that our nation do more to help those that are suffering throughout this world with HIV/AIDS, to prevent this pandemic from spreading even further.
And I’ll also add, dare enough to care about our political process. You know, as I go and speak with students I’m impressed so much, not only in formal settings, on campuses, but with my daughter and her friends, about how much you care, about how willing you are to volunteer and serve. You may have missed the last wave of the revolution, but you’ve understood that the dot.community revolution is there for you every single day. And you’ve been willing to be part of remarking lives in our community.
And yet, there is a real resistance, a turning away from the political process. I hope that some of you will be public servants and will even run for office yourself, not to win a position to make and impression on your friends at your 20th reunion, but because you understand how important it is for each of us as citizens to make a commitment to our democracy.
Your generation, the first one born after the social upheavals of the 60’s and 70’s, in the midst of the technological advances of the 80’s and 90’s, are inheriting an economy, a society and a government that has yet to understand fully, or even come to grips with, our rapidly changing world.
And so bring your values and experiences and insights into politics. Dare to help make, not just a difference in politics, but create a different politics. Some have called you the generation of choice. You’ve been raised with multiple choice tests, multiple channels, multiple websites and multiple lifestyles. You’ve grown up choosing among alternatives that were either not imagined, created or available to people in prior generations.
You’ve been invested with far more personal power to customize your life, to make more free choices about how to live than was ever thought possible. And I think as I look at all the surveys and research that is done, your choices reflect not only freedom, but personal responsibility.
The social indicators, not the headlines, the social indicators tell a positive story: drug use and cheating and arrests being down, been pregnancy and suicides, drunk driving deaths being down. Community service and religious involvement being up. But if you look at the area of voting among 18 to 29 year olds, the numbers tell a far more troubling tale. Many of you I know believe that service and community volunteerism is a better way of solving the issues facing our country than political engagement, because you believe-choose one of the following multiples or choose them all-government either can’t understand or won’t make the right choices because of political pressures, inefficiency, incompetence or big money influence.
Well, I admit there is enough truth in that critique to justify feeling disconnected and alienated. But at bottom, that’s a personal cop-out and a national peril. Political conditions maximize the conditions for individual opportunity and responsibility as well as community. Americorps and the Peace Corps exist because of political decisions. Our air, water, land and food will be clean and safe because of political choices. Our ability to cure disease or log onto the Internet have been advanced because of politically determined investments. Ethnic cleansing in Kosovo ended because of political leadership. Your parents and grandparents traveled here by means of government built and subsidized transportation systems. Many used GI Bills or government loans, as I did, to attend college.
Now, I could, as you might guess, go on and on, but the point is to remind us all that government is us and each generation has to stake its claim. And, as stakeholders, you will have to decide whether or not to make the choice to participate. It is hard and it is, bringing change in a democracy, particularly now. There’s so much about our modern times that conspire to lower our sights, to weaken our vision-as individuals and communities and even nations.
It is not the vast conspiracy you may have heard about; rather it’s a silent conspiracy of cynicism and indifference and alienation that we see every day, in our popular culture and in our prodigious consumerism.
But as many have said before and as Vaclav Havel has said to memorably, “It cannot suffice just to invent new machines, new regulations and new institutions. It is necessary to understand differently and more perfectly the true purpose of our existence on this Earth and of our deeds.” And I think we are called on to reject, in this time of blessings that we enjoy, those who will tear us apart and tear us down and instead to liberate our God-given spirit, by being willing to dare to dream of a better world.
During my campaign, when times were tough and days were long I used to think about the example of Harriet Tubman, a heroic New Yorker, a 19th century Moses, who risked her life to bring hundreds of slaves to freedom. She would say to those who she gathered up in the South where she kept going back year after year from the safety of Auburn, New York, that no matter what happens, they had to keep going. If they heard shouts behind them, they had to keep going. If they heard gunfire or dogs, they had to keep going to freedom. Well, those aren’t the risks we face. It is more the silence and apathy and indifference that dogs our heels.
Thirty-two years ago, I spoke at my own graduation from Wellesley, where I did call on my fellow classmates to reject the notion of limitations on our ability to effect change and instead to embrace the idea that the goal of education should be human liberation and the freedom to practice with all the skill of our being the art of making possible.
For after all, our fate is to be free. To choose competition over apathy, caring over indifference, vision over myopia, and love over hate.
Just as this is a special time in your lives, it is for me as well because my daughter will be graduating in four weeks, graduating also from a wonderful place with a great education and beginning a new life. And as I think about all the parents and grandparents who are out there, I have a sense of what their feeling. Their hearts are leaping with joy, but it’s hard to keep tears in check because the presence of our children at a time and place such as this is really a fulfillment of our own American dreams. Well, I applaud you and all of your love, commitment and hard work, just as I applaud your daughters and sons for theirs.
And I leave these graduates with the same message I hope to leave with my graduate. Dare to compete. Dare to care. Dare to dream. Dare to love. Practice the art of making possible. And no matter what happens, even if you hear shouts behind, keep going.
Thank you and God bless you all.
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