随笔

励志英语美文

时间:2022-09-29 12:44:14 随笔 我要投稿

励志英语美文(通用9篇)

  美文,《法汉词典》译为“纯文学”,法文《拉鲁斯普通名词大词典》中的定义是:“文学、修辞、诗歌艺术的总体,”修辞和诗歌也可以由“文学”来概括。下面是小编为大家整理的励志英语美文,仅供参考,欢迎大家阅读。

励志英语美文(通用9篇)

  励志英语美文 篇1

  《You Have Only One Life》

  There are moments in life when you miss someone so much that you just want to pick them from your dreams and hug them for real! Dream what you want to dream;go where you want to go;be what you want to be,because you have only one life and one chance to do all the things you want to do.

  May you have enough happiness to make you sweet,enough trials to make you strong,enough sorrow to keep you human,enough hope to make you happy? Always put yourself in others’shoes.

  If you feel that it hurts you,it probably hurts the other person, too.

  The happiest of people don’t necessarily have the best of everything;they just make the most of everything that comes along their way.

  Happiness lies for those who cry,those who hurt, those who have searched,and those who have tried,for only they can appreciate the importance of peoplewho have touched their lives.

  Love begins with a smile,grows with a kiss and ends with a tear.

  The brightest future will always be based on a forgotten past, you can’t go on well in lifeuntil you let go of your past failures and heartaches.

  When you were born,you were crying and everyone around you was smiling.

  Live your life so that when you die,you're the one who is smiling and everyone around you is crying.

  Please send this message to those people who mean something to you,to those who have touched your life in one way or another,to those who make you smile when you really need it,to those that make you see the brighter side of things when you are really down,to those who you want to let them know that you appreciate their friendship.

  And if you don’t, don’t worry,nothing bad will happen to you,you will just miss out on the opportunity to brighten someone’s day with this message.

  励志英语美文 篇2

  《Today I begin a new life》

  Today I shed my old skin which hath, too long, suffered the bruises of failure and the wounds of mediority.

  Today I am born anew and my birthplace is a vineyard where there is fruit for all.

  Today I will pluck grapes of wisdom from the tallest and fullest vines in the vineyard,for these were planted by the wisest of my profession who have come before me,generation upon generation.

  Today I will savor the taste of grapes from these vines and verily I will swallow the seed of success buried in each and new life will sprout within me.

  The career I have chosen is laden with opportunity yet it is fraught with heartbreak and despair and the bodies of those who have failed, were they piled one atop another, would cast a shadow down upon all the pyramids of the earth.

  Yet I will not fail, as the others, for in my hands I now hold the charts which will guide through perilous waters to shores which only yesterday seemed but a dream.

  Failure no longer will be my payment for struggle.

  Just as nature made no provision for my body to tolerate pain neither has it made any provision for my life to suffer failure.

  Failure, like pain, is alien to my life.

  In the past I accepted it as I accepted pain.

  Now I reject it and I am prepared for wisdom and principles which will guide me out of the shadows into the sunlight of wealth, position, and happiness far beyond my most extravagant dreams until even the golden apples in the Garden of Hesperides will seem no more than my just reward.

  Time teaches all things to him who lives forever but I have not the luxury of eternity.

  Yet within my allotted time I must practice the art of patience for nature acts never in haste.

  To create the olive, king of all trees, a hundred years is required.

  An onion plant is old in nine weeks.

  I have lived as an onion plant.

  It has not pleased me.

  Now I wouldst become the greatest of olive trees and, in truth, the greatest of salesman.

  And how will this be accomplished? For I have neither the knowledge nor the experience to achieve the greatness and already I have stumbled in ignorance and fallen into pools of self-pity.

  The answer is simple.

  I will commence my journey unencumbered with either the weight of unnecessary knowledge or the handicap of meaningless experience.

  Nature already has supplied me with knowledge and instinct far greater than any beast in the forest and the value of experience is overrated, usually by old men who nod wisely and speak stupidly.

  In truth, experience teaches thoroughly yet her course of instruction devours men's years so the value of her lessons diminishes with the time necessary to acquire her special wisdom.

  The end finds it wasted on dead men.

  Furthermore, experience is comparable to fashion; an action that proved successful today will be unworkable and impractical tomorrow.

  Only principles endure and these I now possess, for the laws that will lead me to greatness are contained in the words of these scrolls.

  What they will teach me is more to prevent failure than to gain success, for what is success other than a state of mind? Which two, among a thouand wise men, will define success in the same words; yet failure is always described but one way.

  Failure is man's inability to reach his goals in life, whatever they may be.

  In truth, the only difference between those who have failed and those who have successed lies in the difference of their habits.

  Good habits are the key to all success.

  Bad habits are the unlocked door to failure.

  Thus, the first law I will obey, which precedeth all others is --I will form good habits and become their slave.

  As a child I was slave to my impulses; now I am slave to my habits, as are all grown men.

  I have surrendered my free will to the years of accumulated habits and the past deeds of my life have already marked out a path which threatens to imprison my future.

  My actions are ruled by appetite, passion, prejudice, greed, love, fear, environment, habit, and the worst of these tyrants is habit.

  Therefore, if I must be a slave to habit let me be a slave to good habits.

  My bad habits must be destroyed and new furrows prepared for good seed.

  I will form good habits and become their slave.

  And how will I accomplish this difficult feat? Through these scrolls, it will be done, for each scroll contains a principle which will drive a bad habit from my life and replace it with one which will bring me closer to success.

  For it is another of nature's laws that only a habit can subdue another habit.

  So, in order for these written words to perform their chosen task, I must discipline myself with the first of my new habits which is as follows:

  I will read each scroll for thirty days in this prescribed manner, before I proceed to the next scroll.

  First, I will read the words in silence when I arise.

  Then, I will read the words in silence after I have partaken of my midday meal.

  Last, I will read the words again just before I retire at day's end, and most important, on this occasion I will read the words aloud.

  On the next day I will repeat this procedure, and I will continue in like manner for thirty days.

  Then, I will turn to the next scroll and repeat this procedure for another thirty days.

  I will continue in this manner until I have lived with each scroll for thirty days and my reading has become habit.

  And what will be accomplished with this habit? Herein lies the hidden secret of all man's accomplishments.

  As I repeat the words daily they will soon become a part of my active mind, but more important, they will also seep into my other mind, that mysterious source which never sleeps, which creates my dreams, and often makes me act in ways I do not comprehend.

  As the words of these scrolls are consumed by my mysterious mind I will begin to awake, each morning, with a vitality I have never known before.

  My vigor will increase, my enthusiasm will rise, my desire to meet the world will overcome every fear I once knew at sunrise, and I will be happier than I ever believed it possible to be in this world of strife and sorrow.

  Eventually I will find myself reacting to all situations which confront me as I was commanded in the scrolls to react, and soon these actions and reactions will become easy to perform, for any act with practice becomes easy.

  Thus a new and good habit is born, for when an act becomes easy through constant repetiton it becomes a pleasure to perform and if it is a pleasure to perform it is man's nature to perform it often.

  When I perform it often it becomes a habit and I become its slave and since it is a good habit this is my will.

  Today I begin a new life.

  And I make a solemn oath to myself that nothing will retard my new life's growth.

  I will lose not a day from these readings for that day cannot be retrieved nor can I substitute another for it.

  I must not , I will not, break this habit of daily reading from these scrolls and, in truth, the few moments spent each day on this new habit are but a small price to pay for the happiness and success that will be mine.