jk罗琳演讲(jk罗琳苦难名言英文大全)
本文目录
jk罗琳苦难名言英文大全
jk罗琳苦难名言英文大全 1.不要怜悯死者,哈利。怜悯活人,最重要的是,怜悯那些生活中没有爱的人。JK罗琳《哈利波特与混血王子》
2.失败意味着剥光所有无关紧要的东西。我失败后,不再假装我是某种其实我不是的人,而开始将我的精力投入于我真正在乎的工作。人生的谷底,变成我重建人生的坚实基石。所以不要畏惧失败;只要活着就必然要面对失败,除非你小心翼翼到仿佛一生都没有活过。如果这样,你的失败将来自于放弃生活。JK罗琳
3.Ifyouwanttoknowwhatamanslike,takeagoodlookathowhetreatshisinferiors,nothisequalsJKRowling《HarrypotterandtheGobletofFire》
4.天空是冷冷的铁灰色,如同盾牌的背面。一阵刺骨的风掀起裙边,吹得小树的树叶哗哗作响。这风仿佛心怀恶意,专挑人们最薄弱的地方下手,吹得颈背和膝盖凉飕飕的,让你连从这现实逃开的梦也不能做。JK罗琳《偶发空缺》
5.永远不要相信任何能独立思考的东西JK罗琳《哈利波特与密室》
6.贫穷会引起恐惧压力,有时候甚至是沮丧。这意味着小心眼卑微和很多艰难困苦。通过自己的努力摆脱贫穷确实是件很值得自豪的事情,但只有傻瓜才对贫穷本身夸夸其谈。
7.生活就像故事一样:不在乎长短,而在于质量,这才是最重要的。JK罗琳《在哈佛大学演讲》
8.现在已经不是抱怨父母引导自己走错方向的时候了,如今的你们已经足够大来决定自己前进的路程,责任要靠自己承担。
9.哈利,表现我们真正的自我,是我们自己的选择,这比我们所具有的能力更重要。JK罗琳《哈利波特与密室》
10.接着,斯内普跪在小天狼星的旧卧室里。他读着莉莉写的那封旧信,泪水从鹰钩鼻的鼻尖流淌下来。信的第二页只有几句话:会和盖勒特格林德沃交朋友。我个人认为,她脑子有点糊涂了!无限爱意莉莉JK罗琳《哈利波特与死亡圣器》
11.失败给了我内心的安宁,这种安宁是顺利通过测验考试获得不了的。失败让我认识自己,这些是没法从其他地方学到的。
12.年来,哈利波特的伤疤再也没有疼过。一切都显得平常。JK罗琳《哈利波特与死亡圣徒》
13.人们容易原谅别人的的错误,却很难原谅别人的正确。JK罗琳《哈利波特与混血王子》
14.当我们面对死亡或者黑暗时,我们害怕的只有未知,没有别的。JK罗琳《哈利波特与混血王子》
15.为什么我说失败是有好处的?因为失败将那些非本质的东西剥离了,我不再伪装自己,我找到了真正的我。我将所有的精力都投入到我最重要的也是唯一的工作中去――写小说。如果我此前在其他方面成功过,那么,我也许永远不会下这样的决心。我自由了,因为我最大的恐惧已成为现实,而我依然活着,有一个可爱的女儿,还有一台旧打字机和一个大大的梦想。我生命中的最低点也是我重建生活的坚实基础。她告诫年轻人:面临挫折时,永远不要放弃希望。
16.这面镜子不能教给我们知识,也不能告诉我们实情,人们在他面前虚度时日,为他们看到的东西而痴迷,甚至被逼得发疯,因为他们不知道镜子里的一切是否真实,是否可能实现。JK罗琳《哈利波特与死亡圣器》
17.最后一个要消灭的敌人是死亡JK罗琳《哈利波特与死亡圣器》
18.只有在逆境来临的时候,你才会真正认识你自己,了解身边的人。这种了解是真正的财富,虽然是用痛苦换来的,但比我以前得到的任何资格证书都有用。
19.他终于明白了邓布利多要告诉他的意思,那就是:被拽进角斗场去面对一场殊死搏斗和自己昂首走进去是不同的。也许有人会说这二者之间并无多少不同,但邓布利多知道mdash,大学生励志;我也知道,哈利带着一阵强烈的自豪想道,我父母也知道这是世界上全部的不同。JK罗琳《哈利波特与混血王子》
20.决定我们一生的,不是我们的能力,而是我们的选择。
21.失败给了我内心的安宁,这种安宁是顺利通过测验考试获得不了的。失败让我认识自己,这些是没法从其他地方学到的。
22.从挫折中获得智慧变得坚强,意味着你比以往任何时候都更有能力生存。
23.我为你做密探,为你编造谎言,为你冒着致命的危险。这一切据说都是为了保证莉莉波特儿子的安全。现在你却告诉我,你养着他就像养着一头待杀的猪多么感人哪,西弗勒斯,邓布利多严肃地说,难道你真的开始喜欢那个男孩了?喜欢他?斯内普叫了起来,呼神护卫!他的杖尖蹦出了那头银色的牝鹿。它落在地板上,轻轻一跃就到了办公室那头,飞出了窗外。邓布利多注视着它远去,注视着它的银光消失,然后转脸望着斯内普,他的眼里已盈满泪水。这么长时间了还是这样?一直是这样。斯内普说。JK罗琳《哈利波特与死亡圣器》
24.伟大引起嫉妒,嫉妒导致怨毒,怨毒滋生谎言。JK罗琳《哈利波特与混血王子》
25.邓布利多:一直以来都是这样吗?斯内普:永远都是。JK罗琳《哈利波特》
26.贫穷并不是一种高贵的经历,它带来恐惧压力有时还有绝望,它意味着许许多多的羞辱和艰辛。靠自己的努力摆脱贫穷,确实可以引以自豪,但贫穷本身只有对傻瓜而言才是浪漫的。
27.小时侯喜欢马尔福一样坏坏的男生,长大后才知道像哈利一样善良的才值得去爱
28.我们不需要魔法来改变世界,我们已经在我们的内心拥有了足够的力量:那就是把世界想象成更好的力量。
29.Itisourchoicesthatshowwhatwetrulyare,farmorethanourabilities我们的选择远比我们的能力更能表明我们是怎样的人。JK罗琳
30.Itdoesnotdotodwellondreamsandforgettolive不要依赖梦想而忘记生活。JK罗琳《哈利波特与魔法石》
31.所以说你所害怕的正是恐惧本身。卢平JK罗琳《哈利波特与阿兹卡班的囚徒》
32.贫穷会引起恐惧压力,有时候甚至是沮丧。这意味着小心眼卑微和很多艰难困苦。通过自己的努力摆脱贫穷确实是件很值得自豪的事情,但只有傻瓜才对贫穷本身夸夸其谈。
的J·K·罗琳的名言
1、ing to us at the end.If not alween what is right and what is easy .黑暗和困难笼罩着前行的道路,很快我们就要在正确的和轻松的进行选择。 ----《哈利·波特与火焰杯》
17、“对于妖精来说,任何一件东西的正当主人都是它的制造者,而不是购买者。凡是妖精制造的东西,在妖精看来,都理当归他们所有。”
“但如果是买来——”“妖精们会认为那是付钱者租用的。他们最难接受的,就是妖精制作的东西由巫师传给巫师。当头饰在拉环眼皮下传过去时,你看到了他的脸色。他很不满。我相信拉环会像他同类中的极端者一样,认为原来的购买者死后,那东西就应该归还给妖精。他们认为我们这样习惯于占有妖精制造的东西,由巫师传给巫师而不再付钱,比偷窃好不到哪里去。” ----《哈利·波特与死亡圣器》
18、“西弗勒斯?”
听到她叫自己的名字,斯内普的嘴角掠过一丝笑意。“嗯?” ----《哈利·波特与死亡圣器》
19、生活就像故事一样: 不在乎长短,而在于质量,这才是最重要的。 ----《在哈佛大学演讲》
20、不要可怜死者,可怜生者吧,特别是那些心中无爱的人。 ----《哈利·波特》
21、哈利仍满肚子好奇,当邓布利多走到门口、为他开门时,他并没有马上动身。
“他还是想教黑魔法防御术吗,先生?他没说……”“哦,他肯定是想教黑魔法防御术。我们那次短暂会面的后果证明了这一点。自从我拒绝伏地魔之后,就没有一个黑魔法防御术教师能教到一年以上。” ----《哈利·波特与混血王子》
22、哈利,表现我们真正的自我,是我们自己的选择,这比我们所具有的能力更重要。 ----《哈利波特与密室》
23、??但是毫无疑问,邓布利多从一开始就对波特有种不正常的兴趣。 ----《哈利·波特与死亡圣器》
24、在肥仔看来,人类所犯下的错误中,百分之九十九是出于为自己感到羞愧,撒谎遮掩,想要变成另一个人。诚实是肥仔的金钱,是他的武器和盾牌。你一诚实,人们就怕你,因为你让他们感到震惊。肥仔发现,别人都身陷尴尬扭捏、虚伪作态的泥潭中,生怕真相泄漏,而他却被不加修饰的原始状态所吸引,他喜欢即使丑陋但却真实的东西,喜欢让他父亲那样的人感到害羞恶心的一切。弥赛亚、贱民,所谓疯子、罪犯,都让他思考良久,他们都是被沉睡的大众唾弃的高贵之人。 ----《偶发空缺》
25、过了片刻,斯内普抬起脸,自从荒野山顶的一幕之后,他仿佛度过了一百年的苦难岁月。
“我以为......你会......保证她的......安全......”
“她儿子还活着,眼睛和他妈妈的一样,一模一样。我想,你肯定记得莉莉·伊万斯的眼睛,它的形状和颜色,对吗?”
“不要!”斯内普吼道,“没了......死了......”
“这是悔恨吗,西弗勒斯?”
“我希望......我希望死的是我。” ----《哈利·波特与死亡圣器》
26、Honestly, if you were any slower, you’d be going backward.
说真的,如果你再慢一点,你就在倒退了。 ----《哈利波特与密室》
27、小了点儿,罗恩急急地说,“比不上你在麻瓜家的那间。我上面就是阁楼,里面住着那个食尸鬼,他老是敲管子,哼哼唧唧……”
可哈利愉快地笑了,说:“这是我见过最好的房间。” ----《哈利波特与密室》
28、天空是冷冷的铁灰色,如同盾牌的背面。一阵刺骨的风掀起裙边,吹得小树的树叶哗哗作响。这风仿佛心怀恶意,专挑人们最薄弱的地方下手,吹得颈背和膝盖凉飕飕的,让你连从这现实逃开的梦也不能做。 ----《偶发空缺》
29、“也许一百万人中间有一人可以同时拥有全部圣器,哈利。我只适合拥有其中最微不足道、最没有特色的。我适合拥有老魔杖,而且不能夸耀它,也不能用它杀人。我可以驯服它,使用它,因为我拿它不是为了索取,而是为了拯救别人。” ----《哈利·波特与死亡圣器》
30、我在结束时打开。 ----《哈利·波特与死亡圣器》
J·K·罗琳经典语录
1、It does not do to dwell on dreams and forget to live.
不要依赖梦想而忘记生活。
2、沉湎于虚幻的梦想而忘记现实的生活,这是毫无益处的,千万记住。 ——J·K·罗琳 《哈利·波特》
3、It is the quality of one’s convictions that determines success, not the number of followers.
决定一个人是否成功的是其信仰的质量,而不是信徒的数量。
4、生活就像故事一样: 不在乎长短,而在于质量,这才是最重要的。 ——J·K·罗琳 《在哈佛大学演讲》
5、反抗你的敌人需要过人的勇气,而在朋友面前坚持自己的立场需要更大的勇气。 ——J·K·罗琳 《哈利·波特》
6、表现真正的自我,是我们自己的选择,这比我们的能力更重要。 ——J·K·罗琳 《哈利·波特》
7、It is our choices that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities.
我们的选择远比我们的能力更能表明我们是怎样的人。 ——J·K·罗琳 《哈利波特与密室》
8、If you want to know what a mans like, take a good look at how he treats his inferiors, not his equals.
如果你想了解一个人的为人,就要留意他是如何对待他的下级的,而不能光看他如何对待与他地位相等的人。 ——J·K·罗琳 《哈利·波特与火焰杯》
9、接着,斯内普跪在小天狼星的旧卧室里。他读着莉莉写的那封旧信,泪水从鹰钩鼻的鼻尖流淌下来。信的第二页只有几句话: 会和盖勒特·格林德沃交朋友。我个人认为,她脑子有点糊涂了! 无限爱意 莉莉 ——J·K·罗琳 《哈利·波特与死亡圣器》
10、他似乎永远也不明白,人性是多面的,每一张平凡的脸孔背后可能都隐藏着一片郁郁生长、独一无二的原野。 ——J·K·罗琳 《偶发空缺》
11、人类偏偏就喜欢选择对他们最没有好处的东西。 ——J·K·罗琳 《哈利·波特》
12、“这面镜子不能教给我们知识,也不能告诉我们实情,人们在他面前虚度时日,为他们看到的东西而痴迷,甚至被逼得发疯,因为他们不知道镜子里的一切是否真实,是否可能实现”。 ——J·K·罗琳 《哈利·波特与死亡圣器》
13、“看……着……我……”他轻声说。 绿眼眸盯着黑眼眸,但一秒钟后,那一双黑眸深处的什么东西似乎消失了,它们变得茫然、呆滞而空洞。抓住哈利的那只手垂落在地上,斯内普不动了。 ——J·K·罗琳 《哈利·波特与死亡圣器》
14、伟大引起嫉妒,嫉妒导致怨毒,怨毒滋生谎言。 ——J·K·罗琳 《哈利·波特与混血王子》
15、建立可实现的目标,这是提高自我的第一步。
16、It is the unknown we fear when we look upon death and darkness, nothing more.
当我们面对死亡和黑暗时,我们害怕的只是未知,除此之外没有别的。
17、重要的不是我们生下来怎样,而是我们将来会变成怎样。 ——J·K·罗琳 《哈利波特》
18、people find it far easier to forgive others for being wrong than being right.
人们容易原谅别人的错误,却很难原谅别人的正确。
19、对于头脑十分清醒的人来说,死亡不过是一场伟大的冒险。 ——J·K·罗琳 《哈利·波特》
20、最后一个要消灭的敌人是死亡 ——J·K·罗琳 《哈利middot
玛琳的名言_关于玛琳的名言
黑暗包裹着我们。然后我听到从下铺传来一声隐约的、几乎听不见般的鼻息声。我静静地躺着,竭力想分辨出那是什么声音,因为那是种我以前从未听到过的声音,一种我拒绝倾听的声音,一种我从未想过有可能存在的声音。那是大姐头的哭声。将来有一天,我会向薇拉问问改造区的事,但现在不是时候。或许我姐姐是对的:可能有些事不知道最好,因为一旦知道了,它们就再也不会被人忘却。母亲和父亲从未告诉过我改造区的事,我是在对潜伏在人类心灵深处的黑暗一无所知的状态下长大成人的。
他们是如何怀着深锁在心中的可怕秘密度过自己的余生的?他们怎么还能种植蔬菜,修理摩托车,送我们上学,担心我们的学习成绩的?
但是他们那么做了。 ----玛琳娜·柳薇卡《乌克兰拖拉机简史》
女人一漂亮,就能让你原谅她许多事。 ----玛琳娜·柳薇卡《乌克兰拖拉机简史》
婚礼,如同葬礼一样,为家庭戏剧提供了完美的表演场所:有各种各样的仪式和象征习俗,并为趋炎附势提供了乔装打扮亮相的机会。 ----玛琳娜·柳薇卡《乌克兰拖拉机简史》
“薇拉,我发现很难理解的是,为什么人们那么快地背叛彼此?你原本以为,在面对压迫时,他们应当表现得坚定不移。”
“不,不,那是种不谙世事的观点,娜杰日达。你瞧,这是人性的黑暗面。当某个人拥有权力时,没什么权的人总是试图逢迎讨好他们。看看父亲总是想法设法地讨好瓦伦蒂娜的样子,就连她虐待他时也是如此。看看你的劳工党政客们巴巴地向资本家‘抛媚眼’的样子,他们原本发誓要把他们推翻在地的。当然,并非只有政客如此,在整个动物界都是如此。” ----玛琳娜·柳薇卡《乌克兰拖拉机简史》
我无法毫发无伤的在世界立足 也无心对每一位世人倾尽情感
若知你对我仍有爱意 钦佩我的好骨气却未曾瞧见我仍未退去的稚气
多情之余始终不能在隐忍之中将自己言语腐烂与腹
谁叫我心不归志仍存
多该死的自尊啊
帕斯捷尔纳克致茨维塔耶娃
我们多么草率地成为了孤儿。玛琳娜,
大雪落在
说吧:今夜,我的嗓音是一列被截停的火车,
(玫瑰的矛盾贯穿了他硕大的心);
因此错过了
而今夜,你是舞曲,世界是错误。
当新年的钟声敲响的时候,百合花盛放
而不是我们尴尬的生存。
当华尔兹舞曲奏起的时候,我在谢幕。
抹去我的名字。
停止,大雪落向我们各自孤单的命运。
……然后我又将沉默不语
我十六岁时,父亲禁止我化妆。他命令我上楼去,把脸上的妆卸掉后才能出门。 “娜迪亚,假如所有女人都往脸上涂脂抹粉,想象一下,就不可能再有自然选择这一说了。其不可避免的结果是物种的丑化。你不会愿意让此事发生的,是吧?” 多么睿智聪达啊。为什么他就不能像个普普通通的父亲那样直截了当地说他不喜欢?现在瞧他那对着这涂脂抹粉的俄罗斯骚货直流口水的样子。也许他现在近视得太厉害了,看不清她化着浓妆。或许他认为,她天生就长着浅蜜桃色嘴唇和埃及艳后般的黑色吊梢眼。 ----玛琳娜·柳薇卡《乌克兰拖拉机简史》
Marin, under the streetlight, dancing by herself, is singing the same song someeone to change her life.
玛琳,街灯下独自起舞的人,在某个地方唱着同一首歌,我知道。她在等一辆小汽车停下来,等着一颗星星坠落,等一个人改变她的生活。 ----Sandra Cisneros《The house on mango street》
致茨维塔耶娃
1我也拥有你,高绝刺耳的音调
也会突然岔出道路
去荒原跳一种无人能懂的舞
像蜜蜂之间的耳语
你凿穿我深夜的河流
幽蓝的星星漫过我的窗户
将你热烈的内核,持续的植入
我虚弱而怯乏的冻土
玛琳娜,玛琳娜,你不能拒绝我
将你唱成一个失眠的音符
你鱼刺般卡在我轻盈的喉咙中
使我唱出的每一支歌都带有血渍
太阳已高。我还在
努力穿越这遥遥无尽的海底隧道
而你,玛琳娜,将立在海的尽头
升起为一座,狂欢的帝国
要紧的是,玛琳说,要让男孩子看到我们,我们看到男孩子。因为玛琳的裙子更短,因为她的眼睛很漂亮,因为她在很多方面已经比我们成熟,男孩子跑过来说一些蠢话,比如我爱上了你说是眼睛的那两个青苹果,把它们给我吧为什么不?玛琳只是看着他们,眼睛都不眨一下,也不害怕。 ----桑德拉希斯内罗丝《芒果街上的小屋》
人行道上滑溜溜的,我们彼此搀扶着对方,起先是为了平衡,但过了一会儿,这种搀扶就变成了相依相伴。 ----玛琳娜·柳薇卡《乌克兰拖拉机简史》
舒拉姨妈说:拿一只苹果,往上面戳上铁钉,放一晚上,然后拔出钉子,吃掉苹果----这样一来就能摄取到维生素C和铁。 ----玛琳娜·柳薇卡《乌克兰拖拉机简史》
假如所有的女人都往脸上涂脂抹粉,想像一下,就不能再有自然选择这一说了。其不可避免的结果是物种的丑化。你不会愿意让此事发生的,是吧? ----玛琳娜·柳薇卡《乌克兰拖拉机简史》
jk罗琳励志故事
J.K.罗琳, 毕业 于英国埃克塞特大学,英国作家。1997年6月,推出哈利·波特系列第一本《哈利·波特与魔法石》。下面是我给大家整理的jk罗琳 励志 故事 ,供大家参阅!
jk罗琳励志故事
一个没有信念,或者不坚持信念的人,只能平庸地过一生;而一个坚持自己信念的人,永远也不会被困难击倒。因为信念的力量是惊人的,它可以改变恶劣的现状,形成令人难以置信的圆满结局。
随着《哈里·波特》风靡全球,它的作者和编剧J.K.罗琳成了英国最富有的女人,她所拥有的财富甚至比英国女王的还要多。她曾有一段穷困落魄的历史,她的成功恰恰在于她坚持自己的信念。
罗琳从小就热爱英国文学,热爱写作和讲故事,而且她从来没有放弃过。大学时,她主修法语。毕业后,她只身前往葡萄牙发展,随即和当地的一位记者坠入情网,并结婚。
无奈的是,这段婚姻来得快去得也快。婚后,丈夫的本来面目暴露无遗,他殴打她,并不顾她的哀求将她赶出家门。
不久,罗琳便带着3个月大的女儿杰西卡回到了英国,栖身于爱丁堡一间没有暖气的小公寓里。
丈夫离她而去,工作没有了,居无定所,身无分文,再加上嗷嗷待哺的女儿,罗琳一下子变得穷困潦倒。她不得不靠救济金生活,经常是女儿吃饱了,她还饿着肚子。
但是,家庭和事业的失败并没有打消罗琳写作的积极性,用她自己的话说:“或许是为了完成多年的梦想,或许是为了排遣心中的不快,也或许是为了每晚能把自己编的故事讲给女儿听。”她成天不停地写呀写,有时为了省钱省电,她甚至待在咖啡馆里写上一天。
就这样,在女儿的哭叫声中,她的第一本《哈利·波特》诞生了,并创造了出版界奇迹,她的作品被翻译成35种语言在115个国家和地区发行,引起了全世界的轰动。
罗琳从来没有远离过自己的信念,并用她的智慧与执著赢回了巨大的财富。即使她的生活艰难,她也坚信有一天,她必定会达到事业的顶峰。
每个人都希望有一天能飞黄腾达,都希望能登上人生之巅,享受随之而来的丰硕果实。遗憾的是,人们往往坚守不住自己的信念。总觉得顶峰是那样高不可攀,想象一下就已经足够了。
记得大学的时候,班上有一个男生,吉他弹得很不错。他经常开玩笑说,如果毕业后自己做一个流浪歌手,他会很高兴。
只是,毕业后,他的父亲为避免他受找工作之苦,很快给他找了一份临时工作,他接受了。不久,当同学们都在为自己的生活奋斗的时候,他结了婚,生了孩子。
聚会的时候,同学们开玩笑地对他说,街头少了一个优秀的流浪歌手。对此,他唯有苦笑。或许当初的他只是随口 说说 ,当他走进现实生活的时候,他发现要实现自己的理想是那么地艰难。
有很多人,终生不甘平凡,却又无力改变平凡。这是人生中多大的悲哀。
J.K.罗琳的个人简介
J.K.罗琳(J.K. Rowling),1965年7月31日出生于英国格温特郡,毕业于英国埃克塞特大学,英国作家。
1989年,24岁的罗琳有了创作哈利·波特的念头。1997年6月,推出哈利·波特系列第一本《哈利·波特与魔法石》。随后,罗琳又分别于1998年与1999年创作了《哈利·波特与密室》和《哈利·波特与阿兹卡班的囚徒》。2001年,美国华纳兄弟电影公司决定将小说的第一部《哈利·波特与魔法石》搬上银幕。2003年6月,她再创作出第五部作品《哈利·波特与凤凰社》。
2004年,罗琳荣登《福布斯》富人排行榜,她的身价达到10亿美元。2005年7月推出了第六部《哈利·波特与混血王子》,2007年7月推出终结篇《哈利·波特与死亡圣器》。截至2008年,《哈利·波特》系列7本小说被翻译成67种文字在全球发行4亿册。2010年,哈利·波特电影系列的完结篇《哈利·波特与死亡圣器》拍摄完成。2014年12月,罗琳更新了《哈利·波特》系列相关的小故事。
J.K.罗琳的个人生活
罗琳于1965年7月31日生于英国的格温特郡。她父亲是罗伊斯罗尔飞机制造厂一名退休的管理人员,母亲是一位实验室技术人员。罗琳小时候是个戴眼镜的相貌平平的女孩,非常爱学习,有点害羞,流着鼻涕,还比较野。她从小喜欢写作和讲故事,6岁就写了一篇跟兔子有关的故事。妹妹黛安(Dianne)是她讲故事的对象。J.K.罗琳是她的笔名,她本来叫乔安·罗琳(Joanne Rowling)。
1992年,在葡萄牙奥波多的米亚卡瓦酒巴,一位名为乔治·阿朗特斯的新闻系学生对罗琳一见钟情,10月16日,乔安妮·罗琳与乔治·阿朗特斯结婚,婚礼在葡萄牙奥波多举行。1993年7月27日,罗琳的女儿出生,取名杰西卡。11月17日,在一次激烈的争吵之后,乔治把罗琳独自扔在了奥波多的街头上。 圣诞节 ,罗琳带着女儿杰西卡离开了乔治回到苏格兰爱丁堡 。1994年8月10日,罗琳向乔治·阿朗特斯提出了离婚。罗琳花了约9个月来接受行为认识治疗。并且,罗琳勉强申请到了一份政府资助,每周能获得103.5美元。1995年6月26日,罗琳的离婚申请终于获得了批准,而且得到了女儿的永久看护权。
2001年,罗琳嫁给麻醉学者尼尔·默里,再次有了一个完整的家。2003年,她生下儿子大卫 ,2005年1月又产下女儿麦肯奇。
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人生不该被定义(一篇演讲稿)
亲爱的同学们: 大家晚上好! “我们在座的,现在都是大学生,过了几年后,在座的很多同学会进入小学、初中、高中的学校做一名老师,然而有的呢,会继续考研读书,还有的呢,可能会跨专业去其他行业做其他事儿。当工作稳定了,我们就会结婚、买房子、生孩子。十年之后,我们的人生就会安定下来。再过十五年呢,我们都三十多岁了,我们的人生轨迹就会定型。”当然,以上这种说法是一部分人的想法,但在我看来,这样的看法是错误的! 现在,让我来告诉你们为什么这些话是错误的。 有的人二十一岁就大学毕业,直到二十七岁才能找到一份合适自己的工作;有的人二十五岁才毕业,但马上就能找到一份合适且体面的工作;有的人没有上过大学,但是他们却在十八岁就找到了自己热爱的事;有的人一毕业就找到好工作,并且赚到很多很多钱,却过得不开心;有的人在十六岁时就清楚的知道自己想要什么,但是在二十六岁时改变了想法。 有的人有了孩子,却还是单身;有的人结了婚,却要等十年左右才生孩子;有的人正处于一段感情中,但爱的却是别人;有的人明明彼此相爱着对方,却没有在一起。 我想说的是,人生中的每一件事都取决于我们自己的时间。你身边有些朋友,也许他们现在遥遥领先于你,有的朋友也许远远的落后于你,但凡事都有它自己的节奏。他们有他们的节奏,你有你的。 请你,耐心一点! 班固,大家都知道吧?但是你们知道库班吗?(不知道了吧)库班,是美国著名的企业家,有很多产业,还有自己的NBA球队,但是他二十五岁的时候还在酒吧,做一名酒保;在被拒绝十二次之后,三十二岁的JK罗琳才出版了哈利波特,成为美国出名的作家;大家应该都网购吧,而马云也是在三十五岁才建立了阿里巴巴;摩根弗力曼是一名著名的好莱坞黑人影星,可他也是在五十二岁时才迎来他演艺事业的大爆发;“罗温.艾金森”说这个名字可能大家都不知道是谁,他就是憨豆先生啊,这个大家一定很熟悉吧,而他也是快到四十岁时才走红。 所以,二十五岁之后才拿到大学文凭,依然值得骄傲;三十岁还没能结婚,但自己过得快乐,也是一种成功;三十五岁之后成家也完全可以啊;四十岁买房也没什么丢脸的。 这才是真正的成功。 因此,我们不要太早的给自己的人生下定义!也不要听别人给你下的定义,我们应该有自己的时间表和节奏。成功最关键的要素掌握在我们自己的手中,请你为自己努力吧! 我的演讲到此结束,希望你的人生不被定义!谢谢。
插画jk-人物|JK罗琳告诉你如何把孩子培养成写作界的高手
29与jk为什么不更了
完结了。作者在《29与JK》第八卷的推特相关内容上表示,这部作品的最终卷已经完成,29与jk不更了是因为完结了。《29与JK》是裕时悠示所作、Yan-Yam负责插画,GA文库所属的轻小说作品。故事简介枪羽锐二是个眼神虽然令人退避三舍,不过在公司则受到另眼看待的29岁社畜他喜欢电动和漫画,假日在网咖追求疗愈,艰辛地度过上班族生活。
人物|JK罗琳告诉你如何把孩子培养成写作界的高手2017年12月英国王室授予JK罗琳“名誉勋位”,威廉王子授勋,这个勋位英国历史上限制56位。
JK罗琳,靠一支笔完成人生的华丽逆袭,从靠政府救济的单亲妈妈,变成比肩英国女王的英国首富,如今还成为英国王室成“名誉勋位”。
我想你一定和我一样好奇:
JK罗琳手上写作之笔的魔力到底从何而来?
罗琳小时候,一头短发,满脸小雀斑,戴眼镜,有点害羞,不爱说话,不管在家还是在学校,她都不受欢迎,所以只能靠阅读和书籍陪伴自己度过孤独的童年。
童年时期大量的阅读,奠定了罗琳坚实的写作基础。国外的儿童阅读与国内的不同,国外孩子的课外阅读一般以孩子最喜欢的故事为主,故事让罗琳享受到了阅读的乐趣,也拓展了罗琳的文学想象力,而且融入她的生活骨血。以至于在母亲离世当天,她能看到一个瘦弱、戴着眼镜的黑色小巫师,一直在车窗外对着她笑。这个小巫师就是后来她笔下的哈利波特
她从小就喜欢写作和讲故事,6岁罗琳完成了她的第一篇童话《兔子》:主角是得了麻疹的兔子rabbit,好朋友们纷纷来看望它。妹妹黛安(Dianne)是她讲故事的对象。罗琳的小说,故事情节是最吸引读者的地方。
罗琳高中毕业时,父母强制要求她报选德语系。可一等父母离开,罗琳就转读了古典文学,在父母眼中,那是个“连卫生间都赚不来”的专业。
但正是罗琳大学接受过的古典文学教育,培养了她深厚的文学功底。罗琳大学期间酷爱推理小说,她因此收获了缜密的逻辑思维。
她写作前一般都写出一份超详细的写作大纲,她的儿童小说以经典文学的故事形式和不断挖坑见长。
母亲去世,与父亲断绝父女关系,被丈夫抛弃带着仅三个月的女儿,依靠政府救济过日子,当罗琳的人生掉入低谷,她开始写作,从此一发不可收拾,名利双收。
你也许会想,成为她这样的人我这辈子我是没希望了。没错,我们这代人绝大多数人确实是没有希望了,很多人一想到写作就想起小时候在学校痛苦的作文经历。
可是你有没有想过,你没有希望了,你的孩子还是有希望的啊!
为什么中国没有伟大的JK罗琳这样的故事大家?
没有哈利波特和星球大战这样富有想象力的伟大作品?
根本原因就中国的孩子儿童时期就缺少对他们故事阅读和创作力的培养
万维刚老师说,中国儿童的读书状况跟中国足球有点像,其一,我们的真实水平比我们以为的还要低;其二,我们都谈论这件事情,但是都不让我们的孩子去做。
中国孩子读的书都是家长和老师想让他们读的书,而不是他们自己想读的书。亚马逊中国排行榜前几名的书籍,他们的目标消费者都是家长而不是儿童,比如《宝宝的第一本好性格养成书》,或者是《格林童话》、《小王子》类的经典书。家长把这些价值感满满的书买回去,就像给他们的孩子戴上了新首饰。
中国的学校把书分为课内书和课外书,但是课外书这个概念本来就不应该存在,一切书籍都是课外书,只有上课的课本才叫“课内书”。虽然现在的老师不会像以前一样动不动就没收孩子的课外书,但真正阅读在中国学生的时间少之又少,他们都在忙于应付一大堆的课外作业和习题。
首先,孩子一出生,市图书馆就会送来一包礼物,里面有各种类型的图书他图书馆介绍,就是在鼓励家长要陪孩子老图书馆阅读。
幼儿园开始,每个教师都有自己的图书角。美国小学生的课外作业80%是阅读。学校经常给孩子家里发买书的广告。
到了小学,除了阅读美国的学校鼓励孩子写书,分章节,有封面,有插画,还有作者致谢。学校还会邀请家长到学校去对孩子的作品进行点评。
在美国,读书是一种价值观,只要孩子拿着书,家长和学校就会很开心。
我们刚说了,亚马逊中国儿童畅销书是《宝宝的第一本好性格养成书》《格林童话》《小王子》,那么美国的儿童畅销书是什么呢?
亚马逊美国上的童书销售排行榜,排在前面的大部分是故事书,而且是比较新的故事书——最老的大概是《哈利波特》,而不是《格林童话》。故事书,才是正常儿童真正想读的书。新的故事书能上榜,说明美国儿童真的是在读书,而不是买了经典拿回家摆着。
这就是中美阅读竞赛中的差距。
想要让孩子愿意离开手机屏幕和电视、电脑游戏,爱上阅读。有英雄,有冒险刺激的情节,有超出孩子日常见识的故事书才是最好的儿童读物。
万维钢老师在专栏中给一份适合小学生的阅读清单:
1.《神奇树屋》(MagicTreeHouse)系列,作者MaryPopeOsborne
2.GeronimoStilton的《老鼠记者》系列,比如TheDragonofFortune
3.TuiSutherland的WingsofFire系列
4.乐高幻影忍者系列
5.口袋妖怪手册(Pokemon:DeluxeEssentialHandbook)
6.LeapReader出的“点读书”
7.DavPilkey的DogMan系列漫画
8.任何一本智力游戏,比如BrainGamesforCleverKids
9.RainaTelgemeier的长篇漫画书,比如Ghosts
出的100PaperDragonstoFold&Fly
如果不想让孩子成为作家,是不是就没有必要让孩子爱上阅读呢?
不是的,让孩子爱上阅读是家长的责任。
阅读对人的语言能力、分析和理解能力至关重要。
哪怕别的都不算,单看语言能力这一项,阅读就是个受益终生的事。
2011年有个大规模的综合研究,说阅读时间决定了一个典型幼儿园学生的12%的语言能力,对小学生语言能力的影响是13%,对初中生的影响是19%,对高中生的影响是30%,对大学生的影响是34%。小孩读的书越多,语言表达能力就越强,而且这个效应随着年级越高越明显。
现在一到要发表演讲的时候,美国随便抓个人都能侃侃而谈,而中国人明明自己的专业技术很厉害,可是常常不知道该说什么。中国留学生在国外学习成绩都很好,但是每到面试的时候,就落于下风,原因就在于国外的孩子在面试的时候,在语言表达上的优势。
这些难道不也是因为吃了从小不读书的亏吗?
哈利波特插画版哪里印刷Bloomsbury。
印刷一般是交由出版方进行操作的,所以哈利波特插画版是由其出版方Bloomsbury进行印刷的。
《哈利波特》(Harry-Potter)是英国作家JK罗琳于1997至2007年所著的魔幻文学系列小说,共7部。
关于JK罗琳在哈佛演讲的问题
不就是说,"你责备你父母误导你,是有个时限的."挺好玩的阿,没笑,可能是文化差异吧.你父母总会老去,然后挂掉,无论你要尽孝还是要责备,都要早早的.树欲静而风不止,子欲养而亲不待
最精彩的英文演讲:JK罗琳哈佛毕业典礼演讲
President Faust, members of the Harvard Corporation and the Board of Overseers(监察员), members of the faculty, proud parents, and, above all, graduates, The first thing I would like to say is "thank you." Not only has Harvard given me an extraordinary honour, but the weeks of fear and nausea I’ve endured at the thought of giving this commencement address have made me lose weight. A win-win situation! Now all I have to do is take deep breaths, squint(眯眼看) at the red banners and convince myself that I am at the world’s largest Gryffindors’ reunion. Delivering a commencement address is a great responsibility; or so I thought until I cast my mind back to my own graduation. The commencement speaker that day was the distinguished British philosopher Baroness Mary Warnock. Reflecting on her speech has helped me enormously in writing this one, because it turns out that I can’t remember a single word she said. This liberating discovery enables me to proceed without any fear that I might inadvertently influence you to abandon promising careers in business, law or politics for the giddy delights of becoming a gay wizard. You see? If all you remember in years to come is the ’gay wizard’ joke, I’ve still come out ahead of Baroness Mary Warnock. Achievable goals - the first step to self-improvement. Actually, I have wracked my mind and heart for what I ought to say to you today. I have asked myself what I wish I had known at my own graduation, and what important lessons I have learned in the 21 years that has expired between that day and this. I have come up with two answers. On this wonderful day when we are gathered together to celebrate your academic success, I have decided to talk to you about the benefits of failure. And as you stand on the threshold of what is sometimes called ’real life’, I want to extol(颂扬,赞美) the crucial importance of imagination. These may seem quixotic(空想的) or paradoxical choices, but bear with me. Looking back at the 21-year-old that I was at graduation, is a slightly uncomfortable experience for the 42-year-old that she has become. Half my lifetime ago, I was striking an uneasy balance between the ambition I had for myself, and what those closest to me expected of me. I was convinced that the only thing I wanted to do, ever, was to write novels. However, my parents, both of whom came from impoverished(穷困的) backgrounds and neither of whom had been to college, took the view that my overactive imagination was an amusing personal quirk that could never pay a mortgage, or secure a pension(养老金). I know the irony strikes like with the force of a cartoon anvil now, but… They had hoped that I would take a vocational degree; I wanted to study English Literature. A compromise was reached that in retrospect(回溯,回想) satisfied nobody, and I went up to study Modern Languages. Hardly had my parents’ car rounded the corner at the end of the road than I ditched German and scuttled off down the Classics corridor. I cannot remember telling my parents that I was studying Classics; they might well have found out for the first time on graduation day. Of all the subjects on this planet, I think they would have been hard put to name one less useful than Greek mythology when it came to securing the keys to an executive bathroom. I would like to make it clear, in parenthesis(插入语), that I do not blame my parents for their point of view. There is an expiry date on blaming your parents for steering you in the wrong direction; the moment you are old enough to take the wheel, responsibility lies with you. What is more, I cannot criticise my parents for hoping that I would never experience poverty. They had been poor themselves, and I have since been poor, and I quite agree with them that it is not an ennobling experience. Poverty entails fear, and stress, and sometimes depression; it means a thousand petty humiliations and hardships. Climbing out of poverty by your own efforts, that is indeed something on which to pride yourself, but poverty itself is romanticised only by fools. What I feared most for myself at your age was not poverty, but failure. At your age, in spite of a distinct lack of motivation at university, where I had spent far too long in the coffee bar writing stories, and far too little time at lectures, I had a knack for passing examinations, and that, for years, had been the measure of success in my life and that of my peers. I am not dull enough to suppose that because you are young, gifted and well-educated, you have never known hardship or heartache. Talent and intelligence never yet inoculated(接种,灌输) anyone against the caprice (任性,反复无常的)of the Fates, and I do not for a moment suppose that everyone here has enjoyed an existence of unruffled(平静的) privilege and contentment. However, the fact that you are graduating from Harvard suggests that you are not very well-acquainted with failure. You might be driven by a fear of failure quite as much as a desire for success. Indeed, your conception of failure might not be too far from the average person’s idea of success, so high have you already flown academically. Ultimately, we all have to decide for ourselves what constitutes failure, but the world is quite eager to give you a set of criteria if you let it. So I think it fair to say that by any conventional measure, a mere seven years after my graduation day, I had failed on an epic scale. An exceptionally short-lived marriage had imploded, and I was jobless, a lone parent, and as poor as it is possible to be in modern Britain, without being homeless. The fears my parents had had for me, and that I had had for myself, had both come to pass, and by every usual standard, I was the biggest failure I knew. Now, I am not going to stand here and tell you that failure is fun. That period of my life was a dark one, and I had no idea that there was going to be what the press has since represented as a kind of fairy tale resolution. I had no idea how far the tunnel extended, and for a long time, any light at the end of it was a hope rather than a reality. So why do I talk about the benefits of failure? Simply because failure meant a stripping away of the inessential. I stopped pretending to myself that I was anything other than what I was, and began to direct all my energy into finishing the only work that mattered to me. Had I really succeeded at anything else, I might never have found the determination to succeed in the one arena I believed I truly belonged. I was set free, because my greatest fear had been realised, and I was still alive, and I still had a daughter whom I adored, and I had an old typewriter and a big idea. And so rock bottom became the solid foundation on which I rebuilt my life. You might never fail on the scale I did, but some failure in life is inevitable. It is impossible to live without failing at something, unless you live so cautiously that you might as well not have lived at all – in which case, you fail by default. Failure gave me an inner security that I had never attained by passing examinations. Failure taught me things about myself that I could have learned no other way. I discovered that I had a strong will, and more discipline than I had suspected; I also found out that I had friends whose value was truly above the price of rubies. The knowledge that you have emerged wiser and stronger from setbacks means that you are, ever after, secure in your ability to survive(逆境,不幸). You will never truly know yourself, or the strength of your relationships, until both have been tested by adversity. Such knowledge is a true gift, for all that it is painfully won, and it has been worth more to me than any qualification I ever earned. So given a Time Turner, I would tell my 21-year-old self that personal happiness lies in knowing that life is not a check-list of acquisition or achievement. Your qualifications, your CV, are not your life, though you will meet many people of my age and older who confuse the two. Life is difficult, and complicated, and beyond anyone’s total control, and the humility to know that will enable you to survive its vicissitudes(变迁,兴衰). You might think that I chose my second theme, the importance of imagination, because of the part it played in rebuilding my life, but that is not wholly so. Though I will defend the value of bedtime stories to my last gasp, I have learned to value imagination in a much broader sense. Imagination is not only the uniquely human capacity to envision that which is not, and therefore the fount of all invention and innovation. In its arguably most transformative and revelatory(泄露的,启示的) capacity, it is the power that enables us to empathise with humans whose experiences we have never shared. One of the greatest formative experiences of my life preceded Harry Potter, though it informed much of what I subsequently wrote in those books. This revelation came in the form of one of my earliest day jobs. Though I was sloping off to write stories during my lunch hours, I paid the rent in my early 20s by working at the African research department at Amnesty International’s headquarters in London. There in my little office I read hastily scribbled(潦草写成的) letters smuggled out of totalitarian(极权主义的) regimes by men and women who were risking imprisonment to inform the outside world of what was happening to them. I saw photographs of those who had disappeared without trace, sent to Amnesty by their desperate families and friends. I read the testimony of torture victims and saw pictures of their injuries. I opened handwritten, eye-witness accounts of summary trials and executions, of kidnappings and rapes. Many of my co-workers were ex-political prisoners, people who had been displaced from their homes, or fled into exile, because they had the temerity(鲁莽,冒失,蛮勇) to think independently of their government. Visitors to our office included those who had come to give information, or to try and find out what had happened to those who they had left behind. shall never forget the African torture victim, a young man no older than I was at the time, who had become mentally ill after all he had endured in his homeland. He trembled uncontrollably as he spoke into a video camera about the brutality inflicted upon him. He was a foot taller than I was, and seemed as fragile as a child. I was given the job of escorting him to the Underground Station afterwards, and this man whose life had been shattered by cruelty took my hand with exquisite courtesy, and wished me future happiness. And as long as I live I shall remember walking along an empty corridor and suddenly hearing, from behind a closed door, a scream of pain and horror such as I have never heard since. The door opened, and the researcher poked out her head and told me to run and make a hot drink for the young man sitting with her. She had just given him the news that in retaliation for his own outspokenness against his country’s regime, his mother had been seized and executed. Every day of my working week in my early 20s I was reminded how incredibly fortunate I was, to live in a country with a democratically elected government, where legal representation and a public trial were the rights of everyone. Every day, I saw more evidence about the evils humankind will inflict on their fellow humans, to gain or maintain power. I began to have nightmares, literal nightmares, about some of the things I saw, heard and read. And yet I also learned more about human goodness at Amnesty International than I had ever known before. Amnesty mobilises thousands of people who have never been tortured or imprisoned for their beliefs to act on behalf of those who have. The power of human empathy, leading to collective action, saves lives, and frees prisoners. Ordinary people, whose personal well-being and security are assured, join together in huge numbers to save people they do not know, and will never meet. My small participation in that process was one of the most humbling and inspiring experiences of my life. Unlike any other creature on this planet, human beings can learn and understand, without having experienced. They can think themselves into other people’s places. Of course, this is a power, like my brand of fictional magic, that is morally neutral. One might use such an ability to manipulate, or control, just as much as to understand or sympathise. And many prefer not to exercise their imaginations at all. They choose to remain comfortably within the bounds of their own experience, never troubling to wonder how it would feel to have been born other than they are. They can refuse to hear screams or to peer inside cages; they can close their minds and hearts to any suffering that does not touch them personally; they can refuse to know. I might be tempted to envy people who can live that way, except that I do not think they have any fewer nightmares than I do. Choosing to live in narrow spaces can lead to a form of mental agoraphobia(旷野恐惧,广场恐惧), and that brings its own terrors. I think the wilfully unimaginative see more monsters. They are often more afraid. What is more, those who choose not to empathise may enable real monsters. For without ever committing an act of outright evil ourselves, we collude with it, through our own apathy. One of the many things I learned at the end of that Classics corridor down which I ventured at the age of 18, in search of something I could not then define, was this, written by the Greek author Plutarch: What we achieve inwardly will change outer reality. That is an astonishing statement and yet proven a thousand times every day of our lives. It expresses, in part, our inescapable connection with the outside world, the fact that we touch other people’s lives simply by existing. But how much more are you, Harvard graduates of 2008, likely to touch other people’s lives? Your intelligence, your capacity for hard work, the education you have earned and received, give you unique status, and unique responsibilities. Even your nationality sets you apart. The great majority of you belong to the world’s only remaining superpower. The way you vote, the way you live, the way you protest, the pressure you bring to bear on your government, has an impact way beyond your borders. That is your privilege, and your burden. If you choose to use your status and influence to raise your voice on behalf of those who have no voice; if you choose to identify not only with the powerful, but with the powerless; if you retain the ability to imagine yourself into the lives of those who do not have your advantages, then it will not only be your proud families who celebrate your existence, but thousands and millions of people whose reality you have helped to change. We do not need magic to transform the world, we carry all the power we need inside ourselves already: we have the power to imagine better. I am nearly finished. I have one last hope for you, which is something that I already had at 21. The friends with whom I sat on graduation day have been my friends for life. They are my children’s godparents, the people to whom I’ve been able to turn in times of real trouble, people who have been kind enough not to sue me when I’ve used their names for Death Eaters. At our graduation we were bound by enormous affection, by our shared experience of a time that could never come again, and, of course, by the knowledge that we held certain photographic evidence that would be exceptionally valuable if any of us ran for Prime Minister. So today, I can wish you nothing better than similar friendships. And tomorrow, I hope that even if you remember not a single word of mine, you remember those of Seneca, another of those old Romans I met when I fled down the Classics corridor, in retreat from career ladders, in search of ancient wisdom: As is a tale, so is life: not how long it is, but how good it is, is what matters. I wish you all very good lives. Thank you very much.
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