In the face of the infinity of the world, the knowledge in our short life is negligible.
In the face of the infinity of the world, the knowledge in our short life is negligible.

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South African writer Gordimer grew up in a wealthy family. At the age of 6, Gordimer dreamed of being a ballet dancer, and on a rainy afternoon, she signed up to join the Little Ballet Company. However, due to her weak physique, Gordimer was very uncomfortable with the intensity of ballet activities, and she had to give up her pursuit of ballet as she fell ill every once in a while.
At the age of 8, the doctor diagnosed Gordimer's physical condition not suitable for school life. Gordimer could only interrupt his childhood studies and recuperate at home all day long. Gordimer wept silently whenever he thought that his life would be nothing. One day at noon, Gordimer finally couldn't bear to sneak out. Suddenly, she was attracted by a wooden sign: Springs Library. Gordimer walks into the library and sees a dilapidated boat in the ocean in a comic book. But no matter how hard the boatman tried, he couldn't catch up with the powerful speedboat in front of him. Gordimer couldn't help but say: "This boat, like me, has dreams but not enough strength. How can it swim on the vast ocean like a speedboat?"

"That's not true." A librarian walked up to Gordimer and said to her, "The so-called impossible in life may be surpassed and subverted. As long as you have the courage to surpass yourself, a thought is a new one. hope."
Gordimer suddenly realized that one way is impossible, and there is another way. As long as he does not despair, he can surpass the impossible. Since then, Gordimer has fallen in love with literature, and she has been stuck in the library and soaked in books all day. When the library bell rang, she hid under the table, and when the library locked the door, she was free to suck the nourishment of knowledge. At the age of 13, Gordimer published a fable, "The Pursuit of Visible Gold," in the children's edition of the Johannesburg "Sunday Express" and began a frantic writing career. After 40 years of hard work, Gordimer finally won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1991, creating an "impossible" miracle.


South African writer Gordimer grew up in a wealthy family. At the age of 6, Gordimer dreamed of being a ballet dancer, and on a rainy afternoon, she signed up to join the Little Ballet Company. However, due to her weak physique, Gordimer was very uncomfortable with the intensity of ballet activities, and she had to give up her pursuit of ballet as she fell ill every once in a while.
At the age of 8, the doctor diagnosed Gordimer's physical condition not suitable for school life. Gordimer could only interrupt his childhood studies and recuperate at home all day long. Gordimer wept silently whenever he thought that his life would be nothing. One day at noon, Gordimer finally couldn't bear to sneak out. Suddenly, she was attracted by a wooden sign: Springs Library. Gordimer walks into the library and sees a dilapidated boat in the ocean in a comic book. But no matter how hard the boatman tried, he couldn't catch up with the powerful speedboat in front of him. Gordimer couldn't help but say: "This boat, like me, has dreams but not enough strength. How can it swim on the vast ocean like a speedboat?"

"That's not true." A librarian walked up to Gordimer and said to her, "The so-called impossible in life may be surpassed and subverted. As long as you have the courage to surpass yourself, a thought is a new one. hope."
Gordimer suddenly realized that one way is impossible, and there is another way. As long as he does not despair, he can surpass the impossible. Since then, Gordimer has fallen in love with literature, and she has been stuck in the library and soaked in books all day. When the library bell rang, she hid under the table, and when the library locked the door, she was free to suck the nourishment of knowledge. At the age of 13, Gordimer published a fable, "The Pursuit of Visible Gold," in the children's edition of the Johannesburg "Sunday Express" and began a frantic writing career. After 40 years of hard work, Gordimer finally won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1991, creating an "impossible" miracle.

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