求关于梦想的英文演讲稿
Ladies and Gentlemen , Good afternoon! I’m very glad to stand here and give you a short speech.
Do you have a gole in our life?Do you often dream your own dream ?Don’t forget one sentence following :
Whenever you may go ,you can’t success without resolution!
Ideals are like the stars we never reach in the sky,but like most mariners,we can chart our course by them .George Eliot ever said that what makes life cheery is the want of motive.Aim is the beacon,without it ,there is no seacure direction, without a direction ,there is no life!
However,maybe we fail in the way to our aims,but we couldnot give up .We must accept disappointment and the failure , because there is nothing like a dream to create the future and build up our body .That likes what Hamin Garland said in his poem:
Do you fear the force of the wind?
The slash of the rain?
Go face and fight them .
Be savarage again.
Go hungry and cold like the wolf.
Go wade like the crame.
The palims of your hand will thicken.
The skin of your cheeks will tan.
You’ll grow ragged and weary and swarthy.
Do you’ll walk like a man !
At last ,I want to say .All our dreams can come ture,if we have the courage to persue them.
Thank you!
有关梦想的英语演讲稿
-Courage is the most important virtue-
By Anne Ju
Courage is the most important of the virtues, because without it, no other virtue can be practiced consistently, said Maya Angelou to members of this year's graduating class.
Jason Koski/University Photography Maya Angelou speaks during Senior Convocation, May 24 in Schoellkopf Stadium. You can be kind and true and fair and generous and just, and even merciful, occasionally, Angelou said. But to be that thing time after time, you have to really have courage. A Pulitzer Prize-nominated writer, actress and civil rights activist (a colleague of Martin Luther King), Angelou addressed the Class of 2008 May 24 on a near-perfect, breezy afternoon in a crowded Schoellkopf Stadium. Angelou, who celebrates her 80th birthday this year, used a cane to walk slowly to the lectern, and she sat for most of her talk. (I won't trouble you to tell you why, she said.) She exhorted the graduates to pay tribute to their ancestors by courageously making the world better. She asked them to take a moment, with gratitude, to reflect on their ancestors -- whether from Europe, Asia, Africa or elsewhere -- and the persecution and hardship they faced, and how they had wanted better for their children and grandchildren. It is up to you. So much is up to you, she said, calling it no small matter to be graduating from Cornell. Taking up the theme of courage, Angelou challenged her audience to try for a week not using any racial pejoratives, sexual bashing terms, or to laugh at others' expense. She assured her listeners that they will like themselves more. She confessed herself to leaving a room when such words are used, because they were created to dehumanize. That was the message Angelou left the audience with, as she recited the words of a song she wrote after witnessing a stranger spit on two young people on a London street corner. She said it was the first time she had recited the work to a graduating class. If you know that youth is dying on the run and my daughter trades dope stories with your son we'd better see what all our fearing and our jeering and our crying and our lying brought about. Take time out. Angelou's witty and wise, yet affable, talk inspired Dawn Randall, a graduating MBA from the Johnson School who grew up reading Angelou's work. It was very moving, very powerful, she said.