书虫抢劫读后感(书虫 劫机的读后感)

发布时间: 2023-05-30 01:39:09 来源: 励志妙语 栏目: 读后感 点击: 93

书虫读后感书虫任意4本,英语读后感,100词左右,六年级水平,每句后面要有中文【1】《爱的教育》读后感,在这纷纭的世界里,爱究竟...

书虫抢劫读后感(书虫 劫机的读后感)

书虫读后感

书虫任意4本,英语读后感,100词左右,六年级水平,每句后面要有中文
【1】
《爱的教育》读后感
在这纷纭的世界里,爱究竟是什么?
读《爱的教育》,我走入安利柯的生活,我走入安利柯的生活,目睹了他们是怎样学习,生活,怎样去爱.在感动中,我发现爱中包含着对于生活的追求. 如果爱是奔腾的热血,是跳跃的心灵,那么,我认为这就是对于国家的崇高的爱.也许它听起来很"口号",但作为一个有良知的人,这种爱应牢牢植入我们的心田.当读到安利柯描绘的一幅幅意大利人民为国炸断了双腿,淋弹死守家园的动人场面时,我不禁想到我们祖国大地上也曾浸透了中华儿女的血.同样是为了自己国家的光明,同样可以抛弃一切地厮拼,我被这至高无上的爱的境界折服.我不需为祖国抛头颅了,但祖国需要我们的还有很多.爱之所以伟大,是因为它不仅仅对个人而言,更是以整个民族为荣的尊严与情绪.
《爱的教育》中,把爱比成很多东西,确是这样又不仅仅是这些.我想,"爱是什么"不会有明确的答案,但我已经完成了对于爱的思考——爱是博大的,无穷的,伟大的力量.
In this translation-theories world, what love is? Read the love of education ", I walk into amway ko life, I walk into amway ko life, witnessed how they study, live, how to love. In touched, I find love contain the for the pursuit of living. If love is pentium blood, is bouncing heart, so, I think this is for the country's lofty love. Maybe it sounds very "slogan", but as a conscientious person, this kind of love should be firmly implanted into our hearts. When I read amway ko portrayed in the Italian people for the kingdom ZhaDuan plenties legs cling homes, drench play tableau, I can't help but think our motherland earth had saturated with Chinese people's blood. Is also to their country's light, also may discard all fellow spelling, and I was the supreme love border subdue. I don't need for motherland shed their blood, but the motherland needs our lot. Love is great, because it not only to the individual character, but also to the whole nation is proud of dignity and emotions. "love education of love than into many things, it is so and is not only these. I thought," what is love "there will be no clear answer, but I have already finished for love thinking -- love is great, infinite, great strength.
【2】
《钢铁是怎样炼成的》读后感
人应该怎样地活着才有意义呢?保尔·柯察金用行动回答了这一问题.保尔他残废后,毫不灰心,还要顽强的学习,努力工作,并且开始了文学创造.后来双目失明了,这对于已经瘫痪的人来说,要是一场多么沉重的打击呀!可是他却毅然拿起笔来,摸索着,坚持写作,每写一个字,他都需要付出极其艰苦的劳动.经过顽强的努力,他终于成功的写出了小说《在暴风雨里诞生》的前几章.读着,读着,我也禁不住热泪盈眶,心潮澎湃.保尔·柯察金那坚毅的脸庞,仿佛就在我的眼前.保尔这样一个普通的战士,竟有比钢铁还要坚强的意志,这是什么力量在鼓舞着他呢?我读完这本书,在书中我终于明白了,这是那最伟大,最壮丽的共产主义事业在召呼着他创造奇迹,这就是他顽强地与疾病作斗争的动力.
People should how to live meaningful? Pavel korchagin use action answered this question Paul. He was crippled, did not lose heart, but also stubborn study, work hard, and start the literary creation. Blind in both eyes later, this to have paralyzed people, if a how heavy blow! But he was resolutely picked up a pen to and fumbled for, adhere to the writing, each to write a word, he takes a very hard labor. After strenuous efforts, he finally successful wrote novel in the storm the birth of the preceding chapters. Reading, reading, and I couldn't help to tears, surging. Pavel korchagin the manly face, as if in front of my eyes. Paul such a common soldier, unexpectedly is than steel even a strong will, and this is what forces in inspired him? I finished reading the book, in the book I finally understand, it is the greatest, most magnificent communism cause in called call him create wonders, this is his tenacious struggle against disease power.
【3】
《鲁宾逊漂流记》读后感
春节放假,我读了笛福的《鲁滨逊漂流记》。我深深地被这本书所吸引,它让我体会到了鲁滨逊那惊人的毅力和百折不挠的精神。
看完这本书,使我深受感动。一个人身陷绝境,竟能这样对生活充满信心,勇敢地面对生活,创造生活,实在是难能可贵的。使我认识到,人不论何时何地,不管遇到多大的困难,都不能被困难吓倒,要勇敢地面对困难,克服困难,始终保持一种积极向上、从容乐观的心态,去面对和挑战厄运。只有这样,才能像鲁宾逊那样,永远是一个胜利者。
The Spring Festival holiday, I read a Defoe's "of Robinson Crusoe. I am deeply attracted by the book, it lets me realize Robinson the surprising perseverance and indomitable spirit.
Read this book, that I was deeply touched. A personal dire straits, unexpectedly can do this life is full of confidence, bravely facing life, create life, true is valuable. Make me realize that people regardless of when and where no matter much difficulty, can be difficult intimidated, bravely facing difficulties and overcome difficulties, and always maintain a positive, optimistic attitude, poised to face challenges and bad luck. Only in this way can we like Robinson, that is always a winner. 英文的暮光之城读后感
Seventeen year old Bella moves from sunny Phoenix to rainy Forks, Washington, but the new school is the least of her troubles. She soon finds herself attracted to a mysterious boy who seems to be infuriated by her mere presence. Soon, however, the truth comes out and the two become inseparable. Bella never dreamed she'd fall in love, let alone with a vampire named Edward. Throughout the novel, he fights to save her, from himself and from others.
Those who will enjoy this novel most are teens and adults looking for a good fantasy and adolescent romance. This is the novel that took Harry Potter's place on the best seller's list. The world of magic and wizards may very well be replaced with the world of vampires created by Stephenie Meyer in her Twilight Saga.
For me, the novel didn't seem to be written particularly well. The plot is simple, characters are predictable and static, and it takes forever for the action to start. That all being said, I think the novel was at least average and worth a read. I will continue to read the rest in the series, but I doubt I'll re-read them once I'm done

书虫 劫机的读后感

要英文的,把那大致内容介绍一下,再加点自己的感想
About Jane Eyre
Love versus Autonomy
Jane Eyre is very much the story of a quest to be loved. Jane searches, not just for romantic love, but also for a sense of being valued, of belonging. Thus Jane says to Helen Burns: “to gain some real affection from you, or Miss Temple, or any other whom I truly love, I would willingly submit to have the bone of my arm broken, or to let a bull toss me, or to stand behind a kicking horse, and let it dash its hoof at my chest” (Chapter 8). Yet, over the course of the book, Jane must learn how to gain love without sacrificing and harming herself in the process.
Her fear of losing her autonomy motivates her refusal of Rochester’s marriage proposal. Jane believes that “marrying” Rochester while he remains legally tied to Bertha would mean rendering herself a mistress and sacrificing her own integrity for the sake of emotional gratification. On the other hand, her life at Moor House tests her in the opposite manner. There, she enjoys economic independence and engages in worthwhile and useful work, teaching the poor; yet she lacks emotional sustenance. Although St. John proposes marriage, offering her a partnership built around a common purpose, Jane knows their marriage would remain loveless.
Nonetheless, the events of Jane’s stay at Moor House are necessary tests of Jane’s autonomy. Only after proving her self-sufficiency to herself can she marry Rochester and not be asymmetrically dependent upon him as her “master.” The marriage can be one between equals. As Jane says: “I am my husband’s life as fully as he is mine. . . . To be together is for us to be at once as free as in solitude, as gay as in company. . . . We are precisely suited in character—perfect concord is the result” (Chapter 38).
Motifs
Motifs are recurring structures, contrasts, or literary devices that can help to develop and inform the text’s major themes.
Fire and Ice
Fire and ice appear throughout Jane Eyre. The former represents Jane’s passions, anger, and spirit, while the latter symbolizes the oppressive forces trying to extinguish Jane’s vitality. Fire is also a metaphor for Jane, as the narrative repeatedly associates her with images of fire, brightness, and warmth. In Chapter 4, she likens her mind to “a ridge of lighted heath, alive, glancing, devouring.” We can recognize Jane’s kindred spirits by their similar links to fire; thus we read of Rochester’s “flaming and flashing” eyes (Chapter 25). After he has been blinded, his face is compared to “a lamp quenched, waiting to be relit” (Chapter 37).
Images of ice and cold, often appearing in association with barren landscapes or seascapes, symbolize emotional desolation, loneliness, or even death. The “death-white realms” of the arctic that Bewick describes in his History of British Birds parallel Jane’s physical and spiritual isolation at Gateshead (Chapter 1). Lowood’s freezing temperatures—for example, the frozen pitchers of water that greet the girls each morning—mirror Jane’s sense of psychological exile. After the interrupted wedding to Rochester, Jane describes her state of mind: “A Christmas frost had come at mid-summer: a white December storm had whirled over June; ice glazed the ripe apples, drifts crushed the blowing roses; on hay-field and corn-field lay a frozen shroud . . . and the woods, which twelve hours since waved leafy and fragrant as groves between the tropics, now spread, waste, wild, and white as pine-forests in wintry Norway. My hopes were all dead. . . .” (Chapter 26). Finally, at Moor House, St. John’s frigidity and stiffness are established through comparisons with ice and cold rock. Jane writes: “By degrees, he acquired a certain influence over me that took away my liberty of mind. . . . I fell under a freezing spell”(Chapter 34). When St. John proposes marriage to Jane, she concludes that “s his curate, his comrade, all would be right. . . . But as his wife—at his side always, and always restrained, and always checked—forced to keep the fire of my nature continually low, to compel it to burn inwardly and never utter a cry, though the imprisoned flame consumed vital after vital—this would be unendurable” (Chapter 34).
Symbols
Symbols are objects, characters, figures, or colors used to represent abstract ideas or concepts.
Bertha Mason
Bertha Mason is a complex presence in Jane Eyre. She impedes Jane’s happiness, but she also catalyses the growth of Jane’s self-understanding. The mystery surrounding Bertha establishes suspense and terror to the plot and the atmosphere. Further, Bertha serves as a remnant and reminder of Rochester’s youthful libertinism.
Yet Bertha can also be interpreted as a symbol. Some critics have read her as a statement about the way Britain feared and psychologically “locked away” the other cultures it encountered at the height of its imperialism. Others have seen her as a symbolic representation of the “trapped” Victorian wife, who is expected never to travel or work outside the house and becomes ever more frenzied as she finds no outlet for her frustration and anxiety. Within the story, then, Bertha’s insanity could serve as a warning to Jane of what complete surrender to Rochester could bring about.
One could also see Bertha as a manifestation of Jane’s subconscious feelings—specifically, of her rage against oppressive social and gender norms. Jane declares her love for Rochester, but she also secretly fears marriage to him and feels the need to rage against the imprisonment it could become for her. Jane never manifests this fear or anger, but Bertha does. Thus Bertha tears up the bridal veil, and it is Bertha’s existence that indeed stops the wedding from going forth. And, when Thornfield comes to represent a state of servitude and submission for Jane, Bertha burns it to the ground. Throughout the novel, Jane describes her inner spirit as fiery, her inner landscape as a “ridge of lighted heath” (Chapter 4). Bertha seems to be the outward manifestation of Jane’s interior fire. Bertha expresses the feelings that Jane must keep in check.
The Red-Room
The red-room can be viewed as a symbol of what Jane must overcome in her struggles to find freedom, happiness, and a sense of belonging. In the red-room, Jane’s position of exile and imprisonment first becomes clear. Although Jane is eventually freed from the room, she continues to be socially ostracized, financially trapped, and excluded from love; her sense of independence and her freedom of self-expression are constantly threatened.
The red-room’s importance as a symbol continues throughout the novel. It reappears as a memory whenever Jane makes a connection between her current situation and that first feeling of being ridiculed. Thus she recalls the room when she is humiliated at Lowood. She also thinks of the room on the night that she decides to leave Thornfield after Rochester has tried to convince her to become an undignified mistress. Her destitute condition upon her departure from Thornfield also threatens emotional and intellectual imprisonment, as does St. John’s marriage proposal. Only after Jane has asserted herself, gained financial independence, and found a spiritual family—which turns out to be her real family—can she wed Rochester and find freedom in and through marriage.
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