Danh ngôn của Walter Mosley
My father always taught by telling stories about his experiences. His lessons were about morality and art and what insects and birds and human beings had in common. He told me what it meant to be a man and to be a Black man. He taught me about love and responsibility, about beauty, and how to make gumbo.
My father always taught by telling stories about his experiences. His lessons were about morality and art and what insects and birds and human beings had in common. He told me what it meant to be a man and to be a Black man. He taught me about love and responsibility, about beauty, and how to make gumbo.
Cha tôi luôn dạy học bằng cách kể những câu chuyện về trải nghiệm của ông. Những bài học của ông là về đạo đức và nghệ thuật cũng như những điểm chung của côn trùng, chim chóc và con người. Anh ấy nói với tôi ý nghĩa của việc trở thành một người đàn ông và trở thành một người da đen. Anh ấy dạy tôi về tình yêu và trách nhiệm, về cái đẹp và cách làm kẹo cao su.
Tác giả: Walter Mosley | Chuyên mục: Beauty | Sứ mệnh: [6]
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Các câu danh ngôn khác của cùng tác giả: Walter Mosley
- I think that people don't know how to do anything anymore. My father was a janitor. He could take a car apart and put it back together. He could build a house in the back yard. Today, if you ask people what they know, they say, 'I know how to hire someone.'
- Poetry teaches us music, metaphor, condensation and specificity.
- When you deal with a person who's experiencing dementia, you can see where they're struggling with knowledge. You can see what they forget completely, what they forget but they know what they once knew. You can tell how they're trying to remember.
- Losing my parents really set me adrift in more ways than one. It's not just losing them. It's losing the possibility of family.
Các câu danh ngôn khác của cùng chuyên mục: Beauty
- From afar, we know we have a great land, dominated by so many different forms of terrain, and we've got amazing and unique animals, and the climate, the beauty and the brutality of it. But I think the detail, and the intimate element of it, I think we're kind of a little bit lost on it.
- I think we need to take time out in our lives to realign ourselves with country, to realign ourselves with what we have and the beauty of what we have. I think we've all just got caught up in this way of life that doesn't allow us to be intimate with it any more.
- The beauty of our country is that when it was founded that they took some time to lay out civil liberties in the first 10 Amendments - the Bill of Rights. I'm a firm believer in those civil liberties and the ability to have your own opinion.
- I think Islam has been hijacked by the idea that all Muslims are terrorists; that Islam is about hate, about war, about jihad - I think that hijacks the spirituality and beauty that exists within Islam. I believe in allowing Islam to be seen in context and in its entirety and being judged on what it really is, not what you think it is.
- My father was a scientist and his colleagues were into pathology and microbiology, and study of viruses and how it spreads and mutates, so I understand the beauty with which nature works and more beautifully how our immune systems work.