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سلام مهمون عزیز امیدوارم حالت خوب باشه. تا حالا شده خلاصهی یه رمانی که قبلاً خوندیش یادت باشه؛ اما اسم اثر رو فراموش کرده باشی؟! اگه این مشکل رو داری اصلاً نگران نباش، کافیه توی انجمن رمانیک ثبت نام کنی و خلاصه رمان رو توی این تاپیک بگی. اینطوری با یه تیر دو نشون زدی هم اسم رمانی که دنبالش بودی و پیدا میکنی، هم به خانواده بزرگ رمانیک میپیوندی و حالا میتونی کلی رمان جدید بخونی و اگه خواستی هم خودت دست به قلم بشی.
دوست داری اخبار طنز بنویسی؟ و باعث خندوندن کاربرا بشی؟ برای خبرنگار شدن بپر اینجا.
علاقه داری به نویسندهها کمک کنی تا اشکالات نگارشی خودشون رو برطرف کنن؟ برای ویراستار شدن کلیک کن.
به نظارت علاقه داری؟ دوست داری به نویسندهها توی پیشبرد اثرشون کمک کنی و ناظرباشی؟ آموزش هم داریم. کلیک کن^^
تو هم میتونی وبتون و مانگا و مانهوا ادیت بزنی! برای ادیتور شدن کلیک کن
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به طراحی جلد علاقه داری؟ دوست داری برای آثار یه جلد با خلاقیت خودت طراحی کنی؟ کلیک کن
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<blockquote data-quote="rahavard_rm" data-source="post: 55990" data-attributes="member: 481"><p><strong>متن انگلیسی داستان:</strong></p><h2>Secret of All Triumphs</h2><p>Life is a series of sacrifices. A parent will go without for the sake of their child. A person will work around the clock for the benefit of their family. A soldier will sacrifice for their country. A religious soul will sacrifice for their beliefs.</p><p>Sometimes though, sacrifice takes an unusual form. Take for example the story of Amar Bharati.</p><p>Until 1970 Amar was an average Joe. He was a middleclass Indian man with a normal life. He had a job, a home, a wife and three children. One morning everything changed.</p><p>Amar had found god. The Hindu god Shiva to be precise. Amar left his family and all the trappings of the material world to wander the back roads of India. He became a Sadhu - an Indian holy man.</p><p>He wore only a simple robe and carried nothing but his trusty trident. For three years he wandered and dedicated himself to god. He decided it wasn’t enough. He still felt trapped by the pleasures of the physical. He still felt saddened by man’s inhumanity to others.</p><p>Amar wanted to do something to symbolize his separation from the material world. He longed to do something in the name of peace. In a symbolic act of sacrifice, Amar raised his right arm to the Heavens. He kept it there for four decades.</p><p>His arm is now withered from being held in the same position above his head all these years. If he now decided to use it, he wouldn’t be able to. It has become a useless piece of bone.</p><p>At first, Amar experienced intense pain and great discomfort from keeping his arm aloft. He now has no feelings in the lost limb.</p><p>Amar has no regrets. His actions have become an inspiration for Shiva worshippers across India. Many other Sadhus have imitated Amar. They have raised their own arms in a show of solidarity.</p><p>Like it or not, such an extreme sacrifice also took great perseverance. The famous author Victor Hugo once said, “Perseverance, secret of all triumphs.”</p><p>World record breaking runner Glenn Cunningham knew a thing or two about perseverance and triumph. On a cold morning in 1916, seven-year-old Cunningham’s two-mile trip to school ended in a tragedy which would define his life.</p><p>The small boy from Kansas arrived at school early. He was not alone. His brothers Floyd, Raymond and sister Letha were with him.</p><p>There was snow on the ground. Letha decided to play outside. The brothers decided to stay indoors. Floyd put some wood in the stove to warm their bones. He poured what he thought was kerosene into the stove to light the fire. It was actually gasoline.</p><p>A terrible explosion ripped through the room. Fierce flames engulfed the brothers and smoke filled their eyes. Letha pulled the door open for the brothers to escape the fire.</p><p>Glenn was alive, but his legs were badly burnt. Raymond had escaped unscathed, but Floyd was in a very bad shape.</p><p>The group of shell-shocked children managed to make the long journey home. Glenn remembers thinking, “Our parents will know what to do.”</p><p>Barely alive and inches from death, Glenn and Floyd were rushed straight to bed. Glenn remembers not being able to stop screaming. He heard the doctor tell his mother Floyd would not make it. He also said if Glenn survived he would never walk again. The doctor suggested amputation.</p><p>Glenn had other ideas. He was determined to keep both his legs and his life.</p><p>He remembers shouting at his mother, “I’m not going to be an invalid. I will walk!” She kissed him and said, “I know.”</p><p>Floyd tragically died, but Glenn survived. He had some hard days ahead of him. He was either confined to his bed or wheelchair. One day in his garden, frustration got the better of Glenn. He threw himself from his chair and pulled himself across the grass. He crawled to a fence and pulled himself up. He repeated this exercise every day. Through pure determination, he began to stand on his own two feet.</p><p>Spurred on by another kid teasing him he’d never walk again, Glenn not only began to walk, he started to run. Glenn entered a school race and won against older students.</p><p>What should have been his crowning glory, ended with a brutal beating from his father. Glenn’s dad thought sports was a form of showing off. He told Glenn to never run competitively again.</p><p>Glenn disobeyed his father. He had two healthy legs and wanted to use them. He kept running and chasing his dreams. He broke records at his High-School and Kansas University for the fastest mile. And then in February 1934, he ran the world’s fastest indoor mile in Madison Square Garden. In four minutes and eight seconds, Glenn proved that determination and perseverance are everything.</p><p>In later life, Glenn would teach children the secret to his success. He told them, “Belief influences action, and action influences belief. Act as if it were impossible to fail.”</p><p>On the other side of the world, Japanese soldier Hiroo Onoda also refused to fail. He believed in perseverance and discipline. He believed in following orders. And he believed in carrying out his duty.</p><p>When Japan surrendered on September 2, 1945, it marked the end of World War Two. Not knowing the war was over, Onoda spent another 29 years in the jungle.</p><p>When the global conflict ended, Onoda was on Lubang Island with three other soldiers. They had orders to never surrender. They vowed to obey with honor.</p><p>The four military men continued to wage war. In 1950 one of the soldiers could not go on. He left the jungle, returned to Japan and told the world about his neverending war.</p><p>One of Onoda’s remaining comrades died of natural causes, the other was killed in a 1972 clash with Filipino soldiers.</p><p>Over the years, Onoda killed over 30 people on the island who he mistakenly believed to be enemy soldiers.</p><p>For nearly three decades the loyal soldier refused to believe the war had ended. The Japanese government sent search parties and dropped leaflets by air to tell him the war was over. Onoda thought it was a trick by the US government to get him to surrender.</p><p>He explained, “The leaflets they dropped were filled with mistakes so I judged it was a plot by the Americans.”</p><p>Over the years, as Onoda continued his war against the locals, various groups of Japanese went searching for him. He suspected they were prisoners of war being forced to trick him into surrender. He stayed hidden.</p><p>Finally in 1974, a young Japanese adventurer named Norio Suzuki heard that Onoda was still in the jungle. Suzuki traveled to Lubang to find him. In just four days, he succeeded where everyone else had failed. He found Onoda and befriended him. He explained to him the war was really over. Suzuki tried to bring Onoda back, but Onoda refused. He could not forget the words of his commanding officer, Major Taniguchi. He said, “It may take three years, it may take five, but whatever happens, we’ll come back for you.” Suzuki knew that Taniguchi was the only one who could reason with Onoda, so he tracked him down. Taniguchi had become a bookseller in Japan, but when he heard about Onoda, he kept his word and returned to the Philippines to get him. In a face to face encounter, Taniguchi ordered the old soldier to finally stand down. With his uniform in tatters and tears in his eyes, Onoda obeyed. He saluted the flag of his country and handed over his gun and sword.</p><p>Onoda explained, “Every Japanese soldier was prepared for death. As an intelligence officer, I was ordered to conduct guerrilla warfare and not to die. I became an</p><p>officer and I received an order. If I could not carry it out, I would feel shame.”</p><p>Onoda was pardoned by the Philippine government, but many of the local people in Lubang could not forgive him. His blind obedience to military orders and loyalty to his country resulted in the needless death of their friends and family members.</p><p>Onoda returned to Japan and was given a hero’s welcome. However, he struggled to settle back in the country he had sacrificed over three decades of his life for. He believed that post World War Two Japan had taken a turn for the worse. The values of his homeland were no longer his values. Onoda then moved to Brazil and became a farmer. In 1984, he returned to Japan and opened several nature survival camps for children.</p><p>Onoda died in 2014. He is remembered by some as foolhardy, but by others as a symbol of loyalty, sacrifice, and perseverance</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="rahavard_rm, post: 55990, member: 481"] [B]متن انگلیسی داستان:[/B] [HEADING=1]Secret of All Triumphs[/HEADING] Life is a series of sacrifices. A parent will go without for the sake of their child. A person will work around the clock for the benefit of their family. A soldier will sacrifice for their country. A religious soul will sacrifice for their beliefs. Sometimes though, sacrifice takes an unusual form. Take for example the story of Amar Bharati. Until 1970 Amar was an average Joe. He was a middleclass Indian man with a normal life. He had a job, a home, a wife and three children. One morning everything changed. Amar had found god. The Hindu god Shiva to be precise. Amar left his family and all the trappings of the material world to wander the back roads of India. He became a Sadhu - an Indian holy man. He wore only a simple robe and carried nothing but his trusty trident. For three years he wandered and dedicated himself to god. He decided it wasn’t enough. He still felt trapped by the pleasures of the physical. He still felt saddened by man’s inhumanity to others. Amar wanted to do something to symbolize his separation from the material world. He longed to do something in the name of peace. In a symbolic act of sacrifice, Amar raised his right arm to the Heavens. He kept it there for four decades. His arm is now withered from being held in the same position above his head all these years. If he now decided to use it, he wouldn’t be able to. It has become a useless piece of bone. At first, Amar experienced intense pain and great discomfort from keeping his arm aloft. He now has no feelings in the lost limb. Amar has no regrets. His actions have become an inspiration for Shiva worshippers across India. Many other Sadhus have imitated Amar. They have raised their own arms in a show of solidarity. Like it or not, such an extreme sacrifice also took great perseverance. The famous author Victor Hugo once said, “Perseverance, secret of all triumphs.” World record breaking runner Glenn Cunningham knew a thing or two about perseverance and triumph. On a cold morning in 1916, seven-year-old Cunningham’s two-mile trip to school ended in a tragedy which would define his life. The small boy from Kansas arrived at school early. He was not alone. His brothers Floyd, Raymond and sister Letha were with him. There was snow on the ground. Letha decided to play outside. The brothers decided to stay indoors. Floyd put some wood in the stove to warm their bones. He poured what he thought was kerosene into the stove to light the fire. It was actually gasoline. A terrible explosion ripped through the room. Fierce flames engulfed the brothers and smoke filled their eyes. Letha pulled the door open for the brothers to escape the fire. Glenn was alive, but his legs were badly burnt. Raymond had escaped unscathed, but Floyd was in a very bad shape. The group of shell-shocked children managed to make the long journey home. Glenn remembers thinking, “Our parents will know what to do.” Barely alive and inches from death, Glenn and Floyd were rushed straight to bed. Glenn remembers not being able to stop screaming. He heard the doctor tell his mother Floyd would not make it. He also said if Glenn survived he would never walk again. The doctor suggested amputation. Glenn had other ideas. He was determined to keep both his legs and his life. He remembers shouting at his mother, “I’m not going to be an invalid. I will walk!” She kissed him and said, “I know.” Floyd tragically died, but Glenn survived. He had some hard days ahead of him. He was either confined to his bed or wheelchair. One day in his garden, frustration got the better of Glenn. He threw himself from his chair and pulled himself across the grass. He crawled to a fence and pulled himself up. He repeated this exercise every day. Through pure determination, he began to stand on his own two feet. Spurred on by another kid teasing him he’d never walk again, Glenn not only began to walk, he started to run. Glenn entered a school race and won against older students. What should have been his crowning glory, ended with a brutal beating from his father. Glenn’s dad thought sports was a form of showing off. He told Glenn to never run competitively again. Glenn disobeyed his father. He had two healthy legs and wanted to use them. He kept running and chasing his dreams. He broke records at his High-School and Kansas University for the fastest mile. And then in February 1934, he ran the world’s fastest indoor mile in Madison Square Garden. In four minutes and eight seconds, Glenn proved that determination and perseverance are everything. In later life, Glenn would teach children the secret to his success. He told them, “Belief influences action, and action influences belief. Act as if it were impossible to fail.” On the other side of the world, Japanese soldier Hiroo Onoda also refused to fail. He believed in perseverance and discipline. He believed in following orders. And he believed in carrying out his duty. When Japan surrendered on September 2, 1945, it marked the end of World War Two. Not knowing the war was over, Onoda spent another 29 years in the jungle. When the global conflict ended, Onoda was on Lubang Island with three other soldiers. They had orders to never surrender. They vowed to obey with honor. The four military men continued to wage war. In 1950 one of the soldiers could not go on. He left the jungle, returned to Japan and told the world about his neverending war. One of Onoda’s remaining comrades died of natural causes, the other was killed in a 1972 clash with Filipino soldiers. Over the years, Onoda killed over 30 people on the island who he mistakenly believed to be enemy soldiers. For nearly three decades the loyal soldier refused to believe the war had ended. The Japanese government sent search parties and dropped leaflets by air to tell him the war was over. Onoda thought it was a trick by the US government to get him to surrender. He explained, “The leaflets they dropped were filled with mistakes so I judged it was a plot by the Americans.” Over the years, as Onoda continued his war against the locals, various groups of Japanese went searching for him. He suspected they were prisoners of war being forced to trick him into surrender. He stayed hidden. Finally in 1974, a young Japanese adventurer named Norio Suzuki heard that Onoda was still in the jungle. Suzuki traveled to Lubang to find him. In just four days, he succeeded where everyone else had failed. He found Onoda and befriended him. He explained to him the war was really over. Suzuki tried to bring Onoda back, but Onoda refused. He could not forget the words of his commanding officer, Major Taniguchi. He said, “It may take three years, it may take five, but whatever happens, we’ll come back for you.” Suzuki knew that Taniguchi was the only one who could reason with Onoda, so he tracked him down. Taniguchi had become a bookseller in Japan, but when he heard about Onoda, he kept his word and returned to the Philippines to get him. In a face to face encounter, Taniguchi ordered the old soldier to finally stand down. With his uniform in tatters and tears in his eyes, Onoda obeyed. He saluted the flag of his country and handed over his gun and sword. Onoda explained, “Every Japanese soldier was prepared for death. As an intelligence officer, I was ordered to conduct guerrilla warfare and not to die. I became an officer and I received an order. If I could not carry it out, I would feel shame.” Onoda was pardoned by the Philippine government, but many of the local people in Lubang could not forgive him. His blind obedience to military orders and loyalty to his country resulted in the needless death of their friends and family members. Onoda returned to Japan and was given a hero’s welcome. However, he struggled to settle back in the country he had sacrificed over three decades of his life for. He believed that post World War Two Japan had taken a turn for the worse. The values of his homeland were no longer his values. Onoda then moved to Brazil and became a farmer. In 1984, he returned to Japan and opened several nature survival camps for children. Onoda died in 2014. He is remembered by some as foolhardy, but by others as a symbol of loyalty, sacrifice, and perseverance [/QUOTE]
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