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《老人与海》读后感50字左右

时间:2015-01-11 14:20

老人与海的读后感五十字

《老人与海》为我们掲示一个道理:人不是为了失败而生的,一个人可以被毁灭,但不能被打败。

这本书的主人公充满信心、锲而不舍的精神,正是人们所需向他学习的一点。

可以不

作文:老人与海读后感,50字左右

《老人与海》为我们掲示一个道理:人不是为了失败而生的,一个人可以被毁灭,但不能被打败。

这本书的主人公充满信心、锲而不舍的精神,正是人们所需向他学习的一点。

(50字左右)

老人与海读后感50字

1The Old Man and the Sea is the most classic and concernful novel of Hemmingway's. Its compendious expression and exciting fighting narrative attracts numerous readers. The author repeatedly emphasized his customary key thoughts in the story: despairing courage, struggling on both physically and psychologically, and the hero's brave, glory and noble character. One of the pivotal sentences, a man can be destroyed but not defeated draws our attention. This sentence is gorgeous in surface but a little doubtful in a certain angle. In the end of the story the old man told to the boy that he was a loser who beaten by the sharks. With his bloody hands and the skeleton of the fish, it was really difficult to judge that he was defeated or not. However, he was undoubtedly destroyed in the fighting at the hopeless sea. Therefore, the difference between destroy and defeated was just something untraceable. We are not expected to tell one word form another, but to feel the antinomy and contact of them. This sentence from the old man was also a reflection of the author himself. Sometimes we may treat a novel as some individual and emotional words. The old man and the sea were the symbols of the author and his life and destiny. As we know, Hemingway suffered a lot from his broken life during two ruthless world wars. In his late years, he was a successful litterateur but also a disable old man. He ended up his life with suicide. It's too arbitrary to say he was defeated from his fate, and also too shallow to use the word destroy in his experiences. In my opinion, the most splendid thing in Hemmingway and his the Old Man and the Sea is not the VICTORY OF DEFEAT, but the relationship between the two words defeat and destroy as well as the novel and the author.2I have read the American well-known Hemingway’s book ‘’ the old man and the sea’’, which came out in 1976. This is a true story about an old fisherman battling with a giant marlin in the sea.The old fisherman, who names Santiago, have not caught any fish for 84 days , other fishermen looks down him as a loser, but he never gives up. Finally 85th days, he fishes a big marlin fish which is bigger than his skiff and over fifteen hundred pounds. The fish begins to tow him farther and farther out to the sea, but he still holds onto the line, even though a hand is cramping, he don’t give up it. After two days and two nights’ crucifixion, at the end he kills the fish, and attaches the marlin to the outside of the skiff with rope, it’s blood leaves a trail in the water and attracts sharks in return journey, he comes to strike back against and uses to all tools which are harpoon, knife, and quant . When Santiago returns to harbor is left over with the fish head fishtail and one backbone. Although the flesh of fish has been got rid of all quilt barking, what also has no way to devastate his brave will. When he lay down on the bed at home, he makes a usual dream of lions at play on the beaches of Africa.This story happened in 1940th near a Gulf Stream in Cuba. The main character Santiago is an old man, who fishes alone in a skiff in the Gulf Stream and lives a small village. He is characterized as someone struggling against defeat. The second character Manolin is a young boy whom Santiago teaches to fish. The litter boy is his loyal friend. Language is great simplicity and power. The theme of courage in the face of defeat, of personal triumph won from loss. It is a song of praise of heroism. The Author, Ernest Miller Hemingway is a famous writer in the literary world. ‘’The old man and the sea’’ was written in 1952, and it is one of Hemingway’s most enduring works .It won the 1954 Nobel Prize for Literature. The author wants to told readers ,you will be supposed to like this old person same mind lofty aspiration, and will even better pursue even better, the bigger goal, don’t easy give up your goal in your life. The novel shows a view about struggle of life, even in the face of nature can’t be conquered, but still can be moral victory. Perhaps the result of a failure, but I n the struggle of process, the reader can see how a person become an indomitable spirit of man. I like the main character Santiago and the classic saying ‘’But man is not made for defeat. A man can be destroyed but not defeated’’, because this is Santiago’s faith of life, and the human will not fail also, the enterprise spirit of a carols. It is encouraging me to face up to life with smiles no matter what happens. It's a simple story, but offers the reader much to think about without lapsing into the didactic. I am strongly recommend that book.3THE OLD MAN AND THE SEA Ernest Hemingway New York: Charles Scribner�s Sons, 1952127 pages.Comments by Bob CorbettJanuary 2006Once again I return to the work of Ernest Hemingway after an almost 50 year hiatus. The Old Man and the Sea is a magnificent story. At one level it is the tale of a man and a fish, at another, a story of man versus nature, at yet another, the story of the culture of manhood, courage, bravery in the face of existence, and at yet another a history of what life was like when individuals were more the central actors on the human stage and not groups or organizations. At the most basic level the very elderly fisherman, Santiago, goes out in his small fishing boat after 84 days without hooking a decent fish. He goes far out, and hooks a gigantic 18 foot long sword fish. The battle then begins, and the fish drags the small boat and Santiago far out to sea. For two days they battle, and Santiago wins that battle, but then loses the great fish on the way home to the scavenger sharks who find him easy prey. Hemingway celebrates the courage and raw guts of this old man, even recounting a time in Casablanca when he had spent an entire day in an arm wrestling match with a much larger man in a seaside tavern. Hemingway celebrates a concept of humans as beings who go it alone, fierce, brave, courageous without even thinking about it, oozing strength from the nature of the best of the species. The story is told with incredible economy of words and description, yet nothing is sacrificed which drives home the power and inner strength of this man, who just takes it as what he does, what it is to be a serious fisherman. Hemingway�s world is not my world. I am no Santiago, no macho man. And the culture of today has little place left for the radical individual whom Hemingway celebrates and Santiago portrays. Yet the power of Hemingway�s telling is such that I couldn�t help but be on Santiago�s side, to admire him, to ache with his loss in the end to forces greater than he. There is a side tale as well. This great individual, the man who stands alone, is not alone completely by choice. He has developed a friendship, a working relationship, a love with a young boy who began fishing with him when the boy was only five. Now the boy has moved on to another boat, a more successful one, at his parents� behest, but he pines to work with Santiago, and when the battle with the great fish has been engaged, Santiago pleads over and over and over: �I wish the boy were here.� Like many readers who might come upon this novel today, I live a life of citified ease and comfort. A life far removed from harsh confrontations with nature. But Hemingway forces me to remember and acknowledge the individual, the struggle for the most basic existence, the battle with nature for survival itself. But most importantly he makes one acknowledge the importance of the individual and the magnificence of courage, skill, art and endurance.5The Old Man and the SeaSimon & SchusterThe Old Man and the Sea was an enormous success for Ernest Hemingway when it was published in 1952. At first glance, the story appears to be an extremely simple story of an old Cuban fisherman (Santiago), who catches an enormously large fish then loses it again. But, there's much more to the story than that...The Old Man and the Sea helped to revive Hemingway's reputation as a writer of great acclaim. This slim volume also contributed enormously to Hemingway's recognition as a world-renowned writer--with the award of the Nobel Prize for literature. The popular reception of the novel comes from its part-parable, part-eulogy style--recollecting a by-gone age in this spiritual quest for discovery. Touching and powerful in turns, the story is told in Hemingway's simple, brittle style. The book reaches out to a very human need--for stability and certainty.Overview: The Old Man and the SeaSantiago is an old man, and many are starting to think that he can no longer fish. He has gone for many months without landing any kind of fish to speak of; and his apprentice, a young man named Manolin, has gone to work for a more prosperous boat. The fisherman sets out into the open sea and goes a little further out than he normally would in his desperation to catch a fish. At noon, a big Marlin takes hold of one of the lines, but the fish is far too big for him to handle.Hemingway pays great attention to the skill and dexterity that Santiago uses in coping with the fish. Santiago lets the fish have enough line, so that it won't break his pole; but he and his boat are dragged out to sea for three days. Finally, the fish--an enormous and worthy opponent--grows tired; and Santiago kills it. Even this final victory does not end the Santiago's journey; he is a still far, far out to sea. To make matters worse, Santiago drags the Marlin behind the boat (and the blood from the dead fish attracts sharks).Santiago does his best to beat the sharks away, but his efforts are not enough. The sharks eat the flesh off the Marlin, and Santiago is left with only the bones. Santiago gets back to shore--weary and tired--with nothing to show for his pains but the skeletal remains of a large Marlin. Even with just the bare remains of the fish, the experience has changed him, and altered the perception others have of him. Manolin wakes him the morning after his return and suggests that they once more fish together.6I was very surprised when I finally tried to read this, and discovered that it bored the living crap out of me. I just couldn't get into it, I don't know why, maybe it was just my mood or something....? I mean, I do like Hemingway. I love the sea, and baseball. I am relatively fond of both old men and little boys (not like that, you fool).... and this is supposed to be really terrific and all, but I just.... I mean, I could've finished it of course, it's short, and it wouldn't have been like torture at all, but I just wasn't feeling it.... so I stopped. Sometimes I think about making an okay-so-does-this-mean-i'm-stupid-or-something? shelf, but my ideological opposition to the idea has overridden that impulse every time.... so far.

《老人与海》读后感约50字

老人这种面对困难毫不气馁的精神很值得我们学习。

我们也应该像他那样,不能满足于现状,应该积极向上;做任何事情都要坚持不懈,只有这样,我们才能战胜困难,获得成功。

读《老人与海》读后感500字作文

老人与海读后感500字  他,一个坚强、不畏困难不怕失败的人,屡受打击,却从未放弃过寻找希望的念头。

他虽然屡遭失败,却从未有灰心失望的时候。

他虽然险些丧命却在无畏中又一次点燃胜利的怒火。

他就是笔下的硬汉——桑提亚哥。

  桑提亚哥84天出海一无所获,他的顽强与拼搏,迎来了第85天充满希望的黎明,又迎来了第85天灿烂的阳光。

第85天,老人出海,在茫茫大海中他的坚持终于得到回报:一条巨大的马林鱼上钩了。

  接下来的四天里,便是老人与的较量。

烈日当空不怕,寒风刺骨不怕,缺水不怕。

他用他的勇敢与坚强,战胜了迎来了胜利的曙光。

许多描写生动的表现出了老人的坚强,永不言弃的精神。

尽管他双手已经软弱无力,眼睛不好使,只看得见间歇的一起,他便不断的尝试。

经过一次又一次的尝试,老人终于战胜了。

就这样一个硬汉形象,在笔下活灵活现。

他不仅告诉我们敢于向命运抗争,向失败和死亡挑战,也告诉我们面对事情要坚持不懈,不甘失败,当我们面对困难,应像文中所说“现在不是想缺少什么的时候,该想一想凭现有的东西你能做什么”“面对困难要镇静,要有信心,而不是抱怨”.  也告诉我们,人不抱希望是傻的,即使生活欺骗了我们也应乐观对待。

所以我对桑提亚哥和他的草鱼,和正对生活失望,找不到方向的人送上一首诗:“假如生活欺骗了你,不要悲伤,不要心急,相信吧,快乐的日子将会来临。

心儿永远向往未来,一切都是

老人与海50字读后感,要一段一段的。

就是片段的读后感啦。

《老人与海》中,孤独的老渔夫桑提亚哥已经不仅仅是条硬汉,他身上所体现的精神价值,完全是古希腊悲剧精神的现代回响。

在《老人与海》中,海明威终于为他所钟爱的硬汉找到了灵魂,这灵魂就是人类亘古不变的永恒价值。

  这价值中包括的就是人的自信。

桑提亚哥连续出海八十四天了,一条鱼也没捕到。

可是,“那双眼睛啊,像海水一样蓝,是愉快的,毫不沮丧的。

”原先跟随桑提亚哥出海捕鱼的小孩,谈到他爸爸把他叫到别的船上去,说道:“他没多大的自信。

”“是的。

”老头儿说,“可是我们有,你说是不是

”  桑提亚哥的自信是绝对自信,是不以环境变化而变化的自信,是不用与他人比较的自信。

在桑提亚哥的生存哲学中,即使遭遇到了极点的背运,人也只能自信。

  人活着,唯一能确定的必然,就是走向死亡。

除此之外,没有任何必然的东西可以依靠。

既然人是靠偶然活着的,那么支撑人生存勇气的,就只有自信了。

如果丧失了自信,在持续那么多天的背运之后,桑提亚哥还有勇气和毅力出海捕鱼吗

因此人活着就必须自信,不自信是人消费不起的奢侈品。

正因为桑提亚哥有着绝对自信,他对小孩被叫走,表示了完全的宽容和理解。

在这里,海明威展现了自信与宽容之间的联系。

  从物质上来说,老人搏斗了三天三夜的结果是失败了;但从人的精神、从人的自信自尊,从人勇于和命运作竭尽全力的抗争来说,桑提亚哥取得了胜利。

  说到底,人的真正胜利也只能是精神的胜利。

人在物质上无论取得多大的成就,都不能赢得我们崇高的敬意。

而只有精神和气魄的胜利,才使我感动,才使我和追随老人的孩子一样,为他的悲壮落泪。

老人与海英语读后感 50就够了

Man is t made for defeat, a man can be destroyed but he can t be defeated. Gently closing the book the old man and the sea,I can't help thinking . In real life, encountering difficulty is unavoidable, the most important is to confront and have so that we can learn from failure.

求一篇老人与海的英文读后感50字

1 TheOldManandtheSeaisthemostclassicandconcernfulnovelofHemmingway's.Itscompendiousexpressionandexcitingfightingnarrativeattractsnumerousreaders.Theauthorrepeatedlyemphasizedhiscustomarykeythoughtsinthestory:despairingcourage,strugglingonbothphysicallyandpsychologically,andthehero'sbrave,gloryandnoblecharacter. Oneofthepivotalsentences,amancanbedestroyedbutnotdefeateddrawsourattention.Thissentenceisgorgeousinsurfacebutalittledoubtfulinacertainangle.Intheendofthestorytheoldmantoldtotheboythathewasaloserwhobeatenbythesharks.Withhisbloodyhandsandtheskeletonofthefish,itwasreallydifficulttojudgethathewasdefeatedornot.However,hewasundoubtedlydestroyedinthefightingatthehopelesssea.Therefore,thedifferencebetweendestroyanddefeatedwasjustsomethinguntraceable.Wearenotexpectedtotellonewordformanother,buttofeeltheantinomyandcontactofthem. Thissentencefromtheoldmanwasalsoareflectionoftheauthorhimself.Sometimeswemaytreatanovelassomeindividualandemotionalwords.Theoldmanandtheseawerethesymbolsoftheauthorandhislifeanddestiny.Asweknow,Hemingwaysufferedalotfromhisbrokenlifeduringtworuthlessworldwars.Inhislateyears,hewasasuccessfullitterateurbutalsoadisableoldman.Heendeduphislifewithsuicide.It'stooarbitrarytosayhewasdefeatedfromhisfate,andalsotooshallowtousetheworddestroyinhisexperiences. Inmyopinion,themostsplendidthinginHemmingwayandhistheOldManandtheSeaisnottheVICTORYOFDEFEAT,buttherelationshipbetweenthetwowordsdefeatanddestroyaswellasthenovelandtheauthor. 2 IhavereadtheAmericanwell-knownHemingway’sbook‘’theoldmanandthesea’’,whichcameoutin1976.Thisisatruestoryaboutanoldfishermanbattlingwithagiantmarlininthesea. Theoldfisherman,whonamesSantiago,havenotcaughtanyfishfor84days,otherfishermenlooksdownhimasaloser,buthenevergivesup.Finally85thdays,hefishesabigmarlinfishwhichisbiggerthanhisskiffandoverfifteenhundredpounds.Thefishbeginstotowhimfartherandfartherouttothesea,buthestillholdsontotheline,eventhoughahandiscramping,hedon’tgiveupit.Aftertwodaysandtwonights’crucifixion,attheendhekillsthefish,andattachesthemarlintotheoutsideoftheskiffwithrope,it’sbloodleavesatrailinthewaterandattractssharksinreturnjourney,hecomestostrikebackagainstandusestoalltoolswhichareharpoon,knife,andquant.WhenSantiagoreturnstoharborisleftoverwiththefishheadfishtailandonebackbone.Althoughthefleshoffishhasbeengotridofallquiltbarking,whatalsohasnowaytodevastatehisbravewill.Whenhelaydownonthebedathome,hemakesausualdreamoflionsatplayonthebeachesofAfrica. Thisstoryhappenedin1940thnearaGulfStreaminCuba.ThemaincharacterSantiagoisanoldman,whofishesaloneinaskiffintheGulfStreamandlivesasmallvillage.Heischaracterizedassomeonestrugglingagainstdefeat.ThesecondcharacterManolinisayoungboywhomSantiagoteachestofish.Thelitterboyishisloyalfriend.Languageisgreatsimplicityandpower.Thethemeofcourageinthefaceofdefeat,ofpersonaltriumphwonfromloss.Itisasongofpraiseofheroism. TheAuthor,ErnestMillerHemingwayisafamouswriterintheliteraryworld.‘’Theoldmanandthesea’’waswrittenin1952,anditisoneofHemingway’smostenduringworks.Itwonthe1954NobelPrizeforLiterature.Theauthorwantstotoldreaders,youwillbesupposedtolikethisoldpersonsamemindloftyaspiration,andwillevenbetterpursueevenbetter,thebiggergoal,don’teasygiveupyourgoalinyourlife. Thenovelshowsaviewaboutstruggleoflife,eveninthefaceofnaturecan’tbeconquered,butstillcanbemoralvictory.Perhapstheresultofafailure,butInthestruggleofprocess,thereadercanseehowapersonbecomeanindomitablespiritofman.IlikethemaincharacterSantiagoandtheclassicsaying‘’Butmanisnotmadefordefeat.Amancanbedestroyedbutnotdefeated’’,becausethisisSantiago’sfaithoflife,andthehumanwillnotfailalso,theenterprisespiritofacarols.Itisencouragingmetofaceuptolifewithsmilesnomatterwhathappens.It'sasimplestory,butoffersthereadermuchtothinkaboutwithoutlapsingintothedidactic.Iamstronglyrecommendthatbook. 3 THEOLDMANANDTHESEA ErnestHemingway NewYork:CharlesScribnersSons,1952 127pages. CommentsbyBobCorbett January2006 OnceagainIreturntotheworkofErnestHemingwayafteranalmost50yearhiatus.TheOldManandtheSeaisamagnificentstory.Atonelevelitisthetaleofamanandafish,atanother,astoryofmanversusnature,atyetanother,thestoryofthecultureofmanhood,courage,braveryinthefaceofexistence,andatyetanotherahistoryofwhatlifewaslikewhenindividualsweremorethecentralactorsonthehumanstageandnotgroupsororganizations. Atthemostbasicleveltheveryelderlyfisherman,Santiago,goesoutinhissmallfishingboatafter84dayswithouthookingadecentfish.Hegoesfarout,andhooksagigantic18footlongswordfish.Thebattlethenbegins,andthefishdragsthesmallboatandSantiagofarouttosea.Fortwodaystheybattle,andSantiagowinsthatbattle,butthenlosesthegreatfishonthewayhometothescavengersharkswhofindhimeasyprey. Hemingwaycelebratesthecourageandrawgutsofthisoldman,evenrecountingatimeinCasablancawhenhehadspentanentiredayinanarmwrestlingmatchwithamuchlargermaninaseasidetavern.Hemingwaycelebratesaconceptofhumansasbeingswhogoitalone,fierce,brave,courageouswithouteventhinkingaboutit,oozingstrengthfromthenatureofthebestofthespecies. Thestoryistoldwithincredibleeconomyofwordsanddescription,yetnothingissacrificedwhichdriveshomethepowerandinnerstrengthofthisman,whojusttakesitaswhathedoes,whatitistobeaseriousfisherman. Hemingwaysworldisnotmyworld.IamnoSantiago,nomachoman.AndthecultureoftodayhaslittleplaceleftfortheradicalindividualwhomHemingwaycelebratesandSantiagoportrays.YetthepowerofHemingwaystellingissuchthatIcouldnthelpbutbeonSantiagosside,toadmirehim,toachewithhislossintheendtoforcesgreaterthanhe. Thereisasidetaleaswell.Thisgreatindividual,themanwhostandsalone,isnotalonecompletelybychoice.Hehasdevelopedafriendship,aworkingrelationship,alovewithayoungboywhobeganfishingwithhimwhentheboywasonlyfive.Nowtheboyhasmovedontoanotherboat,amoresuccessfulone,athisparentsbehest,buthepinestoworkwithSantiago,andwhenthebattlewiththegreatfishhasbeenengaged,Santiagopleadsoverandoverandover:Iwishtheboywerehere. Likemanyreaderswhomightcomeuponthisnoveltoday,Ilivealifeofcitifiedeaseandcomfort.Alifefarremovedfromharshconfrontationswithnature.ButHemingwayforcesmetorememberandacknowledgetheindividual,thestruggleforthemostbasicexistence,thebattlewithnatureforsurvivalitself.Butmostimportantlyhemakesoneacknowledgetheimportanceoftheindividualandthemagnificenceofcourage,skill,artandendurance. 5 TheOldManandtheSea Simon&Schuster TheOldManandtheSeawasanenormoussuccessforErnestHemingwaywhenitwaspublishedin1952.Atfirstglance,thestoryappearstobeanextremelysimplestoryofanoldCubanfisherman(Santiago),whocatchesanenormouslylargefishthenlosesitagain.But,there'smuchmoretothestorythanthat... TheOldManandtheSeahelpedtoreviveHemingway'sreputationasawriterofgreatacclaim.ThisslimvolumealsocontributedenormouslytoHemingway'srecognitionasaworld-renownedwriter--withtheawardoftheNobelPrizeforliterature.Thepopularreceptionofthenovelcomesfromitspart-parable,part-eulogystyle--recollectingaby-goneageinthisspiritualquestfordiscovery.Touchingandpowerfulinturns,thestoryistoldinHemingway'ssimple,brittlestyle.Thebookreachesouttoaveryhumanneed--forstabilityandcertainty. Overview:TheOldManandtheSea Santiagoisanoldman,andmanyarestartingtothinkthathecannolongerfish.Hehasgoneformanymonthswithoutlandinganykindoffishtospeakof;andhisapprentice,ayoungmannamedManolin,hasgonetoworkforamoreprosperousboat.Thefishermansetsoutintotheopenseaandgoesalittlefurtheroutthanhenormallywouldinhisdesperationtocatchafish.Atnoon,abigMarlintakesholdofoneofthelines,butthefishisfartoobigforhimtohandle. HemingwaypaysgreatattentiontotheskillanddexteritythatSantiagousesincopingwiththefish.Santiagoletsthefishhaveenoughline,sothatitwon'tbreakhispole;butheandhisboataredraggedouttoseaforthreedays.Finally,thefish--anenormousandworthyopponent--growstired;andSantiagokillsit.EventhisfinalvictorydoesnotendtheSantiago'sjourney;heisastillfar,farouttosea.Tomakemattersworse,SantiagodragstheMarlinbehindtheboat(andthebloodfromthedeadfishattractssharks). Santiagodoeshisbesttobeatthesharksaway,buthiseffortsarenotenough.ThesharkseatthefleshofftheMarlin,andSantiagoisleftwithonlythebones.Santiagogetsbacktoshore--wearyandtired--withnothingtoshowforhispainsbuttheskeletalremainsofalargeMarlin.Evenwithjustthebareremainsofthefish,theexperiencehaschangedhim,andalteredtheperceptionothershaveofhim.Manolinwakeshimthemorningafterhisreturnandsuggeststhattheyoncemorefishtogether. 6 IwasverysurprisedwhenIfinallytriedtoreadthis,anddiscoveredthatitboredthelivingcrapoutofme.Ijustcouldn'tgetintoit,Idon'tknowwhy,maybeitwasjustmymoodorsomething....?Imean,IdolikeHemingway.Ilovethesea,andbaseball.Iamrelativelyfondofbotholdmenandlittleboys(notlikethat,youfool)....andthisissupposedtobereallyterrificandall,butIjust....Imean,Icould'vefinisheditofcourse,it'sshort,anditwouldn'thavebeenliketortureatall,butIjustwasn'tfeelingit....soIstopped. SometimesIthinkaboutmakinganokay-so-does-this-mean-i'm-stupid-or-something?shelf,butmyideologicaloppositiontotheideahasoverriddenthatimpulseeverytime....sofar.采纳哦

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