Examples (at least 3) about the truth that hard work pays off.

. Helen Keller was born in 1880 in a town called Tuscumbia in northern Alabama. When she was one and a half years old, a serious illness took away her vision and hearing, and then she lost her ability to express language. However, in this dark and lonely world, she learned to read and speak, and graduated with honors from Radcliffe College in the United States, becoming a learned woman with mastery of English, French, German, Latin, and Greek. A well-known writer and educator. She traveled around the United States and around the world to raise funds for schools for the blind, and dedicated her life to the welfare and education of the blind. She has won praise from people around the world and received awards from many governments.

2.

Dancing upon hearing the chicken

Zu Ti of the Jin Dynasty was a man with an open mind and lofty ambitions. But when he was a child, he was a naughty child who didn't like reading. When he entered his youth, he realized his lack of knowledge and felt that he could not serve the country without studying, so he started reading hard. He read extensively and studied history seriously, so he started reading hard. I learned a wealth of knowledge from it and made great progress in my knowledge. He had been in and out of Luoyang, the capital, several times. People who had come into contact with him said that Zu Ti was a talented person who could assist the emperor in governing the country. When Zu Ti was 24 years old, someone recommended him to go to court, but he refused and continued to study hard.

Later, Zu Ti and his childhood friend Liu Kun served as the chief registrar of Sizhou. He and Liu Kun had a deep relationship. Not only did they often sleep in the same bed and quilt, they also had the same lofty ideals: to make contributions, revive the Jin Dynasty, and become the pillars of the country.

Once, Zu Ti heard the crow of a rooster in his sleep in the middle of the night. After he woke up Liu Kun, he said to him: "Other people think that hearing a rooster crow in the middle of the night is unlucky, but I don't think so." I think, how about we just get up and practice swordplay when the rooster crows?" Liu Kun readily agreed. So they got up after the rooster crows every day to practice their swords. The light of the swords danced and the sound of the swords clanged. Spring goes to winter, cold comes and heat comes, never stopping. Hard work paid off, and after long-term hard study and training, they finally became all-round talents capable of writing good articles and leading troops to win battles. Zu Ti was named General Zhenxi, realizing his desire to serve the country; Liu Kun became the governor, taking charge of the military affairs of the three states of Bing, Hebei and You, and gave full play to his literary and military talents.

Bourgeois revolutionary and the 16th President of the United States, Lincoln, is a world-famous speaker. His success lies in the fact that he has been practicing eloquence diligently since he was a teenager, and he has done more reading and listening. When he was young, he worked as a farmer, logger, store clerk, postman and land surveyor, etc. In order to become a lawyer, he often walked 30 miles to a court to listen to the defense statements of lawyers and watch how they argued and made gestures. While listening to the loud and impassioned speeches of those politicians and orators, he imitated them. He listened to those traveling evangelists waving their arms and delivering sermons that shook the sky. When he came back, he also imitated their example and practiced his speeches repeatedly in the woods and cornfields. The success of the speech enabled Lincoln to finally become an eloquent lawyer and eventually enter politics.

3. Churchill, the British Prime Minister during the Second World War, was an outstanding speaker and was listed as one of the top 10 famous orators in the world. However, when Churchill gave a speech in Parliament for the first time, he stumbled into a big somersault - when he was halfway through his speech, he suddenly forgot the next part and couldn't remember it. He was so depressed that he had to interrupt his speech and awkwardly Return to your seat. But he was not discouraged, devoted himself to studying speech skills, and often exercised his oral expression skills. Hard work paid off, and Churchill finally became a famous orator and outstanding politician in the 20th century.

4. Lincoln, the 16th President of the United States, is a world-famous speaker. His success lies in the fact that he has been practicing eloquence diligently since he was a teenager, and he has done more reading and listening. When he was young, he worked as a farmer, logger, store clerk, postman and land surveyor, etc. In order to become a lawyer, he often walked 30 miles to a court to listen to the defense statements of lawyers and watch how they argued and made gestures. While listening to the loud and impassioned speeches of those politicians and orators, he imitated them.

He listened to those traveling evangelists waving their arms and delivering sermons that shook the sky. When he came back, he also imitated their example and practiced his speeches repeatedly in the woods and cornfields. The success of the speech enabled Lincoln to finally become an eloquent lawyer and eventually enter politics.