Showing posts with label choice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label choice. Show all posts

Monte-Carlo Vintage Tennis Tournament Advertisement

Monte Carlo

Monte Carlo

Roger Broders
Buy This at Allposters.com

European vintage advertisement reprints are very popular posters in last days. Especially French advertising material are hot. Original printings from old decades are very expensive but it's worth to buy them for collectors. Reprints of French vintage posters are hot items too. We can see these posters in everyplaces like homes, offices and schools. These reprints have affordable prices than originals for ordinary people who want to buy them.

These posters are not have only antique value, but they also are unique art pieces. Generally these vintage posters has an illustration within from a talented and famous artists of its time. France is a artist depot for centuries and the city is always being an worldwide art center. Especially Paris, the capital city of France has a reputation for visual arts.

Monte Carlo is also another important region of France with its touristic attractions and sporting events. Monte Carlo also known with its casinos. Millions of people are visiting this wonderful place all year from all over the world. Tennis is so popular sport in Monte Carlo now as it was in past. Worldwide and national tennis tournaments are arranged there for decades.

Serious Reading

Novels are excluded from "serious reading," so that the man who, bent on self-improvement, has been deciding to devote ninety minutes three times a week to a complete study of the works of Charles Dickens will be well advised to alter his plans. The reason is not that novels are not serious-some of the greatest literature of the world is in the form of prose fiction--the reason is that bad novels ought not to be read, and that good novels never demand any appreciable mental application on the part of the reader. It is only the bad parts of Meredith's novels that are difficult. A good novel rushes you forward like a skiff down a stream, and you arrive at the end, perhaps breathless, but unexhausted. The best novels involve the least strain. Now in the cultivation of the mind one of the most important factors is precisely the feeling of strain, of difficulty, of a task which one part of you is anxious to achieve and another part of you is anxious to shirk; and that feeling cannot be got in facing a novel. You do not set your teeth in order to read "Anna Karenina". Therefore, though you should read novels, you should not read them in those ninety minutes.

Imaginative poetry produces a far greater mental strain than novels. It produces probably the severest strain of any form of literature. It is the highest form of literature. It yields the highest form of pleasure, and teaches the highest form of wisdom. In a word, there is nothing to compare with it. I say this with sad consciousness of the fact that the majority of people do not read poetry.

I suggest no particular work as a start. The attempt would be futile in the space at my command. But I have two general suggestions of a certain importance. The first is to define the direction and scope of your efforts. Choose a limited period, or a limited subject, or a single author. Say to yourself: "I will know something about the French Revolution, or the rise of railways, or the works of John Keats." And during a given period, to be settled beforehand, confine yourself to your choice. There is much pleasure to be derived from being a specialist.
The second suggestion is to think as well as to read. I know people who read and read, and for all the good it does them they might just as well cut bread-and-butter. They take to reading as better men take to drink. They fly through the shires of literature on a motor-car, their sole object being motion. They will tell you how many books they have read in a year.

Unless you give at least forty-five minutes to careful, fatiguing reflection (it is an awful bore at first) upon what you are reading, your ninety minutes of a night are chiefly wasted. This means that your pace will be slow.

Never mind.

Forget the goal; think only of the surrounding country; and after a period, perhaps when you least expect it, you will suddenly find yourself in a lovely town on a hill.