A famous violinist entered the stage to perform a solo at a New York City music hall. Getting on stage (be) no small task for him. A brain disease he got as a child forced him to walk a stick (拐杖).
Seeing him walk across the stage was hard to forget. He walked painfully, but graceful, until he reached his chair. Heat down (slow), put his stick on the floor and placed his legs in the correct place. Then he picked up the violin, put it under his chin, nodded to the conductor and started (play).
Suddenly something went wrong. The violinist finished the first few parts of the piece, one of the strings on his violin broke. Everyone heard it.
People thought violinist would need to stop to find another string or violin. But he didn't. Instead, he stopped for a moment, closed his eyes and went on. He played where he had stopped, with a passion and power that people had never (hear) before.
It was almost (possible) for others to play how he did with only three strings. But this musician refused to give . He seemed to play the strings in new ways to make the sounds he needed from the missing string.
When he finished, everyone in hall burst into applause.
The musician smiled and said, "Sometimes it is up to the musician to find out how much music he can make with what he has left."