FATE QUOTES VII

quotations about fate


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When fate is adverse, a blade of grass may become equal to a thunderbolt, and when fate is favorable, a thunderbolt may be like a tuft of grass.

CHEEVER MACKENZIE BROWN
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The Triumph of the Goddess


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For man is man and master of his fate.

ALFRED

LORD TENNYSON, Idylls of the King


Nothing is quite as splendidly uplifting to the heart as the defeat of a human being who battles against the invincible superiority of fate. This is always the most grandiose of all tragedies, one sometimes created by a dramatist but created thousands of times by life.

STEFAN ZWEIG

Stellar Moments in Human History


Fate never knocks at the wrong door, dear. You just may not be ready to answer.

SARALEE ROSENBERG

Fate and Ms. Fortune


Fate isn't sentient; it can't make decisions.

RICK CHIANTARETTO

Facade of Shadows


Man makes his fate according to his mind:
The weak, low spirit Fortune makes her slave:
But she's a drudge when hector'd by the brave.
If Fate weave common thread, I'll change the doom,
And with new purple weave a nobler loom.

JOHN DRYDEN

The Conquest of Granada


The youth should be taught that he alone is great, who, by a life heroic, conquers fate; that diligence is the mother of good luck; that, nine times out of ten, what we call luck or fate is but a mere bugbear of the indolent, the languid, the purposeless, the careless, the indifferent; that the man who fails, as a rule, does not see or seize his opportunity.

ORISON SWETT MARDEN

Architects of Fate


Fate is a primitive notion that makes no sense in a land of self-made men and women.

J. PETER EUBEN

"Pure Corruption"


I presume that it is the better part of wisdom that we bow to our fate with as good grace as possible.

EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS

A Princess of Mars


All gamblers are losers.... Because, in the end, if you gamble, you're playing against fate, and fate always wins.

KATY LEDERER

Poker Face


I am a firm believer in fate. That no matter what we feel or what we may think we want or even what's best for us, that it is all predetermined. And most importantly, fate is completely out of our hands. Therefore, I decided long ago to let life happen as it happens. I also strongly believe that we are all here for a reason, something to be learned, and by simply letting life take its course than we shall learn what that is.

WANDA F. ROSS

Reconcilable Fate


No experience has been too unimportant, and the smallest event unfolds like a fate, and fate itself is like a wonderful, wide fabric in which every thread is guided by an infinitely tender hand and laid alongside another thread and is held and supported by a hundred others.

RAINER MARIA RILKE

letter, Letters to a Young Poet, Apr. 23, 1903


That which, to him whose will is not developed, is fate, is, to him who has a well-fashioned will, power.

JOHN CONOLLY

The Westminster Review, Jan. 1865


Dread discovers fate, but when the individual would put his confidence in fate, dread turns about and takes fate away; for fate is like dread, and dread is like possibility ... a witch's letter.

SOREN KIERKEGAARD

The Concept of Dread

Tags: Soren Kierkegaard


Thus we trace Fate, in matter, mind, and mortals--in race, in retardations of strata, and in thought and character as well. It is everywhere bound or limitation. But Fate has its lord; limitation its limits; is different seen from above and from below; from within and from without. For, though Fate is immense, so is power, which is the other fact in the dual world, immense. If Fate follows and limits power, power attends and antagonizes Fate. We must respect Fate as natural history, but there is more than natural history. For who and what is this criticism that pries into the matter? Man is not order of nature, sack and sack, belly and members, link in a chain, nor any ignominous baggage, but a stupendous antagonism, a dragging together of the poles of the Universe.

RALPH WALDO EMERSON

The Conduct of Life


When I seek out the sources of my thoughts, I find they had their beginning in fragile Chance; were born of little moments that shine for me curiously in the past. Slight the impulse that made me take this turning at the crossroads, trivial and fortuitous the meeting, and light as gossamer the thread that first knit me to my friend. These are full of wonder; more mysterious are the moments that must have brushed me with their wings and passed me by: when Fate beckoned and I did not see it, when new Life trembled for a second on the threshold; but the word was not spoken, the hand was not held out, and the Might-have-been shivered and vanished, dim as a into the waste realms of non-existence.

LOGAN PEARSALL SMITH

Trivia


The controversy about the fate of humanity is central and inherent in our cultural life. An apprehensive watchfulness hangs in the air. This is a sign of the times. There is no end to the facts and statistics cited as evidence in support of the opinions about where we are heading. Optimism and pessimism, enthusiasm and alarm, all shades, all degrees. There are penetrating insights, and illuminating interpretations of institutions, behavior and events. Persuasive arguments and diagnosis, an abundant bibliography, and a sleepless irony that misses nothing. We watch ourselves closely.

MARTY GLASS

Yuga


Fate plays a role in many heroic legends. Oedipus must kill the Sphinx because the prize is the queen, his mother, whom he is fated to marry. The word "sphinx" in Greek, cognate with "sphincter," is from sphingo, meaning "I clutch" or "I strangle." She is herself a version of necessity, the tight outline that is the periphery of the universe. Like the Furies and other monsters embodying fate, the Sphinx is a mixed creature, in her case part woman, part lion. When Oedipus answers the riddle and destroys the monster, he thinks that he is liberating a foreign city called Thebes; but in fact, killing the fatal Sphinx allows him to go home, as heroes must--home to complete his fate. He had murdured his father "at the place where the three roads meet" -- the crossroads, the junction of choice. Having killed the obstructive stranger, his father, he had felt "free" -- to take the fatal road home, to encounter the Sphinx, and so to win his mother for his bride, as the Oracle of Apollo had foretold.

MARGARET VISSER

Beyond Fate


Fate isn't good or bad; it's the outcome of any choice you make. Simply put, fate is reaping what we have sown into our life. It's a universal principle of life that God places before every one.

JOHN KIM

The Roadmap to True Love


Fate and victory shift ... now this way, now that way -- like a line of unarmored men under a hail of enemy arrows.

DAN SIMMONS

Ilium