FATE QUOTES V

quotations about fate

Heav'n from all creatures hides the book of fate,
All but the page prescribed, their present state:
From brutes what men, from men what spirits know:
Or who could suffer being here below?

ALEXANDER POPE

An Essay on Man


Fate's sentence written on the brow no hand can e'er efface.

BHARTRHARI

"The Praise of Destiny"


Fate loves the fearless.

JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL

"The Voyage to Vinland"


Fate's always tricky. She likes to wait till she gets you by the back of the neck, so you can't do a thing, and then passes you all that's coming to you.

RIDGWELL COLLUM

The Law-Breakers


Fate remains a confrontation with that which cannot be explained in any other way. It is a part of the very meaning of fate that it is incomprehensible, but this curiously does not mean that all who accept fate are irrational. Whatever is experienced is contingent, and insofar as it is contingent it is not necessary; and not being necessary it is not a product of pure reason. But no one would say that what is contingent is irrational. It might be said to be nonrational, meaning it is not known necessarily; but the term "irrational" is usually reserved for that which directly contradicts itself, like an odd number wholly divisible by two, or a married bachelor. Fate is troubling and perhaps even nonrational, but it is certainly not irrational.

MICHAEL GELVEN

Truth and Existence


It may well be that a man is at times horribly threshed by misfortunes, public and private: but the reckless flail of Fate, when it beats the rich sheaves, crushes only the straw; and the corn feels nothing of it and dances merrily on the floor, careless whether its way is to the mill or the furrow.

JOHANN WOLFGANG VON GOETHE

The Maxims and Reflections of Goethe


A man's character is his fate.

HERACLITUS


When we consider the incidents of former days, and perceive, while reviewing the long line of causes, how the most important events of our lives originated in the most trifling circumstances; how the beginning of our greatest happiness or greatest misery is to be attributed to a delay, to an accident, to a mistake; we learn a lesson of profound humility.

ARTHUR HELPS

Thoughts in the Cloister and the Crowd


Fate was some kind of an invisible beast lurking around them, teasing them. I could have killed you today if I wanted to, it was thinking. Or maybe tomorrow. Hee, hee. You'll never know. Just don't tempt me.

AUDREY PFITZENMAIER

Cheating Fate


When you think to take determination of your fate into your own hands, that is the moment you can be crushed. Be cautious.

FRANK HERBERT

Chapterhouse: Dune


All we can control in life is our own choices, how we choose to live and deal with what life has to offer. Everything else is fate.

MARK PURYEAR

The Nature of Asatru


Fate is an inherent disposition in things mobile, by which Providence binds things to that which It has ordained.

BOETHIUS

De Consolatione IV


Fate always wins, for our own heart within us
Imperiously furthers its designs.

FRIEDRICH SCHILLER

Wallenstein


Fate isn't some middle-aged man with a squint who won't recognize you if you change your clothes.

MEG ROSOFF

Just In Case


Perhaps fate isn't blind after all. Perhaps it's capable of fantasy, even compassion.

ELIE WIESEL

The Time of the Uprooted


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


In the beginning, there were three goddesses, the Fates: one to spin the thread of life, one to measure it, one to cut it. Not only mortals, but even the gods were subject to the decrees of Fate. But the ancient Greeks had a saying that the Muses--and only the Muses--can change the weave of Fate. This is a remarkable psychological idea, and a redemptive one--for it suggests that one is never trapped by one's fate, never permanently imprisoned in the pain of one's childhood, never completely bound by the limitations of one's present circumstance. But it is important to note that what brings redemption and freedom from the heavy hand of Fate is not the frenetic activity of data-gathering, and not a heroic egotistic attitude that tries to break down all barriers, all limitations, trampling over one's history in the determination to dictate all the terms of one's life. No: what brings real change, real redemption from entrapment in the deadening sense of fatalism that stops all creativity, are the Muses. These beautiful daughters of Mnemosyne are able to take the most horrific and anguished experiences of our lives and work their artistry upon them. The Muses enable us to make poetry from pain, lyric from loneliness, literature from personal tragedy. This is what releases us from the sense of meaninglessness that keeps us stuck in pain.

MARY LYNN KITTELSON

The Soul of Popular Culture


If anyone does not help himself, fate never can help him.

HUANZHANG CHEN

The Economic Principles of Confucius


Fate never knows when comedy ends and tragedy begins.

FRANK FRANKFORT MOORE

The Original Woman


Great powers may be shaping the general turn of events, but human personalities still determine their own fate.

DAN SIMMONS

The Fall of Hyperion