FATE QUOTES IV

quotations about fate

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


What is Fate? Fate is the name given to the unfolding of all events, all worlds, realms, lives and powers, and the final end that awaits them, before they are regenerated at the hands of the Fate-weaver, who is the Old Veiled One.

ROBIN ARTISSON

The Flaming Circle


Fate knows all about you, it knows your fears and your weaknesses and your confidences and strengths, and it can be ready for all of them when it decides that the time is right. It can move you like a pawn in a terrible game of chess, sacrifice you for the good of others, drop you from a building you should never have been inside, give you a disease that no one has ever heard of. Luck and chance are impartial. Fate is active. It picks on people. Almost as if it thinks about things too much ...

TIM LEBBON

Face


Why should we try to shield people from fate? Isn't that always wrong? One is fated to be born the child of a certain father, and one can no more escape the consequences of his father's misdeeds than the doer himself can. Perhaps the pain and the shame come from the wish and the attempt to do so, more than from the fact itself. The sins of the fathers shall be visited upon the children. But the children are innocent of evil, and this visitation must be for their good, and will be, if they bear it willingly.

WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS

A Pair of Patient Lovers


To bear is to conquer our fate.

THOMAS CAMPBELL

"Lines Written on Visiting a Scene in Argyleshire"


Each fate is just, since each individual chooses it freely.

ROBERT APATOW

The Spiritual Art of Dialogue


Thy fate is seeking thee,
Fear not! Fear not!
Nor hither, thither run, with puny strain
Of frenzied fingers on this closèd door,
Or that, to find her. Leave thy worse than vain
And feverish seeking; fret thy soul no more,
Nor vex the heavens with ineffectual cries;
Fate will adjust her perfect harmonies
And weave thee in.

CLARA MARCELLE FARRAR GREENE

"Thy Fate Is Seeking Thee"


Free will appears unfettered, deliberate; it is boundlessly free, wandering, the spirit. But fate is a necessity; unless we believe that world history is a dream-error, the unspeakable sorrows of mankind fantasies, and that we ourselves are but the toys of our fantasies. Fate is the boundless force of opposition against free will. Free will without fate is just as unthinkable as spirit without reality, good without evil. Only antithesis creates the quality.

FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE

"Fate and History"


So long as it fated, fate didn't care what it fated.

CHINA MIéVILLE

Kraken


Our fate is something which exists outside ourselves, and which once revealed expresses the meaning of our lives. Apart, however, from soothsayers who claim to have a means of foretelling exactly what will befall us, this kind of fate is only normally revealed after a life has ended. Only then can the meaning of that life be understood.

ANDREW GAMBLE

Politics and Fate


Fate never wounds more deep the generous heart,
Than when a blockhead's insult points the dart.

SAMUEL JOHNSON

Fate of Poverty in London


Fate is a fickle bitch who dotes on irony.

GLEN COOK

The Black Company


Fate happens.

DOTTI ENDERLE

Hand of Fate


The planets are bells on his motley,
He fleers at the stars in their state,
He banters the suns burning hotly--
The Jester whose nickname is Fate.

ARTHUR GUITERMAN

"Fate


I would not fear nor wish my fate,
But boldly say each night,
To-morrow let my sun his beams display,
Or in clouds hide them; I have lived to-day.

ABRAHAM COWLEY

Of Myself


Fate loves the fearless.

JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL

"The Voyage to Vinland"


They may well fear fate who have any infirmity of habit or aim: but he who rests on what is has a destiny beyond destiny, and can make mouths of fortune.

ORISON SWETT MARDEN

Architects of Fate


Spin thy plain thread--'tis wanted soon or late;
No friend will seek thee out so sure as Fate.

CLARA MARCELLE FARRAR GREENE

"Thy Fate Is Seeking Thee"


The bitterest tragic element in life to be derived from an intellectual source is the belief in a brute Fate or Destiny.

RALPH WALDO EMERSON

Natural History of Intellect


If fate be not, then what can we foresee?
And how can we avoid it if it be?
If by free will in our own paths we move,
How are we bounded by decrees of above?
Whether we drive, or whether we are driven,
If ill, 'tis ours; if good, the act of heaven.

JOHN DRYDEN

The Tempest