FATE QUOTES VI

quotations about fate

If you are blessed with great fortunes ... you may love your fate. But your fate never guarantees the security of those great fortunes. As soon as you realize your helplessness at the mercy of your fate, you are again in despair. Thus the hatred of fate can be generated not only by misfortunes, but also by great fortunes. Your hatred of fate is at the same time your hatred of your self. You hate your self for being so helpless under the crushing power of fate.

T. K. SEUNG

"The Dionysian Mystery"


Suppose two men at cards with nothing to wager save their lives. Who has not heard such a tale? A turn of the card. The whole universe for such a player has labored clanking to this moment which will tell if he is to die at that man's hand or that man at his. What more certain validation of a man's worth could there be? This enhancement of the game to its ultimate state admits no argument concerning the notion of fate. The selection of one man over another is a preference absolute and irrevocable and it is a dull man indeed who could reckon so profound a decision without agency or significance either one.

CORMAC MCCARTHY

Blood Meridian


Fate, or "inevitability", has to do with events in history that are beyond the control of any circle of group of men having three characteristics: (1) compact enough to be identifiable, (2) powerful enough to decide with consequence, and (3) in a position to foresee these consequences and so to be held accountable for them. Events, according to this conception, are the summary and unintended results of innumerable decisions of innumerable men. Each of their decisions is minute in consequence and subject to concellation or reinforcement by other such decisions. There is no link between any one man's intention and the summary result of the innumerable decisions. Events are beyond human decisions: History is made behind men's backs.

CHARLES WRIGHT MILLS

The Sociological Imagination


How maliciously does fate always lurk in our path!

HEINRICH FRIEDRICH LUDWIG RELLSTAB

The Polish Lancer


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


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

BOETHIUS

De Consolatione IV


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. There is both time and space
For thy one little thread, it shall have place,
Though it be gold, or may be dull of hue,
Or silken smooth--whatever thou hast spun
Be sure in the great woof shall duly run.

CLARA MARCELLE FARRAR GREENE

"Thy Fate Is Seeking Thee"


Fate, show thy force; ourselves we do not owe;
What is decreed must be; and be this so.

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

Twelfth Night


Fate never knows when comedy ends and tragedy begins.

FRANK FRANKFORT MOORE

The Original Woman


What threatens him, therefore, as his fate, is just his own life made by his deed into a stranger and an enemy.

EDWARD CAIRD

Hegel


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

DAN SIMMONS

The Fall of Hyperion


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

The Triumph of the Goddess


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

J. PETER EUBEN

"Pure Corruption"


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

SARALEE ROSENBERG

Fate and Ms. Fortune


The harder thy fate, the softer thine heart.

IVAN PANIN

Thoughts


Looking backward always presents an overdetermined depiction of fate; by this perspective we leave out of focus the possibilities of action which existed at the time.

REINHARD BENDIX

Force


Fate comes by our own agency. It belongs to our underlying spiritual values, because it is unattainable without experience of the world, and therefore differs from one person to the next.

STELIOS RAMPHOS

Fate and Ambiguity in Oedipus the King


Fate is the all-round determinateness of a person's existence that necessarily predetermines all the events of that person's life; hence, life is merely the actualization (and fulfillment) of what was inherent from the very outset in the determinateness of the person's existence. From within himself, the person builds up his life (thinks, feels, acts) in accordance with particular goals, by actualizing various forms of that which has validity with respect to meaning and objects, upon which his life is directed: he acts in a particular way because he feels he ought to act that way, considers it proper, necessary, desirable to act that way, wants to act that way, etc. And yet, in reality, he merely actualizes the necessity inherent in his own fate, the determinateness of his own existence, his own countenance in being. Fate is the artistic transcription of the trace in being which is left by a life that is regulated from within itself by purpose; it is the artistic expression of the deposit in being laid down by a life that is understood or interpreted totally from within itself.

MIKHAIL MIKHAILOVICH BAKHTIN

Art and Answerability


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


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