Meaningful Quotes. Thoughtful Insights. Helpful Tools.
Advanced Search Options

Quotes about Fortune

Champions make their own luck.
— Vince Lombardi
If there's one thing on this planet you don't look like it's a bunch of good luck walkin around.
— Cormac McCarthy
Luck marches with those who give their very best.
— H Jackson Brown, Jr.
Fortune definitely frowns upon all ill-gotten wealth, and often causes it to mysteriously evaporate.
— Napoleon Hill
The accumulation of great fortunes calls for POWER, and power is acquired through highly organized and intelligently directed specialized knowledge, but that knowledge does not, necessarily, have to be in the possession of the man who accumulates the fortune.
— Napoleon Hill
Every man who has accumulated a great fortune, has recognized the existence of this stream of life. It consists of one's thinking process. The positive emotions of thought form the side of the stream which carries one to fortune. The negative emotions form the side which carries one down to poverty.
— Napoleon Hill
Millions of people look at the achievements of Henry Ford, after he has arrived, and envy him, because of his good fortune, or luck, or genius, or whatever it is that they credit for Ford's fortune. Perhaps one person in every hundred thousand knows the secret of Ford's success, and those who do know are too modest, or
— Napoleon Hill
accumulation of money cannot be left to chance, good fortune and luck. One must realise that all who have accumulated great fortunes first did a certain amount of dreaming, hoping, wishing, desiring and planning before they acquired money.
— Napoleon Hill
When riches begin to come they come so quickly, in such great abundance, that one wonders where they have been hiding during all those lean years.
— Napoleon Hill
Ignorance of one's misfortunes is clear gain.
— Euripides
If ever there came a morning when mercy and simple good fortune took to their heels and fled, grace alone might have to do.
— Toni Morrison
Give us the strength to encounter that which is to come, that we may be brave in peril, constant in tribulation, temperate in wrath, and in all changes of fortune, and down to the gates of death, loyal and loving one to anther.
— Robert Louis Stevenson