Ilona Andrews American husband-and-wife novelist duo
Source: Magic Breaks
Maxim 282
Sentences
Ilona Andrews American husband-and-wife novelist duo
Source: Magic Breaks
“Fortune favors the bold.”
Audentes fortuna iuvat.
Audentes fortuna iuvat.
Variant translations:
Fortune favors the brave.
Fortune helps the daring.
Fortune sides with him who dares.
Compare:
Fortibus est fortuna viris data.
Fortune is given to brave men.
Ennius, Annales, 257
Source: Aeneid (29–19 BC), Book X, Line 284
“When Fortune is on our side, popular favor bears her company.”
Publilio Siro Latin writer
Maxim 275
Sentences, The Moral Sayings of Publius Syrus, a Roman Slave
“May I never sit on a tribunal where my friends shall not find more favor from me than strangers.”
Themistocles (-524–-459 BC) Athenian statesman
As quoted by Plutarch, in Lives as translated by J. Langhorne and W. Langhorne (1850) http://books.google.com/books?id=jaBfAAAAMAAJ, p. 225
Sarah Schulman (1958) American writer
Conflict Is Not Abuse: Overstating Harm, Community Responsibility, and the Duty of Repair (2016)
“No man's more fortunate than he who's poor,
Since for the worse his fortune cannot change.”
Diphilus Athenian poet of New Comedy
Fragment 23
Fabulae Incertae
Ernest Hemingway book Across the River and into the Trees
Colonel Richard Cantwell and Renata in Ch. 38
Across the River and into the Trees (1950)
“4867. There cannot be a more intolerable Thing than a fortunate Fool.”
Thomas Fuller (writer) (1654–1734) British physician, preacher, and intellectual
Introductio ad prudentiam: Part II (1727), Gnomologia (1732)