| Author |
Quotes |
| Anne Tyler | People always call it luck when you've acted more sensibly than they have. |
| Branch Rickey | Luck is the residue of design. |
| Brian Tracy | I've found that luck is quite predictable. If you want more luck, take more chances. Be more active. Show up more often. |
| Cervantes Saavedra | As ill-luck would have it. |
| Cervantes Saavedra | I do not believe that the Good Lord plays dice. |
| Don Marquis | So unlucky that he runs into accidents which started out to happen to somebody else. |
| Douglas Jerrold | Some people are so fond of ill-luck that they run half-way to meet it. |
| Dr Armand Hammer | When I work fourteen hours a day, seven days a week, I get lucky. |
| George S Clason | Men of action are favored by the Goddess of luck. |
| Greek Proverb | When God throws the dice are loaded. |
| J Christopher Herold | Those who mistake their good luck for their merit are inevitably bound for disaster. |
| James A Garfield | A pound of pluck is worth a ton of luck. |
| James Thomas Fields | A farmer travelling with his load Picked up a horseshoe on the road, And nailed if fast to his barn door, That luck might down upon him pour; That every blessing known in life Might crown his homestead and his wife, And never any kind of harm Descend upon his growing farm. |
| Jean Cocteau | I believe in luck: how else can you explain the success of those you dislike? |
| Joel Chandler Harris | Watch out when you're getting all you want. Fattening hogs ain't in luck. |
| John Grisham | Ten years from now I plan to be sitting here, looking out over my land. I hope I'll be writing books, but if not, I'll be on my pond fishing with my kids. I feel like the luckiest guy I know. |
| John Heywood | Now for good lucke, cast an old shooe after mee. |
| John Heywood | I heard someone tried the monkeys-on-typewriters bit trying for the plays of W. Shakespeare, but all they got was the collected works of Francis Bacon. |
| John Heywood | I find that the harder I work, the more luck I seem to have. |
| Joseph Conrad | It is the mark of an inexperienced man not to believe in luck. |
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