"[...]This is human life: ambition is sand, power is sand, wealth is sand, and sand each of the pleasures eagerly enjoyed in the flesh."

"Any interest which people have in worldly things is quite simply the same as children's toys of sand (Homer, II. 15,363-364), in which the enjoyment of the products ends with the interest in their construction. As soon as they cease from their toil, the sand collapses, leaving behind no trace of what the children worked at. This is human life: ambition is sand, power is sand, wealth is sand, and sand each of the pleasures eagerly enjoyed in the flesh." (Homilies on Ecclesiastes, Hall, 1993, 289,18)

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Nein!(?) A negative "point of contact" in the Epistle to Diognetus?

Why "contra fatum"?