<p>Does anyone know one quote each of these stories: Macbeth, Le Morte D'Arthur, and Beowulf that all have something in common??</p>
<p>Thank You in advance.</p>
<p>Does anyone know one quote each of these stories: Macbeth, Le Morte D'Arthur, and Beowulf that all have something in common??</p>
<p>Thank You in advance.</p>
<p>No, but it amuses me that I'm actually vain enough to click on this thread. ;)</p>
<p>Do your own homework.</p>
<p>I'm worse. I'm a junior.</p>
<p>Hint --I bet it has something to do with fate!</p>
<p>For The Last Time The Word Is Quotation Not Quote!!!!</p>
<p>Use the all powerful GOOGLE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1</p>
<p>Thats a stupid assignment........instead, go study for an AP eng. exam:)</p>
<p>lol..tell your teacher the cc council does not approve of her assignment</p>
<p>lol make that the CC not yet applying to college yet counsil</p>
<p>They're all obsolete in 2005.</p>
<p>Bad assignment...coming from a senior.</p>
<p>I love the fact we're vain enough to reply. :)</p>
<p>I've never read Beowulf (though the lucky Honors class gets to), but the other two seemed to share an assassinations-> usurping power-> ultimate downfall theme (Macbeth and Mordred). And I agree about fate and self-fulfilling prophecy - Macbeth would never have believed he'd be fallen by someone who was not born by a woman when the woods march atop the hill, and Arthur didn't believe he'll be killed by the son he will have with his sister. They were both ruthless in preventing it from happening and in doing so seeded their destruction.</p>
<p>I wish we would read "Le Morte d'Arthur" for English :(</p>
<p>Yeah those are junior books (not senior) at my school for brit lit. macbeth and beowulf at least. we dont have le morte d'arthur but yeah.</p>
<p>I didnt read le morte d'arthur but I'm sure in Macbeth and Beowulf, you can find quotations about the ideal hero and the ultimate villain (Macduff and Beowulf, Macbeth and Grendel). This probably isn't helping much, but that's my two cents.</p>