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The Death of King Arthur: The Day of Destiny

Mordred makes himself King of England and incestuously claims Guinevere as his wife.
Guinevere escapes to the Tower of London. The Bishop of Canterbury reproaches Mordred
for his usurpation and would-be incest, and when Mordred tries to kill him, he flees and
becomes a hermit. Mordred wins many Englishmen to his side, then meets Arthur at Dover
but is forced to retreat from him.

In this battle Gawain is mortally wounded. As he dies he admits to Arthur that if it were not
for his insane pride in insisting on unjust revenge, Launcelot would be here now to save the
kingdom; then he writes Launcelot, begging him to come help Arthur and also to pray at his
tomb. Then, bleeding from the wound he got originally from Launcelot — with the fated
sword of Balyn — Gawain dies.

Arthur meets Mordred again at the battle of Bareon Down and again puts him to flight. They
meet next at Salisbury Plain, and there, with all who loved Launcelot fighting on Mordred's
side, they prepare for what is to be their last battle. The night before the battle, Arthur
dreams he is on the Wheel of Fortune, sitting on a throne and dressed in the richest gold
that can be made:

And the kynge thought there was undir hym, farre from hym, an hydeous depe blak watir,
and therein was all maner of serpentis and wormes and wylde bestis fowle and orryble. And
suddeynly the kyrige thought that the whyle turned upso-downe, and he felle anionge the
serpentis, and every beste toke hym by it lynnue. And than the kynge cryed as he lay in his
bed, "Helpe! Helpe!"

After the prophetic dream he has another. Gawain and a number of ladies come to him to
warn him against fighting in the morning for if Arthur fights, he will die; if he waits for a
month, Launcelot will be here to help him. Then Gawain and the ladies vanish.

Arthur asks a truce, and the two armies meet on the field to set terms. An adder appears, a
knight unthinkingly draws his sword to kill it, and the two armies are at war. At the end of the
day, Mordred is the only man of his army left standing, and Arthur has only two knights, Sir
Lucan and Sir Bedivere. Against Sir Lucan's advice, Arthur fights Mordred and kills him, but
he gets his own death wound as he does it. Lucan and Bedivere bear him to a chapel.
Robbers overrun the battlefield stealing the gear of dead knights, killing any that have life left
in them.

Arthur is dying and cannot be moved to safety. And so he sends Bedivere to throw Excalibur
into the lake nearby, then return and tell what he has seen. Bedivere hides the sword under
a tree, thinking it too precious to throw away, then returns and says he has obeyed. "What
did you see?" Arthur asks. Bedivere says he saw only waves and winds. Arthur sends him
twice more, and the last time Bedivere does as he has been commanded. A hand catches
the sword and brandishes it three times.

Then at Arthur's command, Bedivere carries the king to the waterside, where a barge awaits
him and some ladies in black hoods. Bedivere puts Arthur in the barge and he is borne away
to Avilon, perhaps to heal his wounds, perhaps to die. Bedivere wanders through a forest
until he comes to where a hermit is kneeling over a fresh grave. It is the grave of a man
brought to him at midnight by ladies in black. Whether or not the body is really that of Arthur,
no one knows. Some say Arthur still lives, and some say riot.

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