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  1. At the end of Le Morte d'Arthur, we are left with a few characters still standing. First, Sir Bedivere "swooned" and implores the church hermit, who is in actuality the former Bishop of...

  2. Galahad is able to set the pieces together, and the sword suddenly seems like new. He gives it to Bors, since that adventure has been achieved. Then many of the knights depart, since the Sangreal vessel is about to feed the castle residents, but the pure knights are welcomed in.

  3. Ending of the book is heavly inspired by Arthurian legends. Kind Arhur was fatally wounded by poisonous blade, and as mortal medicine couldn't help him, he was sailed to Avalon, also known as Isle of Appletrees. It's poethic description of death and afterlife. Almost the same happened to Geralt.

  4. Upon his return, Bedevere takes his dying king to a hermit; there, Arthur passes away and is. Sir Launcelot hears of both King Arthur’s and Sir Gawain’s death and comes to England. Upon arriving, he becomes a hermit and when Queen Guinevere passes away, she is buried alongside with her fallen king.

  5. In 1984, the ending of Malory's story was turned by John Barton and Gillian Lynne into a BBC2 non-speaking (that is featuring only Malory's narration and silent actors) television drama, titled simply Le Morte d'Arthur.

  6. Margawse rebukes Arthur for having made her son, Gareth, a kitchen knave, and asks where he is. Arthur renews his commitment to find him, saying he hadn’t realize who Gareth was. Margawse says she sent him with gold and silver, sumptuously dressed, but Arthur says Beaumains arrived in poverty.

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  8. Unlike Merlin, the Lady of the Lake asks for a return favor that proves abhorrent to Arthur—who, unlike his father, is forced to refuse to fulfill this end of the bargain. While Balin breaks the stalemate by killing the Lady of the Lake, Arthur cannot bring himself to celebrate this turn of events.

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