“Thou hast betray'd thy nature and th Not rendering true answer, as beses Thy fealty, nor like a noble knight For surer sign had follow'd, eithe Or voice, or else a motion of the mere."
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In 1833, Tennyson proposed to write a long epic about King Arthur, the legendary British leader who resisted the Anglo-Saxon invaders of sixth-century England. By 1838, he had completed one of the twelve books, entitled “Morte d'Arthur,” which chronicled the king's death (“morteExplanation:
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“Thou hast betray'd thy nature and th Not rendering true answer, as beses Thy fealty, nor like a noble knight For surer sign had follow'd, eithe Or voice, or else a motion of the mere."
- Arthur inquires of Bedivere what he heard and saw when he tossed the sword into the lake upon his return.
- Bedivere makes up the story that he heard the sound of the blade being thrown into the sea together with the sound of wild water hitting the cliff.
- As a result of an arm emerging from the water, King Arthur is aware that the sword cannot fall into the sea.
- He chastises Bedivere for lying since he would have received another sign that was practically miraculous if he had thrown the sword as instructed. Bedivere is told by Arthur to go and fling the sword.
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