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Once and Future Royalty
Just, stay with me on this one. I know its going to look crazy at the start, but trust me, I know where I'm going.
It all started with the 537AD scene in Wessex in the opening montage of "Hard Times," S1E3. Yeah, the one where Aziraphale is supposed to be a knight of the Round Table and Crowley is role-playing the Black Knight, and they are both so super-squeaky shiny clean - not a speck of dirt or mud on them. wtf! It looks out of place, unrealistic, and was bugging the crap out of me, like a stone in your shoe. It just didn't fit. I mean, why put a myth, a legend, into that sequence? Oh, OK, yeah, the preceding stories from the Bible, like the Garden of Eden and the Flood, aren't "myths" as well, you say? Hmm. In the context of the Good Omens AU, being a biblical based story, they belong there far more than the legend of King Arthur.
King Arthur, who supposedly united Britain under his rule during the late 5th century and early 6th century, was shown to have the divine right to rule by wielding the mighty sword Excalibur. Some stories tell of Arthur pulling Excalibur from a stone. Some tell of him receiving Excalibur from the Lady of the Lake. Either way, it was bestowed upon him by divine grace. Despite his triumph in battle, he left no heirs, as his queen, the fair Guinevere, was barren. She had a long-running love affair with the greatest knight of the court, Sir Lancelot, but despite this being an open secret in court Arthur would not put her aside. The knights of the Round Table in the court of Camelot were near-paragons of Christian virtue, and there are many tales of their search for the Holy Grail, the cup from the Last Supper of Jesus Christ.
In the end, mortally wounded in battle, Arthur was taken away for healing, and never seen again. It was said he would return when Britain was at it most direst hour to save the day once more. A "messianic" return.
The Once and Future King.
Now, I'm no Arthurian novice; I drank up all of T. H. White as a teenager, read the Dark is Rising multiple times, Marion Zimmer Bradley's interpretation and what ever else I could lay my hands on for a good couple of decades. And there is LOTS of King Arthur stuff around. You are not left wanting for anything new to read or consume. And I'll bet there are a fair few of you also out there who know a quite bit about the legend as well. Oh, and I can't tell you how many times I have watched Monty Python and the Holy Grail. I still walk around quoting it day-to-day, like the good little Gen-Xer I am, having grown up on that stuff. So I really should have listened to my intuition when bits of Monty Python kept popping up in my brain in response to other parts of GO I was thinking about. (Staaay, I said, stay with me here....)
I kept chewing away furiously on the Wessex problem, growling in feral frustration at it, but also kept reading and sorting out some other ideas and metas at the same time. Eventually I found the key in a tiny little post, about a small detail in the 1941 Blitz episode S2E4, of all places. I wanted to slap myself with how much was staring me in the face so obviously once the door opened. And the damn beauty of it is, that I already written about some it, out of context, without knowing the why.
OK. Where to start this journey...hmmm, back to Monty Python, because, guess what - the Wessex scene is actually riffing off one the more famous skits out the the Holy Grail. The scene is a masterpiece of political satire, from start to finish, but the relevant part here is this sequence:
In case you missed the salient points: Arthur claims he is king by divine providence, because he was given Excalibur by the Lady of the Lake. Dennis the peasant protests this waterlogged method of determination, mentioning ponds, watery tarts and a moistened... well, I hope you get the idea about where this is going.
Meanwhile, in 537AD, Wessex, as the mist swirls around them:
"It is a bit damp," complains a shiny silver Aziraphale.
Yes, Excalibur would be a bit damp after it emerged from the Lake. (vidavalor! Get your mind out of the gutter! I'm trying to have a serious discussion here! Please! And I wasn't even going to go anywhere near what the sword in the stone is really meant to be referring to...it's not even relevant to the discussion at hand, I swear! Well, there is going to be sexual relations mentioned but - oh, never mind...)
Right. Where were we. Lets leave those super-clean elite pretendy knights to swim off through the swirling mist back to their dry homes to write and file reports to head office, along with Patsy and the hired Igors, and Dennis can keep playing in his lovely muddy filth after he finishes protesting being repressed by the divinely-deluded Arthur. I've got a bit more to say about what Aziraphale and Crowley might represent here later but you need some more context first, so lets move on. I just needed to show you the first bit so you can see the Arthurian theme stretches across both S1 and S2, and will likely appear in S3 as well. More about that towards the end.
Ah, before I forget...another ref from the Holy Grail we need to cover:
This GIF, unfortunately, doesn't have the full exchange between the peasants, which is this:
P1: "Who's that then?" P2: "I don't know. Must be a king." P1: "How can you tell?" P2: "Because he doesn't have any shit on him."
Ah. Er. OH!
Have you made the connection?
Who have I been emphasizing as being unusually clean in their Arthurian setting? That's right, Aziraphale and Crowley.
What's this implying? That they are royalty. Celestial royalty. Maybe not kings, but how about princes? You know how we've been discussing whether Crowley was a once at least an Archangel, and there is even a hint that he was a fallen prince of Heaven given during the replay of Gabriel's trial? (Not the prince, but a prince - a seraphim) And that Aziraphale may have once been Raphael, and may be again in the future? Once and future royalty. To me it adds weight to the past discussion, and helps to explain the assumed authority expressed in these two scenes here: On the left, Aziraphale takes control inside the book shop as the angels and demons argue who is going to punish Gabriel and Beelzebub (finally found it after several months!) and on the right, Crowley is shouting at the assembling demons in the street that they are "out of order."
Onward, Patsy. (I hope you're still with me.)
1941, the Blitz part 2, minisode.
We've found Excalibur! On to Camelot!


[Edit note: I've added a few GIFs and screen shots into the sequence of parallels above because I was thinking over a few things since I posted and felt this actually sat better. To try and explain, as they don't exactly match as I would like, in the Holy Grail movie, King Arthur and the knights he has gathered rock up at the foot of Camelot and gaze up in awe at it. "Camelot!" Arthur declares to the party. "Camelot!" Galahad echoes in excitement. And a third "Camelot!" comes from Lancelot. What do we get in GO? Aziraphale leaps out of the Bentley (Crowley's black horse) and declares "The theater! Sophocles! Shakespeare!" I swear, if you put the two side by side, they would match. It's not just a reminder of how much time Aziraphale has seen pass by, or that we are seeing a tragedy play out. But damn it, I could so just see Aziraphale attending a Sophocles performance in Athens back in the day...]
Camelot was King Arthur's castle and home of his court. In S2 of GO the Windmill Theater is established as our court of Camelot where our 1941 Blitz-era Arthurian drama is to play out, involving Furfur and the zombies.
Yes, poor old Furfur. Two's company, three's a crowd, as they say. Now we know we're in Camelot, we need to be reminded of the central tragedy of the Arthurian story, that ultimately led to the golden kingdom's fall. Lady Guinevere, Arthur's queen, famously loved Sir Lancelot, and the two were passionate lovers. It was essentially a love-triangle at the top, with Arthur being jilted, but he wouldn't/couldn't discard his queen. Where do we see this playing out in 1941?
Furfur, pleased with himself for catching an angel and a demon in the act of consorting together (with the help of the zombies,) barges into the backstage dressing room, and confronts the lovers with their crime. But who is playing who in the Arthurian love triangle? I would say Furfur is clearly caught in the role of Arthur here. Consider the following exchange:
FURFUR: Hmm, well, well, well… What have we here? AZIRAPHALE: Sorry, have we met? FURFUR: Oh, no, you never had the pleasure, but… we have, haven't we? CROWLEY: Have we? FURFUR: What do you mean "have we?" You know we have. We were in the same legion. Just before the Fall. Doing dubious battle on the plains of Heaven. Remember? CROWLEY: I remember going into battle, I don't remember being there with you. Sorry. FURFUR: I was right next to you. We did loads together. You use to jump on me back, little monkey in the waistcoat. Anyway, whether you do or whether you don't, it doesn't matter. I'm here to inform you, as a representative of the Higher Powers of Hell, that you, Crowley, are in breach of the Infernal Code. Consulting and collaborating with an angel, Fell the Marvelous, aka… [opens book] Azirapalala. Azirapapap. Aziphapalala. AZIRAPHALE: [annoyed] Aziraphale
Furfur claims a past intimate relationship with Crowley, which Crowley spurns offhandedly. Crowley is playing Guinevere here, jilting Furfur/Arthur, which leaves the demon-smiting Aziraphale standing in for the handsome hero Lancelot (with his French connections, no less), and doesn't he make us weak at the knees when he drops his voice an octave in dominating disgust. (Is it suddenly getting hot in here...? Phew!)
Interestingly, looking back in S1 at 537AD Wessex, though, I would say that Crowley was Lancelot as the Black Knight, a role that Lancelot sometimes played in the legends, and Aziraphale would then be the fair maiden Guinevere. It certainly plays into Crowley's long term role of playing the knight who comes to the rescue of Aziraphale's princess in distress. Excalibur was no where in sight, perhaps still beneath the waters of the lake. Nor Arthur. Perhaps it was still too early in the story then...
I had originally suggested in my very first post that Furfur was given a stag as his demon avatar because he was wearing horns for being cuckolded by Crowley. But I wasn't quite thinking about it in context with the Arthurian legend! The stag is also often associated with royalty, plus while wandering around the medieval bestiary website that someone linked to, it interestingly notes that the enemy of the snake is the stag and the stork (Shax's avatar.) Ah ha!

So how can we extrapolate this knowledge into a possible appearance of the Arthurian theme in S3?
Will we see the love triangle of Arthur/Guinevere/Lancelot come back into play and cause more chaos? I'm wondering if it might have something to do with the Fall.
Or will our lovers bring down a divinely-appointed ruler via their committed behind-the-back defiance of expected propriety?
Will Excalibur appear from beneath the waters, perhaps in another form, to declare a new king?
Could it even be a combination Jesus/Arthur, King of the World, returned? And they turn out to be a very naughty boy, disappearing into the night clubs of Times Square, New York, and that's how they lose him? (Social media viral sensation, anyone?)
I wouldn't be half-surprised if Greasy Johnson's name turns out to be Arthur, actually.
And no, I haven't forgotten that Adam's dad was named Arthur as well.
Bring on S3!
**Bonus**
If you've made it this far and you're thinking:

Let me leave you with this last connection.
In the back stage change room, remember Furfur delivers these lines:
FURFUR: What do you mean "have we?" You know we have. We were in the same legion. Just before the Fall. Doing dubious battle on the plains of Heaven. Remember?
On the first level, he is referring the Great War in the Good Omens AU.
On the second level, Furfur is paraphrasing Milton's Paradise Lost.
On a third level, I can (and will in a future meta) connect this back to the training initiative paintball fight at Tadfield Manor in S1.
And even deeper on a fourth level, if you do know the Holy Grail movie well, you'll remember there is an odd little subplot in it, that infers that the whole King Arthur and his knights thing is merely a full-on violent cosplay that is murderously rampaging across the countryside in the present day with the police in hot pursuit. It's a strange juxtaposition between reality and dream, and you aren't quite sure what it is real or not. The ending is bizarrely and abruptly surreal as the two story lines collide in the heat of battle, as the police turn up and arrest the combatants. A bit like this:
#good omens#good omens 2#good omens meta#good omens analysis#aziraphale#crowley#king arthur#king of the who?#the return of king arthur#excalibur#the lady of the lake#watery tarts#monty python#monty python and the holy grail#run away#camelot#arthurian legend#ladies of camelot#guinevere#lancelot#the once and future king#once and future royalty#good omens 1941#furfur#shax#dubious battle on the plains of heaven#tadfield manor
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It's March to Camelot prompt #3- Family.
My partner/tame writer is @corvidfeathers
The March to Camelot challenge is hosted by @mortiscausa
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Hunt
A white hart galloped into the hall, pursued by a white brachet and thirty pairs of black hounds
A scene from Le Mort d’Arthur for @mortiscausa ‘s palette challenge
#march to camelot#March to Camelot 2025#arthuriana#white hart#my art#I usually struggle with palette challenges because I don’t like working in block colours#I did give in a little to detail the hart’s fur which was…#more subtle on my computer let’s put it that way#also THEE funniest section of Mort d’Arthur when a lady is kidnapped in front of Arthur and he legit says#“well she’s not my problem anymore’#le morte d'arthur
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Ok but it's so freaking intriguing to me that the entire merlin fandom decided that Aithusa is a girl, cause I'm pretty sure that they're a boy in canon??? Like when was this decided who is the diva that started this movement cause I wholeheartedly support!!! Like every fic, headcanon, edit or just generally most fanworks have Aithusa as a girl and that's freaking cool
#what if Aithusa decided they're a girl!!!#omg trans Aithusa#heck at this point can they even be classified with human genders?!?!#I mean technically they're a dragon lmao#merlin#bbc merlin#merthur#arthur pendragon#merlin bbc#merlin emrys#aithusa#the white dragon#kilgharrah#the knights of camelot#knights of the round table#bbc morgana#lady morgana#bbc gwen#guenevere#gauis#gwaine#leon#lancelot#elyan#percival#mordred#dragons#dragonlord
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I wish to make brief mention of an acquaintance which was made in private between the moon and the sun. Do you know of whom I mean to speak? He who was lord of the knights, and who was renowned above them all, ought surely to be called the sun. I refer, of course, to my lord Gawain, for chivalry is enhanced by him just as when the morning sun sheds its rays abroad and lights all places where it shines. And I call her the moon, who cannot be otherwise because of her sense and courtesy. However, I call her so not only because of her good repute, but because her name is, in fact, Lunete. Yvain, or the Knight of the Lion | Chrétien de Troyes
for some reason this little friendship/flirtation has always stuck in my mind and I've wanted to draw something for it for ages. i just like the idea of Gawain having lots of gal pals haha
march to camelot #3: kinship
#march to camelot#arthuriana#arthurian legend#knights of the round table#sir gawain#lady lunete#illustration#chretien de troyes#illustrators on tumblr
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Elaine by Edmund Blair Leighton
#edmund blair leighton#art#elaine#arthurian#camelot#river thames#astolat#escalot#the lady of shalott#king arthur#queen guinevere#sir lancelot#britain#medieval#middle ages#great britain#mythology#courtly love#elaine of astolat#guinevere#boat#castle#lancelot#alfred lord tennyson#alfred tennyson#idylls of the king#sir thomas malory#thomas malory#maiden#maid
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Honestly the more you know about the family trees in Arthurian legend the funnier the family tree in the show becomes.
#bbc merlin#Merlin BBC#Arthur Pendragon#Morgana Pendragon#Uther Pendragon#Ygraine de Bois#obviously simplified trees but you get my point#Agravaine what you doing jumping two generations?#Morgana going from Arthur's maternal half sister to his paternal always makes me laugh#Not even touching on the blood feud between Percival's family and Gawain's#Or the fact that in some versions Gawain marries a mad hag in the woods and she magically becomes the hottest lady in Camelot#and if you look at her name is seems like she might be Percival's mum
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Fem Gwaine (Gwanwyn) from my AU!! I love her... Sword-wielding hottie at the tavern, take me
#my art 💛#bbc merlin#merlin fanart#bbc gwaine#sir gwaine#gwaine#fem gwaine#lady knight#lady knights of camelot#gwanwyn#my merlin art 💛#once and future queen au
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bbc merlin cooked so bad like how did they do that? genuinely
#the plot lines my god#so much material for us#who cooked this up#in genuine awe#bbc merlin#bbc merthur#arthur pendragon#merlin emrys#lady morgana#queen guinevere#bbc gwen#bbc morgana#bbc arthur#knights of the round table#bbc lancelot#bbc gwaine#bbc leon#merthur#merlin x arthur#merlin fandom#king arthur#camelot
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PYLE, Howard. The Lady of Shalott by Alfred Tennyson, Part III, 1881. by Halloween HJB
#Howard Pyle#Alfred Lord Tennyson#The Lady of Shalott#Arthurian legends#Camelot#Lancelot#hero's journey#Belle Époque#vintage book illustration#verse#poetry#curse#flickr
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Quest for Camelot (1998)
#animation#2d animation#quest for camelot#lady kayley#kayley and garrett#knights of the round table#90sfairydust
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It's March to Camelot prompt #4- ENVY
My partner/tame writer is @corvidfeathers
The March to Camelot challenge is hosted by @mortiscausa
#my art#written by corvid#march to camelot#lancelot#elaine of astolat#the lady of shalott#arthuriana#arthurian legend
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Lancelot and the Lady of the Lake play another game of hide and seek.
My veeeery late submission for Prompt 1 (Hunt) of @mortiscausa's 'March to Camelot' Challenge! Highly reccomend giving the tag a scroll; there is some fantastic work out there.
#arthuriana#march to camelot#sir lancelot#lady of the lake#The opening chapters to Lancelot IV broke me in some way#Vulgate parent/child dynamics don't make me cry challenge (IMPOSSIBLE)
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anyone noticed that the intro for season 2 is a continuation of the opening of season 1? the first opening ends with judgement day, with everyone jumping and going to heaven or to hell
except that judgement day never came. the apocalypse was averted.
this is the very start of the second opening, and so here they arrive at the ledge on the other side. i also love how crowley climbs up and aziraphale flies down. i just thought this was very clever of the creators of the show
#artists are amazing#try get an ai to create something even half as beautiful as that#the ai would fail miserably#i remember in the second or third episode spotting the camelot ladies poster because ofc i'm gonna notice anything with arthurian ties#and got a delightful bit of foreshadowing#i like this show a normal amount#good omens#good omens 2#good omens season two#good omens 2 spoilers#aziraphale#crowley#david tennant#michael sheen
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And then they took their horses and rode throughout a fair forest; and then they came to a plain, and saw where were many pavilions and tents, and a fair castle, and there was much smoke and great noise; and when they came near the siege Sir Beaumains espied upon great trees, as he rode, how there hung full goodly armed knights by the neck, and their shields about their necks with their swords, and gilt spurs upon their heels, and so there hung nigh a forty knights shamefully with full rich arms. Then Sir Beaumains abated his countenance and said, What meaneth this? Fair sir, said the damosel, abate not your cheer for all this sight, for ye must courage yourself, or else ye be all shent, for all these knights came hither to this siege to rescue my sister Dame Lionesse, and when the Red Knight of the Red Launds had overcome them, he put them to this shameful death without mercy and pity. And in the same wise he will serve you but if you quit you the better. Le Morte D'Arthur, Book 8 | Thomas Malory
march to camelot #4: monstrous
#march to camelot#arthurian#arthurian legends#sir gareth#lady lynette#sir beaumains#knights of the round table#illustration#illustrators on tumblr#i missed out the gilt spurs but I'M NOT GOING BACK TO EDIT ;A;#tw death
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Elaine or The Lady of Shalott (1877) by John Grimshaw (1836-1893).
'She floated down to Camelot: 'And as the boat-head wound along - The willowy hills and fields among - They heard her singing her last song - The Lady of Shalott.'
#john grimshaw#art#artedit#the lady of shalott#1800s art#elaine#camelot#king arthur#art detail#art details
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