I've been editing an Arthurian story for 
Wild Enchantments, so here goes with some Arthurian art!
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| John William Waterhouse, 1893 | 
"La Belle Dame Sans Merci" (the beautiful merciless lady) was a 
short poem by Keats, probably based on a 15th Century courtly poem, that was taken up by a bunch of Victorian artists as the theme for a painting.
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| Arthur Hughes, 1863 | 
  
The story goes: knight meets mysterious lady in the forest; they make  love (I'm reading slightly between the lines here but not much); he  falls asleep and dreams that all her previous dead lovers have come -  too late! - to warn him that he is DOOMED; he wakes and she is gone; he  loiters at the spot until he dies, because he can't bear to ride away  from the last place he saw her.
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| Henry Meynell Rheam, 1901 | 
It appeals to  art-viewers who get a kick from the idea of a irresistably seductive  woman who enslaves poor helpless men, bringing the mighty and noble low. In modern terms, femdom.
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| Robbert Anning Bell (1863-1933) | 
Waterhouse's picture at top is, to my mind, the best, but this one is probably the most famous:
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| Frank Dicksee, 1902 | 
Note the near-crucifixion posture.
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| Walter Craine 1865 | 
For some artists it seems to have been a bit of an obsession:
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| Another Robert Anning Bell, 1920 | 
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| Another  Henry Meynell Rheam, 1901 again. | 
I like the ghosts in that painting. Why the harp-playing girlies represented in the one below?
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| John Melhuish Strudwick (1849-1937) | 
It's probably drawing upon the idea of the Belle Dame as being a fairy lady, rather than a human. The presence of other fairies spying or conniving, as she has her wicked way with a mortal, makes folkloric sense.
In this, slightly later picture, the visual emphasis is less on the sleeping/stricken/dying knight in the foregound than on the lady's sumptuous dress. 
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| Frank Cadogan Cowper, 1926 | 
But note the date of the painting, and the 
poppies. This is almost certainly a WW1 reference - to the soldiers killed in the trenches. Young men cut down by a power they cannot understand and cannot hope to resist. This is a case of a painting that looks only decorative and sentimental, and actually has a deeper darker meaning. 
Interesting images...
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