Scotland came within seconds of creating history before England salvaged a 38-38 draw in a thrilling end to the Guinness Six Nations.
England 38-38 Scotland
England tries: Nowell, T Curry, Launchbury, May, Ford
England conversions: Farrell (5)
England penalties: Farrell
Scotland tries: McInally, D Graham (2), Bradbury, Russell, Johnson
Scotland conversions: Russell (2), Laidlaw (2)
Match report: Thrilling draw in Calcutta Cup
England collapsed in spectacular fashion but Scotland were still unable to register their first victory at Twickenham since 1983 as the Guinness Six Nations climaxed in a remarkable 38-38 draw.
It took a try by George Ford in the final play of the game to rescue England as the injury-ravaged Scots stood on the brink of completing the greatest comeback in tournament history.
Wales received the Grand Slam trophy at the Principality Stadium just moments before Eddie Jones' players exited the tunnel, a 25-7 victory over Ireland elevating them to the pinnacle of European rugby.
Avenging last year's bitter defeat at Murrayfield was now England's aim and as they ran in four tries to build a 31-0 lead inside half an hour, they were on track to mark their last competitive match before the World Cup with an ominous statement.
But it was the prelude to a stunning riposte from Scotland, who ran in the next five tries, two of them finished by jet-heeled wing Darcy Graham, as the overwhelming favourites fell to pieces.
Tied at 31-31, the final game of the 2019 Six Nations was to be decided by a thrilling final quarter as delirious Scottish fans rubbed their eyes in disbelief at the drama unfolding before them.
England were rattled and replacement scrum-half Greig Laidlaw fell short with a long-range penalty attempt in swirling conditions that if successful would have seen them creep ahead for the first time.
But that moment duly arrived with four minutes remaining and once again it was the home midfield that waved Scotland through, but the try still took some scoring from centre Sam Johnson, who broke three despairing tackles to touch down.
Exhausted and bewildered, England summoned the strength for one last assault that saw Ford sprint over to level the final score, although as holders the Scots retained the Calcutta Cup.
⏱️ 29 mins: England 31-0 Scotland
— Sporting Life (@SportingLife) March 16, 2019
⏱️ 76 mins: England 31-38 Scotland
⏱️ Full-time: England 38-38 Scotland
👏🏴🏴 What a sensational match to end the #SixNations even if neither side look happy.#ENGvSCO pic.twitter.com/p1gsOfe88M
There appeared to be only one outcome as England crossed with just 66 seconds on the clock.
Elliot Daly sprinted through a non-existent midfield and fed Henry Slade, whose own run ended when Jack Nowell picked a sharp line that swept him over.
Ben Moon limped off after tacking a big tackle on his ribs but the setback failed to dent momentum as Tom Curry was on the end of a short-range line-out drive.
Scotland were already disintegrating but it was a fine carry and brilliant offload that saw Ellis Genge - who had replaced Moon - find Kyle Sinckler in support in precise interplay from the props.
Sinckler barrelled into Sean Maitland and the ball was worked right where Joe Launchbury dummied his way over.
Daly was causing havoc, with one pass out of the tackle almost leading to a try, and the full-back was involved as England counter-attacked from inside their 22.
Slade had sight of the line as he galloped down the left touchline and at the perfect moment he slipped a sublime pass to Jonny May, who cut inside to touch down.
The one-way traffic was halted when Stuart McInally charged down an Owen Farrell kick, grabbed the ball and won the race to the line, shrugging off a tackle by May in the process.
And it was slick passing and clever lines that opened England up in the 48th minute, the backs interchanging wonderfully until Graham jinked his way over in the left corner.
The Scottish resurgence continued when Ali Price kicked and collected to give number eight Magnus Bradbury the chance to show his pace as the home defence was beaten too easily once more.
It was now England who were falling apart and it was the midfield where the visitors were running amok as incisive play gave Graham his second try that was finished when the wing switched on the afterburners.
And the comeback was complete when Farrell's sluggish pass in a sluggish move was picked off by Finn Russell, who ran half the pitch to drive over.
With the score level, a grandstand finish awaited and it was one England were lucky to play with 15 men after Farrell escaped punishment for a shoulder-led tackle on Graham.
Laidlaw's penalty lacked the legs and Farrell was replaced by George Ford as the tension ramped up, before Johnson and Ford exchanged tries in a heart-stopping finish.
Reaction
England coach Eddie Jones: "It was 100 per cent mental. There's no physical difference out there at all.
"It's a bit of a recurring theme for us. We've experienced this at least three times in 12 months, where we've taken control of a game, let our foot off the gas and then been unable to get control of it back.
"Our first half there was some exceptional rugby. We should have been ahead by a lot more.
"We came in at half-time determined to play a bit tighter and with a bit more discipline, but we failed to do that.
"It's a great lesson for us. I thought our finishers (replacements) did exceptionally well to get us out of jail at the end. Obviously, just disappointed with the full 80 minutes."
Scotland coach Gregor Townsend: "I've never been involved in a game like that as a player or a coach.
"It's the most unusual game I've been involved in.
"I'm very happy with the draw considering what happened in the first half, but the players are absolutely gutted.
"They're really disappointed not to have won, which seems incredible to think when you're 31-0 down.
"We talked about winning back respect in the second half.
"Winning the second half was going to be a huge challenge, against a team which had scored 31 unanswered points.
"To go out and score another five tries in the second half is still hard to believe."