I
have never been a Merlin fan. While my preconceived notions of him before this
class where the obvious old wizard who helped King Arthur, I still didn’t like
him. He wasn’t exciting to me. His adventures weren’t spectacular. I see him as
some prophet who gained magic over the years who uses it for his own advantage and
that of his close friends. I know, I’m being a negative Nellie about Merlin
when everyone else probably likes him.
Even
though I may not like Merlin as a person, I did enjoy reading the Prose Merlin. Being rooted in creative
writing fashion, it was easier and entertaining to read. I laugh when I imagine
Merlin as a year old baby talking to his mother and her dropping him out of
sheer bewilderment. That would seriously freak me out too if my child suddenly
started spouting out wisdom like Plato. Demon child anyone?
However,
out of all the tales associated with Merlin, the one that bothers me the most
is Uther Pendragon’s perusal of Ygerne. It is a classic case of someone wanting
something they can’t have. I feel the feminist rising in me with this because
they treat Ygerne as if she were property to be owned. I realize it was the
norm for men to consider women as possessions back then, but I still rage
against it. I’m proud of Ygerne for standing up for herself and evading the
kings advances. The man just would not give up even when he knew she loved her
husband dearly and would never betray him in such a manner.
When
Urfin goes to speak to Ygerne about becoming the king’s lover, I let out a cry
of indignation at what he says to her. Urfin says, “My lady, it would be an honor
to die for my lord. But what lady as ever before refused to accept the king as
her lover! And he does love you more than anyone else. Surely, you are fooling?”
(Rosenberg 332). Excuse me? Well then, by all means, die for your lustful greedy king who
can’t keep it in his pants. I’d rather keep my loving husband than betray him
for one night with the king. I am glad Ygerne does not find this to be a
compliment, but stands by her virtue and holds fast.
Yet,
sadly, Ygerne does fall to the king’s advances by way of Merlin’s trickery. I
cannot decide if Merlin did this for his own gains or for the gains of his
country. Are they the same? Why would he allow such adultery? I would say the
devil side of him tipped the scale against God in this instance. However,
without the conception of Arthur, God may not have blessed the kingdom when
Arthur comes to power. Once again, the
balance between good and evil rears its head.
(And suddenly Gandalf had a twin brother....)

