Merlinus
Merlinus. The prophecies
of Merlin, which had great influence in the middle ages, represented
the enduring hate of the Welsh for the English conquerors, and were
probably the composition of Merddin, son of Morvryn, whose patron,
Gwenddolew, a prince in Strathclyde, and an upholder of the ancient
faith, perished a.d. 577 at
the battle of Arderydd, fighting against Rhydderch Hael, who had been
converted by St. Columba to Christianity. When the northern Kymry were
driven into Wales, Cornwall, and Brittany, they relocalized the story of
Merlin in their new abodes. Merddin is now represented as a Christian,
and said to be buried in Bardsey, the island of the Welsh saints;
but much of his career is passed in Cornwall, which was long under
the same dynasty as South Wales, even after the English got possession
of the coast at Bristol, and broke the connexion by land between the
two districts. As the mass of tradition grew into the shape in which
we find it in Nennius, and later on in Geoffrey, Merlin becomes a
wholly mythical character, the prophet of his race. It is not till
Geoffrey of Monmouth that we find the boy called Merlin and made the
confidant of Utherpendragon and of Arthur, and able to bring the stones
of Stonehenge from Ireland. Nennius does not mention Merlin among the
early bards, and the poems attributed to him were really composed in the
12th cent., when there was a great outburst of Welsh poetry (Stephens,
Literature of the Kymry, § 4). Among these poems
there is a dialogue between Merddin and his sister Gwenddydd ("The
Dawn"), which contains
724prophecies as to a series of
Welsh rulers. The story of Merlin made an impression abroad as well
as in England. Layamon alludes to several of his prophecies and they
soon gained popular fame. A Vita Merlini in Latin hexameters,
also attributed, though wrongly, to Geoffrey of Monmouth, was printed
by the Roxburghe Club, 1830; the later English forms of the story
by the Early English Text Society. The one fact embodied in the
legend is the long continued enmity of the Kymry to the English
invaders; but even this almost disappeared when the story became
part of the great romance of Arthur.
[C.W.B.]