Merlin's Youth is George Parker Bidder's Arthurian poem of memory, first love, enchantment, and the making of the wizard before legend fixes him in old age. Spoken from Merlin's point of view, the poem looks back toward youth and toward Yberha, the woman associated with his awakening to magic, desire, loss, and the inward burden of visionary knowledge. Rather than treating Merlin only as King Arthur's counsellor or the distant prophet of romance, Bidder imagines him as a figure formed by longing, wonder, and remembered sorrow.
This short late nineteenth-century poem belongs to the long literary afterlife of Arthurian legend, where medieval material is reshaped through Victorian and Edwardian poetic feeling. Its interest lies not in retelling the whole story of Camelot, but in narrowing the myth to a private emotional origin: Merlin before the court, before prophecy hardens into destiny, and before the enchanter becomes a symbol rather than a man. Modern listings describe the work as a poem in which Merlin looks back on his lost youth and first love, remembering Yberha and the arts she taught him.
For readers of Arthurian literature, classic poetry, Merlin legend, medieval romance in later literary form, and nineteenth-century mythic verse, Merlin's Youth is a brief but distinctive work: lyrical, melancholy, and centred on the human memory beneath the familiar magical figure.
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Children's Children's Books Fantasy Fiction Literature & Fiction Science Fiction & Fantasy