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Merlin Book 2: The Seven Songs

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Merlin Book 2: The Seven Songs
Merlin Book 2: The Seven Songs Cover
AuthorT. A. Barron
Original titleThe Seven Songs of Merlin
LanguageEnglish
SeriesThe Merlin Saga
GenreFantasy
PublisherPenguin
Publication date
1997
Publication placeU.S.A.
Media typePrint (Hardcover)
Pages336 pp (hardcover edition)
ISBN978-0-399-25021-7
Preceded byMerlin Book 1: The Lost Years 
Followed byMerlin Book 3: The Raging Fires 
WebsiteThe Seven Songs

Merlin Book 2: The Seven Songs is a fantasy novel by T. A. Barron, published by Philomel Books in 1997.[1] The Seven Songs is the second book in a 12-book series known as The Merlin Saga. This book was originally published as The Seven Songs of Merlin, book two of The Lost Years of Merlin epic, a 5-book series.[2] These books chronicle the childhood of Merlin.

Plot summary

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Young Merlin has brought new hope to Fincayra, the enchanted isle that lies between earth and sky. Having finally freed it from the terrible Blight, Merlin and the forest girl Rhia set out to heal the land using the magical Flowering Harp. But Fincayra remains in great danger still — and the first victim of the renewed tide of evil is Merlin's own mother.

Merlin's sole hope of saving his mother's life is to master the Seven Songs of Wizardry passed down from the greatest wizard Fincayra has ever known, Merlin's grandfather Tuatha. Only then can he voyage to the Otherworld of the spirits and obtain the precious Elixir of Dagda. Yet to do that he must first succeed where even Tuatha failed — by defeating Balor, the ogre whose merest glance means death. Even more difficult, Merlin must discover the secret of seeing not with his eyes, but with his heart.

The Seven Songs

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The Seven Songs refer to the seven major arts of Wizardry. These arts are Changing, Binding, Protecting, Naming, Leaping, Eliminating, and Seeing. A song written on the walls inside Arbassa (Merlin's Sister's Home, an Oak Tree) by Merlin's grand father Tuatha tells of these seven arts and it is only by finding the "Souls of the Songs" that Merlin can begin to master these arts and venture into the Otherworld to retrieve the cure for his Mother.

References

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  1. ^ "The Seven Songs of Merlin". Kirkus Reviews. 1997-08-01. Archived from the original on 2024-02-25. Retrieved 2024-02-25.
  2. ^ Dodds, Georges T. "The Lost Years of Merlin". SF Site. Archived from the original on 2008-01-08. Retrieved 2008-01-05.