Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 December 2020
Edwin Muir's poem, “The Gate,” not only marks literally the dividing point in his work between almost unrelieved darkness and increasing light, but, in every detail of its complex structure and in controlling metaphor, it signals the loss of innocence, the intimate acquaintance with evil, which Muir's later poems suggest must be endured before there can be any true knowledge of good. Both halves, into which the poem is cut by a strong caesura in the twelfth line, plunge in parallel downward movements from security into loss and fear; and although a secondary movement, based on a metaphor of initiation, carries the poem forward, over the threshold of “The Gate,” this forward step also turns out to be downward. Because of Muir's persistent association of a castle with treachery from within, as his novel, The Three Brothers, and several poems show, the step into the fortress of adulthood is simultaneously a drop into the central darkness and terror of the universe.
An expanded version of this essay appears in The Poetry if Edwin Muir; The Field of Good and Ill by Elizabeth Huberman. Copyright ©1971 by Elizabeth Huberman. Used by permission of Oxford Univ. Press, Inc.
1 New York: Seabury Press, 1968, p. 33.
2 “ Alice in Wonderland: The Child as Swain,” Some Versions of Pastoral (Norfolk, Conn.: New Directions, 1950), p. 264.
3 Edwin Muir, Collected Poems (New York : Oxford Univ. Press, 1965), p. 19. All quotations from Collected Poems by Edwin Muir. Copyright ©1960 by Willa Muir. Reprinted by permission of Oxford Univ. Press, Inc.
4 New York: Grove Press, 1962, pp. 85–87.
5 Collected Poems, p. 50.
6 The Three Brothers (New York: Doubleday, 1931), p. 240.
7 Collected Poems, p. 129.