Edwin Muir

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Edwin Muir


Born
in Deerness, Orkney, Scotland
May 15, 1887

Died
January 03, 1959

Genre

Influences


Edwin Muir, Orcadian poet, novelist and translator noted, together with his wife Willa Anderson, for making Franz Kafka available in English.

Between 1921 and 1923, Muir lived in Prague, Dresden, Italy, Salzburg and Vienna; he returned to the UK in 1924. Between 1925 and 1956, Muir published seven volumes of poetry which were collected after his death and published in 1991 as The Complete Poems of Edwin Muir. From 1927 to 1932 he published three novels, and in 1935 he came to St Andrews, where he produced his controversial Scott and Scotland (1936).
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Average rating: 4.01 · 338,643 ratings · 12,263 reviews · 144 distinct worksSimilar authors
Selected Poems

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3.80 avg rating — 70 ratings — published 1965 — 3 editions
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Collected Poems

4.09 avg rating — 58 ratings — published 1965 — 9 editions
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An Autobiography (Canongate...

4.05 avg rating — 43 ratings — published 1954 — 27 editions
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Scottish Journey

3.28 avg rating — 53 ratings — published 1935 — 10 editions
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The Originals Franz Kafka S...

4.14 avg rating — 29 ratings
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The Structure of the Novel

3.60 avg rating — 20 ratings — published 1963 — 26 editions
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Scott and Scotland: The Pre...

3.31 avg rating — 13 ratings — published 1936 — 3 editions
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The Marionette

3.91 avg rating — 11 ratings — published 1927 — 4 editions
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The Estate of Poetry

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4.50 avg rating — 8 ratings — published 1962 — 8 editions
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One Foot in Eden

liked it 3.00 avg rating — 7 ratings — published 1956 — 9 editions
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More books by Edwin Muir…
Quotes by Edwin Muir  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“ Light and praise,
Love and atonement, harmony and peace.
Touch me, assail me, break and make my heart.”
Edwin Muir

“Since I emerged that day from the labyrinth,
Dazed with the tall and echoing passages,
The swift recoils, so many I almost feared
I’d meet myself returning at some smooth corner,
Myself or my ghost, for all there was unreal
After the straw ceased rustling and the bull
Lay dead upon the straw and I remained…

I could not live if this were not illusion.
It is a world, perhaps; but there’s another.
For once in a dream or trance I saw the gods
Each sitting on the top of his mountain-isle,
While down below the little ships sailed by…

That was the real world; I have touched it once,
And now shall know it always. But the lie,
The maze, the wild-wood waste of falsehood, roads
That run and run and never reach an end,
Embowered in error – I’d be prisoned there
But that my soul has birdwings to fly free.

Oh these deceits are strong almost as life.
Last night I dreamt I was in the labyrinth,
And woke far on. I did not know the place.”
Edwin Muir

“The Hotel dining-room, like most of the others I was to find in the Highlands, had its walls covered with pictures of all sorts of wild game, living or in the various postures of death that are produced by sport. Between these pictures the walls were alert with the stuffed heads of deer, furnished with antlers of every degree of magnificence. A friend of mine has a theory that these pictures of dying birds and wounded beasts are intended to whet the diner's appetite, and perhaps they did in the more lusty age of Victoria; but I found they had the opposite effect on me, and had to keep my eyes from straying too often to them. In one particular hotel this idea was carried out with such thoroughness that the walls of its dining room looked like a shambles, they presented such an overwhelming array of bleeding birds, beasts and fishes. To find these abominations on the walls of Highland hotels, among a people of such delicacy in other things, is peculiarly revolting, and rubs in with superfluous force that this is a land whose main contemporary industry is the shooting down of wild creatures; not production of any kind but wholesale destruction. This state of things is not the fault of the Highlanders, but of the people who have bought their country and come to it chiefly to kill various forms of life.”
Edwin Muir, Scottish Journey

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