The gates of horn and ivory appear in the following notable English written works: •
David Gemmell's epic novel
Troy: Lord of the Silver Bow, chapter sixteen. This is referenced when Odysseus talks to Xander about his vision of the future, and what his wife Penelope had taught him about dreams and their gates in the past. •
Edmund Spenser's epic poem
The Faerie Queene (1590, English) in book 1, stanzas XL and XLIV, in reference to a false dream being brought to the hero (Prince Arthur/the Knight of the Red Crosse). •
Alexander Pope's mock-epic
The Dunciad (1743), in Book III: "And thro' the Iv'ry Gate the Vision flies." •
E. R. Eddison's romance
The Worm Ouroboros (1922), in Chapter 2: "...belike the dream was a true dream, sent thee through the gate of horn". •
E. M. Forster's short story "
The Other Side of the Hedge". The reference from Forster comes when the main character of the story observes the two gates; "The Other Side of the Hedge" is usually read as a metaphor of death and
Heaven. •
A. A. Milne's three-act play
The Ivory Door is a condemnation of religious dogma and false belief. •
T.S. Eliot's poem "Sweeney Among the Nightingales". The line "And Sweeney guards the horned gate" is likewise a reference to this image. • Eliot's poem "
Ash-Wednesday". The lines "And the blind eye creates / The empty forms between the ivory gates" similarly refer to this concept. •
William Empson's poem "Letter III": "...offspring of Heaven first born, | Earth's terra firma, the Hell-Gate of Horn" •
H. P. Lovecraft's short story "
Celephaïs" alludes to the gates of ivory as the portal through which children see the world of wonder, which their adult minds, made wise and unhappy by knowledge of the real world, will reject as fanciful. •
Ursula K. Le Guin's novel
A Wizard of Earthsea. •
Robert Holdstock's novel
Gate of Ivory, Gate of Horn. The main character grapples with a traumatic event that has two very different manifestations, one true and one false. •
Derek Mahon's poem "Homage to Malcolm Lowry". "Lighting-blind, you, tempest-torn / At the poles of our condition, did not confuse / The Gates of Ivory with the Gates of Horn." •
Margaret Drabble's novel
The Gates of Ivory. •
W.H. Auden's poem "Prime" in
Horae Canonicae. •
Seamus Heaney's poem "To a Dutch Potter in Ireland" in
The Spirit Level: "Then I entered a strongroom of vocabulary / Where words like urns that had come through the fire / Stood in their bone-dry alcoves next a kiln // And came away changed, like the guard who'd seen / The stone move in a diamond-blaze of air / Or the gates of horn behind the gates of clay." •
Lord Dunsany's poem "The Gate of Horn" in his 1940 book
War Poems. The poem is about leaving his native Ireland and its false dream of neutrality in WW2 to volunteer in
Kent to fight the Germans if they invade, and the hope of a true dream of victory. •
The Ivory Gate, a novel by
Walter Besant, describing a solicitor with a split personality. The utopian thoughts of his alter ego are said to occur "before the Ivory Gate". •
Frank Bidart's long poem "The First Hour of the Night" makes use of both the gates of ivory and horn to question certainty in fact and memory. • The gates are also depicted as part of the Dream world in the graphic novel "
The Sandman" by
Neil Gaiman. • The inspiration for the title of the
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine novel "Horn and Ivory". ==Music==