Hugh MacDiarmid
Born
in Langholm, Dumfriesshire, Scotland
August 11, 1892
Died
September 09, 1978
Genre
Influences
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A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle
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published
1969
—
17 editions
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Selected Poems
by
—
published
1934
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12 editions
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Selected Poetry
by
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published
2012
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8 editions
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The Complete Poems of Hugh MacDiarmid, Volume 1
by
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published
1978
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5 editions
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Complete Poems, Volume II
by
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published
1985
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2 editions
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The Socialist Poems of Hugh MacDiarmid
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published
1978
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Collected Poems of Hugh MacDiarmid
by |
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Annals of the Five Senses: The First Collected Work by Hugh MacDiarmid
by
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published
1923
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4 editions
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The Hugh MacDiarmid Anthology: Poems in Scots and English
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published
1972
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3 editions
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The Revolutionary Art of the Future: Rediscovered Poems
by
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published
2004
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2 editions
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“And until that day comes every true man's place/
is to reject all else and be with the lowest,/
the poorest - in the bottom of that deepest of wells/
in which alone is truth; in which
is truth only - truth that should shine like the sun,/
with a monopoly of movement, and a sound like talking to God.”
―
is to reject all else and be with the lowest,/
the poorest - in the bottom of that deepest of wells/
in which alone is truth; in which
is truth only - truth that should shine like the sun,/
with a monopoly of movement, and a sound like talking to God.”
―
“We are so easily baffled by appearances
And do not realize that these stones are one with the stars.”
―
And do not realize that these stones are one with the stars.”
―
“It requires great love of it deeply to read
The configuration of a land,
Gradually grow conscious of fine shadings,
Of great meanings in slight symbols,
Hear at last the great voice that speaks softly,
See the swell and fall upon the flank
Of a statue carved out in a whole country’s marble,
Be like Spring, like a hand in a window
Moving New and Old things carefully to and fro,
Moving a fraction of flower here,
Placing an inch of air there,
And without breaking anything.
So I have gathered unto myself
All the loose ends of Scotland,
And by naming them and accepting them,
Loving them and identifying myself with them,
Attempt to express the whole.”
― The Complete Poems of Hugh MacDiarmid, Volume 1
The configuration of a land,
Gradually grow conscious of fine shadings,
Of great meanings in slight symbols,
Hear at last the great voice that speaks softly,
See the swell and fall upon the flank
Of a statue carved out in a whole country’s marble,
Be like Spring, like a hand in a window
Moving New and Old things carefully to and fro,
Moving a fraction of flower here,
Placing an inch of air there,
And without breaking anything.
So I have gathered unto myself
All the loose ends of Scotland,
And by naming them and accepting them,
Loving them and identifying myself with them,
Attempt to express the whole.”
― The Complete Poems of Hugh MacDiarmid, Volume 1
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