William Soutar: Collected Works: Published Poetry reintroduces one of Scotland’s most significant twentieth- century poets, a champion of Scots, pacifist visionary and forerunner of ecopoetics whose achievement has long been overlooked.
This two-volume edition of his published poetry showcases his striking lyric gift in poems of love and community, war and mortality. Soutar was bed-bound by illness for the last fourteen years of his life. His work is testament to his creativity and resilience in the face of adversity.
William Soutar was a Scottish poet, born 1898. He served in the navy in World War I, and afterwards studied at the University of Edinburgh, where he encountered the work of Hugh MacDiarmid. This led to a radical alteration in his work, and he became a leading poet of the Scottish Literary Renaissance and 'one of the greatest poets Scotland has produced'. In 1924, he was diagnosed with ankylosing spondylitis. From 1930 he was bedridden. He died of tuberculosis in 1943. His journal, Diary of a Dying Man, was published posthumously and is considered to 'put him into the rank of the great diarists'
One form of verse which he used was the cinquain (now known as American cinquain), these he labelled epigrams. He took up this form in the second half of the 1930s with such enthusiasm that he became an even more prolific practitioner than Adelaide Crapsey had been.