Hugh MacDiarmid (Christopher Murray Grieve, 1892-1978), one of the major
poets of the twentieth century, is the greatest Scottish poet of any
century. He drew on the literary and vernacular traditions of Scottish
culture, revitalising the Scots language to create a literature that is
modern, engaged and experimental, both nationalist and international in
its range.
This selection explores the diversity of MacDiarmid's work, from
delicate lyrics derived from the Scots ballad tradition to fierce
polemic. It includes the whole of his greatest work, A Drunk Man Looks
at the Thistle (1926), and his philosophical poem 'On a Raised Beach',
with a full glossary of its technical terms. Scots words have been
glossed at the foot of each page, and the collection includes an
illuminating memoir by Hugh MacDiarmid's son, Michael Grieve.