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  1. Hugh MacDiarmid es el pseudónimo de Christopher Murray Grieve (11 de agosto de 1892, Langholm [1] - 9 de septiembre de 1978, Edimburgo [2] ), un importante poeta escocés del siglo XX. Fue pieza fundamental en la creación de un modernismo en Escocia , adalid del llamado "Scottish Renaissance" ('renacimiento escocés', versión del modernismo ...

  2. Scottish. Literary movement. Scottish Renaissance. Notable works. A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle. Christopher Murray Grieve (11 August 1892 – 9 September 1978), best known by his pen name Hugh MacDiarmid ( / məkˈdɜːrmɪd /; Scots: [hju mək'djɑr.mɪd] ), was a Scottish poet, journalist, essayist and political figure.

  3. 1892–1978. C. M. Grieve, best known under his pseudonym Hugh MacDiarmid, is credited with effecting a Scottish literary revolution which restored an indigenous Scots literature and has been acknowledged as the greatest poet that his country has produced since Robert Burns.

  4. Hugh MacDiarmid. 1892 - 1978. Hugh MacDiarmid © Gordon Wright (image used under strict permission) POEMS BIBLIOGRAPHY CRITICISM. Hugh MacDiarmid was born as Christopher Murray Grieve on 11 August 1892 in Langholm, a small town just north of the Scottish border with England. His father was the local postman, his mother’s people lived in ...

  5. Hugh MacDiarmid (1892-1978) remains a controversial and influential figure. Born a postman’s son in Langholm Dumfriesshire, he trained to be a school teacher in Edinburgh, then worked on local newspapers in Scotland and South Wales before enlisting in the Royal Army Medical Corps in 1915.

  6. Hugh MacDiarmid es el pseudónimo de Christopher Murray Grieve (11 de agosto de 1892, Langholm [1] - 9 de septiembre de 1978, Edimburgo [2]), un importante poeta escocés del siglo XX. Quick facts: Hugh MacDiarmid, Información personal, Nombre...

  7. Hugh MacDiarmid (born Aug. 11, 1892, Langholm, Dumfriesshire, Scot.—died Sept. 9, 1978, Edinburgh) was the preeminent Scottish poet of the first half of the 20th century and leader of the Scottish literary renaissance. The son of a postman, MacDiarmid was educated at Langholm Academy and the University of Edinburgh.