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・ Hugh M. Clark
・ Hugh M. Cole
・ Hugh M. Cummings High School
・ Hugh M. Garvey House
・ Hugh M. Hefner First Amendment Award
・ Hugh M. Hefner Moving Image Archive
・ Hugh M. Jones
・ Hugh M. Kaptur
・ Hugh M. Milton II
・ Hugh M. Morris
・ Hugh M. Raup
・ Hugh M. Rigney
・ Hugh M. Stimson
・ Hugh Maaskant
・ Hugh MacColl
Hugh MacDiarmid
・ Hugh MacDonald
・ Hugh Macdonald
・ Hugh MacDonald (archer)
・ Hugh Macdonald (Australian politician)
・ Hugh MacDonald (bishop of Aberdeen)
・ Hugh MacDonald (filmmaker)
・ Hugh MacDonald (poet)
・ Hugh MacDonald (politician)
・ Hugh MacDonald (Scottish politician)
・ Hugh MacDonald (soccer)
・ Hugh MacDonald (Vicar Apostolic of the Highland District)
・ Hugh Macdonald Sinclair
・ Hugh MacDonell
・ Hugh MacDowell Pollock


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Hugh MacDiarmid : ウィキペディア英語版
Hugh MacDiarmid

Christopher Murray Grieve (11 August 1892 – 9 September 1978), known by his pen name Hugh MacDiarmid, was a Scottish poet, journalist, essayist and political figure. He is best known for his works written in 'synthetic Scots', or Lallans, a literary version of the Scots language that MacDiarmid himself developed.
The son of a postman, MacDiarmid was born in the town of Langholm, Dumfriesshire. He was educated at Langholm Academy before becoming a teacher for a brief time at Broughton Higher Grade School in Edinburgh. He began his writing career as a journalist in Wales, contributing to the socialist newspaper ''The Merthyr Pioneer'' run by Labour party founder Keir Hardie〔 before joining the Royal Army Medical Corps on the outbreak of the First World War.〔 He served in Salonica, Greece and France before developing cerebral malaria and subsequently returning to Scotland in 1918. MacDiarmid's time in the army was influential in his political and artistic development.
After the war he continued to work as a journalist, living in Montrose where he became editor and reporter of the ''Montrose Review'' as well as a Justice of the Peace and a member of the county council. In 1923 his first book, ''Annals of the Five Senses,'' was published at his own expense, followed by 'Sangschaw' in 1925 and 'Penny Wheep' and 'A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle' in 1926. ''A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle'', is generally regarded as MacDiarmid's most famous and influential work.〔
Moving to the Shetland island of Whalsay in 1933 with his son Michael and second wife, Valda Trevlyn, MacDiarmid continued to write essays and poetry despite being cut off from mainland cultural developments for much of the 1930s.〔 He died at his cottage Brownsbank, near Biggar, in 1978 at the age of 86.
MacDiarmid was a lifelong supporter of both communism and Scottish nationalism, views that often put him at odds with his contemporaries.〔 He was a founding member of the National Party of Scotland〔 (forerunner of the modern Scottish National Party) and stood as a candidate for the Communist Party of Great Britain in 1964.〔
A controversial figure whilst alive, MacDiarmid is now considered one of the principle forces behind the Scottish Renaissance and has had a lasting impact on Scottish culture and politics. Fellow poet Edwin Morgan said of him: 'Eccentric and often maddening genius he may be, but MacDiarmid has produced many works which, in the only test possible, go on haunting the mind and memory and casting Coleridgean seeds of insight and surprise.’〔
==Biography==


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