英國 人物列錶
貝奧武甫 Beowulf喬叟 Geoffrey Chaucer埃德蒙·斯賓塞 Edmund Spenser
威廉·莎士比亞 William Shakespeare瓊森 Ben Jonson米爾頓 John Milton
多恩 John Donne馬維爾 Andrew Marvell格雷 Thomas Gray
布萊剋 William Blake華茲華斯 William Wordsworth薩繆爾·柯勒律治 Samuel Coleridge
司各特 Sir Walter Scott拜倫 George Gordon Byron雪萊 Percy Bysshe Shelley
濟慈 John Keats艾米莉·勃朗特 Emily Bronte勃朗寧夫人 Elizabeth Barret Browning
愛德華·菲茨傑拉德 Edward Fitzgerald丁尼生 Alfred Tennyson羅伯特·勃朗寧 Robert Browning
阿諾德 Matthew Arnold哈代 Thomas Hardy艾略特 Thomas Stearns Eliot
勞倫斯 David Herbert Lawrence狄蘭·托馬斯 Dylan Thomas麥凱格 Norman Maccaig
麥剋林 Somhairle Mac Gill-Eain休斯 Ted Hughes拉金 Philip Larkin
彼得·瓊斯 Peter Jones邊沁 Jeremy Bentham哈羅德·品特 Harold Pinter
吉卜林 Joseph Rudyard Kipling愛恩·哈密爾頓 Ian Hamilton
麥凱格 Norman Maccaig
英國  (1910年1996年)

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  二十世紀蘇格蘭著名詩人。


  Norman MacCaig (14 November 1910 – 23 January 1996) was a Scottish poet. His poetry, in modern English, is known for its humour, simplicity of language and great popularity. [1]
  
  MacCaig was born in Edinburgh and divided his time, for the rest of his life, between his native city and Assynt in the Scottish Highlands. He was schooled at the Royal High School and studied classics at the University of Edinburgh. During World War II MacCaig registered as a conscientious objector, a move that many at the time criticised. Douglas Dunn has suggested that MacCaig's career later suffered due to his outspoken pacifism, although there is no concrete evidence of this. For the early part of his working life, he was employed as a school teacher in primary schools. In 1967 he was appointed Fellow in Creative Writing at Edinburgh. He became a reader in poetry in 1970, at the University of Stirling. His first collection, Far Cry, was published in 1943. He continued to publish throughout his lifetime and was extremely prolific in the amount that he produced. After his death a still larger collection of unpublished poems were found. MacCaig often gave public readings of his work, in Edinburgh and elsewhere, these were extremely popular and for many people were the first introduction to the poet. His life is also noteworthy for the friendships he had with a number of other Scottish poets, such as Hugh MacDiarmid and Douglas Dunn. He described his own religious beliefs as 'Zen Calvinism', a comment typical of his half-humorous, half-serious approach to life.
  
  
  Work
  
  Early
  MacCaig's first two books deeply influenced by the New Apocalypse movement of the thirties and forties, one of a number of literary movements that were constantly coalescing, evolving and dissolving at that time. Later he was to all but disown these works, dismissing them as obscure and meaningless. His poetic rebirth took place with the publication of Riding Lights in 1955. It was a complete contrast to his earlier works, being strictly formal, metrical, rhyming and utterly lucid. The timing of the publication was such that he could have been associated with The Movement, a poetic grouping of poets at just that time. Indeed many of the forms and themes of his work fitted with the ideas of The Movement but he remained separate from that group, perhaps on account of his Scottishness—all of the movement poets were English. One label that has been attached to MacCaig and one that he seemed to enjoy (he was an admirer of John Donne) is Metaphysical.
  
  
  Later
  In later years he relaxed some of the formality of his work, losing the rhymes and strict metricality but always strove to maintain the lucidity. He became a free verse poet with the publication of Surroundings in 1966. Seamus Heaney has said his work 'is an ongoing education in the marvellous possibilities of lyric poetry.' Whilst Ted Hughes wrote, 'whenever I meet his poems, I'm always struck by their undated freshness, everything about them is alive, as new and essential, as ever.' Another poet, beside Donne, that MacCaig claimed was a great influence on his work was Louis MacNeice. Although he never lost his sense of humour, much of his later work, following the death of his wife, in 1990, is more sombre in tone. The later poems appear to be full of heartbreak but they never become pessimistic.
  
  
  Publications
  MacCaig published sixteen collections of poetry. These include
  
  Riding Lights, 1955.
  The Sinai Sort, 1957
  A Common Grace, 1960
  A Round of Applause, 1962
  Measures, 1965
  Surroundings, 1966
  Rings on a Tree, 1968
  A Man in My Position, 1969
  The White Bird, 1973
  The World's Room, 1974
  Tree of Strings, 1977
  The Equal Skies, 1980
  A World of Difference, 1983
  Voice-over, 1988
  
  References
  ^ BBC Biography - Norman MacCaig, Learning Journeys, Writing Scotland. Retrieved on November 9, 2007.
    

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