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The Hitlist: Ten more of Scotland's greatest (living and dead) poets – who aren't Burns


Burns night has been and gone, but poetry is for every night, and day. It’s a source of solace, comfort and cheer in difficult times like this current pandemic and lockdown So here, to help you through, are twenty of Scotland’s greatest poets, who aren’t Robert Burns.
William Dunbar (circa 1459-1530)
“Back to Dunbar!” was a favourite phrase of Hugh MacDiarmid, and the man he was talking about was a Middle Scots poet attached to the court of James IV, who wrote works that were rhetorical and lyrical marvels. Dunbar was one of a group of medieval Scots known as the “makars” and for him the writing of poetry was making . He created poems for his patron, such as The Thrissil and the Rois, a celebration of James IV s marriage to Margaret Tudor. But Dunbar was about more than creating snapshots of court. He created poems that have resonance now. Lament for the Makaris, with its frequent refrain, timor mortis conturbat me (fear of death troubles me), still has ....

East Timor , Glasgow City , United Kingdom , City Of , South Lanarkshire , John Hunter , Seamus Heaney , Fanny Burney , Robert Burns , Walter Scott , Margaret Tudor , Joanna Baillie , Robert Macfarlane , Norman Maccaig , Sorley Maclean , Auld Reikie , Robert Fergusson , Kate Greenaway , William Wallace , Violet Jacob , Nan Shepherd , Hill Burns , Marion Angus , Hugh Macdiarmid , Brian Morton , Robert Louis Stevenson ,

20 of Scotland's greatest poets - from William Dunbar to Jackie Kay


Burns night has been and gone, but poetry is for every night, and day. It’s a source of solace, comfort and cheer in difficult times like this current pandemic and lockdown So here, to help you through, are twenty of Scotland’s greatest poets, who aren’t Robert Burns.
William Dunbar (circa 1459-1530)
“Back to Dunbar!” was a favourite phrase of Hugh MacDiarmid, and the man he was talking about was a Middle Scots poet attached to the court of James IV, who wrote works that were rhetorical and lyrical marvels. Dunbar was one of a group of medieval Scots known as the “makars” and for him the writing of poetry was making . He created poems for his patron, such as The Thrissil and the Rois, a celebration of James IV s marriage to Margaret Tudor. But Dunbar was about more than creating snapshots of court. He created poems that have resonance now. Lament for the Makaris, with its frequent refrain, timor mortis conturbat me (fear of death troubles me), still has ....

North Lanarkshire , United Kingdom , Glasgow City , Dumfries And Galloway , South Lanarkshire , East Timor , Loch Ness , City Of , Perth And Kinross , John Burnside , John Hunter , Seamus Heaney , Dalastair Reid , Kathleen Jamie , Robert Burns , John Banville , Walter Scott , Robin Robertson , Don Paterson , Jeanette Winterson , Auld Reikie , Robert Fergusson , Kate Greenaway , Violet Jacob , Imtiaz Dharker , Liz Lochhead ,