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William Soutar

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Name
  
William Soutar

Role
  
Poet


William Soutar wwwscottishpoetrylibraryorguksitesdefaultfil

Died
  
1946, Perth, United Kingdom

Books
  
Into a room, The Diary of a Dying Man, A bairn's sang and other Sco, Poems, Poems in Scots and English

Education
  
University of Edinburgh

William soutar sculpture museum perth perthshire scotland


William Soutar (28 April 1898 – 15 October 1943) was a Scottish poet and diarist, who wrote in both English and Braid Scots, and is known best for his epigrams.

Contents

William soutar cinquains


Life and works

William Soutar William Soutar Poems My poetic side

William Soutar was born on 28 April 1898 in Perth, Scotland, the only child of John Soutar (1871–1958), master joiner, and his wife, Margaret Smith (1870–1954), who wrote poetry. His parents belonged to the United Free Church of Scotland. He was educated at Southern District School, Perth, and at Perth Academy, before joining the wartime navy in 1916. By the time he was demobilized in November 1918, he was already suffering from what was to be diagnosed in 1924 as ankylosing spondylitis, a form of chronic inflammatory arthritis.

William Soutar William Soutar Website

Soutar began to study medicine at the University of Edinburgh in 1919, but switched to English. He did not excel academically, but he began to contribute to the student magazine. His first volume, Gleanings by an Undergraduate (1923), was published at his father's expense, as were several others. He began to keep a diary on 18 April 1919. During that period he made contact with Hugh MacDiarmid, then in Montrose, and with Ezra Pound. MacDiarmid at this time was abandoning poetry in English in favour of a "synthetic Scots" as a literary language compiled from dialects and from earlier writers such as Robert Henryson and William Dunbar.

William Soutar William Soutar Website

Soutar's work correspondingly altered radically, and he became a leading figure of the Scottish Literary Renaissance, whom posthumous editors would dub one of the greatest poets Scotland has produced. His family adopted an orphaned cousin of his, the seven-year-old Evelyn, in 1927, and this became a spur for him to write also for children. Seeds in the Wind (1933) was a volume of "bairn-rhymes" in Scots.

William Soutar William Soutar Wikipedia

By 1930 Soutar was bedridden with his disease. He died in 1943 of tuberculosis, which he had contracted in 1929. He is buried in Perth's Jeanfield and Wellshill Cemetery. A collected poems edited by MacDiarmid was published in 1948. His journal, The Diary of a Dying Man, was published posthumously. One form of verse which he used was the cinquain (now known as American cinquain), which he preferred to call epigrams. Interest in Soutar's work in Scots and English, and for adults and children, has revived considerably since the 1980s, although none of his verse was in print at the time of his centenary in 1998. In 2014 he was the subject of a BBC radio programme: The Still Life Poet by Liz Lochhead.

William Soutar BBC Radio 4 The Soutar House The Still Life Poet William

Benjamin Britten set twelve of Soutar's poems for tenor and piano in his 1969 song cycle Who Are These Children?.

Selected published works

  • Gleanings by an Undergraduate (Paisley: Alexander Gardner, 1923)
  • Brief Words. One Hundred Epigrams (Edinburgh/London: The Moray Press, 1935)
  • Seeds in the Wind, Poems in Scots for Children (London: Andrew Dakers, 1943)
  • Diaries of a Dying Man (Edinburgh: Canongate Press, 1954) ISBN 0-86241-347-8. In fact only a short selection.
  • The Collected Poems of William Soutar, ed. Hugh McDiarmid (London: Andrew Dakers, 1948)
  • Poems of William Soutar: a New Selection, ed. W. R. Aitken (Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press, 1988) ISBN 0707305543
  • The Diary of a Dying Man (Edinburgh: Chapman, 1991) ISBN 0906772311
  • At the Year's Fa': Selected Poems in Scots and English (Perth: Perth & Kinross Libraries, 2001) ISBN 0905452356
  • References

    William Soutar Wikipedia