SKU: 62663197908

MACDIARMID, Hugh. Sangschaw.

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MACDIARMID, Hugh. Sangschaw.With an Autograph Letter to the Best Hated Man in Scotland MACDIARMID, Hugh. Sangschaw. Edinburgh and London: William Blackwood & Sons Limited. 1925. 8vo. Publishers dark blue boards, gilt vignette to upper board, spine and upper board let tered in gilt, in the publishers pale blue printed dustwrapper; pp. xii, 58, [4 (testimonials)], [2 (colophon, blank)]; jacket faded, spine sunned, spine ends lightly bumped, a few small chips to jacket at head of

With an Autograph Letter to the ‘Best-Hated Man in Scotland’

MACDIARMID, Hugh. Sangschaw. Edinburgh and London: William Blackwood & Sons Limited. 1925.

8vo. Publisher’s dark blue boards, gilt vignette to upper board, spine and upper board let-tered in gilt, in the publisher’s pale blue printed dustwrapper; pp. xii, 58, [4 (testimonials)], [2 (colophon, blank)]; jacket faded, spine sunned, spine ends lightly bumped, a few small chips to jacket at head of spine; light toning; else a very good copy; front free endpaper signed ‘C. M. Grieve (“Hugh M’Diarmid”), contemporary ownership inscription of G. M. Thomson.

First edition of MacDiarmid’s pioneering volume of verse in ‘synthetic Scots’, signed by the poet using his given name and his pen name, with a seemingly unpublished autograph letter from the author (signed ‘Christopher Grieve’) to the journalist George Malcolm Thompson (1848–1933), a portrait photograph of MacDiarmid, and an invitation to his seventieth birthday party.

Thomson was co-founder in 1922 of the Porpoise Press, with Roderick Watson Kerr and John Gould, MacDiarmid’s successors as editors of the Broughton Magazine (1910–11). He had written of MacDiarmid that ‘he has done more than anyone else to put Scotland on the map’ (quoted in McKechnie, p. 137). The year after the publication of Sangschaw, he and MacDiarmid became embroiled in a curious publishing triangle. In a letter to George Ogilvie, his former English teacher, dated 1 January 1928, MacDiarmid writes: ‘Albyn (which has been selling well) I am not proud of [...] About a year before it had appeared I had written to the publishers [Kegan Paul] suggesting that I should do a vol entitled Caledonia: or the Future of Scotland for their [Today and Tomorrow] series. They agreed – and then I found I wasn’t in the mood [...] I kept putting them off. Finally a period of months ensued during which I heard nothing from them. Then I happened to hear that they were announcing a book entitled Caledonia: or the Future of the Scots by G. M. Thomson. I immediately wrote to them – but they said their acceptance of Thomson’s book in no way prevented them accepting mine, written from a different angle – and would I send on my MSS at once?’.

MacDiarmid was displeased at the lack of editorial corrections to his own hastily published work, but Thomson’s work was sent to him in proofs in advance. In a letter to the businessman and Scottish nationalist politician R.E. Muirhead on 16 July 1927, MacDiarmid writes that ‘Mr Thomson and I agree entirely as to the present condition of Scotland and its cause. Where we differ is that while he recognises that nothing but a timely revival of Scottish Nationalism on an adequate scale can avert the calamity of the complete de-Scoticisation of Scotland, he does not believe that will happen – he thinks the time already past. I think otherwise’. In spite of this divergence, he calls Thomson’s essay ‘the most compact, comprehensive, incisively-written unanswerable demonstration of the need for Scottish Home Rule that has yet been penned’ (ibid.); he arranged for his review of Thomson’s Caledonia to appear in the September issue of Muirhead’s Scottish Home Rule, one of over thirty different reviews MacDiarmid wrote on Thomson’s essay and what he refers to in his letter to Ogilvie as a ‘journalistic grand slam’.

By the 1930s, however, MacDiarmid’s and Thomson’s views had further diverged: they clashed in 1934 over the formation of the Scottish National Party (SNP) in 1934; by this time, Thomson was widely regarded as Scotland’s ‘best-hated man’, largely for his alarmist national politics arguing that Scotland was doomed, which he blamed unequivocally on the mass immigration of Irish Catholics to Scotland. T. S. Eliot, in a 26 June 1935 letter to Emily Hale, describes lunching with Thomson to ‘talk about Scottish Nationalism and try to tell him how his pamphlet on the decline of industry in Scotland ought to have been written and he said he would re-write it’.

Their differing political stances evidently did not prevent MacDiarmid and Thomson from establishing a lasting relationship: loosely inserted in the present copy are an autograph letter from MacDiarmid to Thomson, written at Brownsbank Cottage and dated 2 January 1954, in which MacDiarmid discusses his forthcoming In Memoriam James Joyce (1955), an encyclopaedic poetic tribute to Joyce: ‘I enclose, as requested, subscription form for Joyce poem, which is all set up and will be published very soon now. I’ll let you know if I find any MSS still in my possession, but I fear not’. The work was published on behalf of the subscribers, one of whom was Thomson.

There is also an invitation to MacDiarmid’s seventieth birthday reception and dinner arranged by the Edinburgh City Committee Communist Party, as well as a portrait photograph of MacDiarmid by the celebrated Inverness photographer Andrew Paterson (1876–1948), who had photographed the likes of George Bernard Shaw, Noël Coward, Alfred Hitchcock, and John Gielgud.

See Bold ed., The Letters of Hugh MacDiarmid (1984); McKechnie: The Best-Hated Man (2013).

SKU: 2124863

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SKU: 62663197908

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Lyndsey | @thebrunettebiblio
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 4
An Amazing Debut! Dual Timeline, Second Chance Romance, and very well written!!
Format: Paperback
4.5/5 stars ⭐️ 304 pages 📚 🎶 Right Where You Left Me - Taylor Swift “They knew. Some people are lucky like that. They meet their best friend, the love of their life, and are wise enough to never let go.” In case you needed anyone else on Booksta to tell you to read this book, PLEASE go read this book!! I had very high expectations after seeing dozens of raving reviews and the story met every one! We follow Sam and Percy in a dual timeline (from Percy’s POV) through flashbacks of their teenage summers and their reunion over a decade later. I adored the flashback chapters. Watching Sam and Percy grow from awkward 13 year olds into early adulthood was nostalgic. It’ll take you back to your own childhood and the excitement and nerves of experiencing your first love. Though I did suspect what the cause of their breakup would be, it didn’t take away from any of the emotions or heartbreak I felt during those scenes! Carley has a very captivating writing style and you’ll fall in love with aspects of every character. I only felt like the last 15% was a bit rushed! The buildup was fantastic, and the betrayal was anticipated, but I was hoping for a little bit more out of the conflict, how it affected other relationships, and moving on. An extended epilogue would’ve been perfect for this book! For a debut novel, Carley did outstanding and I’m excited to see what she comes up with next! Read this if you enjoy: ⏰ dual timeline ✨ second chance romance 💖 best friends to strangers to lovers ☀️ summer vibes! 🌊 small town romance 👩‍👦‍👦 emphasis on family If you enjoyed Love and Other Words, you will LOVE this! Very similar style and vibes.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 1, 2022
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Madelyne Allen Thurston
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
Phenomenal
Format: Kindle
Truly a wonderful read. I picked it up after absolutely falling in love with her latsest novel 'Our Perfeect Storm' (another good read), convinced that Carley Fortune is going to be the next big thing in romance. After finishing this book, im a believer. Its filled with tension and heartbreak, and laughter. It made me sob, it made me giggle, it even made me a little giddy. I could not put it down, and I'm sure you wont either, if you're already here.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 1, 2026
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Rhiannon Green
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 3
Not my favorite by her
Format: Paperback
I have to say that Carley Fortune can write a really beautiful love story. I enjoyed this one but not nearly as much as This Summer Will be Different. Sam is absolutely precious and his brother Charlie is trouble with a capital T but in the funniest and sweetest way (for the most part). And Percy's journey from 13 to 30 is a nice development throughout. I enjoy the multiple timelines and to see Percy and Sam's love for each other grow from meeting the summer they turn 13. This story is both heartwarming and heartbreaking at the same time. SPOILER: DON'T READ FURTHER IF YOU DON'T WANT ANYTHING SPOILED!!! I was ready to give this book at least a 3.5 ⭐ until the cheating with the brother. Of course it was a one time regrettable mistake, but I am auto out on a cheating trope. And making it with his brother just sets the relationship up for failure no matter how many promises of forgiveness. But that's just my opinion. So be warned.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 30, 2026
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Aubrey Lynea Shore
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
Such a good read
Format: Paperback
This is the absolute cutest book. I’ve read in a very long time! If you were someone growing up in the early mid 2000s, you are going to love this book, it hits all the nostalgic spots, and it makes you really think about your childhood again… I give it a 10 out of 10 highly recommend it super cute read. I read it in like five days between work and other things I had to get done.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 24, 2026
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ESA
Lake Worth, US
★★★★★ 5
Perfect for Homeschooling!! Let the stories come alive and captivate you!
Format: Hardcover
I’m a homeschooling mama and I’m grateful for men like Eric Metaxas who are personally invested in the wellbeing of our nation. Thank you, Eric, for sharing history with truth and the fear of God.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 2, 2026

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