Norman MacCaig (1910-1996) was a Scottish poet who wrote simple, accessible and often humorous poems in modern English. Early on in his career, however, his style was less so, as he had become associated with the New Apocalpytics movement, which sought to remold English poetry with a more surreal style, in reaction to the more sober realism prevalent in poetry of the 1930s. But in the 1950s he renounced his association with this group, and with the publication of his 1955 volume Riding Lights, he presented a collection of formal verse marked by strict adherence to meter and rhyme, and a lucidity that his earlier poems lacked.
Norman MacCaig (1910-1996) was a Scottish poet who wrote simple, accessible and often humorous poems in modern English. Early on in his career, however, his style was less so, as he had become associated with the New Apocalpytics movement, which sought to remold English poetry with a more surreal style, in reaction to the more sober realism prevalent in poetry of the 1930s. But in the 1950s he renounced his association with this group, and with the publication of his 1955 volume Riding Lights, he presented a collection of formal verse marked by strict adherence to meter and rhyme, and a lucidity that his earlier poems lacked.
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