Patrick Ferguson

Epitaph on Major Ferguson, by Woodward, 1781

King's Mountain, by William Gilmore Simms, 1860

This Epitaph by Woodward was published in the Edinburgh Gazette, 8 May 1781. While hardly great literature, it is perhaps the first published verse on the death of Patrick Ferguson at King's Mtn. Indeed, one of Pattie's older sisters, Betty, Mrs. Scrymgeour-Wedderburn, was sufficiently moved to copy it out by hand. Her manuscript copy still survives. She attributes it to a "Mr. Woodwerd" (sic). The poem was reprinted in 1817, without an attribution, in Prof. Adam Ferguson's biographical sketch of Pattie, and in 1888 in James Ferguson of Kinmundy's Two Scottish Soldiers and a Jacobite Laird:

Epitaph on Major Patrick Ferguson

by Woodward

 

Here soldiers sighing o'er a hero's grave,
Tell how he fought and died - here Genius bends,
Mourning the patriot worth she could not save,
While Social Virtue weeps the best of friends.

Here bleeding Pity, viewing what is done,
In silent woe laments her darling son:
For ne'er a milder warrior thus was laid,-
His generous breast no evil e'er repaid:
His heart no selfish passion ever felt,
For there the chastest love of glory dwelt.
His martial ardour tend'rest feelings crown'd,
And, but too daring, not a fault was found.
Let Honour pay the debt his actions claim;
Let candour give to future time his fame;
Let grateful Britain, to her children just,
With never fading laurel shade his dust:
His gallant deeds her youthful soldiers tell,-
Teach them, like him, in glory to excel:
For this he fought; For this, alas, he fell!

And in the interests of balance... The following was originally published in Harper's Monthly in Oct. 1860, and is less well-known than Simms' Swamp Fox poem. The rhythm would make it sing well to the tune of that well-known salacious 18C sailors' ballad, Ratcliffe Highway...

KING'S MOUNTAIN:
A Ballad of the Carolinas

by William Gilmore Simms

HARK! 'tis the voice of the mountain
And it speaks to our heart in its pride,
As it tells of the bearing of heroes
Who compassed its summits and died!
How they gathered to strife as the eagles,
When the foeman had clambered the height!
How, with scent keen and eager as beagles,
They hunted him down for the fight.
.....................................................Hurrah!

Hark! through the gorge of the valley,
'Tis the bugle that tells of the foe;
Our own quickly sounds for the rally,
And we snatch down the rifle and go.
As the hunter who hears of the panther,
Each arms him and leaps to his steed.
Rides forth through the desolate antre,
With his knife and his rifle at need.
.....................................................Hurrah!

From a thousand deep gorges they gather,
From the cot lowly perched by the rill,
The cabin half hid in the heather,
'Neath the crag which the eagle keep still;
Each lonely at first in his roaming,
Till the vale to the sight opens fair,
And he sees the low cot through the gloaming,
When his bugle gives tongue to the air.
.....................................................Hurrah!

Thus a thousand brave hunters assemble
For the hunt of the insolent foe,
And soon shall his myrmidons tremble
'Neath the shock of the thunderbolt's blow.
Down the lone heights now wind they together
As the mountain-brooks flow to the vale,
And now, as they group on the heather
The keen scout delivers his tale:
.....................................................Hurrah!

"The British - the Tories are on us
And now is the moment to prove
To the women whose virtues have won us,
That our virtues are worthy their love!
They have swept the vast valleys below us
With fire, to the hills from the sea;
And here would they seek to o'erthrow us
In a realm which our eagle makes free!"
.....................................................Hurrah!

No war-council suffered to trifle
With the hours devote to the deed;
Swift followed the grasp of the rifle
Swift followed the bound to the steed;
And soon, to the eyes of our yeomen,
All panting with rage at the sight,
Gleamed the long wavy tents of the foeman,
As he lay in his camp on the height.
.....................................................Hurrah!

Grim dashed they away as they bounded,
The hunters to hem in the prey,
And, with Deckard's long rifles surrounded,
Then the British rose fast to the fray;
And never with arms of more vigor
Did their bayonets press through the strife.
Where, with every swift pull of the trigger
The sharpshooters dashed out a life!
.....................................................Hurrah!

'Twas the meeting of eagles and lions;
'Twas the rushing of tempests and waves;
Insolent triumph 'gainst patriot defiance,
Born freemen 'gainst sycophant slaves;
Scotch Ferguson sounding his whistle,
As from danger to danger he flies,
Feels the moral that lies in Scotch thistle
With its "touch me who dare!" and he dies!
.....................................................Hurrah!

An hour, and the battle is over;
The eagles are rending the prey;
The serpents seek flight into cover,
But the terror still stands in the way:
More dreadful the doom that on treason
Avenges the wrongs of the state;
And the oak-tree for many a season
Bears fruit for the vultures of fate!
.....................................................Hurrah!

??? And just WHO is guilty of "treason"??! The ending has me wanting to retaliate with a quick burst of Strange Fruit.!!! At least the original Silver Whistle gets a mention! But I'd like to tell Mr. Simms what to do with his "Hurrah!"s...
Perhaps only one poet could have done justice to the subject - from Pattie's home town of Edinburgh - but he lived over 1000 years too early:

His name was ANEIRIN.

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