Sir Samuel Ferguson
Ferguson, Sir Samuel (1810-1886), poet and scholar. Born in Belfast, he attended the Belfast Academical Institution and TCD. In 1833 he contributed ‘A Dialogue Between the Head and Heart of an Irish Protestant’ to the newly founded Dublin University Magazine, a classic statement of divided loyalties. In 1834 he contributed to the Dublin University Magazine a series of four review articles on Hardiman's Irish Minstrelsy (1831), attacking the editor for scholarly sedition, and making his own vivid verse translations of poems such as ‘Cashel of Munster’ and ‘Uileacan Dubh Ó’. ‘The Fairy Thorn’ was published in Blackwood's in 1834; also in that year he began publishing a series of historical fictions called Hibernian Nights' Entertainments in the Dublin University Magazine. In 1838 he contributed to Blackwood's ‘Father Tom and the Pope’, a burlesque on Irish Catholicism. By 1845, when he published ‘The Vengeance of the Welshman of Tirawley’, a longer poem based on a feud in medieval Co. Mayo, he had established a reputation as an antiquarian and scholar. In Dublin he formed literary friendships with William Carleton, George Petrie, James Clarence Mangan, John O'Donovan, Eugene O'Curry, and in particular Thomas Davis, at whose death in 1845 he wrote a formal elegy. He was a founding member of the Protestant Repeal Association in 1848, and in that year he married Mary Catherine Guinness of the brewing family. Throughout the 1850s he worked on his epic poem Congal (1872). Lays of the Western Gael and Other Poems (1864), Ferguson's first collection of poems, contained many of his best-known pieces. Ferguson became QC in 1859 and Deputy Keeper of the Public Records of Ireland in 1867, and was knighted in 1878. Poems (1880) collects his shorter pieces written since 1864. Shakespeare Breviates (1882) were adaptations of Shakespeare for drawing-room performance. Ferguson's Ogham Inspirations in Ireland, Wales, and Scotland (1887) was published posthumously.
Bibliography
Peter Denman, Samuel Ferguson: The Literary Achievement (1990).





