Robert Fergusson

Robert Fergusson
Portrait by Alexander Runciman, 1772
Portrait by Alexander Runciman, 1772
Born(1750-09-05)5 September 1750
Edinburgh (Capital City), Scotland
Died17 October 1774(1774-10-17) (aged 24)
Darien House, Edinburgh, Scotland
Occupation
  • Poet
  • librettist
  • copyist
NationalityScottish
Alma materUniversity of St Andrews
Literary movementScots vernacular revival
Notable works
  • "The Daft Days"
  • "Hallow Fair"
  • "Auld reekie"
  • "Leith Races"
  • "Caller Oysters"
  • "Braid Claith"
Bronze figure by David Annand of Robert Fergusson outside Edinburgh's Canongate Kirk where the poet is buried.

Robert Fergusson (5 September 1750 – 17 October 1774) was a Scottish poet. After formal education at the University of St Andrews, Fergusson led a bohemian life in Edinburgh, the city of his birth, then at the height of intellectual and cultural ferment as part of the Scottish Enlightenment. Many of his extant poems were printed from 1771 onwards in Walter Ruddiman's Weekly Magazine, and a collected works was first published early in 1773. Despite a short life, his career was highly influential, especially through its impact on Robert Burns. He wrote both Scottish English and the Scots language, and it is his vivid and masterly writing in the latter leid[1] for which he is principally acclaimed.