William Wallace: The Original Warrior Poet

William Wallace: The Original Warrior Poet

It is September 11, 1297. A Scottish commoner with no title, no crown, and no professional army stands at the north end of Stirling Bridge with a force of poorly equipped farmers and freemen. Across the river, the English army of Edward I, one of the most powerful military forces in the medieval world, begins its crossing.

Wallace lets them come. He waits until the English begins its river crossing then attacks, bottlenecking the larger English force on a narrow wooden bridge. English reinforcements are trapped on the other side of the river, and during the fighting, the bridge collapses, drowning much of the English force.

The Battle of Stirling Bridge is one of the most tactically brilliant and consequential in medieval history. A common man with no formal military training destroyed a professional army.

The Man Behind the Myth

Though common, Wallace was educated, almost certainly by the church, possibly by an uncle who was a priest. He read Latin. He understood law, strategy, and diplomacy. After Stirling Bridge, he didn't just continue raiding, he was appointed Guardian of Scotland and immediately began negotiating trade agreements with the Hanseatic League in the Baltic, working to establish Scotland's legitimacy as a sovereign nation on the European stage.

Wallace was not a brawler who got lucky on a bridge, he was a man who understood that winning a battle and winning a war are two entirely different things, and that swords alone don't build nations.

What Made Him a Warrior

When Edward I invaded Scotland and declared himself its king, the Scottish nobility largely capitulated. They had lands to protect, titles to preserve, and political calculations to make. Wallace had none of that. He was a minor knight's son with nothing to lose and everything to believe in.

He began his resistance not with a manifesto but with violence, targeted, personal, and purposeful. He killed the English sheriff of Lanark, reportedly in response to the murder of a woman he loved. Whether that account is precisely accurate matters less than what it reveals about the man. Wallace's first act of war was not political ambition. It was personal grief weaponized into something larger than himself.

From that single act, he built a movement. Men followed him not because he held a title but because he held a conviction. He believed Scotland belonged to the Scottish people, not to a foreign king who had purchased the allegiance of their nobles, and he was willing to bleed for that belief before he asked anyone else to.

What Made Him a Poet

Wallace carried with him a copy of the New Testament. His faith was the architecture of how he understood his place in the world and his obligation to the people around him.

He also understood the power of symbol and story. The cause he articulated, that free men owe allegiance to God and their people, not to a tyrant who purchased their leaders, was as much a moral argument as a military one.

After his capture in 1305, Wallace was offered his life in exchange for acknowledging Edward as his rightful king. He refused. He was hanged, drawn, and quartered in London, a punishment designed to be so brutal and so public that it would extinguish any continuation of rebellion.

It did the opposite. Robert the Bruce, who had spent years hedging his bets between English favor and Scottish loyalty, looked at what Wallace chose and made his own decision. Scotland's war of independence continued. It ended at Bannockburn in 1314 with Scottish victory.

Wallace didn't live to see it, but he made it possible.

Why Wallace Was a Warrior Poet

A warrior poet is not a man who is good at violence. Plenty of men are capable of violence. A warrior poet is a man whose capacity for violence is matched by his depth of conviction, whose willingness to fight is inseparable from what he is fighting for, and who understands that the sword serves the cause, never the other way around.

Wallace carried both. He was dangerous and educated, ferocious and principled, a man of war and faith who understood peace was the goal. He fought not for glory or conquest but for the freedom of his people to govern themselves under God.

Remember, Train Hard. Train Smart. And be the kind of man whose convictions exceed his comfort.

Comments (36)

Howard Wallace_

Thank you for telling the story of my great great great grandfather and keeping his history and legend alive in the WP society.

Prescott Jay Erwin_

The stories of William Wallace have always been inspirational. His courage and conviction — even to death — inspired a change in Robert the Bruce. Robert was no coward, but he was compromised. With the promise of personal gain, the Scots nobility colluded to sell their people out, apparently leaving Robert no choice but capitulation. Negotiating from a position of weakness only inspires the more powerful to make promises they never intend to keep. It took Wallace’s humiliation and death to awaken Robert to that reality. Pushed to the limit, he finally took his stand — and the Sots people stood with him. A warrior awakened can change the tide in the middle of a war that seems lost.

My clan’s forebear, William de Irwyne (Bonshaw, Dumfriesshire, Scotland), was Robert’s loyal armorbearer through the Wars of Independence. And in the end, his faithfulness was rewarded with 10,000 acres in Aberdeenshire, including the Forest of Drum and Drum Castle, and he became Wlliam I of Drum.

This speaks to me of faith in Christ. True repentance is powerful and can inspire others. In Christ, we don’t receive a spirit of slavery or fear, but the Spirit of power and love and self-control. “Blessed is the man who remains steadfast under trial, for when he has stood the test he will receive the crown of life, which God has promised to those who love him” (James 1:12).

Bob Tait_

We should all pray for more William Wallace’s, now and for our future.

Herman aka “Strider”_

Love to see the Guardian of Scotland remembered and respected for what drove him to do good. Not for himself but for his fellow Scotsmen and women. Love to read these articles and read the warrior poet way long ago. And as being vintage ( retired but leave4life sound better) today I’m still active as an external instructor now; reading it, it was standing in front of a mirror. And I do recommend it to my fellow doorkickers. And always refer to the code of old:
A knight is sworn to valour
His heart knows only virtue
His blade defends the helpless
His might upholds the week
His word speaks only truth
His wroth undoes the wicked
…as my code of conduct in life.
Herman aka Strider”
Nunquam non Paratus

Rob Vargas_

Totally agree 👍🏽 and thanks for sharing this post. Definitely a great example of what a man should strive towards in becoming a war poet.

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