Red Roses
By Joe Corrie
- Price:
- £1.00
Item attributes
- ISBN:
- 978-0-85174-914-3
- Acts:
- 1
- Females:
- 2
- Males:
- 2
Item details
Scottish Play: No. 70
From Wikipedia, Joe Corrie (13 May 1894 – 13 November 1968) was a Scottish miner, poet and playwright best known for his radical, working-class plays.
He was born in Slamannan, Stirlingshire in 1894. His family moved to Cardenden in the Fife coalfield when Corrie was still an infant and he started work at the pits in 1908. He died in Edinburgh in 1968.
Shortly after the First World War, Corrie started writing. His articles, sketches, short stories and poems were published in prominent socialist newspapers and journals, including Forward and The Miner.
Corrie's volumes of poetry include The Image O' God and Other Poems (1927), Rebel Poems (1932) and Scottish Pride and Other Poems (1955). T. S. Eliot wrote "Not since Burns has the voice of Scotland spoken with such authentic lyric note". He turned to writing plays during the General Strike in 1926.
More information can be found on his Wikipedia page; Joe Corrie.
John Sturdie, a bachelor builder in the season of red roses, tries to secure a wife through the medium of a matrimonial agency. His friend, Peter Pratt, who has eyes on John's housekeeper, learns the secret from John himself. The arrangement is that he is to meet the unknown lady at a certain place and both of them have to wear a red rose. Imagine the shock when a spinster of the district whom John certainly doesn't like, calls in on her way to the town wearing a red rose.