Skip to main content
Advertise Buy the paper Contact us Shop Subscribe Support us
A Song for John Maclean 
by Martin Goldie

Afore readin Marx he learnt fittin richt
an the sins o the market an power,
frae Grans tales an deith’s holds constant threit.
Resolved tae serve the puir an ne’er cower,
the deith o royal bluid gae Whitehall a jolt,
an he wis jiled fir wirds ginst wrangs an wars.
This prood airchitect o the Clyde’s revolt,
frae cauld deith tae annals his name soars.
Hearts broke, the dour lamped past red sickled flags,
hung frae the sills o mournin tenements.
The toons broad left, as yin in suits an rags,
strode oot ginst the dreich winters elements.
Tae young, the muivements howp an licht wis gane,
fir aye in Eastwood’s yird his banes remain.


Martin Goldie’s collection, A Kist of Treasure: The Life and Death of John Maclean (Seahorse Publications) is a compelling account of the struggles and achievements of one of Scotland’s greatest socialist heroes who died in Glasgow on 30 November 1923. Such was the regard in which Maclean was held that his funeral was the largest ever seen in Glasgow. 

Ad slot F - article bottom
More from this author
Gig Review / 6 October 2024
6 October 2024
ANGUS REID time-travels back to times when Gay Liberation was radical and allied seamlessly to an anti-racist, anti-establishment movement
Interview / 15 March 2024
15 March 2024
ANGUS REID speaks to historian Siphokazi Magadla about the women who fought apartheid and their impact on South African society
Theatre review / 22 February 2024
22 February 2024
ANGUS REID mulls over the bizarre rationale behind the desire to set the life of Karl Marx to music
Theatre Review / 16 February 2024
16 February 2024
ANGUS REID applauds the portrait of two women in a lyrical and compassionate study of sex, shame and nostalgia
Similar stories
21st Century Poetry / 23 October 2024
23 October 2024
by Megan Pattie
21st Century Poetry / 3 September 2024
3 September 2024
by Hywel Griffiths
21st Century Poetry: / 23 January 2024
23 January 2024
by Lesley Benzie
21st Century Poetry / 3 January 2024
3 January 2024
by Angus Calder