You're referring to the poem "Dracula" by Liz Lochhead!
: Introduces roles like Florrie Hathersage (the maid) and additional staff at Dr. Seward's asylum, including Nurses Nisbett and Grice. Script Details and Availability Liz Lochhead Dracula Pdf 33
| Theme | Lochhead’s Treatment | |-------|----------------------| | | Mina’s refusal to be a passive victim flips the traditional Dracula gender script. Her dialogue, laced with Scots idioms, underscores a “women‑of‑the‑people” stance. | | National Identity | By setting the confrontation in a Glasgow tenement, Lochhead links the vampire’s foreignness to the historic outsider status of the Irish/Scottish diaspora. | | Class Conflict | Jonathan’s rough‑handed labour background is juxtaposed with Dracula’s aristocratic pretensions, making the vampire’s “blood‑sucking” a metaphor for exploitation of the working class. | | Language Play – The page mixes Standard English (quotations from Stoker) with Scots (e.g., “Ah’m no’ frae the same kin”). This duality dramatizes cultural dislocation. | You're referring to the poem "Dracula" by Liz Lochhead