King Tony the Peacemaker talks turkey in Stormont
Trimble: `My Lord - you cannot bomb your own true subjects!' Tony: `Oh, can I not! That's what King Slobodan said!'
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Your support makes all the difference.Another section has come to light of the long-lost Shakespearean masterpiece, The History of King Tony or New Labour's Lost, Love and I am proud to bring you this fragment today. Fresh from his triumph in Serbia against the evil King Slobodan, King Tony is back on the warpath to bring peace to Northern Ireland...
The scene is a great meeting house in Belfast, capital of Northern Ireland. Enter King Tony, followed by Sir Alastair Campbell, with Prime Ministers in attendance, spin doctors, Orangemen, etc, etc.
Tony: And so I do declare this parliament open.
My fellows Scots, we have fought long and hard
To have a place where we can talk all night
And gain th'illusion of independence...
Campbell: No, no, my Lord! This is a different
place!
Tomorrow do we go to Edinburgh!
Hereafter is all fun and devolution!
Today is graft and deadline-talking time.
Tony: 'Tis true. I should have known 'tis Ireland here
By all these hard-lined faces gathered round,
These minds worn smooth by bigotry and bias.
Know then, my thick-skulled Irish subjects,
My disaffected Unionists led by Trimble,
My treacherous Papists led by Adams here,
Who, to hear him speak, you'd think a saint
Who never in his life has seen a gun -
Know then that if you do not sign for peace
Before the midnight hour has struck tonight
You all will suffer my true wrath and anger.
Trimble: Meaning?
Tony: That the bombs will fall on
you tonight
Here in Belfast, blowing up your infrastructure,
Bringing you peace, against your murderous will.
Trimble: My Lord - you cannot bomb your own
true subjects!
Tony: Oh, can I not! That's what King Slobodan
said!
But soon he heard the whistle of the rockets
And soon he crumbled, begging me for peace!
Trimble: 'Tis not at all the same. If you bomb
Belfast,
You will be just like Slobodan in Kosovo!
Tony: Whatever. Just get your act together here
And make me seem the monarch that I am!
The scene changes to the Passport Office in Petty France, where crowds of starving and dying people are lying around. Enter Sir Jack Straw.
Straw: May I have your attention for a minute?
You all do come from overseas for asylum,
And in due course you shall be processed...
Adviser: No, no, my Lord, you have it wrong again! These are all British folk, seeking their holidays! They do but wait their passport to be given!
Straw: And what does keep them here?
Adviser: Duke Prescott
Has ordered that a bus lane go through here
To relieve the pressure on the public roads.
Straw: And has it worked?
Adviser: No. Things are twice as bad.
Enter a tall female figure in boots and enormous spectacles. It is Dame Janet Street-Porter.
Janet: Oh, strewth, me blisters! Bring my
Odoritas
And let me have a sit-down for a while.
I have walked this blooming land all day
And now am come to - where am I, by the way? Straw: In Petty France.
Janet: In France? Oh, say not so!
I must have taken a turning wrong somewhere. For I was meant to meet Sir Elton John
And have a chat with him about the country -
Cruising, cottaging, all that sort of thing.
Well, sod that for a lark. I'll get a taxi!
Exit Dame Janet Street-Porter. Enter Sir Greg Dyke, arm in arm with Lord Melvyn Bragg.
Dyke: Tell me, dear Melvyn, now that I am head
Of all the King's Broadcasting Company,
What is this thing called radio? TV I know,
But this poor thing with paltry sound alone,
No pictures to relieve the gloom: what can one do?
Bragg: A word, dear Greg, in secret. What to do
Is send young Paxman packing from his perch
And let me Start The Week again instead!
Dyke: And will it bring the ratings up again?
Bragg: They'll shoot right up, like shares in LWT. Dyke: Hot diggity dog. Let's do it right away!
Exeunt Dyke, Bagg, Straw, severally, leaving dying crowds still awaiting their passports.
More of this exciting stuff soon, I hope.
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