Scoop Satire: A Canterbury Tale
Click for big version
Image via Historic Tale Construction Kit
The Scoop Team were cleaning out our offices earlier today and what should we find at the bottom of the filing cabinet but an illuminated manuscript from the thirteenth century?
It seems to be some sort of horribly bootlegged version of the Canterbury Tales, penned by one Ailfrid of Mule. The scanner's broken but we've typed out some of the more interesting bits.
UPDATE: TradeMe auction pending ($15 reserve).
THE CANTERBURY
TALES
By Ailfrid of Mule
Pt. VII – The Commyioner’ Tale
THEN
SPAKE a Dame by name of Bazely;
A Pious Wommyn who had
haphaz’dly
The notaries of Manukau attack’d
For
Corruption foul and Offices lack’d
So did she recommend
Recourses
‘Gainst Legal Ayd (tho’ wanting Sources)
“I have a tale to quell thy mirth,”
She told the
crowd, “of quaking earth,
of courtiers quizzical and
cowardly;
and the Divine Right of Gerrye Brownlee;
A
tale of Naional legislators:
The other Canterbury
Crusaders.”
They listen’d rapt to her
declaim,
“’Twas on a flat and boringe plain
That I
was sent upon a Quest
(Tho’ lumpy now, and more of
interest)
To end the drought that irked the
squires:
resource managemente of the shires;
The
peasants’ reeves gone aft agley
With that Fisher Kinge,
‘Democracy’;
And naught to do with any
quibbling
the Minister of Environmente’s
sibling,
Nor the estate of Master Carter
in Hurunui
(‘upon the Garter!’)
“With haste I sought to
reinstate
Without meddlesome magistrate
Six honest men
of Wit and Wick
- The kind the Voters never pick
-
Despite the rabble’s disagreeing
I thus restored
the Chain of Being.
But suffer’d that Realm another
affliction,
One still outside my Jurisdiction:
In the
Year of Our Lord deux mille-et-huite
The Lenders
all did wail and bleat
For the Invisible Hand so sure did
shudder
As if in Epileptick judder.”
Then flocking to
the Halls of Labour
The Lenders begged the merest
favour;
That should they lose all of their bets
Could
Gov’nment please pay those debts?
For, they confessed
with burning ears,
Theyr bookes, it seem’d, were in
arrears.
Then Labour did with National’s
backing
back the backers where wits were lacking
Whyle
gray heads, bowed sagacious’ly,
Prais’d fyscal
responsibilitie.
Who would have thought with business
brisk
They’d reap rewards and damn the risk?
But
National chivalrous as ever
The one-and-half billionne
didst weather;
With sympathie and also thankes
Else
John Keye feared a Run on Bankes.
The Scheme remained -
such avarice
Could surely never happen thrice.
Yet
still there was discord in Heav’n
For Hell itself didst
spew objection
Before the dawn one Sabbath morn
with
dirtye bigge cracks o’er my lawn;
‘A portent!’
cried I, for signs were legionne,
‘We must a Prince to
rule our regionne!’
A stoppe-gappe measure for riven
pasture,
A Fissure-King for this Disaster.
Our Honoured
Members sprang to action
Spurning facts and even
faction
With Laws writ by Malthusian mind
To counter
deadly Plague of Swine.
There were no slain, no
Quarantyne
Just cots and mugges of Ovaltyne
But
Parlyamente in finest hour
Did hurl aside its vested
Power;
‘All Haste!’ bellowed those in the
Right,
‘We must rebuild sans oversight;
The
Nation’s laws are naught but Bunyans
That slow the
Progress of these Ronyans.
Then that most Loyal
Oppositionne
Accquiesed without divisionne
And granted
them impunity
For sake of Nationale Unity
With but a
single brave Green knight
One Doctor Graham, much
polite,
Who raised some small pointes of
contentionne
About the Rule of Law’s
suspensionne:
‘Six months in, can we review
And tell
the Publicke what you do?’
Tho’ no accord, they
joined the pact;
The Response & Recoverie Act.
“The
honour it was all agreede
Should go to Brownlee once of
Bede
Whose eminente and wise opining
Conjectur’d
Crown lands ripe for Mining
He’d little change and
soon decamp;
His mark the size of Postage
Stampe.”
“So come we bye to Brownlee’s
chambers”,
She hailed the Minister’s retainers
As
fellow pilgrims, lobbyistes all
Swarm’d in his Office
and out the hall:
“We’ve plucked the pheasants,
unstopp’d the meade
And fucke the peasants, now what
dost thou
need?”