Hello, and welcome to the March edition of The Autolycan. A bit later than usual this month, and anagram corner has gone AWOL - sorry about that but it's getting harder to find the time with so much going on in the UK City of Culture! As I think most regular readers will know this has got off to a brilliant start, and is showing no signs of flagging. If you haven't yet visited, do make a point of doing so. Keep an eye on the website - www.hull2017.co.uk - but beware, some popular shows are sellouts already. Whether there will be time for an April version of The Autolycan remains to be seen!
Anyway, to the March edition. I loved this item about an American chap laying claim to the British throne. What lay behind that, I wondered? As ever, do please pass the link on if you like this, Like it on Facebook and so on. Many thanks.
Anyway, to the March edition. I loved this item about an American chap laying claim to the British throne. What lay behind that, I wondered? As ever, do please pass the link on if you like this, Like it on Facebook and so on. Many thanks.
WE ARE QUITE AMUSED
An
American took out an advertisement in The Times last week to give the
Royal Family thirty days' notice of his intention to claim the
British throne.
The
Week
Her
Majesty Queen Elizabeth ll, feeling slightly disoriented, opened her
eyes. Focussing as best she could on the television screen in front
of her, the realisation slowly dawned that this was no longer the news
coming to her from dear dependable Huw Edwards; rather it had morphed
into something very loud and very unfunny, notwithstanding its own –
clearly misplaced – belief that it was very loud and very funny.
Her eyes searched for the remote. When she failed to find it she
reached for a voluminous card index file on the table adjacent to her
easy chair, consulted it, punched a couple of buttons on a console
and waited. Moments later there was a knock on the door.
'Come.'
The
door opened and a tall, upright man of military bearing marched in.
He bowed once from the neck.
'How
may I be of assistance, Your Majesty?'
The
Queen peered uncertainly at him.
'One
summoned one's Master of the Remote. You clearly are not he. Whom
am I addressing?'
'Ma'am,
the Master of the Remote sadly passed away some ten years ago, but as
a mark of respect to a loyal servant he was never removed from his
office. I am the Yeoman Warder of the Queen's Remote in Ordinary and
his unworthy deputy.'
The
Queen sniffed.
'In
Ordinary? Oh well, see if you can find the damned thing anyway.'
His
expert eye swept the room locating the missing remote immediately.
Its exact whereabouts presented him with a delicate communication
challenge but one for which his exhaustive training had well prepared
him.
'Ma'am,
I believe it may be on the sovereign's chair close to her right hand,
but obscured from view by the folds of her attire. Should I summon
the Mistress of the Robes?'
Her
Majesty retrieved the remote and handed it to him.
'That
will not be necessary. Zap.'
He
zapped, and returned the instrument. She nodded briefly.
'That
will be all.'
By
now wide awake, the Queen pondered the events of the day. Lunch with
the Crown Prince of somewhere with a foreign sounding name – she
forgot what or where exactly – had been going rather well, they had
moved on to the spotted dick and thick yellow custard without
embarrassment – 'one has it with the skin, you know' she had
informed her guest – until the attention of Philip's minder was
momentarily distracted, allowing his charge the opportunity to
enquire mischievously whether the Crown Prince's countrymen still
resolved their differences by eating each other. Fortunately a major
diplomatic row and exchange of Stern Notes was averted by her trusty
Garter Sergeant of Conflict Resolution, formerly a ceremonial post
only but one which had shouldered an increasingly heavy burden and
even spawned a number of deputies and assistants as Philip grew
older.
After
that she'd had to endure her weekly audience with that dreadful May
woman. What was her beloved Kingdom coming to? Not so long ago
little Cameron - she had found it fairly easy to hold out against
the repeated invitations to call him Dave – had damned nearly let
Scotland go and then told some colonist or other that she had 'purred
with delight at the result.' Now here was May fumbling around
hopelessly with Brexit. Not a bad idea in itself, she thought,
especially if it got rid of that ghastly Merkel creature carrying on
as if she was a more senior Queen than she herself was - only with
worse clothes and hair - but best not dealt with in this
quarter-baked way by a clueless rabble who had the temerity to style
themselves Her Majesty's Principal Secretaries of State for This and
That.
But
there was something else at the back of her mind. That day's post
had as usual been delivered personally to her by Letters Poursuivante
(Incoming) who had, with a kind of amused insouciance, drawn her
attention to a letter from some upstart in America laying claim to
her throne. 'Because I got great respect for all broads, specially
that Le Pen dame and you' the letter had informed her 'I'm putting
you on 30 days' notice that I'm gonna be the new King. Get used to
it, lady! Suck it up!' After the afternoon she'd had she was
inclined to write back saying 'you're bloody welcome to it', but a
brief conversation with the Really Good Listener of the Queen's
Bedchamber soon restored her equilibrium.
She
re-read the letter. The author claimed a direct line to a little
known elder brother of William the Conquerer, who should, apparently,
'have inherited the Brit throne plus a bunch of other stuff' in 1066.
The misspelling of 'Conqueror' severely irritated her. There was no
evidence to support the claim to the throne, but there was a
suggestion that Her Majesty and her immediate family would be 'taken
care of' provided they co-operated, although this phrase had been
untidily crossed out and replaced with 'looked after' perhaps,
surmised the Queen, because the first version sounded too
threatening. Late though it now was she summoned Word Processor in
Waiting and dictated a note.
'Elizabeth
the Second, by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Northern Ireland and of Her other Realms and Territories
Queen, Head of the Commonwealth, Defender of the Faith'
(she was sorely tempted to add 'plus a bunch of other stuff' but
resisted) 'has received your letter (undated) concerning the British
throne. Her Majesty has commanded me to inform you, in the name of
Her Majesty (see first sentence for full title) that your claim is
rejected. You will note that Her Majesty's title refers to the
position taken in this matter by God, whose opinion is deemed to
override yours. Yours etc.' The Queen allowed herself a brief
smile. That should do it.
She
had a busy schedule over the next week or two, and soon forgot about
the letter from America. There were cruise liners to be launched,
crowds to be waved at, sundry boring dignitaries to be wined and
dined, May to be fended off every week and constant requests from
Kate to do a bit of babysitting, or 'just pick him up from nursery.'
A plea from Tesco to open a new supermarket in West Bromwich was
refused ('tell 'em no, not even if they were bloody Waitrose' she had
instructed some hapless clerk), as was a request from the Glasgow
Over 80s Cage Fighting Circle that she should reprise the success of
her part in opening the Olympic Games by parachuting into the very
cage where that year's championships were to be held. The promise of
a ringside seat at the Ladies' Final, was, she felt, insufficiently
tempting. A gushing letter from Blackpool saying how great it would
be if she could see her way to doing the Christmas lights this year
('we would be happy to offer you and a friend free afternoon tea in
the luxurious surroundings of the Blackpool Tower Ballroom') met with
similarly sort shrift. The hapless clerk, though, was learning, and
now deleted the expletives before sending the letters.
Meanwhile,
the High Steward of the Royal Tweets - a position less antiquated
than most at court - which meant that the office holder was
considered an upstart and a parvenu by some of her more antiquated
colleagues holding even more antiquated positions – was becoming
increasingly, well, atwitter at some of the tweets she was
monitoring, and eventually felt the need to consult Social Media
Marechal in person. To do so face to face was highly irregular –
her position required her to communicate for the most part in bursts
of 140 characters only, hashtags included. However, the desired
response from her superior was eventually elicited following a series
of increasingly agitated tweets along the lines of Omigod!!
Hav u seen latest from US? ROFLMAO! Must talk soonest! Luv u loads
MWAH! God Save the Queen (it
was the requirement to include that last bit that always played havoc
with her 140 character limit.)
And
so the Steward and the Marechal met, by Royal Appointment as it were,
one momentous day in March of 2017. Notwithstanding the cutting-edge
nature of their posts old royal traditions were maintained – oaths
of allegiance were sworn, ceremonial bows were bowed and liveried
footmen scurried here and there bearing silver trays laden with tea
served in fine Royal Worcester china. Eventually the flummery died
down and they began.
'Hav
u seen l8est?? Is this guy 4 real???' began the High Steward, but
the Marechal held up a hand.
'It's
OK' she said with a smile 'we may transact Her Majesty's business in
English while we are in private.' Momentarily she looked
uncomfortable. 'God Save the Queen' she added, just to be on the
safe side.
The
High Steward relaxed.
'Well'
she said 'take this one as an example. Just
heard so-called Queen Eliz denying my claim to throne! Bad (or sick)
guy!! Terrible!! Will be overturned!! The
originator styles himself @realDonaldTrump –
have we got anything on him?
The
Marechal smiled the kind of smug smile only a Marechal can.
'I
believe our transatlantic cousins, in their wisdom, have recently
elected him to the office of President. I know, I know. Nations
gaining their independence prematurely will sometimes make
distressing choices. It's a lesson our Scottish brethren might do
well to absorb.'
'Should
we inform Her Majesty of his intention?'
'HM
is aware of the claim and is, I understand, not taking the threat
seriously. Indeed she is becoming somewhat skittish in old age and
has decided to have a little fun with it.'
'Fun?'
'Yes.
She is countering his claim to the British throne with one of her
own. She is proposing to restore the USA to its rightful position as
a British colony.'
The
High Steward was astonished.
'WTF??'
she gasped, involuntarily.
'She
is not, of course, serious, but that is the position she will be
taking with this Trump man. Unlike him though HM will be backing up
her claim with reasoned argument. She will contend that the
Declaration of Independence was not only illegal, but actually
treasonable. Further, she will express the view there is no legal
principle then or now to allow a group of citizens to establish their
own laws just because they want to.
She will require Trump to bend the knee, or she will have him
arrested and thrown into jail. She will then announce her intention,
in a rather pleasing phrase I feel, to take back control.'
'You
mean she will threaten to restore British rule to the whole of the
USA?'
The
Marechal nodded.
'Plus
a bunch of other stuff' she said.
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