Wednesday, 6 February 2013

Tories Cancel Riots

The 2020 London International Riots have been cancelled by the Kultcha Sec., Baroness Toss-Er-Jewels. When telephoned by the Sock Puppet, she had these words to say:

Baroness Toss-Er-Jewels: Who the hell said you could run a story like this?
London International Riots
Baroness Toss-Er-Jewels
by Sir Edwin Land-Sneer

The Sock Puppet: Philip Lee, the author and proprietor, Ma'am.

BT-J: And who does he think he is?

TSP: Well, he's a free agent; answers to no one but himself.

BT-J: In that case, you can tell him from me, he's going to need a jolly good brief when this gets out.

TSP: Righty-ho! He knows quite a lot of dangerous people does Philip.

BT-J: And what's that supposed to mean?

TSP: Just that he keeps company with some rather scurvy rogues with broken teeth and fingernails.

BT-J: Look here, I won't be intimidated, you know! We - at what-used-to-be-called the British government - take a very dim view of incitement. You can tell your Mr Lee that from me!

**

Later on, over a couple of gin-and-wotsits at the Carlo Marx Fan Club, the Sock Puppet had private words with Sir Bendy Copper, Chief of the Metropolitan Whatchamacallit.

Sir Bendy Copper: You should have come to me in the first place, old son, the old Kultcha Sec's not even on the case, sticking her pearly neck out is what. And organised rioting is not even an Olympic event for her to be mouthing off about. Comes under your Ministry of Justice and Peace.

London International Riots
Sir Bendy Copper
(
Photo-Fit-Up)

TSP: Was there an economic motive behind cancelling the riots?

SBC: Not as you'd notice. I think they were simply afraid of letting in all them foreign teams.

TSP: Such as?

SBC: Well, take your French for a kick-off. As soon as landing on the quayside they'd be setting fire to our muttons. Then, you can't beat the French at the art of building barricades from bric-a-brac. We'd've had all the totters of South London up in arms. Added to that, you'd get the old Gallic hurling of cobble-stones, which is not something you want to be on the receiving end of, you take it from me.

TSP: They learnt their lesson at Agincourt, then?

SBC: Certainly did, the cheek of them!

TSP: But surely, hasn't it been hundred of years since the streets of London were paved with cobble-stones?

SBC: (Tapping his nose) Planning on bringing their own, weren't they!

TSP: The rotters!

SBC: Then there's all that garlic to consider!

TSP: Egad! So who else was planning to crash the London twenty-twenty?

SBC: You name 'em! Whirling Dervishes, Brazilian Mud Wrestlers, Etruscan Troubadours, Chinese Winkle Pickers – anyone with an 'istory of grudge, Peruvian Gold Diggers, Californian Longshore Drifters, Vietnamese Street Vendors, The Whole Belgian Police Force, Masai Warriors, assorted Zulus, Greek Hoplites, Nude Amazon Booksellers, we could go on...

TSP: I'm sure we could...

**

Later still, the Sock Puppet talked via tele-conferencing link to Hosanna Bomb-Laden, President of GAGA, the Great American Gunlaw Association.

TSP: Will the US now curtail its special relationship with the UK?

Hosanna Bomb-Laden: Let me put you straight, sonny-boy, we want to see the UK remain a strong archipelago off the European coast.
London International Riots
Hosanna Bomb-Laden
(Artist's Impression)

TSP: And what of the “Little Boats of England”?

HB-L: Heck, you gotta secure those borders somehow! You can't see off the Indians and Chinese with a few privateers and an out of date fishing fleet. Your whole country needs to become a modern aircraft carrier.

TSP: Oh, right-on, Hosanna-Bomb!

HB-L: You know, we remember the days when the UK was the only bucket of light east of Nantucket.

TSP: Brings a tear to one's eye!

HBL: The country that gave us stockings-suspenders, horseradish sauce and five-day cricket!

TSP: Tally-ho!

HB-L: Just don't drink the tea is all!

TSP: Thank you so much for your precious time, Mr. President. Amex card alright?

HB-L: Do nicely, boy!

London International Riots
Stitch 'Em Up!

Tuesday, 29 January 2013

Fried Bread - Appellation d'origine contrôlée

The Sock Puppet: Mr Bread, it's said you mean all things to all men...

Fried Bread: Hi, how're ya doin? Sadly no. It's only true to say I have meant few things to several men.
Fried Bread
Fried Bread's on the radio again!
TSP: So what do you mean to women?

FB: Even fewer things and to far less of them, but I am widely loved by the fairer sex... more often as a secret passion. Indeed a good many women have been warned to avoid me at all costs.

TSP: How would you describe yourself?

FB: Light, crisp, and laden with woof.

TSP: What is your secret?

FB: That would be telling, wouldn't it? Let us just say, I succeed in being thoroughly buttery by remaining utterly stale to the core.

TSP: How would you like to be remembered?

FB: As a pleasant after dinner taste, dear boy. My imitators leave a lardy smear on the tongue.

TSP: When was your finest hour?

FB: Serving my sovereign, I think, or guesting at a posh nosh.

TSP: How should you be prepared?

FB: Natural gas. Swear by it!

TSP: Straight out the pan?

FB: And into the cake-hole! With a brace of tinned tomatoes, of course

TSP: Who would play you in the film of your life?

FB: Erm, Huge... whathisname?

TSP: Huge Lorry?

FB: No, not that oaf! He couldn't play housey-housey! Huge Grant, I mean. Or Nigel Kennedy could have a stab at the old cackass. Next question!

TSP: What is your greatest fear?

FB: Of being taken for toast.

TSP: It's been said, you are - what used to be called - “middle brow”...

FB: Oh, I know, I know! Another one is “half-baked”, then there's “the sugar-loafer” and “dough-boy” These are all mere clichés, of course.

TSP: Really?

FB: Devoid of all meaning. The truth is even plainer: I am as mealy-mouthed as any self-respecting lump of carbohydrate.
Fried Bread
Fried Bread is a member of Equity
TSP: How do you envisage your end?

FB: As crotons sprinkled over French onion soup? Lapped up by someone equally scrumptious as myself - a Carla Bruni, for example, or a Justin Bieber?

TSP: That's not very patriotic of you!

FB: Well, it's one better than some snot-nosed Brummie kid sopping up his bacon fat with me!

TSP: There's talk of awarding you heritage status... are you rye or wry?

FB: Very funny words indeed, coming from your mouth!

TSP: At least I have a mouth!

FB: More like a foot and mouth!

TSP: Do us a poem, then!

FB: If you insist! This one's called “crumbs in the bed”

crumbs in the bed
a breakfast of tupenny
rhyming poetry is dead
good of you to photocopy
a cup of tea instead
of jumping right on top of me 

TSP: God, that was shite!

FB: I know. Dismal what you can get away with these days, dontchya think?
Fried Bread
Tra-Laa!

Saturday, 5 January 2013

New Year Honours Sir Ronald Biggs


The Sock Puppet: Sir Ronald Biggs, our readers would love to know how you felt when the old Queen fingered you for the old knighthood.

Sir Ronald Biggs: In a word, gutted.

TSP: Could you explain that for our readers?
Sir Ronald Biggs
Gary Oldman after plastic surgery
"Biggsie" 1998
SRB: It's been alleged that as Her Royal Majesty was drawing the actual sword, I allegedly flinched or even ducked. In point of fact, the whole investiture was done in absentia, since I was neither there in person at the time, nor anywhere else in the vicinity. Also, not only do I stand a hundred per cent innocent in my stockinged feet; but I have concealed on my person sworn affidavits by concealed witnesses who saw the state I was in on the occasion. Suffering from a case of third degree diarrhoea, I could never have gone down on my knees for fear of loosening the bowels and soiling Her Royal Apartments - a form of disrespect which has never formed part of my intentions in any respect.

TSP: So what exactly are your intentions?

SRB: Wholly honourable, your honourable worships. For me to walk, assisted mind you, into any public house on Whitstable High Street; to stand, suitably propped mind you, at the bar; to order, by means of any intermediate third party mind you, a pint of their best bitter; and to drink, through any normal straw mind you, as much or as little of the dear old beer as would satisfy any appointed umpire or other intermediary the Royal Court saw fit. To put it in a nutshell, in fact, to satisfy any Royal Court in the land that I was willing and able to do what is right and proper in a nutshell.

TSP: Would that be The Royal Court of St. James, or the Royal Courts of Justice in The Strand?

SRB: As long as it's not the Royal Court in Sloane Square, I wouldn't give a monkey's which Royal Court it was. Degenerate place!

TSP: Are you referring to the Royal Court Theatre?

SRB: Is that what it is?

TSP: In your day, a haunt of the playwright Joe Orton.

SRB: Joe the What's-His-Right? The nefarious defacer of library books?

TSP: The very culprit.

SRB: Then I go back to my opening remarks. By whom, may I ask, would the deliberate defacement of innocent books designed to be read by pensioners, wheel-chair access wallers, unemployed plumpies and such like be condoned, eh? How long did the little turd get?

TSP: Eighteen months hard.

SRB: Sewing poxy mail-bags, I rather think! But don't you see the point of my gist? The dirty rotten toe-rag performs an act of vandalism against the very heart of English decency and skips off with a slap on the wrists? Whereas the likes of us folk heroes and loyal members of the original criminal class getting thirty years for playing minor roles in a straight forward and somewhat romantic train robbery...

TSP: Which, in your case, netted 2.6 million pounds, worth over 40 million in today's money.

SRB: Look here, sunshine, the old GTR was long consigned to the anals before decimalisation ever set in! Whereas, seen from the genuine criminal's point of view, defacing library books is an unnatural act, tantamount to buggering kindly old ladies on their own landings. You know what buggers of kindly old ladies get inside?

TSP: Do tell!

SRB: Only the jolly old tube of Macleans squirted up the old Humphrey Jarvis!

TSP: Great Scott!

SRB: They don't like it up them, see!

TSP: Bu-bum! I should think not.

SRB: Brings them out in a rash.

TSP: Very rash, I'm sure.

SRB: Which only goes to show you how true rough justice is meted out to the deserving.

TSP: So what, in your opinion, would have been a more suitable penalty to pay for your crimes?

SRB: All being fair and square, I think transportation would have suited me down to the ground.

TSP: You're in favour of a return to penal colonies, then?

SRB: I'm not exactly averse to the idea, no. So long as all poisonous snakes and spiders are cleared out of the dormitories, lavs and showers. Plus any locals loitering about ought to be kept well sprinkled, dusted off and rubbed down. On the whole, I think a spot of planting at the old plantations and forcing a bloke to eat his Christmas pud on ye olde beach, for example, is quite enough of a punishment in this old day and age.

TSP: Hang on a minute, your honour, isn't that more-or-less what you got?

SRB: Ah yes, but I paid my own way, didn't I? You can't say I was detained by Her Majesty's jurisprudence when, at each and every juncture, I was picking up the tab from my own share of the ill-gotten, could you? Saved the taxpayers of England a fortune in dental bills alone, I did.

TSP: So where to now, Sir Ronnie? A world cruise? A season in pantomime? What's your choice of Desert Island Discs? Or are you holding out for a peerage?

SRB: I'm not saying I've abandoned all hope of taking my rightful seat in the House of Lords, that is if Her Majesty were to make good her threat of ordering me to a Baronetcy, I would have to think seriously about it, somewhat, before, with the deepest of respect, turning her down. What I'm saying is, the public have come to expect a certain moral content from their villains. As Roopie Murdoch was saying to me only the other day, that blooming lot are all tainted, it's been one dirty scandal after another. Did you know, he himself turned down the throne of Canada on account of all their shenanigans? He said, you might be just as well off steering clear of them, striking out on your own, so to speak,; and who knows what the good lord has got in store for you? I mean, the old Bishops still have their seats in the House. See what the old Pope has to offer? I mean, if a time-served Nazi cleric can get away with it, why not a lad from Lambeth Walk? A little dash of charisma goes a very long way these days.

TSP: Thanks very much for your time.

SRB: Erm, it's cash payment only, Squire! Ha-ha, none of your fake chocolate money! Save all that cheque's-in-the-post waffle for the taxman.

Sir Ronald Biggs
Phil Collins as Buster
("Biggsie", 1998)
After-forward:
Great After-Dinner Yawns No. 0002
by Philip Lee

As soon as I received the order of the boot from Rose Bruford School of Speech & Drama (for Christmas 1977) I dusted myself off, got a job sorted out and somewhere to live. My new workplace was in the basement of the old County Hall building across the river from the Houses of Parliament. The new flat, which I shared with Christopher Lee and Dave “Westy” West, was in the only remaining terrace of old Lambeth Walk.
Being of a romantic bent – a pussy-footying Caretaker, if you would - as having (in my father's immortal words) 'a bit of stuff' in Sidcup - my weekends were a source of comfort & joy. Friday evenings, after clocking off at the old nine-to-five, would see me skiving out the back of County Hall, down the long, dark tunnel under the tracks of Waterloo Station, to emerge at Lower Marsh; whereupon I would buy a decent box of chocolate fondants from a slightly dodgy retailer located on that lively thoroughfare. My one pound (net weight) of dark chokkies under arm, I would scamper down towards The Cut, round the corner into the side entrance of the station; and there, I would buy a nice bunch of roses from a bloke with striking white hair very popular in that locale. Then it was crossing the road, upping the steps to Waterloo East and boarding the first train on the Sidcup line (fast between London Bridge and Hither Green).
Millions of years later, in another life on the further side of yet another planet - as it were - a film came on the box about Buster Edwards, who was a colleague of old Ronnie Biggs from his days robbing mail trains. This smiling geezer had eluded the police entirely at the time of the blagging, gone abroad, then lingered in Mexico with the gallant one (lately escaped) and other members of the consortium. After three years of this, pining for the comforts of wife, kids and the Great British Banger, he flew home and handed himself in. Edwards served nine years of his dues and then, on release, began flogging flowers at Waterloo. He was the Buster, quite unbeknown to me at the time of my enduring assignations in Sidcup, off whom I would buy the red roses.
I read he later handed himself in to the Almighty. That's a shame. I'm sure his flowers brought much joy, and assuaged a fair bit of guilt on all sides.

Sir Ronald Biggs
Me, 1977

Wednesday, 19 December 2012

TS Eliot interview by The Sock Puppet


TSP interviews'Pottie The Parrot' author
TS ELIOT 

TS Eliot
TS Eliot interviewed by The Sock Puppet
The Sock Puppet: Giz a Potted Outline of yr Youth, Petal...
Troy Story Eliot: ...of my younghood, Sugar? The absolute gist? Psh-haw... Oh Yaaah... mine was a DEADLY SUBMARINE of a childhood; a very Cold War Business done with black-and-white cut-outs in tedious Slow-Mo. I was born into a Lower Class household in a leafless suburb of Wroittenborough. My parents went astray when I was still a tot, Ma ran off with the first Peace Convoy that came along; then Pop upped and chased his dream of becoming a Brazilian Mud Wrestler. Godknows what became of them.
TS Eliot
Copyright Double Dutch Mint
After they disappeared, I was adopted by Dirty Aunt Ernestina. Her dwelling was even further across the tracks, a pebble-dashed packing crate on a soap-opera council estate. Dirty but Daring, Ernestina fed me on Love Hearts and Licorice Allsorts. I contracted chronic toothache and with the help of Welfare was fully braced and re-capped by the age of thirteen. Honest to God, mine was the Smile that topedoed a thousand Liberty Ships. Despite that, I fooled a Gang of Bikers into kidnapping me as a Media Heiress. Over a single weekend, I swopped my sweet Jimmy Savile Innocence for one Jimmy Hendrix Experience after another. By Monday morning, I found myself approaching the Garden Gates of Eton at a hundred and twenty on the clock. Suddenly, there was a hairpin bend in the road, then a great bang, and I was flung from the pillion. When I looked up, I immediately realised what had gone down. An over-rich fuel mix had blown the carburettor gasket. Off my face in panic, I'd gone into a Back Flip and landed on my Toes.
TSP: Did you ring the bell?
TSE: To that posh school? My Governess, no! Even I knew never to do that! I climbed over the ironwork and scurried round to the rear. Hunger led me, by the nose, straight into the Refectory. Breakars was being served, so I slipped through the crowd and sat down with some kids of my own age. It was the first time I tasted porridge in my life.
TSP: Incredible! Does porridge have a taste?
TSE: Crème brûlée to my poor, uneducated tongue. Until that day, I thought Breakfast was a type of Dog Food.
TSP: Then you enrolled?
TSE: Not officially. By a stroke of fate, my arrival had coincided with day one of the new term. There were hundreds of newbies and nobody noticed that my plimsolls hadn't stepped out of a Rolls. So in vogue was my Street Style Rap they never thought the Lower Class Gauche was anything but a Spectacular Pose. I was perceived as Eton's answer to Stephen Fry, who was requisitioned by Top Hatted Geezers long before their Mothers were Invented. When anyone asked who my Pop was, I would frown and whisper my real name – Jeanne-Paula Satyre - and that I was a Deep Cover Operative from Poverty International. Then they'd laugh themselves hoarse. Never could understand why. In fact, in my fourth year the School Sec began to wonder why too. There were Great Arrears in my fees, see.
TSP: That sounds rather far-fetched! Hadn't the Bursar spotted the slip up?
TSE: Not at all! So fond of the sauce was he, the Accounts Book was all wine-stains and ink-blots. It was only when a snooping reporter got on the case that my txt msgs to Jim'll Fix It came to light.
TSP: Uh-Oh! That must have been embarrassing! How did you get out of that one?
TSE: Top of the form, woznai? Teacher's pet. Captain of Girls' Rugger and Meanest Hooker on and off the Cricket grounds. To them, the Ice Cream Spoon stuck in the corner of me mouth was the heighth of Chic. They unearthed a chest of scholars' ship-money from somewhere and finally I was able to go home for the holidays.
TSP: And where WAS Home during that traumatic period?
TSE: Same as ever, Sugar. Dirty Aunt Ernestina's five-bedroomed council 'arse in Wroittenborough. D'you know, she hadn't even reported me missing, the dear old fraud? As my Grauniad, she'd been living it up on Free School Meals with smokes and drinks on Child Benefit.
TSP: That was Dead Bad of her. What about yr education? Hadn't the sagging-off snoopers bin round the auld homestead?
TSE: That's the best part! Aunt Ernestina had never been educated, see, so, disguised as me, there she was filing her nails on my desk at the local state-assisted, woznit?
TSP: A GRAMMAR School, by Jeeves?
TSE: Very forward-looking place was Wroittenborough in those days! Mind you, Esnestina finally learnt her three Rs and was serving up Claims left, right and centre court. Of course, when I showed my mug, she had to pack the racket in.
TS Eliot
Guest Artist Slot
TSP: (very slowly) Woz yer ant pleased t'see yuz after all them years?
TSE: Oh, I should say! She was enchanted! Positively poisoned me with Municipal Kindness! Nicked my Old Spoon, for spite. The Dratted Thing thought it was silver plate and took it down the pawnshop for a quote.
TSP: How much did they spot her for the heirloom?
TSE: Let's just say it was in shillings and pence. Anyroads, soon afterwards, there was I, passing the very shop and I seeing it in the winder! “Me Plastic Spoon!”, I walked in and cried. No dice. I had to sneak home and filch the chit from her purse. The purse was empty besides, she having spent all the ill-gained on Love Hearts and Licorice Allsorts. I had to redeem the jolly old mouthpiece from my own stash of bobs and tanners.
TSP: Didn't you confront her over the theft?
TSE: Confront Ernestina? Like, ask a Bookie for your Stake Back when your Horse comes in Last? Do me a Por Favoree! I had to play it straight-faced, eleven vols on the QT. I started putting out like the regular toffee-nosed-twerp. Boasted of me Pushbike Pass into Downing Street and pied-à-terre on Throgmorton Street.
TSP: Would you say you conformed to any stereotypes in your choice of occupations?
TSE: Quite right. And with the proceeds, bought me Aunt a Traffic Warden's Outfit for her thirty-third birthday.
TSP: Yer made a Meter Maid of her? That woz... imaginative. Did the Trick, as such?
TSE: Capital, dear boy, Capital! To this day she struts the streets of Wroittenborough in black uniform, fishnet tights, notebook and pen in hand, dishing out fines and dreaming of pinching Sir Paul McCartney. Made an honest woman of her!
TSP: And, as everyone knows, when you came up from Eton, you returned to your old home town to become the first Blasted Toff to live there since 1922.
TSE: Aye-aye, together, Ernestina and I have stood this old place back on its knees. A few years ago, it was a paradise of benefit cheats, dope pedlars and thoughtless parkers. Nowadays, if anyone so much as dreams of making a bogus claim or overstaying their welcome outside Lidl, down we swoop and pester them with Family Circle Wheel Clamps and Snooty Insinuations. (Plummy voice:) “See here, you Plebs you, these are all Private Recreation Grounds, aintchya got stately homes to go to?”
TSP: It must be sheer hell for the petty grafters of Wroittenborough!
TS Eliot
Copyright Banks of Inngland, Enngland, Angland & Glond
TSE: Well, they do keep crawling from the woodwork. Then there are all the pensioners camped out in the Municipal Gardens. I'm up to my eyeballs confiscating their Residents' Vehicle Permits.
TSP: But what of your dreams? Do you not hope one day to give up the provincial life and bring your brand of Squalor-Busting Snobbery to the streets of London or New York? Don't you think the Rest of the World needs an Avenging Twerp like you?
TSE: You're reckoning without the great enemy I made at Eton. You see, soon after my reconciliation with Dirty Aunt Ernestina, I was tracked down by the Rotter Spiro de Mountebank. He invoked the Curse of The Three Snitches and impregnated me - while all I could do was simply to Look On in Horror. As a result, I became the Single Ma of dear little Beastie Braddocksnicker, who binds me to this Manor. Whenever I try to cross its Borders, I hear those Tiny Tot Cries, impelling me to run home and Prostrate myself before Her Noble Pottyness. Motherhood has turned me into the Prisoner of the Parish Boundaries.
TSP: Life must be Dead Tedious for you all the way up here!
TSE: Never say die! There is always some little hole I can crawl into on my four-days-off-a-week. Moreover, Wroittenborough has become almost Metropolitan since I came to Power. As well as the Old Town, we have incorporated the seaside resort of Wroittenmouth, Enclosed the great common of Wroittendale and Compulsory Purchased the Twin Plateaus of Wroittencraig - where the oiks go cross-country skating in winter and cheese rolling in summer. And life has its ups and downs, especially with that Rotter Spiro de Mountebank yelping at my heels. By day, he dwells in the alehouses of Wroitten-under-the-Burgh. After nightfall, out he comes wreaking squalor on the poor constituents and stirring me from my Single Parent's Bed. Wearing his Faux Claimant's Cloak & Coronet, he musters hordes of self-employed tree surgeons and their Privet Husbands; they throng the led-lit streets, tweaking Mayhem from the rubber hydrants and popping the windscreens of clapped out Bubble Cars. Little by little, I am learning how and when to circumcise their lewd displays of Insubordination. Meantime, there remain simply vols and vols of adventures for me to hack through. And with little Beastie to bring up on the Strange and Callow, there's seldom a straight moment in the life of this Community Cheat-Busting Bitch!
TS Eliot
Copyright Little Brown Jug, 2012
TSP: I see yer plugged yr vols back then. How goes the old pen-pushing these days?
TSE: What, I? Make Mention of my Printed Books? The very Cheek of it!
TSP: Come, come, Madame, with twenty-eight best-sellers to your name, shifts of your latest book have taken an unexpected downpan. How do you explain this sudden loosening in the bowels of yr popular following?
TSE: I'm sorry, my Agent's making signs through the window. That's enough questions.
TSP: Surely you'll take this opportunity to explain the Great Plot Void between Vols 9 and 14 of 'Hottie The Carrot'?
TSE: That's not a very nice thing to say, Young Man! Well, never mind, time's up. I mean, little Beastie's crying for her changey-wangey!
TSP: Well, thanks for all yr troubles.
TSE: 'Twas nix! BTW, Sugar, no cash payment. Hand Ernestina your card to swipe on the way out.
TSP: Ouch!
TS Eliot
Sock it To 'Em

Friday, 7 December 2012