Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    MacTrump

    Page 5
    Prev Next


      That the Republicons avoid through faith:

      They worship their flaw’d shepherds just as long

      As they may call themselves part of the flock.

      There is no middle ground on such a field.

      A certain check against MacTrump requireth

      A better, stronger Democrati Party.

      SENATOR 5

      Hear, hear!

      PROSPEROSI

      —Indeed, it must be done, for we

      Are weaker now than e’er. I lov’d O’Bama,

      I praise him still. I fought beside him through

      Both thick and thin, and brought him victories,

      And still I fear that he fell victim to

      What Machi’velli warn’d destroyeth those

      Who hope to rule by dignified example.

      It is a wickèd world in which we live—

      We’re animated by the seven sins

      As oceans are, too, by the seven seas.

      When he did choose to lead through hope and virtue

      Instead of some keen mix of love and fear,

      O’Bama set himself up for a fall.

      He knew the tools at his disposal, but

      He failed to use them due to principles

      As paralyzing for a politician

      As surgeons operating sans a blade.

      Th’America o’er which he did preside

      Was but a figment of imagination.

      In their true form did our United Fiefdoms

      Elect MacTrump.

      SENATOR 4

      —Then, friends, the nation’s lost.

      SOOTHER

      Not fully. Like the truths to which we cling,

      Our form of government’s design’d to bend.

      The Constitution doth require ambition

      To counteract th’ambition that is flaw’d.

      Let’s use our flaws much more effectively

      Than the Republicons.

      SENATOR 3

      —My friends, behold!

      Methinks I found the message on the wall—

      The one O’Bama hop’d that we would see.

      PROSPEROSI

      I prithee, sister, raise aloft thy torch.

      SENATOR 3

      [reading:] “I’ve sworn upon the altar of my God

      Eternal enmity against all forms

      Of tyranny over the mind of man.”

      So Thomas Jeffersonius did pen

      In 1800, writing to his friend.

      SOOTHER

      How dost thou know this is th’intended message?

      SENATOR 3

      ’Twas th’only one engrav’d upon the wall

      In fewer than one hundred forty char’cters.

      SOOTHER

      If Jeffersonius and our O’Bama

      Are of the selfsame mind as vile MacTrump,

      Then we must make the people hate him more

      Than they hate us.

      SENATOR 1

      —Speak for thyself, thou imp!

      SOOTHER

      ’Tis true that I am hated, as art thou.

      We could fill up a library of books

      Describing why our party loathes MacTrump.

      Recall, it took a man as ruinous

      As George the Lesser for the Democrati

      To galvanize the angry vote that made

      Thee speaker, Lady Prosperosi, yea,

      And let Banquo O’Bama seize the throne.

      SENATOR 4

      That fiend MacTrump us’d our own plan against us!

      He made the people hate our rightful lord

      As much as we despisèd George the Lesser.

      SOOTHER

      Yea. If MacTrump possess’d O’Bama’s brain,

      He would have been a formidable foe.

      Yet fortunately, he was born a fool.

      We must unite—present a common front—

      And watch whilst his kakocracy implodes.

      The Senate for the moment hath been lost,

      And yet the Southern Chamber is in reach.

      What thinkest thou, my fearless hammer maiden?

      PROSPEROSI

      The former president—e’en Gerald Fordham—

      Once said impeachable offenses are

      Whatever a majority of our

      Strong Southern Chamber wishes them to be.

      ALL

      Hear, hear!

      SOOTHER

      —Methinks that solves our mystery.

      McTweet!

      Enter MCTWEET.

      MCTWEET

      —Yes, sir?

      SOOTHER

      —Send thanks to Lord O’Bama.

      MCTWEET

      It shall be done. Shall I include a picture?

      [There is scattered nodding among the group.

      ’Tis well! I shall prepare the iObscura.

      [McTweet runs behind the statue and returns with a large wooden box.

      Good gentles, be aware: a hashtag call’d

      The #WomensMarch is trending as we speak.

      SENATOR 2

      Such sounds familiar to mine ears.

      MCTWEET

      —I’m sure,

      For sev’ral million women shall attend.

      PROSPEROSI

      We must take action in this matter, yea?

      SOOTHER

      Hurrah! They’ll need a leader! ’Twill be fun.

      Who’ll champion their cause?

      [All look at one another in silence.

      —Shall anyone?

      [Exeunt.

      SCENE 5.

      The streets of Washingtown.

      Enter WOMEN marching, shouting, and chanting. Enter PROTESTORS wearing pink Phrygian caps. Behind them enter MARIANNE and JUSTINE carrying protest signs reading “Liberty” and “Justice” respectively. Unlike the other women, Marianne wears a spiked diadem atop her cap and Justine is blindfolded.

      PROTESTORS

      [singing:] Hark the sound of myriad voices,

      Rising in their might.

      ALL

      —In our might!

      PROTESTORS

      [singing:] ’Tis the daughters of the Fiefdoms

      Pleading for the right.

      ALL

      —For the right!

      PROTESTORS

      [singing:] Raise the flag and plant the standard,

      Wave the signal still.

      ALL

      —Wave it still!

      PROTESTORS

      [singing:] Brothers, we must share your freedom,

      Help us, and we will.

      ALL

      —And we will!

      [Marianne and Justine step aside to rouse the protestors.

      MARIANNE

      [to protestors:] Once more unto the streets, women, once more!

      Our joy of liberty is half eclips’d!

      JUSTINE

      Be just, and fear not, sisters. Know your rights!

      MARIANNE

      Make roar, ye lionesses! Show your pride!

      [All roar.

      MARIANNE

      [to Justine:] How art thou faring, sister?

      JUSTINE

      —O, sublime!

      I feel the warmth of souls revitaliz’d

      As if this winter were a summer’s day.

      A million heartbeats drum against my chest

      Whilst countless footfalls quake my every breath.

      I’m hearing songs of hope instead of rage

      And see how this bold march will trigger change,

      For such a proud display could not have come

      Except by justice having been undone.

      MARIANNE


      Art thou in jest with me, dear sister?

      JUSTINE

      —Nay!

      My words are true. When justice is besieg’d,

      It rallies noble forces to her aid.

      MARIANNE

      If only I could see with your mind’s eye,

      For I perceive a diff’rent, growing threat

      That all our noble systems fail’d to curb

      And all these sister-soldiers could not stop.

      The law is all but toothless in this land

      Against the criminals who break it through

      The very means that make it. That is how

      We got MacTrump, and that is why I sense

      Whatever course we take cannot depend

      On systems so corrupted from within.

      JUSTINE

      But surely thou canst see how dangerous

      Such sentiments can be. Consider how

      MacTrump ascended to his stolen throne—

      Without experience in government.

      He was a private citizen who spake

      Unto a mob who felt as threaten’d by

      O’Bama as we marchers of MacTrump.

      His liberty is full of threats to all,

      Be they the government or populace.

      MARIANNE

      But how can we support a system so

      Indebted to injustice since its birth,

      To slavery and sexism and war?

      JUSTINE

      Injustice, though within our government,

      Is mended by the selfsame engine that

      Createth it. If thou wouldst see a foul

      Law overturn’d, first see it implemented

      Unto its full extent. The law shall lose.

      MARIANNE

      O, fie! I view our laws as spiders’ webs:

      When any helpless creature stumbles in

      They are ensnar’d anon, whilst larger beasts

      Break through it and escape without a scratch.

      JUSTINE

      ’Tis wherefore spiders make poor senators.

      MARIANNE

      I say the web was broken from the start;

      Our constitution bath’d in vice and greed!

      JUSTINE

      All forms of justice start from something less,

      For justice, sister, is but the composite

      Of wisdom, fortitude, and temperance

      In one harmonious environment.

      Their meaner cousin—horrible injustice—

      Is born of ignorance, of cowardice

      And raw voracity, of unrestrain’d

      Behavior in the awful forms it takes.

      MARIANNE

      Yet such behavior makes us human, yea?

      JUSTINE

      Indeed, which is wherefore I put my faith

      In government oppos’d to none at all.

      What, after all, is government, if not

      The greatest self-reflection that we have

      On human nature? If we all were angels,

      No government would necessary be.

      If angels govern’d us, then neither would

      We have a need for government’s controls.

      MARIANNE

      Yet what of holy faith, my sister sage?

      Those who’d subvert the public liberty

      Have found essential allies in the clergy.

      JUSTINE

      A government design’d to safeguard and

      Perpetuate such liberties does not

      Demand such mercenaries. If it did,

      Such crutches would become its greatest weakness.

      MARIANNE

      Methinks that doth explain a lot.

      JUSTINE

      —It does.

      MARIANNE

      Ha! O, Justine, if we perchance survive

      This tempest with our liberties intact,

      I hope to see thee mistress of its courts.

      JUSTINE

      And should the scales in that direction tip,

      I hope to ever hold on to thine arm

      As I do now, for thou shalt be my sword.

      MARIANNE

      And thou my shield. Best friends, forevermore.

      [They embrace.

      Enter MCTWEET.

      MCTWEET

      [to all:] A brief announcement from the president:

      “All peoples of Mohammadian faith

      In shathole lands are hereby banned reentry.

      Protect the homeland!—hashtag TravelBan.”

      [All gasp.

      PROTESTOR 1

      O, shock! Disgraceful!

      PROTESTOR 2

      —Villainy!

      MARIANNE

      [to McTweet:]       —What’s this?!

      Doth that include the peoples of Algiers?

      [Exit McTweet.

      Ah, curses! We should not have blocked him yet.

      My parents may affected be by this.

      I ne’er may see them! O, what shall I do?

      JUSTINE

      Be steel, my grand colossus! I’m with thee,

      And I will help thee fight this harsh injustice.

      MARIANNE

      Thank you, my sister! I—

      [Marianne looks over the outraged crowd.

      —I need to speak.

      [To protestors:] Is this the legacy we shall pursue,

      To lock the doors on those who’d enter in?

      Was not our country born of refugees,

      Of those who immigrated to this land?

      Were we not guests once, newly hither come?

      Except our native peoples, which of us

      Can look back on our ancestors without

      Observing immigrants in our proud lines?

      Some who did choose to see this brave new world,

      Some fleeing tyranny in other lands,

      Some seiz’d as slaves and forc’d against their will.

      MacTrump and his supporters would deny

      Our history. They claim to hold aloft

      The Founding Fathers as their paragons,

      Yet gladly twist the meaning of their words.

      Religious liberty is promis’d us

      Within the Constitution’s Bill of Rights,

      Not just for Christians white and wealthy, nay—

      For ev’ryone, regardless of which god

      On whom they call, or creed which they believe.

      The songs we sing speak to these liberties:

      “From ev’ry mountainside, let freedom ring!”

      The Statue of our Liberty stands tall

      To welcome all unto our gracious land.

      Remember well the message thereupon,

      Proclaiming this: “Give me your tired, your poor,

      Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,

      The wretchèd refuse of your teeming shore.

      Send these, the homeless, tempest-toss’d to me!”

      [The protestors cheer. Exeunt.

      SCENE 1.

      Inside the White Hold.

      Enter CHORUS.

      CHORUS

      We the people come out of the cold

      As months progress, uncertain and confus’d:

      MacTrump doth exercise a stranglehold

      On presidential powers, often us’d.

      Opponents think, at best, his path’s unclear,

      At worst, that he’s a villain spreading woe.

      Now Desdivanka plans a move severe—

      And sets her sights upon another foe.

      Sir James Dogcomey cometh like a pox—

      He’d dog MacTrump with harsh investigation.

      Yet Desdivanka
    , sly as any fox,

      Will ardently protect her father’s station.

      The plots and schemes most rapidly accrue—

      With this, dear friends, beginneth our Act Two.

      [Exit Chorus.

      Enter MACTRUMP.

      MACTRUMP

      The spring hath sprung, yet I’m stuck in the mud.

      It’s been a disappointment through and through;

      E’en daisies are disgusting in my sight.

      They spring up for a moment, full of color,

      Then die the next day, wither’d by decay.

      The floral world is weak and meaningless,

      And bound on ev’ry side by filthy turds.

      Give me, instead, the fields of Mar-Iago:

      The luscious turf made for a manly sport,

      Where even caddies at their work may dream

      Of Cinderella stories on the green,

      Where ne’er a flower doth disrupt the grounds

      Of water features, sand traps, and the rough.

      Ah, Mar-Iago—haven to MacTrumps—

      How I do miss thy verdant, peaceful leas,

      E’en though I travel’d there a fortnight past.

      Perhaps the springtime still may do me well;

      Belike this season’s made for my arising,

      When I, unlike the daffodil or pansy,

      Shall grow into a stronger, manly bud.

      Would that I could remove the wretched snakes

      That slither on my fairway constantly.

      The Democrati losers whine and moan,

      And little better are Republicons—

      Both sides are weak, like flowers to be prun’d,

      And I, MacTrump, prepar’d to trim the hedge.

      I am superior to any bush:

      A mighty golfer I, with hardy roots,

      Who, with his driver, makes a hole in one,

      A firm one-wood beneath my sturdy stump.

      Ha, ha! MacTrump the Stump, a virile rhyme.

      Methinks I am the tee that proudly stood

      As frontispiece to Eden’s eighteenth hole—

      The tee that bore the knowledge of the good

      And of the evil, too. Indeed, I know

      What good is—I am good at being good—

      And evil: I’m so good at being evil

      That I make evil look like something good.

      Enter DAME DESDIVANKA and LORD JARED KUSHREW.

      E’en as the words do tumble from my lips,

      My fav’rite rose in all the world appears:

      Sweet Desdivank’, my blossom and my rosebud.

      DESDIVANKA

      Mine honor’d liege and father most robust,

      My husband and myself have lately talk’d—

      KUSHREW

      The matter, lord, is this—

      DESDIVANKA

      —Dear husband, please;

      The goddess Pallas speaks through silent lips.

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026