A light opera incorporating song patterns and themes from various works of  Gilbert and  Sullivan.

 

 

                                                           

 

     The King of Montpellier

                                                                                                   

or

 

                                                         

                                          The Peer and The Nation

                                                                                                                     

                                                              by Rowena Silver

 

 

 

DRAMATIS PERSONAE

 

 

THE LORD CHANCELLOR

KING WILLIAM

QUEEN HILLARIA

THE LORD HIGH EXECUTIONER 

DAME LYDIA VON  TRAP 

MIRTHICA PITYSING

HOUSE OF PEERS

HOUSE OF LORDS

ActI

 

Rose Garden

 

 ACT II

 

 Courthouse

 

 


 ACT I

 

 

SCENE--ROSE GARDEN    Three Peers skip into the center of a gazebo.  They are dressed in various colored sweat suits and carry cell phones.

 

CHORUS

  

               Skipping lightly, tripping lightly

               All the day and even nightly  

               We must hear and we must sing

               of the actions of the king.

 

                We must hear and we must sing

                Of the actions of the king

 

 PEER ONE

 

                        If you ask us how we live,

                        we will all essentials give--

         

 We can ride on voters' sighs,

                         Warm ourselves on voter's eyes,

                           Bathe ourselves in voter's tears,

                           Clothe ourselves with voter's fears,

                           Arm ourselves  with voter's darts,

                          Hide ourselves in voter's hearts.

                          When you know us, you'll discover

                          That we almost live on voter!

 

  CHORUS

 

                                Yes, we live on voter!

 

                                    All sigh wearily

 

PEER  TWO

 

Ah, it's all very well, but since our congress has been informed of an investigation of the king, our revels are all we have of joy!

  

 PEER  ONE

 

            To think that five-and-twenty years have elapsed since the trial started!

            What could he have done to deserve so terrible a punishment?

 

 PEER TWO

 

             Something awful!  He was a mortal!

 

PEER ONE

 

            Oh!  Is it injudicious to be a mortal?

 

PEER TWO

 

Injudicious?  It strikes at the root of the whole judicial system!  According to the interpretation of our laws by the Lord High Executioner the king who is mortal must die.

 

PEER ONE 

 

             However, William didn't die!

 

                                    Enter Queen

  

QUEEN

 

            No, because your Queen, argued to commute his sentence to indictment for life.

 

 

PEER ONE

 

            He is now working out that sentence at the bottom of that stream!

 

QUEEN

 

Yes, but I think he would rather have it done with.  Being on trial for life can become tedious, I think.

 

PEER TWO    

 

            Why don't we ask him?

 

 QUEEN  

 

            Indeed.  Let's call him and see if he comes. Twenty-five years--it's a long time!

 

INVOCATION--QUEEN.

 

                                     William !

            From thy dark investigation thou art summoned!

             Come to our call--Come, come, William!

 

PEER ONE

 

William!

 

PEER TWO

                                    William!

 

ALL.   

 

                                    Come to our call, William!

William, come!

 

William  rises from the water. He is covered in water-weeds. He approaches the Queen with head bent and arms crossed.

 

WILLIAM

 

With humbled breast

                        and every finger puckered

                        Hilleria, I surface for  respite

                        I am humbled!

 

 

QUEEN

 

For a sin against our court, we banished you.  But time has come I do believe, for judgement of  the king.

 

                        Rise--thou art readied!

 

PEER ONE

Readied!

 

ALL

 

                         Readied!

 

 

His weeds fall from him, and he appears in a polyester leisure suit.  The

Queen places a crown on his head, and embraces him

                       

CHORUS

 

                        Welcome to our hearts,  (aside, perhaps)

King William!  King William!

                        We have shared thy pain, alas

King William!  King William

 

 QEEEN HILLERIA

 

Let us see if the Lord Chancellor has at last given his consent to

put an end to this trial.

 

 WILLIAM

 

No, Last session, I asked for a trail.  To all my entireties they answered thus:    

"You have been accused of being mortal and must stand trial."  I stood in court and read them Whitman and sang songs of freedom with saxophone accompaniment--I even gave them small bears -but it was all in vain.  But, who are these elderly people and why are they so oddly dressed?

  

QUEEN

 

            These are peers of the realm Do you not remember them.  They are old,

but still they are your friends.

 

WILLIAM

 

But they are confounded radicals, and, on a division, they'd be sure to pillory me  you see, they're two to one, which is a strong working majority.

 

QUEEN

 

 D on't let that distress you; should you be returned it will be as a

 Liberal-Conservative.

 

(Peers and Queen trip off)

 

Enter MIRTHICA, dancing and accompanying herself on a ukulele She stands next to William.

                         

MIRTHICA

 

                        Good morrow, good lover!

                        Good lover, good morrow!

                         I prithee discover,

                         Steal, purchase, or borrow

                         Some means of concealing

                         The care you are feeling,

                         and join in a measure

                         Expressive of pleasure,

                         for we're to be indicted today--today!

                         Yes, we're to be indicted today!

 

BOTH.

                          Yes, we're to be indited, etc.

 

 WILLIAM

 

 embracing her

 

 Dear girl! 

 

MIRTHICA

 

But oh, William,  I tremble at the step I'm taking!  I believe its penal servitude for    life for a woman of my station to love a king.  What will become of me?

 

WILLIAM

 

Why, you might fall in love with the Lord Chancellor!  Earl of Breakfast.

 

 MIRTHICA

 

  Yes.  He might do. Except for that confounded robe.

 

KING WILLIAM

 

            As it is, half the House of Lords are sighing at your feet.

 

MIRTHICA

 

The House of Lords are certainly almost alert.

 

KING WILLIAM

 

 Dear girl, you will be fine

 

KING WILLIAM AND MIRTHICA- DUET

 

MIRTHICA

 

 None shall part us from our story,

                         One in life and death are we.

                         All in all to one another--

                         I to thee and thou to me!

 

KING WILLIAM AND MIRTHICA

 

                          Thou the tree and I the flower

                       Thou the earth; I the rake

                       Thou the day and I the hour

                          Thou the music; I the tape!

 

WILLIAM

 

                          All in all since that fond meeting

                       When, in pain, I woke to find

                       Mine the face in all the dailies,

            Yours, and mine with hear enshrined!

 

Lydia trap is peering from behind the bushes.  She enters as William and Mirthica exit.

 

Am I alone, and unobserved?  I am!  Now, let me tell you more about this sham!

 

LYDIA (song)

           

On a chair by my window

a zaftig young twitsang,

William, oh, William, oh William.

 

And I said to her,

Bubelah, why do you sit

moaning -

William oh, William, oh William?

 

Is it weakness of intellect

darling,  I cried

or a  tough crème brole

in your little inside?

with a shake of her poor little head

she replied-

Oh William, oh William, oh William!

 

Now, I sure, of one thing

I am sure that this prigkvetching -

William oh William, oh William

has a story to tell

and it deals with the king

Oh William, Oh William, Oh William!

  

I sighed, you can trust me with all that you hide

all that you longed for and wanted,  besides

did you really expect him to make you his bride?

Oh William oh, William oh, William!

 

I will run straight away to the chief of the court

he's a bit of a rouge and a bit of a sport

but he's sure to reward me for this grand report

Oh William, oh William, oh William!

                                                              

            ACT II

 

LEGISLATIVE COURTROOM 

 

The peers and Lords march in and sit on opposite sides of the courtroom

  

BALLIFF

  

Defer!  Defer! To the To the great and grand Inquisitor!  Defer! Defer!  to the great to the great to the great The Grand Inquisitor!

 

The Grand Inquisitor arrives in a black robe with striped sleeves.

  

INQUISITOR

 

My object all divine

I shall achieve in time,

to let the punishment fit the crime

the punishment fit the crime!

 

The person who deceives a friend

by taping a confidence.

will be made to live in a shack in Queens

with ever increasing rents!

 

The person who votes without a thought

to fairness  or to king,

will be made to sit in a mulberry tree

on an uneven swing!

 

And it will sway in the slightest breeze

into the mucky leaves,

and the insects swarm along his brow

and  up into his sleeves!

 

The society people

with thousand pound dinners

to influence the court,

will be made to sit

on a mound of ice

in a shredded K-Mart coat! 

 

And media people with cameras and lens

and questions intimate

will be put on a griddle

and basted with nettle

            Until we see them sweat!

 

But most of all the man who chooses

to dig up all the dirt,

who doesn't mind dumpsters

or getting foul secrets in his

fingernails and boots

will be main to dwell in a

chicken coop

in a very expensive suit!  

 

My object all sublime

I will achieve in time,

to make the punishment fit the crime

the punishment fit the crime!

  

BALIFF 

 

Be seated Lords!

 

The lords all sit down and some fall over

 

BALIFF

 

Be Seated Peers!

 

The peers all sit down and some fall over

  

BAILIFF

  

                          There are the peers Montpellier

                          Abs of steel and buns of  iron !

                          Paragons of  right and truth  they are

                                Tantantara!  zing!  Boom!

 

Enter the Lord Chancellor, followed by his trainbearer

 

LORD CHANCELLOR

  

                        The Law is the true embodiment

                        Of everything that is excellent.

                        There is no flaw I've seen so far

                        And I, my Lords, embody the Law.

                        See my pretty robes with stripes

    and the gavel that is mine

I am ready to opine

                           what  the king and what the crime

                        but with women, I confess

                        pretty hair and pretty dress

                        makes a pretty,  pretty  mess.

        

(aside) Many here, but none are mine

    

 ALL.               

 

                 Alas. a lass, a pretty miss,

                        and none are his, and none are his.               

 

The LORDS dressed in full robes stand

  

LORDS (song)

 

                        If you want to know are

we  are gentlemen of the bar

with many a thought bizarre

if you think we're cute

in wigs and long of tooth

well we think you wrong!

 

 CHORUS

  

If you ever ever ever

want to grind a man to justice

here they are, here they are!

 

Lords are seated

 

Peers rise

 

 PEERS

Oh, William is our king

and a good king too

and wherever he has done

We have all done too.

 

He never, never lied

(aside) or at least he told us so

And besides, he is our king!

 

CHORUS

 

And  a good king,  too!

  

 Enter The Lord High Executioner.  He is on a wooden horse.  He waves an axe.

  

LORD HIGH EXECUTIONER

 

I am the lord high executioner

a mighty titled challenger and fighter

a gentlemen of  strength  and fortitude

(aside) and, who knows, one day soon a writer

I have the evidence to bury him

I've slunk beneath the rocks and slime to gather it

and I will now reveal to you

foul evidence of  evil in the palace!

 

He rolls out a huge parchment

 

CHORUS  backing up

 

(aside)

Why, the very paper sticks to heaven high

 

Detour!

Detour!

It's the Lord High Executioner!

Detour!

Detour!

It. s the lord it. s the lord it. s the lord it. s the lord

It's  the Lord High Executioner!

  

LORD HIGH EXECUTIONER

 

I am the lord High executioner

I snicker at the nobility and grandeur

I will level ranks, beheading those

who think that they can rival me in stature!

 

CHORUS

 

Detour, detour, for the lord, for the lord, for the lord, high  executioner!

  

All sit down in their places

   

LORD CHANCELLOR  (addressing William)

 

Now, sir, what excuse have you to offer for having flirted with an undocumented law of  the Court of Montpellier?

  

WILLIAM

 

My Lord, I know no Courts of Montpellier I go by Nature's acts !  The rose petals, the  cherry blossoms, the very air cries, "This maiden enters your chambers -take her, we command you!"  Sir, you are Montpellier's Lord High Chancellor, but are you Chancellor of cherry blossoms?  Are you wise enough to know what is is? Is anyone?

 

LORD CHANCELLOR.

 

            No.  It is a pretty point.  I don't know that I ever met it before.  But my difficulty is that at present       there's no evidence before the Court that Cherry blossoms have interested themselves in the matter.

  

KING  

 

No evidence!  You have my word for it. And my word for it is quite different, you see, from your word for it.

 

 LORD CHANCELLOR

 

Ah!  But, Your Majesty, did you not tarry in your duties for a moment of dalliance?

  

KING WILLIAM

 

            A conversation?  I did indeed.

  

PEERS

 

He did indeed, he did indeed he did,  indeed he did,  indeed he did indeed.

 

LORDS

 

This we concede this we concede, this we concede, this we concede.

 

KING WILLIAM 

(aside)

 

            I'm telling a terrible story

but it ought not to diminish my glory

for they would have taken my sorry ass

out of the monarchy!

 

I have in an elegant side step

emerged from that elephant witch trap

which is not in the same category as

telling a terrible story!

 

CHORUS

 

He's telling an uncertain story

but it will not diminish  his glory

'cause they would have taken his sorry ass

out of the monarchy!

  

WILLIAM

            

Here's a pretty mess!

if I just confess,

noblemen in all their glory

will run forward with the story

what a pretty state  of things

a pretty pretty mess!

 

WILLIAM

 

The lady of my love knows I was dealing with another

  

LORDS. 

 

                         Oh, fi!  Young William is a rogue!

 

WILLIAM 

 

I tell her very plainly that that woman was a bother!

 

LORDS

 

Taradiddle, taradiddle, tol lol lay!

 

WILLIAM 

 

She believes my statement, and declares us never parted,

                        Because of a vile rumor that the dead of heart have started

                        She will not turn her back on me and leave me broken-hearted--

 

LORDS

           

Taradiddle, taradiddle, tol lol lay!

 

QUEEN

             Ah, cruel ones, to play with such a notion!

 

PEERS

              As if!  our Willie's  not a rogue!

 

QUEEN

                           You've done him an injustice, for the lady is no bother!

 

PEERS

               Taradiddle, taradiddle, tol lol lay!

 

LORD CHANCELLOR. 

  

                        That fable  may serve his turn as well as any  other.

           

(Aside) I didn't see her face, but if they fondled one another,

                        And she's but young and plump --I don't believe it was a bother

                           Taradiddle, taradiddle&

  

ALL.        

 

Taradiddle, Taradiddle.  Tol lol lay!

 

LORD CHANCELLOR

 

      &nb