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Lifestyle
Victor Billot

An Ode to .. Rob Campbell

Rob Campbell in busier times. Photo: Supplied

Bard Billot on the twice-sacked goneburger Rob Campbell The Last Stand of Robbo the Red  

Robbo the Red came from the hills,

swinging his pole axe,

a mercenary strolling out of the misty days of yore.

He had served many Lords.

He had served the decrepit tribes

of organised serfdom.

He had served the cunning usurers,

and the pirate merchants of antiquity.

Now he came, scarred with the years,

to take his place at the Royal Banquet

with the Lords and the Ladies,

miscellaneous gender diverse aristocrats,

and well-mannered and impeccably neutral Chief Executives.

Hostilities had ceased between all factions

for a night of stuffed grouse, amber mead

and the chortling of those who know they sit

at the High Table, on whatever side.

Red Robbo elbows his way through

and slams his mug on the table.

Silence descends like a heavy curtain on the guests.

The Boy King in his High Chair trembles in fear.

“O Robbo,” he quavers,

“Wouldst thou serve thy King as … er …

as Grand Archimandrite of Te Whatu Ora?”

“No probs Guv,” replies the burly headbanger

with a hearty belch.

Robbo’s eyes narrow and he stabs his finger

at the House of Blue seated on the right.

“Oi, Luxo! What was you saying

about that Nineteen Waters then?

I like meself a bit of co-governance!”

Baron Luxon turns a pallid grey

and retires to his chambers

with a bad case of vapours.

The Acting Marshal of the Rebel Armies,

Toad of Seymour, whips out a poisoned penknife

from beneath his fine pigskin leggings.

“Red Robbo must pay for his insolence!”

he squawks while skedaddling for the exit.

“He must pay!” chant the Chief Executives,

stamping the floor in a chorus of doom.

Grand Mistress Ayesha sighs, and calls for her box

of pincers, whips and gruesome extraction devices

authorised under the Crown Entities Act.

A platoon of the King’s Men step forward,

and Red Robbo is dragged away

to a grim fate, laughing uproariously:

“I’d rather die on me feet

than live on me knees!”, he bellows,

before his voice is cut off

by the slamming of the great iron doors. Victor Billot has previously felt moved to compose Odes for such luminaries as Bishop Brian, Clarke Gayford, Mike Hosking, and Garrick Tremain.

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