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King Arthur, gallant and with class, praises the Black Knight, but alas, with eyes very frigid the black knight stands rigid and repeatedly says, "None shall pass." The Black Knight refuses to move so Arthur his courage does prove. The Black Knight, in rage, a battle does wage, but Arthur his limbs does remove. The village a witch wants to burn and Bedevere makes them all learn the only way which to know she's a witch, and Arthur's respect he does earn The knights that King Arthur does crave and someday his life they might save are Bedevere, Lancelot, Galahad, and forget not Sir Robin, the not-quite-so-brave. The knights then journey to Camelot And are sung to quite gaily of Spamalot. The knights singing is indefatigable, And their rhymes are quite unsingable, But they sing from the diaphramalot. It's only a model of Camelot they face So Arthur declares in disgrace, "Well, on second thought, Let us skip Camelot, For indeed 'tis a silly place." They meet God on one of their trails and thus starts the greatest of tales. "What tale?" you might ask. God gave them a task: The quest for the holiest of grails. The French in a castle they find who taunt them with words not too kind. The mocking's severe and so Bedevere comes up with a plan in his mind A rabbit of wood they create and roll it to the French castle's gate. The French cast the hare high into the air, thus making King Arthur irate. And now a Historian explains a part of King Arthur's campaigns. The Historian is slayed by a knight with a blade Who rides off and leaves the remains. Now several annoying delays set King Arthur's patience ablaze. His Knights he consults, and here's what results: They each went their separate ways. Sir Robin a giant does find with three heads, each with its own mind. The heads start to bicker but Robin is quicker and runs away, minstrels behind. To Anthrax Sir Galahad comes with wounds from his toes to his gums. The girls dressed in white are Galahad's plight but he, to temptation, succumbs. Lancelot arrives just in time to save Galahad from this crime. Though Galahad's torn his chastity's sworn denying him pleasure sublime. King Arthur and Bedevere implore to the old man from scene 24 to help in their quest. What he does is suggest they find an enchanter with lore. While treading the forest they see the terrible Knights who say "Ni." If they want to pass the toll is, alas, a [dramatic chord] shrubbery! A young prince, held against his will, a wedding contract must fulfill. The king has some power; locks him in the tower, but leaves him with paper and quill. The young prince some help does request. His message impales Concord's chest. So Lancelot heeds the young prince's needs and takes up the young prince's quest. Swamp Castle the knight does invade attacking the guests with his blade. Past crying and screeches the tower he reaches, and suddenly ends his crusade. Lancelot realizes in shame that his rescue target's no dame. The king understands, but issues demands, and Lancelot accepts all the blame. Lancelot escapes being wed to the princess that's heavily fed. Her huge tracts of land are not worth her hand, so Lancelot and Concord fled. King Arthur for shrubberies looks in all sorts of crannies and nooks. They start saying "Ni" to the poor old lady, and Roger mistakes them for crooks So Arthur a shrubbery gets from Roger the Shrubber, and sets off back to the woods with neces'ry goods to pay off his passage rights debts. The Knights who 'til recently said "Ni" just won't let poor King Arthur be. It seems like abuse that he'd have to use a herring to cut down a tree. The new errands don't seem legit and King Arthur has a big fit with the Knights who said "Ni" but unconsciously, he beats them by just saying "It." So over a year has now passed; the knights once again have amassed. Upon mountains high some fire they spy. They've found the enchanter, at last! Now Tim some advice does bequeath to all with a sword in their sheath: Their fear must be small for death awaits all with nasty, big pointy teeth. To Caerbannog they're led by Tim. The cave's entrance looks very grim. The rabbit they spot, and Tim warns the lot their chance of survival is slim. King Arthur sends Bors to attack convinced now that Tim is a quack. The rabbit just leaps, the knight's neck he reaps, and Bors' head falls down with a smack. They run out to battle the hare but it simply jumps through the air and kills off a bunch of knights for his lunch. The others run off in despair. The party has taken some hits, but King Arthur won't call it quits. They bring to their aid the Holy Hand Grenade and blow up the rabbit to bits. They go in through the deep cave's maw and find words that fill them with awe. The Aramaic tale explains that the grail is found in the castle of Aaaagh.... From shadows there comes an attack: a creature so foul and black. The Legend'ry Black Beast of Aaaagh has a feast with poor Brother Maynard as snack. They run til they're all out of breath from the black beast that's fierce, just like Seth. But when all hope is gone and they can't go on, they're saved by the animator's death. They exit the cave and they see the Gorge where the old man should be right next to the ridge in front of the bridge to ask them five questions. No, three! The man asks for name and for quest and favorite color. The pest! The answer is "blue" and that being true, Sir Lancelot passes the test Sir Robin's great fear's fading fast. The question that gets him's the last. But he has no criteria of the capital of Assyria and into the Gorge he is cast. Sir Galahad is thus tested too, but he answers one question untrue. He tried to be quick but fell for the trick. He should have said "yellow," not "blue." King Arthur's question number three Is the air speed velocity of an unladen swallow. But his head's not hollow, so he asks which swallow it'd be. The old man the answer knows not (and we get a twist in the plot). The tables have turned, his punishment earned, and into the air he is shot. At last, being guided by grace, the castle of Aaaagh they now face, but to their surprise they see the French guys have now taken over the place. The taunting begins once again but Arthur gets angry, and then, preparing for war, he goes to the shore and gathers a large group of men. Their right to the grail they'll defend. But the French's wrong they won't amend, 'cause the cops track them down and send them downtown, thus bringing the quest to its end. |
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