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The Fish Licence Sketch

This sketch is originally from the episode entitled "Scott of the Sahara". The version that appeared on television is slightly different from this one, for it does not include the "Eric the Half-A-Bee" song. How could they not put the song in the episode, you may ask? I wouldn't know. This version first appeared on "Monty Python's Previous Record" in 1972. Immediately following the "Fish Licence" sketch is the "Eric the half-A-Bee" song, hence the "take it away, Eric the orchestra leader!" at the end of this.


Fish Licence


Customer: Hello, I would like to buy a fish licence, please.

Shopkeeper: A what?

C: A licence for my pet fish, Eric.

S: How did you know my name was Eric?

C: No no no, my fish's name is Eric, Eric the fish. He's an halibut.

S: What?

C: He is...an...halibut.

S: You've got a pet halibut?

C: Yes. I chose him out of thousands. I didn't like the others, they were all too flat.

S: You must be a looney.

C: I am not a looney! Why should I be tied with the epithet looney merely because I have a pet halibut? I've heard tell that Sir Gerald Nabardo has a pet prawn called Simon and you wouldn't call him a looney; furthermore, Dawn Pailthorpe, the lady show-jumper, had a clam, called Stafford, after the late Chancellor, Allan Bullock has two pikes, both called Chris, and Marcel Proust had an haddock! So, if you're calling the author of 'A la recherche du temps perdu' a looney, I shall have to ask you to step outside!

S: Alright, alright, alright. A licence.

C: Yes.

S: For a fish.

C: Yes.

S: You are a looney.

C: Look, it's a bleeding pet, isn't it? I've got a licence for me pet dog Eric, and I've got a licence for me pet cat Eric...

S: You don't need a licence for your cat.

C: I bleeding well do and I got one. He can't be called Eric without it--

S: There's no such thing as a bloody cat licence.

C: Yes there is!

S: Isn't!

C: Is!

S: Isn't!

C: I bleeding got one, look! What's that then?

S: This is a dog licence with the word 'dog' crossed out and 'cat' written in in crayon.

C: The man didn't have the right form.

S: What man?

C: The man from the cat detector van.

S: The looney detector van, you mean.

C: Look, it's people like you what cause unrest.

S: What cat detector van?

C: The cat detector van from the Ministry of Housinge.

S: Housinge?

C: It was spelt like that on the van. I'm very observant!. I never seen so many bleeding aerials. The man said that their equipment could pinpoint a purr at four hundred yards! And Eric, being such a happy cat, was a piece of cake.

S: How much did you pay for this?

C: Sixty quid, and eight for the fruit-bat.

S: What fruit-bat?

C: Eric the fruit-bat.

S: Are all your pets called Eric?

C: There's nothing so odd about that: Kemal Ataturk had an entire menagerie called Abdul!

S: No he didn't!

C: Did!

S: Didn't!

C: Did, did, did, did, did and did!

S: Oh, all right.

C: Spoken like a gentleman, sir. Now, are you going to give me a fish licence?

S: I promise you that there is no such thing. You don't need one.

C: In that case, give me a bee licence.

S: A licence for your pet bee?

C: Yes.

S: Called Eric? Eric the Bee?

C: No.

S: No?

C: No, Eric the Half-Bee. He had an accident.

S: You're off your chump.

C: Look, if you intend by that utilization of an obscure colloquiallism to imply that my sanity is not up to scratch, or indeed to deny the semi-existence of my little chum Eric the Half-Bee, I shall have to ask you to listen to this! Take it away, Eric the orchestra leader!.......


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