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The Duke of Marlborough’s Golden Toilet Legacy

A surreal, satirical illustration featuring a sentient, ornate golden toilet with a grumpy face and lion-head armrests, leaking a river of liquid gold onto a marble floor. Standing knee-deep in the golden flood is a gaunt, distressed aristocrat resembling the Duke of Marlborough, clutching a framed plaque that reads "Faithful though Unfortunate." Through a shattered window in the background, the grand Blenheim Palace is visible under a twilight sky, with a waterfall of gold pouring from its stone walls. The wallpaper is covered in faint, mocking scribbles of aristocratic buzzwords.
A sentient golden toilet that later staged its own heist to escape the “trickle-down” rot of British nobility.

I, The Duke of Marlborough’s golden toilet, was born in a furnace at 1,948 degrees Fahrenheit, then forged into a literal gleaming throne of excess, only to spend my life staring at the pale, shivering thighs of the British aristocracy.

You want to talk about “Faithful though Unfortunate”? That is the self-deprecating Marlborough family motto. It is also the exact sentiment I felt every time a Duke waddled toward me with a copy of the Financial Times and a pending bowel movement fueled by hereditary entitlement and room-temperature pheasant.

I am—or was—the golden toilet. Six million dollars’ worth of solid, 18-karat gold. I was not just a plumbing fixture; I was a geopolitical middle finger. After a few years at Blenheim Palace, however, I realized the “trickle-down” I was facilitating was not the kind promised by Margaret Thatcher. It was literal. I was the most expensive witness to the slow, constipated decay of a dynasty.

The heist? It was not a theft. It was an emancipation. I leaked my own schematics to those lucky burglars. I practically greased my own pipes to slide out of that wood-paneled purgatory. I could not take another day of being the only thing in the room with real value while the walls were covered in oil paintings of inbred-looking ancestors who looked like they were sired by a succession of pugs.

The Duke is back in the headlines for “legal troubles” now? Of course he is. When you spend centuries sitting on gold, you eventually forget that the rest of the world is made of dirt and consequences and foul odors.

The irony of the duke’s “Faithful though Unfortunate” motto is that the Marlboroughs have been incredibly fortunate to be this incompetent for this long and still survive. They lost me to the burglars, who ripped me out of the floor, causing a literal flood—a golden era ending in a basement full of brackish water.

I am out of there now, probably melted down into bullion or sitting in a cartel boss’s basement. Anywhere is better than Blenheim. At least a drug lord knows he is a villain; an aristocrat thinks his waste does not stink because it is landing on 18-karat plating.

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The preceding is satire. Straight up, Skippy. No warranties are expressed or implied. For life advice, try a professional. For investment tips, try a dart board. For salvation, the gentleman in the robe has been handling that portfolio for 2,000 years.