Literature • In the satirical novel
Melincourt, or Sir Oran Haut-Ton (1817) by
Thomas Love Peacock, an
orang-utan named Sir Oran Haut-Ton is elected to parliament by the "ancient and honourable borough of Onevote". The election of Sir Oran forms part of the hero's plan to persuade civilisation to share his belief that orang-utans are a race of human beings who merely lack the power of speech. "The borough of Onevote stood in the middle of a heath, and consisted of a solitary farm, of which the land was so poor and intractable, that it would not have been worth the while of any human being to cultivate it, had not the Duke of Rottenburgh found it very well worth his while to pay his tenant for living there, to keep the honourable borough in existence." The single voter of the borough, Mr Christopher Corporate, elects two MPs, each of whom "can only be considered as the representative of half of him". • In the
parliamentary novels of
Anthony Trollope pocket boroughs are a recurring theme. John Grey,
Phineas Finn, and
Lord Silverbridge are all elected by pocket boroughs. • In Chapter 7 of the novel
Vanity Fair (published 1847–1848), author
William Makepeace Thackeray introduces the fictitious borough of "Queen's Crawley", so named in honour of a stopover in the small Hampshire town of
Crawley by
Queen Elizabeth I, who, delighted by the quality of the local beer, instantly raised the small town of Crawley into a borough, giving it two members in Parliament. At the time of the story, set in the early 19th century, the place had lost population, so that it was "come down to that condition of borough which used to be denominated rotten". Queen's Crawley re-appears in Thackeray's
The Virginians (published in 1857–1859). • In
Charles Dickens' novel
Our Mutual Friend (1864–1865), a borough called "Pocket-Breaches" elects Mr. Veneering as its MP. • The novel
Rotten Borough was a controversial story published by
Oliver Anderson under the pen name
Julian Pine in 1937, republished in 1989. • In
Diana Wynne Jones' 2003 book
The Merlin Conspiracy, Old Sarum features as a character, with one line being "I'm a rotten borough, I am." • In the
Aubrey–Maturin series of sea-faring tales, the pocket borough of Milport (also known as Milford) is initially held by General Aubrey, the father of protagonist Jack Aubrey. In the twelfth novel in the series,
The Letter of Marque (1988), Jack's father dies and the seat is offered to Jack himself by his cousin Edward Norton, the "owner" of the borough. The borough has just seventeen electors, all of whom are tenants of Mr Norton. • In the 1969 first novel of
George MacDonald Fraser's
The Flashman Papers series, the eponymous antihero,
Harry Flashman, mentions that his father, Buckley Flashman, had been in Parliament, but "they did for him at Reform" – implying that the elder Flashman had sat for a rotten or pocket borough.
Television • In the episode "
Dish and Dishonesty" of the
BBC television comedy
Blackadder the Third,
Edmund Blackadder attempts to bolster support for
the Prince Regent in
Parliament by getting the incompetent
Baldrick elected to the fictional rotten borough of Dunny-on-the-Wold (presumably a reference to Dunwich, with 'dunny' also being a slang term meaning 'toilet' in Australian English or 'idiot' in an obsolete British English dialect). He easily accomplished this with a result of 16,472 to nil, even though the constituency had only one voter (Blackadder himself).
Video games • The video game ''
Assassin's Creed III'' briefly mentions pocket and rotten boroughs in a database entry entitled "Pocket Boroughs", with Old Sarum identified as one of the worst examples of a pocket borough. In the game, shortly before the
Boston Massacre, a
non-player character (NPC) can be heard speaking to a group of people on the colonies' lack of representation in Parliament and listing several rotten boroughs, including Old Sarum.
Quotations == See also ==