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Twenty-five quid will not buy me much bingery.
But the verse that came with it adds insult to injury. |
The prize is teeny-weeny.
Delight? You're quite mistaken, For unlike Bond's Martini, I'm neither stirred nor shaken. |
You call your wretched prize a warrant, but
It hardly warrants uncontrolled delight, Like peeing – hoping for a torrent, but Instead, it's just a tinkle in the night. |
Your “prize”: it is a warrant made to test
One's heart-rate, shy of cardiac arrest. |
Moments like this we want to share;
A plane shall spell it in the air. Go burn it on the Moon that you Won what? Too late it's your tattoo; News of your pennies yield extends Postmarked to Earths remotest ends. |
Thanks for the letter-quasi-heart-rate test:
I know I'm healthy for I did detest. Thanks for the raw material for jest. |
Some ingenious ripostes! Incidentally, for Erik and Charlie, Ernie (who I see has got himself into the COD) is the personification of the device for picking the winning bond numbers - Electronic Random Number Indicator Equipment.
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Not knowing what Premium Bonds and Ernies are, I can only admire the brilliant replies of those who do. (Now if it were prize money being cut in half, I think I could come up with something scathing.)
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Harold Macmillan introduced them in 1956, Gail, and they cost £1 each. You can hold a maximum of £50K and cash them in at any time at the original value.
Each bond is entered in a monthly prize draw (numbers randomly generated by Ernie). You trade the interest on a normal investment for the chance of winning one of the two prizes of £1 million, 2 of £100K, 9 of £50K, 19 of £25K, 47 of £10K, 94 of £5K, 1246 of £1K and so on down to 2,092 of £25. Someone with the maximum holding and average luck might win 23 prizes a year worth £575 at current rates if they were all of the lowest value, giving a return of 1.15 %. Not much, but more than inflation at the moment and there's always the chance of one of The Big Ones. Anyway, 1 in 3 people here have some, including the illustrious Ann D., so . . . |
What they represent is Hope, Gail. The recent changes, which diminished the chances of winning and halved the minimum prize, struck a blow at that.
Basically, we lend the money to the Government at zero interest. But so long as they don't spend it on stuff that further erodes Hope, I suppose that's OK. |
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