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The Oldie "Toast rack" competition. Deadline 28th June
Don't you think that people who write "heated, controversial" letters to The Daily Telegraph about toast racks need to get out more, for pity's sake? They clearly have far too much time on their hands! :rolleyes:
Oh well... I haven't seen any of the letters, though I'm beginning to wish I'd seen this riveting debate! Good luck with it. Jayne The Oldie Competition by Tessa Castro COMPETITION No 165 There has been heated controversy recently in the letters columns of the Daily Telegraph about the use of toast racks. Please compose a poem with the title ‘Toast Rack’. Maximum 16 lines. Entries to ‘Competition 165’ by post (The Oldie, 65 Newman Street, London W1T 3EG), email (comps@theoldie.co.uk) or fax (020 7436 8804) by 28th June 2013. Don’t forget to include your postal address. |
“Toast Rack! -Lord Arthur Rack, of whom to boast
Is mere due. Let all praise him, coast to coast! For we owe him so much; What other man can touch His greatness? So I say to you: Rack, toast!” “Free energy from fusion: what a whizz! The key to that discovery was his. The deserts, irrigated; Pure water now filtrated; Clean airships, elevated: all Rack’s biz!” “To Arthur Rack, I bid you, raise your drink! Our debt to him is clear to all who think: He’s brought the world such wealth! Let’s also drink the health Of his dear widow Lil – still in the pink!” [I acknowledge my debt of inspiration to band The Scaffold.] |
As John would say, here's one that I prepared earlier -
Chrome plated Belling from the Swedish lowlands, purring with pleasure at its rye bread thrill, seeds of sesame, pomegranate, pumpkin, browned to perfection on the shiny grill. Teflon-coated sandwich maker hums light pleasantries, gestating paninis in her smooth cream flanks. Aroma of prosciutto, porchetta, mortadella, wafts on the breezes of the Arno’s banks. Dirty British toaster with its smoke-caked toast rack leans to attention on its three worn legs. Bread from Sainsbury’s, the Co-op, Tesco’s, groomed to be smothered by scrambled eggs. |
We’re the Spanish Inquisition. We have strapped you in position
For a cosy little chat with Torquemada, And we feel we ought to warn you as the manacles adorn you That your chances of escape are strictly nada. We advise you to be civil; do not tell him lies or drivel; He’s a moody gent, and can’t abide derision. As you lie upon the rack, we’ll slowly elongate your back - It’s an instrument of wonderful precision. When we turn the wheels and winches, you will stretch by several inches, And you’ll feel excruciating indigestion. After many days of traction, we'll conclude, with satisfaction, That you’ve told the truth and answered every question. But we have to be quite certain that we’ve drawn each sinful curtain, And your soul is fit to meet the Holy Ghost, So we’ll ratchet up the rack until we hear the fatal crack That denotes the job is done, and you are toast. |
On the same lines as Brian. Sick minds think alike.
The Breakfast Inquisition’s said To have great expertise Is making bits of heated bread Recant their heresies. A crunchy slice of Mother’s Pride Will crumble like it’s dust If told a knife’s to be applied Beneath its tender crust. Confession from a sourdough That’s scorched a tawny brown Will come when its tormentors go To fetch the crumbscrews down. But should these fearsome methods fail To make their victims crack, All instruments of torture pale Before the dread toast rack! |
You guys should be writing Broadway musicals.
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Poor toast rack, I lament what you've become,
There was a time when you displayed charred bread To great effect, for those who fancied some. Yet lately one observes a thing of dread - Your rackdom when reduced to leaning letters (That come from Tom and Dicks who want to shift Their wares at breakfast time). Next we'll have sweaters, Shoes and coats about the place, I'm miffed; Such scurrilous displays are emblematic Of wider, falling standards on this Isle. That things aren't what they were is axiomatic, The state of play at breakfast's often vile: Time was when toast was racked as God intended, Not now, a buttered missive's less than splendid. |
Toast Rack
Blood of Bishop, Gore of Knave, Hulk of headless Knight— Only in Old Blighty Could a “Toast Rack” Start a fight! |
Toast Rack
A heated controversy burns on Shakespeare’s sceptred Isle
About the humble toast rack. Has it gotten out of style? The advocates of tableware from ages pre-Edwardian Regard a proper toast rack as a stately little guardian Of desiccated slabs of toast (with soggy gobs of butter) Precisely racked in serried rank, 'midst breakfast table clutter. A crispy texture in a slice of toast is deemed a virtue; (They claim a lack of warmth therein will never ever hurt you.) But rack opponents elbow in, and cry in frantic voice That banishment of toast racks is a beneficial choice To slow the rate of toast’s unique black-body radiation. “‘Tis warmth, not crunch, that makes a piece of toast a fine collation.” The Daily Telegraph debate lets both sides plead their case In letters to the editor which grow more “in your face,” Until each faction stoops to slinging marmalade and jam. Though both are partly in the right, who really gives a damn? |
And this is one I prepared while swimming up and down:
Toast Rack I sing the toast rack, subject most Befitting ode and sonnet. My father had a rack for toast. He leaned his paper on it, An organ multifarious, Of wit and wisdom fashioned, To which, on topics various, He wrote in terms impassioned. Dear Sirs, I rue the day (so ran The temper of his letters) The working classes first began To criticize their betters. And, many a morning, still I see My father's furious ghost Consume, with marmalade and tea, Another rack of toast. |
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