I'm following Bill's blog with keen interest.
An addition to the comp anthologies he mentions:
Bank Holiday on Parnassus, by Allan M. Laing.
Laing was the Greenwell of the 1930s and 40s, the most consistently successful competitor, under a number of names. Bank Holiday on P collects a range of his entries, many still entertaining.
My interest in Laing developed when I found he was a conscientious objector, imprisoned in Wormwood Scrubs during WW1. He wrote 'Carols of a Convict', describing his incarceration in jaunty rhyme. For example:
Crumpled Roseleaves: Speculations on the eve of discharge
So long from morning couch have I
Rolled out upon the floor,
That when I go where beds are high,
Say, two-feet-six or more,
I wonder if I still shall try
To roll out on the floor.
I’ve grown so used to talk in winks
With wary sidelong glance,
That when the watchful warder-lynx
No more’s a circumstance,
I fear my friends will say: “He drinks,”
Met by that sidelong glance.
And when the constitutional mile
With comrades I shall walk,
I wonder if in single file,
All solemnly we’ll stalk,
As is the weary Wormwood style,
The Scrubsian morning walk.
Shall I insist on scrubbing floors,
And hanging bedding out,
Freed from the stimulating roars
That used to fly about?
Such doubts defeat the pleasure sweet
I feel in going out.
If you're interested in Laing, I've written a bit more about him
here.