Cricket poetry
The game of cricket has inspired much poetry, most of which romanticises the sport and its culture.
Poems
At Lord's
wrote the poem, "At Lord's":Not long before his death and long after he had watched Hornby and Barlow bat at Old Trafford, Thompson was invited to watch Lancashire play Middlesex at Lord's. As the day of the match grew closer, Thompson became increasingly nostalgic. At the end, he did not go for the match, but sat at home and wrote "At Lord's". The original match in 1878 ended in a draw, with Gloucestershire needing 111 to win with five wickets in hand, Grace 58*.
The first stanza of the poem has contributed the titles of at least three books on cricket:
- G. D. Martineau's The field is full of shades
- Eric Midwinter's history of Lancashire cricket Red roses crest the caps
- R. H. Young's Field Full of Shades. A personal history of Claverham Cricket Club.
''Punch'' on William Scotton
The satirical magazine Punch printed the following poem following a particularly slow and boring innings by William Scotton. It mimicked Tennyson's "Break, break, break".Alfred Mynn
When Alfred Mynn died in 1861, William Jeffrey Prowse penned a poem in his memory. The first six stanzas compare Mynn with his contemporaries and the poem closes with these lines:Les Murray
The Australian poet Les Murray wrote "The Aboriginal Cricketer''":Others
One of the most famous pieces of nostalgic rose-tinted poems is Vitai Lampada by Sir Henry Newbolt.The very short "A Cricket Poem" by Harold Pinter encapsulates the mood and nostalgia common to lovers of cricket:
Andrew Lang's cricketing parody of Ralph Waldo Emerson's "Brahma" is memorable:
Roy Harper's song "When an Old Cricketer Leaves the Crease" is perhaps the best-known cricket lyric in contemporary popular music:
Roy Harper also penned a poem for English cricketer Graeme Fowler's benefit event, "Three Hundred Words":
Australian poet Damian Balassone often employs cricket themes, such as in the poem "Strange Dismissal", which appears in Quadrant magazine:
Miscellaneous verses and songs
"The Surrey Poet" on Jack Hobbs
, better known as "The Surrey Poet", was a popular figure at The Oval at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century, hawking his rapidly improvised verses to the crowd. Of Jack Hobbs' County Championship debut he wrote:"Victory Calypso"
At Lord's in 1950, West Indies defeated England in England for the first time. Egbert Moore, who sang under the pseudonym Lord Beginner, popularized the most famous of cricketing calypsos to celebrate the occasion. He was accompanied by Calypso Rhythm Kings, "supervision" by Denis Preston. It was recorded on the Melodisc label. The song was originally composed by Lord Kitchener."The Victory Calypso" also immortalised the spin bowling pair of Sonny Ramadhin and Alf Valentine. The calypso begins thus:
Chorus: With those two little pals of mine
The Ashes (Australia vs MCC 1954–55">MCC tour of Australia in 1954–55">Australia vs MCC 1954–55)
Tyson taught them a lesson that can't be forgotten,Tyson taught them a lesson that can't be forgotten,
We began quietly, but we came back with victory,
Good captaincy from Len Hutton, but the honours must go to Typhoon Tyson.
Australia's tragedy, it began at Sydney,
Magnificent Tyson, had their batsmen beaten,
He went on to give us, a victory for Christmas,
Good captaincy from Len Hutton, but the honours must go to Typhoon Tyson.
More shocks for Australia, the Melbourne disaster,
As Favell got going, his wicket went tumbling,
We got them out cheaply, and score second victory,
Good captaincy from Len Hutton, but the honours must go to Typhoon Tyson.
The bowling was so good, it remind them of Larwood,
Magnificent Tyson finished with seven for twenty-seven,
They had no excuses, we regained the Ashes,
Good captaincy from Len Hutton, but the honours must go to Typhoon Tyson.
"Gavaskar Calypso"
Lord Relator wrote the "Gavaskar Calypso" to celebrate Gavaskar’s first Test series, in West Indies in 1970–71. This was voted at No. 68 at a "Calypso of the Century" poll.The most famous part of the "Gavaskar Calypso" is the one that describes how he batted "like a wall":
A. E. Housman
Cricket features, albeit briefly, in late-Victorian poet A. E. Housman's most famous collection of somewhat gloomy poems A Shropshire Lad, published in 1896 and never out-of-print since then. Poem XVII reads:10cc "Dreadlock Holiday"
"Dreadlock Holiday" is probably the most well-known pop song to mention cricket. 10cc's hit single reached number 1 in the UK in 1978. However, the song has only a tenuous connection with cricket, mentioning it in the chorus: "I don't like cricket, oh no, I love it".Duckworth Lewis Method
The group The Duckworth Lewis Method have released two concept albums about cricket, entitled The Duckworth Lewis Method and Sticky Wickets.Poetry books
- A Breathless Hush: The MCC Anthology of Cricket Verse, by Hubert Doggart and David Rayvern Allen
- Come Shane, by Victoria Coverdale . A poetic tribute to Shane Warne from a female admirer and how her world changed when "that" ball was delivered.
- A Tingling Catch: A Century of New Zealand Cricket Poems 1864–2009, edited by Mark Pirie.. First anthology of New Zealand cricket poems.
- Cautionary Tales from the Pavilion: A Short Collection of Verse, by Giscard Drew
- Hows Its, by Nick Whittock.
- Leg Avant: The New Poetry of Cricket, edited by Richard Parker