Diary of Samuel Pepys/1665/July
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The probably source of serious injury, is when a hitter returns the ball with all his drive, straight back to the bowler. A well-known Wykehamist player of R. Price's standing, was these days enjoying as wicket-keeper, and seeing the batsman going to hit Off, ran nearly to the place of a close to Point; the hit, a tremendously onerous one, glanced off from his forehead-he called out "Catch it," and it was caught by bowler! Four was scored at Beckenham, 1850, by a success that glanced off Point's head; but the participant suffered a lot in this occasion. A advantageous participant of the Kent Eleven, about three years in the past, to date injured his thumb that one of many joints was removed, and he has not often played since. Seven seats have been spaced evenly before it, three of them in use, occupied by three young males, apparently about my own age. He explained that three things have been achieved in the few seconds. There I met with Sir W. Coventry, and by and by was heard by my Lord Chancellor and Treasurer about our Tangier money, and my Lord Treasurer had ordered me to forbear meddling with the L15,000 he supplied me the opposite day, however, upon opening the case to them, they did provide it again, and so I believe I shall have it, however my Lord General should give his consent in it, this cash having been promised to him, and he very indignant on the proposal.
So I dwelling to look over my Tangier papers, and having a coach of Mr. Povy's attending me, by appointment, so as to my coming to dine at his country house at Brainford, where he and his household is, I went and Mr. Tasbrough with me therein, it being a fairly chariot, however most inconvenient as to the horses throwing dust and dirt into one's eyes and upon one's clothes. Essentially the most anyone of those bowlers can do is to look out for the balls of his own set; whether or not hit or not by a ball from behind, could be very a lot a matter of chance. Add to all these chances of warfare, the various balls which are flying at the identical time at Lord's and at the universities, and other a lot frequented grounds, on a practising day. I once chopped laborious down upon a shooter, and the ball went a foot away from my bat straight forward in direction of the bowler, and then, by its rotary movement, returned in the identical straight line precisely, just like the "draw-back stroke" at billiards, and shook the bail off. Both were rushing the identical facet of him, and as one held his bat most dangerously extended, the point of it met his accomplice beneath the chin, compelled again his head as if his neck have been broken, and dashed him senseless to the ground.
A surgeon, who witnessed the collision, feared he was useless, and mentioned, afterwards, that with much less highly effective muscles (for he had a neck like a bull-canine) he by no means may have stood the shock. When he got here to Lord's, in 1825, with that Wykehamist Eleven which Mr. Ward so long remembered with delight, their play was unknown and the bets on their opponents; however when once Price was seen practising at a single stump, his Eleven grew to become the favourites immediately; for he was one of many straightest of all fast bowlers; and I've heard experienced batsmen say, "We don't care for his below-hand bowling, solely it is so straight we could take no liberties, and the first we missed was Out." I by no means envied any man his sight and nerve like Price-the coolest practitioner you ever noticed: he all the time appeared bright, though others blue; and you had solely to glance at his sharp gray eyes, and you can directly account for the truth that one stump to shy at, a rook for a single bullet, or the ripple of a trout in a bushy stream, was a lot fun for R. Price.
To attempt the one run from a cowl hit when Price was there, or to give the sight of 1 stump to shy at, How to learn billiards buttons was a wicket lost. At Oxford you may even see, any day in the summer, on Cowley Marsh, two rows of six wickets every dealing with each other, with an area of about sixty yards between every row, and ten yards between every wicket. Freemantle's famous hit was 130 yards in the air. Freemantle's bail was as soon as hit up and fell back on the stump: Not out. Each had a ball hit back to him by that powerful hitter Mr. H. Kingscote, which whizzed, in defiance of hand or eye, most dangerously by. Mr. Fellowes as soon as made so high a success over the bowler's (Wisden's) head, that the second run was completed as the ball returned to earth! In the well-known Nottingham match, 1817, Bentley, on the All England facet, was taking part in well, when he was given "run out," having run round his floor.
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