NOTES FOR A BIOGRAPHY OF GINGER STOTT
I
Ginger Stott is a name that was once
as well known as any in England. Stott has been
the subject of leading articles in every daily paper;
his life has been written by an able journalist who
interviewed Stott himself, during ten crowded minutes,
and filled three hundred pages with details, seventy
per cent. of which were taken from the journals, and
the remainder supplied by a brilliant imagination.
Ten years ago Ginger Stott was on a pinnacle, there
was a Stott vogue. You found his name at the
bottom of signed articles written by members of the
editorial staff; you bought Stott collars, although
Stott himself did not wear collars; there was a Stott
waltz, which is occasionally hummed by clerks, and
whistled by errand-boys to this day; there was a periodical
which lived for ten months, entitled Ginger Stott’s
Weekly; in brief, during one summer there was
a Stott apotheosis.
But that was ten years ago, and the
rising generation has almost forgotten the once well-known
name. One rarely sees him mentioned in the morning
paper now, and then it is but the briefest reference;
some such note as this “Pickering was at the
top of his form, recalling the finest achievements
of Ginger Stott at his best,” or “Flack
is a magnificent find for Kent: he promises to
completely surpass the historic feats of Ginger Stott.”
These journalistic superlatives only irritate those
who remember the performances referred to. We
who watched the man’s career know that Pickering
and Flack are but tyros compared to Stott; we know
that none of his successors has challenged comparison
with him. He was a meteor that blazed across
the sky, and if he ever has a true successor, such
stars as Pickering and Flack will shine pale and dim
in comparison.
It makes one feel suddenly old to
recall that great matinee at the Lyceum, given for
Ginger Stott’s benefit after he met with his
accident. In ten years so many great figures
in that world have died or fallen into obscurity.
I can count on my fingers the number of those who were
then, and are still, in the forefront of popularity.
Of the others poor Captain Wallis, for instance, is
dead-and no modern writer, in my opinion,
can equal the brilliant descriptiveness of Wallis’s
articles in the Daily Post. Bobby Maisefield,
again, Stott’s colleague, is a martyr to rheumatism,
and keeps a shop in Ailesworth, the scene of so many
of his triumphs. What a list one might make, but
how uselessly. It is enough to note how many
names have dropped out, how many others are the names
of those we now speak of as veterans. In ten years!
It certainly makes one feel old.
II
No apology is needed for telling again
the story of Stott’s career. Certain details
will still be familiar, it is true, the historic details
that can never be forgotten while cricket holds place
as our national game. But there are many facts
of Stott’s life familiar to me, which have never
been made public property. If I must repeat that
which is known, I can give the known a new setting;
perhaps a new value.
He came of mixed races. His mother
was pure Welsh, his father a Yorkshire collier; but
when Ginger was nine years old his father died, and
Mrs. Stott came to live in Ailesworth where she had
immigrant relations, and it was there that she set
up the little paper-shop, the business by which she
maintained herself and her boy. That shop is still
in existence, and the name has not been altered.
You may find it in the little street that runs off
the market place, going down towards the Borstal Institution.
There are many people alive in Ailesworth
to-day who can remember the sturdy, freckled, sandy-haired
boy who used to go round with the morning and evening
papers; the boy who was to change the fortunes of a
county.
Ginger was phenomenally thorough in
all he undertook. It was one of the secrets of
his success. It was this thoroughness that kept
him engaged in his mother’s little business
until he was seventeen. Up to that age he never
found time for cricket-sufficient evidence
of his remarkable and most unusual qualities.
It was sheer chance, apparently, that
determined his choice of a career.
He had walked into Stoke-Underhill
to deliver a parcel, and on his way back his attention
was arrested by the sight of a line of vehicles drawn
up to the boarded fencing that encloses the Ailesworth
County Ground. The occupants of these vehicles
were standing up, struggling to catch a sight of the
match that was being played behind the screen erected
to shut out non-paying sightseers. Among the
horses’ feet, squirming between the spokes of
wheels, utterly regardless of all injury, small boys
glued their eyes to knot-holes in the fence, while
others climbed surreptitiously, and for the most part
unobserved, on to the backs of tradesmen’s carts.
All these individuals were in a state of tremendous
excitement, and even the policeman whose duty it was
to move them on, was so engrossed in watching the
game that he had disappeared inside the turnstile,
and had given the outside spectators full opportunity
for eleemosynary enjoyment.
That tarred fence has since been raised
some six feet, and now encloses a wider sweep of ground-alterations
that may be classed among the minor revolutions effected
by the genius of the thick-set, fair-haired youth
of seventeen, who paused on that early September afternoon
to wonder what all the fuss was about. The Ailesworth
County Ground was not famous in those days; not then
was accommodation needed for thirty thousand spectators,
drawn from every county in England to witness the
unparallelled.
Ginger stopped. The interest
of the spectacle pierced his absorption in the business
he had in hand. Such a thing was almost unprecedented.
“What’s up?” he asked of Puggy Phillips.
Puggy Phillips-hazarding
his life by standing on the shiny, slightly curved
top of his butcher’s cart-made no
appropriate answer. “Yah-ah-ah!”
he screamed in ecstasy. “Oh! played!
Pla-a-a-ayed!!”
Ginger wasted no more breath, but
laid hold of the little brass rail that encircled
Puggy’s platform, and with a sudden hoist that
lifted the shafts and startled the pony, raised himself
to the level of a spectator.
“’Ere!” shouted
the swaying, tottering Puggy. “What the
... are yer rup to?”
The well-drilled pony, however, settled
down again quietly to maintain his end of the see-saw,
and, finding himself still able to preserve his equilibrium,
Puggy instantly forgot the presence of the intruder.
“What’s up?” asked Ginger again.
“Oh! Well ’it,
well ’it!” yelled Puggy.
“Oh! Gow on, gow on agen! Run it aht.
Run it ah-T.”
Ginger gave it up, and turned his attention to the
match.
It was not any famous struggle that
was being fought out on the old Ailesworth Ground;
it was only second-class cricket, the deciding match
of the Minor Counties championship. Hampdenshire
and Oxfordshire, old rivals, had been neck-and-neck
all through the season, and, as luck would have it,
the engagement between them had been the last fixture
on the card.
When Ginger rose to the level of spectator,
the match was anybody’s game. Bobby Maisefield
was batting. He was then a promising young colt
who had not earned a fixed place in the Eleven.
Ginger knew him socially, but they were not friends,
they had no interests in common. Bobby had made
twenty-seven. He was partnered by old Trigson,
the bowler, (he has been dead these eight years,)
whose characteristic score of “Not out ... 0,”
is sufficiently representative of his methods.
It was the fourth innings, and Hampdenshire
with only one more wicket to fall, still required
nineteen runs to win. Trigson could be relied
upon to keep his wicket up, but not to score.
The hopes of Ailesworth centred in the ability of
that almost untried colt Bobby Maisefield-and
he seemed likely to justify the trust reposed in him.
A beautiful late cut that eluded third man and hit
the fence with a resounding bang, nearly drove Puggy
wild with delight.
“Only fifteen more,” he
shouted. “Oh! Played; pla-a-a-yed!”
But as the score crept up, the tensity
grew. As each ball was delivered, a chill, rigid
silence held the onlookers in its grip. When Trigson,
with the field collected round him, almost to be covered
with a sheet, stonewalled the most tempting lob, the
click of the ball on his bat was an intrusion on the
stillness. And always it was followed by a deep
breath of relief that sighed round the ring like a
faint wind through a plantation of larches. When
Bobby scored, the tumult broke out like a crash of
thunder; but it subsided again, echoless, to that intense
silence so soon as the ball was “dead.”
Curiously, it was not Bobby who made
the winning hit but Trigson. “One to tie,
two to win,” breathed Puggy as the field changed
over, and it was Trigson who had to face the bowling.
The suspense was torture. Oxford had put on their
fast bowler again, and Trigson, intimidated, perhaps,
did not play him with quite so straight a bat as he
had opposed to the lob-bowler. The ball hit Trigson’s
bat and glanced through the slips. The field
was very close to the wicket, and the ball was travelling
fast. No one seemed to make any attempt to stop
it. For a moment the significance of the thing
was not realised; for a moment only, then followed
uproar, deafening, stupendous.
Puggy was stamping fiercely on the
top of his cart; the tears were streaming down his
face; he was screaming and yelling incoherent words.
And he was representative of the crowd. Thus men
shouted and stamped and cried when news came of the
relief of Kimberley, or when that false report of
victory was brought to Paris in the August of 1870....
The effect upon Ginger was a thing
apart. He did not join in the fierce acclamation;
he did not wait to see the chairing of Bobby and Trigson.
The greatness of Stott’s character, the fineness
of his genius is displayed in his attitude towards
the dramatic spectacle he had just witnessed.
As he trudged home into Ailesworth,
his thoughts found vent in a muttered sentence which
is peculiarly typical of the effect that had been
made upon him.
“I believe I could have bowled that chap,”
he said.
III
In writing a history of this kind,
a certain licence must be claimed. It will be
understood that I am filling certain gaps in the narrative
with imagined detail. But the facts are true.
My added detail is only intended to give an appearance
of life and reality to my history. Let me, therefore,
insist upon one vital point. I have not been dependent
on hearsay for one single fact in this story.
Where my experience does not depend upon personal
experience, it has been received from the principals
themselves. Finally, it should be remembered that
when I have, imaginatively, put words into the mouths
of the persons of this story, they are never essential
words which affect the issue. The essential speeches
are reported from first-hand sources. For instance,
Ginger Stott himself has told me on more than one occasion
that the words with which I closed the last section,
were the actual words spoken by him on the occasion
in question. It was not until six years after
the great Oxfordshire match that I myself first met
the man, but what follows is literally true in all
essentials.
There was a long, narrow strip of
yard, or alley, at the back of Mrs. Stott’s
paper-shop, a yard that, unfortunately, no longer exists.
It has been partly built over, and another of England’s
memorials has thus been destroyed by the vandals of
modern commerce....
This yard was fifty-three feet long,
measuring from Mrs. Stott’s back door to the
door of the coal-shed, which marked the alley’s
extreme limit. This measurement, an apparently
negligible trifle, had an important effect upon Stott’s
career. For it was in this yard that he taught
himself to bowl, and the shortness of the pitch precluded
his taking any run. From those long studious
hours of practice he emerged with a characteristic
that was-and still remains-unique.
Stott never took more than two steps before delivering
the ball; frequently he bowled from a standing position,
and batsmen have confessed that of all Stott’s
puzzling mannerisms, this was the one to which they
never became accustomed. S. R. L. Maturin, the
finest bat Australia ever sent to this country, has
told me that to this peculiarity of delivery he attributed
his failure ever to score freely against Stott.
It completely upset one’s habit of play, he
said: one had no time to prepare for the flight
of the ball; it came at one so suddenly. Other
bowlers have since attempted some imitation of this
method without success. They had not Stott’s
physical advantages.
Nevertheless, the shortness of that
alley threw Stott back for two years. When he
first emerged to try conclusions on the field, he found
his length on the longer pitch utterly unreliable,
and the effort necessary to throw the ball another
six yards, at first upset his slowly acquired methods.
It was not until he was twenty years
old that Ginger Stott played in his first Colts’
match.
The three years that had intervened
had not been prosperous years for Hampdenshire.
Their team was a one-man team. Bobby Maisefield
was developing into a fine bat (and other counties
were throwing out inducements to him, trying to persuade
him to qualify for first-class cricket), but he found
no support, and Hampdenshire was never looked upon
as a coming county. The best of the minor counties
in those years were Staffordshire and Norfolk.
In the Colts’ match Stott’s analysis ran:
overs maidens runs wickets
11.3 7 16 7
and reference to the score-sheet,
which is still preserved among the records of the
County Club, shows that six of the seven wickets were
clean bowled. The Eleven had no second innings;
the match was drawn, owing to rain. Stott has
told me that the Eleven had to bat on a dry wicket,
but after making all allowances, the performance was
certainly remarkable.
After this match Stott was, of course,
played regularly. That year Hampdenshire rose
once more to their old position at the head of the
minor counties, and Maisefield, who had been seriously
considering Surrey’s offer of a place in their
Eleven after two years’ qualification by residence,
decided to remain with the county which had given him
his first chance.
During that season Stott did not record
any performance so remarkable as his feat in the Colts’
match, but his record for the year was eighty-seven
wickets with an average of 9.31; and it is worthy of
notice that Yorkshire made overtures to him, as he
was qualified by birth to play for the northern county.
I think there must have been a wonderful
esprit de corps among the members of that early
Hampdenshire Eleven. There are other evidences
beside this refusal of its two most prominent members
to join the ranks of first-class cricket. Lord
R -, the president of the H.C.C.C.,
has told me that this spirit was quite as marked as
in the earlier case of Kent. He himself certainly
did much to promote it, and his generosity in making
good the deficits of the balance sheet, had a great
influence on the acceleration of Hampdenshire’s
triumph.
In his second year, though Hampdenshire
were again champions of the second-class counties,
Stott had not such a fine average as in the preceding
season. Sixty-one wickets for eight hundred and
sixty-eight (average 14.23) seems to show a decline
in his powers, but that was a wonderful year for batsmen
(Maisefield scored seven hundred and forty-two runs,
with an average of forty-two) and, moreover, that was
the year in which Stott was privately practising his
new theory.
It was in this year that three very
promising recruits, all since become famous, joined
the Eleven, viz.: P. H. Evans, St. John Townley,
and Flower the fast bowler. With these five cricketers
Hampdenshire fully deserved their elevation into the
list of first-class counties. Curiously enough,
they took the place of the old champions, Gloucestershire,
who, with Somerset, fell back into the obscurity of
the second-class that season.
IV
I must turn aside for a moment at
this point in order to explain the “new theory”
of Stott’s, to which I have referred, a theory
which became in practice one of the elements of his
most astounding successes.
Ginger Stott was not a tall man.
He stood only 5 f-1/4 in. in his socks, but he
was tremendously solid; he had what is known as a “stocky”
figure, broad and deep-chested. That was where
his muscular power lay, for his abnormally long arms
were rather thin, though his huge hands were powerful
enough.
Even without his “new theory,”
Stott would have been an exceptional bowler.
His thoroughness would have assured his success.
He studied his art diligently, and practised regularly
in a barn through the winter. His physique, too,
was a magnificent instrument. That long, muscular
body was superbly steady on the short, thick legs.
It gave him a fulcrum, firm, apparently immovable.
And those weirdly long, thin arms could move with
lightning rapidity. He always stood with his hands
behind him, and then-as often as not without
even one preliminary step-the long arm
would flash round and the ball be delivered, without
giving the batsman any opportunity of watching his
hand; you could never tell which way he was going
to break. It was astonishing, too, the pace he
could get without any run. Poor Wallis used to
call him the “human catapult”; Wallis
was always trying to find new phrases.
The theory first came to Stott when
he was practising at the nets. It was a windy
morning, and he noticed that several times the balls
he bowled swerved in the air. When those swerving
balls came they were almost unplayable.
Stott made no remark to any one-he
was bowling to the groundsman-but the ambition
to bowl “swerves," as they were afterwards
called, took possession of him from that morning.
It is true that he never mastered the theory completely;
on a perfectly calm day he could never depend upon
obtaining any swerve at all, but, within limits, he
developed his theory until he had any batsman practically
at his mercy.
He might have mastered the theory
completely, had it not been for his accident-we
must remember that he had only three seasons of first-class
cricket-and, personally, I believe he would
have achieved that complete mastery. But I do
not believe, as Stott did, that he could have taught
his method to another man. That belief became
an obsession with him, and will be dealt with later.
My own reasons for doubting that Stott’s
“swerve” could have been taught, is that
it would have been necessary for the pupil to have
had Stott’s peculiarities, not only of method,
but of physique. He used to spin the ball with
a twist of his middle finger and thumb, just as you
may see a billiard professional spin a billiard ball.
To do this in his manner, it is absolutely necessary
not only to have a very large and muscular hand, but
to have very lithe and flexible arm muscles, for the
arm is moving rapidly while the twist is given, and
there must be no antagonistic muscular action.
Further, I believe that part of the secret was due
to the fact that Stott bowled from a standing position.
Given these things, the rest is merely a question
of long and assiduous practice. The human mechanism
is marvellously adaptable. I have seen Stott
throw a cricket ball half across the room with sufficient
spin on the ball to make it shoot back to him along
the carpet.
I have mentioned the wind as a factor
in obtaining the swerve. It was a head-wind that
Stott required. I have seen him, for sport, toss
a cricket ball into the teeth of a gale, and make
it describe the trajectory of a badly sliced golf-ball.
This is why the big pavilion at Ailesworth is set
at such a curious angle to the ground. It was
built in the winter following Hampdenshire’s
second season of first-class cricket, and it was so
placed that when the wickets were pitched in a line
with it, they might lie south-west and north-east,
or in the direction of the prevailing winds.
V
The first time I ever saw Ginger Stott,
was on the occasion of the historic encounter with
Surrey; Hampdenshire’s second engagement in
first-class cricket. The match with Notts, played
at Trent Bridge a few days earlier, had not foreshadowed
any startling results. The truth of the matter
is that Stott had been kept, deliberately, in the background;
and as matters turned out his services were only required
to finish off Notts’ second innings. Stott
was even then a marked man, and the Hampdenshire captain
did not wish to advertise his methods too freely before
the Surrey match. Neither Archie Findlater, who
was captaining the team that year, nor any other person,
had the least conception of how unnecessary such a
reservation was to prove. In his third year, when
Stott had been studied by every English, Australian,
and South African batsman of any note, he was still
as unplayable as when he made his debut in first-class
cricket.
I was reporting the Surrey match for
two papers, and in company with poor Wallis interviewed
Stott before the first innings.
His appearance made a great impression
on me. I have, of course, met him, and talked
with him many times since then, but my most vivid
memory of him is the picture recorded in the inadequate
professional dressing-room of the old Ailesworth pavilion.
I have turned up the account of my
interview in an old press-cutting book, and I do not
know that I can do better than quote that part of it
which describes Stott’s personal appearance.
I wrote the account on the off chance of being able
to get it taken. It was one of my lucky hits.
After that match, finished in a single day, my interview
afforded copy that any paper would have paid heavily
for, and gladly.
Here is the description:
“Stott-he is known
to every one in Ailesworth as ‘Ginger’
Stott-is a short, thick-set young man,
with abnormally long arms that are tanned a rich
red up to the elbow. The tan does not, however,
obliterate the golden freckles with which arm and
face are richly speckled. There is no need
to speculate as to the raison d’etre of
his nickname. The hair of his head, a close,
short crop, is a pale russet, and the hair on
his hands and arms is a yellower shade of the
same colour. ‘Ginger’ is, indeed,
a perfectly apt description. He has a square
chin and a thin-lipped, determined mouth. His
eyes are a clear, but rather light blue, his forehead
is good, broad, and high, and he has a well-proportioned
head. One might have put him down as an engineer,
essentially intelligent, purposeful, and reserved.”
The description is journalistic, but
I do not know that I could improve upon the detail
of it. I can see those queer, freckled, hairy
arms of his as I write-the combination
of colours in them produced an effect that was almost
orange. It struck one as unusual....
Surrey had the choice of innings,
and decided to bat, despite the fact that the wicket
was drying after rain, under the influence of a steady
south-west wind and occasional bursts of sunshine.
Would any captain in Stott’s second year have
dared to take first innings under such conditions?
The question is farcical now, but not a single member
of the Hampdenshire Eleven had the least conception
that the Surrey captain was deliberately throwing
away his chances on that eventful day.
Wallis and I were sitting together
in the reporters’ box. There were only
four of us; two specials,-Wallis and myself,-a
news-agency reporter, and a local man.
“Stott takes first over,”
remarked Wallis, sharpening his pencil and arranging
his watch and score-sheet-he was very meticulous
in his methods. “They’ve put him
to bowl against the wind. He’s medium right,
isn’t he?”
“Haven’t the least idea,”
I said. “He volunteered no information;
Hampdenshire have been keeping him dark.”
Wallis sneered. “Think
they’ve got a find, eh?” he said.
“We’ll wait and see what he can do against
first-class batting.”
We did not have to wait long.
As usual, Thorpe and Harrison were
first wicket for Surrey, and Thorpe took the first
ball.
It bowled him. It made his wicket
look as untidy as any wicket I have ever seen.
The off stump was out of the ground, and the other
two were markedly divergent.
“Damn it, I wasn’t ready
for him,” we heard Thorpe say in the professionals’
room. Thorpe always had some excuse, but on this
occasion it was justified.
C. V. Punshon was the next comer,
and he got his first ball through the slips for four,
but Wallis looked at me with a raised eyebrow.
“Punshon didn’t know a
lot about that,” he said, and then he added,
“I say, what a queer delivery the chap has.
He stands and shoots ’em out. It’s
uncanny. He’s a kind of human catapult.”
He made a note of the phrase on his pad.
Punshon succeeded in hitting the next
ball, also, but it simply ran up his bat into the
hands of short slip.
“Well, that’s a sitter,
if you like,” said Wallis. “What’s
the matter with ’em?”
I was beginning to grow enthusiastic.
“Look here, Wallis,” I said, “this
chap’s going to break records.”
Wallis was still doubtful.
He was convinced before the innings was over.
There must be many who remember the
startling poster that heralded the early editions
of the evening papers:
Surrey
All out
For 13 runs.
For once sub-editors did not hesitate
to give the score on the contents bill. That
was a proclamation which would sell. Inside, the
headlines were rich and varied. I have an old
paper by me, yellow now, and brittle, that may serve
as a type for the rest. The headlines are as
follows:-
Surrey and Hampdenshire.
Extraordinary bowling
performance.
Double hat-trick.
Surrey all out in
35 minutes
for 13 runs.
Stott takes 10 wickets
for 5.
The “double hat-trick”
was six consecutive wickets, the last six, all clean
bowled.
“Good God!” Wallis said,
when the last wicket fell, and he looked at me with
something like fear in his eyes. “This man
will have to be barred; it means the end of cricket.”
VI
Stott’s accident came during
the high flood of Hampdenshire success. For two
years they held undisputed place as champion county,
a place which could not be upset by the most ingenious
methods of calculating points. They three times
defeated Australia, and played four men in the test
matches. As a team they were capable of beating
any Eleven opposed to them. Not even the newspaper
critics denied that.
The accident appeared insignificant
at the time. The match was against Notts on the
Trent Bridge ground. I was reporting for three
papers; Wallis was not there.
Stott had been taken off. Notts
were a poor lot that year and I think Findlater did
not wish to make their defeat appear too ignominious.
Flower was bowling; it was a fast, true wicket, and
Stott, who was a safe field, was at cover-point.
G. L. Mallinson was batting and making
good use of his opportunity; he was, it will be remembered,
a magnificent though erratic hitter. Flower bowled
him a short-pitched, fast ball, rather wide of the
off-stump. Many men might have left it alone,
for the ball was rising, and the slips were crowded,
but Mallinson timed the ball splendidly, and drove
it with all his force. He could not keep it on
the ground, however, and Stott had a possible chance.
He leaped for it and just touched the ball with his
right hand. The ball jumped the ring at its first
bound, and Mallinson never even attempted to run.
There was a big round of applause from the Trent Bridge
crowd.
I noticed that Stott had tied a handkerchief
round his finger, but I forgot the incident until
I saw Findlater beckon to his best bowler, a few overs
later. Notts had made enough runs for decency;
it was time to get them out.
I saw Stott walk up to Findlater and
shake his head, and through my glasses I saw him whip
the handkerchief from his finger and display his hand.
Findlater frowned, said something and looked towards
the pavilion, but Stott shook his head. He evidently
disagreed with Findlater’s proposal. Then
Mallinson came up, and the great bulk of his back hid
the faces of the other two. The crowd was beginning
to grow excited at the interruption. Every one
had guessed that something was wrong. All round
the ring men were standing up, trying to make out what
was going on.
I drew my inferences from Mallinson’s
face, for when he turned round and strolled back to
his wicket, he was wearing a broad smile. Through
my field glasses I could see that he was licking his
lower lip with his tongue. His shoulders were
humped and his whole expression one of barely controlled
glee. (I always see that picture framed in a circle;
a bioscopic presentation.) He could hardly refrain
from dancing. Then little Beale, who was Mallinson’s
partner, came up and spoke to him, and I saw Mallinson
hug himself with delight as he explained the situation.
When Stott unwillingly came back to
the pavilion, a low murmur ran round the ring, like
the buzz of a great crowd of disturbed blue flies.
In that murmur I could distinctly trace the signs
of mixed feelings. No doubt the crowd had come
there to witness the performances of the new phenomenon-the
abnormal of every kind has a wonderful attraction for
us-but, on the other hand, the majority
wanted to see their own county win. Moreover,
Mallinson was giving them a taste of his abnormal powers
of hitting, and the batsman appeals to the spectacular,
more than the bowler.
I ran down hurriedly to meet Stott.
“Only a split finger, sir,”
he said carelessly, in answer to my question; “but
Mr. Findlater says I must see to it.”
I examined the finger, and it certainly
did not seem to call for surgical aid. Evidently
it had been caught by the seam of the new ball; there
was a fairly clean cut about half an inch long on the
fleshy underside of the second joint of the middle
finger.
“Better have it seen to,”
I said. “We can’t afford to lose you,
you know, Stott.”
Stott gave a laugh that was more nearly
a snarl. “Ain’t the first time I’ve
’ad a cut finger,” he said scornfully.
He had the finger bound up when I
saw him again, but it had been done by an amateur.
I learnt afterwards that no antiseptic had been used.
That was at lunch time, and Notts had made a hundred
and sixty-eight for one wicket; Mallinson was not
out, a hundred and three. I saw that the Notts
Eleven were in magnificent spirits.
But after lunch Stott came out and
took the first over. I don’t know what
had passed between him and Findlater, but the captain
had evidently been over-persuaded.
We must not blame Findlater.
The cut certainly appeared trifling, it was not bad
enough to prevent Stott from bowling, and Hampdenshire
seemed powerless on that wicket without him.
It is very easy to distribute blame after the event,
but most people would have done what Findlater did
in those circumstances.
The cut did not appear to inconvenience
Stott in the least degree. He bowled Mallinson
with his second ball, and the innings was finished
up in another fifty-seven minutes for the addition
of thirty-eight runs.
Hampdenshire made two hundred and
thirty-seven for three wickets before the drawing
of stumps, and that was the end of the match, for the
weather changed during the night and rain prevented
any further play.
I, of course, stayed on in Nottingham
to await results. I saw Stott on the next day,
Friday, and asked him about his finger. He made
light of it, but that evening Findlater told me over
the bridge-table that he was not happy about it.
He had seen the finger, and thought it showed a tendency
to inflammation. “I shall take him to Gregory
in the morning if it’s not all right,”
he said. Gregory was a well-known surgeon in
Nottingham.
Again one sees, now, that the visit
to Gregory should not have been postponed, but at
the time one does not take extraordinary precautions
in such a case as this. A split finger is such
an everyday thing, and one is guided by the average
of experience. After all, if one were constantly
to make preparation for the abnormal; ordinary life
could not go on....
I heard that Gregory pursed his lips
over that finger when he had learned the name of his
famous patient. “You’ll have to be
very careful of this, young man,” was Findlater’s
report of Gregory’s advice. It was not
sufficient. I often wonder now whether Gregory
might not have saved the finger. If he had performed
some small operation at once, cut away the poison,
it seems to me that the tragedy might have been averted.
I am, I admit, a mere layman in these matters, but
it seems to me that something might have been done.
I left Nottingham on Saturday after
lunch-the weather was hopeless-and
I did not make use of the information I had for the
purposes of my paper. I was never a good journalist.
But I went down to Ailesworth on Monday morning, and
found that Findlater and Stott had already gone to
Harley Street to see Graves, the King’s surgeon.
I followed them, and arrived at Graves’s
house while Stott was in the consulting-room.
I hocussed the butler and waited with the patients.
Among the papers, I came upon the famous caricature
of Stott in the current number of Punch-the
“Stand-and-Deliver” caricature, in which
Stott is represented with an arm about ten feet long,
and the batsman is looking wildly over his shoulder
to square leg, bewildered, with no conception from
what direction the ball is coming. Underneath
is written “Stott’s New Theory-the
Ricochet. Real Ginger.” While I was
laughing over the cartoon, the butler came in and
nodded to me. I followed him out of the room
and met Findlater and Stott in the hall.
Findlater was in a state of profanity.
I could not get a sensible word out of him. He
was in a white heat of pure rage. The butler,
who seemed as anxious as I to learn the verdict, was
positively frightened.
“Well, for God’s sake
tell me what Graves said,” I protested.
Findlater’s answer is unprintable, and told
me nothing.
Stott, however, quite calm and self-possessed,
volunteered the information. “Finger’s
got to come off, sir,” he said quietly.
“Doctor says if it ain’t off to-day or
to-morrer, he won’t answer for my ’and.”
This was the news I had to give to
England. It was a great coup from the journalistic
point of view, but I made up my three columns with
a heavy heart, and the congratulations of my editor
only sickened me. I had some luck, but I should
never have become a good journalist.
The operation was performed successfully
that evening, and Stott’s career was closed.
VII
I did not see Stott again till August,
and then I had a long talk with him on the Ailesworth
County Ground, as together we watched the progress
of Hampdenshire’s defeat by Lancashire.
“Oh! I can’t learn
him nothing,” he broke out, as Flower
was hit to the four corners of the ground, “’alf
vollies and long ’ops and then a full pitch-’e’s
a disgrace.”
“They’ve knocked him off
his length,” I protested. “On a wicket
like this ...”
Stott shook his head. “I’ve
been trying to learn ’im,” he said, “but
he can’t never learn. ’E’s
got ’abits what you can’t break ’im
of.”
“I suppose it is difficult,” I
said vaguely.
“Same with me,” went on
Stott, “I’ve been trying to learn myself
to bowl without my finger”-he held
up his mutilated hand-“or left-’anded;
but I can’t. If I’d started that
way ... No! I’m always feeling for
that finger as is gone. A second-class bowler
I might be in time, not better nor that.”
“It’s early days yet,”
I ventured, intending encouragement, but Stott frowned
and shook his head.
“I’m not going to kid
myself,” he said, “I know. But I’m
going to find a youngster and learn ’im.
On’y he must be young.
“No ’abits, you know,” he explained.
The next time I met Stott was in November.
I ran up against him, literally, one Friday afternoon
in Ailesworth.
When he recognised me he asked me
if I would care to walk out to Stoke-Underhill with
him. “I’ve took a cottage there,”
he explained, “I’m to be married in a
fortnight’s time.”
His circumstances certainly warranted
such a venture. The proceeds of matinee and benefit,
invested for him by the Committee of the County Club,
produced an income of nearly two pounds a week, and
in addition to this he had his salary as groundsman.
I tendered my congratulations.
“Oh! well, as to that, better wait a bit,”
said Stott.
He walked with his hands in his pockets
and his eyes on the ground. He had the air of
a man brooding over some project.
“It is a lottery, of
course ...” I began, but he interrupted
me.
“Oh that!” he said, and
kicked a stone into the ditch; “take my chances
of that. It’s the kid I’m thinking
on.”
“The kid?” I repeated,
doubtful whether he spoke of his fiancee, or whether
his nuptials pointed an act of reparation.
“What, else ’ud I tie
myself up for?” asked Stott. “I must
’ave a kid of my own and learn ’im
from his cradle. It’s come to that.”
“Oh! I understand,” I said; “teach
him to bowl.”
“Ah!” replied Stott as
an affirmative. “Learn ’im from his
cradle; before ’e’s got ’abits.
When I started I’d never bowled a ball in my
life, and by good luck I started right. But I
can’t find another kid over seven years old
in England as ain’t never bowled a ball o’
some sort and started ’abits. I’ve
tried ...”
“And you hope with your own boys...?”
I said.
“Not ’ope, it’s
a cert,” said Stott. “I’ll see
no boy of mine touches a ball afore he’s fourteen,
and then ’e’ll learn from me; and learn
right. From the first go off.” He was
silent for a few seconds, and then he broke out in
a kind of ecstasy. “My Gawd, ’e’ll
be a bowler such as ’as never been, never in
this world. He’ll start where I left orf.
He’ll ...” Words failed him, he fell
back on the expletive he had used, repeating it with
an awed fervour. “My Gawd!”
I had never seen Stott in this mood
before. It was a revelation to me of the latent
potentialities of the man, the remarkable depth and
quality of his ambitions....
VIII
I intended to be present at Stott’s
wedding, but I was not in England when it took place;
indeed, for the next two years and a half I was never
in England for more than a few days at a time.
I sent him a wedding-present, an inkstand in the guise
of a cricket ball, with a pen-rack that was built
of little silver wickets. They were still advertised
that Christmas as “Stott inkstands.”
Two years and a half of American life
broke up many of my old habits of thought. When
I first returned to London I found that the cricket
news no longer held the same interest for me, and
this may account for the fact that I did not trouble
for some time to look up my old friend Stott.
In July, however, affairs took me
to Ailesworth, and the associations of the place naturally
led me to wonder how Stott’s marriage had turned
out, and whether the much-desired son had been born
to him. When my business in Ailesworth was done,
I decided to walk out to Stoke-Underhill.
The road passes the County Ground,
and a match was in progress, but I walked by without
stopping. I was wool-gathering. I was not
thinking of the man I was going to see, or I should
have turned in at the County Ground, where he would
inevitably have been found. Instead, I was thinking
of the abnormal child I had seen in the train that
day; uselessly speculating and wondering.
When I reached Stoke-Underhill I found
the cottage which Stott had shown me. I had by
then so far recovered my wits as to know that I should
not find Stott himself there, but from the look of
the cottage I judged that it was untenanted, so I
made inquiries at the post-office.
“No; he don’t live here,
now, sir,” said the postmistress; “he lives
at Pym, now, sir, and rides into Ailesworth on his
bike.” She was evidently about to furnish
me with other particulars, but I did not care to hear
them. I was moody and distrait. I was wondering
why I should bother my head about so insignificant
a person as this Stott.
“You’ll be sure to find
Mr. Stott at the cricket ground,” the postmistress
called after me.
Another two months of English life
induced a return to my old habits of thought.
I found myself reverting to old tastes and interests.
The reversion was a pleasant one. In the States
I had been forced out of my groove, compelled to work,
to strive, to think desperately if I would maintain
any standing among my contemporaries. But when
the perpetual stimulus was removed, I soon fell back
to the less strenuous methods of my own country.
I had time, once more, for the calm reflection that
is so unlike the urgent, forced, inventive thought
of the American journalist. I was braced by that
thirty months’ experience, perhaps hardened
a little, but by September my American life was fading
into the background; I had begun to take an interest
in cricket again.
With the revival of my old interests,
revived also my curiosity as to Ginger Stott, and
one Sunday in late September I decided to go down to
Pym.
It was a perfect day, and I thoroughly
enjoyed my four-mile walk from Great Hittenden Station.
Pym is a tiny hamlet made up of three
farms and a dozen scattered cottages. Perched
on one of the highest summits of the Hampden Hills
and lost in the thick cover of beech woods, without
a post-office or a shop, Pym is the most perfectly
isolated village within a reasonable distance of London.
As I sauntered up the mile-long lane that climbs the
steep hill, and is the only connection between Pym
and anything approaching a decent road, I thought
that this was the place to which I should like to
retire for a year, in order to write the book I had
so often contemplated, and never found time to begin.
This, I reflected, was a place of peace, of freedom
from all distraction, the place for calm, contemplative
meditation.
I met no one in the lane, and there
was no sign of life when I reached what I must call
the village, though the word conveys a wrong idea,
for there is no street, merely a cottage here and
there, dropped haphazard, and situated without regard
to its aspect. These cottages lie all on one’s
left hand; to the right a stretch of grass soon merges
into bracken and bush, and then the beech woods enclose
both, and surge down into the valley and rise up again
beyond, a great wave of green; as I saw it then, not
yet touched with the first flame of autumn.
I inquired at the first cottage and
received my direction to Stott’s dwelling.
It lay up a little lane, the further of two cottages
joined together.
The door stood open, and after a moment’s
hesitation and a light knock, I peered in.
Sitting in a rocking-chair was a woman
with black, untidy eyebrows, and on her knee, held
with rigid attention, was the remarkable baby I had
seen in the train two months before. As I stood,
doubtful and, I will confess it, intimidated, suddenly
cold and nervous, the child opened his eyes and honoured
me with a cold stare. Then he nodded, a reflective,
recognisable nod.
“‘E remembers seein’
you in the train, sir,” said the woman, “’e
never forgets any one. Did you want to see my
’usband? ’E’s upstairs.”
So this was the boy who was
designed by Stott to become the greatest bowler the
world had ever seen....