Alfred, Lord Tennyson, born 6 August 1809, was the Poet Laureate of Great Britain and Ireland for much of the reign of Queen Victoria. His grandson, Lionel Tennyson, went on to lead Hampshire and England at cricket. However, the poet did not have much of an idea about the noble game.
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Rupert Brooke was born on 3 August 1887
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Bob Dylan was born on 24 May 1941
Read MoreThe Cricketing Connections of Lord Byron
Lord Byron, born January 22, 1788, did not walk in beauty; and his gait was as unlike any night of cloudless climes and starry skies as can get. In fact, he had a club foot. However, he did venture onto the cricket pitch in the rather prestigious Eton vs Harrow encounter of 1805. Arunabha Sengupta recalls the poet on the pitch.
Read MoreSiegfried Sassoon: Never shied away from playing the game of cricket
Mayukh Ghosh remembers Siegfried Sassoon
Read MoreElizabeth Barrett Browning and her cricketing notes
Elizabeth Barrett Browning, born March 6, 1806, was one of the most famed poets of the Victorian era. But, there is enough evidence to suggest that she also played a bit of cricket at Colwall Green. Arunabha Sengupta recounts three references to cricket that she jotted down in her diary.
William Wordsworth: His heart leapt up as he beheld a cricket match
William Wordsworth, born April 7, 1770, the romantic poet extraordinaire, also found solace in watching cricket. Arunabha Sengupta writes about the cricketing connections of the man instrumental in launching the Romantic Age of English literature.
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