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THE CRICKET FIELD.

broke, one of the great promoters of matches, as well as the late Mr. Aislabie, always fond of the game, but all his life "too big to play,"—the remark by Lord Frederick of Mr. Ward, which, being repeated, did no little to develop the latent powers of that most efficient player.

The Montpelier Club, also, with men given, annually played Marylebone.

Lord Frederick, in 1803, gave a little variety to the matches by leading against Marylebone ten men of Leicester and Nottingham, including the two Warsops. "T. Warsop," said Clarke, "was one of the best bowlers I ever knew." Clarke has also a high opinion of Lambert, from whom, he says, he learnt more of the game than from any other man.

Lambert's bowling was like Mr. Budd's, against which I have often played: a high underhand delivery, slow, but rising very high, very accurately pitched, and turning in from leg stump. "About the year 1818, Lambert and I," said Mr. Budd, "attained to a kind of round-armed delivery (described as Clarke's), by which we rose decidedly superior to all the batsmen of the day. Mr. Ward could not play it, but he headed a party against us, and our new bowling was ignored." Tom Walker and Lord Frederick were of the tediously slow school; Lambert and Budd were several degrees faster. Howard and John Wells were the fast underhand bowlers.