Search   
Advanced Search
Amount in Cart: $0.00
    

  THE FINEST GOLF LITERATURE - WELCOME 

 
Product Categories

-Great Gift: BOOK BUCKS!

All Titles List

Author Index

Bernard Darwin

Clubs and Courses

Course Architecture

Custom Slipcases

Fiction

Herbert Warren Wind

Instruction

Iris Cloth Deluxe Bindings

Leather ULTRA Series

Limited Editions

NEW! Future Classics

Women

Wrought-Iron Bookcase

Rare peek at art
   inside clubhouse of
   R&A now available


Added! Brad Klein’s
   hard-to-find history
   of Desert Forest GC


Great clubs of Ireland
   and American East in
   books by photographer
   Anthony Edgeworth

More...


image


Mostly Golf - A Bernard Darwin Anthology (1976)
SKU: C-213


Peter Ryde might have started this project, the celebration of a century since Bernard Darwin’s birth, with Darwin’s words in mind: “The afternoon round began with a greatly increased crowd and an almost overwhelming feeling of confidence in our own champion.” This anthology by the golf correspondent of The Times of 48-pieces of his immediate predecessor’s work is, surprisingly, not all about golf. Ryde’s confidence in “his man” is so great he dares to introduce golf readers to Darwin’s writings on other selected subjects. Do not be misled: the book is full of golf from the turn of the century to the 1950s, but there is enough of a sprinkling of other topics to allow a glimpse of the whole man. For example, in 1934, when he ‘played hooky’ from covering an international golf match at Wentworth and went, with the glee of a small boy, to watch a foot race between two champions. “The buzz of excitement when the men came out was worth all the money; one could have wished for a false start or two to prolong it…what fun it all was!” However, golf is never far from Darwin’s thoughts no matter the location. “I could not help feeling that, exciting and agonising (sic) as golf can be, it lacks a little something in that element of tactics. Perhaps it would be more than we could endure if it had it, and we ought to be thankful. At any rate, say what we will, it does lack it. Golf is a contest of temperament, but not of wits.”

One of the inescapable charms of Darwin’s writings is his ability to see with the eyes of a child while thinking with the mind of a highly educated adult. He is an unabashed hero worshiper and yet has the audacity to say ‘The king has no clothes’ if true. What gives the scholarly Darwin pleasure on the tee? Einstein’s theory of relativity is of course beyond my comprehension, but I have my own theory of relativity in regard to hitting to which I am indissolubly (sic) wedded. Some of us cannot hit as hard as others, but the joy is in hitting as hard as we can.” Here is a Walker Cup player, who twice reached the semi-finals of the British Amateur Championship (1909 and 1921), dean of golf writers world wide, saying grab your club, put the ball down, have some fun: hit the Hell out of it!

An Attack of Socketing is Darwin at his impish best. At worst, it is a story going nowhere; at best, it is a story that ends up where it began. Read how an attack of the “shanks” or “socketing” (when the ball goes dead right at impact for a right-handed player) can and does infect the average and best players. The tale unfolds, explaining how the shanks go away (or one would have stopped playing golf to escape them) and how they can, or is it, will, come back. The irony of the story is that the hapless protagonist has anti-shank irons and still manages to shank! As if to assuage our fears, the mischievous Darwin finishes obliquely: “Meanwhile, I do hope that, by describing his torments in such detail, I shall not have put socketing into somebody else’s head…” Of course you know he did.

Hogan at Carnoustie, the immortal James Braid, Ouimet at Brookline, Bobby Jones in quest of the Grand Slam and after his announced retirement: all are the subjects of wonderful pieces. However, the more obscure Darwin becomes in search of a topic, the better the results. Take When Slices were Slices, which contains no advice, although it is loosely about the six different types of slices Seymour Dunn describes in Standardised (sic) Golf Instruction. Sensitive of his reader’s game, Darwin avoids detailing the six slices “because to read a medical book is to invariably to believe that one has got every disease under the sun.” Rather, he makes the challenge that no current player, with rubber core ball and steel shaft, could ever achieve the truly monumental slices produced with the wood shaft and hard gutty ball in a seaside wind. “I have convinced myself the modern golfer knows nothing of slicing.” Darwin details minor slicing records and some slicers of note, like a schoolmaster acquaintance.

“…at eight of the first nine at Aberdovey (the course was not then quite as it is now) he sliced his ball from the tee onto the railway line and in one instance—this is but incidental—the ball was carried in a passing train to Glandovey Junction, where it presumably changed for Borth and Aberystwyth.”

In Put Her in the Woodshed Darwin describes a children’s party where they played the ancient Belgian game chole. Under their rules, two shots would be played by a team toward the distant goal, then the opposing team would play one shot, the decholade, to thwart the advance. “To steer the enemy ball into some spot where it is humanly speaking, inextricable, is to taste one of the most fiendish joys that life has to offer…Even as spectators at a football match are sometimes worked up to exclaim, ‘Kill him’ or ‘stamp on his head’, so our most bloodthirsty cry, giving vent to every instinct of savagery, was ‘Put her in the woodshed.’” Almost like having dessert before the main course, Ryde wrote a brilliant 26-page foreword on Darwin. Part biography, history and observation, Ryde explores the man’s likes, dislikes and the influences on his life. It is a perfect introduction and companion to an eclectic collection of Darwin’s best writings.

Mostly Golf: A Bernard Darwin Anthology edited by Peter Ryde
London: Adam & Charles Black, first edition 1976, 198 pages, illustrated, cloth.
No Place: Classics of Golf, facsimile of 1977 first edition, 1986, 198 pages, illustrated, cloth. Foreword by Herbert Warren Wind, Afterword by Donald Steel.

PRICE:  $33.00
(Receive a 20% discount when you buy six or more copies of any one title. Discount applied automatically at checkout.)

Quantity 







Check the box below to have this product gift wrapped.

Include Gift Box $5.00

E-mail a friend about this item.

Send Page To a Friend

Gift Reminder

Return to Catalog