1.
A true batsman should in most of his strokes tell the truth about himself.
Neville Cardus
2.
Sibelius justified the austerity of his old age by saying that while other composers were engaged in manufacturing cocktails, he offered the public pure cold water.
Neville Cardus
3.
We remember not the scores and the results in after years; it is the men who remain in our minds, in our imagination.
Neville Cardus
4.
There ought to be some other means of reckoning quality in this the best and loveliest of games; the scoreboard is an ass.
Neville Cardus
5.
Often in this our life do we begin by cursing men and end by loving them. A sense of the common fallibility of all flesh makes us kin. No man is lovable who is invincible.
Neville Cardus
6.
Like the British constitution, cricket was not made: it has 'grown'.
Neville Cardus
7.
In cricket, as in no other game, a great master may well go back to the pavilion scoreless.... In no other game does the law of averages get to work so potently, so mysteriously.
Neville Cardus
8.
The umpire... is like the geyser in the bathroom; we cannot do without it, yet we notice it only when it is out of order.
Neville Cardus
9.
It is far more than a game, this cricket.
Neville Cardus
10.
The elements are cricket's presiding geniuses.
Neville Cardus
11.
Dear, lovely game of cricket that can stir us so profoundly, that can lift up our hearts and break them.
Neville Cardus
12.
If a German or an Austrian, a Greek or a Bashibazouk, had composed Gerontius, the whole world would have by now admitted its qualities.
Neville Cardus
13.
Such reproductions may not interest the reader; but after all, this is my autobiography, not his; he is under no obligation to read further in it; he was under none to begin. A modest or inhibited autobiography is written without entertainment to the writer and read with distrust by the reader.
Neville Cardus
14.
Even an ordinary broken chord is made to disclose rare beauties; we are reminded of the fairies' hazelnuts in which diamonds were concealed but you could break the shell only if your hands were blessed.
Neville Cardus
15.
Cricket more than any other game is inclined towards sentimentalism and cant.
Neville Cardus
16.
The laws of cricket tell of the English love of compromise between a particular freedom and a general orderliness, or legality.
Neville Cardus
17.
A great composition to me is.. an incarnation of a genius, of all that was ever in him of the slightest consequence.
Neville Cardus
18.
A snick by Jack Hobbs is a sort of disturbance of a cosmic orderliness.
Neville Cardus
19.
The Australian temper is at bottom grim. It is as though the sun has dried up his nature.
Neville Cardus