Crawley reached the quarterfinals of Wimbledon in 1902 and 1906.[3] He also reached the quarterfinals of Queens in 1913. Though lawn tennis was Crawley's favourite sport, "he was also fond of golf, figure-skating, fives, and revolver shooting".[5] His Book of the Ball (1914) compared several games, trying to discover and illustrate general principles governing the behaviour of the ball. Crawley wrote on sport for publications including The Observer,[7]The Times,[5] and Fry's Magazine.[8]
Translation into Greek for multilingual private printing of Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám, the astronomer-poet of Persia, English tr. by Edward Fitzgerald, privately printed on hand-made paper / Japanese vellum, 1902
The tree of life: a study of religion, 1905
'The origin and function of religion', in Sociological Society, ed., Sociological Papers, Vol. 3, 1906, pp. 243–278, Excerpts online hereArchived 6 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine.
'Exogamy and the Mating of Cousins', in Anthropological Essays presented to E. B. Tylor, 1907, pp.52–68
The idea of the soul, 1909
Review of The Threshold of Religion by R. R. Marett, Man, Vol. 9 (1909). pp. 140–41
'Primitive eugenics', The Eugenics Review, Jan. 1910, pp. 275–80. Reprinted online here.
'Totemism Unveiled', Nature 84 (1910), pp. 31–2
Book of the ball, 1913
Lawn tennis, 1919.
Skating: English, international, speed, 1920
Lawn tennis do's and don'ts, 1922
The technique of lawn tennis demonstrated by cinematography, 1923.
The lawn tennis umpire & referee: what he must know, and what he should do, 1923
Dress, drinks, and drums: further studies of savages and sex, 1931. Ed. by Theodore Besterman.
Oath, curse, and blessing, and other studies in origins, 1934. Ed. by Theodore Besterman. Thinker's Library, no. 40. (Selection from the 1929 Studies and the 1931 Dress, drinks, and drums.)
References
^Birth and baptism of Alfred Ernest Crawley, son of Samuel Crawley and Elizabeth Hannah. England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975