ADVERTISEMENT

O Beckham, where art thou?

March 18, 2010 02:40 am | Updated November 17, 2021 06:37 am IST - LONDON

Poet Laureate pens a poem about David Beckham's injury. The poem weaves the mythical story together with references to Beckham's life, including his marriage to former Spice Girl Victoria Beckham and his experimental fashion sense

ACMilan's David Beckham during the Italian Serie A match against Chievo in Milan on March 14.

David Beckham has become an unlikely muse to Britain's Poet Laureate, who has written a verse about the soccer star's career-threatening injury.

The former England captain tore his Achilles' tendon in a game on Sunday and will miss the World Cup in June as he recovers from surgery.

Carol Ann Duffy's poem imagines Mr. Beckham as the ancient Greek hero Achilles, who according to myth was dipped as a baby in the River Styx, making him invulnerable — except for his exposed heel, the origin of the modern terms Achilles' tendon, and Achilles' heel.

ADVERTISEMENT

The poem weaves the mythical story together with references to Beckham's life, including his marriage to former Spice Girl Victoria Beckham and his experimental fashion sense. It speaks of the hero concealed “in girls' sarongs; days of sweetmeats, spices, silver songs”.

It describes him on the field, “his charmed foot on the ball.”

“But then his heel, his heel, his heel...”

ADVERTISEMENT

Ms. Duffy told the BBC on Tuesday she was inspired because Mr. Beckham “is almost a mythical figure himself, in popular culture”.

Mr. Beckham's injury shattered his hopes of becoming the first English player to appear in four World Cups and put the 34-year-old player's future on the national team in doubt.

Ms. Duffy, a soccer fan, said she had been moved by the image of Mr. Beckham in tears at the side of the pitch after his injury.

“You just thought how all the money in the world and private planes can't sort this. It was a very moving moment.”

But she said she doubted she would be hearing from Beckham.

“I'm a lot more likely to watch football than he is to read poetry,” said Ms. Duffy.

This is a Premium article available exclusively to our subscribers. To read 250+ such premium articles every month
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
The Hindu operates by its editorial values to provide you quality journalism.
This is your last free article.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT