Some years ago I was asked by the
editor of a well-known paper to write a short series
of articles about London. The subject seems ambitious
enough, and indeed London considered either physically
or intellectually is so vast and mighty a world, that
the study of any one-of even the smallest
and least considerable-of its aspects may
well be the task of a lifetime. But, so far as
I can remember, my instructions were of the liberal
and catholic kind. I mean, I was not required
to write of the great city as the goal of the timber
merchant or of the dealer in precious stones, or of
the makers of chasubles, or of the fashioner of
wigs, but rather to depict it as the end sought by
all these, and by myriads more. And so I set
about the task in my usual spirit, firmly convinced,
that is, that better men had said all that there was
to say on the matter brought before me, and yet resolved
to do my best and to try to make something of the
job in one way or another. So I set to work,
and found, strangely enough, that though I was writing
about London, I was also writing a mystical treatise,
on a text which I will not divulge in this place.
But for the beginning of my series I remember that
I went back a good many years to the time when London
began to call to me. I often speculate now in
these later days as to how it would have been with
me if this call had never come. For I have certain
friends-very few of them-still
living in Gwent and on its borders who have not heard
the summons. The special family that I have in
mind has lived in those regions for more centuries
than I can tell. It would be a bold and learned
Welsh herald who would trace them to their beginnings
on the Celtic side, but on the Norman they go back
to Sir Payne Turberville, the companion of Fitzhamon,
and even in Wales a story of nine hundred years is
a long story.
Well, coming down a little through
the ages, the Rowlands that I knew-of course,
their grandfather knew my grandfather-are
still on the soil. Certainly a younger son has
crossed the Severn, but the two others have not moved
their habitations more than ten or twelve miles in
the last fifty years. From half-way between Newport
and Cardiff to Newport, from Newport to a mile east
of Newport, then to four miles east of Newport, at
last to three miles west of Cardiff: they will
surely be laid in the land of their fathers at the
end. So it might have been with me, perhaps,
if it had not been for the blood of certain Scottish
sailors intermingled with the stay-at-home stock of
Gwent. But I often wonder, as I say, how it would
have happened to me if I had found a home under the
shadow of Twyn Barlwm instead of becoming a dweller
in the tents of London. Tents, I say advisedly,
for, with the rarest exceptions, Londoners have no
homes. This was true in a great measure nearly
two hundred years ago, when Dr. Johnson first came
to London from Lichfield; it is now all but universally
true.
But, anyhow, the call of London, partly
external and partly internal, came to me, and for
some months before I left the old land for the first
time I was imagining London and making a picture of
it in my mind, and longing for it. I turned up
the old magazines and re-read Sala’s “Twice
Round the Clock.” I came upon the strange
phrase, “the City,” in stories, and wondered
what the City signified. And I began to have an
appetite for London papers. For it should be understood
that at Llanddewi Rectory a London paper was a thing
of the rarest appearance. I think I can remember
that when the Prince of Wales-afterwards
King Edward VII, of happy memory-was dangerously
ill, my father made some kind of arrangement-I
cannot think what it could have been-by
which he got the “Echo” of those days,
not only on week days, but on Sunday afternoons.
And in ordinary times, when we went into Newport on
market days, we might possibly bring back a “Standard”
or a “Telegraph,” but likely enough not.
We saw the “Western Mail” occasionally,
the “Hereford Times” once a week; weekly
also came the “Guardian,” an excellent
paper, but with more of Oxford, Pater, and Freeman,
and Deans, and Dignitaries in it than of London or
Londoners. Indeed, I remember how the news of
the fall of Khartoum came to the rectory. I had
been spending the evening with some friends across
a few miles of midnight and black copse, and ragged
field and wild, broken, and wandering brook land, and
I remember that not a star was to be seen as I came
home, wondering all the while if I ever should find
my way. One of my friends had been in Newport
that day, and had seen a paper, and so when I got back
at last and found my father smoking his pipe by the
fire, I announced the news in a tag of Apocalyptic
Greek: Khartoum he polis he megale peptoke, peptoke;
Khartoum the mighty city, has fallen, has fallen.
And sometimes I wonder now in these days, when I am
nearer to the heart of newspapers, whether our work
in Fleet Street, with its anxious, flurried yell over
the telephone, its tic-tac of tapes, its
slither and rattle and clatter of linotypes,
its frantic haste of men, its final roar and thunder
of machinery ever gets itself delivered at last on
a midnight hillside so queerly as the tragic news
of Khartoum was delivered in the “parlour”
of Llanddewi Rectory.
But the days came when above the clear
voice of the brook in the hidden valley, above the
murmur of the trees in the heart of the greenwood
there sounded from beyond the hills to my heart a clearer
voice, a mightier murmur. London called me, and
all documents relating to this new unknown world became
matters of the highest consequence and significance,
and so London papers must by all means be obtained.
Far and long ago that spring and summer
of 1880 now seem to me. It was then that London
began to summon, and I was filled with an eager curiosity
to know all about the new world which I was to visit.
As I have explained, the London paper
made a very rare and occasional appearance at Llanddewi-among-the-Hills,
and I don’t think that any of us felt any aching
need of it. But now for me “Standard”
and “Telegraph” became mystic documents
of the highest interest and most vital consequence;
these were the charts to the Nova Terra Incognita;
every line in them came from the heart of the mystery
and was written by men who were learned in all the
wisdom of London. London papers I must have;
that was certain; so I set out to get them.
The nearest point at which these precious
rarities were obtainable was Pontypool Road Station,
about four miles distant from Llanddewi Rectory.
It was the place where I had bought my copy of “De
Quincey” some years earlier, and is now sacred
to me on that account. But in this month of April
thirty-five years ago I thought little of De Quincey
or of his visions. Columbus, I suspect, while
he watched the fitting of his caravel forgot any mere
literary enthusiasms that he might have once possessed;
for him there was but one object and that was the tremendous,
marvellous, terrible venture into the unknown that
he was soon to make. So it was with me; London
loomed up before me, wonderful, mystical as Assyrian
Babylon, as full of unheard-of things and great unveilings
as any magic city in an Eastern tale. It loomed
up with incredible pinnacles-to quote Tennyson
on another city-and in its mighty shadow
all lesser objects disappeared. De Quincey?
After all he was not without value, since he spoke
of Oxford Street; still, I wanted later news of the
City of the Enchanters. So three or four times
a week I walked the four miles to Pontypool Road,
taking the short cut across the fields which leaves
the by-way at Croeswen and brings one out on the high
road from Newport to Abergavenny, somewhere about
a mile from the station, near the lane which wanders
through a very solitary country into Usk.
Pontypool Road Station lies, as I
have said, under mountains, or rather under the huge
domed hills which we in Gwent call mountains.
It is one of the many meeting-points between the fields
and the “works,” and is always associated
in my mind with a noise of clanking machinery and a
reek of black oily smoke of rich flavour, which this
generation would not recognise, since it is only to
be imitated by blowing out a tallow candle that has
long wanted snuffing; and now there are neither tallow
candles nor snuffers. Here, then, of a “celestial”
agent of W. H. Smith I bought my papers; usually the
“Standard” and the “Daily Telegraph.”
The “Morning Post” was, I think, twopence
in those days, and twopence was too much to give for
a daily paper, and, moreover, we had a vague belief
that the “Morning Post” was almost exclusively
concerned with the social doings of the aristocracy,
splendid matters, doubtless, but no affairs of mine.
With these two papers, then, and once a week with a
copy of “Truth,” I would make my way out
of the station, and along the high road till I came
to the stile and the lonely path across the fields,
and alone under a tree or in the shelter of a friendly
hedge I would open my papers, cut their pages, and
plunge into their garden of delights. One of
my chief interests in these journals-perhaps
my chiefest interest-was the theatre; and
I am sure I cannot say why this was so. As far
as I can remember I had up to this time witnessed three
performances of stage plays, and of these three one
was certainly not “legitimate,” being
a drama of the circus called “Dick Turpin’s
Ride to York.” Its chief incidents were
firing pistols and leaping over five-barred gates,
and I must have been about seven when I saw it at
Cardiff. Then in ’76 I was at Dublin, and
saw “Our Boys,” and was very heartily
bored, and finally in ’78 or ’79 I went
with a school-fellow to the skating-rink at Hereford-I
remember the former as well as the latter rinking
mania-and enjoyed a touring companys rendering of Pinafore. And, looking
back, I believe that it was then that the delightful poison began to work; then
when in that ramshackle barn of a place in the Hereford backstreet the curtain
went up on the Saturday afternoon, and eight men dressed as sailors began to
sing:-
We sail the ocean blue,
And our saucy
ship’s a beauty;
We’re gallant men and
true,
And attentive
to our duty.
I remember that, young as I was, I
could not help feeling that eight was a very small
number for the male chorus. This circumstance
confirms me in a belief which I have long entertained
that Heaven meant me to be a stage-manager. True,
I could never master simple addition, and a stage-manager
has to keep accounts. Still, I should not have
been the first stage-manager whose ledgers were filled
with “comptes fantastiques.”
But here I am under my tree or my
hedge on a sunny morning of that Gwentian spring of
so many years ago, eagerly opening the paper and turning
to the theatrical advertisements in that part of the
journal which I have in later years learned to call
the “leader page.” I read about Mr.
Henry Irving at the Lyceum and Mr. Toole at the Folly-I
do not think the vanished theatre was known as Toole’s
in those days. Mme. Modjeska and Mr. Forbes-Robertson
were, I believe, at the Court, Dion Boucicault’s
play, “The Shaughraun,” was running at
the Adelphi-or, stay, was this old house
of melodrama then the home of “The Danites”?
In Wych Street, at the Opera Comique, was “The
Pirates of Penzance”; “Madame Favart”
enchanted at the Strand; “Les Cloches
de Corneville” was at the Globe or the
Olympic, I forget which. And, said each advertisement,
“for cast see under the clock.”
I was vividly interested in that phrase,
“For cast see under the clock,” which
I read in the sibylline leaves of my London papers.
The real meaning of the words never occurred to me;
I conceived that somewhere, in some dimly-imagined
central place of London, there was a great clock on
a high square tower, and that this tower was so prominent
an architectural feature as to be known all over London
as “the clock.” And at the base of
this tower, so I proceeded in my fancy, there were
displayed bills or posters, containing the casts of
all the plays of all the theatres. I never found
that mighty tower in London, but it was many years
before it dawned on me that “the clock”
was merely the pictured clock-face in the newspaper
itself, under which the full casts were then printed.
As I have said, I cannot quite make
out the sources of this intense interest of mine in
the theatre. But I suspect that for the time I
had got into that strange frame of mind to which Thackeray
alluded when he asked a man if he were “fond
of the play.” Thackeray’s friend replied,
I think, to the effect that it depended on the play,
whereupon Thackeray told him that he didn’t
understand in the least what the phrase “fond
of the play” implied. Thackeray was right;
for this attitude of mind is universal, not particular;
and oddly enough, I believe it is very little related
to any serious interest in the drama as a form of art.
There is so vast a gulf between the theatre of to-day
and that of thirty-five years ago that I do not know
whether it is now possible for anybody to be “fond
of the play” in the old sense; but if there be
such people left, I am sure that they have not the
faintest interest in the proposals to build and endow
a national theatre. For to those in the happy
state to which Thackeray alluded, the theatre was loved
not for itself, but as a symbol of gaiety; I would
almost say of metropolitanism as opposed to provincialism.
I have known countrymen relating their adventures
in London almost to wink as they included a visit to
the Globe or the Strand in the list of their pleasures;
the theatre represented to them the “chimes
at midnight” mood.
Thackeray meant-do you
like the mingled gas and orange odours of the theatre,
do you like the sound of the orchestra tuning, the
sight of the footlights suddenly lightening, can you
project your self readily into the fantastic world
disclosed by the rising curtain, and afterwards, do
you like a midnight chop at Evans’s, with Welsh
rarebit to follow, and foaming tankards of brown stout,
and then “something hot”; in fine, do
you like to be out and about and in the midst of gaiety
at hours of the night when your uncles and aunts and
all quiet country people are abed and fast asleep?
That is what Thackeray meant by his question, and
I suppose that our modern, serious lovers of the drama
would regard the man who was fond of the play in this
sense as an utter reprobate, a stumbling-block and
a stone of offence. But it was in that sense
that I pored devoutly over everything relating to the
theatre that I found in my newspapers, as I delayed
in my walks home from Pontypool Road, not being able
to refrain any longer.
Well, the day dawned at last for dreams
to come true-or as true as they ever come.
My father and I set out one fine Monday morning for
Paddington, starting, I think, at about eleven o’clock
from Newport, and getting to London by five in the
afternoon. This was then the best train in the
day; for the Severn Tunnel was not yet made, and we
went all the way round by Gloucester. It was
a six hours’ journey, and now one can get from
London to Newport in two hours and a half. At
Westbourne Park we changed and got into the Underground
system, and so came to the Temple Station on the Embankment.
Thence it was a short walk to the private hotel in
Surrey Street where my father had always stayed on
his infrequent visits to town. I have forgotten
the name of the hotel;-Bradshaw’s
office is built on the site of it-it was
Williams’s, or Smith’s, or Evans’s,
or some such title, and as I believe was then the
way, it was understood to be more or less the preserve
of people from the west. I suppose there were
other little hotels for parsons and small squires
of the east and north and south; for all the streets
that go down from the Strand to the river were then
occupied by these private hotels and by lodging-houses.
Craven Street, by Charing Cross, is the only one of
these streets that has at all preserved the old manner,
which, let me say, was a dingy and dim but on the whole
a comfortable manner. Our hotel was just opposite
the pit door of the old Strand Theatre, and in a former
visit my father and mother, sitting at their window,
had had the gratification of seeing Mrs. Swanborough
sitting at her window over the way knitting busily.
Now all our ladies, however smart, have become knitters,
but if I had been writing these reminiscences a few
years ago I should have asked: “Can you
imagine a London manageress of these days sitting
and knitting in her room at the theatre?”
We went out for a short stroll before
eating, and for the first time I saw the Strand, and
it instantly went to my head and to my heart, and I
have never loved another street in quite the same way.
My Strand is gone for ever; some of it is a wild rock-garden
of purple flowers, some of it is imposing new buildings;
but one way or another, the spirit is wholly departed.
But on that June night in 1880 I walked up Surrey Street
and stood on the Strand pavement and looked before
me and to right and to left and gasped. No man
has ever seen London; but at that moment I was very
near to the vision-the theoria-of
London.
After the astounding glimpse at the
Strand we went back to the private hotel in Surrey
Street and had something to eat. I am not sure,
but I think the meal consisted of tea and ham and
eggs, the latter beautifully poached. I know
that my mind holds a recollection of this simple dish
very admirably done in connection with Smith’s,
or whatever the place was called; and I believe it
was eaten in the evening of our arrival. And
I may say in passing that the hotel had a pleasant,
well-worn, homely look about it; very plain, but extremely
comfortable. I think that my bedroom carpet was
threadbare and that the bed was a feather bed; at
all events one slept sublimely there under the roof,
under the London stars.
Then for the Strand again, now sunset
flushed, beginning to twinkle with multitudinous lamps-I
had hardly seen a lamp-lit street before-and
so to the Opera Comique, where they were playing “The
Pirates of Penzance.” The Opera Comique
was somewhere in Wych Street, which has gone the way
of the streets of Babylon and Troy; purple blossoms
and big hotels and other theatres that I know not
grow now in the place where it once stood. We
went to the upper boxes of the Opera Comique and enjoyed
ourselves very well. I remember my father being
especially pleased with the Pirate King’s defence
of his profession: “Compared with respectability
it’s almost honest,” or words to that effect.
But, oddly enough, I was a little disappointed.
There was not the sense of gaiety that I had expected.
For one thing the music reminded me of the classic
glees and madrigals which I had heard discoursed by
the Philharmonic Society at Hereford, where I was
at school, and I did not want to be reminded of Hereford.
And the female chorus hardly looked as thoughtless
as I could have wished; it seemed to me that they might
very well have come fresh from the rectory like myself.
Of course, it was all very well to be ladylike, and
so forth; but what I asked of the stage was careless
devilry, the suggestion, at all events, of naughtiness.
In fact, my attitude was perilously near to that of
the Arkansas audiences as analysed by the Duke in
“Huckleberry Finn”: “What they
wanted was low comedy-and maybe something ruther worse than low comedy. But I
was not really quite so bad as the Arkansaw lunkheads. We went on another
night to Les Cloches de Corneville, a most harmless production, I am sure; and
that was what I wanted. I was enchanted from the rising of the curtain; there
was the sunlit scene in Normandy, charming, smiling, and a whole row of pretty
girls, evidently as thoughtless as the lightest heart could wish, dancing down
to the footlights and singing:-
Just
look at that,
Just
look at this,
Don’t you think we’re
not amiss?
A
glance give here,
A
glance give there,
Tell us if you think we’re
dear.
And-not one of these girls
looked as if she could have come from any conceivable
rectory. Decidedly, “Les Cloches
de Corneville” was the comic opera for
my money. What a pleasing thrill the scene afforded
when the entire village, for some reason that I cannot
well remember, dressed up as Crusaders and Crusaderesses,
and came suddenly into the room of Gaspard, the miser,
and the big bell began to toll and the gold was poured
out in a torrent on the ground. “When the
heir returneth, then shall ring the bell, so the legend
runneth, so the old men tell”; in some such
words was this grand peripeteia announced in the text.
So the heir no doubt returned and married the extra
pretty girl whose name I have forgotten-she
was not Serpolette, I know, for Serpolette was comic,
delightfully, impudently comic, but still comic, and
so no mate for the hero. Serpolette, I think,
having regard to the Unities, ought to have married
the thin but amusing assistant of the Bailie; but I
do not know whether this were so. But I am sure
everybody was happy ever after, and of “Les
Cloches” and other comic operas like it
I say, in the words of Coleridge’s friend:
“Them’s the jockeys for me!”
I have never been able to make up
my mind as to the respective merits of “Les
Cloches de Corneville” and “Madame
Favart,” which was running at the Strand.
“Les Cloches” had the more coherent
plot of the two, and the great scene of the miser
and the crusaders was more effective in its stagey
way than anything in “Madame Favart,” but,
then, Florence St. John was Madame Favart, and to
old playgoers I need say no more. And Marius,
a delightful French comedian, was in the cast; and
there were those songs dear to memory: “Ave,
my mother,” “The Artless Thing,”
“To Age’s Dull December,” and
Pair of lovers meet,
Stolen vows are sweet,
Sighs, etcetera.
Love is all in all,
On a garden wall,
Never heed papa.
This was sung by Marius, who had no
voice in particular, but an infinite Gallic relish
and unction and finish in everything that he did.
The fourth piece that we went to in this wonderful
week was “The Daughter of the Drum Major,”
at the Alhambra, then a theatre, with an extremely
roomy, comfortable pit. This last piece made but
little impression on me. From my recollection,
it seems to have been more in the modern mode, that
is, a mere excuse for showing off a “beauty chorus”
without the little touch of thin, theatrical but pleasant
romance that delighted me in the two other plays.
But the poverty of the play was atoned for by the
happy circumstance that before going to it we dined
at the Cavour. And the Cavour in 1880 was exactly
like the Cavour in 1915, save in this one matter,
that on the earlier date there was included in the
price of the dinner a bottle of violet wine.
Looking back through the years and
comparing the London of the early ’eighties
with the London of to-day, one circumstance emerges
very clearly in my mind: that is, that the early
London had an infinitely “smarter,” wealthier
air than the later. I say “air” advisedly,
to make it clear that I knew nothing of the real interior
life of the place, or of the resources of its rich
inhabitants. I judged of London purely by its
exterior aspects, as one may judge of a passing stranger
in the street, and decide that he goes to an expensive
tailor, without knowing anything of the condition
of his banking account. So, I say that the outward
show and linéaments of the London of 1880 were
much more refulgent and splendid than those of the
last few years. I was a good deal surprised when
the truth of this first dawned on me some three or
four years ago. For I believe that as a matter
of fact the new London is a much wealthier, more luxurious,
more extravagant place than the old. The rich
people of to-day spend hundreds instead of tens, thousands
for the hundreds of their fathers; the “pace”
of the splendid has increased enormously in the last
thirty-five years; and all the facilities for expending
very large sums of money have also increased to a huge
extent. So well was I convinced of all this when
I fell to comparing the London of my boyhood with
the London of my middle age that at first I thought
that there must be a fallacy somewhere, and I was very
willing to believe that those early impressions of
mine were illusions, natural enough in a lad who had
never seen any more splendid streets than those which
the Newport and Cardiff of those days had to show,
than the venerable, peaceful, ancient ways of Hereford,
whose stillness was only broken by the deep, sweet
chiming of the cathedral bells. But when, interested,
I went into the facts of the question, I found that
I had not been mistaken in my first view-i.e.,
that London was a smarter-looking place thirty years
ago than at the present day, and this for several
reasons.
To begin with, there is the trifling
matter of men’s dress. I do not know whether
we have yet realised the fact that the frock coat is
rapidly becoming “costume,” verging, that
is, towards the status of levee dress. Already,
I believe, it is only worn on occasions of semi-state,
at functions where the King is expected, at smart weddings,
and so forth. Before long it will probably attain
the singular twofold state of “evening dress,”
which is worn all day long by waiters and by what
are conveniently called gentlemen after seven o’clock
in the evening. So very likely the frock coat
will soon be seen on the backs of the maitre d’hotel,
the hotel manager, the shopwalker, the major-domo-if
there be any majores-domo left-as a
kind of uniform or livery, while it will also be the
afternoon wear of dukes at great social functions.
And so with the silk hat; it has not gone so far on
the road of obsolescence as the frock coat, but, unless
I mistake, it has entered on that sad way.
Here, then, is the point of contrast.
Between ’eighty and ’ninety-and
later still-practically every man in London
went about his business and his pleasure with a high
hat on his head. Every man, I say, above the
rank of the mechanic; certainly all the clerkly class;
Mr. Guppy and his friends were still faithful to this
headdress; which, be it remembered, was once universal
all over England, so that even smock-frocked farm
labourers wore it. As for the London of pleasure,
the West End, it would have been quite impossible
to conceive a man of the faintest social pretensions
being seen abroad in anything else. And now,
I go up and down Piccadilly, Bond Street, the Row at
the height of the London season, and see-a
few silk hats and morning coats, it is true-but
the majority of well-dressed men in “lounge”
suits and grey soft hats and black and grey bowlers.
Now let it be clearly understood that
I have no passion for black coats and shiny hats myself,
nor for the dazzling white linen which has largely
given way to soft, unstarched stuffs. But it is
not to be denied that all those habits had a “smart”
appearance, and that a pavement crowded with shiny
black hats, shiny white cuffs and collars, and long
black frock coats made a much more imposing show than
the pavement of to-day, on which the men’s dress
is very much as they please. The modern men look
extremely comfortable and well at their ease; but they
do not scintillate in the old style. A soft grey
hat does not flash back the rays of the sun.
Then, another point and a most important
one: the coming of the motor. I suppose
the kind of motor-impelled vehicle which one is likely
to see in Hyde Park may very well have cost seven
or eight or nine or ten times as much as the horse-drawn
carriages which I remember going round and round so
gay and so glorious. Well, I have watched the
modern procession of motor-cars, and they are about
as impressive as a career of light locomotive engines.
It may indeed in course of time become fashionable
to go up and down the Row in express locomotives capable
of drawing their hundred coaches at a hundred miles
an hour, but the effect would not be smart. Now,
the old équipages were undeniably the last word
of smartness; in themselves they were enough to tell
the stranger that he had come to the very centre of
the earth, of its riches and its splendours.
There were the high-bred, high-spirited, high-stepping
horses, in the first place, groomed to the last extreme
of shiny, satiny perfection, tossing their heads proudly
and champing their bits and doing the most wonderful
things with their legs. The bright sunlight of
those past London summers shone on their glossy coats,
shone in the patent leather of the harness, shone
and glittered on the plated bolts and buckles and
ornaments. And the carriages were of graceful
form, and the servants of those days sometimes wore
gorgeous liveries; and scores of those brilliant équipages
followed on one another in an unending dazzling procession.
That was the old way; now there are some “Snorting
Billies” that choke and snarl and splutter as
they dodge furtively and meanly in and out of the
Park, like mechanical rabbits bolting for their burrows.
While I contrast the London of my
young days and the London of my old-or
present-days, I would like it to be remembered
that I am, so far, only contrasting the two cities
from one point of view, the point of view of smartness.
I have not been saying that 1880 London was more sensible
than 1915 London; but merely that the former struck
an outsider as a more brilliant place than the modern
city. The fact is that I have the most cordial
approval for all social pomps and splendours, so long
as I am not required to take part therein. I hate
wearing frock coats and silk hats and shiny shirts;
but I am very well pleased to sit in the pit, as it
were, and watch those exalted persons who are cast
for the decorative parts going through their brilliant
performances. And, after all, if a man finds
that plate armour is uncomfortable, that is no reason
why he should not delight in seeing other people wearing
it, and wearing it with dignity. And in speaking
of the Hyde Park and Rotten Row of the old days I
mentioned that there were some gorgeous servants’
liveries still left in 1880. And while we are
on that matter, I may say that I have never sympathised
at all with those persons who have found something
mean and ridiculous in a manservant in purple and gold
or in blue and crimson, unless, that is, the point
be taken that only a splendid duty should be dignified
with a splendid vestment, and in that objection I
admit there is some force. Not that I agree for
one moment that there is anything contemptible in
“menial” service; but I am willing to
allow that it may not be altogether seemly for a faithful
fellow, whose business is to hold on behind a carriage
and wait at dinner, to outshine a bishop in pontificals.
But I suspect that the people who sneered at poor
Jeames and his plush were not actuated by this reasonable
motive, but rather by that vile “Liberal”
objection to splendour as splendour. The man
who found “Blazes” ridiculous would probably
find the King in his Coronation robes equally ridiculous.
And so you may go on, up the scale and down the scale;
but the only logical alternative to splendour is Dr.
Johnson’s proposed suit of bull’s hide-all
beyond that is superfluity and vain show, according
to the doctrine of the wretches who in times not long
past sold antique civic ornaments, such as chains
and maces, on the ground that the Mayor of Little
Pedlington did not need such gauds to help him in his
customary task of sentencing “drunks.”
There is one more point in connection
with the Row. Twenty-five years ago the appointed
hour was five o’clock in the afternoon.
Then people sat in the chairs and walked up and down
and looked at the carriages, and I remember a friend
observing to me this singularity, that though the
place was public and open to anybody, still only those
persons who were dressed in the regulation costume-frock
coat and silk hat for men-ever came near
the sacred ground. The people in lounge suits
and bowler hats stood apart, and watched the show
from some distance. Well, the hour of the Row
is now in the morning; but there is a greater change.
There are still “smart” people there; but
there are also people who cannot by any possibility
be described as smart, not even if they be judged
by the very lax standards of these days.
In another matter the London of to-day
is much less impressive in its outward show than the
London of 1880; that is in the aspect of its principal
streets. There are still excellent shops in Bond
Street, Regent Street, and Piccadilly; but there is
no longer in any of them that air of exclusiveness
and expensiveness that I can remember, and this is
particularly true of Regent Street. In 1880 you
felt as soon as you turned up the Quadrant that anything
you might buy therein would certainly be dear; the
very stones and stucco exuded costliness and the essential
attars of luxury. I feel convinced that the cigars
of Regent Street were of a more curious aroma than
cigars bought in any other street, that it was the
very place wherein to purchase a great green flagon
of rare scent as a present for a lady, that if you
happened to want a Monte Cristo emerald this was the
quarter wherein to search for it. That was my
impression, but lest it should be mere fancy, a year
or so ago I asked one of the older shopkeepers whether
the street was quite what he and I remembered it.
He said very emphatically it was not at all what it
had been; and I feel sure that he was right, and that
in a less degree the other principal shopping centres
have declined from their former splendour.
And this for two reasons; first, the
curious modern tendency of the best and most luxurious
shops to scatter and disperse themselves abroad about
the side streets of the West End, leaving gaps which
are filled in most cases by dealers in cheaper wares.
And secondly, the coming of the popular tea-shop has,
in my opinion, done a very great deal to “unsmarten”
the streets of which I am speaking. Let it not
be understood for one moment that I would speak despitefully
of cheap tea-shops; that would indeed be vilely thankless
in one who has often made the principal meal of the
day at an A.B.C.-large coffee, threepence;
milk cake, twopence; butter, a penny-and
has been grateful that for once in a way he has dined.
But, it cannot be pretended that a milk cake is a
costly or a curious dish, or that a plate of cold meat
for sixpence or eightpence is an opimian banquet; and
so, when I pass a popular tea-shop or eating-house,
I feel that my dream of luxury and expense is broken;
and that something of glitter and splendour has passed
away from the West End of London.
I spent the years from the summer
of 1880 to the winter of 1886 in a singular sort of
apprenticeship to life and London and letters and to
most other things. Sometimes I was in London;
then for months at a time I was out of it, back again
in my old haunts of Gwent. I had hot fits of
desire for the town when I was forced to stay in the
country; and then, settled, or apparently settled,
in the heart of London, its immensities and its solitudes
overwhelmed me, the faint, hot breath of its streets
sickened me, so that my heart ached for the thought
of the green wood by the valley of the Soar, and for
the thought of friendly faces.
They say that in old Japan they had
a wonderful and secret art of tempering their sword
blades. Now the steel was placed in the white
heat of the fire, now it was withdrawn and plunged
into the water of an icy torrent; and then again the
trial of the furnace. So heat and cold were alternated,
according to an ancient and hidden tradition, till
at last the craftsman obtained an exquisite and true
and perfect blade, fit for the adorned scabbard of
a great lord of Japan. When I think of those
early years of mine I should be reminded of the process
of the Japanese sword-craftsman-if only
the heart were as tractable as steel. The Kabbalists,
I believe, take the view-a gloomy one-that
the innermost essence of man’s spirit goes out
from the world in much the same state as that in which
it came into the world; and it is certainly true that
some men seem incorrigible; neither fire nor ice will
temper them aright.
During these early years of my London
experience I lived under very varying conditions.
I lived with families, and I lived alone; I lived in
the suburbs and in the centre; I had enough to eat,
and then narrowly escaped starvation. My first
habitat was in the High Street of a southern suburb.
My memory holds a picture of an ancient street of
dignified red-brick houses, a Georgian church, and
a stream of quite inky blackness. The old houses
had old gardens behind them, green enough, but with
a certain grime upon them that made them strange to
eyes unused to this combination of soot and leafage.
But it was quite easy in those days to get from the
suburb to the open country.
Not that I desired any such excursions,
for my notion of an ideal residence was then a lodging
in one of the streets or courts or passages going
down from the Strand to the Thames. This was a
dream that I realised years afterwards, when many
waters (not of the Thames) had passed over my head.
It was well enough, and I used to go out and get my
breakfast at the “chocolate as in Spain”
shop at the west end of the Strand, on the north side.
It was well enough, I say, but it was not absolute
paradise. And, furthermore, and in an interior
parenthesis, let me say that the chocolate at the
old Strand shop was not as in Spain, though very decent
chocolate. The Spanish service of chocolate-I
encountered it when I was in Gascony-consists
in this, first that the chocolate is made extremely
strong and thick, and secondly that with it comes
a goblet of ice-cold well-water, to be drunk after
the chocolate, on the principle, I suppose, of the
Scots who drink water, not with whisky, but after
it.
Well, to return to the more or less-chiefly
less-direct current of my tale, after my
sojourn in the southern suburb came a return to the
country, where I remained eight or nine months.
It was during this exodus or hegira, I think, that
I was excommunicated by old Mr. James, of Lansoar,
because I was loafing at home instead of living on
five shillings a week in London. But my long
sojourn in Gwent was in fact due to a very dismal
discovery having been made of me by certain persons
called examiners. They found me utterly incapable
of the simple rules of arithmetic; and hence I was
debarred from the career which I had been contemplating.
And here I would say that I am almost proud of myself
for my quite extraordinary arithmetical incapacity.
I am not merely dull and slow, but desperate.
I am so wanting in the mere faculty of counting as
to be curious, like those tribes of savages that can
say “One, two, three, four, five ... many.”
There are people who make a living by exhibiting their
arithmetical skill in the music-halls; someone writes
on the blackboard a multiplication sum of fifteen figures
multiplied by fifteen figures, and a second or two
after the last figure is drawn the arithmetical artist
utters the result. Well, I am at the opposite
end of the scale, and I have sometimes wondered whether
“Incompetent Machen” would not be quite
a good turn. It would make anybody laugh to hear
me doing a sum in simple addition. It is like
“Forty-seven and nine, forty-seven and nine,
forty-seven and nine.” I ponder. Then
a brilliant idea strikes me. I pretend the problem
is “forty-seven and ten.” I get the
result, fifty-seven, deduct one and proceed.
Well, I came to London again in the
summer of ’81, thinking of another and quite
a different career, which did not involve, on the face
of it, that little difficulty of arithmetic.
Again I was in a suburb, and again in an old one,
but this time the quarter was in the far west.
I stayed in Turnham Green, then a place of many amenities
standing amongst fields and gardens and riparian lawns,
which, long ago, have been buried beneath piles of
cheap bricks and mortar, for a year and a half, and
then again I altered my plans, or fate rather altered
them for me. I started on a new tack and kept
it for a month, and then somehow slid into a backwater,
in which I was afloat and nothing more than afloat.
Summoning this period into recollection, I find my
position very much like to that of certain ancient
and outworn barges, grass-grown, flower-grown, that
I have come upon suddenly in improbable back alleys
of water, in the midst of a maze of by-streets at Brentford;
but, locally and literally, I was then living in a
small room, a very small room, in Clarendon Road,
Notting Hill Gate.
I have already stated that when I
first came up to London I had no thought of literature
as a career. Indeed, I never have thought of it
as a career, but only as a destiny. Still, my
meaning is that it in no wise dawned upon me as I
travelled up from Newport to London in the early summer
of 1880 that writing of any kind or sort was to be
a great part of my life’s business. And
yet, before I had lived a month in the old red house
by the inky stream, I was trying to write, in the intervals
of a very different task, in an atmosphere which was
utterly remote from literature of any kind. How
was this? Partly, I suppose, because of the very
large proportion of Celtic blood in my veins.
It is quite true that the Celt-the Welsh
Celt, at all events-has directly contributed
very little to great literature. This I have
always maintained, and always shall maintain; and
I think all impartial judges will allow that if Welsh
literature were annihilated at this moment the loss
to the world’s grand roll of masterpieces would
be insignificant. I, speaking from the point
of view of my own peculiar interests, I should be very
sorry to miss my copy of the “Mabinogion,”
and there are certain stanzas of the poem called “Y
Beddau”-“Vain is it to seek
for the grave of Arthur”-which have
a singular and enchanting and wizard music; but in
neither case is there any question of a literary masterpiece.
Yet there is in Celtdom a certain
literary feeling which does not exist in Anglo-Saxondom.
It is diffused, no doubt, and appreciative rather
than creative, and lacking in the sterner, critical
spirit which is so necessary to all creative work;
still it is there, and it is delighted with the rolling
sound of the noble phrase. It perceives the music
of words and the relation of that music to the world.
I was taking a lesson in Welsh pronunciation some
time ago, and uttered the phrase “yn oes oesodd”-from
ages to ages. “That is right,” said
my Welsh friend, “speak it so that it makes
a sound like the wind about the mountains.”
And, with or without the leave of the literary rationalists,
I would say that the spirit of that sentence is very
near to the heart of true literature.
So far then, as a man three-parts
Celt, I was by nature inclined to the work of words,
and there was, moreover, a feeble literary strain in
my own family. There was a second cousin, or
Welsh uncle, I am not certain which, who had composed
a five-act heroic blank verse drama, called “Inez
de Castro,” which was almost, but not quite,
represented by the famous Mrs. Somebody at the Lane
in the early ’fifties. And then, more potent
still, was the heredity of bookishness, the growing
up among books that had accrued from grandfathers
and uncles and cousins, all men who had lived all
their days amongst books, and had sat over country
hearths on mountain sides, reading this leathern Colloquies
of Erasmus, this little Horace in mellow parchment,
with the Sphere of Elzévir.
And then there was the old-fashioned
grammar school education, of which it must be said,
by friends and foes, that it is an education in words.
One spent one’s time, unconsciously, in weighing
the values of words in English and Greek and Latin,
in rendering one tongue into another, in estimating
the exact sense of an English sentence before translating
it into one or another of the old tongues. So
that a boy who could do decent Latin prose must first
have mastered the exact sense and significance of
his English original, and then he must also have made
himself understand to a certain extent, not only the
logic but the polite habit of each language.
I remember when I was a very small boy rendering “Put
to the sword” literally into “Gladio
positi.” “Well,” said my master,
“there is no reason on earth why the Romans shouldn’t
have said ‘gladio positi,’ but as
a matter of fact they did say ’ferro
occisi’-killed with iron.”
And if one thinks of it, he who has mastered that
little lesson has also mastered the larger lesson that
literature is above logic, that there are matters
in it which transcend plain common sense. And
so, the long and the short of it was, that in 1880
I began to try to write.
Now I believe that one of the most
tortuous and difficult questions that engages philosophy
is the theory of cause and effect. I think, though
I am not quite sure, that in one of Mr. Balfour’s
philosophical books this matter is treated, and the
familiar case of a sportsman’s pulling a trigger,
firing a gun, and thereby bringing down a bird, is
made an instance. What is the “cause”
of the bird’s death? Roughly speaking, of
course, the pulling of the trigger; but roughly speaking
is not the same thing as philosophically speaking;
and if anyone be so simple as to conclude that roughly
speaking means truly speaking and that philosophy
is all nonsense, let me remind him that when he enjoys
his after-dinner cigar in his arm-chair he is not
conscious of the fact that he is being whirled through
space, like a top, at the most terrific speed.
So, if I remember rightly, Mr. Balfour
left the philosophical “cause” of the
bird’s death an open question, if not a question
altogether beyond determination of human wit; and
thus it is with the impulse that sends off a harmless
young fellow on the career of letters. One can
talk of the causes that impel a grain of corn to grow
from the ground; sound seed, good soil, good farming;
dry weather, wet weather, each in its season; but
at the last the engendering of the green shoot remains
a mystery. And so it is a mystery that near midsummer
in 1880 I suddenly began to write horrible rubbish
in a little manuscript book with a scarlet cover;
rubbish that had rhymes to it.
But if ultimate causes lie beyond
those flaming walls of the world that put bounds to
all our inquisition, it is not so hard to trace those
causes which are proximate. The bird dies because
the shot hit it in a vital part, the corn sprouts
because it is put into the ground-and I
began to write because I bought a copy of Swinburne’s
“Songs Before Sunrise.”
I forget how I heard of this name,
which once loomed so fiery and strange a portent,
which still, in the estimation of many excellent judges,
stands for a great literary achievement. I know
it was while I was down in the country, because I
can remember one of our clergy, an Eton and Christchurch
man, telling me gossip about the poet, who had in
those early days retired from the world to Putney.
It is to be supposed that I had read something concerning
Swinburne in one of those wonderful London papers
that came over our hills from another world, that might
almost have fallen from the stars they were so wholly
marvellous. But, somehow or other, I was possessed
by an eager curiosity concerning this Swinburne, convinced
in advance-I cannot remember how-that
here I should surely find an unexpected, unsurmised
treasure. And so, one hot, shiny afternoon, I
came up from the old Georgian suburb by the black
stream, crossed Hungerford Bridge, and made my way
into the Strand; into that Strand which is as lost
as Atlantis. And going eastward past many vanished
things, past the rich odours of Messrs. Rimell’s
soap-boiling, I came to St. Mary-lé-Strand, and
the entrance of Holywell Street. At the southern
corner of this street, facing the east end of the church,
there stood Denny’s bookshop, and, gold in my
pocket, I went in with a bold appearance, and said,
“Have you got Swinburne’s ’Songs
Before Sunrise’?” The shopman did not
seem in the least astonished at my question.
He said he had got the book, and produced it, and showed
it me, and the very cover was such as I had never
seen before, provocative, therefore, in a high degree.
And so I bought the book and carried it out of Denny’s
into the sunlight in a great amazement.
For, be it remembered, one did not
go into a provincial bookshop in that easy way and
say, “Have you got this or that?” For the
chances were about a thousand to one that they hadn’t
got it, and never would have it. It is odd, but
I cannot remember exactly the nature of the stock of
the average country bookseller; my impression is of
Bibles, Prayer Books, Church Services, and Pitman’s
Shorthand Manuals. So, if you wanted a book in
the county town, you did not say, “Have you got
so-and-so?” but “Will you get me so-and-so?”
and in four or five days you called and the book was
ready. But I had a notion that in this wonderful
London the bookshop would actually have the book that
you wanted, there actually in presence, and waiting
for you on its shelves. I had a notion, I say,
but again, it seemed almost incredible that there
should be such shops in the world, and so when the
bookseller under St. Mary-lé-Strand said “Yes,”
quite simply, and handed me the “Songs Before
Sunrise” in two or three seconds, I was amazed
and exultant too; the legend of London, though marvellous,
was evidently a true one.
Now I have a friend who is very fond
of preaching the doctrine of what he calls the cataclysm.
He holds that we are all much bettered by an occasional
earthquake, moral, mental or spiritual. He says
that volcanoes which suddenly burst out from under
our feet are the finest tonics in the world, that
violent thunderstorms, cloud-bursts, and tornadoes
clear our mental skies. The treatment is heroic,
but my friend may be right; certainly that volume
of “Songs Before Sunrise” was to me quite
cataclysmic. First there was the literary manner
of the book, which to me was wholly strange and new
and wonderful, and then there was the tremendous boldness
of it all, the denial of everything that I had been
brought up to believe most sure and sacred; the book
was positively strewn with the fragments of shattered
altars and the torn limbs of kings and priests.
How do the lines go? I quote from memory, but they run
something like this:-
Thou hast taken all, Galilaean,
but these thou shalt not take;
The laurel, the doves and
the pæan, the breasts of the nymph in the
brake.
Clearly this was a terrible, a tremendous
fellow, an earth-shaking, heaven-storming poet.
And so between my endeavours to qualify for passing
the preliminary examination of the Royal College of
Surgeons, I began to write; I should think the most
horrible drivel that ever has been written since rhymes
first jingled. I can’t remember, oddly enough,
whether I tried to imitate Swinburne; I know one copy
of verses was “inspired” by a picture
called “Harmony,” which I think was hung
in the Academy of 1880. It depicted a mediaeval
maiden playing the organ, while a mediaeval youth
watched her in a dazed and love-stricken condition.
This is positively the only one of these early horrors
of mine, of which I have any recollection; my memory
is purged of the rest of them, I am glad to say.
I merely mention these things because they illustrate
a very singular point in literary psychology; in universal
psychology, for the matter of that. For I believe
it is a rule that almost every literary career, certainly
every literary career which is to be concerned with
the imaginative side of literature, begins with the
writing of verses. Nay, people who are to live
lives quite remote from literature will often try
to write poetry in their youth; and on the face of
it, this is a great puzzle. For poetry, be it
remembered, is the most “artificial” kind
of literary composition, it is immeasurably the most
difficult, it is by far the most remote from that which
is commonly called life. Why, then, does the
inexperienced beginner, devoid of all technical ability,
invariably essay this most difficult technical task
on his entry into the literary career?
The problem of the boy in the back
room, not far from the dark stream of the Wandle,
writing verses in the red notebook, is really one of
the enigmas of the universe; it is rather a Chinese-box
puzzle; riddle is within riddle.
For if we start at the beginning of
things, or at what seems to us to be the beginning
of things, we are met by the question as to why there
should be any such thing as poetry in the universe.
I need not say how much wider this question is than
it seems; how it must be asked about all the arts,
about fugues and cathedrals and romances and dances.
It is an immense question; immense when one considers
that with nine people out of ten the great criterion
is, “Does it pay?” That is, will it result
in a larger supply of fine champagne, four ale, roast
legs of pork, and mousses royales to the population?
Will this scheme of things enable Sir John to keep
a fifth motor-car, or will it get Bill meat three
times a day? That is, at last, the test by which
we judge all things. It is an old and approved
British test; by it Macaulay condemned the whole of
Greek philosophy, because that philosophy did not lead
up to the invention of the steam engine. Now,
it is quite clear that poetry, speaking generally,
pays neither the producer nor the consumer of it;
it does not lead to motor-cars, beefsteaks, vintage
clarets, or four ale. It is not even moral; not
a single man has ever been induced to drink ginger-beer
instead of beer by reading Keats.
I must pause for a moment; I fear
that it may be thought that I am trying to be funny
or-more injurious accusation!-trying
to be clever. I am not trying to be either; I
am stating the simple facts of the case. Hardly
a month passes by without some indignant person pointing
out in the Press that Engineering and Commercial Chemistry
are infinitely more useful-i.e., lead to
more beefsteaks-than Latin and Greek; and
that when Oxford and Cambridge find out that obvious
truth they may become of some service to the State.
Indeed, it is only a few weeks ago since a gentleman
wrote to a paper showing that military training was
better for a boy-i.e., would make him the
better soldier-than “silly old”
Greek plays. And let me acknowledge that these
contentions are perfectly true; just as it is perfectly
true that fur coats are much warmer than Alcaics.
So, I say, here is the problem: the common, widely
accepted test of the right to existence of everything:
does it pay, does it add to the physical comforts
of life, is quite clearly opposed to the existence
of poetry, and yet poetry exists. Therefore, either
the poets and the lovers of poetry are mad, or else
the common judgment is ... let us say, mistaken.
I need scarcely say that I incline to the latter solution
of the problem, and so qua human being, I am not ashamed
of trying to write poetry by the Wandle, though I
recognise, qua Arthur Machen, that I was, very decidedly,
not born a poet.
For I firmly hold the doctrine that
the natural, the arch-natural expression of man, so
far as he is to be distinguished from pigs and dogs
and goats, is in the arts, and through the arts and
by the arts. It is not by reason, as reason is
commonly understood, that man is distinguished from
the other animals; but by art. I can quite well
conceive the Black Ants sending the message “Hill
27 fell before the Red Ant attack early this afternoon,”
but I cannot conceive either Red or Black Ants writing
odes or building miniature cathedrals. The arts,
then, are man’s difference, that which makes
him to be what he is; and when he speaks through them
he is using the utterance which is proper to him,
as man. For, if we once set aside the “does
it pay” nonsense, which is evidently nonsense
and pestilent nonsense at that, we come clearly and
freely to the truth that man is concerned with beauty,
and with the ecstasy or rapture that proceeds from
the creation of beauty and from the contemplation
of it. And youth, as I think I have pointed out
before, is the time of revelation. It is children
who possess the “kingdom of heaven,” to
them are vouchsafed glimpses of that paradise which
is the true home of man, and so it is that the boy
with literature in his blood naturally makes his first
efforts in the region of poetry, which is the heart
and core of all literature.
The heart and core; for, as in the
individual man, so in the whole history of men literature
begins always with poetry, just as speech began with
song. First, the magic incantation, sung about
strange secret fires in hidden places by wild men,
then the ballad or lyric, then Homer, then Herodotus,
with the odours of the sanctuary of poetry still about
him, though he has come down into the market-place
of prose. And it is not necessary to go farther
in time or space than the Northumberland of a few
years ago to hear phrases common enough, things of
everyday, set to enchanting melodies. I shall
never forget how once in the years of my wandering
I came one wet autumn afternoon to a little town called
Morpeth. It struck me as a dingy place enough,
“un petit trou de province, sale,
noir, boueux,” and my lodging was dingy, and
musty too, in a house kept by an old invalid woman
who moved about in a wheel chair and grumbled if a
window were opened. But when it came to the question
of the stroller’s tea, the servant-maid, who
came, I think, from the wild places of that land,
said consolingly: “You need not trouble
yourselves; you shall have your tea in half an hour.”
No doubt the girl was mortal, but she spoke the tongue
of the immortals; her phrase about our tea was chanted
to an exquisite melody that might have come from the
Gradual-or from fairyland.
The natural man, then, is a singer
and a poet, and so we may say that all artists are
in reality survivals from an earlier time, and so it
is that even in these later days the lad, with something
of the youth and true nature of his race restored
to him for a brief hour, sits in solitary places and
endeavours to exercise his birthright. Alas! he
stutters deplorably in his speech as he delays by the
Wandle, inditing verses; but it is thus that he would
declare that he is a citizen of no mean city; he would
fain say through those sorry rhymes, Civis coelestis
sum.