It begins on the north side of the
City, at Poverty Corner. It begins imperceptibly,
and very likely is no more than what a native knows
is there. It does not look like a foreshore.
It looks like another of the byways of the capital.
There is nothing to distinguish it from the rest
of Fenchurch Street. You will not find it in
the Directory, for its name is only a familiar bearing
used by seamen among themselves. If a wayfarer
came upon it from the west, he might stop to light
a pipe (as well there as anywhere) and pass on, guessing
nothing of what it is and of its memories. And
why should he? London is built of such old shadows;
and while we are here casting our own there is not
much time to turn and question what they fall upon.
Yet if some unreasonable doubt, a suspicion that
he was being watched, made a stranger hesitate at
that corner, he might begin to feel that London there
was as different from Bayswater and Clapham as though
deep water intervened. In a sense deep water
does; and not only the sea, but legends of ships that
have gone, and of the men who knew them, and traditions
of a service older than anything Whitehall knows,
though still as lively as enterprise itself, and as
recent as the ships which moved on today’s high
water.
In a frame outside one of its shops
hangs a photograph of a sailing ship. The portrait
is so large and the beauty of the subject so evident
that it might have been the cause of the stranger stopping
there to fill his pipe. Yet how could he know
that to those groups of men loitering about the name
of that ship is as familiar as Suez or Rio, even though
they have never seen her? They know her as well
as they know their business. They know her house-flag it
is indistinguishable in the picture and
her master, and it is possible the oldest of them
remembers the clippers of that fleet of which she
alone now carries the emblem; for this is not only
another year, but another era. But they do not
look at her portrait. They spit into the road,
or stare across it, and rarely move from where they
stand, except to pace up and down as though keeping
a watch. At one time, perhaps thirty years ago,
it was usual to see gold rings in their ears.
It is said that if you wanted a bunch of men to run
a little river steamer, with a freeboard of six inches,
out to Delagoa Bay, you could engage them all at this
corner, or at the taverns just up the turning.
The suggestion of such a voyage, in such a ship,
would turn us to look on these men in wonder, for
it is the way of all but the wise to expect appearance
to betray admirable qualities. These fellows,
though, are not significant, except that you might
think of some of them that their ease and indifference
were assumed, and that, when trying not to look so,
they were very conscious of the haste and importance
of this great city into which that corner jutted far
enough for them. They have just landed, or they
are about to sail again, and they might be standing
on the shore eyeing the town beyond, in which the
luck of ships is cast by strangers they never see,
but who are inimical to them, and whose ways are inscrutable.
If there are any inland shops which
can hold one longer than the place where that ship’s
portrait hangs, then I do not know them. That
comes from no more, of course, than the usual fault
of an early impression. That fault gives a mould
to the mind, and our latest thoughts, which we try
to make reasonable, betray that accidental shape.
It may be said that I looked into this window while
still soft. The consequence, everybody knows,
would be incurable in a boy who saw sextants for
the first time, compasses, patent logs, sounding-machines,
signalling gear, and the other secrets of navigators.
And not only those things. There was a section
given to books, with classics like Stevens on Stowage,
and Norie’s Navigation, volumes never
seen west of Gracechurch Street. The books were
all for the eyes of sailors, and were sorted by chance.
Knots and Splices, Typee, Know Your
Own Ship, the South Pacific Directory,
and Castaway on the Auckland Islands.
There were many of them, and they were in that fortuitous
and attractive order. The back of every volume
had to be read, though the light was bad. On
one wall between the windows a specimen chart was framed.
Maps are good; but how much better are charts, especially
when you cannot read them except by guessing at their
cryptic lettering! About the coast line the
fathom marks cluster thickly, and venture to sea in
lines which attenuate, or become sparse clusters,
till the chart is blank, being beyond soundings.
At the capes are red dots, with arcs on the seaward
side to show at what distance mariners pick up the
real lights at night. Through such windows,
boys with bills of lading and mates’ receipts
in their pockets, being on errands to shipowners, look
outward, and only seem to look inward. Where
are the confines of London?
Opposite Poverty Corner there is,
or used to be, an archway into a courtyard where in
one old office the walls were hung with half-models
of sailing ships. I remember the name of one,
the Winefred. Deed-boxes stood on shelves,
with the name of a ship on each. There was a
mahogany counter, an encrusted pewter inkstand, desks
made secret with high screens, and a silence that
might have been the reproof to intruders of a repute
remembered in dignity behind the screens by those
who kept waiting so unimportant a visitor as a boy.
On the counter was a stand displaying sailing cards,
announcing, among other events in London River, “the
fine ship Blackadder for immediate dispatch,
having most of her cargo engaged, to Brisbane.”
And in those days, just round the corner in Billiter
Street, one of the East India Company’s warehouses
survived, a sombre relic among the new limestone and
red granite offices, a massive archway in its centre
leading, it could be believed, to an enclosure of
night left by the eighteenth century, and forgotten.
I never saw anybody go into it, or come out.
How could they? It was of another time and place.
The familiar Tower, the Guildhall that we knew nearly
as well, the Cathedral which certainly existed, for
it could often be seen in the distance, and the Abbey
that was little more than something we had heard named,
they were but the scenery close to the buses.
Yet London was more wonderful than anything they
could make it appear. About Fenchurch Street
and Leadenhall Street wagons could be seen going east,
bearing bales and cases, and the packages were port-marked
for Sourabaya, Para, Ilo-Ilo, and Santos names
like those. They had to be seen to be believed.
You could stand there, forced to think that the sun
never did more than make the floor of asphalted streets
glow like polished brass, and that the evening light
was full of glittering motes and smelt of dust,
and that life worked itself out in cupboards made
of glass and mahogany; and suddenly you learned, while
smelling the dust, that Acapulco was more than a portent
in a book and held only by an act of faith. Yet
that astonishing revelation, enough to make any youthful
messenger forget where he himself was bound, through
turning to follow with his eyes that acceptance by
a carrier’s cart of the verity of the fable,
is nowhere mentioned, I have found since, in any guide
to London, though you may learn how Cornhill got its
name.
For though Londoners understand the
Guildhall pigeons have as much right to the place
as the aldermen, they look upon the seabirds by London
Bridge as vagrant strangers. They do not know
where their city ends on the east side. Their
River descends from Oxford in more than one sense.
It has little history worth mentioning below Westminster.
To the poets, the River becomes flat and songless where
at Richmond the sea’s remote influence just
moves it; and there they leave it. The Thames
goes down then to a wide grey vacuity, a featureless
monotony where men but toil, where life becomes silent
in effort, and goes out through fogs to nowhere in
particular. But there is a hill-top at Woolwich
from which, better than from Richmond, our River, the
burden-bearer, the road which joins us to New York
and Sydney, can be seen for what it is, plainly related
to a vaster world, with the ships upon its bright
path moving through the smoke and buildings of the
City. And surely some surmise of what our River
is comes to a few of that multitude who cross London
Bridge every day? They favour the east side
of it, I have noticed, and they cannot always resist
a pause to stare overside to the Pool. Why do
they? Ships are there, it is true, but only
insignificant traders, diminished by sombre cliffs
up which their cargo is hauled piece-meal to vanish
instantly into mid-air caverns; London absorbs all
they have as morsels. Anyhow, it is the business
of ships. The people on the bridge watch another
life below, with its strange cries and mysterious
movements. A leisurely wisp of steam rises from
a steamer’s funnel. She is alive and breathing,
though motionless. The walls enclosing the Pool
are spectral in a winter light, and might be no more
than the almost forgotten memory of a dark past.
Looking at them intently, to give them a name, the
wayfarer on the bridge could imagine they were maintained
there only by the frail effort of his will.
Once they were, but now, in some moods, they are merely
remembered. Only the men busy on the deck of
the ship below are real. Through an arch beneath
the feet a barge shoots out noiselessly on the ebb,
and staring down at its sudden apparition you feel
dizzily that it has the bridge in tow, and that all
you people on it are being drawn unresisting into
that lower world of shades. You release yourself
from this spell with an effort, and look at the faces
of those who are beside you at the parapet. What
are their thoughts? Do they know? Have
they also seen the ghosts? Have they felt stirring
a secret and forgotten desire, old memories, tales
that were told? They move away and go to their
desks, or to their homes in the suburbs. A vessel
that has hauled into the fairway calls for the Tower
Bridge gates to be opened for her. She is going.
We watch the eastern mists take her from us.
For we never are so passive and well-disciplined to
the things which compel us but rebellion comes at times misgiving
that there is a world beyond the one we know, regret
that we never ventured and made no discovery, and
that our time has been saved and not spent. The
gates to the outer world close again.
There, where that ship vanished, is
the highway which brought those unknown folk whose
need created London out of reeds and mere. It
is our oldest road, and now has many bypaths.
Near Poverty Corner is a building which recently
was dismissed with a brief, humorous reference in
a new guide to our City a cobbled forecourt,
tame pigeons, cabs, a brick front topped by a clock-face:
Fenchurch Street Station. Beyond its dingy platforms,
the metal track which contracts into the murk is the
road to China, though that is, perhaps, the last place
you would guess to be at the end of it. The
train runs over a wilderness of tiles, a grey plateau
of bare slate and rock, its expanse cracked and scored
as though by a withering heat. Nothing grows
there; nothing could live there. Smoke still
pours from it, as though it were volcanic, from numberless
vents. The region is without sap. Above
its expanse project superior fumaroles, their drifting
vapours dissolving great areas. When the track
descends slightly, you see cavities in that cliff
which runs parallel with your track. The desert
is actually burrowed, and every hole in the plateau
is a habitation. Something does live there.
That region of burnt and fissured rock is tunneled
and inhabited. The unlikely serrations and ridges
with the smoke moving over them are porous, and a
fluid life ranges beneath unseen. It is the beginning
of Dockland. That the life is in upright beings,
each with independent volition and a soul; that it
is not an amorphous movement, flowing in bulk through
buried pipes, incapable of the idea of height, of
rising, it is difficult to believe. It has not
been believed. If life, you protest, is really
there, has any purpose which is better than that of
extending worm-like through the underground, then
why, at intervals, is there not an upheaval, a geyser-like
burst, a plain hint from a power usually pent, but
liable to go skywards? But that is for the desert
to answer. As by mocking chance the desert itself
almost instantly shows what possibilities are hidden
within it. The train roars unexpectedly over
a viaduct, and below is a deep hollow filled with
light, with a floor of water, and a surprise of ships.
How did that white schooner get into such an enclosure?
Is freedom nearer here than we thought?
The crust of roofs ends abruptly in
a country which is a complexity of gasometers, canals,
railway junctions, between which cabbage fields in
long spokes radiate from the train and revolve.
There is the grotesque suggestion of many ships in
the distance, for through gaps in a nondescript horizon
masts appear in a kaleidoscopic way. The journey
ends, usually in the rain, among iron sheds that are
topped on the far side by the rigging and smoke-stacks
of great liners. There is no doubt about it
now. At the corner of one shed, sheltering from
the weather, is a group of brown men in coloured rags,
first seen in the gloom because of the whites of their
eyes. What we remember of such a day is that
it was half of night, and the wind hummed in the cordage,
and swayed wildly the loose gear aloft. Towering
hulls were ranged down each side of a lagoon that
ended in vacancy. The rigging and funnels of
the fleet were unrelated; those ships were phantom
and monstrous. They seemed on too great a scale
to be within human control. We felt diminished
and a little fearful, as among the looming urgencies
of a dream. The forms were gigantic but vague,
and they were seen in a smother of the elements; and
their sounds, deep and mournful, were like the warnings
of something alien, yet without form, which we knew
was adverse, but could not recall when awake again.
We remember, that day, a few watchers insecure on
an exposed dockhead that projected into a sullen dreariness
of river and mud which could have been the finish
of the land. At the end of a creaking hawser
was a steamer canting as she backed to head downstream now
she was exposed to a great adventure the
tide rapid and noisy on her plates, the reek from
her funnel sinking over the water. And from the
dockhead, in the fuddle of a rain-squall, we were
waving a handkerchief, probably to the wrong man,
till the vessel went out where all was one rain,
river, mud, and sky, and the future.
It is afterwards that so strange an
ending to a brief journey from a City station is seen
to have had more in it than the time-table, hurriedly
scanned, gave away. Or it would be remembered
as strange, if the one who had to make that journey
as much as thought of it again; for perhaps to a stranger
occupied with more important matters it was passed
as being quite relevant to the occasion, ordinary and
rather dismal, the usual boredom of a duty.
Its strangeness depends, very likely, as much on an
idle and squandering mind as on the ships, the River,
and the gasometers. Yet suppose you first saw
the River from Blackwall Stairs, in the days when
the windows of the Artichoke Tavern, an ancient,
weather-boarded house with benches outside, still
looked towards the ships coming in! And how if
then, one evening, you had seen a Blackwall liner
haul out for the Antipodes while her crew sang a chanty!
It might put another light on the River, but a light,
I will admit, which others should not be expected
to see, and if they looked for it now might not discover,
for it is possible that it has vanished, like the
old tavern. It is easy to persuade ourselves
that a matter is made plain by the light in which
we prefer to see it, for it is our light.
One day, I remember, a boy had to
take a sheaf of documents to a vessel loading in the
London Dock. She was sailing that tide.
It was a hot July noon. It is unlucky to send
a boy, who is marked by all the omens for a City prisoner,
to that dock, for it is one of the best of its kind.
He had not been there before. There was an astonishing
vista, once inside the gates, of sherry butts and
port casks. On the flagstones were pools of
wine lees. There was an unforgettable smell.
It was of wine, spices, oakum, wool, and hides.
The sun made it worse, but the boy, I think, preferred
it strong. After wandering along many old quays,
and through the openings of dark sheds that, on so
sunny a day, were stored with cool night and cubes
and planks of gold, he found his ship, the Mulatto
Girl. She was for the Brazils. Now
it is clear that one even wiser in shipping affairs
than a boy would have expected to see a craft that
was haughty and portentous when bound for the Brazils,
a ship that looked equal to making a coast of that
kind. There she was, her flush deck well below
the quay wall. A ladder went down to her, for
she was no more than a schooner of a little over one
hundred tons. If that did not look like the beginning
of one of those voyages reputed to have ended with
the Elizabethans, then I am trying to convey a wrong
impression. On the deck of the Mulatto Girl
was her master, in shirt and trousers and a remarkable
straw hat more like a canopy, bending over to discharge
some weighty words into the hatch. He rose and
looked up at the boy on the quay, showing then a taut
black beard and formidable eyes. With his hands
on his hips, he surveyed for a few seconds, without
speaking, the messenger above. Then he talked
business, and more than legitimate business.
“Do you want to come?” he asked, and smiled.
“Eh?” He stroked his beard. (The Brazils
and all! A ship like that!) “There’s
a berth for you. Come along, my son.”
And observe what we may lose through that habit of
ours of uncritical obedience to duty; see what may
leave us for ever in that fatal pause, caused by the
surprise of the challenge to our narrow experience
and knowledge, the pause in which we allow habit to
overcome adventurous instinct! I never heard
again of the Mulatto Girl. I could not
expect to. Something, though, was gained that
day. It cannot be named. It is of no value.
It is, you may have guessed, that very light which
it has been admitted may since have gone out.
Well, nobody who has ever surprised
that light in Dockland will be persuaded that it is
not there still, and will remain. But what could
strangers see of it? The foreshore to them is
the unending monotony of grey streets, sometimes grim,
often decayed, and always reticent and sullen, that
might never have seen the stars nor heard of good luck;
and the light would be, when closely looked at, merely
a high gas bracket on a dank wall in solitude, its
glass broken, and the flame within it fluttering to
extinction like an imprisoned and crippled moth trying
to evade the squeeze of giant darkness and the wind.
The narrow and forbidding by-path under that glim,
a path intermittent and depending on the weight of
the night which is trying to blot it out altogether,
goes to Wapping Old Stairs. Prince Rupert once
went that way. The ketch Nonsuch, Captain
Zachary Gillam, was then lying just off, about to
make the voyage which established the Hudson’s
Bay Company.
It is a path, like all those stairs
and ways that go down to the River, which began when
human footsteps first outlined London with rough tracks.
It is a path by which the descendants of those primitives
went out of London, when projecting the original enterprise
of their forbears from Wapping to the Guinea Coast
and Manitoba. Why should we believe it is different
today? The sea does not change, and seamen are
what they were if their ships are not those we admired
many years ago in the India Docks. It is impossible
for those who know them to see those moody streets
of Dockland, indeterminate, for they follow the River,
which run from Tooley Street by the Hole-in-the-Wall
to the Deptford docks, and from Tower Hill along Wapping
High Street to Limehouse and the Isle of Dogs, as
strangers would see them. What could they be
to strangers? Mud, taverns, pawnshops, neglected
and obscure churches, and houses that might know nothing
but ill-fortune.
So they are; but those ways hold more
than the visible shades. The warehouses of that
meandering chasm which is Wapping High Street are
like weathered and unequal cliffs. It is hard
to believe sunlight ever falls there. It could
not get down. It is not easy to believe the
River is near. It seldom shows. You think
at times you hear the distant call of a ship.
But what would that be? Something in the mind.
It happened long ago. You, too, are a ghost
left by the vanished past. There is a man above
at a high loophole, the topmost cave of a warehouse
which you can see has been exposed to commerce and
the elements for ages; he pulls in a bale pendulous
from the cable of a derrick. Below him one of
the horses of a van tosses its nose-bag. There
is no other movement. A carman leans against
an iron post, and cuts bread and cheese with a clasp-knife.
It was curious to hear that steamer call, but we
knew what it was. It was from a ship that went
down, we have lately heard, in the War, and her spectre
reminds us, from a voyage which is over, of men we
shall see no more. But the call comes again
just where the Stairs, like a shining wedge of day,
hold the black warehouses asunder, and give us the
light of the River and a release to the outer world.
And there, moving swiftly across the brightness,
goes a steamer outward bound.
That was what we wanted to know.
She confirms it, and her signal, to whomever it was
made, carries farther than she would guess. It
is understood. The past for some of us now is
our only populous and habitable world, invisible to
others, but alive with whispers for us. Yet the
sea still moves daily along the old foreshore, and
ships still come and go, and do not, like us, run
aground on what now is not there.