EVENING
From the Circus to
The Square
There’s
an avenue of light;
Golden lamps are everywhere
From the Circus to The
Square;
And the rose-winged
hours there
Pass like
lovely birds in flight.
From The Circus to The
Square
There’s
an avenue of light.
London yields herself
to men
With the
dying of the day.
Let the twilight come,
and then
London yields herself
to men.
Lords of wealth or slaves
of pen,
We, her
lovers, all will say:
London yields herself
to men
With the
dying of the day.
NOCTURNAL
For the few who have an eye for the
beauty of townscapes, London by night is the loveliest
thing in the world. Only in the London night may
the connoisseur find so many vistas of sudden beauty,
because London was never made: she has “growed.”
Paris affords no townscapes: everything there
is too perfectly arranged; its artificiality is at
once apparent. In London alone he finds those
fantastic groupings, those monstrous masses of light
and shade and substance.
Take London from whatever point you
will and she will satisfy. For the rustic the
fields of corn, the craggy mountain, the blossomy lane,
or the rush of water through the greenwood. But
for your good Cockney the shoals of gloom, the dusky
tracery of chimney-stack and gaswork, the torn waste
of tiles, and the subtle tones of dawn and dark in
lurking court and alley. Was there ever a lovelier
piece of colour than Cannon Street Station at night?
Entering by train, you see it as a huge vault of lilac
shadow, pierced by innumerable pallid arclights.
The roof flings itself against the sky, a mountain
of glass and interlacing girders, and about it play
a hundred indefinite and ever-changing tones.
Each platform seems a lane through a dim forest, where
the trees are of iron and steel and the leaves are
sullen windows. Or where shall you find a sweeter
pastoral than that field of lights that thrills the
midnight sojourner in lower Piccadilly? Or where
a more rapturous river-piece than that to be glimpsed
from Hungerford footbridge as the Embankment lights
and stones surge east and west towards Blackfriars
and Chelsea? Or where a panorama like those that
sweep before you from Highgate Archway or the Islington
Angel?
But your good Cockney finds his joy
not merely in the opulent masses of gloom and glare.
For him London holds infinite delicacies. There
is a short street in Walworth Road East
Street which is as perfect as any nightscape
ever conceived by any artist. At day or dark it
is incomparably subtle. By day it is a lane of
crazy meat and vegetable stalls and tumbling houses,
whose colours chime softly with their background.
By night it is a dainty riot of flame and tousled stone,
the gentle dusk of the near distance deepening imperceptibly
to purple, and finally to haunting chaos. And it
is a beautiful thought there are thousands
and thousands of streets in London where similar ecstasy
awaits the evening wanderer. There is Edgware
Road, with its clamorous by-streets, alluring at all
times, but strangely so at twilight. To dash
down the great road on a motor-’bus is to take
a joy-ride through a fairyland of common things newly
revealed, and to look back from Dollis Hill is to
look back, not on Kilburn or Paddington or Marylebone,
but on the Field of the Cloth of Gold.
Moreover, London wears always new
beauties for the faithful new aspects,
sudden revelations. What was beautiful yesterday
is gone, and a new splendour is presented. Building
operations are begun here, house-breaking is in progress
there, the gaunt scaffolding making its own beauty
against the night sky. Always, throughout the
seasons, her townscapes are there to cheer, to entrance,
to satisfy. At dawn or noon or dusk she stands
superb; but perhaps most superb when the day is done,
and her lights, the amazing whites and yellows and
golds, blossom on every hand in their tangled garden
and her lovers cluster thicker and thicker to worship
at her shrine and spend a night in town.
Nights in town! If you are a
good Cockney that phrase will sting your blood and
set your heart racing back to well, to those
nights in town, gay or sad, glorious or desperate,
but ever sweet to linger upon. There is no night
in all the world so rich in delicate delights as the
London night. You cannot have a bad night in
London unless you are a bad Cockney or
a tourist; for the difference between the London night
and the continental night is just the difference between
making a cult of pleasure and a passion of it.
The Paris night, the Berlin night, the Viennese night how
dreary and clangy and obvious! But the London
night is spontaneous, always expressive of your mood.
Your gaieties, your little escapades are never ready-made
here. You must go out for them and stumble upon
them, wondrously, in dark places, being sure that whatever
you may want London will give you. She asks nothing;
she gives everything. You need bring nothing
but love. Only to very few of us is she the stony-hearted
stepmother. We, who are all her lovers, active
or passive, know that she loves each one of us.
The passive lover loves her as he loves his mother,
not knowing his love, not knowing if she be beautiful,
not caring, but knowing that she is there, has always
been there, to listen, to help, to solace. But
the others who love her consciously, love her as mistress
or wife. For them she is more perfect than perfection,
adorable in every mood, season, or attire. They
love her in velvet, they love her in silk; she is
marvellous in broadcloth, shoddy, or corduroy.
But, like a woman, her deepest beauty she holds for
the soft hours when the brute day is ended and all
mankind sighs for rest and warmth. Then she is
her very self. Beauty she has by day, but it
is the cold, incomplete beauty of a woman before she
has given herself. With the lyric evening she
surrenders all the wealth and wonder of her person
to her lover: beauty in full flower.
As a born Londoner, I cannot remember
a time when London was not part of me and I part of
London. Things that happen to London happen to
me. Changes in London are changes in me, and
changes in my affairs and circumstances have again
and again changed the entire face of London.
Whatever the mood or the occasion, London is behind
it. I can never say that I am happy or downcast.
London and I are happy, London and I are having a
good time, or are lost in the deeps. Always she
has fallen to my mood, caught the temper of the hour;
always is waiting, the fond mother or the gracious
mistress, with stretched hand, to succour and sympathize
in sorrow, to rejoice in good fortune.
And always it is London by lamplight
which I vision when I think of her, for it was the
London of lamplight that first called to me, as a child.
She hardly exists for me in any other mood or dress.
It was London by night that awoke me to a sense of
that terrible spirit which we call Beauty, to be possessed
by which is as unsettling and as sweetly frightful
as to be possessed by Love. London, of course,
is always calling us, if we have ears to hear, sometimes
in a soft, caressing voice, as difficult to hear as
the fairies’ song, sometimes in a deep, impelling
chant. Open your window when you will in the gloating
evening, whether you live in town, in the near suburbs,
or in the far suburbs open your window
and listen. You will hear London singing to you;
and if you are one of her chosen you will have no sleep
that night until you have answered her. There
is nothing for it but to slip out and be abroad in
the grey, furtive streets, or in the streets loud with
lamps and loafers, and jostle the gay men and girls,
or mingle with the chaste silences.
It is the Call not only of London,
but of Beauty, of Life. Beauty calls in many
voices; but to me and to six million others she calls
in the voice of Cockaigne, and it shall go hard with
any man who hears the Call and does not answer.
To every man, young or old, comes, once in his life,
this Call of Beauty. At that moment he awakens
to a realization of better things than himself and
his foolish little life. To that vague abstraction
which we call the average man it comes mostly with
first love or religion, sometimes with last love.
But come it does to each one of us, and it behoves
us all to hearken. So many of us hear, and let
it pass. The gleam pauses in our path for an
instant, but we turn our backs and plod the road of
materialism, and we fade and grow old and die without
ever having lived. Only in the pursuit of beauty
is youth retained; and beauty is no respecter of person,
place, or time. Everywhere it manifests itself.
In the young man of the leisured classes
this sense only awakens late in life. He is educated
to consider only himself, to regard himself as, in
the Broadway phrase, a serious proposition; and some
time must pass before he discovers, with a pained
surprise, that there are other people in the world,
and that his little life matters not at all in the
eternal scheme. Then, one day, something happens.
He falls in love, perhaps; and under the shock of
the blow he discovers that he wants something something
he has not known before, something he cannot name:
God, Beauty, Prayer, call it what you will. He
discovers a thousand subtle essences of life which
his clumsy taste had hitherto passed. He discovers
that there is a life of ideas, that principles and
ideals are something more than mere fooling for dry-minded
people, that thoughts are as important as things.
In a word, he has heard the Call of Beauty. Just
as a man may live in the same house with a girl for
years, and then one day will discover that she is
beautiful, that she is adorable, that he cannot lose
her from his life, so we live surrounded by unregarded
beauty, until we awake. So for seven years I was
surrounded by the glory of London before I knew that
I loved her....
When I was a small child I was as
other children of our set. I played their games
in the street. I talked their language. I
shared their ambitions. I worshipped their gods.
Life was a business of Board School, breakfast, dinner,
tea, struggled for and eaten casually, either at the
table or at the door or other convenient spot.
I should grow up. I should be, I hoped, a City
clerk. I should wear stand-up collars. I
might have a moustache. For Sunday I might have
a frock-coat and silk hat, and, if I were very clever
and got on well, a white waistcoat. I should
have a house six rooms and a garden, and
I might be able to go to West End theatres sometimes,
and sit in the pit instead of the gallery. And
some day I might even ride in a hansom-cab, though
I should have to succeed wonderfully to do that.
I hoped I should succeed wonderfully, because then
the other boys at the Board School would look up to
me.
Thus I lived for ten years. A
primrose by the river’s brim was no more to
me than to Peter Bell, or, since I had never seen a
primrose growing, shall I say that the fried-fish
shop at the corner of the High Street was but a fried-fish
shop, visited once a week rapturously. But after
the awakening, everything was changed. Things
assumed a hitherto hidden significance. Beauty
broke her blossoms everywhere about the grey streets
and the sordid interiors that were my environment.
And my moment was given to me by London.
The call came to me in a dirty street at night.
The street was short and narrow, its ugliness softened
here and there by the liquid lights of shops, the most
beautiful of all standing at the corner. This
was the fried-fish shop. It was a great night,
because I was celebrating my seventh birthday, and
I was proud and everything seemed to be sharing in
my pride. Then, as I strutted, an organ, lost
in strange lands about five streets away, broke into
music. I had heard organs many times, and I loved
them. But I had never heard an organ play “Suwanee
River,” in the dusk of an October night, with
a fried-fish shop ministering to my nose and flinging
clouds of golden glory about me, and myself seven
years old. Momentarily, it struck me silly so
silly that some big boy pointed a derisive finger.
It somehow ... I don’t know.... It....
Well, as the organ choked and gurgled
through the outrageous sentimentality of that song,
I awoke. Something had happened to me. Through
the silver evening a host of little dreams and desires
came tripping down the street, beckoning and bobbing
in rhythm to the old tune; and as the last of the
luscious phrases trickled over the roofs I found myself
half-laughing, half-crying, thrilled and tickled as
never before. It made me want to die for some
one. I think it was for London I wanted to die,
or for the fried-fish shop and the stout lady and
gentleman who kept it. I had never noticed that
street before, except to remark that it wasn’t
half low and common. But now it had suffered a
change. I could no longer sniff at it. I
would as soon have said something disrespectful about
Hymns Ancient and Modern.
I walked home by myself, and everything
answered this wonderful new mood. I knew that
life was rapture, and, as I looked back at the fried-fish
shop, swimming out of the drab murk, it seemed to me
that there could never be anything of such sheer lyrical
loveliness outside heaven. I could have screamed
for joy of it. I said softly to myself that it
was Lovely, Lovely, Lovely; and I danced home, and
I danced to bed, and my heart so danced that it was
many hours before I slept.
From that day London has been my mistress.
I knew this a few days later, when, as a birthday
treat, I was taken to see the illuminations in our
district we were living near the Langham
Hotel then for the marriage of some princess
or the birth of some royal baby. Whenever I am
away from London never more than ten days
at a time and think of her, she comes to
me as I saw her then from a height of three-foot-five:
huge black streets rent with loud traffic and ablaze
with light from roof to pavement; shop-fronts full
of magical things, drowned in the lemon light which
served the town at that time; and crowds of wonderful
people whom I had never met before and longed deeply
to meet again. I wondered where they were all
going, what they would do next, what they would have
for supper, and why they didn’t seem superlatively
joyful at their good fortune in being able to ride
at will in cabs and omnibuses and take their meals
at restaurants. There were jolly fellows, graceful
little girls, all better clad than I, enjoying the
sights, and at last, like me, disappearing down side-streets
to go to mysterious, distant homes.
HOMES. Yes, I think that phrase
sums up my London: the City of Homes. To
lie down at night to sleep among six million homes,
to know that all about you, in high garret or sumptuous
bedchamber, six million people are sleeping, or suffering,
or loving, is to me the most impressive event of my
daily life.
Have you ever, when walking home very
late at night, looked down the grey suburban streets,
with their hundred monotonous-faced houses, and thought
that there sleep men, women, and children, free for
a few hours from lust and hate and fear, all of them
romantic, all of them striving, in their separate
ways, to be happy, all of them passionate for their
little span of life; and then thought that that street
is but one of thousands and thousands which radiate
to every point, and that all the night air of one
city is holding the passions of those millions of
creatures? I suppose I have a trite mind, but
there is, to me, something stupendous in that thought,
something that makes one despair of ever saying anything
illuminative about London.
Often, when I have been returning
to London from the country, I have been moved almost
to tears, as the train seemed to fly through clouds
and clouds of homes and through torrents of windows.
Along the miserable countryside it roars, and comes
not too soon to the far suburbs and the first homes.
Slowly, softly, the grey incertitude begins to flower
with their lights, each window a little silent prayer.
Nearer and nearer to town you race, and the warm windows
multiply, they draw closer together, seeming to creep
into one another’s arms for snugness; and, as
you roll into the misty sparkle of Euston or Paddington,
you experience an ineffable sense of comfort and security
among those multitudinous homes. It is, I think,
the essential homeliness of London that draws the
Cockney’s heart to her when five thousand miles
away, under blazing suns or hurricanes of hail; for
your Cockney, travel and wander as he will, is at
heart a purely domestic animal, and dreams ever of
the lighted windows of London.
Those windows! I wish some one
with the right mind would write an essay for me on
this theme. Why should a lighted window call with
so subtle a message? They all have their messages sometimes
sweet, sometimes sinister, sometimes terrible, sometimes
pathetic, always irresistible. They haunt me.
Indeed, when a lighted window claims me, I have sometimes
hung about outside, impelled almost to knock at the
door, and find out what is happening behind that yellow
oblong of mystery.
Some one published a few years ago
a book entitled “The Soul of London,”
but I cannot think that any one has ever read the soul
of London. London is not one place, but many
places; she has not one soul, but many souls.
The people of Brondesbury are of markedly different
character and clime from those of Hammersmith.
They of Balham know naught of those of Walthamstow,
and Bayswater is oblivious to Barking. The smell,
the sound, and the dress of Finsbury Park are as different
from the smell, the sound, and the dress of Wandsworth
Common as though one were England and the other Nicaragua.
London is all things to all men. Day by day she
changes, not only in external beauty, but in temperament.
As each season recurs, so one feels
that London can never be more beautiful, never better
express her inmost spirit. I write these lines
in September, when we have mornings of pearly mist,
all the city a Whistler pastel, the air bland but
stung with sharp points, and the squares dressed in
many-tinted garments; and I feel that this is the
month of months for the Londoner. Yet in April,
when every parish, from Bloomsbury to Ilford, and
from Haggerston to Cricklewood, is a dream of lilac
and may, and when laburnum and jasmine are showering
their petals over Shoreditch and Bermondsey Wall,
when even Cherry Gardens Pier has lost its heart in
a tangle of apple-blossom, and when the statue of
James II is wreathed about with stars and boughs of
hawthorn as fair as a young girl’s arms, when
Kensington Gardens, Brockwell Park, and the Tunnel
Gardens of Blackwell are ablaze with colour and song,
and when life riots in the sap of the trees as in
the blood of the children who throng their walks,
then, I say, London is herself. But I know that
when November brings the profound fogs and glamorous
lights, and I walk perilously in the safest streets,
knowing by sound that I am accompanied, but seeing
no one, scarce knowing whether I am in Oxford Street
or the Barking Road, or in Stamboul, then I shall feel:
“This is the real old London.” The
pallid pomp of the white lilac seems to be London
in essence. The rich-scented winter fog seems
to be London in essence. The hot, reeking dusk
of July seems to be London in essence.
London, I repeat, is all things to
all men. Whatsoever you may find in the uttermost
corners of the earth, that you shall find in London.
It is the city of the world. You may stand in
Piccadilly Circus at midnight and fingerpost yourself
to the country of your dreams. A penny or twopenny
omnibus will land you in the heart of France, Switzerland,
Italy, Germany, Russia, Palestine, China, the Malay
Peninsula, Norway, Sweden, Holland, and Hooligania;
to all of which places I propose to take you, for
food and drink, laughter and chatter, in the pages
that follow. I shall show you London by night:
not the popular melodramatic divisions of London rich
and London poor, but many Londons that you never
dreamed of and may curious nights.
London by night. Somehow, the
pen stops there. Having written that, I feel
that the book is done. I realize my impotence.
My pen boggles at the task of adding another word
or another hundred thousand words which shall light
up those thunderous syllables. For to write about
London Nights is to write a book about Everything.
Philosophy, humanism, religion, love, and death, and
delight all these things must crowd upon
one’s pages. And once I am started, they
will crowd tiresomely, chaotically, tumbling
out in that white heat of enthusiasm which, as a famous
divine has said, makes such damned hard reading.
For the whole of my life, with brief
breaks, has been spent in London, sometimes working
by day and playing by night, sometimes idling by day
and toiling through long midnights, either in streets,
clubs, bars, and strange houses, or in the heat and
fume of Fleet Street offices. But what nights
they were! What things have we seen done not
at The Mermaid but in every tiny street
and alley of nocturnal London!
There were nights of delirium when
the pulses hammered hot in rhythm to the old song
of Carnival, when one seemed to have reached the very
apex of living, to have grasped in one evening the
message of this revolving world. There were nights,
festive with hoof and harness bell. There were
cheery nights of homeward walks from the City office
at six o’clock, under those sudden Octobral
dusks, when, almost at a wink, London is transformed
into one long lake of light. There were nights
of elusive fog and bashful lamp when one made casual
acquaintance on the way home with some darling little
work-girl, Ethel, or Katie, or Mabel, brown-haired
or golden, and walked with her and perhaps were allowed
to kiss her Good-night at this or that crossing.
What romantic charm those little London
work-girls have, with their short, tossing frocks
and tumbling hair! There are no other work-girls
in the world to compare with them for sheer witchery
of face and character. The New York work-girl
is a holy terror. The Parisian grisette has a
trim figure and a doughy face. The Berlin work-girl
knows more about viciousness, and looks more like
a suet dumpling than any one else. But, though
her figure may not be perfect, the London work-girl
takes the palm by winsomeness and grace. At seven
o’clock every evening you may meet her in thousands
in Oxford Street, Villiers Street, Tottenham Court
Road, or London Bridge, where the pavements lisp in
reply to the chatter of her little light feet.
The factory girl of twenty years ago has, I am glad
to say, entirely disappeared. She was not a success.
She screwed her hair into sausages and rolled them
around her ears. She wore a straw hat tilted
at an absurd angle over her nose. She snarled.
Her skin was coarse, her hands brutal, and she took
no care with herself. But the younger generation
came along, the flapper and behold, a change!
The factory girl or work-girl of fourteen or fifteen
would surprise the ladies of the old school. She
is neat. She knows enough about things to take
care of herself, without being coarsened by the knowledge.
And she has a zest for life and a respect for her dear
little person which give her undisputed title to all
that I have claimed for her. Long may she reign
as one of London’s beauties!
Then there were other nights of maddening
pace, when music and wine, voice and laughter harnessed
themselves to the chariot of youth and dashed us hither
and thither. There were nights of melancholy,
of anguish even, nights of failure and solitariness,
when the last word seemed to be spoken, and the leaves
and the lamps and all the little dear things seemed
emptied of their glory. There were the nights
of labour: dull nights of stress and struggle,
under the hard white lights, the crashing of the presses,
and the infuriating buzz of the tape machine.
There were nights of....
It is these nights that I pretend
to show you in this book, in a little series of cinematographic
pictures. If you will come with me, we will slip
through the foreign quarters. We will have a bloodthirsty
night in the athletic saloons of Bethnal Green.
We will have a bitter night in the dock-side saloons.
We will have a sickening night in sinister places
of no name and no locality, where the proper people
do not venture. We will have a glittering night
in the Hoxton bars. We will have, too, a night
among the sweet lights of the Cockney home, and among
pleasant working-class interiors. And we will
But let us get started.