CLAPHAM COMMON
THE LAMPLIT HOUR
Dusk and
the lights of home
Smile through
the rain:
A thousand smiles for
those that come
Homeward
again.
What though the night
be drear
With gloom
and cold,
So that there be one
voice to hear,
One hand
to hold?
Here, by the winter
fire,
Life is
our own.
Here, out of murk and
mire,
Here is
our throne.
Then let the wild
world throng
To pomp
and power;
And let us fill with
love and song
The lamplit
hour.
A DOMESTIC NIGHT
At six o’clock every evening
London Bridge vomits its stream of tired workers,
hurrying home, most of them living at Clapham Common
or similar places with a different name. Some
of them walk home along those straggling streets which,
after many years, reach the near suburbs; some of
them go by car or ’bus. All are weary.
All are gay. They are Going Home.
I think it was Mr. Mark Sheridan who
was singing, some few years back, that “All
the girls are lover-ly by the seaside!” I do
not know the poet responsible for this sentiment,
but I should like to take him to any of the London
bridges and let him watch the crowd coming home at
six o’clock. He was all wrong, anyway.
The girls are not lovely by the seaside. If there
is one place where the sweetest girl is decidedly
plain and ill-kempt it is at the seaside. His
song should read, “All the girls are lover-ly
up in London!” And they are, whether they be
chorus-girls, typists, shop-girls, Reuter’s messenger-girls,
modistes, or factory girls. Do you know
those delightful London children, the tailors’
collectors, who “fetch it and bring it home”?
Their job is to take out the work from the big tailoring
establishments to the dozens and dozens of home workers,
and to collect it from them at the appointed time.
You may easily recognize them by the large black-lining
bundles which they carry so deftly under either arm.
Mostly they are dear little girls of about fourteen,
in short frocks, and mostly they are pretty.
They have a casual manner, and they smile very winningly.
Often their little feet tramp twelve and fourteen
miles a day delivering and collecting; often they
are sworn at by the foreman for being late; often
they are very unhappy, and hardly ever do they get
more than seven-and-sixpence a week. But they
always smile: a little timidly, you know, because
they are so young and London is so full of perils;
yea, though they work harder than any other sweated
labourer they smile.
And over the bridges they come at
nightfall, if they are not doing overtime, chattering
and smiling, each with a Dorothy-bag, or imitation
leather dispatch-case, each with a paper novelette,
and so to the clear spaces of Clapham Common, now
glittering with the lights of home, and holding in
its midst a precious jewel the sparkled
windows of the Windmill Inn.
At home, tea is ready set for them
and their brothers. Brothers are probably in
warehouses or offices, somewhere in the brutal City;
for every member of the suburban family earns something;
they all contribute their little bit to help “keep
the home going.” Tea is set in the kitchen,
or living-room, and Mother sits there by the fire,
awaiting the return of her brood, and reading, for
the forty-fourth time, East Lynne. Acacia
Grove is a narrow street of small houses, but each
house is pridefully held by its owners, and fierce
competition, in the matter of front gardens, is waged
during spring and summer. Now it is a regiment
of soft lights, each carrying its message of cheer
and promises of tea, armchair, and slippered ease.
The fragrance of the meal is already on the air, and
through the darling twilight comes the muffin-man
and the cheery tinkle of his bell one of
the last of a once great army of itinerant feeders
of London. Gaslight and firelight leap on the
spread table, glinting against cups and saucers and
spoons, and lighting, with sudden spurts, the outer
gloom. A sweet warmth fills the room the
restful homeliness imparted by a careful, but not too
careful, woman. The wallpaper is flaring, but
very clean. The pictures are flaring, but framed
with honest love. The dresser holds, not only
crockery but also items of decoration: some carved
candlesticks, some photographs in gilt frames, an
ornament with a nodding head, kept there because it
always amuses young Emmie’s baby when she calls.
Everywhere pride of home is apparent....
When the lady hears a familiar step,
she lays East Lynne aside, pokes up the fire,
places a plate in the fender, and a kipper over the
griddle, where it sizzles merrily; for it is wasteful
to use the gas grill when you have a fire going.
Then the boys come clumping in, or the girls come
tripping in, and Mother attends them while she listens
to recitals of the days doings in the City. Sometimes
the youngsters are allowed to postpone their tea until
the big ones come home; and then they take a Scramble
Tea on the rug before the fire. You take a Scramble
Tea by turning saucers and plates upside down, and
placing the butter in the sugar-basin, the sugar on
the bread-board, and the bread, so far as possible,
in the sugar-basin, and the milk in the slop-basin.
Taken in this way, your food acquires a new and piquant
flavour, and stimulates a flagging appetite.
Or they lounge against the table, and help themselves
to sly dips in the jam with the handle of a teaspoon,
or make predatory assaults on the sugar-basin.
After tea, the bright boys wash, clean
their boots, and change into their “second-best”
attire, and stroll forth, either to a picture palace
or to the second house of the Balham Hippodrome; perchance,
if the gods be favourable, to an assignation on South
Side Clapham Common; sometimes to saunter, in company
with others, up and down that parade until they “click”
with one of the “birds.” The girls
are out on much the same programme. They, too,
promenade until they “click” with some
one, and are escorted to picture palace or hall or
chocolate shop. Usually, it is a picture palace,
for, in Acacia Grove, mothers are very strict as to
the hours at which their young daughters shall be in.
Half-past ten is the general rule, with an extension
on certain auspicious occasions.
It is a great game, this “clicking”;
with very nice rules. However seasoned the player
may be, there are always, in certain districts, pitfalls
for the unwary. The Clapham manner is sharply
distinct from the Blackheath manner, as the Kilburn
manner is distinct from that of Leyton. On Clapham
Common, the monkeys’ parade is South Side; and
the game is started by strolling from “The Plough”
to Nightingale Lane. As the boys pass the likely
girls they glance, and, if not rebuffed, offer wide
smiles. But they do not stop. At the second
meeting, however, they smile again and touch hands
in passing, or cry over the shoulder some current
witticism, as: “’Snice night, Ethel!”
or “I should shay sho!”
And Ethel and Lucy will swing round,
challengingly, with scraping feet, and cry, “Oooh!”
The boys linger at the corner, looking back, and the
girls, too, look back. Ethel asks Lucy, “Shall
we?” and Lucy says, “Oooh I
d’no,” and by that time the boys have drawn
level with them. They say, “Isn’t
it cold?” or “Awf’ly warm ’sevening!”
And then, “Where you off to in such a hurry?”
“Who me?”
“Yes you. Saucy!”
“Ooh I d’no!”
“Well shall we stroll ’cross
the Common?”
“I don’ mind.”
Then boys and girls move forward together
for the bosky glades of the Common. They have
“clicked.” They have “got off.”
In the light evenings the children
sometimes take Mother for a ’bus ride to Kingston
or Mitcham, or Uncle George may drop in and talk to
them about the garden. While the elders talk
gardens, the kiddies play in the passage at sliding
down the banisters. Having regard to its value
in soothing the nerves and stimulating the liver,
and to the fact that it is an indoor pastime within
the reach of high and low, I never understand why
banister-sliding has not become more popular.
I should imagine that it would be an uproariously
successful innovation at any smart country house,
during the long evenings, and the first hostess who
has the courage to introduce it will undoubtedly reap
her reward....
There are, of course, other domesticities
around Clapham Common on a slightly higher scale;
for there are roads and roads of uniform houses at
rents of L60 and L70 per annum, and here, too, sweetness
and (pardon the word) Englishness spread their lambent
lustre.
Here they do not come home to tea;
they come home to dinner. Dinner is usually the
simple affair that you get at Simpson’s:
a little soup followed by a joint and vegetables,
and a sweet of some sort. Beer is usually drunk,
though they do rise to wine on occasion. Here,
too, they have a real dining-room, very small, but
still ... a dining-room. They keep a maid, trim
and smiling. And after dinner you go into the
drawing-room. The drawing-room is a snug little
concern, decorated in a commonplace way, but usually
a corner where you can be at ease. The pictures
are mostly of the culture of yesterday Watts,
Rossetti, a Whistler or so; perhaps, courageously,
a Monet reproduction. The occasional tables bear
slim volumes of slim verse, and a novel from Mudie’s.
There is one of those ubiquitous fumed-oak bookcases.
They go in a little for statuettes, of a kind.
There is no attempt at heavy lavishness, nor is there
any attempt at breaking away from tradition.
The piano is open. The music on the stand is “Little
Grey Home in the West”; it is smothering Tchaikowsky’s
“Chant sans Paroles.” There are several
volumes of music suspiciously new Chopin’s
Nocturnes, Mozart’s Sonaten, Schubert’s
Songs.
After dinner, the children climb all
over you, and upset your coffee, and burn themselves
on your cigarette. Then Mother asks the rumple-haired
baby, eight years old, to recite to the guest, and
she declines. So Mother goes to the piano, and
insists that she shall sing. To this she consents,
so long as she may turn her back on her audience.
So she stands, her little legs looking so pathetic
in socks, by her mother, and sings, very prettily,
“Sweet and Low” and that delicate thing
of Thomas Dekker’s “Golden Slumbers” with
its lovely seventeenth-century melody, full of the
graceful sad-gaiety of past things, and of a pathos
the more piercing because at first unsuspected; beauty
and sorrow crystallized in a few simple chords.
Then baby goes in care of the maid
to bed, and Mother and Father and Helen, who is twelve
years old, go to the pictures at the Palladium near
Balham Station. There, for sixpence, they have
an entertainment which is quite satisfying to their
modest temperaments and one, withal, which is quite
suitable to Miss Twelve Years Old; for Father and Mother
are Proper People, and would not like to take their
treasure to the sullying atmosphere of even a suburban
music-hall.
So they spend a couple of hours with
the pictures, listening to an orchestra of a piano,
a violin, and a ’cello, which plays even indifferent
music really well. And they roar over the facial
extravagances of Ford Sterling and his friends
Fatty and Mabel; they applaud, and Miss Twelve Years
Old secretly admires the airy adventures of the debonair
Max Linder she thinks he is a dear, only
she daren’t tell Mother and Father so, or they
would be startled. And then there is Mr. C. Chaplin always
there is Mr. C. Chaplin. Personally, I loathe
the cinematograph. It is, I think, the most tedious,
the most banal form of entertainment that was ever
flung at a foolish public. The Punch and Judy
show is sweetness and light by comparison. It
is the mechanical nature of the affair that so depresses
me. It may be clever; I have no doubt it is.
But I would rather see the worst music-hall show that
was ever put up than the best picture-play that was
ever filmed. The darkness, the silence, the buzz
of the machine, and the insignificant processions
of shadows on a sheet are about the last thing I should
ever describe by the word Entertainment. I would
as soon sit for two hours in a Baptist Chapel.
Still, Mr. C. Chaplin has made it endurable.
After the pictures, they go home,
and Miss Twelve goes to bed, while Mother and Father
sit up awhile. Father has a nightcap, perhaps,
and Mother gives him a little music. She doesn’t
pretend to play, she will tell her guests; she just
amuses herself. Often they have a friend or two
in for dinner and a little music, or music and a little
dinner. Or sometimes they visit other friends
in an exchange of hospitalities, or book seats for
a theatre, or for the Coliseum, and perhaps dine in
town at Gatti’s or Maxim’s, and feel very
gay. Mother seizes the opportunity to air her
evening frock, and father dresses, too, and they have
a taxi to town and a taxi home.
Then, one by one, the lights in their
Avenue disappear; the warm windows close their tired
eyes; and in the soft silence of the London night they
ascend, hand in hand, to their comfortable little bedroom;
and it is all very sweet and sacramental....