OLD COMPTON STREET
OLD COMPTON STREET
Through London rain
her people flow,
And Pleasure trafficks
to and fro.
A gemmy
splendour fills the town,
And robes
her in a spangled gown
Through which no sorry
wound may show.
But with the dusk
my fancies go
To that grey street
I used to know,
Where Love
once brought his heavy crown
Through
London rain!
And ever, when the
day is low,
And stealthy clouds
the night forethrow,
I quest
these ways of dear renown,
And pray,
while Hope in tears I drown,
That once again her
face may glow,
Through
London rain!
A FRENCH NIGHT
Step aside from the jostle and clamour
of Oxford Street into Soho Square, and you are back
in the eighteenth century and as lonely as a good
man in Chicago. Cross the Square, cut through
Greek Street or Dean Street, and you are in Paris,
amid the clang, the gesture, and the alert nonchalance
of metropolitan France.
Soho magic syllables!
For when the respectable Londoner wants to feel devilish
he goes to Soho, where every street is a song.
He walks through Old Compton Street, and, instinctively,
he swaggers; he is abroad; he is a dog. He comes
up from Surbiton or Norwood or Golder’s Green,
and he dines cheaply at one of the hundred little
restaurants, and returns home with the air and the
sensation of one who has travelled, and has peeped
into places that are not ... Quite ... you know.
Soho exists only to feed the drab
suburban population of London on the spree. That
artificial atmosphere of Montmartre, those little touches
of a false Bohemia are all cunningly spread from the
brains of the restaurateurs as a net to catch the
young bank clerk and the young Fabian girl. Indeed,
one establishment has overplayed the game to the extent
of renaming itself “The Bohemia.”
The result is that one dare not go there for fear
of dining amid the minor clergy and the Fabians and
the girl-typists. It is a little pitiable to make
a tour of the cafes and watch the Londoner trying
to be Bohemian. There has been, of course, for
the last few years, a growing disregard, among all
classes, for the heavier conventionalities; but this
determined Bohemianism is a mistake. The Englishman
can no more be trifling and light-hearted in the Gallic
manner than a Polar bear can dance the maxixe brésilienne
in the jungle. If you have ever visited those
melancholy places, the night clubs and cabarets, which
had a boom a year or two ago, you will appreciate
the immense effort that devilry demands from him.
Those places were the last word in dullness.
I have been at Hampstead tea-parties which gave you
a little more of the joy of living. I have watched
the nuts and the girls, and what have I seen?
Boredom. Heavy eyes, nodding heads, a worn-out
face, saying with determination, “I WILL be
gay!” Perhaps you have seen the pictures of those
luxuriously upholstered and appointed establishments:
music, gaiety, sparkle, fine dresses, costume songs,
tangos, smart conversation and faces, and all the
rest of it. But the real thing.... Imagine
a lot of dishevelled girls pouring into a stuffy room
after the theatre, looking already fatigued, but bracing
themselves to dance and eat and drink and talk until as
I have seen them they fall asleep over the
tables, and hate the boy who brought them there.
Practically the sole purpose of the
place was to fill some one’s pockets, for, as
the patrons were playing at being frightful dogs, the
management knew that they could do as they liked with
the tariff. The boys wouldn’t go to night-clubs
if they were not spendthrifts. Result: whisky-and-soda,
seven-and-sixpence; cup of coffee, half a crown.
And nobody ever had the pluck to ask for change out
of a sovereign.
Now, I love my Cockneys, heart and
soul. And, just because I love them so much,
I do wish to goodness they wouldn’t be Bohemian;
I do wish to goodness they would keep out of Soho
cafes. They only come in quest of a Bohemianism
which isn’t there. They can get much better
food at home, or they can afford to get a really good
meal at an English hotel. I wish they would leave
Soho alone for the people like myself who feed there
because it is cheap, and because the waiters will give
us credit.
“Garcong,” cried the diner
whose food was underdone, “these sausages ne
sont pas fait!”
If the Cockney goes on like this,
he will spoil Soho, and he will lose his own delightful
individuality and idiosyncrasy.
But, apart from the invasion of Soho
by the girl-clerk and the book-keeper, one cannot
but love it. I love it because, in my early days
of scant feeding, it was the one spot in London where
I could gorge to repletion for a shilling. There
was a little place in Wardour Street, the Franco-Suisse it
is still there whose shilling table d’hote
was a marvel: And I always had my bob’s
worth, I can assure you; for those were the days when
one went hungry all day in order to buy concert tickets.
Indeed, there were occasions when the breadbasket was
removed from my table, so savage was the raid I made
upon it.
There, one night a week, we feasted
gloriously. We revelled. We read the Gaulois
and Gil Blas and papers of a friskier tone.
There still exists a Servian cafe where all manner
of inflammatory organs of Nihilism may be read, and
where heavy-bearded men Anarchists, you
hope, but piano-builders, you fear would
sit for three hours over their dinner Talking, Talking,
TALKING. Then for another hour they would play
backgammon, and at last roll out, blasphemously, to
the darkened street, and so Home to those mysterious
lodgings about Broad Street and Pulteney Street.
How the kitchens manage to do those
shilling table d’hotes is a mystery which I
have never solved, though I have visited “below”
on one or two occasions and talked with the chefs.
There are about a dozen cafes now which, for the Homeric
shilling, give you four courses, bread ad lib,
and coffee to follow. And it is good; it is a
refection for the gods certain selected
gods.
You stroll into the little gaslit
room (enamelled in white and decorated with tables
set in the simplest fashion, yet clean and sufficient)
as though you are dropping in at the Savoy or Dieudonne’s.
It is rhomboidal in shape, with many angles, as though
perspective had suddenly gone mad. Each table
is set with a spoon, a knife, a fork, a serviette,
a basket of French bread, and a jar of French mustard.
If you are in spendthrift mood, you may send the boy
for a bottle of vin ordinaire, which costs
tenpence; on more sober occasions you send him for
beer.
There is no menu on the table; the
waiter or, more usually, in these smaller places,
the waitress explains things to you as you go along.
Each course carries two dishes, au choix.
There are no hors d’oeuvres; you dash
gaily into the soup. The tureen is brought to
the table, and you have as many goes as you please.
Hot water, flavoured with potato and garnished with
a yard of bread, makes an excellent lining for a hollow
stomach. This is followed by omelette or fish.
Of the two evils you choose the less, and cry “Omelette!”
When the omelette is thrown in front of you it at
once makes its presence felt. It recalls Bill
Nye’s beautiful story about an introspective
egg laid by a morbid hen. However, if you smother
the omelette in salt, red pepper, and mustard, you
will be able to deal with it. I fear I cannot
say as much for the fish. Then follows the inevitable
chicken and salad, or perhaps Vienna steak, or vol-au-vent.
The next item is Camembert or fruit, and coffee concludes
the display.
Dining in these places is not a matter
of subdued murmurs, of conversation in dulcet tones,
or soft strains from the band. Rather you seem
to dine in a menagerie. It is a bombardment more
than a meal. The air buckles and cracks with
noise. The first outbreak of hostilities comes
from the counter at the entry of the first guest.
The moment he is seated the waitress screams, “Un
potage un!” The large Monsieur, the
proprietor, at the counter, bellows down the tube,
“Un POTAGE Un!” Away in subterranean
regions an ear catches it, and a distant voice chants
“Potage!” And then from the far
reaches of the kitchen you hear a smothered tenor,
as coming from the throat of one drowned in the soup-kettle,
“P o t a g e!” As the customers crowd in
the din increases. Everywhere there is noise;
as a result the customers must shout their conversation.
As the volume of conversation increases the counter,
finding itself hard-pressed, brings up its heavy artillery.
“Vol-au-vent!”
sings the waitress. “Vol-au-vent!”
chants the counter in a bass as heavy and with as
wide a range as Chaliapine’s. “VOL-AU-VENT!”
roars the kitchen with the despair of tears in the
voice; and “V o l-a u-v e n t!” wails
the lost soul beyond the Styx. By half-past seven
it is no longer a restaurant; it is no longer a dinner
that is being served. It is a grand opera that
is in progress. The vocalists, “finding”
themselves towards the end of the first act, warm up
to the second, and each develops an individuality.
I have often let my Vienna steak get cold while listening
and trying to distinguish between the kitchen lift-man
and the cook. Lift-man is usually a light and
agreeable baritone, while the cook has mostly a falsetto,
with a really exciting register. This grand opera
idea affects, in turn, the waitresses. To the
first-comers they are casual and chatty; but towards
seven o’clock there is a subtle change.
They become tragic. They are as the children of
destiny. There is that Italianate sob in the voice
as they demand Poulet roti au salade! as who
should cry, “Ah, fors e lui!”
or “In questa tomba....”
They do not serve you. They assault you with soup
or omelette. They make a grand pass above your
head, and fling knife and fork before you. They
collide with themselves and each other, and there
are recriminations and reprisals. They quarrel,
apparently, to the death, while M’sieu and Madame
look on, passive spectators of the eternal drama.
The air boils. The blood of the diners begins
to boil, too, for they wave napkins and sticks of
bread, and they bellow and scream defiance at one
another. They draw the attention of the waitress
to the fact that there is no salt on the table; what
they seem to be telling her is that the destinies
of France are in the balance, the enemy is at the
gates, and that she must deliver herself as hostage
or suffer dreadful deaths. Everything, in fact,
boils, except the soup and the coffee; and at last,
glad to escape, you toss your shilling on the table
and tumble out, followed by a yearning cry of “Une
salade une!”
Even then your entertainment has not
ceased with the passing of the shilling. For
there are now numerous coffee-bars in Old Compton Street
where for a penny you may lounge at the counter and
get an excellent cup of black coffee, and listen to
the electric piano, splurging its cheap gaiety on
the night, or to the newsmen yelling “Journaux
de Paris!” or “Dernière Heure!”
There are “The Chat Noir,” “The Cafe
Leon,” and “The Cafe Bar Conte”;
also there is “The Suisse,” where you may
get “rekerky” liqueurs at threepence
a time, and there is a Japanese cafe in Edward Street.
Of course there are numbers of places
in Soho where you may dine more lavishly and expensively,
and where you will find a band and a careful wine-list,
such as Maxim’s, The Coventry, The Florence,
and Kettner’s. Here you do not escape for
a shilling, or anything like it. Maxim’s
does an excellent half-crown dinner, and so, too,
does The Rendezvous. The others range from three
shillings to five shillings; and as the price of the
meal increases so do the prices on the wine-lists increase,
though you drink the same wine in each establishment.
The atmosphere of the cheaper places
is, however, distinctly more companionable than that
of these others. In the latter you have Surbiton
and Streatham, anxious to display its small stock of
evening frocks and dress suits; very proper, very
conscious of itself, very proud of having broken away
from parental tradition. But in the smaller places,
which are supported by a regular clientele of the
French clerks, workmen, and warehouse porters who
are employed in and about Oxford Street, the sense
of camaraderie and naturalness is very strong.
These people are not doing anything extraordinary.
They are just having dinner, and they are gay and
insouciant about it, as they are about everything
except frivolity. It is not exciting for them
to dine on five courses instead of on roast mutton
and vegetables and milk-pudding. It is a common-place.
For that is the curious thing about the foreigner:
wherever he wanders he takes his country with him.
Englishmen get into queer corners of the world, and
adapt themselves to local customs, fit themselves
into local landscapes. Not so the Continental.
Let him go to London, New York, Chicago, San Francisco,
and he will take France, or Germany, or Italy, or
Russia with him. Here in this little square mile
of London is France: French shops, French comestibles,
French papers, French books, French pictures, French
hardware, and French restaurants and manners.
In old Compton Street he is as much in France as if
he were in the rue Chaussee d’Antin.
I met some time since a grey little Frenchman who
is first fiddle at a hall near Piccadilly Circus.
He has never been out of France. Years and years
ago he came from Paris, and went to friends in Wardour
Street. There he worked for some time in a French
music warehouse; and, when that failed, he was taken
on in a small theatre near Shaftesbury Avenue.
Thence, at fifty-two, he drifted into this music-hall
orchestra, of which he is now leader. Yet during
the whole time he has been with us he has never visited
London. His London life has been limited to that
square mile of short, brisk streets, Soho. If
he crossed Piccadilly Circus, he would be lost, poor
dear!
“Ah!” he sighs. “France
... yes ... Paris. Yes.” For he
lives only in dreams of the real Paris. He hopes
soon to return there. He hoped soon to return
there thirty years ago. He hates his work.
He does not want to play the music of London, but
the music of Paris. If he must play in London,
he would choose to play in Covent Garden orchestra,
where his fancy would have full freedom. When
he says Music, he means Massenet, Gounod, Puccini,
Mascagni, Leoncavallo. He plays Wagner with but
little interest. He plays Viennese opera with
a positive snort. Ragtime well, I
do not think he is conscious of playing it; he fiddles
mechanically for that. But when, by a rare chance,
the bill contains an excerpt from Pagliacci,
La Bohême, or Butterfly, then he lives.
He cares nothing for the twilight muse of your intellectual
moderns Debussy, Maurice Ravel, Scriabine,
and such. For him music is melody, melody, melody laughter,
quick tears, and the graceful surface of things; movement
and festal colour.
He seldom rises before noon unless
rehearsals compel and then, after a coffee,
he wanders forth, smoking the cigarette of Algeria,
and humming, always humming, the music that is being
hummed in Paris. He is picturesque, in his own
way shabby, but artistically shabby.
At one o’clock you will see him in “The
Dieppe,” taking their shilling table d’hote
dejeuner, with a half-bottle of vin ordinaire;
and he will sit over the coffee perhaps until three
o’clock, murmuring the luscious, facile phrases
of Massenet.
His great friend is the Irishman who
plays the drum, for they have this in common:
they are both exiles. They are both “saving
up” to return home. They have both been
“saving up” for the last twenty years.
In each case there is a girl.... Or there was
a girl twenty years ago. She is waiting for them one
in Paris, and the other in Wicklow. At least,
so they believe. Sometimes, though, I think they
must doubt; for I have met them together in the Hotel
Suisse putting absinthes away carelessly, hopelessly;
and a man does not play with absinthe when a girl is
waiting for him.