LONDONER'S
LONDON
WILFRED WRITTEN
THE LIBRARY
OF
THE UNIVERSITY
OF CALIFORNIA
PRESENTED BY
PROF. CHARLES A. KOFOID AND
MRS. PRUDENCE W. KOFOID
A LONDONER'S LONDON
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THK RISIN(; SUN TAVERN AND HOOKSELLERS' ROW
HOW GOOD WAS THK OLD KISING SUN TAVKKN, CHEEK BV JOWL WITH A BOOKSKLLKK S
FOUR-STORIED HOUSE, WITH ITS WOODEN GALLERY ATOP, AND ITS OVERHANGING
SIDE IN HOLYWELL STREET WHERE YOU Kt)RESAW GOOD DELAYS (v. 9)
A LONDONER'S
LONDON
BY
WILFRED WRITTEN
(''John o' London '')
WITH TWENTY-FOUR ILLUSTRATIONS BY
FRANK L. EMANUEL
METHUEN & CO. LTD.
36 EiSSEX STREET W.G.
LONDON
y/
First Printed in igis
TO
T. p. O'CONNOR
PREFACE
A WRITER of whom the first John Murray de-
manded a preface demurred to writing one. A
preface, he said, always put him in mind of
Hamlet's exclamation to the tardy player, " Leave thy
damnable faces, and begin 1" I delay to begin only to
explain that the London of these pages is not the
measureless town of the guide-books : that London
on which a hundred and fifty years ago Horace
Walpole began a book, only to faint and fail : that
London which, still earlier, had been called a county
covered with houses, a description which has passed
from metaphor to fact. The Londoner's true London
is smaller. It is the sum of his own tracks in the
maze, the town in which, by hap, he has most often
eaten his bread and thought his thoughts. Samuel
Butler remarks in his published note-books that he
was more in Fetter Lane than in any other street of
London, and that Lincoln's Inn Fields, the British
Museum, the Strand, Fleet Street, and the Embank-
ment came next. This is a very small London, to
which my own adds the City, the northern suburbs,
and those more national regions of Westminster and
the Parks which may be called Everyman's. Although
vil
viii A LONDONER'S LONDON
the reader's intimacies and my own will not be iden-
tical, they will generously overlap. In Chancery Lane,
in the Euston Road, in Rotherhithe, or east of St.
Paul's, we may have few common memories, but we
may find these in the Strand, in Regent Street, in
Bloomsbury, or merry Islington.
While my limiting clue has been some sort of
preference or eager frequenting, I have not tried to
exhaust the associations of any street or district,
being satisfied to follow those great scribes who, when
their subject overflowed, passed on with the useful
remark that all the rest is in the book of Jasher, or in
the book of Iddo the seer concerning genealogies.
W. W.
The Cock Tavern, Fleet Street
31 December, 191 2
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
PAGE
THE VEILS OF YESTERDAY . . . . .1
The Passing of Temple Bar — London in 1886 — The Bearskins
— Old Holborn — John Grey's Cider Cellar — Feudal Blooms-
bury— Halfpenny Hatches— The Wind on the Heath— The
" Bull and Bush "—Booksellers' Row— The Knife-board— The
Lost Wobble — The Dignity of Carts — Leviathan in London —
The Evolution of the Hansom — The Exit of Cockneyism —
Rural Retreats — " I don't like London " — A Fogey's Regrets —
The Advance of Bricks — How London Grows — A Suburban
Highway— The Street that Was— Gipsy Hill— The Cult of
Escape— The Love of London—Mr. Roker's Dear Eyes— The
Spell of London
CHAPTER H
THE FIRST PERCH . . . . . .25
London in the Nursery — The New-comer — A Wessex Squire
— Sir Joshua Reynolds — To London in a Huff — A Shy Lawyer
— The Refusers— Robert Buchanan in Stamford Street —
" Come out of her, O my people " — The *' First Perch " —
Hoxton — A Window in Islington — Charles'Lamb— "Alexander
the Corrector " — Abraham Newland — The Bailiff's Daughter
— The Missing Cow — Plackett's Common — " Pop Goes the
Weasel "— Bunhill Fields — Dining on Young's "Night
Thoughts "—The Temple of the Muses— Shepherdess Walk
— Dodd the Dustman — Goswell Street — Claremont Square —
Old Pentonville — A Noisy Saint — Carlyle and the Brickfields
ix
X A LONDONER'S LONDON
CHAPTER III
PA6B
LORDS AND LANDLADIES . . . . .54
Feudal Waistcoats — The Duke and his View— Decimus
Burton and Major Cartwright— The Making of Bloomsbury—
Lady Ellenborough's Flowers — Zachary Macaulay — Capper's
Farm — Water-cress — A Gloomy Square — A War on Tips —
The Pretender in London — Dying for a Greek Accent — ^A
Question of Taste — Red Lion Mary — Lord Eldon's Peaches —
The Field of the Forty Footsteps— Peter Pindar's Cottage— A
Recipe for Old Age — The Railway Termini— Agar Town-
Morrison's Pills — King's Cross and the Moscow Legend — Art
for the Million— The Cottage that Never Was— St. Pancras-le-
Gasometer
CHAPTER IV
THE CITY man's CITY . . . . . .79
The Street called Broad — A Forgotten Burial-ground — Before
Harley Street— Sir Astley Cooper in Broad Street— The Im-
portance of being Charles — The Five Great Drugs — Dr.
Gardner's "Last and Best Bedroom" — The Resurrection
Men — A Home of Learning — The Devil or Dr. Bull — Mead
and Radcliffe — Queen Anne is dead — " Rejected Addresses "
The Rothschild—" Happy ! Me happy ? "—A Bitter Farewell
— Macaulay's Playground — Death in Tokenhouse Yard — A
Great Auctioneer— Jack Ellis— The Poet of Cornhill— The
Hosier of Freeman's Court — Samuel Rogers in the City —
Dodson and Fogg — Thackeray in Cornhill — William Wynne
Ryland— The Immortal Tailor— The Cornhill Pump—" Patty-
pan " Birch — The East; India House — How to apply for an
Appointment— A Head from the Tower— "Those that encamp
toward the East "— Spitalfields— The Uttermost Parts
CHAPTER V
THE HOUSE-MOVING OF THE GODS . . . . I16
The Euston Statuary Yards— Plastic Piccadilly— " Our Old
Friend,the Pelican " — Joseph Wilton — A Window in Charlotte
Street— Edward FitzGerald— John Constable— Cockney Ladle
CONTENTS xi
PAGE
— Willan's Farm— The Coming of the Omnibus—The " Green
Man " — The Spread of London — The Parent of the Motor-car
— The Inspector of Fishes — The Birth of Camden Town —
Boy Boz— Warren Street— Cookery and Culture— "The
Village Politicians "— " The March to Finchley "—A Nursery
of Pugilists — The Tottenham Court Road— Bozier's Court
— Hanway Street — A Great Corner—" I too am sometimes
unhappy '*
CHAPTER VI
LANE AND LABYRINTH ...... I38
St. Giles's Village — The Resurrection Gate — The Ballad Shop
— Soho — The Author of *' Lacon " — The Clare Market Laby-
rinth — The Great Storm — " Ypol " — A Sinister Archway — A
Night of Terrors — A Murder and its Literature — The Owl —
In Search of a Mantelpiece — A Dynasty of Door-knockers —
Chancery Lane and Shakespeare — Where Hazlitt talked — The
Rolls Chapel — Ready to " Decompound Evidence " — The
Inertia of London — A Great Corner
CHAPTER VII
THE STREET OP THE SAGGING PURPOSE . . . I59
The Mid-London Crowd—" Where's the Maypole ? "—The
Man in the Street — "Swimming the Hellespont" — Street
Portraiture— The Shops that Were— Doyley's— The Polite
Grocers and the Mad Hatters — A Phrenologist — "The
Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire" — Sotheby's —
Homeric Book Sales — "Milk-white Gosset " — The Vellum
Cure — Roger Payne — A Falstaffian Memorandum — Art
among the Ruins — Dr. Monroe's Guests — Turner's Farewell
— Rowlandson and his Cronies — C.K. — Norfolk Street — Dr.
Brocklesby— Garrick's Monument— Dan Leno
CHAPTER VIII
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON . . . 186
The Abbey and an Adventure — Chateaubriand — ^The Despoi-
lers— Antiquities as Playthings— Charles Lamb — "Royalest
xii A LONDONER'S LONDON
PAOK
Seed "—King Henry orders his Tomb— "They do bury fools
there "— " Hie prope Chaucerum "—-"Two feet by two "—Sir
Isaac Newton — Garrick's Funeral — Byron's Home-coming —
Chapel of the Pyx— The National Quarter— The Fire of 1834
—The Horse Guards' Parade— Signalling to the Fleet— The
York Column—" A Shocking Bad Hat "—Cleopatra's Needle
for Waterloo Bridge — A Congress of Wounds — The Evicted
Rooks — The King's Palace — Her Grace of Buckinghamshire
—The Marble Arch — Hyde Park Corner— The Duke and
the Statue
CHAPTER IX
THE STREET OF THE READY WRITERS . . . . 2l8
The Lions of Fleet Street— Button's— The Shops of Yesterday
—The Hamiltonian System— The First Pillar-box— The Tomb
of Richardson — "The Fruits of Experience" — The Age of
the Free and Easy — The Bankrupt Silversmith — A Candle-
snuffing Expert — A Great Day in Fleet Street — The Heme
Hill Philosopher — Peele's Coffee-house and a Tragedy — " Sat
cito, si sat bene " — Hardham's Snuff — The Doctor in Gough
Square — A Guinea a Thousand Words — "Where's the Book ? "
— " Rasselas" — The " Cheshire Cheese " Tradition — Wine and
Wit— "The Anak of Publishers "—" Childe Harold "—An
Angry Poet— Byron's London— The Literary Life
CHAPTER X
"STEPPING westward" ..... 246
The Great Chare— Optical Illusions— The Napoleon Legend
— The Second-hand Book Market — Every Book has its Buyer
—The Superfluous Book— Georgius Tertius— The Nocturnal
Remembrancer — The^Haymarket — Wordsworth at the Opera
— G. A. S.— Pierce Egan— Colonel Panton— The " Eidophu-
sikon" — Snuff in excelcis — " Old Nosey " — Jermyn Street and
a Husband in Hiding — Carlyle in Regent Street — "Sartor
Resartus " in Search of a Publisher — A " Dog's-meat Tart
of a Magazine" — Talks at Eraser's — Edward FitzGerald —
Change for a Sovereign— The High Street of Mayfair— The
Castle of Indolence — Sterne's Death-bed — Gentleman Jackson
—Park Lane— The Tragedy of Camelford House — Lydia
White — " Conversation" Sharp — " Dizzy always likes Lights "
— " Mr. Sydney Smith is coming Upstairs"
CONTENTS
xui
CHAPTER XI
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES
PAGE
. 278
"The Biggest Street in the City "—Heine in Distress— Byron
on London — The Paris Equation — Shakespeare's View from
Bankside — London compared — Pageants and Poets- The
Hungry Generations — Mr. Scrivener Milton of Bread Street's
Boy — Milton Unawares — In Artillery Walk — " Pilgrim's Pro-
gress " — A Dinner at Dilly's — An " Extraneous Person " — Poor
Susan — An Invisible Street — Richard Jefferies at the Bank —
The Street of the China Orange— The Grasshopper — Trans-
lating a Statue— An Eccentric Banker— Pope's " Learned
Friend of Abchurch Lane " — The Chop-houses — Todgers's —
Dickens and the Spirit of Place — Cabbage-leaves and Comedy
— The Bridge of Memories — "London Bridge is Broken
Down " — A Tyneside Carol — Proverbs of London Bridge —
The London Expression— A Wooden Gallery— The Water
Gate of London
INDEX
315
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
The Rising Sun Tavern and Booksellers* Row . Frontispiece
The Old Bell Inn, Holborn ....
Booksellers' Row ...
The Vanished Strand .....
High Street, Islington ....
Pentonville Hill .....
Bloomsbury Backs .....
In Red Lion Square [the Morris-Rossetti site)
In Broad Street, E.G. ....
Beyond Aldgate Pump . . . . .
EusTON Road Statuary ....
Charlotte Street, with John Constable's House
A Glimpse of Soho {Foubert's Place)
St. Mary- le- Strand Church . . . .
Clare Market Ten Years Ago .
The Old Sardinia Chapel Archway
George Yard .....
Strand Demolitions, 1902 ....
King Street, Westminster
The Old White Horse Inn, Fetter Lane .
Park Lane ......
St. Giles', Cripplegate . . . .
Pudding Lane and the Monument
The Water Gate of London ....
FACINQ PAGE
6
14
22
34
52
62
7^
88
1X2
120
130
140
146
164
172
182
206
232
274
286
304
308
A LONDONER'S LONDON
CHAPTER I
THE VEILS OF YESTERDAY
The Passing of Temple Bar-— London in 1886— The Bearskins— Old
Holborn — John Grey's Cider Cellar — Feudal Bloomsbury — Halfpenny
Hatches— The Wind on the Heath— The "Bull and Bush "—Booksellers'
Row— The Knife-board— The Lost Wobble— The Dignity of Carts-
Leviathan in London — ^The Evolution of the Hansom — The Exit of
Cockneyism — Rural Retreats — " I don't like London " — A Fogey's
Regrets — The Advance of Bricks — How London Grows — A Suburban
Highway— The Street that Was— Gipsy Hill— The Cult of Escape—
The Love of London — Mr. Roker's Dear Eyes — The Spell of London
" T TOW many times have you walked under
I I Temple Bar ? " I asked my old friend
"*" "**Hewson.
We were strolling up Fleet Street, after an evening
at the Palaver Club. The discussion, on an economic
subject, had dragged a little, and we expanded to the
air and lights. My question was abrupt, but Hewson
was always ready to recall a London older than mine,
in these homeward talks, nevermore possible.
" Thousands of times 1 " He paused, and added in
his excogitative way, " Do you realize that a couple of
hours ago you could not have asked me that question ? "
^^ Why not?"
D
2 A LONDONER'S LONDON
"Because one cannot talk at large in Fleet Street before
eight in the evening. Imagine yourself asking me in
the luncheon crowd/ How many times have you walked
under Temple Bar ? ' I should have snapped or
swerved, or nodded to another fellow. Dr. Johnson
himself could not now talk in Fleet Street until night
is come, and the people's elbow gone. That is how
London alters. Would any man say to another in the
luncheon-hour, ' Fleet Street, in my mind, is more
delightful than Tempe,' or anything in the least
like it ? "
" That remark was made on a Sunday," I reminded
my friend.
" Precisely ; after church, when Fleet Street was as
quiet as it is now. Tempe and Mull 1 I can see the
old engravings of Temple Bar, with a lonesome girl
carrying a basket on her head, and one high-wheeled
hackney-coach standing like a rock half-way down
there to Ludgate."
" Oh, the engravers made every street a wilderness.
The Doctor had to forge his way through crowds.
You remember that he and Boswell once had to step
into Falcon Court only to say ' How d'ye do.' There
is the place, opposite, next the map shop. But tell
me, you knew the old Bar well ? "
" Like a brother. And I saw it destroyed."
" Well, and did you weep when it went ? You
know Lamb wept when they took down St Dunstan's
clock."
"No. There was the spectacle. That was fine.
The men worked night and day, and one night — it
must have been in the winter of eighteen-seventy-
seven — or eight — I was walking home at about twelve
when 1 came on the scene. There was some fog, and
upon my word the old gateway looked like a sacrificial
THE VEILS OF YESTERDAY 3
altar, all aflame with huge gas-jets in a maze of timbers
and scaffolding. Men crept about it like bees. I
remember the bleached statues of Charles I and
Charles II and the rest of them peeping out, like
your Lamb's party in a parlour, all silent and all
damned. I stood there half an hour, fascinated by
this Titan assault on Time in the dead of night."
" Good Heavens ! And did Londoners come to see
the last of it ? "
" Well, not as they went to see the last of Jumbo.
But they had a big feeling for Temple Bar. I re-
member that on the night of the illuminations for the
marriage of the Prince of Wales the crowds poured
through it for hours and hours, and never ceased to
ply the old iron knocker on the doors ; there was
thunder in the arch all night."
I do not remember whether I told Hewson that I
had been in time to walk under Temple Bar. That
was in the Seventies, in a boyish scamper through
London, and the memory gives me a singular assur-
ance that I have seen an older town. Indeed, Temple
Bar seems now to be more than a vanished object of
Fleet Street ; I see it rising in time rather than in
space, a shadowy postern where the old London
centuries chafed to be released into the light of
modern day. When I returned to London, to be of
it as well as in it, Temple Bar had vanished and its
numbered stones were lying in Farringdon Street.
That was in 1886. Life is long. Thousands of
children who were then in the Park perambulators
are now married and formidable. The young crowd
of London is a new crowd, and the town has come up
like the tide. How different was the whole savour
of the London into which I stole only twenty-
4 A LONDONER'S LONDON
six years ago. Queen Victoria had hardly reached old
age, and the Victorian era had not seen itself in the
Jubilee mirror. Any day, in some quiet street, one
might be face to face with William Ewart Gladstone
whom to meet was like —
Vassalage at unawares, encountering the eye
Of majesty.
I cannot walk down Whitehall without missing the
sentries who, in 1886, had not been removed from
the doors of the Government offices. On Sundays
the Foot Guards walked out in their bearskins, and
you saw a hirsute giant going to the Park with a
diminutive Jill from a Pont Street kitchen. In the
dusk of the evening the broad path from the Ser-
pentine to the Marble Arch was one sinuous blackness,
and I see still the skyline of the tumultuous proces-
sion plumed by those bulbous head-pieces that swayed
against the pale-green sky. In the late Eighties there
was a vestige of courage in taking the Victoria Em-
bankment by night, or walking through the Seven
Dials. There was no Charing Cross Road to air St.
Giles's, and no railway to bisect St. John's Wood. The
sign of the Bull and Mouth Tavern, facing St. Martin's-
le-Grand, still reminded pale Londoners how
Milo, the Cretonian,
An ox slew with his fist,
Anl ate it up at one meal,
Ye gods, what a glorious twist !
In Holborn you might walk through the square
carriage-way of Furnival's Inn, under which Dickens
passed in the flush of his youth to sign his contract
for the Pickwick Papers. Next to Furnival's Inn
THE VEILS OF YESTERDAY 5
stood, or staggered, an inn that Dickens must have
loved. Passing it, you saw pewter candlesticks ; on
entering, you were served with port negus by a waiter
in lineaments and dignity the double of Mr. Speaker
Peel. It was to this old inn, Ridler's, or the ^^ Bell
and Crown," that Tom Hood's ruralizing Cockney had
sent back his longing thoughts from Porkington Place.
Hood had some warrant for his portrait of a Londoner,
wistful of Holborn among dairy delights. For
under Furnival's Inn — not the building one knew,
but its immediate predecessor — there had been a cider
vault kept by one John Grey. This man, after years
of attendance on his customers, had made a decent
fortune, and was able to buy an estate in Yorkshire,
to which he retired. But the clatter of hoofs in
Holborn was ever in his ears ; and finally, he re-
turned to London and endeavoured to buy back his
old cellar. Failing in this, he offered to be a waiter
where he had formerly been master ; he was accepted,
and drew a salary to the day of his death.
No single street has shed more antiquity than Hol-
born : its cheery " Bell " and " Black Bull " are dust.
Then came a gap from which clouds of engine smoke
rolled across the traffic. A shaft of the " Tube " rail-
way was being sunk in Fulwood's Rents, on the site of
Squire's Coffee House where Sir Roger de Coverley
had smoked his pipe. The name of Fulwood's Rents
is not lost, though critics no longer meet there to
** make an end of the Nature of the Sublime."
Among the symbols of this paradoxically remote
London, few are more vivid, or more incredible, than
the Bloomsbury bars, kept by ducal watchmen in
gold-laced hats, who admitted or repelled hansom
cabs as they pleased. They were a relic of the feudal
barriers which had vexed Londoners for generations.
6 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Particularly they recalled the hatches which were
common in the eighteenth century. These were
usually footpaths over private ground, or new neigh-
bourhoods, whose owners took a halfpenny from the
strolling Cockney. The last of them gave access from
the Old Kent Road towards London Bridge. In
Lambeth, behind St. John the Evangelist's Church
in the Waterloo Road, there is still a place called
Hatch Row in the midst of squalid old cottage
property. I have found that the people of the neigh-
bourhood constantly speak of Palmer Street as " up
the Hatch," not knowing, most of them, that the
name perpetuates the memory of Curtis's Hatch,
which led across the nursery-grounds of Curtis, the
nurseryman and botanist — an interesting man, whose
own name ought to have been preserved in the street
nomenclature of this district. No halfpennies were
levied in Bloomsbury, but at the pointing of the
ducal finger your hansom cab turned in an eddy of
objurgation.
In 1886 Hampstead Heath was the beginning of the
country, it has now no claim to be the end of the town.
Itself a "garden city," it is being encircled by jerry-
built suburbs and planetary tram-cars. I knew Parlia-
ment Hill as a place of hedges and haymaking and
trespass-boards. Now it is a park — an open one — but
still a park, and the boys who play cricket on it were
not born when I walked over its solitudes on moon-
light nights, gazing at the far-off silvered dome of St.
Paul's. Hampstead was still a place of pilgrimage and
remoteness, the place where Constable's eye loved
to watch a rain-cloud pass over fir and gorse. I
remember a little row of cottages that stood opposite
the " Bull and Bush." Their gardens sloped gently
to the road ; almost I recover the scent of their
2 U
< X
I <
THE VEILS OF YESTERDAY 7
mignonette and sweet-william. But those cottages
are razed, their gardens are a weedy mound ; gone are
the tea-tables on which cut flowers were placed in jars,
though they grew on every hand. It was a coign of
vantage, whence could be seen the small stir of the
inn. Up and down the lane the voices — not too many
— came and retreated, a bicycle bell tinkled, a party
of girls on horseback trotted out of the shadows,
everywhere the sunshine danced, and then the strains
of a vagrant harp would seek the sky. To sit there
and be meditative ; to finger a pocket Horace,
and murmur, with the precocious melancholy of
youth,
Achilles perished in his prime,
Tithon was worn away by time,
or some other pensive exclamation of the Sabine, was
to envisage London through distance and poetry.
One was conscious of a certain homogeneous mild-
ness in the associations of Hampstead, an orthodoxy
that recalled the family bookcase in some far and
fragrant corner of England. Church Row wore its in-
violate garment of old red brick and straight shallow
windows, as when Mrs. Barbauld produced there the
books which our grandparents found so " suitable "
on Sunday afternoons, and that "Address to Life"
which smoothed their paths to the grave. And there
lived her niece, Lucy Aikin, whose memoirs of
Addison were caressed by Macaulay ; and John Day
of " Sandford and Merton," that prop of the middle-
class nursery. Hard by Joanna Baillie lived and wrote
in silken state, and received Sir Walter Scott, and
heard Crabbe try over his latest lines. In that skyey
retreat, where Mr. H. G. Wells now hoists the social
8 A LONDONER'S LONDON
weather cone, Dr. Beddoes prescribed for literary
ladies the inhaling of the breath of cows, and induced
Ann Veronica's great-grandmother to sleep with a cow
standing all night with its head between her bed-
curtains.
At Hampstead, now and then, Wordsworth had
strolled the heath in large discourse with Haydon.
Even then the village was old, and its venerables
venerated the cottage in which Johnson had written
his " Vanity of Human Wishes"; or reminded each
other that Steele and Gay and Arbuthnot had climbed
to the hill-village as to a green promontory overlook-
ing London's yeasty waves. While they recalled these
Augustan shades, Keats was poising his frail figure
to hear the nightingale. Ruskin was to come, and
Dickens, and Du Maurier, and Wilkie Collins, who
called Hampstead *' an amiable, elevated lubberland,
affording to London the example of a kind of suburban
Nirvana." It is still amiable and elevated, but for
Nirvana we must look farther than to a suburb whose
inhabitants are pelleted from the theatres in a tube.
From the high Heath you still see England on one
side and her capital on the other, but the gipsy girl no
longer rises like a flame from the gorse ; the artist
comes less often to set his easel in the sand, and the
philosopher to pursue the theory of tittle-bats.
While we grow older the London we knew dis-
appears, and at double speed we are separated from
streets where we remember to have stood in leisure.
It was on a drizzling autumn evening in 1901 that
Booksellers' Row was closed for ever. No Londoner
who had haunted the street could consent to its going.
The lane was mediaeval in its shapes and contour, and
nothing like it is left. It led from one island church
to another ; a white church-tower topped the buildings
k
THE VEILS OF YESTERDAY 9
either way. The little cavernous shops, glowing with
books, did not presume to draw you from your direct
eastward or westward path ; they offered you a warm
side-passage where you could absorb a few titles,
accept a provocation to thought, and regain the larger
air of the Strand — or you could finger and buy. How
good was the butt-end that faced you from the Law
Courts ; the old Rising Sun Tavern, cheek by jowl
with a bookseller's four-storied house, with its wooden
gallery atop, and its overhanging side in Holywell
Street, where you foresaw those good delays.
The street imposed a gait. If you hurried you
might knock over one of the gilt-framed old portraits
or landscapes propped outside Wheeler's picture
shop, i Dead to books was the man who could pass
Ridler's without reviewing his regiment of folio his-
tories and topographies, his sheepskin classics, and
the shelf of cropped Elzevirs in the doorway. Mr.
Hindley, himself a maker of books, was to be seen
next door, his " Cries of London " and " Life and
Times of James Catnach " in the foreground. So you
came in the course of time to the modern banquet of
Denny at the south-west corner by St. Mary's. What
shilling shockers, what sixpenny budgets of humour,
threepenny paper classics, astrologies, graphologies I
Good old, hospitable, not quite reputable street, whose
Crescent Moon is now museum lumber, whose beckon-
ing glow is lost in municipal day-shine, I doubt if we
had a right to pull you down. You should be there
still — in the arms of Aldwych.
Twenty-five years ago one mounted a knife-board
bus every morning. At many a "Head" or "Arms,"
well within the four-mile radius, conductors cried,
" London, London " — a little to my displeasure. It
sounded vast and atmospheric, but was I not, then,
10 A LONDONER'S LONDON
in London ? Then came the garden-seat, and facetious
leading articles on its social bearings. Then, tickets.
I think it was on Sunday, 14 May, 1901, that London
began to be strewn with omnibus paper, and my
recollection is that a little snow fell in sympathy.
How the motor-omnibus came, let historians tell in
due season.
The horse-omnibus was pronounced by a great
authority to be ^' probably the lightest and strongest
vehicle in the world for carrying twenty-eight
people at a speed of nearly eight miles an hour."
To-day there are hardly twenty-eight people left in
London who are content to travel so slowly, and for
most Londoners the fine digestive wobble of the horse-
omnibus is already a lost sensation. It is the wobble
we miss — that hint of majestic delirium which per-
mitted a fair woman to smile to you ever so suppliantly
as the bus swung round Waterloo Place. The motor-
omnibus does not wobble, it leans ; but leaning is too
long a trial, and though under it the eye of woman
dilates, it does not respond as in the wobble's divine
recoveries.
Posterity will discover that in the year 191 2 the
newspapers were full of the perils which the motor-
omnibus has brought into streets too narrow for its
unwieldy gyrations. This is one of those disorders
which seem to be always overtaking London. In
1634 Sir William Davenant wrote : ** Sure your
ancestors contrived your narrow streets m the days of
wheel-barrows, before those greater engines, carts, were
invented." Carts had then choked the streets, and
Davenant found that a coach-ride was a dubious
proposition " till the quarrel be decided whether six
of your nobles, sitting together, shall stop and give
way to as many barrels of beer. Your city is the only
THE VEILS OF YESTERDAY ii
metropolis in Europe where there is wonderful dignity
given to carts."
To-day the '^ wonderful dignity " is grudgingly given
to the motor-omnibus, a vehicle almost twice the size
of the one it has superseded within ten years. The
horse-omnibus was proportioned to the stress of the
street, and it had a genial dignity which is absent from
its successor. Thus periodically we are brought back
to conditions which are antique and barbarous.
Goldsmith's Chinaman might write to-day, as he did
more than a hundred and fifty years ago : ^^ Heavy-
laden machines, with wheels of unwieldy thickness,
crowd up every passage ; so that a stranger, instead of
finding time for observation, is often happy if he has
time to escape from being crushed to pieces."
Observation is denied to the man on the motor-bus,
as to the wretch under it. The horse-omnibus was full
of interest and amenity. You exchanged town wisdom
with the driver, watching the dark dance of the manes
below. The give-and-take of the street was possible.
The motor-vehicle's furore of arriving kills obser-
vation. Nor would Mr. Howells write now of its
passengers : ^^ They are no longer ordinary or less
than ordinary men and women bent on the shabby
businesses that preoccupy the most of us ; they are
conquering princes, making a progress in a long
triumph and looking down upon a lower order of
human beings from their wobbling steps." For the
height and high rail of the new vehicle make the
riders look small ; they are alienated from the meek
crowd below, who wince and pass. *^ Canst thou
draw out leviathan with a hook ? " — or a look ? Nor
less prophetically is it written, *'One is so near to
another that no air can come between them. Out
of his mouth go burning lamps, and sparks of fire
la A LONDONER'S LONDON
leap out. He esteemeth iron as straw, and brass as
rotten wood."
Nearly ended, too, is the seventy years' reign of
the vernacular vehicle which bears the surname of its
inventor, Joseph Aloysius Hansom. No one would
have thought, in 1833, of calling his creation the
gondola of London. It rather resembled a tumbril
for taking calves to market, so nearly its body touched
the ground and so high its wheels. Even so it was
not the most fantastic vehicle offered to London. In
various models the door was placed in front, at the
side, and at the back. Hansom himself experimented
with a vehicle which the passenger was to enter through
the wheelSf but this alarming dream was not fulfilled.
That big-bodied, big-brained artist, John Varley, who
painted, astrologized, and believed in the ghost of a
flea, was attracted by the problem, and after much
study he evolved a cab with eight wheels. In the first
trial it nearly cut short the career of his capitalist, who
was a nervous man. " Never no more, Mr. Varley ;
never no more ! Ten minutes in the thing has all but
shaken the life out of me ; ten more would quite finish
me. Never no more, thank you, John." Only London's
wit and social attrition shaped Hansom's vehicle to
the lines that Whistler loved, and made it the artist's
hieroglyphic of the streets. Novelists found in the
hansom a valuable property of fiction, placing their
lovers behind its melodiously clanging apron, or
attaching some mystery of crime to its stealthy
binocular glide through London's night. So, in
Stevenson's story, London is scoured by mysterious
cabmen in search of those ** single gentlemen in
evening dress," from whom Mr. Morris was to
select the few and fit to witness Prince Florizel's
vengeance on the President of the Suicide Club.
I
THE VEILS OF YESTERDAY 13
To-day the hansom hovers between two worlds : it
is still in the streets, yet taking antiquity by the
forelock it has entered the London Museum.
The change of changes in the last twenty years has
been the decline — say rather the exit — of Cockneyism.
Let us look back to 1800. The town which for cen-
turies had solidified within sound of Bow Bells then
showed signs of incandescence. But the process was
ridiculed. The rhymester and the caricaturist found
their butt in the snug citizen who began to keep a
country box at Islington or Camberwell, to which
on a Sunday he brought his family in a chaise,
swelling with pride at the rococo beauties of a
dusty garden. The caricaturists — Bunbury, Gillray,
Deighton, Woodward, and Rowlandson — all poked
fun at the roving citizen and his ideas of landscape
gardening ; and what they said in caricature the
poets repeated in satire. Even Cowper saw little but
absurdity in the demand for villas and summer-
houses. Much of this satire was deserved, for the
Cockney could be happy in the country only by sur-
rounding himself with suggestions of the town. His
summer-houses shared the Chinese fashion of the
London drawing-room, and the Piccadilly statuaries
drove a thriving trade in supplying him with gesticu-
lating gods and squabby Cupids.
When these near retreats became absorbed in
London, the Cockneys went farther afield, and the
satirists followed them to Margate and Brighton. At
Hastings, Charles Lamb vented crocodile pity on the
Londoners picking up shells for a few days and sigh-
ing to be back in town. " I am sure," he says, "that
no town-bred or inland-born subjects can feel their
true and natural nourishment in these sea-places. . . ,
I would exchange these sea-gulls for swans, and send
14 A LONDONER'S LONDON
a swallow for ever about the banks of Thanesis." He
asks these ^^ sea-charmed emigrants " what they would
think if a band of Hastings fishermen with their
fishing-tackle on their backs came to see London.
" What vehement laughter would it not excite among
the daughters of Cheapside and wives of Lombard
Street." To-day fifty thousand Lancashire lads will
invade London, and be admired and welcomed, while
the bungalows of little Londoners are as shells on
the seashore.
Thus the old London pride and the old rustic
suspicion, registered by countless poets, dramatists
and song-makers, may be said to have vanished in our
own time. You must look for them now in the
books : in Chaucer, in the Elizabethans, in the
eighteenth-century essayists, in the Tom and Jerry
writers, and in a thousand Victorian songs. The
song-writer had no better theme than rustic wonder-
ment presented as a satire on London follies. But
who now talks of bumpkins, or makes play with
turnips ? Yet twenty-five years ago the new-comer
was still recognized and twitted : did I not know it ?
A discomforting wit still preyed on his dress or
accent. I fancy that the Reverend Mr. Spalding's
oft-repeated groan, ^' I don't like London" (in the
" Private Secretary "), was the very last stage tag in
this species of humour. The material for farce
can no longer be found in the collision of -London
cuteness with country simplicity, and these straws
from the theatres and concert halls can be trusted.
The bewildered curate's exclamation was effective
because it appealed to familiar ideas. When Mr.
Penley was reiterating his dislike of London at the
Globe Theatre, these half-playful prejudices were still
abroad — a not too merciful wit rained on the country-
BOOKSELLERS ROW
THE LANE WAS MEDI/I-ZVAL IN ITS SHAPES AND CONTOUK, AND NOTHING I.IKE IT IS
LEFT ... A WHITE CHUKCH TOWER TOPPED THE BUILDINGS EITHER WAY (p. 8)
THE VEILS OF YESTERDAY 15
man from the boxes of bus and cab, or environed
him at street-corners. But the ponderous joke was
on the eve of explosion, and to-day it is as much a
memory as the Cockney "2^." To-day, so far from
scorning a country accent, Londoners are beginning
to deplore the loss of their own.
Recalling the town of his youth, an old Londoner
says : ^^ Then it was a comparatively pleasant place to
live in, and even the climate seemed better than it is
to-day. The country came close up to the town,
whereas to-day the town runs a long way out into the
country — rather a different thing ; and a city-going
man did not have to spend two or three hours in get-
ting to and from his work. As a matter of fact, a great
many people walked to and fro from the City. . . .
The size of London will not bear thinking about, and
its probable increase during the next twenty or even
ten years ought to give pause to all thoughtful people."
So immense has been the disturbance in the hen-
roost that the tendency to fly outwards to villa and
cottage has been accompanied by a tendency to
make the centre habitable by roosting high. The big
square brick houses built a hundred and fifty years
ago for spacious town life are pulled down when the
chance offers, to be replaced by blocks of flats in
which family is piled on family, and the windows
give on brick abysses and dust-shoots. So late as
1879, Mr. Charles Dickens, the eldest son of the
novelist, noted in his " Dictionary of London " that
almost the only flats in London were those in Queen
Anne's Mansions, a few in Cromwell Road, and a
single set in George Street, Edgware Road. In 1881
the flat system was sufficiently new to inspire a
comedy, '* Flats," which was brought out at the
Criterion Theatre.
i6 A LONDONER'S LONDON
In all these changes we witness the uneasy breath-
ing of the London whose life has been continuous for
a thousand years. Endowed with the impulse but not
the genius of growth, she has attained her inchoate
immensity by devouring her rural outposts one by
one. City men made an exclusive paradise of some
small village three miles out on a great highway,
intending the simple life when the day ended. The
colony grew, the London road became thinly
peopled, and then the houses grew denser and off-
shoots appeared. Thus the colony was woven into
the fabric. London has grown less by formal advance
into the country than by overtaking herself. In any
suburban highway you may read the story in bricks.
Take any great road, say the Kingsland Road ;
there is no straighter march out of London than this
highway, which stretches north from Shoreditch to
Dalston, and then, changing its name, flies on
through Stoke Newington, Tottenham, and Edmon-
ton to green Hertfordshire. A little way along it,
from Shoreditch, you come to the Ironmongers'
Almshouses, standing back from the road and spread-
ing their long red roofs to the sun. You look
through the railings ; the sunshine glints on the gold
necklet of Sir Robert Jeffery, the founder, standing in
his niche ; it falls softly on the garden grass ; it
gleams on the windows, where forty poor ladies are
drinking tea. All through the eighteenth century
these almshouses, which now flank a roaring highway,
stood alone in the fields. To right and left were
meadows and market-gardens. Some of these
gardens flourished until sixty years ago, when they
were built over ; and the names of the streets tell
where the myrtle (Myrtle Grove), and the laurel
(Laurel Street), and the lavender (Lavender Grove),
THE VEILS OF YESTERDAY 17
and the bosky thickets (Woodland Street) were fru-
gally planted when the nineteenth century was young.
The old ladies who smelt the roses and dibbled
their potatoes in the Almshouse garden looked up
to see the carriers' carts creaking up to Stoke New-
ington and Enfield. Stoke Newington was the
colony, planted on the hill-top far from London.
Newington Green, with its red-brick houses, its
wrought-iron lamps and gateways, its venerable sward
with weather-worn palings, its memories of Poe and
Rogers, still interprets a smaller London whose
Kingsland Road was dotted with carriages and the
carts of wine-merchants and tea-men when it yet
ran between hedges, and was crossed by rabbits.
A rural and connective character survives in the
road from Shoreditch up to Dalston. It widens
with rural extravagance. The pavement becomes a
market, where are dumped, or were recently, articles
that recall the Sixties, queer kitchen utensils, seashells
for garden and rockeries, a shade of wax fruit, a
globe from a dame's school, a fly-blown portrait of
Palmerston.
The faded subsidiary name, "Sarah's Place," may
be read on a house half-way to Dalston. The name
is no longer used, the houses being absorbed in the
artery. But it recalls the first ownership. Sarah was
the wife or daughter of the man who built the row.
In " Susannah's Cottages, 1835," " Hiram's Cottages,
1827," " Mansfield's Cottages," and " Richard's Cot-
*^g^/' you read the same story of an extending
London, and the exultation of her sons advancing
up the Kingsland Road to sit under their own fig-trees.
You walk on up the great free road, and in ten
minutes you are in the bustle of Dalston, and have
passed — from London to London.
i8 A LONDONER'S LONDON
I wish that a pictorial record could be kept of the
elevations in the principal streets of London, to be
renewed perhaps once in a generation. Few things
are more irrecoverable than the look of a street that
has been displaced or rebuilt. Artists may compile
their details ; the promoters of bazaars may nail up
lath and cloth plausibly, and label it with ** Ye's " and
" Olde's" without stint ; but the Street that was eludes
us still : St. James's Street as Lord Byron walked it ;
the Strand as it looked when the Polite Grocers were
weighing out their bohea ; the Haymarket when it
was hay-market ; Holborn as it appeared in fearful
detail from the Tyburn cart.
To this oblivion of streets there is an exception.
There does exist a minute representation of a long
London roadway as it was a hundred or more years
ago. In it the very cobbles and gratings are marked,
every oil lamp-post is numbered, every area railing
accurately drawn, every front door and lintel differenti-
ated, and even the long-vanished hedges and trees
are nicely portrayed. The street line thus captured is
that from Hyde Park Corner to Counter's Bridge,
beyond Kensington High Street, as it appeared in 1811.
The High Street itself is there, house by house, and
window by window — the High Street which Leigh
Hunt loved. Every door in these miles stands, as it
were, to be rapped at — the pillared tavern door through
which was borne the dripping corpse of Shelley's first
wife, and the buff house door from which Sir David
Wilkie stepped out to take the air when he had done
enough work on " The Chelsea Pensioners " or ** Blind
Man's Buff." This record was made for the Kensing-
ton Turnpike Trust by its surveyor, Joseph Salway.
Whether he exceeded his instructions in a generous
regard for posterity I do not know. The fact
THE VEILS OF YESTERDAY 19
remains that the plans which were made for the use of
clerks and contractors are things of beauty and
historical interest. Their value is such that they have
been reproduced in thirty sections by the London
Topographical Society. When these sections are laid
together they form the closest reproduction of an old
London street one can hope to see, and the boon is
completed by the topographical notes prepared by
Colonel W. F. Prideaux. The Survey loses none of its
minuteness even when the road is emptiest. The
hedges and their clay root-earth are drawn as faithfully
as the residential bricks. Beyond old Kensington
Church there is little but banks and ditches on both
sides of the road, which runs through open country as
far as Stamford Brook. The plans end at Counter's
Bridge with Lee and Kennedy's Nursery. At this
point the responsibilities of the Kensington Turnpike
Trustees ceased.
Such elaborate street portraiture as this may be an
impracticable luxury, but simpler records would suffice.
Tallis's " London Street Views," issued in 1838-40, gives
the exact elevations of dozens of entire streets in out-
line, and these, with the help of advertisements, were
sold at three halfpence each. I believe that no such
drawings have been made since.
Happily, many London streets change very slowly.
If you would know how a once rural street may
preserve a quiet self-respect amid modernity, turn
from Oxford Street into Marylebone High Street. Or
you may stand on Camberwell Green and see roaring
tides of humanity go this way and that, but, by some
miracle, leave Denmark Hill to be a place of quiet
breathing, where weather-stained oak palings wander
up a pleasant hill, flanked with old houses, and silent
lawns whose cedars imprison the night. You wander
20 A LONDONER'S LONDON
over Heme Hill, where apricots are ripening in Ruskin's
garden, and descend to Dulwich. Or you climb to
Norwood, and just when you need to be reminded that
London, though composite, is single, and though
changed is continuous, you come to the crest of Gipsy
Hill ; and there — far over trees, roofs, and blurred
town — the Dome and Cross.
Peering into this camp of men, without shape or
bound, one must acknowledge that the love of London
is not quite the emotion that it was a hundred, or fifty,
or even twenty-five years ago. It may be as deep, but
it is different. Dr. Johnson's dictum that the man who
is tired of London is tired of life was uttered in a com-
pact town whose men of intellect could meet with ease
and frequency, and whose ordinary citizens had no
thought of travel or *^ escape." But London's growth
has destroyed literary society as Johnson understood
it, and tens of thousands of Londoners are actually
tired of town life. Every newspaper and hoarding
interprets the Londoner's wish for green pastures and
still waters. No longer is it the quiet pioneering of the
rich that we see. The people, the average million, are
resolved to suck where the bee sucks. An immense
passion for verandas and deck-chairs has swept over
the town, and the speculator can now erect whole
villages of pseudo-antique cottages with white walls
and plum-coloured roofs in the certainty that Lon-
doners will fill them. Behind these trekking thou-
sands, the working class is pressing into the country,
desirous or driven ; and for the vast humble popula-
tion still pent in the streets there is an ever-growing
system of briefer escape. The small Londoner no
longer takes **a walk round the houses" on Sunday
morning. The proletarian motor-bus from Charing
Cross is found at rest by the elm-shaded inns of
»
THE VEILS OF YESTERDAY 21
Harrow Weald and Pinner. Northwood, which was a
primitive hamlet, is now a small town ; populous
Watford is being connected with Euston by a new line ;
and the London tram-cars grind through the old High
Street of Uxbridge.
Meanwhile the eyes of villadom travel yet farther, in
search of less dusty roads, deeper peace, and a more
sacrosanct apartness with the cuckoo. Where will it
end ? London as a city of all-round living and amenity
is dissolving under our eyes. The desertion of the
City by residents has been followed by the desertion
of great districts like Islington and Brixton. In the
last ten years only nine of the London boroughs have
increased their population ; twenty have suffered
decreases ranging from i to 27 per cent. Even a
comparatively open district like Marylebone has lost
15,000 inhabitants in the last ten years. Westminster
has lost 23,000, Holborn 10,000, St. Pancras 17,000,
Islington 7,000. This outward movement of the
higher classes, so creditable to the natural man, so
healthy in its immediate purpose, has begun to beget
doubt and inquiry. When the sun and moon parted,
the sun lost substance and the moon heat : the flight
of the middle cJass has reached a point when one may
wonder whether an analogy arises. Old London
neighbourhoods are emptied of their more prosperous
and cultivated residents, and the vacuum created is
filled by a meaner population. Yet the " going down "
of an urban district is not so much the calamity as the
separation of classes that were contiguous, and the
consequent loss to the colour and variety of the town.
In the streets the poor are left with the poor, in the
fields the well-to-do simmer in the juice of a tepid
selectness. In these new rural colonies the social
equation is distorted. They are pleasant places, these
22 A LONDONER'S LONDON
villages of villas, with their near rabbits and pheasants,
their garden hues and hauteurs of pampas grass, and
their tinkling te^-cups on the golf-club veranda. But
at present they are hybrid and unsocial. All these
nice people, who have come apart to sit under their
fig-trees, go every day to London to toil, to array
themselves, to be amused, and even to be fed. They
are of London, though not in it ; they are in the
country, but not of it. And their villadom, a self-
conscious maiden with many flowers laden, shows
as a moon, beautiful, but rather cold and fruitless, in
London's sky.
The love of London is now unlike the love of any
other city, in that it never beholds, still less embraces,
its object. No tendrils can encompass a city that
seems coextensive with life, and, like life, a sphere of
elective affinities and boundless irrelevance. We do
not say that we love life, except in rhetoric or extremity ;
we love the "warm precincts" we find in it. A big
city can be loved in the intimate sense, but hardly one
that is multiple and measureless. The Bristol man
can love Bristol for its trady little central streets and
water-gleams, whence he sees windows flashing in the
remote sky, and the trees brushing the Clifton heights
where his children run. The Newcastle man can love
his old abyss of river toil and song, crowned by
castle, moot-hall, and cathedral ; and the Birmingham
man loves with a racial love his friendly New Street
and its clustered institutions. When these exclaim on
their birthplaces, we see the town in the townsman,
and hear it hum in its breath, but he who in these
days mouthes a too-familiar love of London should
be named Leontes.
What, then, is the feeling which London still
inspires ? It is less an intimate sentiment, or a rapture
THE VANISHED STRAND (OPPOSITE SOMERSET HOUSE)
FEW THINGS ARE MORE IRRECOVERABLE THAN THE LOOK OV A STREET THAT HAS BEEN
DISPLACED OR REBUILT (P. l8)
THE VEILS OF YESTERDAY 23
of possession, than an awe and joy evoked by human
life itself. London's immense connotation of the
human story diffuses in the mind, in moments of
exaltation, that ether of history in which "many
Ninevehs and Hecatompyloi " are alive and rever-
berant. We are of Babylon and Nineveh and Athens
and Rome. Such feelings are hardly human nature's
daily food. Yet the Londoner feels passionately that
the small things he has seen and done are significant
because they have been enacted in London. " Bless
my dear eyes," said Mr. Roker, shaking his head slowly
from side to side, and gazing abstractedly out of the
grated window before him, as if he were fondly recall-
ing some peaceful scene of his early youth, " it seems
but yesterday that he wopped the coal-heaver down
Fox-under-the-Hill by the wharf there. I think I can
see him now, a-coming up the Strand between the two
street-keepers, a little sobered by the bruising, with
a patch o' winegar and brown paper over his right
eyelid, and that 'ere lovely bulldog, as pinned the little
boy arterwards, a-following at his heels. What a rum
thing time is, ain't it, Neddy ? " The leather-hearted
turnkey of the Fleet prison was not the man to recall
the whopping of a coal-heaver with a sigh of rich
recollection, if that were all. But it was his abiHty to
evoke the event from a remote dailiness of the ancient
and continuing Strand, and his sense of intimacy
with one bulldog in London's immemorial and
interminable "fancy" that deepened the tones and
very nearly dimmed the eye of old Roker of the Fleet.
Thus it is with us all, and better. For a London
memory is often transmuted into a symbol by the
pressure of its great environment. We may have stood
iFor a few minutes, how long ago we cannot tell, to watch
the plane-leaves falling in showers against the Abbey
24 A LONDONER'S LONDON
walls, and now autumn assumes that picture. We
may have felt on certain glittering nights — as who has
not ? — the singular freshness of the west wind in
Oxford Street, and the remote hour returns on the
wind. Or, when summer first touches us, we think
of the great days of enchantment that will roll again
over Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens when the
palms are spread, and the axles burn, and the parapet
of the Serpentine Bridge is warm to the arms of lovers.
CHAPTER II
THE FIRST PERCH
London in the Nursery — The New-comer — A Wessex Squire — Sir
Joshua Reynolds — To London in a Huff — A Shy Lawyer — The
Refusers — Robert Buchanan in Stamford Street — " Come out of her,
O my people " — The " First Perch " — Hoxton — A Window in Islington
— Charles Lamb — "Alexander the Corrector" — Abraham Newland —
The Bailiff's Daughter — The MissingCow — Plackett's Common — " Pop
Goes the Weasel " — Bunhill Fields — Dining on Young's " Night
Thoughts "—The Temple of the Muses— Shepherdess Walk— Dodd
the Dustman — Goswell Street — Claremont Square — Old Pentonville —
A Noisy Saint — Carlyle and the Brickfields
I HOPE there are still youths who, when they
come to London, think of Troy and Bagdad
and Eldorado. For the heart of London's
mystery is enshrined in myth and faery. No summary
of events or massing of figures can fill out the nursery
vision of London's golden pavements, the Lord Mayor
in his coach, and the great Bell of Bow — that vision
which Wordsworth expressed in " The Prelude " —
Would that I could now
Recall what then I pictured to myself.
Of mitred Prelates, Lords in ermine clad,
The King, and the King's Palace, and, not last,
Nor least, Heaven bless him ! the renowned Lord Mayor !
A too emotional coming to London was that of a
West Country traveller who entered the Metropolis on
25
26 A LONDONER'S LONDON
a coach early in the last century. All went well as far
as Brentford. Seeing the lamps of that outlying
village, the countryman imagined that he was at his
journey's end, but as mile succeeded mile of illumina-
tion he asked in alarm, " Are we not yet in London,
and so many miles of lamps ? " At last, at Hyde
Park Corner, he was told that this was London ; but
still the lamps receded and the streets lengthened,
until he sank into a coma of astonishment. When
they entered Lad Lane, the Cheapside coaching centre,
a travelling companion bade the West Countryman
remain in the coffee-room while he made inquiries.
On returning he found no trace of him, nor did he
hear any more of him for six weeks. He then learned
that he was in custody in Dorsetshire — a lunatic. The
poor fellow was taken home, and after a brief return
of his reason he died. He was able to explain that he
had become more and more bewildered by the lights
and by the endless streets, from which he thought he
should never be able to escape. Somehow, he walked
blindly westward, and at last emerged into the country
bereft of memory and wits. I have always respected
this Dorsetshire squire ; other arrivals seem tame in
comparison.
The garrulous Cyrus Redding relates nothing better
than his own arrival in the centre of human gossip.
He had journeyed in the Bath coach, better supplied
with money and introductions than most new-comers.
And he had the taste for London : " I took up my
quarters at Hatchett's Hotel, Piccadilly. There was
a rout in Arlington Street the same night, and the roll
of the carriages kept me awake. I rose unrefreshed,
put a letter or two of introduction into my pocket, and
set out : * The world before me where to choose my
place of rest.' " There you have the sense of arrival in
THE FIRST PERCH 27
London — the world's capital. He rose the next morn-
ing and ascended the Monument, and " shot " the
rapids at London Bridge, and within a few days he
saw the burial of Pitt in Westminster Abbey.
One of the best pictured arrivals of this kind is that
of Sir Joshua Reynolds. He was eighteen when the
coach brought him from Plymouth to London, taking
more time on the journey than the *' Lusitania" takes
to cross the Atlantic. The place where his feet touched
the stones of London was the White Horse Cellar
Tavern in Piccadilly. The Piccadilly tavern which
now bears that name, and the inscription " Established
1720," is not the tavern Sir Joshua saw. This stood,
then and long after, over the way, close to Arlington
Street. When he arrived on that autumn evening in
1740, Sir Robert Walpole was probably eating his
dinner in his Arlington Street house. But the young
artist had no time to gaze ; he must find the house
of Thomas Hudson, the portrait painter, to whom he
was bound apprentice. Hudson's house in Great
Queen Street is still standing. A porter shouldered
his baggage and led the way across Leicester Fields.
There a prosperous journey was to end in disappoint-
ment. The great man had gone the way that his pupil
had come, and was painting the portraits of lords and
ladies at Bath. Where was the apprentice to sleep ?
Fortunately he had an uncle in the Temple, and
there, above the gardens beloved by Spenser, he slept
that night, unaware that to these quiet courts his
dearest friends would come — Johnson to work, Gold-
smith to die.
Men have come to London in many moods.
Alexander Wedderburn (Lord Loughborough), whose
old house is marked by a tablet in Russell Square,
came to London in a huff. He might have remained
28 A I.ONDONER'S LONDON
all his life at the Scotch Bar but for a violent alter-
cation which he had with a fellow-barrister, Mr.
Lockhart, then the Dean of Faculty. During a trial
the Dean called his young opponent a " presumptuous
boy." Wedderburn, bursting with rage, said : "The
learned Dean has confined himself on this occasion to
vituperation ; I do not say that he is capable of reason-
ing, but if tears would have answered his purpose I am
sure tears would not have been wanting." The Dean
muttered threats of vengeance, and Wedderburn pro-
ceeded : " I care little, my lords, what may be said or
done by a man who has been disgraced in his person
and dishonoured in his bed." The Court was now
aghast, and the Lord President declared that "this
was language unbecoming an advocate and a gentle-
man." Wedderburn retorted that "his lordship had
said as a judge what he could not justify as a gentle-
man." The Court gravely consulted as to how this
hot-headed young man should be quelled, and it was
resolved that he must retract his words or suffer
deprivation. Wedderburn rose, and with deadly calm
said : " My lords, I neither retract nor apologize, but
I will save you the trouble of deprivation ; there is my
gown" — here he stripped it from his shoulders — "and
I will never wear it more, virtute me involvo," He
then walked out of court, and that night started for
London and the Woolsack.
The manner of Wedderburn's coming to London
suggests, by contrast, the efforts which John Eardley
Wilmot, afterwards Lord Chief Justice, made to quit
London for ever. He feared to get on, and avoided
success as carefully as other men seek it. His efforts
to hide his candle under a bushel failed. But when a
seat in Parliament was offered him he knew that he
must fly. In a quiet street in Derby, on a patrimony
THE FIRST PERCH 29
of a few hundreds a year, Wilmot settled down to be
an obscure local lawyer. Twelve months of peace
were granted him, and then, without his previous
knowledge, like a bolt from the blue, there fell on him
the appointment to be a Puisne Judge of the King's
Bench. He declared that nothing would persuade
him to face again the roar and smoke of London, but
the advice of friends and his sense of duty prevailed :
he returned. The calm of his career on the bench was
broken only by his promotion to the Lord Chief
Justiceship, and the offer of the Great Seal, which by
summoning all his powers he successfully refused.
Full of years and honours, he retired in 1770, vainly
imploring the King not to grant him a pension.
Not a few young men have left the provincial ark to
find no place in London on which they could rest
their feet, or they have refused London's gifts. Thomas
Bewick left Newcastle for London, looked round him,
and as deliberately returned to Newcastle. In his
maturer years he wrote : " For my part I am of the
same opinion now as I was when in London, and that
is that I would rather herd sheep on Mickley Bank top
than remain in London, though by doing so I should
be made the Premier of England." Look at his
drawings : you feel that he could not have been happy
away from that noble beacon of the Tyne, which
appears in them again and again, the lantern tower
of St. Nicholas' Cathedral, with its thirteen flashing
vanes, which Ben Jonson thought was worth the
journey from London to see.
Just as clear was John Dalton that London was not
his true environment. ^^ A most surprising place," he
wrote, '* worth one's while to see once, but the most
disagreeable place on earth for one of a contempla-
tive turn to reside in constantly." He returned to
30 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Manchester, and made it the birthplace of the Atomic
Theory. Yet more contemplative men than Dalton
have made their homes in London.
A very good hater of London was Philip Gilbert
Hamerton. As a boy he came to a resolution in these
words : " Every Englishman who can afiford it ought
to see London once, as a patriotic duty, and I am not
sorry to have been there to have got that duty per-
formed ; but no power on earth shall ever induce
me to go to that supremely disagreeable place again."
Later in life he supplemented this, and w jce : '^ It is
curious, but perfectly true, that I have never in my life
felt the slightest desire to purchase or rent any house
whatever in London, and there is not a house in all the
' wilderness of brick ' that I would accept as a free gift
if it were coupled with the condition that I should live
in it."
Few well-nurtured youths have made a more curious
entry into London than the late Mr. Robert Buchanan,
the only author whom I have seen standing behind
his own publishing counter. In May, i860, he arrived
at King's Cross from Glasgow without plans or pros-
pects, and minus his railway ticket, which he had lost
on the journey. After some trouble with the station
authorities, who detained his luggage, he breakfasted
at a coffee-house and strolled into Regent's Park,
where he laid down on the grass to think. There he
encountered a youth of his own age, who reminded
him of the Artful Dodger. To him he owed his first
night's sleep in London, in a lodging-house or thieves'
kitchen near Shoreditch, where next morning he awoke
none the worse, and with the little money he had in
his pocket safe. A week later he found his first perch
in London, a garret at No. 66 Stamford Street. It is
curious that his friend David Gray, the young Glasgow
THE FIRST PERCH 31
poet, spent his first night in London wandering about
Hyde Park. Later, he shared with Buchanan what
he afterwards called ^'the dear old ghostly bankrupt
garret " in Stamford Street. Disappointed in literature
and weakened by mortal illness, David Gray asked
only that he might not die in London, and one winter
morning Buchanan put his friend into the Scotch
express at Euston. " Home — home — home," was
his cry.
It is of the significance of London that it inspires
both love and hate, irresistible lure and strong refusal.
In one great man it bred a lifelong tragedy of doubt.
Few things in modern biography are more touching
than the unbreakable thread of regret for country
silence which ran through the London life of Edward
Burne-Jones. The dreamer of beautiful dreams
became a Londoner, and a London society man.
He dined out, and was socially bound and driven.
Yet a vision of his youth followed him like a jilted
ego. It was in 185 1, when he was a Birmingham
youth of eighteen, that he walked over from Harris
Bridge, where he paid a yearly visit to some friends, to
see the Cistercian Monastery in Charnwood Forest.
What he saw that day left a lifelong picture on his
mind, though it is not certain that he ever returned
to the place again. In her beautiful biography of her
husband. Lady Burne-Jones writes : " Friends, wife,
and children all knew the undercurrent of longing in
his soul for the rest and peace which he thought he
had seen there that day." But London loaded him
with personal fetters, and her streets crept round his
Fulham home. The District Railway growled near,
some fine elms came down, Fulham began to call
itself West Kensington, and callers came in crowds to
utter social shibboleths round the painter of ^' The
32 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Sleep of Arthur in Avalon." London was slowly
killing the dream that had pleased his boyish thought.
At last his protests against its demands became
poignant. Year after year he vowed to forsake the
rush. " How I want to be out of it ; and more and
more my heart is pining for that monastery in Charn-
wood Forest. Why there ? I don't know, only that I
saw it when I was little, and have hankered after it
ever since. . . . Many a time I plan flight and escape
— only the work I do is so unportable, it holds me
to it, and I cannot carry it with me ! . . . * Come out
of her, O my people.' "
No one wrote more bitterly of London than George
Gissing, but when his Henry Ryecroft looks back on
his old lodging-houses, the old trite street-corners,
the restaurants and coffee-shops where he found
insufficient nourishment, he exclaims : ^^ Some day I
will go to London and spend a day or two amid the
dear old horrors." He meant his first London
lodgings, where he was better provided with hope
than money. A Londoner can forget much, but his
"first perch," as Lord Eldon called it (anticipating
somewhat Disraeli's remark, " London is a roost for
every bird"), is a lasting memory. Eldon, then John
Scott, brought his Bessy and his bairns to Cursitor
Street. He would say in his years of fame and
dignity, "There was my first perch. Many a time
have I run down from Cursitor Street to Fleet Market
to buy sixpenn'orth of sprats for our supper." A like
story is told of Lord Northington : when he reached
the Woolsack and a mansion in Grosvenor Square, he
and his wife looked back wistfully to their small house
in Great James Street, Bedford Row, where a leg of
mutton had lasted three days — the first day hot, the
second day cold, and the third day hashed.
THE FIRST PERCH 33
The first perch ! There was no reason why I should
have chosen my own in the dismal region of Hoxton.
But when I had found acceptance in the City and was,
so to speak, a licensed Londoner, I had no better plan
than to walk in random search of a roof. I like
to remember that casual faring into London's arms.
As it happened, I wandered north, up Moorgate Street,
past the Artillery ground, blinking with joy when I
saw Finsbury Square, nobly metropolitan, and the Bun-
hill burial-ground — eloquent of the City's dusty past.
I walked up the New North Road without rudder,
and thought that the names above the little shops of
clockmakers, newsagents, and small milliners were
possible only in London and in the novels of Dickens.
In a side-street a decent house showed a card in its
window, and in five minutes I was lord of a chamber
whose windows looked on the mysterious " backs " of
another street. That night I said : These, then, are
London dwellings, and they were old before I was
born. A light would travel up some stairs, gleaming
and failing as it went up from landing to landing.
Resolving to make a unique collection of London shop-
keepers' names, I fell asleep. I have never made that
collection, but I believe that the only man in London
named Oliver Twist lives to-day in my old Hoxton.
George Gissing knew Hoxton. He writes in
" Demos " : ^' On the dim borderland of Islington
and Hoxton, in a corner made by the intersection
of the New North Road and the Regent's Canal, is
discoverable an irregular triangle of small dwelling-
houses, bearing the name of Wilton Square." Here
he laid the home of the Mutimer family. Wilton
Square still answers to Gissing's picture, even to the
railings and the front doors " reached by an ascent of
five steps." He describes the canal — ^' inaladetta e
D
34 A LONDONER'S LONDON
sventurata fossa — stagnating in utter foulness between
coal-wharfs and builders' yards." But London ac-
commodates itself to no phrases, and when I went
that way last summer the canal was not very foul, the
sky above it was blue, and between two bridges, each
bearing a knot of onlookers, a score of naked figures
made one connect Hoxton with sun-clad boyhood : the
truth of the *' Demos " picture was curiously suspended.
If you are not sealed of the tribe of Gissing, or a
little mad on localities, I can suggest no reason why
you should search out Wilton Square.
One night the lights and crowds of Islington High
Street burst upon my view. I saw my mistake, and
soon afterwards quitted the vale for the plateau. I
was now to look down on the Islington High Street
itself, which Ryecroft condemns as dreary and ugly —
I cannot think why. Its long western curve of old
houses set on a raised pavement has a grace of its
own, and at that time sundry scraps of the old village
green survived. The shops of Upper Street and the little
caf^s about the *^ Angel," the ceaseless uphill arrivals of
tram-cars from the City and King's Cross, the white
electric light over the theatre, and the vague traditions
of merriment, and bailiff's daughters, and fat cattle,
made up a sum of cheerfulness that contented me.
From Colebrooke Row I looked down on the barges
coming from Wales, and emerging with all their
suggestions of fields and horizons from the mysterious
Caledonian Tunnel.
Particularly on Sunday morning it was pleasant in
1886 to look out on the long bend of Upper Street
between the Liverpool Road and the Agricultural
Hall, and to watch through the tree-trunks the
omnibuses passing with tinkle and hoof-beat. Even
now — and there have been dire changes since 1886 —
THE FIRST PERCH $$
the pleasant old village asserts itself. Come to it from
the north and you feel its ancient bounds and com-
pactness when you pass St. Mary's Church. Climb ta
it from the south, west, or east, and the sight of that
busy corner at the "Angel " is exhilarating if you have
London charity. You are aware of a population and
an atmosphere. A hundred years ago Islington was
scarcely connected with London at all, and a bell was
rung at the Angel Tavern to summon travellers to
make up a party strong enough to proceed safely over
the fields to London. Roaring thoroughfares now
link the Angel corner with the City, with central
London, and with the great railway centres down
there in the misty mid-region of Euston and St.
Pancras. Yet Islington maintains her separateness.
Though near to the old London, she is still a little
removed in spirit. Her theatres, her music-hall, her
taverns, her restaurants, both English and foreign,
her newspapers, and her penny shows, announce a
hill-top detachment.
The "Angel" that Hogarth knew (he portrayed it
in his Stage Coach print) disappeared in 1819. Its
successor has been replaced in recent years by a new
building whose dome is a landmark easily seen in the
roads that ascend to it.
Hard by the " Angel," unseen, because built over, the
New River flows to Clerkenwell. Charles Lamb's
famous cottage, recently distinguished by one of the
London County Council's tablets, is properly described
as No. 64 Duncan Terrace. I look on it with the
more interest for the reason that a few years ago I had
the privilege of receiving a cup of tea from Mrs.
Edward FitzGerald, who'very well remembered Charles
Lamb in Colebrooke Cottage. As a girl she was
the Lucy Barton in whose album Charles Lamb wrote
the lines beginning : " Little book surnamed of white."
36 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Mrs. FitzGerald would relate how she left the
omnibus with her father, Bernard Barton, the Quaker-
poet of Woodbridge, and how they rapped at this
door.^ Lamb seemed to have been reading, for a folio
lay before him. She particularly remembered that in
a large bookcase nearly every volume bore the white
tickets which they had worn when Lamb picked them
up on the bookstalls. It was like Lamb to be whimsi-
cally indifferent to their presence. Mrs. FitzGerald
remembered little of the talk between Lamb and her
father. It was about books. They finished with a
luncheon of oysters, and then Lamb, who intended to
take a walk, saw them to their omnibus. Only ten
years ago it was possible to listen to this account of a
morning call on Charles Lamb in Islington eighty
years gone. Much water has flowed past Colebrooke
Cottage since then, and now the stream is beneath the
ground, and beneath Lamb's description, '* mockery of
a river — liquid artifice — wretched conduit 1 "
From the middle of Colebrooke Row one passes
through Camden Street to a quaint little street, flagged
for foot - passengers only, called Camden Passage.
This is Islington's version of Booksellers' Row. It
is lined with small miscellaneous shops displaying
picture-frames, second-hand books, old furniture,
foreign stamps, go-carts, old clocks, and ornaments
and shells obtained by deep soundings in early
Victorian parlours. In this by-way died Alexander
Cruden, author of the *' Concordance." Apart from
his *' Concordance," he attracted much attention by his
eccentric benevolences. Many people considered
him insane, but at least " Alexander the Corrector "
might be written as one who loved his fellow-men —
• Sec Mrs. Fit/Gerald's account, communicated to Mr. E. V. Lucas,
by whom it was included in "Bernard Baiton and his Friends."
THE FIRST PERCH 37
always excepting John Wilkes, and, perhaps, the type
of young clergyman to whom he once presented a
work entitled " Mother's Catechism : Dedicated to the
Young and Ignorant."
Islington's list of " worthies " is a long one. The
lintelled cottage of Phelps, the actor, still stands near
Duncan Terrace, facing a boarded-in patch of the old
green. Colley Cibber, the dramatist, is said to have
died next door to the Castle Tavern, near Colebrooke
Row ; Captain Mayne Reid lived in a house near the
Agricultural Hall ; Thomas Dibdin had several
addresses in Islington ; and Canonbury Tower was
the home, not only of Oliver Goldsmith, but of
Ephraim Chambers, the compiler of the first English
encyclopaedia, whose epitaph in Bunhill Fields de-
scribes him as
Heard of by many,
Known to few.
This after all must be the usual lot of an encyclopaedia-
maker, and it applied not less to Dr. Abraham Rees,
who also lived in Canonbury Tower, and published
his ^^ Rees's Cyclopaedia " in forty-five volumes some
ninety years ago.
Another Islington writer, whose works, though
ephemeral, were extremely useful in their genera-
tion and always fetched their full value, was Mr.
Abraham Newland, whose signature was on every
Bank of England note. He died at 38 Highbury
Place, after retiring thither from twenty-five years'
service as chief cashier of the Bank of England.
During that period he never once slept out of the
Bank. His signature was so familiar that the ex-
pression to ^* sham Abraham Newland " became a
cant term for forgery.
38 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Then there is the bailiff's daughter. It has long
been held that the Islington of the old ballad was an
obscure Norfolk village of the same name. This
theory cannot be suffered gladly, and an attempt was
made a few years ago by Colonel W. F. Prideaux to
upset the claims made by Bishop Percy and others for
the East Anglian hamlet.^ The chief argument
against the London suburb is that the distance
between Islington and London, even allowing for the
state of travel in Elizabethan times, hardly accounts
for the '* seven long years " separation of the lovers.
On the other hand, if the Norfolk Islington be meant,
it is curious that the ballad makes no mention of
nightfall in the girl's journey up to London " her true
love to inquire." Colonel Prideaux does not deal
with these matters, which, indeed, are too intangible
for much discussion. His exposition turns on a new
version of the ballad, discovered in Ireland by Mrs.
C. Milligan Fox, in which an interesting variation from
Bishop Percy's version occurs. The ninth stanza runs —
Take from me my milk-white steed,
My saddle and my bow^
And I will away to some foreign countree,
Where no one will we know.
instead of—
If she be dead, then take my horse.
My saddle and bridle also ;
For I will into some far countrye,
Where nae man shall me knowe.
The word "bow" in this version is interesting testi-
mony to the antiquity of the ballad, but to Colonel
Prideaux it suggests more. He remarks : " It brings
us to the time when the London young man was wont
to spend a good deal of his spare time at the ' butts,'
* See " Notes and Queries, " 19 November, 1904.
THE FIRST PERCH 39
which were numerous in the suburbs of London
during the Tudor regime. Finsbury Fields were the
favourite rendezvous for the archers in the north of
London, and Islington Butts were situated at that
point of Islington Common where the boundary Imes
of Hackney and Islington parishes meet. The turf
embankments which constituted the * butts' may be
said roughly to have stood at the junction of the
Kingsland and the Ball's Pond Roads. We can,
therefore, imagine that the bailiff's daughter, trudging
along the dusty Shoreditch Road on her way to ^ fair
London,' met the esquire's son riding forth with his
bow and quiver to practise at the butts, with the
happy denouement that is related in the ballad. . . .
The date of the ballad may, I think, be ascribed to the
latter half of Elizabeth's reign."
A pleasant Islington tradition, repeated in several
other parts of London, is that of the 999 cows which
no herdmanship could increase to 1000. The cows
belonged to Mr. Laycock, one of the great Islington
cow-keepers of the early part of the last century. Mr.
Laycock's ambition to achieve the round number was
said to be inspired by the statement that Job had a
thousand cattle. But the farmer's thousandth cow
was always to seek. Laycock's Yard in the Liverpool
Road still preserves the memory of this great dairy-
man, who, however, had rivals. A Mr. West is stated
in Baird's '* General View of the Agriculture of
Middlesex " (quoted by Nelson in his ^^ History of
Islington ") to have possessed nearly a thousand cows
in 1793. Moreover, the same legend about 999 cows
is associated with Willan's farm, on the site of Regent's
Park. The Islington cattle-layers (or lairs) were
situated on an area bounded on the east by the Upper
Street of IsHngton and the Liverpool Road, which was
40 A LONDONER'S LONDON
then a comparatively new route for the north-western
mails between the Angel at Islington and the
Holloway Road. When Mr. Laycock died, or pretty
soon after, his cattle-sheds were acquired by the
London General Omnibus Company.
Apart from its relation to Islington, the Angel
Tavern is the half-way house on that boulevard that
failed, of which the Euston Road and Pentonville Hill
are the western stretch and the City Road the eastern. I
have a kindness for the City Road, that misbegotten
and forlorn artery. It was projected by a Mr. Charles
Dingley in the year 1756. He was a timber merchant,
and he is stated to have made an unsuccessful attempt
to establish the use of " that ingenious machine, the saw-
mill." It seems a pity that he declined to allow the road
to bear his name, for had he done so the lower part
might have been cheerfully known as Dingley Dell.
Another inventor, less shy of immortality, gave his
name to the first terrace on the right as you descend
from Islington. Dalby Terrace (but the name has
recently disappeared) perpetuates the name of a Mr,
Dalby who, greater even than the Great Twalmley,
invented the public-house beer-engine. He lived for
a time in the large house which heads the terrace and
looks to the "Angel." It is now the office of a build-
ing society.
The triangular patch of ground at this spot, known
to all who know their London by the clock and obelisk
at its apex, has a curious history. It was formerly a
deep hollow, and was called Jack Plackett's Common.
Plackett was a robber. Born in Islington, he was not
without local loyalty, for all his iniquities were done
within a mile of the Angel Tavern, and it was on this
patch of ground that he paid the last penalty of the law
in 1762. Jack Plackett's Common became the scene
of prize-fights.
THE FIRST PERCH 41
As a boy, I had heard of the City Road from a
schoolfellow who was born in Brazil. There, amid
the scents of bananas and coffee, under a sun hotter
than the City Road's hottest, he had heard voices
trolling the verse ; —
Up and down the City Road,
In and out the "Eagle,"
That's the way the money goes —
Pop goes the weasel !
It was his first foretaste of London, and I think he made
it mine. This jingle, like a speck of radium, had given
me years of mysterious light. To allow that light to
be extinguished in the reality would have been interest-
ing, but I was too late for the " Eagle." The tavern,
indeed, remained, and the eagle on its roof, but the
Grecian Saloon had suffered a change. I looked over
it before its demolition in 1901. It had been occupied
for some years by the Salvation Army, but as the
features of the dying will assume youthful expressions,
the ruined Grecian declared its earliest uses. The
theatre stood still, and above the torn proscenium
delicate vases and finials rose giltless and forlorn.
Inside the theatre mouldy Cupids and tattered floral
designs rioted over the ceiling and round the dress-
circle. The orchestra was the edge of a precipice, but
the back wall of the stage reared itself aloft, and in its
crevices the sparrows were building.
It was in 1825, or thereabouts, that Thomas Rouse,
landlord of the '* Eagle," opened the saloon which was
to be the last resort of its kind and also " the father
and mother, the dry and wet nurse of the music
hall." I Singers whose names became inseparable from
* It is thus characterized by the late Mr. John Hollingshead in his
" My Lifetime." He points out that the " more or less inspired Ucensed
42 A LONDONER'S LONDON
the Grecian were Harry Howell and Robert Glindon.
One night Paganini, gyrating in the crowd, was so
mobbed that he had to retire. A more typical frequenter
was Miss Jemima Evans, whose "How 'ev'nly I " is
familiar to the reader of ^' Boz." Her exclamation was
inspired by the walks, the refreshment-boxes, " painted
and ornamented like so many snuff-boxes," and the
waiters tearing about with glasses of negus. A remark
by the gentleman in the plaid waistcoat on Miss
Jemima's lady friend's ankles led to sudden war
between Mr. Samuel Wilkins and the waistcoat.
The tactical view-point of this howling artery is its
intersection with Old Street. Here every face is that
of a worker, and, as the faces come and go, the expres-
sion is the same. In this welter of business and desires
the mass of St. Luke's Lunatic Asylum rises like a sad
suggestion. A hundred and thirty years ago St. Luke's
was built as a suburban supplement to Bethlem Hos-
pital. Now it looks like a refuge for minds that snap
in the street, as though a man should say, '^ I will bear
it no longer," and turn in there, and be a child again,
and look out of those high windows on the hurly-
burly, forgetful and forgot. Yet in the City Road you
have a punctually toiling, long-enduring crowd, and, in
the evening hour of release, a cheerful one. The seats
on the tram-cars gliding up from Finsbury Pavement
are full, and hundreds are walking. Clerks, foremen,
compositors, packers, warehousemen, girls from the
factories of Finsbury, Bunhill, and Cripplegate are
victualler " who founded the saloon, and ruled it nightly from a private
box with the aid of a huge walking-stick, gathered round him many
singers and actors of talent. Here, before they were known in the
West End, appeared members of the Leclerq family, the great Frederic
Robson, Mr. and Mrs. Cauldfield, Mr, Flexmore, Mr. Sims Reeves
(who appeared in 1809 under the name of Johnson), and many others
of account.
THE FIRST PERCH 43
hastening north to their homes and lodgings in
Hoxton, Canonbury, Pentonville, and Highbury.
By an impressive fate the City Road roars past the
cemetery of Bunhill Fields, to which Southey gave the
name of the Campo Santo of Nonconformity. Here
lie the heroes of Puritan England, the champions of
civil and religious liberty, the upholders of industry
and simplicity of life. If Melrose must be visited by
moonlight, this field of sepulchres should be seen on
an autumn afternoon when the leaves are falling and a
soft haze envelops the haunts of Wesley. Although
the ground is thick with gravestones, and its gate-
pillars inscribed with names, the number of interments
exceeds any that the scene suggests. That number
is said to be 124,000. The records, which extend from
1665 to 1852, are intact in Somerset House. Certain
graves give to this harvest of death an undying
interest. Here Bunyan ended his pilgrim's progress
on earth, and in old Bibles there are records that a
father or a mother was laid near — so many feet — from
his grave. Here many Crom wells are buried, Isaac
Watts's name hallows another stone, and yonder is laid
the hand that wrote "Robinson Crusoe." All the
anecdote of Dissent is recalled to your deciphering
gaze. The name of Thomas Bradbury recalls the last
days of Queen Anne. Bradbury feared for the safety of
Dissent, and though he could never have prayed for the
Queen's death, he was ready to see in it a Divine Pro-
vidence. During the Queen's illness he met Burnet,
Bishop of Salisbury, in Smithfield, and learned that
the end was near. The Bishop, who was on his way
to the Court, promised to send word to Bradbury in
the event of the Queen's death. If he should happen
to be in the pulpit the man was to drop a handker-
chief in his view. This signal was given, and the
44 A LONDONER'S LONDON
minister thrilled his audience by suddenly rendering
thanks for the deliverance of the country from evil
counsels, and asking the Divine blessing on " His
Majesty King George and the House of Hanover."
It was long Bradbury's boast that he was the first
to proclaim King George.
To this region belongs the story of one of the few
London tradesmen who have left autobiographies. I
wish there had been more such, for in these books one
dives deep into the everyday past of London, and into
the affairs of the dead Londoner in the surviving
street.
" I opened shop on Midsummer Day, 1774, in
Featherstone Street, in the parish of St. Luke, and I
was as well pleased in surveying my little shop with
my name over it, as was Nebuchadnezzar when he
cried, ^ Is not this great Babylon that I have built f ' "
The poor West Country cobbler who, on setting up in
business in London, thus compared himself, became
the greatest popular bookseller that London had
known. Nor have later achievements belittled the
bibliopolic triumph of James Lackington. Sixteen
years later this bookish cobbler was able to state his
profits from bookselling at ;£40oo a year, and this was
no final figure. Lackington's Repository in Finsbury
Circus was long tabulated as one of the sights of
London, and, indeed, it became a kind of golden
image of bookselling, set up in the plain of Finsbury,
whose height was threescore cubits. To drop Nebu-
chadnezzar, this ** Temple of the Muses," as the proud
bookseller called it, was actually a fine affair. When it
was completed a coach and four was driven round the
floor under its great dome, whose supporting walls
were to be lined with a million books.
Lackington's success grew out of his native love of
THE FIRST PERCH 45
books. His initial stock was his small and tattered
private library, brought from Taunton, and its value,
with an unstated quantity of shoe-leather thrown in,
was about £^, But the cobbler and the cobbler's wife
had a spirit in them that was new to Featherstone
Street, and was bound, like new wine, to burst that
narrow bottle of a street off the City Road.
A story proves this. When the pair were scraping
together the furniture for their one room and work-
shop, Christmas Eve arrived, and with it the noble
idea of a Christmas dinner. Mrs. Lackington sent her
husband out to do his best with half a crown. The
sum was small, yet it might stretch to a little festival.
On the way he spied a second-hand bookshop, and
it occurred to him that with no unsupportable deduc-
tion from the proposed luxuries he might possess him-
self of one more cheap book for his library. He
accordingly entered the shop, thinking to lay out six-
pence or ninepence, but he ended by putting down
his whole sum for a copy of Young's " Night
Thoughts." And it was with the " Night Thoughts,"
and a well-composed harangue on the superiority of
intellectual over sensual pleasures, that the young man
came home. ** I think," he said, " I have acted wisely,
for had I bought a dinner we should have eaten it to-
morrow, and the pleasure would have been soon over ;
but should we live fifty years longer we shall have the
' Night Thoughts ' to feast upon." And, wonderful to
relate, the cobbler's wife accepted this view of the
matter, helped, perhaps, by her dolorous Methodism
and her pathetic pride in self-denial.
A man who could make his Christmas dinner off
Young's *^ Night Thoughts" would never know the
night of poverty. Six months later, with a stock now
worth ^£25, Lackington removed to a shop and parlour
46 A LONDONER'S LONDON
at 46 Chiswell Street, where, not sticking to his last, he
became one entire and perfect bookseller. He became,
too, a widower and a man of the world. It was the
reading of " John Buncle " that expanded him. When
he laid down the last of its four volumes, " my soul
had took its freedom up," he declares, quoting a
forgotten poet. Nor was he perturbed when one of
" Mr. Wesley's old women," as he now pleasantly
called his former pastors, assured him in polite
company that " the devil would soon toss him about
in hell with a pitchfork." Married anew to a lady who
loved books without despising cakes and ale, he was
buying stock at a great rate and becoming intellectual
(he tells us), in the same way as butchers become fat
by the smell of meat. Whereas in Featherstone Street
he had beckoned across the way for a pot of porter,
he could now provide his friends with port and sherry,
and thence he rose to a country box and a carriage
inscribed with the motto — more aristocratic now than
then — ** Small profits do great things."
The time was ripe for the man. He speaks of the
increase of readers in the last twenty years of the
eighteenth century. " All ranks and degrees now read."
The poorer sort of farmers, and country people in
general, had given up telling each other ghost stories
in the fire-light, and ** on entering their houses you
may see ^Tom Jones,' * Roderick Random,' and other
entertaining books, stuck up in the bacon racks."
To fill bacon racks with books may be said to have
been Lackington's aim in business. His secret was
simple. In 1780 he determined, against the whole
custom of the trade, to give no credit whatever, and to
sell books quickly at small profits. ** Remainder "
sales were frequent, and he was surprised to discover
that it was usual for booksellers who bought up
THE FIRST PERCH 47
remainders to destroy half or three-fourths of such
books, and to charge Httle less than the full publication
price for the copies they kept. He broke this custom,
and sold all his *^ remainder " purchases at very low
prices, in accordance with his principle that small
profits do great things. The trade took alarm, and the
arch-underseller was vilified. Yet this phase passed,
the while Lackington, who was a mighty inscriber of
quotations in his tablets, consoled himself with the
sufficiently venomous remark in Carpenter's "Joineri-
ana" that "a bookseller is in general a bad judge of
everything, but his stupidity shines most conspicuously
in that particular branch of knowledge by which he
gets his bread." Booksellers had the wit to perceive
that they, like the public, could buy profitably from
the all-buying Lackington, who began to issue huge
separate catalogues to booksellers and ordinary readers.
He provided in his day and generation a big and
popular form of bookselling, analogous to the hypnotic
and far-reaching methods now employed by the
drapery trades. His reward was a satisfied old age
at Merton, where he wrote his interesting but rather
scandalous memoirs. These still float round the
London bookstalls, though they are hardly likely to
fulfil his prayer that they might live
Till they in flames at last expire,
And help to set the world on fire.
It is easy to see that the original houses in the City
Road were built for well-to-do people who desired to
be rural within twenty minutes' walk of the Bank.
For a time they succeeded. There are records of
delicious fruit raised here. You still see the iron
balconies from which the City Road children looked
48 A LONDONER'S LONDON
down on currant-bushes and sweet-williams. There
is a fragrant name, Shepherdess Walk, now borne by
a street of deadly straightness, along which you walk
in the shadow of a workhouse. The manners of this
neighbourhood may be deduced from the permanent
cautions against window-breaking which meet the eye.
Here within living memory were fields and tea-gardens.
Now all is brick and toil, with a tendency for the
factory to spurn the house from the street.
There are, perhaps, still a few Londoners who
remember Shepherd and Shepherdess Fields when
syllabubs were giving place to mortar, and when Dodd
the Dustman's cinder-heaps adorned the canal. Once
a year Dodd — the Mr. Boffin of '* Our Mutual Friend "
— gave a beanfeast to his minions and their sweet-
hearts, and the neighbouring bricklayers were bidden
to the revels, on which Mr. Rouse of the Grecian
shed the light of his countenance.
Thus in obscure ways has London enlarged herself.
In a forgotten summer evening the Dustmen of the
old streets are dancing with the Bricklayers of the new,
and in the background the City Road resigns itself to
mixed destinies. Even in recent years one has seen
the City Road lose a certain Whistlerian charm it had.
The view of the Regent's Canal from the bridge, half-
way along the road to Islington, no longer invites.
Various rows of cottages have given place to ware-
houses, and a church has been dismantled. A
circular plot of grass, railed in and gateless, has
disappeared near Windsor Terrace. For that weird
circle Dickens might have found a story, and Carlyle
a phrase. Carlyle, indeed, should have described this
Appian Way of toil, this road of wry annals and vexed
property, of dusty graves and exploded revels.
Returning to Plackett's Common, a road which here
THE FIRST PERCH 49
forms an acute angle with the City Road is worth a
passing gaze. It recalls one of the most cheerful
passages in all literature. This : *' That punctual
servant of all work, the sun, had just risen, and begun
to strike a light on the morning of the thirteenth of
May, one thousand eight hundred and twenty-seven,
when Mr. Samuel Pickwick burst like another sun
from his slumbers, threw open his chamber window,
and looked out upon the world beneath. Goswell
Street was at his feet — Goswell Street was on his right
hand — and as far as eye could reach, Goswell Street
extended on his left ; and the opposite side of Goswell
Street was over the way."
How many million readers have been lifted by this
vision of a Goswell Street they have never looked upon !
This London glimpse has passed into the conscious-
ness of the whole English race. The name has
become Goswell Road. Mr. Pickwick's Goswell Street
was the lower portion of what is now one road, rising
from the Charterhouse to the "Angel" at Islington. Not
long ago, more by accident than by design, I walked
again in Mr. Pickwick's tracks, and turned to look
at the street on which that benevolent brow sheds
unfading lustre. To my surprise Goswell Street was
filled with stones, implements, and trestles, and was
noisy with the sound of hammers on iron. Goswell
Street was in the hands of the London County Council,
and on its roadway a new conduit electric tramline
was being laid in the sweat of many brows. The very
portions of Goswell Street in which I was inclined to
locate Mr. Pickwick's lodgings suffered these assaults,
and in several places the opposite side of Goswell
Street was no longer over the way. Yet the old road
was there, basking in a June sun and refreshed by a
summer breeze. Although London rebuilds her streets,
50 A LONDONER'S LONDON
she seldom interferes with their contours. To-day,
much as in Stow's time, Goswell Street " stretcheth up
towards Isledon."
From the " Angel," in the old days, one strolled often
to Claremont Square and its reservoir to look down
Pentonville Hill on the misty vale of St. Pancras.
London rests her elbow in Claremont Square, a place
of large windows, fantail doors, conventional glimpses
of india-rubber plants climbing between white lace
curtains, and eternal afternoon. The name "Clare-
mont " shared by the neighbouring chapel appears to
have no historical basis. It was probably suggested
by the site, and by that amiable weakness which makes
our suburban roads talk (like Fred Bayham) " sumptu-
ously " in terms of Chatsworth, Hawarden, and
Dalmeny.
To Claremont Square and to Amwell Street (a few
doors from the square) went George Cruikshank,
young and new married. In Amwell Street he
illustrated the "Sketches by Boz" and imagined he
wrote " Oliver Twist." There, to his apprentices and
to young disciples like George Augustus Sala, he gave
out his single and constant maxim of art : " Take care
to draw the pelvis right, for what are you, and what
can you do, if your pelvis is wrong ? " In the evening
Cruikshank was to be seen at the Sir Hugh
Myddleton Tavern hard by, where he sat with his
fellow-members of the " Crib," a club of choice spirits
founded by Joseph Grimaldi. Possibly it was after
such a night that George, sitting up in his bed in a
torture of cogitation, saw in the bedroom looking-
glass the reflection of his own face and his fingers
between his lips, and exclaimed, " That's it I " He
had seen Fagin in the condemned cell.
Something in the air and sky of this region might
THE FIRST PERCH 51
suggest, if one did now know of them, the grass slopes
of earlier days, and the extinguished lights and
** garlands dead " of tea-garden and bowling-green.
The street names recall Copenhagen House, White
Conduit House, and other Cockney resorts which dis-
appeared at the beginning of the last century. At the
corner of Penton Street is the Belvedere Tavern, and
inside it a large painting of its old racket-court with
players and spectators ; and here, in Winchester Place,
opposite the reservoir, was Dobney's Bowling Green
at Prospect House, on the site of the present
mantelpiece factory.
A curious story hangs to the name of Hermes Street.
Here at his mansion, Hermes Hill, died Dr. Francis
de Valangin, M.D. A Swiss by birth, he had come to
England from Leyden and practised in Soho Square
and the City. About the year 1772 he looked round
him for a country house, and pitched upon the green
heights of Pentonville. Pink, the historian of Clerken-
well, says that the house he built was more fanciful
than convenient. The doctor named it Hermes Hill
after Hermes Trismegistus, the Egyptian priest and
philosopher, who wrote some forty books on theology,
medicine, and geography, and it is this dim figure of
the age of Osiris and Isis that is recalled to-day in
the murk of Pentonville. It was at Hermes Hill
Dr. Valangin discovered his ^* Balsam of Life," which
was sold long after at the Apothecaries' Hall. Here
his only daughter died at the age of nine, and was
buried under a costly gravestone in the garden. The
doctor lived to be eighty.
Hermes Hill obtained notoriety in 181 1 as the home
of the coal-heaver evangelist, William Huntington,
who added the letters S.S. to his name to signify
'* Sinner Saved." His real name was Hunt, to which
52 A LONDONER'S LONDON
he had added two syllables in order to obscure the
record of a youthful folly. Huntington had come to
London from Thames Ditton in *' two large carts with
furniture and other necessaries, beside a post-chaise
well filled with children and cats." The coal-heaver
made his way in London rapidly. He wrote many
books, and was provided by his flock with a chapel in
Gray's Inn Lane at a cost of ;£9000, a gift which he
graciously accepted on condition that it was made his
own freehold. Here he held forth with noise and
unction, varying his discourse by such interruptions as
" Wake that snoring sinner ! Silence that noisy
numskull 1 " After occupying Hermes Hill for less
than two years, he died at Tunbridge Wells in 1813,
and the sale of his effects at Pentonville produced
some extraordinary scenes. Relic prices were given
for trifles. His arm-chair fetched sixty guineas, and
his spectacles seven guineas. One man bought a
barrel of ale to '* remember him by." Huntington
himself relied for remembrance on his epitaph, which
he dictated thus : *' Here lies the Coal Heaver, who
departed this life July i, 1813, in the 69th year of his
age, beloved of his God and abhorred by men. The
Omniscient Judge, at the Grand Assize, shall ratify
and confirm this to the confusion of many thousands ;
for England and its metropolis shall know that there
hath been a Prophet among them. — W. H., S.S." His
portrait is in the National Portrait Gallery. It is
probable that he did much good in his uncouth way.
In 1826 it was written in Hone's " Every- Day
Book," " Building or what may more properly be
termed the tumbling-up of tumble-down houses, to the
north of London, is so rapidly increasing, that in a
year or two there will scarcely be a green spot for the
resort of the inhabitants." Hereabouts Carlyle in his
THE FIRST PERCH S3
first London days walked with Edward Irving, and
saw *' what was or had once been fields, and was again
coarsely green in general, but with symptoms of past
devastation by bricklayers, who have now doubtless
covered it all with their dirty human dog-hutches
of the period."
He gave this odd picture of a walk with Irving : —
" In some smoothish spot there suddenly disclosed
itself a considerable company of altogether fine-
looking young girls, who had set themselves to dance ;
all in airy bonnets, silks, and flounces, merry, alert,
nimble as young fawns, tripping it to their own
rhythm on the light fantastic toe, with the bright
beams of the setting sun gilding them, and the hum
and smoke of huge London shoved aside as foil or
background. Nothing could be prettier. At sight of
us they suddenly stopped, all looking round ; and one
of the prettiest, a dainty little thing, stepped radiantly
out to Irving. ' Oh ! oh ! Mr. Irving,' and blushing
and smiling offered her pretty lips to be kissed, which
Irving gallantly stooped down to accept as well worth
while. Whereupon, after some benediction or pastoral
words we went our way. Probably I rallied him on
such opulence of luck provided for a man, to which he
could answer properly as a spiritual shepherd, not a
secular."
Seventy years earlier Canaletto, at this spot, or near
it, saw London as no smoky background to brick
and nettle. Seated on the roof of Prospect House,
or at one of the windows, he proceeded to draw
a bird's-eye view of London. In a copy before me
I see pastures and cows, the detached New River
Head, the northern green outskirts, St. Paul's dome
and fifty spires, and beyond all the Surrey hills.
To-day, Claremont Square and a dun sky.
CHAPTER III
LORDS AND LANDLADIES
Feudal Waistcoats — The Duke and his View — Decimus Burton and
Major Cartwright— The Making of Bloomsbury—Lady Ellenborough's
P'lowers — Zachary Macaulay — Capper's Farm — Water - cress — A
Gloomy Square — A War on Tips — The Pretender in London — Dying
for a Greek Accent — A Question of Taste — Red Lion Mary — Lord
Eldon's Peaches— The Field of the Forty Footsteps— Peter Pindar's
Cottage— A Recipe for Old Age— The Railway Termini— Agar Town
— Morrison's Pills — King's Cross and the Moscow Legend — Art for the
Million — The Cottage that Never Was — St. Pancras-le-Gasometer
NOT Islington, but Bloomsbury, is the aviary
in which the young Londoner commonly finds
his " first perch." I have recalled that in the late
Eighties one drove through Bloomsbury with apologetic
stealth, sighting the red waistcoats of the Bedford gate-
keepers, who reduced the traffic to its lowest common
denominator of gentility, which I believe was a four-
wheeled cab. To-day, when bishops stand on soap-
boxes and peeresses sell hats, it is not to be supposed
that feudal waistcoats can endure. Not only have
the waistcoats and bars been withdrawn, but the pomp
implicit in the one and the exclusiveness enforced by
the other have passed out of these fine old streets and
squares.
Along its western boundary Bloomsbury has ad-
mitted modern " mansions," and these already tower
like a wave that must advance by its own weight. As
54
LORDS AND LANDLADIES 55
on the boundaries, so in the centre : Russell Square has
renewed its youth, its houses have put on terra-cotta
like a garment, the windows are new mullioned, and
the doors elegantly gated. Yet compromise goes with
restoration, for the presence of two huge modern
hotels, one of them named, it is true, after the Russell
family and adorned with many a boast of heraldry,
destroys without a pang the symmetry of the largest
square in London.
Yet Bloomsbury is Bloomsbury still — unique and,
on the whole, admirable. It is London's door-mat,
breaking the traveller's fall on her stones. How
lulling and congratulatory was the roll of the hansom
through these linked squares when Euston or St.
Pancras had washed its hands of you 1 Did I not
once sing in the groves of Guilford Street —
For me, for me, these old retreats
Amid the world of London streets !
My eye is pleased with all it meets
In Bloomsbury.
I know how prim is Bedford Park,
At Highgate oft I've heard the lark ;
Not these can lure me from an ark
In Bloomsbury.
I know how green is Peckham Rye,
And Syd'nham, flashing in the sky ;
But did I dwell there I should sigh
For Bloomsbury.
I know where Maida Vale receives
The night dews on her summer leaves ;
Not less my settled spirit cleaves
To Bloomsbury.
Some love the Chelsea river gales.
And the slow barges' ruddy sails ;
And these I'll woo when glamour fails
In Bloomsbury.
$6 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Enough for mc in yonder square
To see the perky sparrows pair,
Or long laburnum gild the air
In Bloomsbury.
Enough for me, in midnight skies,
To see the moons of London rise
And weave their silver fantasies
In Bloomsbury.
Oh, mine in snows and summer heats,
These good old Tory brick-built streets !
My eye is pleased with all it meets
In Bloomsbury.
Only a duke with a liking for port wine could have
planned Bloomsbury. He stood one day in 1756 at a
back window of Bedford House, looking northward
over the Southampton Fields, his wig awry with
passion as he watched a gang of workmen nearly a
mile away. They were constructing the New Road
from Paddington to the City — now the Euston Road.
And the Duke objected. Horace Walpole tells us why.
*'The Duke of Bedford, who is never in town in the
summer, objects to the dust it will make behind Bed-
ford House, and to some buildings proposed, though
if he were in town he is too short-sighted to see the
prospect."
Bedford House had been an unspoiled paradise.
" I have a perfect recollection," says a writer who
knew it, *' of its venerable grandeur, as I surveyed it in
the distance, shaded with the thick foliage of magnifi-
cent lime-trees. The fine verdant lawn extended a
considerable distance between these, and was guarded
by a deep ravine to the north from the intrusive foot-
steps of the daring, whilst in perfect safety were grazing
various breeds of foreign and other cattle." The house
was kept and managed with aristocratic perfection, and
LORDS AND LANDLADIES 57
we hear of the snow-white livery of its servants. The
Duke's family motto, '^ What will be will be," should
have helped him, even though he could not see the
Bloomsbury landlady peeping over the hill-tops of
Highgate.
In the very dawn of the nineteenth century the con-
struction of the ducal Bloomsbury began. Within
seven years the new district had made such progress
that a Scotchman walking over it wrote to his friend
Constable, the Edinburgh publisher : *^ Young Faulder
and I walked over all the Duke of Bedford's new
feuing- grounds — Russell Square, Tavistock Place,
Brunswick Square, etc. The extent of these, and the
rapidity of the buildings, is beyond all comprehension."
Most of the Bedford squares and streets were built
by Decimus Burton, who erected in them no fewer
than 922 houses. When the Bedford titles had been
exhausted, Burton gave his name to Burton Crescent,
where now stands the little-known statue of that fine
old liberty-loving fanatic, Major John Cartwright. He
is to be seen in bronze on the east side of the crescent,
where recently I found him sitting literally under his
own fig-tree, by whose branches he was in some
danger of being strangled.
The whole story of Bloomsbury and the districts
north of it can be read in three maps : Rocque's of
1745, Mogg's of 1806, and Cruchley's of 1845. Let us
arrange a few results.
ROCQUE, 1745.
In this map, made eleven years before the con-
struction of the New Road from Paddington to Battle's
Bridge (King's Cross), Bedford House is seen pre-
senting its back windows to the upward-rolling fields,
58 A LONDONER'S LONDON
in which St. Pancras is clustered round its small old
church, and Highgate shows as a remote hill-top
village. All the ground on which Bloomsbury now
stands is included under the name Lamb's Conduit
Fields. Only Great Russell Street, Southampton Row,
Bloomsbury Square, Queen's Square (named after
Queen Anne), and Great Ormond Street are seen.
The Foundling Hospital stands lonely in the fields,
in which there are many ponds.
The Tottenham Court Road is a country lane in
which Whitefield's first tabernacle stands on the brink
of a lake, not named on the map, but identical with
the sheet of water which the strolling Londoners of the
period called the " Little Sea." Near the chapel stood
a few cottages called Paradise Row, and a turnstile
opening into Crab Tree Fields, or Crab and Walnut
Fields, extending up to Tottenham Court and its Adam
and Eve Tavern. A person standing on the future site
of Tavistock Square in 1745 looked east over unbroken
fields to the northern edge of Clerkenwell, and west-
ward to old Marylebone. To the north-west he could
see the roofs of Islington crowning a green hill.
MOGG, 1806.
Bedford House is gone and Russell Square is built.
The Tottenham Court Road is lined on both sides with
its present offshoots, but Gower Street reaches only half-
way to the New Road. Of the squares and streets
between Russell Square and the New (Euston) Road,
only Tavistock Square is begun. But Guilford Street,
Bernard Street, Great Coram Street, and Tavistock
Place have been completed.
The New Road between the '* Adam and Eve " and
King's Cross is still rural, though Somers Town has
LORDS AND LANDLADIES 59
sprung up. Where Endsleigh Gardens now is, a large
nursery-ground is seen, and opposite the site of the
future St. Pancras Station is a bowling-green.
The sites of Hunter Street, Judd Street, and all their
tributaries are open pasture as far as Gray's Inn Lane.
Camden Town is a small place thinly enveloping a
portion of the Hampstead Road.
Cruchley, 1845.
The modern Bloomsbury is made up, and the
Euston Road, still called the New Road, is completely
urban. Regent's Park has been formed, Camden Town
and Kentish Town are organic continuations of London,
and the London and Birmingham Railway is running
into Euston Square. A reservoir occupies the site of
Tolmers Square.
As Rocque's map has shown us, the lower portions
of the district were of older date than the Bedford
suburb proper, and recent rebuildings have afforded
sudden ghmpses of an antique and picturesque Blooms-
bury which artists have been quick to seize. The
north side of the Queen Square, with railings in Guil-
ford Street, was left open in order that the residents
might enjoy the view to Highgate. Southampton
Row was old enough to have been the home of
the poets Gray and Cowper. In Bloomsbury Square
lived Lord Ellenborough, whose wife, the daughter
of a naval officer named Towry, was so beautiful
that passers-by would linger to watch her water the
flowers on her balcony, a pretty picture saved from
the time when the gardens in Great Russell Street,
and about, were noted for the perfume of their
flowers.
One of the most interesting but least-known spots in
6o A LONDONER'S LONDON
this lower region is the recreation-ground formed out
of the old burial-grounds of St. George the Martyr and
St. George's, Bloomsbury. It lies behind the Foundling
Hospital and is best approached from the Bloomsbury
squares by Handel Street, or from the Gray's Inn Road
by Wakefield Street. " Here lies Nancy Dawson."
Her gravestone, which is said to have borne these
words, has disappeared, but it is possible that it is only
buried out of sight. Twenty years ago, when the
recreation-ground was formed, search was made for
interesting gravestones, and that of Zachary Macaulay,
father of Lord Macaulay, is now erected on the green-
sward. That the grave of this remarkable man should
have been lost, and the recovery of its stone be a
matter of chance, are surprising facts, yet they consort
with the almost painful shrinking from reward and
recognition that marked the Abolitionist's character
and saddened some of his friends. It was said of him,
without exaggeration, that he " sacrificed all that a man
may lawfully sacrifice — health, fortune, repose, and
celebrity." Forty years ago Sir George Otto Trevelyan,
in his Life of Lord Macaulay, wrote in the spirit of his
subject : ** Even now, when he (Zachary Macaulay) has
been in his grave more than the third of a century, it
seems almost an act of disloyalty to record the public
services of a man who thought he had done less than
nothing if his exertion met with praise, or even with
recognition." Yet Trevelyan believed — and his state-
ment has not been corrected in recent editions — that
Zachary Macaulay had received the praise and recog-
nition implied in burial in Westminster Abbey. It is a
generous slip in a classic biography. There is a further
confusion in regard to the epitaph. For the inscription
quoted in the biography as the inscription in the
Abbey is not there. Written by Sir James Stephen, it
LORDS AND LANDLADIES 6i
was not considered suitable for the Abbey cenotaph,
however true. Indeed, its concluding words could not,
perhaps, have been properly inscribed where so many
of Zachary Macaulay's co-workers are honoured :
" Meekly endured the Toil, the Privation, the Reproach,
resigning to Others the Praise and the Reward." But
merit, like murder, will out, and there is now a scheme
to erect a church at Clapham to the memory of
Zachary Macaulay.
The old rural Bloomsbury lives in John Thomas
Smith's account of a farm which stood behind Great
Russell Street, and was occupied by two sisters named
Capper. One of them rode her fields on a grey mare,
and took a spiteful pleasure in cutting with a pair of
shears the strings of the boys' kites. The wooden
pipes of the New River Company crossed the fields
raised on trestles, and beneath their drippings water-
cress grew plentifully.
It is in Red Lion Square that the past of all this
region seems to collect its shadows. The impression
of something a little alien and sinister is felt in this
oblong precinct, in which the tall old houses, now
turned to commercial uses, look down on the chil-
dren's playground. The garden was thrown open
in 1885, and for some years there was a dovecote
in the centre, but it has disappeared. This dovecote
stood on or near the site of an obelisk that was sup-
posed to mark the spot where the bodies of Cromwell,
Ireton, and Bradshaw were secretly burned after their
mutilation at Tyburn. The story has no support. Yet
when the square was built it seemed at once to take
on a ghostly air ; an eighteenth-century writer de-
clared that he never went into it without thinking
of his latter end. "The dreary length of the sides,
with the four watch-houses like so many family vaults
62 A LONDONER'S LONDON
at the corners, and the naked obelisk that springs
from amidst the rank grass, hke the sad monument
of a disconsolate widow for the loss of her first
husband, form altogether a memento moriy more
powerful to me than a death's-head and cross
marrow-bones."
The square has more cheerful associations. Every
one knows that Jonas Han way, the hero of the
umbrella, lived here. A less-remembered resident
is Dr. William King, whose *^ Political and Literary
Anecdotes " is one of those books that are para-
doxically more quoted than read. It was King who
brought to Dr. Johnson his Master of Arts Diploma
from Oxford. He died in 1763, and his reminiscences,
which came to light long after his death, are full of
the London life of his day. He shared with Hanway
a strong objection to the exaction of tips, or vails,
by servants from the guests at great houses. It was
at Newcastle House, no farther than Lincoln's Inn
Fields, that this custom was temporarily scotched
by Sir Timothy Waldo. *^ Sir, I do not take silver,"
said the cook. ^^ Don't you, then I do not give gold."
Hanway made the incident the text of his philippic.
Dr. King whimsically suggested that a notice should
be placed, in large gold letters, over the door of
every man of rank, as follows : " The Fees for Dining
Here are Three Half Crowns (or Ten Shillings) to
be Paid to the Porter on Entering the House,
Peers or Peeresses to Pay What More They Think
Proper."
Dr. King was one of the few who were privy to
the secret visits to London of Prince Charles, the
Pretender, whom he met in 1750 at Lady Primrose's
house. He stayed in London only five days. King
says that his busts, which were then being commonly
LORDS AND LANDLADIES 63
sold in London, were more like him than any painted
portrait he had seen. He came one evening to King's
lodgings to drink tea, and it would appear that this
was during the doctor's stay in Red Lion Square.
'^ My servant, after he was gone, said to me, ^ that
he thought my new visitor very like Prince Charles.'
* Why,' said I, ^ have you ever seen Prince Charles ? '
* No, sir,' replied the fellow, ' but this gentleman,
whoever he may be, exactly resembles the busts which
are sold in Red Lion Street, and are said to be the
busts of Prince Charles.' The truth is, these busts
were taken in plaster of Paris from his face."
Among King's London stories is one that might
have appealed to Browning. Two gentlemen differed
about the accent of a Greek word in a coffee-house
in Devereux Court, in the Strand, and carried their
dispute to the length of stepping out into the court
to end it with their swords — which they did effectually,
for one of them was run through, and died on the
spot.
Like Hanway, the doctor was something of a
pioneer ; his book is one of the earliest examples
of " reminiscence " literature in our modern sense ;
an exemplar, too, by reason of its union of brevity
with a certain quality and finish of anecdote. King
did not trawl his life and correspondence for stories,
but wrote down those that had dwelt in his mind
as significant. To his account of the Devereux Court
duel he appends a grotesque example of that tinder-
like susceptibility to offence which often led to tragic
encounters. Two Englishmen arranged to travel
together through Europe for three or four years.
They took out passports and letters of credit, recom-
mendations, etc., settled all their affairs, and crossed
the Channel. Within a week they were sitting down
64 A LONDONER'S LONDON
in Brussels to a supper of a woodcock and a partridge.
A question arose as to which bird they should cut
first, and they found themselves at variance on this
point of gastronomy. The argument became such
a heated quarrel that they renounced their travelling
project, and parting next morning returned to Eng-
land, one by Calais and the other through Holland.
Six months later. King encountered one of these
gentlemen, who was his friend, and asked him if it
was true they had set out to do the Grand Tour and
had quarrelled in the first week over a woodcock and
a partridge. ''Very true," was the vehement answer,
''and did you ever know such an absurd fellow as
E , who insisted on cutting up a woodcock before
a partridge."
King tells us that he asked many of his contem-
poraries whether they would care to live their lives
over again, and "never heard one man of sense answer
in the affirmative." The gloom of Red Lion Square
may have attuned his mind to such inquiries. On
the other hand it may have deepened his love of
the four best things he recognized in life : " Old wine
to drink, old wood to burn, old books to read, and
old friends to converse with."
But the little square has its modern associations.
At No. 17, in a house whose successor bears a tablet
of commemoration, lived and wrought William Morris,
Edward Burne-Jones, and Dante Gabriel Rossetti.
Here the Morris movement in decoration was born.
And here flourished Red Lion Mary. It is fitting
that a servant girl's name should be linked to a
Bloomsbury square, and Red Lion Mary seems to
have deserved her destiny. She was a plain person,
of much character and unfailing good humour — im-
perturbable, in fact. Rossetti one day bounded into
LORDS AND LANDLADIES 65
the room, strode up to her, and in tragic tones and
with fearful meaning in his voice, exclaimed : —
Shall the hide of a fierce lion
Be stretched on a couch of wood,
For a daughter's foot to lie on,
Stained with a father's blood ?
The girl, quite unawed by the horrible proposition,
replied with complacency, " It shall if you like, sir."
Rossetti described the rooms as ^' intensely mediaeval "
with tables and chairs ^' like incubi and succubi."
For a picture he was then designing Burne-Jones
might have been seen — wonderful as it seems — paint-
ing lilies from specimens that grew in the garden of
the square. This was a happy year : " Blue summer,"
he wrote, ^' from Christmas to Christmas, and London
streets glittered, and it was always morning, and the
air sweet and full of bells."
Residence in Bloomsbury was long valued for its
happy mingling of town convenience with country
pleasures. Mrs. Siddons bought a house in Gower
Street, of which she wrote, '* The back of it is most
effectually in the country." Lord Eldon was proud
of the grapes which he obtained from his vine at
No. 42, though later he would speak in open court
of the injury done to them by the increasing smoke
of London. It is recorded that as late as 1800, at
No. 6 Gower Street, the tenant had twenty-five dozen
of fine nectarines and abundance of celery. And
Gower Street still yields fruit in its season. In 1906,
in Gower Place, close to the Underground Station,
a vine growing on a begrimed house bore four or
five bunches of purple grapes. This vine, which is
piously believed to have been taken from a Hampton
Court parent, is about thirty years old. In 1905 it
66 A LONDONER'S LONDON
bore twenty-two bunches of grapes, and in 1904 more
than forty. Long after Gower Street ceased to reward
the husbandman's labour it remained a very quiet
street, and, as such, agreeable to Charles Darwin,
who remarked that " if one is quiet in London, there
is nothing like its quietness — there is a grandeur
about its smoky fogs, and the dull, distant sounds
of cabs and coaches."
Near Torrington Square and the ground covered
by the new extension of the British Museum was
the legendary '* Field of the Forty Footsteps." The
story goes that at about the time of the Monmouth
Rebellion two brothers fought to the death in the
fields on which Bloomsbury now stands, for the hand
of a lady, who sat on a bank and watched them spill
each other's blood, until both fell to rise no more.
Tradition said that the place where this engaging
young woman sat, and the footprints made by the
two swordsmen, never produced grass again. It
was a fine story for Cockney lovers to gloat upon
when they walked abroad on Sunday mornings in
the fields north of London. They trod piously in
the Footsteps, enjoying something akin to Flaubert's
*' historic shudder." Nor were Cockney lovers the
only folk hypnotized by these strange marks in the
grass. The poet Southey searched for them dili-
gently. He found them adjoining a pond "about
three-quarters of a mile north of Montagu House,
and 500 yards east of Tottenham Court Road." He
not only saw the Footsteps, seventy-six in number,
but he gravely concurred in the opinion that "the
Almighty has ordered them as a standing monument
of his great displeasure of the horrid sin of duelling."
Where, exactly, were these Footsteps, visited and
brooded on by hundreds of thousands of eighteenth-
LORDS AND LANDLADIES 67
century Londoners ? Writing more than fifty years
ago in ^^ Notes and Queries," Dr. Rimbault stated
that common repute located them at the extreme
end of Upper Montagu Street, and at its north-east
corner. In other words, they were at the south end
of Woburn Square. A man who might have fixed
the locaHty to a nicety was old Joseph Moser, whose
" Vestiges " dragged their slow length through the
*' European Magazine." He saw the last of the
Footsteps on 16 June, 1800, and noted in his diary,
"the building materials are there to cover them
from the sight of men."
University College and the Hospital stand on ground
formerly known as Hope Field, in the occupation of a
Mr. Mortimer. The field covered twelve acres, and in
it was a pound ; also a rope-walk, and a row of cottages
known as Mortimer's Folly. Mortimer Market, that
odd little purlieu of the Tottenham Court Road, took
its name from the owner of the field.
It was to enjoy this open country about the New
Road, and the smell of garden and nursery flowers,
that Dr. Wolcot (Peter Pindar) took Montgomery
Cottage in which to spend his last days in peace.
He had done tormenting poor George the Third in
verse and prose, and he looked back on his exploits
with pride rather than penitence. When an old lady
gently asked him whether he did not think that he had
been a bad subject of King George, he replied, " I do
not know anything about that, madam ; but I do know
that the King has been a devilish good subject for me."
Wolcot had now done belabouring the Royal Academy
in his famous "Odes," but he liked to see young
artists with whom he sympathized, and above his
chimney-piece hung a relic of the man whose claims
he had championed with insight and courage, a glow-
68 A LONDONER'S LONDON
ing landscape by Richard Wilson. He now grew old,
and looked back on a life in which contention and
dissipation had played dominant parts. His hand had
been against every man, and every man's hand had
been lifted in reprisal. He now brought his blindness
and other infirmities to the Euston Road, before that
street name was known, because he ** loved the smell
of flowers, and the fresh air of the place." In Mont-
gomery Cottage he often spoke to Cyrus Redding of
the consolations of age. "You have seen something
of life in your time. See and learn all you can more.
You will fall back upon it when you grow old — an old
fool is an inexcusable fool to himself and others — store
up all ; our acquirements are most useful when we
become old." His recipe for length of days was
simple ; " Take care of your stomach, one dish will
do for any man ; take plain food ; keep yourself
from damp. I keep a fire every day throughout the
year. I must have dry air. I wear a flannel shirt
— it is needful, and I take a little brandy or rum.
Fire, flannel, and brandy are required in our
climate."
The name Euston Grove, borne by houses almost
within the station precincts, recalls Peter Pindar's fields
and flowers. Here lived, at one time, Edward Irving.
Close by, in Euston Square, at No. ii, Charles Aders
entertained Lamb, and Wordsworth, and Coleridge,
and Flaxman. The walls of the parlour were hung
with religious pictures, chiefly of the German school,
on which Lamb looked with quiet appreciation : hence
his lines : —
Whoever enters here no more presume,
To name a parlour or a drawing-room ;
But bending lowly to each holy story,
Make this thy Chapel and thy Oratory.
LORDS AND LANDLADIES 69
Parlour or oratory, its walls heard William Blake
explain his pictures as dictations of the Eternal Spirit.
Crabb Robinson said, ^'You express yourself as So-
crates used to do. What resemblance do you suppose
there is between your spirit and his ? " He answered,
" I was Socrates— a sort of brother. I must have had
conversations with him. So I had with Jesus Christ.
I have an obscure recollection of having been with
both of them."
The early Bloomsbury was connected with the New
Road by a private lane belonging to the Duke of
Bedford (now Woburn Place), and more or less directly
by field-paths. To-day, Bloomsbury is a caravanserai
at the thresholds of three great railway termini. In
1837, the portico of Euston Station, the most massive
thing of its kind in these islands, was being built of
Bramley Fall stone at a cost of ;^30,ooo. Single blocks
of the stone composing it weighed as much as thirteen
tons. The least necessary building in London may
survive all others. On 20 July, 1837, ^^^ London and
Birmingham Railway was opened as far as Boxmoor.
It was primitive railway travel. The third-class passen-
gers stood in open carriages and were covered with
dust and cinders from the engines, indeed the guard,
riding on the top of the carriage, had difficulty to prevent
his clothes catching fire. The track was laid on stone
blocks instead of sleepers, and the clatter of the train
was deafening. The bugle sounded in the stations.
It had been difficult to obtain Parliamentary sanction
for the construction of a terminus so far within London
as Euston Grove, and for about ten years no locomotive
was allowed to approach nearer than Chalk Farm.
Thence to Euston the trains ran down an inclined
plane under the control of brakesmen, and in the out-
ward journey they were hauled to Chalk Farm on an
70 A LONDONER'S LONDON
endless rope. "A ship going into harbour," says an
observer of the period, "is not treated with more
caution than a train meets with on being led into the
metropolis; like that, too, it must have its special
pilots, the bank-riders, as they are called, a small body
of men who do nothing but this ; from Euston Square
to Camden Town, and from Camden Town to Euston
Square is the extent of their travels ; and very absolute
their dominions are."
Such was Euston in its infancy. Yet the future of
the station was foreseen. Planned on a gigantic scale,
it has not been spoiled by piecemeal additions. The
great waiting-hall at Euston is the temple of British
railway enterprise. But it is a severe temple. When
G. F. Watts, noting its splendid wall expanses, wished
to decorate these with frescoes at his own cost, the
directors declined his offer on the ground that it was
not their function to provide art for travellers. The
hall is now therefore adorned by its own propor-
tions, and by Baily's overwhelming statue of George
Stephenson.
The note of St. Pancras Station differs from that of
Euston : a later stage of railway history is reflected.
This terminus was completed only in 1871, by which
time railway travelling had developed the need of the
railway hotel. St. Pancras gave to that idea its first
colossal embodiment. Its vast Gothic ho^el masks the
station, and lends the terminus a certain withdrawn
and middle-class sanctity. You enter the station on
precise behaviour, and may even feel a half-doubt
whether you are fully welcome to use it without know-
ing a Director, or at least a guard who remembers your
uncle William. Yet no railway is more hospitable or
does more for your comfort. It is not by accident that
on the main platform at St. Pancras there is a barber's
LORDS AND LANDLADIES 7'
shop, and an office for the sale of theatre tickets.
Unlike Euston, the station is a visible whole. Its
immense roof is built of girders 240 feet in span,
incredibly supported by the distant walls from which
they spring. To descend from St. Pancras Station
into the Euston Road is like coming out of church
into a shabby weekday world.
King's Cross Great Northern Station the man in the
street admires less than the architect. It has the neat
merit of appearing to be exactly what it is. Unlike
Euston and St. Pancras, this station wades in the
London traffic. The engine which has just pulled in
the Edinburgh express is cooling off a dozen yards
from the bus that climbs to Pentonville. King's Cross
Station is a terminus reduced to simple terms : plat-
forms and a roof. No. i platform at King's Cross is,
perhaps, the best departure platform in London, the
neatest, straightest, most amenable and correct. It is
rash to say so, because these are the questions which
divide families.
Both St. Pancras and King's Cross have curious
hinterlands. Somers Town is a kind of Bloomsbury,
with gasometers to represent the British Museum. On
its site Caesar is said to have encamped, but his com-
mentary is lacking. The rise of the district was due to
an influx of refugees from the French Revolution. The
immediate site of St. Pancras Station was styled Agar
Town, after its owner. Councillor Agar, but Dickens
called it a ^' suburban Connemara." He, or one of his
^' Household Words " contributors, relates that a lady
occupying one of the *^ built o' Sunday mornin's " tene-
ments, on being asked whether there was any sewer
connected therewith, replied, " Oh no ! Lord bless
you, we've none o' them nasty things hereabouts ! "
As the west end of the Euston Road runs to tomb-
72 A LONDONER'S LONDON
stones, so its King's Cross end caters for illness and
funerals. For many years a glazed obelisk has informed
the passers-by what it costs to be buried in nine degrees
of pomp. Moreover, the arrived countryman is awed
by a large square building adorned by a sculptured
lion on its roof, and by another lion majestically
couchant in its garden. This is the *' British College
of Health." Erected in 1828 by Mr. James Morrison,
it is the home of Morrison's Pills, a remedy of such
favour in its day that it was frequently mentioned in
** Punch," and was a property of the political car-
toonist. In a "Figaro" cartoon the Duke of Welling-
ton was pictured in the act of taking the Reform Bill
in the shape of a Morrison pill, while being held down
by Earl Grey and Lord John Russell. The founder of
the institution and the pill was an Aberdonian, who
became a merchant at Riga and in the West Indies.
Scourged by ill-health he sought his own remedies, and
then dealt in them with great profit. The " Hygiest "
died in Paris in 1840, at the age of seventy. In the
last ten years of his life he had paid ;£6o,ooo to the
British Government for medicine stamps, and his pills
had an immense sale in France. He wrote various
pamphlets; one bore the title, "Some Important Advice
to the World, or the Way to Prevent and Cure the
Diseases incident to the Human Frame — by James
Morrison, Gent. (Not a Doctor.)"
To King's Cross belongs the flattering legend that
Moscow was rebuilt, after the holocaust of 181 2, on
London rubbish. An immense cinder-heap stood on
ground now covered by the shops at the head of
the Gray's Inn Road. It consisted of horse-bones,
cinders, and mud ; and, according to Walford, it
was " the haunt of innumerable pigs." Dead grain
and hop-husks were also shot here, and on Sunday
LORDS AND LANDLADIES 73
mornings there was much Cockney horse-play. The
statement that in 1826 these rubbish-heaps were sold
to Russia "to help to rebuild Moscow" (Walford), or
"for making bricks to rebuild Moscow" (Hone), would
bear a little more proof than it has received. One
would suppose that after its baptism of fire Moscow
was not short of debris. Hone's contemporary state-
ment is as scanty as all the later ones, of which it
seems to be the father.
The King's Cross — for there was a Cross — dated
only from 1820. In that year Mr. William Forrester
Bray cast a speculative eye on the Battle Bridge region,
and with the assistance of other capitalists built more
than sixty houses at an outlay of ;^40,ooo. But the
name of Battle Bridge, glorious enough in its origin,
had become associated with all manner of rascality, and
the houses were in consequence difficult to let. Mr.
Bray and his partners consulted about a change of
name. " St. George's Cross " was suggested, and also
" Boadicea's Cross," but Mr. Bray, the largest builder,
preferred that the locality should be known as
" King's Cross " in honour of George IV. This was
agreed to. The structure — described as a ridiculous
octagonal affair, sixty feet high, with a statue of
George IV above and a police-station below — was
taken down, unhonoured, though not unsung, in 1845.
Its site is the ventilator of the subway nearest Gray's
Inn Road.
In such surroundings one looks about for something
that will strike even a moderate bliss upon the day.
For many years a cheap art shop has provided a hint
of happier things in this miscellaneous turmoil. Its
window has always been filled with original oil and
water-colour pictures, mostly landscapes, of which the
prices range from five shillings to two guineas. No
74 A LONDONER'S LONDON
" schools " or " experiments " ever influence the
statement of English landscape of which they make
affidavit. From this shop-window, and many others
of which it is a type, I have learned that the pictorial
object which is most dear to the London masses,
transfiguring the prose of the streets, is an original oil-
picture of an English cottage. But to be worth twelve-
and-sixpence, a price it often bears, the cottage must
answer to the sentiment of forgotten songs and faded
almanacs, to the wood-cuts in early Victorian prize-
books, and to a personal and inherited prepossession
that defies analysis. The cottage of Barnsbury's
dream and Pentonville's long desire is described in
one of Joanna Baillie's poems —
E'en now, methinks,
Each little cottage of my native vale
Swells out its earthen sides, upheaves its roof,
Like to a hillock moved by labouring mole,
And with green trail-weeds clambering up its walls.
Whenever I contemplate this accepted art I recall a
South London room in which three of us on a Sunday
morning would look out on the cheerful street through
dangling autumn leaves twenty-five years ago. We
were of progressive ages and different walks in life.
Blakely was a retired clergyman of the Church of
England, a lonely man of dry utterance, whom I rarely
saw during the week save in the stress of putting on
or taking off his overcoat. He would sit in that
rather ill-ventilated dining-room until a walk to
Camberwell Green presented itself to him as a novel
and seductive enterprise, and then he walked until the
hearth resumed its lure. He had anecdote, and I
became impressed by the great number of his fellow-
creatures whom he had buried in wet weather. We
IN RED LION SQUARP:
AT NO. 17 LIVED AND WORKED WILLIAM MORRIS, EDWARD BURNE-JONES, AND
DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI, AND HERE FLOURISHED RED LION MARY (p. 64)
LORDS AND LANDLADIES 75
liked him well : I, not least, for his profuse and
beneficial practice of taking in the ^^ Spectator." For, on
Sunday mornings Blakely's '' Spectator " brought my
friend Skald over from Peckham to join me in envious
dissection of the contemplative poems which that
journal accepted, in preference to our own scare-songs
of revolt. It was thus that we two encountered Pincot,
most radiant and bald-headed of artists.
Pincot was a producer of those rheumatic cottages
with very obese chimneys and very thin columns of
blue smoke, and those rural churches like hummocks
of mould, which are the staple subject-matter of the
people's oils. He worked with stupendous yet light-
hearted industry in his room at the top of the house,
where, as we came to understand, he had several books
which he read and one photograph which he
cherished.
Pincot was prepared to extend a rushy pond to the
crack of doom, or at least to any probable wall-space
over the piano, and his ancient rooks circling over
the ivied church and away into amber empyreans of
Sabbath, always seemed to announce a parson who
had never seen a Dissenter. On the other hand, he
would attentuate an upright picture with an eye
equally faithful to parlour proportions. This would
represent poplars rising out of rushes with perpen-
dicular reflections in the water broken by a punt, while
in the mauve mist of an exiguous sky appeared a
cottage gable not seen before by gods or wondering
men.
" But why," Skald at last inquired, " do you always
paint the same picture ? "
" Why does God raise the same resplendent sun
above the same hill-tops every morning, Mr. Skald ?
Same picture ! Ah, my young friends, if you knew
76 A LONDONER'S LONDON
the delight of putting ducks into different positions on
a pond I There are thousands of ways of doing it — I
say there are thousands — and to me every single one of
them is a little intimate dream."
*' Yes, yes, Mr. Pincot, it is the ducks I am thinking
about — you give them the time of their lives — but
these cottages of yours are always knee-deep in water.
They drip. Their thatches ferment. Dem'd damp,
moist, and unpleasant, you know. I'm only quoting
Dickens, Mr. Pincot."
" Dickens ! I have read every single word of Saint
Boz, and it is the dream of my life to keep an Old
Curiosity Shop. Then I would sit in the back parlour
and create. As it is, I am connected with a very nice
firm — we are like brothers — and I paint like this to
oblige them. I would not disoblige them, Mr. Skald,
for ten thousand pounds.' But I have created. I
should like you to have seen my picture, 'The Cattle
upon a Thousand Hills,' but it fell short of my dream
and it was too big to keep. I have been a dreamer,
and that's the reason— that's the reason of it all."
** I didn't mean to be — critical, Mr. Pincot."
" No, no, and I don't mind you saying my cottages
are rheumatic, Mr. Skald. Mr. Blakely says he would
not dare to preach in my church — St. Mildew's, he
calls it— but I do not mind that either. No, because I
no longer paint my dreams, but I paint to make the
people dream theirs."
Thus exalting and thus humbling himself, chirruping,
sighing, and smiling by turns, Pincot would capture
our hearts. I still see his paintings in certain shops.
But are they his ? Impossible to identify works in
which personality is so nobly sunk in duck-ponds.
He did not paint something " as he saw it," and call
it Nature, or something not in Nature and call it
LORDS AND LANDLADIES 77
sensation. All I know is that the bells still knoll to
church over those lush fields, the first bulrush in the
foreground is still broken, the ducks still challenge
permutation without revealing Pincot. And still the
rooks of a feudal England wheel in a sky that secures
the love and wistfulness of many humble and lowly
men of heart.
Just such a country church as the poor town-dweller
loves was for centuries the spiritual home and the last
God's acre of all this region. " Pancras Church," says
Norden, writing in Shakespeare's lifetime, " standeth
all alone, as utterly forsaken old and wether-beten,
which for the antiquity thereof is thought not to yield
to Panic's in London." In 1777 John Thomas Smith
came here with his father and some young pupils
to sketch. He tells us that the churchyard was
enclosed only by an old hand-railing in some parts
covered with docks and nettles, and that from it he
had a perfect view of Whitefield's Chapel, Montague
House, and Bedford House. And this old church,
much restored and disguised, yet in size and suggestion
a country church, is still to be found among the
gasometers of St. Pancras.
A great roll-call of its dead is inscribed on a
monument in the churchyard, and many of the lost
epitaphs have been collected. They include such
interesting names as Pope's Martha Blount, General
Paoli, Woollett the engraver, Jeremy Collier, John
Walker of the " Pronouncing Dictionary," Ned Ward
of the *^ London Spy," and the Chevalier d'Eon.
Here was buried in 1797 Mary Wolstonecraft Godwin,
who had died at her home in the Polygon, Somers
Town, after giving birth to the daughter who became
the second wife of Shelley. It was in 181 3 that
Shelley, distracted by his alienation from his wife, met
78 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Mary Godwin, then a beautiful girl of sixteen, at the
grave of her mother. In her ^' Memorials," Lady
Shelley writes : *^ Shelley's anguish, his isolation, his
difference from other men, his gifts of genius and
eloquent enthusiasm had already made a deep im-
pression upon her." When they met in this church-
yard he " in burning words poured forth the tale of
his wild past — how he had suffered, how he had been
misled, and how, if supported by her love, he hoped
in future years to enrol his name with the wise and
good who had done battle for their fellow-men, and be
true through all adverse storms to the cause of
humanity. Unhesitatingly she placed her hand in his
and linked her fortune with his own."
Time was when one Londoner could say to another,
" As many all-hails to thy person as there be haicockes
in July at Pancredge." To-day the church, bereft of
half its graves, overshadowed by gasometers, environed
by railways and coal-yards, is a place of pilgrimage to
few ; but its churchyard has been made into a recrea-
tion-ground, that the porter's child may not play on
the hole of the asp or the coal-heaver's child put his
hand on the cockatrice' den.
CHAPTER IV
THE CITY MAN'S CITY
The Street called Broad — A Forgotten Burial-ground — Before
Harley Street — Sir Astley Cooper in Broad Street — The Importance
of being Charles — The Five Great Drugs — Dr. Gardner's " Last and
Best Bedroom " — The Resurrection Men — A Home of Learning — The
Devil or Dr. Bull — Mead and Radcliffe — Queen Anne is dead —
" Rejected Addresses " — The Rothschild — " Happy ! Me happy ? " —
A Bitter Farewell— Macaulay's Playground — Death in Tokenhouse
Yard— A Great Auctioneer— Jack Ellis— The Poet of Cornhill— The
Hosier of Freeman's Court — Samuel Rogers in the City — Dodson and
Fogg — Thackeray in Cornhill — William Wynne Ryland — The Im-
mortal Tailor— The Cornhill Pump—" Patty-pan " Birch— The East
India House — How to apply for an Appointment — A Head from the
Tower — "Those that encamp toward the East "— Spitalfields — The
Uttermost Parts
TO know modern London it is necessary to have
eaten one's bread in Bloomsbury and to have
earned it in the City. Let us then go to the City.
Nowhere has its day a more visible beginning than in
front of Broad Street and Liverpool Street Stations.
Dr. Johnson's opinion that the full tide of human
existence is seen at Charing Cross must stand ; but
here, surely, is the other pole of London's activity.
Old Broad Street — which is not more broad than
Water Lane is wet — is casually regarded by most
Londoners as the first stretch in a great bus route
westward. Nor does Broad Street suggest outwardly
79
8o A LONDONER'S LONDON
that it has a long memory. Its soaring black stone
buildings, rising to a sky crossed and fretted by
wires, do not whisper enchantments under the City's
moon. Yet here and there a stately red-brick building
begins to assert a gracious incongruity, and a glimpse
up a narrow court or through a tall archway corrects
the first sense of surly monotony.
Broad Street Station was built on the site of a grave-
yard, where some sixty years ago the skulls of dead
Bedlamites were thrown up on the spade. Some, not
all. A number were carelessly left, and have been
turned up since in strange surroundings. No later
than 1890 a Londoner wrote : **A few months ago I
happened to be on one of the platforms of the Broad
Street Station, where extensive alterations are being
carried out (it was in the evening), and whilst waiting
for a train one of the newsboys came up and asked
me if I would like a ^ skeleton's head ' ; and, pointing
to a large heap of earth, etc., said, * There are lots of
bones and skulls there.' Not exactly realizing for the
moment what he meant, I said * No ' ; but afterwards
I remembered the old burying-ground, and concluded
that these were some of the remains which had not
been carefully carted away." ^
Almost within living memory Broad Street has been
a veritable Harley Street in its attraction for the most
humane of the professions. At one time no fewer
than twenty medical men lived and practised in it.
Nothing better illustrates the change which came over
the social life of the City in the early part of the
last century than the flitting to the west end of the
town of the physicians and surgeons who thrived in
Finsbury Square, Finsbury Pavement, and the Broad
Street and Bishopsgate Street regions. The medical
' " Notes and Queries," 25 October, 1890.
THE CITY MAN'S CITY 8i
centre of gravity in London was then as definitely in
the east^ as it is now in the west, and it was quite in
the order of things that Sir Astley Cooper should earn
as much as ;£2i,ooo in a single year in Broad Street.
But the tale of removals to the West End became
ever longer. Thus Dr. John Fothergill built up
his great reputation in Lombard Street, and spent
his later and more leisured years in Harper Street,
Bloomsbury. Henry Cline, the great surgeon, moved
from St. Mary Axe to Lincoln's Inn Fields ; Dr.
Robert Gooch from Aldermanbury to Berner's Street ;
and Sir Astley Cooper from New Broad Street to
Spring Gardens.
Sir Astley Cooper's period in Broad Street has the
centenary interest, for he was in full practice there in
1813. The street was then much more domestic, and
correspondingly more cheerful, than it is to-day.
** While my uncle was living in Broad Street," says
his nephew and biographer, ^' many, if not most, of
the first merchants in London had residences in the
City ; those who had also houses in the country
leaving London generally on the Friday evening, and
returning on the following Monday or Tuesday
morning ; 2 so that the appearance of many streets to
the eastward of St. Paul's is now so different as hardly
to permit them to be recognized by anyone familiar
with them in those days. Most of the great houses
which, at the present day, have their street doors open
for more speedy access to the common stairs, which
' The Royal College of Physicians, now of Pall Mall, was founded
in Knightrider Street by Linacre, and flourished for centuries in
Warwick Lane, near Paternoster Row.
* The prevalence of the " week-end habit " at the close of the
eighteenth and beginning of the nineteenth centuries could be
demonstrated in a manner that would surprise many who hastily
judge it to be a mere modern frivolity.
G
82 A LONDONER'S LONDON
again lead to numerous offices on the several floors
were then private mansions, exhibiting abundant signs
of the wealth and magnificence of their proprietors.
" In the evening the light over every door in the
best streets, and Broad Street was among the number,
the carriages of visitors, and the illuminated windows
of the houses in which parties were assembled, gave
them an appearance which is now only to be observed
in the more modern parts of the metropolis."
Cooper's house stood at the west corner of Bishops-
gate Churchyard, now called Church Passage. The
older name may still be seen within the archway
leading out of New Broad Street. His stables and
dissecting laboratory were in the passage. The
Cerberus with whom every anxious caller had to
reckon was Dr. Cooper's faithful Charles, whose duty
it was to introduce the patients in the proper order,
and then to extract them from the consulting-room
with due speed. For the latter process Charles used
the dental term drawing, and it was his opinion that
it was more difficult to draw one woman than two
men. " A gentleman, sir," was Charles's signal to
a tedious patient to depart when he thought that
enough of his master's time had been occupied.
Often it was a sheer impossibility to pass all the
patients through the consulting-room before one
o'clock, at which hour it was imperative that the
physician should go to Guy's Hospital. Delay was
impossible, and therefore Charles, who had spent the
morning in deferring hope, had now to allay heart-
sickness, which he did with happy tact — telling the
residue of patients that if they came early next
morning they would have the advantage of his
master's freshest judgment. On some mornings the
final tangle in Broad Street was unusually difficult,
THE CITY MAN'S CITY 83
and Sir Astley would escape through the back-yard into
the stables, and thence into the passage by the side of
Bishopsgate Church and so into Wormwood Street,
where his coachman, who understood the plot,
presently followed him.
Cooper's patients paid him liberal fees, and his
receipts were increased by the circumstance that they
seldom paid him in cash. Most paid by cheque, and
the acute physician appreciated the fact that patients
who would be chary of taking two or three guineas
out of their pockets cheerfully wrote a cheque for
five. From certain wealthy patients he derived great
profit. Mr. Coles, a great Mincing Lane merchant,
paid him ;^6oo a year. Another patient, a neighbour
in Broad Street, whom he had insisted on attending
only in the way of friendship, took a ticket in a
lottery which fetched ;£2ooo, and this sum he sent to
Cooper, insisting that this too was given in friendship.
When Mr. Hyatt, a West Indian merchant, had to
undergo an operation, he gave Doctors Lettsom and
Nelson ^£300 each, and then jovially flung his
nightcap at Cooper, who found in it a cheque for
a thousand guineas.
All Sir Astley's prescriptions were simple, and he
said : *' Give me opium, tartarized antimony, sulphate
of magnesia, calomel, and bark, and I would ask for
little else ; these are adequate to restore all the actions
of the body, if there be power of constitution to admit
of the restoration." So great was the magic of
Astley Cooper's name that a fraudulent medical gang
or syndicate exploited the name Dr. Ashley Cooper
and, setting up a quack establishment in Charlotte
Street, Blackfriars Road, achieved for a time a con-
siderable success. A good foil to this affair was the
calling in of Cooper by another quack when he lay ill.
/
84 A LONDONER'S LONDON
His biographer tells the story : " Mr. Cooper was sent
for by Dr. G , an advertising quack in Shoreditch,
whose windows announced in capital letters THE
UNIVERSAL REMEDY UNDER GOD. Before
examining the injury, my uncle began to banter him,
suggesting a trial of the Universal Remedy. *Come,
come, Dr. Cooper,' replied G , ' this is a
serious affair.' " I have no doubt that the ^' Dr.
G " here referred to was Dr. John Gardner,
who had his shop just below Shoreditch, in Norton
Folgate, where he practised largely as a worm doctor.
Gardner's tombstone may be seen close to the railings
of the churchyard of St. Leonard's, Shoreditch, in-
scribed : " 1807, Dr. John Gardner's Last and Best
Bedroom," etc. The date 1807 is explained by the
fact that he erected it in that year in the churchyard.
Finding that he was consequently assumed to be dead,
and that his business declined, he interpolated the
word ** intended," which was removed after his
actual death.
In Broad Street, as more frequently in his earlier
practice in St. Mary Axe, Sir Astley Cooper had those
dealings with the " body-snatchers " which belong to
a darker medical age than ours. On the dissection of
the dead human body all medical training and know-
ledge depended and still depends. Without the
necessary supply of " subjects " the medical schools
must have closed their doors, and Cooper, as a great
medical teacher and investigator, became involved to
a bewildering extent in the only method which existed
of obtaining dead bodies. It is a grim chapter. But
the finest physicians of the day felt justified in seeking,
in what way they could, the one means by which the
alleviation of human suffering and the training of
students could be carried on. I refer those who
THE CITY MAN'S CITY 85
desire a fuller knowledge of this side of Sir Astley
Cooper's career to two dreadful chapters in his
biography, where the treatment of the subject is not
more defensive than candid. Cooper's nephew is
satisfied to write : '^ It is held as a common maxim
that those who make use, in any way, of persons
employed in illicit transactions, are as criminal as the
delinquents themselves ; but in this case the urgent
necessity, for the sake of public good, of such apparent
dereliction from duty, removes such a charge of guilt
from the surgeons."
The evil at last reached dimensions which wrought
its legislative cure. Sir Astley Cooper frankly told
a Committee of the House of Commons that there
was no person, let his situation in life be what it
might, whose dead body he could not obtain if he
wished. The Anatomy Act of 1832 put an end to the
whole dreadful system. One observation should be
made. It is that when the need for anatomical subjects
brought forth the infamous body-snatcher, physicians
themselves very frequently offered their own remains
for dissection in the interests of the profession they
had followed and loved. Indeed, several such
instances can be connected with Broad Street. Sir
Astley Cooper himself left strict injunctions that his
body should be examined, and gave directions on the
particular points which he considered would deserve
attention. The eccentric Dr. Mounsey, the friend of
Garrick and of many of the most eminent men of
his time, arranged with Mr. John Cooper Forster,
of Union Court, Broad Street, that his body should be
dissected, and Forster actually dissected and lectured
on it at Guy's Hospital.^
^ Another Broad Street physician, Thomas Robson Ellerby, who
died 29 January, 1827, a member of the Society of Friends, left
86 A LONDONER'S LONDON
The City man hurrying down Broad Street to the
Stock Exchange may think of the street as the home
of learning, where divines and mathematicians and
jurists and doctors of medicine have taught and toiled,
and where astronomers have explored the mountains
in the moon as earnestly as he who poised his glass
At evening from the top of Fesole,
Or in Valdarno, to descry new lands,
Rivers or mountains on her spotty globe.
For the largest commercial building in Old Broad
Street is Gresham House, the representative of the old
mansion that was the home of Sir Thomas Gresham,
which he bequeathed to the Corporation of London
and the Mercers' Company, to be used as a college
and as an institution for the delivery of lectures on
seven sciences.
The characters of Broad Street's wise men are drawn
in Ward's " Lives of the Gresham Professors." Here
in the *^ Geometry Professors' Lodgings," in a shady
corner of the Green Court of the College, Henry
Briggs heard in the year 1615 of Napier's great dis-
covery of logarithms. He resolved to visit the Laird
of Murcheston in Scotland, and he did so in the
following summer. Each knew of the other's genius,
and Lilly tells that when they met they looked long at
each other, while minutes passed, without speaking, in
the silent comradeship of truth-seeking.
In Gresham College, as its professor of astronomy,
Christopher Wren lectured when he was twenty-five.
explicit directions that his body should be " taken to Mr. Kiernan's or
some other dissecting-room," and he added a strong expression of
his opinion that such a sacrifice was incumbent on every member
of.his profession.
THE CITY MAN'S CITY ^ 87
His opening oration was an attempt to explain scienti-
fically the going backward by ten degrees of the
shadow on the dial of King Ahaz.^ In Wren's
chambers were to be seen the men who a few years
later founded the Royal Society.
Another story in Ward's noble folio concerns Dr.
John Bull, whose anthems still have a place in our
cathedral music. Bull fell ill and was allowed to
appoint a substitute at the College and to travel abroad
for a year. Anthony Wood tells the story with almost
scriptural unction : —
^' Dr. Bull took occasion to go incognito into France
and Germany. At length, hearing of a famous musi-
cian belonging to a certain cathedral (at St. Omer's, as
I have heard), he applied himself as a novice to him
to learn something of his faculty and to see and
admire his works. This musician, after some dis-
course had passed between them, conducted Bull to
a vestry, or music school, joining to the cathedral,
and shew'd to him a lesson or song of forty parts,
and then made a vaunting challenge to any person in
the world to add one more part to them ; supposing
it to be so complete and full that it was impossible for
any mortal man to correct or add to it.
" Bull thereupon desiring the use of ink and rul'd
paper (such as we call musical paper) prayed the
musician to lock him up in the said school for two
or three hours ; which being done, not without great
disdain by the musician. Bull in that time, or less,
added forty more parts to the said lesson or song.
The musician thereupon being called in, he viewed it,
tried it, and retried it. At length he burst out into a
great ecstasy and swore by the great God that he that
added those forty parts must either he the devil or Dr,
* See 2 Kings xx, 8-1 1.
88 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Bull. Whereupon Bull making himself known, the
musician fell down and ador'd him."
Evil days fell at last on the institution that bred
these men. In 1710 the Royal Society forsook Broad
Street for Crane Court in Fleet Street. In 1768 the
City Fathers judged that the site of Gresham College
had become more valuable than its lectures, and, to
the indignation of the learned world, the professors
were bundled into rooms in the Royal Exchange and
their decayed home pulled down. The halls of learn-
ing gave place to an Excise office. The precincts of
Gresham College are therefore dust under the wheels.
Its Green Court, square to exactness, with diagonal
paths and spaced saplings ; its north and south piazzas ;
its reading-hall and observatory and its decent lodgings
for men of refinement and learning — all are reduced to
a commercial name, a flight of steps, and an apple-
woman.
In Austin Friars, a precinct full of memories. Dr.
Richard Mead, the most scholarly and magnificent
physician of his time, had a house early in the
eighteenth century. There under the shadow of the
old prior of the Augustine Friars, which had long
been the principal Dutch church in London, he
received his friends with large hospitality ; and there
the outspoken Radcliffe, who had told William the
Third that he would not have His Majesty's legs in
exchange for his three kingdoms, sat and talked
"shop." It may have been in Austin Friars that the
dialogue took place which goes far to explain the
existence of friendship where rivalry might have been
expected. Mead was a young man of tact, and knew
how to please the Court physician. Radcliffe, paying his
first call on the younger City practitioner, demanded in
his brusque way ; " Do you read Hippocrates in Greek ? "
IN BROAD STREET, K.C.
SOARING BLACK STONE BUILDINGS RISING TO A SKV CROSSED AND FKETTKD bV WIRES
(.'. 80)
THE CITY MAN'S CITY 89
"Yes," replied Mead timidly, not wishing to vaunt
his scholarship to his notoriously unlearned senior.
" I never read him in my life," snapped Radcliffe.
"You, sir, have no need — you are Hippocrates
himself."
Another interchange took place at a dinner-party at
Carshalton, where Radcliffe (such were the manners of
the day) deliberately tried to make his young rival
drunk. He did not succeed. Guest after guest fell
under the table until only the old doctor and the
young rival sat in their chairs.
" Mead," cried the veteran, " you are a rising man.
You will succeed me."
" That, sir, is impossible ; you are Alexander the
Great, and who can succeed Radcliffe ? "
" By ! " was the reply, " I'll recommend you to
my patients."
And he did, with the result that, as Dr. Johnson
said, " Dr. Mead lived more in the broad sunshine of
life than almost any man."
It was in Austin Friars that Mead received the
summons which sealed his fame and prosperity. He
was called to the death-bed of Queen Anne, and,
having seen her die in an atmosphere charged with
apprehension, intrigue, and duplicity, he returned,
immensely lifted in fame and favour, to Austin Friars
and to his daily gossip at Batson's Coffee-house by
the Royal Exchange. This coffee-house, by the way,
was the club and rendezvous of the Broad Street and
other City doctors, who, according to a writer in the
"Connoisseur," flocked together like birds of prey watch-
ing for carcasses at Batson's. Mead went there to meet
his apothecary friends and prescribe for the hospital
cases which they described to him. If we are to be-
lieve another writer of the period, this was the settled
90 A LONDONER'S LONDON
custom : physicians never visited the hospitals, but
prescribed in this manner, at second-hand, for the
trustful patients.
There have been other famous tenants of this quiet
precinct at the elbow of the Stock Exchange. That
learned, voluminous, opulent, and highly respectable
antiquary, Richard Gough, was born in Austin Friars
i^ 1735" No books are handsomer — or less read —
than Gough's " Sepulchral Monuments " or his trans-
lation of Camden's " Britannia," which occupied him
seven years at his fine house at Enfield. Literary men
may digest with profit the story that during these
years of toil Gough remained so accessible to his
family that no member of it was aware of his under-
taking. Horace Walpole unkindly, and, on the whole,
unjustly, described Gough as "one of those industrious
men who are only re-burying the dead." Certainly
Gough was no "Futurist" ; so straightly did his mind
run in old grooves that when bewailing an ancient
cross that had been removed he added that its site was
occupied by "an unmeaning market-house."
Austin Friars had been a choice residential precinct
for at least two centuries when, in 1888, the last of its
fine old houses. No. i, was ruthlessly destroyed.^ By
chance I am able to remember its line old staircase
and panelled walls. It had been built in the latter
part of the seventeenth century, and all its tenants had
* This house is described by Mr. Philip Norman and drawn by Mr.
Emslie, in the "Illustrated Topographical Record of London" {third
series), issued by the London Topographical Society in 1900. Its first
tenant was Herman Olmius, merchant, descended from an ancient
Luxembourg family. His eldest son became a Governor of the Bank
of England and his grandson an Irish peer. For many years after
1783 the well-known Huguenot family of Minet occupied the house,
which was afterwards used as business premises by Messrs. Thomas,
Son, & Lefevre.
THE CITY MAN'S CITY 91
been merchant princes. It had a large garden, with
bakehouse, brewhouse, and stables ; even the old well
and pump remained. I see the house now as a kind
of dim ^^ Blakesmoor " of the City.
The brothers James and Horace Smith, authors of
the "Rejected Addresses," lived at No. 18 Austin
Friars, and James resided there for many years before
he took his house in Craven Street, Strand. In Austin
Friars the '^Rejected Addresses," published in 181 2
on the opefiing of Drury Lane Theatre, were written.
The success of the little volumes was enormous, and it
touched the pride of John Murray (the Second), who
had rejected the " Rejected," a mistake which he
instantly repented when he had read the book and
heard Byron call it "by far the best thing since the
Rolliad." He said afterwards, " I could have had the
^ Rejected Addresses ' for £20^ but let them go by as
the kite of the moment." The kite has flown well
ever since and has attained its centenary. However,
Murray lived to hold the string. Miller, of Bow
Street, who had published the brothers' farcical
" Highgate Tunnel," took the first risk, and the Smiths
reaped ;^iooo from the first three editions ; but
Murray, determined to retrieve his error, was at last
able to purchase the well-milked copyright for ;£i3i.
James Smith's heart was in the West End, where his
talents, wit, and social gifts procured him an entry into
the innermost circles of society and clubland. In his
City office he is said to have looked as serious as the
parchments surrounding him. Horace was a stock-
broker in Shorter's Court, but he lived and slept in
Austin Friars. Possessing the two great essentials
of stock-broking, prudence and a host of friends,
he steadily amassed a reasonable fortune. He appears
to have been occasionally a victim of the numerous
92 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Napoleonic scares, and his verses, **The Stock-jobber's
Lament," are redolent of the period and of Stock
Exchange emotions.
Napoleon, who with me has play'd the Devil,
Has doubtless acted it with many more,
In midnight massacres disposed to revel,
Or poison soldiers upon Jaffa's shore.
All other crimes I could forgive thee, Boney,
But this exceeds the blackest in degree ;
'Tis murderous sacrilege to take my money,
For money is both life and soul to me.
Now, concerning the Stock Exchange and its
history and hoaxes, its men and manners, its panics
and pastimes, are not all these things written in the
books ? I pass to a single portrait. " He was just
such a man as the hoys in the street would have thought
a fine subject for ^ a lark ' — unless, indeed, they had been
deterred by the lowering expression or sullen aspect of his
countenance. He always looked sulky," This was the
man whose figure still stands out as the greatest that
has ever haunted the Royal Exchange and the Stock
Exchange — Nathan Meyer Rothschild, as seen by an
eye-witness when Napoleon's power hung like a
thunder-cloud over the bourses of Europe. In the
Royal Exchange this genius had his favourite pillar,
against which he leaned, and from which he never
stirred. In the Stock Exchange he was hardly less
a statue, if we may trust a contemporary writer who
compares the monarch of finance to " the pillar
of salt into which the avaricious spouse of the
patriarch was turned."
When Rothschild stood on the Stock Exchange he
could inspire such a description as this : —
**Eyes are usually denominated the windows of the
J
THE CITY MAN'S CITY 93
soul ; but here you would conclude that the windows
are false ones, or that there is no soul to look out at
them. There comes not one pencil of light from the
interior, neither is there one scintillation of that which
comes from without reflected in any direction.
" The whole puts you in mind of ' a skin to let,' and
you wonder why it stands upright without at least
something within. By and by another figure comes
up to it. It then steps two paces aside, and the most
inquisitive glance that ever you saw, and a glance
more inquisitive than you would ever have thought
of, is drawn out of the erewhile fixed and leaden eye,
as if one were drawing a sword from a scabbard.
^'The visiting figure, which has the appearance of
coming by accident, and not by design, stops but a
second or two, in the course of which looks are
exchanged which, though you cannot translate, you
feel must be of the most important meaning. After
these, the eyes are sheathed up again, and the figure
resumes its stony posture. During the morning
numbers of visitors come, all of whom meet with
a similar reception, and vanish in a similar manner ;
and last of all the figure itself vanishes, leaving you
utterly at a loss as to what can be its nature and
functions."
This is not the portrait of a particularly happy man,
and Nathan Meyer Rothschild never professed that
money lifted him above care. He had so much reason
to fear assassination that once, in a fit of suspicious
terror, he flung a ledger at two respectable strangers
who had presented themselves at his office, and who
were rummaging in their pockets, not for lethal
weapons, but for their letters of introduction. " You
must be a happy man," a guest said to Rothschild
in his splendid suburban home. ^* Happy ' — me
94 A LONDONER'S LONDON
happy ! " was the reply. " What ! happy when,
just as you are going to dine, you have a letter
placed in your hands, saying, Mf you do not send
me £soo I shall blow your brains out'? Happy! —
me happy ! " Such are the legends.
The church, which almost fills the cool square of
Austin Friars, is the successor to the old priory of the
begging friars, who dedicated their foundation to Saint
Augustine, Bishop of Hippo, in Africa. And here, in
the heart of the City, in the very swirl of stock-
broking, sleeps one of Shakespeare's finest characters,
a victim of the Tower — even Edward Bohun, Duke of
Buckingham, who hated Wolsey to his own undoing.
The scene of his departure from Westminster to the
Tower is touchingly drawn in ^* Henry the Eighth,"
and his farewell words have an enduring bitterness : —
This from a dying man receive as certain:
Where you are liberal of your loves and counsels
Be sure you be not loose ; for those you make friends
And give your heart to, when once they perceive
The least rub in your fortunes, fall away
Like water from ye, never found again
But where they mean to sink ye.
The priory church was ultimately granted to the
Dutch people in London, under the name of "Jesus
Temple," and here they still worship, singing the
hymns of their fatherland over the graves of their
forefathers. In the library the Ten Commandments
are seen as they were inscribed by Peter Paul Rubens.
The church is a haven of silence in the pit of the
City ; to walk in its deeply shadowed nave, paved with
memorial slabs, is to breathe the air of a place which
for six centuries has been the home of faith and
learning — nor least when the friars sang great men
to rest in the Latin tongue.
THE CITY MAN'S CITY 95
From Austin Friars one strolls by devious new-built
alleys into Drapers' Gardens. Not much more than
twenty years ago the word '^ garden " was descriptive,
but to-day it is a courtesy. Here, when the paths
were longer and the trees bigger, the children of
City merchants and bankers were given the air and
freedom to play their games. Such a child — a spirited
boy — was regularly brought here by his mother from
a house in Birchin Lane, in the first decade of the last
century. This was the future Lord Macaulay. **So
strong was the power of association," says Trevelyan,
** upon Macaulay's mind that in after years Drapers'
Gardens was among his favourite haunts. Indeed, his
habit of roaming for hours through and through the
heart of the City (a habit that never left him as long
as he could roam at all) was due in part to the
recollections which caused him to regard that region
as native ground."
The somewhat circular route which it is natural to
take in a midday stroll may bring you from Drapers'
Gardens to another purlieu with an ancient name, in
which modern activities usurp the site of old families
and histories. " Oh, Death, Death, Death 1 " was the
cry, uttered "in a most inimitable tone," heard by
Daniel Defoe from an upper casement in Tokenhouse
Yard, in the height of the Great Plague. So, at least,
he tells us, in his " Memoirs of the Plague," but it
could hardly have been a personal experience. The
horror of the incident is deepened by Defoe's state-
ment that " there was nobody to be seen in the whole
street, neither did any other window open, for people
had no curiosity now in any case, nor could anybody
help one another, so I went on to pass into Bell
Alley."
Tokenhouse Yard was built by the Marquis of
96 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Lansdowne's brilliant ancestor, Sir William Petty,
the most versatile gentleman of his age. He mapped
Ireland with a thoroughness of surveyorship never
before achieved, acquired a great fortune, invented a
double-bottomed ship, married a witty and beautiful
woman, became an original member of the Royal
Society, wrote admirable Latin verses, selected a
dark cellar and an axe for a duel that he never
had to fight, was appointed a Commissioner of the
Navy, astonished the world by his analysis of the
London " Bills of Mortality," and his treatise on
taxes, and only failed to win favour at Court " because
he outwitted all the projectors that came near him."
The name of Tokenhouse Yard is now inseparable
from its Auction Mart. But the " Mart " of a myriad
newspaper advertisements dates only from 1864, when
it superseded the older auction-rooms in Bartholomew
Lane, hard by. It is a place of suppressed romance.
In the many small, stuffy auction-rooms, into which
the building is divided, ambition is gratified, territorial
pride is humbled, wealth becomes stable, unthrift is
expiated, and still the hammer falls.
The classic figure of the City Auction is George
Robins, who built up his reputation in the earlier
rooms in Bartholomew Lane, opposite the Bank of
England Rotunda.^ Robins, who died in 1847, was
one of the best-known and liked men of his time.
He brought a glad eye and a sumptuous vocabulary
to the rostrum. In describing a country-seat he
communicated to his audience a kind of "Family
Herald" intoxication, investing a sale with all the
glamour of a '* happy ending," flattering his auditors'
dreams of leisure, wealth, and territorial dignity, and
overcoming any easy detection of his arts by the
' And in the Great Piazza, Covcnt Garden.
THE CITY MAN'S CITY 97
volume of his placid eloquence. He knew every
trick of his calling. Before opening the business
he would scatter comfortable remarks with the air
of a man who had invited his friends to a reception,
and would not allow them to be shy. To those who
lingered at the door, in winter, he would say, " Do,
my good friends, come inside ; you'll be much warmer
if you do." In summer : " My good friends, do come
inside ; you'll find it cooler here."
Robins did not deal in emphasis and gesture ; his
lever was persuasion, and his magic lay in his air of
being a benefactor. He seemed to come with gifts
and critical opportunities in his hands asking only to
be trusted ; some one's dream was about to be realized ;
some man's fortune would certainly be made in the
next ten minutes. He was so seized with his role, and
so happy in performing it, that he seemed only to wait
until the scales fell from the eyes of his hearers and
they saw an earthly paradise within grasp. While
bidders hesitated he would sit down in an arm-chair,
playfully wagging his legs like a godfather of unap-
peasable benevolence. Other arts came into play.
James Grant describes these in his " Portraits of Public
Characters." If the bidding began to flag he would
heave a sigh, and ^'declare with the utmost conceivable
gravity of countenance that in the whole course of his
professional experience he never met with anything so
discouraging. Here he did not imply a criticism of his
audience ; on the contrary, he would sadly surmise
that his remarks had lacked perspicacity, and that his
professional ability must be on the decline."
" If this had not the effect of eliciting higher offers
from those who were previously aspirants for the
property, or calling new competitors into the field, he
assumes an unusually serious aspect, says he cannot
98 A LONDONER'S LONDON
wait longer, and that whoever bids must do it that
instant, otherwise it would be too late ; and, so saying,
he causes the hammer to descend slowly, repeating at
the same time the words ' Going, going, going.' This
third * Going ' is uttered in so peculiar a manner that
the highest bidder in many cases fancies, in the excite-
ment of the moment, that the word is to be ' gone/
and exultingly exclaims : ' The property is mine ! '
This is exactly what Mr. Robins wishes. He then
remarks with infinite address : * Ah, my friend ; I
don't wonder at your anxiety to possess the property ;
you are too good a judge not to know what an
immense bargain it would be at your offer. No, no,
my friend ; that would never do ; it is still in the
market.' "
Not less famous than his eloquence were Robins*s
printed descriptions of the properties he sold.
Flowers by request was his motto when he put
pen to paper. It is said that his advertisements, high
fiown as they were, never led to a repudiation of a
purchase. If that was so, one may dismiss as apoc-
ryphal the story of a client who, without seeing a
certain property, bought it under the spell of Robins's
tongue, only to find that the ** navigable meandering
stream" was a stagnant canal, and the "picturesque
hanging wood " a gallows. Robins died at Brighton
in 1847, leaving a fortune of ;£ 140,000.
In St. Bartholomew's Church, now displaced by the
Sun Fire Office, was buried Dr. Johnson's friend, John
Ellis. Johnson went so far as to say, " It is wonderful,
sir, what is to be found in London ; the most literary
conversation that I ever enjoyed was at the table of
Jack Ellis, a money-scrivener behind the Exchange,
with whom I at one period used to dine, generally
once a week."
THE CITY MAN'S CITY 99
Boswell looked up Ellis in 1790, and found him
pretty hale in his ninety-third year. A few months
earlier he had walked to Rotherhithe, dined, and in the
evening walked back to his house in Throgmorton
Street. Ellis had known how to combine business
duties with literary tasks, having written certain Hudi-
brastic translations, and a version of Ovid's epistles.
The scene of his meetings with Johnson was probably
the "Cock" in Threadneedle Street, behind the Ex-
change gate. I judge that much reading and a vast
experience of City men and manners had ripened Ellis's
philosophy a little over-much, for, while I am glad
to quote I do not profit by his epigram : —
He's wrecked on Scylla who Charybdis shuns,
Who flies disease to the physician runs ;
Fools flying vice, on vice run opposite,
And strife who shun, seek law to set them right.
Then, as now, life was difficult.
Ellis was the last member of the profession of
scriveners, as originally organized. It is curious that
two such learned and finished poets as Milton and
Gray should have been sons of City scriveners. The
City ought never to forget that the author of the
" Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard " was born
in a house on the site of No. 41 Cornhill. He was
the only child out of twelve who survived infancy, and
he would have shared the fate of the others if his
mother had not desperately opened one of his veins
with her scissors. His father, Philip Gray, the money-
scrivener, extravagant and eccentric, had a full-length
portrait of his boy painted by Jonathan Richardson,
the elder, the most accomplished portrait-painter of
the day ; and this portrait is now the treasure of the
Fitzwilliam Museum at Cambridge.
loo A LONDONER'S LONDON
The Cornhill fire of 1748, which consumed nearly
a hundred houses, destroyed Gray's birthplace. The
house had become his property, and he rebuilt it.
The misfortune brought the poet from Cambridge,
and temporarily shook him out of his dreams and
studies. He was then nearing the end of his seven
years' elaboration of the " Elegy." The house was
insured for ;^5oo, and, on the whole. Gray was able
to be amused by the consolations, in the form of
opera-tickets and suppers, offered him by his London
friends. There is a kind of providence in the fact
that the author of the most familiar and best-loved
meditation on life and death in our language was
born in the City of London. No words of poetry
are more certainly lodged in the memory of the first
man you meet in Cornhill than those in which Gray
assembles and suffuses with twilight the feelings
wherein we do not differ from one another. That call
of the glimmering landscape and evening hearth, that
love of the field which no estrangement can wither,
that gulf between riches and peace which no flattery
can bridge, and the sure convergence of all our paths
into precincts beyond anxiety and success : these are
the things which, though they were not new or rare,
Gray made a haunting whisper and a common scrip.
If there is no English poem better known than
Gray's *' Elegy, the same distinction in prose must be
allowed to " Robinson Crusoe." And Cornhill saw
a great deal of Daniel Defoe. The son of the Fore
Street butcher had been educated for the ministry,
when he suddenly perceived that the pulpit was not his
place. "It was my disaster," he said, "first to be set
apart for, and then to be set apart from, that sacred
employ." Not the Reverend Daniel Defoe, but " Defoe
the Civet Cat Merchant," broke upon the world. In
THE CITY MAN'S CITY loi
Freeman's Court, where long afterwards the firm of
Dodson and Fogg was to play with Mr. Pickwick as a
cat with a mouse, Defoe set up as newly married man
and as a hosier. In the latter character he exported
stockings to Portugal, of all places. By a plentiful
lack of attention to business, and a strict non-observ-
ance of the shopkeeping maxims which he after-
wards formulated in his "Compleat Tradesman," he
fell into difficulties, and in 1692 he was figuring in
Bristol as " the Sunday gentleman " who was kept
indoors on every other day of the week by fear of
pursuing bailiffs. But in the end he was able to walk
in Cornhill when he pleased.
Nearly a century after Defoe failed in business in
Freeman's Court the banking-house of Welch, Rogers,
Olding, Rogers and Rogers stood here at No. 3 ; and
into this bank entered Samuel Rogers, the banker-
poet, "with no willing heart, but with a dogged
determination to master his business in the Cit}^, and
to write poetry at Stoke Newington." Relieved at last
from business cares, but drawing a magnificent income
from the bank, Rogers was able to give himself to
society, literature, brilliant friendships, and the culti-
vation of that mordant wit of which we have so many
records.
In 181 1 the firm removed to Clement's Lane, Lom-
bard Street, close by ; and it was here that a strange
calamity befell. The poet Gray's peace had been dis-
turbed by a great fire, the banker-poet's was ruffled by
a great robbery. On Sunday, 24 November, 1844,
thieves broke into the bank, of which Rogers was
now the head, and made an enormous haul of bank-
notes. They abstracted from the safe no fewer
than 36,000 one-pound notes, ;£i,200 in gold, and
securities which brought the total theft to about
102 A LONDONER'S LONDON
;^5o,ooo. The City was aghast, the West End agog,
and it occurred to Rogers that it might amuse him in
his declining years to see how little he could live on if
the worst came to the worst. But the fates were kind ;
the thieves were unable to use the stolen paper, and the
Bank of England repaid to Rogers & Co. the sum of
;£40,7io, on a guarantee of indemnity. A bright side
to the affair was revealed in the instant and practical
sympathy which Rogers received from his friends.
Lord Lansdowne immediately offered to transfer to
Rogers's bank a balance of some thousands of pounds.
Freeman's Court cannot be found to-day. It was
on the north side of Cornhill, close to the Exchange,
and the entrance to it must have been a few yards
east of the spot on which stands the statue of Rowland
Hill. Dickens describes Dodson and Fogg's clerks as
*^ catching about as favourable glimpses of Heaven's
light and Heaven's sun, in the course of their daily
labours, as a man might hope to do were he placed at
the bottom of a reasonably deep well."
It was after Mr. Pickwick's departure, or rather after
his forcible removal by Sam Weller to the air and sun-
light of Cornhill, that Mr. Pickwick benignantly ad-
mitted that he had been " rather ruffled," and inquired
where a glass of brandy and water warm might
be had in the City. And it is at this point that
Dickens records in a single world-famous sentence
that Mr. Welter's knoivledge of London was extensive and
peculiar.
Dickens and Thackeray seem never to be far from
each other, and it was at No. 65 Cornhill, opposite the
Church of St. Peter, whose front is now masked by
a silversmith's shop, that Thackeray had cordial and
profitable dealings with the firm of Smith, Elder. It
was here that the " Cornhill Magazine " was founded
THE CITY MAN'S CITY 103
and christened in January, i860. "Our Store-house
being in Cornhill," he wrote, "we date and name our
Magazine from its place of publication." He had
himself suggested the title, remarking, " It has a sound
of jollity and abundance about it." Thus was opened
a conduit for the thoughts and creations of many of
the greatest Victorian writers.
To Cornhill belongs, by association, one of the
most moving and monitory tales in the annals of
forgery. In it William Wynne, engraver to George III,
joined a Mr. Bryer in starting a print-shop. Although
their trade was large, the enterprise ended in bank-
ruptcy, and this misfortune was the first link in a
chain of events that brought a man of rare accom-
plishment and graceful character to the gallows. On
April I, 1783, Ryland presented himself at Brensom
& Co.'s bank and uttered a forged bill for an
amount which is variously stated. Some accounts
place it at several thousand pounds. His self-com-
mand at this moment, and at all other times, seems to
have been extraordinary. Henry Angelo relates that
the cashier examined the bill carefully, and referred
to the ledger ; then, observing the date, said, " Here
is a mistake, sir ; the bond, as entered, does not
become due till to-morrow." Ryland coolly asked to
be shown the book, and made answer : "So I per-
ceive — there must be an error in your entry of one
day," and, without a tremor, he offered to leave the
bond. Disarmed by his manner, the cashier imagined
that there was really an error in the ledger, and paid
over the amount with apologies, and Ryland left with
the money. Next day the true bill was presented,
and all was discovered. In every London newspaper
appeared a notice offering a reward of ;^5oo for the
apprehension of William Wynne Ryland, and the
I04 A LONDONER'S LONDON
walls displayed placards which augmented the hue
and cry.
The hunted man first found a hiding-place in the
Minories, where his restless nature — perhaps the
strange claustrophobia of guilt — nearly led to his
capture. " Though cautioned by his friends," says
Angelo, ** to remain in his hiding-place, yet, after a
few days' confinement, he could not resist his desire
to take a walk, after dusk, though he knew of the
placards and the reward offered. Thus determined,
he put on a seaman's dreadnought, and otherwise dis-
guised set off and wandered about for a considerable
time, when, returning across Little Tower Hill, a man
eyed him attentively, passed and repassed him, and,
turning short round, exclaimed, * So, you are the
very man I am seeking 1 ' Ryland, betraying not the
least emotion, stopped short, faced him, and returned,
* Perhaps you are mistaken in your man — I do not
know you I ' The stranger immediately apologized,
owned his mistake, wished the refugee good-night, and
then they departed." Alarmed by this incident,
Ryland buried himself in Stepney. It was in Step-
ney that he was caught, and then, pitifully enough,
his fate was sealed by an unconscious imprudence on
the part of his wife, who was his companion in con-
cealment. She took one of her husband's shoes to
a cobbler to be mended. The name ** Ryland " was
inside it, and the cobbler to get the reward gave tidings
to the officers on his track. When they arrived it was
to find the unhappy man attempting suicide with a
razor.
On July 20 the engraver stood at the bar of the
Old Bailey. Even there it seemed that he had a
chance of escape ; the forgery was so wonderful that
it was difficult to distinguish the real bill from the
THE CITY MAN'S CITY 105
false. Thirty and more signatures covering the true
bill had been copied by the artist with an exactness
which defied detection. Yet Ryland was lost when
Mr. Whatman, a Maidstone paper-maker, stepped into
the witness-box. Mr. Whatman said that the paper
of the forged bill was of his manufacture. It turned
out that the bill bore a date earlier than that on which
the paper was proved to have been made. On this
conclusive evidence Ryland was found guilty, and
sentenced to death.
Ryland begged for a respite in order that he might
complete in his cell a very fine plate on which he
was engaged, and which he desired to leave to his
wife as a contribution to the support of herself and
his children. This remarkable request was granted,
and day by day, in Newgate, Angelica Kauffman's
picture of Queen Eleanor sucking the poison from
the arm of her husband was reproduced. At last
the plate was finished, and a proof was passed by
Ryland. He said that he was now ready to die.
Meanwhile the King had been approached with a
view to saving his life, but George the Third could
not be influenced by any statement of Ryland's
valuable abilities. He replied — with some reason, it
must be admitted — that "a man with such ample
means of providing for his wants could not reason-
ably plead necessity as an excuse for his crime." One
last indulgence the engraver's position did obtain for
him : a coach to Tyburn. A thunderstorm delayed
the execution, which was the last but one ever carried
out at that place.
Cornhill ends at Gracechurch Street, whence Lead-
enhall Street continues the eastward artery. Here
banking and insurance give place to shipping and
merchandise, and the region adumbrates the stupen-
io6 A LONDONER'S LONDON
dous ingoings and outgoings of the Port of London.
On the left of the street is the church of St. Mary
Undershaft ; and in it is the tomb of the father of all
them who write about London. For there John Stow
sits, London's "grandsire cut (literally) in alabaster,"
plying a quill with which he seems to be transcribing
the city's story as it unfolds from age to age. We
know him first as a tailor in Cornhill, then as a poor
perambulating student of London, who was seen in
every church and churchyard and muniment-room.
His passion for London's history consumed his sub-
stance and his health. Ben Jonson, walking with
him once in the City, was amused by hearing him ask
two beggars "what they would have to take him
into their order." Had Jonson given us one such
anecdote about Shakespeare we should have been
grateful ; but the poet of Bankside eludes us, while
the antiquary of Cornhill, who must surely have seen
Shakespeare often, is a man whose hand we can shake.
He is described as being tall and lean, with eyes
" small and chrystaline," a face pleasant and open, and
in his disposition "very mild and courteous to any
that required his instructions." In old age his feet
became painful, and he remarked, says Strype, how
"his affliction lay in that part that formerly he had
made so much use of in walking many a mile
to search after antiquities." He was no romancer,
he liked to shatter a myth. He showed that the
" dagger " in the City arms was the cross and sword
of St. Paul, and not, as tradition had it, the weapon
with which Walworth stabbed Wat Tyler in the neck.
But the City whose annals Stow gathered and cor-
rected, and whose majesty he displayed, felt little
gratitude to the old tramping tailor. There is not,
I suppose, a literary document more charged with
THE CITY MAN'S CITY 107
unconscious irony than the one which records the
endowment of research in the case of John Stow.
It takes the form of a Hcence to beg.
Two landmarks of Cornhill cannot be passed over.
The first is the Pump at the corner of the Royal
Exchange. As late as 1875 a City man wrote : " I
remember the time when the Cornhill Pump was
besieged by quite a little crowd of persons with cans,
bottles, etc., to get some pure spring water." The
Pump is now merely a monument ; it does not even
feed its own trough, which is supplied with water
from the mains. The inscriptions on the iron case
will bear study. One of them reads : —
*' On this spot a well was made, and a House of
Correction built thereon by Henry Wallis, Mayor
of London, in the year 1282."
Another : —
^* The well was discovered, and enlarged, and this
Pump erected in the year 1799, by the contributions
of the Bank of England, the East India Company, the
neighbouring Fire Offices, together with the Bankers
and Traders of the Ward of Cornhill."
The most constant companion of the Cornhill Pump
in the last hundred years has been the ^^ little Green
Shop" on the opposite side of the street — Birch's —
now Ring & Brymer's, but always '' Birch's." Its
delicacies have been the manna of the City these two
hundred years. Lucas Birch was in business in this
shop early in the eighteenth century, and his son,
Samuel Birch, born in 1757, succeeded to the busi-
ness. Like Sir William Gilbert's gentle pieman, who
varied his operations with roller and paste by writing
^^ those lovely cracker mottoes," Mr. '' Patty- Pan" Birch
was no mean author and orator. He cultivated his
mind in the debates held at the King's Arras Tavern,
iq8 a LONDONER'S LONDON
in Cornhill, became a force in politics, and rose to be
Lord Mayor in the year of Waterloo. His activities
were so various that in a skit of the day a bewildered
French visitor was represented as having seen him at
the head of a militia regiment, read his poems, seen
his plays at Drury Lane, until — in Theodore Hook's
verses —
Guildhall at length in sight appears,
An orator is hailed with cheers ;
" Zat orator — vat is hees name ? "
"Birch, the pastry-cook — the very same."
No part of the City is more characteristic, or less
known to the average Londoner, than the quarter of
commercial lanes known as Rood, Philpot, Mincing,
and Mark. The greatest of these is Mincing. All
connect Eastcheap with Fenchurch Street. They are
connected with each other by long dark corridors
running through deep blocks of offices and sample-
rooms. These corridors are freely used as short cuts,
and a Mincing Lane youth sufficiently expert in the
local topography finds his way from Mark Lane to
Liverpool Street almost without leaving cover. The
City is a honeycomb, and these curious journeys can
be performed.
The gentlemen who stand near the Mincing Lane
Sale Rooms seem to make a thousand a year by stroll-
ing about in a particular way. One sees, of course,
that the way is everything. The Mincing Lane man
carries in one hand a bright square tin, containing a
sample of tea. Where he is taking it, what he pro-
poses to do with it, is not known. He has never been
seen to open this tin, but he carries it up and down
the Lane in a manner so obviously corrc^^c, prescribed,
and Laney, that you do not grudge him his house at
Sutton. He holds it from the top, at the full length of
THE CITY MAN'S CITY 109
his left arm, which would slope back easily towards his
coat-tails, if he wore coat-tails, but he wears a neat
black jacket, and finds this garment compatible with
a silk hat, tilted well back on his head. His walk is
inimitable (even he cannot reproduce it elsewhere),
but a description of its slow lilt would lead me too far
into post-impressionism. It is believed to account for
the rapt expression on the faces of the local apple-
women.
The old East London House, now replaced by a
pile of offices, gave great distinction to Leadenhall
Street, though Ned Ward speaks of it saucily as
"belonging to the East India Company, which are
a corporation of men with long heads and deep pur-
poses." Much of the interior was open to public in-
spection, and was fitted with Hindu images, trophies,
Indian standards and weapons, state howdahs, Chinese
and Indian paintings, and portraits of the early makers
of British India. Here, in the Accountant-General's
office, Charles Lamb sat at his desk for thirty-three
years.
In this stately and exclusive establishment the
destinies of India and the careers of many Englishmen
were shaped during 250 years. Yet the East India
House could be taken by storm. Joseph Brasbridge, the
Fleet Street silversmith, whose writings I have quoted
elsewhere, relates how a Mr. Jones, a clergyman, with
a son to put out in the world, came with him to
London and, as it happened, put up at the " Black
Bull" in Leadenhall Street. Seeing a throng of car-
riages, he asked its meaning, and was told that a meet-
ing of the East India directors was sitting. Whereupon
he returned to his inn, and wrote this letter : —
" Gentlemen, — I have a parcel of fine boys, but not
much cash to provide for them. I had intended my
no A LONDONER'S LONDON
eldest son for the Church, but I find he is more likely
to kick a church down than to support it. I sent him
to the University, but he could not submit himself to
the college rules ; and, on being reproved by his tutors,
he took it up in the light of an affair of honour, and
threatened to call them to account for it. All my plans
for his welfare being thus disconcerted, I asked him if
he had formed any for himself ; he replied he meant
to go to India. I then inquired if he had any interest,
at which question he looked somewhat foolish, and
replied in the negative. Now, Gentlemen, I know no
more of you than you do of me. I therefore may
appear to you not much wiser than my son. I can
only say that he is of Welsh extraction for many
generations, and, as my first-born, I flatter myself
has not degenerated. He is six feet high, of an athletic
make, and bold and intrepid as a lion. If you like
to see him I will equip him as a gentleman, and —
I am. Gentlemen, etc."
This letter so impressed the board that the young
man was sent for, and appointed a cadet. It will be
expected by the reader that I am now about to disclose
a name deeply graven in the annals of India. But
no — the young giant threw up empire-making, and
returned to a village pulpit.
Leadenhall Street brings one to the Beersheba of
most Londoners — Aldgate Pump. Hereby, in the
Minories, I once had an interesting experience. When
its little church of Holy Trinity was closed, much w^as
written about its remarkable relic, a human head. The
caretaker, a foreman in a neighbouring factory, good-
naturedly took me to the church, and I remember the
strange transition from the noisy granite streets of that
warehouse and workroom region, with its thundering
drays and threatening cranes, into the quiet little build-
THE CITY MAN'S CITY iii
ing, with its amazingly high pulpit and oaken pews
— in one of which Sir Isaac Newton is believed to have
worshipped.
The caretaker soon went to a cupboard and brought
me forth the head. It was in a specially constructed
glass box — this head of the father of Lady Jane Grey.
His ? Well, that is the story, and it has the support
of competent students. Henry Grey, Duke of Suffolk,
was beheaded on Tower Hill (close to the Minories),
on 23 February, 1554, eleven days after the execution
of his illustrious daughter. There is the inevitable
tradition that the executioner was bribed to bring the
head secretly to Holy Trinity Church and place it in
the vault, where it was found about fifty years ago.
Lord De Ros, a careful inquirer, accepted the story,
and the late Mr. George Scharf, the curator of our
national portraits, declared that the features agree with
the best-known portrait of Henry Grey. Others think
this resemblance is fanciful. As to the presence of the
head in the church, it is enough to remember that
heads were frequently recovered from the scaffold.
Sir Thomas More's was secured by Margaret Roper,
and Sir Walter Raleigh's by Lady Raleigh. Suffolk's
head may have been recovered, too, and conveyed to
the Minories, where the Earl's brothers resided. And
it is known that Lady Grey took an interest in the
church long after her husband's death. The remark-
able state of preservation in which the relic remains is
explained by supposing that the head was left undis-
turbed in the box of oak sawdust into which it would
fall on the scaffold. The interesting theory that this
is the head of the father of Lady Jane Grey was dis-
cussed at length in the ''Times" in 1879, and in
*' Notes and Queries " in 1885. The then vicar of
Holy Trinity stated that he had searched the registers
112 A LONDONER'S LONDON
from beginning to end, but could find no mention of
the burial of a beheaded person in the church. But
as the existing registers begin in 1566, and Suffolk was
executed in 1554, this does not weaken the traditional
story.
We are at Aldgate Pump, and before it fades the
immense London of "those that encamp toward the
east." Many Londoners have seen, once in a way,
the London Hospital and the People's Palace, both of
which institutions stand on the great four-mile highway
which connects Aldgate with Stratford, and distributes
the human tide into the jerry-built fastnesses and
creeping fogs of Essex. But these do not know East
London. They have not strolled among the beetling
warehouses and leafy churchyards of Wapping and
Shadwell, or lounged on the river terrace by Blackwall
Station, or lost themselves among the walls and draw-
bridges of the docks, where the masts fill the sky like a
redwood forest.
Sir Walter Besant was right when he said that to
observe the true life of an East London neighbourhood
you must adopt Richard Jefferies' maxim for seeing
the life of wild nature — you must stand still and stand
long. If you will retire into a doorway in a nameless
by-way of Bethnal Green, and stand one whole hour
watching those who come and go, you will — unnoticed
yourself — see into the heart of things. To know in
some true way this vast region, which is equal in size
to St. Petersburg or Philadelphia, is to wonder at its
order, its household dignities, its social keeping, its
magnetic cheerfulness, its immense honest energy that
makes the best of destiny.
Of all East London neighbourhoods none is more
interesting than Spitalfields, which lies north of the
Whitechapel Road. It may best be entered by Brush-
BEYOND IT FADES THE IMMENSE LONDON OF
THE EAST " (p. 112)
BEYOND ALDGATE PUMP
"those that ENCAMl' TOWARDS
THE CITY MAN'S CITY 113
field Street, in Norton Folgate. Here you see an
intelligible goal in the huge grey mass of Christ
Church, Spitalfields. Nicholas Hawksmoor reared
its tower one hundred and sixty years ago, and im-
prisoned the shadows of the eighteenth century in its
enormous portico. Everywhere you perceive that new
wine has been poured into old bottles. In Crispin
Street, in Spital Square, in Elder Street, in Fournier
Street, in Wilkes Street, you may fancy that a dying
glory smiles on the stately Georgian houses, with red
walls, flat windows, and carved lintels. Fine must
have been the lustrings and paduasoys, heavy the
brocades, that brought Spitalfields its wealth and
cheerfulness when the bells of Christ Church showered
down the notes of " Home, Sweet Home " and ^' The
Lass of Richmond Hill " on the red roofs of the
suburb. Through all the Georgian era the twelve
bells made music in the sky. Then, one midnight,
the lightning struck the belfry, and the bells were
heard crashing to the ground amid claps of thunder.
Many a weaver must have taken their fall for an omen,
and the omen has fulfilled itself. Not only the chimes
have gone ; the clack of the loom is now little heard
in Spitalfields. No more does the weaver's song,
loved by Falstaff, fl5at down from the queer old
latticed windows that show you in what rooms the
warp and weft danced themselves into beauty.
Two kinds of houses in Spitalfields recall the
weaving days. First there are these tall old houses
dating from Queen Anne and the Georges, in which
the master weavers lived, or in which at a later period
they only gave out work. I can see Daniel Defoe
wandering among them when they were new, with
his keen eye for prosperity. Secondly, there is the
humbler home of the working weaver, usually small,
114 A LONDONER'S LONDON
but sometimes rising to three stories. It shows a rich
albeit much-blackened brick, and its unfailing feature
is its upper large window, or range of windows, filled
with small panes of glass. You cannot pass such a
house without a sense of desolation. It is true that
other workers have poured into them (I have seen a
cobbler's bald head and flying hammer where I hoped
for a weaver's paraphernalia), but the light of poetry
has faded from the square panes under the eaves.
Many weaver's houses are a hundred years old, some
are a hundred and fifty. On one in Brick Lane I
remarked the date 1723. It is not surprising that time
bears these workshops away but slowly, when it is
remembered that eighty years ago there were 20,000
looms in Spitalfields, employing 50,000 people, and that
up to i860 the Spitalfields weavers were still a great
though declining community.
Spitalfields is but one of many East End regions
in which it is good to have wandered. You catch
suggestions of the old maritime order in Wapping
and Shadwell and Limehouse. Wapping Old Stairs,
of immortal memory, may still be found, though its
boat-bustle is no more. In Poplar's High Street
are private schools of navigation, and in all that
region there is tar and ropes and the mention of
distant ports. The sky at the end of a slum is crossed
by the gleaming spars and cordage of a sailing ship,
or from a great bowsprit a carven goddess stares
down upon the stones, as if looking for the swoon
of green water.
Far away — beyond Shadwell, Limehouse, and
Poplar — is a London which is fain to call itself
" London-over-the-Border," where Canning Town
and Silvertown, and Tidal Basin and Gallions
fade along the flats to North Woolwich.
THE CITY MAN'S CITY 115
The Isle of Dogs, Plaistow, Manor Park, growing
Ilford ; and West Ham, that monster crouching in
the mist !
London becoming Essex, and Essex becoming
London, where the great ships ride high between the
farms !
World of London without end ! And, since with-
out appreciable end, without the charm of outskirts
— let us confess it. London has an immense irregu-
lar selvage, still delightful in patches, but fraying away
until it ceases to be organic, or suggestive of the town.
True outskirts are visibly related to the body that wears
them ; they afford views of the centre, and offer an
accessibly brighter sunshine and a cleaner rain. When
Londoners stand long before the Dutch pictures in the
National Gallery, I think that they are fascinated by
the Dutchmen's towns seen across dunes or drying-
grounds. Ruysdael's " Haarlem" is such a picture. This
is the charm, too — no small part of it — of Rembrandt's
etching, the " Three Trees," where the rainstorm, still
in the outskirts, is moving grandly to the town, and it
is the whole charm of his little " Amsterdam " in which
we see the city from the marshes of the Amstel, or the
Ij, fretting the sky with mast and boat-shed, windmill
and tower. In effect we have abolished London's
outskirts, for when we reach them we have ceased to
look back. Compensation we have : poets and painters
alike have become aware of the beauty of the inner
streets and the imprisoned fogs. To these, then, let
us return.
CHAPTER V
THE HOUSE-MOVING OF THE GODS
The Euston Statuary Yards—Plastic Piccadilly—" Our Old Friend,
the Pelican "—Joseph Wilton— A Window in Charlotte Street— Edward
Fitzgerald — John Constable — Cockney Ladle — Willan's Farm— The
Coming of the Omnibus — The " Green Man " — The Spread of London
—The Parent of the Motor-car— The Inspector of Fishes— The Birth
of Camden Town — Boy Boz — Warren Street — Cookery and Culture —
" The Village Politicians "— " The March to Finchley "—A Nursery
of Pugilists — The Tottenham Court Road— Bozier's Court — Hanway
Street— A Great Corner—*' I too am sometimes unhappy "
A GREY nimbus of sentiment hovers over that
fag-end of the Euston Road where the statuary
yards are always a-cold, and a warm air creeps
for ever out of Portland Road Station. The note
of the neighbourhood is in the statuary yards, with
their queer mixture of objects which represent the
dead man and the undying myth. Here is the eagle
for the garden-gate, and the dove for the tomb.
Here Venus rises from composition foam, and
Mercury — Boy Messenger of the gods — implores
release from modern epitaphs. Cold and grotesque
as they are, these stone-yards detain the eye by
their display of forms and ideals that have de-
scended from nature to Greece, and from the
Athenian chisel to the Euston mould. Not all is
lost that Myron carved or Phidias breathed ; the
Il6
THE HOUSE-MOVING OF THE GODS 117
impoverished spirit has informed the debased pro-
cess, and Hebe is a Hebe of sorts. There is yet a
residuum, ^* a shadow of a magnitude." I suspect that
Colonel Newcome turned a more intelligent eye on
these images in the New Road than ever he did on
Clive's drawings or the masterpieces of Gandish. He
must have seen them on his way from his gaunt
house in Fitzroy Square for his morning walk in
Regent's Park, and it may be that he looked on them
with a sadder gaze than usual on the morning when
the " Post " contained the advertisement of the sale of
his three horses, '* the property of an officer returning
to India."
All this plastic world came from Piccadilly more
than a hundred years ago. There, the mansions facing
the Green Park are built on the sites of the statuary
yards and shops which supplied the Walpolian age
with garden gods and nymphs. Probably the oldest
of these sculpture yards was Van Nost's, the site of
which is now occupied by No. 105 Piccadilly. His
business was purchased by Sir Henry Cheere, who,
though he had enough talent to obtain commissions
in Westminster Abbey, nevertheless turned out a
great deal of cheap-jack work from his "despicable
manufactory," as John Thomas Smith calls it, in
Piccadilly.
Smith relates that Joseph Nollekens took him one
day, when he was a boy, to visit his friend, Mrs.
Haycock, an aged lady who lived near Hampstead
Heath. '* Her evergreens were cut into the shapes
of various birds ; and Cheere's leaden painted figures
of a shepherd and shepherdess were objects of as
much admiration with her neighbours as they were
with my Lord Ogleby, who thus accosts his friend
in the second scene of the ' Clandestine Marriage ' :
ii8 A LONDONER'S LONDON
' Great improvements, indeed, Mr. Stirling ! wonderful
improvements 1 The four seasons in lead, the flying
Mercury, and the basin with Neptune in the middle
are in the very extreme of fine taste. You have as
many such figures as the man at Hyde Park Corner.'"
Francis Bird, the sculptor of the original Queen
Anne group in front of St. Paul's Cathedral, and
the Abbey monument of Sir Cloudesley Shovel, which
Pope called "the bathos of sculpture," was born in
Piccadilly. In Carter's statuary yard at loi Picca-
dilly, Roubiliac found his first employment in London.
Here also worked John Deare, who met his death
in Rome by his rash experiment of sleeping on a
block of marble in the hope that he would dream
of a masterpiece. Scheemakers, the sculptor of the
Shakespeare statue in Westminster Abbey, had his
studios in Vine Street, Piccadilly, where Nollekens,
his apprentice, made rapid progress in spite of his
passion for helping the sexton to toll the death-bell
at St. James's Church.
When Piccadilly began to attract wealthy residents,
the statuary folk moved northward to the Oxford
Street and Fitzroy regions. Thus Rysbrack had
workshops in Vere Street, where he carved Sir
Isaac Newton's monument for the Abbey. Agostino
Carlini settled at 14 Carlisle Street, Soho. He exe-
cuted three of the nine symbolic heads of British
rivers on the Strand front of Somerset House, those
of Tyne, Severn, and Dee. His assistant was Giuseppe
Ceracchi, who left him to establish himself north of
Oxford Street at No. 76 Margaret Street, where he
instructed that clever amateur, the Honourable Mrs.
Damer. This unfortunate sculptor joined the Paris
revolutionists, and was guillotined in 1801, but at
least he contrived to be drawn to his execution in
THE HOUSE-MOVING OF THE GODS 119
a car designed by himself, and in the habit of a
Roman Emperor.
That successful and religiously minded artist, John
Bacon, R.A., settled at 17, Newman Street, where
he moulded his gladiatorial statue of Dr. Johnson for
St. Paul's Cathedral, the Chatham monuments in the
Guildhall and the Abbey, and the recumbent figure
of Father Thames in the quadrangle of Somerset
House. Bacon's courtly side appeared in his reply
to Queen Charlotte, who, looking at the Thames group,
asked him, " Why did you make so frightful a figure ? "
" Art," he replied, " cannot always effect what is ever
within the reach of Nature — the union of beauty and
majesty." Bacon's thoroughly British outlook made
him popular, his business-like habits brought him
wealth. A story illustrates his methods. An order
for a monument had been left with his foreman in
Newman Street during his absence.
" Well," he said on his return, "is it to be in memory
of a private gentleman ? — and what price was proposed ?"
" Three hundred pounds, sir."
"Three hundred pounds — a small bas-relief will
do. Was he a benevolent man ? You asked that, I
hope."
"Yes, sir — he was a benevolent man. He always
gave sixpence, they said, to the old woman who
opened his pew-door on Sundays."
" That will do — that will do ; we must have recourse
to our old friend, the Pelican."
The art associations and rural features of the district
between Oxford Street and the Euston Road are to
be found in the pages of John Thomas Smith's harum-
scarum biography, "Nollekens and his Times," and
in his anecdotal miscellany, "A Book for a Rainy
Day." As a boy Smith began to help his father, who
120 A LONDONER'S LONDON
was Nollekens' assistant, and he was drawing in the
Mortimer Street studio when Dr. Johnson sat for
his bust. The doctor looked at the boy's work and,
patting him on the head, said, *^ Very well, very well."
The boy went to the surrounding studios with his
master or his father. In Foley Place, old Joseph
Wilton, R.A., had his yard and workshops, and here
was a model of the coronation coach which he had
helped to build for George III, and, indeed, for his
present Majesty. Wilton had done the carving,
Cipriani the paintings, and the general design was
made by Sir William Chambers, who married Wilton's
daughter. Smith recalls a pretty cottage near the
Middlesex Hospital, where one of Wilton's labourers
lived, and near it a rope-walk and two rows of
magnificent elms, under which he often saw
Richardson Wilson, the painter, walk with Joseph
Baretti.
Wilson lived at No. 36 (now 76) Charlotte Street,
where he liked to throw open his window to enjoy the
sunset behind the Hampstead and Highgate uplands.
London has since interposed many mean streets be-
tween his house and those Delectable Mountains, yet
looking up Charlotte Street on a clear day you will
see the thin spire of Highgate Church piercing the
brightness of the north horizon. I love the memory
of this brusque, bottle-nosed master who slouched
around his lodgings in the Covent Garden Piazza,
drank and talked at Old Slaughter's, and pawned his
pictures in Long Acre, while to his inner eye the
Italian sun bathed rock and temple in the light of
a younger world. It was from Covent Garden, where
he had a model made of a portion of the Piazza (the
entire work of the piers being provided with drawers,
and the openings of the arches holding pencils and
THE HOUSE-MOVING OF THE GODS 121
oil-bottles), that Wilson moved to Charlotte Street, and
thence, cruising in the same district, to Foley Place
and Tottenham Street. His misfortune was to produce
unsaleable pictures which prepared the way for
Turner. But Peter Pindar, who chastised the painters
of his day with scorpions, foresaw Wilson's value to
posterity. Wilson was at least spared the bitterness
of self-distrust. He once said to Sir William Beechy,
" You will live to see great prices given for my pictures,
when those of Barret will not fetch one farthing." His
later London days were brightened when he received
the post of librarian to the Royal Academy. Then he
came unexpectedly into a small estate in Wales, left
him by his brother. He journeyed down from London
to Lanverris, in Denbighshire, to sit on the rocks in
the sun, and to hold communion with the grey
hills. But his powers were spent, and one day while
walking with his dog he sank exhausted. The dog
ran home and pulled the servants to the spot where
his dying master lay. Few men had known more of
London squalor or of Italian beauty. What pic-
tures and titles were his : " The Death of Niobe,"
"The Villa of Maecenas at Tivoli," "Celadon and
Amelia," " View on the Coast of Baiae," " The Tomb
of the Horatii and Curatii," " The Broken Bridge of
Nemi." What concord of names and hues of the
evening !
In those days the northern end of Newman Street
commanded a view of fields and hillocks, and Nolle-
kens remembered that he had come with his mother
to the top of this street to walk by a long pond near
a windmill, and that the miller charged a halfpenny
to people who entered his grounds. He could recall
thirteen fine walnut-trees standing a little north of
Hanway Street. One Sunday morning he and his
122 A LONDONER'S LONDON
pupil saw the parish beadles seize the clothes of some
boys who were bathing in another pond, known as
Cockney Ladle, on the site of Duke Street, Portland
Place. The water in the Marylebone Basin hard by
was dangerously deep, and many drownings occurred in
these ponds, whose sites are marked in old maps. The
semi-rural state of these districts is curiously evident
in a piece of news published in the "St. James's
Chronicle" of 8 August, 1769 : "Two young [sedan]
chairmen were unfortunately drowned on Friday even-
ing last in a pond behind the north side of Portman
Square. They had been beating a carpet in the
square, and, being thereby warm and dirty, agreed to
bathe in the above pond, not being aware of its great
depth."
But houses soon multiplied, and their coming is
reflected in John Constable's discovery that Charlotte
Street, where he settled in 1822, was becoming a place
of distractions. To be " out of the way of the callers,"
and on account of his wife's poor health, he took another
house at Hampstead, retaining a studio in Charlotte
Street. And Edward Fitzgerald, who lodged sometimes
in the street, wrote from it in 1844 : " O Barton, man !
but I am grilled here. O for to sit upon the banks of
the dear old Deben, with the worthy collier sloop
going forth into the wide world as the sun sinks."
And Constable's own heart was in that East Anglia
which is so little esteemed by the amateurs of scenery,
though it inspired Gainsborough, Cotman, and
Crome. He reverted always to his boyhood on the
Stour. " The sound of water escaping from mill-
dams, etc., willows, old rotten planks, slimy posts, and
brickwork — I love such things." Charlotte Street has
become populous and also un-English, but to-day Ded-
ham Church rises with motherly grace in the Stour
THE HOUSE-MOVING OF THE GODS 123
valley, where willows and aspens quiver among the
darker trees, as Constable painted them ; the river is
deep and pure at Flatford Mill, and only the shadow
on the dial seems to have moved in the little church-
yard of East Bergholt.
Charlotte Street is now the long, straight artery of a
northern Soho. Here waiters are waited on at their
clubs. Here flourish German and Austrian and French
restaurants, revolutionary clubs, blanchisseries, char-
cuteries, and bureaux de placement. The newspapers
of half a dozen countries and their flamboyant fiction
can be bought here. Walking these streets one can
still feel the Marylebone fields underfoot. The old
ponds do not seem to have been filled up, and curious
depressions, dedicated now to mews and garages, can
be found. Many of the early genteel houses are stand-
ing hear Rathbone Place, and it is noticeable that
in certain streets the better houses are on the south
side with an air of having enjoyed the old view up
to Highgate.
The cottages opposite the statuary yards in the
Euston Road were known as Quickset Row. The
Green Man Tavern by Portland Road then stood on
the edge of the town, and its windows looked on
the fields and stacks of two farms. Willan's farm was
at the top of Portland Street. Mr. Willan came up
from Yorkshire as a young man. He was a good
judge of horses, and became a successful contractor
for cavalry mounts and one of those opulent grass-
farmers who supplied London with milk. Of him, as
of Laycock at Islington, it was said that though he
owned 999 cows he never could keep a thousand. To
many a Londoner this farm had been a landmark in
boyhood. White-thorn hedges led from it to Primrose
Hill, and there was a famous stickleback pond. Hard
134 A LONDONER'S LONDON
by was the "Jew's Harp" tea-garden, with boxes for
snug parties, and about it a number of Cockney
summer-houses with castellated roofs on which
miniature cannon were permanently silent. A zigzag
path, known as Love Lane, led to the "Queen's Head
and Artichoke," a like resort.
Not far off, in the Marylebone Road, stood the
"Yorkshire Stingo," whence, in 1829, the first parents
of the London omnibus ran to the Bank at the bidding
of George Shillibeer. The " Yorkshire Stingo " was
not the birthplace of this great species of vehicle ;
Paris gave the omnibus to London. After a life of
piety and austerity, after writing tracts which in Vol-
taire's judgment equalled Moli^re in their wit and
Bossuet in their sublimity, and after committing to
the judgment of Heaven the opinions for which Rome
had condemned him, Blaise Pascal drooped into
suffering, invented the omnibus, and died. Paris went
mad over the conveyance, and then forgot it. In 1819
Lafitte, the banker, reintroduced the vehicle under the
name of " omnibus."
Dictionaries coldly derive the word from the Latin
without the pleasing legend that belongs to it. In an
old French magazine may be found the story of a
certain M. Baudry, who established in 1827 hot baths
in a suburb of Nantes. Lacking customers, he sent,
at fixed hours, a long car into the highways and
hedges, or rather into the centre of the town, to in-
duce them to come in. This was the first " omnibus."
The name occurred to a friend of Baudry's, and it
caught the public fancy the more readily because a
grocer of Nantes named Omnes had painted over his
door the words, " Omnes Omnibus " (Omnes for All).
Taking a hint from his local success, Baudry started
omnibuses in Paris, but the winter of 1829 made the
THE HOUSE-MOVING OF THE GODS 125
streets slippery and forage dear, and he is said to have
died of grief. In that year the first London omnibus
ran from the "Yorkshire Stingo." London did not
take kindly to the word " omnibus." " What is the
plural ? " people asked ; and when Joseph Hume spoke
in the House of Commons of omnihi there was the
laughter called "much." The vehicles were long
known as " Shillibeers/' and if their proprietor had not
met with misfortune and taken to providing hearses,
the name would probably have survived to this day.
As it was, people felt an ambiguity. The first two
" Shillibeers " ran to the City by the New Road, now
the Marylebone, Euston, and Pentonville Roads.
They were drawn by three horses abreast, and had
conductors who had been with Shillibeer in Paris —
likely young men. They wore a middy-like costume,
and when it became known that they were sons of naval
officers the young ladies of Paddington used to ride as
far as King's Cross in order to improve their French.
The " Shillibeers " carried twenty-two passengers ; the
fare was a shilling. Newspapers and magazines were
provided — not without reason, since the journey was
slow, and there was a long half-way halt. In this
generosity Shillibeer was outdone by a later owner,
Mr. Cloud, who ran omnibuses between the Hay-
market and Chelsea. Cloud placed a small well-chosen
library in each of his omnibuses, so that he who rode
might read the standard authors. People rode to
Hammersmith purposely to read these books. As they
also stole them, this method of getting culture was
not so expensive as it looks. The first free library
was an omnibus.^
» For many of these particulars I am indebted to Mr. Henry Charles
Moore's useful and entertaining " Omnibuses and Cabs : Their Origin
and History."
126 A LONDONER'S LONDON
On the site of Osnaburgh Street stood Kendall's
farm, where old people remembered seeing eight or
ten big hayricks in a row. To the Green Man Tavern
came Richard Wilson to play skittles. The "Green
Man" was then known as the Farthing Pie-house,
from the mutton-pies which were sold there when
a farthing went farther than it does now. It was kept
by one Price, an inspired performer on that mysterious
musical instrument, the salt-box, which was beaten
with a rolling-pin, apparently as a drum capable of
producing something like notes. The great Abel, the
'cello player, and the friend of Gainsborough, was
another of Price's crony customers.
The regrets which the spread of London awakened,
about the time when Miser Elwes was running up
his streets in St. John's Wood, are set forth in the
chapter "Nothing to Eat" in Pyne's "Wine and
Walnuts." Says Dr. Ducarel : " I remember those
fields in their natural, rural garb, covered with herds
of kine, when you might stretch across from old
Willan's farm there, a-top of Portland Street, right
away without impediment to St. John's Wood,
where I have gathered blackberries as a boy." It is
on record that Thomas Lowe, " Tommy Lowe " of
Vauxhall, raised a subscription to enable a poor man
to give children rides in this quiet neighbourhood in
a small chariot drawn by four muzzled mastiffs.
Trinity Church parts Osnaburgh Street from Albany
Street. Osnaburgh Street was named after the Duke
of York — of the Column — in his character of Bishop
of Osnaburg. It leads to Cumberland Market, which
is the old Haymarket's haymarket mislaid, and one
of the most outlandish places in London. Under
snow it is the picture of a Siberian village in a forty-
year-old wood-cut.
THE HOUSE-MOVING OF THE GODS 127
A large motor-car exchange has given a touch of
the twentieth century to the lower end of Albany
Street, which also has its name from the Duke of
York (and Albany). The presence of this mechanical
establishment produces a coincidence, for it was in
Albany Street that Sir Goldworth Gurney constructed
the first effective motor-car seen in this country in
the shape of his famous "steam-carriage." Gurney
was a flourishing doctor in Regent Street, and moved
hither into premises where he could develop his idea.
His daughter's interest in the progress of this machine
may not have been shared by the neighbours.
" From a window of my room I looked into the
yard where my father was constructing his steam-
carriage. The intense combustion caused by the
steam-blast, and the consequent increase of high-
pressure steam force acting on the jet, created such
a tremendous current or draught of air up the
chimney that it was something terrific to see or to
hear.
" The workmen would sometimes throw things into
the fire as the carriage passed round the yard — large
pieces of slate or sheet-iron — which would dart up
the chimney like a shot, falling occasionally nearer
to the men than was safe, and my father would
have to check their enthusiasm. The roaring sound,
too, sometimes was astounding. Many difficulties
had to be overcome, which occupied years before
1827.
" The noise had to be got rid of, or it would have
frightened horses, and the heat had to be insulated,
or it might have burnt up the whole vehicle. The
steam machinery was at first contrived to be in the
passenger-carriage itself, as the tuinpike tolls would
have been double for two vehicles. My father was
128 A LONDONER'S LONDON
forcibly reminded of this fact, for there was then a
turnpike-gate immediately outside the manufactory.
This gate was first on the south side of the doors,
and the steam-carriage was often exercised in the
Regent's Park barrack-yard ; then the gate was moved
just a few yards to the north, between the doors and
the barracks.
"But perhaps the greatest difficulty, next to that
of prejudice, which was strong against all machinery
in those days, was to control the immense power of
the steam and to guide the carriage. It would go
round the factory-yard more like a thing flying than
running, and my father was often in imminent peril
while making these experiments.
"He, however, at last brought the carriage com-
pletely under control, and it was perfected. One was
built to carry the machinery, the driver, and stoker
only, and to draw another carriage after it. My father
could guide it, turn it, or back it easily ; he could
set it going or stop it instantly, uphill or down ; he
frequently went to Hampstead, Highgate, Edgware,
Barnet, Stanmore, and its rate could be maintained
at twenty miles an hour, though this speed could
only be indulged in where the road was straight and
wide, and the way clearly to be seen."
To No. 37 Albany Street Frank Buckland took
his young wife (Miss Hannah Papes) in 1863, and
here he lived until his death in 1880. This house
had previously been occupied by Charles Dickens's
father-in-law, Mr. Hogarth. Here Buckland set up
the most amazing household in London. Animals,
birds, and reptiles were to be seen everywhere ;
monkeys were not too troublesome, a jaguar was
not too wild, snakes and glow-worms were not too
unpleasant, to be welcome in the house. Cats, rats,
THE HOUSE-MOVING OF THE GODS 129
mice, parrots, and guinea-pigs and laughing jackasses
were there as a matter of course. A hght in the
kitchen window would signal the fact that Buckland
was working all night to make a cast of a sturgeon
borrowed from a Bond Street fishmonger. Parties
of New Zealanders, Zulus, and Aztecs, arrived in
London, took a bee-line to 37 Albany Street. The
Siamese Twins and the Two-headed Nightingale were
received there as friends of the family. It 'was a
happy household, and Mrs. Buckland's part may be
understood in the fact that her particular pet was
the young jaguar. Death came untimely to this fine
naturalist and Government Inspector of Fisheries.
His biographer's account of Buckland's farewell to
life, once read, cannot be forgotten. " God is so
good," he said, '^ so very good to the little fishes, I do
not believe He would let their inspector suffer ship-
wreck at last ? I am going a long journey, where
I think I shall see a great many curious animals.
This journey I must go alone."
To look up Albany Street is to think of Camden
Town, a great habitat of young Londoners. The
name is a vague geographical expression, standing
for a district which lies between and about the Cobden
statue and the eponymous North London Railway
Station. It was not easy to say exactly where the
old yellow bus entered or left it.
The district came into being in 1791. The date is
fixed by a letter of Horace Walpole's, in which he
says, '^ Lord Camden has just let ground at Kentish
Town for building fourteen hundred houses — nor do
I wonder. London is, I am certain, much fuller than
ever I saw it." Charles Jenner, the author of certain
** Town Eclogues," appears to have seen these bricky
beginnings and to have disliked them. He represents
130 A LONDONER'S LONDON
himself as a poet sitting on a stile near the ^'Mother
Red Cap " :—
Where'er around I cast my wandering eyes,
Long burning rows of fetid bricks arise.
Probably these lines were written rather earlier than
1791, but they smack of the changing soil, and they
recall the moment when the London we know was
emerging from the eighteenth century.
Charles Pratt, Lord Camden, was Attorney-General
and Lord Chancellor, and a brave and honourable
man. He it was who gave Wilkes his Habeas Corpus.
The people adored him as a friend of liberty. ^' Busts
and prints of him were hawked through remote
villages ; a Reynolds portrait of him was hung up
in the Guildhall. . . . English journals and travellers
carried his fame over Europe." This was the man
who founded Camden Town, and gave his name to
Pratt Street, and who, as Viscount Bayham and as
the husband of a Brecknock lady, is also represented
in the names of Bayham Street and Brecknock Road.
A hundred years ago fields still spread where
Dickens was to be baptized a Londoner in the gloom
of Camden Town. Bayham Street was not built in
1806 ; it was ready for the Dickens family in 1823.
As a fact, it was built in 181 2. At the back of
Bayham Street there was a hayfield for Boy Boz to
tumble in. When the Dickens family came to it the
street was already small-suburban. A washerwoman
lived next door, and a Bow Street officer made one
house awful over the way. Yet the street was not
so humble as now. The father of Frank Holl, the
Royal Academician, lived in Bayham Street, and at
least two well-known artists and a dramatic author.
i
CHARLOTTE STREET (WITH JOHxX CONSTABLE'S HOUSE)
NOW THE LONG STRAIGHT ARTERY OF A NORTHERN SOHO, WHERE WAITERS
ARE WAITED ON AT THEIR CLUBS (r. 123)
THE HOUSE-MOVING OF THE GODS 131
The district was lit by oil-lamps, and Boy Boz often
ran to the top of the street to see the watchman
start from his box, which stood there, to light the
lamps round the Mother Red Cap Tavern.
From the Mother Red Cap Tavern southwards the
High Street rose at the end of the eighteenth century.
At first it consisted of small shops with one floor
above, and a few of these houses remain. The most
conspicuous object in High Street is the statue of
Cobden at its foot. Napoleon III was a large con-
tributor to the cost of this monument, which was
fashioned in one of the Euston Road sculpture yards.
It was erected in 1868 on the site of a turnpike that
had disappeared five years earlier, and Mrs. Cobden and
her daughter stood on a neighbouring balcony to see
the unveiling. It is a peculiarity in this statue that,
seen from behind, it raises a vivid expectation that you
are approaching an effigy of the late Lord Salisbury.
Returning now to the sepulchral end of the Euston
Road : visible from it at various turnings, is a
street which belongs to few men's London. Its
length of tall but odd-sized Georgian houses is best
known in the view of it from the Tottenham Court
Road, looking westward. Warren Street, its name.
The average Londoner knows this street only as a
sub-conscious glimpse into a hinterland with which
he has no concern. Small chandlers, bootmakers,
greengrocers, plumbers, and so on are established in
the ground-floors of many of the houses, and in the
room that was once a parlour petrol-tanks are
charged. Other houses keep their residential role.
It is a dingy, populous street of no attraction, the
sort of street in which Frank Buckland might have
stopped to see on a fine day a dusty dancing-bear.
Yet it has known brisk times and eager guests. In
132 A LONDONER'S LONDON
the house which he knew as No. 43 — it is now
obliterated by a warehouse — Dr. WilHam Kitchiner
entertained his fellow-wits and gourmets. The last
of his famous dinners was held eighty years ago.
Kitchiner had inherited ;£70,ooo from his father, a
Strand coal-merchant, and was therefore able to ride
his three hobbies — optics, cookery, and music. To
these he added a genial eccentricity. His dinners
were often elaborate experiments in cookery, and the
guests had to recognize this fact. Five minutes past
five was the minute, and if a guest came late the
janitor had irrevocable orders not to admit him, for
it was held by the mythical " Committee of Taste," of
which Kitchiner was "Secretary," that the perfection
of some of the dishes was often so evanescent that " the
delay of one minute after their arrival at the meridian
of concoction will render them no longer worthy of
men of taste."
In becoming an epicure Kitchiner did not cease to
be a physician with a care for the human machine.
His dinners, though recherche, were usually limited
to three dishes. Sauces were his peculiar care.
Alaric Watts, the poet and editor, recalled an evening
when the doctor produced from a drawer in his side-
board a sauce of superpiquant quality, upon the merits
of which he was still expatiating when a guest, taking
up the bottle, poured at least a teaspoonful on his
plate. " God bless my soul 1 " exclaimed Kitchiner,
" my dear friend, do you know what you have done ?
You've spoilt your steak and wasted a guinea's-worth
of my sauce. One drop, sir I One drop on the gravy
was all that was needful 1 " When Kitchiner's guests
adjourned to the drawing-room they found curious
arrangements for their comfort. Instead of chairs
large stuffed animals were offered them for seats.
THE HOUSE-MOVING OF THE GODS 133
The doctor liked to be asked to play on an old
spinet. Tea and coffee were served by neat maids,
who were not forbidden to join their laughter to
the company's as they moved about.
Warren Street has had other associations with the
things of the mind. The imprint on some of Turner's
'* Liber Studiorum " plates, such as the beautiful
" Straw-yard," reads : ^^ London : Published, February
20, 1808, by C. Turner, No. 50 Warren Street, Fitzroy
Square." Number 50 is quite unaltered, but its
blackened brick, its plain doorway, and its old urn-
and-spike area railings call for no sentimental descrip-
tion. Nor was there much sentiment in the contract
under which Charles Turner engraved for his immortal
namesake. When he had finished twenty out of fifty
agreed plates he represented that eight guineas a plate
was not enough. The result was that Turner did
not speak to his engraver again for nineteen years.
They were reconciled at last, and the engraver lived
to be a trustee under Turner's will.
At No. 10 Warren Street — the ground-floor is
now a shoemaker's shop — were engraved those truly
national pictures, David Wilkie's ^^ Village Politicians "
and " Rent Day." Their painter gave Abraham Raim-
bach a partnership in the speculation, and his concep-
tion of the engraver's toil and dues was such that only
one-fourth of the proceeds was to be Wilkie's and
three-fourths were to be Raimbach's. This arrange-
ment was inaugurated by the plate of '' The Village
Politicians." The engraver had seen this subject
exhibited as the work of a young and unknown
painter at the Royal Academy, where its effect on
the town was comparable to that produced by Byron's
" Childe Harold." He tells us, in his autobiography,
that Wilkie's Blind Fiddler, in the print of that name,
134 A LONDONER'S LONDON
is a portrait of an old man who played his fiddle for
coppers in Oxford Street, "at the wall beyond Lord
Harewood's house in Hanover Square." Wilkie
painted the " Fiddler " within a stone's-throw of
Warren Street in his second London dwelling,
No. 10 Sol's Row, a site now covered by a large
furniture establishment in the Hampstead Road.
These ploughmen of steel and copper were an
interesting race. Raimbach served his apprenticeship
to Hall, who had been a pupil of Ravenet and a chum
of William Wynne Ryland, whose perverted talent,
as we have seen, brought him to Tyburn. He
mentions that the great Woollet, when he had com-
pleted a plate, would assemble his family on the stair-
landing in his house at the corner of Charlotte and
North Streets and lead them in three cheers. On
special occasions he would also fire a cannon from
the roof.
The old rurality of north-west London and the
incursions of the London mob are seen in Hogarth's
masterly picture, '* The March to Finchley." It shows
us the march of the Guards towards Scotland in 1745
when they had passed the turnpike. We see the two
crowded and noisy inns on either side of the way.
Between them, in the distance, the long file of the
Guards is seen marching towards the Highgate slopes
across open country. The riotous scene in the fore-
ground is composed of laggards of the regiment, their
wives and sweethearts, and a mob of camp-followers
and town riff-raff. A signboard outside the Adam
and Eve Tavern in the picture bears the words,
"Tottenham Court Nursery," in allusion to George
Taylor's school of pugilists. Hogarth introduces a
prize-fight as a piece of by-play in the scene, and
there is perhaps no figure in all his works more
THE HOUSE-MOVING OF THE GODS 135
wonderfully seized than that of the potman who is
watching the fight with staring eyes, and with fists
clenched in sympathy with the combatants. Of all
such Tottenham Court revels only two relics linger,
the name of the tavern and the name Eden Street,
which was given to the street that displaced the ^^ Adam
and Eve " tea-gardens, once shaded by fruit-trees and
furnished with arbours. Gone is the King's Head
Tavern to give elbow-room to modern tram-cars.
Tolmer's Square, where this widening of the street
ends, occupies the site of a forgotten New River
reservoir, whose waters wrinkled over the site of the
small palace in which Edward IV, they say, fleeted
the time with Jane Shore.
Historically, the Tottenham Court Road is interest-
ing at its two extremities and in its middle. At all
three points there have been changes. Whitefield's
Tabernacle has been rebuilt, the north and south ends
of the street have been widened. One recalls the little
island of houses and shops that, at the foot of the
Tottenham Court Road, formed Bozier's Court. Here,
fifty years ago, and for long after, Mr. Westell had
a shop which is mentioned in Lord Lytton's " My
Novel." It is referred to in Book VII, Chapter IV.
^* One day three persons were standing before an old
bookstall in a small passage leading from Oxford Street
into Tottenham Court Road. . . . ' Look,' said one of
the gentlemen to the other, ^ I have discovered here
what I have searched for in vain the last ten years, the
Horace of 1580, the Horace of the Forty Commen-
tators.' The shopman lurking within his hole like
a spider for flies was now called out." Mr. Westell
once assured me that he was the spider, and that he
perfectly remembers the Lyttons, father and son,
walking into his shop that day — not, however, to
136 A LONDONER'S LONDON
buy a 1580 Horace, but to inquire the price of
three-volume novels 1 When Bozier's Court was
demolished there was an inquiry as to the origin
of its name, and from a musty rate-book was dug
the fact that early in the eighteenth century a con-
stable of the parish named William Boozsher owned
a plot of land at this corner. I am envious of these
little men who owned London and whose epitaphs are
in the map. A graceful essayist has exclaimed on the
honour of sharing one's name with a rose, but a nursery-
man's rose has now as short a time to stay as we or
anything, whereas a street or even a " stairs " may last
three centuries. If ever I reach the fields of asphodel
I mean to talk with these onlie begetters and wall
landlords of the ancient places. I shall seek out Mr.
Ball who, I hope, will describe his Pond, even if he
cannot justify it; and Farmer Goodman, whose opinion
on the present condition and upkeep of his Fields
should be interesting. Major Foubert must be full of
stories about his ** Place," Short will know what he
grew in his Gardens, and I fancy that Thavie and
Bartlett and little Took will be chatty.
If ^* Bozier's Court" is explained, Hanway Street is
misunderstood. It did not, as some feign, take its
name from Jonas Hanway, the first male Londoner to
carry an umbrella, for as an existing tablet shows it
dates back to 172 1, when Hanway was but nine years
old. The street seems to have been originally Hanover
Yard, from which came " Hanway Yard," and Han-
way Street. I have found the hybrid form, Han noway
Street, in a London manual published in 1755. The
street is named *' Handway " in a map of London
published ten years earlier than this, but the vagaries
of spelling in such cases are endless. Hanway Street
has nothing at all to do with umbrellas, but it has
THE HOUSE-MOVING OF THE GODS 137
some interest for lovers of the game of draughts.
The tavern at its junction with the Tottenham
Court Road bears the name of the " Blue Posts," and
this house (now rebuilt) was once kept by Joshua
Sturges, author of a well-known guide to the game of
draughts, published in 1800, and dedicated by per-
mission to the Prince of Wales. His epitaph in St.
Pancras Churchyard has long been obliterated, but it
bore glowing testimony to his skill as a draughts-
player and his quahties as a man.
Modern, blatant, and architecturally dull, this great
street-corner is one of the ganglions of London's
nervous system. It must have had this character
when George Borrow stood here on a summer's day
in 1824 to see a funeral go by. " Whose body is in
that hearse ? " he asked a little man of the shopkeeper
class. " The mortal relics of Lord Byron," was the
ceremonious answer. The funeral passed up the
Tottenham Court Road on its way to Newstead.
'^ Great poet, sir," said the little shopkeeper, '^ but
unhappy."
Not often since has the democratic mind been
turned to poetry on this spot. The evening omnibuses
are heavy with the cares of Camden Town, Kentish
Town, and Hollo way. Fatigued or pulsing, here is
the life of London in seething average. And one
remembers that when Borrow's dapper little shop-
keeper had commiserated Byron, he added, simply,
" I, too, am frequently unhappy."
CHAPTER VI
LANE AND LABYRINTH
St. Giles's Village— The Resurrection Gate— The Ballad Shop—
Soho— The Author of "Lacon"— The Clare Market Labyrinth— The
Great Storm—" Ypol "—A Sinister Archway— A Night of Terrors — A
Murder and its Literature— The Owl — In Search of a Mantelpiece —
A Dynasty of Door-knockers— Chancery Lane and Shakespeare—
Where Hazlitt talked— The Rolls Chapel— Ready to "Decompound
Evidence "—The Inertia of London— A Great Corner
OVER the way, set back in its own air, St. Giles's
Church talks to the sky of the little old parish
and the graves beneath. Let us walk into the
village by its High Street, down whose narrowness
the yellow bus used to rattle. The bleached tower
rises as in Hogarth's print of " Noon." In the church-
yard sleeps George Chapman, the translator of Homer,
and in the church, Andrew Marvell, the friend of
Milton. And here is the little-known Resurrection
Gate, of which we should know more if it were in
Bruges. Coaches would pull up before it if it were
near Hastings. Go up to it, and you are looking at a
relievo of the Resurrection, with saints and sinners
rising from their graves. Whole-hearted antiquaries
have declared it a copy from Michelangelo, but Mr.
Blotton (of Aldgate) would make it the creation of an
obscure ship-carver. And he is almost certainly
right.
138
LANE AND LABYRINTH 139
St. Giles's began as a Middlesex village, became an
Irish "rookery/' and is now a safe and ventilated
labyrinth through which you may wander to Charing
Cross or Covent Garden. In Broad Street, in a hazy
hour, you may still receive a strong impression of
village separateness and a mothering church. The
district has a certain self-containment, and the small
miscellaneous shop is frequent. One of these is
almost a village shop, in which eggs are peeping out
among newspapers. Groceries, toys, and Eccles cakes
mingle with penny fiction ; penny condiments dot the
shelves, tiny bottles of sauce (the glory of a single
dinner), and French capers, and pencils, and almanacs,
and sweets — not Cockney sweets, but pebbly lollipops
and aniseed bouncers. And ballads that exhale early
Victorian jest and the Cockney "z;."
The town movements of the last twenty-four years
have affected the whole inter-arterial region which
stretched without a break from Regent Street to
Lincoln's Inn. Of the three great districts so con-
tained, the great Clare Market region, which was
Cockney, has been spirited away. St. Giles's, which
was Irish, stands ventilated and rather empty. Soho,
which is foreign, after ceding its Alsace to the Charing
Cross Road, and its Lorraine to Shaftesbury Avenue,
preserves its compact labyrinths and cosmopolitan
charm. The man who is tired of London might
retreat to Soho very comfortably for the rest of his
life. Within its bounding arteries, Oxford Street,
Charing Cross Road, Shaftesbury Avenue, and Regent
Street, he can find all the conveniences and amenities
of life, and not a few of its modest luxuries. Soho can
offer him rooms in which only the muted roar of
London will reach his ear ; social restaurants in which
he can dine in several languages, theatres on its fringe
I40 A LONDONER'S LONDON
for his entertainment; and hospitals in its centre for
his healing. He will never want for books, or
pictures, or oysters. He will pass the cruet to ad-
vanced young men and women, to the writers who
talk of their "art," and to artists who paint their
mental condition. The charm of old streets and
illustrious names will be ever at his hand, and he may
even learn the way to Golden Square — that last secret
of London topography.
A man who did retire to Soho, from sheer unfitness
to live elsewhere, was Charles Caleb Colton, and he
quitted it only to die miserably. He had been Rector
of Tiverton and Vicar of Kew, but, as a sympathetic
friend remarked, he could live in Soho at a sixth of the
expense, " and he acted accordingly." It is unlikely
that either of his parishes missed its parson, unless it
found a more careless incumbent, which was scarcely
possible. It was at Tiverton that Colton rushed from
a death-bed to his church, and poured forth an
exhortation full of home thrusts and in favour of
strict morals, concluding : " You wonder to hear such
things from me 1 But if you had been where I was
just now, and heard and seen what I did, you would
have been convinced it is high time to reform our
courses — and I, for my part, am determined to begin."
But the parson was the first to lapse. Next Sunday he
gabbled through a fifteen minutes' sermon, and was
seen at the church-door putting his dogs and gun into
his gig for a sporting journey. At Kew, Colton kept
his cigars under the pulpit, where, he said, the
temperature was exactly right.
In Soho's warm precincts Colton, wisely resolving
to be as little like a vicar as possible, turned wine-
merchant. He had always a nice Soho taste in wine,
and in his Princes Street garret, overlooking the
A GLIMPSE OF SOHO (FOUBERTS' PLACE)
SOUO, AFTER CEDING ITS ALSACE TO THE CHARING CROSS ROAD AND ITS
LORRAINE TO SHAFTESBURY AVENUE, PRESERVES ITS COMPACT LABYRINTHS
LANE AND LABYRINTH T41
graves of St. Anne's Church, he would produce a
superb bottle of claret or port for a chance guest. His
wine-dealing was carried on in a cellar sardonically
chosen beneath a Methodist chapel in Dean Street.
There a friend found him among casks and sawdust.
"Come down, facilis descensus Averni!" was the
greeting he received. " You have Methodism over
your head, Colton ; I wonder your wine does not turn
sour, belonging as it does to a son of the Church."
But Colton pointed out that wine is reconciling and
that the doxies never conflict in a cellar.
Under Soho's *^ sorry spire " Colton wrote his
" Lacon," of which the first volume appeared in 1820.
It consists of short reflections and opinions on the
conduct of private and public life. He wrote it on
scraps of paper and blank sides of letters. His room
boasted no carpet ; a deal table, a few rickety chairs,
and a broken inkpot placed in a tea-saucer were its
furniture. Alaric Watts, who went there, says that it
was a Grub Street author's garret whose inmate, how-
ever, bore the stamp of a gentleman, and could
produce a bottle of wine whose perfume filled
the room.
Colton is said to have been too much indebted for
his Laconics to Bacon's " Essays " and William
Burdon's " Materials for Thinking," yet the book is
not ordinary. Many maxims in " Lacon " should
have been useful to their author, but his own bark was
ill-steered to the end. He had often associated with
Thurtell, the murderer of Weare, and when the Vicar
of Kew suddenly disappeared from Soho at the time
of the murder, it was feared that he had himself fallen
a victim to the gang. He had only gambled with
them, and was now in flight from his creditors. He
was next seen in Paris, unkempt and careworn. When
142 A LONDONER'S LONDON
his life could only be prolonged by a surgical operation
the philosopher of " Lacon " grimly decided to end it,
and he blew out his brains in the house of a friend at
Fontainebleau. He had been badly cast for a part in
the drama of life, but he knew good wine when he
tasted it, and good poetry when he read it. And he
was wise for others.
It has been given to the Londoner of to-day to
witness the greatest evisceration of the town that has
been known since the Fire of 1666. A little more
than a dozen years ago the Clare Market region was
a humming neighbourhood, full of race and tradition,
a secret labyrinth without omnibuses or newsboys.
All the traditions of piecemeal change, casualness, and
compromise which have made London picturesque
were flouted in the Kingsway and Aldwych scheme.
The surfaces of the new arteries are now the
palimpsest of a populous quarter, of which St. Mary's
and St. Clement's churches are the gracious relics.
The site of Booksellers' Row is defined by the churches,
but few Londoners could now locate the Strand
entries of Lower Drury Lane, Catherine Street, New-
castle Street, or trace the line of Wych Street, which
ten years ago might recall Theodore Hook's remark
that he never passed through it without being blocked
up by a hearse, a coal-wagon, a mud-cart, and the
Lord Mayor's carriage.
All through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
these streets, with Clare Market for their hub, seethed
with humble London life. The tall old houses, built
to last, had their picturesque moods. Especially in
a late autumn afternoon, when the setting sun flashed
on the higher windows, and brought out bits of red
brick and slopes of red tile, these doomed streets in
which generations of Londoners had been born seemed
LANE AND LABYRINTH 143
to plead for respite. Nowhere were you more in the
interior of London. In summer evenings on the
smooth asphalted roadways the girls danced round
barrel-organs, the boys rushed up and down on
roller-skates, and the mothers gossiped on the narrow
pavements. On a winter afternoon the funeral cortege
of a publican would block the street for hours,
developing pomp and public approval. And in all
this intricate daily pettiness you were conscious of
the centuries and the generations.
Clare Market had been an old family affair. Its
founder was John Holies, second Earl of Clare and
Baron of Haughton, who married Elizabeth, eldest
daughter of Lord Vere. Hence the names, Holies
Street, Clare Market, Haughton Street, and Vere
Street. Other family names and titles were trans-
ferred to Denzil, Stanhope, Sheffield, and Gilbert
Streets. In 1661 the earl obtained the grant of a
market, which long served an aristocratic neighbour-
hood in whose annals shine many names. The Earl
of Craven became its hero, the exiled Queen of
Bohemia its cynosure, Orator Henley its buffoon.
Hogarth came to be snug at the Shepherd and His
Flock Club, whose weekly gatherings of artists were
held at the Bull's Head Tavern. For this club he
engraved a^ilver tankard with a shepherd and his flock.
Some fifty years earlier Dr. Radcliffe took his
glass at the *^ Bull's Head," and, taking it, heard the
result of a shipping enterprise to the East Indies
into which he had been drawn by his friend Better-
ton, the tragedian, who name is now borne by a
street in the neighbourhood. The returning ship
was captured by the French within sight of England.
By this disaster Betterton lost his entire savings and
was ruined. But Radcliffe, on hearing of the new^s,
144 A LONDONER'S LONDON
filled up his glass and made a remark singularly like
that which is attributed to Scott at the time of the
Constable failure ; he said that his loss of six or
eight thousand pounds was not a great matter — " he
had no more to do but to go up so many pairs of
stairs to make himself whole again." He lived to
bequeath for the building of the Radcliffe Library,
that glory of Oxford, the sum of ;^4o,ooo.
There were many quiet, unexpected, precincts
around Clare Market. One was Craven Buildings,
whose row of quiet buff houses occupied precisely
the fork of Aldwych. Here at No. 17 had lived
Dr. Arne, who personally published his music to
Milton's "Comus" from this house, and here, I have
no doubt, he brooded over the singularly insulting
description of himself by Mortimer, the painter who
said that Arne's '^eyes looked like two oysters just
opened for sauce, put upon an oval side-dish of
beetroot." The scene-painter, Frank Hayman, also
lived here while he was engaged at Drury Lane
Theatre, and Mrs. Bracegirdle, who is buried in the
cloisters of Westminster Abbey, and Hannah Prit-
chard, who has a memorial in Poet's Corner. Still
later Madame Vestris was a tenant ; and Elliston, the
actor and manager. Lamb's "joyousest of once em-
bodied spirits," lived in this blind alley, which I often
entered for the pleasure of being turned back.
Qjie of the straightest and longest streets was
Stanhope Street It ran between and parallel to Vere
Street and Drury Lane. The new Kingsway has bi-
sected it, and the remainders on either side have been
demolished. It led towards Great and Little Wild
Streets, named after old Wild House, the home of a
duchess in Charles I's reign and of an ambassador in
the next. In 1903 the crowbars were at work on the
LANE AND LABYRINTH 145
old Baptist chapel ;in Little Wild Street, in which an
annual service of thanksgiving and of allusion to the
Great Storm of 1703 was kept up for two cen-
turies. This storm had spread death and destruction
through London. Two thousand stacks of chimneys
were blown down. The damage in the City alone
was computed at nearly two millions. Many people
believed that the war of the elements was accompanied
by an earthquake. In the Thames a number of ships
were driven down-stream, and over five hundred
wherries were lost. In the sermons preached at
Little Wild Street these happenings were recalled,
possibly with embellishments. Of "special pro-
vidences" there were hundreds. A house in the
Strand, containing fourteen persons, collapsed, and no
one was hurt. In Poultry two boys were lying in a
garret ; a huge stack of chimneys falling in crashed
their way through their floor and all the other floors
down to the cellar, followed by the bed with the boys
in it, who awoke in the nether regions merely won-
dering how they came there.
Here and there the Clare Market demolitions
exhaled a last fragrance. Amid dust and debris I
remember seeing this damaged inscription on a
stuccoed wall : YPOL. These letters were part of
the name. Maypole Alley. This little lane had led
down to the Maypole in the Strand.
What's not destroy'd by Time's devouring hand ?
Where's Troy, and where's the Maypole in the Strand ?
The improvements extended across Holborn to
Kingsgate Street. A fire brigade lamp-post stood at
the foot of the lane, oddly perpetuating the note
of urgency which belonged to the corner when
146 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Mrs. Gamp's clients ran up the street looking for
pebbles with which to assail her window.
One of the most interesting vestiges — not finally
destroyed until this year — was the old horseshoe
archway on the west side of Lincoln's Inn Fields lead-
ing into what was yesterday Sardinia Street. With it
disappeared the two fine old houses in Lincoln's Inn
Fields under which it has bent its sturdy back during
two centuries. Shakespeare never saw this arch, but
Bacon may have seen it planned. Only two years
after Shakespeare's death, when newly known as
Lord Verulam, he was concerned in that urbanization
of Lincoln's Inn Fields by Inigo Jones in which this
sinister little archway had its part. Twenty years
ago you passed through it from the desolate exclu-
siveness of Lincoln's Inn Fields (the garden was not
opened to the public till 1895), into the populous dirt
and colour of the whole Clare Market region ; either
way that squat and grudging archway led from one
London world to another.
And in its gloom lurked its own portentous
memories.
For the district was long a centre of Roman
Catholic life. It may have had this character as early
as 1603 when Guy Fawkes took a house " in the
fields beyond Clement's Inn." There the Gunpowder
Plotters met to take their preliminary oath of secrecy,
which they solemnly administered to each other,
"kneeling upon their knees, with their hands laid
upon a primer." Catesby then disclosed his plans, and
the party went upstairs, where, if one accept Winter's
story, they received the sacrament from Father
Garnett. If it be true that the house which witnessed
this dark pact was in Butcher Row, as one account
declares, it follows that the most desperate of crimes
ST. MARY-LE-STRAND CHURCH
THE PALIMPSEST OK A POPULOUS QUARTER OF WHICH ST. MARY'S AND
ST. CLKMENTS CHURCHES ARE THE GKACIOUS RELICS (p. I42)
LANE AND LABYRINTH 147
was planned and ^' consecrated " on the ground now
covered by the Law Courts — one of the many topo-
graphical coincidences in London's story.
While I write portions of the Sardinian chapel
and arch are mingling their dust in a final ruin. Nor is
it the first time that arch and chapel have suffered
together. A medallion in the British Museum pre-
serves the scene in Lincoln's Inn Fields on the night
of II December, 1688 — one of the most terrible ever
seen in London. On the nth King James had flung
the Great Seal into the river, and had fled his capital :
anarchy threatened, and every passion was loosed.
Macaulay has described the scenes of that night, when
this archway became a gully of human wrath, fear,
and fanaticism. In the medallion it is plainly to be
seen, though inaccurately drawn, with its two flanking
passages. Yet this outbreak did not hold so many
terrors as the years of slow persecution in which the
archway saw trembling priests and furtive spies creep
through its shadow.
In the Gordon Riots of 1780, the chapel of St.
Anselm and Cecilia fell a prey to the mob. Then
happier times dawned, and through this arch of
memories came Fanny Burney to her wedding.
Benjamin Franklin passed under it often when he
worked at Watts's printing-office in Wild Court. The
spot became a place of reconciliation when the Red
Mass came to be celebrated in the Sardinian chapel,
and was attended by Roman Catholic members of the
Bench and Bar on the opening of the Law Courts
after the Long Vacation.
Nearer to our day than these old unhappy far-off
conflicts is a drama of crime which has left its mark
on nineteenth-century literature. It was Theodore
Hook who wrote the oft-quoted lines (they were
mS a LONDONER'S LONDON
once quoted at a dinner-party by Browning, who was
extremely annoyed when another guest helped him
out) :—
His throat they cut from ear to ear,
His brains they battered in,
His name was Mr. William Weare,
He lived at Lyon's Inn.
Lyon's Inn stood between Wych Street and Holywell
Street, its last relic being (as I seem to remember) a
walled-up door in the latter street, adorned with two
lions' heads. The above lines, which have also been
attributed to John Wilson Croker, were part of a
mock Catnach ballad on the murder of Weare by his
friend John Thurtell in the autumn of 1823.
Thurtell, conceiving himself to have been over-
reached by Weare in gambling transactions, planned
to murder him, and to rob him of a considerable
" private bank " which he was known to carry in
the pocket of an under-waistcoat. He was callously
assisted by a Mr. Probert, a spirit-dealer, who had a
cottage in Gill's Hill Lane, near Elstree, in Hertford-
shire, off the St. Albans Road. Thurtell decided that
this neighbourhood should be the scene of his in-
tended attack on Weare. He had visited Probert
there many times, and knew the surrounding lanes
and fields intimately.
On the evening of 23 October, Thurtell and a man
named Hunt met Weare at Rexworthy's Billiard
Rooms, in Spring Gardens, and Thurtell asked him
if he would go down to Elstree for two or three
days' shooting. Weare accepted this invitation, and
on the following day, in his chambers at Lyon's Inn,
packed up some clothes in a green carpet-bag, together
with a backgammon-board, and equipped himself with
a double-barrelled gun. While he was thus engaged,
LANE AND LABYRINTH 149
Thurtell and Hunt were buying a pair of pocket-pistols
at a pawnbroker's in Marylebone. This done, they
went to the "Coach and Horses/' in Conduit Street,
where they met Probert. Thurtell arranged to drive
down to Elstree in a gig and to pick up Weare, by
appointment, at the end of Oxford Street. He wished
Hunt and Probert to drive down in another gig, and
if they passed him Hunt was to wait at a certain spot
not far from the lane leading to the cottage. The
circumstances of the drive into Hertfordshire can be
passed over, and it needs little imagination to picture
the horror of the dark Elstree lane, heavy with the
scent of autumn leaves, which flew from the feet of
pursuer and pursued, and the struggle in the dim
light thrown by the lamps of Thurtell's gig.
The clumsy tactics of the murderers proved their
undoing. Probert, Hunt, and Thurtell were arrested
as a precaution, and inquiry became hot. Hunt, in
his alarm, told the magistrates where the body would
be found, and Probert, who had never known Weare,
though he knew what his fate was to be, made a clean
breast of the facts. In the result he was called as the
principal witness against Thurtell and Hunt, who were
tried for the murder at Hertford Assizes. They were
found guilty, and both condemned to death.
The most famous literary relic of Thurtell's trial is
to be found in the writings of Thomas Carlyle. His
use of the word " gig " as a synonym of respectability
had its origin in the following dialogue between
counsel and a witness : *^ What sort of person was
Mr. Weare ? " *' He was always a respectable person."
'' What do you mean by respectable!? " " He kept a
gig." Carlyle's fierce humour seized on this, and
afterwards, when he was storming at respectabilities
and unrealities, gigs were not far from his mind. The
t5<5 A LONDONER'S LONDON
principal allusion is, I think, in his essay on Richter,
but "gigs" were henceforth among his literary pro-
perties, and he uses the word even in the grandiose
conclusion of his ''French Revolution."
Edward FitzGerald's disposition to see good in
Thurtell was perhaps shared by George Borrow, who
portrays him minutely in " Lavengro " and makes him
" King of the Flashmen " in " The Zincali."
Archbishop Whately did not disdain to discuss
Thurtell's character in one of his annotations to
Bacon, where he wrote : " When Thurtell, the mur-
derer, was executed there was a shout of derision
raised against the phrenologists for saying that his
organ of benevolence was large. But they replied
that there was also large destructiveness and i moral
deficiency which would account for a man goaded to
rage (by being cheated of almost all that he had had
by the man he killed) committing that act. It is a
remarkable confirmation of their view that a gentleman
who visited the prison where Thurtell was confined
(shortly after the execution) found the jailers, etc., full
of pity and affection for him. They said he was a
kind, good-hearted fellow, so obliging and friendly
that they never had a prisoner whom they so much
regretted. And such seems to have been his general
character, when not influenced at once by the desire
of revenge and of gain."
Nor was a poet wanting to invest the crime with
hues of night and horror. In lines not unworthy of
Poe, the Rev. John Mitford described it in the terms of
a weird owlishness : —
Owl, that lovest the midnight sky,
Where the casements blaze
With the faggot's rays,
Look, oh ! look ! What secst thou there ?
LANE AND LABYRINTH 151
Owl, what's this
That snort and hiss —
And why do thy feathers shiver and stare ?
'Tis he, 'tis he —
He sits 'mid the three,
And a breathless Woman is on the stair.
An interesting circumstance about these lines is that
they were the last which that strange being, Beau
Brummell, copied into his poetry album.
It is said that Thurtell's fate appealed so strongly to
his friends of the prize-ring that a serious plan was
laid to rescue him at the last moment, and that this
would in all probability have been carried out if the
sum of £soo necessary for the hire of men could have
been obtained from Thurtell's family. The pity lavished
on the condemned man was scornfully referred to by
Sir Walter Scott in his '* Journal." Yet Scott himself,
in 1828, took the trouble to visit Gill's Hill Lane and
to write his comments on the crime which had made
it infamous. In a madcap letter to Bernard Barton,
Charles Lamb exclaims apropos of nothing : " I can't
distinguish veal from mutton — nothing interests me —
'tis twelve o'clock, andThurtell is just now coming out
upon the New Drop."
In Lincoln's Inn Fields I once received a curious
impression of London's small concealed antiquities.
In his " Book for a Rainy Day " John Thomas Smith
talks of the old Willow Walk along the Thames at
Millbank. Here, he says, " on many a glowing even-
ing Gainsborough, accompanied by his friend Collins,
amused himself by sketching docks and nettles, which
afforded the Wynants and Cuyp-like effects to the
foregrounds of his rich and glowing landscapes."
This Collins, he goes on to say, was a modeller of
rustic subjects for tablets of chimney-pieces ^^ in vogue
l$9 A LONDONER'S LONDON
about seventy years back." Smith wrote in 1830, or
thereabouts. He adds that CoUins usually took his
subjects from "-^sop's Fables/' and that his work may
here and there be met with in old houses : *M recollect
one, that of the Bear and Beehives, in the back
drawing-room of the house formerly the mansion of
the Duke of Ancaster, on the western side of Lincoln's
Inn Fields."
It occurred to me that this mantelpiece might still
remain, and my whim was to find it. Lindsey
House is now divided into two houses, each occupied
by firms of solicitors. The Bear and the Beehive
mantelpiece might be in either No. 59 or No. 60. It
seemed a little stupid to interrupt, even for a moment,
the legal labours of Lincoln's Inn Fields. But I found
the mantelpiece, and I do not know who was the more
interested ; I to find it in a business office, or the
occupants of the room to find it in a book. But there
it was, fulfilling expectations — a mantelpiece in use.
There is a fascination in such time-defying trifles. 1
like to look up, in passing, at the old dated rain-pipes
in Chancery Lane, inscribed " I779-" In Bedford
Row there are water-pipes as old as the street, bearing
such dates as 1727, and in Staple Inn you may see a
cistern which was in use before the Restoration. The
eighteenth-century torch-extinguishers outside houses
in Berkeley Square and neighbouring streets, and in
Gower Street, are equally remindful of the fact that
man's smallest chattels survive man.
In the book I have quoted Smith has this curious
passage, which relates to the year 1787 : —
"It is rather extraordinary that mimicry with me
was not confined to the voice, for I could in many
instances throw my features into a resemblance of the
person whose voice 1 imitated. Indeed, so ridiculous
LANE AND LABYRINTH 153
were several of these gesticulations, that I remember
diverting one of my companions by endeavouring to
look like the various lion-headed knockers as we
passed through a long street. Skilful, however, as I
was declared to be in some of my attempts, I could
not in any way manage the dolphin knockers in Dean
Street, Fetter Lane. Their ancient and fish-like
appearance were certainly many fathoms beyond my
depth, and as much by reason of my being destitute of
gills, and the nose of that finny tribe extending nearly
in width to its tremendous mouth, I was obhged to
give up the attempt."
He adds that when he first knew Dean Street seven-
teen out of its twenty-four houses were adorned with
these brass dolphin knockers. Well, forty-two years
passed, and on 17 May, 1829, Smith, who had
become a staid official at the British Museum, had
the curiosity to visit Dean Street to see how his old
" brazen-faced acquaintances " were getting on, and to
his sorrow he found Dean Street was ^* nearly as
deficient of door-knockers as a churchyard is of its
earliest tombstones, for out of seventeen only three
remained."
Another forty years passed slowly over Dean Street,
when a correspondent of " Notes and Queries,"
interested in Smith's story, was moved to make a
journey of discovery. He found only one dolphin
knocker left, on the door of No. 6.
Thirty more years went by, and I in turn joined
the immemorial lunatic procession to Little Dean
Street to look for dolphin knockers. But the
Methuselah of 1869 was gone, and the houses themselves
had followed their ornaments. I gave up an hour to
knocker-hunting in the neighbourhood, but never a
dolphin appeared, though many were old and beautiful.
154 A LONDONER'S LONDON
There was a lion's head and ring knocker in Gunpowder
Alley, and others in Hind Court. No. 3 Red Lion
Court had a very good knocker, into the design of
which was introduced a bat with outstretched wings.
An old knocker of No. 9 Bell's Buildings, Salisbury
Square, was adorned with the figure of a naked boy
playing on a pipe.
In this part of London my affection is given to
Chancery Lane, and particularly to the spot at which
the " Academy " office faced the great gateway of
Lincoln's Inn during the years 1896-1903. Embodied
in that gateway, the Past looked us gravely in the face.
In a few strides we passed into the gloom of a portal
that was standing fifty years before Shakespeare was
born. On wet days a passing " Favourite " omnibus
splashed mud on the two buildings impartially. The
Chancery Lane mud is itself antique ; for in the reign
of Edward I the lane was a noted quagmire. When
it became impassable to knight, monk, and citizen,
John Breton, Custos of London, barred it up
altogether. Or it may be that the Bishop of Chichester
desired privacy. He lived where Chichester Rents
now offers a short cut into New Square, and it was he
who maintained the bar for ten years. When asked to
explain he threw the responsibility on the sheriff.
That gentleman found it expedient to remove the
obstruction, but he left the mud to be dealt with by
posterity. And we are still dealing with it.
The gateway was built by Sir Thomas Lovel in 1518.
Plain in its majesty, this is one of the treasures of
London. Even its oaken doors are centuries old, and
Americans sometimes offer five-pound notes for one of
its bolts or fittings. Pass by it at night, when high
and small the one gas-jet flickers over the great arch,
and the dark mass of the building rises through the
LANE AND LABYRINTH 155
unusual gloom, and you will gain a sense of London's
multi-peopled past.
Assuredly Shakespeare passed this way. His patron,
the Earl of Southampton, lived at the head of the lane.
The wall of Southampton House ran up the east side
to Holborn, and on it Gerard botanized for " Whit-
low grasse " or " the English Nailewoort," which, he
says, "groweth plentifully upon the backe wall in
Chancerie Lane belonging to the Earle of South-
ampton, in the suburbs of London."
Where Shakespeare walked, two of his finest com-
mentators pitched their tents afterwards. In 1809
Charles Lamb, after seeing his " Specimens of the
Dramatic Poets" published by Longmans, lived for
a few months at No. 34 Southampton Buildings,
Chancery Lane ; and William Hazlitt went thither to
prepare his Lectures on the Dramatic Literature of
the Age of Elizabeth. It was here that Lamb
addressed to Manning, then in China, the question :
" How do you like the Mandarinesses ? Are you on
some little footing with any of them ? " But the
ground is especially Hazlitt's. Here, lodging with
Mr. Walker, a tailor, he began his unhappy philander-
ings with Sarah Walker. He spent his evenings at the
Southampton Tavern, now rebuilt out of his know-
ledge, and sketched the company in his masterly essay,
^' On Coffee-house Politicians." He does not spare to
ridicule the ignorance and Philistinism of the fre-
quenters. ^^ What would a linen-draper from Holborn
think if I were to ask him after the clerk of St.
Andrew's, the immortal, the forgotten Webster ? "
The most romantic digression from common talk
and fruitless arguments that he enjoyed here was a
discussion on the comparative merits of Gray and
Byron as poets.
iS6 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Nothing in London — as I have known London — is
more lost and forgotten than the small, complete, and
beautiful precinct of the Rolls Chapel on the east side
of Chancery Lane. It disappeared in 1892. The eye
lingered, the heart knew itself again, at that open arch-
way giving into a cobbled courtyard and a chapel
quiet.
In Rolls Yard for many years a great Scotchman
dispensed English justice with purity and dignity that
have never been surpassed. The place was a little
legal kingdom by itself. It contained the Rolls Chapel,
the Rolls Court House, and the residence of the Master
of the Rolls. As a seat of justice it was never more
famous than under Sir William Grant, between 1801
and 1817. Sir William was descended from the Grants
of Baldarnie, and was a native of Elchies, in Moray.
He had begun his legal career in Canada, but returned
to England to become a great Parliamentarian, and
the trusted friend of Pitt. In Parliament he triumphed
in a very unusual manner — by severe and unassailable
logic. Lord Brougham said of Grant's oratory in the
House that it was " from the first to the last, through-
out, pure reason and the triumph of pure reason."
In Rolls Yard Grant worked, slept, and worshipped.
His was the strong simple mind that knows how to
isolate itself from the infinite solicitations of London,
and by many refusals to win public observation and an
acknowledged identity with the very order and topo-
graphy of the town. There, discarding every art of dis-
play, he listened in unbroken silence to the case before
him until all had been said in advocacy. Then
came a deeply expectant silence, for it was a certainty
that the judgment about to be pronounced would be a
marvel of clear thinking and apt expression. Charles
Butler's description of Grant's judicial eloquence is
CLARE MARKET
-L THROUGH THE i8tH AND igTH CENTURIES THESE STREETS, WITH CLARE
-MARKET FOR THEIR HUB, SEETHED WITH HU-MBI-E LONDON LIFE (v. 1 42)
LANE AND LABYRINTH 157
fine. " In hearing him it was impossible not to think
of the character given by Menelaus, by Homer, or
rather by Pope, * He spoke no more than just the
thing he ought.' But Sir William did much more ; in
decompounding and analysing an immense mass of
confused and contradictory matter and forming clear
and unquestionable results, the sight of his mind was
infinite. His exposition of Acts, and of the con-
sequences deducible from them, his discussion of
former decisions, and showing their legitimate weight
and authority, and their real bearings upon the point
in question, were above praise ; but the whole was
done with such admirable ease and simplicity, that
while real judges felt its supreme excellence, the
herd of hearers believed that they could have done
the same.
*^ Never was the merit of Dr. Johnson's definition of
a perfect style, ' proper words in proper places,' more
sensibly felt than it was by those who listened to Sir
William Grant. The charm of it was indescribable ;
its effect on the hearers was that which Milton
describes, when he paints Adam listening to the angel
after the angel has ceased to speak. Often and often
has the reminiscent beheld the Bar listening at the
close of a judgment given by Sir William with the
same feeling of admiration at what they had heard and
the same regret that it was heard no more."
These Rhadamanthine judgments were delivered
under conditions which would stagger the Law to-day.
Commonly, they were reserved till the evening, by
candle-light, in the stuffy little court. But first Grant
had dined. He no more scamped his dinner than his
cases. A bottle of Madeira would imperil the wits of
most Chancery judges to-day. Sir William drank his
bottle of Madeira at dinner, and after dinner he drank
158 A LONDONER'S LONDON
a bottle of port. Then he was ready to " decompound
evidence."
Chancery Lane remains legal from end to end.
Most Londoners enter it only at a crisis of their lives.
You see a little party in mourning, gathered like birds
on the pavement, and you guess their errand. It
touches the imagination to remember that in the
immensity of London every day brings anxiety and
crisis to a large number of Londoners. Of these
pangs nothing is seen in the town's visage, no ripple or
sharp interruption in its vast usualness. To ho>v many
sufferers has this thought been bitter 1 To how many
has it brought a secret joy 1 Shakespeare knew the
stupendous inertia of a great city in an hour of catas-
trophe. He makes the plotters of Caesar's death pause
in their debate to dispute the exact point of the horizon
at which the sun will presently rise on their bloody
work, and suddenly we are aware of the sleep and un-
consciousness of Rome's millions.
In all writings on London there must be the fallacy
of generalization, for we hear only the general heart-
beat. And nowhere do we hear it plainer than at this
populous corner, where Temple Bar once seemed to
divide the affairs of the east and west, but where now
they appear to be fanned into coalescence by a mon-
ster's wings. Here, in the golden haze of an autumn
afternoon, how big, how beautiful, is London ! What
piling up of roofs and towers, windows agleam in the
level sunlight, summits tipped with fire I
*Tis Eldorado — Eldorado plain.
The Golden City I
CHAPTER VII
THE STREET OF THE SAGGING PURPOSE
The Mid-London Crowd — ** Where's the Maypole ? " — The Man in
the Street — "Swimming the Hellespont" — Street Portraiture — The
Shops that Were — Doyley's — The Polite Grocers and Mad Hatters —
A Phrenologist — "The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire" —
Sotheby's — Homeric Book Sales — "Milk-white Gosset" — The Vellum
Cure — Roger Payne — A Falstaffian Memorandum — Art among
the Ruins — Dr. Monroe's Guests — Turner's Farewell — Rowlandson
and his Cronies — C.K. — Norfolk Street— Dr. Brocklesby— Garrick's
Monument — Dan Leno
LET US stroll to the Strand. Tortured in body,
the street keeps its ancient character. It is neither
of the east nor of the west. It is a link that has
become an interregnum. Its shops are for the passer-
by, its hotels for the pilgrims, its taverns and theatres
for leisure. A certain sagging of purpose and uplifting
of curiosity may be observed in its unsorted mid-
London crowd. More than any other street it is the
epitome of London, however weak in an impossible role.
The mind, indeed, selects the Strand as that bank
and shoal of time on which the Londoner is seen, and
seen no more. Tennyson no more ; he loved the
Strand ; Sir Henry Hawkins no more, looking into
shop-windows; Irving no more, playing Lear to himself
in his hansom-cab. But, indeed, half the Strand has
attended its people to the tomb. In our own time the
contours and skylines have changed, tributary streets
159
i6o A LONDONER'S LONDON
have been shorn away, old buildings that were
household words have disappeared. Exeter Hall is
now a memory, Coutts's Bank has crossed the street,
the Strand Theatre is no more, and the Tivoli Music-
hall has appeared. The pageant of the Lowther Arcade
has left not a wrack behind, the '^ Gaiety " is not the
old " Gaiety," and '' Short's " is not the old '' Short's."
Two great hotels have obliterated Cecil Street and
Beaufort Buildings, those comfortable purlieus. The
Kingsway improvement has displaced a series of lanes
and courts on the north side of the street ; but on the
south side some quaint inlets survive. Across Strand
Lane the clothes line is stretched ; the Adelphi Arches
are still in seeming the habitation of dragons ; George
Yard, giving access to the Adelphi, still pleases the
artist. But gone is Thanet Place, that little oblong
Sabbath of the east Strand, where but yesterday the
milk gathered cream at the lodging-house door.
How many men of the books have been figures in
the Strand 1 Byron came to see the hippopotamus
that looked like Lord Liverpool and the "Ursine
Sloth " that had the voice and manner of his
valet. Dickens knew the Strand like one of his own
books ; the *' Pickwick Papers " were issued close to
Norfolk Street. Hard by was the Crown and Anchor
Tavern where Bobus Smith and " Conversation " Sharp
and Erskine and Curran talked, and where Herbert
Spencer came to eat his chop when he was helping to
edit the '* Economist" at No. 340. Mary Ann Evans
was then working on the ** Westminster Review " at
No. 142, and the pair must have been seen often on
the pavement, though not for long, for their favourite
promenade was the river terrace of Somerset House.
Haydon, the painter, began his long ** agony of self-
assertion " in the Strand, at the foot of Catherine
THE STREET OF THE SAGGING PURPOSE i6i
Street, and on his first Sunday morning in London he
put up a fervent prayer for protection and success in
St. Mary's Church, rising from his knees, " calm, cool,
illuminated, as if crystal circulated through my veins."
Alas!
We have a curious glimpse of Coleridge in the
Strand, where De Quincey found him in the ''corner"
office at No. 348 Strand, a little east of Exeter
'Change. One day he was walking there lost in
day-dreams, when he began to wave his arms about
him in sortie mysterious correspondence with his
thoughts. In the course of these gyrations he was
so unfortunate as to find his hand in a stranger's
pocket. This astonished person at once charged him
with a felonious intention, whereupon the poor youth
sobbed out his innocence, and added the perfectly
true explanation, " I thought, sir — I thought I was
swimming the Hellespont." Few things give one a
more intimate sense of the old streets of London
than a well-etched portrait of the man in the street,
in which the light of common day suddenly prevails
over the trimmed lamp of biography. Charles Lamb,
who could not squeeze out a tear for Byron, and who
mourned strictly as he felt, would, it appears, have
been less affected by the death of Nelson if he had not
met him in a London street a few weeks before
Trafalgar. To Hazlitt he wrote, on 10 November,
1805 : "Wasn't you sorry for Lord Nelson ? I have
followed him in fancy ever since I saw him walking
in Pall Mall (I was prejudiced against him before),
looking just as a Hero should look ; and I have been
very much cut about it indeed."
The peculiar appeal of an encounter in the street,
when personality or circumstance has in some way
rendered it significant, was understood by John Bright,
i62 A LONDONER'S LONDON
who in the greatest of his speeches, perhaps the
greatest to which the House of Commons has ever
Hstened, made use of such an incident. Reminding
the House of the gaps which war had made on its own
benches, Bright referred to the death in the Crimea of
Colonel Boyle, the member for Frome, and said,
" I met him a short time before he went out, near
Hyde Park Corner. I asked him whether he was
going out. He answered he was afraid he was ; not
afraid in the sense of personal fear — he knew not that ;
but he said with a look and a tone I shall never forget,
' It's no light matter for a man who has a wife and
five little children.' The stormy Euxine is now in his
grave ; his wife is a widow, his children orphans."
These sentences were not the least contributory to the
effect of a speech which pierced and paralysed the
House. Simple as they were, their particularization
of Hyde Park Corner, as the scene of farewell, was
true art.
Nowhere do we see old Hogarth so clearly as in
a story of Barry the painter. Asked whether he
had ever seen Hogarth, he replied, ^^ Yes, once. I was
walking with Joe NoUekens through Cranbourne Alley,
when he exclaimed, 'There, there's Hogarth I' 'What!'
I exclaimed, ' that little man in the sky-blue coat f ' Off
I ran, and though I lost sight of him for only a
moment or two, when I turned the corner into Castle
Street he was patting one of two quarrelling boys on the
back, and looking steadfastly at the expression in the
coward's face, cried, * D n him 1 if I would take
it from him 1 At him again.'" The delineator of
London cinematographed I
Near the Strand is the spot where Sydney Smith,
Tom Moore, and Luttrell fell into such convulsions of
laughter over one of Smith's sallies that they were
THE STREET OF THE SAGGING PURPOSE 163
obliged to reel each his own way home without
further speech.
In the Strand's new buildings of the mammoth
order we are apt to forget the numberless small shops
and upstair businesses which these have displaced.
There must be old Londoners who remember the
dozen shops that stood where now the railings of the
Charing Cross Station courtyard stretch along the street.
One of these was Yeate's famous ham-and-tongue shop.
Another was Warren's blacking warehouse. This
was a good old-fashioned shop, with double bow-
windows, and its number, 30, was conspicuous in the
firm's advertisements : —
Hasten to Warren's, at 30, the Strand,
To purchase your Blacking, the best in the land 1
And for polish and surface, and brightness of hue,
No mirror shall then be compared to your shoe.
Warren was a pioneer of poetical advertising, but the
story that Lord Byron wrote rhymes for him at half a
crown a piece is sufficiently dealt with by the author
of " Real Life in London." As for Dickens's youthful
connexion with the Warrens, it is vaguely perpetuated
by the red-coated Charing Cross Station shoeblacks
who now polish the boots of Londoners near the site
of his sorrows at Hungerford Stairs.
Next to Warren's, at the west corner of Villiers
Street, was Roakes and Varty's book-shop. A little
further east Bewlay's tobacco-shop stood as it does to-
day. At No. 53, now dedicated to the " Living Pictures,"
a Mr. Solomon sat at the receipt of custom, and adver-
tised on the front of the building his willingness to
cash " Irish and Scotch notes."
Shops of a type which are noticeably scarce to-day
in the Strand were those of Minier, Adams & Nash,
i64 A LONDONER'S LONDON
seedsmen, next to Coutts's old bank, and Daft & Son,
at No. 69, hot-house builders. Good old shops were
Leigh's map-shop, one door east of Bedford Street,
and Caldwell's biscuit warehouse four doors west of
it. This building is now the Windsor Tavern.
Exeter Hall, sixty years ago, was flanked by Hunt,
the billiard-table-maker, and then came two medical
establishments — Scott's Medical Repository (now
a caf6) and the Medical Dissenter Office, now a
sweet-shop. These buildings are unaltered. The latter
was the Strand depot for the sale of Morrison's pills.
" Knight's Shell Fish Warehouse " stood where Gow's
now invites to oysters. At the foot of Catherine Street
was the " Court Gazette " office.
A quaint shop on the south side of the Strand,
No. 106, immediately opposite the aforesaid pill ware-
house, was Dyte's, *' Quill Merchants and Pen Manu-
facturers to Her Majesty." Burgess's antique and
sternutative fish-sauce shop, close by, vanished only
a few years ago. Messrs. Maggs, the library book-
sellers, now occupy a building that was held by Mr.
Miers, who there flourished as a miniature-frame-
maker in days when the art of miniature was yet
unthreatened by photography ; and what forbids us to
suppose that he framed the identical picture of "a
lady reading a manuscript in an unfathomable forest,"
for Miss La Creevy, whose studio was "about half-
way down " the Strand ?
A great Strand shop in its day was Doyley's, whence
the " doyley " of the dinner-table came. His premises
were at No. 346, east of Exeter 'Change, and were said
to have been built by Inigo Jones. The business itself
was old enough to have been mentioned by Addison
and Congreve. The Doyley of the Johnson period
cut a pleasant social figure in the Strand, and the steps
^&i^.
A VANISHED ARCHWAY (LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS)
SHAKESPEARE NEVER SAW THIS ARCH, BUT BACON MAY HAVE SEEN IT PLANNED (P, 147)
THE STREET OF THE SAGGING PURPOSE 165
of his shop, with an awning over them, were used for
lounging and meeting. Another shopkeeper of social
habits was William Clarke, the proprietor of Exeter
'Change, who was both learned and honest in all that
concerned canes and walking-sticks.
Thomson, the music-seller, was another Exeter
'Change shopman of whom accounts have survived.
His shop was crowded with musical amateurs and not
a few composers of note. His shelves were full of old
plays and pamphlets, and his talk of stories concerning
Purcell and Croft and Boyce ; he helped Sir John
Hawkins greatly with his History of Music, and
Richard Wilson, the painter, who was a critic of men,
was his crony.
There were also the Polite Grocers and the Mad
Hatters. On his way to Exeter 'Change Byron must
have passed the shop of the famous Polite Grocers,
the brothers Aaron and John Trim. " Brother John
and I," as they were called, weighed out their hyson
and bohea for many years at 449 Strand. Every one
knew the " Polite Grocers." The brothers were
singular persons to look at, and they managed their
whole business themselves. On every general subject
they talked with the utmost affability, but on their own
concerns they maintained a close reserve. They were
never seen but in their shop and in their pew at St.
Martin's Church.
At No. 71 the Strand flourished Lloyd the hatter,
the historian and laureate of hats. He sold forty shapes,
and knew how to glorify each. He assisted the public
to remember his address by publishing these lines : —
Lloyd, the great Hatter, renowned far and near,
(Fame trumpets his name through the land)
Crowns with rich Castors, Prince, Peasant, and Peer,
At SEVENTY-ONE in the Strand.
i66 A LONDONER'S LONDON
With short naps and long naps, for heads large and small,
In thousands of shapes he can cater,
At his Depot of Taste, Fashion, Fancy, and all,
Just facing th' Adelphi Theatre.
Time has given to Mr. Lloyd's poetic advertisements
a certain interest. From them we learn that the
popular hat of th-e eighteen-thirties was the " Tilbury/*
though Lloyd considered it had too much character to
suit many wearers. Here spake the artist, but the
hatter made haste to add, " the shape of the face is
immaterial, provided the complexion is not too dingy."
He adds that, " neither overgrown nor little fat gentle-
men " should wear this shape, whose virtues are
compressed into these lines: —
For ease, form, and set,
The like never yet
Was seen — at least, so run opinions ;
Then ye Bloods and ye Whips,
In your " Tilbury " trips.
Look well to your upper dominions.
The " Tilbury " shape narrowed as it ascended, its brim
curled rapidly at the sides, but was well splayed in
front. Lloyd directed his customers to wear it rather
forward, and a little to one side. Captain Gronow,
duellist and diarist, wore the '' Tilbury."
A more accommodating hat was the " Anglesea," with
its perfectly straight chimney-pot and delicate brim.
To every head, to every face,
To every form and feature,
This Hat adds lustre, ease and grace —
Thus art combines with nature.
The " Anglesea " must have been a good hat for a states-
man, and if I read certain portraits rightly it was worn
THE STREET OF THE SAGGING PURPOSE 167
by the Duke of Wellington after he had assumed that
character. But the ^'Wellington/' named after him,
was a more formidable headpiece, and dated no doubt
from his military days : —
Bold, martial, in style — 'twas designed for the face
Of England's great Captain and Statesman, his Grace,
Of whose talents and virtues, 'tis a type emblematic,
Which in war is decision, in council emphatic.
From a rather small, well-curled brim, in which there
is little benevolence, this hat widened upwards. It
overhung the face like a cliff that recedes from the
top, and suggested a crushing progress against obstacles.
The '' Bon-Ton "hat was like the "Anglesea," buthad
more devil in its brim. The ''Bit of Blood" was like a
Wellington — built on a low elevation. It was all angle
and curl, and squat at that. It was " admirably calcu-
lated for those who are about to ask favours, such
being more readily granted when they seem less
wanted, and no one could suppose that the saucy
animation, which would be so strongly visible under
this hat, could make the application from necessity."
Lloyd further recommended the '' Bit of Blood " to
elderly gentlemen about to marry young widows, who
" nine times in ten decide on the choice of a man from
the cock of his hat."
Mr. Lloyd's talents seem to have made his rivals
rather sore. Not much love was lost between him and
Mr. Perring of No. 58 Strand. Mr. Perring claimed
to have "invented" beaver hats, and particularly to
have been the first person to introduce the light beaver
hat weighing four ounces. He advertised bitterly that
since that great day his *' copyists " had " sprung up
like mushrooms." Nay, these "unprincipled pre-
tenders " had even copied his doorway.
i68 A LONDONER'S LONDON
At No. 355 Strand, next to the Lyceum Theatre,
that interesting person Deville the phrenologist
examined the heads of his generation. Among his
satisfied cHents was Tom Moore, who paid him a visit
on II May, 1826, taking with him Sir Francis Burdett. "
He found no poetry in Moore's head, but a great love
of facts and clearness of argument. Moore was not
displeased ; no one ever is displeased with a phrenolo-
gist, who when he does not confirm self-love usually
extends its scope. Professor Fowler once told me
that I possess great organizing ability, and would be
able to control a vast railway system. I have not yet
been able to tidy my desk, but I always think kindly
of Professor Fowler.
Moore took other of his friends to Deville, and
one party consisted of Lords Lansdowne and Cawdor,
and Sydney Smith. On this occasion the phrenologist
did not shine ; he told Lord Lansdowne, whom he did
not know, that he gave his opinion without deliber-
ation, and Sydney Smith that he was fond of making
natural history collections. Smith carried off the
affair with "inextinguishable and contagious laughter,"
in which Moore joined, even to tears.
It should be piously remembered that '*Tom Jones,**
and the ** Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire,"
and the " Pickwick Papers " were all first published
in the Strand. Fielding's publisher, Andrew Millar,
had succeeded to the premises of Jacob Tonson at
No. 141, a house now obliterated by Somerset House.
This shop was a hub of literature during several genera-
tions, and its door was entered by Swift, Pope,
Johnson and Hume, and Thomson. Cadell's partner,
Strahan, saw the possibilities of the " Decline and
Fall." Gibbon himself relates : *' I agreed upon easy
terms with Mr. Thomas Cadell, a respectable book-
THE STREET OF THE SAGGING PURPOSE 169
seller, and Mr. William Strahan, an eminent printer,
and they undertook the care and risk of the publi-
cation which derived more credit from the name of
the shop than from that of the author. So moderate
were our hopes that the original impression had been
stinted to five hundred, till the number was doubled
by the prophetic taste of Mr. Strahan." The first
volume was published on 30 April, 1777, and the first
edition of a thousand copies had to be immediately
supplemented by second and third editions, making
3500 copies in all. The remaining three volumes
appeared at intervals ; the fourth not till 1788, when
its publication was arranged to coincide with Gibbon's
fifty-first birthday and a ^' cheerful literary dinner at
Mr. Cadell's house."
The Strand has seen not only the publication of
books which the world will not willingly let die, but
also the dispersal of the collections of generations of
book-lovers. The auction -rooms that are now always
spoken of as ^'Sotheby's," and are in Wellington
Street, were once in the Strand itself, at No. 145.
The business originated in the middle of the
eighteenth century with Samuel Baker, of York
Street, Covent Garden, and was soon being carried
on under the style of Baker, Leigh & Sotheby.
Mr. Baker was called, by courtesy, the father of his
tribe, and Dibdin records that at sixty years of age
he had every tooth in his head as sound as a roach.
He and his partners and successors, George Leigh
and Samuel Sotheby, wielded the hammer in the
great days of bibliomania, when collectors and con-
noisseurs, some titled, all wealthy, stood in person
round the candle-lit rostrum with snuff-boxes and
catalogues.
To savour all that bibliognostic, bibliomaniac, biblio-
170 A LONDONER'S LONDON
polical, and bibliopegistic world you must turn to the
pages of Dibdin, where these old gentlemen in beaver
hats and spectacles become ^* book knights" or "book
gladiators" in a Homeric struggle for the possession
of Caxtons and De Wordes, vellums and variorums,
missals and black-letter rarities, and the tooled master-
pieces of Lewis and Roger Payne. When Atticus
"drops his lance and retires stunned at the repeated
blows inflicted on his helmet," we understand that
Richard Heber has been outbidden. But again
trumpets sound, falchions glitter, and Atticus secures
Lot 3228 after "enpurpling the plain with his blood."
The battle rages at last by candle-light. "O day of
unexampled courage, slaughter, devastation, and
phrensy ! " Even when the combatants retire it is
only to wait the dawn and close rivets up for the
ensanguined hour in which the Valdarfer Boccaccio
of 147 1, the most coveted volume in existence, will
change hands. When at last Mr. Evans's hammer
falls at ;£226o, its tap is heard in the libraries of
Rome and Venice, and Boccaccio starts from his
slumber of five hundred years I
On the whole one likes Dibdin best in his moments
of exhaustion, when he is content, for example, to
sketch the portrait of " Milk-white Gosset," so named
from his passion for vellum. The Reverend Isaac
Gosset is said to have been cured of an illness by
the mere sight of a vellum Polyglot Bible which was
brought to his bedside. He is called by Dibdin the
Nestor of the book-auctions, and the Homeric counter-
part was aptly chosen for the little hunchbacked
scholar who, when he preached at Conduit Street
Chapel, was obliged to make himself visible in the
pulpit by standing on two hassocks. He abounded
in literary information and humour. He died
THE STREET OF THE SAGGING PURPOSE 171
suddenly in his house in Newman Street, and was
mourned by Stephen Weston in Hnes which adum-
brate the bibhomaniacal tumult in which he lived
and moved.
When Gosset fell,
Leigh rang his knell,
And Sotheby 'gan to vapour ;
For I've been told,
That Folios sold,
Indignant for waste-paper.
Dibdin tells, too, how the spoils of battle were
carried in many cases to Roger Payne's workshop
in St. Martin's Lane, where they entered an atmo-
sphere of squalor and strong ale to emerge in apparel
of exquisite design and fragrance. Roger Payne and
his brother Thomas drank and quarrelled among
the treasures of literature. Thomas did the *^ forward-
ing," and Roger wrought on the leather. They used
the finest materials with the finest art, and were never
the richer. Roger was once convicted of the Fal-
staffian memorandum, '^ For Bacon, one halfpenny,
for Liquor, one shilling." He went in tatters, and
his appearance, says Dibdin, ^^ bespoke either squalid
wretchedness or a foolish and fierce indifference to the
received opinions of mankind. His hair was unkempt,
his visage elongated, his attire wretched, and the
interior of his workshop — where, like the Turk, he
would 'bear no brother near his throne' — harmonized."
At the age of fifty-eight Roger Payne died in Duke's
Court, St. Martin's Lane, and was buried in the
churchyard of St. Martin's-in-the-Fields. Alcohol
had vanquished art, but not until '' Bound by Roger
Payne" had become a sumptuous whisper in every
library and auction-room.
One may easily forget that during seventy years
172 A LONDONER'S LONDON
the Royal Academy brought great painters and art-
lovers into the Strand. Its first official quarters
were in old Somerset House, and in 1780 new
Somerset House became the scene of its exhibitions.
Thither came Reynolds, Gainsborough, Turner, and
Constable.
In Pyne's "Wine and Walnuts" it is told that
Reynolds used to speak of the fine morning effect
of the Strand as it burst upon him when he came
through Exeter 'Change gate, on his way to the
Royal Academy. "The sun, then due east, held the
new church ^ in a mass of rich grey, and the morning
beam shed its rays with Rubens-like splendour on
each side, glancing obliquely on the projections of
old Somerset House, and upon the plastered gables
of the old-fashioned houses that stood out of the
parallel of the street." These gables have long ceased
to take the sunrise, but on each side of Somerset
House stand six houses which Reynolds must have
seen, and whose tiled roofs must have had their part
in that morning symphony.
Within the old palace Reynolds's eye met another
feast of colour, albeit broken and faded — a vast
disarray of pomp in the midst of which Art was
lifting her eyes in new ways of worship. The story
of the palace is in many books. Built by the Pro-
tector Somerset, it had been visited by Elizabeth.
It was given by James I to Anne of Denmark, and
by Charles II to Queen Catherine. In one of its
chambers Inigo Jones had died, in another Crom-
well's body had lain in state. The early Quakers
would have banished its idols and fripperies and sat
silent in its halls, but Fox checked these "forward
spirits" because he foresaw "the King's coming in
« St. Mary-le-Strand.
GEORGE YARD, STRAND
GEOKGE YARD, GIVING ACCESS TO THE ADELl'HI, STILL PLEASES THE ARTIST (p. l6o)
THE STREET OF THE SAGGING PURPOSE 173
again." The palace became a nesting-place of Court
favourites, and then a barrack.
Dapper artists and critics must have curiously
surveyed the ruins about them. Neglected gardens,
mutilated statues, and fountains long dried up met
the eye. Within the stately old rooms a hundred
relics of royalty and grandeur were seen. " In one
part," says a writer of the period, '*were the vestiges
of a throne and canopy of State ; in another curtains
for the audience-chamber, which had once been
crimson velvet, fringed with gold. What remained
of the fabric had, except in the deepest folds, faded
to olive colour ; all the fringe and lace but a few
threads and spangles off; the ornaments of the chairs
of State demolished ; the stools, couches, screens, and
fire-dogs broken and scattered about.
*' The audience-chamber had been hung in silk,
which was in tatters, as were the curtains, gilt leather
covers, and painted screens. Some of the sconces,
though reversed, were still against the hangings ; and
one of the brass-gilt chandeliers still depended from
the ceiling. . . . The general state of this building —
its mouldering walls and decaying furniture, broken
casements, falling roof, and the long range of its
unhabited and unhabitable apartments — presented to
the mind in strong, though gloomy, colours a correct
picture of those dilapidated castles, the haunts of
spectres and residence of magicians and murderers,
which have since the period to which I allude made
such a figure in romance."
In such surroundings did the eighteenth-century
masters — Classicists and Futurists — organize their
work. But the palace soon dissolved, and it was in
the Somerset House of to-day that the first and
greatest of them bade farewell to Hfe and art. The
174 A LONDONER'S LONDON
scene and circumstances of Reynolds's last discourse
are familiar, but good to recall. He said, ^' My age
and my infirmities make it probable that this will be
the last time I shall have the honour of addressing you
from this place. ... I reflect, not without vanity, that
these discourses bear testimony of my admiration of
that truly divine man ; and I should desire that the
last words which I should pronounce in this Academy
and in this place should be the name of Michel-
angelo." There was a pause, and then Burke, grasping
the President's hand, repeated Milton's lines : —
The Angel ended ; and in Adam's ear
So charming left his voice, that he awhile
Thought him still speaking, still stood fixed to hear.
It is not surprising that a street that has always linked
the London of work to the London of play should
have become deeply concerned with art and literature.
The nursery of old English water-colour painting was
Dr. Monro's house at No. 8 Adelphi Terrace, whither
Turner came (crossing the Strand from Maiden
Lane) to sketch with Girtin for half a crown and
his supper. Enough honour has not been paid to
Monro. He tended sick minds in Bedlam, and in
his leisure encouraged the sweet sanities of landscape
art in the Adelphi. He was not a mere patron of
artists, he was their friend and good Samaritan. He
tended John Cozens in his last darkened years ; he
helped De Wint, Varley, and Cristall in various crises ;
and he buried Hearne and Edridge in Bushey church-
yard, where he lies beside them. He was himself an
amateur artist, with a passion for sketching in Gains-
borough's broad style, and he was so in love with his
collected drawings and prints that he had a netting
placed in the roof of his carriage to hold a portfolio.
THE STREET OF THE SAGGING PURPOSE 175
The sketching-room in Adelphi Terrace was provided
with desks and candles, and in it a dozen young
painters practised in the winter evenings, Monro
undertaking to buy their drawings for half a crown
apiece and to add an oyster supper.
We think of London as the emporium of Art,
forgetting that her streets and suburbs have been its
nursery. Girtin dated much of his accomplishment
from a study he made of the steps of the old Savoy
Palace. The river and Clapham Common gave Turner
some of his earliest subjects. Gainsborough and his
friend Collins made studies of the docks and nettles
along the river at Millbank. Varley and Neale would
spend a whole Sunday in the fields about Hoxton and
Tottenham. William Hunt and John Linnell resorted
to the Kensington Gravel-pits, then open country, and
sat down to sketch any mossy walk or cottage and
paling that offered them practice. George Barrett
advised students to watch the sunsets over Paddington
Canal from the bridge at Maida Hill. Paul Sandby,
in his eightieth year, might be seen seated at his
window in the Uxbridge Road sketching some effect
of light and shadow in Hyde Park. Lovely and
pleasant in their lives, in death these men are not
divided, for one seldom thinks of them singly, and year
after year, when the March sun invests the church of
St. Mary-le-Strand with a flower-like whiteness, and
the crocuses illumine the soil of Lincoln's Inn, we are
summoned to an ingathering of that exquisite and
unassailable art which so largely began and ended
along the Thames shore.
You may still see the Chelsea window to which
Turner's chair was drawn in his hour of valediction.
The light of the short day was dying along the river of
his youth. There Girtin, of whom he always spoke as
176 A LONDONER'S LONDON
''Poor Tom," had painted his "White House."
There, or near this spot, he had himself painted his
first exhibited picture, the '' Moonlight at Millbank."
As a man he had lived too long, and as a painter he
had long survived the Adelphi brotherhood. He had
lived to send his pictures to the Great Exhibition,
whose pavilions heliographed to the world the coming
of a new age, our own. Who can doubt that he saw
its vapour in the river dusk, and caught the murmur
of our multitudinous ado 1 For our England is not
Turner's ; she stands to be new or to be lost ; and
Old England — the feudal garden of our fathers, and
the unscrambled honeycomb of poet and painter —
passed in that December evening, on that Chelsea
beach, when the sunset drew the night over the
waters, and eternal night over the soul of Turner. It
was fitting that he, the greatest, should watch the
fading day, his the hand to fire the evening gun.
Not quite of these was Thomas Rowlandson, who
was to be seen walking any day between Adam Street
and Rudolf Ackermann's print-shop at No. 96 Strand,
later at No. loi. Here, close to the Beaufort Buildings
where Charles Lillie had sold his "true perfumed
lightning," and his rejected letters to the " Tatler,"
Ackermann published " Dr. Syntax," and Rowlandson
found a market for his boisterous caricatures. To
Beaufort Buildings — now handsomely sepulchred by
the Savoy Hotel — came artists, authors, and connois-
seurs at the bidding of the clever, burly, upright,
broken - English - speaking German. Mr. Mitchell,
the banker, lived in the same buildings, and helped to
give the place a festive character. Rowlandson was
constantly at his table when he was not travelling
Europe to make sketches on commission for the
banker's portfolios. **A most facetious, fat gentle-
THE STREET OF THE SAGGING PURPOSE 177
man," is Henry Angelo's description of Mitchell.
** In him centred, or rather round him the Fates piled
up, the wealth of a whole family. He was ever the
great gathering nucleus to a large fortune. He was
good-humoured, and enjoyed life. Many a cheerful
day have I, in company with Bannister and Rowland-
son, passed at Master Mitchell's . . . listening to the
stories of my old friend Peter Pindar, whose wit
seemed not to kindle until after midnight, at the period
of about his fifth or sixth glass of brandy and water.
Rowlandson too, having nearly finished his twelfth
glass of punch, and replenished his pipe with choice
Oronooko, would chime in." Pyne, to quote him
again, introduces Caleb Whitefoord, the witty wine
merchant, whose " Cross Readings " so easily amused
Dr. Johnson and his friends. Caleb meets Mitchell
near the Adelphi and exclaims, " Well, worthy Sir, what
more choice bits — more graphic whimsies, to add to
the collection at Enfield, hey ? Well, how fares it
with our friend Roily ? " " Why yes. Mister Caleb
Whitefoord, I go collecting on, though I began to think
I have enough already, for I have some hundreds of
his spirited works ; but somehow there is a sort of
fascination in these matters, and — heigh — ha — ho —
hoo " (gaping), ^^ I never go up — up — Bless the man !
why will he live so high ? It kills me to climb his
stairs," holding his ponderous sides. " I never go up,
Mister Caleb, but I find something new, and am
tempted to pull my purse-strings. His invention, his
humour, his oddity, is exhaustless."
In this atmosphere was carried out the scheme of
**The Microcosm of London," consisting of a series
of views of London streets, buildings, and interiors,
with accompanying letterpress. Pugin did the archi-
tecture, and Rowlandson put in the figures. Rowland-
178 A LONDONER'S LONDON
son's industry was prodigious, yet he was no hermit ;
he often diced a whole night away, and once he sat at
the gaming-table for thirty-six hours. He was uncon-
trollable in this matter, yet remained the soul of
honour. And if his losses were great at night, so was
his toil next morning. His rapidity of draughtsman-
ship was amazing. It was not boastfully that he
would say : ^* I have played the fool, but" — holding up
his pencil — ^' here is my resource." Nor did his
drawing exhaust his production, for he declared that
he had etched as much copper as would sheathe a
man-of-war.
Another great artist whose name is written in the
Strand is Charles Keene. His first drawing for
" Punch " was done in his ramshackle studio at the
top of a house in the demolished row that ran a little
while ago between the churches, screening Holywell
Street. From its windows he and his sister watched
the funeral procession of the Duke of Wellington.
His biographer, Mr. Layard, gives a pleasantly minute
description of this "sky-parlour," with its artistic
odds and ends, costumes, armour, and a battered old
lay figure. In this chaos Keene worked in a pea-
jacket, smoking a little Jacobean clay pipe. He was
a bundle of whims and contempts, and had small
respect for the idle opinions of the world. "Them's
my sentiments pretty accurately," he said one day,
after quoting these lines of his friend, Percival Leigh,
from a very early number of " Punch " : —
Mrs. Grundi,
Gloria Mundi,
Passes like a dream away.
You may chatter,
That's no matter
Ma'am, 1 care nut what you say.
THE STREET OF THE SAGGING PURPOSE 179
Keene is one of the little immortals, with his gallery
of self-made old gentlemen, barristers, volunteers,
artists, waiters, barbers, and 'Arry and 'Arriet.
^^ Learned Professor [to bookseller)'. * Have you the
''Bacchae" of Euripides?' 'Arry: ^'Ere, 'ave a fill
out o' my pouch, Gov'ner 1 ' " Charles Lamb would
have relished the old scholar's glassy, uncomprehending
stare, and the bookseller's poise of ignorance, which
puts him as much beneath the situation as 'Arry's
good-heartedness makes him its master. Keene loved
to arrest a stare or a gasp, as in his ^^ Punch " drawing
"Cheek." A volunteer regiment is about to march
out with twenty rounds of blank cartridge. ^^Sub-
lieutenant {of twenty-four hours' service) : ^ Where-
abouts is this Pyrotechnic Display of yours coming
off, Colonel ? '" It is an awful moment. The few
officers standing about are paralysed, the colonel's
horse, led by an orderly, alone stirs a limb ; in the
distance the regiment waits. The colonel glares on
the youngster, from whose face the smile is just
fading. Keene's backgrounds, his landscapes and
distances, his bits of country lane, his gates and park
walls, and his beaches and boats are inimitable.
The way in which standing wheat is rendered in
the drawing of 26 August, 1871, called "Silly
Suffolk (?) Pastorals — Reciprocity," is miraculous.
And who ever drew a turnip-field, with a pencil, like
Keene ?
The island block that separated the two Strand
churches and hid them from each other became airy
nothing ten years ago. The river-ward streets here
had already been rebuilt in a neo-Gothic style which
suggests their former appearance no more than a void.
Still, their names remain, their sites are preserved, and
in Norfolk Street a large and coherent scheme of
i8o A LONDONER'S LONDON
rebuilding has somehow spared one of the houses
which represent the street in which Peter the Great
had his first London dwelHng.
I have been told that when the old houses in
Norfolk Street were pulled down, some twenty
years ago, several were found to have been built on
piles. In the old days Norfolk Street was virtually a
blind alley ; at its lower end there was a semicircular
platform or terrace with railings, from which wan-
derers from the Strand could look down on the boats.
Many Londoners easily recall this older street, in
which Mrs. Lirriper waged her eight-and-thirty years'
warfare with lodgers and servant-girls, and was em-
bittered by the business rivalry of Miss Wozenham,
who took in lodgers over the way for less money
than herself, yet gave her servants higher wages,
besides having the eiTrontery to advertise her apart-
ments in Bradshaw's Railway Guide.
In those days I think Norfolk Street had much the
same aspect as Craven Street, near Charing Cross.
Its houses had seen some notable residents. In one
of them lived and died Dr. Brocklesby, ever to be
remembered as the physician who attended Lord
Chatham in the tragical scene in the House of Lords,
and comforted the last days of Dr. Johnson. John-
son and Burke could never speak highly enough of
Brocklesby. A touching story is told of his death in
Norfolk Street. In December, 1797, he determined
to visit Mrs. Burke, then a widow, at Beaconsfield.
A friend feared that he was too old and weak for
the journey, and sought to dissuade him ; but the old
man replied : " My good friend, I perfectly under-
stand your hint, and am thankful to you for it ; but
where's the difference, whether I die at a friend's
house, at an inn, or in a post-chaise ? I hope I am
THE STREET OF THE SAGGING PURPOSE i8i
in every way prepared for such an event, and perhaps
it is as well to elude the expectation of it." Leigh
Hunt comments : " This was said like a man and a
friend. Brocklesby was not one who would cant
about giving trouble at such a moment — the screen
of those who hate to be troubled ; neither would he
grudge a friend the melancholy satisfaction of giving
him a bed to die in. He better understood the first
principles which give light and life to the world, and
left jealousy and misgiving to the vulgar." The good
doctor went down to Beaconsfield, returned a few
days later, and died. He was laid in the churchyard
of St. Clement Danes.
Mowbray House, at the corner of the street, long and
memorably associated with the late Mr. W. T. Stead,
stands, as I reckon, on the site of the residence of
Albany Wallis, who died here in his eighty-seventh
year, in 1800. He was a wealthy solicitor. The
'* Gentleman's Magazine," in an obituary notice, says
that his abilities were of a very inferior kind, but that
he was so taciturn that the world imagined ''more
was meant than met the ear." It was Albany Wallis
who raised, at the cost of ;£iooo, the monument to
Garrick in the Abbey. He had lived for many years
in close friendship with the great actor, had been his
executor, and had helped to bear his pall at the
funeral. But his interest in the monument was
explained in various ways of unkindness. It was said
that he had paid his addresses to Garrick's widow, and
that, being rejected, he raised the Abbey monument
out of pique, leaving Mrs. Garrick to be blamed for
neglecting such a tribute — an omission which the
*' Gentleman's," resolved to be impartially disagree-
able, said would entail eternal disgrace upon the
person from whom such a mark of admiration,
i82 A LONDONER'S LONDON
gratitude, and affection was on all hands expected.^
Not satisfied with this innuendo, the genial obituarist
suggested that Wallis was not the man to take any
revenge that involved expense, and that his motive
might be an ambition to link his name for ever with
Garrick's, to "share the triumph and partake the
gale " of the actor's renown.
Garrick's name is my reminder that the accepted
note of the Strand is the theatre. But the drama
and its annals are Hke the violoncello that Dr. Johnson
did not dare play ; they tend to exclude all other
subjects by their complexity and fascination. In a
quarter of a century we have seen great figures pass
from the Strand. It must needs be so, for Time has
mown down players and theatres together. Five
theatres have been uprooted : the Globe, the Opera
Comique, the Olympic, the Strand, and the Old
Gaiety. There have been compensations, but I
boggle at the chaos of memories, from which two
visions arise with that acute appeal which justifies
a word: Irving's '^Jingle" and Mr. Dan Leno.
And of Irving's "Jingle" I have nothing to say except
that I am as glad to have seen it as to have seen any-
thing the comic stage has offered in latter years.
Mr. Dan Leno did not belong specially to the
Strand's footlights — he was seen elsewhere — but I
connect him most with the Tivoli Music-hall. Not
to have seen Dan Leno, not to have seen him often,
is now a misfortune one may be glad to be spared. I
doubt whether any man has charmed Londoners so
much since Garrick. And I am careless of mixing
him up with the masters of "legitimate" drama,
because he is certainly to be mixed with them, and
' Mrs. Garrick had already raised a monument to her husband in
Lichfield Cathedral,
STRAND DEMOLITIONS, 1902
THE ISLAND BLOCK THAT SEPARATED THE TWO STRAND CHURCHES
AND HID THEM FROM EACH OTHER BECAME AIRY NOTHING TEN YEARS
AGO (p. 179)
THE STREET OF THE SAGGING PURPOSE 183
with all masters, in the class of genius. The man
who, in any calling, seems to add something to all
that visible or comprehended effort can attain has
genius. Leno brought something upon the stage that
was not in his song, or in his talk, or in any of his
nameable qualities, even in his humour. None of
these really distinguished him from others. It was
the rush of whimsical sympathy from the little man
that made him great. Who can forget that dry,
pleading, coaxing, arguing voice, hoarse with its
eagerness, yet mellow with sheer kindliness and
sweetness of character ?
In cold print Dan Leno's humour is vulgar with
the vulgarity of the music-halls, but on Leno's lips
all that was consumed as by fire. The sordid things
of life — poverty, debt, domestic jars — lost their hurt
under his ingenuities and catastrophes of candour.
In describing the house he had bought (" Buying a
House") he said : '^ When you look through the side-
window the view is obstructed by trees. Well, they
have been trees, but they're not now, they've been
split. They're planks ; in fact, it's really a bill-posting
station."
His humour depended on its delivery ; it was a
lightning gift from man to man ; an exquisite, reck-
less, irresistible fandango of fun round the little
foibles of some familiar character — a doctor, a waiter,
a shopwalker, a beefeater — yet so loosely tethered
to its subject as to be free to indulge in any number
of drolleries of speech, verbal contortions, and what
not. The unifying quality was the man's gusto.
He drowned drollery in drollery, he annihilated
thought ; he seemed to absorb all the earnestness in
the house and use it before our eyes to make us
laugh. And there was nothing merely expert in his
i84 A LONDONER'S LONDON
rapidity ; the expertness was there, but it was the
rapidity of expertness in the temperature of kindness.
This gave Leno his supremacy. Other music-hall
singers used the same comic material, but no one
approached him in the art of buttonholing an
audience, say, rather, in loving it. The tone of sym-
pathy, of privacy, never left his voice. He was for
ever making a clean breast of it, and beginning again
in a new frenzy of confidence or warning. In all
this you felt that he was acting with the stream of
his character, that he was indeed the kindest and most
ebullient of men, and a delicious observer.
A small boy might have invented much of Leno's
nonsense, but only a great artist and a good man
could have made the heart laugh with it. In his
song '^ The Jap " he said he had been to Japan as
a tea-merchant, but the man who sold him plants
made a mistake and gave him rhubarb. Finding
that he could not sell it, he tried to pass it off as " a
kind of new season shou-shou." A boy might have
said " shou-shou " ; there was no attempt to be more
Japanese than the "Jap," to coin a clever word
that the audience could not have coined. He just
rapped out " shou-shou," and the house crowed like
a child. And when a little later he began a pre-
posterous love episode by saying, with his inimit-
able air of making things clear, "One morning I
was watering the shou-shou," every one crowed with
gladness.
Leno's jokes did not seem to be fabricated, but
to happen, and even so they came fast as a prairie
fire. He was always driving on to some insane
urgency ahead, or stopping to get himself — and us —
out of some imbecile muddle. His understanding
with his audience was the essence of his success,
THE STREET OF THE SAGGING PURPOSE 185
and he knew this so well that he could play with
it. What a triumph was his fuss of incredulity when
he affected to see in our faces a blankness at his
casual mention of a certain Mrs. Kelly. " Good lif e-a-
mighty ! don't look so simple. She's a cousin of Mrs.
Nipletts, and her husband keeps the what-not shop
at the — Oh, you must know Mrs. Kelly, everybody
knows Mrs. Kelly." As Mrs. Kelly's name recurred,
not only she, but all her kin and acquaintance, all her
twopenny-halfpenny dealings and disputes, seemed
to take shape, until — as the repetition in changing
keys went on — whole breadths of London rushed
into view, all the flickering street-corners on Saturday
nights, all the world of crowded doorsteps and
open windows, where Mrs. Kelly is Mrs. Kelly.
Nothing would do until we had acknowledged
a lifelong acquaintance with Mrs. Kelly, and upon
this immense confirmation of her existence came
overwhelming mirth, having its seat in sheer realiza-
tion of life. Only Leno could do this.
CHAPTER VIII
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON
The Abbey and an Adventure — Chateaubriand — The Despoilers —
Antiquities as Playthings — Charles Lamb — " Royalest Seed " — King
Henry orders his tomb — "They do bury fools there" — "Hie prope
Chaucerum " — ** Two feet by two " — Sir Isaac Newton — Garrick's
Funeral — Byron's Home-coming — Chapel of the Pyx — The National
Quarter— The Fire of 1834— The Horse Guards' Parade— Signalling
to the Fleet— The York Column—" A Shocking Bad Hat "—Cleopa-
tra's Needle for Waterloo Bridge — A Congress of Wounds — The
Evicted Rooks — The King's Palace — Her Grace of Buckinghamshire —
The Marble Arch— Hyde Park Corner— The Duke and the Statue
WHO forgets, and who recovers, his first
vision of the Abbey towers, grey above
the trees, moored as it were in the sea of
time, and bathed in the aura of a race ? My own is
enhanced in recollection by a boyish adventure. It
befell that for ten minutes in the dusk of a summer
evening I was locked up alone among the roj'^al tombs.
I had arrived late, and in the rustic frenzy of my
fifteen years. The verger, relenting from the rules,
took me up the deeply shadowed nave. Unlocking
the iron gates at the south of the Sacrarium he
passed me into the heart of the Abbey, telling me
that I might walk round to the corresponding north
gates where he would meet me in ten minutes. It was
magnificent, but sudden, and I was subdued when he
18
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON 187
locked the gate and walked away in the gloom. I
moved uneasily round the chapels, not fearing, I think,
a kingly ghost, but the faint roar of London seemed
to have become an inarticulate cosmic murmur and
an insufBcient assurance of life in this august home of
death. Consequently I was peering through the north
gate long before my time. The minutes dragged.
A rush of apprehension seized me, I climbed the
iron gate, ran like a deer down the aisle, and darted
through the door as if royal dust were indeed stirring.
Bounding into the street, I was aware of my verger
musing in the entrance. He said not a word — nor L
It must have been in a calmer mood, or with
stronger nerves, that Chateaubriand, locked accident-
ally in the Abbey, passed a whole night there. He
looked around for a lair, and found it, he tells us,
^' near the monument of Lord Chatham at the bottom
of the gallery of the Chapel of the Knights and that
of Henry VIL At the entrance to the steps leading
to the aisles, shut in by folding gates, a tomb fixed
in the wall, and opposite a marble figure of death
with a scythe, furnished me a shelter. A fold in
the marble winding-sheet served me as a niche ;
after the example of Charles V, I habituated myself
to my interment." '
It appears, then, that I entered Westminster Abbey
thirty years ago under a regime that had not begun the
enforcement of strict rule and the scrutiny of hand-
bags ; the old era of official insouciance had left a
chink through which a country boy could be allowed to
wander at his will in the mausoleum. This gives me a
sense of another, an older, London — the London that
changed perhaps on that Sunday afternoon in 1887,
' It is not possible to identify the spot from Chateaubriand's descrip-
tion, which seems to be muddled.
i88 A LONDONER'S LONDON
when into the whirlpool of Trafalgar Square the Grena-
diers marched from St. George's Barracks with ball car-
tridge, and the Life Guards came pricking up Whitehall
with quite a new kind of glitter. A great deal of the
picturesque ruination in the Abbey to-day is due less
to the attritions of Time than to such indulgence as
I had received. Many who formerly came to meditate
remained to carve. The Coronation Chair is covered
with the initials of these disastrous folk, who often
found leisure to add the date of their depredations.
Some of them cut their honest names on the State
Shield of Edward III. Others, bent more on relics
than personal immortality, removed mosaic and jewels
and brass plates, or wrenched off the minor images
and ornaments from the great tombs. The shrine
of Edward the Confessor is now a dull erection of
stones ; formerly it blazed with many golden statuettes,
each decked with insignia set with rubies, onyx, and
pearls. It displayed fifty-five large cameos, and where
there was no such encrustation the fabric was aglow
with mosaic. Hardly a handbreadth of this splendour
remains. The silver head of the effigy of Henry III
was stolen centuries ago. '^ Some Whig, I'll war-
rant you," suggested Sir Roger de Coverley ; " you
ought to lock up your kings better ; they will carry
off the body too if you don't take care."
To realize the cynical neglect of the Abbey in the
eighteenth century one may turn to John Thomas
Smith's '* Nollekens and his Times." NoUekens, who
had been a pupil of Scheemakers, did much work in
the Abbey, and Smith, who was in turn the pupil of
Nollekens, was often with him in the building. It was
the great monumental period when many a corner of
the Abbey resembled a sculptor's studio. Could any-
thing be more grotesquely informing than the following
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON 189
snatches of dialogue between the artists and care-
takers reported by Smith ? Nollekens is talking in his
uncouth way to Mr. Catling, the verger.
*' Nollekens : ' Why, Mr. Catling, you seem to be as
fond of the Abbey as I am of my models by Michel-
angelo. My man Finny tells me you was born
in it.'
''Catling: 'No, not in the Abbey; I was born in
the tower on the right hand, just before you enter into
the little cloisters.'
" Nollekens : ' Oh, I know ; there's some steps to go
up and a wooden rail to hold by. Now, I wonder you
don't lose that silver thing that you carry before the
Dean when you are going through the cloisters. Pray,
why do you suffer the schoolboys to chalk the stones
all over ? I have been spelling " pudding," " grease,"
" lard," " butter," " kitchen-stuff," and I don't know
what all. . . . You had better tell Mr. Dean to see
that the monuments don't want dusting, and to look
after the Westminster boys, and not let them break
the ornaments off to play at sconces with in the
cloisters.'
" Gay fere (the Abbey mason): *Ah, Mr. Nollekens,
are you here ? '
"Nollekens: 'Here? Yes; and why do you suffer
that Queen Anne's altar to remain here, in a Gothic
building ? Send it back to Whitehall, where it came
from. And why don't you keep a better lookout, and
not suffer the fingers of the figures and the noses of
busts to be knocked off by them Westminster boys ?
" Gay/ere : * Why, what an ungrateful little man you
are ! Don't it give you a job now and then ? Did
not Mr. Dolben have a new nose put upon Camden's
face the other day at his own expense ? I believe I told
you that I carried the rods when Fleetcraft measured
I90 A LONDONER'S LONDON
the last work at the north tower when the Abbey was
finished.'
*'Nollekens: * There's the bell tolling. Oh no, it's
the quarters. I used to hear them when I was in the
Abbey working with my master, Scheemakers. There's
a bird flying.'
'' Gay/ere : 'A bird ? Ay, you may see a hundred
birds ; they come in at the broken panes of glass.'
" Nollekens : ^ What have you done with the old
Gothic pulpit?'
^^ Catling: " It has been conveyed to our vestry, the
Chapel of St. Blaize, south of Poet's Corner ; a very
curious part of the Abbey, not often shown — did you
ever see it ? It's very dark ; there is an ancient pic-
ture on the east wall of a figure, which can be made
out tolerably well after the eye is accustomed to the
dimness of the place. Did you ever notice the remain-
ing colours of the curious little figure that was painted
on the tomb of Chaucer ? '
*^ Nollekens : * No, that's not at all in my way.'
« < Pray, Mr. Nollekens,' asked Mr. Champneys,
* can you give me the name of the sculptor who
executed the basso-relief of Townsend's monument ?
I have applied to several of my friends among the
artists, but I have never been able to obtain it ; in my
opinion the composition and style of carving are ad-
mirable ; but I am sorry to find that some evil-minded
person has stolen one of the heads.'
^^ Nollekens: * That's what I say. Dean Horsley
should look after the monuments himself. Hang
his waxworks 1 ' "
All this scarcely bears out Charles Lamb's scepti-
cism about Abbey depredations in his essay on the
tombs. He says ; *' For forty years that I have known
the fabric the only well-attested charge of violation
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON 191
adduced has been a ridiculous dismemberment com-
mitted upon the effigy of that amiable spy, Major
Andre." But the mischief had been done, and the
danger remained. The instance that Lamb allows
is a curious one. Acting under the rules of war,
Washington had sentenced Andre to death. Every
possible effort was made by the British to save him,
but in vain, and this fine British officer died with
serene heroism. The whole British Army went into
mourning, and in 1821 Andre s remains were brought
to Westminster Abbey. The monumental group placed
over his remains was several times mutilated, and more
than once the head of Washington was removed. Two
heads taken from the monument were returned from
America to the Dean many years ago with the request
that they might be replaced. They had been carried
off by relic-hunters.
The Abbey is like Shakespeare : all men know it a
little ; few know it intimately or can cast up the sum
of its greatness. The kingliest of our kings lie there ;
those who ruled over ^* Merry England" and led her
soldiers in the field. Many of them were magnificent
patrons of the Church, and they gave their bones to its
keeping. Henry III, the builder of the Abbey as we
now know it, prepared the shrine of Edward the Con-
fessor, which was for ages the magnet of kings, as
Chaucer's grave of poets.
In his turn, Henry III, the "king of simple life,"
as Dante called him, who had himself carried on
his head the Holy Blood to Westminster through the
streets of London, was entombed by Edward I.
Edward's own remains were placed in a very plain
tomb, perhaps in the hope, as Dean Stanley suggests,
that it might be possible some day to fulfil that famous
" pact " that he made with his son on his deathbed,
192 A LONDONER'S LONDON
that his flesh should be boiled and his bones carried
at the head of the English Army until Scotland was
subdued. It is certain that at frequent intervals the
body of the greatest of the Plantagenets was wrapped
in new cere-cloths, as if in view of this dramatic
possibility.
In this Chapel of the Confessor, whose floor is
"paved with princes," lies Henry the Fifth, Harry of
England, the "Hector of his age." It was just before
his departure to Agincourt that he gave precise
directions for his tomb and the magnificent chantry
over it.
It is curious that the king who represents all the
strength of sovereignty should have deposited in the
Abbey with pious pomp the remains of the king who
represents all its sentiment. Whether the body which
he laid beside Queen Anne of Bohemia by Henry V
was that of the hapless victim of Pontefract Castle
was doubted at the time, the mystery being involved
in the whole question of the deposed king's fate. But
it has long been assumed that the effigies of king and
queen do not form a bitter travesty.
One of the strangest and most moving stories of the
Abbey is that of Henry VI choosing his grave there,
and choosing it in vain. He wished to be near his
father, and he came to see the spot with Fleete, the
Prior and historian of the Abbey. Lord Cromwell
also attended him, and the master-mason was there.
Dean Stanley's picture of the scene is unforgettable.
" Henry asked Fleete, with a strange ignorance, the
names of the kings amongst whose tombs he stood
till he came to his father's grave, where he made his
prayer. He then went up into the Chantry, and re-
mained for more than an hour surveying the whole
chapel. It was suggested to him that the tomb of
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON 193
Henry V should be pushed a little on one side and
his own placed beside it. With more regal spirit than
was usual in him, he replied, ^ Nay, let him alone ; he
lieth like a noble prince. I would not trouble him.'
" Finally, the Abbot proposed that the great Reli-
quary should be moved from the position which it
now occupied close beside the Shrine, so as to leave
a vacant space for a new tomb. The devout king
anxiously asked whether there was any spot where the
relics, thus a second time moved, could be deposited,
and was told that they might stand * at the back side
of the altar.' He then * marked with his foot seven
feet,' and turned to the nobles who were with him.
^ Lend me your staff,' he said to the Lord Cromwell ;
' is it not fitting I should have a place here, where my
father and my ancestors lie, near St. Edward ? ' And
then, pointing with a white staff to the spot indicated,
said, 'Here, methinketh, is a convenient place'; and
again, still more emphatically, and with the peculiar
asseveration which, in his pious and simple lips, took
the place of the savage oaths of the Plantagenets,
' Forsooth, forsooth, here will we lie 1 Here is a good
place for us.'
" The master-mason of the Abbey, Thirsk by name,
took an iron instrument and traced the circuit of the
grave on the pavement. Within three days the relics
were removed, and the tomb was ordered. The
* marbler ' (as we should now say, the statuary) and
the coppersmith received forty groats for their instal-
ment, and gave one groat to the workmen, who long
remembered the conversation of their masters at
supper by this token."
After all, Henry, dying in the Tower, was buried
at Chertsey, and then his bones were removed by
Richard III to St. George's Chapel at Windsor.
194 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Among royal interments none was more splendid
or touching than that of Mary II. Macaulay, who
notes that the day was dark and troubled, and that
" a few ghastly flakes of snow fell on the black plumes
of the funeral car," seems to have missed one little
record. A robin which had flown into the Abbey
perched repeatedly on the hearse, and was noticed.
George II's burial has been described in his usual
vein by Horace Walpole. The deaths of Hanoverian
kings and princes evoked but moderate sorrow, and
though Walpole does justice to the scene in the
Abbey he is soon recounting the fears he had about
precedence, and declaring that the anthem was " im-
measurably tedious." His picture of the "burlesque
Duke of Newcastle" fainting in his stall, "the Arch-
bishop hovering over him with a smelling-bottle,"
adds a ridiculous touch to the picture.
" By God, I will not be buried in Westminster
Abbey ! " exclaimed Sir Godfrey Kneller on his death-
bed. Asked why, he answered, " They do bury fools
there ; " and he was laid at Twickenham. This was
extravagance ; nevertheless, a walk round the Abbey
will establish the fact that hundreds of people who
have no interest for us to-day are buried with states-
men who made history, and with poets who enlarged
the soul of man.
Dean Stanley has pointed out that of the three
greatest names in England's roll of intellect, Shake-
speare, Bacon, and Newton, only the last is inscribed
on an Abbey tomb. Shakespeare has a monument,
Bacon nothing. There are no monuments to Keats,
Shelley, and Byron. Cowley is honoured there, but
not Waller ; Beaumont, but not Herrick ; Denham
and Drayton, but not Marlowe and Suckling. Milton's
parodist, John Philips, was given a monument in the
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON 195
Abbey at a time when Milton's own name was con-
sidered as an impossible ^^ pollution of its walls."
Some absences have been too glaring to be endured.
Robert Burns was given a bust forty years ago ; Scott
a bust only seven years ago ; and Coleridge's bust was
unveiled by Mr. Lowell in 1885. On the other hand,
Matthew Arnold is represented by a bust, though
few visitors find it ; here promptitude is matched by
modernity, for you may study the cut of the great
critic's coat and the shape of his collar and necktie.
In the same dark corner which has received Arnold's
bust Wordsworth is represented by a feeble and
moping statue ; why is not our greatest poet since
Milton honoured in Poets' Corner ?
Chaucer's grave was the magnet to poetic dust
His grey marble tomb, erected a century and a halt
after his death, is still the most beautiful and vener-
able object in this part of the Abbey. He had but
a short journey to take from his bed to his grave,
for his last days were spent in a tenement in the Abbey
garden, on ground now covered by the Chapel of
Henry VH. His last words, said to have been dic-
tated on his death-bed, should always be given in
connexion with Chaucer's passing : —
Here is no home, here is but wilderness.
Forth, pilgrim, forth ! O beast, out of thy stall,
Look up on high, and thank thy God of all.
Control thy lust ; and let thy spirit thee lead ;
And Truth shall thee deliver ; 'tis no dread,
Spenser, Drayton, Tennyson, and Browning lie near
the father of English verse. Spenser's first Latin
epitaph, long superseded, contained the words : —
Hie prope Chaucerum situs est Spenserius illi
Proximus ingenio, proximus ct tumulo.
196 A LONDONER'S LONDON
This inscription, set up by Anne Clifford, Countess
of Dorset, was replaced in 1778 by an epitaph which
described Spenser as "the prince of poets in his
tyme." A year or two ago the crowbars fell on little
King Street, where the poet of all virtue died on a
tavern bed. From this street — the old royal way into
the Abbey precincts — he was followed to his grave by
his brother poets, who presently threw their elegies
and their quills upon his coffin. Of these mourners
Francis Beaumont was the next to be laid in Poets'
Corner.
Drayton followed, and again an Anne Clifford was
the giver of a poet's monument. Ben Jonson usually
receives the credit of the epitaph, but Quarles may de-
serve it. It is good to know that Ben is in the Abbey.
Poverty and neglect darkened his latter days. Some
premonition that he might be shut out of the noble
company seems to have haunted his mind. There is
an Abbey legend that points to this. It is said that
one day, being rallied by the Dean of Westminster
about being buried in Poets' Corner, Jonson re-
marked : " I am too poor for that, and no one will
lay out funeral charges upon me. No, sir, 6 feet
long by 2 feet wide is too much for me ; 2 feet by
2 will do all I want." " You shall have it," said the
Dean. Apocryphal as the story sounds, its essential
truth is supported by the fact that in 1849, when Sir
Robert Watson's gravj was being made, the Clerk
of the Works " saw the two leg-bones of Jonson fixed
bolt upright in the sand, as though the body had been
buried in the upright position ; and the skull came
rolling down among the sand from a position above
the leg-bones, to the bottom of the newly made
grave. There was still hair upon it, and it was of
a red colour." Unfortunately the grave is not in
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON 197
Poets' Corner, as Jonson's bust (on the same wall as
the monuments of Spenser and Milton) may lead the
pilgrim to believe. The slab with the words, *^ O
Rare Ben Jonson," cut upon it is in the north aisle
of the nave. The stone has been placed against the
wall for its better preservation.
The coming of Dryden in 1700 was a great event
in the annals of Poets' Corner. No poet has a
simpler and nobler monument. Chaucer's tombstone
is said to have been sawn asunder in. the making of
his grave. At first he had no epitaph, and Pope
drew attention to the homelessness of *' Dryden's
awful dust " in his epitaph for Rowe : —
Beneath a rude and nameless stone he lies,
To which thy tomb shall guide inquiring eyes.
It is said to have been on this hint that Dryden's
patron, Sheffield, Duke of Buckinghamshire, erected
a bust, which was soon replaced by the present one,
a masterpiece of Scheemakers'. Dryden is one of
those poets whose enmities needed the ^'reconcilia-
tions" of the Abbey. It is curious, nevertheless, that
Shadwell's bust and Dryden's are removed as far from
each other as possible, and that their faces are averted
from e*ch other's gaze in a way that is rather amusing
when noticed on the spot.
Next to Shadwell rests Dryden's far more dangerous
critic, Prior, who ridiculed his reign at Will's Coffee-
house. Why is Prior so little remembered as a
man ? He must have been a delightful fellow, or he
could not have spent so many evenings with Swift ;
the Diary to Stella is full of Prior. He was liker to
Horace than any poet we have bred, though he
rather desired Horace's life than lived it. The wish
198 A LONDONER'S LONDON
for the simple life needs no better expression than
he gave to it : —
Great Mother, let me once be able
To have a garden, house, and stable,
That I may read, and write, and plant,
Superior to desire or want ;
And as health fails, and years increase.
Sit down, think, and die in peace.
Addison had preceded Prior to the Abbey by two
years. He was, so to speak, born to be buried in
the Abbey. His piety, his learning, his wit, his pre-
dilections, and his achievements fitted and entitled
him to such honour. And his is a classic Abbey
funeral. " On the north side of that Chapel," says
Macaulay, "in the vault of the House of Albemarle,
the cofBn of Addison lies next to the coffin of
Montague, Yet a few months ; and the same
mourners passed again along the same aisle. The
same sad anthem was again chanted. The same
vault was again opened ; and the coffin of Craggs
was placed close to the coffin of Addison." Macaulay
himself now lies close to Addison.
The funeral of Isaac Newton was less remarkable
for its pomp than for the fact that among those who
gathered round the grave was Voltaire. To Newton
was allotted one of the two fine positions on either
side of the entrance to the Choir. This position
had been refused to various noblemen who had
applied for it.
One of the most showy of Abbey burials was
Garrick's. It cost ;£i5oo. There were thirty-three
mourning coaches alone, and each was drawn by
six horses. When the extravagance of the funeral
was being discussed, and the six horses to each coach
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON 199
were mentioned by Mrs. Burney, Dr. Johnson snapped
out, '* Madam, there were no more six horses than six
phoenixes." But there were. Johnson himself rode
in the nineteenth coach, Burke and Beauclerk were in
the preceding coach, and Gibbon was in the twentieth.
At intervals men in cloaks rode on horseback, and the
coaches were attended by pages. The coffin was
covered with crimson velvet. All traffic was stopped
for two hours while the immense procession made its
way from Adelphi Terrace. Many people sat on the
house-tops. In the Abbey, Burke suggested that the
statue of Shakespeare seemed to be pointing to
Garrick's open grave.
Sheridan was buried near to Garrick and Johnson.
His coffin was carried by dukes, earls, and a bishop.
It is no wonder, considering the circumstances of his
end, that a French newspaper remarked that " France
is the place for a man of letters to live in, and England
the place for him to die in."
It is curious that the body of Sheridan, for whom
Byron had so much liking, and whose character he
defended, rested in Great George Street, waiting burial
in the Abbey, and that Byron's remains lay there only
to be turned from the Abbey doors. Macaulay refers
to this accident, and to the feelings of those who saw
the long train of coaches turn slowly northwards,
*' leaving behind it that cemetery which had been
consecrated by the dust of so many great poets,
but of which the doors were closed against all that
remained of Byron." Dean Stanley refused to judge
harshly either Byron's claims to an Abbey burial or
the convictions of those who refused it. But his own
sympathies are clear. "If Byron was turned from the
door, many a one as questionable as Byron has been
admitted. Close above the monument of the devoted
aoo A LONDONER'S LONDON
Granville Sharpe is the monument of the epicurean
St, Evremond. Close behind the tablet of the blame-
less Wharton lies the licentious Congreve." It was
on 12 July, 1824, that the strange scene was enacted.
Byron had died on 19 April at Missolonghi. Twenty-
one days' mourning by the Greeks had followed, and
it was not until 2 May that the body was embarked,
amid the firing of minute-guns, on the brig "Florida"
for England. Even the news of his death did not
reach London until 14 May. It is impossible to
convey an idea of the impression made when the
words ran through England — " Byron is dead."
Men's breath was taken away to hear that this
man, whose excess of life was manifested alike in
his virtues and faults, in his genius and personality,
had died in an endeavour to free Greece. In one
of his letters Byron had protested that he would
never allow his dead body to be brought home
Hke Nelson's in a cask ; and, indeed, if the spectacular
element in his hfe had been allowed to rule the
manner of his burial, he would not have been laid
to his rest like a county magnate in the heart of
England. On some lonely ^Egean isle, or on some
Grecian promontory, dear to poet and historian,
Byron's obelisk would have caught the first and
last rays of the sun.
But on I July the ship "Florida" brought his
remains to the Downs. It was known that an
application for an Abbey burial would be refused,
and it had been decided that Byron should be
laid in the family vault at Hucknall Torkard, a
mile or two from Newstead Abbey, amid the
scenes which had been associated with his boyish
passion for Mary Chaworth. It seems probable that
his remains were brought to Westminster by the very
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON 201
route over which, with infinite vivacity of description,
he had made Don Juan enter London.
On the 12th Thomas Moore breakfasted with
Samuel Rogers. At half-past nine they set off.
George Street, as they saw it, has virtually dis-
appeared in recent years. When Moore saw the
house and the crowd and the undertaker's men,
he was seized with a nervous trembling amounting
to illness. The scene lives in his Diary. The pro-
cession started, Moore riding in a coach along with
four others — Rogers, Campbell, Colonel Stanhope,
and a Greek Deputy. As they turned out of George
Street he saw a lady crying in a barouche, and said
to himself, ^' Bless her heart, whoever she is." Most
of the mourners left the procession at St. Pancras
turnpike, and returned to town. It was not until he
was crossing the Park with Rogers that Moore felt
the full pathos of the day. Here, strangely enough, they
met a soldier's funeral, and the bugles were wailing
out the air, ** I'm wearin' awa' like snaw wreaths."
Had they continued the journey north they would
have seen much else to mov^e their feelings. As the
cortege wound its way up through Kentish Town
it passed a small house, from the windows of which
it was watched by the widows of Shelley and Captain
Williams, whose husbands' drowned bodies had been
burned in Byron's presence on the wild beach at
Leghorn. Mrs. Shelley wrote afterwards : *' What
should I have said to a Cassandra who, three
years ago, should have prophesied that Jane and I —
Williams and Shelley gone — should watch the funeral
procession of Lord Byron up Highgate Hill ? All
changes of romance or drama lag far behind this."
The contiguity of the Houses of Parliament to the
Abbey is one of the impressive things of London
202 A LONDONER'S LONDON
The Abbey, Westminster Hall, St. Stephen's, and the
Government offices combine to make a great group
of national symbols. Their neighbourliness is, of
course, a matter of development rather than design, yet
less than eighty years ago there was a danger that
this great national congeries would be broken up for
ever.
The story is worth retelling. On the night of
i6 October, 1834, a man of forty was one of an
excited band of passengers on the coach from
Brighton to London. Far away on the horizon a
red light was pulsing wickedly, and at intervals
a bright glow struck the clouds above. At last
the passengers' shouts of inquiry were answered.
The Houses of Parliament were on lire. In this,
as in every other direction, the news had travelled
fast. At Dudley it was known within three hours.
To the man of forty on the Brighton coach it meant
more than to most people. Charles Barry had been
born under the Palace of Westminster ; and now, as
the sky reddened, the thought came to him that he
might be chosen to rebuild it — a true presentiment.
An appalling spectacle awaited the travellers. The
sky was invaded by smoke and embers, and from every
suburb crowds were pouring to the bridges. Three
regiments of Guards had turned out. The crowd
knew that the home of British liberty, the sanctuary
of civil rights, perhaps the Hall of Rufus itself —
unrivalled in the world, and dear now, if it never
was before, to their hearts — were in the greatest
peril. And it had but one thought : could West-
minster Hall be saved ? At the centre that hope
became determined effort. Engines were taken into
the interior, ready to pour water into Richard the
Second's oaken roof. It was a scene which men
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON 203
were to remember on their death-beds. An eye-
witness says that behind the dreadful pother the
grey towers of the Abbey seemed asleep in the
moonlight; unconscious of the red tinge that played
among her buttresses.
From the sublime to the ridiculous there is never
more than a step. Old Dean Ireland, aghast and
dusty, was standing with his Keeper of the Records
on the roof of the Abbey Chapter House. A gust
of wind swept the flames towards them. The Keeper,
foreseeing even more dreadful things, implored him
to descend and save the inestimable treasures of the
church. But John Ireland was not a Very Reverend
Dean in an Established Church for nothing. He
knew his place, and while the sparks were blowing
over Henry the Seventh's Chapel he firmly replied
that he could not think of moving anything without
permission from the First Lord of the Treasury. Yet
had he gone to consult Lord Melbourne he would
certainly have been rewarded with an oath.
When the fire was in hand London breathed again.
Hall and Abbey stood untouched amid the acres of
smoking ruins. The cause of this unparalleled disaster
is one of the jests of history, and it was never told with
more humour than by Charles Dickens. In an after-
dinner speech at Drury Lane Theatre he said : —
^•Ages ago a savage mode of keeping accounts on
notched sticks was introduced into the Court of
Exchequer, and the accounts were kept much as
Robinson Crusoe kept his calendar on the desert
island, on certain splints of elm-wood called tallies.
" In the Reign of George III an inquiry was made
by some revolutionary spirit whether — pens, ink, and
paper, slates and pencils, being in existence — this
obstinate adherence to an obsolete custom ought to be
204 A LONDONER'S LONDON
continued, and whether a change ought not to be
effected. All the red tape in the country grew redder
at the bare mention of this bold and original con-
ception, and it took till 1826 to get these sticks
abolished. In 1834 it was found that there was a
considerable accumulation of them ; and the question
then arose — what was to be done with such worn-out,
rotten old bits of wood ? It came to pass that they
were burnt in a stove in the House of Lords. The
stove, overgorged with these preposterous sticks, set fire
to the panelling ; the panelling set fire to the House of
Lords ; the House of Lords set lire to the House of
Commons ; the two houses were reduced to ashes ;
architects were called in to build others ; and we are
now in the second million of the cost thereof ; the
national pig is not nearly over the stile yet ; and the
little old woman, Britannia, hasn't got home to-night."
The old Palace of Westminster was all but de-
stroyed. St. Stephen's Chapel, where the House of
Commons had sat for centuries, was reduced to a few
blackened walls. It had been set apart during the
reign of Edward VI for the use of the House of
Commons, and the last day on which the House sat
there was 25 September, 1834. On its site has arisen
the fine vestibule named St. Stephen's Hall, the walls
of which exactly correspond with those of the old
Chapel. The spot which the Speaker's Chair occupied
is carefully marked, and also the place where stood the
table from which Cromwell removed the mace, and on
which Pitt and Burke and Fox laid their papers.
Below the floor the beautiful Crypt Chapel still
remains as one of the few relics of the old Palace.
Privileged babies are baptized at its font, and once
in an age a Lord Chancellor is married there.
When the last fire-engine had trotted home, when
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON 205
King William and Queen Adelaide had driven down
in two closed carriages to inspect the debris, and
when the Privy Council had solemnly reported that
somebody had done something improper, the question
of immediate accommodation for Parliament presented
itself. At a cost of ;£3o,ooo the Lords were sent into
the Painted Chamber, the Commons into the damaged
House of Lords. The results were different : the
Lords were uncomfortable, and decided that Barry
was a slow architect ; the Commons liked their
quarters so well that they were in no hurry to move
into Barry's new chamber when it was ready.
Ninety-seven architects had been tempted by the
premiums and the opportunity. It was understood
that a splendid building, in the Elizabethan or Gothic
styles, would be sanctioned. Barry's plan. No. 64,
was awarded the first premium. He had spent the
available time (six months) in the hardest labour,
never allowing himself more than five hours' sleep,
and he had made a tour of the town-halls of Belgium
before working out his design. His son tells us that
his first plan was sketched on the back of a letter in a
friend's house, and that this was the germ of all that
followed. The plan he submitted was curtailed, and
altered in the execution beyond belief, yet out of the
welter of schemes and counter-schemes there emerged
the perpendicular Gothic conception which the world
applauds to-day.
The low site ch^en for the building was an
obstacle to magnificent effect, all the more so because
old Westminster Bridge had a much higher pitch and
a taller parapet than its successor. A proposal was
made to elevate the new Palace on a great terrace,
like that of Somerset House, but it was seen that this
would woefully dwarf Westminster Hall and the
2o6 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Abbey. There was also an idea of removing Parlia-
ment to the Green Park or to Trafalgar Square, but
the associations of history forbade. In a recent dis-
cussion at the Architectural Association it was
mentioned that the Duke of Wellington favoured the
river-edge site on the characteristic ground that the
Houses of Parliament ought not to be accessible on
all sides to a mob 1
The national region of London, as it may be called,
is but " irregularly great," but it homes itself about the
Abbey in large and impressive groupings and areas.
Within a few minutes one may see, besides the great
Westminster buildings, the long line of Government
offices, the Banqueting Hall of the Stuarts, the Horse
Guards and its Parade, the old Admiralty, the Nelson
Monument, old St. James's, the Mall, and the Palace.
Parliament Street and Whitehall are resonant with
great names and happenings. Milton lodged in
Scotland Yard while Latin secretary to Cromwell,
and Andrew Marvell succeeded to his office and
residence.
Something of the old Cromwellian air of Whitehall
lingers in Whitehall Court, behind the Banqueting
House of unhappy memory. Here are little fore-
court gardens and green painted window-boxes, and
pigeons ambling about in the sunshine, and one
hears the golden notes of Big Ben. The house in
which Sir Robert Peel died looks down on the
quiet precinct.
Unless custom has staled the experience one does
not stand on the Horse Guards' Parade unmoved.
Though it may be empty as the Sahara or flecked with
nothing more interesting than a Cabinet Minister and
a water-cart the spirit is stirred. The bugles of empire
seem to be faintly blowing across this fine level, round
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON 207
which the buildings of bleached stone or mellow brick
rise with significant neatness and power. Yonder is
the dragon bomb which Spain gave to the Prince
Regent, and away there in a corner, almost lost in its
own sombreness of brick and ivy, is the eighteenth-
century wall which makes snug the garden of all
that messuage. No. 10 Downing Street.
The most interesting building in Whitehall is
beyond question the old Admiralty, built in the reign
of the first George by Ripley, and described by
Walpole as '^ a most ugly edifice, and deservedly veiled
by Mr. Adams's handsome screen." In the room to
the left of the entrance-door lay in state the body of
Nelson. The Marconi apparatus on the roof is
perhaps the most fascinating object in London, for
through that delicate web of wires England speaks to
her war captains around her coasts and for many
hundreds of miles to sea. These Marconi masts have
taken the place, on the same roof, of ordinary tele-
graph wires, which had superseded the hand-worked
semaphore by which in Nelson's day a message was
sent to the next station in St. George's Fields, and
thence from point to point until from the cliffs it sped
to the quarter-deck. The rapidity with which messages
could be sent down from the Admiralty to Portsmouth
through that old chain of semaphore signals was remark-
able, and some of the stories of quick communication
almost pass belief. From the Admiralty roof a
message was transmitted through Chelsea, Putney,
Kingston, and thence by Cooper's Hill, Chately Hill,
and five other hills to Compton Down, Porstdown
Hill, and Southsea Beach, until, finally, it was
received on a tower in High Street, Portsmouth. It
is said that a message could be thus sent from
Whitehall to Portsmouth in less than a minute.
2o8 A LONDONER'S LONDON
The fellow of the Nelson Column puzzles thousands
of visitors to London, and probably as many Lon-
doners. Who is this man, with the lightning-conductor
growing out of his head, who looks down on the
Horse Guards' Parade and on the Westminster group
of public buildings ? Whose effigy is thus raised as
high as the national hero's ? The last question is
partly disposed of by the circumstance that this
column was erected many years before Nelson's ; its
scale has therefore only an accidental equality with
that of its neighbour. The two columns can be seen
in picturesque relation to each other from the west
end of Carlton House Terrace.
It was to perpetuate the memory of the Duke of
York's services as an Army administrator that the
column in Carlton House Terrace was erected, and
not — as was irreverently said — that the Duke standing
on it might be beyond the reach of his creditors.
For bungling the Flanders campaign he was appointed
Commander-in-Chief, an office which he held, with one
brief suspension, for the rest of his life. On the
whole he was a good commander-in-chief, and it can-
not be forgotten that it was under his rule at the Horse
Guards that England vexed Napoleon in Spain and
crushed him at Waterloo. Unfortunately his adminis-
tration was marred by scandal. In the wary obituary
sketch of the Duke which he contributed to the
"Gentleman's Magazine," Sir Walter Scott did not
spare to condemn the Mrs. Clarke episode. It was
recognized, however, that the Duke had been a dupe.
And now he stands, 124 feet above censure and Carlton
Terrace.
Scott tells a story of the Duke that is more than
biographically interesting. At a dinner-party a young
ofhcer entered into a dispute with a lieutenant-
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON 209
colonel upon the point to which military obedi-
ence ought to be carried. " If the Commander-in-
Chief," said the young officer, "should command
me to do a thing which I knew to be civilly illegal, I
should not scruple to obey him, and consider myself
as relieved from all responsibility by the commands of
my military superior." " So would not I," returned
the gallant and intelligent lieutenant-colonel. " I
should rather prefer the risk of being shot for dis-
obedience by my commanding officer than hanged for
transgressing the laws and violating the liberties of the
country." The Duke had been listening, and he now
gave judgment. " You have answered like yourself,"
he said, '' and the officer would deserve both to be shot
and hanged that should not act otherwise. I trust all
British officers would be as unwilling to execute an
illegal command as I trust the Commander-in-Chief
would be incapable of issuing one."
Outside the Army the Duke was a burly royalty
about town, and, generally speaking, a good-humoured
voluptuary. He haunted the Watier Club, founded by
the Regent, where the dinners were exquisite and the
gambling ruinous. And he uttered at Newmarket the
words, " a shocking bad hat," which for some reason
are immortal. His regular companions were men like
Alvanley, Beau Brummell, Charles Greville (who
managed his racing stud), and Sir Thomas Stepney, to
name only a few in the circle which he drew round him
at the Stable-yard at St. James's Palace. In his later
years the Duke of York was not taken seriously as Heir-
Apparent, for his life was rendered " bad " by a brave
combination of punctuality at the Horse Guards and
lateness at the table. Yet he was hopefully planning
and building York House (now Stafford House, with
a new destiny before it), when dropsy laid him on
p
2IO A LONDONER'S LONDON
his death-bed. From his room in Rutland House, in
Arlington Street, which had been lent to him, he could
hear the workmen's hammers. His death was sin-
cerely mourned, and the burial at Windsor was
carried out at night, with all pomp. At the graveside
many distinguished people took severe colds, a conse-
quence which Lord Eldon escaped by standing (with
acute reluctance) inside his hat.
In 1831 the Army projected a monument to their
lost leader. Carlton House had just been demolished,
and Carlton House Terrace had been built in its two
ranges. The space between these was to have been
filled by a fountain formed of the eight columns of the
portico of Carlton House. Before this plan was
executed the idea of a grand entrance into St. James's
Park from Pall Mall was mooted and preferred. The
Carlton House columns went to support the portico
of the National Gallery, and the new approach to the
Park was selected as the site of the Duke's monument.
It was once intended that Cleopatra's Needle should
be erected at the foot of Waterloo Place on the
spot where the Crimea monument stands. It may
be remembered that when those weighty critics of
" Life in London," the Hon. Tom Dashall and Squire
Tallo-ho, were admiring the features of Waterloo
Place, then known as Regent's Place, the aesthetic
squire remarked that there was a vacuum on this spot.
His friend agreed, but informed him that the column
known as Cleopatra's Needle was *' destined to raise
its lofty summit in Regent's Place." This idea
remained in the air until the fifties, the Needle on
its part remaining in the sands of Alexandria, where
Thackeray saw it *' desecrated by all sorts of abomi-
nations." In the interval, the disappointed shareholders
of Waterloo Bridge asked in vain to have the
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON 211
Needle placed on the central arch of the bridge as
an attraction to passengers.
The story of Carlton House is the story of a whole
period, and it is in many books. But one rather
unfamiliar record comes to mind. Here the American
Minister of the Waterloo period, Mr. Rush, saw a very
remarkable crowd just after the battle — a number of
wounded British officers of high distinction basking in
the smiles of the Regent. He describes the unusual
scene as follows : —
^' There were from forty to fifty generals : perhaps as
many admirals, with throngs of officers of rank inferior.
I remarked upon the number of wounded. Who is
that, I asked, pallid but with a countenance so ani-
mated ? * That's General Walker,' I was told, ^ he was
pierced with bayonets, leading on the assault at
Badajos.' And he, close by, tall but limping ? ' Colonel
Ponsonby ; he was left for dead at Waterloo ; the
cavalry it was thought had trampled upon him.' Then
came one of like port, but deprived of a leg, slowly
moving ; and the whisper went, ' That's Lord Anglesea.'
A fourth had been wounded at Seringapatam ; a fifth at
Talavera ; some had sufifered in Egypt ; some in
America. There were those who had received scars on
the deck with Nelson ; others who had carried them
from the days of Howe. One, yes, one had fought at
Saratoga. It was so that my inquiries were answered.
Each ' did his duty,' this was the favourite praise
bestowed. The great number of wounded was
accounted for by recollecting, that little more than
two years had elapsed since the armies and fleets of
Britain had been liberated from wars of extraordinary
fierceness and duration in all parts of the globe. For,
so it is, other nations chiefly fight on or near their own
territory ; the English everywhere."
2ia A LONDONER'S LONDON
The palace was taken down in 1826, and next year
the rooks which had built in its grounds sought
another nesting-place.
The only great and deliberate scheme for building a
royal palace in London is that of which Inigo Jones's
Banqueting Hall is the monument and the fragment.
The story of Buckingham Palace is but serio-comic.
It is a curious coincidence that George V's London
home stands upon ground that is associated with a
" Wake up, England I " gospel preached (somewhat
fantastically) by James L In 1609 James addressed a
circular to the Sheriffs, Deputy-Lieutenants, and others,
in which he expressed his royal anxiety " to wean his
people from idleness and the enormities thereof." He
had an idea for making his subjects busy and pros-
perous, and a very curious idea it was : to plant
England with mulberry-trees and establish a native
silk industry. Ten thousand mulberry-saplings were
to be sent to each county, and the Sheriffs and
Deputy-Lieutenants were to see to the rest. James
himself took four acres from St. James's Park, walled
them in, and planted with mulberry-trees the ground
in which Buckingham Palace stands. Mulberry-
planting became the fashion. It is said that one of
those who fell in with it was William Shakespeare, who
planted a mulberry-tree in his garden at Stratford-on-
Avon, where it flourished until the middle of the
eighteenth century, when it was cut down by Parson
Gastrin, to his everlasting local shame. The home silk
industry inaugurated by James I did not flourish. In
our time, nevertheless, on the spot where His
Majesty's silkworms perished, a Queen has in our day
ordered her Coronation robes to be made of home-
spun silk.
The mulberry-garden became a popular resort,
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON 213
and the Restoration plays teem with references to its
paths and pleasures — both shady. On 10 May, 1654,
Evelyn wrote in his diary : "My Lady Gerard treated
us at Mulberry Garden, now the only place of refresh-
ment for persons of the best quality to be exceedingly
cheated at." Evelyn explains that since Cromwell
had shut up the Spring Garden, the pleasure-seekers
had moved to the other end of the Mall. Rather
more than fifty years later, when old Buckingham
House was built on the spot. Dr. King wrote in his
" Art of Cookery " of this " princely palace " that
had displaced the forlorn mulberries. Buckingham
House was built for John Sheffield, Marquis of
Normandy and Duke of Buckinghamshire. It was
a handsome house, and the Duke was proud of his
view of London seen from his flat, statue-crowned
roof, and of his retired garden with its '^ wilderness
full of blackbirds and nightingales." There were
*' waterworks " and Latin mottoes, and there was the
gleam of the London sunshine on the "canal in the
Park."
It fell out that a Prince and Princess of Wales
(afterwards George II and Queen Caroline) wanted
a London house, and envied Naboth his vineyard.
Naboth was dead, but his widow, the Duchess, was
willing to treat. Her notions were severely business-
like, and the exact terms of her offer, which have come
down to us, indicate that her Grace of Buckingham-
shire had the makings of an estate-agent. She wrote :
"If Their Royal Highnesses will have everything stand
as it does, furniture and pictures, I will have ;^3,ooo
per annum ; both run hazard of being spoiled, and the
last, to be sure, will all to be new bought when my
son is of age. The quantity the rooms take cannot
be well furnished under ;^io,ooo ; but if Their High-
ai4 A LONDONER'S LONDON
nesses will permit the pictures all to be removed, and
buy the furniture as it will be valued by different
people, the house shall go at ;^20oo. ... If the
Prince or Princess prefer much the buying outright,
it will not be parted with under ;^6o,ooo, as it now
stands, and all His Majesty's revenue cannot purchase
a place so fit for them, nor for a less sum."
The Hanoverians were poor, and business did not
result. The Duchess continued to live in her paradise
at the head of the Mall, swelling with pride to remem-
ber that she was the illegitimate daughter of James II
(a doubtful claim), and therefore the granddaughter
of Charles I, whose martyrdom she celebrated every
year in her great drawing-room, seated in a chair of
state, and " surrounded by her women, all in black
and dismal-looking as herself." She had a great
mind to be buried at St. Germains, with her father,
but thought better of it, and decided to lie with her
husband in Westminster Abbey. She came as near to
attending her own funeral as mortal can, for she
planned its ceremonial, and insisted on having the
canopy brought to her bedside, "even though all
the tassels are not finished."
The mansion which George II had refused at
;^6o,ooo was picked up by George III in 1762 for
less than half that sum, and was settled on Queen
Charlotte in place of old Somerset House, which
being ruinous was about to disappear in favour of
the great Civil Service palace we now know. And
thus it was that Royalty came to Buckingham
House.
In her Journal, under the year 1792, Fanny Burney
gives a brief description of Buckingham House when
"Farmer George" and his family were thoroughly
settled there. Alighting at the porter's lodge, she
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON 215
was charmed to be in time to see the King, with his
three sons, the Prince of Wales, Duke of York, and
Duke of Clarence, standing there after just alighting
from their horses, when the people pressed against
the iron railings. " It was a pleasant and goodly
sight, and I rejoiced in such a detention." She met
the Princess Elizabeth in a corridor, and was presently
paying her respects to the Queen, who was in her
State drawing-room, her head just attired for the
assembly, '^ but her Court dress, as usual, remaining to
be put on at St. James's."
Buckingham Palace, as we see it, was built from
the designs of the all-building Nash, and large alter-
ations were made for Queen Victoria at her Accession.
The insufficiently handsome east front, at last to be
renewed, was then built to close in the quadrangle.
Many Londoners have forgotten that the Marble Arch,
copied by Nash, with modifications, from the Arch of
Constantine at Rome, first stood in front of the
chief entrance to Buckingham Palace. It is on
record that the archway, as first designed, was found to
be too small to admit the royal coach ; but the mis-
take was remedied in time. The Marble Arch was
to have been surmounted by a colossal bronze group
emblematic of Victory, but this was abandoned in
favour of an equestrian statue of George IV. The
statue was executed by Chantrey at a cost of 9000
guineas ; but it never reached the Marble Arch, and
is now in Trafalgar Square.
The alterations at Hyde Park Corner within living
memory have affected the triumphal arch at the head
of Constitution Hill. Formerly consecrated to War
and Wellington, it is now decorated by a symbol of
Peace. This arch first stood opposite the Hyde
Park entrance. In 1846 it was surmounted by the
2i6 A LONDONER'S LONDON
most conspicuous and ugly equestrian statute ever
seen in London, that of the Duke. London had
warning of the aesthetic error it was about to commit,
for in 1838 trial was made of the statue with a
wooden figure of it, and of this erection it was
remarked, *' Whoever has stuck up this scenic effigy
deserves thanks : it demonstrates two things — that
the position is a good one, and that a bad statue
placed there would be an intolerable eyesore." Never-
theless the bronze statue by Wyatt was erected, and,
with all its faults, was loved. Many people bitterly
deplored its removal to Aldershot. A few years ago
Mr. William Royle told the readers of ** Notes and
Queries" that he was standing on the top of the
Triumphal Arch at Hyde Park Corner when the
monument was lowered from it to be removed to
Aldershot. The Triumphal Arch then stood imme-
diately opposite Decimus Burton's entrance screen to
Hyde Park. The architectural effect produced when
the two great portals stood opposite each other may
be seen in a picture in the " Illustrated London News "
of 30 June, i860, in which a regiment of Volunteers
is marching through both gateways.
Few Londoners, perhaps, remembered that the re-
moval of this statue was mooted even before its erec-
tion was completed. This was a sore point with the
Duke, who, in 1846, in his room at Apsley House, was
looking alternately on the scaffolding of his rising
effigy and the newspaper protests against its situation.
Wyatt's colossal work had just been hoisted after the
interior of the horse had been used as a dining-room
by a dozen of the sculptor's congratulatory friends,
John Wilson Croker said, *'As soon as it was there,
everybody but the great Duke seems to have wished
it down again." His "everybody" included Queen
A WALK THROUGH EVERYMAN'S LONDON 217
Victoria and Prince Albert. The agitation was galling
to the Duke, whose feelings can be gauged from these
sentences in a letter to Croker : ^* They must be idiots
to suppose that is possible that a man who is working
day and night without any object in view, excepting
public benefit, will not be sensible of a disgrace in-
flicted upon him by the Sovereign and Government
whom he is serving. The ridicule will be felt, if
nothing else is." In the end the Duke's known
wishes were respected, and the statue remained to be
a mark for jesters and caricaturists down to 1884.
Then the opportunity occurred, and was taken, to get
rid of an " eyesore." Eyesore or not, the statue had
filled the Londoner's eye, and people had liked to show
their country cousins that the setting sun cast the
shadow of the effigy on Apsley House.
The most famous private mansion in London is not
quite what it seems. The stone of Apsley House en-
cases the brick of the mansion which Lord Chancellor
Bathurst erected in 1784, after some difficult negotia-
tions with an old woman who defended her interest
in an apple-stall erected on this spot. The old brick
front is recalled by Thackeray in ^^ Vanity Fair '' :
^* And the carriage drove on, taking the road down
Piccadilly, where Apsley House and St. George's
Hospital wore red jackets still ; where there were
oil-lamps ; where Achilles was not born, nor the
Pimlico arch raised." Where, also, the toll-gate still
obstructed the entry into London.
CHAPTER IX
THE STREET OF THE READY WRITERS
The Lions of Fleet Street— Button's— The Shops of Yesterday— The
Hamiltonian System — The First Pillar-box — The Tomb of Richardson
— " The Fruits of Experience " — The Age of the Free and Easy — The
Bankrupt Silversmith — A Candle-snuffing Expert — A Great Day in
Fleet Street — The Heme Hill Philosopher — Peele's Coffee-house and
a Tragedy — " Sat cito, si sat bene" — Hardham's Snuif — The Doctor in
Gough Square — A Guinea a Thousand Words — "Where's the Book ? "
— " Rasselas "—The " Cheshire Cheese " Tradition— Wine and Wit -
"The Anak of Publishers "—" Childe Harold"— An Angry Poet-
Byron's London — The Literary Life.
YEARS ago I remarked to Hewson, "What a
wonderful book could be written about Fleet
Street 1" We had just left Groom's.
* Yes, if you will leave out Dr. Johnson."
" The Hamlet of Fleet Street ? "
" No, no, the Polonius. He should be kept behind
the arras. A book on Fleet Street minus the Doctor,
and Nell Gwynn, and Will Waterproof, and Mrs.
Salmon's Waxworks, and Nando's, and Dick's might
be worth reading."
"But what is left?"
" Ah, my young friend, stand still. Here 1 This is
Clifford's Passage. Forty years ago this wall was the
window of Button's cook-shop. It curved round the
corner with lots of window-panes. I used to gaze
8I8
THE STREET OF THE READY WRITERS 219
in and see the barristers gulping soup and ices. I
remember the warm waft from the door, Uke my
grandmother's breath. And they write books about
* Ye Marigold ' and the great Lexicographer, confound
him!"
"You have the advantage of me. You remember
another Fleet Street ? "
"Another ! You can have no idea how the street
has changed. To-day it is all for men in a hurry.
The picture and print-shops, the silversmiths', the
ironmongers ', are gone. I remember the time when
kitchen shopping was done in Fleet Street. And my
mother bought many a lace and veil at Speare's, next
to Gosling & Sharp's Bank — Barclay's now. There
is not a grocer or baker left in Fleet Street, but
in the fifties you could fill your larder. Perhaps there
was no butcher, but there was little Davis, a game and
poultry man ; his shop was below the ^ Cheshire Cheese,'
There were cosy confectioners', and a fishmonger named
Willows, I think, close to Bride Lane. Waithman's
shawl warehouse — it was the Shawl Age — was there
too, though Waithman was dead and obelisked. I am
talking of the forties, when the newspaper offices were
the seasoning, not the dish. I remember that cricket-
bats and fishing-rods and bows and arrows were sold
in a pretty big shop on the spot where the ^ Daily
Telegraph ' office stands. There was then a milliner's
at the corner of Bouverie Street, and at the ^ Daily
Chronicle' office corner Crutchley sold his maps. I
don't recommend Crutchley's maps of London now."
"Any book-shops ?"
"A few — Noble's, for one ; and there was another
I like to remember. It gave me one of those fillips
to learning that are so good, though they come to
nothing. It was Souter's, two or three doors from
220 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Shoe Lane. Souter's existed mainly to deal in the
Hamiltonian system of learning languages. You
never heard of that dodge ? "
" I think not."
"Well, the idea was a little too simple. Hamilton,
who, I believe, had a curious career, printed Greek,
Latin, French, and German classics with interlinear
translations. You read the French line and found
beneath it, in smaller type, the literal English equi-
valent. And so you went on ; no grammar to vex
you, no dictionary needed, and no teacher. You
began to read Cicero or Racine as if to the manner
born. I remember the autumn evening when the
idea glued me to Souter's window. I forget how I
raised the shillings, but soon afterwards I bought
three little books — ^^sop's Fables' in Latin, some
French story or other, and a German Gospel of St.
John — and carried them home to Brixton. That night
I took all knowledge for my province. I remember
that my mother reproved my father for laughing at
me. In a week I was suffering from polyglot dyspepsia,
and I am afraid I got nothing else from the Hamilton
system."
'*Goon."
** Well, you must imagine Fleet Street without plate-
glass. When I was a boy there was hardly a sheet,
and if the rows of small-pane windows and old bow-
windows could be seen to-day we should treasure
them like pictures in the National Gallery. I notice
that the new architects are bringing them back. I
think I was a lad of fifteen when a great talk was made
about a shop-window in Ludgate Hill. It was raised
to include the first floor in a manner that was unheard
of then, but common now, and ugly always. Another
hing I remember is the first London pillar-box. It
THE STREET OF THE READY WRITERS 221
was put up at Ludgate Circus, outside Cook's, in 1855.
It was a squat affair with a kind of teapot knob on the
top of it. Only letters could be posted. A notice
told you that newspapers posted there would not be
forwarded."
Thus my old friend would talk, recovering his
youth from sites and objects. He did not utter all
his thoughts, but he was oddly scornful of book topo-
graphy, hackneyed associations, and the pilgrimage
fever. I rose in his esteem when I told him that in
twelve years of London life I had not been to the
Tower. And he was mightily amused one night when
I told him (we were passing St. Bride's Church) how
Madame de Stael blundered in her quest of the grave
of Samuel Richardson. It is one of James Smith's
stories and crops up in his entertaining hotch-potch,
" Grimm's Ghost." Madame de Stael, according to the
veracious Smith, came to London in a high fever to
prostrate herself on the tomb of Richardson. It was
to be her first act in London. She had hardly
deposited her trunks and bandboxes at the Golden
Cross Hotel when she asked the waiter in her over-
whelming way if he could direct her to the tomb of
Richardson. It was a drizzling November afternoon.
The old waiter was nonplussed by the lady's demand,
but it flashed on him that it must be Richardson, the
tavern-keeper in Covent Garden. Yet no, the man
could hardly be dead since he had sold him the
sixteenth part of a lottery-ticket in the week before.
It must be Richardson, of Richardson & Goodmell,
the big lottery agents in Cornhill, who had drawn the
great blank.
Away in a hackney-coach went the great lady to
Cornhill, and pushed into the office, where a clerk was
spreading eighths and sixteenths of lottery-tickets
222 A LONDONER'S LONDON
before a couple of servant-girls. Seeing a managerial
person, she asked imperiously to be directed to the
tomb of Richardson.
"The tomb of Richardson, madam? Bless me!
he's just off to Clapham Rise in Butler's coach.
What Richardson do you mean ? "
"The divhiB Richardson."
" Divine I Oh, he's a divine ? Well, I don't know ;
you had better ask the bookseller over the way."
Here, on explaining that she sought the grave of
the author of "Clarissa," she was directed to St.
Bride's Church in Fleet Street. Back through Cheap-
side and Ludgate Hill her coach drove like a fire-
engine to Fleet Street, where she called the sexton
from his glass of toddy. He took his lantern into the
nave, where he rolled up certain matting on the floor
and at last disclosed, underneath it, a slab nearly as
large as a billiard-table. Down went madam on her
knees, gurgling Je t'adore in the dust that almost hid
from her eyes the tomb of Richardson.
I am sure, from his never quoting it, that my old
friend had not read a book about Fleet Street which
actually did leave out Dr. Johnson — all but his name.
Doubtless many a book-hunter has passed it over,
seeing in its title, "The Fruits of Experience," a
suggestion of sermons or early Victorian piety. Its
only begetter, Mr. Joseph Brasbridge, was a silver-
smith at No. 98 Fleet Street, two or three doors east
of St. Bride's Avenue. He wrote his singular book in
the cottage at Heme Hill, to which he retired after a
business career that was marred by an early bankruptcy,
brought about by his festive and social weaknesses.
As a picture of shopkeeping life in the early years
of the nineteenth century, and of the social recreations
of City tradesmen, Brasbridge's book has singular
THE STREET OF THE READY WRITERS 223
value, though I will not say, with the *' Gentleman's
Magazine" of 1824, that it is better calculated to benefit
our species than all the romances of Scott. It is
embellished with portraits of its author and of his
friend and generous helper, Mr. John Pridden, the
Fleet Street bookseller. Dr. Johnson had still eight
years to live in Bolt Court when young Mr. Brasbridge
lost his first wife. After this calamity he turned to
dissipation, acting on his friend Charles Bannister's
reply to a person, who said, " You will ruin your con-
stitution by sitting up at nights." "Oh," said the
actor, '* you do not know the nature of my constitu-
tion ; I sit up at night to watch it and keep it in repair
whilst you are sleeping carelessly in bed." It was the
age of the "free and easy," the prize-ring, and the
dog-cart. Brasbridge confesses : " I divided my time
between the tavern club, the card-party, the hunt, the
fight, and left my shop to be looked after by others
whilst I decided on the respective merits of Humphries
and Mendoza, Johnson and Big Ben."
At the Highflyer Club, held at the Turf Coffee-
house, the young silversmith met such choice spirits
as the actor Whitfield, "a kind and social soul" ; Mr.
Colburn of the Treasury, " whose every look inspired
cheerfulness and good humour " ; Bob Tetherington,
" as merry a fellow as ever sat in a chair " ; and Mr.
Owen, the confectioner, " a gentleman of considerable
accomplishment and talent."
Nothing better illustrates the changes which rail-
ways and suburbs have wrought on Fleet Street than
the number of snug gatherings which Joseph the
silversmith found near his door. Between Cheapside
and the Strand he had need to walk only a few
yards from one circle of vastly agreeable citizens to
another. At the Crown and Rolls Tavern in
2 24 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Chancery Lane, where card-parties were the order
of the evening, he was pleased to hob-and-nob with
Mr. Richard Ramsbottom, the eminent brewer and
distiller, who " had more of the suaviter in modo
than any man I have met with." This statement
seems to beggar praise rather early in the book, but
to turn over Brasbridge's pages is to realize that
language could not cope with all the varieties of
Fleet Street affability.
In St. Paul's Churchyard our silversmith was
richly at home at the "Free and Easy under the
Rose," held at the *^ Queen's Arms." This had been
one of Johnson's haunts, but now — relieved of that
awful presence — it was the nightly haven of Mr.
Hawkins, the highly respectable spatterdash-maker
of Chancery Lane ; Mr. Draper, the bookseller ;
Mr. Clutterbuck, the amiable mercer ; and also of
Mr. Darwin, churchwarden of St. Mildred's, and Mr.
Figgins, the wax-chandler, of Poultry, who were so
inseparable that Mr. Brasbridge, in an abandon of
wit, nicknamed them " Liver and Gizzard," by which
names they were most cheerfully known in the club-
room ever after.
But the junto of juntos was that which met at the
Globe Tavern in Fleet Street. It stood on the ground
now overshadowed by the offices of the " Daily
Telegraph." There, under the chandeliers of the
cotfee-room, or in a snug box in the bar, sat the
silversmith who made spoons for Archbishop Moore
and forks for His Grace of Argyll.
" I often spent my evenings," he tells us, " at the
Globe Tavern in Fleet Street. Mr. P. the surgeon
was regular in his attendance there, and as he lived
on the opposite side of the water, and Blackfriars
Bridge was not then erected, he continually had to
THE STREET OF THE READY WRITERS 225
take a boat, very late at night, at the certain expense
of three or four shillings, and the risk of his life
into the bargain. When the bridge was built, how-
ever, he grumbled at having to pay a penny for
crossing it, though he saved both his silver and his
person by the exchange of the boat for the bridge.
Among the company at the 'Globe' was Archibald
Hamilton, the printer, with a mind fit for a Lord
Chancellor ; also Mr. Thomas Carnan, the bookseller,
who brought an action against the Stationers' Com-
pany for the privilege of printing almanacs ;
Dunstall, the comedian, famous for his song in
* Love in a Village,' and as delightful a companion
in a private room as he was amusing on the stage.
Also the veteran Macklin, who, when the company
were disputing on the mode of spelling the name
Shakespeare, was referred to by Billy Upton, a good-
tempered fellow, with a remarkably gruff voice, the
loudest tones of which he put forth as he observed,
'There is a gentleman present who can set us to
rights ! ' then, turning to Macklin, he said, ' Pray,
sir, is it Shakespeare or Shaksper ? ' ' Sir,' said Macklin,
' I never give any reply to a thunderbolt.' Another
of the frequenters of the Globe Tavern was Akerman,
the keeper of Newgate, a humane and social man,
and one of those careful personages who always
thought it most prudent not to venture home till
daylight. Mr. William Woodfall, the reporter of the
parliamentary debates, was also frequently with us."
It is not, perhaps, surprising that of the three
hundred pages of the " Fruits of Experience " only the
first eighty-six are required to introduce the author's
bankruptcy. After giving up every farthing Mr. Bras-
bridge found himself in debt to the amount of ;£2oo
and in enmity with various creditors and assignees,
Q
126 A LONDONER'S LONDON
His lease fell into the hands of another silversmith,
and with it not a little of his custom. But a large
measure of help and esteem was left to the amateur
viveur, and a signal act of kindness was done him
by Mr. John Pridden, the bookseller, who gave up
his shop to enable Brasbridge to carry on business
next door to his old premises, now in the hands of
a rival. Happily, the bankrupt's enemies were not
those of his own household. A good second wife
and a charming daughter stood by him, and endured
with patience his rhetoric of disappointment. What
this was like appears in this daughter's excuse for
not accompanying her father on one occasion up
the river to Chelsea. " I knew," she said to her
mother, "that we should have father all the way
recounting 'how his cart had broken down, and his
little barque had struck upon the rocks of Scylla,' and
therefore I begged leave to decline the voyage."
Mr. Brasbridge's observations, rather than his own
doings, give interest to his book. He mentions that
Mr. John Threlfall, of Fleet Street, whose daughter
married Dr. Abernethy, was so athletic that he could
leap over the New River. The lighting of eighteenth-
century taverns by candles must have presented diffi-
culties, but Brasbridge mentions that Mr. Kenton,
the landlord of the Crown and Magpie Tavern in
Whitechapel, understood the problem. He had a
peculiar facility in snuffing candles, and kept two
constantly burning at his side. Having lighted all
the candles in the tavern together, he knew by
watching these when to run round the rooms snuffing
all the rest.
It appears that the art of advertisement writing,
now so well understood in Fleet Street, was not
unborn. Brasbridge's own advertisements in the
THE STREET OF THE READY WRITERS 227
^'St. James's Chronicle" were written for him by
that "elegant writer and admired preacher," the
Reverend Dr. Cosens ; and Mr. Henry Baldwin, the
proprietor of the paper (" my friend Harry ") usually
placed them near the poetry corner, where they
attracted the notice of beneficed clergy, and brought
them as good customers to 98 Fleet Street.
Brasbridge's pages have only a slight Johnsonian
interest. Mrs. Piozzi would put her head into his
shop on her way to Bolt Court. She particularly
admired a stock of papier-mache tea-trays, then
newly invented by Mr. Clay of Covent Garden. They
were adorned with Etruscan figures. Clay made a
fortune of ^80,000 out of these trays, some of
which were painted by well-known artists and Royal
Academicians.
Having cured his own extravagances, Mr. Brasbridge
was human enough to chastise those of his age. He
says that in his later years malt liquors had disap-
peared from the dinner-table in favour of claret at
five shillings a bottle. Next to foreign wines he
reprobates foreign music : " I am of the old school,
and even at this moment the pure English accents
of Charles Bannister, in his excellent song, ^ Merry
is the hall where beards wag all,' vibrate on my ear,
and gladden my heart with many a recollected scene
of harmless festivity. I will defy any Italian opera
to produce on the town that real feeling of delight
with which * Love in a Village ' was received on its
first appearance, or any Italian signor to bring out
shakes and quavers equal to the unlaboured graces
of John Beard, in his song of * Why, neighbour,
ne'er blush for a trifle like this.'"
In the end, bereaved of his children, but blest with
a competence, and retaining many friends, Joseph
22$ A LONDONER'S LONDON
Brasbridge retired to his cottage at Heme Hill, where
he drank beer at table, played cribbage with his old
wife in the evenings, and went to bed at ten on a
pipe and a single glass of grog. In the morning he
watched his rich neighbours roll past to the City in
their carriages. Now and then he went up in the
stage-coach, talking with his rich friend, Mr. Blades,
of Ludgate Hill, to whom he confessed that he was
overawed at Heme Hill by so many rich neighbours.
" You show the awe you stand in by laughing at us,"
was the thrusting reply.
Peele's Coffee-house does not figure in Brasbridge's
list of Fleet Street nooks ; its literary atmosphere was
probably too dense for him. Peele's is still repre-
sented by the tavern at the foot of Fetter Lane.
Here law and literature met to read the news. The
place dated from the days of George I, and was
famous for its files of newspapers, the best outside
the British Museum. Among those who searched
them were the Duke of Wellington, Lord Macaulay,
Dickens, William Cobbett, and Douglas Jerrold. The
collection included files of the '* London Gazette "
(from 1759), " The Times " (from 1780), and the ** Morn-
ing Herald," " Morning Chronicle," and " Morning
Advertiser." When newspapers became cheap Peele's
was of less account as a news-room. A writer in
** Notes and Queries " desired to know what became
of the collection. I can account for a good many
copies of Peele's set of the " Gentleman's Magazine " ;
these are now in my possession and in an advanced
state of disjunction.
Establishments of the kind have survived to recent
years ; there was a news-room half-way down Fleet
Street, on the north side, twenty years ago, affording
SI view of a wonderful amateur roof-garden on the
THE STREET OF THE READY WRITERS 229
other side of the street ; another for country and
colonial newspapers in New Oxford Street ; and in
the chess-room of old Simpson's (closed in 1903 to
make way for the new restaurant) there was a collec-
tion of bound magazines of the good old sort.
A tragic death occurred at Peele's on 15 June, 1848.
Thomas Steele, known as " Honest Tom Steele," had
thrown himself into the Thames from Waterloo Bridge.
He was the trusted friend and political aide-de-camp
of O'Connell, by whom he was appointed " Head
Pacificator" of Ireland, in spite of his hot and
quixotic temperament. When O'Connell's brother
was asked, ^' Why did Dan make a semi-lunatic his
head pacificator ? " he answered, " Why, indeed !
Pray, who the devil else would take such a position ? "
Steele was a Protestant, but his devotion to O'Connell
was such that he kept an altar in his house against
his visits. He once fought a duel on his behalf. He
wore out his health and fortune in the cause of the
repeal of the Union ; but after O'Connell's death
he was unable to " pacificate " his own heart and the
world about him, and the evil day came when he
betook himself to the Bridge of Sighs. The Thames
waters did not quite drown him, but he died at Peele's
Coffee-house, loved and lamented by men of all
shades of opinion.
Outside Peele's an interesting scramble occurred on
a day in 1766. A sedan-chair met a crowd at the
corner ; there was a scuffle as to who should turn up
Fetter Lane first ; the sedan was upset ; and two
personable youths were tumbled in the roadway. One
was William Scott, afterwards Lord Eldon, the other
John Scott, afterwards Lord Stowell. William had
come up to London from Newcastle to meet his
brother, who was to induct him at Oxford. The coach
230 A LONDONER'S LONDON
that carried him up bore the motto, Sat ciio, si sat bene
(Soon enough, if but well enough). Lord Eldon long
afterward recalled these words, which had been graven
on his memory by an incident at the inn at Tuxford.
A Quaker in the coach called a chambermaid to the
door and gave her sixpence, explaining that he forgot
to give it to her when he was there two years before.
Amazed by this precision, young Scott had the shrewd
impudence to say, " Friend, have you seen the motto
on this coach?" ^^ No." *'Then look at it; for I
think giving her only sixpence now is neither sat cito
nor sat bene." When the sedan-chair upset in Fleet
Street, Scott made his ^rst application of his newly
acquired wisdom. " This, thought I, is more than sat
citOf and it certainly is not sat bene." And he adds :
'Mn all that I have had to do, in future life, professional
and judicial, I have always felt the effect of this early
admonition on the panels of the vehicle which con-
veyed me from school." Old Fetter Lane, as Eldon
knew it in 1766, and Coleridge fifty years later, and
Samuel Butler in our own time (he was " especially
prone to get ideas " there), has lost a certain Praise-
God-Barebones atmosphere of schism and conven-
ticle, though the little Moravian church survives.
Gone is the old White Horse coaching inn and its
neighbour houses, a beautiful seventeenth century
group, and the ghostly little house on the east side,
near Fleet Street, which pretended to have been a
home of John Dryden.
Among old Fleet Street shops none is more famous
than Hardham's snuff-shop. It was No. 106, close to
Ludgate Circus, and here was sold the snuff whose
merits Garrick puffed on the stage at Drury Lane. This
was known as " No. 37." For many years Hardham
counted the "pit" for Garrick, and by his punctuality
THE STREET OF THE READY WRITERS 231
and carefulness won the great man's friendship. So
one story runs ; but there are others. Foote is also
named as the author of the puff. Another Highlander
stood outside Micklan's snuff-shop at No. 12 Fleet
Street. It was damaged one night by a young roy-
sterer, who was sued by Mr. Micklan for thirteen
guineas in compensation. This, he said, was a moder-
ate demand, because without the Highlander he would
not have done more than half his business, and his
takings had increased by thirty shillings a day since he
installed the figure. To-day there is no Highlander on
Fleet Street, and this great race is dying out. The
father of London's wooden Highlanders was placed
outside Wishart's snuff-shop at the north-east corner
of the Haymarket on the dry of the birth of Charles
Edward Stuart in 1720. At a later period Wishart's
was removed to No. 42, over the way, where it
flourished under the sign of " The Highlander,
Thistle, and Crown." Wishart's is now in Panton
Street. David Wishart not only initiated this sign,
but he manufactured wooden Highlanders for other
tradesmen. The Wishart Highlander, still depicted
on the firm's card, does not wear kilts, but doublet
and trews, and he carries the Highland targe. It is
said, but probably with little foundation, that these
Highlander figures were a token that the houses they
adorned sympathized with the Jacobite party.
The sign of the Highlander spread quickly through
the London snuff-shops, and nowhere was more
honoured than at Hardham's. According to the author
of ^' Real Life in London," this snuff-seller's fame
was established in the Haymarket by Samuel Foote,
who, in one of his most popular characters at
the Little Theatre, offered a pinch of snuff, and to the
question where he obtained it replied, '^ Why at Hard-
232 A LONDONER'S LONDON
ham's, to be sure." Hardham died in 1772, and left
a fortune exceeding ;^2o,ooo.
I am told that the true reason for the mortality
among wooden Highlanders is to be found in the
cost of their upkeep. The price of a new figure is
very considerable. It must be carved out of a single
piece of wood. To repaint a Highlander well and
correctly is the work of a skilled artist, and would cost
about ;£20. When this expenditure has been necessary,
many a tobacconist has considered that he could lay
out the money to better if less picturesque advantage.
Dr. Johnson's memory, pace my old friend, has
entered into the air of Fleet Street ; we smell him
in the dark. And London has lately shown that she
is not tired of his domination of her *' highway of
letters." His statue now looks down the street, and
his house has become a secure shrine. Could the
doctor return to its glimpses he would be staggered
by the " fury of innovation " which has now removed
Temple Bar, as in his own day it removed Tyburn.
Yet his eye, roaming down the old long vista, would
soon be dim with recognition : the Middle Temple
Gateway, the old curve and gradient, some of the
houses, nearly all the courts and alleys, and the
farrago of roofs lifting the eye to the Dome and Cross,
would assure him of his " daily walks and ancient
neighbourhood."
It is by one of the happiest of fates that the house
in which Johnson compiled his Dictionary, wrote his
"Rambler" essays, and dreamed and wrote " Rasselas,"
should stand to-day in the literary maelstrom of
London. This sturdy old building, which was in
danger of demolition some years ago, is now to be
filled with relics, and with echoes of Johnson's fame.
It is more than his workshop ; it is the empty
THE OLD WHITE HORSE INN, FETTER LANE
GONE IS THE OLD WHITE HORSE COACHING INN AND ITS NEIGHHOUR HOUSES,
A BEAUTIFUL SEVENTEENTH CENTUKY GKOUI" (l'. 230)
THE STREET OF THE READY WRITERS 233
nest of his vexed home Hfe, and the tomb of his
greatest devotion. One cannot enter it without
recalling the stately, pragmatical lady who " desired
the praise of neatness in her dress and furniture, as
many ladies do, till they become troublesome to their
best friends, slaves to their own besoms, and only sigh
for the hour of sweeping their husbands out of the
house as dirt and lumber." Mrs. Piozzi asked Johnson
whether he ever disputed with his wife. He answered,
" Perpetually." And did he ever huff his wife ? ^' So
often that at last she called to me, and said, ' Nay,
hold, Mr. Johnson, and do not make a farce of thanking
God for a dinner which in a few minutes you will pro-
test is not eatable ! ' " But when Tettie died, and he
had laid her in Bromley Church, Johnson put up a
fervent prayer that the wife who had ruffled him for
forty years might be permitted to influence him in his
dreams.
Although he wrote his ^' Ramblers " here, there, and
everywhere, many of them were written in the Gough
Square house. Their success was not great. Johnson
received four guineas a week for two essays — a rate of
payment which works out at about a guinea the
thousand words. The sales, at twopence a number,
did not reach five hundred copies a day; but Mrs.
Johnson, when she read them, was less inclined to
regard her lord as lumber. " I thought very well of
you before," she said, " but I did not imagine you could
have written anything equal to this." Nor did he lack
self-approval. He said to a friend, ^' My other works
are wine and water, but my * Rambler ' is pure wine."
Another literary undertaking and another great
sorrow marked Johnson's residence in Gough Square.
As early as 1744 he had projected an annotated edition
of Shakespeare. Now, in 1756, well rid of his Die-
234 A LONDONER'S LONDON
tionary, he decided to resume this task, and he there-
fore issued his ^' Proposals " with all circumstance.
He announced, as it were with tucked wrist-bands,
that the edition would be ready by the Christmas of
the following year. It was not completed in less than
nine years. Boswell thinks that it was Churchill's
satire that at last spurred the unwilling horse to his
journey's end. On the whole it was calculated to
do so : —
He for subscribers bates his hook,
And takes your cash ; but where's the book ?
Johnson's last year in Gough Square was clouded by
the death of his mother, at the age of ninety. In the
"Idler" (No. 41), which he had begun to issue as a
weekly paper, he referred to this event in those words
of sombre beauty, beginning : " The last year, the last
day, must come. It has come and is past. The life
which made my own life pleasant is at an end, and
the gates of death are shut upon my prospects." It
was not literally so. Johnson lived for another quarter
of a century, and grew in Chamship and wisdom.
And, indeed, this bereavement immediately set him
to write " Rasselas," if only to relieve his heart and to
pay his mother's funeral expenses.
It is constantly stated that " Rasselas" was written
in Staple Inn. But that honour belongs to Fleet
Street. On 23 March, 1759, Johnson wrote to his
step-daughter. Miss Lucy Porter, " I have this day
moved my things and you are now to direct to me at
Staple Inn, London. ... I am going to pubHsh a
little story-book which I will send you when it is out."
We know that " Rasselas " was published " in March
or .April " of this year 1759. If it was published in
THE STREET OF THE READY WRITERS 235
March there is an end to doubt, because after the date
of Johnson's entry into Staple Inn (23 March), there
remained only eight days in this month for the com-
pletion of the story by himself and its issue by the
publishers — an impossibility that is not seriously
diminished if we grant that publication might have
taken place at the end of April. For this is to allow
only five weeks, at the most, for the completion of the
story by Johnson, his negotiations with the three
booksellers who joined to buy it, and the printing and
production of the book. That this unanimous haste
was used is incredible. We know, by Johnson's state-
ment to Sir Joshua Reynolds, that ^' Rasselas " was
written in the evenings of one week, and that it went
to press in portions as it was written. Those topo-
graphers, therefore, who suggest that " parts " of
^'Rasselas" were written in Staple Inn are asserting
that Johnson wrote his story in the six evenings of the
week in which he removed from Gough Square (after
ten years' residence) to his chambers in Staple Inn ;
wrote, that is to say, some of its chapters in the
turmoil of his departure from Fleet Street and the rest
in the turmoil of his arrival in Holborn. That is
incredible. And Johnson's words to Lucy Potter, " I
am going to publish," etc., indicate that the story was
already written. It is not unimportant to establish the
fact that " Rasselas " was written in this old red-brick
house, in the pocket of silence which is Gough Square.
There from night to night the pilgrimage progressed ;
there Imlac grew eloquent and Pequah timid ; the
Pyramids were measured, and the Astronomer rescued
from the mists of a distraught imagination ; and there,
it may be, when the midnight stroke of St. Paul's put
its melancholy atcent on a theme as old as man and
elusive as his breath, Johnson penned that quiet
236 A LONDONER'S LONDON
" Conclusion in which nothing is concluded/' save
only that '^ they deliberated a while what was to be
done, and resolved, when the inundation should cease,
to return to Abissinia."
The claims of the Cheshire Cheese Tavern to be
venerated as a haunt of Dr. Johnson are often ad-
vanced and questioned. I know of only two sources
for the tradition, and they are both weak : Cyrus
Redding's "Fifty Years' Recollections," published in
1858, and Cyrus Jay's reminiscences, published in
1868. All the evidence comes from the two Cyruses.
Cyrus Jay's book, " The Law : What I Have Seen,
What I Have Heard, and What I Have Known," was
published in 1867. In it he writes : '^ I may here
mention that when I first visited the house I used to
meet several very old gentlemen who remembered
Dr. Johnson nightly at the ^Cheshire Cheese'; and they
have told me, what is not generally known, that the
Doctor, whilst living in the Temple, always went to
the * Mitre' or the Essex Head ; but when he removed
to Gough Square and Bolt Court he was a constant
visitor to the * Cheshire Cheese,' because nothing but a
hurricane would have induced him to cross Fleet Street."
It is curious that Cyrus Jay should write (in 1867)
that Johnson's connection with the "Cheshire Cheese"
"is not generally known," for nine years earlier, in
1858, the other Cyrus — Redding — had written : " I
often dined at the * Mitre ' and the * Cheshire Cheese.'
Johnson and his friends, I was informed, used to do
the same, and I was told I should see individuals who
had met them there ; and this I found to be correct."
So the Johnsonian tradition was fairly "generally
known " in 1857. However, it is very similarly
recorded by the two Cyruses. But Jay ought to
have demurred to his ancient friends' statement that
THE STREET OF THE READY WRITERS 237
Johnson went to the ''Cheshire Cheese" ''because
nothing but a hurricane would have induced him to
cross Fleet Street." A hurricane, by the way, would
rather have kept him on his own side of it ; and if the
word be only a metaphor, we know as a fact that
Johnson was for ever crossing Fleet Street long after
he went to live in Gough Square and Bolt Court. He
lived in Gough Square from 1748 to 1758 ; then he
left Fleet Street, to return to it in 1765, never to leave
it again, except to travel, until his death in 1784. Not
once is the " Cheshire Cheese " mentioned by Boswell,
who does, however, record many visits to the " Mitre," to
reach which tavern Johnson had to cross Fleet Street
— hurricane or no hurricane. The old gentlemen had
better not have given a reason for their story.
Tennyson was not the first poet who quaffed wine
in Fleet Street and felt the better for it. In the
innumerable references to the Devil Tavern I find
much about Ben Jonson, and the Apollo room, and
Ben's "Leges Conviviales" in gold letters over the
chimney-piece, but the richest Jonsonian tribute to the
wine here is omitted. It is found in a manuscript
preserved at Dulwich College, in which Ben carefully
notes the occasions when his Muse " smote her life
into the liquor," and one or two when she did not.
Says he : —
" Mem. I laid the plot of my ' Volpone ' and wrote
most of it after a present of ten dozen of Palm Sack,
from my very good Lord T ; that play, I am
positive, will last to posterity, and be acted when I and
Envoy be friends, with applause.
" Mem, The first speech in my Catiline, spoken by
Scylla's ghost, was writ after I parted with my friends
at the Devil Tavern ; I had drunk well that night and
had brave notions. There is one scene in that play
238 A LONDONER'S LONDON
which I think is flat. / resolve to drink no more water
with my wine,
^^ Mem, Upon the 20th of May the King (Heaven
reward him) sent me a hundred pounds. At that time
I went oftentimes to the Devil ; and before I spent forty
of it, wrote my * Alchemist.'
** Mem, My Lord B took me with him into the
country ; there was great plenty of excellent Canary.
A new character offered itself to me here ; upon which
1 wrote my * Silent Woman ' ; my lord was highly
delighted ; and upon my reading the first act to him,
made me a noble present, ordering at the same time a
good portion of the wine to be sent with me to
London. It lasted me until my work was finished.
''Mem, 'The Divill is no Asse,' the 'Tale of a
Tub,' and some other comedies which did not
succeed, by me in the winter honest Ralp died ; when
I and my boys drank had wine at the Devil."
A third poet who loved good wine sent his poetry to
Fleet Street to be published. Keats's friends, Taylor
and Hessey, had their office at No. 93, and thither,
piece by piece, went the manuscript and corrections of
'* Endymion."
But the most splendid poetic event, and the most
forgotten, in Fleet Street's annals occurred a hundred
years ago. On i March, 1812, "Childe Harold " was
published at 32 Fleet Street. Thither John Murray
the First had come from the Navy to publish books.
If he could have had his way he would have set up
bookselling in partnership with another son of
Neptune, William Falconer of " Shipwreck " fame.
As it was, in November, 1768, he sent out his mani-
festos and invoices adorned with a ship in full sail.
The full sail was a little premature, for he had often to
reef his canvas.
THE STREET OF THE READY WRITERS 239
Murray was the link between two ages of literature
and two phases of Fleet Street. He knew Johnson
and his son published for Byron. One December day
in 1784 he stood bareheaded to see Johnson's funeral
go by. His simple and solemn record gives one the
"historic shudder." "Poor Dr. Johnson's remains
passed my door for interment this afternoon. They
were accompanied by thirteen mourning-coaches with
four horses each ; and after these a cavalcade of the
carriages of his friends. He was about to be buried in
Westminster Abbey."
John Murray the Second, the " Anak of Publishers,"
was established at 32 Fleet Street, with its side-door
in Falcon Court, in 1794. Here he entered into rela-
tions with Constable and Sir Walter Scott, and here
he forged that bomb for the Whigs, the " Quarterly
Review." The pavement of Falcon Court has been
trodden by Sir Walter. One day in 1809 David
Wilkie, dining at Murray's, was introduced to the
author of " Marmion," to whose talk about the feudal
Highlanders he listened with rapture, and perhaps not
less intently to his recitation of Campbell's " Lochiel's
Warning."
The shop at No. 32 was in a turmoil on i Marcli,
1812. "Childe Harold "was being published. That
night Byron slept at his rooms at No. 8 St. James's
Street, over the chemist's shop, and on the morrow
(2 March) he awoke, as he said, to find himself
famous : " Childe Harold " was in every one's hand, in
every one's mouth. Sir Egerton Brydges, walking
down Bond Street, saw it in the windows of all the
booksellers. " I entered a shop and read a few
stanzas, and was not surprised to find something
extraordinary in them, because I myself had antici-
pated much from his ' Hours of Idleness.' . . . The
k
240 A LONDONER'S LONDON
affair of this mighty fame was an affair of a day — nay,
of an hour — minute. The train was laid ; it caught
fire, and it blazed. If it had missed fire at first, I
doubt if there would have been a second chance. It
began at noon ; before night the flame was strong
enough to be everlasting."
Moore tells of Byron's table being strewn with letters
from statesmen, great ladies, and unknown admirers,
and of the transformation of the poet's outlook on
London. *' In place of the desert which London had
been to him but a few weeks before, he now not only
saw the whole splendid interior of high life thrown
open to receive him, but found himself among its
illustrious crowds its most distinguished object."
Which of us has not given Byron that ovation in his
heart ?
It has not ill-happened that geography is now en-
throned at 32 Fleet Street, for "Childe Harold" is the
sublime of geography. Those shrine-worshippers who
demand evidence of Byron's visits to the house can
be satisfied. He would come straight from Angelo's
fencing-rooms and make lunges with his cane at
Murray's books. The act was typical of his entry
into literature and Fleet Street, for he came, not as
the scribes, but drenched in youth and the love of
life. When Miller had received the last manuscript
of Johnson's Dictionary from Fleet Street, and ex-
claimed '' Thank God ; I have seen the last of him 1 "
this was life groaning under the burden of literature.
When Murray said of Byron's incursions into his shop,
" I was often very glad to be rid of him," this was
literature disturbed by excess of life.
Byron hated the *' shop " and the cliquishness of the
literary system. He was furious when he learned that
Murray had shown his manuscript to Gifford of the
THE STREET OF THE READY WRITERS 241
" Quarterly " and other critical cronies. To Dallas he
wrote, ^* I will be angry with Murray. It was back-
shop, Paternoster Row, paltry proceeding" — this
reference of his manuscript to others — and he adds,
with an interesting touch, " If the experiment had
turned out as it deserved, I would have raised all
Fleet Street, and borrowed the giant's staff from
St. Dunstan's Church to immolate the betrayer of
trust."
It would be good to see on the front of 32 Fleet
Street a tablet recording the fact that this was the
birthplace, in the publishing sense, of the poem which
poured like fire over Europe, bearing Byron's name
from Fleet Street to the Acropolis. Howbeit the con-
nexion of Byron with Fleet Street has been celebrated
with zeal, though on a less suitable spot, by Sir J. Tol-
lemache Sinclair. At No. 85, on the same side as 32,
this gentleman has adorned the corridor of his pro-
perty, Byron House, wath marble tablets inscribed
with a veritable anthology of Byron's poetry, and with
a bust of the '' Pilgrim of Eternity." The quotations
include a couplet from the ^^ Hints from Horace,'' in
which the case for Byron will again and again be
found.
'Tis not enough, ye Bards, with all your art,
To polish poems ; — they must touch the heart.
Elsewhere in London Byron's memory has been
honoured. His house in St. James's Street and his
birthplace in Holies Street are marked with tablets.
His statue is in Hyde Park, oddly near to Londonderry
House, with its suggestions of Lord Castlereagh, whom
he hated, and facing the great social whirlpool which
he never wished to see again. His London haunts
have hardly changed. No. 4 Ben net Street, where he
242 A LONDONER'S LONDON
lodged, is still a lodging-house, and it is probable that
its very area railings are those he knew. His rooms
in the " Albany," from which he set out to be married,
and his house in Piccadilly, from which he set out to
exile and death, are still standing. Samuel Rogers'
house, where he first met Moore, and Murray's draw-
ing-room, where he first met Scott, are unchanged ;
and you may still walk the pavement in Albemarle
Street on which he paced to compose " The Corsair."
Hard by is the house that was Watier's Club, where
he was one of three men of letters who belonged
to that home of dancing and gaming. Everywhere
his footsteps are to be traced, and in going out of
London your eye may fall on the woods of Dulwich,
which he knew under Dr. Glennie, or on the spire of
Harrow Church, where he dreamed as a boy, and
where his daughter is buried.
Let Fleet Street, then, take dignity from Johnson
and glory from Byron. It is curious that Byron's
grandmother, Sophia Trevanion, knew Johnson and
was one of his favourites. In mentioning this, Mrs.
Piozzi adds her conviction (upon which there may be
two opinions) that the Doctor would have been glad
that his old friend's grandson was a poet. What John-
son would have thought of " Childe Harold " let
imaginative critics decide. What Byron thought of
Johnson may be discovered from his letters. " 'Tis a
grand poem, and so truCj" — he exclaimed on the "Vanity
of Human Wishes" — " true as the loth of Juvenal him-
self. The lapse of ages changes all things — time —
language — the earth — the bounds of the sea — the stars
of the sky, and everything 'above, around, and under-
neath ' man, except man himself, who has always been,
and always will be, an unlucky rascal."
Strange that the *' Highway of Letters " should have
THE STREET OF THE READY WRITERS 243
known these two men : the traditional author battling
for the dignity and rewards of literature, and the
favourite of the gods winning the game without a
thought of the rules. Strange that each should have
voiced that larger pessimism which sombres and does
not weaken. Yet it is to Johnson alone that Fleet
Street would talk of its troubles to-day. We cannot
confer with a comet, but under a planet we can live
and prophesy. Could Johnson revisit the glimpses of
Fleet Street, and be heard at the " Cheshire Cheese,"
what words should we hear across the sawdust ? I
suppose that nothing would amaze him more than the
inclusion of literature among the necessaries of life,
the openness of its doors, the abundance of its emolu-
ments and honours. He would find that hterature
had found its place in the sun. Would the spectacle
have fulfilled his hopes, or would the " Vanity of
Human Wishes' recur to him as an unfinished theme?
He would presently focus his attention on the forms
of literature and the classes of writers that he had
himself known and loved in Fleet Street ; he would
examine the position of the poet, the essayist, and the
scholar. Quickly he would make the discovery that
toil and want are still their frequent portion. He would
hear recent life-stories quite as poignant as those of
Savage and Collins. He would hear of pensions, and
despair. He would find that the public is now the
only patron, and would be amazed by his misgivings
on this subject. He would be baffled once more to
distinguish between the misfortunes and errors of
authors. And, finally, I trow he would convince
himself that beneath all that multiplication of books
and readers which he had desired, beneath all phe-
nomena of production and reward. Literature (as he
and Goldsmith understood it) remains a precarious
244 A LONDONER'S LONDON
profession, because it gives competence and security
to its followers only as the weather gives us a spell of
sunshine. We may observe and predict, but the old
uncertainty will return, the storms and frosts surprise
us, and the eternal variations of adjustment between
the brooding writer and the stressful world assert
themselves.
These unstable conditions are never left behind ;
they advance with the wave, being of the very character
of its motion. There will always be writers of poetry
and belles-lettres who cannot find enough readers.
This will be their misfortune ; but it will not be the
misfortune of literature; on the contrary, it will be its
dayspring and rebirth. A system that would prevent
it must kill literature by eliminating its inspirer —
struggle. Moreover, a society that could welcome
every attack on itself, abet every iconoclasm, and
applaud every dream that transcended and threatened
its own order, would be as temperamental as its
geniuses, and would dissolve in its own fluidity ; it
would hardly have need of formal literature.
Deep down in its heart Fleet Street knows that fine
literature is for a section of God's fools. The old con-
tempt of it, under which Johnson writhed, had that
much truth, just as the old pride which forbade the
author to take material reward on pain of social descent
had a sanction. I suppose that Byron was the last poet
who refused money in Fleet Street. He relented and
grew rich. We who affirm the dignity of letters with
Johnson, and the right to be fortunate with Byron,
will best preserve a sane courage if we remember that
in dismissing ancient prejudices we have not dismissed
the essential character of literature, which is a spiritual
activity seeking to establish spiritual contacts with the
world. Such an affair can lead to riches, or a com-
THE STREET OF THE READY WRITERS 245
petence, only through an affinity between the writer
and a large body of readers. If that does not exist he
may be able to create it by deflection and surrender.
Whether that is justified is a tragic question for many.
That such surrender is often justified, that it may be
free from all baseness, and that it is sometimes enjoined
by a prudence that ought to prevail, one cannot doubt
— any more than one can doubt that the refusal to
submit will ennoble idealists to the end of time.
But if the old shadows haunt the writer's path,
so do the old joys. He may exclaim on his work,
with Hazlitt, " What abortions are these Essays I
What errors, what ill-pieced transitions, what crooked
reasons, what lame conclusions ! How little is made
out, and that little how ill!" But if, with Hazlitt,
he can add, " Yet they are the best I can do," and
if memory restores to him the thrill of far intention
and the abandon of artistic purpose, he will not re-
frain from pride nor forget that he has travelled that
highway of letters along which Milton and Johnson
and Lamb have passed, as surely as he who walks
to Finchley is on the same road as he who arrives
at York.
CHAPTER X
"STEPPING WESTWARD''
The Great Chare— Optical Illusions— The Napoleon Legend— The
Second-hand Book Market — Every Book has its Buyer — The Super-
fluous Book — Georgius Tertius — The Nocturnal Remembrancer — The
Haymarket — Wordsworth at the Opera— G. A. S. — Pierce Egan —
Colonel Panton — The " Eidophusikon " — Snuff in excelsis — " Old
Nosey " — Jermyn Street and a Husband in Hiding — Carlyle in Regent
Street — •' Sartor Resartus" in Search of a Publisher — A *' Dog's-meat
Tart of a Magazine "—Talks at Eraser's- Edward FitzGerald —
Change for a Sovereign— The High Street of Mayfair— The Castle
of Indolence — Sterne's Death-bed — Gentleman Jackson — Park Lane —
The Tragedy of Camelford House — Lydia White — "Conversation"
Sharp — *' Dizzy always likes Lights " — " Mr. Sydney Smith is coming
Upstairs "
THE spot where Dr. Johnson thought he beheld
the full tide of human existence, and whose
centre Sir Robert Peel described as the finest
site in Europe, is a Chare or Charing, i.^., a turn or
turning. Charing Cross, in short, is the place adorned
with a memorial cross, at which the Thames makes a
great turning. For it is here that the river, which has
flowed in a northerly direction from Vauxhall and
under Westminster Bridge, resumes its eastward direc-
to the sea. This immense, unseen chare it is which
makes the geography of central London something of
a puzzle by setting many places on the north side of
the Thames south of places on the opposite bank. I
have rarely been able, without risk of personal damage,
246
"STEPPING WESTWARD" 247
and without the support of a map, to maintain that Hyde
Park Corner is a shade south of Waterloo Station.
It is good that London's centre should bear a name
of immemorial use and elemental origin. But the
place itself remains mysterious. If you wish to baffle
an old Londoner, ask him to direct you to No. 66
Charing Cross. For Charing Cross is not a street, nor
does it answer to any other convenient description.
It is a small district, of which probably not even an
individual postman holds the clue. No. i is discover-
able some distance down Northumberland Avenue.
No. 14 may be looked for, with a hope of success, in
Whitehall. No. 53 is in Spring Gardens, and the
higher numbers are in Cockspur Street. But all are
in Charing Cross.
Charing, in short, is still a scattered village, and
Trafalgar Square is its village green, with the Nelson
Column for its Maypole. But the place has suffered
two great changes : its ancient cross was removed two
and a half centuries ago, and Northumberland House
disappeared in 1874. The present cross in the Strand
forecourt of the railway-station is not fifty years old.
It was completed in 1865, from the design of Edward M.
Barry, A.R.A., who based his drawings on the very
imperfect and doubtful records of the original cross.
Its height from the ground to the gilt copper cross on
its summit is about 70 feet. The eight crowned statues
in the upper story are all representations of Queen
Eleanor, and the shields lower down are copied from
the Eleanor crosses at Northampton, Waltham, and
Westminster, and are full of interest. One of them is
the shield of Ponthieu.
The old cross stood on the ground now occupied
by the equestrian statue of Charles I. This was the
first equestrian statue ever seen in England. Cast in
248 A LONDONER'S LONDON
1633 ^I'oni the design of Hubert le Soeur, it was
buried during the Revolution, to be re-erected here
in 1674. The King's original sword and straps have
had to be replaced. On the night of 13 April, 1810,
these accoutrements fell from the statue. They are
said to have been picked up by a porter of the old
Golden Cross Hotel, named Moxam, and given into
the charge of Mr. Eyre, a neighbouring trunk-maker,
by whom they were made over to the Board of Green
Cloth, and were then replaced. Finally, they were
stolen from the statue either in 1844, when Queen
Victoria was on her way to open the Royal Exchange,
or in the Coronation crush of 1838. Both statements
are made.
This statue, and the lion on Northumberland House,
have afforded examples of the ease with which the
human mind may be misled. It has been stated that
Le Soeur blew out his brains on discovering that, with
all his striving after a masterpiece, he had forgotten to
give the King's horse a saddle-girth. Believing the
story, Londoners do not perceive that the saddle-
girth is there. Yet forty years ago they were able
to see the Percy lion wag its tail on Northumberland
House, when they had been told to expect the
phenomenon.
Another myth, or historical doubt, has its seat in
this region, and has been discussed with some warmth.
I refer to Napoleon's supposed secret visit to London,
in 1791 or 1792, and his taciturn appearances at the
Northumberland Cofifee-house, opposite Northumber-
land House. A recent newspaper correspondence was
enriched by an indirect opinion from Lord Rosebery,
and an interesting letter from the Right Honourable
John Burns. Lord Rosebery declared that he had
never heard of the rumour. Mr. Burns, on the other
"STEPPING WESTWARD" 249
hand, showed that the story was quoted before
1820.
The usual, but very insufficient, authority for the
story that Napoleon lodged in a house in George
Street, near the Adelphi, is John Timbs's ^^ Romance
of London," published in 1865, where we read: ^'It
is not generally known that the great Napoleon
Bonaparte lodged in a house in George Street, a
thoroughfare preserving the Duke's Christian name
(i.e., the name of George Villiers, Duke of Bucking-
ham, from whom Villiers Street also takes its name),
which extends from Duke Street to the Embankment.
Old Mr. Mathews, the bookseller of the Strand, used
to relate that he remembered the Corsican ogre
residing here for five weeks in 1791 or 1792, and
that he occasionally took his cup of chocolate at the
Northumberland Coffee-house, opposite Northumber-
land House : there he read much, and preserved a
provoking taciturnity towards the frequenters of the
coffee-room; though his manner was stern, his deport-
ment was that of a gentleman." George Street is now
merged in York Buildings, but the street practically
disappeared when the Embankment was formed.
And what of Mr. Mathews ? Mr. James Mathews
died on 19 September, 1804, aged sixty-two, after a
career as ** a very respectable bookseller and vendor of
medicines in the Strand, and father of Mr. Mathews
of Drury Lane Theatre." Timbs being then only three
years old, could not have heard the bookseller tell his
story. Whence did he derive it ? It is suggested that
he took it from a communication to the "Birmingham
Journal," made so late as 1855 by one G. Batson, who
adduced other local authorities for the story : —
"Mr. J. Coleman, of the Strand, who is now 104
years of age, and whose portrait and biographical sketch
2SO A LONDONER'S LONDON
appeared in the * Illustrated London News/ February,
1850, and who knew perfectly well M. Bonaparte, who,
while he lived in London, which was for five weeks
in 1791 or 1792, lodged at a house in George Street,
Strand, and whose chief occupation appeared to be in
taking pedestrian exercise in the streets of London.
Hence his marvellous knowledge of the great
metropolis, which used to astonish any Englishmen
of distinction who were not aware of this visit. I
have also heard Mr. Matthews (s/c), the grandfather
of the celebrated comedian, Mr. Thomas Goldsmith,
of the Strand, Mr. Graves, Mr. Drury, and my father ;
all of whom were tradesmen in the Strand in the
immediate vicinity of George Street, speak of this
visit." This tends to show that there had been a
firm tradition of Napoleon's visit in the Strand neigh-
bourhood.
Mr. Burns, however, drew attention to the fact that
in Christopher Kelly's once well-known work, *' Kelly's
Wars," published as early as 1817, this passage occurs:
"As it has been frequently asserted and as often
denied, that Bonaparte once came to England to
solicit Government for a Commission in the British
Army, it may be proper to state that he was in
England, but the object of his appearance here is
not known. He lodged at a house in the Adelphi,
in the Strand, and remained in London but a short
time. This information was obtained from General
Miranda, who asserts that he visited him in England
at the time. It is probable that the period when
Bonaparte was here was about the middle of the
year 1793."
Against this record three objections are made,
(i) That Kelly is an untrustworthy writer; (2) that
Napoleon's movements at the period of his alleged
"STEPPING WESTWARD" 251
visit can be traced from day to day, and that they
negative the story ; (3) that Napoleon never referred
to such a visit in his reported conversations. Un-
doubtedly it is strange that, if Napoleon had paid
this visit to London, he should not have mentioned
it to the many persons to whom he poured out his
memories, especially during his exile in St. Helena.
The legend cannot be taken seriously, but it is
interesting, and somehow we need it.
The ganglionic importance of Charing Cross has
been increased within short memory by the formation
of the Charing Cross Road. As the new second-hand
bookselling centre of London, this street was a
bleak exchange for Old Booksellers' Row. There
seemed to be too much light in it, and too much
noise, and the district had no bookish associations,
unless one took them from the long-vanished Mews
Gate at Trafalgar Square where honest Tom Payne
was for years the bookseller and companion in letters
of men like Porson, and Malone, and George Steven-
son and Sir John Hawkins, and old Cracherode of
the Museum.
Time has reconciled most of us to the new haunt,
which has the merit of spaciousness. The apparently
constant and equal supply of second-hand books, week
in and week out, during years, gives one at times a
sense of baffled wonder. Where does the arithmetical
progression lapse, or conceal itself ? Teufelsdrockh
feared the worst, and surmised, " If such supply of
printed paper should rise so far as to choke up the
highways and public thoroughfares, new means must
of necessity be had recourse to." But even in the
Charing Cross Road there is room for the motor-
omnibuses to pass, and the enigma remains.
There is, indeed, one circumstance which mitigates
252 A LONDONER'S LONDON
the bibliopolic nightmare. It is that for every volume
there is a buyer at last. I remember that one golden
evening more than ten years ago, when the sun was
setting over Red Lion Square and shooting its last rays
directly down the Passage, which took on its best
seventeenth-century air, I talked with one of the book-
sellers on this very subject of improbable sales. And
I made some notes on our talk, which ran as follows :
" Can you," I asked, " sell a book like this ? " The
book was a calf-bound folio, ^* Voyage de Corneille
de Brun," printed in Paris in 1714. Surely, I thought,
Le Brun's sun set long ago ; yet here, in the night of
its uselessness, in the age of Nansen and Sven Hedin,
his ^' voyage " is hopefully exposed for sale. ^' Can
you," I said, " sell a book like this ? "
" I sold another copy not six months ago. Here
and there is a man who is interested in old voyages to
the Levant and round about the East, and who perhaps
finds the plates interesting."
^^But to buy it! I could understand him consulting
such a book at the Museum. It is obsolete; it is hardly
literature ; it is in French ; it weighs, I think, sixteen
pounds ; and you find that a man will come and
give you coin of the realm for it and take it away?"
''I do."
" Here is * Dryden's Fables ' in folio, magnificently
printed, but surely difficult to sell now ? "
** I shall sell it. Indeed it is partly sold already, for
it has lost the plates."
"Well, now, you won't say that you can easily sell
these volumes that your kitten is playing on : Sir Paul
Rycaut's 'The Turkish History,' 1687 ? ^ see it is full
of Othmans and Amuraths and Bajazets — gorgeous old
fellows, no doubt ; but can you sell such a book to a
passer-by ? "
"STEPPING WESTWARD" 253
" Not easily ; but it will go."
" Echard's 'History of England/ in three volumes ?"
'' That will not sell easily."
"RoHin's 'Ancient History/ in seven volumes ?"
'' Yes ; to a few libraries."
*' Newton's * Principia ' ? "
"Yes."
'' Now, I put it to you that you cannot sell 'Zimmer-
man on Solitude.' "
" But I can."
"Or 'Sturm's '."
" ' Reflections.' I own I am surprised when I sell
that book, but I am asked for it, and also for Hervey's
' Meditations Among the Tombs.' "
" What are those books ? "
"Ah, that is a French Dictionary of Medical Science,
published in Paris in 181 2. I have the complete set
in sixty volumes, all beautifully bound in calf 1 "
" You can sell sixty volumes of an obsolete French
medical work, all beautifully bound in calf, to a
Londoner in Red Lion Passage to-day ? "
" I bought it entirely with that idea.'*
" It seems that as long as a book is a book it will sell
at some price to some person."
"That is so."
Consequently one can form a library in the Charing
Cross Road in the unshaken faith that one can sell
it there too. And this is the strength of the second-
hand book market, and the stay of book-lovers. If
the purchase of a book meant irrevocable possession,
literature would soon perish from fatty degeneration
of libraries. For the necessity to get rid of books
is moral and absolute. Many books which are highly
useful, highly convenient, and profitable, are seen at
last to be only money-changers in our temple. They
254 A LONDONER'S LONDON
cannot all have " honest backs." Charles Lamb, whom
bookmen rightly canonize, knew this, and was en-
tirely free from bookish superstitions or false delicacies.
He did not value, for instance, inscribed presentation
copies of books from his intimate friends, even when
these were men of literary distinction and education.
At Enfield he threw such books out of his window.
Thomas Westwood, who added many of these mis-
siles to his shelves, relates : "A Leigh Hunt, for
instance, would come skimming to my feet through
the branches of the apple-tree (our gardens were
contiguous) ; or a Bernard Barton would be rolled
downstairs to me from the library door. * Marcian
Colonna ' I remember finding on my window-sill,
damp with the night's fog ; and the ' Plea of the
Midsummer Fairies ' I picked out of the strawberry-
bed." When these bombardments were in progress,
Lamb was merely adjusting his soul to his books.
George the Third on horseback, Mr. Dent's time-
ball, models of steamships : these are the common
objects of Cockspur Street, that irregular bow of
houses and shops which adds nothing to the symmetry
of Trafalgar Square. Formerly Cockspur Street was
haunted by Scotchmen ; to-day it suggests Liverpool.
Against its plate-glass windows on Sunday evenings
you see the gloved hands of London maidens tracing
the route to Winnipeg. Here also the American, busy
with his pocket-book, looks up to see, cantering dole-
fully in bronze, the monarch from whom his fathers
took America.
Georgius Tertius did not arrive there without
trouble. It was on 3 August, 1836, that the Duke
of Cumberland drew back the curtains from a statue
which brought its sculptor more praise than profit.
Matthew Cotes Wyatt contracted to provide every-
•'STEPPING WESTWARD" 255
thing for ;^4ooo. Originally the statue was to have
been placed at the foot of Waterloo Place, but it
was discovered that the Duke of York (on the column)
would then turn his back on his Royal father. So
Cockspur Street had the honour, and was at first in-
clined to reject it. A firm of bankers thought that
an equestrian figure in the street would be a nuisance,
and obtained a temporary injunction against its erec-
tion. The rule was quashed, and the unveiling took
place two months later than had been intended. At
the ceremony the Duke of Cumberland praised the
design in terms of contrast : the group, he said, had
the great merit that it was not supported by the clumsy
contrivance of a piece of rock, or by an ancillary
serpent, and the horse did not rest like an opossum
on his tail. The following inscription was to have
been cut on the pedestal : —
''To His Most Excellent Majesty George the Third,
King of Great Britain and Ireland, and Defender of
the Faith. A Monarch who was the safeguard of
Christianity, without the honours of a saint ; and
the conqueror of half the globe, without the fame
of a hero ; who reigned amidst the wreck of empires,
yet died in the love of his People ; when peace was
established throughout his wide Dominions, when
the literature and the commerce of his country per-
vaded the world, when British valour was without
a rival, and the British character without a stain."
This derangement of epitaphs was suppressed — in
the interests, I suppose, of public cheerfulness.
In Cockspur Street flourished George the Third's
intimate friend (for such he was deemed) and military
button-maker, Christopher Pinchbeck. Industrious
authors and journalists were indebted to him for
a patent ''nocturnal remembrancer," which is dread-
256 A LONDONER'S LONDON
fully described as a series of tablets with notches
to serve as guides for writing in the dark. This in-
strument was probably found to be in advance of
human nature, but it should appeal to the relentless
author of "Do It Now."
" The Scots go generally to the British," writes
Defoe, when he is enumerating the London coffee-
houses. The British Coffee-house stood in the middle
of Cockspur Street on a site which a few years
ago was occupied by Mr. Stanford's map warehouse.
Here Tobias Smollett and Dr. Alexander Carlyle
were sitting when the news of the Battle of Culloden
set all London "mafficking" for joy. It was an ill
night for Scotchmen, but Carlyle and Smollett left
the coffee-house to walk to Mayfair. The crowds
were so rough that they were glad to step into a
quiet corner to put their wigs in their pockets and
unsheathe their swords, which they carried in their
hands up the Haymarket. Smollett cautioned his
friend to hold his tongue, " for John Bull," he said,
" is as haughty and valiant to-night as he was abject
and cowardly on the black Wednesday when the
Highlanders were at Derby." When Carlyle next saw
Smollett he was shown the manuscript of the ** Tears
of Scotland."
Londoners may hardly credit the fact that such
a street as the Haymarket should have been a market
for hay and straw until 1830 ; and yet after nearly
eighty years this street retains certain relics of the
business. On its western side two jobmasters still
flourish. Over the way at the corner of Orange Street
is a very old saddlery house, with saddlers working
in the view of passers-by. In Orange Street, Oxenden
Street, Whitcomb Street, and St. Alban's Place are
stables or hints of stables. Some of these have become
"STEPPING WESTWARD" 257
garages. The hay market extended down the whole
length of the street, and it is curious that the cab-
rank of to-day is allowed the same large limits. A
little news-shop, which specializes in racing journals,
suggests, if it does not lineally perpetuate, the horsey
traditions of the Haymarket.
To-day the street is dominated by theatres, art-shops,
and foreign restaurants. It has also a mission in sport-
ing and travel equipments. Here you may buy golf-
sticks, alpine axes, shooting-stools, driving-gloves,
knapsacks, and even — as I lately noticed — ^^a fine
old pair of George III duelling pistols."
The dramatic and musical memories of the Hay-
market would set up half a dozen authors. They
have already done so. I pass these by, with a salute
to the few relics of the old Her Majesty's and its
arcades — landmarks of yesterday's London. The pre-
sent theatre is the fourth that has been built on a site
which is associated with Handel. Earlier still, Addison
declared that the noise of the Haymarket stage battles
could be heard at Charing Cross.
To the second Haymarket opera house Wordsworth
paid at least one visit, and I pick this fact out of
the immense and splendid annals of the spot because
a vision of Wordsworth in a London theatre is rare.
Next morning William Jerdan, the editor, met the
Lake poet at a breakfast-party, and was so astonished
by the shrewdness of his criticisms on the singing,
and even on the terpsichorean feats of the evening,
that he asked the poet to contribute to the " Literary
Gazette " impressions of the continental cities whither
he was then bound. Wordsworth declined, but Jerdan's
proprietor desired him to renew his request in case
" Mr. Wordsworth only wanted a little poetical press-
ing." However, Jerdan did not succeed in establish-
258 A LONDONER'S LONDON
ing Wordsworth as the father of the descriptive article.
The poet repHed, " Periodical writing, in order to
shine, must be ambitious ; and this style is, I think,
in the record of tours and travels, intolerable, or
at any rate the worst can be chosen." He added,
** My model would be Gray's Letters and Journal, if
I could muster courage and set seriously about any-
thing of the kind ; but I suspect Gray himself would
be found flat in these days." The courted writer is
not always so candid and sagacious.
A descriptive writer who knew better than to take
Gray for his model, or to be "flat" on any other
theory of travel-talk, was George Augustus Sala ; and
Sala may be said to have started in his career from
the Haymarket. For it was hereabouts that he con-
ceived his final distaste for that " real life in London "
of which the Haymarket was long the vortex. His
conversion took place at an early hour of the morning
and rose out of a dispute with Mr. Jehoshaphat, a
Panton Street restaurateur, concerning a bottle of
champagne for which fifteen shillings had been
charged. In the course of a difficult argument Sala
found himself on the floor, where he received a well-
aimed blow from Mr. Jehoshaphat's richly bejewelled
fist. This was the origin of that damaged nose which
in after years became a landmark of Fleet Street. The
wound was sewn up at Charing Cross Hospital. Sala
bore no grudge to Mr. Jehoshaphat, who, he said,
had done him a lasting service ; for while his nose
was reconstituting itself it was borne in upon him
that the time was come for him to say good-bye to
Bohemia. He married forthwith, and began those
Gargantuan studies in books, sauces, dress, derivations,
and intellectual bric-^-brac which made him the
''G.A.S." of a myriad readers.
"STEPPING WESTWARD" 259
It was fitting, therefore, that near the Haymarket
Sala should have seen, a few years before the Panton
Street massacre, the worn-out creator of Jerry Hawthorn
and Corinthian Tom. For it was by the night-scenes
of the Haymarket that ParHament was induced, in
1872, to pass the Act that made half-past twelve the
closing hour for licensed premises in London. That
Act turned down the lights on the Tom and Jerry
theory of London life. Sala relates that in 1859, or
thereabouts, he met Pierce Egan in the coffee-room
of a tavern in Rupert Street. His portrait of the
old man is masterly, and I will not curtail it.
** Pierce had long since fallen into the sere and
yellow leaf, and was well-stricken in the vale of years ;
in fact, he was seventy-seven when I saw him, and the
year of my meeting with him was the last in his life.
A little wearish old man, somewhat melancholy by
nature, averse to company in his latter days, and much
given to solitariness. Such a one was Democritus, as
Burton, in *The Anatomy of Melancholy,' described
the philosopher of Abdera, from the word-picture left
by Hippocrates. Pierce Egan, as I remember him,
had a rather quavering voice, and a shrinking, shuffling
manner, as though the poor old gentleman had found
the burden of his life a great misery to him, and was
yearning to shake it off.
^' I had drunk deep of his books from my earliest
boyhood. 1 had copied, in pen-and-ink, scores of the
etchings made by George and Robert Cruikshank for
the illustration of ' Life in London,' and I could not
help asking myself, mentally, and with mournful
dismay, whether this withered patriarch could be the
renowned Pierce Egan whose proficiency in slang
had been praised in * Blackwood's Magazine/ who
had been the life and soul of several sporting
26o A LONDONER'S LONDON
' free-and-easies/ and a referee at a hundred prize«
fights.
^^ Still, you will remember that which Burton says
of the occasional relaxation of Democritus : Howsoever
it was, there he lived at last in a garden in the suburbs,
wholly betaking himself to his studies and a private life,
saving that sometimes he would walk down to the haven,
and laugh heartily at such variety of ridiculous objects
which there he saw. So it was with Pierce Egan the
Elder. I forget whether he smoked ; but Holt and I
soon managed to wreathe his old head with garlands
of cerulean vapour, not from cigars, if you please, but
from good honest ' yards of clay ' of the Broseley
pattern ; and then, after a few glasses of rum punch,
the cockles of Pierce's heart were warmed ; the old
man became eloquent ; he began to talk of Tom
Spring, and Tom Belcher, and Bob Gregson, and
other famous gladiators of the bygone ; he told us of
Jack Mitton and of Gully, the pugilist, who retired
from the prize-ring to become eventually a Member of
Parliament. He descanted on the cock-fighting, the
bull-baiting, the badger-drawing, the ratting, and the
dog-and-duck fighting he had seen in the brave days
of old ; he had known Shaw the Lifeguardsman, he
had played billiards with Jack Thurtell ; he was the
abstract and chronicle of the manners of an age which
had vanished, and which, it is most devoutly to be
hoped, will never repeat itself on this sublunary sphere
again."
Small though it is, Panton Street stands in a certain
fatherly relation to many of the streets around it.
Colonel Panton was a notorious gambler of the
Restoration period. One night, at Piccadilly Hall, he
won an enormous sum, and, never touching cards or
dice again, lived in discreet luxury until his death
''STEPPING WESTWARD" 261
in 1681. He built Panton Street, and it is an interest-
ing fact that Sir Christopher Wren, as Surveyor-
General, reported to Charles II on Panton's building
projects, which he said would be useful to the public,
*' especially by opening a new street from the Hay-
market into Leicester Fields." Panton was allowed,
therefore, to proceed with his plans, and he left his
impress on the whole neighbourhood. Panton Square,
as well as Panton Street, was named after him ; and
his daughter married Henry, fifth Lord Arundel of
Wardour, from whom Wardour Street and Arundel
Street were named.
The little square without a name into which Arundel
Street leads, as into a blind alley, was formerly known
as Panton Square. Here, where a few private hotels
monopolize the silence of a small lagoon in the traffic
of Coventry Street, the *' Eidophusikon " devised by
Philip de Loutherbourg, R.A., was deemed to be
something more than a beautiful peep-show. When,
after Garrick's day, there was talk of reducing his
salary at Drury Lane, where he was the principal
scene-painter, De Loutherbourg resigned his post and
planned his ^' Eidophusikon " as a public spectacle.
All London came to Panton Square to see this delight-
ful show in which, by a combination of painted
canvas with new and ingenious methods of lighting,
and clever imitations of natural sounds, some remark-
able effects were produced.
The "Eidophusikon," indeed, attracted painters as
well as the public. Sir Joshua Reynolds came round
from Leicester Square, and night after night Gains-
borough walked up the Haymarket from Schomberg
House to obtain a good seat. Gainsborough, who
was always ready to be captivated by irregular and
experimental art (witness his sponge and sugar-tongs
262 A LONDONER'S LONDON
exploits at Bath) could talk of nothing but the
'' Eidophusikon." The stage on which the brilliant
Alsatian scene-painter worked was little more than six
feet wide, yet within that space he was able to convey
the impression of many miles of receding and
mysterious country. The first tableau represented the
view from One Tree Hill, in Greenwich Park, a view
extending over river and town to the heights of High-
gate and Harrow. On this scene De Loutherbourg
threw the effects of daybreak and high noon. A
contemporary writer describes the various scenes. A
storm at sea, with the loss of an Indiaman, was repre-
sented with great effect : ** I can never forget the awful
impression that was excited by his ingenious con-
trivance to produce the effect of the firing of a signal
of distress in his sea-storm. That appalling sound
which he that had been exposed to the terrors of
raging tempest could not listen to, even in this mimic
scene, without being reminded of the heart-sickening
answer, which sympathetic danger had reluctantly
poured forth from his own loud gun — a hoarse sound
to the howling wind, that proclaimed ^ I, too, holy
Heaven 1 need that succour I fain would lend 1 ' "
De Loutherbourg's devices for imitating natural
sounds might not surprise a stage-manager of to-day,
but they were his own. The boom of the signal-gun
cost him endless experiment, until he found that a
sponge on a whalebone spring, beating against a kind
of drum made of parchment, produced both the boom
and the dull dying echoes from cloud to cloud. The
final scene in the " Eidophusikon" was a lurid realiza-
tion of Milton's Satan on the burning lake. An
impression of immense and forlorn distance was
obtained, and amid the peals of thunder **an expert
assistant swept his thumb over the surface of a tam-
"STEPPING WESTWARD" 263
bourine, which produced a variety of groans that
struck the imagination as issuing from infernal
spirits."
On the east side of the street, between Coventry-
Street and Panton Street, stands one of the oldest
shops in London. At Fribourg and Treyer's snuff-
shop, with its twin bow-windows, it is permissible to
believe that Addison and Pope and Gay and Prior
filled their snuff-boxes with " best Spanish." The firm
supplied George III with snuff until he withdrew
his custom on learning that Pitt dealt there too.
George IV's "cellar of snuff" and Lord Petersham's
" collection of snuff " were in turn acquired by
Fribourg and Treyer, and in the latter instance it is on
record that the proprietors and their assistants were
weighing the purchase for three days. It is a curious
circumstance that the original of that vague and often
re-incarnated character, " Old Nosey," died in this
snuff-shop. The " Gentleman's Magazine" of January,
1783, has this obituary notice : " At Fribourg's snuff-
shop in the Haymarket, Mr. Cervetto, father to the
celebrated violoncello performer of that name."
Cervetto was more than 102 years old when he paid
his last visit to Fribourg's. He had played in the
Drury Lane orchestra during Garrick's last years and
was celebrated for his big nose. At Drury Lane
Theatre he was constantly hailed from the gallery as
" Nosey," and the cry survived the man as a gallery tag
in most theatres.
A curious story is told of Cervetto and his nickname.
During a performance at Drury Lane he was hit by an
apple thrown at him from the gallery. He immedi-
ately climbed to the gallery with one of the sentinels
who then attended the theatre, and proceeded with
him to the upper gallery, where, with his assistance, he
264 A LONDONER'S LONDON
seized the offender by the collar and sent him to the
public-office in Bow Street, where he was convicted of
the assault, and ordered to prison for a few days.
Then Cervetto relented, and next day went to Sir John
Fielding, and not only obtained the man's discharge
but gave him money for the loss of time and labour
which he had suffered. A few months later, Mr.
Cervetto was advised to take horseback exercise. One
day when riding in Oxford Street his horse became
involved in a huge crowd that was following the cart
in which culprits were then conveyed to be executed
at Tyburn. Turning his head to look at the male-
factor, who was the only prisoner, he recognized the
man who had assaulted him at the theatre and to
whom he had shown kindness. The man recognized
Cervetto, and (this is not a nursery story) motioned, as
well as his chains would allow him, to indicate that he
recollected him as " Nosey." This insult, under such
circumstances, sent Cevetto home for the day in a state
of poignant disgust.
The most important offshoot of the Haymarket is
Jermyn Street, that elect place of family hotels, fish-
and poultry-shops, tailoring ateliers, gunsmiths, and
fossils. Its associations with Sir Walter Scott, Sydney
Smith, Tom Moore, and Dr. John Hunter are all
familiar. Two poets, also, of very different achieve-
ment, but not unlike each other in some respects,
lodged in Jermyn Street — Gray and Shenstone. An
address in Jermyn Street is very desirable to-day,
but it costs more than the half-guinea a week which
the poet of the " Elegy " was willing to pay for a
first-floor front room. One of the oddest of London
stories is told of Jermyn Street by Dr. William King.
Here, in the fourth year of Queen Anne's reign, there
was living in Jermyn Street a certain Mr. Howe. He
"STEPPING WESTWARD" 265
enjoyed the comfortable income of ;£8oo a year —
and he had married a lady who came of a good
West Country family (her maiden name was Mallet),
and who had many graces of person and character.
The Howes had two children and were happy. One
morning, seven or eight years after his marriage, Mr.
Howe rose before his usual time, and told his wife
that he had pressing business in the City. He left
the house, and at midday Mrs. Howe was surprised
to receive a note from her husband, telling her that
he must start at once for Holland on business, and
that he might be absent three weeks or a month.
From that hour Mrs. Howe heard no more of her
husband for seventeen years. The evening before
he returned, Mrs. Howe, still buxom, but with threads
of silver in her hair, was entertaining a few friends
and relations to supper, among them her brother-in-
law, a worthy physician named Dr. Rose. In the
midst of their festivity a note, without any signature,
was handed to Mrs. Howe, who, after reading it,
threw it to Dr. Rose, saying merrily, " You see,
brother, old as I am, I have got a gallant." The
note conveyed a request to Mrs. Howe that she
would meet the writer the next evening in Birdcage
Walk. Dr. Rose, meanwhile, had scrutinized the
message carefully, and he declared that it was in
Mr. Howe's handwriting. Mrs. Howe promptly
fainted. On her recovery, which was speedy, it
was agreed that they should all accompany her on
the next evening to Birdcage Walk. The party
went at the appointed time, and after a few
minutes' waiting, Mr. Howe calmly walked up
and kissed his wife. After some conversation with
his friends, he escorted her home, and thenceforward
they lived together as peaceably and happily as in the
266 A LONDONER'S LONDON
first years of their marriage. Mr. Howe never gave
a reason for his extraordinary conduct, but he made
no secret of his movements and actions.
The story he told affords a wonderful instance of
the facilities which London afforded, even two hundred
years ago, to a man who wished to hide himself from his
fellows. When he bade adieu to his wife in Jermyn
Street, Mr. Howe had not voyaged to Holland, nor had
he then or afterwards left London. He had merely
put on a black wig (he was a fair man) and had
gone to live in a quiet street in Westminster. After
his disappearance Mrs. Howe imagined that, unknown
to herself, he might have contracted some heavy
debts ; consequently for some weeks she went in
fear of duns and bailiffs. But nothing happened, and
when all inquiries were exhausted Mrs. Howe wisely
reconciled herself to her loneliness. Before very
long it became necessary for her to obtain a settle-
ment of her husband's affairs, in order that she might
have the means of living. She accordingly applied
for a special Act of Parliament, and this was
granted. Mr. Howe, in his Westminster lodging,
allowed the Bill to go through, and enjoyed reading
of its progress in the '' Gazettes" at a little coffee-
house. Ten years passed, and during that period
Mrs. Howe's two children died. Wishing to reduce
her expenditure, she removed from her house in
Jermyn Street to a smaller one in Brewer Street,
Golden Square, her movements being followed with
watchful interest by her husband, who began more
and more to appreciate the luxury of examining his
wife, as it were, through a telescope. Opposite to
the house in Brewer Street a corn-chandler, named
Salt, had his shop. Mr. Howe scraped acquaintance
with Mr. Salt, and became so intimate with him that
"STEPPING WESTWARD" 267
he dined at his house two or three times a week.
On these occasions it was his pleasure to stand at
the window and look across the way into his wife's
drawing-room, where he watched her little comings
and goings. He doubtless had his own reasons
for his^ eccentric behaviour, but he never explained
them, and probably enough his escapade was merely
a laborious whim ; there is no measuring the fond-
ness of man for his own joke, especially when, as
in this case, it was cumulative. Once settled in his
little Westminster room, Mr. Howe may have found
that the interest of the experiment he was making
was not to be exhausted in a week, in a month, or
even in a year. After all, he might argue, he was
doing a very curious thing ; he had disappeared
round the corner of Jermyn Street to combine the
privileges of the living and the dead.
The Londoner associates Regent Street with trade,
not literature. So, for that matter, and with grim
patience, did Thomas Carlyle when he was having
his difficult dealings with James Fraser at No. 215,
between Maddox Street and Conduit Street. Of the
thousands who perambulate Regent Street on a
summer afternoon how many think of it as the
publishing birthplace of *' Sartor Resartus " ? Yet
it was hither, to No. 215, that Carlyle walked dole-
fully on an August day in 1831, like a parent per-
plexed to know how to place his child in the world
— Teufelsdrockh his unlucky name. *' It is a work
of genius, dear," Mrs. Carlyle had said to him, with
no wifely flattery, but with the insight of a mind
almost as original as his own. And it was in a length
of Mrs. Carlyle's work-box tape that the manuscript
had gone to Murray. A week later Carlyle had called
at Albemarle Street, found the manuscript untouched,
268 A LONDONER'S LONDON
but adorned with a letter of excuse. " I took it with
a silent fury and walked off." He walked to Regent
Street, where he dropped in on James Fraser, the
bookseller and publisher of ^' Eraser's Magazine."
The manuscript was referred to, and after much
"hithering and thithering about the black state of
trade " there emerged from honest James's talk the
blighting proposal that Carlyle should pay him ;£i5o
sterling to launch the book.
A friend advised Carlyle to wait a little before accept-
ing this offer, and he answered that he proposed to
wait till the end of eternity. Out again on the pave-
ments of Regent Street wandered the author with his
manuscript tied with Jeannie's tape — Jeannie being
just then on a visit to Craigenputtock, where she
lovingly waited for good news of the *' work of genius."
He strode through the streets carrying Teufelsdrockh
in his hand. No need to tell in detail of the visit to
Longman's that same afternoon, of Murray's later shilly-
shallying, and of the visit to Colburn and Bentley's,
where "a muddy man uttered the common cant of
compliments." An interesting relic of these adven-
tures will be found in the "Testimonies of Authors"
printed at the end of " Sartor." The first of them,
that of "Highest Class Booksellers' Taster," is neither
more nor less than the report of Murray's reader,
which finally determined the fate of the book in
Albemarle Street.
In the end it turned out that the walk to Regent
Street on that August afternoon had been sufficiently
momentous, for in 1833 " Sartor" began its piecemeal
course in what Carlyle, with saturnine humour, called
Eraser's " dog's-meat tart of a magazine."
The unpopularity of "Sartor" is an old story.
People thought Carlyle a madman, Fraser a fool. The
"STEPPING WESTWARD" 269
unhappy Regent Street publisher took care to keep
Carlyle well informed of the roasting to which he was
subjected by readers of the magazine. Now and again
they met at the shop, and the bookseller talked his
cautious pessimism about what '* paid " and what did
not. He told Carlyle that one of his oldest sub-
scribers came in to him and said, " If there is any
more of that d d stuff I will," etc., etc. But from
some discerning American had come the antidotal
order to send the magazine so long as anything of
Carlyle's was in it.
Carlyle's opinion of Fraser, if contemptuous, was
good-natured : the man wrote his cheques punctually.
Often, indeed, the utterer of everlasting Nays and
Yeas came to dine at 215 Regent Street. Here on a
January night in 1832 he met at Eraser's table James
Hogg, the Ettrick Shepherd, and wondered to see this
"poor herd body blown hither from his sheepfolds,
and how, quite friendless as he was, he went along
cheerful, mirthful, and musical." Lockhart was there,
and John Gait ; but the talk, even so, was '' utterly
despicable," and nothing was said " that did not even
solicit in mercy to be forgotten." On another occasion
he appears to have had better fortune, though it is not
from his own pen that we have the record. In that
curious book, " Reminiscences of an Old Bohemian,"
the garrulous Dr. Strauss recalls a night at Eraser's at
which he met Dr. Maginn, Eather Prout, Thackeray,
and Carlyle. He says it was a glorious night. At
least, they talked literature. " Tom Carlyle grew ex-
uberantly enthusiastic upon Milton, coming down
upon the company somewhat heavily, and perhaps
unreasonably, with long quotations from the two
Paradises and ' Samson Agonistes.'"
Thus with agony, and some mitigations, Carlyle got
2 70 A LONDONER'S LONDON
his Teufelsdrockh's Clothes Philosophy uttered in the
very mart and mirror of fine clothes, and close to the
streets which form the Mecca of the Dandiacal Body.
Time has only deepened the irony of the coincidence.
Teufelsdrockh mockingly welcomes "printed Paper
Aprons as worn by the Parisian Cooks," as giving
a new vent to typography and encouragement to
modern literature ; and he adds, " I hear of a cele-
brated London Firm having in view to introduce the
same fashion, with important extensions, in England."
Here, evidently, we have prophecy fulfilled. For the
Printed Aprons are now legion. A vast journalism of
clothes has sprung up whose mission it is to make
hypnotic affirmations on what woman shall wear, and
then, as quickly as possible, to demode it off her back.
In vain had Carlyle's thunders contended with the
reciprocating voices of Regent Street and Fleet Street
to-day.
Three of Carlyle's closest friends can be connected
with the street. Thackeray I have already mentioned.
Down the Regent Street pavement strolled one day
Alfred Tennyson and Edward FitzGerald. They
stopped to look into a window where busts of Dante
and Goethe were displayed. When they had looked
at these in silence FitzGerald said, "What is there
wanting in Goethe which the other has ? " Tennyson
answered, " The divine."
Southey relates a ludicrous affair into which he and
Campbell fell one day in the Quadrant. Campbell
wished to relieve a poor woman, and rushed into the
nearest shop to change a sovereign. The shopkeeper,
being busy with customers, delayed to oblige him,
and the generous poet lost his temper. Thereupon the
shopkeeper jumped to the conclusion that he had two
rogue? to deal with, and rashly sent for the police.
"STEPPING WESTWARD" 271
Campbell stood in helpless fury, but when Southey
explained things to the constable, that worthy, who
happened to be a Glasgow man, exclaimed, ^'Guid-
ness, mon, is that Maister Camell, the Lord Rector o'
Glaisgie ? " After that it was difficult to separate
Campbell and the shopkeeper, so warmly were their
hands interclasped.
From Regent Street the way into Bond Street is
short, and Bond Street is the jewel of the West End,
and by many degrees its most compactly interesting
street. It is the Rue de la Paix of London, but it is
also the comfortable old High Street of Mayfair. No
street in the world supplies, on a high plane of quality
and expense, so many human wants. It is the place
Where each who wills may suit his wish,
Here choose a Guido — there his fish.
If you continue the line of the street directly across
the map of London, that line will ultimately bring
your eye to Peckham, and it was from Peckham that
Bond Street drew its name. Sir Thomas Bond lived
there. It is now a solemn question whether Bond
Street is conscious of the existence of the south-
eastern suburb. Sir Thomas built Bond Street in the
year 1686, and this date appears on the rebuilt cake-
shop at the corner of Piccadilly. Not a few houses in
Bond Street, some low, some high, stand out from
their neighbours as original or early buildings. And
the long street rises and sinks to-day as the fields
swelled on which it was built. Woodcock and snipe
were shot where now they are trussed.
The most moving story of Bond Street belongs to
its earlier period. On a March afternoon in 1768 a
party sat at dinner in John Crawford's rooms in
272 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Clifford Street. The Dukes of Roxburghe and Grafton
were there, and Garrick and Hume. They all knew
that in Bond Street, a stone's-throw away, Laurence
Sterne was lying ill, and by general consent a footman
was sent to inquire how he did. That footman was
the only person who saw the author of " Tristram
Shandy " die. Sent upstairs by the landlady, he found
the great author in extremis. Afterwards he wrote
some curious memoirs, in which the scene is de-
scribed : " I went into the room and he was just
a-dying. I waited ten minutes, and in five he said,
' Now it is come ' 1 He put up his hands as if to stop
a blow, and died in a minute." Where this happened
Agnew's now stands.
In Old Bond Street the poet Thomson lived for
some time. That his lodging was on the west side of
the street is proved by a caustic remark of Mrs. Piozzi,
who said that the author of '*The Castle of Indolence "
was himself so indolent that he seldom rose to see the
sun do more than glisten on the opposite windows of
the street.
Sir Walter Scott stayed in Long's Hotel in 1815.
in Bond Street Nelson had one of his homes. From
this street Lord Camelford, knowing himself to be
in the wrong, went to Kensington to die a duellist's
death. In 1831, Haydon's picture of Napoleon at
St. Helena was exhibited at No. 21, and there became
the subject of Wordsworth's sonnet containing the
lines : —
Sky without cloud — ocean without wave —
And the one man that laboured to enslave
The world, sole-standing high on the bare hill.
Byron, too, knew Bond Street well. Here flourished j
John Jackson, or Gentleman Jackson, the instructor f
"STEPPING WESTWARD" 273
and pontiff of pugilism in the days of the Regency.
His fame is carried into the region of Hterature by
his association with the poet. One day Leigh Hunt
saw a small black object dancing on the Thames
near Waterloo Bridge and a quiet man on the bank
gazing at it intently. The object was the head of
Lord Byron, and the quietly dressed onlooker was
Gentleman John Jackson, his tutor in all manly sports,
named in "Don Juan" as " my old friend and cor-
poral pastor and master."
If Bond Street is May fair's High Street, Park Lane
is its esplanade. Park Lane and summer join to pro-
duce a unique manifestation of London life. Across
the road, the motor-cars roll softly for hours —
Mayfair emptying its ladies into the Park, and the
Park gates returning them softly to Mayfair. Park
Lane still suggests the end of the town. The great
westward trend of fashion from the Strand and
Bloomsbury and Soho was brought to a stand by
the Park, and against that aerial barrier it still presses.
I have fancied sometimes that the enormous bay-
windows and sweeping balconies in Park Lane have
been blown out like bubbles by the Goddess of
Fashion, straining for space and an occidental
sanctity.
The long line of houses perfectly indicates that
there has been a scramble for this ultimate foothold.
Here we do not find, as art and decorum would
suggest, a stately line of great mansions facing the
Royal demesne. Instead, we have a costly higgledy-
piggledy, relying on later and auxiliary elegances for
its effect. Of the facades before you, half are fronts
and half are backs. The houses are of all shapes
and sizes ; some suggest small palaces and some
glorified bathing-machines. It is indeed the *^ far-
374 A LONDONER'S LONDON
flung line " of the great host whose taste in residence
has followed the sun with an almost panic fastidious-
ness. Let rearguards like Carlton Terrace be massive ;
the great Lane knows that the race is won, with the
Park before it like the inviolable sea. Therefore up
and down its length has run all the foam of adornment
— ivory paint, delicate balconies, censers of perfume,
and awnings that respond to the flower-beds to which
they slant.
In Mayfair you receive the suggestion of "all that
beauty, all that wealth e'er gave " to London, yet the
annals of luxury and ease are leavened in every street
by those of wit, art, and culture. By those, also, of
tragedy. At the head of Park Lane, retired in bricky
seclusion, stands Camelford House, the first home,
after her marriage, of the most loved and lamented
of royal girls. In November of 1817 the blow fell,
and it is curious that the nation's grief was uttered
by the exiled poet whose statue now rises on the
borders of Park Lane. It was in Venice that Byron
forgot all his agitations in those lines of sweeping
sadness : '' Of sackcloth was thy wedding-garment
made."
Both Byron and Scott are recalled in Park Street,
where lived and learned the eccentric, literary, society-
loving Lydia White. She kept her little ball rolling
in Park Street in spite of age and dropsy. As Miss
Diddle this lady figures in Byron's forgotten " literary
eclogue," " The Blues." Rogers said of her in 1826 :
" How wonderfully she does hold out 1 They may
say what they will, but Miss White and A/wsolonghi
are the most remarkable things going." A year later
Lydia White died, and Scott wrote : " She had a
party at dinner on the Friday before, and had written
with her own hand invitations for another party. . . .
PARK LANE
THE ' FAR FLUNG LINE " OF THE GREAT HOST WHOSE TASTE IN RESIDENCE HAS
FOLLOWED THE SUN WITH AN ALMOST PANIC FASTIDIOUSNESS (p. 274)
"STEPPING WESTWARD" 275
She was not, and would not, be forgotten, even when
disease obliged her, as it did for years, to confine
herself to her couch ; and the world, much abused
for hard-heartedness, was kind in her case — so she
lived in the society she liked. No great expenditure
was necessary for this. She had an easy fortune, but
not more. Poor Lydia 1 I saw the Duke of York
and her in London, when Death, it seems, was
brandishing his dart over them. ' The view o't gave
them little fright.' "
Number 23 Park Lane, next to Lord Brassey's well-
known house, was eighty years ago the home of
'^ Conversation " Sharp. Here in his study he had
portraits of Johnson, Burke, and Reynolds, of whom
he could talk at first-hand as late as 1833. Richard
Sharp falls into a group of City men whose social or
other talents brought them into choice company in
the West End. He belonged to the West India firm
of Boddington, Sharp & Phillips in Fish Street Hill.
Afterwards he was head of the house of Richard
Sharp & Co., of Mark Lane, hat manufacturers. His
hat-making was the subject of one of Luttrell's jokes.
" I was mentioning," relates Moore, ^' that some one
had said of Sharp's very dark complexion that he
looked as if the dye of his old trade had got ingrained
in his face." "Yes," said Luttrell, "a darkness that
may be felt."
The envious said that the conversationalist gave his
mornings to the preparation of the remarks and
anecdotes by which he meant to shine in the evening,
but this, if established, would only have proved that
he thought conversation worth while. Examples of
Sharp's talk are few and fragmentary, yet the engag-
ing qualities of his mind can be appreciated in the
little book of " Letters and Essays " which he issued
276 A LONDONER'S LONDON
in 1834, ^"^ which was highly praised by the
"Quarterly Review." To read this forgotten book is
to find a fountain of worldly wisdom springing up in
old Park Lane — a fountain fed not merely from the
clubs and dinner-tables at which Sharp triumphed,
but from his experience as a public man, a Member
of Parliament, and a private adviser of statesmen. On
life's decline he writes in a vein of Mayfair philosophy :
" Do not wait ; but as you run along, snatch at every
fruit and flower growing within your reach ; for, after
all can be said, youth, the age of hope and admiration
and manhood, the age of business and of influence,
are to be preferred to the period of extinguished
passions and languid curiosity. At that season our
hopes and wishes must have been too long dropping,
leaf by leaf, away. The last scenes of the fifth act
are seldom the most interesting either in a tragedy or
a comedy. Yet many compensations arise as our
sensibility decays.
Time steals away the rose, 'tis true,
But then the thorn is blunted too,
though I like much better than these humiliating
thoughts the spirit of Montaigne's sturdy determina-
tion, * Les ans peuvent m'entrainer, mats d rcculonsJ "
At the corner of Upper Grosvenor Street, a large
bay-windowed house with green lattice shutters and
garden railings to match them was for thirty-three
years the home of Lord Beaconsfield. The house had
been left to his wife by her first husband, Mr. Wyndham
Lewis. Here Mrs. Disraeli began that long homely
ministry to her husband's comfort which places her
high among the wives of statesmen. Once, when
asked how she kept Disraeli going, she replied : *' I
♦'STEPPING WESTWARD" 277
always have supper ready for him when he comes
home, and lights, lights, plenty of lights — Dizzy always
likes lights." It was this love of the lights of Mayfair,
among which he died, that prompted Sydney Smith's
jocular vision of London happiness: ** An immense
square with the trees flowering with flambeaux ^ with gas
for grass and every window illuminated with countless
chandelicrSy and voices reiterating for ever and for every
Mr. Sydney Smith is coming upstairs."
CHAPTER XI
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES
"The Biggest Street in the City" — Heine in Distress — Byron on
London — The Paris Equation — Shakespeare's View from Bankside —
London compared — Pageants and Poets — The Hungry Generations —
Mr. Scrivener Milton of Bread Street's Boy — Milton Unawares — In
Artillery Walk — " Pilgrim's Progress " — A Dinner at Dilly's — An
" Extraneous Person " — Poor Susan— An Invisible Street — Richard
Jefferies at the Bank — The Street of the China Orange — The Grass-
hopper — Translating a Statue — An Eccentric Banker — Pope's " Learned
Friend of Abchurch Lane " — The Chop-houses — Todgers's — Dickens
and the Spirit of Place — Cabbage-leaves and Comedy — The Bridge of
Memories — '* London Bridge is Broken Down " — A Tyneside Carol —
Proverbs of London Bridge — The London Expression — A Wooden
Gallery— The Water Gate of London
IN No. 79 of the ^'Connoisseur/' Bonnell Thornton
has a story of meeting a tailor in a country inn,
about forty miles from London, who traced on a
map that hung over the mantelpiece his London
haunts. "At last, after having transported me all over
the town, he set me down in Cheapside, ' which,' he
said, ' was the biggest street in the City.' * And now,'
says he, ' I will show you where I live 1 That is Bow
Church, and thereabouts — where my pipe is, there —
just there, my shop stands.' He concluded with a
kind invitation to me to come and see him, and pulling
out a book of patterns from his coat-pocket, assured
me that if I wanted anything in his way, he could
afford to let me have a bargain." The name of
a7«
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 279
Cheapside had long been almost a synonym of London
shopkeeping. ^^You are as arrant a Cockney as any
hosier in Cheapside," wrote Swift to Gay, and Cowper's
"Gilpin"— founded on the character of John Beyer,
the linen-draper, of No. 3 Cheapside — is instinct with
this view of the street as the home of the " Cit " and
Cockney tradesman.
It was in this Cheapside of trade, in this "biggest
street in the City," that Heine made his reflections on
London, eighty years ago. " Send a philosopher to
London," he wrote, "but no poet ! Send a philosopher
there, he will hear the pulse of the world beat audibly,
and see it visibly — for, if London is the right hand of
the world — its active, mighty right hand — then one
may regard that street which leads from the Exchange
to Downing Street as the world's radial artery. But
send no poet to London ! This downright earnestness
of all things, the colossal uniformity, the machine-like
monument, this moroseness even in pleasure ; this
exaggerated London, smothers the imagination and
rends the heart."
These words illustrate the diverse reactions of
London. Poet and philosopher himself, Heine was
more concerned at the moment to guard his habit of
mind than to project himself into that which seemed
less as a town than a monstrous camp, or a " stone
forest of houses." There is sufficient oddness in the
fact that he bade the world send no poet to London
when contemplating the street which had nourished
Shakespeare and Milton, drawn a song from Words-
worth, been acclaimed as his home by Herrick, and
given lodging to Keats. But Heine's dismay in
Cheapside was not a singular experience. Many a
poetic and sensitive mind has been crushed and
emptied, for a time, by the first revelation of London
28o A LONDONER'S LONDON
For the stranger expects a whole, and finds only parts
and reference and cross-reference. No view at once
synthetic and intimate satisfies the eye ; the total must
be compiled. Byron knew this. He who has stood
on the Acropolis, he says :
May not think much of London's first appearance —
But ask what he thinks of it a year hence !
This was the right word to Heine in Cheapside, but
he stayed in England only three months, visiting
Ramsgate, before he returned to the small cities of
Holland and Germany. Four years later he saw Paris
for the first time. How different, now, his feelings
and exclamations ! London had impressed him as
"the greatest wonder which the world can show to the
astonished spirit," its people as a " rushing stream of
faces, of living human faces, with all their motley
passions, all their terrible impulses of love, of hunger,
and of hate." And standing in Cheapside, looking
into a print-shop window, he had been hustled with
plentiful '^God-damns." In London he had seen the
background first. So soon as he entered Paris, all
was foreground and amenity, and the great arch of
St. Denis, erected in honour of Louis XIV, seemed to
glorify his own entry into the city of politeness, salons,
cafes, and social ease. Tragedy there was, in Paris
too, but over it all a rosy light and sweet air.
This contrast, drawn by Heine in the excitement
of first impressions, is old and familiar. It needed
a hundred adjustments and corrections, many of
which have been made by Time and changing
sentiment. Such hasty violence of comparison,
however, is still precipitated by London's lack of
ensemble, its shapelessness, and that comparative
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 281
inhospitality to the stranger from which its heart
is free — if its heart could be found. The Londoner
of to-day, without the least deflection of his London
love, is enamoured of Paris ; simply, I believe,
because he finds there a certain relief from the
immensity, the inexistence, so to speak, of London.
The picture of Paris ^^ comes together" in a way
that the picture of London never can. It frames
itself. From the terrace under the church of the
Sacre Coeur you feel that you can drop a stone
into Paris. From the terrace above the poignant
^* Aux Morts " monument in the cemetery of Pere
Lachaise you can survey the living city from the
dead. But London, seen from Greenwich, or
Sydenham, or Highgate, shows less as a city than
as Heine's '^ camp of men " or as that " county
covered with houses" which it was called long
before Heine. Sublime and moving, the view can
be, but not very intimate or very intelligible.
In the century of Shakespeare's death, that fine old
Londoner, James Howell, called on Paris and on all
the cities of Europe to do obeisance to London.
Constantinople first. Her houses, he finds, are but
*' cottage-like " compared with London's, and although
her situation " upon the most levant point of Europe "
is splendid, she " may be called but a nest or banner
of slaves."
Rome is like " a tall man shrunk into the skin of a
Pygmey."
Milan, 'tis true, "may pretend much for her dome,"
but in "ubiquitary traffique" where stands she ?•
Venice, though she have the sea for her husband,
has no more interest in it than London. And, " while
Venice is steeping and pickling in Salt-watery London
sports herself upon the banks of a fresh, stately River,
282 A LONDONER'S LONDON
which brings into her bosom all the Spices of the
East," etc.
Naples is too hot, for there the sun " doth as it were
broyl the Neapolitan" whereas he doth " with the
gentle reverberations of his rayes but guild the Walls
of London."
** Touching Copenhagen in Denmark^ and Stockholm
in Swethland, they come far short." Even Mosco is
but a ^'huge wooden City environed about with a
treble wall," and far beneath London.
Amsterdam gives our boaster some judicial qualms.
But he thinks that "in point of wealth Amsterdam
comes short of London, for when Sir Ralph Freeman
was Lord Mayor, it was found out by more than a
probable conjecture that He, with the 24 Aldermen,
his Brethren, might have bought the estates of one
hundred of the richest Bourgemasters in Amsterdam."
Paris is also formidable, but the Londoner is not to
be dazzled by " the advantage of an Orbicular figure,"
for "by the judgment of those Mathematicians who
have observed both Cities, if London were cast into a
Circle, she would with all her dimensions be altogether
as big as Paris."
Finally, he sums up the glories of London under
twenty headings, and pours out a torrent of words,
images, and facts in which the cities of the world
are overwhelmed and obscured. London, he says,
has need of them, but not fear. " London by her
Navigations tindes them out ; . . . What goodly vessels
doth she send fortii, to crosse the Line to the East
Indies, to Italy, and the bottom of the Streights, the
Turks Dominions ; as also to the Baltick Sea, how she
flyes ore the vast white Ocean to Muscovy, and to hunt
the great Leviathan in Greenland."
Clieapside was, and is, part of "the world's radial
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 283
artery." Along it, east and west, many pageants of
Anglo-Saxon history have moved. Shopkeeping
relieved by royal and civic shows was the note
of the street for centuries. To-day, great pro-
cessions go through Cheapside to the Guildhall,
but in Norman, Plantagenet, and Tudor times the
street awaited royal entries into London from the
east and south. English kings, riding to their
coronations, from the Tower to Westminster, passed
through it ; and when they returned from battle-
fields. Royal brides entered London by Cheapside,
as did Anne of Bohemia, after her marriage to
Richard II, and Margaret of Anjou, with her
husband, Henry VI. The birth of the Black Prince
was celebrated by a tournament of knights in the
street, and here Elizabeth received her Bible from
the citizens under a blaze of banners.
For centuries it was the custom for members of the
Royal Family to come into the City to be spectators
of the Lord Mayor's Show — a fact much forgotten
to-day. The circumstances of the visit were simple
and friendly, and a house which stood in Cheapside
opposite Bow Church acquired great distinction from
the fact that its balcony was used by successive
monarchs on Lord Mayor's Day. Six reigning
Sovereigns, of whom Charles II was the first, are
said to have visited this house, and of these no
fewer than three, George I, George II, and
George III, came to it as the guests of the Quaker
family of Barclay. ^' Wilt thou alight, George, and
thy wife Charlotte, and come into my house and
view the Mayor's show ? " is said to have been the
old banker's greeting to his King on the occasion
of the Lord Mayor's show in 1761. Barclay was
then eighty-one years of age, and in the same
i
284 A LONDONER'S LONDON
house he had received in much the same manner
George Ill's two predecessors on the throne.
Wherever commerce and national pageantry mingle,
you have that stir of life, and those appeals to ambition
and imagination, which may be expected to produce
some accompanying splendour of Art. And Cheapside
is not an exception to this rule. With no other street
can we connect such names as Chaucer, Shakespeare,
Ben Jonson, Raleigh, Beaumont, Fletcher, Donne,
Milton, Bunyan, Keats, and Wordsworth. The Mer-
maid Tavern was in Bread Street, and it had an entrance
from Cheapside. Many of the Elizabethan wits, poets,
and voyagers made the " Mermaid " their evening
haunt, and the talk was such, says Jonson, that
when at last the company broke up : " We left an
air behind us " — words, which when I first transcribed
them, were amended by an inspired compositor to
read, ''We left an ass behind us."
Keats had a brief lodging in 1817 at No. 76
Cheapside, over the passage leading to the Queen's
Head Tavern, opposite the Mercers' Hall, and wrote
there his sonnet, '* On First Looking into Chapman's
Homer," and '' Great Spirits now on Earth are Sojourn-
ing." That many other poems included in Keats's first
volume, that of 181 7, were written under Bow Church
is certain. But the little volume failed, and in the
indifferent roar of Cheapside there may have come to
Keats something of the feeling which he afterwards
threw into the saddest and loveliest of his verses : —
Thou wast not born for death, immortal Bird,
No hungry generations tread ihec down.
On the Cheapside pavements Milton played as a
boy. The picture appealed to Carlyle; "O, Posterity,"
he chants, *'it is within men's memory when there was
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 285
an open blacksmith's forge on the north side of Cheap ;
men openly shoeing horses there. And now it has
broad flag-pavements, safe from wheel and horse, even
for the maids and children ; and there runs about on
it one little Boy very interesting to me : ^John Milton,'
he says he is; a flaxen-haired, blue-eyed, beautiful little
object ; Mr. Scrivener Milton of Bread Street's Boy :
Good Heavens 1 "
Against the west wall of St. Mary-le-Bow Church,
if you will turn but a step from Cheapside, you may
read, cut in stone, the famous epigram : " Three Poets
in three distant ages born," whereof one was the
Scrivener's boy. The rest of the inscription sets forth
that John Milton was born in Bread Street, and
baptized in the parish church of All Hallows, in the
same street, and that this tablet was removed to St.
Mary-le-Bow Church when All Hallows was pulled
down, in 1876. Bread Street belongs to the great
St. Paul's Churchyard group of streets which forms
the wholesale mart of Manchester fabrics and Paris
fashions. The same commercial character marks that
labyrinth north of Cheapside which brings you to the
site of the small house in Artillery Row in which Milton
completed *^ Paradise Lost." The place where the poet
drank deeply of the Pierian spring is now occupied by
a firm of well-sinkers. Within sight is the belfried
brick tower of St. Giles's under which he sleeps and
where, at his parish church door, stands his effigy in
bronze. This graceful statue was erected a few years
ago at the instance of Alderman Sir J. ]. Baddeley, and
by subscription.
The Milton home in Bread Street stood towards
Cheapside on the east side, and on a site now covered
by Messrs. Copestake & Crampton's warehouse, num-
bered 58 to 63. Here, on an upper floor, is preserved
2S6 A LONDONER'S LONDON
a bust of the poet, with an inscription relating to the
site. In those days London houses were not num-
bered, and the worthy scrivener's address was ** at the
sign of the Spread Eagle." John Milton was a Cock-
ney of the Cockneys. Not only was he born within
sound of Bow bells, but, as Masson pointed out, if
the bells had fallen from the steeple they might have
crushed the infant in his cradle.
It is left to excisemen to insist that Milton was a
great man, but one may pause to remark that his
words are more often quoted unawares in Cheapside
to-day than Cheapside knows. Our quotations from
Milton are pitched in all keys, and we are not always
to fly to the context in expectation of developing the
thought. Great lines, taken into the language, are
often put to the uses of life without reference to their
original source or implications. Certainly it is true to
say, with Hazlitt, that Milton's Satan expresses the
sum and substance of all ambition in one line: ^'Fallen
cherub, to be weak is miserable," just as he expresses
the sum of all defiance in the lines beginning ''All is
not lost." These expressions have passed into the
language of human effort, and of Cheapside. It is from
Satan's sublime invocation to the sun that we take a line
which is often applied in ways not at all sublime : —
... at whose sight all the stars
Hide their diminish'd heads.
" Fall'n on evil days " are words to which many variants
are given ; they were applied by Milton to himself.
It is often said that one should not be the man who,
'' when God sends a cheerful hour refrains." This
line is the last of Milton's cheery sonnet to his pupil,
Cyriac Skinner, in which he invites him to lay aside
ST. GILES S, CRIPPLEGATE
. . . THE BEI-FRIED BRICK TOWER OF ST. C.lLEs's UNDER WHICH
MILTON SLEEPS, AND WHERE, AT HIS PARISH CHURCH DOOR,
STANDS HIS EFFIGY IN BRONZE (p. 285)
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 387
his books, " to let Euclid rest and Archimedes pause/'
and to drench deep thoughts in mirth.
Indeed, the language of pleasure, no less than that
of a city's toil and aspiration, has been enriched for
all time by Milton. ^'The light fantastic toe" is his,
and "the cricket on the hearth," and the "silver lin-
ing" to the cloud, "the busy hum of men," the "sober
certainty of waking bliss," and " food of the mind."
His, too, the oft-quoted saying : " I cannot praise a
fugitive and cloistered virtue." Everyday quotations
of Milton are too numerous for comment. I resort
to catalogue : " Things unattempted yet in prose or
rhyme," " Justify the ways of God to men," " All hell
broke loose," " Tears such as angels weep," " Chaos
and Old Night," "A bevy of fair women," "Musical
as is Apollo's lute," "Where more is meant than
meets the ear," " Old experience," " LinkM sweetness
long drawn out," "Temper justice with mercy,"
" That old man eloquent," " Dim religious light,"
" Fresh woods and pastures new," " The palpable
obscure," " A heaven on earth." " Best image of
myself and dearer half." The last expression may
suggest that " better half " as applied to a wife is an
adaptation, of Milton's line, which, however, is itself an
adaptation of Sir Philip Sidney's " My better half."
But that which was written in homage to women is
becoming her literal claim.
Bunyan's " Pilgrim's Progress " was published from
a bookseller's shop in Poultry by Nathaniel Ponder,
who thereafter was known as " Bunyan Ponder " — a
crisp example of an author making a publisher
famous. The book was entered by Ponder at Sta-
tioners' Hall, and published by him in 1678, at the
price of eighteenpence. Three editions were called
for within a year.
288 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Booksellers have left their own mark on Cheapside
and Poultry. At Charles Dilly's shop in Poultry,
Boswell contrived, v^^ith infinite diplomacy, the meet-
ing between Dr. Johnson and John Wilkes, on
15 May, 1776. The two men agreed well, Wilkes
sharing Dr. Johnson's delight in girding at Scotchmen,
and it was here, at Number 22, on another occasion,
that the following conversation passed : Wilkes : " Pray,
Boswell, how much may be got in a year by an Advo-
cate at the Scotch Bar ? " Boswell : " I believe two
thousand pounds." Wilks : *' How can it be possible
to spend that money in Scotland ? " Johnson : " Why,
sir, the money may be spent in England ; but there
is a harder question. If one man in Scotland gets
possession of two thousand pounds, what remains for
all the rest of the nation ? " Wilkes : " You know, in
the last war, the immense booty which Thurot carried
off by the complete plunder of seven Scotch isles ; he
re-embarked with three and sixpence."
Every Londoner knows the curious ornate house
on the south side of Cheapside, near King Street,
which bears the inscription, *' Formerly the Mansion
House." To these premises, in 1824, came Thomas
Tegg, who made a fortune by buying and selling
books on an unprecedented scale, and with a keen
nose for a bargain. The pioneer of "remainder"
bookselling, he called himself " the broom that swept
Ihe booksellers' warehouses." At No. iii Cheapside,
and then at No. 73, he held nightly book-sales, at
which he appeared to be giving away books. In
reality his broom had been at work among bankrupt
stocks and on the choked shelves of the West End
publishers. People flocked from all corners of Lon-
don to Tegg's, to buy books at one-sixth or one-
seventh of the published price, or merely to see them
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 2S9
sold. He acquired from Murray the old stock of the
^^ Family Library " for something like ;£8ooo. There
were more than 150,000 volumes in this parcel, and
he bought them at a shilling each, and reissued them
at double the price. He even made a good profit out
of the purchase of 50,000 volumes of Valpy's " Del-
phin Classics." In the period of commercial depres-
sion which befell London in 1826, Tegg bought the
most popular of Scott's novels at fourpence each. He
also purchased the copyrights of Hone's '^ Every-Day
Book " and '^ Table Book," and repubhshing them in
weekly parts cleared a huge profit. He gave Hone
£Soo to complete the *^ Year Book," but this was less
successful.
Besides remarketing old book stock, Tegg issued
innumerable reprints, apparently with small regard
for the rights of authors. When Talfourd's Copyright
Bill was before the House of Commons in 1839,
Thomas Carlyle presented to the House of Commons
his own petition that the Bill might pass. The last
paragraph of this manifesto ran : " May it, therefore,
please your Honourable House to protect him . . .
and (by passing your Copyright Bill) forbid all
Thomas Teggs, and other extraneous persons, entirely
unconcerned in this adventure of his, to steal from
him his small winnings, for a space of sixty years at
shortest. After sixty years, unless your Honourable
House provide otherwise, they may begin to steal."
A less distinguished writer said of Tegg : " He lives
on the ruin of others, though that is no fault or affair
of his. He lives on the ruin of publishers ; he lives
on the ruin of poor authors also ; their losses are his
gains ; their unfortunate speculations — for a great
many authors are foolish enough nowadays to publish
their works on their own account — are frequently
290 A LONDONER'S LONDON
those which turn out most profitable for him." Tegg
flourished exceedingly, in spite of clamour and evil-
speaking, and in the end purchased a country house
at Norwood, where he promised himself the enjoy-
ment of a large garden, though he scarcely knew a
rose from a rhododendron. It is said that the
character of Timothy Twigg, in Hood's novel
" Tylney Hall," was drawn from the Cheapside book-
seller, who died in 1845.
To the seeing eye Cheapside still offers hints of its
old character, and many a detail of antiquity. No
house in it can be older than the one numbered 37,
at the corner of Friday Street, whose front is still
adorned by the Chained Swan, taken from the
Bohun badge of Henry IV. The same device may
be seen over the brass of Eleanor de Bohun, Duchess
of Gloucester, in Westminster Abbey. This house
certainly goes back to the rebuilding of the City after
the Great Fire, but there is a tradition (not discouraged
by the late Mr. Loftie) that it is the part of a building
of much older date. It is said that the Fire spared
this fragment, and that its ravages can be traced on
some of the beams. Cheapside Cross stood nearly
opposite this house. Another object in Cheapside which
no topographer is permitted to ignore is the Wood
Street plane-tree. But I name it only to dispute
its popular association with Wordsworth's " Reverie
of Poor Susan." For the thrush of the poem was
caged, no tree is mentioned, and it is certain that the
Wood Street plane was not growing in Cheapside in
1797, the date of the poem.
There is perhaps not one Londoner in a hundred
thousand — cabmen included — who would not be
willing to make oath that Poultry is the last street
in the great line between Charing Cross and the Bank.
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 291
But this is not so. Mansion House Street concludes
the series, and the name is displayed in the ordinary
manner. Mansion House Street is an integral part of
Heine's ^'radial artery/' and it is the most forgotten
street in London. So forgotten that the point of a
famous and favourite City ballad depends on this
forgetfulness. Yet at ward meetings, and places
where they sing, " The Lord Mayor's Coachman " will
still be called for, and its exposition of London street
nomenclature will be accepted with nods of assenting
sagacity. John undertook to drive his Lordship from
the Mansion House to Buckingham Palace without
going through a single street. He accomplished this
by taking him through Poultry, Cheapside, St.
Paul's, Ludgate Hill, Old Bailey, Holborn, Drury
Lane, Long Acre, St. Martin's Lane, Trafalgar Square,
Pall Mall, and the Park.
But they both forgot Mansion House Street. It was
a New Zealander who showed me that John had lost his
wager before he had well started to win it. Many
things hidden from the wise and prudent Cockney are
revealed to our Overseas babes, and I doubt not that
one of these will yet guide my tardy steps into the
church, also hereby, of St. Stephen's, Walbrook. He
will tell me that this church by Wren, which the
average Londoner never sees, is a miniature St. Paul's,
exquisite in proportion and miniaturely grand. Accord-
ing to some good judges, he will be right. In return,
I shall relate to him the grotesque compliment paid in
this church, and afterwards cancelled, to that imposing
" blue," Mrs. Catharine Macaulay, the author of a
" History of England " whose appearance in the
Charing Cross Road would now cause consternation
among the booksellers. Her clerical admirer, the
Rector of St. Stephen's who lived very comfortably at
292 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Bath, placed a white marble statue of the lady within
the altar-rails during her lifetime, where she domi-
nated the sanctuary as the Muse of History with
a pen in her hand and leaning on the substantial
volumes of her own work. He afterwards removed it,
some say at the imperative desire of his bishop, others
because the lady chose a second husband who did not
live at Bath. The statue was returned to its sculptor,
Moore, " with full permission to do whatever he
pleased with it," but what he did with it is not
history.
We are now in the City's maelstrom, and by all the
rules I ought to detain the reader with ejaculation and
reflection. Instead, let us cross to Lombard Street.
Or if you rebel, or I repent, let it be to remember that
Richard Jefferies, standing and pondering on that apex
of pavement which is occupied by the statue of Welling-
ton, revolved these thoughts : " Burning in the sky,
the sun shines as it shone on me in the solitary valley,
as it burned on when the earliest cave of India was
carved. Above the indistinguishable roar of the many
feet I feel the presence of the sun, of the immense
forces of the universe, and beyond these the sense of
the eternal now, of the immortal. Full well aware
that all has failed, yet, side by side with the sadness of
that knowledge, there lives on in me an unquenchable
belief, thought burning like the sun, that there is yet
something to be found, something real, something to
give each separate personality sunshine and flowers
in its own existence now. Something to shape this
million-handed labour to an end and outcome, leaving
accumulated sunshine and flowers to those who shall
succeed. It must be dragged forth by might of thought
from the immense forces of the universe."
The name of Lombard Street has gone round the
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 293
world ; it might be Esperanto for wealth. '^ All Lom-
bard Street to a China orange" is a periphrasis for
magnificent odds. In Arthur Murphy's comedy, "The
Citizen," first played in 1763, this phrase occurs in a
different form. Young George Philpot, proposing to
drive Corinna to Epsom on the next Sunday, and
boasting that he is as good a four-in-hand coachman
as any in England, says : *^ There we go scrambling
together ; reach Epsom in an hour and forty-three
minutes : all Lombard Street to an egg-shell we do."
There are companion phrases. In '^ Love's Labour's
Lost" we have Biron laying Costard his "hat to a
halfpenny"; in "Richard II" the unhappy Queen
exclaims : " My wretchedness to a row of pins," and,
earlier than Shakespeare, in " Gammer Gurton's
Needle " : " my cap to a crown."
Why a China orange ? This fruit, unknown to
Covent Garden, was apparently poor eating. Some
have seen in its selection a reference to the Levantine
Jews, who wore yellow turbans, but then some people
see Jews as trees walking. Bacon, in his essay on
Usury, says ; " They say that Usurers should have
Orange-tawney bonnets, because they doe Judaize."
As the street took its proverb from the luckless Jews,
so it took its name from the Lombards, who succeeded
them. It was not thought permissible to draw the
teeth of Lombards, who were only ousted when Sir
Richard Gresham, father of the greater Sir Thomas,
came forward with a " disinterested device to take up
all the money in Lombard Street." The Lombards
melted away, and left us the beautiful word " bankrupt"
a corruption of bancarottUy a broken bench. In
Florence an insolvent trader had his bench or money-
changing table broken. It is the man who is now
said to suffer that fate.
294 A LONDONER'S LONDON
The site of the business house of Su* Thomas
Gresham, founder of the Royal Exchange, is now
covered by Martin's bank. Gresham's original sign
of the Grasshopper, made of brass, was long preserved
here, but it vanished more than a hundred years ago.
Mr. John Biddulph Martin is careful to explain the loss
of his valuable relic. " The disappearance of the sign
is not attributable to any want of reverence on the part
of its owners, but to the dishonesty of the workmen
who rebuilt the house in 1794-5. It is said that it was
carefully put away during the rebuilding, but was
not forthcoming at the completion of the works." A
replica of the sign now glints over the door.
In Lombard Street, in a house on the present branch
post-office, Sir Robert Viner conducted his dealings
with Charles II. Here he entertained the King at his
Mayoralty banquet. But he became so maudlin loyal
that Charles made an excuse to depart, and before the
company realized his action he was making for his
coach. Viner, who was beyond abashment, rushed
after his Sovereign, caught him by the hand, and with
a vehement oath exclaimed : " Sir, you shall stay and
take t'other bottle." And he who never said a foolish
thing or did a wise one, trolled the line of an old song,
*' He that's drunk is as great as a king," and returned
to the table. The oddest story of a London statue is
associated with Viner. At the west end of Lombard
Street, on the site of the present Mansion House, was
the Stocks Market for the sale of meat and fish, and
here he was determined to plant the royal effigy. Being
in a hurry, or combining thrift with enthusiasm, he
used for the purpose a statue which he had picked up
cheap at Leghorn, a work in white marble representing
John Sobieski, the King of Poland, in the act of
trampling on a Turk. He had the figure of the Pole
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 295
refashioned till it became that of Charles of England,
while the wretched Turk was rechiselled into Oliver
Cromwell. The chaste result was unveiled on Charles's
birthday, 29 May, 1672, and it adorned the Stocks
Market until it was taken down in 1736, when the
Mansion House was built. It lay as lumber in an inr.-
yard until 1779, when the Corporation presented it to
one of Sir Robert's descendants. The remodelling of
the statue had been so carelessly done that Cromwell
wore a turban to the last. Viner, who died a ruined
man, but at Windsor Castle, was buried in the Church
of St. Mary Woolnoth, Lombard Street. His mansion
became London's first General Post Office in 1705,
and was afterwards known as the Mail Coach Office.
It is now represented by the Lombard Street branch
post-office.
The sites of the great old banks in Lombard Street
can be identified. Thus, the house No. 69 stands on
the site of the gold smithery and bank of Alderman
Edward Backwell, who had both Oliver Cromwell and
Charles II as his clients. His books, still in existence,
show that he managed the accounts of Charles's
Queen, of Queen Henrietta Maria, and of Prince
Rupert, Henry Cromwell, James Duke of Monmouth,
the Countess of Castlemaine, Samuel Pepys, and many
other notabilities.
There is no street in London in which the records
of sites are more complete than in Lombard Street.
Consequently it was possible nine years ago, during
the festivities of the Coronation of Edward VII, to
adorn the street with many of its ancient signs.
Twenty-three of these were hung in their proper
places, and a larger number could have been
correctly placed. Four or five are permanently dis-
played, with the happiest effect.
296 A LONDONER'S LONDON
In 1830 Messrs. Smith, Payne, and Smiths erected
premises at No. i Lombard Street, the foundation-
stone being laid by the youngest partner, and the
following prayer used: *' I invoke the Almighty
Disposer of all events (without whose sanction no
human exertions can avail) to look down with favour
and protection on this our undertaking, to give per-
manence to this building ; and to maintain the pros-
perity of the family connected with it, so long as they
shall continue their affairs with fidelity, and industry,
and with honour, and no longer." It was on this bank
that the publishing house of Longmans drew the
cheque for ;^io,ooo in favour of Lord Macaulay in
payment for his " History of England."
An instructive portrait is drawn by Mr. Hilton Price
of Mr. Fuller, an early partner in the bank of Fuller,
Banbury & Co., of No. 77 Lombard Street. He
belonged to that " prim class of bankers, well known
in the last century, who were hardly ever absent from
their desk in the shop, and who always slept over the
bank. He was a careful, economical man who always
had his washing done at home. One day every week,
at noon, a pint of beer was brought in and placed at
the foot of the stairs for the washerwoman, washing-
day being always known in the City by this circum-
stance. Once, however, this pint became a pot. News
of the unheard-of innovation quickly spread, and
caused quite a sensation in Lombard Street and
Cornhill. Indeed, an old customer called on him to
remonstrate upon his extravagance, telling him that,
although he had had great satisfaction in keeping his
accounts with him till then, he now hardly considered
him fit to take charge of other people's money, since
he did not know how to take care of his own." I have
little doubt that this banker was the " William Fuller,
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 297
Esq., banker, of Lombard Street," of whom I find a
singularly unkind obituary notice in the *^ Annual
Register" of 1800 — a notice which, in these days,
would precipitate an action for libel. He is charged
with having exercised ^^ the most penurious economy,"
and with permitting the pleasure of money-getting to
" reign unrivalled in his soul." The writer has to
admit, however, that he founded twelve almshouses in
Hoxton. The interesting statement is made that after
his death the remains of the old dead banker lay in
state in the banking-house parlour in Lombard Street,
and here we realize perfectly the changes which time
has brought to the City.
Lombard Street has other than banking associations.
In its Plough Court was born Alexander Pope. The
same house was afterwards occupied by William Allen,
the Quaker chemist and philanthropist. Pope's father,
a linen merchant, retired to the country at the age of
forty-six, when his brilliant but crook-backed boy was
only twelve years of age. Of Pope's boyhood in
Lombard Street nothing is known, yet I think one
may reasonably find a trace of it in his mocking verses,
*' To Mr. John Moore, Author of the Celebrated Worm
Powder." Moore was a quack doctor living in
Abchurch Lane, which leads from Lombard Street
into Cannon Street. His '^ learned Friend of Abchurch
Lane," Pope calls him. " John Moore's Worm
Powders " were very extensively advertised in the
newspapers, with testimonials written in plainer lan-
guage than would be tolerated to-day. Pope asks
Moore to remember that "all humankind are worms."
O Learned Friend of Abchurch Lane,
Who sett'st our entrails free ;
Vain is thy art, thy powder vain,
Since worm shall eat e'en thee.
298 A LONDONER'S LONDON
When Moore died in 1737 the '^ Gentleman's
Magazine" blandly remarked that he would now
" verify Mr. Pope's witty observation " — in the last
quoted line. Other times, other taste.
In Abchurch Lane Londoners were introduced to
French cookery. Here was Pontack's. This restau-
rateur was the son of Arnaude de Pontac, president of
the parliament of Bordeaux, and when he set up his
French eating-house in Abchurch Lane he named it the
** PontacHead," after his respected parent, from whose
vineyards he obtained the excellent claret for which
he charged Jonathan Swift seven shillings a bottle.
Pontack's became the fashion, and the Royal Society
dined there annually for many years. The host was a
man of many parts, and Evelyn gives us his portrait.
" I think I may truly say of him, what was not so truly
said of St. Paul, that much learning had made him
mad. He had studied well in philosophy, but chiefly
the rabbins, and was exceedingly addicted to caba-
listic fancies, an eternal babbler, and half-distracted by
reading abundance of the extravagant Eastern Jews.
He spoke all languages, was very rich, had a handsome
personage, and was well-bred, about forty-five years of
age." This Crichton had mentality left for the making
of the best ragouts and sauces in London. In
Abchurch Lane he would hand round such a bill of
fare as the following : " Bird's-nest soup from China ;
a ragout of fatted snails ; bantam pig but one day old
stuffed with hard row and ambergris ; French peas
stewed in gravy with cheese and garlick ; an incom-
parable tart of frogs and forced meat ; cod, with
shrimp sauce ; chickens en surprise^ not two hours
from the shell" — and much else en surprise. During
the South Sea Bubble stockbrokers came to Pontack's
in droves, but when it burst they returned to the chop-
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 299
houses, and " the Jews and directors no longer boiled
Westphalia hams in champagne and Burgundy." The
City was always very like itself.
Pontack's successor was an Englishwoman, whose
charms -^nd abilities were acquired in marriage by a
Lombard Street banker. To-day the finest old chop-
houses in London draw their clients into the network
of lanes and courts between Lombard Street and
Cornhill. Here are Simpson's, Thomas's (at Mr.
Pickwick's " George and Vulture ") and Baker's in
Change Alley, close to Lombard Street. The two
bow-windows of Baker's form an antique frame to a
heartsome vision of pewters, good plain food, and
snug boxes.
The many inlets to this curious region are easily
missed, and only on the spot can the mysteries of
Pope's Head Alley, Change Alley, Cowper's Court,
Birchin Lane, Ball Court, and St. Michael's Alley
be studied. Even these have their cunning little off-
shoots. In Birchin Lane you discover Bengal Court
and Castle Court, and there are other complications.
You may have wondered where the bank messengers
and doorkeepers of the City obtain their gold-laced
hats. In Castle Court there is a small shop that seems
to sell nothing but these glorious head-pieces. It is
startling, in Cowper's Court, suddenly to be con-
fronted by the words,
THE JERUSALEM,
cut handsomely over the entrance to the offices of the
South British Insurance Company. This was once
the daily resort of merchants trading to the East Indies,
China, and Australia. The name Castle Court is
perhaps connected with the sign of the ^^Ship and
Castle," borne as early as 1716 by a Cornhill tavern.
300 A LONDONER'S LONDON
In that year, on Lord Mayor's Day, a Frenchman
exhibited a " sun kitchen " on the roof of this tavern
in the presence of many City gentlemen. He roasted
a fowl and prepared tea and coffee by using the sun's
heat as reflected from a combination of " about a
hundred small looking or convex glasses."
In St. Michael's Alley the Jamaica Tavern still
represents the old Jamaica Coffee-house, the first house
in London in which coffee was publicly drunk. An
entire chapter, and a long one, might be written
about these old mercantile haunts. The story of the
South Sea Bubble centres in Change Alley and in the
vanished Garraway's Coffee-house. The whole mer-
cantility and gossip of the City in the early part of
the eighteenth century seems to centre here and in
its fellow financial coffee-house, *' Jonathan's," also in
Change Alley. It was over the door of the New
Jonathan's Coffee-house that the words "The Stock
Exchange " were first publicly inscribed and seen in
London.
Lucky Corner, that wonderful financial headland
from which the clerks of the Liverpool, London, and
Globe Insurance office now look on the City's mael-
strom, was also known as Pidding's Corner. This
Pidding was a lottery agent. But it was Tom Bish
who gave the Corner its first name. Bish first emerged
from obscurity in the State lottery of 1796. He estab-
lished himself at No. 4 Cornhill in 1798, and from that
year until the last lottery of 1826 he was the greatest
advertising broker in the country. His handbills went
everywhere, recording the successes of his clients and
inviting speculation. Like his neighbour, Samuel
Birch the confectioner, he frequently burst into
poetry, but unlike the alderman he wrote it to push
his business.
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 301
For nearly twenty years Bish exhausted the inge-
nuities of advertising, and finally, when the last of
all the lotteries was announced to take place on
18 October, 1826, he issued a manifesto, in which,
more in anger than sorrow, he wrote : —
" Mr. Pitt, whose ability in matters of financial
arrangements few will question, and whose morality was
proverbial, would not, I am bold to say, have yielded
to an outcry against a tax, the continuing of which
would have enabled him to let the labourer drink his
humble beverage at a reduced price, or the industrious
artisan to pursue his occupation by a cheaper light.
" But we live in other times — in the age of improve-
ment !
" To stake patrimonial estates at hazard or ecarte, in
the purlieus of St. James's, is merely amusement^ but to
purchase a ticket in the Lottery, by which a man may
gain an estate at a trifling risk, — is — immoral 1 Nay,
v^ithin a few hours of the time I write, were not many
of our nobility and senators, some of whom, I dare say,
voted against Lotteries, assembled betting thousands
upon a horse-race ? "
Tom's tears availed not, and the Cornhill lottery
contractors — Bish, Martin, Hazard, and the rest — pre-
pared to put up their shutters. But they meant to
die fighting, and incredible efforts were made in the
summer of 1826 to make the last of all the lotteries a
success. Cars, banners, and music were sent round
the town proclaiming the approaching death of the
Lottery, and the last chance of a fortune. The effect,
however, was funereal, and the gigantic octagonal car
was everywhere only laughed at and pelted with
stones and oyster-shells. The Lottery expired on the
appointed date in Cooper's Hall, Basinghall Street,
and London did not grieve.
302 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Guy the bookseller and founder of Guy's Hospital
kept his shop at Lucky Corner — the junction of
Lombard Street and Cornhill. Here he sold the first
Bibles printed at Oxford, and published school-books
and theological works. He had other ways, it may
be guessed, of growing rich. One of them is un-
pleasantly set forth by Maitland : " England being
engaged in an expensive war against France, the poor
seamen on board the Royal Navy for many years,
instead of money, received tickets for their pay, which
these necessitous but very useful men were obliged to
dispose of at thirty, forty, and sometimes fifty in the
hundred discount. Mr. Guy, discovering the sweets
of this traffic, became an early dealer therein."
Mr. Guy also speculated with great shrewdness, and
was one of the few men who bought and sold South
Sea stock at the right time. He gathered money and
spent little. He dined on his shop-counter, spreading
a newspaper for table-cloth. Such was the man who
founded one of the noblest of London charities. A
censorious world tries to account for the anomaly,
and the story that found favour was this : Guy fell
in love with his maid-servant, and in view of this
event he had so far expanded his soul as to order
that the pavement in front of his shop should be
repaired as far as a particular stone which he marked.
The girl, while her master was out, watched the paviors
at work, and observing a broken place she asked
them not to miss it. They replied that Mr. Guy had
ordered them to go no farther than the marked stone.
" Well," she replied, " mend it ; tell him I bade you,
and I know he will not be angry." But the poor girl
had miscalculated. Mr. Guy was so angry that he
broke off his engagement, renounced all idea of
marrying, and took to founding hospitals and alms-
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 303
houses. He died at the age of eighty, after giving
immense sums to charity and endowing his great
hospital with more than ;^200,ooo.
King WiUiam Street is modern, and its only charm
is its relation to the Monument, but that is much.
I have an old kindness for the Monument region, to
which one comes with uplifted eye and a moved heart
across London Bridge. From the bridge one can
see the City ; other approaches give vista, here is
panorama. The air is laden with the scents of pro-
duce. In Mincing Lane the hot odour of roasted
sample coffee is seldom absent ; the air of Eastcheap
is haunted by tea scents ; in St. Mary-at-Hill you
descend through pepper to fish ; and in Lower
Thames Street the emanations of drysaltery mingle
with oranges and something only to be called otto
of steamboat.
All these scents and sneezes must have been familiar
to the inhabitants of Todgers's commercial boarding-
house under the Monument, though for them there
was a special intimation of bruised oranges in the
cellars of their wonderful labyrinth. The zest and
detail of that description in the ninth chapter of
*^ Martin Chuzzlewit " are unusual, even in Dickens.
His description of Todgers's — its mere situation and
externals — fill four and a half columns in the edition
of the novel before me. No writer dare now attempt
such a thing. Yet we become dead to the rest of the
world as the tortuous, intensive, fantastic, and evoca-
tive lines flow on. Dickens had intended to open
*' Martin Chuzzlewit " in the lantern of a lighthouse
— to be precise, in the Longships, off Land's End.
It is odd, then, that the first deep-bitten passage in
the story should be this description of a labyrinth of
dark lanes and blind alleys close to the Monument.
304 A LONDONER'S LONDON
" You couldn't walk about in Todgers's neighbour-
hood as you could in any other neighbourhood. You
groped your way for an hour between lanes and
byways and courtyards and passages, and never once
emerged upon anything that might reasonably be
called a street. A kind of resigned distraction came
over the stranger as he trod those devious mazes, and,
giving himself up for lost, went in and out and round
about and quietly turned back again when he came to
a dead wall or was stopped by an iron railing, and felt
that the means of escape might possibly present them-
selves in their own good time, but that to anticipate
them was hopeless. Instances were known of people
who, being asked to dine at Todgers's, had travelled
round and round it for a weary time, with its very
chimney-pots in view ; and finding it, at last, impos-
sible of attainment, had gone home again with a gentle
melancholy on their spirits, tranquil and uncomplain-
ing."
The Todgers neighbourhood is fixed by one graphic
touch. On the roof of the boarding-house there was a
sort of terrace, with old posts and fragments of clothes-
lines, and " two or three tea-chests, full of earth, with
forgotten plants in them, like old walking-sticks."
This observatory commanded a view of chaotic roofs,
across which, on a bright day, fell the shadow of the
Monument ; ^' and turning round, the tall original was
close behind you, with every hair erect upon his
golden head, as if the doings of the city frightened
him." Fragments of the real Todgersdon survive in
Botolph Alley, running between Love Lane and
Botolph Lane. These two lanes, with Pudding Lane
and St. Mary Hill, are the arteries, if they can be
called such, of the dense precinct which ** hemmed
Todgers's round, and hustled it, and crushed it, and
PUDDING LANE AND THE MONUMENT
THE EXISTENCE, EVEN FIFTY YEARS AGO, OF A TODGERS BOARDING-HOUSE UNDER
THE MONUMENT, IN THAT LAIR OF CRANES, CARTS, FISH-SMELLS, OATHS AND COL-
LISIONS IS SCARCELY CREDIBLE (P. 305)
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 305
stuck its brick-and-mortar into it, and kept the air
from it, and stood perpetually between it and the
light." Love Lane in its best hours reminds one of
the fishing quarter of Lowestoft. Its cavernous cellars
and unexpected lofts, its tanks of live eels, its dripping
boxes that were yesterday in Grimsby and Blyth, its
baskets of ice glistening on the heads of young
Atlases, give one a sense of the sea which is completed
by the wave-like slosh of besoms on asphalt floors.
The way in which London hugs and secretes the
character of an old neighbourhood — not really parting
with its features when the farewells are said — is known
to her lovers. You would say that the existence, even
fifty years ago, of a Todgers boarding-house under
the Monument, in that lair of cranes, carts, fish-smells,
oaths, and collisions, is scarcely credible. Yet to-day
you have only to enter Swan Lane, hard by, to find a
row of such houses of the Todgers type, shuttered,
curtained, serene in their obscure decency.
It is not necessary, but I have the inclination to
believe that Dickens knew this neighbourhood in
some specially intimate way. It is deeply etched in
another of his early novels, for it was to a house
by the river-side that Newman Noggs inducted Mrs.
Nickleby and Kate when they came under the power
of Ralph Nickleby. Their appointed home was '^ a
large old dingy house in Thames Street, the doors and
windows of which were so bespattered with mud, that
it would have appeared to have been uninhabited for
years. . . . Old and gloomy, and black, in truth it
was, and sullen and dark were the rooms, once so
bustling with life and enterprise. There was a wharf
behind opening on the Thames. An empty dog-
kennel, some bones of animals, fragments of iron
hoops, and staves of old casks, lay strewn about, but
3o6 A LONDONER'S LONDON
no life was stirring here. It was a picture of cold,
silent decay."
I can indulge the fancy that the true spring, the
primum mobile, of Dickens's inspiration was place, not
personality ; that his first relationship with the material
of his art was with streets, houses, and precincts,
which communicated to him a sense of the human
personalities they had absorbed, and awoke a respon-
sive impulse to restore to them the warmth and quality
of men and women. There is an intimacy between
his characters and the places from which they emerge
that is unexampled in any other novelist. Did he, in a
manner, evoke characters from environments ? It may
be the illusion of his art, but I can imagine that he
materialized Ralph Nickleby from the very aura of
Golden Square, that he had to think of Goswell Street
before he could shape his own Pickwick (as distinct
from Chapman and Hall's) and that in the Monument
labyrinth he actually groped after Jenkins. Quilp is
the very emanation of rascally foreshores and rotting
wharves. There is a story of Dickens's boyhood to
which I give far more importance than did Forster, at
the risk of seeming fanciful. As a boy in Bayham Street
he read George Colman's " Broad Grins." The book,
says Forster, " seized his fancy very much, and he was
so impressed by its description of Covent Garden in the
piece called the * Elder Brother ' that he stole down to
the market by himself to compare it with the book.
He remembered, as he said in telling me this, snuffing
up the flavour of the faded cahhage-leaves, as if it were
the very breath of comic fiction,'* On this Forster
remarks, " Nor was he far wrong, as comic fiction
then, and for some time after, was ; it was reserved for
himself to give sweeter and fresher breath to it." It
was, but the comment seems inadequate.
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 307
We are on ground where no genius is required to
evoke spirit from matter. What overcoming lang-
synes of London, ^' felt in the blood and felt along
the heart/' abide in the shadows of London Bridge !
Millions of children who never saw London have
helped to build up London Bridge. How old the
song is, and how it went originally, are points on
which the learned do not agree, but it has been con-
jectured that the first line, " London Bridge is broken
down," may go back to the terrible "battle of the
bridge " fought between the Danish occupiers of
London and King Olaf of Norway. An Icelandic
scald of the thirteenth century begins the ballad of
the fight thus : —
London Bridge is broken down,
Gold is won, and bright renown ;
Shields resounding.
War horns sounding,
Hildur shooting in the din ;
Arrows singing,
Mail-coats ringing,
Odin makes our Olaf win.
More prosaically the song has been traced to a
supposed breakdown of the Bridge, when London
Bridge lying in ruins, the office of Bridge Master
was vacant, and his power over the River Lea — for
it is doubtless that river which is celebrated in the
refrain *^ Dance o'er my Lady Lea " — was for a while
at an end. All this is uncertain, but the song has
been a nursery-rhyme for centuries. A correspondent
of the "Gentleman's Magazine" of September, 1823,
related that in childhood he heard it warbled by a
lady who was born in the reign of Charles II.
Again, " London Bridge is Fallen Down " is declared
to be an old Christmas carol belonging especially to
3o8 A LONDONER'S LONDON
Newcastle-on-Tyne, whose old stone bridge bore a
singular resemblance on a small scale to London
Bridge. It began : —
Dame, get up and bake your pies,
On Christmas Day in the morning,
to which she answers mournfully —
London Bridge is fallen down.
On Christmas Day in the morning,
the inference being that until the Bridge was rebuilt
on the Thames, she could not — on account of some
telepathic obstruction — make pastry on the Tyne.
The proverbial philosophy of London Bridge is
full of interest. The saying that the bridge is *' built
upon wool-packs refers to the impost on wool which
helped to defray its cost. A similar basis, in fact, exists
for the saying that London Bridge was made for wise
men to go over and fools to go under. This harks
us back to the danger which for centuries beset the
'^shooting" of the bridge by small boats and wherries.
The passage of the water was obstructed, not only
by the narrowness of the arches, but by corn-mills
and water-works built in some of the openings. The
other arches were narrow ; at flood-tide passengers
going down the river would often disembark rather
than take the risk of the rapids under the bridge.
Dr. Johnson and Boswell did this on 30 July, 1763,
when they had hired a sculler at the Temple Stairs
for an excursion to Greenwich. Noting the incident,
John Wilson Croker relates a personal experience.
*^ I once had the honour of attending the Duke and
Duchess of York on a party down the river, and
we were about to land to allow the barge to shoot
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 309
the bridge. The Duchess asked * Why ? ' and being
told that it was on account of the danger, positively
refused to get out of the boat, and insisted on
shooting, which we reluctantly did ; but we shipped
a good deal of water, and all got very wet, Her
Royal Highness showing not the least alarm or
regret." Many young Londoners, male and female,
were of the same mind as the Duchess. Hence
Canning's lines ; —
" Shoot we the Bridge I " — the renturous boatmen cry —
"Shoot we the Bridge!" — the exulting fare reply.
with the result that —
Drench'd each smart garb, and clogg'd each struggling limb,
Far o'er the stream the Cockneys sink or swim.
Other old sayings about London Bridge are numerous :
"Take one of the heads on London Bridge, able
neither to speak nor breathe." — " It is impossible to
stop the tide at London Bridge." — " If London Bridge
had fewer eyes (i.e., fewer arches) it would see better."
London Bridge, too, is the traditional Pisgah from
which to view the Londoners ; nor have railway
bridges, tunnels, and tubes deprived it of its morning
and evening supremacy. In all cities this is the
character of the bridge. There, between sky and
water, in the unwonted light, one sees faces
Praising, reviling.
Worst head and best head.
Past me defiling,
Never arrested,
Wanters, abounders,
March in gay mixture.
Men, my surrounders !
I am the fixture.
310 A LONDONER'S LONDON
And it is on London Bridge, if anywhere, that we
may seek for the synthetic London expression, the
form and pressure of the town in the eyes and
bearing of its children. The normal expression on the
Londoner's face has been interpreted by Mrs. Meynell
in one of her penetrating essays : ^^ If there is a look
of human eyes that tells of perpetual loneliness, so
there is also the familiar look that is the sign of
perpetual crowds. It is the London expression, and,
in its way, the Paris expression. It is the quickly
caught, though not interested, look, the dull but ready
glance of those who do not know of their forfeited
place apart ; who have neither the open secret nor
the close; no reserve, no need of refuge, no flight
nor impulse of flight ; no moods but what they may
brave out in the street, no hope of news from solitary
counsels."
This is admirably said, and the only qualification
it can need is that it must not be applied to the whole
Londoner, who is one man on London Bridge and
more or less another man in the suburb. It is in the
street that the Londoner puts on the outward signs
of that inward attitude of defence against the calls
which faces and incidents in the streets make on
him. His ^Mull but ready glance" is that share of
his unmiraculous loaves and fishes which experience
has taught him that he can afford to give you among
four million rivals. De Quincey thought that his
visions, under opium, of innumerable human faces
might have had their origin in his London life. We
who do not eat opium, but are London-pent, must
somehow conquer or evade that tyranny of the human
face. Hence this quick, dull glance — quick with the
quickness of the eye, but dull with the grudgings
of a brain that would weary in an hour's sustained
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 311
alertness. On the other hand this wary retreat
from alertness is itself a strain, and that is why the
Londoner, who turns a fish-like eye on the mass of
his fellow-townsmen, was easily persuaded that the
lion on Northumberland House wagged its tail.
On London Bridge it is that London remembers the
days of her youth while she gives thanks in her sweat
that her natural force is not abated. The air is full of
hum and jingle, yet the silence of the natural river is felt
under the syrens and chains, and even while we see
the oranges passing from boat to trolley the water
bemuses us with the lapping light and grey tracts that
Chaucer knew. And you wish to sense the long story
of the haven, if you can do so without making speeches
out of books, and if the savour of it will come to you
in the warmth of the sun, in the rattle of the crane, or
in the glint of a pigeon's wing when it swerves ? . . .
Ah, well ! come and look at the Pool from Rother-
hithe, where there is peace. There, opposite Wapping
Old Stairs, among warehouse, cranes, masts, funnels,
rigging, and Rotherhithe, there is a wooden gallery.
The little inn wears it like a girdle. It overhangs
the water at high tide and the mud at low ; the lighters
huddle near it as if it were their friend. It is the eye
of a slight promontory and looks over to the league-
long wharves and warehouses which are Wapping and
Shadwell and Stepney, but which, under the evening
sky, are serene and poised as a forest.
A steamship is still unloading her cargo of crude
sugar into Wapping. A lighter receives them from
her high deck, and close to the warehouse another
lighter is yielding its load to a crane that lowers its
chain sixty feet. Always when you look a yellow
package is rising to the little doorway on the top floor.
It disappears.
312 A LONDONER'S LONDON
The grain barge at our side is in the river, but not
of it. It belongs to the canal, and those gaudy
lozenges of colour on the uprights which support its
longitudinal bridge, as long nearly as itself, are a
quarter of a century behind Thames and Medway
conventions. The grain barge has come across from
the Regent's Canal Dock to the granaries, and it will
soon be on another crawl to the West Country. I
think that the barge wife, short, tubby, and tanned,
and wearing a white apron and a sun-bonnet, likes the
canal best. London's gate looms behind the sun-
bonnet, and St. Paul's carries the imagination on, but
London never disturbed this woman. She sits in the
stern with her back to Babylon — a mighty knitter
before the Lord.
Look at these Jersey and Cornwall schooners,
hugging each other like sisters. There is something
primitive about them — a lingering likeness to crafts
that rotted about the time Redriff became Rotherhithe
and Gulliver took ship in the "Antelope" — Captain
William Pritchard — the very "Antelope," mayhap, that
was afterwards wrecked off the Pellews under Captain
Wilson. Wilson brought back his Prince Lee Boo
to get civilization, but he got smallpox with it, and he
lies there among the mariners under the old brick
tower in the leafy churchyard.
Boys are bathing from Old Wapping Stairs.
How large and free, within the limits of an order
too old to be felt, is all this by-play and leisure at the
water-gate of London I And yonder, in remote quiet-
ness, rise those shapes of Tower, Monument, Bridge,
and Dome that are the symbols of this city through
all the world. If they lack the grace of collective
motherhood, if they assimilate rather with the clouds
than the streets, it is because London has attained to
THE STREET OF SONGS AND SIXPENCES 313
dimensions in which her entity is lost in space, as her
origin in time. Only in her sleep, in the suspension
of all that ^' mighty heart/' has a great poet envisaged
the unity of London. Yet here, and at last, one has
some illusion of the whole. Those white-fleshed boys,
in whose veins the life-blood of London is continued
— let us think that they are playing in the dusk of a
maternal city, by a river whose image and tradition are
in every heart. Let the Angel which redeems London
from evil bless the lads, and let London's name be
named on them, and the names that our fathers knew,
and let them grow into a multitude in the midst of
the earth.
INDEX
Abbey, first sight of Westminster,
i86
Abchurch Lane, Pope's " learned
friend" of, 297-8
Academy, Royal, at Somerset
House, 172-4
Adam and Eve Tavern, 134
Addison, Joseph, in Westminster
Abbey, 198
Adelphi, art in the, 174
Aders, Charles, his house in
Euston Grove, 68
Admiralty, the, 207
Advertisement-writing, art of,
226-7
Agar Town, 71
Albany Street, 127-9
" Alexander the Corrector," 36
Amsterdam and London com-
pared, 282
Andre, Major, mutilations of his
monument in Westminster
Abbey, 191
Anatomy Act of 1832, 85
" Angel " the, at Islington, 35
Anne, Queen, her death, 43, 89
Antiquities of London, minor,
151-4
Apollo Room, the, in Fleet
Street, 237
Applewoman and Lord Chan-
cellor Bathurst, 217
Apsley House, 216-17
Archway in Sardinia Street, 146
Arne, Dr., in Craven Buildings,
144
Art for the people, 73-7
Artillery Row, Milton in, 285
Auctioneer, a great, 96-8
Auctions at Sotheby's, etc., 170
Austin Friars, annals of, 88-92
the Dutch church in, 94
Bacon, R.A., John, and Queen
Charlotte, 119
Bailiff's daughter of Islington, 38
Baillie, Joanna, 7, 74
Banker, an eccentric, 296-7
Bank robbery in Cornhill, 10 1
" Bankrupt," origin of word, 293
Barbauld, Mrs., 7
Barclay, David, entertains kings
in Cheapside, 285
Barry, Charles, and Houses of
Parliament, 202-5
Batson's Coffee-house, 89
Bayham Street, Dickens in, 132
Beaconsfield, Lord, in Park Lane,
276-7
Bedford, Duke of, in 1756, 56
Bedford House, 56-7
Row, old water-pipes in, 152
" Bedroom," Dr. Gardner's
" last and best," 84
'* Bell and Crown," Holborn, 5
Bewick, Thomas, his dislike of
London, 29
Birch, '• Pattypan," 107-8
315
3i6
A LONDONER'S LONDON
Bird, Francis, the sculptor, ii8
Birds in Westminster Abbey, 190
Bish, Tom, 300
Blake, William, remarkable con-
versation with, 69
" Blind Fiddler," Wilkie's, drawn
from a London street musician,
134
Bloomsbury, author's lines on, 55
the '• bars" in, 5, 54
growth of, 57-9
Blue Posts Tavern in Totten-
ham Court Road, 136
Body-snatchers, the, 84-5
Bohun, Edward, his dying words,
94
Bond, Sir Thomas, 371
Bond Street, 271-3
Book auctions at Sotheby's, 170
Books, second-hand, 251-4
Booksellers' Row, 8-9
Borrow, George, ue Byron's
funeral, 136-7
Bozier's Court, 135-6
Bradbury, Thomas, and death of
Queen Anne, 43
Brasbridge, Joseph, his chronicles
of Fleet Street, 222-8
Bread Street, Milton born in, 285-6
Briggs, Henry, 86
Bright, John, famous speech of,
1 6 1-2
British Coffee-house, and its
Scotch frequenters, 256
" British College of Health," 72
Brixton, desertion of, 21
Broad Street, E.C., 79-88
Brocklesby, Dr. Richard, 180-1
Brydges, Sir Egerton, on •' Childe
Harold," 239-40
Buchanan, Robert, his arrival in
London, 30
Buckingham House, 213
Buckingham Palace, story of,
212-15
Buckinghamshire, Duchess of, her
bargaining with Royalty, 213-14
Buckland, Frank, in Albany
Street, 128-9
" Bull and Bush," the, at Hamp-
stead, 6
Bull and Mouth Tavern, 4
Bull, Dr. John, the organist,
curious story of, 87-8
Bunhill Fields burial-ground, 43
Bunyan's ** Pilgrim's Progress"
published in Poultry, 287
Burne-Jones, Edward, and Lon-
don life, 31-2
in Red Lion Square, 64-5
Burney, Fanny, at Buckingham
House, 214-15
her wedding, 147
Burns, Right Hon. John, on
Napoleon's alleged visit to
London, 248-50
Burton Crescent, its name, 57
Burton, Decimus, in Bloomsbury,
57
Button's cook-shop. Fleet Street,
218-19
Byron, Lord, his admiration of
'• The Vanity of Human
Wishes," 242
his funeral, 136-7, 199-201
his London, 241-2
in Bond Street, 272-3
in Fleet Street, 239-41
in Strand, 160
on London's '• first ap-
pearance," 280
Cabbage-leaves and comedy,
306
Cadell, Thomas, in the Strand,
168-9
Caesar, Julius, in St. Pancras, 71
Camden Passage, Islington, 36
Camden Town, 129-31
Camelford House, 274
INDEX
317
Campbell, Thomas, his ludicrous
adventure in Regent Street,
270-1
" Campo Santo of Nonconfor-
mity," the, 43
Canaletto, his view of London
from Pentonville, 53
Candle-snuffing expert, a, 226
Canonbury Tower, 37
Capper's Farm, 61
Caricaturists of " country boxes,"
13
Carlton House, remarkable as-
sembly at, 211
Carlyle, Thomas, in Claremont
Square, 52-3
at Eraser's, in Regent Street,
267-70
on "gigs," 148-9
on " Thomas Teggs and
other extraneous persons," 289
Carts, " wonderful dignity " of
London, 11
Cartwright, Major John, his
statue in Bloomsbury, 57
Ceracchi, Giuseppe, the sculptor,
1 18-19
Cervetto, " Old Nosey," 263-4
Charing Cross, book-market in,
251-3
derivation of the name, 246
the monument, 247-8
the puzzle of, 247
Charles I, statue at Charing
Cross, 247-8
Charles II in Lombard Street, 294
Charlotte Street, old and new,
122-3
Richard Wilson in, 121
Chalk Farm and primitive rail-
way travelling, 69-70
Chancery Lane memories, 154-8
Shakespeare in, 154-5
Chateaubriand, his adventure in
Westminster Abbey, 187
Chaucer, his grave in Westminster
Abbey, 195
Cheapside, 278-90
associated with trade and
cockneyism, 279
book-auctions in, 288-90
Heine in, 279-80
Keats in, 284
Milton in, 284-7
Poets in, 284
Cheere, Sir Henry, his leaden
figures for gardens, 1 17-18
Chelsea, J. M. W. Turner at, 176
Cheques, why preferred to cash
by Sir Astley Cooper, 83
" Cheshire Cheese," did Dr.
Johnson frequent it ? 236-7
"Childe Harold," published in
Fleet Street, 237-40
"China orange, all Lombard
Street to a," 293
Chiswell Street, 46
Chop-houses in the City, 229
Church Row at Hampstead, 7
City, residential life in the, 81-2
City Road, the, described, 40-3
48-50
Clare Market, 142-5
Claremont Square, Ishngton, 50
Carlyle in, 52-3
Clarke, Mary Ann, and Duke of
York, 208
Clarke, W., at Exeter 'Change, 165
Cleopatra's Needle, 210-11
Clifford's Passage, Fleet Street, 218
Cloud, Mr., his literary omnibuses,
125
Coal-heaver evangelist, the, 51-2
Cobden statue, the, 131
Cockneyism, the exit of, 13
Cockspur Street, 254-6
Colebrooke Cottage, Charles Lamb
at, 35-6
Coleridge, S. T., in the Strand
161
3i8
A LONDONER'S LONDON
Collins, Wilkie, describes Hamp-
stead, 8
Colton, Charles Caleb, in Soho,
140
*' Connemara, a suburban," 71
Constable, R.A., John, in Char-
lotte Street, 122
at Hampstead, 6
Constitution Hill, 215
" Conversation " Sharp, 275-6
Cooper, Sir Astley,in Broad Street,
81-5
and the resurrection men,
84-5
Copenhagen and London com-
pared, 282
Cornhill, 99-108
" Cornhill Magazine," the, 102-3
Coronation Coach, the, of George
III, 120
'• Country boxes " of citizens, 13
Coverley, Sir Roger de, 5
Cowper, William, in Southampton
Row, 59
on Cockney villas, 13
Cows' breath inhaled as a cure, 8
Cozens, John, 174
Crabbe, George, 7
Crab Tree Fields, 58
Craven Buildings, inhabitants of,
144
Crestall, Joshua, 174
Cromwell, his supposed burial in
Red Lion Square, 61
Cross at King's Cross, 73
Cruden, Alexander, in Islington,
36
Cruikshank, George, in Claremont
Square, 50
Cumberland Market, 126
Cursitor Street, Lord Eldon in, 32
Curtis's Hatch, Lambeth, 6
Dairy farmers of London, 39
" Dagger " in the City arms, 106
Dalby, Mr., Inventor of public-
house beer-engine, 40
Dalston, 16, 17
Dalton, John, his dislike of
London, 29
Darwin, Charles, likes Gower
Street, 66
Davenant, Sir W., on London
carts, 10
Dawson, Nancy, 60
Day, John, 7
Deare, John, the sculptor, his
strange death, 118
Defoe, Daniel, in Cornhill, loo-i
in Tokenhouse Yard, 95
Denmark Hill, 19
Devereux Court, extraordinary
fatal duel in, 63
Deville, the phrenologist, 168
Devil Tavern in Fleet Street, 237
De Wint, Peter, 174
Dibdin, Thomas, on book-auc-
tions, 169-170
Dickens, Charles, on the burning
of the Houses of Parliament,
203-4
and the cabbage-leaves, 306
his sense of place, 306
on the Eagle Tavern, 42
Dingley, Mr. Charles, projector
of City Road, 40
Disraeli, Benjamin, in Park Lane,
276-7
Dodson and Fogg, 101-2
" Dog's-meat tart of a magazine,"
a, 268
Dolphin door - knockers near
Fetter Lane, 152-4
Dorsetshire squire, story of, 26
Doyley's, in the Strand, 164
Drapers' Gardens, 95
Drugs, Sir Astley Cooper's list of
principal, 83
Dryden, John, grave in West-
minster Abbey, 197
INDEX
319
Ducarel, Dr., his regrets at spread
of London, 126
Duel, traditional, in Bloomsbury,
66-7
Duelling, 63
Duke of Wellington, statue on
arch at Hyde Park Corner,
215-17
Du Maurier, George, 8
Dust - heaps at King's Cross and
Moscow legend, 72
Dutch church in Austin Friars,
94
Eagle Tavern, the, 41
performers at, 42
East End life, how to see it, 112
East India House, 109
remarkable letter to direc-
tors of, 109-10
East London, remote districts of,
114-15
Edridge, Henry, 174
Egan, Pierce, described by G. A.
Sala, 259-60
Eidophusikon, the, 261-3
Eldon, Lord, his " first perch " in
London, 32
his motto, 230
his vine in Gower Street, 65
Eleanor Crosses, the, 247
" Elegy," Gray's, 100
Eliot, George, in Strand, 160
Ellenborough, Lady, in Blooms-
bury Square, 59
Ellerby, Dr. Thomas Robson, be-
queaths his body for dissection,
85-6
Ellis, John, a friend of Dr. John-
son, 98-9
an epigram by him, 99
Elwes, John, miser and town-
planner, 126
" Endymion " of Keats, published
in Fleet Street, 238
Euston Grove, 68
Euston Road, flowers and fresh
air in, 68
statuary yards, 1 16-17
Euston Station, 69
Exchequer tallies, 203-4
Fagin, Cruikshank's vision of, 50
Falconer, William, 238
Farthing Pie-house, 126
Fawkes, Guy, 146
Featherstone Street, 44
Fees, liberal, to physicians, 83
Fetter Lane, 230
Field of the Forty Footsteps, 66-7
Fire in Cornhill, 1748, destroys a
poet's house, 100
at Houses of Parliament,
202-5
of 1666, marks of, in a
Cheapside house, 290
" First Perch, The," 25, 32
FitzGerald, Edward, in Charlotte
Street, 122
on Regent Street, 270
FitzGerald, Mrs. Edward, on
Charles Lamb, 36
Flats in London, 15
Fleet Street, 218-45
a silversmith's memories of,
222-8
Dr. Johnson in, 232-6
old shopping days in, 219-20
Foote, Samuel, and Hardham's
snuff, 231
Foot Guards and their bearskins, 4
Forgery by a great engraver, 103
to " sham Abraham New-
land," 37
Fowl roasted in sun's heat, 300
Fox, George, 172
Franklin, Benjamin, in Wild
Court, 147
"PYaser's Magazine," " Sartor Re-
sartus " in, 268-9
320
A LONDONER'S LONDON
Free and easies of old Fleet
Street, 223-225
Free library in an omnibus, 125
Freeman's Court, 101-2
Fribourg and Treyer, 263
Fruit grown in City Road, 47
" Fruits of Experience," a Fleet
Street chronicle, 222-8
Fulwood's Rents, 5
Furnival's Inn, 4
Gainsborough, R.A., Thomas,
261-2
Gamp, Mrs., in Kingsgate Street,
145-6
Garraway's, 300
Garrick, David, his Abbey monu-
ment, 181-2
his funeral, 198-9
Gay, John, at Hampstead, 8
George Street, Adelphi, 249
George the Martyr, Saint, burial-
ground, 60
George II, burial in Westminster
Abbey, 194
George III entertained by Quaker
in Cheapside, 283-284
his statue, 254
George Yard, 160
" Gentleman " Jackson, 272-3
Gibbon's "Decline and Fall," 168-9
Giles-in-the-Fields, Saint, church
and village, 138-9
Giles, Saint, Cripplegate, 285
Girtin, Thomas, 175-6
Gissing, George, on Hoxton, 33-4
on lodging houses, 32
Gladstone, W. E., in the London
streets, 4
Globe Tavern, Fleet Street, festive
gatherings at, 224-5
Godwin, Mary Wolstonecraft, 77
Mary, 78
Goldsmith, Oliver, on London
traffic, II
Gosset, ** Milk-white," 170
Goswell Street, Dickens on, 49
Gough, Richard, the antiquary, 90
Gough Square, Dr. Johnson's
house in, 232-3
Gower Street, stories of, 66
Grant, Sir William, at the Rolls
Court House, 156-8
Grapes grown by Lord Eldon in
Gower Street, 65
grown in Gower Place re-
cently, 65
Grasshopper, the, in Lombard
Street, 294
Gray, David, his dread of dying in
London, 31
Gray, Thomas, in Cornhill, 99-100
in Southampton Row, 59
Grecian Saloon, the, 41
Greek accent, dying for a, 63
Green Man Tavern, the, 123, 126
Gresham College, 86
Gresham, Sir Thomas, 86
in Lombard Street, 294
Grey, Henry, Duke of Suffolk, his
head from Tower Hill, ill
Grey, John, and his cider vault, 5
Grimaldi, Joseph, 50
" Grocers, The Polite," 165
Guy, Thomas, at ** Lucky Corner,
302
why he did not marry, 302
Guy's Hospital, 303
Halfpenny Hatches, 6
Hamerton, Philip Gilbert, his in-
difference to London, 30
Hamiltonian system, the, 220
Hampstead, associations of, 6-8
Hampstead Heath, 6-7
Hansom-cab, evolution of the, 12
Hansom, J. Aloysius, 12
Hanway, Jonas, 136
Hanway Street, 136
Hardham's snuff, 230-1
INDEX
321
Hastings, Charles Lamb at, 13
Hats at Lloyd's in the Strand,
165-7
Haydon, B. R., at Hampstead, 8
his "Napoleon at St. Helena,"
272
in Strand, 160-1
Haymarket, the, 256-60
Hazlitt, William, in Chancery
Lane, 155
Hearne, Thomas, 174
Heine, Heinrich, in Cheapside,
279-80
Henry V in Westminster Abbey,
192
Henry VI chooses his grave in
Westminster Abbey, 192-3
" Here lies Nancy Dawson," 60
Hermes Street, origin of the name,
51
Hermes Trismegistus, Penton-
ville Street named after, 51
Highlanders, wooden, in tobacco-
nists' shops, 231-2
Hindley, Charles, 9
Hogarth, his "March to Finchley,"
134
^ogg> James, in Regent Street,
269
Holborn, changes in, 4-5
Hollingshead, John, on the
Grecian Saloon, 41
Hone's " Every-Day Book," etc.,
289
Horse Guards' Parade, 206-7
Houses of Parliament, the fire of
1834, 202-5
Howe, Mr., of Jermyn Street, his
marital escapade, 264-7
Howell, James, compares conti-
nental cities with London, 281
Howells, W. D., on London omni-
buses, II
Hoxton, author's " first perch " in,
33
Y
Hudson, Thomas, 27
Huntington, William, 51-2
Ireland, Dean, and the burning
of the Houses of Parliament,
203
Irving, Edward, in Claremont
Square, 53
Islington, author's impressions of,
34-5
recent desertion of, 21
worthies of, 37
Jackson John, pugilist and
trainer, 272-3
Jamaica Tavern, 300
James I, his silkworm project,
212
James V, flight of, 147
Jehoshaphat, Mr., of Panton
Street, 258
Jenner, Charles, "Town Ec-
logues," 129-30
Jermyn Street, a strange story of,
264-7
Jerusalem, the, 299
"Jesus Temple," 94
"Jew's Harp" tea-garden, the, 124
Johnson, Dr. Samuel, his funeral
procession in Fleet Street, 239
if he returned to Fleet Street ?
243-5
in Fleet street, 232-7
in a Mortimer Street studio,
120
on his mother's death, 234
Johnson, Mrs. Samuel, 233
Jonson, Ben, as friend of John
Stow, 106
in Fleet Street, 237
in Westminster Abbey, 196
Keats at Hampstead, 8
in Cheapside, 284
in Fleet Street, 238
322
A LONDONER'S LONDON
Keene, Charles, in the Strand,
178
Kelly, Mrs., Dan Leno on, 185
" Kelly's Wars " and the legend
of Napoleon's visit to London,
250
Kendall's Farm, Regent's Park,
126
Kensington Gravel-pits, 175
Kensington Turnpike Trust, 18
King, Dr. William, his London
anecdotes, 62-4
King William Street, 303
King's Cross, the Great Northern
railway-station at, 71
Kingsgate Street and Mrs. Gamp,
145
Kingsland Road described, 16-17
Kitchener, Dr., in Warren Street,
132-3
Kneller, Sir Godfrey, refuses
burial in Westminster Abbey,
194
Lackington, James, story of, 44-7
" Lacon," the author of , in Soho,
140-1
Lamb, Charles, and Lord Nelson,
161
at East India House, 109
his ridicule of Cockneys at
seaside, 13
in Chancery Lane, 155
on damage in Westminster
Abbey, 190-1
weeds out his books, 254
Lay cock, the Islington cow-keeper,
39
Leaden figures for gardens,! 17-18
" Leger Conviviales," Ben
Jonson's, 237
Leno, Dan, 182-5
" Liber Studiorum," Turner's, 133
Life, not to be lived over again,
64
Lincoln's Inn Gateway, 152
Lion on Northumberland House
wags its tail, 248
Lirriper, Mrs., in Norfolk Street,
1 80
Literary life, the, 244-5
Literary memorials in West-
minster Abbey, 192-8
Little Dean Street, curious door-
knockers in, 153
" Little Sea," the, 58
Little Wild Street Chapel, 145
Lloyd, the hatter, 165-8
Lombard Street, 292-7
London Bridge, 307-8
faces on, 310
"London Bridge is Broken
Down," 307
London, coming to, 25-9
and provincial cities com-
pared, 22
as sketching-ground for
artists, 175
expression, the, 310
madness caused by size of,
26
manner of its growth, 16
not easily viewed, 281
population of inner, decreas-
ing, 21
sights of, in 1886, 3-4
size of in relation to comfort,
IS
the love of, 20, 22-4
Topographical Society, 19
topography and curious fact
concerning, 246-7
Londoners, their new desire for
country, 20
Longevity, Peter Pindar's rules
for, 68
" Lord Mayor, his Coachman,"
the, 291
his show formerly witnessed
by the sovereign, 283-4
INDEX
323
Lottery brokers in Cornhill 300
Lottery, the last, 301
Loughborough, Lord, why he
came to London, 27
Loutherbourg, R.A., Philip de,
261-3
Love Lane, 305
Lovel, Sir T., and Lincoln's Inn
Gateway, 154
" Lucky Corner," 300
Luke's, Saint, Lunatic Asylum,
42
Lying-in-state of a Lombard
Street banker, 297
Lytton, Lord, and Mr. Westell's
shop in Bozier's Court, 135
Macaulay, Catherine, her statue
removed from a City church,
291-2
Macaulay, Lord, his cheque for
;^io,ooo, 296
and Drapers' Gardens 95
Macaulay, Zachary, 60
Macklin, Charles, 225
" Mafficking " on Culloden night,
256
Man^an " unlucky rascal," 242
Mansion House Street, 291
Mantelpiece, a sculptured, 151-2
Maps of Bloomsbury, 57-9
Marble Arch, the, 215
"March to Finchley," Hogarth's,
134-5
Marconi apparatus at Admiralty,
207
Market for hay in the Haymarket,
256-7
Mart, the, Tokenhouse Yard,
96
Martin's Bank, 294
Mary II, burial of, in West-
minster Abbey, 192
Marylebone High Street, 19
Maypole Alley, 145
Mead, Dr. Richard, in Austin
Friars, 88-90
Medical men in the city, 80-^
Menagerie, Frank Buckland's, in
Albany Street, 129
Mermaid Tavern, the, 284
Mews Gate and " Honest Tom
Payne," 251
Meynell, Mrs., on London expres-
sion, 310
" Microcosm of London," the, 177
Milan and London compared,
281
Military conduct, a point of, 208-9
Milo the Cretonian, 4
Milton in and about Cheapside,
285-6
quoted unawares, 286-7
statue of, 285
Mincing Lane, 108-9
Minor ies, a head from the Tower
preserved in, no
Mitchell, Mr., the banker, 176-7
Mitford, Rev. John, his poem
"The Owl," 150-1
Montgomery College, Peter
Pindar at, 67-8
Monument, premature, in a City
church, 291-2
Monument, the, 303-4
Moore, John, and his worm
powder, 297-8
Morris, William, in Red Lion
Square, 64
Morrison, Mr. James, and
Morrison's pills, 72
Mortimer's Market, 67
Moscow, a King's Cross legend
of, 72
Mother Red Cap Tavern, 131
Motor vehicle, the first London,
127
Mounsey, Dr., bequeaths his
body for dissection, 85
Mud in Chancery Lane, 154
324
A LONDONER'S LONDON
Mulberry Gardens, the, 212-13
Mulberry-tree planted by Shake-
speare, 212
Munro, Dr. John, 174
Murder of William Weare by
Thurtell, 148-51
Murray, John (the First), in Fleet
Street, 238
Murray, John (the Second), in
Fleet Street, 239
and "Rejected Addresses,"
91
Naples and London compared,
282
Napoleon Bonaparte, did he visit
London ? 248-51
and the Stock Exchange,
92
Nelson, Lord, and Charles Lamb,
161
Newcastle-on-Tyne, old Christ-
mas carol at, 308
Newcom, Colonel, in Fitzroy
Square, 117
Newgate, an engraving completed
in condemned cell, 105
Newington Green, 17
Newland, Abraham, 37
Newman Street, 121
New River, jumping the, 226
New (Euston Road), the, com-
mencement of, 56
" Peter Pindar " in, 67
Newspaper at Peele's Coffee-
house, 228
Newton, Sir Isaac, in West-
minster Abbey, 198
" Nirvana, a suburban," 8
Nollekens, R.A., Joseph, the
Westminster Abbey, 189-90
'* Nollekens and his Times," 119
Norfolk Street, Strand, 179^2
Northington, Lord, in Great
James Street, 32
Northumberland Coffee-house and
the Napoleon legend, 248-9
Obelisk in Red Lion Square,
61
O'Connell, Daniel, 229
" Old Nosey," 263-4
Oliver Twist, a name in Hoxton,
33
Omnibus, the first free library, 125
the " garden-seat," 10
the " knife-board," 9
" Omnibus," its derivation, 124
" Omnibuses," or "omnibi," 125
Omnibuses, the first London,
124-5
Osnaburgh Street, 126
Paddington Canal, 175
Pageants in Cheapside, 283
Pancras, Saint, old church, 77-8
railway-station, 70
Panton, Colonel, and Panton
Street, 260-1
Panton Street, G. A. Sala in,
258
Paris, the omnibus in, 124
and London compared, 280-2
Londoners' love for, 281
Park Lane, 273-7
Partridge or woodcock first ? 63-4
Pascal, Blaise, inventor of the
omnibus, 124
Paul, Saint, his cross and sword
in City arms, 106
" Payne, Honest Tom," 251
Payne, Roger, the bookbinder,
171
Peele's Coffee-house, 228
tragic death at, 229
"Pelican, our old friend the,""
119
Pelvis, George Cruikshank on the
importance of the, 50
Penley, W. S., 14
INDEX
325
Pentonville, new buildings at, 52
Perring, a Strand hatter, 167
Pettv, Sir William, his versatiUty,
96
Phrenology in the Strand, 168
Piccadilly statuary yards, 117-18
Pickwick, Mr., in Freeman's
Court, 101-2
in Goswell Street, 49
"Pickwick Papers," 160, 168
Pidding's Corner, 300
"Pilgrim's Progress," where
published, 287
Pillar-box, London's first, 220-1
Pinchbeck, Christopher, his " noc-
turnal remembrancer," 255-6
Pincot, a painter of cheap oil
pictures, 75
Pindar, Peter, in the New Road,
67-8
Piozzi, Mrs., shopping in Fleet
Street, 227
" Plackett's Common," City Road,
40
Plague, the, in Tokenhouse Yard,
95
Plane-tree in Cheapside, 290
Plate glass, none in old Fleet
Street, 220
Plough Court, Alexander Pope
born in, 297
Poets of Cheapside, 284
Pontack's, 298
Pool, the, 311
Pope, Alexander, born in Plough
Court, 297
" Pop goes the Weasel," 41
Population of inner London, de-
crease of, 21
Portico of Euston Station, 69
Poultry, 287-8
Pratt, Charles, Lord Camden
130
Pretender, the, in Red Lion
Square, 64
Price, landlord of the "Green
Man," 126
Prideaux, Colonel W. F., 19, 38
Prior, Matthew, in Westminster
Abbey, 197-8
" Private Secretary," the, 14
Professors, the Gresham, in Broad
Street, 86
Proverbs of London Bridge, 308
Pump in Cornhill, 107
Quaker banker in Cheapside
entertains Royalty, 283-4
Queen Square, Bloomsbury, 59
Quickset Row, Euston Road, 123
Radcliffe, Dr. John, 88-9
in Clare Market, 143-4
Railway termini in Euston Road,
69-71
Raimback, Abraham, 133-4
" Rambler," Johnson's, written in
Gough Square, 233
" Rasselas," written by Dr. John-
son in Gough Square, 234-6
Reading habit, spread of in
eighteenth century, 46
Redding, Cyrus, his arrival in
London, 26
" Red Lion Mary," 64-5
Red Lion Square, 61-5
Red Mass, the, 147
Regent Street, 267-71
" Rejected Addresses," the, 91
" Remainders," T. Tegg's dealings
in, 288-9
Resurrection Gate, the, 138
Resurrection men, the, 84-5
" Reverie of Poor Susan," 290
Reynolds, Sir Joshua, his arrival
in, 27
in the Strand, 172-4
Richard II in Westminster Abbey,
" Richardson, the tomb of," 221-2
326
A LONDONER'S LONDON
Ridler's in Holborn, 5
Ring and Brymer's, Cornhill, 107
Rising Sun Tavern, Book-
sellers' Row, 9
Robin in Westminster Abbey, 194
Robins, George, the auctioneer,
96-8
" Robinson Crusoe," 100
Rogers, Samuel, and Cornhill, loi
Roker, Mr., of the Fleet Prison,
23
Rolls Chapel and Court House, the,
156-8
Rome and London compared,
281
Rookery at Carlton House, 212
Rossetti, D. G., in Red Lion
Square, 64-5
Rotherhithe, a wooden gallery at,
311
Rothschild, Nathan Meyer, 92-4
Rouse, Thomas, of the Eagle
Tavern, 41
Rowlands, Thomas, 176-8
Royal Academy in the Strand,
172-4
Royal Society, the, 88
Rubens, Peter Paul, inscription
by, in Austin Friars, 94
Ruskin, John, 8
Russell Square, 55
Ryland, William Wynne, his
tragic story, 103-5
Rysbrack, the sculptor, 118
Sala, G. a., 50
in the Haymarket, 358
Salt-box, the, 126
Salway, Joseph, his " Plan," 18
Sandby, Paul, 175
Sardinia Street and Chapel, 146-7
"Sartor Resartus" in search of a
publisher, 267-9
Sat cito, si sat bene, 230
Sauce, a guinea's worth of, 132
Scott, Sir Walter, 7
in Fleet Street, 239
interested in a great murder,
151
Scott (William), Lord Eldon in
Fleet Street, 229
Scrivener, the profession of, 99
Sculptors in Piccadilly, 1 17-18
Sculptures in Westminster Abbey,
damage done to, 189-90
Semaphore at the Admiralty, 207
Sermons on the great storm of
1703, 145
Shakespeare in Chancery Lane,
155
Dr. Johnson's edition of, 233-4
his mulberry-tree, 212
his name, how spelt ? 225
one of his characters buried
in Austin Friars, 94
"Sham Abraham Newland," 37
Sharp, Richard (" Conversation "),
275-6
Shelley, Percy Bysshe, and Mary
Godwin, 78
Shepherdess Walk and Fields,
48
Sheridan, R. B., 199
Shillibeer, George, and the first
London omnibuses, 124
" Shocking bad hat, a," 209
Shooting the bridge, 308
Shops in Fleet Street, 219-20
in the Strand, 164-9
Siddons, Mrs., in Gower Street,
65
Signs of Lombard Street, 295
Sinclair, Sir J. Tollcmache, his
memorial to Byron, 241
Skull in a railway-station, a, 80
Smith, James and Horace, in
Austin Friars, 91
Smith, John Thomas, on rural
Bloomsbury, 61
Smith, Payne, and Smiths, 296
INDEX
327
Smith, Sydney, his ideal of earthly
happiness, 277
at a phrenologist's, 168
Smollett, Tobias, at the British
Coffee House, 256
Snuff-shop in Haymarket, famous,
263
Snuff-shops and wooden High-
landers, 231-2
Socrates, had William 31ake met
him ? 69
Soeur, Hubert le, 248
Soho as a retreat, 139-40
the author of " Lacon " in,
140-1
Somerset House, 214
old, 172-4
Somerset, the Protector, 172
Somers Town, 71
"Sotheby's," 169
Southampton House, Chancery
Lane, 155
Southey, Robert, on the Field of
the Forty Footsteps, 67
Spencer, Herbert, in Strand, 160
Spenser, Edmund, in Westminster
Abbey, 196
Spitalfields, 112-4
Squire's Coffee-house, 5
Stael, Madame de, story of, 221-2
Staple Inn, " Rasselas," not
written there, 234-6
Statuary yards in Euston Road,
116-17
Statue, an extraordinary, 294-5
Steam carriage, Sir Goldsworth
Gurney's, 127
"Steele, Honest Tom," death of,
229
I Steele, Richard, at Hampstead,
1 8
j Stephen, Sir James, his inscription
for Z. Macaulay's monument,
61
Stephen's Chapel, Saint, 204
Stephen's, Saint, Walbrook, a
miniature St. Paul's, 291
Sterne, Lawrence, death of, 272
Stevenson, R. L., and hansom-
cabs, 12
Stock Exchange, the original,
300
Stockholm and London com-
pared, 282
Stocks Market, the, 294-5
Stoke Newington, 16-17
Storm, the Great, of 1703, 145
Stow, John, 106-7
Strahan, W., the bookseller,
169
Strand, the, 159-85
structural changes in, 160
Street, a forgotten, 291
names, rural suggestion in
16-17
from surnames, 136
Sturges, Joshua, a draughts-
player, 136
Sun-cookery in Cornhill, 300
Surnames as street names, 136
Swan Lane, 305
Tallis's " London Street Views,"
Tegg, Thomas, his bookselling
methods, 288--90
Temple Bar, demolition of, 2-3
Tennyson in Fleet Street, 237
in Regent Street, 270
TeufelsdrSckh on the superfluity
of books, 251
Thackeray, W. M., in Cornhill,
102-3
on Hyde Park Corner, 217
Thames Street, Mrs. Nickleby in,
305
Thanet Place, 160
Thompson, James, in Bond Street,
272
Thomson, a music-seller, 165
328
A LONDONER'S LONDON
Thurtell, John, his murder of
Weare, 148-51
" Tilbury " hat, the, 166
Tips, Dr. William King's object-
tion to, 62
Todgers's, 303-4
Tokenhouse Yard, 95-6
Tolmer's Square, 39, 135
Torrington Square, 66
Tottenham Court Road, 135-7
Trevelyan, Sir George Otto, on
Zachary Macaulay,' 60
Trim, Aaron and John, 165
Triumphal arch on Constitution
Hill, 215-16
Turner, Charles, the engraver,
133
Turner, J. M. W., his farewell
to life, 176
" Twigg, Timothy," 290
University College, 67
Upper Street, Islington, 34
Valangin, Dr. Francis de, and
Hermes Hill, 51
"Vanity of Human Wishes,"
written at Hampstead, 8
Varley, John, 174
and his cab invention,
12
Venice and London compared,
281
Viner, Sir Robert, translates a
statue, 294-5
Wager by Lord Mayor's coacli-
man, 291
Wallis, Albany, and Garrick's
Monument, 181-2
Walpole, Sir Robert, in Arlington
Street, 27
Warren Street, 13 1-4
Water-colour artists, famous, 174-
5
Waterloo Bridge, scheme to place
Cleopatra's Needle on, 210-
II
Waterloo Place, intended site of
Cleopatra's Needle, 210
Watts, G. F., and Euston Station,
70
Weare, William, of Lyon's Inn,
148-9
Weavers' houses in Spitalfields,
I 13-14
Weller, Sam, his knowledge of
London, 102
Wellington, Duke of, on site of
Houses of Pariiament, 206
and his statue at Hyde Park
Corner, 215-17
" Wellington » hat, the, 168
Wells, Mr. H. G., at Hampstead,
7
" Wesley's old women," 46
Westell, Mr., the bookseller, 135
Westminster Abbey, 186-99
author's adventure in, 187
Abbey, Chateaubriand spends
a night there, 187
curious conversation in,
189-90
depredations in, 188-91
the royal tombs in, 191-4
Weston, Stephen, 171
Whateley, Archbishop, on the
character of Thurtell, 152
Whitefoord, Caleb, 177
White, Lydia, 274-5
Whitehall, buildings in, 206
Whitehall Court, 206
'• White Horse Cellar," 27
Wilkie, David, meets Sir W.
Scott in Fleet Street, 239
his " Village Politicians,"
and "Rent Day," 133
Willan's Farm, Regent's Park,
39, 123
Willow Walk, at MiUbank, 151
INDEX
329
Wilmot, John Eardley, his shy-
ness of London, 29
Wilson, R.A., Richard, 120-1
Wilton, R.A., Joseph, the sculptor,
120
Wine and wit, Ben Jonson on,
237-8
Wishart's snuff-shop, 231
Wolcot, Dr. (Peter Pindar), 67-8
Woodcock or partridge first ? 63-
4
Woollett, William, 134
Wordsworth, William, at Hamp-
stead, 8
at the Haymarket Opera, 257
on London, 25
" World's radial artery," the, 278
Wren, Christopher, as Gresham
lecturer, 87
York and Albany, Duke of, 208-10
York Buildings, 249
York Column, the, 208-10
Yorkshire Stingo Tavern, the, 124
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