Street Haunting: A London Adventure (1930)
No one perhaps
has ever felt passionately towards a lead pencil. But there are
circumstances in which it can become supremely desirable to possess one;
moments when we are set upon having an object, an excuse for walking half
across
London between tea and dinner. As the foxhunter hunts in order to preserve
the breed of foxes, and the golfer plays in order that open spaces may be
preserved from the builders, so when the desire comes upon us to go street
rambling the pencil does for a pretext, and getting up we say: "Really I
must buy a pencil," as if under cover of this excuse we could indulge safely
in the greatest pleasure of town life in winter--rambling the streets of
London.
The hour
should be the evening and the season winter, for in winter the champagne
brightness of the air and the sociability of the streets are grateful. We
are not then taunted as in the summer by the longing for shade and solitude
and sweet airs from the hayfields. The evening hour, too, gives us the
irresponsibility which darkness and lamplight bestow. We are no longer quite
ourselves. As we step out of the house on a fine evening between four and
six, we shed the self our friends know us by and become part of that vast
republican army of anonymous trampers, whose society is so agreeable after
the solitude of one's own room. For there we sit surrounded by objects which
perpetually express the oddity of our own temperaments and enforce the
memories of our own experience. That bowl on the mantelpiece, for instance,
was bought at Mantua on a windy day. We were leaving the shop when the
sinister old woman plucked at our skirts and said she would find herself
starving one of these days, but, "Take it!" she cried, and thrust the blue
and white china bowl into our hands as if she never wanted to be reminded of
her quixotic generosity. So, guiltily, but suspecting nevertheless how badly
we had been fleeced, we carried it back to the little hotel where, in the
middle of the night, the innkeeper quarrelled so violently with his wife
that we all leant out into the courtyard to look, and saw the vines laced
about among the pillars and the stars white in the sky. The moment was
stabilized, stamped like a coin indelibly among a million that slipped by
imperceptibly. There, too, was the melancholy Englishman, who rose among the
coffee cups and the little iron tables and revealed the secrets of his
soul--as travellers do. All this--Italy, the windy morning, the vines laced
about the pillars, the Englishman and the secrets of his soul--rise up in a
cloud from the china bowl on the mantelpiece. And there, as our eyes fall to
the floor, is that brown stain on the carpet. Mr. Lloyd George made that.
"The man's a devil!" said Mr. Cummings, putting the kettle down with which
he was about to fill the teapot so that it burnt a brown ring on the carpet.
But when the
door shuts on us, all that vanishes. The shell-like covering which our souls
have excreted to house themselves, to make for themselves a shape distinct
from others, is broken, and there is left of all these wrinkles and
roughnesses a central oyster of perceptiveness, an enormous eye. How
beautiful a street is in winter! It is at once revealed and obscured. Here
vaguely one can trace symmetrical straight avenues of doors and windows;
here under the lamps are floating islands of pale light through which pass
quickly bright men and women, who, for all their poverty and shabbiness,
wear a certain look of unreality, an air of triumph, as if they had given
life the slip, so that life, deceived of her prey, blunders on without them.
But, after all, we are only gliding smoothly on the surface. The eye is not
a miner, not a diver, not a seeker after buried treasure. It floats us
smoothly down a stream; resting, pausing, the brain sleeps perhaps as it
looks.
How beautiful
a London street is then, with its islands of light, and its long groves of
darkness, and on one side of it perhaps some tree-sprinkled, grass-grown
space where night is folding herself to sleep naturally and, as one passes
the iron railing, one hears those little cracklings and stirrings of leaf
and twig which seem to suppose the silence of fields all round them, an owl
hooting, and far away the rattle of a train in the valley. But this is
London, we are reminded; high among the bare trees are hung oblong frames of
reddish yellow light--windows; there are points of brilliance burning
steadily like low stars--lamps; this empty ground, which holds the country
in it and its peace, is only a London square, set about by offices and
houses where at this hour fierce lights burn over maps, over documents, over
desks where clerks sit turning with wetted forefinger the files of endless
correspondences; or more suffusedly the firelight wavers and the lamplight
falls upon the privacy of some drawing-room, its easy chairs, its papers,
its china, its inlaid table, and the figure of a woman, accurately measuring
out the precise number of spoons of tea which----She looks at the door as if
she heard a ring downstairs and somebody asking, is she in?
But here we
must stop peremptorily. We are in danger of digging deeper than the eye
approves; we are impeding our passage down the smooth stream by catching at
some branch or root. At any moment, the sleeping army may stir itself and
wake in us a thousand violins and trumpets in response; the army of human
beings may rouse itself and assert all its oddities and sufferings and
sordidities. Let us dally a little longer, be content still with surfaces
only--the glossy brilliance of the motor omnibuses; the carnal splendour of
the butchers' shops with their yellow flanks and purple steaks; the blue and
red bunches of flowers burning so bravely through the plate glass of the
florists' windows.
For the eye
has this strange property: it rests only on beauty; like a butterfly it
seeks colour and basks in warmth. On a winter's night like this, when nature
has been at pains to polish and preen herself, it brings back the prettiest
trophies, breaks off little lumps of emerald and coral as if the whole earth
were made of precious stone. The thing it cannot do (one is speaking of the
average unprofessional eye) is to compose these trophies in such a way as to
bring out the more obscure angles and relationships. Hence after a prolonged
diet of this simple, sugary fare, of beauty pure and uncomposed, we become
conscious of satiety. We halt at the door of the boot shop and make some
little excuse, which has nothing to do with the real reason, for folding up
the bright paraphernalia of the streets and withdrawing to some duskier
chamber of the being where we may ask, as we raise our left foot obediently
upon the stand: "What, then, is it like to be a dwarf?"
She came in
escorted by two women who, being of normal size, looked like benevolent
giants beside her. Smiling at the shop girls, they seemed to be disclaiming
any lot in her deformity and assuring her of their protection. She wore the
peevish yet apologetic expression usual on the faces of the deformed. She
needed their kindness, yet she resented it. But when the shop girl had been
summoned and the giantesses, smiling indulgently, had asked for shoes for
"this lady" and the girl had pushed the little stand in front of her, the
dwarf stuck her foot out with an impetuosity which seemed to claim all our
attention. Look at that! Look at that! she seemed to demand of us all, as
she thrust her foot out, for behold it was the shapely, perfectly
proportioned foot of a well-grown woman. It was arched; it was aristocratic.
Her whole manner changed as she looked at it resting on the stand. She
looked soothed and satisfied. Her manner became full of self-confidence. She
sent for shoe after shoe; she tried on pair after pair. She got up and
pirouetted before a glass which reflected the foot only in yellow shoes, in
fawn shoes, in shoes of lizard skin. She raised her little skirts and
displayed her little legs. She was thinking that, after all, feet are the
most important part of the whole person; women, she said to herself, have
been loved for their feet alone. Seeing nothing but her feet, she imagined
perhaps that the rest of her body was of a piece with those beautiful feet.
She was shabbily dressed, but she was ready to lavish any money upon her
shoes. And as this was the only occasion upon which she was hot afraid of
being looked at but positively craved attention, she was ready to use any
device to prolong the choosing and fitting. Look at my feet, she seemed to
be saying, as she took a step this way and then a step that way. The shop
girl good-humouredly must have said something flattering, for suddenly her
face lit up in ecstasy. But, after all, the giantesses, benevolent though
they were, had their own affairs to see to; she must make up her mind; she
must decide which to choose. At length, the pair was chosen and, as she
walked out between her guardians, with the parcel swinging from her finger,
the ecstasy faded, knowledge returned, the old peevishness, the old apology
came back, and by the time she had reached the street again she had become a
dwarf only.
But she had
changed the mood; she had called into being an atmosphere which, as we
followed her out into the street, seemed actually to create the humped, the
twisted, the deformed. Two bearded men, brothers, apparently, stone-blind,
supporting themselves by resting a hand on the head of a small boy between
them, marched down the street. On they came with the unyielding yet
tremulous tread of the blind, which seems to lend to their approach
something of the terror and inevitability of the fate that has overtaken
them. As they passed, holding straight on, the little convoy seemed to
cleave asunder the passers-by with the momentum of its silence, its
directness, its disaster. Indeed, the dwarf had started a hobbling grotesque
dance to which everybody in the street now conformed: the stout lady tightly
swathed in shiny sealskin; the feeble-minded boy sucking the silver knob of
his stick; the old man squatted on a doorstep as if, suddenly overcome by
the absurdity of the human spectacle, he had sat down to look at it--all
joined in the hobble and tap of the dwarf's dance.
In what
crevices and crannies, one might ask, did they lodge, this maimed company of
the halt and the blind? Here, perhaps, in the top rooms of these narrow old
houses between Holborn and Soho, where people have such queer names, and
pursue so many curious trades, are gold beaters, accordion pleaters, cover
buttons, or support life, with even greater fantasticality, upon a traffic
in cups without saucers, china umbrella handles, and highly-coloured
pictures of martyred saints. There they lodge, and it seems as if the lady
in the sealskin jacket must find life tolerable, passing the time of day
with the accordion pleater, or the man who covers buttons; life which is so
fantastic cannot be altogether tragic. They do not grudge us, we are musing,
our prosperity; when, suddenly, turning the corner, we come upon a bearded
Jew, wild, hunger-bitten, glaring out of his misery; or pass the humped body
of an old woman flung abandoned on the step of a public building with a
cloak over her like the hasty covering thrown over a dead horse or donkey.
At such sights the nerves of the spine seem to stand erect; a sudden flare
is brandished in our eyes; a question is asked which is never answered.
Often enough these derelicts choose to lie not a stone's thrown from
theatres, within hearing of barrel organs, almost, as night draws on, within
touch of the sequined cloaks and bright legs of diners and dancers. They lie
close to those shop windows where commerce offers to a world of old women
laid on doorsteps, of blind men, of hobbling dwarfs, sofas which are
supported by the gilt necks of proud swans; tables inlaid with baskets of
many coloured fruit; sideboards paved with green marble the better to
support the weight of boars' heads; and carpets so softened with age that
their carnations have almost vanished in a pale green sea.
Passing,
glimpsing, everything seems accidentally but miraculously sprinkled with
beauty, as if the tide of trade which deposits its burden so punctually and
prosaically upon the shores of Oxford Street had this night cast up nothing
but treasure. With no thought of buying, the eye is sportive and generous;
it creates; it adorns; it enhances. Standing out in the street, one may
build up all the chambers of an imaginary house and furnish them at one's
will with sofa, table, carpet. That rug will do for the hall. That alabaster
bowl shall stand on a carved table in the window. Our merrymaking shall be
reflected in that thick round mirror. But, having built and furnished the
house, one is happily under no obligation to possess it; one can dismantle
it in the twinkling of an eye, and build and furnish another house with
other chairs and other glasses. Or let us indulge ourselves at the antique
jewellers, among the trays of rings and the hanging necklaces. Let us choose
those pearls, for example, and then imagine how, if we put them on, life
would be changed. It becomes instantly between two and three in the morning;
the lamps are burning very white in the deserted streets of Mayfair. Only
motor-cars are abroad at this hour, and one has a sense of emptiness, of
airiness, of secluded gaiety. Wearing pearls, wearing silk, one steps out on
to a balcony which overlooks the gardens of sleeping Mayfair. There are a
few lights in the bedrooms of great peers returned from Court, of silk-stockinged
footmen, of dowagers who have pressed the hands of statesmen. A cat creeps
along the garden wall. Love-making is going on sibilantly, seductively in
the darker places of the room behind thick green curtains. Strolling
sedately as if he were promenading a terrace beneath which the shires and
counties of England lie sun-bathed, the aged Prime Minister recounts to Lady
So-and-So with the curls and the emeralds the true history of some great
crisis in the affairs of the land. We seem to be riding on the top of the
highest mast of the tallest ship; and yet at the same time we know that
nothing of this sort matters; love is not proved thus, nor great
achievements completed thus; so that we sport with the moment and preen our
feathers in it lightly, as we stand on the balcony watching the moonlit cat
creep along Princess Mary's garden wall.
But what could
be more absurd? It is, in fact, on the stroke of six; it is a winter's
evening; we are walking to the Strand to buy a pencil. How, then, are we
also on a balcony, wearing pearls in June? What could be more absurd? Yet it
is nature's folly, not ours. When she set about her chief masterpiece, the
making of man, she should have thought of one thing only. Instead, turning
her head, looking over her shoulder, into each one of us she let creep
instincts and desires which are utterly at variance with his main being, so
that we are streaked, variegated, all of a mixture; the colours have run. Is
the true self this which stands on the pavement in January, or that which
bends over the balcony in June? Am I here, or am I there? Or is the true
self neither this nor that, neither here nor there, but something so varied
and wandering that it is only when we give the rein to its wishes and let it
take its way unimpeded that we are indeed ourselves? Circumstances compel
unity; for convenience sake a man must be a whole. The good citizen when he
opens his door in the evening must be banker, golfer, husband, father; not a
nomad wandering the desert, a mystic staring at the sky, a debauchee in the
slums of San Francisco, a soldier heading a revolution, a pariah howling
with scepticism and solitude. When he opens his door, he must run his
fingers through his hair and put his umbrella in the stand like the rest.
But here, none
too soon, are the second-hand bookshops. Here we find anchorage in these
thwarting currents of being; here we balance ourselves after the splendours
and miseries of the streets. The very sight of the bookseller's wife with
her foot on the fender, sitting beside a good coal fire, screened from the
door, is sobering and cheerful. She is never reading, or only the newspaper;
her talk, when it leaves bookselling, which it does so gladly, is about
hats; she likes a hat to be practical, she says, as well as pretty. 0 no,
they don't live at the shop; they live in Brixton; she must have a bit of
green to look at. In summer a jar of flowers grown in her own garden is
stood on the top of some dusty pile to enliven the shop. Books are
everywhere; and always the same sense of adventure fills us. Second-hand
books are wild books, homeless books; they have come together in vast flocks
of variegated feather, and have a charm which the domesticated volumes of
the library lack. Besides, in this random miscellaneous company we may rub
against some complete stranger who will, with luck, turn into the best
friend we have in the world. There is always a hope, as we reach down some
grayish-white book from an upper shelf, directed by its air of shabbiness
and desertion, of meeting here with a man who set out on horseback over a
hundred years ago to explore the woollen market in the Midlands and Wales;
an unknown traveller, who stayed at inns, drank his pint, noted pretty girls
and serious customs, wrote it all down stiffly, laboriously for sheer love
of it (the book was published at his own expense); was infinitely prosy,
busy, and matter-of-fact, and so let flow in without his knowing it the very
scent of hollyhocks and the hay together with such a portrait of himself as
gives him forever a seat in the warm corner of the mind's inglenook. One may
buy him for eighteen pence now. He is marked three and sixpence, but the
bookseller's wife, seeing how shabby the covers are and how long the book
has stood there since it was bought at some sale of a gentleman's library in
Suffolk, will let it go at that.
Thus, glancing
round the bookshop, we make other such sudden capricious friendships with
the unknown and the vanished whose only record is, for example, this little
book of poems, so fairly printed, so finely engraved, too, with a portrait
of the author. For he was a poet and drowned untimely, and his verse, mild
as it is and formal and sententious, sends forth still a frail fluty sound
like that of a piano organ played in some back street resignedly by an old
Italian organ-grinder in a corduroy jacket. There are travellers, too, row
upon row of them, still testifying, indomitable spinsters that they were, to
the discomforts that they endured and the sunsets they admired in Greece
when Queen Victoria was a girl. A tour in Cornwall with a visit to the tin
mines was thought worthy of voluminous record. People went slowly up the
Rhine and did portraits of each other in Indian ink, sitting reading on deck
beside a coil of rope; they measured the pyramids; were lost to civilization
for years; converted negroes in pestilential swamps. This packing up and
going off, exploring deserts and catching fevers, settling in India for a
lifetime, penetrating even to China and then returning to lead a parochial
life at Edmonton, tumbles and tosses upon the dusty floor like an uneasy
sea, so restless the English are, with the waves at their very door. The
waters of travel and adventure seem to break upon little islands of serious
effort and lifelong industry stood in jagged column upon the floor. In these
piles of puce-bound volumes with gilt monograms on the back, thoughtful
clergymen expound the gospels; scholars are to be heard with their hammers
and their chisels chipping clear the ancient texts of Euripides and
Aeschylus. Thinking, annotating, expounding goes on at a prodigious rate all
around us and over everything, like a punctual, everlasting tide, washes the
ancient sea of fiction. Innumerable volumes tell how Arthur loved Laura and
they were separated and they were unhappy and then they met and they were
happy ever after, as was the way when Victoria ruled these islands.
The number of
books in the world is infinite, and one is forced to glimpse and nod and
move on after a moment of talk, a flash of understanding, as, in the street
outside, one catches a word in passing and from a chance phrase fabricates a
lifetime. It is about a woman called Kate that they are talking, how "I said
to her quite straight last night . . . if you don't think I'm worth a penny
stamp, I said . . ." But who Kate is, and to what crisis in their friendship
that penny stamp refers, we shall never know; for Kate sinks under the
warmth of their volubility; and here, at the street corner, another page of
the volume of life is laid open by the sight of two men consulting under the
lamp-post. They are spelling out the latest wire from Newmarket in the stop
press news. Do they think, then, that fortune will ever convert their rags
into fur and broadcloth, sling them with watch-chains, and plant diamond
pins where there is now a ragged open shirt? But the main stream of walkers
at this hour sweeps too fast to let us ask such questions. They are wrapt,
in this short passage from work to home, in some narcotic dream, now that
they are free from the desk, and have the fresh air on their cheeks. They
put on those bright clothes which they must hang up and lock the key upon
all the rest of the day, and are great cricketers, famous actresses,
soldiers who have saved their country at the hour of need. Dreaming,
gesticulating, often muttering a few words aloud, they sweep over the Strand
and across Waterloo Bridge whence they will be slung in long rattling
trains, to some prim little villa in Barnes or Surbiton where the sight of
the clock in the hall and the smell of the supper in the basement puncture
the dream.
But we are
come to the Strand now, and as we hesitate on the curb, a little rod about
the length of one's finger begins to lay its bar across the velocity and
abundance of life. "Really I must--really I must"--that is it. Without
investigating the demand, the mind cringes to the accustomed tyrant. One
must, one always must, do something or other; it is not allowed one simply
to enjoy oneself. Was it not for this reason that, some time ago, we
fabricated the excuse, and invented the necessity of buying something? But
what was it? Ah, we remember, it was a pencil. Let us go then and buy this
pencil. But just as we are turning to obey the command, another self
disputes the right of the tyrant to insist. The usual conflict comes about.
Spread out behind the rod of duty we see the whole breadth of the river
Thames--wide, mournful, peaceful. And we see it through the eyes of somebody
who is leaning over the Embankment on a summer evening, without a care in
the world. Let us put off buying the pencil; let us go in search of this
person--and soon it becomes apparent that this person is ourselves. For if
we could stand there where we stood six months ago, should we not be again
as we were then--calm, aloof, content? Let us try then. But the river is
rougher and greyer than we remembered. The tide is running out to sea. It
brings down with it a tug and two barges, whose load of straw is tightly
bound down beneath tarpaulin covers. There is, too, close by us, a couple
leaning over the balustrade with the curious lack of self-consciousness
lovers have, as if the importance of the affair they are engaged on claims
without question the indulgence of the human race. The sights we see and the
sounds we hear now have none of the quality of the past; nor have we any
share in the serenity of the person who, six months ago, stood precisely
were we stand now. His is the happiness of death; ours the insecurity of
life. He has no future; the future is even now invading our peace. It is
only when we look at the past and take from it the element of uncertainty
that we can enjoy perfect peace. As it is, we must turn, we must cross the
Strand again, we must find a shop where, even at this hour, they will be
ready to sell us a pencil.
It is always
an adventure to enter a new room for the lives and characters of its owners
have distilled their atmosphere into it, and directly we enter it we breast
some new wave of emotion. Here, without a doubt, in the stationer's shop
people had been quarrelling. Their anger shot through the air. They both
stopped; the old woman--they were husband and wife evidently--retired to a
back room; the old man whose rounded forehead and globular eyes would have
looked well on the frontispiece of some Elizabethan folio, stayed to serve
us. "A pencil, a pencil," he repeated, "certainly, certainly." He spoke with
the distraction yet effusiveness of one whose emotions have been roused and
checked in full flood. He began opening box after box and shutting them
again. He said that it was very difficult to find things when they kept so
many different articles. He launched into a story about some legal gentleman
who had got into deep waters owing to the conduct of his wife. He had known
him for years; he had been connected with the Temple for half a century, he
said, as if he wished his wife in the back room to overhear him. He upset a
box of rubber bands. At last, exasperated by his incompetence, he pushed the
swing door open and called out roughly: "Where d'you keep the pencils?" as
if his wife had hidden them. The old lady came in. Looking at nobody, she
put her hand with a fine air of righteous severity upon the right box. There
were pencils. How then could he do without her? Was she not indispensable to
him? In order to keep them there, standing side by side in forced
neutrality, one had to be particular in one's choice of pencils; this was
too soft, that too hard. They stood silently looking on. The longer they
stood there, the calmer they grew; their heat was going down, their anger
disappearing. Now, without a word said on either side, the quarrel was made
up. The old man, who would not have disgraced Ben Jonson's title-page,
reached the box back to its proper place, bowed profoundly his good-night to
us, and they disappeared. She would get out her sewing; he would read his
newspaper; the canary would scatter them impartially with seed. The quarrel
was over.
In these
minutes in which a ghost has been sought for, a quarrel composed, and a
pencil bought, the streets had become completely empty. Life had withdrawn
to the top floor, and lamps were lit. The pavement was dry and hard; the
road was of hammered silver. Walking home through the desolation one could
tell oneself the story of the dwarf, of the blind men, of the party in the
Mayfair mansion, of the quarrel in the stationer's shop. Into each of these
lives one could penetrate a little way, far enough to give oneself the
illusion that one is not tethered to a single mind, but can put on briefly
for a few minutes the bodies and minds of others. One could become a
washerwoman, a publican, a street singer. And what greater delight and
wonder can there be than to leave the straight lines of personality and
deviate into those footpaths that lead beneath brambles and thick tree
trunks into the heart of the forest where live those wild beasts, our fellow
men?
That is true:
to escape is the greatest of pleasures; street haunting in winter the
greatest of adventures. Still as we approach our own doorstep again, it is
comforting to feel the old possessions, the old prejudices, fold us round;
and the self, which has been blown about at so many street corners, which
has battered like a moth at the flame of so many inaccessible lanterns,
sheltered and enclosed. Here again is the usual door; here the chair turned
as we left it and the china bowl and the brown ring on the carpet. And
here--let us examine it tenderly, let us touch it with reverence--is the
only spoil we have retrieved from all the treasures of the city, a lead
pencil.
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