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<h2> A LETTER THAT WAS NOT WRITTEN 1914. </h2>
<p>One morning lately I saw in my newspaper an announcement that enraged me.
It was made in the driest, most casual way, as though nobody would care a
rap; and this did but whet the wrath I had in knowing that Adam Street,
Adelphi, was to be undone. The Tivoli Music Hall, about to be demolished
and built anew, was to have a frontage of thirty feet, if you please, in
Adam Street. Why? Because the London County Council, with its fixed idea
that the happiness of mankind depends on the widening of the Strand, had
decreed that the Tivoli’s new frontage thereon should be thirty feet
further back, and had granted as consolation to the Tivoli the right to
spread itself around the corner and wreck the work of the Brothers Adam.
Could not this outrage be averted? There sprang from my lips that fiery
formula which has sprung from the lips of so many choleric old gentlemen
in the course of the past hundred years and more: ‘I shall write to The
Times.’</p>
<p>If Adam Street were a thing apart I should have been stricken enough,
heaven knows, at thought of its beauty going, its dear tradition being
lost. But not as an unrelated masterpiece was Adam Street built by the
Brothers whose name it bears. An integral part it is in their noble design
of the Adelphi. It is the very key to the Adelphi, the well-ordained
initiation for us into that small, matchless quarter of London, where
peace and dignity do still reign—peace the more beatific, and
dignity the finer, by instant contrast with the chaos of hideous sounds
and sights hard by. What man so gross that, passing out of the Strand into
Adam Street, down the mild slope to the river, he has not cursed the age
he was born into—or blessed it because the Adelphi cannot in earlier
days have had for any one this fullness of peculiar magic? Adam Street is
not so beautiful as the serene Terrace it goes down to, nor so curiously
grand as crook-backed John Street. But the Brothers did not mean it to be
so. They meant it just as an harmonious ‘lead’ to those inner glories of
their scheme. Ruin that approach, and how much else do you ruin of a thing
which—done perfectly by masters, and done by them here as nowhere
else could they have done it—ought to be guarded by us very
jealously! How to raise on this irregular and ‘barbarous’ ground a quarter
that should be ‘polite’, congruous in tone with the smooth river beyond it—this
was the irresistible problem the Brothers set themselves and slowly,
coolly, perfectly solved. So long as the Adelphi remains to us, a
microcosm of the eighteenth century is ours. If there is any meaning in
the word sacrilege—</p>
<p>That, I remember, was the beginning of one of the sentences I composed
while I paced my room, thinking out my letter to The Times. I rejected
that sentence. I rejected scores of others. They were all too vehement.
Though my facility for indignation is not (I hope) less than that of my
fellows, I never had written to The Times. And now, though I flattered
myself I knew how the thing ought to be done, I was unsure that I could do
it. Was I beginning too late? Restraint was the prime effect to be aimed
at. If you are intemperate, you don’t convince. I wanted to convince the
readers of The Times that the violation of the Adelphi was a thing to be
prevented at all costs. Soberness of statement, a simple, direct, civic
style, with only an underthrob of personal emotion, were what I must at
all costs achieve. Not too much of mere aesthetics, either, nor of mere
sentiment for the past. No more than a brief eulogy of ‘those admirably
proportioned streets so familiar to all students of eighteenth century
architecture,’ and perhaps a passing reference to ‘the shades of Dr.
Johnson, Garrick, Hannah More, Sir Joshua Reynolds. Topham Beauclerk, and
how many others!’ The sooner my protest were put in terms of commerce, the
better for my cause. The more clearly I were to point out that such
antiquities as the Adelphi are as a magnet to the moneyed tourists of
America and Europe, the likelier would my readers be to shudder at ‘a
proposal which, if carried into effect, will bring discredit on all
concerned and will in some measure justify Napoleon’s hitherto-unjustified
taunt that we are a nation of shopkeepers.—I am, Sir, your obedient
servant’—good! I sat down to a table and wrote out that conclusion,
and then I worked backwards, keeping well in view the idea of ‘restraint.’
But that quality which is little sister to restraint, and is yet far more
repulsive to the public mind than vehemence, emerged to misguide my pen.
Irony, in fact, played the deuce. I found myself writing that a nation
which, in its ardour for beauty and its reverence for great historic
associations, has lately disbursed after only a few months’ hesitation
£250,000 to save the Crystal Palace, where the bank holidays of millions
of toilers have been spoilt by the utter gloom and nullity of the place—a
nullity and gloom that will, however and of course, be dispelled so soon
as the place is devoted to permanent exhibitions of New Zealand pippins,
Rhodesian tobacco, Australian mutton, Canadian snow-shoes, and other
glories of Empire—might surely not be asked in vain to’—but I
deleted that sentence, and tried another in another vein. My desire to be
straightforward did but topple me into excess of statement. My sorrow for
the Adelphi came out as sentimentality, my anger against the authorities
as vulgar abuse. Only the urgency of my cause upheld me. I would get my
letter done somehow and post it. But there flitted through my mind that
horrid doubt which has flitted through the minds of so many choleric old
gentlemen in the course of the past hundred years and more: ‘Will The
Times put my letter in?’</p>
<p>If The Times wouldn’t, what then? At least my conscience would be clear: I
should have done what I could to save my beloved quarter. But the process
of doing it was hard and tedious, and I was glad of the little respite
presented by the thought that I must, before stating my case thoroughly,
revisit Adam Street itself, to gauge precisely the extent of the mischief
threatened there. On my way to the Strand I met an old friend, one of my
links with whom is his love of the Adams’ work. He had not read the news,
and I am sorry to say that I, in my selfish agitation, did not break it to
him gently. Rallying, he accompanied me on my sombre quest.</p>
<p>I had forgotten there was a hosier’s shop next to the Tivoli, at the
corner of the right-hand side of Adam Street. We turned past it, and were
both of us rather surprised that there were other shops down that side.
They ought never to have been allowed there; but there they were; and of
course, I felt, it was the old facades above them that really counted. We
gazed meanwhile at the facades on the left-hand side, feasting our eyes on
the proportions of the pilasters, the windows; the old seemly elegance of
it all; the greatness of the manner with the sweet smallness of the scale
it wrought on.</p>
<p>‘Well,’ I said, turning abruptly away, ‘to business! Thirty feet—how
much, about, is that? My friend moved to the exact corner of the Strand,
and then, steadily, methodically, with his eyes to the pavement, walked
thirty toe-to-heal paces down Adam Street.</p>
<p>‘This,’ he said, ‘is where the corner of the Tivoli would come’—not
‘will come,’ observe; I thanked him for that. He passed on, measuring out
the thirty additional feet. There was in his demeanour something so finely
official that I felt I should at least have the Government on my side.</p>
<p>Thus it was with no sense of taking a farewell look, but rather to survey
a thing half-saved already, that I crossed over to the other side of the
road, and then, lifting my eyes, and looking to and fro, beheld—what?</p>
<p>I blankly indicated the thing to my friend. How long had it been there,
that horrible, long, high frontage of grey stone? It must surely have been
there before either of us was born. It seemed to be a very perfect
specimen of 1860—1870 architecture—perfect in its pretentious
and hateful smugness.</p>
<p>And neither of us had ever known it was there.</p>
<p>Neither of us, therefore, could afford to laugh at the other; nor did
either of us laugh at himself; we just went blankly away, and parted. I
daresay my friend found presently, as I did, balm in the knowledge that
the Tivoli’s frontage wouldn’t, because it couldn’t, be so bad as that
which we had just, for the first time, seen.</p>
<p>For me there was another, a yet stronger, balm. And I went as though I
trod on air, my heart singing within me. For I had not, after all, to
resume my task of writing that letter to The Times.</p>
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