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four, five,
six, seven,
eight, nine,
ten, eleven
The
alfresco entertainments of the aristocracy were the great
gardens of Vauxhall and Ranelagh, and these two famous places
of resort had a character all their own as such, which makes
it desirable to treat of them in a separate chapter. In this,
we ask the reader to follow us through the more humble of
the tea gardens and spas, most of which had some special attraction
of cake and ale, or bowling-green or fives court of its own,
which might recommend it to the patronage of a special clientele
in a day when competi-tion between such places was often severe.
The
first alfresco entertainment in London of which there is anything
like a full account, although open to the public, was not,
it is true, of a very democratic character, or supported by
the patronage of any but persons of a certain condition. Spring
Garden at Charing Cross was of royal origin, and Charles the
First was there accustomed to rub shoulders with his subjects
in what was practically a part of his own royal gardens at
Whitehall. The place took its name from a spring or fountain,
which, in the pleasant fashion of those times, was contrived
to sprinkle those who came to consult the sun-dial.
It is difficult to understand how the public first gained
admission to Spring Garden. Its earliest attraction seems
to have been a bowling-green, "and there was kept in
it," says Gerrard, writing to Strafford in 1634,"
an ordinary of six shillings a meal, continual bibbing and
drinking of wine all day under the trees; two or three quarrels
every week. It was grown scandalous and insufferable, besides,
my Lord Digby being reprehended for striking Will Crofts in
the King's Garden, he answered that he took it for a common
bowling-place where all paid money for their coming in."
This irregularity of Lord Digby and Will Crofts led to an
interference by the royal authorities. We are told that Spring
Garden was "put down for one day," but Queen Henrietta
inter-ceding, "it was reprieved for this year, but hereafter
it shall be no more bowling-place."
This
garden, therefore, which we take to be the forerunner and
the model of the later alfresco enter-tainments of London,
was obviously in full swing in 1634, and the displeasure of
King Charles and of others in authority later notwithstanding,
it survived, with some temporary eclipses, for -thirty years
at least. It is difficult to think of Charing Cross as a sylvan
retreat at this moment, but there is surely fascination for
the Londoner in this description of the place by Mr. Evelyn
in 1658: "The enclosure not disagreeable for the solemness
of the grove, the warblings of the birds, and as it opens
in the spacious walks of St. James's," and it is recorded
that ten years earlier, viz. in 1648, James Duke of York and
Colonel Barnfield passed into and out of Spring Garden in
making their escape from the Palace of St. James's" in
the guise of gallants come to hear the nightingale."
To think to-day of nightingales at Charing Cross!
There
were other aspects of these gardens which commended themselves
less to the sober lover of trees and solitudes, although he
appears to have made much use of the place. A great deal of
what is known of Spring Garden, indeed, is owing to Mr. Evelyn's
re-corded observations. "The thickets of the garden,"
he said, "seem to be contrived to all advantages of gallantry,
for it is usual here to find some of the young company till
midnight after they have been refreshed with the collation
which is here seldom omitted at a certain cabaret in the middle
of this paradise, where the forbidden fruits are certain trifling
tarts, neats' tongues, salacious meats and bad Rhenish; for
which the gallants pay sauce, as indeed they do at all such
houses throughout England." We learn elsewhere that the
collation was at the rate of six shillings a head, which,
allowing for the increased value of money and the poorness
of the Rhenish, is surely a not ungenerous figure for a meal
of cold meat.
It
is not surprising to learn that Spring Garden attracted the
serious attention of the Puritans. The jocular doings under
the trees, the wine-bibbings and the quarrels, were reasons
enough for the benevolent interference of the Parliament,
It is quite in the natural order of things therefore to read
that" Cromwell and his partizans had shut up and seized
upon Spring Garden, which till now (1654) had been ye usual
rendezvous for the ladys and gallants at this season."
We again quote Mr. Evelyn. In the year of the Lord Protector's
death, however, the place was again in full blast, and Mr.
Evelyn, after going to see a coach race in Hyde Park, "collationed
in Spring Garden."
This
collation, indeed, was the great attraction of the place.
It was difficult in those days to get a meal anywhere away
from home, the coffee-houses had not yet arisen, and most
of the taverns lay far eastward of Charing Cross. Great people
then lived either in the city or just out of it, and Spring
Garden, with its luncheon, was a convenient halting-place
for refreshment on the way to, or returning from Hyde Park,
where the promenade of the ring, the foot and chariot races,
were at this time great attractions. “The manner is,"
says Mr. Evelyn, "as the company returns (from Hyde Park)
to alight at the Spring Garden . . . but the company walk
in it at such a rate you would think that all the ladies were
so many Atalantas contending with their wooers." One
of the last references to the place is from the invaluable
Mr. Pepys, whose fuller report on the doings there would have
been very welcome. He went there, it seems, in May of 1662,
with his wife's maids, "and the wenches gathered pinks.
Here we staid, and seeing that we could not have anything
to eate, but very dear and with long stay, we went forth again."
But the days of Spring Garden were already numbered. It occurred,
no doubt, to the keeper of the Privy Purse of King Charles
the Second's needy Court that the situation of the place was
adapted to more profitable uses, and it was soon devoted to
those of building. Here arose the groups of houses first known
as Inner and Outer Spring Garden, where lived a succession
of people of condition till the tide of fashion again flowed
westward. The name of the Spring Garden was adopted by the
New Spring Gardens at Lambeth, which we examine elsewhere
under the title of Vauxhall, but it still lingers about the
spot where the County Council deliberates to-day upon the
licensing of other forms of entertainment for Londoners. The
al fresco tradition of those days was supported by another
garden farther west, the Mulberry Garden, which covered the
site of the present Buckingham Palace and gardens. We take
little account of a bowling-green opened in 1635 by "a
gentleman barber," during a temporary eclipse of Spring
Garden, "in the fields behind the mews in Piccadily,"
because it was really a gaming establishment, "made to
entert ai n gamesters and bowlers at an excessive rate. .
. where they bowl great matches" (Gerrard to Strafford).
It fulfilled the usual destiny of such places, became known
as Shaver's Hall, in pleasant allusion to the" gentleman
barber" who founded it, and its remains could be traced
in the tennis-court at the corner of James Street until quite
recent times. The Mulberry Garden, however, was of the true
class of open-air entertainment, "ye only place of refreshment
about ye town for persons of ye best quality to be excessively
cheated at," says Mr. Evelyn in 1654, Cromwell at that
time having laid his heavy hand on Spring Garden.
Continue
to page 3 of The Tea Gardens