Bankside:
London’s Original District of Sin
David Brandon and Alan BrookeAmberley, paperback 2013
987 1445613840
Flowing through the heart of the capital, the
history of the river Thames offers a powerful symbol for the lives of Londoners
through the centuries. In fact, there have been people living on the site since
before Roman times, washing there, catching fish and watching the horizon for
signs of invaders. It was their livelihood, their transport and a symbol of the
dependency of its people, shaped as they were by its moods and tides. From
Elizabethan boatmen dashed against the arches of London Bridge, to the magical
Frost Fairs, and the Victorian Lightermen steering their way through Dickensian
fog, the river remains central to the city’s story. David Brandon and Alan
Brooke’s Bankside: London’s Original
District of Sin focuses on the way it has defined London, by carving it in
two parts. Their story of life on the south bank tells a colourful and
entrancing tale of Londoners through the ages.
With chapters divided thematically, Bankside offers a glimpse into the inns
and taverns that first grew up south of the river to house travellers. Perhaps
the most famous of these was Chaucer’s Tabard Inn, where the pilgrims of The Canterbury Tales feasted and planned
their storytelling contest. Brandon and Brooke have tracked down the details of
its neighbouring inns; The Bear at the Bridge, which opened around 1318
following a great flood, the Boar’s Head of 1459, the White Hart of 1406 and
others. They appear as backdrops in the lives of famous men and women; the
scenery for wooing and rebellion. At The Bear, in 1665, diarist Samuel Pepys
snacked on ‘a biscuit and a piece of cheese and gill of sacke,’ and was
entranced by the beauty of Frances Stuart, mistress of Charles II. Later that
century, the landlord played host to the raucous drinking sessions of the
Restoration dramatists, who were reputed to drink their canary wine filtered
through their mistress’s underclothing. The pub is also mentioned by Charles
Dickens in Oliver Twist. By contrast, The White Hart was used by Jack Cade as
his headquarters during the peasants’ revolt of 1450. Despite having rallied up
to 45,000 men in his name, Cade was hunted down and killed and his complaints
about oppression and misgovernment were crushed. But they did not go away. The
Wars of the Roses broke out five years later, fermented by similar concerns.
The pub struggled on into the Victorian era, being occupied by a railway
company before being pulled down in 1889.
Bankside
is full of glorious detail. London-based readers will find it a full and
helpful guide to the city they know but residency is not essential for the
enjoyment of this book. Drawing on history, literature, myths and popular
culture, the authors’ wealth of knowledge masquerades under a gossipy style,
making it accessible and interesting. There is bound to be something new to
discover here and something to appeal to all tastes, with chapters covering
markets, prisons, worship, hospitals and theatres. A huge span is included too,
ranging from the very first settlements all the way through to the twenty-first
century, with its reinvention of the area, in popular culture and literature. This
section is of particular interest, not just for its relevance but its almost
encyclopaedic guidebook nature, documenting the uses of various streets in
recent films. If you wished to visit the area today, this book contains useful
information that would help you plan your trip, detailing information like what
can be found in the Tate Modern and the relevant distances between places,
which all seem “a short walk” from each other.
I found the chapter on literary and theatrical
bankside to be one of the most interesting sections. The location of the
theatres and taverns here, outside the city’s jurisdiction make it uniquely
placed as a venue for showcasing new and controversial drama. As Brandon and
Brooke explain, playwrights like Shakespeare, Ben Jonson and their
contemporaries were drawn south, where the Globe theatre was constructed under
cover of darkness. It was designed as a wooden “O”, a representation of the
world with its paintings of stars and clouds overhead and ghosts rising from
the bowels of hell, under the stage. A flag would fly to signify that a
performance was about to begin, usually at two in the afternoon, to utilise the
daylight. However, a performance of Shakespeare’s Henry VIII reached a more dramatic conclusion than even the Bard
had predicted, when a theatrical cannon ball lodged in the straw roof, which
burst out in flames. The sight and smell must have been visible from the
opposite bank, right to the northern boundaries of the city. This section
provides a nice contrast to some of the grisly details of the history of the
Clink prison and the bug-infested hospitals.
Bankside
has a lot to offer the reader. There are two really good picture sections,
featuring a range of well-chosen images which really compliment the text. The only quibble I have is that the writing
is uneven; it does take a little while to get going but soon warms to its
theme. The style does vary between sections, with some written fairly dryly and
others being rather colloquial in tone for my taste. This may be the result of
co-authorship and does not detract from the material itself. Brandon and Brooke
have done an admirable job of delving into London’s original district of sin,
making its history accessible and exciting.
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