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THE
BUILDING OF BRITAIN
Introduction
THOSE
who to-day find themselves in St. Stephen’s Hall may be informed, and quite
truly, that they are standing in a chamber which is only about a century old it
was in fact built after the fire which destroyed the old houses of Parliament in
1834. But the hail is something more than its mere
walls; it is a historic place of much greater antiquity. It stands upon the old
crypt, and exactly fills the site and follows the outlines of the ancient St.
Stephen’s Chapel1 which had been partially burnt in the reign of
Edward the First, restored under Edward the Third, and used in later times as
the regular meeting-place of the House of Commons for nearly three hundred years
(1547-1834). Care has been taken to preserve these old
associations: large brass studs, let into the floor near the east end of the
hail, mark the places occupied by the table and the Speaker’s chair during
those three centuries, and an inscription on the wall towards the west end shows
the position of the Bar of the old House, by which the Lobby was marked off from
the Chamber itself.
In
this hall, then, we are standing upon the exact spot where many of the great
struggles of our Parliamentary history took place where words were spoken and
decisions taken which have ever since affected the course of our national life.
Here, for example, Hampden, Pym, and Eliot fought for Constitutional Government
; Burke pleaded for an understanding of the American Colonies. Pitt and Fox,
Whitbread and Sheridan, contended across the table on questions of war and peace
; and here the long contest of the Reform Bill was carried through. In the first
volume of his great play, The Dynasts, Mr. Thomas Hardy has drawn a vivid picture of a debate
in this hall we see it as the old House of Commons, its arrangement, its
decoration, its candelabra, and its close-packed benches; we
hear the sound of “those slashing old sentences” in which politicians
disputed about the means for saving their country from the militarism of a
foreign autocrat. The place is consecrated to history and the historic
imagination.
The
hail was rebuilt, as we now see it, by Sir Charles Barry, and it was part of his
design that the eight large panels below the windows should be filled with
paintings. But the difficulties in the way were many, and for eighty years the
plan has remained incomplete. For so historic a chamber it was felt that the
only worthy scheme of decoration would be one which should fulfill certain
conditions. First, the paintings must represent striking aspects of the national
life ; secondly, they must form a series and not a mere collection of isolated
scenes; and thirdly, to ensure unity and so heighten the impression to be
effected, they must be the work either of a single artist or of a team working
together in the closest understanding and fellowship.
There
have been few periods in the history of British painting when such an exacting
enterprise could have been undertaken with any likelihood of success. If at last
it has been satisfactorily carried through, it can only be because a new age has
unexpectedly and almost unconsciously produced a new flowering of decorative art
in this country. The eight painters have been found, and found capable of
working together with a harmony which comes near to the miraculous: without
apparent effort, without any cramping of individual genius, every one of them
has bent to the common aim his creative power and his technical skill. This
co-operation has been made easier by the guidance and tact of Sir D. Y. Cameron,
who has achieved with unerring judgment the feat of allotting the eight chosen
subjects to the eight painters, and of keeping them all in touch with one
another during the progress of their work.
The
choice of the subjects was made by the present writer, in consultation with Lord
Peel (the First Commissioner of Works), Lord Crawford (the Chairman of the Fine
Arts Commission), and the Speaker—the initiator and sympathetic director of
the whole scheme. The final list was only settled after long and careful
deliberation, and after Sir D. Y. Cameron and the painters had contributed their
views. It would evidently have been impossible to represent in eight pictures
the varied and multitudinous scenes of a thousand years of national history.
Moreover, it was felt that the later part of this long record was no very happy
subject for the art of to day —it was undesirable to revive smouldering embers
of the party conflicts and personal feelings of the last two hundred years. It
followed that only such scenes could be chosen as would be of the highest and
most far-reaching significance, and that the period they were to cover must be
the eight centuries which begin with King Alfred and end with Queen Anne.
The
series then, as it outlined itself, is concerned with a single subject—the
Building of Britain—and the eight pictures give striking examples of this
process. They show how certain main needs have been
met by the different forces of the national constitution. First comes the
necessity of naval defence, and of the corresponding power of transporting
expeditions oversea: King Alfred’s famous long-ships and Richard Coeur de
Lion’s Crusade rightly begin the story of an island people. Then- comes the
day of the Barons—the great lords who protest on behalf of themselves and all
freemen against illegality and oppression. The fourth picture commemorates the
long struggle of the English people for liberty of religious faith, achieved
only after a hundred years and more of heroic endurance. In the fifth we see the
first far-reaching success of the House of Commons in another vital
obstinacy—the denial of the right to spend the people’s money without the
consent of the people’s representatives. The sixth presents, as in a splendid
dream, the shrewd and romantic daring of the Elizabethan age, eager to find an
Eldorado for itself, and founding instead a New World for a new nation. Next
comes the true and typical story of a great Englishman’s dealing with an
Indian Emperor, the head of an ancient civilization destined to mingle with ours
under a constitution unexampled elsewhere. Finally, we reach the Union between
our own two nations at home: a union often attempted, once half achieved, and at
last completed in an hour most fortunate for the greatness and prosperity of
both.
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