A parcel collection-and-despatch point has been installed recently outside our local supermarket. It offers freedom from the tyranny of waiting at home for your stuff to arrive, which is yet another convenience of modern life made possible by QR codes, apps and other jiggery pokery, the workings of which are understood by a few and just taken for granted by the rest of us.
I’m no technophobe
– I adopt and adapt willingly – but I do feel sad about the demise of some of
the displaced, discarded and disused systems I grew up with. Call it nostalgia,
if you like, but there was something comforting about post offices, postmen and
the rigmarole and regalia they embodied. It just felt as if someone
‘responsible’ was in charge. (In fact, it very much was so, as the original
Royal Mail was set up as a monarchic monopoly to ensure censorship of letters.)
I remember, also, that the good old Royal Mail provided lucrative employment
for us as students in the run-up to Christmas.
A few
streets away from the high-tech parcel point there is a post-box set into a
wall. Its cast-iron face is pitted with age, even though it is painted
resolutely red, as fresh as yesterday’s job. But it has an unusual feature, an
obvious later addition, a white enamelled plate, cut to fit, that has been screwed
to the flat surface around the envelope slot. It bears the grand insignia of
Elizabeth Regina and, while rusting badly around the edges, conveys, in an
authoritative black typeface, the following message:
NOTICE LETTERS WHICH CONTAIN COIN IF POSTED AS ORDINARY LETTERS WILL BE
CHARGED ON DELIVERY WITH A SPECIAL REGISTRATION FEE OF FOURPENCE.
The notice
is plainly redundant and yet it seems that responsibility for its removal has
not been assigned to any of the organisation’s current employees. My hope is
that, on the contrary, its non-removal has been mandated by some official
Keeper of National Treasures, for without it, we would miss that ever-present
visible link to our culture, our heritage, our whacky,
make-it-up-as-you-go-along spirit of “that’ll do”.
The
uninitiated (i.e. younger generations) would, if they were to stop and read it,
marvel at the fact that people actually did send coins through the post, safe
in the knowledge that they were under the Crown’s protection and guaranteed to
be delivered as promised – or compensated for if not. And, as a footnote, don’t
you love the way that the word ‘fourpence’ evolved from its forbear, ‘four
pence’ and, in so doing, acquired a sonorous familiarity? So much nicer than
the modern equivalent, 4p!
You’d have
to be quite contrary to deny that instant electronic transfer of funds is more
convenient than physical methods. Similarly, the cell phone has been
overwhelmingly adopted by the world’s population. And yet, Sir Giles Gilbert
Scott’s telephone kiosk, obsolete though it plainly is, remains an essential
part of the classic British streetscape – so much so that tourists queue to
have their photos taken inside or beside the iconic booths set in places of
historic import. There was, in the 1970s, an ill-conceived attempt to replace
it with a modern design but, faced with derision from such discerning critics
as Bill Bryson, who likened it to a “cheap shower stall”, the new version never
really appealed to the nation’s heart and soul, though it did sort of fit with
the architecture of Euston Station.
I doubt that
Amazon’s parcel facility will stand the test of time and endure as an icon of street
furniture design, but should we care? It doesn’t really belong to us anyway –
it’s Jeff Bezos’ baby – and it’s a case of easy come easy go, a stop-gap
facility until the flying drones take over and children ask their parents,
“What are those funny red boxes on the street for?”