The café was listed in the 1889 Baedeker Guide for London.[a] It closed in 1914, shortly after the outbreak of World War I.[3]
Regulars
The artist Wyndham Lewis first met Sturge Moore, brother of the philosopher G. E. Moore, at the Vienna Café around 1902; the men became great friends.[4] Lewis was there with Sturge in 1910 when he was introduced to the American poet Ezra Pound.[5] Pound, who lived in London from 1908 to 1921, had arrived in the café that day with Laurence Binyon,[6] assistant keeper in the British Museum Print Room.[7]
The café had a triangular room on the first floor with a mirrored ceiling, "which reflected all your actions", Lewis wrote, "as if in a lake suspended above your head". The writers met at a couple of tables on the south side of that room.[15] According to Jeffrey Meyers, the café was a haunt of European émigrés and was furnished at the time "in the Danubian mode with red plush chairs and seats".[16] When World War I began, the Trading with the Enemy Act 1914 was swiftly passed: the owners were Austrians or Germans, who were classed as "alien enemies" under the act and as a result the business had to close.[17]
The Vienna Café made an appearance, as the "Wiener Café", in Pound's "Canto LXXX" of The Pisan Cantos (1948):
And also near the museum they served it mit Schlag
in those days (pre 1914)
the loss of that café
meant the end of a B. M. era
(British Museum era) Mr Lewis had been to Spain Mr Binyon's young prodigies
pronounced the word: Penthesilea
There were mysterious figures
that emerged from recondite recesses
and ate at the WIENER CAFÉ
which died into banking [...]
So it is to Mr Binyon that I owe, initially,
Mr Lewis, Mr P. Wyndham Lewis. His bull-dog, me,
as it were against old Sturge M's bull-dog, Mr T. Sturge Moore's
bull-dog, et meum et propositum, it is my intention
in tabernam,[b] or was, to the Wiener café[18]
Brooker, Peter (2007) [2004]. Bohemia in London: The Social Scene of Early Modernism. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN978-0-230-54692-9
Glinert, Ed (2007). Literary London: A Street by Street Exploration of the Capital's Literary Heritage. London: Penguin Books.
Shaheen, Mohammad Y. (Fall & Winter 1983). "Pound and Blunt: Homage for Apathy". Paideuma: Modern and Contemporary Poetry and Poetics. 12(2/3), 281–288. JSTOR4726010
Starr, Alan (Spring 1982). "Tarr and Wyndham Lewis". ELH. 49(1), 179–189. JSTOR2872887
Terrell, Carroll F. (1993) [1980–1984]. A Companion to The Cantos of Ezra Pound. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN0-520-08287-7
Timms, Edward (2015) [2013]. "Coffeehouses and Tea Parties: Conversational Spaces as a Stimulus to Creativity in Sigmund Freud's Vienna and Virginia Woolf's London". In Charlotte Ashby, Tag Gronberg, Simon Shaw-Miller (eds.). The Viennese Cafe and Fin-de-Siecle Culture. Berghahn Books, 199–220. ISBN978-1-78238-926-2
Yeats, William Butler (2005). The Collected Letters of W. B. Yeats: Volume IV, 1905–1907. Edited by John Kelly and Ronald Schuchard. New York: Oxford University Press.