20 February 2023
3 mins Read
Almost every day before dawn for 37 years, Arthur Stace would write the word ‘Eternity’ on the streets of Sydney in chalk, rendering it in a beautiful copperplate script. He was for a long time anonymous; his identity a mystery until it was revealed by the Sunday Telegraph in 1956, when Stace was aged 72.
Or so the story goes. Artist and lifelong Sydney resident Robert Eadie remembers Stace from the 1940s and ’50s as a friend of his grandfather’s.
“We all knew he was the man who wrote on the footpaths, but my understanding later was that ‘nobody’ knew that,” he says. “Well, we did.” Eadie was a schoolchild growing up in Pyrmont when Stace would call into his house around 8am on his way back from a morning’s signwriting.
“And he’d have a cup of tea with the old fella in the lounge room,” he says. Eadie’s next door neighbour, a boy named Huey, would pinch chalk from his Catholic school for Stace to use.
“The Catholic school had very creamy, soft chalk, which Arthur preferred,” he says. “Whereas the public school where I went had more brittle, harder, whiter chalk.”
A former soldier and a reformed alcoholic, Stace had converted to Christianity when he heard the evangelist Reverend John Ridley preach at the Burton Street Tabernacle in Darlinghurst about how he wished he could ‘shout eternity through the streets of Sydney’.
Today, the restored Baptist church is named Eternity Playhouse in honour of Stace, and is home to the Darlinghurst Theatre Company.
“It was [here that] Arthur Stace heard the sermon that inspired him and his one-man mission,” says Glenn Terry, the company’s CEO and creative producer. The cursive letters are presented with pride on the building’s façade.
“My understanding is that it was a personal sort of gesture to his God, really,” says Eadie on Stace’s motivation. “He didn’t expect a reward.”
Nonetheless, he became mythologised and his message an unofficial emblem of the city: it features joyously in the work of the late artist Martin Sharp, and was beamed around the world in lights from the Harbour Bridge as part of Sydney’s Millennium celebrations.
When Stace died in 1967 he was on his way to becoming a Sydney folk hero, dubbed Mr Eternity or Eternity Man.
“It turned him into somebody that he probably wasn’t,” says Eadie. But all the same, “he would have been amazed… he would have been delighted.”
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