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Authors: Judith Cook

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The plot, taken from the Roman author Plautus, concerns two sets of twins, each pair consisting of a master and his servant, who were parted shortly after their births. The master and servant of one pair find themselves in Ephesus where their counterparts have been living since they were children, with genuinely funny and confusing results. Adriana, the wife of the Ephesus twin, having taken the ‘wrong’ twin back home assuming it is her husband (and possibly spending the afternoon in bed with him) then finds his behaviour so inexplicable that she decides he must be mad and sends for a ‘conjuror’ to cast out his devils. Presumably it was the actor playing this part who was accused of causing mayhem. Whoever he was, he defended himself and his fellow-actors so well, accusing the attorney and solicitor who brought them to court of ‘knavery and juggling’ in presenting their case, that it was promptly dismissed.
3

Commenting on the incident, one Henry Helmus noted that as an evening out the entertainment ‘was not thought to offer much of account, save Dancing and Revelling with Gentlewomen and after such Sports a
Comedy of Errors
, like to Plautus his
Menechmus
, was played by the Players. So that the night was begun, and continued to the end, in nothing but confusion and errors, whereupon it was ever afterwards known as the Night of Errors.’ He then adds: ‘Gray’s Inn Hall, Innocents Day, December 28 1594. There was such a row and such crowding by gentlewomen and others on the stage, that the Temple visitors to Gray’s Inn went away disgusted. And so the Gray’s Inn Men had only Dancing and Shakespeare’s Play.’

The Shrew
needs little or no explanation and was likely based on an older, existing drama on the same subject;
Titus Andronicus
is a blood-stained tale of murder and rape which culminates with children being eaten in a pie, while
Two Gentlemen
is a gentle comedy which introduces one of Shakespeare’s favourite themes where a boy player, dressed as a girl, disguises him/herself as a boy. As for
Richard III
, after
Spanish Tragedy
, it remained the most popular play in repertoire through until the end of the decade and no fewer than six editions of it were published in Shakespeare’s lifetime. It offered the audience everything: a supposedly machiavellian villain who takes the audience into his confidence from the start, love (or lust) with the widow across the coffin of her husband whom he has only recently killed, executions and murders galore, hauntings by ghosts and an all-out battle scene at the end in which the protagonist almost redeems himself by his outstanding courage. For Elizabethans it was important to have ‘a good death’.

This play too acquired a mythology of its own, including the famous tale which appears in the
Diary
of John Manningham, a student at the Middle Temple, in the year 1602:

Upon a time when Burbage played Richard III there was a female citizen grew so far in liking with him, that before she went from the play she appointed him to come that night unto her by the name Richard III. Shakespeare, overhearing their conclusion, went before, was entertained, and at his game ere Burbage came. The message being brought that Richard III was at the door, Shakespeare caused the return to be made that William the Conqueror was before Richard III.
4

True or not it gives a good idea of what actors and dramatists were up to when the opportunity arose.

Another reason for the change in the climate of the times, which bred general suspicion and unease, was the death of Sir Francis Walsingham. His demise resulted in a major political vacancy, that of Secretary of State to the Privy Council, bringing with it the role of spymaster. It was a position which had been coveted by Lord Burleigh’s son, Sir Robert Cecil, for many years, and his father, as Elizabeth’s oldest and most trusted minister, did all he could to ensure his son achieved it, which he did in all but name. However, for whatever reason Elizabeth showed little enthusiasm for making his position official with the result that Cecil was the ‘acting’ Secretary of State (unpaid) for the next seven years. No doubt the Queen saw this as a useful economy.

It was during the winter of 1591/2 that the first signs of plague began to appear. There was scarcely a year without a handful of cases, but this was to prove an epidemic of appalling proportions, killing 10,675 people before it finally ran its course. Almost at once the government ordered the closure of theatres and other public places where people gathered, as a result of which the Rose Theatre was shut from February until the following Christmas; this forced the players, faced with the prospect of having no income at all, to go on the road. Alleyn headed a company made up of actors from several London companies which toured under the name of Lord Strange’s Men. In spite of it being such a gloomy spring, Alleyn had married Henslowe’s stepdaughter, Joan Woodward, thus bringing about, as one commentator has it, ‘Henslow-Alleyn theatrical enterprises’. While it might have been very useful for Alleyn to stitch himself into the Henslowe family, his letters to Joan when out on tour also show a true and genuine affection for her.

However neither the onset of the plague nor his monarch’s obvious lack of enthusiasm in any way diminished Sir Robert Cecil’s zeal for the job in hand, whether or not his position had been officially confirmed. While Walsingham was a clever politician who could when necessary be quite ruthless, Cecil was an even less sympathetic character. Clever, cold, calculating and in both senses of the word truly Machiavellian, he saw the internal security of the country as his top priority. His intelligencers were everywhere. Jesuit priests were hunted down with ruthless efficiency and when found were tortured before being hanged, drawn and quartered. Those whose loyalty was only mildly questionable, or who were thought to be making overtures to King James in Edinburgh as they looked to their future, were put under the sixteenth-century equivalent of surveillance. The atmosphere became increasingly one of unease and suspicion bordering on paranoia.

It is therefore not surprising that Marlowe’s increasingly reckless behaviour was beginning to draw the attention of the authorities. His first real clash with the law had occurred as far back as 1589 and it was by no means all his fault. The report of the subsequent inquest held in September 1589 on one William Bradley, ‘lying dead and slain of a wound, six inches in depth and one inch in breadth, in the right side of his chest’, records the results of a fatal sword fight.
5
Bradley, a quarrelsome young man prone to easy violence, was the son of an innkeeper in Gray’s Inn Lane and had been in a long-running quarrel with Marlowe’s friend and fellow university wit, Thomas Watson. Marlowe had probably first met Watson through Thomas Walsingham, for Watson had been in Paris in 1581 when Walsingham’s uncle, Sir Francis, was spending some time there. Apparently Sir Francis admired Watson’s poetry and his ‘tunes’, or madrigals, and encouraged him to have his work published, which he did to considerable acclaim. Music remained a great love and as well as the poets and dramatists, he numbered composers like William Byrd among his friends. His background was, however, an odd one for while he appears to have studied Law in Italy, he is also said to have spent time in the English College at Douai, although it has never been suggested that he, like Marlowe, was acting as an intelligencer.

The original quarrel between Bradley and Watson had arisen over a debt of £14 owed by Bradley to another innkeeper, John Alleyn, brother of the famous actor. Bradley ignored all John Alleyn’s attempts to get him to repay his debt, even when Alleyn threatened him with court action to be brought through his lawyer, Hugh Swift. Bradley’s reaction was akin to something out of the long-running soap opera,
EastEnders
: he threatened to send a heavy mob round to Swift to see to him if he dared take the matter to court. Swift appealed to the Queen’s Bench for ‘securities of the peace’, which was granted and the matter continued to rumble on. Swift’s brother-in-law was no other than Thomas Watson and in spite of their appeal to the Bench being granted, Bradley’s threats had reached the point where Watson and John Alleyn decided to take the matter into their own hands and sort Bradley out themselves, resulting in Bradley in turn appealing to the Bench for securities of the peace. So, for a while, there was stalemate until Bradley, who had somehow decided that all his troubles were down to Watson in the first place, buckled on his rapier and dagger and set off to settle the matter once and for all.

He made his way to Norton Folgate where both Watson and Marlowe lodged, and lurked around waiting for his quarry. But as time passed and there was no sign of Watson, Bradley went looking for him in nearby Hog Lane. So it was that by fatal chance he came across Marlowe, whom he knew to be Watson’s friend and whom he then publicly and loudly insulted. What he said is not recorded – though it might be imagined since Marlowe made no secret of his proclivities – but the result was that Marlowe promptly drew his sword and challenged him to fight; an exciting piece of entertainment for passers-by who no doubt stood cheering them on. It is clear that Marlowe, no mean fighter, would have taken the engagement to its ultimate conclusion but at that point Watson himself turned up, whereupon Bradley called out ‘art thou now come, then I will have a bout with thee’ and turned his attention to his real enemy, leaving Marlowe with no option but to step aside.

The subsequent fight moved up and down Hog Lane, the combatants using both rapier and dagger, until Bradley drove Watson, now bleeding from a wound, to a ditch at the north end where, with nowhere else to run, he turned and thrust his rapier home, running Bradley badly through. He died almost at once. By this time someone had gone to fetch the Constable who immediately took Watson and Marlowe before the local Justice of the Peace, Sir Owen Hopton, who drew up a warrant ‘on suspicion of murder’ and had them both taken to Newgate prison.

As was the custom, the inquest on Bradley was held the next day before the Middlesex coroner, Ian Chalkhill. The twelve-man jury, after hearing all the evidence, concluded that Watson slew Bradley in self-defence and ‘not by felony’. That being the case Watson and Marlowe must have expected to be set free almost immediately but they remained in Newgate even though Marlowe had not actually struck the fatal blow. He finally managed to get himself out on bail a couple of weeks later bound over to attend the next Sessions on 3 December, but poor Watson languished in Newgate for no good reason until 12 February 1590, by which time he was a sick man as his wound had become infected.

There is a strong possibility that the intelligencer, Robert Poley, witnessed the fight since he lived nearby at the time and it has been said that Shakespeare who, if he did not actually see it, most certainly would have heard about it, used the incident of a three-cornered sword-fight in
Romeo and Juliet
. It is also suggested that the character of Mercutio was based on Marlowe.

Perhaps now is the time to introduce another character to the London scene, one Dr Gabriel Harvey, the eldest son of a wealthy Essex rope-maker, described by Nashe as ‘the Harveys of Hemp Hall’.
6
After graduating at Christ’s College, he had become first a Fellow of Pembroke Hall, then a Trinity Fellow where he studied Civil Law. He was considered an excellent scholar destined for greatness; he had a powerful patron, the Earl of Leicester, while his friends included Spenser and Sidney. But that was as good as it was going to get for so certain was he that he was indeed destined for greatness, he became notorious for his pomposity, grandiose behaviour and overwhelming conceit. In fact he appears to have been a gentleman version of Shakespeare’s Malvolio who also expected greatness to be ‘thrust upon’ him.

He had no time whatsoever for the University Wits and wrote scathingly even of the respectable John Lyly, whom he saw as ‘an odd, light-headed fellow . . . a professed jester, a Hick-scorner, a scoff-master, a playmonger, an Interluder; once the foil of Oxford, now the stale of London, and ever the Apesclogg of the press’. Needless to say the objects of his dislike paid him back in kind. Nashe describes how he went abroad of an evening ‘holding his gown up to his middle, that the wenches may see what a fine leg and a dainty foot he hath’, a ‘mere lute-pin put in a suit of apparel’. But Harvey too would have a role to play before the end of 1593.

On 9 May Marlowe was once again in trouble with the law. He had been drinking heavily, nothing unusual by then. Nor was there anything unexpected about the effect it had on him and his subsequent behaviour after several hours on the wine or sack. Roaring back towards his lodgings, he (literally) ran into Allen Nicholls, constable of Shoreditch, who was walking the other way with his assistant constable, Nicholas Helliot. What happened next depends on who tells the story – whether Marlowe merely behaved aggressively and failed to apologise or actually took a swing at Nicholls – but either way he ended up in court brought before no other justice than that very same Sir Owen Hopton who had presided over his previous court appearance after Bradley’s death.
7

Obviously this was nothing like so serious a charge but even famous poets and dramatists cannot be allowed to get away with insulting the authorities. He was fined the sum of £20, no small amount in 1592, and released:

Upon Condition that he will personally appear at the next general Session of the peace held in and for the aforesaid county [Middlesex]: and meanwhile will keep the peace towards the whole people of the said lady Queen Elizabeth and especially towards Allen Nicholls, Constable of Hollowwell street in the aforesaid county, and Nicholas Helliot, underconstable of the same; Which sum aforesaid he permits to be raised for the use of the said lady Queen in the form of a Recognizance from his goods, chattels, land and tenements, if he should fail in his promise.

In other words Marlowe had been bound over to keep the peace. There is no doubt that he often caused offence, indeed almost took pride in it. In so many ways he is a very modern figure, the boy from the sticks, born into a humble background who, through his own undoubted talent, soars to the top of his profession, achieves fame and adulation, becomes overarrogant, drinks far too much and heads toward disaster.

BOOK: Roaring Boys
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