The Marlowe Papers: A Novel

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The Marlowe Papers: A Novel Page 7

by Ros Barber


  of royal stories. Close to history’s forge

  as a cobbler’s son could ever dream to be,

  think not of danger, or grey poverty

  gnashing its teeth. Just opportunity.

  SMALL BEER

  ‘Not pay you?’ Nashe is shrill, incensed. ‘Not pay?

  The richest English woman beside the Queen?’

  ‘But how did she become so?’ Watson nods,

  filling a pipe. ‘Think on. The woman’s shrewd.’

  ‘Not pay you, though,’ Nashe murmurs.

  ‘I’ll survive,’

  I reassure him. ‘You should see the meals.

  Quality fare, a ransom on their own.

  The books and paper are invaluable,

  and time to write in. And the rest of it –

  the beer and ink and horse food, I can cover.

  Intelligence will serve if the playhouse shuts.’

  The tapster’s girl, collecting empty jugs

  at this point trips, almost into my lap

  before I help her onwards. Watson blinks

  at the accident. ‘You mean your wits, of course.’

  ‘Of course. These were expensive wits to train.’

  SOLILOQUY

  Listen. The hoot owl sweeping from the woods

  marks, like a breath expelled, the starlit air.

  The moon scores loneliness across the fields,

  slow as the rolling ocean, and a breeze

  slides to my cheek and whispers, He’s not here.

  The road might carry love upon its back

  like a dusty serpent winding from the hills;

  you might be sleeping one night’s dream away;

  and yet your absence crawls inside my bones

  and makes its home there, like a broken vow.

  Two things remain: the thudding of my heart,

  that drumming clown whose audience dispersed

  to leave only litter, tickets … and the sound

  that thought makes when it’s battered on a wall

  that won’t admit it. Oh, love, let me in.

  I grieve myself. This shadow I’ve become

  that berates itself for being out of doors,

  the rusty nail on which my name is hung

  now on the edge of falling; I’d be yours

  were I not crushed and bootless. Who is this?

  I grieve that boy who practised walking tall

  around the quiet squares of academe;

  who, like his father, aimed to fashion souls,

  envisaging the awl as poetry.

  I grieve that young man, choking on the jests

  that he and friends had conjured from their dreams;

  of how it will be when all the world is theirs

  and they will fall to bed in satin sleeves …

  oh, clod, oh, stupid man, where was your head?

  This age abhors the truth. It beats it down

  like a smart unruly servant, like a dog

  whose eye reflects his master, club in hand

  and poised to destroy him. Meanwhile, churches cram

  with poisoned congregations, social ticks

  who nod to each other, followers of faith

  who don’t believe the words, but sing the song.

  Oh, irreligious world, so scant of good

  that good, when it comes, cannot be recognised –

  a tolerated foreigner, who’s blamed

  the moment we’re engulfed by our own sin.

  Oh, sacrilegious world, to kill a man

  for the form his prayer takes, when we need all prayers

  to pull us from this darkness into light.

  But snuff us out, who cares?

  Oh, shameless world.

  I’ll hold a mirror to your ugliness

  until you see you contribute each squint,

  each pustulence, to the grotesquerie.

  Oh, former loved but never-loving world.

  We poets have a duty to believe

  in goodness, beauty and the human heart.

  Forgive me, then. How deeply I must grieve

  that I’m struck down for having better faith.

  A rabbit screams its murder. Bullies read

  the bloodied claw of nature as a cue

  to justify themselves as predators.

  The landscape sits as passive as a priest

  receiving our confessions, and the globe

  revolves beneath the heavens: night, then day,

  then night again. A lifetime falls away

  as water poured on sand until we ask,

  What is a human being? Are we clay?

  Excrescences of light? Bright animals

  adopting gross stupidity? Or gods

  pelted in human skin, come down to play,

  create, destroy, find joy in misery?

  The moon squats on the mountains like a pearl.

  It only has to rise, and will be free.

  THE HOG LANE AFFRAY

  Hog Lane, just after two, three years ago.

  After a meal of mutton and cold beer

  with Thomas Nashe, I’m strolling back to work

  on Doctor Faustus when the Devil himself

  calls out behind me: ‘There’s the beardless man

  who slandered me!’ It’s Bradley and a friend,

  George Orrell, full of ale and parsnip stew

  and outrage. ‘I believe I complimented you

  on your uprightness,’ I said.

  ‘Untrammelled shit.

  Give me your sword,’ he says to Orrell, ‘quick.

  I’ll slice his head off. Then we’ll see whose brains

  are bigger.’ Clumsily, he wrests the sword

  from his large friend’s scabbard. Orrell shoves him off,

  annoyed to be handled. Yet eager to assist,

  he hands his yeoman friend a soldier’s blade.

  The rapier at my waist weighs half as much,

  but neither of us has experience.

  ‘That’s not a duelling weapon.’

  ‘I don’t care.

  A fighting weapon’s all I’m looking for.’

  ‘Don’t start this thing.’

  ‘You started it yourself.

  The night you wouldn’t get out of my chair.

  I’m here to finish it.’

  He hawks and spits

  a fat green slug of phlegm on to the dirt.

  Nashe whispers, ‘I’ll get Watson,’ and flits off

  through the gathering crowd, who, with their stink and breath,

  are drawn by the hope of blood and spectacle

  to make our arena. I watch my flame-haired friend

  like an urgent signal flashing up the street,

  dodging the foul discharge of a chamber pot

  before he’s swallowed up in passageways.

  ‘I’ve got no fight with you, my friend,’ I say.

  ‘I’m not your friend.’ He slides a greasy hand

  across his mouth, as if he’s tasted me.

  ‘Draw if you call yourself a man.’

  ‘I do.

  But a gentleman.’ I slide the rapier tip

  into the air with a flourish, though my heart

  is knocking to be let out. ‘And I would rather

  settle with words. But if you’re disposed to fight

  I’ll prove that wit’s superior to sword

  by dodging you.’

  He narrows blazing eyes.

  ‘I’ll have your wits on a skewer. Come here, boy.’

  He beckons with his free hand. ‘Let’s have some blood.’

  ‘Show him what for!’ A shout comes from the back.

  It’s Eric, the local butcher’s lad. ‘Now, Eric’ –

  my sword tip drops to the ground – ‘should you not be

  about an errand, running joints of pork?’

  A grin splits through his pimples, cracking sore.

  ‘I wouldn’t miss a murder for the world.’

 
‘Murder? There’ll be no murder here.’

  ‘That’s what

  you think,’ says Bradley, charging like a bull

  that has broken tether. Instantly, the cuff

  of our weapons clashing, and his heavier blade

  has snapped mine seven inches in.

  ‘Oh dear,’

  says Orrell. ‘Now look what you’ve done. You’ve snapped

  the boy’s toy sword.’ A laugh bristles the crowd.

  I’m hard against the brute, our wrists are locked

  until I push, release and slip aside

  like a sudden opened door, so that his force

  throws him on my behalf.

  ‘You little shit,’

  he growls, brushing the dust off as he stands.

  My breath, from the exertion of his weight,

  is rasping a little, and my rapier

  is blunt as a whore’s remark. Bradley, now sore,

  is more determined. Slow, perhaps, but slow

  in the manner of a seasoned torturer

  delighting in his work, delaying pain

  until the expectation’s made it worse.

  He calls for a swig of ale, as if to savour

  his victory before dispatching me.

  It appears from the audience. ‘I’ll have you now,’

  he says, with a cellared voice, ‘you worthless tick.’

  ‘Go on, Bill, finish him off!’ a woman squeals.

  I turn round, shocked to notice ‘Mrs Peat?’

  ‘I meant him, dear,’ she reverses. ‘Finish him off.’

  And no hard feelings, offers me her gums.

  Bradley’s delight reveals two broken teeth

  inflicted in another brawl; he comes

  like Judgment Day towards me. As he swings

  the unwieldy blade, I snatch from a crooked man

  his walking stick, rush ‘Sorry,’ as he falls

  and his crutch, braced in my hands, prevents an act

  of unfair decapitation, then is dropped

  as I duck beneath those ape arms. Bradley turns

  but trips on the crippled man whose stick I stole.

  ‘You whore’s son with your la-di-dah brocade.’

  Several assistants help them to their feet,

  the old man winded, Bradley in a stew

  now boiling over. ‘Fight, you poncy turd!’

  ‘I believe you’re a little drunk. There are children here.’

  It’s Watson, breathing sharply at my side,

  with Nashe not far behind. He claps his arm

  around my shoulder, saying, ‘Honestly.

  Gentlemen duel at dawn. It’s almost three.

  You’re keeping good people from their work. I’d guess

  that your opponent’s not a gentleman.’

  ‘So you’ve come now?’ says Bradley. ‘Very good.

  I’ll have a bout with you, then finish off

  your wheezy friend.’

  There goes his fish-stock rage,

  bubbling over his lip as if a fire

  were stoked beneath him. Watson keeps his calm,

  and his hand on the hilt of an unfamiliar weapon.

  ‘That’s not your sword.’ ‘No, it’s Cornwallis’s.

  I borrowed it just in case,’ he whispers back.

  Having emptied his verbal armoury,

  the brute has another swig of someone’s ale,

  a pat on the back. A breeze whips up the air

  like a hand up a lady’s petticoat. A thrill.

  My mind cooks up the shiver; brings it here

  with a flavour of its aftertaste, the bite

  of unalterable history. But then, what felt

  like theatre was real: not choreographed,

  the lines to come unwritten and unknown.

  ‘Kit, hold my jacket,’ says Watson, stripping quick

  to his undershirt. ‘It cost me two months’ pay.’

  And he’s in the fray, and fencing.

  I’ve seen cocks

  go for each other’s eyes more cautiously;

  Watson, perhaps pumped up from running there,

  is bright, ferocious; Bradley swinging wild

  like a blinded man who doesn’t know which way

  the blows will come. The gathered crowd step back

  to accommodate raw spleen. A boy left stood

  in the way of danger, awed by spectacle,

  is collared to greater safety.

  ‘Ha! Take that!’

  crows Watson, scratching blood from Bradley’s chest.

  ‘I’ve taken worse,’ his gruff opponent says,

  and turns as ugly as a thunderstorm,

  thwacking his heavy sword again, again,

  across the spaces Watson occupied

  split seconds earlier. Tom leaps back and back

  to make some space for the depth of Bradley’s rage

  as the bull man presses forward. The heavy sword,

  now lightened by fury, flashes there, then there,

  slices at arm and thigh.

  I watch the blood

  that feeds that friendly heart spread like a plague

  across the cambric of Tom Watson’s shirt.

  Bradley is grinning. Now the crowd grows quiet,

  and the steel on steel that follows cuts a hush

  as still as the full-stop of a funeral hymn.

  As tremors in my legs, those staggered steps

  of Watson, backwards – backed now to a ditch

  where his breath comes shallow, sharp as that bare inch

  between him and his end – a sudden end,

  rearing up black from the afternoon’s bad joke.

  And who would leap into that deep unknown

  we’re told leads to the gods, but comes up void –

  is always walked alone – without a stab

  at another’s heart?

  I hear the blade go in

  with a crack of bone, a squeak along the rib;

  Watson’s eyes widen, close. The heavy groan

  is Bradley’s. He slides – as easily as snow

  laid thick on a sloping roof, but thawed beneath –

  clean from the blade, and crumples to the ground.

  No one moves, though the wind tugs at their cuffs,

  their hats, their hems. And then a wail begins

  on a note like a rising flood in someone’s gullet:

  a dusty woman pushing through the throng,

  knocking aside the goggling passer-by,

  the death-dumb neighbour. ‘Bill,’ she’s sobbing, ‘Bill,’

  and it’s Bill that’s drowning. Blood bursts from his mouth

  in eager blossoms as his love winds through

  to cradle him in her lap, ‘Oh, Bill, oh, Bill,

  oh, William’ – so intently locked with him

  that she’s blind to us, his murderers, until

  she finds on her blood-soaked dress a heavy corpse;

  and no one in that flesh.

  ‘What have you done?’

  Her hate disintegrates to disbelief,

  then melts to loss as she returns to Bill,

  what used to be her Bill, what kissed her neck

  to wake her up, and twirled her in a dress

  when he promised her a future, always good

  for the rent no matter what. And now, no Bill.

  And she’s sobbing no, and no, and no, and no,

  her hair stuck to her tears, her hopeless cheek

  stamped with her lover’s blood. The bud of her lips

  murmuring prayers.

  ‘I’ll get the constable,’

  says Nashe. ‘Don’t worry. The both of you stay put.’

  He’s sprinting down the street. I steer Tom’s arm

  to sit him gently down, remove what’s left

  of his shirt and tear it into strips. There’s not

  one protest, joke. With frightened care, I wrap

  his wounds until the clot
h stops soaking red,

  then drape his jacket gently on his shoulders

  as though he were a general. He shudders,

  grips round his knees, and dimly stares away.

  Someone offers a flask: ‘Good liquor, sir.’

  I put it in his hand. He swigs it, gulps

  and winces, gives it back, still gazing straight.

  I don’t partake myself; return it to

  the glove of a quiet man I recognise,

  a friend of Richard Field.

  Tom’s skin is cold,

  so I put my arm around him, stop his coat

  from flapping on his chest. I want to say

  ‘Are you all right?’ but the question is absurd.

  What good are words? There’s a woman sobbing on

  her slain provider, comforter and mate –

  and her sobs are your creation. How should words

  presume themselves as bandages or slings

  when the world limps onward, and you’ve darkened it?

  And words be damned, for if we’re ‘gentle men’

  then what hope does the world have? Words are lost.

  They’ve plucked their eyes out rather than see this,

  have jumped from clifftops.

  Finally, Tom thaws.

  Stone quiet, he murmurs, ‘What will I tell Ann?’

  ‘Tell her the truth,’ I say, after a pause.

  ‘I killed someone? She’ll like that.’ There’s no smile.

  ‘I thought I was a better man,’ he says,

  ‘but there’s no such thing. Just look.’ He nods his head

  at the sobbing woman, mingling tears with blood,

  Orrell and Bradley’s brother lifting what

  used to contain her love, and staggering,

  off-balanced by its weight. ‘Ten minutes ago

 

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