Ink & Roses Chapter 4 – The Curtain Falls Silent

(London, 2 May 1592)

The roar that greeted Will as he stepped into the Curtain was not for him. It spilled from the bear-pit beyond the north wall—thirty dozen voices baying for blood, human and animal at once. He paused, manuscript satchel clutched to his ribs, and wondered how many of those throats would ever bother cheering a play.

Inside the play-yard, the atmosphere felt brittle. Rehearsals were meant to be private, but plague gossip had drawn a knot of groundlings who could not afford to wait for opening day. They leaned against the stage like sailors against a rail, hungry for any scrap of performance. Will felt their eyes rake across him—country cut of cloak, ink under fingernails, the faint smell of river fog still clinging to his boots. He straightened, trying to look as though he belonged.

Ned Alleyn stood centre-stage, one fist on his hip, the other brandishing a paper crown that drooped whenever he moved too quickly. “No, Master Shakespeare,” he called, not bothering to turn, “Tyrants do not whine. They declare.” He flung the line outward like a gauntlet:
“‘Now is the winter of our discontent…”
He stopped, grimaced, and let the crown slide off entirely. “And what manner of winter is this? A mild spring drizzle?”

Ink & Roses A Tudor Tragedy

Will felt heat crawl up his collar. He had laboured over that opening for weeks, trimming and tuning until each syllable sat like a bead on wire. He climbed the side stair, boots thudding against the hollow boards. “The winter is metaphor,” he said, keeping his voice low enough that only the stage heard. “A frost within the soul, not without.”

Alleyn raised one famous eyebrow. “Then give the soul a coat, sir. I freeze.”

A ripple of laughter travelled through the small crowd. Will swallowed it like vinegar. He was unbuttoning the satchel, ready to thrust pages at Alleyn, when a familiar laugh floated from the yard.

Kit Marlowe leaned against a pillar, moonlight catching the silver hoop in his ear. He looked as though he had been there for hours, drinking in every stumble. He lifted two fingers in lazy salute. “Trade you a line for a line, countryman,” he called. “‘Grim-visaged war hath smoothed his wrinkled front,’ and left it to you to wrinkle it again.”

Will’s pulse stuttered between irritation and relief. Part of him wanted to drag the man backstage and demand why he had vanished after the Bear Garden; another part felt the sudden, shameful comfort of a friendly blade in hostile territory. He descended the stair, meeting Kit at the foot of the stage.

“Deptford tomorrow?” Will murmured.

“Tonight, if you’ve the stomach,” Kit replied. “But first we mend this speech. Trust me, Ned will mouth whatever we give him, provided it sounds expensive.”

Before Will could answer, a trumpet sounded. Not the bright flourish that called playgoers to merriment, but the flat, official note used by town criers. The yard fell silent. A bailiff in city livery stepped through the playhouse gate, scroll in hand, voice cracking like winter ice:

“By order of the Lord Mayor and Aldermen, all common plays and interludes are to cease forthwith, the plague having increased these four weeks past. Houses to be shut, gatherings dispersed. God preserve the city.”

He nailed the parchment to the door and was gone, boots splashing mud across the threshold.

A collective exhale, half groan, half gasp, swept the yard. Alleyn let the paper crown fall to the boards and trod on it without noticing. Somewhere a woman began to weep; somewhere else a groundling cursed and spat. Will felt the news hit him like cold water: no performance meant no gate money, no gate money meant no rent, no rent meant the long road home to Stratford with nothing in his purse but cherry-blossom promises.

Kit’s hand found his sleeve. “Breathe, countryman. There are other stages.”

“Where?” Will’s voice came out rough.

“Private halls. Noblemen’s chambers. Even,” Kit lowered his voice, “the coast, if you can stomach a ship.” He steered Will toward the tiring-house door, away from the rising tide of panic. “First we save your play from Ned’s boots. Then we save ourselves from the plague. And then,” his smile flashed, reckless, “we make our own audience.”

Behind them, the parchment flapped against the oak like a dying bird. The Curtain had fallen silent, but in Will’s ears the roar of the bear-pit still raged. Only now, he wondered if he and Kit were the bears, and London the crowd that would soon demand blood.


Next Time: A locked playhouse, a borrowed candle, and two poets rehearsing Richard III to an audience of rats. Chapter 5: “By Candle & By Quill.”


The playhouses are shuttered, the bear-pit still roars – would you risk the plague for one more line on stage, or take the first ship out of London?

A Portrait, A Locket, A Scorned Love Affair?

We’ve all heard the stories and theories about Shakespeare’s sexuality. Was he in love with a man? Was it the Fair Youth of the sonnets? If so, who was it? Henry Wriothesley, Earl of Southampton, Shakespeare’s patron? The only thing we know for sure is that we’ll never know for sure.

That doesn’t mean we can’t hang on each new development in the story like the most recently installment of our favorite reality tv drama, though!

https://news.artnet.com/art-world/hilliard-portrait-shakespeare-patron-secret-lover-2684052

This article from ArtNet brings up a fascinating locket. What’s in the locket? Why, a portrait of H.W. himself. Why’s that special? He was Earl of Southampton, there’s plenty of portraits of him.

Not like this.

Locket featuring a portrait of Henry Wriothseley

When the 2.25 inch treasure was discovered by art historians Elizabeth Goldring and Emma Rutherford, both were struck by the sitter’s unusually androgynous appearance, including his long golden curls, floral patterned jacket, and inviting blue eyes.

It’s difficult to look at a picture like this in 2025 and try to ponder what it meant 400 years ago. So, he’s wearing what he wants. So, he’s wearing his hair the length and style he wants. These days? No big deal. Back then? We don’t entirely know. Obviously, he sat for the portrait, so it wasn’t a completely hidden side of the man. He wasn’t afraid to be seen like this. Art historian Elizabeth Goldring suggests that the locket containing such an image, “must have been for a very, very close friend or lover.”

Wait, it gets better! Such a portrait apparently would have been painted on the back of a playing card. This one in particular used hearts. Awwww!

No no, not that! *This* portrait? If you take it out of its locket and look at the back, somebody has scribbled over the heart and turned it into a black spade! I know, right??

Shakespeare or no Shakespeare, that tells one great story. Do we know if it was a gift, or to whom? No. But we can clearly see that a heart was scratched out. Who would do that, and why? The “scorned lover” theory certainly seems valid. And who is the most well-known potential lover of Henry W.? Exactly.

What do you think?

Ready for Hamnet?

The much-anticipated movie adaptation of Maggie O’Farrell’s Hamnet hits theatres this Thanksgiving, and the trailer dropped this week. Let’s watch!

Ok, thoughts?

I never actually read the book. It came out in 2016 as part of the Hogarth Shakespeare series by Random House, a project to create modern novelizations of many Shakespeare classics by well-known authors. I did read Hag-Seed by Margaret Atwood and Macbeth by Jo Nesbø, but something about Hamnet just didn’t work for me. I don’t think it really fit the pattern of the others, first of all. Are you retelling Hamlet, or are you imagining a life where Shakespeare’s son didn’t die? I wasn’t into a story about the latter. When tragedy happens in real life, I don’t find it a useful exercise to imagine how life might have been different. I don’t find it hopeful, I find it depressing.

But, that’s just me. Maybe I’ll try it again, before the movie? I definitely want to see the movie. I saw All Is True, and I loved All Is True – except the bits about Hamnet. I’m nothing if not consistent.

Ok! Let’s talk about the trailer. Somebody who’s read the book, fill me in, because right off … who is Agnes, and is she a witch? When we’re not blaring the soundtrack and the cinematographer is not taking inspiration from Millais’ Ophelia, the first bit of dialogue I got was, “If you touch people, you can see their future.” So, then, this is neither a reimagining of Shakespeare’s life if Hamnet had lived, nor a retelling of Hamlet? It’s a fantasy?

Is he wearing a cardigan?

Really, that’s about all their is to say about the trailer. We see repeated shots of Paul Mescal as Shakespeare and Jessie Buckley as Agnes, and we hear a whole lot of soundtrack. We have no idea what the plot is, we get no meaningful dialogue or meet any supporting cast. It’s almost like the trailer’s made just for people who read the book, which isn’t how these things usually go. Usually the movie goes out of its way to appeal to the audience that hasn’t read the book.

So, people who’ve read the book, what do you think?

Ink & Roses Chapter 3 – The Bear Garden, Midnight

(Deptford, 30 April 1592)

The dice sounded like hailstones on a coffin-lid.

Three ivory cubes leapt across the scarred table, struck a puddle of spilled ale, and settled – four, four, one. A groan rippled through the ring of onlookers. Kit let his own sigh arrive half a heartbeat late, polished and theatrical. The man opposite, too drunk to notice, was already fumbling for the coins he no longer possessed.

Ink & Roses A Tudor Tragedy

Kit’s gaze slid past the table, past the guttering tallow, and snagged on a newcomer framed in the doorway.

William Shakespeare, still mud-spattered from the road, stood as though he’d taken a wrong turn and ended up in someone else’s dream. He was clutching the strap of a canvas satchel that bulged with the manuscript of Richard III, the pages curled from sweat and river fog. The satchel was heavy enough to ransom a duke, yet worth nothing until it met a stage.

A slow smile curved Kit’s lips. Here was coin he could borrow without ever reaching for his purse.

He leaned back, letting the dice rest, and studied the Stratford man the way a falcon studies a lark. Shakespeare’s eyes flicked from the bear pit to the dice table, from the knife tucked into Frizer’s belt to the silver hoop glinting in Kit’s ear. Curiosity warred with caution; Kit filed the expression away like a line he might one day gift to a character.

Ingram Frizer’s voice cut through the haze. “Three pounds by Pentecost, Kit. Or the Privy Council hears where you supped last Tuesday.”

Kit answered without looking at him. “Pentecost is still four weeks distant.” He scooped the dice, rolled again. Five, five, six. A cheer; coins scraped toward him like filings to a magnet. Luck, however, was a flirt who never stayed for breakfast. Two throws later, the pile had thinned to a single groat and the echo of his pulse.

Frizer’s hand landed on Kit’s shoulder – heavy, proprietary. “Outside. Air clears debts.”

Kit rose, but not before crooking a finger at Shakespeare. “Walk with me, countryman. I have a proposition that might keep both our purses and our necks intact.”

Will hesitated, then followed. Moonlight silvered the puddles; a distant church bell tolled one. Frizer produced a knife small enough to be polite, large enough to be final. The blade caught the moon and shattered it into shards of light.

“Papers or blood,” Frizer said softly.

Kit felt the Stratford man’s breath hitch beside him. He pitched his voice low, for Will alone. “My new play needs a second hand. Your history has soldiers who speak like men, not marionettes. Help me finish it before Pentecost and we split the profits – enough to buy this dog’s silence and your next pair of boots.”

Before Will could answer, a second figure detached from the shadows: Robert Poley, courier, sometime intelligencer, perennial messenger of bad news. He carried no blade; the parchment in his hand looked sharper than steel.

“Gentlemen,” Poley said, as though they were all about to sit down to supper, “the theatres close tomorrow. Plague orders from the Council. Master Marlowe, you are advised to make yourself scarce.”

Frizer’s eyes glittered. “Scarce men still pay debts.”

Poley smiled with half his mouth. “Scarce men also vanish.” He turned to Kit, then flicked a glance at Will. “Deptford. Tuesday. Eleanor Bull’s house. Bring coin, verse, and – if you wish – your new collaborator.”

The bell tolled twice. Somewhere a bear roared; somewhere else a poet swallowed his own heartbeat. Kit pocketed the knife – not Frizer’s, his own – and stepped back into the torchlight, Will half a pace behind him.

Behind them the dice clattered on, indifferent and bright, counting the hours until Pentecost … and the hours until two poets would decide whether to save each other or sell each other out.

—–

Next Time: A bear-baiting crowd roars. A rehearsal stalls. And Will hears the first whisper that the playhouses are about to close forever. Chapter 4: “The Curtain Falls Silent.”


If you had three shillings and a knife at your throat, would you stake it on poetry, loyalty, or the next roll of the dice? Tell us which – and tag a friend who’d make the same bet.

Review: Commonwealth Shakespeare’s As You Like It 2025 (Part 2)

Ok, I had to get all those stories out of the way, sorry about that. For me, those were the highlight of the night.

Ganymede and Orlando

How was the play? It was good. Fine. I’m not a big fan of this one because there’s not really a lot to work with. The plot is thin, the characters for the most part are so shallow a casual audience-member will easily lose track of which one is which. And the ending is just nuts.

It dawned on me this year that AYLI is basically a teen sitcom storyline. It’s all “OMG he likes me what do I do what do I say?!!” with lots of giddy screaming and running around. It’s definitely funny at parts, a real crowd pleaser when it’s being over the top obvious and not lost in the wordplay. But there’s nothing to sink your teeth into and discuss.

Or is there?

I don’t know if I just never noticed it, or this production really played up the angle, but it seemed this year that Ganymede leaned really heavily on the “How can you not see that I’m Rosalind?” moments. He says, talk to me like you’d talk to Rosalind Just go ahead and call me Rosalind. There’s even an awkward scene with a kiss. Orlando’s confused about a lot of feelings, to put it mildly.

Which got me thinking, Maybe this is obvious to the younger crowd maybe I’m just an old man trying to understand. But …let’s start the play in the forest. Orlando meets a new friend, Ganymede. Ganymede certainly looks and talks and presents himself like a fellow boy. But Ganymede’s also obviously much more comfortable talking about girl things. He wants to tell Orlando what girls want. He wants Orlando to talk to him like a girl. And then, just like that, one day Ganymede is gone and Rosalind is in their place.

We the audience know that it’s Rosalind disguised as Ganymede. But, and I’m sure I’m going to get my terminology wrong here, what if Ganymede was in fact a character that on the outside was presenting themselves to the world like a male, but inside, identified as female? Until one day they are?

Orlando, for his part, doesn’t seem to have a problem with his attraction for this character, either. I don’t think Orlando cares who Ganymede identifies as. Is that what they mean by “pan”?

I don’t really know where I’m going with this. Like I said, I’m just an old dad trying to understand a lot of new things. Tell me that AYLI isn’t just about “gender bending” and “cross dressing,” tell me it’s about gender identity, and suddenly I’m paying attention. Then it’s something more than just a farce to laugh at. Then it’s got a point to make the audience think about.

How about I get off my soapbox now and share some pictures?