THE LORD ADMIRAL’S PLAYERS
There was an unwonted buzzing in the
east end of Stratford on that next to the last day
of April, 1596. It was as if some one had thrust
a stick into a hive of bees and they had come whirling
out to see.
The low stone guard-wall of old Clopton
bridge, built a hundred years before by rich Sir Hugh,
sometime Mayor of London, was lined with straddling
boys, like strawberries upon a spear of grass, and
along the low causeway from the west across the lowland
to the town, brown-faced, barefoot youngsters sat
beside the roadway with their chubby legs a-dangle
down the mossy stones, staring away into the south
across the grassy levels of the valley of the Stour.
Punts were poling slowly up the Avon
to the bridge; and at the outlets of the town, where
the streets came down to the waterside among the weeds,
little knots of men and serving-maids stood looking
into the south and listening. Some had waited
for an hour, some for two; yet still there was no
sound but the piping of the birds in white-thorn hedges,
the hollow lowing of kine knee-deep in grassy meadows,
and the long rush of the river through the sedge beside
the pebbly shore; and naught to see but quiet valleys,
primrose lanes, and Warwick orchards white with bloom,
stretching away to the misty hills.
But still they stood and looked and listened.
The wind came stealing up out of the
south, soft and warm and sweet and still, moving the
ripples upon the river with gray gusts; and, scudding
free before the wind, a dog came trotting up the road
with wet pink tongue and sidelong gait. At the
throat of Clopton bridge he stopped and scanned the
way with dubious eye, then clapped his tail between
his legs and bolted for the town. The laughing
shout that followed him into the Warwick road seemed
not to die away, but to linger in the air like the
drowsy hum of beesa hum that came and went
at intervals upon the shifting wind, and grew by littles,
taking body till it came unbroken as a long, low,
distance-muffled murmur from the south, so faint as
scarcely to be heard.
Nick Attwood pricked his keen young
ears. “They’re coming, Robinhark
’e to the trampling!”
Robin Getley held his breath and turned
his ear toward the south. The far-off murmur
was a mutter now, defined and positive, and, as the
two friends listened, grew into a drumming roll, and
all at once above it came a shrill, high sound like
the buzzing of a gnat close by the ear.
Little Tom Davenant dropped from the
finger-post, and came running up from the fork of
the Banbury road, his feet making little white puffs
in the dust as he flew. “They are coming!
they are coming!” he shrieked as he ran.
Then up to his feet sprang Robin Getley,
upon the saddle-backed coping-stones, his hand upon
Nick Attwood’s head to steady himself, and looked
away where the rippling Stour ran like a thread of
silver beside the dust-buff London road, and the little
church of Atherstone stood blue against the rolling
Cotswold Hills.
“They are coming! they are coming!”
shrilled little Tom, and scrambled up the coping like
a squirrel up a rail.
A stir ran out along the guard-wall,
some crying out, some starting up. “Sit
down! sit down!” cried others, peering askance
at the water gurgling green down below. “Sit
down, or we shall all be off!”
Robin held his hand above his eyes.
A cloud of dust was rising from the London road and
drifting off across the fields like smoke when the
old ricks burn in damp weathera long,
broad-sheeted mist; and in it were bits of moving
gold, shreds of bright colors vaguely seen, and silvery
gleams like the glitter of polished metal in the sun.
And as he looked the shifty wind came down out of
the west again and whirled the cloud of dust away,
and there he saw a long line of men upon horses coming
at an easy canter up the highway. Just as he
had made this out the line came rattling to a stop,
the distant drumming of hoofs was still, and as the
long file knotted itself into a rosette of ruddy color
amid the April green, a clear, shrill trumpet blew
and blew again.
“They are coming!” shouted
Robin, “they are coming!” and, turning,
waved his cap.
A shout went up along the bridge.
Those down below came clambering up, the punts came
poling with a rush of foam, and a ripple ran along
the edge of Stratford town like the wind through a
field of wheat. Windows creaked and doors swung
wide, and the workmen stopped in the garden-plots
to lean upon their mattocks and to look.
“They are coming!” bellowed
Rafe Hickathrift, the butcher’s boy, standing
far out in the street, with his red hands to his mouth
for a trumpet, “they are coming!” and
at that the doors of Bridge street grew alive with
eager eyes.
At early dawn the Oxford carrier had
brought the news that the players of the Lord High
Admiral were coming up to Stratford out of London from
the south, to play on May-day there; and this was what
had set the town to buzzing like a swarm. For
there were in England then but three great companies,
the High Chamberlain’s, the Earl of Pembroke’s
men, and the stage-players of my Lord Charles Howard,
High Admiral of the Realm; and the day on which they
came into a Midland market-town to play was one to
mark with red and gold upon the calendar of the uneventful
year.
Away by the old mill-bridge there
were fishermen angling for dace and perch; but when
the shout came down from the London road they dropped
their poles and ran, through the willows and over the
gravel, splashing and thrashing among the rushes and
sandy shallows, not to be last when the players came.
And old John Carter coming down the Warwick road with
a load of hay, laid on the lash until piebald Dobbin
snorted in dismay and broke into a lumbering run to
reach the old stone bridge in time.
The distant horsemen now were coming
on again, riding in double file. They had flung
their banners to the breeze, and on the changing wind,
with the thumping of horses’ hoofs, came by snatches
the sound of a kettledrummer drawing his drumhead
tight, and beating as he drew, and the muffled blasts
of a trumpeter proving his lips.
Fynes Morrison and Walter Stirley,
who had gone to Cowslip lane to meet the march, were
running on ahead, and shouting as they ran: “There’s
forty men, and sumpter-mules! and, oh, the bravest
banners and attireand the trumpets are
a cloth-yard long! Make room for us, make room
for us, and let us up!”
A bowshot off, the trumpets blew a
blast so high, so clear, so keen, that it seemed a
flame of fire in the air, and as the brassy fanfare
died away across the roofs of the quiet town, the kettledrums
clanged, the cymbals clashed, and all the company
began to sing the famous old song of the hunt:
“The hunt is up,
the hunt is up,
Sing merrily we,
the hunt is up!
The
wild birds sing,
The
dun deer fling,
The
forest aisles with music ring!
Tantara,
tantara, tantara!
“Then ride along, ride along,
Stout and strong!
Farewell to grief and care;
With a rollicking cheer
For the high dun deer
And a life in the open air!
Tantara, the hunt is up, lads;
Tantara, the bugles bray!
Tantara, tantara, tantara,
Hio, hark away!”
The first of the riders had reached
old Clopton bridge, and the banners strained upon
their staves in the freshening river-wind. The
trumpeters and the drummers led, their horses prancing,
white plumes waving in the breeze, and the April sunlight
dancing on the brazen horns and the silver bellies
of the kettledrums.
Then came the banners of the company,
curling down with a silky swish, and unfurling again
with a snap, like a broad-lashed whip. The greatest
one was rosy red, and on it was a gallant ship upon
a flowing sea, bearing upon its mainsail the arms
of my Lord Charles Howard, High Admiral of England.
Upon its mate was a giant-bearded man with a fish’s
tail, holding a trident in his hand and blowing upon
a shell, the Triton of the seas which England ruled;
this flag was bright sea-blue. The third was
white, and on it was a red wild rose with a golden
heart, the common standard of the company.
After the flags came twoscore men,
the players of the Admiral, the tiring-men, grooms,
horse-boys, and serving-knaves, well mounted on good
horses, and all of them clad in scarlet tabards
blazoned with the coat-armor of their master.
Upon their caps they wore the famous badge of the
Howards, a rampant silver demi-lion; and beneath their
tabards at the side could be seen their jerkins
of many-colored silk, their silver-buckled belts,
and long, thin Spanish rapiers, slapping their horses
on the flanks at every stride. Their legs were
cased in high-topped riding-boots of tawny cordovan,
with gilt spurs, and the housings of their saddles
were of blue with the gilt anchors of the admiralty
upon them. On their bridles were jingling bits
of steel, which made a constant tinkling, like a thousand
little bells very far away.
Some had faces smooth as boys and
were quite young; and others wore sharp-pointed beards
with stiff-waxed mustaches, and were older men, with
a tinge of iron in their hair and lines of iron in
their faces, hardened by the life they led; and some,
again, were smooth-shaven, so often and so closely
that their faces were blue with the beard beneath
the skin. But, oh, to Nicholas Attwood and the
rest of Stratford boys, they were a dashing, rakish,
admirable lot, with the air of something even greater
than lords, and a keen knowingness in their sparkling,
worldly eyes that made a common wise man seem almost
a fool beside them!
And so they came riding up out of the south:
“Then ride along, ride along,
Stout and strong!
Farewell to grief and care;
With a rollicking cheer
For the high dun deer
And a life in the open air!”
“Hurrah! hurrah! God save the Queen!”
A dropping shout went up the street
like an arrow-flight scattering over the throng; and
the players, waving their scarlet caps until the long
line tossed like a poppy-garden in a summer rain, gave
a cheer that fairly set the crockery to dancing upon
the shelves of the stalls in Middle Bow.
“Hurrah!” shouted Nicholas
Attwood, his blue eyes shining with delight.
“Hurrah, hurrah, for the Admiral’s men!”
And high in the air he threw his cap, as a wild cheer
broke from the eddying crowd, and the arches of the
long gray bridge rang hollow with the tread of hoofs.
Whiff, came the wind; down dropped the hat upon the
very saddle-peak of one tall fellow riding along among
the rest. Catching it quickly as it fell, he
laughed and tossed it back; and when Nick caught it
whirling in the air, a shilling jingled from it to
the ground.
Then up Fore Bridge street they all
trooped after into Stratford town.
“Oh,” cried Robin, “it is brave,
brave!”
“Brave?” cried Nick.
“It makes my very heart jump. And see, Robin,
’tis a shilling, a real silver shillingoh,
what fellows they all be! Hurrah for the Lord
High Admiral’s men!”