NICHOLAS ATTWOOD’S HOME
Nick Attwood’s father came home
that night bitterly wroth.
The burgesses of the town council
had ordered him to build a chimney upon his house,
or pay ten shillings fine; and shillings were none
too plenty with Simon Attwood, the tanner of Old Town.
“Soul and body o’ man!”
said he, “they talk as if they owned the world,
and a man could na live upon it save by their
leave. I must build my fire in a pipe, or pay
ten shillings fine? Things ha’ come to a
pretty passa pretty pass, indeed!”
He kicked the rushes that were strewn upon the floor,
and ground the clay with his heel. “This
litter will ha’ to be all took out. Atkins
will be here at six i’ the morning to do the
job, and a lovely mess he will make o’ the house!”
“Do na fret thee,
Simon,” said Mistress Attwood, gently. “The
rushes need a changing, and I ha’ pined this
long while to lay the floor wi’ new clay from
Shottery common. ’Tis the sweetest earth!
Nick shall take the hangings down, and right things
up when the chimley ’s done.”
So at cockcrow next morning Nick slipped
out of his straw bed, into his clothes, and down the
winding stair, while his parents were still asleep
in the loft, and, sousing his head in the bucket at
the well, began his work before the old town clock
in the chapel tower had yet struck four.
The rushes had not been changed since
Easter, and were full of dust and grease from the
cooking and the table. Even the fresher sprigs
of mint among them smelled stale and old. When
they were all in the barrow, Nick sighed with relief
and wiped his hands upon the dripping grass.
It had rained in the night,a
soft, warm rain,and the air was full of
the smell of the apple-bloom and pear from the little
orchard behind the house. The bees were already
humming about the straw-bound hives along the garden
wall, and a misguided green woodpecker clung upside
down to the eaves, and thumped at the beams of the
house.
It was very still there in the gray
of the dawn. He could hear the rush of the water
through the sedge in the mill-race, and then, all at
once, the roll of the wheel, the low rumble of the
mill-gear, and the cool whisper of the wind in the
willows.
When he went back into the house again
the painted cloths upon the wall seemed dingier than
ever compared with the clean, bright world outside.
The sky-blue coat of the Prodigal Son was brown with
the winter’s smoke; the Red Sea towered above
Pharaoh’s ill-starred host like an inky mountain;
and the homely maxims on the next breadth“Do
no Wrong,” “Beware of Sloth,” “Overcome
Pride,” and “Keep an Eye on the Pence”could
scarcely be read.
Nick jumped up on the three-legged
stool and began to take them down. The nails
were crooked and jammed in the wall, and the last came
out with an unexpected jerk. Losing his balance,
Nick caught at the table-board which leaned against
the wall; but the stool capsized, and he came down
on the floor with such a flap of tapestry that the
ashes flew out all over the room.
He sat up dazed, and rubbed his elbows,
then looked around and began to laugh.
He could hear heavy footsteps overhead.
A door opened, and his father’s voice called
sternly from the head of the stair: “What
madcap folly art thou up to now?”
“I be up to no folly at all,”
said Nick, “but down, sir. I fell from the
stool. There is no harm done.”
“Then be about thy business,”
said Attwood, coming slowly down the stairs.
He was a gaunt man, smelling of leather
and untanned hides. His short iron-gray hair
grew low down upon his forehead, and his hooked nose,
grim wide mouth, and heavy under jaw gave him a look
at once forbidding and severe. His doublet of
serge and his fustian hose were stained with liquor
from the vats, and his eyes were heavy with sleep.
The smile faded from Nick’s
face. “Shall I throw the rushes into the
street, sir?” “Nay; take them to the muck-hill.
The burgesses ha’ made a great to-do about folk
throwing trash into the highways. Soul and body
o’ man!” he growled, “a man must
ask if he may breathe. And good hides going a-begging,
too!”
Nick hurried away, for he dreaded
his father’s sullen moods.
The swine were squealing in their
styes, the cattle bawled about the straw-thatched
barns in Chapel lane, and long files of gabbling ducks
waddled hurriedly down to the river through the primroses
under the hedge. He could hear the milkmaids
calling in the meadows; and when he trundled slowly
home the smoke was creeping up in pale-blue threads
from the draught-holes in the wall.
The tanner’s house stood a little
back from the thoroughfare, in that part of Stratford-on-Avon
where the south end of Church street turns from Bull
lane toward the river. It was roughly built of
timber and plaster, the black beams showing through
the yellow lime in curious squares and triangles.
The roof was of red tiles, and where the spreading
elms leaned over it the peaked gable was green with
moss.
At the side of the house was a garden
of lettuce; beyond the garden a rough wall on which
the grass was growing. Sometimes wild primroses
grew on top of this wall, and once a yellow daffodil.
Beyond the wall were other gardens owned by thrifty
neighbors, and open lands in common to them all, where
foot-paths wandered here and there in a free, haphazard
way.
Behind the house was a well and a
wood-pile, and along the lane ran a whitewashed paling
fence with a little gate, from which the path went
up to the door through rows of bright, old-fashioned
flowers.
Nick’s mother was getting the
breakfast. She was a gentle woman with a sweet,
kind face, and a little air of quiet dignity that made
her doubly dear to Nick by contrast with his father’s
unkempt ways. He used to think that, in her worsted
gown, with its falling collar of Antwerp linen, and
a soft, silken coif upon her fading hair, she was the
most beautiful woman in all the world.
She put one arm about his shoulders,
brushed back his curly hair, and kissed him on the
forehead.
“Thou art mine own good little
son,” said she, tenderly, “and I will
bake thee a cake in the new chimley on the morrow for
thy May-day-feast.”
Then she helped him fetch the trestles
from the buttery, set the board, spread the cloth,
and lay the wooden platters, pewter cups, and old horn
spoons in place. Breakfast being ready, she then
called his father from the yard. Nick waited
deftly upon them both, so that they were soon done
with the simple meal of rye-bread, lettuce, cheese,
and milk.
As he carried away the empty platters
and brought water and a towel for them to wash their
hands, he said quietly, although his eyes were bright
and eager, “The Lord High Admiral’s company
is to act a stage-play at the guildhall to-morrow
before Master Davenant the Mayor and the town burgesses.”
Simon Attwood said nothing, but his brows drew down.
“They came yestreen from London
town by Oxford way to play in Stratford and at Coventry,
and are at the Swan Inn with Master Geoffrey Inchboldoh,
ever so many of them, in scarlet jerkins, and cloth
of gold, and doublets of silk laced up like any lord!
It is a very good company, they say.”
Mistress Attwood looked quickly at
her husband. “What will they play?”
she asked.
“I can na say surely,
mother’Tamburlane,’ perhaps,
or ’The Troublesome Reign of Old King John.’
The play will be free, fathermay I go,
sir?”
“And lose thy time from school?”
“There is no school to-morrow, sir.”
“Then have ye naught to do,
that ye waste the day in idle folly?” asked
the tanner, sternly.
“I will do my work beforehand,
sir,” replied Nick, quietly, though his hand
trembled a little as he brushed up the crumbs.
“It is May-day, Simon,”
interceded Mistress Attwood, “and a bit of pleasure
will na harm the lad.”
“Pleasure?” said the tanner,
sharply. “If he does na find pleasure
enough in his work, his book, and his home, he shall
na seek it of low rogues and strolling scape-graces.”
“But, Simon,” said Mistress
Attwood, “’tis the Lord Admiral’s
own companysurely they are not all graceless!
And,” she continued with very quiet dignity,
“since mine own cousin Anne Hathaway married
Will Shakspere the play-actor, ’tis scarcely
kind to call all players rogues and low.”
“No more o’ this, Margaret,”
cried Attwood, flushing angrily. “Thou art
ever too ready with the boy’s part against me.
He shall na goI’ll find a thing
or two for him to do among the vats that will take
this taste for idleness out of his mouth. He
shall na go: so that be all there is on
it.” Rising abruptly, he left the room.
Nick clenched his hands.
“Nicholas,” said his mother, softly.
“Yes, mother,” said he;
“I know. But he should na flout thee
so! And, mother, the Queen goes to the playfather
himself saw her at Coventry ten years ago. Is
what the Queen does idle folly?”
His mother took him by the hand and
drew him to her side, with a smile that was half a
sigh. “Art thou the Queen?”
“Nay,” said he; “and
it’s all the better for England, like enough.
But surely, mother, it can na be wrong”
“To honour thy father?”
said she, quickly, laying her finger across his lips.
“Nay, lad; it is thy bounden duty.”
Nick turned and looked up at her wonderingly.
“Mother,” said he, “art thou an
angel come down out of heaven?”
“Nay,” she answered, patting
his flushed cheek; “I be only the every-day
mother of a fierce little son who hath many a hard,
hard lesson to learn. Now eat thy breakfastthou
hast been up a long while.”
Nick kissed her impetuously and sat
down, but his heart still rankled within him.
All Stratford would go to the play.
He could hear the murmur of voices and music, the
bursts of laughter and applause, the tramp of happy
feet going up the guildhall stairs to the Mayor’s
show. Everybody went in free at the Mayor’s
show. The other boys could stand on stools and
see it all. They could hold horses at the gate
of the inn at the September fair, and so see all the
farces. They could see the famous Norwich puppet-play.
But hewhat pleasure did he ever have?
A tawdry pageant by a lot of clumsy country bumpkins
at Whitsuntide or Pentecost, or a silly school-boy
masque at Christmas, with the master scolding like
a heathen Turk. It was not fair.
And now he’d have to work all
May-day. May-day out of all the year! Why,
there was to be a May-pole and a morris-dance, and
a roasted calf, too, in Master Wainwright’s
field, since Margery was chosen Queen of the May.
And Peter Finch was to be Robin Hood, and Nan Rogers
Maid Marian, and wear a kirtle of Kendal greenand,
oh, but the May-pole would be brave; high as the ridge
of the guildschool roof, and hung with ribbons like
a rainbow! Geoffrey Hall was to lead the dance,
too, and the other boys and girls would all be there.
And where would he be? Sousing hides in the tannery
vats. Truly his father was a hard man!
He pushed the cheese away.