My Lady Nicotine -- J.M. Barrie Offers Up The Grandest Scene in History
07.28.2005 J.M. Barrie may best be known as the author of Peter Pan, but we prefer
to remember him for My Lady Nicotine, his unfinished book-length ode to
the sublime weed. Here’s chapter 13, humbly entitled The Grandest Scene
in History.
Though Scrymgeour only painted in water-colors, I think—I never looked
at his pictures—he had one superb idea, which we often advised him to
carry out. When he first mentioned it the room became comparatively
animated, so much struck were we all, and we entreated him to retire to
Stratford for a few months before beginning the picture. His idea was
to paint Shakespeare smoking his first pipe of the Arcadia Mixture.
Many hundreds of volumes have been written about the glories of the
Elizabethan age, the sublime period in our history. Then were
Englishmen on fire to do immortal deeds. High aims and noble ambitions
became their birthright. There was nothing they could not or would not
do for England. Sailors put a girdle round the world. Every captain had
a general’s capacity; every fighting-man could have been a captain. All
the women, from queen downward, were heroines. Lofty statesmanship
guided the conduct of affairs, a sublime philosophy was in the air. The
period of great deeds was also the period of our richest literature.
London was swarming with poetic geniuses. Immortal dramatists wandered
in couples between stage doors and taverns.
All this has been said many times; and we read these glowing outbursts
about the Elizabethan age as if to the beating of a drum. But why was
this period riper for magnificent deeds and noble literature than any
other in English history? We all know how the thinkers, historians, and
critics of yesterday and to-day answer that question; but our hearts
and brains tell us that they are astray. By an amazing oversight they
have said nothing of the Influence of Tobacco. The Elizabethan age
might be better named the beginning of the smoking era. No unprejudiced
person who has given thought to the subject can question the propriety
of dividing our history into two periods—the pre-smoking and the
smoking. When Raleigh, in honor of whom England should have changed its
name, introduced tobacco into this country, the glorious Elizabethan
age began. I am aware that those hateful persons called Original
Researchers now maintain that Raleigh was not the man; but to them I
turn a deaf ear. I know, I feel, that with the introduction of tobacco
England woke up from a long sleep. Suddenly a new zest had been given
to life. the glory of existence became a thing to speak of. Men who had
hitherto only concerned themselves with the narrow things of home put a
pipe into their mouths and became philosophers. Poets and dramatists
smoked until all ignoble ideas were driven from them, and into their
place rushed such high thoughts as the world had not known before.
Petty jealousies no longer had hold of statesmen, who smoked, and
agreed to work together for the public weal. Soldiers and sailors felt,
when engaged with a foreign foe, that they were fighting for their
pipes. The whole country was stirred by the ambition to live up to
tobacco. Every one, in short, had now a lofty ideal constantly before
him. Two stories of the period, never properly told hitherto,
illustrate this. We all know that Gabriel Harvey and Spenser lay in
bend discussing English poetry and the forms it ought to take. This was
when tobacco was only known to a select few, of whom Spenser, the
friend of Raleigh, was doubtless one. That the two friends smoked in
bed I cannot doubt. Many poets have done the same thing since. Then
there is the beautiful Armada story. In a famous Armada picture the
English sailors are represented smoking; which makes it all the more
surprising that the story to which I refer has come down to us in an
incorrect form. According to the historians, when the Armada hove in
sight the English captains were playing at bowls. Instead of rushing
off to their ships on receipt of the news, they observed, “Let us first
finish our game.” I cannot believe that this is what they said. My
conviction is that what was really said was, “Let us first finish our
pipes”—surely a far more impressive and memorable remark.
This afternoon Marlowe’s “Jew of Malta” was produced for the first
time; and of the two men who have just emerged from the Blackfriars
Theatre one is the creator of Barabas. A marvel to all the “piperly
make-plaies and make-bates,” save one, is “famous Ned Alleyn;” for when
money comes to him he does not drink till it be done, and already he is
laying by to confound the ecclesiastics, who say hard things of him, by
founding Dulwich College. “Not Roscius nor Æsope,” said Tom Nash, who
was probably in need of a crown at the time, “ever performed more in
action.” A good fellow he is withal; for it is Ned who gives the supper
to-night at the “Globe,” in honor of the new piece, if he can get his
friends together. The actor-manager shakes his head, for Marlowe, who
was to meet him here, must have been seduced into a tavern by the way;
but his companion, Robin Greene, is only wondering if that is a bailiff
at the corner. Robin of the “ruffianly haire,” utriusque academiæ in
artibus magister, is nearing the end of his tether, and might call
to-night at the shoemaker Islam’s house near Dowgate, to tell a certain
“bigge, fat, lusty wench” to prepare his last bed and buy a garland of
bays. Ned must to the sign of the “Saba” in Gracious Street, where
Burbage and “honest gamesom Armin” are sure to be found; but Greene
durst not show himself in the street without Cutting Ball and other
choice ruffians as a body-guard. Ned is content to leave them behind;
for Robin has refused to be of the company to-night if that “upstart
Will” is invited too, and the actor is fond of Will. There is no more
useful man in the theatre, he has said to “Signior Kempino” this very
day, for touching up old plays; and Will is a plodding young fellow,
too, if not over-brilliant.
Ned Alleyn goes from tavern to tavern, picking out his men. There is an
ale-house in Seacoal Lane—the same where lady-like George Peele was
found by the barber, who had subscribed an hour before for his decent
burial, “all alone with a peck of oysters”—and here Ned is detained an
unconscionable time. Just as he is leaving with Kempe and Cowley, Armin
and Will Shakespeare burst in with a cry for wine. It is Armin who
gives the orders, but his companion pays. They spy Alleyn, and Armin
must tell his news. He is the bearer of a challenge from some merry
souls at the “Saba” to the actor-manager; and Ned Alleyn turns white
and red when he hears it. Then he laughs a confident laugh, and accepts
the bet. Some theatre-goers, flushed with wine, have dared him to
attempt certain parts in which Bentley and Knell vastly please them.
Ned is incredulous that men should be so willing to fligh away their
money; yet here is Will a witness, and Burbage is staying on at the
“Saba” not to let the challengers escape.
The young man of twenty-four, at the White Horse in Friday Street, is
Tom Nash; and it is Peele who is swearing that he is a monstrous clever
fellow, and helping him to finish his wine. But Peele is glad to see
Ned and Cowley in the doorway, for Tom has a weakness for reading aloud
the good things from his own manuscripts. There is only one of the
company who is not now sick to death of Nash’s satires on Martin
Marprelate; and perhaps even he has had enough of them, only he is as
yet too obscure a person to say so. That is Will; and Nash detains him
for a moment just to listen to his last words on the Marprelate
controversy. Marprelate now appears “with a wit worn in to the socket,
twingling and pinking like the snuff of a candle; quantum mutatus ab
illo! how unlike the knave he was before, not for malice but for
sharpness. The hogs-head was even come to the hauncing, and nothing
could be drawne from him but the dregs.” Will says it is very good; and
Nash smiles to himself as he puts the papers in his pockets and thinks
vaguely that he might do something for Will. Shakespeare is not a
university man, and they say he held horses at the doors of the Globe
not long ago; but he knows a good thing when he hears it.
All this time Marlowe is at the Globe, wondering why the others are so
long in coming; but not wondering very much—for it is good wine they
give you at the Globe. Even before the feast is well begun Kit’s eyes
are bloodshot and his hands unsteady. Death is already seeking for him
at a tavern in Deptford, and the last scene in a wild, brief life
starts up before us. A miserable ale-house, drunken words, the flash of
a knife, and a man of genius has received his death-blow. What an
epitaph for the greatest might-have-been in English literature:
“Christopher Marlowe, slain by a serving-man in a drunken brawl, aged
twenty-nine!” But by the time Shakespeare had reached his fortieth
birthday every one of his fellow-playwrights round that table had
rushed to his death.
The short stout gentleman who is fond of making jokes, and not
particular whom he confides them to, has heard another good story about
Tarleton. This is the low comedian Kempe, who stepped into the shoes of
flat-nosed squinting Tarleton the other day, but never quite manages to
fill them. He whispers the tale across Will’s back to Cowley, before it
is made common property; and little fancies, as he does so, that any
immortality he and his friend may gain will be owing to their having
played, before the end of the sixteenth century, the parts of Dogberry
and Verges in a comedy by Shakespeare, whom they are at present rather
in the habit of patronizing. The story is received with boisterous
laughter, for it suits the time and place.
Peele is in the middle of a love-song when Kit stumbles across the room
to say a kind word to Shakespeare. That is a sign that George is not
yet so very tipsey; for he is a gallant and a squire of dames so long
as he is sober. There is not a maid in any tavern in Fleet Street who
does not think George Peele the properest man in London. And yet,
Greene being absent, scouring the street with Cutting Ball—whose sister
is mother of poor Fortunatus Greene—Peel is the most dissolute man in
the Globe to-night. There is a sad little daughter sitting up for him
at home, and she will have to sit wearily till morning. Marlowe’s
praises would sink deeper into Will’s heart if the author of the “Jew
of Malta” were less unsteady on his legs. And yet he takes Kit’s words
kindly, and is glad to hear that “Titus Andronicus,” produced the other
day, pleases the man whose praise is most worth having. Will
Shakespeare looks up to Kit Marlowe, and “Titus Andronicus” is the work
of a young playwright who has tried to write like Kit. Marlowe knows
it, and he takes it as something of a compliment, though he does not
believe in imitation himself. He would return now to his seat beside
Ned Alleyn; but the floor of the room is becoming unsteady, and Ned
seems a long way off. Besides Shakespeare’s cup would never require
refilling if there were not some one there to help him drink.
The fun becomes fast and furious; and the landlord of the Globe puts in
an appearance, ostensibly to do his guests honor by serving htem
himself. But he is fearful of how the rioting may end, and, if he
dared, he would turn Nash into the street. Tom is the only man there
whom the landlord—if that man had only been a Boswell—personally
dislikes; indeed, Nash is no great favorite even with his comrades. He
has a bitter tongue, and his heart is not to be mellowed by wine. The
table roars over his sallies, of which the landlord himself is dimly
conscious that he is the butt, and Kempe and Cowley wince under his
satire. Those excellent comedians fall out over a trifling difference
of opinion; and handsome Nash—he tells us himself that he was handsome,
so there can be no doubt about it—maintains that they should decide the
dispute by fist-cuffs without further loss of time. While Kempe and
Cowley threaten to break each other’s heads—which, indeed, would be no
great matter if they did it quietly—Burbage is reciting vehemently,
with no one heeding him; and Marlowe insists on quarrelling with Armin
about the existence of a Deity. For when Kit is drunk he is an infidel.
Armin will not quarrel with anybody, and Marlowe is exasperated.
But where is Shakespeare all this time? He has retired to a side table
with Alleyn, who has another historical play that requires altering.
Their conversation is of comparatively little importance; what we are
to note with bated breath is that Will is filling a pipe. His face is
placid, for he does not know that the tobacco Ned is handing him is the
Arcadia Mixture. I love Ned Alleyn, and like to think that Shakespeare
got the Arcadia from him.
For a moment let us turn from Shakespeare at this crisis in his life.
Alleyn has left him and is paying the score. Marlowe remains where he
fell. Nash has forgotten where he lodges, and so sets off with Peele to
an ale-house in Pye Corner, where George is only too well known. Kempe
and Cowley are sent home in baskets.
Again we turn to the figure in the corner, and there is such a light in
his face that we shade our eyes. He is smoking the Arcadia, and as he
smokes the tragedy of Hamlet takes form in his brain.
This is the picture that Scrymgeour will never dare to paint. I know
that there is no mention of tobacco in Shakespeare’s plays, but those
who smoke the Arcadia tell their secret to none, and of other mixtures
they scorn to speak.

Reader Comments