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BIO
Christopher Marlowe was born on 6 February 1564, the eldest son of a
shoemaker. Apparently he was never really meant to follow in his father's
footsteps (sorry), because he was very well educated, which, back then,
meant that he could read and translate Ovid1. At 23, he went off to London
and became the dramatist for the theatre company owned by Lords Admiral
and Strange. Dramatist was a rotten job, really2, but Christopher (or
Kit, as he was often called) had several outside hobbies, like talking
to his friend Sir Walter Raleigh, being an athiest, and getting arrested
for an 'unspecified' offense3. Kit's plays include works such as The Famous
Tragedy of the Rich Jew of Malta, Edward the Second4, and the infamous
Dr. Faustus. His most ambitious work was the heroic epic Tamburlaine the
Great, a play in two parts of five acts each. This was in poem form, as
all plays were then, but it has the added distinction of being the first
play written in English blank verse. This may not seem terribly exciting,
but bear in mind that it was Kit's pioneering use of blank verse that
encouraged Shakespeare to try it5. He was the first to write a genuine
tragedy in English, again paving the way for Shakespeare. Kit also wrote
one of the most famous lyric poems in the English language, "The Passionate
Shepherd to his Love". Now we get to the really interesting stuff. In
the spring of 1593, a friend of Kit's was captured and tortured by the
Queen's Privy Council6. Based on this 'evidence,' the Council was preparing
to arrest Kit7. But before this arrest could take place, Kit was killed
in a brawl at a rooming-house in the town of Deptford. He was staying
there with three of his friends--and let me tell you, these were some
very interesting friends. Ingram Frizer was a known con artist and (even
worse) a moneylender. Nicholas Skeres was Frizer's frequent accomplice
and probably a fence. Robert Poley was an occasional courier/spy for Her
Majesty's secret service, who had boasted of his ability to lie convincingly
under any circumstances. Frizer's master, Thomas Walsingham, was a cousin
of the noted spymaster Sir Francis Walsingham8. On the night of 30 May
1593, the four of them had just finished eating when Frizer and Kit began
arguing over the bill. Kit eventually grabbed Frizer's dagger and attacked
him from behind, and in the ensuing fight, Frizer regained his dagger
and stabbed and killed his friend9. He was quickly pardoned on grounds
of self-defense, and his employers did not fire or otherwise ostracize
him. Both the timing of Kit's death and the lack of any retribution against
his murderer have led some scholars to theorize10 that his death was faked
and Kit himself took up a new identity to escape the Privy Council11.
Some go so far as to state that this new identity, was, of course, obviously,
that of William Shakespeare12. Either people think it unreasonable for
one tiny island to have produced two literary geniuses in such a short
space of time, or they're subscribing to the idea that Shakespeare received
a terrible education.
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