The earl smiled. ‘Sometimes I think the greatest thing that I ever did for England was to set you to work, my John. Nothing in my life gives me more joy.’
Tradescant waited. Often these days, the earl was disinclined to talk and would walk in silence with his gardener through the slowly emerging shapes of the garden and park. His work was daily growing more arduous; the power of the favourites around the king was undiminished, the problems of the court profligacy greater than ever. The fashion for masques now dominated at court and every occasion was marked with a catastrophically expensive play: written, composed, designed and produced in one night, and completely forgotten the next. Every court favourite, the women as well as the men, had to have a costume blazing with jewels, every important role had to arrive in a chariot or depart with fireworks.
King James had inherited a fortune with the throne of England. The legendary meanness of the old queen had served the country extraordinarily well. Her father had left her a throne with two sources of revenue: the steady flow of money from the sale of places at court, favours, and civic jobs, and the rare bounties voted in taxes by an agreeable Parliament. The balance was a delicate one. Tax the wealth of the industries too sharply and the merchants, traders, and bankers would complain. Go cap in hand to Parliament too often and the country squires who sat there would buy control of royal policy. Only by scrimping on every expenditure, by borrowing, by insisting on constant gifts and by downright out-and-out corruption, had the Tudor King Henry and his daughter Elizabeth amassed a fortune for themselves, and a steady reliable prosperity for their kingdoms. The almighty theft of the Roman Catholic church possessions had started the process, but Tudor charm and Tudor guile had continued it.
King James was new to this process but he had Cecil and half a hundred others to advise him. The earl had thought that the new king, who had previously managed hand-to-mouth in cold castles in a poor kingdom, would show all of the family’s legendary parsimony and have no experience of their love of show.
But it was a habit quickly learned. James, new-come to one of the richest thrones in Europe, could see no reason why he should not have everything he desired. The money from the royal treasury poured out in fountains over the new favourites, over the new luxurious court, for every beautiful woman, for every pretty man. Not even Cecil’s constant struggle with the farming out of taxes, the sale of honours, the exploitation of orphans left in trust to the king, could keep the throne in profit; soon the king would have to call another parliament, and they would speak against him, and against the favourites at court, and the whole question of the king and the people would be thrown open, and who knew where such a debate might lead?
The earl limped forward. His arthritic hip pained him to walk, and it had grown worse in the last few months. John, without offering sympathy, moved a little closer and his master leaned on his shoulder.
‘All I have ever done is juggle with the forces which drive us,’ the earl said. ‘All I ever have to do is to fend off consequences. He’s running through the old queen’s fortune as if there were no bottom to the well. And nothing to show for it. No roads, no Navy, no protection for shipping, no new colonies to mention … and not even a bit of show for the people.’
It was growing darker, the cool early summer twilight hid the bare places of the garden, masked the awkward corners. The earl’s favourite pinks, which John had planted in great ornamental urns on the terrace, scented the air as their cloaks brushed by. John bent to pick a spray and handed it to him.
‘You brought the new king to his throne, and to his country,’ John observed. ‘You’ve served him well. And he came to his country without trouble. You’ve kept the country at peace.’
The earl nodded. ‘I don’t forget it. But that little chestnut tree of yours, John, that little tree in the pot, may bring more joy to more Englishmen than any of my schemes, in the long run.’
‘Most men’s tastes are not political,’ John said apologetically. ‘I prefer the tree, myself.’
The earl laughed. ‘I have something to show you. I think you may be surprised.’
He turned and John followed him back towards the house. The wide double door stood open, two serving men at either side. The earl walked past them as if they were invisible, John nodded pleasantly to them.
The earl led John into the shady hall. The wood floor and panelling smelled sweet and new, there was sawdust still in the corners, and the linenfold shapes on the panelling were sharp-cut and bright. The wood had not even had its first polish yet, it was still light and shining. Even in the twilight it gleamed as if it were bathed in sunshine.
At the foot of the stairs there was a great newel post, left swathed in a cloth by the woodcarver when he went home for the night. The earl took hold of the sheet and pulled it to one side.
‘What d’you see?’
John stepped forwards to look. The post was square and grand, a fitting size and solidity for the big hall, the ornaments carved on top with acanthus leaves and swags and ribbons. One face of the square pillar was ornate with half-finished carvings but the other was already complete. It showed a man, in the act of stepping down from the plinth, stepping out of the frame of the carving as if he would take his place in the outside world, as if he would take his work to the farthest corners of the world.
In one hand the figure had a long-handled rake, and in the other a grand fanciful flower springing from a huge pot, which was spilling over with fruit and seeds: a cornucopia of goodness. He was wearing comfortable baggy breeches and a stout overcoat, and on his head, at a rakish joyful angle, was his hat. With an awe-struck gasp John recognised himself, carved in wood on the earl’s newel post.
‘Good God! Is it me?’ John asked in a whisper.
Robert Cecil’s hand was gentle on his shoulder. ‘It’s you,’ he said. ‘And a very good likeness, I think.’
‘Why have you put me on your stair post, my lord?’ John asked. ‘Of all the things that you could have had carved?’
The earl smiled. ‘Of all my great choices: the Three Graces, or Zeus, or Apollo, or something from the Bible or the king himself? Yet I chose to have my gardener carved in the centre post of my house.’
John looked at the jaunty confidence of the set of the hat and the brandished rake. ‘I don’t know what to say,’ he said simply. ‘It’s too much for me. You have taken my breath away.’
‘Fame comes in many guises, Tradescant,’ Robert Cecil remarked. ‘But I think people will remember you when they sit beneath their chestnut trees and when your plants bloom in their gardens. And here you are, and here you will be, as long as my house stands, recorded forever, striding out with a plant in one hand, and your rake in the other.’
Autumn 1611
Elizabeth and Baby J were at last to move to Hatfield House. Gertrude, suddenly seized with maternal tenderness, came to weep over their departure and to see them off, all their goods loaded into one wagon, and Elizabeth sitting beside John on the driver’s seat with Baby J wedged between them.
‘Where’s the chestnut tree?’ John asked.
‘That tree!’ Gertrude exclaimed, but she lacked her old spite.
‘Safe in the back,’ Elizabeth said. ‘Beside the kitchen things.’
John handed her the reins of the steady horse and went round to the back of the wagon to find the barrel with the tree. It was leaning at an angle against the rail. The movement could have rubbed the bark off the tender trunk. John compressed his lips over hard words. Elizabeth had much work to do: moving house, and a young child, active as a puppy under her feet all day. He should not blame her for being careless with something which had only meant much to her as a token of his love. She never cared for it as he did. It was unfair to expect that she should.
He unloaded a couple of stools and repacked the corner of the wagon so that the tree was fully supported. Then he came round to the driver’s seat.
‘Your baby safely settled?’ Elizabeth asked sharply.
Joh
n nodded, not rising to the bait. ‘It’s a precious rarity,’ he reminded her mildly. ‘Probably worth more than the whole cart of things put together. We would be fools if we broke it out of carelessness.’
Gertrude shot a swift look at Elizabeth as if to bewail the stubbornness of men, then Elizabeth leaned out from the wagon and kissed her mother goodbye.
‘Come and see us at Hatfield,’ Elizabeth said.
Gertrude stepped back as the wagon moved forward. She waved and saw Baby J wave back to her. For a moment she thought she might be able to cry, but though she screwed up her face and thought of the loss of her daughter and her grandson, no tears came.
‘Safe journey!’ she called, and saw Tradescant settle himself on the wagoner’s hard bench seat as if he were ready to travel across half the world.
‘Oh, yes,’ she said under her breath as the wagon drew away. ‘I see you, John Tradescant, with your heart leaping up at the very word “journey”. She’d have done better to have married a good Kent farmer and be christened, married, and buried in her father’s church. But that would never have done for you because you are Cecil’s man through and through and you have all of his ambition – though it shows itself in funny ways with your rarities and your travels – and Meopham would never have been big enough or strange enough or rare enough for you.’
A little handkerchief fluttered from the receding cart, and Gertrude whipped out her own and waved back.
‘Still,’ she said philosophically. ‘He doesn’t beat her, and there are a lot worse things a man can love better than his wife than a garden and a lord.’
Elizabeth and John, unaware of this brutal and nearly accurate summary of their lives, found their spirits rising as they drew further and further away from Meopham.
‘It seems odd to me to live anywhere else, but I shall grow accustomed,’ Elizabeth said. ‘And a bigger cottage and a better garden –’
‘And the parkland all around instead of the lanes for J to play in,’ John reminded her. ‘And gardens the like of which no-one in England has ever seen. Fountains and rivers!’
‘We must take care he doesn’t wander off and fall in,’ Elizabeth said. ‘He’s very restless. I can’t think how many times someone has brought him back to me and told me he was halfway to Sussex.’
‘He can stray all he likes in my lord’s gardens,’ John said with satisfaction. ‘He’ll come to no harm there.’
‘And we’ll eat our dinner in hall or at our home as we wish?’ Elizabeth asked.
‘As we wish when the lord is away from home. But when he is at the palace he likes his men to dine in the hall. And I like to see him.’
‘Well enough when you had no-one to cook your dinner at home,’ Elizabeth remarked. ‘But now I shall be there –’
John put a hand gently on hers. ‘If he looks down the hall to see me, I must be there,’ he reminded her. ‘It’s not a question of a dinner cooked by you or a dinner cooked by the cooks. It’s not even a question of whose company I would rather keep. It is just that if he looks down the hall for me, I must be there. You must know that by now, Elizabeth. You must know that now that we are going to live on his land, in a cottage owned by him and given to us free. You must know that he comes first.’
For a moment he thought she would fly out at him and then there would be a quarrel and a sulk – for they were both terrible sulkers – which could easily last for the whole two days of the journey. But then he saw her recognise the simple truth of it.
‘I know,’ she agreed. ‘But it is hard for me. The people I come from, my family, are freeholders on their own land. They dine where they please.’
‘Sometimes only on bread and bacon,’ John pointed out.
‘Even so. It’s their own bread and bacon and they fear no-one’s favour.’
John nodded. ‘And if I had been content to be a farmer or perhaps a gardener on my own account in a small way with a little market garden for bulbs or flowers or fruit, then I should be a man like that too. But I wanted something more, Elizabeth. I wanted the chance to make the greatest garden in England. And he gave me that when I was a young man, so young that most masters would have made me work an apprenticeship under another man for another year or three before they even considered me. He trusted me, he took a risk with me. He gave me Theobalds when I was little more than a lad.’
‘And don’t you see what you’ve paid for that?’ she asked him. ‘You can’t even choose where to eat your dinner. You can’t choose where to live. Sometimes I think you can’t even choose what to feel in your heart. It’s his feelings that matter. Not your own.’
‘It’s the way it is,’ he stated. ‘The way of the world.’
She shook her head. ‘Not in Meopham. Not in my family. Not in the country. It’s the way of the court where everyone has to have a great man’s favour and protection to rise, where every great man has to have his followers to show his importance. But there are men and women all over the country who live according to their own lights and call no man master.’
‘You think that’s a better life?’
‘Of course,’ she said, but she could see that what seemed to her to be a freedom from an onerous duty was to him a loss, an emptiness which he could not have borne.
‘I would have been a smaller man without my lord,’ he said. ‘And what you think of as freedom is a small price to pay for belonging heart and soul to a great man. It’s the price I pay gladly.’
‘But I pay it too,’ she said quietly.
For a moment he glanced down at her as if something in her voice had made him feel tender for her, regretful, as if they should have been more to each other. She thought that he would put his arm around her and cuddle her against his side and drive one-handed like a lover and his lass on the way to the fair. ‘Yes, you pay too,’ he admitted, keeping both hands on the driving reins. ‘You knew you were marrying a man who had a duty already promised. I was Cecil’s man before we were even betrothed, let alone married. You knew that, Elizabeth.’
She nodded and kept her eyes on the unwinding road ahead of them. ‘I knew that,’ she agreed a little grimly. ‘I don’t complain.’
He left it at that, with her acquiescence, and trusted to the house that his lord had provided for them to persuade her, as he could not, that it was better to be the follower of a great man than a small man on your own account. He saw her face as he drew up outside the cottage and knew that there would be no complaints for a while about the earl.
It was not a cottage he had given them at all – not two cramped rooms on the ground floor and a rickety stair to a hayloft bedroom – but a proper house with a fence all around it and a path of handsome brick chippings leading up to the front door set flush in the middle with two windows, proper glazed windows with panes set diamond-wise in thick lead, on each side of it.
‘Oh! oh!’ Elizabeth slid down from the hard driving seat, lost for words.
A thick blond thatch sat weightily on the low roof. The beams in the walls were so new that they were still golden against the pale pink of the limewashed plaster.
‘New built!’ Elizabeth whispered. ‘New built for us?’
‘For us and no other. Step inside,’ John invited her.
With J at her heels, looking around at everything with eyes as wide as a hunting owl, Elizabeth stepped over the threshold of her new home and found herself inside a stone-flagged hall with a fire already lit in the fireplace to welcome her. To the right was the kitchen, with a big stone sink and a broad fireplace. To the left was a small room she could use as she pleased: a still room, or a drawing room; and immediately before her was a genuine solid flight of stairs with well-made wooden treads and risers which led to two more rooms above. Each one of them was big enough for a full-size bed, never mind the cramped little bed and Baby J’s truckle that they had brought with them on the wagon from Meopham.
‘And a garden,’ John said exultantly.
‘A garden!’ Elizabeth laughed at the predictability of
her man; but let him lead her back down the stairs and through the kitchen to the back door.
Cecil had bidden John take what he wanted from the saplings and plants of the palace gardens and make his own little Eden. John had created in the small walled plot a little orchard, a walk of trellised apple and plum trees, a pottager by the back door with herbs for cooking and salad vegetables, a bed of strawberries, and a kitchen garden bed of beans and peas and onions and greens.
‘It looks so – rooted!’ Elizabeth found the word at last. ‘As if it had been here forever.’
A brief gleam of pride crossed John’s face. ‘That is what I have learned this year at least,’ he said. ‘I have learned how to make a garden new-made look as if it was there when Eden was planted. The trick of it is to put things too close, and bear the work of moving them before they get overcrowded. Also you have to take a risk of moving things which are really too big to be disturbed. Digging a wide trench around the roots. Those trees now –’ He broke off. His wife was smiling at him but she was not listening. ‘I have found a way of moving trees so they don’t wither,’ he finished. ‘But it’s of little interest except to another gardener.’
‘It means that you have given me a beautiful garden which I will treasure,’ she said. She came into his arms and held him close. ‘And I thank you for it. I see now why the little patch at Meopham was not enough. I never thought of you making a cottage garden like you make grand gardens, my John, but you have given me a little beauty here.’
He smiled at her pleasure and bent his head and kissed her. Her lips were still soft and warm and he thought with rising desire that tonight they would bed in a new room and tomorrow wake to look out on the great parkland of Hatfield, and their new life would begin.
‘We’ll see these trees grow strong,’ he said. ‘And we’ll plant the chestnut sapling at the bottom of the garden and sit in its shade when we are old.’
Earthly Joys Page 11