Here you will find the Poem Marlowe of poet Arthur Albert Dawson Bayldon
With eastern banners flaunting in the breeze Royal processions, sounding fife and gong And showering jewels on the jostling throng, March to the tramp of Marlowe's harmonies. He drained life's brimming goblet to the lees; He recked not that a peer superb and strong Would tune great notes to his impassioned song And top his cannonading lines with ease. To the wild clash of cymbals we behold The tragic ending of his youthful life; The revelry of kisses bought with gold, The jest and jealous rival and the strife, A harlot weeping o'er a corpse scarce cold, A scullion fleeing with a bloody knife.