Whatever the cause,
Richard Topcliffe informed
Robert Cecil, who raised the issue to the
Privy Council on July 28. Three of the players (
Gabriel Spenser, Robert Shaw, and Ben Jonson) were arrested and sent to
Marshalsea Prison. Nashe's home was raided (he was then at
Great Yarmouth) and his papers seized, but he escaped imprisonment. He later wrote that he had given birth to a monster – "it was no sooner borne but I was glad to runne from it." Nashe was later to call it "an imperfit Embrion of my idle houres" and claimed to have written only the introduction and first act. For his part, Jonson recalled that he said nothing but "
yes and no". Authorities placed two informers (
Robert Poley and someone surnamed Parrot) with him; those two are referred to in his
Epigram 59,
Of Spies. After this burst of repression, royal authorities appear to have let the matter drop without further incident. The report of the initial arrest says that "the rest of the players or actors in that matter shall be apprehended", but no one else ever was. Shaw and Spenser were released quickly, and even Jonson was out of jail by early in October. Pembroke's Men were in action again, as were the other companies, before winter of that year. The only party permanently hurt was the Swan's
impresario Francis Langley, who alone among the play's producers was not able to obtain relicensing. Langley had apparently run afoul of the Privy Council on an unrelated matter involving a large Portuguese diamond that Langley had fenced, or planned to fence. ==The incident and the London play-world==