In April and May 1593, various anti-immigrant posters had been appearing in London, one of the most vicious being the so-called "Dutch Church libel" which was posted on 5 May. Written in
blank verse, it was signed with the name of one of Christopher Marlowe's most famous characters, Tamburlaine, and contained references to at least two other plays of his. On 10 May, the
Lord Mayor offered 100 crowns reward for information, and the following day the Privy Council authorised torture in discovering the perpetrator. Some time between the posting of the Dutch Church libel and the offer of the reward, Thomas Drury was sent to "stay"
Richard Baines, an acquaintance of his, who was thought to know who was responsible. Apparently as a direct result of this, by 12 May the playwright
Thomas Kyd had been arrested. In his chamber were found fragments of what were called "vile heretical conceits denying the deity of Jesus Christ our saviour". He claimed that they were Marlowe's, who he said had shared a room with him a couple of years earlier and who had affirmed that they were his. Under torture in the
Bridewell prison, Kyd made a series of allegations concerning Marlowe's atheism, which he later confirmed in writing to Puckering. At about the same time, Drury was preparing a list of accusations, the so-called "Remembrances" against Richard Cholmeley, which included his having a "damnable crew" who intended "to draw Her Majesty's subjects to be Atheists" and "after Her Majesty's decease to make a king among themselves and live according to their own laws." Cholmeley appeared to use Marlowe as their guru, and claimed that he was "able to show more sound reasons for Atheism than any divine in England is able to give to prove divinity." Drury also claimed that "there was by my only means set down unto the Lord Keeper (and) the Lord of Buckhurst the notablest and vilest articles of atheism that I suppose the like was never known or read of in any age." Most biographers take this to refer to the so-called "Baines Note", the notorious list of accusations levelled at Marlowe by Richard Baines. Drury was therefore claiming that it was at his instigation that Baines had produced it and that he, Drury, had delivered it to Puckering. After spending nearly two years in the Marshalsea because of Cholmeley's treachery, Drury must have borne a grudge against him. It is known that Baines and Marlowe had "malice one to another". That there was therefore some collusion between Drury and Baines, whether encouraged by others or not, to bring about the demise of both Marlowe and Cholmeley is clear. In less than a month, Marlowe was dead and Cholmeley carted off to prison, never to be heard of again. Drury's disappointment at having received no payment for any of these things is reflected in a letter he wrote to Anthony Bacon on 1 August 1593. ==Later years==