The Locking Away of Light: Cromwell’s Ritual of Erasure
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Cromwell contemplates Christmas decorations, including peacock feather wings, but decides against using them, signaling a somber mood. Johane witnesses his decision.
Cromwell exits and locks the storeroom, plunging the scene into darkness and emphasizing a conclusive rejection of the past. This action underscores Cromwell's changing priorities and possibly a desire to distance himself from past celebrations.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Conflict between nostalgia and necessity—his grief for Liz and the domestic life they shared is palpable, but his resolve to embrace the court’s ruthlessness is unshaken. The act of locking the door is both a eulogy for his past and a commitment to his future.
Cromwell stands alone in the storeroom, his fingers lightly brushing the peacock feather wings, which tremble as if alive with memory. His gaze lingers on the gilded star and other Christmas decorations, relics of a domestic life he is now forced to abandon. When Johane appears in the doorway, his expression hardens, and he delivers his line with quiet resolve before locking the door, symbolically shutting away his past.
- • To sever ties with his sentimental past and fully commit to the political machinations of the Tudor court.
- • To assert his control over his own emotions, ensuring they do not compromise his rising influence.
- • That emotional vulnerability is a liability in the court, and thus must be suppressed.
- • That the memories of his past life with Liz are a distraction from the ruthless ambition required to survive and thrive.
A mix of concern and resignation—she understands the necessity of Cromwell’s choice but is not unaffected by the loss it represents. Her silence speaks volumes, underscoring the cost of his transformation.
Johane appears silently in the doorway, her presence unspoken but deeply felt. She watches Cromwell with a quiet intensity, her single line—'Well?'—serving as both a prompt and a challenge. Her posture and demeanor suggest she is a witness to his transformation, though she does not intervene or judge. Her role is that of a silent observer, her unspoken thoughts adding weight to Cromwell’s decision.
- • To bear witness to Cromwell’s decision without interfering, allowing him the space to make his choice.
- • To subtly remind Cromwell of the humanity he is leaving behind, even if she does not voice it explicitly.
- • That Cromwell’s rise in the court comes at the expense of his personal happiness and emotional well-being.
- • That some sacrifices are necessary, but they should not be made lightly or without acknowledgment.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The storeroom at Austin Friars functions as a liminal space—a threshold between Cromwell’s past and his future. Its dim lighting and cluttered decorations create an atmosphere of nostalgia and melancholy, contrasting sharply with the cold, calculated world of the Tudor court. The room is a sanctuary of memories, but also a prison of sentimentality that Cromwell must escape to survive. The act of locking the door transforms it from a place of reflection into a sealed vault of the past.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
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Key Dialogue
"JOHANE Well?"
"THOMAS CROMWELL Not this year."