Cromwell’s Plantagenet Gambit: The Pole Family’s Loyalty on Trial
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Cromwell confronts Margaret Pole about her family's suspect loyalty, marking a shift to the next interview.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Spiritually exalted but emotionally fragile, her piety a fragile armor against Cromwell’s logic. She is either genuinely unable to process the evidence or chooses not to, her faith providing a refuge from the harsh realities Cromwell presents. There is a tragic naivety to her defiance, as if she believes her beliefs alone can protect her.
Lady Exeter sits across from Cromwell with the air of a woman who believes herself untouchable, her piety a shield against the secular world. She speaks of divine inspiration with the fervor of a true believer, her voice rising as she quotes scripture and invokes the prophet Amos. When Cromwell reveals the fraudulent origins of the ‘golden letter,’ she continues as if she hasn’t heard him, her faith unshaken. Her sickly appearance only underscores the tragic absurdity of her refusal to face reality.
- • To affirm her faith in Elizabeth Barton’s prophecies and the divine origins of the ‘golden letter,’ regardless of the evidence against them.
- • To maintain her moral high ground, even as Cromwell strips away the foundations of her beliefs.
- • To avoid acknowledging the political implications of her defiance, focusing instead on spiritual matters.
- • That divine inspiration is infallible and cannot be fraudulent, no matter the evidence.
- • That her piety and devotion to the Church will protect her from secular punishment.
- • That Cromwell’s tactics are a test of her faith, and she must not waver.
Righteously indignant but increasingly unmoored as Cromwell dismantles his defenses. His fear is palpable when his printers are mentioned, revealing the depth of his isolation. He oscillates between defiance and desperation, a man who knows he is losing but refuses to yield.
Fisher sits across from Cromwell like a man on trial, his skeletal frame rigid with defiance. His initial attempt to bless Cromwell is cut short, and his protests of innocence are met with Cromwell’s relentless logic. When confronted with the seizure of his foreign printers, a flicker of fear crosses his face—his last bastion of influence has been taken. He clings to semantic distinctions ('foreseeing is not the same as desiring') as his world unravels, his voice trembling with a mix of outrage and desperation.
- • To maintain his dignity and authority in the face of Cromwell’s accusations, even as his position crumbles.
- • To distance himself from Elizabeth Barton’s prophecies without outright betraying his alliances.
- • To protect his network of supporters, particularly his foreign printers, which Cromwell has already seized.
- • That his loyalty to the Church and his principles are above political expediency.
- • That Cromwell’s tactics, while effective, are morally bankrupt and will ultimately fail.
- • That his age and infirmity should grant him some measure of respect, if not immunity.
Coldly contemptuous, her disdain for Cromwell barely concealed. She does not need to speak to convey her message: that his commoner status is beneath her notice, and that her bloodline grants her a legitimacy he can never possess. There is a quiet fury beneath her composure, the anger of a woman who knows her family’s survival is at stake but refuses to beg.
Margaret Pole enters the frame with the bearing of a woman who has never had to bow to anyone, her Plantagenet bloodline evident in every disdainful glance she casts at Cromwell. She does not speak, but her silence is louder than any protest—her very presence is a challenge to Cromwell’s authority. The camera lingers on her long nose, a symbol of her aristocratic lineage, as Cromwell accuses her family of suspect loyalty. The moment is cut short, but the tension is palpable: this is not just an interrogation, but a declaration of war.
- • To assert the legitimacy of her Plantagenet bloodline and the historical weight it carries, even in the face of Cromwell’s accusations.
- • To avoid giving Cromwell the satisfaction of a response, letting her silence speak for her defiance.
- • To signal to her allies that she will not be broken, no matter the pressure Cromwell applies.
- • That her bloodline grants her a moral and historical authority that Cromwell cannot touch.
- • That Cromwell’s rise is a temporary aberration, and the old order will eventually reassert itself.
- • That her silence is a form of resistance, and that words would only give Cromwell more ammunition.
Calmly dominant, with an undercurrent of disdain for those who cling to outdated ideals or bloodlines. His confidence borders on arrogance, but it is the arrogance of a man who has mastered the system and knows he cannot lose.
Cromwell orchestrates the interrogations with the precision of a chess grandmaster, leaning across the desk like a judge passing sentence. His voice is measured, his questions laced with feigned concern, but his eyes betray the cold calculation of a man who knows he holds all the cards. He wields documents like weapons, referencing names (Boking, Hawkhurst) and facts with the ease of a man who has already won. His posture—leaning forward, fingers steepled—signals dominance, while his occasional glances at the sheet of paper in front of him remind his subjects that their fate is already decided.
- • To extract public submissions of loyalty from Fisher, Exeter, and Pole, neutralizing their threats to the Tudor dynasty.
- • To dismantle the credibility of Elizabeth Barton’s prophecies and, by extension, the religious dissent they represent, by exposing their fraudulent origins.
- • To shift the focus from religious dissent to the latent threat of the Plantagenet bloodline, positioning Margaret Pole as the next target in his campaign.
- • That loyalty is not inherent but must be extracted through fear and evidence.
- • That the old order—whether religious or noble—must be broken to secure the future of the Tudor dynasty.
- • That power is not about brute force but about control of information and the ability to manipulate perceptions.
N/A (absent, but his actions are a source of shame for Lady Exeter and a weapon for Cromwell).
Father Boking is mentioned only in passing, but his role is crucial: he is the unseen hand behind the ‘golden letter,’ the man who forged a divine warning into a political weapon. Cromwell invokes his name with the precision of a prosecutor, using Boking’s handwriting as proof of the letter’s fraudulence. Boking’s absence makes him no less complicit—his actions are the very evidence Cromwell uses to dismantle Lady Exeter’s faith.
- • To use religious fraud to undermine the Tudor dynasty and support Catholic resistance.
- • To create a sense of divine urgency that rallies opposition to Henry VIII’s reforms.
- • To remain hidden, letting others (like Lady Exeter) bear the brunt of the consequences.
- • That the ends justify the means, even if it means forging divine messages.
- • That the Tudor dynasty’s downfall is inevitable and must be hastened.
- • That his role as a spiritual leader grants him the authority to deceive in the name of faith.
N/A (absent, but her legacy is one of fear and defiance, now being systematically erased).
Elizabeth Barton is never physically present in the scene, but her influence looms large. She is the specter that haunts the interrogations, her prophecies the catalyst for Cromwell’s campaign. Fisher and Lady Exeter invoke her name as a shield, while Cromwell dismantles her legacy with cold precision. Her absence makes her presence all the more potent—a reminder that even the most dangerous threats can be reduced to ink on a page and the gilding of a monk.
- • To serve as a rallying point for those who oppose Henry VIII’s reforms, even in her absence.
- • To embody the dangers of prophetic dissent, which Cromwell seeks to neutralize.
- • To be remembered as a martyr, her prophecies as divine truth, despite the evidence of their fraudulence.
- • That her visions are divinely inspired and cannot be falsified, no matter the evidence.
- • That her role as a prophet grants her immunity from secular punishment.
- • That her legacy will outlast the Tudor dynasty, even if she does not.
N/A (absent, but his work is a source of shame and a tool of Cromwell’s dismantling of faith).
William Hawkhurst is referenced only briefly, but his role is critical: he is the monk who gilded the ‘golden letter,’ turning a forgery into a sacred object. Cromwell names him with the same clinical precision he uses for Boking, reducing the monk’s craftsmanship to mere evidence. Hawkhurst’s absence does not diminish his complicity—his gilding is the very thing that gave the letter its aura of divinity, now stripped away by Cromwell’s revelations.
- • To use his craft to support the Catholic cause, even if it means participating in fraud.
- • To create objects that inspire faith and resistance to the Tudor dynasty.
- • To remain anonymous, letting the divine aura of his work speak for itself.
- • That his craft serves a higher purpose, even if it involves deception.
- • That the Church’s survival justifies any means, including forgery.
- • That his anonymity protects him from the consequences of his actions.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Austin Friars’ study desk is the physical and symbolic battleground where Cromwell’s interrogations take place. It serves as a barrier between accuser and accused, a neutral surface upon which evidence is laid out and defenses are dismantled. The desk is not just a piece of furniture—it is a stage for Cromwell’s performance, a place where bureaucracy becomes theater. Printers’ details, prophetic frauds, and names of traitors pile upon it, each item a nail in the coffin of his opponents’ credibility. Later, in the suffocating quiet of the study, the desk becomes a place of solitude, where Cromwell’s fingers pause over parchment, the howling winds outside a reminder of the storm he has unleashed.
Cromwell’s document on the ‘golden letter’ fraud is the bureaucratic weapon he uses to dismantle his opponents’ defenses. It contains the names of Father Boking and William Hawkhurst, along with other evidence proving the letter’s fraudulent origins. Cromwell consults it methodically, holding it up as irrefutable proof of the deception. The document is not just a list of facts—it is a symbol of Cromwell’s control over information, his ability to turn words into weapons, and his mastery of the institutional machinery that now works for him. Its presence on the desk is a constant reminder to Fisher, Exeter, and Pole that their fates are already decided.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Austin Friars is the power base from which Cromwell conducts his interrogations, a townhouse that has been transformed from its musty origins into a symbol of his rise. The exterior, where beggars throng the gates, contrasts sharply with the controlled interiors where psychological battles are waged. Inside, the grand halls host Holbein’s portrait sessions and desperate pleas from figures like Alice More, but it is in Cromwell’s study that the real work is done. The suffocating quiet of the room, punctuated by the howling winds outside, underscores the isolation of those who enter—Fisher, Exeter, and Pole are not just being interrogated, they are being broken. The household members who observe Henry’s departure from the windows blend domestic life with the ruthless ambition that defines Cromwell’s world.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Plantagenet Loyalists are the silent antagonists of this scene, their threat embodied by Margaret Pole and referenced through her family’s history. While they are not physically present, their influence looms large—Cromwell’s shift in focus from religious dissent to the Plantagenet bloodline signals that their latent power is a priority for the Crown. The interrogations of Fisher and Exeter serve as a prelude to the real target: the elimination of the Plantagenet claim to the throne. Margaret Pole’s aristocratic disdain and her refusal to engage with Cromwell are not just personal defiance; they are a challenge to the very legitimacy of the Tudor Dynasty. Her presence in the scene is a reminder that the old order has not been entirely erased, and that Cromwell’s work is far from done.
The Tudor Dynasty is the ultimate beneficiary of Cromwell’s interrogations, its survival dependent on the neutralization of threats—whether religious, noble, or both. Cromwell’s actions in this scene are not just personal; they are a demonstration of his loyalty to the Crown and his commitment to securing Henry VIII’s legacy. By dismantling the credibility of Fisher, Exeter, and Pole, he removes obstacles to the dynasty’s stability. The interrogations are a microcosm of the broader campaign to consolidate power, quash dissent, and ensure the Tudor line’s dominance. Cromwell’s ability to wield bureaucracy as a weapon is a direct service to the dynasty, proving that he is the king’s most effective enforcer.
The Crown (Henry VIII’s Government) is the ultimate force behind Cromwell’s interrogations, its authority manifested through the principal secretary’s actions. The government’s goals—consolidating power, quashing dissent, and securing the Tudor line—are advanced through Cromwell’s psychological tactics, bureaucratic control, and exposure of inconsistencies. The interrogations are not just personal vendettas; they are state-sanctioned campaigns to eliminate threats to the dynasty. Cromwell’s ability to wield the full weight of the Crown’s machinery—seizing printers, exposing frauds, and demanding loyalty—demonstrates the government’s absolute control over both the religious and noble spheres. The event is a microcosm of the Crown’s broader strategy: to neutralize opposition through fear, evidence, and the unrelenting pressure of institutional power.
The Plantagenet Loyalists are the silent antagonists of this scene, their threat embodied by Margaret Pole and referenced through her family’s history. While they are not physically present, their influence looms large—Cromwell’s shift in focus from religious dissent to the Plantagenet bloodline signals that their latent power is a priority for the Crown. The interrogations of Fisher and Exeter serve as a prelude to the real target: the elimination of the Plantagenet claim to the throne. Margaret Pole’s aristocratic disdain and her refusal to engage with Cromwell are not just personal defiance; they are a challenge to the very legitimacy of the Tudor Dynasty. Her presence in the scene is a reminder that the old order has not been entirely erased, and that Cromwell’s work is far from done.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Cromwell's expressed intention to prosecute Elizabeth Barton's followers causes him to confront Bishop Fisher about his gullibility, marking the next step in Cromwell's strategy to control the situation."
Key Dialogue
"THOMAS CROMWELL: *My lord Bishop.* BISHOP FISHER: *(opens mouth to bless)* THOMAS CROMWELL: Why are you so gullible? Beg the king’s pardon. Plead old age and infirmity. BISHOP FISHER: I don’t know my offence. And, whatever you think, I am not in my second childhood. THOMAS CROMWELL: I think you are. Why else would you have given credence to Elizabeth Barton?"
"THOMAS CROMWELL: *She sat down with the king’s enemies, told them they would be king.* BISHOP FISHER: Foreseeing is not the same as desiring. THOMAS CROMWELL: *She threatened the king, foresaw his death.*"
"THOMAS CROMWELL: *Your family’s loyalty is suspect, Lady Margaret.* *(Margaret Pole’s silence and disdain speak volumes—her Plantagenet bloodline is the unspoken threat.)"