Wolf Hall Episode 4
As Henry VIII grapples with the aftermath of Anne Boleyn's pregnancy and the birth of Princess Elizabeth, Thomas Cromwell navigates treacherous political waters, quelling conspiracies and manipulating alliances to secure the Tudor dynasty's future.
In the autumn of 1533, King Henry VIII reels from the birth of his daughter Elizabeth, his disappointment palpable as noblemen, including the Boleyns, note his lack of concern for Queen Anne’s well-being. Anne, however, remains focused on solidifying her position and securing her daughter’s future, demanding that Mary, Henry's daughter from his previous marriage, be reduced to a servant in Elizabeth's household, and seeking a marriage contract with a French prince for her daughter. She also cautions Cromwell against alliances with the Emperor, suspecting his loyalty due to his friendly relationship with Chapuys.
Cromwell, disturbed by Anne's demands and suspicions, encounters Jane Seymour, sparking a conversation initiated by Jane Rochford who suggests Cromwell could easily purchase Jane for his own purposes, given the Seymour family's financial straits. Rochford hints at Anne’s continued dalliances and inability to provide Henry with a male heir driving a wedge between the Queen and the King.
Cromwell, wary of the many enemies of Anne warns Rafe that many are waiting for her to fail in providing an heir. He then brings in Elizabeth Barton, the Holy Maid, a prophetess who declared the King would not reign one month after marrying Anne. Barton stands trial, and vehemently refuses to recant her statements about the King and Queen, predicting a plague and death for all in power, She even claims to have seen Wolsey's soul in purgatory, a slight to Cromwell which only increases his resolve to put an end to her nonsense.
Cromwell interviews Bishop Fisher, Lady Exeter, and Margaret Pole, all of whom have lent credence to Elizabeth Barton's prophecies. He discovers their involvement and uses the information to exert control over them, manipulating their fears and loyalties to protect the King. Cromwell advises them to beg for the King’s forgiveness, making them indebted to him.
Henry, influenced by Cromwell, decides to pardon Lady Exeter but remains wary of the Poles. The Duke of Norfolk voices his displeasure with Anne's influence and her circle of male companions, sowing seeds of doubt about her conduct. Cromwell juggles courtly duties and offers refuge to Helen Barre, a woman abandoned by her husband, employing her in his household.
As Parliament prepares to vote on the Bill of Succession, recognizing Anne as Henry’s lawful wife and their children as rightful heirs, Thomas More refuses to take an oath, an act of defiance that lands him in the Tower of London. Anne, still insecure, demands that More be added to the list of the guilty alongside Elizabeth Barton, despite Cromwell's strong reservations and knowledge of More's innocence. Cromwell appeals to Norfolk and Cranmer to persuade the King to spare More, leading to a temporary stay of execution but Henry insists on the oath nevertheless. But when the Pope Clement falls ill, Henry believes he will finally get what he wants.
The episode reaches a turning point when Anne Boleyn suffers a miscarriage. The court is shocked, and the loss exacerbates tensions. Amidst the personal and political upheaval, Cromwell is haunted by memories of his past relationship with Thomas More, a past friend now turned resolute enemy. His internal conflict intensifies as he grapples with the implications of More’s impending trial and his own role in it.
More's trial commences, and despite Cromwell's efforts, he is found guilty. Ultimately, Cromwell is forced to confront his own moral boundaries as he navigates Henry and Anne's ruthless demands and prepares for what comes next.
Events in This Episode
The narrative beats that drive the story
The episode opens with King Henry VIII's profound disappointment over the birth of Princess Elizabeth, signaling Anne Boleyn's precarious position. Anne, undeterred, asserts her power by demanding that Princess Mary be reduced to a servant and that Cromwell secure a French marriage alliance for Elizabeth, while also expressing suspicion of Cromwell's loyalties due to his association with Chapuys. Jane Rochford, observing Anne's continued dalliances and inability to produce a male heir, plants seeds of doubt about the Queen's conduct in Cromwell's mind. Cromwell, aware of the many enemies Anne has, begins to investigate Elizabeth Barton, the "Holy Maid," whose prophecies challenge Henry's legitimacy and predict death for the King and Queen. He skillfully interviews Barton's influential supporters—Bishop Fisher, Lady Exeter, and Margaret Pole—manipulating their fears and loyalties to secure their submission and pardon from the King, thus placing them in his debt. Concurrently, Cromwell drafts the Bill of Succession, which recognizes Anne as Henry's lawful wife and their children as rightful heirs, requiring an oath of allegiance. Thomas More, however, steadfastly refuses to take this oath, setting him on a collision course with the Crown. Anne, feeling increasingly insecure, demands that More be added to the list of the guilty alongside Elizabeth Barton, despite Cromwell's strong reservations and knowledge of More's innocence, forcing Cromwell into a difficult moral dilemma.
In a moment of raw political and emotional detachment, Henry VIII receives the news of Princess Elizabeth’s birth with a cold, calculated indifference that sends shockwaves through the court. His …
In the wake of Princess Elizabeth’s birth—a moment that should have been a triumph for Anne Boleyn—the court witnesses Henry VIII’s devastating indifference. His cold dismissal of his daughter (‘Call …
In the suffocating tension of Greenwich’s Queen’s Chambers, Anne Boleyn—still raw from the birth of Princess Elizabeth and the crushing weight of Henry’s disappointment—reveals the jagged edges of her insecurity. …
In the wake of Elizabeth’s birth—a daughter, not the son Henry craves—Anne Boleyn’s desperation curdles into ruthless calculation. The scene opens with a fleeting, tender moment between Anne and her …
In the wake of Princess Elizabeth’s birth—a moment that should have been triumphant but instead deepens Henry’s discontent—Anne Boleyn asserts her waning power with calculated ruthlessness. As Cromwell prepares to …
In a shadowed corridor of the royal chambers, Thomas Cromwell emerges visibly unsettled from an earlier confrontation—his composure momentarily fractured. His gaze lingers on Jane Seymour, a quiet, unassuming figure …
In the shadowed corridors of the Tudor court, Jane Rochford—a master of psychological sabotage—intercepts Thomas Cromwell as he emerges from a disquieting interview, her words a scalpel aimed at his …
In the shadow of Anne Boleyn’s failed pregnancy and the fragile Tudor succession, Thomas Cromwell and Rafe Sadler engage in a tense, strategic exchange by the river at Greenwich. Rafe …
In the shadow of Anne Boleyn’s precarious position and the court’s simmering paranoia, Thomas Cromwell and Rafe Sadler walk toward their waiting boat at Greenwich, their conversation revealing the escalating …
In a tense, psychologically charged interrogation at Lambeth Palace, Elizabeth Barton—the self-proclaimed Holy Maid of Kent—defiantly doubles down on her heretical prophecies, escalating her defiance from spiritual dissent to outright …
In a high-stakes interrogation at Lambeth Palace, Elizabeth Barton—the self-proclaimed Holy Maid of Kent—unleashes a chilling prophecy of divine retribution against King Henry VIII, Queen Anne Boleyn, and the assembled …
In a high-stakes psychological duel at Lambeth Palace, Elizabeth Barton—the self-proclaimed Holy Maid—weapons her divine authority against the Tudor court, delivering a series of calculated revelations designed to unnerve and …
In the suffocating tension of Lambeth Palace, Elizabeth Barton—the self-proclaimed Holy Maid—unleashes a barrage of divine threats and psychological warfare against the Tudor court’s most powerful men. Her defiance is …
In a masterclass of psychological domination, Thomas Cromwell systematically dismantles the moral and intellectual defenses of Bishop John Fisher, Lady Exeter, and Margaret Pole—three pillars of resistance to Henry VIII’s …
In a masterclass of calculated psychological domination, Thomas Cromwell dismantles the moral and intellectual defenses of Bishop John Fisher, Lady Exeter, and Margaret Pole—each a pillar of resistance to Henry …
In a masterclass of psychological manipulation, Thomas Cromwell shifts his focus from religious dissenters to the Plantagenet threat, interrogating Margaret Pole—the last surviving claimant to the throne—while simultaneously dismantling the …
In the oppressive grandeur of Windsor, Henry VIII’s paranoia festers as he fixates on the betrayal of Lady Exeter, blaming her 'fickle' nature while nostalgically recalling a shared Christmas past …
In a tense, high-stakes exchange at Windsor, Thomas Cromwell deftly manipulates Henry VIII into a calculated act of clemency—pardoning disloyal nobles except the Poles—while subtly reinforcing his own dominance over …
In a deceptively intimate portrait session at Austin Friars, Hans Holbein’s artistic eye exposes the fissures in Thomas Cromwell’s carefully constructed persona. The artist’s dismissal of Cromwell’s well-worn Bible—‘So plain. …
In a quiet yet charged moment at Austin Friars, Thomas Cromwell—mid-portrait session with Hans Holbein—interrupts the artist’s critique of his plain, well-worn Bible to extend an unexpected act of mercy. …
At Paul’s Cross, Thomas Cromwell orchestrates a public spectacle of power and coercion, where the disgraced prophetess Elizabeth Barton and her followers are paraded in shackles as a warning to …
At Paul’s Cross, Thomas Cromwell—watching Elizabeth Barton’s public humiliation unfold—confronts Thomas More with a veiled invitation to dinner, a thinly disguised attempt to coerce his compliance with the King’s Oath …
In a tense, claustrophobic confrontation at Windsor, Anne Boleyn—already emotionally unraveling from the birth of Princess Elizabeth and the absence of a male heir—unleashes her paranoia upon Thomas Cromwell after …
In a tense, high-stakes confrontation at Windsor, Anne Boleyn—already emotionally volatile after the birth of Princess Elizabeth and the absence of a male heir—unleashes her fury upon discovering Thomas Cromwell’s …
In a tense, high-stakes confrontation outside the royal chamber, Anne Boleyn—still reeling from the political fallout of Elizabeth’s birth and the precariousness of her position—exploits a moment of vulnerability to …
In a tense, claustrophobic confrontation outside the royal chamber, Anne Boleyn—still reeling from the political fallout of Elizabeth’s birth and her own precarious position—unleashes a calculated attack on Thomas Cromwell, …
In a tense, wine-fueled negotiation, Thomas Cromwell deftly manipulates Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk—Anne Boleyn’s disgruntled uncle—into pleading for Thomas More’s life, framing it as a strategic counter to Anne’s …
In a tense, wine-fueled confrontation, Thomas Cromwell deftly manipulates Duke of Norfolk into pleading for Thomas More’s life—not out of mercy, but as a calculated political maneuver to undermine Anne …
In a tense standoff at Hampton Court, Henry VIII finally relents to the pleas of Cromwell, Audley, Norfolk, and Cranmer, who have knelt in supplication for Thomas More’s life. With …
In a rare moment of unguarded vulnerability, Henry VIII reveals his desperate optimism to Thomas Cromwell—both political (the impending death of Pope Clement) and personal (Anne Boleyn’s suspected pregnancy). The …
Following Anne's demand, Cromwell attempts to persuade the Duke of Norfolk and Archbishop Cranmer to intercede with Henry to spare More, securing a temporary reprieve, though Henry insists More will still take the oath. Henry, buoyed by news of Pope Clement's illness, believes his path is clearing and announces Anne's new pregnancy with great joy, embracing Cromwell. However, this hope is tragically shattered when Anne suffers a devastating miscarriage, plunging the court into shock and exacerbating the existing tensions. This loss is a critical turning point, severely weakening Anne's position and intensifying the pressure on Cromwell to deliver a male heir or eliminate threats. Amidst this personal and political upheaval, Cromwell is haunted by memories of his past friendship with Thomas More, grappling with the moral implications of More's impending trial and his own role in it. More's trial commences, with Cromwell strategically selecting a jury of Londoners who remember More's harsh persecution of heretics. Despite More's eloquent defense and initial successes, Richard Riche, under Cromwell's guidance, fabricates testimony that directly implicates More in treason by denying Parliament's spiritual jurisdiction. The jury, swayed by this and More's own patronizing tone, finds him guilty. Anne, still consumed by grief and insecurity, continues to demand the deaths of Fisher and More, reinforcing Henry's ruthless resolve. Henry, in a chilling confrontation, reminds Cromwell of his role as a "serpent" and demands the execution of his will, leaving Cromwell to confront the profound moral compromises required to serve the King.
In the opulent yet tense confines of Lambeth Palace, Thomas More delivers his final, unyielding refusal to swear the Act of Succession, weaponizing Cranmer’s past hypocrisy to expose the moral …
In a tense, emotionally charged confrontation at Lambeth Palace, Thomas More delivers his final refusal to swear the Act of Succession, framing his defiance as a moral crusade rather than …
In the suffocating tension of Lambeth Palace, Thomas Cromwell’s carefully constructed facade of political invincibility fractures under the weight of Thomas More’s moral defiance. The scene opens with More’s quiet …
In the suffocating confines of the Tower’s cell, Thomas More’s defiance of Henry VIII’s supremacy oath reaches its breaking point as Cromwell—master of political dissection—exposes the fatal flaw in More’s …
In the suffocating confines of Thomas More’s Tower cell, the air thick with the scent of ink and damp stone, the scene unfolds as a psychological duel between two men …
In the suffocating confines of the Tower’s cell, Thomas More—now a prisoner of his own principles—engages in a psychological duel with Thomas Cromwell, where every word is a blade and …
In the suffocating tension of Whitehall’s royal chambers, Anne Boleyn—still raw from her miscarriage and the birth of a daughter—unleashes her grief as a weapon, demanding the executions of Bishop …
In the suffocating tension of the King’s Chambers, Thomas Cromwell attempts to temper Henry VIII’s bloodlust with legal caution, framing the execution of Thomas More as a delicate political maneuver. …
In a moment of rare vulnerability, Thomas Cromwell—usually the master of political maneuvering—is stripped bare by Holbein’s perceptive artistry. The painter’s probing questions force Cromwell to confront the ghost of …
In a tense, emotionally charged confrontation at Austin Friars, Alice More—desperate to shield her family from the king’s wrath—pleads with Thomas Cromwell, the architect of their peril, to intervene on …
In a scene of calculated cruelty, Jane Rochford—acting as Henry VIII’s proxy—delivers the king’s damning suspicions about Mary Boleyn’s child’s paternity and her brother George Boleyn’s loyalty, stripping Mary of …
In the chaotic aftermath of Mary Boleyn’s public shaming—where Jane Rochford’s venomous words have stripped her of dignity and threatened her future—Mary’s bedchamber becomes a battleground of raw emotion and …
In the charged, intimate chaos of Mary Boleyn’s bedchamber—a space strewn with discarded clothes and emotional wreckage—Thomas Cromwell orchestrates a masterclass in political manipulation under the guise of mundane assistance. …
In a masterclass of psychological manipulation, Thomas Cromwell exploits the jury’s London-based composition—shaped by Thomas More’s past persecutions—to ensure a prosecution-friendly verdict. During a tense recess, Cromwell capitalizes on Norfolk’s …
In a climactic confrontation that transforms the trial from a political maneuver into a religious and ideological reckoning, Thomas More seizes the moment to denounce the court’s authority with a …
In the immediate aftermath of More's conviction and Henry's demands, Cromwell is overcome by a severe fever, experiencing vivid hallucinations of his deceased wife, Liz, and grappling with the heavy toll of his political machinations. He recovers, visited by Norfolk, who brings a papal medal, and then by Henry, who expresses concern and praises Cromwell's household, highlighting his growing dependence on his chief minister. Henry's visit also serves to underscore his approval of Cromwell's family and his continued search for loyalty. Cromwell, observing Rafe's growing affection for Helen Barre, a woman he recently took into his household, subtly encourages their relationship, reflecting a softer, more personal side. He also begins to scrutinize his own portrait by Holbein, disturbed by Mark Smeaton's comment that he looks like a "murderer," a reflection of his internal conflict. A significant shift occurs as Cromwell, seemingly on a whim, adds Wolf Hall, the Seymour family estate, to the King's summer progress itinerary. The royal party arrives at Wolf Hall, where Henry's attention is drawn to Jane Seymour. Cromwell observes the subtle interactions between Henry and Jane, particularly a quiet, earnest conversation in the early morning where Henry takes her hand. Cromwell, witnessing this, quietly withdraws, recognizing the profound implications of this new connection. The episode concludes with the King's hat, lost and hanging from a tree branch, a potent symbol of Henry's shifting affections and the new, uncertain future unfolding for the court and for Cromwell.
In the throes of a delirium induced by fever, Thomas Cromwell’s ironclad composure fractures as he hallucinates his deceased wife, Liz, in a moment of raw vulnerability. His plea—‘Let me …
In the aftermath of Cromwell’s feverish delirium—where he hallucinates his dead wife, Liz, and grapples with mortality—he awakens to find the Duke of Norfolk, Anne Boleyn’s uncle, visiting under the …
In a masterclass of Tudor political theater, Henry VIII arrives at Austin Friars under the guise of personal warmth—kissing Cromwell’s cheeks, doting on his household, and playfully flexing his virility—only …
In a masterclass of Tudor courtly manipulation, Henry VIII arrives at Austin Friars not merely as a king but as a performer—his every gesture a calculated assertion of dominance. The …
In the opulent halls of Austin Friars, Thomas Cromwell—still recovering from his fever—stands shakily to greet King Henry VIII, whose visit is as much a performance of royal favor as …
In the quiet of Austin Friars, Thomas Cromwell—master of Tudor politics—finds his self-assurance fractured by a rare moment of vulnerability. His son Gregory’s casual observation about his appearance ('Didn’t you …
In a quiet moment of introspection, Thomas Cromwell—ever the architect of others’ fates—finds himself unmoored by his son Gregory’s blunt observation and the unsettling reflection of his own face in …