The Weight of a Father’s Absence: Cromwell’s Unraveling and Johane’s Silent Grief
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Cromwell rambles about meeting a fur importer from Rostock and learning Polish, as Johane cries, highlighting his grief and dislocation.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Devastated and furious, but channeling her emotions into controlled, cutting remarks. Her silence and physical withdrawal (turning to the bricks) speak louder than her words, conveying a sense of betrayal and irreversible loss.
Johane stands beside Cromwell, her body tense with restrained anger and sorrow. She delivers her accusations with quiet precision, each word a dagger aimed at Cromwell’s evasions. Her final action—turning her face to the bricks and crying silently—is a visceral rejection of his presence, a physical manifestation of her grief and the collapse of trust. Her dialogue is sparse but devastating, exposing the hollow excuses behind Cromwell’s absence.
- • Forcing Cromwell to confront the reality of his absence and its consequences.
- • Honoring the memory of Liz and the children by holding Cromwell accountable, even if only through her grief.
- • Cromwell’s political ambitions are a betrayal of his family’s trust and love.
- • Grief must be acknowledged, not buried under distractions or excuses.
Feigned detachment masking profound grief and guilt, with moments of raw vulnerability when mentioning Anne. His emotional state is fragmented, oscillating between numbness and fleeting flashes of remorse.
Thomas Cromwell stands outside Austin Friars, his posture slack and gaze distant, as if drugged by grief. He speaks in fragmented, evasive sentences, revealing his mental disintegration—first by fixating on his daughter Anne’s lost potential ('She was going to learn Greek'), then by admitting his dangerous association with the heretic Little Bilney, and finally by confessing his absurd preoccupation with learning Polish from a fur importer. His physical presence is hollow, a stark contrast to the emotional storm raging beneath the surface.
- • Avoiding direct confrontation with his grief by deflecting with trivial details (Polish lessons, fur importer).
- • Justifying his absence during the crisis by framing it as necessary for safety (Little Bilney’s dangerous company).
- • His political and strategic actions are justified, even in the face of personal tragedy.
- • He can outrun his emotions by focusing on external distractions (e.g., language lessons, heretical debates).
Not directly observable, but inferred as a source of profound sorrow and regret for both Cromwell and Johane. Her absence is felt as a void, a reminder of what was irrevocably lost.
Anne Cromwell is mentioned posthumously by Johane and Cromwell. Her presence lingers in the dialogue as a symbol of lost potential—her love of Latin, her dreams of learning Greek, and her desperate cries for her father’s return. Though absent, her memory is the emotional core of the scene, the catalyst for Johane’s grief and Cromwell’s guilt.
- • None (posthumous), but her memory drives the emotional conflict in the scene.
- • Symbolizes the cost of Cromwell’s ambition and the fragility of family bonds.
- • Her father’s love and presence were essential to her happiness and survival.
- • Education and intellectual pursuit were pathways to a better future (cut short by tragedy).
The fur importer from Rostock is mentioned by Cromwell as the man he met to learn Polish, a detail that …
Little Bilney is mentioned by Cromwell as the heretic preacher he was with at Gray’s Inn during the crisis. His …
Rafe Sadler is mentioned by Johane as having gone to Gray’s Inn in search of Cromwell, only to be told …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The bricks of Austin Friars serve as a silent witness to Johane’s grief and a physical barrier between her and Cromwell. She presses her tear-streaked face against them, using their unyielding surface as an anchor to steady herself amid the emotional storm. The bricks symbolize the unspoken divide between Johane and Cromwell—the former rooted in the tangible reality of the household’s loss, the latter adrift in his own evasions. Their rough texture and solidity contrast with the fragility of the human emotions on display, grounding the scene in a sense of irreversible permanence.
The setting sun casts a melancholic glow over Austin Friars, amplifying the scene’s atmosphere of loss and quiet devastation. Its light serves as a visual metaphor for the fading hope and the inevitability of time passing, mirroring Cromwell’s paralysis and the irreversible nature of his family’s deaths. The sun’s position—dipping low—symbolizes the end of an era, both literally (the day) and metaphorically (Cromwell’s old life).
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Austin Friars, Cromwell’s London residence, is the symbolic epicenter of the family’s tragedy and the site of his psychological unraveling. The exterior of the house looms as a silent witness to the confrontation between Cromwell and Johane, its bricks and walls absorbing the weight of their grief and guilt. The location is charged with the memory of the sweating sickness, the absence of Liz and the children, and the hollow echo of Cromwell’s political ambitions. It is both a refuge and a prison, a place where the past and present collide, and where Cromwell is forced to confront the consequences of his choices.
Gray’s Inn is mentioned by Cromwell as the location where he claimed to be during the sweating sickness, though Johane reveals that Rafe was told Cromwell wasn’t there. The Inn serves as a symbolic alibi, a place where Cromwell can retreat into his political and intellectual world, away from the emotional demands of his family. Its mention underscores the duality of Cromwell’s life—his public persona as a strategist and his private failures as a husband and father. The Inn is a space of deception, where Cromwell’s lies and evasions are given physical form.
Rostock is implied through Cromwell’s mention of the fur importer, symbolizing his attempt to escape into a distant, commercial world. The city represents the trivial pursuits Cromwell fixates on to avoid his grief, a place where he can pretend his life is still under control. Its mention is absurd in the context of the scene, highlighting the disconnect between Cromwell’s external focus and the internal collapse of his world. Rostock serves as a metaphor for the emotional armor Cromwell tries to construct, a flimsy shield against the weight of his loss.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Bilney reading the bible has echoes of this moment from earlier."
"Bilney reading the bible has echoes of this moment from earlier."
"Bilney reading the bible has echoes of this moment from earlier."
"Their deaths lead to."
"Cromwell feeling bad directly leads to."
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"THOMAS CROMWELL: *Everyone said the sweating sickness was back. I should have sent them to the country.* JOHANE: *Liz wouldn’t have let them go. Anne cried every time you were away.* THOMAS CROMWELL: *Anne?* (staring dully ahead, almost drugged with grief)"
"JOHANE: *Where were you?* THOMAS CROMWELL: *Gray’s Inn.* JOHANE: *Rafe went there. They swore you weren’t inside.* THOMAS CROMWELL: *I was with Little Bilney. I didn’t want Rafe... it wasn’t safe.*"
"THOMAS CROMWELL: *She was going to learn Greek.* (silence) JOHANE: *You would be.* (crying, turning her face to the bricks)"