Fabula
S1E1 · Wolf Hall Episode 1

The Ghost of What Was Lost: Cromwell’s Hallucination of Liz

In the quiet intimacy of their bedroom at Austin Friars, Thomas Cromwell prepares to leave for the treacherous court while his ailing wife, Liz, lies feverish in bed. Their exchange—soft, tender, yet laced with unspoken dread—reveals the fragility of their domestic life as Cromwell’s political ambitions pull him away. As he descends the stairs, a fleeting shadow triggers a momentary illusion: Liz’s white cap, her presence—only for him to turn and find nothing. The hallucination underscores the duality of his existence: the warmth of home slipping away as the court’s cold machinations demand his full attention. This poignant, disorienting moment foreshadows Liz’s impending death and the irreversible cost of Cromwell’s rise, where personal bonds fray under the weight of power and survival. The scene is a turning point, marking the erosion of his private world as he steps further into the shadow of the court.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

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Cromwell prepares to leave, kissing Liz who is still in bed and appears unwell. Liz asks Cromwell to tell her when he is going, and he reminds her that he won't be going with Wolsey.

tenderness to concern

Cromwell heads downstairs, and mistakenly believes he sees Liz following him. He calls out for her to go back to bed but realizes no one is there, foreshadowing her sickness.

concern to unease ['STAIRS']

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

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Conflict between tenderness and ruthless ambition; disoriented by grief, masking anxiety with resolve.

Thomas Cromwell, dressed and poised for departure, stoops to kiss his ailing wife Liz in their shared bedroom. His movements are deliberate but tender, betraying a conflicted emotional state as he prepares to leave her feverish and vulnerable. As he descends the stairs, his mind plays a cruel trick—he glimpses Liz’s white cap, a fleeting hallucination that vanishes when he turns to address her. This moment of disorientation underscores his internal struggle between domestic devotion and political ambition.

Goals in this moment
  • Secure his political position by distancing himself from Wolsey’s fall
  • Protect his family’s stability while pursuing power
Active beliefs
  • His rise in court is necessary for his family’s survival
  • Liz’s illness is a temporary obstacle, not a permanent barrier
Character traits
Tender yet conflicted Observant and perceptive (noticing Liz’s flushed state) Ruthlessly ambitious (leaving despite her illness) Vulnerable to grief (hallucinating Liz’s presence)
Follow Thomas Cromwell's journey
Character traits
autonomy-seeking idealistic emotionally detached impulsive loyal naïve observant youthful grieving
Follow Gregory Cromwell's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

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Cardinal Wolsey's Bed

The white cap—a symbol of Liz’s domestic role and feminine presence—plays a crucial narrative function in this event. Though not physically present on the stairs, its hallucinated appearance triggers Cromwell’s grief and guilt. The cap represents the intangible yet inescapable pull of home, a fleeting vision that vanishes when Cromwell turns to address it. Its absence after the hallucination underscores the irrevocable distance growing between Cromwell and his family as he steps into the court’s shadow.

Before: Worn by Liz in bed, symbolizing her domestic …
After: Hallucinated as a fleeting vision on the stairs, …
Before: Worn by Liz in bed, symbolizing her domestic role and vulnerability.
After: Hallucinated as a fleeting vision on the stairs, then vanishing—symbolizing the loss of domestic warmth.
Creaking Stairs Outside Cromwell’s Bedroom (Episode 1)

The creaking stairs serve as a liminal space where Cromwell’s domestic reality collides with his political ambitions. As he descends, the stairs creak under his weight, marking the transition from the intimate bedroom (where Liz lies ill) to the broader world of courtly intrigue. The stairs also become the site of his hallucination—Liz’s white cap appears here, a spectral reminder of his grief. This object symbolizes the threshold between private sorrow and public duty, a space where Cromwell’s emotional fragility is exposed before he must re-enter the cutthroat world of Henry VIII’s court.

Before: Physically present but neutral; part of the household’s …
After: Transformed into a site of psychological rupture, where …
Before: Physically present but neutral; part of the household’s everyday architecture.
After: Transformed into a site of psychological rupture, where Cromwell’s denial is shattered by the hallucination.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

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Austin Friars Staircase (Cromwell’s Townhouse)

The Austin Friars Stairs function as a threshold between Cromwell’s domestic life and the treacherous world of the court. As he descends, the creaking steps amplify the weight of his departure, while the hallucination of Liz’s white cap materializes—a spectral reminder of what he is leaving behind. The stairs are a liminal space where grief and ambition collide, their narrow, shadowy confines mirroring Cromwell’s internal conflict. The moment of hallucination here is disorienting, blurring the line between memory and reality.

Atmosphere Shadowy and oppressive; the air thick with the weight of Cromwell’s choices and the ghost …
Function Threshold between home and court; a space of transition and moral reckoning.
Symbolism Represents the irreversible step Cromwell takes toward power, leaving his family behind.
Access Open to household members but symbolically guarded by the weight of Cromwell’s decisions.
The creaking of the stairs (audible tension) The fleeting glimpse of Liz’s white cap (hallucinatory and ephemeral) The shadows cast by the morning light (symbolizing uncertainty and moral ambiguity)
Boys' Bedroom (Austin Friars)

The Cromwell Family Bedroom (Austin Friars) serves as a sanctuary of domestic intimacy, where Liz’s feverish presence contrasts sharply with Cromwell’s poised departure. The room is warm and cluttered, a space of shared history and fragility. Here, Cromwell’s tenderness for Liz is most visible, but the bedroom also becomes a site of tension—his kiss a bittersweet farewell, her murmured question a plea to delay the inevitable. The bedroom’s atmosphere is one of quiet desperation, where love and ambition collide.

Atmosphere Warm yet tense; the air thick with unspoken dread and the weight of impending loss.
Function Sanctuary for private reflection and domestic intimacy; a contrast to the cold machinations of the …
Symbolism Represents the eroding domestic life Cromwell must leave behind to pursue power.
Access Restricted to family and close wards (e.g., Rafe Sadler); a private space shielded from courtly …
Liz’s damp hair and flushed face (signs of illness) The cluttered, lived-in warmth of the room (contrasting with the court’s formality) The soft morning light filtering in (symbolizing fleeting time and fragility)

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 1
NARRATIVELY_FOLLOWS medium

"Leaving to follow."

The Cardinal’s Shadow: A Father’s Fleeting Light
S1E1 · Wolf Hall Episode 1
What this causes 2
NARRATIVELY_FOLLOWS medium

"Believing he saw Liz leads to the departure."

Cromwell’s Strategic Isolation: The First Cut
S1E1 · Wolf Hall Episode 1
NARRATIVELY_FOLLOWS medium

"Believing he saw Liz leads to the departure."

The Cardinal’s Exile and Cromwell’s Calculated Isolation
S1E1 · Wolf Hall Episode 1

Key Dialogue

"LIZ ((Murmuring)): Tell me when you are going?"
"THOMAS CROMWELL: I’m not going with Wolsey, remember?"
"THOMAS CROMWELL: Go back to bed, Liz."