Anne’s Pragmatic Cruelty: The Jezebel Gambit and the Cost of Survival
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Anne, aware of her precarious position as Queen, recounts a sermon comparing her to the "wicked Jezebel," who was thrown out a window, then says she'd like to throw Katherine out a window. Cromwell then informs Anne that More has arrested James Bainham and may torture him.
Anne questions why Cromwell expects her to intervene in Bainham's arrest. Cromwell suggests she use her influence with the King, leading to a cynical exchange about her willingness to bargain favors, then mentions the fate of Little Bilney.
Anne firmly predicts Bainham will recant to save himself, asserting survival should be prioritized, implying Cromwell agrees; he is silent. She notices Cromwell is carrying a gift wrapped in blue silk.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Troubled yet composed, masking deeper anxiety about Anne’s defiance and the shifting loyalties at court.
Thomas Cromwell walks alongside Anne Boleyn on the Hampton Court grounds, carrying a parcel wrapped in blue silk. He tests Anne’s political will by discussing the arrest of James Bainham, subtly probing her influence with Henry VIII. His measured responses and calculated gift to Jane Seymour reveal his strategic maneuvering to secure alliances and undermine Anne’s position. Cromwell’s demeanor is controlled, but Anne’s revelations about the Seymour family scandal briefly unsettle him, exposing his vulnerability to court intrigue.
- • To gauge Anne Boleyn’s willingness to intervene with Henry VIII on behalf of James Bainham, assessing her political leverage and loyalty.
- • To subtly curry favor with Jane Seymour by gifting her needlework patterns, positioning himself as a potential ally in the court’s shifting dynamics.
- • Anne Boleyn’s influence with Henry VIII is both a tool and a liability, and her refusal to intervene reveals her self-preservation over moral conviction.
- • The court’s loyalty is fluid, and alliances must be secured through calculated gestures, such as gifts to marginalized figures like Jane Seymour.
Bemused yet angry, masking her vulnerability with sharp humor and defiance, particularly when confronted with Cromwell’s probing and the fragility of her own power.
Anne Boleyn strides confidently alongside Cromwell, her sharp wit and cutting remarks dominating the exchange. She mocks the biblical comparison to Jezebel, deflects Cromwell’s requests for intervention, and gleefully reveals the Seymour family scandal. Her body language—taking the parcel from Cromwell, laughing at his discomfort—exudes control, but her anger at the suggestion of Bainham’s defiance hints at her own precarious position. Anne’s dismissal of Jane Seymour underscores her ruthlessness in discarding perceived threats.
- • To assert her dominance over Cromwell by refusing to intervene for James Bainham, reinforcing her self-interest and independence from his schemes.
- • To undermine Jane Seymour’s standing by revealing the Seymour family scandal, ensuring her own position remains unchallenged.
- • Survival in court requires ruthless pragmatism, and recantation is the only path to safety—both for Bainham and herself.
- • Weakness, whether in others (like Jane Seymour) or in her own actions, will be exploited by enemies, so it must be crushed or controlled.
Fearful and resolute (implied), facing the prospect of torture and death with the knowledge that his fate rests on the whims of powerful figures like Anne and Cromwell.
James Bainham is discussed as a barrister arrested for heresy by Thomas More, with his fate—potential torture and execution—hanging in the balance. His absence from the scene underscores the abstract nature of his suffering, used by Cromwell as a bargaining chip to test Anne’s influence. Bainham’s potential recantation or defiance serves as a metaphor for the moral compromises demanded by survival in the Tudor court.
- • To survive the interrogation, whether through recantation or defiance, though his ultimate goal—religious conviction—may conflict with his desire to live.
- • To expose the hypocrisy of the court’s religious and political machinations, even if it costs him his life.
- • His faith in reformist ideals is worth dying for, but the court’s corruption makes martyrdom a likely outcome.
- • Anne Boleyn and Thomas Cromwell represent the very forces of compromise and betrayal he seeks to resist.
Henry VIII is referenced indirectly as the ultimate arbiter of James Bainham’s fate, with Anne Boleyn’s refusal to intervene highlighting …
Katherine of Aragon is referenced by Anne Boleyn as the figure she would like to throw out of a window, …
Little Bilney is referenced as a precedent for James Bainham’s potential fate, having been burnt at the stake in Norwich …
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Hampton Court grounds serve as the neutral yet charged setting for Anne Boleyn and Thomas Cromwell’s verbal duel. The open, manicured lawns and pathways provide a stage for their high-stakes negotiation, where the absence of physical barriers allows for unguarded dialogue—though every word is laden with subtext. The grounds’ association with Hampton Court Palace, a symbol of royal power, amplifies the tension between Anne and Cromwell, as their exchange plays out in the shadow of Henry VIII’s authority. The neutral ground also allows for the discussion of sensitive topics, such as James Bainham’s arrest and Jane Seymour’s scandal, without the immediate scrutiny of the court’s inner circles.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Royal Court of England looms over the exchange between Anne Boleyn and Thomas Cromwell, its influence manifesting in the power dynamics at play. The court’s hierarchical structure and volatile nature are reflected in Anne’s refusal to intervene with Henry VIII on behalf of James Bainham, as well as Cromwell’s strategic gift to Jane Seymour. The court’s demand for loyalty and its punishment of dissent are embodied in Bainham’s arrest and the precedent of Little Bilney’s execution. Anne and Cromwell’s dialogue reveals the court’s reliance on betrayal and recantation as tools of survival, with their own actions serving as microcosms of the broader institutional machinations.
The Catholic Church is invoked as a looming, oppressive force in the scene, its influence manifesting through the arrest of James Bainham and the precedent of Little Bilney’s execution. The Church’s orthodoxy is embodied by Thomas More, whose actions serve as a foil to Cromwell’s pragmatism and Anne’s self-interest. The Church’s demand for unquestioning loyalty and its punishment of heresy are central to the power dynamics at play, with Bainham’s fate serving as a warning to others. The reference to Jezebel and the priests of Baal further underscores the Church’s role in framing dissent as moral corruption, justifying its brutal tactics.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Anne says she wants to throw Katherine out the window, foreshadowing her character's erratic and drastic behavior. This sets her up for James Bainham's exectution for heresy."
"Anne says she wants to throw Katherine out the window, foreshadowing her character's erratic and drastic behavior. This sets her up for James Bainham's exectution for heresy."
"Anne says she wants to throw Katherine out the window, foreshadowing her character's erratic and drastic behavior. This sets her up for James Bainham's exectution for heresy."
Key Dialogue
"ANNE BOLEYN: Last week, at Greenwich, a Friar preached to us about the good king who was corrupted by the wicked Jezebel. Apparently she built a pagan temple and let the priests of Baal into the palace. She ended up being thrown out of a window. I’m Jezebel, you see, and you’re the priests of Baal. THOMAS CROMWELL: I see. ANNE BOLEYN: I know who I’d like to throw out of a window. Only Katherine’s so fat she’d bounce."
"THOMAS CROMWELL: More has arrested a barrister. James Bainham. He may put him to the rack. ANNE BOLEYN: ((Bemused)) What do you expect me to do about it? THOMAS CROMWELL: Talk to the king? You know how to please him, I suppose? ANNE BOLEYN: My maidenhead for your lawyer?"
"ANNE BOLEYN: ((Angrily)) Then he’s a fool. People should say whatever will keep them alive. You would. THOMAS CROMWELL: ((Troubled)) What if he doesn’t?"