The Virgin’s Gaze: Cromwell’s Test of Jane’s Malleability
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Seymour brothers coach Jane on how to act like a queen, focusing on her entrance, but Cromwell gently redirects, emphasizing the importance of others opening doors for her, symbolizing her anticipated rise in status.
Tom Seymour bluntly asks Jane if she is a virgin, shocking Cromwell, who then rephrases the question more delicately, inquiring if she has ever been asked for in marriage or had any prior contracts, probing her past availability and suitability for the king.
Cromwell asks Jane if she has ever liked anyone, and her direct gaze gives him pause, suggesting a hidden depth or feeling, though Tom remains oblivious and advises her against yielding to the king's charms.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Frustrated and dismissive, his confidence in Jane’s compliance waning as she fails to meet his expectations.
Edward Seymour coaches Jane on courtly decorum, correcting her entrance and posture with frustration. He reacts with exasperation when Jane fails to grasp his hints about Henry VIII’s ‘honeyed words,’ turning away in frustration. His impatience suggests he underestimates Jane’s political acumen, focusing instead on superficial courtly manners.
- • Prepare Jane for her role as queen by drilling her on courtly etiquette and royal protocol.
- • Assert his authority as her elder brother and family representative in front of Cromwell.
- • Jane’s success as queen depends on her ability to perform courtly manners flawlessly, not on her political cunning.
- • Cromwell’s presence is a test of the Seymour family’s ability to deliver a compliant candidate for the throne.
Oblivious to the subtext, his frustration with Jane’s perceived naivety drives his crude questioning.
Tom Seymour bluntly questions Jane about her virginity and advises her not to ‘give in to the king,’ his crude and direct approach contrasting sharply with Cromwell’s subtlety. He seems oblivious to the tension his questions create, focusing instead on his own heavy-handed coaching style. His role is to prepare Jane for her future role, but his methods are heavy-handed and reveal a lack of political nuance.
- • Ensure Jane’s virginity is confirmed to secure her suitability for the king, using his own blunt standards.
- • Warn Jane against succumbing to Henry VIII’s advances, though his advice is delivered with little tact.
- • Jane’s virtue is the primary concern for her queenship, and her compliance with royal expectations is non-negotiable.
- • Cromwell’s interest in Jane is purely logistical, and his gentle rephrasing of questions is a sign of deference to the Seymour family.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The doorway in the private chamber at Wolf Hall serves as a symbolic prop for Jane Seymour’s training in queenly decorum. Edward Seymour instructs her on how to enter and exit the room with grace, framing the doorway as a threshold she must navigate with precision. However, the doorway’s role extends beyond physical movement—it becomes a metaphor for the political and personal boundaries Jane must cross or maintain. Cromwell’s interruption and rephrasing of Tom Seymour’s crude inquiry transform the doorway into a silent witness to the power struggle unfolding, where Jane’s compliance is performative and her true intentions remain hidden behind the act of entering and exiting.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The private chamber at Wolf Hall is a confined, intimate space where the Seymour brothers’ coaching of Jane Seymour takes place under Thomas Cromwell’s watchful eye. The room’s seclusion amplifies the charged air of subtext and unspoken power dynamics, trapping the characters in a space where every gesture and word is scrutinized. The chamber’s walls act as a barrier, both physically and metaphorically, containing the tension between Jane’s performance and Cromwell’s probing. The atmosphere is one of veiled hostility and calculated maneuvering, where the brothers’ frustration and Jane’s cryptic composure collide.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
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Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"THOMAS CROMWELL: ((Gently)) Is it correct that no-one has ever asked for you in marriage? No contract or understanding? THOMAS CROMWELL: Did you never like anybody, Jane?"
"TOM SEYMOUR: ((Oblivious)) Well, whatever you do, you don’t give in to the king now. JANE SEYMOUR: Why would I want to do that?"
"EDWARD SEYMOUR: His honeyed words. JANE SEYMOUR: His what? *(Both brothers turn away in exasperation, so only Cromwell catches what could be the slightest of smiles on her face.)"