The Dead Man’s Verdict: Cromwell’s Trial by Ghosts
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Cromwell seeks reassurance from Rafe, wondering who could have poisoned Dorothea's mind against him other than the Cardinal himself. Rafe expresses disbelief, attempting to console Cromwell.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
A tense mix of sympathy and helpless frustration. He is deeply affected by Cromwell’s despair but lacks the words—or perhaps the will—to intervene, trapped between his loyalty and the weight of Cromwell’s sins.
Rafe sits close to Cromwell, illuminated by the single candle’s dim light. He listens intently, his posture rigid with discomfort, as Cromwell’s confession spirals into despair. Rafe offers no words of comfort or absolution—only silence—and his helplessness is palpable. His presence is a foil to Cromwell’s unraveling: where Cromwell is loud in his self-flagellation, Rafe is quietly pained, his loyalty tested by his inability to ease his master’s torment.
- • To bear witness to Cromwell’s confession without judgment, preserving their bond.
- • To subtly reinforce Cromwell’s self-doubt by withholding absolution, forcing him to confront his actions.
- • That Cromwell’s guilt is self-inflicted and must be faced alone.
- • That his silence is the only response that will pierce Cromwell’s defenses.
A storm of self-recrimination and existential dread, masking a deep fear of moral irredeemability. His surface desperation barely conceals a flicker of defiance—he clings to the idea that his actions were justified, even as he doubts it.
Cromwell sits at his desk in despair, twisting Dorothea’s handkerchief between his fingers. He moves to the window where Wolsey’s spectral presence is usually felt, but finds only emptiness. His voice is raw with self-loathing as he confesses his past ruthlessness—manipulating George Boleyn, ignoring Mark Smeaton’s pleas—and grapples with the existential dread of reconciling with the dead. His body language is hunched, his gaze fixed on the candle flame as if seeking answers in its flicker.
- • To absolve himself of guilt by rationalizing his past actions (e.g., 'I did it for Wolsey').
- • To force Rafe (or Wolsey’s memory) to validate his loyalty, proving he was never Norfolk’s man.
- • That his rise was inextricably linked to Wolsey’s downfall, and thus his guilt is inescapable.
- • That the dead (Wolsey) hold the power to judge him, and their silence is a condemnation.
None (as a spectral figure), but Cromwell projects onto him a mix of reverence, fear, and resentment—Wolsey is both the father figure Cromwell seeks to please and the ghost he cannot escape.
Wolsey is physically absent but spectrally invoked, his presence felt in the empty window where Cromwell expects to see him. His silence is a void that Cromwell fills with accusations and pleas, as if Wolsey’s ghost is both accuser and potential redeemer. The gifts from Dorothea on the desk—symbols of Wolsey’s legacy—serve as tangible reminders of his absence, and Cromwell’s fixation on the candle flame suggests a futile search for Wolsey’s approval.
- • To serve as the embodiment of Cromwell’s guilt, forcing him to confront his betrayal.
- • To represent the inescapable moral reckoning that Cromwell has avoided.
- • That Cromwell’s loyalty was always conditional, tied to his own ambition.
- • That the dead do not forgive, and their silence is a permanent verdict.
None (deceased, referenced in memory), but Cromwell’s recollection is tinged with regret and shame. Boleyn’s weeping is a sound that echoes in Cromwell’s mind, a counterpoint to his own hardness.
George Boleyn is referenced only in Cromwell’s confession, his memory conjured as a symbol of Cromwell’s ruthlessness. Cromwell recalls holding him as he wept and called on Jesus, a moment that now haunts him. Boleyn’s fate—manipulated into tears and ultimately into treason—serves as a stark reminder of the human cost of Cromwell’s political games. His presence in the scene is purely spectral, a ghost of Cromwell’s guilt.
- • To embody the moral failure of Cromwell’s political machinations.
- • To serve as a reminder of the irreparable harm done in the name of ambition.
- • That Cromwell’s loyalty to Wolsey was a facade for his own advancement.
- • That the dead do not rest easy when their names are used as weapons.
None (deceased, referenced in memory), but Cromwell’s recollection is laced with guilt and self-recrimination. Smeaton’s cries are a sound that Cromwell cannot unhear, a testament to his own moral failure.
Mark Smeaton is invoked only in Cromwell’s confession, his pleas for mercy behind a locked door a haunting detail. Cromwell admits to hardening his heart against the young man’s suffering, a moment of cold calculation that now gnaws at him. Smeaton’s voice—crying out, then silenced—is a sound that Cromwell cannot escape, a metaphor for the voices he has suppressed in his rise to power. His presence in the scene is purely auditory, a ghost of Cromwell’s complicity.
- • To represent the dehumanizing cost of Cromwell’s political strategies.
- • To serve as a reminder of the lives crushed under the weight of ambition.
- • That Cromwell’s ruthlessness was not an exception but a pattern.
- • That the dead demand reckoning, even if the living do not.
None (off-screen), but Cromwell projects onto her a righteous anger that fuels his despair. She is the embodiment of his inability to reconcile his ambition with his humanity.
Dorothea is physically absent but looms large in Cromwell’s mind, her accusations the catalyst for his unraveling. The handkerchief he twists between his fingers is a tangible link to her, a symbol of his failed reconciliation. Her voice is heard only through Cromwell’s internalized guilt, her bitterness a mirror for his self-loathing. She represents the personal cost of his political maneuvering—the human lives shattered in his rise.
- • To serve as the voice of Cromwell’s conscience, forcing him to acknowledge his betrayal.
- • To represent the irreparable damage done to Wolsey’s legacy and those who loved him.
- • That Cromwell’s rise was built on lies and betrayal.
- • That no amount of gifts or apologies can undo the past.
Norfolk is mentioned only in Cromwell’s dialogue, his name a curse on Cromwell’s lips. Cromwell vehemently denies ever being Norfolk’s …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The open hearth fire in Cromwell’s study provides most of the light, its warm glow a stark contrast to the coldness of his emotional state. The fire’s crackling is a constant backdrop to his confession, its heat a physical reminder of the passion and ruthlessness that fueled his rise. The fire also symbolizes the destructive potential of ambition—it consumes everything in its path, leaving only ashes behind. As Cromwell twists Dorothea’s handkerchief, the fire’s light flickers across the fabric, as if highlighting the fragility of the gifts he offered in vain. The hearth is a place of both comfort and torment, a domestic space that has become a chamber of moral reckoning.
Cromwell’s desk is the epicenter of his despair, a surface cluttered with the detritus of his political and personal life. The gifts offered to Dorothea—symbols of his failed reconciliation—lie scattered across it, a tangible reminder of his guilt. The handkerchief he twists between his fingers is the most potent of these objects, a physical manifestation of his inability to undo the past. The desk is also where Cromwell’s ‘Book Called Henry’ would typically reside, a ledger of the king’s moods and a tool of his political maneuvering. In this moment, however, the desk is a site of vulnerability, where Cromwell’s carefully constructed facade crumbles under the weight of his memories. The objects on the desk are not just props but relics of his sins, each one a silent accuser.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The ring that Cromwell puts on, symbolizing his allegiance to Wolsey, becomes tangible proof of the loyalty that Dorothea disputes in Act 3. Cromwell questions his motivations. Did he betray Wolsey?"
"The ring that Cromwell puts on, symbolizing his allegiance to Wolsey, becomes tangible proof of the loyalty that Dorothea disputes in Act 3. Cromwell questions his motivations. Did he betray Wolsey?"
"The ring that Cromwell puts on, symbolizing his allegiance to Wolsey, becomes tangible proof of the loyalty that Dorothea disputes in Act 3. Cromwell questions his motivations. Did he betray Wolsey?"
"Dorothea's accusation that he betrayed Wolsey is the reason that Cromwell questions his own motives and actions."
"Dorothea's accusation that he betrayed Wolsey is the reason that Cromwell questions his own motives and actions."
"Dorothea's accusation that he betrayed Wolsey is the reason that Cromwell questions his own motives and actions."
"Dorothea's accusation that he betrayed Wolsey is the reason that Cromwell questions his own motives and actions."
"Cromwell looks for Wolsey's presence because he needs guidance on whether he betrayed the Cardinal. He starts listing his ruthless actions, which are motivated by the questions raised by Dorothea."
"Cromwell looks for Wolsey's presence because he needs guidance on whether he betrayed the Cardinal. He starts listing his ruthless actions, which are motivated by the questions raised by Dorothea."
"Cromwell looks for Wolsey's presence because he needs guidance on whether he betrayed the Cardinal. He starts listing his ruthless actions, which are motivated by the questions raised by Dorothea."
"Cromwell looks for Wolsey's presence because he needs guidance on whether he betrayed the Cardinal. He starts listing his ruthless actions, which are motivated by the questions raised by Dorothea."
Key Dialogue
"CROMWELL: *Is it true?* (He stares at the empty window where Wolsey once stood, his voice a whisper of dread.)"
"CROMWELL: *I pulled down the men who insulted him. I married them to crimes they could barely imagine. I held George Boleyn as he wept and called on Jesus. I heard the boy Smeaton cry for mercy behind the locked door... and I made to go down to free him. But then I thought, ‘No, boy, now it is your turn to suffer.’* (A beat. His fingers twist the handkerchief like a noose.)"
"CROMWELL: *You can persuade the quick to think again... how do you remake your reputation with the dead?* (The candlelight flickers. Rafe has no answer.)"