Jane probes Cromwell’s loyalty through Anne’s shadow
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Cromwell enters Queen Jane's privy chamber, where she subtly chides him for not bringing cakes as he used to, referencing a past incident with Anne Boleyn and a Book of Hours previously owned by Anne, setting a tone of intimate familiarity and shared history.
Jane asks Cromwell about the connection between pleasure and conception, revealing her anxieties and ignorance, and Cromwell deflects her questions by recommending she consult her mother or sister.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Implied as dissatisfied, volatile, and obsessive; his discontent is the unspoken catalyst for Jane’s insecurity and Cromwell’s political maneuvering.
Henry is never physically present in the scene, but his influence permeates the exchange. Jane references his Turkish costume, his dissatisfaction with Christian marriage, and his obsession with sons, all of which frame Cromwell’s responses. His volatile discontent and capricious nature are implied as the underlying tension driving Jane’s anxieties and Cromwell’s evasiveness. The Book of Hours and Anne Boleyn’s inscribed reply serve as proxies for Henry’s lingering emotional and political hold over the court.
- • To secure a male heir, driving the court’s focus on fertility and marital duty.
- • To maintain absolute control, as evidenced by Jane’s fear of his reaction to Cromwell’s responses.
- • That his marital and political failures are tied to the failures of his wives (Anne Boleyn, Katherine of Aragon).
- • That his power is absolute and his displeasure must be anticipated and managed by his courtiers.
Anxious and probing, with moments of playful nostalgia to mask her deeper insecurity. Her laughter and anecdotes are tactical, but her fixation on the Book of Hours and Henry’s inscription betray her fear of repeating Anne Boleyn’s fate.
Jane sits alone in the alcove, reading Anne Boleyn’s Book of Hours when Cromwell enters. She begins with playful nostalgia about his past gifts of cakes, then pivots to the book, using it to probe Cromwell’s reactions to Anne’s memory and Henry’s inscription. Her questions about marital pleasure and conception are awkward but deliberate, revealing her anxiety over her own fertility and Henry’s dissatisfaction. She shares her sister Bess’s crude anecdote about marriage as a ‘military manoeuvre,’ eliciting laughter from Cromwell before abruptly shifting to a warning about Henry’s Turkish costume. Her tone oscillates between vulnerability and strategic probing.
- • To test Cromwell’s loyalty to Henry and his own role in Anne Boleyn’s downfall, using the *Book of Hours* as a probe.
- • To gauge whether her own fertility and marital satisfaction are sufficient to secure Henry’s favor, given his obsession with sons.
- • That Cromwell’s past gifts of cakes symbolize a time when he was more approachable, and his current evasiveness is a sign of his rising power.
- • That Henry’s dissatisfaction with her (and his past wives) is tied to their failure to produce a son, making her own fertility a matter of survival.
Implied as matter-of-fact and unsentimental; her advice is practical, reflecting her own experiences and a lack of romantic idealism.
Bess is mentioned only in dialogue, as Jane recounts her sister’s advice about marital relations. Her anecdote—comparing marriage to a ‘military manoeuvre’ and suggesting that pleasure is irrelevant to conception—serves as a crude but revealing contrast to Jane’s own anxieties. Bess’s voice is invoked to normalize Jane’s questions, making them seem less personal and more like courtly wisdom.
- • To provide Jane with reassurance (or at least a framework) for her marital duties, framing conception as inevitable regardless of pleasure.
- • To normalize Jane’s anxieties by presenting them as common courtly concerns.
- • That marital relations are a duty to be fulfilled, not an experience to be enjoyed.
- • That fertility is beyond a wife’s control, and thus anxiety about it is futile.
Implied as tragic and unresolved; her memory is a specter of what could have been, and her failure to bear a son is a warning to Jane.
Anne is never physically present, but her influence looms over the scene through the Book of Hours. Her inscribed reply to Henry—‘By daily proof you shall me find/To be to you both loving and kind’—is recited by Jane, serving as a haunting reminder of her failed fertility and Henry’s lingering obsession. The Man of Sorrows illumination in the book symbolizes her downfall and the court’s moral decay, while her discarded book becomes a prop for Jane’s probing of Cromwell.
- • To serve as a cautionary figure, embodying the consequences of failing to secure Henry’s favor.
- • To symbolize the court’s moral and political instability, as her downfall was tied to Cromwell’s rise.
- • That loyalty to Henry is conditional and fragile, as evidenced by her own fall from grace.
- • That fertility is the ultimate measure of a queen’s worth in Henry’s eyes.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Queen’s privy chamber at Hampton Court serves as the intimate, candlelit setting for this charged exchange. Its alcove—where Jane sits reading the Book of Hours—creates a sense of seclusion, amplifying the tension between her and Cromwell. The chamber’s domestic trappings (sewing, private reading) contrast with the political and personal stakes of their conversation, underscoring the court’s ability to blend the personal and the political. The alcove’s stone enclosure ‘traps’ their whispers, heightening the sense of confidentiality and conspiracy. The location’s atmosphere is one of quiet tension, where courtly rituals and personal anxieties collide.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The English Court is the overarching institutional backdrop for this scene, shaping the power dynamics and personal anxieties at play. Jane’s questions about marital pleasure and conception reflect the court’s obsession with fertility as a political and dynastic imperative. Cromwell’s evasiveness and deflection are tactical responses to the court’s transactional loyalties, where survival depends on navigating Henry’s capricious demands. The Book of Hours and Anne Boleyn’s memory serve as reminders of the court’s moral decay and the consequences of failing to secure the King’s favor. The organization’s influence is felt in Jane’s anxiety, Cromwell’s political maneuvering, and the spectral presence of Anne Boleyn.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Queen Jane drops hints about the King becoming disgruntled with the confines of his marriage to her (alluding to his interest in Turkish culture where polygamy is practiced) then the King, in disguise, seems to continue this theme in regards to Jane by expressing his disappointment that Cromwell isn't surprised by his look."
"Queen Jane drops hints about the King becoming disgruntled with the confines of his marriage to her (alluding to his interest in Turkish culture where polygamy is practiced) then the King, in disguise, seems to continue this theme in regards to Jane by expressing his disappointment that Cromwell isn't surprised by his look."
Key Dialogue
"JANE: Empty handed? I remember when you used to bring us ladies cakes. But that was before you were so busy."
"CROMWELL: It was you I brought them for."
"JANE: And when the Queen was displeased with you, she threw them on the floor. This was hers. Anne Boleyn’s. She and the King passed it between them. He’s written an inscription. Under the Man of Sorrows."
"JANE: It’s in French, I can’t read it."
"CROMWELL: It says ‘I am yours. Forever.’"
"JANE: Look at the Annunciation earlier. There’s a reply. By daily proof you shall me find/To be to you both loving and kind. Do you think she was kind to him?"
"CROMWELL: Not often."
"JANE: She had hope of a son in those days. She thought she could bear a son."
"JANE: My ladies say that if a wife does not take pleasure in the act, she will not get a child. Is that true?"
"CROMWELL: Perhaps you should consult with your lady mother, your grace? Or one of the dames here at court might advise you?"
"JANE: They have forgotten. They are old."
"JANE: My lady sister, then? She has two fine infants. Bess put heart into me. She said... Say an Ave, Jane, and the King will soon spend. She says she did not take pleasure in her own marriage bed. With her late husband, it was like a military manoeuvre. Brisk."
"CROMWELL: He did not beat the drum, I hope?"
"JANE: No, no. But she always knew when he was on his way."
"JANE: The infants come when they will, she says, pleasure or not. Perhaps I should not have asked you. If you are going to the King now, you will see that he is wearing his Turkish costume again. He does not feel he wore it enough at the festivities. My father said that Turkish princes can have a dozen wives. If the King had been of their sect, he could have been married to the late Queen, God rest her, and to Katherine, God rest her, and at the same time to me, if he wished. Or for that matter, he could have been married to Mary Boleyn and Mary Shelton, and had all the sons he wished. If he'd been of their sect."
"CROMWELL: I do not think the King will turn Turk."