Cromwell’s Final Command to Rafe
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Rafe recounts how Cromwell rescued him as a child and made him part of his family, expressing deep gratitude, bringing him to tears.
Cromwell, accepting his fate, instructs Rafe to have Gregory publicly disown him in order to protect Gregory and the family.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Unknowing but doomed—his emotional state is projected as one of impending betrayal, a man who will soon be forced to reject the very blood that gave him life.
Gregory is not physically present in this scene, but his absence looms large. He is the subject of Cromwell’s directive—a pawn in a game he never chose to play. Cromwell’s words paint Gregory as a naive young man, unaware of the political storm surrounding him, yet his fate is being decided in this moment. The letter he is commanded to write will force him to publicly disown his father, a act that will save his life but destroy his identity. His role here is passive, yet his future is being irrevocably altered by the choices made in his absence.
- • To survive the political purge (as dictated by Cromwell’s directive).
- • To reconcile his identity with the act of repudiating his father, if he ever learns the truth of Cromwell’s sacrifice.
- • That his father’s love is unconditional, even in this cruelest of commands.
- • That his own safety is worth the cost of his father’s name, though he may not yet understand why.
Devastated yet resolute—grieving the past while steeling himself for the future, his love for Cromwell warring with the horror of what must come next.
Rafe stands before Cromwell, his body trembling as he recounts their shared past with raw, unfiltered emotion. His voice cracks as he describes the moment Cromwell rescued him as a child, his tears flowing freely—a rare display of vulnerability for a man who has spent his life suppressing grief. When Cromwell delivers the directive about Gregory, Rafe’s grief turns to anger, wiping tears from his face with a sharp, almost violent motion. He is held by Cromwell in a final, desperate embrace, his thin frame shaking with sobs that subside only as Cromwell’s resolve hardens. Rafe’s loyalty is absolute, but his pain is palpable, a man forced to witness the dismantling of the family he once thought unbreakable.
- • To honor Cromwell’s final wishes, no matter how painful, as an act of love and loyalty.
- • To suppress his own grief long enough to ensure Gregory’s survival, even if it means betraying the family’s legacy.
- • That Cromwell’s protection, even in this form, is the only way to save Gregory from Henry’s wrath.
- • That his own survival is secondary to the survival of the Cromwell name, even if it must be repudiated.
Tyrannical indifference—Henry’s emotional state is one of detached authority, a king who sees Cromwell as a tool to be discarded, not a man with a family to protect. His wrath is impersonal, systemic, and absolute.
Henry VIII is not physically present, but his shadow dominates the scene. Cromwell’s directive to Gregory is a direct response to Henry’s wrath, a man whose capricious cruelty has reduced Cromwell to a prisoner awaiting execution. Henry’s influence is felt in the oppressive silence of the Tower, in the flickering firelight that casts long shadows like the specter of the axe. Cromwell’s defiant words—'When Henry dies and goes to judgment, he will answer for me'—are a direct challenge to the king’s authority, a final act of rebellion from a man who has spent his life bending to Henry’s will. Henry’s regime is the true antagonist here, an unseen force that has orchestrated Cromwell’s downfall and now demands the ultimate sacrifice: the repudiation of his son.
- • To purge any remnant of Cromwell’s influence from his court, ensuring no trace of his former minister remains.
- • To assert his absolute authority over life and death, even in the private moments of his enemies.
- • That loyalty is earned through fear and obedience, not love or mercy.
- • That the execution of Cromwell will solidify his own legacy as an unchallenged ruler.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Gregory Cromwell’s Repudiation Letter is the silent, looming instrument of this event—a document that does not yet exist but is the focal point of Cromwell’s directive. It is the physical manifestation of his sacrifice, the means by which Gregory will publicly disown him to escape Henry’s wrath. The letter is implied rather than shown, its absence making its presence all the more potent. Cromwell does not write it himself; instead, he commands Rafe to ensure its creation, framing it as a necessary protection. The letter symbolizes the irrevocable severing of father and son, a legal and emotional divorce enforced by the state. Its implied existence hangs over the scene like a guillotine, a reminder that Cromwell’s love for Gregory must now take the form of abandonment.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Inner Royal Apartment of the Tower of London is a claustrophobic, historically charged space that amplifies the emotional weight of this scene. Once a site of Anne Boleyn’s political maneuvering and vulnerability before her execution, it now serves as the stage for Cromwell’s own undoing. The apartment’s oppressive silence, broken only by the echo of footsteps and the crackling of the fire, mirrors the isolation of Cromwell’s captivity. The narrow windows filter in daylight like a reluctant visitor, casting long shadows that stretch across the stone walls—symbols of the past and the inescapable future. The space is intimate yet suffocating, a private chamber where public forces (Henry’s wrath, the King’s Council) intrude to dictate the fate of a broken man. It is both a refuge and a prison, a place where Cromwell’s final acts of love and sacrifice are performed in the shadow of the axe.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The King’s Council (Privy Council) is the unseen but all-powerful force behind this event, its influence manifesting in Cromwell’s imprisonment and the directive he issues to Rafe. The Council’s procedures and accusations have led to Cromwell’s downfall, and its institutional authority now demands the repudiation of Gregory as a condition for survival. The organization’s power is felt in the oppressive silence of the Tower, in the knowledge that Cromwell’s fate—and Gregory’s—rests on Henry’s whims, enforced by the Council’s decrees. Cromwell’s defiance ('When Henry dies and goes to judgment, he will answer for me') is a direct challenge to the Council’s legitimacy, but it is a challenge made from a position of weakness, a man who knows his words will have no immediate effect but refuses to bow entirely.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Wriothesley begins dissolving Cromwell's household, and Cromwell instructs Rafe to have Gregory publicly disown him, in order to protect the family. The loss of material possessions motivates his choice to protect the remaining members of his family."
"Wriothesley begins dissolving Cromwell's household, and Cromwell instructs Rafe to have Gregory publicly disown him, in order to protect the family. The loss of material possessions motivates his choice to protect the remaining members of his family."
"Cromwell instructs Rafe to have Gregory publicly disown him, and he expresses his weariness with 'axe-work'."
"Cromwell realizes he will be condemned by a bill of attainder, the very instrument he used on others, foreshadowing his acceptance from 'an eye for an eye'. This realization that they will 'axe' him leads to his mention of being weary of 'axe-work'."
"Cromwell realizes he will be condemned by a bill of attainder, the very instrument he used on others, foreshadowing his acceptance from 'an eye for an eye'. This realization that they will 'axe' him leads to his mention of being weary of 'axe-work'."
"Cromwell realizes he will be condemned by a bill of attainder, the very instrument he used on others, foreshadowing his acceptance from 'an eye for an eye'. This realization that they will 'axe' him leads to his mention of being weary of 'axe-work'."
"Cromwell realizes he will be condemned by a bill of attainder, the very instrument he used on others, foreshadowing his acceptance from 'an eye for an eye'. This realization that they will 'axe' him leads to his mention of being weary of 'axe-work'."
"Cromwell realizes he will be condemned by a bill of attainder, the very instrument he used on others, foreshadowing his acceptance from 'an eye for an eye'. This realization that they will 'axe' him leads to his mention of being weary of 'axe-work'."
"Cromwell realizes he will be condemned by a bill of attainder, the very instrument he used on others, foreshadowing his acceptance from 'an eye for an eye'. This realization that they will 'axe' him leads to his mention of being weary of 'axe-work'."
"Cromwell realizes he will be condemned by a bill of attainder, the very instrument he used on others, foreshadowing his acceptance from 'an eye for an eye'. This realization that they will 'axe' him leads to his mention of being weary of 'axe-work'."
"Cromwell instructs Rafe to have Gregory publicly disown him, and he expresses his weariness with 'axe-work'."
Key Dialogue
"CROMWELL: You did more than I had any right to expect."
"RAFE: When I was a little child... you came for me, brought me on a journey. You set me by the fire and said, 'This is where you live now, Rafe. We will be your family now... we will be good to you, never fear.' I had just left my mother that day and I did not know where I was. I had never seen London, still less your house, but I never cried, did I? I never cried."
"CROMWELL: It is time that Gregory wrote a letter repudiating me. He should speak ill of me. Say he doesn’t know how he came to be related to such a traitor. He should plead for the chance to redeem my errors and crimes, by serving his majesty in the years to come."
"CROMWELL: I couldn’t do it again, you know, Rafe. I couldn’t. The sleepless toil, the axe-work. When Henry dies and goes to judgment, he will answer for me. And he will have to account for what he did to Cromwell."