Object
Henry VIII's Handkerchief
Henry VIII pulls the handkerchief from his sleeve and rubs his face hard during his venomous monologue in Hampton Court chambers. The cloth absorbs sweat and marks his exhaustion as paranoia grips him. Thomas Cromwell and Archbishop Cranmer watch the king clutch it amid accusations against Anne Boleyn, the fabric twisting in his fingers to punctuate emotional swings from fury to self-pity.
3 appearances
Purpose
Wiping face during emotional distress
Significance
Serves as a physical outlet for Henry's unraveling psyche, amplifying his paranoia and moral collapse before Cromwell and Cranmer as he justifies Anne's destruction.
Appearances in the Narrative
When this object appears and how it's used