Object
Anne Boleyn's Smock for a Beggar Woman
Jane Rochford tells Thomas Cromwell that Anne Boleyn sews this smock for a beggar woman, her words dripping insinuation. She frames the garment's creation as a pious cover for Anne's trysts with George Boleyn and Mark Smeaton. Cromwell absorbs the barb without reaction, but the mention plants doubt amid Jane Seymour's innocent presence nearby.
2 appearances
Purpose
Clothing for a beggar woman
Significance
Jane Rochford deploys the smock as a symbolic prop to accuse Anne Boleyn of infidelity, targeting Cromwell's ambitions and igniting the first sparks of the queen's downfall through whispered manipulation.
Appearances in the Narrative
When this object appears and how it's used