Object
Axe for Thomas More's Execution
The executioner's axe rises and falls in a single swift stroke, severing Thomas More's head at the Tower of London. Thomas Cromwell fixes his unflinching gaze on the blade's descent amid the silent crowd's bowed heads, which mark their submission to the Crown. The act unfolds in a brief, visceral flash that underscores the brutality of royal justice.
1 appearances
Purpose
Behead Thomas More
Significance
Delivers final punctuation to More's defiance and clears the old moral order, advancing Cromwell's orchestration of Henry's authority while foreshadowing his own ambition's cost.
Appearances in the Narrative
When this object appears and how it's used