Cromwell’s hollow victory in solitude
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Cromwell enters his study, acknowledging the absence of Wolsey and expressing his desire to share his news with him first.
Cromwell reflects on sharing his achievement with his father, imagining his reaction and the pride he would have felt. He then realizes that all those he wanted to tell are dead and gone.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
A mix of warmth and sorrow, as Cromwell temporarily bridges the gap between his past and present, only to be reminded of its permanence.
Cromwell imagines his father, Walter, reacting to the news of his son’s elevation to Earl of Essex. He adopts Walter’s working-class accent and mannerisms, creating a fleeting, bittersweet connection. The imagined dialogue serves as a poignant reminder of the distance between Cromwell’s past and present, highlighting the irreparable gap between the man he was and the man he has become.
- • To momentarily reclaim a sense of connection to his roots through imagination.
- • To acknowledge the loss of his father and the irrevocable nature of time.
- • That his father would have been proud yet skeptical of his son’s rise, given their humble beginnings.
- • That his father’s absence is a defining absence in his life, shaping his ambition and loneliness.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Cromwell’s new study at Austin Friars is a confined, candlelit space that contrasts sharply with the bustling clerks’ rooms outside. The study, meant for private strategy and reflection, becomes a chamber of solitude where Cromwell confronts the emotional cost of his ambition. The dim lighting and quiet atmosphere amplify his loneliness, while the study’s newness—symbolizing his elevated status—serves as a bitter irony, as there is no one to share his triumph with.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
Within this episode
"Cromwell seemingly on top of the world and celebrates with his household members after his promotion, he reflects on sharing his achievement with his father. He then realizes that all those he wanted to tell are dead and gone. This underscores the profound isolation."
Cromwell elevates allies amid hidden threatsAcross episodes
"Cromwell in his study, now Earl of Essex, imagines telling his father the news and uses Walter's own phrase 'Put-an-edge-on-it' – a direct echo of the forge lesson where Walter taught him to cross his wrists to confuse pain. This memory links his childhood survival training to his current hard-won triumph."
The Forge’s Lesson: Pain as the First Teacher"After learning from Gardiner that Walter secretly paid off the family of the man he killed as a youth – an act that saved Thomas from the noose – Cromwell in Episode 205 yearns to tell his father of his earldom, revealing a desire to reciprocate the protection Walter once provided, however brutally."
The Noose of the Past: Gardiner’s Blackmail Gambit Unleashes Cromwell’s Hidden Shame"In Episode 105, after George Boleyn's humiliating rebuke, Cromwell's mind slips to the memory of his father's harsh forge lesson. In Episode 205, alone in his study after being made an earl, he again conjures his father's imagined reaction. Both moments show Cromwell measuring his present status against the brutal yardstick of his upbringing."
The Wine-Stained Lesson: Boleyn’s Arrogance and Cromwell’s Silent VengeanceKey Dialogue
"CROMWELL: When I left the King—before I came here, b... before I told my household—I wanted to tell you first, Master."
"CROMWELL: To have your blessing. I wanted to tell my old dad."
"CROMWELL: ((chuckles, assumes accent)) What, ‘Put-an-edge-on-it’ has been made an earl?"
"CROMWELL: ((laughs)) Just to see his face. But everyone I wanted to tell is dead."