Wolf Hall

Wolf Hall

by

Hilary Mantel

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on Wolf Hall makes teaching easy.

King Henry VIII Character Analysis

Henry is the king of England. His desire to divorce his wife, Queen Katherine, and marry Anne Boleyn spurs the events of the novel. Henry is a study in contrasts. On the one hand, he can be a genial ruler who is generous and well-liked, but when thwarted, he becomes vicious and cruel, and he thinks nothing of hurting those he previously seemed to like. Over the course of the novel, he comes to value Thomas Cromwell and respect his guidance, and he seems to treat him like a cherished friend, even going to visit Cromwell at his house when he gets sick. However, when Henry senses that Cromwell does not agree with him or might not follow his orders—like when Cromwell tells him it might be challenging to prosecute Thomas More for treason—Henry makes it clear that he has overlooked Cromwell’s inferior “breeding” and keeps him around only because he is “as cunning as a bag of serpents” and can get things done. Henry tells Cromwell, “You know my decision. Execute it.” The implication is that it would be dangerous for Cromwell to refuse the monarch. Henry’s willfulness makes the Tudor court a treacherous place, since anyone who falls out of favor with the king risks being imprisoned or executed. Henry’s fear and rage seem to stem from a position of insecurity since he is hemmed in by the Catholic Church and is also threatened by various claimants to the throne. Henry thinks that having a male heir will guarantee that his child will rule England after him, but Queen Katherine has several miscarriages and isn’t able to give him a son. Similarly, Henry is disappointed when Anne Boleyn first has a daughter and then has a miscarriage. At the end of the novel, Rafe Sadler tells Cromwell, “I wonder the king can stand the hope each time. It would wear out a lesser man.” Henry seems to get increasingly worn out by his cares, as a result of which he makes poorer decisions out of fear. At the end of the novel, Henry seems to have tired of Anne Boleyn—the woman for whom he overturned Christian laws—but seems tentatively hopeful that she still might bear him a son.

King Henry VIII Quotes in Wolf Hall

The Wolf Hall quotes below are all either spoken by King Henry VIII or refer to King Henry VIII. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Power, Ambition, and Deception Theme Icon
).
Part 1: Chapter 2 Quotes

He never lives in a single reality, but in a shifting shadow-mesh of diplomatic possibilities. While he is doing his best to keep the king married to Queen Katherine and her Spanish-Imperial family, by begging Henry to forget his scruples, he will also plan for an alternative world, in which the king’s scruples must be heeded, and the marriage to Katherine is void. Once that nullity is recognized—and the last eighteen years of sin and suffering wiped from the page—he will readjust the balance of Europe, allying England with France, forming a power bloc to oppose the young Emperor Charles, Katherine’s nephew. And all outcomes are likely, all outcomes can be managed, even massaged into desirability: prayer and pressure, pressure and prayer, everything that comes to pass will pass by God’s design, a design reenvisaged and redrawn, with helpful emendations, by the cardinal.

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell, King Henry VIII, Cardinal Wolsey , Queen Katherine, Emperor Charles
Page Number: 25-26
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2: Chapter 1 Quotes

This is an indecent spectacle: the man who has ruled England, reduced. They have brought out […] the scarlet silk in which he braves the summer heat of London, the crimson brocades that keep his blood warm when snow falls on Westminster and whisks in sleety eddies over the Thames. […] There have been days when, swaggering out, he would say, “Right, Master Cromwell, price me by the yard!”

[…] So day by day, at his request and to amuse him, he would put a value on his master. Now the king has sent an army of clerks to do it. But he would like to take away their pens by force and write across their inventories: Thomas Wolsey is a man beyond price.

Related Characters: Cardinal Wolsey (speaker), Thomas Cromwell, King Henry VIII, Duke of Norfolk/Thomas Howard, Duke of Suffolk/Charles Brandon
Related Symbols: Clothes
Page Number: 46
Explanation and Analysis:

How simple it would be, if he were allowed to reach down and shake some straight answers out of Norris. But it’s not simple; this is what the world and the cardinal conspire to teach him. Christ, he thinks, by my age I ought to know. You don’t get on by being original. You don’t get on by being bright. You don’t get on by being strong. You get on by being a subtle crook; somehow he thinks that’s what Norris is, and he feels an irrational dislike taking root, and he tries to dismiss it, because he prefers his dislikes rational, but after all, these circumstances are extreme, […] [and] Wolsey’s unraveling, in a great unweaving of scarlet thread that might lead you back into a secret labyrinth, with a dying monster at its heart.

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), King Henry VIII, Cardinal Wolsey , Henry Norris
Related Symbols: Clothes
Page Number: 54-55
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2: Chapter 2 Quotes

“All along, we were misled, […] because when the king said, Mistress Anne is not to marry into Northumberland, I think, I think, the king had cast his eye on her, all that long time ago.”

[…]

“I wonder,” he says, “how it can be that, though all these people think they know the king’s pleasure, the king finds himself at every turn impeded.” At every turn, thwarted: maddened and baffled. The Lady Anne, whom he has chosen to amuse him, while the old wife is cast off and the new wife brought in, refuses to accommodate him at all. How can she refuse? Nobody knows.

[…] “How has my lord cardinal…” Missed a trick, he wants to say. But that is not a respectful way to speak of a cardinal.

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), George Cavendish (speaker), King Henry VIII, Cardinal Wolsey , Anne Boleyn , Harry Percy
Page Number: 73
Explanation and Analysis:

There never was a lady who knew better her husband’s needs.

She knows them; for the first time, she doesn’t want to comply with them.

Is a woman bound to wifely obedience, when the result will be to turn her out of the estate of wife? He, Cromwell, admires Katherine: he likes to see her moving about the royal palaces, as wide as she is high, stitched into gowns so bristling with gemstones that they look as if they are designed less for beauty than to withstand blows from a sword. Her auburn hair is faded and streaked with gray, tucked back under her gable hood like the modest wings of a city sparrow. Under her gowns she wears the habit of a Franciscan nun. Try always, Wolsey says, to find out what people wear under their clothes. At an earlier stage in life this would have surprised him; he had thought that under their clothes people wore their skin.

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), Cardinal Wolsey (speaker), King Henry VIII, Queen Katherine
Related Symbols: Clothes, Animals
Page Number: 77
Explanation and Analysis:

“I wonder,” Wolsey says, “would you have patience with our sovereign lord? When it is midnight and he is up drinking and giggling with Brandon, or singing, and the day’s papers not yet signed, and when you press him he says, I’m for my bed now, we’re hunting tomorrow…If your chance comes to serve, you will have to take him as he is, a pleasure-loving prince. And he will have to take you as you are, which is rather like one of those square-shaped fighting dogs that low men tow about on ropes. Not that you are without a fitful charm, Tom.”

Related Characters: Cardinal Wolsey (speaker), Thomas Cromwell, King Henry VIII, Duke of Suffolk/Charles Brandon
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number: 79
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 3: Chapter 1 Quotes

“Cromwell, I am content you are a burgess in the Parliament.”

He bows his head. “My lord.”

“I spoke to the king for you and he is also content. You will take his instructions in the Commons. And mine.”

“Will they be the same, my lord?”

The duke scowls. […] “Damn it all, Cromwell, why are you such a…person? It isn’t as if you could afford to be.”

He waits, smiling. He knows what the duke means. He is a person, he is a presence. He knows how to edge blackly into a room so that you don’t see him; but perhaps those days are over.

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), Duke of Norfolk/Thomas Howard (speaker), King Henry VIII, Cardinal Wolsey
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number: 150-151
Explanation and Analysis:

There’s no point backing off; do that and Henry will chase you down. Advance, and he may just falter. He says, “No ruler in the history of the world has ever been able to afford a war. They’re not affordable things. […] You enter into one and it uses up all the money you’ve got, and then it breaks you and bankrupts you.”

[…]

“You said I was not to lead my troops. You said if I was taken, the country couldn’t put up the ransom. So what do you want? You want a king who doesn’t fight? You want me to huddle indoors like a sick girl?”

“That would be ideal, for fiscal purposes.”

The king takes a deep ragged breath. He’s been shouting. Now—and it’s a narrow thing—he decides to laugh.

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), King Henry VIII (speaker), Cardinal Wolsey
Page Number: 168
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 3: Chapter 2 Quotes

“A thousand pounds?” Henry whispers.

It is on the tip of his tongue to say, that will be a start on the ten thousand which, to the best of my knowledge and belief, you have owed the Cardinal of York for a decade now.

He doesn’t say it, of course. At such moments, Henry expects you to fall to your knees—duke, earl, commoner, light and heavy, old and young. He does it; scar tissue pulls; few of us, by our forties, are not carrying injuries.

The king signals, you can get up. He adds, his tone curious, “The Duke of Norfolk shows you many marks of friendship and favor.”

The hand on the shoulder, he means: the minute and unexpected vibration of ducal palm against plebeian muscle and bone. “The duke is careful to preserve all distinctions of rank.” Henry seems relieved.

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), King Henry VIII (speaker), Cardinal Wolsey , Duke of Norfolk/Thomas Howard
Page Number: 195
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4: Chapter 1 Quotes

From the day he was sworn into the king’s council, he has had his face arranged. He has spent the early months of the year watching the faces of other people, to see when they register doubt, reservation, rebellion—to catch that fractional moment before they settle into the suave lineaments of the courtier, the facilitator, the yes-man.

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell, King Henry VIII
Page Number: 296
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4: Chapter 2 Quotes

“Look,” she says. She holds up her sleeves. The bright blue with which she has edged them, that kingfisher flash, is cut from the silk in which he wrapped her present of needlework patterns. How do matters stand now at Wolf Hall, he asks, as tactfully as he can: how do you ask after a family, in the wake of incest? She says in her clear little voice, “Sir John is very well. But then Sir John is always very well. […] Why don’t you make some business in Wiltshire and ride down to inspect us? Oh, and if the king gets a new wife, she will need matrons to attend her, and my sister Liz is coming to court. […] I would rather go up-country to the queen, myself. […]”

“If I were your father…no…” he rephrases it, “if I were to advise you, it would be to serve Lady Anne.”

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), Jane Seymour (speaker), King Henry VIII, Anne Boleyn , Queen Katherine, John Seymour, Liz Seymour
Related Symbols: Animals, Clothes
Page Number: 359
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 5: Chapter 1 Quotes

He finds himself praying: this child, his half-formed heart now beating against the stone floor, let him be sanctified by this moment, and let him be like his father’s father, like his Tudor uncles; let him be hard, alert, watchful of opportunity, wringing use from the smallest turn of fortune. If Henry lives twenty years, Henry who is Wolsey’s creation, and then leaves this child to succeed him, I can build my own prince: to the glorification of God and the commonwealth of England. Because I will not be too old. […] And I shall not be like Henry Wyatt and say, now I am retiring from affairs. Because what is there, but affairs?

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), King Henry VIII, Cardinal Wolsey , Anne Boleyn , Gregory Cromwell, Henry Wyatt
Page Number: 432-433
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 5: Chapter 2 Quotes

It is magnificent. At the moment of impact, the king’s eyes are open, his body braced for the atteint; he takes the blow perfectly, its force absorbed by a body securely armored, moving in the right direction, moving at the right speed. His color does not alter. His voice does not shake.

“Healthy?” he says. “Then I thank God for his favor to us. As I thank you, my lords, for this comfortable intelligence.”

He thinks, Henry has been rehearsing. I suppose we all have.

[…]

The urge arises to put a hand on his shoulder, as one does for any inconsolable being. He resists it; simply folds his fingers, protectively, into the fist which holds the king’s heart. “One day we will make a great marriage for her.”

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), King Henry VIII (speaker), Anne Boleyn , Princess Elizabeth
Related Symbols: Hands
Page Number: 449-450
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 6: Chapter 1 Quotes

There is a feral stink that rises from the hide of a dog about to fight. It rises now into the room, and he sees Anne turn aside, fastidious, and Stephen puts a hand to his chest, as if to ruffle up his fur, to warn of his size before he bares his teeth. “I shall be back with Your Majesty within a week,” he says. His dulcet sentiment comes out as a snarl from the depth of his guts.

[…]

Henry says, “Stephen is a resolute ambassador, no doubt, but I cannot keep him near me. […] I hate ingratitude. I hate disloyalty. That is why I value a man like you. You were good to your old master in his trouble. […]” He speaks as if he, personally, hadn’t caused the trouble; as if Wolsey’s fall were caused by a thunderbolt.

Related Characters: King Henry VIII (speaker), Stephen Gardiner (speaker), Thomas Cromwell, Cardinal Wolsey , Anne Boleyn
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number: 501-502
Explanation and Analysis:

“The queen will be coming to visit her daughter soon. If you would simply greet her respectfully in the way you should greet your father’s wife—”

“—except she is his concubine—”

“—then your father would take you back to court, you would have everything you lack now, and the warmth and comfort of society. Listen to me, I intend this for your good. The queen does not expect your friendship, only an outward show. Bite your tongue and bob her a curtsy. It will be done in a heartbeat, and it will change everything. Make terms with her before her new child is born. If she has a son, she will have no reason afterward to conciliate you.”

“She is frightened of me,” Mary says, “and she will still be frightened, even if she has a son.”

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), Mary Tudor (speaker), King Henry VIII, Anne Boleyn , Princess Elizabeth
Page Number: 516
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 6: Chapter 2 Quotes

Henry stirs into life. “Do I retain you for what is easy? Jesus pity my simplicity, I have promoted you to a place in this kingdom that no one, no one of your breeding has ever held in the whole of the history of this realm.” He drops his voice. “Do you think it is for your personal beauty? The charm of your presence? I keep you, Master Cromwell, because you are as cunning as a bag of serpents. But do not be a viper in my bosom. You know my decision. Execute it.”

Related Characters: King Henry VIII (speaker), Thomas Cromwell, Anne Boleyn , Thomas More
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number: 585
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire Wolf Hall LitChart as a printable PDF.
Wolf Hall PDF

King Henry VIII Quotes in Wolf Hall

The Wolf Hall quotes below are all either spoken by King Henry VIII or refer to King Henry VIII. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Power, Ambition, and Deception Theme Icon
).
Part 1: Chapter 2 Quotes

He never lives in a single reality, but in a shifting shadow-mesh of diplomatic possibilities. While he is doing his best to keep the king married to Queen Katherine and her Spanish-Imperial family, by begging Henry to forget his scruples, he will also plan for an alternative world, in which the king’s scruples must be heeded, and the marriage to Katherine is void. Once that nullity is recognized—and the last eighteen years of sin and suffering wiped from the page—he will readjust the balance of Europe, allying England with France, forming a power bloc to oppose the young Emperor Charles, Katherine’s nephew. And all outcomes are likely, all outcomes can be managed, even massaged into desirability: prayer and pressure, pressure and prayer, everything that comes to pass will pass by God’s design, a design reenvisaged and redrawn, with helpful emendations, by the cardinal.

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell, King Henry VIII, Cardinal Wolsey , Queen Katherine, Emperor Charles
Page Number: 25-26
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2: Chapter 1 Quotes

This is an indecent spectacle: the man who has ruled England, reduced. They have brought out […] the scarlet silk in which he braves the summer heat of London, the crimson brocades that keep his blood warm when snow falls on Westminster and whisks in sleety eddies over the Thames. […] There have been days when, swaggering out, he would say, “Right, Master Cromwell, price me by the yard!”

[…] So day by day, at his request and to amuse him, he would put a value on his master. Now the king has sent an army of clerks to do it. But he would like to take away their pens by force and write across their inventories: Thomas Wolsey is a man beyond price.

Related Characters: Cardinal Wolsey (speaker), Thomas Cromwell, King Henry VIII, Duke of Norfolk/Thomas Howard, Duke of Suffolk/Charles Brandon
Related Symbols: Clothes
Page Number: 46
Explanation and Analysis:

How simple it would be, if he were allowed to reach down and shake some straight answers out of Norris. But it’s not simple; this is what the world and the cardinal conspire to teach him. Christ, he thinks, by my age I ought to know. You don’t get on by being original. You don’t get on by being bright. You don’t get on by being strong. You get on by being a subtle crook; somehow he thinks that’s what Norris is, and he feels an irrational dislike taking root, and he tries to dismiss it, because he prefers his dislikes rational, but after all, these circumstances are extreme, […] [and] Wolsey’s unraveling, in a great unweaving of scarlet thread that might lead you back into a secret labyrinth, with a dying monster at its heart.

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), King Henry VIII, Cardinal Wolsey , Henry Norris
Related Symbols: Clothes
Page Number: 54-55
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2: Chapter 2 Quotes

“All along, we were misled, […] because when the king said, Mistress Anne is not to marry into Northumberland, I think, I think, the king had cast his eye on her, all that long time ago.”

[…]

“I wonder,” he says, “how it can be that, though all these people think they know the king’s pleasure, the king finds himself at every turn impeded.” At every turn, thwarted: maddened and baffled. The Lady Anne, whom he has chosen to amuse him, while the old wife is cast off and the new wife brought in, refuses to accommodate him at all. How can she refuse? Nobody knows.

[…] “How has my lord cardinal…” Missed a trick, he wants to say. But that is not a respectful way to speak of a cardinal.

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), George Cavendish (speaker), King Henry VIII, Cardinal Wolsey , Anne Boleyn , Harry Percy
Page Number: 73
Explanation and Analysis:

There never was a lady who knew better her husband’s needs.

She knows them; for the first time, she doesn’t want to comply with them.

Is a woman bound to wifely obedience, when the result will be to turn her out of the estate of wife? He, Cromwell, admires Katherine: he likes to see her moving about the royal palaces, as wide as she is high, stitched into gowns so bristling with gemstones that they look as if they are designed less for beauty than to withstand blows from a sword. Her auburn hair is faded and streaked with gray, tucked back under her gable hood like the modest wings of a city sparrow. Under her gowns she wears the habit of a Franciscan nun. Try always, Wolsey says, to find out what people wear under their clothes. At an earlier stage in life this would have surprised him; he had thought that under their clothes people wore their skin.

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), Cardinal Wolsey (speaker), King Henry VIII, Queen Katherine
Related Symbols: Clothes, Animals
Page Number: 77
Explanation and Analysis:

“I wonder,” Wolsey says, “would you have patience with our sovereign lord? When it is midnight and he is up drinking and giggling with Brandon, or singing, and the day’s papers not yet signed, and when you press him he says, I’m for my bed now, we’re hunting tomorrow…If your chance comes to serve, you will have to take him as he is, a pleasure-loving prince. And he will have to take you as you are, which is rather like one of those square-shaped fighting dogs that low men tow about on ropes. Not that you are without a fitful charm, Tom.”

Related Characters: Cardinal Wolsey (speaker), Thomas Cromwell, King Henry VIII, Duke of Suffolk/Charles Brandon
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number: 79
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 3: Chapter 1 Quotes

“Cromwell, I am content you are a burgess in the Parliament.”

He bows his head. “My lord.”

“I spoke to the king for you and he is also content. You will take his instructions in the Commons. And mine.”

“Will they be the same, my lord?”

The duke scowls. […] “Damn it all, Cromwell, why are you such a…person? It isn’t as if you could afford to be.”

He waits, smiling. He knows what the duke means. He is a person, he is a presence. He knows how to edge blackly into a room so that you don’t see him; but perhaps those days are over.

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), Duke of Norfolk/Thomas Howard (speaker), King Henry VIII, Cardinal Wolsey
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number: 150-151
Explanation and Analysis:

There’s no point backing off; do that and Henry will chase you down. Advance, and he may just falter. He says, “No ruler in the history of the world has ever been able to afford a war. They’re not affordable things. […] You enter into one and it uses up all the money you’ve got, and then it breaks you and bankrupts you.”

[…]

“You said I was not to lead my troops. You said if I was taken, the country couldn’t put up the ransom. So what do you want? You want a king who doesn’t fight? You want me to huddle indoors like a sick girl?”

“That would be ideal, for fiscal purposes.”

The king takes a deep ragged breath. He’s been shouting. Now—and it’s a narrow thing—he decides to laugh.

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), King Henry VIII (speaker), Cardinal Wolsey
Page Number: 168
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 3: Chapter 2 Quotes

“A thousand pounds?” Henry whispers.

It is on the tip of his tongue to say, that will be a start on the ten thousand which, to the best of my knowledge and belief, you have owed the Cardinal of York for a decade now.

He doesn’t say it, of course. At such moments, Henry expects you to fall to your knees—duke, earl, commoner, light and heavy, old and young. He does it; scar tissue pulls; few of us, by our forties, are not carrying injuries.

The king signals, you can get up. He adds, his tone curious, “The Duke of Norfolk shows you many marks of friendship and favor.”

The hand on the shoulder, he means: the minute and unexpected vibration of ducal palm against plebeian muscle and bone. “The duke is careful to preserve all distinctions of rank.” Henry seems relieved.

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), King Henry VIII (speaker), Cardinal Wolsey , Duke of Norfolk/Thomas Howard
Page Number: 195
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4: Chapter 1 Quotes

From the day he was sworn into the king’s council, he has had his face arranged. He has spent the early months of the year watching the faces of other people, to see when they register doubt, reservation, rebellion—to catch that fractional moment before they settle into the suave lineaments of the courtier, the facilitator, the yes-man.

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell, King Henry VIII
Page Number: 296
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4: Chapter 2 Quotes

“Look,” she says. She holds up her sleeves. The bright blue with which she has edged them, that kingfisher flash, is cut from the silk in which he wrapped her present of needlework patterns. How do matters stand now at Wolf Hall, he asks, as tactfully as he can: how do you ask after a family, in the wake of incest? She says in her clear little voice, “Sir John is very well. But then Sir John is always very well. […] Why don’t you make some business in Wiltshire and ride down to inspect us? Oh, and if the king gets a new wife, she will need matrons to attend her, and my sister Liz is coming to court. […] I would rather go up-country to the queen, myself. […]”

“If I were your father…no…” he rephrases it, “if I were to advise you, it would be to serve Lady Anne.”

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), Jane Seymour (speaker), King Henry VIII, Anne Boleyn , Queen Katherine, John Seymour, Liz Seymour
Related Symbols: Animals, Clothes
Page Number: 359
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 5: Chapter 1 Quotes

He finds himself praying: this child, his half-formed heart now beating against the stone floor, let him be sanctified by this moment, and let him be like his father’s father, like his Tudor uncles; let him be hard, alert, watchful of opportunity, wringing use from the smallest turn of fortune. If Henry lives twenty years, Henry who is Wolsey’s creation, and then leaves this child to succeed him, I can build my own prince: to the glorification of God and the commonwealth of England. Because I will not be too old. […] And I shall not be like Henry Wyatt and say, now I am retiring from affairs. Because what is there, but affairs?

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), King Henry VIII, Cardinal Wolsey , Anne Boleyn , Gregory Cromwell, Henry Wyatt
Page Number: 432-433
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 5: Chapter 2 Quotes

It is magnificent. At the moment of impact, the king’s eyes are open, his body braced for the atteint; he takes the blow perfectly, its force absorbed by a body securely armored, moving in the right direction, moving at the right speed. His color does not alter. His voice does not shake.

“Healthy?” he says. “Then I thank God for his favor to us. As I thank you, my lords, for this comfortable intelligence.”

He thinks, Henry has been rehearsing. I suppose we all have.

[…]

The urge arises to put a hand on his shoulder, as one does for any inconsolable being. He resists it; simply folds his fingers, protectively, into the fist which holds the king’s heart. “One day we will make a great marriage for her.”

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), King Henry VIII (speaker), Anne Boleyn , Princess Elizabeth
Related Symbols: Hands
Page Number: 449-450
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 6: Chapter 1 Quotes

There is a feral stink that rises from the hide of a dog about to fight. It rises now into the room, and he sees Anne turn aside, fastidious, and Stephen puts a hand to his chest, as if to ruffle up his fur, to warn of his size before he bares his teeth. “I shall be back with Your Majesty within a week,” he says. His dulcet sentiment comes out as a snarl from the depth of his guts.

[…]

Henry says, “Stephen is a resolute ambassador, no doubt, but I cannot keep him near me. […] I hate ingratitude. I hate disloyalty. That is why I value a man like you. You were good to your old master in his trouble. […]” He speaks as if he, personally, hadn’t caused the trouble; as if Wolsey’s fall were caused by a thunderbolt.

Related Characters: King Henry VIII (speaker), Stephen Gardiner (speaker), Thomas Cromwell, Cardinal Wolsey , Anne Boleyn
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number: 501-502
Explanation and Analysis:

“The queen will be coming to visit her daughter soon. If you would simply greet her respectfully in the way you should greet your father’s wife—”

“—except she is his concubine—”

“—then your father would take you back to court, you would have everything you lack now, and the warmth and comfort of society. Listen to me, I intend this for your good. The queen does not expect your friendship, only an outward show. Bite your tongue and bob her a curtsy. It will be done in a heartbeat, and it will change everything. Make terms with her before her new child is born. If she has a son, she will have no reason afterward to conciliate you.”

“She is frightened of me,” Mary says, “and she will still be frightened, even if she has a son.”

Related Characters: Thomas Cromwell (speaker), Mary Tudor (speaker), King Henry VIII, Anne Boleyn , Princess Elizabeth
Page Number: 516
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 6: Chapter 2 Quotes

Henry stirs into life. “Do I retain you for what is easy? Jesus pity my simplicity, I have promoted you to a place in this kingdom that no one, no one of your breeding has ever held in the whole of the history of this realm.” He drops his voice. “Do you think it is for your personal beauty? The charm of your presence? I keep you, Master Cromwell, because you are as cunning as a bag of serpents. But do not be a viper in my bosom. You know my decision. Execute it.”

Related Characters: King Henry VIII (speaker), Thomas Cromwell, Anne Boleyn , Thomas More
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number: 585
Explanation and Analysis: