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Wolf Hall: The Mirror and the Light Episode 3 Review: Defiance
Warning: contains spoilers forThe Mirror and the Lightepisode three.Henrys love is a dangerous thing. The protection it brings is equalled only by the threat that comes with its removal. Wolsey learned that. So did Anne Boleyn. Jane Seymour was beginning to learn it before pregnancy granted her this reprieve. And now Cromwell feels it in a queasily tense episode that shows the walls closing in on him.Having taken a princely punt on Cromwell and created him a lord in defiance of the English nobility, Henry is now in a difficult position. To save face in public, he needs to stand by his man, but Cromwells ability to wave a magic wand over the kings problems is waning. Indeed, Cromwellisone of the kings problems. Noble Catholic families the Poles and the Courtneys are gunning for the Lord Chancellor and his Reformation. Theyve spread rumours to put a target on Cromwells back, in the hope of taking out Henry at the same time and restoring England to Rome.Modern audiences know how it ends for Cromwell, and increasingly inWolf Hall: The Mirror and the Light, so might he. We were greeted by a sorry sight (though one that, like every shot in this beautifully composed drama, looked like a painting you could hang in a gallery) at the start of an episode in which Cromwell didnt just suffer political, but also personal pain.Like Henrys, Cromwells sleep was also being troubled by his conscience. Bereft in bed, he replayed Dorotheas untrue accusation of disloyalty to her father Wolsey (who no longer appears to him), and later, was visited by nightmares of Anne Boleyns ladies presenting him with her bloody head. Cromwell knows the lies he told to avenge Wolsey and bring Anne to the scaffold, and now, as someone who loves the Gospel, theyre plaguing him. Its one reason he stumbled over calling himself an honourable man to his son Gregory, and changed to a man of [his] word.Read more The scene at Gregory and Bess wedding was more heartbreak for Cromwell. His humiliated son (secrets never stay secret among this gossip-obsessed lot) bitterly implored his father to stay away from the wife he now knows only accepted him by default, having first thought that shed won a far greater prize. Marriage to wealthy Lord Cromwell, the second most powerful man in England, rumoured as a match for the kings daughter, and whose heirs the king said would follow him onto the throne if he decreed it? Bess would have won the marriage lottery. No wonder she was snippy when she learned shed be Thomas daughter and not his wife.Before they died along with his wife of the sweating sickness, the Lord Chancellor did once have daughters. And now he does again in Bess, and in Jenneke from Antwerp, a character invented by Hilary Mantel to stand in for the illegitimate daughter Cromwell was rumoured to have had but of whose existence theres no evidence. That soap opera-style cliffhanger gave Mark Rylance his first Doof Doof closer inThe Mirror and the Light fitting for such an eventful episode.From the Lincolnshire uprising to the fall of York, Defiance was packed with incident, and with themes that proved depressingly relevant to our times. Misinformation abounded. The rich used the poor to do their violent bidding, manipulating the people through lies and fear. They may well scare their kids with tales of Cromwell in the north, theyve probably been told hes coming to eat their pet cats. As Cromwell asked Dorothea last episode, how do you oppose a fixed opinion thats held on to regardless of evidence or reason? How also, do you reply to bad faith rumours invented to sow disorder, and enemies who invent bogeymen to suit their own agenda?If Cromwell couldnt find an answer, sadly, there cant be much hope for the rest of us. This character is a masterful operator, and watching him at work is still a pleasure, if a bittersweet one in the knowledge of whats to come. Cromwells quick tongue and quicker mind are enviable, even if his perilous position at court is increasingly not. The air of amused tolerance he affects when dealing with schemers like rabble-rousing Chapuys and the Portuguese ambassador is ultra enjoyable, as is his keen way with a threat. The way he left Chapuys, mouth gaping like a drowning fish, with the promise of retaliation should his boss Emperor Charles V follow through with the put-Pole-on-the-throne plan, was to be savoured.Less so were the nauseating moments when circumstances swirled beyond Cromwells control and the king turned on him. Frustrated, furious, and settling the blame for Englands unrest on Cromwells shoulders, Damian Lewis wasterrifyingin this episode. His mercurial temper was underlined with the reappearance of Patch/Sexton the fool. Like Henrys daughter Mary, Sexton had been returned to court after banishment (hed insulted Anne Boleyn before it was cool). Its hard to say which is scarier, Henry smiling at you or screaming at you. Neither one is safe.Wolf Hall: The Mirror and the Light continues on Sunday December 1.
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