It is 4:50am on the 18th May, 1536 and it is four hours to the scheduled time of Anne Boleyn’s execution… She is hearing Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury, saying mass and attended by ladies – some sympathetic and some little more than spies. She is attended by Margaret Wyatt, whose brother Thomas is also held prisoner in the Tower (although he was not amongst the men executed the day previously, who included Lord Rochford, the Queen’s brother), her former nurse, Mary Orchard and her twelve year old niece, Katherine Carey, who is rumoured to be the daughter of the King by her sister Mary – others include either her aunt, Elizabeth Wood, or the wife of the Constable of the Tower, Sir William Kingston.
Anne Boleyn last stayed in the Queens Apartments before her Coronation. Now she is a prisoner, with Cromwell informing Sir William that he expects reports on Anne’s behaviour. Keen to control the messages she sends, Anne insists on Sir William being present when she makes her confession to repudiate the charges against her. Veering, understandably, close to hysteria, everyone – including Anne herself - is keen to get this execution over and done with. However, there will be a delay of 24 hours. A delay in which Anne may scent hope, but which has more to do with politics and the image, much tarnished, of the King.
This is a really interesting read, which looks at the last day of Anne Boleyn through the eyes of those around her – from Cromwell, Thomas Wyatt, Cranmer, Jane Seymour, Henry, Mary and others. They range from those hoping to benefit from the spoils of the change of power from the Boleyn faction to that of the Seymour’s, to Anne’s sister, banished to the countryside and unsure whether she should contact Cromwell or stay safe, out of sight. To be fair, this is a story that I know well, but I highly recommend it; especially if you are not as familiar with the events. It is a well written and interesting account. I will certainly be reading the next in the series, which looks at the last day in the life of Richard III.