Narrative Connection
How these two moments in the story relate
Why These Connect
The narrative assertion
"Cromwell's cynical dismissal of human nature as universally flawed ('It's just people') is paralleled by Wolsey's lonely death, where the 'people' who destroyed him are absent, and only Cavendish remains loyal."
inferred by llm_cross_episode_character
Why This Matters Across Episodes
The longer arc this connection carries
This connection traces Cavendish's trajectory from witnessing Cromwell's detached pragmatism about human nature to embodying the one exception—loyalty—at Wolsey's deathbed. The earlier scene sets up a worldview that the later scene tests: Cavendish's own devotion contradicts Cromwell's cynicism, showing his character's moral core.
About Thematic Parallel Connections
A and B explore the same theme from different angles. They resonate without direct causation, creating meaning through juxtaposition and echo.