The Life of King Henry the Eighth — Act 2, Scene 2: An ante-chamber in the palace.

The Chamberlain reads a letter complaining that horses he had carefully prepared were seized by one of Cardinal Wolsey’s servants, who said the cardinal must be served before any subject. Norfolk and Suffolk arrive and speak with him about King Henry’s troubled mind and the growing talk that Wolsey is driving the king toward a divorce from Katherine. Henry is found alone, reading and angered by interruption, but he softens when Wolsey and Cardinal Campeius enter with the papal commission for the case. Henry orders Norfolk and Suffolk away, welcomes Campeius, summons Gardiner as his new secretary, and arranges for the matter to be heard at Blackfriars, while still struggling with his conscience.