The Life of King Henry the Eighth — Act 2, Scene 4: A hall in Black-Friars.

At Blackfriars, a formal court is assembled with King Henry presiding, Wolsey and Campeius as judges, and Queen Katherine set apart from the king. Wolsey orders the commission read, but Katherine refuses to accept the process quietly. She kneels to Henry, pleads for justice, and defends her long marriage and loyalty. She then turns against Wolsey, accusing him of driving a wedge between her and the king, and appeals directly to the pope instead of accepting him as judge. Henry publicly praises Katherine’s virtues, then denies that Wolsey has pushed him toward the case, and explains that his own conscience and doubts about the marriage have led him here.