The Life of King Henry the Eighth — Act 4, Scene 2: Kimbolton.

At Kimbolton, the sick Queen Katharine is brought in by Griffith, her usher, and Patience. She asks about Cardinal Wolsey’s death, and Griffith describes how the fallen cardinal died repentant at Leicester. Katharine first judges Wolsey harshly, then accepts Griffith’s more charitable account of his learning and generosity. Touched by the story, she grows peaceful, hears sad music, and falls into a sleep in which six white-robed figures appear and honor her with garlands. When she wakes, she believes she has seen spirits promising happiness. Capucius arrives with Henry’s message of concern, and Katharine gives him a letter asking the king to care for her daughter, her women, and her servants.