Henry FitzRoy, Duke of Richmond and Somerset (1519 – ), the king’s illegitimate son. His mother is Elizabeth Blount.
He is a handsome blond child made in the king’s own image. His father has created him Duke of Somerset and Duke of Richmond; he is not yet ten years old, and the senior nobleman in England.
Cromwell meets Richmond on the journey over to Calais. They have not met since the cardinal came down. He is a “handsome boy of thirteen, fair-haired, tall for his age but slender; Henry as he must have been as a young prince.” He is reading The Courtier and he says “I wish the cardinal were not dead. Because now the Duke of Norfolk is my guardian.”
Richmond is to marry Norfolk’s daughter, Mary. This does not please the thirteen-year-old duke. “I have seen her. She has no breasts.”
Richmond marries Mary Howard. He wants to live with his wife, but the king is keeping them apart. Richmond is the only son of Henry VIII and he thinks he could one day reign. But Lady Rochford is here to disabuse him of his dreams:
‘I fear by summer you will have lost your place, sweetheart. Once he has a son born in wedlock, you may tup to your heart’s content. You will never reign, and your offspring will never inherit.’
Richmond stands in for the king at the bloody execution of the Charterhouse monks. The boy asks Cromwell to take his place.
‘If you please sickness, or fall off your horse tomorrow or vomit in front of your father-in-law, he’ll never let you forget it. If you want him to let you into your bride’s bed, prove yourself a man.’
Some special mechanism may have to be created so Harry Richmond can reign, if anything but good should come to his father.
Richmond comes to comfort his father. He is now sixteen and almost six foot, but Henry calls him, ‘my little son.’ Outside, he tells Cromwell that ‘had a woman’ and is now a man. ‘I think Norfolk should let me live with my wife.’
Text within this block will maintain its original spacing when published‘I’ll speak to the duke for you,’ he says. ‘I think he will now be keen to fall in with your wishes.’ Richmond flushes: pleasure, embarrassment? The boy is no fool and knows his situation, which in a few days has improved beyond all measure.
He tells Cromwell how he used to think the cardinal was his father. Cromwell assures him that he is the king’s only son, and he gives Richmond fatherly advice about getting a ‘clean’ mistress and not dealing with ‘whores.’
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