Read Autobiography of Mark Twain Online
Authors: Mark Twain
7. Then shewanted^
wished
^
to march at once upon Paris,
^
to
^
take it, and
^
to
^
drive the English out of France. She was hampered inall the^
every
^
way
that treachery and the King’s vacillation could devise, but she forced her way to Paris at last, and
^
there
^
fell badly wounded in a successful assault upon one of the gates. Of course her men lost heart at once—she was the only heart they had. They fell back. She beggedto be allowed^
permission
^
to remain at the front, saying victory was sure: “I will take Paris now or die!” shesaid^
cried
^
. But she was removed from the field by force, the King ordered a retreat, and actually disbanded his
army. In accordance with a beautiful old military customJoan^
Jeanne
^
devoted her silver armour and hung it up in the Cathedral of St. Denis.Its^
Her
^
great days were over.
8. Then, by command, she followed the King and his frivolous Courtand endured^
enduring
^
a gilded captivity for a time, as well as her free spirit could; and whenever inaction became unbearable she gathered some men together and rode awayand^
to
^
assaulted^
and capture
^
a strongholdand captured it.At last in a sortie against the enemy, from Compiègne on the 24th of May, (when she wasturned^
now
^
eighteen), shewas herself,
^
herself was
^
captured
after a gallantfight.^
struggle.
^
It was her lastbattle^
fight
^
. She was to follow the drums no more.
9. Thus ended the briefest epoch-making military career
^
known
^
in history. It lasted only a year and a month, but itfound^
restored to
^
France an English province, and furnishes the reason that France is France to-day andnot an English^
no longer a
^
provinceyet.^
of her rival.
^
Thirteen months! It was indeed a short career; but in the
^
ensuing
^
centuriesthat have since elapsedfive hundred millions of Frenchmen have lived and diedblest by^
under
^
the benefactions it conferred; and so^
So
^
long as France shall endure, the mighty debt must grow. And France isgrateful; we often hear her say it. Also^
not ungrateful. She, however, is
^
thrifty: she
^
still continues to
^
collect
the Domremy taxes.
II
.
IN CAPTIVITY
.
1.Joan^
Jeanne
^
was fated to spend therest^
remainder
^
of her life behind bolts and bars. She was a prisoner of war, not a criminal, therefore hers was recognized as an honourable captivity. By the rules of war shemust be^
should have been
^
held to ransom, and a fair price could notbe refused, if^
have been refused, had it been
^
offered.John^
Jean
^
of Luxemburg paid her the just compliment ofrequiring^
demanding
^
a prince’s ransom for her. Inthat^
those
^
day
that phrase represented a definite sum—61,125 francs. It was of course supposable that either the King or grateful France or both would fly with the moneyand^
to
^
set their fair youngbenefactor^
benefactress
^
free. But this did not happen.In^
During
^
fiveand a halfmonths
^
and more
^
neither King nor country stirred a hand nor offered apenny^
sou
^
. TwiceJoan^
Jeanne
^
tried to escape. Once by a trick she succeeded for a moment, and locked her jailor in behind her; but she was discovered and caught; in^
In
^
the other case she let herself down from a tower sixty feet high
but her rope was too short and shegot^
sustained
^
a fall that
^
wholly
^
disabled her
andshe could not get away.^
so prevented her escape.
^