Read Autobiography of Mark Twain Online
Authors: Mark Twain
4. Althoughshe wason trial for her life, she was the only witness called on either side; the only witness summoned to testify before a packed jury commissioned with a definite task—to find her guilty, whether shewas^
were
^
guilty or not. She must be convicted out of her own mouth, there being no other way to accomplish it. Every advantage that learning has over ignorance, age over youth, experience over inexperience, chicane over artlessness
every trick and trapand gindevisable by malice and the cunning of sharp intellects practised in
^
the
^
setting
^
of
^
snares for the unwary
all these were employed against her without shame; and when these arts were one by one defeated by the marvellous intuitions of her alert and penetrating mind, Bishop Cauchon stooped to a final baseness which it degrades human speech to describe:apriest who pretended to come from the region of her own home and to be a pitying friendandanxious to help her in her sore need, was smuggled into her cell; he misused his sacred office to steal her confidence; and^
so that
^
she confided to himthe things^
facts
^
sealed from revealment by her Voices which her prosecutors had tried so long in vain to trick her into betraying. A concealed confederate set it all down and delivered it to Cauchon, who usedJoan’s^
Jeanne’s
^
secrets, thus obtained, for her ruin.
Throughout the Trial
,whatever the^
the testimony of the
^
foredoomed witnesssaidwas twisted from its true meaning, when possible, and made to tell against her;andwhenever an
answer of hers was beyond the reach oftwisting^
garbling,
^
it was not allowed to go upon the record.It was upon^
On
^
one of these latter occasionsthatshe uttered that pathetic reproach
to Cauchon:“Ah,^
“you set down everything that is against me, butyou will not set down what is for me.”^
nothing that is in my favour.”
^
(
easier translation
)
5. Thatthis^
her
^
untrainedyoung creature’sgenius for war waswonderful^
marvelous
^
,andthat her generalshipsuggested an old and educated^
was that of a tried and trained
^
military experience, we have the sworn testimony of two of her veteran subordinates
one the Duc d’Alençon,
^
brother to the King of France;
^
the other the greatest of the French generals of the time, Dunois, Bastard of Orleans;that hergenius was as great—possibly even greater—
^
power was equally greatif not greater^
in the subtlewarfare^
strife
^
of the forum, we have for witness the records of the Rouen Trial
, that protracted exhibition of intellectual fence maintained with credit against the masterminds of France; that her moral greatness was peer to her intellect we call the Rouen Trial
again to witness, withtheir^
its
^
testimony to a fortitude which patiently and steadfastly endured during twelve weeks the wasting forces of captivity, chains, loneliness, sickness, darkness, hunger, thirst, cold, shame, insult, abuse, broken sleep, treachery, ingratitude, exhausting sieges of cross-examination,
^
and
^
the threat of torture
with the rackbefore^
facing
^
her and the executioner standing ready: yet never surrendering, never asking quarter, the frail wreck of her as unconquerable the last day as was her invincible spirit the first.