Read Autobiography of Mark Twain Online
Authors: Mark Twain
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when Paris fell.
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Other prophecies of hers came true, both as to the event named and the time-limit prescribed.
VI.
HER CHARACTER
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She was deeply religious, and believed that she had daily speech with angels; that she saw them face to face,andthat they counselled her,advised^
comforted
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her, and brought commands to her direct from God. She had a childlike faith in the heavenly origin of her apparitions and her Voices, and not anythreatof any formof deathwas able to^
in any form could
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frighten it out of her loyal heart. Shewas^
had
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a beautifulandsimple and lovable character. In the records of the Trial
this comes out in clear and shining detail. She was gentleandwinning and affectionate; she loved her home, her friends and her village life; she was miserable in the presence of pain and suffering; she was full of compassion: on the field of her most splendid
victory she forgot her triumphs to hold in her lap the head of a dying enemy and
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to
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comfort his passing spirit with pitying words; in an age when it was common to slaughter prisoners, she stood dauntless between hers and harm, and saved them alive; she was forgiving, generous, unselfish, magnanimous, she was pure from all spot or stain of baseness. And always she was
a girl
,anddear and worshipful, as is meetfor^
in
^
that estate:when she fell wounded, the first time, she was frightened
and cried when she sawher^
the
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blood gushing from her breast; but shewas Joan of^
Jeanne d’
^
Arc,andwhen presently she found that her generals were sounding the retreat,shestaggered to her feet and led the assault again and took that place by storm. Thereis^
was
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no blemish inthat^
the
^
rounded and beautiful character
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of Jeanne, the Maid.
^There was no self conceit in it, no vanity. Only once in her life did she forget whom she was, and use the language of brag and boast. In those exhausting Trials she sat in her chains five and six dreary hours every day in her dungeon, answering her judges; and many times the questions were wearisomely silly and she lost interest, and no doubt her mind went dreaming back to the free days in the field and the fierce joys of battle. One day, at such a time, a tormentor broke the monotony with a fresh new theme, asking, “Did you learn any trade at home?” Then her head went up and her eyes kindled; and the stormer of bastiles, tamer of Talbot the English lion, thunder-breathing deliverer of a cowed nation and a hunted king, answered “Yes! to sew and to spin; and when it comes to that, I am not afraid to be matched against any woman in Rouen!” It was the only time she ever bragged: let us be charitable and forget it.
VII.
HER FACE AND FORM
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How strange it is!—that almost invariably the artist remembers only one detail—one minor and meaningless detail of the personality ofJoan of^
Jeanne d’
^
Arc
that she was a peasant girl
and forgets all the rest; and so he paints her as a strapping middle-aged fish
^
wife,
^crwoman,with costume and face to match. He is
slave to his one
^
prevailing
^
idea, andforgets^
omits
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to observe thatthesupremely great souls are never lodged inbig^
gross
^
bodies. Nobrawn,^
tissue,
^
no muscle, could endure thework that their bodies must do^
strain of their physical efforts
^
; theydo^
perform
^
their miraclesby^
through
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the spirit, which has fifty times the strength and staying-power of brawn and muscle. The Napoleons are little, not big;andthey work twenty hoursin^
out of
^
the twenty-four, and come up fresh while
^
the
^
big soldiers with little hearts faint around them with fatigue. We know whatJoan of Arc^
Jeanne
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was like, withoutasking—
^
inquiring,
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merely by what she did. The artist should paint her
spirit
—then he could not fail to paint her body right. She would rise before us,then,^
in such wise,
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a vision to win us, not
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to
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repel: a lithe
^
, slender
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youngslenderfigure, instinct with “the unbought grace of youth,”dear and bonny and^
wholly
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lovable, the face beautiful,andtransfigured with the light ofthat lustrous^
her luminous
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intellect and the fires ofthat^
her
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unquenchable spirit.
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“It was a miraculous thing,” said Guy de Laval, writing from Selles, “to see her and hear her.”
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