第18章 BEFORE THE KING.FEB.-APRIL,(4)
Jeanne was then brought back to Chinon,where she was lodged in one of the great towers still standing,though no special room is pointed out as hers.And there she was subjected to another process,more penetrating still than the interrogations of the graver tribunals.The Queens and their ladies and all the women of the Court took her in hand.They inquired into her history in every subtle and intimate feminine way,testing her innocence and purity;and once more she came out triumphant.The final judgment was given as follows:"After hearing all these reports,the King taking into consideration the great goodness that was in the Maid,and that she declared herself to be sent by God,it was by the said Seigneur and his council determined that from henceforward he should make use of her for his wars,since it was for this that she was sent."It was now necessary to equip Jeanne for her service.She had a /maison/,an /état majeur/,or staff,formed for her,the chief of which,Jean d'Aulon,already distinguished and worthy of such a trust never left her thenceforward until the end of her active career.Her chaplain,Jean Pasquerel,also followed her fortunes faithfully.
Charles would have given her a sword to replace the probably indifferent weapon given her by Baudricourt at Vaucouleurs;but Jeanne knew where to find the sword destined for her.She gave orders that someone should be sent to Fierbois,the village at which she had paused on her way to Chinon,to fetch a sword which would be found there buried behind the high altar of the church of St.Catherine.To make this as little miraculous as possible,we are told by some historians that it was common for knights to be buried with their arms,and that Jeanne,in her visit to this church,where she heard three masses in succession to make up for the absence of constant religious services on her journey--had probably seen some tomb or other token that such an interment had taken place.However,as we are compelled to receive the far greater miracle of Jeanne herself and her work,without explanation,it is foolish to take the trouble to attempt any explanation of so small a matter as this.The sword in fact was found,by the clergy of the church,and was by them cleaned and polished and put in a scabbard of crimson velvet,scattered over with fleur-de-lys in gold,for her use.Her standard,which she considered of the greatest importance was made apparently at Tours.It was of white linen,fringed with silk and embroidered with a figure of the Saviour holding a globe in His hands,while an angel knelt at either side in adoration.Jhesus'Maria was inscribed at the foot.Arepetition of this banner,which must have been re-copied from age to age is to be seen now at Tours.Having indicated the exact device to be emblazoned upon the banner,as dictated to her by her saints,--Margaret and Catherine--Jeanne announced her intention of carrying it herself,a somewhat surprising office for one who was to act as a general.But it was the command of her heavenly guides."Take the standard on the part of God,and carry it boldly,"they had said.She had,besides,a simple,half-childish intention of her own in this,which she explained shame-faced--she had no wish to use her sword though she loved it,and would kill no man.The banner was a more safe occupation,and saved her from all possibility of blood-shedding;it must however,have required the robust arm of a peasant to sustain the heavy weight.
It will show how long a time all these examinations and preparations had taken when we read that Jeanne set out from Blois,where she had passed some time in military preparations,only on the 27th day of April;nearly two whole months had thus been taken up in testing her truth,and arranging details,trifling and unnecessary in her eyes:--a period which had been passed in great anxiety by the people of Orleans,with the huge bastilles of the English--three of which were named Paris,Rouen,and London--towering round them,their provisions often intercepted,all the business of life come to a standstill,and the overwhelming responsibility upon them of being almost the last barrier between the invader and the final subjugation of France.It is strange to add that,judging by ordinary rules,the garrison of Orleans ought to have been quite sufficient in itself in numbers and science of war,to have beaten and dispersed the English force which had thus succeeded in shutting them in;there were many notable captains among them,with Dunois,known as the Bastard of Orleans,one of the most celebrated and brave of French generals,at their head.
Dunois was in no way inferior to the generals of the English army;he was popular,beloved by the people and soldiers alike,and though illegitimate,of the House of Orleans,one of the native seigneurs of the place.The wonder is how he and his officers permitted the building of these towers,and the shutting in of the town which they were quite strong enough to protect.But it was a losing game which they were playing,a part which does not suit the genius of the nation;and the superstition in favour of the English who had won so many battles with all the disadvantages on their side,--cutting the finest armies to pieces--was strong upon the imagination of the time.
It seemed a fate which no valour or skill upon the side of the French could avert.Dunois,himself an unlikely person,one would have thought,to yield the honour of the fight to a woman,seems to have perceived that without a strong counter-motive,not within the range of ordinary methods,the situation was beyond hope.