The Executioner's Knife - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"It would seem that she had not lied to us. She will now maintain until death that she is inspired of G.o.d. Poor child."
"And yet she abjured!"
"Whoever lied once may lie again."
"If she abjured it was out of fear of the flames--that can be easily understood."
"She proved herself a coward! And she was thought so brave!"
"Well, in the face of the pyre one may well tremble! Just look at those f.a.gots soaked in pitch."
"When one thinks that the whole pile will be in flames all around Joan like so much straw on fire, singeing and consuming her fles.h.!.+"
"My hair stands on end at the bare thought."
"Poor child! What a torture!"
"What else can you expect? Our seigneurs and the doctors of canon law condemn her. She must be guilty!"
"Such learned men could not be mistaken. We must believe them."
"When the Church has uttered herself we must bow down in silence. A body has religion, or has none."
"Well, I have no suspicions. I am an Armagnac and a royalist, and I detest the English rule. I looked upon Joan as upon a saint before her condemnation. Now I cannot even take pity upon her. It would be throwing discredit upon her judges. My religion as a good Catholic shuts my mouth. We must believe without reasoning."
"Did not the ecclesiastical tribunal show how merciful the Church is by accepting Joan's repentance?"
"But why did she relapse!"
"So much the worse for her if she is now burned. It will be her own doing."
"You must admit that by voluntarily going to the pyre she proves her courage. She is an intrepid girl!"
"She is simply displaying her rebellion and idolatrous boastfulness."
"Did not Joan Darc defeat the English in a score of battles? Did she not have the King consecrated at Rheims? Answer!"
"What you say is true. But our seigneurs the bishops judge such matters differently, and better than we could. This is the way I reason, and it is as simple as correct: The Church is infallible; the Church condemns Joan; consequently Joan is guilty."
This method of reasoning, which sways the minds of the more orthodox, prevails over the timid and rare utterances that betoken interest in and sympathy for Joan; she is destined to behold even those who had remained French under English rule led astray by the recent Pharisees, and impa.s.sibly a.s.sist at her execution, the same as her master Jesus, who, sentenced to a malefactor's death, saw the poor and suffering people whom he loved so well, look gapingly on at the execution of a sentence of death that was also p.r.o.nounced by the holy doctors of the law and by the priests of his time.
Suddenly a deep commotion is seen swaying the mob. It announces the approach of the condemned woman.
Standing on a cart drawn by a horse, Joan Darc is clad in a "san benito," a long black gown painted over with tongues of flame, and bearing on her head a pasteboard mitre on which are printed the words: "Idolatress," "Heretic," "Relapsed Sinner." The monk Isambard of La Pierre, one of her judges, stands near her on the wagon and imparts to her the last consolations. She seems to listen to him, but his tokens of compa.s.sion reach her ear only as a confused sound. She no longer expects aught from man. Her face, raised to heaven, looks into infinite s.p.a.ce.
She feels detached from earth, she has shaken off her last human terrors. For a moment she is overcome with fear. "Oh!" cries she, sobbing, "must my body, so clean of all stain, be destroyed by fire! I would prefer to be beheaded!" But after this last cry, drawn from her by the dread of bodily pain, her soul resumes its mastery, and the virgin of Gaul proceeds resolutely to the pyre. The wagon stops at the foot of the platform on which the Cardinal of Winchester, the two Bishops and the captains are enthroned, in their mitres and their casques.
The monk Isambard of La Pierre alights from the cart and motions Joan Darc to follow him. He a.s.sists her with his arm, seeing that the length of her robe impedes her movements. The unhappy girl walks with difficulty. Arrived before the main platform, the monk addresses the victim:
"Joan, kneel down, to receive in a humble posture the excommunication and sentence that Monseigneur the Bishop of Beauvais is to p.r.o.nounce upon you."
Joan Darc kneels down in the dust at the foot of the platform that is covered with purple. Bishop Peter Cauchon rises, bows to the Cardinal of Winchester, and advances to the edge of the platform.
From the ranks of the English soldiers the cries are heard:
"The devil take any further prayers!"
"On with the execution!"
"Is it a new scheme to keep the strumpet from roasting? We have had enough dilly-dallying!"
"Look out, Bishop! You shall not cheat us this time!"
"To the pyre, without further ado! To the pyre with the sorceress! Death to the girl or to the Bishop!"
Bishop Cauchon silences the growing tumult with a significant gesture and says in a sonorous voice: "My very dear brothers, if a member suffers, the apostle said to the Corinthians, the whole body suffers.
Thus when heresy infects one member of our holy Church, it is urgent to separate it from all others, lest its rottenness contaminate the mystical body of our Lord. The sacred inst.i.tutions have decided, my very dear brothers, that, in order to free the faithful from the poison of the heretics, these vipers may not be allowed to devour the bosom of our mother the Church. Wherefore we, Bishop of Beauvais, by divine grace, a.s.sisted by the learned and very reverend John Lemaitre and John Graverant, Inquisitors of the faith, say to you Joan, commonly styled the Maid:--We justly p.r.o.nounced you idolatrous, a soothsayer, an invoker of devils, bloodthirsty, dissolute, schismatic and heretic. You abjured your crimes and voluntarily signed this abjuration with your own hand.
But you quickly returned to your d.a.m.nable errors, like the dog returns to his vomit. On account of this do we now excommunicate you and p.r.o.nounce you a relapsed heretic. We sentence you to be extirpated from the midst of the faithful like a rotten, leprous member, and we deliver you, and abandon you, and cast you off into the hands of secular justice, and request it that, apart from your death and the mutilation of your members, it treat you with moderation!"
The sentence is received with an explosion of shouts of ferocious joy.
The English soldiers signify their satisfaction. The mob looks at Joan Darc with horror. One of the a.s.sessors descends from the platform and speaks to Isambard in a low voice, whereupon the latter turns to Joan:
"You have heard your sentence, rise, my daughter."
Joan Darc rises, and pointing to heaven as if taking the spheres for her witness, says in a loud voice and with an accent of crus.h.i.+ng reproach to Bishop Cauchon, who remains standing near the edge of the platform above her:
"Bishop! Bishop! I die at your hands!"
Despite his audacity, Peter Cauchon trembles, grows pale, bows his head before the girl's anathema, and hastens to resume his seat near the Cardinal.
Two executioners draw near at the words of the prelate consigning Joan Darc to the secular powers. Each seizes her by an arm and they lead her to the pyre, Isambard following.
"Father," says Joan to the latter, "I wish to have a cross, so as to die contemplating it."
The request being overheard by several English soldiers, they answer:
"You need no cross, relapsed sinner!"
"Witch! To the f.a.gots with you!"
"You only want to gain time!"
"We have had enough delays--death to the heretic!"
"To the f.a.gots! To the f.a.gots!"
The monk Isambard says a few words in the ear of the a.s.sessor; the latter leaves hurriedly in the direction of a neighboring church. One of the two executioners, a fellow with a blood-stained ap.r.o.n and a hardened face, who also overhears Joan's request, feels deeply affected.
Tears are seen to gather in his eyes. He pulls his knife from his belt, and cuts in two a stick that he holds in his hand; in his hurry he drops his knife to the ground, takes a string from his pocket, ties the two pieces of wood in the shape of a rude cross, roughly thrusts aside two English soldiers who stand in his way, and then, handing the cross to the monk, falls back a few steps, contemplating the victim with something akin to adoration.