This interesting and extraordinary
girl, surnamed the “Maid of Orleans,”
from her heroic defence of that city, was born about
the year 1410, or ’11, in the little hamlet
of Domremy, near the Meuse, and about three leagues
south of Vaucouleurs, on the borders of Champagne.
Her parents were humble and honest peasants. The
district was remarkable for the devout simplicity
of its inhabitants, as well as for those romantic
superstitions, which, in a rude age, are so often
allied with religion. It appears from the copious
depositions of witnesses from Domremy, examined at
Joan’s trial, that she was unremitting in her
prayers and other religious exercises, and was strongly
imbued, at a very early age, with the prevailing superstitions
of her native place.
During that period of anarchy in France,
when the supreme power, which had fallen from the
hands of a monarch deprived of his reason, was contended
for by the rival houses of Orleans and Burgundy, the
conflicting parties carried on war more by murder and
massacre than by regular battles. When an army
was wanted, both had recourse to the English; and
these conquering strangers made the unfortunate French
feel still deeper the horrors and ravages of war.
At first, the popular feeling was undecided; but when,
on the death of Charles VI., the crown fell to a young
prince, who adopted the Armagnac side, whilst the
house of Burgundy had sworn allegiance to a foreigner,
Henry V., as king of France, then, indeed,
the wishes and interests of all the French were in
favor of the Armagnacs, or the truly patriotic
party. Remote as was the village of Domremy, it
was still interested in the issue of the struggle.
It was decidedly Armagnac, and was strengthened in
this sentiment by the rivalry of a neighboring village,
which adopted Burgundian colors.
Political and party interests were
thus forced upon the enthusiastic mind of Joan, and
mingled with the pious legends she had caught from
the traditions of the virgin. A prophecy was current
that a virgin should rid France of her enemies, and
this prophecy seems to have been realized by its effect
upon the mind of Joan. The girl, by her own account,
was about thirteen, when a supernatural vision first
appeared to her. She describes it as a great
light, accompanied by a voice, telling her to be devout
and good, and promising her the protection of Heaven.
Joan responded by a vow of eternal chastity. From
that time, the voice or voices continued to haunt
Joan, and to echo the enthusiastic and restless wishes
of her own heart. Her own simple account was,
that “voices” were her visitors and advisers,
and that they prompted her to quit her native place,
take up arms, drive the foe before her, and procure
for the young king his coronation at Rheims.
These voices, however, had not influence enough to
induce her to set out upon the hazardous mission,
until a band of Burgundians, traversing and plundering
the country, had compelled Joan, together with her
parents, to take refuge in a neighboring town:
when they returned to their village, after the departure
of the marauders, they found the church of Domremy
in ashes.
Such incidents were well calculated
to arouse the indignation and excite the enthusiasm
of Joan. Her “voices” returned, and
incessantly directed her to set out for Orleans, but
to commence by making application to De Baudricourt,
commander at Vaucouleurs. Her parents, who were
acquainted with Joan’s martial propensities,
attempted to force her into a marriage; but she contrived
to avoid this by paying a visit to an uncle, in whose
company she made her appearance before the governor
of Vaucouleurs, in May, 1428. De Baudricourt at
first refused to see her, and, upon granting an interview,
treated her pretensions with contempt. She then
returned to her uncle’s abode, where she continued
to announce her project, and to insist that the prophecy
that “France, lost by a woman, Isabel
of Bavaria, should be saved by a virgin
from the frontiers of Lorraine,” alluded to her.
She it was, she asserted, who could save France, and
not “either kings, or dukes, nor yet the king
of Scotland’s daughter” an expression
which proves how well-informed she was as to the political
events and rumors of the day.
The fortunes of the dauphin Charles,
at this time, had sunk to the lowest ebb. Orleans,
almost his last bulwark, was besieged and closely
pressed, and the loss of the battle of “Herrings”
seemed to take away all hope of saving the city from
the English. In this crisis, when all human support
seemed unavailing, Baudricourt no longer despised the
supernatural aid promised by the damsel of Domremy,
and gave permission to John of Metz and Bertram of
Poulengy, two gentlemen who had become converts to
the truth of her divine mission, to conduct Joan of
Arc to the dauphin. They purchased a horse for
her, and, at her own desire, furnished her with male
habits, and other necessary equipments. Thus
provided, and accompanied by a respectable escort,
Joan set out for Vaucouleurs on the 13th February,
1429. Her progress through regions attached to
the Burgundian interest was perilous, but she safely
arrived at Fierbois, a place within five or six leagues
of Chinon, where the dauphin then held his court.
At Fierbois was a celebrated church dedicated to St.
Catherine; and here she spent her time in devotion,
whilst a messenger was despatched to the dauphin to
announce her approach. She was commanded to proceed,
and reached Chinon on the eleventh day after her departure
from Vaucouleurs.
Charles, though he desired, still
feared, the proffered aid. After due consultation,
however, it was concluded to grant Joan’s request,
and she received the rank of a military commander.
A suit of armor was made for her, and she sent to
Fierbois for a sword which, she said, would be found
buried in a certain spot in the church. It was
found there, and conveyed to her. The circumstance
became afterwards one of the alleged proofs of her
sorcery or imposture. Her having passed some
time at Fierbois among the ecclesiastics of the place,
must have led, in some way or other, to her knowledge
of the deposit. Strong in the conviction of her
mission, it was Joan’s desire to enter Orleans
from the north, and through all the fortifications
of the English. Dunois, however, and the other
leaders at length overruled her, and induced her to
abandon the little company of pious companions which
she had raised, and to enter the beleaguered city
by water, as the least perilous path. She succeeded
in carrying with her a convoy of provisions to the
besieged.
The entry of Joan of Arc into Orleans,
at the end of April, was itself a triumph. The
hearts of the besieged were raised from despair to
a fanatical confidence of success; and the English,
who in every encounter had defeated the French, felt
their courage paralyzed by the coming of this simple
girl. We cannot give the details of the wonderful
events that followed; it must suffice to say, that
the French were inspired with the utmost courage,
and after a series of great achievements, in which
the wonderful maiden took the lead, the siege was
raised. Thus, in one week after her arrival, the
beleaguered city was relieved. The most incredible
of her promises was now fulfilled, and she henceforth
received the title of “Maid of Orleans.”
The French now carried all before
them, under the guidance of this maiden leader; and,
in three months after she came to the relief of Charles,
he was crowned at Rheims, which had surrendered to
his arms. After a series of successes, she was
in one instance defeated, and finally was captured
in a sally against the enemy, May, 1430. She was
now handed over to the English partisans in France,
brought to trial on the charge of sorcery, and condemned
to death. A pile of wood was prepared in the
market-place at Rouen, and, encircled by a body of
judges and ecclesiastics, she was then burned to death,
and her ashes thrown into the Seine. This took
place in May, 1431. Thus perished one of the
most pure, lovely, and exalted beings that ever lived.
In 1454, a revision of her sentence took place, and
a monument was erected to her honor, on the spot where
she had been inhumanly put to death.