My mother had what the French call a culte for the heroine whoselife I have attempted to write in the following pages.
It was but natural that one who loved and admired all that is good andbeautiful and high-minded should have a strong feeling of admirationfor the memory of Joan of Arc. On the pedestal of the bronze statue,which my mother placed in her house at Cliveden, are inscribed thosewords which sum up the life and career of the Maid of Orleans:—
'La grande pitié qu'il y avait au royaume de France.'
Thinking that could my mother have read the following pages she wouldhave approved the feeling which prompted me to write them, I inscribethis little book to her beloved memory.
R.G.
Arcachon,
November 29.
The authors whose works I have chiefly used in writing this Life ofJoan of Arc, are—first, Quicherat, who was the first to publish atlength the Minutes of the two trials concerning the Maid—that of hertrial at Rouen in 1430, and of her rehabilitation in 1456, and whounearthed so many chronicles relating to her times; secondly, Wallon,whose Life of Joan of Arc is of all the fullest and most reliable;thirdly, Fabre, who has within the last few years published severalmost important books respecting the life and death of Joan. Fabre wasthe first to make a translation in full of the two trials whichQuicherat had first published in the original Latin text.
Thinking references at the foot of the page a nuisance to the reader,these have been avoided.
The subjects for the etched illustrations in this volume have beenkindly supplied by my friend, Mr. Lee Latrobe Bateman, during ajourney we made together to places connected with the story of theheroine.
R.G.
London, January, 1893.
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CHAPTER I. | |
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