Personal Recollections of Joan by Mark Twain

“Take her”; and to the executioner, “Do your duty.”

Joan asked for a cross. None was able to furnish one. But an

English soldier broke a stick in two and crossed the pieces and tied

them together, and this cross he gave her, moved to it by the good

heart that was in him; and she kissed it and put it in her bosom.

Then Isambard de la Pierre went to the church near by and brought

her a consecrated one; and this one also she kissed, and pressed it

to her bosom with rapture, and then kissed it again and again,

covering it with tears and pouring out her gratitude to God and the

saints.

And so, weeping, and with her cross to her lips, she climbed up the

cruel steps to the face of the stake, with the friar Isambard at her

side. Then she was helped up to the top of the pile of wood that

was built around the lower third of the stake and stood upon it with

her back against the stake, and the world gazing up at her

breathless. The executioner ascended to her side and wound chains

around her slender body, and so fastened her to the stake. Then he

descended to finish his dreadful office; and there she remained

alone–she that had had so many friends in the days when she was

free, and had been so loved and so dear.

All these things I saw, albeit dimly and blurred with tears; but I

could bear no more. I continued in my place, but what I shall

deliver to you now I got by others’ eyes and others’ mouths. Tragic

sounds there were that pierced my ears and wounded my heart as I

sat there, but it is as I tell you:

the latest image recorded by my eyes in that desolating hour was

Joan of Arc with the grace of her comely youth still unmarred; and

that image, untouched by time or decay, has remained with me all

my days. Now I will go on.

If any thought that now, in that solemn hour when all transgressors

repent and confess, she would revoke her revocation and say her

great deeds had been evil deeds and Satan and his fiends their

source, they erred. No such thought was in her blameless mind.

She was not thinking of herself and her troubles, but of others, and

of woes that might befall them. And so, turning her grieving eyes

about her, where rose the towers and spires of that fair city, she

said:

“Oh, Rouen, Rouen, must I die here, and must you be my tomb?

Ah, Rouen, Rouen, I have great fear that you will suffer for my

death.”

A whiff of smoke swept upward past her face, and for one moment

terror seized her and she cried out, “Water! Give me holy water!”

but the next moment her fears were gone, and they came no more

to torture her.

She heard the flames crackling below her, and immediately

distress for a fellow-creature who was in danger took possession of

her. It was the friar Isambard. She had given him her cross and

begged him to raise it toward her face and let her eyes rest in hope

and consolation upon it till she was entered into the peace of God.

She made him go out from the danger of the fire. Then she was

satisfied, and said:

“Now keep it always in my sight until the end.”

Not even yet could Cauchon, that man without shame, endure to

let her die in peace, but went toward her, all black with crimes and

sins as he was, and cried out:

“I am come, Joan, to exhort you for the last time to repent and seek

the pardon of God.”

“I die through you,” she said, and these were the last words she

spoke to any upon earth.

Then the pitchy smoke, shot through with red flashes of flame,

rolled up in a thick volume and hid her from sight; and from the

heart of this darkness her voice rose strong and eloquent in prayer,

and when by moments the wind shredded somewhat of the smoke

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