Personal Recollections of Joan by Mark Twain

miniature.”

“I don’t know how to account for it–do you?”

“Yes–without any trouble at all–that is, I think I do.”

No‰l was surprised at that, and glanced up quickly, as if to see if I

was in earnest. He said:

“I thought you couldn’t be in earnest, but I see you are. If you can

make me understand this puzzle, do it. Tell me what the

explanation is.”

“I believe I can. You have noticed that our chief knight says a good

many wise things and has a thoughtful head on his shoulders. One

day, riding along, we were talking about Joan’s great talents, and

he said, ‘But, greatest of all her gifts, she has the seeing eye.’ I said,

like an unthinking fool, ‘The seeing eye?–I shouldn’t count on that

for much–I suppose we all have it.’ ‘No,’ he said; ‘very few have it.’

Then he explained, and made his meaning clear. He said the

common eye sees only the outside of things, and judges by that,

but the seeing eye pierces through and reads the heart and the soul,

finding there capacities which the outside didn’t indicate or

promise, and which the other kind of eye couldn’t detect. He said

the mightiest military genius must fail and come to nothing if it

have not the seeing eye–that is to say, if it cannot read men and

select its subordinates with an infallible judgment. It sees as by

intuition that this man is good for strategy, that one for dash and

daredevil assault, the other for patient bulldog persistence, and it

appoints each to his right place and wins, while the commander

without the seeing eye would give to each the other’s place and

lose. He was right about Joan, and I saw it. When she was a child

and the tramp came one night, her father and all of us took him for

a rascal, but she saw the honest man through the rags. When I

dined with the governor of Vaucouleurs so long ago, I saw nothing

in our two knights, though I sat with them and talked with them

two hours; Joan was there five minutes, and neither spoke with

them nor heard them speak, yet she marked them for men of worth

and fidelity, and they have confirmed her judgment. Whom has she

sent for to take charge of this thundering rabble of new recruits at

Blois, made up of old disbanded Armagnac raiders, unspeakable

hellions, every one? Why, she has sent for Satan himself–that is to

say, La Hire–that military hurricane, that godless swashbuckler,

that lurid conflagration of blasphemy, that Vesuvius of profanity,

forever in eruption. Does he know how to deal with that mob of

roaring devils? Better than any man that lives; for he is the head

devil of this world his own self, he is the match of the whole of

them combined, and probably the father of most of them. She

places him in temporary command until she can get to Blois

herself–and then! Why, then she will certainly take them in hand

personally, or I don’t know her as well as I ought to, after all these

years of intimacy. That will be a sight to see–that fair spirit in her

white armor, delivering her will to that muck-heap, that rag-pile,

that abandoned refuse of perdition.”

“La Hire!” cried No‰l, “our hero of all these years–I do want to see

that man!”

“I too. His name stirs me just as it did when I was a little boy.”

“I want to hear him swear.”

“Of course, I would rather hear him swear than another man pray.

He is the frankest man there is, and the na‹vest. Once when he was

rebuked for pillaging on his raids, he said it was nothing. Said he,

‘If God the Father were a soldier, He would rob.’ I judge he is the

right man to take temporary charge there at Blois. Joan has cast the

seeing eye upon him, you see.”

“Which brings us back to where we started. I have an honest

affection for the Paladin, and not merely because he is a good

fellow, but because he is my child–I made him what he is, the

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