Talk:Saint Joan of Arc (Jeanne la Pucelle): Difference between revisions
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Saint-Beuve [[User:Michael Bromley|Michael Bromley]] ([[User talk:Michael Bromley|talk]]) 11:22, 31 December 2024 (EST) | Saint-Beuve [[User:Michael Bromley|Michael Bromley]] ([[User talk:Michael Bromley|talk]]) 11:22, 31 December 2024 (EST) | ||
== voices & instructions == | |||
Jean de Metz testified that Joan had been instructed fro 4-5 years n saving France. She told him: | |||
“Have no fear,” she answered us, “what I am commanded to do, I will do; my brothers in Paradise have told me how to act: it is four or five years since my brothers in Paradise and my Lord—that is, God—told me that I must go and fight in order to regain the kingdom of France.” | |||
Jeanne D‘arc, by T. Douglas Murray_The Trials_The Project Gutenberg eBook.pdf p 224 [[User:Michael Bromley|Michael Bromley]] ([[User talk:Michael Bromley|talk]]) 13:21, 31 December 2024 (EST) |
Revision as of 13:21, 31 December 2024
La Hire's prayer
“God, do unto La Hire as he would do unto You, if he were God and You were La Hire.”
Joans heirs
from Gutenberg 1909 book: https://www.gutenberg.org/files/19488/19488-h/19488-h.htm#CHAPTER_III
This time she announces that it is her mission to deliver Orléans. And the anointing is not to come to pass until this the first part of her task shall have been accomplished. We cannot fail to recognise the readiness and the tact with which the Voices altered their commands previously given, according to the necessities of the moment. Robert's manner towards Jeanne had completely changed. He said nothing about boxing her ears and sending her back to her parents. He no longer treated her roughly; and if he did not believe her announcement at least he listened to it readily.
In one of her conversations with him she spoke of strange matters: "Once I have accomplished the behest Messire has given me, I shall marry and I shall bear three sons, the eldest of whom shall be pope, the second emperor, and the third king."
Sire Robert answered gayly: "Since thy sons are to be such great personages, I should like to give thee one. Thereby should I myself have honour."
Jeanne replied: "Nay, gentle Robert, nay. It is not yet time. The Holy Ghost shall appoint the time."[389]
To judge from the few of her words handed down to us, in the early days of her mission the young prophetess spoke alternately two different languages. Her speech seemed to flow from two distinct sources. The one ingenuous, candid, naïve, concise, rustically simple, unconsciously arch, sometimes rough, alike[Pg i.79] chivalrous and holy, generally bearing on the inheritance and the anointing of the Dauphin and the confounding of the English. This was the language of her Voices, her own, her soul's language. The other, more subtle, flavoured with allegory and flowers of speech, critical with scholastic grace, bearing on the Church, suggesting the clerk and betraying some outside influence. The words she uttered to Sire Robert touching the children she should bear are of the second sort. They are an allegory. Her triple birth signifies that the peace of Christendom shall be born of her work, that after she shall have fulfilled her divine mission, the Pope, the Emperor, and the King—all three sons of God—shall cause concord and love to reign in the Church of Jesus Christ. The apologue is quite clear; and yet a certain amount of intelligence is necessary for its comprehension. The Captain failed to understand it; he interpreted it literally and answered accordingly, for he was a simple fellow and a merry.[390]
Catholicism
[XXXVIII-XLVII] As to these Articles, [covering among other points her claim that all she had done was at God's bidding; that she had never committed mortal sin 'notwithstanding that she has in fact performed all the actions customary to men of war, and even worse'; that she had declared that her voices were not on the side of the English 'affirming that the saints in glory detest a Catholic realm, to their shame'; that she boasted that her voices assured her of salvation if she kept her virginity, and that she is so assured; that she blasphemed and denied God and the saints]; in answer to many questions which were put to her
Yolanda of Sicily
Of all the revisions, diversions, and distortions of Saint Joan's story and legacy, I don't think any of them mention that another woman, Yolanda, Queen of Sicily played a crucial role in the story. Yolanda was the Dauphin's mother-in-law. She, too, must have believed the Maid, because she personally financed the campaign on Orléans. That's no small thing, but it is rarely mentioned.[1] Michael Bromley (talk) 14:23, 29 December 2024 (EST)
"voices decieved me" >> to clarify
Here for 1930s book on Joan: Saint Joan of Arc : born, January 6th, 1412, burned as a heretic, May 30th, 1431, canonised as a saint, May 16th, 1920 : Sackville-West, V. (Victoria), 1892-1962 : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive
that makes a big deal out of it. Michael Bromley (talk) 10:34, 31 December 2024 (EST)
Sainte-Beuve quotation "Pauvre Jeanne d'Arc!"
« Pauvre Jeanne d'Arc ! écrivait Sainte-Beuve. Elle a eu bien du malheur dans ce que sa mémoire a provoqué d'écrits et de compositions de diverses sortes. Elle a inspiré à de grands poètes tragiques, aux Shakspeare et aux Schiller eux-mêmes, des inventions odieuses ou absurdes ; elle a inspiré au plus bel esprit et à la plus belle imagination une parodie libertine qui est devenue une mauvaise action immortelle; elle est en possession de faire naître, depuis Chapelain, des poèmes épiques qui sont synonymes d'ennui et que rien ne décourage (1). Quelques vers touchants des Messéniennes qu'on a sus par coeur, sont une bien petite satisfaction après tant d'outrages (2). »
from LES MARTYRS VI
still can;'t find the original... from one of Sainte Beuve's essays ... Sackville-West opens her book on Joan w/ part of hte quotation:
Pauvre Jeanne d'Arc! Elle a eu bien du Malheur dans ce que so memoire a provoque d'ecrits et e compositions de diverses sorts"
Saint-Beuve Michael Bromley (talk) 11:22, 31 December 2024 (EST)
voices & instructions
Jean de Metz testified that Joan had been instructed fro 4-5 years n saving France. She told him:
“Have no fear,” she answered us, “what I am commanded to do, I will do; my brothers in Paradise have told me how to act: it is four or five years since my brothers in Paradise and my Lord—that is, God—told me that I must go and fight in order to regain the kingdom of France.”
Jeanne D‘arc, by T. Douglas Murray_The Trials_The Project Gutenberg eBook.pdf p 224 Michael Bromley (talk) 13:21, 31 December 2024 (EST)
- ↑ Mentioned on p. 39 Joan of Arc : her story : Pernoud, Régine without any observation other than that Yolanda financed the operation. Seems to me something more than just writing a check going on there.