Autobiography of Mark Twain (43 page)

BOOK: Autobiography of Mark Twain
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2. Finally Cauchon, Bishop of Beauvais, paid the
^
blood-
^
money and bought Joan
ostensibly for the Church
to be tried for wearing male attire and for other impieties, but
really
^
in reality
^
for the English, the enemy into whose hands the poor girl was so piteously anxious
not
^
never
^
to fall. She was now shut up in the dungeons of the Castle of Rouen and kept in an iron cage, with her hands
and
feet and neck
^
both
^
chained to a
^
wooden block and
^
pillar
; and f
rom that time forth during all the months of her imprisonment
till
^
until
^
the end, several rough English soldiers stood guard over her night and day

and
not outside her room but in it. It was a dreary and hideous captivity, but it did not conquer her: nothing
could break that invincible spirit.
From first to last s
he was a prisoner
^
for the whole
^
year;
and she spent
the last three months of
it
^
which she passed
^
on trial for her life
before a formidable array of ecclesiastical judges,
and
disputing the ground with them foot by foot and inch by inch with brilliant
generalship
^
fence
^
and dauntless pluck. The spectacle of that solitary girl
, forlorn
^
stands alone in its pathos and
^
in
^
its sublimity. Forlorn
^
and friendless, without advocate or adviser,
and
without
^
even
^
the help and guidance of
any
copy of the charges brought against her or rescript of the complex and voluminous
daily
proceedings of the court
to modify
^
by which to relieve

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