The Executioner's Knife; Or, Joan of Arc

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PART I. DOMREMY

PART II. CHINON.

PART III. ORLEANS.

PART IV. ROUEN; OR, THE MYSTERY OF THE PASSION OF JOAN DARC



THE EXECUTIONER'S KNIFE



COMPLETE FOR
FIRST
THE
TIME
IN ENGLISH
EUGENE SUE'S
The Mysteries of the People
OR
History of a Proletarian Family Across the Ages

A fascinating work, thrilling as fiction, yet embracing a comprehensive history of the oppressing and oppressed classes from the commencement of the present era.

These stories are nineteen in number, and their chronological order is the following:

    Eugene Sue wrote a romance
which seems to have disappeared
in a curious fashion, called "Les
Mysteres du Peuple". It is the
story of a Gallic family through
the ages, told in successive episodes,
and, so far as we have
been able to read it, is fully as
interesting as "The Wandering
Jew", or "The Mysteries of
Paris". The French edition is
pretty hard to find, and only
parts have been translated into
English. We don't know the
reason. One medieval episode,
telling of the struggle of
communes for freedom, is now
translated by Mr. Daniel De
Leon, under the title, "The Pilgrim's
Shell" (New York Labor
News Co.). We trust the success
of his efforts may be such
as to lead him to translate the
rest of the romance. It will be
the first time the feat has been
done in English.—N. Y. Sun.
    THE GOLD SICKLE 50c.
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THE IRON COLLAR 50c.
THE SILVER CROSS 50c.
THE CASQUE'S LARK 75c.
THE PONIARD'S HILT 75c.
THE BRANDING NEEDLE 50c.
THE ABBATIAL CROSIER 60c.
CARLOVINGIAN COINS 50c.
THE IRON ARROW HEAD 60c.
THE INFANT'S SKULL 50c.
THE PILGRIM'S SHELL 75c.
THE IRON PINCERS 50c.
THE IRON TREVET 75c.
EXECUTIONER'S KNIFE $1.00
POCKET BIBLE, Vol. 1 $1.00
POCKET BIBLE, Vol. 2 $1.00
BLACKSMITH'S HAMMER 75c.
SWORD OF HONOR, Vol. 1 $1.00
SWORD OF HONOR, Vol. 2 $1.00
GALLEY SLAVE'S RING 50c.

NEW YORK LABOR NEWS COMPANY

28 CITY HALL PLACE :: NEW YORK

THE EXECUTIONER'S
KNIFE
: :   : :  OR  : :   : :
J  O  A  N     O  F     A  R  C

                                               


A Tale of the Inquisition

     B y   E U G E N E   S U E     
                                               

TRANSLATED FROM THE ORIGINAL FRENCH BY

DANIEL DE LEON

NEW YORK LABOR NEWS COMPANY, 1910



Copyright 1910, by the
NEW YORK LABOR NEWS CO.



INDEX
TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE VII
 
PART I. DOMREMY.
 
CHAPTER.
I. JEANNETTE 3
II. GILLON THE FURTIVE 7
III. AT THE FOUNTAIN OF THE FAIRIES 11
IV. THE HARP OF MERLIN 16
V. THE PROPHECY OF MERLIN 23
VI. THE LEGEND OF HENA 29
VII. GERMINATION 34
VIII. "THE ENGLISH" 37
IX. THE FLIGHT 44
X. "BURGUNDY!"—"FRANCE!" 47
XI. THE VISION 58
XII. RETURNING VISIONS 63
XIII. WRESTLING WITH THE ANGELS 68
XIV. "THE TIME HAS ARRIVED!" 72
XV. CAPTAIN ROBERT OF BAUDRICOURT 76
XVI. AT THE CASTLE OF VAUCOULEURS 80
XVII. JOHN OF NOVELPONT 87
XVIII. "GOOD LUCK, JOAN!" 92
 
PART II. CHINON.
 
I. THE COUNCIL OF CHARLES VII 101
II. ALOYSE OF CASTELNAU 112
III. THE TEST 118
IV. THE HALL OF RABATEAU 123
 
PART III. ORLEANS.
 
I. FRIDAY, APRIL 29TH, 1429 137
II. SATURDAY, APRIL 30TH, 1429 147
III. SUNDAY, MAY 1ST, 1429 155
IV. MONDAY, MAY 2ND, 1429 157
V. TUESDAY, MAY 3RD, 1429 159
VI. WEDNESDAY, MAY 4TH, 1429 161
VII. THURSDAY, MAY 5TH, 1429 177
VIII. FRIDAY, MAY 6TH, 1429 186
IX. SATURDAY, MAY 7TH, 1429 203
X. THE KING CROWNED 214
 
PART IV. ROUEN; OR, THE MYSTERY OF
THE PASSION OF JOAN DARC.
 
I. BISHOP AND CANON 229
II. IN THE DUNGEON 262
III. THE INQUISITION 277
IV. THE TEMPTATION 302
V. THE SENTENCE 312
VI. PHYSICAL COLLAPSE 326
VII. REMORSE 348
VIII. THE RELAPSE 354
IX. THE WORM TURNS 357
X. TO THE FLAMES 360
XI. THE PYRE 365
EPILOGUE 378

TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE.

Whether one will be satisfied with nothing but a scientific diagnosis in psychology, or a less ponderous and infinitely more lyric presentation of certain mental phenomena will do for him; whether the student of history insist on strict chronology, or whether he prize at its true value the meat and coloring of history; whether a reader prefer in matters canonical the rigid presentation of dogma, or whether the tragic fruits of theocracy offer a more attractive starting point for his contemplation;—whichever the case might be, The Executioner's Knife; or, Joan of Arc will gratify his intellectual cravings on all the three heads.

This, the fifteenth story of the series of Eugene Sue's matchless historic novels entitled The Mysteries of the People; or, History of a Proletarian Family Across the Ages, presents the picture of the Fifteenth Century—a historic elevation climbed up to from the hills of the era sketched in the preceding story, The Iron Trevet; or Jocelyn the Champion, and from which, in turn, the outlines become vaguely visible of the critically historic era that forms the subject of the next story, The Pocket Bible; or, Christian the Printer.

As in all the stories of this stupendous series bestowed by the genius of Sue upon posterity, the leading characters are historic, the leading events are historic, and the coloring is true to history. How true to the facts are the historic revelations made by the author in this series, and how historically true are the conclusions he draws, as they rise in relief on the canvas of these novels, appears with peculiar conspicuousness in The Executioner's Knife; or, Joan of Arc, above all in this century, when the science of history has remodeled its theory, and, instead of, as in former days, basing man's acts upon impulse, has learned to plant impulse upon material facts.

In the pages of this story the central figure is the charming one generally known to history as the Maid of Orleans. If ever there was in the annals of man a figure that superstitious mysticism combined with grovelling interests to annihilate, it was the figure of the pure-minded, self-sacrificing, intrepid shepherdess of Domremy. Even the genius of a Voltaire succumbed. In righteous revolt against man-degrading superstition, his satire "La Pucelle" in fact contributed, by the slur it placed upon Joan, to vindicate the very lay and prelatical interests he fought, and whose predecessors dragged her name through the ditch and had consigned her body to the flames. Harried by the political interests whom her integrity of purpose menaced and actually thwarted; insulted and put to death by the allies of these, ambushed behind religion; the successors of both elements perpetuating the wrong with false history; and even the enlightened contributing their sneers out of just repugnance for supernaturalism;—all this notwithstanding, the figure of Joan triumphed. Even the head of the prelatic political machine, which had presumed to speak in the name of the Deity with Anathema over Joan's head, has felt constrained to fall in line with the awakened popular knowledge. The Papal beatification of Joan of Arc in this century is a public retraction and apology to the heroine born from the lowly.

Of the many works of art—poetic, dramatic, pictorial—that have contributed to this conspicuous "reversal of judgment" Sue's The Executioner's Knife; or, Joan of Arc has been the most powerful. The pathetic story cleanses Joan of the miraculous, uncovers the grovelling influences she had to contend against, exposes the sordid ambitions she had to overcome and that finally slaked their vengeance in her blood. The master's hand weaves together and draws, in the garb of fiction, a picture that is monumental—at once as a work of science, of history and of art.

DANIEL DE LEON.

Milford, Conn., October, 1909.


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