The Iron Trevet; or, Jocelyn the Champion: A Tale of the Jacquerie

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PART I. THE SEIGNIORY OF NOINTEL.

PART II. THE REGENCY OF NORMANDY

PART III. THE JACQUERIE.

PART IV JOHN MAILLART CHAPTER I. THE WAYS OF ENVY.


A Tale of the Jacquerie

     By EUGENE SUE     
                                               

TRANSLATED FROM THE ORIGINAL FRENCH BY

DANIEL DE LEON

NEW YORK LABOR NEWS COMPANY, 1906

Copyright, 1905, by the
NEW YORK LABOR NEWS CO.

TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE.

Etienne Marcel, John Maillart, William Caillet, Adam the Devil and Charles the Wicked, King of Navarre, are the five leading personages in this story. Their figures and actions, the virtues and foibles of the ones, the vices of the others, the errors of all, are drawn with strict historic accuracy, all the five being historic characters. Seeing the historic importance of the epoch in which they figured, and the types that these five men represent, the story of "The Iron Trevet; or, Jocelyn, the Champion" is more than an historic narrative, it is more than a treatise on the philosophy of history, it is a treatise on human nature, it is a compendium of lessons inestimable to whomsoever his or her good or evil genius throws into the clash of human currents, and to those who, though not themselves participants, still may wish to understand that which they are spectators of and which, some way or other, they are themselves affected by and, some way or other, are bound to either support or resist.

In a way, "The Iron Trevet; or, Jocelyn the Champion" is the uniquest of the series of brilliant stories that the genius of Eugene Sue has enriched the world with under the collective title of "The Mysteries of the People"—we can recall no other instance in which so much profound and practical instruction is so skillfully clad in the pleasing drapery of fiction, and one within so small a compass.

To America whose youthful years deprive her of historic perspective, this little story, or rather work, can not but be of service. To that vast English-speaking world at large, now throbbing with the pulse of awakening aspirations, this translation discloses another treasure trove, long and deliberately held closed to it in the wrappage of the foreign tongue in which the original appeared.

DANIEL DE LEON.

New York, April 13, 1904.

INDEX

Translator's Preface iii
Part I. The Seigniory of Nointel.
  Chapter 1. The Tavern of Alison the Huffy 10
  Chapter 2. The Amende Honorable 26
  Chapter 3. The Tournament 34
  Chapter 4. The Judicial Combat 39
  Chapter 5. Sheet Lightenings 50
  Chapter 6. Prophecies and Premonitions 58
  Chapter 7. Wrecked Hearts 65
Part II. The Regency of Normandy.
  Chapter 1. The States General 74
  Chapter 2. Etienne Marcel 77
  Chapter 3. The Man of the Furred Cap 83
  Chapter 4. The Serpent Under the Grass 97
  Chapter 5. Charles the Wicked 105
  Chapter 6. The Meeting at the Cordeliers 118
  Chapter 7. Popular Justice 126
  Chapter 8. "The Hour Has Sounded!" 143
Part III. The Jacquerie.
  Chapter 1. Captain Griffith and His Chaplain 154
  Chapter 2. The Fox's Burrow 161
  Chapter 3. The Castle of Chivry 175
  Chapter 4. Jacquerie! Jacquerie! 180
  Chapter 5. The Orville Bridge 191
  Chapter 6. "On to Clermont!" 207
  Chapter 7. Clermont 211
Part IV. John Maillart.
  Chapter 1. The Wages of Envy 228
  Chapter 2. Last Day at Home 239
  Chapter 3. Darkening Shadows 247
  Chapter 4. Plotters Uncovered 258
  Chapter 5. The Gate of St. Antoine 267
Epilogue 270


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