<p><SPAN name="V1link2H_4_0005" id="V1link2H_4_0005"></SPAN></p>
<h1> BOOK I IN DOMREMY </h1>
<p><SPAN name="V1link2HCH0001" id="V1link2HCH0001"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter 1 When Wolves Ran Free in Paris </h2>
<p>I, THE SIEUR LOUIS DE CONTE, was born in Neufchateau, on the 6th of
January, 1410; that is to say, exactly two years before Joan of Arc was
born in Domremy. My family had fled to those distant regions from the
neighborhood of Paris in the first years of the century. In politics they
were Armagnacs—patriots; they were for our own French King, crazy
and impotent as he was. The Burgundian party, who were for the English,
had stripped them, and done it well. They took everything but my father's
small nobility, and when he reached Neufchateau he reached it in poverty
and with a broken spirit. But the political atmosphere there was the sort
he liked, and that was something. He came to a region of comparative
quiet; he left behind him a region peopled with furies, madmen, devils,
where slaughter was a daily pastime and no man's life safe for a moment.
In Paris, mobs roared through the streets nightly, sacking, burning,
killing, unmolested, uninterrupted. The sun rose upon wrecked and smoking
buildings, and upon mutilated corpses lying here, there, and yonder about
the streets, just as they fell, and stripped naked by thieves, the unholy
gleaners after the mob. None had the courage to gather these dead for
burial; they were left there to rot and create plagues.</p>
<p>And plagues they did create. Epidemics swept away the people like flies,
and the burials were conducted secretly and by night, for public funerals
were not allowed, lest the revelation of the magnitude of the plague's
work unman the people and plunge them into despair. Then came, finally,
the bitterest winter which had visited France in five hundred years.
Famine, pestilence, slaughter, ice, snow—Paris had all these at
once. The dead lay in heaps about the streets, and wolves entered the city
in daylight and devoured them.</p>
<p>Ah, France had fallen low—so low! For more than three quarters of a
century the English fangs had been bedded in her flesh, and so cowed had
her armies become by ceaseless rout and defeat that it was said and
accepted that the mere sight of an English army was sufficient to put a
French one to flight.</p>
<p>When I was five years old the prodigious disaster of Agincourt fell upon
France; and although the English King went home to enjoy his glory, he
left the country prostrate and a prey to roving bands of Free Companions
in the service of the Burgundian party, and one of these bands came
raiding through Neufchateau one night, and by the light of our burning
roof-thatch I saw all that were dear to me in this world (save an elder
brother, your ancestor, left behind with the court) butchered while they
begged for mercy, and heard the butchers laugh at their prayers and mimic
their pleadings. I was overlooked, and escaped without hurt. When the
savages were gone I crept out and cried the night away watching the
burning houses; and I was all alone, except for the company of the dead
and the wounded, for the rest had taken flight and hidden themselves.</p>
<p>I was sent to Domremy, to the priest, whose housekeeper became a loving
mother to me. The priest, in the course of time, taught me to read and
write, and he and I were the only persons in the village who possessed
this learning.</p>
<p>At the time that the house of this good priest, Guillaume Fronte, became
my home, I was six years old. We lived close by the village church, and
the small garden of Joan's parents was behind the church. As to that
family there were Jacques d'Arc the father, his wife Isabel Romee; three
sons—Jacques, ten years old, Pierre, eight, and Jean, seven; Joan,
four, and her baby sister Catherine, about a year old. I had these
children for playmates from the beginning. I had some other playmates
besides—particularly four boys: Pierre Morel, Etienne Roze, Noel
Rainguesson, and Edmond Aubrey, whose father was maire at that time; also
two girls, about Joan's age, who by and by became her favorites; one was
named Haumetter, the other was called Little Mengette. These girls were
common peasant children, like Joan herself. When they grew up, both
married common laborers. Their estate was lowly enough, you see; yet a
time came, many years after, when no passing stranger, howsoever great he
might be, failed to go and pay his reverence to those two humble old women
who had been honored in their youth by the friendship of Joan of Arc.</p>
<p>These were all good children, just of the ordinary peasant type; not
bright, of course—you would not expect that—but good-hearted
and companionable, obedient to their parents and the priest; and as they
grew up they became properly stocked with narrowness and prejudices got at
second hand from their elders, and adopted without reserve; and without
examination also—which goes without saying. Their religion was
inherited, their politics the same. John Huss and his sort might find
fault with the Church, in Domremy it disturbed nobody's faith; and when
the split came, when I was fourteen, and we had three Popes at once,
nobody in Domremy was worried about how to choose among them—the
Pope of Rome was the right one, a Pope outside of Rome was no Pope at all.
Every human creature in the village was an Armagnac—a patriot—and
if we children hotly hated nothing else in the world, we did certainly
hate the English and Burgundian name and polity in that way.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />