[The Life of Joan of Arc, Vol. 1 and 2 (of 2) by Anatole France]@TWC D-Link book
The Life of Joan of Arc, Vol. 1 and 2 (of 2)

CHAPTER XII
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41 _et seq._ _Mistere du siege_, lines 11,480 _et seq._ _Chronique de l'etablissement de la fete_, in _Trial_, vol.v, p.
289.] [Footnote 923: _Journal du siege_, p.75._Chronique de la Pucelle_, p.

283.] [Illustration: PLAN D'ORLEANS Siege de 1429] Meanwhile the Maid had only just perceived that she was on the Sologne bank,[924] and that she had been deceived concerning the line of march.

Sorrow and wrath possessed her.

She had been misled, that was certain.

But had it been done on purpose?
Had they really intended to deceive her?
It is said that she had expressed a wish to go through La Beauce and not through La Sologne, and that she had received the answer: "Jeanne, be reassured; we will take you through La Beauce."[925] Is it possible?
Why should the barons have thus trifled with the holy damsel, whom the King had confided to their care, and who already inspired most of them with respect?
Certain of them, it is true, believing her not to be in earnest, would willingly have turned her to ridicule; but if one of them had played her the trick of representing La Beauce as La Sologne, how was it there was no one to undeceive her?
How could Brother Pasquerel, her chaplain, her steward, and the honest squire d'Aulon, have become the accomplices of so clumsy a jest?
It is all very mysterious, and, when one comes to think of it, what is most mysterious is that Jeanne should have expressly asked to go to Orleans through La Beauce.


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