SAINT JOAN, by George Bernard Shaw. Joan, who
confronts the men condemning her at a hearing.
JOAN. Yes, they
told me you were fools and that I was not to listen to your fine words nor
trust to your charity. You promised me my life but you lied. You think that
life is nothing but not being stone dead. It is not the bread and water I fear:
bread has no sorrow for me, and water no affliction. But to shut me from the
light of the sky, and the sight of the fields and flowers, to chain my feet so
that I can never again ride with the soldiers nor climb the hills; to make me
breathe foul damp darkness, and keep me from everything that brings me back to
the love of God when your wickedness and foolishness tempt me to hate Him. All
this is worse than the furnace in the Bible that was heated seven times.
I could do without my
war horse, I could drag about in a skirt. I could let the banners and the
trumpets and the knights and soldiers pass me and leave me behind as they leave
the other women, if only I could still hear the wind in the trees, the larks in
the sunshine, the young lambs crying through the healthy frost, and the blessed
blessed church bells that send my angel voices floating to me on the wind.
But without these things
I cannot live; and by your wanting to take them away from me, or from any human
creature, I know that your counsel is of the devil, and that mine is of God.
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