登陆注册
20823600000002

第2章 FRANCE IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY.1412-(2)

When we add to these strange circumstances the facts that the French King,Charles VI.was mad,and incapable of any real share either in the internal government of his country or in resistance to its invader:that his only son,the Dauphin,was no more than a foolish boy,led by incompetent councillors,and even of doubtful legitimacy,regarded with hesitation and uncertainty by many,everybody being willing to believe the worst of his mother,especially after the treaty of Troyes in which she virtually gave him up:that the King's brothers or cousins at the head of their respective fiefs were all seeking their own advantage,and that some of them,especially the Duke of Burgundy,had cruel wrongs to avenge:it will be more easily understood that France had reached a period of depression and apparent despair which no principle of national elasticity or new spring of national impulse was present to amend.The extraordinary aspect of whole districts in so strong and populous a country,which disowned the native monarch,and of towns and castles innumerable which were held by the native nobility in the name of a foreign king,could scarcely have been possible under other circumstances.Everything was out of joint.It is said to be characteristic of the nation that it is unable to play publicly (as we say)a losing game;but it is equally characteristic of the race to forget its humiliations as if they had never been,and to come out intact when the fortune of war changes,more French than ever,almost unabashed and wholly uninjured,by the catastrophe which had seemed fatal.

If we had any right to theorise on such a subject--which is a thing the French themselves above all other men love to do,--we should be disposed to say,that wars and revolutions,legislation and politics,are things which go on over the head of France,so to speak--boilings on the surface,with which the great personality of the nation if such a word may be used,has little to do,and cares but little for;while she herself,the great race,neither giddy nor fickle,but unusually obstinate,tenacious,and sober,narrow even in the unwavering pursuit of a certain kind of well-being congenial to her--goes steadily on,less susceptible to temporary humiliation than many peoples much less excitable on the surface,and always coming back into sight when the commotion is over,acquisitive,money-making,profit-loving,uninjured in any essential particular by the most terrific of convulsions.This of course is to be said more or less of every country,the strain of common life being always,thank God,too strong for every temporary commotion--but it is true in a special way of France:--witness the extraordinary manner in which in our own time,and under our own eyes,that wonderful country righted herself after the tremendous misfortunes of the Franco-German war,in which for a moment not only her prestige,her honour,but her money and credit seemed to be lost.

It seems rather a paradox to point attention to the extraordinary tenacity of this basis of French character,the steady prudence and solidity which in the end always triumph over the light heart and light head,the excitability and often rash and dangerous /élan/,which are popularly supposed to be the chief distinguishing features of France--at the very moment of beginning such a fairy tale,such a wonderful embodiment of the visionary and ideal,as is the story of Jeanne d'Arc.To call it a fairy tale is,however,disrespectful:it is an angelic revelation,a vision made into flesh and blood,the dream of a woman's fancy,more ethereal,more impossible than that of any man--even a poet:--for the man,even in his most uncontrolled imaginations,carries with him a certain practical limitation of what can be--whereas the woman at her highest is absolute,and disregards all bounds of possibility.The Maid of Orleans,the Virgin of France,is the sole being of her kind who has ever attained full expression in this world.She can neither be classified,as her countrymen love to classify,nor traced to any system of evolution as we all attempt to do nowadays.She is the impossible verified and attained.She is the thing in every race,in every form of humanity,which the dreaming girl,the visionary maid,held in at every turn by innumerable restrictions,her feet bound,her actions restrained,not only by outward force,but by the law of her nature,more effectual still,--has desired to be.That voiceless poet,to whom what can be is nothing,but only what should be if miracle could be attained to fulfil her trance and rapture of desire--is held by no conditions,modified by no circumstances;and miracle is all around her,the most credible,the most real of powers,the very air she breathers.Jeanne of France is the very flower of this passion of the imagination.She is altogether impossible from beginning to end of her,inexplicable,alone,with neither rival nor even second in the one sole ineffable path:yet all true as one of the oaks in her wood,as one of the flowers in her garden,simple,actual,made of the flesh and blood which are common to us all.

And she is all the more real because it is France,impure,the country of light loves and immodest passions,where all that is sensual comes to the surface,and the courtesan is the queen of ignoble fancy,that has brought forth this most perfect embodiment of purity among the nations.This is of itself one of those miracles which captivate the mind and charm the imagination,the living paradox in which the soul delights.How did she come out of that stolid peasant race,out of that distracted and ignoble age,out of riot and license and the fierce thirst for gain,and failure of every noble faculty?Who can tell?By the grace of God,by the inspiration of heaven,the only origins in which the student of nature,which is over nature,can put any trust.No evolution,no system of development,can explain Jeanne.

同类推荐
  • The History of the Telephone

    The History of the Telephone

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 太上洞真安灶经

    太上洞真安灶经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 刘练江先生集

    刘练江先生集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 法华十罗刹法

    法华十罗刹法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 伤寒门

    伤寒门

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 我卖凶宅那些年

    我卖凶宅那些年

    卖了二十年的凶宅,说一说那些发生在我身上的离奇古怪的故事。
  • 曾国藩兵书

    曾国藩兵书

    《曾国藩兵书》:中国古代八大兵书。《曾国藩兵书》概括了作为清廷的忠言将领的曾国藩在治理军事方面的才能,整理出一些国藩疏奏、书信兵法思想、曾国藩治兵语录、曾国藩与《曾国藩兵书》等语段,对原书文字做了较详细、确切的注释和翻译,特别以“评析”的形式对原文所揭示的深刻智慧做了深入浅出又切合要旨的阐释,以期帮助读者更好地理解曾国藩的带兵之道。
  • 倾世狂妻:冷面尸王狠狠爱

    倾世狂妻:冷面尸王狠狠爱

    她,死了爹没了娘,爱钱如命、自恋自大、吹牛大王、贪生怕死、爱心“多多”、痞气十足,酷爱美男他,冷漠无情,嗜血任性,却是世界第一杀手,唯有她吃他死死的他,温柔迷人,爱心足足,轻功第一。他,妖媚四射,一笑迷倒一片,却是睡神,,唯恐天下不乱。他,帅气迷人,拥有和混血儿一般的面貌,却是制毒世家。他们普通的生活,因为多了一个她而光彩!中彩票得了意外之财,高兴而死。死后不甘心。要求重生,也要花玩那100万谁知条件既然是让那四个僵尸爱上自己,尼玛啊!新婚之夜,招到”相公不待见,tmm姐姐惹不起,还躲不起吗溜姐姐有选择恐惧症,四选一。还不被剩下的三个分分钟秒杀掉。
  • THE FORGED COUPON

    THE FORGED COUPON

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 廉明公案

    廉明公案

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 心若海川

    心若海川

    女主:霸道……你就省省吧阴郁……你换个人狂躁……跟我无关男主:那就这样吧,谁要我独宠卿呢?!
  • 茗语话龙

    茗语话龙

    这是一段神奇的英雄养成故事(误),一个连名字都被赋予神圣使命的少年,在死去的(划掉)姥爷的引导下,该如何拯救这个即将被魔化的世界,最终过上幸(基)福(友)美(遍)满(地),快(妻)乐(妾)安(满)宁(堂)的生活?
  • 《易经》64个人生智慧

    《易经》64个人生智慧

    本书的主旨,叫“《易经》给人的64个生活智慧”,这表明,《易经》没有那么神秘,它是科学的,它就在我们的身边,我们每天的生活起居,工作事业,健康幸福,都受这64个哲理的左右。我们以什么科学的态度对待这64个哲理,就形成了64个感悟,64个感悟回答了人生的64个怎么办。 本书所写的指引人生的64个感悟既环环相扣又相互渗透,涉及每个年龄阶段的人生疑难问题,旁征博引地把《易经》的精髓真实而又生动地与现实生活密切联系起来。
  • 为他准备的谋杀

    为他准备的谋杀

    欧阳楠一夜之间失去了自己的警察工作,同时也收到妻子与父母一同葬身雪崩之中的噩耗。他的妻子遗体被发现时,正怀着几个月的身孕,而孩子的父亲却是欧阳楠的双胞胎哥欧阳桐。在失去一切的打击之下,欧阳楠打算亲手杀死哥哥来发泄多年以来的怨恨。这场几乎是事先张扬的谋杀,在欧阳楠悉心准备下如期进行。欧阳桐葬身爆炸之中,而欧阳楠也被关押审问。在审问过程中,欧阳楠却惊异的发现,杀死哥哥的并不是那场爆炸,有人赶在他之前就对他哥哥下了杀手。而那真正致命的武器匕首,也顺理成章的被栽赃到了欧阳楠的家中。为了找到真相,欧阳楠不得不想办法在入狱前脱逃。他与哥哥的遗孀陈洁一起寻找真相的过程中,却发现事情并没有想象的那么简单……
  • 关佩文灵异系列之倩女幽魂

    关佩文灵异系列之倩女幽魂

    你遇到过鬼吗?你跟鬼谈过恋爱吗?如果没有,可以看这部中篇小说,中国现代版的人鬼情未了