[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 XIV
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Wherefore they held that when Jeanne decked herself with masculine adornments, in order to appear before the men-at-arms as an angel giving victory to the Christian King, far from yielding to the vanities of the world, she, like Esther and Judith, had nothing in her heart but the interest of the holy nation and the glory of God.

The English and Burgundian clerks on the other hand converted into scandal what was a subject of edification, and maintained that she was a woman dissolute in dress and in manners.
[Footnote 1163: _Ibid._, vol.i, pp.

220, 253; vol.ii, pp.

294, 438.
_Relation du greffier de La Rochelle_, p.60.Analysis of a letter from Regnault de Chartres in Rogier (_Trial_, vol.v, pp.

168-169).
Martin le Franc, _Le champion des dames_, in _Trial_, vol.v, p.


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