Spoken words
Jeanne d'Arc - Joan of Arc (1412-1431)

Quote:
Jeanne encouraging her troops:
"In God's name, we must fight them! Even if the English hang from the clouds, yet we shall have them! For God sends us to punish them. Today the gentle Dauphin will have the greatest victory he has won for a long time! My Voices have told me that the enemy will be ours."

At Vaucoleurs
Asked about her mission she replied:
"...I was born for this."
"Neverthaeless, before mid-Lent, I must be with the Dauphin, even if I have to wear my legs down to my knees!"

Asked who her Lord was, she replied:
"He is the King of Heaven!"
"For even if I had had a hundred fathers and mothers and were a king's daughter, still would I go!"

Asked when she would like to leave: "Today rather than tomorrow and tomorrow rather than later."

Asked if she was afraid:
"I fear nothing for God is with me!"

At Chinon
Jeanne's greeting to Charles at Chinon:
"Gentle Dauphin, my name is Jeanne la pucelle.
The King of Heaven has sent me to bring you and your kingdom help."

At Poitiers
Asked by the priests why God needed soldiers:
"In the name of God! The soldiers will fight and God will give the victory!""In the name of God! I have not come to Poitiers to give signs but take me to Orleans and I shall show you signs for which I have been sent!"

Asked what language her Voices spoke: "They speak better French than you!"

Asked if she believe in God: "Indeed, yes, better than you do!"

Jeanne reassured the Duke d' Alençon's wife, Thérèse, that her husband would not be killed or injured if he returned to the fight. "I give you my solemn word that no harm will come to your beloved husband. Madame, have no fear! He shall indeed return to you. As well as he is now, or perhaps even better!"

At Orleans
In the assault on the English fortress of the Augustines
"In god's name! Let us go bravely!"
In the assault on the bridge at Orleans
"Courage! Do not fall back; in a little the place will be yours. Watch! When the wind blows my banner against the bulwark, you shall take it"
Jeanne's reprimand to Dunois, the Bastard of Orléans:
"In God's name! The counsel of our Lord is wiser and safer than yours. You have thought to deceive me but it is you who are deceived. I bring you better help than has ever come to any general or town, for the help I bring comes from the King of Heaven!""Bastard! Bastard! In God's name! I command you that as soon as you learn of Falstaff's arrival that you will inform me. For if he passes by without my knowledge, I promise you that I shall have your head cut off!"

Jeanne's reprimand to her page:
"Ah, you bloody boy, you did not tell me that the blood of France was being shed!""Ha! Never did I see French blood flow but my hair did not stand on end!""Gaucourt, you are indeed a wicked man to prevent these people from departing. Whether you will or no, they shall go out and will succeed just as well as they did the other day!"

Jeanne's reply to the Captain's request not to fight the next day: "Go back to that council and tell them this! You have been to your council and I have been to mine. Now, believe me when I say that the Counsel of God will be accomplished and succeed and that yours will fail!"

Jeanne's refusal to use a charm to heal her wound: "No friend, I cannot. I would rather die than do a thing which I know to be a sin."

Jeanne encouraging her troops: "Be not afraid! The English will have no more power over you."

Jeanne request for surrender to the English commander Glasdale: "Classidas! Classidas! Yield, yield to the King of Heaven! You called me harlot, but I have great pity on your soul and for the souls of your men."

At Loches
"I shall last a year and a little more."

" 'Daughter of God, go on, go on, go on! I will be your help. Go on!' When I hear this voice, I feel such great joy that I wish I could always hear it!"

Before the battle of Patay
Jeanne encouraging her troops: "In God's name, we must fight them! Even if the English hang from the clouds, yet we shall have them! For God sends us to punish them. Today the gentle Dauphin will have the greatest victory he has won for a long time! My Voices have told me that the enemy will be ours."

At the town of Troyes
Jeanne addresses Brother Richard: "Take heart and come on! I will not fly away."

At the town of Chalons
Jeanne speaking to a friend from Domremy: "I fear nothing, except treason."

At the town of Bourges
Jeanne speaking to Madame Touroulde: "You touch them!" (meaning the religious items that some people brought for Jeanne to bless by her touch) "Your touch will do them as much good as mine."

Before the walls of Saint Pirre-Les-Moutiers
Jeanne addressing to her squire: "I am not alone! I have fifty thousand of my own company to fight with me!"

Compiegne
"By my staff! We are enough! I shall go to see my good friends in Compiegne!"

Reply to the Count of Luxembourg
The Count tried to tempt Jeanne with an offer of freedom. "In God's name, Count, you mock me! Ransom? How you jest. You have neither the will nor the power to do so! "

"I know well that these English will put me to death, because they think that after I'm dead, they will win the Kingdom of France. But even if there were hundred thousand more Godons than there are now, still they will never have the Kingdom!"

Reply to the ecclesiastical judges of Rouen
"It is true that I have wished to escape and I still do! It is lawful for any prisoner to try to escape if he can."

"I came from God. There is nothing more for me to do here! Send me back to God, from Whom I came!"

Asked if she was in God's grace: "If I am not, may God put me there, and if I am, may God so keep me! I should be the saddest creature in the world if I knew I was not in His grace."
Jeanne's warning to Bishop Cauchon: "You say that you are my judge. I do not know if you are! But I tell you that you must take good care not to judge me wrongly, because you will put yourself in great danger. I warn you, so that if God punishes you for it, I would have done my duty by telling you!"

Asked why her standard had a place of honor at the coronation: "It had borne the burden; it was only right that it should have the honor."

Asked if she told her troops that copies of her pennant would be luck, she replied: "What I said was: 'Go boldly among the English,' and I went among them, too!"

"The poor folk gladly came to me, for I did them no unkindness, but helped them as much as I could."

"Everything I have said or done is in the hands of God. I commit myself to Him! I certify to you that I would do or say nothing against the Christian faith."

"Ha! You take great care to put down in your trial everything that is against me, but you will not write down anything that is for me!"

"I am a good Christian, properly baptized and I will die.., a good Christian."

Asked if God hated the English: "Of the love or hate God may have for the English I know nothing, but I know well that they will all be driven out of France, except those who will die here."

Asked why she refused to do woman's work: "There are plenty of other women to do it."

Asked how she summoned her voices: "Most sweet Lord, in honor of Your Holy Passion, I implore You, if You love me, to instruct me in what I am to say to these churchmen. As regards to my clothes, I fully understand the order by which I accepted them, but I do not know how I am to set them aside. In this, may it please You to teach me."

Jeanne's reply to the threat of torture: "Truly, if you were to tear me limb from limb and separate my soul from my body, I would not say anything more. If I did say anything, afterwards I would always declare that you made me say it by force!"

"And if I were condemned and brought to the place of judgment and I saw the torch lit and the faggots ready, and the executioner ready to kindle the fire, and if I were within the fire, yet I would say nothing else and I would maintain unto death what I have said in this trial!"

"Through His Saints, God informed me of His great sorrow for the treason that I had committed by signing the abjuration. To save my life I betrayed Him and in so doing I damned myself!"( In the margin of his paper the court notary wrote: "Responsio Mortifera" which means, "fatal answer.")

"My Voices have since told me that I did a great evil in declaring that what I had done was wrong. All that I said and revoked that Thursday, I did for fear of the fire!"

Is informed of her inpending death
"Alas! Am I to be so horribly and cruelly treated? Alas! That my body, clean and whole, which has never been corrupted, should this day be consumed and burned to ashes! Ah! I would far rather have my head chopped off seven times over, than to be burned!"

"Alas! Had I been in the Church prison, to which I submitted myself, and been guarded by the Clergy instead of my enemies, as I was promised, this misfortune would not have come to me! Ah! I appeal to God, the Great Judge, for the great injuries done to me!"

"Bishop, I die because of you!"

(Bishop Cauchon strongly protested his guilt.) Jeanne replied: "If you had placed me in the Church's prison and gave me into the hands of competent and suitable Church guardians, this would not have happened. That is why I appeal to God for justice against you!"

Last words
"Rouen! Rouen! Must I die here? Ah, Rouen, I fear you will have to suffer for my death!"

"I ask you priests of God, to please say a Mass for my soul's salvation.
I beg all of you standing here to forgive me the harm that I may have done you. Please pray for me."

As soon as Jeanne noticed that the fire had been lit she urgently warned Brother Martin: "Good Brother Martin, I thank you for comforting me, but you must leave this place.., now."

"My Voices did come from God and everything that I have done was by God's order."

"Hold the crucifix up before my eyes so I may see it until I die."

"Jesus, Jesus, Jesus!"


The exclamation of the English soldier: "God forgive us: we have burned a saint,"

The constable de Richemont reportedly greeted Jeanne with these realistic warrior-wise words: "Jehanne, ... If you come from God, I do not fear you ... if you come from the Devil, I fear you even less." He went on to serve at her side in the victory at Patay (18 June 1429).

Jeanne was always reluctant to speak of her voices. She said nothing about them to her confessor, and constantly refused, at her trial, to be inveigled into descriptions of the appearance of the saints and to explain how she recognized them. None the less, she told her judges:

"I saw them with these very eyes, as well as I see you."

May, 1428, she no longer doubted that she was bidden to go to the help of the king, and the voices became insistent, urging her to present herself to Robert Baudricourt, who commanded for Charles VII in the neighbouring town of Vaucouleurs. This journey she eventually accomplished a month later, but Baudricourt, a rude and dissolute soldier, treated her and her mission with scant respect, saying to the cousin who accompanied her:

"Take her home to her father and give her a good whipping."

Orléans was invested (12 October, 1428), and by the close of the year complete defeat seemed imminent. Jeanne's voices became urgent, and even threatening. It was in vain that she resisted, saying to them:

"I am a poor girl; I do not know how to ride or fight." The voices only reiterated: "It is God who commands it." Yielding at last, she left Domremy in January, 1429, and again visited Vaucouleurs.

Credits: Virginia Frohlick. Saint Joan of Arc Center