Saint Joan

by

George Bernard Shaw

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Scene 1 Quotes

“We want a few mad people now. See where the sane ones have landed us!”

Related Characters: Bertrand de Poulengey (speaker), Joan (“The Maid”), Robert de Baudricourt, Jean, Comte de Dunois, Bastard of Orleans
Page Number: 67
Explanation and Analysis:

ROBERT. How do you mean? voices?

JOAN. I hear voices telling me what to do. They come from God.

ROBERT. They come from your imagination.

JOAN. Of course. That is how the messages of God come to us.

Related Characters: Joan (“The Maid”) (speaker), Robert de Baudricourt (speaker)
Related Symbols: Joan’s Armor
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number: 68
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 2 Quotes

“A miracle, my friend, is an event which creates faith. That is the purpose and nature of miracles. They may seem very wonderful to the people who witness them, and very simple to those who perform them. That does not matter: if they confirm or create faith they are true miracles.”

Related Characters: The Archbishop of Rheims (Regnault de Chartres) (speaker), Joan (“The Maid”), Georges, Duc de la Trémouille, Constable of France, Gilles de Rais (“Bluebeard”), The Dauphin (King Charles VII)
Page Number: 79
Explanation and Analysis:

“You are not a churchman; but you are a diplomatist and a soldier. Could you make our citizens pay war taxes, or our soldiers sacrifice their lives, if they knew what is really happening instead of what seems to them to be happening?”

Related Characters: The Archbishop of Rheims (Regnault de Chartres) (speaker), Joan (“The Maid”), Georges, Duc de la Trémouille, Constable of France, Gilles de Rais (“Bluebeard”), The Dauphin (King Charles VII)
Page Number: 79
Explanation and Analysis:

“Do not think that I am a lover of crooked ways. There is a new spirit rising in men: we are at the dawning of a wider epoch. If I were a simple monk, and had not to rule men, I should seek peace for my spirit with Aristotle and Pythagoras rather than with the saints and their miracles.”

Related Characters: The Archbishop of Rheims (Regnault de Chartres) (speaker), Joan (“The Maid”), Georges, Duc de la Trémouille, Constable of France, Gilles de Rais (“Bluebeard”), The Dauphin (King Charles VII)
Page Number: 80
Explanation and Analysis:

“Minding your own business is like minding your own body: it’s the shortest way to make yourself sick.”

Related Characters: Joan (“The Maid”) (speaker), Gilles de Rais (“Bluebeard”), The Dauphin (King Charles VII)
Page Number: 86
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 3 Quotes

“I will not look back to see whether anyone is following me.”

Related Characters: Joan (“The Maid”) (speaker), Jean, Comte de Dunois, Bastard of Orleans
Page Number: 91
Explanation and Analysis:

DUNOIS. I, God forgive me, am a little in love with war myself, the ugly devil! I am like a man with two wives. Do you want to be like a woman with two husbands?

JOAN. [matter-of-fact] I will never take a husband. A man in Toul took action against me for breach of promise; but I never promised him. I am a soldier: I do not want to be thought of as a woman. I will not dress as a woman. I do not care for the things women care for. They dream of lovers, and money. I dream of leading a charge, and of placing the big guns.

Related Characters: Joan (“The Maid”) (speaker), Jean, Comte de Dunois, Bastard of Orleans
Related Symbols: Joan’s Armor
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number: 92
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 4 Quotes

“Men cannot serve two masters. If this cant of serving their country once takes hold of them, goodbye to the authority of their feudal lords, and goodbye to the authority of the Church. That is, goodbye to you and me.”

Related Characters: Richard de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick (speaker), Joan (“The Maid”), John Bowyer Spenser Neville de Stogumber (Warwick’s Chaplain), Peter (Píerre) Cauchon, Bishop of Beauvais
Page Number: 96
Explanation and Analysis:

“When he strikes, he strikes at the Catholic Church, whose realm is the whole spiritual world. When he damns, he damns the souls of the entire human race. Against that dreadful design The Church stands ever on guard. And it is as one of the instruments of that design that I see this girl. She is inspired, but diabolically inspired.”

Related Characters: Peter (Píerre) Cauchon, Bishop of Beauvais (speaker), Joan (“The Maid”), Richard de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, John Bowyer Spenser Neville de Stogumber (Warwick’s Chaplain)
Page Number: 100
Explanation and Analysis:

“You great lords are too prone to treat The Church as a mere political convenience.”

Related Characters: Peter (Píerre) Cauchon, Bishop of Beauvais (speaker), Joan (“The Maid”), Richard de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, John Bowyer Spenser Neville de Stogumber (Warwick’s Chaplain)
Page Number: 101
Explanation and Analysis:

“She acts as if she herself were The Church. She brings the message of God to Charles; and The Church must stand aside. She will crown him in the cathedral of Rheims: she, not The Church! She sends letters to the king of England giving him God’s command through her to return to his island on pain of God’s vengeance, which she will execute. […] Has she ever in all her utterances said one word of The Church? Never. It is always God and herself.”

Related Characters: Peter (Píerre) Cauchon, Bishop of Beauvais (speaker), Joan (“The Maid”), Richard de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, John Bowyer Spenser Neville de Stogumber (Warwick’s Chaplain)
Page Number: 103
Explanation and Analysis:

“My lord: we shall not defeat The Maid if we strive against one another. […] The devil divides us and governs. I see you are no friend to The Church: you are an earl first and last, as I am a churchman first and last. But can we not sink our differences in the face of a common enemy?”

Related Characters: Peter (Píerre) Cauchon, Bishop of Beauvais (speaker), Joan (“The Maid”), Richard de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, John Bowyer Spenser Neville de Stogumber (Warwick’s Chaplain)
Page Number: 106-107
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 5 Quotes

“Well, I have to find reasons for you, because you do not believe in my voices. But the voices come first; and I find the reasons after: whatever you may choose to believe.”

Related Characters: Joan (“The Maid”) (speaker), The Dauphin (King Charles VII), Jean, Comte de Dunois, Bastard of Orleans
Page Number: 111
Explanation and Analysis:

“You came clothed with the virtue of humility; and because God blessed your enterprises accordingly, you have stained yourself with the sin of pride. The old Greek tragedy is rising among us. It is the chastisement of hubris.”

Related Characters: The Archbishop of Rheims (Regnault de Chartres) (speaker), Joan (“The Maid”), The Dauphin (King Charles VII)
Page Number: 113
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 6 Quotes

“You must not fall into the common error of mistaking these simpletons for liars and hypocrites. They believe honestly and sincerely that their diabolical inspiration is divine. Therefore you must be on guard against your natural compassion. […] You are going to see before you a young girl, pious and chaste; for I must tell you, gentlemen, that the things said of her by our English friends are supported by no evidence, whilst there is abundant testimony that her excesses have been excesses of religion and charity and not of worldliness and wantonness. This girl is not one of those whose hard features are the sign of hard hearts, and whose brazen looks and lewd demeanor condemn them before they are accused. The devilish pride that has led her into her present peril had left no mark on her countenance. Strange as it may seem to you, it has even left no mark on her character outside those special matters in which she is proud; so that you will see a diabolical pride and a natural humility seated side by side in the selfsame soul.”

Related Characters: Brother John Lemaître (The Inquisitor) (speaker), Joan (“The Maid”), Robert de Baudricourt, The Archbishop of Rheims (Regnault de Chartres), Peter (Píerre) Cauchon, Bishop of Beauvais
Page Number: 129
Explanation and Analysis:

“What other judgment can I judge by but my own?”

Related Characters: Joan (“The Maid”) (speaker), Peter (Píerre) Cauchon, Bishop of Beauvais
Page Number: 136
Explanation and Analysis:

“There is great wisdom in the simplicity of a beast, let me tell you; and sometimes great foolishness in the wisdom of scholars.”

Related Characters: Joan (“The Maid”) (speaker), Brother John Lemaître (The Inquisitor)
Page Number: 139
Explanation and Analysis:

“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 warhorse; 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.”

Related Characters: Joan (“The Maid”) (speaker), Brother John Lemaître (The Inquisitor)
Related Symbols: Nature, Joan’s Armor
Page Number: 143
Explanation and Analysis:

“One gets used to it. Habit is everything. I am accustomed to the fire; it is soon over.”

Related Characters: Brother John Lemaître (The Inquisitor) (speaker), Joan (“The Maid”), Peter (Píerre) Cauchon, Bishop of Beauvais
Page Number: 145
Explanation and Analysis:
Epilogue Quotes

“I was always a rough one: a regular soldier. I might almost as well have been a man. Pity I wasn’t: I should not have bothered you all so much then.”

Related Characters: Joan (“The Maid”) (speaker), The Dauphin (King Charles VII), Jean, Comte de Dunois, Bastard of Orleans
Page Number: 153
Explanation and Analysis:

“It is the memory and the salvation that sanctify the cross, not the cross that sanctifies the memory and the salvation.”

Related Characters: Joan (“The Maid”) (speaker), The Dauphin (King Charles VII)
Page Number: 154
Explanation and Analysis:

“Yes: it is always you good men that do the big mischiefs.”

Related Characters: The Dauphin (King Charles VII) (speaker), Joan (“The Maid”), Peter (Píerre) Cauchon, Bishop of Beauvais
Page Number: 155
Explanation and Analysis:

“The heretic is always better dead. And mortal eyes cannot distinguish the saint from the heretic. Spare them.”

Related Characters: Peter (Píerre) Cauchon, Bishop of Beauvais (speaker), Joan (“The Maid”)
Page Number: 163
Explanation and Analysis:

“O God that madest this beautiful earth, when will it be ready to receive Thy saints? How long, O Lord, how long?”

Related Characters: Joan (“The Maid”) (speaker)
Page Number: 164
Explanation and Analysis:
No matches.