Summary Charles the Dauphin and his court are at the
central French town of Chinon. As the scene begins, four courtiers-Georges, Duc
de la Trémouille, the Lord Chamberlain (the most important official in a royal
household and counselor to the monarch); Regnault de Chartres, the Archbishop
of Rheims (where the cathedral in which all French kings have been crowned is
located); Captain Gilles de Rais, or "Bluebeard" for the "extravagance of a
little curled beard dyed blue" which he sports, an aristocrat and military
commander; and another commander, Captain La Hire-are discussing the accidental
drowning of a solider whose death Joan supposedly prophesied because he was
swearing. The Dauphin enters, interrupting the conversation, excited about the
news he has received that Baudricourt is sending Joan to him: "[H]e is sending
a saint: an angel. And she is coming to me. She knows the blood royal." Archbishop
de Chartres protests that Charles cannot have an audience with Joan: "This
creature is not a saint. She is not even a respectable woman." La Hire proposes
finding out what Joan is by testing her: when she arrives, Gilles de Rais will
impersonate the Dauphin. If she can see through the deception, she will be
permitted to speak to Charles. All agree to the plan, though for different
reasons. Charles, for instance, wants to know that Joan can, in fact, detect
the royal blood in him; De Chartres, on the other hand-who knows full well
that, because the Dauphin's physical description is common knowledge, Joan will
be able to reject Gilles de Rais as an impostor-hopes that her "miracle" of
detection will "confirm or create faith."
Joan, of course, does recognize that La Hire is not the
Dauphin, and she is quickly introduced to Charles. They speak privately. Joan
urges a reluctant Charles to accept his destiny: "[T]hou must face what God
puts on thee." Charles is loath to engage his enemies in combat, for "one good
treaty is worth ten good fights." Joan insists, however, that it cannot be
France's English invaders who are allowed to set the terms of any treaties.
Charles further protests that he does not want to be king. Joan at last
"tempts" him (Shaw's word in the stage directions) by outlining for him her
vision of a united France at peace. Charles calls his court back into session
and announces that he has given command of his army to Joan-an announcement
that sits well with neither La Trémouille nor De Chartres.
Analysis Scene II raises the question of how much
Joan is actually commanding the situation around her, and how much others are
using her to advance their own agenda. As did Baudricourt and Polly in Scene I,
the character in this scene recognize that supporting Joan's crusade is a
pragmatic, common sense decision. General Jack Dunois-the so-called "Bastard of
Orleans" because he was the natural son of Louis, Duke of Orleans, Charles'
father whom the Burgundians had assassinated-has been unable to take his troops
across the Loire River to attack the English because the wind has been blowing
against him; therefore, the characters ask, might not Joan, for all her talk of
saints and angels and visions, be able to do some good? The tone of Scene II,
however, is quite different. Whereas Polly seemingly expressed a genuine hope,
the outlook expressed here is more marked by cynicism and weariness. Consider,
for instance, La Trémouille's line: "Oh, let them have their way. Dunois' men
will give up the town in spite of him if somebody does not put some fresh spunk
into them." Also note how Archbishop de Chartres moves quickly from summary
dismissal of Joan and her claims to a posture of asserting ecclesiastical
authority over her: "The Church must examine the girl before anything is done
about her." La Trémouille and De Chartres' conversation about Joan and
miracles, in fact, emphasizes the degree to which Joan is vulnerable to being
manipulated by others: the Archbishop views her as a potential "miracle," not
in any supernatural sense, but as "an event which creates faith," even if the
supposedly "miraculous" aspects can be rationally accounted for. Notice also
how the Archbishop, who scoffed at the idea that Joan prophesied "Foul Mouthed
Frank"'s death, then makes a similar prophecy of his own regarding De Rais,
invoking Joan's authority with the soldiers as his own. In these and other
ways, Scene II dramatizes the claim Shaw made in the preface: that Joan, for
all her energy and positive action, was always at the mercy of institutional
and social forces larger than she understood.
Joan adopts an almost maternal attitude toward Charles in
Scene II: she calls him the diminutive and intimate "Charlie," for example, and
she calls him a "poor child" whom she will have to teach to pray. Yet she also
seems childlike, especially in her attitude of absolute and immediate
subjection toward De Chartres: "Oh, my lord, you have given me such strength,
such courage. It must be a most wonderful thing to be Archbishop." This
tension, too, dramatizes statements Shaw has made about Joan in the preface,
and illustrates the paradoxical nature of her character.
This scene reinforces the preface in a further manner. De
Chartres recognizes that "a new spirit [is] rising" in the age. "We are at the
dawning of a wider epoch," he states-an epoch, readers can infer, in which
rationalism will carry the day away from religion. As a result, the Archbishop
acts with great pragmatism (as his discussion of "miracles," referenced above,
demonstrates). Not only does the Archbishop's recognition of what we could call
a new zeitgeist illustrate Shaw's depiction of Joan as a
proto-Protestant and -Nationalist, it also is one example of his practice of
having his characters say "what they would have said" if they fully understood
their own actions and socio-cultural setting.
In both his stage directions and in the exchange of dialogue
between De Rais and the Archbishop about his destiny on the gallows, Shaw is
alluding to the fact that the historical De Rais is considered a forerunner of
the modern "serial killer." For the murder of several young victims, de Rais
was hanged; although he suffered this temporal capital punishment, he avoided
the spiritual fate of excommunication by voluntary confession. Shaw does not
fully develop the parallels he sees, if any, between Joan's trial and de Rais',
likely because most academic historians today do not dispute de Rais' crimes
(although some conspiracy theories persist, claiming that de Rais was framed).
It is interesting, however, that both Joan and de Rais found themselves tried
and executed, and that the one who died in the good graces of the Church-de
Rais-was, history has shown, the true criminal, as opposed to Joan, who died a
"relapsed heretic."
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