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<h2> Chapter 7 Our Paladin in His Glory </h2>
<p>WE WERE doomed to suffer tedious waits and delays, and we settled
ourselves down to our fate and bore it with a dreary patience, counting
the slow hours and the dull days and hoping for a turn when God should
please to send it. The Paladin was the only exception—that is to
say, he was the only one who was happy and had no heavy times. This was
partly owing to the satisfaction he got out of his clothes. He bought them
at second hand—a Spanish cavalier's complete suit, wide-brimmed hat
with flowing plumes, lace collar and cuffs, faded velvet doublet and
trunks, short cloak hung from the shoulder, funnel-topped buskins, long
rapier, and all that—a graceful and picturesque costume, and the
Paladin's great frame was the right place to hang it for effect. He wore
it when off duty; and when he swaggered by with one hand resting on the
hilt of his rapier, and twirling his new mustache with the other,
everybody stopped to look and admire; and well they might, for he was a
fine and stately contrast to the small French gentlemen of the day
squeezed into the trivial French costume of the time.</p>
<p>He was king bee of the little village that snuggled under the shelter of
the frowning towers and bastions of Courdray Castle, and acknowledged lord
of the tap-room of the inn. When he opened his mouth there, he got a
hearing. Those simple artisans and peasants listened with deep and
wondering interest; for he was a traveler and had seen the world—all
of it that lay between Chinon and Domremy, at any rate—and that was
a wide stretch more of it than they might ever hope to see; and he had
been in battle, and knew how to paint its shock and struggle, its perils
and surprises, with an art that was all his own. He was cock of that walk,
hero of that hostelry; he drew custom as honey draws flies; so he was the
pet of the innkeeper, and of his wife and daughter, and they were his
obliged and willing servants.</p>
<p>Most people who have the narrative gift—that great and rare
endowment—have with it the defect of telling their choice things
over the same way every time, and this injures them and causes them to
sound stale and wearisome after several repetitions; but it was not so
with the Paladin, whose art was of a finer sort; it was more stirring and
interesting to hear him tell about a battle the tenth time than it was the
first time, because he did not tell it twice the same way, but always made
a new battle of it and a better one, with more casualties on the enemy's
side each time, and more general wreck and disaster all around, and more
widows and orphans and suffering in the neighborhood where it happened. He
could not tell his battles apart himself, except by their names; and by
the time he had told one of then ten times it had grown so that there
wasn't room enough in France for it any more, but was lapping over the
edges. But up to that point the audience would not allow him to substitute
a new battle, knowing that the old ones were the best, and sure to improve
as long as France could hold them; and so, instead of saying to him as
they would have said to another, "Give us something fresh, we are fatigued
with that old thing," they would say, with one voice and with a strong
interest, "Tell about the surprise at Beaulieu again—tell it three
or four times!" That is a compliment which few narrative experts have
heard in their lifetime.</p>
<p>At first when the Paladin heard us tell about the glories of the Royal
Audience he was broken-hearted because he was not taken with us to it;
next, his talk was full of what he would have done if he had been there;
and within two days he was telling what he did do when he was there. His
mill was fairly started, now, and could be trusted to take care of its
affair. Within three nights afterward all his battles were taking a rest,
for already his worshipers in the tap-room were so infatuated with the
great tale of the Royal Audience that they would have nothing else, and so
besotted with it were they that they would have cried if they could not
have gotten it.</p>
<p>Noel Rainguesson hid himself and heard it, and came and told me, and after
that we went together to listen, bribing the inn hostess to let us have
her little private parlor, where we could stand at the wickets in the door
and see and hear.</p>
<p>The tap-room was large, yet had a snug and cozy look, with its inviting
little tables and chairs scattered irregularly over its red brick floor,
and its great fire flaming and crackling in the wide chimney. It was a
comfortable place to be in on such chilly and blustering March nights as
these, and a goodly company had taken shelter there, and were sipping
their wine in contentment and gossiping one with another in a neighborly
way while they waited for the historian. The host, the hostess, and their
pretty daughter were flying here and there and yonder among the tables and
doing their best to keep up with the orders. The room was about forty feet
square, and a space or aisle down the center of it had been kept vacant
and reserved for the Paladin's needs. At the end of it was a platform ten
or twelve feet wide, with a big chair and a small table on it, and three
steps leading up to it.</p>
<p>Among the wine-sippers were many familiar faces: the cobbler, the farrier,
the blacksmith, the wheelwright, the armorer, the maltster, the weaver,
the baker, the miller's man with his dusty coat, and so on; and conscious
and important, as a matter of course, was the barber-surgeon, for he is
that in all villages. As he has to pull everybody's teeth and purge and
bleed all the grown people once a month to keep their health sound, he
knows everybody, and by constant contact with all sorts of folk becomes a
master of etiquette and manners and a conversationalist of large facility.
There were plenty of carriers, drovers, and their sort, and journeymen
artisans.</p>
<p>When the Paladin presently came sauntering indolently in, he was received
with a cheer, and the barber hustled forward and greeted him with several
low and most graceful and courtly bows, also taking his hand and touching
his lips to it. Then he called in a loud voice for a stoup of wine for the
Paladin, and when the host's daughter brought it up on the platform and
dropped her courtesy and departed, the barber called after her, and told
her to add the wine to his score. This won him ejaculations of approval,
which pleased him very much and made his little rat-eyes shine; and such
applause is right and proper, for when we do a liberal and gallant thing
it is but natural that we should wish to see notice taken of it.</p>
<p>The barber called upon the people to rise and drink the Paladin's health,
and they did it with alacrity and affectionate heartiness, clashing their
metal flagons together with a simultaneous crash, and heightening the
effect with a resounding cheer. It was a fine thing to see how that young
swashbuckler had made himself so popular in a strange land in so little a
while, and without other helps to his advancement than just his tongue and
the talent to use it given him by God—a talent which was but one
talent in the beginning, but was now become ten through husbandry and the
increment and usufruct that do naturally follow that and reward it as by a
law.</p>
<p>The people sat down and began to hammer on the tables with their flagons
and call for "the King's Audience!—the King's Audience!—the
King's Audience!" The Paladin stood there in one of his best attitudes,
with his plumed great hat tipped over to the left, the folds of his short
cloak drooping from his shoulder, and the one hand resting upon the hilt
of his rapier and the other lifting his beaker. As the noise died down he
made a stately sort of a bow, which he had picked up somewhere, then
fetched his beaker with a sweep to his lips and tilted his head back and
drained it to the bottom. The barber jumped for it and set it upon the
Paladin's table. Then the Paladin began to walk up and down his platform
with a great deal of dignity and quite at his ease; and as he walked he
talked, and every little while stopped and stood facing his house and so
standing continued his talk.</p>
<p>We went three nights in succession. It was plain that there was a charm
about the performance that was apart from the mere interest which attaches
to lying. It was presently discoverable that this charm lay in the
Paladin's sincerity. He was not lying consciously; he believed what he was
saying. To him, his initial statements were facts, and whenever he
enlarged a statement, the enlargement became a fact too. He put his heart
into his extravagant narrative, just as a poet puts his heart into a
heroic fiction, and his earnestness disarmed criticism—disarmed it
as far as he himself was concerned. Nobody believed his narrative, but all
believed that he believed it.</p>
<p>He made his enlargements without flourish, without emphasis, and so
casually that often one failed to notice that a change had been made. He
spoke of the governor of Vaucouleurs, the first night, simply as the
governor of Vaucouleurs; he spoke of him the second night as his uncle the
governor of Vaucouleurs; the third night he was his father. He did not
seem to know that he was making these extraordinary changes; they dropped
from his lips in a quite natural and effortless way. By his first night's
account the governor merely attached him to the Maid's military escort in
a general and unofficial way; the second night his uncle the governor sent
him with the Maid as lieutenant of her rear guard; the third night his
father the governor put the whole command, Maid and all, in his special
charge. The first night the governor spoke of him as a youth without name
or ancestry, but "destined to achieve both"; the second night his uncle
the governor spoke of him as the latest and worthiest lineal descendent of
the chiefest and noblest of the Twelve Paladins of Charlemagne; the third
night he spoke of him as the lineal descendent of the whole dozen. In
three nights he promoted the Count of Vendome from a fresh acquaintance to
a schoolmate, and then brother-in-law.</p>
<p>At the King's Audience everything grew, in the same way. First the four
silver trumpets were twelve, then thirty-five, finally ninety-six; and by
that time he had thrown in so many drums and cymbals that he had to
lengthen the hall from five hundred feet to nine hundred to accommodate
them. Under his hand the people present multiplied in the same large way.</p>
<p>The first two nights he contented himself with merely describing and
exaggerating the chief dramatic incident of the Audience, but the third
night he added illustration to description. He throned the barber in his
own high chair to represent the sham King; then he told how the Court
watched the Maid with intense interest and suppressed merriment, expecting
to see her fooled by the deception and get herself swept permanently out
of credit by the storm of scornful laughter which would follow. He worked
this scene up till he got his house in a burning fever of excitement and
anticipation, then came his climax. Turning to the barber, he said:</p>
<p>"But mark you what she did. She gazed steadfastly upon that sham's villain
face as I now gaze upon yours—this being her noble and simple
attitude, just as I stand now—then turned she—thus—to
me, and stretching her arm out—so—and pointing with her
finger, she said, in that firm, calm tone which she was used to use in
directing the conduct of a battle, 'Pluck me this false knave from the
throne!' I, striding forward as I do now, took him by the collar and
lifted him out and held him aloft—thus—as if he had been but a
child." (The house rose, shouting, stamping, and banging with their
flagons, and went fairly mad over this magnificent exhibition of strength—and
there was not the shadow of a laugh anywhere, though the spectacle of the
limp but proud barber hanging there in the air like a puppy held by the
scruff of its neck was a thing that had nothing of solemnity about it.)
"Then I set him down upon his feet—thus—being minded to get
him by a better hold and heave him out of the window, but she bid me
forbear, so by that error he escaped with his life.</p>
<p>"Then she turned her about and viewed the throng with those eyes of hers,
which are the clear-shining windows whence her immortal wisdom looketh out
upon the world, resolving its falsities and coming at the kernel of truth
that is hid within them, and presently they fell upon a young man modestly
clothed, and him she proclaimed for what he truly was, saying, 'I am thy
servant—thou art the King!' Then all were astonished, and a great
shout went up, the whole six thousand joining in it, so that the walls
rocked with the volume and the tumult of it."</p>
<p>He made a fine and picturesque thing of the march-out from the Audience,
augmenting the glories of it to the last limit of the impossibilities;
then he took from his finger and held up a brass nut from a bolt-head
which the head ostler at the castle had given him that morning, and made
his conclusion—thus:</p>
<p>"Then the King dismissed the Maid most graciously—as indeed was her
desert—and, turning to me, said, 'Take this signet-ring, son of the
Paladins, and command me with it in your day of need; and look you,' said
he, touching my temple, 'preserve this brain, France has use for it; and
look well to its casket also, for I foresee that it will be hooped with a
ducal coronet one day.' I took the ring, and knelt and kissed his hand,
saying, 'Sire, where glory calls, there will I be found; where danger and
death are thickest, that is my native air; when France and the throne need
help—well, I say nothing, for I am not of the talking sort—let
my deeds speak for me, it is all I ask.'</p>
<p>"So ended the most fortunate and memorable episode, so big with future
weal for the crown and the nation, and unto God be the thanks! Rise! Fill
your flagons! Now—to France and the King—drink!"</p>
<p>They emptied them to the bottom, then burst into cheers and huzzas, and
kept it up as much as two minutes, the Paladin standing at stately ease
the while and smiling benignantly from his platform.</p>
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