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Chapter XIII Les Miracles de Notre Dame (en) |
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Chapter II La Chanson de Roland (en) |
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Chapter VII Roses and Apses (en) |
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Mont Saint Michel and Chartres (1904) (en) |
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Henry_Adams
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Chapter IV Normandy and the Ile de France (en) |
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Chapter XVI Saint Thomas Aquinas (en) |
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Chapter XI The Three Queens (en) |
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Chapter V Towers and Portals (en) |
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Chapter I Saint Michiel de la Mer del Peril (en) |
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God, as Descartes justly said, we know! but what is man? The schools answered:— Man is a rational animal! So was apparently a dog, or a bee, or a beaver, none of which seemed to need churches. Modern science, with infinite effort, has discovered and announced that man is a bewildering complex of energies, which helps little to explain his relations with the ultimate Substance or Energy or Prime Motor whose existence both Science and Schoolmen admit; which Science studies in laboratories and Religion worships in churches. The Man whom God created to fill his Church, must be an energy independent of God; otherwise God filled his own Church with his own energy. (en) |
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Chapter X The Court of the Queen of Heaven (en) |
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Chapter XII Nicolette and Marion (en) |
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Chapter XV The Mystics (en) |
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Chapter III The Merveille (en) |
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Chapter XIV Abélard (en) |
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Chapter VI The Virgin of Chartres (en) |
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Chapter IX The Legendary Windows (en) |
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Chapter VIII The Twelfth Century Glass (en) |
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