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Mont Saint Michel and Chartres (1904) (en) |
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Chapter XIII Les Miracles de Notre Dame (en) |
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Chapter V Towers and Portals (en) |
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Chapter IX The Legendary Windows (en) |
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Chapter X The Court of the Queen of Heaven (en) |
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Chapter I Saint Michiel de la Mer del Peril (en) |
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Mary's treatment of respectable and law-abiding people who had no favors to ask, and were reasonably confident of getting to heaven by the regular judgment, without expense, rankled so deeply that three hundred years later the puritan reformers were not satisfied with abolishing her, but sought to abolish the woman altogether as the cause of all evil in heaven and on earth. The puritans abandoned the New Testament in order to go back to the beginning, and renew the quarrel with Eve. This is the Church's affair, not ours, and the women are competent to settle it with Church or State, without help from outside; but honest tourists are seriously interested in putting the feeling back into the dead architecture where it belongs. (en) |
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Chapter VII Roses and Apses (en) |
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Chapter II La Chanson de Roland (en) |
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Chapter IV Normandy and the Ile de France (en) |
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Chapter VI The Virgin of Chartres (en) |
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Chapter XII Nicolette and Marion (en) |
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Chapter III The Merveille (en) |
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Chapter VIII The Twelfth Century Glass (en) |
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Chapter XI The Three Queens (en) |
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Henry_Adams
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