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qkg:Mention
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Chapter VII Roses and Apses (en) |
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Chapter VI The Virgin of Chartres (en) |
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Chapter II La Chanson de Roland (en) |
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Chapter III The Merveille (en) |
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The convulsive hold which Mary to this day maintains over human imagination,— as you can see at Lourdes,— was due much less to her power of saving soul or body than to her sympathy with people who suffered under law,— divine or human,— justly or unjustly, by accident or design, by decree of God or by guile of Devil. She cared not a straw for conventional morality, and she had no notion of letting her friends be punished, to the tenth or any other generation, for the sins of their ancestors or the peccadillos of Eve. (en) |
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Chapter I Saint Michiel de la Mer del Peril (en) |
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Chapter XIII Les Miracles de Notre Dame (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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Chapter VIII The Twelfth Century Glass (en) |
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Chapter V Towers and Portals (en) |
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Chapter IV Normandy and the Ile de France (en) |
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Mont Saint Michel and Chartres (1904) (en) |
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Chapter XII Nicolette and Marion (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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