Chapter

1   III| countenance well becomes this splendour. It is a mild, gentle, radiant
2   III|  devising some new pageant of splendour, excellence, and originality
3    IV|      name.[Pg 84]~ ~"Pomp and splendour, flowers and curtains adorned
4    IV|    suffered to cover all this splendour. Yet lest the cold surface
5   VII|    was enraptured by all this splendour.~ ~He had made up his mind
6    IX|       eclipsed by the[Pg 197] splendour which radiated from the
7    IX| tremulous pomp and obsequious splendour. Then he raised his hand
8    XI|      all live together in the splendour of Paradise where every
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