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"
Is
the
Pantheon
far
?
"
"
A
mile
maybe
.
We
ve
got
time
.
"
"
The
poem
said
Santi
s
earthly
tomb
.
Does
that
mean
anything
to
you
?
"
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Langdon
hastened
diagonally
across
the
Courtyard
of
the
Sentinel
.
"
Earthly
?
Actually
,
there
s
probably
no
more
earthly
place
in
Rome
than
the
Pantheon
.
It
got
its
name
from
the
original
religion
practiced
there
Pantheism
the
worship
of
all
gods
,
specifically
the
pagan
gods
of
Mother
Earth
.
"
As
a
student
of
architecture
,
Langdon
had
been
amazed
to
learn
that
the
dimensions
of
the
Pantheon
s
main
chamber
were
a
tribute
to
Gaea
the
goddess
of
the
Earth
.
The
proportions
were
so
exact
that
a
giant
spherical
globe
could
fit
perfectly
inside
the
building
with
less
than
a
millimeter
to
spare
.
"
Okay
,
"
Vittoria
said
,
sounding
more
convinced
.
"
And
demon
s
hole
?
From
Santi
s
earthly
tomb
with
demon
s
hole
?
"
Langdon
was
not
quite
as
sure
about
this
.
"
Demon
s
hole
must
mean
the
oculus
,
"
he
said
,
making
a
logical
guess
.
"
The
famous
circular
opening
in
the
Pantheon
s
roof
.
"
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"
But
it
s
a
church
,
"
Vittoria
said
,
moving
effortlessly
beside
him
.
"
Why
would
they
call
the
opening
a
demon
s
hole
?
"
Langdon
had
actually
been
wondering
that
himself
.
He
had
never
heard
the
term
"
demon
s
hole
,
"
but
he
did
recall
a
famous
sixth
-
century
critique
of
the
Pantheon
whose
words
seemed
oddly
appropriate
now
.
The
Venerable
Bede
had
once
written
that
the
hole
in
the
Pantheon
s
roof
had
been
bored
by
demons
trying
to
escape
the
building
when
it
was
consecrated
by
Boniface
IV
.