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==In fiction== *''Louis IX'', play by [[Jacques-François Ancelot]], 1819 *Davis, William Stearns, ''"Falaise of the Blessed Voice"'' aka ''"The White Queen"''. New York: Macmillan, 1904 *[[Peter Berling]], ''[[The Children of the Grail]]'' *[[Jules Verne]], "To the Sun?/Off on a Comet!" A comet takes several bits of the Earth away when it grazes the Earth. Some people, taken up at the same time, find the Tomb of Saint Louis is one of the bits, as they explore the comet. *[[Adam Gidwitz]], ''The Inquisitor's Tale'' *[[Dante Alighieri]], ''[[Divina Commedia]].'' It is likely that Dante hides the figure of the Saint King behind the Veltro, the Messo di Dio, the Veglio di Creta and the "515", which is a duplicate of the Messo. This is a trinitarian representation to oppose to the analogous representation of his grandson [[Philip IV the Fair]], as the [[The Beast (Revelation)|Beast from the Sea]]. The idea came to Dante from the transposition of the Revelation of St. John in the history, studied from the abbot and theologian [[Joachim of Fiore]].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Lombardi|first=Giancarlo|title=L'Estetica Dantesca del Dualismo|publisher=Giuliano Ladolfi Editore|year=2022|isbn=978-8866446620|location=Borgomanero, Novara, Italy|language=it}}</ref> *Theodore de Bainville, poem, "La Ballade des Pendus (Le Verger du Roi Louis)"; musicalized by Georges Brassens.
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