The Da Vinci Code

The Da Vinci Code

by Dan Brown

Robert Langdon Character Analysis

Robert Langdon is a middle-aged Harvard professor of symbology. While giving a lecture in Paris, France, Langdon finds himself a suspect in the mysterious murder of Louvre curator Jacques Saunière. Rather than prioritize his own innocence, Langdon’s insatiable intellectual curiosity leads him to join forces with Saunière’s granddaughter, cryptologist Sophie Neveu, as they follow the curator’s clues in search of an ancient secret. Langdon’s academic interests revolve around the use of ancient symbols in modern contexts, and he is currently working on a manuscript about the conceptual evolution of divine femininity. Having mentioned Langdon in his final message, Saunière—himself a lover of goddess symbolism—entrusts the professor to seek out and ultimately possess a powerful secret about the Holy Grail and the blood of Jesus Christ. While Langdon’s intellect helps him solve many of Saunière’s intricate puzzles, he is humble enough to seek help from others when he needs it. Ultimately, Langdon’s love of knowledge and the quest to obtain it prevails, proving him worthy of possessing the secret of the Grail.

Robert Langdon Quotes in The Da Vinci Code

The The Da Vinci Code quotes below are all either spoken by Robert Langdon or refer to Robert Langdon. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Conspiracies and Secrets Theme Icon
).

Chapter 3 Quotes

Langdon was feeling anything but fortunate, and coincidence was a concept he did not entirely trust. As someone who had spent his life exploring the hidden interconnectivity of disparate emblems and ideologies, Langdon viewed the world as a web of profoundly intertwined histories and events. The connections may be invisible, he often preached to his symbology classes at Harvard, but they are always there, buried just beneath the surface.

Related Characters: Robert Langdon (speaker), Lieutenant Jérôme Collet, Jacques Saunière
Page Number: 15-16
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 6 Quotes

“I assure you,” Langdon said, “despite what you see in the movies, the pentacle’s demonic interpretation is historically inaccurate. The original feminine meaning is correct, but the symbolism of the pentacle has been distorted over the millennia. In this case, through bloodshed.”

“I’m not sure I follow.”

Langdon glanced at Fache’s crucifix, uncertain how to phrase his next point. “The Church, sir. Symbols are very resilient, but the pentacle was altered by the early Roman Catholic Church. As part of the Vatican’s campaign to eradicate pagan religions and convert the masses to Christianity, the Church launched a smear campaign against the pagan gods and goddesses, recasting their divine symbols as evil.”

Related Characters: Robert Langdon (speaker), Captain Bezu Fache (speaker), Jacques Saunière
Related Symbols: Blood
Page Number: 37
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 8 Quotes

Accepting hundreds of lucrative Vatican commissions, Da Vinci painted Christian themes not as an expression of his own beliefs but rather as a commercial venture—a means of funding a lavish lifestyle. Unfortunately, Da Vinci was a prankster who often amused himself by quietly gnawing at the hand that fed him. He incorporated in many of his Christian paintings hidden symbolism that was anything but Christian—tributes to his own beliefs and a subtle thumbing of his nose at the Church.

Related Characters: Leonardo Da Vinci, Robert Langdon, Jacques Saunière
Page Number: 45-46
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 16 Quotes

Sophie had come home a few days early from graduate university in England and mistakenly witnessed her grandfather engaged in something Sophie was obviously not supposed to see. It was an image she could barely believe to this day.

If I hadn’t seen it with my own eyes…

Too ashamed and stunned to endure her grandfather’s pained attempts to explain, Sophie immediately moved out on her own, taking money she had saved, and getting a small flat with some roommates. She vowed never to speak to anyone about what she had seen. Her grandfather tried desperately to reach her, sending cards and letters, begging Sophie to meet him so he could explain. Explain how!? Sophie never responded except once—to forbid him ever to call her or try to meet her in public. She was afraid his explanation would be more terrifying than the incident itself.

Related Characters: Sophie Neveu (speaker), Robert Langdon, Jacques Saunière
Page Number: 75
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 23 Quotes

“Da Vinci was in a secret society?”

“Da Vinci presided over the Priory between 1510 and 1519 as the brotherhood’s Grand Master, which might help explain your grandfather’s passion for Leonardo’s work. The two men share historical fraternal bond. And it all fits perfectly with their fascination for goddess iconology, paganism, feminine deities, and contempt for the Church. The Priory has a well-documented history of reverence for the sacred feminine.”

“You’re telling me this group is a pagan goddess worship cult?”

“More like the pagan goddess worship cult. But more important, they are known as the guardians of an ancient secret. One that made them immeasurably powerful.”

Related Characters: Sophie Neveu (speaker), Robert Langdon (speaker), Leonardo Da Vinci, Jacques Saunière
Page Number: 113
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 37 Quotes

“During their years in Jerusalem, the Priory learned of a stash of hidden documents buried beneath the ruins of Herod’s temple, which had been built atop the earlier ruins of Solomon’s Temple. These documents, they believed, corroborated Godefroi’s powerful secret and were so explosive in nature that the Church would stop at nothing to get them.”

Sophie looked uncertain.

“The Priory vowed that no matter how long it took, these documents must be recovered from the rubble beneath the temple and protected forever, so the truth would never die.”

Related Characters: Robert Langdon (speaker), Jacques Saunière, Sophie Neveu
Page Number: 158
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 48 Quotes

Allegedly, for centuries, the Priory’s biggest secret—the location of the Holy Grail—was never written down. For security’s sake, it was verbally transferred to each new rising sénéchal at a clandestine ceremony. However, at some point during the last century, whisperings began to surface that the Priory policy had changed. Perhaps it was on account of new electronic eavesdropping capabilities, but the Priory vowed never again to even speak the location of the sacred hiding place.

“But then how could they pass on the secret?” Sophie asked.

“That’s where the keystone comes in,” Langdon explained. “When one of the top four members died, the remaining three would choose from the lower echelons the next candidate to ascend as sénéchal. Rather than telling the new sénéchal where the Grail was hidden, they gave him a test through which he could prove he was worthy.”

Related Characters: Robert Langdon (speaker), Sophie Neveu (speaker), Jacques Saunière, Mary Magdalene
Page Number: 205
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 56 Quotes

“The Grail,” Langdon said, “is symbolic of the lost goddess. When Christianity came along, the old pagan religions did not die easily. Legends of chivalric quests for the lost Grail were in fact stories of forbidden quests to find the lost sacred feminine. Knights who claimed to be “searching for the chalice” were speaking in code as a way to protect themselves from a Church that had subjugated women, banished the Goddess, burned nonbelievers, and forbidden the pagan reverence for the sacred feminine.”

Sophie shook her head. “I’m sorry, when you said the Holy Grail was a person, I thought you meant it was an actual person.”

“It is,” Langdon said.

“And not just any person,” Teabing blurted, clambering excitedly to his feet. “A woman who carried with her a secret so powerful that, if revealed, it threatened to devastate the very foundation of Christianity!”

Related Characters: Robert Langdon (speaker), Sophie Neveu (speaker), Sir Leigh Teabing/The Teacher (speaker), Mary Magdalene
Related Symbols: Blood
Page Number: 238-239
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 60 Quotes

“Meaning that history is always written by the winners. When two cultures clash, the loser is obliterated, and the winner writes the history books—books which glorify their own cause and disparage the conquered foe. As Napoleon once said, ‘What is history, but a fable agreed upon?’” He smiled. “By its very nature, history is always a one-sided account.”

Sophie had never thought of it that way.

“The Sangreal documents simply tell the other side of the Christ story. In the end, which side of the story you believe becomes a matter of faith and personal exploration, but at least the information has survived.”

Related Characters: Sir Leigh Teabing/The Teacher (speaker), Sophie Neveu, Robert Langdon, Jesus Christ, Mary Magdalene
Related Symbols: Blood
Page Number: 256
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 62 Quotes

“It would not be the first time in history the Church has killed to protect itself. The documents that accompany the Holy Grail are explosive, and the Church has wanted to destroy them for years.”

[…]

“Isn’t it possible that these Priory members were murdered by someone outside the Church? Someone who didn’t understand what the Grail really is? The Cup of Christ, after all, would be quite enticing treasure. Certainly treasure hunters have killed for less.”

“In my experience,” Teabing said, “men go to far greater lengths to avoid what they fear than to obtain what they desire. I sense a desperation in this assault on the Priory.”

Related Characters: Sir Leigh Teabing/The Teacher (speaker), Sophie Neveu (speaker), Robert Langdon, Jacques Saunière, Silas
Page Number: 266
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 63 Quotes

In law enforcement, hesitating to arrest a fugitive only occurred when uncertainty had arisen regarding the suspect’s guilt. Is Fache having second thoughts that Langdon is the right man? The thought was frightening. Captain Fache had gone out on a limb tonight to arrest Robert Langdon—surveillance cachée, Interpol, and now television. Not even the great Bezu Fache would survive the political fallout if he had mistakenly splashed a prominent American’s face all over French television, claiming he was a murderer.

Related Characters: Captain Bezu Fache, Lieutenant Jérôme Collet, Robert Langdon, Sir Leigh Teabing/The Teacher
Page Number: 271
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Chapter 69 Quotes

“It could not be more obvious. All the historical signs are in place, and if the Priory did not intend to make their secret known very soon, why has the Church now attacked?”

Sophie argued, “The monk has not yet told us his purpose.”

“The monk’s purpose is the Church’s purpose,” Teabing replied, “to destroy the documents that reveal the great deception. The Church came closer tonight than they have ever come, and the Priory has put its trust in you, Miss Neveu. The task of saving the Holy Grail clearly includes carrying out the Priory’s final wishes of sharing the truth with the world.”

Related Characters: Sir Leigh Teabing/The Teacher (speaker), Sophie Neveu (speaker), Robert Langdon, Jacques Saunière, Silas, Mary Magdalene
Page Number: 295
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 74 Quotes

“The ability of the woman to produce life from her womb made her sacred. A god. Intercourse was the revered union of the two halves of the human spirit—male and female—through which the male could find spiritual wholeness and communion with God. What you saw was not about sex, it was about spirituality. The Hieros Gamos ritual is not a perversion. It’s a deeply sacrosanct ceremony.”

His words seemed to strike a nerve. Sophie had been remarkably poised all evening, but now, for the first time, Langdon saw the aura of composure beginning to crack. Tears materialized in her eyes again, and she dabbed them away with her sleeve.

Related Characters: Robert Langdon (speaker), Sophie Neveu, Jacques Saunière
Page Number: 309
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 78 Quotes

On the table sat a second cryptex. Smaller. Made of black onyx. It had been nested within the first. Saunière’s passion for dualism. Two cryptexes. Everything in pairs. Double entendres. Male female. Black nested within white. Langdon felt the web of symbolism stretching onward. White gives birth to black.

Every man springs from woman.

Related Characters: Robert Langdon, Jacques Saunière, Leonardo Da Vinci
Page Number: 323
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 82 Quotes

“Sophie, every faith in the world is based on fabrication. That is the definition of faith—acceptance of what we imagine to be true, that which we cannot prove. Every religion describes God through metaphor, allegory, and exaggeration, from the early Egyptians through modern Sunday school. Metaphors are a way to help our minds process the unprocessible. The problems arise when we begin to believe literally in our own metaphors.”

[…]

“Religious allegory has become a part of the fabric of reality. And living in that reality helps millions of people cope and be better people.”

Related Characters: Robert Langdon (speaker), Sophie Neveu, Mary Magdalene, Jesus Christ, Bishop Manuel Aringarosa
Page Number: 341-342
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 99 Quotes

“Saunière was dead years ago, when the Church stole his family from him. He was compromised. Now he is free of that pain, released from the shame caused by his inability to carry out his sacred duty. Consider the alternative. Something had to be done. Shall the world be ignorant forever? Shall the Church be allowed to cement its lies into our history books for all eternity? Shall the Church be permitted to influence indefinitely with murder and extortion? No, something needed to be done!”

Related Characters: Sir Leigh Teabing/The Teacher (speaker), Jacques Saunière, Sophie Neveu, Robert Langdon, Mary Magdalene, Jesus Christ
Page Number: 408-409
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 101 Quotes

“It’s in Langdon’s pocket!” Teabing was screaming like a madman. “The map to the Holy Grail!”

As they hoisted Teabing and carried him out, he threw back his head and howled. “Robert! Tell me where it’s hidden!”

As Teabing passed, Langdon looked him in the eye. “Only the worthy find the Grail, Leigh. You taught me that.”

Related Characters: Robert Langdon (speaker), Sir Leigh Teabing/The Teacher (speaker), Mary Magdalene, Jacques Saunière, Captain Bezu Fache, Sophie Neveu
Page Number: 426
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 104 Quotes

“No more secrets, princess. It’s time you learn the truth about our family.”

Sophie and her grandmother were seated on the porch stairs in a tearful hug when the young docent dashed across the lawn, his eyes shining with hope and disbelief.

“Sophie?”

Through her tears, Sophie nodded, standing. She did not know the young man’s face, but as they embraced, she could feel the power of the blood coursing through his veins…the blood she now understood they shared.

Related Characters: Marie Chauvel (speaker), Sophie’s Brother (speaker), Sophie Neveu, Jacques Saunière, Mary Magdalene, Jesus Christ, Robert Langdon
Related Symbols: Blood
Page Number: 441
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 105 Quotes

“It is the mystery and wonderment that serve our souls, not the Grail itself. The beauty of the Grail lies in her ethereal nature.” Marie Chauvel gazed up at Rosslyn now. “For some, the Grail is a chalice that will bring them everlasting life. For others, it is the quest for lost documents and secret history. And for most, I suspect the Holy Grail is simply a grand idea…a glorious, unattainable treasure that somehow, even in today’s world of chaos, inspires us.”

“But if the Sangreal documents remain hidden, the story of Mary Magdalene will be lost forever,” Langdon said.

“Will it? Look around you. Her story is being told in art, music, and books. More so every day.”

Related Characters: Marie Chauvel (speaker), Robert Langdon (speaker), Mary Magdalene, Jacques Saunière, Sir Leigh Teabing/The Teacher
Page Number: 444
Explanation and Analysis:

Epilogue Quotes

The Chalice above. The Blade below.

[…]

He was standing beneath the ancient Rose Line, surrounded by the work of masters. What better place for Saunière to keep watch? Now at last, he sensed he understood the true meaning of the Grand Master’s verse. Raising his eyes to heaven, he gazed upward through the glass to a glorious, star-filled night.

She rests at last beneath the starry skies.

Like the murmurs of spirits in the darkness, forgotten words echoed. The quest for the Holy Grail is the quest to kneel before the bones of Mary Magdalene. A journey to pray at the feet of the outcast one.

With a sudden upwelling of reverence, Robert Langdon fell to his knees.

Related Characters: Robert Langdon, Mary Magdalene, Jacques Saunière
Page Number: 454
Explanation and Analysis:
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Robert Langdon Character Timeline in The Da Vinci Code

The timeline below shows where the character Robert Langdon appears in The Da Vinci Code. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 1
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Harvard symbology professor Robert Langdon wakes to his phone ringing in the Hotel Ritz Paris just after midnight. The concierge... (full context)
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Langdon’s phone rings again. Apologizing, the concierge says the visitor is en route to Langdon’s room.... (full context)
Chapter 2
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One mile from Langdon, the albino man, Silas, returns to his temporary lodging house. He wears a spiked cilice... (full context)
Chapter 3
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As Collet drives through Paris, Langdon mourns Saunière, who he deeply admired. Collet remarks on Langdon’s presence in Paris as a... (full context)
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...while admirers enjoy its symbolism as an ancient structure constructed by modern means. Collet asks Langdon’s opinion, but Langdon only says Mitterrand—the French president who commissioned the pyramid—was bold. The captain’s... (full context)
Chapter 4
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Fache gruffly leads Langdon down the pyramid’s marble stairs, past armed Judicial Police guards. The Louvre’s new subterranean lobby... (full context)
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Langdon reluctantly follows Fache into an elevator. He suffers from claustrophobia after falling down a well... (full context)
Chapter 6
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Like the rest of the Louvre, the Grand Gallery is dimly lit. Langdon is alarmed to see a Caravaggio painting on the floor. Fache reports that Saunière was... (full context)
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Langdon is baffled that Saunière spent his last minutes arranging his body in such a bizarre... (full context)
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Langdon assumes Saunière arranged his body into a five-pointed star to emphasize the symbolism. Sensing Fache’s... (full context)
Chapter 8
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Langdon reads Saunière’s words written with the black light pen: a series of numbers and the... (full context)
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Fache suggests Da Vinci was involved in “darker arts.” Langdon thinks of Da Vinci’s fraught relationship with the Christian church, for whom he painted many... (full context)
Chapter 9
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...to tell him a cryptographer has arrived, despite orders not to interrupt his interrogation of Langdon. Fache is irritated to learn the department has sent Agent Sophie Neveu—he believes her presence... (full context)
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Sophie hands Langdon a slip of paper with the embassy’s phone number and extension. Annoyed, Fache gives his... (full context)
Chapter 11
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While Langdon continues his phone call, Fache berates Sophie for interrupting them. She informs him Saunière’s numbers... (full context)
Chapter 12
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Langdon waits in the restroom, just as Sophie’s strange voicemail instructed. Sophie enters, saying there’s not... (full context)
Chapter 13
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Sophie says Fache is convinced Langdon killed Saunière, despite the lack of motive. The curator was well-loved, and it will look... (full context)
Chapter 14
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...from a call to the makeshift command post in Saunière’s office. There, Collet reports that Langdon is still in the bathroom. The tracker is still moving, so they assume Langdon hasn’t... (full context)
Chapter 16
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Still in the restroom, Sophie wonders if she should have told Langdon all this. She lived with Saunière until 10 years ago, when she came home early... (full context)
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...loved puzzles and cryptograms, feeding her interest which blossomed into a career. Now, she asks Langdon about his meeting with Saunière, unconvinced her grandfather was merely interested in the professor’s work.... (full context)
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Langdon is reluctant to run, believing this will make him look guilty. Sophie promises to tell... (full context)
Chapter 17
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...the meaningless numbers to involve his granddaughter. Suddenly, an alarm sounds from the Grand Gallery. Langdon has broken the bathroom window. Fache runs out while Collet watches as Langdon’s dot jumps... (full context)
Chapter 18
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Fache sprints to the bathroom. On the walkie talkie, Collet reports that Langdon’s GPS dot is moving fast, meaning he must be in a car. Through the broken... (full context)
Chapter 20
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Langdon follows Sophie toward the Grand Gallery’s emergency stairwell, wondering if Fache wrote his name on... (full context)
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Langdon realizes that Da Vinci, the Fibonacci sequence, and the pentacle all relate to PHI. He... (full context)
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Remembering his own description of Da Vinci as a devotee of the divine feminine, Langdon stops on the stairwell, having had an epiphany. He tells Sophie he’s deciphered Saunière’s nonsensical... (full context)
Chapter 21
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...go back and investigate the Mona Lisa, sure Saunière left another message there. She gives Langdon her car keys and directs him to go to the embassy. Sophie believes Saunière wrote... (full context)
Chapter 23
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...in invisible ink, she rushes back to the crime scene and retrieves an ultraviolet penlight. Langdon surprises her in the Mona Lisa’s room. He asks if she ever saw the letters... (full context)
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...confirms she saw the initials P.S. on something of Saunière’s, but she doesn’t say what. Langdon asks if the object also featured a fleur-de-lis, shocking her. Langdon explains his theory that... (full context)
Chapter 25
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...call from a man claiming there is a message waiting for him under the name Langdon. He has forgotten his three-digit-access code. When the operator informs the caller that they have... (full context)
Chapter 26
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Langdon approaches the Mona Lisa, the most famous painting in the world despite its small dimensions.... (full context)
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The inmates were surprisingly engaged with Langdon’s lecture. One asked if the Mona Lisa is Da Vinci in drag. Langdon confirmed this... (full context)
Chapter 27
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Fache calls Collet at the Louvre to tell him that Sophie Neveu tipped Langdon off to the police’s suspicions and helped him get rid of his tracker. Collet confirms... (full context)
Chapter 28
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Saunière’s words, written over the Mona Lisa’s face, read “SO DARK THE CON OF MAN.” Langdon takes this as confirmation that Saunière was a member of the Priory, who believed the... (full context)
Chapter 30
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Security warden Grouard aims his gun at Langdon’s back where he lays face down on the floor. Unable to radio for backup with... (full context)
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...stop. Sophie directs him to put down his gun and radio. Minutes later, Sophie and Langdon flee down the emergency stairwell once again. Langdon has Grouard’s pistol. He remarks on the... (full context)
Chapter 32
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Sophie and Langdon set off the security alarm as the flee the Louvre. Piling into Sophie’s small SmartCar,... (full context)
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...TRY TO FIND ME.” She left the château’s spare key as well. In the present, Langdon shouts at Sophie to stop the car. They are close to the embassy, but the... (full context)
Chapter 33
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Sophie speeds away from the embassy. She hands Saunière’s key to Langdon, who marvels at its strange construction. With the Priory’s seal and its prismatic shaft, the... (full context)
Chapter 35
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Inside the station, Sophie instructs Langdon to purchase two tickets for the next departing train using his credit card, which the... (full context)
Chapter 36
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Back at the Louvre, Fache is furious that Grouard let Sophie and Langdon escape. Collet updates him: they’ve located Sophie’s car and flagged Langdon’s purchase of train tickets.... (full context)
Chapter 37
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Langdon tells Sophie about the Priory of Sion as they drive through Bois de Boulogne, a... (full context)
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Langdon explains to Sophie that the Knights must have found something, because Pope Innocent II suddenly... (full context)
Chapter 38
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Sophie is skeptical of Langdon’s proclamation that the Priory guards the legendary Holy Grail, the cup Jesus drank from at... (full context)
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The theory Langdon references is the subject of his new manuscript. He flashes back to pitching the book... (full context)
Chapter 40
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Langdon drives the hijacked taxi out of the Bois de Boulogne before turning the wheel over... (full context)
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Sophie asks if Langdon thinks the key unlocks the Holy Grail’s hiding place. He doubts this is a possibility,... (full context)
Chapter 42
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...hurriedly turns off his television. Recognizing Sophie’s key, he directs them to the elevator. Once Langdon and Sophie are gone, the guard calls night manager and Interpol to tell them two... (full context)
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Langdon and Sophie descend. An elderly host leads them to a private room with refreshments despite... (full context)
Chapter 43
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...as he was murdered. Vernet’s shock confirms he knew Saunière personally. He tells Sophie and Langdon that Interpol is circulating their pictures. Unfortunately, he can’t access Saunière’s account number to retrieve... (full context)
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...to return. Sophie is frustrated, not wanting to leave without the deposit box. Suddenly calm, Langdon says Saunière was a genius. Producing Sophie’s printout of the crime scene, he points to... (full context)
Chapter 44
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...the image of a five-petaled rose: the Priory’s symbol for the Holy Grail, according to Langdon. Something inside sloshes. Opening the box, they find something other than a chalice. (full context)
Chapter 45
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Vernet returns, stunned to find Langdon and Sophie successfully retrieved the deposit box. Knowing he must get them out of the... (full context)
Chapter 47
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Inside the cargo hold, Langdon and Sophie examine Saunière’s rosewood box. Inside is a large cylinder made of white marble,... (full context)
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When Langdon asks why they can’t simply smash the device, Sophie explains that Da Vinci designed the... (full context)
Chapter 48
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Langdon believes the cryptex is the Priory’s legendary keystone, said to lie “beneath the sign of... (full context)
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Langdon explains that the Priory passed on the Holy Grail’s location verbally to each rising sénéchal,... (full context)
Chapter 49
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Vernet orders Sophie and Langdon to put the box down. He’s heard on the radio that they are wanted, not... (full context)
Chapter 51
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While fleeing, Langdon knocked the truck’s bumper askew. It sparks against the road as they drive. He and... (full context)
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...a few words in the cryptex, including “grail,” to no effect. She is grateful for Langdon’s help, understanding her grandfather intended him to educate her on the Priory. On the road... (full context)
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Langdon met Teabing while filming a documentary on the truth about the Holy Grail. Langdon’s symbology... (full context)
Chapter 52
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Langdon and Sophie arrive at Château Villette. Having moved to France in pursuit of rumors of... (full context)
Chapter 53
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...Vernet asks the manager to turn on the armored truck’s tracking device, claiming Sophie and Langdon stole it. He omits his part in that escape. Activating the transponder will automatically alert... (full context)
Chapter 54
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Once past the gate, Langdon and Sophie park the truck out of sight to avoid questions. Langdon wraps the cryptex... (full context)
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Teabing descends the room’s staircase, calling out happily to Langdon. Langdon introduces Sophie. Teabing—a jovial man wearing metal leg braces—compliments her English and boasts about... (full context)
Chapter 55
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...as Rome’s official religion and transformed aspects of pagan worship to suit the new faith. Langdon and Teabing present several examples of Christian traditions which are rooted in pagan mythology. (full context)
Chapter 56
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Langdon expounds on Teabing’s claim that the Grail is a person—a woman. He draws the ancient... (full context)
Chapter 57
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...bankers are hiding something. Another agent calls from the Louvre: they’ve received a tip that Langdon and Sophie are hiding at an address in Versailles. Collet leaves without asking who called... (full context)
Chapter 58
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Teabing leads Sophie and Langdon to his massive study. This is where he keeps Da Vinci’s painting of the Holy... (full context)
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...the painting, which appears in other Grail-related works. While none of this proves their marriage, Langdon insists that Jewish men during Jesus’s lifetime were expected to marry. Teabing retrieves a book... (full context)
Chapter 60
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...some of the books feature a five-petal rose, symbolizing Mary, the goddess, and female genitalia. Langdon emphasizes there is significant evidence suggesting Jesus was a father and Mary carried his child.  (full context)
Chapter 61
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After Teabing leaves, Langdon, sensing Sophie’s suspicions about her own lineage, dismisses the notion that she is a descendant... (full context)
Chapter 62
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Rémy has told Teabing that Langdon and Sophie are fugitives. Langdon says he’s being framed, but Teabing is still angry they... (full context)
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...out such an attack: the Church, who have wanted to destroy the Grail for centuries. Langdon is skeptical the current Church would murder people to destroy information they deem false testimony.... (full context)
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...shows Teabing Saunière’s key. Teabing doesn’t believe the keystone was hidden in a bank until Langdon confirms they have taken it from its hiding place. Outside, Silas watches his quarry move... (full context)
Chapter 63
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...and his agents surround Teabing’s château. Fache calls, irritated that no one updated him on Langdon’s location (although he was on a phone call). Fache insists Collet wait until he arrives... (full context)
Chapter 64
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...do not find the Grail, the Grail finds you.” While Sophie explains the cryptex’s mechanics, Langdon takes a closer look at the box. Finding a hole in the lid’s underside, he... (full context)
Chapter 65
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...Hearing the gunshot, Collet orders his men to move in regardless of Fache’s orders. Meanwhile, Langdon regains consciousness to see the monk restrained and bloody. Teabing recognized Silas’s discreet Discipline belt,... (full context)
Chapter 67
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Rémy drives Teabing’s Range Rover into the night with no headlights. Langdon sits in the passenger seat with the keystone, while Sophie and Teabing are in the... (full context)
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...for medical treatment and plans to use this as a cover for sneaking Sophie and Langdon out of France. Since the Grail is rumored to be hidden in Britain, this makes... (full context)
Chapter 68
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Langdon calls his editor, Jonas Faukman, to ask if he’s sent copies of his newest manuscript... (full context)
Chapter 69
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...truth (should she discover it) to the world, especially since the brotherhood has been compromised. Langdon admonishes Teabing for pressuring Sophie. Still wondering if her family history is involved, Sophie says... (full context)
Chapter 70
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Back at Teabing’s château, Fache is furious that Collet let Langdon escape again, even though he understands Collet’s reasons for disobeying orders, given available evidence. An... (full context)
Chapter 71
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Langdon, Sophie, and Teabing crowd around the keystone’s box to examine the engraving beneath the rose.... (full context)
Chapter 72
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Langdon reads the mirror-image script, which reveals a poem. Its lines allude to “an ancient word... (full context)
Chapter 74
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Langdon takes advantage of Teabing’s absence to tell Sophie his suspicion Saunière had another reason for... (full context)
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Langdon has often found his students confused by the concept of sex as spiritual, despite evidence... (full context)
Chapter 76
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Langdon views Sophie’s story as confirmation Saunière was Grand Master, but he can offer her no... (full context)
Chapter 77
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...Cipher, which substitutes the first letter in the alphabet for the last, and so on. Langdon recalls how the cipher was used to discover the unknown city of “Sheshach” actually referred... (full context)
Chapter 78
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...of vinegar. Confused, Sophie pulls it out, revealing a second, smaller cryptex. Teabing groans, but Langdon appreciates Saunière’s symbolic use of duality. The smaller cryptex is black, symbolizing the male nestled... (full context)
Chapter 80
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...the customs officials. Rémy will stay on board with Silas. Teabing waves off Sophie and Langdon’s concerns about their hostage, claiming his knighthood will protect him from serious legal consequences. The... (full context)
Chapter 81
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...not to trust the French police. He and Rémy drive off in his limousine, where Langdon and Sophie dragged Silas during the plane’s turnaround in the hangar. (full context)
Chapter 82
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Teabing directs Rémy toward Fleet Street, claiming he’s figured out the next clue. Langdon rereads Saunière’s poem again, which mentions “a knight a Pope interred” and “the orb that... (full context)
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...no reason to think they’re in England. She is grateful Saunière told her to find Langdon and feels closer to her grandfather than she has in years. Sophie asks Langdon if... (full context)
Chapter 83
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Langdon, Sophie, and Teabing arrive at the Temple Church in London. Unlike other churches, it is... (full context)
Chapter 84
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...spotting a smear of blood in the hangar. Within minutes, the pilot has confessed that Langdon, Sophie, and an albino monk were on the plane and told Fache about the rosewood... (full context)
Chapter 85
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...Sophie finds the final tomb is a blank casket with no knightly image. Teabing and Langdon join her as the altar boy enters the sanctuary, accusing them of sightseeing. Langdon claims... (full context)
Chapter 86
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...gun to Sophie’s back. Rémy instructed him to retrieve the keystone and kill no one. Langdon holds up the cryptex, saying he’ll give it to Silas if he lets Sophie and... (full context)
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Rémy tells Langdon to hand over the cryptex, or he’ll shoot Teabing. He has been listening to their... (full context)
Chapter 88
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Langdon and Sophie run to a nearby train station. Langdon feels guilty for putting Teabing in... (full context)
Chapter 89
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...is repeatedly trying to reach Fache. Fache takes the banker’s call. Vernet confesses to helping Langdon and Sophie escape before realizing they were murderers. He is desperate to retrieve what they... (full context)
Chapter 92
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Langdon and Sophie arrive at the King’s College library, which houses one of the best religious... (full context)
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Langdon and Sophie’s anxious demeanors tell Gettum there’s more to their quest than they’ve told her.... (full context)
Chapter 94
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...his fate by showing his face, though he probably would have been eliminated regardless. Though Langdon bringing the keystone directly to his assistant was a happy surprise, the Teacher is glad... (full context)
Chapter 95
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Langdon watches as the computer slowly populates with more of the database’s hits. So far, none... (full context)
Chapter 97
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Langdon and Sophie enter Westminster Abbey, where more than 3000 people are entombed. Guards usher them... (full context)
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...determine what orb is missing. Glancing toward the main altar, he sees a docent leading Langdon and Sophie toward the tomb. Hiding behind a choir screen, the Teacher feels the revolver... (full context)
Chapter 98
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Langdon and Sophie approach Newton’s tomb, startled to see the orb upon it. Langdon speculates that... (full context)
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Langdon and Sophie follow signs for the Chapter House, through which they can see the public... (full context)
Chapter 99
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Still pointing his gun at Langdon and Sophie, Teabing insists he didn’t mean for them to get involved in his plans.... (full context)
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Langdon is incredulous that Teabing murdered the curator. But Teabing insists someone had to take action... (full context)
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When Teabing realized Saunière left a message for Sophie and Langdon, he was planning to offer help when they arrived at the château. Once Teabing saw... (full context)
Chapter 101
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Knowing his options are betraying Sophie or getting shot, Langdon doesn’t respond to Teabing. He walks away with the cryptex, considering Saunière’s riddle—if he can... (full context)
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Teabing thinks Langdon, unlike Sophie, understands that the Grail is bigger than their individual lives. Langdon returns, claiming... (full context)
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Teabing shoots, missing Langdon. He lurches to catch the falling cryptex, but he hears the glass vial shatter. Weeping,... (full context)
Chapter 103
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...Collet delivers a press conference at the château. When asked if Fache’s false accusations of Langdon and Sophie will end his career, Collet graciously implies Fache’s manhunt was part of a... (full context)
Chapter 104
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Langdon and Sophie travel to Edinburgh, Scotland to visit Rosslyn Chapel, built by the Knights Templar.... (full context)
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...pillars near the sanctuary. Knowing the pillars are two of many replicas from Solomon’s Temple, Langdon doubts her, but Sophie is sure. Suddenly, she recalls there is a code on the... (full context)
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...to “a dear friend whom I love very much.” In the present, Sophie wanders off. Langdon ponders the second line of Saunière’s final poem: “The blade and chalice guarding o’er Her... (full context)
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The docent asks Langdon about the rosewood box, claiming his grandmother has an identical one. Suddenly, Sophie leaves the... (full context)
Chapter 105
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That night, Langdon listens as Sophie’s grandmother—Marie Chauvel—explains to Sophie that both her parents were descended from Merovingian... (full context)
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Now, Marie joins Langdon on the porch. He gives her the papyrus with Saunière’s final clue, which Marie will... (full context)
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Sensing Langdon’s persistent curiosity about the Grail’s location, Marie leads him into Rosslyn Chapel. She points out... (full context)
Epilogue
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Days later, Langdon wakes in the Hotel Ritz Paris with a dawning realization. He visits the royal arcade... (full context)