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blessing upon the worship of his ally, though opposed
to his own, for in his letter he writes:
/#
"<sc>Blessed be the Lord God of Israel</sc>,"
#/
and that his actions should be in keeping with his
words, he forthwith entered into a Treaty to build the
first Temple to the ever-living and the only <sc>God</sc> at
Jerusalem.
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No-wrap or block quote?
This looks very much like the previous example: it's different from the surrounding text
because it's surrounded by white space, and it isn't a heading. When there's only one
line, it's often hard to know whether it's wrappable (Block Quote) or not (no-wrap).
The (non-universal) consensus is to use no-wrap when you just cannot tell. Often, the
surrounding text will help you decide, as it does here: the line just above it says,
"in his letter," which suggests prose (wrappable). Also, on the previous page of the
project (which is not in these examples), is a two-line quote from the same letter,
and it's clearly wrappable prose. So, a Block Quote is appropriate here. If you just
can't tell, use no-wrap AND leave a [**note]. Do not leave it unmarked.
The quote is in small-caps, so that must be marked, too; and both the comma and the
quotation marks go outside the in-line markups.