"Pomp" without "circumstance"

Solution 1:

Yes.

From the past month's headlines:

Tim Tebow introduced by Jets, with pomp befitting a star, if not a starter

Zimbabwe: Pomp, Fanfare As Book Cafe Reopens

Pomp, pageantry and royalty at 15th Zik Prize Award ceremony

Solution 2:

I've also heard it used in 'pomp and pageantry', 'pomp and ceremony', 'pomp and show' and 'pomp and pride'.

I've not heard it used on its own, though. These days we tend to use 'pomposity' instead.

Solution 3:

Yes, it is, though it's much more common in its adjective form, pompous.

Solution 4:

In the Anglican and RC English rituals of Baptism, pomps (generic plural only) occurs frequently:

  • ... that I should renounce the devil and all his works, the pomps and vanity of this wicked world, and all the sinful lusts of the flesh, ...

  • I renounce Satan, and his works, and his pomps, and his worships, and his angels, and his inventions, and all things that are under him.