Citation
Jamie Gordon, or, The orphan

Material Information

Title:
Jamie Gordon, or, The orphan
Added title page title:
The Orphan
Creator:
Sherwood Mrs (Mary Martha) 1775-1851 ( Author, Primary )
Seeley, L. ( Leonard )
Seeleys ( Publisher )
Place of Publication:
London
Publisher:
Seeleys, Fleet Street and Hanover Street
Manufacturer:
L. Seeley
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
258 p., [1] leaf of plates : ill. ; 16 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Children -- Conduct of life -- Early works to 1900 -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Orphans -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
History -- British occupation, 1765-1947 -- Juvenile fiction -- India ( lcsh )
Embossed cloth bindings (Binding) -- 1851 ( rbbin )
Publishers' advertisements -- 1851 ( rbgenr )
Baldwin -- 1851
Genre:
Embossed cloth bindings (Binding) ( rbbin )
Publishers' advertisements ( rbgenr )
novel ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
England -- London
Target Audience:
juvenile ( marctarget )

Notes

Citation/Reference:
Cutt, M.N. Mrs. Sherwood,
General Note:
Added title page, engraved.
General Note:
Two "lately published" works by same author listed at end.
Funding:
Brittle Books Program

Record Information

Source Institution:
University of Florida
Holding Location:
University of Florida
Rights Management:
This item is presumed to be in the public domain. The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries respect the intellectual property rights of others and do not claim any copyright interest in this item. Users of this work have responsibility for determining copyright status prior to reusing, publishing or reproducing this item for purposes other than what is allowed by fair use or other copyright exemptions. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions may require permission of the copyright holder. The Smathers Libraries would like to learn more about this item and invite individuals or organizations to contact The Department of Special and Area Studies Collections (special@uflib.ufl.edu) with any additional information they can provide.
Resource Identifier:
026825027 ( ALEPH )
32794324 ( OCLC )
ALH2519 ( NOTIS )

Related Items

Related Item:
PALMM Version

Downloads

This item has the following downloads:


Full Text




ae.



























.

,

a

mp
:

is :

«
fe

The Baldwin Library



University | |
mB «it
Florida











“4

+a
fo cd





JAMIE GORDON.



ig



calling, ‘Zammy! Zammy!’ "—Page 90.



SS ~

SES

SI,
——

ad
Pr-3
— ) Trot agg,
I( Sreleys,

=

Pe te Aa



‘~) >t
“& a G

a

Ne A

“try ©.

MDCCCLI,.



Â¥ on,

iss. “ess o> = SN
ee —

ra Steet.










JAMIE GORDON;

OR,

THE ORPHAN.

LONDON :
SEELEYS, FLEET STREET AND HANOVER STREET.

MDCCCLI.







CONTENTS.

tinal

CHAP. PAGE
I. INTRODUCTION ; . ; . 1
IT. AKRIVAL AT CAWNPORE . ; Ay
III. IN THE HOSPITAL é ‘ ; oe
IV. DISCUSSIONS . ; ; ; ; . ee
V. THE GODFATHER’S DEATH ;, , . 44
VI. NEW QUARTERS. , : ; - &
VII. A NEW FRIEND. ; ‘ ; ats
VIII. TEMPTATION. ; ' . ‘ . oe
1X. ANOTHER CHANGE . ; j : ae
X. THE HOSPITAL AGAIN. : ; . 103

XI. A FRESH REMOVAL : : ; ie



CHAP.

XIl.

XIII.

XIV.

XV.

XVI.

XVII.

XVIII.

XIX.

XX.

XXI.

CONTENTS.

NEW SCENES ‘ .
FURTHER GROWTH .

THE DEPARTURE .”~ .
JAMIE'S LAST GUARDIANS
ANOTHER HOSPITAL PATIENT
A VISITOR . ‘
ANOTHER STRANGER

BAD NEWS FROM THE CAMP
FRESH PROSPECTS . ;

CLOSE OF THE STORY .

PAGE

127
147
155
171
182
193
201
212
225
236

> --++—- +8 ex

—~—— ——. +»



JAMIE GORDON.

CHAPTER I.
INTRODUCTION.

Ir is now nearly half a century past, when fierce war
added nota little to the dangers of the long, the very
long passage, by which the Regiment of Foot
reached the far-off East, and after a protracted and
weary voyage, was landed in Bengal, and stationed at
Fort William, near Calcutta.

The exhausted voyagers there hoped to enjoy some
months of rest, such as may be obtained, at least, in a
roomy cantonment, in a foreign land, where the power
of the sun, even in the coldest season, is always dange-
rous to Europeans. But this was not to be—for they
had hardly been ten days at the Fort, before they were
embarked again, to be hauled up the river Ganges,
to a station some hundred miles higher up. This
move, however, did not take place before several of the
regiment had fallen sacrifice to the change of climate,
and to exhaustion from the fatigues of the previous

B





2 JAMIE GORDON.

voyage. There had also been some casualties during
the passage out ; one or more men had suffered loss of
life by accidents: and there had been deaths among
the women and children. It was the custom then,
and perhaps may still continue to be the same, that
only six women are allowed to go out in a regiment to
India, with each hundred men. The first company
of the regiment, to which this history refers, had accord-
ingly started with its full complement of women ;
though of these six, only three ever reached the up-
country station, for which the regiment was embarked
at Fort William. The first of these six women, was
the wife of a Sergeant, Young, a very decent person,
with some pretensions to gentility, which she could in
no wise make manifest, whilst accompanying her hus-
band in his marches and countermarches in their native
country. The second was Jane Taylor, a dame of some
pretensions likewise, being young and comely: as it
was the fortune of this young woman to lose her
husband at sea, what better could she do, than to
accept the hand of a certain store-keeper in Calcutta,
which said hand was tendered to the widow, almost as
soon as she had landed : and she after a while accepted
the offer, and remained in Calcutta.

Phebe Darke was another of the six women, who
had come out with the first company ; this young
woman was spared, no doubt, from many future troubles
and temptations, by a fever under the line, which car-
ried her off in a few days.

The fourth was Katty McCrury :—she had already
ridden some hundred miles on baggage-waggons, although
still comparatively young and fresh-looking. She had



INTRODUCTION. 3

come originally with her husband from the west of
Ireland.

The fifth of these wives was Betty Pickles, the oldest
of the six, a thorough-bred camp-follower, and one
who would no question have killed herself, long before
she could have had the opportunity of seeing the Indian
shores, by her propensity for strong waters, had not
her want of sobriety been always counteracted by her
covetousness : for she was, and always had been, bent
upon hoarding.

Margaret Gordon makes up the number of the women
of the first company, when it sailed from England. She
is mentioned last, because it is. needful to enter more
into detail respecting her history than into that of the
other women, as she was the mother of the youth,
whose name heads this narrative.

Alan Gordon was the younger son of a Highland
shepherd, of decent means and respectable character ;
the mother of Alan was a second wife, who, by her
shrewish temper, had actually driven away a son by
the former wife, to seek his fortune, how and where he
best might do so.

This elder brother had fled out of the cottage, one day,
in order to escape from the blows of his step-mother ;
nor was there any evidence that he ever returned again
for a moment to his paternal roof, excepting this, that
when the babe Alan was taken up from its cradle, that
babe being the step-mother’s son, there was found the
half of a broken sixpence, laid in the palm of the
child’s hand, the little one having unconsciously perhaps
clutched its fingers upon it. That Geordie—for such

was the elder brother’s name—had had such a sixpence,
B2



4 JAMIE GORDON,

bearing the head of the first George, though much worn,
was well known, and it was believed to be the only bit
of silver he had ever possessed. He never came again,
and his father took his absence so to heart, that he
never used his shepherd’s pipe again, but sank and
faded away, and at length died. The step-dame re-
pented sorely, yet all too late. All prosperity had left
the cottage, and such misery and poverty ensued,
that when she too died, after some years of wretched-
ness, Alan could do nothing else but enlist, though with
small forecast of coming difficulties. But he did not
do so, until he had persuaded his near kinswoman,
whom he had loved from childhood, to become his wife,
and share with him in all the hardships of a soldier’s
life. And as Margaret Gordon had been the pride of
her native glen, neither was such grace denied her, as
might, and did enable her, to be an ornament of the
very trying situation into which she had entered ; and
so she remained for several years, during which she
accompanied her husband in all his movements, never
deviating from such conduct as is the truest glory of
the Christian female.

The eldest-born child of this young couple died, be-
fore the regiment to which Alan had attached himself,
left Scotland ; another, the Jamie of the narrative, was
added shortly afterwards, at a distant place; no other
child was given to them. Alan Gordon would often
say, whilst carrying this child, probably with some little
sense of Highland superstition, mingled with some de-
gree of confidence in providence, ‘ Well, my boy,
should I die tomorrow, I know not that I have aught
to leave with you, to remember me by, but this broken



INTRODUCTION, 5

sixpence, which my poor mother fastened to my neck,
bidding me never to part from it until death’ On these
occasions, his wife would remind him, that there was
a much richer bequest which he might leave his boy,
and that was their little Bible.

But the rest of the story of Alan and Margaret Gor-
don may be soon told ;—that excellent wife and mother
scarcely reached Fort William, before she began to sink,
and she departed this life so shortly before the regiment
was embarked again, that she was buried on the very
morning of its departure. And, whether from grief or
other cause, it is not known, but before the fleet of
boats had entirely cleared the Hoogly, which is that
arm of the great river, the Ganges, on which Calcutta
is situated ; her husband was also dead—and Jamie
was left an orphan—though, as will be seen in the
sequel, not without such a friend as every pious parent
might desire in death, for one who was soon to be an
orphan child.

The Bible and the broken sixpence were all that the
father had to leave to his boy ; the Bible was put by
till such time as it might be used by him, and the
broken sixpence, which had been previously soldered
into a case of silver, was fastened by a chain about the
child’s neck, in such sort as he might not easily break
it off. And now what remains to be said before the
narrative enters upon the particular movements and
concerns of the persons already introduced, but to give
such an account of the climate, the face of the country,
and the various scenes and customs, as shall enable
even the untravelled reader to form some notion of the

sort of life of which the narrative is about to treat.
B 3



6G JAMIE GORDON.

Now, inasmuch as a picture is but half the truth,
when it shews only the personswhich it represents, with-
out any view of the places in which they are located,
especially if there is much about these places out of the
common way of the relator, so, to most readers, the
history of Jamie Gordon and his companions, would be
quite imperfect, were not some account supplied of
the various circumstances about him, which made his
condition so very different from that of a child in Eng-
land.

To any one looking upon a map of the world, it may
be seen that the East Indies lie far to the east and far
to the south of England, and that the voyage thereunto
by sea must be very long, from the necessity of going
all round by Africa, far down to the south, and up again
some way tothe north. This country of which we are
speaking, lies in or near to that part of the earth on ~
which the sun at certain seasons of the year strikes
down directly upon the heads of those below, every day
at noon ; neither does the sun ever appear rolling along
between wind and weather, as the sailors would say, but
dips down its flaming head right foremost when it is
about to set, with nothing like our long sweet twilights
and dawns ; for it arises in the East a fiery red, and
right forward in its movements in the morning, as it
went down in the evening. All trees and herbs
which suit hot climates, grow in that country ;
such flowers and fruits growing naturally there, as can
only be reared with great care and skill in our cold
climate. The year there is not divided into four seasons,
as ours is, but into three of unequal lengths ; the
coolest season, in which that far-off land is pleasant



INTRODUCTION. 7

as what we fancy of the garden of Eden, answers
to part of our autumn and winter ; the dry and burning
season‘and the rainy season, to our spring and summer
and part of autumn ; during all which seasons, except-
ing when the clouds are coming over for rain, or it is
actually raining, the whole sky being for the most part
of one deep dazzling blue, set with a blazing sun by
day, and stars, which look far more brilliant than they
do here, by night. So much for the climate : and those
who have not travelled far, can hardly imagine how
much the ways and manners of persons are changed
and affected by climate, by heat and cold, by wet and
dry, by long days or short. But we shall understand
more of these things as we proceed.

It wouldbe a long history to tell how the English
got possession of many provinces in the East Indies,
many years before any of us were born ; suffice it to
say, that we have established a government there, of
which Calcutta is the principal seat ; and that besides
having raised many black corps, white regiments are
sent out from England and stationed about the pro-
vinces, to help to keep things in order. The natives of
the East Indies are all more or less dark ; few indeed
are black like negroes, and still fewer have negro fea-
tures and woolly hair, for they area handsome well-fea-
tured people, but the very fairest among them can only
be called copper-coloured; amongst them there are
very few Christians, and those, poor ignorant creatures,
but many many idol-worshippers, and many Mahom-
etans ; indeed these two sorts may be said to divide
the population.



8 JAMIE GORDON.

CHAPTER II.
ARRIVAL AT CAWNPORE.

THE passage up the Ganges was very tedious, and as if
those who were in command were uncertain in their
intentions, the regiment was made to halt at several
stations, especially at the cantonments of Dinapore ;
where they went for a little time up to the cantonments,
and were located in them for a few weeks in a very
wretched way, expecting to move again every day. The
only thing by which some few individuals of the regi-
ment remembered this place with any pleasure, was an
acquaintance they there made with a very pious young
gentleman, the Reverend Mr. M » who happened
to be then serving as chaplain at that presidency.

He invited all the religiously-minded men among the
troops to visit him every evening in his quarters, and
on the few who accepted the invitation, he bestowed
Bibles and religious books, which, in that country,
where books are very Scarce, were of exceeding value
to them. This devoted young man even accompanied
the party two or three days journey up the river, and





ARRIVAL AT CAWNPORE. 9

thus gained some seasons of prayer with those of like
mind with himself in the evenings of each day; a
solitary grove or ravine affording the scenes of their
meetings, on all these occasions. These wanderings,
however with all their mercies, and all their sorrows,
at length came to an end.

The regiment having arrived at Cawnpore, a station
very far up the river, was marched directly from the
boats to the barracks. Mightily pleased were the
women especially, after having been crowded on board
ship, and in the boats, for so many months, with very
short intervals, to find themselves again at liberty, and
as the veteran Betty Pickles remarked, to be able to go
whither and where they pleased, and have room and
space to put things about them in a handy way ; such
as a standing cot, two or three chairs, a table, the
chest, and may be a Mora for a child, when there was
one, as in her case.

The Cawnpore Infantry-barracks consisted at that
time of ten long apartments, distinct from each other,
their roofs being covered with thatch, which is far
cooler than any other sort of roof ;—the inside being not
unlike a church, with great doors between each berth.
These doors were double, and the pannels were filled up
with what we call Venetian blinds, which keep out the
sun, and let in the air. One of these long rooms was
given to each company, every two men having a hed-
place between two windows, and a small space on one
side for their table, and chair, and chests, and whatever
else they may want. When a man was married, he
had of course no comrade, but if he had a family,
he had little room enough, as the women found; when



10 JAMIE GORDON.

they had forgotten the close packing at sea and on the
river,

So, as has been described, there were rows of cots
down each side of every long barrack-room ; and be-
tween each bed-place each fami] y had a little space for
its household goods.

The best berths, however, and those which everybody
desired, were the corner ones ; where, instead of another
bed, there was a wall on the one side ; and much striy-
ing there was for these corner-berths, which were gene-
rally given to the married people.

At the end of each barrack in Cawnpore, were small
rooms appropriated for the Sergeants, and who shall say
how pleased the sergeants’ wives were when they found
themselves in a berth which was comparatively so
retired.

The space between the berths was of course as public
as the street, being open to all those who resided in
the barracks, and all who came in to visit there.
Several of the officers also passed through at certain
times of the day, and the cooks, and other black men,
who waited on the white ones, were always going to and
fro, not to speak of Copra-wallahs, Sundook-wallahs,
Dobees and Bunda-wallahs, with a number more of
odd persons, who were always about the verandahs and
at the many door-ways.

Cawnpore itself stands in a vast, dry, sandy plain,
broken up into ragged hollows or ravines, which do not
shew a blade of grass in the dry season. Over this
plain are scattered many houses, Bungalows, as they
call them, in which the gentry live, and huts, in which
the poor natives reside; and if there are many huts



ARRIVAL AT CAWNPORE.

together, they are called a bazaar. Beside the Infantry
lines at Cawnpore, there are Artillery barracks, and
Cavalry barracks, and Sepoy lines, and several more, all
scattered along a fine broad road, near the banks of the
great river. There is scarcely a pleasanter spot beyond
the seas, than Cawnpore in the cold season, and as was
before said, there was scarcely one in the regiment
who was not pleased. There were but three women of
the first company, however, who reached so far ; these
were, Mrs. Young and the two privates’ wives, before
spoken of ; but though there were more corner-berths
than women to claim them, it was more than McCrury
could do to keep his wife and Betty Pickles from falling
out about them ; nor would Betty be silenced, till Ser-
geant Young came out of his room and threatened her
that if she did not hold her tongue, she should not have
a corner berth at all, but one in the very middle of the
row. He also told Mrs. Mc Crury, that if she did not
keep herself quiet, he would see for something that
should still her tongue. °

Everybody was too busy, during this, the first day in
Cawnpore barracks, in settling themselves, to allow of
this dispute being carried on further, for the black mer-
chants from the bazaar were all about with their cots,
and chairs, and tables and necessary articles to sell.
Such of the men and their wives as had been careful of
their rupees, and had not lavished them in drink and
other follies, on the river, were soon provided with every
thing needful, and before night, every berth was in
some order, the women having purchased standing cots
with muslin curtains and netted white cotton fringes.
Some also had provided themselves with folding screens,



12 JAMIE GORDON.

by which they might obtain a little privacy ; and every —
one had his chair or two, perhaps his table, his mora,
and his great chest.

Betty Pickles had bestirred herself to so much pur-
pose, that when her husband came in from parade in
the evening, he found every thing in its place, and his
wife just ready to set out with their only child—a stout
healthy lad, and a black man to carry a basket and
shew the way to the bazaar, to purchase such things as
were necessary in addition to the ration bread and
meat allowed to every soldier.

Betty had never been in so easy a situation in her
life as she then was, she had never had so good a bed to
sleep on, and such sure and high pay ; and she had
never had anything like a servant to scold, and now she
had more than one of these last ; She had a cook, and
she had a share in a washerman ; and yet she was ina
desperate ill humour, as her husband saw, the instant
he laid his eyes upon her. She did not like the man
who was to occupy the bed next to her berth, and she
told her husband, that had she known at the time she
got that berth, that Stephen Fell was to be the next
neighbour, she would have refused it though it had
been paved with gold ; ‘ but,’ added she, ‘ it is all along
of that Katty Mc Crury, and her downrightness, for it
was her berth that I wanted from the first.’

* And what fault have you to find with Stephen Fell,’
said Pickles, as he slowly disencumbered himself of
his cap and accoutrements, ‘he is as quiet a man as
you could have anigh you, if you were to pick and
choose through the whole regiment.’

* Quiet!’ repeated the woman, ‘and don’t you know



ARRIVAL AT CAWNPORE. 13

that that is the very thing for which I hate him. There
is no doing anything with them quiet ones ; they just
work one up, till one does not know what to be at : but
if he is quiet, what have you to say of the lad he has
the care of ? had you but heard the noise Jamie Gordon
has been making, while’s parade! He has come on
finely, I promise you, since he has been on board the
boats : and it was not a quarter of an hour since, that
he canie opposite our door, and tried to wheedle our
Philip to go out and play with him.’

‘ Well,’ said Pickles, ‘ and what harm then ? :

‘Harm, indeed !’ replied his wife, ‘do you forget, that
though Jamie is a year younger than our boy, he could
never let him alone on board ship, and as sure as my
life, had the two come up the river in the same boat,
the one would have tilted the t’other into the water.’

-€Well,’ replied Pickles, ‘ you had best be going off
now ; if it warn’t chat, it would be some’at else to grumble
at ; so say no more, and don’t be losing time. Let the
lads fight it out if they will ; as well now as by and
bye.. When they knows who’s master, they'll be quiet ;
so as I say, you had best be off.’

It: was more than an hour and a half after this, when
Betty Pickles returned to the barracks, followed by the
black nian, laden with a basket which was quite full
of the things she had bought at the Bazaar. Her son
Philip, whom she had taken with her, was lingering a
little béhind : his face being smeared and dirty.

As Betty stepped into the berth, she was in a perfect
blaze of heat, from having walked very fast, and being
still dressed in the fashions of her own country, for she
wore a thick Europe chintz, a Norwich shawl of a

c



14 JAMIE GORDON.

very bright colour, and a yellow satin bonnet, which
she had bought second-hand in Portsmouth.

Her first motion was to take off her bonnet, after
which, fetching a long breath, she called to the Cooley
to set down his basket and unload ; and whilst he was
doing this, she examined every thing she had bought,
counted up her price, and boasted how she had got every
thing under value.

At last, when she had talked herself out of breath,
her husband said, ‘ Well, when you have a mind to
hear, I have some’at to tell you which mayhap may
please you.’

‘And what may that be 2’ she asked. )

‘You were a complaining,’ he said, ‘of having Stephen
Fell as a neighbour, on account of his boy ; its changed
now—he is moved to the t’other end of the barrack,
and they say he is going to have the two stripes on his
sleeve.’

* They might as well make a Corporal of our Phil.!’
replied Betty ; ‘is this what you have to tell me, which
was to please me so mightily! And so I suppose the
man was glad to shift his berth, to get away from
us. Our Phil. was not good enough, I reckon, to keep
company with Jamie Gordon.’

* Have it which way you will,’ replied Pickles, < its
all one to me :’ and so saying, he got up and lounged to
the other end of the barracks,

The glance given by Betty, as she looked after her
husband, might have been plainly understood by the
dullest person, to mean neither more nor less, than ‘ the
sooner you go the better, no matter what drives you,’
—for no sooner was he clearly off, than she produced a



ARRIVAL AT CAWNPORE. 15

large key, which she applied to the lock of the chest
which she had brought with her from England, and
which held all her particular treasures, and having
opened it, with somewhat of a cautious glance about
her, she produced from a deep pocket about her person,
what at Cawnpore would be called a Europe quart
bottle, closely corked, which she placed in a corner of
the said chest, drawing some of the lighter matters
which were in the box, completely over it, neck and
all: next proceeding to place what remained of her
money, in another secure corner.



16 JAMIE GORDON,

CHAPTER III.
IN THE HOSPITAL.

THE cold season had passed away, with its sweet and
breezy mornings, and delightful evenings. The hot
winds too, had come with their dark and long days, and
they had blown their fill, and were passed. The hot
winds are called long and dark, because, while they
lasted, all the doors and venetians of the barracks were
kept closed, excepting on the windward side, and on
that side exactly opposite to where the wind blew.

In order to meet the burning blasts, the doorways
exposed to it, were filled with tattas, which were always
kept wet, so that the air might be cooled in blowing
through them.

The rainy season had also followed and almost passed
away, when Stephen Fel# became so ill, that he was
forced to be carried off in a dooley to the hospital,

Stephen Fell had been in the regiment from a youth,
and was respected by all the officers: and he was just
upon the point of being made a Sergeant, when it be-
came needful to put him down on the sick-list. He



IN THE HOSPITAL. 17

had begun to ail in the beginning of the hot winds,
and had been unable to do much duty for many weeks ;
but he suddenly grew worse towards the end of the
rains, and so he was forced to be sent to the hospital.

It is a good distance from the barracks of Cawnpore
to the hospital ; the road lies across the plain, and the
fashion of the building is much like that of the bar-
racks. The wards are long rooms, furnished with many
beds, and the sick are under the control of the regi-
mental doctors, one of whom lives within the compound ;
and there is also a hospital surgeon, who is generally a
married man.

It was in the cool of the evening, in the last day of
the month of August, when Corporal Fell was put into
the dooley, to be carried down to the hospital. He had
been on his bed during the whole day, and could not
have walked the distance, had it been ever so needful
that he should.

The bearers however, had not carried the sick man
many yards, before a child’s voice was heard, crying
in great distress, ‘Daddy ! Daddy ! take poor Jamie, he
will not stay behind, Daddy ! Daddy !’

At the same time, a little boy was seen running after
the Dooley from the barracks, whilst two or three per-
sons, from whom he seemed to have made his escape,
were in pursuit of him.

The child was exceedingly tall and slender for his
age, judging by his youthful countenance. His hair
was of a dark auburn, and naturally curling, grew
on a head of the most perfect form. His features were
remarkably handsome, and his eyes bright and beauti-
ful. His whole little person seemed as if it had always

C3



18 JAMIE GORDON.

been kept with the exactness of military neatness. He
wore a single garment of white calico, made in the
upper part like a girl’s frock without sleeves, the lower
being only a loose trower. This dress was quite clean,
but he had neither shoe, nor stocking, nor hat, yet his
little feet looked fair and delicate, for they had been
lately washed. This boy was an orphan, the son of
Margaret and Alan Gordon, both deceased.

Stephen Fell had taken him from his last surviving
parent, and from that day, this little one had lain
in his bosom, like the poor man’s ewe lamb, and he had
washed him, and fed him, and taught him, up to that
sad hour in which he was taken away to the hospital.

The Corporal had a comrade, a decent man of the
name of Blake, and he had engaged this comrade to
take charge of the boy, until his return to the barracks,
which for the child’s sake, he hoped might be soon
and as he had a good opinion of the man, he had tried
to think that the child might be happy, and might do
well without him.

Blake had therefore coaxed little Jamie into the
verandah, on the other side of the barracks, just before
he thought the men with the dooley might be expected,
and the child would have had no suspicion of what was
going on, had not Mrs. McCrury called out from the
door of her berth to Blake, to offer her services to do
anything, which might be wanted for the little lad, then
with him, ‘if so be,’ said she, ‘as the father of him
never came back.’

‘Hush, woman !’ replied Blake, ‘ what be you talk-
ing on ;’ and he gave her a nod, and a wink, which she
was not slow to understand.



IN THE HOSPITAL, 19

The child, however, had heard all she said, and by
putting together one or two things which he had heard
and seen in the former part of the day, he had failed
not to make out what was going on: and by watch-
ing and peeping through the doorways, he managed
to find out the very moment in which Stephen Fell
was placed in the dooley, and lifted up by the bearers.
At the same instant, little Jamie shot from the side
of Blake, and running along the verandah, was out on
the plain after the dooley, almost before he was missed.
Blake however, with two or three more, were after
him, before he could make those hear him,4who were
with the dooley, and then the louder the, child cried
Daddy ! so much more loudly did the others still be-
hind, call Jamie. A bird on the wing could only then
have overtaken the golden-haired boy ; his little bare
feet beat the ground, as fast as mill-wheels strike ; and
as he ran, his cry of Daddy ! Daddy ! take poor Jamie.
Oh take poor Jamie ! became more and more pitiful.

Corporal Fell was leaning back in great weakness in
the dooley, and he was thinking, that he hoped he had
judged right, in not taking Jamie to the hospital, where
he feared he might be exposed to catching some dis-
temper ; yet still hanging in doubt upon the matter,
when he was suddenly roused by the cries behind, and
looking out, he saw in a minute how things were. His
very heart jumped to his throat, when he observed
what efforts the little fellow was making to catch the
dooley, and his mind was made up in one moment,
that it should not be his fault, if the child was not in-
dulged in his innocent desire to be with him, whom he
called father, so long as it pleased God to spare that
father, to guard and protect him.



20 JAMIE GORDON.

But the sick man could not make the bearers stop

for as much as a minute, after he had seen the child,
for the men guessed how it would be, if the boy over-
took them, and that they should have to pick him up,
and carry him along with the invalid in the dooley ;
so they kept running on—the foremost crying, Ete, the
next Doo, the third Zeen, and the fourth Chah, in tune
to their steps, and giving deaf ear as it were, to the
Corporal’s call, till he cried, Buckshish! Buckshish !
and then the dooley was set down the very next minute
on the sand. Little Jamie was so spent when he came
up to the dooley, that he had hardly power to scramble
into it, and to pull his father’s arm round him, as he
dropped his head against his breast ; neither did the old
one, nor the young one, say a word to each other, for
what had they to say ? but what each knew, without
the help of words.
. The people who had followed Jamie from the
barracks, were so nigh, that they came up before the
bearers had lifted the dooley again. Blake was the
foremost, he was laughing as he remarked at being over-
matched by such a young ’un ; and he shook his fist at
Jamie, and said, ‘When I can catch you, you young
rogue, I'll pay you, I promise you, but I supposes I
must wait a bit for my vengeance, for now you two be
got together again, I reckon it won't be a little as will
part you.’

Stephen Fell then requested his comrade to send
Jamie’s clothes down to the hospital, and thanking him
for his intended kindness to the boy, the dooley was
lifted up again, and the happy little fellow was in a
sound sleep before the bearers had counted their Ete,
Doo, Teen, Chah, a dozen times more.



IN THE HOSPITAL. 21

Corporal Fell was much respected by William
Thomas, the hospital Sergeant, and, it was in his favour
too that the sick man’s family was from Norwich, as
also was that of Mrs. Thomas’, so when he got in, he
had a pleasant corner berth epptieten him. He had
two windows, as one might say, all to himself, the one
in a line with the back of his bed, and the other on the
left hand of it. That onthe back he commonly kept
dark, but that on the left was wide open most of the
day, and being to the north, Jamie could be outside in
the shade for several hours, both in the morning and
the evening, after the sun had risen.

There was also, from this north window, as much of
pleasant prospect as is often to be enjoyed at Cawnpore,
where the face of the country is almost as flat as in
Holland, saving where the ground may have been
cracked and seamed, in a small way, by theheat. The
hospital compound is inclosed in high walls, but the
grass within these walls, was at that season quite fresh
and green, and the wall itself was hidden by a few
pretty shrubs, which were very pleasant to look upon.
A few goats browsed on the green space between the
hospital and the wall; and there were many young
kids, whose tricks were very amusing to Jamie.

Beyond the hospital wall, on the north side, though
not to be seen from the wards, was a garden filled with
flowers and fruit, and when the breeze blew over this
garden in the early morning or after sunset, it brought
with it the sweet odour of these flowers and fruits, ren-
dering the cool evening and morning time, more delight-
ful than they would otherwise have been. In this
garden also, were certain very thick trees the tops of



22 JAMIE GORDON.

which rose very much above the hospital walls, and
these trees were the harbour of many doves, the cooing
of which birds had a very soothing and pleasant effect.

Neither was the Corporal so ill off, in his next neigh-
bour, as he might have been, for on the very morning
after he had come into the hospital, John Blaney, a
decent man, of the fourth company was brought. from
the barracks, attended by his wife, a respectable north-
countrywoman. Poor John was in a very low, weak
way : yet, when Stephen Fell saw him, he never sup-
posed that he himself should live to see him dead and
buried, and his wife married again,

Corporal Fell had been lain on his bed as soon as he
got into the Hospital, and was not allowed to rise from
it for as much as a week ; but little Jamie was never
long out of his sight, for the child had become jealous
lest there should be another scheme for parting him from
his father, so that whenever this fear came over him
he always climbed on the cot, and either lay down by
his poor daddy, or sat on the bolster with his little
hand laid upon him. He slept at night too by his side,
and did many little things to help him, during the day,
such as running on errands for him, or reaching him a
little water, or Congee, or calling a Cooley to do any
thing he was not able to do himself ; and as the sight
of the child was a delight to the Corporal, the poor
man was always thanking God, that things had been
so ordered that the little fellow had not been left in the
barracks.

There was this difference in the state of Corporal Fell
and John Blaney, that Stephen, though as surely marked
for death, as Blaney, was not by any means so near his



IN THE HOSPITAL. 23

end. He had several ups and downs still to experience,
and was much more easy and stronger, and to all ap-
pearance every way better, after he had been in the
Hospital a week, whilst poor Blaney was getting slowly
worse and worse, for it was all the way down-hill with
him in this life—he was never more fo rally. Blaney
never rose from his bed but to have it made, and, poor
man, it was a weary, weary hour with him when his
wife cleaned him, as she called changing and washing
him every day before breakfast.

There was as much difference between Mrs. Blaney
and the other women, already spoken of, as these women
were unlike each other. Mrs. Blaney was a decent
middle-aged person, with a fresh colour and comely
face, uncommonly neat and tight in her dress, and so
old-fashioned, that one might have thought she had
never been beyond her own village, in the wild border
lands where her father was schoolmaster and parish
clerk, She was also very industrious and thrifty, and
though her husband had only private’s pay, she knew
better than many a Sergeant’s wife, where to put her
hands on a few rupees. To be sure she had never had
a child, for which she expressed much satisfaction, be-
cause children, she said, were more trouble than profit.

Corporal Fell had seen Mrs. Blaney many times
before, but it had so happened that he had never spoken
to her, nor had he heard her much spoken of ; but from
her decent conduct and outward behaviour, she obtained
his respect almost immediately. It is true that he
soon was brought to think that he should not wish to
have her about him at the time when he might want
most comfort ; nay it was not many days before he



24 JAMIE GORDON.

would have been very glad of many an idler, and even
more slovenly neighbour.

All those who have been in hot countries must have
felt the refreshment of those sweet morning hours which
sometimes follow a night in which no sick person is
able to sleep on account of the heat. How comfortable
it would have been to poor Blaney and Corporal Fell to
have enjoyed a sleep each morning, if it were only for a
short time, during that cool period ; but that was not to
be. No sooner had the morning gun fired, which was
always very early, than Mrs. Blaney was out of bed,
and dressed, and beginning to set things in order, call-
ing loudly for the coolies and sweepers, knocking, in
her bustle, first against her husband’s and next against
Stephen Fell’s cot, rattling the fill-mills, as they call the
venetians, in order to clean them, opening her chest
which stood between the beds, and banging down the
lid, clattering with cups and saucers and plates, whilst
she set the breakfast, and not letting, any body be quiet
till she had frightened sleep quite away from the sick
folk on either hand of her.

Still however, things went on very smoothly between
the neighbours, till the morning of about the third day
of their being together.

It was then, after Mrs. Blaney had arranged her
husband’s cot, given him his breakfast, and put every
thing away, that with the best intentions in the
world, she suddenly seized on Jamie Gordon, and began
to handle his head in such a manner as he had never
felt before, driving the sharp teeth of the comb through
the skin at every motion of her hand. The boy was
too proud to cry, but he got off as soon as possible, and



IN THE HOSPITAL. 25

the next morning he rebelled against this treatment,
and shewed that he was not of a temper to be managed
after this sort.

At the very first sound of her voice, bidding him
come to her, he had turned sulky, whilst Corporal Fell,
as he lay in his bed, heard the good woman speaking
loudly to the boy, bidding him come to her in a tone
which would have made any child run as far the con-
trary way-as his legs could carry him. He also heard
the boy say ‘ I won’t,’ and the next minute, for he kept
his eyes shut on purpose, he found that the little lad
had climbed on his bed, and he felt his throat tightly
strained by the round dimpled hands and arms of his
young charge.

It was of no use to pretend to be asleep any longer,
for though Jamie might think that as long as he did not
speak to his father there was no manner of fear of
frightening sleep away from him in any other way,
yet Mrs. Blaney had no such fear of disturbing the sick
man, but changing the object of her anger, she said in
her usual loud shrill tone :

‘I say, Stephen Fell, does you, a decent man as I
believes you to be, does you think it right to uphold
that rampagious child in his obstinacy and rebellious-
ness, and where, I ask, is the gratitude due to me, who
neither looks for fee nor reward, but is willing to fettle
the child and keep him clean and wholesome, whilst
you lie helpless there.’

‘What is it? mistress,’ asked Corporal Fell, not
knowing how to reply, for he loved Jamie too fondly
to think of taking part against him ; ‘ What is it ?’

‘Why,’ she replied, ‘that Jamie Gordon, he won’t

D



26 JAMIE GORDON.

come to be fettled, but runs away when I calls him,
and here you are encouraging him in his wilfulness,
contrary to all decency.’

‘I am really much obliged to you, Mrs. Blaney,’ said
the Corporal, ‘ but——’

Here Mrs. Blaney interrupted Stephen Fell, saying,
‘I am a plain honest woman, Corporal, and I can’t
for the life of me imagine what kind of lad you expects
him to turn out, when you leaves him in his obstinacy
to keep his head from the comb, and to resist the com-
mands of those who, being his elders, must be wiser
than he is, without ever giving him so much as a word
or a blow for his pains. I say, Stephen Fell, if you wish
him well, use the rod pretty sharply, or let others who
will, use it for you.’ And there ended that matter
for that time, and poor Jamie’s golden hair went un-
combed, until his father was able to sit up in bed
and put it to rights with his own hands.



DISCUSSIONS. 27

CHAPTER IV.
DISCUSSIONS.

Corporat Fett enjoyed much quiet during the early
part of the first Sunday which he spent in the hospital.
Mrs. Blaney had been brought up to pay much out-
ward respect to certain days ; so that when she had set
things in order in her berth and dressed herself, she
sat down quietly to read some book which she had
brought with her from England.

At that time there was no place of worship in Cawn-
pore ; there was a Chaplain, it is true, and he hada
service for the men on a Sunday on the open parade at
sunrise. He was ready also to bury and christen and
marry, but there ended all the duties he could be forced
to perform, and unhappily his heart was not in the
cause, so he never did any voluntary service.

Corporal Fell was so much easier this day, that he
was not only able to read himself but to hear little
Jamie read also, which last he had not been able to do
for some weeks, and so Jamie sate on his bolster, may
be an hour or more, reading his chapter and talking

about it, and asking his daddy many questions. Jamie’s
D2



28 JAMIE GORDON,

chapter was the first of Genesis, he had not got beyond
this one yet, and he was a long while in stammering
through it, for the Corporal was very particular in
making him keep his points, and in satisfying him, as
far as he could, about anything he did not understand
in the account of the creation. One of the things he
wanted to know this day was, whether the first plants
and trees came up out of the ground on the third day
with all their leaves and flowers on them, or whether
the sticks, as he called them, came up at first and the
leaves came out afterwards ?

Corporal Fell could not answer this question, but
it led him to much sweet discourse on the beautiful
works of our Creator, and his mercy and loving-kind-
ness even to the smallest birds of the air. ‘ Much as I
love you, my lad,’ said Corporal Fell, ‘ yet does the Al-
mighty love his chosen ones better, and you must
always bear this in mind, Jamie, and remember when
Iam not present to teach you, that when you have
done wrong you must at once humble yourself before
your Heavenly Father, and ask His forgiveness, just as
you would do if you had vexed me, your earthly father.’
Little Jamie understood this well, and his young mind
was thus drawn out by his adopted father in the only
way a child should go, and though the Corporal was
perhaps too indulgent in his treatment of the boy, yet
he was very urgent in shewing him where only he could
look for support and direction for his future well-doing,
both here and hereafter. And it may be hoped, that
though for awhile the good seed did not flourish, yet it
had taken root and wanted but the Divine Spirit to blow
upon it to make it blossom and bring forth fruit.



DISCUSSIONS. 29

So the child read and talked till he was weary, and
till the book fell from his little hands, and his eyes
closed in sleep, and then followed two or more very
still hours, in which little was heard in the wards but
the pattering of a shower and the cooing of the doves,
in the tall trees of the adjoining garden.

The dinner-hour brought some bustle, but, the after-
noon, till towards sundown, was quiet again ; almost all
the sick in the wards had a sleep, and some of them
would perchance have slept some time longer if it had
not been for what shall presently be told.

There were several of the barrack boys in the hospi-
tal at thaf time, but not in the ward with Stephen Fell,
nor near him, so that Jamie had never once fallen
into their company since he had been in the hospital.
He had always played in his own quiet shady corner,
with the little kids, and that evening after he had had
his tea, he had gone out to play in his own place, and
here he would have remained quietly enough, if young
Pickles, his old acquaintance, had not espied him.

When Philip left his mother, he crept slily round
the corner of the building, and beckoned Jamie Gordon
away, enticing him farther and farther, till he had got
him quite to the other side of the hospital.

Then he brought him into the midst of the other
boys, and they were all at high games with each other,
when Mrs. McCrury and Mrs. Pickles passed by to go
out. Betty called to her son, promising him a good
beating, if he did not come after her that moment ;
and Mrs. McCrury seizing Jamie by the arm, told him
to make haste to his father, who had missed him, and

was calling for him.
D3



30 JAMIE GORDON,

‘Bless you, woman,’ said Betty Pickles, ‘why do
you tell the boy to go to his father, you know as well
as I do, that he is no child of Stephen Fell’s.’

‘What is it, asked Jamie, who was still held by Mrs.
McCrury, ‘ what does she say ?’ and he pointed to Mrs.
Pickles.

‘She says nothing worth hearing,’ replied Katty, ‘ but
get along with you,’ she added, as she let the child’s
arm go.

When Mrs. McCrury loosed her hold on Jamie,
Philip Pickles, and several of the other boys, got about
him, and taking up what Mrs. Pickles had said, about
his being no son of Corporal Fell’s, from one thing to
another, they went on to say everything that was spite-
ful and provoking to him, such as, ‘that he belonged
to no one’—‘that his mother was dead in one place,
and his father in another’— ‘and that Corporal Fell
had picked him off his Daddy’s grave ’—with other
such cruel nonsense, as ill-bred children often utter ;
and being only the more excited to plague the boy, from
seeing how the little fellow stormed and raged, stamping
his feet, and telling them that they were all a pack of
liars, and his Daddy should flog them all.

Whilst this was going on in the hospital yard, the
two women who had begun the disturbance, walked
away, being both hot in dispute ; ‘and why for’ said
Mrs. McCrury, ‘ why for should you trouble the little
lad, by telling him that the hand that feeds him, and
the bosom on which he rests, don’t belong to his nat’ral
parent ! won’t he find out soon enough, that the cold
earth lies on the bones of them as brought him into
the world. I tell you, Betty, that he should never have



DISCUSSIONS. 31

learnt them things from me, if he had not known them
afore, the darling !

Long before Mrs. McCrury and Betty Pickles had got
back to the barracks, Jamie Gordon had run to his
daddy, all hot and dirty, for he had been rolled by one
boy in the dust ; and bloody, for he had been exchanging
blows with another ; and ragged, for he had torn one
boy’s pannjaumahs, and that boy had torn his in re-

venge.
- He had come running at full speed, and roaring like
a little bull-calf, and he had scrambled into his castle,
that is the Corporal’s bed, and he had clasped the sick
man round his neck and almost deafened him with his
cries.

All that the Corporal could make out of his words
were, ‘ A’aint I your boy, Daddy? A’aint I your boy,’
whilst at each time that he repeated the question he
hugged the sick man closer and closer, hiding his little
dirty face in his bosom.

‘ Aye, to be sure, my lad,’ replied the Corporal, ‘ if
the will of your parents and the consent of hearts can
make you mine, mine you are; but what have you
been at, Jamie. What’s all this dust and blood ?’

‘ He has been fighting as sure as I am alive,’ said
Mrs. Blaney ; ‘and if you did right Corporal Fell, you
would make him know and feel that he is not to follow
such low ways without punishment ; but here you are
as you always does, upholding him in bad as well as
good. Now, Jamie Gordon,’ she added; ‘don’t be
going for to add the sin of lying to your other sins, but
tell those who ought to know, what you have been doing
with yourself, the last hour ?’



32 JAMIE GORDON.

‘They said,’ replied Jamie, raising his head, but
still holding the Corporal about the neck, ‘they said
he was not my daddy, and that I was not nobody’s lad,
and I said I was daddy’s ; and so I fetched him a blow,
and so he knocked me down, and so I struck again, and
so they rolled me in the dust, and then I came here to
daddy ’cause he loves me.’

‘Do you think I love you, Jamie,’ answered Fell,
‘with that dirty face, and that bloody nose, and when
you have been wicked enough to quarrel and strike
blows. Oh Jamie, do you think I can love you even
whilst you are all dirty and covered with blood and
dust without, and all filled within with evil passions,
with hatred, and vengeance, and cruelty. Do you
think I can love you through all these things, Jamie ?’

‘Can’t you daddy, can’t you,’ replied the child,
drawing a little from the Corporal, and looking pitifully
and earnestly in his face. ‘I thought that you could
never stop loving me, daddy.’

‘True my boy,’ answered the Corporal, ‘ if my love
of you comes from the right source, it never can wear
out with time, neither can you wear it out, be you ever
so wayward ; but mind you, Jamie, . may love a2 to
the end, and yet hate your evil ways.’

The little one did not quite understand what the
Corporal said, he had some idea however, of what he
meant, though it was a dark and childlike one.

He was going again to put the question of whether
the Corporal was really his father, when notice was
given that the Doctor was coming round, on which he
dived under the bedclothes ; thus covering his bloody
face, and when the Corporal raised the sheet after the



DISCUSSIONS. 33

Doctor had made his rounds, he was in asleep so sound
that he was no longer conscious of any care or any
angry feeling.

As might be expected from what has before been said
of Stephen Fell’s management of the boy, no more was
said to Jamie about the affair of that Sunday evening ;
and loath was the Corporal to believe that by not check-
ing in the child, the evil passions as they rose, he was
leaving him to feel the fearful consequences such indul-
gence of passions always bring.

When the evening was quite set in, Mrs. Blaney
having fettled her husband for the night, lighted her
candle and set it on the feenpaun, and having brought
out a book which seemed to have been well thumbed,
she said, ‘I wish, Corporal, you would tell me some-
thing of this little lad’s parents, and how you came to
take him under your care, and why you did not rather
let some of our women have charge of him, though to
be sure, it is not every one of them, as one would like to
have the care of a fatherless and motherless bairn. No
doubt in some things you have done as well for him as
even J myself could have done, barring one particular,
which is, that I account you to be exceedingly to blame—
mind, I say, exceedingly to blame, Stephen Fell, in not
correcting the child, or causing him to be severely cor-
rected, when he does such things as he did this evening.
Then too, about that matter of the combing and clean-
ing, which I was willing out of decency to do, he
shewed such a spirit, that if indulged as you indulges
him, Corporal, must bring him to the whipping-post, if
not worse ; but it is nought to me, he is no kith nor
kin of mine, and you can’t say but that I have warned



3d JAMIE GORDON.

you where all this would end—but leaving the future,
I would be glad to hear how you came to take the lad,
for he seems to give you trouble enough now you have
got him.’ :

Corporal Fell made no difficulty whatever, in granting
this favour ; so raising himself a little upon his pillow
and laying his hand on the sleeping boy, he told his
story much in the words which shall be put down in
these pages.

‘It was some years last spring,’ said he, ‘when we
were lying at Morpeth in N orthumberland, and there
we were joined by as fine a young man from over the
border as ever you saw.’

‘Then truly,’ said Mrs. Blaney, complacently ; ‘he
must have beem comely indeed, for them border people
have not their fellows in all Europe.”

‘His name was Alan Gordon,’ continued Fell, ‘and
he was married to a very fair lass whom he called
Peggy. He had been married so long as to have had
one little lad, who was dead before I knew them ; this
one, that is Jamie, having been born after I knew them.
I was the man who stood first to the child at the font,
—you will call that something, Mrs. Blaney.’

‘Sure, she answered ; ‘ but go on.’

‘So,’ continued the Corporal, ‘we was moved from
place to place—mostly about the south-coast ; and lay
one whole summer on Barnham Downs.’

‘Aye,’ said Mrs. Blaney, ‘ was not that where Blaney
and I joined ; but we was not in your company, and
it a’int in Europe as it is here—where there is more
women about a barrack or camp than there is men—so
I might have been months at the same station with



DISCUSSIONS. 35

Gordon’s wife, and never knowed there was such a
woman.’

‘But you knew there was such an one at Fort
William ;’ resumed the Corporal, ‘and that she died
there, and was buried the day we came off, to come up
the country.’

‘To be sure I did, replied Mrs. Blaney; ‘ here
worn’t a woman in the regiment, that it did not put
under fear, because of the climate.’

‘I was put on board the same boat with poor Alan
and the child, to come up the river,’ continued the Cor-
poral ; ‘for which favour I was beholden to Sergeant
Young, who felt for the poor widower, and I knew how
needful I was to his comfort, and almost to the preser-
vation of the child, from whom the father would on no
account be parted. Though, as he had been falling
away ever since he came into the hot climate, he needed
the care almost of a woman. Alan Gordon was very
far from well when we got him aboard the boat, but we
set down his ailments rather to grief than to any de-
cided disease ; and he was so afraid of being sent to the
hospital boats, which would have parted him from me
and the child, that he did not complain, but concealed
even from me many of his worst symptoms.’

‘From the time however of Margaret’s death, he was
quite unable to carry the child about, when we went
on shore in the evening, and the lad wanted as much
care as a baby of twelvemonths ; for he had been so ill
at Calcutta that it was expected he would have gone
before his mother, and was reduced to a perfect skeleton,
having quite lost the use of his legs. It was strange
how this long illness backed him in every way, for to



36 JAMIE GORDON.

this day he hardly remembers any thing which hap-
pened before it. Alan Gordon could not bear the idea
of parting from him or of turning him over to any of
the women of our company ; so it was left to me to
take care of him when his poor father was disabled,
and somehow or other, I cannot say how, the lad
wound himself about my heart in such a way that had
he died when his father did, I should have mourned him
as one mourns an only son.’

‘And what would you do now if he was to die?’
asked Mrs. Blaney.

“I hope,’ replied the Corporal, ‘I should be enabled
to acknowledge that all would be for the best. I can-
not now live to see him grow up, and I must leave him
in a dangerous world. I do not however, doubt that
all will be ordered for his good ; but to go on with my
story. Poor Alan fell off, from day to day, from the
time he came into the boats; and yet it is my belief
that he, now being in glory, accounts those few months
to be the most blessed of his earthly existence: for
though dying daily, as one might say, as to the outward
man, he was then only beginning to live in the Spirit.
His wife had ever been a prudent, discreet, and as I
believe, a truly pious person, and many and many is
the time when I have seen her on board ship, trying to
win him to read the Scriptures to her, when she would
be sitting on deck with her needle in her hands. But
as it regarded him, she had nothing to comfort her on
her death-bed, but the evidence of things not seen ;
still she was, as she told him and me, blessed with as
full an assurance that his Heavenly Father loved him,
and had put it into her heart to pray for him, having



DISCUSSIONS. OV

promised that those who asked should receive: that
she died in joyful hopes of a future re-union in glory.
Not that I mean to say that poor Alan was ever an
enemy to the Truth, as too many are ; but whilst things
went well with him, he gave small thought to his God ;
and this his poor wife was well aware of. However,
he was quite another man, by Divine grace, towards the
last, and was enabled joyfully to commit his eternal
happiness to Him who had died for him. It was the
very day on which he died, his little boy was sitting
at the time on the bed on which his father was
stretched, and when he had expressed his perfect con-
viction that he should find all he had lost, in his blessed
Redeemer, he asked me to give him my hand, and when
I had done so, he took the small thin hand of this dear
boy by my side and put it into mine; then closing
my fingers upon it, he raised his head, it was the last
_ time he did so, and pronounced his blessing,—his dying
blessing on’ us both. He was taken only one hour
afterwards with the death-throes, and never again spoke
distinctly, for he was dead before evening gun-fire.
We halted that evening on a wild woody shore—some-
where between this and Benares ; I remember the place
well, though I can’t remember the name of it. It was
the Saturday night however, and we were not to move
till the Monday. Poor Gordon died at such an hour
that there could be no thought of burying him before
morning, even could we have wished to turn out the
poor corpse so soon ;—so we got a few boards knocked
together, to be ready for day-break, and I watched
the body all night, as it lay stretched in the boat,
holding the poor unconscious orphan in my arms,’
K



38 JAMIE GORDON.

‘And I warrant,’ said Mrs. Blaney, ‘ that you heard
enough of the jackals that night, howling and prowl-
ing, being drawn by the scent of death. Them creatures,’
she added, ‘knows better where a corpse is, or where
one is like to be, than the wisest of us human crea-
tures.’

* My old comrade Blake had gone the evening before
with one of our Corporals and three others, to choose a
place for the grave,’ continued Fell ; ‘and they had
gone farther inland than is commonly done on such
occasions, and Blake had taken a fancy to one particular
spot, and had got leave to have the grave dug there.
So at the very earliest dawn, the body was put into the
shell, and marched up to the place, and the service was
read over the grave, and we all returned to the boats,
where we were to remain quiet all day. As soon in
the afternoon as we could get liberty, that is, Blake,
myself, and others of poor Alan’s friends, we went up
again to the grave, and took some of the Dandies, and
other black fellows with us, and we got stones from the
bed of a brook near at hand, and heaped them on the
grave, as we read ofin the Holy Scriptures. Then Blake
took his knife and carved a few letters and figures on
the bark of the tree under which the heap lay ; the
letters and figures were, A. G. with the date ; and there,
if no accident has happened to the tree, and the stones
have not been stirred, the place of that grave is as clear
to be seen now, as it was the day we left it. When the
sun was so low that the trees on the bank broke its
rays, I took the child in my arms and carried him up
to the place of his father’s grave, I hoped that he would
be old enough to remember it, and I resolved to shew



DISCUSSIONS. 39

him every thing about it distinct and clear, hoping, as
the saying is, that the scene might form a picture never
to be forgotten in his young mind. The little one loved
to be carried out ; he knew not, poor lamb, what he had
lost, and he patted my cheek with his small hand, as he
was carried along, and nestled his face close to mine.
It would be more than unnatural surely, Mrs. Blaney,
if the poor orphan had not then secured such a place
in my heart as no folly on his part should ever be able
~ to lose.’

‘Well,’ said Mrs. Blaney, ‘I don’t understand any
thing about such things. Its well some do—or what
would become of such orphanless bairns as yon—more
especially, when they are of such a rampagious sort as
the lad there is,—but go on,—so you took him to see
where they had laid his father ; did he understand any
thing about it, think you ?’

‘I cannot say what he understood at the time,’ replied
Corporal Fell ; ‘ but he has no memory of seeing that
- grave. Now one thing was, that he was taken very sick,
very soon afterwards, and a long sore hand I had with
him for some weeks ; though I reckon that the trouble
I had with him then only made him the dearer to
me.’

‘Trouble,’ repeated Mrs. Blaney, ‘ by that rule, Cor-
poral : if your love for him is to grow in measure as he
continues-to plague you, you will be doting on him by
and bye, as never fool of a father doted on any son.’

The Corporal smiled, but did not attempt to turn
aside the keen edge of the woman’s remark. He only
added, that after having taken the child on that Sun-

day evening to the grave, he had hastened back with
EK 2



40 JAMIE GORDON,

him, in double quick time, from having, when he acci-
dentally looked down, perceived the clear, fresh print of
a tiger’s foot on a swampy patch under the trees on the
bank.

When the-Corporal had finished his story, Mrs. Blaney
said, ‘I am obliged to you, Stephen Fell, for what you
have told me, and can only say, that I wish all fatherless
and motherless bairns could meet with as much kind-
ness in one sense as you have shewn to Jamie Gordon ;
still, to be plain with you, there is one point in which
to my thinking you do act a most unkind part by the
little lad. I am not one as ever can use flatteries,
or say one thing and mean another; so if you have
not a mind to hear my opinion, I will say no more, and
there the matter may rest.’

The Corporal assured Mrs. Blaney ‘that he had no
objection to hear all she had to say.’

‘Well then, said she, ‘this is the bottom of my mind.
It is my opinion, and it is not grounded on hear-say,
but on what my own eyes and ears have told me, that
you are led by a foolish and blind fondness to withhold
that correction from the boy, which becomes more and
more needful, let me tell you, from one day to another.
A few months more and that bairn Jamie Gordon will
neither be to hold nor to bind.’

Stephen Fell confessed with a sigh ‘that he had ob-
served, that as the child grew and gained strength, he
had shewn more and more of a temper that was not
easily kept under,’

‘ You do acknowledge that much,’ replied the woman,
‘then in the name of common sense, man, why don’t you
apply the rod whilst it may be of service. I should



DISCUSSIONS. 41

have tried it, I promise you, in no time, instead of talk-
ing and palavering with him as you did, and trying
foolishly enough to fill him with the notion that he
could do nothing to make you cease to love him, though
you did not love his vile ways. I could hardly be-
lieve my own ears, when I heard you going on in that
fashion.’

‘Perhaps,’ answered the Corporal, with the air of
one who is afraid he has got the weak side of the argu-
ment, though still unwilling to acknowledge it, ‘ you
do not quite understand my plans with the child.’

‘You need not suppose any thing about it,’ retorted
Mrs. Blaney, ‘the plain truth is that we are as far from
each other in our thoughts on the guidance of children
as John O‘Groat’s house is from the Land’s End. ;—but
let us hear all you have to say about plans as you calls
them ; though to speak the honest truth I have not
much notion of their being anything to the purpose.’

‘You must first take into consideration, Mrs. Blaney,’
said the Corporal, ‘that was I ever so well disposed to
use the rod to this poor boy who is sleeping by my
side, I have not the power now, neither have I had it
for weeks back—the strength of my arm is departed,
never I believe to be restored.’ ,

‘May be so,’ she replied, ‘ for I have no notion of your
ever getting about again, though some think otherwise,
and others flatter you about your case, to keep your
spirits up; but what’s that to the purpose; / was ready,
as you knows, in the matter of the combing and fettling,
to have fought the battle for you if you had but en-
couraged me, but that is past, and J have done with it.’

Stephen Fell took no notice of this remark, but said,
E 3



42 JAMIE GORDON.

‘I have thought long and deeply upon the subject of the
management of this poor boy, Mrs. Blaney, and even
many a time and oft since I have lain upon this bed,
and the way of thinking to which I am come is what I
shall tell you. Could I have looked forwards to living
long enough to lead the boy through the dangers of
childhood, 1 hope that I should, as you say, have pun-
ished him when he does wrong. But,’ he added, gain-
ing confidence in his own opinions as he proceeded,
“being by the will of God deprived of the hope of
seeing the child grow up to manhood, and on the con-
trary having the prospect of quitting him in a few
months, perhaps weeks, I desire only to leave sweet
and kind and gentle recollections of me, his nursing-
father, on his mind.’

‘And so,’ remarked Mrs. Blaney, ‘to be sure of his
good word in after-life—may be even in that expecta-
tion, those that live long enough may find you to have
made a mistake ; for what must be the end of your weak
indulgence.’

‘Hear me out,’ replied the Corporal, ‘ you have mis-
taken my object. It is not that he may speak well of
me hereafter that I have adopted this plan of managing
the child ; but that the boy may be’able when in danger
of being hardened and corrupted by his own evil pas-
sions, and evil companions, and the world’s unkindnegs ;
to turn back to the memory of the love, and kindness,
and patient forbearance shewn him in his wayward in-
fancy by his adopted father. Then through that
earthly father, or rather through Divine blessing upon
the lessons taught by that earthly father, he might still
mount higher, and be enabled to see the love of that



DISCUSSIONS. 43

Heavenly Father, who cared for him when yet he
knew him not.’

‘Bless us, do but hearken to the man! Why, Cor-
poral, you have a many strange notions!’ exclaimed
Mrs. Blaney.

Then having snuffed her candle and opened her
book, she added, ‘ Well, Stephen Fell, I suppose I ought
to be obliged to you for your trying to make me com-
prehend what you are after; but I don’t say as I
either understands you, nor approves of your opinions,
even when I does understand you. Methinks I have
heard some say whose words you would honour, though
you set so light a value on mine, that “those whom
the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth every son
whom he receiveth.” Heb. xii.6. But the matter is
nought to me, so now you may as well settle yourself
for the night.’

Then fixing her eyes on the book, she made the Cor-
poral understand she wanted no more talk,



44 JAMIE GORDON.

CHAPTER V.
THE GODFATHER’S DEATH.

Tuoven Stephen Fell made no comment upon what
Mrs. Blaney said, the verse she had quoted caused
many reflections which often before had occurred to
his mind ; but as it will be seen, the impression was
not sufficient to make him alter his conduct to the
child, though he could not but acknowledge to his own
mind, that Jamie Gordon, like other high-spirited chil-
dren, would have been all the better for a little correc-
tion.

The very next evening, the Corporal got permission
from the Doctor to sit up a few hours, which was a
great relief to him and caused the days to pass much
more agreeably ; but from that time Mrs. Blaney seemed
as if she was not altogether pleased because Jamie was
not managed according to her wishes, and in conse-
quence she grew very tart with the boy and drove him
from her side of the Corporal’s cot,—where to be sure
he had no right to be. The Corporal however passed
all these things over, and as he was better able to man-



THE GODFATHER’S DEATH. 45

age the child now he was up, few causes of dispute
arose.

It must not be thought however that there was any
real amendment in Stephen Fell’s health, though there
was much in appearance, especially when the cold sea-
son first came on, but there was never any thought of
his being able to return to his duty.

The hospitals in India generally become much thin-
ner in the colder months, and fewer deaths occur. The
berth next to Corporal Fell’s was soon left vacant, for
John Blaney went off quite suddenly towards the end of
September. He died at gun-fire in the morning, and
was buried the same day av gun-fire in the evening,
and Mrs. Blaney packed up and cleared out of the hos-
pital the same night, having been asked to go to the
Quarter-master’s Bungalow, there to do needlework and
wait upon the lady till she could settle her plans.

Every decent widow would wish to avoid living in
barracks, so Mrs. Blaney was at the Quarter-master’s
nearly three months, but she spent her Christmas in
the barracks, having taken a second husband and risen
in rank, and consequently in comfort. She had chosen
the best and most suitable out of many an offer, for it
must be remembered how few white women there were
in Cawnpore, and the next time we shall hear of her
we must call her Mrs. Fifer.

Her husband was pay-sergeant Fifer of the first
company, his room being next to that of Serjeant
Young, the door opening almost upon Katty McCrury’s
berth.

It seemed as if providence had ordered all things so
that the last months of the life of Corporal Fell should



46 JAMIE GORDON.

be those of the greatest peace and quietness he had
ever known since he had been a soldier.

There were some other invalids in the ward, but
they were quiet men, and there was not another child
to interfere with Jamie ; so that there was much oppor-
tunity for Stephen Fell to instruct the boy in reading
and even a little writing, and to teach him many of those
passages of Scripture which he particularly wished him
to keep stored up in memory against the day of need.

When I am gone, he thought, this dear boy will be
exposed to every temptation to wickedness which can
be well imagined. I am sorely afraid that he will give
way and become at least for a time all that I could
wish him not to be, but still I am assured that our God
will remember him. For it isto thee, O Lord, that I
trust this my fatherless child, knowing that thy mercy
endureth for ever. For though a mother may forget
her sucking-child, that she should not have compassion
on the son of her womb, yea, she may forget, yet wilt
thou not forget thine adopted ones.

When the cool season was set in, Corporal Fell was
permitted to creep about in the evenings in the hospital
compound, and even to go out into the plain, from
whence he could see the wide Ganges and the boats
gliding down the stream. He could not indeed walk
far, but he had found an agreeable seat on a low bank
of sand under the wall of the garden, of which mention
has been made before. There, under the shade of the
trees, whose boughs spread over the wall, he sat many
an evening with his little one either seated at his feet,
or standing between his knees, exchanging much sweet
discourse with each other.



THE GODFATHER’S DEATH. 47

The dying man endeavoured on all occasions to raise
the thoughts of the boy from this present evil world to
that happy region where the redeemed shall live for
ever with the Redeemer. Vast and continued were the
pains which he took to make the little one understand,
that greatest manifestation of the Divine love, by
-which God was made man, and crucified for the sins
of the world. All the lessons then given by Stephen
Fell to that fair boy, were lessons of love, and all the
examples he used to fix these lessons on the memory of
the child, were taken from the objects then before them.
He compared the passing nature of each, man’s life on
earth, to the progress of some small skiff down the
mighty Ganges. The bright purple and golden glories of
the clouds, which sometimes half concealed the setting
sun, served him not unseldom, for the emblems of that
bright state of existence, in which the redeemed shall
shine with the excellency of the Redeemer ; as the clouds
then in the west were decked with the rays of golden
light. |

So sweet were some of these discoursings between the
little boy and his dying instructor, that they some-
times seemed almost to forget that there existed any
other beings near them, but themselves and God their
Heavenly Friend and Father.

Who can pretend to say, how far Jamie Gordon
would have escaped the corruptions of the barracks, had
it pleased God to spare Corporal Fell to guard him
through the dangers of childhood and youth ; but this
was not to be. The worthy man lingered through the
whole cold season, seeming to get no worse; but he
began to change at the end of February, and never



48 JAMIE GORDON.

rose from his bed after the first of March, going off
quite suddenly at last.

It was about four in the afternoon, that he first ex-
perienced any symptoms which foreboded the near
approach of death ; but about seven o’clock he was so
much better, that he called for Jamie, and took his
last leave of him, though he himself did not know it
to be such.

The child cried bitterly, when his adopted father told
him that he must leave him for the night, as he felt too
ill to allow him to sleep near him, as had been their
custom hitherto ; but he made no objection, when Mrs.
Thomas led him away, and placed him under the care
of a young man, who lay at the other end of the ward.

She then returned to the bedside of the dying man,
where she found her husband, and not knowing how
long he might linger, and feeling that it would not be
proper to leave him with the black men, she told Ser-
geant Thomas, that come what would, she would stay
to see the last of the Corporal, and that he might go
to bed, as she knew as well what to do, as him, or any
of them. ‘ But,’ added she, ‘as it would be dull sitting
here, when every one else in the ward may be fast
asleep, I wish you would send up to the barracks for
Nancy Fifer, to sit along with me, and you may as well
send what may be wanted for the laying-out, before
you go to bed.’

Poor Fell was past all care on the subject of what
was going on in the little world about him, on the
door-sill of which his soul yet lingered ; and he was, it
is trusted, passed all suffering, though his spirit was
still in the body, as was evident from the occasional



THE GODFATHER’S DEATH. 49

spasmodic twitchings of his features, though he was
otherwise perfectly still, and apparently in a gentle
slumber.

Mrs. Thomas was a comely dame, of a certain age.
She had been twenty years in the regiment, and had
been the general nurse of the sick for as much as fifteen
of those years.’ She was one that made herself gene-
rally pleasing to the sick, and often indulged their long-
ings, in contradiction to the orders of the Doctors, being
pretty sure that no complaints would be made against
her on that score.

So when Sergeant Thomas had gone out of the ward,
the sick having all been served, and settled down for
the night—the lamps lighted, and every thing as it
should be, Mrs. Thomas took the only chair in the
berth, and placing herself where she could see the dying
man, and reach him in an instant, should anything
be wanted, she crossed her arms in front, and leaning
back with her feet extended, she began to think. If
she had told her thoughts, it would have been a good
lesson for those persons, who fancy that the heart may
be turned from folly, by the influence of awful and
appalling scenes. Mrs. Thomas was in a certain sense
alone, in a vast and gloomy apartment, where she heard
no sound but the occasional squeaks of musk-rats, and
the distant howl of the prowling jackal. She was
watching the last movements of one dying, and yet her
head was running on the pattern of her next gown;
of the probability of the Corporal’s having saved any
money, and whether it was secured to Jamie ; of the
price of a keg of Europe brandy, which her husband

F



50 JAMIE GORDON.

had bought that day ; and of the good luck of Nancy .
Blaney, in picking up pay-sergeant Fifer.

In this way, and when Mrs. Fifer arrived, in a sort
of chat, some hours passed, and it was not till towards
the dawn of the morning, that Mrs. Thomas was made
aware of the very speedy approach of death, and so
easy was the passage of the soul, that she hardly called
her companion in time to witness the last gasp.

The morning gun sounded, the moment after Stephen
Fell had breathed his last, and the body was immediately
removed to a separate apartment, and laid out in the
usual forms by the women, flowers being strewn over
it, as we do in Europe. Several of his old friends
from the barracks came down’ after parade, to see the
last of their loved and honoured comrade, and amongst
these, the first was Blake. He came in before the
women had left the remains, and almost his first ques-
tion, after he had looked a moment on the well-remem-
bered face, was, ‘ Where is Jamie Gordon? what is to
come of the poor lad ?’

Jamie was still sleeping, (as was Supposed,) where
Mrs. Thomas had laid him the night before ; but
Blake’s question led to much discussion on this subject,
Not one of the three women present, had a living child
in India, Mrs. Thomas had one son with her mother
at Norwich. Mrs. McCrury had buried two babies,
and expected another ; and Mrs. Fifer had never been
a mother. All the three, however, as well as Blake
himself, expressed their'willingness to takeilittle Gordon
and it seemed to be almost a pity, that Mrs. Thomas’s
offer was not taken ; but as she was often from home,
it was thought by Blake, who was supposed to know



THE GODFATHER’S DEATH. 51

. the mind of the late Corporal better than most, that
Mrs. Fifer would be the properest person to take the
child : that is, if her husband made no objection. It
was then settled, that if Sergeant Fifer was agreeable,
she should come down in the cool of the evening for
the boy, and till then, that Mrs. Thomas should see
after him.

This matter being arranged, the two women from
the barracks set off to go home, whilst Mrs. Thomas
went through the wards, to look after any of the sick,
who might want her help, and to see what kept the
little orphan so long asleep.

When she came up to the cot where she had laid
him the night before, they that were about, told her
that he had been up, and gone from thence sometime ;
but no one could just say where he was gone.

There is not much more now to be said of Stephen
Fell, but that his remains were laid in rest that very
evening, in the soldier’s burying-ground, at the station
where he died. But there is much, much, to be said of
poor Jamie Gordon ; and they that would follow him,
must go through many a troublesome and fearful
scene.

The poor child was now, what he never could before
have been accounted—an Orphan indeed, a lone and
friendless Orphan in a strange land ; a child who had
no particular claim for kindness from any one, except-
ing that he was white, and that he was come with
many others of his own colour, from a far distant land.

This orphan was at that time, exactly such a child
as the noblest parents might have delighted in, and ene

of whom the most religious might have hoped the best.
F 2



52 JAMIE GORDON.

He had spent the last six months almost alone, one
might say, with his father by adoption, in the hospital,
and those months, with the Divine blessing, had done
great things for him ; or rather we should say, that God
had made the opportunities allowed by those months,
operate to the great benefit of the child, in many more
than may at first appear.

The world in which we now live, is a material world,
and there is nothing done in it, of which we can com-
prehend the doing, which is not done through material
means. What the Almighty does independently of
means, we do not understand, and cannot calculate
upon.

Now this is certain, that no child is ever taught to
read—is ever instructed in good manners—is ever made
acquainted with the affairs of this world—is ever taught
to work—or cypher—or any other art—but through
some visible means ; and therefore, such children as are
without teachers—or under evil teachers of any kind,
either grow up like perfect savages, or become skilled
only in that which is evil. But it should be carefully
observed, that even good teaching, unless blessed from
above, can never go beyond present things—can never
affect any thing beyond the present nature, which we
have all received from our forefather Adam ; a nature
which is corrupt and perishable—and one therefore,
which is only capable of a temporal, and sort of outside
improvement.

Though Stephen Fell had fully known, of how little
value (without God went before him as it were,) any
thing could be to Jamie, which he could teach him ;
yet, as those who work in faith always do, he went as



THE GODFATHER’S DEATH. 53

strait to the point of what he would have done for the
child, as if every thing had actually depended on him-
self. As he himself, being, as he knew, on the thresh-
hold of another world, had views of light and glory
from that other world, which stood him in the stead,
or rather were more to him, than the finest gentlemanly
education could have been,—he was enabled to go quite
beyond what might have been expected, even from a
non-commissioned officer, in the instructions he gave
the boy, as to all things which are lovely and of good
report. —

Thus, though it had not yet appeared how far the
Divine Spirit had begun to work with the child, yet
every one who could have judged of these matters,
must have seen, that Jamie Gordon was altogether, at
the time of his adopted father’s death, quite another sort
of person, from the other boys of the barracks. With
regard to teaching, there was not a book in his own
language which he could not read off with ease. He
could write his name too, and could count better than
most children of his age. He had a number of texts ~
by heart ; and his adopted father had also thought it
right, before his death, to give him all the knowledge
he could, of his natural father and family.

In his person, he was an uncommonly fine lad, one
of the most healthy children in the regiment, of so re-
gular features, that it was often said, he ought to have
been a girl ; but withal he was strongly and boldly
formed, and it was no easy matter to put him in fear.
The sort of management he had experienced, had how-
ever very much confirmed one peculiar quality of his

mind, and that was, that he could only be governed by
F 3



54 JAMIE GORDON,

kindness ; and as afterwards was proved, he was stub-
born as iron, when treated harshly, whilst he might be
melted like wax, by the faintest glow of affection.

On the morning of the death of Corporal Fell, the
child had awakened, almost immediately after the re-
moval of the remains, and instantly bethinking himself
of his father, and wondering why he was not with him,
he dressed in all haste, and ran to the empty berth.
There was the pillow, on which the dying head had
just now rested, and the cup, and spoon, from which
the lips had been moistened for the last time; and
nothing there to the eyes of the child, spoke of more
than that the invalid had risen, and gone from thence.
Jamie was not aware that this was impossible, and
without speaking to any one, he went out at the door,
and looked for his father, in those places where he had
been wont to see him, only a few days before. He
walked round the hospital, and passed out at the gate.
He thought, that he whom he sought, might be under
the favorite trees. He was still wholly unconscious of

‘the change which had passed upon him ; he knew not
that the eye which had seen him, but a few hours past,
should see him no more—that he should return no more
to his house, neither should his place know him again.
He had indeed often seen death, and even witnessed
the whole process and ceremony of interment ; but he
had never yet felt it in the person of one on whom he
depended for his happiness. He had never within his
recollection, suffered any real bereavement from the
death of any one he had known ; till that day therefore
this child had never really felt, what it might be to
lose a dear friend. Often as the Corporal had spoken



THE GODFATHER’S DEATH. 55

to him, of his probably speedy dissolution ; he had
never realized the idea, nor did a thought of the truth
that his father was really dead, and that his body was
at that moment, lying in the dead-house, occur to his
mind, till he saw that the place under the tree was
empty.

When this thought first struck him, he threw him-
self, with his natural impetuosity, his full length on
the sand, after which, raising himself, and sitting up
with his head pressed down on his knees, he wept and
sobbed, till his whole frame was convulsed ; whilst
from time to time, he cried out, ‘Oh my father! my
father! come back to Jamie! Oh! come back to Jamie!’

It was by these cries, that Mrs. Thomas was directed
to the boy: and it was with real kindness, that she
went up to him, and soothed him, and led him by the
hand into her own apartments: for she had two very
comfortable rooms, for herself and husband. There,
whilst her breakfast was being set by a black man,
whom she kept for all table services, she tried her best
to comfort the boy, holding him before her, as she sate
in her chair.

‘Well, my poor child,’ she said, ‘it a’int to be denied
that you have lost one, who was more to you than
many fathers are to their children—but you must re-
member, my boy, that all pain is past with him for
ever—and that he is now in glory, reaping the rewards
of his good deeds.’

‘But Oh! Oh!’ replied Jamie, ‘I shall never see
him again.’

‘Not in this life, my boy,’ said the Sergeant’s wife
—‘surely not, for ever gone—there a’ant no return ;



56 JAMIE GORDON.

but won’t it be your fault, if you don’t go to him ?
you must live as he did, and serve God, and then you
will be sure of meeting him in heaven.’

Mrs. Thomas’s religion was somewhat different to
that which had been taught to Jamie, but he was too
full of grief to pay much attention to her doctrines.
In a very little while, he broke out again into violent
grief, and was so anxious to see his poor father, and
to sit by the body till they took it away, that after
forcing a cup of coffee upon him, she gave way to him
and led himto the gloomy apartment, which was set
aside in the hospital at Cawnpore, for laying out the
dead.

There lay the remains of Corporal Fell, neatly laid
out, and the white sheet which covered the body, being
_ scattered over with flowers. The face looked calm and
peaceful. The work of decomposition was as yet going
on slowly : but toward mid-day, Mrs. Thomas knew
that it would be necessary to force Jamie away.

She indulged him however for a while, in his desire
of sitting by the corpse, though she greatly wondered,
that he did not express some fear of being left with it.
The child however, expressed none, but kept his eyes
fixed on the face, and seemed so lost in thought, that
Mrs. Thomas wondered more and more at him. But
she could in no way get from him, what he thought;
all he would or could say, was, ‘I wish, I wish, God
would take me to my own father—the father that used
to speak to me, and look at me ; but this does not speak,
and does not look.’

After various attempts to get him away quietly from
the body, he at length came away himself, and did not



THE GODFATHER’S DEATH. 57

ask to see the corpse again : and he said to Mrs. Thomas,
‘I can think of my father better, when I do not see
that ’—(he did not say what,) ‘ father is not there ;’
and he was anxious that Mrs. Thomas should explain
to him, where his father was, putting a number of
questions, which she could not answer.

Towards evening, it seemed as if his little mind was
some way made up to his loss; he saw the funeral go
out of the compound, in silence: he did not ask to
follow it, as Mrs. Thomas had expected ; but said, a
can’t think that father is in that coffin, I think of him
somewhere beyond the clouds.’

The views which the Corporal had tried to give him,
of the change which takes place at the natural death of
the redeemed, were working on his mind, and had been
working whilst he was looking at the corpse, and mark-
ing from one hour to another, the fearfully rapid change
as decomposition went on. Being quite convinced,
however, that the mind who had loved and instructed
him, and made him very, very happy ; was no longer
with that dead body ; his young and tender mind was
already delivered from those fearful thoughts of the
grave, which cause many mourners to think only of
their friends, as the prey of worms and of corruption.

There was no one to whom the child could tell his
thoughts, so as to make them understand him ; for
when he tried to do so to Mrs. Thomas, who kindly
encouraged him to talk to her—he could not tell what
she meant to say, when she endeavoured to explain
things to him : for at one time she spoke of the departed,
as if they were sleeping under the sod ; and then again,
as if they were in glory on high. The good woman



58 JAMIE GORDON.

could not make those things clear to others, which she
did not herself yet understand.

But she was so kind to the boy, that when Mrs: Fifer
came up to fetch him to the barracks, and he learned
for the first time, that he was to go with her; all his
grief was renewed, and he was so unfortunate as to
let her see, that he would much rather stay where
he was.



NEW QUARTERS, 59

CHAPTER VI.
NEW QUARTERS.

Ir is very likely that Jamie Gordon would have refused
altogether to go with Mrs. Fifer, had not the Sergeant
suddenly appeared at the moment in which the spirit
of resistance was about to explode in a loud cry, and a
declaration of utter abhorrence to the measure ; for if
there was a woman in the regiment more hateful to
little Gordon than every other, it was Mrs. Fifer.

To resist Sergeant Fifer, however, was quite out of
the question with the boy ; for, in the first place he
was a Sergeant, he wore three stripes, and a worsted
sash ; then, too, he was a tall, large-built man, and he
had been drilled to an upright position, till he could
not bend; and thirdly, there was something awe-in-
spiring in the deep tinge of his complexion, which was
of the colour of red copper, and in the huge seam of an
old sword-wound, which ran all down one side of his
face. His character, and his manner too, were both
such as a child would naturally feel afraid of, for he
was accounted to be as discreet and respectable a man



60 JAMIE GORDON.

as any in the corps. He had never been known to be
in the least affected by liquor when on duty, or likely
to be so; and he went through every military form
required of him, with such exactness, that his move-
ments were like those of clock-work. Though he had
been heard to utter a sonorous laugh on some peculiarly
mirth-inspiring occasion ; yet no one could assert that
they ever saw him smile. It cannot therefore excite
any wonder if little Jamie at the sight of him, marching
up to the door of Mrs. Thomas’s apartments, should at
once give up all ideas of resistance, and deliver himself
up to his fate, without a word.

The first words of Sergeant Fifer were, “ Well, mis-
tress, be you ready to take the boy by the hand and
come along?’ then wishing Mrs. Thomas a good even-
ing, he added that they must see the lad in his place
before gun-fire.

Directing the child to walk first, he gave his arm to
his wife, and they proceeded to the barracks, without
uttering one word to each other by the way.

The room which Sergeant Fifer occupied, was situated
at one half of the end of the first company’s barrack ;
the other half being the apartment of Sergeant Young.
This room had two doors, one of which opened in the
verandah at the end of the barracks, and the other into
the interior, close upon Katty Mc Crury’s berth. Be-
sides these doors, there were other openings by which
air might be admitted, and light shut out. In one
corner of this berth was a handsome cot of sepoo-wood,
with musquito-curtains of thin muslin. The floor was
covered with a selvege of blue and white cotton, striped.
There was also a square table, the leaves of which could



NEW QUARTERS. 61

be let down when not wanted, a few chairs, a wardrobe
on a stand, in which Mrs. Fifer kept her tea and sugar,
her cups and glasses, and other stores ; and a couple of
handsome chests, clamped with brass, in which she laid
up her own, and the Sergeant’s clothes. Between each
window or door-way were pegs fastened against the
wall, on which many things were suspended, but all
with great attention to order and uniformity—for the
Sergeant was as precise in his apartment, as in his
military forms and dress—and he had already drilled
his wife into the same attention to neatness. The first
bit of furniture which Jamie remarked in the berth
was a little bedstead, which could be rolled under the
larger one in the day-time, made up with a mattress
and bolster, for himself, and near to it stood a painted
mora, on which he was cinected to seat himself as soon
as he came in.

It ought to be understood that at that time—whatever
now may be the case—every child born of white parents
belonging to regiments in his Majesty’s service, in the
East Indies, was entitled to three rupees every month,
which three rupees were quite sufficient to supply any
additional expense of maintenance incurred for such
child, either with the parents or strangers. Mrs. Fifer
knowing this, was assured that she should sustain little
or no loss by Jamie, and, as she said to her husband,
some credit might accrue to them, by their kindness to
the orphan, in the eyes of the regiment.

It was nearly dusk, when Sergeant and Mrs. Fifer
arrived at the barracks, and directed Jamie to place
himself on the mora. The Sergeant next proceeded to
hang up his cap on its usual peg, and to disencumber

G



62 JAMIE GORDON.

himself of his stiff leather stock. His wife got a candle
lighted from the room without, laid a cloth on the table,
set some country cheese, a piece of cold salt beef, some
ration bread, pickles, and chili pepper in the pods upon
the table, not forgetting two tumblers, a jug of water, and
as a matter of course, a Europe black bottle ; this being
done, she called her husband to sit down, and whilst
she was serving him with her own hands, before she
sat down herself, there was a little discourse between
them, respecting the boy, and he was accordingly
called and directed to stand on one side of the table, a
plate being set before him with a certain portion of what
was on the board.

‘I don’t want anything,’ cried the poor boy; ‘I
don’t want anything to eat, I want my own poor
father !” |

‘But don’t you know, child,’ said Mrs. Fifer, ‘ that
he is gone to that place from which no one ever comes
back, and what’s the use of your grunting and refusing
your victuals ; you has not eat the value of an ounce
this day, Mrs. Thomas says, and you will be sick with
fasting, and what a hand we shall have of it then.’

‘Give me another slice of the beef, said the Sergeant,
holding out his plate, ‘and let the boy alone, can’t
you ?’

‘Why should I, she answered ; ‘if the lad is sick, is
it you or me as must have the trouble of him ?”

‘Give us the cup,’ said the Sergeant ; ‘set it down
there :’ and he plaeed his hand on the tumbler, as it
stood by his plate, encompassing it with his thumb and
three fingers, and nodding at the same time towards
the bottle, by which token his wife was to understand



NEW QUARTERS. 63

that she was to pour some of the contents of the bottle
into the tumbler, measuring the quantity by the three
fingers. This being done, the Sergeant filled up the
tumbler with water from the jug, and having taken two
or three sups, to ascertain whether the liquor was to his
taste, he set down the glass, and returned to the salt
beef.

Mrs. Fifer was now busy in filling her own plate.
She also prepared a draught for herself, but the whole
of what she prepared was hardly enough to fill a wine-
glass, and the liquor, which was brandy, hardly coloured
the water.

Had not there been a mixed murmur of voices from
the large room on the other side of the partition, it would
have been all silent in the Sergeant’s room, whilst the
couple were eating their beef; but the noise without
went on continually, at length the voice of Katty Mc
Crury was heard above all the rest. She was telling
some wild story of something which had happened in
her own country.

Soon Mrs. Fifer, again addressing Jamie, said, ‘ In-
stead of standing and whimpering there, child, you
ought to be quite thankful and erateful-like to us for
our goodness in providing you with a decent and
respectable home ; for think ye, child, what would have
been your condition had ye been put under the care or
rather no care of that Katty McCrury? Let me tell
ye too, it would have been so had it not been for me
and my good man ; but Jamie, I would have ye under-
stand that I am not going to guide ye in that loose easy
way in which he did, who is no more. He was most

unpersuadable in one thing, and that was, in his indul-
G 2



64 JAMIE GORDON.

gence of you, boy, so that he never used any correction
for any of your bad conduct ; and to such a degree did
he humour the child, Fifer,’ she added, looking at her
husband, ‘that do what he would, however bad it
might be ; to what or to whom would the little shame-
less thing run and tell it first and foremost, but to Cor-
poral Fell himself! This I have seen more than once
nor twice either, with my own eyes.’

‘But he used,’ sobbed little Gordon, ‘ he used to tell
me how wicked I was when I was wicked; he made
me hate to be wicked.’ -

‘Well we shall see,’ replied Mrs. Fifer, ‘how fa
you relishes punishment for bad behaviour, for you
must mind what you be about, and don’t be expecting
any love from me or the Sergeant, but according to
your deserts. Here you be under my eye, and if you
is to stay here, you must mind every word I say, and
as sure as you gets out and gets among the bad children
about, either in this barrack or another, so sure shall I
make you to feel my hand—and so now you knows
what you has to expect.’

This was too much for the child ; this sorrow heaped
on sorrow, was more than he could bear, and so violent
was his burst of grief, that even the Sergeant was
touched by it, and displeased with his wife. He was a
man to whom anything like any noise or quarrelling or
violent crying of children, or scolding of women, was
particularly annoying, especially ifit should happen in
his berth ; so he accordingly silenced his wife in such
a deep tone of displeasure, as she dared not to resist,
and drawing Jamie to him, he held the tumbler of ~
which he had already drank about three parts, to the



NEW QUARTERS. 65

child’s lips, and telling the exhausted boy to swallow
what was left, he arose, and bidding his wife help the
child to bed, he left the berth to go his round of the
barrack and see that all was right before bed-time.

The poor bereaved orphan, after having swallowed a
large quantity of such strong stuff as he had hardly
ever even tasted before, would never have found his
little cot without the help of Mrs. Fifer, but when once
laid in it he was almost instantly overpowered with a
heavy sleep. |
_ It would not be expected that there should be much
quiet in the barracks after gun-fire in a morning, but
if it was needful that all the men, and even some of the
women should get up at that hour, there was no cause
for shaking up poor Jamie as Mrs. Fifer did, from a
very sound and deep sleep, the instant her husband had
gone off, in order that she might roll his bed under the
other.

The boy’s dressing was soon done, as Mrs. Fifer
threatened him with a combing and washing after
breakfast, and when he was ready, she made him assist
her in setting her berth to rights. She took up the
selvege and shook it out on the plain, she brushed and
polished every article of furniture, and then set the
breakfast with the aid of her Bobbergee, as she called
her cook. All these things being done, she washed her
hands and face, took off a loose wrapper, in which she
had done her dirty work, and had got herself in respec-
table trim by the time parade was over.

Little Jamie’s back however, ached with the shoves

and pushes she had given him, as she drove him from
: G 3



66 JAMIE GORDON.

one job to another, and a spirit of sullenness was getting
hold of him very quickly.

His young face, in the days which were passed, used
to be for the most part either quietly serious and calm,
or lighted up with happy smiles ; he knew that he was
loved by him who had taken the charge of him,
and he had the feeling that he was beloved too
of Him who made him. But these warm bright feel-
ings were passing away, and the effect produced on the
boy’s mind was coldness and sullenness. The Sergeant
and his wife drank coffee at their breakfast, they gene-
rally had the remainder of what meat they had had for
dinner, fried up in the morning. The Sergeant did not
heed it, if perchance it was slightly tainted, as it often

would be when the night had been particularly hot.

It was always served up again with a quantity of pep-
per ; the cook used to bring this savoury fry in a
covered dish, and the Sergeant ate it with chilies.
Besides this, there was always ration bread and white
bread on the table, with butter and sometimes eggs :
and Jamie was not denied anything that was at the
table. |

After breakfast, Mrs. Fifer took Jamie into a corner
of the berth at the back of the cot, which stood half-
way between the outer and inner wall, and there she
scoured and combed him with no tender hand ; and
having given him clean clothes, she handed him an old
spelling-book from one of the chests and bade him to
sit in the corner, where she bad washed him, and get
his spelling. From that time this became Jamie’s cor-
ner, his only place of refuge, in which he could hide
himself from the eye of Mrs. Fifer.



NEW QUARTERS. 67

This corner was shaded on one side by the back of
the cot, and on the other side there was a latticed
window which opened on the verandah, through which
he could peep, and through which he could hear every
thing without, just the same as if he were in the very
room with the person speaking. Every morning after
breakfast, he was hurried into it, always with some
task, either of spelling or questions—which tasks he
was, he found, so seldom required to say,—that he did
not always learn them, but made for himself a number
of little amusements, of which no one took much note.
He had a clasp-knife which one of the men had given
him, and he notched sticks, and cut pegs which he
placed in a row upon the window sill; he made them
of different heights to answer to the ranks of the regi-
ment ; and he got at several books, which often amused
him for a Jong time together. These books he found
in Corporal Fell’s chest, which was left to him with
his linen and some other matters, but the rest of the
effects had been sold, and the money placed in the hands
of the Major for the use of the boy when he required to
be put out, in case any objection was made of his being
put on the strength of the Regiment, and if so it was
to run up, till he was of age. The most precious of
_ these books was his father’s Bible, out of which the boy
had learned many verses, and in which, that is on the
fly leaves, Alan Gordon had written a sort of register
of his own family, to which Corporal Fell had made
some additions. There was Andrew Gordon, Jamie’s
grandfather, of Shepherd’s Knowe, in the Highlands of
Scotland ; his first wife and her son George, after which
last name was written, as if some years afterwards,



68 JAMIE GORDON.

“ supposed to be still living, at least not known to be
dead,” and the shepherd’s second wife, and her son Alan,
and the son’s wife Margaret, daughter of another Gordon
of Shepherd’s Knowe, with “ deceased,” after all these
members of the family, with the exception of Gordon
the uncle, and Jamie the second son of the said Alan
and Margaret.

Who shall say how many times were these, the only
notices of his forefathers, read and re-read by the poor
desolate child in his corner ; and what imaginations he
created in his young mind of a fatherland very, very
far off, where, if he could go there, he might perhaps
find his lost uncle, and be received as a dear son.

Sure however it is, that these imaginations took such
strong hold of his mind at that time, that they never
were erased ; nay, that they had such effect upon him,
that they influenced his whole life, as will be seen in its
proper place : only let it be observed that the mysterious
silver case which hung at his neck, perhaps served not
a little to remind him of these imaginations and pur-
poses.

The other books found in the chest, were the Pilgrim’s
Progress, the Holy War, by the same writer, Lord
Anson’s voyages round the world, and Robinson Crusoe,
with an old book of birds and beasts. What a source
of amusement were these to poor Jamie ! they served
to beguile many an hour which otherwise would have
been weary indeed. He had another amusement in
trying to write, and to draw on a board with a piece of
chalk.

The Sergeant, when not on duty, sate a good deal in
his berth, making up the Company’s accounts in a



NEW QUARTERS. 69

morning, aud his wife went on with her sewing or
seeing after dinner, and Jamie soon learned that he was
to be quiet during that time, though for the most
part, as long as he was quiet, he could amuse himself as
he chose. The dinner was at one, and he did not ob-
serve that Mrs. Fifer took anything with hers but water,
nor did she give anything else to him. After dinner
the Sergeant often slept in his chair, and sometimes the
mistress went out of the berth to talk to one or other of
her acquaintance, and as this happened the very first
day after he had been under her care, Jamie stole out
too and creeping round the verandah was making his
way to Blake’s berth at the very remote end of the
barracks, when, suddenly he happened to meet her. She
was in conversation with Betty Pickles, and he came
upon her before he was aware. She flamed up at the
sight of him, and he could only avoid a blow by run-
ning back to his corner ; but his spirit rose within him,
and from that moment he felt that she was so unjust in
confining him, although she could not herself stand the
same confinement, that he made up his mind that there
could be no harm in deceiving her, and that he would °
get out whenever he could make himself pretty sure
that she would not know it.

As soon as the Sergeant went off to evening parade,
she dressed herself, and making Jamie fit for a walk,
she put a basket into his hand and took him out with
her to the bazaar, which was a good step off from the
barracks. As she went along she met a Sergeant’s wife
of the Grenadiers, who was going the same way. They
joined company, and were so full of discourse as they
went along, that the boy was left to run hither before



70 JAMIE GORDON.

or behind them. So long as Mrs. Fifer let him alone,
he enjoyed himself very well, though a sad thought
would sometimes come over him, and then he ceased to
run and jump.

They did not come home till nearly dusk ; and then
came the supper, as the night before, only that the
Sergeant gave nothing strong to the child to drink, and
he was ordered to bed before the older persons.

This was Jamie’s first day, spent in Sergeant Fifer’s
room, and when all things are considered, it is certain
that in many respects he might have been placed in
many a worse condition without going beyond the
barracks. Still however, the cold and heartless manner
in which the child was treated, was already beginning
to draw up much that was evil in his young and hot
and ardent mind—his proud nature rose in rebellion
against the woman’s cold treatment, and more especially
against the hints which from time to time she con-
tinued to throw out against his own beloved father of
adoption.

These feelings grew so fast upon him, that as he saw
her bustling about after he was in his bed, he felt that
he was quite pleased to hear her husband now and then
giving her a cross or sullen word.



A NEW FRIEND. 71

CHAPTER VII.
A NEW FRIEND.

Tne earliest news which Jamie heard on the first Sun-
day morning, after he had come to Sergeant Fifer’s
room, was that Mrs. McCrury had a daughter. This
was a piece of information which had but little interest
for him ; though he heard the woman who was waiting
on Mrs. McCrury assert, that the child was certainly
the finest which had ever been seen in Cawnpore, and
a perfect jewel of a beauty. He also heard Mrs. Fifer
say, when the news was told her, ‘Indeed! and I am
sorry for it, this one will soon be with the rest, for
that wild Irishwoman will never rear a child in this
country, whatever she might have done in her own.’

Nothing ‘more however on the subject of the new-
born infant, or indeed on any other was said, during
the morning’s meal; after which the Sergeant rising
and taking his cap and account-books, nodded to his
wife, as he walked out of the door, saying, he was going
to the Captain to settle the company’s account.

‘ As if,’ remarked Mrs. Fifer, ‘ there was not six days



72 JAMIE GORDON,

in the week for such employment, but that you must
do it always on the Sunday,’ but the Serjeant was
gone out of hearing before she had got thus far in her
speech,

When her husband was gone, she called Jamie to
assist her in putting all things away ; the table was
soon cleared and the room put in order, after which the
boy was sent into his corner, with a page of questions
full of hard words, which he neither understood nor
cared to understand. There he remained, however,
now and then peeping under the cot to see where his
enemy was, till he heard some one enter the berth, and
ask her to please to be so good as to come for a bit to
poor Mrs. McCrury, who had something lying on her
heart, which kept her from taking the rest of which
she stood in the greatest need.

Jamie saw that Mrs. Fifer had risen from the table,
where she had been reading some large old book, at
the sound of these words, and he saw her with pleasure
shut the door which led to Katty’s berth behind her.
She was hardly gone, when a strange and sudden noise of
a small drum and squeaking pipe reached his ears, and
presently he was aware that a number of children and
idle young privates were gathered and gathering in
the verandah, just without the room, for he could see
them through his lattice.

In that company, there were then only three white
children, himself, Philip Pickles, and the so lately
added little McCrury ; but there had accumulated
through various means, a number of boys and girls of
various complexions from almost black to almost white;
from twelve years old down to under one month, who



NEW FRIEND. 73

had come in with their black mothers, and who if they
did not altogether reside within the barrack, might
be found there at any hour in the twenty-four. The
sons of these females were never allowed to think them-
selves equal with the white boys, and if they got any
influence over the little Europeans—which they often
did—it was only by cunning. But, in some instances
where the mothers was not quite black, but were them-
selves half and half, and where they were married to
the men with; whom they lived, the daughters had often
very fine names, and were dressed in white muslin and
glass beads, and were allowed to keep their places with
the best of the Europe girls in the barracks.

The crowd of idle persons which Jamie saw through
the venetians, was chiefly made up of this sort of chil-
dren, and he heard one calling to another in Hindo-
stannee, to come, and to come quickly, ‘gildee ! gildee !’
was the word. The little drum rattled louder and
nearer, and the pipe skirled, and the temptation became
too powerful for Jamie’s resistance any longer, so down
went the question-book, the stool was knocked over,
and he was standing the very next moment on a chair
just within the outer door of the room, peeping over
the heads of the crowd, to see what might be seen to
the best advantage. Now that which was to be seen,
was no other than Soosoo Gee, the Bunda-walla, with
his Bunda riding on his Buckry in grand state and
style; and these three had stopped right opposite the’
door of the berth ; and as the company had signified
their wishes that the Tamacha should forthwith begin,
Jamie had already promised himself much pleasure.
He had seen Soosoo Gee and his monkey many times

H



74 JAMIE GORDON.

before, but it was what appeared to him a long, long,
while ago. But at the very moment, that the Bunda’s
master was giving his command to his long-tailed slave
to begin his tricks, the half of Jamie’s chair was claimed
by one of the girls before mentioned, known by the
name of Cecilia Hughes. This girl was one of the
tallest and oldest of these children, and had been pushed
behind the crowd into such a position that she could
see nothing. What then could possibly be more con-
venient to her than the half of Jamie’s chair ? So up
she sprang, and throwing her arm round the boy to
hold him firm, for he had been near falling when she
made her spring, she began chattering to him in mixed
English and Hindostannee, and telling him all that
the Bunda would do. ‘ First,’ said she, ‘he will nautch,
and then he will tumble, and then he will stand on
his head, and then he will caper in the air ;’ and she
was going on to give him more information than
might have been altogether edifying for a child,
when in marched Mrs. Fifer. In one instant all was
changed—the girl sprang from the chair and out at the
door, Jamie crept under the cot on his hands and
knees into his corner, whilst Mrs. Fifer banged the
double door too, bolted it and closed the lattices, and
then sitting down on a chair in the middle of the berth,
she called Jamie to her.

‘Where are your questions, sir?’ were her first
words, ‘ fetch me the book.’ Jamie brought it, placed
it in her hands and stood rubbing one bare foot against
another, for she seldom encumbered him with shoes
in the house. Mrs. Fifer turned to the page which she
had given him to learn ; and asked the first question



A NEW FRIEND. 75

in that sort of cold fault-finding tone, which is sure to
blow up every spark of obstinacy which may exist in
the nature of any poor human being, to whom it
is employed.

Now it so happened, that young Gordon could have
answered this first question, because he had read it over
two or three times, and he had a very good memory.
But then, thought he, if I answer question first, I
must answer question second, and [ shall be no nearer
pleasing her; and if I answer all that is in the first
leaf, I shall have to learn all that is in the second next
time ; so I will not answer question one, I will not
speak at all. Though perhaps he hardly owned it to
himself, it is certain that he made up his little obsti-
nate mind, to try who would be tired first in the con-
test. As might be expected, when Jamie refused to
speak, Mrs. Fifer became very angry ; she gave him
two or three smart thumps over the shoulders, and sent
him back to his corner, with his book: and in the
course of that morning, she called him as many as four
times, to try if he would speak, but each time he was
only the more obstinate in regard to the questions;
though otherwise he cried much, and seemed to be more
sorrowful than hard.

Mrs. Fifer knew very well, that her husband would
be very cross, if this kind of thing was to go on in his
presence. He would be telling her, she well knew, that
people’s eyes would be on her, and that she would be
blamed, if she was thought to be hard on the boy ; so
she tried another way.

‘Jamie,’ said she, ‘ give me the book, you a’int wor-

thy to read such nice words ; I would have taught you
H 2



76 JAMIE GORDON

and tried to improve you, a poor helpless thing as you
are, if you would; but now I must deal with you as
God deals with the sinner, and cast you off, that is, as
to any hope of making you better. Aye, you may cry,
till you have shed every tear in your head ; but what
good will tears or repentance do, when the opportunity
is lost, and may be, lost for ever.’

Jamie raised his fine dark eyes, and fixed them on
her ;—he was thinking whether she was speaking of
herself or of God.

She saw this look, and said, ‘ What is in your mind
now ? speak out, and let me hear it.’

‘Father,’ replied the boy, ‘told me that God is like
a father, a kind father, kinder even than my father
was, if that could be possible ; and that he will not easily
cease to love poor children, though he may frown upon,
and even punish them for doing wrong.’

‘Be assured,’ replied Mrs. Fifer, ‘that God hates
those who commit sin, whomsoever they be ; just for
instance, as I do not love you, Jamie Gordon, now
that you are proud and obstinate ; and let me tell you,
that such pride and such chalinnas wae make you
hateful, both in the sight of God and man.’

‘Why, then,’ answered Jamie boldly, ‘did father
tell me that I must try to love God, because he first
loved me ?’

* Well, well,’ said she, ‘I am not going to demean
myself with bandying words with such as you. Those
must be strange times, when children are to teach their
elders. But mind what I am going to say, Jamie
Gordon—my love to you will be meted and measured
by your behaviour, and as it is with me, so will it be



A NEW FRIEND. 77

in the next world ; as a man sows, so will he reap.’
So saying, she pushed him from her, for she heard the
step of the Sergeant ; and so that matter passed off for
that day.

Mrs. Fifer always took care to have a particularly
good dinner for the Sergeant on the Sunday : and this
day, whilst the family were at the table, she opened
out to him the history of her being called to Mrs.
McCrury’s in the morning, and the reason for her hav-
ing been so called. Katty had formed the wish, that
she and the Sergeant should stand to the child, who
was to be christened by the Chaplain of the regiment,
according to the Protestant form, as no Romish priest
was near at hand; and the ignorant Katty and her
husband thought this would be better than no cere-
mony at all. ‘She had once,’ said Mrs. Fifer, ‘ thought
of Sergeant and Mrs. Young, to stand to the child, but
had preferred us two, as being the more decent and
respectable persons.’

Mrs. Fifer, notwithstanding the frequent quarrels
she had with Katty, seemed to have been so flattered by
the compliment passed by the Irishwoman, that she
asked no questions as to the christening being at a
future time repeated by a Romish priest, and the Ser-
geant being, as he said, quite agreeable, the matter was
settled before they rose from table: and it was farther
agreed, that when the babe was christened, the enter-
tainment should be given in their room.

After dinner, the Sergeant snored as usual in his
chair. Jamie took the bolster off his cot, and laying
himself at full length on the floor in his corner, slept

away all his sorrows, whilst Mrs. Fifer went out to
H 3



78 JAMIE GORDON.

tell her success toYMrs. McCrury, and to fill up the
remainder of her time, till parade, in gossiping with
Mrs. Pickles.

On that Sunday fortnight, Sergeant and Mrs. Fifer, —
Sergeant and Mrs. Thomas, Sergeant Craycroft of the
Grenadiers, a Mrs. Hill of the second company, with
Blake, the only private invited, and Jamie Gordon,
took the infant to the Chaplain’s bungalow, where she
was christened by the name of Aileen. After which
the company met in Sergeant Fifer’s room, and enjoyed
a comfortable supper, consisting of a roast turkey,
sausages, and some curry and rice.

The Sergeant made a bowl of punch, in which the
little one’s health was drank, each person in his turn
bowing to the mother, and giving the health with
tumbler in hand.

Jamie’s punch was measured in a wine-glass, and
Sergeant Craycroft, who was famous in the regiment
for his mirth, whispered to the boy, when he spoke
the name, to add the word Avourneen to it.

Jamie did as he was desired: and speaking up, ‘ Mrs.
McCrury,’ he said, ‘here is health to little Aileen
Avourneen.’

There was no great wit in this ; but the well-known
Irish word, from the mouth of the English boy, so
pleased the father, that from that time, he oftener
called his child Avourneen, than Aileen ; and Jamie
Gordon did the same, first from ignorance, and next
from habit.



TEMPTATION, 79

CHAPTER VIII.
TEMPTATION.

Arter the christening of Aileen MecCrury, months
passed on without much change in the situation of
Jamie Gordon. The hot winds were blowing, and Mrs.
Fifer was forced to be always within, so that Jamie
could not stir without her seeing him.

The boy was too much afraid of her heavy hand to
rebel openly, or to dare her displeasure ; but if he had
not made up his own mind to rebel when he felt himself
able, there were not wanting those that were con-
stantly exciting him to it. One might have thought
that he would be safe enough in his corner, but if hedges
have eyes, and walls have ears, venetian lattices may be
said more truly to have both.

There was not a child above six years old in the bar-
racks, that was not offended at what Mrs. Fifer had
oftentimes been heard to say,—that they were all a
pack of untaught, mischievous ne’er-do-weel’s, and that
if ever she found Jamie amongst them, she would find
means to make him remember it. She had actually



80 JAMIE GORDON.

fallen out with Betty Pickles on the subject, telling
her that she would have to answer for his end, if she
continued, as she did, to indulge Philip in all his evil
propensities. Betty did not tell her what was the truth,
that Philip was already beyond her hand ; but she told
her that as she had never been a mother, she could
know but little of what a mother’s trials were.

All that Mrs. Fifer had said to Mrs. Pickles, was
repeated by her to her son, and told again by him to
Cecilia Hughes, for this girl was his most intimate
friend at that time ; and in consequence, the two to-
gether formed certain plans by which they hoped to
revenge themselves on the proud wife of the Sergeant.

Philip and Cecy, as the girl was commonly called,
could not however, begin their scheme of vengeance for
some time, for Philip went into the hospital with
his mother, who was suddenly taken ill, and stayed
with her several weeks ; and he was hardly returned to
the barracks, before Cecilia was seized with Ophthalmia,
which made her unfit for active mischief, for many
more weeks afterwards. Thus the time wore on, and
Jamie had found, or rather, God had provided for him,
a something to love,—and this something to love, had
for awhile, at least, taken away half his sulkiness, for
before he had found out that he could love this object,
his mind had been constantly full of plans to get away
from Mrs. Fifer, and of thoughts of spite and vengeance,
when she baffled him.

Now this thing, or rather this person, who was pro-
vided for Jamie to love, was no other than little Aileen
McCrury.

This child had, from week to week, grown and thriven



TEMPTATION. 81

so well that she was the admiration of every one who
saw her. She was also uncommonly pretty, and looked
more like the child of a noble mother, than of such an
uncultivated person as poor Katty. Yet lovely as
this baby was, and proud as Mrs. McCrury seemed to
be of her, yet often would she be off for an hour or
more, at any time of the day, when she could get her
to sleep on the cot ; trusting, that if the child awoke
and cried, some one or another would pick her up.

_ It happened on one of these occasions, it being in the
cold season, when Aileen might have been about nine
months old, that her mother having left her one morn-
ing, as usual, she awoke as if in a fright, perhaps from
some dream, and began to cry bitterly. Mrs. Fifer hear-
ing her, called to Jamie, and bade him run to the baby,
‘for that unfeeling mother,’ said she, ‘ is off again, and
the child will screech itself into fits.’

Jamie never was told to run anywhere without
obeying instantly, for his limbs often ached for motion.
He was out at the door, round the corner of the barrack,
in at McCrury’s berth and by the cotin a moment. At
the sound of his voice, which was most gentle and sweet,
when he tried to make it so, repeating the words, ‘ Aileen
Avourneen,’ the baby extended her little arms, and tried
her utmost to spring into his ; he caught her up, whilst
she clasped him round the neck, pressing her sweet face
against his : and so closely did she cling to him, that he
felt her heart beating against his side. It was a settled
matter, from that moment, between both parties, that
these two were always to hold to each other, he to her,
in the way of a protector, and she to him in the way
of the person protected. Back again he ran with her



82 JAMIE GORDON.

into Mrs. Fifer’s room, and having begged a slice of
bread and butter for her, with a little milk, which had
remained from breakfast, he took her into his corner,
and there the two sat on the floor, and seemed to require
no other company.

What did the mother desire better, than that her
little one should be kept quiet whilst she enjoyed her-
self ? and accordingly she failed not to press the matter
as far as it would go. She laid her flatteries thick upon
Jamie, and assured him that he could quiet and please
the baby, when neither father nor mother could. But
how she kept the hold she had got on Mrs. Fifer’s
favour, no one suspected, except Betty Pickles.

Thus things went on much in the same course for
many months, with this difference only, that Mrs, Fifer
became from time to time less watchful of Jamie ; and
Aileen grew and could walk, and became cunning
enough to steal out of her parent’s berth, and to come
round the corner of the barracks, and get to Jamie’s
little refuge. She had learned to call him ‘ Zamie ;’ and
his heart was drawn more and more to her, because she
was the only one of all the fellow-creatures about him,
who really and truly loved him, or even so much as
pretended to do so. It is certain she could not converse
with him, but she could look with wonder when he said
any nonsense to please her, and she could admire when
he played any merry trick to make her laugh, and
when he seemed unhappy or shed a tear, she could look
sad too; and she quivered so with joy when she saw
him for the first time every day, and held so fast to
him, when any one offered to remove her from him,
that it was hardly strange that he should give her all



TEMPTATION. 83

the love he had to give. She was like a little only
sister to him, and when he considered that God had
made this pretty little creature to love him, it brought
to his mind many a sweet thought like those he had
in former days; and then also, when he saw that Mrs.
Fifer did not hinder her little god-child coming into the
room, and being with him, he felt her to be less unkind
than she used to be ; so by degrees, he lost much of his
spiteful feelings against her, for he was far from sus-
pecting what it was which caused her to be so much
less watchful over him, than she was at first.

But all this while, beginning from the time at which
Cecy Hughes recovered from the Ophthalmia, she and
Philip Pickles were busy about Jamie ; for their desire
was to get him out amongst themselves, and to teach
him all their own ways, which were in all respects ex-
ceedingly vile.

Such a girl as Cecy Hughes, is not often seen in En-
gland ; for bad as many English people are, yet they
cannot in all respects be so entirely without the know-
ledge of right, as that poor girl was. She came of a
family of which for some generations the fathers only
were white, and where there had been no religion or
knowledge of God, or sense of right or wrong, for many
years. The girl had a pretty face, and she was tall and
slim, and had bright black eyes, and she was very
lively, and could please any one she tried to please, and
she might have been a very nice girl had she had a good
and careful mother. How much cause have those who
have been better taught, to pity her, and such as her.
From infancy her time had been divided between the
barracks, and a hut in which her mother lived and



84 JAMIE GORDON.

cooked, and washed, for she acted as a servant to some
man of the first company.

This Cecy wore, in the hot season, very little more
than a white frock, which was seldom clean, with
coloured shoes, trod down at the heel, and no stockings.
Her hair behind was well oiled and plaited, and fast-
ened with a comb, and braided before. She always
wore large drop silver ear-rings, and a necklace of some
sort of beads, but her neck and arms were far browner
than they would have been, by being always uncovered
and exposed to the sun.

All that the mind of this poor girl ever ran upon,
was some sort of self-indulgence. She thought of
nothing, but how to please herself. She was got to
that wretched state, in which she was pleased by any
thing wicked: only because it was wicked. It was
enough for her, that a thing was forbidden, or difficult
to get, to make her desire it.

On this account, she was as eager as Philip could be
to get at Jamie, only because Mrs. Fifer kept him up.
Cecy supposed, that Jamie must of course be as sick —
of being shut up, as she would have been in such a situ-
ation, and that he would immediately fall in with any
scheme for deceiving Mrs. Fifer, and getting his liberty.
She began her operations by often walking round to
the part of the verandah, at the end of the barracks,
loitering just before Jamie’s window, and trying, either
by singing scraps of songs, or talking to any one who
might chance to pass near her, in such a way as she
thought might draw his attention. Her next scheme,
when she found he did not seem to notice her, was to
procure a few dry sugar-plumbs, or raisins, and to



TEMPTATION, 85

drop them through the venetians. Jamie and Aileen
was sitting together on the mat before the window,
when the first shower of sugar-plumbs fell; and
whilst the baby picked up one after another, Jamie
called through the lattice, to enquire who was without.

Cecy had watched her opportunity, when she knew
that Mrs. Fifer was not in her room, nor near it ; and
she answered therefore without fear, ‘It’s me, Jamie
Gordon,’ she said, ‘Cecy Hughes: and Iam come to
ask you, if you can’t sometimes get out of this cage
here, and away from the cat, which is always watching
you in it, and come to us for a bit of fun. You must
be moped to death in this dull place ; and next week
is Hobson Jobson. Can’t you throw some dust any
how, in the eyes of the cat, and meet me and Philip
somewhere, and so get away to the Tamacha.’

‘I do not like being shut up so,’ replied Jamie, ‘and
I should like to get out, and play with you sometimes.’

‘Well then, will you come if I can manage it for
you—I mean to the Mohurrun. I will contrive to
get somebody away for an hour or two ; so you will be
ready, won’t you, when I come for you? you will
know when to expect me. It will be when she is out
of the way. The best time will be, on the last day of
Hobson Jobson, about four or five o’clock, if I can
manage it. I shan’t like to come often again before
that time, lest the cat should smell a mouse ; so good
bye now’—and away she went.

‘What isit ? What does she mean ?’ thought Jamie :
‘Where does she want me to go ? and what is she going
to do with Mrs. Fifer ? I do not know what she means.’
But Aileen having picked up as much as she desired,

I



86 JAMIE GORDON.

was getting restless. So the boy lifted her up, and see-
ing no one in the room, he lugged her out into the
verandah, in his arms, and kept loitering with her about
the corner. This he had lately been permitted to do :
though if he went farther, or was seen talking with
other children, he was pretty sure to feel the heavy
hand of Mrs. Fifer.

The Mohurrun is a prineipal feast of the Mahome-
dans, and lasts several days. It is kept in commemo-
ration of the deaths of Hussein and Hossein, the sons
of Fatima, the daughter of Mahomet. One of these
princes was slain with a sword, and the other poisoned.
The Mahomedans assert, that at the day of judgment,
Fatima will present herself before the throne of God,
with the head of her murdered son in one hand, and
the heart of her poisoned son in the other; and that
on account of their deaths, she will claim the acquittal
of all their followers. It is therefore accounted a merit,
by the Mahomedans in India, to shew their respect for
these deceased princes ; and therefore at the time ap-
pointed, they make little models of tombs of talque,
and gold, and silver tinsel, which they paint of various
colours. These are to represent the tombs of the princes,
and they carry them about for several days, whilst the
people follow them with pipes, and timbrels, and every
species of harsh music, dancing, capering, tumbling,
waving naked swords, as in mock fight, and crying,
Hussein ! Hossein !—the shades of night bringing yo
interruption to the wild scene.

The business terminates by the casting of the tombs
into the river, or some other water ; but whilst it lasts,
all the lower sort of Mahomedans are in a state of in-



TEMPTATION, 87

toxication, if not of temporary madness, from the
opium, which they either chew or smoke.

‘Hobson Jobson,’ are the names which the English
soldiers have bestowed upon the two princes; and the
idle Europeans about the barracks always make a
point, whenever they can do so, to get out and mix
themselves up with the riotous mob of Mahomedans, if
only that they may have something to laugh at.

But Jamie Gordon had forgotten the whole business
of the Mohurrun, and all the expected delights of
Hobson Jobson, and the plan of Cecy, to obtain liberty
for a few hours for him, on the last day of the feast,
till he was reminded of all these things, on the morning
of the very day appointed for Cecy’s scheme.

Mrs. Fifer had hardly shaken sleep out of him, in her
usual tender way, when the sound of tum-tums, and
other instruments used by the natives on their feast-
days, reached his ears, and he was then suddenly
reminded of Cecy, and thought that he should like,
if it could be, just to run as far as the Sepoy parade,
or may be a little farther, where he might see what was
going on. He knew that there was not a boy of his age
in the barracks who would not have that pleasure ; and
he soon made up his mind, that if he could not have
it, he should be very ill-used, and very unhappy, and
have greater cause than ever for thinking Mrs. Fifer
very cruel.

His thoughts, however, were turned from this train
immediately after breakfast, by Mrs. McCrury, who,
just opening the door of the room and putting her head
in, said, ‘Jamie, darling, there’s Aileen sore troubled
with her teeth, poor thing, and naught will do to please

12



88 JAMIE GORDON.

her, but she keeps crying, Zammy! Zammy ! Come,
for the life of you, dear boy, do come and see what
you can do for her ; and if there is any turn asI can
do for Mrs. Fifer in your place, would not I do it on
my bare knees, so that the darling may be quieted.’

It happened this day that the Serjeant was on duty,
so Mrs. Fifer, who was putting away the tea-cups, told
him to look to the child, whilst she invited Katty to
walk in. Jamie found little Aileen sitting on the cot,
having been washed, and dressed, and fed ; but having no
ailment whatever that any one could see, but that which
might have proceeded from the objection most little
ones have to being put into bed when not disposed to
sleep. As usual the baby quivered with delight, when
she saw Jamie, and when taken up by him, put forth
all her strength to grasp him round the neck, and thus
he became her willing captive. He carried her first to
his corner, where he had a variety of little amusements
for her, and he was soon told by Mrs. Fifer, that ‘he
must mind her well, and feed her too when she needed
it, for the mother was gone out and might not be back
for some hours.’ 2

Jamie was never more happy, than when Aileen was
left solely to him, especially when he had the liberty
of carrying or leading her about the verandah, and sit-
ting with her in some shady part of it, to see the people
passing backwards and forwards, and this morning
particularly there was much to see, because every body
was in a state of excitement.

Once or twice during the forenoon, Jamie thought of
Cecy, but then again he was obliged to turn to his



Full Text

ae.



























.

,

a

mp
:

is :

«
fe

The Baldwin Library



University | |
mB «it
Florida





“4

+a
fo cd


JAMIE GORDON.
ig



calling, ‘Zammy! Zammy!’ "—Page 90.
SS ~

SES

SI,
——

ad
Pr-3
— ) Trot agg,
I( Sreleys,

=

Pe te Aa



‘~) >t
“& a G

a

Ne A

“try ©.

MDCCCLI,.



Â¥ on,

iss. “ess o> = SN
ee —

ra Steet.




JAMIE GORDON;

OR,

THE ORPHAN.

LONDON :
SEELEYS, FLEET STREET AND HANOVER STREET.

MDCCCLI.

CONTENTS.

tinal

CHAP. PAGE
I. INTRODUCTION ; . ; . 1
IT. AKRIVAL AT CAWNPORE . ; Ay
III. IN THE HOSPITAL é ‘ ; oe
IV. DISCUSSIONS . ; ; ; ; . ee
V. THE GODFATHER’S DEATH ;, , . 44
VI. NEW QUARTERS. , : ; - &
VII. A NEW FRIEND. ; ‘ ; ats
VIII. TEMPTATION. ; ' . ‘ . oe
1X. ANOTHER CHANGE . ; j : ae
X. THE HOSPITAL AGAIN. : ; . 103

XI. A FRESH REMOVAL : : ; ie
CHAP.

XIl.

XIII.

XIV.

XV.

XVI.

XVII.

XVIII.

XIX.

XX.

XXI.

CONTENTS.

NEW SCENES ‘ .
FURTHER GROWTH .

THE DEPARTURE .”~ .
JAMIE'S LAST GUARDIANS
ANOTHER HOSPITAL PATIENT
A VISITOR . ‘
ANOTHER STRANGER

BAD NEWS FROM THE CAMP
FRESH PROSPECTS . ;

CLOSE OF THE STORY .

PAGE

127
147
155
171
182
193
201
212
225
236

> --++—- +8 ex

—~—— ——. +»
JAMIE GORDON.

CHAPTER I.
INTRODUCTION.

Ir is now nearly half a century past, when fierce war
added nota little to the dangers of the long, the very
long passage, by which the Regiment of Foot
reached the far-off East, and after a protracted and
weary voyage, was landed in Bengal, and stationed at
Fort William, near Calcutta.

The exhausted voyagers there hoped to enjoy some
months of rest, such as may be obtained, at least, in a
roomy cantonment, in a foreign land, where the power
of the sun, even in the coldest season, is always dange-
rous to Europeans. But this was not to be—for they
had hardly been ten days at the Fort, before they were
embarked again, to be hauled up the river Ganges,
to a station some hundred miles higher up. This
move, however, did not take place before several of the
regiment had fallen sacrifice to the change of climate,
and to exhaustion from the fatigues of the previous

B


2 JAMIE GORDON.

voyage. There had also been some casualties during
the passage out ; one or more men had suffered loss of
life by accidents: and there had been deaths among
the women and children. It was the custom then,
and perhaps may still continue to be the same, that
only six women are allowed to go out in a regiment to
India, with each hundred men. The first company
of the regiment, to which this history refers, had accord-
ingly started with its full complement of women ;
though of these six, only three ever reached the up-
country station, for which the regiment was embarked
at Fort William. The first of these six women, was
the wife of a Sergeant, Young, a very decent person,
with some pretensions to gentility, which she could in
no wise make manifest, whilst accompanying her hus-
band in his marches and countermarches in their native
country. The second was Jane Taylor, a dame of some
pretensions likewise, being young and comely: as it
was the fortune of this young woman to lose her
husband at sea, what better could she do, than to
accept the hand of a certain store-keeper in Calcutta,
which said hand was tendered to the widow, almost as
soon as she had landed : and she after a while accepted
the offer, and remained in Calcutta.

Phebe Darke was another of the six women, who
had come out with the first company ; this young
woman was spared, no doubt, from many future troubles
and temptations, by a fever under the line, which car-
ried her off in a few days.

The fourth was Katty McCrury :—she had already
ridden some hundred miles on baggage-waggons, although
still comparatively young and fresh-looking. She had
INTRODUCTION. 3

come originally with her husband from the west of
Ireland.

The fifth of these wives was Betty Pickles, the oldest
of the six, a thorough-bred camp-follower, and one
who would no question have killed herself, long before
she could have had the opportunity of seeing the Indian
shores, by her propensity for strong waters, had not
her want of sobriety been always counteracted by her
covetousness : for she was, and always had been, bent
upon hoarding.

Margaret Gordon makes up the number of the women
of the first company, when it sailed from England. She
is mentioned last, because it is. needful to enter more
into detail respecting her history than into that of the
other women, as she was the mother of the youth,
whose name heads this narrative.

Alan Gordon was the younger son of a Highland
shepherd, of decent means and respectable character ;
the mother of Alan was a second wife, who, by her
shrewish temper, had actually driven away a son by
the former wife, to seek his fortune, how and where he
best might do so.

This elder brother had fled out of the cottage, one day,
in order to escape from the blows of his step-mother ;
nor was there any evidence that he ever returned again
for a moment to his paternal roof, excepting this, that
when the babe Alan was taken up from its cradle, that
babe being the step-mother’s son, there was found the
half of a broken sixpence, laid in the palm of the
child’s hand, the little one having unconsciously perhaps
clutched its fingers upon it. That Geordie—for such

was the elder brother’s name—had had such a sixpence,
B2
4 JAMIE GORDON,

bearing the head of the first George, though much worn,
was well known, and it was believed to be the only bit
of silver he had ever possessed. He never came again,
and his father took his absence so to heart, that he
never used his shepherd’s pipe again, but sank and
faded away, and at length died. The step-dame re-
pented sorely, yet all too late. All prosperity had left
the cottage, and such misery and poverty ensued,
that when she too died, after some years of wretched-
ness, Alan could do nothing else but enlist, though with
small forecast of coming difficulties. But he did not
do so, until he had persuaded his near kinswoman,
whom he had loved from childhood, to become his wife,
and share with him in all the hardships of a soldier’s
life. And as Margaret Gordon had been the pride of
her native glen, neither was such grace denied her, as
might, and did enable her, to be an ornament of the
very trying situation into which she had entered ; and
so she remained for several years, during which she
accompanied her husband in all his movements, never
deviating from such conduct as is the truest glory of
the Christian female.

The eldest-born child of this young couple died, be-
fore the regiment to which Alan had attached himself,
left Scotland ; another, the Jamie of the narrative, was
added shortly afterwards, at a distant place; no other
child was given to them. Alan Gordon would often
say, whilst carrying this child, probably with some little
sense of Highland superstition, mingled with some de-
gree of confidence in providence, ‘ Well, my boy,
should I die tomorrow, I know not that I have aught
to leave with you, to remember me by, but this broken
INTRODUCTION, 5

sixpence, which my poor mother fastened to my neck,
bidding me never to part from it until death’ On these
occasions, his wife would remind him, that there was
a much richer bequest which he might leave his boy,
and that was their little Bible.

But the rest of the story of Alan and Margaret Gor-
don may be soon told ;—that excellent wife and mother
scarcely reached Fort William, before she began to sink,
and she departed this life so shortly before the regiment
was embarked again, that she was buried on the very
morning of its departure. And, whether from grief or
other cause, it is not known, but before the fleet of
boats had entirely cleared the Hoogly, which is that
arm of the great river, the Ganges, on which Calcutta
is situated ; her husband was also dead—and Jamie
was left an orphan—though, as will be seen in the
sequel, not without such a friend as every pious parent
might desire in death, for one who was soon to be an
orphan child.

The Bible and the broken sixpence were all that the
father had to leave to his boy ; the Bible was put by
till such time as it might be used by him, and the
broken sixpence, which had been previously soldered
into a case of silver, was fastened by a chain about the
child’s neck, in such sort as he might not easily break
it off. And now what remains to be said before the
narrative enters upon the particular movements and
concerns of the persons already introduced, but to give
such an account of the climate, the face of the country,
and the various scenes and customs, as shall enable
even the untravelled reader to form some notion of the

sort of life of which the narrative is about to treat.
B 3
6G JAMIE GORDON.

Now, inasmuch as a picture is but half the truth,
when it shews only the personswhich it represents, with-
out any view of the places in which they are located,
especially if there is much about these places out of the
common way of the relator, so, to most readers, the
history of Jamie Gordon and his companions, would be
quite imperfect, were not some account supplied of
the various circumstances about him, which made his
condition so very different from that of a child in Eng-
land.

To any one looking upon a map of the world, it may
be seen that the East Indies lie far to the east and far
to the south of England, and that the voyage thereunto
by sea must be very long, from the necessity of going
all round by Africa, far down to the south, and up again
some way tothe north. This country of which we are
speaking, lies in or near to that part of the earth on ~
which the sun at certain seasons of the year strikes
down directly upon the heads of those below, every day
at noon ; neither does the sun ever appear rolling along
between wind and weather, as the sailors would say, but
dips down its flaming head right foremost when it is
about to set, with nothing like our long sweet twilights
and dawns ; for it arises in the East a fiery red, and
right forward in its movements in the morning, as it
went down in the evening. All trees and herbs
which suit hot climates, grow in that country ;
such flowers and fruits growing naturally there, as can
only be reared with great care and skill in our cold
climate. The year there is not divided into four seasons,
as ours is, but into three of unequal lengths ; the
coolest season, in which that far-off land is pleasant
INTRODUCTION. 7

as what we fancy of the garden of Eden, answers
to part of our autumn and winter ; the dry and burning
season‘and the rainy season, to our spring and summer
and part of autumn ; during all which seasons, except-
ing when the clouds are coming over for rain, or it is
actually raining, the whole sky being for the most part
of one deep dazzling blue, set with a blazing sun by
day, and stars, which look far more brilliant than they
do here, by night. So much for the climate : and those
who have not travelled far, can hardly imagine how
much the ways and manners of persons are changed
and affected by climate, by heat and cold, by wet and
dry, by long days or short. But we shall understand
more of these things as we proceed.

It wouldbe a long history to tell how the English
got possession of many provinces in the East Indies,
many years before any of us were born ; suffice it to
say, that we have established a government there, of
which Calcutta is the principal seat ; and that besides
having raised many black corps, white regiments are
sent out from England and stationed about the pro-
vinces, to help to keep things in order. The natives of
the East Indies are all more or less dark ; few indeed
are black like negroes, and still fewer have negro fea-
tures and woolly hair, for they area handsome well-fea-
tured people, but the very fairest among them can only
be called copper-coloured; amongst them there are
very few Christians, and those, poor ignorant creatures,
but many many idol-worshippers, and many Mahom-
etans ; indeed these two sorts may be said to divide
the population.
8 JAMIE GORDON.

CHAPTER II.
ARRIVAL AT CAWNPORE.

THE passage up the Ganges was very tedious, and as if
those who were in command were uncertain in their
intentions, the regiment was made to halt at several
stations, especially at the cantonments of Dinapore ;
where they went for a little time up to the cantonments,
and were located in them for a few weeks in a very
wretched way, expecting to move again every day. The
only thing by which some few individuals of the regi-
ment remembered this place with any pleasure, was an
acquaintance they there made with a very pious young
gentleman, the Reverend Mr. M » who happened
to be then serving as chaplain at that presidency.

He invited all the religiously-minded men among the
troops to visit him every evening in his quarters, and
on the few who accepted the invitation, he bestowed
Bibles and religious books, which, in that country,
where books are very Scarce, were of exceeding value
to them. This devoted young man even accompanied
the party two or three days journey up the river, and


ARRIVAL AT CAWNPORE. 9

thus gained some seasons of prayer with those of like
mind with himself in the evenings of each day; a
solitary grove or ravine affording the scenes of their
meetings, on all these occasions. These wanderings,
however with all their mercies, and all their sorrows,
at length came to an end.

The regiment having arrived at Cawnpore, a station
very far up the river, was marched directly from the
boats to the barracks. Mightily pleased were the
women especially, after having been crowded on board
ship, and in the boats, for so many months, with very
short intervals, to find themselves again at liberty, and
as the veteran Betty Pickles remarked, to be able to go
whither and where they pleased, and have room and
space to put things about them in a handy way ; such
as a standing cot, two or three chairs, a table, the
chest, and may be a Mora for a child, when there was
one, as in her case.

The Cawnpore Infantry-barracks consisted at that
time of ten long apartments, distinct from each other,
their roofs being covered with thatch, which is far
cooler than any other sort of roof ;—the inside being not
unlike a church, with great doors between each berth.
These doors were double, and the pannels were filled up
with what we call Venetian blinds, which keep out the
sun, and let in the air. One of these long rooms was
given to each company, every two men having a hed-
place between two windows, and a small space on one
side for their table, and chair, and chests, and whatever
else they may want. When a man was married, he
had of course no comrade, but if he had a family,
he had little room enough, as the women found; when
10 JAMIE GORDON.

they had forgotten the close packing at sea and on the
river,

So, as has been described, there were rows of cots
down each side of every long barrack-room ; and be-
tween each bed-place each fami] y had a little space for
its household goods.

The best berths, however, and those which everybody
desired, were the corner ones ; where, instead of another
bed, there was a wall on the one side ; and much striy-
ing there was for these corner-berths, which were gene-
rally given to the married people.

At the end of each barrack in Cawnpore, were small
rooms appropriated for the Sergeants, and who shall say
how pleased the sergeants’ wives were when they found
themselves in a berth which was comparatively so
retired.

The space between the berths was of course as public
as the street, being open to all those who resided in
the barracks, and all who came in to visit there.
Several of the officers also passed through at certain
times of the day, and the cooks, and other black men,
who waited on the white ones, were always going to and
fro, not to speak of Copra-wallahs, Sundook-wallahs,
Dobees and Bunda-wallahs, with a number more of
odd persons, who were always about the verandahs and
at the many door-ways.

Cawnpore itself stands in a vast, dry, sandy plain,
broken up into ragged hollows or ravines, which do not
shew a blade of grass in the dry season. Over this
plain are scattered many houses, Bungalows, as they
call them, in which the gentry live, and huts, in which
the poor natives reside; and if there are many huts
ARRIVAL AT CAWNPORE.

together, they are called a bazaar. Beside the Infantry
lines at Cawnpore, there are Artillery barracks, and
Cavalry barracks, and Sepoy lines, and several more, all
scattered along a fine broad road, near the banks of the
great river. There is scarcely a pleasanter spot beyond
the seas, than Cawnpore in the cold season, and as was
before said, there was scarcely one in the regiment
who was not pleased. There were but three women of
the first company, however, who reached so far ; these
were, Mrs. Young and the two privates’ wives, before
spoken of ; but though there were more corner-berths
than women to claim them, it was more than McCrury
could do to keep his wife and Betty Pickles from falling
out about them ; nor would Betty be silenced, till Ser-
geant Young came out of his room and threatened her
that if she did not hold her tongue, she should not have
a corner berth at all, but one in the very middle of the
row. He also told Mrs. Mc Crury, that if she did not
keep herself quiet, he would see for something that
should still her tongue. °

Everybody was too busy, during this, the first day in
Cawnpore barracks, in settling themselves, to allow of
this dispute being carried on further, for the black mer-
chants from the bazaar were all about with their cots,
and chairs, and tables and necessary articles to sell.
Such of the men and their wives as had been careful of
their rupees, and had not lavished them in drink and
other follies, on the river, were soon provided with every
thing needful, and before night, every berth was in
some order, the women having purchased standing cots
with muslin curtains and netted white cotton fringes.
Some also had provided themselves with folding screens,
12 JAMIE GORDON.

by which they might obtain a little privacy ; and every —
one had his chair or two, perhaps his table, his mora,
and his great chest.

Betty Pickles had bestirred herself to so much pur-
pose, that when her husband came in from parade in
the evening, he found every thing in its place, and his
wife just ready to set out with their only child—a stout
healthy lad, and a black man to carry a basket and
shew the way to the bazaar, to purchase such things as
were necessary in addition to the ration bread and
meat allowed to every soldier.

Betty had never been in so easy a situation in her
life as she then was, she had never had so good a bed to
sleep on, and such sure and high pay ; and she had
never had anything like a servant to scold, and now she
had more than one of these last ; She had a cook, and
she had a share in a washerman ; and yet she was ina
desperate ill humour, as her husband saw, the instant
he laid his eyes upon her. She did not like the man
who was to occupy the bed next to her berth, and she
told her husband, that had she known at the time she
got that berth, that Stephen Fell was to be the next
neighbour, she would have refused it though it had
been paved with gold ; ‘ but,’ added she, ‘ it is all along
of that Katty Mc Crury, and her downrightness, for it
was her berth that I wanted from the first.’

* And what fault have you to find with Stephen Fell,’
said Pickles, as he slowly disencumbered himself of
his cap and accoutrements, ‘he is as quiet a man as
you could have anigh you, if you were to pick and
choose through the whole regiment.’

* Quiet!’ repeated the woman, ‘and don’t you know
ARRIVAL AT CAWNPORE. 13

that that is the very thing for which I hate him. There
is no doing anything with them quiet ones ; they just
work one up, till one does not know what to be at : but
if he is quiet, what have you to say of the lad he has
the care of ? had you but heard the noise Jamie Gordon
has been making, while’s parade! He has come on
finely, I promise you, since he has been on board the
boats : and it was not a quarter of an hour since, that
he canie opposite our door, and tried to wheedle our
Philip to go out and play with him.’

‘ Well,’ said Pickles, ‘ and what harm then ? :

‘Harm, indeed !’ replied his wife, ‘do you forget, that
though Jamie is a year younger than our boy, he could
never let him alone on board ship, and as sure as my
life, had the two come up the river in the same boat,
the one would have tilted the t’other into the water.’

-€Well,’ replied Pickles, ‘ you had best be going off
now ; if it warn’t chat, it would be some’at else to grumble
at ; so say no more, and don’t be losing time. Let the
lads fight it out if they will ; as well now as by and
bye.. When they knows who’s master, they'll be quiet ;
so as I say, you had best be off.’

It: was more than an hour and a half after this, when
Betty Pickles returned to the barracks, followed by the
black nian, laden with a basket which was quite full
of the things she had bought at the Bazaar. Her son
Philip, whom she had taken with her, was lingering a
little béhind : his face being smeared and dirty.

As Betty stepped into the berth, she was in a perfect
blaze of heat, from having walked very fast, and being
still dressed in the fashions of her own country, for she
wore a thick Europe chintz, a Norwich shawl of a

c
14 JAMIE GORDON.

very bright colour, and a yellow satin bonnet, which
she had bought second-hand in Portsmouth.

Her first motion was to take off her bonnet, after
which, fetching a long breath, she called to the Cooley
to set down his basket and unload ; and whilst he was
doing this, she examined every thing she had bought,
counted up her price, and boasted how she had got every
thing under value.

At last, when she had talked herself out of breath,
her husband said, ‘ Well, when you have a mind to
hear, I have some’at to tell you which mayhap may
please you.’

‘And what may that be 2’ she asked. )

‘You were a complaining,’ he said, ‘of having Stephen
Fell as a neighbour, on account of his boy ; its changed
now—he is moved to the t’other end of the barrack,
and they say he is going to have the two stripes on his
sleeve.’

* They might as well make a Corporal of our Phil.!’
replied Betty ; ‘is this what you have to tell me, which
was to please me so mightily! And so I suppose the
man was glad to shift his berth, to get away from
us. Our Phil. was not good enough, I reckon, to keep
company with Jamie Gordon.’

* Have it which way you will,’ replied Pickles, < its
all one to me :’ and so saying, he got up and lounged to
the other end of the barracks,

The glance given by Betty, as she looked after her
husband, might have been plainly understood by the
dullest person, to mean neither more nor less, than ‘ the
sooner you go the better, no matter what drives you,’
—for no sooner was he clearly off, than she produced a
ARRIVAL AT CAWNPORE. 15

large key, which she applied to the lock of the chest
which she had brought with her from England, and
which held all her particular treasures, and having
opened it, with somewhat of a cautious glance about
her, she produced from a deep pocket about her person,
what at Cawnpore would be called a Europe quart
bottle, closely corked, which she placed in a corner of
the said chest, drawing some of the lighter matters
which were in the box, completely over it, neck and
all: next proceeding to place what remained of her
money, in another secure corner.
16 JAMIE GORDON,

CHAPTER III.
IN THE HOSPITAL.

THE cold season had passed away, with its sweet and
breezy mornings, and delightful evenings. The hot
winds too, had come with their dark and long days, and
they had blown their fill, and were passed. The hot
winds are called long and dark, because, while they
lasted, all the doors and venetians of the barracks were
kept closed, excepting on the windward side, and on
that side exactly opposite to where the wind blew.

In order to meet the burning blasts, the doorways
exposed to it, were filled with tattas, which were always
kept wet, so that the air might be cooled in blowing
through them.

The rainy season had also followed and almost passed
away, when Stephen Fel# became so ill, that he was
forced to be carried off in a dooley to the hospital,

Stephen Fell had been in the regiment from a youth,
and was respected by all the officers: and he was just
upon the point of being made a Sergeant, when it be-
came needful to put him down on the sick-list. He
IN THE HOSPITAL. 17

had begun to ail in the beginning of the hot winds,
and had been unable to do much duty for many weeks ;
but he suddenly grew worse towards the end of the
rains, and so he was forced to be sent to the hospital.

It is a good distance from the barracks of Cawnpore
to the hospital ; the road lies across the plain, and the
fashion of the building is much like that of the bar-
racks. The wards are long rooms, furnished with many
beds, and the sick are under the control of the regi-
mental doctors, one of whom lives within the compound ;
and there is also a hospital surgeon, who is generally a
married man.

It was in the cool of the evening, in the last day of
the month of August, when Corporal Fell was put into
the dooley, to be carried down to the hospital. He had
been on his bed during the whole day, and could not
have walked the distance, had it been ever so needful
that he should.

The bearers however, had not carried the sick man
many yards, before a child’s voice was heard, crying
in great distress, ‘Daddy ! Daddy ! take poor Jamie, he
will not stay behind, Daddy ! Daddy !’

At the same time, a little boy was seen running after
the Dooley from the barracks, whilst two or three per-
sons, from whom he seemed to have made his escape,
were in pursuit of him.

The child was exceedingly tall and slender for his
age, judging by his youthful countenance. His hair
was of a dark auburn, and naturally curling, grew
on a head of the most perfect form. His features were
remarkably handsome, and his eyes bright and beauti-
ful. His whole little person seemed as if it had always

C3
18 JAMIE GORDON.

been kept with the exactness of military neatness. He
wore a single garment of white calico, made in the
upper part like a girl’s frock without sleeves, the lower
being only a loose trower. This dress was quite clean,
but he had neither shoe, nor stocking, nor hat, yet his
little feet looked fair and delicate, for they had been
lately washed. This boy was an orphan, the son of
Margaret and Alan Gordon, both deceased.

Stephen Fell had taken him from his last surviving
parent, and from that day, this little one had lain
in his bosom, like the poor man’s ewe lamb, and he had
washed him, and fed him, and taught him, up to that
sad hour in which he was taken away to the hospital.

The Corporal had a comrade, a decent man of the
name of Blake, and he had engaged this comrade to
take charge of the boy, until his return to the barracks,
which for the child’s sake, he hoped might be soon
and as he had a good opinion of the man, he had tried
to think that the child might be happy, and might do
well without him.

Blake had therefore coaxed little Jamie into the
verandah, on the other side of the barracks, just before
he thought the men with the dooley might be expected,
and the child would have had no suspicion of what was
going on, had not Mrs. McCrury called out from the
door of her berth to Blake, to offer her services to do
anything, which might be wanted for the little lad, then
with him, ‘if so be,’ said she, ‘as the father of him
never came back.’

‘Hush, woman !’ replied Blake, ‘ what be you talk-
ing on ;’ and he gave her a nod, and a wink, which she
was not slow to understand.
IN THE HOSPITAL, 19

The child, however, had heard all she said, and by
putting together one or two things which he had heard
and seen in the former part of the day, he had failed
not to make out what was going on: and by watch-
ing and peeping through the doorways, he managed
to find out the very moment in which Stephen Fell
was placed in the dooley, and lifted up by the bearers.
At the same instant, little Jamie shot from the side
of Blake, and running along the verandah, was out on
the plain after the dooley, almost before he was missed.
Blake however, with two or three more, were after
him, before he could make those hear him,4who were
with the dooley, and then the louder the, child cried
Daddy ! so much more loudly did the others still be-
hind, call Jamie. A bird on the wing could only then
have overtaken the golden-haired boy ; his little bare
feet beat the ground, as fast as mill-wheels strike ; and
as he ran, his cry of Daddy ! Daddy ! take poor Jamie.
Oh take poor Jamie ! became more and more pitiful.

Corporal Fell was leaning back in great weakness in
the dooley, and he was thinking, that he hoped he had
judged right, in not taking Jamie to the hospital, where
he feared he might be exposed to catching some dis-
temper ; yet still hanging in doubt upon the matter,
when he was suddenly roused by the cries behind, and
looking out, he saw in a minute how things were. His
very heart jumped to his throat, when he observed
what efforts the little fellow was making to catch the
dooley, and his mind was made up in one moment,
that it should not be his fault, if the child was not in-
dulged in his innocent desire to be with him, whom he
called father, so long as it pleased God to spare that
father, to guard and protect him.
20 JAMIE GORDON.

But the sick man could not make the bearers stop

for as much as a minute, after he had seen the child,
for the men guessed how it would be, if the boy over-
took them, and that they should have to pick him up,
and carry him along with the invalid in the dooley ;
so they kept running on—the foremost crying, Ete, the
next Doo, the third Zeen, and the fourth Chah, in tune
to their steps, and giving deaf ear as it were, to the
Corporal’s call, till he cried, Buckshish! Buckshish !
and then the dooley was set down the very next minute
on the sand. Little Jamie was so spent when he came
up to the dooley, that he had hardly power to scramble
into it, and to pull his father’s arm round him, as he
dropped his head against his breast ; neither did the old
one, nor the young one, say a word to each other, for
what had they to say ? but what each knew, without
the help of words.
. The people who had followed Jamie from the
barracks, were so nigh, that they came up before the
bearers had lifted the dooley again. Blake was the
foremost, he was laughing as he remarked at being over-
matched by such a young ’un ; and he shook his fist at
Jamie, and said, ‘When I can catch you, you young
rogue, I'll pay you, I promise you, but I supposes I
must wait a bit for my vengeance, for now you two be
got together again, I reckon it won't be a little as will
part you.’

Stephen Fell then requested his comrade to send
Jamie’s clothes down to the hospital, and thanking him
for his intended kindness to the boy, the dooley was
lifted up again, and the happy little fellow was in a
sound sleep before the bearers had counted their Ete,
Doo, Teen, Chah, a dozen times more.
IN THE HOSPITAL. 21

Corporal Fell was much respected by William
Thomas, the hospital Sergeant, and, it was in his favour
too that the sick man’s family was from Norwich, as
also was that of Mrs. Thomas’, so when he got in, he
had a pleasant corner berth epptieten him. He had
two windows, as one might say, all to himself, the one
in a line with the back of his bed, and the other on the
left hand of it. That onthe back he commonly kept
dark, but that on the left was wide open most of the
day, and being to the north, Jamie could be outside in
the shade for several hours, both in the morning and
the evening, after the sun had risen.

There was also, from this north window, as much of
pleasant prospect as is often to be enjoyed at Cawnpore,
where the face of the country is almost as flat as in
Holland, saving where the ground may have been
cracked and seamed, in a small way, by theheat. The
hospital compound is inclosed in high walls, but the
grass within these walls, was at that season quite fresh
and green, and the wall itself was hidden by a few
pretty shrubs, which were very pleasant to look upon.
A few goats browsed on the green space between the
hospital and the wall; and there were many young
kids, whose tricks were very amusing to Jamie.

Beyond the hospital wall, on the north side, though
not to be seen from the wards, was a garden filled with
flowers and fruit, and when the breeze blew over this
garden in the early morning or after sunset, it brought
with it the sweet odour of these flowers and fruits, ren-
dering the cool evening and morning time, more delight-
ful than they would otherwise have been. In this
garden also, were certain very thick trees the tops of
22 JAMIE GORDON.

which rose very much above the hospital walls, and
these trees were the harbour of many doves, the cooing
of which birds had a very soothing and pleasant effect.

Neither was the Corporal so ill off, in his next neigh-
bour, as he might have been, for on the very morning
after he had come into the hospital, John Blaney, a
decent man, of the fourth company was brought. from
the barracks, attended by his wife, a respectable north-
countrywoman. Poor John was in a very low, weak
way : yet, when Stephen Fell saw him, he never sup-
posed that he himself should live to see him dead and
buried, and his wife married again,

Corporal Fell had been lain on his bed as soon as he
got into the Hospital, and was not allowed to rise from
it for as much as a week ; but little Jamie was never
long out of his sight, for the child had become jealous
lest there should be another scheme for parting him from
his father, so that whenever this fear came over him
he always climbed on the cot, and either lay down by
his poor daddy, or sat on the bolster with his little
hand laid upon him. He slept at night too by his side,
and did many little things to help him, during the day,
such as running on errands for him, or reaching him a
little water, or Congee, or calling a Cooley to do any
thing he was not able to do himself ; and as the sight
of the child was a delight to the Corporal, the poor
man was always thanking God, that things had been
so ordered that the little fellow had not been left in the
barracks.

There was this difference in the state of Corporal Fell
and John Blaney, that Stephen, though as surely marked
for death, as Blaney, was not by any means so near his
IN THE HOSPITAL. 23

end. He had several ups and downs still to experience,
and was much more easy and stronger, and to all ap-
pearance every way better, after he had been in the
Hospital a week, whilst poor Blaney was getting slowly
worse and worse, for it was all the way down-hill with
him in this life—he was never more fo rally. Blaney
never rose from his bed but to have it made, and, poor
man, it was a weary, weary hour with him when his
wife cleaned him, as she called changing and washing
him every day before breakfast.

There was as much difference between Mrs. Blaney
and the other women, already spoken of, as these women
were unlike each other. Mrs. Blaney was a decent
middle-aged person, with a fresh colour and comely
face, uncommonly neat and tight in her dress, and so
old-fashioned, that one might have thought she had
never been beyond her own village, in the wild border
lands where her father was schoolmaster and parish
clerk, She was also very industrious and thrifty, and
though her husband had only private’s pay, she knew
better than many a Sergeant’s wife, where to put her
hands on a few rupees. To be sure she had never had
a child, for which she expressed much satisfaction, be-
cause children, she said, were more trouble than profit.

Corporal Fell had seen Mrs. Blaney many times
before, but it had so happened that he had never spoken
to her, nor had he heard her much spoken of ; but from
her decent conduct and outward behaviour, she obtained
his respect almost immediately. It is true that he
soon was brought to think that he should not wish to
have her about him at the time when he might want
most comfort ; nay it was not many days before he
24 JAMIE GORDON.

would have been very glad of many an idler, and even
more slovenly neighbour.

All those who have been in hot countries must have
felt the refreshment of those sweet morning hours which
sometimes follow a night in which no sick person is
able to sleep on account of the heat. How comfortable
it would have been to poor Blaney and Corporal Fell to
have enjoyed a sleep each morning, if it were only for a
short time, during that cool period ; but that was not to
be. No sooner had the morning gun fired, which was
always very early, than Mrs. Blaney was out of bed,
and dressed, and beginning to set things in order, call-
ing loudly for the coolies and sweepers, knocking, in
her bustle, first against her husband’s and next against
Stephen Fell’s cot, rattling the fill-mills, as they call the
venetians, in order to clean them, opening her chest
which stood between the beds, and banging down the
lid, clattering with cups and saucers and plates, whilst
she set the breakfast, and not letting, any body be quiet
till she had frightened sleep quite away from the sick
folk on either hand of her.

Still however, things went on very smoothly between
the neighbours, till the morning of about the third day
of their being together.

It was then, after Mrs. Blaney had arranged her
husband’s cot, given him his breakfast, and put every
thing away, that with the best intentions in the
world, she suddenly seized on Jamie Gordon, and began
to handle his head in such a manner as he had never
felt before, driving the sharp teeth of the comb through
the skin at every motion of her hand. The boy was
too proud to cry, but he got off as soon as possible, and
IN THE HOSPITAL. 25

the next morning he rebelled against this treatment,
and shewed that he was not of a temper to be managed
after this sort.

At the very first sound of her voice, bidding him
come to her, he had turned sulky, whilst Corporal Fell,
as he lay in his bed, heard the good woman speaking
loudly to the boy, bidding him come to her in a tone
which would have made any child run as far the con-
trary way-as his legs could carry him. He also heard
the boy say ‘ I won’t,’ and the next minute, for he kept
his eyes shut on purpose, he found that the little lad
had climbed on his bed, and he felt his throat tightly
strained by the round dimpled hands and arms of his
young charge.

It was of no use to pretend to be asleep any longer,
for though Jamie might think that as long as he did not
speak to his father there was no manner of fear of
frightening sleep away from him in any other way,
yet Mrs. Blaney had no such fear of disturbing the sick
man, but changing the object of her anger, she said in
her usual loud shrill tone :

‘I say, Stephen Fell, does you, a decent man as I
believes you to be, does you think it right to uphold
that rampagious child in his obstinacy and rebellious-
ness, and where, I ask, is the gratitude due to me, who
neither looks for fee nor reward, but is willing to fettle
the child and keep him clean and wholesome, whilst
you lie helpless there.’

‘What is it? mistress,’ asked Corporal Fell, not
knowing how to reply, for he loved Jamie too fondly
to think of taking part against him ; ‘ What is it ?’

‘Why,’ she replied, ‘that Jamie Gordon, he won’t

D
26 JAMIE GORDON.

come to be fettled, but runs away when I calls him,
and here you are encouraging him in his wilfulness,
contrary to all decency.’

‘I am really much obliged to you, Mrs. Blaney,’ said
the Corporal, ‘ but——’

Here Mrs. Blaney interrupted Stephen Fell, saying,
‘I am a plain honest woman, Corporal, and I can’t
for the life of me imagine what kind of lad you expects
him to turn out, when you leaves him in his obstinacy
to keep his head from the comb, and to resist the com-
mands of those who, being his elders, must be wiser
than he is, without ever giving him so much as a word
or a blow for his pains. I say, Stephen Fell, if you wish
him well, use the rod pretty sharply, or let others who
will, use it for you.’ And there ended that matter
for that time, and poor Jamie’s golden hair went un-
combed, until his father was able to sit up in bed
and put it to rights with his own hands.
DISCUSSIONS. 27

CHAPTER IV.
DISCUSSIONS.

Corporat Fett enjoyed much quiet during the early
part of the first Sunday which he spent in the hospital.
Mrs. Blaney had been brought up to pay much out-
ward respect to certain days ; so that when she had set
things in order in her berth and dressed herself, she
sat down quietly to read some book which she had
brought with her from England.

At that time there was no place of worship in Cawn-
pore ; there was a Chaplain, it is true, and he hada
service for the men on a Sunday on the open parade at
sunrise. He was ready also to bury and christen and
marry, but there ended all the duties he could be forced
to perform, and unhappily his heart was not in the
cause, so he never did any voluntary service.

Corporal Fell was so much easier this day, that he
was not only able to read himself but to hear little
Jamie read also, which last he had not been able to do
for some weeks, and so Jamie sate on his bolster, may
be an hour or more, reading his chapter and talking

about it, and asking his daddy many questions. Jamie’s
D2
28 JAMIE GORDON,

chapter was the first of Genesis, he had not got beyond
this one yet, and he was a long while in stammering
through it, for the Corporal was very particular in
making him keep his points, and in satisfying him, as
far as he could, about anything he did not understand
in the account of the creation. One of the things he
wanted to know this day was, whether the first plants
and trees came up out of the ground on the third day
with all their leaves and flowers on them, or whether
the sticks, as he called them, came up at first and the
leaves came out afterwards ?

Corporal Fell could not answer this question, but
it led him to much sweet discourse on the beautiful
works of our Creator, and his mercy and loving-kind-
ness even to the smallest birds of the air. ‘ Much as I
love you, my lad,’ said Corporal Fell, ‘ yet does the Al-
mighty love his chosen ones better, and you must
always bear this in mind, Jamie, and remember when
Iam not present to teach you, that when you have
done wrong you must at once humble yourself before
your Heavenly Father, and ask His forgiveness, just as
you would do if you had vexed me, your earthly father.’
Little Jamie understood this well, and his young mind
was thus drawn out by his adopted father in the only
way a child should go, and though the Corporal was
perhaps too indulgent in his treatment of the boy, yet
he was very urgent in shewing him where only he could
look for support and direction for his future well-doing,
both here and hereafter. And it may be hoped, that
though for awhile the good seed did not flourish, yet it
had taken root and wanted but the Divine Spirit to blow
upon it to make it blossom and bring forth fruit.
DISCUSSIONS. 29

So the child read and talked till he was weary, and
till the book fell from his little hands, and his eyes
closed in sleep, and then followed two or more very
still hours, in which little was heard in the wards but
the pattering of a shower and the cooing of the doves,
in the tall trees of the adjoining garden.

The dinner-hour brought some bustle, but, the after-
noon, till towards sundown, was quiet again ; almost all
the sick in the wards had a sleep, and some of them
would perchance have slept some time longer if it had
not been for what shall presently be told.

There were several of the barrack boys in the hospi-
tal at thaf time, but not in the ward with Stephen Fell,
nor near him, so that Jamie had never once fallen
into their company since he had been in the hospital.
He had always played in his own quiet shady corner,
with the little kids, and that evening after he had had
his tea, he had gone out to play in his own place, and
here he would have remained quietly enough, if young
Pickles, his old acquaintance, had not espied him.

When Philip left his mother, he crept slily round
the corner of the building, and beckoned Jamie Gordon
away, enticing him farther and farther, till he had got
him quite to the other side of the hospital.

Then he brought him into the midst of the other
boys, and they were all at high games with each other,
when Mrs. McCrury and Mrs. Pickles passed by to go
out. Betty called to her son, promising him a good
beating, if he did not come after her that moment ;
and Mrs. McCrury seizing Jamie by the arm, told him
to make haste to his father, who had missed him, and

was calling for him.
D3
30 JAMIE GORDON,

‘Bless you, woman,’ said Betty Pickles, ‘why do
you tell the boy to go to his father, you know as well
as I do, that he is no child of Stephen Fell’s.’

‘What is it, asked Jamie, who was still held by Mrs.
McCrury, ‘ what does she say ?’ and he pointed to Mrs.
Pickles.

‘She says nothing worth hearing,’ replied Katty, ‘ but
get along with you,’ she added, as she let the child’s
arm go.

When Mrs. McCrury loosed her hold on Jamie,
Philip Pickles, and several of the other boys, got about
him, and taking up what Mrs. Pickles had said, about
his being no son of Corporal Fell’s, from one thing to
another, they went on to say everything that was spite-
ful and provoking to him, such as, ‘that he belonged
to no one’—‘that his mother was dead in one place,
and his father in another’— ‘and that Corporal Fell
had picked him off his Daddy’s grave ’—with other
such cruel nonsense, as ill-bred children often utter ;
and being only the more excited to plague the boy, from
seeing how the little fellow stormed and raged, stamping
his feet, and telling them that they were all a pack of
liars, and his Daddy should flog them all.

Whilst this was going on in the hospital yard, the
two women who had begun the disturbance, walked
away, being both hot in dispute ; ‘and why for’ said
Mrs. McCrury, ‘ why for should you trouble the little
lad, by telling him that the hand that feeds him, and
the bosom on which he rests, don’t belong to his nat’ral
parent ! won’t he find out soon enough, that the cold
earth lies on the bones of them as brought him into
the world. I tell you, Betty, that he should never have
DISCUSSIONS. 31

learnt them things from me, if he had not known them
afore, the darling !

Long before Mrs. McCrury and Betty Pickles had got
back to the barracks, Jamie Gordon had run to his
daddy, all hot and dirty, for he had been rolled by one
boy in the dust ; and bloody, for he had been exchanging
blows with another ; and ragged, for he had torn one
boy’s pannjaumahs, and that boy had torn his in re-

venge.
- He had come running at full speed, and roaring like
a little bull-calf, and he had scrambled into his castle,
that is the Corporal’s bed, and he had clasped the sick
man round his neck and almost deafened him with his
cries.

All that the Corporal could make out of his words
were, ‘ A’aint I your boy, Daddy? A’aint I your boy,’
whilst at each time that he repeated the question he
hugged the sick man closer and closer, hiding his little
dirty face in his bosom.

‘ Aye, to be sure, my lad,’ replied the Corporal, ‘ if
the will of your parents and the consent of hearts can
make you mine, mine you are; but what have you
been at, Jamie. What’s all this dust and blood ?’

‘ He has been fighting as sure as I am alive,’ said
Mrs. Blaney ; ‘and if you did right Corporal Fell, you
would make him know and feel that he is not to follow
such low ways without punishment ; but here you are
as you always does, upholding him in bad as well as
good. Now, Jamie Gordon,’ she added; ‘don’t be
going for to add the sin of lying to your other sins, but
tell those who ought to know, what you have been doing
with yourself, the last hour ?’
32 JAMIE GORDON.

‘They said,’ replied Jamie, raising his head, but
still holding the Corporal about the neck, ‘they said
he was not my daddy, and that I was not nobody’s lad,
and I said I was daddy’s ; and so I fetched him a blow,
and so he knocked me down, and so I struck again, and
so they rolled me in the dust, and then I came here to
daddy ’cause he loves me.’

‘Do you think I love you, Jamie,’ answered Fell,
‘with that dirty face, and that bloody nose, and when
you have been wicked enough to quarrel and strike
blows. Oh Jamie, do you think I can love you even
whilst you are all dirty and covered with blood and
dust without, and all filled within with evil passions,
with hatred, and vengeance, and cruelty. Do you
think I can love you through all these things, Jamie ?’

‘Can’t you daddy, can’t you,’ replied the child,
drawing a little from the Corporal, and looking pitifully
and earnestly in his face. ‘I thought that you could
never stop loving me, daddy.’

‘True my boy,’ answered the Corporal, ‘ if my love
of you comes from the right source, it never can wear
out with time, neither can you wear it out, be you ever
so wayward ; but mind you, Jamie, . may love a2 to
the end, and yet hate your evil ways.’

The little one did not quite understand what the
Corporal said, he had some idea however, of what he
meant, though it was a dark and childlike one.

He was going again to put the question of whether
the Corporal was really his father, when notice was
given that the Doctor was coming round, on which he
dived under the bedclothes ; thus covering his bloody
face, and when the Corporal raised the sheet after the
DISCUSSIONS. 33

Doctor had made his rounds, he was in asleep so sound
that he was no longer conscious of any care or any
angry feeling.

As might be expected from what has before been said
of Stephen Fell’s management of the boy, no more was
said to Jamie about the affair of that Sunday evening ;
and loath was the Corporal to believe that by not check-
ing in the child, the evil passions as they rose, he was
leaving him to feel the fearful consequences such indul-
gence of passions always bring.

When the evening was quite set in, Mrs. Blaney
having fettled her husband for the night, lighted her
candle and set it on the feenpaun, and having brought
out a book which seemed to have been well thumbed,
she said, ‘I wish, Corporal, you would tell me some-
thing of this little lad’s parents, and how you came to
take him under your care, and why you did not rather
let some of our women have charge of him, though to
be sure, it is not every one of them, as one would like to
have the care of a fatherless and motherless bairn. No
doubt in some things you have done as well for him as
even J myself could have done, barring one particular,
which is, that I account you to be exceedingly to blame—
mind, I say, exceedingly to blame, Stephen Fell, in not
correcting the child, or causing him to be severely cor-
rected, when he does such things as he did this evening.
Then too, about that matter of the combing and clean-
ing, which I was willing out of decency to do, he
shewed such a spirit, that if indulged as you indulges
him, Corporal, must bring him to the whipping-post, if
not worse ; but it is nought to me, he is no kith nor
kin of mine, and you can’t say but that I have warned
3d JAMIE GORDON.

you where all this would end—but leaving the future,
I would be glad to hear how you came to take the lad,
for he seems to give you trouble enough now you have
got him.’ :

Corporal Fell made no difficulty whatever, in granting
this favour ; so raising himself a little upon his pillow
and laying his hand on the sleeping boy, he told his
story much in the words which shall be put down in
these pages.

‘It was some years last spring,’ said he, ‘when we
were lying at Morpeth in N orthumberland, and there
we were joined by as fine a young man from over the
border as ever you saw.’

‘Then truly,’ said Mrs. Blaney, complacently ; ‘he
must have beem comely indeed, for them border people
have not their fellows in all Europe.”

‘His name was Alan Gordon,’ continued Fell, ‘and
he was married to a very fair lass whom he called
Peggy. He had been married so long as to have had
one little lad, who was dead before I knew them ; this
one, that is Jamie, having been born after I knew them.
I was the man who stood first to the child at the font,
—you will call that something, Mrs. Blaney.’

‘Sure, she answered ; ‘ but go on.’

‘So,’ continued the Corporal, ‘we was moved from
place to place—mostly about the south-coast ; and lay
one whole summer on Barnham Downs.’

‘Aye,’ said Mrs. Blaney, ‘ was not that where Blaney
and I joined ; but we was not in your company, and
it a’int in Europe as it is here—where there is more
women about a barrack or camp than there is men—so
I might have been months at the same station with
DISCUSSIONS. 35

Gordon’s wife, and never knowed there was such a
woman.’

‘But you knew there was such an one at Fort
William ;’ resumed the Corporal, ‘and that she died
there, and was buried the day we came off, to come up
the country.’

‘To be sure I did, replied Mrs. Blaney; ‘ here
worn’t a woman in the regiment, that it did not put
under fear, because of the climate.’

‘I was put on board the same boat with poor Alan
and the child, to come up the river,’ continued the Cor-
poral ; ‘for which favour I was beholden to Sergeant
Young, who felt for the poor widower, and I knew how
needful I was to his comfort, and almost to the preser-
vation of the child, from whom the father would on no
account be parted. Though, as he had been falling
away ever since he came into the hot climate, he needed
the care almost of a woman. Alan Gordon was very
far from well when we got him aboard the boat, but we
set down his ailments rather to grief than to any de-
cided disease ; and he was so afraid of being sent to the
hospital boats, which would have parted him from me
and the child, that he did not complain, but concealed
even from me many of his worst symptoms.’

‘From the time however of Margaret’s death, he was
quite unable to carry the child about, when we went
on shore in the evening, and the lad wanted as much
care as a baby of twelvemonths ; for he had been so ill
at Calcutta that it was expected he would have gone
before his mother, and was reduced to a perfect skeleton,
having quite lost the use of his legs. It was strange
how this long illness backed him in every way, for to
36 JAMIE GORDON.

this day he hardly remembers any thing which hap-
pened before it. Alan Gordon could not bear the idea
of parting from him or of turning him over to any of
the women of our company ; so it was left to me to
take care of him when his poor father was disabled,
and somehow or other, I cannot say how, the lad
wound himself about my heart in such a way that had
he died when his father did, I should have mourned him
as one mourns an only son.’

‘And what would you do now if he was to die?’
asked Mrs. Blaney.

“I hope,’ replied the Corporal, ‘I should be enabled
to acknowledge that all would be for the best. I can-
not now live to see him grow up, and I must leave him
in a dangerous world. I do not however, doubt that
all will be ordered for his good ; but to go on with my
story. Poor Alan fell off, from day to day, from the
time he came into the boats; and yet it is my belief
that he, now being in glory, accounts those few months
to be the most blessed of his earthly existence: for
though dying daily, as one might say, as to the outward
man, he was then only beginning to live in the Spirit.
His wife had ever been a prudent, discreet, and as I
believe, a truly pious person, and many and many is
the time when I have seen her on board ship, trying to
win him to read the Scriptures to her, when she would
be sitting on deck with her needle in her hands. But
as it regarded him, she had nothing to comfort her on
her death-bed, but the evidence of things not seen ;
still she was, as she told him and me, blessed with as
full an assurance that his Heavenly Father loved him,
and had put it into her heart to pray for him, having
DISCUSSIONS. OV

promised that those who asked should receive: that
she died in joyful hopes of a future re-union in glory.
Not that I mean to say that poor Alan was ever an
enemy to the Truth, as too many are ; but whilst things
went well with him, he gave small thought to his God ;
and this his poor wife was well aware of. However,
he was quite another man, by Divine grace, towards the
last, and was enabled joyfully to commit his eternal
happiness to Him who had died for him. It was the
very day on which he died, his little boy was sitting
at the time on the bed on which his father was
stretched, and when he had expressed his perfect con-
viction that he should find all he had lost, in his blessed
Redeemer, he asked me to give him my hand, and when
I had done so, he took the small thin hand of this dear
boy by my side and put it into mine; then closing
my fingers upon it, he raised his head, it was the last
_ time he did so, and pronounced his blessing,—his dying
blessing on’ us both. He was taken only one hour
afterwards with the death-throes, and never again spoke
distinctly, for he was dead before evening gun-fire.
We halted that evening on a wild woody shore—some-
where between this and Benares ; I remember the place
well, though I can’t remember the name of it. It was
the Saturday night however, and we were not to move
till the Monday. Poor Gordon died at such an hour
that there could be no thought of burying him before
morning, even could we have wished to turn out the
poor corpse so soon ;—so we got a few boards knocked
together, to be ready for day-break, and I watched
the body all night, as it lay stretched in the boat,
holding the poor unconscious orphan in my arms,’
K
38 JAMIE GORDON.

‘And I warrant,’ said Mrs. Blaney, ‘ that you heard
enough of the jackals that night, howling and prowl-
ing, being drawn by the scent of death. Them creatures,’
she added, ‘knows better where a corpse is, or where
one is like to be, than the wisest of us human crea-
tures.’

* My old comrade Blake had gone the evening before
with one of our Corporals and three others, to choose a
place for the grave,’ continued Fell ; ‘and they had
gone farther inland than is commonly done on such
occasions, and Blake had taken a fancy to one particular
spot, and had got leave to have the grave dug there.
So at the very earliest dawn, the body was put into the
shell, and marched up to the place, and the service was
read over the grave, and we all returned to the boats,
where we were to remain quiet all day. As soon in
the afternoon as we could get liberty, that is, Blake,
myself, and others of poor Alan’s friends, we went up
again to the grave, and took some of the Dandies, and
other black fellows with us, and we got stones from the
bed of a brook near at hand, and heaped them on the
grave, as we read ofin the Holy Scriptures. Then Blake
took his knife and carved a few letters and figures on
the bark of the tree under which the heap lay ; the
letters and figures were, A. G. with the date ; and there,
if no accident has happened to the tree, and the stones
have not been stirred, the place of that grave is as clear
to be seen now, as it was the day we left it. When the
sun was so low that the trees on the bank broke its
rays, I took the child in my arms and carried him up
to the place of his father’s grave, I hoped that he would
be old enough to remember it, and I resolved to shew
DISCUSSIONS. 39

him every thing about it distinct and clear, hoping, as
the saying is, that the scene might form a picture never
to be forgotten in his young mind. The little one loved
to be carried out ; he knew not, poor lamb, what he had
lost, and he patted my cheek with his small hand, as he
was carried along, and nestled his face close to mine.
It would be more than unnatural surely, Mrs. Blaney,
if the poor orphan had not then secured such a place
in my heart as no folly on his part should ever be able
~ to lose.’

‘Well,’ said Mrs. Blaney, ‘I don’t understand any
thing about such things. Its well some do—or what
would become of such orphanless bairns as yon—more
especially, when they are of such a rampagious sort as
the lad there is,—but go on,—so you took him to see
where they had laid his father ; did he understand any
thing about it, think you ?’

‘I cannot say what he understood at the time,’ replied
Corporal Fell ; ‘ but he has no memory of seeing that
- grave. Now one thing was, that he was taken very sick,
very soon afterwards, and a long sore hand I had with
him for some weeks ; though I reckon that the trouble
I had with him then only made him the dearer to
me.’

‘Trouble,’ repeated Mrs. Blaney, ‘ by that rule, Cor-
poral : if your love for him is to grow in measure as he
continues-to plague you, you will be doting on him by
and bye, as never fool of a father doted on any son.’

The Corporal smiled, but did not attempt to turn
aside the keen edge of the woman’s remark. He only
added, that after having taken the child on that Sun-

day evening to the grave, he had hastened back with
EK 2
40 JAMIE GORDON,

him, in double quick time, from having, when he acci-
dentally looked down, perceived the clear, fresh print of
a tiger’s foot on a swampy patch under the trees on the
bank.

When the-Corporal had finished his story, Mrs. Blaney
said, ‘I am obliged to you, Stephen Fell, for what you
have told me, and can only say, that I wish all fatherless
and motherless bairns could meet with as much kind-
ness in one sense as you have shewn to Jamie Gordon ;
still, to be plain with you, there is one point in which
to my thinking you do act a most unkind part by the
little lad. I am not one as ever can use flatteries,
or say one thing and mean another; so if you have
not a mind to hear my opinion, I will say no more, and
there the matter may rest.’

The Corporal assured Mrs. Blaney ‘that he had no
objection to hear all she had to say.’

‘Well then, said she, ‘this is the bottom of my mind.
It is my opinion, and it is not grounded on hear-say,
but on what my own eyes and ears have told me, that
you are led by a foolish and blind fondness to withhold
that correction from the boy, which becomes more and
more needful, let me tell you, from one day to another.
A few months more and that bairn Jamie Gordon will
neither be to hold nor to bind.’

Stephen Fell confessed with a sigh ‘that he had ob-
served, that as the child grew and gained strength, he
had shewn more and more of a temper that was not
easily kept under,’

‘ You do acknowledge that much,’ replied the woman,
‘then in the name of common sense, man, why don’t you
apply the rod whilst it may be of service. I should
DISCUSSIONS. 41

have tried it, I promise you, in no time, instead of talk-
ing and palavering with him as you did, and trying
foolishly enough to fill him with the notion that he
could do nothing to make you cease to love him, though
you did not love his vile ways. I could hardly be-
lieve my own ears, when I heard you going on in that
fashion.’

‘Perhaps,’ answered the Corporal, with the air of
one who is afraid he has got the weak side of the argu-
ment, though still unwilling to acknowledge it, ‘ you
do not quite understand my plans with the child.’

‘You need not suppose any thing about it,’ retorted
Mrs. Blaney, ‘the plain truth is that we are as far from
each other in our thoughts on the guidance of children
as John O‘Groat’s house is from the Land’s End. ;—but
let us hear all you have to say about plans as you calls
them ; though to speak the honest truth I have not
much notion of their being anything to the purpose.’

‘You must first take into consideration, Mrs. Blaney,’
said the Corporal, ‘that was I ever so well disposed to
use the rod to this poor boy who is sleeping by my
side, I have not the power now, neither have I had it
for weeks back—the strength of my arm is departed,
never I believe to be restored.’ ,

‘May be so,’ she replied, ‘ for I have no notion of your
ever getting about again, though some think otherwise,
and others flatter you about your case, to keep your
spirits up; but what’s that to the purpose; / was ready,
as you knows, in the matter of the combing and fettling,
to have fought the battle for you if you had but en-
couraged me, but that is past, and J have done with it.’

Stephen Fell took no notice of this remark, but said,
E 3
42 JAMIE GORDON.

‘I have thought long and deeply upon the subject of the
management of this poor boy, Mrs. Blaney, and even
many a time and oft since I have lain upon this bed,
and the way of thinking to which I am come is what I
shall tell you. Could I have looked forwards to living
long enough to lead the boy through the dangers of
childhood, 1 hope that I should, as you say, have pun-
ished him when he does wrong. But,’ he added, gain-
ing confidence in his own opinions as he proceeded,
“being by the will of God deprived of the hope of
seeing the child grow up to manhood, and on the con-
trary having the prospect of quitting him in a few
months, perhaps weeks, I desire only to leave sweet
and kind and gentle recollections of me, his nursing-
father, on his mind.’

‘And so,’ remarked Mrs. Blaney, ‘to be sure of his
good word in after-life—may be even in that expecta-
tion, those that live long enough may find you to have
made a mistake ; for what must be the end of your weak
indulgence.’

‘Hear me out,’ replied the Corporal, ‘ you have mis-
taken my object. It is not that he may speak well of
me hereafter that I have adopted this plan of managing
the child ; but that the boy may be’able when in danger
of being hardened and corrupted by his own evil pas-
sions, and evil companions, and the world’s unkindnegs ;
to turn back to the memory of the love, and kindness,
and patient forbearance shewn him in his wayward in-
fancy by his adopted father. Then through that
earthly father, or rather through Divine blessing upon
the lessons taught by that earthly father, he might still
mount higher, and be enabled to see the love of that
DISCUSSIONS. 43

Heavenly Father, who cared for him when yet he
knew him not.’

‘Bless us, do but hearken to the man! Why, Cor-
poral, you have a many strange notions!’ exclaimed
Mrs. Blaney.

Then having snuffed her candle and opened her
book, she added, ‘ Well, Stephen Fell, I suppose I ought
to be obliged to you for your trying to make me com-
prehend what you are after; but I don’t say as I
either understands you, nor approves of your opinions,
even when I does understand you. Methinks I have
heard some say whose words you would honour, though
you set so light a value on mine, that “those whom
the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth every son
whom he receiveth.” Heb. xii.6. But the matter is
nought to me, so now you may as well settle yourself
for the night.’

Then fixing her eyes on the book, she made the Cor-
poral understand she wanted no more talk,
44 JAMIE GORDON.

CHAPTER V.
THE GODFATHER’S DEATH.

Tuoven Stephen Fell made no comment upon what
Mrs. Blaney said, the verse she had quoted caused
many reflections which often before had occurred to
his mind ; but as it will be seen, the impression was
not sufficient to make him alter his conduct to the
child, though he could not but acknowledge to his own
mind, that Jamie Gordon, like other high-spirited chil-
dren, would have been all the better for a little correc-
tion.

The very next evening, the Corporal got permission
from the Doctor to sit up a few hours, which was a
great relief to him and caused the days to pass much
more agreeably ; but from that time Mrs. Blaney seemed
as if she was not altogether pleased because Jamie was
not managed according to her wishes, and in conse-
quence she grew very tart with the boy and drove him
from her side of the Corporal’s cot,—where to be sure
he had no right to be. The Corporal however passed
all these things over, and as he was better able to man-
THE GODFATHER’S DEATH. 45

age the child now he was up, few causes of dispute
arose.

It must not be thought however that there was any
real amendment in Stephen Fell’s health, though there
was much in appearance, especially when the cold sea-
son first came on, but there was never any thought of
his being able to return to his duty.

The hospitals in India generally become much thin-
ner in the colder months, and fewer deaths occur. The
berth next to Corporal Fell’s was soon left vacant, for
John Blaney went off quite suddenly towards the end of
September. He died at gun-fire in the morning, and
was buried the same day av gun-fire in the evening,
and Mrs. Blaney packed up and cleared out of the hos-
pital the same night, having been asked to go to the
Quarter-master’s Bungalow, there to do needlework and
wait upon the lady till she could settle her plans.

Every decent widow would wish to avoid living in
barracks, so Mrs. Blaney was at the Quarter-master’s
nearly three months, but she spent her Christmas in
the barracks, having taken a second husband and risen
in rank, and consequently in comfort. She had chosen
the best and most suitable out of many an offer, for it
must be remembered how few white women there were
in Cawnpore, and the next time we shall hear of her
we must call her Mrs. Fifer.

Her husband was pay-sergeant Fifer of the first
company, his room being next to that of Serjeant
Young, the door opening almost upon Katty McCrury’s
berth.

It seemed as if providence had ordered all things so
that the last months of the life of Corporal Fell should
46 JAMIE GORDON.

be those of the greatest peace and quietness he had
ever known since he had been a soldier.

There were some other invalids in the ward, but
they were quiet men, and there was not another child
to interfere with Jamie ; so that there was much oppor-
tunity for Stephen Fell to instruct the boy in reading
and even a little writing, and to teach him many of those
passages of Scripture which he particularly wished him
to keep stored up in memory against the day of need.

When I am gone, he thought, this dear boy will be
exposed to every temptation to wickedness which can
be well imagined. I am sorely afraid that he will give
way and become at least for a time all that I could
wish him not to be, but still I am assured that our God
will remember him. For it isto thee, O Lord, that I
trust this my fatherless child, knowing that thy mercy
endureth for ever. For though a mother may forget
her sucking-child, that she should not have compassion
on the son of her womb, yea, she may forget, yet wilt
thou not forget thine adopted ones.

When the cool season was set in, Corporal Fell was
permitted to creep about in the evenings in the hospital
compound, and even to go out into the plain, from
whence he could see the wide Ganges and the boats
gliding down the stream. He could not indeed walk
far, but he had found an agreeable seat on a low bank
of sand under the wall of the garden, of which mention
has been made before. There, under the shade of the
trees, whose boughs spread over the wall, he sat many
an evening with his little one either seated at his feet,
or standing between his knees, exchanging much sweet
discourse with each other.
THE GODFATHER’S DEATH. 47

The dying man endeavoured on all occasions to raise
the thoughts of the boy from this present evil world to
that happy region where the redeemed shall live for
ever with the Redeemer. Vast and continued were the
pains which he took to make the little one understand,
that greatest manifestation of the Divine love, by
-which God was made man, and crucified for the sins
of the world. All the lessons then given by Stephen
Fell to that fair boy, were lessons of love, and all the
examples he used to fix these lessons on the memory of
the child, were taken from the objects then before them.
He compared the passing nature of each, man’s life on
earth, to the progress of some small skiff down the
mighty Ganges. The bright purple and golden glories of
the clouds, which sometimes half concealed the setting
sun, served him not unseldom, for the emblems of that
bright state of existence, in which the redeemed shall
shine with the excellency of the Redeemer ; as the clouds
then in the west were decked with the rays of golden
light. |

So sweet were some of these discoursings between the
little boy and his dying instructor, that they some-
times seemed almost to forget that there existed any
other beings near them, but themselves and God their
Heavenly Friend and Father.

Who can pretend to say, how far Jamie Gordon
would have escaped the corruptions of the barracks, had
it pleased God to spare Corporal Fell to guard him
through the dangers of childhood and youth ; but this
was not to be. The worthy man lingered through the
whole cold season, seeming to get no worse; but he
began to change at the end of February, and never
48 JAMIE GORDON.

rose from his bed after the first of March, going off
quite suddenly at last.

It was about four in the afternoon, that he first ex-
perienced any symptoms which foreboded the near
approach of death ; but about seven o’clock he was so
much better, that he called for Jamie, and took his
last leave of him, though he himself did not know it
to be such.

The child cried bitterly, when his adopted father told
him that he must leave him for the night, as he felt too
ill to allow him to sleep near him, as had been their
custom hitherto ; but he made no objection, when Mrs.
Thomas led him away, and placed him under the care
of a young man, who lay at the other end of the ward.

She then returned to the bedside of the dying man,
where she found her husband, and not knowing how
long he might linger, and feeling that it would not be
proper to leave him with the black men, she told Ser-
geant Thomas, that come what would, she would stay
to see the last of the Corporal, and that he might go
to bed, as she knew as well what to do, as him, or any
of them. ‘ But,’ added she, ‘as it would be dull sitting
here, when every one else in the ward may be fast
asleep, I wish you would send up to the barracks for
Nancy Fifer, to sit along with me, and you may as well
send what may be wanted for the laying-out, before
you go to bed.’

Poor Fell was past all care on the subject of what
was going on in the little world about him, on the
door-sill of which his soul yet lingered ; and he was, it
is trusted, passed all suffering, though his spirit was
still in the body, as was evident from the occasional
THE GODFATHER’S DEATH. 49

spasmodic twitchings of his features, though he was
otherwise perfectly still, and apparently in a gentle
slumber.

Mrs. Thomas was a comely dame, of a certain age.
She had been twenty years in the regiment, and had
been the general nurse of the sick for as much as fifteen
of those years.’ She was one that made herself gene-
rally pleasing to the sick, and often indulged their long-
ings, in contradiction to the orders of the Doctors, being
pretty sure that no complaints would be made against
her on that score.

So when Sergeant Thomas had gone out of the ward,
the sick having all been served, and settled down for
the night—the lamps lighted, and every thing as it
should be, Mrs. Thomas took the only chair in the
berth, and placing herself where she could see the dying
man, and reach him in an instant, should anything
be wanted, she crossed her arms in front, and leaning
back with her feet extended, she began to think. If
she had told her thoughts, it would have been a good
lesson for those persons, who fancy that the heart may
be turned from folly, by the influence of awful and
appalling scenes. Mrs. Thomas was in a certain sense
alone, in a vast and gloomy apartment, where she heard
no sound but the occasional squeaks of musk-rats, and
the distant howl of the prowling jackal. She was
watching the last movements of one dying, and yet her
head was running on the pattern of her next gown;
of the probability of the Corporal’s having saved any
money, and whether it was secured to Jamie ; of the
price of a keg of Europe brandy, which her husband

F
50 JAMIE GORDON.

had bought that day ; and of the good luck of Nancy .
Blaney, in picking up pay-sergeant Fifer.

In this way, and when Mrs. Fifer arrived, in a sort
of chat, some hours passed, and it was not till towards
the dawn of the morning, that Mrs. Thomas was made
aware of the very speedy approach of death, and so
easy was the passage of the soul, that she hardly called
her companion in time to witness the last gasp.

The morning gun sounded, the moment after Stephen
Fell had breathed his last, and the body was immediately
removed to a separate apartment, and laid out in the
usual forms by the women, flowers being strewn over
it, as we do in Europe. Several of his old friends
from the barracks came down’ after parade, to see the
last of their loved and honoured comrade, and amongst
these, the first was Blake. He came in before the
women had left the remains, and almost his first ques-
tion, after he had looked a moment on the well-remem-
bered face, was, ‘ Where is Jamie Gordon? what is to
come of the poor lad ?’

Jamie was still sleeping, (as was Supposed,) where
Mrs. Thomas had laid him the night before ; but
Blake’s question led to much discussion on this subject,
Not one of the three women present, had a living child
in India, Mrs. Thomas had one son with her mother
at Norwich. Mrs. McCrury had buried two babies,
and expected another ; and Mrs. Fifer had never been
a mother. All the three, however, as well as Blake
himself, expressed their'willingness to takeilittle Gordon
and it seemed to be almost a pity, that Mrs. Thomas’s
offer was not taken ; but as she was often from home,
it was thought by Blake, who was supposed to know
THE GODFATHER’S DEATH. 51

. the mind of the late Corporal better than most, that
Mrs. Fifer would be the properest person to take the
child : that is, if her husband made no objection. It
was then settled, that if Sergeant Fifer was agreeable,
she should come down in the cool of the evening for
the boy, and till then, that Mrs. Thomas should see
after him.

This matter being arranged, the two women from
the barracks set off to go home, whilst Mrs. Thomas
went through the wards, to look after any of the sick,
who might want her help, and to see what kept the
little orphan so long asleep.

When she came up to the cot where she had laid
him the night before, they that were about, told her
that he had been up, and gone from thence sometime ;
but no one could just say where he was gone.

There is not much more now to be said of Stephen
Fell, but that his remains were laid in rest that very
evening, in the soldier’s burying-ground, at the station
where he died. But there is much, much, to be said of
poor Jamie Gordon ; and they that would follow him,
must go through many a troublesome and fearful
scene.

The poor child was now, what he never could before
have been accounted—an Orphan indeed, a lone and
friendless Orphan in a strange land ; a child who had
no particular claim for kindness from any one, except-
ing that he was white, and that he was come with
many others of his own colour, from a far distant land.

This orphan was at that time, exactly such a child
as the noblest parents might have delighted in, and ene

of whom the most religious might have hoped the best.
F 2
52 JAMIE GORDON.

He had spent the last six months almost alone, one
might say, with his father by adoption, in the hospital,
and those months, with the Divine blessing, had done
great things for him ; or rather we should say, that God
had made the opportunities allowed by those months,
operate to the great benefit of the child, in many more
than may at first appear.

The world in which we now live, is a material world,
and there is nothing done in it, of which we can com-
prehend the doing, which is not done through material
means. What the Almighty does independently of
means, we do not understand, and cannot calculate
upon.

Now this is certain, that no child is ever taught to
read—is ever instructed in good manners—is ever made
acquainted with the affairs of this world—is ever taught
to work—or cypher—or any other art—but through
some visible means ; and therefore, such children as are
without teachers—or under evil teachers of any kind,
either grow up like perfect savages, or become skilled
only in that which is evil. But it should be carefully
observed, that even good teaching, unless blessed from
above, can never go beyond present things—can never
affect any thing beyond the present nature, which we
have all received from our forefather Adam ; a nature
which is corrupt and perishable—and one therefore,
which is only capable of a temporal, and sort of outside
improvement.

Though Stephen Fell had fully known, of how little
value (without God went before him as it were,) any
thing could be to Jamie, which he could teach him ;
yet, as those who work in faith always do, he went as
THE GODFATHER’S DEATH. 53

strait to the point of what he would have done for the
child, as if every thing had actually depended on him-
self. As he himself, being, as he knew, on the thresh-
hold of another world, had views of light and glory
from that other world, which stood him in the stead,
or rather were more to him, than the finest gentlemanly
education could have been,—he was enabled to go quite
beyond what might have been expected, even from a
non-commissioned officer, in the instructions he gave
the boy, as to all things which are lovely and of good
report. —

Thus, though it had not yet appeared how far the
Divine Spirit had begun to work with the child, yet
every one who could have judged of these matters,
must have seen, that Jamie Gordon was altogether, at
the time of his adopted father’s death, quite another sort
of person, from the other boys of the barracks. With
regard to teaching, there was not a book in his own
language which he could not read off with ease. He
could write his name too, and could count better than
most children of his age. He had a number of texts ~
by heart ; and his adopted father had also thought it
right, before his death, to give him all the knowledge
he could, of his natural father and family.

In his person, he was an uncommonly fine lad, one
of the most healthy children in the regiment, of so re-
gular features, that it was often said, he ought to have
been a girl ; but withal he was strongly and boldly
formed, and it was no easy matter to put him in fear.
The sort of management he had experienced, had how-
ever very much confirmed one peculiar quality of his

mind, and that was, that he could only be governed by
F 3
54 JAMIE GORDON,

kindness ; and as afterwards was proved, he was stub-
born as iron, when treated harshly, whilst he might be
melted like wax, by the faintest glow of affection.

On the morning of the death of Corporal Fell, the
child had awakened, almost immediately after the re-
moval of the remains, and instantly bethinking himself
of his father, and wondering why he was not with him,
he dressed in all haste, and ran to the empty berth.
There was the pillow, on which the dying head had
just now rested, and the cup, and spoon, from which
the lips had been moistened for the last time; and
nothing there to the eyes of the child, spoke of more
than that the invalid had risen, and gone from thence.
Jamie was not aware that this was impossible, and
without speaking to any one, he went out at the door,
and looked for his father, in those places where he had
been wont to see him, only a few days before. He
walked round the hospital, and passed out at the gate.
He thought, that he whom he sought, might be under
the favorite trees. He was still wholly unconscious of

‘the change which had passed upon him ; he knew not
that the eye which had seen him, but a few hours past,
should see him no more—that he should return no more
to his house, neither should his place know him again.
He had indeed often seen death, and even witnessed
the whole process and ceremony of interment ; but he
had never yet felt it in the person of one on whom he
depended for his happiness. He had never within his
recollection, suffered any real bereavement from the
death of any one he had known ; till that day therefore
this child had never really felt, what it might be to
lose a dear friend. Often as the Corporal had spoken
THE GODFATHER’S DEATH. 55

to him, of his probably speedy dissolution ; he had
never realized the idea, nor did a thought of the truth
that his father was really dead, and that his body was
at that moment, lying in the dead-house, occur to his
mind, till he saw that the place under the tree was
empty.

When this thought first struck him, he threw him-
self, with his natural impetuosity, his full length on
the sand, after which, raising himself, and sitting up
with his head pressed down on his knees, he wept and
sobbed, till his whole frame was convulsed ; whilst
from time to time, he cried out, ‘Oh my father! my
father! come back to Jamie! Oh! come back to Jamie!’

It was by these cries, that Mrs. Thomas was directed
to the boy: and it was with real kindness, that she
went up to him, and soothed him, and led him by the
hand into her own apartments: for she had two very
comfortable rooms, for herself and husband. There,
whilst her breakfast was being set by a black man,
whom she kept for all table services, she tried her best
to comfort the boy, holding him before her, as she sate
in her chair.

‘Well, my poor child,’ she said, ‘it a’int to be denied
that you have lost one, who was more to you than
many fathers are to their children—but you must re-
member, my boy, that all pain is past with him for
ever—and that he is now in glory, reaping the rewards
of his good deeds.’

‘But Oh! Oh!’ replied Jamie, ‘I shall never see
him again.’

‘Not in this life, my boy,’ said the Sergeant’s wife
—‘surely not, for ever gone—there a’ant no return ;
56 JAMIE GORDON.

but won’t it be your fault, if you don’t go to him ?
you must live as he did, and serve God, and then you
will be sure of meeting him in heaven.’

Mrs. Thomas’s religion was somewhat different to
that which had been taught to Jamie, but he was too
full of grief to pay much attention to her doctrines.
In a very little while, he broke out again into violent
grief, and was so anxious to see his poor father, and
to sit by the body till they took it away, that after
forcing a cup of coffee upon him, she gave way to him
and led himto the gloomy apartment, which was set
aside in the hospital at Cawnpore, for laying out the
dead.

There lay the remains of Corporal Fell, neatly laid
out, and the white sheet which covered the body, being
_ scattered over with flowers. The face looked calm and
peaceful. The work of decomposition was as yet going
on slowly : but toward mid-day, Mrs. Thomas knew
that it would be necessary to force Jamie away.

She indulged him however for a while, in his desire
of sitting by the corpse, though she greatly wondered,
that he did not express some fear of being left with it.
The child however, expressed none, but kept his eyes
fixed on the face, and seemed so lost in thought, that
Mrs. Thomas wondered more and more at him. But
she could in no way get from him, what he thought;
all he would or could say, was, ‘I wish, I wish, God
would take me to my own father—the father that used
to speak to me, and look at me ; but this does not speak,
and does not look.’

After various attempts to get him away quietly from
the body, he at length came away himself, and did not
THE GODFATHER’S DEATH. 57

ask to see the corpse again : and he said to Mrs. Thomas,
‘I can think of my father better, when I do not see
that ’—(he did not say what,) ‘ father is not there ;’
and he was anxious that Mrs. Thomas should explain
to him, where his father was, putting a number of
questions, which she could not answer.

Towards evening, it seemed as if his little mind was
some way made up to his loss; he saw the funeral go
out of the compound, in silence: he did not ask to
follow it, as Mrs. Thomas had expected ; but said, a
can’t think that father is in that coffin, I think of him
somewhere beyond the clouds.’

The views which the Corporal had tried to give him,
of the change which takes place at the natural death of
the redeemed, were working on his mind, and had been
working whilst he was looking at the corpse, and mark-
ing from one hour to another, the fearfully rapid change
as decomposition went on. Being quite convinced,
however, that the mind who had loved and instructed
him, and made him very, very happy ; was no longer
with that dead body ; his young and tender mind was
already delivered from those fearful thoughts of the
grave, which cause many mourners to think only of
their friends, as the prey of worms and of corruption.

There was no one to whom the child could tell his
thoughts, so as to make them understand him ; for
when he tried to do so to Mrs. Thomas, who kindly
encouraged him to talk to her—he could not tell what
she meant to say, when she endeavoured to explain
things to him : for at one time she spoke of the departed,
as if they were sleeping under the sod ; and then again,
as if they were in glory on high. The good woman
58 JAMIE GORDON.

could not make those things clear to others, which she
did not herself yet understand.

But she was so kind to the boy, that when Mrs: Fifer
came up to fetch him to the barracks, and he learned
for the first time, that he was to go with her; all his
grief was renewed, and he was so unfortunate as to
let her see, that he would much rather stay where
he was.
NEW QUARTERS, 59

CHAPTER VI.
NEW QUARTERS.

Ir is very likely that Jamie Gordon would have refused
altogether to go with Mrs. Fifer, had not the Sergeant
suddenly appeared at the moment in which the spirit
of resistance was about to explode in a loud cry, and a
declaration of utter abhorrence to the measure ; for if
there was a woman in the regiment more hateful to
little Gordon than every other, it was Mrs. Fifer.

To resist Sergeant Fifer, however, was quite out of
the question with the boy ; for, in the first place he
was a Sergeant, he wore three stripes, and a worsted
sash ; then, too, he was a tall, large-built man, and he
had been drilled to an upright position, till he could
not bend; and thirdly, there was something awe-in-
spiring in the deep tinge of his complexion, which was
of the colour of red copper, and in the huge seam of an
old sword-wound, which ran all down one side of his
face. His character, and his manner too, were both
such as a child would naturally feel afraid of, for he
was accounted to be as discreet and respectable a man
60 JAMIE GORDON.

as any in the corps. He had never been known to be
in the least affected by liquor when on duty, or likely
to be so; and he went through every military form
required of him, with such exactness, that his move-
ments were like those of clock-work. Though he had
been heard to utter a sonorous laugh on some peculiarly
mirth-inspiring occasion ; yet no one could assert that
they ever saw him smile. It cannot therefore excite
any wonder if little Jamie at the sight of him, marching
up to the door of Mrs. Thomas’s apartments, should at
once give up all ideas of resistance, and deliver himself
up to his fate, without a word.

The first words of Sergeant Fifer were, “ Well, mis-
tress, be you ready to take the boy by the hand and
come along?’ then wishing Mrs. Thomas a good even-
ing, he added that they must see the lad in his place
before gun-fire.

Directing the child to walk first, he gave his arm to
his wife, and they proceeded to the barracks, without
uttering one word to each other by the way.

The room which Sergeant Fifer occupied, was situated
at one half of the end of the first company’s barrack ;
the other half being the apartment of Sergeant Young.
This room had two doors, one of which opened in the
verandah at the end of the barracks, and the other into
the interior, close upon Katty Mc Crury’s berth. Be-
sides these doors, there were other openings by which
air might be admitted, and light shut out. In one
corner of this berth was a handsome cot of sepoo-wood,
with musquito-curtains of thin muslin. The floor was
covered with a selvege of blue and white cotton, striped.
There was also a square table, the leaves of which could
NEW QUARTERS. 61

be let down when not wanted, a few chairs, a wardrobe
on a stand, in which Mrs. Fifer kept her tea and sugar,
her cups and glasses, and other stores ; and a couple of
handsome chests, clamped with brass, in which she laid
up her own, and the Sergeant’s clothes. Between each
window or door-way were pegs fastened against the
wall, on which many things were suspended, but all
with great attention to order and uniformity—for the
Sergeant was as precise in his apartment, as in his
military forms and dress—and he had already drilled
his wife into the same attention to neatness. The first
bit of furniture which Jamie remarked in the berth
was a little bedstead, which could be rolled under the
larger one in the day-time, made up with a mattress
and bolster, for himself, and near to it stood a painted
mora, on which he was cinected to seat himself as soon
as he came in.

It ought to be understood that at that time—whatever
now may be the case—every child born of white parents
belonging to regiments in his Majesty’s service, in the
East Indies, was entitled to three rupees every month,
which three rupees were quite sufficient to supply any
additional expense of maintenance incurred for such
child, either with the parents or strangers. Mrs. Fifer
knowing this, was assured that she should sustain little
or no loss by Jamie, and, as she said to her husband,
some credit might accrue to them, by their kindness to
the orphan, in the eyes of the regiment.

It was nearly dusk, when Sergeant and Mrs. Fifer
arrived at the barracks, and directed Jamie to place
himself on the mora. The Sergeant next proceeded to
hang up his cap on its usual peg, and to disencumber

G
62 JAMIE GORDON.

himself of his stiff leather stock. His wife got a candle
lighted from the room without, laid a cloth on the table,
set some country cheese, a piece of cold salt beef, some
ration bread, pickles, and chili pepper in the pods upon
the table, not forgetting two tumblers, a jug of water, and
as a matter of course, a Europe black bottle ; this being
done, she called her husband to sit down, and whilst
she was serving him with her own hands, before she
sat down herself, there was a little discourse between
them, respecting the boy, and he was accordingly
called and directed to stand on one side of the table, a
plate being set before him with a certain portion of what
was on the board.

‘I don’t want anything,’ cried the poor boy; ‘I
don’t want anything to eat, I want my own poor
father !” |

‘But don’t you know, child,’ said Mrs. Fifer, ‘ that
he is gone to that place from which no one ever comes
back, and what’s the use of your grunting and refusing
your victuals ; you has not eat the value of an ounce
this day, Mrs. Thomas says, and you will be sick with
fasting, and what a hand we shall have of it then.’

‘Give me another slice of the beef, said the Sergeant,
holding out his plate, ‘and let the boy alone, can’t
you ?’

‘Why should I, she answered ; ‘if the lad is sick, is
it you or me as must have the trouble of him ?”

‘Give us the cup,’ said the Sergeant ; ‘set it down
there :’ and he plaeed his hand on the tumbler, as it
stood by his plate, encompassing it with his thumb and
three fingers, and nodding at the same time towards
the bottle, by which token his wife was to understand
NEW QUARTERS. 63

that she was to pour some of the contents of the bottle
into the tumbler, measuring the quantity by the three
fingers. This being done, the Sergeant filled up the
tumbler with water from the jug, and having taken two
or three sups, to ascertain whether the liquor was to his
taste, he set down the glass, and returned to the salt
beef.

Mrs. Fifer was now busy in filling her own plate.
She also prepared a draught for herself, but the whole
of what she prepared was hardly enough to fill a wine-
glass, and the liquor, which was brandy, hardly coloured
the water.

Had not there been a mixed murmur of voices from
the large room on the other side of the partition, it would
have been all silent in the Sergeant’s room, whilst the
couple were eating their beef; but the noise without
went on continually, at length the voice of Katty Mc
Crury was heard above all the rest. She was telling
some wild story of something which had happened in
her own country.

Soon Mrs. Fifer, again addressing Jamie, said, ‘ In-
stead of standing and whimpering there, child, you
ought to be quite thankful and erateful-like to us for
our goodness in providing you with a decent and
respectable home ; for think ye, child, what would have
been your condition had ye been put under the care or
rather no care of that Katty McCrury? Let me tell
ye too, it would have been so had it not been for me
and my good man ; but Jamie, I would have ye under-
stand that I am not going to guide ye in that loose easy
way in which he did, who is no more. He was most

unpersuadable in one thing, and that was, in his indul-
G 2
64 JAMIE GORDON.

gence of you, boy, so that he never used any correction
for any of your bad conduct ; and to such a degree did
he humour the child, Fifer,’ she added, looking at her
husband, ‘that do what he would, however bad it
might be ; to what or to whom would the little shame-
less thing run and tell it first and foremost, but to Cor-
poral Fell himself! This I have seen more than once
nor twice either, with my own eyes.’

‘But he used,’ sobbed little Gordon, ‘ he used to tell
me how wicked I was when I was wicked; he made
me hate to be wicked.’ -

‘Well we shall see,’ replied Mrs. Fifer, ‘how fa
you relishes punishment for bad behaviour, for you
must mind what you be about, and don’t be expecting
any love from me or the Sergeant, but according to
your deserts. Here you be under my eye, and if you
is to stay here, you must mind every word I say, and
as sure as you gets out and gets among the bad children
about, either in this barrack or another, so sure shall I
make you to feel my hand—and so now you knows
what you has to expect.’

This was too much for the child ; this sorrow heaped
on sorrow, was more than he could bear, and so violent
was his burst of grief, that even the Sergeant was
touched by it, and displeased with his wife. He was a
man to whom anything like any noise or quarrelling or
violent crying of children, or scolding of women, was
particularly annoying, especially ifit should happen in
his berth ; so he accordingly silenced his wife in such
a deep tone of displeasure, as she dared not to resist,
and drawing Jamie to him, he held the tumbler of ~
which he had already drank about three parts, to the
NEW QUARTERS. 65

child’s lips, and telling the exhausted boy to swallow
what was left, he arose, and bidding his wife help the
child to bed, he left the berth to go his round of the
barrack and see that all was right before bed-time.

The poor bereaved orphan, after having swallowed a
large quantity of such strong stuff as he had hardly
ever even tasted before, would never have found his
little cot without the help of Mrs. Fifer, but when once
laid in it he was almost instantly overpowered with a
heavy sleep. |
_ It would not be expected that there should be much
quiet in the barracks after gun-fire in a morning, but
if it was needful that all the men, and even some of the
women should get up at that hour, there was no cause
for shaking up poor Jamie as Mrs. Fifer did, from a
very sound and deep sleep, the instant her husband had
gone off, in order that she might roll his bed under the
other.

The boy’s dressing was soon done, as Mrs. Fifer
threatened him with a combing and washing after
breakfast, and when he was ready, she made him assist
her in setting her berth to rights. She took up the
selvege and shook it out on the plain, she brushed and
polished every article of furniture, and then set the
breakfast with the aid of her Bobbergee, as she called
her cook. All these things being done, she washed her
hands and face, took off a loose wrapper, in which she
had done her dirty work, and had got herself in respec-
table trim by the time parade was over.

Little Jamie’s back however, ached with the shoves

and pushes she had given him, as she drove him from
: G 3
66 JAMIE GORDON.

one job to another, and a spirit of sullenness was getting
hold of him very quickly.

His young face, in the days which were passed, used
to be for the most part either quietly serious and calm,
or lighted up with happy smiles ; he knew that he was
loved by him who had taken the charge of him,
and he had the feeling that he was beloved too
of Him who made him. But these warm bright feel-
ings were passing away, and the effect produced on the
boy’s mind was coldness and sullenness. The Sergeant
and his wife drank coffee at their breakfast, they gene-
rally had the remainder of what meat they had had for
dinner, fried up in the morning. The Sergeant did not
heed it, if perchance it was slightly tainted, as it often

would be when the night had been particularly hot.

It was always served up again with a quantity of pep-
per ; the cook used to bring this savoury fry in a
covered dish, and the Sergeant ate it with chilies.
Besides this, there was always ration bread and white
bread on the table, with butter and sometimes eggs :
and Jamie was not denied anything that was at the
table. |

After breakfast, Mrs. Fifer took Jamie into a corner
of the berth at the back of the cot, which stood half-
way between the outer and inner wall, and there she
scoured and combed him with no tender hand ; and
having given him clean clothes, she handed him an old
spelling-book from one of the chests and bade him to
sit in the corner, where she bad washed him, and get
his spelling. From that time this became Jamie’s cor-
ner, his only place of refuge, in which he could hide
himself from the eye of Mrs. Fifer.
NEW QUARTERS. 67

This corner was shaded on one side by the back of
the cot, and on the other side there was a latticed
window which opened on the verandah, through which
he could peep, and through which he could hear every
thing without, just the same as if he were in the very
room with the person speaking. Every morning after
breakfast, he was hurried into it, always with some
task, either of spelling or questions—which tasks he
was, he found, so seldom required to say,—that he did
not always learn them, but made for himself a number
of little amusements, of which no one took much note.
He had a clasp-knife which one of the men had given
him, and he notched sticks, and cut pegs which he
placed in a row upon the window sill; he made them
of different heights to answer to the ranks of the regi-
ment ; and he got at several books, which often amused
him for a Jong time together. These books he found
in Corporal Fell’s chest, which was left to him with
his linen and some other matters, but the rest of the
effects had been sold, and the money placed in the hands
of the Major for the use of the boy when he required to
be put out, in case any objection was made of his being
put on the strength of the Regiment, and if so it was
to run up, till he was of age. The most precious of
_ these books was his father’s Bible, out of which the boy
had learned many verses, and in which, that is on the
fly leaves, Alan Gordon had written a sort of register
of his own family, to which Corporal Fell had made
some additions. There was Andrew Gordon, Jamie’s
grandfather, of Shepherd’s Knowe, in the Highlands of
Scotland ; his first wife and her son George, after which
last name was written, as if some years afterwards,
68 JAMIE GORDON.

“ supposed to be still living, at least not known to be
dead,” and the shepherd’s second wife, and her son Alan,
and the son’s wife Margaret, daughter of another Gordon
of Shepherd’s Knowe, with “ deceased,” after all these
members of the family, with the exception of Gordon
the uncle, and Jamie the second son of the said Alan
and Margaret.

Who shall say how many times were these, the only
notices of his forefathers, read and re-read by the poor
desolate child in his corner ; and what imaginations he
created in his young mind of a fatherland very, very
far off, where, if he could go there, he might perhaps
find his lost uncle, and be received as a dear son.

Sure however it is, that these imaginations took such
strong hold of his mind at that time, that they never
were erased ; nay, that they had such effect upon him,
that they influenced his whole life, as will be seen in its
proper place : only let it be observed that the mysterious
silver case which hung at his neck, perhaps served not
a little to remind him of these imaginations and pur-
poses.

The other books found in the chest, were the Pilgrim’s
Progress, the Holy War, by the same writer, Lord
Anson’s voyages round the world, and Robinson Crusoe,
with an old book of birds and beasts. What a source
of amusement were these to poor Jamie ! they served
to beguile many an hour which otherwise would have
been weary indeed. He had another amusement in
trying to write, and to draw on a board with a piece of
chalk.

The Sergeant, when not on duty, sate a good deal in
his berth, making up the Company’s accounts in a
NEW QUARTERS. 69

morning, aud his wife went on with her sewing or
seeing after dinner, and Jamie soon learned that he was
to be quiet during that time, though for the most
part, as long as he was quiet, he could amuse himself as
he chose. The dinner was at one, and he did not ob-
serve that Mrs. Fifer took anything with hers but water,
nor did she give anything else to him. After dinner
the Sergeant often slept in his chair, and sometimes the
mistress went out of the berth to talk to one or other of
her acquaintance, and as this happened the very first
day after he had been under her care, Jamie stole out
too and creeping round the verandah was making his
way to Blake’s berth at the very remote end of the
barracks, when, suddenly he happened to meet her. She
was in conversation with Betty Pickles, and he came
upon her before he was aware. She flamed up at the
sight of him, and he could only avoid a blow by run-
ning back to his corner ; but his spirit rose within him,
and from that moment he felt that she was so unjust in
confining him, although she could not herself stand the
same confinement, that he made up his mind that there
could be no harm in deceiving her, and that he would °
get out whenever he could make himself pretty sure
that she would not know it.

As soon as the Sergeant went off to evening parade,
she dressed herself, and making Jamie fit for a walk,
she put a basket into his hand and took him out with
her to the bazaar, which was a good step off from the
barracks. As she went along she met a Sergeant’s wife
of the Grenadiers, who was going the same way. They
joined company, and were so full of discourse as they
went along, that the boy was left to run hither before
70 JAMIE GORDON.

or behind them. So long as Mrs. Fifer let him alone,
he enjoyed himself very well, though a sad thought
would sometimes come over him, and then he ceased to
run and jump.

They did not come home till nearly dusk ; and then
came the supper, as the night before, only that the
Sergeant gave nothing strong to the child to drink, and
he was ordered to bed before the older persons.

This was Jamie’s first day, spent in Sergeant Fifer’s
room, and when all things are considered, it is certain
that in many respects he might have been placed in
many a worse condition without going beyond the
barracks. Still however, the cold and heartless manner
in which the child was treated, was already beginning
to draw up much that was evil in his young and hot
and ardent mind—his proud nature rose in rebellion
against the woman’s cold treatment, and more especially
against the hints which from time to time she con-
tinued to throw out against his own beloved father of
adoption.

These feelings grew so fast upon him, that as he saw
her bustling about after he was in his bed, he felt that
he was quite pleased to hear her husband now and then
giving her a cross or sullen word.
A NEW FRIEND. 71

CHAPTER VII.
A NEW FRIEND.

Tne earliest news which Jamie heard on the first Sun-
day morning, after he had come to Sergeant Fifer’s
room, was that Mrs. McCrury had a daughter. This
was a piece of information which had but little interest
for him ; though he heard the woman who was waiting
on Mrs. McCrury assert, that the child was certainly
the finest which had ever been seen in Cawnpore, and
a perfect jewel of a beauty. He also heard Mrs. Fifer
say, when the news was told her, ‘Indeed! and I am
sorry for it, this one will soon be with the rest, for
that wild Irishwoman will never rear a child in this
country, whatever she might have done in her own.’

Nothing ‘more however on the subject of the new-
born infant, or indeed on any other was said, during
the morning’s meal; after which the Sergeant rising
and taking his cap and account-books, nodded to his
wife, as he walked out of the door, saying, he was going
to the Captain to settle the company’s account.

‘ As if,’ remarked Mrs. Fifer, ‘ there was not six days
72 JAMIE GORDON,

in the week for such employment, but that you must
do it always on the Sunday,’ but the Serjeant was
gone out of hearing before she had got thus far in her
speech,

When her husband was gone, she called Jamie to
assist her in putting all things away ; the table was
soon cleared and the room put in order, after which the
boy was sent into his corner, with a page of questions
full of hard words, which he neither understood nor
cared to understand. There he remained, however,
now and then peeping under the cot to see where his
enemy was, till he heard some one enter the berth, and
ask her to please to be so good as to come for a bit to
poor Mrs. McCrury, who had something lying on her
heart, which kept her from taking the rest of which
she stood in the greatest need.

Jamie saw that Mrs. Fifer had risen from the table,
where she had been reading some large old book, at
the sound of these words, and he saw her with pleasure
shut the door which led to Katty’s berth behind her.
She was hardly gone, when a strange and sudden noise of
a small drum and squeaking pipe reached his ears, and
presently he was aware that a number of children and
idle young privates were gathered and gathering in
the verandah, just without the room, for he could see
them through his lattice.

In that company, there were then only three white
children, himself, Philip Pickles, and the so lately
added little McCrury ; but there had accumulated
through various means, a number of boys and girls of
various complexions from almost black to almost white;
from twelve years old down to under one month, who
NEW FRIEND. 73

had come in with their black mothers, and who if they
did not altogether reside within the barrack, might
be found there at any hour in the twenty-four. The
sons of these females were never allowed to think them-
selves equal with the white boys, and if they got any
influence over the little Europeans—which they often
did—it was only by cunning. But, in some instances
where the mothers was not quite black, but were them-
selves half and half, and where they were married to
the men with; whom they lived, the daughters had often
very fine names, and were dressed in white muslin and
glass beads, and were allowed to keep their places with
the best of the Europe girls in the barracks.

The crowd of idle persons which Jamie saw through
the venetians, was chiefly made up of this sort of chil-
dren, and he heard one calling to another in Hindo-
stannee, to come, and to come quickly, ‘gildee ! gildee !’
was the word. The little drum rattled louder and
nearer, and the pipe skirled, and the temptation became
too powerful for Jamie’s resistance any longer, so down
went the question-book, the stool was knocked over,
and he was standing the very next moment on a chair
just within the outer door of the room, peeping over
the heads of the crowd, to see what might be seen to
the best advantage. Now that which was to be seen,
was no other than Soosoo Gee, the Bunda-walla, with
his Bunda riding on his Buckry in grand state and
style; and these three had stopped right opposite the’
door of the berth ; and as the company had signified
their wishes that the Tamacha should forthwith begin,
Jamie had already promised himself much pleasure.
He had seen Soosoo Gee and his monkey many times

H
74 JAMIE GORDON.

before, but it was what appeared to him a long, long,
while ago. But at the very moment, that the Bunda’s
master was giving his command to his long-tailed slave
to begin his tricks, the half of Jamie’s chair was claimed
by one of the girls before mentioned, known by the
name of Cecilia Hughes. This girl was one of the
tallest and oldest of these children, and had been pushed
behind the crowd into such a position that she could
see nothing. What then could possibly be more con-
venient to her than the half of Jamie’s chair ? So up
she sprang, and throwing her arm round the boy to
hold him firm, for he had been near falling when she
made her spring, she began chattering to him in mixed
English and Hindostannee, and telling him all that
the Bunda would do. ‘ First,’ said she, ‘he will nautch,
and then he will tumble, and then he will stand on
his head, and then he will caper in the air ;’ and she
was going on to give him more information than
might have been altogether edifying for a child,
when in marched Mrs. Fifer. In one instant all was
changed—the girl sprang from the chair and out at the
door, Jamie crept under the cot on his hands and
knees into his corner, whilst Mrs. Fifer banged the
double door too, bolted it and closed the lattices, and
then sitting down on a chair in the middle of the berth,
she called Jamie to her.

‘Where are your questions, sir?’ were her first
words, ‘ fetch me the book.’ Jamie brought it, placed
it in her hands and stood rubbing one bare foot against
another, for she seldom encumbered him with shoes
in the house. Mrs. Fifer turned to the page which she
had given him to learn ; and asked the first question
A NEW FRIEND. 75

in that sort of cold fault-finding tone, which is sure to
blow up every spark of obstinacy which may exist in
the nature of any poor human being, to whom it
is employed.

Now it so happened, that young Gordon could have
answered this first question, because he had read it over
two or three times, and he had a very good memory.
But then, thought he, if I answer question first, I
must answer question second, and [ shall be no nearer
pleasing her; and if I answer all that is in the first
leaf, I shall have to learn all that is in the second next
time ; so I will not answer question one, I will not
speak at all. Though perhaps he hardly owned it to
himself, it is certain that he made up his little obsti-
nate mind, to try who would be tired first in the con-
test. As might be expected, when Jamie refused to
speak, Mrs. Fifer became very angry ; she gave him
two or three smart thumps over the shoulders, and sent
him back to his corner, with his book: and in the
course of that morning, she called him as many as four
times, to try if he would speak, but each time he was
only the more obstinate in regard to the questions;
though otherwise he cried much, and seemed to be more
sorrowful than hard.

Mrs. Fifer knew very well, that her husband would
be very cross, if this kind of thing was to go on in his
presence. He would be telling her, she well knew, that
people’s eyes would be on her, and that she would be
blamed, if she was thought to be hard on the boy ; so
she tried another way.

‘Jamie,’ said she, ‘ give me the book, you a’int wor-

thy to read such nice words ; I would have taught you
H 2
76 JAMIE GORDON

and tried to improve you, a poor helpless thing as you
are, if you would; but now I must deal with you as
God deals with the sinner, and cast you off, that is, as
to any hope of making you better. Aye, you may cry,
till you have shed every tear in your head ; but what
good will tears or repentance do, when the opportunity
is lost, and may be, lost for ever.’

Jamie raised his fine dark eyes, and fixed them on
her ;—he was thinking whether she was speaking of
herself or of God.

She saw this look, and said, ‘ What is in your mind
now ? speak out, and let me hear it.’

‘Father,’ replied the boy, ‘told me that God is like
a father, a kind father, kinder even than my father
was, if that could be possible ; and that he will not easily
cease to love poor children, though he may frown upon,
and even punish them for doing wrong.’

‘Be assured,’ replied Mrs. Fifer, ‘that God hates
those who commit sin, whomsoever they be ; just for
instance, as I do not love you, Jamie Gordon, now
that you are proud and obstinate ; and let me tell you,
that such pride and such chalinnas wae make you
hateful, both in the sight of God and man.’

‘Why, then,’ answered Jamie boldly, ‘did father
tell me that I must try to love God, because he first
loved me ?’

* Well, well,’ said she, ‘I am not going to demean
myself with bandying words with such as you. Those
must be strange times, when children are to teach their
elders. But mind what I am going to say, Jamie
Gordon—my love to you will be meted and measured
by your behaviour, and as it is with me, so will it be
A NEW FRIEND. 77

in the next world ; as a man sows, so will he reap.’
So saying, she pushed him from her, for she heard the
step of the Sergeant ; and so that matter passed off for
that day.

Mrs. Fifer always took care to have a particularly
good dinner for the Sergeant on the Sunday : and this
day, whilst the family were at the table, she opened
out to him the history of her being called to Mrs.
McCrury’s in the morning, and the reason for her hav-
ing been so called. Katty had formed the wish, that
she and the Sergeant should stand to the child, who
was to be christened by the Chaplain of the regiment,
according to the Protestant form, as no Romish priest
was near at hand; and the ignorant Katty and her
husband thought this would be better than no cere-
mony at all. ‘She had once,’ said Mrs. Fifer, ‘ thought
of Sergeant and Mrs. Young, to stand to the child, but
had preferred us two, as being the more decent and
respectable persons.’

Mrs. Fifer, notwithstanding the frequent quarrels
she had with Katty, seemed to have been so flattered by
the compliment passed by the Irishwoman, that she
asked no questions as to the christening being at a
future time repeated by a Romish priest, and the Ser-
geant being, as he said, quite agreeable, the matter was
settled before they rose from table: and it was farther
agreed, that when the babe was christened, the enter-
tainment should be given in their room.

After dinner, the Sergeant snored as usual in his
chair. Jamie took the bolster off his cot, and laying
himself at full length on the floor in his corner, slept

away all his sorrows, whilst Mrs. Fifer went out to
H 3
78 JAMIE GORDON.

tell her success toYMrs. McCrury, and to fill up the
remainder of her time, till parade, in gossiping with
Mrs. Pickles.

On that Sunday fortnight, Sergeant and Mrs. Fifer, —
Sergeant and Mrs. Thomas, Sergeant Craycroft of the
Grenadiers, a Mrs. Hill of the second company, with
Blake, the only private invited, and Jamie Gordon,
took the infant to the Chaplain’s bungalow, where she
was christened by the name of Aileen. After which
the company met in Sergeant Fifer’s room, and enjoyed
a comfortable supper, consisting of a roast turkey,
sausages, and some curry and rice.

The Sergeant made a bowl of punch, in which the
little one’s health was drank, each person in his turn
bowing to the mother, and giving the health with
tumbler in hand.

Jamie’s punch was measured in a wine-glass, and
Sergeant Craycroft, who was famous in the regiment
for his mirth, whispered to the boy, when he spoke
the name, to add the word Avourneen to it.

Jamie did as he was desired: and speaking up, ‘ Mrs.
McCrury,’ he said, ‘here is health to little Aileen
Avourneen.’

There was no great wit in this ; but the well-known
Irish word, from the mouth of the English boy, so
pleased the father, that from that time, he oftener
called his child Avourneen, than Aileen ; and Jamie
Gordon did the same, first from ignorance, and next
from habit.
TEMPTATION, 79

CHAPTER VIII.
TEMPTATION.

Arter the christening of Aileen MecCrury, months
passed on without much change in the situation of
Jamie Gordon. The hot winds were blowing, and Mrs.
Fifer was forced to be always within, so that Jamie
could not stir without her seeing him.

The boy was too much afraid of her heavy hand to
rebel openly, or to dare her displeasure ; but if he had
not made up his own mind to rebel when he felt himself
able, there were not wanting those that were con-
stantly exciting him to it. One might have thought
that he would be safe enough in his corner, but if hedges
have eyes, and walls have ears, venetian lattices may be
said more truly to have both.

There was not a child above six years old in the bar-
racks, that was not offended at what Mrs. Fifer had
oftentimes been heard to say,—that they were all a
pack of untaught, mischievous ne’er-do-weel’s, and that
if ever she found Jamie amongst them, she would find
means to make him remember it. She had actually
80 JAMIE GORDON.

fallen out with Betty Pickles on the subject, telling
her that she would have to answer for his end, if she
continued, as she did, to indulge Philip in all his evil
propensities. Betty did not tell her what was the truth,
that Philip was already beyond her hand ; but she told
her that as she had never been a mother, she could
know but little of what a mother’s trials were.

All that Mrs. Fifer had said to Mrs. Pickles, was
repeated by her to her son, and told again by him to
Cecilia Hughes, for this girl was his most intimate
friend at that time ; and in consequence, the two to-
gether formed certain plans by which they hoped to
revenge themselves on the proud wife of the Sergeant.

Philip and Cecy, as the girl was commonly called,
could not however, begin their scheme of vengeance for
some time, for Philip went into the hospital with
his mother, who was suddenly taken ill, and stayed
with her several weeks ; and he was hardly returned to
the barracks, before Cecilia was seized with Ophthalmia,
which made her unfit for active mischief, for many
more weeks afterwards. Thus the time wore on, and
Jamie had found, or rather, God had provided for him,
a something to love,—and this something to love, had
for awhile, at least, taken away half his sulkiness, for
before he had found out that he could love this object,
his mind had been constantly full of plans to get away
from Mrs. Fifer, and of thoughts of spite and vengeance,
when she baffled him.

Now this thing, or rather this person, who was pro-
vided for Jamie to love, was no other than little Aileen
McCrury.

This child had, from week to week, grown and thriven
TEMPTATION. 81

so well that she was the admiration of every one who
saw her. She was also uncommonly pretty, and looked
more like the child of a noble mother, than of such an
uncultivated person as poor Katty. Yet lovely as
this baby was, and proud as Mrs. McCrury seemed to
be of her, yet often would she be off for an hour or
more, at any time of the day, when she could get her
to sleep on the cot ; trusting, that if the child awoke
and cried, some one or another would pick her up.

_ It happened on one of these occasions, it being in the
cold season, when Aileen might have been about nine
months old, that her mother having left her one morn-
ing, as usual, she awoke as if in a fright, perhaps from
some dream, and began to cry bitterly. Mrs. Fifer hear-
ing her, called to Jamie, and bade him run to the baby,
‘for that unfeeling mother,’ said she, ‘ is off again, and
the child will screech itself into fits.’

Jamie never was told to run anywhere without
obeying instantly, for his limbs often ached for motion.
He was out at the door, round the corner of the barrack,
in at McCrury’s berth and by the cotin a moment. At
the sound of his voice, which was most gentle and sweet,
when he tried to make it so, repeating the words, ‘ Aileen
Avourneen,’ the baby extended her little arms, and tried
her utmost to spring into his ; he caught her up, whilst
she clasped him round the neck, pressing her sweet face
against his : and so closely did she cling to him, that he
felt her heart beating against his side. It was a settled
matter, from that moment, between both parties, that
these two were always to hold to each other, he to her,
in the way of a protector, and she to him in the way
of the person protected. Back again he ran with her
82 JAMIE GORDON.

into Mrs. Fifer’s room, and having begged a slice of
bread and butter for her, with a little milk, which had
remained from breakfast, he took her into his corner,
and there the two sat on the floor, and seemed to require
no other company.

What did the mother desire better, than that her
little one should be kept quiet whilst she enjoyed her-
self ? and accordingly she failed not to press the matter
as far as it would go. She laid her flatteries thick upon
Jamie, and assured him that he could quiet and please
the baby, when neither father nor mother could. But
how she kept the hold she had got on Mrs. Fifer’s
favour, no one suspected, except Betty Pickles.

Thus things went on much in the same course for
many months, with this difference only, that Mrs, Fifer
became from time to time less watchful of Jamie ; and
Aileen grew and could walk, and became cunning
enough to steal out of her parent’s berth, and to come
round the corner of the barracks, and get to Jamie’s
little refuge. She had learned to call him ‘ Zamie ;’ and
his heart was drawn more and more to her, because she
was the only one of all the fellow-creatures about him,
who really and truly loved him, or even so much as
pretended to do so. It is certain she could not converse
with him, but she could look with wonder when he said
any nonsense to please her, and she could admire when
he played any merry trick to make her laugh, and
when he seemed unhappy or shed a tear, she could look
sad too; and she quivered so with joy when she saw
him for the first time every day, and held so fast to
him, when any one offered to remove her from him,
that it was hardly strange that he should give her all
TEMPTATION. 83

the love he had to give. She was like a little only
sister to him, and when he considered that God had
made this pretty little creature to love him, it brought
to his mind many a sweet thought like those he had
in former days; and then also, when he saw that Mrs.
Fifer did not hinder her little god-child coming into the
room, and being with him, he felt her to be less unkind
than she used to be ; so by degrees, he lost much of his
spiteful feelings against her, for he was far from sus-
pecting what it was which caused her to be so much
less watchful over him, than she was at first.

But all this while, beginning from the time at which
Cecy Hughes recovered from the Ophthalmia, she and
Philip Pickles were busy about Jamie ; for their desire
was to get him out amongst themselves, and to teach
him all their own ways, which were in all respects ex-
ceedingly vile.

Such a girl as Cecy Hughes, is not often seen in En-
gland ; for bad as many English people are, yet they
cannot in all respects be so entirely without the know-
ledge of right, as that poor girl was. She came of a
family of which for some generations the fathers only
were white, and where there had been no religion or
knowledge of God, or sense of right or wrong, for many
years. The girl had a pretty face, and she was tall and
slim, and had bright black eyes, and she was very
lively, and could please any one she tried to please, and
she might have been a very nice girl had she had a good
and careful mother. How much cause have those who
have been better taught, to pity her, and such as her.
From infancy her time had been divided between the
barracks, and a hut in which her mother lived and
84 JAMIE GORDON.

cooked, and washed, for she acted as a servant to some
man of the first company.

This Cecy wore, in the hot season, very little more
than a white frock, which was seldom clean, with
coloured shoes, trod down at the heel, and no stockings.
Her hair behind was well oiled and plaited, and fast-
ened with a comb, and braided before. She always
wore large drop silver ear-rings, and a necklace of some
sort of beads, but her neck and arms were far browner
than they would have been, by being always uncovered
and exposed to the sun.

All that the mind of this poor girl ever ran upon,
was some sort of self-indulgence. She thought of
nothing, but how to please herself. She was got to
that wretched state, in which she was pleased by any
thing wicked: only because it was wicked. It was
enough for her, that a thing was forbidden, or difficult
to get, to make her desire it.

On this account, she was as eager as Philip could be
to get at Jamie, only because Mrs. Fifer kept him up.
Cecy supposed, that Jamie must of course be as sick —
of being shut up, as she would have been in such a situ-
ation, and that he would immediately fall in with any
scheme for deceiving Mrs. Fifer, and getting his liberty.
She began her operations by often walking round to
the part of the verandah, at the end of the barracks,
loitering just before Jamie’s window, and trying, either
by singing scraps of songs, or talking to any one who
might chance to pass near her, in such a way as she
thought might draw his attention. Her next scheme,
when she found he did not seem to notice her, was to
procure a few dry sugar-plumbs, or raisins, and to
TEMPTATION, 85

drop them through the venetians. Jamie and Aileen
was sitting together on the mat before the window,
when the first shower of sugar-plumbs fell; and
whilst the baby picked up one after another, Jamie
called through the lattice, to enquire who was without.

Cecy had watched her opportunity, when she knew
that Mrs. Fifer was not in her room, nor near it ; and
she answered therefore without fear, ‘It’s me, Jamie
Gordon,’ she said, ‘Cecy Hughes: and Iam come to
ask you, if you can’t sometimes get out of this cage
here, and away from the cat, which is always watching
you in it, and come to us for a bit of fun. You must
be moped to death in this dull place ; and next week
is Hobson Jobson. Can’t you throw some dust any
how, in the eyes of the cat, and meet me and Philip
somewhere, and so get away to the Tamacha.’

‘I do not like being shut up so,’ replied Jamie, ‘and
I should like to get out, and play with you sometimes.’

‘Well then, will you come if I can manage it for
you—I mean to the Mohurrun. I will contrive to
get somebody away for an hour or two ; so you will be
ready, won’t you, when I come for you? you will
know when to expect me. It will be when she is out
of the way. The best time will be, on the last day of
Hobson Jobson, about four or five o’clock, if I can
manage it. I shan’t like to come often again before
that time, lest the cat should smell a mouse ; so good
bye now’—and away she went.

‘What isit ? What does she mean ?’ thought Jamie :
‘Where does she want me to go ? and what is she going
to do with Mrs. Fifer ? I do not know what she means.’
But Aileen having picked up as much as she desired,

I
86 JAMIE GORDON.

was getting restless. So the boy lifted her up, and see-
ing no one in the room, he lugged her out into the
verandah, in his arms, and kept loitering with her about
the corner. This he had lately been permitted to do :
though if he went farther, or was seen talking with
other children, he was pretty sure to feel the heavy
hand of Mrs. Fifer.

The Mohurrun is a prineipal feast of the Mahome-
dans, and lasts several days. It is kept in commemo-
ration of the deaths of Hussein and Hossein, the sons
of Fatima, the daughter of Mahomet. One of these
princes was slain with a sword, and the other poisoned.
The Mahomedans assert, that at the day of judgment,
Fatima will present herself before the throne of God,
with the head of her murdered son in one hand, and
the heart of her poisoned son in the other; and that
on account of their deaths, she will claim the acquittal
of all their followers. It is therefore accounted a merit,
by the Mahomedans in India, to shew their respect for
these deceased princes ; and therefore at the time ap-
pointed, they make little models of tombs of talque,
and gold, and silver tinsel, which they paint of various
colours. These are to represent the tombs of the princes,
and they carry them about for several days, whilst the
people follow them with pipes, and timbrels, and every
species of harsh music, dancing, capering, tumbling,
waving naked swords, as in mock fight, and crying,
Hussein ! Hossein !—the shades of night bringing yo
interruption to the wild scene.

The business terminates by the casting of the tombs
into the river, or some other water ; but whilst it lasts,
all the lower sort of Mahomedans are in a state of in-
TEMPTATION, 87

toxication, if not of temporary madness, from the
opium, which they either chew or smoke.

‘Hobson Jobson,’ are the names which the English
soldiers have bestowed upon the two princes; and the
idle Europeans about the barracks always make a
point, whenever they can do so, to get out and mix
themselves up with the riotous mob of Mahomedans, if
only that they may have something to laugh at.

But Jamie Gordon had forgotten the whole business
of the Mohurrun, and all the expected delights of
Hobson Jobson, and the plan of Cecy, to obtain liberty
for a few hours for him, on the last day of the feast,
till he was reminded of all these things, on the morning
of the very day appointed for Cecy’s scheme.

Mrs. Fifer had hardly shaken sleep out of him, in her
usual tender way, when the sound of tum-tums, and
other instruments used by the natives on their feast-
days, reached his ears, and he was then suddenly
reminded of Cecy, and thought that he should like,
if it could be, just to run as far as the Sepoy parade,
or may be a little farther, where he might see what was
going on. He knew that there was not a boy of his age
in the barracks who would not have that pleasure ; and
he soon made up his mind, that if he could not have
it, he should be very ill-used, and very unhappy, and
have greater cause than ever for thinking Mrs. Fifer
very cruel.

His thoughts, however, were turned from this train
immediately after breakfast, by Mrs. McCrury, who,
just opening the door of the room and putting her head
in, said, ‘Jamie, darling, there’s Aileen sore troubled
with her teeth, poor thing, and naught will do to please

12
88 JAMIE GORDON.

her, but she keeps crying, Zammy! Zammy ! Come,
for the life of you, dear boy, do come and see what
you can do for her ; and if there is any turn asI can
do for Mrs. Fifer in your place, would not I do it on
my bare knees, so that the darling may be quieted.’

It happened this day that the Serjeant was on duty,
so Mrs. Fifer, who was putting away the tea-cups, told
him to look to the child, whilst she invited Katty to
walk in. Jamie found little Aileen sitting on the cot,
having been washed, and dressed, and fed ; but having no
ailment whatever that any one could see, but that which
might have proceeded from the objection most little
ones have to being put into bed when not disposed to
sleep. As usual the baby quivered with delight, when
she saw Jamie, and when taken up by him, put forth
all her strength to grasp him round the neck, and thus
he became her willing captive. He carried her first to
his corner, where he had a variety of little amusements
for her, and he was soon told by Mrs. Fifer, that ‘he
must mind her well, and feed her too when she needed
it, for the mother was gone out and might not be back
for some hours.’ 2

Jamie was never more happy, than when Aileen was
left solely to him, especially when he had the liberty
of carrying or leading her about the verandah, and sit-
ting with her in some shady part of it, to see the people
passing backwards and forwards, and this morning
particularly there was much to see, because every body
was in a state of excitement.

Once or twice during the forenoon, Jamie thought of
Cecy, but then again he was obliged to turn to his
TEMPTATION. 89

little Aileen, who was very jealous of his attention
being drawn from her.

It was earlier than usual when Mrs. Fifer dined, and
immediately after dinner, a boy appeared with a dirty
piece of paper folded up square and directed to Mrs.
Fifer. The lad gave her the paper, and walked off the
instant he had done so.

‘'What’s this ?’ said she, ‘a letter to me, I hope no
harm’s come to Fifer.’ She was a minute or more before
she could make it out, and when she had done so,
‘Jamie,’ she said, ‘here is Mrs. Thomas taken quite
bad, and she a’ant at home, she is at a house as much
as a mile and a half from here, and she has begged me
to make haste to her, so go I must. But mind you
take care of the child till her mother comes in, and
lucky enough, I hear her tongue in the berth this very
moment.’ .

Jamie never thought of putting this dirty note—said
to be from Mrs. Thomas, together with Cecy’s scheme,
but took Aileen up to carry her to her mother, whilst
Mrs. Fifer got ready to obey Mrs. Thomas’s call, hay-
ing not the smallest doubt but that the ill-written
scrawl was from her ; and so quick was she, that she
had set out in less than half an hour after the dirty
paper had been put into herhand. Mrs. McCrury had
been making purchases somewhere, and had brought
a Cooley back with her, who carried a loaded basket,
and she had not come empty herself, for when Jamie
got into the berth, she was emptying her pockets and
stowing things away in the chest, which she locked up
as soon as she had so done.

When she took the little one from Jamie, she thanked
13
90 JAMIE GORDON.

him for his care of her, giving him abundance of good
words, and he lounged out into the verandah at the
front of her berth, the idea having just at that moment
occurred to him, Perhaps that note was sent by Cecy ?
Before he could reflect on this matter, the girl herself
stepped round the corner, having added a cap with smart
ribbons, and a faded Barcelona handkerchief, to her
usual dress. Philip Pickles was with her, and she
came close up to young Gordon, and catching hold of
his arm; ‘Now Jamie,’ she said, ‘now’s your time,
have not we done it well ? she is off and can’t be back
under two hours, come along,’ and she drew him to-
wards the way she would have had him go.

‘Stop ! stop ! Cecy,’ he said, ‘only a minute, let me
think, Suppose she should come home before I can
get back, oh, she would kill me.’

* Afore I would stand to be beaten by any woman !
though she was my own mother—’ said Philip.

‘Come, come,’ repeated Cecy, ‘come, Jamie, we
shall have such fun.’

‘Aye, come along,’ said Philip, taking hold of the
other arm of the boy. Jamie’s resistance was becoming
less and less strong every instant, though he had not
yet stepped out of the verandah ; when suddenly a
loud and bitter cry met his ears. The boy and girl
grasped him tighter, but looking back he saw his be-
loved baby, who could step, but with difficulty when
by herself, trying to follow him, calling ‘Zammy!
Zammy !’ and shrieking with alarm under the idea
that the other children were using him ill.

He shook himself with violence from Cecy and Philip,
and being free he ran back to Aileen. He stooped
TEMPTATION. 91

and opened his arms, she tottering forwards, laughing
and trembling with delight. —

He had for the second time this day, delivered him-
self up to her influence, and there is no influence so
irresistible as that of a beloved baby, and as he turned
with her into her mother’s berth, he heard Philip
Pickles say, with a provoking laugh ; ‘ Was there ever
such a fool on earth as that Jamie Gordon !’
92 JAMIE GORDON.

CHAPTER IX.
ANOTHER CHANGE.

Tue weakest instruments in the hand of God, are
available to produce the most important consequences,
whilst the mightiest human efforts fall short of their
object, when the Almighty hath so willed, and fall
harmless and ineffective, as an ill-directed arrow.

Thus, as has been shewn in the last chapter, the
cries of the baby Aileen, utterly confounded, for a while
at least, the wicked contrivances of these corrupt and
malicious children, and the orphan Jamie was spared
for that time, from witnessing the abominations, which
accompany the great Mahommedan festival of the
Mohurrun, When, late in the evening, Mrs. Fifer
came back from the Bungalow, about two miles distant,
where Mrs. Thomas was actually nursing a lady, she
found her husband still on duty, and Jamie sitting on
the step of the verandah, just opposite her door, with
his little queen by his side.

Mrs. Fifer had been cordially received by Mrs.
Thomas, and well entertained by the desire of the lady
ANOTHER CHANGE, 93

of the house; but Mrs. Thomas had denied all know-
ledge of the dirty note.

Jamie thought that Mrs. Fifer looked very odd, and
very red, and much flustered, when she came in. She
complained too of her head—said she was very ill; and
throwing herself on her cot, dressed as she was, she
bade Jamie take the child to its mother, and stay in
Mrs. McCrury’s berth, whilst she got a little rest.

The boy was rather pleased than otherwise, when he
heard this order, for he had expected that Mrs. Fifer
would have found something to scold him about, return
when she might,—as she generally did, when she had
been out for some time. It was better than he had
expected, when he saw her lie down so quietly. So
picking up Aileen, he did as he was told, saying, as he
brought the child to her mother, ‘ She is very bad, Mrs.
McCrury, she can’t hold up her head any how.’

“More’s the pity,’ answered Katty, laughing, and
looking up from the table, where she was setting the
table for supper; and cutting at the same time, a
large slice of bread and butter, which she sugared well,
and handed to him, with a cup of milk and water,
also well sweetened. She knew that the child would
eat and drink with him, better than if she had attempted
to feed her apart ; and as the mother went on with any
job she happened to have to do, she said, ‘ And so she’s
very bad? What ails her, Jamie? Where has she
been ? ’

‘Why do you smile, Mrs. McCrury ?’ asked the boy.

‘Did I smile?’ asked Katty, ‘what makes you
think [I'd smile, when you tells me how ill she is ; but
what did she complain of ?’
94 JAMIE GORDON.

‘ Her head,’—replied Jamie, ‘she said she could not
keep it up.’

‘And that the room turned round, and that the
things in it were topsy-turvey. Did not she say
so?’ she asked, and the woman smiled again, and
chucking Jamie under the chin, ‘ Well! lad,’ she
added, ‘it can’t be that you should still be so young
and so soft as all that, and been living in barracks too
as long as you can remember; don’t you know yet,
lad, what it is sometimes makes folks’s heads dizzy ?’

Mrs. McCrury, (whose own head was not exactly
cool), laughed fairly out, at the fixed inquiring look
which Jamie set upon her, whilst she was speaking ;
and perfectly chuckled again at his sudden change of
countenance, when the truth flashed upon him.

‘And so,’ thought he, ‘ Mrs, Fifer is overcome with
liquor—is that it ? she can’t keep up her head. Have
I ever seen her so before? No: not like this, but per-
haps a little ; and now I remember she has complained
of her head once or twice, when the Sergeant has been
on guard; and why does she go to her chest so many
times in the day ? it is so, I am sure of it.’ And having
come to this conclusion, he joined Katty in the laugh
against Mrs. Fifer.

After Mrs. McCrury had (imprudently enough)
thrown the light she had done on the character of Mrs.
Fifer, in the eyes of Jamie Gordon—it cannot be sup-
posed that the boy ever afterwards felt the least respect
for her, or for her morality, or for her rebukes, and as
he was getting older and more manly, he would not
from that time forward, submit to be boxed up, as Mrs.
McCrury taught him to call it, in any berth.
ANOTHER CHANGE. 95

He walked out when he pleased, and when Mrs.
Fifer asked him where he was going, it was ten to one
that he answered her at all. If she attempted to lay
hands on him, and detain him by force, as she had done
in former times, he would struggle himself clear of
her, and then walk away, commonly running for
refuge into the McCrury’s berth ; and thus small quar-
rels were constantly occurring, and words passing
between the two women : though some months expired
before these small discords blew up into a regular flame.

Mrs. Fifer was conscious that she had put herself
into Katty’s power, by employing her, as she had often
done, since she had married the Sergeant, to procure
liquor privately for her ; and Katty had used this power
to make her submit to become the godmother of the
child, and to let Jamie take much of the trouble of her
infant off her hands.

Mrs. Fifer had extreme fear of her husband, and of
his finding out her love of strong drink ; sometimes
she feared that he suspected her—sometimes she hoped
that he did not. Remembering also her decent paren-
tage and education, and knowing that the habit was
gaining upon her, she was often very miserable ; and
although she had no power, for she had no true reli-
gion, to resist her sin, yet she strove in every way
she could to hide the evil propensity from the sight of
the world. When free from liquor, and perhaps desi-
rous of doing better, she was wont to take Jamie Gor-
don in hand, and try to beat, what she called, some
little morality into him ; for she was fully aware that
he was daily falling off from all that had been good in
him, when first he came to her.
96 JAMIE GORDON.

More than a year had passed away, since the mortal
remains of Stephen Fell had been laid in the cold
grave; and many other things had come over the mind
of Jamie Gordon, since the divine truths respecting
the love of God to his creature man, had been impressed
thereupon. The truths thus taught in childhood, are
often engraven in ineffaceable characters, as by the
finger of God ; but although they cannot easily be worn
out, they may be covered and concealed, or rendered
unintelligible for a longer or shorter term, by the
mud, and mire, and filth, thrown up by the footsteps
of an evil nature. So was it with Jamie; the days
of bright religious hope and joy, which he had ex-
perienced when a happy child, living with the dearest
of earthly fathers, seemed to his fancy to have passed
away to an immeasurable distance in the back-ground
of time, and as many older persons than himself are
hourly doing, he fancied that virtue and goodness were
dreams, and that what Mrs. Fifer used to say of his
adopted father, might be true ; that he was indeed a
most kind man, but that he had some strange notions,
especially about God’s dealings with his creatures.
Jamie, though older, and far more manly, and more
knowing, than when he first came to the barracks from
the hospital, could not ‘answer Mrs. Fifer, as he had
done then, nor speak to her of his hopes, that God did
love him, and would love him to the end, though he
might severely chastise him for his faults.

But it was not then, as it had been with the poor
. orphan ; for although it had pleased God so far to re-
strain him from gross actual sin, yet he was living al-
most without a thought of God. He was beginning
ANOTHER CHANGE. 97

to delight in such foolish talk as that often used by
Katty McCrury, and he took a pleasure in watching for
Mrs. Fifer when she took a sup in a corner, and carried
these tales in high glee to Katty.

Thus was this poor boy set as it were in the high
road to destruction, for before him lay all that was
evil, and there seemed not to be a single impediment in
his way thereunto. There was not one wise or pious
friend to admonish him kindly of his danger ; or to
attract his attention to any one useful or profitable
object. Even Mrs. Fifer, as her besetment became
more powerful from indulgence, was rapidly relaxing
from her watchfulness, and there remained only a single
and apparently very feeble tie to restrain the poor boy
from rushing into utter recklessness. Weak, however,
as this tie appeared to be, it still held him, and held
him firmly.

After the affair of the Mohurrun, which happens in
or about the end of March, things went on with Jamie
much the same as aforetime, until one day, when the
hot winds were blowing furiously, and all the outer
doors of the barracks were closed, excepting to the lee-
ward, whilst the same wind blew quite damp and almost
chilly, when those in the Sergeant’s berth, heard the
threatenings of a storm.

Betty Pickles had told Mrs. Young, and Mrs. Young
had told Mrs. Fifer, that Katty McCrury had been
overheard to make her boast, that she could do any-
thing she pleased with Mrs. Fifer, on account of her
being deep in her secrets, and being employed to help
in getting for her, unknown to her husband, that which
was dearer‘than life to her.

K
98 JAMIE GORDON,

She had also told Mrs. Young, that Jamie had been
heard laughing with Mrs. McCrury, about Mrs. Fifer’s
head-aches.

Mrs. Young had thought it proper to warn Mrs. Fifer
against the woman whom she was trusting with her
secrets, and she very prudently urged her to try to
draw off quietly from her, and to avoid if possible, an
open quarrel. Unluckily, poor Mrs. Fifer was taken
at a disadvantage ; for the very reason that Mrs. Young
had chosen that day for her communication was, because
Sergeant Fifer would not be at home that night ; and it
was all the worse for his wife, for she had taken an
additional drop, before Mrs. Young had entered, and
she was not in a state to hear what her neighbour said
with calmness and prudence. She raised her voice, after
having heard the whole, and loudly calling for Jamie,
she vowed that she would have it out of his bones first,
come what would !

‘You are wrong,’ said Mrs. Young, ‘I thought better
of you, Mrs. Fifer, or I would not have meddled in
the affair, I promise you ;’ and as she went out of the
room by the outer door, she met Jamie coming in, lead-
ing Aileen by the hand.

Mrs. McCrury had heard the loud and angry call for
Jamie, and therefore was not surprised, when the report
of a tremendous box on the cheek, accompanied by the
shrieks of the two children in chorus, burst upon her
ears. The first blow being evidently followed by others,
as she could learn from the sound.

It was not in Katty’s nature to suffer the boy, who
had done so much for her, to be ill-used by any one ;
so in she rushed, and brought all the rage of the angry
Mrs. Fifer on herself.
ANOTHER CHANGE. 99

Now scenes of this kind, when they happen, in one
chapter after another of our history, perchance it may
be just as well to pass them over but slightly.

Mrs, Young was shocked at the confusion which she
had made, and promised herself never again to meddle
in a business of this kind ; but seeing one of the ser-
geants of the Company, she begged him to run over to”
the guard-house, and take Fifer’s place, whilst he came
home to his wife, who was, as she cautiously repre-
sented things, in strong hysteric fits.

The Sergeant smiled, and said, ‘ Aye, indeed, is it 80,
Mrs. Young, I am sorry for it, I believe you know
nothing, (at any rate by experience) of the complaint ;
but I will do your bidding.’

The violence of the tempest had subsided, when Ser-
geant Fifer arrived, nor is it known what measures he
took with his wife, who was to all appearance in a dead
faint on the cot ; but he told Mrs. McCrury that ‘he
never would have nothing more to do with young Gor-
don ;—that as she was so fond of him, she might take
him, for all he cared ;’ and he directed some one to lift
out Jamie’s cot and chest, ‘and put them,’ he added, ‘in
the berth of any one who will be troubled with him.’

‘That is me,’ replied Katty, ‘so come along Gordon,’
and she turned into her berth, and directed where the
goods were to be bestowed, in such a way, as to shew
that she knew better than most people, how to make
the best of a very small space. So this great change in
the state of the orphan was began and finished, between
sunset and supper-time, and it took place towards the
end of the hot winds. There were many causes for

young Gordon finding himself more easy with Mrs.
K2
100 JAMIE GORDON.

McCrury, than he had done with Mrs. Fifer. He had,
as far as she was concerned, liberty, full liberty, for
aught that she had to say against it. He might have
had the run of every barrack, and of every bazaar, near
or far off. He was never corrected nor reproved, let
him use any language he would, however bad—and
he was allowed to eat or drink what he chose. There
was no other check put upon him, but that of neces-
sity ; he could not have more than he could get, which
may be considered a general necessity with all crea-
tures. The boy became from day to day more familiar
with wickedness, and it was quite impossible but that
he must have known every thing that was vile, had he
had no other teacher than Cecy Hughes, though through
Divine mercy, she was checked, and restrained by an
unseen hand, unknown to her.

The lower classes of black people in India use the
most abominable language in their common discourse ;
and those white children who do not understand them
are most happy ; but Jamie, after he came to live with
the McCrurys, learned this tongue so fast, from the half
white children, and black servants, and people about
the barracks, that he might even then have passed for
a native as far as speech went.

What child of honest parents could have been in a
worse situation than poor Jamie Gordon then was ; he
had indeed passed from bad to worse, and even the ease
he enjoyed seemed to be against him ; still his Heavenly
Father had not forgotten him, and though the ministry
used was unsuspected, he was holding him by the hand,
and keeping him from utter destruction.

He was becoming from day to day more necessary
ANOTHER CHANGE. 101

to the happiness of Aileen, The mother, when the
child was weaned, and could run without assistance,
neglected her more and more, and so terrified the gentle
baby, even with her kindness, that the little one when-
ever it was possible would shrink from her to Jamie,
always keeping close to him,’and never willingly leay-
ing him, even at night.

Her father, a weak, soft young man, loved her dearly,
and she would go to him from Jamie without crying,
and would kiss and stroke him, and he often used to
say, evenin his wife’s presence, ‘ Jamie boy, it is you
that has reared Aileen ; had it depended on her mother
she would have been now with the other two, but you
have been kind to the avourneen, Jamie, boy, and
should I die you will stand by her, won’t you ?’

‘I do not think I could help it, Jamie used to say,
‘TI could not help it.’

It may be understood how Jamie might be ruled and
guided through the force of kindness, by an older person,
such as Sergeant Fell, on whom the boy depended for
every thing ; and how his Heavenly Father might use
this influence to guide the child in the desired course ;
but it is more wonderful that God should use so very
feeble, and in itself helpless an instrument to carry on
this work of love, but so it was. The lovely infant
might be said to have acted as a drag upon the boy
whenever he was running into any great wickedness,
planned by the other children. If he attempted to scuffle
or fight, her cries, and anguish, and terror, almost im-
mediately would call him back to her side ; when tempt-
ed to go off on some scheme of mischief, the thought

of the sadness she would feel in his absence, would keep
K 3
102 JAMIE GORDON,

him back, and many and many a time was he held
from saying an evil word, lest she should learn it of
him, and repeat it.

Amidst all the scenes of wickedness, to which he was
exposed, there was a standard of right fixed in his
memory, with which he could not avoid sometimes
comparing the principles and conduct of those with
whom he had lived. But this exercise, which was forced
upon him, became more and more painful, and he would
often say to himself, ‘If some people have been good,
why cannot I be good? and if God loves good and
hates wickedness, surely he will punish those who act
wickedly.’

The effect of a careless life, where, though a person
may not be actually doing very wicked things them-
selves, they do not make any effort to do better, nor
shew any disapprobation of sin in others, is to
darken the mind, to shut out hope, and peace and joy,
and in time to render them utterly stupid or miserable.
Poor Jamie Gordon was at times one, and at times the
other, and thus passed many months, from the day in
which he had left Sergeant Fifer’s berth, before any
change of any consequence took place in his condi-
tion.
THE HOSPITAL AGAIN. 103

CHAPTER xX.

THE HOSPITAL AGAIN.

So hot and so unhealthy a season, as that which
occurred when Jamie Gordon was living with the
McCrurys, had not been known, as the oldest Europe
Doctors said, since the English had been at Cawn-
pore. Many of the Europeans were carried off ; es-
pecially in the hospitals, for there was by no means an
equally great mortality among the higher ranks, so
that the military surgeons began to suspect that the
sick got at something which was the same as death to
them, and what was this something but ardent spirits.
The disease of which so many died at that time was
dysentery, which always when it proved fatal, termi-
nated with violent inflammation and mortification.
There was a very strict order that nothing should be
brought into the hospital without examination ; espe-
cially in the way of drink ; double sentinels were set,
and so strong had been the suspicion of the Doctors,
that Sergeant Thomas was told, that he should not only
lose his post, but his rank, if he was not more vigilant.

Of course these things made great talk in the bar-
104 JAMIE GORDON.

racks, and on this very account one or two of those
men to whom a little arrack was more than meat, went
on with their duty for days after they should have
complained and taken the proper remedies, and several
lives were lost in this way.

Amongst those who were first taken was Pickles, ‘ he
was not going,’ he said, ‘to sacrifice his life for a dram,
though he did not understand how so small a matter
as a gill of any strong waters was to prove fatal.’ So he
complained and was sent forthwith to the hospital.
His wife, however, told him at once that she should
not and could not go along with him, to be deprived
even of the least sup of comfort with her victuals, it
was what she had no notion on.

‘Well, then!’ said he, ‘I suppose I must try to do
without you,’—so Pickles went to the hospital and Betty
staid in the barracks, whilst Philip went to and fro, ©
just as the whim took him.

Pickles had scarcely been gone a day, when Patrick
McCrury began to complain, and so quickly did the
symptoms of the disease press upon him, that there was
not an hour between his first making them known to
the Doctor, and his being sent off.

Jamie was not in the berth when Patrick complained
first, nor was he returned when the man was sent off,
but he came in only a minute afterwards, carrying
little Aileen with him.

‘So Jamie,’ said Mrs. McCrury as soon as she saw
him. ‘So Jamie, think what has turned up since you
has gone out,’ and having told him, she added, ‘ and
now Jamie, we may not behave like that ne’er-do-weel
Betty Pickles there,’ and she drew up her lip in scorn,
THE HOSPITAL AGAIN. 105

‘and leave our sick to do without comfort and help,
nay ! Jamie boy, we will do no such thing, but as soon
as sun is down, you, and I, and Aileen, will be after
him. We will abide with him too, and see the last
of him, if it is the will of Providence ; so be striving,
lad, and help me to make all things fast and tight
here. We must get a few things together to take with
us, but we must remember, Jamie, that we shall be
searched, so we must not carry so much as my thimble
full of—you knows what, boy.’

‘Then, how are you to do,’ he asked, laughingly,
‘ how can you get on without your usual sup?’

‘Can’t I go out sometimes?’ she answered, ‘and
are not there conveniences nigh the hospital, where
those who are up to such things might get a drop of
refreshment? Are there no huts that way ? and no
black folks who knows what us white ones likes ?
All that’s wanting in most countries is the pice, and
perhaps a little discretion to know where the pice is
to be bestowed.’ |

Jamie laughed, and looked as if these subjects were
not quite new to him ; and every thing being ready,
Mrs. McCrury set out with the two children to walk
to the hospital, as soon as the sun was low in the hea-
vens. A Cooley went behind them, bearing an open
basket and some articles which were necessary ; and
Jamie and Mrs. McCrury carried Aileen by turns.

There was no difficulty made in receiving Katty and
her children into the hospital, though there was a very
close examination made of what they brought in with
them. Mrs. Thomas who met them in the compound,
telling her ‘that it was as much as her place was worth
106 JAMIE GORDON.

to suffer any thing to pass into the wards, which was
contrary to the Doctor’s orders ; but you are just come
in the luck of time, Katty,’ she said, ‘ when you and
the children can have the berth next to McCrury, it
was only vacated this very morning by one who has
changed it for a cooler and quieter one.’

_ ‘Indeed ! aye! > drawled Mrs. McCrury in a pathetic
tone, ‘ And who is gone ? None that you know ? replied
Mrs. Thomas, with a placid smile, ‘but it is a busy
time with us now. We sees a good deal of company
as Thomas says, but we don’t keep our guests long,’
‘But Katty, woman,’ she added, ina more dolorous
accent, ‘ your man is very poorly, and so I am glad
you arecome. It is not decent for a man to be left
to do alone, with his wife not a coss off from him, en-
joying herself in other folk’s company.’

Mrs. Thomas then walked in with the new comers
into the ward where McCrury lay, and shewing the
woman the place she destined for her, she left the family
to themselves. There isan old and very true saying,
that what is one man’s meat is another man’s poison,
and if this is true of meat, how much more of what a
man accounts comfort. Poor Patrick lay in the very
place where Stephen Fell had died, and the berth given
to Katty was where Blaney had expired ; but the very
quiet which had, with God’s blessing, been so sweet
to Stephen Fell in his last hours, was what Patrick
would have thought most miserable. The poor man
felt himself therefore quite refreshed by the loud cheer-
ful voice of his wife, and the bustle she made about
him ; though she did not try to hide from him that
she thought him looking shocking bad.
THE HOSPITAL AGAIN, 107

‘And so I be, Katty,’ he said, ‘and my lips is almost
glued together with thirst, for the water and the congee
does not satisfy.’

‘ And how should they ?’ she answered, ‘ for they
run over the tongue without leaving a touch of a taste
behind them,’ and she condoled with him in a deep and
dolorous tone, finishing off with no good wishes of the
Doctors, whom she called a pack of born fools, for
keeping from a poor wretch the only thing that could
give him any comfort.

‘It does me good, however, to see your face, Katty
dear,’ he said, ‘and the bright eyes of them childer—
the Lord love them both.’

But if Jamie’s eyes were bright, his heart was very
sad; he had never been in that ward, nor stood near
that cot, nor looked through that door which was by its
side, since he had been there with Corporal Fell, and
that wasa time which seemed to him very, very long ago,
at one instant and then very, very near at another time ;
and ‘oh’ he thought ‘what wasI then, a happy child
whom God loved, and what am I now?’ The tears sud-
denly sprang to his eyes, and his heart seemed to swell ;
he was ashamed that any one should see these tears or
guess their cause, and he therefore hastily walked round
the foot of the bed and passed out at the door. It
was the hot season, the compound was therefore dry
and dusty, there were no goats nor little kids, the
Parkinsonia and the other shrubs under the wall looked
languid and brown, and he turned to where the build-
ing hid him from those who were within the ward, and
seating himself on a heap which lay under the wall, he
gave way to his tears without restraint. ‘Oh my
108 JAMIE GORDON.

father ! my father Fell,” he thought, ‘my kind my dear,
dear father. Can it be true what you used to tell me,
that God would always be a parent to me, and that
though I might do much that is wrong, yet he would
still love me, and pardon me, did I desire it, because
my Saviour died for me, and that for my Saviour’s
sake, he would never cease to care for me? But oh! I
am very wicked, and how can I believe that God has
love for me when he sees me as he has done day after
day amongst bad people, enjoying their company and
doing no better than them. Oh! I am very wicked,
very very wicked,’ cried the poor orphan, and he stooped
his face upon his knees, pressing his hands to each side
of his head, and there he was for many minutes weep-
ing so bitterly that the large warm tears fell like the
rain-drops upon the sand.

Whilst thus he remained without moving, little
Aileen, having been set down in the berth by her mother,
who had as many things to tell her husband and the
other sick in the ward, as if she had just come from
another world, had trotted out of the door, and had
come to where she saw Jamie seated as has been before
described. It was Jamie for whom she had been look-
ing and, for, whom she had in this bold manner explored
this new place, and when she beheld him thus sitting
in a posture she did not understand, her little heart be-
gan to swell, and running to him with noiseless step
over the soft sand, she threw her arms about him and
pressed her baby lips against his brow. She, the only
creature then breathing whom he loved with his whole
heart, had just come to him at the moment, in which
he was feeling how vile and how worthless a being he.
THE HOSPITAL AGAIN, 109

was ; and it would not be easy to say what his thoughts
were at the instant in which he first felt the pressure
of that baby’s lips.

‘Oh my Aileen! my Aileen!’ he cried, suddenly
raising his head, and clasping the little one round the
waist, ‘did I think I was of no use or value to any
one, that I had no good thought left, did I so far for-
get my Aileen.’

Placing her on her usual seat on his knees, he suf-
fered her to use her accustomed little powers of giving
comfort. He sat quietly whilst she wiped away his
tears with the end of her pinafore, hugging him closely
between the times of the application of the pinafore,
and looking earnestly in his bright eyes, to see whether
the tears would come again.

Soon she had brought back not only his usual cheer-
fulness, but more, more than his usual cheerfulness ;
for it was the misfortune of Jamie to be always liable
to extremes, and to be running continually from one
to the other.. It was not half an hour after he had
been sitting under the wall, ready to break his heart, that
he was careering about the hospital-compound with
Aileen on his back, making such an outcry, that Mrs.
Mc Crury thought it best to call both the children in,
to give them their suppers and put them to bed.

After Mrs. McCrury came down from the hospital,
the poor man certainly got better. He lost many of
his worst symptoms, and the doctor said he could feel as
sure as man could do, that for this once, the young
soldier would get through it. Even Sergeant Thomas
was.so pleased on the Sunday evening, after McCrury
had come into the hospital, by every appearance of the

L
110 JAMIE GORDON.

sick man, as to pass his jest upon the wife. ‘ Katty,
my lass,’ he said, ‘I am sorry for thee, but I thinks
you have lost your chance of promotion for this bout ;
but McCrury needs only to go on as he has done, and
he’ll be sure to give you another chance soon.’

‘Do you mean in regard to his taking too kindly to
the toddy ?’ replied Mrs. McCrury. ‘ Well, I don't
deny, but that he does sometimes exceed ; but he is
used to a little, and he is not well without it : and even
now Sergeant, I do say, that if he had but a little of
it, was it but a taste of something only to qualify that
mawkish stuff, they calls Congie, take my life for it,
he would be up and about in no time.’

‘Hold your peace, woman,’ replied the Sergeant,
‘it’s not to be—so no more of it ;’ and with a nod to
McCrury, and wishing him a good night, he walked
away.

Poor McCrury had been turning and fretting many
times in the day, for the very taste of comfort of which
his wife had spoken to Sergeant Thomas. He owned
indeed, that he was very much better, that he felt cool,
and easy, and that all the bad signs about him were
disappearing ; but he complained of weakness, and
lowness, and wanting to be still, and of not being able to
bear as much noise as he did : and he wanted something
he said, to put some heart into him.

‘And you shall have what ye want, jewel,’ replied
his wife, “but only complain, there’s a good lad, that
you feel cold in the feet ; tell the doctor soin the morn-
ing, do you hear?’

Urged on by Katty, for what end will shortly appear,
McCrury complained of a sense of cold in the feet.
THE HOSPITAL AGAIN. 111

The doctor expressed some surprise indeed, because
the sick man had every sign of being so much better—
and nothing, it might have been thought, but death
itself could have accounted for cold at such a season.
However, when the wife proposed sending to the bar-
racks, to get a Europe flannel garment to wrap round
the feet, he said, ‘ Do if you please,’ and walked away,
hardly giving another thought to the subject. So
Jamie was sent up to the barracks, with the key of the
chest, and told where to find a short flannel jacket, which
Mrs. McCrury used to wear under her cloak, and over
her gown, on a march in Europe.

Jamie was examined by the sentinel, when he went
out, and when he came in.

So the jacket was brought into the berth, and laid
down on the tea-frame : but before it could be applied
to the feet, Mrs. McCrury was so awkward, as to spill
over it, a mixture of Rhubarb and some other powder,
which Mrs. Thomas had just brought her, to give to
her good man.

She set up such a squall when this happened, that
Mrs. Thomas, who was walking away, returned, and
really expressed her thankfulness that no worse had
happened, promising to send another mixture in a few
minutes.

‘ But what a mess have I made,’ said Mrs. McCrury,
and what a smell in the berth ; if there is aught dis-
agreeable in the world, it is the scent of rhubarb. It
has fallen too, on Aileen’s frock, which lies under the
table, and on some of my things, an apron and a hand-
kerchief,—we shall all be poisoned with the smell. But
I know what I shall do,’ she added, and gathering the

L2
112 JAMIE GORDON.

things all up together, and putting them in a pewter
basin which she had kept from her sea-store for washing
the children, she told her husband that she would carry
them down to the people who were washing on the
ghaut, not a step off, and get them to rince them out ;
‘and then,’ she said, ‘ we can dry them in the sun in no
time.’

Throwing an old black shawl over her head, she ac-
cordingly set out, and when stopped by the sentinel, at
the gate, she told him what had happened, and what
she was going to do. Thus she passed, and was equally
successful when she came in again, with the things wet
and lying in the basin, just closely rolled up, as they
had been washed and partly wrung out ; she brought
in the things without saying one word, and opening a
small trunk, which had been brought from the barrack,
she put the basin in at the top, and covering it over
with a cloth, she locked it up ; she then went about her
business, as usual, only it might be seen that she was
in more than her usual high spirits, and as there was a
smell of arrack or toddy about her, it was supposed
that when she had gone out, she had contrived to com-
fort herself, although the poor husband was forced to
go without. |

McCrury had an easy day, Aileen sat a long while
by him on his bed, prattling to him, and sometimes
stroking his face with her dimpled hand, and more than
once, in his rough ignorant way, he asked the blessing
of God on his little girl. So passed the day, and when
the doctor came round in the évening, he said to Ser-
geant Thomas, ‘ This young man is going on as well as
possible ; just proceed with him as we have begun ! !
THE HOSPITAL AGAIN. 113

When the doctor was gone, and it was nearly dark,
Mrs. McCrury, winking to Jamie to come after her,
went to the trunk, took out the basin, containing the
wet linen, and saying, ‘ we will hang these things to dry
in the court,’ she went out with him at the side-door ;
then bidding him watch, that no one should come on
her unawares, she wrung out the flannel, and other
articles into the basin, which she had steeped well, not in
water, but in arrack ; she next fetched her teapot, and
poured the drainings from the flannel and other clothes
into the pot, to this she added sugar, and lemon-juice,
filling the whole up with water, for she had prepared
the lime-juice and sugar to be ready. All this she did
quickly, and in the sight of Jamie, and the boy thought
her exceedingly clever, and greatly admired her contri-
vance ; ‘Now Jamie,’ she said, ‘get this basin filled
with water, and dip these things in it, and spread them
out to dry, that the scent may get out of them ; and for
the very life and soul of you, don’t blab one word of
what I have done; for as sure as you do lad, you
shan’t stay with me another hour, and you shall never
again speak one word to Aileen.’

‘But are you sure that the punch won’t hurt him ?’
asked Jamie. ;

‘ Are you a fool, boy,’ she answered, ‘don’t you see
how he is sinking and going for want of something
o” the sort.’ |

‘ But the doctor said he was better,’ said Jamie.

‘The doctor knows nothing about that ; nor nothing
else” replied Katty ; ‘so do as I bid you—and then to
bed with you, and learn to hold your tongue when I tells

you.’
L3
114 JAMIE GORDON.

- Jamie saw that Mrs. McCrury was not in a humour
to be contradicted, and yet his conscience told him that
he was doing wrong to keep silence on what she was
going to do. ‘If it should kill him,’ he thought, ‘if he
should die !—and those who must know best, say that
this rack is poison to those who have the sickness which
he has. Oh, then there will be a great wickedness on
my mind, and God will be more angry with me than
he isnow. Shall I go and tell Mrs. Thomas ?—but Mrs.
McCrury will kill me ; and then poor little Aileen, I
shall be taken from her ;’ and in his agony, he fairly
broke out into a loud burst of grief.

But how he might have determined on acting is
not known, for Katty was soon after him, to bring him
in, and see him to bed, and in a few minutes he was
stretched on the cot with little Aileen on his arm ; sleep
however did not come to him immediately, his thoughts
still continued to be too troublesome to allow him to
rest.
A FRESH REMOVAL. 115

CHAPTER XI.

A FRESH REMOVAL.

Ir is a dismal page of human woe, and human folly, to
which the narrator of this history must now turn. All
was hardly settled down in the ward for the night, and
no fear of the Sergeant or his wife appearing again,
when Mrs. McCrury, in glee at the thought of how she
had cheated every one, came close up to the side of her
husband, who was just dropping off into a quiet sleep,
and whispering, ‘Here, honey jewel, I’se been as good
as my word, I’se cheated them all ; here, jewel, take the
spout in your mouth, and tell me what it tastes on!’

‘ What is it?’ said poor McCrury, rousing himself,
‘not more stuff, I trust ; sure I have had enough for
one while.’

‘Try my lad, try,’ replied his wife, and half forcing
the spout into his mouth, he was speedily convinced of
the nature of what she was offering him. Having tasted
the mixture, he swallowed, without once taking his lips
away, full as much as a tea-cup of the liquor ; two
thirds or more of which was fiery arrack; the water
having only been added to fill up the tea-pot.
116 JAMIE GORDON.

‘There,’ said she, ‘my lad ;’ as she withdrew the
spout from his mouth, ‘there! is not that relishing ?
and don’t it do your poor heart good ? does not you find
yourself better already ?’

‘To be sure I do,’ he replied, ‘I feel it better than
sleep, nor all them vile doctor’s stuff.’ Raise my pillow
a bit, lass ; dear heart how lightsome I feel, well but I
was dreaming just now, as Aileen and Jamie was here,
—but tell me lass, how did you cheat them all—and he
ran on some minutes in this unsettled way, but with
such an apparent increase of strength, that his wife was
quite pleased.

Jamie was so near to the sick man, that he heard
and understood almost all that was passing between
him and his wife. He could see them both by the light
of a lamp which hung from the roof, in the midst of
the ward ; and it relieved him of half his trouble, when
he heard McCrury sayhow lightsome he felt. Being more
easy in his mind he gave himself up to sleep, yet whilst
he was dropping off he still heard the voice of McCrury
speaking up and in a cheerful tone.

How long he slept, he knew not, but he was awakened
by Mrs. McCrury, who had come round to the farther
side of the cot, and was lifting Aileen out, Jamie had
his arm round her, and even before he was right awake
held her faster, as he felt that some one was drawing
her away ; ‘Loose the child, Jamie, man,’ said the
mother, ‘ Patrick has axed for her, he will have her
brought, and laid by him, naught else will plase him—
so let go.’

Jamie loosed his hold of the baby, and turning himself
round, slept again ; but this sleep, though dead and
A FRESH REMOVAL. 117

heavy at first, finished off uneasily, and with dreams
in which he thought he heard complaints and groans.
A somewhat rough and hurried pull at his arm from
Mrs. McCrury aroused him again ; it was then, may be,
four o’clock in the morning. ‘In the name of heaven,
lad,’ she said ‘up with thee, and look to Aileen, take
her off the bed ; I does not know what to make of her
father, he is like one out of his mind, and he is beating
about him, and looking so wild ; up for your life, lad.

At the name of Aileen, Jamie sprung from his bed,
and catching up the sleeping child in his arms, he laid
her in the place he had just left.

There was little difference in Jamie’s dress, by day
or by night, in the hot season, so that he was soon
ready after he had slipped on his shoes, to do anything
that might be required.

‘Take the candle,’ said Mrs. McCrury, ‘and see if
you can get to light it by the lamp, but don’t disturb
no one,’

The boy got a high mora, and climbing on it, he suc-
ceeded, in a little while, in lighting a candle.

‘ Be sharp,’ said Mrs. McCrury, as he came near with
the light, guarding it with his hand, as he hurried
along.

When the light fell on the sick man, the poor child,
not to speak of the wife, were utterly confounded at the
change, which had passed on him in the few hours since
bedtime. He seemed to be drawn together, and con-
vulsed with fierce pains, in the lower part of the
stomach, he was even already past distinct utterance ;
a clammy sweat rested on his brow, every feature was
contracted, The fiery spirit had fed up the inflammation,
118 JAMIE GORDON.

and it was plain both to the wife and boy, that death
must soon follow.

‘Merciful heaven !’ said Jamie, ‘it is that horrid rack!’

‘What rack ?’ returned Katty.

‘The rack, the toddy,’ replied Jamie firmly, ‘ which
you gave him from the teapot.’

‘You had best mind, and keep your tongue within
your teeth, James Gordon,’ said Katty, ‘or by the soul
within me, I’ll be avenged ; and my vengeance shall fall
where you shall feel it most.’

‘She means on Aileen, this little innocent sleeping
baby,’ thought Jamie, ‘but surely she could not hurt her
own innocent baby. But I am resolved, he thought, for
Aileen’s sake, I will not tell what I know ; and proudly
and sullenly, he said, ‘Mrs. McCrury, never you fear,
it shall never be known from me; but can nothing be
done for him, must he die !’

The morning gun fired before these words had passed
the mouth of Jamie, and in a few minutes more, the
Sergeant would probably come in; Mrs. McCrury had
scarcely time to suck the contents of the teapot to the
dregs, to rince it out, and lock it away, to straiten the
bed-clothes, and put things something in order, before
Sergeant Thomas came in, and soon afterwards the
doctor. * ,

There was some surprise expressed by both of these,
at the fearful change which had passed on poor McCrury
during the night : and if the serjeant had smelt arrack
when he first came into the berth, and had some suspi-
cion of foul play, yet he thought it wisest, not only
to pretend ignorance himself, but to keep all suspicion

* A true story,
A FRESH REMOVAL. 119

from the doctor, Thus Katty had the comfort of
hoping, that the trick she had played, and the deceit
she had used, would pass undiscovered, though she
would not allow herself to believe for one moment,
that the fiery spirits had done the mischief.

Poor McCrury did not survive the day—all was over
with him before evening gun-fire. The body was in-
terred early next morning, and before the next evening,
the widow, with the fatherless child, and Jamie Gordon,
had returned to their old berth in the barracks.

Now although Mrs. McCrury had wiped her mouth,
and eased her conscience, in the idea that no one but
Jamie knew aught of that which she had done, with
respect to the liquor, yet there was one who had come
to the knowledge of the story, and who only wanted
the opportunity, when it might come out with the
best effect, before she told it.

Now who should this person be, but Betty Pickles,
who was on two or three accounts, the natural enemy
of Katty McCrury.

First, they were private soldier’s wives, in the same
company —then they were of two countries, one Eng-
lish, and the other Irish ; added to which, one had a
son Philip, and the other had the charge of one Jamie
Gordon. But what were all these old causes of hatred
and heart-burning to Betty Pickles, in comparison with
the present vantage-ground, which the enemy had got
over her. Katty McCrury was a widow—she was at
liberty to receive offers of marriage, and might com-
mand a halbert, and three stripes, and a separate apart-
ment. Then to be sure Miss Aileen would be dressed
every day in her muslin frocks, and kid shoes, and not
120 JAMIE GORDON.

to be spoken to by such as Philip Pickles ; however,
she had her story to tell, and she was resolved it should
come out, when it might be least welcome.

Now it was rather by a round-about way, that
this story came to Mrs. Pickles’ ears. On the morning
of the day on which poor McCrury died, Mrs. Pickles
had sent her son Philip down to the hospital, [to take
some thing to his father—and as he was up early, he
got there before his father was ready to see him. So
as luck would have it, as Mrs. Pickles described it, he
went strolling and sauntering about the compound, till
he came to where Jamie had left the flannel waistcoat,
and the other articles which had been soaked in the
arrack, to dry on the sand; and near to them was set
the basin, which last Jamie had forgotten to bring. in.

Now Philip, if he had not known the basin, could
not have been at a loss to make out the owner, as he
desired to do, for he was as curious as his mother, be-
cause there were the two letters, P. and M., cut rudely
at the bottom of it; so, as he thought, there could be
no doubt, whose these things were. But then came
the enquiry, why they were left there; and he took
up the flannel, which looked of a curious colour, and
immediately perceived that it had the smell of arrack
or toddy, still strong upon it. This was something to
set the boy’s mind to work, and he had something
more, before he went back to his mother.

This something more, was the extraordinary change
which had passed on poor McCrury, during the night.

Betty Pickles was much gratified by this story, and
delighted moreover with her son’s shrewdness—but she
kept the discovery to herself, till some days after poor
A FRESH REMOVAL. 121

McCrury was dead and buried. Only now and then,
when she heard him spoken of, would she allow herself
to utter a deep groan, or some exclamation, which made
people wonder, as for example: ‘ Well! and it might
have been expected afore now, and its only a marvel
that he stood it so long ; and he that gets into his shoes,
must be a bold man’—with other equally dark and fear-
ful expressions, to the same purpose. So the mischief
continued to brood and to gather, lying for a while
entirely between Philip and his mother.

Mrs. McCrury was not the woman to hurt her repu-
tation at the funeral, by neglecting the forms of grief
thought proper for a widow. She sent all in a hurry,
to borrow a black gown, and widow’s cap, from Mrs.
Fifer, and when she looked for the last time, on the
remains of her husband, just as they were shutting
down the coffin on them, Mrs, Thomas, who was
present, was obliged, as she said, to support her, she
was so overcome with her feelings ; nor did Mrs. Thomas
state the case other than truly, for Katty was really
overcome. .

A week past over, however, and she was vastly re-
covered, and another week, and no young girl set free
from school, could have enjoyed her liberty more than
did the widow.

Hot as the season was, she was never in her berth
during the morning, but going from one barrack to
another, visiting the Sergeant’s wives, and other
women.

And what would have become of little Aileen all this
while, had it not been for Jamie Gordon? and what
may be asked, would have come of Jamie, had not

M
122 JAMIE GORDON.

Aileen hung upon him, and depended upon him for all
that can be done for babies, to supply their wants.
The love by which this little one held the boy, was the
only tie in this world, which kept him from rushing
headlong into every thing which is bad.

The more completely the little girl was forsaken by
her mother, the more she clung to Jamie, and the more
he held to her. If he got away for a moment to play
with any others of the soldier’s boys, she was after him,
with the silent tear perhaps running down her cheeks,
and this he could not bear to see. Then her joy, when
after she had lost sight of him awhile, she saw him
again, and he could not think of changing her joy to
sorrow, by leaving her for a second time.

She was always so frightened, and trembled, and
cried so much, whenever she saw him at any thing like
rough play, with Philip Pickles, or any one else, that
he must have been quite other than he was, to give her
this pain ; and thus the Almighty, for a little longer,
preserved this poor orphan child, in this very simple
manner, from those deep and desperate trials, to which
he was afterwards exposed.

It was not long before Betty Pickles found the op-
portunity for which she waited, of taunting Katty
McCrury, publicly, with causing her husband’s death.
It led to a scene of fearful excitement. Katty had tried
her constitution to the utmost, during the first weeks of
her widowhood, and Betty Pickles had given the finish-
ing stroke, by thus fearfully provoking her passions,
bringing on the crisis, only a little sooner than it might
have otherwise occurred. Poor Katty was never herself
again after this afternoon, though her disease, which had
A FRESH REMOVAL. 123

taken hold of her head, shewed itself in various forms,
for at one time she lay quite stupid, at another she
raved and rambled, and again she wept or laughed
wildly. Thus she went on through the whole night,
requiring at times to be held down in her bed. Early
in the morning the poor creature was carried in a dooley
to the hospital, and Jamie was left in the berth with
little Aileen, there to wait what a day or two might
bring forth ; for it required no particular skill to enable
any one to foretel that Katty’s fate would be decided
one way or another, very shortly.

Long, very long did Jamie remember that, and the
few days which followed ; when being left with his
beloved Aileen, he did all he could to amuse her, and
to supply all she required. He had been so much ac-
customed to attend to her, that he found no difficulty
whatever, and he thought that he should like to live
always as he had done that day.

In the evening the account from the hospital was,
that the poor woman was worse, that she had known
no one since the morning, that she had raved incessantly,
but never asked for her child, and that the only person
who could quiet her in the least, was Mrs. McKenzie,
who had been with her all the day.

The forsaken baby slept that night in Jamie’s arms,
wholly unconscious of the awful scene which was going
on in the hospital. The first news which was heard on
the fourth morning after that fatal evening was, that
the widow was no more, she had died a little after mid-
night, and Betty Pickles then vainly wished that she

had not provoked her, and it was observed that for a
M2
124 JAMIE GORDON.

few days her voice was never once heard beyond her
own berth.

Jamie and Aileen were left to themselves all the day,
the neighbours supplying them plentifully with food,
but Jamie cried bitterly, for he had really loved Mrs.
McCrury with all her faults, and Aileen cried because
he did.

The funeral took place at sunset, but no notice was
taken of the children till after parade, when Blake, who
had lately been made a Corporal, came to them, and
telling the boy to make himself and Aileen as decent
as he could, he said, ‘ You must both come along with
me to Mrs. McKenzie, and then you will hear what is
to be done.’

‘I don’t want anything to be done ;’ said Jamie. ‘I
only want to be left here with my own baby.’

‘ Aye, to be sure,’ replied Corporal Blake, ‘that is a
good notion of yours ; but come along,’ and he lifted
up the little girl and walked away with her towards the
river, whilst the child shrieked for Jamie to follow.

The party had soon reached the water-side, descend-
ing to the very edge of the river by wide stone steps,
which were situated between the walls of two gardens ;
there the pinnace lay at anchor, or rather fastened to
the shore by a rope, having a plank placed from the
shore to the deck ; and the venetians of the large outer
cabin open on both sides. There were many servants
about the pinnace, and at the top of it was a palankeen,
and there were several other boats belonging to the
party.

Mrs. McKenzie had parted with all her store to one
Simon Zachary, a merchant in Cawnpore, and she
A FRESH REMOVAL. 125

had nothing now to do, but to drop down to Calcutta
as quickly as she could. She had made up her mind
to act a kind part by her deceased friend which was to
adopt Aileen, and take her with her. ’

She had rather hurried things to get off from Cawn-
pore the next morning, and nothing then remained but
to tell Jamie of what was intended, and to part the
children : it being also settled that the boy was hence-
forward to reside with Corporal Blake.

As Jamie ran after Blake who marched quickly down
the bank to the river ; the idea had struck him that
possibly Mrs. McKenzie might take Aileen. He even
could not hide it from himself, that such a change must
be every way for the good of the lovely baby ; but he
could not—no he could not bring his mind to the idea
of being parted from her, his heart swelled and his eyes
filled with tears, and when he followed the Corporal
into the cabin, and was addressed by Mrs. McKenzie, he
could restrain himself nolonger. He rushed to Aileen,
whom Blake had just set down, and sobbed and wept,
in utter and uncontrollable wretchedness ; ‘Don’t take
her away, please ma’am,’ he said, ‘I shall die if you
do; every thing I love is taken away, I cannot do
without Aileen ! ’

‘Have you told him our plans, Blake ?’ asked Mrs.
McKenzie.

‘Not I) replied the Corporal, ‘ but since the murder
is out, why make any more words about it ?’ and he
set himself to reconcile the boy to what could not be
avoided ; and so far succeeded that he ceased to sob and
cry : And being promised that if he would come down a

little after gun-fire, he should see his Aileen again in the
M 3
126 JAMIE GORDON.

morning, the separation was effected more quietly than
was expected, yet not without the aid of that which we
have seen often resorted to in the course of this history,
a strong liquor, which on this occasion was adminis-
tered after supper to the children in the form of
sweet punch.
NEW SCENES. 127

CHAPTER XII.
NEW SCENES.

Lirrte Aileen McCrury must now be left for a while,
whilst we follow the fortunes of the bereaved Jamie ;
but Aileen must no longer be thought of as a poor little
girl, the child of a drunken mother, living in’ barracks,
but as of one surrounded with many circumstances of
luxury. Mrs. McKenzie had hired a waiting-maid for
her, before she had brought her into the pinnace, and
she had already set a tailor, who travelled in her suite,
to make the child white dresses by dozens. In conse-
quence of which, in a very few days, the remarkable
beauty of the little girl had every advantage which .
elegant attire and delicate cleanliness could give it:
but still the baby often cried for ‘ Zamie ! Zamie !
Zamie |’ and after months had passed, she still retained
the recollection of this her first, and at one time only
friend.

Poor Jamie Gordon was so far excited by the punch
which had been given him, that he by no means felt
his loss so bitterly as he would otherwise have done.
128 JAMIE GORDON,

His little cot and chest had been removed, by the Cor-
poral'’s direction whilst he was away, into Blake’s berth;
and he had hardly laid himself on his cot before he was
in a sound sleep ; but towards morning, he began to
sleep more uneasily, to dream of Aileen, and to feel that
some sorrow lay heavy at his heart.

The reverberation of the morning gun had scarcely
ceased, before he was up ; he had lain down in his light
clothing and he got up with them. Hastily slipping on
his shoes, he was in the plain the next moment, and
down at the ghaut where the pinnace had lain the night
before.

It was not broad day-light when he reached that
ghaut and saw no pinnace; he raised his hands and
uttered a cry so piteous, that a certain black man who
was washing himself in the river, took notice of it, and
told him that if he sought the pinnace that lay there the
evening before, he could inform him that it had dropped
down to a wharf a little lower on the river the night
before. The other boats belonging to it had gone with
it, and that if he would hasten to that ghaut he would
probably there see his friends.

With this new hope, for Jamie did not suspect that
Mrs. McKenzie had told a falsehood, when she promised
him that he should see Aileen in the morning ; the
poor boy quitted this ghaut and hastened to another a
little lower down, which he knew very well, because
there many of the soldier’s boys were accustomed to
bathe ; but neither there did he find the pinnace.

As the wise man says, “ Hope deferred maketh the
heart sick,” Jamie’s hope was as yet only deferred, it
was not destroyed, he did not yet suspect that Mrs.
NEW SCENES. 129

McKenzie had deliberately deceived him. So on he
went, sometimes walking fast, and sometimes running,
till he had advanced beyond his own knowledge, and
beyond the usual haunts of the men of his regiment ;
but still he did not see anything of the pinnace till he
had arrived at a point or turn of the bank, farther from
his home than it might be thought a boy of his age
could have made in so short a time.

This place did not appear to be near any dwelling-
house, it lay under a bank, on the top of which were
briars and other thorny and prickly shrubs. The space
between the bank and the stream, was only a reedy
swamp, liable at times to be flooded, and never very
safe for the traveller, not only on account of the quick
sands, but because of the alligators, which sometimes
lay basking in the sun among the reeds.

The whole body of the sun was above the horizon,
when Jamie reached this point, and there, standing on
a projection of the bank he caught along reach of
the Ganges, flowing majestically in its course towards
the sea, having more than a thousand miles to run to
where it pours itself through countless mouths into the
black water, (Calla pana.) There also along the bright
line of the water, he saw the pinnace, her white sails
unfurled, and gently swelling with a slight, yet favour-
able breeze, She was gliding gracefully, like some
proud aquatic bird, whilst the smaller boats which
accompanied her, seemed in comparison with her, but
like small specks upon the water.

Who. shall presume to describe the feelings of the
poor orphan boy, when coming suddenly out from amid
the briars, he arrived at where he beheld the departing
130 JAMIE GORDON.

vessel, and understood that his hope was departed with
it, when he felt that he had been deceived, that his
Aileen was gone, and that the chances were against
him, that he should ever see her again. There was no
one to whisper to him at that moment, What God does
thou knowest not now, but thou shalt know hereafter.
There was none to remind him that almost any change
from a barrack-room must be an advantageous one to
a delicate and beautiful little girl; there was none to
tell him, that there is a merciful, and omnipotent
Father superintending and overruling all the affairs
of the human race ; there was no one to soothe him
or to wipe the tears from his cheeks. He was alone,
alone indeed, and for a long time his grief was still and
silent and motionless.

He stood fixed in the very attitude in which he had
first seen the pinnace which was bearing away his
Aileen. He watched it till the object became more and
more indistinct. He strained his eyes till the low hull
sunk from his view, and the white sail shewed like a
single spot ; this too presently disappeared, and every
trace of Aileen was lost! lost! to Jamie.

For a moment more he stood fixed, he did not utter
a sound, but his very heart seemed to swell as if it
would have burst. The storm of feeling at length found
vent, and well it was it did so. The boy threw himself
on the ground, the tears poured from his eyes, he called
on his little beloved one, ‘Oh Aileen ! Aileen! Aileen
Avourneen ! my sister, my sweet darling baby ! shall I
never see you more. Oh! that I were dead! that you
were dead ! that we were buried in the same grave! I
have no one now, no not one, not one to love me j’ and
NEW SCENES. 131

again the poor boy cried ‘ Aileen ! Aileen! ’ as if the very
sound of her name was some small comfort to him.

After a while, Jamie knew not how long or when he
had changed his posture, he found himself sitting in-
stead of lying on the bank, with his arms folded and
his eyes fixed on the point of the stream where the
water seemed to meet the sky, and where the white sail
had disappeared. He was thinking, What is Aileen now
doing, is she calling for Jamie—will she remember him
all her life—will she ever forget him ? Then his thoughts
turned towards his own state, and he felt that there was
not one person left who cared much for him, nor one
whom he could love. Blake was not unkind, but some-
how he did not like him, he knew not why—Philip
Pickles he naturally hated, and his mother too he hated
—and Mrs. Fifer, and Cecy Hughes ; his heart and
feelings seemed to turn from‘them all, and memory
carried him back to the time when he had been happy,
under the care of Corporal Fell ; and amongst many
things which his father by adoption taught him, came
this truth which he had always tried to fix on his mind,
that God can never cease to love those whom he
had redeemed through his blessed Son, though he
must ever hate their ways if wicked; he remembered
the time when he believed this, but he thought now
that it could not be true, because (he felt) if God does
love people he would make them happy, if he loved me
he would not take everybody from me who is dear to
me, and who would be kind to me and love me: first
my mother, then one father, and then another, and then
Aileen, my own dear dear Aileen. I cannot believe
that God loves me. I think, that what Mrs. Fifer says
132 - JAMIE GORDON.

must be true, and that God does now, and will by and
by take dreadful vengeance on those people who do not
think of him. ‘Well!’ he said after a while, speaking
loud, though there was none to hear ; ‘I cannot help
it, [am very, very miserable,’ and again he broke out
with his former cry, ‘Oh Aileen ! Aileen ! Avourneen !?
At last he remembered the sad necessity, and retraced
his steps to the barrack.

That day happened to be a field-day, one on which
the men were detained much longer from the barracks,
than on ordinary parade-days, so that the long absence
of Jamie had hardly been observed, and no enquiry
respecting it was put to him when he came in.

Young Gordon, though residing in the very same
room in which he had lived all along, was now enter-.
ing into an almost new mode of existence. With Mrs.
Fifer and Mrs. McCrury, he had formed one of a sort
of domestic circle, and had had his little family ties,
and family duties, some of which were so sweet, that
every time he thought of them, a chill came over his
heart. He was now to be associated. only with men—all
of them coarse, free, and to say the truth, low-lived per-
sons. Corporal Blake himself, though a good soldier,
was very plain in his discourse, and rough in all his
habits.

There were about eight or ten men at that end of the
room, who messed together, and kept a cook amongst
them. They had a table set in one of the berths, for all
the ten ; and there was no great attention among them,
to any order in the setting forth of their meals. Some
of them drank coffee for breakfast, others tea, and others,
their ration drink, as it happened, They had what
NEW SCENES. 133

had been left at dinner, fried up for breakfast, to which
was added, sausages, and country bacon, and coarse
ration bread ; and it was not often, that any of the fry
went back for the benefit of the cook.

This mess was just sitting down to breakfast, when
Jamie Gordon came in. Corporal Blake made room
for him by his side. He was sitting on a chest, and he
edged to one end, to give the lad space. A bowl of
coffee was set before him, a sort of Benjamin’s mess of
meat and bread ; but no farther notice was taken of
him—not a question put to him, of where he had been
since gun-fire, or aught else.

The men were all busy talking of their own concerns,
of some late orders, which had not pleased them, and of
some quarrel which had occurred the day before, be-
tween two men in another company. 3

After the dishes were emptied, each man moved
away, whilst the cook cleared the table, and Jamie
rose and lounged into the verandah. In that place,
the day before, he had walked with his own little Aileen,
without even the expectation of .being parted from her,
but now where was she? how many miles already,
might there be between her and himself ; and he looked
around for some place, where he might run to hide his
trouble ; not having then been forced to make his home
in the corner fixed for him, by his then present master.
He had, he thought, no place to go to, but the verandah,
in which he had hardly turned himself round, when
he was surrounded by a number of children of various
descriptions, belonging to the soldiers, the foremost of
these being Cecy Hughes. ‘There he is,’ said the
bold girl, ‘and if he is not crying!’ said another.

N
134 JAMIE GORDON.

‘Why, surely he can’t be crying for Katty McCrury,’
asked a third. ‘ Or may be, the child who was always
roaring after him,’ exclaimed a fourth ; ‘he can’t never
be so downright soft as that, neither ;’ and the little mob
got so close round him, and made such a noise in his
ears, that he had lost all self-command, and had already
dealt two or three blows about him, and struck several
of them, before they could get out of his reach. They
however, all made off, leaving him more sad than be-
fore, and with no other object, than how to get through
the weary hours, as well as he could. He was fatigued
with his morning run, and with much weeping, he
went to the berth, laid himself at the top of his chest,
and fell asleep, and afterwards got up and lounged
about till dinner-time. He had ate little breakfast,
and Corporal Blake seeing him not disposed to eat at
dinner, gave him a little mixed arrack, which seemed
for a time, to do him good. Another hour or two
of lounging, brought him to the time, when the men
were preparing for parade.

‘ You have none to wait on you, now, Gordon,’ said
Corporal Blake, ‘but mind you, if you don’t keep
yourself creditable, I shall see if I can’t make you re-
member it. Mind you, rub up your accoutrements
every evening, after Iam gone out, and put on your
clean clothes, and give the others to the doby, and let
us have no slovenly doings, as if you was a dirty black
Cooley.’

When young Gordon had done all that Corporal Blake
required of him, and was replacing his brushes in his
chest—the chest left him by Corporal Fell, his eye
fell upon the long-neglected, long-forgotten Bible: for
NEW SCENES. 135

certain it is, that it had scarcely been disturbed, since
he had left Sergeant Fifer’s room.

He was stooping down into the chest, with the inten-
tion of taking it out, when he felt a slight tap on his
shoulder, and looking round, he found that it had been
given by Cecy Hughes.

She laughed at the wonder he expressed, and asked
him, as he was alone, if he had a mind to come along
with her.

‘I am going,’ she said, ‘to the bazaar, to get mother
some coffee, and sugar, and other things; and then
may be, I may call at my aunt’s, my mother’s sister,
and so home again—we shall be in before supper.’

Jamie stood in doubt, with his hand holding up the
lid of the chest.

‘Come, come,’ she said, drawing his hand away from
the lid, at the same moment, and letting it down with
a loud bang, ‘now lock it, Jamie, and put away the
key, and take your cap, and we will be off.’ Whilst
still speaking, she clapped his cap, which was lying
near at hand, upon his head, turned the lock of the
chest herself, took out the key, and hung it on a nail -
on the wall, and then seizing the boy’s hand, she led
him half willing, and half afraid as he was, out of the
berth, across the verandah, and out upon the plain.

At that instant, had young Gordon examined his
thoughts and feelings, he would have found that he had
two distinct sets of them, contending, as it were, with
each other. The one party advising him not to go with
Cecy, whom he knew to be a bad girl, but to stay about
the barracks, and perhaps to read a chapter in his

Bible; or if he wanted exercise, to go and see the _
N2
136 JAMIE GORDON,

parade—and the other saying, No: go and enjoy your
liberty, and be merry, and see what can be seen. For
a time, the worse feelings and desires were to have the
pre-eminence, and seem to be the conquerors.

Jamie had held back, when first leaving the barracks ;
but he had scarcely got ten yards from them, before,
feeling his liberty, he actually ran first, and it was as
much as Cecy could do to keep up with him.

What would it be worth to us, who are living almost
on the other side of the globe, if we could see, as in a
magic lanthorn, or coloured picture, the various places
through which those children walked that day? Being
clear of the ten lines of the barrack, they came to a
road, which led up a slight eminence. On each side
of this road, were officer’s bungalows, standing in
gardens, each having its handsome gate and gateway.
The lofty trees of these gardens, in many places, spread-
ing their branches over the walls, and forming a plea-
sant shade for those who walked without.

The ascent was trifling: and at the top on the left,
was the burying-ground of the European gentlemen
and their families ; for amongst other strange customs
which have arisen in India, more probably from cir-
cumstances, than from any regular plan, the distinc-
tions of rank are kept up after death, and the remains
of those, who take a low degree in society, are not
mixed with those of a higher grade.

This burying-ground was enclosed with high walls,
and some tall trees, which shaded the tombs, whilst
on the right, opposite this burying-ground, was a clus-
ter of Bungalows, standing in compounds, retired, and
scarcely seen by persons passing along the roads. A
NEW SCENES. 137

little farther to the left, were the artillery barracks,
and artillery officer’s bungalows,* from whence a nar-
row road cut across, to the principal road of the station,
called the Sepoy lines. This road was so wide, that it
was the general place for field-days and reviews ; and
many of the finest houses in Cawnpore looked upon
these lines. Then in the cool of the evening, all the
Burra Sahibs and their families, took the air in various
carriages, on horses or elephants.

Cecy and James Gordon must needs pass across this
road, or rather plain, to get to the bazaar, whither she
wanted to go. The bazaar was still at some distance,
on a road, which ran out from the principal line ; its
place was marked by a Mosque, with minarets seen
among trees, and forming a fine object to the gentle-
men’s houses on the left of the parade.

As the children went on, Cecy pointed out the
Barouches, Bullock Coaches, Ton-tons, and other car-
riages, which were out upon the road: and she knew
the names and histories of every family, to whom they
belonged ; or rather, she pretended so to do, which did
as well for Jamie.

Having crossed the Sepoy lines, as this great road
is called, they got into the one immediately leading to
the Bazaar ; it was narrower and more retired, though
there were huts scattered here and there, on each side,
and some small inferior bungalows. They also had to
pass the gates of the soldier’s burying-ground, on their
right—and Jamie wanted to go in and see if he could

* One of these bungalows was afterwards converted into a place of
Christian worship. Another was the residence of the Rey. Henry Martyn.
N 3
138 JAMIE GORDON.

find the grave of poor Mrs, McCrury, but Cecy would
not allow him.

‘ Surely,’ she said, ‘we hear enough of death in the
barracks, without coming after it here ; if we must die,
we must ; but what is the use of thinking of it, more
than we need? go, come along, Jamie, for as sure as
you go in there, I will run away and leave you.’

Jamie had no desire to be left ; so he walked on, and
soon afterwards the two children were got into the
bazaar itself,

Those persons who have only seen, what is called a
bazaar in England, must not think of forming from it
any notion of a bazaar in India; the one is as little
like the other, as an habitation of stone is to an orna-
mented cottage.

An Indian bazaar is formed of numbers of mud cot-
tages, each being generally covered with a thatched
roof, called a choppa. These huts have one low door,
and seldom any windows, the floor being of earth, with
little or no furniture, but what a man may carry on his
back, and walk away with. These houses are ranged,
sometimes in strait lines in the streets; but in the
outskirts of most villages, they are stuck hither and
thither—often with heaps of dirt and broken pottery
between them, or deep holes of black stagnant water,
which emit smells so vile, that it is a wonder, how
human creatures can exist amongst them. The public
streets of these bazaars, though narrow, noisy, and also
dirty, are better to live in than the outskirts, and the
English children are often much amused, while riding
through them in their carriages, by looking at the
shops, and the curious things in them. The shops are
NEW SCENES. 139

no more like ours in England, than the houses ; they
are formed by the lowest room, to the front of each
house, the wall of which is left open, and the floor
made level with the opening. Then in the midst sits
the Buniah on his heels, with all his wares about him,
within reach of his hands, whilst the shutters are fas-
tened up in the day time, to protect his shop from the
heat of the sun. Sometimes, but not always, there is
a door in the back of the shop, to other parts of the
house ; but it as often happens, that the house belongs
to one family, whilst the shop itself is occupied by
another. In these shops are many strange things for
sale, besides such as we know in Europe. One shop
perhaps is filled with bright brass vessels, most of
which are of the shape of the flower of the blue-bell
or water-lily, and are called Lotus; others contain all
sorts of grains, and spices, and grocery, packed often
in leaves pinned together by thorns ; others are full of
odd toys, of sweet-meats, of native dresses, bangles,
and false jewels; and others display old-fashioned
Europe goods, which are bought cheap, and sold dear.
But the shops are not the strangest things in these
bazaars. The black people, who are much about the
Europeans, get a something in their manners, and
appearance, which is not quite so strange to white peo-
ple, as those who live more amongst themselves ; but
truly, when a person from England first goes into a
bazaar, and sees the people as it were at home, it is
wonderful if he is not both shocked and grieved.

The streets of these places are filled with fierce and
bold women—miserable infants, naked boys, and almost
naked girls. All of these children have uncombed and
140 JAMIE GORDON.

uncut hair, and are uninstructed in everything but
wickedness. Added to these are lepers and Fakirs, and
toques, and persons exposing frightful sores, whilst the
most horrid sounds of drums and fearful music, belong-
ing to some idol temple, with scoldifig, swearing, curs-
ing, blaspheming and complaining, add horror to
horror, and leave the mind incapable even of imagining
what the secret crimes of a people must be, when the
outward walk and appearance is so disgusting.

But Jamie Gordon had been accustomed from infancy
to see these bazaars occasionally, and to know what to
expect when he visited them, ; so he went quietly with
Cecy to the stall where she bought what she wanted.
She then produced a cotton handkerchief, and directed
the buniah to tie up what she had bought in it, then
drawing the knot over her arm, she walked on, having
called Jamie still to follow her. Cecy passed on quickly,
till she had led her companion to a quarter of the
village which he had not seen before, and stopped before
a large ruinous native house, which had a long low
front. This house was covered with small dark dis-
coloured tiles, and in the centre of the front, was a wide
double-leaved door, which stood open ; on each side were
two double-leaved windows, the venetians of which
were also open. The rooms within were therefore ex-
posed to view ; the walls had been white- washed, but
were discoloured with damp and dust, the rafters of the
roof up to the very tiles, were all visible. In gentle-
men’s houses, in India, white cloths are generally ex-
tended over the rooms to supply the place of ceilings,
where the building is not of stone ; but such cloth had
never been in the place we are speaking of. These
NEW SCENES. 141

apartments were very large, and were filled with all
manner of merchandise, new and old, chiefly what are
called Europe goods in India, though many of the
articles so called, had been fabricated in the country
where they were exposed for sale. There was furniture
of every description, pottery from Delf, Nankin and
England, knives, and scissors, hats, boots, broad-cloths,
jewelry, kegs of spirits, saddles, whips, fowling-pieces,
dirks, Benares gauzes, the refuse of milliners’ shops,
from the lower provinces, and finally, with many other
things, all and every article which Mrs. McKenzie had
had left on hand, when she had resolved to return imme-
diately to the lower provinces. In short, this was a
Europe store, and it was kept by an Englishman, who
some forty years before, had come out to India, in the
capacity of a gentleman’s servant, and through favour,
had been permitted to stay in the country, and by mer-
chandise, to arrive at his present condition of Europe
store-keeper in Cawnpore.

This man, who called himself Simon Zachary, was
one of those iron-constitutioned Englishmen, on whom
no climate seems to have any effect. He had been exposed
to the sun till his skin was as dark and as dry to all ap-
pearance as the leather of an old boot ; and if he ever
had a liver it must have perished long since, from the
quantity of fiery spirits with which he deluged it every
day, though he never was seen intoxicated. Notwith-
standing all this, he made no complaint, but went
plodding on with his business, filling his purse rapidly at
one end, whilst his family, and he had a very large one,
emptied it at another.

He was busy in his store making up an order with
142 JAMIE GORDON.

several natives of various appearance about him, all of
them his servants, when Cecy entered the store, fol-
lowed by young Gordon, and on her asking him if her
aunt was at home, he replied, ‘Walk in—you know
the way,—I cannot tell you.’

Cecy stepped forward, looking to Jamie to follow ;
and after crossing through many rooms, all piled up
with goods in the strangest disorder, she brought him
through these into an open court: on the two sides of
which, were, what are called in India, Godowns, or
store-rooms, some locked, some open. At the farther
end was another house, answering to that through
which they had passed ; a low, square, yet wide and
roomy building, which was in fact, the store-keeper’s
dwelling house. This court presented a scene of litter
and confusion, even greater than the store had done.
It was scattered over with straw, rope’s-ends, packing
cases, wheels and bodies, and dislocated limbs of old
carriages of various kinds, with here and there, two
or three broken Europe bottles, or fragments of pottery.
Cecy passed on, and at length reached the door of the
dwelling house.

This door was also wide open, but before it hung a
thick curtain, which Cecy pushed aside, without cere-
mony, and walked into a vast bare empty hall. The
only person present, was an old woman, dressed in a
coarse white sheet, and a pair of striped trowsers, who
was sitting in a corner, chewing paun.

‘Where is my aunt?’ asked Cecy, and was directed
by the woman’s eye, to a room at the upper end of the
hall. ‘Come along, Jamie,’ said the girl—and without
further ceremony, she hastened on, and soon reached
the family apartment.
NEW SCENES. 143

Jamie Gordon had seen many things, which we in
England never see ; but he had not yet ever met with
anything like this place, to which he had been brought :
and a more knowing person than himself, might have
been puzzled to have found out, whether he had come
into a room inhabited by Europeans or natives.

This room was only white-washed, and the walls
bare; but there was nothing in that. But the person
he was come to see, the aunt of Cecy Hughes, was
squatting on a selvage on the floor like a native, when
there was at the same time, a table, and chairs in the
room. Then, though Jamie knew that the master of
the house was an Englishman, because of his name, .
and his way of speaking, and even the colour of his
eyes ; yet he had never seen what he thought an uglier
old black woman, than the mistress ; and so surprised
he was, that he stood looking at her, whilst Cecy ran
up and kissed her, calling her aunt.

It may generally be known by the appearance, whe-
ther black people can get at good food, or not. We
sometimes see rich people in England, look thin, and
half-starved ; but not so with the natives of India.
Cecy’s aunt had ate of the best for many years, and
she was therefore so fat, that her chin and throat seemed
all of one size, and the rolls of fat about her neck,
hung like the dewlaps of a cow. She had called herself
a christian, ever since she had been in Zachary’s house,
and therefore she did not dress like a Hindoo, or
Mahommedan woman. She wore an immense full pet-
ticoat, made of a whole web of striped silk, the stripes
running round her, like the hoops of a barrel. Her
upper part was incased ina sort of loose boddice of
144 JAMTE GORDON.

muslin, trimmed with silk, with tight sleeves, which
reached the bend of her arm: and her hair, which had
been raven black, but which at that time, began to be a
little grizzled, was combed carefully up from her face,
and fastened in a round protracting knot, in the very
nape of her neck.

Her skin was not of a sleek bright black, or brown,
but perfectly yellow: and as she used much oil in
her adorning of herself, it looked particularly greasy.
Her lips and teeth were black, owing to what she
chewed: and she wore a large gold necklace, and ear-
rings so heavy, that they weighed down the whole
lobes of her ears, and made them stand out from her
head,

This person was sitting on a carpet, at one end of
the room, when the children came in. A handsome
Hookah, with a long snake, and amber mouth-piece,
stood ready at her hand, and if she had not been smok-
ing when her niece came in, she had been enjoying
complete apathy, by which is meant, perfect stupidity,
or a sort of state, often enjoyed by an owl in a barn,
or a cow in a fat pasture.

When her niece ran up to her and gave her the usual
salam, she did not smile or express any pleasure at
seeing her, nor did she ask after her niece’s mother,
but she said, ‘Who have you got there, bring him up
to me? what is his name? who’s child is he ? where
was he born ?’

Jamie walked up to the old lady at the call of Cecy,
but he hoped that she would not touch him: he had
no cause to fear, she did not even put out her hand to
his, but said, ‘ Your name, what is it ?’ addressing him
in Hindoostanee.
NEW SCENES. 145

‘Sit down, Jamie,’ said Cecy, ‘and tell my aunt
your name.’

The boy did as desired, still keeping at a careful dis-
tance.

‘Was he born in this country?’ continued the curi-
ous old lady.

‘Don’t know !’ replied Cecy, carelessly, ‘But where
are my cousins? I came on purpose to see them, and
to make Jamie acquainted with them,’ she added,—
‘and we must not stay, we must be back by gun-fire.’

The old lady took the pipe of her hookah in her
hand, and was about to regale herself with a few whiffs,
when as many as four young women, all of whom pro-
mised, if they lived long enough, to be the very images
of their mother, came rushing into the room from an
inner apartment. At the sight of them, Jamie started
up, and wished himself anywhere but where he was.
They were all promisingly stout, were dressed in exactly
the same style as their mother, and though the eldest
was not 20, one. was a widow, and another was married
to a clerk in her father’s store. There was a noisy
greeting between these girls and Cecy, and then all
their attentions were turned upon Jamie, and they began
to ask questions about him, and to make remarks upon
him in Hindostanee, not caring nor inquiring whether
he understood them or not.

‘Fair as the moon!’ said the young widow. ‘ You
must bring him often, Cecy, we shall be glad of his
company,—you know we do not like that ugly boy
whom you have so often brought with you before.’

‘Of what boy were they speaking?’ asked Jamie, as
he was returning with Cecy to the barracks. .

0
146 JAMIE GORDON,

‘Of what boy,’ she answered, ‘ Who else, but Philip
Pickles,’

‘And do they not like him ?’ replied Jamie. ‘ Well,
now, I do not wonder at that.’ If any one had seen
how he stepped out as he spoke, they would have ex-
pected what really happened, that he would have some
set-down before he slept that night, though he did not
expect the sort of reception which he met with from
Blake when he entered the berth.

‘Jem!’ said Blake, ‘you have taken the advantage
of my being out of the way, to be off, and along to the
bazaar, with that Hughes’s girl. Did you expect I
should not hear of it? Now, inasmuch as this is the
first offence of the kind, I shall spare your bones for
the nonce. But mind my words, for a second offence
of the kind, you shall have such a taste of my rattan, as
you won’t forget for sometime. Now understand, lad,
that I expects you to be on parade as due as I am, both
mornings and evenings, and smart and clean too, and
that you stand where you can see what is going on ;
and it would not hurt you to cut some slips of wood,
and put them through the manceuvres like so many
soldiers ;—there’s a job for you as will keep you out of
mischief, lad, if it brings nothing else to pay.’
FURTHER GROWTH. 147

CHAPTER XIII.
FURTHER GROWTH.

As we have described the former day from the time
Jamie Gordon returned to the barracks,we must refrain
from entering into any very minute accounts of his
manner of spending his time for some months after-
wards ; for not only months but seasons passed away
from that time, with as small change as may be con-
ceived in the sort of military life in which the boy was
mixed up. -

Jamie had retained much of a childlike manner and
childish modes of thinking and feeling, so long as he
was associated with Aileen; but from the period in
which he lived chiefly with men, and only occasionally
fell into company with persons nearer to his own age,
he became less playful, and might have sometimes heen
mistaken for being sullen when he was only full of
thought ; for being often bidden to hold his tongue by
the rough elders who were about him, and having
none of his own age to tell his thoughts to, his mind

fell back upon the past, in such way as it had not often
02
148 JAMIE GORDON.

done, since he first used to sit in the corner of Mrs.
Fifer’s berth: and most blessed was it then for him,
that most of those memories of what appeared to him
as far past, as if as many years as months had rolled
by, since he had lost his second father, came back
enriched with the most precious instructions, both of
precept and example, which one created being is ever
permitted to impart to another.

Blake was soon promoted to the two stripes, with the
speedy prospect of a third, when there was an opening
in the company.

Blake would have been promoted before, had he been
skilled with his pen, and other such matters; but as
he became more and more known to his officers, and
more respected, not only for his quietness and sobriety,
but for other estimable qualities ; and as it was found
that he had. taken much pains to improve himself,
when it was most needed, there was no longer any delay
in pushing him on.

No man in the rank of a private soldier ever had
higher and more honourable principles than Blake :
and this was well known to Corporal Fell, when he
committed Jamie to his care, though he did not deem
him a religious man, a matter of sore regret to the
dying Christian—and it was thought that Blake would
have undertaken the charge of the child at once, had
he not felt that, from his tender years, he needed a
woman’s care.

As it had turned out, however, the boy was taken by
him, just at the time, when he needed such a hand over
him as the Corporal’s ;’ and it was much to the advan-
tage of the lad, that his patron enjoyed a corner berth,
FURTHER GROWTH. 149

and that he and Blake had it all to themselves—no
women being near, it being at the very opposite end of
the range from Mrs. Fifer, Mrs. Young, and Betty
Pickle’s berth.

The Corporal had his true military notions of subor-
dination, and he was determined to keep the boy in his
place. He was a determined hater of what he called
low life—and as he especially despised the whole race
of coloured people, which are always about a Euro-
pean corps in the East Indies, and indeed, wherever
there are blacks, he never failed to make Jamie feel
the weight of his hand, when he detected him in con-
versation with any of the coloured children, often
driving him into the berth with small ceremony, when-
ever he found him so engaged.

There were at that time, no other white children in
that whole range, but Philip Pickles, and Jamie, for the
Sergeant’s wives had no children ; and there was little
need to use any guard upon Jamie respecting Philip,
unless it might be to prevent the two from going to
loggerheads, which they were too apt to do; when they
came in each other’s way. Though it must be observed,
that the boys might have been much better friends,
had not the mother of one, by her perpetual grumbling,
kept up her son to the spirit of jealousy and hatred,
which she had herself first inspired. In the common
course of things, the two young turkey-cocks would
have long before tried each other’s strength, in such
wise, as would have settled the point of who was to
have been master, and afterwards gone on together as
other boys do; the avowed conqueror, often in such
cases, suffering himself to be altogether led by the

03
150 JAMIE GORDON.

conquered ; and this assuredly would have been Jamie’s
case, from the superior generosity of his natural charac-
ter over that of Philip’s.

Corporal Blake had his plans for Jamie, and they were
such as had sense and reason in them, and were founded
upon experience: Nor did he hide them from the
boy, as will be seen by what followed, on his opening
them out to him, which he did one day, when he had
brought him in, neck and shoulders, from the verandah,
where he had found him, on returning from guard,
engaged in some game, with a little mob of coloured
children.

‘It don’t signify your blubbering there, lad,’ he said,
as he was quietly taking off his accoutrements : ‘but
so sure as I finds you discoursing with such sort as
them there without, so sure shall you feel the weight
of my hand. When I passed my word to him, as was
more than a father to you, that I would befriend you
whenever it came in my way to do so, I meant to do
as I said: and would have done it from the first, only
those women over-talked me, saying, that you was too
young to be left to men only ; I say, did I, (think you,)
or did I not, resolve to stand to it? What’s a soldier, lad?
what’s a soldier, I say? who does not stand to his word?
From the general to the drum-boy, him that has not
the courage to stand to a word, once passed in right
earnest, and good faith, is not worth the buttons on his
coat. He is good for naught, but to be food for powder.
But to come to what were my notions, and must be those
of every man of common sense,—to my notions, I say,
of befriending such an one as you, or any other lad of
your age and inches, when I passed that word to Cor-
FURTUER GROWTH. 151

poral Fell;—what were they, but that when I had
seen that you was provided with victuals, and kept
clean and tight, I should farther add the benefit of
applying the rope’s-end, or may be a taste of the rattan,
when your ideas and mine did not step together, in the
particulars ofyour behaviour, more especially as it might
concern the company you were to keep. Now to be
sure, when you fell in with that family, once residing
up yonder,’—and he pointed over his shoulder, in the
direction\ of what had so lately been the McCrury’s
berth, ‘you was not altogether in the best of company,
lad—but they were white, any how: they were called
Christians, and all that, and poor Katty would have
raised the barrack, afore she would have parted from
you; but things are altered now, you are now under
my command, lad, and take what I say for better for
worse ;—if I ever catches you again, sculking with those
coloured children, you shall have more and smarter
stripes on them shoulders of yours, than ever a sergeant
among them has on his sleeve! A pretty soldier, truly,
you'll make, if you are beginning already to mix up
with these coloured folks, which are the very pest of
every European corps in India, or wheresoever the two
sorts meet in any part of the earth.’ ‘But what may
you be muttering there, Jim?’ asked the Corporal
suddenly, resting the hand with which he was polishing
some part of his accoutrements.

‘1 was saying,’ replied Jamie, though he spoke not
until the Corporal had repeated the question, ‘I was
saying, that I do not want to bea soldier.’

‘You are sulky, still, be you,’ returned Blake, look-
ing round for a cane, which was in its usual place in
152 JAMIE GORDON.

the berth, where everything was kept in most military
precision ; ‘and you think you are to stand up against
our colonel, and all the officers, and all that has any
regard for your well doing, do you? Why, what in
the name of common sense is to become of you ? here
at the world’s end, one may say, without kith or kin,
guardian or friend, beyond the regiment in which you
was born, and which stands to you in the place of
father and mother, and all, as it were ? and there you
stand, sulky as a bear, and say, you will have nothing
to do with none of them ; but when the time comes, I
tell you, you won’t be asked, but you will be put on
the strength of the regiment: and neither with your
leave, nor by your leave ; so now you know what you
have to depend on—and not another word about it, for
I would not like to dub you sergeant, that is, to give
you the stripes I talked of, just now, in the humour I
am just in;’ and the Corporal looked what he said,
in such fashion, that Jamie thought it best not to give
him another word.

From that day, Corporal Blake took such measures,
as tended very much to abridge the liberty of the boy ;
and though himself, by no means an enlightened man
in a religious way—yet as Mrs. Fifer had been divinely
appointed to do at one time, and the baby Aileen at
another, he was made the means of carrying on the
training of the twice bereaved orphan, in such wise, as
Omunipotence only could plan and carry out. There was
no regimental school then in the corps, but the Corpo-
ral sought out one William Jones, in another company,
who was accounted a very good scholar, though he was
too little of a soldier ever to be promoted to the halbert :
FURTHER GROWTH. 153

and he paid him for giving the boy lessons in writing,
and cyphering, at his leisure-hours,. to which lessons
were added, tasks, to be got by rote, from any book
which could be had: it being a farther arrangement of a
tender Providence, that as Jamie had a Bible of:his own,
and Jones had no other book to lend him, these lessons
had need to be learned from that one and only source
of all wisdom. Thus did the Almighty “temper the
wind to the shorn lamb,” not suffering the pest~bearing
vapours, which blow from the fens of heathen corrup-
tion, upon so many children of careless English parents
in India, to blight and destroy all the young hopes of
the orphan boy. 3 |

But to pass from these reflections, Corporal Blake
having thoroughly established his command over Jamie,
and what was better, having brought him into such
state of obedience, as one can hardly be supposed to be
rendered by a child, without some better principle than
fear, months passed on with little change. The cold
season spent itself, the hot winds followed, and then
came the rains, which is the season well known to be
most dangerous to Europeans—and, after them, the
prospect of the sweet cool months again. But before
even the early mornings were grown fresh, it became
generally understood, that there was such a movement
in prospect, as scarce a wife or mother in the whole
corps could look forward to without alarm ; and yet
there were not a few among the men who rejoiced in
the view of a change, though sure to bring many ter-
rors with it.

The first breath of this report came like that gentle
stir among the leaves of some tall tree, which prefaces
154 JAMIE GORDON,

the coming typhoon, or tempest from the desert, which
so often rages over the northern portions of the English
territories in Hindoostan. The sound was soft, and
low, and whispered, at last in the barracks, from one
to another, though still but little heeded, till it was
found that several of the officer’s compounds were be-
ginning to be littered with camels, and other such pre-
paratives for a march, as could not be easily mistaken.
It was then time for every one to look to himself, and
to begin to do whatever in him lay, to prepare for such
@ move, as. was far more certain in its goings out, than
in its comings in. For who could say, that he was not
being called to a war and a contest, from whence “ there
is no discharge?”
THE DEPARTURE. 155

CHAPTER XIV.
THE DEPARTURE.

From the very serious preparations which were going
forwards, no doubt could be entertained, that no com-
mon enterprise was in hand ; not merely some attack
on a troublesome native chief on the borders, or some
such matter; but, as Betty Pickles remarked, a business
which might make many widows and fatherless
children.

There were wives, and mothers, and children, belong-
ing to the corps—and these not all white,—who felt for
their husbands and fathers, as members of a family
ought to do ; and made every preparation, with sighing
hearts, and tender thoughtfulness.

At this time, which was only a few days before the
march, as it afterwards proved, Blake was promoted
to the halbert ; but although this promotion caused a
considerable increase of business, yet he was not un-
mindful of poor Jamie’s concerns ; often remarking, that
if the lad was left to have the run of the barracks whilst
156 JAMLE GORDON.

the men were away, he would not be worth the broken
stock of a fire-lock when they came back.

He applied to some of the most decent women in
several companies, as well as his own, to take charge
of the boy, but with small success ; every one of these,
not tied down by small children, had been kindly in-
vited to go to the bungalows, and abide with the officer’s
ladies, by which plans the higher and lower could
impart comfort to each other. Mrs. Young had been
invited by the adjutant’s lady, otherwise she would
have undertaken the boy ; and thus things went on,
until the order came at last, for the first move to take
place very early on the next morning after it was de-
livered ; and though some weeks had passed since the
first rumour of a march had been heard ; yet it came
at last somewhat unexpectedly.

‘It don’t matter to me when I move,’ remarked
Sergeant Blake, when he heard it first on the parade
in the morning, ‘for I have been in marching trim
these three days; but as to young Gordon, I don’t
know what is to be done—it was only last night, that
I was disappointed of a woman of the Grenadiers, who
almost said she would take charge of him, and I was
thinking of going down this very morning, to see if he
could be lodged in the hospital, by favour of Sergeant
Thomas, with some one or other of the invalids, to take
charge of him—one of the chronicle cases as Mrs.
Thomas talks of,’ he added with a smile, ‘ but how am
I to find the time?’

Sergeant Blake was thinking more of Jamie, than
of any thing else, when, parade being dismissed more
speedily than usual, he hastened to his berth, as soon
THE DEPARTURE. 157

as he came to the barracks, and there to his amazement,
saw his corner, as it were, almost filled with the wide
spread of Mrs. Sergeant Thomas’s ample petticoats. She
was talking with Jamie, whom she held by the hand,
as he stood before her, and seemed, though she certainly
looked very warm and very rosy, as much at home,
and as entirely at her ease, as if she had been seated in
her cane-chair, in her own bungalow.

Blake rather started, when he saw her ; and though
there was not another woman in the regiment whom
he would so gladly have seen at that instant, yet he
could not find words to tell her as much, so readily, as
to be before her with the first address. |

‘A’nt you surprised to see me here, Blake ?’ she
said, with her usual smile, ‘but I was fain to take the
first cool hours of the morning, and though I have done
so, you see how hot I am ; but 1 had two calls to come
hither this morning. First, I had a mind to pay my com-
plimentsto you, Sergeant. I did not hear of your promo-
tion till last night, though Thomas knew it all along.
Well to be sure ! and you will do credit to the sash and
three stripes, if ever a man did. But what think you
is the object of this move ? But you heads of the corps
is so close, that you keeps all you knows to yourselves
from us poor women. Well, may the blessing of Him
above, go with you all, and bring you safe back. I
sh’ant have an easy moment, till that comes to pass—and
you will leave many an aching heart, and weeping eye,
behind you. Well, but that is not all, for which I took -
the trouble to come up here this morning. I come to
say, that if you a’nt provided, Sergeant Blake, with
a place for Jamie here, whiles you are away, that he

P
158 JAMIE GORDON.

shall be as welcome as flowers in May, to a corner in
our house, and a seat at our table, and the run of our
compound, and all that, if so be as he will promise
and stand to it, that he don’t go beyond the walls, nor
come up to the barracks, or get among the huts and
places. Thomas says, that he can’t, nor won't answer
for him, if he is to have his liberty, to go whither and
where he lists.’

Sergeant Blake had already opened his mouth, to
express his warm and grateful acceptance of this pro-
position, so entirely to his heart’s content, when he
found himself utterly overborne, by such an outbreak
from Jamie, as had not often occurred, since he had
drilled him into subordination, some months before.

‘I will, I will !’ cried the boy, his whole young face
allin aglow. ‘If you please to allow it, sir,’ he added,
looking wistfully up to the Sergeant, ‘I should so like
it—Mrs. Thomas is so kind, she always was so kind,
and I shall be so glad, so very, very glad, may I go?
may I go? please to let me.’

‘ First and foremost,’ returned the Sergeant,—‘ will
you please to let me put ina word, Jim? have not I
told you scores of times, that you are too smart with
words, and too slow with deeds. It worn’t for you to
answer Mrs. Thomas, but for me, who stands in the
shoes of them that should have the natural rule of
you; and now, Mrs. Thomas,’ he added, ‘now I have
the liberty to speak, please to accept my honest thanks
for your very kind andseasonable offer ; and tell Sergeant
Thomas, that is there never a man, let alone a woman,
in the whole regiment, as I would confide this lad to,
if he was twenty times my own son, happier than I do
THE DEPARTURE. 159

to him and you—only, that I hope that you will keep
him to his place, and in his place ; and never let him
have a taste of anything but water, that is of naught
stronger than water. I have stuck to that, ever since
I had him in tow, and he is all the better for it—there
is spirit enough in that young skin of his, without
putting more into it. It will be a different thing when
he comes to advanced age ; and as to his getting out
beyond the hospital-walls, I hope that the Sergeant
will lay his rattan about him, to good purpose, if ever
he catches him at that game.’

‘Thank you, Sergeant Blake, thank you, sir,’ broke
in Jamie again, with such a flash of pleasure in his
bright eyes towards Mrs. Thomas, as caused her to
smile, and say, ‘ Well lad, and so it is settled, and
you must put up your alls into your chest, and I will
send two Coolies for it, when I gets home, and then
you may come down as soon as ever you pleases.’

‘No, please Mam,’ replied Jamie, ‘I should like to
stay to see the last of—of Sergeant Blake.’

‘La! child, said Mrs. Thomas, with a shudder,
‘what a word is that ?’ |

‘I only meant,’ added Jamie, who saw and under-
stood her shudder, ‘I only meant, to see him and be
with him till he goes.’

‘ Well! well!’ she answered, ‘and what else should
you mean? You shall come to us in the morning,
then ; and that being settled, I must take my leave,
Sergeant, for you, no doubt, have not much time to
throw away. I mean before I go home, just to call to
see poor Nancy Fifer ; they tells me she takes on bit-

terly. Ah! Sergeant Blake, what a changed woman
P2
160 JAMIE GORDON.

that is! since she was poor Blaney’s pains-taking little
wife, aboard ship.

To this remark, Sergeant Blake made no answer:
but asked Mrs. Thomas, ‘ whether she did not stand in
need of a little refreshment, before she undertook her
walk home.’

‘I don’t care,’ she replied, ‘if I have a draught of
pure water, Blake, if you have any here. Jamie, lad,
pour me some out.’

‘Nay! nay!’ returned the Sergeant, who thought,
for very shame’s sake, he must not be so inhospitable,
as to entertain so kind a visitor with cold water only,
proceeding at the same time, to take the only tumbler
which the berth afforded, from the boy, who had already
supplied it, and to add as much brandy from a Europe
bottle, which he produced from his chest, as was quite
sufficient to qualify the rawness of the water. He
handed it to Mrs. Thomas, taking the occasion to thank
her again, for her kindness to the boy, in such wise,
as proved that his heart went with his lips.

Mrs. Thomas drank to their happy meeting again in
a few months ; when, as she added, he, with the whole
corps, she hoped would return, crowned with laurels ; and
then bidding him adieu, she went round the verandah to
Sergeant Fifer's room.

It was all hurry, and what toa looker-on, might seem
confusion, during the next twelve or more hours,
through the whole cantonments, for there were other
corps about to move from Cawnpore, as well as that
with which we are so well acquainted ; but order was
working out of this confusion, under the influence of
that discipline, which may be called the very essence
THE DEPARTURE. 161

of all military life. A spirit which Blake had, as
hath appeared, availed himself of right well, in his
management of the boy Jamie.

When this said Jamie had gathered together all his
possessions, locked them in his chest, and sent them
off by the Coolies to the hospital, it was little that he
had to do, though he was ready to help any one, who
would accept his services. He was just in such a
humour, that he would have laid down his very life
for any man in the barrack, that had ever done him
the slightest service ; he was sorry that there was no
job to be done for Sergeant Blake—but that tried
soldier had so forecast his matters, that he had left
nothing to the Jast, which could be managed before ;
and in fact, he was little in his berth, all the day, but
backwards and forwards, between one place and another,
as his business called.

The move was to take place an hour or two after
midnight, at which time there would be a moon, on the
wane indeed, but not very far from the full, and it
was wished that the men should get as many hour’s
rest as possible, before the drum should beat, which
was to be the signal for the falling in, and other such
movements, as were to precede the start.

It was however, scarce an hour before midnight,
when Sergeant Blake came into his berth, having been
detained for some time, after the barracks had become
comparatively quiet, and most of the Corporals and
privates were getting their rest. But Blake was a Ser-
geant, and was proving himself every day more to be
depended upon ; and the honours and favours of this

world are not to be enjoyed without some cost. J amie
P 3
162 JAMIE GORDON.

had not gone to rest, though he was tired, he had too
many troublesome thoughts to let him sleep. He was
sitting on his Mora, with his head leaning forward
against the Sergeant’s cot, when the latter came in.

‘Jamie, lad,’ -he said, as he entered, ‘why a’nt.
you in bed? what cares have you, and such as you, to
keep you watching, child ?’

_ ©Oh! many, many, father,’ replied Jamie.

It was not often, that the boy used the word father,
to the Sergeant, nor did he know that he did it at that
time. ‘I could not sleep, whilst I thought of how very
tired you must be.’

‘That’s true enough, Jim,’ replied Blake: ‘I am
dead tired, and that’s the truth ; have not I been on foot
ever since gun-fire, and scarce sat down five minutes
in all that time—and the worst of it is, that I hardly
dare take any rest now, I am so afeard that I shall fall
into such a dead sleep when once lain down, that I
should scarce hear the big drum, if it was beat at the
bed-foot ; and I?ll tell you what, Jamie, I would sooner
be carried out hence, feet foremost, than fall in a min-
ute after the time, on such an occasion as this.’

‘I will settle that, father,’ said Jamie, ‘I am not
sleepy the least in the world. I could not sleep if I
was to try with all my might and main. You shall lie
down, and I will sit by you on the Mora, and when I
hear the first, the very first touch of the drum, I will
wake you—that very, very moment.’

‘If, returned the Sergeant, ‘I could trust thee, lad.’

‘Trust me, father!’ replied the boy, in such a tone,
as proved that he was almost choking with his feelings ;
‘not trust me! when I owe you so much, so very much,
THE DEPARTURE. © 163

when you have taken such pains for many months, to
do me good? not trust me, father? Oh! if you knew
what sorrow it is to me to be parted from you, how
afraid I am, that I should get wicked when you are
gone. If you did but know’—and there he stopped,
because he could not utter a word, for very choking.

The Sergeant was taking off some of his uppermost
accoutrements, preparatory to his lying down, whilst
Jamie was speaking, and before he had done, he had
thrown himself on the cot, dressed in other respects
as he was: nor did he answer, till thus brought almost
to a level with the boy, as he sate on the Mora. He
then extended his hand to him, laying it on his head,
and saying, ‘ I’ll trust thee, my lad, and though we
should never meet again after this night, you will re-
member me kindly, and forgive me, if ever I have been
over harsh with you.’

‘No! no! father,” cried Jamie—it being his last
thought, to put a denial on the request of the Sergeant’s
to be forgiven, if he had ever been over severe; but he
could say no more, he could only sob, his sobs increas-
ing when the Sergeant blessed him, as he had never
done before, adding in a lower tone, ‘and Corporal Fell
was right when he used to say, there is nothing makes
a man or child, but true religion. It has been good for
me, Jamie, to hear you con your tasks, as you often
used to do out of your Bible; some of them words, I
trust, will stick by me, where never a book could go
with me: or if it could I could neither have opportu-
nity nor leisure to turn to it.

Not a minute after this, and the Sergeant was in a
heavy sleep, as was also the larger portions of those,
164 JAMIE GORDON.

then in that range of the barracks ; some little dream-
ing, that this was the last time that ever they should
sleep on other bed, than that of the lap of earth.

Jamie was perhaps the only watchman in that long
room. He would have thought it an offence, even to
have winked an eye; though, before midnight, there was
such a deep silence, that he could hear naught but the
melancholy roaring of a lion, kept in a cage by some
gentleman then residing in Cawnpore. Jamie had
often heard this howl before: hence it did not alarm
him, though he had never thought it so unutterably
melancholy, as he did that night. For that was a sea-
son, in which all things seemed to shew only their
dark sides to his young mind.

As the minutes advanced towards midnight, poor
Jamie found himself growing so overpowered with
sleep, that he thought it would be best for him to get up
from his mora, and move about. He accordingly did so,
and stealing out of the berth, found no difficulty ir
getting out into the verandah, which as hath been be-
fore said, encompassed the range on all the four sides.
Not a creature was then moving in that verandah, ex-
cepting a sentinel, who having been chosen from one of
the men who were to remain behind, could spare the
rest which were so desirable for his comrades ; the
man challenged Jamie as the boy passed, but took no
other notice of him, when he learned who he was.
Jamie passed up one long side of the range, till he came
to the front under the windows of Serjeants Young
and Fifer’s rooms ; there all was still, and there he was
placed, facing the road which passes by from those
parts of the cantonments called the highest, from their
THE DEPARTURE. 165

being above the other as it regarded the river,—going on
towards the Artillery-barracks, to which in fact there
was a considerable rising from those of the Infantry,
all along the wall of the officer’s burying-ground on the
left. lt was a clear star-light night, nothing more to
be observed as betokening the moon—than a pale cold
gleam on the horizon where she was soon to rise.

All there when Jamie came up was quite still;
though not motionless, for when he looked before him,
he could hardly make out at first what strange figures
were moving between where he stood and the cook-
houses of the barracks, which were over against across
the road ; another look and he saw that there was a
string of laden camels, with their riders moving on-
wards in the way the corps was expected to go, that
was up towards the artillery barracks and thence across
to the Sepoy parade, the same way partly which
Jamie had gone when he had visited the Khanum
Zachary with Cecy Hughes.

There is something strange, and almost spectre-like,
in the form of the long neck and small head of the
camel, when seen as these then were by a dim light ;
and the more so, when no noise attends their steps ;
as on that occasion when the creatures are moving
slowly on the sand, so these passed on and the boy
was still watching them, when an almost unearthly
lumbering sound rose on his ears, from the same way
the camels were going. His first notion was, that it was
thunder, but as he saw no lightning and the sound
went rolling on, he could think of nothing else but an
earthquake; the boy had heard much of earthquakes,
and had had much desire to have the luck of feeling
166 JAMIE GORDON.

a bit of one, but he was not then in the humor to
have his wish gratified. For were not there troubles
enough just then without earthquakes ? He was not
sorry when the sentinel who had challenged him, being
just relieved, came up to him, and said, ‘This looks like
downright good earnest, Jamie lad. It’s sharp the
word and quick the motion, now, in good sooth—yet
I reckon the work will be sharper still, and the motion
quicker too—when, them, as those tumbrils is laden
with, open out on the enemy.’

‘ What do you mean, Smith?’ asked Jamie. ‘ Why
the tumbrils, the wheels as bear the artillery ;’ an-
swered the man, and he pointed in the direction of the
artillery-barracks with his thumb over his shoulder, —
‘ They be off there, lad, with the field-pieces, just to get
a start of the men, and I promise you that when those
gunners are set to work, they will play a game, such
as none of their mud forts all over the land will stand
for the twinkle of an eye. The roar of yon iron we
heard but now, is but child’s play to such as they can
make when rightly started.’

‘Then,’ said Jamie, ‘those are the tumbrils from_
. the artillery-barracks, Oh! Smith, these wars are ter-
rible things indeed.’

‘To them as is not used to them,’ replied the man,
who could talk as big as the best soldier in the corps—
‘there, look you what comes up this way, and now they
are started, there won’t be any more quietness tonight
any how. There they come, don’t you hear the squeak-
ing and screeching of their wheels; one wonders that
those hackery-drivers won’t be at the expence of a
THE DEPARTURE. 167

ha’porth of greese now and then for the benefit of their
own ears, if it was for naught else.’

Before Jamie well understood what the man was
speaking of, the recent track of the camels, though at a
considerable distance, began to be occupied by a string
of camp-followers, and had it been broad day-light, no
one with a heart at ease would have needed more
amusement, than to behold the various scenes and
figures which this line presented ; there were hackerys
_ or native carts drawn by bullocks, the heavy wheels
screeching and skirling as they turned on their axles,
with a noise which might almost be expected to wake
the dead ; persons of all sorts, ages and conditions, rid-
ing on small rough ponies, and carrying with them
all sorts and kinds of curious articles, even to a parrot
in a wicker cage, which was fastened at an old woman’s
saddle-bow crupper, others were walking, carrying bas-
kets and wallets or dragging children along with them,
and they passed on and on,—there seemed to be no end
of them. If they were all bound to the first encamping
ground, it was certain that when the troops arrived,
they would find many more human creatures about
them there, than they left behind them, and though
this train had shewn but indistinctly when they first
appeared ; yet when the moon arose, which she speedily
did, after throwing her first cold beam above her,
they might be more clearly discerned in all their odd
particularities, by any one who stood where Jamie did,
and had the heart to examine them curiously. But
such was not the boy’s case ; he lingered, however, in
the verandah, until the first far-off sound of the tum-
brils died on the ear, and then walked back to his berth
168 JAMIE GORDON.

to be ready at the first stroke of he reveille to awake
the Sergeant.

It was different to what it had been before, when Jamie
was returned to his mora. For there was no longer
the same deep silence, and though many of the men,
and amongst these Serjeant Blake, still slept heavily yet,
there was a beginning of some movements in the room
itself ; for the black cooks were beginning, according
to orders, to serve water to make tea or coffee in the
several messes and the private berths, this same boiling
water being used in many cases for a little hot grog
instead of tea ; then there was a perpetual snarling and
screeching without of hackery-wheels and other noises,
which proved that the cantonment was beginning to be
all alive. At length the first stroke of the reveille-drum
was heard, and Jamie, who had procured a pint mug
to be filled with coffee, roused the Sergeant, breaking
his sleep most unwillingly, nor suffering him to rise
before he had given him the drink ‘he had provided.
- Serjeant Blake, though he had not. a moment to lose,
yet failed not to drop several words which shewed how
deeply he was touched with the boy’s attention, and the
solemn, the touching manner in which he said, ‘ Bless
thee, my boy! the blessings of thy Saviour rest upon
thee now and for ever,’ were remembered by the orphan
through all the years of his youth, and if he still lives,
are to this day among the sweetest and most touching
recollections of his early years.

A few more minutes and all the ten ranges were
nearly empty, and all the companies had fallen into
their places in the open space between the barracks,
and the huts, and cooking-houses across the way ; all
_ THE DEPARTURE. 169

the white women and children of the corps were
gathered in the verandahs at those ends of the buildings
which faced the road ; there were many more women
and children standing under the huts and offices on the
other side; the nearly full orb of the moon was consider-
ably above the horizon, moving in pale majesty along
the deep blue sky, and shedding a cold, pale, sickly light
on the whole scene, such a light as the waning moon
only can afford.

Jamie placed himself as directly opposite to where
Serjeant Blake was, as he could venture to do. But he
could not tell whether he was seen or not, by that in-
distinct light, till he received a token at the very last,
which proved that his presence had not only been ap-
prehended by the eye, but by the heart of the gallant
non-commissioned officer.

There was a minute of intense feeling, when all had
fallen into their places ; when each gallant son of our
common fatherland stood like a statue, under the in-
fluence of such high military discipline as few other
people ever knew, whilst waiting for the signal to
move—a signal which was either to come from the band,
or to be so instantly followed by the striking-up of
that band, as to seem all one with its first notes.

At length it came, and at the moment when the
various instruments. struck up the old tune of—“Over
the hills and far away, over the hills and a great way
off,” clarion, trombone, fife and drum, producing a har-
mony so strong, so sweet as seemed to rise to the very
skies and sink into every heart, there was a simul-
taneous move, as of one vast body regulated by one will ;
and yet not so very rapid was that movement, but that

&
170 JAMIE GORDON.

Serjeant Blake could bestow one parting look at Jamie,
a look which told him how he had marked, and how
he valued all his kind and faithful attentions, so especi-
ally shewn during that night.

Thus passed on that gallant corps; whilst the old
air rung sweet and full, along the line of its march,
' until it had quite cleared the cantonments : many
mothers and children. followed for a shorter or longer
way, but Jamie ran before them all, cutting across
towards the Sepoy parade, through ways well known
to him between garden-walls,

Being come out from thence on the parade, he once
again had a clear view of the line, and heard the band
again as clearly almost as he had done at first, but
he could not distinguish Serjeant Blake from among
the other non-commissioned officers ; the boy had run
himself out of breath, he sat down on a heap of sand,
where he could see the last of the departing corps, and
where, after he could see it no more, he could yet hear
the band—“ Over the hills and faraway,” yes, over the
hills and far away were the words which seemed to be -
whispered in his ears, until the strain died upon his
senses ; he heard the drum only then for a little time,
and then all was still, and he perceived that he was
quite, quite alone, and knew himself to be at a very
considerable distance from the home which had been
offered to him.
JAMIE'S LAST GUARDIANS. 171

CHAPTER XV.
JAMIE’S LAST GUARDIANS.

Wuutst the corps is marching over the plains, and
Jamie going slowly towards the hospital, choosing such
ways between garden-walls and Bungalow compounds,
as were most likely to be solitary.—for he desired no
talk with any other of the boys or girls of the regiment ;
whilst the morning was breaking and the birds were
beginning to twitter in the trees, whose branches spread
over the wall, it needeth to turn to the hospitable
people, who were looking out for the coming of the boy.

There was not a non-commissioned officer’s wife in all
Cawnpore, so handsomely lodged as Mrs. Thomas in her
Bungalow—as Hospital Sergeant’s help-meet. It stood
in the hospital-compound ; it contained four rooms ;
two of good size in the front, and as many smaller
rooms behind; it communicated by a back-door with
the wards, so that the Sergeant could be in and out
whenever it suited him ; one of the small rooms behind
was prepared for Jamie, with a cot, a table, and a chair ;
and with many other needful articles, even so much as

Q2
172 JAMIE GORDON.

a looking-glass, of near half a foot square, nailed up to
the wall; surely there had never before been such pre-~
parations made for the accommodation of that orphan
boy ; then there was his chest fixed across the threshold
of a door-way, along which he might stretch his legs,
with his back to the wall, when he was minded to read ;
then near at hand was a bath, where he might dabble
and splash at any time tohis heart’s content, and no-
fear of drowning neither. Mrs. Thomas, in all kind-
ness, had already, early as it was, seen to giving the
last touch to these ‘comodations,’ as she called them,
and was first seated down at her breakfast-table, in
expectation of her husband, who had arisen earlier than
usual, to run up to the barracks to see the party off.
We must call the room in which the Hospital Ser-
geant’s wife was seated—the hall ; it was a square white-
washed room, and very sparingly furnished ; there
was a bit of country carpet under the table in the
middle of the room ; but the rest of the flooring of tiles
was uncovered. The set-out on the table was, however,
something very superior, for the good woman liked to
have things handsome about her, and in conseqyence
made the man, whom she called her Bobberjee, and who
filled various capacities in the household, to place the
cups and platters, knives and forks, and other matters’
required at every meal, in very precise and particular
order, her napery also was very white, and her Europe
tea-pot of Queen’s metal as bright as silver ; there was
a double loaf of white bread and another of ration bread
already on the table, with fresh butter, and goat’s milk
all in a froth, and spaces were left for two hot dishes of
some sort of fry, which were not to appear till the Ser-
JAMLE’S LAST GUARDIANS. 173

geantcamein. We say nothing of the spices and pickles
which were added to this breakfast.

At the head of this table, in a large cane-chair with
a mora to keep up her feet, sat Mrs. Thomas, having
put the tea into the pot, and having nothing just then
to do, but to look through the door into the compound.
She was one who scarcely ever found the cold season
long enough, to cool down the heat she had gathered in
the hot season ; but as the Sergeant, her husband, used to
say in his facetious way, his wife worn’t one as burned
white, as most folks did in that climate, but kept up
her natural colour almost to a wonder.

She was dressed in a loose muslin wrapper, with long
sleeves, and open about the throat, with a turn-down
collar, and a small muslin cap, garnished with scarlet,
and white plaid country ribbons ; which she had thrown
back far above her brow, as she said for, ‘ coolness.’

She had not long to wait for her husband. He had
not gone beyond the barracks, and he soon came in,
saying as he threw off his cap, ‘ Well, my lass, and they
are off, and I am sure that they have my very best
wishes and prayers to go along with them.’

‘And if Iam not mistaken, Thomas,’ she answered,
‘they needs them, and every one’s else’s—that is if
there is any thing in dreams, for would you believe it,
the very last night that was, I dreamt ’—

‘Pooh! pooh! lass, returned the Sergeant, ‘ there
a’ant much miracle in any dismal dream, as you or
another might have had, when going to bed with your
head full of a march—may be to a bloody field, or
surely to a dangerous one, to be begun by the morn-
ing light ; but come now, I am as sharp-set as a wolf,

Q3
174 JAMIE GORDON.

where is the Bobberjee ?’ and raising his voice, he
uttered a call so loud, as shortly to bring in the cook,
followed by a little black urchin his son, each bearing
a dish, one of which when uncovered shewed several
hot rashers of country bacon, and the other a few small
fish, some of which last were moved without mn of
time to the Sergeant’s plate.

‘But shan’t we wait for Jamie Gordon ?’ said Mrs.
Thomas, ‘sure the boy won’t be long behind you !’

‘Very like!’ replied the Sergeant, ‘if the lad will
undertake to go my rounds through them wards, and
see to all the medicines, and take the doctor’s orders,
then, though I am so sharp set, may be I might be per-
suaded to stand upon such ceremonials with him as
you recommend.’ All this was said and answered in
high good humour ; though Mrs. Thomas shewed some
anxiety, as the minutes advanced, at the non-appear-
ance of the boy, nor did he come until the Sergeant
had breakfasted and gone out, and when he did arrive
Mrs. Thomas was as she said, almost staggered, by the
sadness of his aspect, and his refusing to take any thing
but a drink of tea. However, when she understood that
he had been up all night, and how far he had run that
morning, she was not slow in perceiving what he most
needed ; she conducted him to the room which had
been prepared ; she made him take off his shoes and
lie down on the bed, she so closed the jalousies that he
should have the benefit of the air, and not the disturb-
ance of the light, and then left him, though not until
she had awakened a very strong sense of gratitude to-
wards herself, in his young, and as he had felt it, that
morning, entirely-bereaved heart.
JAMIE’S LAST GUARDIANS. 175

There are hearts of many kinds in the breasts of
human beings, some which in their affections seem never
to go beyond me and mine as one may say ; others that
feel only for a fellow-creature for the time being, hav-
ing more or less warmth and sincerity in such feeling ;
and another kind that feel long and steadily, and as it
were through ill report and good report; but such
hearts as these last scarcely belong to nature ; perhaps
those of the second order are the very best which nature
affords ; and when the orphan Jamie found such an
one as Mrs. Thomas, he had more cause for gratitude
than as a child ht perhaps thoroughly understood.

It was all so still when Mrs. Thomas left the room,
that the weary boy very soon forgot himself, though
his sleep was at first disturbed by a never-ending proces-
sion of marching troops, seeming to be going on and
on, yet never passing clear of him; whilst the air of
“ Over the hills and far away,” as played by the band,
arose and fell, or seemed to do, upon his ear. At
length, however, his sleep became dreamless, and held
him so long, that he did not awake from it till Mrs.
Thomas came in to call him to dinner.

‘Well, Jamie, lad,’ she said, as she stood by the cot,
¢ You have had it out, my boy, and paid up old scores
in good sooth, even counting that you had not slept for
eight-and-forty hours before you lay down “where
you now are ;—well but, are you not hungry ? you have
not had a taste of victual in your mouth this day, and
Thomas and I breakfasted so early that we are quite
ready for dinner, though it is not half an hour yet
after noon ; so up and be about ; there is a nice hand of
boiled pork smoking on the board now as ever knife
176 JAMIE GORDON,

was put into ; there is never a piece of porker as Thomas
fancies like the hand, just with the smallest sprinkling
of salt on it, afore it is put in the pot ; come, Jamie, be
smart,’ and Jamie was smart, for he was very hungry,
and was out of the room, and at the table, almost as soon
as Mrs. Thomas herself.

It was long ago, if ever, that Jamie within his
memory, had sate down toa table, so well appointed
and set out, as that of the Hospital Sergeant’s wife’s
then was—for what with one thing, and what with
another, this pair was getting on in the world, con-
sidering their condition, and how they had started
in life, as well, if not better, than any other in the
regiment ; and as Mrs. Thomas saw how things were
managed in the gentlemen’s houses which she fre-
quented as nurse, she had a better chance of knowing
what was genteel, as she often used to say, than some
as carried their heads much higher than she ever desired
to do.

After the dinner, Mrs. Thomas herself talked of being
disposed to take a nap. The Sergeant did not say
what he was going to do with himself, but he told the
boy, that that was not an hour for him to be going
into the wards, and disturbing the sick, who many of
them slept, during that hottest part of the day.

‘ So’ you must contrive to keep yourself quiet, lad,’
he added, ‘ till towards sun-down, or a little afore : yet,
I much fear, that you will find your own company,
either a dull or a mischievous comrade, lad, at such
hours as these, unless you are the man for a book.
Well, I see how it is,’ he continued, ‘I had forgotten
how you had been put forward to the book, when you
258 JAMIE GORDON.

and though every twenty-four hours brought the troops
nearer, there were yet some days to come before they
could come in.

Immediately after the evening gun-fire, Jamie took
leave of his happy little room, and the friendly bunga-
low, in which, for the time being, he had found the
kindest of protection ; his young heart was swelling,
and his eyes burning, for he was striving manfully to
keep in the tears.

They found the supper ready in the pinnace, and a
most hearty welcome. Though even Mrs. Thomas
could not rally her spirits to talk, and she was struck
more silent still, when just before she and her husband
were thinking to take leave, Mr. Gordon proposed that
they should join in a hymn and a prayer.

Mrs. Thomas long remembered the first verse of this
hymn—

“ How are thy servants blessed, O Lord!
How sure is their defence,
Eternal wisdom is their guard,
Their help Omnipotence.”

Before the usual hour, Jamie Gordon was beyond the
report of the morning gun at Cawnpore.

FINIS.

L. SEELEY, PRINTER, THAMES DITTON, SURREY.
LATELY PUBLISHED

BY THE SAME AUTHOR.



THE NUN.

A TALE OF CONVENT LIFE.

Fifth Edition. In foolscap 8vo. Price 5s. cloth.

ROBERT AND FREDERICK.

A BOYS BOOK.

In foolscap 8vo. With Twenty Engravings. Price 7s. cloth.






-








ale I

koa

PS Ti be

is



Tosca SaLbieal
+
e
é
‘





xml version 1.0
xml-stylesheet type textxsl href daitss_disseminate_report_xhtml.xsl
REPORT xsi:schemaLocation 'http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitss http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitssdaitss2Report.xsd' xmlns:xsi 'http:www.w3.org2001XMLSchema-instance' xmlns 'http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitss'
DISSEMINATION IEID 'E20081031_AAAAAQ' PACKAGE 'UF00001916_00001' INGEST_TIME '2008-11-01T13:39:35-04:00'
AGREEMENT_INFO ACCOUNT 'UF' PROJECT 'UFDC'
DISSEMINATION_REQUEST NAME 'disseminate request placed' TIME '2013-12-09T17:35:54-05:00' NOTE 'request id: 299157; Dissemination from Lois and also Judy Russel see RT# 21871' AGENT 'Stephen'
finished' '2013-12-14T21:32:44-05:00' '' 'SYSTEM'
FILES
FILE SIZE '3' DFID 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfile0' ORIGIN 'DEPOSITOR' PATH 'sip-files00007.txt '
MESSAGE_DIGEST ALGORITHM 'MD5' bc949ea893a9384070c31f083ccefd26
'SHA-1' cbb8391cb65c20e2c05a2f29211e55c49939c3db
EVENT '2011-10-31T12:15:08-04:00' OUTCOME 'success'
PROCEDURE describe
'2011-10-31T12:09:45-04:00'
redup
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfile1' 'sip-files00009.txt
bc949ea893a9384070c31f083ccefd26
cbb8391cb65c20e2c05a2f29211e55c49939c3db
'2011-10-31T12:13:53-04:00'
describe
'2011-10-31T12:09:49-04:00'
redup
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfile2' 'sip-files00300cover4.txt
bc949ea893a9384070c31f083ccefd26
cbb8391cb65c20e2c05a2f29211e55c49939c3db
'2011-10-31T12:12:19-04:00'
describe
'2011-10-31T12:09:54-04:00'
redup
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfile3' 'sip-filesspine.txt'
bc949ea893a9384070c31f083ccefd26
cbb8391cb65c20e2c05a2f29211e55c49939c3db
'2011-10-31T12:11:20-04:00'
describe
'2011-10-31T12:09:58-04:00'
redup
'1198272' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATLS' 'sip-files00000cover1.jp2'
094804128b062ce78f85c95f525e59b6
922ab636d6938c976dcc3ea652654ae2e52b0a27
'2011-10-31T12:12:42-04:00'
describe
'162757' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATLT' 'sip-files00000cover1.jpg'
f10a49b5259e7582b1478f8bf3410188
9b559f6c303197cf213ac7bb8d7671b9d0d29190
'2011-10-31T12:16:39-04:00'
describe
'221' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATLU' 'sip-files00000cover1.pro'
ade95f84448c652705416ed671f73bae
41d71e418b55bb5d9146ad4bb96109198765a6e5
'2011-10-31T12:14:35-04:00'
describe
'34943' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATLV' 'sip-files00000cover1.QC.jpg'
cdb2d4ba42d648621e6153ca6b7d6a43
e3a1cd428a047b463a0d170896f6b4e5af93d20a
'2011-10-31T12:10:56-04:00'
describe
'28760918' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATLW' 'sip-files00000cover1.tif'
247eee7382ff7f9d77c5bfe763fb14b4
567db0532d2393ea90efa0e2dbcaf6eee0218b9e
'2011-10-31T12:12:58-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATLX' 'sip-files00000cover1.txt'
bc949ea893a9384070c31f083ccefd26
cbb8391cb65c20e2c05a2f29211e55c49939c3db
'2011-10-31T12:13:36-04:00'
describe
'7903' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATLY' 'sip-files00000cover1thm.jpg'
1ca08412a6ed2f5048401c21744890a7
50bae4bf91759b6027b18eae3b1fe14bb57cd15a
'2011-10-31T12:11:22-04:00'
describe
'1211026' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATLZ' 'sip-files00000cover2.jp2'
60da682be70f125759e12385af5fb9af
a7f5451008414ae15b6ab6459fe9c66e6923ee2b
describe
'51414' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMA' 'sip-files00000cover2.jpg'
4c754ddb0b8ff3cbf74114f065d72b89
f5c873b9fb6c2a91321eb873e3a347ad09ff3d77
'2011-10-31T12:13:08-04:00'
describe
'1982' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMB' 'sip-files00000cover2.pro'
3880c08ed882e2338c9227f17e603b40
61b1baeb39274016bf4b96aa03130bcd6c43ff82
'2011-10-31T12:13:18-04:00'
describe
'14021' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMC' 'sip-files00000cover2.QC.jpg'
cf6652612d43997e82556d818627fca2
6908b9b7595345c3cb0d63a23cf4512d00d99a50
'2011-10-31T12:11:44-04:00'
describe
'29066630' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMD' 'sip-files00000cover2.tif'
5a1ea8f73f8a964b4f02ca491f37a9ad
204064fd31da786b2b84fb94a3bead59334b53c4
'2011-10-31T12:10:35-04:00'
describe
'120' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATME' 'sip-files00000cover2.txt'
909fdb3286ec2d2d33e8524347238d00
9a8a0acaf0df4242efe27cb51922dd590bdde7a2
'2011-10-31T12:14:22-04:00'
describe
'4377' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMF' 'sip-files00000cover2thm.jpg'
89f70aa9913ea764689df64f3b5f3649
4bd84d805dbf6f36a3cb23263d624febd7bcf98f
'2011-10-31T12:13:19-04:00'
describe
'1055201' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMG' 'sip-files00002.jp2'
25a7ec6cd5db126ddb2eed4e617d2ba3
f957cf8f4b8b506eece4b339da5856fcc35a647b
'2011-10-31T12:11:41-04:00'
describe
'55246' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMH' 'sip-files00002.jpg'
09001d40f89b8c64bcbc7dc509360053
b4fc7b95b142f8769f9e16609c24d0c8cd699be5
'2011-10-31T12:16:22-04:00'
describe
'823' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMI' 'sip-files00002.pro'
aad8459eff73533882c98b42b697fe9e
27c18306f3a09d16d59f7e27f3ed1b864cfa4563
'2011-10-31T12:10:04-04:00'
describe
'14254' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMJ' 'sip-files00002.QC.jpg'
7a3eac52d949ff63d683b7214a77356e
4c135bb260bd195f4dad1d931973aab7debb648f
'2011-10-31T12:13:21-04:00'
describe
'8451621' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMK' 'sip-files00002.tif'
91b9a2dd4099a123ee491fcb26bed07b
3adb07c3a2cc188bb014247d938bf19f41966244
'2011-10-31T12:14:32-04:00'
describe
'158' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATML' 'sip-files00002.txt'
b809fe3191ca8519903de89c5c3585de
063b17591fd1f460c50234d5481e87faeeb68ddf
'2011-10-31T12:12:52-04:00'
describe
'3808' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMM' 'sip-files00002thm.jpg'
43a3af7cde87319d9ead2cc525ff69bd
eb63c40c8549110a90608fa93fef560d1f2840b5
'2011-10-31T12:15:46-04:00'
describe
'1144244' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMN' 'sip-files00003.jp2'
d56ff9d6c4ea5c0a7beb89c868cf169d
85c28bf02479853195efdd66d58dc63474a1b627
'2011-10-31T12:11:58-04:00'
describe
'48665' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMO' 'sip-files00003.jpg'
fb68cf4c0bf79685d0c4398103fdc252
af2e8eb85c1f5293d7c275e1b30d5a7c30364e1e
'2011-10-31T12:15:57-04:00'
describe
'4465' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMP' 'sip-files00003.pro'
aaa696f5ffe8353f77cdee3c91c4460d
e550a06c9e84583f2bfa99b825b148557088ce89
'2011-10-31T12:10:48-04:00'
describe
'12078' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMQ' 'sip-files00003.QC.jpg'
2888feb05e30c2fb425556aff18932c6
48e2ec8a84a42db48d072b46534a1a1ae4c57258
'2011-10-31T12:10:05-04:00'
describe
'9163975' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMR' 'sip-files00003.tif'
4b8151d16779a39b573b9468921601f3
34d6fc92024498e278e8a406478a7f1849ff269f
'2011-10-31T12:10:33-04:00'
describe
'513' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMS' 'sip-files00003.txt'
004b8a8e1e23c6cca4a7b17307bf9ca4
264c6cc69fed3fb0f1e4f86a0d6e6dda14eabdd3
'2011-10-31T12:14:41-04:00'
describe
WARNING CODE 'Daitss::Anomaly' Invalid character
'3160' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMT' 'sip-files00003thm.jpg'
1e5437eb8472901d3294fe2170d9eaf1
d32d406fe52b5306ce6e54a1a648f555341f8104
'2011-10-31T12:10:22-04:00'
describe
'1055199' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMU' 'sip-files00004.jp2'
97336ca82aeb136415736d7928a23653
2ad963e9a86d8c1e7709637f7aa6546d26626ebc
'2011-10-31T12:15:45-04:00'
describe
'18971' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMV' 'sip-files00004.jpg'
3b6c70632d0d52ae9c59bf529e5106fc
eb025983cefede67420bd7d4393031a173f48e02
'2011-10-31T12:14:02-04:00'
describe
'606' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMW' 'sip-files00004.pro'
87fd2cfd195c049794fdd5deebc5d620
b4ad0d190e93cb2cf9819fcebeb8cf74eda9c093
'2011-10-31T12:12:17-04:00'
describe
'4990' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMX' 'sip-files00004.QC.jpg'
756f8356a155c814e4228c7cf6d4321d
e6e850ad8683f32da6b7547d6f4f2a9755a432a6
'2011-10-31T12:15:56-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMY' 'sip-files00004.tif'
c981114e02e83b186676ba971eb46ce2
0e658b35c9a69e806bd7f4ebfe8a8ab7ddceb00d
'2011-10-31T12:14:20-04:00'
describe
'50' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATMZ' 'sip-files00004.txt'
1292a1057e195f64a1213d4d2889320b
95201832c8c59c96c28fa8e8c5ced266ebe37018
'2011-10-31T12:13:24-04:00'
describe
'1584' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNA' 'sip-files00004thm.jpg'
331a6cd5363eeb432c15de3b804b0712
df825d3f7c4a0142449b999bedb13d056ac00d81
'2011-10-31T12:16:04-04:00'
describe
'1062445' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNB' 'sip-files00005.jp2'
8dde92b635c6557180eebe8febfe9eff
cbb4b4807f7b431fbc92b8f046cad82711ffed55
'2011-10-31T12:10:13-04:00'
describe
'99697' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNC' 'sip-files00005.jpg'
0e6f260c257ccc44494f8fad55543e7e
2a91db4b480083ea1a9c247c9f18ab1daccd487d
'2011-10-31T12:11:05-04:00'
describe
'1559' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATND' 'sip-files00005.pro'
663078a002ccba04ad77898e0619391b
e43473336b56aa54f06e2e584b63764fd49c7672
'2011-10-31T12:10:07-04:00'
describe
'27579' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNE' 'sip-files00005.QC.jpg'
824101181ce4c92816303dc0967345f2
26254b09630e8e73a13ddd881236e9b9a3701473
'2011-10-31T12:14:10-04:00'
describe
'8509927' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNF' 'sip-files00005.tif'
338a21bae40549e5c6ada3a9053dca64
37316a56f3ab26f3e9199cc40336c9c807f90ebc
'2011-10-31T12:15:00-04:00'
describe
'65' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNG' 'sip-files00005.txt'
b3bb3b76b59ea9df6024c14013f7545b
a4fe8693e8bbb288a0c16f5451f49c36e4c967a4
'2011-10-31T12:12:29-04:00'
describe
'7824' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNH' 'sip-files00005thm.jpg'
2f1b6187db13231459e4a2a1dc4980e5
0bb6ab77a04f5484b67ba9686a18baca4c4bea99
'2011-10-31T12:16:01-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNI' 'sip-files00006.jp2'
874ec4ee98341af847cb24d84da30065
54c66a6965011d88c2470ee31296d50664912427
'2011-10-31T12:13:40-04:00'
describe
'93397' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNJ' 'sip-files00006.jpg'
2a9a096491813bdeb753609acd09ab04
b47689b03f4a888d47343a6b8c7e99c5e8bb92e9
'2011-10-31T12:14:56-04:00'
describe
'733' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNK' 'sip-files00006.pro'
7e891e6350b7091d0c25841fd6b41039
d19df2cb358bd2d40061a0d8c6995689083a31b4
'2011-10-31T12:11:07-04:00'
describe
'26791' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNL' 'sip-files00006.QC.jpg'
36e4e8437862a9ce1b82b3c993aadbeb
4d5045bc6244ae99ca2d18ca49a6782af1d5b256
'2011-10-31T12:12:50-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNM' 'sip-files00006.tif'
337b02dfc12fd7ead13a6eb54e1cc620
c3e33b7923498f37fc217deda744118d3fd3171b
'2011-10-31T12:12:21-04:00'
describe
'187' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNN' 'sip-files00006.txt'
55e6d41c6a1cf70df207f93ba7362c9d
704ae5abe95f1e30882214a09a40ed3f1745c5a1
'2011-10-31T12:11:08-04:00'
describe
'7775' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNO' 'sip-files00006thm.jpg'
b4e51f5bdc0a1338face1ecca25e372f
25c60f1eddffd5307080b70506ef1c4e6964b6db
'2011-10-31T12:14:04-04:00'
describe
'1062292' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNP' 'sip-files00007.jp2'
525918de503428c6dc9c0022b4cf1cf6
97f3f1f27ea3572df8d620b07e918c66d754db79
'2011-10-31T12:11:10-04:00'
describe
'25217' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNQ' 'sip-files00007.jpg'
6f91daaff012d69e5bff862e64bec2cf
bd47f5d938cc7c6e9002b6ed54486dda93f256d8
'2011-10-31T12:11:45-04:00'
describe
'219' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNR' 'sip-files00007.pro'
848d68b0858438f466ec8b7714c65f96
8d2d4c8d67d7e119216181ed5d33f24fa1ef0db4
'2011-10-31T12:16:47-04:00'
describe
'6494' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNS' 'sip-files00007.QC.jpg'
e321c25778f11fac790d6b7241166bdf
98349994dfca84f2b759386ace4e6255af29b450
'2011-10-31T12:13:10-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNT' 'sip-files00007.tif'
3de68e56a9339ff368ed39fbae2111e3
b5b37f1a653b2aa5dcf5e2416ef1797111291b8d
'2011-10-31T12:12:03-04:00'
describe
'2076' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNU' 'sip-files00007thm.jpg'
b24dfde8edaae03e66e5ce075eb32f20
4d5b2a5773e0d34a545896e571ab7c01fc562260
'2011-10-31T12:14:05-04:00'
describe
'982628' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNV' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
ca36216d8718ce9c42bad6519fe220d5
df336963d1a46ba935efe55b714726cdc73ec7b4
'2011-10-31T12:10:17-04:00'
describe
'25263' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNW' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
9172a9a4250a0b540892e01038f38685
a34efd24995d079dbf242105e1b4606dc6e08431
'2011-10-31T12:10:54-04:00'
describe
'2775' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNX' 'sip-files00008.pro'
dae97128b01a679e851aa90a2f2b3434
0cefab422cefd3b7cde865b2133a1e934eadba11
'2011-10-31T12:14:37-04:00'
describe
'6990' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNY' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
5d6c4d3f711117a7471577f480173349
183382d756e2417fc5a3f367e0621ac8dc7f5560
'2011-10-31T12:14:21-04:00'
describe
'7871601' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATNZ' 'sip-files00008.tif'
50b61798384d02500840740dafb3489e
ebe072fbb1f388592cd28b80761636e27029470d
'2011-10-31T12:12:47-04:00'
describe
'195' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOA' 'sip-files00008.txt'
2dd03b6fdf50e068da5847f9787bd916
48a604e29f7fd9ea4a8134cede5ccf929714d080
describe
'2664' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOB' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
abb6d8b5bdd068e88875ed598f52e01a
fe3466a2afc123ab045744905e0ca180d5c7434b
describe
'926726' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOC' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
1ec1697558ede685a246c10d595f3fe0
33a58f5ed17cb1c73ff549b79bcd1ea9218f5aef
'2011-10-31T12:15:17-04:00'
describe
'12554' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOD' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
addfc0e911c0e309be2dc907ad493f6b
925fed5760d5885b87f6b2e6c41844598a57091f
describe
'215' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOE' 'sip-files00009.pro'
b28d426e659c67a965bb323861fce3d2
d731f5eefe123a24448e6da7f240b77dc5a4926d
'2011-10-31T12:11:18-04:00'
describe
'3111' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOF' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
3bfc39a3cf8595fbf897c29e14335b1c
bdef45cbedc6f583667079e63ae8e48c8f148e7a
'2011-10-31T12:11:26-04:00'
describe
'7825559' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOG' 'sip-files00009.tif'
0067abd9667406575aca666c0629cde0
1bc4a52821ef570e263d21f041508f19b785fcb4
describe
'1214' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOH' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
f72f06c6cfb8c96528d348ac1e7e905d
935e5716cf0752a9b06759ddd25ed4069d611afd
'2011-10-31T12:12:15-04:00'
describe
'1055256' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOI' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
618aed669c82e0531210b90604f2a19a
dfc7465a05b41f6dcf1cec1c70083363b01a38bc
'2011-10-31T12:15:49-04:00'
describe
'36517' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOJ' 'sip-files00010.jpg'
80e0a1c73ef1143cd2f36b2e30a72601
339de7ff4b04bf807abbb26d28063443dbd4196f
'2011-10-31T12:13:13-04:00'
describe
'10314' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOK' 'sip-files00010.pro'
886d755b55c6873f0340529b91c41f11
15dcf487f937e8a104de4bc92d041d04f9a542fe
'2011-10-31T12:13:05-04:00'
describe
'12920' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOL' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
936f5a5799f27645ea2f6ed20142953c
193590888ea2c9cb1280f8d51ae9471b8a094b7b
'2011-10-31T12:12:56-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOM' 'sip-files00010.tif'
27af15f071668df4b450c314dae79a96
803bd177d9e8cc0106d4244870584dd2e7b48ee0
'2011-10-31T12:14:51-04:00'
describe
'585' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATON' 'sip-files00010.txt'
a1baabf49fefbc21b2b6928d2d7e6d20
53be946c4bb13cef501ce453d9b18da914f5c674
'2011-10-31T12:14:16-04:00'
describe
'4628' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOO' 'sip-files00010thm.jpg'
ce8e29e7950b62b19f899eebf9e6693a
389bbecec4be7f58a12530b33512b60168d51957
describe
'1062514' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOP' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
cbec8459e3f8e8e6d1d2a5618dbe75ba
6687b5ab446f12e74d634edf562ddcccb3cf60d1
'2011-10-31T12:14:33-04:00'
describe
'33384' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOQ' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
00381cc84e7acda066a259154cdffe9a
35ecf8e8aa5312cba84f143775400aac5d77ed9e
'2011-10-31T12:16:25-04:00'
describe
'11261' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOR' 'sip-files00011.pro'
a17e587619434481930beb8fa08b3876
a4333f69f892a9c49f04fe34d45475628192740f
'2011-10-31T12:13:22-04:00'
describe
'11527' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOS' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
b485f16834cbf320fe4676bc17d4cd59
cf0838eeeef32e8da8d309bc6b8103701ccd1fe0
'2011-10-31T12:12:01-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOT' 'sip-files00011.tif'
4e3ef31ce907a98149e0bab177a3c0cc
d6bf525d3c042205b00e959900a9e39c25de329e
'2011-10-31T12:12:26-04:00'
describe
'636' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOU' 'sip-files00011.txt'
d7922fdb36458729316ee31ac8dd1ac1
5a14eb1bdc2e2462a35a4a914289588756c9b164
'2011-10-31T12:12:24-04:00'
describe
'3878' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOV' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
0b1fe4a4029f422bb46218e6b83f4a40
03f5d4ef3c16adc655402a8b0d50ac7c1d17fbfc
'2011-10-31T12:16:05-04:00'
describe
'1055177' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOW' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
d82c5f359388e0c1ac4f58063a62256c
3c2203fe0dda473304d23d3b183267f47789d5d4
'2011-10-31T12:13:33-04:00'
describe
'75101' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOX' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
a257eb701a1283581a8a215654a130bd
102f55461435bea36f6e521a357fd5e79265f685
'2011-10-31T12:13:07-04:00'
describe
'23893' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOY' 'sip-files00012.pro'
4fff7588cf41371afb189874f7df6bf9
0b33c128058d847ba04cced8c4962e9311c97627
describe
'25817' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATOZ' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
a82f4348ce3aa59afca0ac12a1aef03c
c2c37f7832d4c09e750267d0b8a527cbeb4ff330
'2011-10-31T12:12:08-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPA' 'sip-files00012.tif'
b7609aad3191b6f4b9a314c35997905c
7bffa7052edf50a7311e92b5465481685985c493
'2011-10-31T12:15:03-04:00'
describe
'1020' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPB' 'sip-files00012.txt'
6ff9687424ffa0e3ec918a62f361aa0e
91eda0a4f2ddcf4133f052365217a60fad799349
'2011-10-31T12:16:27-04:00'
describe
'7434' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPC' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
f6e1cd89b08d99e7ca49ab660cc644d2
0c2a6c177167fcaa9165ce157bf1f91051a1aea5
'2011-10-31T12:15:04-04:00'
describe
'1062562' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPD' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
16a61f14c69948483c787f99f44ec99e
24261dbaae406e0f6f5b8c8319ebf8c52a527fae
'2011-10-31T12:15:32-04:00'
describe
'108172' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPE' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
15db0c9d98d3c113466f753782350d49
565f802c3aed6d095a0a2d64570a65db70beffdb
describe
'42714' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPF' 'sip-files00013.pro'
748564d1023d7644365c9eab876a9755
e3895713c4f85e9d2b96f13ab8d4e08adc8583d0
describe
'39825' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPG' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
291d55d2e43bf267de8731b5c5dc619b
0de23d92422b43ae1a27e91be59221a0a5cfecdf
'2011-10-31T12:15:33-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPH' 'sip-files00013.tif'
cf491a8354d2c11065a7426a3ba0261d
cff49fff2bb59f852346e9a3b98fdb04d5119a85
'2011-10-31T12:16:12-04:00'
describe
'1704' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPI' 'sip-files00013.txt'
87227353172fd731eb3738b4575bc1e8
b64ec29b89ec64718153035c9d9f462781e96a84
'2011-10-31T12:11:14-04:00'
describe
'10562' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPJ' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
45fc2c7f4beeee0f1f7fc088f3a16136
461b790c68951f481d7e2a22f5a7e41503131e3d
'2011-10-31T12:13:47-04:00'
describe
'1055238' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPK' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
06e7cd67a76e02c953ceaecb0db745b2
0aafafb83c5a918d0c751b1577b28bc053bd74cf
'2011-10-31T12:11:01-04:00'
describe
'103388' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPL' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
f21a9f6f073080595657744f35ee4c83
80bdbcc9016a21b6c59e90591a5eb5f05919d020
'2011-10-31T12:10:57-04:00'
describe
'41601' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPM' 'sip-files00014.pro'
d466cf254c9af2820fa6db959e8ebece
8c9b3ae83d86fa83c25c440a15ecec60c59c0340
describe
'36511' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPN' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
fd13582c6a8261282dc1ad9ce6224955
63ce847de5f2903b6ddf2382260a506e6ba12086
'2011-10-31T12:12:28-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPO' 'sip-files00014.tif'
7f17cfc556ee4e8df0462961fddf8df9
83dc48041f6524b304f4f47e1850ec4766f6e100
'2011-10-31T12:14:57-04:00'
describe
'1698' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPP' 'sip-files00014.txt'
51db22bc2fc64e8441c89661f1595b80
feeb554cc72c013e8779643ceddb4902f52d539c
'2011-10-31T12:15:54-04:00'
describe
'10071' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPQ' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
a57bf839527a7cb36af46f7b5fa00d8e
2cbaceba62e5e28228556a76c927d894e0c46a90
'2011-10-31T12:11:55-04:00'
describe
'1062529' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPR' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
92a75485c7074970c959f3bf17b695bb
373000bc2c6965a590db010902e56e2d0f9a4a6b
'2011-10-31T12:14:36-04:00'
describe
'110012' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPS' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
d358947d281b5df0f06ca3381ddcd41e
9c99aa640ba4f72334d9c09d087a68c891eff52a
'2011-10-31T12:13:32-04:00'
describe
'43912' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPT' 'sip-files00015.pro'
9459e2d4eb9d83660fb37bac23b966bc
84e7bae9e4d131de9e2e34047861a985b9fe2d78
'2011-10-31T12:14:34-04:00'
describe
'39564' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPU' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
5aebb6d9aba90514425fa08c93f54112
9877473b13f78241a6c60b97aa339066ef297509
'2011-10-31T12:13:27-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPV' 'sip-files00015.tif'
c99a967cf7af45230cb6ba5f903a318d
5458e292de825c1fb15ffbee9679565a8b452db5
'2011-10-31T12:15:41-04:00'
describe
'1742' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPW' 'sip-files00015.txt'
da4316e1114cbc6033d5da9e9d027009
d65e5eaf445b86f2b2764b4de380ec54c2be1493
'2011-10-31T12:16:31-04:00'
describe
'10423' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPX' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
287171e5eae52ed1d8f38ba73975d271
5d91015b63ccfc203d97957dec18b4b09d1e5ba1
'2011-10-31T12:16:13-04:00'
describe
'1055134' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPY' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
b74d2ed2430ac9d6e308eac0a007b7e4
d129edfa011c3a074f7deef77d30b3a9e0d2b434
describe
'105651' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATPZ' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
b4ae8eee2f00bd50595fed849765e7b8
e4b35124dabbb8cdea866110f69bcd33820e1a42
'2011-10-31T12:11:35-04:00'
describe
'43781' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQA' 'sip-files00016.pro'
f2ace8d8cce886d85422726f8364a943
0075402018cd24824814d130ad3753bc9687bebf
'2011-10-31T12:16:32-04:00'
describe
'38055' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQB' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
be6461ddf92d44bc3a21b8082bddb3e5
a6d6d64fb254a9fe553176822ec806f0cda6ed8f
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQC' 'sip-files00016.tif'
e41315276af9131a89e2230fb7cfc865
d4c14d08dfdf4941d200b006f5d8d7d767c077e3
'2011-10-31T12:11:12-04:00'
describe
'1821' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQD' 'sip-files00016.txt'
f1399f676e20d42321722e1998aa043a
9bf2739287cd87c1064f4bdd6307f1c413b0f4ab
describe
'10205' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQE' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
e985abf60766c57231ffdcfad2394fbd
07e37fa919096afaac76a43106f70f1aa1854878
'2011-10-31T12:13:31-04:00'
describe
'1062511' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQF' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
7016ecc35e1f9a10fcb857f691ad064e
0b8d9cb85f3554e8d86933e32383bfd1eb05d402
'2011-10-31T12:16:06-04:00'
describe
'108326' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQG' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
d100ed0f58d4f12a1fcd50381fc574fd
ea0c60dcc3fa4f6f90f26493a1c7eacfe20014c2
'2011-10-31T12:10:38-04:00'
describe
'44147' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQH' 'sip-files00017.pro'
5edd0cef717846e721040a66a345de14
4d9792f4517914fd087d2e832a5e386f922ec592
'2011-10-31T12:16:10-04:00'
describe
'39362' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQI' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
a2b827d5bb1f468c17935c4c919c0736
1e42656d041af7b65896c1e3ce03c2b2f141f35b
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQJ' 'sip-files00017.tif'
7182c360fe3cf26c654e83c2868ba0c3
673af8de79451949e575de17412b013159286e46
'2011-10-31T12:15:13-04:00'
describe
'1758' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQK' 'sip-files00017.txt'
f1afae6a61dfa8bf90eee87f4362d190
df7fe51660b56a7e9c8ce961a827a685a64624d1
'2011-10-31T12:13:06-04:00'
describe
'10090' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQL' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
c6e6eaa3f1a3c81cb08d65aeaa21cc4d
59ba2bbf7ac625a17d0d96eeadd382ad87c77c2a
describe
'1055257' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQM' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
fd2379f193f313c7b264215b4100464b
5fe04f401da9ba28e3eae8797e00ada948bfe060
describe
'104645' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQN' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
69fb1a516c067d0a4f1ad8df5631eff7
7c5e2f0d72d3ac7b66f74207bf3a81f348d87a40
'2011-10-31T12:12:43-04:00'
describe
'41982' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQO' 'sip-files00018.pro'
368644c454b2adf42a69ed6033092c99
9e87eef52370ad08eea2d81d11667b5ed6b93713
'2011-10-31T12:14:00-04:00'
describe
'36979' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQP' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
015012d67b08b1c7342a9f258378a003
e0e3322cf7b448fe473bf91aed1b5c3747baacc3
'2011-10-31T12:10:52-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQQ' 'sip-files00018.tif'
19846aa7e8896631d22bc375eccdd135
4dac9a748ca9d3d7cfcf2e6df49831279883991f
describe
'1657' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQR' 'sip-files00018.txt'
47e439d8f9d94cf702b46394ec2f52b0
96d03daf69639c7d3e13333efdfda10551467a78
'2011-10-31T12:16:19-04:00'
describe
'9749' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQS' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
44b718fed696bbb5ed93a46def91cd58
74c9ec4071926fafbbb378605c3bba81d720eb47
describe
'1062548' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQT' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
67b0d2e7868cc70b964f8c43ce8ba2a5
4e2a32be764c2f9a4434afd2c0a9c0628ea204ba
'2011-10-31T12:11:09-04:00'
describe
'76029' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQU' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
090069f04c10bf580650396bcf24e4b3
ce885fd1b3888e6b79d57312fcfe8d05efc0fbfc
'2011-10-31T12:16:26-04:00'
describe
'27368' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQV' 'sip-files00019.pro'
1f46b04b56fabe5ef573ca563dc8968e
4adf972c13ef203f1956caf1538962c36963ab46
'2011-10-31T12:13:25-04:00'
describe
'26850' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQW' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
04163d0d1b94800180f255d9d261e726
01106e72efaabd2faf374d59a7b2bb2cb426c527
'2011-10-31T12:10:14-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQX' 'sip-files00019.tif'
b4f8bf92369972efa3f93232eaf0a586
9fcb41aacf2e829d6b4d5da74380eb3036986a7f
'2011-10-31T12:15:52-04:00'
describe
'1148' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQY' 'sip-files00019.txt'
c971624f152a8e3dd6ed9cd9240eeb24
567b4a04446d42d863be1733c593dea482f7c215
'2011-10-31T12:15:48-04:00'
describe
'7286' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATQZ' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
cd315201657fec2a21cd52ae800dcca0
44561bc49030ba2b8f05e7e8fc066672786bd489
'2011-10-31T12:11:19-04:00'
describe
'1055105' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRA' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
52ddb5a671ca935b1bc3ccd11d30d95a
f4833efb42253d630f32b526f2854e54edc92940
'2011-10-31T12:12:41-04:00'
describe
'107644' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRB' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
0e840f467aa6c27fb9b3ab390a3a17a8
a0e62475e11409f7de32cd9dc929c920fe04300f
'2011-10-31T12:12:30-04:00'
describe
'42875' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRC' 'sip-files00020.pro'
f0ff6a8629486a17e5e8909f25af0730
8fa54ab90c850f86582520706256edad520922d3
'2011-10-31T12:13:15-04:00'
describe
'37859' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRD' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
5386bde283ba6802d1b23e659cb94d26
ca717390b562e535c3c2256e7ee7933eb6001ddb
'2011-10-31T12:10:32-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRE' 'sip-files00020.tif'
e80882e810d0b0fdfddc093aa3e085db
7061c8630f6d12517ee4f960663e1c5d316a5e0a
'2011-10-31T12:16:09-04:00'
describe
'1714' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRF' 'sip-files00020.txt'
66253d831081e46f8eb305f10d247f7e
3160394a3f3e395542aaa276bd43706df995c449
'2011-10-31T12:15:22-04:00'
describe
'10331' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRG' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
5e6e2942a04d6528d28c826168424ae3
f7ffca80fc6a6fd4b792ccd91f69d078a9decd08
describe
'1062505' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRH' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
5620beba30c6f42b4c8ca9ba31266f43
cec9413c7d60232a785cd828aaa468fc23477adc
'2011-10-31T12:15:58-04:00'
describe
'101069' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRI' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
66a449c4ff21d799ac555a0819a44645
75cd5ae23f50047d484b23d42cfcf31f43bea9ee
'2011-10-31T12:14:28-04:00'
describe
'40445' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRJ' 'sip-files00021.pro'
39087825ef8d55b3093afbbc908f7b5d
4edf3dc9d8530e2231642634615d3920fe7ca905
'2011-10-31T12:15:36-04:00'
describe
'36843' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRK' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
2f0309ef17c7d3b6f141be8e9016d316
7c17bef6d691908398a1cece80561046bce95816
'2011-10-31T12:11:37-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRL' 'sip-files00021.tif'
d45159eefea4e62360d6883c7a0a92fc
e0908f129f602c328a9b528751ff242122b4867f
'2011-10-31T12:13:03-04:00'
describe
'1662' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRM' 'sip-files00021.txt'
47878d2fdb5e579aa950d5dbde62bb77
87c0f56a0e52f457326eba4390073727f6fafb4e
describe
'10111' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRN' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
bdec9ff81c56b2c9456587241319aeea
0a30731066d4a4a06fa860204e292b1138317074
describe
'1055212' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRO' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
3e63db50c9c16e55db2720a41c9a8c6c
8d3836d9011c3259d3510e4342a2cfd2ddfe1111
'2011-10-31T12:14:58-04:00'
describe
'110289' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRP' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
982e0a610d0f9dbfdbba6d13f59f89be
f0528330a91344a475eef65c2b49becf111ad465
'2011-10-31T12:16:02-04:00'
describe
'45107' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRQ' 'sip-files00022.pro'
d810b35ab9d076af904e85dc9d8c8f23
b94f4cf66259a904b88c8217087b6fa7ecdf0cf3
'2011-10-31T12:11:52-04:00'
describe
'39319' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRR' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
061cf49852ad68e3acb70c6566be8b43
40d323903e3994461fdccaf770f49108edebb252
'2011-10-31T12:10:41-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRS' 'sip-files00022.tif'
a175b247544a9e6e86bac4ea99d864c0
5944fb8fa404e2f1c8646448970dddd3d195d266
'2011-10-31T12:13:20-04:00'
describe
'1785' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRT' 'sip-files00022.txt'
60bf018e85967ffffe15058496e8fb19
c5101fbfa92504fc29e2eb04d080ec846b70c165
'2011-10-31T12:11:59-04:00'
describe
'10662' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRU' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
ac6fd0fe9c93553df1ce0e9eed7b3555
8cd265598a1cdd356e3eee0c57bfb2398552ac30
'2011-10-31T12:11:00-04:00'
describe
'1062520' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRV' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
a4812f5efe7552a40569491ef3a845a9
ae6e6a7f98dded4bd68ac3a29ae7a9c7e60a9ea2
'2011-10-31T12:12:38-04:00'
describe
'108245' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRW' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
5d1c5525c439c27f22a6371d6e235e45
8607c1640613d996c31bf945f3a2449664c2ecea
describe
'42737' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRX' 'sip-files00023.pro'
06055c81f01ae54755cc9a10cbd316c7
1a9545eb5d3723a841152034ef453899f385d20d
describe
'38708' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRY' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
a73bd3d0e35f1a1deb466fc71ddbf636
c4fd4697eed119db9e7164dc6e02ee24afbc1ab6
'2011-10-31T12:16:34-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATRZ' 'sip-files00023.tif'
5065233e9ae7480b927a16b2515b45e3
f6da40aeb9e2e5015d3e68991aa1dbe24e830b7b
'2011-10-31T12:13:12-04:00'
describe
'1743' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSA' 'sip-files00023.txt'
a7cfc5ce66e5bde8d3495f111c26a59c
7e9f3fdfd452e641aaac062db6c1b164b3bfe047
describe
'10298' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSB' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
3d52c1001213594218636bd3f9764254
ef1a6b5720ea18ee1f8dcfddd2ca5811816447ef
'2011-10-31T12:13:28-04:00'
describe
'1055240' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSC' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
cf8a3b6df45a5ed509bc3b2c3c151cb8
d3e9e5958d85591a0b3a6ef68f9417fab45d8a07
'2011-10-31T12:15:37-04:00'
describe
'112062' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSD' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
ba7794dc86e69c29fe3abfe4c81c9096
b467e9e068f29d9e3bf5245b5d59dcd20ac7baf9
'2011-10-31T12:15:31-04:00'
describe
'44507' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSE' 'sip-files00024.pro'
869233d763f798ec70044e025ff92cd1
c2011efc1d73e304d0ae831edc47e32518bbbaee
'2011-10-31T12:11:02-04:00'
describe
'39121' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSF' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
2bd2e5bae77b4d7b7ce3e60b4c267652
7b198f24d92614edddb58819e1bcc18f98eafa06
'2011-10-31T12:16:44-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSG' 'sip-files00024.tif'
ec9bd8e4a829d7528fee71536b5fce05
2ab19aaba6c2e3f12b489b78feb580e8159d17e4
'2011-10-31T12:13:01-04:00'
describe
'1788' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSH' 'sip-files00024.txt'
ff8acc3d36cc8321e21555d092972b2f
fbb44a502a64ef162485dff2f9b86101d986b8c1
describe
'10496' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSI' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
2c0df4a814c29a6110ba5127d1438673
59be4935425e7132d5d640ce6ec2f43d4613a799
'2011-10-31T12:11:57-04:00'
describe
'1062437' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSJ' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
fcd93d7a8d80c4329199ef6ad97ded74
738d9ce152f12f17fb1cafe5e00de66cc5c009e7
describe
'101063' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSK' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
16aad007d6a7735d8028163fc168e6c6
6d584313fad4a048849dae115b53158ef5f72eb0
describe
'39913' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSL' 'sip-files00025.pro'
103bdaef72fdb8d973981355778248a5
b3dcdb84598655ee09f011b6cb51ffcd3bf332b9
'2011-10-31T12:11:53-04:00'
describe
'36799' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSM' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
e87d7c0ac04edbfd4a65f60f7cf5bf32
5955dc10b434235973c4ec24fc41f0185abe3a72
'2011-10-31T12:13:37-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSN' 'sip-files00025.tif'
66b6e7b7afdf116c7a6b595068a6808e
ae5639917d91d5bf9c778c1948ba1f72d285b891
'2011-10-31T12:15:05-04:00'
describe
'1645' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSO' 'sip-files00025.txt'
d07e99b3a31bae38ba5d6ad5dd92b8e3
3513319c3919abbed65285cbc1a7465f000dfd19
'2011-10-31T12:11:30-04:00'
describe
'10244' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSP' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
31bda1dab0a1220c3b11e118695bcc66
72cd79880d6aaccbb91df511071a770d7599cee9
describe
'1055062' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSQ' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
b8ef9da44ee2c310c72fa2fe957cbae3
b6015c1e8011d0ac65e5e8b88e8d10231a80f7bd
'2011-10-31T12:10:15-04:00'
describe
'53007' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSR' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
0e16a674f233757f2aa99eb1338b368a
60c6a4d8206554af90981bfa432f460fd1288400
'2011-10-31T12:16:14-04:00'
describe
'15342' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSS' 'sip-files00026.pro'
968b299287f613e44d866a8230590ef0
54311db1eff301df4a4c6634820ba5152604d3d3
describe
'17944' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATST' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
00a1025e13851c52ebb8f1a3fce8786a
8632544c4ea720670b97b7301ba20fbb29689f10
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSU' 'sip-files00026.tif'
43c446cdb921a9ede1bc995a98bc8aed
99597a56bbc3670a829691d2fffbc1d259dd30f9
'2011-10-31T12:16:07-04:00'
describe
'616' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSV' 'sip-files00026.txt'
dd2f564c2e1c996584b4394a34fdfbd5
7f287b1ea8a166a323b85232223ac66367bf8ed4
'2011-10-31T12:11:24-04:00'
describe
'5090' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSW' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
d9d8802f09f43cdad84272fcf65b7d4b
05baba5dbab5ad03bc369bf4affa98291d24355a
'2011-10-31T12:14:50-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSX' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
d521115f71825398ed799d870132dd6b
89364c90620ce5a416dc992e254f4683bcaa2f5f
describe
'75198' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSY' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
6940d7ba7cc03f794893aa34db7f6526
c254fdc577d929f9dc9e0cd5062b07a72fca3677
describe
'26593' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATSZ' 'sip-files00027.pro'
d5673ca645cd5b2e9e4e2ce2ae7b1fa6
159ecec49c4b4ed6749aeb5976ebaf8d5ad9e4b8
'2011-10-31T12:14:25-04:00'
describe
'26471' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTA' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
e46c221e5bbce922d5b8f2a32841a20f
d569404eea85188c4470a9f06140dd9374c1198e
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTB' 'sip-files00027.tif'
68a4aefabe54f41aacfe7735a942bb90
b076f2127b926edc7943f2006109a981c6a3ea20
describe
'1105' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTC' 'sip-files00027.txt'
616405db2ca3685ed618d06e175d8295
ecc379b652ce4f9d54bdab982bf2249e5ba931d6
'2011-10-31T12:10:06-04:00'
describe
'7271' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTD' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
bbce0340e97baf4b00e5926bcb5054e2
9f789fd6acecdaedfdd3cb66321b083f8ae0969d
'2011-10-31T12:13:35-04:00'
describe
'1055143' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTE' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
2b800175e42bf8fdeff9c7099c6feeb3
3359261958f707df365a409faee0d55c2dfd79a1
describe
'104793' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTF' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
5c9c930c48eb442fb270ef2b35aed725
acd3b4d65be74f17feaee059ed2a875f4cc6db72
describe
'42049' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTG' 'sip-files00028.pro'
c59301b3ac0b99b33613994a3006bf4f
9efb81206a5c9a980c4a2c8d64d707c7a50de1dc
describe
'37825' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTH' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
f49c471121ba30864499d1c09d34116f
5d0c38743e8d72144bda863cdb48466fdb111fd9
'2011-10-31T12:10:30-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTI' 'sip-files00028.tif'
cea4a39746b21bf467a7fcbc35e55cb8
6518cc0e854cc31f312fd938de79c6b2c4fb7a59
describe
'1694' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTJ' 'sip-files00028.txt'
8c439c5122f18982e0c7cc28086f65d2
b11b5168e2f055c0080f20693614d93a61858959
describe
'10239' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTK' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
e33b9fc279d3f52ce6e533df4de3029d
4e7e5ad41446018c30e24c4f3fad53fddab565e4
'2011-10-31T12:10:11-04:00'
describe
'1062552' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTL' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
1b23980f23adf573d33c260166848b96
1ad90b8d2acd42c5ac65381cecd7e919ff73c244
'2011-10-31T12:14:19-04:00'
describe
'106444' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTM' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
42009b4ec66bf38c60c426697754538a
bda73aeaba5f2db647ac3d4af9d370b1e9cf8ca4
'2011-10-31T12:14:44-04:00'
describe
'42208' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTN' 'sip-files00029.pro'
56afa540c2205c51100cadfe98a60937
4ebd2b0c6e522f41f159d5776e7998e506cd9b2d
'2011-10-31T12:12:22-04:00'
describe
'38896' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTO' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
a0bce0ba9f8f6406bfa8ceaa64550c5c
6219d57f97237b45c6b9aac2563f411a480fe4e8
'2011-10-31T12:15:16-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTP' 'sip-files00029.tif'
c5eb7e33299977cc424dcb654469d003
4c28c6a14e8376b9d7afbdc5eb75460a66d17bca
'2011-10-31T12:10:45-04:00'
describe
'1675' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTQ' 'sip-files00029.txt'
8e33b3db5eb934dabeb060fc7da29f6a
43a91fa018a6112b3e63f793f8e41bdf92923f21
'2011-10-31T12:11:51-04:00'
describe
'10212' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTR' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
7c0cee6f1b430da58646bbb73f13e7c1
48a1f391d0f294b5f9523c5dac4bdeeb6f73a452
'2011-10-31T12:12:44-04:00'
describe
'1055060' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTS' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
06790d75c90d05a68028d082f16d1964
b1a214b4c026de7089c743ae15355c28bd15089e
'2011-10-31T12:10:29-04:00'
describe
'113242' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTT' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
938bdc7125b065a502003ec0ac43d8fc
3c814e38c7d5f462013de1f3cbc928cd796cc95f
describe
'45554' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTU' 'sip-files00030.pro'
cb551587bfa03351a07a3775b975cdae
e833507d01551cbe7f37b47f70e81bfcbb7ae14c
'2011-10-31T12:14:18-04:00'
describe
'41115' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTV' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
ffbe23ae87d4fb18ef074508cfee29a2
1481fe2dab06b79b664fbf15bbd4b2c5f48eea21
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTW' 'sip-files00030.tif'
55cb7b4ec0fa1bf46a5a1f74d180751f
88fe3679df3e4f80f73e62ec739bb6a32fe88b89
'2011-10-31T12:16:11-04:00'
describe
'1811' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTX' 'sip-files00030.txt'
204c576be018bba5c12545127edd6ed9
64f15965004b9db346705c732e5977b20e2bdef6
'2011-10-31T12:10:08-04:00'
describe
'11020' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTY' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
306894b5de9f2d6310207148bf6a148d
c8801753bde3f979718633e9b44b73c132b4fe06
'2011-10-31T12:12:00-04:00'
describe
'1062497' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATTZ' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
04d7965756e09abbda4b9108022c23d2
77672ccc3fdf52cecee0c6fcb33153179a9e6269
'2011-10-31T12:12:06-04:00'
describe
'108266' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUA' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
ebd7fab74816014d2f948fe7f60f5093
518b66827acdfe6b030979b477340ef28f2954a9
'2011-10-31T12:12:13-04:00'
describe
'43785' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUB' 'sip-files00031.pro'
5df7092e8d25e51591fbf48ab585264d
af9073acdf73caf985d45cc0918a81553868f0c9
describe
'39414' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUC' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
d77a7c9bc06f67802f4c0de3473c3892
bf5c231765aff168cc1573533b65393374212bcc
'2011-10-31T12:16:15-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUD' 'sip-files00031.tif'
7a7662c4c988158022be4e6d7e18a291
19a36e3ff443852750b36642bf337b27884551bf
describe
'1764' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUE' 'sip-files00031.txt'
9123fb2ca94077e6960e064bbb66744a
7b2d6de056fd63092a0a84508ee8e6f09724fa18
'2011-10-31T12:13:52-04:00'
describe
'10750' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUF' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
762711fd130f7561420479ceea280633
fe260cf4bf5645c1e165540c47423fb37737a313
describe
'1054995' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUG' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
504d7d7ac472b3324af064356f19543a
86733ba73fc9d5d88d7d4d1e799489f5c0feb767
'2011-10-31T12:10:55-04:00'
describe
'108392' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUH' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
bf6c5b528bc5d05e9b48172a6ad48f97
dd8ea4f3a3665f09b29cfa75a6bab0eb9aca4437
describe
'44373' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUI' 'sip-files00032.pro'
19a28d8e2c0229ff3a055f95d6046561
e91d9b9dfd9eac9385ececdfd72fde179ba273a2
describe
'39589' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUJ' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
964c42fe0d158a2d414dfd7f5140ebcd
188e60fe32ad555d59074adbca87033bc9d01240
'2011-10-31T12:13:00-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUK' 'sip-files00032.tif'
3e64f198483e5f73a64e26cf3bda757b
86057ef2b30f125247878b72ce147e853914fa19
'2011-10-31T12:12:02-04:00'
describe
'1762' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUL' 'sip-files00032.txt'
c24a7dc44d347e1e7b73473e63bbef88
f2fc43be81a90ff0b89eac324ccc3cbf598d874b
describe
'10713' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUM' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
182d17a15c017105a55948273268e693
dc4ca9a33456924edc3d0b8605c2375af3d2c6a2
describe
'1062551' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUN' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
db9b666116655a432cefd7f5f07877ad
c531cb5f54f3455e9e8e8517aa097aa00d29790a
describe
'108404' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUO' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
5b71db6956d3faf65505e092d6435f83
1ec05000f897d406b9d95df724852866dee41e47
describe
'43969' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUP' 'sip-files00033.pro'
9f1cb350049e256cc0270e64cd24d87b
5904863923f17928f6c2cf339a986e51e3f5cedb
describe
'39312' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUQ' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
f430a57687ecef687e1e040ba5a31de0
431abf16fdbbc0b8da190e3fb81c3cf374ee31a7
'2011-10-31T12:10:58-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUR' 'sip-files00033.tif'
bd69d17f4da732a9a6de4a1f38e42307
4964ba26d156fc1bd5b94b71df31d7d3ab00536f
'2011-10-31T12:14:31-04:00'
describe
'1767' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUS' 'sip-files00033.txt'
8386f2397894a4eb65657cd9af914170
eca3fc994231f67511072642c9d5574bfa7d626f
'2011-10-31T12:10:28-04:00'
describe
'10324' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUT' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
352e9d04c50d6901493f8a49d4af59be
295dc524714c4414f0d28cde3105326e99dc50dd
describe
'1055250' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUU' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
89715fb0bf93e723b3593ead28e9e1d3
225342cdc15de254e9c89e763ac91b91cb0ec093
describe
'108296' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUV' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
3ba14b0189833dfee92cf1b022021988
61770f6c0e9cee7ca1590609b71b72e22a93a7c6
describe
'43882' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUW' 'sip-files00034.pro'
377c821f01f78937f518c86547e0917d
50c96db34fd88f2aa564d477e09635909313627d
describe
'38688' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUX' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
3acd2d4a51ba67c011adaa6632404532
488d459e00713e45b814f2a2b67793e89cea6094
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUY' 'sip-files00034.tif'
95543a740ce0ca0ad65e937db56c947b
8f1f6f27823fa92c9a6069e1a59f2aa426dde8ae
'2011-10-31T12:10:59-04:00'
describe
'1756' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATUZ' 'sip-files00034.txt'
95b9ebf6a5b312967150bcda15f18137
14768f6fd1838b14582e6972215dee4788c61deb
'2011-10-31T12:15:06-04:00'
describe
'10088' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVA' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
ef00120c29446f64aeffad113101a328
0f180c67e680b1bc0a837ca10df1cdf49de9d0e1
describe
'1062516' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVB' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
10e465e99ab5d9301db8b467d42cd601
beca98b83ad3f2b1c0723490af411bf0a728e20a
describe
'109143' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVC' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
9576de480b6e135055d38de7bb5dffc1
844902039ed34c24d10560ca7f2208b5267fae83
'2011-10-31T12:14:53-04:00'
describe
'43583' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVD' 'sip-files00035.pro'
f96350a3544f87d8955a3d8b9d19fd98
7fa230d5219ffde23c571062a32e03f7f2afc8be
describe
'39306' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVE' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
fc5a0534daa305d8027566481f31e173
12ff4d0ea7fb7ce88c19b46ebae9eb137aaa874f
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVF' 'sip-files00035.tif'
1cd1090b9a3ef5accfb702996533461b
d7cd3a7a1a26ed728081bd427b023d894c5c267e
describe
'1724' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVG' 'sip-files00035.txt'
915f97f2fa89b98d18f933b75d84491b
8c55af009ab4039449c3ca920c6545bb9312eff8
describe
'10568' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVH' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
3086064d63cec81ac4fd0eed37e31e78
2fe2eea7392bd04b425737a263b00a1ede976b77
describe
'1055147' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVI' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
4a7481067a451588aa228ab4974742ee
0e8e7b87eb07a752ead2ba544065ccedf4d53192
describe
'105824' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVJ' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
1b6a3b1d058666642e25ae8d70f75842
54e0226a398d1e9323c6e802ca5605e45bee048a
'2011-10-31T12:14:11-04:00'
describe
'41725' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVK' 'sip-files00036.pro'
1dcc4816dabcf16bda737419738fb230
546a6680d15304709f10a7e810a37062c88b45c5
describe
'38038' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVL' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
715f32054fffbfdd9998daaddb5e1d80
112ec25115a4f36ac1095b3388aeda124909aa58
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVM' 'sip-files00036.tif'
48fbc319660721e0fb49aadc3bdbdfb0
7574b6876450e6eff0db6a06f695a0a4fe5f51b1
'2011-10-31T12:13:46-04:00'
describe
'1683' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVN' 'sip-files00036.txt'
d036e00190828b30a885e4fb335c9387
ef87b83eb263ceafcd3d46a1a5229912b95f04d7
'2011-10-31T12:12:20-04:00'
describe
'10728' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVO' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
95b5a0cbc6500405d46744d6fab0cd2a
ea81a254eb4c08b7178e848aea4162be3ee58f57
'2011-10-31T12:16:38-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVP' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
f7264d693d6bec0a0133952ddbf017b0
1c1c60bcab8234fba329f5b45da856315fabe610
describe
'67729' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVQ' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
445a8cd0c1c06de36f40a2aa3f1c068d
05e9107b9f8a9cf1a71b3e81a4c9c31f62bfc80f
'2011-10-31T12:13:26-04:00'
describe
'23828' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVR' 'sip-files00037.pro'
fc7a08252dffecd35577f228b8d9885f
ffcc8577d72ca58537b3bf03f265760b5ddc490f
'2011-10-31T12:10:46-04:00'
describe
'23699' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVS' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
41241af518e21a13af011619ff1fa26e
0359b128dcd63cd785158b6331ae344433f71513
'2011-10-31T12:13:09-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVT' 'sip-files00037.tif'
1e3983a28ccfa8c232a4d2fcfe2cdbda
f205e7bb719c060320cb59cb8f51c9b290488234
'2011-10-31T12:12:11-04:00'
describe
'950' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVU' 'sip-files00037.txt'
1dfac74d52eb7e12e368e5a2d2b71b20
3248563ec27ceb0a0fdf551565aa4ceb36a40b7c
describe
'6872' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVV' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
fa7f50b0e3f7e13dde191763a52e3a21
45561e2f3422bae8af9c26e62f76d08ab0a0c519
'2011-10-31T12:11:03-04:00'
describe
'1055246' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVW' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
060ba66642319c0fa9680c0f5e0a99e3
2702884671f5514c2aedd4e5eb2ff9741451ab3f
describe
'80080' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVX' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
30a3a18adfdaf3db638f3d2cf8505c4a
a54e6e490884ef42237986302e16e7a20f90c882
describe
'28297' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVY' 'sip-files00038.pro'
bc9a4e64f26508a55a1196e42560490a
49adab6f0613ede209c5c60918df3a0712a23b31
describe
'28205' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATVZ' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
e08c089ecc2948d6d84fa66f27fbf745
2da4f0f3c3fff2ef06559b16d07b3d3e7473134d
'2011-10-31T12:13:02-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWA' 'sip-files00038.tif'
587004daa7ce84ed89f13f724bc94c5e
5e44460187053151fe7bc4a12cedd22038aa6629
describe
'1192' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWB' 'sip-files00038.txt'
5e7401d3bd3501ade8cd34806c6f2298
eec0e852e31260b3388ffeee9083ac7624407e1e
describe
'8090' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWC' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
30734f51da56ba0d3de6b4e2ac33134e
946fbcb4ee8abe96c7a945ad4fbd7d256aea018a
'2011-10-31T12:14:03-04:00'
describe
'1062493' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWD' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
ed35bc76f3822ad0980fb169f28f136b
6cc15e784bd929a68dd2f31f42360342321e94e8
describe
'111532' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWE' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
e8bbbc9ee7f63a9b6647730fe940214c
c59122c79ef03ef7c2caf93f1ce593cc1d25070c
'2011-10-31T12:15:11-04:00'
describe
'44526' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWF' 'sip-files00039.pro'
1818d60710bdc4784259c2750e0b5b13
3298037df3b331e15e4c1e26a6b2e044cf9f4659
describe
'40219' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWG' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
21b52e53b9db330053dafca6dc25c07f
96c42f95e82dc2dad0d54e533bcee966442699a7
'2011-10-31T12:16:43-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWH' 'sip-files00039.tif'
40397641112f2136ec84d02c1719ff20
ac5ed83673f58d11f691a19c3002ab510ee83c2b
'2011-10-31T12:15:35-04:00'
describe
'1754' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWI' 'sip-files00039.txt'
5b719212b8a9ddec2ef72061384dd4e2
298a25601ab2cee0c63eec694f6debfe175e839f
'2011-10-31T12:11:32-04:00'
describe
'10621' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWJ' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
ad48baf5e899d7f0e9c11609d37ce5ea
83519131cba8d750f92e95d63037b18fd6d2b092
describe
'1055182' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWK' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
c68fa0f91e980fd653fd593af59fc777
189c17c8474455e7f58d86aef913edc6e7c6973d
describe
'109316' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWL' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
e7ebe6fa5981b6847d3448a21129a190
b8ba6c5466b4e82c6beec5d352cdd008a27ee931
describe
'43350' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWM' 'sip-files00040.pro'
59b0f8428330385e90435c25f73174b6
ee3eaf9fe8ed88bd74b4e4d355d44f9322942a73
describe
'38801' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWN' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
1afe851a92472446e12865476e7b0ef6
06f984453a285e3cb2580ed1b079160193bf7ce7
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWO' 'sip-files00040.tif'
61f1b2d0fbb26e6b0557083369a82c36
7d6e690b7bf4adc5ce08a40c3d6220c6ed73d558
describe
'1760' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWP' 'sip-files00040.txt'
0521261ed87e8227ccdd0cfdc0408311
f4f049c6c920011ef16e2f8c61971257d5cd40af
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWQ' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
1b160a7202f7cab57062974510e19cfb
84901c598972bf4f8a259a559401dd0f0bc869af
'2011-10-31T12:12:40-04:00'
describe
'1062527' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWR' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
1190196d91ef6aa3003255d695814aeb
960e75def1efdf8b9b18036adc025db810793313
'2011-10-31T12:15:50-04:00'
describe
'107588' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWS' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
c08d09ca8bcbe364615b666d24b067d2
76fca8dbb06ca0f5d423056a1cfbe32df5a4d5e5
'2011-10-31T12:15:30-04:00'
describe
'42425' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWT' 'sip-files00041.pro'
5873233e8bd370cd68d66be7dde0f462
3281017017b3497d86c8de0ccf4fd8893cec1b33
'2011-10-31T12:11:50-04:00'
describe
'38882' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWU' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
ffb4d92903571a1415120a418a3c5ccc
6149fec032aff3ac596a33a3c8c4601e9fa7ab54
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWV' 'sip-files00041.tif'
dd269a758302c7d48cddc09f0d9c69c2
1bef42b997fbe0b77f03e650943694bc1ffbfdfb
'2011-10-31T12:13:42-04:00'
describe
'1681' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWW' 'sip-files00041.txt'
42a200963f2e68faa7b28fea7116afeb
1049f2cf9fec6be2f390ee3044fc0b29314f2385
'2011-10-31T12:11:48-04:00'
describe
'10417' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWX' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
dfc49d2cf721b127db5a101ed0ac1a5c
aa50947148fa6b4d87f80f1765c26e609df983ff
describe
'1055107' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWY' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
2631942b27a42b7e60826739b09274fa
e1efcd37169df78609ca509036f2e8e39bf30f20
describe
'102962' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATWZ' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
b8ae7883597d292fade1221a4e67d283
4d82b897fca11bde0c594c06a177e3909947e100
describe
'40458' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXA' 'sip-files00042.pro'
7fe10e98b0bc3aaaf4778d0edf986ed3
f35e799fe8f1b28fbe3fd7903e74550035f69af6
describe
'36196' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXB' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
145509f37fe5275d51018860f9e6bb22
93fcfbc63a8786ba77c9c3370d8a914cccd4f9a7
'2011-10-31T12:13:04-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXC' 'sip-files00042.tif'
d8a36994674aee6cb3a9e290c745f36e
8fe69e5fae7c8f190315466403b175199aef1d9c
'2011-10-31T12:12:10-04:00'
describe
'1631' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXD' 'sip-files00042.txt'
de899432b99e62096ffe6c4f083e8096
e421636cc285847ed05b8ef22bc9e8ee25710cee
'2011-10-31T12:16:17-04:00'
describe
'10130' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXE' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
3d34737e82a625ebb4129cac1d4a304e
e8a594c300f9fc9e0fa2cb31d4dd9edec76a67ee
describe
'1062513' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXF' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
ac7a48503b2bf7179d819ad328d6296a
6f80522a352e749b1a297d8a37bcd2e076d9f4c3
'2011-10-31T12:15:39-04:00'
describe
'106314' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXG' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
a61b10f85c60c4b90001aa43a9380375
ac2f25bbbb6e6f43338e00050ee1f731c9575648
describe
'42651' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXH' 'sip-files00043.pro'
9a9302b97ec65734c52486fa4c6b4ed8
968f8e28d78f17a3168aa9a756d3865507abdad1
describe
'38203' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXI' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
af2daa8b5dcd9b5d9c07dfefa8ea47b6
851d006164c94b699db5a3d31e3f38da01821ad6
'2011-10-31T12:11:46-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXJ' 'sip-files00043.tif'
89407c7d3bc2e234b1705ed6b428eff6
d0cf317b69661eaaa9adb2159f55ba6745a1bc09
describe
'1693' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXK' 'sip-files00043.txt'
7ceb50068b3ce49c6f2ef86ae0a943f5
16248ad1c3111b7f582f72ba77686d2be40d559a
'2011-10-31T12:16:03-04:00'
describe
'10185' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXL' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
e2f41d98d58e7951e24bb04a91e92830
4ae6c0abd9f0793627573c66d07e214d556f7f89
'2011-10-31T12:16:40-04:00'
describe
'1055151' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXM' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
ffc5d498bab83204ee8cf3a8ca3e2d29
72b7b0ca6a2fdd51f23858dd8fb2151f1defae82
'2011-10-31T12:10:19-04:00'
describe
'110818' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXN' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
ce0872ffe159cd23e054be80121601f7
cd10063f18661028ab64f25993aa6886c632a2da
describe
'44237' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXO' 'sip-files00044.pro'
70fa677b271a336f8de28b30759ad2ae
6b09156830b0af69f89c52bcf4fafd277b0fdbd5
describe
'39108' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXP' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
0a2c3515ae37b23ac1bc5d095ae31a61
90e931c634c6ad579829e66aa2405df1453eb6ba
'2011-10-31T12:11:15-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXQ' 'sip-files00044.tif'
8920760fb3685118ea7ad74491547364
7b8ef1f8533fe63b9ae97c1c8340f33ac522fb3b
'2011-10-31T12:10:50-04:00'
describe
'1752' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXR' 'sip-files00044.txt'
68960c68b0f393cde02e4df10a35b375
2654eb48be0869e94e9c94ff887f37130cf3ff07
describe
'10847' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXS' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
5144629c033ad8f63622f9cbcbadd46b
a57da41506a20b8a28c55ab960e82798f5c2e428
describe
'1062495' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXT' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
fe88721bbf865c5e78d5fda931854943
efe7b0a45a8ea6de50d932abe84ce2725055ff26
describe
'101659' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXU' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
c6c151258b031de968d5845cec349feb
bee0e17deed3b9577635b10c4de3c99b170a1343
describe
'40177' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXV' 'sip-files00045.pro'
81442e5d1ca937211b803d528c27259e
df039490460b91df8d90acb4100aec2228a2225f
describe
'36966' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXW' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
e5567aa08cc7e989ddd409959b7955ac
99c6573adbd6b3b48a3864e7b9132ccb4bfe9981
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXX' 'sip-files00045.tif'
930c878f02400a69832abe0bb9762894
753955a641cd9058c18934f50ec14b476d334927
'2011-10-31T12:13:14-04:00'
describe
'1617' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXY' 'sip-files00045.txt'
54584c57400b1ef58f618a7ef409ed47
2bd560fa3fdd7700b627d0b31e8f1fc86f3e7620
describe
'10153' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATXZ' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
aa70026da9ae7243686a47b3169883d6
442d0ec36e2a2e3c84a3e560aa6ec8e45b27f2a6
'2011-10-31T12:14:13-04:00'
describe
'1017997' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYA' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
5ba24335bf719b74d370d0a4e6ec3a07
232ad2d1f56add044d967fbda3a4ead4d16ee22c
describe
'102930' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYB' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
3cc0cf878b81718713d9496d77604730
19186129314d83528958d7f6ed4ea9a00d5047b5
describe
'41577' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYC' 'sip-files00046.pro'
2c2f658fda1332b997b277b2da93054a
37f207fc2aba6aada829cf67e50f0305a4836ce4
describe
'36627' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYD' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
af7a7c93bd9d3fbe61b74d572ab0ccaa
feac9c74de83a542b0909b16ce5fbabb764c5f76
describe
'8149747' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYE' 'sip-files00046.tif'
9dd323fd849619c991c53275a0e107b8
80ff645b525ac917907dbd4111bcd0c12f2945bc
'2011-10-31T12:15:44-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYF' 'sip-files00046.txt'
6953ad1a3597ba22f4434129c8d53d1d
e9bd81d7aaa8a35f516d0f54cb363ddc0dc08538
'2011-10-31T12:15:23-04:00'
describe
'10901' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYG' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
dfebc62952bec889b8d222082f77c7b5
dafc15ffb62f749910d809569600460db779bef5
describe
'1019963' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYH' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
f348e36dc3b3a0bc19d9901295c00de0
3f4a9d676f64e990b085f729376d2b6c705d21ba
'2011-10-31T12:14:59-04:00'
describe
'105425' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYI' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
60a12250e8e3799b3560bff428fe71b4
12d69f32eaa12bdc650bdf32ed6351a09fb4ff10
describe
'42819' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYJ' 'sip-files00047.pro'
abdae7e80ee6a168efda22c0b35dbe80
8ea8c75eb09a721c5eeed2d9eb31a9db5a799f15
describe
'37887' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYK' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
362e3eb88e5624dd5b7a968daf9cd63e
29eabf0c51eed3068b124d8a32577d7cd7cf77a5
'2011-10-31T12:12:37-04:00'
describe
'8169621' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYL' 'sip-files00047.tif'
e704aac4fc74e64459a885f92f0ff80b
6ea7c8ffde7edf92177b09d047e3a6fc2d66ae47
describe
'1700' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYM' 'sip-files00047.txt'
767ed98da84b1f1d4bb9ee9e92d38546
b3ed9ed5430ef6f988dc03c465f5f9f95b7d7de2
describe
'11256' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYN' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
95a237a0e2128d83edf471786378a037
23349b8d80c254d9fa00019e24266b889d7ca613
describe
'1032887' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYO' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
baadc320db9734a884eacc42378a83f1
72b537f1a16da10b34b2ea14ea28ef5574bbf13f
'2011-10-31T12:10:10-04:00'
describe
'108408' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYP' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
20c254dd06eba83783baacd7aec38888
d53d3e10db699f6d49d6f32fd4fc6ed00adb09c6
'2011-10-31T12:12:59-04:00'
describe
'44288' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYQ' 'sip-files00048.pro'
0946deedb8f1ed0dde656f39f0707f64
0fe278951e649b49d4d7daec5c8d7f737ff200d1
describe
'38630' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYR' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
a283d6f28546acb426df50677d7c3ea8
a319e7d61b953a35481aff0e0fbadfaf5b50bbaa
describe
'8272709' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYS' 'sip-files00048.tif'
7bec59c2db12ef69873f243846028b42
a514835d0f5ee4ecba9df33be6681911b279d8b9
'2011-10-31T12:13:29-04:00'
describe
'1777' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYT' 'sip-files00048.txt'
6f58d31e7c9e45e96992a3c5447092c2
40070948c49d686c3d78b4bb33549d1255d4e0a5
'2011-10-31T12:10:27-04:00'
describe
'10746' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYU' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
1ddde86d9f25e65a225218dd1c89458d
7e88683187e6ee6f9b55b6f660ebc8f49d954d0d
'2011-10-31T12:16:23-04:00'
describe
'1020003' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYV' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
f8bd9bee17719f726b8dc68e64b8af7a
7971614efa2eb99a6cb9383e181ba4817806d0e9
'2011-10-31T12:14:42-04:00'
describe
'101900' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYW' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
2463a9de0fc7fc62ba145a2589c6b9ee
1c05a60f89402dfc22da3115a041633b730da275
describe
'44493' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYX' 'sip-files00049.pro'
f1786a6c653aba1330e7184568a8b2a8
c76bb085e0960e303cdce0f1fa7edd7ba0028778
describe
'36853' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYY' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
42e37c9024e030dc4e8cdcc6de1a7986
403baaea3a6a0f4b6aaaf8b764bd02bbc8c3db51
'2011-10-31T12:14:06-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATYZ' 'sip-files00049.tif'
baae78e6fb56b2e7b25252fb70c56a71
93ed3a96fa641000bfc73a9173a64f12f676efe2
describe
'1772' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZA' 'sip-files00049.txt'
95be04eb11213e1084b6e2e7582775ec
7ab2a07ad523a8d11f17e64195229f0fee24c4ba
'2011-10-31T12:14:54-04:00'
describe
Invalid character
'11034' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZB' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
d7a78a337e6e6fc43fad1eef4eb57eb9
67cb555d7641a0b190e1963e92e352f0700cff15
describe
'1032870' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZC' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
18ca24076b75e42de5c805445989ada8
da5151c30005308d32faf4bd055f51316bd5e175
'2011-10-31T12:15:29-04:00'
describe
'99027' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZD' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
a907527e07f34eca8f6010fbad9383b4
5b4da1bc72d27b36a2f1ea7ecf89131a3d1d3ade
'2011-10-31T12:16:28-04:00'
describe
'42066' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZE' 'sip-files00050.pro'
65f83cf9a6dcd47db7bc6446ec0bb6a8
924fd7ced6554e124549e94231395a85eab084e6
describe
'35662' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZF' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
92f9f3d96136aded9c950c496e51832b
9dac69ace322b8d90df3070b7ef1455bd270a26c
'2011-10-31T12:11:38-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZG' 'sip-files00050.tif'
67164046c25fbf3d970eb40b91a250f1
c2d9f18d1af7bae59235a45a0e89f6aa556ee08d
describe
'1731' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZH' 'sip-files00050.txt'
f97f523cd3f5dae2e3b7ce24628ad231
d8a21f13bfe22f39ab866d20c887073243548db4
'2011-10-31T12:12:31-04:00'
describe
'10089' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZI' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
544f6ae80bde6ce315fe427d0f391b5a
7e741c67a0f542ab2e9b5ed7c7460475cfd3655a
'2011-10-31T12:14:48-04:00'
describe
'1019998' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZJ' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
77d0d960d434a09aef976f3af25fbd24
cf1b6214cb9f6e00f66d90b55222449529b13240
describe
'95803' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZK' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
805b8f90134a2f9b239efc6964029bd7
911aba370c60809a4f028937c6ea7edf642b2394
'2011-10-31T12:15:20-04:00'
describe
'41289' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZL' 'sip-files00051.pro'
78a8bb9352b57589be5a4c5ccffcba2e
64b314061b7cafedfd202f08032726c691160b8b
'2011-10-31T12:16:37-04:00'
describe
'34902' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZM' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
fbb64e60a0f90c9c8710671c72cb0a40
8b1726151ecdcd236d0a9e7866e4c0c0605fd803
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZN' 'sip-files00051.tif'
1c1e9f505f236fed11ca468bc572467a
901fc29b5c9e3d5cb8e7d1b3ae2a5686c8c6d96e
'2011-10-31T12:10:09-04:00'
describe
'1689' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZO' 'sip-files00051.txt'
2fc72ffcac4e0e80ef1703664d4a5aa4
a2add79d52d1a701dfc1a143c1ed8b381a11c217
describe
'10559' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZP' 'sip-files00051thm.jpg'
c1c20141e1e2efc4e2331c3d1efff787
de956258c89457e1feef1c1e89f66934cf600731
'2011-10-31T12:11:47-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZQ' 'sip-files00052.jp2'
eb41537e58767925c13a95d1e9293204
feabf991a2af9bf8962e1b96913db769ac42f059
describe
'103160' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZR' 'sip-files00052.jpg'
95fc58a919c313f2af0b74e73c07ecb9
882148ae92f2ce26e1c225098e7958596ceb078c
'2011-10-31T12:13:39-04:00'
describe
'43715' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZS' 'sip-files00052.pro'
7175c840b17d17fa79fe7d60358ce2d8
6ce90bd74a244e6c217cb25518341ccfab892a3b
describe
'37390' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZT' 'sip-files00052.QC.jpg'
eba4baf4643e8d51f1d25ba5d6f8bcbe
17d5ce51d808e5caf94adf1374c2a708481a6077
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZU' 'sip-files00052.tif'
9616045ac6af76cb1e7fd4a64308e2f0
2e496ba258a8a3d27608d7bccea8f743af5d09c2
'2011-10-31T12:14:43-04:00'
describe
'1795' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZV' 'sip-files00052.txt'
f566447b029daa43f1e683935e76ab65
aaef136543ecaf17634c2ec33ff2d2b683f4302c
describe
'10366' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZW' 'sip-files00052thm.jpg'
2adaec7c28a8ce1811eed8e881197c37
ad84259e824ab1e16e554f1d7321abd036d11b6a
'2011-10-31T12:11:04-04:00'
describe
'1020005' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZX' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
f9c05146d43ff93fd31b4bdce3a55ca2
025d27025d7127dd992d0c68c3c6a78287516c06
describe
'103228' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZY' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
9313f3db1a3acdec62e83c86569984e0
69cbf1f5d00afec9279dd016d77bb14ae0543bbe
'2011-10-31T12:12:18-04:00'
describe
'42912' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAATZZ' 'sip-files00053.pro'
401c151b42915bb6acb5f19e30890c10
c40a62d758844c14df0c32faa785a92be93379a7
'2011-10-31T12:11:49-04:00'
describe
'37066' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAA' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
a6b1022eeaaff3e155bb41c48a9f3cc9
f0c78dc01c8515ce6ff7fe659bc16649bdcf40ba
'2011-10-31T12:15:12-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAB' 'sip-files00053.tif'
2173c00aed3e1560f20b684adc8617ef
75b73f551e9a5ff0929aa6431dc01563c7b8895c
describe
'1737' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAC' 'sip-files00053.txt'
34f6990db8e4ae57483dd661db7fb71f
f840af51d9ffabdad88f02ed4c9d983c767c9c47
'2011-10-31T12:11:56-04:00'
describe
'11009' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAD' 'sip-files00053thm.jpg'
7ef0904cf5d9d8a28beb8a66a18efc7e
2894d4190b8efd724e0863cba6c49b3086b92b39
describe
'1032860' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAE' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
05168e158180ce4a422dd6d90a8b87bc
0bfbf7de864ddc12f1c320e0418c3b99c9088d4f
describe
'65967' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAF' 'sip-files00054.jpg'
4406ff4a3e2b6d05936a30218dcefd08
573b35a651c797b5613e9160e991a47686ea16c4
describe
'22822' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAG' 'sip-files00054.pro'
4369ed8de71941c5cb51edcf1b20d443
a6d57d1676a9a1afc4753814fd484c9f0154649d
describe
'23184' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAH' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
9a3a42015320473baa34c9b81d43ad5e
702bb93dfaaa6211391a1a32004c2bc79990bd7f
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAI' 'sip-files00054.tif'
54ed240b3bc4fcb92ddb067de2f6018f
92c58017046e48e08c033f028b5c364b09b4c038
'2011-10-31T12:13:38-04:00'
describe
'945' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAJ' 'sip-files00054.txt'
cddd22d1ea2f2ad36d69d0ed046599b5
a881dc3a9502d9862413b881cc7e30e462e70745
describe
'6831' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAK' 'sip-files00054thm.jpg'
945c78af7495336a08201e2535ed5067
7279a7a6c62581a16449b9e7550d31fdd00de69b
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAL' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
578f697068783d520e84d7c2913b9a72
11bb425247f8d20a593676435c91260c70016d94
describe
'69843' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAM' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
f88b56070a6aaa08bb67d51fd6de5d54
898d99da7d98956b873d636dd1a56c08a6122e58
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAN' 'sip-files00055.pro'
8acb1df2b0a1cfdd1537e1e6b8d98b88
5ab55c4fc0744889148042e77e6772cda328409c
describe
'24496' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAO' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
155974537e79abf3a1bae95076264a3b
44c8ac5b6dc2f65fa101e5c631babc35cf42e79e
'2011-10-31T12:13:43-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAP' 'sip-files00055.tif'
0661304d99dbbe9f7ccc83e1900cfaca
01a977cbfa785975b21191763dda10ecade516b0
describe
'1104' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAQ' 'sip-files00055.txt'
8803cf2435d76b9658e93f9029dd0450
0c46d98257a3c7b31008985532d6d3d5356d23cb
'2011-10-31T12:12:27-04:00'
describe
'7607' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAR' 'sip-files00055thm.jpg'
0b6e8579ae4c9b88971a09999fc75a84
11d4dcd45cd81b7a418e5df9f17a7c3b77420d10
describe
'1032896' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAS' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
022cae11615421c366dd6a8aa63de08a
12919fd131e607fd8c0f5948bb2447252dbdbe1b
describe
'103001' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAT' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
9c8baf328895c12a877fb05d03c6badf
d6d22e40689282592eb8f4afa3809706490d4050
describe
'41055' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAU' 'sip-files00056.pro'
9e87e20dcc0078660165c1c554529444
40f4220c0f98751ab23496fc20a8eb4f8915aa49
'2011-10-31T12:10:39-04:00'
describe
'36790' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAV' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
59e426c149196abfd85c9cec7e552bc5
5b716420a70a0a1a2f9c3f58a2120b9521e0d2e0
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAW' 'sip-files00056.tif'
dd66ff87f6f39fd31092107997263aec
30c022ac2196234a52d87515a3d76beb36dd4054
describe
'1656' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAX' 'sip-files00056.txt'
ad82aa8cd03822ce46a2231c3832bde9
bd792d3bac280119528cf24e98b35d27e3b2173d
'2011-10-31T12:14:29-04:00'
describe
'10250' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAY' 'sip-files00056thm.jpg'
4dadbd541c2c423b811dbdd7603e9e26
1dcc939c01352d2eb0069052dafd78ef9453fb77
describe
'1020002' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUAZ' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
27e2134af3e69a777d1477771e690642
07c388c8fecc003a07c2fc4cc6032f187a94008d
describe
'103489' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBA' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
f060da3994948e22288cde22c0f03148
fc55a866b395399a03690c217b7819fa687e0540
'2011-10-31T12:12:39-04:00'
describe
'43565' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBB' 'sip-files00057.pro'
d757fa2e4c563cdcc15a9fa68adea542
58d4a0d7ef119d0452a6dc6e3455fe38f4d1eea3
'2011-10-31T12:11:43-04:00'
describe
'36982' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBC' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
ad1f03c495bc19af71076b24e70aa2fb
666d675d8b7f4fcff5aeb9b73f49edfa8f5bec7f
'2011-10-31T12:15:07-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBD' 'sip-files00057.tif'
6283084174cf884bfa6736298c8ee312
dcc2af316cb768dad6994d95678d3dd9ee6f182d
describe
'1749' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBE' 'sip-files00057.txt'
e9ce653705f6e67b9cae64a30679c2d3
4efb428f18be977b7e924b4d3a2a49e3da6bc90e
describe
'10447' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBF' 'sip-files00057thm.jpg'
b5a5bf063607bb791d9482b72fda4a13
db0e2df08c4bf285a3044b4361264ddb138e3a56
'2011-10-31T12:14:09-04:00'
describe
'1032781' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBG' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
13602bcf13d50443200705d890fd4d0b
67bf10606af4e88b6b3f892ec7cfffb4dcbe9f78
describe
'105608' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBH' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
ca5e152f6a10cd2d0294ce1d7548d9f6
51eb934262dfe02f529b0483a26e0476e0e3c381
'2011-10-31T12:13:44-04:00'
describe
'42933' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBI' 'sip-files00058.pro'
7c8a8c655554d615120973452f465020
1637907374646f90220397f9160eac42c61aafd1
'2011-10-31T12:16:42-04:00'
describe
'38140' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBJ' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
a2099c07e019b443463b105993c1ac15
0f88ae7c82d11905a7666b1e99f3656ba1349627
'2011-10-31T12:10:18-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBK' 'sip-files00058.tif'
6a277990388b446d637c3393280da2fc
b87e0ed94ba3e1c188daa302cf22c6b780ccfdd4
'2011-10-31T12:12:05-04:00'
describe
'1725' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBL' 'sip-files00058.txt'
91ca02f728a2857abc7b5db199aa9e94
c3005f19605fc4623fca850b07742c92d22bf199
'2011-10-31T12:12:53-04:00'
describe
'10677' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBM' 'sip-files00058thm.jpg'
e338ea97088919a25214400ab1d29c06
910c896b025b9f20c57e71c2ec672b9564c6d7f5
describe
'1020009' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBN' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
bf304bb4846762f8de1942645283198d
4dd77cd72b33fdb92fa9684175f88a413bba0126
describe
'101541' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBO' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
a7a092dc068c3b57048cc28d7f4ccede
a565bf165e1fcbcfde45529e855322f304e2ec5d
'2011-10-31T12:15:34-04:00'
describe
'42181' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBP' 'sip-files00059.pro'
8289f194bb41c4839bb77b9b59ddab03
54a88306c65a2c6c3369b402f6d9fa4d618c0067
describe
'36106' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBQ' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
337d37d0f7adba951d2b8e20f4453c33
0ec2d696f0efc509bd62c797742d0745474cf151
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBR' 'sip-files00059.tif'
f6948bc687fc90580abb4e4ac9508e38
1e8959ba66d4a8b26af7074d3c0e1f6c899c8f26
describe
'1671' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBS' 'sip-files00059.txt'
3a28ec816991d9a9674fa83246512cb6
466ced723bc7539c1843b4671e14a43abee19864
describe
'10955' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBT' 'sip-files00059thm.jpg'
8514945300a7d8e73ec573ba40c482c1
fe4804758dd5a16f51bad808e2071f829144d6ac
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBU' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
cba098e0139cbe9ede5b7fb841e64b6e
5aea288db9d7fa6d379f5e04a5db50594ddb2405
describe
'104124' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBV' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
e26720b0810d2cf3d1e42be97a8f8552
321e22274a780ca7763cf6ac5996ad13f7a3c8e8
describe
'41285' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBW' 'sip-files00060.pro'
8077538d13876e5b6f96c7c8072c5a3a
d60599505840f64d36eba1f78cbf8bf0e26e2c4f
describe
'37396' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBX' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
10285442554e8d63c1e814748648c2fb
dd2d8b26dfbeec66445e78661c9ed9a72aa1ece7
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBY' 'sip-files00060.tif'
179841576842a7b997b3d84d285b99a7
c89db25f73499d2ad3191a6b8a347d90533cc8d6
'2011-10-31T12:11:27-04:00'
describe
'1673' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUBZ' 'sip-files00060.txt'
c57c4ee74d7fae00ff9955d30e501239
77d60360953883b1daef20e632651e5b0990d094
'2011-10-31T12:14:23-04:00'
describe
'10255' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCA' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
6fccb0b00e83a608a011c4b7180358c6
454787871016059d618f303f3926e3bacf6615b9
'2011-10-31T12:16:20-04:00'
describe
'1019975' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCB' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
734908ae04e723ae23a4e3a31f2db640
ac2b3ce7ded0dc3b9ef341a7652d9abeb8900d48
'2011-10-31T12:13:11-04:00'
describe
'105585' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCC' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
0917333c0ff8696138a268972beaa271
11da784d2a4274d13ed11a05970ffa0337d269ab
describe
'43476' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCD' 'sip-files00061.pro'
12c721068739e998b632b82fe4d73480
de63b3ceb9e456d45a42ed70345b3a8f6ea76d56
describe
'37833' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCE' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
a0e69babf60cf098392338ef2ca783d8
f30585c0fa027cbd334545d8e95abb17e0147e11
'2011-10-31T12:11:34-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCF' 'sip-files00061.tif'
5e1e03254d3b6137db793d491ec18c81
dd15b28736589ed2e71eb3f791349d0755b6b49a
describe
'1726' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCG' 'sip-files00061.txt'
1b635bc73c0bc3d582754f78dc9dd4af
dbb94ad3b07850e835bfb12d14f2320f49d8f37b
describe
'10870' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCH' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
1df622c3722d1606b79318da39291640
73bf12fa6b77fbc63e57560573d95cbcb2fbaf15
describe
'1032744' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCI' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
dea84cf6849569d479bf364890c87080
0cae45b4df15287ff50b3d0d97adef2ea77ec1fa
'2011-10-31T12:12:32-04:00'
describe
'101473' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCJ' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
db6cdea68b130aa0ce57f430bba36556
da8a927d453859815efac9d0332bc1e8d1903ef7
describe
'41172' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCK' 'sip-files00062.pro'
e5735c92ded052551fbd6513ba3600e2
4fecead4c4027b5160c28936cd3eb0890fb189b7
describe
'36925' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCL' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
659574160695ddde1826819fa7b141a1
62ded049be7f5038770c4f4e4ea048f662ef2a4d
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCM' 'sip-files00062.tif'
fc1088ee02d8633d92f64d6f6177b876
2671d13553208dbb0d68c5b5bab9c5da35ce1bd3
'2011-10-31T12:15:51-04:00'
describe
'1707' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCN' 'sip-files00062.txt'
51954e9dd05b5cb434b5242adf3c00e1
ea44ce90e5791bb71a1e5cb7ad2210eea7bb02ed
describe
'10388' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCO' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
935671f5081b46382b4126e43fa070ac
1ab70b4382f0a4e55854c5ea28d2a396b4f78903
describe
'1019946' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCP' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
37d463520f0ddb5cb01d0a2746060479
d86c84bfdce2cdea28f1ddc5c026051ee5b983e9
'2011-10-31T12:15:28-04:00'
describe
'103225' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCQ' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
6a24c37706c1657d8f4bb499211cd356
d7c49734bcdfa5084736d14a386f3ec4ffe728e8
describe
'42016' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCR' 'sip-files00063.pro'
1df8d6b098dee2f3c09c8b64a797c201
c0d864ce0f1597ec4b0578252d03d14c5ea9437a
describe
'37032' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCS' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
aecc7401b9c28d64f6f75c24612be552
bb6a6382bdacd943bb9b79b77c68c66773f523c8
'2011-10-31T12:14:30-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCT' 'sip-files00063.tif'
19738879395290cda62c0074f0d97df2
ca78208ce4acff71602ff790564052ddf7ec0317
'2011-10-31T12:12:33-04:00'
describe
'1667' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCU' 'sip-files00063.txt'
063a878ee56e9cb9a7e619607f556578
9f8013f839c133b69b49724a6563ddb5be009fb9
describe
'10514' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCV' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
8b24cad9c809ebee53f691f62bd88f17
b5eba94fb34529415d5c02c0a0f2fe17c88c59b6
'2011-10-31T12:15:21-04:00'
describe
'1032878' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCW' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
134dc655883687df33094674df4614e4
07f3a902b503bc53a1039022403c8cd6e57e4299
describe
'105629' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCX' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
c8d408aba6b0d217ec7656dae8785cb0
d8cdad5704c7be0e645d549821ae853bd8b98984
describe
'43605' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCY' 'sip-files00064.pro'
fbf49e05610cd042d06140ca6ac46f60
41731783df9ec5072082b5d3dd8301ed4eb513f1
'2011-10-31T12:12:35-04:00'
describe
'38298' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUCZ' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
182c43889753232489e869c134ada594
532a1f2c46151db154353a2e0619c247aec203c3
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDA' 'sip-files00064.tif'
63117d12ce66bea10ed47dc1345e5cea
8170e308958f378473768b4a09783038f0cd3daa
'2011-10-31T12:10:53-04:00'
describe
'1768' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDB' 'sip-files00064.txt'
a5bd71fb8ab17b656c921c19cf1d67b3
903af0e5a987b79f34351828378be5fa1dba4626
describe
'10566' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDC' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
32cd3fddeb99ed3343619decfc1b527e
7d1a5275b25a6e6776e0874fb9a92bb9f855e46c
'2011-10-31T12:16:35-04:00'
describe
'1019970' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDD' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
a3aa39fa1499cde398fb0354e317659c
5334012c4b8e40e770da01e9b4a6f8a179880076
'2011-10-31T12:11:33-04:00'
describe
'107235' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDE' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
1112db2b02fe5b407e151329755412e4
71bd02fa62bccf21427538e6a75ec1c3bb2950b2
describe
'44766' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDF' 'sip-files00065.pro'
54056822158c0797346c9e3594592f65
74ad9a6b1dc44e12f7eb9bd14151ca754be4377f
describe
'38242' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDG' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
10b3cb28352c05b4af703b8c796aa778
af57eb672f2387b909c10ed1d35423d1254579bd
'2011-10-31T12:13:51-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDH' 'sip-files00065.tif'
e20a91a8697a3c2fee424ff2520d9702
d95321f2f575859b86f23b1fee2bb437d6477e26
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDI' 'sip-files00065.txt'
4395bf336e5442ab8273d3420b30cc69
11dfad741930fa7a3d4ee3c84a231704b1ea23b8
describe
'10988' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDJ' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
11e8fedee2da8b34b8fd563ffc6fd84e
f34f723914c6db759e6250134adf3b997a4c098e
describe
'1032895' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDK' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
97e2993902f572628d7a0e8b57e24751
c4f4cbcc131d36c758c5c6ee2cb0131c761aee09
describe
'100498' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDL' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
0cc0fd84da16a4ada50f5d8d134c51be
6084a7f189f3dc14d4829a53883c344925204949
describe
'40533' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDM' 'sip-files00066.pro'
35b52c29e5d158491a9224cfd25b0c33
d84b7e014fc235cdcd0c39e18a7915f4f7eb995c
describe
'36442' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDN' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
82f2d16469bdb278cb54fe8529d6f610
3cb99ff51c4dd2aa9e7f0fe397772233ff1c7283
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDO' 'sip-files00066.tif'
182685c396ce4ee3b92a1343b3806e81
231dde7de3b4d8acf4310bc7b90672f09745a768
describe
'1642' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDP' 'sip-files00066.txt'
24560a970585d4bc2e9d0d7373107f30
86fcfea76a4508727ba39b6bb4f726e114b9cc28
describe
'10546' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDQ' 'sip-files00066thm.jpg'
66b8a9b9f307a77ae6e8b781aa7bd587
854c58dfb37cba67c759a8c020f38e0d0779c1b9
describe
'1019978' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDR' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
eed46a6be3982d8d5d5a075d91009a1c
12e2ecd2fcb8ebedc4d54d4eda530c97f259d6ac
describe
'101898' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDS' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
0c354d602052d412703bda2ab6951450
aecb31a39885aaf8db231c77eb5559b0602a37b3
'2011-10-31T12:14:40-04:00'
describe
'42123' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDT' 'sip-files00067.pro'
f7088332b27cac89d94c886926fdfc26
cb2cdc96a5845f4894d5388e26c74026da405fa9
'2011-10-31T12:15:01-04:00'
describe
'37084' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDU' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
722decd762bb5724b86fbcb0dde9da69
873c7db3e63e4e23cacde9020cabffbd1943a9c9
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDV' 'sip-files00067.tif'
bc503653e41f7365d86af8ccd527d017
a7dc4665f4b93bc5a2258bd8ed1749355bac82ba
describe
'1691' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDW' 'sip-files00067.txt'
d9f960b09415bb58547138dcd9997209
47e6e6e562a84e9c636c891c9dc02771bda5859a
describe
'10953' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDX' 'sip-files00067thm.jpg'
2e51639886f8f999c57b922c73a18ac0
0475bb2db2b4085939e445faaec32ac1e816d099
'2011-10-31T12:15:09-04:00'
describe
'1032832' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDY' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
86bdd7bcf4510e6a7f6b09a0dec5e4d9
42408845e2bab475e4f9fe524f8b44ad1d7bb6c5
describe
'106139' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUDZ' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
1074d1ca681691b73f5ae6d8e7ad4f27
2012517dfcea8cc8af5f10cec1c7079dfed10a13
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEA' 'sip-files00068.pro'
d39ba58a72990fa3c0a4baf4ba3f1967
b93e5d40da2fdc27fd9f8634010c043455ee978c
'2011-10-31T12:14:27-04:00'
describe
'38564' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEB' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
78d4e6da44cb2e8f12ad64a0daa315fa
9923ee85916325f0f767d39fd0262f493ac1da17
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEC' 'sip-files00068.tif'
761b15c5a1ff75582493146b6cae4480
20441e475cc8b6e36626e1824b820fdc2fb1f49a
'2011-10-31T12:16:21-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUED' 'sip-files00068.txt'
8515ffa2e4230db28c600e6e946578c2
20488fce6214cd71c5ab7063d8eaf1ba34d6a646
describe
'10723' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEE' 'sip-files00068thm.jpg'
9206e978e3875a39ca1ac34aa9ea2792
c179361e583f81a36f589e0d3e4ec145c90621aa
describe
'1019980' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEF' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
7297faa8cbf6149300f3e4bebc8d024c
ff289a2d10bfbc985a268f1be20285c2871b2f58
describe
'35436' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEG' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
7136dd1a78302d907b5305aa5c7998b5
5f82d6478333630b384cad60bb8f327d43b85484
'2011-10-31T12:16:36-04:00'
describe
'10039' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEH' 'sip-files00069.pro'
1340e20a8202e7699efcc37cb813b4bd
a8aac725012776385ae11e11c669f497265ce3ee
describe
'12227' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEI' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
3deda69a212fa4972ca317314740f58e
2a69c29dfdbdca622727c84d329dd136d1188c57
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEJ' 'sip-files00069.tif'
1390854726f63651a106ee0e9ea16f67
78b02dcd360fb9932db9f3e5960b2a37f90fc4a0
'2011-10-31T12:16:00-04:00'
describe
'413' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEK' 'sip-files00069.txt'
00f2982173b58724197f6c40c5e325b8
bc6119090ee671b16ea9cc68679edc8ea4ee05f8
describe
'4087' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEL' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
1c4e96a710725bdb68cc10bca6c37554
265afe6e9d55a4f22eb4a591e688f9c32f54090a
describe
'1032903' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEM' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
60c9a143c47982e1a19b3aa0b8dc1b3d
93556fc3e3062ed53356b613956ef71506fc4f42
describe
'69181' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEN' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
3e93488da845f202fd48368578177ea5
94e90ffd9e42a35cf9d4ec950a86ec2c8aea5224
describe
'27848' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEO' 'sip-files00070.pro'
41efd3e3e4d9904a150303515f8b806b
df7e347f0dbce55e13529526f0e8d1c70691c9bd
describe
'25396' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEP' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
001ddd3c55705dd6ebb3b25aaf2f14bb
942064c4ca222cb742fd2ffc0374f2ffb63e601c
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEQ' 'sip-files00070.tif'
e9918256e9c5d7fcd99f4c6e4a9f07d8
3e018657669e2aa7a2d85f809b3a8b3c7b20a92c
describe
'1143' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUER' 'sip-files00070.txt'
d8dc31372cbe09b39c6a3c92f26dfb6a
102582b4939d8966603405a5b372636d48d7cce6
describe
'7463' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUES' 'sip-files00070thm.jpg'
5b56e4f787b1e8182713f6fbb73197e4
6af72ec9aaf6699a535bf77de1f8b9e6e0c8aec0
'2011-10-31T12:10:16-04:00'
describe
'1019867' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUET' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
f415e18e75644c039d1eff0b6ef30ea0
c695259c2d5be22d932bd529af950bd25569e8d9
'2011-10-31T12:10:51-04:00'
describe
'105069' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEU' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
8d4dedd028bf14244d3184f6db8d4336
fee46bb73e17e77f2d9e5ea2da597a64fd23faa4
describe
'43666' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEV' 'sip-files00071.pro'
b90d6630fc56e6e41fec158db78e7a99
146643a73c201e2e4b05ec8577040924b9b2a694
describe
'38181' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEW' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
cc3e548a4a64f62ba2ff4aee06a33d9f
760432dfc92a6de5e8e9d36dc0000475378d309d
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEX' 'sip-files00071.tif'
2a18b9a9110927bbc6b8b0807c8a47f5
5dd6d586f346fb6f4b1e8b6a7c6704a8bc62db56
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEY' 'sip-files00071.txt'
0a90d5b82c59a53c2c44cb5a783a9f62
9d1a584eb2ed5bdb7a30954d0e42e72efca8c1b4
describe
'11441' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUEZ' 'sip-files00071thm.jpg'
32905a30370f428404c7415eb83b9bde
a00bc8f56768bcfee73051859ddff92f683f3848
describe
'1032892' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFA' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
54372033505348bac98db1db63ba06ff
136f1165f16c3bfc8691ec69150d5c9cadde5c77
describe
'106512' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFB' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
bf519f22346530873a9e536d1abb2eab
09c1aa7d6e7575902260d1af976a0863da815a25
'2011-10-31T12:10:31-04:00'
describe
'43911' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFC' 'sip-files00072.pro'
8fe42b2ea8ab97b020524f92796930c1
0fdad7d5127473b0a9cd51af9a72958cf80a5968
describe
'37813' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFD' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
3ddc018e0987fe890871281ea8ad38c4
030489f2edb93884033b3d36c68eadcb589f23bd
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFE' 'sip-files00072.tif'
eb64c747b04b0e249eb2a397ebc3c02f
6609682688d6989030a72174a02c1692c14298e5
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFF' 'sip-files00072.txt'
d288b995d9ac1b4ac62a88d91fae1b88
571fe77b94ef64b1b766c3914422675f50a50564
'2011-10-31T12:15:55-04:00'
describe
'10622' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFG' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
cc426690ffb2fbeb1c6cb9b5697d617f
66548dbbdf764cc41f4cb548dd727e26830c3347
describe
'1019979' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFH' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
71bb7290d40ad5bcacd7f04a7f00337f
10ea4f020c67d02afb5146fbdaf03196edc0e16c
describe
'100520' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFI' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
8ba94e4889e8cb3ca0b326120cb2e768
a4d7c6d7649f590c02849346d77ee5e5985f0385
describe
'42120' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFJ' 'sip-files00073.pro'
dc6aa80e67289f42cee2a26978727025
528826b8a334e9a538293c754e7392e6158dd121
describe
'35898' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFK' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
118eac866d88260b1ec8328eabaddced
58f321f065244aa4f7079e2268b12c6f7e764a66
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFL' 'sip-files00073.tif'
52627229bed0046ade045f1e345365d1
b073813a19483987e5e87f03429a1dd6540318ba
'2011-10-31T12:11:16-04:00'
describe
'1695' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFM' 'sip-files00073.txt'
f2a30f300fddd81d940e8c7028cf6e81
3249f969fd923fe8100f498a2eb8ba98006a03f5
describe
'10681' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFN' 'sip-files00073thm.jpg'
1c1461523a81157bbde683e814a59806
d64b9a0e0ac12959d820514268255994fb882a8f
describe
'1032856' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFO' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
1119f591c9ab5d719bd7cac61c3cd72f
245c7d752515c0d7b087d53851699d1c6b7006a2
describe
'102657' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFP' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
baaf13d506c9003550d45ae848288ad1
9a2cec77001891e2f0d46b772ea95c365464ef32
describe
'41883' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFQ' 'sip-files00074.pro'
52a685d12683ee39b9d4a99cd4988c06
5a2f436c00ef551a8c4793b0e23324b0e51b1a3a
describe
'37079' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFR' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
72296f974c9559019c9a5e462c19cc5a
030fd44655adc98dd6434faa4586fb5d8f184f9a
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFS' 'sip-files00074.tif'
9754338cc44d8c2e954226f570753aaa
6ba9223ff27a9d5364c5980341a790a516bf8c34
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFT' 'sip-files00074.txt'
b5f1af04d0f14541247af045188496e4
481b7fca127acf859d5adf99a3bfc22a39293b62
'2011-10-31T12:12:25-04:00'
describe
'10373' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFU' 'sip-files00074thm.jpg'
488987a67c7403013d3c5f33eb646fb5
0e0487b54f289da1e2a71a1f1706427e36d91de4
'2011-10-31T12:15:18-04:00'
describe
'1019881' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFV' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
0012d360264a89e6a8ba2780cfc48302
bab3fef615fb56cc469b9c7d355be639b7a46d8b
describe
'103807' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFW' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
aaa7179b38ab010d6b416241c6a9874d
acad93b7f509c2e5d91cc03be24c11583b005861
describe
'42775' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFX' 'sip-files00075.pro'
66a4742cd1855b5844eaf395236287bf
e9d725ed88126f8fd3d0203f5e3b80c1c04ab3a4
'2011-10-31T12:11:21-04:00'
describe
'36806' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFY' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
cfa3d277519c43838574ca99475e171d
2e7a60e32fb32c14154ed112d4ea5f4806bfa3b0
'2011-10-31T12:10:36-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUFZ' 'sip-files00075.tif'
059b07d0dd1324fa7f911e66414071c4
d02702e64cdc628aa5fe3006d727e3fb1665f4cf
describe
'1719' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGA' 'sip-files00075.txt'
2b59ce6bcfaa29bc792e21ba9f9f1f0c
4eb0d3f743db15be6a262d7f607eeef95d251404
describe
'11037' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGB' 'sip-files00075thm.jpg'
f1108938b96162d3374424cf13f9158f
612f9bf33072f026876cee9840d829df6f3e184c
'2011-10-31T12:13:17-04:00'
describe
'1032897' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGC' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
eed94d9a435a3dc560cff68a08d3d89d
64a140a270efa80ba88ce43b18f38565b79f62af
'2011-10-31T12:14:39-04:00'
describe
'103188' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGD' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
9f5d95ea0d6353669af4427d1de5f12d
f9128333acd1b83bc009a22f104df2b0e4e3d1f2
'2011-10-31T12:10:49-04:00'
describe
'41018' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGE' 'sip-files00076.pro'
0f8ed01fb359a9449bfd374c641c9e6a
b7670e5203b193b6f9b98d95f28b24e9cc16c4e9
describe
'36353' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGF' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
dfba4a0be2b6a83120827a6bbab88c10
763a0d1147e473a72aee75d68777688e627fb732
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGG' 'sip-files00076.tif'
4265f43c164b8fed4c58eb9b1f23291c
28b41c677010786b1259f45003f82db97d3ee4cc
describe
'1676' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGH' 'sip-files00076.txt'
a6d1773946430361a4253cc562b634ef
dca3b1608ea65dac65d752615738218177752bf1
describe
'10410' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGI' 'sip-files00076thm.jpg'
533146808bd6d724026a5114d2918770
2e5316201334ebac829ce9e3cf283c16e6d13c58
describe
'1019971' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGJ' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
32ba4081ee9bd1ee41efffdee8db9c3a
508bb7dbaea82cc8e0b7e3f9491b6527d34140e8
describe
'103126' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGK' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
8785f63abf8341b7973facb1cdf856d2
ca9cde9be086cbd9e19113b5baae74f50c52ec19
'2011-10-31T12:12:36-04:00'
describe
'42308' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGL' 'sip-files00077.pro'
8a2661f10d1bec54ebff320a3043ad01
d019151bdb2aab5f80bf91db23db60897a61f74a
describe
'36948' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGM' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
82671528db95f72d8fb1f94637d225ed
77fb4c3c39f179ec85d2c768073e771184835faa
'2011-10-31T12:14:08-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGN' 'sip-files00077.tif'
afaa0d2fd582d9b6c767713c69f0608f
6d35912c90b3cebc7ade9a83794a25c23cf3cdfc
describe
'1696' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGO' 'sip-files00077.txt'
db3725648c0169fbe8b02686f5fb0a6d
5e406cbecac233f86b5b981c815ac99f228898e4
describe
'10967' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGP' 'sip-files00077thm.jpg'
d2433ff34387f5231cc6f0a93d120bf6
20c7533f5216c77bd11153bbc25d06642c8c1016
describe
'1032845' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGQ' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
4f47dbed8c45f58bfbcfff1b0246ea1f
2beffa25e0e2b55584433c1050f8b614b71ad7a1
describe
'109615' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGR' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
cecbf909627c6119130807109dedbd15
682f79cfa4b7c8b28d796866fae4552fe36f2855
describe
'44839' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGS' 'sip-files00078.pro'
2b4e9d12359fd7ee0c2999c0bf6abed5
64363d2446455201a216926323c16d1df8e879a1
'2011-10-31T12:11:11-04:00'
describe
'38963' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGT' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
f75267a153cf6b07d6f8a082ed32d628
dc5cffbb1e78651c2f0febd1eaf46e861e31f25e
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGU' 'sip-files00078.tif'
4434fb84d6de848644b6bd245a9b8832
7d77ad59202c6381f49e740eda0904ccebc2b8bd
'2011-10-31T12:12:51-04:00'
describe
'1786' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGV' 'sip-files00078.txt'
2dd5afb0452fc979e9d967a3cbc98340
409304c210a2ed8be3ca48d25b4020fc77953470
'2011-10-31T12:11:06-04:00'
describe
'10963' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGW' 'sip-files00078thm.jpg'
2d364001a2bb967a9d7c21cd6124cadb
4695290296bc8f1c3e19c4ff261783d4025f6246
describe
'1019989' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGX' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
f6b96e2fc176b59df1b97eb33e91c3a1
ec2078ce3c30ddec809643779da7bfc32e1463db
'2011-10-31T12:14:45-04:00'
describe
'101522' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGY' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
84521b0f14c9b3123c464ff081d13939
b381f397c42f70f75afb03037787bd994611aa9f
describe
'41764' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUGZ' 'sip-files00079.pro'
f805aec239966aa67154e4a0df9e0931
ba7903ec4425dd591a66693550c2dbf07a085565
describe
'36065' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHA' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
ff8609bf927d44b0a246dc12f2902996
705254b9bf1ea9ab3d8641764f2470f022cc0927
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHB' 'sip-files00079.tif'
98c2090fc5a5cd2f698d711570366caa
0cce9342dfb331c362333c48417bf0a48e9350db
describe
'1701' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHC' 'sip-files00079.txt'
4c2179df23293daaa96ff1a4fe74d823
182e4095052036c90d0c4caa457760c7d5d8bc13
describe
'10678' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHD' 'sip-files00079thm.jpg'
92b5a13ee303919bf935f34bc53f1f99
8767fdb12ba43c7c2c15fd14a2b4c0bd24802b70
describe
'1032811' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHE' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
08661702484456973007c237a5a09db8
a06fe05f30db66eef4dbbc0b52c1fe09c06ef782
describe
'107798' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHF' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
d8fc8131894a83164df652f8301fa47c
cb758c7ae03c820296cdf9006da4c5a34796a5a0
describe
'44408' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHG' 'sip-files00080.pro'
89126c1d97f7e3c85aacb9394ac58a0e
1e09987849a5d1c004f6f1d2b5ef34a70233bc79
'2011-10-31T12:10:21-04:00'
describe
'38448' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHH' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
ba737844f2ee2ac5b15c3522f6a3ded1
ca56e94ce45a78c6667da73fc26fa1828cd3b1e4
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHI' 'sip-files00080.tif'
4cb53c0c470ceca87bc565bd2b738451
e5d0ad68021213d01a89901e1ffa0c0af3dac9ba
describe
'1770' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHJ' 'sip-files00080.txt'
cd8130cdd97bdff79a50d2a65af53eab
a68c0394cf10f825b5fae436c9b9b0d2aff6ac4c
describe
'10708' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHK' 'sip-files00080thm.jpg'
7e0021493f4e769b2095dfcedcd61ecc
2bda79d6f07cad7a2a36287b886c11f57c62e393
'2011-10-31T12:12:55-04:00'
describe
'1019994' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHL' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
409b398cc2e09cf5931c205731267131
caa6a5c06757c03d998beb5df888489e66fc2026
describe
'79907' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHM' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
6ac64d66de9dbde994b78369a297c8c6
fa0fe17f6dab4e91821c1cc550e00f847b2bd3e0
describe
'30931' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHN' 'sip-files00081.pro'
4615218bc262970868c2933506eca730
bc96e87965506459adf50d3dd25335a573ee749d
describe
'28105' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHO' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
de12a382ff021e193c710f91ada1c719
fc2992e250ad64149c2654e1fe77e4c9ed13cc71
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHP' 'sip-files00081.tif'
99798190e7173341ea57fc2c5aefe881
de916bc77a506da6c9a62fdf70d53edc255c3fdb
'2011-10-31T12:11:40-04:00'
describe
'1239' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHQ' 'sip-files00081.txt'
70c8a69f7b379f2d3163947df969003e
9f604bd4494cb84ab6e3c18733c2d2999e9b599a
describe
'8164' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHR' 'sip-files00081thm.jpg'
a29c5a50089d34f30dd5f7fb4813d8c7
4e230217f8c6d972698e9b54dd840ca4dd138def
describe
'1032711' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHS' 'sip-files00082.jp2'
221b50e5c640a5ac5d614ad0cbd6c105
bb8e719543e36e35aae88eb0a6ce24ce57fcff57
describe
'74207' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHT' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
f561d98c75c2e476494c1a753b334df2
d7593d5f850c7942c34f79025179e93e4cff8e7c
'2011-10-31T12:15:15-04:00'
describe
'27310' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHU' 'sip-files00082.pro'
2458b1b17539575228159b8ab0f1e0a8
249ee25bc0b51df134c9935325bdbce6d1cc04a2
describe
'25854' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHV' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
2983665a0ce736004f0d071ebd52cf95
61a0da558894ae266edd6bcc609597827b003c39
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHW' 'sip-files00082.tif'
2e004806e02d668dab65270cd2db7064
1a32ea07d3eba69f10b6cca01456c91427ced425
'2011-10-31T12:13:23-04:00'
describe
'1124' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHX' 'sip-files00082.txt'
297150c2c0526870f77c5289f65c2a2f
424bc8c24299d06f036c0194bbcd03e3a0a5fd76
describe
'7404' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHY' 'sip-files00082thm.jpg'
7aee8e57261dc3ecbe1231b96201bb84
a8892ad7308aada9aab9291735c9d086841cd805
describe
'1019930' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUHZ' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
74f8d7684b4b1e48e35a5257dbd856ab
e61e0aa2d535c8d70e6eefb5ddf13d8f31d47848
describe
'102241' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIA' 'sip-files00083.jpg'
0a7795646294b8c739503a0ece55c3de
6aeae9ff711d78df41ae7a4b2bd6fb0f8f44010e
describe
'41780' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIB' 'sip-files00083.pro'
fbded0cbd7c2910f2cb1bdd6475a6089
f3dd113bd8460fa83534b6b8767808e79728a60a
describe
'36975' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIC' 'sip-files00083.QC.jpg'
5c1119cb2a501578139e1a17342a11ab
7857357b56d6accb9eb7e2569460714276658651
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUID' 'sip-files00083.tif'
3920bbe1534cd776f7d5ea63522543bd
3f45b1a8d403bb5e5534ee85595a58f3b91b9e2d
'2011-10-31T12:14:24-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIE' 'sip-files00083.txt'
b1b658ee82d69ec35c2a606f8df47475
f98d34535661186426e5c17f14306cb68c1b284f
describe
'11093' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIF' 'sip-files00083thm.jpg'
feee34c4c00cd838de0395bd8e3b53fd
e81aef354657b5dfcabc740ff388f5e8b328af55
'2011-10-31T12:11:54-04:00'
describe
'1032888' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIG' 'sip-files00084.jp2'
29bb788e2fdd3eac56e3b97780e57158
fde9f02b80ac292b4e79b42820377e65e1c5d0c6
describe
'107607' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIH' 'sip-files00084.jpg'
4452eb6e0a57680de4aba5a89d471112
24c0ab22833586abb6513fd8c9fe38377812739d
describe
'44604' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUII' 'sip-files00084.pro'
e1082e0dba5a4e1780bc5909068c8eb1
bf0e5f2be5c373581e7a5eb138fc1658a2e1abdb
describe
'38705' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIJ' 'sip-files00084.QC.jpg'
d83a25b3cdf916d19bbb943418365aa9
573c40bfdcce3053e2f9c48897e59a8d56428508
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIK' 'sip-files00084.tif'
5f414850d44ea63d67ebdfd732f92f07
4070d9de771a1946828abe2e074ed8c105afbcfd
describe
'1814' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIL' 'sip-files00084.txt'
5bca1e5ce6550f54904a7a97bacd1d28
7961471052aa2093f6f4cb2c4175c41c4f4f5cc3
describe
'10589' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIM' 'sip-files00084thm.jpg'
2ac1e2262feae2212df9f28fb9e5f9cb
c507d689e374ea77fdcba2ef88d175ba9bb6f663
describe
'1019837' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIN' 'sip-files00085.jp2'
4fd44d45b4d40d7203baaa774b1223ac
1d4a0ed383b0c31eb31f4626ac6e5d88fca9477d
'2011-10-31T12:14:55-04:00'
describe
'106416' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIO' 'sip-files00085.jpg'
8dd12c2b9bd9543a33fa4ed0af8b84e8
a46284401cc92239c715f452c07b499943482131
'2011-10-31T12:14:52-04:00'
describe
'43776' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIP' 'sip-files00085.pro'
4d92a77a1901d0289a653c6a09c096b7
fe6ff3294d5f1a0fc4c2340eef94fc6a1936d85b
describe
'37875' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIQ' 'sip-files00085.QC.jpg'
578f1666c9fa558002034b9ceecb7687
2c49ce30bf52f06abbb7886a68acd47c99db2d53
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIR' 'sip-files00085.tif'
2395adcd7ea352d73925a60adc74333c
e92ad6205bd4a0a88ee3b33a9998e23bc3a58354
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIS' 'sip-files00085.txt'
71e9509e63593e1330a11d5295ff4c27
b4237a9a36ed9c50152de79b5d533a5289fe02ef
'2011-10-31T12:12:09-04:00'
describe
'11214' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIT' 'sip-files00085thm.jpg'
d83ee10f23dc5a3e3926dd0c85538779
16a2ac60364754d366bcb54a03d686a451d5cdcc
describe
'1032857' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIU' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
0acc638d86087962b7151b4a35db92da
ecc397ec7750159b5c50ef86cd8d179bebbf5d3a
describe
'103842' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIV' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
e7c7af8d0dca149f0c6a4674fcd2e6d0
b7858deb64ffedeb544cc59cedd8d59487b5bd3a
describe
'42421' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIW' 'sip-files00086.pro'
c9efb35c34984c540d163f847a631dc8
7105aac2da394bc320cab82e562320483c087a75
describe
'37472' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIX' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
2ae7a856ae119c73e06c30acde3fec95
15f3e15c4182b22b390643811afbd77927c8443e
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIY' 'sip-files00086.tif'
1e5c0bab7dbf3e8b008f2626309f0d54
f56dec463cbdf729d7fd673a3e335a1a1dc5ed19
describe
'1729' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUIZ' 'sip-files00086.txt'
c95784eaf01aae84c12eba0c713eb0a3
bd79ae61ecfeed10824571ab618a533274096b13
describe
'10452' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJA' 'sip-files00086thm.jpg'
22adb878087d7b16254daf937d93319d
8e3dda28d20e75c74064971b502f9fcdb780d13c
describe
'1019950' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJB' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
7ea3696da860aa67af7c75ee57d7a3ba
5a1f0e35bf892a0d420304938cab2605fa13dae0
describe
'100204' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJC' 'sip-files00087.jpg'
81f37ab6080eebf753c5953e83af19f1
36d1c68417d6510f8b5cd980ace3309b3d661a3c
describe
'40696' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJD' 'sip-files00087.pro'
f9ee88b04f67763d063986ac7237fa24
6dcf393da1eb5bbdcf6cc33c120e98b591c64d0e
describe
'36312' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJE' 'sip-files00087.QC.jpg'
25dc146b509d377c898fd37e68620bb9
d5269c629591fcca0802790fead336d0e629548e
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJF' 'sip-files00087.tif'
5710a0439d70ef9e0d5627632f63ed43
ccda3160f1457fba1aac3bd01059b7a80b1a303d
describe
'1640' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJG' 'sip-files00087.txt'
09b45f4a5a8a3f97287cf1fd846cb54e
3ca346592f64933506ef7baa0d9494eb8e77e6ea
describe
'11003' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJH' 'sip-files00087thm.jpg'
0d10fae163ace81687ad7cc12fbd4c0b
13f99d96749f8f4b0567d7c97ecd6caa0cc184be
describe
'1032880' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJI' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
84b3ead2fbcfe0b21ed06b7aaf592def
a2c065315531f72dda067ca3c0b935326ae44333
describe
'105570' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJJ' 'sip-files00088.jpg'
cb8c4547254ef89b84982bb11ef84a85
ce264178ef3d469034963d991046ae4a45a6d54a
describe
'42712' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJK' 'sip-files00088.pro'
b27a76f00518fd15929472c6521ff755
13525bb3cb729233b8f28068868ba2d1b56efb56
describe
'37971' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJL' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
dfa62a7e03d1dd56cb083089d5fe4114
814f2d8ca0a59d790689377824d0c545eaec2787
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJM' 'sip-files00088.tif'
a2e98ac87c37616db3c760fe476fc149
b340a7c88e6b7fd333d46493ef180b1f294802e1
describe
'1720' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJN' 'sip-files00088.txt'
6d02a39ba22d40010007d5214ace3d36
2eab940662bce284593b4ec0442b2115366652b5
describe
'10349' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJO' 'sip-files00088thm.jpg'
4a84a634d3190e9a9fc2faa126faeb72
1ba514c877e9548dcf82385470c467d070134e41
describe
'1019961' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJP' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
ecd464eff3d6f3e4623a2b94351171ce
5876f66e583daeffa757cba1d787e60de7fe27f4
describe
'90055' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJQ' 'sip-files00089.jpg'
b9206fb0483ff34a56008a022d6e96e5
2c35508c1cb37fd6f2f234f4deffa0806dfac17e
describe
'34687' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJR' 'sip-files00089.pro'
f3e026fbbe45decaf7190f8708074b73
c6f97f43af6cd56e35190bef6083541335ea3c94
describe
'32217' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJS' 'sip-files00089.QC.jpg'
7d5277c5c8b5451e44f6f5eecf40667f
e3d0cf09ce9da8cd7c71a9cb08727b5d20faefb6
'2011-10-31T12:16:29-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJT' 'sip-files00089.tif'
1eb73de30b76c23583dec344201d21ca
69a0042a01416d32d4918bd51ea414a704c02aca
describe
'1408' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJU' 'sip-files00089.txt'
9554c036f3b82bd4c080e607a0c9356f
0ca56250a0e12a172ef39f9333db8e697ee5a312
describe
'9694' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJV' 'sip-files00089thm.jpg'
5acef6dc956fc1fad9e23b25548dcbf5
a11f88b611a0a46b0b03aa8323a2f6c978743ec9
'2011-10-31T12:12:46-04:00'
describe
'1032894' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJW' 'sip-files00090.jp2'
e67331c35dcd0accd75e9fe2b729c5a9
ece2ebe97b8c52491ce10d29b73c2e0ee8531ccb
'2011-10-31T12:16:45-04:00'
describe
'73002' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJX' 'sip-files00090.jpg'
b9f327d85b2a0c8ff3ed22679938584f
154cbd48ad02947dc812b066327c05f9f416567b
describe
'26359' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJY' 'sip-files00090.pro'
d2145001d314df09e0a3ef88d9e636bc
3b65cbe8ed0602783463610237c3779e1eddd457
describe
'25625' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUJZ' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
ce559d80c6f69ab7e04230c9a6c4abb1
83fb732f6ed247e931b98e167d73f84cc05836a9
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKA' 'sip-files00090.tif'
0b8b39c6ed87d27dd00cc8a61e48e440
a3274edb8ab47093c0266854c3b8dca6148bb5aa
describe
'1088' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKB' 'sip-files00090.txt'
a3f5212edd2f2d3549aa04c04c321e6f
7376363fc7d0c3c44434f22490911f4969984d37
'2011-10-31T12:12:34-04:00'
describe
'7220' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKC' 'sip-files00090thm.jpg'
fa45698b2c44dcc2504293575efd8386
45566bee88cc9b0714a7b1b44d770cefe7673d14
'2011-10-31T12:13:16-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKD' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
53d6ef07f437a764aceff3bd6d009dd5
c6732aebc2f6b3a18fa99c3cd09bbb25ecc64efc
describe
'105936' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKE' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
fb3acad3279ccaf71754b0a25e0bbba8
9f70f751c3460201cea225bb1f114d306091c980
'2011-10-31T12:10:40-04:00'
describe
'43011' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKF' 'sip-files00091.pro'
d9db661d83b7af3a80ecdd99df595c70
983caab6e24978735ed2648b140101d2463ad2da
describe
'38440' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKG' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
0a739da7723049443976915f5704fff5
0e5ecf57928cfdf08f0e7c4599fe66315c82bdc9
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKH' 'sip-files00091.tif'
75387bcf3823ae335a25a6786674f440
fa0ce280b8c930829dcee4e2fb4d55bacd777880
describe
'1734' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKI' 'sip-files00091.txt'
775e97096d566be9c72fc6fbf9e4b5b2
4282cc6fec3f162f722c567cacaf8513c5261b22
describe
'11319' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKJ' 'sip-files00091thm.jpg'
67ef5785ab005085296834b9ddc21b26
441c34c7e242777e34c6aa5d50b3fb41ba3dd78c
describe
'1032886' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKK' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
b6aef9f37f19ddaf9b0fb90ec8292cd1
1164bd88f066175445ce9490051837454fe84c19
describe
'109771' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKL' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
5100a449b9c5f66c3af90f4716fb79cc
8860ace77175b71b62963e616ccec99fa686098e
describe
'45457' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKM' 'sip-files00092.pro'
ad9f3c8c7fa84f95259e4a8aad47e52b
8581e5210b21272dd566fe304c4b92288020a240
describe
'38913' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKN' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
b785578ff1964efa717f34f22df62ff8
4effa00d23e077c1ab76d02bab1e67f256f1f909
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKO' 'sip-files00092.tif'
9d07914f9fb623ca290f7aa774e1275d
fcb8169fcf77e06b04e2200d3c032b4bcc65c474
describe
'1803' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKP' 'sip-files00092.txt'
16a1e2b8f547f93b656afbfb4d918084
78d18c7a5f6eb04785c51cbb9a43cf36f9b9c096
describe
'10764' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKQ' 'sip-files00092thm.jpg'
4611fe75a6d2a71e3a01b5fb80a62ab0
beea6870842f7392409ba1c2fed5eee083a1101c
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKR' 'sip-files00093.jp2'
1ae4195a1661ea203a13ba9ed4e0bdb0
7ca3a7509dc6331926c9461184ef79b1a0e885e4
describe
'107273' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKS' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
bd20a459ae32aedcfce0d97fa67774a5
6a67cbcefd21a33d4b8098f3a93cccc52f4a84c0
describe
'43903' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKT' 'sip-files00093.pro'
9546278bd0bf9b7efaab141c5ae3c79b
f84d88775aff6ca46c7d6b38344c97215714d752
describe
'39520' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKU' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
f5e596cc4ff0326d0057f9c3c28321ab
f0a100dc639c1d05f73aaa28b9786e437eb14194
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKV' 'sip-files00093.tif'
6ef1d41109ba919be42db29d62d4ee89
139c713d704e31a78e2595dd2e8fc07de4e78d51
'2011-10-31T12:16:41-04:00'
describe
'1736' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKW' 'sip-files00093.txt'
4e96d1324dd75f99a33c19f59463029a
e305bf50c3ecfc2d916a8e50951662f8e381a2d2
describe
'11591' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKX' 'sip-files00093thm.jpg'
0f761fbe8d1988c9ddd3f5dae491a673
c2c968ce88b8fe1e263d84d84ae5910cbade0e35
'2011-10-31T12:11:28-04:00'
describe
'1032862' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKY' 'sip-files00094.jp2'
68516732c42cab719256ee8c526f622f
a6f697589446ce99aed051d51b26edce56b14694
describe
'108510' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUKZ' 'sip-files00094.jpg'
a62e3c227e96a63225a16a2d195bc7c2
a44580a8fd84b178fe0c787abb21d18b1f9289f1
describe
'43978' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULA' 'sip-files00094.pro'
8aaa89a9193ff68297ad4edded8fb424
f0967085f35a4c1f0a7feca4ee85edede2bd813b
describe
'39124' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULB' 'sip-files00094.QC.jpg'
fcb7f8a56f8c1687907f6ca8004899fb
8c9f3c6bd45eb84afc4e1f1ee80f7c9b205ed875
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULC' 'sip-files00094.tif'
7de9b91351b4ddb366b2e56d2a11062b
41116e65f3df23139e7f2e0eccf071d8e286944b
describe
'1746' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULD' 'sip-files00094.txt'
7c1725fd26a2dfe0557f32b48b2ec297
59f1d4107159658de3a20de51f5751b503b8d17d
describe
'11031' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULE' 'sip-files00094thm.jpg'
1f8e7f6b3676a3b856708d97d4471bb1
7027b541a72dc650b1fdda821c5470abe74d481d
describe
'1019965' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULF' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
fbdd72e612ecb561f068d82cd9fc89fa
76d4fd1833747d6f84270d1e77c2e4e5be2d8b91
describe
'102528' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULG' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
162f19fccd9f76b9123982b52c048d35
562c6353970f70796e337981729c1d6569291f8e
describe
'42612' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULH' 'sip-files00095.pro'
3e8b849f43c3d3527be6d8d0e370c372
e818154c90dd4db62b6fd908cde1aaf04ded565e
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULI' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
1e1d99785a4bb7fa22b8aeecd27319e7
e11966f07e22434cf5bfb24dac8288700839b7a0
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULJ' 'sip-files00095.tif'
44350bb273c97de180285cef169e8e15
06cc766374c2e2a373fbfa5e0c9504ffb19c1e71
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULK' 'sip-files00095.txt'
a03bf9a936b49f2aea7b2f52140c5f53
f44425f248e6781bb75979ed76484367f28e70e4
describe
'10907' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULL' 'sip-files00095thm.jpg'
83d902f42f1f2514e012d4cb3aafe4df
51d16086374cd4b3c2da51235e709afe58b9eeb2
describe
'1032877' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULM' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
05f47a6e968480b16bc7f303fd52aaae
e6da6f66aaec68048748eb94276c9a35aae9dffa
describe
'106457' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULN' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
690ac4d3f77babf82bbb7c5030b6501f
92357aae5300f75f2533db5e59f5e19340135347
'2011-10-31T12:10:25-04:00'
describe
'42986' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULO' 'sip-files00096.pro'
71efc7ee5df55c75db85b93f34c44e8b
9ef88af54f88f5f0a19add30f333642f1887401a
describe
'38476' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULP' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
3e9a6d6e3764127fe736acc91ddb11b0
690454c4e096bdc5f2f9744940a580f75123d7ec
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULQ' 'sip-files00096.tif'
61c730c73a5e5127fa21cf89d035c9af
75027e0886820fa630b5b000278e48cabf9b1389
describe
'1747' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULR' 'sip-files00096.txt'
e9ebebf5107d73600d00e3455cc5f7e2
d97f7a979a57a913afa96b47f91bb2b2da27130a
describe
'10772' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULS' 'sip-files00096thm.jpg'
d90b880bd3b10868672075be95249c54
5123031fc5e1fca7030e3c4dc9e33ba005b2ade3
describe
'1019932' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULT' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
197ae1eaa682293b0834c34f1d830000
048290e833952015918f6611cae807863a74a713
describe
'105439' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULU' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
27a3d10e46099a097598c990a6024016
b8cb1d8e26e302ceb33326ccb5c2d8ccc90d901b
describe
'44008' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULV' 'sip-files00097.pro'
20b2d42bb0c8a48112996c898c4f03d0
eef9b985f5a70fc9ecd7a94bf6ce3cac2eb04e0b
describe
'38324' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULW' 'sip-files00097.QC.jpg'
bcca0aaa1039538c1135c1fd3e424c00
cea7a8d4fe630e9775d671b6c77693d4e7a6b3a6
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULX' 'sip-files00097.tif'
db3bf8970c983bdd80d1b6f8055a22c7
8a3c8f30abf7ed459af775a7e6d256e88407aebd
describe
'1744' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULY' 'sip-files00097.txt'
e1ea90a757ec07e5426df3c005352e8a
d78e14606e4a0716bb834638cacdfc4e828b5d80
describe
'11129' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAULZ' 'sip-files00097thm.jpg'
b93b9e77ac537cdb8a9a51259d6b49d8
133f7dfa18ea3c9b147abd40540ee1ca0ef8c2a5
describe
'1032900' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMA' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
d84534a1d6c950a7036ab5deb6155ea1
bf92eda109c0a62e7b1b07cb474bfbb03639e4cf
describe
'105803' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMB' 'sip-files00098.jpg'
8f091424d0048b73a834cad48a07779d
0ac1e7a9b0000f795cbc3efc9d4f48189a92c4b0
describe
'42877' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMC' 'sip-files00098.pro'
36fa151d03ec0c6860db4b3dacb7c953
71b1ab546609b91f8ef50f6cabf32557d335c73b
describe
'37854' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMD' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
e4220322c1076d00d38ee9f4a19de88d
f8b17f84e3b376de378ed71b2a5c891dfd7759fd
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUME' 'sip-files00098.tif'
915a5780e5ea70524513d1fe73fc90a1
ddd5a1fafbee3af2160b7d364b25e75311438ff9
'2011-10-31T12:15:38-04:00'
describe
'1745' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMF' 'sip-files00098.txt'
e750dbe7e0a7e9a1741892cef58a78ba
fe58209899a5065a0ded2c2c9cc1c5110de86c10
describe
'10838' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMG' 'sip-files00098thm.jpg'
0ce45a256a984590d3b34f10ce683759
778dd75c81aec5d54a81a4557446204e900e8c16
'2011-10-31T12:11:42-04:00'
describe
'1019996' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMH' 'sip-files00099.jp2'
315910213806a15af880eb7d849842c9
8237b0ca69b79ee06f793197fd05fe90c428e3ec
describe
'101935' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMI' 'sip-files00099.jpg'
449758daad6c402503902827888bd781
e547abd493d959dada6b0f81a5fe1e872691c1ff
describe
'42114' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMJ' 'sip-files00099.pro'
eb02e862a750386ff07f2e99ac1ab0a4
04e95b18b3489839f7dbe23e2d239546829fb261
describe
'36074' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMK' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
f109704fec18914e4fd979c3ddf81a9f
2fe4202a03e0ba1555a6ced2a8620573ba3d99ad
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUML' 'sip-files00099.tif'
f50d71dee57b7a51f8b6442e421980c7
15bd4b2ec022576f8c8473fae4a09a1766962f41
'2011-10-31T12:13:30-04:00'
describe
'1672' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMM' 'sip-files00099.txt'
397619184ed56ca9b4c585daf452f833
931028118f12e6e9b4d4e3d168e043ae08ce8b55
describe
'11059' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMN' 'sip-files00099thm.jpg'
9a752bccb56b68a1b2ef4c3ba97d797b
d2efaf2436491d1af4e93477637be65becf4a609
describe
'1032766' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMO' 'sip-files00100.jp2'
93f804edbac00934d33ff44ae99f5e8e
40a776a5a9be79c9dcecc999a70562ba2328f5fe
describe
'103361' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMP' 'sip-files00100.jpg'
e2098c23b3fb5f9c6f6331f1690b13a4
e2115ada743d724f2d46e6f8d0d861fbfe18c415
describe
'41211' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMQ' 'sip-files00100.pro'
7f650fa946091ee32cfc0bebd66b5c73
e0dd55cde36b987cf33d5945368407f4ce1b6963
describe
'37011' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMR' 'sip-files00100.QC.jpg'
443f6b4ab9415a391bedbdd0ed15e25d
34adf64b17e0c7f68f1f3ffc05f4b923aa090f51
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMS' 'sip-files00100.tif'
ee31688e3530c4afb192281780ed3a6b
47d39ced162fe169ce4187242e1711b9f06ccce4
describe
'1665' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMT' 'sip-files00100.txt'
7052a80cfdc4c3893c2bbda10062a8bd
1aa1bd54dfd326e70073c1290427eac6a7662656
describe
'10776' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMU' 'sip-files00100thm.jpg'
139b672569d31c2e65781f2424c2b422
338df987ca58221448a974296e0b5212d2d3299e
describe
'1019969' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMV' 'sip-files00101.jp2'
2f777643ff786cd0c162b119a4b7ae69
876d41a284b5c9aa0aa1554c2e8482951d3fdd16
'2011-10-31T12:11:13-04:00'
describe
'102515' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMW' 'sip-files00101.jpg'
a1003fa9f7f05b84adac41b023ff3521
857fec4a58c1071a2ffc95fe225bae794c4de2fd
'2011-10-31T12:12:23-04:00'
describe
'41874' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMX' 'sip-files00101.pro'
59302432ff7c8b9b92f861c5f78d67e9
f3ddeed8ec2eb047bce9ce4c26cda223901ed3ba
describe
'36914' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMY' 'sip-files00101.QC.jpg'
298dd1660050cc8728dcaf270daec1bf
88a3456ab7024724808a9b413f048656f0d238e9
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUMZ' 'sip-files00101.tif'
14297c255e64a039cc6c5cdbc448ccc5
26c79691af1561bd70b787b0f1460cdc8ee57a99
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNA' 'sip-files00101.txt'
326144a82ae4695012d43eee5a284674
cdc8ff741dac1243c3ed6844cd68e885bea6998e
describe
'11061' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNB' 'sip-files00101thm.jpg'
b06d44f9b54dad727d2c26b643b4aedc
57ae4fd24cf76219f56ee3aa28a1627001229672
describe
'1032889' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNC' 'sip-files00102.jp2'
d1297f38b882f74194be5f33bc6c4a4d
7bdf9e00e951b58e45ee1b359528d9ce3fc306f2
describe
'39287' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUND' 'sip-files00102.jpg'
5069cfd724fb206a8bd2fd60b91f3c6b
e71dc5658f788bd29b2251190603aebf133857de
describe
'10984' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNE' 'sip-files00102.pro'
3532982604691fb0f16998388293411d
0ed1242e1bcfce24bb404d8882ff97560e408f1b
'2011-10-31T12:10:03-04:00'
describe
'13036' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNF' 'sip-files00102.QC.jpg'
c265ce131cef8f2ae2f97f48d2b3756a
8835da4fd530a96102f415a6cc7fae2dc61512ff
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNG' 'sip-files00102.tif'
2d5b49bf45ae246394b0b19c52f12824
c28fead0377c2bc76bcce1c5198b5d49d16577f0
'2011-10-31T12:15:59-04:00'
describe
'468' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNH' 'sip-files00102.txt'
71898d705ef7acacee15ec3d54836234
a41670fad32e53b2d5b7378290ed12d37e5875e1
describe
'4052' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNI' 'sip-files00102thm.jpg'
116d6e70a16502c7669c4313f3407ebb
6b2d0ed84526378d171f0fed31616ca15bccfee2
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNJ' 'sip-files00103.jp2'
a22e892113e38580e550d8c2977b04c4
381306bb7eb1c856096a90e908f26677fc9fa612
describe
'71505' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNK' 'sip-files00103.jpg'
a2bc51e484fce58046797e724de762b4
2aa0287f09b3b0c9c94effdba9ecf7fcce37ea99
describe
'26510' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNL' 'sip-files00103.pro'
66dcaab7c571134f5a152ce5e3d9609d
27ace821d43ee7d9f8c231b08c9f806a535762cf
describe
'25052' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNM' 'sip-files00103.QC.jpg'
844eebf8bf001403ffe802aca4391d2c
63fd77ed1f46f72c57558b59a3097af7c59b979b
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNN' 'sip-files00103.tif'
e6575f21b527f5c8ca77f97fe4bb2767
c272bcef150dbba96f77d14d1e47b91c4712e582
describe
'1091' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNO' 'sip-files00103.txt'
00c6e8fcc1e31b644af1ab54593fb0b2
f27e6128e46481ae8546d8ccaeab3861a9b6df99
describe
'7685' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNP' 'sip-files00103thm.jpg'
ac9ea74d8f94cf4291d162543b544d9f
bcedf5e476d17a2fa49d45f6308ac8dc5e2725b8
describe
'1032748' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNQ' 'sip-files00104.jp2'
a478e8d616910e9e6d3bb42d51b0865e
65ebbedbb6ffd09198fb006c7b2c2dad9c8a8c66
describe
'103368' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNR' 'sip-files00104.jpg'
de26cc810b129fb4406f522249ee8f2c
fb7e1e5563d10322a11a5072e2aed4f9e9630a6c
describe
'41468' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNS' 'sip-files00104.pro'
8c0feb1b230ee49f064d44f3bd5c5553
64bafe80490628a6b6f2365e7700c0c65fb649a6
describe
'36685' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNT' 'sip-files00104.QC.jpg'
12178a99e1682e0734f0d78262cb0eda
c530c479db38c1974d5b18592ad6631861c4deaa
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNU' 'sip-files00104.tif'
3e0c2cb90b4b2cd68af8212e0e02b46a
ad62c8964dba101bf1337512e1900a6ca302ca01
'2011-10-31T12:15:43-04:00'
describe
'1651' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNV' 'sip-files00104.txt'
c60216cbf0bbd0bfb6b0be8847307d27
ca6b84e8891d6c06a3f20297d2dad0383c753aef
describe
'10469' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNW' 'sip-files00104thm.jpg'
0def70096c0c98a2dfd1bd880caad080
8af571dd05a2585ae04c8d5dba6e476feedd3be3
describe
'1019968' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNX' 'sip-files00105.jp2'
65ce358fd5189304f4f52acf1d847b12
d94f6b9e9f2f10d283257b612089e0e9a2aeaf7d
describe
'103413' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNY' 'sip-files00105.jpg'
7a527c5c16a0507579cf00373be6bc14
f5cf350f45abc49a050838be3cb5033ab1515708
describe
'41970' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUNZ' 'sip-files00105.pro'
a7708c4ff2c3eb3742197b75f3caf8d2
89f07f2c4ff1d36d3e45ddc60b4770fd6804694e
'2011-10-31T12:14:38-04:00'
describe
'38193' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOA' 'sip-files00105.QC.jpg'
1d6f0b96173c115c0808c59cbe5f6b5f
e8c13cec913e1da4646c8405723d6728c59bccf8
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOB' 'sip-files00105.tif'
e523e55584bdb281d9b8850087b3a86b
12a8bcc54d38923a64f66b035ef0d8f7e9c9ea00
'2011-10-31T12:14:46-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOC' 'sip-files00105.txt'
7190d0010b56de4facd95903d8a8a627
387d5651a73b2ba70a792a1f4276437bbbf43661
describe
'11186' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOD' 'sip-files00105thm.jpg'
1f74e297ecc844fffe8661aa09cc0f54
aa5887848e51457abdc763251418c32df2d3c6c5
describe
'1032866' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOE' 'sip-files00106.jp2'
92e889e8ffa59c0172a379f8d5f9fa61
7a8c121be9f82f90458f0b4338923f72ab7b1a41
describe
'106714' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOF' 'sip-files00106.jpg'
22c1e55202eae253b56862d9aa42abcd
f7388b21cbb7c9664e4984ce49f1d34bc5882a9c
'2011-10-31T12:12:07-04:00'
describe
'42959' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOG' 'sip-files00106.pro'
833b5cc363261d1fc59b6a81541a7a87
cd7513dfd0fd32d1c4975be5a0ab4993c58a46db
describe
'38160' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOH' 'sip-files00106.QC.jpg'
5a9762cb9c79d81804320ce9f46a3817
2ca36fffe5c6e72446626a7a344734b4a483666e
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOI' 'sip-files00106.tif'
6cbdeeb2c3b3eace4163ef8b6aab4318
f85c77d7767483d00060d765d411b58d505a4f8a
describe
'1702' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOJ' 'sip-files00106.txt'
482b7ab14b5b9b173afc05d768b8a502
295142846d70259f6309df11714e640fb2775b21
'2011-10-31T12:15:53-04:00'
describe
'11001' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOK' 'sip-files00106thm.jpg'
807e4d9f350d96edf067fd3378c8147c
528397a85103dc7b56203f66387de0486330bd47
'2011-10-31T12:13:41-04:00'
describe
'1019951' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOL' 'sip-files00107.jp2'
dfed2fd2d729a1a5be3049b7479df606
8bea2bccdfc34ad95a6e0fdc91546d09a3691708
describe
'108406' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOM' 'sip-files00107.jpg'
f04b59265ff54b5d6263053cf5237720
1ab1933dcd7ccdb66eae6d84bec5df0f550cebc2
describe
'43893' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUON' 'sip-files00107.pro'
494760579a05f9215a5041b90fecbbef
ae4cc7b0a1af7184c98e396b039ee2f81677cc70
describe
'38753' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOO' 'sip-files00107.QC.jpg'
95cf819631be4333f13b1108857099b1
47290ff8cb31ef616838c40ed5706b2af38740ff
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOP' 'sip-files00107.tif'
d69171957826dc34fe78286ff14b8782
15982f171ddb5e1dc50aee12bf656cd399f70b65
describe
'1766' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOQ' 'sip-files00107.txt'
e7c4b19712d7855cbf89caa18e688abc
f514aebed3baf9a936d776a8a7b8c8ab34dfb802
'2011-10-31T12:14:49-04:00'
describe
'11696' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOR' 'sip-files00107thm.jpg'
884ac4f34f8eb3efa3d3c559ce08d2bf
a550cd634f4ae119f7e2792147fdaf49687fb5f0
describe
'1032841' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOS' 'sip-files00108.jp2'
e2a9c1064385e5c3199b0bd15fa9f03c
bf41bf498f8f3f0769c8476fa1738f25979db579
describe
'104716' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOT' 'sip-files00108.jpg'
63413102b9cffefa254f3fed7772699a
f78d9025e386d705c8030cdd83a6a8675ba3c9d1
'2011-10-31T12:15:19-04:00'
describe
'41882' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOU' 'sip-files00108.pro'
6c7d7fd961d53c3aefa5692282ed09f1
fd8530b6e79378ac368cfb63dccd70a7cf2cd8ac
'2011-10-31T12:14:26-04:00'
describe
'37484' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOV' 'sip-files00108.QC.jpg'
6c515dabe5108dac68392502927447d3
a11f463f1d2c013b433dd6eea3054cfa40121b41
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOW' 'sip-files00108.tif'
d4b3e3dffd6d1c4b23234c4c37a51204
30319409e991b11b022b04b9fa1999f969481138
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOX' 'sip-files00108.txt'
1515e7f06937173db7e47b55acc97efd
8aa06a86fc32c64f8610e75593f4ec4619d1b23f
describe
'10629' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOY' 'sip-files00108thm.jpg'
b08ea9d3389f792861891cf17d27480b
32beeb42b11ea0411640d969a0329d2ba0590b33
describe
'1019966' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUOZ' 'sip-files00109.jp2'
5db53ba77a46d0ccf982cdf48d416f71
ff8f4ab41124b8441f2391fbc8330e5cbae11b26
describe
'104348' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPA' 'sip-files00109.jpg'
b84afcf9ac3d908e4ac9637fe8cd60d1
a0310c9a20ee3aad2c4e9f5638969c68a64e7e36
describe
'42639' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPB' 'sip-files00109.pro'
b07dc3f931a368a571974ac809c3a671
4894a8d387e46538fc4d5296106e891b9cc17636
describe
'37381' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPC' 'sip-files00109.QC.jpg'
5b768a40bdac2a4a543a1ee0db63f3bc
6ff3dddc9de3be62c0f2bff96a554714850073d6
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPD' 'sip-files00109.tif'
76f65f557e144b704d184d2b73d54df3
bedbe2a328cfe87b7dcf516d7c797c830d042454
'2011-10-31T12:13:34-04:00'
describe
'1708' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPE' 'sip-files00109.txt'
523df39290ffa1406e2b6914f46efd6f
b36a3729d8becb484bcee4ca9c150ee6f332175d
describe
'11340' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPF' 'sip-files00109thm.jpg'
56813db8cb9f6ccd6383a35dc526ff46
8d72b30b8fee73a99b76f138d7211834f60bb20c
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPG' 'sip-files00110.jp2'
942d6e3e9352fb49c6c26f671bde1ea5
f00bdeee79d20e11e94f6f56f8ff2e3fee3c1db2
describe
'109226' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPH' 'sip-files00110.jpg'
d48b7167857f65fcc90b8df39f339d38
e5c06d8e4ff746dba3e213e5a2043325810a6bf6
describe
'44185' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPI' 'sip-files00110.pro'
10dd556d9c2a4a7be5f6efac39210e31
1ffe8c760aeb286906c25af59c1d330cdd3940f8
describe
'39283' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPJ' 'sip-files00110.QC.jpg'
394fadd0c5b0d46fd5b12dbd0ea390b2
4e7021dfad02e050a4b24827e8c9e8118b65ff53
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPK' 'sip-files00110.tif'
5778fe49a4fdd5a2eaf228f4e9552d3c
13be38c581f94b254b5133ace1f091c34276844e
describe
'1774' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPL' 'sip-files00110.txt'
1f4d8d6c1e076b59b28c6ceca0db6e14
89d8a32fed2e7b01925c357601f5dfab1dcdf5b0
describe
'11023' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPM' 'sip-files00110thm.jpg'
bb1cf9eb8e13855b1993fdf0a3e43cdf
cc4b02a2c00fb181d020185832c6c8020a7fbfc4
describe
'1019952' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPN' 'sip-files00111.jp2'
366e41c55e436c20fabd383edc41d0fd
66716daa0631652959fc6cb5d652990bcee00ac8
describe
'105858' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPO' 'sip-files00111.jpg'
31a4adc7d6b4f512766d663565e1e592
ea684d8f12d8bd889bf6583e9faf60c5c2eb69ae
describe
'43238' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPP' 'sip-files00111.pro'
aca84180ecd3d7fb1bbf50c9fa98e238
f53d392d62335148f7d036679149bc0b4833cc34
describe
'38303' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPQ' 'sip-files00111.QC.jpg'
9b28f60d95d1736fadec72d4477adf9a
65eef9399ea525a72064f12fed622c5fdd11b0cb
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPR' 'sip-files00111.tif'
0fb23fd123a1eb654950915c636612f6
faadc34a4e9ae7767980a253b13d00d51548cb0f
describe
'1712' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPS' 'sip-files00111.txt'
3675bbec95a7dd5319f3b6eac4aa8ac7
e313f5c94881c4bbd1a3ff1e6732ca2d62513171
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPT' 'sip-files00111thm.jpg'
89014c1e10e758c9b34ff0c1b27bcf64
c889bcfa2eadfdc34affc09e7fd7ac05589cedc6
describe
'1032733' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPU' 'sip-files00112.jp2'
862319ee046de1176cbd37303d97e465
0e27264959d2098595d0a80fd47de7c8f8688f64
describe
'107871' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPV' 'sip-files00112.jpg'
6950a6307cd31b67d23e9e5514d3f256
961ce6c3e80641439d0a0cf14af3083c425c2357
describe
'43904' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPW' 'sip-files00112.pro'
1854655d40b1bb4da2236b2018d75afa
ee9d2a49f3d6a1736c8a91a482fe2daf08c95091
describe
'38515' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPX' 'sip-files00112.QC.jpg'
582b0a9a4f8cb87fb4bb311c56921f75
5e7ee6ce79913ead09e5d6b185654daf515caa1e
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPY' 'sip-files00112.tif'
4d844029ac2ed9283cdcfd52bcce8d2a
80b9d506d369af39aebc05e7b4f50914683f4e12
describe
'1784' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUPZ' 'sip-files00112.txt'
8deab30ed163ef550abb7334614ef6ad
912760d67e8b3eb74f9e3bdba92708ff2445587a
describe
'11068' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQA' 'sip-files00112thm.jpg'
2aac39538ed5b9b48798fa4ddbb4f8e6
c6530bf70d1b8ad675337a941e632ad861a673c7
describe
'1019959' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQB' 'sip-files00113.jp2'
665b205409b03f5535bb5676f75b142e
751e95ed1556ce573a0abd862bc13fb1e44ef3d0
describe
'79333' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQC' 'sip-files00113.jpg'
f75a383c879880d0981a756b372b92d2
650e4588a595eb35a34f015432959f754f32527e
describe
'30125' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQD' 'sip-files00113.pro'
12bda4cb8247fb42962ff0a822225214
d53253dcbd2c247bc85308d18f1d0d55b07460e6
describe
'28405' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQE' 'sip-files00113.QC.jpg'
821a3196631aa01ac0981a8fc819d372
3ffe046dcd7ec4abbf7dd0cd8642721e79e24091
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQF' 'sip-files00113.tif'
548afe63806be4c514108ae7e8e782ac
a467ad4621d8f0d578572b446e6a6352c6df88d0
describe
'1202' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQG' 'sip-files00113.txt'
127a0152bbdf47ed77a83fe241a2fcb6
65e7c5971d5f48d38df65e8babd28202a112bfb1
describe
'8692' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQH' 'sip-files00113thm.jpg'
9d81feea462ff9ec74fd75df0dd5964d
c007ce6b6d1e3d9c2aff9ebf687714f1fad38017
describe
'1032875' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQI' 'sip-files00114.jp2'
c5563b889eab4bb01861f1961353dc1e
58cf328b2b3e68773b083a283904a6c966740041
'2011-10-31T12:12:54-04:00'
describe
'77394' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQJ' 'sip-files00114.jpg'
bb4dec1d6cc6b19feb474dcb8ceb80f3
c43457232d8c3e9049cc9feb5eb0cabdf42175a7
describe
'28955' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQK' 'sip-files00114.pro'
77720392730c6e679d4ee240b2d812c7
ae03b8f45c6efd90da4724ec670726c2c7c9bec3
describe
'27329' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQL' 'sip-files00114.QC.jpg'
93c1ab2219742ec872956a3125fabca9
3af678a17ab56d4289921dd377a11698c8b75882
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQM' 'sip-files00114.tif'
fa8df86beaccb64671ab7b18e6ffe5f9
45b61a0dc36d15939ae33c7d04e092dd4f594b2e
describe
'1183' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQN' 'sip-files00114.txt'
12ab03e37dee8bc4c2b2a642ce81cfbd
2be8296f85a1e3093319d87491f35a1dc34cfaa1
describe
'8023' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQO' 'sip-files00114thm.jpg'
db6e226acdf75154afc85584f39b8a2a
5e1b490fd00316a2457edc33488dd8495026e075
'2011-10-31T12:16:24-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQP' 'sip-files00115.jp2'
2787f2e5252e9af379142980581855cf
f64c1be8f0717a10929f7b5a1b514684f11cf322
describe
'101507' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQQ' 'sip-files00115.jpg'
f38c85f6036973aa25706ce677db09b1
1021697f6d51471f71b76b512ff29088daf65d15
describe
'41613' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQR' 'sip-files00115.pro'
5f6ca66447db627820faa99c6d7f3356
942f58ddc285bb603257c519905cc191dfc0ba65
describe
'36483' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQS' 'sip-files00115.QC.jpg'
d9dc477d79db324fbede80526cf2d1a9
8dc34218d2805eeda8cd8fa4405d3ae4239c5a0a
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQT' 'sip-files00115.tif'
705dca82cc7bc104ecd01849887f8f23
b01f67b60874f6ec3359b2cc67e5b99294fb39b6
'2011-10-31T12:15:42-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQU' 'sip-files00115.txt'
4b4e48fa3446dcb5519282e3071901bc
e7603c92e7810f2cbc30a665acba2ba8feb8cabb
describe
'11199' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQV' 'sip-files00115thm.jpg'
b22b8589b1950028a8756c67a31b7f83
5a1cce22cef6ded4a3ce5dabf4b76f027b224426
describe
'1032882' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQW' 'sip-files00116.jp2'
221e8b68c8a603e6223fa8836940f92e
52a7af4f011a1eb3e3799a416c9c4cbe0abe8fb2
describe
'104000' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQX' 'sip-files00116.jpg'
4da2b1e271f04e7e5179963c2d5a8461
c26067ada2a1d62cf78095b41118829a2d231939
'2011-10-31T12:15:47-04:00'
describe
'42452' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQY' 'sip-files00116.pro'
2d5d7b28b323fbae205b4b5293eba168
a3bb1b065a0b926a1beef3bb2cd55f85840379cb
describe
'37926' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUQZ' 'sip-files00116.QC.jpg'
6f815717666a4ad08cf1d8b73ffbe507
3aeb6358247f59503b16060ab4fa5f981024e954
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURA' 'sip-files00116.tif'
7a56fd967ce3b03a19878e3f7d78ebef
9a4ac74a2bddee376f26c49597563cfce86f021e
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURB' 'sip-files00116.txt'
9df63b0de33a8981daf6eb708471e7a9
c0cad3e91983772656795ad8d74edfe4b48da7f7
describe
'10987' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURC' 'sip-files00116thm.jpg'
6cdb3041c8355f1ba49c426c364f14f3
074ae58b867b9ee9d9507e8310ed1cde97fc0842
'2011-10-31T12:16:08-04:00'
describe
'1019999' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURD' 'sip-files00117.jp2'
c9b518168f2ce74dff806eff175a0119
6f8b805bf6d098c941b3ac728c3253f21ea9a7e0
describe
'105869' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURE' 'sip-files00117.jpg'
08cb5de9710a60306706394027c74232
da98c9a6ccc734c4463f8b1d071e53a669c2e79e
describe
'43268' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURF' 'sip-files00117.pro'
b2decdafb8195c776158774fda8192eb
9d1e66d679cf5c712b6eec94ed6f1744d3d2f8db
describe
'38278' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURG' 'sip-files00117.QC.jpg'
903354815e9b8f186822d2ef19b9d946
6e78271a005fe9955f475f847f62f30940686326
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURH' 'sip-files00117.tif'
1587fd7c7633a3d9115b9712cfc49df6
c05d22e1a1f66c68d31bd04ff4b5ed79a2eab64c
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURI' 'sip-files00117.txt'
324b9be544ad7ea16997dcc63dd157c3
aa6ddf9f41a05bdcb73d514c725980b79f8eb271
describe
'11220' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURJ' 'sip-files00117thm.jpg'
363f57d25f065779691b999ca51d8494
a37bbbe87c583d41971e41cb34585a0d87cc90d2
describe
'1032874' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURK' 'sip-files00118.jp2'
58929d1315821c40ca41ee85a7161522
2e71b184b076fa41e0216ad1174f45cf201115e0
'2011-10-31T12:15:10-04:00'
describe
'104781' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURL' 'sip-files00118.jpg'
7ddf773cc2fa63628063ecd341aabf88
4038390e48cca9ffd36b2b6d1a982b6c8031bb43
describe
'42985' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURM' 'sip-files00118.pro'
3fcee6cfd3be1eb02ee33523850660f7
ecbea1f75fd491d4fb9e4f89e27ba3a375a597ef
describe
'37365' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURN' 'sip-files00118.QC.jpg'
d627be1b9cec180d89a92a30615adaf3
70ade125a082f91c36630879b6e989a99bb8a2f9
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURO' 'sip-files00118.tif'
4d7fb8a54d01ba23872ac41d651ff3c5
47b9446e6279ff08e742d13b0b05f0dacc44b879
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURP' 'sip-files00118.txt'
59f26715c2cd07446826e24e8369524b
97aba5c487865eb42eb61787e9f49487fda79528
describe
'10616' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURQ' 'sip-files00118thm.jpg'
a68487c786fcc91ca8ad4fb63ca15b60
c2580f692c4e925ff1611d9a593e681338bdcf79
describe
'1019964' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURR' 'sip-files00119.jp2'
d13e182762d350cb345653e39ebe0ebf
5677a5c12c1f5ab9b6f1cf152f328d9d91fe9fd6
describe
'106937' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURS' 'sip-files00119.jpg'
ed8abb0da14d976f310eb8c19693b629
6eff32375bdca9e69b59cf85f25081c3bb705757
describe
'43985' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURT' 'sip-files00119.pro'
076f28eec7f47be53503ac1e1fb2c366
2165d12274524dcd44ab22862ebc55f6e5aa2b98
'2011-10-31T12:12:12-04:00'
describe
'38834' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURU' 'sip-files00119.QC.jpg'
ec1998fae4de1d0c08f7da8e56881a00
ce1fb2c7dc7e0ec143e86a24e98e2f9b330042d3
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURV' 'sip-files00119.tif'
93b614668e464d1358ff7f6a8f054f87
47118f7c467c572f9eea3d8df6719970077d8985
describe
'1757' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURW' 'sip-files00119.txt'
142205dcf448b7807ed36edcf12b81d4
e91745175beb337dcdd3b9803fb63ffcbcecfe54
describe
'11219' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURX' 'sip-files00119thm.jpg'
b5b9c2dc510c96f62b28f0895e8c94a2
7a29ad13943edcf71eb305b14dc22b764ff84c1a
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURY' 'sip-files00120.jp2'
9fab2e026365f2fdd3c433dab0078f24
9e94e99520b4a12169e4eedff7822840b86b64ff
'2011-10-31T12:16:33-04:00'
describe
'107439' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAURZ' 'sip-files00120.jpg'
c882b53dbd7770a11f70552a9a530310
5fe8f855c5e3a3ee022655c7f39fb188dbfd9cfe
describe
'42735' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSA' 'sip-files00120.pro'
75685df416774a97ac7455e06835a329
6afa40125c5f406a2ce70b756adaeff4f57f0596
describe
'38493' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSB' 'sip-files00120.QC.jpg'
becf9d9eb8161741781bd923f50b41e5
894ca63372826577e748f6dedcd9bcd81731b187
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSC' 'sip-files00120.tif'
d7021519e7957912fa205b6405b76746
12ab578457dba6cc3e0599bbe71a6e421dd1f07f
describe
'1697' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSD' 'sip-files00120.txt'
af047e2a9301c591538abd34337c24b2
90e417a198fd4bfc480db2642ffa1646e579f6ca
describe
'11014' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSE' 'sip-files00120thm.jpg'
50605f9489feea61fd4f0c82a2833f34
4a3f60a5e50a10ca9770bb4ff2ede962330266c7
describe
'1019832' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSF' 'sip-files00121.jp2'
d9dd280124a4f0b1fe7a179fd2ea0e72
8a363493b9e5d8b36b0e8200b76740696fd6c0af
describe
'103232' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSG' 'sip-files00121.jpg'
da61d45c0e3d378429564fefb1c95a46
b50ec0e22b5602b1146e3cb15cee6a7632beeb75
'2011-10-31T12:10:26-04:00'
describe
'41968' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSH' 'sip-files00121.pro'
607d47f2f8583f7e9cf89524fb6818eb
6a921d66314cfffafe00e2aae5eb81d43535b6f5
describe
'36522' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSI' 'sip-files00121.QC.jpg'
a452adb97084ec008fcfb2731a8850ba
3ae37810854ce8a134c85d0ff3cba07340da2e7e
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSJ' 'sip-files00121.tif'
863635ec4784bdd18da23821255ca28e
49a074e3211000b3552475270ed65e3fbdcd63dc
describe
'1684' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSK' 'sip-files00121.txt'
1be1e4e9845df6d89fa129ff6b9afed6
6a9ffb3f5593418333e674c715da076d11d63336
describe
'10966' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSL' 'sip-files00121thm.jpg'
dae366806d0a47855a0dd6eb4a58f3d4
e1b837ec37d8d3599a943efa56863965d4515dda
describe
'1032843' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSM' 'sip-files00122.jp2'
c93e4e864491ef3f911becb15d5c5b9a
9558b9fc11392840232def669294c95a3d301d55
describe
'105188' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSN' 'sip-files00122.jpg'
22ad333ae757f12e53f50f6c1a7adef1
8f312618a0dc8d7269b90accb5cb9bc98df92ff8
describe
'41739' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSO' 'sip-files00122.pro'
b5180f5ee308f645732da5297d28958c
fbabba0620201b1eeb69945f8792d5e5dc3c0cdd
describe
'37009' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSP' 'sip-files00122.QC.jpg'
96d529712fa1590d93551c3b0ae99851
21a49c3be7d2bf28f49b96137b3e12ec69212079
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSQ' 'sip-files00122.tif'
1b2c01b334c9bb19042de7e35b9b3b9a
6f64bdb7c63e97f599abfa298da8770d3a802be1
'2011-10-31T12:14:07-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSR' 'sip-files00122.txt'
c3edf02898f8f3f72a9ee01934ad87b5
00b9a53557b705368adf3167819da00bc286081f
describe
'10650' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSS' 'sip-files00122thm.jpg'
c08cd84646f27a990af7ee596aa835e1
937ea645fe5b16d95e922df1fd79119305d4c5aa
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUST' 'sip-files00123.jp2'
b00e70af3ecf67c6a7d4fd7b2a33536d
33b4b72bdc7c62b3584fad2caa1dd40cf3747b7b
describe
'106504' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSU' 'sip-files00123.jpg'
3b8a22f98d28c29cf0aba9543b0e1b74
286ac62ef6fd7ef2eb3640dbf82a4faab0b6b279
describe
'43067' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSV' 'sip-files00123.pro'
76e2bb8123dab9e9b9963920cfe21bd7
dd1ba8dafadc3cdf244552f7c2bb6cdb67b5ae33
describe
'38015' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSW' 'sip-files00123.QC.jpg'
43d341303c32a519a3a98bb411629016
773af45c676b70ebc7821b5e320b26549c784d15
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSX' 'sip-files00123.tif'
72bac4214706cecab223e2b26508cd61
d33e96e56132adc224feb9ae6f26325d9bdd93a1
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSY' 'sip-files00123.txt'
1c35f2d23a7ba1069c9da0062a4f4150
8c0bbf0aa4c65acb2e084d25753a787762c58d97
describe
'11095' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUSZ' 'sip-files00123thm.jpg'
736b0cc6ab7873ad990f564995bcef2c
c3a578c21a39a3633b668341142c9bc162fb96ac
describe
'1032879' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTA' 'sip-files00124.jp2'
4022678ba3c18711c763e44a99b52696
f19f39ea329e09cc875769d2cf281cf4d2e3f3fe
describe
'104597' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTB' 'sip-files00124.jpg'
651fb6ec644847d42d54e08ef31b0977
3395ce0d5a2a11d6ff37f405c3a7b22ce4f12fbd
describe
'41805' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTC' 'sip-files00124.pro'
ef9167aac771a51c2f9770dd224b9bb1
0d8a5bf6a6496fd0307c3ccd8a06b5d2f8a2059b
describe
'36928' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTD' 'sip-files00124.QC.jpg'
3750bfe1e2106d6579868da2c70a0aed
2c9cec461a6e1f001e54c7cae985affec5ce5def
'2011-10-31T12:16:18-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTE' 'sip-files00124.tif'
726e079de9953f9a8ed750bca894f272
d4e3132c8901045e39ceb6d7746c6e0bcc5a62d1
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTF' 'sip-files00124.txt'
fbd8e72abcc9ebeada51b681dffd7151
d4659a15cd7f6337e6dce9eb1b66ed695b02f279
describe
'10737' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTG' 'sip-files00124thm.jpg'
d020a5c9b055ca16f395f3365e40b1d3
1c032ed2eac5cf96e5332708ff9aa9172f2b32df
describe
'1019987' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTH' 'sip-files00125.jp2'
ea232f29c86193caf95f8349ab7b56ed
b099dec6b8a8f563ac89121918fe809351621a77
describe
'71436' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTI' 'sip-files00125.jpg'
663787afce27a7b1648feb9d53a3ac2e
ef7f556dc7329d80c801fc469e0626ba67f1a247
describe
'25377' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTJ' 'sip-files00125.pro'
da53a56a0b45bbb3b8200b3dd8717d62
37fb7875159b2dd821277130849af98be6b7783c
describe
'24886' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTK' 'sip-files00125.QC.jpg'
3e2c871bf6112eedc1052c41a94ad7fc
969b64ca3cc6828257aaa82efec63affa7fff76c
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTL' 'sip-files00125.tif'
e78a65f52dc93426d658a1cfa050c241
4b0903f0a0b7963cd8c51645a91aca45661c4312
describe
'1015' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTM' 'sip-files00125.txt'
42ee482d8cd19a68156fba8ef80750ee
2f35fe6adf30081125db2c0750563d6b7f2ed7fc
describe
'7387' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTN' 'sip-files00125thm.jpg'
e7b7ddc402cff98a9cf6668640be57f2
4a9598cb0c4e54a890e2af4110e0748e98e9ee4b
'2011-10-31T12:13:48-04:00'
describe
'1032801' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTO' 'sip-files00126.jp2'
e31a88fbe9072ca13f1c25e779071fa3
c4de63f1d448fb3cc739195c3cc3696585cbbb52
describe
'81368' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTP' 'sip-files00126.jpg'
4220b14ae03e58a603e3b4d6c65da6c8
119f16eb3950eb6abd8801b2f372a67d0595d7d8
describe
'28507' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTQ' 'sip-files00126.pro'
3d925e31745e8933d23b787dc75adbce
574b78ae18aacdbe90e77e425f551ed58bcb0b31
describe
'27743' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTR' 'sip-files00126.QC.jpg'
94203415532c351bb49bc12cc8fc1137
368df62a78506e29d34a287f8fba09a54e18c3b5
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTS' 'sip-files00126.tif'
fe5a2658fd2a9bd521b3279967de8186
9cc9daac0e189345d3824b6c2e1ac27d298644df
'2011-10-31T12:11:25-04:00'
describe
'1175' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTT' 'sip-files00126.txt'
9ab550ca2aecfc34655bd26c2bde6925
44bf79f5444d783ba5c427a13e76460734ff6e72
describe
'8173' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTU' 'sip-files00126thm.jpg'
d0048be6cf10fa11a7554f957bc17cb6
9b05ebd81c8e10efe4c8d78a7592fac656160317
describe
'1020001' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTV' 'sip-files00127.jp2'
f9c2b5d6b052c701cd2c1b994f11420e
b6240d14ad3b34cd17299008e56be5124f7ae9c3
describe
'102721' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTW' 'sip-files00127.jpg'
5798b0f1264a529bd5573952b2fa01d9
fd61f6b804b2b93bc730f65c93f55b559ae23672
describe
'42271' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTX' 'sip-files00127.pro'
4aad8c416420603c859543db2d79ce7f
5fe72d37aef4ef3f2d7aa9e8e5f023e8b47a6a27
describe
'37062' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTY' 'sip-files00127.QC.jpg'
2dce243d485d8e4cb571e0f538ce6868
d9643d0b6b9c72868d9848aa4d86552ac2649166
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUTZ' 'sip-files00127.tif'
e96f9cc6d17a813e467b7b5086f69023
bf129ffbab947779e285a947fab32d8697fb6489
describe
'1680' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUA' 'sip-files00127.txt'
9bd18b31c24a6424b182824000692f4d
87a034b622d2137e69014fa326d2168a760c3dec
'2011-10-31T12:13:59-04:00'
describe
'11002' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUB' 'sip-files00127thm.jpg'
d1e24d1ff17a7f7292039f0b7819d35c
3b272e59a68fe68b20fd9158738385d801531632
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUC' 'sip-files00128.jp2'
7fc6da124baf255c3925baf7a021ff42
d7e091a0ac6549c71118cefbe3ea67a6f257783c
describe
'105036' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUD' 'sip-files00128.jpg'
fe46d7214e268bf8843f26eb364c4f7e
4033d07dc5633e60d1dcb529ba4db40e4617e545
describe
'41575' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUE' 'sip-files00128.pro'
7b9a0e5d69fe5ebec34014c04fb80766
29fe65131eb80e356b115bcf682325538e4594e2
describe
'37546' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUF' 'sip-files00128.QC.jpg'
d262aa73975553a4e1f126e645daea21
e28aa0f83b222fd0b0dcceee1236de460a0fe69b
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUG' 'sip-files00128.tif'
1d4d00e66b31157d5f5e89557fcaa6a5
c53f06533f302942403094e739374f10204dc804
describe
'1655' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUH' 'sip-files00128.txt'
eab7253c83a489efa06f2088f0746253
08598e9c2340d99cc294565ae420b74bb557637a
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUI' 'sip-files00128thm.jpg'
9484f8ef0e0667d443295fb317118dbe
2ca52a5e59ac41bfe22c5b27c062349a274ae256
describe
'1019939' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUJ' 'sip-files00129.jp2'
268a39ebf95de29773a8411bb24f2a7d
05fc15d8c3e33f6f1a7d4f201f4d5f76160ddfbd
'2011-10-31T12:13:55-04:00'
describe
'99664' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUK' 'sip-files00129.jpg'
42b4f4b076fae2265c663621e2117d78
718cbbf396f32b08e126febeeafc1d9783c961d2
'2011-10-31T12:11:17-04:00'
describe
'40067' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUL' 'sip-files00129.pro'
7becf581bd1120449a298ff121291295
e06953c6fd30468fa3ec94fd65551a30b022179a
describe
'35347' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUM' 'sip-files00129.QC.jpg'
63db8bcea5799e484945898ee932ea14
8cb4b4312ce4aacfab022a03e60d61e64e11e164
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUN' 'sip-files00129.tif'
693fb7ed0e4adcd579c6ecbb25f0faed
f434ed3918b5a8393c40e6050d835e129b0ed914
'2011-10-31T12:15:14-04:00'
describe
'1632' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUO' 'sip-files00129.txt'
224b0a6cb669bd72730bf98316fe4440
a73166e10aba709cd46b08ee32a7a149fd568e35
describe
'10610' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUP' 'sip-files00129thm.jpg'
8b874c6a577189541b9834960a45b6d3
b6121f0bd92e2c3214ddd817d5a78c2b505b092d
describe
'1032902' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUQ' 'sip-files00130.jp2'
c3e182e5218086cf9d160c9e89f1e960
40d150e14a2212147c44fba72e5ea99f8b354e5c
describe
'107626' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUR' 'sip-files00130.jpg'
8c4f0092fd435f71234278a09728d9aa
bf27f411eabea675a2b80bcf55fed8e8568bf7db
describe
'42474' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUS' 'sip-files00130.pro'
011eae7bfee2e6583edc33261ced5b62
fae66a58f835225208388f7e228a8c81f6f5b1d2
describe
'37753' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUT' 'sip-files00130.QC.jpg'
c2b61858088a389d2a60a113d19ff753
48aad3b31fbe4c2213722783f2fe87442a2362e2
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUU' 'sip-files00130.tif'
feb31fb2eb07a361d323c11d6e3873e4
96644bfb84937cc4807324509265277fc36bb378
'2011-10-31T12:16:16-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUV' 'sip-files00130.txt'
1bd6bce4510c3740817292afcfa16cb2
baf55b915882fcee60109f2a0e697b3641e017bf
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUW' 'sip-files00130thm.jpg'
73a70be56fc2feec38944a0645815d7e
d348303c50bcf88216074b715838bb70f028d0d0
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUX' 'sip-files00131.jp2'
17d2a7c1a3fb407b41a9961e9ce633be
7a9b43043a29859f6d790b1f404de8432051f32e
describe
'110170' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUY' 'sip-files00131.jpg'
25cbcfea6e02cac6df48388655ef17c1
8d88271fef6d9b4588b8fd482f3996018d50ec3f
'2011-10-31T12:12:16-04:00'
describe
'44328' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUUZ' 'sip-files00131.pro'
03a97aa1cef2c4766cc8dc196fc4504f
f7ad3619d17c464b323011342cb832b65389ab09
describe
'38899' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVA' 'sip-files00131.QC.jpg'
f9a81724377ecddb3e3ca85536c7645f
0a9ec68d456f86bca00029a46b684ceb60792d6e
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVB' 'sip-files00131.tif'
5ea5e0ae52e537646adb6f8ef3474cff
4e590484c72ba70b120b7c326ff4a478182b9d99
'2011-10-31T12:12:14-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVC' 'sip-files00131.txt'
4160486314c0644b73165d5776cc6720
8f3a9dc316961a8a80405760fbe502dabb555a2a
describe
'11420' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVD' 'sip-files00131thm.jpg'
046177dc06f1374043e8e5f3c77f78fe
1cc7f39810c8e7ae1244ca9f56a5b009fbc4ecd0
describe
'1032898' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVE' 'sip-files00132.jp2'
6ef866b8f98b6b6dc41853c0948fe747
76d3e30ab4d8dabf6fa3fcda598310b8ffe1b3a4
describe
'105104' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVF' 'sip-files00132.jpg'
dee035e7420dfb9667b2d0bb856b17c8
f29b7cfb323516892533b85c0c60f4e7bf28b56b
describe
'40779' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVG' 'sip-files00132.pro'
de9f636ca970595ee84d292ae9871105
d59cdb31122c0b507bc2ab9531e8a5b5ad0b9a2f
describe
'37427' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVH' 'sip-files00132.QC.jpg'
44b31ed98a2103572eae64c4b8eed85d
684fb172d84ca304914c08a8765b742c366bdad1
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVI' 'sip-files00132.tif'
b580fd8ee68aeade642e205ba25f6f3f
fe04ba545dc2fceaad8086fdb09a20f28b954635
describe
'1652' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVJ' 'sip-files00132.txt'
830903d07e89791c626c5c973ea4bfab
3929188e2e925fbac587aec31af76b6066f0108a
describe
'11017' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVK' 'sip-files00132thm.jpg'
5b1824f46131722e1245209c74656192
0e382568735b7bd12886879aaf65abf0ee6957d5
describe
'1015046' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVL' 'sip-files00133.jp2'
f32bba0d0528e7a89cb5fa439099cfcd
f6ffcebde2bdec97e91a6e8911711c52f142a226
describe
'104151' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVM' 'sip-files00133.jpg'
dc360d9d650162e9b7830547707d6a0a
9aba81c2afab9f745c7d64bc9068c4589a6c1ba7
describe
'44297' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVN' 'sip-files00133.pro'
751e60366773b7ae64ec9aaba57c1744
cb76eb6d2d5542448fbc6684284467724aa2000a
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVO' 'sip-files00133.QC.jpg'
3a384eae3bd7d57e13d06947f2e23ff4
46c81c6ec01b8f68569f80386f99ac1794613827
describe
'8130513' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVP' 'sip-files00133.tif'
a41ece0dfb1ba0820f0aaf0dc846ab62
bf4f84dc39e48302787d9db652f8df36ead37194
describe
'1783' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVQ' 'sip-files00133.txt'
27218745e04f670e962aa6b72ec3e61b
2a330b8e9e2fd89524d27d0b9260d7ccd5d57ca5
describe
'11190' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVR' 'sip-files00133thm.jpg'
213720bb1f02fb500cdc0df31545f0dc
d5fe1ded9523eb2f4e19b02b196709f162f56a6f
describe
'1029133' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVS' 'sip-files00134.jp2'
1e2b862e08bd703970799b2a1e91b33a
06f0d4384f1fd6e88eda951e08758f9ed851a77e
describe
'105157' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVT' 'sip-files00134.jpg'
8aaf2c34e608926e5941d6488dcb22e5
540f558e18735a776c445488582537f2cf34b54b
describe
'42274' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVU' 'sip-files00134.pro'
e9f34c5238d6e5138ccf39444db2ecb9
b8af45f835ad7eeee448de6baa7243377aff4661
describe
'38348' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVV' 'sip-files00134.QC.jpg'
41f2c6602309cb2bf45c1c13a01cb3d4
a1748c775e731de967149c9871c74491cf39d246
describe
'8242589' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVW' 'sip-files00134.tif'
8b3a7ba1bb461aaeb51c3ea2b76b5360
4d37b845ef075a04c7348c476f632a3629076748
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVX' 'sip-files00134.txt'
b3b3e1ada44550e42c457f87219489f3
d1fc102601df2a99eea22c2ec0a83a9695e0e6b1
describe
'10370' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVY' 'sip-files00134thm.jpg'
2e4ccc17cf28dad17f044dc21518d299
ac7457e995b60e4d6c1ea27fef34d6986ecaebf6
describe
'1015060' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUVZ' 'sip-files00135.jp2'
9c13f427813981d8176c24bf84b54551
4b55c0c6706fd712e73c5822e69bc74f6b315275
describe
'98133' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWA' 'sip-files00135.jpg'
b9927df600da9c0c64d4cad4d45f5a09
2997322ac1553908c4cf6c4a86937db8b6dd2348
describe
'40115' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWB' 'sip-files00135.pro'
39552aa0f644e599561e6e62c2d22b04
cb8f709225e33e5ef9d3cfc9f2a7606e2b12c2c1
describe
'36231' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWC' 'sip-files00135.QC.jpg'
acd278e7664e7f1fe8fce631ce9500eb
c9cab2681054e2bbae781d5e252478d10b6e86d4
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWD' 'sip-files00135.tif'
daeed6f9d78600b1ea395f36700a26de
dbebbcd188cb52352e824fc6d674b0d33dcaef8b
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWE' 'sip-files00135.txt'
09c2dcaf7a995f6c636a30b8d6b391cf
425855f975795b4df668dd45f86f9de3ad2bec4c
describe
'11132' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWF' 'sip-files00135thm.jpg'
89079c3b56c06c09c763d443c96d87c1
a85758ec62e97bdc91dd86e67b394967aa5dd7e2
describe
'1029111' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWG' 'sip-files00136.jp2'
8f1c9c6e15f7d3ee34501a5425898890
8fe65b2bcf24ee7a08829a3bd61aac59319548a2
describe
'104327' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWH' 'sip-files00136.jpg'
94315d0075548b9879086c7e92acd0fe
c78d370be418adc8c13915495e9588dedae96903
describe
'42269' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWI' 'sip-files00136.pro'
d98ceec89c7a7e2bfbeb5fb1e128685b
3ecc1e545bb2366825827a189f38a1b1ebf84081
describe
'38133' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWJ' 'sip-files00136.QC.jpg'
26dd76216492b5374784af642c48f4a4
40ea54c419b2c17498698cc5e1581044094e7fc7
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWK' 'sip-files00136.tif'
7d8a9032a45d9971daf29892e8d1fa1f
dbe9584640e229ccecd46a2cd58cd6466f529519
describe
'1739' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWL' 'sip-files00136.txt'
c0259e5ef358952ccd7adeb87b53a3bc
a6b93d73fc48a6296fbbe59a31622d956c41d463
describe
'10725' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWM' 'sip-files00136thm.jpg'
afe79e46b015939ef7ef158c8eff6dab
0440c176af148d21d69726db2c53a1e8fa9fd00a
describe
'1015088' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWN' 'sip-files00137.jp2'
1eb293158816013531cb37c3a5713bd8
52662779398392fb3e23b592082320dc1f523037
describe
'34858' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWO' 'sip-files00137.jpg'
ee555e89dea067cebc63bee0bdd8a575
731c13e3d7a70943c9b22de571f7eab3fbf3f019
describe
'8077' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWP' 'sip-files00137.pro'
d8c58fe876fb2590fe144c5d1d1e8a4a
bd9fd4b6ae2ca2a7843c6ae61cefb207ad3fad0e
describe
'11580' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWQ' 'sip-files00137.QC.jpg'
657b0fb2467a04d4d185f9036668beaf
9e2fffab403e0009c390bb2ab263c5b1e6b779de
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWR' 'sip-files00137.tif'
6fd89cdc971e033e0bdec3a1d792daa4
38d68f182657dd5dbfd9ff7f365bbdb848a74610
describe
'333' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWS' 'sip-files00137.txt'
c4221d84f7f48ac3322e4c7e8796971d
f3b8a1fba8eab85404a3d0445f5fea40c3608c75
describe
'3758' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWT' 'sip-files00137thm.jpg'
cd6e744b404f12acbfbd6a0c77522c0e
702c28f6704a64cef4acb30b7f0fd49a42ec72f8
describe
'1029122' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWU' 'sip-files00138.jp2'
de79d4a6f2a18fad6c758d48804c110b
e76ccfa9ac46d8a10cab7648c766922465f2205d
describe
'75959' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWV' 'sip-files00138.jpg'
ad65762c0796af2a4a1a28126731dff0
7c585f7b57940e928426392e906911123de9c929
describe
'26638' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWW' 'sip-files00138.pro'
50eba5c37314d4c723587cc5ef74b774
2ef0e1c6a4e879c7356befe8e5945a326ae15f41
describe
'26497' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWX' 'sip-files00138.QC.jpg'
63e4861766ac6a99b5eef4f445b758c0
2d36d515953a2946840b19576463117eec5ac83e
'2011-10-31T12:10:23-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWY' 'sip-files00138.tif'
a7e83ec1c3ba9e85dd8ba0aeab18c627
66bac0fac6d8baf9e592e89de7c8610febcf7529
'2011-10-31T12:14:47-04:00'
describe
'1100' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUWZ' 'sip-files00138.txt'
f052c1c850d5825b50dce15e9beb7782
5b853fe273345dc2971dc854fee6d00277c1e1fc
describe
'7374' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXA' 'sip-files00138thm.jpg'
4d1b9853d8065d412123e578dee4642d
f95931623577eda3b288a4c85bc711dae41e4222
describe
'1015059' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXB' 'sip-files00139.jp2'
a5bbbf9195ff54463c6b7589a59df602
c7ced9d6d9e4558ccd4b3a154fd6fa84036c3e37
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXC' 'sip-files00139.jpg'
03b2c203a952475ee3047a1b36311d29
4c59a45f9f6290ff650dd6658022ec611b68806c
describe
'42779' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXD' 'sip-files00139.pro'
de7cef789188701440ee7d59a7d7e860
2e279512e361c60885a3a8ef128e45adc88d7c83
describe
'37556' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXE' 'sip-files00139.QC.jpg'
9539940f833b85a896925c9c756a7b08
e5f2e7fb9b06b8d99cf8ca2c1126ecc60abdc41a
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXF' 'sip-files00139.tif'
1832fb7439cc0145dfeac0b2482bef24
7ffbe61b3e2b7f10ceefdfa9e8bf55a48b7ddd18
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXG' 'sip-files00139.txt'
f69d71c2362e460b4f5489b3e323090e
3422e31b8c9df04160b7ad693fad9b00bf5a8df3
describe
'11018' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXH' 'sip-files00139thm.jpg'
1a6eb115551912f770daddf0e90e11fe
d4d65200facf465f39fef1fe609dfe1ed16d0ace
describe
'1029161' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXI' 'sip-files00140.jp2'
e7358549c7bbf8524fd3a4bc72ab0cd3
c8d742f1d6ac2819faae82d948f252f33ded1310
describe
'112893' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXJ' 'sip-files00140.jpg'
b08922b8e1ef065fbae68ade9b18aac7
b9e62e856a723cbefeb5587d1db774f38171ac93
describe
'43384' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXK' 'sip-files00140.pro'
7cba0d99f312da546ab407573fba31d7
1ad7b6c4444371cca85646525195c17b3d48275b
describe
'39962' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXL' 'sip-files00140.QC.jpg'
6e31ad05a10a7a906b08bcf7fd26cff7
ef65046360fbfbd2846d246821cbdefc3a14d1a0
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXM' 'sip-files00140.tif'
2fbae81987315f528bb066b3285014ce
bf421cfd0fd2396ea44f3f81c0ecefeb6141e41c
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXN' 'sip-files00140.txt'
719ec9b424aeb5c3aa6e3309ce98c383
d61ca19cf8c812e6d2909720866eb04d7ba22d20
describe
'10792' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXO' 'sip-files00140thm.jpg'
0674d5aa1578999eb37614465f2d82c5
48ff72a1a38379653daf83e46539447f5f4b0765
describe
'1015105' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXP' 'sip-files00141.jp2'
f42bcb2fad241633cb7ce6823aa86705
0eca4fdbc37bf3f71101b91a68429777edbc46a7
describe
'106529' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXQ' 'sip-files00141.jpg'
0966718216bbe001c21ca41bad0f072b
de5aee885960d5520efca9400034a98c7ca13522
describe
'44022' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXR' 'sip-files00141.pro'
8627875018760f8aa64c6a730debffcd
b1f26e446e79d4e5289089c8be98ca1c9619a399
describe
'38380' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXS' 'sip-files00141.QC.jpg'
366867a21649a6c579c91320879156e4
b48ab8eb98652102caaeca2707b93a7aef60be36
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXT' 'sip-files00141.tif'
fb223a13432f61f41ad2c17bd3289835
d3318bd08345f23d9fc519408ce60318f13ec7ae
describe
'1792' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXU' 'sip-files00141.txt'
c478e9d6b7c391a765279be20a97d9de
3042e7564d47a7d7e37d0e62f4ac512ac10ad5ef
describe
'11352' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXV' 'sip-files00141thm.jpg'
5a12db6fce9f92e9603c75ff19b84b98
320030d1bce64f7f13de3d02c3f385cf180e47ba
describe
'1029116' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXW' 'sip-files00142.jp2'
56736542e67b4974334d8be93db449c3
aaa2a01557349a68c9620b62181b724b84e2cb67
describe
'112939' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXX' 'sip-files00142.jpg'
77f36e5e7fdd0d4c964da382e1dec1f9
2c8917656e2f68e39cac782d7066cd844464295a
describe
'44202' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXY' 'sip-files00142.pro'
fab41a7d322c7293046081626cbdff4d
6fe8cb48df098a7ed5435c0554d00f1c193be22a
describe
'40209' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUXZ' 'sip-files00142.QC.jpg'
84429c374977011d0e1432fa7fcb1dbc
5d6aaf95c1e2b60439eac87291dac9760c3446a0
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYA' 'sip-files00142.tif'
0b11b2c88712a1823a30d41524442e1b
2969915130d366cec1a61c34766d506a91acd1b3
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYB' 'sip-files00142.txt'
80bcec05e90993a91de9b01d286b77b4
9182b8b311d7acbf3945eda66e8a58c48e6fc0bc
describe
'10647' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYC' 'sip-files00142thm.jpg'
49891144d7a416e2df462a016790a999
141a532bc7e98669566120fb96ec3907ce6ade6c
describe
'1014984' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYD' 'sip-files00143.jp2'
9644c7ff2b649ccb860a3f9edc851d0e
1ee7a22e0d94efc0b56bfabf27584a57aab30d72
describe
'107231' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYE' 'sip-files00143.jpg'
a793e6bb685d5bbd3da73e20b5525470
821df975a4a93bb8e66f60db6b5ce8de30198e08
'2011-10-31T12:15:24-04:00'
describe
'43079' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYF' 'sip-files00143.pro'
17799cb5be7bbb35e85677acd70139ef
c989a05e8c06ae3ec4de953cc63d8ecb470d7b62
describe
'38585' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYG' 'sip-files00143.QC.jpg'
9f6d18e3bcbd33eb56dee068513a7d83
3626013910f72e1dc183d3eeeec4070833c67220
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYH' 'sip-files00143.tif'
e512d45ad652c833626b3189095b2f6a
65778d2db3e7739fc0d732d2ec15ebfc77f836d1
describe
'1732' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYI' 'sip-files00143.txt'
a43caa1ea23bdc37a940d994aa092096
a3f4af1de399c53e58a886f8e8406f319eb5a0f4
describe
'11443' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYJ' 'sip-files00143thm.jpg'
cf62e51e6d4b3649b8a1e26f5addb9f7
0cc8f3f57045ebe1f098193cfb983fe612c42f8c
describe
'1029095' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYK' 'sip-files00144.jp2'
543732cd6645fe92a89bcfc67227d338
9c937e77bf8f98d11092da700feed0aadab11d53
describe
'111857' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYL' 'sip-files00144.jpg'
0e605ca7bd79a05b12e80543508f18dc
2f93bbb4ff699c4bd1ccc2068f7ee9b4782924d5
describe
'43212' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYM' 'sip-files00144.pro'
a3316270872ddb3b49bde5cda7bca60e
f3b385354495d7975694013e7a6f0f3b212cefc6
describe
'39577' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYN' 'sip-files00144.QC.jpg'
eebb3313aa9b84fda5b3aed77333388a
9cbee07260f5b5925c8519bc8e8b25ab422bbb00
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYO' 'sip-files00144.tif'
d6649c07fc7d4ce4e0cbb175a0343f85
f4a7357d979bb8ff354426ca6894bac73d871fdc
describe
'1716' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYP' 'sip-files00144.txt'
a18c9055b1e660f905952a16718d74fa
33f527f3be2636bf4edebd2357bc72e8eb2cfc30
describe
'10630' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYQ' 'sip-files00144thm.jpg'
1805d81b8c68b00fd4a1288dc2285a92
4c9eaa41203203a93685ccf91fe4534f74ed6c1c
describe
'1015117' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYR' 'sip-files00145.jp2'
dfe6c2f3cb47e2e1e871a4de46c62612
15c57515eaa74fccfde3d24fbcffe95682d44295
describe
'106453' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYS' 'sip-files00145.jpg'
eb7885ab945eb5b2b28579c76aee8a25
9281829cc52e91e14e8fca2ebfa028c466a322ab
describe
'43052' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYT' 'sip-files00145.pro'
ddf07ecb75acf4f721789766d03f7f29
2f24465a9ab61fb5cde033ad584bc807373fffe6
describe
'37989' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYU' 'sip-files00145.QC.jpg'
641ed39246b159514370f35dca50bdbf
470fbfa1e03092983c1d5a773c1ede2c933e055d
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYV' 'sip-files00145.tif'
1e1be0eacaff1c7e801e50ba3771495f
2d92bdbcea1834fe740ef6258939d2618dffbc6f
describe
'1706' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYW' 'sip-files00145.txt'
a4e785cb3046f7c8ab8a5438c897d34a
9a82d7533db24ca9ea730477398d792f2d44604c
describe
'11029' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYX' 'sip-files00145thm.jpg'
c1b584815ed56533938fe0d317f5423d
fa941155a4a3757bb53fe4b99757354dc2832762
describe
'1029110' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYY' 'sip-files00146.jp2'
ace1caff510cec4cbabf4995eacdb44f
bfe56757533d0e64ad7a5de5a62df4d333c69660
'2011-10-31T12:15:26-04:00'
describe
'106871' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUYZ' 'sip-files00146.jpg'
03abade0a8740731de747864164072c4
e25c856c6a1b9b1c2d2ccc7406b42e4cb6df9310
describe
'41399' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZA' 'sip-files00146.pro'
3c40fe420e7b90663d476e1194702edd
ec3eb6911ac6c9c944a24223593c67519575f178
describe
'38020' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZB' 'sip-files00146.QC.jpg'
c457f599d0963ba51d43818241b26c95
74daf3c4c3c9e0f13c49280326401dca0b48e8b5
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZC' 'sip-files00146.tif'
00468421d3fcad8be4488c4a79b0b418
cbf7e630035d6d749112ac6d77fc2b2413a73608
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZD' 'sip-files00146.txt'
45d80b073b6d613549d0b55aaa12c646
7c6712686e8eefdd5ed6d2026b620054c39b5a50
describe
'10374' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZE' 'sip-files00146thm.jpg'
dd3dbb2a009250ef7d5742d8b9cf8e83
f8e6f3641643fde7b0a1d48db236322e15987c94
describe
'1015104' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZF' 'sip-files00147.jp2'
903ffebf16f44c3607383b4a39d06ff7
8b2eba9b29ea5fd152356710fe6e02e9da64c547
describe
'107344' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZG' 'sip-files00147.jpg'
ce83b0c773aee724809e5c5579a1bf73
7c545de3993651c95f0ebec47b9e9efb5d7645ea
describe
'43864' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZH' 'sip-files00147.pro'
69b9434bb63a5ee06dc54bec8e0bc92a
e57486175be10045a7a85917ffbaac5b7a0867bd
describe
'38103' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZI' 'sip-files00147.QC.jpg'
a212427e9305d4ed990d6c0171e62218
fe9fc2d945bed4e1e6905423ad3717fb1d0e7e6f
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZJ' 'sip-files00147.tif'
17766bf46f599ad72f31499f622c760d
da345411d4f7fe9d6fad7c6a7ee8a9a7c2f6656e
describe
'1740' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZK' 'sip-files00147.txt'
89b3306a6914bfd130a8402691c71821
49754924450515e19d6f3d90464c5a98d9afef09
describe
'11063' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZL' 'sip-files00147thm.jpg'
30c6b2930188a766c594c154ef4e7567
698abdb67d98943fcfe6fd1d769d3df6f6a7c176
describe
'1029158' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZM' 'sip-files00148.jp2'
6df141368eee6455867be7d2d713d0f9
31099b05e4b07e92945e056012a4176075676216
describe
'105992' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZN' 'sip-files00148.jpg'
6b88300f58796386c63246be02017da1
b786a7d3b3bfebca0751351f8852231fa3d48555
describe
'42728' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZO' 'sip-files00148.pro'
0a9c84009e9d71b9188c9845e7e37d8b
b20f1373174c639523d29aa38d83aceb7768441c
describe
'37686' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZP' 'sip-files00148.QC.jpg'
c498c280edb6022df551908f2462a39e
19fba59a10174dfeccca997509582c94c57b4e47
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZQ' 'sip-files00148.tif'
5960698e20850c5682c81478c9b621ee
0378f0aa25417392339412572044ef8376b32271
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZR' 'sip-files00148.txt'
ff07d1ce7f25a64342db665daa37dcc0
fc4b872f322374e8aea94abc4d29c030413a851b
describe
'10190' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZS' 'sip-files00148thm.jpg'
9be467e3852b3cf2af533e0404574da4
9cbc6dfaa3acd7060f9d2f3d2b4129fcaa9a0862
describe
'1015099' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZT' 'sip-files00149.jp2'
2172be0ae2e02677ee6f41b620fd5ec0
fbde48f0ff48e46b2c105dcbd5ed20a3d0da510d
describe
'102496' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZU' 'sip-files00149.jpg'
288b60eac93df906a1d149dc845b0c75
e3b6bcb06ee01d696057834ce0c5a7de162ff7f2
describe
'41900' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZV' 'sip-files00149.pro'
64cdfefdac437a9d8e96ffd10a07c45d
56d2fea4ef05a1f7bb3c5cddb5b0cbb7a6c6f089
'2011-10-31T12:10:37-04:00'
describe
'36804' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZW' 'sip-files00149.QC.jpg'
ff48224affa273b9a4bdfdea50bc4f52
5f792aa52b732a30cb86cce2aee17528e47d0932
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZX' 'sip-files00149.tif'
925c7f409bade08262a6cdfb4472bcce
94e9866a9ab2c58039ba16925a3a6619aa6c9a57
describe
'1663' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZY' 'sip-files00149.txt'
dc5a2ed1611aa14ff73c0f92a8b51b69
39a8a71cb862c3474fb3ecc15167cce2bc32decd
describe
'10944' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAUZZ' 'sip-files00149thm.jpg'
46dbc6fd0be447002e91b257536bdbb4
852c6d29220dfd607c32642a6e823c0e56e29921
'2011-10-31T12:16:30-04:00'
describe
'1029130' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAA' 'sip-files00150.jp2'
86fc07941922014643bf065668544562
1e4b0638cbe4db3e7908c7cac361a8add5b98988
describe
'112117' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAB' 'sip-files00150.jpg'
9abc4a39c76667a8c8acdd37790379e6
d70b7b401bc2e8e1863e5b578b2623c034388167
describe
'44653' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAC' 'sip-files00150.pro'
5e9c9b5bf23cadc841236b2337e65e70
71daa44329929d8adf4347891715f174ec853f6f
describe
'40418' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAD' 'sip-files00150.QC.jpg'
36b6606cbca52d66a582b59c3cf793cf
e50ca0c845484e298356a369f3a69e1a038930b5
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAE' 'sip-files00150.tif'
bf07b72f64f434807cfff363ffbeb909
bbcca1204322169e086d83ea551ab87f0d3cf632
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAF' 'sip-files00150.txt'
6f4cb1b19782e694005bba981054ab36
6dd9798fff16756b52a765c6831f46fd69914187
describe
'10762' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAG' 'sip-files00150thm.jpg'
e8d732b822273690c840626bf0572805
6090755d920ee296b8388bfe92ecae332754f0d9
'2011-10-31T12:10:12-04:00'
describe
'1015126' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAH' 'sip-files00151.jp2'
54c576bc90c3abc85eee05c3f93ce59f
40e9f648ee4c1f4e96d89ae0fefdaa1f40577563
describe
'108699' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAI' 'sip-files00151.jpg'
17da27676e1dcff4c9c7711ff433895b
e17c05a6d31770b9eef474f751edd1288ac89963
describe
'45062' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAJ' 'sip-files00151.pro'
44a6c58811054202d661f2b73e474b6e
8f2931a5b42a114b7059f0b89dba9b9678896106
describe
'38547' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAK' 'sip-files00151.QC.jpg'
8c8ae780ccdbdab1859516f2f2cff0c9
eae60e84cac35a9b2d0871c2b7a735ea0febbd86
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAL' 'sip-files00151.tif'
b4d3399c51fe5f32bf461e86e6036cea
3fb4b1039a54ad37d990ff43139e8e4557876af3
describe
'1804' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAM' 'sip-files00151.txt'
dd2681a3bd68e738f81311ac3af9a317
1e831256c382d7382c11508133f999a1746c39b0
describe
'11058' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAN' 'sip-files00151thm.jpg'
e20d38ad5636a7faae781034f8dad46a
6f04d97878fa4ba11a7cdc2ff1fa413dccb0c35d
describe
'1029156' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAO' 'sip-files00152.jp2'
519858421a3193c09e7ef57453bdf710
25d487156f017a004a214d5ed2e36c7f6f31f0c7
describe
'112230' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAP' 'sip-files00152.jpg'
11ff0f3794438ace8b987046c5c2fe61
544739a72212ac9f54e1db30f3d866533c053b82
'2011-10-31T12:15:02-04:00'
describe
'44098' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAQ' 'sip-files00152.pro'
7c7677963d2ef55b9297ad73972ea7ea
d8f519d62d86caf23500a566a716ed60a6bc74ee
describe
'39672' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAR' 'sip-files00152.QC.jpg'
ae94728becf89f42abe2a89bb1dec418
7f8fb68b2ea28378926df34745caffc48d315e8b
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAS' 'sip-files00152.tif'
106c42285e49f3bc144d76a8558716cf
58921b4716c083275e21bb429178af27f421adbe
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAT' 'sip-files00152.txt'
1f8a826e3a33dfe911cb81af6c9dacc6
69073cab8db02cd0617b6c006f509f641dd54d87
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAU' 'sip-files00152thm.jpg'
3afbfaf7c335dd7d18dfd5973b0377c8
98658d8307f3dd3072b129118455607990629c00
describe
'1015005' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAV' 'sip-files00153.jp2'
39618be1a30e2f0006257f03be406cf7
6e7eca998768617f26449099b9922e9119d9a3f3
describe
'106056' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAW' 'sip-files00153.jpg'
e0118ccc7662d271ba4167de061f9af6
bdb1177b8f30d3a130e3a271dcc35622b54e9ac2
describe
'43220' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAX' 'sip-files00153.pro'
4429e58269e3552dfa343d02e8f14812
92f56e088a964af2790c0f6984d46224bb8cbc38
describe
'37704' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAY' 'sip-files00153.QC.jpg'
b369c04e02568cb757d819c76ab83f0d
50ed2baed0e6376e5c17de8b95f58fb3da347fb9
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVAZ' 'sip-files00153.tif'
ebfdfc09b8dbfa05f0fa01859651d8eb
cf990e652bacb139dc988b3645609788c6538a04
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBA' 'sip-files00153.txt'
60126f443d277058f89ac0a151ef8dd9
35bff06befdbc36f209c6f258d6a7901185bde21
describe
'11136' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBB' 'sip-files00153thm.jpg'
4308e26d9557044bac8a851bc069f704
bb0b13e2e37c88f6c9de05fa77124d776834e304
describe
'1029135' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBC' 'sip-files00154.jp2'
02910523f25dcfde00dda1ffe584324f
1fdbb9ae0800a2e03f3044a453949fa293a2d6da
describe
'111014' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBD' 'sip-files00154.jpg'
b1f380b69c76c8d19545788e20e31d1f
48cc45dc63370ef1a70722656e471e7da7e6b191
describe
'43485' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBE' 'sip-files00154.pro'
212fc0c66dbe4693425f635a13a52f1b
2576d06d7d0379100448e4ed49f46e336b1085fd
describe
'39497' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBF' 'sip-files00154.QC.jpg'
8abe9bf45759b21f0da7740be9897f35
1e73b8ca7bfe758335b07404ca6ee64e4ba6e951
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBG' 'sip-files00154.tif'
1c6c8ef269388d6415274a993e16cc77
843e033dead6de5717a50ffd07ae65ccfd5945f0
describe
'1741' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBH' 'sip-files00154.txt'
06d719592767b34046b3460bb4f72b9e
81b4e49456f23c3885e2d9cb56bda1bdb6f02722
describe
'10461' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBI' 'sip-files00154thm.jpg'
03776a73384bc1501a194d54e5e83d88
02f7fd5f5d72dc1d59b7023ae03d1cb208e85878
describe
'1015054' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBJ' 'sip-files00155.jp2'
08758a2802653ee16effe8dce4f300cc
c9fb730e56f2d2d01ab43d25462574be2afa28a6
describe
'103440' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBK' 'sip-files00155.jpg'
1f60bc14fdd1d4a3925f6c76e81e1552
c0fa00cea0e6dcd691458c8f7ff599d43e9c94b6
describe
'41160' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBL' 'sip-files00155.pro'
3200903e1ae225f5bbcef8462094d96e
13cdec3259d70414cc54643b9f1d1653d19f23d9
describe
'37325' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBM' 'sip-files00155.QC.jpg'
19a2ffd7cd95e9c0095ec8a99cbc3448
97f9c58e62677896bf5741207fff916570d09666
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBN' 'sip-files00155.tif'
238f91a71f0de0220fbc42fc9adf49c3
7a6cf4c68c367c2bfe19134c9e300d2b21f8db1e
'2011-10-31T12:15:40-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBO' 'sip-files00155.txt'
f0ca445c335487ba9a29ca8716e727ba
93e9661a6ddc92df8f288f89ef6c4747898da5cd
describe
'10842' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBP' 'sip-files00155thm.jpg'
232b12f8b801169e12cf15bebb5ab07f
327d4e6e002ffcaf1d8b17262b8a56795cf3426b
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBQ' 'sip-files00156.jp2'
6de017bc9213825dbebe0ae98a1f8547
142efe50620392a437b245f461f80977585a9a81
describe
'104843' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBR' 'sip-files00156.jpg'
106bea5efa6aa54a76e6dbaffc6b7edd
622b98f4a2c7b948884ddcc1dd5341b9fa1c2c83
describe
'39754' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBS' 'sip-files00156.pro'
79008e1dd4c04cadc1ec46f4c9f87f48
8c5fc9f604380fc9fec253c85ba9d37f3d461c8c
describe
'37002' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBT' 'sip-files00156.QC.jpg'
739a836f23eb1db85cb3cb585aa1ac48
22f673f28ae64cdd66637c44cacbc41d1f09a56f
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBU' 'sip-files00156.tif'
8f0c5578e29b9bb2cad106e98fabb46a
214af1e023a8ed42c3ae22f36141c6808a4cd8d5
'2011-10-31T12:11:39-04:00'
describe
'1596' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBV' 'sip-files00156.txt'
c9d01cd4553f90dac55a87dca3d2b6d0
97c37e62fb1ba6980a0094bfcf274b9703340c6e
describe
'10142' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBW' 'sip-files00156thm.jpg'
ab4bee1a0333e2c30bb2badb49062e88
7e6f4202597eda3d3d77e125ffc31879f3189734
describe
'1015100' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBX' 'sip-files00157.jp2'
05475d12c9a00883289e2939fde29b5b
fe7adc02f1e6f570000269c68e9820173c4448e7
describe
'85585' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBY' 'sip-files00157.jpg'
c3fc90d9be3fe9deac115574cfd56744
8a7f7c71ec1a6b8617c399de08b75c081b86b109
describe
'32012' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVBZ' 'sip-files00157.pro'
60a4c5c0e144870c04fbfe8a792bac0e
368c401e104a1fbea98c636792efafd7fc713ad7
describe
'30025' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCA' 'sip-files00157.QC.jpg'
1937c90e73e89bfd28c0d64247aca23c
bf34ca07af0210ca5bcd5b235bd883332daf57cd
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCB' 'sip-files00157.tif'
cd4465340590f37c3bece2b112e659ef
bb878d86115527d1c700359b3eff7dea26decc43
describe
'1273' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCC' 'sip-files00157.txt'
05654c86484d3e77fe44c5369a393cea
1f89b2d694afc11562e3b9bce5890294f0b7a6b1
describe
'8794' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCD' 'sip-files00157thm.jpg'
60c724af14e564237098f06cf4f99aa7
510d1fa54ab79b4bb8ca13731d3abf68bb80d20d
'2011-10-31T12:14:15-04:00'
describe
'1029157' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCE' 'sip-files00158.jp2'
8b9a29bff58ca95f70ed5ead117f88ab
7850f56f10d48b67a982c27efb107053af7727d6
describe
'80626' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCF' 'sip-files00158.jpg'
99c4c7c6c72ab2e10a2913949f0b5662
8f33530fb42da5910e1e694289add9a4947fef46
describe
'26624' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCG' 'sip-files00158.pro'
73174097ea037b6600f38caeb457a6d9
b163cb79fc3ad49d2c258b5e8318c0f3611d6911
describe
'28005' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCH' 'sip-files00158.QC.jpg'
7502dd1c4d3e675bde885902866823d7
7e4438c0de9a999e081a0fe431a3391f52d98293
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCI' 'sip-files00158.tif'
7e97bd1fdb03e91a9dd2cb933c2b4caf
5901bff3922c935b21e650c32485eb605562cfcd
describe
'1115' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCJ' 'sip-files00158.txt'
9614df4e91c4b36bf1879e1cb6ad2ccd
1be80530ac65085572d04967b98d3d89f4a9a0a2
'2011-10-31T12:13:58-04:00'
describe
'7727' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCK' 'sip-files00158thm.jpg'
fd21bdc736b53337e77d5b72372dac2c
6a3310f2a98a112cbbbac7bf69c19d4b8e34fe9d
describe
'1014976' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCL' 'sip-files00159.jp2'
90ede86060a2a25f1b630a51874a71bf
545e4f7e5456985b0c0e676add4b1bbd9904780c
describe
'102306' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCM' 'sip-files00159.jpg'
4aa23fd2fda4fc0f417a6220c52a19b1
5f7e7a7c920065b2bc72fffdac35e9db1ac9d68c
describe
'41219' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCN' 'sip-files00159.pro'
f216588bf0fc73255dade110ce6502de
214de35222b12b0462871830d4c3287a7072075a
describe
'37038' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCO' 'sip-files00159.QC.jpg'
1a55beb09998f3257f73f9317ae72f89
14adc271ef3a1820612135151ea703e42665ea5a
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCP' 'sip-files00159.tif'
432230582838803405470b36470b9551
4c1756d1495cc2569317c766c2886a78233ebf4f
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCQ' 'sip-files00159.txt'
1f7e755a634939ce2e36572eed1b4d98
d60b4b0bfcd1b4deea6355a6ec5895a9acd8f034
describe
'10888' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCR' 'sip-files00159thm.jpg'
f90036122e90fd93fc17b969366dba91
d7803cde991d061c2dacd5cbbf5483425f410a93
describe
'1029123' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCS' 'sip-files00160.jp2'
b8b080796828a0240ce9af622258726a
9d90686cdf7c9d42712f7253100db73693e8918e
describe
'110977' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCT' 'sip-files00160.jpg'
ffb726051d891c7b15def783ff635b9c
323e9c032d98078b820e3ba11af8a3eee76bd191
describe
'43055' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCU' 'sip-files00160.pro'
18d3dda3d535c345c3792e0b5720d6dd
94006c6e62437efb09b5c9b99584e9cc7c5766fb
describe
'39471' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCV' 'sip-files00160.QC.jpg'
89bbb05bd678d3ba13c4558bc894692e
0701ab4d3861536bdf47e06eb624f5d142109359
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCW' 'sip-files00160.tif'
fd8a9c4c9ef5945edbec3566acc65223
4302be632365e594aad8bccfa116ffe4c61d935b
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCX' 'sip-files00160.txt'
c12802d0a2cb0fce4cb7c9422e52a4e7
fbd22537013ba80ebf06e34bc70794cdd8c58082
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCY' 'sip-files00160thm.jpg'
e01a0b5acbe8549492768b28d1a398c8
5c3de565d55584167f6bb4933750ab62b41f06b3
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVCZ' 'sip-files00161.jp2'
e6c99622bacf8540a4b87098d0dd6c1e
e3431926a1e28cab1bc276e3785355c2339def94
describe
'106415' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDA' 'sip-files00161.jpg'
7c4ea4de8ba0acbac34459e6442c36d4
31c39a6d9727ba7ef265ece3489840c14912aa89
describe
'43620' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDB' 'sip-files00161.pro'
d22c9be31cb19b6d1c4e650f4a625c35
b6c02a470668155e8afceef31faaaaf26c67620b
describe
'37948' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDC' 'sip-files00161.QC.jpg'
fa99c6e09c9fc2e84305664f79bb0a9e
03ec0d352da75024c39a1ff8abd34acada8672e1
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDD' 'sip-files00161.tif'
a35d45bbee3e37858db4bfae58268c81
b381a3185b4490471b2dc9c0fc00f8bfe6156910
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDE' 'sip-files00161.txt'
12355f2547f9005fa845be8c88b5765f
6fac2613a5fcb1ad4c1e3f545fbdfb4da94d3849
describe
'11079' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDF' 'sip-files00161thm.jpg'
e1cfde50c5f865ebcc6c57fef8f4e4d9
d7231f11d408aa7cee63b32abd2f1405c6d5ff31
describe
'1029149' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDG' 'sip-files00162.jp2'
297449ecadc8e8ea595d8e2f70175c77
a714f8e4d86b99fc1fd74f4ed41e1bc3ebe148e9
describe
'112499' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDH' 'sip-files00162.jpg'
1b9f6f34a66b93141d20953368a2d406
7eb0a642439361bd08bfec7a44a7287eb8b50dd5
describe
'44086' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDI' 'sip-files00162.pro'
38001624216b1c4d0725ce769630aa3b
a58d13833cadd065d31a80e89b87f373c341f0d4
describe
'40322' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDJ' 'sip-files00162.QC.jpg'
07f5fd7649221d981960d52a2b2fd7c8
92de9e78f465e1909066e6aac61d9c0ba54e0005
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDK' 'sip-files00162.tif'
d59095924d5b80e842e14c7bc253d413
211b145493e3fbf42fc362cd5c09e3356f37ec0d
'2011-10-31T12:10:42-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDL' 'sip-files00162.txt'
ace50f0e3bc128c8e8b81f50532a9496
de2be0602e57105d83cf3e9ab5b82dd760be6f90
describe
'10745' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDM' 'sip-files00162thm.jpg'
c6fa82932c85d25ae3e6e56b062a5831
abf7a87a2fbde13ba4ae93423714a1bf8a55b76a
describe
'1015089' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDN' 'sip-files00163.jp2'
e92fd7521dc2fb0983c5628db6c96e0c
47cf03f9f9da4acab54c7e63c4d256c6077acb5f
describe
'111240' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDO' 'sip-files00163.jpg'
10606f00bb94d25adfa6b369b2f06f29
165489bd4044b2db7eee295f033c7df6fd2cd66d
describe
'43886' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDP' 'sip-files00163.pro'
dfa371c4670c0022afa7d1490f8a65ad
f047cd5baa3cd62e6a9281059f37c9a0aca8d0ba
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDQ' 'sip-files00163.QC.jpg'
0c95707d9c355cee00f014a724b2bc5b
63fa02bcd22e2402db42bd4d7a3d64aa0c2d7426
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDR' 'sip-files00163.tif'
c539535036d870276f72fa8f70a0f5ef
08b773c113c626c2a5eca3784b743c7c7813e6f8
describe
'1738' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDS' 'sip-files00163.txt'
426926b9cef41caf99a86e2a59c994e0
f95098c84271eee5e20f7417ff01f59a8ba7b25c
describe
'11658' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDT' 'sip-files00163thm.jpg'
eb5fb74f7c25e317473fc2872a958fae
427cb68bd922f885dcb2c13f72e41a8563bc22d9
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDU' 'sip-files00164.jp2'
4bc047e1bf98a1de8d3cdb0f6758c1cc
8f2ebf38647ddd3bac6d87a39c13553bba552abc
describe
'111148' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDV' 'sip-files00164.jpg'
b2ac8e4d609349a18d355b24a19969ca
cca7758270d6b93e654e4fe5d6add067b78f3721
describe
'43072' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDW' 'sip-files00164.pro'
918a9d5800f16277617ab73b9b2b8c27
1d89a4123441aa981eb969dfc687b5e21a201ab6
describe
'39530' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDX' 'sip-files00164.QC.jpg'
2474f9274796dd5852ee7e22c3020012
4529e2fa7e674dbe38df25253375fd2fedd2b9e5
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDY' 'sip-files00164.tif'
b92d4b23dfce537c023dd523ee8d5c67
b2fad7318ce7534eeb78b3ef383023678620a2e6
'2011-10-31T12:14:17-04:00'
describe
'1730' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVDZ' 'sip-files00164.txt'
f41e08c4bba4729f06c3b04a09169680
b9d6a13314c04a865475d417e8417e26225e6355
describe
'10747' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEA' 'sip-files00164thm.jpg'
cbd6924cccbc6f99399e86e15d998ced
01e3f9863556c8e91216ea97d28a9fda83813b42
describe
'1014809' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEB' 'sip-files00165.jp2'
3b07c34646fd88f97517e52124d70beb
17a20ceff3b678c94f1b57fcfab2ed5e9c61fbb2
'2011-10-31T12:12:04-04:00'
describe
'59319' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEC' 'sip-files00165.jpg'
a106f4e84e007584c1db8cd6145768e3
664fd2daeba6c13a53721629a73b5c585b818a82
describe
'19792' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVED' 'sip-files00165.pro'
f2d09ae9fc3d051fe06d2fc56fc2b99e
4f39eabef0dc2517d293fd5f0ec9ac860c68377b
describe
'20203' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEE' 'sip-files00165.QC.jpg'
2f274b9faf86838dd819f6ce76ad1188
1094906bc120640db48a4c4f3a95765e5bb32c6d
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEF' 'sip-files00165.tif'
251aee57981bc461340df67166599a6d
758ab92db7e37837f2f55a4d2d4b9abe360aab3c
describe
'791' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEG' 'sip-files00165.txt'
dba6777e277e2e13095c0c6d20750590
22adb089b48e3e402a4eee36e169c56a928279b8
describe
'5924' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEH' 'sip-files00165thm.jpg'
5d07667adaf8ff76edebe0eef6ff0596
90f700e5e47af5ae154268d0a186dc765f4fe836
describe
'1029080' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEI' 'sip-files00166.jp2'
0a989b689a98aed96957f84dffb62ce6
164b5ab4cfdc251a93888a8cb081ad680e2c8d2c
describe
'76396' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEJ' 'sip-files00166.jpg'
d8c2b00f38fcce03c760e1df054ece9c
caea1cc5ef801b9bb43f37e8c6c6f7b04d5dcd04
describe
'24778' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEK' 'sip-files00166.pro'
99a7e9e5c79ec21a6353d0608bed276d
c5370df3c10d0f4be59c47966509137a144c9e78
describe
'26028' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEL' 'sip-files00166.QC.jpg'
28a41aaae06d82318869f351a4c67863
b9ed1b19d068d4258195f6e9918a562871ba4195
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEM' 'sip-files00166.tif'
1fd0dda54669176df5122375fe3f2729
f5215909693e0f7546fcdc8b71a4c416cf87beef
describe
'1030' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEN' 'sip-files00166.txt'
0aaad264430225df9cde47867b98401d
e3f5dd71936e78e555992476428db0fe055003be
describe
'7270' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEO' 'sip-files00166thm.jpg'
fbd57b9462ef9fde4f6a2b908deff484
6d2707aa0c58f9a853a1d2d643a886ded3e773b6
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEP' 'sip-files00167.jp2'
882fdea17e6e786f3344d3dbce07906d
1e143f51cf760976d0ff13e261a5e0838815cb51
describe
'105061' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEQ' 'sip-files00167.jpg'
0553e8fca764c008e6ef19abeb7010d0
89b89da2e949b6059732c970aa5be49e08ee8701
describe
'42623' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVER' 'sip-files00167.pro'
c44af593ee94d773d4ef56c339262020
4e0580f2d6ffefbe137d4d5f069c575d7a3ee919
describe
'37964' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVES' 'sip-files00167.QC.jpg'
ca4197ceeebd69dc03c178ff9fc195b1
4c0c47992e0646ba326191e20a48ef4e55a10fdd
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVET' 'sip-files00167.tif'
35181ada35683660bdb1e8fd6c744348
8e5e5114292d1de68c9222fcc29214618df17e53
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEU' 'sip-files00167.txt'
3067d4f41b8bb397fe1dad0b9d36c0c9
337c12f2d9f04ac1939f2e40046dfd7f4c138ae6
describe
'11110' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEV' 'sip-files00167thm.jpg'
6379fd04d9dbc38d7bd6fb9104f1c1c1
509a21dd61eaff2c9887dae55fbeb920c84ef55c
describe
'1029113' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEW' 'sip-files00168.jp2'
d5d5b208aacc5d4f319d730ca44c4e63
dec6bef821152a89f3d59a84cc89693ee9da62a7
describe
'112015' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEX' 'sip-files00168.jpg'
66699b6f8686cf4d94040c1f1bc2eade
a2f6339d62f9e7345fc948f64db65a8b665d40e2
describe
'44888' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEY' 'sip-files00168.pro'
f545423a310262557c0a46081b4cfe9f
cc886072518755589826a719f4f77f5608cd241c
describe
'40142' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVEZ' 'sip-files00168.QC.jpg'
19e0251e6cf7aae669069c972c672901
595ac09168b9e3cefa581e09f4497c9f67f8c61e
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFA' 'sip-files00168.tif'
1ca3fc3dca12b1f8d0343313cb56f08f
397f11ebaaa50c46745815920e4b3981f70a0688
describe
'1824' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFB' 'sip-files00168.txt'
39d03c13f33a98d531274078cb929cce
764dbabe8466a096057cd25b0d682120ffda5763
describe
'10924' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFC' 'sip-files00168thm.jpg'
8a7e577dd3c301fe5066671521db2144
cb37548aba433acdb63582d5e471f096216d649f
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFD' 'sip-files00169.jp2'
3ec50c49f32804fd0feeb44c8f0dbee5
7a55a58a2b611d94b8d605e5c58f5079efbd902e
describe
'105630' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFE' 'sip-files00169.jpg'
08e79634dcceddfb7d763457788c97db
30efd6f8250bbed868b791ae98b75d6863256fe4
describe
'43708' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFF' 'sip-files00169.pro'
f333fba3d795ea2334e015a0f5498223
572b683d9c3cbd1492b9b77322bce133c8471168
describe
'38013' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFG' 'sip-files00169.QC.jpg'
d46d1bbefde731a71cb1e861c92f18ad
0f8314d6a58e43d7c22dea2b6dde1aa7872509b4
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFH' 'sip-files00169.tif'
19ae29334e018291213e719a6270ba04
fbe6353829a5007d257b5671341c5e2fadcae6b4
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFI' 'sip-files00169.txt'
469b106953feeebfd981251b30677395
f8e8170e7fcb96457a72a54a77ac765a1d4dd223
describe
'11174' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFJ' 'sip-files00169thm.jpg'
16b53d487136262ebafc8858f334bb9a
0f27d9746b8e0c4a9c2de340194edcc77a8d8a03
describe
'1029148' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFK' 'sip-files00170.jp2'
5423175e2cd5beb0007147a78d3d68c8
04691531a60495b383f7bc2cc6e38fe663ad7dbf
describe
'106955' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFL' 'sip-files00170.jpg'
2ceb7c4324d90690f01bc3cef1c3225a
8e3f56a0a31a16b49b4b9e9edd3e48c3fc6bac32
describe
'41808' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFM' 'sip-files00170.pro'
0a3d091487d22594bdd7de8b0e7807c3
35f0e7b25fd607040e546a88eff6604e1f8e9bb7
describe
'38698' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFN' 'sip-files00170.QC.jpg'
3b6fa51beaa95f9e42010540801cf290
2706287037268a5429ab5d85a78ede785efcf223
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFO' 'sip-files00170.tif'
17a88f1e7f70ad6f59be6bd06a024e04
7b9578bb8551aa3514c0581a55c2a99fea97e32a
describe
'1711' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFP' 'sip-files00170.txt'
47eaa7ac6c1940992f74e50e6a4f95e6
42805358d94be614ed75a057f3d994c190c5729b
describe
'10523' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFQ' 'sip-files00170thm.jpg'
4ef49826849294d80f66ab0803701122
9e955757330997fc321742b13db9e2dd28b4bbd0
describe
'1015106' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFR' 'sip-files00171.jp2'
c90acb9bebb1975ceb00dee70cf79e6c
6b71b5ce2d28cd935dbb79f8347c6c3536f01e5f
describe
'102617' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFS' 'sip-files00171.jpg'
d771ed5d4bb52aad7dbbcfc1f3c249a0
0b409dfda8895c29377421ec931f71a78b2a6cb2
describe
'41088' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFT' 'sip-files00171.pro'
0aee0827222808006091a1a2f9cef851
fd6864091aa92316c9abfeb3dbe180d5c7be5be9
describe
'36486' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFU' 'sip-files00171.QC.jpg'
3c4f4c3a714909b681231a04ba74185c
84c62b9bfd19af8b6e66eb56b04e46d7947de48c
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFV' 'sip-files00171.tif'
c10c32a9b8ad033b9b3d58c453228f06
0f805a6df5592ab0dfafa60881b4b2423a5ae1ec
describe
'1668' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFW' 'sip-files00171.txt'
3a41fea61cf6b16cc428d87ce579b6f7
642926530ff5d1106828dbc86965fca006d50990
describe
'11088' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFX' 'sip-files00171thm.jpg'
fa2f9a5b4f90ff62bb307090c81022a8
a76217cf1b87930175039ea92f2e68e080d16506
describe
'1029137' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFY' 'sip-files00172.jp2'
5fc8863a67a642e98c2a8132d40f1fb7
f807688a77e98a55976b6ad921c24f662dc0bb52
describe
'109773' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVFZ' 'sip-files00172.jpg'
77b1689f95894c775a6a09443040f71b
a5fb423f7ef0eb34aa9fcbbedae48e4eeedb31d9
describe
'42856' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGA' 'sip-files00172.pro'
8673e4c9720c173b34fa21ce1b84bb5b
18d35cace80c1b2f8fd48173529dc12a4c02d45c
describe
'39409' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGB' 'sip-files00172.QC.jpg'
cd5b050c261e34ee3ac6a5eee7d849af
2778e60c465d95f17a171e4a06de145aef4612c1
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGC' 'sip-files00172.tif'
76cd69e63e43d6c65196cacce06fee0d
ed967a2bb93fcb05cea17be0918278ff065bdde9
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGD' 'sip-files00172.txt'
ac1a5cf13f021f0e50ad79e0eb0039c8
2640b57afc686a7ffeaa258ed49ec5bd94323816
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGE' 'sip-files00172thm.jpg'
d808270996fcce8f165e83155dd5999d
64b797b634452e46d5e53dc00906339b7daae551
describe
'1015114' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGF' 'sip-files00173.jp2'
0c7c2ea94c05e760bada78af55664213
193eb567aa540abd12c4d18ee618585786ab7c6e
describe
'104460' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGG' 'sip-files00173.jpg'
8251835988aac23ed9e5292d082487f7
a029d79ef55e51d3223467d457f293ee503ae950
describe
'42950' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGH' 'sip-files00173.pro'
49775be6e1d990f1d340c9529bcc87eb
d7b0a238494dca2a988f4fa9ccb1fcf8f1928381
describe
'37236' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGI' 'sip-files00173.QC.jpg'
a860d68d944213eb527cab59738678a3
c5df39bb8d98bebef3e78906668b51ba7b76882c
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGJ' 'sip-files00173.tif'
aa434c237568b79840c3e8c08d020c64
8601708d9ae6ed5b8d0f065d89abfecaa776b2d1
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGK' 'sip-files00173.txt'
5c6917b1856b59c658500c11e87fdba9
e65884072520cad07451cfc6491c8004bc281c17
describe
'11367' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGL' 'sip-files00173thm.jpg'
ed73a3cfd0bda8a0085d2c6db3bb900e
c124f512247f272a7e0a234f258b5a8a2e127d31
describe
'1029088' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGM' 'sip-files00174.jp2'
e3ded0669c532deee03da90262d6eeff
8ab771f6ae61c8470a3735d25258e8fc4cbccfe6
describe
'110250' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGN' 'sip-files00174.jpg'
b0c923e4408901a9a387c74c0284802f
283b486e5451e9e080e99abd2f3d583a918aa9b0
describe
'43489' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGO' 'sip-files00174.pro'
bcdb2ed7db08c2b6adfe7f44a11b7ae8
3604e5f8ab9db9a9c9d91066ba7a439a3a4fd737
describe
'39490' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGP' 'sip-files00174.QC.jpg'
041892c10092e1083bcf569f6bd65669
86e14642aa2647cab9b40041ba3b40679b6cb5aa
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGQ' 'sip-files00174.tif'
64801e45ca324c6ef24d9a77e5aba0e8
32788526c6e8d03dbe43fc79e50efac7345f04db
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGR' 'sip-files00174.txt'
3b6dd437534581a3489e38ae3c089d70
577af0dc123e079558556d8e6e62476124bea60f
describe
'10578' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGS' 'sip-files00174thm.jpg'
29e25510a70d7b2d64b0a8c5c8d815bd
fbf19a84d599061ce2cf4898c08d82851ef93861
describe
'1015071' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGT' 'sip-files00175.jp2'
dd68410a838ae03adfe0fb9851011fb3
3f6060b0b217998d4205a3ac55e9fe0091db9746
describe
'107793' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGU' 'sip-files00175.jpg'
3f5fad86e89f4b1388548ee044cbe661
4bd3303bab3c6aa36be396a54850e9c1dc53fbe9
describe
'43944' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGV' 'sip-files00175.pro'
19ef41f950e0987f3f08cafffda6a904
9e0d5693d13d80e9ee10f61e743d3159bb618080
describe
'38950' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGW' 'sip-files00175.QC.jpg'
e06e466f37f1fed847be25bdeb348522
8884f2b07a423f95b647cc59e85faea51140a31e
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGX' 'sip-files00175.tif'
82b1f030054cfa4c78d0bdb7ab0f7630
b471872f0bd90622207f49ad89bccc8890ee9e63
describe
'1761' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGY' 'sip-files00175.txt'
45308d53dae8ebeb46d0f15d437ab434
9f086e93f0f0da5917d125626c1aa0fc9699b0e8
describe
'11285' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVGZ' 'sip-files00175thm.jpg'
e9b2286c72e1fad7bc84cc72a57fae17
df1869f4695870e0946d4497ff4af8f83edae726
describe
'1029153' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHA' 'sip-files00176.jp2'
69b7a0b741f98e8b32df228484d6ce96
8227ad457459684ec693757912def95e1805e33a
describe
'111484' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHB' 'sip-files00176.jpg'
fb9f853762b503a8d30b64aa8d480620
bf54df5032dd2ec726be57cf71e4337dcfd7882b
describe
'43464' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHC' 'sip-files00176.pro'
fcbdd1e533cdbd9aac23c726ff46cea5
21cf2c25293b4bd59a6d894ee14ea86ba683b032
describe
'39571' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHD' 'sip-files00176.QC.jpg'
6a2e182a94e31e9b4952baf6e39a1ca6
14df47a21e38aff0c28be9ecd2050f19b40057f8
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHE' 'sip-files00176.tif'
f9b5b0257bb334e7be2600eb4461f77e
cf0717d3113b3ad85226733b5dbdaad0561bc1a4
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHF' 'sip-files00176.txt'
de6b00db49a6ddad328a9c40fcc28eb5
215df3ee0690d4828551c6511e20b432f2bbb914
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHG' 'sip-files00176thm.jpg'
4d6cfa382acc342a4de6c7c1adb67737
5adfefa08d26c3ec5fa3c7b0cdba252e321d8219
describe
'1014959' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHH' 'sip-files00177.jp2'
616f7d06f334424cb662dcd602106f85
0ab8cf3a5d0f1739a975360338d6791c7c781a37
describe
'103121' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHI' 'sip-files00177.jpg'
2f60bd46241c01cbb37517438d2d5b7a
619634612b61dd5450a25d70ac8220d087673a17
describe
'41487' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHJ' 'sip-files00177.pro'
5e5ca2cb29f571d42ce2f374ec7fcd97
c37c44200705a5e941248c8164cfb2464c4d69ea
describe
'37021' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHK' 'sip-files00177.QC.jpg'
f84cdf7262257b50e308fa53d2444874
8ca4af7bfaedb63714773c66c1898fa2b534ea71
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHL' 'sip-files00177.tif'
3db95a5a36efd5c5c12fbbfcffa0ce90
16a8ae032f24a8e534c3d813a8fc050501432f94
describe
'1674' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHM' 'sip-files00177.txt'
01e83d084a90b1f83596a3350eda4367
d17c989c61eeb437ae2d65e116722c34b8e963bc
describe
'11030' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHN' 'sip-files00177thm.jpg'
4c5ccacf8a7036e7e32f00e2baade5ac
d305a93b8ad9534bc61fba443eb77fe451615c00
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHO' 'sip-files00178.jp2'
1af2663e8a6de44032d63a43b3116b03
26dc229c8572d72a506d5535c29a02a3639ca352
describe
'112543' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHP' 'sip-files00178.jpg'
fa00501828baabf315ae51bc66271c45
ba256ad80fe79195a187823a0bcc7c135a2bd0a7
describe
'44890' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHQ' 'sip-files00178.pro'
d5878c43251327e16ff3573259432279
866d46da01a49b1f72ac14a9ef9b4d1b609b7323
describe
'40159' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHR' 'sip-files00178.QC.jpg'
3dcf9cbeb170d1117363beaf5ead89e6
f4c9919540417b1a60578fef75b85f1d600d1b40
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHS' 'sip-files00178.tif'
e35f93a605ffbb8b6312ec452a1d1638
4327a974ebed874ea66c370644cf645309dc59e0
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHT' 'sip-files00178.txt'
8c4c3eedb9ae884d0c6c5b6a74415f6a
fa7f41cf73056aaea48b13c6dd382cbb89c8d063
describe
'10585' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHU' 'sip-files00178thm.jpg'
217f184f540891ae6d92d60da560ce18
03387f4a68586bd508b80a708d7a44f506a2c005
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHV' 'sip-files00179.jp2'
c1d183d52d284200049966d48789de63
3f13d83f88f248f605785cfdd658bef5b66cd5a7
describe
'108464' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHW' 'sip-files00179.jpg'
4370c46cd0a4c61861c0a721f6f42c7d
901d8970cb5a0ce50023572ef1fa3f1e4d1e60c9
describe
'43938' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHX' 'sip-files00179.pro'
44e93900361c3beff72dd9d27b7900e9
c26d70a2d7eb52392ebc0aa84d5448bd5233255c
describe
'39005' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHY' 'sip-files00179.QC.jpg'
72d6870a7682b3b57eb1593b03318b27
af9759d3505db8ac48f31ab4f5fef01d139e9106
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVHZ' 'sip-files00179.tif'
27421e6c3ddae5698722f3303c6468e0
68b9b28c70e18310e070f9056dd97d02c04f988a
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIA' 'sip-files00179.txt'
36ea7e0366f7c6eb98c87e5624b6b805
03e2a5f107e1e9688eaf25161236d78c673c7a8e
describe
'11370' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIB' 'sip-files00179thm.jpg'
b2905aa46d6415faf86791db790d8a5e
c7e23871a59a38cce291a1059c4866c19db91381
describe
'1029143' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIC' 'sip-files00180.jp2'
9710a9369eee38ed10f6f46ce72e5422
16ff3ec4060c5dc98748bae3509ec9068472108c
describe
'110393' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVID' 'sip-files00180.jpg'
56742f30e744aa63f2afc818a5b4df34
1842de5ce3c2d2b325990d3a8cb2d47726f6942f
describe
'43615' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIE' 'sip-files00180.pro'
ed00de1c8c3df69f3a5232255b98db41
eac4e80936698a5862b48802aa9ac14783d2edf8
describe
'39544' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIF' 'sip-files00180.QC.jpg'
356db8cf2427b17cfc6b496d89763655
5bce0417fdb420d62c68269b5fdd6f81ec2a4887
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIG' 'sip-files00180.tif'
2e83715f27245f779f0668f157b9b1b7
6dba55f93d24e1da7624a9441c4e7595f11a5dc3
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIH' 'sip-files00180.txt'
e25e9d4e83e068f53c1b167e8ee240f3
3162b7445a062c6b4911dd49d2a2658fb0b69c20
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVII' 'sip-files00180thm.jpg'
b255e64927f400e5e5373e4333b22a6c
048257afa2e46141407f3d6d0c9020457fd6a563
describe
'1015113' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIJ' 'sip-files00181.jp2'
dea9dedd7119797a8bb1ed47b30cc88c
74915c1fdbf2bbebfd075e8e3a6fb7c1f34aadb3
describe
'92486' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIK' 'sip-files00181.jpg'
f92ac8694b820e7b58d1f4f95922eba4
4f40231ad077457b3435cea065aca5983462c3ac
describe
'35785' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIL' 'sip-files00181.pro'
76a7793927255816053ffb829bee3fae
833861c2b2bd7eccad07fd1815f27d72643c5e42
describe
'32786' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIM' 'sip-files00181.QC.jpg'
feb08bbf67813b513d30dea743b0a7d5
f0f7e3cb2c81f46e14e8d70b8592855b4dc22f06
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIN' 'sip-files00181.tif'
b8d04a13d247126ebf898e86c39c38de
cefee6ab8bbb13664b1cc8ad36e8c7965e1ea7dd
'2011-10-31T12:14:12-04:00'
describe
'1417' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIO' 'sip-files00181.txt'
a52ab473f6ace1465eaf54ccbd4212e5
cb61bc70daa98fb255c7e920b67ddbb6b823bdf5
describe
'9772' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIP' 'sip-files00181thm.jpg'
44c10c21eec5789c817eb6bd5a4a616e
1d17dde3a8b6c9e963639785ab9598a093bd045e
describe
'1029125' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIQ' 'sip-files00182.jp2'
1ac3cb7717b74fec00a1808afd7f2902
2550fc1a980f0b86defd099e9f26c74f2c7600d8
describe
'83529' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIR' 'sip-files00182.jpg'
d1adad6fb0d8793ec0e80376a15b654d
61ff73c7f24e8838b2005738d4bab2a9902a750b
describe
'28374' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIS' 'sip-files00182.pro'
228b8d896253f7e74f2ef2baa82e3a1e
9a94cdf355fbb96a55cdbdb87692b1c9ec323484
describe
'28973' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIT' 'sip-files00182.QC.jpg'
2bc11bd84ff59c6dac761f6b1cd2b2ad
c1e96df94ed1380c4cfae8086dc9392f68951566
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIU' 'sip-files00182.tif'
6bcd0a8dcb94eb4885b946e3bb0dbb17
5e5f91753829ef363934fc6a4745149bd7f2c1ba
describe
'1193' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIV' 'sip-files00182.txt'
da53c4dae4b79c129ab69dfd65677204
e62681fa6955fafe122352ee3d7398e23261201a
describe
'7829' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIW' 'sip-files00182thm.jpg'
de89d2282129c81deb1b11e658882bd3
e01af2b7dc87c43728767fe474fe86b8e16838a9
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIX' 'sip-files00183.jp2'
d58be32b9395fef67f5d2845adae10dd
362bb2ee8c75cbe85075221640a2413dc0b2775a
describe
'109411' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIY' 'sip-files00183.jpg'
af73da0b3f347ed3dd50994d1a147ac2
48bb274898fd8b8c90acaa0e921aa374c165d3a7
describe
'46051' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVIZ' 'sip-files00183.pro'
d5a69d9a85cef789d809218888ae7a5d
9066a4b1402291a320e838d2a10668349862436c
describe
'39333' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJA' 'sip-files00183.QC.jpg'
7d1bc172ab492f4644c7f64c4a48ca2e
7a2bb77f1a784f6df98c08a9767e0e361a7f9f92
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJB' 'sip-files00183.tif'
173b31140b31222e9c79f2a1f5e00aa9
fde77da68add04831a026ff10fbf12d70e7bc1fe
describe
'1818' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJC' 'sip-files00183.txt'
72c6bd61f41aebc8871cc8a6e5bacecf
b9c431bcd9f935f258cb2156a1818721077db901
describe
'11291' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJD' 'sip-files00183thm.jpg'
efdd1033e324261659ab91f4390e2dda
73940adc7f2fa925fee4ea4b0a7c1e9a1389b48b
describe
'1029085' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJE' 'sip-files00184.jp2'
e41e14b4d8b0f746cb9c307d98b0d4f9
b1be319e64e1ddde9f272673e1b6c6c38c72beec
describe
'110221' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJF' 'sip-files00184.jpg'
7945e6913957e3fafbd35d1b37e12d89
1a21feac386fb299da51f1b9db45266752d42e38
describe
'43788' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJG' 'sip-files00184.pro'
a7b4451e237910d1e1760a1f58e2dbb0
5f429a27a45c94daf33c18dd112d70c6c61444f8
describe
'39625' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJH' 'sip-files00184.QC.jpg'
acb963232a75ffb41a9ebf0ce16d99f3
8511fea39b7016a186418be4fb171d42b2c807e0
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJI' 'sip-files00184.tif'
a5e98a38ae434fa2daa6f83785f3d1f7
33e772a8ce40dc0855a06542191a445becbebdeb
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJJ' 'sip-files00184.txt'
fc554a0356fdd298bf7d7aabe173a396
175447cb858521832d08ee4a4c233ed7a5bdf8ff
describe
'10802' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJK' 'sip-files00184thm.jpg'
4d0d1a96560d2709583239621e3b2cdf
0e39f692301cea28718268ddd99c22cead571f5e
describe
'1015116' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJL' 'sip-files00185.jp2'
6615f828b682e6c0a4b4b2a70b4d260a
87b56f3fffd6b1e65139f7cc2e6741e5dfac1505
describe
'107606' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJM' 'sip-files00185.jpg'
a9c7791ab6dd0d89247d68bd6beb095b
3f56a7b6a2ad09d3e616ad9ee435886a217c54c5
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJN' 'sip-files00185.pro'
23072d1014a476bb359cda8de50a5abd
d0736410fad29b6627dfa5a3f677ec59be1b22f0
describe
'39148' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJO' 'sip-files00185.QC.jpg'
870c5c1bb99623c899d8f51544dc0d4f
8d27d5b46106b87d73d3317a2f5bb78257d9339f
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJP' 'sip-files00185.tif'
f5449e154b28aa431a3b4205a2f2a3b4
4877e3430a6b9e947d7b01db26b454f6d085b39c
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJQ' 'sip-files00185.txt'
88afe8a710995358487f035384c46937
fe37acbbb9c5d73748d3b4393ecc27e14b3d88c3
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJR' 'sip-files00185thm.jpg'
9fd46d9c76ae89301a6f76a44a4824e1
f36d9fe4ad6569d8427e29c8c158f3bb644eab5d
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJS' 'sip-files00186.jp2'
32b2287a4c4e916c9e4e3afcddbba48d
caa226f9f951dc6f1ab29bd5e690d642205323db
describe
'112107' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJT' 'sip-files00186.jpg'
089c1ba87538d1a8c7a24444e6a777ab
d94811723189fb391c0b6c35f78d3d4c3d6e2dcf
describe
'45032' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJU' 'sip-files00186.pro'
5e1306f951dcc882ac30e6b0ede314f0
c7c9018a5046a3a74ed59e7256e1b9ea1a16e4c6
describe
'40102' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJV' 'sip-files00186.QC.jpg'
2f5c1d79853953a129c4513a4b31e18d
bb1d4247ad9a298cb9d14a35df31f222fd1a564e
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJW' 'sip-files00186.tif'
a40deba0fe815d378572e54bfecb9475
c2649e64bc1eb2375f262251041b76fe95d69aaa
describe
'1815' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJX' 'sip-files00186.txt'
d08c02c055e682823a121b60a55872e5
8d75b50a89a398a5df802924a5ddeefb591e3bb4
describe
'10734' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJY' 'sip-files00186thm.jpg'
5aec863f8124fb17726c3f101d49448b
9470ba4e8c5f6bbae0ace522d37b0678257008f4
describe
'1015077' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVJZ' 'sip-files00187.jp2'
dbf2d83593b8d93e39ab69e9218a8bfa
ce8ad4e036762d3f08d1582d8b3ff78dced3abd4
describe
'102902' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKA' 'sip-files00187.jpg'
4480deede41581726712c2f7c640d6f4
0d79a0641450b56365fb42543c4baef837af8a44
describe
'42748' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKB' 'sip-files00187.pro'
0abca4389a55e613c328f11995c37e12
2fbea1941d3a9537f1022a69b5b87fae27106497
describe
'36879' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKC' 'sip-files00187.QC.jpg'
77e5f91f66a1370c893d305f3f462318
581a601806b32cab208a143e95d32be8e2703619
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKD' 'sip-files00187.tif'
2e4bd99d31f8c7df7761ea5e97618efa
2403594053dadbfa17ad69dc300b177a30e2e8af
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKE' 'sip-files00187.txt'
f5e757c9761a4cf87db9d673b8e2d22e
b1a473ddc9cfe85ce176e4891c66c0fe849826cb
describe
'10667' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKF' 'sip-files00187thm.jpg'
fb52bbc6f6f0fa12f112187e8aed36c6
d21f028e439446c079d06251e9722bef2689dfe1
describe
'1044856' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKG' 'sip-files00269.jp2'
9ffd4790b5d81a5a1172dd71870655a6
a912b4b45abf13d73f7cfb3bd58b87b7e9d4f853
describe
'76797' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKH' 'sip-files00269.jpg'
b8acf6777c6135130141ef51c7eeb988
2dd6fe2ee1510ffb1d8f630787dc33259faf5d2c
describe
'27363' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKI' 'sip-files00269.pro'
1c1a108c06a89e1a170c0c713a398350
fde46af43cec18eb1d3dcacc90eec291e14e3137
describe
'27134' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKJ' 'sip-files00269.QC.jpg'
35a133ff3def4cd681353003baa981d0
e5ea9e09a90f2ac3960433a67df474b83fd148f2
describe
'8368453' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKK' 'sip-files00269.tif'
8b2b0ee1bf20fc24ad812fa56f2623fc
18c3d66e7a71c9e6273f7079e0348d00a5e7c708
describe
'1195' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKL' 'sip-files00269.txt'
b3f98afd16743e7d010b05e4f070005e
de610a187b7fcef8516ddd214b8028a4965de949
describe
'8144' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKM' 'sip-files00269thm.jpg'
32c6a49e9dad9cf2d5dbf71681635a05
7ea85d079a43b5608df2bef5ea7d40b4acdb0efe
describe
'994488' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKN' 'sip-files00270.jp2'
5a67a9c262fba197cdd663e724fa2001
20f30512162e583f0ae882a954557787a073c04b
describe
'34379' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKO' 'sip-files00270.jpg'
98e7f2f76ef17ee8d17186739e8fb522
678ef3b984ed6d5ce57019e144a427be53eed5ce
describe
'5662' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKP' 'sip-files00270.pro'
2a0f066c69ed0461a1db1c41114e6807
50089ddc9f74a0acb64f35186cf656249142c368
describe
'9856' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKQ' 'sip-files00270.QC.jpg'
4dc72b1ce2f3fe5d63f97be3f6c30f9d
0a4367d316788ad135c7bc282e281426c4cd7466
describe
'7967563' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKR' 'sip-files00270.tif'
3bd43c4dfa94f7c1f5c26f9fe2eda51d
cd539d749f4f3dec34bba917e9af1e32e1257886
describe
'340' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKS' 'sip-files00270.txt'
f51c8a279bc0180f37496dec5cd17954
e7f2da7929d0fc013f7125ac508b9607f994499f
describe
'3267' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKT' 'sip-files00270thm.jpg'
c5a57a60f01fbcbc81e93f6eb18cfa56
c08c71c5e61dbdbc71916e561d6516883207f73b
describe
'1198287' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKU' 'sip-files00300cover3.jp2'
5957b83221aa324d473d55208940b3d6
1dc0cfba28aa6178eafeecb057ed899cafea5a66
describe
'56114' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKV' 'sip-files00300cover3.jpg'
89d4b0a6e8016f1c542a9205db19dd20
0d02c1e4a608d12b083412ada3a4286a458b5e07
describe
'351' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKW' 'sip-files00300cover3.pro'
1d1aea7cd3439d5b2c74a346041e75cc
83c962fe7a8778f417c5f95f1334c577e5a7de63
describe
'13745' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKX' 'sip-files00300cover3.QC.jpg'
b84b482277282bb64f01f7865cc669c8
a158158d584f5be4f19ba8e7ffc7a29e484c2271
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKY' 'sip-files00300cover3.tif'
66c5b351cd28a85ce8eb086a2dec62bb
a74ce82edffac8046f4b7fc25deae7780634d82e
'2011-10-31T12:10:44-04:00'
describe
'17' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVKZ' 'sip-files00300cover3.txt'
e940fadd1df53680e7b65d3f987c1097
f76d97911f0b5a6ccf9e062c707a4817efea2687
describe
'3889' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVLA' 'sip-files00300cover3thm.jpg'
6d00f4bb2938f1ee40b05daa9d77319f
7664afb46218972a28a270ca64b9970c921e31e7
describe
'1198299' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVLB' 'sip-files00300cover4.jp2'
fab13d644202aa73fcccbb25880720ca
02b5bdd43d7fb0f3ec595a5b12d5c386735d0ec2
describe
'151125' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVLC' 'sip-files00300cover4.jpg'
47c4841cb00d2bf55603c9267adca00d
757500bb661ee95a74578d3ac55de513c15b4f5c
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVLD' 'sip-files00300cover4.pro'
3d2c174ac89797f7f3667aea72a497a1
03ab95b9e63fc642bd0c380d0c33a4520da070a7
describe
'31626' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVLE' 'sip-files00300cover4.QC.jpg'
2a5e45223d01a9e7e8fce835d8fb9051
fdc23338c1a2e508e66070cd5d26021b278b1c96
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVLF' 'sip-files00300cover4.tif'
cec077998205160715939db643adda5a
8dfe273309ab1cfa67230c2e1fa8c6af3f5fcbf1
describe
'7092' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVLG' 'sip-files00300cover4thm.jpg'
9049dbebf336a706c3cb75c9d42f722a
2825203c5ac57994b4ba672919b786e5a9b9b2c6
describe
'272741' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVLH' 'sip-filesspine.jp2'
e0488af34f266f39f71a724d1ff547d1
f8add3860f18271c35683c8213d3a63392e5ee8f
describe
'33566' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVLI' 'sip-filesspine.jpg'
91a510fc2076394d4345558875a4dba1
8eb024808c270ef2a31a5578d2fda80de2390396
describe
'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVLJ' 'sip-filesspine.pro'
6c11b913a39bab77cfcbb5174088aa66
b8ec9646378a5db1b51d066140552d41498696b4
'2011-10-31T12:13:50-04:00'
describe
'8418' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVLK' 'sip-filesspine.QC.jpg'
2089cb0a9fe581a4bccf7fdf8e4696cd
469a3a791bf8c5cc49cbfc708304615d2eed6d21
describe
'6547732' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVLL' 'sip-filesspine.tif'
063a64b21f98c03abb19374eefbce6a1
51d82c402e5869ed89902c30cdb71bfbc1ae17d6
describe
'3515' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVLM' 'sip-filesspinethm.jpg'
6e5e96a044b379eef23541ae106409b2
208cfd5083cf16be3c221a919bc6f8130c8dc460
describe
'324546' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVLN' 'sip-filesUF00001916_00001.mets'
ea99f5903bc1a3cb12039885c5f748a9
b83ebb8db2410756037bec13ab598420563e27da
describe
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
'2013-12-14T21:19:05-05:00' 'mixed'
xml resolution
http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsdhttp://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
BROKEN_LINK http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsd
http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
The element type "div" must be terminated by the matching end-tag "
".
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
'418328' 'info:fdaE20081031_AAAAAQfileF20081101_AAAVLQ' 'sip-filesUF00001916_00001.xml'
4f88a1adb89a26920ccecaa2a8b1146a
9083851e1b726dab7b89c5bc1a6cc17774c6b9b5
describe
'2013-12-14T21:19:08-05:00'
xml resolution