Citation
Thanksgiving night, or, Tales told in winter weather

Material Information

Title:
Thanksgiving night, or, Tales told in winter weather
Portion of title:
Tales told in winter weather
Creator:
Massachusetts Sabbath School Society ( Publisher )
Place of Publication:
Boston
Publisher:
Massachusetts Sabbath School Society
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
144 p. : ill. ; 16 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Family -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Family stories -- 1851 ( local )
Embossed cloth bindings (Binding) -- 1851 ( rbbin )
Bldn -- 1851
Genre:
Family stories ( local )
Embossed cloth bindings (Binding) ( rbbin )
novel ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
United States -- Massachusetts -- Boston
Target Audience:
juvenile ( marctarget )

Notes

Funding:
Brittle Books Program
Statement of Responsibility:
written for the Massachusetts Sabbath School Society, and approved by the Committee of Publication.

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University of Florida
Holding Location:
University of Florida
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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:
026985248 ( ALEPH )
45577037 ( OCLC )
ALH8956 ( NOTIS )

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THANKSGIVING NIGHT:

OR,

TALES TOLD IN WINTER WEATHER.

Written for the Massachusetts Sabbath School Society, and
. approved by the Commitiee of Publication,

BOSTON:

MASSACHUSETTS SABBATH SCHOOL SOCIETY,
Depository, No. 13 Cornhill.

1851.



%)





Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1851,
By CHRISTOPHER C. DEAN,
in the Clerk’s Office of the District Court of Massachusetts,







Chauksgiving Wight.

A STORY OF NOVEMBER.



Ir was a plainly furnished little back par-
lor as you ever saw. ‘There was no centre
table in it; no piano-forte ; no pictures; no
sofa; no book-case; no gas-lights. What
an empty room! Not at all,—it was, on the
contrary, quite full.

First, there was a baby in it; and the.
baby’s mother; and its three brothers; and
its two sisters; and its father; and the cat;
and the cradle, the baby’s, not the cat’s
cradle; and a huge work-basket; and a
table with the tea-things on it; and a clock
in the corner; and a geranium in the win-
dow; and a glass lamp; and a stove; and
a Bible; and a hymn-book; and a rocking-







8 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.



chair; and nine other chairs; and a stool;
and an ink-bottle; and a broom; and a
closet-door.

All these things November saw, as he
looked in from the shop, through the glass
doors of the little back parlor. ‘The baby
was looking at the flame of the fire, and
seeming, as is the way with babies, to see
wonderful and mysterious things in it; the
mother held the baby, and wrapped a rag
round the youngest boy’s sore-finger; the
youngest boy was intent on that operation ;

| his next brother whittled a stick with a dull

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knife; Susy played with the cat; the cat
played with Susy; the eldest boy dipped
his fingers into the sugar-basin ; Jane who
was setting the table, scolded him; the
father satand thought; the cradle, impelled
by the whittler’s foot, rocked now and then
with great violence; the work-basket ran
over with stockings to be mended; the tea-
cups clinked into their saucers, and the tea-
spoons tinkled beside them under Jenny’s
hand ; the clock in the corner ticked bravely,



THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 9

atietetuniddiinia EEE ELI ne

unconscious that its hands were half an
hour too slow; the geranium in the window
drooped for want of water; the glass lamp
smoked; the stove thawed the ink in the
bottle ; the Bible and the hymn-book waited
on their shelf; the rocking-chair held the
mother and the baby ; the chair which sup-
ported the father was poised on two legs;
the other eight stood more soberly on four;
on the stool sat Susy; the broom cast a
little shadow into its corner ; and the closet-
door creaked as Jenny went to and fro with
the tea-things.

Who would have thought it was Thanks-
giving night? No one spoke for a long
time. At last, the father, rousing himself
a little, said, ‘‘ Is not tea almost ready ? It
seems to me Jane, you are slow to-night.”

‘‘T am sure it is not late, father,’ said
Jane, peevishly. ‘If James didn’t keep
stealing the sugar, I should have been ready
by this time; but it is not six yet.”

Here the clock tolled out six full, sonor-
ous strokes. The father and son laughed.





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10 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.

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LRBALLAL LLLP OS

‘That clock is slow too,” said the father,
taking out his watch.

— “ Yes, I wish you would set it right,”
said the wife.

Jane went with a cross face into the
closet, and came back with some dough-
nuts. James tried to take one, and missed
it. Then Willie laughed at him. The
father bade James sit down and be quiet.
The mother reproved Willie for making so
many chips, and told him to put up his
knife. The cat scratched Susy; Susy
struck the cat, which then slunk away into
the corner in the broom’s shadow.

Oh, what a dull Thanksgiving evening!
One hopes the homes of the Governor and
Council are more cheerful.

And now the boy with the sore finger
frets, and wishes he could go to bed; and |
the baby cries, because the mother attempted
to lay it in its cradle. At last, even the
mother’s patience gives way, and she says,
‘Well, I shall be glad, children, when





THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 11

Thanksgiving Day is over, and you are all
safe in bed.’’

This will never do! said November to
himself, and he went away from the glass
doors, and into the street, just as Jane
announced that tea was ready, and the
family drew round the table.

“ James, see if that stair door is open,”’
said the father, after a few minutes’ silence ;
“it feels very chilly here. Wife, these
dough-nuts are not very good, are they? I
thought housekeepers always contrived to
have some good cake at Thanksgiving time.
I can’t eat these.”

James, coming back, put his cold hand
on Jenny’s neck. A fresh complaint fol-
lowed. ‘I'he mother sighed, and filled the
baby’s mouth with bread and milk. Jane
had burnt Willy’s slice of toast; George
put his feeble finger through the handle of
his mug, and cried out with the pain. Susy
scalded her mouth with hot tea. Pussy
got nothing. » The father thought of trade,
and expense of winter fuel, and winter





12 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.








clothing. Wife and child must not expect
much indulgence this season. Times were
hard. Most men had large losses, and
small gains. Such a family too, to provide
for, he did not know how it was ever to be
done. So he sipped his tea and grumbled,
and ate his toast, and was discontented ;
and Thanksgiving was only a name in that
room,

Just then came a knock at the door; a
Single, faint knock, as if the person outside
would a little rather no One should hear.
“Hush!” said Amos Reed, ‘“ somebody
knocks.”’

‘“No!” said the Test, “it is a loose
blind.”

‘You promised me a long time ago to
secure that blind,” complained the wife.

Her husband only stirred his tea with
great energy.

Knock! knock! Two knocks this time.
Amos Reed took the lamp and went to the
door.. The’ wind blew the light out, the
moment the door was opened.



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THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 13

‘‘ Now the light is gone out!” said Mrs.
Reed. Then those in the room heard
voices speaking, and the outer door shut,
and Amos Reed coming back. But he has

Some one with him. ‘‘ Come in here,” he
Says. “ Here, Jenny, light us this lamp
again.”

After two or three attempts, this was
accomplished, and the family saw, standing
in the door-way, a poor woman with a
bundle in her arms, and a child of four or
five years holding by her gown.

The master of the house explained that
it was a poor woman who came to ask for
something for her children to eat. “I
thought, wife,” said Amos Reed, by way
of apology, ‘‘ that as it was Thanksgiving,
it would be a sin to send any body away.”

‘You are quite right, my dear,” an-
swered Mrs. Reed, pleasantly, every wrin-
kle smoothed out of her anxious forehead,
by the spirit of charity. ‘ It would have

been a pity not to ask her in.”’
2 .

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14 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.



‘ Put down your bundle,” said the hus-
band.

‘‘ And take off your hood, and sit by the
fire,’’ added the wife.

‘¢ Mother, shan’t I give this little girl a
doughnut,” asked Jenny, and James hand-
ed the plate to his sister.

The bundle proved to be a baby, another
baby, and its feet were duly spread out to
the fire, to be warmed, and the pale mother
smiled to see its pleasure. When her own
wrappings were taken off, she seemed a
neat, comely person, still quite young, and
mentioning her name, the Reeds found that
she was a neighbor, who had been spoken
of to them as a very respectable and deserv-
ing woman.

Amos Reed’s heart smote him, that one
of his neighbors should, on ‘Thanksgiving
day be forced to beg a little food to keep
her children from suffering. Why had he
not thought to call at her house the evening
before, to inquire if she needed any thing?
He was not so poor, he hoped, but that he



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THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 15

could assist a neighbor. Things had not
come to that yet. |

Then the stranger was made to sit up to
the table with them. Finished ? Oh, no,.
they had scarcely begun their meal. Jenny
was directed to put more tea into the tea-
pot; the creaking closet door was again
opened and shut, and a fresh loaf cut.

How charming it was to have two babies
at the table; how they looked at each other
and stared, and nodded, and marveled,
and how the new baby relished its bread
and milk; and what a dear funny little
thing Peggy was, and how happy a night
Thanksgiving night was, nobody can know
who was not there to see.

Amos Reed told his wife, that the dough-
nuts were not so bad, after all; and re-
marked, that for his own part, he preferred
a good doughnut to most other kinds of
cake. Jane and James were the best friends
in the world; Willy liked -his toast to be
done very brown, he said, and George
found it easy to take up his mug in his






isin ani ng ila etre alesis tal

16 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.

right hand, instead of his left. Susy was
too busy with her little visitor to remember
her scalded mouth; and there never was
happier tea-table than theirs.

‘“T am to blame, Mrs. Walker,” said
Amos Reed, that I did not come in to see
you yesterday. I ought to have seen that
you had your Thanksgiving comforts.”

‘Oh, sir, I had no claim,” answered
the guest.

“Yes, you had. Here was I, surrounded
with blessings, a happy and prosperous
man, who should not have let the sun go
down, without knowing that those on each
side of me, had some share of the good
things of the season.’”” Amos Reed went
on,—‘“‘ I have the best of wives, and good
healthy children; a flourishing trade; no
debts; (he had forgotten all about the hard
times), and I did not send you even a tur-
key to keep your Thanksgiving. I hope I
shall be forgiven, and I’ll tell you what V’ll
do, just to make myself feel a little easier,





THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 17

Nnencnencnabiehiiencennennantnsinnnnanmapminmnnnnionn,
you know; I’ll send in a cord of wood, to-
morrow, and some flour and meal.’’

Amos Reed looked at his wife, his wife
thanked him by a look. “If Mrs. Walker
will accept them,” said she, “I have some
very good clothes which Susy has outgrown,
and which would about fit little Peggy.”

Here Mrs. Walker began to speak, but
her words became inaudible, and soon died
away, smothered by emotion, as much as if
buried under the cord of wood that was
coming. ‘The children began to play at
blind-man’s buff, and Mrs. Walker told her
new friends, her story. It was a simple,
common story enough :—the husband un-
fortunate, perhaps improvident, though that
did not appear ; — discouraged, —sick,—
dead. Her relations all gone; the nearest
remaining, some cousins, poor, and an uncle,
rich, but displeased. There was no hope
from him. She could get work, sewing,
washing, ironing, any honest work. ‘'T'o
night was the first time she had ever begged.

It was very hard to make up her mind to
2*



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18 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.
it, but the children were so cold and hun-
gry, and she had no money left.

“ Don’t say a word about it,” cried Amos
Reed. “It was all my fault. I should
have gone to see you. I can’t forgive
myself.”

‘“ And I ought to have reminded you,”
said his wife; ‘‘ we are both to blame.”

Then Amos Reed bustled into his shop,
and came back with a piece of ninepenny
calico, from which he insisted on measur-
ing off two gowns, one for his wife, and
one for the widow. They grew very merry
over it, as he made them stand up to see
which was the taller of the two, and they
thought it wonderfully amusing when he
cut an extra yard to make Mrs. Walker a
cape, and ordained that his wife should go
without, unless she would promise to re-
form, and try harder to please him. ‘Then
his wife said she would be very good and
dutiful, if, instead of her cape, he would
give her some spotted flannel for Mrs.
Walker’s baby. Why should not their

ef






THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 19
LLP Ln iainaaitiactasii ita,

babies be dressed alike as well as them-
selves ?

‘To be sure! a capital idea, Mrs. Reed!”
and the spotted flannel was brought out,
and cut off.

Mrs. Walker did not receive these gifts
with tears and humility, as she had the
offer of wood. She was no longer the beg-
gar-woman who had asked food for hungry
children. She was a visitor now, and the
calico and the flannel were little tokens
of regard between friends. Besides, the
Thanksgiving season made it becoming to
give and take presents. She began to seem
quite a pretty woman, and sat there not
without dignity. Her faded shawl hung
with an air over one shoulder, and she
really had very good teeth when she smiled,
and pretty eyes too, thought Amos Reed.
‘‘ She must have had a great deal of trou-
ble, poor thing; a nice, smart girl I’ll be
bound, when she was young.”




















When November came back, and looked










20 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.



SNPS NLL RAL ALARA LAP LLLP LPP PPP, ——e—e—e—e—e—e—————————— ee?

from the shop through the glass doors of
the little back parlor, he saw both babies
asleep in the cradle; the mistress of the
house sewed ; the stranger rocked the cra-
dle from time to time, or talked or watched
the children. They are now in the height
of their play. Blind-man’s buff having
been interdicted as too noisy. Susy is in
the centre of a circle, with the broom in her
hand. (Willy’s chips were swept up long
ago), the others dance round her, in the
intricacies of some anonymous game.

The great work-basket stood under the
mother’s chair; eight other chairs were put
up in a corner; so was the stool; the mas-
ter of the house needed no chair; he made
frequent journeys between the shop, the
window and the stove. The ink was
thawed, and the bottle put away. The
table had retired into the recess behind the
closet door; the geranium had been water-
ed. he cat had been treated to the milk
left from tea; the clock, now set forward,
the half hour, was about to strike nine. It



| a el

THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 21
encanta eS Ain isn
was a pleasant Thanksgiving scene, and
little Peggy thought never was there so
delightful a room, never were people so
kind.

‘Things look better,”’ said November,
going away from the glass doors into the
street.

I don’t know if Amos Reed heard him,
but that worthy man, now walking to the
window, drew aside the curtain, and looked
out on the night. ‘* Dear, me!” he eXx-
claimed. “ There is a light in the old man’s
room. He is not gone any where, it seems.
I wonder if he is sitting up there all alone.”

‘‘ Who, father,” asked Willy, chancing to
overhear the words.

‘‘ The poor old man that lives opposite,”
said his father, pointing to a house whose
back windows looked down into the Reed's
yards Willy knew that his father meant
Mr. Hallet. He had often been at that
house during the last six months, to do
errands for the persons whose lodger Mr.
Hallet was. Nobody liked Mr. Hallet ex-

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22. THANKSGIVING NIGHT.

cept Willy. He had given Willy an old
copy of Cook’s voyages, and the boy felt
under obligations to him. Willy always
_ Spoke of him as ‘ the cross old gentleman ;’
the others were in the habit of calling him
by the less civil name of ‘Old Spectacles.’

‘‘ A poor sort of Thanksgiving, he must
have,” continued Amos Reed, as he put
down the curtain, ‘‘ without chick or child,
or any body to talk to;” and the speaker
turned towards his own noisy family, with
a face that seemed to say ‘ blessings on you,
every one.’

‘ Suppose,” suggested Willy, “I should
go, and ask the old gentleman, to come here
and see us a little while.”

‘‘ He’d never come,” said James.

“« Besides it is late,”’ said the mother.

‘Only nine o’clock,” pleaded Willy,
‘‘ and nobody goes to bed early on Thanks-
giving night. Why, even George is not
sleepy now, though he wanted to go to bed
before tea.”

aman ara a





THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 23

‘* Wouldn’t he think it very strange,”
asked the father ?

“Willy would not dare to go,” said
Jane.

““Who’s afraid,” demanded Willy stoutly?

‘“He won’t like children’s noise,” said
the mother.

‘We can be very still,’ shouted all the
children in a breath, “ if Old Spectacles
comes.’”

‘So it ection answered the father,
laughing, as their voices woke the babies.

Then putting the chairs in order, the
children betook themselves to play at ‘turn
the treneher;’ but Willy thought of the
cross old gentleman sitting all alone on
Thanksgiving night. He asked if he might
go and inquire whether he was wanted to
do any thing.

‘““Not at this time of night. You can’t
do an errand now, unless he is sick, and
wants medicine,—in that case,—I don’t
know ; ”—said Amos Reed, hesitatingly.



lili iheeemmarrtmscciaieietiteaitiiaiias AE
24 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.
i iiihinssie ite necrcniidncsnmmareiateet te pamdenitsisiiiniiss
‘* Yes, I could see how he does. It is
bad to be ill on Thanksgiving day, father.”
The father nodded; se Willy drew his
hand from Peggy’s detaining clasp, ,prom-
ised not to stay many minutes, and fan off.

November. happened to be looking into
‘the cross old gentleman’s’’ room, as Willy
rang at the front door. It wasa large room,
warm and light. There were books all
round upon the walls, and on the table by
the fire, as well as on the chairs and floor.
The single occupant of the room had been
reading, for an open volume lay on the
table near his hand. Now, however, he
was leaning back in an easy chair, and
gazing steadily at the fire. November saw
that his face was neither that of a very old,
nor of a very crossman. November thought
it looked sad, and showed the traces of care
and grief. Perhaps the eyes that were
fixed so steadily on the fire, saw visions of
other ‘Thanksgiving days, when he was not
a cross old gentleman, and all alone. Per-



THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 25

rrr

haps in that silence of his room, he listened

to the voices that used to speak to him
years ago. ;

Now,. November hears Willy’s footsteps

coming up the stairs and along the pas-

aim S

TN Etre Ti
ws



sage. Next comes a gentle knock at the
_ door, and the old man Starts from his rey-
_ erie.

‘‘ Please, sir,’ said the boy, when the



25 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.

senshi fit I IPP PPP APL PIPPI

door was opened to him, “I came to see if
you wanted any thing to-night. It is
Thanksgiving night,” faltered he in confu-
sion, “‘ and I said I would come and see if
you were all alone, and if you were well.”

“Tf I were alone, and if I were well!
What ails the boy ?”

“Tt is Thanksgiving night,” answered
the child meekly.

The old man threw open the door, and
made the boy enter. He gave him a chair
by the fire, and then resuming his own seat,
looked straight at his visitor. Willy began
to repent very thoroughly of his boldness,
and thought the ‘cross old gentleman’
extremely disagreeable, in spite of the gen-
erous affair of Cook’s voyages. He looked
round the room at the astonishing number
of books; Willy had not supposed there
were so many in existence as those shelves
contained ; but whenever his eyes had made
the circuit of the room, they again met
those of Mr. Hallet, and all his confusion
was renewed.



o



THANKSGIVING NIGHT. ss BT
PIII NINN PRL PAPAL PLP PLL PPP PPO PPL PPP APPS Pa Prinses

At length the old gentleman saw fit to
break the uncomfortable silence. He said,
‘Do people in this town go about cus-
tomarily, on Thanksgiving evening, to
other men’s houses to inquire if they are
alone, and if they are well ?”

‘‘ No, sir,” answered the boy.

‘“ How did it concern you whether I was
alone or not? Who sent you? What is
your father’s object 2”

‘‘ Nobody sent me,” said Willy, answer-
ing the question that was most easily an-
swered ; “‘ but father saw your light shining
through the window down into our yard,
and he said you had not gone any where to
see your friends.”’

‘‘ Friends!” repeated the old man bit-
terly. ‘ Well, go on—.”

‘And father said -it must be a poor
Thanksgiving,—and—and that is all.”

‘No, that’s not all; so he sent you to
cajole me.”

‘‘ Oh, no sir, he did not send me. I came
myself to cajole you.”



28 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.

The old man could not help a smile at
the boy’s innocent ways. He asked him
more mildly, the reason of his coming.

‘* Because it is Thanksgiving, sir; we
are very happy at our house.”

‘¢ Do people hereabouts make presents at
Thanksgiving,” asked Mr. Hallet sud-
denly ? |

‘YT think they do,” replied the boy ; ‘‘ for
my father gave the poor woman a calico
gown, and some flannel for the baby.”

‘* And what do you expect of your rich
neighbor,” asked Mr. Hallet, coolly ?

‘* Who, sir?” said the child.

“ What, I say, did you think I should
give you? If your father could give away
calicos and flannels, you thought, I suppose,
that I could afford something better ; heh?
What had you fixed on in your mind asa
suitable present from the rich old man? It
is likely you had some idea about it,—
speak !”

‘JT did not know you were rich, sir,”
said Willy, manfully. He no longer felt





in

THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 29



confused and bashful. He had been in-
sulted. “ My father said you were poor,
and lonely, and we were sorry for you,
and I said I would come and ask you to
our house, because we were so happy, but
he thought you would not come, and my
mother thought it was too late, and that
you would not like children’s noise,—and
we all said we would be still, if old,—
if —,??

‘ Out with it,” said Mr. Hallet, “ what
is that word that sticks in your throat?”

“Old Spectacles,” said Willy, bluntly ;
they call you so, but they don’t mean any
harm ;—only I don’t call you that, because
I like you. I mean I was obliged to you
for Cook’s voyages, you know. SolI said
I would come to inquire if you were well,
or if you wanted any body to go for medi-
cine,—that is the whole story,” continued
the boy; ‘but I would not have come if we
had known that you were not poor, and did
not mind being lonely ; and as for a present,

I don’t want one, I never thought of one;
3*

ee



I isithinnicemneesncetiesieieninieaettatatcsnttacaniigicciiaisiishinsiniantagumaail

30 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.



and if you were to offer me all these beau-
tiful books, I would not touch one of them.”

Willy had here worked himself up to a
quite heroic state of indignation; (for my
part I don’t blame him), and picking up his
cap, he began to put his chair back from
the fire, in order to go away.

‘‘ Stop a minute,’ said Mr. Hallet; ‘ so
you left your play, from gratitude for an
old book given you months ago! You were
very merry at home, were you?”

‘Yes, sir.”

‘“‘ You were at a good game of play, I
suppose.”

‘‘ Yes, first we had blind man’s buff;
afterwards some other plays, and little
Peggy is so funny.”

‘* One of your sisters is named Peggy, it
seems.”’

‘No, sir; Peggy is Mrs. Walker’s litile
girl, that came to beg.”

“Who,” demanded Mr. Hallet, eagerly.

‘A poor woman came just as we were
at tea, and asked for something for her

&
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THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 31
habeas ae autnaattiinaancaandmaninihain aan
children to eat, and father brought her in,
because it was Thanksgiving, and her
baby is in our baby’s cradle, and Peggy
plays with us, and is going to have our
Susy’s clothes, that she has outgrown.”

‘* Where does Mrs. Walker live, and how
long have you known her?” inquired Mr.
Hallet, after a pause.

‘‘ She lives in our street, we never saw
her before. She cried when she first came
in. She is poor as any thing, you see, and
her husband is dead, and she has no friends,
and she wants to get some work, and she
has a wicked uncle that quarreled with her
husband.”’

‘ Boy, Pll go back with you. I have an
errand to your father,” said Mr. Hallet.

Willy thought he had better run on first,
and stop the noisy play of the children, but
the old man checked him. The two en-
tered the little back parlor together.

“Old Spectacles is come, I declare,”
said James. Jane begged him to be quiet.
Amos Reed began to place a chair, and to

anid lhsllieneneseniainetieensntninemeseameserines oo lbs



32, THANKSGIVING NIGHT.



be civil, but the visitor crossed the room
hastily, and going straight to Mrs. Walker,
looked in her face and said, “are you the
wife of Hallet Walker, of Philadelphia ?”’

“T was,” answered the woman with
faltering voice; ‘‘ he is dead.”’

‘‘T am his mother’s brother, who brought
him up, and for whom he was named,”
said Mr. Hallet. ‘I did not know that he
was dead. I would not believe him when
he wrote to say he was ill. I scarcely read
his letter, for I was very angry with him,
and I am afraid I have been harsh, and
now he is gone ;—poor boy,—poor boy !”

Mrs. Walker knew that her husband had
| been extravagant and undutiful, and that
the man before her, had repeatedly for-
-given him, and paid his debts and restored
him to favor. She could not in her soft-
heartedness blame the uncle for being at
length discouraged, and indignant. She
told him so, and that in his last days her
husband expressed great penitence and
affection towards the relative for whose





od

lll

i,

THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 33
Asiana nnncnniininainni niet nbebatinasbibiaiisiss aaa
kindness he had made so poor a return,
He told her to find out. his uncle, but she
had not yet been able to do so.

And now Willy had brought them to-
gether, and there would be no cord of wood
sent on the morrow, nor flour, nor meal.
Mrs. Walker would have plenty of every
thing now, only she said she should not
return the gown and the flannel which Mr.
Reed had given her. Those she wanted as
keepsakes. And Mrs. Reed and she should
take tea with each other some day, dressed
just alike in their new gowns, should they
not ?

‘‘ And both the babies,” suggested Mr.
Hallet, “ in their red petticoats, hey?”

Mrs. Reed repudiated that name for the
infantile garments in question. Robes, I
believe, she insisted on having them called.

“ What is the baby’s name?” asked the
uncle,

“ He is called Hallet, for his father,”
said the widow.

&





34 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.



‘¢ And for me,’’ added Mr. Hallet, snatch-
ing up the infant, and kissing it. Then
were not all the children amazed at the
sight of ‘Old Spectacles’ playing with a
baby ?

When November came again, he had two
visits to make. Up stairs, he saw George
asleep, forgetful of play as of sore finger, in
his crib. If Willy still kept Thanksgiving,
it was in his dreams; and James’ roguish
pranks had ceased until the sunrise. In
the neater room occupied by the girls,
Jane’s cares were at rest, and Susy’s curls
no longer danced in frolic with the cat.

Below, the cat was wide awake, and the
parent Reeds, and Mrs. Walker, and the
uncle. ‘They made plans about the future,
and talked of the past, and rejoiced in the
present, and were very sensible and friendly.
Of all the Thanksgivings he had ever
known, Amos Reed said, this was the
strangest, and most wonderful. And his
wife, as she always did, agreed with him.

a



THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 35

So November left them there, and went
away to look through those glass doors into
the little back parlor, no more for a twelve-
month.





st ensessestssenssssstesssnsssssenssnsssnusigesinesmenenmtnn

36 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.
ietiiieeentieneea ies

Soy ot Christmas.

A STORY OF DECEMBER.



In Mr. Maurer’s brick block, were four
houses, occupied by the same number of
families. In the corner house lived young
Dr. Andover, with his wife, child, and
mother. ‘The second was tenanted by the
two Miss Newburys, who kept boarders,
of whom I was one. The Haverhills were
in number three, and the remaining house
had been taken by my friends, Mr. and
Miss Danvers.

As | knew something of all these fami-
lies, I am able to relate to you some of the
pleasant though not uncommon things that

9%





JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 37
MAA AANA tn rnnnnnirccicoeey,





befell them about Christmas time, a few
years ago.

It was one day in the week before Christ-
mas, that Frank Haverhill, after sitting for
a long time by the fire with a book in his
hand which he was not reading, suddenly
said to a lady who was in the room,
‘Aunt, since I came here you have given
me some good lessons about controlling my
temper. I wish now there was any way
to cure me of a love of money.”’

‘‘ Love of money, my dear boy? I have
never observed in you any undue regard
for money.”

‘No, aunt,” said Frank, “TI do not think
you have, for I do not know that I ever
felt it till to-day.”’ As he said these words,
Frank blushed, and looked a good deal
ashamed.

‘Will you tell me how it was?” asked
Mrs. Haverhill.

“Why, aunt, you know I have to be at
school by nine o'clock, and I was rather
late in setting off this morning ; so instead

4

a”
,

‘

ee see nna cai ta

te



‘nee
38 Joy AT CHRISTMAS.

of giving me my luncheon, you gave me a
five cent piece to buy some gingerbread.”

Mrs. Haverhill remembered this very
well.

“ Well, aunt, I gave the money away.”

“Then you have had nothing to eat
since breakfast,’’ said his aunt.

“Oh, yes, I have; but I will tell you
how it all happened. When I got to the
bridge, James Mott was standing by the
toll-house door, shivering with cold, and
holding a snow-shovel in his hand. He
had not any mittens or gloves, and I could
see his arm in two or three places through
the holes in his jacket sleeve. I called to
him not to stand shivering there, but torun
a race with me to the other end of the
bridge. ‘Then he said that he had not a
cent to pay the toll. He said he had come
early to the bridge, hoping that the toll-
taker would have employed him to clear
away the snow about his door, but the man
preferred doing it himself. Poor James
looked very sorrowful. He said he had

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JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 39
OPP PP PPP PIIRARRRRNRAADRDDNADDNDANARAARARRAAARKAARAAAAAAAAAARARAAAAS

been so happy while making his new
shovel, at the thought of earning something
by it, for his mother. If he could only get
across, he knew of one gentleman who
would employ him, and there were so many
people who would want the snow cleared
from their sidewalks, that he thought he
should be almost certain to earn three or
four ninepences.

‘So, aunt, I gave him my five-cent
piece, and told him to take his toll out of
that, and run as fast as he could. Istarted
to run, too, for I was afraid of being late.
I was in good time, however, and had
looked over my lessun before Mr. Dixit was
ready for my class. I thought no more of
my five cents until recess, when we were
going out to play on the common.

Tom Coxall asked me to go with him to
the confectioner’s. I told him he had better
ask somebody who could keep him com-
pany in eating,—that I had no money, and
could not buy any thing. Then some of
the other boys noticed that I had no lun-







40 JoY AT CHRISTMAS.









cheon, and asked me if I forgot it. Icould
not say that, you know, so I told them
about meeting James Mott at the toll-house.

‘Tom Coxall said I was the greatest
fool he had ever heard of, to give a boy
five cents because he wanted one. I should
never be rich, he said, it was very easy to
prophesy that. I told him I did not desire
to be rich, I was a very happy boy without
being rich, and I could be a happy man
just as well. ‘Tom said none but simple-
tons or hypocrites talked in that way.
Every body wanted to be rich, only all did
not know enough to accomplish it. Then he
began to boast about his srandfather, how
every body talked of him as the richest man
in New York, and admired him, and liked
to be introduced to him. ‘Catch him giv-
ing five cents when one would have done
just as well,” said Tom.

“The other boys said they meant to be »
rich, too, and one or two of them who had
money went with Tom over to the confec-
tioner’s. I could see that some of the boys



















































JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 41



began to think less of me, for what Tom
said, and I was sorry for that. Yet I did
not see either what the harm was if I chose
to go without my luncheon to please James
Mott, and besides, how were Tom and the
others to get rich by spending their money
on cakes and tarts?

‘Still, 1 had a kind of feeling that I
never had before, about our being poor.
Somehow all the fine houses I had ever
been in, rose up before my eyes, and Mrs.
Coxall’s carriage rolled by, with Mrs. Cox-
all and her daughters sitting in it; and
then I had a picture of you, dear aunt, and
Fanny, getting out of the omnibus in the
middle of the street, where the snow was
| deepest. Perhaps I should have gone on
| thinking, until I had repented giving away
my half-dime, if just then James Mott had
not come up tome. He said he had earn-
ed sixty cents, and he had come to pay me
what I had lent him. He said he had not

a five-cent piece, and should be obliged to
4* ,

ie



einem

42 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

CARR eee OO —EOOO*> eae



—~

give me coppers, unless I would take a four-
penny piece instead.”
‘And what did you do?” asked Frank’s
aunt, with a shade of anxiety on her face.
‘“T took two cents to buy a roll, because
I was really hungry,” said Frank, “ and I
begged James to keep the rest to carry home
with his earnings.”’
Mrs. Haverhill asked the little boy if he
thought Tom Coxall’s luncheon tasted bet-
ter than his. Frank said he did not know
how much Tom had enjoyed his tarts; his
roll was an excellent one, he knew that.
He felt grateful, too, to James Mott as
he eat it, and that made it taste the
sweeter. ,
©] wish 1 could give him a jacket, aunt,
or something of that sort,” said Frank
presently ; ‘‘ don’t you think it was very
kind of James to come down by the school
just at twelve o’clock, just at the right time,
you know, aunt, to give me the money for
my luncheon ?”
Mrs. Haverhill was of Frank’s opin-







being well-timed. She thought in this case
both the loan and the re-payment had been
so, and she was glad both boys had been
so friendly. There was no further conver-
sation on the subject that evening. It was
tea-time, and after tea Frank learned his
lessons, and when the lessons were done,
he was sleepy and went to bed.

Mrs. Haverhill had Frank’s luncheon put
up for him in season the next day, safe in
the satchel which he strapped over his
shoulder; then she put on his comforter,
and tied Senin the ears of his cap, and bade
him good morning. He was no sooner gone,
than putting on her own walking-dress, she
went out to find Mrs. Mott. It was a very
cold day, and as Mrs. Haverhill walked
rapidly to keep herself warm, she thought
of the rents in the poor bdy’s jacket of
which Frank had spoken.

The house to which she was directed
had a forlorn and neglected appearance.
It did not look as if it had been painted

siailiasesalejebtipieiinaieaninetsinetesrennioensesiiaeccernanianianuiiiinitepetaiiasiaal
JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 43
ion that a service gains in value by
Dll



initiates AAT

44 joy AT CHRISTMAS.

since the declaration of independence, and
two or three panes were gone, their places
being supplied by shingles.
To Mrs. Haverhill’s knock a voice an-
swered, ‘‘ Come in.’ The lady obeyed the
voice, shutting the door after her as quickly
as possible, so as not to admit the cold,
frosty air. When in the room, she saw a
few embers on the hearth, close to which,
wrapped in a shawl and holding a baby in
her arms, sat a woman with a sorrowful
face. The sorrowful face, to which no
smile came, looked up at the visitor.
‘‘Tam afraid you are not well,’’ said
Mrs. Haverhill in a voice which conveyed
sympathy and all the comfort of sympathy
in its tones. The kind words made the
tears fall fast all over the baby’s head; the
mother wiped them away hastily, and seta
chair near the chimney for Mrs. Haverhill.
That lady began to play with the baby, a .
healthy little rogue it was, while she in-
quired about the wants of the family. She
found that the last stick of wood had just





a hy, AAS



JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 45





been burned in order to boil the water for
their breakfast. They were late, Mrs.
Mott said; but it did not seem worth while
to get up earlier, since they were warmer
in bed, and the day would be quite long
enough.

‘‘Ifit had not been for a young gentle-
man that my son knows,’’ continued the
poor woman, ‘‘ we should have been with-
out a shelter this bitter day. He gave
James some money to go to Boston with,
and my boy earned enough to pay a little
towards the rent, and to get a spoonful of
tea and a pound of meal.”?

‘Tam glad Frank’s little gift was of so
much use to you,” said Mrs. Haverhill ;
‘‘and I came here this morning partly to
thank James for taking the time and trou-
ble to go to the school in order to repay
Frank in season for his luncheon. I assure
you my nephew felt it as a great kindness,
and I am sorry James is not here to receive
my thanks.”

At these words there was an immense

nein







46 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

itt PPP PPP PPP PPP PPP PPP PPP PPP PLL ILI IIIS

stirring in the bed. which stood in a cor-
ner of the room, and James, with his hair
in a sad state of confusion, and his face red
with blushes, bounced out from under the
clothes, and, coming to the lady, protested
that she had nothing to thank him for. He
knew, he said, that he ought to have
insisted on returning all the money, but
then they were all so cold and hungry at
home, and their landlord threatening to turn
them out of his house. Besides the other
boy said he only wanted two cents.

While James was speaking, the dirty red
face grew very pale. His mother said he
was weak lately; she poured out some
warm tea into a cup, without sugar or
milk, and gave it to him with a piece of
bread. This was his breakfast. Mrs.
Haverhill begged Mrs. Mott to drink a little
also; she poured it out for her, and cut a
slice from the bread and put it into her
hand. ‘Then she left the room, saying, as
she did so, “I will return in a few min-
utes.”





JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 47

cepaatentetnnitntet tl LLL LLL PLLA LL LALO ET

When she came back, she was followed
by alittle girl carrying three sticks of wood.
Mrs. Haverhill herself had a little basket
on her arm, and in her hand some shavings
and pieces of bark. |

Ah! what a charming fire soon blazed
upon the hearth! How it shone on the
pale, thin faces, and cheered them with its
warm brightness! And now suddenly ap-
peared on the hearth, a sauce-pan of warm
bread and milk. The same bright-eyed
little girl who had brought the wood,
stretched out her arms and said, ‘‘ Let me
feed the baby, while you warm yourself.”
Mrs. Mott said she should make some hasty-
pudding for dinner, now that she had so
good a fire, and felt a little stronger.

Now it happened that Mrs. Haverhill
had a sort of wash-house standing in her
yard, of which she made no further use
than to put under cover her tubs and gard-
ening tools, with odd benches, empty bar-
rels and the like. She easily gained her
husband’s permission to offer this house to



48 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

RAAAAARARPRPPRP PPP PPP LPP PPP PLP LPP PPP PP PP PPP PPP PPP ADIPL IPAS

the poor widow for the winter, and Frank
was to have the pleasure of carrying her
the news when he came home from school.

‘Don’t take off your coat, Frank,” she
said when he came in, “I want you to do
an errand for me.” Perhaps Frank was a
little disappointed that he could not at once
come to the fire, and enjoy a new book
which one of his school-fellows had lent
him. He cast rather a rueful glance at the
great basket, which was put into his hands.
But when he knew the errand he was to
be sent upon, when Mrs. Haverhill had
told him all she had seen in the morning,
and when he heard that James Mott and his
mother were to live in their yard all winter,
rent-free, he took a great leap into the air,
kissed his aunt, and was out of the house
ina moment. Indeed, he came very near
overthrowing Patrick, who was waiting
with a wheel-barrow of wood to accompany
him.

The next day began the Christmas holi-
days. Very busy Frank was then in help-





JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 49

ing James to put the house in order for the
Motts to move in before Christmas day.
There was a great deal to be done in a few
days. The little room up stairs was to be
emptied of its rubbish. All this old lumber
must be examined to see if any thing could
be found likely to be useful to Mrs. Mott.
In this Fanny joined the boys, and their
exclamations of pleasure over half-worn
pieces of furniture were often so loud, as to
reach the ears of Mrs. Haverhill’s woman
Jemima who was ironing at a table by the
kitchen window. Perhaps no other article
called forth such demonstrations of delight
as a cradle, the very cradle in which Fanny
had been rocked when she was a baby.
Would it not be just the thing for Mrs.
Mott’s baby? ‘There it could lie and sleep
while its mother washed, or sewed, or
cooked, or did any thing else her friends
should employ her about. Then James
could sit by the cradle in the evening, and
learn his lessons, for Frank had already
decided to make a scholar of him.

5





50 Joy AT CHRISTMAS.





Jemima became so much interested in the
good work, that she actually offered to take
a tub of hot water, with soap and brushes,
and make the whole place clean.

‘You shall not work by yourself,” cried
Frank, “James and I will help you.” Je-
mima afterwards declared that the two boys
had been very useful; they were almost as
good as girls, she said. James swept the
whole house before she went into it; he
cleaned the windows, and blacked an old
cooking-stove which had been allowed to
grow rather rusty. Frank, armed with a
yellow bowl full of paste, and a painter’s
brush, proceeded to put up some prints that
he had been a long time collecting, over a
partition which was covered by a very
shabby paper disfigured in places by marks
of damp, and even by holes. Most con-
spicuous of all, was a large engraving of
General Washington crossing the Delaware,
the figures colored by Frank himself,—
Washington being represented in a very
extraordinary uniform, and the horse in







JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 51



the foreground very brilliant and peculiar.
When the house was clean and dry,
Frank invited his aunt to look at it. She
expressed great pleasure at finding it better
than she expected, and then she asked
James what furniture his mother had to put
in it. One bed, one table, two chairs, and
a chest were all they had left.. The rest
had gone for rent and fuel.

Mrs. Haverhill said she would look over
her house and see if she could find any
thing to spare. ‘I have something,” cried
Frank; ‘‘you know’ those shelves that I
made in the autumn, that we could never
think of any place for, I’ll hang them up in
James’ room; they will do for him to keep
his books in, that is if he has any books,
and if 1 can make the shelves stay without
tipping forward.”

Mrs. Haverhill did not look in vain. The
bed and bed-clothes were found for the
cradle, and Fanny had the pleasure of
making ready the baby’s bed. Then a
narrow stretcher was discovered by Jemi-



52 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

aarti L PPL LL LALLA ILLIA

ma, with its mattress, and pronounced just
the thing for James. Next an old table
was brought out, which might be made
useful if it had four legs instead of three.
Frank volunteered to supply the deficiency,
but as there was in the family a well-
founded doubt of the strength and stability
of his carpenter’s work, it was judged best
to send it away for the necessary repairs.
Three chairs, the cane seats of which were
worn out, Patrick seized upon, saying that
he could make them “very tidy and ele-
gant’ by nailing some bits of carpet tight
over the broken cane-work. All hands
were interested in this work of furnishing
the house.

When these and a good many other less
important articles were put in order, and
brought into the house, a fire was made in
the stove, the cradle judiciously placed with
a chair for the mother on one side the fire,
James’ seat on the other, and the table with
its new leg in front. Frank and Fanny
would go out repeatedly take a run across





ET

JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 53



the yard, then come back, open the door
suddenly, and look in, to see the effect;
while Jemima declared it as her settled
opinion, that “the only things wanting to
make it as comfortable and cheerful like
for Christmas as any cottage in England,
were a bit of carpet on the hearth, and some
branches of holly and ivy in the windows
and over the fire-place.

“Oh,” said Frank, “you old English
people think there is nothing to equal your
holly and ivy, but I can tell you, Mistress
Jemima, if James and I took the trouble to
go into the woods, we could soon convince
you that we have things full as pretty as
any you ever saw.”

Jemima looked as if she thought holly
and ivy had not their equals in the vegeta-
ble kingdom, but she said it would give her
pleasure to see any thing green in the house
at this season. She hoped if Frank got any
boughs, he would spare her enough to dress
the kitchen, as she had been used to see it

at home.
5*





54 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

id





LPL



Patrick offered to move Mrs. Mott.—It
was in the afternoon of the twenty-fourth
of December, that she took possession of her
new abode. She had been there just long
enough to have her bed set up, and to
admire the cozy look of the little place,
when the boys came in with the hemlock
and ground pine which they had collected.
Frank carried his share of the green boughs
to Jemima, who almost shed tears of delight
over them, and proceeded at once to adorn
her territories after the fashion of her native
Devonshire.

That was a happy Christmas eve at the
Haverhill’s. In the smaller house, the
Motts were enjoying the warmth and clean-
liness of their new quarters. Mrs. Mott did
more. She had felt ill, desponding, deso-
late. Now, she had found friends, and
consequently hope and strength of heart.
It was with her as with the apostle, when
the brethren heard of him and came to meet
him as far as Appii Forum and the Three

&



ani biennale

JOY. AT CHRISTMAS. 55

hit PPP PPPPP PPP PP PP PPP PPLE PPP LPP L LPP AIP PILI

Taverns; whom when Paul saw, he thank-
ed G'od, and tock courage.

Jemima was happy in her kitchen, ad-
miring her own decorative powers, and
discoursing to Patrick about those far-off
scenes and days which the season recalled
to her memory.

In the parlor, Frank and Fanny were
happy in anticipating the surprise James
Mott would feel, when on going to bed, he
should find lying in his room a complete
suit of warm clothes which Mr. Haverhill
had bought for him from Frank’s measure.

It was just at this point, that I, the writer
of this story, came to know any thing about
the Motts. I had gone to Mrs. Haverhill’s
to return a book, and the children, whose
intimate friend I was, told me all the cir-
cumstances which I have related.

Frank’s aunt asked him if he had been
troubled during the last few days with
the desire to be rich. Frank said he had
not thought about it since the holidays
began. He supposed there was no tempta-

ee
Yo



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56 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

LLLP LLL ltl

tion for him to love money except when he
was at school, where his companions
thought so much of riches. At home he
despised money.

‘What is that,” inquired Mr. Haverhill,
whose attention had been attracted from
his newspaper by the earnestness of Frank’s

tones. ‘‘ You despise money? Let me tell ,

you money is a very good thing.”

“Oh, uncle! Do you care about money ?
Do you think much of people just because
they are rich?”’ asked Frank with a sort
of wondering horror in his face, and great
emphasis on the pronoun.

‘That is not the question, my good
fellow. Ihave said nothing of that sort.”
Then Mr. Haverhill, smoothing his paper
over his knee, and opening his eyes wide in
comical mimicry of Frank’s, repeated his
words, ‘‘ Money is a very good thing, most
excellent nephew.”

‘So Tom Coxall thinks,” answered
Frank, ‘(and a good many of the boys.
But, uncle, I did not believe that. you







or sensuous
JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 57
would say so. I thought;—I mean I did
not think ;—I was almost certain ;
of Motioy-ishesie — very — cena
said the uncle again, in a manner half
laughable, half provoking. “* But, Frank,
always remember and be sure of this. It
is by no means the best thing.”

Frank and Fanny both looked relieved
at this. ‘ What is better, then?” asked
the boy, beginning to comprehend his uncle’s
meaning.

“ Better? Better than money ? I suppose
whatever we are willing to give money
for, and especamry whatever money is una-
ble to buy.”

‘But tell’ me some particular thing,”
demanded Frank.

‘Well, I should say, a good nephew that
never mdachdcretands, nor feels shocked at
his uncle, is to be viiefenndd: ’

What should you say,’’ asked Frank,
turning to the rest of us.

6

‘Good health is better,’”’ said his aunt.
‘‘ Dear friends,” suggested Fanny.

Po eee ee





58 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

—— —— Eee

“ A good conscience,’ said Mr. Haver-
hill.

“A glass of cold water,” added I, put-
ting down mine.

“A merry Christmas is. better,” cried
Fanny, and Mrs. Haverhill said more
gravely than we had hitherto been speak-
ing, I will tell you what Moses felt on this
subject.”’

‘* Moses ?”’ asked the children.

‘‘Yes; we are informed in the epistle to
the Hebrews, that Moses esteemed the re-
proach of Christ greater riches than the
treasures in Egypt.”

Frank said it never occurred to him be-
fore that Moses had any temptation to stay
in Egypt.

‘It is certainly insinuated in this verse,”’
said Mr. Haverhill, “‘ that if he had contin-.
ued in the court of Egypt as the son of
Pharaoh’s daughter, he might have had the
free use of the king’s treasures, and of
course, might have procured all the enjoy-
ments to be bought with money.”





ac untieemaninnnnntmaian

JOY AT OHRISTMAS. 59
eR IIILLIIOLAQLQLOIQESLE_e_aeeeee eePeerereeeeerrv
‘“T can understand,” said Frank, ‘ that
Moses gave up a good deal. I suppose
Egypt was a very rich country; but I do
not know what is meant by the reproach of
Christ.” :

‘‘ Perhaps,” said his uncle, ‘ the scoffs
cast on the Israelites, for expecting the
Christ to arise among them, in whom all
the nations of the earth should be blessed.
In more general terms, Moses, wise in this
beyond all the wisdom of the Egyptians,
preferred the reward which he looked for in
the life to come, to the temporary enjoy-
ment of the pleasures in the court of Egypt.
Remember, the Egyptians were a civilized
and powerful nation; the court was a lux-
urious and wealthy one. On the other
hand the Israelites were a race of slaves,
condemned to the most sordid and laborious
tasks. How should a king arise from
these? Where was that sceptre, not to
depart from Judah till Shiloh came ? Where
the promised lawgiver? The families of
Judah are working in mortar, and in brick,





$$$ — ees

60 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.
and in all manner of service in the field,



and their mocking masters make ‘ their
lives bitter with hard bondage.’

‘““We have no king but Pharaoh, was
doubtless the cry of most of them, as the
years rolled by, and no help came. It was
not so with all. We know that by one of the
Hebrews, even the son of Pharaoh’s daugh-
ter, that promised blessing of the whole
earth,—those prospects grown so dim to the
minds of most of his brethren,—that re-
proach of Christ, were esteemed greater
riches than all the treasures of Egypt.”

“ Fanny, my child,” continued Mr. Hav-
erhill, turning to his little girl, ‘“‘ those were
very true words of yours, that a merry
Christmas is better than money ; for what is
Christmas? The day on which the nativity
of our blessed Saviour is celebrated. And
what has not our Saviour’s birth been to
us? No longer a reproach ;—for he has
come, and his coming is hope, and truth,
and life, and joy, and Heaven. Give mea



oe



a

JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 61



Bible, Fanny, and let me read part of the
matchless story.” Mr. Haverhill read:

‘‘ And there were in the same country
shepherds abiding in the field, keeping
watch over their flock by night.

‘* And lo, the angel of the Lord came upon
them, and the glory of the Lord shone
round about them; and they were sore
afraid.

‘‘And the angel said unto them, Fear not ;
for, behold, I bring you good tidings of
great joy which shall be to all people.

‘‘ For unto you is born this day, in the city
of David, a Saviour, which is Christ the
Lord.

‘‘And this shall be a sign unto you; ye
shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling
clothes, lying in a manger. |

‘‘ And suddenly there was with the angel
a multitude of the heavenly host, praising
God and saying, |

‘Glory to God in the highest, and on earth
peace, good will toward men.”

6





x



62° JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

CAR RARARAAARRRRAI LL LLLLLOLLM_MLOoOwownnmwnm=—"™—"_"—"”OOervveesees sees’

There was not so much joy at Christmas
in the next house, which as I told you was
occupied by the Miss Newburys and their
boarders. A boarding-house is not like a
family. YetI thought, when I took my
place at. the breakfast-table on Christmas
morning, and answered the good wishes of
my fellow-boarders, that we all liked each
other better than usual. I think we should
all have been more ready to assist each
other, more reluctant to believe any evil
about each other. How could it be other-
wise, after we had just used that pleasant
form of words, ‘I wish you a merry Christ-
mas?”

Even our old bachelor, Mr. Freeman,
was benignant towards us all, and civilly
helped Mrs. Maritou to her favorite dishes.
The universal good humor was so ap-
parent as even to set at rest the heart of
Miss Dorcas Newbury, who, poor woman,
was apt to fear that her boarders were

always more or less dissatisfied, if not on







JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 63



the very verge of a general remonstrance
and departure.

Miss Phebe was a quiet person of few
words, and so far as appeared, of only one
strong partiality. She was genuinely fond
of flowers. The discovery of a new bud
on one of her plants was always an event
of some importance in Miss Phebe’s sel-'
dom-varied life. Judge then if she was
not made happy this morning by the un-
expected gift of a pot of carnations almost
ready to bloom.

These are trifles, you will say.—Yes;
but it is in trifles chiefly that we can show
our “gvod will toward men.” Few of
us may be called upon for acts of heroic
daring, or heart-rending self-sacrifice in
behalf of others; but we may all con-
tribute something to the ‘‘ peace on earth,”’
by our morning, afternoon, and evening
acts of common life. The kind word
spoken,—the unkind look forborne,—the
slight service heartily rendered,—we often
fail even in these things; and need not







64 JOY AT OHRISTMAS.



covet opportunity of failure in the per-
formance of more difficult duties. It is
only the faithful over a few. things who
have proved their fitness to be intrusted
with much.

I was to dine that Christmas day, with
my friends, Mr. Danvers and his daughter.
On my arrival, I saw at once that they
had something to tell me, and Miss Dan-
vers presently said; ‘‘ The strangest thing
has happened to me to-day which I must
ask you to listen to, though it is quite a
long story.”

On my expressing a desire to hear it,
my friend continued. “ You must know
that our good Betsey, having married and
left me, I wished to engage in her place a
sempstress and housemaid. So I told
Mrs. Goodwin to look out for a proper
person. ‘T'wo or three days ago, Goodwin
brought to me a very nice young woman,
as she said, who had been recommended
by a friend of hers. I was pleased with





JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 65

PARRA PRPPIEOPPP PPP PPP PPL LP PPPOE PPP PPP PPL LP PIPPI

her appearance, and engaged her at once.
She came the day before yesterday.

‘‘ Now comes the interesting part of my
story. Old Mrs. Goodwin, you know,
always goes to church at Christmas.
Father and I also went out, leaving only
Anne, which was the new girl’s name, and
the cook in the house. I was not very
well this morning, and came home after
walking a short distance. [I let myself in
without ringing, by means of a latch-key,
and was no sooner in the house, than |
heard some one playing in most masterly
style on the piano-forte. I remembered
that my instrument had been left open,
but it was none of my music which was
now played. It was something very beau-
tiful and elaborate, and excuted with such
ease, such brilliancy that I stood for some
minutes in the passage, without moving,
and almost afraid to breathe, lest I should
put an end to the performance.

Bye and by, the character of the music
changed. A few chords-were struck in a

6*

y Se
or





66 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

eee e—eEeeeeee—eEeEeEOOeeSO mS Pee ee em Omer sn eee Ss as



kind of simple prelude, and a voice began
to sing. ‘The voice was as wonderful as
the previous playing, very sweet and full.
' Words and music were alike new to me,
but I find I can recall one verse which was
twice repeated : :
“ A song of thanks and loud to Him
Who makes our labor cease,

Who feeds with love the midnight dim,
And hearts devout with peace.”

“T could not restrain my curiosity any
longer, but even as the singer was dwell-
ing on the last line [ went into the room.
What was my surprise to find there the
newly engaged Anne! She was not aware
of my presence till I stood close by her
side. She blushed a good deal, half mur- |
mured something about its being very
wrong,—a pleasure long denied, and great
temptation. | could hardly catch the
words, the poor girl was so much em-
barrassed.’’—

‘And what did you do?”

“You will think me very foolish,”



a

JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 67

LPP LLP



answered Miss Danvers laughing; “ but
acting hastily and under the influence of
that magnificent music, I told her not to
get up, that I had never heard such play-
ing before, that she was too good a musi-
cian to be any thing else, that I had long
desired to take some lessons in music,—
that instead of living with me in any other
capacity she must stay as my teacher,—
that then she should play all day if she
liked, and I never should be tired of listen-
ing.” —

‘¢ And how did she receive this ?”

“Why, I suppose very improperly for a
discharged housemaid. She leaned her
head against my shoulder, and cried with
all her heart.”

“And you’”—

‘Tf the whole truth is to be told, 1 must
own that I cried for sympathy. Such
things, you know are catching, and her
emotion was so genuine that I could not
help it. Just then father came in.”—

‘“Yes:” said Mr. Danvers, ‘“‘ what should

e——————————————————m aed



*,

68 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.



I see on entering my parlor, but my
daughter and my housemaid weeping in
each other’s arms. I uttered some excla-
mation of surprise. Julia, sly little rogue,
knowing her father’s weakness where mu-
sic is concerned, and willing to propitiate
him in favor of her new friend, managed
matters very skillfully.”

‘‘T think so;” said the young lady. ‘I
first motioned to the astonished Mr. Dan-
vers to sit down and listen; then I told
Anne that he was very fond of music, and
implored her to oblige me by at once
beginning something, any thing. She
wiped away her tears and commenced the
beautiful Andante movement in Beetho-
ven’s Fifth symphony. Whether it was
well played or not, I leave it for yonder
musical gentleman to decide.”

‘‘Admirably played it was to be sure,”
said Mr. Danvers.

‘‘He has not heard her sing though,”
said his daughter. ‘She was no longer in
voice, poor thing, after crying. When she





JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 69



had finished the Andante, she got up, and
telling us that her father had been a music-
master and organist of great skill, and had
taught her what she knew, she left the
room. That is my story. I want you to
see Anne and to hear her. I know you
will agree with me that she would be mis-
placed as a servant, and very a and
happy as my governess in music.’

Accordingly after dinner, just before it
was time for lamps to be lighted, Miss
Danvers brought her in. She was a slight,
quiet-looking girl about twenty years old.
Her face indicated talent I thought, and
bore the traces of suffering. I was pleased
with the modest, yet self-respecting man-
ner of this young person, and not a little
surprised, when, on my name being men-
tioned, she looked earnestly at me for a
moment, and then said,

‘Miss § has forgotten me, I think,



or I should be inclined to claim her as one
of my earliest acquaintances.”’
I shook my head, smiling, and affirming





70 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.



that if so, she had quite outgrown my
recollection.

‘Yet you will probably remember Mr.
Newport, the blind organist in P and
the little girl who used to lead him about.”

‘Little Anne!” I exclaimed, ‘‘is_ it
possible that you are little Anne New-
port ?”’

‘“ Whose gloves you used to mend for
her, and to whom you’ gave the good
counsels which a motherless girl sorely
needs.”

‘And good old Mr. Newport,” I said,
‘‘T fear, my dear, you have lost your
father.”

She made a motion of mournful assent,
but was not at that moment able to
answer me. ‘Turning to Mr. and Miss
Danvers, I told them that ten or twelve
years before, [ had been for several months
the guest of some friends in P The
daughters of the family were then young
and received instruction in music from Mr.
Newport, a gentleman of great eminence







JOY AT CHRISTMAS. vel

PP PPP Pei AL PALI AI LIAL ILE

in his profession. Being blind, he was
always attended by a little girl, his only
child. I perfectly well remembered the
interest I felt at the time in this little
creature, to whom I took pleasure in ren-
dering slight services with the needle
when I saw that her dress needed such
aids.

After some years’ absence, I again visited
P , and on inquiring for my old
friends, I learned that Mr. Newport had,
not long before, given up his situation as
organist and left the town. It was thought
he had gone to the West. After this, I had
never heard of them, though I had some-
times wondered what had becom> of my
little Anne. I expressed the sat.sfaction
I now felt at meeting her; a feeling fully
shared by Miss Danvers. I became, as it
were, a sort of voucher for the worthiness
of her new protegé.

‘‘] have known a good deal of sorrow
since those days,’ said Anne Newport.
“ My father’s illness was long and painful.







$$$ sss

72 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

-_wYYew =



We were very poor and obliged to sell our
books and the music which he had used
before his blindness, and which he was
saving for me. At- length he grew so
restless that he would not stay long in any
place, and so we made few friends. After
his death I thought of trying to obtain
pupils, but we had not been known in the
neighborhood of Boston, and without proper
recommendations and amidst so much com-
petition, | had no chance of success, I had
not money to go any where else, and be-
sides, there were some trifling debts which
I did not wish to leave behind me. Sol
was glad and thankful to take any respect-
able situation that was offered me. ‘That
situation however, | have now lost;’’ said
she, with a half playful timidity as if
uncertain what was to become of her after
all.

‘But you have found friends and a
home, dear Anne,” said the warm-hearted
Julia, looking at her father, after she had
spoken.







JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 73

‘“Yes,”’ added Mr. Danvers in the polite,
slightly formal manner which was natural
to him, and rather becoming. ‘“ Your
friends, Miss Newport, will take care of
your interests now.” (Here a gentle bow
to me.) “At present you are on a visit to
my daughter.”

‘And so,” I said, “‘I wish you a merry
Christmas, and if there are any gloves to
be mended, I have not forgotten my old
skill.”’

‘It is much if I have gloves at all now,”
said Anne, ‘‘but Ican play without them,
and with your permission, I will give you
some music in this Christmas twilight.”

“Yes, do, it will gratify us all, and I
am sure it will do you good,” said Julia ;
andI added, ‘Let me hear if you have
improved. When I saw you last, you
could only play ‘ Bounding Billows’ with
one hand.”

She seated herself without further invita-
tion, at the instrument, and held us silent

with her excellent performance. ‘Then she
7

i ee

i



T4 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

ee AAPA PPP PPP PPL PPP PPP PPP PDL PPP PAPAL ALP AP AA ALA APL I AAA AAI IAP

sang this hymn. A midnight hymn by an
English poet, set to music by her father
she told us. |

“ The stars shine bright while earth is dark,
While all the woods are dumb,— |
How clear those far-off silver chimes
From tower and turret come !

“ Chilly but sweet the midnight air,
And, lo! with every sound,

Down from the ivy leaf, a drop
Falls glittering to the ground.

“*Twas night when Christ was born on earth ;— "
Night heard his first, faint cry ;

While angels caroled round the star
Of the Epiphany.”

I had promised to spend the evening at
Dr. Andover’s, and indeed, having known
sqmething of the Christmas-keeping of the
other three houses in our block, I felt
inclined to take a peep at the fourth. Sol
said good-bye to the pleasant group at
Mr. Danver’s, wondering within myself
which felt the happier, she who had found,
or they who had given a home.





Xe.



JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 75



The Andovers were poor; the Danverses
were rich. Not poor like Mrs. Mott, not
rich like Crassus. But about the one family
every thing showed a certain carelessness
of expense. One lamp was never made to
do the duty of two; one person was not
expected to do the work of two. Innocent
pleasures were not given up because they
could not be afforded. ‘There was plenty
of furniture, plenty of servants, plenty of
time, plenty of every thing.

At Dr. Andover’s the cost had to be
nicely calculated. Friends were invited
for tea rather than for dinner; the new
book was borrowed, rather than bought;
the faded carpet was made to last another
year. Dr. Andover was still young, and
of a profession in which success is prover-
bially slow. Many were their struggles,
many their little sacrifices, and self-denials,
and many their hopes of brighter days.

The husband studied diligently, was
very attentive to what business he had,
and helped out his income by writing in







76 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

————— — —— —eESeoee>errerses>srr ee eEeEaewY —

his own proper name for the medical
Journals, and anonymously for some of the
magazines. :

His wife and mother taxed the common
purse as lightly as possible, making and
repairing all the family clothing, and re-
ducing their personal expenses to the
lowest sum possible. ‘They were poor,
but they were not in debt, and they were
happy. If sometimes the future looked
dark, it was not on Christmas day they
would allow the gloom to gather, and
our evening was as cheerful as if we had
been a quartette of millionaires.

Now, Miss Danvers had that morning
early, as I chanced to know, sent to Dr.
Andover’s a large and handsome Christmas
cake,—‘ from an old patient,” as the card
with it stated; the fact being, that the
lady had once had a tooth extracted by
the Doctor, which she called being his
patient.

Great was dear Mrs. Andover’s pride and
pleasure in her cake ;—great the satisfac-



Ti sisesielselienithiinaneneeeoneihibetiiintaianiacidaiibingtnittanetiiipleenintitinninneniinitinieassie

JOY AT CHRISTMAS. TT



tion with which she exhibited it to me.
She had saved it uncut till I should see it.
‘Ts it not a handsome cake?” she asked;
adding, ‘“‘a present this morning, from
one of my husband’s patients.’”’—It was
indeed as handsome and rich as frosting
and citron could make it.

But the cake was not the only thing kept
to be shown to me. Little Eddy had been
allowed to sit up in order to see me, or
rather to be seen by me, and now the dear
little fellow is called upon to say the hymn
he has learned. ‘‘ Mind,” said his mother,
‘and speak very plainly, and don’t say
washed.”’

Eddy stood up very straight on the
hearth-rug and recited :

“ While shepherds watched their flocks by night,
All seated on the ground,
The angel of the Lord came down
And glory shone around,

‘Fear not,’ said he,—for mighty dread
Had seized their troubled mind—
‘ Glad tidings of great joy I bring
To you and all mankind.
7*





Pa re



78 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.
eee”
To you, in David’s town, this day
Is born of David’s line,
The Saviour, who is Christ the Lord ;
And this shall be the sign:



The heavenly babe you there shall find
To human view displayed,

All meanly wrapped in swathing bands
And in a manger laid.’

Thus spake the seraph, and forthwith
Appeared a shining throng

Of angels, praising God, and thus
Address their joyful song:

‘ All glory be to God on high,
And to the earth be peace! -

Good will henceforth from heaven to men,
Begin and never cease.’ ”’

“It is very sweet to hear from infants’
lips the words that were first uttered on
this earth by lips of angels,” I remarked,
when the child had finished, without mak-
ing a single mistake.

“Doubtless,” said Dr. Andover, “ there
is much better poetry in the world than this
hymn, yet it was the first 1 taught my boy.

+—_—__



a

JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 79

POCO nn ttn

Is it not dearer to us all than almost any
other? And now, Eddy, say your other
little verse, and then kiss us a good night.”
“Do you mean ‘Child Divine,’ ” asked
the little one who knew nothing else ?
‘‘-YVes,”’ said his father.
Eddy recited :

*‘ Thou Child Divine, Immanuel,
Welcome to thy lowly manger !
With heart-felt joy thy birth we hail,
And greet with songs the lovely stranger.”

Then he gave us each a kiss with his rosy
lips and disappeared with his mother.

When Mrs. Andover returned, she said
to her husband, “ Edward, if you have
finished the poem you were writing, I wish
you would read it to us now. I liked what
I heard of it, and we have nothing to do
but to listen.”

The other two ladies added their solici-
tations, and the Doctor read





80 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

ee ;
4

“ A CHRISTMAS HYMN.



BY ALFRED DOMETT.



‘Tt was the calm and silent night!
Seven hundred years and fifty-three
Had Rome been growing up to might,
And now was queen of land and sea.
No sound was heard of clashing wars,—
Peace brooded o’er the hushed domain ;
Apollo, Pallas, Jove and Mars
Held undisturbed their ancient reign
In the solemn midnight
Centuries ago.

’T was in the calm and silent night !—
The senator of haughty Rome
Impatient urged his chariot’s flight
From lordly revel rolling home.—
Triumphal arches gleaming swell
His breast with thoughts of boundless sway ;
What recked the Roman what befell
A paltry province far away,
In the solemn midnight
Centuries ago ?



Within that province far away
Went plodding home a weary boor.





wena acini aa ctonipeapannnonmnnnncnnnnanantetan
A streak of light before him lay,
Fallen through a half-shut stable door
Acwoss his path.—He passed,—for naught
Told what was going on within ;
How keen the stars, his only thought,
The air how calm and cold and thin,
In the solemn midnight
Centuries ago.
Oh, strange indifference! Low and high
Drowsed over common joys and cares ;
The earth was still—but knew not why,
The world was listening—unawares !

JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 81

How calm a moment may precede
One that shall thrill the world forever !
To that still moment none would heed,
Man’s doom was linked no more to sever,
In the solemn midnight
Centuries ago.

It is the calm and solemn night !

A thousand bells ring out, and throw
Their joyous peals abroad, and smite

The darkness—charmed and holy now!
The night that erst no name had worn,

To it a happy name is given ;
For in that stable lay new-born

The peaceful Prince of Earth and Heaven,

In the solemn midnight
Centuries ago.”

NE





82 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.



Then the Doctor went out to see a pa-
tient. A poor, non-paying patient, it is
likely, since he took with him two of the
oranges from the table. I am sure he want-
ed to carry a dozen, but he could not afford
himself the luxury of giving more, even
although it was Christmas day.

He was not absent long, and, soon after
his return, a letter was left at the door.
The Doctor took his letter, which he read
with a slight flush on his face. He then
said to his mother and wife, ‘‘I have
received the appointment as visiting physi-
cian to the , which I asked for, you
know some time ago. I heard that it had
been given to Balsam, but it seems I am to
have it; the duty to commence at New
Year’s.”

Here was a joyful surprise. His income
would be more than doubled at once.
There was opportunity besides, of becom-
ing more generally known, and means of
self-improvement. We all shook hands









JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 83

OR 0 0000 0 0 00 0:00 ee

with him on his appointment, and his’

mother kissed him.

Christmas had brought them relief from
pressing cares, and I left them full of
pleasant hopes and plans for the coming
year.

I have certainly known a great many
happy people this Christmas, I thought, as
I re-entered the Miss Newbury’s front door
and made my way up to my own apart-
ment, There is a great deal of happiness
in this world, doubt it who will. I did not
doubt it, when the next minute, I espied a
letter on my table; along welcome letter
from a dear relative at a distance. This
was a cup of blessing poured out for my
especial use, and I hope I was not unthank-
ful.

Once more I read as had been my custom
from childhood, Milton’s wonderful Hymn
on the Nativity, and though now that was
read alone, by my solitary fire, which had

Bi



84. JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

once been read aloud with brothers and
sisters round, I would not yield to the sad-
ness of such a thought, nor sully with sel-
fish tears the Joy of Christmas.





Sn



THE YOUNG MISSIONARY. 85



Che Young Missionary.

A STORY OF JANUARY.

—_———_—_ +<—_—_——_-_-_—-

Tus prayer was ended, and the last words
of peace were spoken. The humble ser-
vice was over, and all prepared to depart
in haste, for the sky had long been growing
darker, and the air seemed thickening with
snow. The people had listened quietly
and with respect, but an anxious gaze was
every now and then directed through the
small window-panes, and it might have
been noticed that at length, after such a
look, weather-beaten heads nodded to each
other, and there was a slight stir near the
door. Perhaps they would have begun to
go away, singly or in pairs, for they knew
3

a



ss





86 THE YOUNG MISSIONARY.

~e—ReOrmreoe



——

that the young minister, if not a stranger
in the country, would be aware of the com-
ing storm and dismiss them, but the ser-
mon before long drew to a close, and wag-
ons and boats were speedily filled. ‘The
missionary himself had twenty miles to
ride, and even his inexperienced eye saw
the threatening omens, and that there was
no time to lose. Before the last boat left
the shore, he was ready to set off, not with-
out due refreshment offered and received,
and the precautions rendered necessary by
that terrible climate of carefully wrapping
up neck, chin and forehead.

By this time, the snow, which had been
whirling in the upper air, began to descend
in the fine, dust-like particles, which are
thought to indicate the beginning of a long-
continuing storm. The large, plumy flakes,
which float down in white beauty, and
deck the ground with soft stars, showing,
it is said, an approaching change in’ the
weather, soon cease to fall, and are followed
by suns more golden, and skies bluer than







THE YOUNG MISSIONARY. 87





before. But these tiny crystals, grey as
you look up through them, crowded myr-
iads on myriads together, fall, hour after
hour, with unceasing industry, till. every
fence is covered, and every hollow filled.
The roads, through the remote settlements

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of this country, always solitary enough,
assume a death-like stillness beneath their
shroud, nor does any living thing remain
abroad.

nm 98





88 THE YOUNG MISSIONARY.

~~







For the first four or five miles, the young
minister, passing at intervals the homeward
bound wagons of his people, received re-
peated and urgent invitations to turn aside
with them for the night. Declining to do
this, every voice called after him as he rode
away, and eager warning to use his utmost
speed in getting home. ‘There were warn-
ings too, all around him; from the old woods
came moans and sobbings; and dismal
voices went by on the hurrying blast.

His horse’s feet make no sound on the
muffled earth, and still deeper grew the fast-
increasing drifts.) He knows that if he
were to relax his efforts, or to lose his way,
as now on these logs and stones, even so
above his body, and around his head would
the fantastic snow-wreath settle. ‘ Lost in
a snow-storm ;’—‘In the woods in a snow-
storm,’ were words that would not fail to
account for his absence, to all who heard
them. He thought of the people with
whom he had so recently parted. Even
the fishermen of Wallace Cove were by



gy

THE YOUNG MISSIONARY. 89

eee Pv

this time at home, and every member of his
afternoon’s congregation safe under shelter,
while in that blinding and bewildering tem-
pest, all the trees look alike to him, and he
toils on, inahope that is half despair. That
vast hemlock, has he passed it before, or is
it one of many of the same size, and form,
deceiving his senses with its familiar looks ?
And yonder half-fallen tree lying against
its fellow is strangely like one seen half an
hour ago, if indeed it be not the same, and
he, miserably wandering still, in the same
part of the woods, there to wander till night
comes on, and the snow and the frost do
their work on him helpless in the dark-
ness.

He feels for a moment as if his prayer
could not rise among those close-serried
ranks of trees, and through the stifling
snow. 'Then indeed is he utterly alone.
And is it thus must end all his early dreams
of distinction, all his more sober hopes of
usefulness? Shall they all lie down to-
gether, and be alike shrouded and forgot-

8*

i iainehremeiinenninhenemanaainniininnenianeieneiianinitentnniininanaiaieniiinaitililll

ee re eres Be wena te Att LLL ALA





90 THE YOUNG MISSIONARY.

——_Oo



ten, tillon some afternoon in the distant
summer, the step of.the hunter or the
woodman shall pause, and his careless
whistle cease, on a sudden, as his eye falls
on a heap of human bones, found where
the fatal sleep overtook its victim, and
buried where they were found at the foot of
the ancient pine ?

Still another hour, and the horse plodded
on,.forcing his way through the drifts, for
rider dared not to deviate from the path
so much as to go round them, were that
possible in the thick forest. So while a
chill colder than that of winter or the grave
was at his heart, even the shadow of a mo-
mentary despair, he encouraged his gener-
ous companion, and felt that there was
between them a sympathy of suffering.

On! on! not a sound is to be heard but
the wailing of the wind, when suddenly
the trees seem closer together, and the
horse stops before a mountain drift of snow.
Now may they well give themselves up for
lost. 'The path has ceased ; it is fast grow-



THE YOUNG MISSIONARY. 91

a





.

ing dark, and there is no more strength to
struggle. But hark! along, distant how! min-
gles with the blast, and the horse, catching
the sound, turns aside, and with increased
and still increasing speed goes forward.
The wolf is exulting over his expected prey,
and the shout of his triumph, louder than
the voices of the storm, stirs anew the
languid pulses of both horse and rider.
But the missionary was not forgotten in
the wild woods of Nova Scotia. Not for-
gotten was it, that he was “the only son
of his mother and that she was a widow.”
Another sound ere long meets his ear, and
this time a sound of hope. Surely that
must be the: sea breaking surlily against
the rocks! And, in truth, the sea is near,
and a few more efforts bring him out of the
forest; and upon the shore. In another half
hour, the hamlet is in sight, and the dan-
ger over. None of his fisher neighbors are
abroad, but, as he goes by in the silence,
some rays from the blazing fires shine
through uncurtained windows across his



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92 THE YOUNG MISSIONARY.



path, and all unknowing it, each dwell-
ing blesses him as he passes to his own
home.

Nor was the missionary without cheerful
reception at his home. Mr. Donaldson, a
Christian man from one of the islands in
the Bay, had come to welcome the new
minister, and to spend the Sabbath with
him. So after his solitary ride of the after-
noon, he sat not down to a solitary meal
that evening, but a brother sat beside him
at his table.

The cold all the next day was more se-
vere than had been remembered in the
hamlet, and that thirteenth of January
came afterwards to be spoken of as the cold
Saturday. No fires could secure a com-
fortable temperature in those thin, wooden
houses, where angry draughts pour in
through many a crevice, and about the ill-
fitting doors and windows. Going out was
impossible. Nor would it avail to shovel
paths while the snow continued to fall. A
quantity of wood had been collected, but not

&





we

THE YOUNG MISSIONARY. 93



prepared for burning, and the two men
were glad to warm Hidinselves by sawing
and splitting it ready for the fires.

So wore away the day. In the evening
they spoke together of the manifold trou-
bles and wants of the Christian life, and
how mercifully the Almighty Father deals
with his erring children. The gray head
offered to his young friend the fruits of his
experience of the ways of God and man in
that wilderness, and listened in his turn to
the plans and hopes of the missionary.
They read some of David’s psalms, all af-
terwards distinguished in the young man’s
Bible by apencil-mark. They sang togeth-
er a hymn, and the pastor prayed more fer-
vently than usual, now that-a Christian
brother’s heart was beating near in unison
with hisown. And thus their prayers went
up together through the still, chilly night
air.

“There are gene men, everywhere,”
was the missionary’s thought before he fell
asleep that night, “and even were it not



scan acta ganas asinine unnmnaT



Ro

%&

94 THE YOUNG MISSIONARY.

annnnenneneereeeeers nr rere or os errr rrr rrr”

so, the good God is everywhere.” ‘ Even
in the howling woods,” added conscience,
“vet did thy faith fail thee!’ But in the
heart where faith failed, gratitude was
strong, and filled its chambers with her
song of love, and all within the pastor’s
house and around it was peace.

For many years, the old man had not
heard a sermon, or been present in a con-
gregation of worshipers, and very pleasant
to him were the services of the next day.
“Now,” said he, “I depart in peace ;—the
preaching of the word, I had scarcely hoped
would be enjoyed by my children, and lo!
mine eyes have seen Thy ”—he would
have added “salvation,” but something
choked his utterance, and his lips moved
inaudibly while a tear of joy glistened in his
aged eyes.

Perhaps it is in such isolated spots as this
settlement, that the comforts and hopes of
religion are most fully apprehended. ‘Those
humble, solitary ones gladly receive the
promises of the Bible, and to the spirits of



36



THE YOUNG MISSIONARY. 95

eaeennrntiteparininninnrabniniaipa PPP LD DDP PDP LPP PEL LED

the storm-tossed and weary how welcome
its fair visions of peace.

Monday morning at Fair Cove was clear
and fine; and with the minister’s promise
to visit him on Thursday, the old man
entered his boat, spread its single sail
of dingy red, and departed over the
waters of the Bay, and the missionary sit~
ting by his fire alone, blessed the Provi-
dence that had brought to him this coun-
selor and friend. On Thursday it had
been agreed, he should hold a meeting at
the island and early on that day he set
forth, taking with him two of his neighbors
as boatmen and choristers. The blue un-
frozen waters rolled freely along, and the
great snowy hills looked down upon them ;
and the wintry day laughed in its beauty,
and man, satisfied with what was present
with him, thought not of longing for the
spring.

A few hours saw the boat safe at the
island. “The missionary inquired for Don-
aldson’s, and was followed by the person to





96 THE YOUNG MISSIONARY.

——orr>



<—L—L—L——L—L— LL LO LOLOL Een en nn



whom he had spoken. A second left a cart
which he was mending and joined the first.
A third stood in the door of his house, and
seeing the minister, gravely added himself
to the group.

When they arrived at the place they
sought, some of the men who accompanied
the missionary opened the door for him,
and he wentin. Hesaw an elderly woman,
and said to her, ‘‘ ThisI think is Mr. Don-
aldson’s house. Can I see him?”

‘Oh, aye, sir,’’ replied the woman, “he
is not at all altered. Just this way, sir.”
The missionary with light step followed.
The door was thrown open; the room was
filled with people, and there was Mr. Don-
aldson—in his coffin. The minister had
come to his friend’s funeral.

How, or when the old man passed away
could not be known. His boat was seen
coming before the wind, and managed, it
was thought, carelessly. Was there no one
init? A neighbor meeting it as it ran
aground among the ice of the little beach,







THE YOUNG MISSIONARY. 97

LPI IOP







_

found the owner lying in the bottom as if
asleep. At first they thought he was sleep-
ing, but he waked no more. A paper which
the missionary recognized, was found on
his person, to the effect that there would
be religious worship at his house on the
next Thursday, and for that day they had
arranged his funeral.

The poor young missionary felt as if his
heart would break. How could he comfort
the afflicted when he had himself sustained
sogreat a shock? But perhaps his sorrow
was a balm to theirs, for true sympathy
avails more toa wounded heart than fair
words of consolation.

He took a short time for communing with
his own spirit, then rose before them all,
and spoke the words of which we are never
weary. The Lord gave: the Lord hath
taken away: Blessed be the name of the
Lord. His prayer was made amidst the
tears and sighs of the people, and all the
time he prayed, he wept. ‘Then there was
silence for a little, and a Bible being

9

——————— ———_———_—— 2



98 THE YOUNG MISSIONARY.

scien ithe tlds ETRE DO

brought him, he said, ‘“‘I probably heard
the last words which our dear friend and
brother addressed to mortal ear, and it is
fitting thatI should make them now the
text of his funeral sermon. On that last
morning of his earthly life, he bade me be
of good cheer, relying on Him who said,
Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my
word shall not pass away.”

It was sad for them all to remember how
much of their earthly pleasure, much of the
higher joy which we name of heaven, had
passed away, but they were not allowed to
rest here. Here was one thing firmer than
the hills of earth, more lasting than the
stars of heaven, the Word that shall not
pass away. In this strain the minister dis-
coursed, holding the Bible of the departed
in his hand, and the people looked at it and
at him and reverently listened.

There was preaching on his island, and
in his house; the day he had so desired to
see was come, and he lay still and regarded
it not. A servant of the church was be-





eo

THE YOUNG MISSIONARY. 99

—O—oOoOorornrwmnumseaeeemoaoOoOoOOOOosa ese ees eww ey reer’

neath his roof, and he gave him no wel-
come. So thought the missionary as he
sat down after his sermon, and all the
stricken family satcalm in their grief around
him. “On Sunday,” said he at last, ‘‘ our
venerable and now most happy friend sang
with me this hymn:
‘There is a house not made with hands,
Eternal and on high.’

Sing you it now, I cannot.” The boat-
men who had accompanied the minister be-
gan; other voices took up the words, and
at length, even his voice who said he could
not sing that hymn, and who felt almost as
if he should sing no more henceforth, joined
the solemn strain, and had ceased to trem-
ble ere its close.

%§$—_—_—__ eeef



100 COMING HOME.



Coming Aue.

A STORY OF FEBRUARY.



First it should snow; then it should hail ;
then it should rain; and all the while it
should freeze. During the night this must
take place. Then, when about ten o’clock
the next morning, the sun puts aside the
clouds like a curtain, and looks forth, the
world has become a very miracle of beauty.
What long sparkling aisles of steel-stemmed
trees! How the woods blaze with rubies

and diamonds, till not all the jewelry of all
the courts on earth can compare with the
splendor of this strip of New England for-
est !





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050a726dbba127c0fcabb7b2e44b6d82c0f0ca7e
'2011-10-30T21:03:05-04:00'
describe
'73240' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAG' 'sip-files00006.jpg'
62208d22ee76284dcdc86dabd921580e
8fe47998ebb64759955fcf1da1e6f1928eefbaaa
'2011-10-30T21:01:20-04:00'
describe
'17040' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAH' 'sip-files00006.pro'
bdbd7ac6cea030528d1197e1b502386a
257c757eb913f609a3171fb36bb398670eb25b0b
'2011-10-30T21:02:48-04:00'
describe
'27434' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAI' 'sip-files00006.QC.jpg'
f77ca193a89430d985778b7720c68c1c
bc43ddf7b39f3f41e192e4264eae7a8acc5cf359
describe
'7081973' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAJ' 'sip-files00006.tif'
df8c89d3152e931882e50853f6014bc9
2b49c93d1cfee24b0c5929df666bcf4fa3a67d58
'2011-10-30T21:03:17-04:00'
describe
'722' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAK' 'sip-files00006.txt'
8a22d38bc55b178faae7bc696b711858
5ac506edc09f12614f568317c21f9d15014180c7
'2011-10-30T20:59:46-04:00'
describe
'7978' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAL' 'sip-files00006thm.jpg'
cd6669e3cd5dad6e4e4ff7c856067705
7c28ce18cc92118a412e7b2b6302063a33fa1a19
'2011-10-30T21:02:35-04:00'
describe
'873144' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAM' 'sip-files00007.jp2'
430073bb60bd0d79de3ac0df009245a7
93793330f335e103be58e2e403817da751d80308
describe
'95623' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAN' 'sip-files00007.jpg'
83ebcc78baa8ae1702f0f81414bec8c2
e2a41f7d4a8b0c06318604e9c6717b2fe14dc93c
'2011-10-30T21:00:19-04:00'
describe
'26438' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAO' 'sip-files00007.pro'
f0be64f7551b494fc9fb1665c1f66cc9
1ab891a449423d617553534184f9781817bdde47
describe
'36786' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAP' 'sip-files00007.QC.jpg'
679daebeff661d59925d6977d6330134
84264430b74d21f4247f5fa9aa441ca987701188
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAQ' 'sip-files00007.tif'
904df64728044cb63c09b8d212ffec95
6f4f61f8257283a129d470c3a83241e78c5a827c
'2011-10-30T20:59:34-04:00'
describe
'1111' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAR' 'sip-files00007.txt'
5f04df03b6ca522d21fc678004581fdb
65cf7ffd021dd6e4b7ec8ca07c28ee42f9fe61fa
'2011-10-30T21:00:26-04:00'
describe
'10653' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAS' 'sip-files00007thm.jpg'
76dce471048ea07d1682ab65990a76bb
bbf3d59b8374c260d65595888228871fa9510e2c
'2011-10-30T21:02:50-04:00'
describe
'884179' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAT' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
d9bded9db5c384e09eaccf62db95c71b
22dbe2c599cc40c42a97a8c7d6c340a15011c9bb
'2011-10-30T21:02:27-04:00'
describe
'96341' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAU' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
028369495bf3a1754e385b8c924e73cb
8680f838f4d3317691f67a6980a8bd509fe64136
'2011-10-30T21:02:22-04:00'
describe
'28093' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAV' 'sip-files00008.pro'
4682c05384b86eac05c297674c82353e
c76f229324ef0e8f2f1d39923addf93a21c12d7c
'2011-10-30T20:59:41-04:00'
describe
'37117' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAW' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
636f19208a85867f708d57de96746530
df5a06d55d3dd4f820d9b391dbbd97042f5a6b3a
'2011-10-30T21:01:26-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAX' 'sip-files00008.tif'
ba7248611cd74030fb4698fe080ab0ae
53932511f48fabbae743bde80f1bca23cf16ca64
'2011-10-30T20:59:31-04:00'
describe
'1149' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAY' 'sip-files00008.txt'
f0a4d9a1eee1e606daa10b32e81e49f8
7762018d9cdd15811056d37828fdcdb5978caaf6
describe
Invalid character
'10194' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIAZ' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
5ff67bd673d36f180acb50399230604e
477d6e2960243b17b03e754c0a7a756ab1400f42
'2011-10-30T21:02:45-04:00'
describe
'873148' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBA' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
8a6f570e739cdede071c7efeabd864f6
a27aa3519e9e97a9ead50340c9da30bfa96a5d1c
'2011-10-30T21:02:43-04:00'
describe
'88073' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBB' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
8401ea75c514db5d3c16e5ee1ff649fc
3014c18ed72049d169076bdfd3279149b10441fe
'2011-10-30T21:01:29-04:00'
describe
'23406' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBC' 'sip-files00009.pro'
039acd4b3ef1e0834a63970875186a88
cd9a09047967c79ab92a6c8c7eacaa50ea0f4372
describe
'33599' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBD' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
37c89bccf8c3aabe6714cb4d62e72413
04dda177570ecafe3ea5477a3e5e49ed5780ea09
'2011-10-30T21:00:35-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBE' 'sip-files00009.tif'
9754a888eb500e06f8a58e6a438356b6
54f172e80c3da83a17893599f1c60cdee3d3f87c
'2011-10-30T21:02:26-04:00'
describe
'957' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBF' 'sip-files00009.txt'
05594e08cf99fd43f223472e29aaaeee
34a11182460981648656f7ebfc88ac97c82a7c98
'2011-10-30T21:02:20-04:00'
describe
'10141' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBG' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
a9360fd1be19365197cd144a62ad5087
7d7cb5d93259edfbbf1541b08fa318f3f7a8433c
'2011-10-30T21:01:33-04:00'
describe
'884134' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBH' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
095c41223b8297f3f95cd2c99a439f3d
ec07b9ac2d4b10acf4dacbebba834bf814e5ac95
'2011-10-30T20:59:59-04:00'
describe
'96196' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBI' 'sip-files00010.jpg'
beb714ab5a6dcddc37239371dc86e1b8
ce43dfff1f0f24b2ee29b28e7c04acc70d523dda
describe
'26112' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBJ' 'sip-files00010.pro'
f72d19673d74690b5f264f0f80bad1e5
21484d3469015edf661fff5bbf86c77e56cf7023
'2011-10-30T21:01:23-04:00'
describe
'36770' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBK' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
67a49d567a393979f2edd77f87a33ea2
5b2cc2b174f2b7e66b7e273871d5b3b2e3392399
'2011-10-30T21:00:47-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBL' 'sip-files00010.tif'
7720eb70d16d911fa489bf445e1bd182
983ee0fb48512aa845c78f58a898338b350ae025
'2011-10-30T21:03:18-04:00'
describe
'1091' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBM' 'sip-files00010.txt'
87b4631599982230e248dd5bda19bad9
e627d5ccacd964f0da4160e93877a5763e11c45b
'2011-10-30T20:59:55-04:00'
describe
'10730' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBN' 'sip-files00010thm.jpg'
5e2f3410bb1ffd8971637c0f71dfb1c3
6fdb01957185ae07260218c04191c9f25633e19f
describe
'872977' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBO' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
6c0e81036782b7a60f023db07871d991
10a2d8d521fc5aeff6be58dee88f3bc0149d77be
describe
'91193' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBP' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
91e11e71e125ac84bd6a6b42ae3be09f
3e898b2d46febc5c571aaf8c064bd1095fe78d8f
describe
'22210' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBQ' 'sip-files00011.pro'
b436aa57adb0f50b4455881885719ddc
809a4555c579bab41ddcb6894be4ae5201ff2ac0
'2011-10-30T21:00:54-04:00'
describe
'34106' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBR' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
84c47fec9ed269c8c3d87efec84f547b
9888c641e8194cf8506b4aae7cb6d9d266a9c671
'2011-10-30T21:03:03-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBS' 'sip-files00011.tif'
07f85cd4640dc00369cf24ae229f4834
fe64394ce948da00cc5d93b1dade777873d03b11
'2011-10-30T21:02:38-04:00'
describe
'947' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBT' 'sip-files00011.txt'
ea1f399d075a2a5059f3fb4626799317
458af02194f42855c71dd9a731a0dc62c8026782
'2011-10-30T21:02:56-04:00'
describe
'10424' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBU' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
7dfef557901d8384d5118dc2a4bab82f
b81957df89fa537292a1f6f2eabb0f8b7792f696
'2011-10-30T21:00:23-04:00'
describe
'847403' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBV' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
1df7279abafb722695ab4cc4f61e28be
3c8562e2f1117f46e764b18eab6330126848c751
'2011-10-30T21:02:06-04:00'
describe
'92646' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBW' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
d3917f0cf5f282ba3a8e5ba86480abfb
9027ee732904f52db28db0621d84a52f07002717
'2011-10-30T21:00:42-04:00'
describe
'23575' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBX' 'sip-files00012.pro'
c20c34e57f929fabc30f70c06034acce
739cda33db4537a19ff1f518e74b0c5569303ae6
'2011-10-30T20:59:32-04:00'
describe
'35170' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBY' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
ae29b3a640b3c9097a7456a05a5d04c2
1e8e5355c4d2587d8b3da3ccf6ba7624284e6a75
describe
'6783261' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIBZ' 'sip-files00012.tif'
4b9f4c1afce7708a60f9bff2e3a95621
777a254199c3966081ddbfd6b888541bffce4048
'2011-10-30T21:02:12-04:00'
describe
'1006' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICA' 'sip-files00012.txt'
21fb44640f6678568d32963c34ce12b4
ad16fa5879a59546271577153b393720e3ac3c2a
'2011-10-30T21:01:30-04:00'
describe
'11028' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICB' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
24049d6876cea58ae42a48990e26e7c5
ab42baf9392121fe55fae1b1b8f5f4a9f4aeb749
'2011-10-30T21:00:45-04:00'
describe
'847913' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICC' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
21dd205b4c8a27d656d3abdbdd3d614d
61601343041d9e005b4f985ca89afc638288a590
describe
'91107' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICD' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
537f85ee6e366d42f8cda6984037d0f8
43d9153257eadcaf036beb9c78d53358d221bf99
'2011-10-30T21:00:30-04:00'
describe
'25566' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICE' 'sip-files00013.pro'
69e115cb2b3e4df85b35fed51840ce29
9745d40850d7b46f9e2727e2c754e9be191a5318
describe
'34164' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICF' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
c0e51019bfbf20967ee5316794cd513d
0bd999ec7421517d3dfeb9031d027fe3773605db
'2011-10-30T21:02:05-04:00'
describe
'6789615' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICG' 'sip-files00013.tif'
7d9f95dd747f14bcdfe9f129144560b7
346565f53cd9bf04677db0582459fb0a95b37c78
'2011-10-30T21:00:52-04:00'
describe
'1079' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICH' 'sip-files00013.txt'
557b10fbd2023d10721613ee103b8723
0dffada59b3a699fbd202d9fa19dd582993f918f
describe
'11035' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICI' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
7578b95a9399c8d6efcda2a75a93245b
872bd8716312d4d136c86fa3d5bb741a984b3639
'2011-10-30T21:02:09-04:00'
describe
'851082' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICJ' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
8a07b3a421ec41e5168733dd0acf74ec
9e0e9fc848a368a6ac061e2b84ac2888f76c0269
'2011-10-30T21:01:35-04:00'
describe
'95546' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICK' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
c41c45ffba8f8950b785775ca93044e3
08f6b9f908f9bf0e77ae933dbed5ac12fcc4a042
describe
'25241' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICL' 'sip-files00014.pro'
b5d5268f3ec734abb7bb89eb31fccfc5
016affcfca3e30356e57c141532ba4dc9e289d60
'2011-10-30T21:00:40-04:00'
describe
'36200' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICM' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
5fe360d6e698864acef2dc6df08ad7d2
6991651375302c31e42284310bb8569e59a3d327
'2011-10-30T20:59:35-04:00'
describe
'6814883' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICN' 'sip-files00014.tif'
7c92348a820e242da5cf7660675034fd
9e8c01a2b499102f3895901e5da93d30ca47909f
'2011-10-30T21:02:28-04:00'
describe
'1098' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICO' 'sip-files00014.txt'
cc0cfc361fc5d9b38e4906e3b8b0092a
2093e438bda6992d360dc3608a26871f52e7ea0e
'2011-10-30T21:00:16-04:00'
describe
'10878' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICP' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
40f3a9e1a8a979606a5e298ef3809c4e
2047bd7aa9059c6a8496462d7ffec300b83384a6
'2011-10-30T21:03:15-04:00'
describe
'847873' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICQ' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
7741330d5559c13835b8fde2726f6146
608d9020cea54dc3ff1cd543aad7e14e2f4ab763
describe
'90067' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICR' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
7647be8d33f4a60e7563107ed000a227
48109c509ed66109decab40ddacade9ba2eacf42
'2011-10-30T20:59:56-04:00'
describe
'25202' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICS' 'sip-files00015.pro'
c0a7ec5e80da7cb3d8997a0d9db60455
3d37b257b3e0a72e45259aca6981c2611bddf70f
'2011-10-30T21:02:57-04:00'
describe
'34187' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICT' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
eee2cc7129779b49a6212d57502f2450
e71e15a594ac59d1311e38802c73a64dbf4b1402
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICU' 'sip-files00015.tif'
e939f004ef6ca12fd41b03538a4e24ea
dc86fdbbef2990c0eb6a74e50f1f4b33bb82ada2
'2011-10-30T21:01:34-04:00'
describe
'1026' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICV' 'sip-files00015.txt'
6a067067652b8eae386453bbc0efe2af
29aa4554286ad9d23ff71818ec8161d92ff013b3
'2011-10-30T20:59:54-04:00'
describe
'11142' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICW' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
1e586adf3bd5f33ffbf7cc710bc56e52
462de69b3fcb60dedf80e25bb71b22d6ed17a343
describe
'851036' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICX' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
add00b60861bc2987aa3eb49ae73af18
4e78c89b05fb6d1d2027d0c41907146cb4c1f7b6
describe
'98104' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICY' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
616dc0b3610c49a54b847bfe8680812c
bf0f45c59c6db85e20885b2d8ca3997c6eefb079
describe
'26261' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACICZ' 'sip-files00016.pro'
73a35a8d3aab2ec1c476318264613964
7bc7f4c0634954d1a71562e2d106f528fc0a0293
'2011-10-30T21:00:09-04:00'
describe
'37225' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDA' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
47ecbc27bc70961eb77461547ddd795f
22d9ea1abac4b9eace295636fab0052359659146
'2011-10-30T20:59:58-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDB' 'sip-files00016.tif'
ed1b9f48633db443d8d61018ad1639f8
74742f2cc5f61a05fabdb557143480af6bf8b820
'2011-10-30T21:01:17-04:00'
describe
'1092' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDC' 'sip-files00016.txt'
366a43e0bb661793b5678f8318641783
c43965ab7a858e97fb4a7c16a00aef773430e1e6
describe
'11020' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDD' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
42eca04bedeb1cdab59d428a668b8fd6
a3161da63512428bca952e239c89b4a91bbd84c1
'2011-10-30T21:03:12-04:00'
describe
'817953' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDE' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
a18ea3c20d530b67be654083aea325ec
39b28d8e6e005c63177627a9bd20b319a54e4991
'2011-10-30T21:01:43-04:00'
describe
'90917' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDF' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
afc9f2eeeb4cfb1d51245862022324b3
9ab4423c3fbb2cff4be4c7f3164a095daf252ee6
describe
'25993' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDG' 'sip-files00017.pro'
2966b6ed56a71ec597c8ffc1e860c2d7
36d172b4eb295a9b03baa9f8175906a583aadf3c
'2011-10-30T20:59:43-04:00'
describe
'35261' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDH' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
04ca7177d2cc9a3e7b3dbb44fc513ff3
da70c1f551a169023ba15406731e30064ab7a7c7
'2011-10-30T20:59:45-04:00'
describe
'6547591' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDI' 'sip-files00017.tif'
3fc9dd22457b74f3b8961626b6d5345c
9f424ec791cba06c346bb02d36309bf425813d33
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDJ' 'sip-files00017.txt'
d55f256ec8431feb4507e3472e31403c
47a5065835baa9a5086db552fd85514c13cedc2a
describe
'11343' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDK' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
0e7b8f65fb21b6e533ce1cf3333b7bcd
89a86c61b4fdd8543aacc7c1ca35064aea8e8b43
'2011-10-30T21:02:39-04:00'
describe
'810438' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDL' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
40e8b35a27ee4255fac5276c38c752c2
f356ae5e9d6345c01110d88920bc567460e74264
describe
'89563' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDM' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
783d3659308edc0d71c8074390322604
0c7f67d25d38e52e2658603a29c7a149fd9677af
'2011-10-30T21:02:44-04:00'
describe
'23302' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDN' 'sip-files00018.pro'
b62eea46e14c5d91a62a00d5bf912e66
5af07700441a63aafb3e12347e2d900edfde21ab
'2011-10-30T21:02:37-04:00'
describe
'35126' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDO' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
cbf1870922edfaf93443966952ba4d43
e10a71c2b35743460fae9b3b8f7b46f45af19fd0
describe
'6487451' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDP' 'sip-files00018.tif'
cd18e5b15419864dab2daf7f5afd1189
3f358c1fe7ce97207109c10b24c833aaa7a35df1
describe
'972' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDQ' 'sip-files00018.txt'
e213246cd3f59eec314771a9a2a2baa0
6ba87292bf184a6015113c94a6052241bae4fcaa
'2011-10-30T21:02:30-04:00'
describe
'10813' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDR' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
15a10c1e1c51227dae9eb8697ff66564
23b805996f9fe92ddb32d8c7643e37f67656d375
describe
'863459' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDS' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
bbd2baf20b36a76a8bbedd6b3304f832
f865d54f845ad66f6b876ed39e77b4f3aaf52430
'2011-10-30T21:01:47-04:00'
describe
'96180' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDT' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
0b4e91511e8c338a14b2688d66e5b1e9
14e2290e8bbbd055b1e8c4d3b7b93aa3542e0540
describe
'28245' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDU' 'sip-files00019.pro'
7af23182eea30203c460e0c1f178d588
c1137814d8ad57acc2a2e211adda0fbd928203bb
describe
'36952' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDV' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
7af610dbcc13c0f7f1f45455b81c3b42
886610a84b9d9d54d2e04fdbfd21bfd2606e73f2
'2011-10-30T21:02:21-04:00'
describe
'6916397' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDW' 'sip-files00019.tif'
699dfb5abc947f30c9bdb9c597c2a0b1
9bd8bf11762a426ccdcc826a6d7e7fca00977957
'2011-10-30T21:02:14-04:00'
describe
'1137' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDX' 'sip-files00019.txt'
9366119c912e655e4767d96e2eaf4fb1
3640b798260cd603308c91edcd73c55d913dc287
describe
'10651' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDY' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
583ef9568ea5b9a6d3e7018065f3f56e
934eb744842a27dff161314a5df17f82eab0b7ef
'2011-10-30T21:00:15-04:00'
describe
'818468' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIDZ' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
56c01389885a33ce4b9002fb728b1179
67559ea6f0b27f5d9720ffb1a55ee6462197cf9a
describe
'92451' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEA' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
ec780f224a835838610e5aa1acc69d84
ed0e98f87e8f5609f55606fb85d694feb836ac37
describe
'24117' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEB' 'sip-files00020.pro'
04d63b44165d2975941cc5b1772d6739
104751b88908bfbdb840c8a551a7181c2d3f6b2e
describe
'36168' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEC' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
e64128a3203b72fbe3cd4b231b173be0
099bdc7e54edec2b49efcfa705ad31e9c8ba1cda
describe
'6554193' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIED' 'sip-files00020.tif'
b4a412bef4c4d848bb5e7262ee27c915
96bb25a8f2b2ee0dac7f7bf589cab74c03ab25c1
'2011-10-30T21:00:50-04:00'
describe
'1063' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEE' 'sip-files00020.txt'
5b7aa6fd55bbb9ae5ecbb1802b9c169f
a2e653a23e8a562027d437c396d8d89cc1d60c9e
'2011-10-30T21:01:32-04:00'
describe
'10909' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEF' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
c4fc1d62126f749fe8270a56cc7537f7
ffa19800a330939997a4919666f8b85fa669f664
describe
'855784' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEG' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
0b79cb2166f37f657d26146df1c6bc5f
1d6988662faf3607f83f41bc5f919d0d72b8cc1c
'2011-10-30T21:01:55-04:00'
describe
'87119' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEH' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
b6073895fe6e392a877ba66dc02a2955
f8807d9866031def44470583928ec04dd2e513d6
describe
'23607' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEI' 'sip-files00021.pro'
66900618f0d994397505afd9c82ac3d3
6fc70eb8cf23f3558b6956df7aea46bf2c646510
'2011-10-30T21:03:14-04:00'
describe
'32516' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEJ' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
c54186102f02fd6ca9b9ed2b1c8521fb
06b4c20c236b7d133c7b7bd10aa991f6c6ff2a04
'2011-10-30T21:02:47-04:00'
describe
'6850307' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEK' 'sip-files00021.tif'
520f2cf16d211520a55ae3243d5f394c
c60a42dfacf315105930ef69d097ecea6540b7c1
'2011-10-30T21:01:31-04:00'
describe
'1042' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEL' 'sip-files00021.txt'
fa0eb7b25b87849619562292b260801e
638e0aa73c7989c52383dbadb9df4d9790c401ca
'2011-10-30T20:59:42-04:00'
describe
'10234' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEM' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
ef61b8832a668b02b93ae68fb8a51efa
990707faff05b47d7e8807382a51d172d229bcc2
'2011-10-30T21:02:29-04:00'
describe
'796051' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEN' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
06cb72ef3782ac5fc12de3cf67626512
975c730430de5cd7a0e9721532277cfc9333b733
'2011-10-30T20:59:39-04:00'
describe
'85325' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEO' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
56766592a46ab372a3a9ee3e135ea355
abecffb69d428d710368397f2cb6cc98c204431e
describe
'21758' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEP' 'sip-files00022.pro'
4c2921785a064ff7771c15e815f63c27
f781b7c7b90e0966512113594d3973d0d1eb6443
'2011-10-30T21:01:57-04:00'
describe
'34588' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEQ' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
5bbb7ce12bac9d3fc81f8ee46f594ca2
c1b6cd1b9d6c50413c1f8a35ba5693c354678a3c
'2011-10-30T20:59:57-04:00'
describe
'6372355' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIER' 'sip-files00022.tif'
f925d332bfe68de3afaf6cae0b112c3a
8a0466e029aea58057f25235d3a198c6ed364f90
'2011-10-30T21:03:21-04:00'
describe
'995' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIES' 'sip-files00022.txt'
0f2145608ddc68cbf855f910793ddfa4
ecad22286b65486c1417cefe27fa3a213722bb3b
describe
'10840' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIET' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
657f52a15f3fb91a90f965a7be9b758c
4292269e5eae9985b7eb9087fc75e0d7b1eba50a
describe
'823099' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEU' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
9d246ebcdafe192817f6eb0ff03c5187
73f8b6760b6f89938a6810fc2ea73a2b0a686a06
describe
'93843' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEV' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
3f0edf79f82dc1c2495ab0469dfc826a
637acbec43c1f26726ef2547cdc14a6351b0146f
'2011-10-30T21:00:44-04:00'
describe
'25819' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEW' 'sip-files00023.pro'
24190aac2d4b031db5a8be149ccc49bf
ffa6e30f6c271fb53d63b749561918e582485890
'2011-10-30T21:01:41-04:00'
describe
'36008' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEX' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
4144803f5b8ab181f1d03936c40defe9
e05752d0a93fb389be83c5fb02c817c924b57350
describe
'6589189' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEY' 'sip-files00023.tif'
2b77b24032fa9143fab4d704037ab6dd
66e58e027983e87dc9536dcf38dfc495bd1f56d0
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIEZ' 'sip-files00023.txt'
6c7f883566e31d244c0a38e8af70a158
528625edc0665e789600c8d16fffe43069acfbd7
'2011-10-30T21:00:12-04:00'
describe
'11782' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFA' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
c2e1833b209b5e84daf712929d92a2b5
73261dca43d0a14f48279544790da0fe158348e8
describe
'791364' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFB' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
07e8de7c0384841dc400c08f05b0b4b8
ab3fde039a348ac5ce63eb0050a9cad86ca41fa1
describe
'84118' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFC' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
2752d5afcf97df39c0329f42c41ea20a
3d4f3e7c777b0d1c362b302d9d658370ede7dac3
'2011-10-30T21:03:19-04:00'
describe
'9048' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFD' 'sip-files00024.pro'
4828755eef06d615ca0b8ad5c9c95df8
79caf3b4db780d32d816d44ed0369fd18fcae2a0
describe
'28679' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFE' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
7057a361db2e098ea897b318b466d994
18bfedd9a155fcc3ce03dc978b4fca1f32106734
'2011-10-30T21:01:01-04:00'
describe
'6334851' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFF' 'sip-files00024.tif'
86cbaba9bbd2bce969f78dc852318d74
9af0a39fc47677c7990d08a26620d1aa682f7991
'2011-10-30T20:59:50-04:00'
describe
'387' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFG' 'sip-files00024.txt'
048aeb2c5f68fc7abf0175f24ee21049
bd5e088364d786c1a24cb6780ffbd14ea6b821e5
describe
'9589' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFH' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
7a98eaf750af2a8f9cae99c6aa8b9c67
a0fbaa1391d92d1639a017f247ed327b9f49075c
'2011-10-30T21:01:40-04:00'
describe
'809565' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFI' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
3e0c9413d6532f44d04ed9ba4ade3a93
10df5765a774bd2f6a8d051ca51dbf7e0929757f
describe
'91464' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFJ' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
f160ea8f504ce7c800f7f352665c8a2c
ae0d3f69379d9b25ed4d23f5a8ccff874ebbef7e
'2011-10-30T20:59:38-04:00'
describe
'24831' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFK' 'sip-files00025.pro'
a36aa19980cd8aec922b2793818108b9
ae4d18310623831ddfebb650b6fe64c84d5d20cb
describe
'34759' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFL' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
872d054e6a58fdfa4f8efab59e4b52ef
d5094b7ad42084fb9cf7fe4bbc8d825f0296ba2a
'2011-10-30T21:02:19-04:00'
describe
'6480451' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFM' 'sip-files00025.tif'
182919d7c51dd10ac8cffc4f6f526fa5
5358b0be3297aa0c802db7a4f5527f92db2592da
'2011-10-30T20:59:36-04:00'
describe
'1015' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFN' 'sip-files00025.txt'
5899451e8f599851ebbd7179199e4aad
179492c32d04dd063f1bb2efc0493ce73c96e5cd
describe
'11844' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFO' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
9acdb9d8c9f32be4d0b097516f6ea0bb
936865da40b5728632651899d15b07f88726c135
'2011-10-30T21:01:14-04:00'
describe
'812387' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFP' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
f9edcfd69e2eb8ee15e6d0af29617f8c
bf28ce2766975f446fc5563deec0e31c1e3d9887
'2011-10-30T21:01:39-04:00'
describe
'86173' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFQ' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
b37cba069ead37d87e81490f54893c4d
0d5938ab814c297a964d9e8df704a7a2c6b63208
describe
'22505' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFR' 'sip-files00026.pro'
87288265fb80382581e9a7f752644ea2
9d8bec9ef1f8ef0bf7ecf81b680925ad02ff5ece
'2011-10-30T21:02:11-04:00'
describe
'33349' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFS' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
ec78fb6ed61a70619300a73c3ecb6089
c3e0a014fd6199a391d21ebcdd17720ad4afc510
'2011-10-30T21:03:22-04:00'
describe
'6503019' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFT' 'sip-files00026.tif'
1300df9e34c8241ee96d4624a6d5b11a
09c2c07479fbe17bc795c9ead11a8b65365fdf16
'2011-10-30T21:02:17-04:00'
describe
'941' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFU' 'sip-files00026.txt'
41a452d3d2b61aedb8d77a3874829364
30f7d23ead2424be37bb3fbb0741501e0feafd24
describe
'11238' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFV' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
28dce14dc3ac5441466a469dc840cfca
d4b88c13ef98e453a264db9174ae55af4a0375b2
describe
'812647' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFW' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
440319f0b5ebba4c43e6de4a47f1bdbc
b231a973684fac3243d60963edeee631f28315ad
describe
'86048' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFX' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
35635290d7cc4bc7ade5192c0a799090
f586d2f6fd733a4566088477731fa0a85f9624e7
describe
'23589' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFY' 'sip-files00027.pro'
1673f6a84da0ade6a0ffd3a62c0cf987
333a3243dba93f221cdb6b77baffb57ab5f6b2f9
describe
'32446' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIFZ' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
4ed319548116b6c726f3d55ae2791561
265b5d8136aad6edf5c3f949d94d57df680a0d5d
'2011-10-30T21:02:41-04:00'
describe
'6505547' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGA' 'sip-files00027.tif'
5f91b426d335c69930f8ca35af5d9277
42248be2428f9be68f1ca1ae7a758f65314cf2d0
'2011-10-30T21:03:08-04:00'
describe
'958' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGB' 'sip-files00027.txt'
94ea3b845e7f17c7c84d6eb5ff1559fd
1d8cfe125bb34a29afe4709cf58a885a2bfb2ae4
'2011-10-30T21:01:02-04:00'
describe
'10996' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGC' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
6b00802aba7ab6113b664111a9583ff6
1ed4ae0c09cba1c7843890fe0b2e8cbcbfdc9b62
describe
'819445' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGD' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
fbf3ef932c01c42e613afcefb60b1d97
54442ea15b6314f28a7fc3b13ab9fcb01c9e9273
describe
'91480' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGE' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
7f6213d985bec9832eafa38ee84b7490
91070a867882165e182e5e5be35b53d34a8116a0
'2011-10-30T21:01:38-04:00'
describe
'26466' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGF' 'sip-files00028.pro'
d943a4cb9281eef92479518901fcf5d2
08b3b195b85e1741e0d35f0671139486efa2e579
describe
'35460' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGG' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
23d9831139abda0e962c12095ee442e3
d04386f6cc274e7e75554d0f62bec16d294c2a73
describe
'6559579' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGH' 'sip-files00028.tif'
48874f1bd1d8194a5993338bff198672
cf5f943be3b5c5e9b8922455b89171ebbf18908b
'2011-10-30T21:01:12-04:00'
describe
'1169' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGI' 'sip-files00028.txt'
7b913c2b749423b7f3cfc9047bfb61eb
a261be03edecf4b478a9c095075751ce31e07ce4
describe
'11564' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGJ' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
1ab8bcdaf69201563f5d4326f7829dff
c191d9af228f125df2c88020ddbcd6f039aa9e4b
'2011-10-30T21:01:37-04:00'
describe
'828589' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGK' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
c50fba281ae5daa4883570918f1b22bc
d35bf4520ac6192ae4a5f18366553bff2d74436e
'2011-10-30T21:02:32-04:00'
describe
'82559' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGL' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
d84eeafe226a374e0f9990e6c717f418
796af84e75607fc104ec524a81c34f0347b3ea03
describe
'22522' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGM' 'sip-files00029.pro'
9963a94ae4f4e2fb8578fb0589cd8034
74e43e2b5cfd6e2fe8cb006febda3397c0a32e38
'2011-10-30T21:00:29-04:00'
describe
'32783' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGN' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
b87fb58e86cb26ab61e1ac891583c2e6
d2c724b9a88ee1c8a8d9ed1a3635a80cd53c4623
'2011-10-30T21:01:51-04:00'
describe
'6632767' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGO' 'sip-files00029.tif'
ac09804928a13ef05dd1842e036edd0b
5e39b28214f515ef804c705135bfb449ec52ae88
describe
'973' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGP' 'sip-files00029.txt'
963911f20b2bbe68873ae251ab0fb62f
8501ed2cb58a20ef70fd30899f50975147d0a026
'2011-10-30T21:02:01-04:00'
describe
'10858' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGQ' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
dc958efdef57f81b80351ff5bb5ac53c
220d2adf3b7dce50bc7bc9ce05a6001762f839f7
describe
'812677' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGR' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
948b24821cead4b70ae7a8fd21d0efea
47c745010c44b73e1ac40edb567421d28e1476eb
'2011-10-30T20:59:47-04:00'
describe
'91093' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGS' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
b144b57e7d01a970025c7b18b5e721a0
a530d3c3b08214f0059150c27d6dd3c53be656f8
describe
'25746' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGT' 'sip-files00030.pro'
462a6c62a3804f230747b775fc92acf4
80dc64d8f7bac7a038e3bdca5f16544cccc25fc0
'2011-10-30T21:01:21-04:00'
describe
'35600' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGU' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
710e7fb6ad5a819dd1163f7718bbecd2
9001f3964d4247756b1d7afd0008b1174b98b56f
'2011-10-30T21:02:54-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGV' 'sip-files00030.tif'
4e5556007c44cb8b415ba7e2cddc1e2f
d70492e4ec0a6697ad57312e96c78b614b4bd2d8
describe
'1146' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGW' 'sip-files00030.txt'
068b01513d9d8c30e36c75829f032178
62f6786bdf449107fe635e7d834fb912ebe423a0
describe
'11578' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGX' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
9183e70238eac3f9c44d37315a8e78c4
341146fed5bcef1bee848dde47a026bfddc4a501
'2011-10-30T20:59:33-04:00'
describe
'826906' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGY' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
da82cece95e66a8386b0347fe599b2ac
10b5b480d9f67cb86589970ca81b3dc78301560a
describe
'94489' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIGZ' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
f0866b074f4696cd37edaca202475d4a
4a1420c145b7540d2e4f00ea6077d0349e37e000
describe
'26040' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHA' 'sip-files00031.pro'
9d2274398cada6230a3b75a26d2c745c
a88b79b076338dcdd35698e827b6b0a94374c92e
'2011-10-30T21:00:00-04:00'
describe
'35794' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHB' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
aca96dad168c377dfadb2f1c487f1827
51ffcb555dbf6dd70c5b5ebc7b7f3db36ec7789e
describe
'6619275' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHC' 'sip-files00031.tif'
be48e83c3d8e42a27e5adf2f79b92172
123169278f913d317040bfbfd775434ba0ca17ff
'2011-10-30T21:02:02-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHD' 'sip-files00031.txt'
358f32b0583c9ce1de9dfb60f75290d5
1be96d6fd1a4fc8336c9344228667a5e438a71c0
describe
'11408' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHE' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
712d608c33ccfdb71fd8bab7f8ee71ca
d38dafea7f47e731ad3dc056a845f27074ec5623
'2011-10-30T20:59:40-04:00'
describe
'800650' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHF' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
b1646a5ea968f86b49cb21435e6ad1cf
2d5251a524f725a0854d1fb6d89bb2cae9c03806
'2011-10-30T21:00:32-04:00'
describe
'87005' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHG' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
95b19e30273d95d563b249597d68df59
d0dbd75a13949f206ea05a09d5897c40b2ec66fb
describe
'23282' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHH' 'sip-files00032.pro'
b848c437cc76ae8ab0ba31950edbb8d9
e70075490ef95043f8ea3ff81fc067704a9d7e82
'2011-10-30T21:00:08-04:00'
describe
'33124' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHI' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
576e984599b9ff579d2af4f7f6b02a92
b7feb0ad4fa07e16187b3d070144998240ef7b8c
describe
'6409283' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHJ' 'sip-files00032.tif'
1d4fcb5e3a363aafbe99732ff1ebef89
5151fe97082bf6bc0aee8c8bcc6d8ea93db32aae
describe
'1046' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHK' 'sip-files00032.txt'
adceec0c9fa65ad418b68840e3b2a327
c8314c7e1632d9c3ad9495edbacf2d9a17ffc1e3
describe
'10932' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHL' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
ec86826c256f74b65ebf6d6a90b49ff7
56193a8b9f536462a86eec20b9e08f520461eb8a
describe
'827323' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHM' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
cb9e566339181fc5190536d42eda0961
9aac5684d108090152137a33480423c034e3deb6
'2011-10-30T21:02:49-04:00'
describe
'91426' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHN' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
3bbdeb152cd4b053a3f074a3f09d01a2
1e290174e28c68debd06574d0d746f10474e5482
'2011-10-30T21:01:36-04:00'
describe
'25087' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHO' 'sip-files00033.pro'
02f24dde50f2cbfc4e264942b2a30a10
6808f9cac04aa52f530aac69ee3f6461bca50487
describe
'35352' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHP' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
b856cdfad682eccbcf3942eb3fbf100d
6a2b272501a26c14e7b2780208d0b27508dd4580
describe
'6622615' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHQ' 'sip-files00033.tif'
3bccf71a5d5646f97e7301fb954d5842
a69cb1b54e08ad19e35e485361b0aa379de19bab
describe
'1052' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHR' 'sip-files00033.txt'
3f4d3b17d7e098c5f65b92017cab688f
2296faa6163388253ac3bde4eac38c895caead98
describe
'11313' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHS' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
287cc42fdd0538e928370aba264343a0
40fb55968792e0e04254e6e2a4e81f1d12f1b463
describe
'617037' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHT' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
fd7633adc53c1fab45275f7ad3a11fd5
3d5554244960e94f0d89a43a1fc8e39e635b38bc
'2011-10-30T21:01:13-04:00'
describe
'37512' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHU' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
a5bfce0d08213b36ff152cf76668e767
3cf12715b27a0b66ad8ae8786c4a0604cb46122a
'2011-10-30T21:02:16-04:00'
describe
'4581' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHV' 'sip-files00034.pro'
dd131c0b03ca0bea0c43f5b3483204ec
d3f781d996478349a4a30a672d2b3ba6bb56902c
describe
'13094' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHW' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
a256375b0dbf71e6daa97648496f95e5
965a18f4f54568316ecddc083db322229ea1c8a5
describe
'6347831' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHX' 'sip-files00034.tif'
bf57b47cb1829ce204d0415cc99ad6f0
80bf6ea2e970183fb632bf14606ea0d76bbf3e55
'2011-10-30T21:00:51-04:00'
describe
'208' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHY' 'sip-files00034.txt'
94b34baa51d6e2a7f24e3e09e19c7720
f00781a5b5ad2ab557ced788fbf750e9b4df0bd6
describe
'4893' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIHZ' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
adbc1695feb853874305d7517f527b9a
d83243cf59e0906900d2222f032043572b44b1bf
describe
'820959' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIA' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
7f219b169e0dd65cbe230e5266c70516
254a5efbdf67b7a7d2aba7724a1dd12d591e15eb
describe
'65211' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIB' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
db3786f297d8628da5135f7267c6ad69
186e6e183cc8e27aaa81de68391b4943c7451036
'2011-10-30T21:02:13-04:00'
describe
'15816' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIC' 'sip-files00035.pro'
e35ef813cc4c5fe87a1f2e0e0683091b
f4acddb9d950b7ee2c128c64b5bae4e551f4b609
describe
'25668' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIID' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
55d81f1525210f5b52b58a12af9c4dfc
eb8e5b890c9ee6732ba512304ae80bce75ddf722
describe
'6613611' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIE' 'sip-files00035.tif'
96715f20f223f8c9b3a011e08ca51291
068d804541cfee412d8603aef7557ad844480bf2
describe
'669' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIF' 'sip-files00035.txt'
345e545ebb4af431420a2f95cf2c43bd
4fbb2246286b4404e845cf2da3f9f62d7993008e
'2011-10-30T21:02:34-04:00'
describe
'8556' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIG' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
8a223a92cd745cd5526ed7253cfbb878
74344c2a27c6700b01bda9c3e75395a15b3a3a4d
describe
'815025' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIH' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
050aea5c28be5670a3a262930a6367be
37dc457734edb9498890189f8b97bbc6b593fcc4
'2011-10-30T21:02:08-04:00'
describe
'88512' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIII' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
be16847bfaef0948b29e411b70f82b2b
b694fcb103f0b5b3b3150b1cb4832005e5b2359d
describe
'24153' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIJ' 'sip-files00036.pro'
542f6428d31bc9f154d5f226a862652b
293590cfea588bc130dfa04b798203f2f990dd64
describe
'33417' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIK' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
751246552895b67306e7f569aa0bc455
008c5576a22fc84d845257b452f0b451568b410d
'2011-10-30T21:00:01-04:00'
describe
'6524187' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIL' 'sip-files00036.tif'
4e285fc21a6b5fa88ddac053ebecb7ab
a800ee134d26dcb9d072526b4f172f973c8bf99c
'2011-10-30T21:00:41-04:00'
describe
'1073' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIM' 'sip-files00036.txt'
b550fb05dbb632951f9085fa92ebdbc5
553ffa99f357ff7843cdc6ea9653ab9e02944a76
describe
'10965' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIN' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
85ef72bd4264420678a73d9837d8e5fe
548cad085d440f8eed02d90ce5159b490a21f392
'2011-10-30T21:01:48-04:00'
describe
'812452' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIO' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
62dc5c684c83e52ecee2db07530e4b57
a511a6124cd02f24a91d52f0ba278a31a1960913
describe
'89898' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIP' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
73d5b9aa5966d8f5ec0ccfa1de758bc0
736d7ddf10445380b66660b7c23c16bb30d84a03
'2011-10-30T21:00:31-04:00'
describe
'24766' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIQ' 'sip-files00037.pro'
5f820c43549846d3c531544fa8fe83b0
1ac4921b00440193ba3ada97d28e7877e5b6c8e1
describe
'35028' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIR' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
3dcf3488f50c32611c82d46fd16935c2
5d1cf80d062ada5c836ff7927cc366ebd5808b57
describe
'6503615' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIS' 'sip-files00037.tif'
b47b7dc2f2afc1a10e19b7c9cfe8f55b
f083388efd76336fd15e96ec1790271f0362b31a
describe
'1017' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIT' 'sip-files00037.txt'
1ea146284aacba1130e0867d02d60909
40b1fd5bbb1c0309c961900aa3c364f75ec214f4
describe
'11574' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIU' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
b985e1bfa2cd39df3b2e1767b46ca131
59553306f520f9fdf1513a369056bc8789a5dfbb
describe
'820158' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIV' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
22e1d5dfe3cdbd124b4297f1eecddc60
fca8f68a04529649a08b82e5a52b6ddb1c75672e
describe
'91213' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIW' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
a540cd015d93a0b9470b3451d8772416
145a0e253e5be92a3a6570efb6900747f3254a3c
'2011-10-30T21:02:58-04:00'
describe
'25451' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIX' 'sip-files00038.pro'
e9c4e4fbaf37fb0e8e200cea512ea3b7
9ee79ba8dd830022798f8accac3c4c2946554d3f
'2011-10-30T21:01:42-04:00'
describe
'36221' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIY' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
ef7a2ed3b69e93e2c856d99510f4a7f4
437b96243bdbeb8ecb9a36fdeca3346d3c58cbf4
'2011-10-30T21:03:01-04:00'
describe
'6565307' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIIZ' 'sip-files00038.tif'
1cd6c6952289b7f05e7492113c7aef6f
ae9e48fe4c3a17891458a46c660f51327531214e
describe
'1028' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJA' 'sip-files00038.txt'
c23ad77c61feb2d2447cf0e40bbe2356
cd62edb6d57fbb1277461744b75e5469eec4df02
describe
'11527' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJB' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
592143f3dce82db01d6a33a76e1da818
bdd9bd9ce3299b9dd4ee21bbdec1e6ee907d53b6
'2011-10-30T21:02:24-04:00'
describe
'805944' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJC' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
3223d02dded7fb052e51147700a732a9
b0d2de42357b8ce0e87503631be8519bfd8d693d
describe
'94821' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJD' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
5fd68d6ce1061716523c0cd2dce2fd99
4ec460360e5ec64e4ed4de168f459c8c27a1115f
describe
'26865' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJE' 'sip-files00039.pro'
14eb407e3316a59b2fd35abbae3f4898
c1c954bee969532dbb2a543dc2e39dfb7cea5ab4
describe
'36350' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJF' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
794e6b8dbdba57abc7e9cb69b89ebabf
df18d3addc6c84f65cfecef233b14e87d09fa151
describe
'6451615' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJG' 'sip-files00039.tif'
576a19770c83ef146748cc0844b14c88
7ea15f5567a3c129d7adaea62ae67c727cdbca3f
'2011-10-30T21:03:00-04:00'
describe
'1114' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJH' 'sip-files00039.txt'
ebdf2090515e42d7f83b637d57c02fbb
c5a3b0e6d1ca22a7d45484007546666f7177dd63
describe
'11735' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJI' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
5011b320492c4f256577605871cf896e
663c3893fafa7f34416df3f411f708ef79925c67
'2011-10-30T21:01:10-04:00'
describe
'834324' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJJ' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
ddb59c8a2f79915044e62ffa15060a04
64c0dafff16d22f482580380b168694f81b5a771
describe
'91967' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJK' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
79cc0629c03517a03dd2d055e12c4419
7ceeec1d776379f0d8a380c42e3d96fac250d22e
'2011-10-30T21:03:16-04:00'
describe
'25030' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJL' 'sip-files00040.pro'
cf5ab396581b4b19e5c12a7185c2f612
fe160da415a30df31acc6acbbd44b5973debcf8e
describe
'35180' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJM' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
6d27a745f5efd160533371994f6e3e23
82d120d46de319f49d1ee4f8ee02ea79e31da0e4
describe
'6678803' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJN' 'sip-files00040.tif'
eec0a23c25848a0caa78031f143c99da
08e12c9360bb38ab9266a20d9669d8128581afdb
describe
'1024' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJO' 'sip-files00040.txt'
446b95ff228e4ebb695d4d0885fdf3a6
c12faee05e07cffaa7103d29f0f8e3f3194e517c
describe
'10736' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJP' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
fbe3eec3b80cccc63bd3fb9061e1f4c7
b5a5d8e6f86ea09419ffb3b44a47738ed33346d8
describe
'813352' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJQ' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
ac0d36461cbace372162884f788a0f96
69e82ee680fa06586ea9a98d6c553a7d387acf3d
describe
'86772' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJR' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
a531639ed69f4e85ea60e12db9a0d266
5bb984937f61aa135b6cffd8e1aa6d7682528da6
describe
'25086' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJS' 'sip-files00041.pro'
bc89b795857f82b53a8a7a9a08f3f598
359158d35fdf7fe7e50f4537b45f9bd5751f1f92
'2011-10-30T21:03:20-04:00'
describe
'33320' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJT' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
2e0d8f78ed22dd1b95971ce7cd8fca0c
98b8fff98a43a647c4c98c164deae08dd9231836
describe
'6510807' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJU' 'sip-files00041.tif'
19900c73808840a062db42d7ef713a51
db407d79ca721637c99e0a80a3ed9c6c904954fc
describe
'1045' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJV' 'sip-files00041.txt'
0d958946c763072504934c85f24bc9e8
8a4eb9697d0f4629e41b0d5bd4c20387d77f4e31
'2011-10-30T21:01:16-04:00'
describe
'10585' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJW' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
6b0251f5219f54010db6a76bac14c0ba
bbba513deeb7e7f76756a9170128b7cc35b5bd71
describe
'812206' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJX' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
1bea6a2cc5cb2e05d41e40686a129e42
fed5da7914ef9c553ad76003cabd1668ab4a9b49
describe
'90657' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJY' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
c000fb883a93908457809e9a46bc8e76
416e231ef86ee6aa422bbbe3526c44864daf050a
describe
'25707' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIJZ' 'sip-files00042.pro'
ba8e355e0304d2d4cb0081254853956c
c6d9c0c44977c4de96cc04a0128cd525f24e5432
'2011-10-30T21:00:05-04:00'
describe
'34341' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKA' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
23d17fe5de382e853ef5aaa976713899
d3a08f8636563c0211db67bee021ebad724772d4
describe
'6501619' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKB' 'sip-files00042.tif'
1df3b7f7094da4377a56282c580f79e1
7db3eeb9c5b324ef39857eed141a906a7afbf601
describe
'1121' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKC' 'sip-files00042.txt'
b26db2f9bf16e4193dce6c9a51ca7359
077c1e1d62afcb83a70f45edfc3088abc03ee76d
describe
'11134' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKD' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
cc22b658089cf0fbd988b9861e1ea916
622109d15954f67cc1e079929ca3dd5e97a596e2
describe
'807377' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKE' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
7b2ff1bce046bc559cff9d66f1b0972c
6c7993c3b38501d3702836272516f0445c560293
describe
'94657' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKF' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
63996a85f20fcbfc33bf1f8cd3c46cbb
bdbc9f6f7c01d3801d9595e56697b6ecaca2ba44
describe
'26335' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKG' 'sip-files00043.pro'
676947d329ee07fbde621c23a0e24840
d608c2ea2bcf2970c709ef014813bf9c40022e34
describe
'36690' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKH' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
79a43a1c4902455d12e1bc80653536a1
f0f660f9d7b8389ba152113c4d78f01b90d43319
describe
'6462927' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKI' 'sip-files00043.tif'
83f6c56ec09b4eccca6efe8d0abdc8a9
6f4302a23e69fc27f1fb495d3dd1eb075061b948
'2011-10-30T21:00:58-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKJ' 'sip-files00043.txt'
e77a00a91f5bec17bf6d3ae4442f9382
33d5ef40bf1abc095318e9d898e72eec6ab19cc9
describe
'11890' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKK' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
53862cc9c3f89502fc70ee7846c97360
2346a6f6766bf5d0381fcb3ad0a8fc72ce106fbb
'2011-10-30T21:00:07-04:00'
describe
'824218' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKL' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
8f0bba11debf570a1a24f7fb22feb299
a768edcafa0984097cbda87566de083c12c160a4
'2011-10-30T21:01:50-04:00'
describe
'86962' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKM' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
bf6a7661bdb3e1846ce3065a85790773
9abb8b184d752774793d1852d6249f9e8cf3c768
'2011-10-30T21:01:00-04:00'
describe
'25295' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKN' 'sip-files00044.pro'
9854cbde481b7f202a567c55ce35df44
05ab1bd7cb40cdd2ddb5e425d3122ac45c0cdcbc
'2011-10-30T21:02:00-04:00'
describe
'32995' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKO' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
0c5ef7a375d42fa5b1c46330adbf9b9a
c026138607367cf4580e3ec4d707ba4f4afff909
describe
'6597947' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKP' 'sip-files00044.tif'
fde4b68f127f1bd494b619fcaae30e11
237c0e48d3e48ddad88052d9d7bda27d8aaba814
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKQ' 'sip-files00044.txt'
411d721ddd76420134ad714a68e72008
49d0ab9bf03fb367c54fd273c08b8ccc3e5d8141
describe
'10376' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKR' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
a6b8495f8547e78f4c6b0e91cb5d1493
6e954e7c22eafda53d82251e77758103fd93ffdd
describe
'879215' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKS' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
d298087bc9ecbd17c6d9ef385b7f7892
75781675ca770d2e1b18779e66676a66921e47b3
describe
'92083' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKT' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
2710d2a60d535b19297134f3ee938a87
b48d0d25c01ae752f93d5ce4ca65ad61771cfa3f
'2011-10-30T21:01:56-04:00'
describe
'25656' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKU' 'sip-files00045.pro'
8621631c28b64ce7b2c1ec52095f2b78
560d7b8dcc71fc9e86a509178aff5a9546bc7eb3
describe
'35774' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKV' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
cbf376c3c157438f12b12688efc54fd3
f86ceb4943d0854788b9a6cd07e046a83307ff5f
describe
'7042215' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKW' 'sip-files00045.tif'
05ac02ee6f78d72b63fed43e84806436
5bcf894c5e4c9558a2b876b3fcc94de1e710e585
describe
'1040' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKX' 'sip-files00045.txt'
e42d301ab7163f71592da2739e3d22d6
be32826a997a8a1975b2db62a8ba4e55c27377f2
'2011-10-30T20:59:49-04:00'
describe
'10319' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKY' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
480894b0b8209940e3240323a50a3e4d
f0d9347e46ab92f6a6df7d0011a55e950d18d19c
describe
'868416' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIKZ' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
6e88a30324967da8db97c9d96cb34e67
dfaee7dc8612716999d96988e266fa9a154d5aa2
describe
'94286' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILA' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
922ae02c3f8fea3d3e9ba031292bb6be
f5b77c8ec3d3dbf6fffd7522d9dd93f32d376204
describe
'25964' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILB' 'sip-files00046.pro'
568fd37658b2545f0d4303157d5dfba5
bb1fd716bfdd78eb14d27af97dd76fc46952f30a
describe
'36487' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILC' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
0f14f79fd6f592df91b12900faadb52f
1c2ac987ceac8f91cf9cb3157b2ab8f4ac390bfa
describe
'6956765' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILD' 'sip-files00046.tif'
24bfbb1630345c9fab680f854b65a0bf
a281907447a476bed29112d96434e5caf384c989
describe
'1077' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILE' 'sip-files00046.txt'
4dc68b6f4998ea683fbf551b0ff4e191
d6632aa51215a31d6c2d9b85b83358122bd85418
describe
'10576' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILF' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
3d7570f0888324d8f80843b65a289b99
5d40b359e33f0859cd8f7c5bb9a2e8ce590d18a2
describe
'849821' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILG' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
2b5d56796b99d47f28a6c7bfd0abb198
46028c990512b0735a2b80d8aa1815432c25f359
'2011-10-30T21:00:38-04:00'
describe
'92240' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILH' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
f0c0cfc8ea07a707850f89eb16a12187
e0b5af17f602874d3316dadd783efac8498ff003
describe
'26189' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILI' 'sip-files00047.pro'
e0501ac6c8207299695a02ba5e83ac81
b17d089760b6f66d6b0478b09af428e987b1ac78
describe
'35750' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILJ' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
a95f9bbb4bfac353542f73c4805ccd94
3d41302c788617a019aa1d0368404a9bb131ea82
describe
'6802723' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILK' 'sip-files00047.tif'
acdbcc89be9dfe01257cd6d7161aa492
55634cdca77de4e5356875a0abb45efa06e4760c
'2011-10-30T21:01:58-04:00'
describe
'1067' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILL' 'sip-files00047.txt'
a675b50a7c3513c7a3b4b250859a64b4
92c3717695208e65ef26caf55ecbfd7e0d3c7213
describe
'10408' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILM' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
df4ea67bbff4543743fdb95140367117
e47a43e40e1d4e7183db4d0a3a59acf3a756490a
describe
'868426' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILN' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
526c377b80f4c77f20126f883c49ba35
cd6fd2d0dde0237343196e6c309a51b95cb04ab7
describe
'93355' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILO' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
4b323f2aa18372b4759bf59cdda14bff
19d737a48338828fa5e729c545031ab1d5344f9b
describe
'26654' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILP' 'sip-files00048.pro'
a83a14dc2fa1b91ba1db57727bbf54e7
e7797d4e4b50582a6b334a80e56a49f4369ef2ee
describe
'36213' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILQ' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
e63fa5a6d2a6b4dced93f303787c90a1
f7e1a78b02d109174afddb6e8de05064bf1df955
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILR' 'sip-files00048.tif'
1254c7e81f7d9acda315965aa8302c98
0c207f89c25a09f3b89e8d26c5b6d1ac0bd0ee5c
'2011-10-30T21:00:17-04:00'
describe
'1084' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILS' 'sip-files00048.txt'
478efecacc73cc76ab61c2222df8ce01
8fd3eaed39218c4a74e35c1e47055ddfafcafd1b
describe
'10538' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILT' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
1644b19b5ff933dfbea14a97eaf2a256
a83aa41d7be3a12539971357754846478ed5c4bf
'2011-10-30T21:02:59-04:00'
describe
'845091' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILU' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
cbf11de483e5accffd67eb8c317e1032
9d580fbb1a149eecc432d13d0fcd6849ea9e605d
'2011-10-30T21:03:07-04:00'
describe
'94290' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILV' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
46649a3f2122e2ee48da6b1cf2d1280f
2cb1b0bddd43280d50bde3441d7034f4ef4736e2
describe
'26226' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILW' 'sip-files00049.pro'
e8a2b28f6b29d71c594981e14d381523
ceafd234e3d786c20c2203e76a7e02a7bb21def5
describe
'35899' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILX' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
91159a8205ba2877c22423be06c22d32
5be46326df8ca86d55015d2fc34d550bfa4f0d67
'2011-10-30T21:01:09-04:00'
describe
'6765091' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILY' 'sip-files00049.tif'
aa917deb51013c4edc50ac44297cfe86
30413312778be3a72f61a8a734bd862ba6e6aa63
'2011-10-30T21:00:49-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACILZ' 'sip-files00049.txt'
09054d7e043d7488a3f35d253cc15083
1193ce646b93f6cb4b2a5567c622e84c0c05026b
describe
'10846' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMA' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
087ff3d06bc77bc887f581aced0e7bed
6d2040f160127d912c683edc8f246f73901fd0a4
describe
'868504' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMB' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
a334d49e4c34552502b40e9d88a590ca
6517b269a754859e7e60e6e9e1693ed68f57c773
describe
'92316' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMC' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
d8a95dcee4777ba545be850ff7b925f0
56ab1c38a09d85503874ccff4544c86dc78af5d7
describe
'27111' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMD' 'sip-files00050.pro'
2323c6c785ccfb39a2d0833f78c93966
0db298049eb5ee655916ef72a7eec83f64c5d8f9
describe
'35677' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIME' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
2b6daad48f3f05913c40a846adb3b841
50a44818014fc14cd169367715cdd8938dfa8a96
'2011-10-30T21:00:57-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMF' 'sip-files00050.tif'
8dcb81b4ed35cb66ac76e71d7fee2c44
0f50980e34176f02a2b9f5b818be89b6654865d5
describe
'1150' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMG' 'sip-files00050.txt'
fdd3dc6faebf9af33ba7641616a69511
f6cfdb97c6cdfef84de60ce1ca81d68c3ad7dafb
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMH' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
807aadad10bfd4ff391c1d8dacbd3b58
16ca65180c0f5a4e4d23bd5e72aa85f9f33f0e37
describe
'834728' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMI' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
391443c4e0a7e7f21a1062b79c8ae7d8
0e36e1469ff57b69db159550680b24d0dae6a9b2
describe
'91868' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMJ' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
16e5fdad7335b01dfd2f8f1e60b210cc
8fd46e1393ef342e3808ced9a54deae6b021e24f
describe
'26213' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMK' 'sip-files00051.pro'
1991e7bbac1713addc0fb30a4e1b645e
a94c0d537431b5c7b939f2148e06ccb672dd665d
'2011-10-30T21:01:24-04:00'
describe
'34519' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIML' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
cbcc2110686c01d1af69c3f7ff6e8b2f
e913ea96d6769626137696b74dbab3cc4a882b24
describe
'6681871' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMM' 'sip-files00051.tif'
765b3b1a9e60ab7a59a95f985fb89d61
9ed25c3b9ab2dad4671b314a7dfee47d6eb18695
describe
'1055' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMN' 'sip-files00051.txt'
80ccc1f99fd44a54d6251e408c88571a
5724be601a5196baec867bafec04bc10ab66cd51
describe
'10756' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMO' 'sip-files00051thm.jpg'
af5457dd15764e085112ac526cf7d21d
534c3bd29166bafaa0f5f060ddf2d99ae95eb4e4
'2011-10-30T21:03:04-04:00'
describe
'868512' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMP' 'sip-files00052.jp2'
347a99265908f83ac82b2a7665587d18
088400bed4c04d8fe8db9c76ce3799848b6479f2
'2011-10-30T21:00:36-04:00'
describe
'90646' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMQ' 'sip-files00052.jpg'
a593e95678ddbdda3d8ec2ebd8a0d32a
4858e47ebf31452a571b3987eef73156442c2af5
describe
'26808' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMR' 'sip-files00052.pro'
0ad88bcb27f58e5661a3ebaa6bb6456e
d4dcf3d9db5ba76237cf988211469438aa13e80b
describe
'33893' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMS' 'sip-files00052.QC.jpg'
caba33456fa4df0c4eb67c2cf7b526e6
b312cae0cd6f222d873f095e524bdb81b25305aa
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMT' 'sip-files00052.tif'
77c87e889f48faffcaf4caaa23902931
8779c029abbac4fdd3e6e7214105227b7bab5504
'2011-10-30T21:03:10-04:00'
describe
'1175' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMU' 'sip-files00052.txt'
ba39c0d9c9bfb73f023c20f5e4cb7a44
c5e347d44dd9224ed2322b2e8f3ed022e60529d6
describe
'10437' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMV' 'sip-files00052thm.jpg'
6c93565b99b7d9f33d48e34e5dd1c1ce
a9f16aca06e5a6d506cf282b208e76f05db9aa4e
describe
'829703' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMW' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
82caca3ce5555eb9165f3d14a3844510
e67c2f4b9bbdb0a5be6986ea74bd8d51835b86b5
describe
'89081' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMX' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
5eb3606ac22becf76d77b0a483f3f621
43879ae54b9182ca542879d36f77c5ed71c5d0c3
describe
'24852' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMY' 'sip-files00053.pro'
4d29bbad7d8892615e34fcfd157d61e2
42617dfc85e1b4175c49df848c09751dad524a2e
describe
'34414' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIMZ' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
526344abadeb61fff487b807a31b2107
dcdd41542be138f7a6fc8b61904ef74b273b5e9d
describe
'6641587' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINA' 'sip-files00053.tif'
afa5b512b6a830d57054901f7b829f99
b237884c45e31836f034027ac5c787b38c70d531
'2011-10-30T21:00:10-04:00'
describe
'1005' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINB' 'sip-files00053.txt'
93513aab21424b6d0969d664d82b3129
d6dbedda537c5cfe20bd2a2a36c36bf4771e79da
'2011-10-30T21:02:23-04:00'
describe
'10434' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINC' 'sip-files00053thm.jpg'
cac2054f3017d4321f33e866e1d23f4c
5a6ade7cbbc903386c27de44257458ba262a250f
'2011-10-30T20:59:44-04:00'
describe
'868515' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIND' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
0b9c9851619c356ab2c8902ca124dfd3
7cb198f8e31c4fe3ce512bcee015ed777d9d0cc6
describe
'91420' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINE' 'sip-files00054.jpg'
e18aada8182736924bc760cfd3b05d68
837cd88093d5f5341ae953ab9fd485840b2aacdb
describe
'26981' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINF' 'sip-files00054.pro'
822d0a102fc346ef24fcc850986031b4
455c2b7566daac17ee62e96baa73914e9149231d
describe
'34606' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACING' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
9ab81232db04472ad2b74ac49d88dc53
7f382c826b3ecc060f6ed47fc15d5a7766f6c0c2
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINH' 'sip-files00054.tif'
4748146870fec8d46e5733a3c4df637c
1ef6ff7d5e8ea1e1b9a6ad1e72bbc410b6e85a97
describe
'1102' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINI' 'sip-files00054.txt'
84afb16950ae7b5eed6a525eb919b012
ccc522699ff7fe06a8ce1461ccb743aca465217c
'2011-10-30T20:59:52-04:00'
describe
'10347' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINJ' 'sip-files00054thm.jpg'
f7b2881f6458c6299eabc6a4f195c1d6
9caf816cc9955f63272f9d117f874c9bfb243f67
describe
'840074' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINK' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
2e4c6e473305950769c2382fb45d46d2
bfcf8e551f5ba0b30c20e00fbcea93a841673370
describe
'88225' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINL' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
57e9baa3b54cb12e50ebb8c6c16d4fcd
842d6c67694799ecb683cb6eb1330ac3d6c35950
describe
'25530' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINM' 'sip-files00055.pro'
4f5f7338d197197fe9854f71d64cba9f
25b3b76d0dd128b14dd770906ce926950c687259
describe
'33871' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINN' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
f42d93bb109a2684a9d0f1b795003364
8a86b855b0a52ce619693fd331527917fdd9a265
describe
'6727031' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINO' 'sip-files00055.tif'
3b22669e44a07b49c2305177703272c6
860bea163679c6c8231fc22ab162000b983a244e
describe
'1047' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINP' 'sip-files00055.txt'
53921a970e196c42c7a4600b8b647e08
1c2523e2a734d9603766010f92d69a583176144f
describe
'10549' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINQ' 'sip-files00055thm.jpg'
7d1633bba2112f27a6946bc738e36157
68e8b5aeaeeb3e0291946b079dbab531b03dbff9
describe
'868510' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINR' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
7a2bc630befa37f3f7f4accfd21ba6be
4b9ce43aa80ac52f17b16555ada9e4ab148a8205
'2011-10-30T21:01:49-04:00'
describe
'85352' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINS' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
f076407697e492da65019a6d5417ccb8
b5e77098183a0fc345be2859367c6b09d083257b
describe
'22624' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINT' 'sip-files00056.pro'
f20bfa85b73711d7bb0b328801707c5b
3c18173ae4e8eebbd33ab99fa1fd61fc6788c450
'2011-10-30T21:01:53-04:00'
describe
'32972' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINU' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
ff600304281d864ead60c3e07e5b3f0e
0a6557130ffc1ccc67a7ca4443d58fab4ee6234d
'2011-10-30T21:02:46-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINV' 'sip-files00056.tif'
72a4f818d36751bee6b9e30cd9238b1f
d117897ac4c42f3d5946d9d06e83af39fdf9398f
describe
'988' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINW' 'sip-files00056.txt'
74af9ab91f56c708128716650ed3ca09
0cab5424223b0f81178f308849c7ee272fd040d0
'2011-10-30T21:00:21-04:00'
describe
'9895' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINX' 'sip-files00056thm.jpg'
e4f02f316b4c2f03e4c93859c2367703
804ed554073ca1246d6df43e48d3a04f13cf16d7
describe
'840095' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINY' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
02661ff6ce54423a61bdf9e1b832e4e0
4951169db46fccfc3b9f8003f992062fa0de590f
describe
'83076' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACINZ' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
8e67b6db1535c24b9cb58a6ca376498f
5d8b0959bbef7ca554cb02501806116287d3117b
'2011-10-30T21:01:27-04:00'
describe
'22280' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOA' 'sip-files00057.pro'
c60c9518c0f37a568741dd19d35e78cb
6d6a2f0d53f5187f6ebe63a0c40c46e323328afd
describe
'32325' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOB' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
8ac6300b653946d171aa246c2e588064
1cfdd806532de1f30cd28f2e446f65490a4206bf
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOC' 'sip-files00057.tif'
f959c3a3426697563a0d20feccd799bd
10a0964382c492b862c264ba9e943488690752a8
'2011-10-30T20:59:51-04:00'
describe
'916' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOD' 'sip-files00057.txt'
a719b8472e94660b9afa57aa8b86b0c3
84e702ca668d8fc462714f74e474aff65743c467
describe
'10180' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOE' 'sip-files00057thm.jpg'
2427274bac9ac6e9952e7a6b327772e9
91b2e84fdd2b3f359a82a78e0412c70c020ec2b4
describe
'868521' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOF' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
e44ea05c06dc1001e192f3fd309a46c3
ec59b56e567d0f110b0599495534ec51999c525d
describe
'94523' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOG' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
2307bf0030bfc2b3b7e586fa0902449a
1667c3dd3ad2afce3ebc5aed94aeebed5543d912
describe
'26562' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOH' 'sip-files00058.pro'
8680351d1ba46adfd1f4fa9e5220c4ee
75ec6539869858b133df3d6116b9576861b9686a
describe
'36611' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOI' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
685d9d19982f715a7d0804b6170feb13
89c2c7772d31cfcb95e48f8842aace5080de320a
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOJ' 'sip-files00058.tif'
aa8cdd42cee120a39e8bc6256efd1f8a
db2f5ffbf88dfdece526019cc6081868de978ac9
describe
'1081' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOK' 'sip-files00058.txt'
87c364634fc9495e3117cecef8067aba
98dc9de5708895119a9c3bf649bfcf3998215bf5
describe
'10715' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOL' 'sip-files00058thm.jpg'
2d3343f290693e06661a661ce1f02829
9e62a4c315af47df8af7f9cdd75fe91f6ad21390
describe
'840071' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOM' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
05bc4b62e9b9c2fc9be11010e8432949
0b28ccc461eec27f840d7d25a1e37fe9da603e81
describe
'88707' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACION' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
8989c61cc056ff737c321aa234dd86df
326dfff56cfbc7bf738ef79f93fbb8933e10f5f1
describe
'25199' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOO' 'sip-files00059.pro'
abb1799779283f87a42df4b528f61f44
11940ea9c38ac0a1312cb5a6fe210d5bf76c6177
describe
'34023' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOP' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
c574890034d65e7511107e627ec0ad8c
9a9124698fe115b351f8a85f8b6cd57115cffa2a
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOQ' 'sip-files00059.tif'
5c3ad8c48efd1ed4508ebb087b3a8c82
83243426ecba858150474535138e3414ab9a4755
'2011-10-30T21:00:33-04:00'
describe
'1008' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOR' 'sip-files00059.txt'
5b63978f36787065f2077e026ec036e7
dedc8bfd490e72f26a14cc85cafc42f7ec7b4bb9
describe
'10500' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOS' 'sip-files00059thm.jpg'
77a46a72b6b87384e8ce06963505227c
d52abdbe913230467b6d27d0616e97d978f951f4
describe
'868513' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOT' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
3c9a2c1bce4cae78afdc2909f020cba0
ea57c4de79d5401e68dfa212546a9c9a9848a568
'2011-10-30T21:02:33-04:00'
describe
'82639' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOU' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
51ab99f6ca57045b4e3c303d84571a6c
09c764666cf6f5a36a1e162033750beba94c8713
describe
'23064' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOV' 'sip-files00060.pro'
8a145a213490abf2ca5ad84ec382a237
dd37ce41fba9d5db44c00ee1f9c6cee4bae1fedc
'2011-10-30T21:02:31-04:00'
describe
'30709' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOW' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
19354c5a696ecc928fe99c96ec7609ac
a7a61df6162275d3b1098e3cdf7bfa8addb706fa
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOX' 'sip-files00060.tif'
010d9c07dcc4238a244a8dfc98c357d0
54ee2ae232fa6eabfdaa6b9ff8282c8aac8c7f63
describe
'977' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOY' 'sip-files00060.txt'
598730bf9f66a44fee397888f40079fa
949aed7e522a9ee996951dea829f5feb904fa7e9
describe
'9388' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIOZ' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
6b836fb29b4dc5a75e41be59f2ad1deb
5897d44fb9eff77edde2b76a5b1aa70961120644
describe
'840093' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPA' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
90308fc49da1f617d07c4658a0c851a2
97e956d6bc0dd1c23e6ef2e62f83f0a8f7ef52cf
describe
'88717' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPB' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
b262178472b960b8d1950c688c3c282c
7d50b94d476dd327bf0d3e174bd7a7307c92c1f3
describe
'26039' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPC' 'sip-files00061.pro'
610404060062e36eeaf5930c2047eb1c
38e12db9c8ad892c5a39680a0c5f8a302adffedc
describe
'34935' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPD' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
23ec49ec606599d729200d9cd8571136
33f2596d26109292a4fee6cb04adff4b83eca61d
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPE' 'sip-files00061.tif'
bbc7cb57133d2b937bc100eff3e9bda1
47c7465299637d2babce71f03ea6622d49c41a9f
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPF' 'sip-files00061.txt'
189f910da862934e6365788d4b8f697e
6ea899206fc5e97324b23e077d19557a9a60a48a
describe
Invalid character
'10735' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPG' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
3c999fed73ddbc69268106197197b888
41107f9fe51936e0d59f7867733414ebc98f0e8e
describe
'868516' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPH' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
2feb1511913f43a7d311db56f2b87da8
725463676e155875885bba8d650287ceae183b65
describe
'89232' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPI' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
245521e5e248a3283737f2383177f7df
ade9f9ed3ffb56bec376b6be9ce7f2ded718175e
describe
'25291' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPJ' 'sip-files00062.pro'
b1839250c3da5471dfcd65ca77cd37ae
4d7f162c52a79f5d61bc3d649d4c69b705bd5181
'2011-10-30T21:00:25-04:00'
describe
'33810' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPK' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
d65009c76fdff5022a1ab4c48a267ef6
c27f901626aace752682e0e749d7cf84bbac0e9a
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPL' 'sip-files00062.tif'
f54d405fb4706dfcb0d7cd1050ad11e1
5cd1d2da836372a9ef9741f7c2333c60dd9d6bc9
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPM' 'sip-files00062.txt'
2d28353a7f9c3f9d3a35e146bb425ee5
4b1fe721e1e08f46efc22ac9b4fd07b48a93af08
'2011-10-30T21:01:52-04:00'
describe
'10563' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPN' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
9a8518d281fe8b79f34c420e64af3d8d
bd2e7f8f21a4476b7450307341c42393c6f17f54
describe
'840076' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPO' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
277fe53ff609f3ba6720a03b0a21b310
e1a3fd79ea32e2e11d602d91f87e1eefbb617814
describe
'83767' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPP' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
15120927ee97a65bfbda345a3af8239a
bc5e25ddc280dff8723ff0b221a9f6335e0a58e6
describe
'24804' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPQ' 'sip-files00063.pro'
bc902df05ce30efee6b687dd675a3079
5e37878546b0f733a66695271e72f9d15ed6ff87
describe
'32182' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPR' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
55e1afa6c584adb4f0111e2263f44e09
82538953d1e1477f4332f8b8d0a75bcb2c091b6e
'2011-10-30T21:02:15-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPS' 'sip-files00063.tif'
764e61095b8286a44fdbe739cbac0cc0
4817f21370bfece8b208d360a7930b6c8fa952d1
describe
'1002' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPT' 'sip-files00063.txt'
6bdd1aa6af689961f8c0700ef28a1eba
59ae211e296ab1293ef79be5860aa409686d6b23
describe
'10452' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPU' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
aaeeb9465ac36cf388af33978c46bcd1
ae02af3be568b2bd8e8c8a63da45c3290839c9ae
describe
'868528' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPV' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
ab22ae36c158fe7fe99bfbbfb6cf13b8
c3d56ac544d1d3e855499135526593cf93c1579c
describe
'92219' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPW' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
3d740acb85634671073b9b9c5225dd23
5a51530a85cd4ab5d0fde5938b99f9c00f6f1d06
describe
'26891' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPX' 'sip-files00064.pro'
6f0cd88f4b6e02a31f62536f111970d3
3300eefb91a4d318e2b63c92870ff8d9c60f4f1b
describe
'35701' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPY' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
3fac4c40d630050c1d2b127a4743992a
97496ee2e5b3860a17850671e691dc828c34f49d
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIPZ' 'sip-files00064.tif'
a31ca63390a2ef76045eec98b99d0139
17c1836123767c3b16bb8a57e2fbb4482835ab79
describe
'1127' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQA' 'sip-files00064.txt'
be93adf32f62bdc147b44bf302e1df90
60d7152edb6da0d4a4cfd4b6427c36f54a006210
describe
'10728' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQB' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
1325574c274d54d0cb93120514cdad83
2c413d60d65e46d37cb2777c0c9bbcb3365d520a
describe
'840052' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQC' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
78cc9d9f46ebfbfebe71ba7f13a571b7
7703bcc8b6c44b73421bda1101006b88aef003df
describe
'79141' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQD' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
6c25544faa47b4a3e3ba66c24657c007
2cfb3cc246dce4f07aa04d0f45438600beb5f597
describe
'23097' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQE' 'sip-files00065.pro'
337914fbfe606a5fe41d6dc9ccc95091
63e4831bd7c40993b14a3814a994fe3c5c890bc8
describe
'31478' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQF' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
26bc2d38b0645cf3303b25fc37902514
c13d0da2cfed36e87e417c7dfa1c43fdf5014698
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQG' 'sip-files00065.tif'
50fbfa275282e1b81cc5e9fcdc688da3
49180318dbabcc3b6c79ee64b1ba7186c268761a
describe
'971' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQH' 'sip-files00065.txt'
b6afd078029ae88981842325176d8719
1ea607af3e63affcefc4b76a11b4a90e3a085cbb
describe
'9281' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQI' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
ee8935a12377e18478e26a593ee5af2e
fe6c0e2e7353d1e13a72ae72f7aaab57e3aabf6d
describe
'868503' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQJ' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
064bd1565f15542cfe3bd9d9592704a3
2110716fdb52c7401786b19906d5eff3e34f4158
describe
'84223' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQK' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
3ffebc7f81cdd619071e486e70a73143
8a5556ee09a85d9040be4d47fcf09bf93f4d0754
describe
'24960' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQL' 'sip-files00066.pro'
6f4a938d985161cbcc3ab19750f3c7d0
3e4adc80caf5ac8eeda6f53136135b8492246e5b
describe
'31829' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQM' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
a01dea9f413627a51ddcedbcce770cf5
23e909d923e20855ea0f87cf0142554bae3c0734
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQN' 'sip-files00066.tif'
bd200469f4afc6bf0243fa22e91c6913
9a40f65cc07ec18a33f39e729260446ebd0efb30
describe
'1029' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQO' 'sip-files00066.txt'
56848820d3053cd8233fbfbc6b6e8e2e
c205b64ff7465cccd4b771c7fbdb32248507cb5a
describe
'9487' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQP' 'sip-files00066thm.jpg'
eb594e6f67c45669d5eb4ef746f9f9c0
acfa2ff8a7895ed941f8ff3e4ff83028ecaacf33
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQQ' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
86347151a235b33461d395bf475648e0
39044b462ecce322572d3addebd79718062e4744
describe
'89428' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQR' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
71bd87aee79d39bd05c41f029c603ec9
6a7b46d2794de07e0c2cd2ccfb5f1a9d4c40b51c
describe
'25426' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQS' 'sip-files00067.pro'
b3de623fd93ddd6eda6b60861746324e
fbac94a2823fe9c0e1641a48741ae684f0b43402
'2011-10-30T21:00:13-04:00'
describe
'35032' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQT' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
ded357053c5542d08c5266ea0c4f1724
f98b24a4364c6c4d4949ebefbdd3a31ecfcef288
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQU' 'sip-files00067.tif'
ec196cc9852d022c660cfa238db79370
c25d75717e3d991147ba6cfad317417ec4e6ee0d
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQV' 'sip-files00067.txt'
7ada92b59104ff6e47acd56b13c00c99
bc075334f8d5b0f982cca2178dbfeb0be792fb97
describe
'10693' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQW' 'sip-files00067thm.jpg'
5a00dee40f3f3d1702144f04491f93f4
2ecf0d8cfdf574e5dc5c96b109f7cd4219501667
describe
'868520' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQX' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
44b79194595577c097f659e14a16cfd4
27a812022535d12102e8e4a99050b73f51db573f
'2011-10-30T21:00:43-04:00'
describe
'90623' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQY' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
d1e5c1f7995ade0cc8899d0a41841978
18d123cf89e3082f43ac7dbbd694ceb4839cd76a
describe
'26251' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIQZ' 'sip-files00068.pro'
f706436248978b9f794583d79503e726
87f0e89b254a8054480c29fa2012464e7068316d
describe
'35199' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRA' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
9133ec9053bccfd5609c1f1b173c22f8
659e3a0d5137783455c480f9f8af1725cf888724
'2011-10-30T20:59:53-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRB' 'sip-files00068.tif'
7f8785749da5e3f6a41d746c89175eb1
93ed9d94f067f2ee87fe6e1b5f85bbd1f416f9c0
describe
'1119' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRC' 'sip-files00068.txt'
b5c39018b7428debcada21687b743aed
81171a233d2d52ad0a5def1aa52fe800ccd5cbd6
describe
'9963' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRD' 'sip-files00068thm.jpg'
f83c231d58f145021660a151b3f87c38
ed5e8866495c68bbc392d140fdcb44a6e6ee3ada
'2011-10-30T21:00:39-04:00'
describe
'840062' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRE' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
e444295504a592e52d7a8acb5c0e164d
284e0ceb1fd11a4518c93d643ee4ab59d0301dcb
describe
'83652' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRF' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
5546983f53e0402a2286f540ec91a0b6
8af2f33d3c865dd66d1328ea008926e63e4f86d4
describe
'22885' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRG' 'sip-files00069.pro'
e9fb31f77102d6089df62b79c2a15481
2954287d69b504fcd9a422045393c7e1dcc3d4e1
describe
'31964' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRH' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
068d8c936497301010146936feb4a988
a034da88a74db06230b86b012b733e12b76889f7
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRI' 'sip-files00069.tif'
ecd180a25c44b1944e979d2dbf3d70c3
bcd2d8a6624d495852aebec556f9433291f948df
describe
'987' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRJ' 'sip-files00069.txt'
2ea47f343d7fa4e8b22f927ed41f602d
6432f79402b9bb10b8a0c652df9909e25132addb
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRK' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
70d7806b9d54ba24345d77d5dd6bd9c6
f85f7f2e930bac2b81e2c65212585c33587b012b
'2011-10-30T21:00:03-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRL' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
1b4f8cff12e74f77c79599e202aa3134
5e0b35d8f6677e8d1a156b75d758bf6613e85870
describe
'89971' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRM' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
703d6cb247eb4d7a9354586c8ea3d038
64b43f8704fcaf6483b30731a75230f951d410ce
describe
'25944' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRN' 'sip-files00070.pro'
6f08ddd0574433801fa46da66bb45cd2
432bd4420ff98391e56ab9f19021dc7a6dcddbdd
describe
'34398' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRO' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
946803fdb94af0887682804abad6f874
4a0c148364761e01f7db3db74c31379d5dd64aa7
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRP' 'sip-files00070.tif'
e3dcd8fffd86a6149cfe4ba1bb6af258
9b78a270c7231b787f87174d740bd0b75725b0b2
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRQ' 'sip-files00070.txt'
bc891f0fc55979d1e721746e80fc7a6c
c2949a9ef7e890631f0b4270cccb9708f550246e
describe
'10443' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRR' 'sip-files00070thm.jpg'
14b30c5cd49fe67d47e882423c61d1aa
86edddb18f6d6464b4c27231fe0ab4842feedb0f
describe
'840090' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRS' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
f20c6cc8d120ea013dc4bd493c3a9fa8
83cd21250743cc9fc083bf068ce305d20a47d2eb
describe
'87374' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRT' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
22ae30c757dae669adb2b4d44084fc98
7e0e367890635bc491c7626cc49a701701f26f98
describe
'26078' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRU' 'sip-files00071.pro'
915db80d2702e82c04c47c73ddbb1895
8a97d938c1296ea9cd6f63b4a0ce998cae32b434
describe
'33603' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRV' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
f78f90327616da2939f32077f23c6f43
7f13128a49b5752c87bff14a79d5e0f003daaf02
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRW' 'sip-files00071.tif'
3aea6eb896621cd80a14c02321299360
038ff949eccccf297da0244bd143d1af597365a7
describe
'1041' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRX' 'sip-files00071.txt'
45b8b2a26aa5f2422c19a14e5b56267a
23465077cf267f9e89cb5236fe6d04c858d8b1ea
describe
'10247' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRY' 'sip-files00071thm.jpg'
9a0478993c5310531d477e49dd448df1
e018dbdcf843a62ba5f4c17b76cafb524378d9d3
describe
'868511' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIRZ' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
c29bd50e729157ec7289f168e5c10c89
46a1af6d9e3b50eda2f42c33ebede22ea09274e5
describe
'91294' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISA' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
f71ab665b0b9da58ffda4c311f6d8868
71afc9dd7fcdff34e1dfb620f70f942fd9849aac
describe
'24991' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISB' 'sip-files00072.pro'
b64591ac2285a049c5fbb8e45b6cdf5f
25b42f77089b865105d9bd5978a9ec059bb2f120
describe
'34057' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISC' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
9a7bdae4bdb84f041ff088f20e538bd3
d8395d7cee57a6abb8b580ba0e51dcf8a10480d8
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISD' 'sip-files00072.tif'
d910218b481b490c291f3aa992331d06
adae81fbb3d463f0c2e5901aac5270b9a4b454dd
describe
'1053' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISE' 'sip-files00072.txt'
f2b45a20097e469f07788ac201af1bfc
25e669225f33e0ccff72435b101f233f78546c43
'2011-10-30T21:01:08-04:00'
describe
'10298' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISF' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
808f4d598e8192367c381ca435513ae3
c6126762f99e038ce526dd44643137f273e0cf9d
describe
'840030' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISG' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
2ebb53cb72886913b3ccf5e291e0a0fa
3aaa89c740ccde9c68329d69bfeb7b9fbbbcb91c
describe
'77773' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISH' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
c5b94d72cec0c70b623cd8dbcc2916d4
f64b4d321cbddcb287151612dde7403ba9143e63
describe
'22753' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISI' 'sip-files00073.pro'
8c670e6ed27e04a23ed7cab4b9e2e10d
8e885688cf99bae59a058e2dd39e02334fb6511d
describe
'29371' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISJ' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
c3d0a605310a1c4455d8b73992d9ef82
f84d5fcd46045d92b2309ca4f6bfc16abe0526f8
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISK' 'sip-files00073.tif'
45c827d877bb8a6fa38e484cefdcc96a
37739309e1eed894cd30eef15bfccabf0ac2325a
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISL' 'sip-files00073.txt'
860d77f801c981f0f6a73614ed2be86b
9af5217b8e705936ddd144e482bea717ca0d5781
describe
'8937' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISM' 'sip-files00073thm.jpg'
f967e35769a225c4b291ff2780b85398
1f3b4871bb64a37afcb51f48d670e8cbf7bd8fbe
describe
'850428' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISN' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
bd703295d8e490ff5d60ad35fe4f04c7
2da7a58b54369f5f23337fa6c17814a0adf1a6a2
describe
'93443' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISO' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
3460537c366e60eb9218a669068b4051
23ac40142fa062d4260fa40fafc960c88fc3c13a
'2011-10-30T21:00:53-04:00'
describe
'27048' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISP' 'sip-files00074.pro'
b057d6b2800652d62fafaca07afb546a
3ac53d0a9ed387a3c4569bddd857c5bcd8ae9c85
describe
'36088' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISQ' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
b540be578d2cc305d167c46cbc490d05
aba04c08df6797ff9f700b2e127ba7e83f66481b
describe
'6807419' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISR' 'sip-files00074.tif'
88ec5bb61f3d0e1ddb106b7692c420bb
05bc93ed64aa8dab60c2ff41c75ad798af421278
describe
'1144' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISS' 'sip-files00074.txt'
3f3ee3ed48445056e6bc1ecac7269c14
359bbf606a6ea64652cf0995b7938225b921956b
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIST' 'sip-files00074thm.jpg'
e656529f36370cbf4e8c0facecef9487
7f5fc45ba0b6e00cb03344bb7fbddefcbd8ebaf8
describe
'835595' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISU' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
9e20287b9ab4f3e41f53e7a862623a49
ef21527ab947d015db761263406e8908e1afb904
describe
'87579' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISV' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
5a0567fc868ac76348d3c9c8537a9ca2
12ffae036e43bcbb2b39f1570274060484f6acbc
describe
'23825' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISW' 'sip-files00075.pro'
e5eecc65a2e00e25fa8d3e8d5006558f
8025d4b2f5d49f3a1c9e40cae0a2e0a78cd7b217
describe
'34150' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISX' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
9cb569325b606b494b52ef8e470b3e0f
87967766eafe2d743d6b912c5b9b86de3af87518
describe
'6691045' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISY' 'sip-files00075.tif'
70bd9fd2dae1d7979a3512ec184d2691
04828a27b6ccf1163ceaccafc0124114c0dbdc08
describe
'974' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACISZ' 'sip-files00075.txt'
949a149eff9e35650f1d1678d0b9a21a
1664433df1ee6f9d2001a809de548b38b12cbfb2
describe
'10354' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITA' 'sip-files00075thm.jpg'
74fe73474465d3396a07ae4f0c76b5e5
b9fc960dc25c3300ccc50e022e4bb3878a666007
'2011-10-30T21:01:07-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITB' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
c50380bd4c9c8b62c99e138a73d1f679
67092dabc05769a7a9251e68559b834c874b9c6f
describe
'82602' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITC' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
dc37eae518604b32e2088246db8b09c9
1cda2a67705b15137bcab4e1b98dae2173b631b8
describe
'25100' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITD' 'sip-files00076.pro'
2a77c09265a5e3b43709f97923de3a0d
a41eb7206358a939de906b81328469f9333855b8
describe
'30914' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITE' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
57f1ad1f5e35ef113cf742d7b18cc00e
2f6fd3f1ccf1b61917ff5f2d2e9235667fad1e6b
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITF' 'sip-files00076.tif'
12202196bc50086f7b83b45fa13ab5d4
8e68c48ed4450cb1dec8b45f9a5a924c60d333c4
describe
'1159' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITG' 'sip-files00076.txt'
67cacc7aba004417eef0dfdbf0dfe592
4fb0c29b5ee60e70831ad2a39871745c7740c942
describe
'9477' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITH' 'sip-files00076thm.jpg'
5b58a13c3e1dd0831d93e12dff268b29
97d2907174d6819d6abb78722984c01b2b32110b
describe
'835493' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITI' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
41fb2a9ded20b7f9bf347325f9925978
cd8c127a8b45ddbffaa0599462ff09c9862ee55d
describe
'71363' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITJ' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
6a2c4aee8eace2e3b7c20b3c61ae2788
30cc00294e448dc2e96409406f6e7c6b7a5cad8f
describe
'21800' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITK' 'sip-files00077.pro'
92d7a1ab200a221a4ba012fa0dca890c
85f5737d8997085e49c228cd414bea2d7bdb5ee4
describe
'26396' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITL' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
11092086d7044f54cb961ab2112f42ef
6bce9cfcb649c032fe29d7f617218c26221f7cea
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITM' 'sip-files00077.tif'
258b2795176c0bccab2ae302e6826063
d756bfa157665ad5ebc9cd6bb3b967aed608acbf
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITN' 'sip-files00077.txt'
a3a7530be6e792722d9f226529d42990
2368a4444ccbac51fa19882c0716af21d16c7433
describe
'8125' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITO' 'sip-files00077thm.jpg'
24c58bb7826a4ab48dea993f54e444bc
aa7fdd2044750dc90f6905dfa13b306d0761d032
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITP' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
4da0d7e88eb22b26b42b233690203938
c9774c0a416e9581396fa38bf5779d3ea448e409
describe
'74025' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITQ' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
969e04be04c79a0dcbdab76ab90f5b85
200aecf8ba868ea27d3559128205f896257118b0
describe
'20469' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITR' 'sip-files00078.pro'
e315d002725e2a3b62b45df2c5c127b8
23ee983089d83e3d7d46bb9fa73d2cc1cb4deca3
describe
'28344' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITS' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
bead554cd59831156dd6ad0e26ce5591
f346cb529a384c88a57eefd61ef2acbe8b4fe43f
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITT' 'sip-files00078.tif'
ab7cfb2c899deba6e7d6b9480736aa6b
ee3460b3721c53c0c36deef2db4bf267188423ff
describe
'888' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITU' 'sip-files00078.txt'
5ab4db04b6cf673e8f342398cad39013
a7e3a5254c9efd1354ac7669bf9db2a3b14918c8
describe
'8765' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITV' 'sip-files00078thm.jpg'
5c0be72eb64a0c57ccb5219b318c092f
4585656bde80e758a00e49141bac68e6e683448c
describe
'774971' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITW' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
57d59c18d7af40dd677c86cb3188b110
635bfd09bc21b0a6a43e27ebcb4b6b858173830b
describe
'62558' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITX' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
9c697aa52d2eeb823249ffae3263ae1a
183f527e53c81419f7d180077002435b5794de09
describe
'19756' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITY' 'sip-files00079.pro'
66413c1227c4ddc2392b0eb24afecea6
6cd9506aab70fd99c43fa5d8eb4157da4429989a
describe
'22015' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACITZ' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
a92e3246524c5d9cf46688e428d43493
a8d1785e844cfab5404f1a8f73b7455e7fb6d485
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUA' 'sip-files00079.tif'
4a3400cc944850f222e490f42794516c
fc962543c9abb1d6443dd4b8a37f1bfbbdf0d0d9
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUB' 'sip-files00079.txt'
53ddb8018200f6b0ed9fb3fb5202b204
f69ecbf1793b530cb99b669d93bfb2de4359be3e
describe
'6680' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUC' 'sip-files00079thm.jpg'
4f3d9962f397727d788b508f93af5740
ee55227b3091506f13eef4941c5feaccd10b5d9b
describe
'840094' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUD' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
8fe0c4721a6a1e0d8b5acd5399f1b144
6b9038a1269bce52329095c23b73c2f5b2471089
'2011-10-30T21:02:04-04:00'
describe
'68851' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUE' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
a2d8753414a3863f4e7da80e7a3a634f
a8c4060021a4266179de1de347b18c29ea95121b
describe
'27935' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUF' 'sip-files00080.pro'
b920072ef7b33c78b846be888155b6ee
ec299af80eb6ebd85ae0db4edf923f9617094af3
'2011-10-30T21:00:28-04:00'
describe
'24063' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUG' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
91decb233f9723279bf49e475197b304
c08823497d66efb990473087bdd13b317a2cf0c6
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUH' 'sip-files00080.tif'
5ef1b7887dc8121ab4e61f9bee2dd1cb
8729b37ccc6c23ffe4cf0b54e620e48522433745
describe
'1513' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUI' 'sip-files00080.txt'
4f6ca782021ee83e39605b498acf3494
18b43d8eb5be3d9b8e21ac3f8a5322f4e9509ccd
describe
'7382' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUJ' 'sip-files00080thm.jpg'
2233089568dc98ec838dcc2658bc430b
fc99d1980363b97668187b4616e6ac941e9754aa
describe
'835588' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUK' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
bf6c9ca41d0d76d7317f06e36fd9c054
526156cc3c1657ab7df999b80e3030e133f06c86
describe
'87346' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUL' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
d9ce8edc1e55662f4d188fff3bd18ce7
a034f7ce36f099efff969bce731952dff33974c8
describe
'23864' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUM' 'sip-files00081.pro'
81f27d77159129ccc89771827260082b
4cadc05abc9bd4295a80796a67f69fa0d0d1b462
describe
'34042' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUN' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
8e385e21129a775d462e46d10e164c3e
ff5c13d95f45f1b5ae2346141efbcf31a3b34e37
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUO' 'sip-files00081.tif'
63caa80b54c91dc1044b00f7e2dd864e
0bbb0058af96530e783399912488a52a5f1f6a4d
describe
'968' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUP' 'sip-files00081.txt'
22d6ad55b61a115bb018751de7a50aef
2133cb504bdbc91fc1fb581c2b9f1419fc1f80a0
describe
'10361' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUQ' 'sip-files00081thm.jpg'
67ff8862d598d4ec3de86a2cde7e0259
caaacbc9c123ab0f05add0c6db350b565c8b0649
describe
'840080' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUR' 'sip-files00082.jp2'
06908ab33a5cded0892d7e8cfa3d7198
c73cb6f26cbdafb75c270830dcad09f5cf02fcaf
describe
'81853' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUS' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
174736b52ebb5585bb1e99fcfd8d6384
005c2fa6395e62e692f2daf051440ea8b8167854
'2011-10-30T21:01:46-04:00'
describe
'21921' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUT' 'sip-files00082.pro'
a2fa3032ad3748a66a9471795988e860
64512b1dd87a479981ad3d85bdc5d8c9ceb4028e
describe
'31598' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUU' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
e3b131389be0634d9b7585370e7f3190
75bdc9f565dcf1c74c8debb621a64aba6169d676
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUV' 'sip-files00082.tif'
c7093dae03c10d448ccba96c35657fa4
0c43b1dde20508192630491bfc3b283eb8bf5bef
describe
'890' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUW' 'sip-files00082.txt'
2552a8d431ffc092ff67f6c6fc0e6062
e61a13a6eb508a3d2ffe0269cb1643210568835e
describe
'9944' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUX' 'sip-files00082thm.jpg'
dd38658458855f197b9c3a0522b1515d
e7a0b0f061cbdf329338015a7861fd2708cc948b
describe
'590723' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUY' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
039b6c0159c2392c5a3ceb42a34ed284
1bcb26ad9bbc5f8d762237d17d378fa3ad97feb0
describe
'38350' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIUZ' 'sip-files00083.jpg'
5c13bb744dea0891b28f89943ea7fedd
50025e3e3575ed70977b0183f4df337ab64fd0b0
describe
'5648' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVA' 'sip-files00083.pro'
ee0230caec2ea0561704d6aab4c46076
afdf4a705e3f7eeb69e262b055d2344ee32ba190
describe
'13769' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVB' 'sip-files00083.QC.jpg'
00e7a39d342eba288f17442180d9ecd5
9438ffe6ae748cbbefde0135ec091983fb663209
describe
'6567443' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVC' 'sip-files00083.tif'
84b81603cfadc5e1ec00744110d92f40
effe0b907a91a2d29dcbfa6462fa5c5f8c115190
describe
'263' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVD' 'sip-files00083.txt'
93c6e1006447cd64fb78fa2129353925
9bc7b471aea214e0a4c10f901a9f4b1977687e4d
describe
'4540' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVE' 'sip-files00083thm.jpg'
ad6072a1157316530b7e3a3619a18f0c
965f825912b628f58817171fca39b75bbc30310c
'2011-10-30T21:03:09-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVF' 'sip-files00084.jp2'
529db1283a045503f46755fb68bfc0d7
ba8cd44406f9f609f0e891c5ebe50119d1425ab9
describe
'73801' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVG' 'sip-files00084.jpg'
3ca23f3756f2c3a5ac47614e46b96588
e3e6f8285c500a1e6aec70156a7dffe61dbec74d
describe
'17174' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVH' 'sip-files00084.pro'
fcbb9d3b7da10e3dee56be57054d7719
dd82c8836aa7055184f7fa318eb82ef07d2b1e6c
describe
'28008' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVI' 'sip-files00084.QC.jpg'
5fff77a498f05320be2ec0147469aded
5d0c52416c22077676d648f6efac4246d2e694c9
'2011-10-30T21:00:56-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVJ' 'sip-files00084.tif'
ee003b73c2b570776f066b8a9f801c25
04d7384922871463c128de0cf033af89839243c3
describe
'731' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVK' 'sip-files00084.txt'
2ca96412e707e3640e1069b02902fb99
b00114f36e010480f88f889d61cf23b0971eafd7
describe
'8704' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVL' 'sip-files00084thm.jpg'
f6176319531254556cbfdc3357367528
cae785f93a952d69ee66a5c923d7855dc156f393
describe
'810136' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVM' 'sip-files00085.jp2'
97a18b754e84abedce64fe32357ed135
0c352ccbf4be9f5f8f56c54cd6d53d541e46b9fe
describe
'96446' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVN' 'sip-files00085.jpg'
b36852821a3b7cac9635206e81838862
6aa7ecc30aa6c5af2de6bc4979dc255de385e08b
describe
'27493' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVO' 'sip-files00085.pro'
2a6b3cb8f128594f762fc419decca896
2bf7b20a41402b00b0352a9e7d1b6ce99817412a
describe
'38768' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVP' 'sip-files00085.QC.jpg'
b5da71289c95eb07bd88ddc576f24502
99645d36e419d83b5a107e5b2e00b9b9bde53fc1
describe
'6485183' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVQ' 'sip-files00085.tif'
d1a4b5b16b13fd4a6960f773e3d3a3ee
fcce857b16202c9389be6cc094d328d3e1371af6
describe
'1165' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVR' 'sip-files00085.txt'
07e5f1dd3d2fecbf878aabfc79018ed6
3d463e76df81d594dd1cb6b4a876b6db2aa9833d
describe
'11514' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVS' 'sip-files00085thm.jpg'
407b96bf6291f21a7107be4f5ff9ccad
a3c4517d360c11ee42799ebb0ea19d57f987e770
describe
'840006' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVT' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
9096699f3afe6f5d146eaf2d8007ad3f
0a5a8950ce25d3f64c760ed11b5cbc7f2208eb98
describe
'90748' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVU' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
62f57d69aead11c42e019049e8c70f70
9d8de5c587ce46299e58ebd256493b5e8ef0ac0f
describe
'11644' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVV' 'sip-files00086.pro'
b402689fba2e437703e913285254b8f6
a8bc56ca6f5757125361487c6de42060387692f4
describe
'31611' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVW' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
0e569f9f03740a5fe3e45e70ccb8f573
9ab3aa680dab93ff1658bb0c088390d711e7e0a9
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVX' 'sip-files00086.tif'
a36a93ee3b9999cbe55f42a79a5c8bcc
de72b12ea6da99c2835d7711f369e138c9d91117
describe
'492' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVY' 'sip-files00086.txt'
61f9b8eb884959b16640386f09246f69
84e3ea84dc359304b3632f0dbfbfc57c53c347bb
describe
Invalid character
'9797' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIVZ' 'sip-files00086thm.jpg'
b33146b755676e18d6da512bb5ecb25f
4ad4b08384df3ab47f4ffc9dc0840226b3b59b8f
describe
'817786' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWA' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
efa7369b9ee6d2ee0ea7147bdc902e28
08b97dd9262cfd2d6de4235e8e28c9283994bb13
describe
'95177' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWB' 'sip-files00087.jpg'
f591e55b46901344e5ad549a8cdfaa55
439a5347c5338ef2dcf07e851257547c6fea03d5
describe
'28948' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWC' 'sip-files00087.pro'
fad06ca88a85173af4211fcc80ab290e
de3e3b96551273856c18e2551c46a7c24d33c4cc
describe
'35782' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWD' 'sip-files00087.QC.jpg'
35069935af4d6961849cefd4f6c13a59
6c967198bd1e201a04b1e63d9805a3ceda298173
describe
'6546243' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWE' 'sip-files00087.tif'
1411bdd98bc7c33f17103ade7d2b8f22
ef9e206df106a332523af5cad8b1a86d0eecadd3
describe
'1246' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWF' 'sip-files00087.txt'
8ae4631ef853cee78b2efd8aafc02f87
c5c4ffa9608b108f4ec75427a2bc9b2584218231
describe
Invalid character
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWG' 'sip-files00087thm.jpg'
65f7afa4738f48a1976db746507034d4
8b78e2ccedee34b2c4d3cc2c6bb9026a05644c25
describe
'840050' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWH' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
51f64949b7ce918857658db5d8a00541
c8f75a7427d2ec8c3a1000612809c55239159804
describe
'96058' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWI' 'sip-files00088.jpg'
410048ade5659bb21ac6575841c0fe96
03f05cfe416133d985220c3f529df9116ae73721
describe
'26991' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWJ' 'sip-files00088.pro'
5e8bbe9949eae83e880b2797780c8291
5e2cfe40cd59d9d1ff89c04981635f3018eeeaf7
describe
'35887' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWK' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
f514115c8ad5df2b13b8d1da7e9f6f06
2472cdcd382a1a7ccf17dbcd560e9c2ec4ef9986
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWL' 'sip-files00088.tif'
ba4fbb7f3d6a53d9be38d8d3e082ad9d
b99f3713304d03c428d017d5539a97926aebf935
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWM' 'sip-files00088.txt'
fb493deaf81e6de7229384068fc1be1f
dd3ab73638be3a7d5fff5d156c1431a324f3cd3e
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWN' 'sip-files00088thm.jpg'
55a411dd7e9b4a1e97f596b9226457ab
20ad82f3d0847b677ee9dfab63b39d846414f721
describe
'835604' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWO' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
41c3cf413f4eb8cf38744964b163dda9
eb48006d06acf7bd72418ef14549e2c7ff3155ad
describe
'90652' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWP' 'sip-files00089.jpg'
52b041d5145748ba8bd66a18b909721c
c78c621d8059ee85903ee7f836791e9dd454ecb3
describe
'26135' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWQ' 'sip-files00089.pro'
5db9c53c168710a49fdc57db2d853a4a
515c85e1d32e259a326df63f4fa909d3f4f015c0
describe
'35185' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWR' 'sip-files00089.QC.jpg'
1d7b784490edaa79fe0ae08989868c4f
30c10e655060a02fd0850dc76273036937ddc86d
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWS' 'sip-files00089.tif'
2b6d2df95a025e2987c7c7255428ab35
8fca43eefc9857ae7e37d7424851e1c711c7c1a9
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWT' 'sip-files00089.txt'
b3a7d7276d82a9c8b8481ec7828facda
32615d24677ed35984e9ea9864bfc7a17cab978c
describe
'10856' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWU' 'sip-files00089thm.jpg'
28dac61e25264672b212692aa6e78258
6cf2da5eeb64a822243245e4d44e697e4713251e
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWV' 'sip-files00090.jp2'
4853a3b963b432fad4a377e02646ea4b
4a916ba3346e87c040dcf7cd73f6d45a5b8d00b5
describe
'93547' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWW' 'sip-files00090.jpg'
1937f14520c579e92e6489ada935c75a
8165f47db2a949298161d0e0ff70b00fe2d88bad
describe
'28908' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWX' 'sip-files00090.pro'
7c41a201b221b133b4b420b9e40d926a
af24a3e1f78dea9f5dade4eebb327a1a4d4b774d
describe
'35966' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWY' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
fbd17e5b77aac6e4a3a77ec921c99c79
99c5922375e8bdc0cf5f77f491705f62959cde41
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIWZ' 'sip-files00090.tif'
1cfe74f55627795f2d346d1bb3324049
ab4fb152526ff27daf378867d63ca70086f6c58e
describe
'1168' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXA' 'sip-files00090.txt'
a654a9f1f26f995d4318b6d73ea99e4e
08cb929391df5ed8e529ceca628aa76f8a6d8ea2
describe
Invalid character
'10839' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXB' 'sip-files00090thm.jpg'
c65efbd9d1439a3bb02d28db165a5ea9
399c2bf8276e51e21a2d3e8cfa00bcbd87933fe0
describe
'835568' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXC' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
5855c86232a50c263bfeed9da4d5c371
d76d12ce98136d4d4a0f3135e5138099f2166926
describe
'90635' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXD' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
c096c2db0a84784aa6800fc19bd3ac4a
0feac70993c127ada1538e17449182ee1c946146
describe
'24752' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXE' 'sip-files00091.pro'
d1bc3c7fc2295b9c8f668467d1308abc
c65db5eee59768101bde070a688d6d889a1ae0ae
describe
'34984' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXF' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
9a252a7d584019dbc1f0ab373051d2c7
1590ffff6804150f93ee6bac06e26e1fe01fb914
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXG' 'sip-files00091.tif'
929670fe6b075b77398d57537f49d842
e94e0963e9bd5832bafba9c229ff984578a3fa20
describe
'1051' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXH' 'sip-files00091.txt'
cc303bde00f76e3be4a28fe143887cb4
2f8b35058b95c8c09c4f9cd29d7233ad24459d47
describe
'10652' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXI' 'sip-files00091thm.jpg'
44f82a6724efad8917b956aa013695de
5da84ee970a2287f3f8953ea14e4a9374c9fddb1
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXJ' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
43beef4ae734c2a0c7c6a5c4ef593119
e02eb64be5659178d3fc06d83c2ab02d59c5fe38
describe
'92337' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXK' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
fbc2b8dd910f553da5731762eb605656
0f3b5ce4901b5030946dd5bca9f9adb43adfa8fb
describe
'26918' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXL' 'sip-files00092.pro'
51879e484b0f3866e169a43779d45b0d
074f2da974f73ff93f9248be8fbe015705ac796a
describe
'34557' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXM' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
2aaf60409c596253372159da4e9a1e5a
2608e0687c188786951eb0f788caa7e629a68469
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXN' 'sip-files00092.tif'
f1639ac4f2c53cbec3d50d882a35e8a5
343788d191488402268c043343b645dabc10d4b9
describe
'1140' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXO' 'sip-files00092.txt'
f7281a604d6e052cb8efd2239971a05e
c1dc5ab95fdbc717f26d5584e9a876d5cb190501
'2011-10-30T21:00:20-04:00'
describe
'10823' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXP' 'sip-files00092thm.jpg'
a876c3b51479218bc233d314926c94a7
4eee4ea0af61cd0c788cdf139163cb416bcf6a68
describe
'835598' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXQ' 'sip-files00093.jp2'
c18ffa9dc5fa6d5568e33b5deb9ba190
c37982667aaa71b5b845b8b0591ecfaf0ad13108
describe
'94328' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXR' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
2379fca2c913eb8f6942489eaf8a4fd0
f070b529a7669d7692de46b4455959cab1585d22
'2011-10-30T21:03:23-04:00'
describe
'26393' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXS' 'sip-files00093.pro'
d3d9eca674a6e0c846ab850eda54ca06
ba963f172f14e7cb68b85d8bb20c24e82225ac2a
describe
'37146' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXT' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
1d000d6eec8a401a8bd9e147201f5597
a6e0ceea357d9e156fbfbf5d45aea42e8127a7bc
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXU' 'sip-files00093.tif'
9d84b57339b08321924b3438bf7b17e8
1f4dcbc941707451137ee6598f27501e0d9473b0
'2011-10-30T21:02:10-04:00'
describe
'1134' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXV' 'sip-files00093.txt'
520e653c002a521547ee6c26bfd17b32
ec867ebfcb1fb0f97485dc454a30452a7e726b92
describe
'11175' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXW' 'sip-files00093thm.jpg'
e84119058c069fc1d9ee0f18c527b0d7
8e459a16695f471c0f9422a8ccd93444fd0a943d
describe
'840066' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXX' 'sip-files00094.jp2'
9cc7c2c22446b2b3bd3018463ed2bb7d
6a4f60d09e2556c68991107016f2aedb0e33420b
describe
'93076' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXY' 'sip-files00094.jpg'
7483d710ce2891781a6e7a1dc7199d30
47a64e4c2e5e5c86f6426eb6f561c2c7c56dffb7
describe
'25053' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIXZ' 'sip-files00094.pro'
744935196b5436eaa8d0bfe96a784d6f
0b757bba8b8cad2299926c724df3dafc62ed9b3c
describe
'35516' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYA' 'sip-files00094.QC.jpg'
c50b29d14e08138d04f6f8d7540417c4
45d07cd27c6f6a0062f63ac52f3272b5ce9e8f91
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYB' 'sip-files00094.tif'
e32d2912a4836c3727babaa6e080c79d
11b2dc5d457884951b2e9ec8743efd9fd970d887
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYC' 'sip-files00094.txt'
b00421e4632133a69eaaba76f135e106
6cf1ff809f284fb72b14c4faf132f4eb7b5d020a
describe
'11081' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYD' 'sip-files00094thm.jpg'
8c8708e4e1d4cd4b976e83183ac7cdc5
d0ee69771b809c4cb86d28e21079bb6bd092ff2f
describe
'835602' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYE' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
5048e7bc2bc8ce71d80f79181f3361ab
e3cf4ab843ff44ff2ed455ca86c3b77a2d20eb35
describe
'90377' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYF' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
12466f4020bb33942a8aa8f34a4e8c4b
c3bba76fec212c004fc6d4cde5003654eeda6ce0
describe
'25046' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYG' 'sip-files00095.pro'
349ae1efc595b6a390fc1ae99183defc
0bcf5b8396fac6589c72fe4e9eddb1795a65d2d0
describe
'34769' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYH' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
274b1f319a4ab80347bd492d766ef5ce
96a3dbe0efb002dfcc9b8ddd24770bd5434baff7
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYI' 'sip-files00095.tif'
344a6f24b14b32a5a592a4a86f98ea6f
49b5995f30f4d3a06f5cdd527209ae2076b55d44
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYJ' 'sip-files00095.txt'
c3a454d2684094a1cc457de1605c6cb5
a264c2f2d5acad5eaef35424cfd7489766ef02b4
describe
'10599' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYK' 'sip-files00095thm.jpg'
69ca46224c5937fcecf6135d97bbbc12
fa659cbd55567353ba6f81061db7cb9e7dd8a852
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYL' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
3b20e8c458203e2ccfa2ddcf0b42cea7
82db97ec061d0df70502555bcafe5608a7020d5c
describe
'90628' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYM' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
14d8a9b372115798365b27cc37935474
ed01f8fd5579931c5b31ba466589b99f020ac72c
describe
'26681' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYN' 'sip-files00096.pro'
507f90e8e5c70f1900a780358fa2ad57
9ae43576e789ea21f916c1aa0c3c061f082b7c88
describe
'33999' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYO' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
f051e8a363e9f47ead9045a011d3140f
8396419a47c98597bc5a709b2440e511824f3053
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYP' 'sip-files00096.tif'
216e1527496923db4d15486cc74e956e
fb044d8696fca90872d580e0efd2d66a7f1c1886
describe
'1096' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYQ' 'sip-files00096.txt'
40f21792c8365a3c38797e06f461236c
540edd76a5eca753ab1247fa129c6e8e153cb259
describe
'10765' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYR' 'sip-files00096thm.jpg'
95069410a2e0d48351ea20d178f12e07
49a81c5d948660eb70588d3e2bf5555170e672af
describe
'835560' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYS' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
79f1728ec29bd77d890a0fcc787fc5be
3055f92e81ae99cf6b1a05a4f464c1a04772c4b8
describe
'95077' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYT' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
ca5facd94662e6b8bd134b94b3d93200
0f9ce78e6bf899a5f104c3cf63f8290ca605c4f9
describe
'26315' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYU' 'sip-files00097.pro'
479f2468410ae66a8dd3121c8e68bb9d
6bfb369a4ab7cb9ebbcb59d52bfa8009537e784e
describe
'37093' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYV' 'sip-files00097.QC.jpg'
f8145f5a74d7de687d3e03bcb0ee0001
092ef3662103613e5942f935222313bba15301e1
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYW' 'sip-files00097.tif'
1fd6c7833c00b6820d3e6a3f0e633739
24fc01db7ab5736e164f20895187abc51df63d29
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYX' 'sip-files00097.txt'
1956d92f3ac3c093a401ed12fdc05fb7
7e0d2a8b011e09ae7522c5d7b42b402370a3bf30
describe
'11029' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYY' 'sip-files00097thm.jpg'
d473383105756e81ff07c594124d16f9
f2652e5e77532a19c82832f7d85c50e67a6d8abf
describe
'840091' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIYZ' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
95cc3b69e33bbd93a593e7cf921ac61a
70902a69dd68e0f38a1e0c90b112eae4f0492714
describe
'69649' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZA' 'sip-files00098.jpg'
0300c0cf2dab54336900c6ea470b0309
d7cb375d128f0b4a2a637cb642dd3e5717beaed0
describe
'17545' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZB' 'sip-files00098.pro'
30e8637a0527b04136371cf2ff8db3ac
10d434d434a26cfd76319dcc2a80818cda6e6453
describe
'24853' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZC' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
2090e43a4fb6f4e0e8e1b7e717293a66
8c25e3fae40abb6a5281e6fc6716a711942663ca
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZD' 'sip-files00098.tif'
42b7af51d6a91153d0eba26afc29bd7d
03e911846a8623c2f1201843533a05e9dc55f358
describe
'725' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZE' 'sip-files00098.txt'
1b036d8e118a022629690e3fee1319c8
243c8e31d14f152cf3cdbbcb697523ea3cd4b69e
describe
'8190' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZF' 'sip-files00098thm.jpg'
c20a7c1447e8162ac63f4c331fed37db
e089a852aca7e0cc252c9d4f52df1ef8c814144a
describe
'784534' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZG' 'sip-files00099.jp2'
8a81da7afe43041336d34819018b3b8a
aa2665d32008060b761c7071b7298dce278dd67d
describe
'63783' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZH' 'sip-files00099.jpg'
47a05b8fd0b4d3e3cec959256acefa9d
32aaadb5e331818d0f4de064ca397abf2e78bf29
describe
'15370' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZI' 'sip-files00099.pro'
9c0c56e3c4f23a54649e45dea3cedc1d
fa284427c912082ec592b91d5b2b8e468e9b0ee9
describe
'23392' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZJ' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
57db4e9c6915a57b7a35f3344917bd74
2f51c6329a8547ef02cfde1945a277ceac7d7e91
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZK' 'sip-files00099.tif'
463832e5063d876dcffca2fdd9c1d90a
3be97f4f7cd5bb657e307e57fbede51dd20f0152
describe
'677' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZL' 'sip-files00099.txt'
bac1a85a9554a8e291b4ae0f642ff53f
5e491d7fd0dc9eac74f659c4cfd79ebe59991b02
describe
'7708' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZM' 'sip-files00099thm.jpg'
0ed463a181dc0a95c9deb78fa9932451
219750997228ce5fcb8d989d2f762c83e224a82a
describe
'840075' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZN' 'sip-files00100.jp2'
1cc7ab5d5377e4454cbcd9813973e2f0
9e4ab181a698c6ee92c42f5da51aeaaaf7102a45
describe
'93232' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZO' 'sip-files00100.jpg'
0a4651d2a8ed5abc104de07958113b48
6c60a25bdfeefe1cc987e73ce4e907d8add9eede
describe
'26151' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZP' 'sip-files00100.pro'
8351dc183924d9d9e79d2bc62a933eec
9090ad3f0cee5183430e9f373059ab63421478b6
describe
'35353' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZQ' 'sip-files00100.QC.jpg'
5bd5e98ee8fc8eb7ca85ad85b57ae1a4
c4b14e5ddd1d6abed4166d8bcb549858bbcc05d5
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZR' 'sip-files00100.tif'
a9328e9b897a4f9d31391eb3204411b1
ebd4c72285b343a23ebc8b069b321819bbe4dbf0
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZS' 'sip-files00100.txt'
a721810b9bf7fcf9e2b5b12f6c079a7b
5d4daa292f53740c02ad44116735f912fa91dfbd
describe
'10733' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZT' 'sip-files00100thm.jpg'
9f5ffaacd00fe9d942880b9e3a5d9b09
856f3a1412cde2d77a1d1fcba0327a29f92cbdda
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZU' 'sip-files00101.jp2'
902b5ad0b4c8dc99a947ded58af74b48
cce90b8e3f5276526aa9edc2b5c1f6b9b6c03f9d
describe
'86328' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZV' 'sip-files00101.jpg'
c3509004930a1c4b08696e70ecb10e05
1e41804777c31e8849c1b2322322917b5f1970c3
describe
'24601' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZW' 'sip-files00101.pro'
1c864ea2925867f4457ecf7c93158554
052dfc1ebc64d634a97697866bdaebe2fa135a26
describe
'33579' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZX' 'sip-files00101.QC.jpg'
b4094070ca7187d7a00a57decad2d45a
dd1dd349b75adbc62430c4606b944ffc506952bc
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZY' 'sip-files00101.tif'
68b3bf36e5c945d35e89862dd5f23d6d
ea00457a51b18167f961b7a74a2eaeee61fa1634
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACIZZ' 'sip-files00101.txt'
c067753d8c61c1300fcdd00fc287783b
3bae70889e673420c405e95c77bc079be0276976
'2011-10-30T21:01:28-04:00'
describe
'9822' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAA' 'sip-files00101thm.jpg'
0b11939891d7ce1d2b4d2ff79739acff
55997c44a19a1f24489dfce52754b04cf3963c43
'2011-10-30T21:00:55-04:00'
describe
'840096' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAB' 'sip-files00102.jp2'
4eabf38192d51e5bdb1b5fa45466ea8a
64e9af9a5661c6a00035822c0a74b10d8abfa056
describe
'88967' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAC' 'sip-files00102.jpg'
60566bfa45df1262d8ffb37283f578bd
3042d5417f6d03a5464112c398cb0857ebbe54c4
describe
'25918' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAD' 'sip-files00102.pro'
363967d8d1e21c429ed4041d415c3faa
a42ff0540057e3107ad567c7d94f85814231c56f
describe
'33555' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAE' 'sip-files00102.QC.jpg'
edbecc01f8238c48b1c1df960ed406a8
007979912a51206072abd544b2f7a602e5df33b8
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAF' 'sip-files00102.tif'
7b9a4beb3ef6c2d71479466636d9f239
49c99b35986cb0a11b9a0f599eab718c4e969bb3
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAG' 'sip-files00102.txt'
9b4446f88a29fe809bc52b229749160e
ba47ec266a8635ac6a2bd212397cc4348c996b29
describe
Invalid character
'10248' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAH' 'sip-files00102thm.jpg'
8b0c44d0cb865cfe4552ed5e421c5ea2
ef73f7b6483de085d35c90e81c44525f75ac3aa8
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAI' 'sip-files00103.jp2'
607301ed9816a82e9a3106cac500bf4f
8322e268c915e71d81880d0e506bc07c6bc5b85d
describe
'92974' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAJ' 'sip-files00103.jpg'
a01df6055c994b07f854b0c913fcc391
1996f67e8df04a96375dfc55d0b41129c264aa7c
describe
'26329' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAK' 'sip-files00103.pro'
cd15a13954811af41ed671ad51213dc3
8fe2a05bc2451438dda68d2842cf2273ffa00179
describe
'35570' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAL' 'sip-files00103.QC.jpg'
f11799cdbe778c26840c129876501356
282a9695aa726afe6dfd332c40fae08a393f7ac1
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAM' 'sip-files00103.tif'
413c57397e954f5edb0832b8207f8338
758ee77f55b2dc2a950fc694d8c39c19fa7691da
describe
'1113' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAN' 'sip-files00103.txt'
baebd2df5e31403c7caa9cfe026dea20
4ebe3892987f2b77c2ae2e4c26c773b2641a57a3
describe
'11004' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAO' 'sip-files00103thm.jpg'
33960f582af74764141cd2146b6fb05d
d2ac822182b7c200342f732adb09c3a334381567
describe
'840099' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAP' 'sip-files00104.jp2'
d032839293601ac65eb370fe4b5101fe
f7851e0a4c399ce1d2c6cd07b14a33d9cbb05fe6
describe
'91025' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAQ' 'sip-files00104.jpg'
482a3139cff65ea6dade717570f85ee4
202833907480e703b86db3f0d30e816913a284b3
describe
'26736' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAR' 'sip-files00104.pro'
deb83f01ebbd1174ef021f8e0b164d4c
86520dc887a6ba4bbb94f4ba96d6c9082798eaff
describe
'34831' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAS' 'sip-files00104.QC.jpg'
0e6ba98c550351ffbec549e667a1ebda
fe34e5f20816a39f8e2d3927b6de6bd877943e3f
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAT' 'sip-files00104.tif'
f80630a046627eebf1bc1b6473340b97
4fce724f4b749af8fffcbb1a01953c3e61adf374
describe
'1176' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAU' 'sip-files00104.txt'
7e31600ad59868cb0a95fca76247bc49
bb7a9c8d1d8e1977821912d2c8b54728817e5ef0
describe
'10669' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAV' 'sip-files00104thm.jpg'
b66db52b5da4f7d509fb491bc66525c4
2692a3d36073148a0153c4918b0bbc95a693f8a9
describe
'835603' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAW' 'sip-files00105.jp2'
71a39469ff1e5a1565c5b5fd85f3defc
a9322fb282bbb6fbcc17d3dcc0c55e299ff367ff
describe
'91181' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAX' 'sip-files00105.jpg'
6f9d60c82f82f11d625473f1d05dcb5c
57377db47abef3129ca25056af6690e868f624f5
describe
'24671' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAY' 'sip-files00105.pro'
b33af3210550eeae337c5c7840f99b50
9bdbb2a421892eeae89b80dc5547bfeacea582e8
describe
'35101' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJAZ' 'sip-files00105.QC.jpg'
2a602af018bbd32e28f51c789f0dbea2
22b8daac836b0341acc6ca0b8373b9523894c199
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBA' 'sip-files00105.tif'
0bd2e614a675121873091fc4f3c9392b
6ce678e6c16fa9ca1bd9e46a75f7328b69f8bfe4
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBB' 'sip-files00105.txt'
6bbd57831ec29d07db097b794c840f46
3c49111f01fad8c93a1d5426b66553180b387409
describe
'10884' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBC' 'sip-files00105thm.jpg'
52129e4aa6eab0e13a787246abad7915
1a0a2fd214481dd2917886a37cc0940930c216c5
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBD' 'sip-files00106.jp2'
820a0885cc7da1a7a1d16b71765ff3fe
70a06176e192ac59691698ee3899234f07b14fba
describe
'91792' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBE' 'sip-files00106.jpg'
f91e156bd82a6e7f24f4fed8837d6054
e5f4fbe94b3e6c83bbbc60b06cf62b5560e2c0bd
describe
'24806' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBF' 'sip-files00106.pro'
59434356181c6d502014ffb19e13ceb7
e8830370b4f057e062e0cea0eca7b5f88381fa0a
describe
'35898' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBG' 'sip-files00106.QC.jpg'
33331a5a835a7555839dd183aefb8ba3
008a0e8dd352985c5cd8e59655909e85582d2dc2
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBH' 'sip-files00106.tif'
48b8dcab03c62aa8525974352d08bd23
464c49067265c724da81cd21c2f783309c4c5fcc
describe
'1013' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBI' 'sip-files00106.txt'
26719c4ae0fdc27dec9ede8c14285844
455b7221cc8d783f2d9b03e7a20bdb18dbf87121
describe
'10897' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBJ' 'sip-files00106thm.jpg'
3f13c11bb6e55bb8a6b60b070beef57d
ef44d3bfa1cd68143807d01f0768ee0e6f38da7b
describe
'835592' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBK' 'sip-files00107.jp2'
aa3392fab6c764cbb9034e8fd36e068b
4f871a450119d21fd123646108020ff7c3b76c97
describe
'89702' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBL' 'sip-files00107.jpg'
599d33de99df201a90b9dc99b736c12f
5d83ada1645b01ed471fd9801611698d17d01fa5
describe
'26276' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBM' 'sip-files00107.pro'
4584c967ed03273f2370a32dd6de048c
81a86455f18f61195a7c4a0b33f58830f714c128
describe
'34574' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBN' 'sip-files00107.QC.jpg'
5a5a7de40b4d55e2f1f0a4370e634fc7
ab68d801a45228e2cfb10d71f95f8a0ac120ff80
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBO' 'sip-files00107.tif'
dd19461b2416a54255fcb4942daed0b1
1b7baa21fc2faca046683853e717aea524b41d22
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBP' 'sip-files00107.txt'
9ab59328843368f0a0ddafc3afaf4f1f
b9bd589a97bc3b24870bcddb808828bffead168f
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBQ' 'sip-files00107thm.jpg'
2df4ecc02e78f9ef74ed76e6c8ef8012
af5b092e28570dd61acecb245323e53b968dc0e1
describe
'840089' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBR' 'sip-files00108.jp2'
653d71a0a8389ee422980e9c56f10338
f35b946e2ff29265d733b99cf2a2b76ed76a3510
describe
'93882' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBS' 'sip-files00108.jpg'
cc61630a5c254620bd32d7f768ea584f
d48ee4c292b7a42032b340d229cb99a63715c878
describe
'25111' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBT' 'sip-files00108.pro'
173001af9ccf4f2c08ed9759961baaed
561b2412d382c81fdde51f73f4d231b3692f7d84
describe
'35690' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBU' 'sip-files00108.QC.jpg'
f1fac626d74ff743136b156a84eda561
60140bda2cee71750bd21dda4a5ff16cd2584614
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBV' 'sip-files00108.tif'
9c01657af68f9e620f6d93c6a86c2d5a
15ca8bc5b1e098d2c69a0e21710a86e1a0bd692a
describe
'1043' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBW' 'sip-files00108.txt'
ffe18429a64c615e9bd5675c481b8788
706c75f2b22f0209970b59c14791e9faf6ac582f
describe
'10848' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBX' 'sip-files00108thm.jpg'
8a311da96aa4407c4a59e837c6fdb740
7f92187b83c7009adcc71847649707b803582126
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBY' 'sip-files00109.jp2'
0c17e373fda2dcea96958d71d66cb850
f45f3db8dba3350d067147ba0cd5c6617874e6be
describe
'88442' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJBZ' 'sip-files00109.jpg'
f2fd99658d535820842a7630641378b6
f131d691bdc0c3bcc36df1955fbc046a576571ff
describe
'24147' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCA' 'sip-files00109.pro'
8150d1ff4d0abac79d24f7dd44ddae90
ee311d88ed798e1ef12ec951a24d27d9853a6f8c
describe
'33407' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCB' 'sip-files00109.QC.jpg'
68da29840bc1d5a53b7c4e7965b5695b
0d68a59f980a62848db8f3ccea71b7a0e67a7798
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCC' 'sip-files00109.tif'
a075fdc4209b10a6b7a939addfe798f3
84276c3523d941de18098f36012a7395602afb12
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCD' 'sip-files00109.txt'
b083a8d6f07effa5f5be2d0c7b61e73a
5aec522b2447a3a0d58a21dd4327dae2c56bc0a9
describe
'10139' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCE' 'sip-files00109thm.jpg'
390e028237ddc7ee9e7a56c086d920a7
6141df7337034718945ef3b88032944a31bf3f28
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCF' 'sip-files00110.jp2'
7e3da9fa330787f2bf37471966ee548e
2453d2fcd072190e1a679d432ec4ea4dc1aed3ca
describe
'89956' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCG' 'sip-files00110.jpg'
069768715360ef0fc86720c1a38055dd
907b83df7b8a5215b315527bbf6eaa513d3a05c8
describe
'25022' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCH' 'sip-files00110.pro'
55e09d4fe62b0702c14991488a7cc5b6
69bfd125407e7dcc2f9d1ebfd26df7a507ab0c1f
describe
'33767' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCI' 'sip-files00110.QC.jpg'
6b20d5e549fef4e30fcca28564e9855a
d58ba7791748fa25e2f9b7f7f141426db8d790b4
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCJ' 'sip-files00110.tif'
8b467a6f395d9932ee118f6d1b6d33cc
5269b5e31fbccb30807cd387e7694576dcbc6d2a
describe
'1085' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCK' 'sip-files00110.txt'
116de0116de4c97579649027ee6b48b9
d60cb3e8047d0e9b809a4bf92f22c3dd8cf7d0bb
describe
'10496' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCL' 'sip-files00110thm.jpg'
514498a47e2f87c84a4f8b67474eb83f
f8de6f409ed9c1b54336118478b9b11f811e6177
describe
'835565' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCM' 'sip-files00111.jp2'
ebb0c8d9515309c97efd98dddabea7de
03a2d992095ecca80a40238e028de04412757077
describe
'93416' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCN' 'sip-files00111.jpg'
81fb86176b9768ac5402c20cabf1c57b
2eb2fe76160089de402d37a852bbbf169322c14b
describe
'25436' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCO' 'sip-files00111.pro'
ccf2d7b90e7a9524572e9966256728de
24550f0262368313e67a19a123c7905a7de09011
describe
'34879' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCP' 'sip-files00111.QC.jpg'
c44583c9ae67425b547fcdfb8ac782d0
f1cc14091345e8ea6a20abea25f3ac11dc9f3c3e
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCQ' 'sip-files00111.tif'
2c7b7c2f01c3a32483380f0bb890de8a
47ebbceed1551f670103cdb187a29ed9df4c382d
describe
'1036' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCR' 'sip-files00111.txt'
c2536b56704723aae6253d5c5659182a
a591e00d0f13819a15ce4862252a6d2ce468c5c9
describe
'10333' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCS' 'sip-files00111thm.jpg'
f848632c94ea117aac10342d1b2f8e3d
bebb0cd923301a4d31a4e07061671107164fc75b
describe
'840078' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCT' 'sip-files00112.jp2'
84fe588bc146bcba9e673e8ed75baf75
4275fb57b941dd3cd2cbfa3b0df35154ef1706b0
describe
'93724' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCU' 'sip-files00112.jpg'
da567d3c209b078cf43e3c2ee8cd98b6
d180b2732fa51f8658a82727d4f3a038245269f1
describe
'25702' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCV' 'sip-files00112.pro'
b7ddcac6c7d7830bd3c9210ca24e3983
e95679849e077b5215f226f4c04fac2d156c1769
describe
'34687' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCW' 'sip-files00112.QC.jpg'
98d2fe837a0e064bfc390e0976223b7a
6508430d1fe51695586dd82b03e1417c3816a41c
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCX' 'sip-files00112.tif'
b72a4c4e34a39a3f5f8f8515aab5e0b3
121ebac1c3ce9c44082e51b949bcfdde051a713d
describe
'1094' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCY' 'sip-files00112.txt'
6fdb66d6e5bfb064a93a4eea18e08ad2
7da9e3cd7f042adad4571479dc420d5fd23fed56
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJCZ' 'sip-files00112thm.jpg'
ce91b652d09d2fa6bb54e838c0be2fb7
dfedd1313c1f6c1068dbc6ee5a9e63edff4cae42
'2011-10-30T21:02:53-04:00'
describe
'835601' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDA' 'sip-files00113.jp2'
bc0c4d05a143ee04b2331556ef9c05f6
b0123f7ea71fc194982bd55a8db277b7a0835c2b
describe
'95701' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDB' 'sip-files00113.jpg'
a856385cec6a88a7ad76cc707ca5b700
a0bcf17eecb44048d6c529d588561773e155cfe5
describe
'25738' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDC' 'sip-files00113.pro'
e29f4369ffce19e09ba24a1fc4f4cbf5
ee0110d081e9ff0bae10380e301a56ab47eb0b46
describe
'36500' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDD' 'sip-files00113.QC.jpg'
ee98b51c591cae03374781ee66b8cadd
0679a7a2df0945c9405837f8116707fb4a74f48d
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDE' 'sip-files00113.tif'
c8860c9c8af89bcb164ebebc4d5c43b9
021e57eb59cc94097a71eac6b34654aabbb80f0a
describe
'1030' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDF' 'sip-files00113.txt'
c1335eebf7f999aee7f2b840739fafb7
90d4154a5740e5abc6714b141b28c93db32b8ff8
describe
'10666' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDG' 'sip-files00113thm.jpg'
1112148e7832c4499e8fec0d9f6d0212
1d3bd0b6e9055539f6056a629dd3fd7de40808bf
'2011-10-30T21:01:03-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDH' 'sip-files00114.jp2'
a0de5d26654c23701d16886599aa61c9
03aefbfa0d0beb8a8171ef5854e8a5657cc4d8ef
describe
'93050' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDI' 'sip-files00114.jpg'
35c086c7773ee92f26c01ae92a69de75
7186b2ca4cda1b44774747efc11055d844702389
describe
'25759' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDJ' 'sip-files00114.pro'
6814dcdcd56be0967ba2833006fc8ee8
566407eec34ab6de89a7dda8e7e82a62823c3039
describe
'34696' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDK' 'sip-files00114.QC.jpg'
c9f289d1f260484ef04dbf4d7fa2f60b
3e7e0dcc53e003cc542338e584695b9e7fe78dc3
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDL' 'sip-files00114.tif'
a50131d8791aaba501325d9439b403e3
557350aeff6bd8aafa4e79133c55aa8bcee2d30d
describe
'1086' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDM' 'sip-files00114.txt'
732fb4325bd599a9737662b23fe9e38b
9ef4354fc354e449bf1b2480ba5381c29d19ba0d
describe
'10479' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDN' 'sip-files00114thm.jpg'
e4f128fc39ce6fdde3035455730a3a6e
5f3ab228248ac2336b61c79fde1a1f9255c0dcec
describe
'835571' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDO' 'sip-files00115.jp2'
a388a32d1c9a0ed798a25e3af7cd779e
4d8d9d17c7f7a46f267b7a13430371acc27a2f57
describe
'90979' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDP' 'sip-files00115.jpg'
ee6645407986fff6beef1e022dcf82ab
c04662003b30b62d6bfe98e7272f6e69bfcd834b
describe
'25146' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDQ' 'sip-files00115.pro'
c51f234eb1077f77a1507fb2d53b006c
af1aa0ddd858ec0446f5dfca0e6d19a7b8252845
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDR' 'sip-files00115.QC.jpg'
239ca024470890b99f0ac092c1d71cc6
8f41f98326f0fa2a92251326080047f558fcf5ad
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDS' 'sip-files00115.tif'
fe3f02be2cc798f1b68a9313f38911bd
43f24257919e14cd8290c87d9ded1386d22459d3
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDT' 'sip-files00115.txt'
a786c5ed186f85fa01cd1c5ba732251b
cf2324bbdc47f9fce5e98b240a66f5ce38cebfb8
describe
'10796' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDU' 'sip-files00115thm.jpg'
f92588dbb1d9a877457b3c17036ed626
8503af0632711fb8c51339ea8ca00c02f454dc94
describe
'840082' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDV' 'sip-files00116.jp2'
2b69c8c30b8049cbbdc3705d40369cf0
febb4c207dd74bba6a1a506ff018868be2992aa1
describe
'88466' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDW' 'sip-files00116.jpg'
2354f6f14cc2cb9ce922b0dc9ef6ec06
1526441f068f1842ea8d67876aaca4e9e07fd22f
describe
'24783' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDX' 'sip-files00116.pro'
f752d0f22aa769730b4b2982d0daf902
6cd32d65b06f8975f0bd1864910623c3353055ea
describe
'32791' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDY' 'sip-files00116.QC.jpg'
72a62c9dd700413ce1c0572bf9b4311b
3f53b2ee3700065e179a61b21fea0aa46175607d
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJDZ' 'sip-files00116.tif'
fcaede259b9c36c918ff5dcb83993242
ba85f16debae2fe3a609c2700b262b22a24946d9
describe
'1088' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEA' 'sip-files00116.txt'
e30c34faafbe0cfcc7536e1f3a805061
70589c46d913ebfe5e97823f08d1e4a47ec0523e
describe
Invalid character
'10409' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEB' 'sip-files00116thm.jpg'
cbbc35feaf93545e8e56929ca910144e
3f5beae7e0a8ee6128c3a4034c307c214819ff1e
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEC' 'sip-files00117.jp2'
9a5baabaa24826309727f384e5260870
28113107c897970d129e70044dce4840d085888b
describe
'81143' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJED' 'sip-files00117.jpg'
ebf5716420b88b5895ea05579525c0af
907cfbb6d144411a3d9436fee1e98674b23844f0
describe
'22032' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEE' 'sip-files00117.pro'
952b61df1714382d1cfb4b452e887fba
3ba667e529a4bef33378f8da6b074436ee17545b
describe
'31981' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEF' 'sip-files00117.QC.jpg'
705f4d307345811dbe3b3e16664a01a2
095fd302303facca3a329307ba04c6d1ff3eb02c
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEG' 'sip-files00117.tif'
fc15d85e19f152be51648d12ecdd8bd9
ed25c4646a4767b359adabf6de8ed0f481de56cf
describe
'954' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEH' 'sip-files00117.txt'
9d70779a26152cfada923dafeb265c81
2a245284b3ae1ea8b25d375fa3ab6562862d7aad
describe
'9431' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEI' 'sip-files00117thm.jpg'
fac2edc8a34579b9caa3800ab71d3e96
90b47b248b3c37a6461daa9777aec251883bb194
describe
'840081' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEJ' 'sip-files00118.jp2'
ebaed6c0fb1bdcf3f516dbfc64b7a504
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describe
'92150' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEK' 'sip-files00118.jpg'
0a97a48091fe98f1fe0b6004bdaf318d
9da3ba922953a5fe49b619f3e06492f3293f1fd5
describe
'26295' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEL' 'sip-files00118.pro'
0c7252c76fbc744bc33410f45e2f4437
8c2bd712ee8b92d7ecc50a1d57a40e3e67c2ffae
describe
'34661' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEM' 'sip-files00118.QC.jpg'
c2386b3fe3422474f5b302631486026e
90b9d605e572a01119734f3272c595a5765a14a3
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEN' 'sip-files00118.tif'
6241b0be0362795201f0a1a9dfe050c5
5c93463837ec0fd4dc819674dab7a0571ecd7995
'2011-10-30T21:01:06-04:00'
describe
'1126' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEO' 'sip-files00118.txt'
bb9f98964565dec1152242aecda4b216
d70683d27decc21a1df6347d391c53c115544d43
describe
'10740' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEP' 'sip-files00118thm.jpg'
17f6cd02db542e1477e0c4a50ac810b8
60b448aca6176551530829234db9041635299fad
describe
'835584' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEQ' 'sip-files00119.jp2'
5ca69fd2d2a92c0101e5c7ab6c0596f0
e2eb6d355a030f41aa4711d38c95c0910da01997
describe
'93428' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJER' 'sip-files00119.jpg'
2f673afa3ffe18cb908c07a782d0fe27
c51565a439904cf1d77d21828672dce063e0240f
describe
'26861' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJES' 'sip-files00119.pro'
9a450b324b2d1344e148cf0f413b5dfb
9680a97062798f6eded272ce154d03376f33c799
describe
'35370' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJET' 'sip-files00119.QC.jpg'
a5359e47d1fa13fadca0b1eae80eafb7
a6e7c72b282c33fe20cad660c411c50d9fdcb8ad
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEU' 'sip-files00119.tif'
4549ccc63d260ae52665ab11f8a602ca
ff6aa3af939835f47922c572fadf14f85180e1fb
describe
'1151' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEV' 'sip-files00119.txt'
c8a7f7a55ca151bc9cb37fa359dfad09
31e0c85c4905d5a136aefcd09b4a9d0ed2e6342c
describe
'10574' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEW' 'sip-files00119thm.jpg'
0217a817f089015534d368ddcf2ad2d7
0b0c7f2962b0be4004fe613028d91bb1414a2933
describe
'824781' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEX' 'sip-files00120.jp2'
c872b5ebcf4eaed259fca0626ddd5311
ab654d728a22d48296a1bf51bb67680a30182108
describe
'90523' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEY' 'sip-files00120.jpg'
acaa4b621aa47b0dbb39903e5fb13b5e
8d436642b7edb61be79b1e5fde95795b9ddac180
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJEZ' 'sip-files00120.pro'
80f6a107ee83fea9cd36c7e6677f85c8
9c2fce759a8355ebc424494e8292e3a1a8b5d103
describe
'34038' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFA' 'sip-files00120.QC.jpg'
bab1e79c755e81c4f2c27e21108c536d
6e492f0df6cbb5281adff8a4e41fc72d04807679
describe
'6604485' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFB' 'sip-files00120.tif'
893f5a8d737e0e55cc70f76e5b37dbda
fc7f50a3c0b7285b0ac05b8c8fbe2308b5a60f07
describe
'1022' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFC' 'sip-files00120.txt'
d8321aa6d8acb6dfcb0834c292ddead6
2d41b944e2c1d5ac17d6fb7ae4c5a4c612bb2be0
describe
'11382' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFD' 'sip-files00120thm.jpg'
de65f2ac547f6ab1f7846760a714d63f
37726a460f1675be8ab6bba47d20124eefe7ee85
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFE' 'sip-files00121.jp2'
2e80c23886832dcf02ae94d07ef0159b
8691ab4a535b8dbd15d89fd33090f88e2aca5435
describe
'95837' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFF' 'sip-files00121.jpg'
880371893133b528f73887828c1f5c3b
004872e3a9113f774cf225b8edbd2a94fe7d3654
describe
'25687' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFG' 'sip-files00121.pro'
40701a126acf48944bcd753894c5cc4d
f87ef8f017c981284f0a07659f533c480bda392f
describe
'37092' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFH' 'sip-files00121.QC.jpg'
11d87355852473e07368f57174dc49d3
016a438ab098a14198055b0f856c023ab30ce317
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFI' 'sip-files00121.tif'
084bc88ae95fd4131982cc80e95b6029
7315e0aeb19629d1a1121ae1453a916ce3c267d7
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFJ' 'sip-files00121.txt'
7a16c4a1cfff5ffe7b647939970fea28
7ccae6595cbe8f27b252d3fc1ffc808ddd021b82
describe
'11209' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFK' 'sip-files00121thm.jpg'
336270c708a4c36f93dae1748a251d59
c5ec426c1f7eee30376188b8e612bf2b5304fccd
describe
'824746' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFL' 'sip-files00122.jp2'
91af45a439615c92e2357fe51ac0f324
b69fa5b9789f6d652f8e6a79863df7e0e7b83389
describe
'86180' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFM' 'sip-files00122.jpg'
ef06280d2b65af7bd9e3a381ba72a2f0
9a329380a0a7fa7afe9250543607114950acc963
describe
'10054' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFN' 'sip-files00122.pro'
9940fdc39a6dd48a64f8cce89a97945d
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describe
'27947' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFO' 'sip-files00122.QC.jpg'
578c6e29dd23b95af90a8b56ce4620d3
95067f76b427b6584ff235eef6fc88879f12f702
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFP' 'sip-files00122.tif'
728ac3ab7690ecdc900222f7f2c80f27
27f2b157e4706d4a8d45a7dd2ad4717b5bd40cd3
describe
'426' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFQ' 'sip-files00122.txt'
26b1145e2eab00233568c7705674f369
771aaa7020bec0a85f4d1b4627c0d98e82d1ad7b
describe
'9309' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFR' 'sip-files00122thm.jpg'
09c8b1f879325c481f726f535c26e7da
b39b889b98e34fb27e9e07fffd12db3491ddd40d
describe
'835582' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFS' 'sip-files00123.jp2'
3397f6326d10c9e6a2f0b883700f73cb
8587ddc9b76ca9ed7faa67bed668470433d304b7
describe
'85723' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFT' 'sip-files00123.jpg'
63c555316c2901fa4b2abd0c4556d043
1b5a1133f97660b961c4381edfe0d97419ca2098
describe
'22436' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFU' 'sip-files00123.pro'
92d1cec08482155245d22524b454aa67
f1233c8c6a1074fa8d71453bb341fd25c45c8f1f
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFV' 'sip-files00123.QC.jpg'
71d279c4aaf64287298bcbbc5edee503
dc8a9136ac362be3a9ed57b79050449e6530f2fc
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFW' 'sip-files00123.tif'
75423c9a8b1d2cc9aeba5126bb071d66
929cb2a17a5f45ba1c2d5ac1ae8b1714fe59ba2f
describe
'910' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFX' 'sip-files00123.txt'
c31d7295c284fbaba65cb5dbe709f861
89d8cdc9b0948844273e58807e3c00d2ad7296f9
describe
'9904' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFY' 'sip-files00123thm.jpg'
22032afb2d376bcce19675cd1764b740
53828656e2e6f9b4541bd65aff98910f54a57f5b
describe
'824777' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJFZ' 'sip-files00124.jp2'
d1e4eb8518a62865e27c7c78cbe1c823
36d7a74332c592d4c622a597362cf2717be8c9f0
describe
'93704' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGA' 'sip-files00124.jpg'
885cd1967da80db2b94f73949a5f376a
5e5781ed1d5dd8a3a3f417d847a3b49874c70ce1
describe
'24976' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGB' 'sip-files00124.pro'
d058194708214979c0487119fca51a79
fc7a4b59d2f6cdfd18d28ca1969e50e553bdd57d
describe
'36623' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGC' 'sip-files00124.QC.jpg'
efcb228e157f6149a9a1e74b336aefbe
50fe203ecc5a57a2e23a7d22fcc78c919764061b
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGD' 'sip-files00124.tif'
b8e5e98dd10e9463169d4b94882562da
80aaeb13e2f1f21eda31e52b1b4f85befc77a42e
describe
'1034' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGE' 'sip-files00124.txt'
1b6b54c8f7f2dbaf1d613c49c2f11577
068626c73d4dbbe624b2910b2cdc91607e50f188
describe
'11449' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGF' 'sip-files00124thm.jpg'
9fb18fedcbac97b4b77124f7f1f6fcdd
b9958d6340c031731b323afc96165642474931eb
describe
'835564' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGG' 'sip-files00125.jp2'
b64d6eca2b450e1710d7dfbd20866c6f
dca96b49dc8b2b83d7b8bd6398304b57b3a3cd9e
describe
'91988' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGH' 'sip-files00125.jpg'
235ec53136780a6573e6f55355873f60
6a73030b378c1152c838eae320bc2ad9cfe55f0c
describe
'25831' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGI' 'sip-files00125.pro'
112949c110a43da32f5d3874ed0cae64
f1ee9bc4ce0891d8d7c3fdbb2f08c8ba1524bde9
describe
'35115' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGJ' 'sip-files00125.QC.jpg'
aa60d07dcff98e47d16ceee5470dc57d
196b5c5b225bbc0def6b3bebb21b77e4466e969c
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGK' 'sip-files00125.tif'
ecd79c62345e5460865d23e5082e6111
130412484c626e22efd78913286be2ad376c9d8f
describe
'1118' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGL' 'sip-files00125.txt'
fa3d701851979b0b18f5ca1a9600997e
3c9d199507f478f4098d3c1ace97ac7c4a928e09
describe
'10778' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGM' 'sip-files00125thm.jpg'
6d7552c3c27fcb26b10eccaee046912d
d19d721cd0ecf6a5f3c74fe76613981cc55eb362
describe
'824765' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGN' 'sip-files00126.jp2'
10b70c10d4beb538319b7f860822b2a5
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describe
'81579' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGO' 'sip-files00126.jpg'
cd582553817d109de040efedb96dd761
44e1397ca02d1467c7976222a04451de80fa1e8a
describe
'20667' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGP' 'sip-files00126.pro'
3b27f5205cb59df28f8385d2d0d797fb
1137ee12efa499a51bced47ebd773c68ea7f98a6
describe
'31595' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGQ' 'sip-files00126.QC.jpg'
e978a6d2dbc7c55aa2a096b70ef06860
8d3a2372f5548555949da3d08bae697928b9b762
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGR' 'sip-files00126.tif'
6a7799b083b29bd9c6b4f38e8b7c5660
efb2e14848d06435a21c4745c5a68eea0e039d81
describe
'866' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGS' 'sip-files00126.txt'
6a5b9215658aea80fa50edbcd41cb096
5d552f4f29bac0108005ddc1e202ca7124e521d6
describe
'10047' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGT' 'sip-files00126thm.jpg'
6be81eeeeaafbfd86405f4f2b7aa21d1
7bc9f5ce1f005bfb7957585318103cb8198cea55
describe
'855883' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGU' 'sip-files00127.jp2'
f5dadf9bdb23a4fe4547e1e92aae8489
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describe
'90393' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGV' 'sip-files00127.jpg'
26598a3f4c24c17102c96e5132edd92c
bc86a1f9fd2b8cd4accc0f3c8787ce7abcb9a972
'2011-10-30T21:01:44-04:00'
describe
'25761' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGW' 'sip-files00127.pro'
1e74233d05d70ff999a2bf69e38f3f23
d4b35b4171b58ba30b98f91090f10f5889970e8b
describe
'35314' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGX' 'sip-files00127.QC.jpg'
78e8197a57a58de3a9079a496e68638c
51bb5d630f7e907ffb4ab3e9e7f18ecbfaaa6dd4
describe
'6853569' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGY' 'sip-files00127.tif'
f955575895b1581c436f769264d3c0be
ee178e273582cd05c7277a1d5a254545059ff392
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJGZ' 'sip-files00127.txt'
839c01531140f592acff906175160598
9b849b334d2947bb269042dc4743265f1a509b20
describe
'10618' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHA' 'sip-files00127thm.jpg'
dac4994475a2a1689469f1e6014772c5
cf2efb3f1e94ed3cfb720b6499966948f1342447
describe
'832107' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHB' 'sip-files00128.jp2'
11c10f9e1bb15e6bf252ed202fb3bf58
0b72fffd553193c687a622304be995056e4d981f
describe
'89096' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHC' 'sip-files00128.jpg'
7e91c460fb69843ece91c69a39ffabd4
693fa89ddca747e00bb4f4871e4980a227b4d3eb
describe
'24502' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHD' 'sip-files00128.pro'
cd666bdac34c13dfa0fd461dba173f01
8795e7d3669b3958721e4eae2fa437931cfd86a1
describe
'33260' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHE' 'sip-files00128.QC.jpg'
fc9555891ca139a632ae5c0e1dc33d8e
23986915a29b134508092e9996b7ee4316ec6a1e
describe
'6663095' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHF' 'sip-files00128.tif'
785e966a757c2f479dab64635e0a263e
e3461270f11d34035cb066dafa05d864f636b96d
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHG' 'sip-files00128.txt'
5c1bb30e8d7f4567ee89c06b9b5e34f7
41291fb3abb0dc06a64adc454bad2f9d4b432a5c
describe
'10446' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHH' 'sip-files00128thm.jpg'
ae17bd1d0d2bad086e970ed1133a9456
54ba81015abaf5f6b4f836b12842e98274dc7f25
describe
'855905' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHI' 'sip-files00129.jp2'
dc104c4bafca60258f02e313324b8fbc
b112cd32c9492b24dccc56d92607291e7a9984ad
describe
'92715' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHJ' 'sip-files00129.jpg'
866ddab9178fe4e3ef179dbdef363856
343813e2806c4184264ceb5c2ace8da5906e8bea
describe
'24883' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHK' 'sip-files00129.pro'
c2dcde12e944ad8e34ca870fa510f9a4
43612c3c5c0af8b02c3eefc6c28f14355ae57c97
describe
'35389' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHL' 'sip-files00129.QC.jpg'
694ffc53f845988268ce2118488cb9a2
19af2dabceb8d6b8c790b177e37826214db76280
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHM' 'sip-files00129.tif'
8476509fbe333d28fa30b42b4efd2b0e
304edf3d43c28fb62c3228de0a64eb9ea900a648
describe
'1000' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHN' 'sip-files00129.txt'
eff2833934bc32b0d43219bb91d86f0e
0d69f43514ef89bcf2670f9b454f8bc4cb19596b
describe
'10838' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHO' 'sip-files00129thm.jpg'
bce4374d50c544c3b244cec3a04789ad
a336c07010c609222ec651149f0ba1228bfd7657
describe
'832064' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHP' 'sip-files00130.jp2'
46988fd165e6341c4a54159cbd378ba4
c77c9e8681887d608e3f48c644582b0bec80c703
describe
'92192' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHQ' 'sip-files00130.jpg'
6867518471e29a875bba47eaee150b16
455ccb524aa737bef1dc72f3addd4ee913609bd9
describe
'23780' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHR' 'sip-files00130.pro'
6275caa26fbd01c8fe866098120c3872
cbf0a43c4d8b8608b2a9779802d3841c6effc5c7
describe
'35832' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHS' 'sip-files00130.QC.jpg'
0c88ac319d5a8b651cf85bb15aa25202
38c80c9027b76b4e254c4493fdc521140336d786
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHT' 'sip-files00130.tif'
87fc439d07d4d8a7f9cf1c77c2f4fd28
46a034748bbe65d857b264de0666d8bbad31a717
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHU' 'sip-files00130.txt'
90efbf2bf443df0f7eab75937a041087
220a4136f98449e9ac2011b684621d9be95e1c3d
describe
'11018' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHV' 'sip-files00130thm.jpg'
7e4635f0393b402a1086d7721206522b
1463b7125c18766a4c1c489a266f009b92251348
describe
'855916' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHW' 'sip-files00131.jp2'
feba60b4bff571ff32663fe159b15a13
7bd92dd0a8994aebca4b98199595dd62bc29ab39
describe
'87313' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHX' 'sip-files00131.jpg'
f1bbde62e936a3ed3634447465fc2c7f
6faf3c8f8dc6852fa2e9ae272882b9f74fb9b5db
describe
'24053' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHY' 'sip-files00131.pro'
6d408684ad937acafda2d54b1ea4ed8b
4971ffa8e29b0cd82a04cc2854891ca2d5dc7bd0
describe
'32858' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJHZ' 'sip-files00131.QC.jpg'
35f288444ffc93c95334f809ebf563ad
741f9486165adb6f6effefb3e8d65b194bee983d
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIA' 'sip-files00131.tif'
d24f23f8a2993cbf78590b7f605255a5
ce676d680d4d91d47bf13a95f6d3cd08ecf774b8
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIB' 'sip-files00131.txt'
1a2bc7c50dadc48649492e96267b9d95
5a04e34fbe1cb097ed466833c1095833b273ec7f
describe
'9915' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIC' 'sip-files00131thm.jpg'
96414d3c0d374457cb899f727b646ea4
bc764b7fabbcc0ab20fdd19a6d9a24182e02ce30
describe
'832081' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJID' 'sip-files00132.jp2'
e6a535bc12afcdcd3a0abccaa1eb4df5
caf08a958fcfabd2ce96bfd76a69be1f49da85b5
describe
'93041' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIE' 'sip-files00132.jpg'
13b6aaa389168f3d4aacc7258afc3483
32a079cbee001f139183913a078879d6c763ae87
describe
'24366' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIF' 'sip-files00132.pro'
e53a86e7b2bba9b5b0f0a3b4e5297f24
4a54cae050d185437ed009c8108f4a739fb8e526
describe
'35105' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIG' 'sip-files00132.QC.jpg'
a9479a01818c0f8c936317190d1957df
3dbb4fbc3f4197442d2c427dcd879c904f267894
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIH' 'sip-files00132.tif'
a6a0c8b32b53ff1f6e3c8a7b9a925865
60393d03897c808d462457df12a5ec69d316013f
describe
'1007' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJII' 'sip-files00132.txt'
e5c4231f587891c73698ef901e591daa
a019acd6bc49c16974a13c99731a1628760ff844
describe
'10626' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIJ' 'sip-files00132thm.jpg'
227d35a02f4c920527d1a9e36fa8c92c
599d71a1f7fac58d94e36f7d73fb9b06a7c29420
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIK' 'sip-files00133.jp2'
cdf4c982fb1567e6d0a62da346bceb3a
9cc4bd6097ece41914b29fea2fc26330f54764be
describe
'93104' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIL' 'sip-files00133.jpg'
7fab4f30b8203c09448382ffb51bcbf0
fba3e37a4f6dd643a48412602622e9ceec045b9a
describe
'27805' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIM' 'sip-files00133.pro'
f5b7188cfb1c7c23f57af4e70befe30e
3ae11e861aec686a7d4ee1a455daefee13407678
describe
'36411' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIN' 'sip-files00133.QC.jpg'
6a0434729b0c4ba76869081c6b083fbc
733c107ee9d970922b8a1dce8b5a3950d3648127
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIO' 'sip-files00133.tif'
2852e8389bacd9b0e086b826e84f3494
a83e50a21a025f5b220dbeb703783510e5274b17
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIP' 'sip-files00133.txt'
c9b14956c76ea02f04ce006bea19f9eb
31da1484136cf7ab0c4b642810e5b98a4189f89e
describe
'10641' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIQ' 'sip-files00133thm.jpg'
705f686d9f7df9afe4e3f52f6f3d120b
f5a0861fc35ae3da72f8d0bb1759279834f5a157
describe
'832099' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIR' 'sip-files00134.jp2'
e9c075e1c99b3c9aa1d151dc0ee21997
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describe
'86517' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIS' 'sip-files00134.jpg'
5b6f29e531ccfaca9e00c8353adbc0ff
42c1edf4cf97d5d36b2790d76fddcf477f8ede5d
describe
'23447' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIT' 'sip-files00134.pro'
3470cc5f983a2397564130c73f981f44
dd5648c2a0d62a20d49a60ae2d5aba8ddaf87529
describe
'33541' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIU' 'sip-files00134.QC.jpg'
dc357f8e2fc4f0bdcaf5cfa9f4e8cc11
8690e9b9d7ed268ae50bcdbb52d8fccd39ba5d4b
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIV' 'sip-files00134.tif'
55e175a8ed691ca5206f5466bad42400
39d50f3900d4d9a27d32f9e7b06aff4a8067a475
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIW' 'sip-files00134.txt'
c98d5a34ed6d0691e3110fa6e2717017
1a7e73b94c884c7a5745894ace1302958aa1bc20
describe
'10572' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIX' 'sip-files00134thm.jpg'
16fdce8060f2076062c8d5fa58122401
ed6269536dde21eec25793a111be11c6650cf0c2
describe
'855873' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIY' 'sip-files00135.jp2'
d79d92668a14700e005485b2ff674b3a
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describe
'84915' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJIZ' 'sip-files00135.jpg'
6e83b764364f7d7de3a24ca7be997047
2c03999e36d4ab73d2d8ddabe20ab6cecb47fd4b
describe
'23320' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJA' 'sip-files00135.pro'
964313b9bbfe8e5bfc8ee47059a1ff39
329f81e4fce2156b77c16b959638e6c61d14cccd
describe
'32787' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJB' 'sip-files00135.QC.jpg'
63522574bb0e7a529801745635257d57
694b4f6ea37861804525b635e61cf0329ab93ad6
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJC' 'sip-files00135.tif'
92a3f3bd62913a1a6051d01eb1995f91
38cc8dae160d7d188193cc02e41bd258a27c0b76
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJD' 'sip-files00135.txt'
4a5f9498e4d774216b5204132f572214
bfbfe19bef0bac082beda2b154f7d86a47dd61fd
describe
'9957' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJE' 'sip-files00135thm.jpg'
5aa11f8acc5adcd7d86c3b3bb61acd27
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describe
'832080' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJF' 'sip-files00136.jp2'
ae98f90f80a0581a0b85ae5d607036ce
879d25242ecb854b75293560b892d1df832b5882
describe
'91460' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJG' 'sip-files00136.jpg'
2d932c553edaa5200c5405ed351e23d1
718d2175e13c313e6a8a9ed1eb9acefa3a754dd9
describe
'25254' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJH' 'sip-files00136.pro'
9f361f600d5aa2fafcf1206accec2321
33bc308bedc92db9f2af4ce0a9c88d82eb9e5ec4
describe
'35304' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJI' 'sip-files00136.QC.jpg'
6cf4147d9d6fc821405b9aba5a28e620
b8e892c9dfe17a4a706a949893c4509eef03a1e3
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJJ' 'sip-files00136.tif'
5352ffb1c5e89a470cbbafc3a6725936
6e3c714a4508645d401bbd0402fc7abde9ca7016
'2011-10-30T21:01:45-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJK' 'sip-files00136.txt'
a9c0d57302bbe61c740afe9ff11cef70
db371e781d1f4d451a865c26fa6e3ce14fb1081d
describe
'11126' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJL' 'sip-files00136thm.jpg'
9a6d59cea459668b2529d82dde11b058
ac32d1a2756c4d32ec7fd4954635ff5c2fc6eb83
describe
'866507' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJM' 'sip-files00137.jp2'
32694685d3776d6ac2565a9e4a246fdd
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describe
'90347' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJN' 'sip-files00137.jpg'
5dc541351dcabf632c60813ed4f73614
13730a62fc9dac17e16aa8fb4290b9de137b3cb8
describe
'26594' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJO' 'sip-files00137.pro'
9d82d31efe55f016b8f045d5392e844a
1a852cf9677a9e2b59cf36ae34db5966d0d615a6
describe
'34002' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJP' 'sip-files00137.QC.jpg'
635c57d22560cbd5d790cac5d88ec068
200d4cf39c6be1267ccf7a2910864060da6008d5
describe
'6940955' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJQ' 'sip-files00137.tif'
ba82417c90879838b0a87211b916425b
a4f9b0de46613f2ed3cc736391628ce11267242b
describe
'1115' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJR' 'sip-files00137.txt'
4076d33eb255207c37fa1d76037e4080
cfe9bb1374996731d4cb440945a31bb9c61e82be
describe
'9806' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJS' 'sip-files00137thm.jpg'
39dfec8dca16b8c3b0af31808cb74f8d
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describe
'852871' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJT' 'sip-files00138.jp2'
34b436850639ca12f22547a68452e1df
00a20ab7d5714b8593fc7be1ab0f5827dcdd0f7a
describe
'86030' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJU' 'sip-files00138.jpg'
ec254a45f37d4910b33198b2ad42f59f
7318932d5011004c7a7cc40e90ae2c569b31183d
describe
'23933' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJV' 'sip-files00138.pro'
0e7c26b9437cd5c9c470e51a0a551291
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describe
'33240' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJW' 'sip-files00138.QC.jpg'
b5b5c2eb3b443ad04ad8146951b4c529
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describe
'6829301' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJX' 'sip-files00138.tif'
280b241c4cd02c65b71257bc84c47c60
1b29a8f8600e854bccedd9012ca09c367a458a3f
describe
'989' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJY' 'sip-files00138.txt'
778721d0832cbba7e1c6b10753214c28
988cc2956704fa240837139283b3dba5c968321f
describe
'10195' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJJZ' 'sip-files00138thm.jpg'
f89c49c02c2a28256ff3f3ef1770685d
bb97b5083e5402bc55e3f56ef270a3443e9f952f
describe
'866561' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKA' 'sip-files00139.jp2'
7e4cb9266b37c92c73e32a2427a26d7b
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describe
'77927' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKB' 'sip-files00139.jpg'
fb29c4fdca1e8a097d91d0fabca84b92
5edb3fa09616cb7df070d8ee0ce4347794525206
describe
'20138' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKC' 'sip-files00139.pro'
437e67fba230a9ffe30d9a37c8de216e
fab7225355f09bf1869bae71a479dea131801241
describe
'29300' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKD' 'sip-files00139.QC.jpg'
d267d71fe6ec52f3693a6709e2369ac8
ce3b2e3fd6d2d119a30c29c0492979a54af938ca
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKE' 'sip-files00139.tif'
574fa29ed85b9b5ba9216b93d047a76a
9e6de8de6a24e004761f455e4a677c1e362a793e
describe
'832' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKF' 'sip-files00139.txt'
8aacc162a4aae8c604832bf154d4b796
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describe
Invalid character
'9021' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKG' 'sip-files00139thm.jpg'
7ae5344e74358b51fdc715d9194489ad
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describe
'851685' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKH' 'sip-files00140.jp2'
b71332440971ae2cd4d3b9ed7f0f7203
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describe
'68066' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKI' 'sip-files00140.jpg'
3d420d7d3e07fcf1fdd764bf3a4563b8
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describe
'17511' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKJ' 'sip-files00140.pro'
f9c2289aeed44043a25357741b489210
4474aad361f7d83add5bbee79269cbcbb4b1507d
describe
'25714' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKK' 'sip-files00140.QC.jpg'
0b4f918d5bbbe9659933586656bcb53a
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describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKL' 'sip-files00140.tif'
625e73197a2041efa99ab1a961c824bc
52d40080254bc8cfc38d83bc3817b4b5cc65bcd0
describe
'697' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKM' 'sip-files00140.txt'
dad0cfbc236fe5042fe1fd01c3dfd0bf
e8b6678a8d626aab0997a2b23d68de609120c4fe
describe
'8337' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKN' 'sip-files00140thm.jpg'
bb0284031e8b3b041165b1c13615a919
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describe
'866549' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKO' 'sip-files00141.jp2'
b80731e3873d2e8c3b278b09aa8c45b7
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describe
'81626' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKP' 'sip-files00141.jpg'
7f87b4a882b56cb4103ca695b084abc9
4d963f0c06a773025f08ffa4cf88bf502b7166e4
describe
'21701' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKQ' 'sip-files00141.pro'
d32a296330812a76a69a3ad305ca7792
78bf7adc9a4deef93686c4159163128af4b9a66b
describe
'31604' 'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKR' 'sip-files00141.QC.jpg'
ce3c7c36b003f24e767c5ba0a564c51d
3205f0dda7d46f8a900adf27f9de1a62cf4736e1
describe
'info:fdaE20081023_AAAAYXfileF20081026_AACJKS' 'sip-files00141.tif'
fa6820db7d2bd539287c8936dac72bba
8e05b5b96da3214ea5e1bbf9adaf0f5874a59927
describe
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The Baldwin Library






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THANKSGIVING NIGHT.

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JOY AT CHRISTMAS.—see p, 87.
9e
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THANKSGIVING NIGHT:

OR,

TALES TOLD IN WINTER WEATHER.

Written for the Massachusetts Sabbath School Society, and
. approved by the Commitiee of Publication,

BOSTON:

MASSACHUSETTS SABBATH SCHOOL SOCIETY,
Depository, No. 13 Cornhill.

1851.



%)


Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1851,
By CHRISTOPHER C. DEAN,
in the Clerk’s Office of the District Court of Massachusetts,




Chauksgiving Wight.

A STORY OF NOVEMBER.



Ir was a plainly furnished little back par-
lor as you ever saw. ‘There was no centre
table in it; no piano-forte ; no pictures; no
sofa; no book-case; no gas-lights. What
an empty room! Not at all,—it was, on the
contrary, quite full.

First, there was a baby in it; and the.
baby’s mother; and its three brothers; and
its two sisters; and its father; and the cat;
and the cradle, the baby’s, not the cat’s
cradle; and a huge work-basket; and a
table with the tea-things on it; and a clock
in the corner; and a geranium in the win-
dow; and a glass lamp; and a stove; and
a Bible; and a hymn-book; and a rocking-




8 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.



chair; and nine other chairs; and a stool;
and an ink-bottle; and a broom; and a
closet-door.

All these things November saw, as he
looked in from the shop, through the glass
doors of the little back parlor. ‘The baby
was looking at the flame of the fire, and
seeming, as is the way with babies, to see
wonderful and mysterious things in it; the
mother held the baby, and wrapped a rag
round the youngest boy’s sore-finger; the
youngest boy was intent on that operation ;

| his next brother whittled a stick with a dull

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knife; Susy played with the cat; the cat
played with Susy; the eldest boy dipped
his fingers into the sugar-basin ; Jane who
was setting the table, scolded him; the
father satand thought; the cradle, impelled
by the whittler’s foot, rocked now and then
with great violence; the work-basket ran
over with stockings to be mended; the tea-
cups clinked into their saucers, and the tea-
spoons tinkled beside them under Jenny’s
hand ; the clock in the corner ticked bravely,
THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 9

atietetuniddiinia EEE ELI ne

unconscious that its hands were half an
hour too slow; the geranium in the window
drooped for want of water; the glass lamp
smoked; the stove thawed the ink in the
bottle ; the Bible and the hymn-book waited
on their shelf; the rocking-chair held the
mother and the baby ; the chair which sup-
ported the father was poised on two legs;
the other eight stood more soberly on four;
on the stool sat Susy; the broom cast a
little shadow into its corner ; and the closet-
door creaked as Jenny went to and fro with
the tea-things.

Who would have thought it was Thanks-
giving night? No one spoke for a long
time. At last, the father, rousing himself
a little, said, ‘‘ Is not tea almost ready ? It
seems to me Jane, you are slow to-night.”

‘‘T am sure it is not late, father,’ said
Jane, peevishly. ‘If James didn’t keep
stealing the sugar, I should have been ready
by this time; but it is not six yet.”

Here the clock tolled out six full, sonor-
ous strokes. The father and son laughed.





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10 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.

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LRBALLAL LLLP OS

‘That clock is slow too,” said the father,
taking out his watch.

— “ Yes, I wish you would set it right,”
said the wife.

Jane went with a cross face into the
closet, and came back with some dough-
nuts. James tried to take one, and missed
it. Then Willie laughed at him. The
father bade James sit down and be quiet.
The mother reproved Willie for making so
many chips, and told him to put up his
knife. The cat scratched Susy; Susy
struck the cat, which then slunk away into
the corner in the broom’s shadow.

Oh, what a dull Thanksgiving evening!
One hopes the homes of the Governor and
Council are more cheerful.

And now the boy with the sore finger
frets, and wishes he could go to bed; and |
the baby cries, because the mother attempted
to lay it in its cradle. At last, even the
mother’s patience gives way, and she says,
‘Well, I shall be glad, children, when


THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 11

Thanksgiving Day is over, and you are all
safe in bed.’’

This will never do! said November to
himself, and he went away from the glass
doors, and into the street, just as Jane
announced that tea was ready, and the
family drew round the table.

“ James, see if that stair door is open,”’
said the father, after a few minutes’ silence ;
“it feels very chilly here. Wife, these
dough-nuts are not very good, are they? I
thought housekeepers always contrived to
have some good cake at Thanksgiving time.
I can’t eat these.”

James, coming back, put his cold hand
on Jenny’s neck. A fresh complaint fol-
lowed. ‘I'he mother sighed, and filled the
baby’s mouth with bread and milk. Jane
had burnt Willy’s slice of toast; George
put his feeble finger through the handle of
his mug, and cried out with the pain. Susy
scalded her mouth with hot tea. Pussy
got nothing. » The father thought of trade,
and expense of winter fuel, and winter


12 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.








clothing. Wife and child must not expect
much indulgence this season. Times were
hard. Most men had large losses, and
small gains. Such a family too, to provide
for, he did not know how it was ever to be
done. So he sipped his tea and grumbled,
and ate his toast, and was discontented ;
and Thanksgiving was only a name in that
room,

Just then came a knock at the door; a
Single, faint knock, as if the person outside
would a little rather no One should hear.
“Hush!” said Amos Reed, ‘“ somebody
knocks.”’

‘“No!” said the Test, “it is a loose
blind.”

‘You promised me a long time ago to
secure that blind,” complained the wife.

Her husband only stirred his tea with
great energy.

Knock! knock! Two knocks this time.
Amos Reed took the lamp and went to the
door.. The’ wind blew the light out, the
moment the door was opened.



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THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 13

‘‘ Now the light is gone out!” said Mrs.
Reed. Then those in the room heard
voices speaking, and the outer door shut,
and Amos Reed coming back. But he has

Some one with him. ‘‘ Come in here,” he
Says. “ Here, Jenny, light us this lamp
again.”

After two or three attempts, this was
accomplished, and the family saw, standing
in the door-way, a poor woman with a
bundle in her arms, and a child of four or
five years holding by her gown.

The master of the house explained that
it was a poor woman who came to ask for
something for her children to eat. “I
thought, wife,” said Amos Reed, by way
of apology, ‘‘ that as it was Thanksgiving,
it would be a sin to send any body away.”

‘You are quite right, my dear,” an-
swered Mrs. Reed, pleasantly, every wrin-
kle smoothed out of her anxious forehead,
by the spirit of charity. ‘ It would have

been a pity not to ask her in.”’
2 .

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Ff

14 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.



‘ Put down your bundle,” said the hus-
band.

‘‘ And take off your hood, and sit by the
fire,’’ added the wife.

‘¢ Mother, shan’t I give this little girl a
doughnut,” asked Jenny, and James hand-
ed the plate to his sister.

The bundle proved to be a baby, another
baby, and its feet were duly spread out to
the fire, to be warmed, and the pale mother
smiled to see its pleasure. When her own
wrappings were taken off, she seemed a
neat, comely person, still quite young, and
mentioning her name, the Reeds found that
she was a neighbor, who had been spoken
of to them as a very respectable and deserv-
ing woman.

Amos Reed’s heart smote him, that one
of his neighbors should, on ‘Thanksgiving
day be forced to beg a little food to keep
her children from suffering. Why had he
not thought to call at her house the evening
before, to inquire if she needed any thing?
He was not so poor, he hoped, but that he
8

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THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 15

could assist a neighbor. Things had not
come to that yet. |

Then the stranger was made to sit up to
the table with them. Finished ? Oh, no,.
they had scarcely begun their meal. Jenny
was directed to put more tea into the tea-
pot; the creaking closet door was again
opened and shut, and a fresh loaf cut.

How charming it was to have two babies
at the table; how they looked at each other
and stared, and nodded, and marveled,
and how the new baby relished its bread
and milk; and what a dear funny little
thing Peggy was, and how happy a night
Thanksgiving night was, nobody can know
who was not there to see.

Amos Reed told his wife, that the dough-
nuts were not so bad, after all; and re-
marked, that for his own part, he preferred
a good doughnut to most other kinds of
cake. Jane and James were the best friends
in the world; Willy liked -his toast to be
done very brown, he said, and George
found it easy to take up his mug in his



isin ani ng ila etre alesis tal

16 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.

right hand, instead of his left. Susy was
too busy with her little visitor to remember
her scalded mouth; and there never was
happier tea-table than theirs.

‘“T am to blame, Mrs. Walker,” said
Amos Reed, that I did not come in to see
you yesterday. I ought to have seen that
you had your Thanksgiving comforts.”

‘Oh, sir, I had no claim,” answered
the guest.

“Yes, you had. Here was I, surrounded
with blessings, a happy and prosperous
man, who should not have let the sun go
down, without knowing that those on each
side of me, had some share of the good
things of the season.’”” Amos Reed went
on,—‘“‘ I have the best of wives, and good
healthy children; a flourishing trade; no
debts; (he had forgotten all about the hard
times), and I did not send you even a tur-
key to keep your Thanksgiving. I hope I
shall be forgiven, and I’ll tell you what V’ll
do, just to make myself feel a little easier,


THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 17

Nnencnencnabiehiiencennennantnsinnnnanmapminmnnnnionn,
you know; I’ll send in a cord of wood, to-
morrow, and some flour and meal.’’

Amos Reed looked at his wife, his wife
thanked him by a look. “If Mrs. Walker
will accept them,” said she, “I have some
very good clothes which Susy has outgrown,
and which would about fit little Peggy.”

Here Mrs. Walker began to speak, but
her words became inaudible, and soon died
away, smothered by emotion, as much as if
buried under the cord of wood that was
coming. ‘The children began to play at
blind-man’s buff, and Mrs. Walker told her
new friends, her story. It was a simple,
common story enough :—the husband un-
fortunate, perhaps improvident, though that
did not appear ; — discouraged, —sick,—
dead. Her relations all gone; the nearest
remaining, some cousins, poor, and an uncle,
rich, but displeased. There was no hope
from him. She could get work, sewing,
washing, ironing, any honest work. ‘'T'o
night was the first time she had ever begged.

It was very hard to make up her mind to
2*
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18 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.
it, but the children were so cold and hun-
gry, and she had no money left.

“ Don’t say a word about it,” cried Amos
Reed. “It was all my fault. I should
have gone to see you. I can’t forgive
myself.”

‘“ And I ought to have reminded you,”
said his wife; ‘‘ we are both to blame.”

Then Amos Reed bustled into his shop,
and came back with a piece of ninepenny
calico, from which he insisted on measur-
ing off two gowns, one for his wife, and
one for the widow. They grew very merry
over it, as he made them stand up to see
which was the taller of the two, and they
thought it wonderfully amusing when he
cut an extra yard to make Mrs. Walker a
cape, and ordained that his wife should go
without, unless she would promise to re-
form, and try harder to please him. ‘Then
his wife said she would be very good and
dutiful, if, instead of her cape, he would
give her some spotted flannel for Mrs.
Walker’s baby. Why should not their

ef



THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 19
LLP Ln iainaaitiactasii ita,

babies be dressed alike as well as them-
selves ?

‘To be sure! a capital idea, Mrs. Reed!”
and the spotted flannel was brought out,
and cut off.

Mrs. Walker did not receive these gifts
with tears and humility, as she had the
offer of wood. She was no longer the beg-
gar-woman who had asked food for hungry
children. She was a visitor now, and the
calico and the flannel were little tokens
of regard between friends. Besides, the
Thanksgiving season made it becoming to
give and take presents. She began to seem
quite a pretty woman, and sat there not
without dignity. Her faded shawl hung
with an air over one shoulder, and she
really had very good teeth when she smiled,
and pretty eyes too, thought Amos Reed.
‘‘ She must have had a great deal of trou-
ble, poor thing; a nice, smart girl I’ll be
bound, when she was young.”




















When November came back, and looked







20 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.



SNPS NLL RAL ALARA LAP LLLP LPP PPP, ——e—e—e—e—e—e—————————— ee?

from the shop through the glass doors of
the little back parlor, he saw both babies
asleep in the cradle; the mistress of the
house sewed ; the stranger rocked the cra-
dle from time to time, or talked or watched
the children. They are now in the height
of their play. Blind-man’s buff having
been interdicted as too noisy. Susy is in
the centre of a circle, with the broom in her
hand. (Willy’s chips were swept up long
ago), the others dance round her, in the
intricacies of some anonymous game.

The great work-basket stood under the
mother’s chair; eight other chairs were put
up in a corner; so was the stool; the mas-
ter of the house needed no chair; he made
frequent journeys between the shop, the
window and the stove. The ink was
thawed, and the bottle put away. The
table had retired into the recess behind the
closet door; the geranium had been water-
ed. he cat had been treated to the milk
left from tea; the clock, now set forward,
the half hour, was about to strike nine. It
| a el

THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 21
encanta eS Ain isn
was a pleasant Thanksgiving scene, and
little Peggy thought never was there so
delightful a room, never were people so
kind.

‘Things look better,”’ said November,
going away from the glass doors into the
street.

I don’t know if Amos Reed heard him,
but that worthy man, now walking to the
window, drew aside the curtain, and looked
out on the night. ‘* Dear, me!” he eXx-
claimed. “ There is a light in the old man’s
room. He is not gone any where, it seems.
I wonder if he is sitting up there all alone.”

‘‘ Who, father,” asked Willy, chancing to
overhear the words.

‘‘ The poor old man that lives opposite,”
said his father, pointing to a house whose
back windows looked down into the Reed's
yards Willy knew that his father meant
Mr. Hallet. He had often been at that
house during the last six months, to do
errands for the persons whose lodger Mr.
Hallet was. Nobody liked Mr. Hallet ex-

8 $A $$$

|
22. THANKSGIVING NIGHT.

cept Willy. He had given Willy an old
copy of Cook’s voyages, and the boy felt
under obligations to him. Willy always
_ Spoke of him as ‘ the cross old gentleman ;’
the others were in the habit of calling him
by the less civil name of ‘Old Spectacles.’

‘‘ A poor sort of Thanksgiving, he must
have,” continued Amos Reed, as he put
down the curtain, ‘‘ without chick or child,
or any body to talk to;” and the speaker
turned towards his own noisy family, with
a face that seemed to say ‘ blessings on you,
every one.’

‘ Suppose,” suggested Willy, “I should
go, and ask the old gentleman, to come here
and see us a little while.”

‘‘ He’d never come,” said James.

“« Besides it is late,”’ said the mother.

‘Only nine o’clock,” pleaded Willy,
‘‘ and nobody goes to bed early on Thanks-
giving night. Why, even George is not
sleepy now, though he wanted to go to bed
before tea.”

aman ara a


THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 23

‘* Wouldn’t he think it very strange,”
asked the father ?

“Willy would not dare to go,” said
Jane.

““Who’s afraid,” demanded Willy stoutly?

‘“He won’t like children’s noise,” said
the mother.

‘We can be very still,’ shouted all the
children in a breath, “ if Old Spectacles
comes.’”

‘So it ection answered the father,
laughing, as their voices woke the babies.

Then putting the chairs in order, the
children betook themselves to play at ‘turn
the treneher;’ but Willy thought of the
cross old gentleman sitting all alone on
Thanksgiving night. He asked if he might
go and inquire whether he was wanted to
do any thing.

‘““Not at this time of night. You can’t
do an errand now, unless he is sick, and
wants medicine,—in that case,—I don’t
know ; ”—said Amos Reed, hesitatingly.
lili iheeemmarrtmscciaieietiteaitiiaiias AE
24 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.
i iiihinssie ite necrcniidncsnmmareiateet te pamdenitsisiiiniiss
‘* Yes, I could see how he does. It is
bad to be ill on Thanksgiving day, father.”
The father nodded; se Willy drew his
hand from Peggy’s detaining clasp, ,prom-
ised not to stay many minutes, and fan off.

November. happened to be looking into
‘the cross old gentleman’s’’ room, as Willy
rang at the front door. It wasa large room,
warm and light. There were books all
round upon the walls, and on the table by
the fire, as well as on the chairs and floor.
The single occupant of the room had been
reading, for an open volume lay on the
table near his hand. Now, however, he
was leaning back in an easy chair, and
gazing steadily at the fire. November saw
that his face was neither that of a very old,
nor of a very crossman. November thought
it looked sad, and showed the traces of care
and grief. Perhaps the eyes that were
fixed so steadily on the fire, saw visions of
other ‘Thanksgiving days, when he was not
a cross old gentleman, and all alone. Per-
THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 25

rrr

haps in that silence of his room, he listened

to the voices that used to speak to him
years ago. ;

Now,. November hears Willy’s footsteps

coming up the stairs and along the pas-

aim S

TN Etre Ti
ws



sage. Next comes a gentle knock at the
_ door, and the old man Starts from his rey-
_ erie.

‘‘ Please, sir,’ said the boy, when the
25 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.

senshi fit I IPP PPP APL PIPPI

door was opened to him, “I came to see if
you wanted any thing to-night. It is
Thanksgiving night,” faltered he in confu-
sion, “‘ and I said I would come and see if
you were all alone, and if you were well.”

“Tf I were alone, and if I were well!
What ails the boy ?”

“Tt is Thanksgiving night,” answered
the child meekly.

The old man threw open the door, and
made the boy enter. He gave him a chair
by the fire, and then resuming his own seat,
looked straight at his visitor. Willy began
to repent very thoroughly of his boldness,
and thought the ‘cross old gentleman’
extremely disagreeable, in spite of the gen-
erous affair of Cook’s voyages. He looked
round the room at the astonishing number
of books; Willy had not supposed there
were so many in existence as those shelves
contained ; but whenever his eyes had made
the circuit of the room, they again met
those of Mr. Hallet, and all his confusion
was renewed.
o



THANKSGIVING NIGHT. ss BT
PIII NINN PRL PAPAL PLP PLL PPP PPO PPL PPP APPS Pa Prinses

At length the old gentleman saw fit to
break the uncomfortable silence. He said,
‘Do people in this town go about cus-
tomarily, on Thanksgiving evening, to
other men’s houses to inquire if they are
alone, and if they are well ?”

‘‘ No, sir,” answered the boy.

‘“ How did it concern you whether I was
alone or not? Who sent you? What is
your father’s object 2”

‘‘ Nobody sent me,” said Willy, answer-
ing the question that was most easily an-
swered ; “‘ but father saw your light shining
through the window down into our yard,
and he said you had not gone any where to
see your friends.”’

‘‘ Friends!” repeated the old man bit-
terly. ‘ Well, go on—.”

‘And father said -it must be a poor
Thanksgiving,—and—and that is all.”

‘No, that’s not all; so he sent you to
cajole me.”

‘‘ Oh, no sir, he did not send me. I came
myself to cajole you.”
28 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.

The old man could not help a smile at
the boy’s innocent ways. He asked him
more mildly, the reason of his coming.

‘* Because it is Thanksgiving, sir; we
are very happy at our house.”

‘¢ Do people hereabouts make presents at
Thanksgiving,” asked Mr. Hallet sud-
denly ? |

‘YT think they do,” replied the boy ; ‘‘ for
my father gave the poor woman a calico
gown, and some flannel for the baby.”

‘* And what do you expect of your rich
neighbor,” asked Mr. Hallet, coolly ?

‘* Who, sir?” said the child.

“ What, I say, did you think I should
give you? If your father could give away
calicos and flannels, you thought, I suppose,
that I could afford something better ; heh?
What had you fixed on in your mind asa
suitable present from the rich old man? It
is likely you had some idea about it,—
speak !”

‘JT did not know you were rich, sir,”
said Willy, manfully. He no longer felt


in

THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 29



confused and bashful. He had been in-
sulted. “ My father said you were poor,
and lonely, and we were sorry for you,
and I said I would come and ask you to
our house, because we were so happy, but
he thought you would not come, and my
mother thought it was too late, and that
you would not like children’s noise,—and
we all said we would be still, if old,—
if —,??

‘ Out with it,” said Mr. Hallet, “ what
is that word that sticks in your throat?”

“Old Spectacles,” said Willy, bluntly ;
they call you so, but they don’t mean any
harm ;—only I don’t call you that, because
I like you. I mean I was obliged to you
for Cook’s voyages, you know. SolI said
I would come to inquire if you were well,
or if you wanted any body to go for medi-
cine,—that is the whole story,” continued
the boy; ‘but I would not have come if we
had known that you were not poor, and did
not mind being lonely ; and as for a present,

I don’t want one, I never thought of one;
3*

ee
I isithinnicemneesncetiesieieninieaettatatcsnttacaniigicciiaisiishinsiniantagumaail

30 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.



and if you were to offer me all these beau-
tiful books, I would not touch one of them.”

Willy had here worked himself up to a
quite heroic state of indignation; (for my
part I don’t blame him), and picking up his
cap, he began to put his chair back from
the fire, in order to go away.

‘‘ Stop a minute,’ said Mr. Hallet; ‘ so
you left your play, from gratitude for an
old book given you months ago! You were
very merry at home, were you?”

‘Yes, sir.”

‘“‘ You were at a good game of play, I
suppose.”

‘‘ Yes, first we had blind man’s buff;
afterwards some other plays, and little
Peggy is so funny.”

‘* One of your sisters is named Peggy, it
seems.”’

‘No, sir; Peggy is Mrs. Walker’s litile
girl, that came to beg.”

“Who,” demanded Mr. Hallet, eagerly.

‘A poor woman came just as we were
at tea, and asked for something for her

&
Be
&

~~ tsesSsseseesiens

THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 31
habeas ae autnaattiinaancaandmaninihain aan
children to eat, and father brought her in,
because it was Thanksgiving, and her
baby is in our baby’s cradle, and Peggy
plays with us, and is going to have our
Susy’s clothes, that she has outgrown.”

‘* Where does Mrs. Walker live, and how
long have you known her?” inquired Mr.
Hallet, after a pause.

‘‘ She lives in our street, we never saw
her before. She cried when she first came
in. She is poor as any thing, you see, and
her husband is dead, and she has no friends,
and she wants to get some work, and she
has a wicked uncle that quarreled with her
husband.”’

‘ Boy, Pll go back with you. I have an
errand to your father,” said Mr. Hallet.

Willy thought he had better run on first,
and stop the noisy play of the children, but
the old man checked him. The two en-
tered the little back parlor together.

“Old Spectacles is come, I declare,”
said James. Jane begged him to be quiet.
Amos Reed began to place a chair, and to

anid lhsllieneneseniainetieensntninemeseameserines oo lbs
32, THANKSGIVING NIGHT.



be civil, but the visitor crossed the room
hastily, and going straight to Mrs. Walker,
looked in her face and said, “are you the
wife of Hallet Walker, of Philadelphia ?”’

“T was,” answered the woman with
faltering voice; ‘‘ he is dead.”’

‘‘T am his mother’s brother, who brought
him up, and for whom he was named,”
said Mr. Hallet. ‘I did not know that he
was dead. I would not believe him when
he wrote to say he was ill. I scarcely read
his letter, for I was very angry with him,
and I am afraid I have been harsh, and
now he is gone ;—poor boy,—poor boy !”

Mrs. Walker knew that her husband had
| been extravagant and undutiful, and that
the man before her, had repeatedly for-
-given him, and paid his debts and restored
him to favor. She could not in her soft-
heartedness blame the uncle for being at
length discouraged, and indignant. She
told him so, and that in his last days her
husband expressed great penitence and
affection towards the relative for whose


od

lll

i,

THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 33
Asiana nnncnniininainni niet nbebatinasbibiaiisiss aaa
kindness he had made so poor a return,
He told her to find out. his uncle, but she
had not yet been able to do so.

And now Willy had brought them to-
gether, and there would be no cord of wood
sent on the morrow, nor flour, nor meal.
Mrs. Walker would have plenty of every
thing now, only she said she should not
return the gown and the flannel which Mr.
Reed had given her. Those she wanted as
keepsakes. And Mrs. Reed and she should
take tea with each other some day, dressed
just alike in their new gowns, should they
not ?

‘‘ And both the babies,” suggested Mr.
Hallet, “ in their red petticoats, hey?”

Mrs. Reed repudiated that name for the
infantile garments in question. Robes, I
believe, she insisted on having them called.

“ What is the baby’s name?” asked the
uncle,

“ He is called Hallet, for his father,”
said the widow.

&


34 THANKSGIVING NIGHT.



‘¢ And for me,’’ added Mr. Hallet, snatch-
ing up the infant, and kissing it. Then
were not all the children amazed at the
sight of ‘Old Spectacles’ playing with a
baby ?

When November came again, he had two
visits to make. Up stairs, he saw George
asleep, forgetful of play as of sore finger, in
his crib. If Willy still kept Thanksgiving,
it was in his dreams; and James’ roguish
pranks had ceased until the sunrise. In
the neater room occupied by the girls,
Jane’s cares were at rest, and Susy’s curls
no longer danced in frolic with the cat.

Below, the cat was wide awake, and the
parent Reeds, and Mrs. Walker, and the
uncle. ‘They made plans about the future,
and talked of the past, and rejoiced in the
present, and were very sensible and friendly.
Of all the Thanksgivings he had ever
known, Amos Reed said, this was the
strangest, and most wonderful. And his
wife, as she always did, agreed with him.

a
THANKSGIVING NIGHT. 35

So November left them there, and went
away to look through those glass doors into
the little back parlor, no more for a twelve-
month.


st ensessestssenssssstesssnsssssenssnsssnusigesinesmenenmtnn

36 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.
ietiiieeentieneea ies

Soy ot Christmas.

A STORY OF DECEMBER.



In Mr. Maurer’s brick block, were four
houses, occupied by the same number of
families. In the corner house lived young
Dr. Andover, with his wife, child, and
mother. ‘The second was tenanted by the
two Miss Newburys, who kept boarders,
of whom I was one. The Haverhills were
in number three, and the remaining house
had been taken by my friends, Mr. and
Miss Danvers.

As | knew something of all these fami-
lies, I am able to relate to you some of the
pleasant though not uncommon things that

9%


JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 37
MAA AANA tn rnnnnnirccicoeey,





befell them about Christmas time, a few
years ago.

It was one day in the week before Christ-
mas, that Frank Haverhill, after sitting for
a long time by the fire with a book in his
hand which he was not reading, suddenly
said to a lady who was in the room,
‘Aunt, since I came here you have given
me some good lessons about controlling my
temper. I wish now there was any way
to cure me of a love of money.”’

‘‘ Love of money, my dear boy? I have
never observed in you any undue regard
for money.”

‘No, aunt,” said Frank, “TI do not think
you have, for I do not know that I ever
felt it till to-day.”’ As he said these words,
Frank blushed, and looked a good deal
ashamed.

‘Will you tell me how it was?” asked
Mrs. Haverhill.

“Why, aunt, you know I have to be at
school by nine o'clock, and I was rather
late in setting off this morning ; so instead

4

a”
,

‘

ee see nna cai ta

te
‘nee
38 Joy AT CHRISTMAS.

of giving me my luncheon, you gave me a
five cent piece to buy some gingerbread.”

Mrs. Haverhill remembered this very
well.

“ Well, aunt, I gave the money away.”

“Then you have had nothing to eat
since breakfast,’’ said his aunt.

“Oh, yes, I have; but I will tell you
how it all happened. When I got to the
bridge, James Mott was standing by the
toll-house door, shivering with cold, and
holding a snow-shovel in his hand. He
had not any mittens or gloves, and I could
see his arm in two or three places through
the holes in his jacket sleeve. I called to
him not to stand shivering there, but torun
a race with me to the other end of the
bridge. ‘Then he said that he had not a
cent to pay the toll. He said he had come
early to the bridge, hoping that the toll-
taker would have employed him to clear
away the snow about his door, but the man
preferred doing it himself. Poor James
looked very sorrowful. He said he had

<< $<$<<$ <_<


JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 39
OPP PP PPP PIIRARRRRNRAADRDDNADDNDANARAARARRAAARKAARAAAAAAAAAARARAAAAS

been so happy while making his new
shovel, at the thought of earning something
by it, for his mother. If he could only get
across, he knew of one gentleman who
would employ him, and there were so many
people who would want the snow cleared
from their sidewalks, that he thought he
should be almost certain to earn three or
four ninepences.

‘So, aunt, I gave him my five-cent
piece, and told him to take his toll out of
that, and run as fast as he could. Istarted
to run, too, for I was afraid of being late.
I was in good time, however, and had
looked over my lessun before Mr. Dixit was
ready for my class. I thought no more of
my five cents until recess, when we were
going out to play on the common.

Tom Coxall asked me to go with him to
the confectioner’s. I told him he had better
ask somebody who could keep him com-
pany in eating,—that I had no money, and
could not buy any thing. Then some of
the other boys noticed that I had no lun-




40 JoY AT CHRISTMAS.









cheon, and asked me if I forgot it. Icould
not say that, you know, so I told them
about meeting James Mott at the toll-house.

‘Tom Coxall said I was the greatest
fool he had ever heard of, to give a boy
five cents because he wanted one. I should
never be rich, he said, it was very easy to
prophesy that. I told him I did not desire
to be rich, I was a very happy boy without
being rich, and I could be a happy man
just as well. ‘Tom said none but simple-
tons or hypocrites talked in that way.
Every body wanted to be rich, only all did
not know enough to accomplish it. Then he
began to boast about his srandfather, how
every body talked of him as the richest man
in New York, and admired him, and liked
to be introduced to him. ‘Catch him giv-
ing five cents when one would have done
just as well,” said Tom.

“The other boys said they meant to be »
rich, too, and one or two of them who had
money went with Tom over to the confec-
tioner’s. I could see that some of the boys
















































JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 41



began to think less of me, for what Tom
said, and I was sorry for that. Yet I did
not see either what the harm was if I chose
to go without my luncheon to please James
Mott, and besides, how were Tom and the
others to get rich by spending their money
on cakes and tarts?

‘Still, 1 had a kind of feeling that I
never had before, about our being poor.
Somehow all the fine houses I had ever
been in, rose up before my eyes, and Mrs.
Coxall’s carriage rolled by, with Mrs. Cox-
all and her daughters sitting in it; and
then I had a picture of you, dear aunt, and
Fanny, getting out of the omnibus in the
middle of the street, where the snow was
| deepest. Perhaps I should have gone on
| thinking, until I had repented giving away
my half-dime, if just then James Mott had
not come up tome. He said he had earn-
ed sixty cents, and he had come to pay me
what I had lent him. He said he had not

a five-cent piece, and should be obliged to
4* ,

ie
einem

42 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

CARR eee OO —EOOO*> eae



—~

give me coppers, unless I would take a four-
penny piece instead.”
‘And what did you do?” asked Frank’s
aunt, with a shade of anxiety on her face.
‘“T took two cents to buy a roll, because
I was really hungry,” said Frank, “ and I
begged James to keep the rest to carry home
with his earnings.”’
Mrs. Haverhill asked the little boy if he
thought Tom Coxall’s luncheon tasted bet-
ter than his. Frank said he did not know
how much Tom had enjoyed his tarts; his
roll was an excellent one, he knew that.
He felt grateful, too, to James Mott as
he eat it, and that made it taste the
sweeter. ,
©] wish 1 could give him a jacket, aunt,
or something of that sort,” said Frank
presently ; ‘‘ don’t you think it was very
kind of James to come down by the school
just at twelve o’clock, just at the right time,
you know, aunt, to give me the money for
my luncheon ?”
Mrs. Haverhill was of Frank’s opin-




being well-timed. She thought in this case
both the loan and the re-payment had been
so, and she was glad both boys had been
so friendly. There was no further conver-
sation on the subject that evening. It was
tea-time, and after tea Frank learned his
lessons, and when the lessons were done,
he was sleepy and went to bed.

Mrs. Haverhill had Frank’s luncheon put
up for him in season the next day, safe in
the satchel which he strapped over his
shoulder; then she put on his comforter,
and tied Senin the ears of his cap, and bade
him good morning. He was no sooner gone,
than putting on her own walking-dress, she
went out to find Mrs. Mott. It was a very
cold day, and as Mrs. Haverhill walked
rapidly to keep herself warm, she thought
of the rents in the poor bdy’s jacket of
which Frank had spoken.

The house to which she was directed
had a forlorn and neglected appearance.
It did not look as if it had been painted

siailiasesalejebtipieiinaieaninetsinetesrennioensesiiaeccernanianianuiiiinitepetaiiasiaal
JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 43
ion that a service gains in value by
Dll
initiates AAT

44 joy AT CHRISTMAS.

since the declaration of independence, and
two or three panes were gone, their places
being supplied by shingles.
To Mrs. Haverhill’s knock a voice an-
swered, ‘‘ Come in.’ The lady obeyed the
voice, shutting the door after her as quickly
as possible, so as not to admit the cold,
frosty air. When in the room, she saw a
few embers on the hearth, close to which,
wrapped in a shawl and holding a baby in
her arms, sat a woman with a sorrowful
face. The sorrowful face, to which no
smile came, looked up at the visitor.
‘‘Tam afraid you are not well,’’ said
Mrs. Haverhill in a voice which conveyed
sympathy and all the comfort of sympathy
in its tones. The kind words made the
tears fall fast all over the baby’s head; the
mother wiped them away hastily, and seta
chair near the chimney for Mrs. Haverhill.
That lady began to play with the baby, a .
healthy little rogue it was, while she in-
quired about the wants of the family. She
found that the last stick of wood had just


a hy, AAS



JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 45





been burned in order to boil the water for
their breakfast. They were late, Mrs.
Mott said; but it did not seem worth while
to get up earlier, since they were warmer
in bed, and the day would be quite long
enough.

‘‘Ifit had not been for a young gentle-
man that my son knows,’’ continued the
poor woman, ‘‘ we should have been with-
out a shelter this bitter day. He gave
James some money to go to Boston with,
and my boy earned enough to pay a little
towards the rent, and to get a spoonful of
tea and a pound of meal.”?

‘Tam glad Frank’s little gift was of so
much use to you,” said Mrs. Haverhill ;
‘‘and I came here this morning partly to
thank James for taking the time and trou-
ble to go to the school in order to repay
Frank in season for his luncheon. I assure
you my nephew felt it as a great kindness,
and I am sorry James is not here to receive
my thanks.”

At these words there was an immense

nein




46 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

itt PPP PPP PPP PPP PPP PPP PPP PPP PLL ILI IIIS

stirring in the bed. which stood in a cor-
ner of the room, and James, with his hair
in a sad state of confusion, and his face red
with blushes, bounced out from under the
clothes, and, coming to the lady, protested
that she had nothing to thank him for. He
knew, he said, that he ought to have
insisted on returning all the money, but
then they were all so cold and hungry at
home, and their landlord threatening to turn
them out of his house. Besides the other
boy said he only wanted two cents.

While James was speaking, the dirty red
face grew very pale. His mother said he
was weak lately; she poured out some
warm tea into a cup, without sugar or
milk, and gave it to him with a piece of
bread. This was his breakfast. Mrs.
Haverhill begged Mrs. Mott to drink a little
also; she poured it out for her, and cut a
slice from the bread and put it into her
hand. ‘Then she left the room, saying, as
she did so, “I will return in a few min-
utes.”


JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 47

cepaatentetnnitntet tl LLL LLL PLLA LL LALO ET

When she came back, she was followed
by alittle girl carrying three sticks of wood.
Mrs. Haverhill herself had a little basket
on her arm, and in her hand some shavings
and pieces of bark. |

Ah! what a charming fire soon blazed
upon the hearth! How it shone on the
pale, thin faces, and cheered them with its
warm brightness! And now suddenly ap-
peared on the hearth, a sauce-pan of warm
bread and milk. The same bright-eyed
little girl who had brought the wood,
stretched out her arms and said, ‘‘ Let me
feed the baby, while you warm yourself.”
Mrs. Mott said she should make some hasty-
pudding for dinner, now that she had so
good a fire, and felt a little stronger.

Now it happened that Mrs. Haverhill
had a sort of wash-house standing in her
yard, of which she made no further use
than to put under cover her tubs and gard-
ening tools, with odd benches, empty bar-
rels and the like. She easily gained her
husband’s permission to offer this house to
48 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

RAAAAARARPRPPRP PPP PPP LPP PPP PLP LPP PPP PP PP PPP PPP PPP ADIPL IPAS

the poor widow for the winter, and Frank
was to have the pleasure of carrying her
the news when he came home from school.

‘Don’t take off your coat, Frank,” she
said when he came in, “I want you to do
an errand for me.” Perhaps Frank was a
little disappointed that he could not at once
come to the fire, and enjoy a new book
which one of his school-fellows had lent
him. He cast rather a rueful glance at the
great basket, which was put into his hands.
But when he knew the errand he was to
be sent upon, when Mrs. Haverhill had
told him all she had seen in the morning,
and when he heard that James Mott and his
mother were to live in their yard all winter,
rent-free, he took a great leap into the air,
kissed his aunt, and was out of the house
ina moment. Indeed, he came very near
overthrowing Patrick, who was waiting
with a wheel-barrow of wood to accompany
him.

The next day began the Christmas holi-
days. Very busy Frank was then in help-


JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 49

ing James to put the house in order for the
Motts to move in before Christmas day.
There was a great deal to be done in a few
days. The little room up stairs was to be
emptied of its rubbish. All this old lumber
must be examined to see if any thing could
be found likely to be useful to Mrs. Mott.
In this Fanny joined the boys, and their
exclamations of pleasure over half-worn
pieces of furniture were often so loud, as to
reach the ears of Mrs. Haverhill’s woman
Jemima who was ironing at a table by the
kitchen window. Perhaps no other article
called forth such demonstrations of delight
as a cradle, the very cradle in which Fanny
had been rocked when she was a baby.
Would it not be just the thing for Mrs.
Mott’s baby? ‘There it could lie and sleep
while its mother washed, or sewed, or
cooked, or did any thing else her friends
should employ her about. Then James
could sit by the cradle in the evening, and
learn his lessons, for Frank had already
decided to make a scholar of him.

5


50 Joy AT CHRISTMAS.





Jemima became so much interested in the
good work, that she actually offered to take
a tub of hot water, with soap and brushes,
and make the whole place clean.

‘You shall not work by yourself,” cried
Frank, “James and I will help you.” Je-
mima afterwards declared that the two boys
had been very useful; they were almost as
good as girls, she said. James swept the
whole house before she went into it; he
cleaned the windows, and blacked an old
cooking-stove which had been allowed to
grow rather rusty. Frank, armed with a
yellow bowl full of paste, and a painter’s
brush, proceeded to put up some prints that
he had been a long time collecting, over a
partition which was covered by a very
shabby paper disfigured in places by marks
of damp, and even by holes. Most con-
spicuous of all, was a large engraving of
General Washington crossing the Delaware,
the figures colored by Frank himself,—
Washington being represented in a very
extraordinary uniform, and the horse in




JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 51



the foreground very brilliant and peculiar.
When the house was clean and dry,
Frank invited his aunt to look at it. She
expressed great pleasure at finding it better
than she expected, and then she asked
James what furniture his mother had to put
in it. One bed, one table, two chairs, and
a chest were all they had left.. The rest
had gone for rent and fuel.

Mrs. Haverhill said she would look over
her house and see if she could find any
thing to spare. ‘I have something,” cried
Frank; ‘‘you know’ those shelves that I
made in the autumn, that we could never
think of any place for, I’ll hang them up in
James’ room; they will do for him to keep
his books in, that is if he has any books,
and if 1 can make the shelves stay without
tipping forward.”

Mrs. Haverhill did not look in vain. The
bed and bed-clothes were found for the
cradle, and Fanny had the pleasure of
making ready the baby’s bed. Then a
narrow stretcher was discovered by Jemi-
52 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

aarti L PPL LL LALLA ILLIA

ma, with its mattress, and pronounced just
the thing for James. Next an old table
was brought out, which might be made
useful if it had four legs instead of three.
Frank volunteered to supply the deficiency,
but as there was in the family a well-
founded doubt of the strength and stability
of his carpenter’s work, it was judged best
to send it away for the necessary repairs.
Three chairs, the cane seats of which were
worn out, Patrick seized upon, saying that
he could make them “very tidy and ele-
gant’ by nailing some bits of carpet tight
over the broken cane-work. All hands
were interested in this work of furnishing
the house.

When these and a good many other less
important articles were put in order, and
brought into the house, a fire was made in
the stove, the cradle judiciously placed with
a chair for the mother on one side the fire,
James’ seat on the other, and the table with
its new leg in front. Frank and Fanny
would go out repeatedly take a run across


ET

JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 53



the yard, then come back, open the door
suddenly, and look in, to see the effect;
while Jemima declared it as her settled
opinion, that “the only things wanting to
make it as comfortable and cheerful like
for Christmas as any cottage in England,
were a bit of carpet on the hearth, and some
branches of holly and ivy in the windows
and over the fire-place.

“Oh,” said Frank, “you old English
people think there is nothing to equal your
holly and ivy, but I can tell you, Mistress
Jemima, if James and I took the trouble to
go into the woods, we could soon convince
you that we have things full as pretty as
any you ever saw.”

Jemima looked as if she thought holly
and ivy had not their equals in the vegeta-
ble kingdom, but she said it would give her
pleasure to see any thing green in the house
at this season. She hoped if Frank got any
boughs, he would spare her enough to dress
the kitchen, as she had been used to see it

at home.
5*


54 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

id





LPL



Patrick offered to move Mrs. Mott.—It
was in the afternoon of the twenty-fourth
of December, that she took possession of her
new abode. She had been there just long
enough to have her bed set up, and to
admire the cozy look of the little place,
when the boys came in with the hemlock
and ground pine which they had collected.
Frank carried his share of the green boughs
to Jemima, who almost shed tears of delight
over them, and proceeded at once to adorn
her territories after the fashion of her native
Devonshire.

That was a happy Christmas eve at the
Haverhill’s. In the smaller house, the
Motts were enjoying the warmth and clean-
liness of their new quarters. Mrs. Mott did
more. She had felt ill, desponding, deso-
late. Now, she had found friends, and
consequently hope and strength of heart.
It was with her as with the apostle, when
the brethren heard of him and came to meet
him as far as Appii Forum and the Three

&
ani biennale

JOY. AT CHRISTMAS. 55

hit PPP PPPPP PPP PP PP PPP PPLE PPP LPP L LPP AIP PILI

Taverns; whom when Paul saw, he thank-
ed G'od, and tock courage.

Jemima was happy in her kitchen, ad-
miring her own decorative powers, and
discoursing to Patrick about those far-off
scenes and days which the season recalled
to her memory.

In the parlor, Frank and Fanny were
happy in anticipating the surprise James
Mott would feel, when on going to bed, he
should find lying in his room a complete
suit of warm clothes which Mr. Haverhill
had bought for him from Frank’s measure.

It was just at this point, that I, the writer
of this story, came to know any thing about
the Motts. I had gone to Mrs. Haverhill’s
to return a book, and the children, whose
intimate friend I was, told me all the cir-
cumstances which I have related.

Frank’s aunt asked him if he had been
troubled during the last few days with
the desire to be rich. Frank said he had
not thought about it since the holidays
began. He supposed there was no tempta-

ee
Yo
aca Ee

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56 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

LLLP LLL ltl

tion for him to love money except when he
was at school, where his companions
thought so much of riches. At home he
despised money.

‘What is that,” inquired Mr. Haverhill,
whose attention had been attracted from
his newspaper by the earnestness of Frank’s

tones. ‘‘ You despise money? Let me tell ,

you money is a very good thing.”

“Oh, uncle! Do you care about money ?
Do you think much of people just because
they are rich?”’ asked Frank with a sort
of wondering horror in his face, and great
emphasis on the pronoun.

‘That is not the question, my good
fellow. Ihave said nothing of that sort.”
Then Mr. Haverhill, smoothing his paper
over his knee, and opening his eyes wide in
comical mimicry of Frank’s, repeated his
words, ‘‘ Money is a very good thing, most
excellent nephew.”

‘So Tom Coxall thinks,” answered
Frank, ‘(and a good many of the boys.
But, uncle, I did not believe that. you




or sensuous
JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 57
would say so. I thought;—I mean I did
not think ;—I was almost certain ;
of Motioy-ishesie — very — cena
said the uncle again, in a manner half
laughable, half provoking. “* But, Frank,
always remember and be sure of this. It
is by no means the best thing.”

Frank and Fanny both looked relieved
at this. ‘ What is better, then?” asked
the boy, beginning to comprehend his uncle’s
meaning.

“ Better? Better than money ? I suppose
whatever we are willing to give money
for, and especamry whatever money is una-
ble to buy.”

‘But tell’ me some particular thing,”
demanded Frank.

‘Well, I should say, a good nephew that
never mdachdcretands, nor feels shocked at
his uncle, is to be viiefenndd: ’

What should you say,’’ asked Frank,
turning to the rest of us.

6

‘Good health is better,’”’ said his aunt.
‘‘ Dear friends,” suggested Fanny.

Po eee ee


58 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

—— —— Eee

“ A good conscience,’ said Mr. Haver-
hill.

“A glass of cold water,” added I, put-
ting down mine.

“A merry Christmas is. better,” cried
Fanny, and Mrs. Haverhill said more
gravely than we had hitherto been speak-
ing, I will tell you what Moses felt on this
subject.”’

‘* Moses ?”’ asked the children.

‘‘Yes; we are informed in the epistle to
the Hebrews, that Moses esteemed the re-
proach of Christ greater riches than the
treasures in Egypt.”

Frank said it never occurred to him be-
fore that Moses had any temptation to stay
in Egypt.

‘It is certainly insinuated in this verse,”’
said Mr. Haverhill, “‘ that if he had contin-.
ued in the court of Egypt as the son of
Pharaoh’s daughter, he might have had the
free use of the king’s treasures, and of
course, might have procured all the enjoy-
ments to be bought with money.”


ac untieemaninnnnntmaian

JOY AT OHRISTMAS. 59
eR IIILLIIOLAQLQLOIQESLE_e_aeeeee eePeerereeeeerrv
‘“T can understand,” said Frank, ‘ that
Moses gave up a good deal. I suppose
Egypt was a very rich country; but I do
not know what is meant by the reproach of
Christ.” :

‘‘ Perhaps,” said his uncle, ‘ the scoffs
cast on the Israelites, for expecting the
Christ to arise among them, in whom all
the nations of the earth should be blessed.
In more general terms, Moses, wise in this
beyond all the wisdom of the Egyptians,
preferred the reward which he looked for in
the life to come, to the temporary enjoy-
ment of the pleasures in the court of Egypt.
Remember, the Egyptians were a civilized
and powerful nation; the court was a lux-
urious and wealthy one. On the other
hand the Israelites were a race of slaves,
condemned to the most sordid and laborious
tasks. How should a king arise from
these? Where was that sceptre, not to
depart from Judah till Shiloh came ? Where
the promised lawgiver? The families of
Judah are working in mortar, and in brick,


$$$ — ees

60 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.
and in all manner of service in the field,



and their mocking masters make ‘ their
lives bitter with hard bondage.’

‘““We have no king but Pharaoh, was
doubtless the cry of most of them, as the
years rolled by, and no help came. It was
not so with all. We know that by one of the
Hebrews, even the son of Pharaoh’s daugh-
ter, that promised blessing of the whole
earth,—those prospects grown so dim to the
minds of most of his brethren,—that re-
proach of Christ, were esteemed greater
riches than all the treasures of Egypt.”

“ Fanny, my child,” continued Mr. Hav-
erhill, turning to his little girl, ‘“‘ those were
very true words of yours, that a merry
Christmas is better than money ; for what is
Christmas? The day on which the nativity
of our blessed Saviour is celebrated. And
what has not our Saviour’s birth been to
us? No longer a reproach ;—for he has
come, and his coming is hope, and truth,
and life, and joy, and Heaven. Give mea



oe
a

JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 61



Bible, Fanny, and let me read part of the
matchless story.” Mr. Haverhill read:

‘‘ And there were in the same country
shepherds abiding in the field, keeping
watch over their flock by night.

‘* And lo, the angel of the Lord came upon
them, and the glory of the Lord shone
round about them; and they were sore
afraid.

‘‘And the angel said unto them, Fear not ;
for, behold, I bring you good tidings of
great joy which shall be to all people.

‘‘ For unto you is born this day, in the city
of David, a Saviour, which is Christ the
Lord.

‘‘And this shall be a sign unto you; ye
shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling
clothes, lying in a manger. |

‘‘ And suddenly there was with the angel
a multitude of the heavenly host, praising
God and saying, |

‘Glory to God in the highest, and on earth
peace, good will toward men.”

6


x



62° JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

CAR RARARAAARRRRAI LL LLLLLOLLM_MLOoOwownnmwnm=—"™—"_"—"”OOervveesees sees’

There was not so much joy at Christmas
in the next house, which as I told you was
occupied by the Miss Newburys and their
boarders. A boarding-house is not like a
family. YetI thought, when I took my
place at. the breakfast-table on Christmas
morning, and answered the good wishes of
my fellow-boarders, that we all liked each
other better than usual. I think we should
all have been more ready to assist each
other, more reluctant to believe any evil
about each other. How could it be other-
wise, after we had just used that pleasant
form of words, ‘I wish you a merry Christ-
mas?”

Even our old bachelor, Mr. Freeman,
was benignant towards us all, and civilly
helped Mrs. Maritou to her favorite dishes.
The universal good humor was so ap-
parent as even to set at rest the heart of
Miss Dorcas Newbury, who, poor woman,
was apt to fear that her boarders were

always more or less dissatisfied, if not on




JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 63



the very verge of a general remonstrance
and departure.

Miss Phebe was a quiet person of few
words, and so far as appeared, of only one
strong partiality. She was genuinely fond
of flowers. The discovery of a new bud
on one of her plants was always an event
of some importance in Miss Phebe’s sel-'
dom-varied life. Judge then if she was
not made happy this morning by the un-
expected gift of a pot of carnations almost
ready to bloom.

These are trifles, you will say.—Yes;
but it is in trifles chiefly that we can show
our “gvod will toward men.” Few of
us may be called upon for acts of heroic
daring, or heart-rending self-sacrifice in
behalf of others; but we may all con-
tribute something to the ‘‘ peace on earth,”’
by our morning, afternoon, and evening
acts of common life. The kind word
spoken,—the unkind look forborne,—the
slight service heartily rendered,—we often
fail even in these things; and need not




64 JOY AT OHRISTMAS.



covet opportunity of failure in the per-
formance of more difficult duties. It is
only the faithful over a few. things who
have proved their fitness to be intrusted
with much.

I was to dine that Christmas day, with
my friends, Mr. Danvers and his daughter.
On my arrival, I saw at once that they
had something to tell me, and Miss Dan-
vers presently said; ‘‘ The strangest thing
has happened to me to-day which I must
ask you to listen to, though it is quite a
long story.”

On my expressing a desire to hear it,
my friend continued. “ You must know
that our good Betsey, having married and
left me, I wished to engage in her place a
sempstress and housemaid. So I told
Mrs. Goodwin to look out for a proper
person. ‘T'wo or three days ago, Goodwin
brought to me a very nice young woman,
as she said, who had been recommended
by a friend of hers. I was pleased with


JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 65

PARRA PRPPIEOPPP PPP PPP PPL LP PPPOE PPP PPP PPL LP PIPPI

her appearance, and engaged her at once.
She came the day before yesterday.

‘‘ Now comes the interesting part of my
story. Old Mrs. Goodwin, you know,
always goes to church at Christmas.
Father and I also went out, leaving only
Anne, which was the new girl’s name, and
the cook in the house. I was not very
well this morning, and came home after
walking a short distance. [I let myself in
without ringing, by means of a latch-key,
and was no sooner in the house, than |
heard some one playing in most masterly
style on the piano-forte. I remembered
that my instrument had been left open,
but it was none of my music which was
now played. It was something very beau-
tiful and elaborate, and excuted with such
ease, such brilliancy that I stood for some
minutes in the passage, without moving,
and almost afraid to breathe, lest I should
put an end to the performance.

Bye and by, the character of the music
changed. A few chords-were struck in a

6*

y Se
or


66 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

eee e—eEeeeeee—eEeEeEOOeeSO mS Pee ee em Omer sn eee Ss as



kind of simple prelude, and a voice began
to sing. ‘The voice was as wonderful as
the previous playing, very sweet and full.
' Words and music were alike new to me,
but I find I can recall one verse which was
twice repeated : :
“ A song of thanks and loud to Him
Who makes our labor cease,

Who feeds with love the midnight dim,
And hearts devout with peace.”

“T could not restrain my curiosity any
longer, but even as the singer was dwell-
ing on the last line [ went into the room.
What was my surprise to find there the
newly engaged Anne! She was not aware
of my presence till I stood close by her
side. She blushed a good deal, half mur- |
mured something about its being very
wrong,—a pleasure long denied, and great
temptation. | could hardly catch the
words, the poor girl was so much em-
barrassed.’’—

‘And what did you do?”

“You will think me very foolish,”
a

JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 67

LPP LLP



answered Miss Danvers laughing; “ but
acting hastily and under the influence of
that magnificent music, I told her not to
get up, that I had never heard such play-
ing before, that she was too good a musi-
cian to be any thing else, that I had long
desired to take some lessons in music,—
that instead of living with me in any other
capacity she must stay as my teacher,—
that then she should play all day if she
liked, and I never should be tired of listen-
ing.” —

‘¢ And how did she receive this ?”

“Why, I suppose very improperly for a
discharged housemaid. She leaned her
head against my shoulder, and cried with
all her heart.”

“And you’”—

‘Tf the whole truth is to be told, 1 must
own that I cried for sympathy. Such
things, you know are catching, and her
emotion was so genuine that I could not
help it. Just then father came in.”—

‘“Yes:” said Mr. Danvers, ‘“‘ what should

e——————————————————m aed
*,

68 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.



I see on entering my parlor, but my
daughter and my housemaid weeping in
each other’s arms. I uttered some excla-
mation of surprise. Julia, sly little rogue,
knowing her father’s weakness where mu-
sic is concerned, and willing to propitiate
him in favor of her new friend, managed
matters very skillfully.”

‘‘T think so;” said the young lady. ‘I
first motioned to the astonished Mr. Dan-
vers to sit down and listen; then I told
Anne that he was very fond of music, and
implored her to oblige me by at once
beginning something, any thing. She
wiped away her tears and commenced the
beautiful Andante movement in Beetho-
ven’s Fifth symphony. Whether it was
well played or not, I leave it for yonder
musical gentleman to decide.”

‘‘Admirably played it was to be sure,”
said Mr. Danvers.

‘‘He has not heard her sing though,”
said his daughter. ‘She was no longer in
voice, poor thing, after crying. When she


JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 69



had finished the Andante, she got up, and
telling us that her father had been a music-
master and organist of great skill, and had
taught her what she knew, she left the
room. That is my story. I want you to
see Anne and to hear her. I know you
will agree with me that she would be mis-
placed as a servant, and very a and
happy as my governess in music.’

Accordingly after dinner, just before it
was time for lamps to be lighted, Miss
Danvers brought her in. She was a slight,
quiet-looking girl about twenty years old.
Her face indicated talent I thought, and
bore the traces of suffering. I was pleased
with the modest, yet self-respecting man-
ner of this young person, and not a little
surprised, when, on my name being men-
tioned, she looked earnestly at me for a
moment, and then said,

‘Miss § has forgotten me, I think,



or I should be inclined to claim her as one
of my earliest acquaintances.”’
I shook my head, smiling, and affirming


70 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.



that if so, she had quite outgrown my
recollection.

‘Yet you will probably remember Mr.
Newport, the blind organist in P and
the little girl who used to lead him about.”

‘Little Anne!” I exclaimed, ‘‘is_ it
possible that you are little Anne New-
port ?”’

‘“ Whose gloves you used to mend for
her, and to whom you’ gave the good
counsels which a motherless girl sorely
needs.”

‘And good old Mr. Newport,” I said,
‘‘T fear, my dear, you have lost your
father.”

She made a motion of mournful assent,
but was not at that moment able to
answer me. ‘Turning to Mr. and Miss
Danvers, I told them that ten or twelve
years before, [ had been for several months
the guest of some friends in P The
daughters of the family were then young
and received instruction in music from Mr.
Newport, a gentleman of great eminence




JOY AT CHRISTMAS. vel

PP PPP Pei AL PALI AI LIAL ILE

in his profession. Being blind, he was
always attended by a little girl, his only
child. I perfectly well remembered the
interest I felt at the time in this little
creature, to whom I took pleasure in ren-
dering slight services with the needle
when I saw that her dress needed such
aids.

After some years’ absence, I again visited
P , and on inquiring for my old
friends, I learned that Mr. Newport had,
not long before, given up his situation as
organist and left the town. It was thought
he had gone to the West. After this, I had
never heard of them, though I had some-
times wondered what had becom> of my
little Anne. I expressed the sat.sfaction
I now felt at meeting her; a feeling fully
shared by Miss Danvers. I became, as it
were, a sort of voucher for the worthiness
of her new protegé.

‘‘] have known a good deal of sorrow
since those days,’ said Anne Newport.
“ My father’s illness was long and painful.




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72 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

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We were very poor and obliged to sell our
books and the music which he had used
before his blindness, and which he was
saving for me. At- length he grew so
restless that he would not stay long in any
place, and so we made few friends. After
his death I thought of trying to obtain
pupils, but we had not been known in the
neighborhood of Boston, and without proper
recommendations and amidst so much com-
petition, | had no chance of success, I had
not money to go any where else, and be-
sides, there were some trifling debts which
I did not wish to leave behind me. Sol
was glad and thankful to take any respect-
able situation that was offered me. ‘That
situation however, | have now lost;’’ said
she, with a half playful timidity as if
uncertain what was to become of her after
all.

‘But you have found friends and a
home, dear Anne,” said the warm-hearted
Julia, looking at her father, after she had
spoken.




JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 73

‘“Yes,”’ added Mr. Danvers in the polite,
slightly formal manner which was natural
to him, and rather becoming. ‘“ Your
friends, Miss Newport, will take care of
your interests now.” (Here a gentle bow
to me.) “At present you are on a visit to
my daughter.”

‘And so,” I said, “‘I wish you a merry
Christmas, and if there are any gloves to
be mended, I have not forgotten my old
skill.”’

‘It is much if I have gloves at all now,”
said Anne, ‘‘but Ican play without them,
and with your permission, I will give you
some music in this Christmas twilight.”

“Yes, do, it will gratify us all, and I
am sure it will do you good,” said Julia ;
andI added, ‘Let me hear if you have
improved. When I saw you last, you
could only play ‘ Bounding Billows’ with
one hand.”

She seated herself without further invita-
tion, at the instrument, and held us silent

with her excellent performance. ‘Then she
7

i ee

i
T4 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

ee AAPA PPP PPP PPL PPP PPP PPP PDL PPP PAPAL ALP AP AA ALA APL I AAA AAI IAP

sang this hymn. A midnight hymn by an
English poet, set to music by her father
she told us. |

“ The stars shine bright while earth is dark,
While all the woods are dumb,— |
How clear those far-off silver chimes
From tower and turret come !

“ Chilly but sweet the midnight air,
And, lo! with every sound,

Down from the ivy leaf, a drop
Falls glittering to the ground.

“*Twas night when Christ was born on earth ;— "
Night heard his first, faint cry ;

While angels caroled round the star
Of the Epiphany.”

I had promised to spend the evening at
Dr. Andover’s, and indeed, having known
sqmething of the Christmas-keeping of the
other three houses in our block, I felt
inclined to take a peep at the fourth. Sol
said good-bye to the pleasant group at
Mr. Danver’s, wondering within myself
which felt the happier, she who had found,
or they who had given a home.


Xe.



JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 75



The Andovers were poor; the Danverses
were rich. Not poor like Mrs. Mott, not
rich like Crassus. But about the one family
every thing showed a certain carelessness
of expense. One lamp was never made to
do the duty of two; one person was not
expected to do the work of two. Innocent
pleasures were not given up because they
could not be afforded. ‘There was plenty
of furniture, plenty of servants, plenty of
time, plenty of every thing.

At Dr. Andover’s the cost had to be
nicely calculated. Friends were invited
for tea rather than for dinner; the new
book was borrowed, rather than bought;
the faded carpet was made to last another
year. Dr. Andover was still young, and
of a profession in which success is prover-
bially slow. Many were their struggles,
many their little sacrifices, and self-denials,
and many their hopes of brighter days.

The husband studied diligently, was
very attentive to what business he had,
and helped out his income by writing in




76 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

————— — —— —eESeoee>errerses>srr ee eEeEaewY —

his own proper name for the medical
Journals, and anonymously for some of the
magazines. :

His wife and mother taxed the common
purse as lightly as possible, making and
repairing all the family clothing, and re-
ducing their personal expenses to the
lowest sum possible. ‘They were poor,
but they were not in debt, and they were
happy. If sometimes the future looked
dark, it was not on Christmas day they
would allow the gloom to gather, and
our evening was as cheerful as if we had
been a quartette of millionaires.

Now, Miss Danvers had that morning
early, as I chanced to know, sent to Dr.
Andover’s a large and handsome Christmas
cake,—‘ from an old patient,” as the card
with it stated; the fact being, that the
lady had once had a tooth extracted by
the Doctor, which she called being his
patient.

Great was dear Mrs. Andover’s pride and
pleasure in her cake ;—great the satisfac-
Ti sisesielselienithiinaneneeeoneihibetiiintaianiacidaiibingtnittanetiiipleenintitinninneniinitinieassie

JOY AT CHRISTMAS. TT



tion with which she exhibited it to me.
She had saved it uncut till I should see it.
‘Ts it not a handsome cake?” she asked;
adding, ‘“‘a present this morning, from
one of my husband’s patients.’”’—It was
indeed as handsome and rich as frosting
and citron could make it.

But the cake was not the only thing kept
to be shown to me. Little Eddy had been
allowed to sit up in order to see me, or
rather to be seen by me, and now the dear
little fellow is called upon to say the hymn
he has learned. ‘‘ Mind,” said his mother,
‘and speak very plainly, and don’t say
washed.”’

Eddy stood up very straight on the
hearth-rug and recited :

“ While shepherds watched their flocks by night,
All seated on the ground,
The angel of the Lord came down
And glory shone around,

‘Fear not,’ said he,—for mighty dread
Had seized their troubled mind—
‘ Glad tidings of great joy I bring
To you and all mankind.
7*


Pa re



78 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.
eee”
To you, in David’s town, this day
Is born of David’s line,
The Saviour, who is Christ the Lord ;
And this shall be the sign:



The heavenly babe you there shall find
To human view displayed,

All meanly wrapped in swathing bands
And in a manger laid.’

Thus spake the seraph, and forthwith
Appeared a shining throng

Of angels, praising God, and thus
Address their joyful song:

‘ All glory be to God on high,
And to the earth be peace! -

Good will henceforth from heaven to men,
Begin and never cease.’ ”’

“It is very sweet to hear from infants’
lips the words that were first uttered on
this earth by lips of angels,” I remarked,
when the child had finished, without mak-
ing a single mistake.

“Doubtless,” said Dr. Andover, “ there
is much better poetry in the world than this
hymn, yet it was the first 1 taught my boy.

+—_—__
a

JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 79

POCO nn ttn

Is it not dearer to us all than almost any
other? And now, Eddy, say your other
little verse, and then kiss us a good night.”
“Do you mean ‘Child Divine,’ ” asked
the little one who knew nothing else ?
‘‘-YVes,”’ said his father.
Eddy recited :

*‘ Thou Child Divine, Immanuel,
Welcome to thy lowly manger !
With heart-felt joy thy birth we hail,
And greet with songs the lovely stranger.”

Then he gave us each a kiss with his rosy
lips and disappeared with his mother.

When Mrs. Andover returned, she said
to her husband, “ Edward, if you have
finished the poem you were writing, I wish
you would read it to us now. I liked what
I heard of it, and we have nothing to do
but to listen.”

The other two ladies added their solici-
tations, and the Doctor read


80 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

ee ;
4

“ A CHRISTMAS HYMN.



BY ALFRED DOMETT.



‘Tt was the calm and silent night!
Seven hundred years and fifty-three
Had Rome been growing up to might,
And now was queen of land and sea.
No sound was heard of clashing wars,—
Peace brooded o’er the hushed domain ;
Apollo, Pallas, Jove and Mars
Held undisturbed their ancient reign
In the solemn midnight
Centuries ago.

’T was in the calm and silent night !—
The senator of haughty Rome
Impatient urged his chariot’s flight
From lordly revel rolling home.—
Triumphal arches gleaming swell
His breast with thoughts of boundless sway ;
What recked the Roman what befell
A paltry province far away,
In the solemn midnight
Centuries ago ?



Within that province far away
Went plodding home a weary boor.


wena acini aa ctonipeapannnonmnnnncnnnnanantetan
A streak of light before him lay,
Fallen through a half-shut stable door
Acwoss his path.—He passed,—for naught
Told what was going on within ;
How keen the stars, his only thought,
The air how calm and cold and thin,
In the solemn midnight
Centuries ago.
Oh, strange indifference! Low and high
Drowsed over common joys and cares ;
The earth was still—but knew not why,
The world was listening—unawares !

JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 81

How calm a moment may precede
One that shall thrill the world forever !
To that still moment none would heed,
Man’s doom was linked no more to sever,
In the solemn midnight
Centuries ago.

It is the calm and solemn night !

A thousand bells ring out, and throw
Their joyous peals abroad, and smite

The darkness—charmed and holy now!
The night that erst no name had worn,

To it a happy name is given ;
For in that stable lay new-born

The peaceful Prince of Earth and Heaven,

In the solemn midnight
Centuries ago.”

NE


82 JOY AT CHRISTMAS.



Then the Doctor went out to see a pa-
tient. A poor, non-paying patient, it is
likely, since he took with him two of the
oranges from the table. I am sure he want-
ed to carry a dozen, but he could not afford
himself the luxury of giving more, even
although it was Christmas day.

He was not absent long, and, soon after
his return, a letter was left at the door.
The Doctor took his letter, which he read
with a slight flush on his face. He then
said to his mother and wife, ‘‘I have
received the appointment as visiting physi-
cian to the , which I asked for, you
know some time ago. I heard that it had
been given to Balsam, but it seems I am to
have it; the duty to commence at New
Year’s.”

Here was a joyful surprise. His income
would be more than doubled at once.
There was opportunity besides, of becom-
ing more generally known, and means of
self-improvement. We all shook hands






JOY AT CHRISTMAS. 83

OR 0 0000 0 0 00 0:00 ee

with him on his appointment, and his’

mother kissed him.

Christmas had brought them relief from
pressing cares, and I left them full of
pleasant hopes and plans for the coming
year.

I have certainly known a great many
happy people this Christmas, I thought, as
I re-entered the Miss Newbury’s front door
and made my way up to my own apart-
ment, There is a great deal of happiness
in this world, doubt it who will. I did not
doubt it, when the next minute, I espied a
letter on my table; along welcome letter
from a dear relative at a distance. This
was a cup of blessing poured out for my
especial use, and I hope I was not unthank-
ful.

Once more I read as had been my custom
from childhood, Milton’s wonderful Hymn
on the Nativity, and though now that was
read alone, by my solitary fire, which had

Bi
84. JOY AT CHRISTMAS.

once been read aloud with brothers and
sisters round, I would not yield to the sad-
ness of such a thought, nor sully with sel-
fish tears the Joy of Christmas.


Sn



THE YOUNG MISSIONARY. 85



Che Young Missionary.

A STORY OF JANUARY.

—_———_—_ +<—_—_——_-_-_—-

Tus prayer was ended, and the last words
of peace were spoken. The humble ser-
vice was over, and all prepared to depart
in haste, for the sky had long been growing
darker, and the air seemed thickening with
snow. The people had listened quietly
and with respect, but an anxious gaze was
every now and then directed through the
small window-panes, and it might have
been noticed that at length, after such a
look, weather-beaten heads nodded to each
other, and there was a slight stir near the
door. Perhaps they would have begun to
go away, singly or in pairs, for they knew
3

a



ss


86 THE YOUNG MISSIONARY.

~e—ReOrmreoe



——

that the young minister, if not a stranger
in the country, would be aware of the com-
ing storm and dismiss them, but the ser-
mon before long drew to a close, and wag-
ons and boats were speedily filled. ‘The
missionary himself had twenty miles to
ride, and even his inexperienced eye saw
the threatening omens, and that there was
no time to lose. Before the last boat left
the shore, he was ready to set off, not with-
out due refreshment offered and received,
and the precautions rendered necessary by
that terrible climate of carefully wrapping
up neck, chin and forehead.

By this time, the snow, which had been
whirling in the upper air, began to descend
in the fine, dust-like particles, which are
thought to indicate the beginning of a long-
continuing storm. The large, plumy flakes,
which float down in white beauty, and
deck the ground with soft stars, showing,
it is said, an approaching change in’ the
weather, soon cease to fall, and are followed
by suns more golden, and skies bluer than




THE YOUNG MISSIONARY. 87





before. But these tiny crystals, grey as
you look up through them, crowded myr-
iads on myriads together, fall, hour after
hour, with unceasing industry, till. every
fence is covered, and every hollow filled.
The roads, through the remote settlements

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of this country, always solitary enough,
assume a death-like stillness beneath their
shroud, nor does any living thing remain
abroad.

nm 98


88 THE YOUNG MISSIONARY.

~~







For the first four or five miles, the young
minister, passing at intervals the homeward
bound wagons of his people, received re-
peated and urgent invitations to turn aside
with them for the night. Declining to do
this, every voice called after him as he rode
away, and eager warning to use his utmost
speed in getting home. ‘There were warn-
ings too, all around him; from the old woods
came moans and sobbings; and dismal
voices went by on the hurrying blast.

His horse’s feet make no sound on the
muffled earth, and still deeper grew the fast-
increasing drifts.) He knows that if he
were to relax his efforts, or to lose his way,
as now on these logs and stones, even so
above his body, and around his head would
the fantastic snow-wreath settle. ‘ Lost in
a snow-storm ;’—‘In the woods in a snow-
storm,’ were words that would not fail to
account for his absence, to all who heard
them. He thought of the people with
whom he had so recently parted. Even
the fishermen of Wallace Cove were by
gy

THE YOUNG MISSIONARY. 89

eee Pv

this time at home, and every member of his
afternoon’s congregation safe under shelter,
while in that blinding and bewildering tem-
pest, all the trees look alike to him, and he
toils on, inahope that is half despair. That
vast hemlock, has he passed it before, or is
it one of many of the same size, and form,
deceiving his senses with its familiar looks ?
And yonder half-fallen tree lying against
its fellow is strangely like one seen half an
hour ago, if indeed it be not the same, and
he, miserably wandering still, in the same
part of the woods, there to wander till night
comes on, and the snow and the frost do
their work on him helpless in the dark-
ness.

He feels for a moment as if his prayer
could not rise among those close-serried
ranks of trees, and through the stifling
snow. 'Then indeed is he utterly alone.
And is it thus must end all his early dreams
of distinction, all his more sober hopes of
usefulness? Shall they all lie down to-
gether, and be alike shrouded and forgot-

8*

i iainehremeiinenninhenemanaainniininnenianeieneiianinitentnniininanaiaieniiinaitililll

ee re eres Be wena te Att LLL ALA


90 THE YOUNG MISSIONARY.

——_Oo



ten, tillon some afternoon in the distant
summer, the step of.the hunter or the
woodman shall pause, and his careless
whistle cease, on a sudden, as his eye falls
on a heap of human bones, found where
the fatal sleep overtook its victim, and
buried where they were found at the foot of
the ancient pine ?

Still another hour, and the horse plodded
on,.forcing his way through the drifts, for
rider dared not to deviate from the path
so much as to go round them, were that
possible in the thick forest. So while a
chill colder than that of winter or the grave
was at his heart, even the shadow of a mo-
mentary despair, he encouraged his gener-
ous companion, and felt that there was
between them a sympathy of suffering.

On! on! not a sound is to be heard but
the wailing of the wind, when suddenly
the trees seem closer together, and the
horse stops before a mountain drift of snow.
Now may they well give themselves up for
lost. 'The path has ceased ; it is fast grow-
THE YOUNG MISSIONARY. 91

a





.

ing dark, and there is no more strength to
struggle. But hark! along, distant how! min-
gles with the blast, and the horse, catching
the sound, turns aside, and with increased
and still increasing speed goes forward.
The wolf is exulting over his expected prey,
and the shout of his triumph, louder than
the voices of the storm, stirs anew the
languid pulses of both horse and rider.
But the missionary was not forgotten in
the wild woods of Nova Scotia. Not for-
gotten was it, that he was “the only son
of his mother and that she was a widow.”
Another sound ere long meets his ear, and
this time a sound of hope. Surely that
must be the: sea breaking surlily against
the rocks! And, in truth, the sea is near,
and a few more efforts bring him out of the
forest; and upon the shore. In another half
hour, the hamlet is in sight, and the dan-
ger over. None of his fisher neighbors are
abroad, but, as he goes by in the silence,
some rays from the blazing fires shine
through uncurtained windows across his
Â¥



92 THE YOUNG MISSIONARY.



path, and all unknowing it, each dwell-
ing blesses him as he passes to his own
home.

Nor was the missionary without cheerful
reception at his home. Mr. Donaldson, a
Christian man from one of the islands in
the Bay, had come to welcome the new
minister, and to spend the Sabbath with
him. So after his solitary ride of the after-
noon, he sat not down to a solitary meal
that evening, but a brother sat beside him
at his table.

The cold all the next day was more se-
vere than had been remembered in the
hamlet, and that thirteenth of January
came afterwards to be spoken of as the cold
Saturday. No fires could secure a com-
fortable temperature in those thin, wooden
houses, where angry draughts pour in
through many a crevice, and about the ill-
fitting doors and windows. Going out was
impossible. Nor would it avail to shovel
paths while the snow continued to fall. A
quantity of wood had been collected, but not

&


we

THE YOUNG MISSIONARY. 93



prepared for burning, and the two men
were glad to warm Hidinselves by sawing
and splitting it ready for the fires.

So wore away the day. In the evening
they spoke together of the manifold trou-
bles and wants of the Christian life, and
how mercifully the Almighty Father deals
with his erring children. The gray head
offered to his young friend the fruits of his
experience of the ways of God and man in
that wilderness, and listened in his turn to
the plans and hopes of the missionary.
They read some of David’s psalms, all af-
terwards distinguished in the young man’s
Bible by apencil-mark. They sang togeth-
er a hymn, and the pastor prayed more fer-
vently than usual, now that-a Christian
brother’s heart was beating near in unison
with hisown. And thus their prayers went
up together through the still, chilly night
air.

“There are gene men, everywhere,”
was the missionary’s thought before he fell
asleep that night, “and even were it not



scan acta ganas asinine unnmnaT
Ro

%&

94 THE YOUNG MISSIONARY.

annnnenneneereeeeers nr rere or os errr rrr rrr”

so, the good God is everywhere.” ‘ Even
in the howling woods,” added conscience,
“vet did thy faith fail thee!’ But in the
heart where faith failed, gratitude was
strong, and filled its chambers with her
song of love, and all within the pastor’s
house and around it was peace.

For many years, the old man had not
heard a sermon, or been present in a con-
gregation of worshipers, and very pleasant
to him were the services of the next day.
“Now,” said he, “I depart in peace ;—the
preaching of the word, I had scarcely hoped
would be enjoyed by my children, and lo!
mine eyes have seen Thy ”—he would
have added “salvation,” but something
choked his utterance, and his lips moved
inaudibly while a tear of joy glistened in his
aged eyes.

Perhaps it is in such isolated spots as this
settlement, that the comforts and hopes of
religion are most fully apprehended. ‘Those
humble, solitary ones gladly receive the
promises of the Bible, and to the spirits of



36
THE YOUNG MISSIONARY. 95

eaeennrntiteparininninnrabniniaipa PPP LD DDP PDP LPP PEL LED

the storm-tossed and weary how welcome
its fair visions of peace.

Monday morning at Fair Cove was clear
and fine; and with the minister’s promise
to visit him on Thursday, the old man
entered his boat, spread its single sail
of dingy red, and departed over the
waters of the Bay, and the missionary sit~
ting by his fire alone, blessed the Provi-
dence that had brought to him this coun-
selor and friend. On Thursday it had
been agreed, he should hold a meeting at
the island and early on that day he set
forth, taking with him two of his neighbors
as boatmen and choristers. The blue un-
frozen waters rolled freely along, and the
great snowy hills looked down upon them ;
and the wintry day laughed in its beauty,
and man, satisfied with what was present
with him, thought not of longing for the
spring.

A few hours saw the boat safe at the
island. “The missionary inquired for Don-
aldson’s, and was followed by the person to


96 THE YOUNG MISSIONARY.

——orr>



<—L—L—L——L—L— LL LO LOLOL Een en nn



whom he had spoken. A second left a cart
which he was mending and joined the first.
A third stood in the door of his house, and
seeing the minister, gravely added himself
to the group.

When they arrived at the place they
sought, some of the men who accompanied
the missionary opened the door for him,
and he wentin. Hesaw an elderly woman,
and said to her, ‘‘ ThisI think is Mr. Don-
aldson’s house. Can I see him?”

‘Oh, aye, sir,’’ replied the woman, “he
is not at all altered. Just this way, sir.”
The missionary with light step followed.
The door was thrown open; the room was
filled with people, and there was Mr. Don-
aldson—in his coffin. The minister had
come to his friend’s funeral.

How, or when the old man passed away
could not be known. His boat was seen
coming before the wind, and managed, it
was thought, carelessly. Was there no one
init? A neighbor meeting it as it ran
aground among the ice of the little beach,




THE YOUNG MISSIONARY. 97

LPI IOP







_

found the owner lying in the bottom as if
asleep. At first they thought he was sleep-
ing, but he waked no more. A paper which
the missionary recognized, was found on
his person, to the effect that there would
be religious worship at his house on the
next Thursday, and for that day they had
arranged his funeral.

The poor young missionary felt as if his
heart would break. How could he comfort
the afflicted when he had himself sustained
sogreat a shock? But perhaps his sorrow
was a balm to theirs, for true sympathy
avails more toa wounded heart than fair
words of consolation.

He took a short time for communing with
his own spirit, then rose before them all,
and spoke the words of which we are never
weary. The Lord gave: the Lord hath
taken away: Blessed be the name of the
Lord. His prayer was made amidst the
tears and sighs of the people, and all the
time he prayed, he wept. ‘Then there was
silence for a little, and a Bible being

9

——————— ———_———_—— 2
98 THE YOUNG MISSIONARY.

scien ithe tlds ETRE DO

brought him, he said, ‘“‘I probably heard
the last words which our dear friend and
brother addressed to mortal ear, and it is
fitting thatI should make them now the
text of his funeral sermon. On that last
morning of his earthly life, he bade me be
of good cheer, relying on Him who said,
Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my
word shall not pass away.”

It was sad for them all to remember how
much of their earthly pleasure, much of the
higher joy which we name of heaven, had
passed away, but they were not allowed to
rest here. Here was one thing firmer than
the hills of earth, more lasting than the
stars of heaven, the Word that shall not
pass away. In this strain the minister dis-
coursed, holding the Bible of the departed
in his hand, and the people looked at it and
at him and reverently listened.

There was preaching on his island, and
in his house; the day he had so desired to
see was come, and he lay still and regarded
it not. A servant of the church was be-


eo

THE YOUNG MISSIONARY. 99

—O—oOoOorornrwmnumseaeeemoaoOoOoOOOOosa ese ees eww ey reer’

neath his roof, and he gave him no wel-
come. So thought the missionary as he
sat down after his sermon, and all the
stricken family satcalm in their grief around
him. “On Sunday,” said he at last, ‘‘ our
venerable and now most happy friend sang
with me this hymn:
‘There is a house not made with hands,
Eternal and on high.’

Sing you it now, I cannot.” The boat-
men who had accompanied the minister be-
gan; other voices took up the words, and
at length, even his voice who said he could
not sing that hymn, and who felt almost as
if he should sing no more henceforth, joined
the solemn strain, and had ceased to trem-
ble ere its close.

%§$—_—_—__ eeef
100 COMING HOME.



Coming Aue.

A STORY OF FEBRUARY.



First it should snow; then it should hail ;
then it should rain; and all the while it
should freeze. During the night this must
take place. Then, when about ten o’clock
the next morning, the sun puts aside the
clouds like a curtain, and looks forth, the
world has become a very miracle of beauty.
What long sparkling aisles of steel-stemmed
trees! How the woods blaze with rubies

and diamonds, till not all the jewelry of all
the courts on earth can compare with the
splendor of this strip of New England for-
est !






radiant with steel and gold. From those
bushes to the right float little yellow drops
the morning air. It is, “an illumination of
all gems.”

COMING HOME. 101
Great stately boughs and delicate pen-
dent twigs, are alike sheathed in purest
silver, and every spray of every bush, and
every nascent bud is stiff in shining armor
of its own. Myriads of prisms of every
shape, size, and color, dazzle the eye. Now
sways towards you a slender birch all over
vivid as fame. Here swims a great orb of
orange, and elsewhere thousands of lilac
and azure and even green drops quiver in

For some hours, the splendor lasts, until
the sun, which flattered and adorned the
scene, destroys it, and in unnumbered
streams the pageant glides away.

I do not know that we in New England
have any name for this beautiful spectacle.
In Nova Scotia it is called ‘a silver-thaw,”
and no where certainly does it produce finer
effects than on the sea-coasts of that noble

peninsula. ‘There, the gigantic pine droops
Q*

$$ hf
102 COMING HOME.

lhe
heavy and brittle with his gorgeous ‘dress,
and the mighty hemlock wears his ermine
like a king, and one sees

_“ Every withered stump and mossy stone
With gems encrusted and with seed-pearls sown.”

It is not, however, with the bonny Prov-
ince, that my story has to do. ‘The silver-
thaw of which I am speaking, wove its
magic in the old Bay state. I wonder if
Obbatinua of Shawmut, and the other
eight sachems, who, in 1621, at Plymouth,
professed themselves king James’ loyal sub-
jects, ever paused in their wide forests to
gaze on such a scene! I wonder if the
squaw-sachem of Massachusetts saw it, and
talked with her dusky maidens about the
Great Spirit who showed his children things
so glorious! 1 wonder if the huge crow,
sitting with outstretched neck on yonder
stump, feels a beauty in the morning, or
the wild sea-birds that glance by in bright-
ness of their own !

I am but of yesterday and know nothing,

3 _——$— —
ae

TOO

COMING HOME. 103

hahaa sigh pace EPL LLL Se

and therefore I wonder if there may not be
hosts of shining ones, unseen by us, and
themselves beautiful with the colors of
heaven, gazing delighted on all that here
delights me, and saying softly to each other,
God saw every thing that He had made, and
behold it was very good!

Let us walk wisely in these wood-paths,
in consideration of what is, and of what
may be about us.

Nor is the charm of sound wanting. The
tiny tinkling of the drops falling by their
own weight makes a continual music to the
ear. The foot crushes the clear snow be-
neath which the little granular hail-drops
lie; presently some larger icicle falls with a
crash, and the unfettered brook is all the
time gliding on, on, as if eager to tell its
kindred streams the wonders it has seen in
the woods.

And now we come out into the road.
Yonder wooden fence is smooth as a mir-
ror, and spears pure enough for Milton’s
Ithuriel to have borne, gleam on every

—+—$—$ $$ $ ———_—_@§i@ i ———_—_4
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104 COMING HOME.

ees

window of the barns. The hay-stack is
frosted with a delicate net-work, and the
old red chimney wears its garniture of
pearls and is not ashamed in the presence
of the morning. While, dearer to us, per-
haps, than any other object in the land-
scape, true child of earth, fickle, fluttering,
yet striving still to rise, the smoke steals
upward from behind the trees, and floats
away in long soft wreaths.

Along this road, on the February morn-
ing which I have attempted to describe,
briskly walked a young man, who carried
in one hand a small carpet-bag, and swung
a light stick in the other. He was very
young, with a cheerful, honest face, and
seemed greatly to enjoy his morning walk.
Now he whistled clear and loud, a few
merry. notes; now he rattled down a long
row of icicles with his stick, while ‘‘crunch,
crunch,” sounded the snow under his quick
steps.

And bye-and-by, it was noon. ‘The
many-tinted and peculiar beauty of the day

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COMING HOME. 105

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was over, and only the clear white sun-
shine was left, sleeping on the white snow.
And still, the smoke from the chimneys
fluttered and soared, and still the young
man walked steadily forward. But his
whistling had ceased ; there were no icicles
now within his reach, and the little carpet-
bag was slung on his stick, and carried
across his shoulders.

Down the long hill behind him, came the
stage-coach. The wheels creaked on the
frozen road; the traces jingled; the horse-
hoofs clattered; proudly stepped the four
brown horses. Every body looks with
interest at the passing coach, that great,
noisy, cheerful apparition on a lonely
country way. Our young traveler turned
to watch it, as it drew nearer. He saw
with pleasure the nodding, jolting, black
and yellow carriage, with the comfortable
show of trunks at its back, and the well-
satisfied faces looking out from the win-
dows. He thought some of them must be
going home, like himself. Then he admired

i nsntnetesiiciinitiinicitaasiaaaecinssieanaiaaa
inant eeicenennenesenpnienceet

106 COMING HOME.

the small, eager limbs of the horses, their
beautiful heads held sharply up in the
descent, their fiery eyes and breath; nor
did he fail to bestow due attention on the
tutelary genius of the whole, the mighty
driver himself, sitting exalted and alone
with his purple comforter, his face burnt
by New England frost and sun and wind,
and perhaps also in part by New England
rum.

‘‘ Whoa! whoa!” said the driver, sud-
denly reining up at the foot of the hill.
The coach came to a full stop. Some strap
or buckle needed to be adjusted. ‘The
young man on foot went forward and per-
formed the trifling service, while the driver
stood up and thrapped his arms together in
order to warm them. ‘Then he stamped
vigorously to restore the circulation in his
feet.

‘‘ All right, now;” called out the young
man, stepping back from the horses. ‘The
driver gathered up the reins. ‘‘ You are

welcome to ride as far as we go, Mister,” |

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COMING HOME. 107

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he said; and the traveler gladly clambered
up to the box. So carpet-bag, stick, and
their owner traveled more easily the next
few miles, besides seeing the country to
more advantage, and reaping the benefit of
the various items of information, dealt out
by the driver. Our traveler learned that
Mr. Brooks had built a new barn; that old
deacon Saunders had been buried the day
before, and that eighty-seven children and
grand-children, including the husbands and
wives of such as were married, went as
mourners at the funeral. In one house a
pair of twins had been born ; from another
the head had gone to California; the widow
Hilton had lost her cow; squire Condy’s
office had been broken into by thieves; and
the school-house at the four corners had
been burned down.

Thus the coach rolled on, and so did the
sun, and all the frost-work was melted
from the woods on either hand.

«¢J,ook! Isaw a man there among the
bushes.”




108 COMING HOME.

ities DLL LL LEAL LALLA LLL LLL LLL Ee

‘Only a black stump,” said the driver.

‘No, it was a man with a white coat on;
I saw him distinctly.”

“It was a white stump, then. Whoa,
Prince! steady, Lightfoot! There is no
man there,” continued the driver, looking
at the spot pointed out by his companion,
and giving his near wheeler a slight cut of
the whip by way of rounding his sentence.
But the other was confident he had seen a
man suddenly disappear at that place, and
he even thought the face was one he knew.

Another half hour of trees on each side
the road, then a farm or two on the right
or the left, then the village, and the coach
stopped before the door of Bells’ tavern at
the Four Corners. The old vehicle with
sundry jubilant, swinging motions, dis-
charged all its contents and appurtenances ;
—horses, coachman, trunks, ladies, chil-
dren and cotton umbrellas. The ladies and
children were appropriated with surprising
rapidity; so were the umbrellas, but wheth-
er as honestly, I am unable to say. I be-


COMING HOME. 109

ONC NNN ease ee kek lw__

lieve so, however, as the weather was fine,
and people must be bad indeed, who would
take their neighbors’ umbrellas, cotton ones
moreover, in bright sunshine.

The horses walked round ‘to their stables
with an air which said, “at home,” as
plainly as if each had given the by-standers
his card with Bell’s Tavern engraved on it
in copper-plate. The black and yellow
coach stood with its doors and windows
open as if gasping for breath, or staring in
grotesque amazement atits sudden deser-
tion. The trunks were disappearing, one
by one, and on their way in wagons and
carryalls to the homes of their owners.

As for the little carpet-bag, that, too,
was just about to depart, when a hearty
voice called out, “Is that you, William
Horn? Come home to make the old lady
a visit, I suppose ?”

William said that it was so, and had the
pleasure of learning that his mother was in
good health a day or two before, when Mr.
Bell had seen her.

10


gD

110 COMING HOME.



Mr. Bell insisted on William’s stopping
to dine with him. He had, himself, just
come home, he said, and had yet had no
dinner. It was ready now, and William
must come in and help him to eat it.. Such
an invitation is not thoroughly disagreea-
ble to a young, healthy lad, who has been
walking from daylight till an hour or two
past noon, and William with a simple
“Thank you, sir,” entered the tavern.

The meal was soon despatched, for Wil-
liam was impatient to see his mother, and
there were still three miles between them. |
The landlord too, seemed in a _ hurry.
There was, he said, two good days’ work
to be done that afternoon. It was now
three o’clock, and he was wanted in three
different places.

A sudden message that Mr. Bell was
asked for, seemed to indicate a fourth de-
mand on that individual’s already over-
tasked afternoon. His companion rose also,
assumed the carpet-bag again, and was





COMING HOME. 111

enact REPL PELE DEP OE LEED OEE





running down the steps, when Mr. Bell’s
voice once more arrested him.

“If you are not particular about going
home directly, and could do an errand for
me, I should be very glad.”

When the tavern-keeper had explained
his errand, William found that it would
take him nearly four miles in another
direction, and he was both tired and impa-
tient. Still, Mr. Bell’s coach had saved
some time for him, and Mr. Bell’s dinner
had refreshed him. He owed him many
old kindnesses besides, so he answered as
cheerfully as possible under the circum-:
stances, that he would go.

“1 was going over myself,” said Mr.
Bell, ‘‘ but I am very busy here; there is a
meeting of the County Commissioners, and
I ought tobe here. The man I promised
to pay the money to, was to be at the creek
at three o’clock to-day, and he has already
began to think that for once Jeduthan Bell
‘5 worse than his word. It is a pretty large














































112 COMING HOME.

sum to trust a- little boy with, or I should
send our Hannah’s Josey.”

‘Tam quite ready to go,” said William,
more cordially than before.

‘Well, then, you shall have the little
wagon, it won’t take you long to drive
over to the creek. Here is Dracut’s money,
for which you will take his receipt, you
know; I will pay you a dollar for the job,
and thank you kindly besides.”

When William got back to the Four-
Corners,.it was almost night. The land-
lord .had finished his business with the
County Commissioners. William gave him
the receipt for the money paid, and received
the promised dollar, which he added to the
thirty-nine he had in his wallet for his
mother. ‘“ And now, straight for home,”
he said with a laugh.

The landlord laughed too, and said he
meant to drive William down to the Falls;
he wanted to see a man there about some
meal, and should pass Mrs. Horn’s house.

The village called the Falls, was situa-

&





COMING HOME. 113





ted about three miles from the Four-Cor-
ners, and the light wagon soon stopped at
Mrs. Horn’s door. William got down, and
in his quiet way thanked good-natured
neighbor Bell for his attention. Neighbor
Bell handed out carpet-bag and walking-
stick, and he handed out yet more; there
was something done up in a white bag, and
there were two brown-paper parcels, and a
box. “These are for your mother; my
wife sends them with her love,” said Mr.
Bell, and drove off very fast.

William Horn opened the door, and went
in. He had to make two journeys before
he had brought all his valuables into the
house. He passed the door of the best
room, where they used to sit on Sundays,
and in the summer afternoons; he knew
there would be no one there at this time.
But neither did he find any body in their
common room, the kitchen.

A fire had not yet gone out on the hearth.
His mother’s chair stood in its accustomed
place. A little table was near, on which
10%




















































114 COMING HOME.

lay her knitting and her Bible. All showed
signs of her recent presence. The son drew
together the mouldering brands, and made
a good fire. ‘Then he lighted a lamp, and
looked about him. On the shelf lay a book
which he took down to examine. It was
an Arithmetic, worn and dog-eared, kept
there for love of him. In a corner was the
little stool where he used to sit and learn
the next day’s lesson, while his mother
sewed something for him, answering his
hundred questions, and seeing when. she
looked at him, not so much the stout-built,
brown-faced, rough-handed and blunt ur-
chin on the stool, as’ the good, agreeable,
and respected man which she hoped he
would become.

William was not uneasy at his mother’s
absence. He supposed she had gone out
for a short time to see a sick neighbor, or
to do some errand at the village shop. But
he was impatient for her return, and at last
he bethought himself of preparing the eve-
ning meal against her coming. He remem-




COMING HOME. 115

ceeningnceapat CADPR LLL LE LLP IDOL

bered the parcels left by the friendly inn-
keeper. Undoing the whitish bag, he cut
some slices from the ham it contained.
While these were broiling, he found in one
of the paper parcels some sugar, in the
other, tea. So he put some tea into the
old familiar tea-pot which he took from the
cupboard beside the fire-place, and drawing
up the black, round table that had been in
the family before he was there himself, he
arranged matters with all the skill in his
power. He had just completed his prepara-
tions by transferring some biscuits from
the box to a plate, when he heard steps on
the flat door-stone, and the door was
opened.

“Mother!” ‘My child!’ ‘My Wil-
liam’? ‘My dear mother.” ~ :

Ah! it is a pleasant thing to go home to
one’s mother after a year’s absence. How
she looks at her child from ‘head to foot, to
see if he has grown, and is well and strong ;
how she gazes through his eyes down into -
his heart to see if that remains as honest


116 COMING HOME.



——oeee—eeeeeeee| —_—£¥_-_->~—~—
and loving as when she parted with him
that morning months ago, with tears and
hopes on both sides, and on hers with many
fears and prayers.

Mrs. Horn praised William for having
prepared their tea, and in the fullness of her
satisfaction at his return, said nothing of
the few spots left on the hearth in trans-
porting the broiled ham to the too-distant
plate. She swept up the ashes, and sat
down in the chair he placed for her, and
looked at him, and eat a mouthful and
looked again.

‘‘ Now, mother, that I see you knitting, I
am sure it is all right, and that it is really
you in that corner. How often I have
thought of you in the evenings, how often
Ihave dreamed of you sitting just there
with your knitting in your hands, and now
I see you.u—Ah ! mother, I am so happy,”
said the young man, ‘‘and lam tostay a
whole fortnight with you.” Then taking
out his little wallet, he added, ‘‘ And here
mother is some money to buy yarn with.”
COMING HOME. 117



‘‘But my dear, there is a great deal of
a

‘There are’forty dollars, mother.”

‘Why, William, and is it all properly
yours ?”’

‘No, mother dear, it is all properly yours
now, but it was all honestly earned and
saved for you. I have besides a muslin-
de-laine gown-pattern, which Mr. Ledger-
son sends you because, as he is pleased to

say, I have served him well. He gave me,
“moreover, a new suit of clothes, which are
to be here tomorrow, with my trunk. We
shall see then, how proud you will be to
walk out with me. Come, mother, put up
your cash, and knit your stocking; or stay,
see how little yarn you have left on your
ball; let me hold a skein for you as I used
to do.” .

See them now, the son with the great
blue skein over his wrists, and the mother,
now and then stopping to loosen a knot,
and, when the thread ran smoothly, look-
ing fondly at her boy. He was again with

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118 COMING HOME.



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her; again all her own; this was the mo-
ment she had looked forward to, through
many a long, weary summer day ;—in
many a long, lonely winter evening.

“Ts Mrs. Ledgerson kind to you, Wil-
liam ?”’

‘‘T never see her, mother! I am notin
her orbit.’

‘But you are in her family, are you
not ?”’

‘‘T suppose so; I sleep under the same
roof; but I am up, have had my breakfast,
and am off, before she comes down stairs.
Of course, we boys do not go to dinner un-
til our master comes back to the store; at
night, too, I am late, and find my tea, and
toast and so forth, left for me in the dining
room. Our hours do not agree,” said he
with a laugh.

‘And how on Sunday, William ?”’

‘On Sunday, mother, I go to church,
and from my elevated station in the left-
hand gallery, I could not if I would, get

——_——__$_ FF
COMING HOME. 119




even a glimpse of Mrs. Ledgerson in her
lower sphere of the broad aisle.”

‘‘ But you are not at church all the while
on Sunday. How is it between the ser-
vices ?”’ ;

““T spend a good deal of time in my own
room. You know I wrote you that I had
joined a Young Men’s Bible Class; the
preparation of the lesson for that occupies
my morning usually. Breakfast is late, and
Mrs. Ledgerson has hers in her own apart-
ment, I suppose, or else she goes without, I
don’t know as to that. Dinner I can’t stop
for, on account of going to the Bible Class.
At tea-time I do generally meet the whole
family, and then, being pretty well tired of
reading and thinking, I go to my room,
and wish I were in the country with you.”

‘That must bea lonely life, I am afraid.”

“Too busy to be lonely, mother; too
busy all day, too tired at night.”

Mrs. Horn was so simple that she thought
it wrong and unkind thus to leave a young,
inexperienced boy to his own guidance.

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120 COMING HOME.
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To her it seemed the plain duty of a mas-
ter to see not only that his clerks and ap-
prentices served him well in his business,
but that their leisure time was innocently
spent, that their habits were good and their
hours regular. She saw no reason why the
mistress of the family should not give some
attention and sympathy to these lads, trans-
planted from the pure influences of a coun-
try home, and feeling, as they must do at
first, the want of the mother and sisters
left behind. She would not have thought
it too much for Mrs. Ledgerson to have
seen that William’s linen and stockings
were kept in repair, or to-have talked with
him about the books he read, or to have
taken him to her pew on Sundays.
Strange, antiquated, scriptural notions
Mrs. Horn had of duty and responsibility,
and very little idea of the imperative claims
of gentility and fashion. 'T'o William,;: she
however said nothing of what she consid-
ered the short-comings of Mrs. Ledgerson.




COMING HOME. 121



She inquired about young Anson. Washe
doing well in Boston?

William saw very little of him, he said.
‘‘'The fact is, mother, Anson does not find
me quite gay enough to suit him. He has
more money than | have, and I am some-
times afraid he wastes both money and
time. Mother, do you know I think it is a
great safeguard to a fellow not only to
have a good mother, but for her to be poor?
If you had been as well off as Rufus An-
son’s mother, I might have learned to drink
wine, and to smoke cigars, and to go to the-
atres, and drive fast horses.”

‘Does Rufus do those things?’ asked
Mrs. Horn.

William owned. that he did, and that
after his own refusal to have any thing to
do with such amusements, Anson accused
him of want of spirit, called hima spooney,
and at length ceased to take any notice of
him. William begged his mother to say
nothing of what he had told her, and ad-
ded, ‘‘ I think I saw him this morning, on

ll

—_————


122 COMING HOME.

the road, or rather, by the side of the road
among the shrubs. Mother, it strikes me,
now that we are speaking of Rufus and
his ways, that he may have done some-
thing wrong, and have been coming home,
poor fellow. I have often thought he could
not always go on so.”

William got up from his seat, and walked
about the room. The thought of his old
playfellow’s folly was a painful one, but
it could not occupy him long in the pleas-
ure of that first meeting with his mother.
He resumed his place and began to inquire
about his friends in the village. Was the
good minister well, and his family? He
had in his trunk, as a present for Mr. Red-
ner, a set of those new paste-board cases for
holding pamphlets—And Luke Randal,
was his health restored ?

Mr. Redner was well and active, but
Luke would never be well again. It was
with him Mrs. Horn had been this after-
noon. Poor Luke could not live many
days now. He had sent a message of affec-
ge



COMING HOME. 123

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tion and farewell to William, begging him
to live a holy and Christian life, that so by
the grace of Almighty God, his last hours
might be filled with peace.

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Thus talking together the evening wore
away, and now Mrs. Horn put aside her
knitting, and her boy read to her some
Psalms and some chapters from the gospel
according to St. John; and then the mother

Deane ccc ee an een nes aaa i Sa
124 COMING HOME.

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and son went to their sleep with glad and
grateful hearts.

Early the next morning, William went to
inquire after his old acquaintance, the sick
Randal. At the door of the house, he met
Mr. Redner coming out. “Is Luke yet
living, sir ;” asked William, inating: hands
with the sind

“No,” said Mr. Redner, “ Luke has gone
home.”

“ Poor Luke!” said William, with a tone
of sadness in his voice.

“No,” said Mr. Redner; ‘not poor
Luke. We do not say poor William, when
we hear of your coming home. We say,
happy William; and we humbly hope and
believe we may say happy Luke. He is
once for all at home. He goeth no more out
forever. Home! Home!’’ murmured the
minister softly, as if the word were sweet
to his taste.

While they were yet standing before the
door, a young lady came up to them, who
greeted: Mr. Redner affectionately, shook




COMING HOME. 125

Onn eee el eee errr

hands with William in a friendly manner,
and was told of young Randal’s release.
They all walked down the street together,
as far as the lane leading to Mr Redner’s
house. At first, it seemed as if Mr. Red-
ner would pass this, and continue his walk,
but Miss Fleming had turned up towards
the house, and he thought showed a wish
to speak with him. William thought so
too, and as he bowed to her, and noticed
her paleness, again there crossed his mind
the recollection of the white coat in the
woods. He took leave of his companions,
accepting the minister’s invitation to call
on him in the course of a day or two, and
resumed his walk about the village.

It was Rufus Anson whom William had
seen from the top of the stage-coach.
Walking on when no one was in sight, and
skulking in the woods when he thought
himself likely to be observed, he passed
through Four-Corners after dark, and
reached his mother’s late in the evening.

11*


126 COMING HOME.



There was company at Mrs. Fleming’s
that night, and music and the sound of
cheerful voices. From the shrubbery where
he stood shivering in the cold February
air, Rufus could see the figures moving
about in the brightly lighted rooms.. With-
in, were the warmth and food and rest
which he required, and he was without, in
the darkness.

Little did the ie think when with
smiling eyes and lips she answered some
guest’s inquiry about her son, how near he
was to her, almost within her call.

At length all the good-nights were said ;
the door was shut and fastened after the

last of the departing guests, and Mrs. Flem- —

ing and her step-daughter were left alone.
The elder lady sank into an arm-chair as if
tized, while the other closed the piano-forte,
and extinguished the lights. Then draw-
ing a seat to the fire beside her companion,
the two chatted together, for perhaps half
an hour.

‘And now, mother, I will light your
COMING HOME. 127



candle for _ You must not sit up a
minute longer.” im

Mrs. Fleming smiled at her daughter’s

airs of authority, but complied. ‘ Good-
night, my dear! You had better draw the
rug away from the fire.”

‘© Yes, mother, go up stairs directly.”

“ And, Mary, just notice whether the
side-door is fastened.”

‘‘Mrs. Fleming, must I carry you. up
stairs ?” 3

So Mrs. Fleming went, and Mary was
about to follow, when her attention was
attracted by a knock on the window. She
was not a timid person, she walked directly
towards the window whence the sound
came. As she did so, a voice spoke her
name.

“Did some one speak? Is any body
there?” she asked.

“ Mary,” cried the voice again, while a
pale face was pas close against the
window.

The young lady, with an exclamation of


128 COMING HOME.



joyful surprise, hastened to admit him.
‘“ Hush!” he said, as she opened the side-
door which was nearest to the place where
he stood. ‘ Don’t make any noise Mary.
Is every body in bed but you?”

‘Yes, every body. But, my dear Ru-
fus, what is the matter? Are you ill? Oh,
how cold you are !—Come in here ; here is
the best fire.’’

‘* Yes, I am very cold,” said the youth,
spreading his hands out over the fire; “ but
don’t speak so loud, or somebody will find
out that I am here,—and yet I must see my
mother. Is she as well as usual?”

‘‘ Yes,” not very strong, you know; and
it will startle her to see you so suddenly. I
do not understand this concealment, Rufus.
Is it necessary? Why not come home
boldly ? ”

“Why?” said he bitterly; “ because if
seen, my next hour might be the state
prison. I tell you, Mary, they are already
perhaps, in search of me. Let me go to my
mother. I must see her to-night.”’

i
COMING HOME. 129



‘‘ Let me prepare her first,” said Mary ; ;
‘‘ and you will promise not to agitate her.”

“Yes, yes; she need not be agilated..
There is nothing to. agitate her. A man
has been detected as a liar, a gambler, and
a thief, and is in danger of disgrace and a
prison,—and that man is her only son. »
That is all; nothing to agitate a woman in
that, i think. f

Mary was silent. Ina minute he spoke ©
again. ‘ There is some difference ere
the heiress, and the fugitive from justice,”
he said gloomily, pointing to her delicate
evening dress, and then glancing at his own
disordered attire.. ‘ But no matter, I need
not trouble you with my misery. I deserve
it all.”

‘Oh, Rufus! Rufus! Don’t talk SO’
strangely. Where should you go with
your misery, if not to me. You can hardly
stand. Lie down, my dear — and
tell me what I can do for you.”

“ Tecan not; I must see my mother once
more. I atane have some money, and some


130 COMING HOME.



food, and make my escape. Oh, my poor
mother! How will she bear it? Mary, I
wish my mother was dead. I wish we
were all dead,—or rather, that I had never
been born.”

‘‘T knew he was come,” said Mrs.
Fleming, joyfully. ‘I heard you talking,
Mary, and I was sure it was Rufus’ voice.
So I threw on a wrapper and ran down.
My dearest boy, how do you do? But you
are pale,—you tremble,—you turn away
from me. Oh, my Rufus, what have you
been doing ?”’

Poor lady ! poor, loving heart, joyful no
more! She sank down, in dismay, and
would have fallen if her children had not
supported her to a sofa. Throwing himself
on his knees before her, her wretched son
told the story of his follies and crimes; told
more fully than I need to repeat here, how
he had begun by giving little suppers to his
fellow-clerks, to prove to them that he was
a good social fellow, with some knowledge
of life, and not a raw, country simpleton.



————_———-- en wow NS


COMING HOME. 131

epee OP PPLE ELLE LLP PLP GLEE IIL

These were followed by Sunday excursions,
with fast-trotting horses into the country,
terminating usually at a public-house some-
where in the suburbs. ‘These expenses
pressing heavily on his means, he had at
length been tempted to try his fortune at a
gambling-house.

Sometimes winning, sometimes losing,
but always sinking deeper, and deeper into
debt, he had at last, in the mad hope of
repairing all, taken money belonging to the
firm. He had done this twice, and had
lost it, every dollar. In the certainty of
detection, he had rushed from the gambling
house, and from the city, and found his
way home to her.

“And now, I have told you all; I have
kept back nothing. I have ruined my-
self, and disappointed you. Oh, my mother,
can you forgive me? Can you love me
still ?”’

““ Through every thing, I must love you,
Rufus,” sobbed Mrs. Fleming.

“ J like business,” began he again; “I

jp
132 COMING HOME.

am not disposed to be idle. Ido not, I did
not even then, enjoy the ways I pursued.
But I had begun, and it seemed as if I had
no power to stop.”’

Thus the three sat all through the night,
while the widow Horn and her son were
sleeping peacefully in their homely cham-
bers.

‘What is he to do, Mary? I can not
think for him,-—my power of thought seems
to be leaving me.’ The lady was indeed
far from well. Delicate before, the shock
of her son’s misconduct had completely
prostrated her. She lay quite still, with
shut eyes, holding his hand in hers. His
eagerness to be away seemed to have van-
ished, and all the fierceness of the evening
before, at the sight of his mother.

‘“T will stay here by my mother,’ he
said, ‘‘as long as I can, no matter what
happens tome. I have run my career. I
am past fear and hope.” |

As for Mary, she busied herself with ad-
ministering restoratives to her mother. She


COMING HOME. 133



prevailed on Rufus to take the food which
he needed; and, when she had in some
degree soothed and comforted them both,

she proposed that they should consult their
good friend and minister.

At first, Mrs. Fleming was unwilling.
She could not bear that even he should
know her son’s wickedness, and shame ;
but when reminded that-every one would
soon know it, that the very newspapers
would publish his disgrace; when Rufus
urged her to consent, that he might have
the counsel of the wise and good man, she
begged Mary to go at once for Mr. Redner.

Not finding him at the Parsonage, Miss
Fleming followed him to the Randal’s,
where, as we have seen, she arrived while
the minister was speaking with William
Horn.

It was still early when Mary re-entered
the parlor with Mr. Redner. “ Has Mary
told you sir?”’ asked young Anson.

‘© She tells me that you have grievously
sinned, my son, and that you wish to con-

12

"4
134 COMING HOME,

sult me.” Then sitting down, he led the
unhappy boy to relate his story.

A stranger who could have looked into
that room would have at once perceived
that some unusual event had disturbed the
family routine. The sun, streaming in
through the partially opened shutters,
showed the yet unremoved traces of the
party of the previous night ;—a bunch of
grapes under the table ;—a gay scarf left
hanging on one of the chairs;—a handful
of flowers fallen on the carpet. Mary’s
light dress too, which she had not found
time to change for one more suited to a
winter morning, seemed out of place. Mrs.
Fleming lay on her sofa with face almost
as white as the shawl she had hastily
thrown about her, while, near to her, and
still holding her hand sat Rufus with worn
cheeks and hollow eyes. The minister sat
grave and sorrowful, and heard the confes-
sions of this stray lamb of his flock.

‘© Will you pray with us, Mr. Redner, in
this our extremity?” said Mrs. Fleming.


iT

COMING HOME. 185

eipininin eta P LLLP ELL LPP PPP ILI IL ELL

As they rose from their knees, “ That,”
said Rufus, with a groan, “is the first
prayer I have heard for more than six
months.”

“It is for Almighty God, our heavenly
Father, to hear prayer,” said Mr. Redner ;
“ it is for us, his erring children, to pray.” |

“Tecan not pray;—l dare not pray. I
am not of God’s children,” said the young
man.

The minister looked at him with a
boundless compassion in his eyes, but he
did not think fit at this time to enter into
any argument with him. He only said,
‘the Father is still a father, and has a
welcome in his heart;—and in his house,
robes, and music, and a feast, for the son
who sits far distant among husks and
swine.”

When Rufus had fully answered all the
minister’s questions about his affairs, the
good man reflected for a little, and then
offered to go to Boston that very day. He
would see Mr. W - would tell him of



einen LL aE

%
136 COMING HOME.



the remorse of his guilty clerk, and repay-
ing him the money stolen, endeavor to
prevail on him not to expose and prosecute:

cw is a stern man, and he trusted
me greatly. He will never forgive,” said
Rufus.

‘“‘Nor can I command the sum neces-
sary,” said Mrs. Fleming. I have not
above a tenth part of it. You know, Rufus
dear, I always sent you as muchas I could
spare from my income—and I have already
encroached on that of the. next half year.
But I will sell every thing in my power, and
lam sure Mary ’—

‘‘ Mary is not yet of age,” said Mr. Red-
ner, ‘‘and her guardian would hardly give
her such a sum at an hour’s notice, without
being informed of all these unhappy cir-
cumstances.”

‘No! no!” interrupted Mrs. Fleming,
“better see Mr. W—— and beg him to
wait. We will all work for money, and
save in every way in order to pay him.



$$ $C

%
Pon 1

COMING HOME. 137

ita



Oh! Mr. Redner, tell him our misery, and
persuade him.”

“It will be of no use,” said Anson ; ‘‘ but
if Mr. Redner is willing to take the trouble
for such as I am, he can try: and, sir, 1
hope you will believe me when I say, that
wretched as I am at this shame, and guilty
as I feel when I see to what sorrow I have
brought my mother, I yet feel a relief,—at
any rate, I am no longer deceiving her, and
draining her of all her money. I was so
weary of a life of lies, 1 so loathed myself
and my pursuits. If one only knew be fore-
hand what a path of thorns he enters upon
who begins to do wrong.”

“T cannot believe,” said Mary, that Mr.
W. was free from blame. He must have
neglected Rufus. If the merchants took a
little more interest in their young men,
perhaps they might be saved from some of
the dangers of large towns.”

“Ah! Mary, I have nobody to blame
put myself. I knew better all the time.
My conscience told me William Horn was

12*

——————————— eee &

_s initia iil o


188 COMING HOME.



right when I laughed at him for going so
steadily to his church and his Bible-class.”’
‘‘ William is come home, too,” said Mary,
bursting into tears, as she thought what a
coming home her brother’s had been.
“Yes, I saw him on the coach. He isa
pleasure and a pride to his mother, while I,
—yet I had a better prospect than William.
I had more education, more friends, a better
business situation, I suppose I have more
ability,—at least, William used rather to
look up to me, I know. He may well look
down on me now.” |
Mr. Redner had been writing for a few
minutes at the table. He now brought a
paper for Rufus to sign. It was a brief
statement of the wrong done his employer,
and authorized Mr. Redner to act for him.
‘‘What shall you promise about the
money,” asked Mrs. Fleming, ready, if it
could be so, to sell herself into slavery to
save her son.

The minister hesitated a moment before
he answered: “I have, during my ministry






















COMING HOME. 189

ceanstense permanently AAT ALLA ODE TE

of twenty years in this place, saved exactly
the sum in question, I can get it at the
Four Corners as I passthrough. If he will
listen to me, Mr. W shall be paid to-
day.”

‘“ Dear, kind Mr. Redner,” exclaimed
Mary, “it shall be the first care of my
mother and myself, that you do not lose this
money.”

“No doubt, no doubt; but it is Rufus
who shall-pay me. This debt to me will
be one cord the more binding him to indus-
try and economy. For the sake of your
dead father, now I trust in heaven,—for
your suffering mother’s sake,—yes, my
poor, dear boy, and for your sake, whom I
knew in infancy, and whom I hope to see
a penitent and useful man, I would risk
more than this to save you.”

The youth groaned and turned away.
To be loved when we have done wrong ;—
to be benefited when you do not deserve it,
—it is enough to break the hardest heart.
Rufus had not a hard heart, and he was


lh ne aR

140 COMING HOME.

—~





completely overcome. ‘‘It is I alone who
have sinned,” he said, ‘‘ why can I not
suffer alone? But Ihave brought distress
upon you all.”

“Certainly,” answered Mr. Redner.
“There is no sin but leaves its stain; no
sob of suffering but wakes its echo. We
are not isolated beings ;—rather may we be
likened to threads interwoven in this great
web of life. But I must go. Farewell.”

And here we leave them. Mrs. Fleming
lies feeble and sorrow-stricken in her
anxious chamber. Mary, palest and ten-
derest of nurses, waits on her with untiring
devotion. What dark memories and dread
forebodings haunt the soul of Rufus we do
not seek to know.

Meanwhile the minister is absent on his
errand. Let us hope that he may be suc-
cessful. «
i snimntnineeiinantieectamnssstininiepeammminesnphomncini

A TOUCHING SCENE. 141



GQ Cauching Srene.



\

A French paper says, Lucille Romee, a
pretty little girl, with blue eyes and fair
hair, poorly, but neatly clothed, was brought
before the Sixth Court of Correction, under
a charge of vagrancy.

“Does any one claim you?’ said the
magistrate.

“Ah, my good sir,” she replied, ‘‘ I have
no longer any friends; my father and moth-
er are dead. I have only my brother James,
but he is as young aslam. O dear ! what
could he do for me?”

“The court must send you to the house
of correction.”

‘Here I am, sister. Here I am; do not
fear,” cried a childish voice from the other


se

142 A TOUCHING SCENE.

RPP BP ALAAL LALLA ALLILLLLQLOewnenmmemaenmaews—a > rrr Ps?

end of the court. And at the same instant
a little boy with a sprightly countenance
started forth from the midst of the crowd,
and stood before the magistrate.

‘© Who are you?” said he.

*‘ James Romee, the brother of this poor
little girl.”

‘ Your age ?”

‘¢ Thirteen.”

‘And what do you want?’

‘¢T come to claim Lucille.”

‘‘But have you, then, the means of pro-
viding for her ?”’

‘‘ Yesterday I had not, but now I have.
Don’t be afraid, Lucille.”’

Lucille. ““O! how good you are, James.”

Magistrate, to James. ‘But let us see,
my boy; the court is disposed to do all it
can for your sister. However, you must
give us some explanation.”

James. ‘Just a fortnight agomy mother
died of a bad cough, for it was very cold at
home. We were in great trouble. Then l
said to myself, I will become an artisan,

¢

-iettetincteareattaietnlinn Re
yh

A TOUCHING SCENE. 148

and when I know a good trade, I will sup-
port my sister. 1 went an apprentice to a
brush maker. Every day I used to carry
her half my dinner, and at night I took her
secretly to my room, and she slept in my
bed, while I slept on the floor, wrapped up
in my blouse. But it appeared the little
thing had not enough to eat, for one day
she unfortunately begged on the Boulevard.
When I heard she was taken up, I said to
myself, Come, my boy, things cannot last
so; you must find something better. I
very much wished to become an artisan,
but at last I decided to look for a place ;
and I have found a very good one, where I
am lodged, fed and clothed, and have twen-
ty francs a month. I have also found a
good woman, who for these twenty francs
will take care of Lucille, and teach her
needle work; I claim my sister.”

Lucille, clasping her hands, “O, how
good you are, James Y

Magistrate, to James. ‘My boy, your
conduct is very honorable. The court en-

ee

x
8S

144 | A TOUCHING SCENE.

PLL





Pl ll lt

courages you to persevere in this course,
and you will prosper.”’

The court then decided to render up Lu-
cille to James, and she was going from the
bar to join her brother, when the magis-
trate, smiling, said, ‘‘ You cannot be set at
liberty until tomorrow.”

James. “ Never mind, Lucille, 1 will
come and fetch you early tomorrow.”

To the magistrate: ‘I may kiss her,
may I not, sir?’ He then threw himself
into the arms of his sister, and both wept
warm tears of affection.




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