Citation
The pathway of the fawn

Material Information

Title:
The pathway of the fawn a tale of the New Year
Portion of title:
Tale of the New Year
Creator:
Hervey, T. K., 1811-1903
Thomas, William Luson, 1830-1900 ( Engraver )
Thomas, George Houseman, 1824-1868 ( Illustrator )
Macquoid, Thomas Robert, 1820-1912 ( Illustrator )
Office of the National Illustrated Library ( Publisher )
Levey, Robson, and Franklyn ( Printer )
Place of Publication:
London
Publisher:
Office of the National Illustrated Library
Manufacturer:
Levey, Robson, and Franklyn
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
195 p., <2> leaves of plates : col. ill. ; 18 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Inheritance and succession ( lcsh )
Pictorial cloth bindings (Binding) -- 1852 ( rbbin )
Bldn -- 1852
Genre:
Pictorial cloth bindings (Binding) ( rbbin )
novel ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
England -- London

Notes

Summary:
Bertha is forced by her father to masquerade as a boy in order to bar the succession of his nephew, Heinrich, to the family estates. She is secretly learning sculpting from her cousin who lives in the vicinity with his sister, Roschen, and his mother. Two local landowners and friends discover love in unexpected places: Ernst sees through Bertha's disguise and declares his love; and Moritz meets Roschen and vows to marry her. After many trials, revelations, an illness and a strayed letter the two pairs of lovers find happiness.
Citation/Reference:
Wolff, R.L. 19th cent. fiction,
General Note:
Added title page, engraved.
General Note:
Illustrations from designs by G.H. Thomas, chapter initials by T.R. Macquoid, engraved by W.L. Thomas.
Funding:
Brittle Books Program
Statement of Responsibility:
by Mrs. T.K. Hervey.

Record Information

Source Institution:
University of Florida
Holding Location:
University of Florida
Rights Management:
This item is presumed to be in the public domain. The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries respect the intellectual property rights of others and do not claim any copyright interest in this item. Users of this work have responsibility for determining copyright status prior to reusing, publishing or reproducing this item for purposes other than what is allowed by fair use or other copyright exemptions. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions may require permission of the copyright holder. The Smathers Libraries would like to learn more about this item and invite individuals or organizations to contact The Department of Special and Area Studies Collections (special@uflib.ufl.edu) with any additional information they can provide.
Resource Identifier:
026810042 ( ALEPH )
22162349 ( OCLC )
ALH1851 ( NOTIS )

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Pathway of the Fiton,

Gale of the How Pewr,

REE

BY MRS. T. k. HERVEY.

LONDON:

OFFICE OF THE NATIONAL, ILLUSTRATED LIBRARY, ,
, 227 STRAND.



LONDON :

PRINTED BY LRVEY, ROBSON, AND FRANKLYN,
Great New Street, Fetter Lane.



—2 sets 2 —~(Lontents—_ssestes _._

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CHAP, PAGE
I, THE YEAR’S LAST SIGH. . DESERTION SO ae Se eae ae
Il. THE MOUNTAIN PATHWAY . THE HEART'S STRUGGLE . » a8
Ill, THE SCULPTOR’S HOME. . FAIRY-GIFTS . . «ae
IV. THE EMPTY CAGE . . . THE AVENGING ANGEL «a
V. THE PINE WOOD. . . . THESOUL’SSECRET . . . 68
VI. MORITZ AND ROSCHEN . . FANCY’S FROLICS. . o> nn

VII. THE INTERRUPTED Vow . GLIMMERINGS OF THE PAST, 67

VIII, THE FAILING GENIUS . . RECOGNITIONS: . . , , 74
IX. REVELATIONS . . . . THE BOY BERTHOLD . . . 83
X. THE CLOSED DOOR . . . THE TRUST REPOSED. . . 87
XI. THE FOREST SHADE. . . DIE GUTEIN DIE SCHONE . 95

XII, THE FOUNTAIN’S BRIM. . TROST IN KUMMER .. . 104
XIII. THEGANYMEDE . . . , THE CHARM Woes 5.4 ee
XIV. THE CHECKED PURSUIT . THE BANDED BROTHERS. . 120
XV. THEITALIAN GRAVE . . THENIOBE. .. oe

XVI. THEGREY PILLAR . . , THE SFELL DEEPENS. . . 135



V1 CONTENTS.



CHAP, y PAGE
XVII. RUIN’S RIOT . . . « «. GLAY ANDSPIRIT. . ee

XVIII. THE RIVER'S BRINK. . . THE SELF-REBUKE . . . 152
XIX. LOVERS, BUT NO LOVE . . ROSCHEN’S WHISPER. . . 159
XX. THE HAUNTED CHAMBER . THE SPIRIT-RIDDEN . .
XXI. THE ANTIQUE CHAIR . . THE BLENDING SHADOWS . 173

XXII. THE PILGRIM GUEST . . CONCLUSION .... . 183

COOL OUCH AM I~



From Designs by 6. B. Chomas,

Q THE CHAPTER-INITIALS BY T. R. MACQUOID.

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ENGRAVED BY W.L. TH OMAS.

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THE DEPARTURE. TITLE-PAGE,

THE YEAR'S LAST SIGH. FRONTISPIECE, ene

THE HOME OF ARMER THE SCULPTOR ., ‘ ° ° 31
THE INTERRUPTED Vow : ° . : e ; 70
BERTHOLD AND ROSCHEN , * ; ‘ ; ‘ 75
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN . . » ; ° 96
WILHELM VON FERN AND THE STATUE , ° ‘ > fa
MORITZ AND ROSCHEN AT THE FOUNTAIN ° ° ° 12]
THE DESERTED GARDEN ; ‘ , ; . » See
MORITZ AND ROSCHEN . ° ° ° ‘ : « 159
BERTHA AND VON FERN : . ; : : , 2a.
THE BALL. THE PILGRIM GUEST . . ‘ ° - 188

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“The Old Year lies a-dying !

The night is Starry and cold, my friend ;
And the New Year, blithe and bold, my friend,
Comes up to take his own |” TENNYSON,

= N earlier days,—neither chivalric
hor steam-ridden, fast by a rude
old city ofthe Rhine; cradled on
ee: the breast of a wooded mountain-
slope girded at its base by the crumbling walls of
the ancient citadel; a seeming partaker of the safety
afforded by the far-extending ramparts below, yet with

B



10 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN,
Pianists ik atic oe en
a certain ostentatious and upstart aspect looking down
upon its more ancient neighbour—stood the towers of
Graubriider.’

The place, as its name imports, had been originally
a monastery for Monks of the order of Grey Friars.
A portion of the earlier structure still held its ground,
wearing to the wandering fancy an aspect not without
some shadowy and fantastic resemblance to the good
brotherhood themselves, long since departed, who had
once found there “a habitation and a name.” Tere
might be seen the remains of an antique tower, bald
and tonsured with clustering weeds ; there, a wreck
of broken wall cowled with grey lichens; while, silent
and solitary, and girt by the moonbeams, a _half-de-
molished arch would greet the eye, bending beneath
its mantle of the ivy, like the drooping of old age under
the severity of monastic isolation.

Some little way apart, as if the very front of ruin
wore a forbidding aspect to the possessor of so much
wealth as the lord of Graubriider, extended many a
rood the princely mansion where he made his abiding-

place.



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 11
ini tac i

Beyond this again, stretching far away,—farther and
farther from the habitations of men, from the city’s
busy hum, the bartering of trade, the ringing of the
money-changers ; from the struggles of congregated
households, the cry of the many and the laughter of
the few,—rising with graduated slope, a solitary region,
the upland terminated in an abrupt ridge skirting the
horizon.

This verge, or boundary-line, was familiarly known
by the appellation of “ The Hunter's Ridge.”

The name had originated in the fact that, when-
ever the hunt was up, the whole pack—including alike
huntsmen and dogs—were there visible for miles round,
the forms of both horseman and hound being distinctly
traced against the blue or clouded welkin, dilated by
their position into the semblance of shapes more
gigantic than the reality.

The “ Hunter’s Ridge” was terminated at one end
of its horizontal line by a deep, dark, overhang-
ing wood—the refuge of the startled Fawn; skirting
the borders of which was a narrow precipitous path,

leading towards the city and the winding Rhine at



12 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

enter
‘ts foot. At the other end it diverged downwards,
at a less acute angle, till gradually lost in the open
country.

Such was the position tenanted by one of the most
luxurious men of his day—Wilhelm von Fern, lord of
Graubrider.

Without a passion more exalted than that of self-
aggrandisement ; without an object more worthy than
self-indulgence, or a wish that flew beyond the narrow
region of its attainment ;—it was wonderful how the
easy grace of manner so naturally accompanying these
decent-sounding vices won the world’s approval, Wil-
helm von Fern was a man universally lauded.

But a time for the heart’s reckoning comes to all ;
and the man of luxury was soon destined to feel this
iruth in its fullest force.

To-night an unaccountable sensation of uneasiness
besets him,—a vague haunting, over which the mind
has no control, and with which reason has no power
to grapple. He gives it no words, moulds it not even
into a thought of dread. He feasts as is his wont. In

yonder lofty dining-hall, hung round with trophies of



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 13
niet nine ts csi ia
the chase, he drains glass after glass of the Rhine’s
choicest vintage—the all-imperial J ohannisberger ; and
if a spectre sits at his board—as it will at the banquet-
ings of better men—to him it is yet voiceless as the
crowned terror of the Egyptian revel—a formless shape
without a name.

It was the last night of the closing year, and he
had gathered round him, at that festal hoard, a few
choice spirits— younger men all than himself—to bear
him company in seeing the New Year in.

At such a season, the varying moods to which the
passing and coming year gives rise, seldom fail to find
expression, and, however mirthful or however sad, are
alike sanctioned by the spirit of the hour. The sha-
dow on the heart, or the cloud upon the brow, of our
brother, for this one night passes without notice. Each
man is busied with the ushering in of his own indi-
vidual fate, of which the hand upon the dial-plate is
accounted the silent and mysterious herald. ‘

As the hour of midnight drew near, the cloud
which had been slowly gathering upon the brow of

Wilhelm von Fern assumed a deeper hue. It was in



14 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

Se ernment neinaeiencnteciiiiinsiitibimmaaisie ste
vain that the wine went freely round ; in vain that
his voice joined chorus with the snatches of song that
made the great hall ring ;—every note seemed an-
swered by a strange wild echo, mysterious and un-
earthly. He could not lift off the burthen that lay
like a loadstone at his breast, attracting to itself every
shape and form and presence of material things, and
enduing them with a power equal to its own, till the
accumulated weight threatened to crush him. The
very finger on the dial, like the needle of the mariner’s
compass, seemed to point to him, and him alone.

So unusual a manifestation of seriousness, almost of
gloom, on the part of their host, could not fail to com-
municate itself in some measure to his guests. And it
soon became evident, from the changed current of the
conversation, that the distant and the mystical were gra-
dually usurping the place of the present and actual, as the
stealing finger of Time was coursing mutely but surely
towards that point at which another year must die.

The superstitions of their own and other lands be-
came now the topic of the moment, The aspect of the

night — dark, silent, and starless, without one solitary



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 15

——_

gleam to enliven its cheerlessness, or a single breath to
break the hushed monotony of the hour—afforded an
opening for the peculiar tone which was unconsciously
stealing over that festive board.

“You are right, Moritz,” remarked the young
Ernst Engelhertz, in reply to an observation made by
his friend ; “ indeed most of the northern nations have
shared in this feeling, and drawn singular prognostics
from the winds of New Year’s Eve.”

“It is almost universal,” pursued Moritz von der
Brunn. “In the uplands of Scotia, or Scottisland, the
inhabitants have their Candlemas Bull”

“Their what!” exclaimed the somewhat affected
Ruprecht von Lorn; “ their bull? I thought that was
the peculiar property of that island in the Irischer See,
called by the natives ‘ Die Smaragden Insel.”

“ Pardon me,” said Moritz; “but, to use a phrase
borrowed from another island of some note, you have
‘taken the wrong bull by the horns.’ The Candlemas
Bull of which I speak is a material rather than an in-
tellectual cloud ; neither more nor less than a vapour

in the atmosphere—a passing mist, known by that



16 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

Sei iineanneammiinnncntsenipicabilc gel ian 6s

name from its assuming, or being supposed to assume,
by the aid of a prolific northern imagination, the form
of that animal, and from whose motions or transitions,
caused by different currents of air, on this particular
night, many strange auguries arise.”

“ With us, now,” exclaimed Ruprecht, “we Ger-
mans assign more importance to the breath that issues
from human lips as the old year dies out.”

“And with reason,” rejoined Ernst ; “inasmuch as
the moment of midnight, at such a season, has ever
been regarded in our land as the chosen time for the
races of genii, good and evil, to move abroad.”

“Childish nonsense !”? cried Wilhelm von Fern ;
“are not good and evil ever on the wing? and can a
particular day or hour be supposed to rule the sleepless
watches of spirits that are eternal—if they have any
being at all?”

“ Question not their being,” mildly remonstrated
the young Ernst: “we know and feel their presence
hour by hour, and day by day. I would not lose the
strong conviction of their ministry for all this world’s

—s0 called—realities.”



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 17
inna as taal talaga te
“ But the evil ones?” asked Ruprecht, with a light
laugh. “Come, come, Ernst, confess that you could
do well enough without them.”

“The evil ones,” suggested the generous Moritz ’
von der Brunn, answering for his friend, “ are fain to
pass on the shady side of the wall when Ernst walks
abroad.”

“T consider,” replied Engelhertz, “ that the evil
races of genii have their moral significance equally with
the good. Were there nothing to overcome, where
were the triumph ?”

“You believe, then,” cried Wilhelm von Fern,
with a faint attempt at a sneer, belied by his quivering
lip, “in the extreme point to which credulity has
pushed this superstition: in fine, that the particular
utterances of to-night—here, for instance, in a land of
civilisation, and round a board where the potent Rhine-
spirit circles in the grape—have power to compel the
fiend ?”

“I do truly believe,” was the answer of the young
and enthusiastic Ernst, “that words involuntarily uttered

at such a season as this,—whether around such a board



18 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
eter orton eaili
or elsewhere ; whether spoken on the summit of the
Brocken, or beneath the pitchy boughs of the Schwartz-
wald; whether in the green depths of the Rhine valleys,
or beside its winding waters,—are alike potent from
the lips that give them breath. N ay, further, that
while the worse spirits are at times permitted to apply
such terms in a strained or fatal sense—if at all ambi-
guous,—on the other hand, the words themselves, on
the lips of the just, may become words of power, con-
trolling the designs of demons, and forcing them to
work out the good of the utterer against their will.”

“Ha! ha! ha!” shouted Wilhelm yon Fern ;
“further than this the tide of superstition can scarcely
run. But see!” he added, suddenly pointing to the
dial-plate, “ we have almost forgotten the watches of
the night. It wants but a minute to the charmed
hour !”

That minute was one of the deepest hush. Every
eye turned in the same direction, and became riveted
on the time-piece.

Wilhelm von Fern rose, and treading the boards as

if his step would have disturbed some sleeper, turned



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 19
Seed nntonlnehietiticlbpiahs icone labialis fig ee
to the window, and noiselessly opened the casement to
its full swing, in order that the chimes of the aenaen
cathedral might be distinctly heard.

Still, not a breath stirred, not a star was visible.
But down, far down the rocky steep, lay the ancient
city at its foot, with all her innumerable lights reflected
in the waters of the darkened Rhine—so many witnesses
of the anxious and breathless watchers that awaited the
signal of another birth to time; a year for hope, for
love—young voices and old graves.

At last the finger approached the point of twelve;
neared, all but touched it.

Every glass had been filled to the brim, and every
man stood ready, his eye fixed on the numeral figure,
to hail with one prolonged cheer the crowning of the
hour. |

At this moment of intense silence, when the hand of
the dial had all but marked the appointed stroke ; while
the heart itself seemed to pause, so still were its beat-
ings ; and when, had a feather dropped, it would have
startled the listeners 3—suddenly—whence or from what

quarter of the globe it came no man knew — suddenly



20 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

a wild rush of air, perfectly indescribable save by the
term, a gasp, a shudder of wind, swept past the case-
ment!

It scarcely sounded before it was gone, dying as
suddenly as it rose.

Every man started, looked on his neighbour, and
turned pale.

Ernst Engelhertz and Wilhelm von Fern, the be-
liever and the sceptic, gazed into each other’s eyes.
The face of Ernst was pale, but calm; the aspect of his
entertainer was that of one suddenly arrested for some
crime. To the “ angel-hearted” guest that sound was
but the death-sob of his departed year. To the shrouded
heart of the self-lover it bore another tone. The retri-
butive angel was winging its dark way overhead, and
in that shuddering gust Ae heard the rushing of its
wing.

Hark !

Without the door, along the corridor, like a spirit’s
tread, in the pause of the revel, is there heard no other

sound ?

Hark!



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 23



Is there no step on the outer floor that is sounding
its last there? no music on the boards that shall miss its
echo through all the long year that is newly born?

Hark!

Stealing down along the carved and gilded staircase;
sweeping with light, quick step, but still guarded tread,
from marble step to step, from carpeted landing to
statued recess; halting here and there with breathless
pause, then bounding on anew under the pressure of
the impulse from within,—passed a youth of apparently
some sixteen summers.

The massive hall-door stood partly open, as if to
afford surer and more speedy egress to the figure thus
stealthily hastening to cross its threshold—for ever !

The face that was seen to emerge from that parental
roof was pale; pale as that of the sculptured form that
stood beneath the carved balusters to light the boy forth
from the house of his fathers.

As the night-wind fanned his cheek, and he felt that
he was about to give himself, his hopes, and his fortunes,

to the keeping of that world without, whose breath was



24 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

“eeeerpeitinetnonmennnerentnrmsennestnsnnnap tense eninnihulecia sili:

less tender than the fresh but chilling night-breeze that
wafted his bright hair, an expression somewhat akin to
dismay for a moment crossed his face.

But his part was taken, and the youth passed out.



CHAPTER II.
Che Manntain Pothuay. Che Weart’s Straggle.

‘* Potent was the spell that bound thee,
Not unwilling to obey ;
For blue Ether’s arms around thee
Still’d the pantings of dismay.”
WORDSWORTH.

~S
are you there ?”—

asked the boy, in




a low, sweet voice,
as in the dark his hand sought and
clasped that of his foster-mother.
True to that love which is se-
cond only to the natural instinct
that binds the real mother to her
offspring, old Grete stood by the portal
awaiting her foster-child. Long before the
appointed hour she had lingered about the

walls ; and her anxious gaze, from time to



26 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. :

ieee as tha thdisnectiatinien palette ninnitcice maslness acdctactne
time directed towards the half-open door, would have
betrayed to a looker-on, had such been at hand, how
hazardous she considered the step about to be taken.
But no sooner had she caught a glimpse of her youthful
charge descending the lighted gallery within, than her
wrinkled face brightened, like night touched by the
morning.

As the boy’s foot crossed the threshold, the strong
light from within threw his figure into bold relief. To
eyes, like those of Grete, accustomed to look on him,
there was little that could be termed singular in his
appearance. A stranger, however, might have detected
a slight effeminacy of air, and even of costume. The
_ loose tunic, somewhat resembling the more modern
blouse, which formed part of the student-costume of
the time, was in the present instance longer than usual,
fuller and more flowing, —a modification by no means
ill-adapted to his slight but graceful figure. Bent over
his brow, its looped-up brim scarcely serving the pur-
pose of concealment for which it appeared to be so
placed, he wore a low-crowned hat of the half-German,
half-Spanish form.



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 27

Stepping thus out into the night, he shook back the
waving curls that partially shaded his face, and drawing
the folds of his tunic more closely around hin, stretched
forth his hand into the darkness.

“Grete, my mother, are you there?”

“Here, my Berth” ——

“It is well; but call me Berthold. I have borne
that name for eighteen years; I must know no other
now. Oh, Grete, it is done !—no faltering, no look-
ing back. Affection, kindred, home, where are they
now ?”

“It is not yet too late: return.”

“ Return! Is it thus that you would counsel me ?—
you, who have ever taught me to shun evil as a plague?
No, Grete, no; let us on: quick! quick!”

Under the pressure of some strong emotion, the boy
half led, half dragged his unresisting guide up the steep
towards the summit of the Hunter’s Ridge.

But already, ere half the distance was gained that
lay between them and the point towards which they
pushed, the boy’s strength was overtasked.

“Stay, good Grete,” he faltered breathlessly; “a

Cc



28 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

moment’s rest, ‘The path is surely bewitched to-night ;
I never felt its steepness till this hour.”

«Tis thy heart’s beating, child, that robs the breath
God gave thee.”

* Look yonder!” said the youth, as, pausing for a
brief rest, he gazed back upon the home he had for-
saken ; ‘‘ see, the lights dance from every window.
Methinks even now I hear the sounds of their wassail.
Those generous spirits little know with whom they
feast. There was Moritz; I heard his clear voice above
them all: and Ernst, the good and pious Ernst. Ah!
little knows he, as he quaffs the wine-cup, that the
gold which lines it is another’s! little dreams he that
the bread he breaks is yours, Armer, my poor one!
Oh! shame! shame! shame!”

“The evil-doer will rue it soon, my bird, when to-
morrow’s sun shines upon thy empty cage, and not on
thee.”

“Oh, Grete, not that! say not that! There lies the
sting! Your words reprove me as for asin. Whatever
guilt lies at his door, it is not against me. Could any

other act than this have touched him with the full sense



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. » 29



of his wrong, I had not done it. Be he to others what
he may, he is my father still.”

In renewed bitterness of spirit, the boy knelt on
the rough and stony path, and lifted up his voice to
Heaven.

“ Hear me,” he cried, “Thou who knowest the
suffermg and the wrong; Thou at whose feet, before
whose throne, I cast off for ever the inheritance I have
so long unwillingly usurped ; Thou who seest my
agony of heart, my failing, faltering soul,—hear and
sustain me, Thou! If I have done this thing in a wil-
ful, a selfish, or an unfilial spirit; if I have dealt this
blow at the heart that loves me for any other good than
theirs, of which his must be a part, in the reconciling
of each one with another; if I have done this, knowing
not myself,—forsake me.”

And the boy bowed his face to the chill earth, and
sobbed aloud.

Then Grete spoke. “ Arise, my Berth, and come
away. Why,—all good spirits shield thee, child !—thy
touch is cold as death!”

“Nay, mother, I am strengthened. There, give



30 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
Fa lenin ne
me your hand once more; we will on again. See, the
stars come out; Orion’s belt is studded thick; the path
clears: on, on, my Grete!”

And the foot that-had scarcely crushed the flowers
of eighteen summers trod that mountain pathway once
more with buoyant step.

Long and trying was the path, the night keen and
cheerless; but Berthold no more faltered by the way.
All good spirits abroad that night sang to his spirit as
he went on his course; the evil ones kept aloof.

“See, the Pathway of the Fawn,” said he at last,
pointing to a worn track along the upper ridge, which
lost itself in the depths of the forest. ‘‘ Down behind
yonder wood lies your home—and mine, dear Grete,
A nightly shelter shall you give me. I am but young,
my mother. But first,—ay, before I sleep, you must
down yonder path with me.”

“ Save thee, child !—to-night?” exclaimed Grete.

“Ay, to-night, good mother. Right deeds make
right times, my simple Grete.”

“ Well, well, be it as thou wilt; but tarry not
long.”



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 81



«Oh! city of the sorrowful!” exclaimed the youth,
as, skirting the pine-wood, they descended the pathway
to the city, “ how calm thou lest! yet aching hearts
and lips that hunger are rife within thy streets. Be-
neath yonder roof from whose window the lights shine
feeblest, whose battered walls scarce serve to shut out
the wintry wind, thou wakest and watchest, lone
mother of poverty! And Armer, thou; and thou, my
little Réschen, sweet bud of tender promise !”

Thus, as he pursued his midnight path, did the boy
Berthold ponder: till now, as the chimes from every
tower and minaret told that half the mid-hour was
passed, the two approached the lowly roof that shel-

tered the sculptor Armer.



CHAPTER III.

Che Srulptor’s Vome, Fairy Gifts,

“« The Beings of the mind are not of clay.”
BYRON.

« Poo oa.
La iV (eM HE interior of the sculptor’s studio
might in itself have formed a at
WA a subject for the limner. Narrow i,
"yg Wer.) dimensions, and scantily furnished
a with even those appliances which

constitute the mere machinery of art,



Sg the room was not indebted to the
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¢ -
FES
od AS
f WW Aber a {
1 (

in a: m
“in We ee cold forms of sculpture alone for the

y

if aR

a beauty that breathed through it.
Before a small table, on which burned a solitary
lamp, her pale but still beautiful face bent over her
work, sat the mother of Armer the sculptor. Low at
her feet, so placed as to make the matron’s lap the
receiver of the winter flowers she was occupied in

weaving into a wreath for the New Year, knelt his



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THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

young sister Roschen. Half conscious of the loving

eyes that from time to time rested upon her bent-down

face, she continued to weave her garland of the flower-

ing laurel and winter rose, singing, as she wove, to no

music save that within her heart.

Armer stood before the statue om which he had
been labouring when the stroke of the New Year had

arrested his hand and drawn the little family group

into the narrow circle of one fond embrace. Now, the

year was fully ushered im and the three had resumed

‘their places. But, though the chisel was still in his

hand, Armer paused once more ; and turning at the

sound of that voice, listened to the singer.

Puschew's Sg.

Twas a sculptor of olden days
Who pictured a being of air:
On the phantom, entranced, would he gaze—
The child of his thought was there.
He drank from the fount of delight,
But a poison lay hid in the bowl;
For there shone 0? this world of night
No form like the dream of his soul.



36

THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

He pined, and his glory was fled ;
He wept, but none wept for him ;
He slept with the quiet dead —
What now was the world to him ?
He had sighed, but his sighs have fleeted ;
He had mourned, but his tears are o’er ;
He had hoped, but his hope was cheated ;
He had dreamed, but he dreams no more.

Beside him a heathen boy
In an unblest grave was laid,
Who had sung sweet hymns of joy
To the god his hands had made.
But soon his awakened thought,
Bewildered, refused to rejoice ;
For the clay he had piously wrought
Returned him no answering voice.

Lament not the sculptor, whose grave
Is hallowed, and calm, and deep;
O’er his grief shall the welcome wave
Of a soft oblivion sweep :
Nor fear for the heathen child,
His prayer was a prayer of love.
Their search had been long and wild ;
They have found what they sought—above.

“Thanks, thanks, sweet Réschen, for my favourite



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 37



song,” said her brother Armer, as the sounds fainted in
music on lips that rivalled the budding rose. “ Thanks ;
the New Year opens, as the Old Year died, with the
sounds I love best to hear.”

A kiss from the pale lips that bent over her inter-
rupted the reply of Roschen. So she stood up silently ;
and girding the waist of her mother with both her
arms, gazed up into her face, and then nestled her head
in her bosom. Then, starting away with a fawn-like
step, she threw her arms round the neck of Armer, and
kissed him on the brow.

“ What is it? speak, my Roschen,” said her mo-
ther. ‘ Something more than usual flutters at thy
merry little heart. Speak to us; what is it, my sweet?”

“TI cannot; I have no words, dear mother. I was
thinking, or feeling,—nay, you know it, both of you,
without my speech. I was thinking how—how—how
happy we all are this blessed New Year’s Day!”

A sigh from her mother checked the light heart in
its spring.

Armer was silent. He was busied in chiselling the

final stroke that was to complete his greatest work, the



38 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

(alii chiaaiiaietiiniscinientiniainisitaminteniipininitasiaiianii citi i tS
Diana—a very masterpiece of art; so, at least, the fond
Roschen pronounced it.

The “ little Rose” looked from one to the other, till
at last one soft solitary drop, like dew upon the petal,
stood upon her bloom-like cheek. And now, bending
over Armer, she suddenly became absorbed, or seemed
to be so, in the progress of his work.

“There,” said the young man, as he stepped back-
wards, at the same time casting the chisel from his
hand; “there, my work is done! but I am not satisfied
with it. It does not please me, and it never will. But
I can add not another stroke; I am weary. ‘Twenty
times have I remodelled that lip, twenty times have I
retouched that one curve,—and still, still I am not
satisfied. What think you of it, mother?”

“That it is peerless, my son. Before even you
had given to it this last day’s labour, you know I pro-
nounced it perfection. What say you, my child?” she
added, turning to Réschen.

“ It is Dian herself, sweet mother. See with what
a grace she bends, as over the Latmian hill. One is

fain to cry, ‘ Where is Endymion?”



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 39

But,—soft! Now another foot was on the floor,
entering like a fay; and another voice than Armer’s
replied to the last words of Réschen. The door was
thrown wide, and Berthold stood before them.

“ Here, my Rose-bud,” said he, “ if by Endymion you
mean one who sleeps, or rather walks, beneath the moon.”

“ The first foot,” said the mother thoughtfully, in
a voice none heard, as she glanced quickly from Ber-
thold to her daughter.

Berthold kissed the mother’s pale cheek, and stooped
to the lips of Roschen ; then he looked on Armer, and
took his hand.

“ The blessing of the kindly year be with you all,
sweet friends!—Armer, you have toiled late.— But
what is here? the Dian finished ?”

“ Berthold, a judgment!” Réoschen was the first.
to cry.

“ Ay, cousin, your voice,” exclaimed Armer.

«“ That is scarcely fair,” echoed the mother with a
smile. ‘ You know, Armer, that Berthold is your
pupil—almost your rival now, so closely does he ap-

proach you in the mysteries of your art.”



40 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

“No rival, dear aunt; a fellow-labourer in the
same vineyard.—But let me look at it. It is indeed
a masterpiece, dear Armer! But”—

“« Ah! that dwt,” cried Armer ; “ that mars all.”

« Nay, I will shew you what it wants. You will
not be jealous? May I touch it?”

Armer nodded assent. Réschen took up the dis-
carded chisel, and laid it in the hand of Berthold,
who took his stand before the statue. A few kindred
touches, and the form breathed !

“* Marvellous — marvellous !” cried Armer, really
delighted, and without one taint of envy.

‘“*T confess it wanted that last touch,” said his
mother.

“Ah! cousin Berthold, now it lives indeed!”
chimed in Roschen.

The statue of Armer had been a Diana chaste,
but voluptuous. One touch from the more divine fin-
ger of the boy Berthold, and it became at once the
Dian of the Soul!

** And now,” said Berthold, “ for one moment’s

serious talk. I must not stay: Grete, my foster-mo-



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 41

nee denisce enn ancmeiiiinstamtasiailiiniatitinntcctaiahine saath
ther, waits for me without.—Armer, when purpose
you to send this statue to my father?”

« With the first light of day,” Armer answered.
“ One word from you would prepare him’”—

But Berthold, with a sad grave smile, laid his
hand on the arm of his cousin, and said, “ That is
over |”

A real, deep, and sympathetic sorrow was expressed
in the faces of the three, as they looked into the eyes
of their one friend. They had no words. That look
shewed that they understood him.

‘Of this no more,” said Berthold. ‘‘ Had your
persuasions been listened to, this would not have been.
But it is done; words nor thoughts can alter it now.
So no more. And now, Armer, listen to me. My
plan is this: be you yourself the bearer of this statue.
Let but my father see you. He loves your art, and
will honour the artist.”

« Who but his son, who but Berthold, taught him
to love it? Ah, how much we already owe you!”
murmured Réschen.

“ Well, my life on it, good will come of this !—Be



42 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

not backward, Armer ; lend yourself to my plot; there
is more in it—far more than any of you dream, more
than can reveal. Under your assumed name, he will
scarcely discover your close relationship to himself.
When he permitted me to visit you here, Armer, in
the character of your pupil, he little thought that the
son of his only sister was my teacher. While his anger
against her still lives, that secret must be strictly kept ;
but if once he learns to love you, as he must, all is
well. And then, farewell poverty and Armer!”’

“ Why, what a phrase, Berthold!”’ cried the merry
Roschen. ‘* Do you mean, farewell to Armer too ?”’

Berthold looked troubled —just a little startled.

“It was a strange phrase, Réschen,” said he; “ very
strange. I cannot think how my lips came to frame it.
You read my meaning? I would have said, ‘ Poverty
and Armer, take your farewell of each other.’ In what
a strange blundering way I worded it! I wish I had
not said it,—least of all on New Year’s Night!”

A shadow, as of some coming ill—a dim prophetic
sadness—seemed to settle upon their hearts. It was clear

that some such mystic fancy as that of which Ernst



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 43

Engelhertz had spoken, was in all their minds. Ber-
thold, though still grave, was the first to break a silence
which was becoming oppressive. 7

“ You think he has no suspicion of your real name ?”
he asked, continuing the conversation which had been
so inauspiciously interrupted.

“No,” said Armer, “ none.”

“ That is well.”

‘ But, Berthold,” began the mother. She hesitated.

“ What would you say, dear aunt?’ inquired the
youth.

“T do not think we quite see our way here,” re-
plied the conscientious matron. “ You have, I see
clearly, quarrelled finally with your father; and we
are, in some way or other, the cause. Armer must think
well of all the possible consequences to you as well as
to himself, in following out your design for him. If
your father takes a fancy to him and employs his time
fully, so far it is well. But let us look a little beyond.
You have quarrelled with him; you have left his roof.
Suppose, in such a case, as many a man has done be-

fore him, he should take up with a stranger, as Armer



44 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
Sdaieeihstieinhinsihapateietaisintinhise etait lai ick
is to him. Nay, more; should he, when once attached
to him, discover the secret of his relationship to him-
self,—what if he should finally adopt him, discarding
you from all but the inheritance he cannot take from
you?”

The brightest beam of the sun that ever burst
through the storm-cloud might have found a rival in the
sudden radiance that overspread the face of Berthold.

“You think it likely,—you conceive it possible,
then?’ he cried aloud, as his heart silently whispered
within him,—‘ Then this is no wild dream! Heaven,
I thank Thee !’

Veiling his gladness with as much seriousness as he
could assume, he added, “ Be at rest. No wrong can
visit me through Armer: it is not possible. Of that
be assured. And now farewell all!” |

The youth was gone. And once more the little
enthusiast Réschen turned to take, before she slept,
a parting look at the Dian.

At the foot of the pedestal lay three small packets,
on which were inscribed the names of “ J ohanna,”

“ Armer,” and “ Réschen.”



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 45

As the mother inspected their contents, “‘ Bless him !”
she cried, “ our best preserver! ‘To-morrow, then, ye
shall fare better, my children ; for this day ye have not
tasted bread.”

D



CHAPTER IV.

Che Empty Cage. Che Auenging Angel.



** About his window, at the dawn,

From
Birds

the vine’s crooked boughs
chirrupped an arouse :

Flies, buzzing, strengthened with the morn —

Heli not hear them again

At random strike the pane !”

on
a )

F/
/

1 OA
i
é

AS

_>

a ELL did Grete foreshadow the

dismay which was to visit the lord
of the revel, when the morning’s sun
should shine on the wild bird’s for-
saken cage—the sleeping-chamber of
his departed heir.

On that night when the Old Year
sighed its last ; when the audible
sob—the death-throe of that portion
of time which had been permitted to

slip by without one better resolution



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 47

or lawful act of restoration — sounded upon the startled
ear of the wrongdoer ;—on that night was Wilhelm von
Fern forsaken by his better angel.

A comfortless morning succeeded to a night with-
out sleep; and with a mysterious perception of the
quarter from whence that blow would fall, which his
conscience and the night alike indicated as about to
visit him, his first inquiry was for Berthold.

They sought him first in the upper chambers,—in
the room where he slept. ‘The door stood open, and
the bed was unpressed. The idle lute hung tuneless,
and music-pages lay strewn about in unwonted disorder.
But the Druid misletoe and the prickly holly were
ranged about the precincts of the young recluse at
once with grace and care, and rather as if to deck the
lordly Speisesaal than the solitary Schlafkammer of a
dreaming boy. ‘They searched around and about it ; and

to the wondering voices of the seekers echo replied —
“‘ Not there !”

*¢ They sought him east, they sought him west,”—

Down among the fountains—low at the Berg’s foot,



48 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN,

NAOMI nhieu ajeagi aio ea
where the green sward so often tempted that light
foot to stray ere the birds rose to matins,—

Not there !

** They sought the forest thorough,”—

Among the shrub-grown vineyards—past the old
monastery-tower of the Graubriider—along the weed-
crowned walls—through the ivied arch—the damp
crumbling cloisters—

Not there !

“The sweetest flower that ever bloomed,”’—

In the gardens of his “ pleasaunce,” where the
thick-grown boughs, unleafed and bare, stood crowned
and fringed with early snow,—where vistas stretched
away, and arbours of the climber-rose shewed here and
there a stunted, scentless, solitary flower ;— by the
orchard and the Kiichengarten—the broad trellised
walk—and the alley, bough-overarched,—

Not there !—not there!

Then came a time when the search was foregone ;
and Wilhelm von Fern sat alone with his anger.

“Send for Ernst Engelhertz!” cried he, in the



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 49.



first, fierce, sudden storm of his intemperate rage. And
before a second thought could stay the messenger, he
was gone.

In the unreason of passion, beset with suspicions
of he knew not what, the firstlings of his wrath lighted
upon the head of the unconscious Ernst.

He recalled every word of the young man’s recent
confession of faith in the mysteries of the unseen world
of spirits. This faith, at the time of its admission his
jest and scorn, he now grew to regard in the light of
a hoax—a simulated and crafty assumption of an out-
world belief, —a trick—a juggle ;—a plot in collusion
with Berthold, to frighten him into submission to an
act of desertion, which was thus made to appear under
the aspect of a divine dispensation.

Man of the calmer soul, startle not at the incon-
ceivable injustice and folly! Such madness is a world-
wide truth.

Ere half an hour had elapsed, wrapped in the cloud-
less ether of a true soul, the young Ernst stood before
him.

Before that face a lie could not live. And now, in



50 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

edn lientecaaninnilatepainiitc sii g cc acs Anne
his inmost heart, Wilhelm von Fern cursed himself for
his folly.

A hurried and stammering recital of the past night’s
mystery told to Engelhertz the tale of seeming wrong.

As soon as a pause in the passionate relation of his
late host allowed him an opening, then spoke Ernst.
In the silence that succeeded to the clamour of the
other, his voice sounded like a soft deep wind among
the linden-boughs, when the thunder has rolled by.

“I have long watched the boy,” said the “ ernst”
and upright spirit; “I have looked into the youth’s
soul as, it may be, no other has ever looked.”

Here he gazed long and fixedly at the father.

Wilhelm started —looked uneasy —bit his lip.

“And this I will say now, and will repeat when-
ever and wherever called upon to do s0, answering
with my life for him, as for one without stain, without
tarnish, without touch or blight of evil from this world’s
smirching breath ; to whomsoever it may concern—to
_ you, his father, most of all—here, in your presence, in

the light of God’s great day, under the blessing of His
new glad year,—this will I say and uphold, that never



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. dl
cate ne re acacia ota a eclectic
in his young life, either under provocation or temper,
light word or kindless tone, has that child, in thought,
word, or deed, rebelled against his sire, or against his
God !”

“ To—to—to me, it is true,’—faltered Wilhelm.

“To you and to all has he alike been spotless, or
there is no truth in nature. And he is gone—gone
in sorrow and bitterness of heart; and you, his father,
upbraid him. Is this well, Wilhelm von Fern ?—Nay,
you have called me hither, and you must hear me
now,” he pursued, as the father strode the room with
a chafed spirit. ‘Heaven pardon me for judging, if I
judge amiss! Your pardon, too, if unwittingly I do
so; but I must speak. A wrong there is somewhere—
a bitter, a cruel, and a blighting wrong: where or of
what nature I know nothing; but at your door it les,
not at the boy’s.”

Again the eyes of Wilhelm sank beneath the youth’s
glance.

“ Recall him!” he continued, with still greater

warmth ; “a word of yours—some word for which his



52 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

eaten ehosetnineieahenmstinaeinsinmeseniconspettishsmsacunsis eis, sil i

soul thirsts—would bring him to your arms. Speak it,
Wilhelm von Fern !”

“ By the living Host, I will not hear this !”

“Then, farewell! Never at your board do I sit
more ; never call you friend, or in fair fellowship wear
out life’s hours beneath your roof. Over that flower
—that— that tender plant your foot unrighteously has
spurned, from this hour I keep my watch!”

He has turned, and is gone.

Once more the father sits alone.

The bird in his bower that sang to him so sweetly
—is its voice silent now? Silent? N 0; it rings to
his spirit through the freshness of the early dawn and
the glow of the noon’s mid-hour. The fair phantom-
hand of the child presses sweet music from a shadowy
lute, as twilight, deepening, shuts out the day. And
through all the long night-watches one cry alone is in

his ear, upon his heart—“ Father ! father !”



CHAPTER V.

Che Pine-Waut. Che Soul's Senet.

*¢ Why shouldst thou hold thy tenderness aside
From all thy lavishment of other gifts,
As if thou wouldst resort to means and shifts
Thy dearest, noblest attribute to hide ?”

aO~ (>

/ / a! —
(SAK
» WN

Roa Wey Q\ /~ new day, Berthold came
: ia yj
| to consider of what he had



My done, his heart misgave
Jk (Shim. One thought, which

<>. in his first impulse in what
| \ he believed to be the cause of
right, had escaped him, now

\ ~ struck at the boy’s heart with a pang of dis-

J may.

}
/

L What if his visions, what if the faith he

felt in the resources of his art,—its power to support

both himself and his friends, if the worst were to

come,—should fail to be realised ?



D4 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



It was true that he felt within him that divine “ af-
flatus” which was its own best warrant of success. Yet
what if that should prove, instead of a real inspiration,
the mere colouring of imagination, the result of youth-
ful vanity !

Were it so, not only had he cast away his all—of
that he thought little, —but worse, far worse, the bread
of Armer !

How the boy’s fancy twined about that name !
Never, since the days of Pythias, surely was there a
friendship like to this !

The bread of Armer !

He thought how he had laid, with a sweet stealth,
those fairy-gifts at the foot of the Dian. And to this,
his last gift, his power was restricted. It was his
all; his sole help to those who had no other hu-
man aid.

It was a suggestion of pain.

Full of such thoughts, a craving desire possessed
the youth to quit the roof of Grete, and, skirting
the pine-wood, to take one more look at the home he

had abandoned, and around which his fancy clung with



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 5D



twofold fondness since that decisive step was taken which
made him an exile for ever from its walls.

Heedless or forgetful that his form was a mark for
every eye, relieved against the now cloudless horizon,
the boy Berthold stood once more upon the little beaten
track worn by the fawn’s footsteps in the turf.

Here again he wept a woman’s tears: pure as the
drops that flowed from the meek eyes of the half-mortal,
half-spirit Undine, when she breathed the fatal death-
kiss upon the lips of her beloved, did the tender spirit
of the boy pour tears like rain over the inevitable pang
he dealt.

As he continued to gaze, half blinded by his tears,
he thought he descried, ascending the steep that led
upwards towards the spot where he stood, a form he
knew well. Yes, he could not be mistaken; it was
Engelhertz.

A crowd of grateful emotions thronged through his
heart as he recognised the one true and tried friend of
his young life. His first impulse was to rush down the
steep to meet him, to tell him all. Nay, all, alas! he
could not tell, —his vow forbade that,— but at least his



56 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

act of sudden desertion, and so draw present help and
comfort from his friend’s unerring counsel. |

But before he could put his design into execution,
a new and painful suggestion deterred him. Something
in the manner, the tender reverential manner, of the
young Ernst had more than once led him to conjecture
that the secret of his life—a secret known only to him-
self, his father, and his old nurse and foster-mother
Grete, and which he had bound himself by a solemn
vow to that father never to reveal—had been divined
by the clear sight of Engelhertz.

As this thought struck him, by a second impulse
more potent than the first the boy strove to avoid him,
and quickly turning from the spot, dived into the re-
cesses of the wood.

Through the clasping boughs Berthold looked down
the steep. He saw the upturned face of Engelhertz
with steady gaze fixed on the exact spot where he
stood, as his earnest defender pursued his upward path
in the direction of the Hunter’s Ridge.

As he continued to watch the approach of his
friend, the resolution of the boy was changed. That



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 57

was not a face to flee from; so he made no further
effort to escape, but stood his ground.

Soon the crackling boughs, sapless and crisp with
winter’s frost, told that another step had passed the
embowered threshold of the pine-wood; and in another
moment the hand of Berthold was clasped in that of his
friend.

A few brief words served to convey to Ernst the
tale of Berthold’s flight, his present sanctuary in the
home of Grete,—from whose cottage there was a secret
opening into the wood,—and the life of future toil he
had marked out for himself.

Ernst also had his tale to tell; softening to the
child’s ear all that would grate most harshly on it in
the account he had to give of the father, and conclud-
ing with a hope that reconciliation was not far distant.

* Alas! dear friend, you do not know all,” said
Berthold, “ or you would searcely venture to breathe
that hope, so little does a reconciliation seem possible.”

* All things are possible to a pure will; such, at
least, is my creed. And now,” added Ernst, “let us

take counsel together, in as far as we may. You say



58 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



you are about to devote yourself to a life of toil. Alas!
dear child, is this a hand,” and he lifted the frail fingers
that lay pale within his clasp, ‘‘is this a hand for labour
to visit with rough touch? The southern suns, my
boy, beneath which your childhood passed, have left
you too tender and too fragile for rude toil to be your
portion.”

« Armer, my teacher, has so toiled from his very
earliest youth ; why should not I? We shall work
together ; together make real the bright creations of our
dreams; together watch the kindling spirit of true Art
revisit the embodied glories which the earlier sculptors
left half wrought.”

“Ts it so?” in his internal spirit sighed the watch-
ful Ernst, as he gazed long and wistfully on the tender
cheek that glowed with some new impulse of delight.

« And who is this Armer?” he asked, after a pause
of unquiet consciousness on the part of each.

“ His true name none may know,” was the answer,
“until he shall have wrought for himself a glory where-
with to surround it as a halo. His mother calls him

Armer, her ‘ poor one.’”



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 59

‘He should be rich in soul whose tasks are mated
unto thine !”

At those words the hearer looked round ;—and the
eyes of the twain were upon each other.

There was no mistaking that look. Hither in the
all but divine nature of Engelhertz, or in some pure
instinct felt but unknown, there existed a power which
at one and the same time read the companion-soul and
its secret.

Did a setting sun pierce the dim pine-boughs with
a kindling glow, that the changing cheek of Berthold
should redden thus with a bloom like the new-blown
rose ?

In silence did Ernst take the withdrawn hand once
more within his own;—in silence lead the way to the
cottage of Grete.

‘Your safest rest is here,” he cried. “ Be it my
care that none shall molest you; that no eye, without
your will, shall look upon your face as I have looked
this day! As a bond between us that no offence has
come to you through me; that you will give yourself

to my guidance, my protection, at all hours and at all



60 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

seasons, should peril beset you,—let this be the token:
let me speak to you again here, near the Pathway of the
Roe, whence, a startled Fawn, but now you fled before
my step ;—at some passing times—when you will. Do
you promise this?”

With downcast eyes, and a heart that melted like
a very woman’s, the youth faltered, “I do need pro-
tection, and of thee will I seek it, for thy soul is as my
soul.”

And the two parted.



CHAPTER VI.
Parity ond Rochen. Faury’s Frolirs.

‘* Of gentle blood, upon her birth
Consenting planets smiled ;
And she had seen those days of mirth
That frolic round the child.

With her, methinks, life’s little hour
Pass’d like the fragrance of a flower,
That leaves upon the vernal wind
Sweetness we ne’er again may find.”
EZ J. MONTGOMERY,





\\ ' re we HY, thy step grows more
: e womanly and stately every
day, little Roschen,” cried Mo-
KO. ritz von der Brunn, as he helped
‘" y ~~ her. to fill her pitcher at the

(SS), y fountain that played just without

5 Ze his father’s Schlosshof.
aa Rar “Time it should, Herr Moritz;
: ES for do you not know that to-morrow I am
in ye ¥ to be a statue?”
4 a * Thou a statue !—That round cheek,
cA F without line or dint, save where the
i



62 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

i camhoapernere an scien nine enema”

merry dimples run,—marry, ‘twill puzzle the sculp-
tor.”
“ Oh, but I am to bea Hebe—cup-bearer to the

gods, you know; a little Hebe, with full round



face”

“A feast for the gods, indeed, where thou pourest
out the nectar! Why, thou art fresher than the new-
sprung hyacinth, best flower of the spring. Take care
that, like the flower’s namesake, thou fallest not in love
with thine own beauty when thou art a statue.”

«Take care you don't, laughter-loving Herr Mo-
ritz.”

‘‘ Dost thou think there is danger, pretty one :.

“Ay, indeed I do. Why, are you not ever on
the watch for my coming? and do you not teaze me
with merry sayings and light jests, saucy words and
more saucy looks ?—and do not lovers do so? So Lene,
the herdsman’s daughter, says. I should so like to
have a lover: will you be mine !”

“That will I, right honestly,” said the laughing
Moritz, half bewitched with the Hebe glance of the

child; “ and to begin, you must give me a kiss.”



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 65
-<~hetatcnroeetnnanameseididaistitlesiiniasigstbtuis sc aiieaiitial ta. Cer

“To begin? No, no; ask Lene.”

“TI prithee get thee gone, child; I waste my time
talking folly to thee. I fear thou wilt learn little from
my teaching, thou seemest so grave a lecturer thyself.—
Away!” And he raised the filled water-jar on to the
head of the girl, and turned to go.

“Stay, stay, Herr Moritz,” said Réschen, calling
after him.

“* What wouldst thou, child?”

“See, you have left your ring, a goodly golden
hoop, on the fountain’s brim.”

“A ring?” looking at his bare finger. “In good
sooth, so I have; my grandam’s ancient wedding-ring.
Thanks, my pretty maid; but for thee it surely had
been lost. See, I have two, one on the other hand
finger ; my grandam’s both. Methinks I well can spare
you one. Wilt keep it for my sake, thou budding
rose?—A little too big for thy finger, eh? Let me
try. Why, so itis. But, see here; thou hast a ribbon
round thy neck—there let it hang: twill some day fit
thee better.”

The sly Réschen, when night drew down, put the



66 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
ne ene
golden bauble underneath her pillow ;—and dreamed
she was Moritz’s little wife.

Moritz thought, “ I was a fool to give my grandam’s
wedding-ring to any but my wife :—I must marry little

Réschen to get back my hoop.”

Cerone @YCHAD—



CHAPTER VII.
Che Sutercupted Vow, Glimmerings of the Past.

** To be forsworn,
Better that thou hadst ne’er been born :
Thowrt outcast by thine own consent.
An oath when broken is not sprent,
But with a curse of heaven reknit.;
For angels have attested it.”





WHITEHEAD,



Cathedral towers—the most



A
a
a)
S

ty Va silent and unfrequented spot
“\ of the entire city—an hour

before midnight, a solitary male
figure was seen slowly pacing to and
fro. A foil was held lightly in his
grasp; and from the presence of the
Rappierknopf, or button, at the point —-
the usual accompaniment of the mere
fencing weapon, and which, when the

foil was used for more deadly pur-



68 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
Unibet cnn edadee aapanbincna tities fe
poses, was struck off,—it was evident, although the
place and time might have augured otherwise, that he
was a lounger there with no very hostile intent.

He had not long paced thus the sacred precincts of
the Domkirche, waking the echoes of its grass-grown
courts, before he was joined by a second, and soon after
by a third, haunter of the night—each weaponed like
himself.

The greeting passed in silence on the part of each,
except that as they met, the foil of the one would strike
against that of the other, clashing for a moment, and
breaking with its sharp clang the silence that prevailed.
When the last comer had thus crossed steel with his
confréres in token of peaceful fellowship, he who had
been first at the place of meeting was also the first to
speak.

“Say,” said Ruprecht von Lorn—for it was he,—
‘are ye both prepared? Shall we here, after the cus-
tom of our land, enter into a defensive league together,
pledging ourselves by a solemn vow to all the relations
which belong to the bond of Briiderschaft ?—help, aid,

and succour in peril; defence of each other in absence ;



i

;
P3
i
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=
4
'







pews, dat: tee of mat

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ney



oe < aga tire — pave
was 8 Tounger there 9 0. ee

He hat net han yoo h 2
the Dow kirche, waking the é

Ry & eae :
echt, on
The greeting passed 3 in ‘Gierss ee tes jae OE os,
sateopt Chet as they met, the foil ef the age saettd serike.
against that of the other, clashiag tr 4 weent, and”
breaking with its sharp clang tht stlemer thot swevailed.
~ When the last comer had thue sessed sto! wth his
‘ : confrives in token. of peaceful feowehip. % «he had
a heen Gait ot the _ of meeting wae whic the But to
" -apenk.
* 1 * tae.” said iiteshc von Lorn-—-for © #s2 4e,—
2 Bare 3 ye both orepered? Shall we bere, wften “Se cus-
toes land, enter into a defensive — mgetner,



{SETTLE ae
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THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 71
eee eee allem aRNeneneNanm REINS
present counsel in all need ; unity of hand in life, law,
and freedom,—the heart, the purse, the sword ?”

“ We are prepared,” answered with one voice both
Ernst Engelhertz and Moritz von der Brunn.

“Touch steel once again, then, in sign of commu-
nion.” |

As the clang of their foils once more broke upon
the silence of the night,—suddenly the weapons were
pushed aside, and a woman’s form stood before them.
It was the mother of Armer.

« Fold!” she cried, as, half fainting, she leant
against the cloister-wall. ‘Never on a spot where I
draw breath shall that vow be passed again! Put down
your harmless weapons, oh, heedless youths! while yet
they are bloodless. A bond like this once broken
brings with it perdition, alike here and hereafter !”

The suffering visible in her face as she spoke was
sufficient to impose for the moment a barrier to their
project; and with one consent the three lowered the
points of their foils, and turned respectfully towards
her.

“ Nay, good mother, be it as you will for this night ;



72 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

eer
we may not promise more,” said Ruprecht, who, though

wanting in some of the finer qualities of his companions,
was, in all, a passing good youth. -

“ By the grief and agony of a long life,” pursued
the excited Johanna, “I do enjoin ye all to forbear this
deed. No blessing rests upon it. It is a thing to be
forsworn of all good men, so fatal is the breaking of the
bond. Hear me!” she cried still more vehemently. “I
was a wife, and am a mother. This bond,—its broken
faith, made me widowed and forlorn; my boy a wan-
derer, his young sister dowerless—beggared !

“They were three—those friends of my youth,—
even as ye are three, when one of their number first
sought my love; my own brother—the child of the
same mother—was the second; the third was thy fa-
ther,” pointing to Engelhertz, forgetful at the moment
how far the secret of her own history might be im-
periled. “ He alone was faultless and faithful to his
vow. By the other two, my brother and my lover, it
was broken; and from the hour it was outraged, and
the weapons once crossed in peace were raised in strife

against each other, from that hour, downwards, all good



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 73
siti hielb siemens A cetisaliestacts ici L isda ee ee ae
fortune forsook the one to his slow-withering, dying
day, as all good men should forsake the other!”

Engelhertz who had, during this earnest appeal of
the widowed mother, continued to regard her atten-
tively, was here on the point of speaking :—but she
arrested his voice.

‘* Not now,” she cried ;—“ not here: Lhave said too
much. Ifyou recognise me, breathe not my name to-
night, nor ever. And for you,” she continued, turning
to the other two, “oh, think well what ye do! Pre-
serve to each other the bond of unity in faithful Briider-
schaft unbroken; but make no vow. The noble heart
needs none to bind its truth! Let your boast be rather
that, without help or aid from any idle vow either to
each other or to heaven, ye can preserve a ‘knightly
faith unblemished by the blood upon the steel !”

As she turned to go, Ernst, with a parting wave of
the hand to his friends, sprung to her side and lent his
arm for her support.

As they passed together on their way, the quiet ear
of night alone heard the whispered exclamation of En-

gelhertz: ‘ Johanna von Fern—vyon Alpen!”



CHAPTER VIII.

Che Failing Genius. Deroguitions.

«" A youth through the dim twilight I behold,
As mute and motionless and pale as stone.
Hands clenched, eyes closed, he sits—but not in sleep.”
WHITEHEAD.





ADie ETURN we to the Sculptor’s home.



Mn FA
Be)

:
f
+

like the morn from eye, cheek, and lip,—stood Réschen.

Robed in garments light, loose, and flowing ;
in her hand a small antique pitcher, such as

might well have been exhumed from the reek-



ing ashes of Pompeii; an arch smile glancing

Before the plastic clay, yet formless from the lap of
earth, sat, or rather reclined, the figure of the boy Ber-
thold. His hand had not yet sought to touch the form-

less mass of mould into which the breathing beauty was



<<

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THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 77
a areas oii ine OES
to pass. His eye, it is true, was fixed upon the young
shape into whose semblance he was about to breathe a
spirit akin to the model herself. Yet it seemed as if his
mind, scarcely yet attuned to the work, was striving —
though evidently with a painful effort—to grasp that
great Ideal without which, so Berthold deemed, no work
“of the master’s hand is worth the clay that fixes first the
primal thought, giving to it its earliest shape and sub-
stance.

A light, almost childish laugh from Roschen sud-
denly recalled him to a bitter sense of the truth :—
the spirit of his art was for the hour, perhaps for ever,
asleep within him!

« Set down your pitcher, Réschen,” said he; “ it
may not be to-day. My eyes are filled with shadows,
that will not let me see you as you are. Weary your-
self no further. Your merry voice is deepest wisdom
here, where silence weighs like lead upon the heart.
Oh, for your cheerful upspring of young life! I could
almost envy you, my Réschen.”

« You are sad to-day ; shall I sing to you?” was her

answer.



78 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



“ Any thing but silence and self-thought.”
« Listen, then, instead of thinking.”

Sung.
‘¢ Mid the Lindenthal springing,

A rose drank the dew,

Where, in melody singing,
A wood-linnet flew ;

She flew to the wild-rose,
Inhaling its breath ;

But her torn wings reclose
Round the weapon of death.

A thorn neath the false flower
Lay treacherously green,
And the simple one’s dower
Proved a dagger unseen.
And still at life’s close
Thus her voice sang forlorn,
‘I saw only the rose,
Yet I feel but the thorn !’”

“May you never press upon the thorns that lie
thick-grown upon the pathways of sweet earth!” cried
Berthold. “Oh! Réschen,” he continued, “ where

stays Armer? I cannot work alone; my hand is



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 79

powerless. I need your brother’s help, dear girl. The
spirit in which I gloried has grown dim.”

And in his outspread hands the boy’s buried face
was hidden.

“Tt is indeed strange that he does not return,” re-
plied Réschen. ‘“ My mother has gone out to make
inquiry after him; she, too, stays. What can have
become of him?”

“ Two whole days, and not a word. How sick the
heart grows that waits and hopes! If we could but
hear his step !”

“ Hush! listen!” cried Roéschen.

“ Nay, it was but the wind.”

And Berthold was right; for though the Old Year
had died so stilly, but for one gusty breeze of parting
breath, its successor did indeed respire with such full
lungs as set the crazy cottage-walls creaking beneath
their blast.

The wind too, ever a lover of the night, grew
louder and more shrill as the twilight of the short-lived
winter’s day deepened and set. And it soon became an —

unprofitable task to strain the ear for sounds that would



80 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

come and go, rise and fall, faint and swell, with every
imaginable freak. Each step that approached seemed
to be suddenly—just when the expectant hearers felt
most sure of its coming—caught up and whirled away,
as if by some phantom wing that hovered directly over
that particular door-sill. And no step came.

Then the night drew down; and the two grew
fearful as two fawns that have missed the doe’s track-
way in the waste.

But presently—when, as it ever happens, despair
had seized upon the heart, and it had given up, or
thought it had given up, its long weary watch, then,—
all at once, the latch was lifted, and Armer stood before
them. i

There was in the manner of his entry,—in the entire
heedlessness or unconsciousness of all that gnawing
uncertainty, doubt, and dread which had been the
portion of the watchers,—something painfully start-
ling to those on whom the shadow of that roof-tree
had pressed with so dire a weight.

It was felt, but not spoken; not even moulded
into a thought.



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 81
enemies niiliatllii ng
Indeed, it was no time for thinking; there was so
much to tell and to hear. Armer had to recount with
vivid delight how well his statue had been received ;
how he had himself been treated as though he were
the first of sculptors; how he had been detained hour
after hour, and had been finally prevailed upon to sleep
under a roof whose gorgeousness made it, to the fancy
of one who had been from his birth a wanderer like
Armer, a very fairy palace of enchantment.

This was an explanation sufficient—sufficient at
least for the reason of those who received it ; and if
any lingering feeling of disappointment remained, it
was but as a feeling, attributable more to the manner
of Armer than to any thing more real and tangible ; .
and it was at once smothered as unworthy of being
entertained.

But there was still a something undefined, a chill,
an aching, upon the hearts of both Berthold and

Réschen,—though least so with the younger, lighter
heart,—which would not be lifted off.

As the three were still conversing late into the

night, and wondering to each other what could have



82 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

become of Johanna, the door again opened, and she
entered, accompanied by Engelhertz.

The surprise of the two—Ernst and Berthold—was
great; for, in their brief interview, Berthold had not
told, and Ernst had forborne to ask, the particulars of
all that related to his art, and the friends with whom
it was associated.

Armer, too, had his recognition.

“ Ah!” he cried, the moment Engelhertz crossed
the threshold, “ my fellow-student by the Zuricher-
See!”

The exclamation of Ernst was one of no less as-
tonishment :

“ Welcome, Heinrich von Alpen, to the Miitter-
land!”



CHAPTER IX.

Arwlations. Che Boy Berthald,

** Oh! colder than the wind that freezes
Founts that but now in sunshine played,
Is that congealing pang which seizes

The trusting bosom when betrayed.”
¢ )

tn (>A
' a sw E pass over the greeting between
IN } ; ||) Johanna and her son, All her an-
i | | xiety at once relieved by his pre-

sence, the mother’s heart was at rest.






MOORE,




Forbearing all questions as to his pro-
tracted absence in the hearing of Ernst,
she turned to the latter. Alluding to the excla- ,
mation he had uttered on entering—

“* Yours is the first voice,” said J ohanna, “ that
has welcomed us back to the land of our birth.
You spoke of the Miitterland. Alas! she has proved
but a kindless mother. When last we met you, the
blow had not yet fallen which sent us beggared to
her bosom.—You remember Matthaus ?”

F



84 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

TD

“ Well—oh, well!”

“ You witnessed his sufferings—his blighted, crip-
pled life! The mind fell victim first; the body lin-
gered long. That wound inflicted by my brother’s
hand, though healed to outward sight, slowly sapped
the powers of life and reason, and he became—what
you saw not.—Oh, what a wreck he was!”

« Heaven preserved the orphans 2”

«“ Ay, I hold them! They are my all; sweet
bonds, yet ministers to pain! Pardon, dear Ber-
thold,” she pursued, turning to where the boy sat
apart, wrapt in some waking dream, —‘“ friend where
no other friends were found! Pardon if 1 seem to
grudge my boy’s inheritance to you. It is not that.
But to see him so utterly forsaken, when ye should at
least have been sharers in my brother’s squandered
wealth,—it does seem hard.”

“ May I hear that tale?” asked Engelhertz, with —
a now deepening interest, his eye wandering to the
face of Berthold.

“ You shall.—These lands of Graubriider, which

stretch so wide and rule it so lordly, were once pat-



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 85



titioned between a brother and a sister—Wilhelm and
Johanna. By my father’s will,—for it is of myself
and my brother that I speak,—the lands were to de-
volve upon the male heirs of my co-heir Wilhelm ;
or, failmg his issue male, to be divided equally be-
tween his children and mine.

“ Taking advantage of another clause in the will,
—in which it was well known there was a flaw,— my
brother assumed the right to exclude me altogether
from my joint life-heirship with himself, in the event
of my marrying without his consent.

“That I did so,—little dreaming that the errors
of my poor father’s will would thus be used against
me, to the utter beggaring of my orphan children,—
you already know. On that night, when they who
had been such fast friends (united in the triple bond
of Briiderschaft with your father, Ernst,) quarrelled,
became bitter enemies, and sought each other’s life;
—on that very night, when my Matthaus fell wounded
beneath the sword of my brother,—I fled to him.
I supported, nursed, and finally, —married him.

“ Soon afterwards my brother went into Italy, where



86 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. |

hss li nalanennneleapcnlaigicabheialomaeataeteinsinalntn
he resided many years. He there married, vowing that
no child of mine should ever succeed to his lands.

“ Fortune favoured his designs. The male heir,
which was to exclude my children from all participa-
tion in the wealth, my portion of which he had already
wrung from me, was granted to his prayer. His wife,
who died at Florence in the second year of her mar-
riage, left him one child—a boy.

“ Here is the result,” she added, looking round at
her poor dwelling, and at her two children, Heinrich
and Roschen.

But the eye of Ernst was turned alone on Berthold.
The boy had fainted !









Nie oe
id

CHAPTER X.
Che Closed Hor. Che Crust Repos.

**Long time hesighed. . . ....,
Now, hark! his anxious heart beats high.”
° WILLMOTT.

‘T will have been
| surmised that, while
Johanna was recit-
ing the history of
her past sorrow and
wrong, the boy
Berthold—who had
been sitting apart,
sz apparently occupied
by visions unconnected
with the tale—was in
truth a silent listener,
eagerly drinking in
every word that passed.
Thus, at the moment

when Johanna’s voice



88 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



ceased, the boy’s sick heart,—overtasked and crowded
with more intense, because hidden, anguish,—yielded at
once, beat with feeble pulse, and sense and conscious-
ness deserted him.

The first impulse of Johanna was to loosen the
boy’s vest, in order that he might breathe more freely.
But before she could do so, Engelhertz, quickly putting
her aside, called for water, and having bathed the boy’s
temples, himself bore him into the open air.

This at once revived him; for, in spite of those
southern suns to which Ernst had chosen to attribute
his almost feminine delicacy of frame, Berthold was
not ordinarily so fragile.

The boy’s first look on awaking to a consciousness
of the scene around him, was one of startled uneasiness.
Something, however, in the calm aspect of Ernst re-
assured him, and he soon returned to those who so
anxiously awaited him, smiling at his own weakness.

The circumstance was soon forgotten,—forgotten
by all but Ernst. To him it conveyed a revelation not
to be questioned. Whatever were his suspicions be-

fore, that sudden swoon, at the very close of Johanna’s



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 89

relation, in a moment brought conviction to his mind.
Had confirmation been wanting, what followed would
have supplied it.

Berthold sought the city no more. Shut from every
eye but that of Grete, the cottage of his old nurse
became now the boy’s only resort. Johanna wondered,
and poor Roschen’s tears fell fast; for though both
frequently ascended the path towards the cottage of
Grete, neither was ever admitted. Ernst alone made
no attempt to gain admission. None knew, though
Engelhertz too well divined, the mental struggle that
was going forward within the closed doors of that
humble dwelling.

At last, one morning Grete presented herself at his.
door, the bearer of a letter from Berthold. |

Here, for the first time, the calmness of Ernst de-
serted him. The trust, then, which he had so fondly
hoped would be reposed in him, if in none else, was
about to be accorded. The promise given on that
never-to-be-forgotten day, beside the Pathway of the
Fawn, was now to be kept in its own pure spirit of

truth. The anticipation was ecstacy.



90 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



In his anxious haste to arrive at its contents, the
letter became torn in his hands, but enough was left
clear for the heart to decipher; and though clothed in

broken words, it conveyed a speaking meaning.

** To Ernst Engelhertz.

“ Keeping the promise I made to one who would
never have extorted it but for the noblest purpose,
I place in you this trust. The secret of a deadly
wrong has, I am led to think—partly from your own
observation, and partly through my untimely failure
of strength during Johanna’s recital—become known
to you. If this be so, towards you at least my vow
is no longer binding. But, before I commit myself
further —since this surmise may prove unfounded—
tell me truly ifI am right. If it is as I believe, you
will read my meaning without more words ; if not, let
this letter remain the enigma it must be to you. I
cannot tell if I should be glad or sorry that you should
know all. To me it would prove a sumless blessing
to be enabled to open all my heart to one whose watch-

ful guardianship has sweetened the dull life of many



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 91



a year; yet, for the sake of a father’s fame, I would
it were not so. Speak to me truly in this hour, for
uncertainty weighs upon my spirit.—Yours,

“ BERTHOLD VON FERN.”

Beneath the keen eyes of Grete the trembling hand

of Ernst scrawled a brief reply :—

“ To the Child of Von Fern.

“Your secret is mine! For years have I guarded
it as my life, knowing not its meaning, but trustful in
you. Johanna’s relation confirmed what my soul had
never questioned. For your father, fear nothing; his
secret is safe, as yours is, in the true breast of your
Ernst. Let not your trust end here; let me be near
you for your counsel, as of old. Give me permission to
meet you once more, as I prayed, near the Pathway of
the Fawn. And be this the token that I speak truly—
I call you Bertha von Fern.— Yours unto death,

Ernst ENGELHERTZ.

“ T will pass along the deer’s track at the coming

of the sunset.”



92 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
cieeiviisectuiinitseinesadsceaasasaonnsaciinsaasiabiali Aisa

Ernst himself, whose heart beat fast with a thou-
sand crowding emotions, could scarcely have desired a
swifter or more earnest messenger than Grete. Accus-
tomed to the mountain-path from her girlhood, she
climbed its steep ascent with a step which youth could
scarce have rivalled, and was soon lost to sight.

As she reached her own door, the latch was cau-
tiously lifted from within, and Grete’s entrance was
welcomed by her whom we have hitherto known under
the name of the boy Berthold. Another moment, and
the letter was opened and read with moist eyes and
cold, pale, trembling lips, to which the sweet sounds
came slowly.

“Tt is so, Grete!” exclaimed Bertha, at last; “ it
is as I have told you: the secret is no longer ours.”

“Love has a keen eye, my bird,” answered the
wary nurse, glancing at her young charge.

«Say rather the ‘ angel-heart’ divines truly, good
Grete,” said her foster-child, as, with an uneasy con-
sciousness that the old woman touched closely upon the
truth, she turned away from eyes that searched her
hidden heart.



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 93

After a few moments given to thought, casting her
arms about Grete’s neck, she added —

** And now, dear nurse, whatever comes, this shame-
ful garb must be laid aside. Never since that night
when I felt that our secret was too surely betrayed—
to one at least, to the noble, earnest heart !—have I
borne to shew myself in such a guise. As you love
me, fetch hither with all speed such garments as maiden
youth may wear without a blush; but let their hue be
sombre, as befits one who mourns. Alas! I have cause
to mourn.”

Grete hesitated, doubtfully.

“ 1 know what you would say,” Bertha responded
to her looks: “ this is betrayal at once. But not so.
Until I may do so with safety to my vow —broken yet |
to none—I leave the refuge of these walls and yonder
wood no more. If ever I am to resume this hateful
disguise, I know not; but this only I feel, I must and
will resign it here—now, at once. A few hours hence
—see, the sun is low already. Oh, haste, dear Grete !
haste! Do my bidding but this once, and I will love

thee ever.”



94 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

“ T yead your meaning, child,” said the old woman,
still shaking her head doubtfully ; “ you go to meet
him, then,—this stranger ?”

“ Stranger!” cried Bertha. “Is he a stranger
whose eye alone has watched my steps, whose foot has
hovered round my solitude, for years? A stranger {—
he who, resigning all youth’s joyous sports and healthful
pastimes, hour by hour, and year by year, wore his
young days away in silent musings by the side of his
boy-friend? who, in the thrice-blessed confidence of
youth, gave all his glorious aspirations to my keeping,
calling me ‘ sweet friend —dear brother?’ O Grete,
is he a stranger?”

“ Ay, ay, that was all very well then,” answered

Grete ; “ but now”



“ What now ?—Good nurse, no more. I pray you,
haste !”

“ Well, well, I am gone.—Ah, it is ever so! Old
steps may lag, but. young wishes will speed. Ay,
‘ay, I was young too once.” And half doubting, half

pleased, the good nurse went muttering on her way.



CHAPTER XI.
Che Forest Shade. Die Gute in bie Schone,

“ Loving the Beautiful, thou lovest all :
Goodness is Beauty in a lovelier guise.”
Bs 2 \ CV o
Son LAS ICON FRE
HEE CSIR

7





(STAI

eZ,

mes a ON
wi TK ‘RUE to the hour, the sun no
*4 sooner slanted, raying down
behind the crests of the pyramidal
pines, than Ernst was seen slowly
pacing the Pathway of the Fawn.
Dejected, with eyes downcast,
and drooping limbs shrouded in a
woman's garb of mourning, Bertha
stood within the shadow of the pines.
She could not approach him, true,
dear friend though he was. She could —
only think, only feel, how often ere now

she had presented herself before him in

PS
Da the guise of the boy Berthold. Now, a
ae shrinking woman, she stood in his path

3 trembling and abashed.



96 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
a speincene peunlenemnaiiciaeiacienatiniaaeontaaienaiiiaaniilmaiite

A slanting beam from the setting sun falling on the
spot, betrayed where she stood. In a moment Ernst
was at her side.

How he pined to fold her in one long embrace, as
he gazed upon her strange new beauty, obscured no
more! Not daring to trust his voice, he took her
hand in silence, and~led her farther into the wood-
side shade.

Bertha, drawing comfort from his looks, was the
first to speak.

«Can just men pardon me,” she cried, “the wrong
I do?”

«To the just are vows most binding ; and you have
vowed,” was all his answer. And again there was
silence between the two. Not for worlds would he
have broken the pure dream of her trust in him by
giving breath to the words that trembled on his lips.

But by degrees the new restraint which had sprung
up between those who had been such true and fast
friends, wore insensibly away.

« And now,” cried Ernst, as the twilight deepening

found them still occupied in sweet but aimless converse,







vy0

cy 4 2 ee
shaken
ohare oe gd





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describe
'1055' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYF' 'sip-files00008.txt'
62f16f2a58a53e992689d9ee578576c0
8dd4056eb51eca855f3e90b0289a66eed3ddeda3
describe
'5127' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYG' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
f3774365b37418514bf686ea25301a43
58ff3823eea7b5d22237de8e180f2b5b262ad24c
'2011-11-16T08:52:35-05:00'
describe
'917472' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYH' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
4db6b29135951fe1d6001cbd625d67a4
19d8b5ebf1a78e57c72ceb1b1f4478ced8ce4629
'2011-11-16T08:49:31-05:00'
describe
'30412' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYI' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
4409daa53006fb75217b7ee9aff0bd14
2376649ea6ae8923e85b722b05f931b171c871fb
'2011-11-16T08:51:44-05:00'
describe
'9393' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYJ' 'sip-files00009.pro'
dda63292b68999995649ab97ebbc1817
22ebefd63090fe8f00864d1adcd487313ec1c293
describe
'9417' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYK' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
c297d7fe9646b318208a166b82440b70
0d1908616f031e9eb3d0e5be49f57b6fd65794fe
'2011-11-16T08:49:55-05:00'
describe
'9548657' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYL' 'sip-files00009.tif'
1bfa7db5c24960f3aae40b82377025d1
d6e259c87966a7fa7ddb52f72fd6cb6532ffc1be
'2011-11-16T08:48:13-05:00'
describe
'449' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYM' 'sip-files00009.txt'
4ac8b5d0d2707ef17e9c9ac2f01aadf7
73637f5fcdd90e23f4269d3d15223df4d51b19a0
'2011-11-16T08:49:37-05:00'
describe
'3312' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYN' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
cc8defc9c1cb658c6743dea275dff78d
206816be48b903b0d1375c20474b9144f7a37d41
'2011-11-16T08:51:09-05:00'
describe
'1264132' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYO' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
fd1c5ebe30ad1f67d11e8207c9f808f6
179fe518020d7304f472c817f52976e6ccf61123
'2011-11-16T08:49:53-05:00'
describe
'63785' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYP' 'sip-files00010.jpg'
7e660a5b6b02b156f8dca08abb1c47b5
a63a1f595a3c6c70fbe18104bec1651888b7b7ea
'2011-11-16T08:50:09-05:00'
describe
'12374' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYQ' 'sip-files00010.pro'
519ea15b9e4516eeba90ab60528b7616
497c993e7fdafd0e3c0406d49ec10b8f54269dc0
'2011-11-16T08:52:41-05:00'
describe
'21544' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYR' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
246231975350232469145161276335dc
8a0fbae15b09f1ec282e34b8174a5f5e93592d55
'2011-11-16T08:50:46-05:00'
describe
'10123459' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYS' 'sip-files00010.tif'
bd36b172c2a1d14b58dab40927f6b789
967b85a2a5c0663628e8b3c9d5c0380ae9adbd06
describe
'604' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYT' 'sip-files00010.txt'
673f9712373ff23bd13fa8dc557e80b2
f3f20e5da0f223e733e30695a8a958fb1b77fea6
'2011-11-16T08:49:52-05:00'
describe
'6254' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYU' 'sip-files00010thm.jpg'
b695f452f4eb67a30e554e1e0c7fac3f
2a8e36c5d9cffe9d4c2660aec007a5ce027c7add
'2011-11-16T08:49:29-05:00'
describe
'871056' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYV' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
564f1c89a67c8f7c56fd58a80ad240dc
36995b1e98e35c344413e04457f92e18d1dfecba
describe
'17460' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYW' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
adb6f72059fb5029bac64ccf778f62e4
80f95256499680b7205692c8176dcb08bc153538
'2011-11-16T08:46:42-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYX' 'sip-files00011.pro'
0cace2f095ec5ee71a4506b8a85c6faa
fa66b9b9980cead82687d2d18aff85c1716dd361
'2011-11-16T08:51:03-05:00'
describe
'4542' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYY' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
4e3a5d7db60f1d7d982aa78b8a56e2b8
d1dd057d6175bf9bdcae10997e032d59a21796f1
'2011-11-16T08:52:05-05:00'
describe
'9854115' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEYZ' 'sip-files00011.tif'
846e2299b0770281e1bfdf8105992301
937df5564cc2ee09ddba6ce0a63ec6c162edb0f5
describe
'1414' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZA' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
dcc73d286897b9d1f0bfc2d433db018a
8ab9d070648f2d18c1f47d901fa4ee294657673f
'2011-11-16T08:50:25-05:00'
describe
'1209309' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZB' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
a3eb1147fe41daede3bfb9aefcae2137
e52541b0a117a8e02c21adcfbc9b47414f184f9b
describe
'101265' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZC' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
fcce87e202094fb6633e9d88e62cb936
fa76334fc09f7ee972aa2e2dd990cba8b407e39c
'2011-11-16T08:52:00-05:00'
describe
'13356' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZD' 'sip-files00012.pro'
d692518a66adcd708ec2dd9cf9bf863a
0cd7c2c2320785bdebad0587246cae64a729ecef
'2011-11-16T08:51:06-05:00'
describe
'29097' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZE' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
43b0712f125d7aa3ef18cfa7b4912983
aa25260396ac26957180c5381629098df7429b90
'2011-11-16T08:49:40-05:00'
describe
'9683991' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZF' 'sip-files00012.tif'
ceea5744e3d0f3c39f07c61ee969cea6
127e71a1865e36ef30b74e669ab8050f07bb7fd4
'2011-11-16T08:50:53-05:00'
describe
'798' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZG' 'sip-files00012.txt'
ec0e0b2dd85f3b75a6c38ef8437f8192
45dfdce119de27a7e0510454d2d8ed80861fd5fa
'2011-11-16T08:49:17-05:00'
describe
'7549' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZH' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
4126fb1e71dd18408beea15acd31d0fe
5ea67351634c64f8b23ba71ea68fc3a22cb1fbf6
'2011-11-16T08:47:57-05:00'
describe
'1173360' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZI' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
73a7034b6b590877fc777b812fd86683
c52eba53bd5f6719aa136dd8327c7862b46a3c42
'2011-11-16T08:48:16-05:00'
describe
'77270' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZJ' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
b89050c93f6a37b53c43da8d37c6c0a5
56636f5c2a3c42b91dc9ec5185fccce7ff4ac170
describe
'28686' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZK' 'sip-files00013.pro'
c64c628f2fa1f655e73accf925dfceaa
57d65208cd31b8f9248e6f0d4569814c40e4ccc1
describe
'27263' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZL' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
b40b4495e2587abe9e33416578da67e9
ac367efd6f9f85c234ee0f0512d18dac04b63f5f
'2011-11-16T08:52:32-05:00'
describe
'9396419' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZM' 'sip-files00013.tif'
3fb69772b0e773af60fd8b63aa6946f6
9c01ef186750e6ac4fa67d66486f4fa13f7456dd
'2011-11-16T08:47:21-05:00'
describe
'1173' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZN' 'sip-files00013.txt'
a51bfc0911d63444e4fdf6cf4b4db459
e3d034c341a3a2b1e2ccea541c95d10716b765d2
describe
'7583' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZO' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
4d92f917027eaf52a68aab5c5db0c2ff
792ed26e6df557b0a7e2c7d1ce659cd8346b44d1
'2011-11-16T08:47:06-05:00'
describe
'1134923' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZP' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
9ee458db5f98a285731ac77c07d6ffd8
23ba0ea88c0c23fd8aa3349524099aaf7f84e7c7
'2011-11-16T08:46:47-05:00'
describe
'80209' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZQ' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
89663deaf848757da743d466d2afceb6
ce67e65ef2a30c267bb5f10d320729dfb67bab8d
'2011-11-16T08:49:28-05:00'
describe
'28681' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZR' 'sip-files00014.pro'
60beb3caaac888e7e42a68be0dd3de94
14f5d0d21f8be27313a75921722d20aa06608736
'2011-11-16T08:51:24-05:00'
describe
'29271' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZS' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
6028e661fe49f83c70e10b69a02160b5
68171eb70b8270f81256e07e1ab8151775f5635a
describe
'9088787' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZT' 'sip-files00014.tif'
4019a14e86a4e33d35f2f53bea3abb67
9dd84f923c79ffa1b1918a53d2a90d59a5b6a701
'2011-11-16T08:52:45-05:00'
describe
'1165' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZU' 'sip-files00014.txt'
de7a5804c99ad0abe095f22eb143894c
322662b4a04427f7e23cf49fc376d31112edecaa
describe
'8307' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZV' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
788c0a83387e280a8c026e671928f2fe
d583a3af679d9f94c4ea0c022fe68c0bd8c9d834
describe
'1161508' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZW' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
cac724b592ba769804df7ad5b89148bf
f4dd027714790824c33d7ba728e97218f55844a3
'2011-11-16T08:50:48-05:00'
describe
'68808' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZX' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
10c0a6033f0ee6600b59a38b2cf4de83
02a3d8bd03a39c5a57b177f5feeb9a7aea949617
'2011-11-16T08:50:44-05:00'
describe
'27792' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZY' 'sip-files00015.pro'
40a74e5acc2bb38fd353b92c99f2fa7c
07ceddd4d4642a2d4b1483f96ab662b194819cc7
'2011-11-16T08:50:55-05:00'
describe
'24952' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABEZZ' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
730e4f694e8e5a978cb519a51d3a39d7
c9feaff2b52a69f4b942ac51db3510d5c731f221
'2011-11-16T08:52:47-05:00'
describe
'9301775' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAA' 'sip-files00015.tif'
195a57fed3c464ceff306edf13f5f52e
077799b4e4db740f1157c7d3ab099d49182368cb
'2011-11-16T08:48:11-05:00'
describe
'1125' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAB' 'sip-files00015.txt'
9f3db68d06b5cb629be1715d2a6061f5
2a0edf62ec9e2d03c14d487890e1bbab9e07537b
'2011-11-16T08:48:42-05:00'
describe
'7008' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAC' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
1df92d2eaf3c0f83b5994c3e4aa6c2c9
6e6c83815b55f08af86ed1f7df4edc8d123b9d6d
describe
'1100190' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAD' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
2b5668b51defae72007a39eec6278383
61164de02ca0329448194c371cb82d5bd21fd56d
'2011-11-16T08:52:11-05:00'
describe
'79257' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAE' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
60e4f58f61ccebf625dd67473b132e1a
d0b9fa4e0c32910d15991e33d6f356ad898f5794
'2011-11-16T08:46:58-05:00'
describe
'29569' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAF' 'sip-files00016.pro'
fea8bdb8e746e4c71246ff0812d94ad6
1cc4567be3fdf5f8474bc5c801908698a53264de
describe
'29913' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAG' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
74a38ec93ee13e4d6451ab5732d7d3ee
ae360a5d3aebdf9ef2857ec2b2706c14dd7e3722
'2011-11-16T08:52:38-05:00'
describe
'8810651' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAH' 'sip-files00016.tif'
f699ad2ddac2272f06b9bde76a8718e5
c4e052b263413c388e8bae1f1e318fc5a6c92193
'2011-11-16T08:47:23-05:00'
describe
'1205' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAI' 'sip-files00016.txt'
d843f1c612e30577160c7f4bf9722077
0e760c767052f08e241404f4bd9c6b8d13344f4d
'2011-11-16T08:52:15-05:00'
describe
'8421' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAJ' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
f711b33615d9bc1d2649bc3877f997fb
c1497545f9de99947157b9f4e044f98474d1d5aa
'2011-11-16T08:48:04-05:00'
describe
'1125862' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAK' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
b81810ee8d722d783ecd281f8fa8731f
10a776f38492ab4195417715932374eddf888062
'2011-11-16T08:47:13-05:00'
describe
'80326' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAL' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
eeeb55aae888ea287126d6cd2cf75522
496d98626035d8f822398b8fdc3ceee0582ffd73
'2011-11-16T08:47:01-05:00'
describe
'31520' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAM' 'sip-files00017.pro'
1ff53a4dc2824547b82b19358d0c59e1
a63934aece6c9971f6316c735e68871d1d7b45db
describe
'29822' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAN' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
8e850adfab396b9802fb392fbad4d764
a1b08d983de9d25fcff2a019de69b2f50ec8442c
'2011-11-16T08:47:32-05:00'
describe
'9016117' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAO' 'sip-files00017.tif'
249d438e9f622c99e2edd350ad4b5f82
dfdd8e2b960ef4cbcaee23293a0947c624f856ad
'2011-11-16T08:48:51-05:00'
describe
'1288' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAP' 'sip-files00017.txt'
94e244f6b4a8153b1771db6c19a9cd79
de7d063c0ee65cccc3a955c7ef12784fd29aa6ed
describe
'8319' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAQ' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
e4d9c5a78a7e93e83b376b81f48948ce
d57c94d22eb735cba90311e97039ccde78bd2f8c
describe
'1107537' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAR' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
c8b3b972b73425512d890179208c3df9
6c257e11dd6b9f47064a05210d80b46a2f73edd9
'2011-11-16T08:52:04-05:00'
describe
'78068' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAS' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
e73c9540f553d54bed38d1757abba102
319b812c822bf4ecf2404e9b7a14a8ed55519956
'2011-11-16T08:51:34-05:00'
describe
'29550' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAT' 'sip-files00018.pro'
f01257e961d7523eec9fa4f8cad82a3b
ff18dd5c1dd82f5b83ce47ee335efa27a6b99812
describe
'28849' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAU' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
d549420c4c6f1abc30209893316fb1bf
9d394a6ce7361e7888baf63475fe0e01650f8e06
'2011-11-16T08:49:22-05:00'
describe
'8869589' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAV' 'sip-files00018.tif'
84fae03b7f636be879f737547af0dccf
252a5a4be7b2500c7f72d9beaa20c87073d19aa4
'2011-11-16T08:49:00-05:00'
describe
'1202' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAW' 'sip-files00018.txt'
f9ce21a6a4836dac653477b98cfe5018
b4381fc27fd4c3f01a021b321ea31e992f7af189
describe
'8023' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAX' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
54e8c9db38112c61cdd16e1278690695
ec5d95389a1fe496cb97f14e5e7558d896f1521a
'2011-11-16T08:47:34-05:00'
describe
'1125839' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAY' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
898142cb8716a26248151ba24bbc59ed
61088c1ccc2fff9fb708955449736e1e406be1b9
'2011-11-16T08:49:09-05:00'
describe
'73805' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFAZ' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
093275106160cf117cec5182261024d6
9ade1ec266a62e7e2afdbe1d53c678c88e970912
describe
'28598' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBA' 'sip-files00019.pro'
01800fa03acaec6043f184ff144dad8b
85e478d0b7dbb512313f0c21427aec2e84def0f1
'2011-11-16T08:49:58-05:00'
describe
'27488' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBB' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
2064a5b7a86d940eeedaaf1550667186
3fe340fbd0171f7c2a53eec93a6821958a772253
'2011-11-16T08:49:38-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBC' 'sip-files00019.tif'
11f16a62fb475b1b20fdf19309779d75
b51474b464324170800301a5bf06fda4cb97ecfc
'2011-11-16T08:52:57-05:00'
describe
'1166' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBD' 'sip-files00019.txt'
39f1425ef9d284d95f99ce53bd6fd779
659b0780c5ff009e60982533af93fe7bc5b4c284
describe
'7790' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBE' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
08fd34ca664dc3ed2240b9593be605d9
37c8fe1dacc7e449d215e9ead9cef8bcfc52a09d
'2011-11-16T08:47:36-05:00'
describe
'1107538' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBF' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
e1f9992d743aad192ce20f8b5c41753d
41d0319618282c7c9149229c47ee879c139d34a3
describe
'75289' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBG' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
5edece3c21b35b10af67d05102973c01
e72d8409e99208ce6247142e9c2a95142c4f904f
'2011-11-16T08:52:30-05:00'
describe
'27474' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBH' 'sip-files00020.pro'
8955e3b0789e77c7b1e10ab787dc7cb5
56047594453c1926a19f28eda50c17c23bcb69b7
'2011-11-16T08:52:22-05:00'
describe
'28063' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBI' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
0349a6f61a1c303e65e09cf180a3aae9
5bc8522269c41390e6382edb83338384ff3b7000
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBJ' 'sip-files00020.tif'
0bec572ab36650ab481f8d4cd05cf800
eebb80c1bd28308876975dbc0905831cea104b22
describe
'1138' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBK' 'sip-files00020.txt'
52a58a89c8641d3d2ab045eae2117e8e
d6fed45bfb0d44b5d6b12d4061d9814f2d8127be
'2011-11-16T08:50:50-05:00'
describe
'7992' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBL' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
a3bc18c2e9623e4dcd1050629e973218
0a33188329706c608dd2b4ac90c87052645c7bdb
describe
'1125870' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBM' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
8f18edc417eeffb6ea86dc02c29dc049
41e89a745a6974ebdea23f2d4dab56be051b5a23
'2011-11-16T08:52:03-05:00'
describe
'75080' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBN' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
73dc2beaeea293ba9430cb95a8482068
0ccfc017e5c7ec6e2ef619dec8ff44e9f57e6a36
'2011-11-16T08:50:12-05:00'
describe
'28902' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBO' 'sip-files00021.pro'
d638f953c9ecf51253776202ae83960b
78ec3afd9052ddaac9416584bd7d43dd6d04a9a3
'2011-11-16T08:49:24-05:00'
describe
'27966' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBP' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
9918927e3f6d8e2ceb1a27608644ae0b
dc97417aa65ae8b658c8328d2658a036a324163d
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBQ' 'sip-files00021.tif'
8e58aee1b8a764c753848e3b24c26039
a42cb7779a129cac40a51ef04c0f53bd3c6da00a
'2011-11-16T08:51:58-05:00'
describe
'1190' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBR' 'sip-files00021.txt'
162ec0c3ae52f1c5dc9edc1549c06957
ebb9e5607f9ecae0ced8e270861627cb0f237e1f
'2011-11-16T08:48:54-05:00'
describe
'7956' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBS' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
dfe5b3652dfece0204d0d6998cfdefa0
d0925b54a2f54d497822874a140732797fc860d2
'2011-11-16T08:46:43-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBT' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
0c36928c3438e8e0c22b633e764da25e
76cf468e32c0cce397d0ff0abdc3fbf9b1c3d763
describe
'76524' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBU' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
58685a4cb2d4d179bf1531d7b06b6f19
0f4ad1804b5a6c9f72e5e21e7c02a43fc9119e4f
describe
'28860' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBV' 'sip-files00022.pro'
a453e722d8f58fcf60069da2785acc02
d68d46bb4678cd7a5a09fbd23051cc3cb607326f
'2011-11-16T08:47:41-05:00'
describe
'28422' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBW' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
46245c0f99b14698afe7f03f0dc4e53f
467ff333462a0f47c30ba56a40dca1721ff74afd
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBX' 'sip-files00022.tif'
2b7472903cb690a328ed26a7bf2f6023
8880d308754504a2391d3681029392241e60cdb9
describe
'1182' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBY' 'sip-files00022.txt'
a335d5482df6a0d95cbc044defee8e93
0511d0105be93bcbeff56ef5f766f3200208bb55
'2011-11-16T08:50:21-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFBZ' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
ad2b3c63461297b52493f3de1acd3e4b
e57b5c4110d386899008fde158babe62166bf908
describe
'1138416' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCA' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
9ab209ee49df597a2eabe0d5e66ad214
768af43e9866f288a9d08841af31ebd876737dfe
describe
'63636' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCB' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
38ac8f31165564ff79a4ac3e7c2e2dd1
1f4991dd9c2cd8ce4e4456073a7e98d46cb8bb81
describe
'23504' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCC' 'sip-files00023.pro'
242571bc6a2b10d98926002f26d5309d
074c6a9f7cf58df409c857be8e285a490db97c98
'2011-11-16T08:48:05-05:00'
describe
'23995' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCD' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
d8077bfc91caee814410a4d9a1332e95
1fd6fe4a75faf47bcbf3f45f3cbf3e717476cdb5
describe
'9116625' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCE' 'sip-files00023.tif'
018998008e28b2494c8b5b3a08abc437
10f0c7417ccc2e1215139eed669b8c66c96b9182
'2011-11-16T08:49:04-05:00'
describe
'957' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCF' 'sip-files00023.txt'
70943afdc6c87542a7ea45890cf73539
0ab967adfed503cf2d2a3a71c174c675f334c9cc
'2011-11-16T08:48:58-05:00'
describe
'6549' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCG' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
98859dff80362e0222cf23ec9b749480
406b7b6b1ae592acf1686a7eb3727999d75b9086
'2011-11-16T08:50:30-05:00'
describe
'1144449' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCH' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
791ab81c8c3f6db450d8a2eb4865b9ea
a0c8107da855921d3ebe729c1db054e71ee2d08e
describe
'73103' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCI' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
6711a3d1d674917e5cf704346e332ad2
b50d6fabbcca4be9215c47d10ef5def24292280e
describe
'27808' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCJ' 'sip-files00024.pro'
7f8b77f1cae3fb036daa1ec7c526d331
145be448a18981a3b6214ebfbe1e07a69ae6fcbf
'2011-11-16T08:49:35-05:00'
describe
'27479' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCK' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
a8c58b6873c0281dd688e2b2fbf84102
aa01c49ececf6eaa556a4cc3d7d35d8374bd4bc7
'2011-11-16T08:47:51-05:00'
describe
'9164929' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCL' 'sip-files00024.tif'
27a7501fff611f3a71cada0bbdc3b704
9d6bd26479ae4022ff7be3b21ee4fee170454d6d
'2011-11-16T08:48:46-05:00'
describe
'1126' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCM' 'sip-files00024.txt'
3afe95e5e0124ecf64ba13cd33fb98bb
784dd62e406739ab4f24e263aa58fe3f8a20fef0
'2011-11-16T08:49:50-05:00'
describe
'7425' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCN' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
760a883106ba70ad184c48b150fad108
478f7311c98ba3245c467513dd372b4703d004d8
describe
'855975' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCO' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
69602c9adaab125a7a7f37b9052561f6
7256b5feea9f6a5ebee15db7b6ef362f6cce7971
describe
'28606' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCP' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
3a6ba01adce31305b5a203a7b0975afd
c0afb7d342303d198d1638d010f4dd14462c2d40
'2011-11-16T08:49:39-05:00'
describe
'6176' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCQ' 'sip-files00025.pro'
90f924db686d6bfa3dbe90ccfafce359
327e4eb0c35332de264503a89040472c92e61ca9
'2011-11-16T08:49:44-05:00'
describe
'9821' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCR' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
39dcee6227ba07e500fc1cb7cdc6b9e2
b3f2a03955e5ece0d13760782a7fedd9d8a567ef
'2011-11-16T08:49:47-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCS' 'sip-files00025.tif'
1ff38bb3a01870cd7fcb4bb2ddb81310
79231a5706a74269655ff7e9460161df551f69e3
'2011-11-16T08:48:29-05:00'
describe
'258' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCT' 'sip-files00025.txt'
db3533105a08a3d529320d3d211af6e5
59818b8d9f211ea1890205a2c5db2c7ee8c813f8
'2011-11-16T08:46:39-05:00'
describe
'2906' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCU' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
95c80980e45da079aad0296e1a196ca9
09d94f41a994e9693bc3bf0a9226f8a49d3be89d
'2011-11-16T08:46:57-05:00'
describe
'1144455' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCV' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
af3e39f7325f78beba17ce10aeacfee4
e4dd74696f76a25f1ba1d57157b8f87da13cb83b
'2011-11-16T08:50:39-05:00'
describe
'76141' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCW' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
3cf8ca9e38dd47611c9712a2de9f77bd
3a4f917df91ec4ddac9911b5f700cc8e4c2f9660
'2011-11-16T08:47:49-05:00'
describe
'17415' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCX' 'sip-files00026.pro'
e016590d3cb6c83fd4f9671ca8a5e7bc
15fbb044db86e0bcb2a6ab9d0e11006b5b01f847
'2011-11-16T08:49:30-05:00'
describe
'24511' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCY' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
f1ce4871e361d85f15ff9a8230dd97dd
16eba8fea4447ba402360a72f559e9dcbad94c81
'2011-11-16T08:50:10-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFCZ' 'sip-files00026.tif'
2e5f9fd237617aa60398d46cd564889e
1775a0e798cdf234471b22bcc22ea716a8f393d8
'2011-11-16T08:48:44-05:00'
describe
'1007' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDA' 'sip-files00026.txt'
68f44f520a582558959541f81f56885a
d80a9e4fd8c9f0cc347d9fd447eb170da9e61676
'2011-11-16T08:51:04-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
'6934' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDB' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
c279c88a10477782d519e0f57c7d007d
b5c80929426a6a345e5aed3ae2262e3000765798
describe
'1138320' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDC' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
4838cde771b474704179f376f23072d9
e7dfbff237d4ec643551399a0bf5bf6bb3bfe93a
'2011-11-16T08:49:05-05:00'
describe
'77820' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDD' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
15f5bfdf65a1c9dbe303bfd38e54800a
bdc634ddc0a3fab4d11e0a07730a68bb484f8da5
'2011-11-16T08:47:35-05:00'
describe
'29487' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDE' 'sip-files00027.pro'
293a8abefdb33761df5d61c9f49c34f3
26869bf417da179dd67203421415cfc2a4fc1229
'2011-11-16T08:49:59-05:00'
describe
'28206' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDF' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
5b8bfe98400f79a96ed9b173ba7f7a50
223ad0c2027acfb998a778053c6e8eca53f69bb9
'2011-11-16T08:50:34-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDG' 'sip-files00027.tif'
86cc0ae207ce4a000abcbfa422b13769
e63e57f5cafa54e62fb32c71ecdaee2fae7a8efb
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDH' 'sip-files00027.txt'
ffb6ff2a28d1999c61b9de447044debe
aad9b5bae35dacc5702c082b19fb77d09fd151a7
describe
'7875' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDI' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
623089a4e37b7eec163fccdb5bab95fd
aa7cfa67a3019c12d933205e6c2fc8d394b2533c
'2011-11-16T08:46:44-05:00'
describe
'1144319' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDJ' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
2a22c21bd9acea0fc401bd00e74be30e
4b481ee5a4342eebb221b4bd91872bd5304bce24
'2011-11-16T08:47:26-05:00'
describe
'70474' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDK' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
3d97e2512816bca4a95fd2da7f4765c9
988f96edb02eeb5b88c4a7156d9da2d546cff3e9
'2011-11-16T08:49:15-05:00'
describe
'26848' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDL' 'sip-files00028.pro'
9e94a5e5644c00605ab8a9d155c2397b
a20cfc6bc3b2874fd34798f6e1a2ed2f91dd97d6
'2011-11-16T08:49:43-05:00'
describe
'26114' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDM' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
1a42932eb6353047460da9e0bd26e27f
c28d0c7a83b8fc4f4685eaa75c461cedb85fde55
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDN' 'sip-files00028.tif'
7fbd444d2267dd4eb15cd79275782df9
1344f8675a07514d22132c4724c2dd9956c2c98c
describe
'1099' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDO' 'sip-files00028.txt'
c17d49c726e3da5682ecb7a15f0bfc00
0da4530c72cc592c4f8e074c21b41a2baccaa868
describe
'7141' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDP' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
2adcbd8e1fcf76d7e0736450de9b7311
b086a5802e88ab1380dcd1abb79cc7c9f163fdc4
'2011-11-16T08:48:37-05:00'
describe
'1113695' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDQ' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
cab51e0a6838b90d4bb91da8a43976ab
684bf2cb969516d4e2e36b0b1fd5d92e1f700e36
describe
'68126' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDR' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
277cfbd4ea654e52828bd4b017adfcff
49a1586d39daad58ab4be2ccc8cc5b272ad4b355
describe
'28368' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDS' 'sip-files00029.pro'
1fa2732df2093e5c034397b287113fea
e147602c8e72f169ce5073f1b2b448cee9e4e763
'2011-11-16T08:52:17-05:00'
describe
'24496' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDT' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
55d28a60ed8704010c0adf86f5be0de3
870534868e24a4b68df44554e99db32f98dd1a9c
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDU' 'sip-files00029.tif'
b2e6a19c1833b5acbf57e0c0898f90ed
a5c53c8ffdf2d64e7eace62378a7862171768cfc
'2011-11-16T08:51:15-05:00'
describe
'1130' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDV' 'sip-files00029.txt'
4efb8e2779dfccbca78e5c1d5a16e842
624e3cad2303dc91f6a20c0df5eb72a02d501c3f
'2011-11-16T08:49:14-05:00'
describe
'7375' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDW' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
3d09a11a1ac6d828a0bc5792a222197a
2ef885e65d363df67959bd24e7df9c2b61ddaa27
describe
'1144384' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDX' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
99b14a6e1c0d7457ab584c952c4046f0
aa4c782fbb7631e7fc61e48218aeffe5f20dff4e
describe
'67064' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDY' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
7b4cf648770cc5c86df1391be6950a49
55f2e512eee3af8b04fb6a38374d2af5ded32430
describe
'26826' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFDZ' 'sip-files00030.pro'
79f6e7e135fa2dab9459b25c3e1cb2eb
e4156f1fbfd3a7317cb0158df7daf26336bdc069
'2011-11-16T08:48:31-05:00'
describe
'24253' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEA' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
7f866e9c942e7b3fafb1ebcbfa501953
eb10cdd4f9e1e501badbf015b0ac2f4e651ed1c0
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEB' 'sip-files00030.tif'
6d9676810b95bded2a185ccfb5d226ac
67b0c175ee69427e09365ca857f2581d8a963f4e
describe
'1092' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEC' 'sip-files00030.txt'
c2de32422f49cfdccaa6e126a140a121
538aac33ebc9c41cb4d47f3fefbe213476cdd5c9
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFED' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
3aea1286c92657692c591095e98884bf
8f38dc05fe930fdd9cedd63f8a423c9125417c6a
describe
'1110827' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEE' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
8226850a9947b1a86225af5f8ae92287
32ffaef4588eebfe75d3ce5c85bc63609b7b49ab
describe
'68112' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEF' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
d108ec46854845c33aad199b6258fc1f
51d444241a0c1b8ee1114c0231b82980bd379fc1
'2011-11-16T08:47:03-05:00'
describe
'26989' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEG' 'sip-files00031.pro'
21f0ffce9572cc42dcbb17df4bebd218
cbc0cd89c9b4404a3c30f696f51bff4c60c23922
'2011-11-16T08:51:56-05:00'
describe
'25031' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEH' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
fea98bde48b58854e291271234b48981
e296a49bf749e36ef7c700d200bd26456f7dc3d9
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEI' 'sip-files00031.tif'
a857852f009af1e729a086d2a3974755
ab8c78f1b93792e52be51b38396e9df97d031ee5
'2011-11-16T08:51:13-05:00'
describe
'1095' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEJ' 'sip-files00031.txt'
01a20caff080a4de1141c58c6188b850
528cf01c44921dbc863db8857819602372853f25
describe
'7159' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEK' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
84829a0d68e880722e405519b26ef171
06373d4b995ca04aafa5da78bf03b402e084cfd9
'2011-11-16T08:50:36-05:00'
describe
'1072786' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEL' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
da3fc25ec828cfd2d151bbabd0372b51
fa5ea756f96b3346ef08a9a3efc74f337b7ebcf5
describe
'54056' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEM' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
75abf581c84c3c0df5fab6004c12ee7b
54b83188547fd8d2ad98e6eca02419cc55d2c36b
describe
'19063' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEN' 'sip-files00032.pro'
9d2de7355f2c0a0b7a3dd69e2d99dc2e
38896eccf5b20d8a87ec259e95612c62e4676e16
'2011-11-16T08:46:41-05:00'
describe
'20197' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEO' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
fd0beb6c65998cefe357e168024dda20
e0a34e0ff9c884342dd8530056bb4c4d710e0748
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEP' 'sip-files00032.tif'
01b36ac95b93ff8e2077133d1b723adc
77337700db2e3311e95c35c052f24ddbc46fee1f
'2011-11-16T08:49:36-05:00'
describe
'763' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEQ' 'sip-files00032.txt'
ea60ed5dfc786f52349d203daa80735c
ba3c7e69a76b0243b2e95e49409ff54116309dcb
'2011-11-16T08:52:06-05:00'
describe
'5749' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFER' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
f146a2c26010b2a6084ec62cf56c2257
55dbea0c036aa5e0a3da4d396221ba6e5e1fcb5f
describe
'1135714' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFES' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
b25a3f6c782dc4bab817bc6e07d06dc8
657893e5efc29a5823ff190ff42d92f5f3a92cb0
describe
'64495' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFET' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
e0d08bf78c4a9f00eb0a22a505dbbaf9
ce3af884ff6c795a61f7e610968d939c7efa656b
'2011-11-16T08:51:59-05:00'
describe
'19716' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEU' 'sip-files00033.pro'
475eb8c8489cbb8669272ad7a50c33c6
3af3e588468e6396542fca4f5364f740ba1b20f1
describe
'22938' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEV' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
b9328f5ea6aedd71f2c40dc518b43857
3991816053f64054f432cb80ad0397166d0e09e6
'2011-11-16T08:47:29-05:00'
describe
'9095949' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEW' 'sip-files00033.tif'
28b0a9c5cfa63b38922c2e782ebcccc4
c4d5d6f9f81b390864e54c5a1953866e3f41f48a
describe
'996' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEX' 'sip-files00033.txt'
6bbc423368909f809e2cbbfd2e8dc42a
740b94985752fa8a2a7b79d3a3c6c890c91aecd8
'2011-11-16T08:51:46-05:00'
describe
'6487' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEY' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
27772d2319e70d339383ecf97b2d8b93
f29889c8a8c5eb966398426d77b63fe18a09197b
describe
'1149132' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFEZ' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
cde6056dc2e19b32015280c54e323e27
60629282bb0a05d779c68092f77704980c381596
describe
'129237' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFA' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
3064c04f403ec54588183a06db8f13a2
7305deda0825c32e04b7c18abbd286059ca9c5f0
'2011-11-16T08:49:48-05:00'
describe
'576' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFB' 'sip-files00034.pro'
83e256451db2bf3fe05ff6d1ff35689e
e3edb527461425e5536c5d5bc0516093eec5b19e
'2011-11-16T08:50:01-05:00'
describe
'32245' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFC' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
9a7d7a3031b7849e6411e2e07012465c
e0699f130fed471717764af4de8635e1a5abdbbc
describe
'9202799' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFD' 'sip-files00034.tif'
1b21829a3eacad455e18e0b1e7951668
a612658df59d8fdc6257cdc4ebf90f19510ade79
'2011-11-16T08:52:53-05:00'
describe
'143' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFE' 'sip-files00034.txt'
9c665870a3c2984ee14c2da2200d2491
3c3394f3b996dcdd48e04d324140f2d771a24d13
'2011-11-16T08:51:38-05:00'
describe
'7847' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFF' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
d58d727b441b4f926b907819f253697b
47be97d0872778d5d0b7b927ba63df5000e6fbb0
'2011-11-16T08:52:10-05:00'
describe
'805242' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFG' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
cf1767242542a967727f7d5b6d2dcdb3
194d05577af68c7f7e3e1e1881fd946893bacb40
describe
'26086' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFH' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
c189001e6177280753616f197dd5539e
01e8fa3bc1a5673c3b8208853ed715800cfeeb52
describe
'358' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFI' 'sip-files00035.pro'
d62035a25b08b4ccfeab6cace6762bff
cbfc462f8c0b8a29948c0b6d1c45186cd7b7a9d6
'2011-11-16T08:48:43-05:00'
describe
'6671' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFJ' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
6d248ec65727bceda56fe7c7e37840cb
cb6b015b2110407ce11f15914f31eda45fb77462
'2011-11-16T08:47:15-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFK' 'sip-files00035.tif'
05db4856841e8bb35cad607bbabe9b99
3d59f76e1d3f34fa2facb45f478080bd3b48a906
'2011-11-16T08:51:23-05:00'
describe
'23' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFL' 'sip-files00035.txt'
b193776ee8c315e5e48617812ac758d9
f0a93e5733fed2a6dbd7cbd8997dfaa59094df97
describe
'1733' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFM' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
0e5aee20a2c9078a5fb5491b99fbedf3
baed0f41f17b598f882a951bdc74ace789660e5a
describe
'1117989' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFN' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
b3ac10b749aa64c37b432895b9599494
ecd3edc110c2a6681014ef03007d395d01107d2e
'2011-11-16T08:47:56-05:00'
describe
'70086' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFO' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
e175856ca39aca4a9dda79f0ecf83a6a
e49c922febc6bff6417fd4cd60f7d16d55ac82b6
'2011-11-16T08:48:32-05:00'
describe
'25077' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFP' 'sip-files00036.pro'
3d3b1754e20dc14e561f00c91f78493e
778f41aa02aef00aefb36d44deb2ddb05c3e8d00
'2011-11-16T08:48:10-05:00'
describe
'25513' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFQ' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
e23a82866091ca5ab38fd2078e8e37df
cded84391e6dba186767a2941377a3e4858d08f7
describe
'8953809' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFR' 'sip-files00036.tif'
0ae1125004d13c4a772b7d8aef399406
c88c1899febce11a46f95ce03a1cf15f65ac4a22
describe
'1146' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFS' 'sip-files00036.txt'
5abe77c50411e5eb6f1aae685d2dc606
6e5b58ed7aa3465ccd9df7ced7f2f58c5be163b6
describe
'7145' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFT' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
df24db369272edd068feec826a14208f
5473d0f45e719835e9df820d3a4acf5d2b97c5b4
'2011-11-16T08:47:39-05:00'
describe
'927125' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFU' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
f17b10c5322efe2bd9c36b9d3b20a75a
7a1aef76031d97ab2203fe056bf292ad0211c61b
'2011-11-16T08:47:55-05:00'
describe
'52347' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFV' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
19c3ef5ec750ec9b68c0e7b1362f5cac
8f8a931f0d4b7663c23adaa93e43e47d171660cf
describe
'23021' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFW' 'sip-files00037.pro'
10cd050944fa117dee7b88835b4e59fb
e76912ae9c59d7d21e7b6464c6fe0338e7e6de64
describe
'17927' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFX' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
594fa307b7ab7206b41ebb3e4c4fc153
12df35068c69b1be60371c495f9e09e2764b40d1
'2011-11-16T08:50:18-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFY' 'sip-files00037.tif'
5bc334a4286dfa1f088beff8bf9188aa
a83c517992965a2bac425e6a3953765223e986a2
'2011-11-16T08:50:11-05:00'
describe
'1074' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFFZ' 'sip-files00037.txt'
853939a3d93f061aa76387298e48a417
c1f71e5d1f7fba42ebd8189caeb160f28dc287b9
'2011-11-16T08:49:06-05:00'
describe
'4768' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGA' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
fd3cc9af9aa520d1c07248f59e8520a9
15f5543d9b7cfd9bf1035517782619e9443e455d
describe
'1149161' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGB' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
0743fbbf3ace5167226a2d37474381d1
90e474aac0bd4f3556730efca98f7900a8227bc5
describe
'71895' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGC' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
6ee7f1a7e04c989c7172a956d81a5de1
550a0f5d35f99d5ff2eeb9a17bedc55c1c42ac27
describe
'28285' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGD' 'sip-files00038.pro'
d82f39252cc26a10019693b3b4fe790e
ab980587d865e4382708e43e000e18d7ab3e5533
'2011-11-16T08:47:19-05:00'
describe
'27383' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGE' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
01335b85441f67aa62ae567a3af0f554
da9cd5fd59fd29bcada9ce592498ce45a24817cd
'2011-11-16T08:50:42-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGF' 'sip-files00038.tif'
65318ca757116f49a0558b3045dd5f4c
cd97fab891c01473c58550da28a99a3b2a2b6755
describe
'1137' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGG' 'sip-files00038.txt'
5437d8fe061ac63f7d0a040560d5ab1c
42d0ee0fb148816e31a0571583cbd70626e637ad
describe
'7651' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGH' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
60f6825984913ca2f0f8f5807964174a
725f99b56b666e9afe7c7559e0b7260fc0688f3b
'2011-11-16T08:49:16-05:00'
describe
'1098567' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGI' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
55af9afd27e52e9b7f7c7e303f656d99
0cd78874c40efa20b805b5f00e89428daaaa820d
'2011-11-16T08:52:07-05:00'
describe
'70550' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGJ' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
993acf4af13e7c31ac13b96f20be4a74
733cc2b22b5ef52bbaafab5f70a703cd97100c20
describe
'28533' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGK' 'sip-files00039.pro'
68afa468ca95018b70bf9d40e27524ec
09ae47c0853de7e1a72767b55b48e56d44658d43
'2011-11-16T08:49:08-05:00'
describe
'26346' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGL' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
7f7d52b5cdaba9df872d136711593906
58903c27f40a323ab5c33c70ba44e00e085b68fc
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGM' 'sip-files00039.tif'
5e25b4bc411f8a8a6d9f996af3bca1b8
6721cc3dc1543e911e85f76ead6c84998beb8bd7
describe
'1155' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGN' 'sip-files00039.txt'
3f6ec9d4f8fc1ac3729c1491f96fc0ea
fbb2aeae3aac361e0939fa90864418a2ab16d688
'2011-11-16T08:49:45-05:00'
describe
'7403' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGO' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
f60a055de327ce8ab1101d0e1ce41859
6ee80bdf2b8121c32f1f99a7d6cae105f0930b18
describe
'1149163' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGP' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
4d3f96f48a18fa59693600290dd6a5ab
fff1bcd6f8caf551154619dd8f553d2e6c6d5040
describe
'67949' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGQ' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
5b56aceb55c41f555044d1991a6c78e6
952467b33ca04dfec11bb5ba4c1d5f00b97f2fae
describe
'26499' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGR' 'sip-files00040.pro'
d1cb0a0f2f1b662e6ce0ea1d63b183e1
04ac0c0c55f9e51334be4b725ab73b81ffa6819d
'2011-11-16T08:52:23-05:00'
describe
'24232' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGS' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
fae75dbf8de1eff29bdd83c2fa98792b
a8aedd23d3649f5746eea5ebf660ceaee1d2a174
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGT' 'sip-files00040.tif'
bed617e81f02c193787bb50d4b9b4ca0
8cfd7d75b40d194b444d3a81d56c1df0e5c40621
'2011-11-16T08:52:13-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGU' 'sip-files00040.txt'
c36244cea6b57cf2a5dcc1fd840ad033
ab414da2c8d1b9e758042e986b779490c0c67f0e
describe
'7398' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGV' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
b507b145d801bd9c023c238e87b956e8
f080fe07228745b5f0fc11e769f38a13108a504f
describe
'1077817' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGW' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
fb454cc0a1979eb94e31441717a2e515
8294b642b725ee427cfa41d340b626525c5769e8
'2011-11-16T08:51:21-05:00'
describe
'63582' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGX' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
29d5af976ee62599c2f05efe65d34a0c
ad9011faecd13f2ae7b58ea8ad0622f31dab85ed
'2011-11-16T08:51:33-05:00'
describe
'25043' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGY' 'sip-files00041.pro'
b06de68ca9b51325f69a165c23cd5a67
953a6cbec571558fe8bc9178f493f36109cf4c0d
describe
'23407' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFGZ' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
e0e5064c56207baf36e543fb8c84b46e
d601afce96bef93cd3a1b4bb9fe70cc3f879a420
'2011-11-16T08:47:50-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHA' 'sip-files00041.tif'
059ede348bd4121a35961cca014251e2
bc66b1c31baa527f6cfd74eac9f4dc9a610932b0
describe
'1023' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHB' 'sip-files00041.txt'
96a89014c4c176ec1e5d70b9f4612dee
6300f0c8fc88e8f29c43fbdebdbf640c4272a6b9
'2011-11-16T08:50:15-05:00'
describe
'6739' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHC' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
a5c2bcaef2605973cad6ca7b23ce48c5
a32e8e4d502a801788941663af83a393301ad23c
'2011-11-16T08:52:28-05:00'
describe
'1149181' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHD' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
2e0651605d5b8de3af0701d8c98e5ebd
cf508d55e0c4ebfb4bc839432519be0b3da3551d
'2011-11-16T08:46:52-05:00'
describe
'67056' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHE' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
e3ca5ab0a793e1f38aa5cdf940c267da
90f95896baeee8f34d50822522fc87ec2f8045f8
'2011-11-16T08:46:51-05:00'
describe
'26256' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHF' 'sip-files00042.pro'
165b12b41b6f1c6622a7df52dae44ff4
bf34e99c84cbdb9175be7bc27bb3ef50f9d51dd3
'2011-11-16T08:47:12-05:00'
describe
'24457' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHG' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
be508531d2c1e555eb09c819e6455f3a
3bde7f34f8bdebd371e1d960a78eda3aa7aa94ba
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHH' 'sip-files00042.tif'
cc318bb0cb0b4d42ae98055a68142f9d
5885d4da21ce730b4dd09a054a9e50d938900101
'2011-11-16T08:51:28-05:00'
describe
'1062' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHI' 'sip-files00042.txt'
ac32a393bcafda7ed4b567fbfe226b77
13e8a5d3d134e64b7b199efde1578a67436e3dde
describe
'7292' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHJ' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
5031909893e16e00812ade2110eb419b
baa7ffbc67d28b991aefc6394b5d30b607323729
'2011-11-16T08:50:02-05:00'
describe
'1135787' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHK' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
4cf5b1fbe0bd81187893671d9918423b
f4876765fe7a0090f803e7d60b5f5d1c5b415e5b
'2011-11-16T08:49:12-05:00'
describe
'75051' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHL' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
e86375b86137bb4449bb19122924fce4
b8a29b79b80fd9a64939c2ef810ae16b06c01eff
'2011-11-16T08:47:52-05:00'
describe
'30855' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHM' 'sip-files00043.pro'
8eaae65a6ed02d0f8d9780c9bc98bb5f
8be8e41c4a7f554b80b96e0e456b0143f6c2f248
'2011-11-16T08:48:14-05:00'
describe
'28348' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHN' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
289df351f9b98c696fa3c5ce5dabb3bf
4e8cefaf6f16d0e27fd016e4452d2f6228743e08
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHO' 'sip-files00043.tif'
86877a6a2d898fdd60e04b59b2af15a7
30c1aa2cf2a21d82cf861d960cc42210094ed46c
describe
'1228' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHP' 'sip-files00043.txt'
4012c1af36a6be3982e28123e55ccde2
8d63b54921e818c665b84d1ec084a304b3ba2a04
describe
'8030' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHQ' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
fb92ee2259568e6b77512d82576b3337
1dbdf2ab03878243d632aef141d72589d4c011d0
describe
'1139867' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHR' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
f4617d33f5658872222a7604ed453331
b5a237ce40856c92d56659bd79f3d1f70f4fe447
describe
'68400' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHS' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
e30672d637d7ff73c4f334c448b8cfe4
ca55933b793700ee70c06d74a207386bc155d52a
'2011-11-16T08:47:17-05:00'
describe
'27573' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHT' 'sip-files00044.pro'
ac27511fa4ed95615851ed730e084008
e2326c9b8402406f9f0552506cbcd043ffc18a3e
'2011-11-16T08:48:09-05:00'
describe
'26354' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHU' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
f16909ed1f1ce99e0fe73db85ccf4f39
1d9f652e7634343d3b2c1faa48234f2e0d43171b
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHV' 'sip-files00044.tif'
9ccf3765b73a10cf61a5c2f130de7a54
560a172c3138cd0e3cd57d0deb723e82ebb4397f
describe
'1114' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHW' 'sip-files00044.txt'
8d228d5b26d559a54ce0859dc6d063bb
f9589f54f08aca7cf97b3f207d9019d068cca983
'2011-11-16T08:51:48-05:00'
describe
'6987' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHX' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
ad51f6b1ac624155699e47d8a6a24022
fc8ff187f078dd8bbfa8580d8bfdf44bab1ddbe9
describe
'1091062' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHY' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
881af6950e0e2cc5edcf522ed0ff67b1
ca5398fb140d7756e57e13f4061dd3853ba89b14
'2011-11-16T08:49:57-05:00'
describe
'68853' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFHZ' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
e1ad27481b225b755233d1e443de4543
f90d9a9b13f702b7028e28a7ba1c486881442a3b
'2011-11-16T08:51:22-05:00'
describe
'26894' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIA' 'sip-files00045.pro'
b329e49f74db72c6e0abc227e997d4ae
c1667e0f4603164192dd0dbd8d38f6fcd28c369a
'2011-11-16T08:51:55-05:00'
describe
'25410' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIB' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
7b6ad7c042711339d43d70740b25975e
86f2e48df10c49c104539dfc85d63e7d107d87ef
'2011-11-16T08:48:01-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIC' 'sip-files00045.tif'
391f8258e7aa86a3943165c93ce63a14
62fd95a5845c46133e07febaabd0213790dddd88
'2011-11-16T08:46:46-05:00'
describe
'1077' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFID' 'sip-files00045.txt'
077653614a247f6a7634f7a1e71a8c68
687f00e9aca6d2c78d998d30c6369d7129154bbe
'2011-11-16T08:48:35-05:00'
describe
'7630' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIE' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
06d842b37aed73e59e8fc6a5212e1571
872c414d1a5076f39956b3f63c4ef85dcf2cc245
'2011-11-16T08:47:20-05:00'
describe
'757450' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIF' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
81386adcd1d48c85cd0cd76da77a20c0
8f9a42b0bd7374ce5e349a93b5287e94152fa803
describe
'24734' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIG' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
cc6da1ba66abc48833fbd198eba258e4
cc2991babd5edb48d362c65288b7f42663a861f5
'2011-11-16T08:46:54-05:00'
describe
'5587' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIH' 'sip-files00046.pro'
61d5f1a6a7e9e09ef69cb04a997671c1
de1819d31eba46996849bf6eb0c5769e8ae4ac14
describe
'8006' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFII' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
b0ee3c31231dad7373e2735cba4a00f1
0ff355ffd0ef43f339d2d1e31a05f2d1016dad70
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIJ' 'sip-files00046.tif'
6c237ecb1303ede6f6d09b96f14636ea
206587d7453aa73ce2c65082a49da9fe3aac7e77
describe
'232' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIK' 'sip-files00046.txt'
86c1f5117a4227cf8541bba04a99c7cf
4021d5be9f30653e785836b652df80e0c915be2e
'2011-11-16T08:51:00-05:00'
describe
'2625' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIL' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
062df6b6a1d0b331b5de48eefd8e17db
aeabc83d89b4c9945a8365af671de0dbef808e37
'2011-11-16T08:50:19-05:00'
describe
'1044861' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIM' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
3cf0a53a67991bdab642085242098535
6aa144d8e61aacbb1412d410b24b5314ee6b8aca
describe
'55691' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIN' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
3e3db33a8abcef0446b4172b0eedfadc
604dd74269fa946019465113dcb40335a20031f1
'2011-11-16T08:51:40-05:00'
describe
'16643' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIO' 'sip-files00047.pro'
1b7af09a6abd3cb9a85340248cead8dc
8e61f049889ebb02ae10258b442286eb8574e4d3
describe
'19540' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIP' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
1dad2604e3478383fec24b4118dc0501
5f35c21b060484a6732c8492d76c19db5a94263d
'2011-11-16T08:50:24-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIQ' 'sip-files00047.tif'
de80370e2a914d75b4c65b74f8fa3aa3
8bd8995427f1cb5b395925a8f6765aa7a866501b
'2011-11-16T08:49:49-05:00'
describe
'819' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIR' 'sip-files00047.txt'
91489a27e7988fc35d213ff71e5f4b8a
0805b75b20f00b5290c5ae3f65f4eedee2f53d86
describe
Invalid character
'5475' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIS' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
d7db48e7000f0a35c10c4a121af76314
960930a37377cf3e8883c47bffea1f3968fe4238
'2011-11-16T08:50:08-05:00'
describe
'1149141' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIT' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
1aa73cb4d71c7413aca89c092b9ed2fd
71afcbbc2d28d3b0ff5113831decc07a237705c5
'2011-11-16T08:51:47-05:00'
describe
'71072' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIU' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
2b6be672291dfa9ec2b40cb4f8ccc86b
9c028d2bb111bf84602adfcfaccd332c0d781b70
describe
'27686' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIV' 'sip-files00048.pro'
5daf534b19d7b7bc3e61d0d2d04622c2
5f2c7ed202d211176e25654e85d7ee2184a6b0fa
describe
'24512' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIW' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
1322c90b23d3163cba6b2d11ddb0cf7b
e766b54f4c6116bbc451ed85fc2173c6ed404a7f
'2011-11-16T08:50:54-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIX' 'sip-files00048.tif'
31f6694ac39dd220380c2a407c360f42
9ad554da71648a27d394d68042c2c3865d547a3f
'2011-11-16T08:50:16-05:00'
describe
'1121' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIY' 'sip-files00048.txt'
b6f1007c911401e794d2c6816ee4d475
3debcbaca34594ab889821a12a36f0d074ea7b17
'2011-11-16T08:49:41-05:00'
describe
'7327' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFIZ' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
501040c79fe2c99ccb0f330613dd47bc
037f1186485e6425fafabd9097da6d22c8449eee
'2011-11-16T08:49:42-05:00'
describe
'1023599' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJA' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
fbd6fc27ac4878b85f609a8f5eb52547
0f695205d8da30abe62f1a9e6d5687ad5825cd57
describe
'61255' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJB' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
58e7888f156deeb08d6fc8cc01c77d50
2780cdeb4689d243f214d807a4aa90f544205bf5
describe
'24094' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJC' 'sip-files00049.pro'
e0dcdd7586700199d36de99178ae6ace
b4f88b4c01761e0d17ab4e5b5821e4cc63ce5709
describe
'22452' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJD' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
7c7ed50c27e64e320cf3a5010bbf43f8
4ab671d99e429ec9541aef904b9e18428ba761c4
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJE' 'sip-files00049.tif'
6526d50ea453982a2b72b97d1f409fb8
054fad0e6b381ec8abf60766043864e49fff511d
'2011-11-16T08:49:19-05:00'
describe
'1001' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJF' 'sip-files00049.txt'
edc82e438f6ca4d93c5cd986d2ece166
c5b5f01117c8a1c693a4c3ba71973f30b3ddd122
'2011-11-16T08:50:51-05:00'
describe
'6571' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJG' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
c9e8dd65c477e77c1aec768e919343e5
ee1fcd80f1f7638e2d3ae46640308c984041113c
'2011-11-16T08:48:50-05:00'
describe
'1119400' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJH' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
1aea7286cfb908d6be2218c07d8c4498
14089326652e78163a9c2cc50ce6df8c1d4a7b7f
describe
'67422' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJI' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
c3dc86b9abd115c4bc37e561e7784729
57c9687e9613728efc7ce2f253317d98a554f70f
describe
'27507' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJJ' 'sip-files00050.pro'
6f9682d92d212eb52cd10df55948f1c6
842fab46d14f3b75cb8299fbfe8b835602850f05
describe
'25169' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJK' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
b35d06276430fe5f38cac7c432d164c2
1967ab4208d4d1964c9ed6e67bbf27bcff03913c
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJL' 'sip-files00050.tif'
fd40546f9ee65a7527359b007ef7ab59
bb61461a9a8904fbf47048a05ee589229332aee1
'2011-11-16T08:51:52-05:00'
describe
'1109' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJM' 'sip-files00050.txt'
35b74089b18b7a954f2c0fb809752b6d
7946984e022493e7996680973a73b21f107fd1f8
describe
'6898' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJN' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
098a847481464ee78ab2539a242ea7f5
44ef858de68963db791c0fc9c166bf5655819ded
describe
'1125762' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJO' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
74f12c5e7cf28aa7817cb0df0a824a45
a1cfcbbe9d72a0d34d10f702a3c0ddbe789cb5ef
describe
'69205' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJP' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
c50e9644d6ef93be43fee9bb576fbce3
4651d98357f86bad31130bd4a40271fd9c017c9a
'2011-11-16T08:50:31-05:00'
describe
'29722' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJQ' 'sip-files00051.pro'
70009f83e2bbf08499ec5cbbe0dfbc27
49901ea724ad92b95a5af544c7d861416598b942
'2011-11-16T08:52:18-05:00'
describe
'23377' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJR' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
b810a0959afb3f740f320b158f6c2ece
223613ad3a2e9700f305bc84be1359438e682535
describe
'9508981' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJS' 'sip-files00051.tif'
c6d8f17eeaae8df60725f91a80df4ef3
c975854b764b0a0a8d779eb1064a8691f94c05b6
'2011-11-16T08:50:43-05:00'
describe
'1208' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJT' 'sip-files00051.txt'
6aec7de7032427494fd63990c8b74c6a
4169b6d42b268571cc684b66f29ffd1f3ebecdec
describe
'6938' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJU' 'sip-files00051thm.jpg'
6e7a93cb06fde715c32990a8f59ba021
ee35ed9866bbd8dee251b73276a63687bc7373ef
'2011-11-16T08:51:18-05:00'
describe
'1133177' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJV' 'sip-files00052.jp2'
e3428f77b1d1fbcd1c68cc048b8830ce
376ac46cd9f48481221f102daa8d7337fc6be196
describe
'66780' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJW' 'sip-files00052.jpg'
d51ebac15b91af4d6691dead401cf531
50781386ad7f036c68d42a2763c9a7d187a7639e
describe
'26164' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJX' 'sip-files00052.pro'
03c8349323ca38b8183851764d24b68a
1da6f87311bc69c1afc0392e7d8fd3df49cc15e5
describe
'24883' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJY' 'sip-files00052.QC.jpg'
af43f6a57a139b12c2ecc993955703f6
c46ac33d2071d0ae9a0c7565c5890d35026a2bce
'2011-11-16T08:50:32-05:00'
describe
'9284745' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFJZ' 'sip-files00052.tif'
2e0c81c493dbcc52d3a6cbc527d6d452
e01a29ee2c8e5453f5aefacb012d9dc6c187a252
'2011-11-16T08:51:31-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKA' 'sip-files00052.txt'
d56ac3040346b72dd67e231a3a0ad00b
230e809c54f7d762e81f08bb3d0041f337e837a3
describe
'7210' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKB' 'sip-files00052thm.jpg'
b7dfcf3ac137036c729eb32056b923cd
6d1c9d968029f4ff0cdb95b1cbdce86a65740980
describe
'1025971' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKC' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
df27dbea2fd8140631d75c0f01b66594
6d2d51af851f1cc7278c72ddef26573dca8621c6
'2011-11-16T08:51:17-05:00'
describe
'57924' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKD' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
1ba07ed59dd479aec0178274bd6eb9eb
dcbebfaa0be405441cb9732d2a0845cffd4eefcd
describe
'22965' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKE' 'sip-files00053.pro'
152f9d5f85096bf41153b2a1ae60c241
a7aa2ef8059fe30146d802a39f70ac19ca363354
describe
'21839' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKF' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
58c69900ac0de559f2df66ef1ba30bcb
c0c112e0890323329b809b00d026aceaadc9d0d8
'2011-11-16T08:49:56-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKG' 'sip-files00053.tif'
d8ecfdbf264832b6e322e25dc2f22e4d
2fb2b172b8307e3c5e8b6bcb3532d3be6a720bff
describe
'935' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKH' 'sip-files00053.txt'
273a2fcb07e69c1b4a61b315bb68430a
a41e4412df003c922ee173d77ff3d7de96599099
describe
'5886' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKI' 'sip-files00053thm.jpg'
24e9a103971b8a719046df4d5a1d6401
064b362e2ba78f5a5529d8d8f1c181217ff40012
describe
'1159429' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKJ' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
22dca135b1be257a8510312f1df1385c
8190d1ad7680395b5925484dcbbb40dd89904137
describe
'65248' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKK' 'sip-files00054.jpg'
25163de6a659fce4e3dd5f9792fb01f3
7ef820decca36a55631600935522296d1f971e14
describe
'19025' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKL' 'sip-files00054.pro'
766f20b5f36e029db109bcbf1fd57b41
766829a7337e95f9648d9908a60398d766abbfa0
describe
'22171' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKM' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
a9abd4854244b6eddf30619feddb4062
a13e90af0f882819952b9eb2ff8d0c5d154e8197
'2011-11-16T08:52:14-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKN' 'sip-files00054.tif'
4ad1cde7bb5b4f07eb4fbbe2db982e09
a20a890cb7ba635423ec2204cb89ccb95d100477
'2011-11-16T08:49:23-05:00'
describe
'987' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKO' 'sip-files00054.txt'
9f8f5e2fea34ad8f3aaca1bbcecc86cf
b33f987d9b1c5660ce92f5a031c640ac21e78f31
'2011-11-16T08:47:46-05:00'
describe
'6112' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKP' 'sip-files00054thm.jpg'
90547933c41332a6c6047444cb705e3b
1b366be3d83cec1e23e203cb8bf97da09793aa37
'2011-11-16T08:52:31-05:00'
describe
'1057545' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKQ' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
e86939a2590018bf47507b648ddbf7a0
33e57553412222b0c845573cd7ad8be6071483d0
describe
'62286' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKR' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
a2835f73454ee8ab95d61a30580fbb61
2fa86e6d15a4b5919feeea4d9b5e8dd221a81d35
describe
'25781' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKS' 'sip-files00055.pro'
b770491cf5c4ece4860a2f843b1195ca
a5f422db8784785132d11b6d7af198666c98b05f
describe
'23742' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKT' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
77ee9f9bc1b75deae8312e552e97ee7d
367ca1053a50193fcdb8a7b77bc7c71f6cf75fff
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKU' 'sip-files00055.tif'
449f0e1585861f85bf1b0fa55c8a9c50
f03ba627fa0fea6a2a647988df75afabecaa1a6b
describe
'1045' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKV' 'sip-files00055.txt'
414866192649017d94203ba719b86861
0c42b6b9388c15b9094d452c3e386191f716af38
'2011-11-16T08:51:11-05:00'
describe
'6566' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKW' 'sip-files00055thm.jpg'
06e4fd9a524e9dba64cad970cf3766aa
5dd2c55e83cbff8e9fb171956f99be132407ca29
describe
'1159410' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKX' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
cb5fd2a1bf3b9fa4a83f15233a9e872c
88ab5ce8219380e07554aa086511cc5c42fa4492
describe
'73055' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKY' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
5e9af2779dd9add16f916fa77c1927e4
5cb6294c7e122a2eae466765ecf87a7216c74753
describe
'29223' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFKZ' 'sip-files00056.pro'
85d51521513f3cdb9ba90e8f708b3778
ad202ff6dcdbf58711963ed5c8eca99e23739c49
describe
'27975' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLA' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
90294b4c391dd8e511abdba5a1e90486
746eb2e2d954b14d07009f3ceead275044822393
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLB' 'sip-files00056.tif'
240e6c8fa324ad258e40619a5ab5f04e
9274d9cabdb412878ae37b9249903027c070f244
describe
'1177' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLC' 'sip-files00056.txt'
cc3b4bb1642872c5928c42f8058ac505
ced51cacbd9bd8506e196ce724ce7ac9b68bdc64
describe
'7712' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLD' 'sip-files00056thm.jpg'
3b042f0e402e8b0530e0d283b46dbeda
1ecfa24ee58d8025674d8a1aad77a5adbfdb68af
describe
'1145151' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLE' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
efd4952fc4309009e168c49dbd33a039
06313f1b4c9b153aff1f6c17db980ca416457224
'2011-11-16T08:50:27-05:00'
describe
'68772' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLF' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
5c32f47278fc1a5057ad9c0cab99a9af
57ecb4f739cc4c776f7eede9e852be5f4d4137fd
'2011-11-16T08:51:10-05:00'
describe
'29014' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLG' 'sip-files00057.pro'
31222dd8b340f11953c12e5dfd1cfe5f
29e3fe6864d73708d0c8402b449ee88b4d2e5c08
describe
'27515' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLH' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
3947b0fef0b0c97331c10f7578255267
3c6f120d2fca571d1b0a80b7de68c8c31cbbbb67
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLI' 'sip-files00057.tif'
784abbb4a4149e097883051c838717c5
613112f883f681c2c726225eaad9b0d7b9d5be15
'2011-11-16T08:52:12-05:00'
describe
'1157' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLJ' 'sip-files00057.txt'
23f62714e1c133e8f6ea31b38b9bf2c5
d34e12269d975cfa89b6313a93f2c816d5790b78
describe
'7038' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLK' 'sip-files00057thm.jpg'
f6b5ebb79266300c408d308388b7927b
2f7cb71896112a58e89b0c351380d1478c444250
'2011-11-16T08:50:28-05:00'
describe
'1159355' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLL' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
4556737860ef343e308653528edafe19
ad252918561cf358487eadedbcdd0999ad3fbc44
'2011-11-16T08:52:39-05:00'
describe
'71968' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLM' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
cda1bc7404b6e406cdb1e29646785bfa
6156a081ff11849d0aedfa03d983ec69a0ece491
describe
'29166' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLN' 'sip-files00058.pro'
9f5f23f801b74d74606c453211aa5886
88a6926d5389673fb13f503ff8ae420473b8b435
describe
'27889' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLO' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
f666c472a963d4ecb7e5c1911f178c98
0f41a67fd0e4085d056a983101ddf650d0342da3
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLP' 'sip-files00058.tif'
489fa83434de93f86e68f4a8c21fdefc
d4b846756b3556e96a0de345509cd3b568e586f1
describe
'1172' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLQ' 'sip-files00058.txt'
be7b94553281ec2f3b0379da6ab26472
a238a61eb6d1dc870a55728a445161ec2d3f6d5f
'2011-11-16T08:47:08-05:00'
describe
'7768' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLR' 'sip-files00058thm.jpg'
59f87e926672b8ef77978586fe541b5e
3d7d25a88c7b70a85cae4ab0f3ebc32f259f2db2
describe
'1145991' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLS' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
58ef28ad1cef330e7e63d3cd145b0fc6
6c22f22773f65281e1491470b2bf12f8a8051a82
describe
'1519348' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLT' 'sip-filesback.jp2'
4171695782813044edf3d41fd1e04346
928ca45f97feb90ad41b6b265d46e7791bb7e4a0
describe
'69090' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLU' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
56cc94a742b4e696bd83566436942aac
16532f18d722a846f31c347955f3bb6f6a6fe50c
describe
'28982' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLV' 'sip-files00059.pro'
848192485598f82fffb21ff9ed622442
0de51d2c2efebd1d9f08b53c1e410b37f9d8a535
describe
'22608' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLW' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
a9e6c3dd310ab2135dfdd327eea141a5
b6f06c8456147e4fd52193b34ee590be4721fd37
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLX' 'sip-files00059.tif'
3bdfd05ce8bf988f41e04ad188957740
07d3ec62c74863c2a08364a87a675433cc6deb8b
describe
'1162' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLY' 'sip-files00059.txt'
578fba8ec6d4c3cea76592daa88a93a7
bd5208176c3b3066d95ebb3706b4a2225fec9da3
describe
'6970' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFLZ' 'sip-files00059thm.jpg'
6229df714320c5e0f308b767e693785e
c80c606cf4caeb10b00c53749d66bd038af138a9
describe
'1148261' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMA' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
c9d66dacc07c5ef370f88ef79100b739
e571a23c21809b00e4cbd62bdc4a3876b1abc34c
describe
'66808' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMB' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
a5460e3f6aa0419f38b4e0adfdec3113
54f2e350e56300e7a6429d7fc245e45c2511c4cb
describe
'26150' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMC' 'sip-files00060.pro'
2f0a5646e6290d5a5e44fcc5250a9126
48c9985f2cf5ca69acbe24d6ac95373d6473cef7
describe
'24301' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMD' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
9d9e6e3d90ef5faab483e8f752ef5d49
a49c9060a1db0fc00dcc141d5eb45b4d1e62e720
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFME' 'sip-files00060.tif'
e39b20d26ab441ceb791e4f820bb49c6
0e11b757e4d9e144a908692226db4479347e2a5d
describe
'1065' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMF' 'sip-files00060.txt'
4180b8200c73b3bc8e8025b95e7b04b7
9d7227b6c1ef236ac38a57944b17303834393112
describe
'7212' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMG' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
b14044369d017cec61f372c5334c6e18
e379afa8bcb9defb4c06622b1d1c9a5bdb79591a
describe
'892339' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMH' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
f7d9c33bbef68ab9c9620f957df3b7f0
6e69a4256d18b4d715f51e7dad3a0ef6f0050a25
describe
'37654' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMI' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
dcf7da43197ec5343069065b9b3ae419
ab180dc6d862556f17692b3ae3094ddf25ae4a6a
describe
'11915' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMJ' 'sip-files00061.pro'
06056fb79ba4c1e49c0ca7225f06eeff
586556b4864e5f561de8f608714254446e35b0f1
describe
'14719' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMK' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
3fe247b1277254c26c534063925d6ed9
bc2b2048a62a0e29f438ba0d3d1dde3017251725
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFML' 'sip-files00061.tif'
8fc39b8e011c4f8248ee9b4bb99a12e6
628e05d994ae2a5b1e02f8b56c02c7adc753f8a7
'2011-11-16T08:48:56-05:00'
describe
'489' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMM' 'sip-files00061.txt'
0bdccd87d62b47bdb9d6a3223c972461
75aec76b041a5ada5d710d717941c921183e6f3c
describe
'4102' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMN' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
e4c6f912c0ccf6212c614cf875379445
ffea3bd6b0b48197016325253e0af5f1acaa6373
describe
'1159423' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMO' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
eec00ab5add64b082edbcd99146a43ee
32f28a6a3d2542fc01873550820e37b2ab5e8480
describe
'74062' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMP' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
ad87dbdb5ea8b3ce9b1cc4f478a88502
ae6883e904d7c694f9b4c30743ca0f3dc353bf41
'2011-11-16T08:48:33-05:00'
describe
'19361' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMQ' 'sip-files00062.pro'
53c97048bfbf858223f73a85be1ca312
52ece7eaf260a5493dbf88c6b2a4a8f0304356ad
'2011-11-16T08:48:25-05:00'
describe
'24618' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMR' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
c4fb20f80e1ff7caed345d18826968a2
a7ce6c69f3d83b0d199e6ac55023d6f82c4851b5
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMS' 'sip-files00062.tif'
3a597e3d0fb839c0b3940ed3a3629323
1ece4a869dc4ec9bc5ea1a12ef4bce114b04097f
describe
'982' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMT' 'sip-files00062.txt'
01df71abd7465b90c31d2afa9066578e
e9891980f250d86479e81217417b1275227a9ba5
describe
'6555' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMU' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
3c1bddaf2e8761b5ce6deeebe56dc54b
18fbee5b1f8610814ea47808651512319ae3d952
'2011-11-16T08:46:56-05:00'
describe
'1135591' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMV' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
d32e0412b7e34be55bcdd72929d0a404
2f9a85160d8a14f5307441e24da0d05aa463c503
'2011-11-16T08:52:46-05:00'
describe
'63689' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMW' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
9bc472190500d4a1b3bffe33688d9074
86f69a0f308cfc1d35c26644f82539c263213220
describe
'25968' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMX' 'sip-files00063.pro'
3cfaac12235581221bcaf86dc7c70fda
1817947424d6bddcf361fce9754331f9c13afe4b
describe
'23671' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMY' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
3b58d1c32fe3b1e6f29c93990eb86c0b
30152a280d2d071e578cbdb4f2792a433289a5f0
'2011-11-16T08:50:00-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFMZ' 'sip-files00063.tif'
f6d904aea861d64bde0b6aa54794d4d4
d9604ae0b8759af60a29aebde12581cd8fddf267
describe
'1075' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNA' 'sip-files00063.txt'
0a19c9a2e4ae5d35d6e31b608568410e
134a049cb0ec4662d522f620da8a48e66628851a
'2011-11-16T08:48:55-05:00'
describe
'6978' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNB' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
0aeb424becde52843742971a819a4a1b
d5fa437fcf500a9b8b62f53bb705f43dfaf8085f
'2011-11-16T08:50:17-05:00'
describe
'1158502' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNC' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
438d89f05147c0cb151ba94e2758b3c5
ad76ba9543d6d119da6c4a24defdebdb599040a4
'2011-11-16T08:52:58-05:00'
describe
'66626' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFND' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
d0c595ef69d91c8ab68f402f56aeb919
a1a34e23dfe4549ff03dc3540f5b375677ba5677
'2011-11-16T08:47:33-05:00'
describe
'26344' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNE' 'sip-files00064.pro'
dd72305796f475274520b42b7bc75216
6b6d5252547d6ddd97014d0c91aa5bebef8d67ae
'2011-11-16T08:51:51-05:00'
describe
'24003' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNF' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
897455def904d56d96d46390351ef1dc
3b68db5eae0f68585d021864989be0819f4db1df
'2011-11-16T08:51:14-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNG' 'sip-files00064.tif'
b277bb579f5ff96743908dfdd0df7763
317a8d8a64ca30e96d96665cff2194adf878efd5
'2011-11-16T08:49:01-05:00'
describe
'1073' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNH' 'sip-files00064.txt'
654bc48a3a10bb48dbab05812518b34a
2096b00b214c8eb26acf1da92207492c985c7640
describe
'7213' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNI' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
1c5916de8491f313f500af7f594ecd32
32c7aff292fddb5acf160c60d311f3fb08dbfb29
describe
'707147' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNJ' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
72090dad4b6117b68313eae29d325e4d
c6b7f05086b6144a71d0502d529b6bd93143dc09
describe
'25371' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNK' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
9ce0266a374c2c655492febf671a87fe
18b89b83537bb93986f23d534f5e9a3b5edf3ba8
describe
'7283' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNL' 'sip-files00065.pro'
c10f557ed223ff3fae6c288a0c78385d
26874cb445e24fa7163d192f34a9ab762e2468b7
describe
'9024' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNM' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
9914757d26fee3ed7c2b1361bf101635
b0f0f4c2283e487d40b3798f01bbdb6f672249fb
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNN' 'sip-files00065.tif'
2e51038d832cccbadf29e0c05328a59d
6c86d9cc4e6a00ed75ade486fa088655b9463dc3
describe
'338' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNO' 'sip-files00065.txt'
7c9b700c8d6664b0ef1885606cd254fe
ee97a755d170c357e34807269d8c772b5854f032
'2011-11-16T08:52:44-05:00'
describe
'2745' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNP' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
90c31656e06485474adc56c559937286
6b046331e681a1c65fdf6539b8c6a8e483a0f252
describe
'1159387' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNQ' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
2569fe789fb23aa03647615e7fd3e60e
d6df8b0917dd245025ad715a4c6e484497b26c6a
'2011-11-16T08:51:42-05:00'
describe
'67941' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNR' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
c3398dd9fae022cde4c2468583cda94d
7d705f83791c58afe6b304493ac459fe31863120
describe
'18536' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNS' 'sip-files00066.pro'
c9e7d2667667939c2469016935855655
c7e6d42e61e1dfd7a1086839a8098eaabe6bcb01
describe
'22563' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNT' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
dc4c472cab4bb8958e8b162050692fb4
d83879f4230f38ae558edd9898f550292ed7c538
'2011-11-16T08:51:01-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNU' 'sip-files00066.tif'
8af248bee8564563298ab63887193495
ff6682f5cb3b8b8821ef55c423305c80f59c1045
describe
'1052' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNV' 'sip-files00066.txt'
09603242ab4136604d31a6f1b4e16986
e29d804e4b81fa3d033133cdfd8daffedafab527
describe
'6144' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNW' 'sip-files00066thm.jpg'
c7292b5f7bac95f0e4b13a5a7fbc3467
bef277d743a960fa3be482d2cdc6459b9b7336fc
describe
'1187455' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNX' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
d65705124eb943827a47b1a630263fd6
3ec1754f172f209fed9c0852352dba19048cbb38
describe
'71930' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNY' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
12f1e4e486fb776d45c27bd869f3732b
d6a38e5e95340f7dd3578391d4bf69d45c5008dc
describe
'29551' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFNZ' 'sip-files00067.pro'
4f86e9e03348961bd69201a968980756
1aa2b47ea7e979713a4b190f10098139a152a210
describe
'27839' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOA' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
0840d1dd50da05dbf5587f257c5a74cb
f08ad1c2558aa2a9813906ec00fbb4868f4a931b
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOB' 'sip-files00067.tif'
ccb3ec87a6c2e18863a32267d56af90d
193594ef0114243b53bcf3f91e95744f09b36d6d
'2011-11-16T08:50:14-05:00'
describe
'1184' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOC' 'sip-files00067.txt'
041b66a29365dd9172dc72aad9045b3f
d2c7dc4c02b40ecf5829d31bb05f3afa790c60bb
describe
'7354' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOD' 'sip-files00067thm.jpg'
638ee3c2362f8b20e956841de3f93ac3
431508f2a2797e6745a9726bd1102ef87200aae2
'2011-11-16T08:47:00-05:00'
describe
'1159407' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOE' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
a8ece41533089a5a298113de535bdfa2
f4f9422f773d219adea3519238fb0f073ae17c47
describe
'72954' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOF' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
ea757d6b290f8e894d8fbefe6dd36302
f3ef7b45bbccd1859ec327d1c8660c3e3e740677
describe
'1533' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOG' 'sip-files00068.pro'
aba0aabf401e48c2ccbd9267f516ed09
84032d5336b6d491341dac3cd7d148e5447904b2
describe
'18929' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOH' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
d81906056d3c03e7e6d7f0e72ec486e0
8df5b5a5b6e162be3208de640cc0f6a61c978375
'2011-11-16T08:47:28-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOI' 'sip-files00068.tif'
4ba2b2289de461c2a78ac2e4c6ac5a53
0044c1cc45cd2b9b0790344feba056ae2a55f674
describe
'240' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOJ' 'sip-files00068.txt'
833736e75761bcb86d74de932f275c51
d95b2ec872370d0b7751413b6302e36195032399
describe
Invalid character
'4944' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOK' 'sip-files00068thm.jpg'
f175cf002927d2e63910613b748ab2b5
9666b2f6f139f87b4dc6efd29e77b0c641140047
'2011-11-16T08:47:54-05:00'
describe
'1187314' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOL' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
c76cf56f390472546d575de087412556
a89e9a93e6192cef4de48a1bc116bbd037d48b42
'2011-11-16T08:48:52-05:00'
describe
'49872' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOM' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
15da2ea8e1dfe7a68830d1a42fad500f
f816f7c549d4b64008a81695031f61aeec973a60
'2011-11-16T08:47:04-05:00'
describe
'3660' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFON' 'sip-files00069.pro'
b3536563da25662096931c1769077194
87f77a9f5f6f322e852a846008f021ea377a0cfd
describe
'14628' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOO' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
a8fed032a84cbf64ec6a02a7332a0de3
d17001acb9ec72cb9167aec9197fc17c03aef73c
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOP' 'sip-files00069.tif'
09085387ccc7ed54d92f88973b38657d
749358c62f048b0df43d42c5ec600071ca43c6a5
describe
'246' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOQ' 'sip-files00069.txt'
034715227fe167d6acbf7e3dfc95576a
89b86a87cfe7543c227dfe0db1ae0d5014320121
'2011-11-16T08:51:25-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
'4362' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOR' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
108163a4a81632a1e58263c69438bad0
419785c1d884e827f302445122a07c8a20c89aac
describe
'1228032' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOS' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
60262c495f14ab95b0050d36cf7e1b3a
fac3c0046c4fe77358c6b69a3fc3a9aebaa934c0
describe
'93393' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOT' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
40e1e27061f4f834234cd2746a2e1abe
c52430886f90c37126ab81db051e6fbb5f860478
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOU' 'sip-files00070.pro'
70225a614bc9af7e98ce0ca9a6e09c6b
eeee7b37b7cecd5b989b2c19a3233843d208299d
describe
'23560' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOV' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
ed640e8a52327a5b5e555c6f20b28272
32edf5bd235fc180fe40afca1bcc6b84354a9f9d
describe
'9834649' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOW' 'sip-files00070.tif'
7f196d55a962327828d209e71b0e5971
229c7deeb2960d557cc19f0a7e2092a494cb7793
'2011-11-16T08:50:58-05:00'
describe
'198' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOX' 'sip-files00070.txt'
39511946e44224b5179bcb8c5c38fa8c
883124b1d77b5a883dad761d83fc1ed59c3036c0
describe
Invalid character
'5982' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOY' 'sip-files00070thm.jpg'
f338bba4b0e1ce42d88c783eff53cd40
fb630a08a88a5b2c5d56c321ed0bb92f7b7c2a7c
describe
'692101' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFOZ' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
a881129439f81966342ceb973ca92275
231def2daea7991e862a188e6b8acd048280ef4e
describe
'17559' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPA' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
06a3feaac7fbb49cb86489d490b18bd5
a987283529a7d921aab31457e81526c80d87b196
'2011-11-16T08:47:59-05:00'
describe
'326' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPB' 'sip-files00071.pro'
1e2bc7a15c78565eb29b35247802a578
d855bcbb76952fb1d2fa8ece85bcca241648a9bf
'2011-11-16T08:52:42-05:00'
describe
'4702' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPC' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
726ff97c9e7312408381439f74b6dd6d
268a527c4e8d53af4f82d43becc38efd632a8726
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPD' 'sip-files00071.tif'
3e5282ad6c3848326638f31a40322c09
01cbd70f3003da2d7ab36fcd75d08283a390fb0d
describe
'10' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPE' 'sip-files00071.txt'
3529d0d0e3c1149842bbaf6ad12941ee
671a5b2dac7755c0a367ea0dfbbc07bbb3baabdd
describe
'1450' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPF' 'sip-files00071thm.jpg'
f36f413a352357b4f9c9d45955eb5681
d62e10c475d18d73a089ce4eae114a3d351eb4ee
describe
'1087840' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPG' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
57e88ed2820f9657d47cfef4d572526b
2b8816971c5e9954485c13d1773da918805aea02
describe
'76071' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPH' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
240822ead71085c947ad997d2447b020
677838885ade663911600ec9d2ccf9b52a85416b
'2011-11-16T08:48:39-05:00'
describe
'27296' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPI' 'sip-files00072.pro'
249daeae8723119e0251997559bcf825
1cbfcb03c81843c926488ecf9bfbd47f2d71e1dd
describe
'28335' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPJ' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
f67f769beffd53c5d491c2149b59fcaf
bdf5a6a8964bde7a50ab7e7cae73a46461b85f22
describe
'8712369' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPK' 'sip-files00072.tif'
2373db3c4b4a8fd3e046b73eb814bcea
480c779464f6be77632d0d0f22c4f2fbb89738cd
'2011-11-16T08:48:27-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPL' 'sip-files00072.txt'
a8e9871395394947dcd21af1443bd9f6
1090e4305391e70c25941be1367e8ac9b9fe9e6b
describe
'8309' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPM' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
d3691c8be2493f59d03bbf81e2ae4b8a
c21f96eafd3de94cbd50af16bdf288d85376f6be
describe
'1187377' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPN' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
b681a179e86511e5b3983e3a0b391c72
656c98ff507baf75ed868be3f34295651d1f5627
describe
'72206' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPO' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
c22e7cfb16919dc5bde0de3b64337f42
cdc5d5f3541bc2b1b7cf1267012162712f97be84
'2011-11-16T08:49:18-05:00'
describe
'30476' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPP' 'sip-files00073.pro'
49a9c507045afae464abd3506e9075d3
c0765725d6f8688446b6cf3dbe2a16a1fd7b585a
describe
'25628' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPQ' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
b841c6547d5ece9dea019e531f97c48f
33a39a7257b206b38f9e6ceb27c8aee4ca38fa2b
'2011-11-16T08:52:19-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPR' 'sip-files00073.tif'
910d967f329b3a12193b57d0f79014b9
9874bf9f3940fc3b5fcd04fee8ee02dd4a2b1141
describe
'1217' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPS' 'sip-files00073.txt'
ca74fd35857def32aec33ec189ae0d24
77dd6dda6d87e3063cd4b49f003710a145139980
describe
'7200' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPT' 'sip-files00073thm.jpg'
cdbb2459b92127b47977dca2794a63b9
6bf14d083d16ccfce132c8d33fd28c01700d8d24
describe
'1228155' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPU' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
7cd0c7cf87237b4214eedbfa7782b95f
f5b4bd652b2124e9f67c26a3c4328fbc1ee296e1
'2011-11-16T08:46:48-05:00'
describe
'67247' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPV' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
0711f991506374cbaeb2a778903af6a6
b6d82178c9178f302ab663f3c2da3a2b35ac39be
describe
'29022' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPW' 'sip-files00074.pro'
66fc0609124f29b478caa837c7db562f
4c64a781327cdb5693ebb3bd6b5af629fef994fe
'2011-11-16T08:48:08-05:00'
describe
'23528' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPX' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
43d99a43467cf9649db24c49faf51ce7
f859d45b06b8b43280e8ac819fe7be76d03236e2
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPY' 'sip-files00074.tif'
3ecf0bcfdbdfb0ed3a252f5b03266610
152feaa506c08606808f0b36763a64acf287e465
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFPZ' 'sip-files00074.txt'
84107ff62c05786ed115dcc0bc32f0a7
22747678511f343b25bcfee69aaed17a6166dc37
describe
'6491' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQA' 'sip-files00074thm.jpg'
efa6636fcd9d3e12b8caf504e3089999
c8b2c6a547be4e1ef41a6dd17e70e514c8d75791
describe
'1187247' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQB' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
bcddacd2b87b09591ceac9d75bd67f60
e97b2491b1b02244e8ad742c91fafc042031170d
describe
'66968' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQC' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
23081245b67f23c81e9d91dd9a922993
737d08e069fdc32cb33fff646c160083a4454519
describe
'18435' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQD' 'sip-files00075.pro'
f6cefd3afb81a6530aac2bef72b5cee0
e39d9a580cebde66f9006ce8263caafed7be98dc
describe
'21575' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQE' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
c7df38489b4109de3f2c383ced597c7e
03321389e21693c08b728cd47f1590daf23645db
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQF' 'sip-files00075.tif'
dd762ab8c61c65593e8e01e34d659e45
65caaefb456d9a4d92f882dc5535eb5514d6756f
'2011-11-16T08:48:24-05:00'
describe
'879' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQG' 'sip-files00075.txt'
080c7c7170c2fb8da029e5ef23bcb529
a384a1aec42828afcaaf8fa4510c3e37700d8541
describe
'6385' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQH' 'sip-files00075thm.jpg'
c317a85f3a37cd266acd891404fbe116
9c42e54c1dd749425eece97793e102322343ef15
'2011-11-16T08:50:37-05:00'
describe
'1227861' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQI' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
23183e19b1dfb68d0485b90ed7a73c07
ca10291877079517649967cc6d9779bdd20be41b
describe
'106396' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQJ' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
a65c6c62bff32be32c74167a0eee5724
216da99e48da24c32c9b9c6ddfca7ddcd1d0ac13
describe
'417' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQK' 'sip-files00076.pro'
c3848bc4b9b9aefd8ad41ef900733b7d
ff039a3cca2817c22d5a5bd596bfa18dcb58534a
'2011-11-16T08:48:02-05:00'
describe
'26554' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQL' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
f8576c9af170b41e7a4a918c93eea9e4
6cdc4850581edcf888e9da3a448c13f7ac20c239
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQM' 'sip-files00076.tif'
fbc7da097d4f6f9002f97bfb8b6af4e2
20d1789d2236b40136c372f6861d82f09294ab7a
'2011-11-16T08:50:20-05:00'
describe
'135' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQN' 'sip-files00076.txt'
05f26cbbb3f2b0297c152afcae5850d1
407c20920a738309ce49e90ca37c69e7f9c6be85
describe
'6584' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQO' 'sip-files00076thm.jpg'
8075946f1ffa793317fb340480180b5b
08e6d50b5ea00773925e2c3b2e1e396da3055418
describe
'754941' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQP' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
967ac3dedc42cade0e0f734f2a2465fc
271b98b2189c77bff84f4f38b6d663345a640248
describe
'19986' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQQ' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
de6a332dc354f2e8771228ad8f1e8db8
d14e62459ceae28b850b1e79e569d0956f51708d
'2011-11-16T08:51:29-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQR' 'sip-files00077.pro'
8d6ec0d15bfc8c11703be28791f1709c
072388fe6af859a91a4a8ee636ae43f50f050f74
describe
'5071' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQS' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
9bc0db640e5f3f32c3fcc2112088ec37
88c111750cae2042123f5470e0111351c7eff52d
describe
'9302815' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQT' 'sip-files00077.tif'
d3591aed534054fa5e76ce846a1df6ed
4b0483983f7378017dca567441b2a84d23926408
describe
'1409' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQU' 'sip-files00077thm.jpg'
90a6fa5b656facf871f61603f0b06601
9d840a4526a9d6ee8b842e6cf78890ab7038a237
describe
'1073850' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQV' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
1a8266b088cd1fe7e75129e1ee53209a
da2dcdf76ba6b4a85419a804c87a7f2ff9cd4e1f
describe
'76009' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQW' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
ddd09809fcd5881d9d4b7520efa700bd
b0891284ca1c66e2cc4e8e2f752e3d3c50e61142
'2011-11-16T08:50:45-05:00'
describe
'27847' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQX' 'sip-files00078.pro'
16a08d1817a8c5c90b9b7973f45df4de
34ff011000658fe0d822096f0b4c98a8bfd94aee
describe
'28413' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQY' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
ec3e5a93ba23aa70133996266ad33c95
c3c208b3206ae98c1dc3fc402ce3f3a718c656a8
describe
'8600775' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFQZ' 'sip-files00078.tif'
03a99848f9f682644dd7289f349ef2cd
8775d3c9917731f8f9d4806a336bb670a6aa4a4e
describe
'1144' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRA' 'sip-files00078.txt'
d4727dbfaa85e9c2e3845fb4a9b977e1
32b54df1f14b894a7ff7f1e6a69c6bfb8bba228c
describe
'8276' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRB' 'sip-files00078thm.jpg'
1f5071bef066d5f05899cd17ee727f22
79557a2d11f77c8f8bc0b1440b79a21fc4d605f4
describe
'920078' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRC' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
9fc918b831bac3e27d5a1224a31fd8c1
62f54bedcf30708708dabecc90a92db8301f7fea
describe
'44834' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRD' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
fe8e7744ab8f521a7007e71815fede6d
4282e76aebd75713a704cfdab426acc4bc14a7f5
describe
'18946' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRE' 'sip-files00079.pro'
68d4adf739db683d1ba258aa9b4123ef
2ccc93f2973640f711f5becc0809e18e60b07437
describe
'15636' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRF' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
54de51f61f7f92fd7f3f5f95818db431
99a4ba8a45b80338d204fe9226786415c055288a
'2011-11-16T08:52:52-05:00'
describe
'9280687' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRG' 'sip-files00079.tif'
4a50f72ede80e0ff39b63865fe54451b
c4d75e300393ae85a6aa76fd34b78386dbc15d5c
describe
'1041' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRH' 'sip-files00079.txt'
e522cb65ac23ba3fbdc01e8db2bc97f7
4f77ec4548528ed9d819bc8b87f0740a524876d5
describe
'4528' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRI' 'sip-files00079thm.jpg'
5c9b555cc335f1f613c47b69ed6d2b55
ce777f88e9ab0d46a6a79004c856e75d28754df8
'2011-11-16T08:48:41-05:00'
describe
'1126354' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRJ' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
7ef0488f1e88693f26f7aac568d04f0e
ba4201f88d7843b6521394e3b726f6f5a962d481
describe
'66174' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRK' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
f6cd7372caade43040ef67c9ec0731b5
f945246869e00700f72136659c780afb68b1e46b
'2011-11-16T08:50:03-05:00'
describe
'25472' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRL' 'sip-files00080.pro'
70c21ad3f642a0ebd1676a8206d49e44
58b89bd417e9cab7b62f7f392f90cf2968069bf3
describe
'24561' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRM' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
9a25d501a4fe471126a01659e04f11f8
9c032f7a270203667963deeea71506203ed3c8b7
describe
'9019999' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRN' 'sip-files00080.tif'
7824f3ec87793a3a908f48376a663d10
a5e63ea1d940377bc51e416af8ce157d06a20792
describe
'1036' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRO' 'sip-files00080.txt'
e8e800866611ea049943f86d209b4bc0
d8b3c3360a72ad9d86e391bf6769d1dafa7a0a6e
describe
'6907' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRP' 'sip-files00080thm.jpg'
fefa13546589a61a2ace051e0bd0467d
2edd61d09d6759fc69f5acf75e10ef3db7e91dc1
describe
'1132125' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRQ' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
241176c733017e749ac886f6f2b00438
ab58764d567baa4024cb0e34722e41e1eb855b3d
describe
'66172' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRR' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
d9203b215a38dcbc4a0deb75a834ce76
a313996a7dcc5519bde73c4db884ad27547e5375
describe
'26979' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRS' 'sip-files00081.pro'
5688646995fd667a6adb5aace06449d9
c1b689adcf9f19be1f1a5bbc8f0c76f69b56176d
describe
'24579' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRT' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
1f1249ab8cdde01f5679a454d893eaab
32b5f2209b6344fdddda6590fe3e5e340c35a360
'2011-11-16T08:47:58-05:00'
describe
'9309411' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRU' 'sip-files00081.tif'
7a83ef26e992bbc1c7e08aba72fe68ec
e40ebd03528526595ff7c6fd8f20072e82ba5735
describe
'1080' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRV' 'sip-files00081.txt'
0af561822c580b7ecc1445d4f9393c9e
037a9fba9cac284c3adceadf7c2789e0d8655395
describe
'7011' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRW' 'sip-files00081thm.jpg'
c22740ab0266be0c1b03af430f59ef3a
cc16a6a64e52504a8c008d9be1308c4bfea0155e
describe
'1126328' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRX' 'sip-files00082.jp2'
244ddbe838a610a6ff5beb94f6b395e0
51692e4d28faa03349daae489816a0fb0a420088
describe
'73367' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRY' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
7f99b57a801831cb19525ed60e5eee53
38966469d70c370c2081acae55cdab70f93d3e33
describe
'29000' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFRZ' 'sip-files00082.pro'
be8706427aece790ed8b6a20f2225ea2
84f8fdca919851c7e7f638e2a31ddb418da16038
describe
'27665' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSA' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
27158654085a8d0089479a62fd4fca5d
a776214090efbfb0460b663eb9eada03d3d53f52
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSB' 'sip-files00082.tif'
e06bfa581941ea820abd81ac68339ac1
38b07d79e6868fc0292c72d6d38d99e2ff1902e3
'2011-11-16T08:52:37-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSC' 'sip-files00082.txt'
5c4cb6af8522d06b07fd87bb8df756b9
ad321bd4a2f7d5a70de304906cac5447519dca24
'2011-11-16T08:51:45-05:00'
describe
'7974' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSD' 'sip-files00082thm.jpg'
d828ea34479775dbb87a7a22219677f2
686cb65e1ee4bd6082ee024f75770e5c980718e2
describe
'981528' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSE' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
fe6871a35591a78ad5a10fe07ec4f822
c78ec02be5734f3ef407aa2df8fd4c149b59aab6
describe
'47910' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSF' 'sip-files00083.jpg'
534a02ad644d0e5ce6885d5429f144d2
294294d5b88658fe2a0a417d0649b2d9bda206f2
describe
'15893' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSG' 'sip-files00083.pro'
0486461b1b94e96a2a75365ca3936f03
b4557589940eb900df510434df9c6d9e0d51fea7
describe
'17063' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSH' 'sip-files00083.QC.jpg'
c670b639a0a01ea4812351e1413a057f
f28d7a7543d856378f6caf1901432d7810004686
describe
'9159073' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSI' 'sip-files00083.tif'
dff8b3e9cab3559ceb3f5c26442d004e
4c0a46d51d8d5dcccc7e7d17fed0268cd5b34f19
describe
'649' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSJ' 'sip-files00083.txt'
1a5ef81b81eff4711d337baabb2c0911
14c832e67b1e942b1168e67e297fd507b2fa6485
describe
'4964' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSK' 'sip-files00083thm.jpg'
fa2be8aff3c2ec8f021ff4f2e4a43a4f
bba556eb5dbebb1ea63de88d7517cb5f11eff23e
describe
'1140892' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSL' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
6f6739816168d726ca022ccc70d852bc
63f522079003073e76c52b02d0fe0fbc0dd3a65a
describe
'60375' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSM' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
db9c3519c78c5e2a52904a4f5216a20e
a913c3a5dd27a83dc70e9cc085a020fc8a64f5be
describe
'21642' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSN' 'sip-files00086.pro'
92150d534c179d2e552ed239d19d88e0
98fd376a9975aee8b1ee2445fb66e13613992b4b
describe
'21724' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSO' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
349a63a740c86f3ed46d5ac7df7102d4
c29dbf446fcfffd31ec0563ac8b42bfba0289dbd
describe
'9137407' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSP' 'sip-files00086.tif'
c0ce7bf95a1a7551cd5f61aacee36ca9
2a79396e06960a7b490e88ee5f8884a4d535fa1b
describe
'1037' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSQ' 'sip-files00086.txt'
6c98abee5e4c07c1ac358764e511333f
f19122f22b94c887f60b95d68b2fe70d2aaa35d3
describe
'6048' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSR' 'sip-files00086thm.jpg'
0ba4c68a2aae5a089ef549ba096cf6ab
024096b37a1ff123824820251d6a6b6af28f61a7
describe
'1164683' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSS' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
9b2464c7758668d2af8104a11cecd3f0
f07ee6a107b293fc45492520bfe4cfc0e9bec588
'2011-11-16T08:47:53-05:00'
describe
'67253' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFST' 'sip-files00087.jpg'
374e286f9a60ac2009076545bb5e3e7b
2f32d7af0e0403ef245cea7b68da77ee612b9959
describe
'26963' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSU' 'sip-files00087.pro'
db6651964cea03f3b816dd22015f1bcd
9b17e1f4a3fb048bb9c46311c42cae668ee3cf17
describe
'25625' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSV' 'sip-files00087.QC.jpg'
bf34b78ec21fb6ec726e049c9103e632
d24bcd97cd63c7ab262820a7f2941704b9a44490
describe
'9326743' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSW' 'sip-files00087.tif'
c6021e8625869ea17fdf2b9feff549d1
58b8db866ed951949e644e7028a53ad3f855905a
describe
'1101' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSX' 'sip-files00087.txt'
b62bc584a3165dde89921754754f988a
2c8fce818a98aea66165ad7c2d41ef3e481c940a
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSY' 'sip-files00087thm.jpg'
36e29b3bf1b3af50214a500307ebcd15
f423d13656e2f42cc5309c1fda393e3c2dcfe80c
describe
'1133339' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFSZ' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
f348ba6e833d1e21b1e3f5874dd275e3
912b6ffe063d24b8f55cac3f5cba8cc7a9d61027
'2011-11-16T08:52:20-05:00'
describe
'74683' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTA' 'sip-files00088.jpg'
26b44aefc6cee100936187e7cfc87596
ddece4e388c48b3c7874971c1cda52aef015454d
'2011-11-16T08:49:11-05:00'
describe
'29313' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTB' 'sip-files00088.pro'
be642da88ba23c7305a53218eb52ca02
6df4f1c3b235076f6e229f8ab8820e4e43d1d47c
describe
'27901' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTC' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
6886aa02145936216c244a699f773cb3
8c9c5b03a9c727361479c856cd069f4614df746a
describe
'9075885' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTD' 'sip-files00088.tif'
c499ef1117d891a78d00cdbe35617093
fa342b4a99043606fe27b1bd3b60206e616a5cb3
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTE' 'sip-files00088.txt'
72155d29fdcc175379703f80dc4ada20
6408646c2d4943f56ecb1894dba39ebf51ec2c31
describe
'7942' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTF' 'sip-files00088thm.jpg'
b4f42541b1cc00063eb2a3ff38ffe8bb
92d77efb0c87c041c4e41efa4cdb8e08b77872f0
describe
'1086910' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTG' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
c289c7baf72dddf20f4922004e36fa93
a843bbb03d723fa20a40502c870df0c6bf7a7370
describe
'48531' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTH' 'sip-files00089.jpg'
5e6bbf0244ed3655cd880c929f470d71
999f1109926f9678e5124c5aa5f070a7312e2c6b
describe
'16282' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTI' 'sip-files00089.pro'
a8d0360d11d73e10143f997ef98d414d
878f3c53a1653c25f5e17355b8f501174d8bb461
'2011-11-16T08:48:28-05:00'
describe
'16320' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTJ' 'sip-files00089.QC.jpg'
2d71852d045ec219c94e1b4d30c8ca05
ab5e603b064bdd5108eb443a465458c910d3ee21
describe
'9501235' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTK' 'sip-files00089.tif'
274005fa597e08a7e52ba750ec7c4347
0622de946c21ab031a47cc5661e5c044f6fbb2ae
'2011-11-16T08:52:55-05:00'
describe
'666' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTL' 'sip-files00089.txt'
a7776d5c0c324c6ea414236daeb2364f
4cac82ce3a64bdace409a69927bfd03b84d0ceed
describe
'4983' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTM' 'sip-files00089thm.jpg'
c1652018042aff37e15ebf787ad0cf95
61728db1f3e1aefa91f09cf93ad1086480fa2df1
describe
'1183454' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTN' 'sip-files00090.jp2'
c2dd4a26000e7d1b418cead7c5e4758d
73a4a3d792680c132ffb54da2cde5391d4e605e8
describe
'87365' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTO' 'sip-files00090.jpg'
7a79ce7467c8f8ffc2b6f61377fc7a7a
d211f71fa477cadfedfda651d48ae6eb89a5f30c
describe
'122951' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTP' 'sip-filesback.jpg'
742a66a8bf2440063ae88c0f71ad3f8b
65d7f76d9d8c94db457b4e67f1410cc971c9080d
describe
'12491' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTQ' 'sip-files00090.pro'
849de3cfb52a107691e748c8463987cc
ba01017f3ffe7064090c9b52a51ff3c2d0812ec6
describe
'27161' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTR' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
5cc64b6a4e878dcc38d5868a204a80ba
b37ce9e6265023362e538af7de3842bfef89be3b
describe
'9477667' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTS' 'sip-files00090.tif'
861946d18583097f67b8c4fad6f83b0d
327d925f87d84fae5792e95ed4aca5578f5ea2e2
describe
'940' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTT' 'sip-files00090.txt'
526b9073139a00ede8fb41336f3b7d80
23e5e5d51338c8be098a1c7f18f5e96075a83628
describe
'7142' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTU' 'sip-files00090thm.jpg'
2ee06d157bc648e1b43a339f3f89a3a4
73148a922136f20be6c2462063edbb2c3141aff4
'2011-11-16T08:52:34-05:00'
describe
'1156485' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTV' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
2623127d9319c0c6664e3bd720aeee11
d104021b841903862721c1d867adc094319b1b43
describe
'72819' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTW' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
b07e5a6a05dc2157abac8af8548f844f
a6f5dd814f269a9b5ea0528dd6fe447162613a57
'2011-11-16T08:51:37-05:00'
describe
'29492' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTX' 'sip-files00091.pro'
146b28ec2b8312dfb8d381167f57f7fe
0bf5f34118f7435563b05054f337bdb90da6e810
describe
'26595' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTY' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
5b381cbb8835425a304a93a12e5383cc
7321358c79e849156a95537fb69c4e004eb4dab7
'2011-11-16T08:51:54-05:00'
describe
'9261133' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFTZ' 'sip-files00091.tif'
6e2221fdf979d7328ae7bd8543023df3
0bf468d7c94be82b685f894f7501ab23b64226cf
'2011-11-16T08:48:00-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUA' 'sip-files00091.txt'
e04681c58ec4bf111c58546f8024fd67
fc5bea33c2e65911ead4f7740302d398cb8f6bd4
'2011-11-16T08:48:34-05:00'
describe
'7361' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUB' 'sip-files00091thm.jpg'
fdb8fec2e088bfae2739aa29661451f2
47c8a46fdcead465b2b2baf7e4c8f6b74ebc63b1
describe
'1140967' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUC' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
16fa997254df15b191869275eb06a198
ce66ab6eacd42cc10fdf725311254f479fec5276
describe
'72760' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUD' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
94ab1ca359c8c0556b36ee5e8ec5ee49
2a8686ed247ab3dd16c4d427fda503bc63e815c7
'2011-11-16T08:47:14-05:00'
describe
'28134' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUE' 'sip-files00092.pro'
5e5fbebb25e8b2094d6d0adb7cf355eb
d9f9bb29da1e54e8bec4aff6bc0015d85949b477
describe
'27149' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUF' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
4e2f631ae5fe8321a29b292d0211424a
8f703d6d131ccd26f7fa18bcd975993ade94b287
describe
'9137203' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUG' 'sip-files00092.tif'
54dc36bcce51248fc3101999b9f9073e
d9d2151df06b9578b29fd2e40260fd529168f347
describe
'1124' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUH' 'sip-files00092.txt'
51603fdf9ff6e638fc1c6b3098c79ea0
4c7f0b0b13d27bbee1e563f00e343e38be9a46f7
describe
'7742' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUI' 'sip-files00092thm.jpg'
0c7589d52d267a21f7315ea60f803e4f
75428b94642b09d073f43a045dded380bdee1d67
'2011-11-16T08:48:30-05:00'
describe
'1123979' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUJ' 'sip-files00093.jp2'
f6d8681a84fa00a6666499b067001faf
3ea8bf6d5823f4880dc550f39422ab123b2abd45
describe
'72461' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUK' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
6874f7b249368e3975d0a7730b797300
c50fe002183104cc34c8fc15f445277eee7f0631
describe
'28411' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUL' 'sip-files00093.pro'
f7f5a59f1b1cfffe98b6431faeca91f5
88630a055069bc5e07218ebb3e44ba0c7ca78f67
describe
'27285' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUM' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
8d50d44e9e41145dede47a448d386f4e
5fb6b6c7d83d6cf8e594095c7b60e8af3692e514
describe
'9001527' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUN' 'sip-files00093.tif'
4f14cd393b4974dbee61528521447fd3
c3b02cea075f2b81f4ef8fd0b617afb77eb92791
'2011-11-16T08:49:20-05:00'
describe
'1145' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUO' 'sip-files00093.txt'
ea272332651e1fac52b0a1a30003c1db
ff974349784caf25d2f0aab6a4c17a123d597a74
describe
'8096' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUP' 'sip-files00093thm.jpg'
99ca7b4690b7a05361d936fbb25f38d3
625e726cdfe0baac6d0b4d9f59b39aff22d6e348
describe
'1168239' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUQ' 'sip-files00094.jp2'
c55b08b01e9884ccd2ae4cb725b780f4
94c55394fc1f473131631a18dd730efa904b2420
'2011-11-16T08:51:41-05:00'
describe
'62855' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUR' 'sip-files00094.jpg'
01d8c4069b00444bf1c7c454e33af7e9
6be61e0d910a1e38cc260f21ea2292e24dd3b93e
describe
'24134' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUS' 'sip-files00094.pro'
1aa482a3257387264d62b4167cd74243
5b03d117c282d56aa7be073d1316708ccb05dcd3
describe
'22809' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUT' 'sip-files00094.QC.jpg'
4bcee2729fd1f88ba07244c2c4844626
d40defcfd8af1f11e632d1e33e33a40d5ea32ad2
describe
'9355789' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUU' 'sip-files00094.tif'
f2179af186f1b79fa76315b5c440c82b
c29868d45897dde54356bdaec7f727c93444c802
describe
'1043' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUV' 'sip-files00094.txt'
0326614eb9a493916792d4ee82a7ba5e
a6ca3e63a71f4ee4cc4ea2961e586fd27040b071
describe
'6765' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUW' 'sip-files00094thm.jpg'
86c40b7578f2075ebc1f2abd448b6388
3f9fe2644c244e7ad00b5e39c92fa6dded51f14c
describe
'1164084' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUX' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
3e6e646b91088177341c50b53f260c8e
926659bfa7f3fde629fc4b14c15f59ebf035dcf1
describe
'71011' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUY' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
07664fce79d133a2978dfabba7ddd713
e4d129e73596cac384ccab219691e8409240c286
describe
'28491' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFUZ' 'sip-files00095.pro'
1a047c038319e8f02f4f369c5058f354
e3779a0a7f4c0aec81ca055888275774b0b36d8e
describe
'27007' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVA' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
a264582b39c0ad4d47e97a4b55c6298b
fbc2c8703b21142a2a72239e7fed92f5cb7a5203
'2011-11-16T08:50:49-05:00'
describe
'9322399' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVB' 'sip-files00095.tif'
2fff56432fa51a782a46d33a4544875a
eeb378d881b8b86587200569192621092270400d
'2011-11-16T08:48:45-05:00'
describe
'1147' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVC' 'sip-files00095.txt'
667de5052718e0c626ba8e2563ae382b
056a4f1d4b10dbb9d9788efe15897bd7af551f29
describe
'7448' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVD' 'sip-files00095thm.jpg'
782c3100c1939540026bfaa9fd69f6ce
115bf3e5c339e14c0dc9bd2227c5a5aa6c2e64a1
'2011-11-16T08:47:45-05:00'
describe
'1140988' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVE' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
4d3734be4e709759e11f8e71536a82ea
fbf1e547838065e13e046070503386adf59b9599
describe
'70964' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVF' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
de3d998fce82a864f897362dc8882e5f
ab71393fa86727c676fd7b1a69f6b3fe661b9b78
describe
'27754' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVG' 'sip-files00096.pro'
88c951fb3515d62755b897594061184d
a151168e821a492b71bdefdafa5985975809175d
describe
'27196' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVH' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
2000819c3225fc9b369cee9353374dcb
ca2671aa0668402149700919d6ee8c59fb10b24b
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVI' 'sip-files00096.tif'
c3c01943ae431e74b16a4fc4c6c5ef9c
c68a3abd053cc133f827f283029d5711a7acfab5
describe
'1115' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVJ' 'sip-files00096.txt'
168254c106bb6643338294876fb2f2d9
7a6f040397a387274c94c7495136259b8226db18
describe
'7803' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVK' 'sip-files00096thm.jpg'
4d4db1b1b8a34b3353b77a5e9db6e708
719056173bf43e77463cff2f54c793ebce532495
describe
'1132133' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVL' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
375a4882bcb56c09482ce630c90e3436
c08325877ece3d827c837f18c10ffa2fe1bd4f20
describe
'67082' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVM' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
28a022f7cdc472c1788d9c24e24e85b4
5c7dc41c67186359cce6f2149d56abb94e3454c6
describe
'25770' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVN' 'sip-files00097.pro'
b8d8ee2e9880da5c33427bc7b8b6a2d8
afa29f8e20e0e64b93217fa569d3818502cc5686
describe
'24807' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVO' 'sip-files00097.QC.jpg'
c98899c99adaeb464742140a7807d080
c80207497732b6bdb6a83785738a62be20425d15
describe
'9067375' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVP' 'sip-files00097.tif'
a41406306f961a8c161a0906f9b4ebdd
cba1c5eb1243b9c2adf1f6be095cceea230f8ef1
describe
'1049' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVQ' 'sip-files00097.txt'
7213ab78e8d269a37fe0375aefb934c0
eb4e6082b32d11608afca5e21399cf0df4f312e6
describe
'7062' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVR' 'sip-files00097thm.jpg'
de6306ba3867ccef8d4dcba71d161368
656ec94be7ff4b0a2bbf9347a2d40332a3dd9ad6
describe
'1209689' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVS' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
962f6c454424461a63074735168dda76
75b32b1eb1879058663e42ea8e62b7fd9076ed25
describe
'71197' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVT' 'sip-files00098.jpg'
6300a3bf8e327768b31a0e02b3251712
9f75ce13a95859101fb6ddafc74a659f2363dcbf
describe
'18125' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVU' 'sip-files00098.pro'
7ffc7bd5d403de8f89067f773b1d5c6a
2bd4a5051687473942b6c30177dacaf15c8fdcb8
describe
'22521' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVV' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
1b2a75f4330bcb2352429eae6f9974e7
1dacb5db16772b541b9e9bb853085d0589ce8722
describe
'9687161' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVW' 'sip-files00098.tif'
42af83113432a952f5fa0d923f45b4e6
930233027a2651f58053ae3e9f761eb098e06482
describe
'920' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVX' 'sip-files00098.txt'
ec26e3a2636bedd63eab8c2774a4b1d7
7ca960ace9d817f45f4cd1332f46bb95cea16b53
describe
'6416' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVY' 'sip-files00098thm.jpg'
c725ca49d597cf3a55aa8aa85615cf47
3a1790aceff4c09cbd13d9dab6baa2b9a43bcbab
'2011-11-16T08:47:25-05:00'
describe
'1177104' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFVZ' 'sip-files00099.jp2'
c6807da2aa0ca1c30e70a1ed68f213ae
4a747bc215e499ab5f2cf0fd49029ae574eed14b
describe
'65679' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWA' 'sip-files00099.jpg'
4c2cc6fe6c326da24c78c35763ea1e73
844fb303de0ac17fce85f7eae4c282afdbaaa717
describe
'25576' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWB' 'sip-files00099.pro'
265814e4fadc497c03e2ea59302bcc7f
e592076ad37a980eba25f20c25da8484351ed950
'2011-11-16T08:51:27-05:00'
describe
'24071' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWC' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
3dbd806970bd6463e3a89a32d6e72a5d
97705562255ec76f346145a4a2ebd3dc2f6a788c
describe
'9426279' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWD' 'sip-files00099.tif'
84c1bc2d7d710ff950f3952126df3283
0c6e2fbc0e5eaf3ad73c6d3b8e12acaa36b352b2
describe
'1047' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWE' 'sip-files00099.txt'
1d949581af6ccd8b19497ccb73d795a6
041fd112b065b45c8274b92e1dd67d929ce92607
describe
'6973' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWF' 'sip-files00099thm.jpg'
369325a1a4b75282b9572530f1ddf580
702609e3009c822e9d6db6dbb2f9f5d60f39acc1
describe
'1215589' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWG' 'sip-files00102.jp2'
92d80fcdc665b00909f050a746f05111
b67acd38d4c7f5ed8e9a06b8a11e49219fca2e36
describe
'97538' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWH' 'sip-files00102.jpg'
14ab3c0518b35090089fb8742e0d4845
4a78a75bb27609bfcdfa955db36ddfd6faee9456
describe
'476' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWI' 'sip-files00102.pro'
b72e28851be5a67ad0b92544b79b6af4
6573e596a81972cb9557fab484c606419fb48d73
describe
'24408' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWJ' 'sip-files00102.QC.jpg'
aeac2e4824239410c793a33f86f69446
282a3c7da9479da23350f1fd1b9172f094ee2013
describe
'9734209' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWK' 'sip-files00102.tif'
d716050cb616d8b1f3c78cb500ecf55d
4f491ca664b9fff8ef8ac937487b3a183bf87478
'2011-11-16T08:52:24-05:00'
describe
'304' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWL' 'sip-files00102.txt'
a2009addf1d9fb04cf92f8acf221d707
ff17868c7630a3081f335af8ee7e9759d18991d5
'2011-11-16T08:50:47-05:00'
describe
'6165' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWM' 'sip-files00102thm.jpg'
2639b05bceeb442fcf0442cce586503d
2408a90c63bf259a641eabd7f39fcef893a94bed
describe
'718909' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWN' 'sip-files00103.jp2'
c81482d76e70f1531702ffa520c4a085
4ffd71aadcc55287e34490150093ba98aa378b1d
describe
'24808' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWO' 'sip-files00103.jpg'
fee0b3320e172205640d2aed74caad57
87843324d621746c72aba4e655ecf4f27c3dc91f
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWP' 'sip-files00103.pro'
b5387bdedcf631e89978e12a558725ea
3699b6308b0a3f5d771d2ba83013ed46b7cd201d
describe
'6024' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWQ' 'sip-files00103.QC.jpg'
d7771aa1843eec6f94f6757c225e40fa
a23f9db18860ad37d35a4114be4c2f2288c0fbde
'2011-11-16T08:51:16-05:00'
describe
'8463027' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWR' 'sip-files00103.tif'
e12c66d250488e741338497416c215e0
dc0caf4818742c1b3703bf267c231d480eadb792
describe
'1421' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWS' 'sip-files00103thm.jpg'
60b72ee382101a5072db2eeac86badc6
bda59a15b3d2c94eccd0a5bf6d07362aac8b0e0c
'2011-11-16T08:52:48-05:00'
describe
'1119866' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWT' 'sip-files00104.jp2'
cae0e7150cd7d2de0906ce4b1fb63f6f
0caf77c7dbf81366b355f40e9214d628581c5aa9
describe
'78358' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWU' 'sip-files00104.jpg'
eead183bcc41396ed0de873491f85f1e
7bd87ef9fc88acff5127d6a78f62c63a7aec7b94
describe
'28346' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWV' 'sip-files00104.pro'
528e2b4168c9de998886e9fa2fda1ad9
5ab5765b8d80bbd1c24b48c84a889f77f03befbd
describe
'29193' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWW' 'sip-files00104.QC.jpg'
1f73fb171c126dca89b363cae8a4c2dc
ac67ebd02c72a2c25d4196e19594870a3ce1d681
describe
'8968309' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWX' 'sip-files00104.tif'
c63ad1ba453e6b04b2fec11fb18f8c25
13727737ca6f46f6bd860a6dc34c1726547b7b50
'2011-11-16T08:46:59-05:00'
describe
'1167' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWY' 'sip-files00104.txt'
906fffbc2e1ae3512fb9646d67928081
99c61897b2db60fedcf385bb789d83cd7a535758
describe
'8364' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFWZ' 'sip-files00104thm.jpg'
5783cae1589ab22b937357dfdc7957ce
4083cc4dc45b8b81ecf3ad8c89a58c5f1b8ef7eb
describe
'1164112' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXA' 'sip-files00105.jp2'
052c31f2547685fcd44ba3a9dc8d086c
906f695bb168caece5da5b681ef9bd8c46d87cc8
describe
'71149' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXB' 'sip-files00105.jpg'
dca25787a3d5857b4d61249359a4618b
b801447db3642f95045a1eb88ae30f6e796a7a5f
describe
'28420' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXC' 'sip-files00105.pro'
dd44f6de6c36823e2c76307b96ed92df
0bd8ee9fdf860894c57752b9f4c5bfa76d4bc526
describe
'25330' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXD' 'sip-files00105.QC.jpg'
610419c43cb5991f1273f7fcda3f3b5e
6846489c6af5e7291f52daf88bef61cc6675efcd
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXE' 'sip-files00105.tif'
f8b817553fc2c8e94649552896178d07
6ccce4735d1f5d2403afe270e735c7cfc4c35083
describe
'1140' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXF' 'sip-files00105.txt'
0b12bcab33e318f82ba4b13c15567cfe
788594a770c0bda423ee8504e15002768ada4a00
describe
'7383' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXG' 'sip-files00105thm.jpg'
c5464b6efe95890dcbe967163351031a
0183310a846fdbb187e44d5b4958119da36eb4dd
describe
'1125397' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXH' 'sip-files00106.jp2'
ff034202c48d15d94e0ca87eb9e0a6c3
fd4a8161150986bf408c1257890608ab89f26689
describe
'74051' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXI' 'sip-files00106.jpg'
c2262894c9494477fb3718bda502e0f5
2bae5e2cfb61c0a49183eaa28f956bc06e3f083c
describe
'27824' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXJ' 'sip-files00106.pro'
0a4a23f862d3362ca7b0e4c86cf41965
4e6391f430cf4f00820d3bb3c7c3301e4571fa69
describe
'27495' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXK' 'sip-files00106.QC.jpg'
d8556f13e0bdc322a7be3204ef120fb2
936473363893ca797dd8e5f884f10eac12f13a2f
describe
'9012717' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXL' 'sip-files00106.tif'
ec13db85b8ae99715fb6b9173e946d2f
c016ddb82d5019a5c28b283f385efa2203fe4891
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXM' 'sip-files00106.txt'
2bd84661eb3d735fa663afdf687dba65
0cf3a99442fb0de4bc831f2bf26dd46f5ef47a07
describe
'7709' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXN' 'sip-files00106thm.jpg'
9535241f3a6042f842c73d5e091450be
bab9288e875d21c8f50f0f76a4c73948624ba467
describe
'1171117' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXO' 'sip-files00107.jp2'
0f69afb126d1a1194b47e12e42df943a
3da2a6a818f84fe74876a25749e6e02acb8d90cb
'2011-11-16T08:50:05-05:00'
describe
'73106' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXP' 'sip-files00107.jpg'
e3967b57a59f11e999fcd68b8685529c
6d937df7f13cb94fda38de3a2f59cf7ed4275837
describe
'29130' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXQ' 'sip-files00107.pro'
524d3ea9b20eb6de819ec44ec9fea63a
19be05915873f46a6ad628e87cb1d28f62042dc4
describe
'27535' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXR' 'sip-files00107.QC.jpg'
81e6492f509884eb3e655168824ff96b
66b066577f5a96eaa742091056c92169013b5e91
describe
'9378675' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXS' 'sip-files00107.tif'
8d553b9faff5f1628a1b334e28047841
5b3025e8a0c8ff6265b4b1b0efa64f78674fa997
describe
'1169' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXT' 'sip-files00107.txt'
92e391b80bc972718d0b953e6d419992
dd13eb3b8a85148712cedcb23c95f7c82b82a908
describe
'7612' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXU' 'sip-files00107thm.jpg'
a0e7c5012e6787dee2004661ba968882
e811a372b8bedfbe861cd730f46858af81db44f8
describe
'1140822' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXV' 'sip-files00108.jp2'
327bd90079ddfa05ac50addfa0d300c9
5c18a1241ff4de02b8be0cfedf2e957665230783
describe
'65914' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXW' 'sip-files00108.jpg'
4d2f4a1961a8fd49b5aec98c22dd56e4
47389f277f568b96d80d9ca19d2ee35fcae98aa3
describe
'25796' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXX' 'sip-files00108.pro'
a8e9e247689083fdd3bf8cddb621701b
2a1eae5f5c4fc332584673e761731fa7c88acb8d
describe
'25619' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXY' 'sip-files00108.QC.jpg'
95d82e45b5ce98c489fb5d5b289fc996
17c1cc56356f09d702c877cec757c154d4149a26
'2011-11-16T08:49:13-05:00'
describe
'9136459' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFXZ' 'sip-files00108.tif'
a86613ea4d71a1be547b6730b5da594d
2908b379e9fc7b731eda574e243975f457963dad
'2011-11-16T08:51:43-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYA' 'sip-files00108.txt'
700a064031009e12c2be33d74126abe2
cecd5e063050fe41674bbfc5c894fa993d627485
describe
'6918' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYB' 'sip-files00108thm.jpg'
cb63bd919c966b3310846e4adfcc5cb0
d4e77d3f46c0f3ebdae349017079c9425fc03189
'2011-11-16T08:49:54-05:00'
describe
'1162296' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYC' 'sip-files00109.jp2'
0c934e5bca087c1cc0f56fec839558d1
ecfbdfabaa00bd36a910f5ae5ae6fc91688c3cc3
describe
'63083' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYD' 'sip-files00109.jpg'
3b8d8bc0d7dbcb40e5cdfed96a5b66dd
017ecae49a3aca55f48e5138f8141310bad675d1
describe
'17682' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYE' 'sip-files00109.pro'
6b2dcd9614f4b4d8695b068c78f0c853
bc819fbef7ae44b6cccbd79b0dd91dc70934b7bf
describe
'21076' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYF' 'sip-files00109.QC.jpg'
183943513743ec0ad2c908ab6e00528e
2e60d864ff8e18ed1f779d77b4ec08f22bcd2eac
describe
'9307881' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYG' 'sip-files00109.tif'
ebab3ba8f6477dd5a5b4e92f7c28a3f2
1d911deac013f7e618e0469de34bdf6064881a99
describe
'958' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYH' 'sip-files00109.txt'
3423cdc382f1dd7cba8c21c004a52adf
6d9dd4185de616bfe7748f4d35f60062de2e7b4a
describe
'6056' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYI' 'sip-files00109thm.jpg'
4253785282f75dce2dafa7cfda4533e9
d5d10999ddfa228d430e131c70af43f513606463
describe
'1133938' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYJ' 'sip-files00110.jp2'
0a2ea8958618f169cee87e3b96ebd47b
3953736373164fc4aed5ba065063916315f15b2e
describe
'64290' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYK' 'sip-files00110.jpg'
6b2c9887f8caf4f84edca78d737f2d9d
82f18b04770c5c8e16c49f4b7fc9693779cfcdb2
describe
'23158' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYL' 'sip-files00110.pro'
2b3742643f83c65587f34eeaf47881c2
986445e72634a1adf63f545c4ea752cfb155aff0
describe
'22972' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYM' 'sip-files00110.QC.jpg'
b3c61bd370858e2c6f22bc7bde5b423b
1ca0364b62e3d67602819a87e24c9a303217854f
describe
'9081249' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYN' 'sip-files00110.tif'
be891af42be7fc42253c736c726c5091
e3ca63efcd0f792d94a9cb874889359fd3655b81
'2011-11-16T08:49:51-05:00'
describe
'1031' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYO' 'sip-files00110.txt'
2be3678dfd7c081b8a7cd2d035e7fdb4
9554afafe32214c399fea6f1e273790a9da45b7c
describe
'6959' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYP' 'sip-files00110thm.jpg'
0843bd627276ef74e1f83ea73f495b56
46e37a9f19038229ad11b06c41683011cfa4a53c
describe
'1098638' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYQ' 'sip-files00111.jp2'
3662952bab92cb30daf6e00b8bc9fc3d
ed6564b8df230dc2e5db57f325322c68b706a16b
'2011-11-16T08:48:06-05:00'
describe
'54411' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYR' 'sip-files00111.jpg'
2615dc59c88f38a29efa06157fb6863e
183a707813ff1729a53e920e2ebc67844222d3de
'2011-11-16T08:50:07-05:00'
describe
'21529' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYS' 'sip-files00111.pro'
7eaf0830b7a0ed5eadbf6ff4fa8ea2be
0ee12740f1fc6a748a11353c31ae63b2b6edbaec
describe
'19184' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYT' 'sip-files00111.QC.jpg'
c01f5c2c04028fcf07dc067c5d9207b6
32ab07595780f564dbacea819290d0721135ac24
describe
'9104875' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYU' 'sip-files00111.tif'
d5c483a27fe194120f0901c4c4cc74a3
04c292fd9aeb40e47b02fa44ee2fb6e5c5f25215
'2011-11-16T08:48:49-05:00'
describe
'1233' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYV' 'sip-files00111.txt'
324b1a7b6624e762065a02ade3446dfc
d2f80e60b4c26ea4c4059cccf651a82be21cbe72
describe
'5560' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYW' 'sip-files00111thm.jpg'
ac67e5d682cd04ea308b74913e514dde
c2e0db799d8a2cf811ff3bab75ed8c4f6614f6e2
describe
'1146964' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYX' 'sip-files00112.jp2'
a76f0ab66252a5b241f84a94fa1be237
a9f55b333f200a8123275ac2e8dd369141a30f8c
describe
'67726' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYY' 'sip-files00112.jpg'
97f2e73060ba39de7a4bf208a92d7bca
04545755ce198eada2fdb26b257381820f964c69
'2011-11-16T08:52:29-05:00'
describe
'25595' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFYZ' 'sip-files00112.pro'
450650dfc7a65c5b42169e8373eca05c
55cbcb4bd9e65e7349e4eb3a5e5ce6e7139b5259
describe
'24596' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZA' 'sip-files00112.QC.jpg'
e50050dc75c6af23bef6c9b6b0bf69ed
b1967e1a0d15e7fa3be588769bc62b46390698f3
describe
'9185129' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZB' 'sip-files00112.tif'
f7f6ddb1a8d5336a7cd13392591554dd
f1ecdca2199d5ec2ff9c6506cfcfb26895b565c5
describe
'1051' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZC' 'sip-files00112.txt'
450b6ea328b9c65729df3d94c64ce263
5383ec55f6bb9b341be0ea7fc37e7c30f8984b32
describe
'7622' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZD' 'sip-files00112thm.jpg'
39566f9bca51b9f2d6edf354dec7f017
e68a0991a160a747a17d5ada600a6e6385a1f098
describe
'1195817' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZE' 'sip-files00113.jp2'
4b32a270c520a83a7a9e6fddd55dac0e
ef7fefabf936775e6da0d3e08197c453c9e5792a
'2011-11-16T08:47:47-05:00'
describe
'70469' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZF' 'sip-files00113.jpg'
7a1bbc7f902813b58f4a990e0045a42e
94762ffe0ee4c8ec2dc60a0025b3be83131b9169
describe
'28291' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZG' 'sip-files00113.pro'
b7306ff2c61a875911cff55a0841e74d
84b37f6740c6eaa96809097b302208c0182c07e4
describe
'25265' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZH' 'sip-files00113.QC.jpg'
4093acf8931b482297c32de3432f0cf3
e9cc41dff2edad43701b0747724b0b17b57a13a9
describe
'9576451' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZI' 'sip-files00113.tif'
4895603639551310a8ba6d018e908a33
d0266e9ca69c1770c3f5385340da393319ed55fc
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZJ' 'sip-files00113.txt'
e8fb75510cdf954011e697db41f8c392
5ddcd647d9371f9ec3049fc762c1bf1590d73f1c
describe
'7342' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZK' 'sip-files00113thm.jpg'
90055e36a0597effe77b6b7fe131ef92
2297f1c3a988c15ae00d99720ce467774e8ce69b
describe
'1162200' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZL' 'sip-files00114.jp2'
b5b821a4fe0e88babab8a5a4a62103e6
0f95a3afaeee25bc4933e9ddf982fa8c289c9472
describe
'65200' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZM' 'sip-files00114.jpg'
e8ca35e43f61d98debfc46784cb4498f
d4e538a030627eebc7d9b60159fcc1babc6d0c78
describe
'25196' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZN' 'sip-files00114.pro'
88fecc3e8b80e3e94a769a3fedf508b1
6ffbea374740bf8a77af271fa88335cbfb5abefb
describe
'24325' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZO' 'sip-files00114.QC.jpg'
d52ec9e8c2abe5f2393cc7af58230f15
e577ffa038dde4146ed84c8b21e0f4756c90239d
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZP' 'sip-files00114.tif'
2244f59c3f664c44efd4936abf8f0248
abffdc1e840aa241fbd8135d3c0cdce3989ba1d2
describe
'1026' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZQ' 'sip-files00114.txt'
ab315a31eb0f60d4d63e7501b4f1db77
0520cbe64e26e5a18593feb93ad0544bfa6a30e0
describe
'7075' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZR' 'sip-files00114thm.jpg'
594ca67fe25f029e4ea01ee7826cf045
3f27300a2c1db717dedb50b32a0f88a5dd83bcae
describe
'1155323' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZS' 'sip-files00115.jp2'
c3d1995f3796b077bf4c3d0745a396b8
eaa4fd607784d0cd9e99f8a15fe5954409cf69b3
describe
'66465' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZT' 'sip-files00115.jpg'
c4cd87ed98d7ca168cb8e82c74368c90
1b211c118276310867e43e69a60919ca2ffbe372
'2011-11-16T08:47:22-05:00'
describe
'26419' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZU' 'sip-files00115.pro'
0935623de8d8087f02d3a657f1a8d71a
10681da403f743010d33a985dab7e7432f379e4d
describe
'24945' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZV' 'sip-files00115.QC.jpg'
edfe67b2e44b6aee8a45effc5cd62918
909eeab0d8ddf3d16018e1bdcd639daa156add72
describe
'9252047' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZW' 'sip-files00115.tif'
6e9d05ae435d21d11de76624fc3a09ee
c44d10c175aa69dca833f71bacd27efd9498d22d
describe
'1057' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZX' 'sip-files00115.txt'
2c6c983fa998d887355389c9ba3d8966
10db920ebfaedcb5edf47384b5787a04cc5ae381
'2011-11-16T08:49:03-05:00'
describe
'7096' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZY' 'sip-files00115thm.jpg'
6832b0f47f5c1b58aa90cb875431aaef
1f906a7a9d7971482cd410590654bc036653ffa5
describe
'1212658' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABFZZ' 'sip-files00116.jp2'
92688823b85b1dd7bf11ad294a8f7c81
ada78423eab97b2e4517a1fbcd91fce58ad7e874
describe
'55654' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAA' 'sip-files00116.jpg'
1f8123221d31804334ee895801d390a4
d480b502f9350b435c54bba3deb028f0cfc7a21e
describe
'20637' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAB' 'sip-files00116.pro'
faaf84d0314d44a8023b436e970c226b
f08d9cfcbc32d525074522fb90de5d4bfd2b2190
describe
'18156' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAC' 'sip-files00116.QC.jpg'
0f3570cd531116202789be56ec05393f
0a7f17a57f859986b5fa5ccd2748c690ac3a8fdc
'2011-11-16T08:50:59-05:00'
describe
'9715923' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAD' 'sip-files00116.tif'
d20118b30fd282c18a153a27c8f6975a
64e9d56ffcdbd716b3677ac5e7926e0c07d1de94
describe
'834' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAE' 'sip-files00116.txt'
181a4628c71214b8d46f90a1e620d73c
4d6a3045926d4bd891a54a6132702e1c0eb2f49b
describe
'5710' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAF' 'sip-files00116thm.jpg'
098707b20ad627df5496d95598c8cc51
83ee6e540cbfec5ac141f8e39a6276f5a0664698
describe
'1178513' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAG' 'sip-files00117.jp2'
7cd52327edd2a72814d6da18bf68afba
cb9e01a2be2ac639abefac6ec40b8429e991c532
describe
'65554' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAH' 'sip-files00117.jpg'
a08d608c9f3678b708bab8b1708a1f4b
e2bb537d3363c438b91a5739f409f9cfbe35de18
describe
'18396' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAI' 'sip-files00117.pro'
eec8c0a7dd175263446cca4f01d7d9d2
4cf5908e07ecd5bd2c3751ee02a2571771a8c89b
'2011-11-16T08:51:02-05:00'
describe
'21928' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAJ' 'sip-files00117.QC.jpg'
bdbe8435c5c4e4254d1b38d70fa3848f
6a727bc26e74a55e30668faed22614a2b21e2b9d
describe
'9437979' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAK' 'sip-files00117.tif'
b9536a8b62d033da140a7bc45ac4bea2
d3be841ebdc200dcd7e72f60507aac1a7b9e405d
describe
'899' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAL' 'sip-files00117.txt'
2a636e3f5c518e4e3068d9cce42bf1cf
b71fa18aa3da7c15c2764808a48d91a992e3520a
describe
'6188' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAM' 'sip-files00117thm.jpg'
c4a6367239a9049d543a5d28ad26d06b
d041d70d3a027b1d5c18192d08c236b14015c048
describe
'1238053' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAN' 'sip-files00118.jp2'
f4b3da76800af161359630127f93b815
24921a63034c37a516a74e99dae4e63b3af0b270
'2011-11-16T08:48:12-05:00'
describe
'103476' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAO' 'sip-files00118.jpg'
4de9829b648dcfad4418c57c9528a4c5
52e9c1a6205885f06e374b302513325f71ee1294
describe
'1022' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAP' 'sip-files00118.pro'
51d477371ff004563ef53f82ac0361e4
1413517d96072a37e8aa0b49f9586e701c998276
'2011-11-16T08:48:57-05:00'
describe
'25602' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAQ' 'sip-files00118.QC.jpg'
802dd098fa22e91530f70d636dc53e8c
42812a0956e0ebc345b4efade48ed33ac067d5b2
describe
'9914151' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAR' 'sip-files00118.tif'
988ef973e15f76e71c8006c9ade7bfe5
5ac7e3624d0cf129f6d8904b26a8078794c4a74e
'2011-11-16T08:52:49-05:00'
describe
'72' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAS' 'sip-files00118.txt'
f7c55f51ff191129853c7f5bafba047c
02e59ed2ef8e2101ba18a5451810873f57eae729
describe
Invalid character
'6306' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAT' 'sip-files00118thm.jpg'
a26378951ae56d775426b1c897304c8d
0dd9b09a717e6f4f1507e4abacb5e93fab8cd0fd
describe
'654097' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAU' 'sip-files00119.jp2'
3ae100ab8d472e7670e934a3e871b792
aad72e35e2e4890a761a2b696350263ce56746c3
describe
'16861' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAV' 'sip-files00119.jpg'
d2dc25aac932746587bb03f7454cd781
6a22ec0546ff22829d6181cd1e4bed0f1088cfc2
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAW' 'sip-files00119.pro'
ca789fcac19e45edb56823966ea0c20c
f230511fde255220d02f69a12bdb1f544f445323
'2011-11-16T08:49:46-05:00'
describe
'4337' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAX' 'sip-files00119.QC.jpg'
76b1cfaded8d754b4578733f090614fd
1ed5cd6dd7e2f0fe9e6fc41633e6807d6747d1c3
'2011-11-16T08:48:26-05:00'
describe
'9287403' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAY' 'sip-files00119.tif'
96813118aac2df28e52460b1ea771f85
04a205c255761c5aa9fdec3d3d7c5fbdb8d46e97
describe
'1249' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGAZ' 'sip-files00119thm.jpg'
882cd9297b7d0f61296563942389ef69
21506203fbbcf0a4fa7aeeb70de3010f589a9a94
describe
'1146573' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBA' 'sip-files00120.jp2'
ac545b249dd004b3d25505536189ade7
ce32a3ca2683a1a22c5fcc690ab5c54f5507f04d
describe
'71307' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBB' 'sip-files00120.jpg'
6c7d6c5a6ab14a08174f6199c1f2239c
7a01b369035202d96b6ac020d35b0774e1ee0bdd
describe
'27232' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBC' 'sip-files00120.pro'
10565a1c90dfadb87c7bd65ebeb4d9d7
9758a5ece1264d57b551ea6547b747199ed6f5fd
describe
'25539' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBD' 'sip-files00120.QC.jpg'
8756e631caee900c5ece3fcd5fd9f77f
484e08a08c5f9b32e9396011c67320affd0ed11a
describe
'9182089' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBE' 'sip-files00120.tif'
caa9a91f11a019d6255f18f328e8beb8
3fa4240c29938ddcc7ab8f849e74e975d319a428
'2011-11-16T08:48:18-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBF' 'sip-files00120.txt'
9dcde2ddb2eda7aff670ab44e650e538
9c3b1a54320be363944fe888a0e20ab58a8c42bb
describe
'7211' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBG' 'sip-files00120thm.jpg'
2c2b2c9bb21217b253f6d428fd5d1811
41ffe8ff8741683ce65f6883034e9ee070d26479
describe
'1185450' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBH' 'sip-files00121.jp2'
8eca799a59242e111278e8bc6378a554
d3b420902de85fb75af3287df9fb6331e7ab0674
describe
'62353' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBI' 'sip-files00121.jpg'
cabbf1d63d23d37bf49aad88d9627e89
a35bde2964757a9e2b31f4b331f15044b3c5ea9b
describe
'24057' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBJ' 'sip-files00121.pro'
0590ae0a58d041ca0ea6c97a6be5cea1
244b9615e46d7ea8a8ad8d2d8afdd1864043e6f9
describe
'29838' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBK' 'sip-filesback.pro'
9926f33c9fadac216ac734a7e5909a52
d297767d7125681c6de3b4a0af13581fdfd6ac75
describe
'22741' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBL' 'sip-files00121.QC.jpg'
03ccae8bb4d7b219a49dd0cf9a3b72bb
3f77ca6d3a2a6e863bfa773944fdcf1e0c4459c1
describe
'9493059' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBM' 'sip-files00121.tif'
e1695e990f32d0c19f7b9b6e3619e155
e48db9ad1e5d966edf372860be4160165c4286e6
describe
'978' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBN' 'sip-files00121.txt'
dd01a319169656ed23f656cc0e2c1246
18e6f32ccbd901e245f3ea856c13db2e6cf682bb
describe
'6496' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBO' 'sip-files00121thm.jpg'
a48dc88c0caed6351e8cf70df344dce2
c68104606453d9eecfaa6792d3ce22644fcbf79f
describe
'1149595' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBP' 'sip-files00122.jp2'
741b7bf2eb3fa4bf95d2ac419c60ef78
9e5dcf7089ea257ba2c4ff64e82b661e01447da5
describe
'70644' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBQ' 'sip-files00122.jpg'
514b5d72af0244c5bf90a2a69e798bd6
6f675ab8394c39f6044ef587d0ae48894c85ce6e
describe
'27066' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBR' 'sip-files00122.pro'
7b9137df302c852a533f318ddd4bc93f
040b5e9fff3f617c5398d510f8d7effcdb562163
describe
'26448' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBS' 'sip-files00122.QC.jpg'
6a534d9b986fcb48429f6d7b2c967135
ef83958ce865a454117689982d07533f1dd05b30
describe
'9206819' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBT' 'sip-files00122.tif'
77378b8f2efa33184315d95728b9be0b
bac692c639e6580f949024c3dc656ea6ed32f778
'2011-11-16T08:46:55-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBU' 'sip-files00122.txt'
da12d69048d5230b085fc8c1bc6b67b7
811d6d24b0562d1a17d039e99721c52c7a158904
describe
'7321' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBV' 'sip-files00122thm.jpg'
de1c898e9d204103db215a03743343f5
7223a7602188146fb04a1f91e0960608f2c702ef
describe
'1163158' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBW' 'sip-files00123.jp2'
4fd68b5ce61e00b15346cb13bf4d47a0
3ded4d55888675ab0f3c8f166012e88c7f5ec997
'2011-11-16T08:50:29-05:00'
describe
'65797' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBX' 'sip-files00123.jpg'
46c7feb63a813f6a5b583e9049d9cac7
a90b8c0277d06c57c1656410815ca15f86c68135
describe
'26396' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBY' 'sip-files00123.pro'
c715e5f33dcf9ea8b149693df64a2a19
f3bff404306a5ebcb54ded4d649baa2d32676de9
describe
'23855' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGBZ' 'sip-files00123.QC.jpg'
7ddad037af0622c5082c8c78b9c5958f
f21b1877e6482fadc2a7ab8ef42e1c7c98ad8263
describe
'9367627' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCA' 'sip-files00123.tif'
f9ef0b9464ede22a81a5317c7b38bf57
4795ca92ba39c6803541d6f26162c3824804f5a0
'2011-11-16T08:52:56-05:00'
describe
'1066' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCB' 'sip-files00123.txt'
9e27ee06e7d91a075a3209d72114720d
201b631dd4745154d4ad78648a232bb09997e0b4
describe
'6980' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCC' 'sip-files00123thm.jpg'
25f171ddd1a42fd9b27d0fa032047c93
5ad5060b9f119c2a086edad51f95e2268dc3ef97
describe
'1126966' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCD' 'sip-files00124.jp2'
8cadf37adc894cd6f56771686c068124
4401f61948ab6757f4282e91861ab35f1a404c61
describe
'51946' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCE' 'sip-files00124.jpg'
1141b088ef8ffc4fd1a4f6c592adc4a0
2b82f6dbf052322f00c53fcf424be984ba64b7f0
describe
'17937' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCF' 'sip-files00124.pro'
02c62f7264eff2a977c07efed9d6d6ea
8fa08434e5aab9bb0af6dbc4a5fec92a1bf46ad7
describe
'18606' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCG' 'sip-files00124.QC.jpg'
f315d61f4e54bdaf78c43510560cdd31
99ce7ad7e4e61f07621269d08455aaff94420ea4
describe
'9229433' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCH' 'sip-files00124.tif'
3374a40dff4321721eeb7f809dce7755
a4ef0dfccfd7f529e8ddc8f4329cbdcda49f90a9
'2011-11-16T08:52:51-05:00'
describe
'728' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCI' 'sip-files00124.txt'
6d54e858e9afce19fd6ec3e570b78823
d7b757fb7f865662ef1d0da34b7ec0312f29af66
describe
'5396' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCJ' 'sip-files00124thm.jpg'
e19ce6604b928bf5164d65b399c2e429
4d92ec98544f7d8b0c7523c5f993597cba198b2d
describe
'1149730' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCK' 'sip-files00125.jp2'
f5f2cb4a17b963cb6bd8e3cb4aa7993a
ea00e9b934904f2a718c597d45c4e8f7a4f2f48a
describe
'89452' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCL' 'sip-files00125.jpg'
49423462756fd01f6ef7f25919cef926
8f8b7ef70e54d34fb9e805d1c8ae8d922aa07599
describe
'15706' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCM' 'sip-files00125.pro'
d7df5bc5304e5196eaaa73d745184763
634c8fd4d0def0ad967ea43ebebd93a8ec172f82
describe
'28604' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCN' 'sip-files00125.QC.jpg'
6edc4648960fc363c25038038078a7bb
ddfa176b742fefaab6fb23d3edce92d1364c45f0
describe
'9207411' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCO' 'sip-files00125.tif'
f13e3fec82e555974396d1c2c9bda15c
d592f0222547c834b57a6381127d5651712935dd
describe
'1015' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCP' 'sip-files00125.txt'
427cc4dc1245e04b9a543b03bb5c2cb7
926114c0017b7d1a23b75cc2cc2c4c2629868b57
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCQ' 'sip-files00125thm.jpg'
d3df0618b82c80f830adf66b5a71c2f7
206d3c926a2e2ddc19b091709c9c5e9ee00a7087
describe
'1244074' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCR' 'sip-files00126.jp2'
c67bae48eaaf7777441c50aa7f90beda
66d851887f86865c9ffee63186fdb17b5535ea6e
describe
'106892' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCS' 'sip-files00126.jpg'
773c9f5c0b98c3db58d3ff12a8fcb142
017f44327f3a2809ecd8c0f057ae8e0341b0d5c0
describe
'612' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCT' 'sip-files00126.pro'
6449c03b2004f0340de10caa445f672f
a052cdb4e3afd57144fd6f92a4bf6a27bb599f4a
describe
'27700' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCU' 'sip-files00126.QC.jpg'
8f3a43f9fc9bed715dc33e10572e1305
27fa1dd69fa337b7e62fecf792eab1f7ec09c216
describe
'9962367' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCV' 'sip-files00126.tif'
e7753a1b2792911a8faa3d6a4d0db82d
1ffbdeecb88a89c3df4b3c7e86501abebffec89a
describe
'247' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCW' 'sip-files00126.txt'
ad429f7287e746e69826531a5a1cd2ff
ea28eea910150aedcb1b9ed1cdc1493a07bc48cc
describe
'6812' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCX' 'sip-files00126thm.jpg'
282ac20f0330309f5d2bfb9c2b143f6d
e59311992dd51faa5599af1432461fff7fcbe685
describe
'727794' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCY' 'sip-files00127.jp2'
44d515f4dc944a8a232c7080a34fa677
41b7e8de0c2d4240ca6bfcb1d94d63eb71287e5b
describe
'16948' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGCZ' 'sip-files00127.jpg'
d06839a9ed524e3d3598176727996f25
66e2150ac3a57e7d916153b92f15d98c6905178a
describe
'279' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDA' 'sip-files00127.pro'
53635a143985d5a3440c8bac013cedc7
f8cbcc55924be8b3ba38ca0a64db537ea0fcb056
describe
'4410' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDB' 'sip-files00127.QC.jpg'
e9334cb96d1e077ebddfc9925f6e01b7
1b43d876c528f824d4f9676c32a3c4fea13468bb
describe
'9614291' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDC' 'sip-files00127.tif'
ed4c6a0e0a6c6c33de4253bb3dc102b6
d0ec318e79b3d25c87cfa16f478afe5cc42b77f7
describe
'8' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDD' 'sip-files00127.txt'
8fe8e4604506b6664205efda14dccf1d
7d01e4c26b167a05c44c53b6962ee39e89410935
describe
'1349' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDE' 'sip-files00127thm.jpg'
31c8f8f98ff32527954d7de61b7f4bd1
4a38067ef6a537026a35bfd3464c40d9fdebcbd7
describe
'1172453' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDF' 'sip-files00128.jp2'
6d95c90629cb6ee4f0187b002b6a0a14
2ed46be60274468c27d906e90d9f91625ca4d600
describe
'72622' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDG' 'sip-files00128.jpg'
eb1c02da743eec36e5f68ebf0e5ee1df
6eff84da6aa8bb89c9839c00b7e84fc46d1b1740
describe
'27595' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDH' 'sip-files00128.pro'
979ffa5d4438b3d3c69dac85b2fd55e0
0d3eb5eee26a1650c8b97a8e96b770206873207f
describe
'25374' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDI' 'sip-files00128.QC.jpg'
09a750aab86ee05050ea1d17972c12ba
081765a141451221007ffb630f240d8015541380
describe
'9389179' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDJ' 'sip-files00128.tif'
a9c2bb1b4bb4b9420dfa13b6685cb68e
3aa28ca35828f9f4cb3e282fdea7c34dfe640797
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDK' 'sip-files00128.txt'
3409a5f9434a061ad7a1cb9a22ea3fc7
15854b5038c6c73ef65aa63a0f6c0093c6e688ad
describe
'7128' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDL' 'sip-files00128thm.jpg'
c8772cf7dd784f8a03e74a6cb20208d1
242101977e573fcd8ab776457f7409fdbd3097e5
describe
'1101763' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDM' 'sip-files00129.jp2'
28158d7a2fda296fc2d19e0cf63702ca
ba12aea1f9079e5944cef0a6c017b81b1570211b
describe
'70869' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDN' 'sip-files00129.jpg'
04bf39885955d1b6c30cecbb0cbd7b44
95a28c94c7cabc259f03bae7144a7ce7a9baa6d3
describe
'27163' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDO' 'sip-files00129.pro'
3491eaaae6bd2b2bb68aa490be075b1f
5afbba3ade0784740c7dd220a304a341d05ef6a2
describe
'26769' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDP' 'sip-files00129.QC.jpg'
d91ebf2c1b0e77fb7bdfe2a6ef3fdc9e
85744dccf192930df3d5a0ea8ef9028784c27bfe
describe
'8823733' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDQ' 'sip-files00129.tif'
8013e44ac1677f42db56ce9b6746d473
096a074555043782f4630e74cce319056eb6282d
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDR' 'sip-files00129.txt'
d44c2ab7c060f7d6a12408dbdcd434f4
f94e7aa2ebca4b8610351176c5e868bf76c07e85
describe
'7733' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDS' 'sip-files00129thm.jpg'
40c49e0f426bd8428467cbd621dd0083
b7c63a327076ec3cf7b5e1a3c2891eab1fc848e9
describe
'1140847' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDT' 'sip-files00130.jp2'
5331ebe40cdaeebf91e2c4d86259cf54
acbdd85152e4495afa99c0806a25e4176fa72ec8
describe
'67870' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDU' 'sip-files00130.jpg'
80bd1665b032729e02a2c6f1fc7d0352
507d739b3c68c43d4641862f02417d5cc57a195b
describe
'27304' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDV' 'sip-files00130.pro'
e21608657efa008bf6ebcb2baf72af22
b690141a51354918ce7ff270b58522881b84824a
describe
'25263' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDW' 'sip-files00130.QC.jpg'
bb088a1a6698c5676ae935c08ffbcbf6
b50ed82dc08c17cbb43bb6abd2a8edd02b825840
'2011-11-16T08:47:37-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDX' 'sip-files00130.tif'
25cd772de2e2e7170550de4e4287fdec
06a35d98bbc7774fc95bcfb5d9c30a46182e25a5
describe
'1104' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDY' 'sip-files00130.txt'
dc327bef48693706050db73d927c5893
aa139fe8e7eca1f68c9e4eaec696705ed37b618b
describe
'7554' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGDZ' 'sip-files00130thm.jpg'
34e9cc18be49214da7f0e9ea8c9ebfc5
10b1e14a51966cfea35c1c1e077463b576ba2d60
describe
'1109952' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEA' 'sip-files00131.jp2'
9a2d0fa3495c88da83c8520e239e2e94
6c695127fcdd3558b8a1cc762fb9d11b2ce6ed6f
describe
'63736' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEB' 'sip-files00131.jpg'
24a29c4e30ccdf436335df4177d0b39f
95158a3a6999d6a73c9c4d51270888a8bea3dee1
describe
'23800' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEC' 'sip-files00131.pro'
f42b8094d28b6318867b8606146a99f1
05eda0dbae286e62d959450535c9507e7493449f
describe
'23376' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGED' 'sip-files00131.QC.jpg'
6255aa69566d5d6302445004e79e84b8
8b7ab17cc8de5d65d5c70429b39cc159b06d192f
describe
'9113703' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEE' 'sip-files00131.tif'
9507c6d2da1e4079b9e99f3db4e8bc76
db365d0e9a052a561f45573f28f75e7e470a4cfc
describe
'983' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEF' 'sip-files00131.txt'
6d12ec36a4ab0857a0f60aed3a899fff
9d606589eb10c87e67cd3dd835622cd3130aecf9
describe
'6884' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEG' 'sip-files00131thm.jpg'
a053d33cb028af204912d0e2466f77cd
0c939dc9bee9941378dc3308c3be0b64f0525f40
describe
'1136806' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEH' 'sip-files00132.jp2'
db27c6be573967e74e3019dc430c45fe
28886fa7fd06c03b9cd7ee933ec12c56ecd44410
describe
'71315' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEI' 'sip-files00132.jpg'
b974a3d827c7abdf9967d1ea8fb1a209
ae0da20e3849bc4659056314ff75065baa637e99
describe
'27200' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEJ' 'sip-files00132.pro'
d479ce4b93efa14b9f6cffc910dd7d01
b305cb0015ef216ec44e5eab5105007041fd7048
describe
'26498' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEK' 'sip-files00132.QC.jpg'
a7532500fe49451124deb2bc3bdd6d25
4cda607da72a10ffdf18b28353309e6801c6894e
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEL' 'sip-files00132.tif'
68eac600d13a4daaca5e515070d2ae85
006cdb7c7fc968811165de4750d05476bcb01580
describe
'1118' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEM' 'sip-files00132.txt'
665d3397dbc2d30cdf81406bdec641b0
6b1d295bc2d91a98bd5f639ee85249af23c02861
describe
'7781' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEN' 'sip-files00132thm.jpg'
d89577a8ef119389e0fe58b8e64da567
dc65c6943ff3cd30e19dcb3931af15a45b61f452
describe
'1146577' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEO' 'sip-files00133.jp2'
a5fed0ed81f3906d28c0829df6f15dee
7dbc8852df3d76ecf8fef4c66cf50d342428433b
describe
'67095' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEP' 'sip-files00133.jpg'
0f339507a55089e204c1f280a663dd80
910bc8c203f5e13caf6c19cadfb9f1db772ae2f4
describe
'26420' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEQ' 'sip-files00133.pro'
b9003cb7d1814154ad8a4248f5a51426
3a1a66c99df65a3e4ad6c116c81fee33579e49e8
describe
'24890' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGER' 'sip-files00133.QC.jpg'
6de653714eaed737442c7ac99ac4549a
98baab02add54c835ff747b585b27ccdb6ba82de
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGES' 'sip-files00133.tif'
5dc7a1a3e3c8d187150d7ad153f49340
9e5fb6f104bb69b9ee97f88b38d0935d2332a695
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGET' 'sip-files00133.txt'
9c8318765de47b5e832a237a6af3b319
2cfb7070c58683d765107cf4421ef8db0df00013
describe
'7104' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEU' 'sip-files00133thm.jpg'
20134ff21d229e7b112c4e428f51a7a0
9b940f90da50dd827a52d2585e1e8751473816f7
describe
'1160542' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEV' 'sip-files00134.jp2'
fb635c9ebb5ff470b39ac25cf4ce3a45
f93210f318fefb3e4b907ebc612b86862ff93c98
describe
'67265' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEW' 'sip-files00134.jpg'
9c78c648c1b6da84e67593099ac02642
4c39226d814f081de4aa09a3854afb95192b4ac9
describe
'19944' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEX' 'sip-files00134.pro'
5ff7e904b5e52aabf9dc4c631dbfa3c6
c0aefab430a4788ab9d22992388f818c762e07bc
describe
'22109' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEY' 'sip-files00134.QC.jpg'
9d8d170363ce5b91f674f9d9ff618402
0e6f4cacdbcfe906f7ff9d93f84534c516d4525a
describe
'9295547' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGEZ' 'sip-files00134.tif'
ce3d8199cda691d559961942a85b0b0c
633756f8f2193f5ab2c2596a360ae113b8e0f1df
'2011-11-16T08:52:36-05:00'
describe
'937' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFA' 'sip-files00134.txt'
c65551a65c0e4ae8cd39a3f96617aa11
789947f906596b9f23da93f19fcb774838eb3db8
describe
Invalid character
'6006' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFB' 'sip-files00134thm.jpg'
d4d835f103a2877fa7c35ee521c3e641
be602c6e099a6c52869d2a038479f8d30048b953
describe
'1151064' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFC' 'sip-files00135.jp2'
15568313c70268695a0e7527c9fa591e
3fe19ef9ce02f97e6851616c685b6c6b9a916546
describe
'74531' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFD' 'sip-files00135.jpg'
db09cfbf4ce98af43809d8a23caff468
f0d9b74f8711c53d1194590463ce790da1499474
describe
'29931' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFE' 'sip-files00135.pro'
f0021b099bb4e4d12cee0313a637b8a1
de42dbc4220fadd87c29da1668c5ae591f6c5a2a
describe
'27063' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFF' 'sip-files00135.QC.jpg'
a63f7f40a206d2bd069c93cdc82ea1af
caf1b76d8c2175d5337bc522586828f1fcbf325f
describe
'9218339' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFG' 'sip-files00135.tif'
92c089df1ca12ce49a0d72593a16d22e
d510f93e5129dbc24ee1089378133e99bc33f574
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFH' 'sip-files00135.txt'
ba30026b38de17292932575c76465a16
7719162435f34d8be33d12fb6de96347927e0e87
describe
'7580' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFI' 'sip-files00135thm.jpg'
5c088f0205605a0b5466a4fbf69dc41e
facadb69f30a2c78cda9f5c0ba3a69dc62dca473
describe
'1151098' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFJ' 'sip-files00136.jp2'
044cbeff581ac6ac300e7cf2dd10550c
d70f5ee00913fd55a0fee4cc09b22b96af736c5c
describe
'68665' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFK' 'sip-files00136.jpg'
6b3dc888cc40ad493484105f0de7fe71
bb345d3ed80bfbe16c9729c251624dd9c9c58e19
describe
'26128' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFL' 'sip-files00136.pro'
c6819b6156439c3de7a6c08d36cd7ef0
ea9ccbc17e8c4f66a5825fa3c5eb5ec071c76d22
describe
'24710' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFM' 'sip-files00136.QC.jpg'
8eb38fb9dece0aaebfe678a27022de96
4167626cafd1107f2e05187098d02c227337d917
describe
'9218519' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFN' 'sip-files00136.tif'
0283cf7d598d8c66c9c5349d2de5277d
1e510afa5905097d2af345a3489466b166bb54a3
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFO' 'sip-files00136.txt'
70f9f3aefc2aa1c9faf73f1db71ea576
ee6b8d117f2acef97f33d93949ba1ad9f69c0374
describe
'7561' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFP' 'sip-files00136thm.jpg'
8daa6b122d4de5586a7ca3f521eba2e5
381f1c1a01801048291de111c63963e49b8e7dc5
describe
'1155255' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFQ' 'sip-files00137.jp2'
5782dc39edebb687085863021fff828e
67d0c4f9d3b71b93b3361da6710c598d373b3004
'2011-11-16T08:50:22-05:00'
describe
'73911' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFR' 'sip-files00137.jpg'
f333e55f08b26c3710e305f5f63af754
19e7ac21afd6576e766c9e96365a3e7d160da5fa
describe
'29249' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFS' 'sip-files00137.pro'
6f9cc44fcbe5ac048decb130d378198f
0529e55af4eec210c2e37f2e55340c7765f61297
describe
'27577' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFT' 'sip-files00137.QC.jpg'
381a9d3ce7abace6ee349f0abf44c4c1
7713f411c92f022baa61708d2d79984b5e327e44
describe
'9251973' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFU' 'sip-files00137.tif'
d441c2aad2f0470b45b224ea486aaa7f
7402eba952ab17922fd8e5b69ed053c4c7363df1
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFV' 'sip-files00137.txt'
bcbd24f7dea3369a43719ee9aa1ff503
4816fe873681ec03b977aff51600e2a65c3f5016
describe
'7348' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFW' 'sip-files00137thm.jpg'
8d48a66c61dbd7cb25af6a7146acf154
0868442b50b4711bc914a01be72ade385b135f13
describe
'1143753' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFX' 'sip-files00138.jp2'
c2d969cd5b5930b640d1309aa5f6f719
e887ca8b07f8cf01f5ecf0fa2ac19019d6e60d9a
describe
'71774' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFY' 'sip-files00138.jpg'
b31446946fac0a8ef8ebdcfe2257203d
df6b26ba5f550ae87c19262a7a589117fe3da56a
describe
'28657' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGFZ' 'sip-files00138.pro'
22341baeeb61b84a4f34302dfb07fa6b
043e38bbd2fa3494eeb6c65e1305320a2f2ebfaa
describe
'26313' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGA' 'sip-files00138.QC.jpg'
3fe71940fdfc96e27fb6061698b325ca
6d46f9d398317c3a1447e9f837b7fc80ad41f343
describe
'9159647' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGB' 'sip-files00138.tif'
78720737947186613cdea06dc9210028
64591d09c1dc015007624e13ea22baf5d81de65a
describe
'1179' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGC' 'sip-files00138.txt'
ef16923a9fbe70e01f09916a4b20b142
ef6c5d5004e22feee7066f76970df890e733e345
describe
'7364' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGD' 'sip-files00138thm.jpg'
19eb21f45e747fcef931c847703f9dec
d0d6b4a7f2c80c229e098a9977189bc395300f07
describe
'1134712' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGE' 'sip-files00139.jp2'
af45ad3eb505e63af97e0211c048aed5
e95933cedd4cc4407052506d8f4ae8ce1ac54df2
describe
'59404' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGF' 'sip-files00139.jpg'
7f11ff39dad9d158f3dffab8416949f3
3990e0c8fca96d18cb5a9b60d03b5c4fd8099fdd
describe
'21139' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGG' 'sip-files00139.pro'
6b4e12951e113cc28ceb5d727bc7ccdb
9c80ef3b0a795e68de19e75364cc7a83ee387c46
describe
'21607' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGH' 'sip-files00139.QC.jpg'
d19a5601075a35bf2510669945dcd79f
c91c87eedb61340d66fe64a867d54b6f5caff703
describe
'9274661' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGI' 'sip-files00139.tif'
d27a423c18a8ee5e6503dc0ea8b0f326
a680f0baea4cd19a2f54813a4e2a12ad1162dbce
'2011-11-16T08:52:27-05:00'
describe
'860' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGJ' 'sip-files00139.txt'
633514495c458124c1dada7d066b7f30
da5e67b2cd499ebc82602a24db51751c7b5b3daa
describe
'6014' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGK' 'sip-files00139thm.jpg'
8553bc9411aa1c645729c725340205bd
7a4e6599841bbf421aefbef036f5442c93d5f9a9
describe
'1157929' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGL' 'sip-files00140.jp2'
57adbcabc08a04c775ead09722336625
6ab423777d36ab12439ff989aacf805c8d40842e
describe
'77467' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGM' 'sip-files00140.jpg'
8235da5e426443489212d9a188d416ea
62f2ec3757f0d71f7e060ec01eb72bac4a64075c
describe
'19590' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGN' 'sip-files00140.pro'
c374d130a055090bf5c88b9ca0c14d5c
279ed220e2fc878e32fe7585559b41707098cb54
describe
'24886' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGO' 'sip-files00140.QC.jpg'
a34f2da786fdb7f65f5578ca84267902
8468cb48a3b28677cba917738728f79b076c960c
describe
'9272771' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGP' 'sip-files00140.tif'
9f78a050d261a2a445ec1ae96ebdafb8
b00c334050387eca780d3e37385e3f30aeebe4c8
describe
'918' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGQ' 'sip-files00140.txt'
38e91a1dba52bc384ec9c4e60d74c2a2
055e86f44161ab3f9df53cac155ec45b182d1697
describe
Invalid character
'6880' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGR' 'sip-files00140thm.jpg'
1580336ffc2de6336f1485725fa7ca7b
9c263441f9b8b7f84d433ba9fcfbb96d3fc9641e
describe
'1117076' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGS' 'sip-files00141.jp2'
9271d5d343bcf48e3bdd72b40877063b
1f2a34e87668ffc02890fdf26871bf8d28df47ee
describe
'72261' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGT' 'sip-files00141.jpg'
99e9517fb988f60e47862ff015f252bf
caaae1209f87668b01bf69178c7c1526f7867954
describe
'27156' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGU' 'sip-files00141.pro'
39498684a05f61bd94cf50b588bb1ab4
b31a0a03363234499fbd89137c23036299ab96a9
describe
'27274' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGV' 'sip-files00141.QC.jpg'
df7887fc7232f8fc4c8665f1afec82c6
d0a0fccc8b980b3a0de5391030b9e542703f0754
describe
'8946441' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGW' 'sip-files00141.tif'
44d48db7ed6a2205272857e4624c372c
4e2b116c2a3cab5f1c0a896b7bff5e102f6bd707
describe
'1103' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGX' 'sip-files00141.txt'
cdc5a1c02b272a720dac6680b203219c
286be84d561693af2c002d2269c15a11ff3f29ff
describe
'8222' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGY' 'sip-files00141thm.jpg'
2b201cd33d159d5677cc99be3b6353d4
b4a22f1f8a32d20c410377aa552a888366d1ea1d
'2011-11-16T08:47:44-05:00'
describe
'1144064' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGGZ' 'sip-files00142.jp2'
de658f975cf7bbb42c3c765e69aa8e7e
4496e6e2077b762b85d91ec8a19629a15a129624
describe
'69625' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHA' 'sip-files00142.jpg'
a1cc75031ea178134ebd0096222f7625
6c6acd068ea9092da9378411a586ca0114986889
'2011-11-16T08:48:53-05:00'
describe
'26491' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHB' 'sip-files00142.pro'
d6ec2b46ae12e50f7688a4d52338b151
106f4b0bd4f435806f63f8940568db7c9c82831d
describe
'26248' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHC' 'sip-files00142.QC.jpg'
ff05ecde1840908c868349463c59db53
7d87e5de15009735859b9858aafc43d876fbd571
describe
'9162849' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHD' 'sip-files00142.tif'
baf2661720f6f1178ca713ccde3e21da
e0e7411b71963b3d3d26f9a46c7274aad59b7923
describe
'1076' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHE' 'sip-files00142.txt'
237cbf18bb22af7ef4786a97e73824de
0252b95064c80dde65f7cc0346b742118fda99cc
describe
'7481' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHF' 'sip-files00142thm.jpg'
e4835820c97a2253e2cb03f7bd1974db
6b569d03bc4c50f46de3a636174da2226e3a3903
describe
'1114113' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHG' 'sip-files00143.jp2'
74e7044cb7787f616f780ad3aff340aa
3fd8aa4ab326420140b8dd1ca2ade60b0f77864d
describe
'75180' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHH' 'sip-files00143.jpg'
74398f93eee30b306882c3ebd2ef2b92
6816036f143fcda5d55db78d6d05dbfa6d9f7783
describe
'28888' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHI' 'sip-files00143.pro'
4bff48c8d83a912b4b9275eaee3510a1
6705981ceff9ac15f190cbea399ff63a86a37184
describe
'27963' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHJ' 'sip-files00143.QC.jpg'
46d444b5a5ca15cc54a3b244e0f530c7
90a8dca3c141feb33841bd2135a88f8b9ebef665
describe
'8922149' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHK' 'sip-files00143.tif'
138f1edff93764e42744c634324fba51
9a489827b8d33b54aa0135197709b214ced2cfc8
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHL' 'sip-files00143.txt'
d3b516378c4f990bd665236d21d07728
d66d72f8ad3f08b75df10941e78d184bd288346e
describe
'7866' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHM' 'sip-files00143thm.jpg'
fae2951962752959961f90272f599ff0
f6510771ce5c93190ac6df880245a3b07e9b89b7
describe
'1148188' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHN' 'sip-files00144.jp2'
5b1e4db6ef8469e8122e2e80ca27d3f8
b15464acf831f35a6a9d11b96146651754ed2e04
describe
'73039' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHO' 'sip-files00144.jpg'
34813ae92206d5347636bc25734e7c11
8b34b75a8734554f58f76e66e438f99539aad31a
describe
'27978' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHP' 'sip-files00144.pro'
e515f4a1c5c8ba0ae0ac3a4fdf21999f
0af429bde15aeccedbd7cb13bec5a59e7de048ee
describe
'26435' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHQ' 'sip-files00144.QC.jpg'
42480aee148624c01fe6b37807e1280c
7dac3a4baee5e519f1862f03c47fe96085fa6af5
describe
'9196139' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHR' 'sip-files00144.tif'
994e460922cdaa7f01907658073119aa
5f12ffb8860669a42ef2337a3282013291c2ea0d
'2011-11-16T08:51:49-05:00'
describe
'1132' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHS' 'sip-files00144.txt'
3ee1f7ec0a5eb0a10c4745fe41623a8f
27a524dc41d353c9625e20fcf4fb78ab8e000677
describe
'7454' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHT' 'sip-files00144thm.jpg'
57300455979ba5920a1c7389a2be7692
033f310a1c2aea1a2bd259704d7bb1d9ada83e60
describe
'1101772' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHU' 'sip-files00145.jp2'
c94d74b8de25561c13ed6a9dceae1cfc
5464f4e76df395d3d7cd65d138a6ebd3d764a7dd
describe
'72759' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHV' 'sip-files00145.jpg'
fcc4638b7c381157847859c7fcb52e59
683091ce4a27e6a73fc2fc28461236326fbb4a6a
describe
'28222' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHW' 'sip-files00145.pro'
ab9f080703795c74f5fa2cc21330e9c6
4ec2caa10ffc0da79a79a0f88a1ec31824999b40
describe
'27102' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHX' 'sip-files00145.QC.jpg'
756ea90b1b93eb4a65e97f841377b48b
c113e6f0e6250d1f75d9bcc5c1dacfdc8af5d010
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHY' 'sip-files00145.tif'
34ff63b1e616e7c4ecfd659106161d44
80274ae0831c3d1698745ae068b4ec9333cfd725
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGHZ' 'sip-files00145.txt'
2fbc74ff265af2a97eb16e664a00581d
021683829585ea1c523c6e3a965fed277101c5b5
describe
'8001' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIA' 'sip-files00145thm.jpg'
a4a05bcdc70d438f93f6186c0a158675
9fbc4ba663f5fe292b0717faad848900ecc72aa5
describe
'1123976' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIB' 'sip-files00146.jp2'
2cb8ccd5ea60f95a72fe4f216c4919d0
cc885d6d3e1aa9597d4649477df6b1aa6538f20b
describe
'69629' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIC' 'sip-files00146.jpg'
53f06b35f028514e48b063f3fc817992
c224a171071392f4564b1e4f584e7759d572ba42
describe
'26270' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGID' 'sip-files00146.pro'
55ef59a155ab3b4f79cc5eb98d94d633
bb117d23b78885018d6a28e80a06f6e4b765ef4e
describe
'25544' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIE' 'sip-files00146.QC.jpg'
6d44e864d13049bca76ed07f2f98f3cb
f823008142a697f232b42c9153896f0752f9ef74
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIF' 'sip-files00146.tif'
2cc90681379aef27b73b264371241268
517942c5694635900704bd6b922461f97d6b56a2
describe
'1085' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIG' 'sip-files00146.txt'
955e5cc9aa95fa847f847a8d57e08096
0e81d39a56e4d0c2f45daec270a4f72bd5d6544d
describe
'7339' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIH' 'sip-files00146thm.jpg'
96df25d9063df21c160e99f2aca76e8b
adb86c118cb8776815cb3c95783f884f739fa4e9
describe
'1132698' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGII' 'sip-files00147.jp2'
c8907f7ab7cb8819cf8d980f888b362d
edfa26020a38fb8040ed8f2be06b3b713011c540
describe
'75538' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIJ' 'sip-files00147.jpg'
c64512e9093418d347ce3b7a4f0a8139
de3ed21347fce9838d132b194b36ef166e4e1b52
'2011-11-16T08:47:48-05:00'
describe
'30289' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIK' 'sip-files00147.pro'
67cfe355f9e236e32a0916da1e5eaff1
646c37c20abe2db4599e200fea55f3233944a0e4
describe
'28095' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIL' 'sip-files00147.QC.jpg'
c3b7533bc94fc4f8c0b4ad668f2a07d1
5a52ac788fea32de4888c939dc1a255b1f412f95
describe
'9071251' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIM' 'sip-files00147.tif'
a73dbed532605bf6331a32896d9a8990
a1475b6264b002c8e2cef6502a104ad6bad26f33
describe
'1206' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIN' 'sip-files00147.txt'
2dfd4a86d70aa4bfb336b8465ce54954
4d7c2af8d010513197bdf21477960529639ffbfc
describe
'7775' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIO' 'sip-files00147thm.jpg'
60254c830c21faa55c65b29170de8d5a
3e67b1944455412ef267abaca4b4bf08c11be107
describe
'1176989' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIP' 'sip-files00148.jp2'
5950fc78ac1c5ed942af0c3987612cab
4af040020b8d66277cdf1722df0368d2978d6831
describe
'72250' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIQ' 'sip-files00148.jpg'
84a84773cb85f9ee71c073516db284b2
461b4eff4e984944df906ea573b9a1a94f7afdde
describe
'28942' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIR' 'sip-files00148.pro'
30fdd01d683edffd18cec36e231a850f
c8032320548d554e851f63628677ff7fba91fa4d
describe
'26322' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIS' 'sip-files00148.QC.jpg'
25afd12deaf0095e09acee6c2bdc9c38
1d117f42e670ffd236b37722ad99e647c7e60413
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIT' 'sip-files00148.tif'
9c280f254912decdebf2dead2522d89f
299dd3a6713224716f1ab438126f8e53bc51f6d0
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIU' 'sip-files00148.txt'
e013fd4d39d79b1253e6345549f07567
4722bed04372d0333e9989a604ca24e58905f26d
'2011-11-16T08:51:39-05:00'
describe
'7652' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIV' 'sip-files00148thm.jpg'
b90439134cc9157957cc7e758e213618
6b5a9f309e21f0336b268807f836de79713e6f00
describe
'1046135' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIW' 'sip-files00149.jp2'
4a7ca90a8bcbc4cd35adbba2f779226d
8469726f650b58ed45e33cc6060a803517ec7861
describe
'53222' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIX' 'sip-files00149.jpg'
99c454d70b5f5f45e7d8a1ef704aa749
d3b35c38967e3a168cc8e0006e2ca2fd8235f5e8
describe
'18468' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIY' 'sip-files00149.pro'
7e5733da61d210c0d1e88da862d3a92b
b4ecc2a12f20a726475518d3a5d063900a47efaa
describe
'19485' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGIZ' 'sip-files00149.QC.jpg'
2bb164663bc88e30373ba8c6f9dad08f
8868963f0ff97722a31ec94978e887442929eda7
'2011-11-16T08:52:26-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJA' 'sip-files00149.tif'
2e301316c2fddb3c6bd714a5d0e79844
d3c71539e3c11d28ba76f0c958fbcf30d763922b
describe
'744' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJB' 'sip-files00149.txt'
1133d5f8371769434687ad3f474f61e7
b15bf3fa36893b95b77040bda023ff50ef05923c
describe
'5695' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJC' 'sip-files00149thm.jpg'
cf27d97be39301057ed52d877f383926
aef6d87e7ec4f6959602f7231e0e32fc693e9ee3
describe
'1181001' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJD' 'sip-files00150.jp2'
a7c80e8f235994f39653b7a58acf0971
7b044e4534d05704026baa16cc0b50cf00d9dd91
describe
'63090' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJE' 'sip-files00150.jpg'
3079b3791d3b6415a9ce9bd08f534b85
14057e5a0f83b37f5f93d123455a92f6b55c483a
describe
'16086' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJF' 'sip-files00150.pro'
11115d535113f065874f229275ec7a15
473d590caeebdb682f61f97ba2cbe60fd6b11757
describe
'20663' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJG' 'sip-files00150.QC.jpg'
e86ab094d20dbab3c210b516445a001d
b1aa029a576774d6d2bef5fb4382a56b0c363d48
describe
'36466252' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJH' 'sip-filesback.tif'
221c7888c453331f8c4693bc32e29458
c1904c66d027bb17fafbec90c56d415d521c105f
describe
'9457507' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJI' 'sip-files00150.tif'
0d6d835d900666d4fea2ce0da442f376
10191b78c376498fbe02a2965e69592d07ed1f89
describe
'856' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJJ' 'sip-files00150.txt'
2b8d2a816c7756e93c7811a53bb87150
b678ec822a0331fa2beef082952f22ba0c6682ea
describe
'5558' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJK' 'sip-files00150thm.jpg'
c04cd4013ce48e72b595cfd6869be6a0
1b3ad96edaca0e3d57a3fe7e6d479fe5efe18005
describe
'1126888' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJL' 'sip-files00151.jp2'
014481c90ec88132b8613072ec314ddf
8564ab604af69342d0eb5a56b583487d52bb9593
describe
'79273' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJM' 'sip-files00151.jpg'
65fbac8295c5b722cb400f60a41ba782
f6424389d81e8443d9c010e3b0d898d4b7df4ae0
describe
'29387' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJN' 'sip-files00151.pro'
816797458548a52a6466713a0ce5a2ac
b707a133dbac2abcb3168f2542a99f54f090afed
describe
'28838' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJO' 'sip-files00151.QC.jpg'
3e1327592550786676e0039cb96d679b
64e1be16c32a3a9591b2614ed4ee9a08b5c2e6a9
describe
'9024651' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJP' 'sip-files00151.tif'
515d62b5048ef1b2b45a857b315159af
43e7498cab2821eed5d4e5eff2edb0e656763841
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJQ' 'sip-files00151.txt'
1f10f7c10affbce1420d85f72fc900e8
ea8ee0769b789e64085150618d3d46f84997b55c
describe
'8194' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJR' 'sip-files00151thm.jpg'
10bb2051bfbc85446b03d2d4b1e3511f
6b8570370677d1f2f8465709f148247b97d369bc
describe
'827008' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJS' 'sip-files00152.jp2'
bc075aae409190fc24c849d90d15cc9e
3f36e26de682ca55403a6136134155d1f980737a
describe
'24619' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJT' 'sip-files00152.jpg'
4bad2ddd0c3aa5c0d00c3c3b887d095d
79aea778ed0c4185478f2fc509de2c90eab68ca7
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJU' 'sip-files00152.pro'
c34d6b5b05050a0180ecd701534a101f
288ca0b54a4ba96f337d482939e42c3308e67b9f
describe
'5834' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJV' 'sip-files00152.QC.jpg'
643364a128efe9f2a76e7ed12f2d5861
a7a088663f84b8708cae934b34332c2bc90afb1b
'2011-11-16T08:51:35-05:00'
describe
'8869731' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJW' 'sip-files00152.tif'
404930ccc14f6ec1c1b7c4fbf3be38f4
45a25120f2a12dd76346938e93af75b31178d8f9
describe
'1542' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJX' 'sip-files00152thm.jpg'
b2b9a3a5a7ccc730ca801ed804d1648e
c059fd546d717756c0b04018ba04a8f70ea6850c
'2011-11-16T08:48:20-05:00'
describe
'1265400' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJY' 'sip-files00153.jp2'
27e3e964c9485285fd02c9d8b1bc6b5f
008e43da941f9a6adba1d7a290cdb01a699d8a17
describe
'136939' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGJZ' 'sip-files00153.jpg'
9e2d202da9133b08fa190ae1415c9182
fb15cf9c0b8b1d0f2f0d9c182fdcf876ce3f9623
describe
'2442' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKA' 'sip-files00153.pro'
1c6fe8448e72545d834688d91789dd54
58414e5bbe0890e92bbeeef69dd8ec37854b2c44
describe
'35699' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKB' 'sip-files00153.QC.jpg'
6f6e1cc4efeba2a1175fbd0b635b8183
5c0b16decea6c7e4e86a2a0e77ad1a1ce7f1ddb9
describe
'10132839' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKC' 'sip-files00153.tif'
4748d0fb568212ddc1d6e8d601ca0a6a
0b4cebe2dcee9455b378939dc6b3ec71872414d2
describe
'266' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKD' 'sip-files00153.txt'
b3f548e85a949f704f8d4dcd0570f16f
fb5a03f98615cf99061bbcae4a2462a6d19f234f
describe
'8801' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKE' 'sip-files00153thm.jpg'
2fe1b94bf1b19dd59eb6bbba604fdd16
2fa5b8a05ae719e2a2a04d8b26e86f1a86cfae7f
describe
'1140987' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKF' 'sip-files00154.jp2'
b49b5ef4dcfdee5ed4f23f0f37d13cce
d6b15ce57626fb173038ad72013a430247600c9c
describe
'78287' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKG' 'sip-files00154.jpg'
d3b4eb0e548327a553719b94510955d2
c540692ccbfc4cd531129aac5104459bc3ef71b2
describe
'29335' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKH' 'sip-files00154.pro'
a3675496924c44ec3a14d39220663008
633a5723ad09b5b5f5c7c3202b23cc5aac10798a
describe
'28797' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKI' 'sip-files00154.QC.jpg'
65636908984d2a6b96ada423d85b2ff1
880a5bb186407e31e4d42d3cb3daae430386c305
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKJ' 'sip-files00154.tif'
430cfb15a6bc408a9d22628a8949516b
102cbf414100b5eff3b75e5a57ad7c20fa41afc0
describe
'1176' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKK' 'sip-files00154.txt'
bfe3e0f9137913121806f8daaba2520d
db5332e5716f60a409309a8202c39246764c13f3
describe
'7986' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKL' 'sip-files00154thm.jpg'
0a3dbbe799c57ef5d85375d89bd100b1
c5099fbaf5033ecfae716298ddea1de3cc476cd0
describe
'1086020' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKM' 'sip-files00155.jp2'
86a41c54fcc69a861663d07f607037cb
2d6a47c2c0bb7e91b79fd73e73e6bfd8cc1ac0ab
describe
'77784' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKN' 'sip-files00155.jpg'
173752946be920f751a7d6f5223096c8
132057be5cdd6c8218d5222d58f9c1822915d0ef
describe
'28640' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKO' 'sip-files00155.pro'
75c658ae3b0cb4b23fc655daac840881
a0b142d208d506e03a97dfa2059f315423bddfae
describe
'29343' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKP' 'sip-files00155.QC.jpg'
445f29fa4705434a3de166a43ad8f50f
9cc63e1e598ee12dd2b7c80747a99684826d5f5b
describe
'8697523' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKQ' 'sip-files00155.tif'
9b984bedf465cc6e73ebaba82cde8868
68a8fea10dbd819083c9832d2c4593ddef6c4e37
describe
'1183' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKR' 'sip-files00155.txt'
5fcbb9c098f3cc9cfecb5d5a3729eda6
a6de7a473ca58970846dc65b0d6839468aeb965c
describe
'8651' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKS' 'sip-files00155thm.jpg'
90d6876e228399e4b88d2487f2588928
f07b8e9ab2a773dbc0bc817bcc35086ac1c20d95
'2011-11-16T08:47:09-05:00'
describe
'906876' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKT' 'sip-files00156.jp2'
c5b25ef7e8e3dd7b2ec6483d7dba39f7
61fd298238879f6cdb07e19e26fdab0105a4d5fa
describe
'26466' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKU' 'sip-files00156.jpg'
e04f0eedd069987f424590761a2539db
eed21fa66afb7e5339c7ed1fe914ac8d1445ca71
describe
'5050' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKV' 'sip-files00156.pro'
64429cfffb76ca0b9bc87231ade6dd95
380d5f824dee974aa351de918f6bdd6c1d4012c7
describe
'8069' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKW' 'sip-files00156.QC.jpg'
465347eea3ba4682a0376935d0738fbd
f546b77fac26f5ce84b199692c7706c322ebc419
describe
'9204533' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKX' 'sip-files00156.tif'
63d6670f74261cb4447ef3f97cb075a2
f26348bd6e24350aabcaa31479ed6e4845ef00aa
describe
'229' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKY' 'sip-files00156.txt'
18857ba08b60f7063abe866affd4c630
98c712e087108dac1cc4cc0dad691d0b13112b0a
describe
'2878' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGKZ' 'sip-files00156thm.jpg'
539c1966fc3eb34e5c712f350c23e219
033f05fd21ec7450a2ae08202766db7e5bc9bf39
describe
'1156329' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLA' 'sip-files00157.jp2'
3ac8f6ed4ef5e5e7f2a4fe67e9cdbd70
60c9e858dc76a1837f6b1620e75fec55c64e6d75
describe
'64910' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLB' 'sip-files00157.jpg'
50cc42b966e5f9dc8256f8078cb7d792
99e6e276aaa783217082b9cb3759f4414ce95903
describe
'16976' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLC' 'sip-files00157.pro'
8ee19b1727021c7ee6bc9b3cf96ebda5
49ac6f1638e5e9edd2e80723957a2d91a67f3bba
describe
'21564' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLD' 'sip-files00157.QC.jpg'
b67573ce9a2074ee8f5dc4a610c18bce
5cdcf51f56f8dd927ef92ac291738b85fb6950cc
'2011-11-16T08:47:43-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLE' 'sip-files00157.tif'
83bedd7dcb1e19d87f135341e7a257d4
790c17e118d5ea63c96141b5f2c3369788d98bc7
describe
'893' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLF' 'sip-files00157.txt'
19b633b38d611639af3a36adb0a26770
f9e70ab383a231df2564273083edd3320dc7f39b
describe
Invalid character
'6062' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLG' 'sip-files00157thm.jpg'
f22559a085a57989c1c303c6cf2f73e9
961c3fa1ece90a27989ddb0928d1471a224e1a75
describe
'1149635' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLH' 'sip-files00158.jp2'
be6d2e46980fc041c14e45347dfac5af
85b99f7c8b4f39296fcf0343c461e9841bf07deb
describe
'74735' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLI' 'sip-files00158.jpg'
dbd418fff81987fc5ef8d4e14c7606c8
9cbbb17463f656c57f839da3960b779d26319983
describe
'29063' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLJ' 'sip-files00158.pro'
184aa182e8fb7e75529df120ace5b80b
e115582a886c61455c031d70b80a12755acd7d5f
describe
'27880' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLK' 'sip-files00158.QC.jpg'
b77c3e6bff9f85fa396950b802ae52b0
0934ead374f4706e0a62f4f4fff4d7f6c449324e
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLL' 'sip-files00158.tif'
d9d2603d6cfc914ab1e6ff77ebd009fa
a393d92c20489ece11b32d199683601bc424df21
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLM' 'sip-files00158.txt'
f23a875c15a8a30361724564743e5361
018a402c760b7962cad4258aa16353e7122069c8
describe
'7761' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLN' 'sip-files00158thm.jpg'
2a456c6fcc01382a3aff8408a88cf7fc
692dbe9379d27e5d3ccfdabb5fc111109d9ceaef
describe
'1114969' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLO' 'sip-files00159.jp2'
6ac706a729704794a2e1296f404c10a2
fe84a9514509591595ad2816d6fc388d4526b352
describe
'65272' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLP' 'sip-files00159.jpg'
b15f570268bf2b84890b07691aee57b4
ecf55df7e80e60eeaef32d6cb44f5d8dc93f69c1
describe
'25012' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLQ' 'sip-files00159.pro'
00dd5c9ec0c1201e63a2d2c793fe3d61
500dbaaac4d4d5c7b3de00fc836297b41045d86c
'2011-11-16T08:49:10-05:00'
describe
'24241' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLR' 'sip-files00159.QC.jpg'
2bff720f874d33a9d5e74f1be0728e51
b223ce924871314d76d5849c13690b3abf88ab17
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLS' 'sip-files00159.tif'
0b4fea0a8137ce112478f2cd09c3bb91
39ad90cfc3977cc4dce20b9fbd7345eda71770cc
describe
'1035' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLT' 'sip-files00159.txt'
a9b4e89a8a5ef52cf0567b963a94f344
20254dcd822edf2174a35a72e3758551f9812075
describe
'7230' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLU' 'sip-files00159thm.jpg'
d34bf5b1291624c5eb4e57d2b464550a
e44b345270fe68907d3ea466a152131e11b70082
describe
'1135358' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLV' 'sip-files00160.jp2'
8b70e14fb417f5f771801c10136df697
b427260f82974587900649c1cbedd7b795887542
'2011-11-16T08:48:47-05:00'
describe
'71833' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLW' 'sip-files00160.jpg'
68cea2c6f95071d15073fafca378c68e
410e15802cf0e18f9388137cacdb7d64b2b3829d
describe
'28071' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLX' 'sip-files00160.pro'
6fe1f92f1dae47b31edd3f541d90aaf3
49966c056020d00617d9a3004695f3431c292018
describe
'26517' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLY' 'sip-files00160.QC.jpg'
ca6fcaef1b625bd9ac4edab66a82484c
257598171268c920a9e9c57931ac48e8ffae9d16
describe
'9092427' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGLZ' 'sip-files00160.tif'
5372d699d87c1cdb86f40f752d1502bf
698c335bca83ef98b608a702e735dee65b7314f9
'2011-11-16T08:47:16-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMA' 'sip-files00160.txt'
f82d0c648500dcec2dbc24a7cc62ca7c
71115a5d2ee055d3559f9b409889f34201590cac
describe
'7307' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMB' 'sip-files00160thm.jpg'
38dee2c2052e4606c4f00dc246caf2e6
1bbe8a4b27996ccba58ccc41d271a84a548ac3a0
describe
'1125527' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMC' 'sip-files00161.jp2'
a2f61f799ef1ea4e92bf9ef6a0a087fe
2bd0a819cf7e8ce5ba9abe4baafe07c3564b6860
describe
'74681' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMD' 'sip-files00161.jpg'
d68d02eebf8643c70ea0b49937f7bb39
21e149d37fcf5cbd59914678563085d69ad2e5e4
describe
'29610' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGME' 'sip-files00161.pro'
ca62c77d241fdad4f37226306f6fcc4b
845cd10f69104591f76c67de5692eaa17ae33911
'2011-11-16T08:48:23-05:00'
describe
'27530' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMF' 'sip-files00161.QC.jpg'
8ea382038bafc92a5b69ce37f58117d6
54c3da28cf1fdca4adb85315107c368780af7986
describe
'9014469' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMG' 'sip-files00161.tif'
e6ae28bd3da17e99bc27c3190fdeb2f1
e618a85918ddf90b1585ca6cdd8e8be056ab4ad4
describe
'1200' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMH' 'sip-files00161.txt'
9a1eb8390b60d56e1fab24a0b6296324
12f53f34d4e084be27e8372ed12ad1243d97befc
describe
'7826' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMI' 'sip-files00161thm.jpg'
2de4366201a4cc5b2a73fb1634bff423
6b35130fa2321bb6dd2ad96178c269fdd1a975ef
describe
'1142216' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMJ' 'sip-files00162.jp2'
ec54c95eb10d21489951c778a244688b
775f68c9a45d3c94171f9616e4246a134387dab0
describe
'75914' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMK' 'sip-files00162.jpg'
cc62b47e7ebbd04ddae774565c5b9497
f4d7e5c02279390ebc698d304226e5af26157432
describe
'29216' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGML' 'sip-files00162.pro'
764cfd45662533753551b8b8a0fba317
6be8be037b4836ca5046f77eff893e8e4676852e
describe
'27759' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMM' 'sip-files00162.QC.jpg'
9b6a513ef0592be4dbf1c51191afb8dd
54cc41c4a60d64912a6bdbb4c6aff7ad1d858eba
describe
'9147337' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMN' 'sip-files00162.tif'
860e0e18532c33ed8f9933d2330ea6a6
e562d7b0c46496f171741f578ed52a99ac8a3829
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMO' 'sip-files00162.txt'
73eaf86dfeb905da6e2920cb2a877333
a0d290b8016bf899d884ce6d595a055704d143fd
describe
'7990' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMP' 'sip-files00162thm.jpg'
e0a60c1c70b9e2a004b385d2c7b8a939
001735816c6ed0fde0196208d22e43ef7b4ecb6c
describe
'1098840' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMQ' 'sip-files00163.jp2'
07881da04fb45b302a1e92a6772a4c1a
fdc26cc51545ef3a951460efc149eaa7268f7f7b
'2011-11-16T08:48:15-05:00'
describe
'64881' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMR' 'sip-files00163.jpg'
e45e2a8f4cd9122579dde278d7f1ddbe
0a987611fca02d4d4d0791b3a1feb65864ac8f5b
describe
'23439' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMS' 'sip-files00163.pro'
00611e1e9d16dcf31d9ee2c6c430bdc8
7bab1549d94889809cee5ed59d19c7eaadf9af56
describe
'23585' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMT' 'sip-files00163.QC.jpg'
68af74fd8451f6307a1e76db8880d235
9137eb84113d0c3ba9ed08ae48d22f1d27d57db5
describe
'8800115' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMU' 'sip-files00163.tif'
cc9cb9f141caa1286f0a86b82c0280a7
b241fa1dca8f9fb86758208e0268972eaacbda68
'2011-11-16T08:52:40-05:00'
describe
'973' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMV' 'sip-files00163.txt'
ca911fb5dda35e5b137ac9346f180af1
e7375e0f2d6cd84a8033df647985f47273aaed66
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMW' 'sip-files00163thm.jpg'
de16b045563d458ad586a4923f1ed23b
637cfcc06086058145086ddad8e5d51848b2c656
describe
'768356' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMX' 'sip-files00164.jp2'
59a809d21356a1ce98ab895d747a2a9a
ee35f5ae04f792295a7e06bd906b1094d48de411
describe
'20341' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMY' 'sip-files00164.jpg'
5f16367d9de74e2bbbf55de22d7c4bd0
8319f48163e91a1450463895ebf49def940fc8fa
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGMZ' 'sip-files00164.pro'
67c37dfcd066f7f3fef8f289931bd67f
3bba90497e2a750c2922e0389914a048c724bf52
describe
'5203' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNA' 'sip-files00164.QC.jpg'
fb03d80efc659bde82b78c37b25c7f4a
af681ed35531492b6fe9271c862fa9d5ae6821cd
describe
'8767139' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNB' 'sip-files00164.tif'
6a61556109385bc817ab89ee4e23f991
86c94028985e569a9c87e3d78c51a168990ac0ae
describe
'1466' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNC' 'sip-files00164thm.jpg'
99414ee5b7cf8024f02cadb2e5184c2e
7836819d5cb5a28f7af679584bf1e0b19ccfda1b
describe
'1247017' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGND' 'sip-files00165.jp2'
fbdbbcffc35aee4a63f3e7d7a271940a
3a2ac1b11d2da89b229633c69ca055646bbbaf92
describe
'113885' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNE' 'sip-files00165.jpg'
075899873fa7b0a14cb894649c89b63d
e89a54bc6d0263432fc2721390cc3d5ee62a4256
describe
'453' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNF' 'sip-files00165.pro'
a75ec932355b102108168ca81bdbccce
91630501185937eb11d162bdd08c81faddae83b6
describe
'30772' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNG' 'sip-files00165.QC.jpg'
3c3ba1ac8fd2598183b0963422b49989
c962c4d96c7eaf3bf97006b77fdf41bd270fb7c1
describe
'9986475' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNH' 'sip-files00165.tif'
048472d3590f5992f2429a44b9eb0383
dcaed9b0426ed20ffb0cd57e923492f6027c2087
describe
'130' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNI' 'sip-files00165.txt'
29fcdd808f9230dda531a33af12df31f
2b023f08e78a2639404279adf29fec383cf09ff3
describe
'7762' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNJ' 'sip-files00165thm.jpg'
625a8195bd175058dbb8235dbf2af302
0a53a83fea45269f2d386cae2d38a73570916624
describe
'1155304' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNK' 'sip-files00166.jp2'
49e0e09310dc615498f383cefbccf6e6
0a29332830ec1f49a4b7bbfd0942272828f99f48
describe
'69643' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNL' 'sip-files00166.jpg'
2ff9c9f4c8afb7511d4974a8e9c8f23f
8a21bda0b383699c834d782efd96168569b55f4e
describe
'17130' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNM' 'sip-files00166.pro'
c1c21ad694d1277f57ce678142f78a48
90ba0a5497951a652dfc9d340688559871287091
describe
'22506' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNN' 'sip-files00166.QC.jpg'
4098d2a9ba1c88529c127db4b4c089a2
a6fe25282ca8d66533415564550c63a005c88272
describe
'9251909' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNO' 'sip-files00166.tif'
9456dc072a2d86026813f2a8684b10fa
2fa5ef44e6453ad4414848692e239f580db3d81b
describe
'854' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNP' 'sip-files00166.txt'
85f993c9c1800faf33ee4302c9276207
d0520ca8a8609d6a30a2740cf00a394dc9a678f7
describe
'6283' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNQ' 'sip-files00166thm.jpg'
a1d209d91b3ab435069710e496b7c175
53727e5a97412785e8bcd518e0e4fb2c35ebf209
describe
'1072191' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNR' 'sip-files00167.jp2'
2d14935dd76729d6d04e36d5d9a805d8
08d2d3ab3e686195ae1b567d5c3fbb38566ef589
describe
'79310' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNS' 'sip-files00167.jpg'
9af8baf44b76d0a6fdc3e155bbb31103
d68bb852861495cf209999ee4e1707f9cd871054
describe
'28383' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNT' 'sip-files00167.pro'
f88aded5a90f3631ec8d06d832ad5d9b
d781a57a834501ffb601bd0333ae8b87aad1a6d3
describe
'29783' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNU' 'sip-files00167.QC.jpg'
fd1adc8b5fe763bfd073a8730871abc4
b81f0808bb70f12dcc9daa670b4e6ade80565669
describe
'8586809' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNV' 'sip-files00167.tif'
cab9cbdeb75c6fd228c66f833150f6a5
8813327d2a0ad1fbe77d60115dbbf8914ce6035e
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNW' 'sip-files00167.txt'
5cb9cf746d396dc9cacd8f4fca1b160e
3f710cf7609962c7fcc682ee2580dd9ec73cbbab
describe
'8662' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNX' 'sip-files00167thm.jpg'
33918495ea83cefa6afbb78ede204236
6b5caf0d28355fb2c59ff44481d2b7cc68d638f4
describe
'1113295' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNY' 'sip-files00168.jp2'
d5198d462f84aea0008fd335852fd4e1
fbeb0b3ff9e9d9d85819169237bb4606e82d84fb
describe
'69088' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGNZ' 'sip-files00168.jpg'
10830a486c32694f6fc79c37fb3a9fd2
649f259952887af6241f0b0f336016933d040463
describe
'23819' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOA' 'sip-files00168.pro'
ab701d556fcfdf92a9cd9271b5714efc
bd460534056e10b2ec12bd7a95ad247c0e9c39ee
describe
'25321' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOB' 'sip-files00168.QC.jpg'
5c44137c32eb725a003fe2d2b930595b
879b8934a7b269cbc48a410c2cc0d406dd77c3d4
describe
'8915895' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOC' 'sip-files00168.tif'
9f449605a2fd252a41ea275427615876
9475570af1e6cd34f0fe0ce017f4dc93827ff3a2
describe
'986' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOD' 'sip-files00168.txt'
4434638811acb02b35f70a241a272d78
db082d29ed702ab84f04ca22c911c434cb69a126
describe
'7548' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOE' 'sip-files00168thm.jpg'
3158ff5a8d0b28713e397c88c376efbb
e4ee3448d0f90df273a75cda3f9493fbce847e15
describe
'1091216' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOF' 'sip-files00169.jp2'
e05f15ca54dc92b95d4ada0e22e0a299
7c2572cda63134eb38309da41e213dba6fb8b644
describe
'69054' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOG' 'sip-files00169.jpg'
283038c97826aa13d507c214373e6bdf
dd82d582748774519d090e09afaf02140d031917
describe
'25066' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOH' 'sip-files00169.pro'
88f7d6780bb8462c2e02a04da0b656a2
b720df14028712dbfdd07a06fb8228f8286da9cf
describe
'25478' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOI' 'sip-files00169.QC.jpg'
5dbc33ce695bc7af042262fb50e44ab8
1d485f6d36250f035a483008d3967feacd52f032
describe
'8739929' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOJ' 'sip-files00169.tif'
04096445b0ed218d717597dc566c8738
d15cf4ad53d8e26d1f2ab3cd412abf79d68c7e72
describe
'1038' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOK' 'sip-files00169.txt'
c99a9e2e4cd05dc6941babb25d5e3741
6dbf90f4ac690542dc76569a427a117e0980a6f1
describe
'7850' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOL' 'sip-files00169thm.jpg'
d0fe9d9121238ae0971bf32c5ffd6e3e
c8d442dc2c8a7d8a44cd9bd324bc61af5dbf7ba2
describe
'917359' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOM' 'sip-files00170.jp2'
800a73a94e72d9e0f88ff84a7653ac44
d6bf5b606829c0efdef06112469498da29ce89a9
describe
'30078' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGON' 'sip-files00170.jpg'
98ce40c6e6ed043562dbf9d8d544d7ca
7cab555e1a2fdd307cf8445189a940b76fbc0c64
describe
'6097' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOO' 'sip-files00170.pro'
6a37a8e71db70363067e472587ca24dc
807f54e24b4c6fb374e5a246bbbcd62e61175b21
describe
'9655' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOP' 'sip-files00170.QC.jpg'
756d9906d752b0234333b57b75df4176
5717a1ea67983acbf88c69501b1e44e1aae3cd6b
describe
'9262379' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOQ' 'sip-files00170.tif'
1a0c5420c6392a9bb29549d2720088db
a2857f441c8f0af6cb976f7d7cc68080f330ab73
describe
'276' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOR' 'sip-files00170.txt'
a3813c1f437e750b73c98aed9e13d093
e43f204134f4894fafa21d89df5ca483feb349c9
'2011-11-16T08:51:32-05:00'
describe
'2887' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOS' 'sip-files00170thm.jpg'
70dda3d3c425d26e9e2475c46ed56fee
eee73445497c3584072818596e1ada9d9027b793
describe
'1124129' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOT' 'sip-files00171.jp2'
b55cd30073eb25b77e1c82c253d9d5ab
bba9925e45cb3c0fad35bf2e2e11cc1a1d115baf
'2011-11-16T08:47:07-05:00'
describe
'72818' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOU' 'sip-files00171.jpg'
140bf29e92b6254e390f54b727b77757
9c1fc47c72b6da2ad2711e87b8d810596dc2e9b0
describe
'19804' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOV' 'sip-files00171.pro'
8e2a724126d6878f0fca64e2b4e6ff8a
6503e18dc83ea4a6739c35a7ef2b207accae3462
describe
'23826' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOW' 'sip-files00171.QC.jpg'
86f34fb99e6da2eca0481ccf7893db63
63a23978db800cd68b88edd7a14d797ba3c6e509
describe
'9002865' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOX' 'sip-files00171.tif'
af892565030092a85c69b9fcf677431d
01b915e50e6043cbe52ad746a2cc3ab38249fa94
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOY' 'sip-files00171.txt'
4ffa68211f740788f236b08e4a77a03e
95c7b59b46f90d1cf2f79ef7797de6a26c105ecd
describe
Invalid character
'6591' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGOZ' 'sip-files00171thm.jpg'
16e16194aad94812e8bb3f4cd2960ea2
8172196acd750a94ddf38f6c24fd29e78b70cae3
'2011-11-16T08:47:40-05:00'
describe
'1172590' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPA' 'sip-files00172.jp2'
3595bfbdfb48bedc1b36f925ff891608
b9d370ff777df96b3371007c1dc24d1111e9134c
describe
'79442' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPB' 'sip-files00172.jpg'
c139c610bac8b9844d4fdc1c21414e50
ffbe52e073f7793a384aee68e56b6a31bdbd55cc
describe
'30507' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPC' 'sip-files00172.pro'
fa927204d9c965c08fd0aee954b77ab3
2ca3d830c424e81e1e8568e1b1e4f8492d09ab41
describe
'29623' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPD' 'sip-files00172.QC.jpg'
08b3d4d927c9324d72009a5580f4a37c
7805f0bf375cfc1d5b595202bf33b149d6cf466f
describe
'9390241' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPE' 'sip-files00172.tif'
21f836e3af9d538dae383bd5f65f45a4
6a19136ec9f6daa434a9b799f9279cfad6bb6bbe
describe
'1225' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPF' 'sip-files00172.txt'
2ca35284859c9395a8dc570b4b6b2202
309c2aea6567b5bfca8c7ed17f6965bf6b68ca66
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPG' 'sip-files00172thm.jpg'
987ab743fba64c17f337bb7265cdad55
f0b5c0c78c16bb76e3d0b1fdaf755056b6236d15
describe
'1119843' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPH' 'sip-files00173.jp2'
02e22effecf4fcc81c1f0522f1f39fcf
e9bad299ccd7db2bdc89372691bc46a2996882cf
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPI' 'sip-files00173.jpg'
179ac9185808490dd1aae20b6016135f
2aac8e34cd8c5c3bae5ad0e1fffb3a323eb1d467
describe
'29042' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPJ' 'sip-files00173.pro'
7a56143e504f6aa6732976ad406a0505
3d70c8b85c6852aae0af4b0f35e4d69c0383fdd6
describe
'27058' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPK' 'sip-files00173.QC.jpg'
c751010576907e23c702430586589818
128ec376826eedc845005c6bb114c0789d8d7f58
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPL' 'sip-files00173.tif'
489cadae8ec2303e8fbf74ce25906c0a
18062741e10cf026ed1d0b2f79a3fbd75074c187
describe
'1186' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPM' 'sip-files00173.txt'
1a5a174478b7414a4d6cc2c5358fd5d3
17b4739fbaa43743904dceb3ead09e66cdf1b4a3
describe
'7874' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPN' 'sip-files00173thm.jpg'
7f23dfb29ec54fe39e6698a1982df4a1
8eac83230276f9d786374faffc208efd85128702
describe
'1149262' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPO' 'sip-files00174.jp2'
7cb866391eb4035aa9b9539f635f058e
981ff627a3e10a9f07a256d31a9b2d01c3674c51
describe
'69956' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPP' 'sip-files00174.jpg'
896e24e3354720bb1ab67e957e61bf97
65aa0b931f0d34d42d3f8562cb047351ea08b2dc
describe
'27224' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPQ' 'sip-files00174.pro'
93c52c3db0297099d0c1377db59e32ca
b9f5c8bb03356489decfd3b013c8eea95b77ef24
describe
'25243' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPR' 'sip-files00174.QC.jpg'
7c5faff6a2ac3a5ad8db4d8c2c335509
6f111de46478ae567967b58236394f44feb23b1d
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPS' 'sip-files00174.tif'
70dc91028110565e56ca8823aeb5dda1
49c38cb0029f30b9f2bc154ad639f605cea28f6b
describe
'1100' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPT' 'sip-files00174.txt'
371c4cd5aeedb3b6a42b3ef2def7c1cf
af2b897c13d62e01aef595eb44630f6754c40707
describe
'7083' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPU' 'sip-files00174thm.jpg'
e213599a51e9046df697e78a69871d40
4e04e4313d5b46abfb08eef5c90b642972b16307
describe
'1126372' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPV' 'sip-files00175.jp2'
3cdc9fdf8b9a419873746e33503ece54
bb6f386f6c6cdf37db22f942988cc5ffb507dd9e
describe
'75169' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPW' 'sip-files00175.jpg'
2e440a5bcd210804c9a5238714c481be
7e1fc740de0c4b99e78a47de27014841431f0098
describe
'26830' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPX' 'sip-files00175.pro'
c366caed5be41eba53cfb46959678dd1
b3cb3e44a6af3b30c625489b0b24242f61383da7
describe
'28003' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPY' 'sip-files00175.QC.jpg'
25ce8a9c81a95adacbab0771d4eee5c4
697a37ae89460c33555956aae890e3933fc41b8f
describe
'9021063' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGPZ' 'sip-files00175.tif'
319db36a52fa26a77d225f028d8340eb
0f0f01f7a3097b161d4baf02ec761933a8bbcdad
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQA' 'sip-files00175.txt'
3fb7bc403697fed8b5bc6e235bd69d9b
7d1b0505efc1ef1235e1c4adb8c4db8806964780
describe
'8193' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQB' 'sip-files00175thm.jpg'
b73e599c968c6f32d2c6f2e6c5a3eca4
417153111583be1f20b5da7de80b5d7cb936462f
describe
'1073657' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQC' 'sip-files00176.jp2'
273af150fa010534072bbc5f037a595d
46b410ba95ce72efe0962a3fc6d9b61a316ba90c
describe
'79441' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQD' 'sip-files00176.jpg'
c681b5d1192b18487ef3e35aedb30254
48bafe98f696fd33591ac66dbbc4cfcec79cd336
describe
'28571' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQE' 'sip-files00176.pro'
8f6b370ed931a131cbba0b18ec988454
a79ba50964e183880ff235ee77bd6970d281b293
describe
'29544' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQF' 'sip-files00176.QC.jpg'
af2a05120720b2e31037250621f53d27
8ffb27214e7642b2f34954d0fe0595145075e37b
describe
'8598595' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQG' 'sip-files00176.tif'
b0217aa4ca03d626a27d343785ec6fd9
2f711b349ec9964000d40785e8855662137a66ed
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQH' 'sip-files00176.txt'
0fbaa6646a4fc2e58edb68549058b6b1
9b79e4fb78b6e297610b375ccb2fb51eee4717ee
'2011-11-16T08:48:07-05:00'
describe
'8386' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQI' 'sip-files00176thm.jpg'
f9268f1d4c15a486e59905ff9223b436
512ca8287b7bd7568d02de1f50e9aef5797688c2
describe
'996848' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQJ' 'sip-files00177.jp2'
a192ebecb1829e759adceec17369f797
84abeb157d9f327cd0b33ec1c37d7884fd9ff9ab
describe
'56393' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQK' 'sip-files00177.jpg'
1fba50733f30334b987eb49676fd45aa
c20e896f480d7539dbe00728c6e6f26ddd4c1cdf
describe
'17998' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQL' 'sip-files00177.pro'
54f87db80c6df8f2b17a96773372a552
816dd2fb340548a3d52b4c22b70ce2fb2c4fc810
describe
'21096' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQM' 'sip-files00177.QC.jpg'
b08c1603b6e4091aa54dc2d0124b4026
2db1667ba4fc64abcd977fdd3379b2b3b874e4c7
describe
'8569269' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQN' 'sip-files00177.tif'
765f0d833c0da39eb54b09149c528a99
e66e0ea9d79718b0b299465db18281f8faae47bd
describe
'733' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQO' 'sip-files00177.txt'
d611ebf1f43ccaa4d3cfc649268fa140
763e58bbbf190a5b73e86ab7c5ca99a676937425
describe
'6502' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQP' 'sip-files00177thm.jpg'
65da6f97019cbafdeb9c562deb4e4a8a
aecfb8478fdbd7f8967d40bd2bb36bf426dbbfe8
'2011-11-16T08:52:09-05:00'
describe
'1168225' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQQ' 'sip-files00178.jp2'
ae6eeaa7fbba64862dc49152ae498a8c
a3e3fe01f53b689e49e3b1ac5ee83fb98327305c
describe
'69453' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQR' 'sip-files00178.jpg'
3bf2ee0248861de8c3c414b4c6de575d
74a85329ea55c8618b1f53f6901176355852f47c
describe
'20051' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQS' 'sip-files00178.pro'
e4429ef8dc2561dd4f54af86d557032d
cb09dd6cf7d89f2359ffe4911d544511840a77bc
describe
'23622' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQT' 'sip-files00178.QC.jpg'
af111ef09460c6049f814cb5b5af171c
5981a8752e2c0435e27fa6d41b212c4cfbf2b1f1
describe
'9355143' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQU' 'sip-files00178.tif'
66ab7d6f878a94bbd11caa9334db9def
c61ad72efec7a568cb0c0ddf7bc57ef4be68b3b3
describe
'1024' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQV' 'sip-files00178.txt'
43a1d181017672ba4078ba933848590c
a10a500e874a7eacc1ffdcfd6a041f68346f9f16
describe
'6843' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQW' 'sip-files00178thm.jpg'
6829a0ab204cd2df0bc93ae49d591b85
8476215aa40cdfb3037621ea5a902b9ec37fa1e2
describe
'1093924' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQX' 'sip-files00179.jp2'
88cfecdb7dcbeeb8a52dab626ef534b8
ce7df90c5d78da0cb051e6582d6384bfb195a0ac
describe
'73155' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQY' 'sip-files00179.jpg'
fd195307c6543134ebed6d250321b7fd
e907b1f6d921c40582e8ee3161291abe5cfc6197
describe
'27918' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGQZ' 'sip-files00179.pro'
cab65bb54aaad595f1d317366a232322
da58960da639c31f5ea3947f1c2b79fefa2ad93d
describe
'27567' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRA' 'sip-files00179.QC.jpg'
279441e0bd2446ea1693d6e5c475103e
f0f9d1afb4a36892e4caea0f954c2fa0620263ab
describe
'8761131' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRB' 'sip-files00179.tif'
ceb7e199ca7b97dcffddc97b3e36c4d3
e19fa67bac6a1933989f718063b26d90992a3f26
'2011-11-16T08:50:38-05:00'
describe
'3824' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRC' 'sip-filesback.txt'
ab1bd87258c7c912d31f50a7ec9edfd0
12e6e981cd070fac3caa86a976b71b38a0ab2310
describe
Invalid character
'1142' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRD' 'sip-files00179.txt'
87d0f82d72a4c49b0d17d16d6e1bd6a8
ceb67337cf29c2830f42d1d1af073122ef930036
describe
'7973' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRE' 'sip-files00179thm.jpg'
c55cc042528940063e23c389206668f1
6d2317204c2a28f723fb234737096eb9b4d34557
describe
'1136800' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRF' 'sip-files00180.jp2'
00a7e4d1aeea930183c1c70250baa486
0393146d1f957f962cc2dbcf02231340b4ae8b15
describe
'70717' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRG' 'sip-files00180.jpg'
ff7feb53a552bbd80a86528aa5726921
ee4a96c9c8b6a509b468bd0436a11bd67124ee02
describe
'27634' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRH' 'sip-files00180.pro'
23c262bb129f799e6806421aa69e751d
b5bf897bab0fd132c2a1c8587f80d2d1da944c38
describe
'26474' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRI' 'sip-files00180.QC.jpg'
aa9fecfe72e52fdd3252ca90c8ab2f95
9c649d9eaa8fefb5a94423907c45dcd7ce1eeec9
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRJ' 'sip-files00180.tif'
cb2b33f02b14b198624950762b8215f5
a456224bc5458ed8c6e4f4f6afd46c13affb3a85
'2011-11-16T08:47:02-05:00'
describe
'1112' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRK' 'sip-files00180.txt'
e7a78c661d984c703992fcc7c2a157ad
769f357c2c50edc559e935b07eabb2dc531f79b8
describe
'7665' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRL' 'sip-files00180thm.jpg'
a864eebed22c1048586fdfb62c4eacbf
92eb0fb2f6a312d50bd923e5849b087e0b481403
describe
'1118521' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRM' 'sip-files00181.jp2'
8a21d535def8be1b935437673e974838
7000cce5fffc8d76fb58673a4be871a3996a64ad
describe
'76079' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRN' 'sip-files00181.jpg'
fc778f476a14c3441f50c3dba2f31291
db7d0ee2a1be3177b54c48e0e78a654b0207f4e4
describe
'27480' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRO' 'sip-files00181.pro'
a71b48b09e968ae8f684ef792191100e
55cfc2d42e5e7c71566e6eb6b235b61bfca6b359
describe
'28409' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRP' 'sip-files00181.QC.jpg'
db881d79b55337eaa18ef654b879965c
34c1110d1ed05e9147c3f4e8f73f84662e028219
describe
'8958621' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRQ' 'sip-files00181.tif'
4d56a3996d776d543a0a1948f15476c8
a1396614fa0e8fd94cf7c96e654cca4a5202a201
describe
'1120' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRR' 'sip-files00181.txt'
6b0a08946cab8456fe646f89163d920b
6608823e7d2db1deb563ca595d2f5a320e4bda44
describe
'8483' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRS' 'sip-files00181thm.jpg'
5806d4f55f1518269101576bd62f1f40
8cc87e216d5010eba09fcf1603708a266d6b5974
describe
'1128605' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRT' 'sip-files00182.jp2'
86a85b107e27bedaf98e3330d91b42d7
819eeedbc17ec2a5406a47ca4f30614a59d327b6
describe
'74951' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRU' 'sip-files00182.jpg'
2ce49841450ad3d699e5dd152d11f67c
fed0b4d1a1b65c6c8b671d9be52364393a80a51c
describe
'28715' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRV' 'sip-files00182.pro'
18be55fb9fd96576d79fc6c0b908638e
28d841985cf951858f0329b3b22ad910c112edda
describe
'27499' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRW' 'sip-files00182.QC.jpg'
d1229b0bf86f7f016a190bebdf91f7f7
86f2842877a43b2bf495552b65c262dd657d773d
describe
'9038275' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRX' 'sip-files00182.tif'
96659f2b431dc4677ce7118f73ca31a7
e2fbe87d2ef8e06489c77a2c7a515b4197726311
describe
'1163' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRY' 'sip-files00182.txt'
e820b246d63409c62feebe2e29bda2e6
77396bc274ed08e401d9ff3797c7e2feb38c9a78
describe
'7914' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGRZ' 'sip-files00182thm.jpg'
c286c03087ae736a3ec3435bcfb2f2d0
7213f9490f1bbc6170a7b2df3756bea96614fcaf
describe
'1133926' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSA' 'sip-files00183.jp2'
0e9c8f02fba810c12fe8b9d68d9ea56f
4e59ef57ca8b6ae0238b4b003703f9698fffb93d
describe
'70163' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSB' 'sip-files00183.jpg'
585a188541f13e2d1d6bad42596f14fc
7775fb610cd2bf5b7ceeb9c45f4dbc22c8058416
describe
'27165' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSC' 'sip-files00183.pro'
60eb4dd051859b6838dbdc39dbf1b343
78faa751e91219199b43250fe727e39e05a37ed9
describe
'25740' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSD' 'sip-files00183.QC.jpg'
c3f4b557bd75280d203597d2174ce99f
2f47568fd1abba7d978570dced7d0bfe083903be
'2011-11-16T08:48:03-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSE' 'sip-files00183.tif'
23fb08a16ea946911843c94133084857
adbc42b5341b842f8cb520b44dff13807b539717
describe
'1094' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSF' 'sip-files00183.txt'
29bdb371eaeb4ed16235eed22b7be759
7cf9d906fbeb73b29812b03de25181ffd1486ebd
describe
'7736' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSG' 'sip-files00183thm.jpg'
658841e25cdae1651d36d8a549d75a96
b100cd7c6e26807cab70d804eaf5e947254a16f9
describe
'1142209' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSH' 'sip-files00184.jp2'
d63d16953e98ab10745a67931d125457
775fa13b9b8b87c4ce0793d0a6129a661532b16c
describe
'71815' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSI' 'sip-files00184.jpg'
4ebec787576224c5b740ccccff8903d6
79f55bbe9692673f35afb7805b3687225852b0b3
describe
'27378' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSJ' 'sip-files00184.pro'
af481974592c99492f12b22161a56cb9
c1cce1faed76a08d54d7ae78475e6c1da9a04f36
describe
'26345' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSK' 'sip-files00184.QC.jpg'
8e86583988f22d5199f27f082b0367ef
824cac9edb011c94e2d2a6ba08eb529c11b65bc0
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSL' 'sip-files00184.tif'
53bd1752697a104dff33697f0e11db80
98e7879e9e287310c48cd0f8fdf9c8c97e3dddda
describe
'1113' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSM' 'sip-files00184.txt'
7583249dacee4aecdda95baa5fefb0e0
fea2530e45aba964549ac35c8e52df5d9ee48d0f
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSN' 'sip-files00184thm.jpg'
034c38378bd308483e2b053dbfa9a644
9391ca9a8d3499f0637ed1d8ce9e90341215634f
describe
'1170648' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSO' 'sip-files00185.jp2'
4ce2f5b61c32b7f28c165245fbc209ec
d54fcfb4ce59c4824cd3a8bb6142834b6a68968b
describe
'66281' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSP' 'sip-files00185.jpg'
95b5ed19bec8e7c11bbd2466bccfca6f
36c6a4eaf6f58c379261b43656876aff3970814e
describe
'24685' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSQ' 'sip-files00185.pro'
aba7de89c97b2517c76daa9ae01dc745
6d4a60711322a1bbc010c6cea6ee1797fd556082
describe
'24377' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSR' 'sip-files00185.QC.jpg'
22bf80bcd050e97692e429f5d12d9a1b
3a5657412d654ef666f2c0eefb5470732df02db0
describe
'9374969' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSS' 'sip-files00185.tif'
dd5bfe8d757fa8089c28b6356e1fa55e
550de9749d4d627c2fb271005ea1ba9088e087ea
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGST' 'sip-files00185.txt'
d726ab77ad7d6c2502678a612c7698ef
9529110609c052a2f4026c5a0c82b932fe6915c9
describe
'7049' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSU' 'sip-files00185thm.jpg'
c9eade520c984d1303c5332e44460561
e334805e47557b068111f83365c04eff9e35f8c3
describe
'1204320' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSV' 'sip-files00186.jp2'
8987dcffd2966d44d2a1269bca6ba759
d117ef14b141b360af6e5148f7bec5b90fb5223b
describe
'71711' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSW' 'sip-files00186.jpg'
fc2cfdd8938b84b636d06fbcf0d4ea51
f45ae365157ec9619384e5ea27983ff6879d05da
describe
'28035' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSX' 'sip-files00186.pro'
2959fdfcf26a30ed52eaa00732ed75be
fe6bf6437bde0141ca57c60b23efd693935f4318
describe
'26822' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSY' 'sip-files00186.QC.jpg'
0d0758cd46d245c7b5bcaf4eed7a583c
1fc7dac804c2c6063deed381a852010fce2f4827
describe
'9644779' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGSZ' 'sip-files00186.tif'
63ff4a4aa7160a8218fee13116b02877
47efd5b7e914872c83aef05e765875346a5c6b47
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTA' 'sip-files00186.txt'
b76ec8dd83438222e7fac1cdf2467ffd
f26bfa2b7475d86c9fcd4852f93d5aa4178ca1fa
describe
'7493' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTB' 'sip-files00186thm.jpg'
0de38dba447be14fad97aebf4f0e5d72
65139e621976371593f510c7db98b0a248786d09
describe
'989179' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTC' 'sip-files00187.jp2'
934bb2e4e99d9d98fb179ba178b6ce2a
af868926495a08e9b001b48d81e041c703b28601
describe
'49204' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTD' 'sip-files00187.jpg'
bdb7ede86b68e90f2186ffef10b7522b
0218cceaa5a4dcff63edf09158d5a24b5354a5af
describe
'14408' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTE' 'sip-files00187.pro'
96d1193d78202b02e72ad7e61e3a5b57
d27c086b557123e69830942e2390639af7ff3462
describe
'17364' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTF' 'sip-files00187.QC.jpg'
972fe48c0f3a38aabe0b62de2a373ed1
c87e5dbd41259398932c239703f38bcd54b03e52
describe
'8806709' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTG' 'sip-files00187.tif'
ed4ce007075e6a7ea9fe8dcb53e7fe3f
5e4f64196309487b6ee66e654d69ca54347e917d
describe
'592' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTH' 'sip-files00187.txt'
76f5682bf5b0c923defe810da976a942
66dafdeced868c8cc51ce9195a181fe67ed54b98
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTI' 'sip-files00187thm.jpg'
0a391a8e1044d4d382947f35bc79875d
5aac3f5c9fe557cdc9c870d570249aa729ef73ad
describe
'922590' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTJ' 'sip-files00188.jp2'
6a366f9691932646c2262b66deacf06e
de01b71c1ca789e3e10a7f25c704af5f366bc3d3
describe
'24620' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTK' 'sip-files00188.jpg'
d9c68c902b127bbda98133858a3b60fe
f2b3261efaeec5f10d6ee5f16ea0c9b5e608d0f6
describe
'283' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTL' 'sip-files00188.pro'
8b4f1b361acf8bee64b379fe75117fec
7abeb472127fd8ddcd90dc126b9a9e3731222113
describe
'5974' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTM' 'sip-files00188.QC.jpg'
e8333827d569e1a4359d6201284a0a4c
45dea1418269b71899b94d3a2ad65aa000afece4
describe
'9366615' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTN' 'sip-files00188.tif'
9d5461728f80a07695f16943b5a45b0e
f672954f1a5de2f4e9137643bd221e162554a192
describe
'448' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTO' 'sip-files00188.txt'
24f3f4cc7b31fd3df59b30ecd0055ec2
ecde8416790c70042892c02e06557e645f27dd72
describe
'1654' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTP' 'sip-files00188thm.jpg'
ae943a558468f0eb162ca52d97a52e45
ef119ac566a45029e948acbaeea28bd4cf51bd03
describe
'1244067' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTQ' 'sip-files00189.jp2'
bde5b2748655c27966ab2fe1150a0dc9
5ae7f10b2777bd809b5533ab3ffbc51090bbaa3f
describe
'79186' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTR' 'sip-files00189.jpg'
2622ab2cd251eb94935c368fb243f972
ab8454666f6f79648be33eeab3f2d940d585e75a
describe
'309' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTS' 'sip-files00189.pro'
a4ca7a3080a21986327926f2836eef6b
edf3cfeb9642ea09761b5e522bbd4cb0d65d3363
describe
'19284' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTT' 'sip-files00189.QC.jpg'
5be2fd2d73bbcf7f249334fb682cf7a1
ea9029f6c0010399a8e5a5ab3a273cbc9501fa82
describe
'9962419' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTU' 'sip-files00189.tif'
447c0b3bc73895ea0f445844b811579c
caaefb57bbe9a7348b57f4685d696b856f65c788
describe
'155' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTV' 'sip-files00189.txt'
354663f4a10392fdd7c399e9ee18af4f
e6ae359b208025e7e06850354b7af4bee4cc8bd3
describe
'5122' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTW' 'sip-files00189thm.jpg'
2cb15542ed4b6644a45f347b109e1abe
e152156bebe1ad527586094f101178c760666d06
describe
'1155297' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTX' 'sip-files00190.jp2'
87b43f8bac4705028af5ddec3046a796
27694f1b396e4879269caa2d9891685c8d849736
describe
'77469' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTY' 'sip-files00190.jpg'
3cd9d8091df0646628b34bb76c278672
0394cd20278d17f8dac73e0ff2dc53773a699be8
describe
'20208' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGTZ' 'sip-files00190.pro'
da4a5bd2ea4a7dfe6a9554b956c3252a
86138e98fec5dc0883ad0cc50976039871fafcc0
describe
'25025' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUA' 'sip-files00190.QC.jpg'
65b3834e372ecc5e2c1cbee72711db01
13108a17344454c59701da73bd7ef711d71e3ad0
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUB' 'sip-files00190.tif'
60864d7ef41527a59ff00fba8641b3f5
313e06f6efc44544b3699cddb3c7b22254837122
describe
'1252' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUC' 'sip-files00190.txt'
45ccb81d64338506e959b4d14f94e017
89f0e4f1334cacfa8a57d2bd4e1d7956a7acfe48
describe
Invalid character
'6448' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUD' 'sip-files00190thm.jpg'
cf88700d838c3ea168e27507c1553120
a50d102a85206eb2e4b5916cab9b804672af00f2
describe
'1126159' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUE' 'sip-files00191.jp2'
5892bf685c8d1c039642eca4931797ca
5b2dffe766f9e159efd45e36f7c92e4be74ecb83
describe
'76975' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUF' 'sip-files00191.jpg'
7d304708a16cf3780755d07381fabacd
15a2ab7c01628e5c61d56b4d89392fee3e3fb6a6
describe
'28595' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUG' 'sip-files00191.pro'
af5c4e694adcf40d9fe8276f08b397fb
f8f7183a9f1a17b33d532c996659e49e0fe1abc5
describe
'29220' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUH' 'sip-files00191.QC.jpg'
352d64458f10dcd739a3d84950d9d15e
a67fe0907627f82e35ed197c3a8d8371dcad90f4
describe
'9020203' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUI' 'sip-files00191.tif'
9396fc00aac7b2e0649e0d0632575dfb
f09e8a173efbb68f54c0fb226feea6cca1750a69
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUJ' 'sip-files00191.txt'
a5330240d424b328376b414206af05f4
9c9609894211b3bbd8eb677fc47a7f9ad2c140f0
describe
'8437' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUK' 'sip-files00191thm.jpg'
4b25546fc72d5098a48ba86d5ad93d41
5ff80f7d2f2956c2c66f691342ae2f729afeda77
describe
'1105820' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUL' 'sip-files00192.jp2'
32e0f9a7dc9d22c5aa55f43dd1ad00ab
1066cd04224bf1bd2e4cd025ef62f757747f64ba
describe
'74743' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUM' 'sip-files00192.jpg'
33089ad8422a99639359ce6e7109f330
25c63ac0ddb838e74388cf7d88af7088efb341f8
describe
'28552' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUN' 'sip-files00192.pro'
8cbdd3c8cf0fdfc8881b938dce222843
e7b9d964fcf34c5e3741e65adcbf4ef926cf879f
describe
'28055' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUO' 'sip-files00192.QC.jpg'
c84ca85e3cda5224365cf6de7285a2b9
d8265131d0ac04adf5ecd60338ab36826f72e7a0
describe
'8855739' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUP' 'sip-files00192.tif'
77d914537350d21ed225e5774452d0e0
064ea170b2195c78ced1aec27eb8d3569d6fa43e
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUQ' 'sip-files00192.txt'
b31ddbb377df1d826db5b87787b49d42
713ba35becfaa0a94193910836ed6797bdfb91b2
describe
'7838' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUR' 'sip-files00192thm.jpg'
522a7f479aaafe71e18f808e588544c2
41cf50de964b1076d0e4318fa00a30a202610cf5
describe
'1107663' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUS' 'sip-files00193.jp2'
2beb404400d5db8621f49f012a6775be
fea3fcf44e3bbf7041f1f327496704ea8e67b792
describe
'77812' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUT' 'sip-files00193.jpg'
62ca9bdfe5ba6f6fb63a3696663868d8
630e43f5db93249bb17155036df8125dd725a260
describe
'27879' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUU' 'sip-files00193.pro'
611d2e1babe784948eecfed5fac2f349
1d53cd6c34f333ae11a4f2209699fd5783a6e796
describe
'28319' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUV' 'sip-files00193.QC.jpg'
046ee8418ae6c75793624a1d24aaa97e
4c7b5cfe19d1fc734f876d92c90e79e63e1309c4
describe
'8870799' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUW' 'sip-files00193.tif'
9bca5e2f4f8e68e6cc31a1c593084ac9
c86d4f426a74908fe83a77527ef7ffed58739d42
describe
'1133' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUX' 'sip-files00193.txt'
bba5291cd060a09e0b0872966b215c77
180c111ebfc5688ae33a2426f15ba5ef8d81b79c
describe
'8180' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUY' 'sip-files00193thm.jpg'
2116e65f5ff2772b3bef6f3482c4f718
cd2c08c0ee79ed7dcd0204055195377b66b26fc1
describe
'1156475' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGUZ' 'sip-files00194.jp2'
62c292c88fc34908ab428083f1bd6e68
a0be1af9aa7f9591664cb0702648d4393018121a
describe
'131477' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVA' 'sip-files00194.jpg'
0f8c2af56abc9b1ce74d8bcd51ca0352
b0c25197643638fe33165421cf0f5647ddcff904
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVB' 'sip-files00194.pro'
43a978747e981483a47130a63de44c37
e083c96bfb5eb354b3413735d62c6428a7362599
describe
'34677' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVC' 'sip-files00194.QC.jpg'
9893395cdb7b104b146d21b92b5c4c91
e9bf88018160930a293206b0f628b4fdf8134c32
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVD' 'sip-files00194.tif'
d1861184279574328e440382290cbd78
9fd001cc7a52444c947dc8b6be2659fdc0536ac4
describe
'170' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVE' 'sip-files00194.txt'
08c5a5a2b7525cca097b9438b47ee13e
08f5233553d09c5806f76ddcdff9df908e1cbd8c
describe
Invalid character
'8674' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVF' 'sip-files00194thm.jpg'
e47eaa2879df28c80853165bd2a24fa8
0ce66346cbb88a3eb4f1abbadbc9a706c470cfc4
describe
'762629' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVG' 'sip-files00195.jp2'
3f09a72d823a456a1905e54c24c2a4a1
ca8619637bfc46d874a1e284a0ced2c42188848c
describe
'21009' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVH' 'sip-files00195.jpg'
f75d67de5061e7b93f9dcde039915480
0f6ff9ef1efe2b27af3688ec95688e05db31ca85
describe
'351' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVI' 'sip-files00195.pro'
79031b377db3d8b78f77808ca07dd421
6b1eb3f09a037e9d8d38f86eec6d72c698e6a00e
describe
'5473' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVJ' 'sip-files00195.QC.jpg'
e766dd62fee1b2f4cdddd332385360e2
f9578dc28625c6dc9bcb118bc47782a10b6c55d7
describe
'8910589' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVK' 'sip-files00195.tif'
be4f175e4eff8de9f03289e45df12230
42441602cacd2038e882621aba87299a98650579
describe
'11' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVL' 'sip-files00195.txt'
cd1cea5ed33e0f65ca7e146dc4e04fdc
dfcf160bdd444686e5612528b828b4eec07bfef5
describe
'1599' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVM' 'sip-files00195thm.jpg'
d797510e6125427237e91afdb5feee35
0e9c3700accab4687aecac38e3858ad208ba316d
describe
'1129214' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVN' 'sip-files00196.jp2'
99b6dd2ed1f52ec84c5f3fcda4abaa79
9bdf7bf8de370db9aabe58dfecd7eae66efabbf8
describe
'76641' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVO' 'sip-files00196.jpg'
9cd33a1b4ef3b10fdd82443c50648221
8d9b1fc22544197890fd68d2990dbaa4caadcd41
describe
'27801' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVP' 'sip-files00196.pro'
68b9a817858b3a0f39c22640bc1c6aed
9fd15f20ad8a81062f539c783ba7b01491f2da2d
describe
'26852' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVQ' 'sip-files00196.QC.jpg'
1da1b6f2121f3cd111a2223d319bcb7a
457e5c45ba11b8fee1ac6734e3b76bd512e003c4
describe
'9044933' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVR' 'sip-files00196.tif'
2e67c7aa85777e596d8473f728356e75
51dc2a12c87654e7d962fa460ba0dbb61ac04f4e
'2011-11-16T08:47:38-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVS' 'sip-files00196.txt'
5c64668f2f2c51b4ae1c15692c03eedb
d12ad04a480a1dd27d3c18a9132855c639516504
describe
'7627' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVT' 'sip-files00196thm.jpg'
df8e03dced1f732900ac047da545da7d
db4b29f8adb070f300f8ddf78f14a1fb2b35e5dc
describe
'1105055' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVU' 'sip-files00197.jp2'
61fd4c0aeb98272bcfee8aae9f94fc60
fa45faa0b5f6000750128862b8fd84dca67f9d1f
describe
'80128' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVV' 'sip-files00197.jpg'
fba923bdb2411ace05b8e3fa9a4d7a6f
ad2eb5c0ea7eb21ac58e1a89ef27f94718927967
describe
'30909' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVW' 'sip-files00197.pro'
924fe43bf306602eca6e3c4eeece1eaf
39e989060459c6d4e0d536ab9de6bd79777a5b94
describe
'29533' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVX' 'sip-files00197.QC.jpg'
68054b5b0c4fb06c8665043acdf51155
370c1ffcb149c82081001ec3a29e7b3b0dd2ebf8
describe
'8850197' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVY' 'sip-files00197.tif'
f28f51e0fb265d503ccfd79aec94ff68
1c934d75c93673165b8f66e0e69771f671d91b95
describe
'1254' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGVZ' 'sip-files00197.txt'
8d34f94a34438115cd2b4c80ecb4305d
40c46fc8b6424659e973c63423423a3f6c5dfb86
describe
'8730' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGWA' 'sip-files00197thm.jpg'
a81d97db7ce77aeb6fba8d7dda88d9d5
df7395579aaa3e9720366232e235a2e913738ace
describe
'1164041' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGWB' 'sip-files00198.jp2'
85a6c2d9cf249a0695cf7e97804fd037
832be3cc2245cbeff1098386c3a4027d36ddece9
describe
'71244' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGWC' 'sip-files00198.jpg'
3bdd0a40848d5c3c3ca9385f3939a876
9ec2daa77e553b5c28bba2eea94097fadd168ce7
describe
'27674' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGWD' 'sip-files00198.pro'
818023a23fb7187ea2babffc392a605c
1b6b86b03cb41e907edbc7fa0fbbfdd736a654ad
describe
'25437' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGWE' 'sip-files00198.QC.jpg'
8493a9caea0a8fbfebf9ab44c3d83661
95c71c99e5357a46e4b3d46d295e22ae5e8d8df9
describe
'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGWF' 'sip-files00198.tif'
ac5c001762ab4bf5d38eb3c79e02ba62
9b27229e6c6cb6d4b651e41c2f382193770e84e3
describe
'1122' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGWG' 'sip-files00198.txt'
fe7ef1393d2a24e1578f04d7ae1fa646
56b93f602a12a02ced254898c09d4ef1714ed3e9
describe
'7121' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGWH' 'sip-files00198thm.jpg'
b219abfd458296bfbd81a01b38817de1
75a458a87b8fd9d8043e0e50f867fd87f3429067
describe
'1101323' 'info:fdaE20080919_AAAAVOfileF20080920_AABGWI' 'sip-files00199.jp2'
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THE

Pathway of the Fiton,

Gale of the How Pewr,

REE

BY MRS. T. k. HERVEY.

LONDON:

OFFICE OF THE NATIONAL, ILLUSTRATED LIBRARY, ,
, 227 STRAND.
LONDON :

PRINTED BY LRVEY, ROBSON, AND FRANKLYN,
Great New Street, Fetter Lane.
—2 sets 2 —~(Lontents—_ssestes _._

Carrera >

CHAP, PAGE
I, THE YEAR’S LAST SIGH. . DESERTION SO ae Se eae ae
Il. THE MOUNTAIN PATHWAY . THE HEART'S STRUGGLE . » a8
Ill, THE SCULPTOR’S HOME. . FAIRY-GIFTS . . «ae
IV. THE EMPTY CAGE . . . THE AVENGING ANGEL «a
V. THE PINE WOOD. . . . THESOUL’SSECRET . . . 68
VI. MORITZ AND ROSCHEN . . FANCY’S FROLICS. . o> nn

VII. THE INTERRUPTED Vow . GLIMMERINGS OF THE PAST, 67

VIII, THE FAILING GENIUS . . RECOGNITIONS: . . , , 74
IX. REVELATIONS . . . . THE BOY BERTHOLD . . . 83
X. THE CLOSED DOOR . . . THE TRUST REPOSED. . . 87
XI. THE FOREST SHADE. . . DIE GUTEIN DIE SCHONE . 95

XII, THE FOUNTAIN’S BRIM. . TROST IN KUMMER .. . 104
XIII. THEGANYMEDE . . . , THE CHARM Woes 5.4 ee
XIV. THE CHECKED PURSUIT . THE BANDED BROTHERS. . 120
XV. THEITALIAN GRAVE . . THENIOBE. .. oe

XVI. THEGREY PILLAR . . , THE SFELL DEEPENS. . . 135
V1 CONTENTS.



CHAP, y PAGE
XVII. RUIN’S RIOT . . . « «. GLAY ANDSPIRIT. . ee

XVIII. THE RIVER'S BRINK. . . THE SELF-REBUKE . . . 152
XIX. LOVERS, BUT NO LOVE . . ROSCHEN’S WHISPER. . . 159
XX. THE HAUNTED CHAMBER . THE SPIRIT-RIDDEN . .
XXI. THE ANTIQUE CHAIR . . THE BLENDING SHADOWS . 173

XXII. THE PILGRIM GUEST . . CONCLUSION .... . 183

COOL OUCH AM I~
From Designs by 6. B. Chomas,

Q THE CHAPTER-INITIALS BY T. R. MACQUOID.

J



ENGRAVED BY W.L. TH OMAS.

Sn“

THE DEPARTURE. TITLE-PAGE,

THE YEAR'S LAST SIGH. FRONTISPIECE, ene

THE HOME OF ARMER THE SCULPTOR ., ‘ ° ° 31
THE INTERRUPTED Vow : ° . : e ; 70
BERTHOLD AND ROSCHEN , * ; ‘ ; ‘ 75
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN . . » ; ° 96
WILHELM VON FERN AND THE STATUE , ° ‘ > fa
MORITZ AND ROSCHEN AT THE FOUNTAIN ° ° ° 12]
THE DESERTED GARDEN ; ‘ , ; . » See
MORITZ AND ROSCHEN . ° ° ° ‘ : « 159
BERTHA AND VON FERN : . ; : : , 2a.
THE BALL. THE PILGRIM GUEST . . ‘ ° - 188

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The Year's Last Sigh. DMesertion. —~\ >

n iS —
“The Old Year lies a-dying !

The night is Starry and cold, my friend ;
And the New Year, blithe and bold, my friend,
Comes up to take his own |” TENNYSON,

= N earlier days,—neither chivalric
hor steam-ridden, fast by a rude
old city ofthe Rhine; cradled on
ee: the breast of a wooded mountain-
slope girded at its base by the crumbling walls of
the ancient citadel; a seeming partaker of the safety
afforded by the far-extending ramparts below, yet with

B
10 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN,
Pianists ik atic oe en
a certain ostentatious and upstart aspect looking down
upon its more ancient neighbour—stood the towers of
Graubriider.’

The place, as its name imports, had been originally
a monastery for Monks of the order of Grey Friars.
A portion of the earlier structure still held its ground,
wearing to the wandering fancy an aspect not without
some shadowy and fantastic resemblance to the good
brotherhood themselves, long since departed, who had
once found there “a habitation and a name.” Tere
might be seen the remains of an antique tower, bald
and tonsured with clustering weeds ; there, a wreck
of broken wall cowled with grey lichens; while, silent
and solitary, and girt by the moonbeams, a _half-de-
molished arch would greet the eye, bending beneath
its mantle of the ivy, like the drooping of old age under
the severity of monastic isolation.

Some little way apart, as if the very front of ruin
wore a forbidding aspect to the possessor of so much
wealth as the lord of Graubriider, extended many a
rood the princely mansion where he made his abiding-

place.
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 11
ini tac i

Beyond this again, stretching far away,—farther and
farther from the habitations of men, from the city’s
busy hum, the bartering of trade, the ringing of the
money-changers ; from the struggles of congregated
households, the cry of the many and the laughter of
the few,—rising with graduated slope, a solitary region,
the upland terminated in an abrupt ridge skirting the
horizon.

This verge, or boundary-line, was familiarly known
by the appellation of “ The Hunter's Ridge.”

The name had originated in the fact that, when-
ever the hunt was up, the whole pack—including alike
huntsmen and dogs—were there visible for miles round,
the forms of both horseman and hound being distinctly
traced against the blue or clouded welkin, dilated by
their position into the semblance of shapes more
gigantic than the reality.

The “ Hunter’s Ridge” was terminated at one end
of its horizontal line by a deep, dark, overhang-
ing wood—the refuge of the startled Fawn; skirting
the borders of which was a narrow precipitous path,

leading towards the city and the winding Rhine at
12 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

enter
‘ts foot. At the other end it diverged downwards,
at a less acute angle, till gradually lost in the open
country.

Such was the position tenanted by one of the most
luxurious men of his day—Wilhelm von Fern, lord of
Graubrider.

Without a passion more exalted than that of self-
aggrandisement ; without an object more worthy than
self-indulgence, or a wish that flew beyond the narrow
region of its attainment ;—it was wonderful how the
easy grace of manner so naturally accompanying these
decent-sounding vices won the world’s approval, Wil-
helm von Fern was a man universally lauded.

But a time for the heart’s reckoning comes to all ;
and the man of luxury was soon destined to feel this
iruth in its fullest force.

To-night an unaccountable sensation of uneasiness
besets him,—a vague haunting, over which the mind
has no control, and with which reason has no power
to grapple. He gives it no words, moulds it not even
into a thought of dread. He feasts as is his wont. In

yonder lofty dining-hall, hung round with trophies of
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 13
niet nine ts csi ia
the chase, he drains glass after glass of the Rhine’s
choicest vintage—the all-imperial J ohannisberger ; and
if a spectre sits at his board—as it will at the banquet-
ings of better men—to him it is yet voiceless as the
crowned terror of the Egyptian revel—a formless shape
without a name.

It was the last night of the closing year, and he
had gathered round him, at that festal hoard, a few
choice spirits— younger men all than himself—to bear
him company in seeing the New Year in.

At such a season, the varying moods to which the
passing and coming year gives rise, seldom fail to find
expression, and, however mirthful or however sad, are
alike sanctioned by the spirit of the hour. The sha-
dow on the heart, or the cloud upon the brow, of our
brother, for this one night passes without notice. Each
man is busied with the ushering in of his own indi-
vidual fate, of which the hand upon the dial-plate is
accounted the silent and mysterious herald. ‘

As the hour of midnight drew near, the cloud
which had been slowly gathering upon the brow of

Wilhelm von Fern assumed a deeper hue. It was in
14 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

Se ernment neinaeiencnteciiiiinsiitibimmaaisie ste
vain that the wine went freely round ; in vain that
his voice joined chorus with the snatches of song that
made the great hall ring ;—every note seemed an-
swered by a strange wild echo, mysterious and un-
earthly. He could not lift off the burthen that lay
like a loadstone at his breast, attracting to itself every
shape and form and presence of material things, and
enduing them with a power equal to its own, till the
accumulated weight threatened to crush him. The
very finger on the dial, like the needle of the mariner’s
compass, seemed to point to him, and him alone.

So unusual a manifestation of seriousness, almost of
gloom, on the part of their host, could not fail to com-
municate itself in some measure to his guests. And it
soon became evident, from the changed current of the
conversation, that the distant and the mystical were gra-
dually usurping the place of the present and actual, as the
stealing finger of Time was coursing mutely but surely
towards that point at which another year must die.

The superstitions of their own and other lands be-
came now the topic of the moment, The aspect of the

night — dark, silent, and starless, without one solitary
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 15

——_

gleam to enliven its cheerlessness, or a single breath to
break the hushed monotony of the hour—afforded an
opening for the peculiar tone which was unconsciously
stealing over that festive board.

“You are right, Moritz,” remarked the young
Ernst Engelhertz, in reply to an observation made by
his friend ; “ indeed most of the northern nations have
shared in this feeling, and drawn singular prognostics
from the winds of New Year’s Eve.”

“It is almost universal,” pursued Moritz von der
Brunn. “In the uplands of Scotia, or Scottisland, the
inhabitants have their Candlemas Bull”

“Their what!” exclaimed the somewhat affected
Ruprecht von Lorn; “ their bull? I thought that was
the peculiar property of that island in the Irischer See,
called by the natives ‘ Die Smaragden Insel.”

“ Pardon me,” said Moritz; “but, to use a phrase
borrowed from another island of some note, you have
‘taken the wrong bull by the horns.’ The Candlemas
Bull of which I speak is a material rather than an in-
tellectual cloud ; neither more nor less than a vapour

in the atmosphere—a passing mist, known by that
16 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

Sei iineanneammiinnncntsenipicabilc gel ian 6s

name from its assuming, or being supposed to assume,
by the aid of a prolific northern imagination, the form
of that animal, and from whose motions or transitions,
caused by different currents of air, on this particular
night, many strange auguries arise.”

“ With us, now,” exclaimed Ruprecht, “we Ger-
mans assign more importance to the breath that issues
from human lips as the old year dies out.”

“And with reason,” rejoined Ernst ; “inasmuch as
the moment of midnight, at such a season, has ever
been regarded in our land as the chosen time for the
races of genii, good and evil, to move abroad.”

“Childish nonsense !”? cried Wilhelm von Fern ;
“are not good and evil ever on the wing? and can a
particular day or hour be supposed to rule the sleepless
watches of spirits that are eternal—if they have any
being at all?”

“ Question not their being,” mildly remonstrated
the young Ernst: “we know and feel their presence
hour by hour, and day by day. I would not lose the
strong conviction of their ministry for all this world’s

—s0 called—realities.”
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 17
inna as taal talaga te
“ But the evil ones?” asked Ruprecht, with a light
laugh. “Come, come, Ernst, confess that you could
do well enough without them.”

“The evil ones,” suggested the generous Moritz ’
von der Brunn, answering for his friend, “ are fain to
pass on the shady side of the wall when Ernst walks
abroad.”

“T consider,” replied Engelhertz, “ that the evil
races of genii have their moral significance equally with
the good. Were there nothing to overcome, where
were the triumph ?”

“You believe, then,” cried Wilhelm von Fern,
with a faint attempt at a sneer, belied by his quivering
lip, “in the extreme point to which credulity has
pushed this superstition: in fine, that the particular
utterances of to-night—here, for instance, in a land of
civilisation, and round a board where the potent Rhine-
spirit circles in the grape—have power to compel the
fiend ?”

“I do truly believe,” was the answer of the young
and enthusiastic Ernst, “that words involuntarily uttered

at such a season as this,—whether around such a board
18 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
eter orton eaili
or elsewhere ; whether spoken on the summit of the
Brocken, or beneath the pitchy boughs of the Schwartz-
wald; whether in the green depths of the Rhine valleys,
or beside its winding waters,—are alike potent from
the lips that give them breath. N ay, further, that
while the worse spirits are at times permitted to apply
such terms in a strained or fatal sense—if at all ambi-
guous,—on the other hand, the words themselves, on
the lips of the just, may become words of power, con-
trolling the designs of demons, and forcing them to
work out the good of the utterer against their will.”

“Ha! ha! ha!” shouted Wilhelm yon Fern ;
“further than this the tide of superstition can scarcely
run. But see!” he added, suddenly pointing to the
dial-plate, “ we have almost forgotten the watches of
the night. It wants but a minute to the charmed
hour !”

That minute was one of the deepest hush. Every
eye turned in the same direction, and became riveted
on the time-piece.

Wilhelm von Fern rose, and treading the boards as

if his step would have disturbed some sleeper, turned
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 19
Seed nntonlnehietiticlbpiahs icone labialis fig ee
to the window, and noiselessly opened the casement to
its full swing, in order that the chimes of the aenaen
cathedral might be distinctly heard.

Still, not a breath stirred, not a star was visible.
But down, far down the rocky steep, lay the ancient
city at its foot, with all her innumerable lights reflected
in the waters of the darkened Rhine—so many witnesses
of the anxious and breathless watchers that awaited the
signal of another birth to time; a year for hope, for
love—young voices and old graves.

At last the finger approached the point of twelve;
neared, all but touched it.

Every glass had been filled to the brim, and every
man stood ready, his eye fixed on the numeral figure,
to hail with one prolonged cheer the crowning of the
hour. |

At this moment of intense silence, when the hand of
the dial had all but marked the appointed stroke ; while
the heart itself seemed to pause, so still were its beat-
ings ; and when, had a feather dropped, it would have
startled the listeners 3—suddenly—whence or from what

quarter of the globe it came no man knew — suddenly
20 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

a wild rush of air, perfectly indescribable save by the
term, a gasp, a shudder of wind, swept past the case-
ment!

It scarcely sounded before it was gone, dying as
suddenly as it rose.

Every man started, looked on his neighbour, and
turned pale.

Ernst Engelhertz and Wilhelm von Fern, the be-
liever and the sceptic, gazed into each other’s eyes.
The face of Ernst was pale, but calm; the aspect of his
entertainer was that of one suddenly arrested for some
crime. To the “ angel-hearted” guest that sound was
but the death-sob of his departed year. To the shrouded
heart of the self-lover it bore another tone. The retri-
butive angel was winging its dark way overhead, and
in that shuddering gust Ae heard the rushing of its
wing.

Hark !

Without the door, along the corridor, like a spirit’s
tread, in the pause of the revel, is there heard no other

sound ?

Hark!
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 23



Is there no step on the outer floor that is sounding
its last there? no music on the boards that shall miss its
echo through all the long year that is newly born?

Hark!

Stealing down along the carved and gilded staircase;
sweeping with light, quick step, but still guarded tread,
from marble step to step, from carpeted landing to
statued recess; halting here and there with breathless
pause, then bounding on anew under the pressure of
the impulse from within,—passed a youth of apparently
some sixteen summers.

The massive hall-door stood partly open, as if to
afford surer and more speedy egress to the figure thus
stealthily hastening to cross its threshold—for ever !

The face that was seen to emerge from that parental
roof was pale; pale as that of the sculptured form that
stood beneath the carved balusters to light the boy forth
from the house of his fathers.

As the night-wind fanned his cheek, and he felt that
he was about to give himself, his hopes, and his fortunes,

to the keeping of that world without, whose breath was
24 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

“eeeerpeitinetnonmennnerentnrmsennestnsnnnap tense eninnihulecia sili:

less tender than the fresh but chilling night-breeze that
wafted his bright hair, an expression somewhat akin to
dismay for a moment crossed his face.

But his part was taken, and the youth passed out.
CHAPTER II.
Che Manntain Pothuay. Che Weart’s Straggle.

‘* Potent was the spell that bound thee,
Not unwilling to obey ;
For blue Ether’s arms around thee
Still’d the pantings of dismay.”
WORDSWORTH.

~S
are you there ?”—

asked the boy, in




a low, sweet voice,
as in the dark his hand sought and
clasped that of his foster-mother.
True to that love which is se-
cond only to the natural instinct
that binds the real mother to her
offspring, old Grete stood by the portal
awaiting her foster-child. Long before the
appointed hour she had lingered about the

walls ; and her anxious gaze, from time to
26 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. :

ieee as tha thdisnectiatinien palette ninnitcice maslness acdctactne
time directed towards the half-open door, would have
betrayed to a looker-on, had such been at hand, how
hazardous she considered the step about to be taken.
But no sooner had she caught a glimpse of her youthful
charge descending the lighted gallery within, than her
wrinkled face brightened, like night touched by the
morning.

As the boy’s foot crossed the threshold, the strong
light from within threw his figure into bold relief. To
eyes, like those of Grete, accustomed to look on him,
there was little that could be termed singular in his
appearance. A stranger, however, might have detected
a slight effeminacy of air, and even of costume. The
_ loose tunic, somewhat resembling the more modern
blouse, which formed part of the student-costume of
the time, was in the present instance longer than usual,
fuller and more flowing, —a modification by no means
ill-adapted to his slight but graceful figure. Bent over
his brow, its looped-up brim scarcely serving the pur-
pose of concealment for which it appeared to be so
placed, he wore a low-crowned hat of the half-German,
half-Spanish form.
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 27

Stepping thus out into the night, he shook back the
waving curls that partially shaded his face, and drawing
the folds of his tunic more closely around hin, stretched
forth his hand into the darkness.

“Grete, my mother, are you there?”

“Here, my Berth” ——

“It is well; but call me Berthold. I have borne
that name for eighteen years; I must know no other
now. Oh, Grete, it is done !—no faltering, no look-
ing back. Affection, kindred, home, where are they
now ?”

“It is not yet too late: return.”

“ Return! Is it thus that you would counsel me ?—
you, who have ever taught me to shun evil as a plague?
No, Grete, no; let us on: quick! quick!”

Under the pressure of some strong emotion, the boy
half led, half dragged his unresisting guide up the steep
towards the summit of the Hunter’s Ridge.

But already, ere half the distance was gained that
lay between them and the point towards which they
pushed, the boy’s strength was overtasked.

“Stay, good Grete,” he faltered breathlessly; “a

Cc
28 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

moment’s rest, ‘The path is surely bewitched to-night ;
I never felt its steepness till this hour.”

«Tis thy heart’s beating, child, that robs the breath
God gave thee.”

* Look yonder!” said the youth, as, pausing for a
brief rest, he gazed back upon the home he had for-
saken ; ‘‘ see, the lights dance from every window.
Methinks even now I hear the sounds of their wassail.
Those generous spirits little know with whom they
feast. There was Moritz; I heard his clear voice above
them all: and Ernst, the good and pious Ernst. Ah!
little knows he, as he quaffs the wine-cup, that the
gold which lines it is another’s! little dreams he that
the bread he breaks is yours, Armer, my poor one!
Oh! shame! shame! shame!”

“The evil-doer will rue it soon, my bird, when to-
morrow’s sun shines upon thy empty cage, and not on
thee.”

“Oh, Grete, not that! say not that! There lies the
sting! Your words reprove me as for asin. Whatever
guilt lies at his door, it is not against me. Could any

other act than this have touched him with the full sense
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. » 29



of his wrong, I had not done it. Be he to others what
he may, he is my father still.”

In renewed bitterness of spirit, the boy knelt on
the rough and stony path, and lifted up his voice to
Heaven.

“ Hear me,” he cried, “Thou who knowest the
suffermg and the wrong; Thou at whose feet, before
whose throne, I cast off for ever the inheritance I have
so long unwillingly usurped ; Thou who seest my
agony of heart, my failing, faltering soul,—hear and
sustain me, Thou! If I have done this thing in a wil-
ful, a selfish, or an unfilial spirit; if I have dealt this
blow at the heart that loves me for any other good than
theirs, of which his must be a part, in the reconciling
of each one with another; if I have done this, knowing
not myself,—forsake me.”

And the boy bowed his face to the chill earth, and
sobbed aloud.

Then Grete spoke. “ Arise, my Berth, and come
away. Why,—all good spirits shield thee, child !—thy
touch is cold as death!”

“Nay, mother, I am strengthened. There, give
30 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
Fa lenin ne
me your hand once more; we will on again. See, the
stars come out; Orion’s belt is studded thick; the path
clears: on, on, my Grete!”

And the foot that-had scarcely crushed the flowers
of eighteen summers trod that mountain pathway once
more with buoyant step.

Long and trying was the path, the night keen and
cheerless; but Berthold no more faltered by the way.
All good spirits abroad that night sang to his spirit as
he went on his course; the evil ones kept aloof.

“See, the Pathway of the Fawn,” said he at last,
pointing to a worn track along the upper ridge, which
lost itself in the depths of the forest. ‘‘ Down behind
yonder wood lies your home—and mine, dear Grete,
A nightly shelter shall you give me. I am but young,
my mother. But first,—ay, before I sleep, you must
down yonder path with me.”

“ Save thee, child !—to-night?” exclaimed Grete.

“Ay, to-night, good mother. Right deeds make
right times, my simple Grete.”

“ Well, well, be it as thou wilt; but tarry not
long.”
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 81



«Oh! city of the sorrowful!” exclaimed the youth,
as, skirting the pine-wood, they descended the pathway
to the city, “ how calm thou lest! yet aching hearts
and lips that hunger are rife within thy streets. Be-
neath yonder roof from whose window the lights shine
feeblest, whose battered walls scarce serve to shut out
the wintry wind, thou wakest and watchest, lone
mother of poverty! And Armer, thou; and thou, my
little Réschen, sweet bud of tender promise !”

Thus, as he pursued his midnight path, did the boy
Berthold ponder: till now, as the chimes from every
tower and minaret told that half the mid-hour was
passed, the two approached the lowly roof that shel-

tered the sculptor Armer.
CHAPTER III.

Che Srulptor’s Vome, Fairy Gifts,

“« The Beings of the mind are not of clay.”
BYRON.

« Poo oa.
La iV (eM HE interior of the sculptor’s studio
might in itself have formed a at
WA a subject for the limner. Narrow i,
"yg Wer.) dimensions, and scantily furnished
a with even those appliances which

constitute the mere machinery of art,



Sg the room was not indebted to the
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¢ -
FES
od AS
f WW Aber a {
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in a: m
“in We ee cold forms of sculpture alone for the

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if aR

a beauty that breathed through it.
Before a small table, on which burned a solitary
lamp, her pale but still beautiful face bent over her
work, sat the mother of Armer the sculptor. Low at
her feet, so placed as to make the matron’s lap the
receiver of the winter flowers she was occupied in

weaving into a wreath for the New Year, knelt his
ec =

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THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

young sister Roschen. Half conscious of the loving

eyes that from time to time rested upon her bent-down

face, she continued to weave her garland of the flower-

ing laurel and winter rose, singing, as she wove, to no

music save that within her heart.

Armer stood before the statue om which he had
been labouring when the stroke of the New Year had

arrested his hand and drawn the little family group

into the narrow circle of one fond embrace. Now, the

year was fully ushered im and the three had resumed

‘their places. But, though the chisel was still in his

hand, Armer paused once more ; and turning at the

sound of that voice, listened to the singer.

Puschew's Sg.

Twas a sculptor of olden days
Who pictured a being of air:
On the phantom, entranced, would he gaze—
The child of his thought was there.
He drank from the fount of delight,
But a poison lay hid in the bowl;
For there shone 0? this world of night
No form like the dream of his soul.
36

THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

He pined, and his glory was fled ;
He wept, but none wept for him ;
He slept with the quiet dead —
What now was the world to him ?
He had sighed, but his sighs have fleeted ;
He had mourned, but his tears are o’er ;
He had hoped, but his hope was cheated ;
He had dreamed, but he dreams no more.

Beside him a heathen boy
In an unblest grave was laid,
Who had sung sweet hymns of joy
To the god his hands had made.
But soon his awakened thought,
Bewildered, refused to rejoice ;
For the clay he had piously wrought
Returned him no answering voice.

Lament not the sculptor, whose grave
Is hallowed, and calm, and deep;
O’er his grief shall the welcome wave
Of a soft oblivion sweep :
Nor fear for the heathen child,
His prayer was a prayer of love.
Their search had been long and wild ;
They have found what they sought—above.

“Thanks, thanks, sweet Réschen, for my favourite
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 37



song,” said her brother Armer, as the sounds fainted in
music on lips that rivalled the budding rose. “ Thanks ;
the New Year opens, as the Old Year died, with the
sounds I love best to hear.”

A kiss from the pale lips that bent over her inter-
rupted the reply of Roschen. So she stood up silently ;
and girding the waist of her mother with both her
arms, gazed up into her face, and then nestled her head
in her bosom. Then, starting away with a fawn-like
step, she threw her arms round the neck of Armer, and
kissed him on the brow.

“ What is it? speak, my Roschen,” said her mo-
ther. ‘ Something more than usual flutters at thy
merry little heart. Speak to us; what is it, my sweet?”

“TI cannot; I have no words, dear mother. I was
thinking, or feeling,—nay, you know it, both of you,
without my speech. I was thinking how—how—how
happy we all are this blessed New Year’s Day!”

A sigh from her mother checked the light heart in
its spring.

Armer was silent. He was busied in chiselling the

final stroke that was to complete his greatest work, the
38 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

(alii chiaaiiaietiiniscinientiniainisitaminteniipininitasiaiianii citi i tS
Diana—a very masterpiece of art; so, at least, the fond
Roschen pronounced it.

The “ little Rose” looked from one to the other, till
at last one soft solitary drop, like dew upon the petal,
stood upon her bloom-like cheek. And now, bending
over Armer, she suddenly became absorbed, or seemed
to be so, in the progress of his work.

“There,” said the young man, as he stepped back-
wards, at the same time casting the chisel from his
hand; “there, my work is done! but I am not satisfied
with it. It does not please me, and it never will. But
I can add not another stroke; I am weary. ‘Twenty
times have I remodelled that lip, twenty times have I
retouched that one curve,—and still, still I am not
satisfied. What think you of it, mother?”

“That it is peerless, my son. Before even you
had given to it this last day’s labour, you know I pro-
nounced it perfection. What say you, my child?” she
added, turning to Réschen.

“ It is Dian herself, sweet mother. See with what
a grace she bends, as over the Latmian hill. One is

fain to cry, ‘ Where is Endymion?”
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 39

But,—soft! Now another foot was on the floor,
entering like a fay; and another voice than Armer’s
replied to the last words of Réschen. The door was
thrown wide, and Berthold stood before them.

“ Here, my Rose-bud,” said he, “ if by Endymion you
mean one who sleeps, or rather walks, beneath the moon.”

“ The first foot,” said the mother thoughtfully, in
a voice none heard, as she glanced quickly from Ber-
thold to her daughter.

Berthold kissed the mother’s pale cheek, and stooped
to the lips of Roschen ; then he looked on Armer, and
took his hand.

“ The blessing of the kindly year be with you all,
sweet friends!—Armer, you have toiled late.— But
what is here? the Dian finished ?”

“ Berthold, a judgment!” Réoschen was the first.
to cry.

“ Ay, cousin, your voice,” exclaimed Armer.

«“ That is scarcely fair,” echoed the mother with a
smile. ‘ You know, Armer, that Berthold is your
pupil—almost your rival now, so closely does he ap-

proach you in the mysteries of your art.”
40 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

“No rival, dear aunt; a fellow-labourer in the
same vineyard.—But let me look at it. It is indeed
a masterpiece, dear Armer! But”—

“« Ah! that dwt,” cried Armer ; “ that mars all.”

« Nay, I will shew you what it wants. You will
not be jealous? May I touch it?”

Armer nodded assent. Réschen took up the dis-
carded chisel, and laid it in the hand of Berthold,
who took his stand before the statue. A few kindred
touches, and the form breathed !

“* Marvellous — marvellous !” cried Armer, really
delighted, and without one taint of envy.

‘“*T confess it wanted that last touch,” said his
mother.

“Ah! cousin Berthold, now it lives indeed!”
chimed in Roschen.

The statue of Armer had been a Diana chaste,
but voluptuous. One touch from the more divine fin-
ger of the boy Berthold, and it became at once the
Dian of the Soul!

** And now,” said Berthold, “ for one moment’s

serious talk. I must not stay: Grete, my foster-mo-
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 41

nee denisce enn ancmeiiiinstamtasiailiiniatitinntcctaiahine saath
ther, waits for me without.—Armer, when purpose
you to send this statue to my father?”

« With the first light of day,” Armer answered.
“ One word from you would prepare him’”—

But Berthold, with a sad grave smile, laid his
hand on the arm of his cousin, and said, “ That is
over |”

A real, deep, and sympathetic sorrow was expressed
in the faces of the three, as they looked into the eyes
of their one friend. They had no words. That look
shewed that they understood him.

‘Of this no more,” said Berthold. ‘‘ Had your
persuasions been listened to, this would not have been.
But it is done; words nor thoughts can alter it now.
So no more. And now, Armer, listen to me. My
plan is this: be you yourself the bearer of this statue.
Let but my father see you. He loves your art, and
will honour the artist.”

« Who but his son, who but Berthold, taught him
to love it? Ah, how much we already owe you!”
murmured Réschen.

“ Well, my life on it, good will come of this !—Be
42 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

not backward, Armer ; lend yourself to my plot; there
is more in it—far more than any of you dream, more
than can reveal. Under your assumed name, he will
scarcely discover your close relationship to himself.
When he permitted me to visit you here, Armer, in
the character of your pupil, he little thought that the
son of his only sister was my teacher. While his anger
against her still lives, that secret must be strictly kept ;
but if once he learns to love you, as he must, all is
well. And then, farewell poverty and Armer!”’

“ Why, what a phrase, Berthold!”’ cried the merry
Roschen. ‘* Do you mean, farewell to Armer too ?”’

Berthold looked troubled —just a little startled.

“It was a strange phrase, Réschen,” said he; “ very
strange. I cannot think how my lips came to frame it.
You read my meaning? I would have said, ‘ Poverty
and Armer, take your farewell of each other.’ In what
a strange blundering way I worded it! I wish I had
not said it,—least of all on New Year’s Night!”

A shadow, as of some coming ill—a dim prophetic
sadness—seemed to settle upon their hearts. It was clear

that some such mystic fancy as that of which Ernst
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 43

Engelhertz had spoken, was in all their minds. Ber-
thold, though still grave, was the first to break a silence
which was becoming oppressive. 7

“ You think he has no suspicion of your real name ?”
he asked, continuing the conversation which had been
so inauspiciously interrupted.

“No,” said Armer, “ none.”

“ That is well.”

‘ But, Berthold,” began the mother. She hesitated.

“ What would you say, dear aunt?’ inquired the
youth.

“T do not think we quite see our way here,” re-
plied the conscientious matron. “ You have, I see
clearly, quarrelled finally with your father; and we
are, in some way or other, the cause. Armer must think
well of all the possible consequences to you as well as
to himself, in following out your design for him. If
your father takes a fancy to him and employs his time
fully, so far it is well. But let us look a little beyond.
You have quarrelled with him; you have left his roof.
Suppose, in such a case, as many a man has done be-

fore him, he should take up with a stranger, as Armer
44 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
Sdaieeihstieinhinsihapateietaisintinhise etait lai ick
is to him. Nay, more; should he, when once attached
to him, discover the secret of his relationship to him-
self,—what if he should finally adopt him, discarding
you from all but the inheritance he cannot take from
you?”

The brightest beam of the sun that ever burst
through the storm-cloud might have found a rival in the
sudden radiance that overspread the face of Berthold.

“You think it likely,—you conceive it possible,
then?’ he cried aloud, as his heart silently whispered
within him,—‘ Then this is no wild dream! Heaven,
I thank Thee !’

Veiling his gladness with as much seriousness as he
could assume, he added, “ Be at rest. No wrong can
visit me through Armer: it is not possible. Of that
be assured. And now farewell all!” |

The youth was gone. And once more the little
enthusiast Réschen turned to take, before she slept,
a parting look at the Dian.

At the foot of the pedestal lay three small packets,
on which were inscribed the names of “ J ohanna,”

“ Armer,” and “ Réschen.”
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 45

As the mother inspected their contents, “‘ Bless him !”
she cried, “ our best preserver! ‘To-morrow, then, ye
shall fare better, my children ; for this day ye have not
tasted bread.”

D
CHAPTER IV.

Che Empty Cage. Che Auenging Angel.



** About his window, at the dawn,

From
Birds

the vine’s crooked boughs
chirrupped an arouse :

Flies, buzzing, strengthened with the morn —

Heli not hear them again

At random strike the pane !”

on
a )

F/
/

1 OA
i
é

AS

_>

a ELL did Grete foreshadow the

dismay which was to visit the lord
of the revel, when the morning’s sun
should shine on the wild bird’s for-
saken cage—the sleeping-chamber of
his departed heir.

On that night when the Old Year
sighed its last ; when the audible
sob—the death-throe of that portion
of time which had been permitted to

slip by without one better resolution
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 47

or lawful act of restoration — sounded upon the startled
ear of the wrongdoer ;—on that night was Wilhelm von
Fern forsaken by his better angel.

A comfortless morning succeeded to a night with-
out sleep; and with a mysterious perception of the
quarter from whence that blow would fall, which his
conscience and the night alike indicated as about to
visit him, his first inquiry was for Berthold.

They sought him first in the upper chambers,—in
the room where he slept. ‘The door stood open, and
the bed was unpressed. The idle lute hung tuneless,
and music-pages lay strewn about in unwonted disorder.
But the Druid misletoe and the prickly holly were
ranged about the precincts of the young recluse at
once with grace and care, and rather as if to deck the
lordly Speisesaal than the solitary Schlafkammer of a
dreaming boy. ‘They searched around and about it ; and

to the wondering voices of the seekers echo replied —
“‘ Not there !”

*¢ They sought him east, they sought him west,”—

Down among the fountains—low at the Berg’s foot,
48 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN,

NAOMI nhieu ajeagi aio ea
where the green sward so often tempted that light
foot to stray ere the birds rose to matins,—

Not there !

** They sought the forest thorough,”—

Among the shrub-grown vineyards—past the old
monastery-tower of the Graubriider—along the weed-
crowned walls—through the ivied arch—the damp
crumbling cloisters—

Not there !

“The sweetest flower that ever bloomed,”’—

In the gardens of his “ pleasaunce,” where the
thick-grown boughs, unleafed and bare, stood crowned
and fringed with early snow,—where vistas stretched
away, and arbours of the climber-rose shewed here and
there a stunted, scentless, solitary flower ;— by the
orchard and the Kiichengarten—the broad trellised
walk—and the alley, bough-overarched,—

Not there !—not there!

Then came a time when the search was foregone ;
and Wilhelm von Fern sat alone with his anger.

“Send for Ernst Engelhertz!” cried he, in the
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 49.



first, fierce, sudden storm of his intemperate rage. And
before a second thought could stay the messenger, he
was gone.

In the unreason of passion, beset with suspicions
of he knew not what, the firstlings of his wrath lighted
upon the head of the unconscious Ernst.

He recalled every word of the young man’s recent
confession of faith in the mysteries of the unseen world
of spirits. This faith, at the time of its admission his
jest and scorn, he now grew to regard in the light of
a hoax—a simulated and crafty assumption of an out-
world belief, —a trick—a juggle ;—a plot in collusion
with Berthold, to frighten him into submission to an
act of desertion, which was thus made to appear under
the aspect of a divine dispensation.

Man of the calmer soul, startle not at the incon-
ceivable injustice and folly! Such madness is a world-
wide truth.

Ere half an hour had elapsed, wrapped in the cloud-
less ether of a true soul, the young Ernst stood before
him.

Before that face a lie could not live. And now, in
50 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

edn lientecaaninnilatepainiitc sii g cc acs Anne
his inmost heart, Wilhelm von Fern cursed himself for
his folly.

A hurried and stammering recital of the past night’s
mystery told to Engelhertz the tale of seeming wrong.

As soon as a pause in the passionate relation of his
late host allowed him an opening, then spoke Ernst.
In the silence that succeeded to the clamour of the
other, his voice sounded like a soft deep wind among
the linden-boughs, when the thunder has rolled by.

“I have long watched the boy,” said the “ ernst”
and upright spirit; “I have looked into the youth’s
soul as, it may be, no other has ever looked.”

Here he gazed long and fixedly at the father.

Wilhelm started —looked uneasy —bit his lip.

“And this I will say now, and will repeat when-
ever and wherever called upon to do s0, answering
with my life for him, as for one without stain, without
tarnish, without touch or blight of evil from this world’s
smirching breath ; to whomsoever it may concern—to
_ you, his father, most of all—here, in your presence, in

the light of God’s great day, under the blessing of His
new glad year,—this will I say and uphold, that never
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. dl
cate ne re acacia ota a eclectic
in his young life, either under provocation or temper,
light word or kindless tone, has that child, in thought,
word, or deed, rebelled against his sire, or against his
God !”

“ To—to—to me, it is true,’—faltered Wilhelm.

“To you and to all has he alike been spotless, or
there is no truth in nature. And he is gone—gone
in sorrow and bitterness of heart; and you, his father,
upbraid him. Is this well, Wilhelm von Fern ?—Nay,
you have called me hither, and you must hear me
now,” he pursued, as the father strode the room with
a chafed spirit. ‘Heaven pardon me for judging, if I
judge amiss! Your pardon, too, if unwittingly I do
so; but I must speak. A wrong there is somewhere—
a bitter, a cruel, and a blighting wrong: where or of
what nature I know nothing; but at your door it les,
not at the boy’s.”

Again the eyes of Wilhelm sank beneath the youth’s
glance.

“ Recall him!” he continued, with still greater

warmth ; “a word of yours—some word for which his
52 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

eaten ehosetnineieahenmstinaeinsinmeseniconspettishsmsacunsis eis, sil i

soul thirsts—would bring him to your arms. Speak it,
Wilhelm von Fern !”

“ By the living Host, I will not hear this !”

“Then, farewell! Never at your board do I sit
more ; never call you friend, or in fair fellowship wear
out life’s hours beneath your roof. Over that flower
—that— that tender plant your foot unrighteously has
spurned, from this hour I keep my watch!”

He has turned, and is gone.

Once more the father sits alone.

The bird in his bower that sang to him so sweetly
—is its voice silent now? Silent? N 0; it rings to
his spirit through the freshness of the early dawn and
the glow of the noon’s mid-hour. The fair phantom-
hand of the child presses sweet music from a shadowy
lute, as twilight, deepening, shuts out the day. And
through all the long night-watches one cry alone is in

his ear, upon his heart—“ Father ! father !”
CHAPTER V.

Che Pine-Waut. Che Soul's Senet.

*¢ Why shouldst thou hold thy tenderness aside
From all thy lavishment of other gifts,
As if thou wouldst resort to means and shifts
Thy dearest, noblest attribute to hide ?”

aO~ (>

/ / a! —
(SAK
» WN

Roa Wey Q\ /~ new day, Berthold came
: ia yj
| to consider of what he had



My done, his heart misgave
Jk (Shim. One thought, which

<>. in his first impulse in what
| \ he believed to be the cause of
right, had escaped him, now

\ ~ struck at the boy’s heart with a pang of dis-

J may.

}
/

L What if his visions, what if the faith he

felt in the resources of his art,—its power to support

both himself and his friends, if the worst were to

come,—should fail to be realised ?
D4 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



It was true that he felt within him that divine “ af-
flatus” which was its own best warrant of success. Yet
what if that should prove, instead of a real inspiration,
the mere colouring of imagination, the result of youth-
ful vanity !

Were it so, not only had he cast away his all—of
that he thought little, —but worse, far worse, the bread
of Armer !

How the boy’s fancy twined about that name !
Never, since the days of Pythias, surely was there a
friendship like to this !

The bread of Armer !

He thought how he had laid, with a sweet stealth,
those fairy-gifts at the foot of the Dian. And to this,
his last gift, his power was restricted. It was his
all; his sole help to those who had no other hu-
man aid.

It was a suggestion of pain.

Full of such thoughts, a craving desire possessed
the youth to quit the roof of Grete, and, skirting
the pine-wood, to take one more look at the home he

had abandoned, and around which his fancy clung with
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 5D



twofold fondness since that decisive step was taken which
made him an exile for ever from its walls.

Heedless or forgetful that his form was a mark for
every eye, relieved against the now cloudless horizon,
the boy Berthold stood once more upon the little beaten
track worn by the fawn’s footsteps in the turf.

Here again he wept a woman’s tears: pure as the
drops that flowed from the meek eyes of the half-mortal,
half-spirit Undine, when she breathed the fatal death-
kiss upon the lips of her beloved, did the tender spirit
of the boy pour tears like rain over the inevitable pang
he dealt.

As he continued to gaze, half blinded by his tears,
he thought he descried, ascending the steep that led
upwards towards the spot where he stood, a form he
knew well. Yes, he could not be mistaken; it was
Engelhertz.

A crowd of grateful emotions thronged through his
heart as he recognised the one true and tried friend of
his young life. His first impulse was to rush down the
steep to meet him, to tell him all. Nay, all, alas! he
could not tell, —his vow forbade that,— but at least his
56 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

act of sudden desertion, and so draw present help and
comfort from his friend’s unerring counsel. |

But before he could put his design into execution,
a new and painful suggestion deterred him. Something
in the manner, the tender reverential manner, of the
young Ernst had more than once led him to conjecture
that the secret of his life—a secret known only to him-
self, his father, and his old nurse and foster-mother
Grete, and which he had bound himself by a solemn
vow to that father never to reveal—had been divined
by the clear sight of Engelhertz.

As this thought struck him, by a second impulse
more potent than the first the boy strove to avoid him,
and quickly turning from the spot, dived into the re-
cesses of the wood.

Through the clasping boughs Berthold looked down
the steep. He saw the upturned face of Engelhertz
with steady gaze fixed on the exact spot where he
stood, as his earnest defender pursued his upward path
in the direction of the Hunter’s Ridge.

As he continued to watch the approach of his
friend, the resolution of the boy was changed. That
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 57

was not a face to flee from; so he made no further
effort to escape, but stood his ground.

Soon the crackling boughs, sapless and crisp with
winter’s frost, told that another step had passed the
embowered threshold of the pine-wood; and in another
moment the hand of Berthold was clasped in that of his
friend.

A few brief words served to convey to Ernst the
tale of Berthold’s flight, his present sanctuary in the
home of Grete,—from whose cottage there was a secret
opening into the wood,—and the life of future toil he
had marked out for himself.

Ernst also had his tale to tell; softening to the
child’s ear all that would grate most harshly on it in
the account he had to give of the father, and conclud-
ing with a hope that reconciliation was not far distant.

* Alas! dear friend, you do not know all,” said
Berthold, “ or you would searcely venture to breathe
that hope, so little does a reconciliation seem possible.”

* All things are possible to a pure will; such, at
least, is my creed. And now,” added Ernst, “let us

take counsel together, in as far as we may. You say
58 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



you are about to devote yourself to a life of toil. Alas!
dear child, is this a hand,” and he lifted the frail fingers
that lay pale within his clasp, ‘‘is this a hand for labour
to visit with rough touch? The southern suns, my
boy, beneath which your childhood passed, have left
you too tender and too fragile for rude toil to be your
portion.”

« Armer, my teacher, has so toiled from his very
earliest youth ; why should not I? We shall work
together ; together make real the bright creations of our
dreams; together watch the kindling spirit of true Art
revisit the embodied glories which the earlier sculptors
left half wrought.”

“Ts it so?” in his internal spirit sighed the watch-
ful Ernst, as he gazed long and wistfully on the tender
cheek that glowed with some new impulse of delight.

« And who is this Armer?” he asked, after a pause
of unquiet consciousness on the part of each.

“ His true name none may know,” was the answer,
“until he shall have wrought for himself a glory where-
with to surround it as a halo. His mother calls him

Armer, her ‘ poor one.’”
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 59

‘He should be rich in soul whose tasks are mated
unto thine !”

At those words the hearer looked round ;—and the
eyes of the twain were upon each other.

There was no mistaking that look. Hither in the
all but divine nature of Engelhertz, or in some pure
instinct felt but unknown, there existed a power which
at one and the same time read the companion-soul and
its secret.

Did a setting sun pierce the dim pine-boughs with
a kindling glow, that the changing cheek of Berthold
should redden thus with a bloom like the new-blown
rose ?

In silence did Ernst take the withdrawn hand once
more within his own;—in silence lead the way to the
cottage of Grete.

‘Your safest rest is here,” he cried. “ Be it my
care that none shall molest you; that no eye, without
your will, shall look upon your face as I have looked
this day! As a bond between us that no offence has
come to you through me; that you will give yourself

to my guidance, my protection, at all hours and at all
60 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

seasons, should peril beset you,—let this be the token:
let me speak to you again here, near the Pathway of the
Roe, whence, a startled Fawn, but now you fled before
my step ;—at some passing times—when you will. Do
you promise this?”

With downcast eyes, and a heart that melted like
a very woman’s, the youth faltered, “I do need pro-
tection, and of thee will I seek it, for thy soul is as my
soul.”

And the two parted.
CHAPTER VI.
Parity ond Rochen. Faury’s Frolirs.

‘* Of gentle blood, upon her birth
Consenting planets smiled ;
And she had seen those days of mirth
That frolic round the child.

With her, methinks, life’s little hour
Pass’d like the fragrance of a flower,
That leaves upon the vernal wind
Sweetness we ne’er again may find.”
EZ J. MONTGOMERY,





\\ ' re we HY, thy step grows more
: e womanly and stately every
day, little Roschen,” cried Mo-
KO. ritz von der Brunn, as he helped
‘" y ~~ her. to fill her pitcher at the

(SS), y fountain that played just without

5 Ze his father’s Schlosshof.
aa Rar “Time it should, Herr Moritz;
: ES for do you not know that to-morrow I am
in ye ¥ to be a statue?”
4 a * Thou a statue !—That round cheek,
cA F without line or dint, save where the
i
62 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

i camhoapernere an scien nine enema”

merry dimples run,—marry, ‘twill puzzle the sculp-
tor.”
“ Oh, but I am to bea Hebe—cup-bearer to the

gods, you know; a little Hebe, with full round



face”

“A feast for the gods, indeed, where thou pourest
out the nectar! Why, thou art fresher than the new-
sprung hyacinth, best flower of the spring. Take care
that, like the flower’s namesake, thou fallest not in love
with thine own beauty when thou art a statue.”

«Take care you don't, laughter-loving Herr Mo-
ritz.”

‘‘ Dost thou think there is danger, pretty one :.

“Ay, indeed I do. Why, are you not ever on
the watch for my coming? and do you not teaze me
with merry sayings and light jests, saucy words and
more saucy looks ?—and do not lovers do so? So Lene,
the herdsman’s daughter, says. I should so like to
have a lover: will you be mine !”

“That will I, right honestly,” said the laughing
Moritz, half bewitched with the Hebe glance of the

child; “ and to begin, you must give me a kiss.”
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 65
-<~hetatcnroeetnnanameseididaistitlesiiniasigstbtuis sc aiieaiitial ta. Cer

“To begin? No, no; ask Lene.”

“TI prithee get thee gone, child; I waste my time
talking folly to thee. I fear thou wilt learn little from
my teaching, thou seemest so grave a lecturer thyself.—
Away!” And he raised the filled water-jar on to the
head of the girl, and turned to go.

“Stay, stay, Herr Moritz,” said Réschen, calling
after him.

“* What wouldst thou, child?”

“See, you have left your ring, a goodly golden
hoop, on the fountain’s brim.”

“A ring?” looking at his bare finger. “In good
sooth, so I have; my grandam’s ancient wedding-ring.
Thanks, my pretty maid; but for thee it surely had
been lost. See, I have two, one on the other hand
finger ; my grandam’s both. Methinks I well can spare
you one. Wilt keep it for my sake, thou budding
rose?—A little too big for thy finger, eh? Let me
try. Why, so itis. But, see here; thou hast a ribbon
round thy neck—there let it hang: twill some day fit
thee better.”

The sly Réschen, when night drew down, put the
66 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
ne ene
golden bauble underneath her pillow ;—and dreamed
she was Moritz’s little wife.

Moritz thought, “ I was a fool to give my grandam’s
wedding-ring to any but my wife :—I must marry little

Réschen to get back my hoop.”

Cerone @YCHAD—
CHAPTER VII.
Che Sutercupted Vow, Glimmerings of the Past.

** To be forsworn,
Better that thou hadst ne’er been born :
Thowrt outcast by thine own consent.
An oath when broken is not sprent,
But with a curse of heaven reknit.;
For angels have attested it.”





WHITEHEAD,



Cathedral towers—the most



A
a
a)
S

ty Va silent and unfrequented spot
“\ of the entire city—an hour

before midnight, a solitary male
figure was seen slowly pacing to and
fro. A foil was held lightly in his
grasp; and from the presence of the
Rappierknopf, or button, at the point —-
the usual accompaniment of the mere
fencing weapon, and which, when the

foil was used for more deadly pur-
68 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
Unibet cnn edadee aapanbincna tities fe
poses, was struck off,—it was evident, although the
place and time might have augured otherwise, that he
was a lounger there with no very hostile intent.

He had not long paced thus the sacred precincts of
the Domkirche, waking the echoes of its grass-grown
courts, before he was joined by a second, and soon after
by a third, haunter of the night—each weaponed like
himself.

The greeting passed in silence on the part of each,
except that as they met, the foil of the one would strike
against that of the other, clashing for a moment, and
breaking with its sharp clang the silence that prevailed.
When the last comer had thus crossed steel with his
confréres in token of peaceful fellowship, he who had
been first at the place of meeting was also the first to
speak.

“Say,” said Ruprecht von Lorn—for it was he,—
‘are ye both prepared? Shall we here, after the cus-
tom of our land, enter into a defensive league together,
pledging ourselves by a solemn vow to all the relations
which belong to the bond of Briiderschaft ?—help, aid,

and succour in peril; defence of each other in absence ;
i

;
P3
i
}
=
4
'




pews, dat: tee of mat

-
ney



oe < aga tire — pave
was 8 Tounger there 9 0. ee

He hat net han yoo h 2
the Dow kirche, waking the é

Ry & eae :
echt, on
The greeting passed 3 in ‘Gierss ee tes jae OE os,
sateopt Chet as they met, the foil ef the age saettd serike.
against that of the other, clashiag tr 4 weent, and”
breaking with its sharp clang tht stlemer thot swevailed.
~ When the last comer had thue sessed sto! wth his
‘ : confrives in token. of peaceful feowehip. % «he had
a heen Gait ot the _ of meeting wae whic the But to
" -apenk.
* 1 * tae.” said iiteshc von Lorn-—-for © #s2 4e,—
2 Bare 3 ye both orepered? Shall we bere, wften “Se cus-
toes land, enter into a defensive — mgetner,



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THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 71
eee eee allem aRNeneneNanm REINS
present counsel in all need ; unity of hand in life, law,
and freedom,—the heart, the purse, the sword ?”

“ We are prepared,” answered with one voice both
Ernst Engelhertz and Moritz von der Brunn.

“Touch steel once again, then, in sign of commu-
nion.” |

As the clang of their foils once more broke upon
the silence of the night,—suddenly the weapons were
pushed aside, and a woman’s form stood before them.
It was the mother of Armer.

« Fold!” she cried, as, half fainting, she leant
against the cloister-wall. ‘Never on a spot where I
draw breath shall that vow be passed again! Put down
your harmless weapons, oh, heedless youths! while yet
they are bloodless. A bond like this once broken
brings with it perdition, alike here and hereafter !”

The suffering visible in her face as she spoke was
sufficient to impose for the moment a barrier to their
project; and with one consent the three lowered the
points of their foils, and turned respectfully towards
her.

“ Nay, good mother, be it as you will for this night ;
72 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

eer
we may not promise more,” said Ruprecht, who, though

wanting in some of the finer qualities of his companions,
was, in all, a passing good youth. -

“ By the grief and agony of a long life,” pursued
the excited Johanna, “I do enjoin ye all to forbear this
deed. No blessing rests upon it. It is a thing to be
forsworn of all good men, so fatal is the breaking of the
bond. Hear me!” she cried still more vehemently. “I
was a wife, and am a mother. This bond,—its broken
faith, made me widowed and forlorn; my boy a wan-
derer, his young sister dowerless—beggared !

“They were three—those friends of my youth,—
even as ye are three, when one of their number first
sought my love; my own brother—the child of the
same mother—was the second; the third was thy fa-
ther,” pointing to Engelhertz, forgetful at the moment
how far the secret of her own history might be im-
periled. “ He alone was faultless and faithful to his
vow. By the other two, my brother and my lover, it
was broken; and from the hour it was outraged, and
the weapons once crossed in peace were raised in strife

against each other, from that hour, downwards, all good
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 73
siti hielb siemens A cetisaliestacts ici L isda ee ee ae
fortune forsook the one to his slow-withering, dying
day, as all good men should forsake the other!”

Engelhertz who had, during this earnest appeal of
the widowed mother, continued to regard her atten-
tively, was here on the point of speaking :—but she
arrested his voice.

‘* Not now,” she cried ;—“ not here: Lhave said too
much. Ifyou recognise me, breathe not my name to-
night, nor ever. And for you,” she continued, turning
to the other two, “oh, think well what ye do! Pre-
serve to each other the bond of unity in faithful Briider-
schaft unbroken; but make no vow. The noble heart
needs none to bind its truth! Let your boast be rather
that, without help or aid from any idle vow either to
each other or to heaven, ye can preserve a ‘knightly
faith unblemished by the blood upon the steel !”

As she turned to go, Ernst, with a parting wave of
the hand to his friends, sprung to her side and lent his
arm for her support.

As they passed together on their way, the quiet ear
of night alone heard the whispered exclamation of En-

gelhertz: ‘ Johanna von Fern—vyon Alpen!”
CHAPTER VIII.

Che Failing Genius. Deroguitions.

«" A youth through the dim twilight I behold,
As mute and motionless and pale as stone.
Hands clenched, eyes closed, he sits—but not in sleep.”
WHITEHEAD.





ADie ETURN we to the Sculptor’s home.



Mn FA
Be)

:
f
+

like the morn from eye, cheek, and lip,—stood Réschen.

Robed in garments light, loose, and flowing ;
in her hand a small antique pitcher, such as

might well have been exhumed from the reek-



ing ashes of Pompeii; an arch smile glancing

Before the plastic clay, yet formless from the lap of
earth, sat, or rather reclined, the figure of the boy Ber-
thold. His hand had not yet sought to touch the form-

less mass of mould into which the breathing beauty was
<<

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THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 77
a areas oii ine OES
to pass. His eye, it is true, was fixed upon the young
shape into whose semblance he was about to breathe a
spirit akin to the model herself. Yet it seemed as if his
mind, scarcely yet attuned to the work, was striving —
though evidently with a painful effort—to grasp that
great Ideal without which, so Berthold deemed, no work
“of the master’s hand is worth the clay that fixes first the
primal thought, giving to it its earliest shape and sub-
stance.

A light, almost childish laugh from Roschen sud-
denly recalled him to a bitter sense of the truth :—
the spirit of his art was for the hour, perhaps for ever,
asleep within him!

« Set down your pitcher, Réschen,” said he; “ it
may not be to-day. My eyes are filled with shadows,
that will not let me see you as you are. Weary your-
self no further. Your merry voice is deepest wisdom
here, where silence weighs like lead upon the heart.
Oh, for your cheerful upspring of young life! I could
almost envy you, my Réschen.”

« You are sad to-day ; shall I sing to you?” was her

answer.
78 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



“ Any thing but silence and self-thought.”
« Listen, then, instead of thinking.”

Sung.
‘¢ Mid the Lindenthal springing,

A rose drank the dew,

Where, in melody singing,
A wood-linnet flew ;

She flew to the wild-rose,
Inhaling its breath ;

But her torn wings reclose
Round the weapon of death.

A thorn neath the false flower
Lay treacherously green,
And the simple one’s dower
Proved a dagger unseen.
And still at life’s close
Thus her voice sang forlorn,
‘I saw only the rose,
Yet I feel but the thorn !’”

“May you never press upon the thorns that lie
thick-grown upon the pathways of sweet earth!” cried
Berthold. “Oh! Réschen,” he continued, “ where

stays Armer? I cannot work alone; my hand is
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 79

powerless. I need your brother’s help, dear girl. The
spirit in which I gloried has grown dim.”

And in his outspread hands the boy’s buried face
was hidden.

“Tt is indeed strange that he does not return,” re-
plied Réschen. ‘“ My mother has gone out to make
inquiry after him; she, too, stays. What can have
become of him?”

“ Two whole days, and not a word. How sick the
heart grows that waits and hopes! If we could but
hear his step !”

“ Hush! listen!” cried Roéschen.

“ Nay, it was but the wind.”

And Berthold was right; for though the Old Year
had died so stilly, but for one gusty breeze of parting
breath, its successor did indeed respire with such full
lungs as set the crazy cottage-walls creaking beneath
their blast.

The wind too, ever a lover of the night, grew
louder and more shrill as the twilight of the short-lived
winter’s day deepened and set. And it soon became an —

unprofitable task to strain the ear for sounds that would
80 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

come and go, rise and fall, faint and swell, with every
imaginable freak. Each step that approached seemed
to be suddenly—just when the expectant hearers felt
most sure of its coming—caught up and whirled away,
as if by some phantom wing that hovered directly over
that particular door-sill. And no step came.

Then the night drew down; and the two grew
fearful as two fawns that have missed the doe’s track-
way in the waste.

But presently—when, as it ever happens, despair
had seized upon the heart, and it had given up, or
thought it had given up, its long weary watch, then,—
all at once, the latch was lifted, and Armer stood before
them. i

There was in the manner of his entry,—in the entire
heedlessness or unconsciousness of all that gnawing
uncertainty, doubt, and dread which had been the
portion of the watchers,—something painfully start-
ling to those on whom the shadow of that roof-tree
had pressed with so dire a weight.

It was felt, but not spoken; not even moulded
into a thought.
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 81
enemies niiliatllii ng
Indeed, it was no time for thinking; there was so
much to tell and to hear. Armer had to recount with
vivid delight how well his statue had been received ;
how he had himself been treated as though he were
the first of sculptors; how he had been detained hour
after hour, and had been finally prevailed upon to sleep
under a roof whose gorgeousness made it, to the fancy
of one who had been from his birth a wanderer like
Armer, a very fairy palace of enchantment.

This was an explanation sufficient—sufficient at
least for the reason of those who received it ; and if
any lingering feeling of disappointment remained, it
was but as a feeling, attributable more to the manner
of Armer than to any thing more real and tangible ; .
and it was at once smothered as unworthy of being
entertained.

But there was still a something undefined, a chill,
an aching, upon the hearts of both Berthold and

Réschen,—though least so with the younger, lighter
heart,—which would not be lifted off.

As the three were still conversing late into the

night, and wondering to each other what could have
82 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

become of Johanna, the door again opened, and she
entered, accompanied by Engelhertz.

The surprise of the two—Ernst and Berthold—was
great; for, in their brief interview, Berthold had not
told, and Ernst had forborne to ask, the particulars of
all that related to his art, and the friends with whom
it was associated.

Armer, too, had his recognition.

“ Ah!” he cried, the moment Engelhertz crossed
the threshold, “ my fellow-student by the Zuricher-
See!”

The exclamation of Ernst was one of no less as-
tonishment :

“ Welcome, Heinrich von Alpen, to the Miitter-
land!”
CHAPTER IX.

Arwlations. Che Boy Berthald,

** Oh! colder than the wind that freezes
Founts that but now in sunshine played,
Is that congealing pang which seizes

The trusting bosom when betrayed.”
¢ )

tn (>A
' a sw E pass over the greeting between
IN } ; ||) Johanna and her son, All her an-
i | | xiety at once relieved by his pre-

sence, the mother’s heart was at rest.






MOORE,




Forbearing all questions as to his pro-
tracted absence in the hearing of Ernst,
she turned to the latter. Alluding to the excla- ,
mation he had uttered on entering—

“* Yours is the first voice,” said J ohanna, “ that
has welcomed us back to the land of our birth.
You spoke of the Miitterland. Alas! she has proved
but a kindless mother. When last we met you, the
blow had not yet fallen which sent us beggared to
her bosom.—You remember Matthaus ?”

F
84 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

TD

“ Well—oh, well!”

“ You witnessed his sufferings—his blighted, crip-
pled life! The mind fell victim first; the body lin-
gered long. That wound inflicted by my brother’s
hand, though healed to outward sight, slowly sapped
the powers of life and reason, and he became—what
you saw not.—Oh, what a wreck he was!”

« Heaven preserved the orphans 2”

«“ Ay, I hold them! They are my all; sweet
bonds, yet ministers to pain! Pardon, dear Ber-
thold,” she pursued, turning to where the boy sat
apart, wrapt in some waking dream, —‘“ friend where
no other friends were found! Pardon if 1 seem to
grudge my boy’s inheritance to you. It is not that.
But to see him so utterly forsaken, when ye should at
least have been sharers in my brother’s squandered
wealth,—it does seem hard.”

“ May I hear that tale?” asked Engelhertz, with —
a now deepening interest, his eye wandering to the
face of Berthold.

“ You shall.—These lands of Graubriider, which

stretch so wide and rule it so lordly, were once pat-
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 85



titioned between a brother and a sister—Wilhelm and
Johanna. By my father’s will,—for it is of myself
and my brother that I speak,—the lands were to de-
volve upon the male heirs of my co-heir Wilhelm ;
or, failmg his issue male, to be divided equally be-
tween his children and mine.

“ Taking advantage of another clause in the will,
—in which it was well known there was a flaw,— my
brother assumed the right to exclude me altogether
from my joint life-heirship with himself, in the event
of my marrying without his consent.

“That I did so,—little dreaming that the errors
of my poor father’s will would thus be used against
me, to the utter beggaring of my orphan children,—
you already know. On that night, when they who
had been such fast friends (united in the triple bond
of Briiderschaft with your father, Ernst,) quarrelled,
became bitter enemies, and sought each other’s life;
—on that very night, when my Matthaus fell wounded
beneath the sword of my brother,—I fled to him.
I supported, nursed, and finally, —married him.

“ Soon afterwards my brother went into Italy, where
86 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. |

hss li nalanennneleapcnlaigicabheialomaeataeteinsinalntn
he resided many years. He there married, vowing that
no child of mine should ever succeed to his lands.

“ Fortune favoured his designs. The male heir,
which was to exclude my children from all participa-
tion in the wealth, my portion of which he had already
wrung from me, was granted to his prayer. His wife,
who died at Florence in the second year of her mar-
riage, left him one child—a boy.

“ Here is the result,” she added, looking round at
her poor dwelling, and at her two children, Heinrich
and Roschen.

But the eye of Ernst was turned alone on Berthold.
The boy had fainted !






Nie oe
id

CHAPTER X.
Che Closed Hor. Che Crust Repos.

**Long time hesighed. . . ....,
Now, hark! his anxious heart beats high.”
° WILLMOTT.

‘T will have been
| surmised that, while
Johanna was recit-
ing the history of
her past sorrow and
wrong, the boy
Berthold—who had
been sitting apart,
sz apparently occupied
by visions unconnected
with the tale—was in
truth a silent listener,
eagerly drinking in
every word that passed.
Thus, at the moment

when Johanna’s voice
88 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



ceased, the boy’s sick heart,—overtasked and crowded
with more intense, because hidden, anguish,—yielded at
once, beat with feeble pulse, and sense and conscious-
ness deserted him.

The first impulse of Johanna was to loosen the
boy’s vest, in order that he might breathe more freely.
But before she could do so, Engelhertz, quickly putting
her aside, called for water, and having bathed the boy’s
temples, himself bore him into the open air.

This at once revived him; for, in spite of those
southern suns to which Ernst had chosen to attribute
his almost feminine delicacy of frame, Berthold was
not ordinarily so fragile.

The boy’s first look on awaking to a consciousness
of the scene around him, was one of startled uneasiness.
Something, however, in the calm aspect of Ernst re-
assured him, and he soon returned to those who so
anxiously awaited him, smiling at his own weakness.

The circumstance was soon forgotten,—forgotten
by all but Ernst. To him it conveyed a revelation not
to be questioned. Whatever were his suspicions be-

fore, that sudden swoon, at the very close of Johanna’s
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 89

relation, in a moment brought conviction to his mind.
Had confirmation been wanting, what followed would
have supplied it.

Berthold sought the city no more. Shut from every
eye but that of Grete, the cottage of his old nurse
became now the boy’s only resort. Johanna wondered,
and poor Roschen’s tears fell fast; for though both
frequently ascended the path towards the cottage of
Grete, neither was ever admitted. Ernst alone made
no attempt to gain admission. None knew, though
Engelhertz too well divined, the mental struggle that
was going forward within the closed doors of that
humble dwelling.

At last, one morning Grete presented herself at his.
door, the bearer of a letter from Berthold. |

Here, for the first time, the calmness of Ernst de-
serted him. The trust, then, which he had so fondly
hoped would be reposed in him, if in none else, was
about to be accorded. The promise given on that
never-to-be-forgotten day, beside the Pathway of the
Fawn, was now to be kept in its own pure spirit of

truth. The anticipation was ecstacy.
90 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



In his anxious haste to arrive at its contents, the
letter became torn in his hands, but enough was left
clear for the heart to decipher; and though clothed in

broken words, it conveyed a speaking meaning.

** To Ernst Engelhertz.

“ Keeping the promise I made to one who would
never have extorted it but for the noblest purpose,
I place in you this trust. The secret of a deadly
wrong has, I am led to think—partly from your own
observation, and partly through my untimely failure
of strength during Johanna’s recital—become known
to you. If this be so, towards you at least my vow
is no longer binding. But, before I commit myself
further —since this surmise may prove unfounded—
tell me truly ifI am right. If it is as I believe, you
will read my meaning without more words ; if not, let
this letter remain the enigma it must be to you. I
cannot tell if I should be glad or sorry that you should
know all. To me it would prove a sumless blessing
to be enabled to open all my heart to one whose watch-

ful guardianship has sweetened the dull life of many
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 91



a year; yet, for the sake of a father’s fame, I would
it were not so. Speak to me truly in this hour, for
uncertainty weighs upon my spirit.—Yours,

“ BERTHOLD VON FERN.”

Beneath the keen eyes of Grete the trembling hand

of Ernst scrawled a brief reply :—

“ To the Child of Von Fern.

“Your secret is mine! For years have I guarded
it as my life, knowing not its meaning, but trustful in
you. Johanna’s relation confirmed what my soul had
never questioned. For your father, fear nothing; his
secret is safe, as yours is, in the true breast of your
Ernst. Let not your trust end here; let me be near
you for your counsel, as of old. Give me permission to
meet you once more, as I prayed, near the Pathway of
the Fawn. And be this the token that I speak truly—
I call you Bertha von Fern.— Yours unto death,

Ernst ENGELHERTZ.

“ T will pass along the deer’s track at the coming

of the sunset.”
92 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
cieeiviisectuiinitseinesadsceaasasaonnsaciinsaasiabiali Aisa

Ernst himself, whose heart beat fast with a thou-
sand crowding emotions, could scarcely have desired a
swifter or more earnest messenger than Grete. Accus-
tomed to the mountain-path from her girlhood, she
climbed its steep ascent with a step which youth could
scarce have rivalled, and was soon lost to sight.

As she reached her own door, the latch was cau-
tiously lifted from within, and Grete’s entrance was
welcomed by her whom we have hitherto known under
the name of the boy Berthold. Another moment, and
the letter was opened and read with moist eyes and
cold, pale, trembling lips, to which the sweet sounds
came slowly.

“Tt is so, Grete!” exclaimed Bertha, at last; “ it
is as I have told you: the secret is no longer ours.”

“Love has a keen eye, my bird,” answered the
wary nurse, glancing at her young charge.

«Say rather the ‘ angel-heart’ divines truly, good
Grete,” said her foster-child, as, with an uneasy con-
sciousness that the old woman touched closely upon the
truth, she turned away from eyes that searched her
hidden heart.
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 93

After a few moments given to thought, casting her
arms about Grete’s neck, she added —

** And now, dear nurse, whatever comes, this shame-
ful garb must be laid aside. Never since that night
when I felt that our secret was too surely betrayed—
to one at least, to the noble, earnest heart !—have I
borne to shew myself in such a guise. As you love
me, fetch hither with all speed such garments as maiden
youth may wear without a blush; but let their hue be
sombre, as befits one who mourns. Alas! I have cause
to mourn.”

Grete hesitated, doubtfully.

“ 1 know what you would say,” Bertha responded
to her looks: “ this is betrayal at once. But not so.
Until I may do so with safety to my vow —broken yet |
to none—I leave the refuge of these walls and yonder
wood no more. If ever I am to resume this hateful
disguise, I know not; but this only I feel, I must and
will resign it here—now, at once. A few hours hence
—see, the sun is low already. Oh, haste, dear Grete !
haste! Do my bidding but this once, and I will love

thee ever.”
94 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

“ T yead your meaning, child,” said the old woman,
still shaking her head doubtfully ; “ you go to meet
him, then,—this stranger ?”

“ Stranger!” cried Bertha. “Is he a stranger
whose eye alone has watched my steps, whose foot has
hovered round my solitude, for years? A stranger {—
he who, resigning all youth’s joyous sports and healthful
pastimes, hour by hour, and year by year, wore his
young days away in silent musings by the side of his
boy-friend? who, in the thrice-blessed confidence of
youth, gave all his glorious aspirations to my keeping,
calling me ‘ sweet friend —dear brother?’ O Grete,
is he a stranger?”

“ Ay, ay, that was all very well then,” answered

Grete ; “ but now”



“ What now ?—Good nurse, no more. I pray you,
haste !”

“ Well, well, I am gone.—Ah, it is ever so! Old
steps may lag, but. young wishes will speed. Ay,
‘ay, I was young too once.” And half doubting, half

pleased, the good nurse went muttering on her way.
CHAPTER XI.
Che Forest Shade. Die Gute in bie Schone,

“ Loving the Beautiful, thou lovest all :
Goodness is Beauty in a lovelier guise.”
Bs 2 \ CV o
Son LAS ICON FRE
HEE CSIR

7





(STAI

eZ,

mes a ON
wi TK ‘RUE to the hour, the sun no
*4 sooner slanted, raying down
behind the crests of the pyramidal
pines, than Ernst was seen slowly
pacing the Pathway of the Fawn.
Dejected, with eyes downcast,
and drooping limbs shrouded in a
woman's garb of mourning, Bertha
stood within the shadow of the pines.
She could not approach him, true,
dear friend though he was. She could —
only think, only feel, how often ere now

she had presented herself before him in

PS
Da the guise of the boy Berthold. Now, a
ae shrinking woman, she stood in his path

3 trembling and abashed.
96 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
a speincene peunlenemnaiiciaeiacienatiniaaeontaaienaiiiaaniilmaiite

A slanting beam from the setting sun falling on the
spot, betrayed where she stood. In a moment Ernst
was at her side.

How he pined to fold her in one long embrace, as
he gazed upon her strange new beauty, obscured no
more! Not daring to trust his voice, he took her
hand in silence, and~led her farther into the wood-
side shade.

Bertha, drawing comfort from his looks, was the
first to speak.

«Can just men pardon me,” she cried, “the wrong
I do?”

«To the just are vows most binding ; and you have
vowed,” was all his answer. And again there was
silence between the two. Not for worlds would he
have broken the pure dream of her trust in him by
giving breath to the words that trembled on his lips.

But by degrees the new restraint which had sprung
up between those who had been such true and fast
friends, wore insensibly away.

« And now,” cried Ernst, as the twilight deepening

found them still occupied in sweet but aimless converse,

vy0

cy 4 2 ee
shaken
ohare oe gd


THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 97
eee eee
“ give me patient hearing while I speak of a scheme I
have devised, which may, by Heaven’s blessing, bring
happiness to all, and can do injury to none.

“ You know me somewhat of a dreamer. But,
Bertha, there are true visions as well as false; instincts
of the soul, which are greater than we know. You be-
lieve this ?”

« T shall do from this hour,” answered Bertha.

“T have a creed, too,” continued Ernst; “ wild
enough, it may be, but with me a profound belief. It
‘. this: I hold that in the intense perception of the
Beautiful lies the germ of all Good ; that the fine sense-
worship we bestow upon all that is loveliest in the
material world is closely allied to the more divine im-
pulses of the soul.

“ Now if this be so, may not the discerning power
I speak of be directed to the noblest, the most glorious
issues? May not the perception of moral beauty be
aroused and quickened into new-born life by a more
‘ntimate association with the external beauty which is
everywhere around and about us!

“ It is this faith which I purpose to put to the test;
98 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

sacs bahia inalneianabiaialichioaneplitoadianeaennmnaatll
the instinctive faculty within me assures me of suc-
cess.”

«JT see; this touches my father!” cried Bertha, with
eyes of thankful hope gazing upward in his face.

Turn thine eyes upon that brow, O thou “ angel-
heart!” Thou beliest not thy faith; thy creed is true.
In thy worship of the beautiful in her, how divine the
impulses awakened !

“Tt does,” he replied; “it is towards your father
that my design tends. There must be no force; no
wresting of the rights of others from him. He who
has fallen so low must be cast no farther down. We
must rather strive to raise him; self-convict him of his
better nature; draw forth the spirit-beauty that lies
veiled within him as within all created beings,—though
few may lift the veil. Oh! Bertha, we will teach him
to know himself. We will crowd around him visions
of beauty that shall stir the sleeping soul of good within
his breast. Linked together in that holy task, our
hands shall marshal before his gaze a train of visions
that shall cast the tempter out.”

Oh, that this might be!” sighed Bertha.
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. . 99

“ Keep firm your faith, and have no fear.”

‘¢ But,—Johanna ?”

“That must be looked to. If I find she may be
trusted, we must tell her all. I have less doubt of her
than of Armer.”

Armer! Was that name losing its charm? Was
the sweet dawning fancy nipped in its early bud by the
suspected worthlessness of its idol? Eye and lip were
calm and serene as she replied:

“ How, without his aid, can we proceed in this?”

“ Why, only thus. This very day has he been
offered by his new patron the means to study for a
year in Italy. His absence may befriend us best.
Once away, whatever works shall reach your father
will be received as from Armer; he will suspect no
other hand. Then for our glorious work! ‘There
shall be no pause, no rest for his awakened conscience.
Each after each, some sculptured form, divine in con-
ception, but breathing a mortal beauty linked by sweet
ties and home affections to his heart, shall confront him
in his home. Johanna’s self shall rise before him.
She shall stand as she stood in youth,—a living phan-

G
100 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

tom, before his aching sight; till revenge shall sink
abashed, and love rise in its place. First she shall
greet him in her early beauty, with all its Hebe grace
and bridal bloom, whose coronal was steeped in tears.
Next in her saddened, mournful after-day,—a weeping
Niobe of the heart, to gaze on which shall pulse his
own to madness.

“ Then, when most his soul is melted, his heart
bowed, his every evil impulse cowed and crushed be-
neath the weight of ruthful memory, then you—you,
Bertha, in your dear semblance, real as yourself,—shall
stand within the shadow of his arms, the dove he chased
from that most sacred ark of home! You—against
whom my soul has vowed his anger shall not live—you
shall he gaze on with fixed eyes, as dead men gaze on
heaven; till at last he sinks, subdued ;—dull to all
feelings but the one, that your love, the heaven lost
to him in his days of guilt, shines above him still,
no cloud between. Then, in that hour, as with dead
men in their shrouds, the redeeming angel’s voice
shall sound, and the ransomed clay shall quicken into

soul!”
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 101



He paused,—the fire of a pure high purpose light-
ing up his eyes.

All was mute: no spirit-answer sounded from her
voice, whose music was his life; and bending low to
catch sweet tones the winds might bear away, he spoke
in grieved and passionate appeal.

“ Say, Bertha, does your spirit answer me in this?
Will you follow in the sacred paths through which my
steps would guide you?”

Still no answer.

“ Oh, Bertha, in another hour, another time, as
sweet, if ought on earth could be as sweet as this, thus
did you say,—‘ Thy soul is as my soul!’ Can you echo
now my eager words and wish—a wish conceived and
passionately borne for your dear sake alone? Or is the
wide-spread faith in sympathy a dream?”

With steady gaze she raised her eyes to heaven.
She slowly loosed the arm on which she leaned, and
dropping to the ground on one bent knee, raised up
her hands on high.

Her lover and the heavens heard her answer: the

very forest leaves grew still.
CHAPTER XII.
Che Fountains Brim. Crost tn Kummer.

‘¢ They talked with open heart and tongue—
Affectionate and true.”
WORDSWORTH.

ar ae eX again to the on The winds
| We “a of March took up the violet’s

ne ‘ breath, and bearing it onward
with swift wing, chased the
wild honey-bee with his load
of sweets along the spangled
4. meads: then, folding their pin-



ions, they lay down beside
some quiet brook till other springs should come; and
April, whose gentler step could scarcely breast the
buffet of their gale, came tripping light of foot with
the sunshine on her brow.

And once more Réschen stood beside the bubbling
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 105



fountain in front of the Schloss von der Brunn; this
time no longer with light laughter on her lip, but
grave and full of thought.

Her pitcher was filled. But she had missed the
wonted helping hand that made her labour light: Mo-
ritz was nowhere to be seen.

She lingered at the spring, evidently unwilling to
leave the fount without one word exchanged with him.
Should she call to him? Oh, no! that, she thought, she
dared not do ; indeed, it was too probable that he was
not within hearing, or he would surely have been at
her side.

A bright thought struck her. She would sing the
little echo-song with which she sometimes roused the -
voices round the Lurley Berg. So, tuning her voite

to the right key, she struck up

Der Wirkerball.

Alone, beside the Lurley Berg,
I wait, I watch, I pine ;
Sweet voices sound from rock to rock,
But none replies to mine,
Lureley !
106 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



Lift up thy voice above them all ;—
Sound, oh! sound the Wiederhall,
Lureley !

The Gemse’s step is on the hill,—
My love he should be there :
His hound comes whining to the gate ;—
Where stays he ?—where, oh! where ?
Lureley !
Hear my sick heart’s frantic call ;
Sound, oh! sound the Wiederhall,
Lureley !

Alas ! thou echoest but the sound
Despair’s wild voice has stirred ;
Unto my weary, longing hope,
Thou answerest not a word,
Lureley !
I cast me down :—my voice shall call,
Oh! never more thy Wiederhall,
Lureley !

As the last notes died away, Réschen, hopeless of
seeing him that day, was turning to go,— when Moritz
bounded over a low wall at her right, and in a mo-
ment was at her side.

‘You will think me very bold, Herr Moritz,” said
the poor girl, almost wrought to tears by the sudden
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 107
i ata ea ara ese
apparition of one whose help she came to seek, and
who seemed so willing to extend it; “ but in truth I
lingered for your coming.”

“ Can I serve thee in aught, my little Roschen ?”
replied Moritz. “See, thy voice has lured me hither ;
though I almost vowed—but no matter. Tell me
what I can do to aid thee.” For he saw well by the
girl’s earnest, almost tearful look, so new to Rés-
chen, that there was something wrong.

“ First tell me,” she said,—‘‘ you go sometimes to
Graubriider, do you not ?”

“ Often, Réschen ;—what then? Hast thou a
friend there ?”

“ How shall I tell you? Do you know if any tid-
ings have been received there — of— one— who—alas !'
my brother has deserted us !”

“ Was this new favourite, then, sent into Italy
by Von Fern,—he whom they called Armer,—was he
thy brother ?”

It would be difficult to say,— Moritz himself could
not have told,— what made the youth's face suddenly

brighten as he arrived at this conviction.
108 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

LN

Now, Moritz von der Brunn, be it understood,
knew nothing whatever of Réschen, or her family, or
friends ; had never even seen her, save at that same
fountain’s side, where the two would appear to have
met by some meddling stroke of fate. The young
man’s interest in the child, however, had recently
been deepened, and his curiosity piqued, as we shall
see, by meeting with her sculptured resemblance in
the possession of Wilhelm von Fern.

“Was Armer, then, really thy brother?’ he re-
peated. “Oh! then that accounts for it.”

“ For what, Herr Moritz?” in her turn inquired
Roschen.

“ Why, the Ganymede—the Hebe,—up yonder in
the gallery of Von Fern,” said Moritz. “ It was clear
to me that only one who loved thee dearly could have
chiselled thus thy beauty out of the cold stone. Why,
it lives, it breathes! It takes the heart by storm. A
most provoking likeness, in good sooth! Scarcely thou
thyself, but rather the bewitching thing thou wilt be:
such, perchance, as was thy mother in her youth.—
And so Armer is thy brother, after all.”
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 109

She longed to say it was not the work of Armer ;
but that would betray too much. She only answered :

“ T thought he loved me,—and my mother,—and
Bertha. But he thinks of us—sends to us no more,
who love him, oh, so well!”

« Sends no more! why, how is this?’ cried Mo-
ritz, his head still running on the Ganymede, the sup-
posed work of Armer, and ignorant of the scheme in
which the latter had no part.

«“ Oh, ask me not!” answered Réschen ; “I see it
all.” And her young heart echoed once again the pro-
phetic words of Bertha,—‘ Farewell poverty and Ar-
mer !’ 7

She looked wistfully at Moritz, and said, “ You can
give me no help, then; there is no hope—no com-
fort |”

“ Nay, nay, Réschen, say not so,” cried Moritz,
taking her hand kindly in both his own; “ it is not
so bad as that. I see well now what thy sorrow is.
Make me thy friend; a true one will I be to thee,
Réschen.”

“TI would willingly tell you all,” she answered,
110 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



“for I feel,—I know, that I may trust you; but the
secret is another’s, not mine. And for Armer, I can-
not—must not speak of him as”—he deserves, she
would have added.

“ No, no; neither you nor any one shall speak of
him as unkind. He is only a little forgetful, —sur-
prised, as we all are at times, by his good fortune.
When did you hear from him last?”

“ Oh, not for weeks—nay, months past. I cannot
reckon it but by my mother’s tears. And Bertha
grieves for us, yet speaks no word against him. Our
only comfort is in the good Herr Engelhertz.”

“* Engelhertz!” echoed Moritz, in some surprise.

“ Yes,” said Roschen. ‘“ Oh, how kind he is, this
dear Ernst! And what a skill he has! Bertha says
he ever breathes a divine spirit into things that have
no soul until his touch inspires them.—You should
hear Bertha.”

“ Ernst has indeed a master-hand. Then he is
your friend; and he suggests your subjects, as well
as assists you in your labours,—I mean your bro-

ther’s ?”
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 111

“He works, and so does Bertha,” Réschen replied
with some hesitation, fearful that she had already said
too much.

« Well,” said Moritz, without waiting for her bro-
ken speech, ‘‘ I will go and see the Ganymede again.
Once at Graubriider, I may possibly serve you; per-
haps hear news of Armer.”

“* You will not say we blame him?”

* Not a word. ‘Trust me cordially, as I would
thee, sweet Roschen! When next we meet, I hope to
bring thee better comfort. Yon fount is full enough,
good sooth, without thy tears!”

With lightened heart and step did Roschen trip
towards home that day, with her burthen of bright
waters. No fountain of oblivion—no Lethe, that, from ,
which the sweet waves were drawn ;—but a sparkling

Ennoe of fair and fond remembrance !
CHAPTER XIII.

Che Ganymede. The Charm Barks.

‘* LEON. The fixture of her eye has motion in’t,
As we are mock’d with art.

. Still methinks
There is an air comes from her. What fine chisel
Could ever yet cut breath ?
( SHAKESPEARE,



Sy SS FESS

aly Y ; N the halls of Graubriider,—alone,
before the Hebe,—fixed in an

attitude of silent contemplation, stood




t)
x







\

=

é

William von Fern.

— Was his eye dimmed with the ra-

_—
fii) | bo
= ®
r
S i< )
” one 4

:

diance that streamed from the work of
the sculptor’s hand? or did the lifeless

marble speak to his spirit of sweeter

“tiff

its

- TT ae

things than its own embodied beauty—

ae
aut

youth and a sister’s love ?
He looked, and looked again; passed
his hand across his eyes, as if doubting if

some vision of the brain had not gathered
SWS
LESSQWwWwS
SSS

loner

HIT A a

tet



THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 115
et rec eae
form and substance from the cold stone before him,
enduing it with the shape of her whom he had so cast
out—his playmate of boyhood, Johanna !

Down the long gallery he paced with slow, musing.
steps ; then turned and looked again.

Still it was there,—a very phantom of the heart!
with such smiling lips as feed the ungrowing love, ne’er
younger and ne’er older, which is nature’s bond with
those who have one pastime and one home.

She was the girl, and he once more the boy.

The flowing drapery and the half-raised foot! Thus
had he seen her a thousand times chase the azure but-
terfly from flower to flower, trip along the bordered
walks, or press the velvet turf.

In the arch meaning of that laughing lip he heard
soft gibes re-echo; as when, a rude and clumsy boy,
her lighter step pursued him with the snowy ball when
winter had bound the brooks.

The lifted hand and pitcher! ‘Thus stood she by
her favourite rose, dropping sweet dews,—Aurora’s
brighter self. :

Those flowing locks! How often had he seen them
116 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

wafting airs from heaven across the cheek they pressed,
light as the thistle-down upon the peach !—as, flying
before the gale, she followed far the kite he flew, her
eye on heaven, as his on her, too happy in that sweet
sharer of his sport.

Where now had all this vanished ?

Oh, cold, dull journeyer through the aching, anxious
years !—oh, Mammon-ridden heart! are these things
still so sweet ?

In the sounds of the revel,—in the ringing of the
gold, hast thou found thee better pastime ?

Is the lighted hall a fitter temple for thy spirit,
man of the changed heart! than the arching sky that
spanned ye both,—beloved and loving children,—in one
wide embrace ?

Is the goblet more precious than the golden king-
cup your hands gathered with the dew?—Is the wine
sweeter than the brook-water ?

Alas!

If but the phantom of her voice could reach him !—

one word—a tone—a sigh!

Alas!
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 117



The echo of his pacing foot alone filled all the
chamber ; there was no other sound.

As he gazed, the hovering twilight threw soft sha-
dows across the marble brow; and, silently stealing
with a step of stealth, like Time on beauty’s face, the
veiling darkness crept from cheek to lip. The eye-
lids seemed to droop,—the smiling grace to settle into
thought.

Such a change he remembered well. He thought
how, in old days, her childish mien had deepened into
pensive beauty ; how childhood’s sports were all at once
foregone, and youth’s full heart made pastimes of its
own: how for her a new world began to dawn—a new
strange life to quicken; how day had its own hopes,
which were not of the child; and how night, instead
of deep sleep, brought visions to a wakeful pillow, of
toys that wearied less the limbs, but made the heart
beat quicker.

He saw it all again—as of old!

Well—oh, how well!—he recalled the time when
first the softening shadow fell !

They stood apart—not severed,—the sister and the

H
118 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



brother. A rich-toned voice was in the maiden’s ear
—a voice to childhood strange; singing, in young
love’s burthen old, sweet ditties of all time ;—filling with
music alien to that home each household hearth and
haunt !

There wanted but the kindling blush to shew him
Matthiaus at her side.

Matthius !—his friend—his chosen heart-linked bro-
ther; his sister’s love,—the promised bridegroom of
her youth, —the husband of her heart !

With irritable tread his arrested foot beat measures
on the floor. He paused and turned. He would not
be so fooled ;—he would gaze on it no more.

In spite of him, his eye wandered back. Half con-
scious only of the time and place—so mingled were
those buried memories with the things of now— he saw
not busy feet that entered, nor busy hands that lighted
up the hall.

Suddenly, the quivering lights fell on the statue’s
darkened face. Again the curved lip wreathed with
smiles ; again the vacant and orbless eye beamed with

a new-lit fire.
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN 119
silences ethene csnnsiientiniaic i ke a

Was the thing in motion? or had his brain grown
dizzy with such thoughts ?

The foot sprung from the pedestal, and led the
joyous dance! He heard the viols play—the harp-
notes ring! ‘The boards beneath his tread bounded
and fell with the bound of the springing feet! The
plighted hands touched his, as they swept past the
spot where he stood ; and he caught sweet, smothered
tones in the whirl of the flying dance!

There is a sudden lull. The phantom music stills;
—the airy harp-notes die away. The dream-dance is
closed, and the shadow-steps pass out.

There is a pause—a breathless pause. Sighs only

fill the empty space ;—tears and a shrouded face !
CHAPTER XIV.
Che Checked Pursuit. The Banded Brothers.

ef Se ‘Give her rein—let her go ;
Like Wshaft from the bow,
Like a bird on the wing.”















T so happened that,
S* Roschen turned
SS homewards from
the Brunn, Mo-
ritz, whose
Js pO intention

PS : Ae y WA eae ; a
- FR "i had been to proceed

— :
a immediately to Grau-

== .—~ brider, instead of taking his

path at once in that direction,

she passed on her way.
Poising on her head the pitcher,—
_ which was held in its safe position more
from the exact balance maintained by her erect

form and steady step than by the slight support


1.

yp. 12




7-9 ® ve





ger tea Mert A>

Ams

i

“”

5



















.
Pal «
a “
”
ed
.
‘










THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 123

afforded by the one raised arm, which more from habit
than necessity was curved upwards to sustain it,—
Roschen hied homewards.

Now with such a burthen, however expertly sus-
tained, it was not easy to turn the head, as the over-
mastering desire arose to look round and see if Moritz
was still there; but yet Roschen managed it with ex-
quisite grace. One waltz-like turn of the forward foot,
and the whole light form swung round, the beaming
face glancing aside through the bow of the rounded
arm.

It was irresistible. Moritz felt it to be so; and,
judging from his first forward spring, a few such paces
would have carried him to her side.

But this did not suit Réschen. Through all her
artless prattle—her almost childish confidence in her
stray companion of the hour—he had never yet learnt
from her either her history or the place where she
dwelt. So, seeing herself, as she thought, pursued,
she quickened her pace, and soon distanced the half-
enamoured Moritz.

At the identical moment, as if a twofold spell were
124 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



at work against him—one to speed the steps of the
flying beauty, and the other to enchain his own—he
felt his arm suddenly grasped from behind.

Turning round in angry surprise, his eye softened
to find his detainer no other than Engelhertz.

A quiet smile played round the lips of Ernst as
the glance of Moritz met his own; and passing his arm
within that of his friend, he walked on by his side,
taking the same path as Roschen.

«“T must hamper you with a less pleasant com-
panion,” he said, “ for I have something for your
ear.”

«Oh! a lecture, I suppose,” exclaimed Moritz.

« But that I know thee, Moritz, perhaps I might
lecture,” returned Engelhertz. ‘“ As it is, I share to
the full your admiration of yonder sylph-like, flying
form;—as lovely a piece of Nature’s work as ever
drew beauty from the skies !”

« Who is she?” cried Moritz, quickened by this
unlooked-for sympathy into an eagerness at which, in
a more sober hour, he would himself have smiled.

‘* Whence comes she? What is her name?”
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 125



“ Soft,—not so fast, Moritz. First, why do you
ask ?”

“ Why do I ask?” exclaimed Von der Brunn, sud-
denly halting. ‘ Well, suppose I cannot tell you ; I
am not sure that I know myself. I might as well say,
Why do you question me why I ask? Why do we
ask the name of a bird—a flower ?”

“ The flowers that we may gather, and wear as life’s
best crown—the sweet wayfarers of our native fields—
have all familiar and undisguised names: this is not
one of such,” was the answer of Ernst.

“ Her birth, at least, I'll swear,” said Moritz, “ is
never what it seems.”

“It may be so. What matters it to you or me ?”

“ Why, nothing, truly. Yet”—— |

‘« Yet — yet —sweet fancies haunt yon fountain with
her steps? Is it not so? So young,—so fairy-like, this
little passage-bird of fifteen springs haunts at sunny
seasons these shores of yours, crossing the watery path
of yonder Brunn. Chase her not back, Moritz, to a
stormier land! Never in her ear breathe word, how-

ever stainless, that shall check the sweet, wild flight of
he. THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



her young wing. You little think how often I have
watched ye both. She talks much to you, as I think?”
«“ She does, and I to her; but, before heaven!
never”
«¢ What says she ?”
“ Sweet words, that fall like Echo’s own!—so mu-
sical—so soft! Still”
“ But of what does she speak? Be frank with me:
remember, the bond of brotherhood unites us,—though





unsworn. I have motive for my asking.”

“ Frankly, I have nought to tell. I might, methinks,
retort your just-now question, and say, Why do you
ask ?”

“JT will tell you. You see already that some mys-
tery attaches to her and hers.”

“ That is plain; but I cannot fathom it.”

“°’Twere better that you should not, save for one
only reason. You may serve her, and all on whom her
love is cast.”

“ How?” cried Moritz, with renewed interest,—quite
willing to ride round any castle wall of all the Rhine

for so fair a Cunegunda.,
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 127

pee initiates csi

“That would take long to tell. As time serves, you
shall know. Let this be enough for the hour :—we want
your true and honourable heart-service. I need not
say you will give it?”

“And whom do you mean in saying ‘ we ?’” again
questioned Moritz, half disposed to be jealous of his
friend.

“Some few,” answered Ernst, “ besides myself; a
widowed mother and her injured son, and—one be-
sides,”

The impressive tone in which the closing words
were spoken, added to the peculiar expression that
crossed the face of Ernst as he uttered them, threw a
startled, but still enigmatical, light upon the mystery
which so puzzled Moritz. ‘There was more here, at
least, than fantasy. Engelhertz, it was clear, had some
deep interest at heart, associated, though how he could
not divine, with the history of Réschen. But the fact
alone was enough for Moritz.

“Tell me plainly,” said he, “in what I may aid you.
Heart and hand are ready,—nay, impatient for your ser-
vice. Stay; she named Graubriider. I think I see”


128 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

“Yes, go to Graubriider,” cried Engelhertz ; “ watch
well what signs strike you there. Above all, mark with
keen eye Von Fern. Be constant in his path: note
well his words. Let no passing mood of his—no anger,

sorrow, tenderness, or ruth, be passed by your keen

99

eye.

As he spoke, the two had reached Johanna’s door.
The foot of Ernst was on the threshold as he added:
“Go, brother of my heart; and for your reward, well
earned in such good service, I give you at all hours free
entrance here. ‘This is Réschen’s home. Here, for the
present, we part: here seek me on your return, and”—

“ Stay,” interrupted Moritz; “ what of her brother
Armer ?”

“ Touch lightly on his name to her when next you
meet,” answered Ernst. “ Brother or friend who so
betrays his trust,—who, in the first blush of brighter
fortune, neglects, forsakes, forgets, the holy hearth-ties
of his earlier, darker day,—is best but lightly named.
Be you a brother to her youth, as I shall be. Now,

farewell !”
CHAPTER XV.

Che 3tolinn Grove. Che Winky.

** Weep now for the lonely morrow,

For the hearth-light cold,

In your dark and silent sorrow,
Hearts, with grief grown old!

Ye have trod the vintage dread
Till no purple drops remain ;

Till no more its wine is shed,
Ye have drained the cup of pain !”







y 4
\ bd things are possible to a pure
will.
Such had been the creed of Ernst.
ak Such now was the faith of Bertha.
Upon the altar of this faith they
eT ia down their hearts. Already,
in their first bright creation—the
Y\ Ganymede, the issue had justified
K® such faith. The highest conception
s had sprung from the purest develop-
SING ment of will. The effect produced upon
eS er the mind of him in whose restoration to

| {3)_ 130 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

Sa is iN cla anialcnanionnemeninaameaiat
rested, was greater than their fondest hope could have
foreshadowed.

Their reliance upon Moritz was great. His zeal in
the cause was sufficiently strong to prompt his constant
watchfulness of Von Fern; at the same time that, stand-
ing apart from any closer and more individual interest,
he was less likely to betray himself than if that cause
were his own.

But now, on the very threshold of their hope, in the
dawning of a first success, a new difficulty stood in the
way of their further progress.

Johanna—who had so far shewn a spirit of forgive-
ness, as to induce Ernst to trust her with the knowledge
of the greater wrong committed against her (in the sys-
tematic fraud practised by her brother for the purpose
of excluding her children from their inherited rights )—
had yet never, from the first, been wholly reconciled to
the plan that was to be pursued. She looked upon the
entire scheme as wild and chimerical; and, feeling her
power at once to reinstate her children, without await-
ing the slow moral progress of events designed by Ernst,

was, after many conflicts with herself, on the very eve
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 131
eons tinct gs Sue
of betraying the whole and acting decisively, when an
event occurred which for the time set aside all thoughts
but the one.

This was the news of the sudden and violent death
of Armer—or, as we should now call him, Heinrich
von Alpen.

On the day when Johanna received the letter, dated
from Italy, which conveyed the mournful intelligence,
Bertha was standing before the half-modelled clay out
of which was to grow a second statue,—the Niobe, de-
signed for the gallery of her father. Engelhertz was
bending over her, assisting her in her labours ; suggest-
ing and retouching, guiding her with his counsel, and
inspiriting her by his praise. Réschen alone was ab-
sent.

Bertha thought she knew well, when that letter came,
that it was from Heinrich himself: the mother’s heart
divined otherwise.

The quick alarm of love,—and that a mother’s love,
caught, from the first glance at the letter, a forewarning
of dread.

No sooner had she hurried over the contents than,
132 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

uttering one long piercing shriek, she fell senseless to
the ground.

Bertha flew to her side; while Engelhertz took up
and read the fatal scroll. It was in a stranger’s hand,
and to the following effect.

It appeared that, having previously engaged in some
midnight brawl, induced by a jealous rivalship for the
smiles of an Italian beauty, Heinrich von Alpen was
returning late to his lodging in a retired street of Flo-
rence, when, almost at his own door, a concealed assas-
sin rushed upon him, overmastered his weapon, over-
powered, and finally wounded him. The writer of the
letter, who, aroused by the struggle, had witnessed the
conflict from a neighbouring window, hastened to the
spot; but too late to defend the unfortunate youth.
The writer bore him to his own home, and, receiving
from his dying lips a knowledge of who he was, in-
stantly wrote off to the Frau von Alpen, imparting the
heart-rending intelligence of his fall; adding that “long
ere the letter could reach its destination, Heinrich would
be no more.”

Over the scene which followed let misery draw a veil.
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 133
waking was an agony without its parallel in all earth’s
realm of tears !

Crushed mother! The idol of her heart and hope
—no less because unworthy,—the crowning gift of all
her life, “her widow-comfort and her sorrow’s joy,”—
dead—clay-cold beneath the glare of the Italian sun!
buried where never foot of hers might tread; his very
grave on alien ground!

What were to her his neglect, his selfishness, his
heart-barrenness of love? His very heedlessness seemed
virtue now; coldness a very grace in him; the shews of
affection but chains to fetter his free spirit !—So does the
heart reason over the dust that tortured while it lived:

On Bertha his death fell with a sudden, stunning
weight. Hers was a tearless, aching, undefined sorrow.
Cherishing early in her deep heart a sense of the wrong
done to him, many commingling feelings ever twined
around his name—pity, tenderness, and trust; a wo-
man’s friendship on the dawn of love, whose day-spring

never rose, though its first faint flush was in her East of
life !
134 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
Fo, seen enbnniniiannaniaaagaalin

She mourned him as one she could have loved—had
surely learnt to love—had he borne out, ay, even the
faintest halo of that glory with which her young fancy
was beginning to surround him; mourned him as one
who had perished ingloriously.

But amidst all this sorrow,—like some fair plant
unwholesome dews can nourish,—beneath the daily,
silent dropping of such tears as can be wept but once,
the statue grew in beauty.

Stricken as she stood, when grief had done its worst,
and the shrunk brow, and lips compressed, and droop-
ing lifeless limbs first spoke how mortal was the blow,
the eyes of Ernst had lighted on her form.

The thing grew real as he gazed on her—too real
in her agony. No art was needed; here it was Nature
all.

So grew to form the “ Niobe of the Heart.”
CHAPTER XVI.
Che Grey Pillar. Che Spell Deepens.

** All seems a painted show. I look
Up through the bloom that’s shed
By leaves above my head :

My heart halts, hot and dried,
As the parched course where once a brook
Through fresh growth used to flow.”



)
AS
Wd










pu
dy)
ni!
¢





fe neath her feet : hot summer in the

De
Sr

woods made welcome their rich

)

je

iy

a

A

\ shade: the vineyards of the Rhine ripened

ad Ss

yy ~
ID)»
re
rb =
RCS

A
F
\\" Eee
S 5 oxy
S-> ct?

ee for the vintage; and earth grew bounteous
S> in the full-crowned ear.

Between that Pathway and the towers that

Ug
SI} =
«

Ww

; ; stood midway on the steep descent towards

oS

Re the winding Rhine, a solitary man paced up-
fit: ward with uncertain step.

| y | Changed since the hour of his last year’s
revel, Time upon him had reversed the sea-

I
136 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

cece ent CT
son’s progress ;—he seemed to wither as rapidly as the
year grew ripe.

He traced, as we have said, the upward path ; but
++ was with no assured tread. The impulse that directed
his steps was less a confirmed desire, than a vague,
haunting wish ;—of what, he scarcely knew. Why had
he sought that summit of the hills? Did he yearn for
some chance meeting with the child who had forsaken
him, that his eyes turned so often towards the cottage
of Grete? Well he knew where the flying Fawn had
sought and found shelter.

He gained the higher track, and stood upon the
Hunter’s Ridge.

How silent and how dead the landscape looked!
How stale were all things in this breathing world!
There was a slow wasting agony in the silence of great
Nature’s pulseless heart ;—torture in its dull dead blank
of sound!

He looked around. The forest stood unstirred by
sound or motion. Birds at roost within the boughs,
startled for a moment by his step, chirped a few notes

of quick alarm, and once more settled into rest. The
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 137



blue ether had no cloud, whose motion on the breeze’s
path could speak of aught akin to stirring life. The
winds themselves paused, breathless, before the Man
of Sighs !

He felt like one becalmed upon a deep, dead sea,—
ice-blocked and wintered in the waste. Two waves of
sound alone were surging in his ear—two voices, not
of ocean:—thine, Johanna! and, Bertha, thine !—his
sister and his child.

Wearied with all he saw, he turned again from
gazing on the far-off landscape, and looked down once
more on the place of his home. Home! What a
mockery was in the word! Yet, for those broad lands,
for that far-reaching scope of earth’s green ground, the
baffled soul had wrecked itself! For those palace-walls
the heart was made a solitary cell for remorse to goad
and fret in! The chambers of its pride stood empty,
while the spirit’s were all too full,—shadows filling
the one, and Despair’s too-real presence haunting. the
other.

Slowly along the downward path again he bent his
138 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
Ec eens nner
steps. He could not rest: a nightmare, which the
summer twilight had no power to chase away, weighed
upon his breast. His steps, guided by phantoms,
obeyed an impulse not his own.

He reached the haunted ground of home.

Between him and its boundary-walls, upon a ridge
of rising ground, there rose a fair-hewn pillar of grey
granite stone—a memorial of other days. The spot
it occupied was close beside the western wall of his.
own choice Sculpture Gallery, haunted now for ever
to his thought by the semblance of that sweet sister of
his youth. From the pillar’s base, which rose to a
level with the long line of windows that lighted that
art-study, one standing with fixed gaze might see the
things within ; for the gallery—a pbuilding separate and
complete in itself—was lighted also on the opposite, or
parallel side, by a second row of windows, making
all within as visible as day to those standing without.

He stood beside that pillar in his pulseless hush of
heart. He saw not the fair Rhine winding far beyond,

with calm and even flow; nor the woods, now waveless
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 139
~-nssnnieestii ceeosanilipheelionsianiehiilelcsnelibecsice cies ieeiis cia cic a
and unstirred, that stood darkening the air with their
luxuriant foliage.

On one particular spot alone his eye was set. One
window of that gallery,—or rather some form discerned
within it,—arrested his startled gaze.

He became as one turned to stone.

The dial could have traced but half its circle since
he had stood within that very region of desolation to-
wards which his feet were now mysteriously led back ;
yet there, within the gallery, heralded by no voice,—
bursting upon his sight like a thing from the grave,—
stood a marble form, whose moveless sorrow made the
sick heart shudder.

It was she —Johanna,—even as he knew she must
have stood beneath the overwhelming pressure of such
ills as his hand first called into being. Thus must she
have stood transfixed, first beside the bleeding body,
next before the wrecked mind, of her love and hus-
band— Matthius, his friend !

Did he dream? or was this thing a sign that he
was indeed doomed to endure hell’s torture before his

time? How came it there? What hands, on a sudden,
140 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

cinema EL
while his steps for a few brief moments wandered from
yonder region, had cast that wreck of beauty in his
path, blighting all his vision /

As he stood, gasping and stricken,—his thoughts a
chaos of mingled agony and terror,—a living form passed
along, within, before the marble :—it was Moritz.

What a relief was the near presence of a breathing

human soul !
With sudden and eager haste he rushed within.

Had he looked in the face of Moritz—a face too in-
genuous for deceit—his suspicions must have been
aroused ; but he had eyes for the Niobe only. Before |
that he stood entranced. He could not lift his eyes
from the form. His brow darkened and wrinkled into
rigid lines with the intense scrutiny of his gaze. He
saw not the marble: he traced no design,—no art. He
looked at the woman till he thought she breathed.
He drank from the cup of her agony, till his own soul
was filled with the piste

Moritz stood by, speechless ; half-fearful of what
would come next. He watched Von Fern closely.

He saw him begin to tremble ;—the strong man shaken,
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 141





almost convulsed. Then, suddenly, the face that had
been so movelessly fixed, rigid as the marble itself,
all at once relaxed,—buried itself in the shaking hands ;
and through the shuddering fingers dropped warm
tears.

Moritz turned uneasily ; and trod the gallery, away
from the stricken man.

That movement roused him, and restored him in
some measure to himself. He drew his hands away ;
and what a face was there!—how darkened! how worn!
What tearing misery, what racking anguish, broke into
harsh lines that face which once gained all men’s suf-
frages with its smooth smiling show !

He spoke to Moritz:—his voice was broken.

“Thad a sister. She was fair, even as that; like,
too, in mien and gesture. If you would catch her
very trick of grief, look upon that aspect,—and be-
hold it.”

“ You lost her early?” inquired Moritz.

“* Lost ?—yes,” he answered, musingly ; “ I lost her.
Some things we miss, and some we lose. ‘True, I lost

her; that is the word, — you are right.”
142 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



“The young,” rejoined Moritz, at a loss what to
say,—‘ the young, when they go from us, leave at least
the beautiful for memory to rest upon. Neither age
nor disease had razed from your thought the loveliness
of her image.”

Von Fern laid his hand on the arm of Moritz, as
he replied,—‘*‘ Look upon her as she stands there. Is
there a disease, in all the ooalens catalogue of known
ills that fill death’s ranks, any like the blight upon that
face? Disease! Is not grief the worst and most fatal ?
Can medicine heal it? Can all the resources of surgery
restore the crushed limbs that wither and droop day
by day, and hour by hour, under its pressure? Can a
draught from any tempered spring that runs through
the wide earth’s veins, strengthen the failing life that
gasps and fails where the destroying angel sets the
impress of his seal—thus! Oh, Moritz, what that girl
was once! This,” he continued, pointing to the statue,
—‘‘ this is but the wreck she would be, not the thing
I knew her. What you see—but of what use is it to
talk ; breath will not restore the past.”

‘Thought has its healing,” replied Moritz, ‘ if we
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 143
=nansoniirasnhensinfhatinininicaneidlthaietigbihtatcikaniyss tunis aut ee
give it speech. Since you have spoken so far, I would
gladly hear more.”

“What more is wanting ?” said Von Fern; “ what
words .can make an old sore new? A scar will be a
scar, breathe on it as we may. Mine is no longer a
wound, or there might be healing.”

“ Most true: where death steps in”

‘I tell you she is mot dead! Said I not so ?—Well,

well, I cannot talk of this. Pardon me if I am some-



what uncourteous in my speech. The fact is, I—I
have had a shock: I confess it ;—scared like a boy.
But come, come, no more of this. Let us seek some
chamber where fewer phantoms rob us of our rest.
You'll stay and sup ””

Von Fern drank hard that night. Hour after hour
he detained Moritz. The wine circled freely: the sub-
ject of the statue was altogether dropped ; and not a
single question was asked of how it came there. As
in dreams the most singular combination of circum-
stances and events strikes the sleeper with no surprise,
the intensity of Von Fern’s mental reverie seemed to
close the portals of his mind against the intrusion of

every natural and rational doubt.
144 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

A secnminencnaiaguancigeanieataasnnnisaneanieasoanicimenetaaane

No sooner was Moritz gone, than the man of misery
stole back to his shadows.

Once more he opened the door of the gallery. He
looked within; but this time forbore to enter. The
solemn night cast its appalling mantle over the Niobe
—that image of the living-dead—the lost in life to him!
He could not face at such an hour the retrospect it
brought.

He raised the light aloft above his head, and took
one long last look at the figure as it stood at the further
end of the gallery, separated from him by some distance.
Then, closing the door with a sigh that echoed along
the bare walls and lofty roof, he stole away with soft

step, and head bowed down upon his breast.
CHAPTER XVII.

Hain's Rint, Clay aud Spirit.

“* All day within the dreamy house

The doors upon their hinges creaked ‘

The blue-fly sang in the pane ; the mouse
Behind the mouldering wainscot shrieked,

Or from the crevice peered about ;
Old faces glimmered through the doors,
Old footsteps trod the upper floors.”

TENNYSON,

a gt ORNING found him once

Px 7S
et SAS a
on
ye

)) AES
“4 oN RP aif r . . a
=| got — ADs Jat again beside the speaking
(mn a3

. . d

“ ‘stone. Again he gazed with



%) Ara\e=, ,\ stricken soul upon that face

Be sy) <= and form, whose fixed
ee SRD pe

PON i id eS “a als B
: NE Oe ete but idealised embodi

‘
~

ment of wrong and suf-
fering was at once a

beauty and a terror.



dl ° Day after day found him planted be-
146 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



fore the spot which it occupied; or pacing with droop-
ing form and measured step the narrow boundary
wherein its visible agony seemed to exhale the tor-
tured breath of mortal life.

His feet seemed rooted to the spot. The changing
heart of the man grew to the marble, till he could find
no life but in its presence—no being save that which
he drew under the veil of its sorrow, beneath the
shadow of its despair.

Those about him, unconscious of the secret springs
of this newly-awakened and most engrossing passion
of the heart, marvelled at his aspect, as hour by hour
the workings of remorse drove health from his cheek,
and vigour from his step. Much of the change that
was marked by all was naturally attributed to the de-
; sertion of Berthold—for as Berthold only had the sup-
posed boy been known within those walls. But none
dared to question ; and the name had long since become
a forbidden sound in that forsaken household.

Forsaken and deserted it was in every sense. The
voice of the child was silent in those chambers as the

strings of the broken lute ; and when its music sank

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THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 149
Senn aaa Goh
and died upon the ear of the father, the music of his
heart and life died with it. He had never known til]
he lost the sweetness of her presence how much of his
being was bound up in his lost child. She was gone ;
and the heartless reveller was transformed into a think-
ing, humanised being. The man of self learned the
lesson of humanity—taught by Sorrow in the school
of Truth.

Meantime, the desolation which grew out of a life
aimless as his had now become, shewed itself every
where. The house became aruin. Weeds grew upon’
the outer walls, and damps encrusted and corroded
within. The garden flowers grew dwarfed and stunted
with neglect. Shrubs, in their unpruned overgrowth,
choked the once clear alleys; and the trailing vines
bore shrivelled and tasteless fruit.

Where the once trimly-bordered walks conjoined,
light pillars, urn-crowned, had stood; breaking here’
and there the monotonous level line, and blending art’
with nature. The pillars now had lost their arrowy
straitness, sinking into the untended walks, where rain-

gullies made soft the loose sand ; and in the broken’
150 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

and moss-grown urns the unscared birds had built their
nests.

The wild rabbit left his burrow on the green hill-
side, and approached the haunts of the tame, where the
wild sow-thistle tempted him, growing juicy and tall
among the stores of the Kiickengarten. The uncleansed
fish-ponds wore @ surface greener and smoother than
the lawns; and deep under the choked-up waters the
fish gasped and died.

All things seemed to stagnate, save the soul of that
one lonely man. Out of his dearth—out of his silent,
solitary, and deserted being,—alone grew fair fruits.
The leaves of his spirit unfolded one by one, un-
checked now by the parasite weeds of its earlier, hap-
pier day. ‘The waters of his soul flowed freer since
the sunlight had forsaken its waves.

But the clay wasted as the spirit grew. The
earthy mould,—the mortal part,—seemed to diminish
as the immortal essence blossomed and expanded. The
dust portion of the man appeared to pass from him as
his higher nature developed,—like scattered sand-grains

before the airs of heaven. ‘The erect form became
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 151

bowed ; the limbs grew feeble; the face thin, pallid,

and worn.
The mirror-soul presented a fairer image than ever

of its Maker; but the frame was a wreck.

OOS OYCHAM >
CHAPTER XVIII.

Che Hiner’s Brink. The Self-relukte.

“* She said
Brokenly, that she knew it, she had failed
In sweet humility ; had failed in all ;
That all her labour was but as a block

Left in the quarry.”
. TENNYSON.







x S ONTHS passed away. The steps of
LY ( Time hastened on with noiseless and
unheeded tread. Those who had
) t 2 but lately marked its onward course
by the anxious registry of their own
hopes and aims, now listened for its
march no more; or tracked it only
by its pressure, like footprints in the
sand.
In the sculptor’s home, the art-labours
of the earlier year were finally abandoned.

Fear had begun to usurp the place of
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 153



hope ; and the two who had wrought out the object
for which they strove, questioned if it were good.

In the face of the Dying Year they could not pal-
ter with a fiction. Success had crowned their efforts;
—but how? The erring soul they sought to rescue
was stricken in its very redemption. They could not
say to the powers of soul and sense which they had
awakened to new being, “ Thus far, and no farther,
shall ye go.” They stood rebuked.

Once more they took sweet counsel together. The
silence of great Nature’s heart was within and around
them ; at their feet the rolling Rhine. The unleayed
boughs, so soon to be renewed in greenness, stretching
downward to the river’s brink,—the restless changing
tide—the shadeless forests and the bounding water, —
spoke audibly alike to the hearts of both Ernst and
his Bertha, crying, “ Onward, onward for all time!”

Sick with the fears that crowded upon her soul,
the girl turned a pale, wan face towards him on whose
fast love she leaned in trust unutterably sweet. Still

she spoke not: words could not speak her hopeless-
ness.
154 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

Oe ee eect OA LN

Ernst gazed into her eyes, and read her trouble
there.

“ Nay, speak not,” he said; “am I not your
second soul, and shall I not divine your tears? Oh!
my beloved, before the guardian eyes now gazing down
on you from yonder place of bliss, you stand self-con-
demned.”

“ Utterly—miserably ! Why did I do this thing ?
Oh, what was I, that I should stand—my father’s judge,
before the face of a just God, whose mercy tarried but
a day ?”

“ Your father is redeemed: be comforted.”

“ Redeemed,—but not by me! I, who should
have been the first to wait, to watch, to nourish the
first blest seeds of his awaking conscience,—I—1 left
his side; and he has no comfort now on this side
death !”

« Comfort shall come to him.”

« Not from me. Never, oh, never more! I am
not worthy now to lift up these arms and clasp them
round his neck; I, his child,—his cherished one,— his
hope! I, for whose sake his early guilt, his one first
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 155

a

injustice, became -a steadfast and abiding wrong; a
wrong confirmed, — persisted ine Oh, why was I so
blind, who see so clearly now ?”

But her lover answered, “ Calm yourself; you see
not clearly yet ; passion disturbs you.”

“Oh, Ernst, you cannot hide it from my _ heart.
Your looks condemn me; your words, so feeble in
their consolation, tell me too truly that you judge me
as I judge myself.”

His soul melted as he said, “If I spoke not truly
to you in this hour, I were not worthy of that love to-
wards which, as to some far-off heaven, I dare to lift
these eyes. No, Bertha, I will be to you a gentler,
calmer conscience, — as truthful, but less severe, than
your own.

“To us, my dear one, who walk darkly here, it is
given not much to act, but most to wait and hope.
Often on our onward, perilous life-path, roll torrents
that obstruct our way. We may not turn those waters
from their course ; we may not stem the tide, nor drain
the river in its bed :—we should find but quicksands

where the waves withdrew. Better, beloved, our tears
156 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAW.
eect
should feed the stream, even though but to fill the cup
that ‘ will not pass from us;’ better to yield up breath
upon the brink, than dare to drain life’s pastures of one
wave which God hath given to flow !”

« Alas, I know it; your thought is as my thought.”

« A sea of guilt was his,—a dark and bitter sea ;
but your affection was a soft and silent river of delight
flowing amidst that main! It might in time, by pa-
tience and God’s love, have made that bitter sweet.”

«Tt might—it would !”

“ Still, faint not nor falter. ‘That which is done in
ignorance or haste, or under some strong passion of
pure justice, such as was inspired within your soul,
shall surely find its pardon.”

“ My sin is deep ; God’s eye alone can fathom it.”

© Yet let us be just as well as true to ourselves.
How have you sinned? Look conscience calmly in the
face, and answer. You bore for many a year to see a
wrong deed done. You strove earnestly, first by gen-
tle means, to wear out anger in a stern man’s heart
against the innocent suffering through his wrong. You

failed. Your heart bled inwardly in secret, and you
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 157



found no hope. You wept: the tears that kept green
the memory of that wrong were powerless to wash its
stain away. ‘Then, last, when all beside had failed, you
felt you must not, dared not, share that guilt. You
fled away from the house of sin. You could not live
and bear that stain upon your soul, usurping wealth
for want of some scant portion of whose sum the right-
ful owners pined in hopeless poverty.”

“ And then my vow,—a vow he forced unwillingly
from my lips. Oh, Ernst, you give me deep peace:
who else could lead me right ?”

“ Yourself, my Bertha!—and better for this hard
struggle, this wrestle of the soul, conquering though
it be. For me, I too should stand rebuked far more
than you. Remember how I set about this work ;
in what blind confidence, in what undoubting faith
in the issue. That issue comes,—comes even before
I looked for it. Iam arrested in my path: my hands
_ are crippled; my work is ended. I sought a recovered
spirit ;—and I find a human heart bowed down. This is
my work. It was I who prompted it all.” .

“The good was yours; the evil all, all mine. To
158 , THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

seinen scnetemsietinidenetahit nites nmauaatsibbinieadis me tate
you he was little more than a stranger. But I,—I
should have known him better. If his child, —his
playmate,—his familiar friend, could be thus blind to
the better, purer portion of his nature, who else should
augur truly of him?”

“ Little do we any of us know each other,” an-
swered Ernst. “ We grow familiar with the outward
face and form; but the inner life, how darkly is it hid-
den!” ,

‘“ My heart aches for him. Dared I but fly to his
side! His health, too, fails.”

“ His soul’s health grows; it quickens with new
life. What is all else?”

“ Yet, by me,—through my desertion, —should—
should this sickness end in death! Alas!” She wrung
her hands at that dread thought.

“ What you have done, God looking on your heart,
will never end so ill; of that be sure. Once more I
say, be comforted !”

Silently now they passed; and silently the river

rolled,—away.

i
ih


CHAPTER XIX.



N\Louers, but ne Loue, Hosehen’s Whisner.
Me

‘« Eve’s voice not softer when she prayed
By moonlight in the cedarn shade.”
) WILLMOTT.

acini resolutions
ee a were now formed in the
minds of Bertha and her
lover for the restoration of Von
e ern,—and both alike felt that no
time was to be lost,—their plans were
in danger of being anticipated by another actor on the
scene,
This was no other than Roschen.
The child had often taken counsel with Moritz on
the subject of Von Fern. It seemed to them both that,
now when the desired end was gained,—now that his

anger was gone, his heart melted, his remorse deep and
160 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

full,—no object was any longer served by leaving him a
prey to anguish. Sickness had already visited him with
heavy hand ; what if death itself should follow? Nay:
Moritz, who knew more about his real state than any
one else, dreaded a still more deplorable result: the
entire overthrow of his mind ;—the final breaking of
those mental chords already too rudely jarred ;—@ living
death.

Thus, while to those more nearly interested any
attempt to turn the current of events appeared a task
of difficulty and danger, these lighter spirits, looking
upon delay as the worst evil, would gladly have leaped
at once to the issue.

One day, as the two, Moritz and Réschen, tracked
the Fawn’s Pathway from the cottage of Grete, where
they had found Bertha more self-accusing and fearful
than ever, a sudden thought seized Réschen, which she
lost no time in communicating in an eager whisper
to her companion.

So diminutive was Réoschen, that to reach the ear
of Moritz the child was fain to stand on tiptoe. This

was an unsteady position ; 80, to support herself, the
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 161

natural impulse, child-like, was to clasp his neck with
her two arms.

The arms of Moritz met round her small waist ;—
impulse as natural, as innocent too.

The whisper uttered,—almost too rapidly for im-
parting the meaning it was meant to convey,—little
Roschen dropped to earth without a blush.

As the child but a moment before had leaned against
Moritz’s shoulder, the bauble round her neck almost
touched his lips: it was the ring he had given her.

Now he held it between his fingers; he played
with it. He knew not what to answer her.

“Tf I grant your request, dear Réschen,” he said at
length, “I take a great risk upon myself. Still, I do
not think I can refuse you.”

“Do not, dear Moritz,” cried Roschen eagerly ;
** pray do not bad

“ And I may wait for you?”

“* Not may,—you must.”

‘* Do you command me, little one ?”’

“Yes; for you love me.”

“Do I? and Moritz laughed saucily.
162 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
a eae ence ve ee om

“Ah, dear Moritz,” said Réschen gravely, “ do
not laugh at me; I lean on you so since — since
Heinrich went away.”

“ Do you love me as you loved Heinrich ?”

How steadfast were the eyes that looked into Mo-
ritz’s face! The heart of Réschen fixed on but one
word of the sentence.

“ Loved him?’ she questioned seriously. “ Did
you not mean to say, ‘as I love him?”

“ Either—or both.” »

“Then, Moritz, you speak lightly, and know not
what you say. Iam heedless, and perhaps you think
me forgetful. Yet, my best, my second brother, you
sometimes say: that you like me to think of you when
you are away,—when | cannot see you, as I can no
more see Heinrich. How is it, then, that you would
have me forget my lost brother, he who is always away—
in his grave !”

“ Nay, I meant not so,” answered Moritz, touched
by the girl’s earnestness.

« But you think L love him less now than when —

when he was here, standing amidst us all.”
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 163

She could speak no more for sobbing.

** Indeed, indeed,” followed the broken words—
“indeed I do not.”

And she crept without fear to the young man’s

breast, and her tears fell warm upon his heart.
CHAPTER XX.

Che Bannted Chamber. Che Spirit-rihien.

« Daylight fades,
The evening mists fall cold and blue ;
My soul is crossed with lonelier shades,
My brow is damp with darker dew.
The earth hath nothing but its bed
Left more for me to seek or shun}
My rage is past—my vengeance fed—
The grass is wet with what I’ve shed,—
The air is dark with what I’ve done:
And the grey mound that I have built
Of intermingled grief and guilt,
Sits on my breast with sterner seat
Than my old heart can bear—and beat.”

J. R.





oJ
AY A

rie ya as vt Pee K
ay pA?) toes “
= WD - LTemé A A
si Pum NN Wes

did the feeling of
%.. desolation grow into the
x heart of the forsaken man;

deeper and deeper did the

4 ie ae canker of misery corrode his being:
c Nie {| they who had his interest nearest at
aR \Ry

\o¥ DX me AS
fi ON heart little knew how deep. ‘The pro-


THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 165



cess of disease was at work slowly but surely. His

mind was fast becoming a wreck. Silence and thought,
—which had done their work of redemption, together

with the influences of the beautiful around him, in
purifying and exalting the fallen nature of the man,—
now that their better office was done, and their kindlier
ministration no longer needed, slowly consumed him,
undermining at once life and reason.

The first apparent indication of the dreadful mental
malady which threatened, was in his growing inability to
separate the formless phantoms of his brain from their
idealized embodiment in sculpture, —or, at times, even
from the actual living and breathing presences around
him. The creations of other minds were fast becoming
portions of the real machinery of his life. Walking day
by day amidst the cold and lifeless forms of art, his dis-
torted imagination began at last to hold strange com-
munion with them. They were his guests, and he
their host; and as he strode that haunted gallery for
hours together, he would parley with the spiritualized
presences which had risen up before him—so silently

and mysteriously heralded.
166 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
Oho | a lanaerencaienieeemnene int amu to

It was this very mystery of their successive appear=
ance before him which first seemed to give the lead-
ing tone to his mind. Superstition was brought home
to him; to him—the scoffer! Without question or
argument, he at once adopted the belief that agencies
the most terrible were at work to reprove,—to crush
him.

In that strange confusion of mind which surely pre-
saged approaching mental alienation, while the stony
images seemed to him to be endued with life, the real
persons of his life’s drama would sometimes assume to
his distorted view the spectral appearance of the marble.
They were to him one and the same. ‘The fictions that
had so wrought upon him were to all intents realities :
the actual was no longer anything to him. The forms
of his fancy alone were living ; the human were to him
as the dead.

In that gallery he took his meals. ‘They were
placed before him, and he ate. “But he seemed rarely
conscious by whose hands he was served. His attend-
ants, distress¢d at what they saw, watched him unseen.

He rarely went to his bed ; but would pass the greater
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 167

part of the night pacing up and down that dim cham-
ber, talking, as if to himself, in a low, monotonous,
melancholy undertone,—and this through successive
nights. Sometimes he would fall into a short disturbed
sleep, where he sat, rocking to and fro, gazing at
spectres.

Whenever he had so slept, he would invariably
awake in a hurried and startled manner ; rise up sud-
denly, like a sentinel who has been found sleeping at
his post; pace the room in a more agitated manner
than his wont, and continue without rest for the re-
mainder of the night.

When again the dayspring dawned, and the stream-
ing sunbeams found their way into his solitude, he would
cover up his face with a shrinking dread of the renewed
light.

It was one long painful struggle with remorse ; one
hopeless uninterrupted pang, which neither darkness
nor the day could heal or chase.

At one end of that haunted chamber,—now his con-
stant resort,—stood an antique chair. On the night im-

mediately preceding that which was to close the Old.
168 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

Year, he had there seated him ; falling into that vague
train of thought which had now become his more ordi-
nary mood.

Following the dim line of inanimate forms that
stood in spectral array along the walls, his eye rested
on the Ganymede.

Has clay a voice? Can the marble speak? Is
genius preathful, or the soul a dream ¢

A thing that hath no heart; a rock from out the
quarry ; a stony presence like to death, with cold
lustreless eyes, — What doth it looking into that man’s
stricken soul, as the day wanes and night falls, sickening
with thought !

He sat thus long, with dull and glazing eye, and

racked and tortured brain, through which disjointed
images thronged ‘nstead of quiet thoughts 5 till, silently
and at last, sleep overcame him.
Before that troubled sleep deepened into heavier
slumber,—while yet the half-conscious senses received
impressions of the sights and sounds of moving life,—
soft footsteps sounded on the threshold.

A moment more, and a slight form, so slight and
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 169



EE

fragile as to seem a thing of air, swept with springing
but noiseless motion across the floor.

The steps suddenly arrested before the sleeper.

His eyes, but half unclosed, fell upon the figure.
There was fear,—but no surprise,—in his face. He
was awake again, yet he saw only the embodiment
of his dream; the selfsame presentment on which his
eyes had so lately closed, when the two were face to
face—he and the Ganymede—the wasting clay and
breathing stone. No clay is she who confronts him
—so he deems: no clay, but a spirit—a beautiful
terror !

Clutching the arm of the chair with a nerveless
grasp, he answered the startled gaze,—the questioning
eyes, of this new visitant, in broken accents and with a
trembling voice:—‘‘ You come again. Is this well,
Johanna?— And now so near; why so near? Closer
and closer ye draw around me, ye awful shadows!
When, oh, when will your ministry be done? How
long shall I endure the tortures of the damned before
my time? Hence, and keep your place! 1 will not be
thrust out of life so soon. ‘Torture though it be, there

L
170 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
eT ro
is worse beyond. Away! ye press like nightmare on
my breast.—Away ! begone, I say 4g

A sudden impulse of such mad rage as had formerly
possessed him ‘n his sterner days, caused Wilhelm von
Fern to rally from the torpor that was stealing over
him; and, springing to his feet, his lifted arm threat-
ened to demolish any thing more substantial than the
visionary terror by which he felt himself haunted.

But, before the stroke could fall —away,— without a
word, without a sound,—like a parting sunbeam from
before his face, the startled vision fled !

He turned—he looked: there was no trace. As it
had appeared, so it was gone,—in silence and mystery.
But whither ?

Peer so~
CHAPTER XXI.
Che Antique Choir, Che Blending Shatoms.

*¢ Now indeed
His senses had swooned off: he did not heed
The sudden silence or the whispers low,
Or the old eyes dissolving at his woe,
Or anxious calls, or close of trembling palms.”
TN: YAS KEATS.
| Vy ) wit, HE sudden apparition, whose im-







2/f/ pulse and whose secret purpose had
y been to seek the stricken father in
his desolation, and pour balm upon
his wounds,—was no other than Rés-
chen; and hers the step which fled—
its object unattained—ain equal horror
and dismay.

Terrified and breathless, Roschen
he | toiled up the mountain-steep, supported by
/ M. Moritz, who had awaited her without.

i) F One moment she rested, panting,.in the
A Fawn’s Pathway; then again fled towards
KR” the cottage of Grete, which she entered

R alone.

$
172 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
Oa ic i aah ee nein nein
Once within its walls, she opened all her heart to
Bertha; confessing her purpose (as communicated in
that whisper to Moritz), and its unfortunate issue.
Kindly as a sister, Bertha laid her hand on the
sunny hair of the child.
«Oh, dear Réschen!” she began, “ you have been
too quick. Caution is needed; | dread—I shudder to

think how much. A premature attempt to save, will



kill him; or worse, far worse”

« Nay, Bertha,” interrupted Réschen, “ we have
delayed too long. He must be saved now ; it will soon
be too late. His eyes are hollow as the grave,—his
cheek is bloodless. Oh! never shall I forget his look,
as he rose up like one possessed. Indeed, indeed, you
must go to hin—now, at once. ‘Those dreadful por-
traits perplex and torture him. I saw at once that he
mistook me for some phantom thing. You must go
yourself, without delay.”

“ Alas!”? returned Bertha, “I shall be to him now
—to his heart—but as a phantom. ‘The child of his
love, whom I tore away from his arms, no longer exists.

He will hate—he will spurn me.”
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 173

‘“‘ Neither, neither,” said Roschen. ‘“ Oh, you vex
me, Bertha! What should you fear? It is these ter-
rible resemblances that rack and torture him. Go to
him. When last he saw you living before him, happy
in his love, his heart was full of tenderness for you.
So it will be again.”

Bertha rose up silently, and kissed Roéschen on the
brow.

**T will go,” she said.

But as she turned to leave the cottage, Roschen,
struck with a sudden thought, withheld her.

‘‘ Stay—not yet,” she cried; “‘ not to-night, Bertha.
Wait till this time to-morrow. He will then be settling
down to rest in the same place—the same position ;
for so I learn,—Moritz says it is his custom. It will
then be New Year’s Eve. It was on that night a year
ago that you forsook him. He will remember the
hour: he will be thinking of your going from him.
And when he sees you before him, all this long year
of sorrow will seem like one cruel dream. He will
find you there.” |

The following night, at that same hour, there were

hurried steps upon the mountain-path.
174 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



Faltering, Bertha stood upon the Hunter’s Ridge ;
trembling, she passed along the Fawn’s light Pathway,
one arm alone supporting her,—the arm of Ernst.

They descended the rugged steep, and with throb-
bing pulse approached the grey pillar’s base. One stood
there awaiting them ;—-it was Johanna.

There was no greeting; a pressure of the hand
was all.

From that same spot, whereon the stricken man
had stood and gazed within upon the shadow, the three
now stood and gazed on him—himself a shadow of the
past.

Johanna’s limbs trembled beneath her. Bertha’s
heart beat fast against the breast to which she clung ;—
the heart of Ernst beat as hers.

As they crossed in the shadow of the pillar, their
own shadows fell within the room—across the window
—over the floor—along the walls.

The solitary man within looked drearily round.
It seemed, indeed, as if each several statue were once
again endued with life, as the gliding shadows swept
the pedestal’s foot,—crept over the plinth,—flowed

along the room, noiseless as air.
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 175



But the thought disturbed him no more. Imagi-
nation was dead ;—life a blank. Phantoms might come
and go, now. His soul could be darkened by no sha-
dow, for in it there was no more light!

Absorbed by his reveries, he saw not the figure of
Bertha, as, opening the door noiselessly, she stole into
the room, taking her’ place among the sculptures.
Neither did he discern the forms of Ernst and Johanna,
standing dark within the doorway.

Stricken as he seemed in soul and sense,—in life
and reason, how the heart of his child throbbed as she
gazed upon him! Dreading a too sudden recognition,
she yet longed to throw herself at his feet.

Powerless to move, she became almost as rigid as
the marble forms by which she was surrounded. She
fixed her eyes upon his face, striving to draw from him
one encouraging look.—In vain.

He looked up, but only took her for another phan-
tom,—one vision the more of all that had long haunted
him in the dim chamber of his unrest. :

Seated in that antique chair, behold him once again.

Back through the silent years his visions bear him
176 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



on. Gentler visions are they to-night,— tender and
less terrible !

Around that very chair, in days gone by, a child —
a sprite—a fairy form, bright as the morn and sinless
as the day—sported beneath his eye. He sees it now
as then he saw it; but it eludes his grasp. He sinks
back powerless.—It is gone !

His arm hangs listlessly over the chair.—Suddenly
he feels his fingers caught. On their unclosed palm
soft kisses are pressed. Climbing his knee, light limbs
spring upward with a bound, and rounded arms are
circling his neck. Childhood’s lips are pressed to his,
—oh, breath than violets sweeter !

The rack that rides his heart moves his uneasy
limbs. He rocks te and fro, and the antique chair
creaks with the crazy motion.

No rest—no rest!

The action renews the dream. ‘The clinging arms
relax. It is childhood’s hour of sleep. ‘The fragile
form his stronger arms entwine ; the little weary head
falls sideway on his neck; the azure eyes are veiled

beneath their drowsy lids. Motherless, but not for-
—_

THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 177

lorn, she sleeps—upon his bosom, sleeps ; and, beating
time with rocking bound, he sings a low, wild nursery
song,—to the music of his heart and hers !

Oh, days for ever gone!

Beside an airy lute he sees her next, wearing the
day down with the twilight of sweet song,—some me-

lody mournful as the dying day. He knows youth’s
passion for the sorrowful, and smiles. Her beaming
glance meets his. His smile is multiplied on her sweet
cheek; eye, mouth, and dimpled cheek, are running
o’er with mirth. Her ringing laugh sounds like merry
bells in breezeless evening hour,—no sigh to steal its
sweetness from the ear.

Oh, music hushed for aye!

He hears with sense half-dead; he sees,—and yet
sees not. His retrospective spirit passes into the dim
eclipse of time, and discerns not clearly the blank,
cheerless now. ‘The sun of his past days, half-veiled,
throws but a dreary light on all that is: but he knows
that none save phantoms are around him ;—he feels he
is alone.

Whence, then, the hand that closes round his own ?
178 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.

i a cmtennneelae ele NE
Has one of the statues left its place, and, gliding to his
chair, laid its stony hand in his? That was no marble
touch—no clay-cold clasp! Is it some trick of memory
that beguiles him? He cannot tell, for the darkness
alike without and within him.

A sigh!

It can be but a fiction of the brain, like all the
rest. Yet surely again there are shadows crossing to
and fro, blending with the shadows of the marble, on
the wall?

He draws his hand away.

The phantom—if phantom it be—will not be so
rebuked.

He feels his fingers drawn by magic, but not un-
gentle force, between the warm and throbbing veins of
something too like life.

He starts !—Is it gone? His eyes swim; he cannot
see. He feels the pressure still!

Agony of agonies!—His child? She must be dead, ©
and this her presence, in the semblance of quick life,
come back to haunt,—then spurn him.

He turns aside. No respite! The fellow-hand is
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 181

clasped ; he is bound down and fettered on all sides.
He strives to rise ; a nightmare presses down his limbs.
A sob—a stifled sob, a struggle of quick breath close
to his ear,—a voice of long ago—thrills him!

He lifts his eyes. What form is that he sees stand-
ing erect before him, like a seraph to lead to—not
bar from—Paradise? What angel-hearted guest stands
thus with mute and humble look before his face of
guilt? Is it the guardian-spirit of his child; or one he
knew in his life-days, that are no more?

Both!

As he gazes on that placid brow, serene in holy
youth, a strange dim retrospect is his. Again it is
New Year’s Eve. The swift mysterious rushing of the
viewless wind is in his ear, as he heard it on that night
in the hardness of his heart. The dead hush follows,
and the beating pulse!—The hour is to him as that
hour.

The cloud upon his brain has dimmed his sight ;
the shadows of the mind mingle with the shadows be-
fore him and around him,—the unreal with the actual,—

till all is clothed in mist, as a sea-foam !
162 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
ba peppered cS I a erate

Another and another deeper sob, on either side!
What dreadful doom awaits him ?

Terrible avengers !—yet they kneel! Dread mes-
sengers of wrath!—they weep + !

The spectral forms from which he shrinks —do they
bear him on viewless wings to expiatory shades? See!
the dreaded doom reversed! To his heart he bears
them—on his breast! The only shriek that echoes to
the roof is the shriek not of a lost, but of a recovered
soul. It fills the air but with one tone, one pulse of

unutterable joy —“ Bertha! —J ohanna !”

rOF CCH ROT?

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CHAPTER XXII.

Che Pilgrim Guest, Conclusion,

‘“ New Year, forth looking out of Janus’ gate,
Doth seem to promise hope of new delight ;
And, bidding th’ Old adieu, his passéd date
Bids all old thoughts to die in dumpish sprite ;
And calling forth, out of sad Winter’s night,
Fresh Love, that long hath slept in cheerless bower,

Wills him awake,” —
SPENSER.






Say gliding with viewless wavelike
\> > motion over Time's rippled
BOSS. silver sands, now art thou
Nig / PS @ on thy throne !

From icy goblets
— =~ do we drink to thee
—to thy coming change,

' to thy newer birth.
Tongues of flame speak, trumpet-
, like, thy fame. Piled faggots,

crackling, chuckle in warm glee to see thee hailed and

crowned at last. The very frost upon the panes shoots
184 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
Sere iit ten
into starry and gemlike forms, in honour of thy throning
hour; and the mild moon looks down her last on thy
glad reign, filling with deep illumination the rich earth ;
while music-voices ringing from unnumbered hearths,
in sweet harmonious cadence timed by love, swell up
thy jubilee!

Let us look into the old Hall once more.

Picture that long gallery lighted with a habitable
glow. See the dim line of faces, how they seem to
live,—the colourless lips to smile, the bloodless cheeks
to bloom, the vacant eye-orbs to dilate, and fix them-
selves, mutely gazing on their breathing counterparts !

At one end blazes a hearth: beside it sits a man
worn with long sorrow; opposite to him a woman grey
with years, but like him as a sister to a brother. She
calls him ‘ Wilhelm,’ and he her, ‘ Johanna.’

On her brow there is a cloud that may not be
lifted off. A voice is in her ear like the voice of
Heinrich !

Between the double row of marble figures standing
sentinel on either side, move down the airy dance

forms as beautiful, but filled with breathing life. The
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 187
old man’s heart beats time to their flying feet. Oh,
joyous pulse,—so new t

One alone, seated at his feet, foregoes youth’s joyous
pastime. Her knees support a lute, newly strung.
One hand is upon the strings, the other locked in his.
It is Bertha!

And, see! Who leads the mazy dance? who is it
that speeds with light, free foot the airy measure?
round whose fair forehead droops the winter-rose, that,
frail as a hedge-row blossom, shrinks and curls its fra-
gile petals before the more than summer glow of that
ripening cheek ?— The “ little Rose,” rose-crowned !

Moritz leads her down the dance. His eye, rapt
with her beauty, strays from feature to feature of that
young face; casts a quick glance over the swan-like
neck, and fixes on the bauble hanging from her breast
—the mystic spousal ring ! |

As the measure closed, and the dancers paused, the
two stole away to rest, seating themselves beside a
window deeply embowered with spreading branches of
the dark-leaved myrtle. The spirit of the opening year
was upon them,—a mystic feeling in both their hearts
188 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
gpl ihe ae ee

of all that it might bring,—all of sweet, and pure, and



true that harboured in its gracious coming. |

As they sat thus, in the conscious silence of a dawn-
ing love, Ruprecht von Lorn, with a fair partner on his
arm, passing close, paused a moment before them,

Ruprecht, shading his eyes with one hand, gazed
out into the moonlight through the uncurtained win-
dow.

“ Why, Moritz,” he exclaimed, “look yonder!
What cloaked and cowled pilgrim do I see resting
against yonder grey column? He cannot be the ghost
of the Old Year, for the grey-beard is not yet dead,
though his death-warrant is signed to-night. I should
hold it to be the herald of the New, but that his tabard
is somewhat smirched.”

As the speaker ceased, both Moritz and Roéschen
turned in the direction indicated.

As they looked out, the figure, which was plainly
discernible in the light of the moonbeams, turned its
face upward towards the solitary moon ; and one broad,
bright ray fell direct upon the features,

At that moment, Réschen, whose eyes had followed
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THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. — | 191
gai cetera ne
those of Moritz, sprang suddenly from his side, and
quitted the gallery.

While the eager glance of Moritz was yet seeking
her round the room, where he supposed her still to be,
Ruprecht laid his hand on his friend’s arm, and pointed
once more to the column.

There, against the pillar, leaned the stranger; and
there, to his breast,—clung Roschen !

Moritz could not believe his eyes. Réschen, has
Rischen—for so at such a moment did his heart at
once own her —Réschen in the arms of a stranger !

All was soon confusion. The guests talked and
marvelled what could cause such a sudden stir in that
quarter of the room,—for Moritz’s exclamation of sur-
prise fell audibly upon the ears of all.

Cursing his own folly, which would thus soon attract
attention to her whom, in spite of all appearances, his
faith would not permit him utterly to condemn, he con-
trived to divert the observation of the guests by caus-
ing a summons to the refreshment-room. Thither . all
withdrew, except Wilhelm von Fern, Johanna, Bertha,
Ernst, and himself.
192 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.
lS ee a

Scarcely was the gallery thus cleared, when Réschen
entered, accompanied by the shrouded figure of the
mysterious and unsummoned guest.

Passing all others, the pilgrim knelt down with a
lowly reverence at the feet of Johanna.

There is no fatal joy, or Johanna had died with that
Old Year! A moment since, she would have said there
was but one face which could wear such a look as his,—
this dark-browed pilgrim youth,—and that lay cold be-
neath the Italian sun. Yet here stood her own Hein-
rich before her, warm with the blood of the living!

A few words told all. His woun1, supposed at first to
be mortal, had healed gradually, beneath friendly hands.
The explaining letter, trusted to stranger and less
friendly ones, had never reached the mourning mother.

Taught by bitter experience to cherish deeper in his
heart the unchanging love ‘he had so heedlessly slighted
in his humble home, Heinrich turned, like a weary
pilgrim, his steps back to that sacred hearth. Finding
it desolate and forsaken, he pursued his search after the
loved and lost, till the grey pillar met his view. Stand-
ing thus without, as they had beheld him, oppressed with
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 193
ssa psshsisblntastateticaen inners aeieuanalcdniataaiaa daaeaan
a bitter feeling of his own unworthiness, he had gazed
upon the group within, not daring to enter, till all at
once he felt soft arms encircle him; and, warm with
love and breathing life, Réschen threw herself upon his
breast.

And once again the mother owned a son— Words
cannot speak her transport.

So now Johanna’s eyes wore light again.

To-night the Old Year will die. There is neither
sign nor portent in the heavens, nor upon the earth.
Meteor lights are unseen; rushing winds unheard. All
is calm and peaceful. Every heart hallows the hour
with pure thoughts, and kindly home affections. There
is nothing to foreshadow :—nothing for fear to create ;
nothing for imagination to dread. If the hour has its
portents, they are all of joy, and speak in whispers to
the heart of each.

No shadow, no cloud, rested upon any heart—save
one. One alone sat solitary and apart. The hope of
Ernst awaited the full fruition of the year.

In that solemn pause of his heart, Bertha gazed

upon his face. In her conscious eyes, the eyes of Ernst
194 THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN.



were mirrored as in some clear wave—its surface un-
rippled, save by one mute tear of chastened joy.

Her hand for a few brief moments strayed over the
lute, and trifled with the strings. She struck a few

opening chords, then sang:

Che Sulitary Hoy.

* Wuen sad and fainting with despair,
With every pulse soul-stirred,
Winged thoughts came to thee on the air,
Made voiceful as a bird ;—
In that lone hour thou spak’st a prayer,
Belovéd ! and wert heard.

"Twas but a solitary ray,
For which thy soul, athirst,
Looked up as to the dying day;
But, oh! it was the first
That e’er from out that darkened way
On such a suppliant burst !

Even as a rainbow, yet unriven,
Streamed that light around thee ;

Even as a wandering sunbeam, driven
By such clouds as bound thee

Fast and far through fields of heaven—
So that radiance found thee.
THE PATHWAY OF THE FAWN. 195



And as, beneath upon the grass,
Slow, and now more slowly,

Those clouds, like breath upon a glass,
Sweep o’er the earth so lowly ;

So did a softened spirit pass
Into thy bosom holy !

Thy vision yet no star hath seen,
Save Hope, on which to call;

But cloudless ether lies between
Thy path and heaven’s wall :

Here earthly gloom—there starry sheen —
And Love is over all !

As her voice trembled and died down,—mingling

with its last tones, the softened chimes of the distant

Domkirche sounded the New Year’s birth. Ere yet

the signal bells had died upon the air, a voice sweeter

than those breezy waves of sound was in her ear: a

pulse truer than those airy chimes made music with

her own.—Bertha was clasped to the Angel-heart !

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