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Little things

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Little things
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American Sunday-School Union. Committee of Publication ( Editor )
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71 p. : ill. ; 15 cm.

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Christian life -- Juvenile literature ( lcsh )
Embossed cloth bindings (Binding) -- 1852 ( rbbin )
Baldwin -- 1852
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United States -- New York -- New York
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revised by the committee of publication.

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These jittle personal kindnesses often open the hearts of the
poor. p. 54. L. T.





“He that contemneth small things shall fall by little and little.”
Eccl. xix. 1.

REVISED BY THE COMMITTEE OF PUBLICATION.

PHILADELPHIA :
AMERICAN SUNDAY-SCHOOL UNION,
No. 146 CHESTNUT STREET.

New York, No. 147 Nassau Street......Boston, No. 9 Cornhill.
LOUISVILLE, No. 103 Fourth Street. P



Si a a



Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1852, by the
AMERICAN SUNDAY-SCHOOL UNION,
in the Clerk’s Office of the District Court of the Eastern Distriw of
Pennsylvania.

i nemaamen ie me

gas No books are published by the AMERICAN SUNDAY-SCHOOL UNION
without the sanction of the Committee of Publication, consisting of four-
heen members, from the folowing denominations of Christians, vis. Bap-
Reformed Dutch. ‘Not more than three of the members can be of the same
denomination, and no book can be published to which any member of the
Committee shall object.



f
‘.
CONTENTS.

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INTRODUCTION.



Tiere is in many persons an undefined dread of
paying attention to little things, as if they thought
that doing so was the sign of a little mind ; and that
by neglecting trifles, as they call them, they show
themselves to be superior in intellect. It is far from
my intention to justify, or even excuse, that weari-
some attention to minutiz, that incessant fidgetiness
about trifles, from which all must have at some time
or other suffered; but I would wish, if I could,
to convince the reader, that all things are not trifles
that are called so, and that, as “little things” may
have great consequences, they are well worth at-
tending to. 7

For small things as well as great, the Christian’s
rule should be, to “do all to the glory of God ;”
and if we are enabled from this motive to perform
our little duties, to bear our little crosses, to strive
against our little sins, we surely will run no danger
of degenerating either into anxious carefulness about
trifles, or careless neglect of them. In the adorn-
ing of the person, or the decoration of a room, it is
the little finishing touches that give elegance and

7



8 INTRODUCTION.



grace; 80, in the adorning of our profession as Chris-
tians, it is the little things that make or mar the
beauty of holiness. Attention to them is part of the
duty commanded, when we are told, “ Let your light
so shine before men, that they may see your good
works, and glorify your Father which is in heavén.”
A neglect of them dims that light, and may be a
stumbling-block in the path of others.

Dr. Chalmers’s expression, “the power of littles,”
has become almost a proverb, and may be applied to
many other subjects than contributions of money ; for
who has not felt how much power there is in “ little
things,” to act either as constant sweeteners of life,
or as perpetual sources of discomfort and annoyance?

Let our attention to these matters be thus guard- ~
ed by high motives against becoming trivial ; let us
sincerely endeavour to seek the good ‘and the happi-
ness of others; let us regard our daily recurring lit-
tle cares and duties as part of our appointed work
set us by our heavenly Father, and as affording

‘Room to deny ourselves, a road
To bring us daily near to God.”
And surely none can say that “little things” will
not be ennobled by this consecration of them to “ Him
in whom we live, move, and have our being.”



LITTLE THINGS.

Little Dutivs.

‘‘ Whether therefore ye eat or drink, or whatsoever ye
do, do all to the glory of God.—1 Cor. x. 31.

‘‘Who sweeps a room, as for Thy law,
Makes that and th’ action fine.” —Herbert.

UnpeEr this head I would wish to enforce, not
merely the doing of little duties, but the doing
of these little things as duties; for many of
them are irksome and seem trifling, and there-
fore require all the more that they be performed
under a sense of duty. It does indeed require
no small share of energy to perform little duties
regularly ; they seem so small, that we think
omitting them this once can signify little; it
seems hardly worth while to summon up our
energy for such a trifle, and so by degrees self-
indulgence prevails ; and when once little duties
are neglected, discomfort and discontent inva-
riably follow. The acquiring habits of method,

order, and punctuality, can scarcely be classed
roe



10 LITTLE DUTIES.



among Little duties, for these habits are required
on every occasion of life, the great and import-
ant, as well as the small and insignificant ; but
I am convinced that much of the irksomeness
and worry sometimes attendant on “little du-
ties,” would be lessened or removed, were they
performed punctually and methodically, all
things kept in their proper place, and all things
done at the proper time.

The first little duty I would mention, is one
on which so many of the others depend, that on
that account alone it must be acknowledged to
have a strong claim,—I mean early rising ; and
a difficult and most disagreeable duty it is gene-
rally acknowledged to be. Who does not know
how readily excuses are listened to in the morn-
ing on this subject? Who has not suffered from
want of courage and resolution in this matter?”
Who has not felt the intense pleasure of ascer-
taining that it is really too early to rise yet? I
doubt if any grown-up person likes early rising.
They may and do like being up, having the
bright, quiet morning hours all undisturbed to
themselves, and they may feel this to be well
worth the struggle of rising, but a struggle it is,
and in most cases a daily one. But there are
times when any one can rise’ early and without



LITTLE DUTIES, 11



much difficulty,—on going a journey- for in-
stance, or taking our place at a sick-bed, or even
while anxious to get time to pursue some pleas-
ant occupation for which we have no leisure
otherwise. ‘Where there is a will, there is a
way, is true here; but how to get the will, is
the difficulty, I acknowledge, and even where
habit makes it easier, it seldom, I suspect,
makes it pleasant. We must urge it on our-
selves as a duty, by every motive that we feel
influential: it is good for the health, it redeems
time more than any other plan, it is a daily op-
portunity of self-denial, and it promotes cheer-
fulness and good humour. Besides, is it not an
all-important reason for rising early, that we
thereby secure a quiet and uninterrupted time
for prayer and reading the Scriptures? For
‘by this means we not only benefit our souls, by
seeking our daily-needed supply of grace and
Strength, but we are striving against those foes
of the soul, sloth and self-indulgence.

The duties that generally devolve on ladies
who are their own housekeepers, are among the
little duties that it may be expected I should
refer to here; but as these must vary in differ-
ent households, all I can say of them is to en-
force the necessity of their being performed with



12 LITTLE DUTIES.



punctuality and method, and as early in the day
as possible. There should be a fixed hour for
these domestic duties—all orders to servants
should be given at that time, and by a little
foresight and method in planning, the little
wants.and cares of the day may be anticipated
and provided for, and the machinery of the
household set a-going in much shorter time than
those can believe who work without a plan, and
leave each want to be supplied when it occurs.
Method and order generally go together, and in
little duties both are indispensable ; for where
the latter only prevails, there is often a worry-
ing, fidgetty way of being perpetually engaged
in looking after servants’ work, or putting the
room in order, or interrupting others by doing
things at wrong times; but where there is
method and punctuality, the plan for the day is
laid, and all the little duties got over at their
own time. It does require a little energy to
acquire the habit of doing things at the right
time, by resolutely laying aside whatever we are
engaged in, and actively getting through little,
(it may be irksome,) duties; but if any doubt
its being a duty to do so, let them spend a short
time in a house where this is not attended to,
and see if the discomfort there produced is not



LITTLE DUTIES. 13



sufficient to show how essential attention to
these little duties is. Punctuality is one of the
duties most frequently neglected by our sex—
by this I mean minute punctuality ; for whether
it be that railway travelling has taught the ladies
the necessity of being in time or not, I do not
think that in greater matters, sich as going a
journey, we are unpunctual. It is in the daily
and hourly occasions that we are apt to fail,—_.
just to be a little too late for meals—not quite
ready when it is time to go out—just a quarter
of an hour behind our engagement—and so on;
and because it is sosmall a matter, we forget that
its constant recurrence makes it most annoying
to others. One great cause of this fault is the .
eagerness to finish something we are about, or
the unwillingness to lay aside some favourite oc-
cupation ; and another is, a sauntering way of
getting ready, an idle way of putting off our
time, for it is almost always the idle who are
unpunctual. Connected with this duty of punc-.
tuality, is the still rarer habit of never procras- ’
tinating. I do not believe there is one human
being who stands clear on this point; but I
will have more to say on this subject, when I
come to speak of procrastination as one of our

“little sins ;” so here I shall merely urge as
2



14 LITTLE DUTIES.



duty, the resolute striving against this fault in
little things. Letters to answer, a small ac-
count to pay, a stitch in time, a trifling service
to be rendered to another,—who is not apt to
procrastinate in these things? No one can be
punctual, or attain to what Southey calls “the
virtue of reliability,” who does not struggle
against the encroachments of this foe. There
are so many little things to’do, that need not
be done at any particular time, that we are very
apt to fall into this fault; but if we felt the
duty of being faithful to our own resolutions in
small matters, we surely would not make light
of our frequent failures, owing to this vile habit
of procrastination.

There is an old saying, which was often re-
- peated to me in my youth, “ Can do is easily
carried about with you.” And really I think
it amounts to a duty in woman to attend to this
saying, for we hardly ever learn to do anything
that we do not find the advantage of at some
time or other. Some persons are naturally.
more neat-handed and notable than others;
but every woman should endeavour to learn all
she can of the little arts that make life com-
fortable, and, above all, of whatever can make
her useful in a sick-room. No doubt the same



LITTLE DUTIES. 15



qualities of method, order, and. good manage-
ment, will show themselves in every department
of duty ; but much may be gained by observa-
tion, and a desire to learn, from whatever
source. ‘There are some people who never go
from home without bringing back some useful
hint in housekeeping, in the arrangement of a
room, the order of a table, or, it may be, the
planning and planting of the flower-garden.
These are the persons who know the best way
of doing every thing. Their homes may be
known by the air of comfort and elegance they
contrive to give by attention to the little things,
not merely by tidiness, but by tasteful arrange-
ment, and a degree of attention to devoration.
Some one speaks of the little things that mark
the whereabouts of woman—flowers especially
do so; and trifling as some may think it, I up-
hold it as one of our little duties, to make our
homes not only as comfortable, but as pretty
and pleasing as possible. There are some peo-
ple who pay no heed to niceties of this kind,
either esteeming them beneath their care, or
not having taste enough to feel the want of
them. Their rooms have a blank, uncomfort-
able, uninhabited look ; their personal attire is
always unlike other people’s; they never seem



16 LITTLE DUTIES.



to notice any improved way of managing little
matters, or they do not like the trouble of
learning and practising it ; and it is ten chances
to one, that by beginning with despising deco-
ration and taste, they end by neglecting comfort
and tidiness.

I hope I may not be mistaken as advocating
any dangerous Popish doctrine, if I suggest, as
one of our little duties, what may be called small
self-denials. There are few duties, indeed,
which do not involve self-denial in one form or
another; but what I mean now, is self-denial
for self-denial’s sake, as a means of strengthen-
ing the character, and of keeping under self-
indulgence, sloth, and love of our own way.

Many people deny this to be a duty at all,
and others deny that there is any self-denial in-
volved in the little matters referred to; but I
suspect these latter have never tried the ex-
periment, and many of the former mistake self-
denial for penance, or a desire to atone for sin.
Of course, in this light, I would consider self-
denial to be as erroneous as it would be ineffica-
ciotis; but if we are not to deny ourselves in
little things, what mean the frequent exhorta-
tions of Scripture to this effect:—“ Take up
your cross daily and follow me.” “ Keeping



LITTLE DUTIES. 17



auder the body, and bringing it into subjec-
tion.” ‘Endure hardness, as a good soldier
of Jesus Christ.”

[ think there can be no doubt that little self-
denials in comfort, ease, or food, have the good
effect of making us less dependent on these
things, less selfish, and more energetic when
action is required ; while a conscientious watch
kept up on the subject of personal expenditure,
will convince most of us how much we stand in
need of this duty. There is often a restless
desire to buy something we think we need, or,
at all events, that we wish for, which, if habit-
ually indulged, leads to extravagance, and is
one of the most specious forms of self-pleasing.
Compel yourself to wait, to see if you cannot
do without it, if you really need it, or whether
your eager desire is not just a fancy; and you
will find this exercise of self-denial sometimes
not a small one, but always a useful check upon
an impatient and covetous spirit. Another ex-
ercise of self-denial that may be mentioned, is,
not uttering a sharp retort, however witty or
well-deserved it may be, and this helps us more
to attain to a mild and Christian spirit, than
almost any exercise of gentleness I know.
‘This last piece of self-denial leads to another,

ae



18 LITTLE DUTIES.



and, alas, much-neglected little duty,—I mean
forbearance.

How does it come to pass, that while we all
allow the duty of forgiveness, so few of us think
as we ought of the kindred duty of forbear-
‘ance? The command is plain, “ Forbearing one
another, and forgiving one another :” and well
may forbearing be put first, for I am sure if
there was more forbearance exercised, there
would be less forgiveness required. Perhaps
the expression, “making allowances,’ may more
clearly express what I mean. The aged, we ad-
mit, are entitled to this; the young generally
obtain it; but among each other, between
sisters-in-law, for instance, how much harm is
done by the want of a little kindly forbearance!
Some are provoked by another’s vanity or af-
fectation; some by their caprice ; some are ex-
asperated by a dictatorial manner, a way of
“Jaying down the law ;” while others cannot put
up with such a one’s egotism, or thinks it right
to snub some one’s self-esteem; and so we go
on as if the command, “Let every one please
his neighbour,” were altered to, Let every one
tease his neighbour.—O, let us learn to make
large allowances for others, let us cultivate @
forbearing spirit in trifles, for it is there we too



LITTLE DUTIES. 19



often fail most; remembering how much we
need it ourselves, and looking in this, as in every
duty, to the example of our Divine Master,
whose forbearance and patience with his dis-
ciples in their waywardness and ignorance, is
left us as an example that we should “ follow
His steps.”

The duty of being always in a good humour,
is so important, that I hardly should enumerate
it among little things; but all else is almost
valueless without it. It is like the soft balmy
air and bright sunshine of a summer's morn,
which when we feel and breathe, we think no
other enjoyment can equal; without which the
finest landscape wants a charm, and with which,
the dreariest desert is bright and beautiful.
Great duties, great kindnesses lose much of -
their virtue and power to benefit others, if not
performed in this spirit, and little duties and
little kindnesses are indeed nothing without the
sunshine of cheerful good humour, to gild and
adorn them. Akin to this is the duty of culti-
vating a cheerful disposition,—a disposition to
be easily pleased. ‘There are persons to whom
this seems natural, who are always pleased, and
we all feel how much more agreeable it is to
have any thing to do with them, than with



* 20 LITTLE DUTIES.



those who, either from indifference or discon
tent, are seldom or never pleased. By this
duty, however, I mean rather more than merely
not being discontented,—I mean the disposition
to show that we are pleased, a good-humoured
way of receiving little services, a readiness to
admire what we see others wish us to like, and
a willingness to “do unto others as we wish
they should do unto us,”’—the reverse, in short,
of a captious, fault-finding spirit.

It may be alleged that a careful attention to
some of these little duties may lead to an irk-
some particularity, a teasing habit of for ever
putting to rights, and to a neglect of more im-
portant concerns. This will never be the case,
however, if we remember to perform little duties
with a large spirit, and consider first the com-
fort of others. If done as duties, they must
also be done without fuss or parade, and above
all, let us remember that while we thus, as it
were, “tithe mint, and anise, and cummin,’
we must beware of neglecting “the weightier
matters of the law.” The warning against
doing this, is, however, followed by the words,—
“ These ought ye to have done, and not to leave
the other wndone.”’



LITTLE KINDNESSES. 91



Little Rinduesses.

«Finally, be ye all of one mind, having compassion one
of another; love as brethren, he pitiful, be courteous.’ —
1 Pet. iii. 8.

‘‘ All joys go less,
To the one joy of doing kindnesses.”— Herbert.

I THINK, if we examine our own hearts, we
shall all feel ourselves to have been sadly neg-
ligent in this branch of the “little things.”
How often, from want of thought and attention,
do we see people, really kind people, fail to
make others happy or comfortable. How often
do we see, in families who would do any thing
to oblige each other if the matter were a great
one, such a total neglect of the little kindnesses
of life, that by degrees they become selfish, and
are unable to perceive wherein they fail, or that
any thing else ought to be expected of them
than what they perform? How often do we
hear kindly-feeling, well-intentioned people, re-
gretting that they can do nothing, that they
have nothing in their power,—while all the time
these little kindnesses are unnoticed and unper-



22 LITTLE KINDNESSES.



formed. Life affords but few opportunities ot
doing great services for others; but there is
scarcely an hour of the day that does not afford
us an opportunity of performing some little, it
may be unnoticed service. Careful and earnest
attention to little things of this kind, is of great
advantage to our own characters. We can sel-
dom perform little kindnesses without little self-
denials; and the habit once formed of daily at-
tending to others, and trying to please and serve
them, is of inestimable use in repressing our
natural selfishness. I speak advisedly, when I
class trying to please others as among the little
kindnesses we should study toperform. It isa
command in Scripture, that every one should
“please his neighbour for his good to edifica-
tion;” and I fear it is a duty oftener neglected
than trying to serve others. Amongst the many
ways of doing this, I may mention kind con-
sideration of the peculiarities of others. There
are few families where there are not some mem-
bers who require to be studied a little, and if
the “ peculiar one’’ be the head of the house, or
an aged member of it, this attention is generally
paid. But between brothers and sisters, or be-
tween friends, how little of this kind forbearance
do we see! How often do we feel it hard to be



LITTLE KINDNESSES. 23



the one that must always give up! How apt are
we to be provoked at the peculiarities of others,
instead of endeavouring to forbear, and please
them rather than ourselves! There is much
want of knowledge of each other’s characters to
be met with in families, and from this sometimes,
I think, proceeds the careless indifference about
pleasing them; but knowledge of each other's
peculiarities is not so uncommon, though atten-
tion to them israre enough. Thestudy of cha-
racter may be apt (unless pursued in a Chris-
tian spirit) to lead us into critical and censori-
ous thoughts and feelings ; but if we study others,
that we may know how best to please them,
and make them happy, I cannot think it can be
otherwise than a profitable study. One of the
little kindnesses I would enforce, is “allowing
people to be happy in their own way.” Never in-
sist upon your way, and your way alone, as being
the only one that can succeed in giving plea-
sure; for in doing so, you will too often only
torment and annoy those you wish to serve;
and sometimes this spirit, when yielded to, be-
comes a perpetual petty tyranny over others.
Remember also that different ideas of pleasure
are entertained by the aged and the young. For
while, in general, to old people, quiet and



24 LITTLE KINDNESSES.



regular undisturbed routine is most pleasant,
variety and a certain degree of restless excite-
ment, are liked by the young. There is no
little kindness more generally felt, than a readi-
ness to promote the plans of others, an entering
into their feelings, and an endeavour tosmooth
down all difficulties in the way. Who has not
felt damped when a party of pleasure was plan-
ning, or a pleasant invitation received, and no
one seemed to take any interest in it, or tocare
whether you went or not ; still worse, if some one
started objections, foresaw the difficulties, and
wondered how you could care about going at all ?
To the young especially this sort of kind sym-
pathy is valuable; and how soon you may dis-
cern, in a family, which individual is in the habit
of showing it, by the ready and constant recur-
rence of all to her as the one who always helps
forward a. plan, sympathises in a little pleasure,
and enters into all the exeitement of an enjoy-.
ment which perhaps she is neither to share, nor,
(on her own account,) would eare to partake of.
How worse than tiresome is the “wet blanket,”
who, on these occasions, thinks it will rain,—is
sure you cannot be spared from home,—or, ab-
sorbed in other things, takes no interest, and
will not be put out of her own way forany one!



LITTLE KINDNESSES. 25



Look around among the families you are intimate
with, and see which member of each is the one
to whom all the others go in little difficulties ;
which is the one that studies to make the others
happy, forgetting self till she really becomes the
‘one who cannot be spared from home ;” and
you will generally find that that one does not
confine her attentions to home, but is always
the person who thinks of little kindnesses to be
done to others—gifts of fruit and flowers to the
sick—visits to those confined to the house—the
loan of a book, or a sight of engravings—or ~
the earliest information of absent friends. I
remember one who was thus distinguished for
little kindnesses ; she was not what is generally
termed acute or shrewd, but I never knew any
one so quick at finding out what people liked,
or so ready to doit, or get it for them. Her
means were limited, but she gave more little
gifts than any one I knew ; her time was much
occupied at home, and her accomplishments
made her society much sought after; but she
could always find time to visit those who were
apt to be overlooked, and to show those who
had no claim on her, a little kindness. I re-.
member her getting herself introduced to an old
lady who lived alone and had few friends, that



26 LITTLE KINDNESSES.



she might go sometimes and play chess with
her; and many an hour which she might have
spent in her own amusement, she bestowed on
her, cheering her lonely lot by her kind cheer-
fulness. Little presents are said to be always
acceptable; they lay no one under obligation,
and they mark a kind remembrance of you
when absent, or a desire to supply some little
want you have expressed; and as their value is
seldom great, the giving and receiving of them
is one of the many little kindnesses we should
practise and indulge. “ The sacred duty of
giving pleasure,” as it is called in an admirable
little book, entitled “‘ Passages from the Life of
a Daughter at Home,” may be practised daily.
And, oh, if we could but feel what a sacred duty
it is, surely we would wish and endeavour to
make and find opportunities of practising it!
Is it not a sacred duty to make life as happy as
we can to the young, before life’s trials and
troubles come upon them? Is it not so still
more to those who are enduring the heat and
burden of the day? And do not all feel it to be
so toward the aged, who perhaps have little left
to cheer them, and may have suffered and un-
dergone much during the weary days of their
pilgrimage? Let us seek out opportunities, let



LITTLE KINDNESSHS. _ oT



as slight nothing as too trivial or minute, not
even the keeping a favourite seat at the fireside
for one we know has a fancy for it, or the most
trifling arrangement of household matters, if
it may give pleasure to others.

The desire of showing little kindnesses pro-
ceeds often merely from an obliging disposition ;
but I think the Aabit of it must be formed on
Christian motives, and on a habitual course of
self-denial and thoughtfulness. It may be call-
ed a habit of preferring others before ourselves.
To the young I would earnestly say, Endeavour
to acquire this blessed habit. Do not, because
you can do so little for others, do nothing.
Look around you, first in your own family, then
among your friends and neighbours, and see
whether there be not some one whose little bur-
ben you can lighten, whose little cares you may
lessen, whose little pleasures you can promote,
whose little wants and wishes you can gratify.
Giving up cheerfully our own occupations to
attend to others, is one of the little kindnesses
and self-denials. Doing little things that nohody
likes to do, but which must be done by some
one, is another. I remember how grateful I
once felt when a young friend hemmed a set of
pocket-handkerchiefs for me in her play-hours



298 _ LITTLE KINDNESSES.



when I was from home, because she knew ]
disliked hemming. Doing a thing, and saying
nothing about it, is also a kindness; for I dare
say we all know how irksome it is to be told
that this, that, or the other thing, was got for
us, or done on our account; and how ungrate-
ful we are apt to feel for kindnesses thus thrust
upon us. A willingness to lend books, new
music, or patterns, to those who will take care
of them and return them, is also a mark of kind
feeling.

It may seem to many, that if they avoid little
unkindnesses, they must necessarily be doing
all that is right to their family and friends ;
but it is not enough to abstain from sharp
words, sneering tones, petty contradiction, or
daily little selfish cares; we must be active and
earnest in kindness, not merely passive and in-
offensive. In these little things it is really
more from the manner in which they are done,
than from any great value in the services
themselves, that we see the kind and Christian
spirjt. All must be done cheerfully, as if it
were a pleasure, not merely a duty; and above
all, we must never allow any one to feel or see
that we have made a sacrifice of our own will
or wishes on their account. It is contemptu-



LITTLE KINDNESSES. 99



ously said to be a “Scotch present,” when any
one, in bestowing a trifling gift, tells the receiver
that it is of no use to the giver; but it has
often struck me that there is much true delicacy
and kindness in this, for it is evidently designed
to prevent the recipient from feeling under any
obligation; and this is one of the little kind-
nesses I am recommending.*

Attending to any one who is overlooked in
society, from whatever cause, is another of the
the kind offices that may be classed under this
head. Few do not feel this when the person
is overlooked on account of poverty or age,
or singularity of appearance ; but do we con-
sider it sufficiently, if the unfortunate individu-
al is guilty of being tiresome and prosy ? Yet
a little self-sacrifice on these occasions is cer-
tainly both kind and right, as we are all ready
to acknowledge when we see any one cheerfully
undertaking the burden of talking to, or worse,
of listening to, one who is generally regarded
as “a bore.”

*I may, however, give & hint, in passing, to the re-
coiver, that it is, to say the least of it, not in good
taste, when asking something you desire to possess, to talk

of it disparagingly as a mere trifie. If it wore so, you
need not have asked for it * all.



80 LITTLE EFFORTS.



Littl €fforts.

‘She hath done what she could.”

« T find that successful exertion is a powerful means of
exhilaration, which discharges itself in good humour upon
others.” —Dr. Chalmers.

Tv has often struck me, in reading the parable
of the Talents, that the servant who was sloth-
ful and hid his Lord’s money, was not one of
the more richly endowed, but one who had but
one talent. Is it not too often soin life? How
frequently do we feel, and act upon the feeling,
that we could do more good were it not that we
can do so little? There really seems a peculiar
danger to those possessed of but one talent, to
neglect the exercise of it; and it were well,
if, while excusing ourselves for doing nothing
because we cannot do much, we recollected that
the slothful servant, who buried only one talent,
was condemned for so doing and would have
been proportionally rewarded, had he, like the
others, traded with, and increased his Lord’s
money. It is too often indolence under the



LITTLE EFFORTS. $1



guise of humility that causes us to act thus.
Little efforts are troublesome to make, and we
prefer dreaming over what we would do were rich or great, or endowed with talent, to
sétting ourselves honestly and steadily to do
what wecan. ‘There is no one, I believe, how-
ever straitened in circumstances, or inferior in
capacity, who has it not in his or her power to
do some good, while hundreds who are neither
the one nor the other, neglect this duty because
they think they can do but little. Do that little
faithfully. Look out for opportunities. Count
no effort too little, and assuredly you will find
the truth of the promise, “to him that hath
shall be given.” If you are sincerely desirous
to be useful, and willing to begin with humble
efforts, do not fear but that larger and more ex-
tended spheres of duty will open before you;
or if you are one of those who really do possess
but one talent, and endeavour to employ it for
God’s glory, do not doubt His gracious accept-
ance of your smallest services, for has He not
promised that even a cup of cold water given
in His name, shall be rewarded ?

To many who feel humbled and grieved that
they can do so little for the Saviour’s cause on
earth, or for the good of others, it should be an



82 LITTLE .EFFORTS.



encouraging thought, that “all members have
not the same office.” The small stones of the
temple are as useful in their place as the more
imposing parts of the building; and let them
be assured that He who commended Mary for
anointing his head, because “ she had done what
she could,” will not despise any attempt, how-
ever small, to serve and glorify Him. For in-
stance, in visiting the abodes of the poor, espe-
cially in sickness, we are apt at first to feel
painfully what seems to us the absence of all
comfort; but it is then that we learn how small
an addition to their little stock will prove a com-
fort to them, and how many things which we
thoughtlessly waste or put aside as useless,
might be made serviceable. Little efforts to do
good in this way, may be thought of by every
one. ‘rifling as these may be, it is humbling
sometimes to see the gratitude felt for such
small services, and many a time do the words
of the poet rise to mind :—

‘sve heard of hearts unkind, kind deeds
With coldness still returning ;
Alas! the gratitude of men
Hath ofi’ner left me mourning.”

There are many cases in which, in giving



LITTLE EFFORTS. 33



clothes to the poor, it is an additional assistance
to send them ready-made or mended ; for, often
the hard-worked mother cannot find time to sew,
and the younger members who might assist,
are at school or at service, and too often have
not the ability to do much for themselves in
this way. No doubt those who are in circum-
stances to do so, can generally contrive better
for themselves in this respect than we can do
for them, and a handy person will turn almost
any old thing given to them to good account;
but in many cases their “time is their money ;”
and at all events the trial may be useful to
some one who is wondering what they can do
to help the poor. Where there are cases of
sickness, too, it is amazing how very little is a
comfort and support in the way of food, or
little delicacies. Much, indeed, is wasted by
servants, that might, were they so inclined, be
made useful to the poor; but sometimes the
trifles or fragments we have to give them seem so
small, that it is not worth while to send them,
and perhaps it is not,—but would they not be
worth something if taken, instead of being sent ?
Were we more in the habit of kind personal in-
tercourse with the poor of our neighbourhood,
there are many little services of this sort we



34 LITTLE EFFORTS.



might render them, and gratefully would they
be received. I have heard many speak warmly
of such kindnesses shown them by a humble-
minded follower of Christ, who had not much
to give, but who, as they expressed it, ‘‘ never
thought any thing too little to be at the trou-
ble of bringing.” These little personal kind-
nesses often open the hearts of the poor, so that.
a word of counsel, or even of reproof, is kindly
‘ taken, and opportunities of speaking “a word
in season” are thus often procured, where other-
wise it might be felt to be intrusive. Many who
are desirous of doing good to the souls as well
as the bodies of others, and yet feel painfully
conscious that they cannot speak as they wish,
may benefit them by giving or lending books ;
and sometimes this plan affords an opening for
conversation on the book, and frequently a word
of warning and rebuke may be thus conveyed,
and make an impression, where a direct appeal
or personal address would offend. Reading a
few verses of Scripture, even without a remark,
is also one of the little efforts that may be
blessed, for “the entrance of His words giveth
light.” These are meant but as hints to those
who really desire to begin this good work ; but
once begun, not only will opportunities of doing:



LITTLE EFFORTS. 35



good increase, but the ability to do so will grow
likewise. You will find a use for many a little
thing you now cast aside; you will become quick
in suggesting and supplying little comforts ; and
while thus following His example who went
about doing good, you will experience the truth
of the promise, that “ He who watereth others,
shall be watered also himself.”

Under this title of little efforts, I may also
class endeavours to improve ourselves; for I
believe many neglect the important work of
self-education after they are grown up, from
the erroneous idea that, because they can do
little, they need therefore do nothing. ven
when our time is not much at our own disposal,
when domestic and social duties demand a large
share of attention, I believe a great deal might
be done by a careful employment of the frag-
ments of time that so often run to waste.
Southey has an amusing calculation of how
much may be learned by a regular application
of ten minutes a-day. In fifty years seven lan-
guages may be thus acquired, so as to read them
with facility and pleasure, if not critically, and
to travel without needing an interpreter. But
without attempting any such effort as this, the
nint is worth attending to; for, as Southey



86 LITTLE EFFORTS.



says, “Any man who will, may command ten
minutes ;” and if there is any truth in the idea,
it may serve to show that little efforts for our
own improvement, where greater are not in our
power, should not be despised and neglected as
useless. Besides this careful redeeming of our
fragments of time, however, we must remember
that no efforts, great or small, will be of much
avail, unless they are continuous. If even great
but intermediate efforts are useless, how power-
less must little ones be, unless steadily and per-
severingly carried on! Southey’s ten minutes
were to be datly devoted to the study ; and we
must bear in mind, that if only little efforts are
in our power, we must endeavour to make up
for their insignificance by their frequency. It
is not to be deniéd that sometimes it requires a
greater exertion to make a little effort, than
one of a more important nature, but the power
of habit will go far to aid us, if we were once
but aroused to the importance of making these
efforts. May I give a hint on what may be
called little exertions, that in some cases may
be found useful? I refer to slight feelings of in-
disposition. Exertion, active exertion, is often
the best remedy for these feelings; but it is one
we are not always willing to apply, for even



LITTLE EFFORTS, 37



when we can plead no bodily ailment, every one
must have felt at times a tendency to ennui, or
a listless weariness, without any definite cause.
Then it is that we should arouse ourselves, and
by a little exertion we can do so, and.after a
short time of active bodily or mental exercise,
we shall find these feelings disappear, and expe-
rience the truth of these words of Dr. Chalmers,
which serve as a motto to this chapter. Take
the advice given by the Rev. Sidney Smith to
those suffering under listless ennui and want of
earnestness: “Make yourself care. Get up.
Shake yourself well. Pretend to care, make-
believe to care, and very soon you will care,
and care so much, that you will be extremely
angry. with any one who interrupts your pur-
suits.”’

x ( RW Sa
er e

qs 3 :

oe





88 LITTLE CARES.



Little Cares.

‘Casting all your care upon Him, for he careth for
you.”—Pet. v. 7. |

«Commit thy trifles unto God, for to him is nothing
trivial.

«Thou art wise if thou beat off petty troubles, nor
suffer their stinging to fret thee.

«Thrust not thine hand among the thorns, but with a
leathern glove.” —Tupper’s Proverbial Philosophy.

Turse fall much within a woman’s sphere of
duty, and are of almost daily occurrence to her;
yet they are often of s0 trifling a nature, that
one feels ashamed to mention them, or even to
allow that they are cares. I would make a
distinction between little cares and little an-
noyances; for the latter, if disregarded and
cheerfully borne, generally disappear; but our
little cares cannot so easily be dismissed, and
sometimes arise so much from constitutional
causes, that they require the exercise of reli-
gious principle and trust, to keep them within
due bounds. ‘To all who feel’ the tendency to
‘be anxious and careful about many things” —
who have a Martha’s spirit—the gentle rebuke
of our Saviour may still be applied ; for does not



LITTLE CARES. 39



an earnest heed to the one thing needful, make
all little earthly cares take their subordinate
place in our esteem? But what I would wish
to impress upon my readers’ mind is, that we
are warranted, I think, by the word of God, to
carry all our cares, however trifling, to Him,
to cast all our burdens, however small, on Him
who has graciously promised to sustain us if
we do so. Our great cares must often seem
small in the eyes of Him who “taketh up the
isles as a very little thing ;’’ and our small
cares will not be beneath the notice of Him,
by whom the “very hairs of our head are all
numbered.”

Along with this, I think that a misthodinal
distribution of time, letting each duty and
occupation have its appointed time to be at-
tended to, does much to keep down that absent,
anxious spirit which little cares are so apt to
produce. We cannot well seek for sympathy
from others as a resource, for sometimes these
trifling cares would annoy those we wish to
please ; sometimes we feel that they would not
be cares at all, except to ourselves; but by
resolutely doing each duty as its time occurs,
by resolving that, except when necessary, we
will not let our minds dwell on them, (for truly



40 LITTLE CARES.



“sufficient for the day is the evil thereof,’’)
and by trustfully committing our way unto
God, we may relieve our minds of many of our
little cares, and in some cases get quit of them
altogether. I allude chiefly to such as are
almost inseparable from women’s duties,—the
charge of servants, and the care of children or
of the sick; and I would also include those
cares which may exist chiefly in our own over-
anxiqus and nervous temperaments. But there
*s a class of little annoyances, if I may so call
them, which I would dispose of in a different
way ; I mean such as we make for ourselves by
a fretful or fastidious spirit. There are some
who make such a fuss about trifles, tormenting
themselves and worrying others by @ perpetual
fault-finding and discontent, that all pleasure
is spoiled by their presence, and every trifling
evil magnified to a mountain. It is a good
rule in little things, as well as great, that
‘¢ what can’t be cured, should be endured,” and
endured cheerfully. Iam not advocating slo-
venly and careless endurance of little annoy-
ances that may be remedied. Let them be set
right by all means, and the more quietly, as well
as quickly, the better ; but I have observed per-
sons who took such things easily enough, most
‘



LITTLE CARES. 41



ludicrcusly discomposed by trifles neither they
nor any one else could remedy, and which
should. have been overlooked with a smile, if
noticed at all. I remember hearing of one
lady who professed great love for the country,
and summer after summer left town and esta-
blished herself in country quarters. It was
remarked, however, by her friends, that she
never went twice to the same place, and that
though at first her praises of new quarters
were enthusiastic, yet when she returned to
town she had always some reason against re-
turning to that place. Never did any one seem
to be so unfortunate in smoky chimneys, dis-
agreeable neighbours, and disobliging land-
ladies, till at last it was shrewdly suspected
the fault 2 in the lady herself. One sum-
mer, however, a perfect place was found;
months went on, and no fault seemed to be
discovered, and it was hoped that now the fas-
tidious lady was pleased, and that her search
for country quarters was at an end. But what
was the amazement and amusement of her
friends to find her, when winter brought her
back to town, as determined as usual not to
return to her little paradise of the preceding
summer. What could he the reason? Simply



42 LITTLE CARES.

— .—_————”

because a ‘pea-hen used to come sometimes to
the garden-wall, and make such a noise!
There are many people, I fear, who find pea-
hens everywhere.

I used to think the catalogue of woes in that
amusing book, “The Miseries of Human Life,”
never could be the subject of aught but laugh-
ter; but there are many Mr. and Mrs. Testies,
too, in the world, who groan in good. earnest
over such little cares. It is really ludicrous to
hear the gravity with which some people will
allude to the fact of the road being dusty,
even alleging that as a reason for not going @
walk; others are as much afraid of a shower};
others of sunshine; some are terrified at the
idea of being overheated, while others tremble
at the notion of taking cold. Thigre is no end
to these idle fancies and fears; if laughed at,
they think you unfeeling ; if sympathized with,
they multiply and increase. Let us all beware
of making much of little annoyances; let us
learn to laugh at them, remembering how very
annoying such freaks are to others, as well as
‘nconvenient to ourselves. A cheerful spirit,
that will not see or be put about by trifles, soon
ceases to feel them; while to those who seem
to find a perverse pleasure in dwelling on and



LITTLE CARES. 43

being daunted by them, these little discomforts
will actually become real cares, and will eat out
half the comfort of theig lives.

Southey remarks, in one of his letters, that
“there is a pleasure in extracting matter of jest
from discomfort and bodily pain.” It is cer-
tainly a pleasure few indulge in; but he is right
when he adds, “that it is a wholesome habit
when it extends no further, but a deadly one if
it be encouraged when the heart is sore.”





44 LITTLE PLEASURES.



Little Plensures. :

‘¢Who giveth us richly all things to enjoy.”—1 T%m.
vi. 17.

«Thou art wise and shalt find comfort, if thou study
thy pleasures in trifles. For slender joys, often repeated,
fall as sunshine on the heart.” —Proverbial Philosophy.

‘¢ Happiness is made up of small pleasures, and domes-
tic peace is the column which these light traceries grace
and adorn.

‘Every thing which busies the mind innocently, and
gilds the domestic scene, is worthy of attention. Life,
happy life, is made up of small pleasures; and we may
plant here a shrub, and there a flower, and water them
innocently, and cultivate them profitably.” —Shades of
Character.

I couLD multiply extracts to prove that little
pleasures are the great sweeteners of life. The
theme is trite and commonplace; we know all
that can be said in favour of common and sim-
ple pleasures, and say we believe it; and yet how
few, when past the age of childhood, really do
enjoy themselves by means of little pleasures ?
It is generally agreed that the man who has a
hobby is a happy man, however trifling his
hobby be; and though I by no means wish to



LITTLE PLEASURES. 45



advocate an earnest pursuit of trifles as a means
of enjoyment, it is no doubt the case that the
happiness of “the man with a trifling hobby is
caused mainly by his power of giving his mind
to it, of being occupied by it. The pursuit
of pleasure, and the finding pleasure in little
things, are, however, very different; for while
the first is perhaps the most selfish of all ways
of wasting time, the latter is a duty we owe both
to ourselves and others. There are many little
varieties in our daily life that might be made
pleasures of, were we so inclined. A country
walk, a little excursion, making trifling altera-
tions in domestic arrangements, preparing some
little surprise for an absent member of the fa-
mily, obtaining some little thing we have long
wished for, any innocent variety or change in
our every-day life,—may be made a source of
pleasure; and happy, indeed, are they who
keep this child-like spirit in mature years.

To those who are continually seeking their
own gratification, there can be little enjoyment
of pure and simple pleasures, for these soon lose
their effect, unless combined with self-denial
and a steady adherence to the rule of “duty
first, and pleasure afterward ;” and though, no
doubt, the capacity of little pleasures to give



— LITTLE PLEASURES.



pleasure, depends more on the mood of our own
minds, than more striking incidents do, yet to
those who cultivate the disposition already al-
luded to—of being easily pleased, it is wonder-
ful how many are the sources, and how frequent
the occurrence, of little pleasures—
‘¢The common air, the earth, the skies,
To them are opening paradise.”

To those who have a love of nature, there
never can be any want of varied and simple
pleasure. To some, the mere sight of green
trees and hedges suffices; and even where the
grander and more picturesque forms of beauty
- are wanting in the scenery, the true lover of
nature will find much to enjoy. It is one great
argument in favour of intellectual cultivation,
and the acquiring knowledge, that to a well-
stored mind the effect of little pleasures is
greatly enhanced. A love and knowledge of
art, however slight, increases the pleasure of
all country excursions. So does botany, geology,
and entomology; while to those less favoured
individuals, whose lives are spent in cities and
amidst the works of men, an acquaintance with,
and interest in, any branch of knowledge, adds
to their more limited stock of pleasures tenfold.

We are too apt to turn from the pleasures



LITTLE PLEASURES. 4T



that lie in our daily path, and to sigh after
others that seem to us unattainable. How many
people long for the pleasures of travelling, and
envy those who have the means and time at
their command to go abroad, or to visit the
more remote parts of our own country ?

But do they relish as they might the pleasures
of those little excursions which come almost
within everybody's power now-a-days? If an
‘nhabitant of a town,—is a few hours’ occasional
excursion to the country thoroughly enjoyed, or
a walk through beautiful grounds, or a visit to
a friend’s garden? Or are these simple pleasures
despised because they are so common, OF turned
from in discontent, because they are only to be
enjoyed for a short time ? |

To a cultivated and observant mind and taste,
there is scarcely an object of still life, or a fine
scene in nature, or an incident that occurs, that
does not afford food for thought, or for the exer-
cise of kind feelings, or something to lay by
autong memory’s stores for future enjoyment.
If you seek for small pleasures with a small mind,
however, beware lest you degenerate into a mere
frivolous gossip—one on whom little things act
as poison—one who is amused and interested
by the tittle-tattle of the neighbourhood, or the



48 LITTLE PLEASURES.



frivolities of dress. The more the mind is eul-
tivated, the greater will be the amount of small
pleasures, and the keener and safer the relish
for them; for you will turn from all that is
mean and low, and enjoy with a grateful and
contented spirit the many flowers that grow in
your daily path, but which sometimes must be
sought for in this spirit ere they are found. I
may conclude this chapter as I begun it, with
an extract from “‘ Shades of Character :”—

‘‘ How much real enjoyment there may be in
modest pleasures, with little variation from
what is within every one’s reach... .. We
have all some one on whom to look with love,
some to whom we may give pleasure; and
nature smiles in some way or other on every
Jand.”’



LITTLE SINS. 49.



Little Sins.

‘Dead flies cause the ointment of the apothecary to
send forth a stinking savour; so doth a little folly, him
that is in reputation for wisdom and honour.” —Eecles. x. i.

‘‘ Yet once more, saith the fool, yet once, and is it not
a little one ? |

“Spare me this folly yet an hour, for what is one
among so many ? :

«And he blindeth his conscience with lies, and stupe-
fieth his heart with doubts.

‘Whom shall I harm in this matter? and a little ill
breedeth much good.

“‘ My thoughts, are they not mine own? and they leave
no mark behind them.

‘© And if God so pardoneth crime, how should these
petty sins affect him?

So he transgresseth yet again, and falleth by little
and little.
‘Till the ground crumble beneath him, and he sinketh
in the gulf despairing.” —Proverbial Philosophy.

Waar are little sins? Surely a Christian
ought to consider all sin as an offence against
a holy God, and therefore the term little can
never be applied to it. The distinction made
by the Romish Church of deadly and venial
sins, is unauthorized, we believe, by the Scrip-

5



50 LITTLE SINS.



tures; yet we all look lightly, even tenderly,
upon some fault, as we could fain call it; we
all incline to claim indulgence for some failing,
under the plea, “Is it not a little one ?”

I fear, this distinction which we make of
faults and sins, helps to blind us to the real
nature of many little evil ways, and prevents
our admitting that what has in it the essence
of sin is sin, be it in ever so small a degree,
Faults we may have besides, and these should
likewise be striven against, for they are very
apt to grow into sins, and even at the best, when
they are what are called “allowable faults,” why
should we cherish them and annoy others, with
what a slight degree of watchfulness and resist-
ance would enable us to conquer altogether ?
For instance, under this head of faults, how
strict (and properly: so,) are those who have the
care of young people in checking all faulty
habits, rude manners, careless ways, waste of
time by trifling, inattention to what is said to
them, slovenliness, and all the many little faults
of manner that offend against the rules of cour-
tesy. Yet we whoare grown up, and are aware
that many of these faults are to be found in
ourselves, too often excuse ourselves by alleging
that “we mean nothing wrong,” that “it is but



LITTLE: SINS. 51



our way,” that “itis merely a bad manner,” and
so on; as if we could not, or should not, strive
against and conquer faults in ourselves which
we expect children to watch over and subdue.
Were we in the habit of tracing our little sins
up to their source, we must feel convinced that
they originate in those sinful propensities,
which, if followed out to their full extent, we
admit to be exceeding sinful. Some of these
little sins may not be the seeds of greater—too
often, however, they are so; and because we
think we can stop in time, because we think it
does no one harm but ourselves, ought we, dare
we, to indulge any habit or feeling which even
we ourselves admit would, by a little excess,
become sin?

I suspect also that we are apt to deceive our-
selves as to the facility with which we can con-
quer these little sins. If it were so, our indul-
gence of them is the more culpable; but the
daily and hourly watch against them, the steady
resistance to the pleading from within of “just
this once,” —‘‘ is it not a little one ?’’—is no easy
task, and in some respects is a harder one than
those greater occasions of temptation, when we
guard ourselves by putting on the whole armour of
God, that we may be able to stand in the evil day.



82 LITTLE SINS.



What should come first in our catalogue?
There is one sin, or fault, eall it what you will,
of which we all admit we are guilty, against
which we have all made many resolutions, and
which visits us in so many different ways, and
with so many excuses for its indulgence, that it
may, in most people, be called their besetting
sin, I mean procrastination—and who dare say,
My hands are clean, I never procrastinate ?
When some sad result has followed from our
habit of procrastinating, or when we feel con-
scious that it was sheer mdulgence and dislike
of duty, which caused us to put off doing any
thing, we feel how wrong this habit is; but
in the daily little matters, such as answering
letters, settling small accounts, executing little
plans for the good or even the amusement of
others, which of us feels as we ought, that we
are indulging a fault that, if carried just a little
further, will bring confusion and discomfort
into all our worldly affairs, and which too often
ends in causing us, Felix-like, to delay till a more
convenient season the concerns of our immortal
souls.

Method in the arrangement of our time,
so that each hour brings its own duty, would
help us much against this sin ; for it often arises



LITTLE SINS. 53



from having so little to do, that we think we
can “do it any time,” and this is generally found
to be no time. The busy rarely procrastinate.
It is the idle and indolent who do so; and there is
no more effectual way of rooting out the parent
sins of idleness and indolence than by a daily,
hourly struggle against procrastinating in little
things. Whenever any one is heard to com-
plain of want of time, we generally find such
person is guilty of procrastination, as well as
of idleness. The hardest-working men com-
plain least of this; and all, or almost all, who
have distinguished themselves by industry, and
by the wonderful amount of labour they have
got through, men like Scott, Southey, and Chal-
mers, must have done their work when they had
it to do, and not merely when they felt inclined
to do it. Resolve, then, that when you have
any thing, however small, to do, you will do it
now, or at the very first time set apart for that
branch of duty; and remember that in steadily
striving against the idle or indolent wish to pro- .
crastinate, you are strengthening your charac-
ter and improving your habits in more than one
particular.

- Tdleness is a fault we all condemn in the

young, and too often indulge in without re-
oe



54 LITTLE SINS.



morse ourselves. There is a busy idleness,
which sometimes blinds us as to its nature. We
seem, to ourselves and others, to be occupied,
but what is the result of it all? What Han-
nah More calls “a quiet and dull frittering
away of time,” whether it be in “unprofitable
small talk,” or in constant idle reading, or saun-.
tering over some useless piece of work, is surely
not “redeeming the time ;” and yet how many
days and hours are thus unprofitably wasted,
and neither ourselves nor others benefited! All
women who have much leisure, are liable to this
fault; and besides its own sinfulness, for surely
waste of time is a sin, it encourages a weak,
unenergetic frame of mind, and is apt to pro-
duce either apathetic content in trifling occu-
pation, or a restless desire of excitement and
amusement, to help on the weary time these
trifles cannot kill. Those who have their time
entirely at their own disposal, with perhaps no
definite duty to occupy them, should guard re-
solutely against waste of time; make duties for
yourselves ; fix hours for your different oceupa-
tions; do with your might whatsoever your
hand findeth to do; and carefully, conscien-
tiously ascertain which of your employments is
not worth all this care; have a motive, a reason,



LITTLE SINS. 55



for all you do, and frequently examine your-
selves as to what you are doing ; and surely you
will find time too precious to be either squander-
ed, or frittered, or idled away. While idleness
must be thus guarded against, both in spirit and
its results, indolence in its various shapes must
also be considered as an insidious foe.

But it is against the little forms of indolence
that we must watch, remembering how encroach-
ing it is, and how surely it grows from bad to
worse. Slovenly habits and ways of action are
frequently the result of indulged indolence ; it
is not because we know no better, that we al-
low ourselves in many a little slovenly way,
and indulge ourselves in a lazy manner of do-
ing what we have to do. Sloth and love of
ease are too often looked upon as little sins,
and indulged in and excused accordingly ; but
besides that they are decidedly opposed to the
spirit of self-denial inculeated in Scripture,
how seldom do they stop short, satisfied with
small indulgences! If we begin by consulting
our love of ease, our dislike to trouble, our
slothful desires in trifles, what security have
we that we shall not end in that self-indul-
gence, which is regardless of aught but its
own comfort and gratification; which will not



56 LITTLE SINS.



be denied, and is insatiable in its demands;
and which, when indulged, makes a woman
more useless, in mind and body, than almost
any other of our so-called little sins ?

Bodily and mental indolence do not always go
together, but both must be guarded against ;
and perhaps the temptation to the latter is
stronger in women than the former. How few
women feel it a sin to neglect the cultivation of
their mind! Any book or subject that requires
the exertion of thought, is set aside by many,
because they cannot be troubled with it; and
this mental indolence, this dislike of mental ex-
ertion, increases and craves indulgence, quite
as much as bodily indolence does, till at last
the mind will submit to no control but that of
amusement and excitement, or sinks into rusty,
useless apathy.

I have seen a plan recommended, as a
check upon what may be called busy idleness,
which might bring some to consider whether
they might not indeed make a better use of
their time, than frittering it away in trifling
occupations, and perpetual visiting or saunter-
ing. Itis to keep a faithful record, even for
one week, of all that has been done, summing
up the hours thus spent, and honestly and seri-



LITTLE SINS. 5T



ously seeing what has been the result to’ our-
selves and others. If, along with this, we would,
like Jonathan Edwards, resolve “to observe
after what manner we act when in a hurry, and
to act as much so at other times as we can,
without prejudice to the business,” a stop would
be put to much idle trifling, and we would learn
to put more value on our time than we do.
Among the various forms of self-indulgence
is one which is apt to assume, like many of our
little sins, an appearance of virtue,—I refer to
a dislike of finding fault even when it is our
duty. I allow that it is disagreeable, that it is
difficult, that it requires both temper and tact,
and that a perpetual fault-finder is a nuisance
not easily borne; but still it is sometimes a
duty, and where, through what is called “taking
things easy,” this duty is neglected, domestic
discomfort, if not more serious consequences,
are sure to follow. How often do we hear it
said with an air of complacency, “I wish now
I had spoken before, and not allowed matters
to go to this length; but I so dislike always
finding fault.” These complaints chiefly refer
to servants and domestic concerns, while I be-
lieve we ought rather seriously to reproach our-
selves for neglect of duty in this matter, and



58 LITTLE SINS.



resolve henceforward to obey the apostle’s com-
mand, ‘“ He that ruleth, let him do it with dili-
gence.” Do not find fault unnecessarily, or
when irritated; but’do not pass by faults or
faulty ways of doing work, merely because you
dislike to find fault.

Then there is the tribe of faults that come
under the head of thoughtlessness; daily and
hourly the source of little neglects, little debts,
little unkindnesses, which we never see in their
true character, simply because we never think
about them at all. They are, however, all
transgressions of the law of love, and, as such,
are little sins to be watched and striven against.
If we would but remember that all thoughtless-
ness of others is selfishness; if we could but
feel it as a reproach, not as a palliative, to have
to say, “‘I never thought of it;”’ surely we would
strive to think; to remember little services at.
the right time; to avoid the thoughtless word
or jest that may pain another ; to put ourselves
sometimes to the slight inconvenience of going
out of our way to pay a visit; and to be punctual.
and prompt in paying small debts. areless-
ness in expenditure, and idle waste, are as fre-
quently caused by thoughtlessness as by wilful
extravagance, but the result is the same; and.



LITTLE SINS. 59.



wly that has ever seen the distress and discom-
fort arising from not thinking on these subjects,
will deny the duty of steadily guarding against
sins of thoughtlessness at their commencement ?
To be inconsiderate of others is universally
allowed to be a most unamiable trait, but I fear
it is one of which all thoughtless persons are
more or less guilty; and unless watched against
in the young, it will be apt to end in the more
determined form of self-seeking, and neglect of
others altogether.

Can I class bad temper among little sins ? I
think not. But why is it, then, that, go almost
where we may, we meet with little manifesta-
tions of this hydra, which seem to be yielded to
without shame, and excused as of little conse-
quence? It is true that, except in childhood,
we rarely meet with violent fits of passion, or
determined attacks of the sulks; for even where
religious principle does not suppress such sinful
displays of temper, shame and a regard to the
opinions of others would prevent indulgence in
such degrading and absurd manifestations of
displeasure. But there are ways and means of
Jetting others feel that we are out of humour,
and of indulging and betraying temper, that
we are apt to think too lightly of, and to class

‘



60 LITTLE SINS:



among our little sins, if indeed we class them
among sins at all, One frequent excuse is, that
our manner is bad; but is our manner bad when
we are in a good humour? Does the presence
’ of a stranger at these times change such bad
manners into gentleness and courtesy? If
it is merely a bad manner, surely that is un-
der our own control, and may be more easily
amended than the deeper-seated evil from
which in reality it springs. No one would
judge harshly those, who, from ill-health, or

rrying and anxious care, are betrayed into
irritability, though those who are thus situated
ought to watch and strive against yielding to.
it. But the consideration of the duty of bear-
ing with the tempers and caprices of others,
and of making allowances for them, is not the
question at present; my wish is rather to warn
and arouse those who are hardly conscious, it
may be, how annoying these little indulgences
of ill-humour are to others. Who does not
know the symptoms of this disease—the cold
averted look, the monosyllable dry reply, the
utter want of interest shown in what you are
saying or doing? Or, worse still, the short,
snappish voice and manner, the sullen gloom,
the determination not to smile or be pleased;



LITTLE SINS, 61



the air of being a martyr, or of having suffered
some deep affliction; the talking at but not to
the offender; the quiet sneer, the affected won-
der at something you or your friends have done,
the mock humility, the desire to be neglected ?
Who has not seen, grieved over, or smiled at,
such manifestations of the evil spirit within
another, yet perhaps gone and done likewise,
ay, and justified herself, saying, “ We-do well
to be angry!”

One reason why bad temper is not felt to be
sinful, perhaps, is, that it is frequently disguised
under some other name, and excused to our own
hearts, as even an amiable weakness. A fit of
regular snappish irritability, perhaps, can hardly
be thus disguised, though we may try to excuse
it as “impossible to help being angry!” But
for the more silent and sullen indulgences, how _
often do we plead hurt feelings, or that we are
too sensitive, or that we are misunderstood, or
that we only wished to awaken others to a sense
of how ill they had behaved to us.

Akin to this, is liability to take offence, to
touchiness, a quickness to fancied slights, and
to magnify small and often unintentional neg-
Jects into great offences. Wisely. did Southey
counsel his daughters to avoid giving offence,

6



62 ‘LITTLE SINS.



but still more careful to guard against taking
offence. The worst of all these little exhibitions
of temper is, that we too often indulge in them
only toward those we love, only at home, and
to our own family. The presence of a stranger
enables us to repress them, or rouses us up to cast
them aside; for we are rarely petulant, snap-
pish, gloomy, sullen, or discontented, except in
the home circle. These things ought not so to
be. Is it not most ungrateful to Him who
maketh the solitary to dwell in families, thus to
poison our own enjoyment and that of others,
and abuse such a blessing as the family relation
confers when employed for his glory? “Be
courteous,” is His command, and is meant to be
applied to our daily home-life, as much as to
strangers and acquaintances. In some cases,
perhaps, it is more the manner that is in fault,
than the temper; but if a bad manner rouses
and irritates others, and is thereby an occasion |
of sin, ought we not sedulously to guard against
it? How few, for instance, are not provoked to
resistance by a dictatorial manner, a “laying
down the law’ as if there could be no appeal
from our opinion or judgment, or fretted by a
sharp manner of rebuke or remonstrance, as if
the person speaking were personally injured, or



LITTLE SINS. 63



checked and chilled by the gruff and ungracious
manner in which some little service has been
received, even when the recipient was gratified
by the kindness.

Many, indeed, and various are the defects of
manner; and in too many cases, we shall find,
if we trace them honestly to their source, that
they spring from our selfish disregard of the
feelings of others, and would be checked and
improved, were we more ‘kindly affectioned one
to another.”

The ‘habit of viewing every thing in a ridi-
culous light, is one of the family failings that I
would warn against. It too often leads to an
unamiable desire to detect and hold up to ridi-
cule the faults of others, and it almost always
destroys the finer feelings of admiration for
what is beautiful, and the tender and more
lovable qualities of putting the best construc-
tion upon the actions of others, &c. A critical,
censorious, fault-finding woman is a most un-
amiable being; and let us not conceal the true
odiousness of such propensities in ourselves,
under the guise of a sense of the ludicrous.

In many families, however, where both love
and good temper prevail, there is what may be
called an irksome, rather than a sinful, mode of



64. LITTLE SINS.



carping and contradicting one another. No
harm is meant, and no offence is taken; but
what can be more irksome, than to hear two
sisters, for instance, continually setting each
other right upon trifling points, and differing
’ from each other in opinion for no apparent rea-
son, but from a habit of contradiction? and such
a habit does it become, that one may some-
times see persons who have acquired it, con-
tradict their own statements just made, the
moment any one advances the same opinion.
It is generally on such trifles that this bad
habit shows itself, so that it may seem needless
to advert to it; but it is a family fault, and
should be watched against, for it is an annoy-
ance, though but a petty one, never to be able
to open your lips without being harassed by
such contradictions as, ‘‘ Oh, no, that happened
on Tuesday, not Wednesday ;” or, if you remark
that the clouds look threatening, to be asked
with a tone of surprise, “ Do you think it looks
like rain? Iam sure there is no appearance
of such a thing.” Narrate an meident, every
small item is corrected ; hazard an opinion, it
is wondered at or contradicted ; assert a fact,
it is doubted and questioned ; till you at _
keep silence in despair.



LITTLE SINS. 65



If such a habit is teasing, so also is the habit
of indecision in trifles. ‘* Have a choice,” is a
good rule sometimes. How often is a whole day
wasted in discussing what is to be done, where we
should walk, what such a one would like; and how
frequently does all this wavering and wondering ©
end in doing nothing, or something the very
reverse of what the person consulted would
like, if she had just said what she wished, when
asked. It is rather painful sometimes to give
a decided opinion on some such trifle. It looks
like wilfulness, in small matters. But, when
asked from a really kind motive, try, if possible,
to have a choice, and do not bandy civil speeches
for ever, such as,—“ Just what others wish,’’—
‘‘T have no choice,” &c. &e., till at last no one
will go either here or there, or do this or that,
lest some one else should prefer going else-
where, or doing another thing. Going a-shop-
ping with one of these undecided ones is an in-
expressible annoyance; and many a time have I
wondered at the patience of the shopman thus
tried. Quiet decision in those little matters may
be quite consistent with a readiness to give up
one’s own way, and to oblige others. If it is
not so, then it becomes wilfulness ; which gene-
rally proceeds from | a selfish desire to have



66 LITTLE SINS.



one’s own way, cost what it may to others. I
mean, however, to confine myself to “little
things,” and, therefore, this sin can only be
considered in its smaller manifestations, and it
is to the young I chiefly address myself. There
+g a vast amount of little wilfulnesses too often
indulged in by young people when just released
from the restraint of childhood, and when of
an age to be swayed by advice, rather than
governed by command. .

Inattention to their health, by not wearing
warm clothing, and by exposing themselves un-
necessarily to over-fatigue, or bad weather, is
one of the most frequent ways of displaying
wilfulness among the young. Good advice is
rejected or ridiculed ; and those who would be
shocked and grieved at the thoughts of disobey-
_ing a parent’s command, or showing determined
obstinacy in greater matters, too often act so
wilfully against the known and expressed wishes
of their friends on these little points, that
rather than keep up the perpetual fault-finding
and irritation, they are abandoned to their head-
strong ways, and soon forget, that in thus
“‘ pleasing themselves,” they are indulging sin,
as well as grieving others.

It is no easy thing to be deniel one’s own



LITTLE SINS. 67



way in trifles, to obey the rule, “Yea, all of
of you be subject one to another, and be clothed
with humility.” But let us go honestly to the
root of these and: many other evil ways, and
must we not acknowledge that the spirit which
prompts them is very different indeed from that
of Him who pleased not himself, and who has left
us an example that we should follow His steps ?
It may seem too’ solemn a view to take of such
little things; but are we not in all things, in
whatever we do, to glorify God? Surely, then,
nothing is too trifling to be made the subject of
prayer and watchfulness. Those who are most
liable to indulge wilfulness themselves are gene-
rally those who wish to impose their own way
on others; and any thing more annoying, more
unlovely, than this petty tyranny, exists not.
Do not excuse yourself, however, reader, by
saying, “I may be, and perhaps am, a little wil-
ful, but I am sure I would let others have their,
own way, if they let me have mine.” All
wilful people are not dictatorial; and you will
have quite enotigh to do with your own sin, for
such it is, before you rejoice. in not having
another added to it. Wilfulness in your case
may spring more from selfishness, while love of
power and a certain strength of character are



68 LITTLE SINS.



combined in the wilful ones, who not only love
their own way, but wish that others also should
follow it. I have alluded to this subject in
“Little Kindnesses,” and refer to it again here,
chiefly to guard my readers against both kinds
of wilfulness,—a determination to take one’s own
way in trifles, or small things, and a resolution
to force others to give up theirs to please you.
Watch and pray against this spirit, either in
one case or the other. Both are alike opposed
to Christian love and kindness.

The next little sin I would refer to is “ slight-
ing and breaking resolutions.” These resolu-
tions may be made on small and trifling mat-
ters; the thing resolved on may be of little con-
sequence ; but is not the habit a fatal one to
our moral welfare? And, alas ! too often so to
our eternal peace. “Vow, and defer not to
pay thy vow,” is @ solemn warning on this
point; and we may well feel overwhelmed with
guilt in the sight. of God, when we recollect the
many solemn resolutions and vows we have for-
gotten or broken. Weak as we feel ourselves
to be in those more important points, we are
more apt to seek strength from on high to en-
able us to be faithful to our God; but do we
fcel sufficiently that we owe it as a duty to our-



LITTLE SINS. 69

——_ --__—-

selves to be faithful in small resolutions? It
would go far to help us to acquire resolution of
character, and to strengthen us against self-in-
dulgence, were we faithfully to adhere to our re-
solutions, in spite of the pleadings of indolence,
carelessness, indifference, and love of ease. Ob-
serve, I say, faithfully, not obstinately, for the
sin I am speaking of has reference only to good
resolutions, not to any little matters that may
concern others, or our own pleasure or conve-
nience merely, and where resolution to carry out
an intention becomes obstinacy and self-will.
We do not consider this breaking of little re-
solves a sin, and we excuse ourselves by plead-
ing forgetfulness, that it matters little, that we
cannot be always on the watch, or that we re-
solved in a moment of excitement, and do not
now care much about it. All this may be true,
but it is asad proof of our unfaithful spirit, by
every such indulgence of which we harden our
hearts, and are in danger of finding that “he
that is unfaithful in little is unfaithful also in
much.” Did we keep a list of our small resolu-
tions, and at the end of a month mark how many
had been fulfilled, how many needlessly procras-
tinated, and how many more remained unfulfill-
ed, (it may be, forgotten,) surely we would be



70 LITTLE SINS.



humbled, and aroused to strive against this foe
by every means in our power, not on account
of the items done, or left undone, but on account
of the danger to our own souls by indulging it.
Much of this unfaithfulness in known duty
arises from our want of earnestness. We do
not really care much about what we thus neg-
lect. And there is another sin also arising
out of this lukewarm spirit, that I would warn
my readers against. It is, laughing at sin
either in ourselves or others, putting off with a
joke what should be deeply felt, treating as
light, and sometimes as amusing, what is dis-
pleasing to God, and what, in our more serious
moments, we feel to be a cause of deep humilia-
tion and sorrow. Oh, surely, this is not a little
sin! It cannot be so to make light of that abo-
minable thing which He hates, who is of purer
eyes than to behold iniquity. Then let us guard
against it in its smaller manifestations, as well as
in its more daring form. ‘Be ye not mockers,
lest your bands be made strong,” may be applied
to those who, either from a desire not to be found
in the wrong, or from the ill-natured habit of
finding amusement in the faults of others, make
a jest of their own and their neighbours’ fail-
ings, turn into ridicule what they should silently



LITTLE SINS. 71



grieve over, and thus harden their hearts against
any loving endeavours to set them right, and
against all tenderness of conscience as to their
own sins and shortcomings. “Fools make a
mock at sin ;” and surely they only ; and if we
feel inclined to shield ourselves under the ex-
cuse that it is only at little sins we laugh, let
us remember,—

‘¢’Twas but a little sin this morn that enter’d in,
And lo! at eventide the world is drown’d.”









OIS5h B26 |
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'2011-11-10T09:52:45-05:00'
describe
'1050580' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXE' 'sip-files00004.jp2'
c978282a9b30ba4bbd2d6b2decefd4ec
b796f5abc29a27640fce26f133f30aeaf3535b9b
'2011-11-10T09:53:45-05:00'
describe
'49826' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXF' 'sip-files00004.jpg'
96619566832178041cf941520c2c3f20
fdcdaa68ac729bdc590903234544dc90af2e0b5e
'2011-11-10T09:54:08-05:00'
describe
'8867' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXG' 'sip-files00004.pro'
d3e13fb882b9750a9abb10b728f0d3e0
6dac66c3115bac731b5197dfbdc299ec7df8bcbd
'2011-11-10T09:52:32-05:00'
describe
'16019' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXH' 'sip-files00004.QC.jpg'
0e89b1997bae14ddcf4f6f6fa602c823
9fb1a202711a233bc4ae575e84042e7ec06327c3
'2011-11-10T09:52:16-05:00'
describe
'8410417' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXI' 'sip-files00004.tif'
0bf0175b0e61f1210bbf2a083561aa77
01e75ff0961408194ee8e896d52810d389c23d02
'2011-11-10T09:53:43-05:00'
describe
'526' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXJ' 'sip-files00004.txt'
d2422516048674f6a0683a723b85178c
231c1daa31a75a35a2ffde8e45eb97111667c0b5
'2011-11-10T09:54:16-05:00'
describe
WARNING CODE 'Daitss::Anomaly' Invalid character
'5353' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXK' 'sip-files00004thm.jpg'
4fe59c71e70c9390a9b342f59693ccc2
de7534f5ff300a0ce4d47311526a431eb47981f7
'2011-11-10T09:54:31-05:00'
describe
'911207' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXL' 'sip-files00005.jp2'
c56044974e6c061ebf1cd797f47c3a37
b915fb516aff5ebf0d354fd99c0507d00fba9471
'2011-11-10T09:54:18-05:00'
describe
'47118' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXM' 'sip-files00005.jpg'
52820cfaaea93921ad2b89602be71406
e86d995c06655477e93d31fa6caf621b8e3b3a5d
'2011-11-10T09:54:29-05:00'
describe
'12850' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXN' 'sip-files00005.pro'
a01ecf35f964e16be7195d5b7d1f04e8
3541600dec1babab333dfc35f7a394c3aeef6b74
'2011-11-10T09:54:34-05:00'
describe
'14758' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXO' 'sip-files00005.QC.jpg'
e1c34941533bd67468ecef66b425629c
c9a3a669d3475c6975d68d9d80fdd1e6e27ef7a2
describe
'7297735' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXP' 'sip-files00005.tif'
d5cd776678332e3c116bb9127fad79f6
8672b4e3a2e13bfb89ccc08fe4c1e7e3e9f16a00
'2011-11-10T09:52:55-05:00'
describe
'579' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXQ' 'sip-files00005.txt'
dc4865855f3b20f7d6248adf9b0c265e
9047d0f36b2e76365e276b03679f8c5c3b552996
'2011-11-10T09:53:29-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
'5269' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXR' 'sip-files00005thm.jpg'
6f4a14ed8227f1090a81d50f58233677
c9cd12b9eeafbf5dfe105a1b00754c947ac307c6
'2011-11-10T09:52:36-05:00'
describe
'933347' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXS' 'sip-files00006.jp2'
e2ac6263f6c4529f16a216d4798398ce
f7ddb991baa5054270801334ab296e32455c8030
'2011-11-10T09:52:28-05:00'
describe
'41686' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXT' 'sip-files00006.jpg'
d3630dcc66e0b10637071eb3b1d9f724
4421552157556dc93d9a8c7c4a6a6788654ea40a
'2011-11-10T09:54:05-05:00'
describe
'14148' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXU' 'sip-files00006.pro'
b45ee6dad480bbe4f2c4175dd633995a
7b7e38832c201a2edd90241f0bf9d8d52beae22c
'2011-11-10T09:54:28-05:00'
describe
'13639' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXV' 'sip-files00006.QC.jpg'
a8166f326ec394616292169038fd4d0c
f5b9b5a85930cf7c75383aaefeb991fadadc2c74
'2011-11-10T09:52:34-05:00'
describe
'7474149' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXW' 'sip-files00006.tif'
70e5d785aa693dce2c2fa1eff604187f
59a7d5c9ce43880a7bd943dcbf65567de1af8b99
'2011-11-10T09:53:04-05:00'
describe
'659' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXX' 'sip-files00006.txt'
abd7fbc4245123b75b0994dc9a44ca89
7c06dec3975e7cc52750e36b1f50ca29a2450d4d
'2011-11-10T09:52:14-05:00'
describe
'4957' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXY' 'sip-files00006thm.jpg'
387aed4229613ac1736e0d37e5634692
2bffd44217d2ce2f7ede6940e0b73943dccb777e
'2011-11-10T09:53:51-05:00'
describe
'780894' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFXZ' 'sip-files00007.jp2'
e6081dfa75755b31d1b8ce793c998937
31e87fa07a6bff668241a577d8ffb2601dad865c
'2011-11-10T09:52:53-05:00'
describe
'20286' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYA' 'sip-files00007.jpg'
a8f8d582421373407be7a912b5c37877
f744de5f87a3693cb80f81d123bc880119de22fb
'2011-11-10T09:53:06-05:00'
describe
'476' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYB' 'sip-files00007.pro'
602757d273a5f4a6fab688d5ebbbbaf6
3565d2fb3bf8827840e80e8bed23cc52cbbc384f
'2011-11-10T09:52:23-05:00'
describe
'5980' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYC' 'sip-files00007.QC.jpg'
a4ecaa34495ad5414356e86181e3b5db
fbbe42c565e67d89cf68b41ef425f90c1a4bcac0
'2011-11-10T09:53:28-05:00'
describe
'7224395' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYD' 'sip-files00007.tif'
aba6ed75931c2ea06ca1d1e2a33c3890
93ef4a0af171b65c724ab847872bd1213ed1a844
'2011-11-10T09:54:41-05:00'
describe
'80' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYE' 'sip-files00007.txt'
16be9656cb95a41f9e3d6e40258b45c9
9e302d90fe82f91d6ac7246490baf5a85e19ba88
'2011-11-10T09:53:02-05:00'
describe
'2394' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYF' 'sip-files00007thm.jpg'
12deac92886d838dc057114db9c9d9dc
d49d6ebc1314613b0761b97d6f9671cedab67932
'2011-11-10T09:52:54-05:00'
describe
'933348' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYG' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
8ec53aa1de1b8c5f88e1490b7cb08df9
6d928386d97b8b454dafc00c36dcdd9dc7869197
'2011-11-10T09:53:15-05:00'
describe
'90598' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYH' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
27ee4044ad7b29122903064c2859f512
c6cb316ccc83f144f6f0b4f8448d4287e3f298b0
'2011-11-10T09:52:19-05:00'
describe
'29860' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYI' 'sip-files00008.pro'
37a3a6bc6acde5a163e06e9e71caa963
288120b3ed9fc19bbe70b3d31da7cb53b257ca18
'2011-11-10T09:53:41-05:00'
describe
'32519' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYJ' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
2e6f11803a081eaa24383e87a9d70990
dcfc5d6dc686ddd185350fbf744115097a974d29
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYK' 'sip-files00008.tif'
bf04c00dcd550f6b172bcce9d1b1f1f2
ca138e8b5b22b573c7e4be40ce088382799042a4
describe
'1225' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYL' 'sip-files00008.txt'
7253f546ed511250cd0e19220be4c6db
795b33cf502903cae91fe5249532f53166eafa73
describe
'10793' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYM' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
ea590aa047a9aef700f3fab7ecfe3992
8113702dc8831b7e7452d135a25c28ca564f83c3
'2011-11-10T09:52:47-05:00'
describe
'938234' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYN' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
7b3a4173fcdc39d3d50893239fd1a64d
0fd59c49529427e77d3f63c87ef85eb8715be2fa
'2011-11-10T09:52:22-05:00'
describe
'95460' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYO' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
ef22516b7d4690bd8b5587137b4c6e5d
14ab9ea8880965abb08f4836670ae92d040199ad
'2011-11-10T09:53:13-05:00'
describe
'32279' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYP' 'sip-files00009.pro'
3e72c4a973b932ceffa0053261b2b8ff
a6d089f86698d4d802ccdfe8eeb3b5078a51e117
'2011-11-10T09:53:21-05:00'
describe
'34581' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYQ' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
a819447bce6dc66ed2736d633c26e5b8
907c61c78a9e36dc856ec55bcd73e70cbccdd913
'2011-11-10T09:53:22-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYR' 'sip-files00009.tif'
edd34dd9380a3c14d08d6bdf2c41c222
534771da5574876f393a5193b1a0faa376e6175b
'2011-11-10T09:53:11-05:00'
describe
'1331' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYS' 'sip-files00009.txt'
aa365ebd1d2095ab0557ab5f49e3a9f2
3f8a8d5a1ff6be7d1a087b036c05156c55c5beee
'2011-11-10T09:52:24-05:00'
describe
'11411' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYT' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
49c984a8f263e18e3b64bfe3d2004133
5b64fe80ec38e2dcaeba07a0a4532adba1f476fc
describe
'933406' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYU' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
d271c3ff65bcf32b42eeff5be6a9dc96
b9260becce55cfcd38d551e2dfa114b38ab8be66
'2011-11-10T09:54:10-05:00'
describe
'81841' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYV' 'sip-files00010.jpg'
28dca9b1cca4e261637dffefe447551e
ee5da428d7892c8e914d043573d36f8972ba0a27
'2011-11-10T09:53:17-05:00'
describe
'24069' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYW' 'sip-files00010.pro'
64ceaf92303d134c9cd69c37a64cf98d
3f753f539433e8fa35140180c3dff5f68fa74d49
'2011-11-10T09:54:02-05:00'
describe
'29450' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYX' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
bec333510d8ac62a047fe323005db097
5135a194197612d8cd53c4d051afe6ab7a4fc1bf
'2011-11-10T09:52:41-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYY' 'sip-files00010.tif'
06e70a15fd99f2fac7976e604ca94e6e
16aa617cc52d4f824fbe49e5c2615ced03a1338c
'2011-11-10T09:52:52-05:00'
describe
'1054' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFYZ' 'sip-files00010.txt'
609c6cd5ffffbbe133f839bc25c7ecd1
019e0dd9e7e397174f5c63c6c0fd44fa709bfb0e
'2011-11-10T09:53:19-05:00'
describe
'10230' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZA' 'sip-files00010thm.jpg'
88f8e1bb5fcab60c753b11f60da592a3
e923fbc8e60e96d78d0639aad3e30fe0f6b0b4cc
describe
'938219' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZB' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
eac0b8238e4299f9373f72b83b7bf80b
d3ae45c03be2431f85a989edae93b6cee2ad116d
'2011-11-10T09:53:24-05:00'
describe
'102547' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZC' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
bbbebd8165d551a6c16ae265900f53cd
afa893c3d32ea346b645ebd51120b80361b3c786
'2011-11-10T09:53:36-05:00'
describe
'33020' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZD' 'sip-files00011.pro'
1a47b8178930757ec01ea4a897e27f28
1e93185b1d6282114940ee20f0c278d9b62fadef
'2011-11-10T09:53:33-05:00'
describe
'38045' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZE' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
f215becadc83ad908577387129570ee8
461648d5770cff3b6d91d78ac1fd0163ced07b23
'2011-11-10T09:53:25-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZF' 'sip-files00011.tif'
fd1c04c1e3e93e0646a40f4c85d0bb44
b124d0aa8b20a54cdfcd98ca12feeab562a7d53e
'2011-11-10T09:54:04-05:00'
describe
'1339' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZG' 'sip-files00011.txt'
64f7ef71c6f5dc09fbcbdfaa3ac46b78
a99120f76cd6c0541af9dc49bbf5c66416f5a5a4
'2011-11-10T09:53:37-05:00'
describe
'12426' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZH' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
248f321e5ed3aba2c1efca48dbbc15e4
f1b67cec90d6c45f3fe34a6949b222b5ab1a8676
'2011-11-10T09:54:20-05:00'
describe
'933287' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZI' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
08741200136481d11ef9033cf9946771
5f0ce9aee9067876a44261046461982cb5f13c50
'2011-11-10T09:53:48-05:00'
describe
'103512' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZJ' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
c5e2d831dd30ea466e907ec1c97fbe84
77446d3dae3b1abff17ada1b608d5acb5a010936
describe
'33414' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZK' 'sip-files00012.pro'
b9ab5e02b40f403e672931e34bc6feb9
443db8999bbaf220007fe9d4c681252840aa6066
describe
'37992' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZL' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
a2619b8daee7ac02d5f9febacf41545e
7dd84bd70b10a08d1018bb27e8db78b9e104de15
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZM' 'sip-files00012.tif'
b728a5a6b39f316282cf0226a8a8504c
6d7576d578900268b672ed7e14dfc3810a228401
'2011-11-10T09:53:44-05:00'
describe
'1371' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZN' 'sip-files00012.txt'
eafea5b4e49158fbd668ab6bddf65c63
b4646e760f55d43f2909c8890491b2bfc8f386ca
'2011-11-10T09:52:58-05:00'
describe
'12553' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZO' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
0ad7c2db4c6a3e8f2f63783cc04e2985
262c9225d06ca232595eff8fad7fa597a77abe01
'2011-11-10T09:52:51-05:00'
describe
'938160' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZP' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
03b6eb4eca2d7a1a883ce6b4b4759af6
80931e8391b5caa3939725eb294a6cf2ac9c6f1a
'2011-11-10T09:54:38-05:00'
describe
'103632' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZQ' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
e136736fd140cde4b6d6786452a27802
48599a219fad4c397834b9bb22bb86d068f8cc37
'2011-11-10T09:53:10-05:00'
describe
'33491' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZR' 'sip-files00013.pro'
bc198e780416657782c43df72e38c75e
d5295418e5ca3e5dd330f9cb382be2a25645e459
describe
'38717' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZS' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
7b1d1f03263f92a8ea531ea5882130c4
da529ceed1288bf6f80aefdf3aa0450c832f6bb6
'2011-11-10T09:53:46-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZT' 'sip-files00013.tif'
768e23b4ae463462d684b64a771e6df1
056c47f9b89f72ad6e5952eb1fa4c63ec3736952
'2011-11-10T09:53:49-05:00'
describe
'1342' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZU' 'sip-files00013.txt'
f6a44f1f975a3073c90eaf62b971bf4c
51255ca515bf62db1720e56918fc255735dc0292
describe
'12738' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZV' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
a0544b0a98e262d1aa0e656c12e70f1c
3438eebe3b5a73c5b8a4b1765c7b1ba3027b1665
'2011-11-10T09:53:32-05:00'
describe
'933218' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZW' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
8517ed0e6c3c8b89521ad85afd4b2272
97b3550ef83aebf3aa7268e38e8366d033877c40
describe
'102317' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZX' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
bd80b2725854fca1ebc8ef1d0330cb7c
5d6b82004c939b4f45bf6a2789908544c19c200e
'2011-11-10T09:53:53-05:00'
describe
'33833' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZY' 'sip-files00014.pro'
724efeb14c0a67776811753bf1185948
42df6f21c332f560d23b58bba0079c37e9bbc54e
describe
'37517' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAFZZ' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
27d5db855114b5499fac097799730b10
5bb1927563fafd94192d9e7578debba6655d616a
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAA' 'sip-files00014.tif'
66236c8f346e8f20c232257bc68bdc07
2e48338d03a66bc9ef39a5d8df71e81699336ee9
'2011-11-10T09:54:01-05:00'
describe
'1344' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAB' 'sip-files00014.txt'
f00d5b9f0271a6e9cce868c7e3910641
40585b57bb738fb17d9d9f1d42a8577a3a568132
describe
'12057' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAC' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
d97aa7e2020fb89cf731ecc8b8f40e84
9c3a83d54b913cded751c1154286459c04badf58
describe
'938235' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAD' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
0fd262423948d91958725e0a48300f13
9169402f89c674bafc2f2c527655c6e83d2d2337
'2011-11-10T09:54:30-05:00'
describe
'100196' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAE' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
11efdcb9a7b1bca41d7b2c692f5ad5b1
842c6e7e765a066fc585b277e5b92eff534bf11e
describe
'32477' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAF' 'sip-files00015.pro'
08253d5e325bcf10efdb183bf268b231
23f8bffbb85a34436c93319c80c3a74c99a1ec7b
describe
'36863' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAG' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
8e3a7ce23e88500161faad28fb84c4e6
5a3b31a04faf89f388f2c6fcfcdfdac29577ad9b
'2011-11-10T09:52:15-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAH' 'sip-files00015.tif'
e6838d3a83c2da893cbe1a31997ea4f0
f043ed4edeae87f04f934d5cc7b3d71d72e3848e
describe
'1312' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAI' 'sip-files00015.txt'
20569edfa16650649fecac7bd4df4c82
af314727b4e09b644a35726b668e9a8b539f25b1
'2011-11-10T09:53:58-05:00'
describe
'12494' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAJ' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
11f630483e31431be83341daffa7ec43
e18f1de8bee6489f0a81710c2e6e0a281739203a
describe
'933372' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAK' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
73d218ba46783135dded50b18b85a561
24a651ee38d5a428d24d287f15e96dc737f50791
describe
'101974' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAL' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
ce3b4af0244b3e769637584926f6f705
a78418fa4086295c7c214ffa3a978f0c380b4655
'2011-11-10T09:52:17-05:00'
describe
'32647' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAM' 'sip-files00016.pro'
8fa54325511866977f6c982f3fdc90f7
12f316fc869b0136796fbf94557b95191cee44f7
'2011-11-10T09:52:49-05:00'
describe
'37052' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAN' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
6ff06139973186e210d867260703706f
e2a1bad2a4ce8465eab1cb0cbd411eed60f73a03
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAO' 'sip-files00016.tif'
4f8d381afeb2462f23915df7dbd03621
6267d0f2e6a2ab6d5aedc492578cb00ab2f22bfb
'2011-11-10T09:52:57-05:00'
describe
'1340' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAP' 'sip-files00016.txt'
ba59e187f01859023521804e53eb8662
69329f8edb5f494b30d3c6d03244d82406e0c414
describe
'12375' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAQ' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
f34613af194803719da8cf1d4bc6e530
3ab1af167b7dae372b378705017d2b53aaa3e938
'2011-11-10T09:52:27-05:00'
describe
'938067' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAR' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
92d5aeda589c1bf0ab63958a2a0858e1
0f0d301df72c21d1e7aee621664098b6a1c574ee
'2011-11-10T09:54:40-05:00'
describe
'98908' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAS' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
3f1a745287703d1c0b1c01c7da0457e5
3f9f571b3f92d018c52f8baf4a9bbfe8a841f8eb
'2011-11-10T09:54:03-05:00'
describe
'32713' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAT' 'sip-files00017.pro'
12aec44d968338a968d8f381de1ee38d
78560773ada3fb7923a2be0e1472dca63d60ac8c
'2011-11-10T09:54:19-05:00'
describe
'36548' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAU' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
20f93109a7672b8746298c1613cfd75f
90071f41ea52b6e6bd4a9c62dc24fe78e581336a
'2011-11-10T09:54:21-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAV' 'sip-files00017.tif'
e6b0be71ba44b064c6cdbec5d8fda03e
fdb3825d2bb2d38a1588268f97e6c117212a5eb3
describe
'1328' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAW' 'sip-files00017.txt'
495f74d08bb92553b2658505772686b6
ca702704be2f44653e0d5dccc18b9a696d6c5bd2
'2011-11-10T09:54:15-05:00'
describe
'12084' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAX' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
85d166a416b3242dea9d00e7ea856567
02fb91f20149ba4af08c908e7564b84e636e25b8
'2011-11-10T09:53:30-05:00'
describe
'933268' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAY' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
37eceddffe07a95e5ff82345a0fd7977
fdf3dc281db77670329851f2f78728ee383aee40
describe
'101212' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGAZ' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
b6a4936cb0cbb419b849b1db5c9f8cf2
94ca6257e838168ae4dac400be6646e61821c016
'2011-11-10T09:53:08-05:00'
describe
'32874' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBA' 'sip-files00018.pro'
62ed1624ec47a3cfe591a8881db68e83
293af38b57713d1aafeb9d48aba546b24f4c03c8
'2011-11-10T09:52:40-05:00'
describe
'37001' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBB' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
7c17bde3aa535d4c16ad986ed8dbfc02
72763ea54819759d1b952f653a68e70d37908176
'2011-11-10T09:54:13-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBC' 'sip-files00018.tif'
c021760718e2644bb2f313b401a0e66b
8103bc0d62a1733c3e33748c7d88ddb065b27b47
describe
'1349' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBD' 'sip-files00018.txt'
759ead0f4da595f87a38e59698f22bde
53fad291b2644f1878894a35d34227a7e86b8c54
describe
'12321' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBE' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
86dc7958ba80b4cb7162b5b1815e38ab
bca96dcdc292e3f636a6b2400c024bab654ab415
'2011-11-10T09:53:00-05:00'
describe
'938136' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBF' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
c0758346929fa0d3ddc7213bf3968487
fae4c6e2cf0056b1cd74f7dbf131db2432a9588e
'2011-11-10T09:52:48-05:00'
describe
'98919' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBG' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
e2538c1dc741700b00913d1bfb18ec18
3f055f3596cd40393bd5418a46421feccf2214e7
'2011-11-10T09:54:45-05:00'
describe
'32116' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBH' 'sip-files00019.pro'
8c10fa85f5bb3d1839af9d5fcf96c08a
6e74a98c6211dd3727b73abc242c1f0d2a65dc07
'2011-11-10T09:53:09-05:00'
describe
'36848' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBI' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
eb15fbe5ecb635cf966278f1bb71d33f
22d34088593a514967271c889a908cb02febbc99
'2011-11-10T09:53:01-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBJ' 'sip-files00019.tif'
1e6febe2d16c16a2b1de7d46d4319eb2
7f2555cf70316eff3d7f851da7989d33aaafa1a1
'2011-11-10T09:54:27-05:00'
describe
'1282' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBK' 'sip-files00019.txt'
bf22067e2e03f9d2a34376e0f01636b5
10af74029baf843dfd60e88480096b6a95347ce7
'2011-11-10T09:54:37-05:00'
describe
'12099' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBL' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
76af729f52d97eeed207de9736b540d6
9b1e133598855f6e5ba31a0646762483fd093ab8
describe
'933313' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBM' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
86aa58568937ac4fa758204145886929
af10a753e3427d65586f68ea051c5fb5854c7ac8
describe
'101138' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBN' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
db8763753147759b8c2c5a206bd3ce18
498d862ca342fe2602140e3c0b21accff9b9a0d6
describe
'31983' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBO' 'sip-files00020.pro'
ba27bc632da82d7e3abd13ec5606a6ec
df785bfc28e1ff03163c1e3d104908e85df0c4d0
describe
'36421' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBP' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
7e735bd1faa3d86fc2f8638d6f071ccc
e6a17bf6096eceb7149c7fa2a1f8649ec4199fc0
'2011-11-10T09:54:14-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBQ' 'sip-files00020.tif'
603fc5133c581bf8933563cc545884f9
1f07a25c1f854679958ffcddf650164c384a7cb2
describe
'1293' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBR' 'sip-files00020.txt'
9eca27c813123d0c9970563bc10bee62
63d4edc15d582993d17a35b3c0d1ab91e05eb05e
describe
'12196' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBS' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
17daeb36ff8ca4c76d48a3f12580f836
47e2f5d7e5a1cbbce3070349a38fe574eb8122b1
'2011-11-10T09:54:44-05:00'
describe
'938246' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBT' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
cb20a2cfe7b499deaa2f7126fa1142de
cf2c25ba2c82aac19165f5c6a25d09d256f80855
describe
'96849' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBU' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
e5b9caf68d254a6752b910b27c01fd45
a29e37930498c70a20fc0e57c9f97852f694d265
describe
'31128' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBV' 'sip-files00021.pro'
d5b6491ba78905f11701ac9fd1514ad4
c25f7175d660737221ca73ed9d02194c8206e088
describe
'35394' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBW' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
def5adf1e152f5aab8d8b36d03a3d7fe
226c554e31aca9f33922d5a4200d83c54156b478
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBX' 'sip-files00021.tif'
cd7ff76960e04230169299a05c6f5ab0
64a2f84c72a37dd6790881c75d64a9efbf846838
describe
'1259' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBY' 'sip-files00021.txt'
fc286655ca32774f1b0b927eea4d5c7e
11b1237373d2c1165e0523edbb82638a9c6a88bf
describe
'12029' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGBZ' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
1cb91f0abaafbe7ea237aa5356d19fe3
47b25306f5ebf47e0a10ddb8e2d1c56a6665eb1e
describe
'933279' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCA' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
bc51f421ac8c598dc57452dc673b029a
2fdc8eba3bf0caada4d1b3f86d77650c960e3674
'2011-11-10T09:52:50-05:00'
describe
'85754' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCB' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
4e4e2e3a7d874a23a17a87ce02a70176
e36c030643325924359991a2c35a18c2d4008593
'2011-11-10T09:53:39-05:00'
describe
'26851' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCC' 'sip-files00022.pro'
9dcbfe492e0f926ee25a2cedf8311241
08a165c4f6399241a6ffec765d8d70477b3040a1
'2011-11-10T09:53:05-05:00'
describe
'31336' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCD' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
2cb1fa8bc26377bdd5ad7ba75753f1a9
a4f3ab24fc1cef89f419b30475cd51f49cfe26b2
'2011-11-10T09:54:32-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCE' 'sip-files00022.tif'
950ea3829b88cd3983d21cafc98d1345
41aaf1faee958d24548080b1d9d3662fdb913723
describe
'1135' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCF' 'sip-files00022.txt'
4479ddfbb40f54a03b3cd6c509d6cbf9
3db34a3e0853131f4b180f96653fe3813d7887d8
describe
'10435' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCG' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
026ad64fecbf5b0e6f8d9e1384b51eb3
5392f69dde8b79c6df952693427782bbceb8e84d
describe
'938205' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCH' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
d487fe081896321866d901742bbaca21
5bb6c5364c805e3d769f0fb79d80c620e4dbe74e
'2011-11-10T09:54:39-05:00'
describe
'102110' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCI' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
01d47b019c4d70e88ad56bcd2230a19a
6342a49de71c46c794069d44f0321c8d98d2b60b
describe
'34263' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCJ' 'sip-files00023.pro'
d4bc69a8cfa223598823b254759341be
f423878ae01a0785ad031ab1f7627543de996723
describe
'37282' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCK' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
945559bd1406ba4bf9bd6337f60cd92e
746bfba19e206da902ed40f06a7289170f9c6cb4
'2011-11-10T09:52:18-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCL' 'sip-files00023.tif'
dfa304ee2b1ae1271cf073fb1a0b41bf
a4f5240b7cc8e66c085d0b08da2592303097ee03
describe
'1360' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCM' 'sip-files00023.txt'
f22a4f3d590c52926735d9475ee689de
990616f55a598bd47aabcf22b07327724f1834f7
describe
'12287' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCN' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
50a91679d8d2bc2302feb33ac1a56cf0
ca373f90c36575fbd2830cc203b0ed634673a862
describe
'933399' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCO' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
c112e75e2bd2d77533e4e748026a08a4
d3d07d9d635a191d28788b7f45b0c6e74c5ceff0
describe
'102655' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCP' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
a8585617847435d9289b0212846a734a
c349bfb88982aca27e65499680c1b6969833f0f7
describe
'32915' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCQ' 'sip-files00024.pro'
f7119386c11fb729b230c9c69fef0a51
b24ea279a56e8fd91b8e1484ac59b13b99763000
describe
'37490' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCR' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
3fed658165fa6cb7dcd76ce45cb9ba78
dffe2bbfa383c891038fe68dfaebb8b78f698165
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCS' 'sip-files00024.tif'
b8acfa269d9030704a326ccf7fcec413
f0ae1eb275d09773bacfe47012b5d2433c168233
'2011-11-10T09:54:07-05:00'
describe
'1314' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCT' 'sip-files00024.txt'
42d61bafb196e194a8283cc51c942ec7
05cecd7da736bf05f9f017c34133598c5c7d51f4
describe
'12458' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCU' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
2e434287d49f10b3af0668e20fdf751e
b1436ddb736280c71cc2c4d86b94fee625f68ec8
'2011-11-10T09:52:29-05:00'
describe
'938227' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCV' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
19df27c6e9d48cd2b4c51e719d88e3d5
2eb219846b400af054c90bbb16d250d8c32caf16
describe
'101791' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCW' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
df466afcfaabe39f64254176681cc21f
6111b410ebfd8195571cb6a655b38c57a5f8db7a
describe
'34346' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCX' 'sip-files00025.pro'
40de31eeb10c7e5cf4148f21cac61bf8
b5c530f74424cbccf98e79c148d37da0638a0b36
'2011-11-10T09:53:23-05:00'
describe
'37138' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCY' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
e0a5eb2bb66d0aaee7bbbc75d3fdee63
a0c03104db8e58a5798d7ef6106d5198f46f53a9
'2011-11-10T09:54:17-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGCZ' 'sip-files00025.tif'
93e061ef0d27af090ccc6ee7f023a20c
d429beacaaba40d11ae6e9d641b0cbecd68a787e
'2011-11-10T09:54:33-05:00'
describe
'1366' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDA' 'sip-files00025.txt'
66b9d6473b7d590ded7bb4ad0e9e71b2
01b26837251635d0ad5d79c1448d75845725c46f
describe
'12438' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDB' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
ba08b225f9f964e18a766b8842087086
32ee5e4500f816e1342c30b6685c0fd323248231
describe
'933394' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDC' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
75d3dae037bf5670e2086ec612ff2c6c
216100f2504fb67686f2c1d6326d16a0246cf0bd
describe
'102733' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDD' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
ead9a21f5417467355d8e151b2564589
5eced1fa2b0e1563891d0a6c378cfa39df78f587
describe
'33308' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDE' 'sip-files00026.pro'
528c9045b847837b008525c40e641507
b680ee10015f3f56df1b3582c8db1dbc4892ac05
'2011-11-10T09:54:06-05:00'
describe
'37192' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDF' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
0cc72d219b5b6340c851f61e3de5ffd0
32ed49d774856b169f0a825ad1576711b81eed93
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDG' 'sip-files00026.tif'
0f392b9a62c3a3acd5e3b939bd760b10
266d3348212c3f39af882d570f17021032c8058e
describe
'1370' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDH' 'sip-files00026.txt'
089997fcdec31a397dd574b2ca03fe8f
beb411a7a1f14534b3c5b8db68d35990aa94ba58
describe
'12574' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDI' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
0a37c58f7a82333add478e425b2d1bdb
a309cb901f716b27d656395d7b6d53736f163abb
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDJ' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
45af3dc6e0d8ed0588efab7682763e41
b12ebee137039aaa56bfdf9b89546b7b07834092
describe
'102170' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDK' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
a9d310dcb25ea82f5e636acf9919b467
a4f0aab68374fc08112958539e854e4fd08446db
'2011-11-10T09:53:03-05:00'
describe
'33014' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDL' 'sip-files00027.pro'
5f5b943e0960c882e85baa276ad83324
78620c6d49502d4d82fbb683fc7e36329abcd618
describe
'38052' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDM' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
66a00fc20256c83f93592e8414e53888
df1e2ed578e3d019c45c0e710b41c40e000d22b1
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDN' 'sip-files00027.tif'
162a517a67d0c55d9e97b4bf7e493c97
4482757c2ab80a3a02d2748b1026093748fe434d
describe
'1322' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDO' 'sip-files00027.txt'
e6ad65def840e123bfe46eeba831ad80
059b4f5f1f1b07a466268a2312c8d8a242cfce96
describe
'12648' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDP' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
d199b30bc848e1ed28ede51a79a0800e
89e0a063216f45a2dc6bfd61c2bfe97fc2350178
describe
'933361' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDQ' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
ebafaa60e6db1e889ac954470fc3c625
12389242488b1cd12b6ec12285c76440e5f72c5a
describe
'102357' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDR' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
f67dcaeecd6fc015494b9ff657c827b4
66a70314879e83fcd6abb6e3e4b8cc1e1960d3f8
'2011-11-10T09:54:25-05:00'
describe
'33198' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDS' 'sip-files00028.pro'
4ad9e0f66715cd27008ab486059cfdf1
4dfef574f44996335d5dd9527ae798e6a5b647ca
describe
'37221' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDT' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
682f1dbda3498958864faf18b948d1c6
5180658a9125acd96d2c11035e2794fba830d426
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDU' 'sip-files00028.tif'
113c5b2386d0b52f6bcd2e9505515dcf
839c58bcd96359f1341fbcbba91031a8fd430471
describe
'1350' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDV' 'sip-files00028.txt'
2a0a594263593fc8579e1bc6d59bd7dd
9e32d6bda0076e6c4d809a13a70a8204ca6ce099
'2011-11-10T09:53:14-05:00'
describe
'12429' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDW' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
cce74f345aa31feb2032354cb302e7c1
339359250c423f5b8257c3056d1378ff9028e6fb
describe
'938114' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDX' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
cf55078a07a036327b276d6cfa270bbe
059c7d8543f449fc2b35f209b7ffd8db5b81678d
describe
'97866' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDY' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
24c402728dfd15c1c9bc6aa416595cc4
b87f3b9425945eb82e8ff47e2c71dd20527a412b
'2011-11-10T09:54:36-05:00'
describe
'32151' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGDZ' 'sip-files00029.pro'
dd6a9afc3532b9f99ebc784f67d5f91a
4a042e938f32c38b5a08788213df96dbbaa1f36c
describe
'36466' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEA' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
e1ec49e3c4b585b27d4ed02fa2f31a07
6b5f23278faffd49cd6745a9be5725e16c13ee4a
'2011-11-10T09:54:42-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEB' 'sip-files00029.tif'
8f48f5a9a67676847ee219399a922015
61e85877bd5ed0c7b7c5d5e1fd817ae54196d150
describe
'1280' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEC' 'sip-files00029.txt'
bf3753e97ae2e22525de3eb647aa365f
999029cd74505d7d029604ec07f7216da773abbe
describe
'12359' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGED' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
b1ca6ded3ddfba3f779e97d8907ac73b
a80f918c2ae36493c914f0613b88adc40b8cdaf3
describe
'933354' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEE' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
1f253bdba362aaf1b67174d95c275722
fd23d7ed80a5340a5bc2b323add5efc8780d262a
describe
'97082' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEF' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
552f5be8266597eeca4731d7e8088732
03283dc0d1e5a6a0516ad46cb214be5d4afee22c
describe
'33462' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEG' 'sip-files00030.pro'
6cb1a3d1452dc507de81b333bf75adb1
dff1c1e90a00161e4a38c6e0e0170ca63f3e3003
'2011-11-10T09:54:23-05:00'
describe
'35453' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEH' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
46e7aa6d72dfc6a7197bd5f7b9c409e7
88626db934904c1d1c371cb75399d9bb617a5215
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEI' 'sip-files00030.tif'
77a8540257f4e3f5eac7d67c4d7018a4
5dca51929fe1bffc3fe7cbec5784afec2cf0ebea
'2011-11-10T09:54:43-05:00'
describe
'1391' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEJ' 'sip-files00030.txt'
dcedf9f43d0d199baba4a572898b006c
24ec6c941c459430bceb0540d21194497c6b1723
describe
'11876' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEK' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
70bf91975ad7d786dc98657c73dc981c
9576c02fa326635da748fb3e809f03f4dc94b741
describe
'938216' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEL' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
e8d2f9c8a7c0db19c0b887b5d6c56062
d3969cb713852ee0754b30cef2505c83943f0222
describe
'83458' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEM' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
eaddaf53b8fcd1adf6a790faa273ef48
24299e950a9a724345e8566fa07727fa0da19f16
describe
'26267' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEN' 'sip-files00031.pro'
ad3840058eeadce90ce017e44807b6f9
a3f7e8bd20131ac4e3d6e7b1421b205b6a389e07
describe
'30234' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEO' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
d7d0982e92c59dff8fb1c7c9611aca89
616bcb6bf0bb13774102eb42ca88f18413c3362e
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEP' 'sip-files00031.tif'
f3160b2b6b491fc19e215b2b8fb14bc2
f2ae4a6dec611542830048be765b9b0288e47f82
describe
'1077' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEQ' 'sip-files00031.txt'
79ab68f0ff70556933d309b3b7736fe7
dcd00a7741c9efa6b8799a5d87108bb244b58b71
'2011-11-10T09:52:39-05:00'
describe
'10373' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGER' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
9c20a776c33eb2cc3271702eaa2b1ab1
ff1c16a2ebb9116589c487d3adbd870744b8af5f
describe
'933388' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGES' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
b460ec771aa2938e28dbe55e6ac699ad
51bf5982318b9de0de72be65fec7c6ea25589218
describe
'100734' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGET' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
f76a533ca2fc9961f1f3befc04811e71
63f05062c50f50939c2336fe89d9c55e3df39653
describe
'33270' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEU' 'sip-files00032.pro'
36fccf94f0126e66cd327095771a9647
4a287846c1d3229c4f1126532c51cf3688f62235
describe
'36737' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEV' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
567d4b1eded599ad796cb55440efc0c3
12622a9ec93670e30df71479008f8fb03017cbc8
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEW' 'sip-files00032.tif'
be405b18f1d031a0e7faa87e68ec280c
d428e8ec95e9caf273328499108bfed7cf5803c6
describe
'1343' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEX' 'sip-files00032.txt'
08d686519d06133643cdef35fefa4197
ab9a3211a37549a5833397ccff5290d15e3a272d
describe
'12547' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEY' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
441720571418937958fe7887f2d52aa5
e03209abe33d441176c980cd47f2fcef196ccb81
describe
'938242' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGEZ' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
ff2548231cbce80e7827861a2b138a8e
606f33d91628d4f2d2442523e741e7808ded6c5d
describe
'91629' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFA' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
aea5a1487638f04616fb1bd7c4a908c2
4648787f2060b666f58e5c6f417b327dc670cf58
describe
'29975' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFB' 'sip-files00033.pro'
f4a53ded767a23c618566f7f73b43b10
923fc277dd36237eb66d1d6c25b3b3bd381df045
describe
'33769' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFC' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
fd53ba23943f559bdf1257f6ea8dd0e9
8e52fc02fc03497db19bf771244b2855e31b37a7
'2011-11-10T09:53:34-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFD' 'sip-files00033.tif'
c5204d7be9051b26bcf51c3135030a28
7ad0e9f466fbef5b939babd01b161ba5b313466c
'2011-11-10T09:53:27-05:00'
describe
'1234' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFE' 'sip-files00033.txt'
77f948d88d8b859f375469fd0a1ebe6d
1750648798b86c41e996562bdfc8f4bed6b1c464
describe
'11533' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFF' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
b4563fda026b3fa0e4b89735c5771add
d3114ea47408ccfdb7d57f899307c4b98ca3fb62
describe
'933310' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFG' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
87bf0eeb1fe83998f43fb7a92cfbd387
8d92895b6e5705596b5a9408c055a57415dcc49d
describe
'101928' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFH' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
7dbe074f745e9dbabaeeb85ded26ad70
f370a20bfcb548ed3865ce469002c3af0b685d80
'2011-11-10T09:53:35-05:00'
describe
'33074' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFI' 'sip-files00034.pro'
983e556fa9785fc7d0d941455269cbe5
de2b6b5c34dc7c16c75422533f1d5afd9326bc2d
describe
'37129' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFJ' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
fd2f68a8e8a83721eaaa1b6b66e662c8
ddfb515faaa9dcb319cea1a7eb48242a09feb1ce
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFK' 'sip-files00034.tif'
5caf3c8a40cb780f03289aea57df9da1
4a3acfd08c506059fe85d0425bb38e94144c1bcf
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFL' 'sip-files00034.txt'
b26afae077047ee5be5c2184f6bd67e0
61003abd76ca6a548b85b5048c260612a37fbcd8
'2011-11-10T09:52:46-05:00'
describe
'12663' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFM' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
a2d7bee130375ef10e5033d22136c707
07c3fc20535a8a73a2fcc444f5e1325628ed8b2f
describe
'938225' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFN' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
a074d4809a9b12c99843cda8ef0223dd
d51ec020bcfb561776b09d416f9813e7b8ce8b22
describe
'102920' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFO' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
4c69034aef283ee51ade9eddae1229c8
f6847faef2a1bed4bcec55898827d0c79b33af34
describe
'33448' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFP' 'sip-files00035.pro'
8cfec81fb7f37fb4a447dc5efb0c162b
4b54df0b6d6dd5bcf2a4f0d41e692d76b7c61ff9
describe
'38064' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFQ' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
8d21be2366090c60c3223e8e7de5e29a
fd718adef90e4de853072d2d6794082a1b017650
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFR' 'sip-files00035.tif'
749d1393f2704efdfa0cee4bb7131e93
10293e58886233c75de8a8480ca33bfbec99a81b
describe
'1332' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFS' 'sip-files00035.txt'
ec9ec663eb083ba9b39d300e71f9d23d
cf23d9e7d9ca8973452324b7d95c72f2ee4fc7db
describe
'12849' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFT' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
dc38725a2365cfe78c5313f07650d06f
0401e468ebd75e2344dc5d21e3f8c4ba55ab8474
describe
'933403' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFU' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
777e40666ae764a3e87506afda6af342
b50dd9cf36c4b0d6215907c54aba45c64e87a556
describe
'101349' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFV' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
858a92d267e7519356bb573f6565c187
c4a1d4145c1bf7d26e7e16c94802e7c646cc4d22
describe
'32556' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFW' 'sip-files00036.pro'
bc830045ca8f56085ba2ddfd70c227a3
2a8339c8255b90a12e040a0d9bddb0d39b965a78
describe
'36786' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFX' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
b509397416975664dc3ef3628d5e4891
8bee6f9a22d4d46bfb336f0875b954ca16515c64
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFY' 'sip-files00036.tif'
39d6cacf84b084cff83c86bf27bc7244
578626c9ca4bf8d3740621d2854e0428c0449830
describe
'1306' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGFZ' 'sip-files00036.txt'
c61976d7845db1ac3f4745b961a76c4d
6d3c6575d007a7185ec92bc83f31959b3d6601dd
describe
'12502' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGA' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
e62d7157d55bf41d4b99d065b05b3c4b
29643600b4bcafb28bbb1e27ede790c3a983f3aa
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGB' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
dcce574185453309d27b8b110a6c17e5
ccc5f28d85c0ee01292eff01d70ea9a9ec754a84
describe
'101808' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGC' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
44b9f28556f43ce77b22e4e4cfaba55f
27dbed97d1b891c565008fe55c748800e86af580
describe
'33862' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGD' 'sip-files00037.pro'
797cc4b72274ccb9288df1d20ee546c3
f22bb3fa7f40db441b396831f5c1feb260b2f3a6
describe
'37146' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGE' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
9d39ac7be1a75c881c7aecf64f85e174
c71f23200f733a6e4eb8f65e724fdae18e8e4bac
'2011-11-10T09:54:09-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGF' 'sip-files00037.tif'
cc9a96c30ef0bbf2811c2269d43c4ada
10f0e44f2836895610fb176100b6c72aa8645172
'2011-11-10T09:54:11-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGG' 'sip-files00037.txt'
ae880cb30f7a78e1920e0d23664e56be
b8125313c6370148c1d410a524acb238296fe33f
describe
'12486' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGH' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
e3e860ec5d6cbe50676bc464b91f3fb2
9453bf6831b4f11c2d1d8baf8f62217f6c81766f
describe
'933392' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGI' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
f8dcc9569ed59f13b6de1aa84360e8fa
f35c9aaa2e3cdb0e3a0ea62d86c51149b11baf6b
describe
'87522' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGJ' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
66573866ff0cfad076dd1a016408bc99
41513af933a0598c9cf61c4ba0bc750afca54d7b
describe
'20314' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGK' 'sip-files00038.pro'
5c56f0c8bb6aba700e0300224d5708fa
70f3585b9b84f086056c1f410e89992c8d4aac62
describe
'31102' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGL' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
f5283b9e69d600197cb1bb5f3feb9b58
304ba414968518caced467adb4b91dbe5f30db2a
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGM' 'sip-files00038.tif'
4cde7050e891c91ca84d027ebb6182bf
358a157660a6fdc8d40e95e6feedf01c906e7d39
'2011-11-10T09:53:18-05:00'
describe
'844' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGN' 'sip-files00038.txt'
f4a8e5ccc0e7573c2772c7fb6b14cb03
12aff59ac3506b42401ca8fd65ff4dc3b6d4984a
describe
'10220' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGO' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
69801d9b87cce196ae4004c157f18fb1
a97688e694bef01d7828afe1db997c45b136473a
describe
'938105' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGP' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
e556c5d7cf7cf219e9c8b19dbface60f
9e7a2dda6f54ba5d7cb9cedab8924f9e1a685131
describe
'88360' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGQ' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
dfa3976d1ff18e4a0387fe319e6a15f1
64a8e66b6fa865d4e993fc8e13ab112a27899826
describe
'28423' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGR' 'sip-files00039.pro'
166881dfa8ed5e45c3ee3224a5f4754d
607e0668042b4adb6ab2dd86f23ae61738789e0d
describe
'31808' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGS' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
c8055ea35c7246c550599b4c7187b7e1
58b5defaeb7de9d1315a34f0c8c092a343fe40a4
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGT' 'sip-files00039.tif'
6d34eeaae3fd39c130d6495a7251a4c0
b4e9af322fbec1865a042a5b87e305618c98ed4e
describe
'1184' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGU' 'sip-files00039.txt'
960f3eb53ce65598948e8d065d853e38
b6aa4d4ba1a280649adda63930ea6259e8690b71
describe
'11052' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGV' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
eddd02c6745e9e99987a29502432cd32
5a76a88f3053d8d028f171afc81f56f0f4b3175b
describe
'933203' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGW' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
4e1ee0066eb273c94987142306c4703b
1306982287db9f7240e6545aa62972066bee331d
describe
'98810' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGX' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
137b11889f66f82510cf0f5bcf047802
74f52fe9c16b520bdb6b872af63c1e32f951ac48
describe
'32178' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGY' 'sip-files00040.pro'
c6892d3f639b99fd8aae5c0802ffebb4
62ca4b260f4a80d94334f3d97d8aa5e03203841f
describe
'35943' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGGZ' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
9b63f88cc386039315fc0b49c85c0324
720a0070efbae14226f1f2d82e390062c9d3f25c
'2011-11-10T09:52:35-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHA' 'sip-files00040.tif'
2f7fb79bc9d9ee410b825978db365013
19da58fb055823774a737db371dca3837ff7349e
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHB' 'sip-files00040.txt'
f1f03da6ca6a76629e7cca0349cc2803
04ca9c2ec2ab0fe1d0dbbddc02134f057b49c4c7
describe
'12258' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHC' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
9b7cf69df8dfd7c6fe91d3b8121b531e
0b3c0c298553b1a929b34fc87f9baaba2a82799b
'2011-11-10T09:52:20-05:00'
describe
'938211' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHD' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
297b2868ddce96e3c8698b787cb32f4d
440ece2426639cc272d7ebd6348a6100aa2ab477
describe
'100494' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHE' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
5d98524dcdf25c5478d091f025f7698e
03b6ca350b12505df70525f83fa8369e41ac150e
describe
'33192' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHF' 'sip-files00041.pro'
a0bed4a4d2913bc89d2a65bfa4ea28fc
a4adbc6deae721502a29f25fee26ba4dbaaf5deb
describe
'37231' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHG' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
44c91f5e33c1ff67f001f040304902b1
c143ac09ff1348ff95df7067c6a1854232dfedae
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHH' 'sip-files00041.tif'
192d10280271f210ace74e2517b644ec
c782d9b7370b49280d0abc6ea42d0732f69bd0cf
'2011-11-10T09:52:56-05:00'
describe
'1392' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHI' 'sip-files00041.txt'
0e46d2d419a8e628586410adb39e0272
098b619e40417faa43395be2a67947163685f161
'2011-11-10T09:54:00-05:00'
describe
'12543' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHJ' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
c91913ddc25f341c2dd3ed4cd9a3c540
0900f6817e317ba513c335f6db0912fc713b4f48
describe
'933267' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHK' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
ef308c06f2ac7d3da973c761b2bebceb
dc68fde58c20404b1fd21361730f9ce79bed395c
describe
'101128' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHL' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
10243545b7625c32aa347c24fc5dcdc7
b301aa887203450b8769d33b6b976d18bdcb0d75
describe
'31791' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHM' 'sip-files00042.pro'
ee9ecd907c0f9e2ece3223e5af3823ba
ea50f33445d48f0c90db262e9436bb3b88c83ccc
describe
'36858' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHN' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
6cc9840898f29c8e4ea26dd9de4bf351
a3c14d5bc316abe1967d4e8989671f4a1dfedd22
'2011-11-10T09:52:59-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHO' 'sip-files00042.tif'
a3453f6fbe691580fc9fd36083e0c58e
4147b24c43a97417cb76d15b6be4de7dcfd2df56
describe
'1304' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHP' 'sip-files00042.txt'
1220514e6882d4fe2631ac39df59679a
226031c51b80fb055caacfe7e493b0f396e97575
describe
'12569' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHQ' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
14f495e5cb971b0295ffb5cafb7984d2
cb649b763ae6f6c5ebc2027c43194ee0a2b8b923
'2011-11-10T09:53:07-05:00'
describe
'938245' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHR' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
34fb460a6b9caef9e8db23d2c7b1216d
a7bee0d733ae9a58ba5999fc9a82bbdee53752e3
'2011-11-10T09:53:40-05:00'
describe
'101225' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHS' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
6d27e942702bbdead31d928dbc9b6475
63e5fc0b07e505c0a6552b50be10913f20ad49ff
describe
'32037' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHT' 'sip-files00043.pro'
e309ee73ca7421bc3d05f525c7246c28
bc5c09b189a4506f39e22bb4ff3a1d9369b4940f
describe
'37071' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHU' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
42ae112c36e0dede21440ee9332a5db1
0a4bc75eec3767d1313b44b5af8ee58ab8ee8b36
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHV' 'sip-files00043.tif'
fa4a6b1c43f97cbde6b444df1ef5e6a9
ce22d1e42d26866f54b8afc55b99c168862989ca
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHW' 'sip-files00043.txt'
f594ed90b0b5aaf9afc8c175684fd20d
034984daddb536bc98810d103b536b9cdd409587
describe
'12253' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHX' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
2f27f90eb410bfb5e12af93c65df6431
c61a2dbc402c7048c0787a1a41b76d5ade7fe147
'2011-11-10T09:53:54-05:00'
describe
'933408' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHY' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
623d922040ac7c875b8372a766393aec
c9f4b5006be43efedd6b5f2c75e3c4932ad5a76b
'2011-11-10T09:53:55-05:00'
describe
'88766' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGHZ' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
3910241f3ae6ef5615384d4357847212
a2563328b87813c536fd010c9238215a94c2c5d5
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIA' 'sip-files00044.pro'
51e2c8c4a8fcf4a612349452bc4896d3
4dc65809bbf9eb08efe565b69c1fecfa6c876f88
describe
'28502' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIB' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
5f4a3d8cefdaedd902d1e0e1be3ed565
5dae9e58173ff3ccd5db8adfe8f1565b17f241c3
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIC' 'sip-files00044.tif'
6561703e430e777a39a4890423026cc3
0c96b72b304bd16aceb389169a0ff7271b97ea80
describe
'524' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGID' 'sip-files00044.txt'
cc4ec98b6dbf00cb98eb262f67259b8f
30004f82af8438228f8e8e22c7713e163e89dcc6
describe
'9470' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIE' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
a17f218c1fb318b7a43cae83ac11dcf5
e5413283ba1fc7897e02368ac9f989080cefd58b
describe
'938215' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIF' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
7ae8d052fd8d9c28900e2d71ac50124e
cb29edd5e3c20d8827a5ed11a1f21c283c4be8f8
describe
'86437' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIG' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
47ce31c14294301841645dfbe8ae8979
43464cb099543aa2d640df117e2738e3c6515c76
'2011-11-10T09:53:38-05:00'
describe
'28532' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIH' 'sip-files00045.pro'
b1d73de781b26cb8154e4e071574bdf5
006031b39b7ad49cfb6c52cea5f0626a257a8d6a
describe
'30870' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGII' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
45f12c6963e222f7745b48935825c5b9
61e25fc2d119fee9e253d077b95c9eb0d3e1776c
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIJ' 'sip-files00045.tif'
22876d23100ec0a4b7e20f673eaadf7e
a852338c2f0c12f83374ebaacdd9131f30f2b8ae
describe
'1222' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIK' 'sip-files00045.txt'
365245c57f02d9ae3330baf761522aeb
c04aacc2b51ceef4f7af5c41ba4227ba9867c87b
describe
'10632' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIL' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
5a2f75102da7ab3802fec6593a104212
d29bc14f8d47ccd77f43ed6f42f765c3c379cd3b
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIM' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
0452d5dad71dda7a2fe9df28488696d9
a6f70b05cd458bafaabc9e9d2ef4b3b854a7fb79
describe
'103305' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIN' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
2a4cf014ed30d349d392c6c55f15b9f9
4724d48484704a383c3de52017e913c607f57753
describe
'33630' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIO' 'sip-files00046.pro'
8d050ab057eb235a1347fa6a511c6fb1
44f33934e93a66a9186e85839e5c1d1c0500fadb
describe
'37579' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIP' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
97866eff78a5a3dab542b2b00ec3c3c9
4a4f0afc2188ad6d6121336664372faf24042367
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIQ' 'sip-files00046.tif'
110ed1174a4ea046215564944274076c
c090fd6a0512bae9c333b08e538264f5f245d331
'2011-11-10T09:53:52-05:00'
describe
'1359' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIR' 'sip-files00046.txt'
f13a34058aab3c7e446b9e2a14980725
fd4ffc7f4d4df8b2611802ccfea98dc4d1d8531d
describe
'12416' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIS' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
2660aefea3e2b7dca2cf76205ccbadbb
1f9ee131ba7b1dfea65398fedeb3e44c4ef36632
'2011-11-10T09:53:56-05:00'
describe
'938228' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIT' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
bbd812942fea4ee327ffd69f6d6c9499
863f2b9d5eb630006d23cdc957bcf1ea3e0d8d37
'2011-11-10T09:53:20-05:00'
describe
'100330' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIU' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
cd0414a4ae2a0e3388cd0b5a2659d4d6
5357133b1f4c2c3ccdc683af0b99d3ac2aa261c4
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIV' 'sip-files00047.pro'
d75eb342a1fb5cc3566d7ef56f1fa19d
3fd98dbbdc92f35ca672abe08b079a810af2a22a
describe
'36084' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIW' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
6fef3289fe950f700857f92d65cd4b36
21074b44ac276cf4600e4bbfccd19056805f224b
'2011-11-10T09:53:42-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIX' 'sip-files00047.tif'
6359f1a0777f37b0478f91d0a184b0e7
e28dbc82c4ed7f6a98419a3e752808dbd5d81c4d
describe
'1317' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIY' 'sip-files00047.txt'
d1f6924fa654481f55bc4e3ab22760ae
9d5a843086e47513cdcba465025a253c71b9e3ac
describe
'12351' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGIZ' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
650e9be4cd390a0cea8d15d141f80c3b
e7d3c7040c3580b7a976e4e3e642bd1028e05e56
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJA' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
03d877a5e582cbb0263cd4429bd75bd6
777891ce9ea9231c457410125ff0ea94d370a509
describe
'104025' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJB' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
1a9d4a0f0b35ccb10f831218b2c5bbfa
5eb38c6d43ce72a6351d19af9660e12611b5dc96
describe
'33153' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJC' 'sip-files00048.pro'
0878c78617fa25da219963588ec205b1
8b90ceb223b4df889e19d904250bf7de491df0aa
'2011-11-10T09:54:35-05:00'
describe
'37411' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJD' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
9a278b076d9d230a91c3aa639b1c6c14
70d02a92c5fc79445c69305957f7f7ece1a36d94
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJE' 'sip-files00048.tif'
bbdd70bb87c1a70ceb82eb7c8728c566
bdeeacd0acef6ca9af26f75dd4e7b4966f44dfcb
describe
'1362' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJF' 'sip-files00048.txt'
e119707a5306eb2edb859832993e9775
31f0b49ea0256897c33eb1274ad176291f31d5cc
describe
'12529' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJG' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
eb1420529a1d3be2dd8f7ed2ec4d228e
20fd0124f8daba44b3972561b33e55f7dc6665d1
describe
'938140' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJH' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
9b7f386186bc0fc56f06d32c8bf91289
9608b76e2391a1703b3c723bdd807770f05c888a
describe
'72568' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJI' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
8ca6b7e63919a20fd3dad6a52f30f29b
db6378d287645fd0bffab33b03751cbf0163ecb9
describe
'19343' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJJ' 'sip-files00049.pro'
409474ba94ca53e21a21fd10a16db06e
22c204562f71aabeefae40a5a1a874e96455a040
describe
'26594' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJK' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
ce0786e091fca4c666e2b12b1acbc362
35a553edeb8dbb139c6c6cbab4047c4ad647d0c6
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJL' 'sip-files00049.tif'
23b6e3881dada1fa65ae66df65ac6ac2
26fd00d79671d1700728ed4b109fc4c7e5939874
describe
'774' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJM' 'sip-files00049.txt'
30353d025e570caba8a6a33a409e9606
524cc09b1b84918a31ee74afb788c52e50d6661f
'2011-11-10T09:52:44-05:00'
describe
'8947' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJN' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
a6af2c1a318720782f9ab358f3c42ae8
7c5290cedd563791987441674efb20da06f333b4
describe
'933312' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJO' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
64b538f94ffefc960d5705f874bf6545
c5117cb34cf3639da676fefc20d7a4846067d88b
describe
'83053' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJP' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
37809f50fa8900879721ca7f2bd4adb1
343dc99275081a73785d926112db1282b9080e19
describe
'28409' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJQ' 'sip-files00050.pro'
8be3f5b56300eea0f53ed00699b7813a
e0da2d379b4842eb7541aaa11b24044360bcbadb
describe
'29022' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJR' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
412a095cd217dbf88680c3f67d651e3e
b49ccaeeee8d781f1dd00b1bdb47e47a6b84e847
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJS' 'sip-files00050.tif'
ecafcaa696ee3c658dd17127bf271b84
449fe0cd0a9f9c22ace22c89e3ec61dbebbe4a83
describe
'1224' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJT' 'sip-files00050.txt'
8ebbcc72ceb7aa918dff61c1ea47249a
79213d60be480be3beb37fb999eed7538b78dd0a
describe
'10027' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJU' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
37ffbc999cabae26faf2c572f41ce040
216913082b677d501a8416b3fc9b0a4ece934587
describe
'938243' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJV' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
eecf50ba1de8a8eda945907f5c5f0318
2fe4b31964c46167eec84deb6b55f9da2547e2cb
describe
'101858' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJW' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
d96472721b0cbff16ff6d038c7d42c3f
9eef36d6a75b47497d89d6e79cd9758cabc3c2b0
describe
'33265' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJX' 'sip-files00051.pro'
3c4d48ea264e56ca4c7bf93b859a65a6
61f469c4541c9f7c90063f01a1c181da5a90cdf8
describe
'36873' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJY' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
a185377a58db57dfd5821c39effc59e0
1f019bac62424daf2f876b8a26b84e828ffe3de6
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGJZ' 'sip-files00051.tif'
b9e61e35816abeb5929d1f3d9e0e0050
ba7b96b8bc8afa025660f485dd1064dd564ee0f9
describe
'1326' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKA' 'sip-files00051.txt'
55eec1b25d3b4c33b5817b64382b2786
18d1a19fe4cb76a1d3f7159d028d4f089c367230
describe
'12441' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKB' 'sip-files00051thm.jpg'
15afbd1b38d98869ff806e984ba33c69
8e3319c4db94ca9e0bae42ebd8e549c1b9119bcd
describe
'933386' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKC' 'sip-files00052.jp2'
d73b79c25f9b87c47e56e71a53878401
5d07343ef51b3561d03e995880019d750d2b36ac
describe
'99702' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKD' 'sip-files00052.jpg'
96e34a34b8c808dc8778c2d7f5538688
f3a3bdec694e788c1a95a46fc01dbb953c272d3e
describe
'32931' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKE' 'sip-files00052.pro'
693843ecf0c9a8b1cec0e1cb01030fa8
43ae7d31c1d0b5780480c023a33b2f3da975aef0
'2011-11-10T09:53:16-05:00'
describe
'36178' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKF' 'sip-files00052.QC.jpg'
9b942b4c1fa89a860ed310529e4de7f0
47f8019b063734f356b2a41ea122f164d30f69c2
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKG' 'sip-files00052.tif'
3bde653b3dd9fc5b8a475597cb33dfa8
d4d90aca4a5fe62d506447837df28f119d424b9b
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKH' 'sip-files00052.txt'
ce2953b21f3c0af7f9deb3511080ee4d
b7537806f2079238fd1c412ef3b20ddb34f0680c
describe
'12155' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKI' 'sip-files00052thm.jpg'
3ce0049590d44b1b475685fad0668fc8
d6034548476b060a72bb4a6d54e07091c84b5f92
describe
'938226' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKJ' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
0d0903bc3deaf47203e813f638af6709
7af3773e22ecc7468c35cccb53afe94db2cdf1bc
describe
'97912' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKK' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
acc3d4707b8551d32af6ea5946a3d09e
7ef235ef68db7cfbe79d6fb552ca78129d0b3943
describe
'32376' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKL' 'sip-files00053.pro'
ecebcd5d3a3f9b2b6a60e21213f187a4
e051f9acb6bd8bd716bd6be4b05959c42efdc443
'2011-11-10T09:52:30-05:00'
describe
'35928' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKM' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
b3ad13a08860bd2fef8e67c0e6472afc
c4ccd9391030cd1512a3e898ba2e719d96739cf1
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKN' 'sip-files00053.tif'
88e36b44f76cbb0c15d331f0b3b30909
14c4d475e37c7077ff9f9269cb82b88f11982910
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKO' 'sip-files00053.txt'
86ea3c457d305d9efb656a1e50405f0b
98c658a201c994d1d6aaf8b8d8ec91bf4fd6fa67
describe
'12398' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKP' 'sip-files00053thm.jpg'
9f1ac061c20f4592eeea8014c72e55cb
3cbef7184181984400f2db8a290903cd3c232ba5
describe
'933393' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKQ' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
23fbecbd07cb9ee16a97878c431812cd
56adf8bf87a7ce6efe852e06169db9b4ef4103ca
describe
'99001' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKR' 'sip-files00054.jpg'
6edbcc4e8f843a7f39cf31e9af5591c0
e75fb7c59409577a0d3c4656561e8e6389f94365
describe
'32567' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKS' 'sip-files00054.pro'
4218b27d6f20a0612fb358cb961dd57a
d0393e8c43734859608556c54491cb005d4dc940
describe
'35947' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKT' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
355bfab5e1f1ce8a121e3a322e0b0dd6
1bc474944591eea62c1d3c979ab355368a274580
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKU' 'sip-files00054.tif'
23a9a70d24bf7d3fc017ec53bb50fd99
40e13f4223433b4070fad08681fdea8317c85650
describe
'1330' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKV' 'sip-files00054.txt'
ba7264d31dacfa4c69a91279156fe9ce
5293a2bcd35e652b8aaa179cd2335a49cfa33b46
describe
'12239' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKW' 'sip-files00054thm.jpg'
0879f449e7dec376134f187b63ffd5b5
13aad804dcc3d4dd88278b1a4fe36fa9575a714c
describe
'938237' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKX' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
450a21b031d8dba7d91f29727e990384
ab51745a4df7311b378e09a57581c578aa784d8d
'2011-11-10T09:53:59-05:00'
describe
'100536' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKY' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
2bfd0ef9c79f5b67ac6bba48467b8786
1e7bbf628581266f669dc29c3154ae33473c6af8
describe
'33170' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGKZ' 'sip-files00055.pro'
a0faf67a6b2c0adbf17fbe1b03559a53
6a55fbde89f2dabad6ec77fcd9e2130e28728d40
describe
'36640' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLA' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
59985112aca07dbf6df9f58599a8defc
7d74e05e461ff33ccd5f4c6834daca8725386d3d
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLB' 'sip-files00055.tif'
36f8c8f8696f761aa2055b4577399969
a76e23ccd358ed5f4efd1c47f5e561da021a8255
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLC' 'sip-files00055.txt'
d9c35e3b9fd6b5ca5f8b80240d63953a
1ab98390aec95603d24a5551e127718f7e6d6525
describe
'12546' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLD' 'sip-files00055thm.jpg'
d2e64659ea2458f19b6934900382b670
69c2bbcaf68791844290d324ffe9428dc755ecbf
describe
'933283' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLE' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
d2ca5fee0156734a01adcbd47a304b24
80e3038468cd719992915b222bc3b76ad6c9c448
describe
'99823' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLF' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
3c07e10fba654341cca7824b6bb7171f
eeff636fe97895713a5feab106f8c258aa84b657
describe
'33194' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLG' 'sip-files00056.pro'
db0d3f1423262f01a0bcba1aeb4e8511
8a89019c4c6575db3430d2164259d4b2a0cc3d8a
describe
'36667' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLH' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
780ef4acc0e1ef2297136115b32bcb19
0d6fac0c46dd16a0d41ec425a66f788b4d214a0d
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLI' 'sip-files00056.tif'
dbc818895ea7281010b1e85f0f5e90f6
8d36dde50b00cc38b9cd6bb79736bfaaa0be97b3
describe
'1357' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLJ' 'sip-files00056.txt'
a41e4bfea78ec00108779fbc27d568d7
64c230a5b3839e0ab884a434b4f20e444048e2ef
describe
'12040' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLK' 'sip-files00056thm.jpg'
934f6c608ec71b7e6d9bc3028ebefbb6
9e25785ae2f6636f7e611b0af5ec0bbcd76ddf8c
describe
'938082' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLL' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
e3db7529facb673d8c23b350b75dfe15
8bfc7a561baa3224460446ecd8022b70fd943f65
describe
'96782' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLM' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
ebd70f5e45507f2b091f1a7c525b717c
d95e7861df5c0e4dfe9cb3c34e75110942e42815
describe
'31585' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLN' 'sip-files00057.pro'
2773b77d542219c23ad15fda0718ae59
79db79921f990b7db19fd4899c474e11d76e23e4
describe
'35627' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLO' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
33ba7dbb0dcb253135b1bc0ad2f983f4
46f6e9a712c47e90864bbd0e978eb5e7a02b672b
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLP' 'sip-files00057.tif'
ae1334698e465225d03d473bb846be2c
46f7fc293d94f1d1cf169ae3c252b4bd3a926ccf
describe
'1266' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLQ' 'sip-files00057.txt'
2a1b59d6dd2bb3963e8dd79f2dc815f0
26b5e3677f67a00995fe780acc54aee68fce8e2c
describe
'11593' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLR' 'sip-files00057thm.jpg'
69c225a32d4da4e9eda7c23a6d810ab2
7d955ea92b7875a3e4487231bca1bbdbbabad824
describe
'933378' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLS' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
477df4bc9020aca2259d9a7b95139bcd
75e9ddf23a49186cc9bcf2f6d9cb0ca4d2978111
'2011-11-10T09:53:26-05:00'
describe
'102644' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLT' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
d01815dc6ca255f279acc8b35220b991
bf849c3797c3fec906c60b2c6928d5502f8074e8
'2011-11-10T09:54:26-05:00'
describe
'33403' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLU' 'sip-files00058.pro'
3ef033caf78f6e61a348c1a6ceee11a0
311a282af48019ea9fb06ff81012bca1a2db15d8
describe
'37102' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLV' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
e6d080174ee05d252e95e5f8802bda65
677a6950a81513a3f7a5831eb64eef18ac5b7182
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLW' 'sip-files00058.tif'
c7c24648819ba7e218b22bbcc4b2a0e8
5051f40ab1235dcc109881796b8c65819f44b743
'2011-11-10T09:52:25-05:00'
describe
'1365' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLX' 'sip-files00058.txt'
960af2548c776a8854e987d1c1f4394e
5d0554502a852e38f3a1c3b4f5fafcd831d6c1d4
describe
'12203' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLY' 'sip-files00058thm.jpg'
5ca13e948e367e233bd8699258c2aad9
141554685541f7299443c603f6ffd747b723dd0d
describe
'938065' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGLZ' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
094855c5e1ba6800081b953f8c038033
3da9f7c290fbd25694c356fe4e201c055a50c9a3
describe
'101861' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMA' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
e512ebef09c32ec7e40de875500cf672
734ff9b19aa952a2dd72e18c11ea8705b7766865
describe
'33169' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMB' 'sip-files00059.pro'
af1ad2a2e5cc8b1549987205bb2dc4ff
bf0edda9380a86e48fb49a165ebb41c6493acf6d
describe
'37011' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMC' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
605219748c2907e2a98c46411f72a1b0
5fe322a0fcca1c8a7b18e9e3ae8203d1ef05d576
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMD' 'sip-files00059.tif'
b4d88a921dd8f5544127378953177eaf
476d5747f76feba8fd8f37a8089018089342c45a
describe
'1327' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGME' 'sip-files00059.txt'
868e8d55050895dfaf00a698ae256ea9
a234ad698e031c430532ea5460b54ca806c0f73c
'2011-11-10T09:53:57-05:00'
describe
'12081' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMF' 'sip-files00059thm.jpg'
4a9c7eda91235350aecb48534284fe01
b9ed7a5aa037901eb84d994f79fee460b56966b6
describe
'933398' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMG' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
697ca39464362192ab9f06db4f430efd
454e454d3c0b0c599dea0b0bd6091f412c096578
describe
'102050' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMH' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
1460f3f97bce20c5b23b3ba6b169d1da
906ed9df2035853828f9fdec236090cadba859e9
describe
'32857' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMI' 'sip-files00060.pro'
db6e1372496e5a31b696ae0c56146fd1
35cb094f45a924ab8802840c5a5db0c3fd952e38
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMJ' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
76dfd2e0708bd3086c162f989fa7fcce
5f8239511c96825fd41d6100921c6e053568a73f
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMK' 'sip-files00060.tif'
de96c998be1746c36c4ccfa76ec8a57d
e623105babb954cf2b4e0e474a055f40bf5a6d8f
describe
'1333' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGML' 'sip-files00060.txt'
50cb5f874f96fb286d907aa590295ae1
e0dfbc268c210011d48b8abf7ac1677aebe04d05
describe
'12045' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMM' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
c316b560c1a14599ae5c5c91a61c9481
3b7affaa7fb46067f0e957d704677fa85ad6df80
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMN' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
38d3e217bc6d5e56b7c6232616d79a11
971be876f960176287e5372637ea00aa056ea7fb
describe
'100975' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMO' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
8e59a9c3d123096e7512471e5524d671
3095338414a1f70991dc259afa6232a1bdbf36f8
describe
'32233' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMP' 'sip-files00061.pro'
2cbbd188b3e9538cbecf06aaac6b145e
04eb862e2d9e37a501a8e36bbb56c6bb97f03286
describe
'37268' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMQ' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
2a1d751fc2ba5890de8337105fac9551
230a032338b0375ef4bb79aeb50643211286e937
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMR' 'sip-files00061.tif'
2fdac3bab188c1058b875a780c3f517a
592c78c5f76148b17f33592302f3bc55b7923368
describe
'1287' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMS' 'sip-files00061.txt'
da6aeed90b6502f2e1fb7def4f00ff17
b0a3d47b4b13782035710ef95704c8dde5638c2e
describe
'12274' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMT' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
4c67cbd42f684dda271054ef4c88a236
b120dd022b2affd6eb3887151a63e364e54b59af
describe
'933404' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMU' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
fd1ab1396e0fe293519cc8ea6033b572
7b988d7ec2883f2e1478b2dd323cc38e5dfab9bd
describe
'102301' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMV' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
d92a5aaf2a9c9b03eabd5c6ea977d97b
03d025d85a8c5a50ae60b3ea788a929e6294c806
describe
'32767' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMW' 'sip-files00062.pro'
5a23379772c2616fdeed4af1944cad18
14315dd5a44221fc378ca99dbfc086b9946c23ec
describe
'37175' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMX' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
bd3f7a0636e85b15ef3fac8eae57bdca
cacc82ede5b1fc67559608d975a1dddd87a818b3
'2011-11-10T09:53:31-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMY' 'sip-files00062.tif'
e5cb7dfe8959c0c540cbb790611f9b84
35cd733cd3ca580df123d5d24257382a28df5acc
describe
'1323' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGMZ' 'sip-files00062.txt'
aff0ab2d0321bccfc30695083cfaf832
36226f40a00a3fce959572444fcea98e9b9b402f
describe
'12436' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNA' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
611473c352a3a43c54aaa8cf95a36a11
ec2f9666e3a0e6d0b0df1900b4f48fbb632922cd
describe
'938084' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNB' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
4f7d3c7701515bcaf77640867e01b505
2720806baa4c5ae9d79214c4769d90650148d561
describe
'103624' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNC' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
320e20c762006ce710e3bf85b4d3e89a
2516d5d1aac0169c3f270fe5803ae0e536cfbf7a
describe
'33478' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGND' 'sip-files00063.pro'
7ba9160747c2d81da94e3fd3d92cd9dc
d154ee39a8ac408622465d97b97815c9cfc71088
describe
'37926' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNE' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
50a424039368c7d6af28891fa32d431b
0cf82d4ec3290a64058182a8d6cbecb303b95525
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNF' 'sip-files00063.tif'
3dab879d4ebd9f150120feace43492dd
a5ea4f118695a696514ccc5f0a6f876c43b61983
describe
'1335' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNG' 'sip-files00063.txt'
3ca16da0d805280d0a8626eed29921d5
14d5b78f4b39510ca7288436d876657c1e3af3f8
describe
'12795' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNH' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
a3761ebf78089119ec8b0ae6295fe888
9f8a7e20f7023270ec2ae3a2035074cac4037ec4
describe
'933289' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNI' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
1c9be8afc9476525c3658bebb500da42
201b16c50b24ad59108245ec71dceb45b68df6f9
describe
'100123' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNJ' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
4c68f84d16bcaa8b9674e9b721a6c23f
733a3ae211b8a0caa4a76a7311edfc2debd0cf8c
describe
'31767' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNK' 'sip-files00064.pro'
6e34a7ede5171486c680d5223dfab416
f206c40788fce96b1ef4df8240f82dd3de53a3bf
'2011-11-10T09:52:21-05:00'
describe
'36530' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNL' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
a21ca186dc6f283c119b342af3778b91
4819aa3ff92bda55bbee91d5ee479440faadb15d
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNM' 'sip-files00064.tif'
93cf0ee9267d322947a98af61d627e4d
20699e5b3583b525f034ef6e9273dedd3d848236
describe
'1301' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNN' 'sip-files00064.txt'
743739edd500d1ddf1402a5d3ccc6200
ec5e1385895b566cb4d11d5bca24b0409c3a5bae
describe
'12004' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNO' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
38b2182eb32b7c0656fb4cc38fae6a19
463c4ba81583aea958ab4e9eb387af959146ca29
describe
'938156' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNP' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
3a492e007ef321b48a02afd6e8afe6f4
6c7b9008856bff3e8cf513aaf22dac4eb2729434
describe
'97427' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNQ' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
615c68d5960da170b25b9de935b0bdd8
8404957ea109a070da6fd4dc04ddadea825cf296
describe
'32134' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNR' 'sip-files00065.pro'
0105b0c9d95d1534b04b2d04c4aa8c68
51cf1bb8f09354642d8b0eb4d894fdbe55e8e9a9
describe
'36061' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNS' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
ff3fd7cc89d4aa6c1c02989edbf0591f
5b85b596f1ee7a38442bbf60926cecf4458750b5
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNT' 'sip-files00065.tif'
ebde8f3976c0572e72ef3bbed0b3ad4c
2b58382530448afce179f751768f2667a534edff
describe
'1275' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNU' 'sip-files00065.txt'
7792439b41504e7e096e139bdc63afbb
845f648a2e5ecb8188bc4c29d1854d325f604bd3
describe
'11958' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNV' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
ee0ab302310a5159c71f6ec2c7c50cba
d476e761f5123a4bd40bb80e61f9c4394b567bf8
describe
'933220' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNW' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
e8d8b07b8590ce284c0fa889669bcc04
588468e1261bbfd4e331b4618268bb005d64a463
describe
'101692' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNX' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
6e0a4e9abe94ff7677abbc3f204bf401
c82c85efd611171ecf00bd3a99662d145150a6b3
describe
'34032' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNY' 'sip-files00066.pro'
6e9442ba4ad958d17f063e9ff40d7972
6b8142bbbfa416023b5d036e2dc7c099b9c3932e
describe
'36704' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGNZ' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
e70de1e30edb5497c9af6e13036d66c3
a01c48fd0620d51af964d5f7669bfd5deaabf96e
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOA' 'sip-files00066.tif'
b03c664348a2f2456eea3015912b1558
a8df6ab7959295f2c3ee2e432a79674330d658e0
describe
'1388' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOB' 'sip-files00066.txt'
a7427aae3f7b04dafebdf5ce2f848fcf
2eaa5245f7edf90605fe21c61306722656923a1d
describe
'12211' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOC' 'sip-files00066thm.jpg'
c1c4b035751092aea38dd1583b248a14
04a075b0b52aff9b83ee1156d56f1e5a202bf0de
describe
'938221' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOD' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
918dc8ac3373abd89a7f0f3c0e3f712b
b5f5565d85e1241528e1e7e5bcbb6d4e36e78280
describe
'99064' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOE' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
f4002debe15f1c80c2128c3d7571aaeb
e34a9a1e9be92fbe90af382897733a16c4dd9223
describe
'31797' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOF' 'sip-files00067.pro'
11e491023a394fbe0243c8a2372f88f8
5fcb695227253473ad69cbe727468d59aa9fa3d7
describe
'36203' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOG' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
89c41c5d12cf44308329d48a9c0ef142
eab46d5d094be203c661cb8a508b83ca5be871c6
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOH' 'sip-files00067.tif'
9791ab0ab0daaf363cd7c0b7361199b6
55bcdb9696e5427f1e0805ae7140e859f5701fb2
describe
'1292' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOI' 'sip-files00067.txt'
3f191eeeab8264ed291aceaa7557deb3
8101d7670e9e400fbf0cf638df7d4ffe648564e2
describe
'12148' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOJ' 'sip-files00067thm.jpg'
9c24250b5d2d8de1c35bc8685c447ba4
4b465bc1034db74d1099eb3dc3c37fe88b0b307d
describe
'933337' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOK' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
cac3c2739ee81d6e7a5392f420a9165e
9226e17030e5917adc36c75c6e380e717baccf98
describe
'103560' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOL' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
8d05f22b8d82fab1cf8a84d9950d0769
4033e608211dbd02a755b4fb23d4748024424867
describe
'33418' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOM' 'sip-files00068.pro'
16f3cb53a130e8433b6265b718517d39
1fc3bd06210f2bcc34f7ddda3c5ef2ded8894f94
'2011-11-10T09:53:47-05:00'
describe
'37523' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGON' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
de68d97a1983ae987e64693a2a6dbcc0
fda65c6161729da4610e97e819cd0f61a73d9bc6
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOO' 'sip-files00068.tif'
f1ed54fa830294aee66a38d8ac1d18ca
a7b3b31d016b7dd56c42531e0e57d60b9e5bcb50
describe
'1363' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOP' 'sip-files00068.txt'
392eb6b84a03ae88b07773220e02a334
ec73751de3ab16361db107c348a6792510fa4f03
describe
'12527' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOQ' 'sip-files00068thm.jpg'
b9de9b6d93c170eee773fb8812c9a7aa
0336bb70ef8ab5d8482f68c535e8671eb65e0e45
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOR' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
edf76665ec94a822ed8dfbff6ee3bfc1
419405f1a2fba87fb4b217a322a9fa18b9f6c711
describe
'100398' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOS' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
715955341ede5b18cc93358cbef74057
839fd7545bf9ae0548743b2d63454ebfd283b476
describe
'32773' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOT' 'sip-files00069.pro'
ad04801009db265a6c599389d72d21b6
103cdbb900ecec00e6582712b1c41ee81f9497d7
describe
'36897' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOU' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
d4195f48ca0a2d32afb7da1e9292f984
7cbaab9b0716f0bf9b1998145acf3e3925813ab4
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOV' 'sip-files00069.tif'
bf772ea7cbaee93a481297c1407d894e
c5d12d20718b836a77ddd7e481fdf07a7a6cba18
describe
'1321' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOW' 'sip-files00069.txt'
054d89824d515892dafa7734cd43fd3d
7285bce19b76ca2456950ef1163e6ee31657c934
describe
'12640' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOX' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
c964e66cd271bf77310c4f44eb2ab061
38199a0ca71a9f1984945e960437dcaf3d5c392d
describe
'933391' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOY' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
902a3e94c67d1a1de9bac9f78fe24075
e6931e659e28dda18e63acb8c8d8f81817aa0e2a
describe
'103688' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGOZ' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
f31af37780b23ef104d6b05060047e04
4d77ba498bcb61c94af77dbb8bf28d62d43590c9
describe
'34388' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPA' 'sip-files00070.pro'
afc56a431f5c9c508e776245cae0d1f6
472723c36d9cf98c16d0bc93678f8e0a4efe7378
describe
'37499' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPB' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
ba43c9ba931d36bb133fa6815e4697c7
9ba0fd3d96956be4cec6aaf8f92859a8ee36cc2b
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPC' 'sip-files00070.tif'
e45f829d6f004230155224d174bc7a6a
982f584335717acfd68c2c7ec7623b3e5e716789
describe
'1398' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPD' 'sip-files00070.txt'
498a8ae884e123c6a25a888e09bffe4f
eeef89e8b6fb41d6a84c215ab441a20f574f1d5b
describe
'12401' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPE' 'sip-files00070thm.jpg'
067f150a3b97d98166c4b491852ed71c
87cba82d7575410799288553de411d751fc30fbd
describe
'938218' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPF' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
0e13d276f13df18e7f9182bfb7fbce77
fd2e15e2f3d1317c3663eb6ca42d985f989b7924
describe
'103529' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPG' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
ea36e7cb29ee88da074395156e74da40
5010492b48234154cae2ffb3a74e973fea863cc5
describe
'33354' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPH' 'sip-files00071.pro'
9f76ed8ec1b0dd0ce1034cfcf294339e
2209318cedb42d3b63612dc9945daff068edba62
describe
'37728' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPI' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
60bc533c23d108b51f387644a23c7e97
409b5e6e0e37783edd2a68db7cf91cc4fa7322ff
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPJ' 'sip-files00071.tif'
9b1150eefd1a995ba74f091086318c4e
76ed797ef91ae481fb31f2debcdfd4910ded02a7
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPK' 'sip-files00071.txt'
8d62899b5f792b1e40b6839609bc67d5
b38b78b75421d26cc5039170e0c7c1642a14c877
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPL' 'sip-files00071thm.jpg'
408c4158206db0513bdf479fced936ed
1bba42560119a1ccbfd5da334e1f9b5f9edd6d55
describe
'933357' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPM' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
8545f6e5b85306cde565e967a553cd96
bc6930f4e8e39e751f19c1fb5a618903ea9bc706
describe
'74924' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPN' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
65925c0a2e0b004a06dcf2d24dc80cdf
698c4d46411c36ec57433cff1845ce948f494dc6
describe
'11671' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPO' 'sip-files00072.pro'
db073519bedd2ebeec0368595adb510d
8a82b8a40fb25dd2045aef2e4a314401234de3bc
describe
'23993' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPP' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
90ea9f9ee62519f0509074450c3e26b4
ac91434b37830907ab00f820c230248d4a347391
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPQ' 'sip-files00072.tif'
f6620ac38340c8ee7818c8455726d12d
f571d8219f8e0dfc0891f98fe3e45cc91a5b61b8
describe
'496' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPR' 'sip-files00072.txt'
f225d0d44251e2d9bf9361b605f5156b
eddc4680cc7e97f26585590e86d2a5878d935671
describe
'7987' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPS' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
f25b7a4a9a315c36bf269e475cf1aa4d
170cb00fd3289118a34fa390ef9fd5d92fb68da2
describe
'1045717' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPT' 'sip-filescover1.jp2'
15ec23d81f77352dc99fbe974fc920a1
d0d9b4f3acea7efe90f5c57c6278649b8ff1724c
describe
'84378' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPU' 'sip-filescover1.jpg'
31cc14ae63378d9368a490924e6f43bd
78a7eccae110c6e8ab1646656a81cb5f9327a8a8
describe
'216' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPV' 'sip-filescover1.pro'
11bf18620aa6fb61f320c8b95aa10cd0
8cafbc436189807723d5cdb050d62b565a210174
describe
'17381' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPW' 'sip-filescover1.QC.jpg'
d2d288a7fe88093af285b1aaaa2f0907
fa55c55dc6d680cac30baa5ef09abfe00adfc410
describe
'25103644' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPX' 'sip-filescover1.tif'
830b8e962a0c23565522852488e982ee
a2d50f360c42befe1a3b7aaee54db8eb96920193
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPY' 'sip-filescover1.txt'
bc949ea893a9384070c31f083ccefd26
cbb8391cb65c20e2c05a2f29211e55c49939c3db
describe
'4334' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGPZ' 'sip-filescover1thm.jpg'
bf9369a53f73ab6bf99f17f105dd8e63
f07d6b73750f0e226ead6d7ff1c65c478cd9f855
describe
'1093971' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQA' 'sip-filescover2.jp2'
07fee9b8b98be6818dd4e227d72d44b5
21d954628d67c645a339db92ff3293ae38942bf3
describe
'45216' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQB' 'sip-filescover2.jpg'
89e846d7816c56aba6da395d3e2fbb65
e2d963816c205fb74753d02c1f89e8a0f483a759
describe
'1767' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQC' 'sip-filescover2.pro'
28ef2b94c865a8d09ec1cf8ef7f7cd06
eeb7e2da6d7ca78707cfb5a1ebed53e9fa331ab9
describe
'13450' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQD' 'sip-filescover2.QC.jpg'
d6f61529261156c074c2ac4d396a3d75
e40d95d966c5ff6ef2c1f885fbefcd7bbba96794
describe
'26259984' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQE' 'sip-filescover2.tif'
a44911ea2fb00508a06fae549f441e06
854871a9c82ec43658de309131f3b2a8d9586e98
describe
'88' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQF' 'sip-filescover2.txt'
94b4052c0d4653cdf09cabd022a12c14
6cc774eac34ac93b9752f92e7c175fd44c21e8b8
describe
'4236' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQG' 'sip-filescover2thm.jpg'
289e8eea46cbd6673522e8ffc5356f1d
248539c90a660a8170f3cf14f60d669aceeec0ca
describe
'1122669' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQH' 'sip-filescover3.jp2'
14d49bfeba920392ef83671a35ddfa0a
2ff5f5191c20e405468ea9b4f45bc6abaefafc00
'2011-11-10T09:52:38-05:00'
describe
'40016' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQI' 'sip-filescover3.jpg'
bb083714af23fca5695876e24ea6230d
eb51b3b3c03475ce8461a46f2101cd0c67cd0245
describe
'596' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQJ' 'sip-filescover3.pro'
78b02017e33a5a850824033e5ed212c5
32e2537bf5ba38a49208e02c085995e90d90c197
describe
'11716' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQK' 'sip-filescover3.QC.jpg'
9d6e966108f23166037c308070ebcbc3
08dfb52c246dde362801277b4395956390317595
describe
'26945588' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQL' 'sip-filescover3.tif'
07bd2ece281f13abfc8b457d1393eab6
5065fc89363b27aa1c23d05a1610f04227504763
describe
'16' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQM' 'sip-filescover3.txt'
fb6ed0961b67583722335170fd667344
e1b65ba1fa8dfa2331ac207be40c188290631f4c
describe
'3939' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQN' 'sip-filescover3thm.jpg'
4032e228bdc5eefecdbd7dc52b79e5dd
5c52e6d94f4502ff40928e87db137e864c44b454
describe
'1045886' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQO' 'sip-filescover4.jp2'
0cf7d5e8992482e229e28b38a8ee5bf8
83e70dacd85a71b6d1462166b9d7bdffb669c2f2
describe
'84297' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQP' 'sip-filescover4.jpg'
617a49c13d2a76d3fc8467333216943f
ddc1b99b7ca1a5360c3c7da153fc93aa828bebb5
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQQ' 'sip-filescover4.pro'
5683818767daf02b53a0ffc8888d18f0
c71b216c92908801608e5375329e9debfa420832
describe
'17439' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQR' 'sip-filescover4.QC.jpg'
e4d04b5fccea4bb754587b8ce8fd4939
d83790a2cbecffc1671eff61cb1711774430ef8f
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQS' 'sip-filescover4.tif'
e52add6701dbbd57556b4fa8f9dca420
b811c79bd73d3a85c6b54dac5c018bcac576b095
describe
'4364' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQT' 'sip-filescover4thm.jpg'
3bcd543153ded743014e833cf7916084
da743f0f766b4337d55350f63d07ae2850e0de64
describe
'131065' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQU' 'sip-filesspine.jp2'
f3b13478680f941da50a5ca87aae5eb8
6cf239a9a1424f64a52b48b0149a3252dfe9d604
describe
'24711' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQV' 'sip-filesspine.jpg'
8fa25134b2af180559768e0a3062af40
abad4adfeb7b9cb02f2bee39151d079ef5af1fbc
describe
'281' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQW' 'sip-filesspine.pro'
aeaef6150d506b3edfa298588cbd8e28
db58a32eade658d108c304f96481d76c968595ce
describe
'7181' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQX' 'sip-filesspine.QC.jpg'
6545ce05015c017fce40bf0ea3d7e7be
9d8734637fa7f4527e2c6e0b0bf29664448172a4
describe
'3147692' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAADUfileF20080922_AAAGQY' 'sip-filesspine.tif'
c575ce205b94f3c9c58f4bc2454f871d
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describe
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The Baldwin Library

eer ig
mB Florida






These jittle personal kindnesses often open the hearts of the
poor. p. 54. L. T.


“He that contemneth small things shall fall by little and little.”
Eccl. xix. 1.

REVISED BY THE COMMITTEE OF PUBLICATION.

PHILADELPHIA :
AMERICAN SUNDAY-SCHOOL UNION,
No. 146 CHESTNUT STREET.

New York, No. 147 Nassau Street......Boston, No. 9 Cornhill.
LOUISVILLE, No. 103 Fourth Street. P



Si a a
Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1852, by the
AMERICAN SUNDAY-SCHOOL UNION,
in the Clerk’s Office of the District Court of the Eastern Distriw of
Pennsylvania.

i nemaamen ie me

gas No books are published by the AMERICAN SUNDAY-SCHOOL UNION
without the sanction of the Committee of Publication, consisting of four-
heen members, from the folowing denominations of Christians, vis. Bap-
Reformed Dutch. ‘Not more than three of the members can be of the same
denomination, and no book can be published to which any member of the
Committee shall object.
f
‘.
CONTENTS.

PAGES
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LITTLE DUTIES. ....0. sereeeees seotnnoceamporconnpatnnenendinninne 9
LITTLE KINDNESSES. .......00 seccesses covevceee soveecees coeeecees 21
LITTLE EFFORTS... .....0ccecceceeees soesseees ove soeces soccaseoeece 30
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LITTLE PLEASURES.......+04 oo oces sbeceseos cossesese conse acéevec 44

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INTRODUCTION.



Tiere is in many persons an undefined dread of
paying attention to little things, as if they thought
that doing so was the sign of a little mind ; and that
by neglecting trifles, as they call them, they show
themselves to be superior in intellect. It is far from
my intention to justify, or even excuse, that weari-
some attention to minutiz, that incessant fidgetiness
about trifles, from which all must have at some time
or other suffered; but I would wish, if I could,
to convince the reader, that all things are not trifles
that are called so, and that, as “little things” may
have great consequences, they are well worth at-
tending to. 7

For small things as well as great, the Christian’s
rule should be, to “do all to the glory of God ;”
and if we are enabled from this motive to perform
our little duties, to bear our little crosses, to strive
against our little sins, we surely will run no danger
of degenerating either into anxious carefulness about
trifles, or careless neglect of them. In the adorn-
ing of the person, or the decoration of a room, it is
the little finishing touches that give elegance and

7
8 INTRODUCTION.



grace; 80, in the adorning of our profession as Chris-
tians, it is the little things that make or mar the
beauty of holiness. Attention to them is part of the
duty commanded, when we are told, “ Let your light
so shine before men, that they may see your good
works, and glorify your Father which is in heavén.”
A neglect of them dims that light, and may be a
stumbling-block in the path of others.

Dr. Chalmers’s expression, “the power of littles,”
has become almost a proverb, and may be applied to
many other subjects than contributions of money ; for
who has not felt how much power there is in “ little
things,” to act either as constant sweeteners of life,
or as perpetual sources of discomfort and annoyance?

Let our attention to these matters be thus guard- ~
ed by high motives against becoming trivial ; let us
sincerely endeavour to seek the good ‘and the happi-
ness of others; let us regard our daily recurring lit-
tle cares and duties as part of our appointed work
set us by our heavenly Father, and as affording

‘Room to deny ourselves, a road
To bring us daily near to God.”
And surely none can say that “little things” will
not be ennobled by this consecration of them to “ Him
in whom we live, move, and have our being.”
LITTLE THINGS.

Little Dutivs.

‘‘ Whether therefore ye eat or drink, or whatsoever ye
do, do all to the glory of God.—1 Cor. x. 31.

‘‘Who sweeps a room, as for Thy law,
Makes that and th’ action fine.” —Herbert.

UnpeEr this head I would wish to enforce, not
merely the doing of little duties, but the doing
of these little things as duties; for many of
them are irksome and seem trifling, and there-
fore require all the more that they be performed
under a sense of duty. It does indeed require
no small share of energy to perform little duties
regularly ; they seem so small, that we think
omitting them this once can signify little; it
seems hardly worth while to summon up our
energy for such a trifle, and so by degrees self-
indulgence prevails ; and when once little duties
are neglected, discomfort and discontent inva-
riably follow. The acquiring habits of method,

order, and punctuality, can scarcely be classed
roe
10 LITTLE DUTIES.



among Little duties, for these habits are required
on every occasion of life, the great and import-
ant, as well as the small and insignificant ; but
I am convinced that much of the irksomeness
and worry sometimes attendant on “little du-
ties,” would be lessened or removed, were they
performed punctually and methodically, all
things kept in their proper place, and all things
done at the proper time.

The first little duty I would mention, is one
on which so many of the others depend, that on
that account alone it must be acknowledged to
have a strong claim,—I mean early rising ; and
a difficult and most disagreeable duty it is gene-
rally acknowledged to be. Who does not know
how readily excuses are listened to in the morn-
ing on this subject? Who has not suffered from
want of courage and resolution in this matter?”
Who has not felt the intense pleasure of ascer-
taining that it is really too early to rise yet? I
doubt if any grown-up person likes early rising.
They may and do like being up, having the
bright, quiet morning hours all undisturbed to
themselves, and they may feel this to be well
worth the struggle of rising, but a struggle it is,
and in most cases a daily one. But there are
times when any one can rise’ early and without
LITTLE DUTIES, 11



much difficulty,—on going a journey- for in-
stance, or taking our place at a sick-bed, or even
while anxious to get time to pursue some pleas-
ant occupation for which we have no leisure
otherwise. ‘Where there is a will, there is a
way, is true here; but how to get the will, is
the difficulty, I acknowledge, and even where
habit makes it easier, it seldom, I suspect,
makes it pleasant. We must urge it on our-
selves as a duty, by every motive that we feel
influential: it is good for the health, it redeems
time more than any other plan, it is a daily op-
portunity of self-denial, and it promotes cheer-
fulness and good humour. Besides, is it not an
all-important reason for rising early, that we
thereby secure a quiet and uninterrupted time
for prayer and reading the Scriptures? For
‘by this means we not only benefit our souls, by
seeking our daily-needed supply of grace and
Strength, but we are striving against those foes
of the soul, sloth and self-indulgence.

The duties that generally devolve on ladies
who are their own housekeepers, are among the
little duties that it may be expected I should
refer to here; but as these must vary in differ-
ent households, all I can say of them is to en-
force the necessity of their being performed with
12 LITTLE DUTIES.



punctuality and method, and as early in the day
as possible. There should be a fixed hour for
these domestic duties—all orders to servants
should be given at that time, and by a little
foresight and method in planning, the little
wants.and cares of the day may be anticipated
and provided for, and the machinery of the
household set a-going in much shorter time than
those can believe who work without a plan, and
leave each want to be supplied when it occurs.
Method and order generally go together, and in
little duties both are indispensable ; for where
the latter only prevails, there is often a worry-
ing, fidgetty way of being perpetually engaged
in looking after servants’ work, or putting the
room in order, or interrupting others by doing
things at wrong times; but where there is
method and punctuality, the plan for the day is
laid, and all the little duties got over at their
own time. It does require a little energy to
acquire the habit of doing things at the right
time, by resolutely laying aside whatever we are
engaged in, and actively getting through little,
(it may be irksome,) duties; but if any doubt
its being a duty to do so, let them spend a short
time in a house where this is not attended to,
and see if the discomfort there produced is not
LITTLE DUTIES. 13



sufficient to show how essential attention to
these little duties is. Punctuality is one of the
duties most frequently neglected by our sex—
by this I mean minute punctuality ; for whether
it be that railway travelling has taught the ladies
the necessity of being in time or not, I do not
think that in greater matters, sich as going a
journey, we are unpunctual. It is in the daily
and hourly occasions that we are apt to fail,—_.
just to be a little too late for meals—not quite
ready when it is time to go out—just a quarter
of an hour behind our engagement—and so on;
and because it is sosmall a matter, we forget that
its constant recurrence makes it most annoying
to others. One great cause of this fault is the .
eagerness to finish something we are about, or
the unwillingness to lay aside some favourite oc-
cupation ; and another is, a sauntering way of
getting ready, an idle way of putting off our
time, for it is almost always the idle who are
unpunctual. Connected with this duty of punc-.
tuality, is the still rarer habit of never procras- ’
tinating. I do not believe there is one human
being who stands clear on this point; but I
will have more to say on this subject, when I
come to speak of procrastination as one of our

“little sins ;” so here I shall merely urge as
2
14 LITTLE DUTIES.



duty, the resolute striving against this fault in
little things. Letters to answer, a small ac-
count to pay, a stitch in time, a trifling service
to be rendered to another,—who is not apt to
procrastinate in these things? No one can be
punctual, or attain to what Southey calls “the
virtue of reliability,” who does not struggle
against the encroachments of this foe. There
are so many little things to’do, that need not
be done at any particular time, that we are very
apt to fall into this fault; but if we felt the
duty of being faithful to our own resolutions in
small matters, we surely would not make light
of our frequent failures, owing to this vile habit
of procrastination.

There is an old saying, which was often re-
- peated to me in my youth, “ Can do is easily
carried about with you.” And really I think
it amounts to a duty in woman to attend to this
saying, for we hardly ever learn to do anything
that we do not find the advantage of at some
time or other. Some persons are naturally.
more neat-handed and notable than others;
but every woman should endeavour to learn all
she can of the little arts that make life com-
fortable, and, above all, of whatever can make
her useful in a sick-room. No doubt the same
LITTLE DUTIES. 15



qualities of method, order, and. good manage-
ment, will show themselves in every department
of duty ; but much may be gained by observa-
tion, and a desire to learn, from whatever
source. ‘There are some people who never go
from home without bringing back some useful
hint in housekeeping, in the arrangement of a
room, the order of a table, or, it may be, the
planning and planting of the flower-garden.
These are the persons who know the best way
of doing every thing. Their homes may be
known by the air of comfort and elegance they
contrive to give by attention to the little things,
not merely by tidiness, but by tasteful arrange-
ment, and a degree of attention to devoration.
Some one speaks of the little things that mark
the whereabouts of woman—flowers especially
do so; and trifling as some may think it, I up-
hold it as one of our little duties, to make our
homes not only as comfortable, but as pretty
and pleasing as possible. There are some peo-
ple who pay no heed to niceties of this kind,
either esteeming them beneath their care, or
not having taste enough to feel the want of
them. Their rooms have a blank, uncomfort-
able, uninhabited look ; their personal attire is
always unlike other people’s; they never seem
16 LITTLE DUTIES.



to notice any improved way of managing little
matters, or they do not like the trouble of
learning and practising it ; and it is ten chances
to one, that by beginning with despising deco-
ration and taste, they end by neglecting comfort
and tidiness.

I hope I may not be mistaken as advocating
any dangerous Popish doctrine, if I suggest, as
one of our little duties, what may be called small
self-denials. There are few duties, indeed,
which do not involve self-denial in one form or
another; but what I mean now, is self-denial
for self-denial’s sake, as a means of strengthen-
ing the character, and of keeping under self-
indulgence, sloth, and love of our own way.

Many people deny this to be a duty at all,
and others deny that there is any self-denial in-
volved in the little matters referred to; but I
suspect these latter have never tried the ex-
periment, and many of the former mistake self-
denial for penance, or a desire to atone for sin.
Of course, in this light, I would consider self-
denial to be as erroneous as it would be ineffica-
ciotis; but if we are not to deny ourselves in
little things, what mean the frequent exhorta-
tions of Scripture to this effect:—“ Take up
your cross daily and follow me.” “ Keeping
LITTLE DUTIES. 17



auder the body, and bringing it into subjec-
tion.” ‘Endure hardness, as a good soldier
of Jesus Christ.”

[ think there can be no doubt that little self-
denials in comfort, ease, or food, have the good
effect of making us less dependent on these
things, less selfish, and more energetic when
action is required ; while a conscientious watch
kept up on the subject of personal expenditure,
will convince most of us how much we stand in
need of this duty. There is often a restless
desire to buy something we think we need, or,
at all events, that we wish for, which, if habit-
ually indulged, leads to extravagance, and is
one of the most specious forms of self-pleasing.
Compel yourself to wait, to see if you cannot
do without it, if you really need it, or whether
your eager desire is not just a fancy; and you
will find this exercise of self-denial sometimes
not a small one, but always a useful check upon
an impatient and covetous spirit. Another ex-
ercise of self-denial that may be mentioned, is,
not uttering a sharp retort, however witty or
well-deserved it may be, and this helps us more
to attain to a mild and Christian spirit, than
almost any exercise of gentleness I know.
‘This last piece of self-denial leads to another,

ae
18 LITTLE DUTIES.



and, alas, much-neglected little duty,—I mean
forbearance.

How does it come to pass, that while we all
allow the duty of forgiveness, so few of us think
as we ought of the kindred duty of forbear-
‘ance? The command is plain, “ Forbearing one
another, and forgiving one another :” and well
may forbearing be put first, for I am sure if
there was more forbearance exercised, there
would be less forgiveness required. Perhaps
the expression, “making allowances,’ may more
clearly express what I mean. The aged, we ad-
mit, are entitled to this; the young generally
obtain it; but among each other, between
sisters-in-law, for instance, how much harm is
done by the want of a little kindly forbearance!
Some are provoked by another’s vanity or af-
fectation; some by their caprice ; some are ex-
asperated by a dictatorial manner, a way of
“Jaying down the law ;” while others cannot put
up with such a one’s egotism, or thinks it right
to snub some one’s self-esteem; and so we go
on as if the command, “Let every one please
his neighbour,” were altered to, Let every one
tease his neighbour.—O, let us learn to make
large allowances for others, let us cultivate @
forbearing spirit in trifles, for it is there we too
LITTLE DUTIES. 19



often fail most; remembering how much we
need it ourselves, and looking in this, as in every
duty, to the example of our Divine Master,
whose forbearance and patience with his dis-
ciples in their waywardness and ignorance, is
left us as an example that we should “ follow
His steps.”

The duty of being always in a good humour,
is so important, that I hardly should enumerate
it among little things; but all else is almost
valueless without it. It is like the soft balmy
air and bright sunshine of a summer's morn,
which when we feel and breathe, we think no
other enjoyment can equal; without which the
finest landscape wants a charm, and with which,
the dreariest desert is bright and beautiful.
Great duties, great kindnesses lose much of -
their virtue and power to benefit others, if not
performed in this spirit, and little duties and
little kindnesses are indeed nothing without the
sunshine of cheerful good humour, to gild and
adorn them. Akin to this is the duty of culti-
vating a cheerful disposition,—a disposition to
be easily pleased. ‘There are persons to whom
this seems natural, who are always pleased, and
we all feel how much more agreeable it is to
have any thing to do with them, than with
* 20 LITTLE DUTIES.



those who, either from indifference or discon
tent, are seldom or never pleased. By this
duty, however, I mean rather more than merely
not being discontented,—I mean the disposition
to show that we are pleased, a good-humoured
way of receiving little services, a readiness to
admire what we see others wish us to like, and
a willingness to “do unto others as we wish
they should do unto us,”’—the reverse, in short,
of a captious, fault-finding spirit.

It may be alleged that a careful attention to
some of these little duties may lead to an irk-
some particularity, a teasing habit of for ever
putting to rights, and to a neglect of more im-
portant concerns. This will never be the case,
however, if we remember to perform little duties
with a large spirit, and consider first the com-
fort of others. If done as duties, they must
also be done without fuss or parade, and above
all, let us remember that while we thus, as it
were, “tithe mint, and anise, and cummin,’
we must beware of neglecting “the weightier
matters of the law.” The warning against
doing this, is, however, followed by the words,—
“ These ought ye to have done, and not to leave
the other wndone.”’
LITTLE KINDNESSES. 91



Little Rinduesses.

«Finally, be ye all of one mind, having compassion one
of another; love as brethren, he pitiful, be courteous.’ —
1 Pet. iii. 8.

‘‘ All joys go less,
To the one joy of doing kindnesses.”— Herbert.

I THINK, if we examine our own hearts, we
shall all feel ourselves to have been sadly neg-
ligent in this branch of the “little things.”
How often, from want of thought and attention,
do we see people, really kind people, fail to
make others happy or comfortable. How often
do we see, in families who would do any thing
to oblige each other if the matter were a great
one, such a total neglect of the little kindnesses
of life, that by degrees they become selfish, and
are unable to perceive wherein they fail, or that
any thing else ought to be expected of them
than what they perform? How often do we
hear kindly-feeling, well-intentioned people, re-
gretting that they can do nothing, that they
have nothing in their power,—while all the time
these little kindnesses are unnoticed and unper-
22 LITTLE KINDNESSES.



formed. Life affords but few opportunities ot
doing great services for others; but there is
scarcely an hour of the day that does not afford
us an opportunity of performing some little, it
may be unnoticed service. Careful and earnest
attention to little things of this kind, is of great
advantage to our own characters. We can sel-
dom perform little kindnesses without little self-
denials; and the habit once formed of daily at-
tending to others, and trying to please and serve
them, is of inestimable use in repressing our
natural selfishness. I speak advisedly, when I
class trying to please others as among the little
kindnesses we should study toperform. It isa
command in Scripture, that every one should
“please his neighbour for his good to edifica-
tion;” and I fear it is a duty oftener neglected
than trying to serve others. Amongst the many
ways of doing this, I may mention kind con-
sideration of the peculiarities of others. There
are few families where there are not some mem-
bers who require to be studied a little, and if
the “ peculiar one’’ be the head of the house, or
an aged member of it, this attention is generally
paid. But between brothers and sisters, or be-
tween friends, how little of this kind forbearance
do we see! How often do we feel it hard to be
LITTLE KINDNESSES. 23



the one that must always give up! How apt are
we to be provoked at the peculiarities of others,
instead of endeavouring to forbear, and please
them rather than ourselves! There is much
want of knowledge of each other’s characters to
be met with in families, and from this sometimes,
I think, proceeds the careless indifference about
pleasing them; but knowledge of each other's
peculiarities is not so uncommon, though atten-
tion to them israre enough. Thestudy of cha-
racter may be apt (unless pursued in a Chris-
tian spirit) to lead us into critical and censori-
ous thoughts and feelings ; but if we study others,
that we may know how best to please them,
and make them happy, I cannot think it can be
otherwise than a profitable study. One of the
little kindnesses I would enforce, is “allowing
people to be happy in their own way.” Never in-
sist upon your way, and your way alone, as being
the only one that can succeed in giving plea-
sure; for in doing so, you will too often only
torment and annoy those you wish to serve;
and sometimes this spirit, when yielded to, be-
comes a perpetual petty tyranny over others.
Remember also that different ideas of pleasure
are entertained by the aged and the young. For
while, in general, to old people, quiet and
24 LITTLE KINDNESSES.



regular undisturbed routine is most pleasant,
variety and a certain degree of restless excite-
ment, are liked by the young. There is no
little kindness more generally felt, than a readi-
ness to promote the plans of others, an entering
into their feelings, and an endeavour tosmooth
down all difficulties in the way. Who has not
felt damped when a party of pleasure was plan-
ning, or a pleasant invitation received, and no
one seemed to take any interest in it, or tocare
whether you went or not ; still worse, if some one
started objections, foresaw the difficulties, and
wondered how you could care about going at all ?
To the young especially this sort of kind sym-
pathy is valuable; and how soon you may dis-
cern, in a family, which individual is in the habit
of showing it, by the ready and constant recur-
rence of all to her as the one who always helps
forward a. plan, sympathises in a little pleasure,
and enters into all the exeitement of an enjoy-.
ment which perhaps she is neither to share, nor,
(on her own account,) would eare to partake of.
How worse than tiresome is the “wet blanket,”
who, on these occasions, thinks it will rain,—is
sure you cannot be spared from home,—or, ab-
sorbed in other things, takes no interest, and
will not be put out of her own way forany one!
LITTLE KINDNESSES. 25



Look around among the families you are intimate
with, and see which member of each is the one
to whom all the others go in little difficulties ;
which is the one that studies to make the others
happy, forgetting self till she really becomes the
‘one who cannot be spared from home ;” and
you will generally find that that one does not
confine her attentions to home, but is always
the person who thinks of little kindnesses to be
done to others—gifts of fruit and flowers to the
sick—visits to those confined to the house—the
loan of a book, or a sight of engravings—or ~
the earliest information of absent friends. I
remember one who was thus distinguished for
little kindnesses ; she was not what is generally
termed acute or shrewd, but I never knew any
one so quick at finding out what people liked,
or so ready to doit, or get it for them. Her
means were limited, but she gave more little
gifts than any one I knew ; her time was much
occupied at home, and her accomplishments
made her society much sought after; but she
could always find time to visit those who were
apt to be overlooked, and to show those who
had no claim on her, a little kindness. I re-.
member her getting herself introduced to an old
lady who lived alone and had few friends, that
26 LITTLE KINDNESSES.



she might go sometimes and play chess with
her; and many an hour which she might have
spent in her own amusement, she bestowed on
her, cheering her lonely lot by her kind cheer-
fulness. Little presents are said to be always
acceptable; they lay no one under obligation,
and they mark a kind remembrance of you
when absent, or a desire to supply some little
want you have expressed; and as their value is
seldom great, the giving and receiving of them
is one of the many little kindnesses we should
practise and indulge. “ The sacred duty of
giving pleasure,” as it is called in an admirable
little book, entitled “‘ Passages from the Life of
a Daughter at Home,” may be practised daily.
And, oh, if we could but feel what a sacred duty
it is, surely we would wish and endeavour to
make and find opportunities of practising it!
Is it not a sacred duty to make life as happy as
we can to the young, before life’s trials and
troubles come upon them? Is it not so still
more to those who are enduring the heat and
burden of the day? And do not all feel it to be
so toward the aged, who perhaps have little left
to cheer them, and may have suffered and un-
dergone much during the weary days of their
pilgrimage? Let us seek out opportunities, let
LITTLE KINDNESSHS. _ oT



as slight nothing as too trivial or minute, not
even the keeping a favourite seat at the fireside
for one we know has a fancy for it, or the most
trifling arrangement of household matters, if
it may give pleasure to others.

The desire of showing little kindnesses pro-
ceeds often merely from an obliging disposition ;
but I think the Aabit of it must be formed on
Christian motives, and on a habitual course of
self-denial and thoughtfulness. It may be call-
ed a habit of preferring others before ourselves.
To the young I would earnestly say, Endeavour
to acquire this blessed habit. Do not, because
you can do so little for others, do nothing.
Look around you, first in your own family, then
among your friends and neighbours, and see
whether there be not some one whose little bur-
ben you can lighten, whose little cares you may
lessen, whose little pleasures you can promote,
whose little wants and wishes you can gratify.
Giving up cheerfully our own occupations to
attend to others, is one of the little kindnesses
and self-denials. Doing little things that nohody
likes to do, but which must be done by some
one, is another. I remember how grateful I
once felt when a young friend hemmed a set of
pocket-handkerchiefs for me in her play-hours
298 _ LITTLE KINDNESSES.



when I was from home, because she knew ]
disliked hemming. Doing a thing, and saying
nothing about it, is also a kindness; for I dare
say we all know how irksome it is to be told
that this, that, or the other thing, was got for
us, or done on our account; and how ungrate-
ful we are apt to feel for kindnesses thus thrust
upon us. A willingness to lend books, new
music, or patterns, to those who will take care
of them and return them, is also a mark of kind
feeling.

It may seem to many, that if they avoid little
unkindnesses, they must necessarily be doing
all that is right to their family and friends ;
but it is not enough to abstain from sharp
words, sneering tones, petty contradiction, or
daily little selfish cares; we must be active and
earnest in kindness, not merely passive and in-
offensive. In these little things it is really
more from the manner in which they are done,
than from any great value in the services
themselves, that we see the kind and Christian
spirjt. All must be done cheerfully, as if it
were a pleasure, not merely a duty; and above
all, we must never allow any one to feel or see
that we have made a sacrifice of our own will
or wishes on their account. It is contemptu-
LITTLE KINDNESSES. 99



ously said to be a “Scotch present,” when any
one, in bestowing a trifling gift, tells the receiver
that it is of no use to the giver; but it has
often struck me that there is much true delicacy
and kindness in this, for it is evidently designed
to prevent the recipient from feeling under any
obligation; and this is one of the little kind-
nesses I am recommending.*

Attending to any one who is overlooked in
society, from whatever cause, is another of the
the kind offices that may be classed under this
head. Few do not feel this when the person
is overlooked on account of poverty or age,
or singularity of appearance ; but do we con-
sider it sufficiently, if the unfortunate individu-
al is guilty of being tiresome and prosy ? Yet
a little self-sacrifice on these occasions is cer-
tainly both kind and right, as we are all ready
to acknowledge when we see any one cheerfully
undertaking the burden of talking to, or worse,
of listening to, one who is generally regarded
as “a bore.”

*I may, however, give & hint, in passing, to the re-
coiver, that it is, to say the least of it, not in good
taste, when asking something you desire to possess, to talk

of it disparagingly as a mere trifie. If it wore so, you
need not have asked for it * all.
80 LITTLE EFFORTS.



Littl €fforts.

‘She hath done what she could.”

« T find that successful exertion is a powerful means of
exhilaration, which discharges itself in good humour upon
others.” —Dr. Chalmers.

Tv has often struck me, in reading the parable
of the Talents, that the servant who was sloth-
ful and hid his Lord’s money, was not one of
the more richly endowed, but one who had but
one talent. Is it not too often soin life? How
frequently do we feel, and act upon the feeling,
that we could do more good were it not that we
can do so little? There really seems a peculiar
danger to those possessed of but one talent, to
neglect the exercise of it; and it were well,
if, while excusing ourselves for doing nothing
because we cannot do much, we recollected that
the slothful servant, who buried only one talent,
was condemned for so doing and would have
been proportionally rewarded, had he, like the
others, traded with, and increased his Lord’s
money. It is too often indolence under the
LITTLE EFFORTS. $1



guise of humility that causes us to act thus.
Little efforts are troublesome to make, and we
prefer dreaming over what we would do were rich or great, or endowed with talent, to
sétting ourselves honestly and steadily to do
what wecan. ‘There is no one, I believe, how-
ever straitened in circumstances, or inferior in
capacity, who has it not in his or her power to
do some good, while hundreds who are neither
the one nor the other, neglect this duty because
they think they can do but little. Do that little
faithfully. Look out for opportunities. Count
no effort too little, and assuredly you will find
the truth of the promise, “to him that hath
shall be given.” If you are sincerely desirous
to be useful, and willing to begin with humble
efforts, do not fear but that larger and more ex-
tended spheres of duty will open before you;
or if you are one of those who really do possess
but one talent, and endeavour to employ it for
God’s glory, do not doubt His gracious accept-
ance of your smallest services, for has He not
promised that even a cup of cold water given
in His name, shall be rewarded ?

To many who feel humbled and grieved that
they can do so little for the Saviour’s cause on
earth, or for the good of others, it should be an
82 LITTLE .EFFORTS.



encouraging thought, that “all members have
not the same office.” The small stones of the
temple are as useful in their place as the more
imposing parts of the building; and let them
be assured that He who commended Mary for
anointing his head, because “ she had done what
she could,” will not despise any attempt, how-
ever small, to serve and glorify Him. For in-
stance, in visiting the abodes of the poor, espe-
cially in sickness, we are apt at first to feel
painfully what seems to us the absence of all
comfort; but it is then that we learn how small
an addition to their little stock will prove a com-
fort to them, and how many things which we
thoughtlessly waste or put aside as useless,
might be made serviceable. Little efforts to do
good in this way, may be thought of by every
one. ‘rifling as these may be, it is humbling
sometimes to see the gratitude felt for such
small services, and many a time do the words
of the poet rise to mind :—

‘sve heard of hearts unkind, kind deeds
With coldness still returning ;
Alas! the gratitude of men
Hath ofi’ner left me mourning.”

There are many cases in which, in giving
LITTLE EFFORTS. 33



clothes to the poor, it is an additional assistance
to send them ready-made or mended ; for, often
the hard-worked mother cannot find time to sew,
and the younger members who might assist,
are at school or at service, and too often have
not the ability to do much for themselves in
this way. No doubt those who are in circum-
stances to do so, can generally contrive better
for themselves in this respect than we can do
for them, and a handy person will turn almost
any old thing given to them to good account;
but in many cases their “time is their money ;”
and at all events the trial may be useful to
some one who is wondering what they can do
to help the poor. Where there are cases of
sickness, too, it is amazing how very little is a
comfort and support in the way of food, or
little delicacies. Much, indeed, is wasted by
servants, that might, were they so inclined, be
made useful to the poor; but sometimes the
trifles or fragments we have to give them seem so
small, that it is not worth while to send them,
and perhaps it is not,—but would they not be
worth something if taken, instead of being sent ?
Were we more in the habit of kind personal in-
tercourse with the poor of our neighbourhood,
there are many little services of this sort we
34 LITTLE EFFORTS.



might render them, and gratefully would they
be received. I have heard many speak warmly
of such kindnesses shown them by a humble-
minded follower of Christ, who had not much
to give, but who, as they expressed it, ‘‘ never
thought any thing too little to be at the trou-
ble of bringing.” These little personal kind-
nesses often open the hearts of the poor, so that.
a word of counsel, or even of reproof, is kindly
‘ taken, and opportunities of speaking “a word
in season” are thus often procured, where other-
wise it might be felt to be intrusive. Many who
are desirous of doing good to the souls as well
as the bodies of others, and yet feel painfully
conscious that they cannot speak as they wish,
may benefit them by giving or lending books ;
and sometimes this plan affords an opening for
conversation on the book, and frequently a word
of warning and rebuke may be thus conveyed,
and make an impression, where a direct appeal
or personal address would offend. Reading a
few verses of Scripture, even without a remark,
is also one of the little efforts that may be
blessed, for “the entrance of His words giveth
light.” These are meant but as hints to those
who really desire to begin this good work ; but
once begun, not only will opportunities of doing:
LITTLE EFFORTS. 35



good increase, but the ability to do so will grow
likewise. You will find a use for many a little
thing you now cast aside; you will become quick
in suggesting and supplying little comforts ; and
while thus following His example who went
about doing good, you will experience the truth
of the promise, that “ He who watereth others,
shall be watered also himself.”

Under this title of little efforts, I may also
class endeavours to improve ourselves; for I
believe many neglect the important work of
self-education after they are grown up, from
the erroneous idea that, because they can do
little, they need therefore do nothing. ven
when our time is not much at our own disposal,
when domestic and social duties demand a large
share of attention, I believe a great deal might
be done by a careful employment of the frag-
ments of time that so often run to waste.
Southey has an amusing calculation of how
much may be learned by a regular application
of ten minutes a-day. In fifty years seven lan-
guages may be thus acquired, so as to read them
with facility and pleasure, if not critically, and
to travel without needing an interpreter. But
without attempting any such effort as this, the
nint is worth attending to; for, as Southey
86 LITTLE EFFORTS.



says, “Any man who will, may command ten
minutes ;” and if there is any truth in the idea,
it may serve to show that little efforts for our
own improvement, where greater are not in our
power, should not be despised and neglected as
useless. Besides this careful redeeming of our
fragments of time, however, we must remember
that no efforts, great or small, will be of much
avail, unless they are continuous. If even great
but intermediate efforts are useless, how power-
less must little ones be, unless steadily and per-
severingly carried on! Southey’s ten minutes
were to be datly devoted to the study ; and we
must bear in mind, that if only little efforts are
in our power, we must endeavour to make up
for their insignificance by their frequency. It
is not to be deniéd that sometimes it requires a
greater exertion to make a little effort, than
one of a more important nature, but the power
of habit will go far to aid us, if we were once
but aroused to the importance of making these
efforts. May I give a hint on what may be
called little exertions, that in some cases may
be found useful? I refer to slight feelings of in-
disposition. Exertion, active exertion, is often
the best remedy for these feelings; but it is one
we are not always willing to apply, for even
LITTLE EFFORTS, 37



when we can plead no bodily ailment, every one
must have felt at times a tendency to ennui, or
a listless weariness, without any definite cause.
Then it is that we should arouse ourselves, and
by a little exertion we can do so, and.after a
short time of active bodily or mental exercise,
we shall find these feelings disappear, and expe-
rience the truth of these words of Dr. Chalmers,
which serve as a motto to this chapter. Take
the advice given by the Rev. Sidney Smith to
those suffering under listless ennui and want of
earnestness: “Make yourself care. Get up.
Shake yourself well. Pretend to care, make-
believe to care, and very soon you will care,
and care so much, that you will be extremely
angry. with any one who interrupts your pur-
suits.”’

x ( RW Sa
er e

qs 3 :

oe


88 LITTLE CARES.



Little Cares.

‘Casting all your care upon Him, for he careth for
you.”—Pet. v. 7. |

«Commit thy trifles unto God, for to him is nothing
trivial.

«Thou art wise if thou beat off petty troubles, nor
suffer their stinging to fret thee.

«Thrust not thine hand among the thorns, but with a
leathern glove.” —Tupper’s Proverbial Philosophy.

Turse fall much within a woman’s sphere of
duty, and are of almost daily occurrence to her;
yet they are often of s0 trifling a nature, that
one feels ashamed to mention them, or even to
allow that they are cares. I would make a
distinction between little cares and little an-
noyances; for the latter, if disregarded and
cheerfully borne, generally disappear; but our
little cares cannot so easily be dismissed, and
sometimes arise so much from constitutional
causes, that they require the exercise of reli-
gious principle and trust, to keep them within
due bounds. ‘To all who feel’ the tendency to
‘be anxious and careful about many things” —
who have a Martha’s spirit—the gentle rebuke
of our Saviour may still be applied ; for does not
LITTLE CARES. 39



an earnest heed to the one thing needful, make
all little earthly cares take their subordinate
place in our esteem? But what I would wish
to impress upon my readers’ mind is, that we
are warranted, I think, by the word of God, to
carry all our cares, however trifling, to Him,
to cast all our burdens, however small, on Him
who has graciously promised to sustain us if
we do so. Our great cares must often seem
small in the eyes of Him who “taketh up the
isles as a very little thing ;’’ and our small
cares will not be beneath the notice of Him,
by whom the “very hairs of our head are all
numbered.”

Along with this, I think that a misthodinal
distribution of time, letting each duty and
occupation have its appointed time to be at-
tended to, does much to keep down that absent,
anxious spirit which little cares are so apt to
produce. We cannot well seek for sympathy
from others as a resource, for sometimes these
trifling cares would annoy those we wish to
please ; sometimes we feel that they would not
be cares at all, except to ourselves; but by
resolutely doing each duty as its time occurs,
by resolving that, except when necessary, we
will not let our minds dwell on them, (for truly
40 LITTLE CARES.



“sufficient for the day is the evil thereof,’’)
and by trustfully committing our way unto
God, we may relieve our minds of many of our
little cares, and in some cases get quit of them
altogether. I allude chiefly to such as are
almost inseparable from women’s duties,—the
charge of servants, and the care of children or
of the sick; and I would also include those
cares which may exist chiefly in our own over-
anxiqus and nervous temperaments. But there
*s a class of little annoyances, if I may so call
them, which I would dispose of in a different
way ; I mean such as we make for ourselves by
a fretful or fastidious spirit. There are some
who make such a fuss about trifles, tormenting
themselves and worrying others by @ perpetual
fault-finding and discontent, that all pleasure
is spoiled by their presence, and every trifling
evil magnified to a mountain. It is a good
rule in little things, as well as great, that
‘¢ what can’t be cured, should be endured,” and
endured cheerfully. Iam not advocating slo-
venly and careless endurance of little annoy-
ances that may be remedied. Let them be set
right by all means, and the more quietly, as well
as quickly, the better ; but I have observed per-
sons who took such things easily enough, most
‘
LITTLE CARES. 41



ludicrcusly discomposed by trifles neither they
nor any one else could remedy, and which
should. have been overlooked with a smile, if
noticed at all. I remember hearing of one
lady who professed great love for the country,
and summer after summer left town and esta-
blished herself in country quarters. It was
remarked, however, by her friends, that she
never went twice to the same place, and that
though at first her praises of new quarters
were enthusiastic, yet when she returned to
town she had always some reason against re-
turning to that place. Never did any one seem
to be so unfortunate in smoky chimneys, dis-
agreeable neighbours, and disobliging land-
ladies, till at last it was shrewdly suspected
the fault 2 in the lady herself. One sum-
mer, however, a perfect place was found;
months went on, and no fault seemed to be
discovered, and it was hoped that now the fas-
tidious lady was pleased, and that her search
for country quarters was at an end. But what
was the amazement and amusement of her
friends to find her, when winter brought her
back to town, as determined as usual not to
return to her little paradise of the preceding
summer. What could he the reason? Simply
42 LITTLE CARES.

— .—_————”

because a ‘pea-hen used to come sometimes to
the garden-wall, and make such a noise!
There are many people, I fear, who find pea-
hens everywhere.

I used to think the catalogue of woes in that
amusing book, “The Miseries of Human Life,”
never could be the subject of aught but laugh-
ter; but there are many Mr. and Mrs. Testies,
too, in the world, who groan in good. earnest
over such little cares. It is really ludicrous to
hear the gravity with which some people will
allude to the fact of the road being dusty,
even alleging that as a reason for not going @
walk; others are as much afraid of a shower};
others of sunshine; some are terrified at the
idea of being overheated, while others tremble
at the notion of taking cold. Thigre is no end
to these idle fancies and fears; if laughed at,
they think you unfeeling ; if sympathized with,
they multiply and increase. Let us all beware
of making much of little annoyances; let us
learn to laugh at them, remembering how very
annoying such freaks are to others, as well as
‘nconvenient to ourselves. A cheerful spirit,
that will not see or be put about by trifles, soon
ceases to feel them; while to those who seem
to find a perverse pleasure in dwelling on and
LITTLE CARES. 43

being daunted by them, these little discomforts
will actually become real cares, and will eat out
half the comfort of theig lives.

Southey remarks, in one of his letters, that
“there is a pleasure in extracting matter of jest
from discomfort and bodily pain.” It is cer-
tainly a pleasure few indulge in; but he is right
when he adds, “that it is a wholesome habit
when it extends no further, but a deadly one if
it be encouraged when the heart is sore.”


44 LITTLE PLEASURES.



Little Plensures. :

‘¢Who giveth us richly all things to enjoy.”—1 T%m.
vi. 17.

«Thou art wise and shalt find comfort, if thou study
thy pleasures in trifles. For slender joys, often repeated,
fall as sunshine on the heart.” —Proverbial Philosophy.

‘¢ Happiness is made up of small pleasures, and domes-
tic peace is the column which these light traceries grace
and adorn.

‘Every thing which busies the mind innocently, and
gilds the domestic scene, is worthy of attention. Life,
happy life, is made up of small pleasures; and we may
plant here a shrub, and there a flower, and water them
innocently, and cultivate them profitably.” —Shades of
Character.

I couLD multiply extracts to prove that little
pleasures are the great sweeteners of life. The
theme is trite and commonplace; we know all
that can be said in favour of common and sim-
ple pleasures, and say we believe it; and yet how
few, when past the age of childhood, really do
enjoy themselves by means of little pleasures ?
It is generally agreed that the man who has a
hobby is a happy man, however trifling his
hobby be; and though I by no means wish to
LITTLE PLEASURES. 45



advocate an earnest pursuit of trifles as a means
of enjoyment, it is no doubt the case that the
happiness of “the man with a trifling hobby is
caused mainly by his power of giving his mind
to it, of being occupied by it. The pursuit
of pleasure, and the finding pleasure in little
things, are, however, very different; for while
the first is perhaps the most selfish of all ways
of wasting time, the latter is a duty we owe both
to ourselves and others. There are many little
varieties in our daily life that might be made
pleasures of, were we so inclined. A country
walk, a little excursion, making trifling altera-
tions in domestic arrangements, preparing some
little surprise for an absent member of the fa-
mily, obtaining some little thing we have long
wished for, any innocent variety or change in
our every-day life,—may be made a source of
pleasure; and happy, indeed, are they who
keep this child-like spirit in mature years.

To those who are continually seeking their
own gratification, there can be little enjoyment
of pure and simple pleasures, for these soon lose
their effect, unless combined with self-denial
and a steady adherence to the rule of “duty
first, and pleasure afterward ;” and though, no
doubt, the capacity of little pleasures to give
— LITTLE PLEASURES.



pleasure, depends more on the mood of our own
minds, than more striking incidents do, yet to
those who cultivate the disposition already al-
luded to—of being easily pleased, it is wonder-
ful how many are the sources, and how frequent
the occurrence, of little pleasures—
‘¢The common air, the earth, the skies,
To them are opening paradise.”

To those who have a love of nature, there
never can be any want of varied and simple
pleasure. To some, the mere sight of green
trees and hedges suffices; and even where the
grander and more picturesque forms of beauty
- are wanting in the scenery, the true lover of
nature will find much to enjoy. It is one great
argument in favour of intellectual cultivation,
and the acquiring knowledge, that to a well-
stored mind the effect of little pleasures is
greatly enhanced. A love and knowledge of
art, however slight, increases the pleasure of
all country excursions. So does botany, geology,
and entomology; while to those less favoured
individuals, whose lives are spent in cities and
amidst the works of men, an acquaintance with,
and interest in, any branch of knowledge, adds
to their more limited stock of pleasures tenfold.

We are too apt to turn from the pleasures
LITTLE PLEASURES. 4T



that lie in our daily path, and to sigh after
others that seem to us unattainable. How many
people long for the pleasures of travelling, and
envy those who have the means and time at
their command to go abroad, or to visit the
more remote parts of our own country ?

But do they relish as they might the pleasures
of those little excursions which come almost
within everybody's power now-a-days? If an
‘nhabitant of a town,—is a few hours’ occasional
excursion to the country thoroughly enjoyed, or
a walk through beautiful grounds, or a visit to
a friend’s garden? Or are these simple pleasures
despised because they are so common, OF turned
from in discontent, because they are only to be
enjoyed for a short time ? |

To a cultivated and observant mind and taste,
there is scarcely an object of still life, or a fine
scene in nature, or an incident that occurs, that
does not afford food for thought, or for the exer-
cise of kind feelings, or something to lay by
autong memory’s stores for future enjoyment.
If you seek for small pleasures with a small mind,
however, beware lest you degenerate into a mere
frivolous gossip—one on whom little things act
as poison—one who is amused and interested
by the tittle-tattle of the neighbourhood, or the
48 LITTLE PLEASURES.



frivolities of dress. The more the mind is eul-
tivated, the greater will be the amount of small
pleasures, and the keener and safer the relish
for them; for you will turn from all that is
mean and low, and enjoy with a grateful and
contented spirit the many flowers that grow in
your daily path, but which sometimes must be
sought for in this spirit ere they are found. I
may conclude this chapter as I begun it, with
an extract from “‘ Shades of Character :”—

‘‘ How much real enjoyment there may be in
modest pleasures, with little variation from
what is within every one’s reach... .. We
have all some one on whom to look with love,
some to whom we may give pleasure; and
nature smiles in some way or other on every
Jand.”’
LITTLE SINS. 49.



Little Sins.

‘Dead flies cause the ointment of the apothecary to
send forth a stinking savour; so doth a little folly, him
that is in reputation for wisdom and honour.” —Eecles. x. i.

‘‘ Yet once more, saith the fool, yet once, and is it not
a little one ? |

“Spare me this folly yet an hour, for what is one
among so many ? :

«And he blindeth his conscience with lies, and stupe-
fieth his heart with doubts.

‘Whom shall I harm in this matter? and a little ill
breedeth much good.

“‘ My thoughts, are they not mine own? and they leave
no mark behind them.

‘© And if God so pardoneth crime, how should these
petty sins affect him?

So he transgresseth yet again, and falleth by little
and little.
‘Till the ground crumble beneath him, and he sinketh
in the gulf despairing.” —Proverbial Philosophy.

Waar are little sins? Surely a Christian
ought to consider all sin as an offence against
a holy God, and therefore the term little can
never be applied to it. The distinction made
by the Romish Church of deadly and venial
sins, is unauthorized, we believe, by the Scrip-

5
50 LITTLE SINS.



tures; yet we all look lightly, even tenderly,
upon some fault, as we could fain call it; we
all incline to claim indulgence for some failing,
under the plea, “Is it not a little one ?”

I fear, this distinction which we make of
faults and sins, helps to blind us to the real
nature of many little evil ways, and prevents
our admitting that what has in it the essence
of sin is sin, be it in ever so small a degree,
Faults we may have besides, and these should
likewise be striven against, for they are very
apt to grow into sins, and even at the best, when
they are what are called “allowable faults,” why
should we cherish them and annoy others, with
what a slight degree of watchfulness and resist-
ance would enable us to conquer altogether ?
For instance, under this head of faults, how
strict (and properly: so,) are those who have the
care of young people in checking all faulty
habits, rude manners, careless ways, waste of
time by trifling, inattention to what is said to
them, slovenliness, and all the many little faults
of manner that offend against the rules of cour-
tesy. Yet we whoare grown up, and are aware
that many of these faults are to be found in
ourselves, too often excuse ourselves by alleging
that “we mean nothing wrong,” that “it is but
LITTLE: SINS. 51



our way,” that “itis merely a bad manner,” and
so on; as if we could not, or should not, strive
against and conquer faults in ourselves which
we expect children to watch over and subdue.
Were we in the habit of tracing our little sins
up to their source, we must feel convinced that
they originate in those sinful propensities,
which, if followed out to their full extent, we
admit to be exceeding sinful. Some of these
little sins may not be the seeds of greater—too
often, however, they are so; and because we
think we can stop in time, because we think it
does no one harm but ourselves, ought we, dare
we, to indulge any habit or feeling which even
we ourselves admit would, by a little excess,
become sin?

I suspect also that we are apt to deceive our-
selves as to the facility with which we can con-
quer these little sins. If it were so, our indul-
gence of them is the more culpable; but the
daily and hourly watch against them, the steady
resistance to the pleading from within of “just
this once,” —‘‘ is it not a little one ?’’—is no easy
task, and in some respects is a harder one than
those greater occasions of temptation, when we
guard ourselves by putting on the whole armour of
God, that we may be able to stand in the evil day.
82 LITTLE SINS.



What should come first in our catalogue?
There is one sin, or fault, eall it what you will,
of which we all admit we are guilty, against
which we have all made many resolutions, and
which visits us in so many different ways, and
with so many excuses for its indulgence, that it
may, in most people, be called their besetting
sin, I mean procrastination—and who dare say,
My hands are clean, I never procrastinate ?
When some sad result has followed from our
habit of procrastinating, or when we feel con-
scious that it was sheer mdulgence and dislike
of duty, which caused us to put off doing any
thing, we feel how wrong this habit is; but
in the daily little matters, such as answering
letters, settling small accounts, executing little
plans for the good or even the amusement of
others, which of us feels as we ought, that we
are indulging a fault that, if carried just a little
further, will bring confusion and discomfort
into all our worldly affairs, and which too often
ends in causing us, Felix-like, to delay till a more
convenient season the concerns of our immortal
souls.

Method in the arrangement of our time,
so that each hour brings its own duty, would
help us much against this sin ; for it often arises
LITTLE SINS. 53



from having so little to do, that we think we
can “do it any time,” and this is generally found
to be no time. The busy rarely procrastinate.
It is the idle and indolent who do so; and there is
no more effectual way of rooting out the parent
sins of idleness and indolence than by a daily,
hourly struggle against procrastinating in little
things. Whenever any one is heard to com-
plain of want of time, we generally find such
person is guilty of procrastination, as well as
of idleness. The hardest-working men com-
plain least of this; and all, or almost all, who
have distinguished themselves by industry, and
by the wonderful amount of labour they have
got through, men like Scott, Southey, and Chal-
mers, must have done their work when they had
it to do, and not merely when they felt inclined
to do it. Resolve, then, that when you have
any thing, however small, to do, you will do it
now, or at the very first time set apart for that
branch of duty; and remember that in steadily
striving against the idle or indolent wish to pro- .
crastinate, you are strengthening your charac-
ter and improving your habits in more than one
particular.

- Tdleness is a fault we all condemn in the

young, and too often indulge in without re-
oe
54 LITTLE SINS.



morse ourselves. There is a busy idleness,
which sometimes blinds us as to its nature. We
seem, to ourselves and others, to be occupied,
but what is the result of it all? What Han-
nah More calls “a quiet and dull frittering
away of time,” whether it be in “unprofitable
small talk,” or in constant idle reading, or saun-.
tering over some useless piece of work, is surely
not “redeeming the time ;” and yet how many
days and hours are thus unprofitably wasted,
and neither ourselves nor others benefited! All
women who have much leisure, are liable to this
fault; and besides its own sinfulness, for surely
waste of time is a sin, it encourages a weak,
unenergetic frame of mind, and is apt to pro-
duce either apathetic content in trifling occu-
pation, or a restless desire of excitement and
amusement, to help on the weary time these
trifles cannot kill. Those who have their time
entirely at their own disposal, with perhaps no
definite duty to occupy them, should guard re-
solutely against waste of time; make duties for
yourselves ; fix hours for your different oceupa-
tions; do with your might whatsoever your
hand findeth to do; and carefully, conscien-
tiously ascertain which of your employments is
not worth all this care; have a motive, a reason,
LITTLE SINS. 55



for all you do, and frequently examine your-
selves as to what you are doing ; and surely you
will find time too precious to be either squander-
ed, or frittered, or idled away. While idleness
must be thus guarded against, both in spirit and
its results, indolence in its various shapes must
also be considered as an insidious foe.

But it is against the little forms of indolence
that we must watch, remembering how encroach-
ing it is, and how surely it grows from bad to
worse. Slovenly habits and ways of action are
frequently the result of indulged indolence ; it
is not because we know no better, that we al-
low ourselves in many a little slovenly way,
and indulge ourselves in a lazy manner of do-
ing what we have to do. Sloth and love of
ease are too often looked upon as little sins,
and indulged in and excused accordingly ; but
besides that they are decidedly opposed to the
spirit of self-denial inculeated in Scripture,
how seldom do they stop short, satisfied with
small indulgences! If we begin by consulting
our love of ease, our dislike to trouble, our
slothful desires in trifles, what security have
we that we shall not end in that self-indul-
gence, which is regardless of aught but its
own comfort and gratification; which will not
56 LITTLE SINS.



be denied, and is insatiable in its demands;
and which, when indulged, makes a woman
more useless, in mind and body, than almost
any other of our so-called little sins ?

Bodily and mental indolence do not always go
together, but both must be guarded against ;
and perhaps the temptation to the latter is
stronger in women than the former. How few
women feel it a sin to neglect the cultivation of
their mind! Any book or subject that requires
the exertion of thought, is set aside by many,
because they cannot be troubled with it; and
this mental indolence, this dislike of mental ex-
ertion, increases and craves indulgence, quite
as much as bodily indolence does, till at last
the mind will submit to no control but that of
amusement and excitement, or sinks into rusty,
useless apathy.

I have seen a plan recommended, as a
check upon what may be called busy idleness,
which might bring some to consider whether
they might not indeed make a better use of
their time, than frittering it away in trifling
occupations, and perpetual visiting or saunter-
ing. Itis to keep a faithful record, even for
one week, of all that has been done, summing
up the hours thus spent, and honestly and seri-
LITTLE SINS. 5T



ously seeing what has been the result to’ our-
selves and others. If, along with this, we would,
like Jonathan Edwards, resolve “to observe
after what manner we act when in a hurry, and
to act as much so at other times as we can,
without prejudice to the business,” a stop would
be put to much idle trifling, and we would learn
to put more value on our time than we do.
Among the various forms of self-indulgence
is one which is apt to assume, like many of our
little sins, an appearance of virtue,—I refer to
a dislike of finding fault even when it is our
duty. I allow that it is disagreeable, that it is
difficult, that it requires both temper and tact,
and that a perpetual fault-finder is a nuisance
not easily borne; but still it is sometimes a
duty, and where, through what is called “taking
things easy,” this duty is neglected, domestic
discomfort, if not more serious consequences,
are sure to follow. How often do we hear it
said with an air of complacency, “I wish now
I had spoken before, and not allowed matters
to go to this length; but I so dislike always
finding fault.” These complaints chiefly refer
to servants and domestic concerns, while I be-
lieve we ought rather seriously to reproach our-
selves for neglect of duty in this matter, and
58 LITTLE SINS.



resolve henceforward to obey the apostle’s com-
mand, ‘“ He that ruleth, let him do it with dili-
gence.” Do not find fault unnecessarily, or
when irritated; but’do not pass by faults or
faulty ways of doing work, merely because you
dislike to find fault.

Then there is the tribe of faults that come
under the head of thoughtlessness; daily and
hourly the source of little neglects, little debts,
little unkindnesses, which we never see in their
true character, simply because we never think
about them at all. They are, however, all
transgressions of the law of love, and, as such,
are little sins to be watched and striven against.
If we would but remember that all thoughtless-
ness of others is selfishness; if we could but
feel it as a reproach, not as a palliative, to have
to say, “‘I never thought of it;”’ surely we would
strive to think; to remember little services at.
the right time; to avoid the thoughtless word
or jest that may pain another ; to put ourselves
sometimes to the slight inconvenience of going
out of our way to pay a visit; and to be punctual.
and prompt in paying small debts. areless-
ness in expenditure, and idle waste, are as fre-
quently caused by thoughtlessness as by wilful
extravagance, but the result is the same; and.
LITTLE SINS. 59.



wly that has ever seen the distress and discom-
fort arising from not thinking on these subjects,
will deny the duty of steadily guarding against
sins of thoughtlessness at their commencement ?
To be inconsiderate of others is universally
allowed to be a most unamiable trait, but I fear
it is one of which all thoughtless persons are
more or less guilty; and unless watched against
in the young, it will be apt to end in the more
determined form of self-seeking, and neglect of
others altogether.

Can I class bad temper among little sins ? I
think not. But why is it, then, that, go almost
where we may, we meet with little manifesta-
tions of this hydra, which seem to be yielded to
without shame, and excused as of little conse-
quence? It is true that, except in childhood,
we rarely meet with violent fits of passion, or
determined attacks of the sulks; for even where
religious principle does not suppress such sinful
displays of temper, shame and a regard to the
opinions of others would prevent indulgence in
such degrading and absurd manifestations of
displeasure. But there are ways and means of
Jetting others feel that we are out of humour,
and of indulging and betraying temper, that
we are apt to think too lightly of, and to class

‘
60 LITTLE SINS:



among our little sins, if indeed we class them
among sins at all, One frequent excuse is, that
our manner is bad; but is our manner bad when
we are in a good humour? Does the presence
’ of a stranger at these times change such bad
manners into gentleness and courtesy? If
it is merely a bad manner, surely that is un-
der our own control, and may be more easily
amended than the deeper-seated evil from
which in reality it springs. No one would
judge harshly those, who, from ill-health, or

rrying and anxious care, are betrayed into
irritability, though those who are thus situated
ought to watch and strive against yielding to.
it. But the consideration of the duty of bear-
ing with the tempers and caprices of others,
and of making allowances for them, is not the
question at present; my wish is rather to warn
and arouse those who are hardly conscious, it
may be, how annoying these little indulgences
of ill-humour are to others. Who does not
know the symptoms of this disease—the cold
averted look, the monosyllable dry reply, the
utter want of interest shown in what you are
saying or doing? Or, worse still, the short,
snappish voice and manner, the sullen gloom,
the determination not to smile or be pleased;
LITTLE SINS, 61



the air of being a martyr, or of having suffered
some deep affliction; the talking at but not to
the offender; the quiet sneer, the affected won-
der at something you or your friends have done,
the mock humility, the desire to be neglected ?
Who has not seen, grieved over, or smiled at,
such manifestations of the evil spirit within
another, yet perhaps gone and done likewise,
ay, and justified herself, saying, “ We-do well
to be angry!”

One reason why bad temper is not felt to be
sinful, perhaps, is, that it is frequently disguised
under some other name, and excused to our own
hearts, as even an amiable weakness. A fit of
regular snappish irritability, perhaps, can hardly
be thus disguised, though we may try to excuse
it as “impossible to help being angry!” But
for the more silent and sullen indulgences, how _
often do we plead hurt feelings, or that we are
too sensitive, or that we are misunderstood, or
that we only wished to awaken others to a sense
of how ill they had behaved to us.

Akin to this, is liability to take offence, to
touchiness, a quickness to fancied slights, and
to magnify small and often unintentional neg-
Jects into great offences. Wisely. did Southey
counsel his daughters to avoid giving offence,

6
62 ‘LITTLE SINS.



but still more careful to guard against taking
offence. The worst of all these little exhibitions
of temper is, that we too often indulge in them
only toward those we love, only at home, and
to our own family. The presence of a stranger
enables us to repress them, or rouses us up to cast
them aside; for we are rarely petulant, snap-
pish, gloomy, sullen, or discontented, except in
the home circle. These things ought not so to
be. Is it not most ungrateful to Him who
maketh the solitary to dwell in families, thus to
poison our own enjoyment and that of others,
and abuse such a blessing as the family relation
confers when employed for his glory? “Be
courteous,” is His command, and is meant to be
applied to our daily home-life, as much as to
strangers and acquaintances. In some cases,
perhaps, it is more the manner that is in fault,
than the temper; but if a bad manner rouses
and irritates others, and is thereby an occasion |
of sin, ought we not sedulously to guard against
it? How few, for instance, are not provoked to
resistance by a dictatorial manner, a “laying
down the law’ as if there could be no appeal
from our opinion or judgment, or fretted by a
sharp manner of rebuke or remonstrance, as if
the person speaking were personally injured, or
LITTLE SINS. 63



checked and chilled by the gruff and ungracious
manner in which some little service has been
received, even when the recipient was gratified
by the kindness.

Many, indeed, and various are the defects of
manner; and in too many cases, we shall find,
if we trace them honestly to their source, that
they spring from our selfish disregard of the
feelings of others, and would be checked and
improved, were we more ‘kindly affectioned one
to another.”

The ‘habit of viewing every thing in a ridi-
culous light, is one of the family failings that I
would warn against. It too often leads to an
unamiable desire to detect and hold up to ridi-
cule the faults of others, and it almost always
destroys the finer feelings of admiration for
what is beautiful, and the tender and more
lovable qualities of putting the best construc-
tion upon the actions of others, &c. A critical,
censorious, fault-finding woman is a most un-
amiable being; and let us not conceal the true
odiousness of such propensities in ourselves,
under the guise of a sense of the ludicrous.

In many families, however, where both love
and good temper prevail, there is what may be
called an irksome, rather than a sinful, mode of
64. LITTLE SINS.



carping and contradicting one another. No
harm is meant, and no offence is taken; but
what can be more irksome, than to hear two
sisters, for instance, continually setting each
other right upon trifling points, and differing
’ from each other in opinion for no apparent rea-
son, but from a habit of contradiction? and such
a habit does it become, that one may some-
times see persons who have acquired it, con-
tradict their own statements just made, the
moment any one advances the same opinion.
It is generally on such trifles that this bad
habit shows itself, so that it may seem needless
to advert to it; but it is a family fault, and
should be watched against, for it is an annoy-
ance, though but a petty one, never to be able
to open your lips without being harassed by
such contradictions as, ‘‘ Oh, no, that happened
on Tuesday, not Wednesday ;” or, if you remark
that the clouds look threatening, to be asked
with a tone of surprise, “ Do you think it looks
like rain? Iam sure there is no appearance
of such a thing.” Narrate an meident, every
small item is corrected ; hazard an opinion, it
is wondered at or contradicted ; assert a fact,
it is doubted and questioned ; till you at _
keep silence in despair.
LITTLE SINS. 65



If such a habit is teasing, so also is the habit
of indecision in trifles. ‘* Have a choice,” is a
good rule sometimes. How often is a whole day
wasted in discussing what is to be done, where we
should walk, what such a one would like; and how
frequently does all this wavering and wondering ©
end in doing nothing, or something the very
reverse of what the person consulted would
like, if she had just said what she wished, when
asked. It is rather painful sometimes to give
a decided opinion on some such trifle. It looks
like wilfulness, in small matters. But, when
asked from a really kind motive, try, if possible,
to have a choice, and do not bandy civil speeches
for ever, such as,—“ Just what others wish,’’—
‘‘T have no choice,” &c. &e., till at last no one
will go either here or there, or do this or that,
lest some one else should prefer going else-
where, or doing another thing. Going a-shop-
ping with one of these undecided ones is an in-
expressible annoyance; and many a time have I
wondered at the patience of the shopman thus
tried. Quiet decision in those little matters may
be quite consistent with a readiness to give up
one’s own way, and to oblige others. If it is
not so, then it becomes wilfulness ; which gene-
rally proceeds from | a selfish desire to have
66 LITTLE SINS.



one’s own way, cost what it may to others. I
mean, however, to confine myself to “little
things,” and, therefore, this sin can only be
considered in its smaller manifestations, and it
is to the young I chiefly address myself. There
+g a vast amount of little wilfulnesses too often
indulged in by young people when just released
from the restraint of childhood, and when of
an age to be swayed by advice, rather than
governed by command. .

Inattention to their health, by not wearing
warm clothing, and by exposing themselves un-
necessarily to over-fatigue, or bad weather, is
one of the most frequent ways of displaying
wilfulness among the young. Good advice is
rejected or ridiculed ; and those who would be
shocked and grieved at the thoughts of disobey-
_ing a parent’s command, or showing determined
obstinacy in greater matters, too often act so
wilfully against the known and expressed wishes
of their friends on these little points, that
rather than keep up the perpetual fault-finding
and irritation, they are abandoned to their head-
strong ways, and soon forget, that in thus
“‘ pleasing themselves,” they are indulging sin,
as well as grieving others.

It is no easy thing to be deniel one’s own
LITTLE SINS. 67



way in trifles, to obey the rule, “Yea, all of
of you be subject one to another, and be clothed
with humility.” But let us go honestly to the
root of these and: many other evil ways, and
must we not acknowledge that the spirit which
prompts them is very different indeed from that
of Him who pleased not himself, and who has left
us an example that we should follow His steps ?
It may seem too’ solemn a view to take of such
little things; but are we not in all things, in
whatever we do, to glorify God? Surely, then,
nothing is too trifling to be made the subject of
prayer and watchfulness. Those who are most
liable to indulge wilfulness themselves are gene-
rally those who wish to impose their own way
on others; and any thing more annoying, more
unlovely, than this petty tyranny, exists not.
Do not excuse yourself, however, reader, by
saying, “I may be, and perhaps am, a little wil-
ful, but I am sure I would let others have their,
own way, if they let me have mine.” All
wilful people are not dictatorial; and you will
have quite enotigh to do with your own sin, for
such it is, before you rejoice. in not having
another added to it. Wilfulness in your case
may spring more from selfishness, while love of
power and a certain strength of character are
68 LITTLE SINS.



combined in the wilful ones, who not only love
their own way, but wish that others also should
follow it. I have alluded to this subject in
“Little Kindnesses,” and refer to it again here,
chiefly to guard my readers against both kinds
of wilfulness,—a determination to take one’s own
way in trifles, or small things, and a resolution
to force others to give up theirs to please you.
Watch and pray against this spirit, either in
one case or the other. Both are alike opposed
to Christian love and kindness.

The next little sin I would refer to is “ slight-
ing and breaking resolutions.” These resolu-
tions may be made on small and trifling mat-
ters; the thing resolved on may be of little con-
sequence ; but is not the habit a fatal one to
our moral welfare? And, alas ! too often so to
our eternal peace. “Vow, and defer not to
pay thy vow,” is @ solemn warning on this
point; and we may well feel overwhelmed with
guilt in the sight. of God, when we recollect the
many solemn resolutions and vows we have for-
gotten or broken. Weak as we feel ourselves
to be in those more important points, we are
more apt to seek strength from on high to en-
able us to be faithful to our God; but do we
fcel sufficiently that we owe it as a duty to our-
LITTLE SINS. 69

——_ --__—-

selves to be faithful in small resolutions? It
would go far to help us to acquire resolution of
character, and to strengthen us against self-in-
dulgence, were we faithfully to adhere to our re-
solutions, in spite of the pleadings of indolence,
carelessness, indifference, and love of ease. Ob-
serve, I say, faithfully, not obstinately, for the
sin I am speaking of has reference only to good
resolutions, not to any little matters that may
concern others, or our own pleasure or conve-
nience merely, and where resolution to carry out
an intention becomes obstinacy and self-will.
We do not consider this breaking of little re-
solves a sin, and we excuse ourselves by plead-
ing forgetfulness, that it matters little, that we
cannot be always on the watch, or that we re-
solved in a moment of excitement, and do not
now care much about it. All this may be true,
but it is asad proof of our unfaithful spirit, by
every such indulgence of which we harden our
hearts, and are in danger of finding that “he
that is unfaithful in little is unfaithful also in
much.” Did we keep a list of our small resolu-
tions, and at the end of a month mark how many
had been fulfilled, how many needlessly procras-
tinated, and how many more remained unfulfill-
ed, (it may be, forgotten,) surely we would be
70 LITTLE SINS.



humbled, and aroused to strive against this foe
by every means in our power, not on account
of the items done, or left undone, but on account
of the danger to our own souls by indulging it.
Much of this unfaithfulness in known duty
arises from our want of earnestness. We do
not really care much about what we thus neg-
lect. And there is another sin also arising
out of this lukewarm spirit, that I would warn
my readers against. It is, laughing at sin
either in ourselves or others, putting off with a
joke what should be deeply felt, treating as
light, and sometimes as amusing, what is dis-
pleasing to God, and what, in our more serious
moments, we feel to be a cause of deep humilia-
tion and sorrow. Oh, surely, this is not a little
sin! It cannot be so to make light of that abo-
minable thing which He hates, who is of purer
eyes than to behold iniquity. Then let us guard
against it in its smaller manifestations, as well as
in its more daring form. ‘Be ye not mockers,
lest your bands be made strong,” may be applied
to those who, either from a desire not to be found
in the wrong, or from the ill-natured habit of
finding amusement in the faults of others, make
a jest of their own and their neighbours’ fail-
ings, turn into ridicule what they should silently
LITTLE SINS. 71



grieve over, and thus harden their hearts against
any loving endeavours to set them right, and
against all tenderness of conscience as to their
own sins and shortcomings. “Fools make a
mock at sin ;” and surely they only ; and if we
feel inclined to shield ourselves under the ex-
cuse that it is only at little sins we laugh, let
us remember,—

‘¢’Twas but a little sin this morn that enter’d in,
And lo! at eventide the world is drown’d.”






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