Citation
The two apprentices

Material Information

Title:
The two apprentices a tale for youth
Spine title:
Two apprentices
Creator:
Howitt, Mary Botham, 1799-1888
William Tegg & Co ( Publisher )
Bradbury & Evans ( printer )
Place of Publication:
London
Publisher:
William Tegg & Co.
Manufacturer:
Bradbury and Evans
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Edition:
New ed.
Physical Description:
175, 16 p., <2> leaves of plates : ill. ; 15 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Christian life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Apprentices -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Orphans -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Publishers' catalogues -- 1852 ( rbgenr )
Embossed cloth bindings (Binding) -- 1852 ( rbbin )
Bldn -- 1852
Genre:
Publishers' catalogues ( rbgenr )
Embossed cloth bindings (Binding) ( rbbin )
novel ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
England -- London
Target Audience:
juvenile ( marctarget )

Notes

General Note:
The frontispiece, engraved.
General Note:
Added t.p., engraved.
General Note:
Publisher's cataglogues follows the text: Catalogue of instructive and amusing books for children and young people (p.1-8) -- Catalogue of standard school books (p.9-16).
Funding:
Brittle Books Program
Statement of Responsibility:
by Mary Howitt.

Record Information

Source Institution:
University of Florida
Holding Location:
University of Florida
Rights Management:
This item is presumed to be in the public domain. The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries respect the intellectual property rights of others and do not claim any copyright interest in this item. Users of this work have responsibility for determining copyright status prior to reusing, publishing or reproducing this item for purposes other than what is allowed by fair use or other copyright exemptions. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions may require permission of the copyright holder. The Smathers Libraries would like to learn more about this item and invite individuals or organizations to contact The Department of Special and Area Studies Collections (special@uflib.ufl.edu) with any additional information they can provide.
Resource Identifier:
026820033 ( ALEPH )
45712300 ( OCLC )
ALH2286 ( NOTIS )

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aeWwO API NEN Tp
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ee A Gale for Donth, SS

BY MARY HOWITT.

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WILLIAM TEGG & CO CHIEAPSIDE.







THE TWO APPRENTICES.

A Gale for ¥outh.

BY MARY HOWITT,

AUTHOR OF “STRIVE AND THKIVE,” “SOWING AND BRAPING,”
“WORK AND WAGES,” ETC, ETC.

NEW EDITION.

LONDON :

WILLIAM TEGG & CO., 85, QUEEN STREET,
CHEAPSIDE.

1852,



LONDON:
BRADBURY AND BVANS, PRINTERS, WHITEFBIARS.



CHAP.

I.
Il.
Ill.
IV.
V.
Vi.
VIl.

CONTENTS.

amen

PART 1,

PAGE
May-vrarr Day anp THe Goop Miss Kenpnricks . l

Tue Ossornes AND THEIR Famity Trovstes. . 20

Tue Two AppreNTIcEs . ‘ ; ° -§ &
Jessiz’s ACQUAINTANCE MADE ‘ ° i ak
A Spoke in Tot Wueer ‘ ‘ . .- 66
Derren aNd Dreprr . ‘ . ‘ ss.
Tue Bussre Burst ; ‘ Gs

Sesneeieenemetaiial



PART II.

I. Otro Acquaintance anp New . ‘ : ce
If. A ConTre-remps . ‘ ° ‘ ° « US
II. Acarn, Otp anp New Acquaintance . oe ae
IV. Tuey are orr.—Tuey are Maraip! . : 4a
V. Anotuer Oxtp AcQuaINTANCE . ‘ ~—<« a
VI. MapmmorseLtt ANGELA .« ‘ ° ‘ - 164







THE TWO APPRENTICES.

PART I.

CHAPTER I.
MAY-FAIR DAY AND THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKS.

Ir was in the merry month of May, and the sixth
day of the month; the sun shone warm and bright,
and diffused a spirit of cheerfulness over the leafy
woods and the richly pastoral country that surrounded
the pleasant little town of Uttoxeter, or Utceter, as it
was, for the sake of euphony, commonly called. The
cuckoo had been up shouting for hours in the hedge-
row trees of the little convenient crofts, full of grass,
and enclosed with tall hawthorn hedges, now in full
bloom, which environed the town ; and the blackbird
and the throstle were singing with all their might in
the abundant gardens, which intersected or lay behind
almost every house in the town. At six o'clock in
the morning, all that little town was astir, for it was
the morning of May-fair—an important day, for
Utceter being, as it were, the metropolis of an exten-
sive pastoral and farming district, its spring and
autunm fairs were attended from both far and wide,
The roads leading to it from all directions had, the
preceding day, been filled with herds of cattle and



2 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

droves of sheep, and long trains of horses. Yellow
and green caravans, containing wild beasts and jug~
glers, and fire-eaters, had driven through the neigh-
pouring villages, giving to their inhabitants a
foreknowledge of some of the wonders and attractions
of the Fair. In the market-place of the town itself,
all had been stir and bustle for four-and-twenty
hours at least, and the inhabitants of the market-
place shops declared it to be their opinion, that the
people, with their booths, and stalls, and caravans,
had been up and busy the livelong night. And it did
look like it; for when, on that morning, they ven-
tured their night-capped heads between their window-
curtains for a peep, the whole open space was full of
booths and stalls; and here was to be seen the tall
sign-post of “ Thomas Rigley, licensed dealer in stays,
from Whitechapel, London ;” and here, “¢ James Ford,
cutler, from Sheffield ;” there, “ Morgan O'Grady,
the celebrated worm-doctor ; ” and beyond, “ Jonas
Solem, shoemaker, from Stafford,” close by the side
of “ Aaron Tagg and Son, earthenware dealers, from
Lane-Delf, in the Staffordshire Potteries :” whilst
behind all these, like a great yellow wall, on which
the morning sun shone dazzlingly, rose the four great
caravans of “ Roarem’s Menagerie,” flanked, on one
hand, by the blue caravan of the Fire-Eater, and on
the other, by the red-fronted tenement of the travel-
ling theatre. It was the beginning of a gay day—quite
a féte-day—and all looked so busy and wide awake,
that the night-capped heads were popped back again,
with the uncomfortable sense that they must have over-
slept themselves, till a glance at watch or time-piece,
or else the sweet chimes of the church clock, told them
it was only just six, and there was no reason to hurry.



THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKS. 3

The cuckoo shouted from the elm-trees, and the
blackbirds sang in the pear-tree boughs; and the sun
shone, and the bells began to ring ; and the public-
houses began to fill with farmers, clamouring for their
breakfasts; and the inhabitants of the streets in which
the cattle and horse-fairs were held, left their lower
window-shutters closed ; and jockeys began to crack
off their steeds, and farmers began to handle prime
stock, and the Fair was in active operation. The
morning went on; the jockey’s business slackened ;
the fat stock and the lean stock had found pur-
chasers; and the more vulgar part of the business
drew to an end. In the meantime, the booths and
the stalls had arranged their wares. Thomas Rigley,
staymaker, of Whitechapel, hung out his * corsets,”
in opposition to Stephen Udal, the old accredited
staymaker of the town, and laughed in his sleeve at
the old-fashioned cut of things which had been made
out of London. James Ford, the Sheffield cutler,
displayed his knives and razors in shining order;
while Moses Birch, the town-cutler, assured the world
around him, in a loud voice, that his wares were made
to cut, and not, like some other folk’s, only to sell.
Morgan O’Grady exhibited horrid things in spirits,
and counselled all loving parents, in his little printed
papers, which flew about like leaves in autumn, to
purchase for their children a pennyworth of his
famous worm-gingerbread; and never since people
trod upon soling leather, had been seen such tempting
rows of shoes as those of Jonas Solem and’ the seven
shoemakers of the town, who now, for the first time
in their lives, agreed all together in the declaration,
that if people wanted to buy shoes no better than if
made of paper, they must buy them from the Stafford



4 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

makers. The booths of toys were already thronged
with children, who, however, as yet, speculated rather
on what they should buy, than actually bought.
Farmers’ wives were huying cheese-colouring, and
new milking-pails and butter-prints ; and getting their
business all done before dinner, that they and their
daughters might in the afternoon have “a bit of time”
for amusement. ‘The bells rang on more merrily
than ever; the streets, where the horse and cattle-
fairs had been held, were now all in progress of being
swept and cleaned ; and now the roads and the town-
ends were all thronged again with cattle going out,
and country people—lads and lasses, and mothers and
children, and old grandfathers and grandmothers—
coming in, for the afternoon’s fun and merriment.
The four big men, in beef-eater costume, outside the
wild-beast show, blew their trumpets, and the lion
within roared from time to time ; the fire-eater’s per-
formances began ; and the red front of the travelling
theatre had been removed, and there was now seen an
open stage in front of a canvas screen, and gaily
attired nymphs, who looked to vulgar eyes as if stars
of gold and silver had been showered upon them,
walked arm-in-arm, to and fro, attracting the admi-
ration of village swains and big boys, who flocked
thither in crowds; whilst dashing, bandit-looking
men, in cloaks and plumed hats, cast half-gallant,
half-ferocious glances, upon the village maidens, and
thus excited in them the most charming, romantic
terror, which could only be allayed by their going
up, and seeing all the wonders of that enchanted
world which lay behind the canvas, and of which
these beings were the inhabitants.

It was now noon, and the public-houses were full



THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKS. 5

of dinners and dinner-eating guests, who did not
notice, as those did who were just coming into the
fair, how clouds had gathered from the south-west,
and threatened rain; a gusty wind, too, had arisen,
and whirled the dust along the roads, and made a
strange commotion among the booths and stalls in
the market-place. It grew cold and dull ; and then,
just when dinner was over, and everybody was in the
fair, and wanted to enjoy themselves, it really began
to rain, and to rain in good earnest It was no
shower ; there was no prospect of its soon being over;
the sky was all one sullen mass of smoke-coloured
cloud; and down, down, down came the soaking
rain. The kennels soon ran over ; and the badly-
paved market-place was full of puddles, into which
people unwittingly stepped, ankle-deep. It really
was quite a melancholy thing to hear then the screech
of a tin penny-trumpet, or the bark of a woolly dog
in a little child’s hand, as it stood, sheltering, with its
mother, in a crowd of people, under an entry, yet
never wondering, dear little soul, as they did, how in
the world it was ever to get home. People had not
brought umbrellas with them; and it was quite
pitiable for anybody, but those who sold ribbons, to
see smart girls walking along with pocket-hand-
kerchiefs over their bonnets, quite wet through, and
which now were all stained with the mingling and
dripping dyes of their so lately blushing or verdant
honours. People crowded into booths or under stalls
—not to make purchases, but to find shelter ; and
went by throngs into the wild-beast show and the
theatre, not so much to be entertained, as to get out
of the rain ; and all the time could think of nothing
but how wet they were, and wonder how, if it
B 2



6 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

kept on raining, they were ever to get home that
night.

At four o'clock, at five o'clock, at six o'clock, it
rained just as hard as ever, and seemed as if it would
rain all night; and the public-houses were brimful :
in kitchen and parlour, and bed-room, and everywhere,
there was a smell of wet clothes and tobacco smoke,
and ale, and gin-and-water. What was to be done ?
What indeed was to be done? For at that very time,
there came, slowly and heavily advancing into the
town, one after another, in long and weary line, seven
heavy baggage wagons belonging to a regiment which
had marched shortly before through the town, on its
way to Ireland. Wearily went onward the wagons
along the wet, grinding street, piled up, as high as
the houses, with baggage, and soldiers’ wives and
children. The drivers were wet; the horses were
wet; the soldiers who attended the train were wet ;
and so were the wives and children, who, wrapped in
gray woollen cloaks and coats, sat up aloft among the
baggage: the rain lay in large pools in the hollows of
the tarpauling, and rocked about, and spilled over, as
the wagons went along unsteadily up the ill-paved
street; and altogether, the whole train presented 4
most comfortless and weary appearance, On, however,
it went, wagon after wagon; and cheerful families,
sitting at home by their warm firesides, were filled with
a kindly compassion for the poor strangers, who had
arrived thus disconsolately and thus inopportunely.

There was no room in the market-place for the
unloading of the luggage; so the wagons, having
made the circuit of the town, came at length to a
stand in the widest part of the widest street, and
began slowly to unload.



THE GOOP MISS KENDRICKS. 7

Just opposite to where they halted, stood, with its
large awkward porch in front, and its large, pleasant
garden behind, the little, low, old-fashioned house,
inhabited by the Miss Kendricks, Joanna and Dorothy.
Their parlour lay a step below the street, and its
window was almost on a level with it ; and, but that
the pavement was always kept so nicely clean before
it, must have been sadly splashed with the rain that
poured down from the clouds, and dripped from the
eaves above. The Miss Kendricks were, if not among
the richest, among the most respectable inhabitants
of the town. Their father, in their early youth, had
been the well-beloved curate of the parish—a man
80 pure and good, and one who so nobly and beauti-
fully performed all his duties, great and small, that
God, to reward him best, took him home to himself.
His wife, heart-broken for his loss, followed him
within twelve months; and left four children, Rebecca,
Joanna, Leonard, and Dorothy, to the care of their
great-uncle, a small shopkeeper of the place. The
uncle was even then an old man—perhaps God spared
his life for the sake of the orphans ; and why not,
when he cares even for the sparrows? He himself
believed it was so; and he lived on, not only to care
for the orphans, but to become of no little consequence
in the place, from being for so long a time “ the oldest
inhabitant ”—a sort of living chronicle of events; a
referee on all difficult or disputed questions of right
or usage. Alas! poor old man, however, all did not
go on so well and smoothly as he hoped and prayed
for: Rebecca, the eldest of the orphans, grew up
somewhat wild and wilful, and married sorely against
his will. It was a marriage of unhappiness and
poverty : she and her husband removed to a remote



8 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

part of England, and vanished, as it were, entirely
from the knowledge of the family. The others, on the
contrary, grew up into the most steady and promising
manhood and womanhood. The girls he had educated
simply, as, according to his notions, might best fit
them for tradesmen’s wives; but to the brother he
gave the education of a gentleman and a scholar, and
lived carefully, and almost parsimoniously himself, to
maintain him respectably at Oxford. As regarded
him, his wishes were all fulfilled ; and on the evening
of the day on which the news came that Leonard had
received the degree of Bachelor of Arts, he died, as
he sat quietly in his chair. The business of his life
was done; and at the advanced age of ninety-five he —
was borne to his grave, honoured by the whole town.
He left his house, and property to the amount of a
hundred a-year, to his nieces and their brother ; the
house for them to live in as long as they needed such
a home, and the money to his nephew, subject to a
payment of thirty pounds a year to each sister. Miss
Joanna was seven-and-twenty at the death of her
uncle—a plain, old-fashioned little woman, who
looked six or seven years older than she was; whilst
Dorothy, on the contrary, looked younger, and though
four-and-twenty, had all the bloom and liveliness of
eighteen. Prepossessing, however, as was Dorothy,
she, at the time of her uncle's death, had no accepted
lover ; whilst Joanna had been engaged to a stationer
and printer of Lichfield, of the name of Allen, for a
couple of years, and had only deferred her marriage
from reluctance to leave her old relative in the then
declining state of his health.

In such a little town as Utceter, everybody knew
everybody's affairs ; and therefore, no sooner was the



THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKs. 9

old gentleman dead, than all said, that for a certainty
Miss Kendrick would marry, more especially as
Leonard, who was now ordained, had the offer of a
curacy in Derbyshire, and nothing seemed more
natural than that the lively Dorothy should keep his
house. Thus the world laid out things for them ;
and thus also, in the quiet of their little back parlour,
they laid out things for themselves, The great-uncle,
as we said before, was a small shopkeeper. He sold
stamps and stationery, and small cutlery ware, and
tea in sealed-up packets, as it came from the India
House: he had, altogether, a nice little read y-money-
business, which amply supplied every passing week
with cash for its current expenses, and some little
besides; and it was no wonder, therefore, that after
his death, several tradesmen of the place wished to
purchase the business at a good premium.

It is an old and true saying, that “ man proposes,
and God disposes;” and it was so in this case.
Leonard went to his curacy, whence he wrote the
most affectionate and charming letters, full of the
most fervent desires to do good in his parish, and to
promote the happiness of his sisters. Joanna thought
of, and made preparations for her marriage, which
was to take place as soon as the time of ful] mourning
for the old gentleman had expired ; and in the mean-
time she kept on the business, prudently anxious to
spare all, and save all, against the breaking up of the
family. The weeks and months went on, and Doro-
thy, in the summer, paid a visit to her brother—a
golden time to her, and an earnest, as she believed it,
of the life which lay before her. It was a quiet,
out-of-the-world, Peak village, where her brother
lived ; beautiful in its locality, and inhabited by people



10 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

as kind and simple-hearted as soul could wish, who
received her among them as if she had been an angel
from heaven; whilst the few-families there, of higher
rank and intelligence, seemed at once to open their
hearts and homes to her. |

“ How well you look, Dorothy!” said Joanna to
her, on her return: “the Peak air agrees with you.
Your eyes look brighter, and your colour clearer than
ever!”

Dorothy looked at herself in the glass, and she
thought so too. Poor Dorothy! that was the last time
she ever saw herself. The next day she felt unwell
with headache and fever ; she grew worse and worse ;
a medical man was called in, and in a day or two
pronounced her to be ill of small-pox. We shall not
go through that long and severe illness. Dorothy lay
at the point of death; and her brother and sister,
unable to resign her into the hands of her Maker,
prayed that, at any cost, her life might be spared.
Their prayeys were heard. She lived ; but not alone
at the expense of her beauty; she lost, what was far
more, her eyesight. Well, indeed, may we say, poor
Dorothy !» Life had now hard lessons for her—patience
and submission. For herself, could she have chosen,
she would rather have died than lived. She had just,
as it were,.become conscious of the worth of her
beauty and of herself; and now she was a poor, blind
ruin—a spectacle to be shunned and pitied.

“Come again to me,” wrote Leonard; “the Peak
air will do you good: the people here all love you,
and will be kinder to you than ever.”

“I will not go there, of all places in the world,”
said Dorothy, with bitterness; “I will not go there
to bea burden to him, and a spectacle to the whole



THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKs. 11

parish! Life has become hateful to me~would to
God that I had died, or might die ere long!”

Joanna had the patience of an angel, and answered
her sister's repinings with loving and gentle words.
Winter came on; and then spring; and again the idea
was revived of Dorothy’s going to Leonard, for change
of air; whilst Joanna, whose lover was impatient for
his marriage, made her preparations for this event,
But to this proposal the poor invalid would not listen.
She entertained the most fixed, and as it seemed ob-
stinate, determination not to visit her brother 3 nor
would she assign any reason for so doing. Everybody
but Joanna lost patience with her ; but she, never,
“ She will become accustomed in time to her misfor-
tune,” said she to her friends, and, above all, to the
mother and sister of her affianced lover ; “and in
the meantime, we must have patience with her, as
with a sick child. She is now,” said she, “ suffering
from a mind diseased, which is worse than sickness of
the body. Let us only have patience with her ;” and
from month to month Joanna delayed her marriage,
that she should not at least take so sad an invalid
into the house of her husband. Day after day came
his mother and sister, sometimes together, and some-
times alone, who lost no opportunity of dropping
hints to poor Dorothy on the Christian duty of sub-
mission to our afflictions, and renunciatidn of our own
wills,

“Go, and take a walk, and get a mouthful of fresh
air, for you look as pale as a ghost, with all this
watching and anxiety, night and day,” said they con-
tinually to Joanna, in the hearing of her sister ; “and
we will mind the shop, and talk to Dorothy, while
you are gone.”



12 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

For awhile Joanna obeyed, but presently she began
to perceive that the unhappy and distressful state of
her sister’s mind was aggravated by these interviews.
Dorothy was no longer open towards her; there was
a coldness and a reserve which she could not pene-
trate, which only increased her silence. Light,
however, broke in, when the mother and sister,
having, as they thought, discharged their duty to
Dorothy, began to speak plainly to Joanna—she was
not doing her duty either to her sister or herself, thus
humouring her like a child ; a degree of firmness, and
even severity, was requisite. Dorothy must learn to
submit ; and when it pleases God to afflict us, said
they, we must not stand in the way of other people's
happiness with our whims and fancies. Leonard was
willing to have Dorothy, and to him she ought to go ;
a quiet country place would furnish her with the best
home: Leonard had said that he would have a girl
to wait upon her; what did she want more? and
then Joanna must remember that she was not using
Allen well; he had had his house ready these two
months, and how long did she mean to keep him
waiting? If Allen had not told her himself, they
would do so, that he was tired of all this waiting and
waiting, and he had no notion of anything but
Dorothy's going at once to her brother's, and submit-
ting to her afflictions as any good Christian ought to
do; and as Leonard, who was so good a man and
preacher, would soon teach her, &c., &c., &c. !

Joanna said but little in reply, but sent over to
Lichfield, to request an interview with her lover.
He came ; and, as plain speaking had begun, it was
soon evident that he held the same opinions as his —
family—perhaps, indeed, that they had been employed



THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKS. 18

to speak for him. Joanna said, considering the
reluctance which her sister had shown to visiting her
brother, she had entirely given up the thoughts of
her ever residing with him ; and that, in fact, wher-
ever her home was, there also would be Dorothy’s.
Allen was silent. Joanna’s spirit was roused; did he
then not wish her sister to live with them? He
hummed and hawed, as people do who are ashamed of
speaking out their real minds. She then said, that
he was free to choose another wife; for without
she had his most full and free consent to Dorothy
living with them, and to her own share of whatever
the sale of the business might produce being settled
upon her, she would never become his wife.

Whether Allen looked for some such consumma-~
tion as this; or whether he wished it—whether he
was tired of his old love, and wished to be on with a
new—is not for us to say ; but on hearing these words,
he quietly rose up from his chair, and in a tone rather
of ill-humour than grief, said, “Very well; then I
suppose there will be an end of the matter.”

“*I suppose there will,” said J oanna, without the
least agitation.

“If you alter your mind before night,” said he, “you
can let me know; I will stay so long at my mother’s.”

“T shall not alter my mind,” said Joanna; “and
I thank God that I have found you out before it was
too late.”

Nothing more was said ; Allen took his hat, and
left the house 3 and Joanna did not alter her mind,
The next day the mother and sister came, and were
a deal more vehement on the subject than Allen had
been ; they upbraided her and scolded her no little,
and had no mercy on the poor blind Dorothy, who,

c



14 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

however, did not hear what was said. It was a long,
sturmy day ; but, like all other days, it came to an end ;
and Joanna, who in the course of it said that Allen
had not in truth shown much real love for her, and
could soon find another wife for his new house and
furniture, was right ; for, within a month of that day,
he married a young lady of Lichfield ; and this, his
mother and sister took care to say, was the best day's
work he ever did.

All this seemed easy enough for Allen ; he suffered,
apparently, nothing. Joanna, on the contrary, suf-
fered much; she had loved sincerely and with her
whole soul, and she threw herself now on the kind
affections, and loving, though clouded heart of poor
Dorothy for consolation. Nor was she deceived.
Dorothy roused herself from her lethargy, and forgot
hér own sorrows in alleviating those of her sister.
This was the really cementing bond between them.
Each bore the other’s burden, and felt how good
sympathy was for a wounded heart. The reserve on
the part of Dorothy gradually gave place to confidence
and openness, and, in proportion as she came to speak
of her morbid unhappiness, it left her. One of her
greatest trials was to allow herself to be seen ; and,
for this reason, she could not be induced to go out.
It was quite natural, perhaps, for she had been
reckoned very pretty, and had been greatly admired
by all the young men of the neighbourhood ; and now,
though she could not see her face, she knew that she
had become very plain. Great, therefore, was the
good Joanna’s delight, when one fine evening she
said, suddenly,

“Tie that thick veil of which you have spoken on
my bonnet, Joanna, and take me to Bramshall Wood.



THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKS. 15

I long to hear the gurgling of the little brook there,
and to smell the cowslips: you will gather me some,
and I know how they look.”

Joanna could have cried for joy to hear her sister
speak thus, and went with her to the wood. They
sat down by the side of the little stream, the brightest
and clearest of little woodland streams, and listened
to the songs of the birds; and Joanna gathered
flowers, which she placed in the hands of her poor
blind sister,

‘You have often thought me selfish and unrea-
sonable,” said Dorothy, at length ; “I know you havo,
and so did Mr. Allen and Martha. I know I have
not been submissive,” said she, preventing her sister’s
interruption, “‘and let me speak, Joanna, now, for I
feel as if I could open my heart to you, and it will re-
lieve me of a great burden; for, though I have told you
many things, I have not told you all, and to-night I
feel as if I could.” Joanna put her arm round her
sister's waist, and Dorothy continued :—

“I was very happy, formerly, yery happy indeed ;
I wanted nothing that I did not possess; I had no
wish beyond my own sphere, and in that sphere I
possessed all that I desired, my uncle’s love and
yours. I was happy, too, in the consciousness of
being good-looking; I felt that I had the power of
pleasing ; looks of admiration met me and followed
me, and I was happy that it was so. Perhaps I
was vain. At that time, however, I should have
denied it, but now I think that perhaps I was so,
and God saw right to punish me; and oh, Joanna,
what a heavy punishment for so light an offence ! ”

“God is good,” said Joanna, with emotion, “and
his chastenings are only in love!”



16 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

“I believe it,” returned Dorothy, “ and I will not
repine ; nor is it for this that I came here to-night. I
came here to ask your forgiveness for many faults, for
much impatience, for much obstinacy, and perhaps in
part to explain what has not been clear in me, espe-
cially as regards my unwillingness to visit Leonard.
Ah, you will then see, Joanna, what reason I have
to sympathise with you, for I have suffered like you !
J was very happy whilst I was with Leonard: you
know it; but neither he nor you know what it was
that really constituted my happiness, and then made
the bitterness of my misery. I loved—loved deeply
and truly. Nay, do not start, Joanna—the joy and
the misery are both past. I have resigned the dearest
. hopes of my soul at God’s requiring, and the time of
peace is now come!”

Dorothy was silent 2 few moments, and Joanna
wiped away both her own tears and those which
flowed from the darkened eyes of her sister.

“You have heard of Henry Ashdown, the squire’s
nephew. Leonard mentioned him in his letters— in
the first letter, I remember, that ever he sent to us
from Winston. He was a gay, but good-hearted
young man, Leonard said. On the very day of my
arrival at Winston, Leonard told me that Mrs. Ash-
down, Henry’s mother, who had been for many years —
a sad invalid, was then at the Hall, for her health ;
that, for her piety and many remarkable virtues, he
had become much attached to her; and that it was
his wish that I should contribute as much as possible
to her comfort and amusement. I went often to see
her, and thus Henry and I met. I loved the mother ;
but ah, I loved also the son. The mother made me
the minister of her mercies to the poor, for she was



THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKS. 17

the most charitable of women; and whilst Leonard
read to her in pious books, I went on her errands of
benevolence: but I never went alone. Leonard is
simple-hearted and unsuspecting as a child, and never
seemed to notice the intimacy between Henry and
me. I was happy—oh, how happy!—in my love ;
and, though Henry never formally avowed his passion
for me, his looks and actions bespoke it as plainly as
words. His uncle wished him to marry the daughter
of a rich neighbouring squire: his mother also
acquiesced in it ; for, as he was his uncle's heir, she
consulted his wishes in all things. He himself, how-
ever, did not second their plans—at least, he told me
so; adding, that he meant to marry to please only
himself, and would give his hand where he had
already given his heart. I left Winston, to return,
as I fondly hoped, in a few months; and ah, how
impatiently did I look forward to that time! Heaven
forgive me, if in it I forgot everything. All that
followed you know Henry Ashdown never in-
quired after me; how was it likely that he would
marry me, disfigured and blind? Oh, Almighty
God, why was I spared to become the poor object
that I am!”

Again Dorothy paused, and agaih the two sisters
mingled their tears. ‘ Yes, I know what followed,”
said Joanna, at length. |

** Leonard's letters,” continued Dorothy, “told of
Henry’s marriage and residence at the Hall. How
could I then go to Winston ?—how could I, blind
though I am, sit in the same church with Henry and
his bride? Oh, Joanna, what wonder then was it,
when your sorrows came, that I could enter into
your heart, and sympathise so deeply with you!

c 2





18 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

Hence is it that sorrow is so universal, that we may
have mercy and compassion on one another !”

Joanna drew her sister yet more closely to her, and
laid-her head upon her bosom, and kissed her blind
eyes, and felt that she had never loved her so tenderly
as then.

The little shop was continued as in the time of the —
old uncle, and thus furnished constant occupation for
Joanna; but while yet there lay upon poor Dorothy
the languor of enfeebled health and of a cruelly dis-
appointed heart, the hand of God, which chastens
only in love, sent a new sorrow to bind her heart, as
it were, all the more to Him. Leonard wrote thus
to his sisters :—

‘**T am at length compelled to deal frankly with
you. I am not well. I have felt very weak and
poorly since the winter, when I suffered much from
cold. I have latterly been much at the Hall. Mrs,
Ashdown has been very kind to me, and has nursed
me like a mother. I have had a physician from
Ashburn, and he recommends a warmer climate.
Here, even in summer, the air is keen; and as I feel
myself now unable to preach, I have consented to
give up the curacy for the present. I do this with
the greatest reluctance, for I love the people, and I
see among them a sphere of great usefulness ; and if
I am not able to return, I trust that God in his mercy
will send hither a shepherd, who will faithfully care
for his flock. At the present time, however, I yearn
to be with you. My heart's desire and prayer to *
God is that he may make me submissive to His-will.
Farewell! The day after you receive this, I shall
be with you.”

The anxieties and sorrows of his sisters were for-



THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKS. 19

gotten in the distress caused by this letter. Leonard
had hitherto said nothing of illness, and now they
knew indeed that he must be ill to give up thus
his pastoral duties. Dorothy roused herself in the
sad thought of her brother’s illness, and with a pro-
phetic feeling, which she would not, however, avow
to herself, that he came home to die. Blind as she
was, she arranged the pillows for him on the sofa
which she had hitherto occupied, with a zeal and
activity of self-forgetfulness that made Joanna see
the truth of her own maxim, that with every mis-
fortune there came some compensating blessing.
Leonard returned, and even Dorothy perceived how
great was the change in him: he was far gone in
consumption, and the most inexperienced eye could
see that he had not long tolive. But that short time
was as the tarriance of an angel, and left a blessing
behind it. The words of love and consolation which
fell from his lips were spoken in the spirit of his
divine Master: ‘ Let not your hearts be troubled ;
ye believe in God, believe also in me. In my father's
house are many mansions ; if it were not so, I would
have told you. I go to prepare a place for you.”
The influence of the dying brother was good upon
both sisters, but most especially on Dorothy; she
never left her brother night nor day; she sat with
his hand in hers, like Mary at the feet of Christ, lis-
tening to his blessed words of salvation; whilst
Joanna, like Martha, though without her dissatisfied
heart, waited upon them both.
‘ Joanna feared greatly the effect which her brother's
death would have on Dorothy, but the effect was
different from what she expected. Whilst he lived,
her very breath seemed to hang upon his; but when



20 THE OSBORNES AND

his blessed spirit had departed, like David of old, she
arose, and, as it were, girded herself to combat against
the weaknesses of her soul, and to practise all those
lessons of patience and submission, and trust in God,
which she learned from him.

From this time,in the true spirit of Christian
resignation, Dorothy, though blind and scarred by.
the ravages of a fearful disease, was never heard to
complain. She discovered in herself the most re-
markable sources of activity and amusement. Her
hands were never idle, whilst the cheerfulness of her
mind made her company really attractive. Years
went on; Dorothy’s once rich black hair had become
white before its time ; and when her sister, without
explaining the cause for so doing, placed a quiet cap
on her head, she submitted without remark, in-
stinctively understanding the reason why it was done.

Joanna, when arrived at middle life, contrary to
what she had done in her youth, looked younger than
she really was; and, small though her income was
(she had given up the shopkeeping several years
before), she was really a person of some consequence
in the town. In every benevolent scheme she was an
operator, managing or serving; and a never-failing
counsellor and comforter to the poor in difficulty or
distress.

ee + ee



CHAPTER II.
THE OSBORNES AND THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES.

“Ir is a terrible evening for these poor people to
arrive on,” said Joanna to her sister, who sat knitting
on the sofa, upon that rainy evening of May-fair day,
as the baggage-wagons were unloaded before their



THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES. 21

windows, and one weary woman after another, stiff
with having sat so many hours up aloft among wet
boxes and tired children, was helped down from her
elevation, and seemed only to put herself in motion
with difficulty. The good Joanna was full of com-
passion, and pitied their having to find quarters in
the noisy and crowded public-houses, where they
would be unwelcome guests both to landlord and
landlady. Greatly interested as she was by the
whole arrival, her sympathies were presently enlisted
on behalf of a woman who, overcome by more than
fatigue, seemed unable to stand, and seated herself on
one of the chests; whilst a boy, of about twelve,
seemed to be the only one who took much thought
about her. She was wrapped in a large gray cloak ;
and the hood, which was drawn over her head, par-
tially revealed a face which was pale and dejected,
The boy ran hither and thither to the various groups
of women, who began to move off in various direc-
tions, and then back again to the sick woman, for
whose comfort he seemed very solicitous, for he
lugged along a small chest, upon which he made her
place her feet, and then wrapped her cloak about
her with the most affectionate care. All this Joanna
described to her sister, and then called her servant,
bidding her take her pattens and umbrella, and go
across, and ask if the poor woman would come in and
shelter. Instead of returning with her as was ox-
pected, Joanna saw her servant give her her arm, and
sheltering her with her large umbrella, move off
along the street, whilst the boy trudged after, carrying
a large bundle. On the return of tho servant, it
appeared that the woman, who was delicate, had been
taken ill on the road; that she was billeted to the



22 THE OSBORNES AND

Talbot ; and, as there were two public-houses in the
town of that name, it was supposed to be the one
lying at some distance, whereas it proved to be the
one just at hand, and thither the maid had escorted.
her. The woman, she said, seemed to be subdued
and spiritless, as if she cared not what became of her;
while the boy, on the contrary, seemed as if he would
move heaven and earth to get her attended to, for he
ran into the house, and demanded attention both from
host and hostess, and never rested till a comfortable
bed, in an upper room, was allotted to her, and then
set about opening his bundle, and getting her into
bed, just as if he had been a regular sick-nurse. The
woman had fallen into a fainting fit, she said, just as
she had told her that her mistress, Miss Kendrick,
had sent her ; but she thought the boy understood, |
as well as Mrs. Tunnicliffe, the landlady, that her
mistress, who was very good to the poor, would go
and see her if she was no better, and pray by her, or
she could have the clergyman, if she liked it better;
only he was such a young man, and many folks
would much rather have Miss Kendrick than he.
Miss Kendrick was very well satisfied with what
her maid had done; and commissioning her, the first
thing in the morning, to run over, and inquire after
the invalid, she went to bed. Scarcely, however,
was the servant down-stairs the next morning, when
a message came from the sick woman, requesting a
little conversation with Miss Kendrick ; to which |
was added, from the landlady, that she was so ill, she
could not last long. In half an hour, Miss Kendrick
was with her, and her first impression was that the
hand of death was indeed upon her. She was prop-
ped up in bed, and seemed feeble in the last degree.



THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES. 23

“Are we alone?” asked she, casting her mournful
eyes round the room. “ We are, mother,” said the
boy, throwing himself on his knees at the bed’s foot ;
“there is only the lady, and you and me.”

She looked steadily at Miss Kendrick, and then
said, slowly and with difficulty, “I am Rebecca—
your unhappy, outcast sister. God brought me here
to die. I knew it a8 I entered the town, when the
baggage-train could not enter the market-place, but
made halt before the very house where I had been a
child—from whence I set out when I took my fate
into my own hands!”

Joanna, petrified with astonishment and compas-
sion, seized her hand and gazed into her face.

“Yes,” said the woman, “I am Rebecca, your
sister, though you may not recognise me.”

“My poor, unhappy sister!” exclaimed J oanna,
embracing her with tears. “Thank God that you
are found at last! You shall live with us—-with
Dorothy and me—you shall yet be happy !”

“ Never more in this world !” interrupted she. “I
know I have not long to live, and yet I have much to
say—let me speak while I have the power.— My
first husband died. 1 thought to mend my condition.
I married a second time ; but there was not a bless-
ing on anything I did. I married yet more unhap-
pily. I have had nine children by my two husbands,
The youngest child, a girl, is left behind with its
grandmother,—a good woman. This is my youngest.
boy,—he is my Benjamin. The two older than he
died. It was good for them. Of the other six two
are married, two are beyond seas, and one—oh my
God, have pity on the outcasts of society ; for all are
thy children!” After a long pause, she again pro-



24 THE OSBORNES AND

ceeded :—‘ My husband is a soldier, ~a private in the
, now in Ireland, and which we follow. He was
a very handsome man ; and that was my bane. He
was of an unbroken temper, and was not loved in the
regiment. 1 suffered much from him; and yet I
would not leave him. I always went with the regi-
ment ; for the officers’ ladies liked me. I wasa good
laundress, and got up their fine linens to their mind ;
and for this reason, spite of my poor health, was per-
mitted to accompany the regiment to Ireland. I was,
however, taken very ill on the journey. I began to
spit blood ; and at Wolverhampton, I felt it was all
over with me; for a dreadful thing came to my
knowledge there.” With these words she drew
from under her pillow a part of a newspaper,
which she put into Joanna’s hand, and bade her —
read, but not aloud. She read how one Peter |
Reynolds, a private in the —— regiment of foot |
soldiers, bound for Ireland, who had been guilty
of some misdemeanor on the march, had de-
serted immediately on their arrival in Dublin,
been retaken, and sentenced by court-martial to be
shot.

“ He is my husband,” said the poor dying woman
after a time. ‘I thought I should have died as I
read the paper. 1 told nobody, however, but him,”
said she, looking at the boy, “and he has the sense
of a grown man. I knew how little Reynolds was
liked in the regiment, and that there was no hope
for him; and for that reason I wanted all the more
to see him before it. happened. I thought I might com-
fort him ; for oh, it’s a dreadful thing to die in that
way, when a man’s in his full strength.” She could
say no more. Her distress of mind was excessive *

















THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES. 25

and one fainting fit succeeded another so rapidly that
she was unable to converse again through the day.
The boy in the meantime, who showed the strongest
affection towards her, and an intelligence and pru-
dence beyond his years, won the entire love of
Joanna.

In the evening, as the sick woman seemed some-
what better, she was removed on a bed to the house
of her sisters ; and in three days from that time she
died. It was an event of course which made a deal
of talk in the town. Many people remembered
Rebecca Kendrick and her unhappy marriage ; but
to the great joy of her sisters, the miserable and dis-
graceful end of her second husband was never or
scarcely known in the town.

“I wonder whether Mr. Osborne would take poor
William as an apprentice,” said Dorothy to her sister a.
day or two after the funeral; “a chemist and druggist’s
is a good business, and they are such kind people.”

“T have thought of that too,” returned J
“for we will do all we can for him ; what a clever,
nice boy he is! But it is odd that we have seen
nothing of the Osbornes for these three or four days ;
nor have they sent down to inquire after us. How-
ever, when it gets dusk, I will put on my things and
go and have some talk with them about William.”

The Osbornes were Miss Kendrick’s most intimate
friends, He, as it may be inferred, was a chemist
and druggist. He had one of those dingy, old-
fashioned shops, saturated with the smell of drugs
and physic, which are only to be found in old-
fashioned places. His wife and he, who had no
family, were patterns of conjugal felicity ; each
thinking the other as near perfection as poor human

»



26 THE OSBORNES AND

nature could be; and they were not very far from
the mark, for better people than they, making allow-
ance for some little intermixture of human weakness,
could hardly be found. They had been fast, life.
long friends of the Kendricks; and not a week
passed without their spending an evening together.
It was no wonder, therefore, that Joanna was sur-
prised that for the last three or four days they
had heard nothing of them. Joanna resolved to go
to them when it was dusk; but as it is not yet
dusk, we shall find the interval very convenient for
making the reader acquainted with some farther
particulars regarding them, which it is very import-
ant for him to know.

Mr. and Mrs. Osborne were now somewhat past
middle life, and had been married nearly thirty years.
At the time of her marriage, there was a young
sister, the daughter of her father by a second mar-
riage, dependent upon her. The mother died in
giving birth to this child, who, however, never felt
her loss in the love and care of her elder sister. The
father died when she was about ten years old; and
soon afterwards the elder sister married ; and in her
Lusband the child found a second father. She grew
up gentle and beautiful ; and the love of this affec-
tionate pair was lavished upon her. Never was girl
more tenderly nurtured, more beloved, or more in-
dulged. She had all her heart could wish ; and she
appeared to deserve it.

The Osbornes, though tradespeople, were well to
do, and the young lady was admitted to the best
society of the place; and as she advanced towards
womanhood, had the chance of making several ad-
vantageous matches. For some time she appeared



THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES. 27

difficult to please, till at length a gay young stranger,
whom she accidentally met, with, fixed her fancy.
Her friends objected somewhat to the match. In
the first place, he was a stranger; in the second
place, he lived far off, that is to say, in Liverpool ;
and to them, who wished to have their darling fixed
near to them for life, Liverpool seemed a long way
off ; thirdly, and which was most important of all,
there was a something—an indescribable something—
about this Louis Edwards which was unsatisfactury
to the plain-dealing and straightforward sincerity of
Mr. Osborne. He was plausible, had a reason for
everything, and though he was an American by birth
and connections, he had lived so many years in Eng-
land as to be English in his feelings. Still for all that,
and though he was a broker by trade, and hada part-
ner, a man of reputation and substance, and had altoge-
ther a very imposing manner, Mr. Osborne never liked
him; and felt so strongly that there was a something,
though it was impossible: to say what, which created
misgivings, that he and his wife refused their consent.

Edwards was dismissed; and the loving, gentle,
all-acquiescent Phebe promised to give him up. If
there be an occasion beyond all others which awakens
the affection of parents to their children—and the
Osbornes were as parents to Phebe—it is when they
see a child submissively giving up its beloved will
and wishes to their sterner reason and judgment.
The Osbornes felt thus, and thought that they could
not sufficiently show their affection to her ; and were
devising a thousand little schemes for her happiness
and indulgence, when one dreary day in November
she was gone! They could not conceive whither,
till the second day’s post brought a letter from her



28 THE OSBORNES AND

beseeching their forgiveness, and saying that as she
knew they desired her happiness, they must allow
her to become happy in her own way, which was by
uniting her fate to that of Edwards. This she had
done, and must now throw herself on their mercy,
assuring them that her future life should prove how
grateful she was for all their former kindness.

A letter like this is at such a time a mockery.
Better by far is it to weep over a child borne to the
grave with all its young fair promise in the bud, than
to see one that we love as our own life running wil-
fully and headlong into ruin spite of all our warning
and our prayers! The Osbornes thought so. Her de-
ceit and disobedience cut them to the heart, and their
prejudices were only the more strengthened against
a match which had begun so badly. Grieved how-
ever as they were, from the bottom of their souls
they pitied her; for they felt sure that a time would
come when she would bitterly repent.

‘* Alas, Phebe,” said good Mr. Osborne’in his reply
to her letter, “ what is this which you have done!
But we will not speak of the sorrow which we fore-
see. May God bless you, though you have grieved
us sorely! You are young, and life lies all before
you; be a good wife; be true to your husband in —
good and in evil ; atone for your want of duty to us
by your duty to him; and so may God Almighty
bless you !”

The Osbornes did not turn their backs on Phebe ;
but remembered her in sorrow rather than in anger ;
and this strong proof of their affection touched her
much more deeply than any evidences of their dis-
pleasure could have done. The match, however,
in a worldly point of view, did not appear so bad.



THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES. 29

Edwards lived handsomely ; and, though Phebe could
never persuade her brother and sister to visit her,
she failed not to tell them of her prosperity, of her
gay life and acquaintance, and of her happiness as a
wife and mother. Whether, however, she gave a
brighter colouring to things than they deserved;
whether she wished to deceive others, or was herself
deceived, we cannot say ; but at the very time when
she was writing of her happiness and prosperity, her
husband’s name appeared in the gazette, and they
were deeply insolvent bankrupts.

“The world is not surprised, my dear Phebe, at
what has happened, however you may be,” wrote Mr.
Osborne to her, “nor are we. The time of trial is now
come; faint not now, nor lose courage; and above all
things do not forget God, who chastises us only in love,”

Poor Phebe! the time of trial was indeed come ;
and, for the first time in her life, she learnt what it
was to deny herself and take up her cross daily.
Every one finds this to be a hard lesson; and Phebe
was one to feel it bitterly, Edwards removed from
Liverpool to London; had one clerkship after an-
other, and lived as he could, now with money and
now without; yet never losing his unabashed plausi-
bility, and buoying himself up with the notion that
after all he should do somehow or other.

Few and far between were the letters which Phebe
wrote to her friends; and though she never com-
plained of narrow circumstances, she wrote mourn-
fully of the sickness and death of two of her chil-
dren. The Osbornes on their part were extremely
anxious about her; and though she never solicited
aid from them, the five and ten-pound notes which
good Mr. Osborne occasionally inclosed were always

D2



30 THE OSBORNES AND

thankfully accepted. They invited her and her one
remaining child to come and visit them,—to remain
through a long winter with them; but this she de-
clined, without assigning any reason for so doing.
Not long afterwards, however, she wrote to them
a humble letter, and one which bore evidence of be-
ing written with difficulty ; it was on behalf of her
husband, to beg the loan of a few hundred pounds,
as he had the chance of entering into partnership
in a speculation which promised to return cent. per
cent. Mr. Osborne refused, on the plea of want
of confidence in Edwards and his schemes. The
next post brought a letter from Edwards himself, full
of the most plausible statements regarding his scheme,
and urging the loan of the money almost as a right
on behalf of his wife. This letter was immediately
followed by one from Phebe to her sister, begging her
in the most urgent and moving terms to use her in-
fluence with her husband, as not only Edwards’
worldly prosperity depended on this money being
raised, but her own happiness also. ‘There was an
urgent tone of almost desperation in the letter, and
an instability in the handwriting, that showed the
most agitated state of mind. The Osbornes were
moved ; and, accompanying the money with a letter
of grave tradesman-like advice to Edwards, Mr. Os-
borne remitted it on no other security than his note.
Within a few months, Phebe wrote again; the
cloud had evidently passed away ; but from this time
the tone of her letters was much more serious than —
formerly. She spoke little of her husband, but
much of her child, then six years old, of which she
scemed extremely. fond. A year went on, and letters —
came but seldom ; a second year, and then Edwards and



THEIR FAMILY TROUBLEs. 3l

his partner were again bankrupt. Edwards accused
his partner of roguery and mismanagement, and sume
person who accidentally had seen Phebe in London
brought news of her wan and care-worn appearance.

The relations thought more of her distress than of
the loss of their money. For two more years nothing
was heard of them ; and how they lived never came
to their relations’ knowledge. At length, one winter's
day, 8 woman wrapped in a large plaid cloak knocked
at the private door and begged to speak with Mrs.
Osborne alone. After some hesitation she was
brought in; and when they two were together, she
announced herself as Phebe Edwards.

“I know how shocked you are to see me,” said
she, “I am greatly changed; but that is of small
account, J am become regardless of my looks.”

The good people wept over her ; and received her
as the father in the gospel received his prodigal son.

“You are come to stay with us,” said they, “ you
will never leave us again.”

“I am going again to-night,” said Phebe, “ my
business is urgent. I dared not write, nor would I
let Edwards come himself.”

She then explained that by the kind interference
of a gentleman who had known her husband in
Liverpool, he had the chance of a situation in a
banking-house in London, provided some responsible
man would be surety for him to the amount of five
hundred pounds. Phebe paused ; for the money
her brother-in-law had already lost by her husband
was in her mind, and she saw that it was in his also.

“I know your thoughts,” said she, “‘and because
you have already suffered so much, F would not
write to you; but, brother, it is the privilege of the

t



o2 THE OSBORNES AND

good to forgive injuries—to return good for evil.
Forgive us, therefore, what you have already suf-
fered from us; I have prayed God to forgive us,
even as I knew you had done, and you will not
close your heart against us. Oh- ” said she,
clasping together her hands, and fixing upon him
her large, sunken, and tearless eyes, “I have
made my child pray to God every night to bless
you; because I thought that the prayers of a
child most surely ascended to heaven! I know,”
continued she more calmly, “that you have very
little reason to trust either Edwards or me; but if
you cast us off, then are we lost for ever! I do not
pretend or attempt to excuse Edwards; but he is
heartily sorry for the past—he has been unfortunate,
we have all suffered much, and we are all humble
now; and from you we ask this one chance of re-
gaining our place in society !”

“Qh stay with us, Phebe,” said Mrs. Osborne,
quite overcome by her sister's words, “‘ stay with us,
and you and your child shall never want.”

“The first letter,” returned Phebe, “which I
received from Mr. Osborne after my marriage, con-
tained these words, ‘atone for your want of duty to
us by your duty to your husband, and so may God
Almighty bless you!’ these words I have never for-
gotten. They have been hitherto, and shall still be,
the law of my life; let my husband's fortune be
what it may, I abide with him to the last.”

“She is right, Sarah, she is right,” said Mr. Os-
borne, wiping his eyes and rising from his seat ; “and
I will be surety for Edwards for her sake. I will
give him this one trial more.”

Poor Phebe, who hitherto had not shed one tear,



THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES. 33

now overcome by the generous kindness ot her
brother, covered her face with both her hands and
wept like a child. How the rest of the day was
spent may easily be imagined; the best which the
house could offer was set before her; and her sister,
taking her into her own chamber, questioned her
elosely of her wants and actual condition. But
whatever Phebe’s sufferings had been, she kept
much to herself. To poverty she confessed, and to
all the hardships and anxieties which poverty brings
with it ; but not one word did she utter against her
husband, although her sister never lost the impres-
sion that she had suffered much unkindness from him.

True to her first intentions, she returned by coach
that night to London, taking with her good store of
many things which the bounty and overflowing
affection of her sister heaped upon her.

Phebe’s visit had entirely reinstated her in the
hearts of her relations, and the next year Mr. Osborne
did such an unheard-of thing as go to London him-
self, on business he said, but in reality to see her and
her children: for a second child, a little girl, was
now born to her. On his return, he related that
they were living quietly, and with some appearance
of comfort ; but that there was still a look of depres-
sion and anxiety about her, while Edwards on the
contrary seemed scarcely changed, excepting that he
was grown slightly grey and much stouter than when
he married ; but he was as well dressed as then 3 as
gay in spirits, as plausible; and to the conscientious
and somewhat suspicions mind of Mr. Osborne, as
unsatisfactory as ever, For his own peaee of mind
as regarded them, it was a pity that he had ever been
to visit them. The only thing that gave them real



34 THE OSBORNES AND

satisfaction was that Edwards retained his situation ;
and at the end of the second year received an increase
of salary, which Phebe did not fail to communi-
cate to her relations. Three years had now gone on,
and we are arrived at the period when our story opens.

The Osbornes and the Kendricks were, as we
have said, fast friends; the somewhat similar mar-
riages of Phebe and the unhappy Rebecca, had made,
for years, a great sympathy of feeling between them.
Mrs. Osborne was at their house, and sitting by the
side of Rebecca’s bed when she died, and her husband
had attended her to the grave.

Much attached, however, as they were to their
friends, they said nothing of the disgrace which had
befallen Rebecca’s husband and the father of the
nephew whom they had adopted, thinking, with a
natural and jealous feeling of family pride, that there
was no good in publishing the dishonour of one’s own
connexions.

Some such feeling as this operated on the mind of
good Mrs. Osborne as she sat in the dusk of evening
in the little parlour beside the shop, with the candles
unlighted, and heard her friend Miss Kendrick in-
quire with astonishment about Mr. Osborne's sudden
journey to London, of which Mr. Isaacs the shop-
man had told her. «

Yes, said Mrs. Osborne, but in an incommuni-
cative tone, her husband was suddenly called to Lon-
don by a letter from poor Phebe. She feared things
were going on but badly with them,—how, she did
not say, merely adding, “but I wish nothing to be
said about it; the least said the better, as we all
know.”

Joanna was a reasonable woman, and she excused



THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES. 365

her friend’s reserve, sincerely sympathising with her
in having any new cause of anxiety and distress,
Leaving her, therefore, to open her business respect-
ing her nephew to Mrs. Osborne as a sort of prelimi-
nary step in the affair, we will communicate to the
reader that unhappy circumstance regarding the
Edwards's, which Joanna knew only later.

The letter which Phebe had written was rather
indefinite, but one which filled those to whom it was
addressed with horror. It spoke of temptation and
crime, of loss of character for ever, and of the severest
punishment of the law, and besought her brother-in-
law to hasten to them immediately. He did so, and
found his worst fears to be true. Edwatds had been
again tempted to embark in some wild speculation ;
money was wanted which his own means did not
supply, and having gained the confidence of his em-
ployers, he had taken advantage of it, and had, at
two several times, drawn money from the bank by
forged orders in the names of merchants who had
large dealings with the house. In the first instance,
six months had elapsed without detection; in the
second, to a larger amount, detection came speedily.

On the first moment of alarm, he had escaped on
board a vessel bound for Hamburgh ; but had been
pursued and taken while the vessel was under weigh.
There was not a word to be said in his extenuation ;
the fact was as it were proved upon him ; he was in
the fangs of the law, and was committed to take his
trial.

Such were the facts respecting which Mrs. Osborne
might well be excused from saying much. In a
week’s time her husband was again at home; and
Miss Kendrick made application on behalf of her



36 THE OSBORNES AND

nephew being apprenticed to his business. Mr. Os-
borne said that he had just engaged a young appren-
tice, whom he shortly expected; that two at once
was rather too much; but considering the case of
poor Reynolds, and that it was to oblige Miss Ken-
drick, he would talk with Mr. Isaacs and see if it
could not be arranged ; and that she should know in
a day or two. Within a day or two, Joanna and her
sister resolved upon going to Matlock for a few weeks,
and taking their nephew with them ; so that there
was full time to deliberate. The season was fine.
Miss Kendrick found company to their taste at
Matlock ; and to the great joy of the boy, who now
for the first time in his life knew what ease and
pleasure were, the stay was lengthened to the end of
July.

On their return, Miss Kendrick went to hear the
decision of her friend the druggist ; again he was not
in the shop, but there stood behind the counter a
slim, gentlemanly youth, who, under the direction of
Mr. Isaacs, was folding up, very successfully, penny-
worths of Epsom salts and flowers of brimstone. This
was evidently the new apprentice of whom Mr. Os-
borne had spoken. On inquiring for that gentleman,
Miss Kendrick learned, to her surprise, that both he
and his wife were in London.

** It must be about that miserable business of the
Edwards's,” said she to Dorothy on her return. Of
course it was, and all the town knew it by this time;
for the newspapers had detailed the affair from one
end of the kingdom to the other.

The trial was now over. Edwards had pleaded
his own cause most skilfully and eloquently, but in
vain ; he was found guilty, and condemned to four-



THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES. 37

teen years’ transportation. On hearing his sentence,
Edwards seemed to feel, for the first time, the crush-
ing weight of his unhappy circumstances. A paleness
as of death overspread his countenance ; and, but for
the support of the turnkey, he would have fallen to
the ground. Mr. Osborne visited him the next day
in prison; and, for the first time in his life, felt com-
passion for him. Edwards was in fact a man of real
talent and great power of mind, with some tendencies
to good; but alas! he was one of those who have not
the ability to resist temptation. He was of a sanguine
temperament, and was always confident of success
When, therefore, humiliation and failure did come,
he was only the more cast down. His spirit was
now broken, and the better parts of his character
came forth. These, as it were, took the kind heart
of Mr. Osborne by surprise ; and now, with a reac-
tion of feeling which is very natural to a generous
mind, he felt as if he must compensate for his hitherto
hard judgment; and this he did by more than free
forgiveness,

Phebe during the whole time had been calm and
collected. ‘The worst had come that could come ;
and God and good men had not abandoned her.
That kind brother, who had been as a father to her
in her youth, stood by her in this hour of trial. He
had already adopted her son as his own; and thus
removed, as it were, from the knowledge and con-
tamination of evil, she trusted that his course through
life might be easier and happier than that of his
parents. Phebe's resolve from the first had been to
remove with her youngest child, a little girl of two
years old, to the land where her husband was now a
banished man. Her brother made no objection; and

E



38 THE TWO APPRENTICES.

he and his wife accordingly came up, two weeks be-
fore the time of her departure, to provide for her
comforts on the voyage, and to take leave of her for
ever. She sailed at the beginning of August ; and
the convict ship in which was her husband at the end
of the same month.

Their careers seemed thus brought to an end in
this hemisphere ; and therefore leaving them, the one
with his weaknesses and his misdeeds, the other expi-
ating the errors of her youth by a life of patience and
duty, we will turn more particularly to the son, who
will henceforth be one of the principal heroes of our
little story.



CHAPTER III.
THE TWO APPRENTICES,

Tue youth, like his father, was called Louis, with
the additional Christian name of William, which his
mother had given to him in love and grateful remem-
brance of her brother-in-law Mr. Osborne ; and now
his good uncle and aunt, anxious to remove from him
any infamy connected with his father’s misconduct,
‘transposed and slightly altered his names, and called
him Edward Lewis Williams. Edward Williams
‘was therefore only an ordinary young apprentice—it
was given out that he was an orphan—with whose
history the world had nothing to do; and though
Mr. Isaacs and the whole household soon saw that he
was not treated like an ordinary apprentice, the world
did not readily conjecture that he was the son of the
convict Edwards.

“2,
.

“Let Williams come into the parlour,” said Mr.



THE TWO APPRENTICES. og

Osborne, as he was leaving the shop for the evening,
to his assistant Mr. Isaacs, *‘I would have a little
talk with him before his fellow-apprentice comes ;
he seems a sharp, clever youth, I think,” said Mr.
Osborne.

“A little too much of a gentleman at present,”
returned Mr. Isaacs, who was a thorough tradesman,
and had no patience with any dandyism behind the
counter, “‘and sharp and clever he is with a witness ;
he has broken half a gross of vials, two graduated
measures, and a Corbyn quart, within the last fort-
night; but he has taken prodigiously to practical
chemistry, and so that he does not blow the house
up, he may be of some use in time.”

** We must teach him to be careful,” said Mr. Os-
borne, advancing to the door, “‘send him in as soon
as he comes,” repeated he, and disappeared through
the half-glass door with the green silk curtain, that
led to the parlour where his good wife always sat at
her work.

Mr. Osborne had a little code of morals—it is a
thousand pities that it never was printed—which he
delivered orally to his apprentices many times during
the earlier part of their apprenticeship; and he now
wished particularly to insist on that part which re-
lated to “your duties towards your fellow-appren-
tices.” This warned of bad example, either set by
themselves or followed in others; insisted on truth,
sobriety, kindness; on advising in love; on “doing as
they would be done by.” Mrs. Osborne always cried
when her husband thus lectured his young appren-
tices. She felt asif the boys were her own children,
and she always said that no clergyman could preach
to them as her husband did. “And now remember,”



40 THE TWO APPRENTICES.

concluded Mr. Osborne, “that the happiness and
well-being of your future life depend upon the dis-
positions you cultivate and the habits you acquire in
youth ;—are you idle, wasteful, unpunctual, dilatory
in youth, it is vain to look for industry, frugality,
exactness, and promptitude in after-life. .A religious,
active youth will ensure, as far as human means can
do it, a respectable and prosperous age!’ These last
words Mr. Osborne never failed to speak with re-
markable emphagis, nor did he omit it on this occa-
sion. Thus far, the young apprentice had been fed
with what may be called, in the style of Jean Paul
or our Carlyle, the common apprentice-bread ; after-
wards came the cake-of-love which was broken for
his especial eating; and this was literally a love-feast,
at which the good aunt as well as uncle assisted.
Some little they said on his peculiar circumstances,
on the awful example which would ever remain be-
fore him in his father's career ; but oh, how tenderly
and lovingly was this warning enforced! The youth
—and he was a slender, handsome youth—sat with
his graceful head supported on his well-fermed hand,
and his intelligent brown eyes fixed on the counte-
nance of his affectionate monitors. He looked hand-
some; and they saw in him the fairest promises of
good,—they saw in him the support, and comfort,
and pride of their old age. They besought him to be
steadfast in his duties both to God and man; they
besought him to deserve the love which they were
willing to give him; and in them, they said, he
should never want a friend. They spoke with tears,
and as the seal of the covenant between them, they
gave him a new Bible, which they prayed him to
_ Study diligently. The youth began to say something



THE TWO APPRENTICES. 41

about gratitude ; but his voice trembled, and he was

so much affected that he could not go on. The old

people gave him their hands, and said that it was not

needful; they understood his feelings, and were sure ‘
he would try to deserve their love.

Mrs. Osborne ordered in a very good supper that
night ; the apple-pie that had been intended for the
morrow’s dinner was sent in, and cold beef, and
pickle, and roast potatoes with plenty of butter; and
then the smart young apprentice went out to put up
the shop-shutters, secretly rejoicing to himself that it
was for the last time, inasmuch as the new apprentice
would come the next day, and then, as the junior,
this would henceforth be his duty.

We have spoken of the Osbornes’ love-feast ; the
Miss Kendricks also made one for their nephew,
which they intended should last for a whole day.
They hired a post-chaise, and drove to the pleasant
village of Hanbury in Needwood Forest, where lived
some old friends of theirs,—a good farmer and his
wife. Their nephew walked about the farmer’s
abundant garden, and ate fresh-gathered apples from
the trees, and strolled out by himself into the fields,
and came home just in time for dinner. And what
a dinner it was, with game, and hot apple-pie, and
cream, and syllabubs! and how merry the little fat
farmer was, and his wife too, and how they all ate,
and drank, and chatted, and laughed! Even Aunt
Dorothy, she was as merry as anybody.

After dinner, William went out again by himself,
He had been rather low-spirited the day before about
leaving the aunts that he loved so well and going
'prentice; but now all dull thoughts seemed driven
away. There was something inspiriting in the bright,

» €
EZ



42 THE TWO APPRENTICES.

breezy autumn air, as he strolled along through the
old pasture fields, and saw the feathery seeds of the
thistle and the great groundsel lifted up and carried
over his head by the wind, and the yellow harvest-
fields lying amid the deep repose of the woodlands
around, and the harvesters piling up the golden
shocks of corn on the heavy wain, which moved om-
ward now and then, silently as ina dream. Heat
down on the dry slope of the field, with the little
shrubby tufts of the rosy-hued rest-harrow at his
feet ; and thought about his past life and his future.
There was a deal of hardship, and sorrow, and trouble
in his past life, which was best known to himself and
to his Almighty Father; and which he someway or
other shrunk from telling to his kind aunts. There
. was no use in telling it to them, he thought, and he
was right ; for it would have done them no good, nor
him either, All this now passed in clear review be-
fore him ; it was like a procession of dark shadows ;
one after another they went by, and ended in that
wet night of May-fair day and his mother’s death.
But yet that death was not as sad as many things in
her life had been; and the boy thought of her grave
in the little churchyard of her native town as of her
truest resting-place. The only pleasant thought in
the past was of his little sister,—the little rosy-
cheeked Susan, who was left with the old Methodist
grandmother at Truro in Cornwall. Susan was very
happy ; and above all things liked going with the old
woman to chapel, where the people all sang so loud.
It was a pleasant thought, that of Susan. Then came
his aunts,—Dorothy, blind, and with her hair like
snow, yet as cheerful as a lark, and so active! No-
. body that saw her at home could ever think her



THE TWO APPRENTICES, 43

blind! And Joanna, who never thought about her-
self, but was always working or scheming for the
good of somebody or other ; who was full of resources
for every difficulty, and who suggested good motives
for everybody’s actions, Never in all this world,
poor William thought, were there better women
his aunts; it would be impossible for him to
out badly, belonging, as he did, to such good
pe William thought of all the pleasure they
had given him, of the happy weeks at Matlock, of
the collection of minerals they had bought for him,
of the new clothes they had given him,—how they
were about to put him apprentice to a respectable
business, how they had given him a new Bible and
such a handsome prayer-book as would make it a
pleasure to go to church; and to wind up all, how
they had hired a chaise and brought him out into the
country, which he enjoyed so much, just on purpose
to make his last day of freedom pleasant. All this he
thought of, and then made a little vow with himself
that he would be very obedient and good as an ap-
prentice, and be industrious in learning his business ;
and then, when he was a man and his aunts were
old, that he might be able to do something for them
in return. He grew quite in love with his good
resolves, and then fell into a charming day-dream of
happily-accomplished wishes, from which he was
roused by the sound of voices and the creaking of
a loaded wagon, which, with its piled-up sheaves,
went brushing slowly past the tall hedge-row trees
behind him. It was the wagon which, two hours
before, he had been watching in the distant fields ;
and then the thought first occurred to him that it
was time for him to go back to the farm-house. He.



44 THE TWO APPRENTICES.

ran hastily back, buoyant-hearted with all his good
resolutions, and was a little alarmed to see the post-
chaise standing at the door. Aunt Dorothy and the
farmer’s wife were seated on the horse-block, and
Joanna and the farmer were looking out from the
farm-yard gate; they evidently were looking for
him, and then, all at once, for the first time since a
had been out, he remembered that his aunt Joamha-
had warned him not to be long, not above an hour ;
for they wanted to be at home in good time—how
could he have forgotten? Aunt Joanna looked dis-
pleased as he came up; he had never seen her look
displeased before.

“ Well, youngster, we’ve had a pretty hunt for
you,” said the farmer, when he reached the gate.

“You must have forgotten what I said,” remarked
Aunt Joanna.

“Ah, Master William,” began the farmer’s wife,
“I’ve had a pretty time to pacify your Aunt
Dorothy ; she thought you must have got drowned,
or some mischief.”

“Tam very sorry,” said William ; and felt quite
humble and submissive, but there was no time or
opportunity to say more. He hurried into the par-
lour to have tea, or coffee, or wine. There was
plum-cake, seed-cake, and bread and butter: he
must have something—he could eat nothing; he
wanted so much to make his peace with everybody.
But there was no chance for his getting in a word
his aunts, and the farmer and his wife, were at the
chaise-door, in the full energy and activity of leave-
- taking. There was a basket full of eggs, a bottle
of cream, and some fresh butter to go into the
chaise ; there was a hamper of apples and a couple



THE TWO APPRENTICES. 45

of fowls to be stowed away, for all of which the
aunts had, first of all, to express astonishment, and
then thanks ; and, amid all this, they and their
nephew seated themselves in the chaise, and off they
drove. William sat silent, and felt unhappy ; his
heart trembled at the thought of anger; he had seen
so much of it formerly, and so little of it in the last
happy weeks of his life. He wished his aunts
would but begin to talk; but for some time they
did not, nor did he.

At length began Aunt Joanna:—‘ My dear boy,”
said she, “nothing will be more necessary to you,
in life, than strict punctuality. Now, when I had
told you to be back soon, what could keep you out
so long—when you might see that it was getting
late, and the dew was falling. What were you
doing?” |

“‘ Nothing,” said he.

“Nothing!” she repeated. “That is hardly
likely—an active boy like you must have been
doing something.”

William might have said that he had been busy
with his thoughts, reviewing the past, and making
good resolves for the future. He thought of saying
so; but then it occurred to him that perhaps his
aunts would not believe him: he had often been
dishelieved in former days, when he had spoken the
honest truth. A sullen cloud, like the spirit of
those dark former days, fell upon him, and he again
replied to his aunt’s question, three times repeated,
that “‘ he had been doing nothing.”

His aunt said no more. Neither she nor Dorothy
said much during the rest of the drive homeward ;
they were sorry to see him, as they thought, per-



46 THE TWO APPRENTICES.

verse and sullen, and not wishing to excite an
antagonist spirit, which they fancied they saw in
him, they sat silent, and mourned to themselves.

He, on his part, sat between them, dispirited and
out of humour. This was the end, then, of all his
good resolutions: nobody would give him credit for
meaning to do right—that was always the way.
His aunts, after all, were as unjust as anybody else.
All his good resolutions seemed folly and nonsense ;
he despised himself for them, and said, in. his own
heart, that it was no use trying to be good. The
dark phantoms which he had called up from the
. past, and made to pass before him, seemed to have
possession of him, and he remembered mournfully
the chapter which, the evening before, he had read
in his new Bible to his Aunt Dorothy, of him who
took seven other spirits unto him worse than him-
self, and the last state of that man was worse than
the first. :

So ended their Love Feast. But it was a real
Love Feast for all that. It was only as if the love-
cake had been a little burned in the baking—human
endeavours are so seldom perfect.

But now, for six months after this time. Mr.
Isaacs went to church every Sunday evening; and,
as the Osbornes’ pew adjoined that of the Miss
Kendricks, and they regularly attended church
twice in the day, which Mrs. Osborne did not,
because her husband only went in the morning, he
mostly walked home with them; and when there
was no moon, and the streets.therefore as good as
dark—for the scanty oil lamps were not worth
speaking of—he offered an arm to each sister, which
had given rise, in the minds of the two most noto-



THE TWO APPRENTICES. 47

rious gossips of the place, Mrs. Morley and Mrs.
Proctor, that Mr. Isaacs had a liking for Miss
Joanna Kendrick. The report had even reached
the ears of the parties themselves ; but they seemed
so amazingly indifferent about it, that people left
them to do as they would, only just speaking of it
now and then to keep the idea alive, as a town
corporation walks its parish boundaries every seven
years or so, to keep their memory from dying out.

** And how does William get on,” asked Miss
Kendrick, therefore, one Sunday evening, figm
Mr. Isaacs, on whose arm she leaned.

“Pretty well,” said he, in a half-hesitating tone.

“* Only pretty well, still!” she returned.

“Why, you see,” said Isaacs, “he has not the
natural facility of mind that Williams has. That
youth has something quite uncommon about him—if
he had but stability he might do anything. They
now take regular Latin lessons, and that prevents his
attending to many other things. Latin is abso-
lutely necessary, and they neither of them under-
3tood a word of it.”

‘* What, then,’ began Joanna, somewhat cheered,
“had this clever youth been as much neglected as
our poor nephew ?”

“* He has knowledge enough, and to spare,” said
Isaacs, “but not exactly of the right kind; he is
prodigiously smart and clever, and knows hew to
make the most of what he has. If he have but
stability and good conduct, he may get on won-
derfully.”

These words sunk deep into the hearts of both
aunts. How was it? Was Williams above the
average capacity of youths, or was their nephew



48 THE TWO APPRENTICES.

velow it? They were troubled and discontented.
They feared that he did not make all the efforts in
his power; perhaps he was careless and inattentive :
they must talk with him, and try to rouse up a
spirit of emulation in him. Next moment, they
were half-disposed to be out of humour with his
companion’s facility of mind—it is so unpleasant to
be outstripped ourselves, or to see those one loves
and cares for outstripped.

The next evening, the aunts sent their compli-
ments to Mr. Osborne, and begged that he would
let their nephew drink tea with them. He came,
and by the gentlest manoeuvres in the world,
the affectionate aunts began to test the young
apprentice’s knowledge and skill. How did he
like his business ?—did he feel that he was getting
on at all ?—did light begin to break in upon him in
any way ?—did he feel that he could keep up with
Williams? To these questions he replied, that he
did like his business—that he felt he was getting
on—light was breaking in upon him, even in Latin ;
he had made up a prescription that very day—but
as to keeping up with Williams, that was not an
easy thing. Williams could make out a prescription
above a month ago. Williams was so very clever,
he could do anything that he liked; he learned
without the least trouble, and had such a memory
as never was !

Such was his report of his fellow-apprentice.
The aunts listened in silence, and concluded that it
must be as Mr. Isaacs had said; Williams was a
youth of extraordinary abilities. They sighed over
their nephew, who seemed to have but common
abilities, and were kinder to him than ever; per-



THE TWO APPRENTICES. 49

haps to compensate, if they could, for Nature’s
supposed unkindness. But long was the lecture
that they gave to him on patience and perseverance,
which, plodding on together, remove mountains of
all kinds, and make even ordinary abilities more
availing than the most meteor-like genius.

“Well, and how does Reynolds go on?” again
inquired Joanna from Mr. Isaacs, some twelve or
eighteen months later. .

“* Exceedingly well!” was now the reply. “He
has stability and perseverance, he will make a good
tradesman. He is much more practical than Williams,
and thus much more useful.” The aunts were well
pleased, and now could very well endure to hear
their nephew speak well of his fellow-apprentice.

The Osbornes, who had their reasons for being
particularly interested in Williams, saw his quick
abilities, and his attractive exterior, with uncommon
pleasure. As to Mr. Isaacs, he had begun some
time ago to have his own thoughts about the smart
apprentice, and let him now take his own flights,
Satisfied to have the more helpful services of Rey-
nolds. Isaacs soon saw, what Mr. Osborne seemed
never to find out, that Williams, unstable as water,
‘spite of his natural brilliant gifts, would, in the end,
excel in nothing. Besides this, there were slight
peccadilloes now and then, a missing half-crown or
80, which, while he never shut his own eyes to, and
always reproved in his own way, he never spoke of to
Mr. or Mrs. Osborne, unwilling to distress them, as he
said to himself, about the son of poor Mrs, Edwards,

Mr. Isaacs had mentioned to Miss Kendricks his
suspicion of the youth’s parentage ; and this suspi-
cion was confirmed to them by an accidental discovery

F



50 THE TWO APPRENTICES.

which their nephew made of what seemed to him
the transposed name of his companion, written in
his Prayer-book, “ William Louis Edwards ;” and
which, on being shown to him, he immediately tore
from the book, saying gaily that it was only a joke.
But Williams’s secret was safe, both with Miss
Kendricks and Mr. Isaacs; and, while the youth
did not trouble himself one jot about either the one
or the other, he grew tall and good-looking, and,
though he wore a shop-apron, had not at all the
look of a tradesman about him.

Time went on: the fellow-apprentices agreed
- remarkably well together. Reynolds plodded on
at the quiet drudgery of his business, and Williams
took discursive flights of all kinds. Now he was
deep among gases, and now he was up in the clouds
among the fascinations of the circulating library ;
now he dipped here and there into the Materia
Medica and Dr. Thomas’s Practice of Physic; and
now he laboured for three months in learning to
play the flute. He certainly had a variety of tastes,
if not of talents; and the Osbornes, good people as
they were, saw this as something quite remarkable.
Mrs. Osborne was fascinated with his handsome
figure and gentlemanly bearing, wifh his amusing
conversation, and his variety of little social talents
and accomplishments. She contrasted him, in her
own mind, with the more homely, unassuming
Reynolds. ‘“ Poor Miss Kendricks,” thought she,
“how proud they would be to have a nephew like
ours |”

She was the kindest-hearted woman that ever
_ lived, and she never thought thus without being

touched with compassion for the good, humbly-



THE TWO APPRENTICES, 61

gifted youth, as she thought Reynolds; and man y
a little kindness and indulgence did he unwittingly
owe to this sentiment in her heart towards him.

Time went on, and yet on. The apprentices had
each gone on in their own way, and were both
nearly nineteen years of age. Williams was now
above the middle size, and seemed to have done
growing ; while Reynolds, on the contrary, seemed
as if he had only just begun to grow, and was, as
his Aunt Joanna said, “coming on famously.” She
began to think, after all, that her nephew would, in
his way, be every bit as good-looking as-Williams.
He was stouter built, to be sure, and would never
be so tall, but there was such a firm, manly air
about him, something so honest and good in his
countenance—it was quite a pleasure tp look at him!

It was now the middle of winter—a cold, sleety
day, when no customers, saving such as wanted
physie, turned out of doors. The shop-door was
shut, the stove was burning cheerily, and the two
apprentices were standing together, looking over a
play-bill, which had just been thrown in.

Players were “come to the town; a theatre was
opened, and that night the performances began.
“The Beaux’ Stratagem :” it was a charming play,
said Williams; and read over the list of characters
and performers like a school-boy running over a
well-practised lesson. There was nothing in this
world that he enjoyed like the theatre; to see a
play well acted was the finest thing in the world—
the next best thing was to see one badly acted.
Oh, a tragedy acted by strolling players, there was
something quite racy about it! He declared that .
he should be a great patron of the theatre. He



52 THE TWO APPRENTICES.

would take care, he said, and get Mr. Osborne's con-
sent to their going.

There was no difficulty about that. Mr. Osborne
was the most indulgent of masters; and the two
young men set off arm-in-arm, in the highest spirits,
intending to be very critical, and yet very much
amused.

A great club-room at one of the inns had been
converted into a very pretty little theatre, which was
well lighted, and tolerably decorated. Neither boxes,
pit, nor gallery had one seat to spare ; the players
evidently had taken the little town at the right
moment. Williams, however, was at first amazingly
critical ; found unmeasured fault, and ridiculed
everything. He had seen, he said, in his time, the
finest theatres in London, and he knew what good
acting was, too. The acting, however, pleased him ;
above all things, the acting of Miss Jessie Banner-
man, who performed the character of Dorinda. He
declared that she was a goddess, an angel ; so young,
not above sixteen; so divinely beautiful! she was
equal to any actress in genteel comedy that he had
ever seen. He must know something about her!
He was very fond of players, he said ; loved, of all
things, to have the entrée of the green-room ; had
a vast fancy for acting himself; and ended by pro-
testing that he was deeply in love with that girl,
and would make her acquaintance, or know the
reason why.



JESSIE'S ACQUAINTANCE MADE. 53

CHAPTER IV.
JESSIE'S ACQUAINTANCE MADE.

We must now pay a visit to the house of a clog
and patten-maker, and, without using any ceremony,
enter the little parlour, which is but very humbly
furnished, with its home-made listing carpet hardly
covering its brick floor, and its furniture of blue and
white check. In the middle of the room stands a
round table, covered with a coarse huckaback “table-
cloth, on which plates, knives and forks, and an
earthenware salt-cellar, with bread and cheese, give
intimation that supper is at hand. The homely
furniture, however, did not cause a moment's
uneasiness to the persons who were there, and
whom we may as well introduce to the reader.
First of all, a little old woman, in a night-cap not
remarkably clean, and a pink bed-gown, who sat
bending over the little fire-place set in Dutch tile,
cooking on the fire a quantity of tripe, in a sauce-
pan rather too small for the purpose, while within
the fender stood dishes and plates to warm. This
old woman, known in the theatrical corps as
Mrs. Bellamy, though she never acted, seemed so
absorbed by her occupation as to take no notice
whatever of a young couple who sat together, in
very amicable proximity, on the sofa. These were
Jessie Bannerman, the fair prima donna of the com-
pany, and our acquaintance, Williams, who was now
paying by no means his first visit to the inmates
of the patten-maker’s parlour. Williams was very
handsomely dressed in his Sunday clothes, for it
was Sunday evening; whilst the young lady, a

F 2



54 JESSIE’S ACQUAINTANCE MADE.

slight, delicate young creature, was decidedly en
déshabillé, a costume which, although it bore unequi-
vocal marks of having been supplied by a scanty
purse, was not unbecoming to her remarkably inte-
resting appearance.

The youth held both her hands in his, and gazed
with almost devotion into her face. She seemed to
have been weeping, but a faint smile, like April
sunshine, passed at that moment over her face, and
she replied, in answer to some remark of his, “ Oh,
no, the dear old creature, she is very deaf; she
hears nothing we say, and if she did, she would not
interrupt us. Ah, she 1s a good creature 1” ex-
claimed she, snatching away her hands from their
confinement ; and starting up to the old woman’s
side, she put them on her shoulder, and spoke in
her ear, but not loudly, “I have been telling him
how good you are to me, and how much I love
you,” added she, and kissed the old woman's
wrinkled cheek. ‘The old woman understood the
action, if not the words, and gave several little,
short nods, without turning her head, or apparently
lifting her eyes from the saucepan.

The young girl sat down again, and continued,
“Tf it were not for her, my life would be worse
than that of a galley-slave. She is not as poor as
she seems, and has managed to make herself of
‘ eonsequence to the company; and Mr. Maxwell,
the manager, consults her in everything. He hates
her, however, for all that, and they quarrel dread-
fully.”

Whilst these few words passed, the old woman
had dished her tripe, which she covered up with a
basin, and set within the fender, while she went out



JESSIE’S ACQUAINTANCE MADE. 55

for ale in a small jug. When she returned, and
showed what her errand had been, the youth started
up, exclaiming against his own forgetfulness, and
took from the pocket of his great-coat, which he
had laid upon the floor, two bottles of wine, which
he said he had brought for them, and which he
believed would prove good. The old and the young
lady both expressed surprise, and then they all
three sat down to supper with the most apparent
cordiality. The old woman’s tripe was excellent,
and well cooked, and Williams's wine was as good
as need be drunk; but here, before it could be
drunk, there occurred a little difficulty. The wine-
glasses of the patten-maker’s wife were locked up
in a corner-cupboard of this room ; she would not
entrust her keys to her lodgers, nor would they
admit her into the room, lest she should recognise
Mr. Osborne’s apprentice, whom she well knew, in
the young visitor who usually came in so muffled
up and disguised that he passed for one of the
players themselves. Two little china cups, there-
fore, that stoodé on the mantel-piece as ornaments,
were substituted instead ; the old woman having one
to herself, and Jessie and her lover—for lover he was
—the other between them. After supper, which
all three had seemed greatly to enjoy, the old
woman swept up the hearth, cleared away the
supper-things, and sticking the corks into the
bottles, lest, as she said, such good wine should
spoil, seated herself in a low-armed chair, and,
throwing her apron over her face, lay back as if to
sleep ; whilst Jessie and the young man resumed
their seats on the sofa, and shortly afterwards fell
into deep conversation.



56 JESSIES ACQUAINTANCE MADE,

“ And must I tell yon all?” asked she.

“ All, every incident from your earliest memory,”
returned he, passionately. ‘‘ Whatever concerns
you, interests me.”

Jessie heaved a deep sigh, and was silent for s
few moments.

“J have heard her say,” at length she began,
looking towards the old woman in the chair opposite,
“that my mother was the most beautiful of women,
and perhaps, also, the most unfortunate. She was
the daughter of a village schoolmaster, a man pos-
sessed of some little property ; and she,” said she,
again indicating the old woman opposite, “ was, I
fancy, his wife, and consequently is my grand-
mother; but that she never will confess, although
I have besought her on my knees. My mother was
loved, or rather courted, by a rich gentleman. She
loved him—oh, too well: he deserted her, and
her father, who was a very severe, although in
his way a very religious man, never would forgive
her error. He turned her, one wild autumn night,
out of doors. It thundered and lightened, and
was a night on which to lose one’s senses, or else
to do some horrid deed. Her mother prayed the
father to relent, and to open the door; for she
stayed wandering about the house till long after
midnight, begging and praying that he would not
be so hard-hearted and so cruel—but it was all in
vain! He was one of those men who think
that it was the woman only who fell; he thought
that the man was a superior being, whose place
in creation was to domineer over woman, and
punish her, and subject her as much as he could.
It was a sort of virtue in his eyes, and so he



JESSIN'S ACQUAINTANCE MADR. 57

heither would listen to the prayers of his wife nor
daughter.”

“ What a monster he was!” exclaimed Williams,
in a very audible voice.

The old woman put her apron from her head, and
said sharply to him, “ It is fine talking, young man !
but you are all tyrants by nature—every one of you
——for al) you look so mild and gentle ! Every one
of you!” added she, again throwing her apron over
her head,

“I thought that she was deaf!” exclaimed Wil-
liams, amazed, and almost terrified. |

“And so she is,” returned Jessie, “ but you are
so violent.”

“ Well, go on,” said he ; “your story affects me.”

“* My grandfather,” continued she, “ would not go
to bed till long after my mother’s voice had ceased
outside, and then he took the key of the house-door
and put it under his pillow, to prevent his wife going
out. She was very much afraid of her husband, so
she waited till she heard him snoring in bed, and
then she got out at the kitchen-window; but no-
where could she find her daughter. She wandered
about all day, and went into the neighbours’ barns,
and up and down the river-side; but she found
no traces, nor had anybody in the village seen
her. Towards evening, however, she met a wagoner
coming with his team towards the village, who had
been out with barley to a neighbouring town; and
from him she learnt that, about three o'clock in the
morning, he had overtaken a young woman, who was
walking alone on-the road, and who seemed very
much distressed. She begged him, he said, to give
her a lift in his wagon, which he did ; he had also



58 YESSIE'S ACQUAINTANCE MADE

given her part of the refreshment which he had
with him for himself, and had spoken a good word
for her to the woman of the house where he put
up; but that, after she left his wagon, which was
at the town’s end, he had seen no more of her, nor
could he tell what it was her intention to do, or
where to go. My grandmother was so affected by
this mark of kindness, especially, as she said, in a
man, that she thought within herself, what could
she give him in return. She felt in her pocket, but
money she had none, excepting a crooked Queen
Anne’s sixpence with a hole through it, which she
had kept many years. This she gave to him, and
begged of him to keep for her sake; and for her
sake, also, to be kind to poor women whenever he
met with them, and to take her blessing for the
kindness he had shown her daughter. Instead of
going home, she at once turned herself round, and
walked through the night back to the town, where
she arrived at daybreak. The woman of the
public-house could give no information respecting
her daughter, so at night she set off home again.”
“‘She spent that day, and the next, and the next
after that,” said the old woman rapidly, interrupting
her, and throwing the apron from her face, and
sitting up in the chair; “three whole days she
spent in searching for her daughter! It was a
large town, and a wicked town, and nothing but sin,
and misery, and sorrow, did she meet with every-
where, wherever she sought for her poor outcast!
But she did not find her! Many a fair young
creature she saw, as desolate as her own child; but
her own child she found not, and, with a bleeding,
' downcast heart, and a weary body, she retraced her



JESSIE'S ACQUAINTANCE MADP. 59

steps homeward. Her husband, as she came back,
sat among the little boys in the school just as if
nothing had happened, and heard them read about
Mary Magdalene, in the Bible, that our Lord ‘and
Saviour Jesus Christ himself had mercy on, yet he
never had pity on his own flesh and blood! If I
were to tell you,” continued she, “of the tears,
and the heart-aches, and the prayers of that mother,
all in secret between her Maker and herself, you,
that are young, would maybe not believe me, so I
pass them all over. In a winter or two afterwards,
her husband got a rheumatic fever, and she then
had to wait on him night and day: he was as help-
less as a child, and was cross, and out of humour
with her, and with himself, too. She had a weary
life of it. The parson came to see him, and
preachers of all sorts, from far and near; for he
was reckoned a religious man; and being parish
schoolmaster, and a man of property besides, folks
thought much of him, and his wife got them to talk
to him of his daughter, now that he was sick and
helpless, and turn his heart towards her, if they
could. But he was as hard as iron, and he would
not even have her mentioned in his prayers. Well,
it pleased God to afflict him it many ways, and he
had fits and spasms, and was speechless for months.

“** Stephen,’ said his wife to him, one night,
‘God is punishing you for your hardness to poor
Mary. You deserve it! and I hope he will never
take his hand off you till you’ve forgiven her, and
acted as a Christian should do !’

“< He had not spoken for months and months, and
you may think what was her surprise when he lifts
himself slowly up in bed, and fixing his hollow



60 JESSIES ACQUAINTANCE MADE.

eyes on her, says, ‘ He has punished me—punished
me severely. I forgive her, and may God Almighty
forgive us both!’ With these words he dropped
back on the pillow, and his poor wife was so over-
come by what she heard, all so unexpectedly, that
she sank down as if she had been smitten, and when
she had strength to rise again—he wasa corpse! A
bitter feeling now came over her towards herself:
she had been angry with him—she had done her
duty to him only as duty, not as love. What would
she not have given then for one week, one hour, of
his past life! Ah, children, children!” said she,
addressing the two before her, “‘ never grieve those
you love; never lose an opportunity of doing a
kindness to those you love; never give way to
bitterness and hardness, else you will lay up a
punishment for yourselves which will pursue you as
with a whip of scorpions !”

A silence of a few minutes ensued. Jessie had
thrown herself back in a corner of the sofa, and
Williams sat staring at the old woman, who now,
as if with all her faculties awake, continued :—

“Some indistinct rumour reached the mother,
some time after her husband’s death, that her
daughter was in London; so she turned all the
little property that was left into money, and to
London she went. She went to London to find her
daughter. And how was her daughter to be found
among the thousands of other women’s daughters,
that were outcasts in society—-women with beauty,
talents, affections, all trampled under foot, viler than
the very mud of the streets! She went out on
the evenings of summer days, when the birds of
’ heaven were singing, and the dew lay as pure as



JESSIE'S ACQUAINTANCE MADE. 61

angels’ thoughts on the grassy fields; and what did
she meet? Women that the rich and pampered
daughters of untempted virtue loathed ; but she met
not with her daughter. She went out on cold, deso-
late, pinching nights of winter, when happy fami-
lies sat round happy hearths—fathers, and mothers,
and little children, and blessed God that they lived
in a Christian land, where all misery was cared for ;
and what did she still meet? Poor, unfortunate
women again—creatures that God had made a little
lower than the angels; for what? To be the prey
of the vilest passions of man; to be despised,
scorned, pointed at, trampled on; to be miserable
and outcast! These she saw, winter and summer,
alike ; these, beauty and misery, going hand-in-hand
down to the pit! Yes, young man,” said she, lifting
up an admonitory finger, “such as you it is that do
this work of death and the devil! and think not
that you shall come here, paying your flattering,
false attentions to that old woman’s grand-daughter
unwatched and unprevented !”

“Upon my soul,” said the young man, quite
taken by surprise, “I am sincere as the very sun
in heaven! Only, you see, as yet, I am in tram-
mels; I am not my own master.” ,

* Enough ! enough!” said the old woman. “ But
I have not yet done. You asked for Jessie's history,
and we are not yet come to it. I had been out
one night to get a bit of butcher’s-meat ; I had not
had a bit for months, and somehow or other the
fancy took me to have a bit; so I went out that
Saturday night, and had not gone far, before I was
stopped by a crowd at the door of a house,.where
they said that a man was ill-using a woman. ‘It’s

e |



62 JESSIES ACQUAINTANCE MADE.

only his wife!’ said somebody near me ; just as if
he had said, it’s only his dog. These were things
that I felt in my very soul; so I rushed into the
house, just as the brutal husband, mad with liquor
and cruelty, and with blood upon his clothes, threw
himself out of the door into the middle of the crowd,
which, ‘spite of the attempts to seize upon him, he
struck off right and left, and made his escape. A
crowd of people beside me had rushed into the
house, and up-stairs where the woman was, whose
blood we met, trickling down-stairs, before we
reached the top. She was bleeding from face, and
neck, and arms, where she had many great gashes.
She looked as if she were already dead, and a little
child, not six months old, lay crying on the miser-
able bed beside her. The sight of the woman
caused a cry of indignation and horror in the people,
and half of them turned back to overtake and secure
the man whom they now regarded as a murderer.
From a feeling of pity which wrung my very heart,
I took up the child in my arms; it looked into my
face, and smiled! It was she!” said the old woman,
pointing to Jessie, who now, pale and excited, was
weeping again. |
“They took the woman to the hospital,” con-
tinued she. ‘“ She was one of a travelling company
of comedians and horse-riders; her husband and
she acted the principal parts: she had been, and
still was, very beautiful. She was the school-
master's daughter—the daughter of that mother
who had sought her so long and so wearily! She
did not die. There were two children: the infant,
and agirl of seven years old, a young creature that
played night after night, and was the great attrac-



JESSIE'S ACQUAINTANCE MADR. 63

tion of the company. She was ill, and’it had been
about her acting that the parents had quarrelled
that night. She was a wonderful child. Oh, why
are such gifts as hers given, when they can lead but
to misery and ruin! The little Fanny danced on
the tight-rope night after night, and performed the
most wonderful feats of horsemanship as the Flying
Circassian; and acted and sung to the delight of
crowds of thoughtless, admiring people. She played,
and danced, and rode, and grew weaker and weaker
day by day; but there was no pity either for her
or the infant, which, as soon as it could walk, was
made to ride and dance, and which promised to be
as great a prodigy as her sister. When the mother
was dead, I joined myself to the company. The
father hated me, but he could not get rid of me.
I stayed, because there was no law to take them
forcibly from the father. After I had been with
the company some years, things mended. All were
not as bad as he; poor they all were, buts many of
them had kind hearts, and there were those with us
who would take our parts; and besides, as Fanny's
health mended under my care, the father no longer
tried to make my life intolerable ; besides which, a
cold which I took made me deaf, so that I could not
hear him. He married again, and then I took the
children to myself; the travelling life was not un-
pleasant to me, and Fanny was a very angel.”

‘And where is Fanny?” asked Williams. The
old woman made no reply.

Jessie took the handkerchief from her face, and
laying her hand on his arm, said solemnly, “ Fanny
is dead!”

He looked shocked, and she continued, “Had



64 JESSIE'S. ACQUAINTANCE MADE.

you known Fanny, you would never have loved
me. I am no more to be compared to her, than
the moon to the sun. She was nineteen when she
died ; I was then twelve. She,” said she, pointing
to the old woman, “had much more reason to love
Fanny than me. She was much handsomer than
me, and was so witty and merry! Ill as she was,
it never cast her down; and her laugh! Oh, I
remember it now! I never heard a laugh like it—
80 sweet, so joyous, so musical! My father used to
say that her laugh would make her fortune; but
she took cold one night at the theatre, and in three
days she died! They think of making another
Fanny of me,” said she; “ but it will not do. My
father is disappointed in me. I am not as brilliant
as my sister. My life is not happy—not at all
happy,” said she, clasping her hands, and bursting
into a passion of tears.

“Adorable girl!” said Williams, quite beside
himself with love and pity, and throwing himself
on one knee before her. ‘“ My whole life shall be
devoted to making your life happy !”

The fair Jessie bowed her face, and wept upon
his shoulder,

“ Hey-day !” said the old woman, starting up from
her chair, “ what nonsense is all this! I know what
it means when men talk of life-long devotion, And
what are you, young man? Can you rescue her
from the life of misery that lies before her ?”

““T am one who love her better than life,” said
Williams, starting to his feet, and facing the old
woman with quite a theatrical air. ‘I love her,
and, were I but free, I would marry her to-morrow.”

“Fine talking!” said the old woman, with a



JESSIE’S ACQUAINTANCE MADRE. 65

sneer; “if I were but free! that is always the
way! If I were but free, indeed! Why, when
you are free, your mind will have changed. Then,
then! ah, I know you men! You are a pack of
designing, selfish knaves, and I’ll have none of you!
I'll take care of Jessie Bannerman, if she cannot
take care of herself; and so you had better take
your leave, for the decent people at your house
must have been in bed these two or three hours.”

“ By Jove, and so they will!” exclaimed Wil-
liams, looking at his watch, and horrified to see that
it was past two o'clock.

“YT shall never get in to-night,” said he, almost
dolefully. “ For Heaven’s sake let me sleep where
Iam. I will lie on the sofa, or anywhere, and
early in the morning 1 will be gone.” |

The old woman was again deaf; and it was only
by his forcibly taking possession of the sofa, that she
seemed to understand him. Jessie laughed as merrily
and as musically, Williams thought, as Fanny could
have done, and applauded the idea. But the old
woman was inexorable, and turned him literally out
of doors. :

Well was it for him that, in that quiet town,
every soul, excepting the watchman, was in bed.
The night was fine and starlight, and avoiding the
watchman, who made himself perceptible by his
cry, he walked through the town right into the
country, which was not inconvenient to him, as he
had excused his yesterday's absence on the plea of
spending the afternoon with some friends in the
country ; and the next morning he entered Mr. Os-
borne’s parlour just as they were about to sit down to
breakfast, nobody suspecting one word of the real truth.

G2



66 A SPOKE IN THE‘WHEEL-

CHAPTER V.
A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL,

My readers may imagine how confusing must
have been all the inquiries which assailed the young
man from Mrs. Osborne during breakfast. “ Well,
and how were the Yates’s? Is he better? and is
John come from Birmingham? And what news
have they from Mrs. Benjamin? Are the children
better? And has Jenny had the measles ?”

Williams was not a young man to be easily dumb-
foundered ; his replies really were all so straight-
forward, that nobody could have had the slightest
suspicion of all not being quite straightforward re-
garding them. ll this, however, was nothing to
the difficulty he found after breakfast, when he was
told to assist in the putting up of a large order for a
country-shop. What room had he in his mind for
6 lbs. of yellow ochre, and 2 lbs. of camomile flowers,
and glue, and lamp-black, and syrup of squills, and
opium ?

“ What, are not those things put up yet?” asked
Mr. Osborne, looking down into the lower ware-
house, as he saw Williams by lamplight, towards
dinner-time, weighing out whitening, which he knew
came fourth in a list of seven-and-twenty articles.
No, indeed! they were not put up. Williams had
thought of nothing all the morning but the fair Jessie,
and her sad family history, and her deaf old grand-
mother, who, after all, was not deaf. He went over
the history, incident by incident, and asked himself
many questions. Who, then, was Jessie's father ?
Was it that Mr. Maxwell, the manager, with whom



A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL 67

she had said that the old woman often quarrelled? —
and if so, why was she called Bannerman? Was
that her mother’s name? and if so, why, then, was
the old woman called Bellamy? He could not
understand these things. One thing, however, he
could very well understand, and that was, that he
was desperately in love ; should never love anybody
else as long as he lived; and if he were but out of
his time would marry her instantly, even if he had
to starve all the rest of his life for it.

What an awkward thing it is for a young man
violently in love, and a little headstrong into the
bargain, not to be out of his time—not to be at
liberty to do just as he likes! He grew quite
desperate there, down among the whitening casks
and the hogsheads of oil and vinegar. He remem-
bered her tears, and that she had declared herself to
be unhappy; and that she had to display all her
charms and her powers of pleasing every night to
worthless crowds, whilst he was dying but for one
glance of hers. And then, how did he know but
that some young fellow who was “ out of his time,”
and his own master, might not fall in love with her,
and carry her off at once! What so likely? He
then laid a thousand impossible plans, which at the
moment he vowed to execute. He would join the
company, and travel with her. He would run off
with her, and get married; his uncle and aunt
would be angry, he knew, but in the end they
would forgive him. Jessie should throw herself at
their feet; they could never withstand her beauty
and her tears. In the midst of this scene he was
woke to reality and a dinner of boiled beef and
turnips. Poor Williams! he had no appetite, and



6% A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL.

he looked as woe-begone as it was possible for any
young apprentice to look who was over head and
ears in love. He was not well, he said ; he was, to
use the words of a country swain in love, “ hot and
dry, like, with a pain in his side, like ;” and he pre-
scribed for himself a walk in the fresh air, which
Mr. Osborne freely permitted to him, deputing
Reynolds to finish his work below.

Williams dressed himself with great care, and putting
on his great-coat, made the best of his way to the
clog and patten-maker’s, not failing to sec, as he
passed along the streets, on every blank wall and
every projecting house-corner, the name of his fair
one in the play-bills for the night, “‘ To be performed
this evening, the Fair Quaker of Deal, the part of
the Fair Quaker, by Miss Jessie Bannerman.” Jessie
was the attraction of the company—the whole town
acknowledged it. The sight of her name added to
his impatience ; he reached the house, and thinking
neither of the patten-maker nor his wife, rushed
through the kitchen, where they sat at tea, without
any precaution of concealment, and knocking hur-
riedly at the parlour-door, entered without waiting
for permission from within.

“ Why, that’s Osborne’s smart apprentice, for
sure,” exclaimed the patten-maker’s wife ; “so, he 8
smitten, is he, with that young player-wench ¢”

“Why, how many young chaps are there after
her?” asked her husband.

“ Half-a-score,” said the wife, “at least ;” and
began counting them on her fingers.

Williams's entrance produced quite a sensation
among the three persons in the room. The old
woman, who sat with her spectacles on, sewing



A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL. 69

white muslin cuffs into the slate-coloured stuff gown
which was evidently to be the dress of the Fair
Quaker of Deal, knocked down an old pasteboard
box which held her store of sewing materials. Jessie,
who stood en déshabillé, as yesterday, with her little
Quaker’s cap in her hand, turned first red and then
pale at the sight of him; and a tall young man, of
perhaps two-and-twenty, who was at that moment
presenting her with a bouquet of splendid green-
house’ flowers, started back a step or two, as if a
snake had stung him, and then stood, with the flowers
in his hand, and a look of defiance in his eye, at the
unexpected rival, whom the lady might be supposed
to favour from her changing colour. A glance told
all this ; and Williams, on his part, looked as much
taken by surprise as any of them. Here had he
flown on the wings of love and impatience only to
find a rival—a favoured rival his jealousy whispered,
and that in the handsome person of Tom Bassett, a
young man of family—an articled clerk of the first
lawyer in the place ;—he was in love with her foo—
it was death and destruction !

“Shall you see me to-night as the Fair Quaker ?”
asked Jessie, with one of her sweetest smiles.

‘“‘ Most certainly I shall,” said Williams, who, in
the face of his rival, felt that it must be so.

She showed him the cap, and pointed to the dress
which the old woman was engaged upon for the
character ; and while he turned to speak to the old
woman, who seemed now deafer than ever, Tom
Bassett again presented his flowers, which were
graciously accepted. Williams did not wait for the
old woman’s answer, but was, the same moment,
at Jessie’s side again, looking daggers at the free-and-



70 A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL.

easy young lawyer. With the air of a queen, Jessie
motioned the two to be seated. Bassett laughed
and talked with the most provoking ease and con-
fidence. In his eyes, evidently, Williams was a
rival not worth noticing. Jessie laughed at his jokes,
and seemed not to trouble herself about the other.
It was mortifying, it was provoking, it was enough
to make a saint swear, thought Williams. “ Here I
sit,” thought he to himself, “like a fool, without
a word to say for myself! ” If he were to speak, he
knew that his voice would betray his feelings—he
wished his rival at the devil. We beg our readers’
pardon, but it is truth; he did so, and he wished
more than that—that he could challenge him, and
put a bullet through his body. It was a ‘most
uncomfortable time to him. He called Bassett an
ass—a stupid, conceited ass—in his own mind ; and
perhaps he might have been excited to call him so to
his face, if the old woman, who had finished her
work, had not got up, and shaking out the gown,
said it was now ready, and as it was five o'clock, the
gentlemen had better both take their departure.
** Did they hear?” she repeated, as if she thought
them as deaf as herself.

They both rose, and Jessie offering a hand to each
at the same moment, curtseyed them a graceful
adieu.

‘“* I must say a word to you,” whispered Williams,
as Bassett left the room.

*“ To-night, after the play. I do not act in the
after-piece,” said she, hurriedly, and closed the door
upon him. But that was enough; he wanted no
more ; he felt as if wings had at once sprung from his
shoulders. |



A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL. 71

The patten-maker sold tickets for the play, and
the words that he heard after the parlour-door had
shut were, “ten box-tickets for to-night.”

The patten-maker counted out the tickets, and
Bassett, who had drawn forth a handsome scarlet
purse with gold rings from his pocket, laid down
a guinea, and without waiting for the change,
drew on his gloves, and pocketed his purse and the
tickets.

“Ten box-tickets,” said Williams to the patten- ©
maker, who looked as if he had expected it; and
thinking of a bootmaker’s bill, for the payment of
which he had received money from his aunt, drew
forth a very modest little brown purse, which Miss
Dorothy Kendrick had netted for him, and paid for
his tickets with a half-guinea, a half-crown, five
shillings, and four sixpences ; the coin looked quite
_ beggarly, and the purse was left so empty that the
rings slid off as he put it again into his pocket. But
he was not going to trouble himself Just then on that
subject. Tom Bassett also stood on the door-step as
he went out, and drawing forth an eye-glass, con-
temptuously surveyed him from head to foot. Eye-
glasses, in those days, were not as common as now ;
and Williams, though he felt stung, as it were, from
head to heel, hummed, with a gallant, careless toss of
the head, one of Jessie’s favourite airs; and recollect
ing how inconvenient any public quarrel would be,
or, in fact, any quarrel at all, as it would bring more
than he liked to the knowledge of his uncle, turned
upon his heel and walked down the street.

Now came the consideration respecting the ten
tickets, and he almost thought himself a fool for
having bought more than one for himself, What



72 A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL.

was he now to do with them? He walked across
the fields towards the Dove-Bridge, and came to the
very wise conclusion, that two of them he would
keep, and the other eight, wrapping neatly in paper,
he would drop, on his return, in the market-place,
where they would be sure to be found. As to the
two that he retained, he would boldly confess the
having purchased them, and ask permission for
Reynolds and himself to go to the theatre that night.
He did as he had resolved; and, after just about
as much reproof as he expected from Mr. and Mrs.
Osborne, tea was hastened, and, grateful to his com-
panion for having obtained for him this unexpected
pleasure, Reynolds ran up-stairs to prepare his
toilet.

The little theatre was crowded, and the fair Jessie
was received most enthusiastically. Williams thought
her lovelier than ever in her quiet Quaker costume. ©
“All the town is in love with her,” said he to his
companion ; “and is she not an angel ?”

It was quite a brilliant night. The very gentry of
the town were there ; and there, seated between the
two daughters of the lawyer, sat Tom Bassett.
Williams was delighted, for with these two young
ladies he was quite secure for the night.

“ And now, my dear, good fellow,” whispered
Williams to his companion, just before the curtain
fell, “ you must stand my friend. You will ; promise
me you will!” said he, laying his hand on his arm,
and: looking quite agitated. “J am in love with
Miss Bannerman; she knows it; she loves me, too,
and has promised me a little interview this evening.
She is a very angel : she is a good girl, I assure you :
I love her as my life, and I am sure you will be my



A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL. 73

friend. She does not act again to-night,” continagl
he, rapidly, and not allowing Reynolds time to speak,
“but you will stay the after-piece—it is the most
amusing thing in the world ; and if Iam not at home
by the time you are, don’t let anybody miss me—
and I ‘ll do as much for you any time!”

*“‘ But, Williams,” began he. Williams, however,
did not wait to hear. The curtain fell, and he was
ZOLe.

He knew perfectly the back-entrance by which
Jessie would leave the theatre ; and there, at the very
moment of time, stood she, wrapped in a cloak, and
attended by the old woman with a lighted lantern.
‘Spite of the lawyer's daughters, there also was
Bassett, making a thousand protestations of regret
and chagrin at not being able to accompany her.

“She wants no escort,” said Williams, rendered
bold by his good fortune ; “‘T shall have that hap-
piness,” and taking J eeaic’s little hand, which he
drew within his arm, he walked off triumphantly.

“ The jackanapes! the conceited jackanapes !”
exclaimed Bassett ; but not imagining for a moment
that Jessie would give a druggist’s apprentice the pre~-
ference over him, he went back to the theatre laughing
to himself at the youth’s “ ignorant conceit.”

Williams walked off triumphantly with Jessie on
his arm, and the little old woman trudged beside them
with her lantern ; but scarcely had they gone ten
yards when they were stopped by a man who puf a
small paper into their hands.

What had they here? They stopped; and, by
the light of the lantern, read the words, printed
in great, black, awful-looking letters, ‘°° Tue Doorr
or Tar Piay-House Leap To Hei!”

i



74 A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL.

It’s the parson’s doing!” said Williams, shocked

* at what he had read aloud, and, crumpling it in his
hand, threw it from him. ‘“ He is a narrow-souled,
bigoted, methodistical fellow, who sets his face
against every kind of pleasure! It is just like him!”
This little incident, however, seemed to throw no
gloom on him, after the first moment; so, leaving
them to their full enjoyment, we will return to Rey-
nolds, who was thrown, by his companion’s sudden
desertion, into a state of the most complete perplexity.
Reynolds was a good-hearted fellow; he always
looked upon Williams as much older in worldly
experience than he was; he, himself, was a child in
comparison of him, a mere apprentice; whilst the
other had been, as it were, “out of his time” this many
and many aday. He had long known that Williams
would never exeel in his business ; he had neglected
the study of every branch of it ever since the first
glow of novelty was worn off. He was frank in his
confession about it; he hated business, and would
never do any more than he was obliged; yet the
impulses of his nature were often good and kind; he
knew his own weaknesses and acknowledged them,
and was quite willing that Reynolds should stand
a long way before him in the good opinion of Mr.
Isaacs. Reynolds really liked him, and had so con-
stantly and for so long done his work, and hidden
all his misdemeanors, and made up for his short-
comings, that Williams had the fullest confidence
that he would befriend him also in this instance.
Betray him he never would; and he would smuggle
him, safely and unseen, into the house, if he sate up
the whole night for it. Yes; that was all true. But
for all that, Reynolds was not at all pleased with the



A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL. 765

position he was now placed in. This, then, was
what he had been brought for; he had been made
a cat’s-paw of, and he felt vexed ; besides this, he
was very honourable and religious in his principles
and notions; and the hurried and candid confession
of his companion had utterly shocked and confounded
him. For his part, he would as soon have thought
of falling in love with his grandmother as with a
player—for so he called her, not “actress,” as
Williams did, let her be as beautiful as she might :
and then to make appointments with her at night ;—
there was something quite frightful to him in it.
And all at once the whole scene before him lost its
attraction. It was a wicked place! that which they
had just seen performed was low and disgusting—a
burlesque, a coarse caricature! He was offended
—ashamed—angry with himself @r having been
amused ;—and now this “ after-piece” was worse
and worse—there was not even the beauty of Jessie
Bannerman to set it off ; the women were painted,
gaudy creatures ; the men fit associates for them.

It was in this spirit that Reynolds sat out the
*‘ after-piece.”

When the company dispersed from the theatre,
there was not one man but three who distributed their
little printed papers. Everybody had one, some two
or three ; and everybody, on reading them, exclaimed
—“ This is Mr. Goodman’s doing ;” or “ This is the
parson’s doing ;” or “ We shall have a sermon against
the players on Sunday.” |

And all these exclamations were right. There
was a sermon against them on Sunday, and a severe
one, too; and not alone against players and play-
houses, but against all playgoers, also. But before



76 A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL.

Sunday, the clergyman, who was one of the best of
men, although one of the most rigid, called on the
Osbornes, as he had been doing for some days on his
delinquent flock, to remonstrate with so respectable a
man, and so good a church-goer as Mr. Osborne, on
allowing his apprentices to frequent places of such
awful wickedness as theatres !

Williams was faint with apprehension lest the
clergyman knew also of his passion and his acquaint-
ance with the fair Jessie ; the patten-maker and his
wife knew of it; Tom Bassett knew of it; oh, it
must come out! He felt quite ill, and went into
the upper warehouse, looking like anything but a
bold lover, where he sat down on a resin-tub,
waiting for the judgment which he feared might be
at hand.

Mr. Oshorne @as a very good, kind-hearted man,
good to the poor, and charitable in the gospel-sense
of the word to all mankind. He thought players
bad, low people ; but, for his part, he saw no use in
commencing a crusade against them. We should
never exterminate them, they would exist ‘spite of
us; and people, he said, would go to theatres to be
amused. People must be amused ; he saw no harm
in it at all. He had had some thoughts, he said, of
going himself ; and as to his apprentices—why, if his
young men were good and steady, and attended to
their business, he thought it only right now and then
to give them a bit of pleasure. He had always done
so; he had been forty years in business; had had
about seven-and-twenty apprentices, all of whom,
for what he knew, had turned out well. He thought
that was a proof that his system was not a very bad
one ; and with all respect for the clergyman, whom



A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL. 77

nobody respected more than he did, he must still be
allowed to pursue his own course.

The clergyman used his strongest arguments; he
knew nothing as yet of Williams’s affairs, or he
would have had a famous argument in his hand; but
still Mr. Osborne adhered to the very last to his own
opinions—perhaps even went a little beyond them in
opposition to what seemed the ultra opinions of the
other.

All this went on in the parlour, and Mr. Isaacs
and a customer, who was of the clergyman’s way of
thinking, discussed the subject in the shop, whilst
Reynolds went on with his weighing and labelling
and pill-making, and thinking that they were right,
every word they said. He did believe all players,
men, women, and children, to be a wicked, low,
dissolute, unprincipled set of peopl and it was not
his intention ever to go near them again.

Next morning, before church, came Miss Joanna
Kendrick to beg that her nephew might go to
church. She was warmer even than the clergyman
had been, and really censured Mr. Osborne for letting
his young men go to the play-house. If she had
been asked, she said, she should have prevented it,
at least as far as her nephew was concerned. Mr.
Osborne could do just as he liked with regard to the
other.

Mr. Osborne felt quite vexed—for the first time in
his life vexed with Miss Kendrick. He repeated to
her what he had said to the clergyman about his
forty years experience in business and the manage-
ment of apprentices ; but it was quite in another tone
of voice, and Miss Kendrick was hurt. She replied
warmly, and so did he; and really these two excel-

H 2



78 A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL.

lent people might have quite come to a quarrel had
not a note at that moment, from a physician, required
Mr. Osborne’s particular attention.

This note was an awkward affair, indeed ; such a
thing as this had never occurred befiep i in the whole
forty years of Mr. Osborne’s practice. He started
up, and, with the note in his hand, went into the
back-room, which was appropriated to Mr. Isaacs
and the young men.

‘“‘ Who made up that prescription of Dr. Chawner’s,
yesterday 2?” asked he.

Mr. Isaacs considered for a moment, and then

replied that Williams had done it.

Williams was sitting there reading a volume of
Massinger’s plays, which he had borrowed from
Anderson, one of the actors; he started, and looked
frightened. “ Wily, what of the prescription ? ” he
asked.

“Did you make that up yesterday?” asked
Mr. Osborne, in an angry tone.

“T did, sir,” he returned, submissively.

* And how came you, then, to put in 40 drops
tinctura opii and 6 tinctura scille, instead of 6 drops
tinctura opii and 40 tinctura scille ?”

Williams could not tell, unless he had mistaken it.

Mr. Osborne swore—yes, actually on a Sunday
morning. Williams’s answer had provoked him to
it. ‘* Mistaken a physician’s prescription! What
the deuce did he mean by mistaking a physician's
prescription, or anything else! He would he poison-
ing people some of these days; what had he learnt
his business for,” &c., &c.

Never had Mr. Osborne, in all his forty years’
practice, been so angry as then. It was the first



DEEPER AND DEEPER. 7

time in his life that ever a mistake had been made at
his counter in a physician's prescription.

Williams knew well enough the cause of his
blunder—he krew where his thoughts had ‘been
when he made up the prescription. He had not a
word to say for himself.

Mr. Isaacs, almost as vexed as Mr. Osborne, made
up the prescription, vowing with himself that he
never would put another into Williams's hands.
Mr. Osborne wrote the best apology he could to the
physician, and Williams sat all the morning reading
Massinger's plays.



CHAPTER VI.
DEEPER AND DEEPER.

Tue whole town talked of nothing but the players.
One half the inhabitants sided with the clergyman,
the other half with Mr. Maxwell’s company. The
theatrical party was headed by the family of the
lawyer with whom was Tom Bassett; and this same
lawyer not only bespoke a play, but talked of giving
a supper to the principal performers.

_ The lawyer's daughters thought of nothing but
private theatricals ; and Tom Bassett, who was hand
and glove with half the theatrical staff, as well as
desperately in love with the prima donna, borrowed
the actors’ own copies of plays, and was au fait in
all that appertained to theatrical life.

On the other hand, among the persons most active
on the side of the clergyman, were the good Miss
Kendricks. It was as good as a sermon to hear
Miss Joanna talk ; she really was more effective than



80 DEEPER AND DEEPER.

the clergyman, because she was less violent. He
talked of the theatre as the “ devil’s house,” called
theatricals the “‘ work of hell,” and denounced all
such as, after thus being warned, wilfully aided and
abetted them, “as heirs of damnation.” It was quite
awful to hear him talk. Miss Joanna, on the
contrary, spoke in love and tenderness, pitied the
“poor, benighted creatures,” the players; who, she
said, were more to be lamented over than pagan
Hottentots, and she besought people, for the love of
their own souls, not to give them encouragement ; nor
would she at all go the length that the clergyman
did, in saying that it would be a good thing if every
copy of Shakspeare had been burned publicly by the
hand of the hangman. No, Miss Joanna, in all her
zeal, talked like a tender-hearted Christian, and
people listened toher. But, spite of all that she said,
and spite of all the clergyman thundered forth, the
little theatre was crowded night after night.

Mr. Maxwell, the red-faced manager, said that he
liked nothing so well as the opposition of a parson ;
it always did the house good, and he did not know
whether he should not introduce Mr. Goodman some
night on the stage.

All this time the rivalry between Tom Bassett and
our apprentice went on as hotly as ever. Each
thought himself the favoured lover, yet still each
hated and feared the other. Between these two
young men, however, there was one great difference.
Bassett had plenty of money, Williams had none.
All that he had of his own had long been gone; the
pound that had been given to him by his aunt to pay
the poor bootmaker had been spent in tickets, as we
know. He had borrowed since then every farthing



DEEPER AND DEEPER. 8T

of money from Reynolds, and which, being but a
scanty allowance, was always hoarded and husbanded
with the greatest economy. From Mr. Isaacs he
dared not borrow ; nor, just then, when the memory
of his blunder was fresh in his mind, durst he ask
money from his uncle. There was, however, the
cash in the shop-safe. His uncle placed the greatest
confidence in him as regarded money—a great deal
more than Mr. Isaacs had done for a long time.

“Shall I or shall I not ?” questioned he with him-
self. Oh, how bad it is when we begin to parley with
principle! |

“* No, I will not !” said he ; but he said it feebly,
as if he were not at all sure—as if he wanted, if he
could, to deceive himself into a notion of his own
virtue. “No, I will not!” said he, again and again
-—“ at least, not to-day!” he should have added, to
be quite honest to himself.

The next week was Christmas week, and it had
been long an understood thing that Williams was to
have a holiday on Christmas-day : he ventured to
mention it to Mr. Osborne, spite of the unpleasant
“memory of the prescription. He had heard, he said,
how beautiful the gardens at Alton ‘Towers looked in
the winter, with snow on the ground and hoar-frost
on the trees; he hoped he might be permitted to go
there on Christmas-day. ‘‘ He would be very indus-
trious,” he said, “in future ;” and being once on the
subject, he launched out freely. “He was so sorry,
so ashamed,” he said, “‘of the blunder he had made.
Mr. Osborne had touched him so by his patience
and forbearance.” Mr. Osborne, himself, thought
that he had not shown much; but so the young
man said— “and would he only grant him this



82 DEEPER AND DEEPER.

favour now, he would show how grateful he was.”
On Mr. Osborne — plain, honest, straight-forward
man as he was, and with every tendency to the in-
dulgence of his nephew,—all this made the very
impression which was desired. ‘Poor fellow,”
thought he, “he is so cut up about that blunder ;
he has never looked like himself since—seems all in
a tremble and a dream ; one must not be too severe
with him !”

“Yes, surely, he might go ;’ but Mr. Osborne
could not imagine how there would be any pleasure
in going alone—could not Reynolds, too, have a holi-
day? Williams, who did not by any means think
of taking a companion like Reynolds, reminded
Mr. Osborne that Mr. Isaacs went out on Christmas-
day, too, and Reynolds was to have his holiday on
Christmas-eve with his aunts.

Miss Kendricks had not been to the Osbornes’ since
the little rencontre on Sunday morning ; both they
and the Osbornes still let the little affair rankle in
their minds. It was that sort of quarrel which
sometimes the merest trifle occasions between friends,
and whether it shall be healed, or whether it shall
become a wide and lasting breach, depends upon one
or other of them on the first occasion of anxiety r
sorrow. As yet, however, that occasion had not
presented itself, and Reynolds went to spend Christ-
mas-eve with his aunts without being the bearer of
any message from Mrs, Osborne. Such a thing had
never happened before. The Osbornes, also, were
spending Christmas-eve out, and nobody was left at
home but Mr. Isaacs and Williams.

With Williams it seemed as if the crisis of his fate
were come; he had formed his own plans both for



DEEPER AND DEFPER. 83.

that evening and the morrow ; as far as regarded that
evening, he had formed them in counsel with himself
and in desperation, and to the stifling of the voice
of conscience within him. “But what must be,
must,” said he ; “go there with her I must and shall,
and to go I must have money.”

His plans were, therefore, formed. Reynolds was
out of the way ; his uncle was So, too; and he made
himself sedulously useful in the shop ; he made pills,
and mixed emulsions for coughs and sold boxes of
issue-plaisters, and moved here and there with such
alacrity as astonished and delighted poor Mr. Isaacs,
who was racked that evening with toothache.

“Go and sit down by the parlour-fire,” said
Williams, as the time for shutting up the shop
approached, “TI ’ll make up the books and see that
all is left straight, and you go and make yourself
comfortable.”

Mr. Isaacs, well pleased to leave his post at the
desk, where a draught of cold air came in keenly
against his ailing tooth, went into the back-parlour,
and Williams had the shop all to himself. The
. warehouse-boy put up the shutters, raked out the
fire, and was dismissed for the night. Williams
added up the day-book, counted the money in the
till, put three-and-sixpence in his pocket, and entered
the amount, minus this, in the day-ledger ; and then,
unlocking the shop-safe with a trembling hand,
looked this way and that, and thought if Isaacs should
come in, or if Mr. Osborne should be returning early
by some chance, and peep through a crack of the
shutters. Oh, that miserable if! But why was he
so fearful! Alas, because he intended to take money
as he had already done from the till.



84 DEKPER AND DEFPER.

Oncé or twice before, Mr. Isaacs had found some
deficiency ; Mr. Osborne had never even suspected it ;
he would as soon have thought of his wife robbing
him as Williams.

The money was taken and dropped into the waist-
coat pocket ; the safe was locked, and double-locked.
If he could have seen his own face at that moment
he would have started. But he did not ; and, rallying
himself, he put out the shop-lights, and went into
the back-parlour, where the candles were burning
dimly with long, unsnuffed wicks, for poor Mr. Isaacs
was gone to bed.

There was nobody in the room; it was almost a
shock to be thus thrown, as it were, upon himself and
his own conscience.

“ Suppose,” thought he to himself, “‘ that, after all,
I have only taken silver, two shillings and sixpence ;
should I then go back and change them, though I
know what a horror this stealing is? I wish one had
no need to do it!”

He put his hand into his pocket and drew the
money forth to the light. It was gold—two guineas
and a half. He felt glad that it was so. The
next moment Reynolds returned—the gay, laughing,
unanxious Reynolds—Williams envied him his light-
ness of heart.

The next morning the church-bells rang ; the sun
shone bright, and the slight covering of snow and
hoar-frost was like the festal garment of nature. The
houses were decked with holly and ivy, people were
moving briskly about—the whole town was merry ;
even the paupers in the parish workhouse arose that
morning with cheerful expectation, for that day they
were to have roast-beef and plum-pudding for dinner.



DEEPER AND DEEPER. 85

Many people hired horses and gigs that day and
drove out into the country, so that there was nothing
at all remarkable in the circumstance of old Evans
driving one of his miserable hacks, which, however,
was made to wear its best looks that day, in one of
his smartest gigs, along the high street and half-a-
mile beyond the end of the town. Of this nobody
took any notice, and it was so contrived, also, that
nobody saw Williams, whose great-coat collar stood
up above his ears, whilst his hat was slouched over
his eyes, assist into the said gig Miss Bannerman,
dressed in a dark blue cloak trimmed with fur, and
a black velvet bonnet, and then take his seat beside
her, and drive off briskly. On they drove, and pre-
sently overtook two other gigs, in which were seated
five members, male and female, of the theatrical
corps, who, like them, were going to spend the day
in the gardens of Alton Towers. But as with these
other five persons we have very little to do, we shall
drop them for the present, and confine ourselves to
our young couple, just as if they were quite alone.

Williams was enraptured with his fair companion.
She looked lovelier than ever in that black velvet
bonnet ; the walk in the clear winter air had brought
a colour to her cheek like that of the June rose. She
was, indeed, very lovely—but not with that vulgar
loveliness which alone consists of beauty of com-
plexion, hair as dark and glossy as “the raven’s
wing, and “ dark, blue eyes, as soft as those of the
dove.” These she had, it is true; but that which
constituted the real charm of her countenance was a
sentiment of tenderness, calm decision, and truth and
love. It was a face to fill with tears the eyes of any
beholder capable of eppreciating qualities such as

I



86 DEEPER AND DEEPER.

these, in a being exposed to every temptation which
can assail beauty and taint the delicacy of woman.
Jessie Bannerman, though a “ player-wench,” as half
the town called her, was an extraordinary girl. She
knew her own personal worth, and her own dignity
as a woman, and she made her lovers feel it, too. It
is impossible to say what was the peculiar charm
which attracted her towards Williams, but to him she
had really given her affections ;—this she had never
denied, she was really in earnest in her love ;—and
Williams was never with her without feeling, as it
were, under the influence of a superior nature. He
fancied that he adored her, that he would have laid
down his life for her: he bought the pleasure of
being in her company at the expense of his own
probity ; and yet he felt sure all the time that could
she have only known this she would have rejected
pleasure at such a cost.

Beautiful as were those magnificent gardens, which
are said to be laid out on the traditional plan of the
hanging gardens of Babylon, the lovers took but little
notice of them ; he was engrossed by her, and she by
her own thoughts. At length they reached a pavi-
lion, which, lying in the full sunshine, was warm
almost asin summer, Here they seated themselves,
and Jessie, turning to the young man, said—

“Now, we have had enough of flattery and non-
sense—we must talk seriously. You have talked
hitherto ; you must now listen to me. My unhappy
family history, which you have heard, can only give
you the idea of me as of a creature sprung of
wretchedness and crime, to whom God has given, for
some mysterious purpose, remarkable gifts—gifts
worse than useless if I am to become only the poor



DEEPER AND DEEPER. 87

degraded being which my present life may seem to
foretell. But, Edward,” said she, fixing her large,
calm eyes upon him, “it must not be so; our
destinies, after all, are, in great measure, in our own
hands; a spirit within tells me So, and that spirit
shall be my guide,

“I have many lovers, but how few there are who
would marry such a one as me. I speak plainly,
Edward, for one of us must do 80; and as I have go
much more experience in life than you, and under-
stand you better even than you understand yourself, I
speak to you openly. You talk of marriage : what
nonsense it is of you, who are as yet a boy, and do
not know even your own mind! J believe that you
love me ; but as yet you do not understand me per-
fectly, for you have seen only that which is idle and
trifling in. me; but indeed I am capable of much that
is good and ennobling and valuable in life.”

* Oh, Jessie,” said the young man impatiently, and
ready to throw himself at her feet, “let us unite our
fates at once. 1 know what you are—TI wish you
not other than you are—let me rescue you from a
fate which is unworthy of you! My aunt is good.
When she knows your excellence she will love you
as a daughter: they love me, but how much more
will they love you!”

** All nonsense,” returned Jessie ; “ you talk like
a child, as you are; you, that dare not even let
them know of our acquaintance, to talk thus! No,
no; we must have patience, and wait for the true
time. You must wait for me for five years.”

“TI will go with you,” interrupted Williams ;
“ what is all the world to me without you! I know
that I, too, have talents—I would be prompter



88 DEEPER AND DEEPER.

even, or candle-snuffer, or anything to be near
you!”

Jessie laughed and shook her head—“ That would
never do,” said she; “ that would not satisfy me.
My father,” she continued, ‘‘ blames me for want of
amuvition ; but he mistakes me: I am ambitious—
ambitious of the greatest good which life can give,
and that is real love and domestic happiness! Not
such love as we act night after night, poor, unreal
love, all tinsel and glitter ;—no, no, the love that I
mean is self-denying, long-suffering, unobtrusive, as
free to the poor as to the rich. Oh, Edward, I was
ill not long ago ; the company went on without me,
and I and my good grandmother—for such she is—
remained in the house of a poor tailor. Would you
believe it, but it was truly in that house, and with
those humble people, that I first learned what true
Jove was, and what was the real meaning and worth
of life. Happiness there was a substantial thing, not
dependent on wealth or the world’s favour, for of
these they had nothing ; not wavering or uncertain,
according to the whim of the moment, but as real
and steadfast as life itself. Love was never talked of,
but they dwelt in its spirit; it was as if the atmo-
sphere of a better region filled the house ; the children
were born in it, and breathed it as their native air,
and they were good and kind like their parents. A
light then broke in upon my rind. My grandmother
saw and felt these things as [ did ;—she is not,
Edward, the deaf, stupid old woman which it is her
will to appear ; but that is her secret—she and I
understand each other. ‘The goal which I have set
before my ambition is a hore of love, and my prayers,

Heaven knows, are, that I may be kept pure and



DEEPER AND DEEPER, 89

made worthy of it. This is, perhaps, my religion :
in the eyes of thousands of good people I am but as a
poor outcast child of perdition—worse than & pagan,”

“ You are a real divine angel,” exclaimed the young
man ; “* Mrs. Osborne would love you—she must and
shall know you,” cried he, for at that moment every-
thing seemed easy tohim. “ When they know you
they will not Oppose our union. I will steadfastly
stick to business ; my uncle is not a poor man ; he
will, I am sure, give me a share in his business, [|
will work so hard for you, and we will be so happy.
I shall become good through you; I shall owe my
salvation to you !”

“Amen !” said Jessie, solemnly ; “but I, that am
wiser than you in some things, must guide you 4
little. You are yet an apprentice—I am yet under
my father’s control: a time will come when we shall
both be free. If you love me truly, you must wait
till then. Five years from now shall be our time
of trial. This is Christmas-day. You shall hear
from me on the fifth anniversary of this day, but
to me you shall not write. Five years from this
time our trial shall have ended. Can you be true
to me for so long ?—I know that I shall be true to
rou !”

' Lovers’ vows sound foolish ; therefore, we will not
write down the violent protestations with which
Williams responded to this singular proposal. He
swore that neither heaven nor earth could ever
change him—and at the time he thought so.

(For my part, I, that narrate this story, must here
put in, by way of parenthesis, that had I been present,
or had been in any way consulted, I should have

12



90 DEEPER AND DEEPER:

said that such a connection was of that doubtful
character, that, spite of Jessie’s really superior nature,
the best thing would have been to have put an end
to the whole affair as soon as possible. But, as
neither I nor anybody else of great discretion was
present, the lovers made this compact, and then, the
rest of the party joining them soon afterwards, they
all adjourned to the village inn to dinner.)

It was as merry a dinner as ever was eaten by a set
of‘poor players. They ate, and drank, and sung, and
told witty anecdotes, and were ten times freer and
easier than so many lords and ladies. The host and
the hostess came to the parlour door, and listened
and laughed too, and, spite of the really serious con-
versation which had passed between him and Jessie
in the garden, Williams caught the infection of the
company’s mirth, and was as gay as any of them.
Something was said of Mr. Goodman, and Williams,
who had always maintained that he had some talent
for acting, began to mimic his grave and measured
way of speaking. His personation was called for
again and again, and he was declared quite a genius.
Bassett, they said, could not do it half as well. They
then revealed to him asecret. Anderson, who had
the talent for writing little comic pieces of one or two
acts, had written one called “ The Parson in Love,”
intended to ridicule Mr. Goodman: there was a
young actress in the piece, Lucinda, who was to
personate a puritan lady, Mrs. Tabitha T wiggem, who
was to inveigle the clergyman, and lead him into
endless fooleries. Jessie was to take this character
and Bassett was to take that of Parson Perfect—and
. it was to be given out that he was a new actor from



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describe
'518045' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAREG' 'sip-files00005.jp2'
5af75c2e1428b1ba8e65cd6091f28da7
6335d8c43be4d4edc8263b6f8c03822d0163a6b3
describe
'13692' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAREH' 'sip-files00005.jpg'
8e2e5dd2c8f1d7ab77cdbb7e28e5f4e6
72645a7ece82a726e08cf7ecf72543796b4a97f9
'2011-11-17T04:10:30-05:00'
describe
'215' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAREI' 'sip-files00005.pro'
918b450ac9b39ba140f5ff0dc5f73b37
86aa448c06373b9b43023253784cd7052677c288
'2011-11-17T04:03:11-05:00'
describe
'3711' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAREJ' 'sip-files00005.QC.jpg'
7c486bfb4d2d6f22c3a211843790ca90
9f47157ed0b3e1e42f8d6e80c938125e89b0cd63
'2011-11-17T04:09:57-05:00'
describe
'6997907' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAREK' 'sip-files00005.tif'
e1a84ce7670507b76e3ff2abbd7bda53
e0c923eabd8c74c1d35628cae8cb393ef0ef8f79
'2011-11-17T04:02:41-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAREL' 'sip-files00005.txt'
bc949ea893a9384070c31f083ccefd26
cbb8391cb65c20e2c05a2f29211e55c49939c3db
'2011-11-17T04:04:34-05:00'
describe
'1352' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAREM' 'sip-files00005thm.jpg'
abd6578ebeff72008e4f189f988a1550
b4136c08fb4d046d5133f942c8662192e4f16dee
'2011-11-17T04:04:19-05:00'
describe
'908414' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAREN' 'sip-files00006.jp2'
9d2d32681064e43cd825c15faada071c
35417af57987f4271e1b0c9a605286329367501d
'2011-11-17T04:03:33-05:00'
describe
'34421' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAREO' 'sip-files00006.jpg'
607134fd272fc5aa5057f605fd6f543f
a517d8c5e20d135ff0eb675b6dd74f32cf6cb12d
describe
'5926' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAREP' 'sip-files00006.pro'
14c90ab1febd8d421ebe8638b86e4574
fb6e7eb6a6249c23d9d7af3a06e5ea06b64c969c
'2011-11-17T04:09:40-05:00'
describe
'11716' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAREQ' 'sip-files00006.QC.jpg'
c060b68101b931cb840d88628217e979
05bac068f74b4b0b4a3797829e28733afd1b1656
'2011-11-17T04:05:57-05:00'
describe
'7276497' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARER' 'sip-files00006.tif'
7d7664a4216962a8c54868873bcbc776
4b05b6a2bb3bea241391b11d8cd6bf2d669a9510
'2011-11-17T04:09:03-05:00'
describe
'397' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARES' 'sip-files00006.txt'
0734a94c21021e9b6bedf683fbe59225
cd950991dde703c000e5a77134ed40833e41479b
'2011-11-17T04:10:18-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
'3918' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARET' 'sip-files00006thm.jpg'
247c83ab157a8b289267b7132e3eb111
54d9ad34ea44cf7534c67b9e70a44a3fd1c4759f
'2011-11-17T04:02:44-05:00'
describe
'692203' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAREU' 'sip-files00007.jp2'
b7cf4030473e4e546bc59d268bfc6a84
47483adf54b43e3a34d36c88a57903c58ab310a4
'2011-11-17T04:05:37-05:00'
describe
'16920' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAREV' 'sip-files00007.jpg'
ac8d75740afeb4931abc8200b75765e0
58c390679723bcec5338e7108ffafba69e5562f9
'2011-11-17T04:07:15-05:00'
describe
'1523' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAREW' 'sip-files00007.pro'
03fa9e7081398cd791de57d5d5c8b698
8d8c79e40aeda63b0b0640520ac4111d98ef30b6
'2011-11-17T04:09:20-05:00'
describe
'4657' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAREX' 'sip-files00007.QC.jpg'
8176fe35cdeb86b660968a51947a5002
16c962e5fd69b0373ac41a59b4dd4b085175361a
'2011-11-17T04:03:04-05:00'
describe
'7093021' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAREY' 'sip-files00007.tif'
f9c5f34a14e21ba2ed4ebe0811ca5389
3fd4c80fe34cb74c69090e6c3600c05d9f385f89
'2011-11-17T04:06:10-05:00'
describe
'150' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAREZ' 'sip-files00007.txt'
4e142bcbebebf3e5abb2ef396d11783b
119f8d92f797e45f575f0233974a656b11d06ef0
describe
'1743' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFA' 'sip-files00007thm.jpg'
e988f8a29fadcbc5df150b9fad835a0f
f2a47a4c123919b4c7382756d0832d0508d69302
'2011-11-17T04:02:59-05:00'
describe
'875521' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFB' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
d2954534b8a17d10a296aeec8f378040
a0696cca0c470dba6045ef8b46b20a25ec2c78f9
'2011-11-17T04:04:55-05:00'
describe
'44459' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFC' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
f377e64b5cb594d943bf45ce4cc85d3b
30a4234ce6f8537aac5b0d7daf11b625ecbe3565
'2011-11-17T04:08:42-05:00'
describe
'16785' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFD' 'sip-files00008.pro'
c7214ab2ad1cf585ed566330b3682e2d
e239d44312600cb1037d71a17487a93452706b80
describe
'17977' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFE' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
cef9348c0aeda53b1dd682834e7cb4c5
4eabf3d30596655890a6c5d6d2c122536031aaf2
'2011-11-17T04:04:23-05:00'
describe
'7013005' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFF' 'sip-files00008.tif'
64d450d5dd2fcbc3e068984dbd25d355
5c8ce76f1d6246391f7975ccecd90ca8d5f356f0
'2011-11-17T04:10:20-05:00'
describe
'830' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFG' 'sip-files00008.txt'
a28c54df74c15e12598e268c2d847d24
aac37e2e152288f3573e0a8c32ae8f7db10e9f60
'2011-11-17T04:09:01-05:00'
describe
'6074' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFH' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
166db42013215ce7ed364591fa3d01d2
acba24aa692a8ba3dc28d703a8fc9bf8df6b5538
'2011-11-17T04:03:40-05:00'
describe
'710106' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFI' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
a817d054daaa075c975e049adeec6368
216b57337649ffcac842c90aea08ab3e82b67b24
'2011-11-17T04:05:00-05:00'
describe
'16243' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFJ' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
bd2520680c0c8d79907e90f7815ee7f2
1da78ea2a5edc61a971bc9a0d52d2e5760a051a9
'2011-11-17T04:10:44-05:00'
describe
'347' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFK' 'sip-files00009.pro'
8cfe3825bea06b0818d73ee812e0ceb3
ab1ba3d3dce61b0baaa8f084d031b53e5595f35b
'2011-11-17T04:08:41-05:00'
describe
'4562' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFL' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
fc9126dbda377d264ca7394f2cb5f8ea
a1e547aef0d330db4bc175237869a9f1788c91fd
'2011-11-17T04:02:27-05:00'
describe
'6733319' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFM' 'sip-files00009.tif'
cd4d074244155ad0f4c76e30d8fe20b5
05beb8d82297ce0141b91ee7ea4388ac7365628e
'2011-11-17T04:10:14-05:00'
describe
'400' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFN' 'sip-files00009.txt'
ab7c3dc0b4952b7afed04cddd07fd0b5
bd39d73d2ee88edc7122afd61c5d4eed5e6599e2
'2011-11-17T04:03:08-05:00'
describe
'1742' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFO' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
42b0749b8f48e8a0aee367de0693eb49
176ba3294a2159e5fea8292faef4773a80a8eb49
'2011-11-17T04:06:57-05:00'
describe
'868848' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFP' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
2391820e9b096519606e7669379c193a
a1d3bfd1beb6d36dc7637334953980ace2d0dec0
'2011-11-17T04:05:52-05:00'
describe
'88901' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFQ' 'sip-files00010.jpg'
10f1e7679c366ef730ef488071e774d5
1de3a3053fa9a6326267e8dafc79b0a176160c19
'2011-11-17T04:03:42-05:00'
describe
'29413' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFR' 'sip-files00010.pro'
24f72d0adb2845b0a06a17aa0483f5e7
24946652d8aba87b6f017be05eec52faf134e854
'2011-11-17T04:09:48-05:00'
describe
'30977' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFS' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
1ffc071775492af8f5ac82f12fbe92f6
eaaae57ffb978b733e15df3bf29e4a1488a5818b
'2011-11-17T04:05:32-05:00'
describe
'6957887' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFT' 'sip-files00010.tif'
a7b33afba699d83f9250fd3ead5ebc73
79af6d29225f0c8ae0ac2bf497a381390383a3f5
'2011-11-17T04:09:04-05:00'
describe
'1265' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFU' 'sip-files00010.txt'
ab3e87814e2d325a97423affef398f49
0206f9eaf718b7cfec764ec79b808aa7178c5e28
'2011-11-17T04:09:51-05:00'
describe
'9585' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFV' 'sip-files00010thm.jpg'
f76913bb4b78eb50269fb2e2e14b381f
848e1a19d7d6ff002fbe42dbaa28f4d3a76cb68b
'2011-11-17T04:08:37-05:00'
describe
'842337' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFW' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
85f7e734bd7c9fe4815dc321beea02b0
da00fb5b1f0cc9efb1cdbbde256394d546e502eb
'2011-11-17T04:06:28-05:00'
describe
'122355' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFX' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
659cb3fc5fb30d40d7eff84e45daaa20
b9873b6c2d17317997bc522aeae9d10bcc97bb78
'2011-11-17T04:03:13-05:00'
describe
'46682' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFY' 'sip-files00011.pro'
44617ec2a5d2edf3328d34686c898d0b
ad472257b12c1a590b023a29090d495f661435db
describe
'43975' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARFZ' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
35bcec2ea2a16ce29e2b14cb07ef88a9
283496b27bd25f9d35a7c25a46e599d34d5df1db
'2011-11-17T04:05:49-05:00'
describe
'6745763' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGA' 'sip-files00011.tif'
0492e577243ebbaa8b5faeb54eef6df0
3d1c6b53d541a35c5723d8bf92ee039e75c2383d
'2011-11-17T04:10:08-05:00'
describe
'1895' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGB' 'sip-files00011.txt'
883348cef9a787a53e29d204ea39a382
bdefd6701feba9f75e7b428d42507b3fd15579d3
'2011-11-17T04:05:02-05:00'
describe
'13163' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGC' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
db993f131238723500d53d54f886c98a
598fadf285a9f02ab29863f5895e5f5751c40503
'2011-11-17T04:05:48-05:00'
describe
'849176' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGD' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
9764ae461ffabdbe2ec1c7f644e388be
60f3f83511a823dbea2515b8c68b9a08184f13ee
'2011-11-17T04:04:24-05:00'
describe
'120670' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGE' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
13a6fb5d399a30c9a465e8be260c0784
6370522bef8b984d39cacc1cd3653e83ec0adb8b
'2011-11-17T04:04:51-05:00'
describe
'46235' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGF' 'sip-files00012.pro'
3b49a0bb5b7df862a7381b35bdd09b4a
fc8493cbc01664bb2581e4a783ae218746be41a9
describe
'43046' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGG' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
0f2221e0b3b6f5b2c601a985addc29a9
b9cadf43852eee7129ae0edcfb55b383d5a9ecc3
'2011-11-17T04:05:23-05:00'
describe
'6799859' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGH' 'sip-files00012.tif'
1e8fe3bd3ed67e72ccb2a51c65b2bba3
026d3ee107bd3d75ade5270a73454af6977d9018
describe
'1856' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGI' 'sip-files00012.txt'
d4161746c01f29d7f5d83c33edaaf314
d955326e9a773880b031bb493eb739b767eac10e
'2011-11-17T04:03:54-05:00'
describe
'12720' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGJ' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
06b69a7c01c0829a4c074bd1f2f1801b
b5a704ecdc48d3216110c9e44da5e3c5a6cc9da8
'2011-11-17T04:03:18-05:00'
describe
'861746' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGK' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
bd5c17e1bcb5608d0bd6f21630751034
1870471441a47068b1454d505099001200c841a6
describe
'115726' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGL' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
6cb1fadcbd897e914c82c6842e79e84c
a744103249877d84e954ffe149addbb82d0ebbc5
'2011-11-17T04:06:13-05:00'
describe
'45297' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGM' 'sip-files00013.pro'
68a21686ee31a1961c31021b9d943af0
9a0548424e835a17ebbf2a6e49c89268b63024a4
'2011-11-17T04:03:30-05:00'
describe
'41456' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGN' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
393cd994083fdde6564f9e68843676b7
ff7af3c56cd69bca6504672568f801dd2ccd7e6e
'2011-11-17T04:05:50-05:00'
describe
'6900763' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGO' 'sip-files00013.tif'
e91563a5a145fb74b402797fcdc7fd0c
3b4473084f4621bda9503c5f237e04a78a273d43
'2011-11-17T04:08:32-05:00'
describe
'1804' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGP' 'sip-files00013.txt'
aede7cf464157fbebf3a2777880843df
0180a7ddb63ba333f3a38c0893652e896397def6
'2011-11-17T04:09:45-05:00'
describe
'12868' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGQ' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
b7fd4578626ac56f2ab8177fb41182c6
870b239a438f89fde8611aaf3fd596e728e91b11
'2011-11-17T04:06:12-05:00'
describe
'840520' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGR' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
cf35fe3eca071df00a45c21593ab24cb
0ae9d36b5da8ba077b2ccfc3fab0eb3c935c3dff
'2011-11-17T04:04:01-05:00'
describe
'117981' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGS' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
901ff2a198e7d7d08ba7f17bc9432352
401b2a20908e730e9aef4b1ba1055e0111295d3c
'2011-11-17T04:08:34-05:00'
describe
'45467' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGT' 'sip-files00014.pro'
e2b517d5dafe5fe4ee941844412fbe5a
7bb8514467f88c9a43230747f4617ccbeb4e434a
'2011-11-17T04:02:53-05:00'
describe
'43199' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGU' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
f754cac09b98ba550c8328ad1a205590
41718611e9f18c9b2b181f161a52788c92aa8978
'2011-11-17T04:07:00-05:00'
describe
'6730899' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGV' 'sip-files00014.tif'
c252c54822008c81362d7ce9b38b337a
f45264088d79e3c2cd9fd45e76549874296f7bac
describe
'1903' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGW' 'sip-files00014.txt'
3b8fc155619b672d5a8fc17d0b3b4400
4629299b9b4f16808bc8dfbe5ec829c74c0678f8
'2011-11-17T04:08:58-05:00'
describe
'13159' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGX' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
681399c868f053ee5a022dd6e6bb4a8f
680c8f9e9c1e8bcb013e8f7d059c7ae17a763260
'2011-11-17T04:04:09-05:00'
describe
'853800' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGY' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
96d02590c3aaa56f6da4b77c458ba815
cc526d6a045800476556a170188d93b6a32da70f
'2011-11-17T04:05:17-05:00'
describe
'114861' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARGZ' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
3520977a9a8603123ffd6334e83a9757
3fbfaeb48beec66e3755e97930bc3d4a77c5c65b
'2011-11-17T04:08:53-05:00'
describe
'44221' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHA' 'sip-files00015.pro'
4df21f5fbbb1f75f7f4ff20569c270e5
edca64ed3691e837385cde1dcdb0dcaae46cb55a
'2011-11-17T04:06:52-05:00'
describe
'41586' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHB' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
3d95e0631122df852af061fb547dcc01
7aa6302f07919206307f20f32c3ab79673f9064b
'2011-11-17T04:05:03-05:00'
describe
'6837329' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHC' 'sip-files00015.tif'
3063db67da797f0c33d97fa224074550
e45f022021fdcb0fbe20770326d2b44b961bd466
'2011-11-17T04:09:59-05:00'
describe
'1769' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHD' 'sip-files00015.txt'
3ce865044a5323dd7601c7856e1e35c9
abf876e02986af724bf77fe34c51dc515dc80f60
'2011-11-17T04:04:12-05:00'
describe
'12861' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHE' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
e325f23075bbd512e6306fd7f21a6383
534b25b4b90a8307b6f6d0797a2ed462584412e4
'2011-11-17T04:04:45-05:00'
describe
'858425' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHF' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
2bdedca7e2f2b345b86cc10af0b390d9
7ba6dfc79b902ee458bb677994cbe43fea8ade4f
'2011-11-17T04:04:48-05:00'
describe
'122758' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHG' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
3811de37117be2e4356e5671ce711dbe
5a1a6de6451b1f9e32acfa1667d2343eed8cb17d
'2011-11-17T04:04:02-05:00'
describe
'46238' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHH' 'sip-files00016.pro'
dbca2c39b4c975fede675f1432613ccd
a45aa12955c2ca67426a48552df7671528bd33ee
'2011-11-17T04:03:19-05:00'
describe
'44170' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHI' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
73aceb19b3c5d4986e90801860e407fe
ced28ed3dc8007bcd0fbb92f54cb7fdcf1873cd4
'2011-11-17T04:06:18-05:00'
describe
'6874005' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHJ' 'sip-files00016.tif'
f1efd969059fca2926620d525136df1a
33b79c8813c7592ec80d72eea57bcbc39ce6463f
'2011-11-17T04:09:55-05:00'
describe
'1907' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHK' 'sip-files00016.txt'
b97d796add8baaa1018eb7d2c029dd1b
4caf2475d6cb7c085bd766ce9e41dabb5f684336
'2011-11-17T04:09:16-05:00'
describe
'12594' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHL' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
a3aba8ff547be6fe3609d4e4a9d341e8
3e7440a4158d2fbbcb8e7ff92be1d479a9f9cbdb
describe
'840849' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHM' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
9bd5d9c994f3493b8561e045823c0051
6684fceffd68a89974fde105be21c2340cf894d0
'2011-11-17T04:04:21-05:00'
describe
'115435' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHN' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
1bb828bc589ddac26b454898f4e264e5
7ede6a50bf1140a8c184473b66195d7fc942e6da
'2011-11-17T04:06:56-05:00'
describe
'45980' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHO' 'sip-files00017.pro'
bef71c0716362322afcb66701b67b06e
d1fa22c57a848d9da280c219d236be499045b67e
'2011-11-17T04:03:16-05:00'
describe
'41661' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHP' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
de198f0259ba5268763f5f3d369c7bcc
2510197de5b47dc6b6bf987eb5744290fa8ecb84
'2011-11-17T04:10:35-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHQ' 'sip-files00017.tif'
df4a86a3fe7ba8bec26e2a1032879c18
37a234846d209b00e4e34f036b7f3f7f5a6dc559
describe
'1844' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHR' 'sip-files00017.txt'
8f4cb4510cf298c0c090053bbea204d4
0529b31026e4d6622cbc57a97e6cf274346630c4
describe
'13091' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHS' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
d50238571469e3127662d3c1818c7864
da5ffca2816806d12dbdf0072f676cb3d029c669
describe
'848472' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHT' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
1fcafab3dfdc9ef50aba75f6424cf1fc
3a0fa2682a084a2af0039e97238d09e3e9418503
'2011-11-17T04:08:57-05:00'
describe
'121873' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHU' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
df019029339a2a06750fbf6972fe8c32
86a1105a704567247b822ca3911286522cbdedc5
describe
'45822' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHV' 'sip-files00018.pro'
e68cb1e782573ad15f8e5c859207b1ed
b8249f7825e218c8938832da7fe1f0861c85e412
describe
'43988' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHW' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
3e65411f2b4e0f8af6acb1e5570776ee
ccf3a7aaeb8e94837a98b210397afacc8977f51e
'2011-11-17T04:02:26-05:00'
describe
'6794699' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHX' 'sip-files00018.tif'
9c5fc26a1aa9e4baa85e62fc1c6c31ce
cb799bc32874f5c951d4d48675e6ee1896d81907
'2011-11-17T04:09:07-05:00'
describe
'1893' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHY' 'sip-files00018.txt'
186f20eeeaa4f0a3ff8afe4861f27384
efef91923d73a65ff65f1fdccaaf8c45009dd8ab
'2011-11-17T04:04:58-05:00'
describe
'12866' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARHZ' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
f1d6f928e08d9980a67a06c7d2af2c6e
d30d509fd81a131f00ca0d7d444dbb170652d0a3
describe
'835021' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIA' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
f0d845cb2a0078b6f23e2a91ad09c9ff
92a5a8469c8e82aad63f8e22e1dff0ee90ae75e1
'2011-11-17T04:10:33-05:00'
describe
'112311' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIB' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
591c90cff5f2816b264a1df29ea1c3db
04943e1421e99618724f8aff8bc51ffc87529910
'2011-11-17T04:06:32-05:00'
describe
'43392' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIC' 'sip-files00019.pro'
4bd17d1e86b7c06c18023a992d587c59
a6c06e9ef27c2295ceca8165a918d84889042280
'2011-11-17T04:09:34-05:00'
describe
'41090' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARID' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
1d627f35952db8f8f57bb88c06647bf9
41581a6b244754e1a541715edaea637f7d56a91d
'2011-11-17T04:06:51-05:00'
describe
'6686681' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIE' 'sip-files00019.tif'
9e10d24d7a5f08630c856834f2229c2e
2410d88aca79029eac30aba9968ac20ff9af302e
'2011-11-17T04:08:47-05:00'
describe
'1740' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIF' 'sip-files00019.txt'
ea2de7156de27150fcdb29a396c847ea
4688f7bacd35d70db7984386035961b761b50f0e
describe
'13195' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIG' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
ee67809900a1611ed677d8fff07cd116
4b91e286ae6fc123783021a109d02a4b33fe7004
'2011-11-17T04:05:06-05:00'
describe
'811470' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIH' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
9b0882e2934df793432297844f3064b1
35593f79162d2fe97fde7421fb6cd8be83392a3b
'2011-11-17T04:04:00-05:00'
describe
'120382' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARII' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
f6f90499ff36c252cd5f7113867d2a00
ce9821557076c09839f0ba68e87701ed5c8ac007
describe
'44006' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIJ' 'sip-files00020.pro'
d8bd921aab4bd34b49eababf7e06d4c9
74ffed7399d0dbef5299b0c2ad08bd3d8628b0cf
describe
'43149' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIK' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
6a4e8ef2e9a36ffbd8e040511b54e737
dc27b7c2d1df8a432f17b66297fa9b8d7da7710b
'2011-11-17T04:04:04-05:00'
describe
'6498223' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIL' 'sip-files00020.tif'
b2dd90482c2cecce98d39b92ddf7cf77
2c54bc9f6a5a8f128e00c301c770e0262eff7404
'2011-11-17T04:04:46-05:00'
describe
'1816' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIM' 'sip-files00020.txt'
7a6d7bcaaccbb3b482716531ad8d030e
abd41a199163e512d3b52e456a5904b9abfcb69e
describe
'13168' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIN' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
e176a24bfa972bcb9b88076040be4995
acf3af2070d9560619c14a327831f83cdf957240
'2011-11-17T04:07:11-05:00'
describe
'856840' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIO' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
720bc628b324e083605d380c57d408bb
4073f2d6689953b73c5a8252f2ba9e32ac987b39
'2011-11-17T04:10:00-05:00'
describe
'119527' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIP' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
0241aaa30d185460a3d1b9d732482868
6b6bac7376a657be298aa069638c3655346e6388
describe
'45321' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIQ' 'sip-files00021.pro'
fa082ab21cfcf311c130b5d3db5181b2
2d95f163baad90c54173b48c36b9f3bcc62b13d3
'2011-11-17T04:06:40-05:00'
describe
'42833' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIR' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
9648ecc7576155e23c2d5f72646b3030
4e088db557c0b4ccce876681bf3ddbd8abe672fe
'2011-11-17T04:07:04-05:00'
describe
'6861523' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIS' 'sip-files00021.tif'
915f3e73d139c0786c1a678c87dff5fc
0d558bb25c65152223b3b633e0f1533d8b3e0219
'2011-11-17T04:10:36-05:00'
describe
'1809' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIT' 'sip-files00021.txt'
792ad978ba6482edb6be2e18873b7f6e
00dba423aa272d1a55cd64cf2b1b611d0fab9219
describe
'13400' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIU' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
773c46e7918cafcd52fd9789ca2b3ded
62cf62e5e358f9016676c25ea045b1ef71021c14
'2011-11-17T04:10:37-05:00'
describe
'845705' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIV' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
e14fbfe0f312a909e901ca4bb997c8fd
f1d3b8144896a5dc9bfeb38647612b339a3d52c0
'2011-11-17T04:03:55-05:00'
describe
'116477' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIW' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
a333c4b5a79528fa4e6e5293368331b0
d458957105dd2d61244f9183f1675a11f553fd3a
'2011-11-17T04:03:41-05:00'
describe
'43076' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIX' 'sip-files00022.pro'
46ef2c77cbfa1a4f7f160e1a5f7bf5bf
a167b53195391830ed36a0e84800144e84f06090
describe
'41421' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIY' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
b07ec96e130edbe6f7a494139adf4e44
d04803af12e4b9db94ff0bc521c2561b112677e2
'2011-11-17T04:09:50-05:00'
describe
'6772159' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARIZ' 'sip-files00022.tif'
444834cfc97d981415a34757cca71301
5758ae869cdb8474c8f6e7b107e8d68911d01d48
'2011-11-17T04:06:46-05:00'
describe
'1808' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJA' 'sip-files00022.txt'
6f794c1ff26ed2c8fd686db05ae2396c
3b5f03e1f7e419794711d9ede758881ab9134535
'2011-11-17T04:03:51-05:00'
describe
'13147' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJB' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
3698a0b81c7dfaa65dc965c104037491
f78221c0dd20719e08d5b010c9ef9f371cdb4e55
'2011-11-17T04:03:00-05:00'
describe
'835807' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJC' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
eee32961955b55a1d7ef0777e7c207e0
d532bb75e72ba8a32e7859bb3132e4792dbafd8e
describe
'113367' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJD' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
99958ab8cf5c6f565bf2026654cad81c
e81bf47e85dc7b1592f70831156914387e74d609
'2011-11-17T04:10:32-05:00'
describe
'44185' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJE' 'sip-files00023.pro'
f19a31be0b2e64f5116b82e6d7209822
ff7bde4850666125e3f1584c90800490b26eeb25
describe
'40523' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJF' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
22254b50ae2d1e8775cf64a72455ca2e
97dcbcf7f23ba57d77ad2600d7ee859aad1598b1
'2011-11-17T04:06:20-05:00'
describe
'6693261' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJG' 'sip-files00023.tif'
05ad590ad8163a17b0d0a52d91a9bf3d
7aca1c9ca71b98fde3edf792cad2b6658066ed3d
'2011-11-17T04:02:43-05:00'
describe
'1787' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJH' 'sip-files00023.txt'
725112b7c7a2f283d18c70db11648cce
b7a56bfb8c6d37913b68cc9aeebdf7e7a7fb87f4
'2011-11-17T04:04:56-05:00'
describe
'13474' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJI' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
ef4ff453f6b88e1082dee6e8ae6d2096
4d466329a327f0c8d9a199a639316f5b4946791f
'2011-11-17T04:04:54-05:00'
describe
'850554' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJJ' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
89bd5864c861d233f1314d14ff3c058d
1b763d4576f907ec493ece76213b7eeea22e3cc8
describe
'113292' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJK' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
6c393b04406683b838af23f3bf6e463b
905b7b90d9742ee10990c3a750fb3150485e1b33
'2011-11-17T04:06:43-05:00'
describe
'43004' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJL' 'sip-files00024.pro'
1751ecc3ad289876e8fc52fdc7008279
16471b6fba3c9fcb670d94fa17b730dbd9e33acf
'2011-11-17T04:03:53-05:00'
describe
'40475' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJM' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
46c1f61703b672fabc045e4d25a952d1
6d68e301d715a7bde6f884ae936a2f3c44be529f
'2011-11-17T04:10:55-05:00'
describe
'6810999' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJN' 'sip-files00024.tif'
af354361b1a5a6abaf95dc58b5676a63
b32f5785a377fa21e3bfe09212bf8dcce51cf743
'2011-11-17T04:10:21-05:00'
describe
'1730' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJO' 'sip-files00024.txt'
426a66f48680e2d43def538b2dc6d8d8
31f6d6fd716bee460caa40871f62caf8b1cb8479
describe
'13191' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJP' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
75e26fe145884be9e3c9f3e962ccdd71
840f5b5c5619738c323ad8709ed94aa9a094058b
'2011-11-17T04:05:04-05:00'
describe
'846153' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJQ' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
f9fd66e965328190846ad4923415b2c1
e482b84d965a9df1b8fd5e6698429f94e08da958
describe
'115883' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJR' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
f2478679cdd5d03160945042b347368e
2f4dab6539d1b285ab74d0c08cf5ef73f6577d1e
'2011-11-17T04:03:05-05:00'
describe
'44361' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJS' 'sip-files00025.pro'
6a15329ef16dce17ca03b30a77753650
ee11196f913c4b628f9a5b0bcd8bcb7bf34607d3
describe
'41658' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJT' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
d89a582f724129b45b940f47ef2012ae
1ca0662aaaf2d45af5dfba35e1ba258083e39d32
'2011-11-17T04:10:27-05:00'
describe
'6775929' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJU' 'sip-files00025.tif'
3a79b0b466c279d839163bf318a3ed42
8f394f186b83974fe6ee8d614c45be6d6ea197d3
'2011-11-17T04:03:31-05:00'
describe
'1790' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJV' 'sip-files00025.txt'
4933494058968cd4a58bcf9a918edc7b
3f71ef3d4e5b64c704d3b3e0757d77b70c317c1f
'2011-11-17T04:04:29-05:00'
describe
'13215' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJW' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
c9488a59fbbbb800ca03cda6e9fbc31f
61f156c8b6a581e42d0f4aa0bdfd55844ba44459
describe
'854396' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJX' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
7c921a2d9ccb7fb999212a694d5edd72
6e78597c09182565f357f92508b53b1ace893bf6
'2011-11-17T04:06:22-05:00'
describe
'111859' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJY' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
4f8ed73ce2fc7e09d2827142f6bd7765
30cb118ecb73010be1db44d3964172330db3c8e8
'2011-11-17T04:04:08-05:00'
describe
'42859' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARJZ' 'sip-files00026.pro'
478bee1e605b380be849cbbfc4f341d2
0e8f7d52b6584b97e0c99b4a6f07dbf969ad11c5
'2011-11-17T04:06:49-05:00'
describe
'41050' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKA' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
2930171eea84c52f06078bbcf65b349d
764d7c1a5f55e8f8b5c1dc6a57bd20591f585daa
describe
'6841899' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKB' 'sip-files00026.tif'
d3fb08fc8caf78156b69b67494c7a2a8
991ef3e03cce034c7ad5f7ad524419313741ad17
'2011-11-17T04:07:09-05:00'
describe
'1741' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKC' 'sip-files00026.txt'
40f8912d4231232fe313ca0da7b73525
ab16cd231048823099a91bb0f01da5c0e57befeb
'2011-11-17T04:05:43-05:00'
describe
'12925' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKD' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
3b4d75c514770f4449176069d3378cbf
791ea673f40d9cb083a4e6cad9c278040c1694b9
'2011-11-17T04:03:56-05:00'
describe
'850052' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKE' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
78d3ef946c44c6cdff4a0e5b8a72b817
f429d0378b4993222436ae78223ba6e405b7ec83
'2011-11-17T04:06:35-05:00'
describe
'109798' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKF' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
80b974b66dde79fb6f69096798ad5ac9
9423509bf4e3e44285b78b3fba57df14616d54c9
'2011-11-17T04:02:28-05:00'
describe
'42664' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKG' 'sip-files00027.pro'
04d5b142c7c9b126ee3d57512c7deba7
825b175c20858d8287ae11d9400d52d6b8028260
'2011-11-17T04:08:55-05:00'
describe
'40162' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKH' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
8b8ce9d3f767307285bb16cddb15f1a5
848dde757186d09a70bf8db4ddbce6cf5e153092
describe
'6807029' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKI' 'sip-files00027.tif'
9afad3cc730bafd8d08518668d31500f
8b3f611ef192a236f1a0851687bf2a2fe0f2d9bb
describe
'1707' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKJ' 'sip-files00027.txt'
e5ca2dc6ddadf108b95aafc1eb67442b
9f5c1405677dabb3118d4a7517b4b3cc19773f0f
'2011-11-17T04:04:20-05:00'
describe
'12439' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKK' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
f7bea44bb845ad5b696c9d73fbbf86b3
c28541fd9e868115fafb3607e01ef98f373d2e41
describe
'853837' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKL' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
448e7be60ff127ab5f49ed6c3bc5bafb
0af8eb17b7f62091b39b5436ffd62e6a6ec82006
'2011-11-17T04:05:05-05:00'
describe
'117744' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKM' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
47aa55f4c6bc5cc77d948729c2de5b75
bb402e69fd9908e3ba1ead388247f84919f83ff4
describe
'44897' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKN' 'sip-files00028.pro'
88ff23eedc7b613fafeee49b5e7a6912
9b4ad92db12348dd0ebde23ad96420c50ba2b934
describe
'42475' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKO' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
04d4c73a1c5f6f3b7965ab2c4b746350
1d3a84f12fedb1e87addc1764a80db48eb8df527
'2011-11-17T04:09:10-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKP' 'sip-files00028.tif'
4729377959bbfa80ac2bb0a787360155
fee4f365a8af212cfae8f261538686e07616004e
describe
'1797' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKQ' 'sip-files00028.txt'
01a370ef5e66b3a408c24890976e6a65
d6304eb401c621b8f78bb9e8dc39c721ab20bad6
'2011-11-17T04:09:38-05:00'
describe
'12943' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKR' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
8d2a408a7a68af7e78c5c69b630787ba
75cdec572dd6f966b9c8964d623165f6c95bd3b2
'2011-11-17T04:05:19-05:00'
describe
'852499' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKS' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
e292a9cf560a8c8de7dc4e2f52de8d3b
6c615de51a62c35e3d498e114d6156394648273f
'2011-11-17T04:05:55-05:00'
describe
'106872' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKT' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
c25b2b6ed9ed8f7694fd875314fce2a3
87daa1c0816cd7fad3878f4530ce76c6cbc10fa3
'2011-11-17T04:02:50-05:00'
describe
'40436' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKU' 'sip-files00029.pro'
006fc6fd7ffcc298ee2f59a715b5ac04
68f49e74a6b3a0b4b5ebc28dcea898d3a79f133d
'2011-11-17T04:09:08-05:00'
describe
'38476' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKV' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
f939f6f7951614ee87989e65389d54c6
140efb6f5d5d490ea3324fcb19d8392c33eccf34
'2011-11-17T04:05:36-05:00'
describe
'6826553' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKW' 'sip-files00029.tif'
cd406895a33956f3761eab32f818a2f6
fdad31d5d66f8692384106075afd158440a8bf1f
describe
'1647' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKX' 'sip-files00029.txt'
bef00ac72802a6907ae166b8948fb187
34a1788e76fcf0c1190a28338170480521f4a8f7
'2011-11-17T04:10:09-05:00'
describe
'11954' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKY' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
54fec3e64849d7af67d61c19f5f9681f
49b7b4889ee3ce169bee44efacafe1cf74567bd9
describe
'847623' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARKZ' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
a9c0db9996d96799e6db3d8f27928d03
33a1eb8f98b3d76b4fde57088c318176c9c94b80
'2011-11-17T04:10:34-05:00'
describe
'118444' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLA' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
2b0c547666d11ad2476dc8d9f0552fce
dfbb30b076a7c1e7d9b991dbebae9523658b6b50
'2011-11-17T04:04:11-05:00'
describe
'45214' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLB' 'sip-files00030.pro'
432508ad9dfaa1804e1b077382b4aba4
709bac2468f215ab7ce4bc409b9b5856f48f52d2
describe
'42549' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLC' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
2904ab39ae3fb96673b655794630894c
760d38b6a7cf10660ca50523b6103849e590dc36
describe
'6787513' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLD' 'sip-files00030.tif'
76cfe96c10d3c13de4fb37ea21aa2f01
8835598b55591b3cfbf06d46577a809f367283b3
'2011-11-17T04:10:16-05:00'
describe
'1805' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLE' 'sip-files00030.txt'
ebce269a5f1e805a7767f6ce7afe77f2
5d395c06717e078d619adffab041bdd44c6b45a2
'2011-11-17T04:09:56-05:00'
describe
'13085' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLF' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
acdae1066dd945a3cf7adc08609f302b
2936fb675fa5fef5989d4c510dfa337c5d3aeb3f
'2011-11-17T04:06:48-05:00'
describe
'865585' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLG' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
88607a9e57c5a296b6ab1f7a385d2b7d
af96d1763e8d63e92a10c1255a37b04274f95e75
'2011-11-17T04:05:26-05:00'
describe
'120169' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLH' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
16088292bc7ae2fa19bdf297da00bca6
e2198046d0e094825176291756eb4818e2d7f0be
'2011-11-17T04:09:43-05:00'
describe
'46057' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLI' 'sip-files00031.pro'
e8153a1d39f511ad30b97c87164d86cd
fa496af8d5c8f14f4a9037d2205041b21c358f85
describe
'42772' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLJ' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
f43ab3038a3cf9c95f6111bc5e6b8198
8754a4125487df6beca15dd846e3d300241de700
'2011-11-17T04:06:07-05:00'
describe
'6931463' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLK' 'sip-files00031.tif'
20df70e913633b891479e62619153207
063ca7ca41863b9656b9557c27527a00b9223a1f
'2011-11-17T04:07:05-05:00'
describe
'1827' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLL' 'sip-files00031.txt'
5c8b7791622642926d56f59ed9a61480
36ae75f125705d29917c33c43730fb5dd395855c
describe
'12829' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLM' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
82ea76958526eb4cfaa01db90068a047
4981fe487358ccd7941fe138b785566c24720c1e
'2011-11-17T04:02:34-05:00'
describe
'831768' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLN' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
74968c2ed31c1abd6dea189df1905472
7512aaff024d95ac5a82933b212720c4f606f779
'2011-11-17T04:08:51-05:00'
describe
'116612' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLO' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
5bcbe08ee28881134c1c4f05f034de65
d4c8c7c9764bef575804bde5963f60ee31b8527b
'2011-11-17T04:10:28-05:00'
describe
'42406' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLP' 'sip-files00032.pro'
82c72f00a0802a9378ac73060eea7582
b97346c8330b834eade4a05f9287e1cd979954cf
'2011-11-17T04:06:14-05:00'
describe
'41773' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLQ' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
e60226062f1de93fc3b73f4b8487143b
175c9f3e935ddaae5db386634470676ef3bc153d
'2011-11-17T04:08:38-05:00'
describe
'6661939' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLR' 'sip-files00032.tif'
a4950bb472f0c8b638ed816bb84f7c67
3084a78fab944d147ea492ddcaf31e834a2dea12
describe
'1734' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLS' 'sip-files00032.txt'
72544e5df5bf1d1b6d7b5b85b95273e6
289d51eb35047184211aa93845dcb3c60c10750c
describe
'13261' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLT' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
3c85e56c43b57f027eb73628d108f304
7e983d54b1d0334f3ddc5e3a1e7334d3586ffe0f
'2011-11-17T04:03:10-05:00'
describe
'817906' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLU' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
e5351fc2e29edb62212575142ea322ee
3fd69dd6fcb2c4b1f246850afb98fce455246585
describe
'114113' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLV' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
b88ba2fc3d1ce7405e5d4bc336bc725b
5b1116de209d9f71206790142726ac985ac9df4b
'2011-11-17T04:05:59-05:00'
describe
'43026' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLW' 'sip-files00033.pro'
2ae2d7f5cee723a014dd930661943009
e9706a83af78999f17ed685dcbfe7d64237f278b
describe
'41556' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLX' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
9c42f50e5e6fe108b6ebc1e64fa07fc0
f3bd71d56cf6441f4c1d77d38326d4bb9fef8fd6
describe
'6550291' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLY' 'sip-files00033.tif'
0dc1fbab5b02d710f05c257c6fe75372
c2483c5947ce59c148928569ebf0b6703c3dfc67
'2011-11-17T04:08:59-05:00'
describe
'1732' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARLZ' 'sip-files00033.txt'
2dfef37d4e357ad970d129dbae355b30
0b3378c1a9e994a04a1ad7697bd4ce66f3490b09
'2011-11-17T04:05:09-05:00'
describe
'13994' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMA' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
42d0ceb2137697a053f5a10d8ca6321a
9bcdf9635ac0da16d1ec77bc1bbcd5b1707ec49b
describe
'851674' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMB' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
713d0c8a98c14c70a656a5bbe8fab33a
8d14c98235a668e67f304b435df3a2d50af6e962
describe
'120236' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMC' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
303b8909e086a03f17a4c22a33cdadaa
09339b48daeb4e86a1690d5b1360629b998d7e34
'2011-11-17T04:03:03-05:00'
describe
'42910' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMD' 'sip-files00034.pro'
e2a4a9bfb96faa4985b377b9fc2e4cda
209aee020e47060976422662c84a69c589097522
describe
'43496' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARME' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
f10c39fbac7d548df809783fc595224f
21c64fa549d369cf4fbf2c0e4abcacbc2266c3b6
'2011-11-17T04:03:20-05:00'
describe
'6819811' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMF' 'sip-files00034.tif'
7f62cce685c3ef023159f5bacd5fea69
defedd883cc3ff82d7f72aa0f3bfcfb40e442337
describe
'1798' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMG' 'sip-files00034.txt'
81159eabea91b8fcc5268571662169a8
eee8c0411143e75c05474ff1cd389b1590326056
'2011-11-17T04:04:16-05:00'
describe
'12879' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMH' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
3781a09df81b858d2070e0dc9ec56e40
c04e82f7913dc4c7cceb667d08f384eb99b93bbd
'2011-11-17T04:06:34-05:00'
describe
'830969' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMI' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
4bf820275a5b5197878cf5dcc23fa446
07879fe1042cff832a8ec09f01316f1fada21e52
'2011-11-17T04:06:59-05:00'
describe
'113194' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMJ' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
ba78eb1a3dd48188d7bb2c90253df803
f0ced02af5934730e3a911eec14be19b3f937c9c
'2011-11-17T04:05:28-05:00'
describe
'43211' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMK' 'sip-files00035.pro'
302965a8df7c33d08be19b97ba5b51ac
57bcf1b89fadb4ce54d57f6731e73fb7a88f77fd
'2011-11-17T04:03:35-05:00'
describe
'40963' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARML' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
ba387f83a366eeadf5875f33cb688711
92b36884727357e87dbdb7da9b1a898cb98d203b
'2011-11-17T04:07:02-05:00'
describe
'6655201' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMM' 'sip-files00035.tif'
674500736d46e951a7e1f52bbb7d3d63
04698870dfa445f7e1794fb280d7e5671c33cbc2
'2011-11-17T04:09:19-05:00'
describe
'1723' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMN' 'sip-files00035.txt'
27430fee89a63c7b55dccfe010beecb6
b17a45245f9105b50ad5090d13df56b7263fbcb5
'2011-11-17T04:10:39-05:00'
describe
'13577' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMO' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
b618f01f4bd01b0e6c253b0279a88657
258381ab10a827c7bfa55573c97bf3134e295d87
'2011-11-17T04:04:06-05:00'
describe
'840779' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMP' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
ded416cc9416b27d95df1101375faacd
b8725b452e1960727abd670fafa4691cd392fab1
'2011-11-17T04:03:50-05:00'
describe
'121042' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMQ' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
488fbc727063202e8d4dfacf53afdf64
06c0b0a80a8d5d75e2c4eed143ded94bb1a51995
'2011-11-17T04:02:32-05:00'
describe
'46207' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMR' 'sip-files00036.pro'
8647f73026f4fbb1cec8c461607cdd5f
34f12d7c8de2d8008f14d163bd4929eace5e6bf0
'2011-11-17T04:08:50-05:00'
describe
'43258' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMS' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
9449d45534766d813e7a2c95312f594e
1ef38a00de124a99dcfbaac970bc03094c403874
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMT' 'sip-files00036.tif'
cd91dd122b00c431ed7a1456cc897102
e03022bdf9ead2d5a5b9290ee3ebadbb1e495b41
'2011-11-17T04:10:43-05:00'
describe
'1909' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMU' 'sip-files00036.txt'
4a577bddd2459518d01a19e02e2ce0b0
8262a090bbc10a4768d545181406e089732c375a
'2011-11-17T04:06:36-05:00'
describe
'13309' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMV' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
46fcbf108eb0d7b62054ce9f846f8bd0
a59868464c43693061af6ac38f1d8c6de56c1bc7
describe
'848122' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMW' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
d4db1eb65310aceb4f449f1657bb2561
40b83679c018c64745f90b1cb0da83ab64764b25
describe
'113711' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMX' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
01c6276349c8dd49046030f10ebc4e7b
cd2bf39d28b7a422e945194744faa0fc707e1212
describe
'43896' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMY' 'sip-files00037.pro'
fcc284bed8ff86c3bd5a702cbcca91b3
85373ac83b8086718234bc29fbf4c9993d51204d
describe
'41387' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARMZ' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
8e7d60e85c3cf33a5fda3911b1eb7ce2
def321f871f4d1ecc1f4414da2f69237c6eb9562
'2011-11-17T04:09:36-05:00'
describe
'6791583' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNA' 'sip-files00037.tif'
430a21e6711c1adb7d4daebd12cc4d1c
3d7445185b3ab3a738150ca360406e2eb789c4e2
describe
'1802' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNB' 'sip-files00037.txt'
629185faf9b77d155d0d2335318cd920
a22797d1c0d0651471643ef848229af018136d1f
describe
'12848' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNC' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
2e0387e7e739c7328aa343ab7207c570
fb4e54215c9bf55c0ed0c96af7fcb6288e702f3c
describe
'843275' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARND' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
d6184a4c9cf7a15db7abbe0833e1b274
900586a88cf98f64ad8e179c6e7a1ccd7163c16e
'2011-11-17T04:02:31-05:00'
describe
'115262' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNE' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
4477e97d7744ac9ea45a2cc7e43047c0
df81a55f4b1c90dce9c8aaf0d0a682acf56b627b
'2011-11-17T04:10:38-05:00'
describe
'44675' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNF' 'sip-files00038.pro'
7c3b2984ef859ef19324a087130de208
2b9a1aa70b399e708b5a83c42dce80760b8cdcaf
'2011-11-17T04:09:44-05:00'
describe
'42007' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNG' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
b22b5bd0c9c4b825ce0240ca186fe938
5102db8419cfafaf857be6f3575623364b3f12db
describe
'6752743' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNH' 'sip-files00038.tif'
1b892c9627341ab7c6d268c9cbd87259
646e1dbdb558e8bb0b21e051c563c26440aceea0
'2011-11-17T04:03:02-05:00'
describe
'1849' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNI' 'sip-files00038.txt'
d99e9528d652faf55de0ab295e543da2
7014c0ff2741c34deea321bf3150e80030fe74cb
'2011-11-17T04:10:11-05:00'
describe
'12903' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNJ' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
4e1532da37a3ca6fc33892dde28bbb2a
72af0d30f4730d0e005d26b4ed0e0a551ed1dfe9
'2011-11-17T04:04:47-05:00'
describe
'842716' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNK' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
02a963c1bad586b68bdf38f811fcc4fb
b620988c57fc674594802113839aa7de3791a8e9
'2011-11-17T04:03:47-05:00'
describe
'116990' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNL' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
37a7a27c27fa17f1ac25c529522e2517
231447bdfe931c10c3575cb43456c8796a35a7e3
describe
'45145' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNM' 'sip-files00039.pro'
c98887b676eeef38907e615b5cb2e447
8946d00ed01bf2e861c8b9533f57d536c437c804
describe
'42388' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNN' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
efac4f7bf3564965462cd605fefd0c73
c333c37a313375fec5d2f49f41b7646c4ac9f3f0
describe
'6748473' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNO' 'sip-files00039.tif'
83fd0418508a8ea90164fcbfe720f35b
6519dd34ce54dda01e4310038d5ae1507b7703d7
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNP' 'sip-files00039.txt'
55be98f59ab38712b0a21c4bcc6b30a1
9d0d6134af1ae78ac47b58381b74b48c7006605a
'2011-11-17T04:10:15-05:00'
describe
'12837' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNQ' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
bf07d57be6d6d558b7d0e4dc011ef708
4fabc2c9bbd0b2870f5b67914e38e72afd9b020c
describe
'817225' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNR' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
b07d6b0ca12ae494589f7723dbe73827
d1e4004a32d1ef6e1f5dc2587915e55a6ea5c6cc
'2011-11-17T04:03:14-05:00'
describe
'113386' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNS' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
7381267e211cee76e5339fa0120a1598
76e0564550de87c2cb1194e5e4fceac0b0e1a673
describe
'42627' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNT' 'sip-files00040.pro'
9acd46b458ec71df8ff3a84824c392a1
27c00f5da074633d5898bbe17f0c7c9a3aa98533
'2011-11-17T04:05:35-05:00'
describe
'41035' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNU' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
ccdbc6c6e5952a3c737e001dbc1e1526
16b70d7b6a103f4e49efd4b86a590d34beee0518
describe
'6544511' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNV' 'sip-files00040.tif'
76b1310171174f84da8c757baebe1144
d365159c216b0022c24e270ed5e4a8ef8e7b30e5
describe
'1763' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNW' 'sip-files00040.txt'
9d35a9fb38cfb7ef2cf202e069c83109
569cecde6aa0ddc1bbbc7748262adf848ba5d805
'2011-11-17T04:02:55-05:00'
describe
'13484' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNX' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
9df69b6a195e8e0b40b94c49060841c3
66f1afb2f074951d9562dc74a8868b47cc641ad0
describe
'870541' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNY' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
f44d1a4c8f245255e0f96bb0b2b7afa6
eb879c25697eb447690c3f8fcb5b112e674f1d65
describe
'110310' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARNZ' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
d69c529d324d263080f3231a7e8f568c
cdfed6a02595396a26b83ab064f4f0dfb253b7a5
describe
'42814' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROA' 'sip-files00041.pro'
7d9d83d1137d5db7b9bbf9a59b86ba52
cacb73ae058d54c0f9a957aa70bb194636b639c2
'2011-11-17T04:10:19-05:00'
describe
'39979' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROB' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
72b30d9430a386e60d455704fe40ff9b
f666a601b7dd8a92e4a0315e2bd67196fc967b9c
describe
'6971103' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROC' 'sip-files00041.tif'
0e8a4bc2e11c2b8e0205365590ad467d
58f5b413dd7e27cda1a24aedb0eb202fcbfe5221
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROD' 'sip-files00041.txt'
0c13917339f786f793defc93f71b5650
f6262e81dcd4185c0bfa25a5fa69a4f2a3dc1cb7
describe
'12499' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROE' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
f706f8174238433033299c3fa3d5104d
954d8ff5ecb157f8a98c859d07188a09998d5d2d
'2011-11-17T04:09:02-05:00'
describe
'873265' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROF' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
f9d73d96497fc30bf05268a44ff08b09
d68903fde3b0c52d60a159478c05a8a22a3abf1a
'2011-11-17T04:03:52-05:00'
describe
'116775' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROG' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
1fb528b2be0a1ffdd0d7e64194591674
ca23782a805d75cf9109519712dfbacccec83de5
'2011-11-17T04:03:29-05:00'
describe
'44967' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROH' 'sip-files00042.pro'
1a94ff38aadaa22c4b9f8e7af5763301
85d1ea64f96e187dae49e2dfa786284303c5a7aa
'2011-11-17T04:05:56-05:00'
describe
'42350' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROI' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
6c143ac97350c9928ad4a620cf6ed174
9189d7201312e2a2acebc97c1f0412ef7c2f60b2
describe
'6992657' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROJ' 'sip-files00042.tif'
772f6467227e382b88ff90b964a7e8af
e6459881ff7570b635b390accc5e569b35d5394a
'2011-11-17T04:05:51-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROK' 'sip-files00042.txt'
1e90164150b0537f16ee2b1e4b0f5624
ed9ad98bf9b5a2c5a52774f3c2582d3b8403d238
'2011-11-17T04:04:07-05:00'
describe
'12390' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROL' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
04727454ea33b01ee256ea08f2a8598e
485c7443a8af02cff5f86c7949f511d7b5cb68db
describe
'858140' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROM' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
1d1c573ef51d45eb7b0bfc1348ad2422
d39b684593356be39cfedd9e27db132b7b1f7ccb
'2011-11-17T04:04:22-05:00'
describe
'112005' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARON' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
bfb0ee59b136ede5bbf0bc508e747204
fed03fc8c3c90a6fa0dc6edffbe7110e14fb9fb3
'2011-11-17T04:04:35-05:00'
describe
'41968' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROO' 'sip-files00043.pro'
fb530b1ca489e5437243eee5eab8e3f3
392ecbb482a94dfb856014bfc85c8c739f335ff7
'2011-11-17T04:03:58-05:00'
describe
'40791' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROP' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
76b69190a9919caa4ab9c3b1fe55b04d
c770082024f79e8d96d1976a0433585a570ce8c4
'2011-11-17T04:10:01-05:00'
describe
'6871999' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROQ' 'sip-files00043.tif'
ca41e691910f5636c864249df94753f1
8c2eb5eeaa2c7b28f0d1732b34757a154b1dd185
describe
'1704' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROR' 'sip-files00043.txt'
e2abccefbaf9684749f2e1176411502c
d768bce8a8a83a82c71a59803ad7abf17a881ba0
'2011-11-17T04:10:56-05:00'
describe
'12519' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROS' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
8a93019be55e96b04ea7a2e6ef5ce1b3
2e90792a86c6c53399120395817ef448c3c5a208
describe
'849449' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROT' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
c37d1a31f18b0194bb41d955557dcfd5
ac842d02d0d8f81167615a263160e25d7de948f1
'2011-11-17T04:09:30-05:00'
describe
'116243' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROU' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
294ec919d341156ee3b0778ce9922f01
d2f765cdb50d7ff3f4e945c1427a26170b1dad37
'2011-11-17T04:04:39-05:00'
describe
'43613' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROV' 'sip-files00044.pro'
d4daf351ffb162fe88d064321561cd19
969f4272ff19b87990f7d904f4ce016714ec1ef3
'2011-11-17T04:04:05-05:00'
describe
'41323' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROW' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
9688e5f5ccf9836dfe79901b0708cd44
9b8527e0cb823f3291debc29d9b0f30ecb5cd025
'2011-11-17T04:03:43-05:00'
describe
'6802659' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROX' 'sip-files00044.tif'
bff61f2d109d78e0254f0a97a8aa7fa5
414c61469e932a50093e3440a352606771a4ef0d
'2011-11-17T04:09:05-05:00'
describe
'1765' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROY' 'sip-files00044.txt'
7f952cb3da03e9abe1f5db8ea95f3c31
422d2885874ad452a692c0ed2da2cfa8da9151f6
describe
'12654' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAAROZ' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
a5bc026e843fe52643aed4a040e7c3df
475b98f987b7b42a79a6858b0133d3bf1ede1063
'2011-11-17T04:03:22-05:00'
describe
'849514' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPA' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
0aa8e1797d34a6558a877ffcae0feb70
0438cfa04ae0e9eb8886eab987fb072865bd06ea
describe
'115078' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPB' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
84a7a25c7d06c0f66c9090dc457ed3fb
a8dd2b5517a7fc1e4ab60d2f807a2a6da5b2d69f
describe
'43245' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPC' 'sip-files00045.pro'
a56967472c5004d7bf3ab2f8891104b1
605a891dd0016d2b6910a1db7664539dca3ca8c9
'2011-11-17T04:03:39-05:00'
describe
'41523' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPD' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
a2c3cf3f17d67cc909562744d7e6c715
52276911bd1a77396caf295f8de1a336a371e5fe
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPE' 'sip-files00045.tif'
238c3d8b1da2500e9cc3c67546fbdeea
324b1830f5e3e8102a9081714734142c357ee98e
'2011-11-17T04:05:47-05:00'
describe
'1724' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPF' 'sip-files00045.txt'
a6aaa8f0967ac71cdfd796655d38e824
f01ff54416112f33dc08ae3251d5fa7b6d44c299
describe
'12794' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPG' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
834dffe5a5de4df48a441faf52230939
1174d53ab4f5642bfa2f46985a72f5ef775eb0bf
describe
'862488' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPH' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
b0c4e3b0f08b591f4964581778fc4f80
4368ca2affc68a8874c7f6875c5f747960bfad49
'2011-11-17T04:06:11-05:00'
describe
'120061' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPI' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
c81ec9dd94d4654568057366e0bc595b
3ef16e6ae826bc10c7394cf797e65073954c126a
describe
'44782' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPJ' 'sip-files00046.pro'
632cca768d67d23361733f086f936784
3751e5d5c25d3c680a4c7f461495723061be4637
describe
'43304' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPK' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
8bdc6ea8e6db2a3040b099c8e75e18b1
8e0fcfb31e1a8882d0df93ee893cc2ae67b1b9c6
describe
'6906669' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPL' 'sip-files00046.tif'
20d509cc0a13503bde1ea7e754b11aab
e3357d859e10d480130aa9791e3e24916cb92aac
'2011-11-17T04:02:36-05:00'
describe
'1870' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPM' 'sip-files00046.txt'
2af7caf94e1dd0ffaf893faf9cec797f
8e54ee4315c8c0b9bfb6ffa726a2802e415e9dc5
describe
'12818' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPN' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
2a752b57d1fa7cf6350b322457c9cbed
b34296249099f5d366c2ecc747f9ff1d25a1e516
'2011-11-17T04:10:41-05:00'
describe
'851261' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPO' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
4a3d4f23547efca9731ff3d3e04b2c1a
9e97850f240764b066aefe8dddbb386a687ee301
describe
'102770' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPP' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
c57c03a4cc7cf982a4c767556adebefd
d442553705bcd49d3f9fb34325c3bbef25e7d163
'2011-11-17T04:06:58-05:00'
describe
'37337' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPQ' 'sip-files00047.pro'
2292823baab4768b0758efd5b9e7cbf4
6a5aa123f1062df12a7ddbcd1508d91971504328
'2011-11-17T04:04:28-05:00'
describe
'37805' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPR' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
65bb36204f7083d83a044699fe09627b
34c0003221d612abd33bdddf78c95cfade4928f3
'2011-11-17T04:02:37-05:00'
describe
'6817613' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPS' 'sip-files00047.tif'
86cd552c498bf6a9adfcd430d45e8237
9a8b21b6184eddb85a3afc3b50845379306c6e90
'2011-11-17T04:09:39-05:00'
describe
'1559' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPT' 'sip-files00047.txt'
b1eb76816f64528286af1d2d84cc5220
12336020982999ac68373eee8a7a5bb1dce75dc5
'2011-11-17T04:06:16-05:00'
describe
'11930' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPU' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
5f6c3d68b32b018ba862de6e40d4fccd
a15a3db3544796c087b9a39e3ab971b97370d704
'2011-11-17T04:02:47-05:00'
describe
'838121' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPV' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
c1e4be0efd9e541f4f44379ae4e6f0e4
ca5f3369195c8f23e7f87647214702006ae05da1
describe
'115639' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPW' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
88354c31564151f75a5e920977f71187
56569609bbf434057ddef590003d7980ab158682
describe
'42972' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPX' 'sip-files00048.pro'
235de5cbcb3fe8a94ec36d13d84fa187
74682357639c7c8da8326611894e0c3a6601b4d7
describe
'41835' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPY' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
66f862070fc845fc42b12daf35ecdb5e
d5da7e1c0092587f03a6d8e46bd850a9f886f622
'2011-11-17T04:06:53-05:00'
describe
'6711383' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARPZ' 'sip-files00048.tif'
8ac58894164c5753ff518c74d66bc857
cb0edefb708b17a8e1f2f6ec02f3abcdf7fa4d72
'2011-11-17T04:03:25-05:00'
describe
'1747' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQA' 'sip-files00048.txt'
009f060d2b8fee93d15e4d1ca3aa5e53
6956ec1a63558e941e07dfd5cacb05f835642318
describe
'12998' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQB' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
bee9390633bba323c2038a7c3e9d57fc
515fd0ba04d45e03a1b61976379d43a739071b35
'2011-11-17T04:04:38-05:00'
describe
'844865' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQC' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
ae41e878fa11f3dea53599ee780af8fe
9e185b272bc2676d49e51024222159658555ab82
'2011-11-17T04:05:01-05:00'
describe
'119553' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQD' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
6a2e216329a28a590dc50e7894c29883
8ca738770574f4237fa4ebc78d1b5c1cae88f553
'2011-11-17T04:04:53-05:00'
describe
'45699' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQE' 'sip-files00049.pro'
e273b558d6992277a733052c46f79020
22a55208b889cd9027359935d4bcd5306581e3bf
describe
'43432' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQF' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
e14ca4112efe44352be7790c2061d8ae
ffc764c13af93793cda5307ef9f3a37b44d35bef
describe
'6765379' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQG' 'sip-files00049.tif'
e6f4aecf60dbaafe3ca6acd2af3ed716
69fbccd4ef37752091e185ccd8d1d34e6dfc5806
describe
'1834' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQH' 'sip-files00049.txt'
7acb8e29c2209158a68992c1130b2ea8
23003de21c63bf0ad7c606c7d3e92b217c9a46b7
'2011-11-17T04:04:17-05:00'
describe
'12980' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQI' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
a47f9212be2f13346eb2c6fa2bcea819
a4b3b7a6aeb7f93fdea2749678f7906222967bba
describe
'848538' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQJ' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
8423c0f1d189ad61c9c193420486db40
8a4dddf71bccf44bbba8fcb3323fc9dfb6125d15
'2011-11-17T04:03:21-05:00'
describe
'118871' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQK' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
d23ca7985ccb51e57872dfdfcf934581
8fb390bacd09618fbb727e8983cd505fdaa8d005
describe
'44350' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQL' 'sip-files00050.pro'
e9357e9904346db1118c8cfcfaf2a124
75f38bdb3ea7276ea3efbd074d827defa70c1016
'2011-11-17T04:02:58-05:00'
describe
'42817' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQM' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
dbe69861f83897281cb5ed4ad36162d4
f64c57727502bad268817de0e2037e0211a75e4f
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQN' 'sip-files00050.tif'
69a27ed45e3112ee202c654f8fe47cc8
d98e6254f66143f8e8672635f021aac2ae82b868
describe
'1832' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQO' 'sip-files00050.txt'
19f38035b956077f1ae6c491c0077a66
80c2471fb73466fe13547733154244836d7355a2
describe
'12692' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQP' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
fde8d174fe69e2267d976fd624414ee1
8b72d987bb06f954b04a13fd03dbceab004ccc33
'2011-11-17T04:06:24-05:00'
describe
'870572' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQQ' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
55555bf5bfc328229ef4dd4048b15014
c43db37dae468336bed10160242896878ee11bbc
describe
'120119' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQR' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
403cf7862bed4e36c6e87457f3b1be23
6e77aaf1eda1d288c1b3f3bb762e189885401262
'2011-11-17T04:05:40-05:00'
describe
'45803' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQS' 'sip-files00051.pro'
ca09e198e22a3244ae3bdd439285c83d
fe22fed10d17fe5fc23db796a046d13abeae15e3
'2011-11-17T04:10:53-05:00'
describe
'43124' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQT' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
28504c76d331702785787600be320e12
103dfadc57b9a4105831701f532876a844c0141a
'2011-11-17T04:09:12-05:00'
describe
'6972543' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQU' 'sip-files00051.tif'
8e3da7efce32b296869e5bfd9ed27a74
551bded9b4679ac2c9444d348fd99b84bb53aac5
'2011-11-17T04:09:42-05:00'
describe
'1815' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQV' 'sip-files00051.txt'
f14d457beecdb4277f28a54c847d087f
991a93409904b2e48ac09413a8e5f3516747911b
describe
'12641' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQW' 'sip-files00051thm.jpg'
b7800b32378937c2c524cd2a8edeac9a
96afb87db50c6af1e8a5e75090d0be8b256316ec
describe
'858182' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQX' 'sip-files00052.jp2'
6f07d47bb6b4d97b4b8e5b84179484a0
6ed9eb91359fcfc25576b15f010eca484de37ef0
describe
'118792' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQY' 'sip-files00052.jpg'
ff8281c6c074a001deda6c47e47a5181
29efd4703e31ef16ae9a563b97e80935927231ca
describe
'44581' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARQZ' 'sip-files00052.pro'
1f30d4066ad3cbabcad2f836cb66fd91
d50d9e71cce3dbb5b1c6e42f7c2ca6cc131efe42
describe
'42775' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRA' 'sip-files00052.QC.jpg'
995a51afb0882f24511df8b50670286d
f8a0b6647436fcd3c5f01d8a1d047c191ae28d45
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRB' 'sip-files00052.tif'
51807e1cdef967dd171934484e7ec7c8
986bd56b5cee07a869344bea9c9cf4fff506838a
'2011-11-17T04:04:32-05:00'
describe
'1854' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRC' 'sip-files00052.txt'
fdeb9f6c580b46c5edd8c97c6fc1d829
f20ce513a849cfd4444ec019e471d6ee518fa4f5
describe
'12789' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRD' 'sip-files00052thm.jpg'
59e195c9b1d12e2406355c60a75f8c79
bf53f2a82e593399958309a13b87fa1695fcf950
describe
'884484' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRE' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
999f4e9f8a331a324a0eebf52be30e85
85a65eef3cd6d16e3f36d5d99e6d2fef6a3caddd
describe
'109424' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRF' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
235271bf51e04877792413d063e2bfe3
2d1b8d0ad0977f7f7f0416cb9d5138156a3f2259
'2011-11-17T04:06:05-05:00'
describe
'41477' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRG' 'sip-files00053.pro'
11c20c6c2a35997f9d0920c7829d939f
bfe3024d847b52a909b2541ed0fecb1ec882bcc7
describe
'40260' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRH' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
50a7f382e4c640d84db5909da857b242
8ca4600e6cfaf060a048a6b8718ed2749e3c254b
'2011-11-17T04:08:35-05:00'
describe
'7082503' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRI' 'sip-files00053.tif'
35594817a15c31940e3d9215a4ef0866
2c995f04786ee47a78b49318e6aad8158f139704
'2011-11-17T04:05:10-05:00'
describe
'1679' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRJ' 'sip-files00053.txt'
bf22be8fd3383344981e9b0acfe54ec5
51f5b2197a8a5e4a19db929c55f26199de121193
'2011-11-17T04:10:51-05:00'
describe
'12080' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRK' 'sip-files00053thm.jpg'
e7c5716c709373e5a4ac8c718428b5f8
31f95fcdfa149fe66c51a6e8015a02750e24a14a
describe
'872543' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRL' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
95583cc301229d5996fbf93fa59d5973
62b77348cbf7f0b7ec2851335c0f83eb4c6cb020
describe
'109592' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRM' 'sip-files00054.jpg'
84c059f57660074bf80e79c2812ee674
36fc466a54ec2e52b0c1690785444592c97eef25
'2011-11-17T04:03:37-05:00'
describe
'40206' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRN' 'sip-files00054.pro'
5ed117133d72333056dfc765b80f721f
b9bb0677b09805c3ed2e498192c63c3c95d4f948
'2011-11-17T04:09:35-05:00'
describe
'40580' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRO' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
a2f5c3cc1a2762723b0112726b835e69
43a50720ef30f092ade26a0bb3489e08e01881d5
describe
'6987007' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRP' 'sip-files00054.tif'
7923fec447bb6091be82c72016a93fea
e8c2f0f7410e5080538909b132940a5e908283a3
'2011-11-17T04:02:49-05:00'
describe
'1639' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRQ' 'sip-files00054.txt'
7ea01e68a26558f9e5590ef6ae9af11a
c0febb1c443d3a433fbaf9d547368bf59eb63762
'2011-11-17T04:05:29-05:00'
describe
'12269' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRR' 'sip-files00054thm.jpg'
3d757e5c90b05e75576663a27e449590
fad1779995924411158e02d8e982bbff96865b8b
'2011-11-17T04:04:27-05:00'
describe
'876807' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRS' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
01f4ea1f4c037076c0f1dfb9346cbf45
cd2629cbde6510f494379107f462bb591a3e8f47
'2011-11-17T04:05:16-05:00'
describe
'112436' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRT' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
9d9f964337590baff7fddd4509430055
cb08fef257f406fb5e19586bdfc1c9f8f56fa3dc
describe
'42453' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRU' 'sip-files00055.pro'
d025622653fda923ae6ef41400251bcb
32b30dcac0d53335153087f37c7789feed9e9b0a
'2011-11-17T04:04:57-05:00'
describe
'41229' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRV' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
8738368d55bd9611da7daa61432a1e2f
5764b13edd4a09a5f3009b40cb178cd8ce289cc2
describe
'7021577' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRW' 'sip-files00055.tif'
0e96ef860474c64c6d25fb882a0602ad
72b2a6083f9bdd503ed8f9889179aa2f06517cef
describe
'1711' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRX' 'sip-files00055.txt'
a40390e5e5f43cce1dfebdc430610be9
4e656e0478a31ba1093fe3e1b20375655fae0bd0
'2011-11-17T04:10:04-05:00'
describe
'12141' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRY' 'sip-files00055thm.jpg'
182826c4b9376d7a835c9dc5850d184e
c6d4d1046247c2e1b51e31b14a9c9a5fc10917f3
'2011-11-17T04:06:37-05:00'
describe
'899684' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARRZ' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
b631bbf8f060757ac8c7e79c67f144fd
0c33334bed42ae48a827252530cd751f33b7cb45
describe
'109703' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSA' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
5cffd23278138c0ea5395cfabdcd0f8c
ec08c06c09efdd7589b9481f2efd8ce3e487e557
'2011-11-17T04:02:24-05:00'
describe
'40227' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSB' 'sip-files00056.pro'
df039f6bb240089af81b2e902e97e2cd
c9d23e5388c83e065e0d799c7324ed0df2661c7d
describe
'40283' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSC' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
31fac3d1d7a774da47a991bcd500cb8c
dbf681fb2b0b08883867e236cef9497055c22692
describe
'7206557' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSD' 'sip-files00056.tif'
101ca6c4f9839ed9c941559c0af3458d
dfaee5319ddc567181aabb12fc1aa3f9e7c2b085
'2011-11-17T04:04:10-05:00'
describe
'1633' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSE' 'sip-files00056.txt'
1ee3ca37bc66f625a8be2e08c9c1ec93
867cebe3510dcc08f1122c0030ec2b6c9100edca
describe
'11706' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSF' 'sip-files00056thm.jpg'
aff7c2ad45a6021e79426d1855e2ffca
4a04bc25aea941e034ca8403ee59e5d1e41feb23
'2011-11-17T04:04:37-05:00'
describe
'876888' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSG' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
a77bde1e8984a75eb8e5d5d47714a127
c9745b6e6946be4649b432328d05e9369b07d419
describe
'114298' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSH' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
bc0c469e7060015fc601680bdb69ea6d
e348bf78601ac522aed8ace5aac5e5643846700f
describe
'42266' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSI' 'sip-files00057.pro'
84be8048acbf7acf46d0a27b5716b38b
b5f4eb4a294256228e7ee3e90e7866a595b358f1
'2011-11-17T04:10:45-05:00'
describe
'41807' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSJ' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
9b852edccc521d188aa6b690b9f56d69
39d968225357e46ad0b71dbcd6610f93669f821c
'2011-11-17T04:10:31-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSK' 'sip-files00057.tif'
cb1576d194adaa18eb589790d21f7d1f
26dfce660e3eaf3f3d32c8b0e60e2ad3c1d674d6
describe
'1693' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSL' 'sip-files00057.txt'
a3d6c8ffe05f5d5a44bd1c6ed1d86f7b
377bdf8e2678a00db3f73c7cbfb15bd7bac2d8d2
'2011-11-17T04:03:23-05:00'
describe
'12340' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSM' 'sip-files00057thm.jpg'
81a209e18b11bf0188b86be65c2b4006
7c8f354101957854f0d2afa4733a250f9a015c75
describe
'848523' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSN' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
e4031fb8c38a33d24faf29eb3a80e135
da0c94342da7596ef06532a6914a5cb8794298bf
describe
'117672' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSO' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
3b2a889ca299d6d40fd054ca339dc7f6
6de71539a79adcbe70f1d863d3c76f7ab871b12f
describe
'43967' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSP' 'sip-files00058.pro'
3a7598ff6ced1b6dc8f5fe576a8f94c4
23b50f43ce124aaa6d94dee353feab02e8a372b2
'2011-11-17T04:02:57-05:00'
describe
'43090' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSQ' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
3b35ab6c27f15ab4dc46ccea1aa906f4
1795bb20515f2108b05d0b0bb9c949fa07067e9d
'2011-11-17T04:02:42-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSR' 'sip-files00058.tif'
7d188e3db4c587194c1190e78c5709ec
e0bb86545f9e8cdcee258b430ddac48478212743
'2011-11-17T04:09:26-05:00'
describe
'1838' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSS' 'sip-files00058.txt'
49ebbdbf0c8aa721f6b8e6abe382bad1
6dddc38eface2dc029ad491babade1a15a68f51a
'2011-11-17T04:06:00-05:00'
describe
'12832' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARST' 'sip-files00058thm.jpg'
96fac3c663bfa310b51840f0556fb490
1c611497cdf8c93911145a51735f1f04f952195a
describe
'845915' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSU' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
e5528a1da35d12428d3359ed4bc32c4d
d3cb6ce973af7cf1eabd313a75f6f8c336c0e754
describe
'115416' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSV' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
05f10bf25f689f3f7481f83a261afdf5
007acdd865ce1b1c1c88e1f459dd20ccbf902c90
'2011-11-17T04:03:17-05:00'
describe
'41983' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSW' 'sip-files00059.pro'
c0bea91498d7c0a46724a86f636a32c0
d59ce78fb78b0de1edb231ef95b0f3b4939e9ace
describe
'42584' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSX' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
ff2cd1a556e5b6db7e78e419056e9f57
ac595b98761af1615f08ae6a0cd6f105eebb5b00
describe
'6774883' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSY' 'sip-files00059.tif'
a8587d9dcead9313d1c640f767a585e3
0e9d9eb9a72ab886a5e1cdf4879e7cf6f1a42109
'2011-11-17T04:04:49-05:00'
describe
'1698' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARSZ' 'sip-files00059.txt'
c16784c946c49c98e46471c2ab3ffa19
8d622c66bcf694d8b227911fdf2eb46162f963bc
describe
'12773' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTA' 'sip-files00059thm.jpg'
1ac08c7de8196b03ac94b6a186e25046
213a1c7a93f0d0367c3a431127adf18f2940154a
describe
'891957' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTB' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
17a892860c5beecab9ea20c696fb76f0
01ce857119d960ebd2918f84b6e6a1fc447793ca
describe
'115470' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTC' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
c551ef27e34dcb14a671fb98e98bccc9
2ad806c1ff784a5e6a00369cb1771b3b5a919a0e
describe
'43381' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTD' 'sip-files00060.pro'
9d964a50a9d71ccd296985a259aaafbb
e033fe736bedf6e9c8f3558404cd71463ce7f2fb
describe
'42238' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTE' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
a7d93a79e037fa034590d4c94470befa
5d40b3da5cfd96767c592b7da8f70c81107d3ad8
'2011-11-17T04:04:18-05:00'
describe
'7144737' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTF' 'sip-files00060.tif'
616c304ab4349cc6767b89ad25d44c28
230c5126ec8e82c15dbdf3a0f2452f2aafbe04e6
describe
'1753' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTG' 'sip-files00060.txt'
0c104f4860ac13702b191c23111c7142
5ede322678ceda3b17cde1beeb67f908b3d45e65
'2011-11-17T04:05:31-05:00'
describe
'11990' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTH' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
7b8d8fd4c6d0621abd1a45c799df46dd
9b9af6529d4725918de99e492350beead2f39721
'2011-11-17T04:09:25-05:00'
describe
'860634' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTI' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
23f098d7d502647912d6f1540c7877b9
b427d13e295a45fc1a5aa66a437bf60fa5036c9a
describe
'98314' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTJ' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
3e4eed563f9e3f72f70f08ea13aef46f
32953a13bb88ed41b043182982426f361a85b3d8
describe
'35512' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTK' 'sip-files00061.pro'
d71a4716bdea47df95882989bc94686b
c77a8124ba27932eb29cfeac85428146a30fe55b
describe
'35210' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTL' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
12f477595fcd2b43c97a9ad6d7f43132
b9052869ac5f15eed36fdcbc0f9bea068ac507ed
describe
'6891823' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTM' 'sip-files00061.tif'
25944aa09a3ef82c7652f3d827fda5fd
16902591fd84d5bf268c669142b92d387ef35463
'2011-11-17T04:09:18-05:00'
describe
'1443' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTN' 'sip-files00061.txt'
e145d5f486eb49123819f98e5432c2d9
9d74c612b2c6bc25b96b97b916e6d6e2371b4b96
'2011-11-17T04:04:31-05:00'
describe
'11412' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTO' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
b8bdc1816687745f163ccc819e6c7559
62949de14484d09cc549a58e1908afeb3a60793c
describe
'888081' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTP' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
ca5075f7e608b9efc9c670d33999e81e
cac89db3293d03552210f68fc0dd46dc9444d6e9
describe
'108258' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTQ' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
3b21714a5bb74156ec94633ddf5fdf15
8b2fb5039193e8a7538d96a7dc1fe52e1e37dd49
'2011-11-17T04:09:33-05:00'
describe
'40412' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTR' 'sip-files00062.pro'
435d09c2c868d117dc38993cf96078fb
6ed786775ab1c2f9284edb93de13f14a6c8e41fd
'2011-11-17T04:02:17-05:00'
describe
'39470' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTS' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
e9ee90d910e3d74e36e89b4bf866cb19
76c2e7e03f0c16e8d6a0b09eeb52a59e1c7e73b6
describe
'7113535' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTT' 'sip-files00062.tif'
3912d29aab0952f9f93229ef1a1b15d5
4ba1c28dcd60d9439dc51b30ed09bbe8354b1d5b
'2011-11-17T04:02:13-05:00'
describe
'1687' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTU' 'sip-files00062.txt'
3c31cdfdac0c778c9dd419b9272543f1
66a38e243017fe0f8f40b17c878d70d1076fd1b9
'2011-11-17T04:02:15-05:00'
describe
'11416' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTV' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
37b728d8b09836e717d47de6b2eebd21
3f754f01a77f5814e80531024215745bfa55c7d9
describe
'861213' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTW' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
4a4901fdda74b189edd34bb585deb642
ccfd7558ef844ca500776cb7b9f3d05340d5a1fe
describe
'110176' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTX' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
63ecade39d9d3a57a303a0a8a5368dab
b04f5a7c982dd162fc666f5c818ab0a210c97265
'2011-11-17T04:09:13-05:00'
describe
'41847' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTY' 'sip-files00063.pro'
71e2b3be36caf21ab7ba3f0d38a00a26
8508f7ac5ef7e1d68085ad3ac874b789e5c3cbe4
'2011-11-17T04:08:44-05:00'
describe
'40605' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARTZ' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
c317fdc9dc6972022f649f8a074ac0b3
62de141bb8a164911109cd5c671d27c830d7289a
describe
'6896493' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUA' 'sip-files00063.tif'
8e17ff1f353ecc7338d659e0dd64ba97
aa0e3219f7f545e66c21933a89827fba723c5cf8
'2011-11-17T04:10:50-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUB' 'sip-files00063.txt'
eb364e711619a42fe289884b7857a22f
82d357178630caf1b2af8c3eecb8e7cc8448acde
describe
'12834' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUC' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
d00bb3b36388894a7101068b402a62d4
57255c47b6042a648373d2a3bda090cb6b193c4b
describe
'851005' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUD' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
30c11657f4bc5385c64369b9cd62de2c
fd3a80bf275fedc81836cec7e35abce6067cd4c1
'2011-11-17T04:03:59-05:00'
describe
'114996' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUE' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
d34cccfc16392656913acfbed664f0ce
4da3cebb53fa9b36cd5fd076d0616a78b1efbecf
'2011-11-17T04:05:33-05:00'
describe
'43508' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUF' 'sip-files00064.pro'
f0e431cf0d38ca4961c0ff5a3868aca0
530e11a9a4a29805801ffc739e5b6fc443bbc79e
'2011-11-17T04:06:25-05:00'
describe
'42540' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUG' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
ce68a5cf4f38f7f9b15d8714b0792125
4f320d1c032548b1ad731b8d701fbcb9ca4d342c
describe
'6814523' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUH' 'sip-files00064.tif'
103b098d08d408dfade2ebe64fc02dcc
bca159564a260a6a9f89287eaf2a659085f836bd
'2011-11-17T04:05:25-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUI' 'sip-files00064.txt'
df4816a31b6f25591a6f06d42e59efd7
04f7050e006c3a764c3a393333818752f4cea75c
describe
'13093' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUJ' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
6dbe6985ee379c24c5d07656d307b4f3
f0c9a01948d3e77ee8214b5bc86b03be6bd82e65
describe
'865959' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUK' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
3d1b48ed017272ed1117db3383d29a63
b6f633533f334be40befd9b635920507316f7e6a
describe
'110185' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUL' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
b0d02810e7df4de5009e5b69ef07d379
6e7948faaece87468c47d186f6ff91f99c0e37cd
describe
'41507' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUM' 'sip-files00065.pro'
b1f616f657868c0610177603b26b6d7c
58924374943476741264c5d46d7eb587405339ee
describe
'40983' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUN' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
17e3fe9c0d639c322ea51f6da6e55eb6
28dfa55839949709e0269045148a64e355bf9420
'2011-11-17T04:09:47-05:00'
describe
'6934331' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUO' 'sip-files00065.tif'
0c5fd719ee68c0c78cf17f8a7eda55fc
e68283ab733333cfac506a8a4bf176b7435e619f
'2011-11-17T04:03:12-05:00'
describe
'1662' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUP' 'sip-files00065.txt'
998186846543dbdef0f4f09a2f7a6787
b8289ca8fbba9b8c5009e9fe7283cc8fc2cf5d03
describe
'12078' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUQ' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
63c82cd6aff7d5e64396d4a5cd7ba356
428955cc1239ed6989a9f690ab9d6656f267db41
'2011-11-17T04:02:40-05:00'
describe
'863894' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUR' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
f02735b016b82909c8fce27a7b7b246b
2bcc2ca0be35b149a787d0ee8265b194ba3ea84f
'2011-11-17T04:10:17-05:00'
describe
'108588' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUS' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
bd1cd540dd9011e08ec7db1ba2280e66
43ff74782b4648cf8d5c01e4e6281e9e1a4472f6
describe
'40643' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUT' 'sip-files00066.pro'
930a0ac4066bb7ddd646db9b4c463209
9617c5267fe51cad4551db48d0eb8b43b5bc65bd
describe
'39507' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUU' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
c04c56dbda0109c8d991d244b5707bb8
c2fa4c8ef507692c30f1aaeade7d0b794c39c310
describe
'6917867' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUV' 'sip-files00066.tif'
2d912ece7c68b26945986bbc22fed832
502101a7164575e1623ac00e1b8e371e91b79294
describe
'1674' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUW' 'sip-files00066.txt'
ed44602fad0f01407a6ee56b7102a758
dfd221a0428ac3ce61422c7ee539a320d845ef90
describe
'12116' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUX' 'sip-files00066thm.jpg'
b9732dea3affb3d01d8fe6634670b13a
84e94e505aa3b5d7add634a15f6755acc720d5f6
describe
'838364' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUY' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
d87b885e1ef329c419600ded0139dbe5
c30b139226224ba50ad326b41b279c1c10963451
describe
'116782' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARUZ' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
d1409962e9f747f8a3017b0aaed18cce
a4d59d262d8d4747a8f9b73eaa2b5cc1c7ebfa31
'2011-11-17T04:02:56-05:00'
describe
'43909' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVA' 'sip-files00067.pro'
de94f4394229f25ce50e273c0c7a18a1
0fbd3372cebb8a9ca19442fd1dea2a533e6af1ce
describe
'43386' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVB' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
1889222e693a5dbc6507e033a274435a
af3fcdf7ba4010f9d8936c195843cad3f25ac48b
describe
'6713903' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVC' 'sip-files00067.tif'
2c8cd43c6e7467a8956606831b0dadb6
232d0461a649e2ae812c3b00587d1b3cbbe41ea2
describe
'1761' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVD' 'sip-files00067.txt'
530e7109d5f1cfa75fb81ba760036e57
884752deae314b49dbe1ad4bffa457a035906580
describe
'13492' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVE' 'sip-files00067thm.jpg'
6ed724d1e6198e59fd3d13c926b3061e
fe2d0de5b3e5bbd40a8a23ac7b741a3f282f5e54
describe
'861608' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVF' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
b22782f874e091bd065cb7595bc523c4
69d028fc75c654b3ef5877b3a5b723f12a266f6f
describe
'116029' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVG' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
bde23f6696d0b9631d25a86f8820ad42
13dcbc7edb70ff581bdbb50c87d69bb89aadd58b
'2011-11-17T04:03:48-05:00'
describe
'43717' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVH' 'sip-files00068.pro'
924c0f2c9e87dfaf681e4f29e99f8d9c
7863e18678af2fd29f5f4fb1314151a4bf9383df
describe
'42673' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVI' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
98b8e4e081537b2e9cc1dbc18ae87834
60b5ca80822486d348411fde5bd4df9f76e8a342
'2011-11-17T04:09:23-05:00'
describe
'6899851' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVJ' 'sip-files00068.tif'
d2a3c4f01c40e8dc7e64744f19127ea7
9bc5ad49cffbbce57652eb876b71e4b4d68ab1bc
'2011-11-17T04:08:49-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVK' 'sip-files00068.txt'
61f3c1e250652eb6bd4457dcf5053488
38d0a714484d50491dcf6d753410c5c373033e77
'2011-11-17T04:03:01-05:00'
describe
'12601' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVL' 'sip-files00068thm.jpg'
559449bd16547ace0f4cd44f4f304e17
e6d823e92735017dc0d451827819c1c92f8de0f6
describe
'858339' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVM' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
81f598a914e91f4131fe3c6593925c27
c103e86bf26feb3b89992db3de0ce63cc6d7626e
describe
'116188' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVN' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
e196c55d9b7e8c28b673224a18d55a89
51a0dd005fe6d4265cfc0fb8b97690b5785ca241
'2011-11-17T04:05:42-05:00'
describe
'43265' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVO' 'sip-files00069.pro'
f75cd1723b3f5bcb493d34f5b62acd5a
a56b471c6db72c91a0e5fb2b484cb35948749802
describe
'43561' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVP' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
4be7030fe36dfbd688fa10393af09be8
15da1b369a11e85c223557ff7395b6031b5ba3f6
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVQ' 'sip-files00069.tif'
f3dbbcfcc1d299754b301a595fdb9708
a9530fc6ab9aaa967c3c9f36730a7cbb95b6e239
'2011-11-17T04:04:52-05:00'
describe
'1739' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVR' 'sip-files00069.txt'
9627c032df56c2929eaa6ca23a30abd1
4aa070b8891aa93b4b29c5829bd5a16fea7d2b8f
describe
'12534' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVS' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
17078f8d96bfef11d586aaef6ed050bd
0ccea07b8df34c4e491ae23c1462a323b6b799e4
describe
'866423' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVT' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
d9b8d0ecee445887f17a3d63dd64194a
37568332371fbad4d1560fe5f78a29ca5b2f7b68
describe
'115291' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVU' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
0d4aeb5874b89137c69030f4cdc985e8
dcb8e540bc8751f9c5f03de02f8f8c4e188b0b2e
'2011-11-17T04:02:51-05:00'
describe
'43337' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVV' 'sip-files00070.pro'
64e4b3380143b56eef031a0edbec5bda
7adb792cd10473609cc02ea153da0b11a3283a5e
describe
'42234' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVW' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
29c2ae5ad441e9f3cef078af8709d2fb
f93263103a893ba4c1426f0590a2bc4e99fb052a
'2011-11-17T04:02:23-05:00'
describe
'6937873' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVX' 'sip-files00070.tif'
9935e76570296c3f8b51c649336813a2
732894bcd90fae90c6ce916166b0ca9f9a663d92
'2011-11-17T04:09:28-05:00'
describe
'1735' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVY' 'sip-files00070.txt'
af38d03fe6773462fa54c7d2cd40b66b
65107289049ded6935ba6510154701d45650349e
describe
'12376' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARVZ' 'sip-files00070thm.jpg'
a99c708a22d909c98904524890e68ef9
00da9ee48c1b46322fc8dbe3253372ac04b2fd56
describe
'856322' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWA' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
ee1510c64c2fa330bbf79330845066e6
b70a7c105b20f137acd6e81085dffdb796d38769
'2011-11-17T04:05:46-05:00'
describe
'114698' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWB' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
8b317cef55ac1da4dbaea6f6120531f1
ccc9ad31e48116179f7e4fe5cf7207f67d79b640
describe
'43597' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWC' 'sip-files00071.pro'
f3a6c69031467872a12e594c3dd2a712
86ca20672e89fac71f97fd740097d6b2633ac020
describe
'42208' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWD' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
006cb6a6c986de8a2437fd564bd0b3f9
0a5a39ecec8e70d866a1e3b22375040790840d44
describe
'6857053' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWE' 'sip-files00071.tif'
ffa86a84d88b402676e3af8c08167d71
e21f6ca6d577541601864a7da82195edf8e50d5e
'2011-11-17T04:08:33-05:00'
describe
'1748' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWF' 'sip-files00071.txt'
e2d1c1df82a2c39f59a7dc586a002caf
76cebc89d049deee933eff02fadb875f701fc69c
describe
'13251' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWG' 'sip-files00071thm.jpg'
3e323764ac8b154b2b4a1cb2616a6358
323d77f93068fca8f754e97e524848024a5b3cad
describe
'855714' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWH' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
0dbf16a486d584a4a3a6160e491f6d70
dd0e5945da6b22e99e458c9d66bdbdebb2fa5293
describe
'113042' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWI' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
38285e86caf53b5ad4a6240e099e7461
1fa57e9eb046a332282ff9fa70459d00c5089d53
describe
'42379' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWJ' 'sip-files00072.pro'
432a4a5fe61394c7726fb877abbb6ef8
8402f7061f2bf1aae70c8794801cb2acd8b3fb38
describe
'41627' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWK' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
0c386b9ce522e20dedb0c1e31cddf013
e4c8ba2c953774663175fa85f65a26adbb64afb1
'2011-11-17T04:10:05-05:00'
describe
'6852183' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWL' 'sip-files00072.tif'
0e9596ba72c17c93b964773d14fec2ad
403e701cc5e42d118ec1a40aa85e2220dec2cf45
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWM' 'sip-files00072.txt'
2587cbe0cb483faebce61be371e28d92
7f7cda1d8c2c5d5cac1c68cfdd81bd123e0a1360
describe
'12786' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWN' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
6f8c6b54202bd39d9c2423ab06d7db5c
c5b9c0a07f0d3585a8519a07433212b7849227d3
describe
'854332' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWO' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
f48fc4f98143712c6ea906a92785526d
d6b8705a61164495ce86652dab3936db90e720a6
describe
'108030' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWP' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
afca4aa4485fe1c876d4d0d8baf74167
8fdd9c4303cd18f0464a624579c1aefa04da018a
describe
'41333' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWQ' 'sip-files00073.pro'
664f5c9de0dc02e5d32408ea669a07d3
bffc2136583270df7658c0181aede7b36fa6e2a6
describe
'39431' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWR' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
8cfd86299e9c27e72445a98d000f1990
4250c0d343c7a33ae5f70fb9ea51e6293c961953
'2011-11-17T04:07:03-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWS' 'sip-files00073.tif'
9e3e354f974da5f8e53b2bb1212a5006
4f812c39de60cb0bb3d9f7b9fdeb0b7e163d7cf5
'2011-11-17T04:09:37-05:00'
describe
'1659' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWT' 'sip-files00073.txt'
93b67fb778264ed42cddfc38e14ca020
214ac6773663644b14e7eb1527aa5b34ab5114ee
describe
'12973' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWU' 'sip-files00073thm.jpg'
e33a916973338a00b5a77e6041134b55
3287a274aeeab3271b3494e679eeb4bc11b8836c
describe
'856310' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWV' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
c2b6a88c99efdaff460f7eb7532d7035
a1387709d21988a0d7200c690b37945096f5f0a4
'2011-11-17T04:06:38-05:00'
describe
'110326' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWW' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
b2e2086680f455ab9a5d1ac17d89e5f7
24afffc7d9148315493b6e0742aebd5db89f261d
describe
'42268' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWX' 'sip-files00074.pro'
c6c090940072606a969807566da84ebb
bbadff0a7d1e77544b1c33bbb9b05aa6b6489b06
'2011-11-17T04:08:54-05:00'
describe
'40524' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWY' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
d59862f7402f2ab035cf01ee1fd70ec5
4d89aa15ab2e4bf28d8552a0129e926a64681285
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARWZ' 'sip-files00074.tif'
c33c753b416bac0f10f9903a2a1a5e95
e933275c8105d1faf883b57b9780c87afd3b7ffc
'2011-11-17T04:06:09-05:00'
describe
'1759' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXA' 'sip-files00074.txt'
6bb316164f54b356c25afd3cdc064c85
23bb0088389b1b49aafcffd3e320e14c96b594a7
describe
'12634' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXB' 'sip-files00074thm.jpg'
0c632734ecdcda3ec563c8ec34e65cb9
842f5017f91fa483468dfcbd1a032baa665362a2
describe
'862506' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXC' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
7632ad570a85e72751f0f63993a01a24
9c2aee268c03890532b7cb1dd4f8fa834b6ac2a3
describe
'105952' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXD' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
6409629cf1c4c356a63fcc91705bc4f7
beabbedde2ac9b354c548b34c8d3bfde0a4ba535
describe
'39030' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXE' 'sip-files00075.pro'
c7a001569efb3763c89ba07aaace375d
8b10bf63cc5f88a99e2e2162a7dd410a5f87f300
'2011-11-17T04:05:21-05:00'
describe
'38879' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXF' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
d677f8a0f1aed78c9f47f409cc54de74
60233b066da701565a5b0801a26d6e3540909a5f
'2011-11-17T04:05:11-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXG' 'sip-files00075.tif'
5b0c630604b5540e241465851dede0af
133d50b8d337eb65f16ab2835d277f7686820c01
describe
'1595' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXH' 'sip-files00075.txt'
72c9f93e7b089da2c87c6400a6b6f141
2403af6cea3c91ec5cd662f681eb2e922a1d91dd
describe
'11975' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXI' 'sip-files00075thm.jpg'
4e63bfc3e1274ca7e61025ab3362cabc
0c10931c37d8e42ee06a0fb4078c2f9664354c51
describe
'841748' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXJ' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
15d5342cf56f93a440fc60ed4dcf16a6
89ae850ce56648762c1edeba01ccb337740b4489
'2011-11-17T04:10:06-05:00'
describe
'116618' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXK' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
29bf1c6289d09e73fdfdb5b91fc46bef
1babf115382dadbbad7be6212ea884379a94b55e
describe
'43585' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXL' 'sip-files00076.pro'
b223bec0eb301db95947459ac171f750
61c4524f4dd995f536e25352437b47ebb1f2cf68
'2011-11-17T04:05:54-05:00'
describe
'42908' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXM' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
13b7ff32151ee69a0a10d784ea6e67e8
1557864f1f7578dbfef7dca1158a732f6035358e
describe
'6740703' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXN' 'sip-files00076.tif'
f123e94a5acaa63787f373dab84f05a2
1a7f73fa2066aaedd4ffcf34ca10b8e96c2afb3f
describe
'1738' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXO' 'sip-files00076.txt'
b075f6fc1bf8bd18de5e3818c9f608bf
6e6f7a1e21107273fc27a9e41faac1404bc782b1
describe
'13269' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXP' 'sip-files00076thm.jpg'
bfdcc7e245909a307b981c0aa436ac12
73b2aa1f976f81e11cc3e9717d2ad53270059b2f
'2011-11-17T04:03:26-05:00'
describe
'862504' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXQ' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
51f091b3b2a097210db960b292d5bc95
fdcee73ce40ce0ee46c663bd9a405a37c9af91bc
describe
'111629' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXR' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
1b68d39247a372156cf904a312b64bd3
f23810cfbd6fe352ec88635e21543287fc44ed33
describe
'42777' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXS' 'sip-files00077.pro'
5a711653f31fd18ba0bd8e0dffedbec2
0178c14fe443a2cb34d14d04249a40107238d664
describe
'40708' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXT' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
9b9a59fbbb3f5a70329935c7ec1b0886
fc4d6277667e0f6a7606da75c29863f2f416ac72
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXU' 'sip-files00077.tif'
b97b8a3b6b9a307d5546aefb07736eb7
5914c07daf882d1f23c84ecebbd4ec9928d2b18e
'2011-11-17T04:09:00-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXV' 'sip-files00077.txt'
585591de36d479625472b075d627bd82
321c9d42cef6b7c46bce6ae0940f3927bb70ec96
describe
'12586' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXW' 'sip-files00077thm.jpg'
6201566048858e1e58069bac50dd196e
3f8e6a2e3979d66e88333c097a5304c55a669f2e
describe
'866389' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXX' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
3d9be77a804ba77d704b89e1b557119b
5d83ca96fc683cc419601de57333fe9ce4a7340e
describe
'115369' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXY' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
606bfb105532bb6dda970501eababa04
2451d80c9f542375194d01838b6b11f081cfbbbd
describe
'44330' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARXZ' 'sip-files00078.pro'
f49857b68d0a9d798c4ee30bb345a58d
6ba63d5a74d8b3875d1df8a013be14bc3de9af6a
describe
'42361' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYA' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
09163f121c621301d54ce59be4dd136d
766bf6f9894dda7577feda96be9060858f7d17e7
'2011-11-17T04:04:25-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYB' 'sip-files00078.tif'
650ef1d2ae2bf514c7ace76424739b16
b29dde28f6dae6aea90f17160fb27aa1699131b5
describe
'1799' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYC' 'sip-files00078.txt'
4bb8524f5dd84a7f65dd4175177c6e3f
df9fe9545d4c5e065a566fd2b1149a81b9805618
describe
'12427' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYD' 'sip-files00078thm.jpg'
0de5ef638803e3327440980b981bac38
a99aef378b82867f35aa68f513353abdd50996e4
describe
'866415' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYE' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
e67a5051ef0f7f2681a4f36ae90e1e45
70f573aff50b3bd5bee3ae90408c54b73e8ee582
'2011-11-17T04:05:53-05:00'
describe
'109757' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYF' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
9c3521dd02a3e95c9be2dbd1216896c8
ca96882796598692de3e2419ac2f23936dac227e
describe
'41149' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYG' 'sip-files00079.pro'
58f8d02bc3eb7b3cecc3b16f9c82bf38
571421b742e25e19dda721f6f82416d6c92a6985
describe
'39822' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYH' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
97164819f6ac6197887fecfa7f9d04eb
6c04c35e694bb816119722a3f1a7869d18ff5a4b
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYI' 'sip-files00079.tif'
6db8632ae6e559ed96ef3ec933a9c803
6590ab41a4efd99a873336cdd06933f4394a12f0
describe
'1646' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYJ' 'sip-files00079.txt'
70959e47c9639d86e4a0a84d7ece8068
fac3e434283b82c8333b8b1805cf1b56dcce03ac
describe
'12428' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYK' 'sip-files00079thm.jpg'
edce9f3d54fab626312257fc1b1fa7d6
55af253c940c0812f78a22d68f56c62163d397ca
describe
'883149' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYL' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
dd7d42ace8ec15a73d69f402a845e320
1d6b4197fb3582cb6ba40385a252d54db17dbc03
describe
'116779' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYM' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
bcdd625916d4f8992cf30fb0a42cfd06
a30552865fdf91291a1d6b9bea3998c5fb7d74bf
describe
'43637' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYN' 'sip-files00080.pro'
7ee1965888cd02215e8627457378a7ed
468a6d6b53f94081b6240a0b9ebd3edd069abf5c
'2011-11-17T04:10:47-05:00'
describe
'42728' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYO' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
170ef002f90ffc9f32278a208c6a9be9
505e1d47d326ea0ee5b02c1337030bca712fb51d
describe
'7074555' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYP' 'sip-files00080.tif'
f004e935200a842410d603af198b043a
5e27922f6922ece50d2d9bd37eb4966f15321529
describe
'1776' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYQ' 'sip-files00080.txt'
3a9d5397506931908ca5eec5baa5e0b7
ef34ef87fc469de1bc7f267bf78806aa7083046e
describe
'11883' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYR' 'sip-files00080thm.jpg'
fa270378492a505deb0b1157ec8e3a0e
2d98098f78a1199a5be98288e9089c1416c77ee5
describe
'877601' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYS' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
aa925b4f810cb4e0129b50b2fb2bb029
7bbbeddff325758c92fc1c5bb76897b05e11650b
describe
'115739' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYT' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
80a552c420c0cc691650af22b700b298
961bd2b0f80c938f6a8f625dd3be5e15773b13e9
describe
'43552' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYU' 'sip-files00081.pro'
7f145959e507bcd016a15fce7a8ce310
411552376a9d964e7d66b6b17c93607980bf1846
'2011-11-17T04:09:49-05:00'
describe
'41897' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYV' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
3c222aec707d6dc84a084191e652f91c
bea49acd7b46321479cbd1196b53e3942709c6c6
'2011-11-17T04:05:13-05:00'
describe
'7027427' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYW' 'sip-files00081.tif'
8d04c34ca5c4df8743f6cb1987acbb4b
d711998dd76aa33e10132e2552d473523b1f30cf
describe
'1771' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYX' 'sip-files00081.txt'
374c8e7297de1e8bb3409966defc0385
680f5003d4d7b69c23feff661bdd8042f6165ad1
'2011-11-17T04:06:33-05:00'
describe
'12339' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYY' 'sip-files00081thm.jpg'
004655d728d62de29e5201c85eb75b24
aff97e6c4fd2a718ef916cf71f10e33f5434e366
'2011-11-17T04:02:39-05:00'
describe
'848461' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARYZ' 'sip-files00082.jp2'
8f8d1748a8269c89dfdfbcf462a07837
647b97dc25c7426f64319bc9fd4008039efa0d5f
describe
'114930' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZA' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
4eecaa01d1b0f8d8f82863661133b427
c9c335410aee142dadef47f620ca20cd3a144d24
describe
'42076' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZB' 'sip-files00082.pro'
ea809b667176e2805b0d2610fcc36d3c
a1ec2217d493dfff2b016bf919d969fafd12824e
describe
'41403' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZC' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
b154042febaacf17ffa12467eb8236d5
5e5bd808fe36a82b665ef4b1e9acb1687881008a
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZD' 'sip-files00082.tif'
fe43bdee0332db66ee8e8c0b2ca69d50
9525f0f04681cf9c4f6b2ff4d9311a82e0451536
'2011-11-17T04:07:08-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZE' 'sip-files00082.txt'
86073d15ef3a19698ba74172af0e119c
d13a4863d023058f3accf66358003390dd3942a9
'2011-11-17T04:09:46-05:00'
describe
'12443' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZF' 'sip-files00082thm.jpg'
214ba788000642773a8a33d883c3a570
71bc49d4084979676131765b50c46fe1704156b7
'2011-11-17T04:09:09-05:00'
describe
'880082' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZG' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
4907abf7313dbd52a973df4b1c043c3e
0d62f39a50e3cbe16e3ca7fcff2b5b597cd133b4
'2011-11-17T04:09:17-05:00'
describe
'117798' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZH' 'sip-files00083.jpg'
df8ac439e821813a6fe15fd87da9787e
82ea6ce8ac08e41891b362371f99f3ed8ff2f4c2
describe
'45420' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZI' 'sip-files00083.pro'
7775a325e9aaa0a1304569f777417c33
f3f880ee5005b2cb3ff325c8575197738114376e
describe
'42459' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZJ' 'sip-files00083.QC.jpg'
11ce5b74c0f9af68500f3242b0f9a4d5
114cb355e4d69213138f935c775c673f60c034c4
'2011-11-17T04:03:38-05:00'
describe
'7047633' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZK' 'sip-files00083.tif'
a4f146044a50ed26a80ab17447025ac4
a0d19282bebf505e346f1a77ff288d81670466d2
describe
'1800' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZL' 'sip-files00083.txt'
b910b183c6df380a35294e06dd331e07
9ee9ca5c8db5e3a4fcb3981d5c389fb12847b9c9
describe
'12238' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZM' 'sip-files00083thm.jpg'
f3312c9b4ab695f25260afa8f3316e6d
c9f6b8b91470d4b88e72591b6525d71134428648
describe
'866426' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZN' 'sip-files00084.jp2'
f9a1a9a2b1cc0190d64b1391ce4254ef
f8b6b5787f76152fb1dab9114c432bdc6e29245c
'2011-11-17T04:04:15-05:00'
describe
'111939' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZO' 'sip-files00084.jpg'
7ed197207eb4c38437b8e751633c8ec8
067185a3e93c986268e059250c6d2fbf572f3d60
'2011-11-17T04:06:42-05:00'
describe
'42971' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZP' 'sip-files00084.pro'
fc61c71bc46ac34853791492d89b6f2d
edfb01ab2bf279140e4cec3dadd63778e58695ad
describe
'41230' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZQ' 'sip-files00084.QC.jpg'
0ee7af7bdd414eac7980e7603dee4eb9
4c05d225c7397abff04105e8d3a773c1f9c0b42d
'2011-11-17T04:06:01-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZR' 'sip-files00084.tif'
bb1e9155556f9efdf3bde5734096f50d
de05730252882417f6907532138789a796e14172
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZS' 'sip-files00084.txt'
3475c249cd78b478150c905bcd38255e
5926d7637d5bf582d9852e500c726bbf427d65dc
describe
'12581' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZT' 'sip-files00084thm.jpg'
a36ae0e9dbedcb57a6f76b688cebcedc
280ae08d6b8bb3c15e313739ec60c5c0e17b010f
'2011-11-17T04:02:22-05:00'
describe
'893922' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZU' 'sip-files00085.jp2'
2b4893117241a241c6d27a72d8c682a1
da05d05786f8818a106c07e8a1279857bc0f38dc
describe
'112549' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZV' 'sip-files00085.jpg'
4da3979fc2eefd2c92e73db35156788f
fa5cf62404cb2ad6888e3f5185caac6884499c6f
describe
'43365' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZW' 'sip-files00085.pro'
4e8e375638b95879be1f7ace62247a6e
71acae900087c6f221213210ef88a869ef6aa674
describe
'41415' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZX' 'sip-files00085.QC.jpg'
e60673ce44b47afd30c5ab6f664edf3b
fdfb9b02920f296df0a4fde24820982c50ddd355
describe
'7158193' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZY' 'sip-files00085.tif'
8d4a398bcca9a9525470a551fde9a4bb
f25457d8fcfbb28d1ef3088343aeda4f9d5a4ecb
describe
'1728' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAARZZ' 'sip-files00085.txt'
2b96b707a58218718d8c0e15ba34fd36
bfb6e11a84140bfa2e687ec844e3f536ef66070c
describe
'12474' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAA' 'sip-files00085thm.jpg'
f6177af4219e9984111b34126b292071
6db07c7444e3b50d4d6eaba20c580d5683ba72a7
describe
'862523' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAB' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
ba658cb9b8940465805973fc7ba63612
bfa5a1b6f5a3a7c62afda2a06d26959ed07ee637
describe
'110700' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAC' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
17f9438ae1859e29676099e243e13d7a
0e4d9e18d1d4a3de327c2105035a48bea1a37872
'2011-11-17T04:09:31-05:00'
describe
'42105' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAD' 'sip-files00086.pro'
ccde525a1daf0a07ac48e251a8d2d464
41c53a845f4b1fccf3e4983976bdc0c7eba6a29e
describe
'40477' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAE' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
ea44f2859257d8742ac483b0f4c6872b
07e75336ce377bfc3641a45d031395d9564dc526
'2011-11-17T04:10:29-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAF' 'sip-files00086.tif'
2cbfbf99bbf9d1e3d7a2e35ba2784dfd
247088f39109ab0198883a4e3399c8f727534d39
describe
'1726' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAG' 'sip-files00086.txt'
8b27005b8e4941a837fd7656af2cdf17
29dfc8f6277a5a09c4ab19839ae393211588db4f
describe
'12523' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAH' 'sip-files00086thm.jpg'
3c362a7696a5d892e13298d0a413aa23
2429a636e8637242ed874d91cf893652378bd53e
'2011-11-17T04:09:14-05:00'
describe
'864384' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAI' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
907e9939bcaaf3b542fb93641a82cd0b
8c039ae3bde8b5616503dcaf26284c6fb988e711
describe
'108097' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAJ' 'sip-files00087.jpg'
5f8d1bc75f4d892498f334e5d69baab9
5dd0277f4ff6361b7b8435f1eb50f9fe2d1027c1
'2011-11-17T04:04:44-05:00'
describe
'39031' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAK' 'sip-files00087.pro'
ee202edd6056f8d1061f02bb60c81e8a
fba8ff1635b199fa32b4df3e37c9b990f8216046
'2011-11-17T04:03:36-05:00'
describe
'40188' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAL' 'sip-files00087.QC.jpg'
fcb30dbc95a6f2df29047756e7559537
409fc853096e1715246151e00135ab78e70b6258
'2011-11-17T04:03:45-05:00'
describe
'6922051' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAM' 'sip-files00087.tif'
be620262b34be1b2662f2d5c63ba0a37
2c3114a8df5d6da859cca3935fd6c4224e328035
describe
'1589' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAN' 'sip-files00087.txt'
a5a19269dfe94a6f7dc401284a5d0c3a
9b076360b8e9722b0f4c57dfb0a7ff2a202f6be2
describe
'11686' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAO' 'sip-files00087thm.jpg'
0e977d72adc6a64f5b501a9f013ab0df
cae0dfde9f433b957400f9edefe081fec92c286e
describe
'883119' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAP' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
7d195abc1055239405044e799079fcb0
ec1e247d0ed9e9f631b3848930a02f5441c12804
describe
'100878' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAQ' 'sip-files00088.jpg'
0f1e7e8b91847b3f56ceeadb9293685e
b5f900d4d3bc3a0b33529a602addfc9bb0022590
describe
'36452' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAR' 'sip-files00088.pro'
69c2b5966acfb2f1ebb2aaf2279887fa
e1f76a97f66036e885323025f69222e3e40e815b
describe
'37443' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAS' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
abdb73a828c3c21dcc1114c03d818819
8d2a3753a98f536e04078c89fa2589a322f25a15
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAT' 'sip-files00088.tif'
9638438d9ab178a424afa882c4457db3
08e1b715559c05c758400fefd7be4cc809ea9cf2
'2011-11-17T04:07:25-05:00'
describe
'1518' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAU' 'sip-files00088.txt'
fd463469b5dbc1c1afd02df1fc474fa6
db56d4ff7a7028bff5e50f6f92383c37f1c9a152
describe
'10948' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAV' 'sip-files00088thm.jpg'
72dba4f31175d512dbea20126a0fbc83
95232aa7ade4569a0c8a21d77a68b8e6de8f10b2
describe
'862428' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAW' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
95254410a7738de60fcbcc09dadbb3ff
62c53001e5a6229d3959b59703b2dcd3762ed215
describe
'113398' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAX' 'sip-files00089.jpg'
d78b856c43a86440c170901d758488ba
1be0a19d00f0aee71c00bd06fbcccdd8022834a9
describe
'42660' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAY' 'sip-files00089.pro'
fa0593b64c95c891102367c623f5a2e6
16ce4b06a6b50442ae06270bf04290f461ca6983
describe
'41724' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASAZ' 'sip-files00089.QC.jpg'
ba5736c0ac74bc70ae0413ba130aa3d9
1244acd56c60c5b985971a5d6a34f93f3c8037b9
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBA' 'sip-files00089.tif'
e9f2d9686616063d883e804b779750d8
4989bed8a2d197a5e50abe81ff3686f57b805295
'2011-11-17T04:09:29-05:00'
describe
'1772' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBB' 'sip-files00089.txt'
cad08e6045d0d73020be932599a4e4ee
4ae6b4e8cf355fad24f8ff59e74f8b9f2db09d9a
describe
'12670' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBC' 'sip-files00089thm.jpg'
650c1aa9f864aea4981a955765f1c682
a9ae26935aa70045ad86e3022c0f47c33df76d09
describe
'859057' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBD' 'sip-files00090.jp2'
9a81883f7e24a9af271842be849e48b9
ab0b850b6c252d9b63719b0367bb10c96c2209e3
describe
'113159' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBE' 'sip-files00090.jpg'
316ef7368dd9302bed0f4d915ec4ba23
cd864677aec13721a72a35e2e38a746fffbb4a9e
describe
'43115' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBF' 'sip-files00090.pro'
9e0a6f08c2b08bfad8a41f582958c960
51c83187f1b88f5dcc4ecef7254228342e4d0e28
'2011-11-17T04:03:32-05:00'
describe
'41946' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBG' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
b0ee7bb49281c3cdbec5b907000f4d80
e73ac77e0e8e7466caf2dbbe8992bf1c6af31643
describe
'6879845' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBH' 'sip-files00090.tif'
019170afd18b136bd3fcde307ed0235d
cd75a20f54fa2403bc91d951d42b7e1bf2699f3a
describe
'1736' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBI' 'sip-files00090.txt'
e120649748b687d5045a29758a206f37
29f3f5095819eea23370a69c02b8039d841e7720
describe
'12700' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBJ' 'sip-files00090thm.jpg'
00dd2127aa2da40a45a95c8ca4a9c0c1
1f5e6cc77ddaba38c0e4aeb542f8d87b948c0795
describe
'860926' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBK' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
71406fbca982e3b79e71bf4dd4662927
c19d97ebf9ff2da5229bd3d4ace64741b053cbe0
describe
'112932' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBL' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
47a68da448d3e89c09536c2a0c20f23d
7e1fcd43418feb9ab0cf80bfb944e5adb504ca14
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBM' 'sip-files00091.pro'
98a41d8af3b28ebb66e626fdfab87832
facb5480e14b69d97158fc81ff032d7442c30cda
'2011-11-17T04:05:08-05:00'
describe
'41648' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBN' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
634271c47f69d38f68b491683a5fdd03
3283143db26f7af4ed3b2ccae2a903fe371d73e0
describe
'6894111' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBO' 'sip-files00091.tif'
12abc6e7cbbbfd9dfbb34b8c765fd0df
808a4ab2cc55e9f3b406919ab16284a4a4be7701
'2011-11-17T04:09:24-05:00'
describe
'1713' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBP' 'sip-files00091.txt'
dac63310c3172e81bf6379117d7d9b29
acbdd69802188db1d3f9ef159764ad4c9e4013d9
describe
'12191' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBQ' 'sip-files00091thm.jpg'
72663bc31bc784deb66967a836baa4b7
a4a7a1bb4073a6ce6c86c0f7ff1e76adaab662b2
'2011-11-17T04:08:40-05:00'
describe
'878905' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBR' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
436c98a1135c15662055f769fe578c06
2c5900bd29f60806134fd1e3621f53b7bfb37046
describe
'114554' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBS' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
98d85c0c7725707155dd2e0f50322d90
f6fa22d4a9680b7704cdd46b4d8cbba1e1b76b2b
'2011-11-17T04:07:10-05:00'
describe
'43177' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBT' 'sip-files00092.pro'
0095841ff1d7b0c0fab93da611cd747d
28295cfdc3443c366db8d4b244feffede27a6796
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBU' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
c02504523fffb9f5a885e6b52e90befb
8fc7c25fe144c6b3446939b22dd1dcca38556124
'2011-11-17T04:06:31-05:00'
describe
'7037771' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBV' 'sip-files00092.tif'
28e61443dcda10084859a1b0a7fb5839
4e16882f14f9edbe3f79831faf39c1293550ef11
describe
'1782' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBW' 'sip-files00092.txt'
46a6739b4d59a18b1a40bef8421d8191
d68d791cdb7ba3a2e7eb2c49720a41fcf373b8b5
describe
'11945' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBX' 'sip-files00092thm.jpg'
27161e8025d90a1e642870c881902203
8b93bb782109a6ce44535131b1e25e1b96c42160
'2011-11-17T04:08:56-05:00'
describe
'851393' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBY' 'sip-files00093.jp2'
50f5a0504c7a4c4212a4a0f434a3acc5
5fba0b3b5cf1f89faf2d9ce8ea9f3b94245b6942
describe
'109890' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASBZ' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
daffc3f6037610c7545e7d4505b383f0
fc17308cf0ffba8083369b0cb5df701447c33661
describe
'40979' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCA' 'sip-files00093.pro'
26491584a093c2fa15c18846f0310ecb
2f323f9f64124e19862e48d861fa68e58d7f76a0
describe
'40313' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCB' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
2532f882ed91849d1ed49bd272dd50a0
70321a2c49a5ad8106ccca4ec3bddcab0b741869
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCC' 'sip-files00093.tif'
7373614161c18460a46d92083e46e621
04d112b772fcc909b4110aeb3c07f31d71ae2f53
describe
'1666' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCD' 'sip-files00093.txt'
5c6196830ef8481fbd1647748b439f4f
e89266b6e3ef8a2af3b3c3040c855f0059f3af37
describe
'12862' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCE' 'sip-files00093thm.jpg'
e580fde08906cd0252a387fb23d5b23f
86b88a652c0a49f32b0fe63401733f1858deb2fc
describe
'845348' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCF' 'sip-files00094.jp2'
7857bdb0c9e7e7b00425a1d2544cb42f
36208be2b721aa0ea2297cd497eb2a09c8fbb721
describe
'120226' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCG' 'sip-files00094.jpg'
eb9e441f72ab062464b6259c259f55b1
cb91c02d84d7db5092f46ff497633324983078a3
describe
'46022' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCH' 'sip-files00094.pro'
590d047eff598f56c121676e0686a698
4b2484e44c0445f9387199807dc78895bcd8c1c1
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCI' 'sip-files00094.QC.jpg'
c11c84d27ab42630f93e9c952b1e95af
f72e105578b45746c1a5f56f72e7f1fa241b51c1
'2011-11-17T04:02:54-05:00'
describe
'6769223' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCJ' 'sip-files00094.tif'
d4285c8faa1189f189530afb0303230e
7def23fc723231045e7b3384464884a76dca58af
'2011-11-17T04:03:57-05:00'
describe
'1930' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCK' 'sip-files00094.txt'
4fd3247ff8c899822fcf4604c0aa5190
7f3e64183d7f19f13e42abc037640c6532991494
describe
'12751' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCL' 'sip-files00094thm.jpg'
e4abd49ce046b2ba244c5154ed244fd7
394d74dbc2a2b6f74214768be9bfe44724db5848
describe
'885529' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCM' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
dc8e0e851c9443141535b4dd2f1876cc
17fc39ec8bda33302a0fb526f4122639c46f4c91
describe
'117189' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCN' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
f4366c289bcc289a96219deb329e1f64
bdbacb0d225232c07d40542f89d0595d8cc75ea5
describe
'44559' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCO' 'sip-files00095.pro'
cf83f41bd16522c5f35670178b150a21
4acbd9060cde54367fcad3dd93266dd13b54d0ca
describe
'42366' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCP' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
c69486cb9ce4ba4367f778e3a06f78b5
1190a8111b9d63eab8774d1044f949cb65035095
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCQ' 'sip-files00095.tif'
cb4cbeb90c5dbfcb33b0d6791a5747b5
b07e987ff77eb8e0c8f1c0c4c716dae489d33d4f
describe
'1794' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCR' 'sip-files00095.txt'
ccee29ad58a8eb883d88a22485cdc116
a26ca1c5f1d66f2e4425fc840088c55d8b15453b
describe
'11952' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCS' 'sip-files00095thm.jpg'
f17a0b27e0edfbb1d2dd7301fd4e57c6
9dd3ea0439832229f54b2427d2343bd01c316a0f
describe
'842844' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCT' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
00f9125527b0987ee1c0a026006cca33
732702405000e3fabc52b7cc538c7827f5acb6e5
'2011-11-17T04:03:06-05:00'
describe
'114466' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCU' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
17afde60910586c2c743002300ce9e17
704e6365eef15ba45cbe7f3181841ed0a586b6f9
describe
'42667' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCV' 'sip-files00096.pro'
e7947d52f8615de282f85c3c5f864c38
860037365745718c44098e7055374bb2b99f7665
'2011-11-17T04:10:10-05:00'
describe
'42367' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCW' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
23f2c2fa852928a805376e2dc39d6d04
ea333860c9ab4687853f89df56dcf87772b3f181
describe
'6749299' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCX' 'sip-files00096.tif'
2773c203a4427c0366fcf467cfaaaa85
514dc27fbebeb768ca8d09955196c6f6225fc644
describe
'1773' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCY' 'sip-files00096.txt'
584d6717f8e91834eb523d031ae3073a
3950bc229659ac04e05e58ae77b34d629c259f64
'2011-11-17T04:02:25-05:00'
describe
'12623' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASCZ' 'sip-files00096thm.jpg'
f146f1b6c8b554d305dda98a51414204
5ee958d0c0952e4dc2a6dcbeb30fdb203ceb128f
'2011-11-17T04:04:14-05:00'
describe
'858419' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDA' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
85225e771449271c18fdc41161c2c8b3
3268ffb894a9cdacc1657fccc0849716839aed28
describe
'116384' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDB' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
f6ebd1ac46a27609d19b2083e6e6f999
96474dda840a7316dcd29a35d68f1439331478cb
describe
'44487' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDC' 'sip-files00097.pro'
23a4bc3db56bf3b09f4c35273d71ebb0
388133d7f69ef553b72f012d1d3eedff0927c14f
describe
'43460' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDD' 'sip-files00097.QC.jpg'
d1dccdbc71f7ba6cb90185ab396a73ce
ba81170d9fc1122d8f644ca5fad034dcb5fe0e18
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDE' 'sip-files00097.tif'
2106309a015a6a2d48cee2e806cbbe93
7c5a37cadd0c4e1a3d25c1d3ebfc03c5370ffd47
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDF' 'sip-files00097.txt'
34c8e6d9ddaf36cd743e9acd42e20e00
0ba5ff8f6798bfdb36040eb5ef3d4a59992b0711
describe
'12552' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDG' 'sip-files00097thm.jpg'
55f26a3213e5314ced6e6e2c6556eed5
e6eb2119fbd7ab7ff14a8b3ed97d43e29c194a9b
describe
'854167' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDH' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
1edac9aa9d91ea035f272db140d2f30b
e477bee22e2f164df41efbdf16706cc858706968
describe
'108646' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDI' 'sip-files00098.jpg'
6ed8d51e3030371c4db8ab44987af6e4
9074588c4909ca7d348e7b47bd81d9f1ef4b8e5a
describe
'41432' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDJ' 'sip-files00098.pro'
0ff3bfec9784e0baf9923d99fb005e0e
2f3679ea83d7d8bc1a80862a897cc24f86981422
describe
'40173' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDK' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
6a9af62f297c541d306af9f42a6f3a0f
2c65f687e24b2591e9ee279387beafc147211b3c
describe
'6839825' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDL' 'sip-files00098.tif'
43e2df241763e75225edd68e4693b43a
2429e48730cf5f9adbf4a40404823fea4eda0530
describe
'1752' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDM' 'sip-files00098.txt'
b9907858bf4378cd9b0e45fdfdc0ab47
315ee436e77dd6aa4bb2fa8a3f6cbad6bf0bebbc
describe
'12131' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDN' 'sip-files00098thm.jpg'
7d9df60e1982489f64d91995116ea22a
288f35faf93d80f6f4872182e41ed9e9dd3b8419
'2011-11-17T04:08:39-05:00'
describe
'865931' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDO' 'sip-files00099.jp2'
99315724d45601c75eb9a4204be8ee51
a6b280f086e6cc49b472c8de1c6f96824165f08d
describe
'115275' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDP' 'sip-files00099.jpg'
2e25b975c9318ca44eff8da9404a308b
e2955329c0211d97410752a4ae62badf6c3cb2b1
describe
'44299' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDQ' 'sip-files00099.pro'
c7cb099256fd110d3791a3f321e301bb
632ba2ac05f9ad40b82fa4c3d272127578a0337e
describe
'41587' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDR' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
50dda1a7816c9d5c831d24f5455249fd
f8abf55b36c57ce69129718d0a1caabfd447f352
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDS' 'sip-files00099.tif'
e8dd0d4f00482c8613ffb9705d5be5d6
e6a49db72ddf2c36d0da6504454c8d108e5a36a4
describe
'1842' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDT' 'sip-files00099.txt'
770f584bdabde90a9a060c99b4b6afd8
27bcba0ac3acefd2d93c669d42009c7a4885abfa
describe
'12507' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDU' 'sip-files00099thm.jpg'
b3ab315095c74c15477ed296d405c80e
3680fe8480dd04dec9035abb71c594fde78bc533
describe
'872056' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDV' 'sip-files00100.jp2'
d2898c34e694b89ce2527bf09d143f84
ff0fef95d006075e0cf8c1824a297690f911e1e7
describe
'113069' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDW' 'sip-files00100.jpg'
00003747837819f41eacbe1a73f70fb8
20656530285153fe2ecb4b66ca395f13a88281ed
'2011-11-17T04:10:12-05:00'
describe
'41720' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDX' 'sip-files00100.pro'
36e8c149b6e26359d34b84b3d8167354
db055012fa70e9f50db73dad8cfaf676d4d34269
'2011-11-17T04:05:39-05:00'
describe
'40616' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDY' 'sip-files00100.QC.jpg'
e05e838f204ae141a458a336ec165103
3ffe501d6b6a4338bfb19a4dff2c104bee3a3682
'2011-11-17T04:09:21-05:00'
describe
'6982985' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASDZ' 'sip-files00100.tif'
72aace9067212a3303cb286e1913acd7
fc6d5da7a67e0502fe82274c438f4f37528a09aa
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEA' 'sip-files00100.txt'
c194f713d85410404312337afdf9a249
e87355aff632c9e1b81e935531d4c1370d8476ab
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEB' 'sip-files00100thm.jpg'
e5f25abd8426131cdca34dfa15ab6a73
d653c63a6eafc39e1eba79670337a75a130aa7f3
describe
'847548' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEC' 'sip-files00101.jp2'
4652c5e76645db97f98b10070c8dc3e3
8791378f8b50ceab8a41a6790bf8ce7eb29b587b
describe
'113409' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASED' 'sip-files00101.jpg'
134df1506520ca3965f0575001ec1ab5
d63b12009d1e720c753786ab5a08a7068c923e1a
describe
'44778' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEE' 'sip-files00101.pro'
d7448593c225b0b61261f4542f1efa04
9ba7c61d6759c1cb0c9f01b7a7f64f57a36ad1f3
describe
'41290' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEF' 'sip-files00101.QC.jpg'
2a1e6467cd121012f5bfbd2b9a618248
9d4eea42fc0b4656cfe49f2b2e47579ce5dd9cd7
'2011-11-17T04:08:45-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEG' 'sip-files00101.tif'
112a300013572c1f465e88cae5e82cb6
5d924852b491e3f61bb74ac1401d71f319c8276b
describe
'1784' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEH' 'sip-files00101.txt'
6c4e702c87845978276f6ffa96d49cbc
442c5159835c5aed4b26a492a398df3df71a31ff
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEI' 'sip-files00101thm.jpg'
d54914cb091725c89a86bd5d2727642a
d3ec5239f4a1d4b3dfe722a413d89ce5f82e7c62
describe
'893216' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEJ' 'sip-files00102.jp2'
3558a7f69296c3ae8e15240ad19eb20f
55114557af78ad9f31f07e532e28a4cc3944ad3f
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEK' 'sip-files00102.jpg'
cf6454bd59ec4c6911af193711111a39
8c6ca02c2f2d18eb1e621dc618495bf3ea7ed3f5
describe
'44231' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEL' 'sip-files00102.pro'
4840fc1b3c01ea871a944f43f43809b1
717119e97087a76952b0295b1a07ebd42e4062ef
'2011-11-17T04:05:15-05:00'
describe
'41941' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEM' 'sip-files00102.QC.jpg'
5c46b0a19edc4a0bf910666311dd2474
ecfddf5c7092982f54a6c0389493fb09e8da5c99
describe
'7154571' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEN' 'sip-files00102.tif'
4c0369ffa6c29125c820cc714999952c
c506faf9b4171a35803fcdf1252eea27d63e1935
describe
'1814' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEO' 'sip-files00102.txt'
7a55d51096e42f12a93cf3bb12140227
77af653b4f46a695a489c720236e87d51149c744
describe
'12198' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEP' 'sip-files00102thm.jpg'
8f8b4e28d5b123bfb9cde63fe9aa5230
54f3787bb0160a4be820f585fbb588cbc0ce7bc4
describe
'860562' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEQ' 'sip-files00103.jp2'
6575e3c1d5da97715691adab9ed102c8
5ad284f8b35ead9e96d688db014e6e17f889e0d1
describe
'114105' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASER' 'sip-files00103.jpg'
0adb3f0abc27ffd34437670d979a3dbe
d89a6daf4e7cf2b455cf08713e1d0db35b65b26c
'2011-11-17T04:09:54-05:00'
describe
'43135' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASES' 'sip-files00103.pro'
13f143eed6fedafbc1c58b67708f200b
cb7625278a3fd895f897b06b845adaec94b43441
describe
'41196' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASET' 'sip-files00103.QC.jpg'
6f6bc162abfbcb7c2d5264e38d61a552
258802e456d7a0e8976016c00b886949306bf7cd
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEU' 'sip-files00103.tif'
c89ea3e431737028c1dbeba6127dfdf7
12dc4194491dbf2924843aa010a938bf1f258a08
describe
'1778' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEV' 'sip-files00103.txt'
3fda9c5563e657ae04684f0d883d5c9f
ee77a1c6d70312ce3e14b03ba5e05354a6fd682f
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEW' 'sip-files00103thm.jpg'
d1ac40896da52080e080e9c3b3dbf679
b2164b915d2e582c9c84e98df0fe3a85e5731c18
describe
'853342' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEX' 'sip-files00104.jp2'
d160ee0857f3ced43bad008d57d718a6
1f89f6c2326c5367f5717dcdc98fc39637e6718e
describe
'115773' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEY' 'sip-files00104.jpg'
d7194dacc8c100a4830b9da6201d2aca
0b7108872c3672ee63f5e7b162d954635dbead57
'2011-11-17T04:07:46-05:00'
describe
'42778' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASEZ' 'sip-files00104.pro'
3adc4c85795df8a54bc1f9949dcde2e5
8326169ae3e3e15faee33dbfc31ea1b1e08b4e9e
describe
'42087' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFA' 'sip-files00104.QC.jpg'
456b56cc86b38ea9ee103cd371da97a7
34031766a3210ac6ea043ae60427848b448be6a7
'2011-11-17T04:04:33-05:00'
describe
'6834339' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFB' 'sip-files00104.tif'
0f5a7d36ae2d4886b8de1459e872b108
d37bf2b6112a2552a7f7441002127ad86d3ef7df
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFC' 'sip-files00104.txt'
f07c4004910d8b6ebe270f6f551bb59e
46900b432dea1f78168b7491e83d596582074689
'2011-11-17T04:10:57-05:00'
describe
'12709' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFD' 'sip-files00104thm.jpg'
92b6ac0f9215b2cb6550fd98f83d6748
1fd34138d6b0219f54384629c637a99909ca4f4a
describe
'873874' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFE' 'sip-files00105.jp2'
428b67b26d3717903a77cdf94eeeb8ba
885acc94dcf8109ccbf24d55586710818bf21309
describe
'108606' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFF' 'sip-files00105.jpg'
2df88b4894e711ddc56b3ea1d0fd441f
157d7dae7dae58ad05598c7bb381e658591cd77c
describe
'40948' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFG' 'sip-files00105.pro'
1b021f059a8bcdf87d6cf46a85720e48
38aedf39400bd0f84553bb3f336d0f18c52aea03
describe
'39617' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFH' 'sip-files00105.QC.jpg'
7db8773f428a75f520d6e2c7ca26b680
a4f61f8322ad39b6f1998681f1d586e286720ea3
'2011-11-17T04:05:38-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFI' 'sip-files00105.tif'
fdde5b6c1955ce958f721af43597e8b5
67d68e7efbb0ac00a72bb8bba2c598db205c411c
'2011-11-17T04:03:46-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFJ' 'sip-files00105.txt'
e8b3215aff033947709b1bc66aaafa35
a6ab2d94c6fe17dcc84914273925086bbeb6ad66
describe
'12504' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFK' 'sip-files00105thm.jpg'
06f99a7044800718e07bb4bb9f875016
adb63d122923e6ba4c768be06b1982666a187fdf
describe
'853444' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFL' 'sip-files00106.jp2'
b2e451f8e97d20af6460170d0f960a15
61c95d175e77d5d59a171e4cfb4dde25f9b302ab
'2011-11-17T04:05:14-05:00'
describe
'103987' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFM' 'sip-files00106.jpg'
6e17619875821d9d283c407e06cb4d00
d531c58ad8622db1bdf86cd1a68c7a9cbe60a8c7
describe
'38025' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFN' 'sip-files00106.pro'
5a77d5bed1488451286b4245772bb04d
25ac13564e0964e332b3b3d5ea9b2af86e9e70c0
describe
'38269' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFO' 'sip-files00106.QC.jpg'
616e834724b8d1dc0087d16dc971460d
9c6295a561d2295dad752ae8eddc71a93f37f8ee
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFP' 'sip-files00106.tif'
79980a30acfa2a439f0be352aeebc6ea
413d58f5eba5381bf6661e681cbab48efcd54a8e
describe
'1667' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFQ' 'sip-files00106.txt'
73bd796cd5109edf92879ef7593348f5
858b4cacbf6b72a3176669712e6e00b091cd0999
describe
'11862' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFR' 'sip-files00106thm.jpg'
a70a3c0cf243acea710e7c311f59adac
59a7f3a4e9d20a01afff2b687f50370ca2e18d1b
describe
'870282' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFS' 'sip-files00107.jp2'
08465fb364c5212324edcb249c187212
7c8b395a66e53487941670d88acec59d8390dac4
describe
'111296' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFT' 'sip-files00107.jpg'
8bec83860279a40cb094aaccb1b5bda4
7fd933c01d68b2c95db67de29774eb6f00b4ad14
describe
'41244' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFU' 'sip-files00107.pro'
c6392fcd24dd62ca0ab59336db6c0b38
58f42ed24788c23465ae6109023ef15b0363b89e
describe
'40869' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFV' 'sip-files00107.QC.jpg'
491e770f4b08a8133df6393096b2b8aa
1762f5f7c5506be98c17ab953adf6c27c4964bf5
describe
'6968811' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFW' 'sip-files00107.tif'
4cfe2ea8a5557291eb19dbedb4a9058a
3e4ea9fb936bc6c8a429520ddcbec34621fd59ec
describe
'1716' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFX' 'sip-files00107.txt'
c70d1563300b2868fabaa03a1842ff0f
9945e7f078018cb9f954af6e1434a8c953e50e6b
describe
'12110' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFY' 'sip-files00107thm.jpg'
b5219f29e54fc730b44924a4fdd7d3f6
83b843b2165fcee984f0ec3edb8ff31da877b1e6
describe
'860131' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASFZ' 'sip-files00108.jp2'
53c3bf10fedb88101639460e8033a1fd
621700779361fd5a8e110658d8f68fa657067515
describe
'106952' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGA' 'sip-files00108.jpg'
c112f62b3b2ad530ca436fc09caca50c
e32817423848cbbd746e0f6193bcceaf7c121997
describe
'38934' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGB' 'sip-files00108.pro'
e12a55b1714e9f5a9c8587f7cc817f9a
c271bf7ec5540a6ab976e5d5f1b9c9dfd42d9ff7
describe
'39559' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGC' 'sip-files00108.QC.jpg'
a46b5348e4ada55c10961a20d0f754cb
0f4405b2c1b440748ad42015c7e0a8a3eb9c7d46
describe
'6887971' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGD' 'sip-files00108.tif'
4860d58945e90b1ae549927e942e1ce3
5d1926961964ff454ba8e1a77f0dc86d17c953b2
describe
'1579' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGE' 'sip-files00108.txt'
169529b428aabbf98829f92d7827ba4c
241a9df090b782adc91bc5f35deaabd015ecd761
describe
'11661' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGF' 'sip-files00108thm.jpg'
40a88313397978ee3ae79cc21777871b
62edfd42c2419f7d09820a6db3b4a0eb92642ff6
describe
'863888' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGG' 'sip-files00109.jp2'
18149b81ce173e901d4e398e4551642c
44a32ca382459f1bb3bcefd27bb4eb5e0d3cd72e
describe
'102667' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGH' 'sip-files00109.jpg'
373a7471622a99b2de5e1494dc426dd0
ab2b3941e6ec50478ae4ee907ea5017aa55be9dc
describe
'37974' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGI' 'sip-files00109.pro'
8dc85ed2d165ec4663151f6baa28d7b0
6e7e90a945ec4349152064b1c45f6222c3a307ac
describe
'37871' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGJ' 'sip-files00109.QC.jpg'
6c8dbc9f93a46a95c71280fa3ee7c5c7
e85d5f25918bc2ced8fae684452b1b156b753e95
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGK' 'sip-files00109.tif'
d0b5246ea0edb567267b4a59a8a754b6
cc8357f574003b9d32dc2e95357d69392ffbd1ee
describe
'1586' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGL' 'sip-files00109.txt'
acb425b812761a85157fabaab93b3d3a
39de80195eeee0ff37c083bdc2364cedce0d946b
describe
'11821' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGM' 'sip-files00109thm.jpg'
1787592b9869e105b86a26546c25bfd1
5c77fb2454d40f625bd3686a2f4e2289052da966
describe
'854161' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGN' 'sip-files00110.jp2'
039351c75e8af74da2b4e0ff80e35e4e
60d8721370101af47ebfd76c7ad34e3e233834ed
'2011-11-17T04:02:52-05:00'
describe
'112561' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGO' 'sip-files00110.jpg'
e8f53aa565f37f45b69dc801a9cc27e7
7a0ffa77d05f976115c262c59e1bd739820ca877
describe
'42644' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGP' 'sip-files00110.pro'
bc7fda57d0a01ac41c79894e264b682a
4f30993c0680f381fcc2491b89e161364203bcf1
describe
'41431' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGQ' 'sip-files00110.QC.jpg'
424f5706de40ea90da13a6989ba180e5
dd0f8e2af5c64a72757f151241d9e76aca90143e
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGR' 'sip-files00110.tif'
c1df6e16383eae185ec90eeca5dd9758
c792f3940ade2ce59a404671eaf151cdb8b6fea6
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGS' 'sip-files00110.txt'
36afbed361983fa833295f37413d3d12
fb41b5acf32bbd382474886092733c9f09447cd2
describe
'12202' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGT' 'sip-files00110thm.jpg'
8070c9659fcfbd573719dd9d8d3672ef
c2ae27c942bf96330fef78999429cd6c66b5516c
describe
'851373' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGU' 'sip-files00111.jp2'
5d399cb78076a4ea123e6c99f96849d2
7f937ff669767cd30f6578dcc8644ff05a28b4b0
describe
'113681' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGV' 'sip-files00111.jpg'
6ecbfb196368e8071e0f10ba789c3cef
41abf958281838adcaa59565254cc32056f20f23
describe
'42977' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGW' 'sip-files00111.pro'
1257aa409bfd456a3cd773d138927ede
5c92831c18ef9eb187078288047a3692dd396528
describe
'41686' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGX' 'sip-files00111.QC.jpg'
0d0c5b8fbf71b3a95dbb8937fc3495be
a77caaffeb348653f6add5d4e36a85e247d2366b
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGY' 'sip-files00111.tif'
bfb8b353d32089aea0b304ba428b6874
c9442af2a3df5f21e7fe3b53f95e6019396be912
describe
'1756' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASGZ' 'sip-files00111.txt'
ebba97aa65e2288f2d33c06567a6eea6
d80d4bf3cc5dddbb608dc20657a55bb01c9e9629
'2011-11-17T04:09:32-05:00'
describe
'12591' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHA' 'sip-files00111thm.jpg'
09c300073e534ee86cc9c5a09873c6c9
fd44b5e7ff4c18186b9d673471d8fb92bae486a9
describe
'859160' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHB' 'sip-files00112.jp2'
cdd3d68fe3da5f86cf6481367748e614
ef4c2e30beec9989d0b6d146ad5520fd32d29ff6
'2011-11-17T04:02:38-05:00'
describe
'110657' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHC' 'sip-files00112.jpg'
4613a2cfda909bdb9ea3dd5599cd14e2
64a718e8ae901a608e9bf3a9829be01189d6f682
'2011-11-17T04:09:27-05:00'
describe
'40717' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHD' 'sip-files00112.pro'
5510530665e2ecbcf787c0e6f73aedc9
51ecb71575afd2eb548cf3bb2cdf6701cf92c55e
describe
'40320' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHE' 'sip-files00112.QC.jpg'
cf3c89d70b73e0a6953697f527ada817
e63e458f3b24edf1d210fd7d4f44d9ac35d34a03
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHF' 'sip-files00112.tif'
ca47ca3c7b0dd1c05285d8a0ac7c2ff3
cfb3aa5c908e9edd6293fa728d3ad922267de998
describe
'1654' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHG' 'sip-files00112.txt'
7591e27192bd1623518cc8932aad37b4
aa1d0dfe5f2ea7688c714f806d1293e95b2c8d09
describe
'12325' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHH' 'sip-files00112thm.jpg'
7f302afcc97e07bc23135465f4ee4b16
c817abd1a695117581d4f81f8a5c30fe50b7b787
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHI' 'sip-files00113.jp2'
38411974f912b3185da02f891be93bcf
9c31c2c41e6eee22a50b6da3724e2835a0ba70d3
describe
'112791' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHJ' 'sip-files00113.jpg'
75fece74639ff220f96e6244a1a5ccef
1c10500083cbc71b7f41f986cc8658b53bd216aa
describe
'43959' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHK' 'sip-files00113.pro'
b26ee6f1d542d6af8881b69b3f13132d
0235f4bf8e3dec8db1c6c151c67d66e4860111ea
describe
'41251' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHL' 'sip-files00113.QC.jpg'
c1ca2851fad70b90ba7566ec28ffc98b
c0a56e01a53c92de608b16acf4e1106a74581668
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHM' 'sip-files00113.tif'
b63b2c21ccecfd57120611595bc15a7f
7d2c950352569acd6f77437dc73e85cf03d06437
'2011-11-17T04:05:58-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHN' 'sip-files00113.txt'
5169692007af08b5615d29ecffeb4fbe
d18e05d9224670df8a9d4011d48b75fc893fc5c4
describe
'12234' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHO' 'sip-files00113thm.jpg'
0b349e7898c2efd42fd526efac91d0ea
5280d8a97513191687b2b423a071ebe8bcd631f1
'2011-11-17T04:05:30-05:00'
describe
'871402' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHP' 'sip-files00114.jp2'
0ee074742b7294d6e3c05f3ff9a9e31e
26fab48c38552e896ff47e4c06eafa4a01b9410f
describe
'114386' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHQ' 'sip-files00114.jpg'
068354406d043128e737d2be09ca1d97
a099c728efe676a9b5b9abec311b498c60cf1348
describe
'42964' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHR' 'sip-files00114.pro'
4794c5f3336daba88861e55b23d2254b
8a4ae8b5ed4a9685a6911a0eb7d943955bf1565d
describe
'41647' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHS' 'sip-files00114.QC.jpg'
740dc9ba57de286642fd76880321f552
a4e040f45aec390304801de8812b63623d004254
describe
'6977893' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHT' 'sip-files00114.tif'
c19052b0b1490302c824a708f38a6e7d
70a95236278529887d326f1da648cb00e5c1cc1e
describe
'1764' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHU' 'sip-files00114.txt'
197f0f4dd204d1057b23894e5fdcba98
56ee3550b64c5200e70c1d1b10a950dbd7f927a3
describe
'12854' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHV' 'sip-files00114thm.jpg'
686a2738cea1d7fcc7f0a72dfca5588d
aa61a99f0c2237b80884c2240f438ffd70b1214b
describe
'870235' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHW' 'sip-files00115.jp2'
9a93b4750ced7a55d3b8f893510760b1
c3fdd104a8941a74885f26205ecc890f3d76cbce
'2011-11-17T04:06:26-05:00'
describe
'111388' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHX' 'sip-files00115.jpg'
641fd858677bbc92cf21fb0751454f15
3575978509941097b1da56639cfa9721f0924332
describe
'41446' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHY' 'sip-files00115.pro'
c6ebbfb1d35ee78378e42a7cb30cc4c2
291e581e919ad0d849ceeba59488c657c864a7c6
'2011-11-17T04:08:46-05:00'
describe
'40817' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASHZ' 'sip-files00115.QC.jpg'
08bbc1e008f091f91f26949820ba26e3
953ed97b5f1d6c7fbcb867e749120c719f36d40d
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIA' 'sip-files00115.tif'
29ac43d28ce7e8429293801572f8ce69
21b03702b90395240383df638aeaeecc2bd8c908
describe
'1709' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIB' 'sip-files00115.txt'
37abcc92167ff3bb58bf28cac467cf7e
b6e5be20b45c6ff6218af479304d0479b4333d2c
'2011-11-17T04:10:13-05:00'
describe
'12290' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIC' 'sip-files00115thm.jpg'
4460cadcd63f5ca43da6fe2de81c4338
d8e59429499db52c8188bebb6dd14cb5cdb92a72
describe
'860039' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASID' 'sip-files00116.jp2'
c01e28543d90c4f2924e6351417fa27f
3611803c986dfbc39709690b95172a796865f8ee
'2011-11-17T04:10:46-05:00'
describe
'113449' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIE' 'sip-files00116.jpg'
81b797643b292ff1e8f3b204888541fb
b093813ba08a74cd6561867f83d25ee1a907de57
describe
'41751' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIF' 'sip-files00116.pro'
b19b650eb12f41eea88ca03bdb316a87
6d608d589b217def9a9975349e805d7cd450a4e5
describe
'40919' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIG' 'sip-files00116.QC.jpg'
c1426ee4425fce1d3529f16a54de6431
c178b3ccaea0938cbb7fd5b97a7774c6425ebb6c
describe
'6886753' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIH' 'sip-files00116.tif'
c699de0231699c7ecc8d1caaf7b4bc49
9af26bc4cd8fab6f6a5b78aa8566ae1873133490
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASII' 'sip-files00116.txt'
baeceb76485f7e58ca15109f6d10c3a8
f312dc30453fa62996aef1ddaffe926e2e7c956f
describe
'12673' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIJ' 'sip-files00116thm.jpg'
3802174fa783f684c74eb457af948b91
9d8e0c309ddb499db42c88fb011762dbd7a79f9d
describe
'860632' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIK' 'sip-files00117.jp2'
6f3b609e1910dfbe07d391307418c4d1
87b0d764880a5f8138316039beb1c3dea03bf8e2
'2011-11-17T04:06:17-05:00'
describe
'115129' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIL' 'sip-files00117.jpg'
3de91da13e97c45c83607b1bacf3ba47
69d1cefc5a4824df25e26ee4262b2e0e6e3adfef
describe
'42975' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIM' 'sip-files00117.pro'
6be5836382f876d3ab0c5f6a40c6f699
5a738eeff0dafdbb5e7ad95d21e4417606daed89
describe
'41616' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIN' 'sip-files00117.QC.jpg'
f0ac3f6a2fc5050662f86391cbf9241e
bb6bc4e5862f12e05a07a2b5d82d8b9b05edbafe
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIO' 'sip-files00117.tif'
7eca22d046f16203c35bef03fb603776
cb43ae67230edb6bb79935000b202cfb2d5278dd
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIP' 'sip-files00117.txt'
b402004d63b186f8e55dd8d9c3554c74
96030743681214e530da2bab70c735cf997db322
describe
'12803' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIQ' 'sip-files00117thm.jpg'
33bf42e24a7171f42a8515f63ba9b792
a8004dfcdccf9bd29ba12fd0b629bccb2bc54af6
describe
'872552' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIR' 'sip-files00118.jp2'
698b1801eda8043b91ec2af344e0078b
eff5992a2c84b775b410f6bc85a1e5e1bb9e212e
describe
'85258' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIS' 'sip-files00118.jpg'
550d2cc82e07a20c02a829e49d47c747
528303c8e1ff914ad9a603b8b1f031537d9d3c4d
'2011-11-17T04:06:39-05:00'
describe
'26992' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIT' 'sip-files00118.pro'
6a0c176cec13d340466463cfb51085ec
41c9d0574c86fe18c80c4cdd8b47ba6901a10e71
describe
'29954' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIU' 'sip-files00118.QC.jpg'
2cbf56fbaf962b7e5117df6c6e392d90
18c6bfdb9122ab2752f54a91cc8f692f5fa638b4
'2011-11-17T04:02:33-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIV' 'sip-files00118.tif'
58be39e582df0720f012c5a236e13c9c
985acbb84eacb293caf155d411cb7adc45cad11c
'2011-11-17T04:03:44-05:00'
describe
'1137' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIW' 'sip-files00118.txt'
862db8726763b4cb6019ab5c2ce24f85
c23dbb1ea033b59bf5cddb4eb25e9a4f9ba8f717
describe
'8904' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIX' 'sip-files00118thm.jpg'
a4dbee59fd203e945579134439ba8c7e
ca7055edc201b50caab84309bde08b38816f931f
describe
'859975' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIY' 'sip-files00119.jp2'
c9e94eaf9fc0dafea50f7319e23dc10d
d65f328809f1adcb16ef05461afbf36ef44d4b05
describe
'115267' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASIZ' 'sip-files00119.jpg'
5f54f30d713dd1da0565cf2943c65cc8
d3df7dd6e20e9de83f970a8057fc327c155fc61b
describe
'42514' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJA' 'sip-files00119.pro'
8aa220976677c8a6b8d04251ff6fd3d6
ed11547cdbea7fcf2bf00643b921dccc39633278
'2011-11-17T04:06:55-05:00'
describe
'42458' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJB' 'sip-files00119.QC.jpg'
8a5778bccb94507a7ac8e177a35d8d47
49f7f85b1d19ce37168cec4e9d3d38ee5570f8d9
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJC' 'sip-files00119.tif'
02a203eafed017a03937c2a69557e031
7ce585f0d3c5cd810c55743eb76e5a8cefdb19ce
describe
'1697' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJD' 'sip-files00119.txt'
82a4717d1f1d8cc026762cd6fdb73771
976465417d6c973c0ff88c48519525cd149241c1
describe
'12993' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJE' 'sip-files00119thm.jpg'
4352329ab73e3b3aa43835492b236c2f
7bfc4d38741482179e643112fcd66c13e5a64dcf
describe
'852823' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJF' 'sip-files00120.jp2'
004ab5677f1981cd8349fd3344925622
437a846113b0c6a1fba9a3fd6c9beff79694d008
describe
'119852' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJG' 'sip-files00120.jpg'
3df81ebdd639675a5bf1a66e721cc080
83015aeef046e738d41be83fbc1d740de27e9311
describe
'43475' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJH' 'sip-files00120.pro'
2be194e8380b34f078ea5f0bcd1f40a2
df014b53b212e6be57672600c88efce4e5b78314
describe
'43313' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJI' 'sip-files00120.QC.jpg'
df764ed235193caf3a0fc176c8f95fde
ae16ba14fc0e715201733097c9d745ebee985895
describe
'6828979' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJJ' 'sip-files00120.tif'
a76cf19243b96f7297f62ad18ae68e42
27647629e1ae2fa433e72a68d4d09cbd02c02acb
describe
'1750' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJK' 'sip-files00120.txt'
cb09c79672d7bc525d686e5967bd0def
0e173448ea3d7b1a2ca954949398cb55d2aff069
describe
'12932' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJL' 'sip-files00120thm.jpg'
eed08c35c9f6cdcd6afd10f7d4ebcc2f
351c2ee04b75cb6b3b95a2be21e2925251b01746
describe
'871393' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJM' 'sip-files00121.jp2'
144d7d4d045eca818c29f62da7ec7779
ad7e6482987f512dd0ad6ff104f4c03ad17f8374
'2011-11-17T04:06:15-05:00'
describe
'115480' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJN' 'sip-files00121.jpg'
f04522a4277cce3fd76b08c683ed9342
020860aee9eed2bcd19929f083c07be7e6d8014f
describe
'43318' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJO' 'sip-files00121.pro'
6822f8a45dd81f873a1fa718ce8d138b
1538d568ff0c6855c20d097a14da47d479e642b1
describe
'41875' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJP' 'sip-files00121.QC.jpg'
e51e1d678d73ba8b8e87c8fc81dc19c0
cee8be4d03a4f77789168b4477e6b1daef71d3f5
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJQ' 'sip-files00121.tif'
a0bd84d71b6b6505bc8a75ee5b75edef
b456675c4018c461f4f6287d99cf80badda0414e
'2011-11-17T04:10:07-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJR' 'sip-files00121.txt'
452f433deb05c7cc446aefa488c4a4a5
103fa280c7e7d6a96cc45c27fac708754c6892d3
describe
'12754' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJS' 'sip-files00121thm.jpg'
101f482221170f105384f19f56314d91
29425512de54db8ecee44cc7b7714c37f3795419
describe
'855297' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJT' 'sip-files00122.jp2'
c792741a80ea7dc8b7846024cbd084b6
c049694430ca3d497cd461e89ba85230becd0890
describe
'114212' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJU' 'sip-files00122.jpg'
d0fd607d8916773b9663b6d0e72a6511
aa52c25837cca1c105f97cf06455d9770185b14d
describe
'42050' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJV' 'sip-files00122.pro'
68b75f7c550395f9ae306ecaa1fd9c1b
02f381d70394f406d94ccede048716174a3bf94f
describe
'41697' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJW' 'sip-files00122.QC.jpg'
2a0bf149e521ff02a343997fe270c42b
e44cc0281572d00cccadc44a64a491ea2a93bb45
'2011-11-17T04:03:49-05:00'
describe
'6848903' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJX' 'sip-files00122.tif'
6bf0c8339647aae9b12dd1fde07a713f
531288b1bb0f494783c51af70212a5a96e6c2c0d
describe
'1727' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJY' 'sip-files00122.txt'
327ffbad4e5d100d7a6e3d03e89ea378
7fcf6cb5bccf1cb74c179b7fe1c01cd9fca5c4f1
describe
'12274' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASJZ' 'sip-files00122thm.jpg'
9bf93c99fe916d1fe32ccf35ccaa87aa
655e127b0e703844fdc433b64a0a51bb0d0dad42
describe
'878872' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKA' 'sip-files00123.jp2'
17ff607378552dbf5d05823092a8769e
5c49221a18cdc3750420fc63262ac225e4b1dd1d
describe
'118810' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKB' 'sip-files00123.jpg'
f95a6fc0979282b0a7ee41802f121e63
0dd38510e5f0d8fd8cc9308c30168a6d4ca9f918
describe
'44577' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKC' 'sip-files00123.pro'
f5902f57b05d52d4d7c0ddf52ff3998c
8a3467d9681ca5433e6dcb683abaa3e479403522
describe
'43067' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKD' 'sip-files00123.QC.jpg'
a092c7bf58aefbf81d0e3f744b9b5e60
bf42e0cc352324806d7c3a35ad5402d56a2dfc4c
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKE' 'sip-files00123.tif'
f95cb43438730b61f4443835cf7b148d
e624494b6164fcf761f110d463bc116a5fd7e070
describe
'1780' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKF' 'sip-files00123.txt'
927976ea6ee78bb7d83e0490acdafcc2
f4dde3db78eb5d791cf52bda832d0be9c7013b47
describe
'12288' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKG' 'sip-files00123thm.jpg'
74343a4e06b11c8e38cd42ec2896c043
8dc45c64540dc50162f72cb699e30e655ab6b1c3
'2011-11-17T04:02:46-05:00'
describe
'873815' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKH' 'sip-files00124.jp2'
89110e5dc0e4f76c3f1e38d1ceba1bc6
9d97155b5df9dfaa931bd6e6d9683ebf74422e26
describe
'111792' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKI' 'sip-files00124.jpg'
28ab1edc2bd107966d9aceedd2f609d1
36f338d3d3cf359b34834e11096faec76ee8c8b9
describe
'40209' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKJ' 'sip-files00124.pro'
3393d525fbec8c4f7010b2a0d55b8e67
4718915ca1d0c5988be14ef893f1a47c51f4c808
describe
'40338' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKK' 'sip-files00124.QC.jpg'
2e8f1dcb618b739498bcd1b304d2a97b
e4ee3a6f8fa9c2b8b7573147a86f5ddc3ffa5cdf
describe
'6996951' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKL' 'sip-files00124.tif'
57b09e346c765cc6f824d3e6cdfc2312
821f084d99dfcb4c6a7c5d97fa47c5a5f87acf7f
'2011-11-17T04:08:43-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKM' 'sip-files00124.txt'
f3f9100ee323fdb358d7ae5ac8f2ccf9
96d6dd041cf13ca846861c2dd6f0fdb0fb2fba77
'2011-11-17T04:10:22-05:00'
describe
'11608' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKN' 'sip-files00124thm.jpg'
b9dd7441afd395a37f3e7df8e191daa5
0f31c9092e22df8279be49d36000dc3a6bb6ad60
describe
'897627' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKO' 'sip-files00125.jp2'
523604dbe32ffd365c74776fd272f93d
52175ee92614ed579ce5513bd8cc75563db12c18
'2011-11-17T04:09:52-05:00'
describe
'108911' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKP' 'sip-files00125.jpg'
f30452c1b52499b1263a94a9bbac9b69
268035340ff5e5afd036b9e607a9b4c8b0a915a1
describe
'44500' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKQ' 'sip-files00125.pro'
15e490eec97b04aeea4ebd51ab1a86cc
47dbb93e2f11fc0c8da010d72e1f1770849d091d
'2011-11-17T04:03:09-05:00'
describe
'40054' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKR' 'sip-files00125.QC.jpg'
7e7191f6722a4e35bd3aeb4466dd0d10
761e6b6798aabb6694f51e75c86b492cd5befd23
describe
'7189893' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKS' 'sip-files00125.tif'
7bd1bd2de3b6a336e26392d3b4649186
7e17e07c3bf6f90a45d92bbf1342c690366fc2b5
describe
'1806' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKT' 'sip-files00125.txt'
9d40341c490a0c81257a35115eccaab5
1f4446673cb8d80cb0a41744276a4d9e28a1b761
'2011-11-17T04:09:41-05:00'
describe
'11790' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKU' 'sip-files00125thm.jpg'
52f1d8491c179568ed7b57dab45ca692
0ad4b1e9c6266b34b6af2c3037da68d41524026d
describe
'842403' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKV' 'sip-files00126.jp2'
5682ad33bb51ea4cf20de1c4b9a779e5
2f0c737de386b90d252302b1954a044a00a63db1
describe
'118199' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKW' 'sip-files00126.jpg'
a3847f2a0fff98c812fdefe22b8495ef
c6feb809eaced2fc70c1f4b9380dae1bd08ff042
describe
'43712' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKX' 'sip-files00126.pro'
6647c99bf90123fc8644840096c16bf8
2d0e78bcba34b0ba582bc3b6d10fa8eb57b78f9e
describe
'42039' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKY' 'sip-files00126.QC.jpg'
968412c626cb92b9d8c463e452c844c0
440b22ab0a8fe8d19e038ab061923e931996ed9c
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASKZ' 'sip-files00126.tif'
408ed3e69800956fc7e518158283f4fc
584ff5f9afbb5445ee2cd114da5d707f259a6b69
describe
'1791' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLA' 'sip-files00126.txt'
c711c6aa681e46a39a5f0caceb8092d6
9254c18bb4c6b4dd5ae565c1075bbdc0fa667ae4
describe
'13070' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLB' 'sip-files00126thm.jpg'
1d54d9c99eb0a75932f8588994ac94d6
40b0bb2c7ba068553b4126d23cc5df6705b4a0ec
describe
'868892' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLC' 'sip-files00127.jp2'
5bffb9d18b38af6c20ca32b98714b7ac
a89d98ee5e5b4b848a734f1ee06ffc3a59259f5e
describe
'111240' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLD' 'sip-files00127.jpg'
e1ea5d040e2fdaf1277170003260ac08
02cd27bb3d70f3bd3e42897d073c657b45836cf8
describe
'40733' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLE' 'sip-files00127.pro'
73370fe6a1d6f98463678a594b4d4d02
3ce037c4a3df7007c5f3b3fb6e29b70d607b50d9
describe
'39911' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLF' 'sip-files00127.QC.jpg'
15b4febad433ca84da0a6b67660e272a
fb15fab0aa6fe6044c8161359e558db8dca6b731
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLG' 'sip-files00127.tif'
759ff476516992e46d19e8c6bbc122e0
3b4cdd7722f26f263f16b2b0e24b177e4e37e496
describe
'1657' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLH' 'sip-files00127.txt'
c2fd95b49010f7e231aa3c11bb110125
9c256aefdcb1c7e1059f75a3492cb70cb2711d2f
describe
'12301' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLI' 'sip-files00127thm.jpg'
92f326724a393796360dacd388b65010
6dac20d764c5c1bf534944c8eb6d1db3a997f51b
describe
'871924' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLJ' 'sip-files00128.jp2'
df6a881cf17df945708dcfb20b0fcd49
911e873771c3791bcd297b3c83b701a280a4a860
describe
'107248' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLK' 'sip-files00128.jpg'
4e9f263e9c7f768cf5601fce9fef7dc5
952ee8505cb6e3aec3a4a9b9c18c4c1d1ff35c49
describe
'38080' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLL' 'sip-files00128.pro'
9454c887c188f5ced6f49e64460c042c
56368828126ff8b43492a16fb15d76c440ef2dcc
describe
'39043' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLM' 'sip-files00128.QC.jpg'
6c9506414faaff44f64c7bb71efe6c5a
0639a60aad2f2b58eeacc0d74c19902d805298b3
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLN' 'sip-files00128.tif'
91b6f09b2f8a9d5a96c6e6687088e178
03dfcbb58bc0c14a471fb413b3859abb80f449b5
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLO' 'sip-files00128.txt'
3ebd8b87e1ce636e6fd88fe5100c4c3e
8f3d8822bad3a0416e81f862e9d34ea7fdd17a6f
describe
'11542' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLP' 'sip-files00128thm.jpg'
b84b20d3d466af5e1424403655499739
332b44277e1b4f8f6d2fc94e4b29b587a8a45cfb
describe
'856229' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLQ' 'sip-files00129.jp2'
5256e427612b9019a1549bed77aa642e
fcb8d2273ef66dff8d069468f0ebe3b46106f938
describe
'111063' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLR' 'sip-files00129.jpg'
dc51f929d256fa48c8330bbfb88f97b3
52fbc95fde8a965a7059dc098f60c3b8f9ac2f4d
describe
'40916' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLS' 'sip-files00129.pro'
49ac3cb3b1ee59b06539fcd20148af9c
d56eba7fdab452ac88d44d9fbc05b2c3e60d13a7
describe
'40566' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLT' 'sip-files00129.QC.jpg'
8fe388e26651098827a1fc68de8303c9
06a65ab29dddc4317bed8c7ebb492b8fdccd8844
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLU' 'sip-files00129.tif'
2de7c81582f4d620adde0ccad1a1161f
c53c956af5254ef9b2c4ebcaa94dbb9678a521ae
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLV' 'sip-files00129.txt'
cd574df67743ff0969e449f7e1cc0a08
50c3c0914f2f4d19fa00ea937680e3572413bdc3
describe
'12730' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLW' 'sip-files00129thm.jpg'
238e24e4b6125bbef67df3f0548f6e32
c735eb3ae471aabc08db66459576c62e5320f404
describe
'863462' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLX' 'sip-files00130.jp2'
2388cb8c2daff3ddd7aafe4cc2c8095b
f21adba097a133d9e0f429ccb69fac44e9b708a1
describe
'112776' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLY' 'sip-files00130.jpg'
f355b8276975d9ed73225a28fb5e7a67
88beff5d440d05141d03beaff5ba19ea7363b56b
describe
'41324' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASLZ' 'sip-files00130.pro'
6b17a8499dd0c11097f39aba23f86ced
ee8a13b52faf9f4051987308e5d3fe9d85694e04
'2011-11-17T04:08:52-05:00'
describe
'40953' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMA' 'sip-files00130.QC.jpg'
122987924fc5de2a2d3e60ab157a2186
b5ff14762d783d7c5e1afe297675ecc8e137527c
describe
'6914225' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMB' 'sip-files00130.tif'
4d81d772de5e1f42e4216c60d365be7e
d7b13b2286d7f9441edad1cfb6addbf7541ac45b
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMC' 'sip-files00130.txt'
8ca503e2f359bba13f0c1a59331b475e
cc5f23eea1674bd18e71d0009d53de27bec78083
describe
'12351' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMD' 'sip-files00130thm.jpg'
70e277fcac1509cd44306d5182162006
a3253359ed83bc93e3a2f3765f7cbd298f14ca40
describe
'862526' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASME' 'sip-files00131.jp2'
4f976f5576802dde843445b367b56c3a
693c5c36e81c29f6265d731286417a03dde35b3f
describe
'112815' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMF' 'sip-files00131.jpg'
4ebee4e17070eadd17a2fa1ed427a2f3
1ca36552d8c79f527281e907a958ad2d7fe0d329
describe
'42425' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMG' 'sip-files00131.pro'
71a517f485ac06c532b3084385266f1f
b20a1cbf02c54042cffffda07adbc452111536c5
describe
'40602' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMH' 'sip-files00131.QC.jpg'
d005ff70355cd93d66f1e69eab9e2a3c
a490d036de1a495edb0b5bb6d9f90e5f44675039
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMI' 'sip-files00131.tif'
91d4359acfeaf05d7305bc3301b2739e
27a45c1a45d0c69d9020d7b76bfb4a4f5bacf57f
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMJ' 'sip-files00131.txt'
c47b30e960342e58d4fd56c8f8b706c6
3ea803a0f63bd1a4138efa176f15db03d6dfdf9b
'2011-11-17T04:05:12-05:00'
describe
'12307' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMK' 'sip-files00131thm.jpg'
71515e7f274baf0d55ad6763406453d0
df9d09d177e6f6a1d828eeae1ba4ea3ad3d094ff
describe
'886301' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASML' 'sip-files00132.jp2'
c5e9a2bc0f972d4b1d21e83654ec7b97
f2ecc5ad059ad5dcb2741fe75bb18d4687d2f7a5
describe
'113572' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMM' 'sip-files00132.jpg'
65c44e1cfe1bdce58faff20cd009bd5a
31591d7c17d7f29e7126ee5950a000a9e74b8e84
describe
'42113' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMN' 'sip-files00132.pro'
eee3c97c1bb304ea80f6e6e091eda64d
f5f4d33f98321c7c02e68157c859aa6bf514a196
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMO' 'sip-files00132.QC.jpg'
e32b09ace691afaa616b10738c5d47be
a133a344b43a4879197944bc9b93c5a300cccd72
describe
'7096967' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMP' 'sip-files00132.tif'
d37c670765d52082cad5295ccc2647f2
92fb66d423aea3b39912d5df24ff813b7e4fbd93
describe
'1691' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMQ' 'sip-files00132.txt'
c3fbce237937f179f783b1eb5e40f049
af8bf6baea54075fb4c528ba173644aabbcd891d
describe
'12135' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMR' 'sip-files00132thm.jpg'
8e52b2a749e22aa5fcc1e957361ee3e7
995b4afe21cdcfd5c6843687824909d379e73a4c
describe
'836247' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMS' 'sip-files00133.jp2'
4c55dc00f6eaed5f9d6b552d9356c1f6
db1f0aca07ed494ba5fa9ab403dc6c3d5450afb3
describe
'117037' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMT' 'sip-files00133.jpg'
5f175d044be5bbb716757babf7b3d8a3
4ee67f83dcc4324494541bc8b0cbcdb9a0305180
describe
'44521' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMU' 'sip-files00133.pro'
bb8b2eca0a347ea98b31e3f8b5035664
10fdfed50df2665b517516b993fee2c19dc9d8df
describe
'43100' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMV' 'sip-files00133.QC.jpg'
91ae7d711e16406e87d8434de58ac695
1ccc7c1e6121cccb2ce1fe8acf46a7dbccc38ed7
describe
'6696419' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMW' 'sip-files00133.tif'
b334b187deaab383c84503a7849dd6bc
2ed324f0c5690d865c579e555f82f01032f2daf2
describe
'1783' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMX' 'sip-files00133.txt'
c73f50c42d007b97130651224a5cdec0
28da0de75460d9adb75c84fffe6c8b5ea03c3e26
describe
'13232' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMY' 'sip-files00133thm.jpg'
bd09513fd70e23ec80b355d143171cb3
ac88ad060a8a435546feaa6de246e8cf13dd8811
describe
'859121' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASMZ' 'sip-files00134.jp2'
4c418130378b831dacc75b77f576e630
ff9f7387140dd2a151bda9228767ca6539693b41
describe
'117361' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNA' 'sip-files00134.jpg'
afe442aa823ca81076741df2cbbe47fc
2a0f1b875625dbc2adf5970fde0554414989cbae
describe
'44974' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNB' 'sip-files00134.pro'
26a87acdb838d25a397a85eda23a5b56
93d118a55ac824610d3320b2a89f5d4e894a396e
describe
'43217' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNC' 'sip-files00134.QC.jpg'
0437a8d6cb455cc239252b0702f2e213
1e9e01bf7750d8185c09561de1c35f54ad53e82d
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASND' 'sip-files00134.tif'
aaaf1cb8642770e236c3fc8186a4890e
2a48248b0ebc4a84f824539d2f358c4a671dbfa5
describe
'1839' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNE' 'sip-files00134.txt'
7474d58b35b6f08bff34e4ed3ce9d528
4c4272ea7ae980c416cfeb9c86515d9ff235b6ce
describe
'12508' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNF' 'sip-files00134thm.jpg'
cea6ef86c6034e4be8e722101b3d5bbd
acc3e6a215b96373b867b6e500f46092bdf2ddda
describe
'847062' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNG' 'sip-files00135.jp2'
adf4d8255ce258fbfb45cf19fc327cac
c596db7ee7defe3b2d409707b5dd59174529756f
describe
'116641' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNH' 'sip-files00135.jpg'
585f3785f828fcecaa4707f25bad3ab0
4b927d641952e6b1046acec89bfb3dc8727d4d84
describe
'43447' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNI' 'sip-files00135.pro'
126657de908879e51e469f58c59019c6
9bda515d239a6d98c97bcaf3461deeab34e9b2e5
describe
'42767' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNJ' 'sip-files00135.QC.jpg'
3dfd3c1211e82d77266b669e8aada59f
fd7c9a622a206108e430d5f571c9fd20ec5d9a5d
describe
'6783043' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNK' 'sip-files00135.tif'
8bc9664745ec32859138b889ba2b7fd6
f508ce535064314a7a4e79c435f2573c69c4ebdb
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNL' 'sip-files00135.txt'
dee14491ce0220c9303a91021a5f2de9
32c43ce536afecdb867f8821dc7c6b9e5ecb010d
describe
'12839' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNM' 'sip-files00135thm.jpg'
0d974c06ccd0d54c225a33ca6a2bff74
9150947954c01bb20c508d92e15c1dd62145072f
describe
'855313' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNN' 'sip-files00136.jp2'
adc7acbd28fdd39a3c2efaea0975b8d4
4b91777834d96a5bf0dd7dae201e1dfcdd60371e
describe
'110366' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNO' 'sip-files00136.jpg'
157ce1b816f685b64bf53f9d2b1fb510
c01ddbf2016beefa305eeb91227d3b072aa8db25
describe
'41139' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNP' 'sip-files00136.pro'
cc434b2953e11d05e51815ff8fd85359
13b57f158c4b6b36df61c2329455b2fda34bc378
describe
'40688' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNQ' 'sip-files00136.QC.jpg'
a8cf357221b889a4497794833297354f
2739ba34bde64cc29446884cd10c0ea98d04fcbc
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNR' 'sip-files00136.tif'
af8a869305db35e86e57728233ba92b9
d23e9ad583c456cc5fc0d345dc6ee53b0351d795
describe
'1680' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNS' 'sip-files00136.txt'
29287faa439248139930ab8e6e22b37b
55b137542a4b445015795a965ffd3fa87e636f91
'2011-11-17T04:05:44-05:00'
describe
'11993' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNT' 'sip-files00136thm.jpg'
c1a1a3999cc19afb53f1ea9edc02c86d
9570bc8935b109ab09dcd4219e95755603db5569
describe
'843256' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNU' 'sip-files00137.jp2'
51cfcf4ae4de8c89a96a051f526fea7e
ea503f8ee16ab44fa37dbcbc9e1b98638c594ddc
describe
'117928' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNV' 'sip-files00137.jpg'
565db48ee4ed49d4a6a69f0df1cd61cd
82bb52d77941c1d9b6fb4fb85a6a042905a37afa
describe
'45246' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNW' 'sip-files00137.pro'
989655763a84a745a83c977aaf93d939
bf53bfac71de0f27378e735298dddda9d9a5ec28
describe
'42542' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNX' 'sip-files00137.QC.jpg'
38a411e95834a336ec420d2b1af05c28
644a0d8d3f7be54732bb0843ac952f7c257057a4
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNY' 'sip-files00137.tif'
fc91bc19c1ba3b5c4be797a01da826c7
7765da3ef96839fd9c71596451eadebb3286aa19
'2011-11-17T04:07:07-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASNZ' 'sip-files00137.txt'
e0cf64cbd627809849254e4bd1aca674
8e7b083ade1fd628a4e7e7c86ede9c262920cc0e
'2011-11-17T04:10:26-05:00'
describe
'13696' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOA' 'sip-files00137thm.jpg'
4725dba57c5bfb8afcbe011679437b63
7c5bc657f3eb27d82b10d97a97257d8fb581c015
'2011-11-17T04:05:27-05:00'
describe
'843195' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOB' 'sip-files00138.jp2'
285eb7f1ebb3266c9c9cf59a889034c6
d857a1937faac6e682c8fe95855a5cf5549093bb
describe
'109282' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOC' 'sip-files00138.jpg'
839969bd8498fa3eb81d6110e9647065
71a6d2dd400713d80e8bbeab222f352f0e639d93
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOD' 'sip-files00138.pro'
68086e44272b959a32de94cc7dfbc1be
2f8f036ffead0fa74edef69e05bd7c7a72dfbb10
describe
'39676' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOE' 'sip-files00138.QC.jpg'
c802ce837a4ab1256f087bf657c0c484
1e8364da5716484d0f752f0eef21a262c384195b
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOF' 'sip-files00138.tif'
9baa558b7c781ca98b7ad1901730e7d1
b57797258ee79532168e1719851ec8570e98869b
describe
'1745' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOG' 'sip-files00138.txt'
0761b4865d6bdc41b86529b7707a34a7
ef16d92eb05df901311c643b1c2437ccda501c40
describe
'12512' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOH' 'sip-files00138thm.jpg'
0f3a33ce424122998b8c7fb562d1366f
2b3046e2a0e90616975acb639cd33146d0f80e88
describe
'851383' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOI' 'sip-files00139.jp2'
0e066e90cf8eb875473ba81be0d4e395
442026d515e1a5556ed2f846afaa9efabdbb6d6a
describe
'119218' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOJ' 'sip-files00139.jpg'
0b8778faa0a139aaf4c1974d68edce4d
ff878f581d6cd3ef214a1e7b710c7dcf5dc66538
'2011-11-17T04:06:03-05:00'
describe
'45115' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOK' 'sip-files00139.pro'
4cfc56d0cb239f3bffe04e0b5980bbf7
57c7bc7d0ac26c1298c77adc12df3e8fd69406a9
describe
'43687' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOL' 'sip-files00139.QC.jpg'
e76d19b44a565ecefe5d2879ca526ea6
9a9faba41ecbefc0083cd4d1eacfd9f127fb8d87
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOM' 'sip-files00139.tif'
6075d94485fa5f12bc741cc926a33e37
c588fbe8bcc81c413c16c9fd3fa5752ff7146f59
describe
'1792' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASON' 'sip-files00139.txt'
1f7ff58fff3ff1b44d82ba42b8d14997
7b9f9e20f107f3d63d506755e8b6a402a0d4f7a4
describe
'13017' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOO' 'sip-files00139thm.jpg'
3a0e6a3a8c1c988ae0e1c7526535f2ba
a5214bd64268c446b9edabb11601da7eba1dc57c
describe
'859103' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOP' 'sip-files00140.jp2'
51ac7842cdb601d7eaf325cf1b82e25a
6387d6f9efced83cec20479ce0969e6835b61040
'2011-11-17T04:06:21-05:00'
describe
'118607' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOQ' 'sip-files00140.jpg'
720090e9f293b2544007d2cb866723bc
186e9a82b54b1e5575ab153f19553386ccce4c70
describe
'44312' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOR' 'sip-files00140.pro'
04f1986a81cfd0e44d5086843076a231
3faa10296bf139219405a5e862aa5a6527c56069
describe
'43426' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOS' 'sip-files00140.QC.jpg'
2d19ba60f7dccebc2f105e7175efc1e9
12c88a87192ee481862a2e63acafe9ddd7280fcc
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOT' 'sip-files00140.tif'
5d37b30ea9be982d2a2349869d2b0777
2391bb10789302aa72d7e634abf016423046ce72
describe
'1824' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOU' 'sip-files00140.txt'
1ddc8751582607ecd639662e6135b246
9bf02cce52222fc237aaeb551d71262e4afb96fd
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOV' 'sip-files00140thm.jpg'
efa359fadd062bf24910caea1e9230b3
e868fa343f81f078196efe41ef88ecd98b6cb380
describe
'861124' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOW' 'sip-files00141.jp2'
55654a108dc3dbb1ec00513ce84feb79
94f12523ea62c6817f66380c08804c164679b1d1
describe
'120477' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOX' 'sip-files00141.jpg'
29cf2bd3f71642df27b465fac756da2e
e7f29eee30c14b2f206624e7e7ec176ff025b707
describe
'46253' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOY' 'sip-files00141.pro'
94fe926f2e6c544dc9cd71459bb510ef
127946d95a7c78da089d07186e5095986e1d4480
describe
'43042' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASOZ' 'sip-files00141.QC.jpg'
3379ff49d9037bc30325e907e1d370d8
5b068c05443a97f5354a7e3316c46424d9d7bd44
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPA' 'sip-files00141.tif'
c06edfb5fc46d6a545ab23e31eb4f70a
e26152a0dfde29a57dac366c89554e4340539f95
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPB' 'sip-files00141.txt'
ce7d0b258ca4659e40b686bf6b79d043
70a3c77bbd6f8aa6e1ce4176ecaf343a6423c466
describe
'13139' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPC' 'sip-files00141thm.jpg'
4ad07a69a0c42baaca4f2c60dbeac4a4
2552c6dc54e9e4a22d92bb08abe283ad971476bc
describe
'839964' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPD' 'sip-files00142.jp2'
bbcf4af0c51a4f53f4939fa629e0f2d8
fd4b4f0e2671d9e385857f338bdd91cc4b10e3b4
describe
'119457' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPE' 'sip-files00142.jpg'
7285674758b0a26fcddb95bb97e9a709
2ac97a46c21b5cecdd52a6da96b067497a73d2e4
describe
'46046' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPF' 'sip-files00142.pro'
dd1eb92812df3e2e002f533813861441
d8fcf84017fb1d221231b0b607848f4ba573033b
describe
'43794' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPG' 'sip-files00142.QC.jpg'
79c036b047547799fabedd001648a64d
e73d34c3775d7f9e87aba8da50323f259454cde9
describe
'6726139' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPH' 'sip-files00142.tif'
2d6b982bab624d586f152d35505dee4c
9e7310f8b3410652372b06b39227e767fc3c963a
describe
'1904' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPI' 'sip-files00142.txt'
3569f458fdc804c90a1398a24cdc9c32
6c602cfd0fac0c78fd46c28dc395fa5477b1d4a0
describe
'12919' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPJ' 'sip-files00142thm.jpg'
06aaa7d7356b2016e529dfa8a98cafa8
3c2f7e8805e05ffe136c5ef73e0029868ff227ff
describe
'833243' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPK' 'sip-files00143.jp2'
6d2295df7be2b6810b2e5e6595db5783
2ed5676ac914c813620322451c515bbd7faf6b1c
describe
'118938' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPL' 'sip-files00143.jpg'
24baf4a7db77ccd42baed1c73419711f
0e59e81f8a96bbba22bfc0ee140bfa8c8b809e77
describe
'44370' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPM' 'sip-files00143.pro'
ac5a80fb0a93575223ad4d05be3f8b9a
58bad9ac3d0a2d4fe883f9dcdc90633d61892be9
describe
'43425' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPN' 'sip-files00143.QC.jpg'
3d092a0624c326a25a7423af2af66ea1
9cefad2702b784a12c482eb9cabb0a1bcaa4cb96
describe
'6672343' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPO' 'sip-files00143.tif'
687598dec3497689f7ccfe97c22efab5
b8004132d55f3d4182bf0432229eff848d133ebf
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPP' 'sip-files00143.txt'
833ab3d9d10c83b0378197d9ac1f85da
75ce0a4dfb55728d6c25eb052b18eecf43febd73
'2011-11-17T04:06:23-05:00'
describe
'13068' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPQ' 'sip-files00143thm.jpg'
e801b6736f2b8442d20645ff38e9b406
03fa60fbe8bb473e68dbb381e2cd73ccea67f2a7
describe
'848385' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPR' 'sip-files00144.jp2'
3d31b7c767c879c394a79dcfa321df95
1fc3896cccd0c5177c76f867508a2f8a8243b2ed
describe
'116722' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPS' 'sip-files00144.jpg'
2e4538f83158e67119655af6a6515b56
9b079cf3a2a26fb2eb98d6767730c383cbe50e81
describe
'43591' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPT' 'sip-files00144.pro'
ab80d02253e0ad7cc5cbb0a8fb1d382b
ba508013fb0a17916b8b045a0ea087dfa217d970
describe
'42331' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPU' 'sip-files00144.QC.jpg'
e09e305b40acd4e6756892698fb6e3ce
d04bd05cee51b8e5288d96fe1d260c6dd998cbfb
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPV' 'sip-files00144.tif'
74b2a207112b926c5c8c6426542c110e
1167f76e3da396d0f0da17be51056c5909394837
describe
'1775' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPW' 'sip-files00144.txt'
6d9dc4b1c318daa51cbe58283a419d87
fd217b4097de39ffd2c9cf90df9b519037b9aa30
describe
'12657' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPX' 'sip-files00144thm.jpg'
259c40aee6eb74471403deda34f974e6
3b0f6cd2ee3819679c4a08c9f143d6b4da54880b
describe
'838418' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPY' 'sip-files00145.jp2'
2759f4081ef40fa92cfa183e33b1dd17
15ee5cf352c1f8343beea11109fa254e9b03035e
describe
'118716' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASPZ' 'sip-files00145.jpg'
a4b45ab835b08c3296c77d3b281b6c72
be1eef93283d1b8f738e35f556fa4abff6d28de1
describe
'45358' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQA' 'sip-files00145.pro'
096f84ce6697b533ee8edca6991a0579
41d89b866b8e2af42126884c6659b054423f7d6f
describe
'43170' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQB' 'sip-files00145.QC.jpg'
635c2bcc0808b46383d5bc44bedaca66
d61e7130bcee9abceb7021298a5c8f7596eddcdb
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQC' 'sip-files00145.tif'
661a6bc0a6231c41742b0c31173a5fee
cb9d782462576ac861122d5f0f87e358c98b4127
describe
'1850' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQD' 'sip-files00145.txt'
f71d1f8fc4e614340d022c06d7422db5
2a52a8df44d655c70f8d182de025b7120d884c74
describe
'13289' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQE' 'sip-files00145thm.jpg'
73b79bbaec66e43c2e9a6c952429cd6c
4bca6e34fe4e447a4afb02f61ac6b807deb00563
describe
'848521' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQF' 'sip-files00146.jp2'
df1c9a5815cff912a60ef3499cf33058
5240e6119ad5ba3d6f0309f7edc3354e773ee2ef
describe
'119971' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQG' 'sip-files00146.jpg'
60ac318a3cadf90a1f9ca087717334ce
d2ee94e80230c4a804966348571a601b83581601
describe
'46126' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQH' 'sip-files00146.pro'
f9bd78d1ae17fb38bc079f3e7967532f
8af8473a5a85e60c1e7fd3e054b27c735d3adbc3
describe
'43571' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQI' 'sip-files00146.QC.jpg'
52d9f027d64ce35bc07c120641761106
bf1db97ca0b6a619bb88230163468ef98b905c8a
'2011-11-17T04:03:15-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQJ' 'sip-files00146.tif'
94d1597feb6d4d61cfb6783322005749
ce72e5c0ae220448b47b24e71bd2523981c33ddd
describe
'1896' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQK' 'sip-files00146.txt'
e2b8f3194579a120aad5e20d8f6fa812
e84951d498ca11cd1b2f3ae33dfdbe2f0e578bee
describe
'12748' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQL' 'sip-files00146thm.jpg'
6169f32ba40874812b3d95150afa706a
d918a4b8ad894b2677332a4204853a1089c27e1e
describe
'870740' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQM' 'sip-files00147.jp2'
6e059bf78cc71c8cbdd9475311a8ea1e
a668cc46d2a9e5e2853dbfbd6ca23e4b3edcd07e
describe
'118209' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQN' 'sip-files00147.jpg'
28a9a89348b2331f2991f6d7fb57415f
563b4d53f6b7cf936df9bd68e01d8cfaf3da7ff3
describe
'45502' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQO' 'sip-files00147.pro'
c793bf1dd9e6c041b628e32b6db6d48f
12fece09382ec8b271d4667d3be1288da96a3120
describe
'43255' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQP' 'sip-files00147.QC.jpg'
3db5b8cca9aa6101ec1e96b4fff7e5fd
5650de71db0372f459ef0460fdbeaf2660eae3cf
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQQ' 'sip-files00147.tif'
9f31b2b47888f861aa333e167bc22cdf
0bb32ada9a32083095da89bae0279e7864f374fe
describe
'1857' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQR' 'sip-files00147.txt'
99e2c5b6da8e324d4cae9b557dccd8c7
3fa3c39ca9e94a637018aff0fb37aa7a5f65906f
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQS' 'sip-files00147thm.jpg'
f389c9aa1aff53fbf60f5f7519406fa5
346988d0eadd1fa1f01777d9e7bfed5ffd6294d2
'2011-11-17T04:04:26-05:00'
describe
'860031' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQT' 'sip-files00148.jp2'
fb153ab6109b866df828dfc153f1ff4f
f30d6a2b8dcaec112f34f3edb21d80c8bdbbc350
describe
'110964' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQU' 'sip-files00148.jpg'
13aa1a93db8c403086257dc742038205
97a2cd6e82e35399d0a72577a883a10b5d233fb0
describe
'42323' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQV' 'sip-files00148.pro'
8602629446b8a7e0b1a3269d450f68f5
02ca60a0a7482207abb35ede2eaeee7da56ca683
describe
'40426' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQW' 'sip-files00148.QC.jpg'
dc59a2c070d089ba8cf85f543c5a6a1c
f3e7ba7bca4876755b7d7463888bae9252492ad8
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQX' 'sip-files00148.tif'
3296a4c6e0d1daa0dcb65801e5c6d2d9
3322efab12cfd5ed84d9d0db384d42e5c43fc31f
'2011-11-17T04:06:06-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQY' 'sip-files00148.txt'
25ca993445c59f51e759c50a4db7fecc
ae35e6694ceb1624dd7c941e97d2a807e3200655
'2011-11-17T04:08:25-05:00'
describe
'12203' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASQZ' 'sip-files00148thm.jpg'
fce5ce499ef396c4ad66d4ddb8a0400a
f585165d257557e915ec8c07a8cb7c2d578b132b
describe
'848516' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRA' 'sip-files00149.jp2'
99a06973a94de45ec073e3a15fa79e62
0c49865d4b46e403c4b379ccf24ac49a1613b4c3
describe
'116815' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRB' 'sip-files00149.jpg'
272a12e8f241ecdd29a69c9851467504
ebd51b3dec70e70afe952886dc18f7f5727aafc3
describe
'43354' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRC' 'sip-files00149.pro'
3fdf4e3fc51ccdae77a09840481959a4
e96a8ee290c1face643228ae5065d5af7a855613
describe
'42494' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRD' 'sip-files00149.QC.jpg'
e33e5c67a968abd819c6df4589ffd0f7
cbf3e014c70185a621d5bc808e124aac061ed537
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRE' 'sip-files00149.tif'
68153d96692b04a42dcbdd099361f942
523264a9d80990e61621909c956bd73dec33df68
describe
'1786' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRF' 'sip-files00149.txt'
9082ee5ff5674ee7a686257dce8ba224
6fb68441ae19f4eed5a3113a632adc564afae13c
describe
'12745' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRG' 'sip-files00149thm.jpg'
ece68b20094d6f44e7189b48f8b58f58
c7491ae14cba6b0ac6800cddab441c721bd4e85d
describe
'857672' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRH' 'sip-files00150.jp2'
a68afef14a842fc2213cdc77f3a2e2df
2c736d3e0c4fcae09b5cc9a63cad211a1595dfc4
describe
'108777' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRI' 'sip-files00150.jpg'
137f97c8b8edf93afd57abf1c68aa38c
fd912546efa9bbdb5f13752ec4031a44f23871da
describe
'39607' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRJ' 'sip-files00150.pro'
ec1a2000910d818221a2e53feadb2a31
08daf758e84dde3e25e6f7571d77a73b5140a47c
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRK' 'sip-files00150.QC.jpg'
fc358c7e745c766587272c801ae8471c
cc4fc1d0520a861b3b9f833042fc7dfd0d880d1e
describe
'6867765' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRL' 'sip-files00150.tif'
cb95a4b7db68ab46a823b0f28cae6b1a
a56da54f7ef56d75c0a7d1f547f882296e0fa22e
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRM' 'sip-files00150.txt'
8b3ad30f236f992f05b72c137803edbd
7026ec7f2bbfa795878b499ca94e436825248cbd
describe
'11559' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRN' 'sip-files00150thm.jpg'
0edc6f36bb5ad7534245eb6a4e42e7ad
0bac1eab4c641880320c151afcf52ac0c1bf73cb
describe
'858753' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRO' 'sip-files00151.jp2'
b4a34daa33208d4c5d6a3d59424c03de
519e001d6299dca5ab18659a6ec3c9baf7d83381
describe
'114444' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRP' 'sip-files00151.jpg'
b3acda1f8dd572e7731ac58c53e8a699
5381e3b0fe7b5da20c8e09a29aa9695d6fb6c280
describe
'43110' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRQ' 'sip-files00151.pro'
055fc95fff54a813c0febf586dbced21
37622817c6f47f7664f86d9af06778e792c09bca
describe
'41866' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRR' 'sip-files00151.QC.jpg'
a1aa11d89c3b7fe208ba1316280f6127
bd1e935e20a734c3e3b56e11521fbfe0ca2774fc
describe
'6876769' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRS' 'sip-files00151.tif'
389d3393ba9b89fbd27c248022f51dfe
2111cd3fa0c5094183f06e890fd2f79de46db2ef
describe
'1744' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRT' 'sip-files00151.txt'
db0d15686c493cd8e636157140c39798
afed848505c858c15accc803627feb76cd555eca
describe
'12820' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRU' 'sip-files00151thm.jpg'
d58daed89dd690c046875818c0f8313d
23a0dfc2d51a5e66de79e512f286ee34b71d4001
describe
'835054' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRV' 'sip-files00152.jp2'
fedabff9630df3fb8a4b9c3f401c2906
d0726acfd79a4d2c68d9730d588a26dde55279f2
describe
'117493' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRW' 'sip-files00152.jpg'
7baef1c390836404fd94325e15a074eb
7bd67063120ef0a81140ec21f7e32d89a2aae24e
describe
'43220' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRX' 'sip-files00152.pro'
3bbf5a9bc65e520bf7957d0d232676fc
2acc5f4236ddc8b328ad7e4cae03d88d1c0062b4
describe
'43269' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRY' 'sip-files00152.QC.jpg'
9f235803f891de56ba7ca5f4382abbc1
ff2bc3f6c687c68732643c2c8372172c7eede46c
describe
'6686899' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASRZ' 'sip-files00152.tif'
d6e0a23f38249dfac598a4e359c7b01e
d7620c7624b53620365be611c992da7c437f62a0
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSA' 'sip-files00152.txt'
6b77007d04bf6f99ee7ca5eb710f6e8c
0768c8fb1d60acad7b2dea8972b3884f7da87432
describe
'13182' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSB' 'sip-files00152thm.jpg'
dbc8b7eb9a5c5ca3a68c9a42b9db2000
6fb549b0b9fe4b35c65265f04b8a16070fe6cdc5
describe
'841315' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSC' 'sip-files00153.jp2'
2aa8503527818ed770bca608bf3e0bda
1cbe12296b31c295c22ad95d02b248b1f5c298da
describe
'114138' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSD' 'sip-files00153.jpg'
e6b2939ffe8ca0b5a05fedf2e3dfcb6a
89670cfc0f970bb75898f6f5c5310b26ec55083a
describe
'43325' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSE' 'sip-files00153.pro'
853126d6917c76c38fa84b7db6325e70
f2dc9759f43eb8ea4d9ce81a77d4717f48fbf36e
describe
'41410' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSF' 'sip-files00153.QC.jpg'
6fa01a005e69c5633146b688e520a72f
560411189b4ea25d738faa92f2e25250b44d6f75
describe
'6737289' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSG' 'sip-files00153.tif'
ec3758a3f0ed1a8f9d72323add19d4b3
426f3abea0da707b16469724eb92bdbd66e9ff7f
describe
'1729' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSH' 'sip-files00153.txt'
ad681a83ba666b36dc7d4253fd9657c2
290d8708ac94a5822b5030e9b6b35628dca03bfd
describe
'13296' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSI' 'sip-files00153thm.jpg'
f940685573156bb99de578192f82f513
76d099e04e9f9c5c2e070c235783323e854bba4f
describe
'835048' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSJ' 'sip-files00154.jp2'
7b2e1624affccd5b50320e14976311b0
474644b4b93a8b6fd627570f3568681bc6ce5d30
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSK' 'sip-files00154.jpg'
3d26d8111f70e810d2d67c6f72452641
89b87ec8194815b15f197830d0861ffb0ba4c0f6
describe
'43179' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSL' 'sip-files00154.pro'
05e7f6d2d3da33b7744a221248383951
3d3d1b7341f1ea9f1573f92a384dcd4fb4a94554
describe
'43105' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSM' 'sip-files00154.QC.jpg'
b336ca6cbcf91af91545b0a5544338be
83abea4bd5b42dbe2db6f55b34b3ea5fbcbf086f
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSN' 'sip-files00154.tif'
203adc23d017113680bd620b67b09ead
ee45ecde8a50b576857dd70983c3d43504479b79
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSO' 'sip-files00154.txt'
b127a44b236224a09831ef9b9cd0bda8
0d010c004b5b0f86e8823e2c10f3d2bf62a0d91d
'2011-11-17T04:09:58-05:00'
describe
'13054' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSP' 'sip-files00154thm.jpg'
a7aab707de533c458540e0b8e37c312c
45da4d0b0686f65384c08acc998433bc46cdceba
describe
'841649' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSQ' 'sip-files00155.jp2'
958b31fdbcde0e35fdff517200eb598e
f163ce89c07cf8e96d9b785a9c182109b41c4099
describe
'116853' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSR' 'sip-files00155.jpg'
d217482035d5676374e41a35e380ae2b
5fe35d88b8a7c85c479dadb80986d6755b6fdb20
'2011-11-17T04:03:24-05:00'
describe
'42294' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSS' 'sip-files00155.pro'
bbecaf0b7d4ff9cc74930f7e0d1bbc93
47b1ecff95d5ccdfa669f4e2bcc3ea65d894f88b
describe
'42834' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASST' 'sip-files00155.QC.jpg'
ad6d10ca00f126a3e49aa9eb0bf60d82
6aa28270e31603fc5cba8ef79e505765a7fee7b0
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSU' 'sip-files00155.tif'
1a9114665b5b5e58bc2a86072859c310
0a1411cc3bcec4271308edb8b78440bf47b549a1
'2011-11-17T04:02:48-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSV' 'sip-files00155.txt'
4c7cd5462037f5addd0552bb57fcc6d3
9eec71a33aad8ad91a3d3ed81a0659808d15ca01
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSW' 'sip-files00155thm.jpg'
446765c1f3c23b35abf9195627975d21
d20e1a0c4062c844afa028105ac1857dda7792d4
describe
'855710' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSX' 'sip-files00156.jp2'
870b9051bce380d50b95864872b9427d
a58dcc555ba3381069644f67dffc3afb07b00f8d
describe
'119174' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSY' 'sip-files00156.jpg'
ffcfb4da4b734ee25a8e9dcb8d8c4d72
0c617ca570be01ca7c1afe2b009bf61f986afbea
describe
'45224' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASSZ' 'sip-files00156.pro'
43c629dc8deb137483d34e4370329103
f37bf523978240c012f5df240e8b63e57a8323fa
describe
'42943' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTA' 'sip-files00156.QC.jpg'
37965f8f51911294284cc4b819bfbd6f
2536237aebcc8316f43a4b87af9c13b39d393afc
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTB' 'sip-files00156.tif'
a33024979a9f3973e00d04f92c1e530b
65347ce3b99116b1e23356c470c8f567928e021f
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTC' 'sip-files00156.txt'
1903225dcb75354556ef3695956ec5d4
fd58f116d10a5937cabb4eda23a6a3a3e8f5057b
describe
'12728' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTD' 'sip-files00156thm.jpg'
3e5d8ee932589c50071898be03284d33
6e65c8c019cee10c5a7a52ff5928b03820df6f7f
describe
'849125' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTE' 'sip-files00157.jp2'
32d6220de62b4caafb7696b0c03b4952
7e7cda67bcdc05d3711bfc942f2e4dedd5fbe34b
describe
'117320' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTF' 'sip-files00157.jpg'
83f13d992a20dcb52b4d72080e0b56ea
ba452cb769c0abb155ef359cc8a0061422935374
describe
'43193' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTG' 'sip-files00157.pro'
c22cb573a9cfd2a1e17b3d6c31044efe
8b2a0b7b209853816ac35ed6dedb04a432de6fa3
describe
'42708' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTH' 'sip-files00157.QC.jpg'
adb73e9877713110506b0f62e7bdd802
831e0009510f3415c000fe81464da22872061771
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTI' 'sip-files00157.tif'
e8c5952b8ecd5ea409d2489a68ea4a6e
3d4967b816b984dd9fa62ced27a4a52cce1bfd24
describe
'1766' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTJ' 'sip-files00157.txt'
6a29c8cb13273f3d92a007688eed3900
0ae9d645aeb99a556f97604dca6078f4e951308e
'2011-11-17T04:06:27-05:00'
describe
'13018' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTK' 'sip-files00157thm.jpg'
9a78284e65fbd6f7d1cf8a40f26ade71
6f2a6b07431e601e8294e6c928cb3669f09f87d5
describe
'865108' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTL' 'sip-files00158.jp2'
060a200e2909bad2562dff19b2f3c933
68fd4c38b0b65c2322408df7013070beab86a675
describe
'114738' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTM' 'sip-files00158.jpg'
2576ba0c1ea1a0e945ae51ab9ae13e55
71593bcc44f8114a043b99617b38e995a41345e3
describe
'42481' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTN' 'sip-files00158.pro'
19617454a98ab13d58e7ea422e44e3ab
f84c2593fa2b8dae98a86fadd98c32147fd207ee
'2011-11-17T04:10:02-05:00'
describe
'42204' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTO' 'sip-files00158.QC.jpg'
d3543204102c18a38487fc0cd8c24cf7
f355cd82d6547d787dda1f0a6f09129e6ba3c623
describe
'6928391' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTP' 'sip-files00158.tif'
59caad0870fab5b654b856a9d0400ff8
4fa6f1d904ed7414b86c37eff8713c1fd5c665dd
describe
'1770' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTQ' 'sip-files00158.txt'
67a6617c5ed0b803e11a73cb82e93156
ca2788c8d47a669cfdd41b9d2ff5e23c42f6dc6a
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTR' 'sip-files00158thm.jpg'
4604cb44a780bea8923782fa988b80ba
d3e31ed572a68210cbdb3a5b4207e72e8b375a06
describe
'849099' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTS' 'sip-files00159.jp2'
033ada36e3bbbd3479b8da06ab5e2afa
37eefad0ead7e29d9aca5531462ccf1cb2fee94a
describe
'107306' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTT' 'sip-files00159.jpg'
f67b27ed5c63a582c04beb2d56731ffc
75bf2596272eee52eebe65bafe0b231a79f34f94
'2011-11-17T04:10:42-05:00'
describe
'38957' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTU' 'sip-files00159.pro'
aea167ed6dff9b737b1e20cb044fe01e
945d1be8b2afe2b696db5ca5db1899bb0d9c45df
describe
'38498' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTV' 'sip-files00159.QC.jpg'
36c6e1e8fee86cb5482fa6f4c849f0b7
b146e6d46f6a9903e3adf0bbd601145a73ba4452
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTW' 'sip-files00159.tif'
9ed5bd173d37dbaf64cf01cdb22a16ac
ab9d629aade5692f2c007ced606da0bc6948c811
describe
'1609' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTX' 'sip-files00159.txt'
b2072c0a45ef345e34330879fa15ab45
934f9a8ca4bd2e26907738964fb03fdad347bb83
describe
'11889' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTY' 'sip-files00159thm.jpg'
03c63f095db4192ffada683a8bfe71b5
d75b30d9bfe9056df76059e2f8c4e773afae106d
describe
'846670' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASTZ' 'sip-files00160.jp2'
3f0620a6f5f7cdee91d037742caf1c3f
9bd338a45cefaf7e592482c967e463a2dbbb286c
describe
'118405' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUA' 'sip-files00160.jpg'
e2ef437b674fa59f3d759515da7698b3
7bb47d0598357e932911216fc4a6aab5d008577f
describe
'45211' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUB' 'sip-files00160.pro'
4e14ec5590a284addb07aaf8271fc212
f30f56d5d81b9f7ae15f28e164966bd3afc5977f
describe
'43284' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUC' 'sip-files00160.QC.jpg'
3f65cebc6e62d205a67b2e98a1fe8fbc
db5d5a543683c415263030503aadfff8de53725a
describe
'6780143' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUD' 'sip-files00160.tif'
128bced5a6890a898290662814cc7712
1ca0eaddb08a565f6b3c95fc7bcc6b5e0aaef218
describe
'1860' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUE' 'sip-files00160.txt'
477342c21a5f1aa426c5ae83fcde53b1
47c50168ea5f88e486d332644798036d4ee3c597
describe
'12833' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUF' 'sip-files00160thm.jpg'
606d3a7f12c21f5c57640f07ce2fe7d7
fc77f2e6898e3eb61f023f6adc0dc141f9b5bbac
describe
'855614' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUG' 'sip-files00161.jp2'
e489fb98e41fa35b9de2b5f09db4fb3d
d880a8fe6db2cf08f2f6ddf098ff56cabb813aa8
describe
'119849' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUH' 'sip-files00161.jpg'
61ea37ec60965da9a001a8584af0f40e
0ddf3ce2fb5a6465e4e6faa504610323da188f33
describe
'45114' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUI' 'sip-files00161.pro'
da9194c7de60e583e672ada6235b6d1a
22990a919f2af1d88c4f3b19e967882279bdcad1
describe
'42996' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUJ' 'sip-files00161.QC.jpg'
03902ea5d024c3801cf2095095599b10
7bd946431492222057dd474fbff0594ce30b13af
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUK' 'sip-files00161.tif'
b5193a3bf87c30d9d857223aa0a02a51
1447b95465a245bacd475217a1852533ce955155
describe
'1826' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUL' 'sip-files00161.txt'
7f6ea6dc24c276772cc40ba6872e8f02
4f1edf66b750e05feb42ef5461464342d04a8302
'2011-11-17T04:05:34-05:00'
describe
'13013' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUM' 'sip-files00161thm.jpg'
622e06a3ebad9f22f2c08b82bfd529f2
8c9f2ce82c3025e0912fb04ca0e1c347da9319ba
describe
'865934' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUN' 'sip-files00162.jp2'
4a25aa04e29838e185357dc0c3da3156
07eaded4a191f17844ecb1b68a54da425bc82334
describe
'115880' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUO' 'sip-files00162.jpg'
b132845b6eb49e3fd16c8627b8301090
a57e0a55437ee94099a68a21df38af7f6e693729
describe
'43608' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUP' 'sip-files00162.pro'
bd12953fd7bf57d9b38073ba31ad3a73
6172d61a741c8cdf09ae23320793d4230499d0ef
describe
'42270' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUQ' 'sip-files00162.QC.jpg'
7d661715fa22793086d3dcce593516aa
2556075baba68f48733a208a9e2027dc1034519d
'2011-11-17T04:05:41-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUR' 'sip-files00162.tif'
137b007ed2cce9fff40147c460fd5287
ea5251ab46305fe7ab629b9cf494fa127e7bbd1c
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUS' 'sip-files00162.txt'
dfc0f90f1e34d9164e909a0914bd3300
ab6f7a7d5a9af26485afcde43c878288a39f32b2
describe
'12737' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUT' 'sip-files00162thm.jpg'
40602e154966e96a4f7b52ef503eabab
6d069133e892f01374a846ef8ed0c7de294f0ceb
describe
'853747' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUU' 'sip-files00163.jp2'
16260cb461d73b8f56531498a1cc37a9
7a478098cdf9b733823f3c007fcce44763966373
describe
'110194' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUV' 'sip-files00163.jpg'
c66877047e754504adcf0ca82c17ce67
a5031d657afe7c45ccad4ef8f95ed0378117bd00
describe
'40521' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUW' 'sip-files00163.pro'
c2d20e588023d4cae03124192c2ce919
afec497e424f646365efbd130d50455ea9fe3075
describe
'40322' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUX' 'sip-files00163.QC.jpg'
f54c43474f466990258bff7d80317307
ce405f45d498f476d4bbd2a185db916bc839b23a
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUY' 'sip-files00163.tif'
01ef28b6a576bf8c09bcdbd84a5c9b4d
633da82771836a12704bfe817f6cff23ef032bd7
describe
'1638' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASUZ' 'sip-files00163.txt'
67244a820260aad6f30ce5bedb4ac755
254b52e4011ca621cd16752cde76f5cb527fc9ef
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVA' 'sip-files00163thm.jpg'
c231df2b08cbab206b33cd29b3219fa2
3cc6087a9a8f3536adf58a9bc6129ea66b8b160a
describe
'876342' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVB' 'sip-files00164.jp2'
7336b9b037708e5fa0d3a8767f85e98d
cd26e8ae1c15aba19ddf091e344442b59d520f71
describe
'113556' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVC' 'sip-files00164.jpg'
af06a4b70427880245cf24e15e922197
9372ee944161b097d20dfeda43e4ef0bb912ee16
describe
'41701' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVD' 'sip-files00164.pro'
0ef074ed3eca552b836306d6b2ff7c1f
9fd5143ceb97a9f34cc885cc1955d284a367601b
describe
'42365' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVE' 'sip-files00164.QC.jpg'
4f484e88031a9cdab306bfcc7b5bd6b5
7833f0a81d738eb8101f2ab21e060fa21ba21e72
describe
'7017365' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVF' 'sip-files00164.tif'
4f4ec31b1e1089339927f6c36565a3d9
5fe4a1c36626b7235daef7c77bd1f7751989bb4e
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVG' 'sip-files00164.txt'
4976717108140f8786b7d6ce2c44075c
1eb32e1fa7d3fbc4ae602b0a5fc5a0f253dd5fc6
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVH' 'sip-files00164thm.jpg'
b8e733b9237c56edd8f954afae9145f8
427f8bc838c1dd919d77f2807a6fd8af889b7b9a
describe
'858747' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVI' 'sip-files00165.jp2'
7c017f539fda1e4638ebad60218e9e15
4f6dc4c8f93692b5e02a634c3c00391e4f47b8d6
describe
'118122' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVJ' 'sip-files00165.jpg'
9772c4bb2b0a15188d2b512eb5c76653
6506591b540a42a16b473ab8d1d5ce578635242f
describe
'44323' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVK' 'sip-files00165.pro'
63aef9d2b693376d28bdbe2acac57d32
e2d038266310b43e347fb2341b3380a647c1cc6c
describe
'42326' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVL' 'sip-files00165.QC.jpg'
5708abde17264e4803918ee9daa4a4a3
8f59451cacaf75821985304f76aa10caaf59df92
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVM' 'sip-files00165.tif'
a7ae04437bfd55885a2b40b0115376b8
ce17edf486321dbd3373b26114f29e073f1f6a0c
describe
'1843' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVN' 'sip-files00165.txt'
f00c321155bd40a6712877000730a52b
dea4d4a44ec3f6b5584422d3664572e592515bf8
describe
'12968' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVO' 'sip-files00165thm.jpg'
05f6f3418394405bce5a65d9d958845e
6289f0e4d1bf9974c7bcdf3fc45438d92ccdcfa6
describe
'856616' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVP' 'sip-files00166.jp2'
e29214bbcb127ad1357df684892d7473
e655b97dbcb076b37d127769fbbd6548e42e0156
'2011-11-17T04:02:29-05:00'
describe
'109927' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVQ' 'sip-files00166.jpg'
b1573f27de4d794a7652c74182c711b5
a8a74f5db90008d8bb0acb11ccf5da5d35d8f91b
describe
'40550' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVR' 'sip-files00166.pro'
6dc7cdce3ae8bdd331b16ba8944397a5
eac581632bb0bb7f9ec9cd2f84e6b23aee19a930
describe
'40415' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVS' 'sip-files00166.QC.jpg'
b317370cf961e6cf6b6c6834abc810db
2f1e479e6df9c518c640aa93566c913875dba3df
describe
'6859831' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVT' 'sip-files00166.tif'
85d5659625ab7e03d6416bc9ef52d003
fa4363e997771910e6de6fd895b3a2a6e99ac09a
describe
'1640' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVU' 'sip-files00166.txt'
346610f588daea5e9bcfee68fb330030
3e65d237897ca476b00b4125e7f1f2b2e575bb06
describe
'11911' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVV' 'sip-files00166thm.jpg'
ba0980297b7df723bc8b1cf57da92b84
c2a30db07264cadad9c42cc4fc99ebcd813a5210
describe
'840837' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVW' 'sip-files00167.jp2'
a92324fe1a8e9548e0e7692f9c4a44e5
c65bad523c1f9c3956d2dd980e0119dd2de9166c
describe
'111999' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVX' 'sip-files00167.jpg'
ef6808f79fd3350fc959e229ce264d09
d219b173c2a8791b8d543f15a486b86cf8a2b65a
describe
'41920' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVY' 'sip-files00167.pro'
742b1d9de143dbc64508f4c5488401d0
ffceb3bebc45018c27a35d53638ffff94acb53bd
describe
'41116' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASVZ' 'sip-files00167.QC.jpg'
c242c8da847c06ffda5d1cf5d16a26aa
eb46b742b5ef053879fc6c86b58bb0fd04ca3c52
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWA' 'sip-files00167.tif'
9c978effad138c08ce727f0e6fbb7fb2
fe27853cdc48bd9dd4842f608cf6b461033603d3
describe
'1681' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWB' 'sip-files00167.txt'
95c7e6528ff45db8f202c265ddb1a169
a7cde8b6fab75a000cb28c9603efaea0dc9d1917
describe
'12872' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWC' 'sip-files00167thm.jpg'
7b8a06fa9c70fa9c22156c77dd79e259
a9391a09800ff6276754dc317bfa46029fb01890
describe
'860821' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWD' 'sip-files00168.jp2'
7915f8e5ed10749bcce5e4fcb58a3bff
3ed9e7f4ca69edfefa555515754313eba6e7d1c7
describe
'117157' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWE' 'sip-files00168.jpg'
c108333b2982b44173212a7d46e3afbd
b33a26f1f8fa9a32ae28079bdaf6f57733dacfa1
describe
'43808' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWF' 'sip-files00168.pro'
cf53f1d42de585894fa90ddaaec407a7
c32d103da45f07534abcd5284fd5db7ee4c698c0
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWG' 'sip-files00168.QC.jpg'
d6af2bb981d62589ceddf577a4b06d92
54ccde826f246d1ec89daaae547e338dc876cee8
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWH' 'sip-files00168.tif'
e3d63786e79e6f6901bc67cc4399a875
8e02097094d4e38821eed6362b3377def99a68ce
describe
'1803' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWI' 'sip-files00168.txt'
2556047f7800edeb35308f2f773e1ea7
2599c45977ae8b4b639b9c09103ed322399310b5
describe
'12069' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWJ' 'sip-files00168thm.jpg'
286a80660bfd7e0d2cc6da5ef99bc944
af849a5c0c0ef6cdf4d5078f8f9d0ebfa7164710
describe
'831937' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWK' 'sip-files00169.jp2'
46ec25b20925c6499c08c91fbfa16c23
b748bf8a5160acc9f979db067b6393fa7cb7ab0b
describe
'116969' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWL' 'sip-files00169.jpg'
37b53e265ea7ebdf696b55b3925e20b9
a71bf3bd23f1dc6735424314987dfcba8eea3b63
describe
'43969' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWM' 'sip-files00169.pro'
28229f59cb1ce5d9acac65df0842c520
61bb50bec46650df0c016fa300f38083c051093f
describe
'42573' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWN' 'sip-files00169.QC.jpg'
68692e3bf4f5a6ad94df15d479a93095
d60e19651151636cd71ca9f0b4f392c53fb01969
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWO' 'sip-files00169.tif'
7ae2ac804f624495da4cd57c80d16cf4
11068b6e93a24e9f8a7ccd9b6c1bd245f94efbe6
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWP' 'sip-files00169.txt'
7459ae93567a5ea77c21e7c43186d33d
100fe8ae1d33e8da7de232af008c3a3806211935
describe
'13072' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWQ' 'sip-files00169thm.jpg'
413d191c1b71bf73d71ac16976ff2519
cc40ca12e9e008b8147f4265e3f0b34cca3db471
describe
'833245' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWR' 'sip-files00170.jp2'
a9af319935a2d225b757c21b62c1400c
1a595fb4249cb2be4829bfc637710534cb0cddd6
describe
'109934' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWS' 'sip-files00170.jpg'
39c9704f6b9536615198ffcddd05de47
0292883a7bc0c6132a8a8c4bad76e7706846f6b7
describe
'40786' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWT' 'sip-files00170.pro'
ab2cc3878a5f8d96bef19956a2dc25b7
a74d662220b02cc3eaa3c97c21112cee8b14b037
describe
'40314' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWU' 'sip-files00170.QC.jpg'
9c897cbbdba3166c96cec7276ffbe603
319e54d9f6efc6c5d248da0560faf7ea52fcff39
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWV' 'sip-files00170.tif'
b0e7dc16406462f97136643a9b543f36
bd44b23bfa8dd9f1b4b62a1f9fab13294b4230dd
'2011-11-17T04:06:50-05:00'
describe
'1703' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWW' 'sip-files00170.txt'
446daf1c58755561109e60dce3a71573
90b595eb31614b5b09d25615b160030af0f1f4c6
describe
'12185' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWX' 'sip-files00170thm.jpg'
1ee7b329ad84dc15f6dd538530938f70
b7c346f1ab6406f4baf1e95b96beb1a2fb3b8967
describe
'844829' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWY' 'sip-files00171.jp2'
d75f338e3c8884e7f17f86852a4a103c
745c036eb98a564017fe6a685edd93113c416d0f
describe
'118397' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASWZ' 'sip-files00171.jpg'
2f6e7a11524af920fb6a07b70b376856
33186347418101a61165d82ad33c5136acac6423
describe
'44762' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXA' 'sip-files00171.pro'
f81184dff4bbef1db91212462b023017
73e6d3af1155c73053d9d48fc88f1fcbcba4af21
describe
'43347' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXB' 'sip-files00171.QC.jpg'
21479e8c27231100dc1877b5f5e20d63
b5e4ee8c3446d7e2c617793fa01a23bb97107c0b
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXC' 'sip-files00171.tif'
ab62527d4d785d5e0cff7e09b4f878a3
879eacf953f7ff3bedb658d64eb4f238cf61177f
describe
'1774' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXD' 'sip-files00171.txt'
d0082093fb728a8f56f6e12354cb50d2
b79ac8850b609a4632eb98be8e0d7e2654998fbd
describe
'12877' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXE' 'sip-files00171thm.jpg'
24fd24b1a855f85dd71ceaf139ce3ba3
3b0740bd44a4fb58ec07e67fdb9408822766f07f
describe
'819769' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXF' 'sip-files00172.jp2'
42ff3c891ef76ec88a542a9693c2223d
12ceb035f1fb0361ef1be5b7b61671991f8e1415
describe
'118567' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXG' 'sip-files00172.jpg'
a8117db71c94c10597b57e689ed25353
c388588c6111d98169106f8065bc0ae013e011ad
describe
'43987' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXH' 'sip-files00172.pro'
2140dde75760ce0488a1305251c0d365
a608540f17f825b1c500ad717188ba8cb09babc2
describe
'43415' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXI' 'sip-files00172.QC.jpg'
f13919053dc19490f212e4e2311385d3
39a6225bad57b8d7a060ac6eeb0235456b6d355b
describe
'6565343' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXJ' 'sip-files00172.tif'
ab8f3851b04cebfe662fd0828abf07ee
24aedbda3bdffed37c8521328ef3581fd3ed002b
describe
'1807' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXK' 'sip-files00172.txt'
19761aee0718de5a40ad61d4202d5e57
6847fdff1b300a72e50a656482e79de3ab9caf8f
describe
'13491' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXL' 'sip-files00172thm.jpg'
c488ac2deb1abb16913a254c1260fd7a
4ccde753d12ab52eeda9bbb7d3d1c028151c4b20
describe
'840528' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXM' 'sip-files00173.jp2'
6d22d2ef5a1a5ce20c3feb3ad2b0443a
c2f87a46ca21a1a369dba39e4f3cb96bff96f9a4
describe
'102514' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXN' 'sip-files00173.jpg'
a6bd52486a6f428e9956383493d78d86
7b4ef2718ab947aaa6adc294c828b2d7bdb63fe9
describe
'36411' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXO' 'sip-files00173.pro'
e491c9157b70f30f19155bd737be4cb6
3b5042ab7b57d4759af7367919a86d97505ecc81
describe
'37052' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXP' 'sip-files00173.QC.jpg'
69290938e807970237c7561f5c27ab29
24a2b40595bed6d3f61a9619cae3bd0b2c4520f5
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXQ' 'sip-files00173.tif'
97575f48282bbde2addf58518826506c
b08fef584ad8b13e6985aae07b6119f0ae1a498c
'2011-11-17T04:06:45-05:00'
describe
'1495' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXR' 'sip-files00173.txt'
c144692f8597b1f40f026f3f468f5e46
cf40cc03fecf00cb19196d633a96b672188a8302
describe
'11459' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXS' 'sip-files00173thm.jpg'
cf847f362290c70f5c6e038b0099f576
193b748e62f8a8b8ceb1b360d7fd010272089034
describe
'842401' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXT' 'sip-files00174.jp2'
4b0b9d3062a795b006658743bf09863d
4a6a69682fbbfa5b0ac285e3187449a6635f70f2
describe
'113630' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXU' 'sip-files00174.jpg'
51a68f83ebec8812e61abdc84dec0033
4bd04ab7a733daa176715fdc8b41cfc4ee20c598
describe
'42115' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXV' 'sip-files00174.pro'
6c739cad7e51feaf482ba650fa7a9086
9ed71138126ba69863d04c5e0ebe5176af7df479
describe
'41171' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXW' 'sip-files00174.QC.jpg'
61ed7276d4b4683affcb00b45afe165d
db2735c08f3b5be711459bb1c0b8164c8cea6a50
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXX' 'sip-files00174.tif'
d4999ff15e78bdb1ee9edaae9d0519e1
8ec404cf97acdd82e4ca5e3acea1ceb1c9800dba
describe
'1696' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXY' 'sip-files00174.txt'
f246ced0e1cf9637f2d844e6b071b975
65f7155e9af16679f2b6b42416c1157d8b71175e
describe
'12583' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASXZ' 'sip-files00174thm.jpg'
441ac6d68851354d1a1ebd52e563ad40
13cbd0c3707258898d77122cd6ab1eaf6a8da650
describe
'845673' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYA' 'sip-files00175.jp2'
ed35f7c4c567c5b2737204140e350a40
24e408115b21e70b24ef2652ba666f80f40f350a
describe
'105073' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYB' 'sip-files00175.jpg'
24edad9cbaa1784ddcfeb1f7179e34c2
54d1d2cabe7fb717d0936994880667846e8f0812
describe
'39405' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYC' 'sip-files00175.pro'
a73b17caa0a039dfea39a6453acb5ab1
d6ea853139012bb12e3de83059779c95879d79c6
describe
'38367' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYD' 'sip-files00175.QC.jpg'
8ce6434ff10d01b73a04c730759e336f
cf32e5de529b4f0c92de3a08b3bde894803b3a28
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYE' 'sip-files00175.tif'
09d427b05645822ad0c269111256af17
953b88aed025a7ebab31fc9b2729f751805d579f
describe
'1588' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYF' 'sip-files00175.txt'
ad76a3c243f386e877b75bd7e4f5f6a4
d7dd1edbb5d5f5b3d72f310051b3a116c854f898
describe
'12411' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYG' 'sip-files00175thm.jpg'
cb51eedc0be506f3ac27616cb94f79f5
3e0d9496985fe88c93bddc9b06f0907a72ba231c
describe
'855555' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYH' 'sip-files00176.jp2'
a47014e247e7646e4ec7c353f166d1f5
8619f4653cc45c7b0025ce7076f63b15d99158c7
describe
'118243' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYI' 'sip-files00176.jpg'
f86c423a0f7c445e924f3f0c94eee69a
dbb9ab53570985ab1c20b5e5b8173ef76878470e
'2011-11-17T04:10:49-05:00'
describe
'44678' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYJ' 'sip-files00176.pro'
c9c98dbd65604720073431052d77a57a
7d64a8f5eb0b9b8a878265ec2ad0ee266df17222
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYK' 'sip-files00176.QC.jpg'
4360963181905e737ad617a57d12eafd
38992efbf4db6dbafb978c6d3564857e17ffed78
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYL' 'sip-files00176.tif'
cdeb206122ca2f631f876345bba53155
6ad52b63f810da3c13949721177a1599ba04bbae
describe
'1846' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYM' 'sip-files00176.txt'
a5a645da487bb3ddac133906204ba861
bbfef94b2fc9b34b4f292c7bf45c9bcc40697a41
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYN' 'sip-files00176thm.jpg'
fdf6aede41279b448625368d8c65dcf3
4ead88ff9f1f7d4efcd9b4d2b73865fcedfc0f76
describe
'851966' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYO' 'sip-files00177.jp2'
6357f7eb655de2fc65d7eaae1df1afe2
4724e8dd5fe560a404369e82e42b45843c08819d
describe
'106982' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYP' 'sip-files00177.jpg'
9d7592bb42b8f6db7740b9c4bf7e851e
90e34ac2f901ed77b97d6f898b6e80a729a62735
describe
'39854' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYQ' 'sip-files00177.pro'
5ac3d62b0ea743e8e24b04d89b263bfc
1b6549111ef78df5c305e45f27bff0b70b9b3cb0
describe
'39138' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYR' 'sip-files00177.QC.jpg'
684a5a384bb7b3775befe3b9d9ac0bf5
a6000fde86485f82da8afcdff1c0ab196172f013
describe
'6822283' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYS' 'sip-files00177.tif'
31a4a12031b94ffc8f5accb886ca2599
c4a4330c4aef95586ce6c2cdd96d9a61d1a1b9de
describe
'1610' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYT' 'sip-files00177.txt'
8ed541fa93cb1c4e6d563a8c370aa0d1
d944540a33ef64902c4d2945eed0ff06684eb155
describe
'12329' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYU' 'sip-files00177thm.jpg'
698ede38a4e0ed4bb22406760e6e3724
cddefb76ea8bd7ab1b493ef724a23354a9bdddaf
describe
'835625' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYV' 'sip-files00178.jp2'
a95ba997573dc82b73406896a5e8c228
a92706d10fb86d074c877f5387ca4a054110cc84
describe
'108860' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYW' 'sip-files00178.jpg'
ec3f0ec678e11f37b8bc98726cedc877
32052329b5602a7f0a5d3e3d0f2138fcc78eb9c7
describe
'39518' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYX' 'sip-files00178.pro'
9e4cf6318e881993209b4f1d92853f67
9eaf540c63c1868819deeee3e10af2d63ae8b0d9
describe
'39844' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYY' 'sip-files00178.QC.jpg'
6b541e92f2ff24647693dfd7ab786c85
4f6c72650697bf284786d78725515572d99cffe4
describe
'6691859' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASYZ' 'sip-files00178.tif'
613e6352c1fe8a432d790136b263f6fc
944ef20ed07167f6eae692fffbcc1d92bd7442cd
describe
'1664' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZA' 'sip-files00178.txt'
06a9d12086af10bee3f4dbdde8cc5ed8
dab912010f157987812a17138a9e38d8acac48a5
'2011-11-17T04:02:19-05:00'
describe
'12484' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZB' 'sip-files00178thm.jpg'
94a65d794708c8455836258ff7adee49
f5eb683f58ab883721bdd2b039542901d01cadbb
describe
'842729' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZC' 'sip-files00179.jp2'
39c17a7081529fb772c59d73ef3ce1ca
5f9de4423e83498bc249c77f08695152ae22bfee
describe
'111306' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZD' 'sip-files00179.jpg'
afce888acff7fe2f22f5935906f845e7
8c588b386f88b12875ac282ea242907d886b378c
'2011-11-17T04:05:22-05:00'
describe
'41510' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZE' 'sip-files00179.pro'
152112c15f02f3d57ad67daea45fa2ee
b2381c3f4fed35b075db410e9a37b6fbfe9d6ab0
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZF' 'sip-files00179.QC.jpg'
294c2e262259a4dc9f80e41d3f343bcd
1f16ed739a31bd1b9944af2c5ea44a7ec2d1358b
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZG' 'sip-files00179.tif'
a8e02e4ac75b18f55e11d6c20a23be58
d8a7095fa88579d1b4ba9648f983d6c29a94ead3
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZH' 'sip-files00179.txt'
02513c70afc0ad579c87cd3e34fc55a3
ee81d268dd5418ca069df792d1ee932daa275c6a
describe
'12660' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZI' 'sip-files00179thm.jpg'
4940a5c2ec82d08bb8e3e0377e3486c8
81032f55549a16f9ed2dc59aae234ffeecc15292
describe
'828944' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZJ' 'sip-files00180.jp2'
479139886119e20a7e59977a086dc5e9
e75bfca3b8a12213c5fd305d84ae493028eab6c5
describe
'106353' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZK' 'sip-files00180.jpg'
9afe6b589ac9401ea97a9c1559737523
812c3c8f0291042f3acdbf322de22c4a23f12366
describe
'39006' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZL' 'sip-files00180.pro'
deb7c2efff340be1bedbd48be17ccfe8
9e933f5c7d4ca62b03eccb8a318fb79d55c6cda9
describe
'38357' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZM' 'sip-files00180.QC.jpg'
a3042e7a0476dd722f7276a839f305a7
a222e340f3b31c1bc64af00cd29573113a268465
describe
'6638163' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZN' 'sip-files00180.tif'
25e29f63093f4b6bf8ec8d5042984ce1
1f7b20fd28aebad8e5911861aaa8053f62b4c000
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZO' 'sip-files00180.txt'
902c08b2040507c3339bd113906dd162
1331dce73b0dc7fb4ef07ff9df1bccf5f5b681d2
describe
'12408' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZP' 'sip-files00180thm.jpg'
b8318e771503b4f2dcdef6eec486ca95
f00ff323ad900e15c442ef83cbb592e54de9ccb4
describe
'841348' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZQ' 'sip-files00181.jp2'
a116a6db10a02c706f959266c04567e7
a904cd9d63a14fcd44c52e49dc6956b1359955b5
describe
'110731' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZR' 'sip-files00181.jpg'
a1f445bdd33d82ca01b657486587ed4b
6aca356d0fe850d387b4488a4fe87b7431215204
describe
'42652' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZS' 'sip-files00181.pro'
8a020132dce1eb5c7e0400a28475d036
61efbabca6b6cd5cb43cc202ccf134e26e8e030b
describe
'39315' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZT' 'sip-files00181.QC.jpg'
158aac961eb335e7528d3086dbdd9b80
56f1733b7d325d12e9b52817415966f04485ec60
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZU' 'sip-files00181.tif'
33b7cb3e341fd791932989814907b269
55fff2eacb43b434e209123113bec9e24f08429f
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZV' 'sip-files00181.txt'
e16c53e78642a5e45f65ea2ab1f44ac0
c0fcf229b466b94880945b691ef580fb1212b1ce
describe
'12972' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZW' 'sip-files00181thm.jpg'
6bab89166534fccdac71a09b5cee1896
4f683005bf2938e98ef3a8cb368bec4ba81652ad
describe
'828017' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZX' 'sip-files00182.jp2'
8918f50fc5ab6119896294f41380a9d1
ed8a61005bce6a89db1c821fb45007c9bdc45e16
describe
'114761' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZY' 'sip-files00182.jpg'
62a40dee230b287df84025ca17085d09
2715c07789388c587ccdb14168336079290a039b
describe
'43522' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAASZZ' 'sip-files00182.pro'
d230682b6d8de6da9b1e23d5722a2d91
58ddfc0c19379e63a8a7970d0d8bbd4e75482ae9
describe
'41743' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAA' 'sip-files00182.QC.jpg'
0a3b95f5d2b362b4d8d993f1c64d7664
99f28c16c3c92ffa4c2b8564988eafd9b24bc498
describe
'6630907' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAB' 'sip-files00182.tif'
2751e463e0f9365cc9932ed2e48c0fd3
2c484e2b0cd8ee9682054fefadb776ed9d19d3c3
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAC' 'sip-files00182.txt'
66c73e5cc51072980ca826307b3699ba
c194f79bf123b793194d2bb2ddcc27e28437a52e
describe
'13213' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAD' 'sip-files00182thm.jpg'
5dd73aeb65c2d03fc123c1f25ecd6d1a
df3cb26f485ffb3ff6e7ad59fee51df5ed87d4a5
describe
'845192' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAE' 'sip-files00183.jp2'
2f01ee3cec11f550688c457c98f3f7f4
9bd7c14bb3e466f7b562f824459913c7c6b6c89c
describe
'105032' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAF' 'sip-files00183.jpg'
1ed4c791f61021a1974c017c333b25eb
bb45289f1e316f570a7f8d6b49e812a1491cfa4c
describe
'37979' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAG' 'sip-files00183.pro'
a1d9363c9aaa3cd5d70a82b75bff2369
802c009bd1c9a1c9709d51fb5c9634c02fb3940d
describe
'38547' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAH' 'sip-files00183.QC.jpg'
adc3837f3301de5bcd3af100034f7647
aa38095febdb03534886328d03d3391a352fad9c
describe
'6767989' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAI' 'sip-files00183.tif'
9cc4f57063813c6372392137ab986e99
3be1ebea386e4d470ab0b6fc47e461bde0be76f8
describe
'1570' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAJ' 'sip-files00183.txt'
43b36b4e61d56b8f9e5efe1c46c96713
111b272a532946935c2d7d201b2675b27bb284ca
describe
'12402' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAK' 'sip-files00183thm.jpg'
79b553f32cca23ecd787ad261e9f172a
7cd2b6ee71acfaf0d1a33e3f40df948724e8f75b
describe
'828872' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAL' 'sip-files00184.jp2'
854a8aff28750cc9a24c14b356075355
263b992644c26775043ee984bc9dc9bc5ab5d014
describe
'46960' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAM' 'sip-files00184.jpg'
54c0e955d230c91a4bace91b6e05a05f
b0d2a0de7407ad4428107ad3775687f58674b4e6
describe
'13607' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAN' 'sip-files00184.pro'
4cc7cbbc794c56d7f6ad46454b55b498
6a67561d23b8f4b83b5d73571bef8a75159c2a57
describe
'16489' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAO' 'sip-files00184.QC.jpg'
11db6d49d868ac2f086b545d810b28e8
97ca87a087ff8664159b721e54f784b60da1db8f
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAP' 'sip-files00184.tif'
cda6b0a50c3203f49f1bcaad5b28290d
d42dccee4a2a532f3353f99b109cca2cafb77925
describe
'627' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAQ' 'sip-files00184.txt'
23ee0be2f91a3a9fc2c9e7bda5e1b7e8
149cb44a3bfbe3d4d792296fa3742f42c24b164a
describe
'5730' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAR' 'sip-files00184thm.jpg'
0a42ca2e188aff15a7b4c36efe7cbd05
3c2a981c1eb2de97555808e8d01092b0a1b541cd
describe
'741667' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAS' 'sip-files00185.jp2'
5c14f1bfebbe5043110dbfc047715803
16643f3a43b84d1b4d6ad7ed38fb7932b36d173c
describe
'21353' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAT' 'sip-files00185.jpg'
f65345b464a100eb0c91d4723bec380f
1c584ee34ebd3d5020cb4cc026330f71fdcfc9de
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAU' 'sip-files00185.pro'
966a8990b3dce5f578f407dc65759f0a
f532378d06aedf3088b7396710f58862416acfec
describe
'5907' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAV' 'sip-files00185.QC.jpg'
8ba2733ef76c4e2512ba415f31fe486d
8aa5daf6b5c87b026cffaf8ea54e950dc21e82eb
describe
'6504861' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAW' 'sip-files00185.tif'
2958f6006dbd35c23ca1895f82461983
fc3b2bf4935ce0a515ecb1bed0fcbf9223f94ac1
describe
'2142' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAX' 'sip-files00185thm.jpg'
1d65cd436f2532ae11ee4bf9f805263f
af2d7f8d2f33f2590a6c5a6b0b42b24387210796
describe
'877795' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAY' 'sip-files00186.jp2'
86fa1234bc9cdaf9d72ddbd8fae786a7
05120e8980853566a7974262bb2b94eece426a2e
describe
'101067' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATAZ' 'sip-files00186.jpg'
fcc9ebfb668933cd7447f634c33851e2
fdcc734a37d5e6c48e4aa8dfc685783a6a993085
describe
'30038' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBA' 'sip-files00186.pro'
1f3be4488475d296fce07528c6873f7c
819f606f870afc52f8419c4627192d325e4a0b18
describe
'35063' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBB' 'sip-files00186.QC.jpg'
a519bb3d42c22072bedd3396688f8cf7
222f365d46c3d30568ff9451588102dae4e193aa
describe
'7030981' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBC' 'sip-files00186.tif'
d9860b8cf0dbcf3d659c693eeeac2a76
3440c839284a0fed4cff2230581c6ba6953edcb9
'2011-11-17T04:05:07-05:00'
describe
'1403' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBD' 'sip-files00186.txt'
d9009057e8c21b3f58719dd31e3336a5
984b744be2699bc7d0bedee56263d730094726ef
describe
'10351' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBE' 'sip-files00186thm.jpg'
fd0bb446db0b649caba74448185f61b9
309f2e9565a57f9a6d2da816739bc7bf92472d8a
describe
'894240' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBF' 'sip-files00187.jp2'
7c6bbcab53396ea0d22b572ab4dfa754
f79d4b0ce48c46425e82e4ce9b0029e1713e3341
describe
'112024' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBG' 'sip-files00187.jpg'
b25433e07729823dd54d428bad531140
890221df49cb99f98c0657efe669aaef84e5ec8e
describe
'40697' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBH' 'sip-files00187.pro'
50011f5c101091ce5c6bc5dd47ca40a5
2fbd4f05d580638674ab11ca24d6913ac2a77d52
describe
'38246' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBI' 'sip-files00187.QC.jpg'
fc21d31eb4dc1c8d7bc5e7115a047d3d
74a9a7891c9d1d2b3e69f418a4344a3e34ea761c
describe
'7158835' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBJ' 'sip-files00187.tif'
f781ad96066afa486b0b029a87496add
96a033022ca80e7dcc78553d6763be817b8eaef5
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBK' 'sip-files00187.txt'
0819d0a685a5518f0ba72d41736cd190
8d7fabcc0328a023bcd26414b027d9b02f933610
describe
'12042' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBL' 'sip-files00187thm.jpg'
dd30f28eea15f6d1d4f52ac0e30b7d34
c0c13e4719ffe65b37bef99cdae8ae829d5dee7e
describe
'901778' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBM' 'sip-files00188.jp2'
0cff7996af1af9f2faa010210365b124
387acb642411c2de3c395651b40f188b1d476e9c
describe
'116485' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBN' 'sip-files00188.jpg'
26eead161de0ca6d22ddfefbd5d692e3
c7c791c1936a1aa8bd72f03e8b2e27f18ad2f642
describe
'39766' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBO' 'sip-files00188.pro'
062af1c228d080b32b02b7192a525b50
3b728fa7a600d41aeccae5d419f9bb7211a00da8
describe
'40153' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBP' 'sip-files00188.QC.jpg'
26d0c76ab49405e718474b60ce11cafd
b06886d4d0f086c5a93beb6177edb8efcd7f6500
'2011-11-17T04:02:09-05:00'
describe
'7219287' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBQ' 'sip-files00188.tif'
80dec81c770a408a093375a7dc89b81e
63377fa40d3190c22030d32c7baa7c81c59bca32
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBR' 'sip-files00188.txt'
a910faf5a6f5f1044d8ce7acb9a99be3
466935fb11edc557d60ddbf520ec66cbf5006334
describe
'11592' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBS' 'sip-files00188thm.jpg'
3452dbc85f248d6820cc753a97a40ba2
b67b8891ae5d18a3b65dffefdbd01b4d193a929f
describe
'903112' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBT' 'sip-files00189.jp2'
7866af0412c24d2098ccce0c31e058a9
2224feb03b35a90cce421de0dc389315c679ec51
describe
'116822' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBU' 'sip-files00189.jpg'
38e05fd623b179f4b9f26056336391bd
9735260ee68bda2c8d70fed0a4cf56437b437733
'2011-11-17T04:06:02-05:00'
describe
'45193' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBV' 'sip-files00189.pro'
e270f58909bb29cda173506f09c33449
f5105e6f011dcbb8795510258a59d097c2f2ad3a
describe
'39744' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBW' 'sip-files00189.QC.jpg'
a5d4268ac79cb18b992d941c01bafe82
58bd9899abc65c9a1ed885df5861c16803607598
describe
'7229455' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBX' 'sip-files00189.tif'
8d067a43e1cde96d49312e20bbb7ed61
affe94dfbfe5a077e06808d595a316c3cad8c501
describe
'1981' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBY' 'sip-files00189.txt'
51c62d440b91d7c4fbb5159d9dbbaef7
0d5a1faa4e66fc77a324cb1249133f82e0ef97c4
describe
'12279' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATBZ' 'sip-files00189thm.jpg'
dcd91eed42b97a36fc95395ac65bf017
ffdbeac142bd8f9c4c780c494fe640da6f6f673a
describe
'906364' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCA' 'sip-files00190.jp2'
60a1881b3c0e990e32176d03455869f4
ef2673b6289ff84418c54fa01381852fc8c5d6f9
describe
'114247' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCB' 'sip-files00190.jpg'
4665127ca9ffcf1145fc4b73eaa240cc
c175fc87593c00f33fc616edd12533a5f2eaed93
describe
'41830' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCC' 'sip-files00190.pro'
f610e320b438f9c2117df1856334d389
007c4e950c580033d18984d0edd86dc53e10d87b
describe
'39482' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCD' 'sip-files00190.QC.jpg'
c757e976e883633458c6c1a8aa4f346f
2f01007fd2dd07a9b449d7affa5e9a5e0c95a6e9
describe
'7256497' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCE' 'sip-files00190.tif'
85c56305a26cf7b1c75d81776034c382
afd924c99e190d7648231b80ec5f25221fec3d11
describe
'1919' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCF' 'sip-files00190.txt'
e0b20ca75fbc580c579776f7f8c14a56
e7faec5cc3fbf8bee42c7669b999852f298028b2
describe
'11794' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCG' 'sip-files00190thm.jpg'
49b3ff7e10c3b96f393c22a22ac47364
35be11369e8918a69d1b606f2e14946272073e50
describe
'902430' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCH' 'sip-files00191.jp2'
eeecc266f706e0e39471a42f57f9d14b
9b25fdd73ddb88e747beabad8ef346f8687560df
describe
'105387' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCI' 'sip-files00191.jpg'
6ba3479049f49ed43fa3bdb942ffe5e5
ff82844e3d06c4cb825ae6236cd31461b807461d
describe
'33838' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCJ' 'sip-files00191.pro'
785069afe2efc7e0b1b48083fc04d1f4
6a9064bf1500eca32954ca6aabfde37640fdd892
describe
'36567' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCK' 'sip-files00191.QC.jpg'
a534c85aab5305545ef3dc5ac31bcadb
538e50c320489d9676441630f8b6cc5c1a128f75
describe
'7224557' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCL' 'sip-files00191.tif'
96541a5e84a663590f5fd6486b1504f6
21c1109c8d40693daea877f47a47b9902cc05ca4
describe
'1463' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCM' 'sip-files00191.txt'
cdce7530c5c493c5b5d263a2e61a3278
ad9cfd6366270f40aca5b0a57db66b19a79e266d
describe
'11345' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCN' 'sip-files00191thm.jpg'
8b862d1379f9552865d9f7e5724842fc
40c022297c39ce2725686378a7eda73d7d684cad
describe
'896847' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCO' 'sip-files00192.jp2'
c9602be275bf5ba9cf43560889314792
202b135821c026cb9c29d94d9bdd3b94d0631f4f
describe
'111916' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCP' 'sip-files00192.jpg'
8ebeb5c8aa4c26f5e5203687237bd651
e23d26d1718774d4dde89d3a82f2bffab20bc9b7
describe
'37243' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCQ' 'sip-files00192.pro'
db4a0151cd99c3d470abe8d8fdb17568
a5075e0e853340233918e34ff509039dfd9038df
describe
'38601' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCR' 'sip-files00192.QC.jpg'
59971fcbe553bb1ab96fc72ffc86c398
818014d3c7deda43584e1b288f507ad3df3303a7
describe
'7180035' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCS' 'sip-files00192.tif'
26286c99adbb0dbd8c4588413ccd1019
fa98dcb0e575ac30e8b8689136f90b200c74c188
describe
'1616' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCT' 'sip-files00192.txt'
10a80b52535133937062fdbd04001ec8
13fc7d937e6c930c4e8202ede6bf2f1a5e5fdd02
describe
Invalid character
'11011' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCU' 'sip-files00192thm.jpg'
5c1152da49c9930c5dedc20fe8348bbc
ef76eef2486d0684431a16f2525c04b20dab38dc
describe
'893012' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCV' 'sip-files00193.jp2'
6c37691e798a6e6b3c9cf51b648fd3d7
210fe792106132e7e3bde0505b949fb2bb7faffe
describe
'117794' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCW' 'sip-files00193.jpg'
9b12b1aa6546abd32b085858fc24f30a
2dbdaf95566988d356b6b7b44c7864442cad77d2
describe
'47533' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCX' 'sip-files00193.pro'
ef09f9484d02dc2fb9f9410172150e21
b0b96914a987b3d5a711f17a67423d5787a895df
describe
'40725' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCY' 'sip-files00193.QC.jpg'
52da020e7b4426b7a979167510bb10c6
ea777c567b68727a8fc9b50151b1f19bfe705bc9
describe
'7150531' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATCZ' 'sip-files00193.tif'
3d64c6e896c0a680d64be5f01b78bb33
64cf31d8f58e67b977a338cf7d90b9e0dc8a7b40
describe
'2072' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDA' 'sip-files00193.txt'
075d4f85ccb419667237e8fd35832747
7c9c797ba638f6e7df476b25abfe433228b1e8f0
describe
'12711' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDB' 'sip-files00193thm.jpg'
3ac4f36db415043fc4d78680d0b9f80f
d35f8203bb52293ce57595f1660f7ef51f81e20b
describe
'914251' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDC' 'sip-files00194.jp2'
9b53ebf44ec49774d922f22c1eec059f
d6c65a549b4bcfec5db866f58b2a3abc2d93df7a
describe
'93465' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDD' 'sip-files00194.jpg'
03c5ba491d19bf19e93e5839724bd1a3
6f18f49d5c2cf899e35b0ec21a086c31dc4d6218
describe
'26287' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDE' 'sip-files00194.pro'
b275aa97459cb27b8964c899aadd10b5
beb5d46d3f60e1fd82a9552a19b20ef3001b0db5
describe
'32474' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDF' 'sip-files00194.QC.jpg'
91a6800ac5eb0228319d23282f22dc23
bd187ad9435e87c80fd91e6f7db8b0ca4ee52cdc
describe
'7319475' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDG' 'sip-files00194.tif'
f936c57768d0c7aeb17b0341ebc79fe0
98db3a6ccdcfe8df0d43984f4a39f82027efb774
describe
'1191' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDH' 'sip-files00194.txt'
e21bf40649f34829dcd6d8301d5c5111
ea70e951e3539288e37b10a88329c17861196073
describe
'9967' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDI' 'sip-files00194thm.jpg'
72ebe196c88a9f9dfab0fc6b1b164315
b07c8a3afd8169ff82d8ff72e243d93831a552f1
describe
'892150' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDJ' 'sip-files00195.jp2'
c2142207c9e5c3dd9ce0e4efa0f20e11
c1ef8bbc2707ae18265cbf0bef15e26bd814190a
describe
'117940' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDK' 'sip-files00195.jpg'
ff0cd0c3733bf57fbe3898bf9015033b
69c2687986283c60c44c06f405fad4ae3dc8eef5
describe
'44285' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDL' 'sip-files00195.pro'
d09a605b79d2e6489adca97e24452637
bdf2acfa4ceabf743963ed7126c496346fd5446d
describe
'39591' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDM' 'sip-files00195.QC.jpg'
0067997c78ea91c05fedc44eab931122
697158b35310480401863286ee185095e8b8199c
describe
'7142253' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDN' 'sip-files00195.tif'
f94929069dbd32d997f1c45eb0bea123
0fc00512ab80cd2f6b608b005f33dd9a25964db3
describe
'1990' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDO' 'sip-files00195.txt'
c855978d1cafc7a95e07d565033b1dbf
389f14c61bbbbb550ae08295e3f09f7214cd7f51
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDP' 'sip-files00195thm.jpg'
6ac17045657b929b9921beed8a55c5a4
a16754bfcac786a9dce46b3d645118af411dea11
describe
'913731' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDQ' 'sip-files00196.jp2'
97a14f4c4d9dfdeb1c55745ac410f114
6f9524f3248cdb04143dc420e409a40f3721d045
describe
'103536' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDR' 'sip-files00196.jpg'
7f5158ec405909c46ab33fef7f944ac9
9f98491cd5a5254fc8c4243c53fd233b6ce27eea
describe
'34157' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDS' 'sip-files00196.pro'
bba526e05bf3bd59d45247670a94a7e3
65b6b4fb666114fcef101bfe52aba21ab79509aa
describe
'35535' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDT' 'sip-files00196.QC.jpg'
f1a7a61a31fa52f2b6b03755626d767f
ab912d418cfa0913734ae5dec977998e695350db
describe
'7314803' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDU' 'sip-files00196.tif'
d730529ff9431a70be9790b57847e9bd
7a05a8f7ac21bb6961a339788909cce5c0fab701
describe
'1529' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDV' 'sip-files00196.txt'
5508b8da7fb447e1eb8854bf0763ef7e
d49ee69432bd0c5d8bef93a5a7f935037635e97d
describe
Invalid character
'9847' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDW' 'sip-files00196thm.jpg'
d67f0778e0fc80129bc57eb6674cd130
c01faf65edf2f3844da27011619b0f2234d91c28
describe
'889247' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDX' 'sip-files00197.jp2'
9b04de191713d00d4777dde27c863106
b3a1a504ae68155bb55639234ebfc48066f45c6c
describe
'114707' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDY' 'sip-files00197.jpg'
9c5b6fa44ec91397d6f0e1743f68c36d
2c211cf382dfb6b0a7cb5cc6226ddad1f2b4f4e4
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATDZ' 'sip-files00197.pro'
a35adb0594d8a4436d209340f88aa917
ef158c77f6b7b64d41a59edb42c4e3a00d3ad684
describe
'39599' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEA' 'sip-files00197.QC.jpg'
15d72a71b51d802c24955b56f5d7c3b8
eae9c2eeca945b5431250265589cc4387d5a52c1
describe
'7118291' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEB' 'sip-files00197.tif'
37772b05933e4779057ae286af06eb5e
f95aea465fb3be5925b4614d768b56d039a3a578
describe
'1868' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEC' 'sip-files00197.txt'
92c0c2b475144334114758b43a4dc11d
acb90fc2dc68e8dcdec2dc6bafe424b3aa628d30
describe
'12620' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATED' 'sip-files00197thm.jpg'
9262e06501d340e38edcbaf3d7d2d9d3
fbdae76b3709af66610e116b017d06962a382b48
describe
'878620' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEE' 'sip-files00198.jp2'
8d98defd91da7a4b08bd0706a28ce311
eb59511942d7b89258a567b6d2dd46b3fed8257d
describe
'115654' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEF' 'sip-files00198.jpg'
1819d43918723dce4d9f433d960a367c
ba3a3433a5dffe5e817759a334ffaf1e8eb73be4
describe
'41342' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEG' 'sip-files00198.pro'
93c3fb326239e78b754fd9dfa91e367b
cb8695289b0fc72e4dcd36cd5af2c6d9e76bc358
describe
'39579' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEH' 'sip-files00198.QC.jpg'
b26de28d0c39ff5ca719c871da28d9fa
d5a7ae40f593169d9dcc432eb674c8ae41c680b8
describe
'7035853' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEI' 'sip-files00198.tif'
2b7b507a054fc1cad27c07c98b318c11
2821bac3c84ee224de87220cae7eda743a0c34bb
'2011-11-17T04:05:20-05:00'
describe
'1811' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEJ' 'sip-files00198.txt'
f75a1aa03888cf3a41c9221339855735
73387c331f3c642ec0a9a7fdaf5a72ee8a8be115
describe
'11372' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEK' 'sip-files00198thm.jpg'
d5b41e7fa9c2cf2436899de647d3b1f5
e5a1d333aec76ff39d71156c31dfa8b69e3b239a
describe
'895480' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEL' 'sip-files00199.jp2'
42c7930568569b6276de326b1bc58e5a
ea6f3ff9c42c9eecf215ffab993d46ff2c79f35e
'2011-11-17T04:02:10-05:00'
describe
'109259' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEM' 'sip-files00199.jpg'
3230c2c541f2b79adeb2632b42c3a5ee
f5b7baef6d127798647a281de0bdfeaf62b4c8e3
describe
'38798' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEN' 'sip-files00199.pro'
84102d369feea188b07b987e99abe836
557c845ad2440d6d680cd70da52db62701be45c2
describe
'37386' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEO' 'sip-files00199.QC.jpg'
0756b493d1b310bc182d7ab6647e9954
91be18c1d905dbbcec8af480b222d6d5f1ab77e8
describe
'7168035' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEP' 'sip-files00199.tif'
7a64deb30d8a7af8b3ae94c6cd01f47e
318c14b263a7c1813b46d1cf87256be4e1b0247e
describe
'1706' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEQ' 'sip-files00199.txt'
32c9b61e7a1f8601803d6ef1b9b9029f
c82e9048c159602d805d473355e0a4999d87b2b3
describe
'11401' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATER' 'sip-files00199thm.jpg'
0c04fcca7c039ec1622e599104f12b0c
6a0af68a3b5586a60db54615f9e69c52782d6fbf
describe
'919346' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATES' 'sip-files00200.jp2'
9897230b7309fbf59973cd41feb12a6d
1efa18d06a0da9f5ca33ce949947019252e86482
describe
'96964' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATET' 'sip-files00200.jpg'
8889db4393511f61e5a1109c9ef62368
61af6840e099160ab3cdfcdb37b470858c819d4e
describe
'29158' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEU' 'sip-files00200.pro'
3ad4351d0e76583d10486244f93c87dd
97b5e4942212f450b2a7bdc7675236b2d0449e9c
describe
'33288' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEV' 'sip-files00200.QC.jpg'
8f559ac76d5b12d7f17dd3093e2b24f5
368760abc4a5d84b66c97afe8001120f6ce4bf79
describe
'7359927' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEW' 'sip-files00200.tif'
3c439cfb25601740b5600636dd36f6fb
4f4df42365f9636ebf6bf5e3749416c20552a2a5
describe
'1315' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEX' 'sip-files00200.txt'
251d22c036c2c857dbed32fdcb7738e4
48d10bf4c1034ce0b14a3739b24b3d2b05bd2c97
describe
'9894' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEY' 'sip-files00200thm.jpg'
17603fd9e002a6c520ebba301610955a
d70a9db9f21f9fd4934deb37afb07f9749b64bb2
describe
'908582' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATEZ' 'sip-files00201.jp2'
06afabbd2bde186cf794ed36a33b7597
a72df9be02b07e1d0b1acacfaed2568a59b7e09c
describe
'107409' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFA' 'sip-files00201.jpg'
69899ee0e8172b207fb0dcd66d75b396
477cbbe6d01bb3fcac193ad47401f273775376e5
describe
'38505' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFB' 'sip-files00201.pro'
2eed45392e3ea27f1583abcdd3530c2a
6ff454c0431e0f08694126e8684948745eadcea6
describe
'36067' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFC' 'sip-files00201.QC.jpg'
d9f504e6c88680ded724b7672ff07841
9c10c80a56009d83ff0097967798196639b27fd7
describe
'7274001' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFD' 'sip-files00201.tif'
78be68ffdc3d29d4988024e5538a7fa2
ecf370aaee09ccb66dd291506387116021189f95
describe
'1682' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFE' 'sip-files00201.txt'
23c964a18b48f174d62831cf6d28d248
4cb8b48c0f00f400a77a25106f02b70706d13fa3
describe
'10725' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFF' 'sip-files00201thm.jpg'
3213cd684e0036b3b6f7560b4dcc8dbe
5ff112fbc99f85e3e52c8dd4b3ba9ca39f73020c
describe
'878604' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFG' 'sip-files00202.jp2'
62959641d9459172e1c6522700e60000
60d7eafa04c4af9e4f262ee58f26509c027a447b
describe
'39432' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFH' 'sip-files00202.jpg'
2c4a18a5897e5328348d909b7b874c64
72cc1486ab64883d3b0f85d5cdc4dc1375d8900a
describe
'719' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFI' 'sip-files00202.pro'
933b53ece2c758ca700fd9e927298f69
c5c357e491fd2df76110fa1ace6f2b6b5e85bc34
describe
'9473' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFJ' 'sip-files00202.QC.jpg'
cad2f9f1f72bba1406f38e8ef5972b72
f5c4552c0be9460d7119e9491a7034454edcc4d8
describe
'7034225' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFK' 'sip-files00202.tif'
61a4847aef3c5cb4e2f0a9f3ebe3a459
51fe5936f0e5bdd839c4bc3660fe437294c5c5b4
describe
'257' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFL' 'sip-files00202.txt'
222b7d487f7da7bbe7ad515432d12dbc
2a231da8b72960549f418cf26f9b26152f88964e
describe
Invalid character
'2709' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFM' 'sip-files00202thm.jpg'
96fc4ef55426625c548b233888c88692
7e577225662e84fd037613de41071b07f2176077
describe
'964882' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFN' 'sip-filescover1.jp2'
489f787a4628f8a3e3728d333b293022
6ff14f52e526525c16a9fe684b8041df9f2aa432
describe
'171144' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFO' 'sip-filescover1.jpg'
e84d2bbb305c97728f43cd8b6d076a8f
d7de92b7b35546118aef18ca51b3666a017b68a8
describe
'394' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFP' 'sip-filescover1.pro'
eb70f65345182aa808e91d823783ec7a
a63d469342e1b09b2339a3637468ee9c06e4ff63
describe
'37662' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFQ' 'sip-filescover1.QC.jpg'
1870d5a94e33fc3b5c96b87cc1b771b9
c29bdc55a3585b1287e23c7dc14154a017cb6d8f
describe
'23158476' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFR' 'sip-filescover1.tif'
aba11323c1be2514c03384f010be9280
ad8a7d9452cdf6dfc96f96959c0da355de6cfcc5
describe
'26' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFS' 'sip-filescover1.txt'
6a034c75981469b655e1859574e2e412
a197593fc9d91f22f78b81c87c050697d1fe1a6b
describe
'8243' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFT' 'sip-filescover1thm.jpg'
4cb3736a9d583d54157a403211761acb
9ce8563901f841e8949e4faa552c5f31fb78f281
describe
'964845' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFU' 'sip-filescover4.jp2'
0b8da1db0900205c118930057d68a3ad
78ac7673c96c6e06798bab4d98213e66fdafa84f
describe
'177786' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFV' 'sip-filescover4.jpg'
ce0b57f25bdee37c8299653c36e9f8b2
6ec9770f24a85d0c009cb5564e9b50adfbd0cccc
describe
'898' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFW' 'sip-filescover4.pro'
925292b38f050ed250eeb98a9a23d85e
192b404f6ed8f62c78863d3505490b96b65c9edd
describe
'38232' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFX' 'sip-filescover4.QC.jpg'
9872f247e0cdbca8f7e07deb587b0f01
8a4901bb9d6ea4a8bdc05045ed79de9bd0ef2b7f
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFY' 'sip-filescover4.tif'
46bd04f7ca422aa787719ce14dd93e3e
f8d982395c900b30ac7cfbda69a946c3c45c4ae8
describe
'437' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATFZ' 'sip-filescover4.txt'
3595bc09353c916598ea1855920ad2e7
a6b836afb9cf3b7c3efb4b0722f66f8951e4e76a
describe
Invalid character
'8192' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATGA' 'sip-filescover4thm.jpg'
0bd8c1a97182d245ef53ddfeee9fe4a0
91808c83a46aed4aa5a11b1608da91609373dc3f
describe
'164137' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATGB' 'sip-filesspine.jp2'
76d0879189d7b2766f8e94059e6ea4e9
0d76173e46a2d4dccd62a6a6f30a4fac92cd0bbc
describe
'34752' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATGC' 'sip-filesspine.jpg'
f47f21b26a7d49fddb45e2d306f81fa4
89ba5564470073a08c9ed005f91723d3a475658f
describe
'213' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATGD' 'sip-filesspine.pro'
ff514a33863615d028948be103d2b798
2f589535f6cba0608cfab63f1fa20fbc31ee77e7
describe
'8820' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATGE' 'sip-filesspine.QC.jpg'
947c5e7ce2646744745fbb70a93d74cd
1481a8fd9450c50eb08442e6b6a0f002aba261e9
describe
'3940956' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATGF' 'sip-filesspine.tif'
7ca9b4b09bf0e87105f3e042b0df23ec
1b62f8a084502fc659f304210df608029b6ef4b2
describe
'3356' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATGG' 'sip-filesspinethm.jpg'
3c93cd062254202092879195709c8174
5da379947372f851b82ec4d9e126203fb8ef75b2
describe
'343037' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATGH' 'sip-filesUF00002625_00001.mets'
7bc53bb70434339f17477c8a4c0429cc
cc9c2ee9b26285dbf4d90a4166adf4da7016641e
describe
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
'2013-12-15T23:57:10-05:00' 'mixed'
xml resolution
http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsdhttp://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
BROKEN_LINK http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsd
http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
The element type "div" must be terminated by the matching end-tag "
".
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
'442516' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEQfileF20080923_AAATGK' 'sip-filesUF00002625_00001.xml'
dbb185bf5043697401ffc9f1bef2ae87
3387086164dc8fa4445da1eb596859ca4f49775d
describe
'2013-12-15T23:57:13-05:00'
xml resolution










Package Processing Log















Package Processing Log







12/15/2014 12:54:38 PM Error Log for UF00002625_00001 processed at: 12/15/2014 12:54:38 PM

12/15/2014 12:54:38 PM

12/15/2014 12:54:38 PM cover1.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:38 PM cover1.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:38 PM 00001.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:38 PM 00001.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:38 PM 00002.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:38 PM 00002.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00003.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00003.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00004.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00004.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00005.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00005.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00006.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00006.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00007.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00007.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00008.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00008.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00009.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00009.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00010.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00010.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00011.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00011.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00012.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00012.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00013.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00013.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00014.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00014.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00015.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00015.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00016.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00016.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00017.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00017.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00018.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00018.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00019.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00019.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00020.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00020.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00021.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00021.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00022.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00022.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00023.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00023.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00024.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00024.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00025.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00025.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00026.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00026.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00027.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00027.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00028.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00028.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00029.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00029.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00030.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00030.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00031.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00031.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00032.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00032.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00033.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00033.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00034.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00034.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00035.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00035.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00036.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00036.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00037.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00037.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00038.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00038.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00039.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00039.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00040.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00040.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00041.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00041.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00042.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00042.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:39 PM 00043.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00043.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00044.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00044.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00045.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00045.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00046.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00046.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00047.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00047.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00048.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00048.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00049.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00049.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00050.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00050.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00051.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00051.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00052.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00052.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00053.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00053.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00054.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00054.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00055.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00055.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00056.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00056.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00057.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00057.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00058.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00058.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00059.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00059.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00060.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00060.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00061.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00061.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00062.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00062.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00063.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00063.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00064.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00064.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00065.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00065.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00066.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00066.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00067.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00067.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00068.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00068.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00069.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00069.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00070.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00070.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00071.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00071.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00072.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00072.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00073.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00073.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00074.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00074.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00075.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00075.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00076.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00076.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:40 PM 00077.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00077.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00078.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00078.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00079.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00079.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00080.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00080.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00081.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00081.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00082.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00082.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00083.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00083.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00084.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00084.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00085.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00085.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00086.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00086.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00087.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00087.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00088.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00088.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00089.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00089.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00090.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00090.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00091.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00091.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00092.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00092.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00093.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00093.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00094.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00094.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00095.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00095.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00096.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00096.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00097.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00097.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00098.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00098.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00099.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00099.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00100.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00100.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00101.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00101.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00102.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00102.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00103.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00103.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00104.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00104.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00105.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00105.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00106.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00106.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00107.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00107.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00108.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00108.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00109.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00109.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00110.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00110.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00111.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00111.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00112.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00112.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00113.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00113.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00114.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00114.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:41 PM 00115.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00115.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00116.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00116.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00117.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00117.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00118.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00118.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00119.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00119.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00120.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00120.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00121.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00121.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00122.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00122.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00123.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00123.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00124.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00124.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00125.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00125.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00126.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00126.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00127.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00127.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00128.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00128.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00129.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00129.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00130.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00130.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00131.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00131.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00132.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00132.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00133.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00133.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00134.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00134.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00135.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00135.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00136.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00136.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00137.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00137.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00138.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00138.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00139.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00139.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00140.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00140.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00141.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00141.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00142.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00142.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00143.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00143.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00144.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00144.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00145.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00145.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00146.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00146.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00147.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00147.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00148.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00148.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00149.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00149.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00150.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00150.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00151.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00151.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00152.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00152.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00153.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00153.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00154.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00154.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:42 PM 00155.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00155.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00156.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00156.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00157.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00157.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00158.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00158.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00159.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00159.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00160.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00160.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00161.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00161.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00162.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00162.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00163.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00163.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00164.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00164.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00165.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00165.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00166.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00166.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00167.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00167.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00168.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00168.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00169.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00169.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00170.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00170.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00171.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00171.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00172.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00172.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00173.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00173.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00174.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00174.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00175.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00175.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00176.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00176.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00177.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00177.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00178.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00178.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00179.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00179.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00180.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00180.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00181.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00181.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00182.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00182.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00183.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00183.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00184.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00184.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00185.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00185.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00186.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00186.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00187.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00187.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00188.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00188.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00189.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00189.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00190.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00190.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00191.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00191.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00192.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00192.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00193.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00193.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00194.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00194.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00195.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00195.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00196.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00196.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00197.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00197.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00198.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00198.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:43 PM 00199.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:44 PM 00199.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:44 PM 00200.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:44 PM 00200.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:44 PM 00201.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:44 PM 00201.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:44 PM 00202.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:44 PM 00202.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:44 PM cover4.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:44 PM cover4.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:44 PM spine.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

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WILLIAM TEGG & CO CHIEAPSIDE.

THE TWO APPRENTICES.

A Gale for ¥outh.

BY MARY HOWITT,

AUTHOR OF “STRIVE AND THKIVE,” “SOWING AND BRAPING,”
“WORK AND WAGES,” ETC, ETC.

NEW EDITION.

LONDON :

WILLIAM TEGG & CO., 85, QUEEN STREET,
CHEAPSIDE.

1852,
LONDON:
BRADBURY AND BVANS, PRINTERS, WHITEFBIARS.
CHAP.

I.
Il.
Ill.
IV.
V.
Vi.
VIl.

CONTENTS.

amen

PART 1,

PAGE
May-vrarr Day anp THe Goop Miss Kenpnricks . l

Tue Ossornes AND THEIR Famity Trovstes. . 20

Tue Two AppreNTIcEs . ‘ ; ° -§ &
Jessiz’s ACQUAINTANCE MADE ‘ ° i ak
A Spoke in Tot Wueer ‘ ‘ . .- 66
Derren aNd Dreprr . ‘ . ‘ ss.
Tue Bussre Burst ; ‘ Gs

Sesneeieenemetaiial



PART II.

I. Otro Acquaintance anp New . ‘ : ce
If. A ConTre-remps . ‘ ° ‘ ° « US
II. Acarn, Otp anp New Acquaintance . oe ae
IV. Tuey are orr.—Tuey are Maraip! . : 4a
V. Anotuer Oxtp AcQuaINTANCE . ‘ ~—<« a
VI. MapmmorseLtt ANGELA .« ‘ ° ‘ - 164

THE TWO APPRENTICES.

PART I.

CHAPTER I.
MAY-FAIR DAY AND THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKS.

Ir was in the merry month of May, and the sixth
day of the month; the sun shone warm and bright,
and diffused a spirit of cheerfulness over the leafy
woods and the richly pastoral country that surrounded
the pleasant little town of Uttoxeter, or Utceter, as it
was, for the sake of euphony, commonly called. The
cuckoo had been up shouting for hours in the hedge-
row trees of the little convenient crofts, full of grass,
and enclosed with tall hawthorn hedges, now in full
bloom, which environed the town ; and the blackbird
and the throstle were singing with all their might in
the abundant gardens, which intersected or lay behind
almost every house in the town. At six o'clock in
the morning, all that little town was astir, for it was
the morning of May-fair—an important day, for
Utceter being, as it were, the metropolis of an exten-
sive pastoral and farming district, its spring and
autunm fairs were attended from both far and wide,
The roads leading to it from all directions had, the
preceding day, been filled with herds of cattle and
2 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

droves of sheep, and long trains of horses. Yellow
and green caravans, containing wild beasts and jug~
glers, and fire-eaters, had driven through the neigh-
pouring villages, giving to their inhabitants a
foreknowledge of some of the wonders and attractions
of the Fair. In the market-place of the town itself,
all had been stir and bustle for four-and-twenty
hours at least, and the inhabitants of the market-
place shops declared it to be their opinion, that the
people, with their booths, and stalls, and caravans,
had been up and busy the livelong night. And it did
look like it; for when, on that morning, they ven-
tured their night-capped heads between their window-
curtains for a peep, the whole open space was full of
booths and stalls; and here was to be seen the tall
sign-post of “ Thomas Rigley, licensed dealer in stays,
from Whitechapel, London ;” and here, “¢ James Ford,
cutler, from Sheffield ;” there, “ Morgan O'Grady,
the celebrated worm-doctor ; ” and beyond, “ Jonas
Solem, shoemaker, from Stafford,” close by the side
of “ Aaron Tagg and Son, earthenware dealers, from
Lane-Delf, in the Staffordshire Potteries :” whilst
behind all these, like a great yellow wall, on which
the morning sun shone dazzlingly, rose the four great
caravans of “ Roarem’s Menagerie,” flanked, on one
hand, by the blue caravan of the Fire-Eater, and on
the other, by the red-fronted tenement of the travel-
ling theatre. It was the beginning of a gay day—quite
a féte-day—and all looked so busy and wide awake,
that the night-capped heads were popped back again,
with the uncomfortable sense that they must have over-
slept themselves, till a glance at watch or time-piece,
or else the sweet chimes of the church clock, told them
it was only just six, and there was no reason to hurry.
THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKS. 3

The cuckoo shouted from the elm-trees, and the
blackbirds sang in the pear-tree boughs; and the sun
shone, and the bells began to ring ; and the public-
houses began to fill with farmers, clamouring for their
breakfasts; and the inhabitants of the streets in which
the cattle and horse-fairs were held, left their lower
window-shutters closed ; and jockeys began to crack
off their steeds, and farmers began to handle prime
stock, and the Fair was in active operation. The
morning went on; the jockey’s business slackened ;
the fat stock and the lean stock had found pur-
chasers; and the more vulgar part of the business
drew to an end. In the meantime, the booths and
the stalls had arranged their wares. Thomas Rigley,
staymaker, of Whitechapel, hung out his * corsets,”
in opposition to Stephen Udal, the old accredited
staymaker of the town, and laughed in his sleeve at
the old-fashioned cut of things which had been made
out of London. James Ford, the Sheffield cutler,
displayed his knives and razors in shining order;
while Moses Birch, the town-cutler, assured the world
around him, in a loud voice, that his wares were made
to cut, and not, like some other folk’s, only to sell.
Morgan O’Grady exhibited horrid things in spirits,
and counselled all loving parents, in his little printed
papers, which flew about like leaves in autumn, to
purchase for their children a pennyworth of his
famous worm-gingerbread; and never since people
trod upon soling leather, had been seen such tempting
rows of shoes as those of Jonas Solem and’ the seven
shoemakers of the town, who now, for the first time
in their lives, agreed all together in the declaration,
that if people wanted to buy shoes no better than if
made of paper, they must buy them from the Stafford
4 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

makers. The booths of toys were already thronged
with children, who, however, as yet, speculated rather
on what they should buy, than actually bought.
Farmers’ wives were huying cheese-colouring, and
new milking-pails and butter-prints ; and getting their
business all done before dinner, that they and their
daughters might in the afternoon have “a bit of time”
for amusement. ‘The bells rang on more merrily
than ever; the streets, where the horse and cattle-
fairs had been held, were now all in progress of being
swept and cleaned ; and now the roads and the town-
ends were all thronged again with cattle going out,
and country people—lads and lasses, and mothers and
children, and old grandfathers and grandmothers—
coming in, for the afternoon’s fun and merriment.
The four big men, in beef-eater costume, outside the
wild-beast show, blew their trumpets, and the lion
within roared from time to time ; the fire-eater’s per-
formances began ; and the red front of the travelling
theatre had been removed, and there was now seen an
open stage in front of a canvas screen, and gaily
attired nymphs, who looked to vulgar eyes as if stars
of gold and silver had been showered upon them,
walked arm-in-arm, to and fro, attracting the admi-
ration of village swains and big boys, who flocked
thither in crowds; whilst dashing, bandit-looking
men, in cloaks and plumed hats, cast half-gallant,
half-ferocious glances, upon the village maidens, and
thus excited in them the most charming, romantic
terror, which could only be allayed by their going
up, and seeing all the wonders of that enchanted
world which lay behind the canvas, and of which
these beings were the inhabitants.

It was now noon, and the public-houses were full
THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKS. 5

of dinners and dinner-eating guests, who did not
notice, as those did who were just coming into the
fair, how clouds had gathered from the south-west,
and threatened rain; a gusty wind, too, had arisen,
and whirled the dust along the roads, and made a
strange commotion among the booths and stalls in
the market-place. It grew cold and dull ; and then,
just when dinner was over, and everybody was in the
fair, and wanted to enjoy themselves, it really began
to rain, and to rain in good earnest It was no
shower ; there was no prospect of its soon being over;
the sky was all one sullen mass of smoke-coloured
cloud; and down, down, down came the soaking
rain. The kennels soon ran over ; and the badly-
paved market-place was full of puddles, into which
people unwittingly stepped, ankle-deep. It really
was quite a melancholy thing to hear then the screech
of a tin penny-trumpet, or the bark of a woolly dog
in a little child’s hand, as it stood, sheltering, with its
mother, in a crowd of people, under an entry, yet
never wondering, dear little soul, as they did, how in
the world it was ever to get home. People had not
brought umbrellas with them; and it was quite
pitiable for anybody, but those who sold ribbons, to
see smart girls walking along with pocket-hand-
kerchiefs over their bonnets, quite wet through, and
which now were all stained with the mingling and
dripping dyes of their so lately blushing or verdant
honours. People crowded into booths or under stalls
—not to make purchases, but to find shelter ; and
went by throngs into the wild-beast show and the
theatre, not so much to be entertained, as to get out
of the rain ; and all the time could think of nothing
but how wet they were, and wonder how, if it
B 2
6 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

kept on raining, they were ever to get home that
night.

At four o'clock, at five o'clock, at six o'clock, it
rained just as hard as ever, and seemed as if it would
rain all night; and the public-houses were brimful :
in kitchen and parlour, and bed-room, and everywhere,
there was a smell of wet clothes and tobacco smoke,
and ale, and gin-and-water. What was to be done ?
What indeed was to be done? For at that very time,
there came, slowly and heavily advancing into the
town, one after another, in long and weary line, seven
heavy baggage wagons belonging to a regiment which
had marched shortly before through the town, on its
way to Ireland. Wearily went onward the wagons
along the wet, grinding street, piled up, as high as
the houses, with baggage, and soldiers’ wives and
children. The drivers were wet; the horses were
wet; the soldiers who attended the train were wet ;
and so were the wives and children, who, wrapped in
gray woollen cloaks and coats, sat up aloft among the
baggage: the rain lay in large pools in the hollows of
the tarpauling, and rocked about, and spilled over, as
the wagons went along unsteadily up the ill-paved
street; and altogether, the whole train presented 4
most comfortless and weary appearance, On, however,
it went, wagon after wagon; and cheerful families,
sitting at home by their warm firesides, were filled with
a kindly compassion for the poor strangers, who had
arrived thus disconsolately and thus inopportunely.

There was no room in the market-place for the
unloading of the luggage; so the wagons, having
made the circuit of the town, came at length to a
stand in the widest part of the widest street, and
began slowly to unload.
THE GOOP MISS KENDRICKS. 7

Just opposite to where they halted, stood, with its
large awkward porch in front, and its large, pleasant
garden behind, the little, low, old-fashioned house,
inhabited by the Miss Kendricks, Joanna and Dorothy.
Their parlour lay a step below the street, and its
window was almost on a level with it ; and, but that
the pavement was always kept so nicely clean before
it, must have been sadly splashed with the rain that
poured down from the clouds, and dripped from the
eaves above. The Miss Kendricks were, if not among
the richest, among the most respectable inhabitants
of the town. Their father, in their early youth, had
been the well-beloved curate of the parish—a man
80 pure and good, and one who so nobly and beauti-
fully performed all his duties, great and small, that
God, to reward him best, took him home to himself.
His wife, heart-broken for his loss, followed him
within twelve months; and left four children, Rebecca,
Joanna, Leonard, and Dorothy, to the care of their
great-uncle, a small shopkeeper of the place. The
uncle was even then an old man—perhaps God spared
his life for the sake of the orphans ; and why not,
when he cares even for the sparrows? He himself
believed it was so; and he lived on, not only to care
for the orphans, but to become of no little consequence
in the place, from being for so long a time “ the oldest
inhabitant ”—a sort of living chronicle of events; a
referee on all difficult or disputed questions of right
or usage. Alas! poor old man, however, all did not
go on so well and smoothly as he hoped and prayed
for: Rebecca, the eldest of the orphans, grew up
somewhat wild and wilful, and married sorely against
his will. It was a marriage of unhappiness and
poverty : she and her husband removed to a remote
8 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

part of England, and vanished, as it were, entirely
from the knowledge of the family. The others, on the
contrary, grew up into the most steady and promising
manhood and womanhood. The girls he had educated
simply, as, according to his notions, might best fit
them for tradesmen’s wives; but to the brother he
gave the education of a gentleman and a scholar, and
lived carefully, and almost parsimoniously himself, to
maintain him respectably at Oxford. As regarded
him, his wishes were all fulfilled ; and on the evening
of the day on which the news came that Leonard had
received the degree of Bachelor of Arts, he died, as
he sat quietly in his chair. The business of his life
was done; and at the advanced age of ninety-five he —
was borne to his grave, honoured by the whole town.
He left his house, and property to the amount of a
hundred a-year, to his nieces and their brother ; the
house for them to live in as long as they needed such
a home, and the money to his nephew, subject to a
payment of thirty pounds a year to each sister. Miss
Joanna was seven-and-twenty at the death of her
uncle—a plain, old-fashioned little woman, who
looked six or seven years older than she was; whilst
Dorothy, on the contrary, looked younger, and though
four-and-twenty, had all the bloom and liveliness of
eighteen. Prepossessing, however, as was Dorothy,
she, at the time of her uncle's death, had no accepted
lover ; whilst Joanna had been engaged to a stationer
and printer of Lichfield, of the name of Allen, for a
couple of years, and had only deferred her marriage
from reluctance to leave her old relative in the then
declining state of his health.

In such a little town as Utceter, everybody knew
everybody's affairs ; and therefore, no sooner was the
THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKs. 9

old gentleman dead, than all said, that for a certainty
Miss Kendrick would marry, more especially as
Leonard, who was now ordained, had the offer of a
curacy in Derbyshire, and nothing seemed more
natural than that the lively Dorothy should keep his
house. Thus the world laid out things for them ;
and thus also, in the quiet of their little back parlour,
they laid out things for themselves, The great-uncle,
as we said before, was a small shopkeeper. He sold
stamps and stationery, and small cutlery ware, and
tea in sealed-up packets, as it came from the India
House: he had, altogether, a nice little read y-money-
business, which amply supplied every passing week
with cash for its current expenses, and some little
besides; and it was no wonder, therefore, that after
his death, several tradesmen of the place wished to
purchase the business at a good premium.

It is an old and true saying, that “ man proposes,
and God disposes;” and it was so in this case.
Leonard went to his curacy, whence he wrote the
most affectionate and charming letters, full of the
most fervent desires to do good in his parish, and to
promote the happiness of his sisters. Joanna thought
of, and made preparations for her marriage, which
was to take place as soon as the time of ful] mourning
for the old gentleman had expired ; and in the mean-
time she kept on the business, prudently anxious to
spare all, and save all, against the breaking up of the
family. The weeks and months went on, and Doro-
thy, in the summer, paid a visit to her brother—a
golden time to her, and an earnest, as she believed it,
of the life which lay before her. It was a quiet,
out-of-the-world, Peak village, where her brother
lived ; beautiful in its locality, and inhabited by people
10 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

as kind and simple-hearted as soul could wish, who
received her among them as if she had been an angel
from heaven; whilst the few-families there, of higher
rank and intelligence, seemed at once to open their
hearts and homes to her. |

“ How well you look, Dorothy!” said Joanna to
her, on her return: “the Peak air agrees with you.
Your eyes look brighter, and your colour clearer than
ever!”

Dorothy looked at herself in the glass, and she
thought so too. Poor Dorothy! that was the last time
she ever saw herself. The next day she felt unwell
with headache and fever ; she grew worse and worse ;
a medical man was called in, and in a day or two
pronounced her to be ill of small-pox. We shall not
go through that long and severe illness. Dorothy lay
at the point of death; and her brother and sister,
unable to resign her into the hands of her Maker,
prayed that, at any cost, her life might be spared.
Their prayeys were heard. She lived ; but not alone
at the expense of her beauty; she lost, what was far
more, her eyesight. Well, indeed, may we say, poor
Dorothy !» Life had now hard lessons for her—patience
and submission. For herself, could she have chosen,
she would rather have died than lived. She had just,
as it were,.become conscious of the worth of her
beauty and of herself; and now she was a poor, blind
ruin—a spectacle to be shunned and pitied.

“Come again to me,” wrote Leonard; “the Peak
air will do you good: the people here all love you,
and will be kinder to you than ever.”

“I will not go there, of all places in the world,”
said Dorothy, with bitterness; “I will not go there
to bea burden to him, and a spectacle to the whole
THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKs. 11

parish! Life has become hateful to me~would to
God that I had died, or might die ere long!”

Joanna had the patience of an angel, and answered
her sister's repinings with loving and gentle words.
Winter came on; and then spring; and again the idea
was revived of Dorothy’s going to Leonard, for change
of air; whilst Joanna, whose lover was impatient for
his marriage, made her preparations for this event,
But to this proposal the poor invalid would not listen.
She entertained the most fixed, and as it seemed ob-
stinate, determination not to visit her brother 3 nor
would she assign any reason for so doing. Everybody
but Joanna lost patience with her ; but she, never,
“ She will become accustomed in time to her misfor-
tune,” said she to her friends, and, above all, to the
mother and sister of her affianced lover ; “and in
the meantime, we must have patience with her, as
with a sick child. She is now,” said she, “ suffering
from a mind diseased, which is worse than sickness of
the body. Let us only have patience with her ;” and
from month to month Joanna delayed her marriage,
that she should not at least take so sad an invalid
into the house of her husband. Day after day came
his mother and sister, sometimes together, and some-
times alone, who lost no opportunity of dropping
hints to poor Dorothy on the Christian duty of sub-
mission to our afflictions, and renunciatidn of our own
wills,

“Go, and take a walk, and get a mouthful of fresh
air, for you look as pale as a ghost, with all this
watching and anxiety, night and day,” said they con-
tinually to Joanna, in the hearing of her sister ; “and
we will mind the shop, and talk to Dorothy, while
you are gone.”
12 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

For awhile Joanna obeyed, but presently she began
to perceive that the unhappy and distressful state of
her sister’s mind was aggravated by these interviews.
Dorothy was no longer open towards her; there was
a coldness and a reserve which she could not pene-
trate, which only increased her silence. Light,
however, broke in, when the mother and sister,
having, as they thought, discharged their duty to
Dorothy, began to speak plainly to Joanna—she was
not doing her duty either to her sister or herself, thus
humouring her like a child ; a degree of firmness, and
even severity, was requisite. Dorothy must learn to
submit ; and when it pleases God to afflict us, said
they, we must not stand in the way of other people's
happiness with our whims and fancies. Leonard was
willing to have Dorothy, and to him she ought to go ;
a quiet country place would furnish her with the best
home: Leonard had said that he would have a girl
to wait upon her; what did she want more? and
then Joanna must remember that she was not using
Allen well; he had had his house ready these two
months, and how long did she mean to keep him
waiting? If Allen had not told her himself, they
would do so, that he was tired of all this waiting and
waiting, and he had no notion of anything but
Dorothy's going at once to her brother's, and submit-
ting to her afflictions as any good Christian ought to
do; and as Leonard, who was so good a man and
preacher, would soon teach her, &c., &c., &c. !

Joanna said but little in reply, but sent over to
Lichfield, to request an interview with her lover.
He came ; and, as plain speaking had begun, it was
soon evident that he held the same opinions as his —
family—perhaps, indeed, that they had been employed
THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKS. 18

to speak for him. Joanna said, considering the
reluctance which her sister had shown to visiting her
brother, she had entirely given up the thoughts of
her ever residing with him ; and that, in fact, wher-
ever her home was, there also would be Dorothy’s.
Allen was silent. Joanna’s spirit was roused; did he
then not wish her sister to live with them? He
hummed and hawed, as people do who are ashamed of
speaking out their real minds. She then said, that
he was free to choose another wife; for without
she had his most full and free consent to Dorothy
living with them, and to her own share of whatever
the sale of the business might produce being settled
upon her, she would never become his wife.

Whether Allen looked for some such consumma-~
tion as this; or whether he wished it—whether he
was tired of his old love, and wished to be on with a
new—is not for us to say ; but on hearing these words,
he quietly rose up from his chair, and in a tone rather
of ill-humour than grief, said, “Very well; then I
suppose there will be an end of the matter.”

“*I suppose there will,” said J oanna, without the
least agitation.

“If you alter your mind before night,” said he, “you
can let me know; I will stay so long at my mother’s.”

“T shall not alter my mind,” said Joanna; “and
I thank God that I have found you out before it was
too late.”

Nothing more was said ; Allen took his hat, and
left the house 3 and Joanna did not alter her mind,
The next day the mother and sister came, and were
a deal more vehement on the subject than Allen had
been ; they upbraided her and scolded her no little,
and had no mercy on the poor blind Dorothy, who,

c
14 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

however, did not hear what was said. It was a long,
sturmy day ; but, like all other days, it came to an end ;
and Joanna, who in the course of it said that Allen
had not in truth shown much real love for her, and
could soon find another wife for his new house and
furniture, was right ; for, within a month of that day,
he married a young lady of Lichfield ; and this, his
mother and sister took care to say, was the best day's
work he ever did.

All this seemed easy enough for Allen ; he suffered,
apparently, nothing. Joanna, on the contrary, suf-
fered much; she had loved sincerely and with her
whole soul, and she threw herself now on the kind
affections, and loving, though clouded heart of poor
Dorothy for consolation. Nor was she deceived.
Dorothy roused herself from her lethargy, and forgot
hér own sorrows in alleviating those of her sister.
This was the really cementing bond between them.
Each bore the other’s burden, and felt how good
sympathy was for a wounded heart. The reserve on
the part of Dorothy gradually gave place to confidence
and openness, and, in proportion as she came to speak
of her morbid unhappiness, it left her. One of her
greatest trials was to allow herself to be seen ; and,
for this reason, she could not be induced to go out.
It was quite natural, perhaps, for she had been
reckoned very pretty, and had been greatly admired
by all the young men of the neighbourhood ; and now,
though she could not see her face, she knew that she
had become very plain. Great, therefore, was the
good Joanna’s delight, when one fine evening she
said, suddenly,

“Tie that thick veil of which you have spoken on
my bonnet, Joanna, and take me to Bramshall Wood.
THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKS. 15

I long to hear the gurgling of the little brook there,
and to smell the cowslips: you will gather me some,
and I know how they look.”

Joanna could have cried for joy to hear her sister
speak thus, and went with her to the wood. They
sat down by the side of the little stream, the brightest
and clearest of little woodland streams, and listened
to the songs of the birds; and Joanna gathered
flowers, which she placed in the hands of her poor
blind sister,

‘You have often thought me selfish and unrea-
sonable,” said Dorothy, at length ; “I know you havo,
and so did Mr. Allen and Martha. I know I have
not been submissive,” said she, preventing her sister’s
interruption, “‘and let me speak, Joanna, now, for I
feel as if I could open my heart to you, and it will re-
lieve me of a great burden; for, though I have told you
many things, I have not told you all, and to-night I
feel as if I could.” Joanna put her arm round her
sister's waist, and Dorothy continued :—

“I was very happy, formerly, yery happy indeed ;
I wanted nothing that I did not possess; I had no
wish beyond my own sphere, and in that sphere I
possessed all that I desired, my uncle’s love and
yours. I was happy, too, in the consciousness of
being good-looking; I felt that I had the power of
pleasing ; looks of admiration met me and followed
me, and I was happy that it was so. Perhaps I
was vain. At that time, however, I should have
denied it, but now I think that perhaps I was so,
and God saw right to punish me; and oh, Joanna,
what a heavy punishment for so light an offence ! ”

“God is good,” said Joanna, with emotion, “and
his chastenings are only in love!”
16 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

“I believe it,” returned Dorothy, “ and I will not
repine ; nor is it for this that I came here to-night. I
came here to ask your forgiveness for many faults, for
much impatience, for much obstinacy, and perhaps in
part to explain what has not been clear in me, espe-
cially as regards my unwillingness to visit Leonard.
Ah, you will then see, Joanna, what reason I have
to sympathise with you, for I have suffered like you !
J was very happy whilst I was with Leonard: you
know it; but neither he nor you know what it was
that really constituted my happiness, and then made
the bitterness of my misery. I loved—loved deeply
and truly. Nay, do not start, Joanna—the joy and
the misery are both past. I have resigned the dearest
. hopes of my soul at God’s requiring, and the time of
peace is now come!”

Dorothy was silent 2 few moments, and Joanna
wiped away both her own tears and those which
flowed from the darkened eyes of her sister.

“You have heard of Henry Ashdown, the squire’s
nephew. Leonard mentioned him in his letters— in
the first letter, I remember, that ever he sent to us
from Winston. He was a gay, but good-hearted
young man, Leonard said. On the very day of my
arrival at Winston, Leonard told me that Mrs. Ash-
down, Henry’s mother, who had been for many years —
a sad invalid, was then at the Hall, for her health ;
that, for her piety and many remarkable virtues, he
had become much attached to her; and that it was
his wish that I should contribute as much as possible
to her comfort and amusement. I went often to see
her, and thus Henry and I met. I loved the mother ;
but ah, I loved also the son. The mother made me
the minister of her mercies to the poor, for she was
THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKS. 17

the most charitable of women; and whilst Leonard
read to her in pious books, I went on her errands of
benevolence: but I never went alone. Leonard is
simple-hearted and unsuspecting as a child, and never
seemed to notice the intimacy between Henry and
me. I was happy—oh, how happy!—in my love ;
and, though Henry never formally avowed his passion
for me, his looks and actions bespoke it as plainly as
words. His uncle wished him to marry the daughter
of a rich neighbouring squire: his mother also
acquiesced in it ; for, as he was his uncle's heir, she
consulted his wishes in all things. He himself, how-
ever, did not second their plans—at least, he told me
so; adding, that he meant to marry to please only
himself, and would give his hand where he had
already given his heart. I left Winston, to return,
as I fondly hoped, in a few months; and ah, how
impatiently did I look forward to that time! Heaven
forgive me, if in it I forgot everything. All that
followed you know Henry Ashdown never in-
quired after me; how was it likely that he would
marry me, disfigured and blind? Oh, Almighty
God, why was I spared to become the poor object
that I am!”

Again Dorothy paused, and agaih the two sisters
mingled their tears. ‘ Yes, I know what followed,”
said Joanna, at length. |

** Leonard's letters,” continued Dorothy, “told of
Henry’s marriage and residence at the Hall. How
could I then go to Winston ?—how could I, blind
though I am, sit in the same church with Henry and
his bride? Oh, Joanna, what wonder then was it,
when your sorrows came, that I could enter into
your heart, and sympathise so deeply with you!

c 2


18 MAY-FAIR DAY AND

Hence is it that sorrow is so universal, that we may
have mercy and compassion on one another !”

Joanna drew her sister yet more closely to her, and
laid-her head upon her bosom, and kissed her blind
eyes, and felt that she had never loved her so tenderly
as then.

The little shop was continued as in the time of the —
old uncle, and thus furnished constant occupation for
Joanna; but while yet there lay upon poor Dorothy
the languor of enfeebled health and of a cruelly dis-
appointed heart, the hand of God, which chastens
only in love, sent a new sorrow to bind her heart, as
it were, all the more to Him. Leonard wrote thus
to his sisters :—

‘**T am at length compelled to deal frankly with
you. I am not well. I have felt very weak and
poorly since the winter, when I suffered much from
cold. I have latterly been much at the Hall. Mrs,
Ashdown has been very kind to me, and has nursed
me like a mother. I have had a physician from
Ashburn, and he recommends a warmer climate.
Here, even in summer, the air is keen; and as I feel
myself now unable to preach, I have consented to
give up the curacy for the present. I do this with
the greatest reluctance, for I love the people, and I
see among them a sphere of great usefulness ; and if
I am not able to return, I trust that God in his mercy
will send hither a shepherd, who will faithfully care
for his flock. At the present time, however, I yearn
to be with you. My heart's desire and prayer to *
God is that he may make me submissive to His-will.
Farewell! The day after you receive this, I shall
be with you.”

The anxieties and sorrows of his sisters were for-
THE GOOD MISS KENDRICKS. 19

gotten in the distress caused by this letter. Leonard
had hitherto said nothing of illness, and now they
knew indeed that he must be ill to give up thus
his pastoral duties. Dorothy roused herself in the
sad thought of her brother’s illness, and with a pro-
phetic feeling, which she would not, however, avow
to herself, that he came home to die. Blind as she
was, she arranged the pillows for him on the sofa
which she had hitherto occupied, with a zeal and
activity of self-forgetfulness that made Joanna see
the truth of her own maxim, that with every mis-
fortune there came some compensating blessing.
Leonard returned, and even Dorothy perceived how
great was the change in him: he was far gone in
consumption, and the most inexperienced eye could
see that he had not long tolive. But that short time
was as the tarriance of an angel, and left a blessing
behind it. The words of love and consolation which
fell from his lips were spoken in the spirit of his
divine Master: ‘ Let not your hearts be troubled ;
ye believe in God, believe also in me. In my father's
house are many mansions ; if it were not so, I would
have told you. I go to prepare a place for you.”
The influence of the dying brother was good upon
both sisters, but most especially on Dorothy; she
never left her brother night nor day; she sat with
his hand in hers, like Mary at the feet of Christ, lis-
tening to his blessed words of salvation; whilst
Joanna, like Martha, though without her dissatisfied
heart, waited upon them both.
‘ Joanna feared greatly the effect which her brother's
death would have on Dorothy, but the effect was
different from what she expected. Whilst he lived,
her very breath seemed to hang upon his; but when
20 THE OSBORNES AND

his blessed spirit had departed, like David of old, she
arose, and, as it were, girded herself to combat against
the weaknesses of her soul, and to practise all those
lessons of patience and submission, and trust in God,
which she learned from him.

From this time,in the true spirit of Christian
resignation, Dorothy, though blind and scarred by.
the ravages of a fearful disease, was never heard to
complain. She discovered in herself the most re-
markable sources of activity and amusement. Her
hands were never idle, whilst the cheerfulness of her
mind made her company really attractive. Years
went on; Dorothy’s once rich black hair had become
white before its time ; and when her sister, without
explaining the cause for so doing, placed a quiet cap
on her head, she submitted without remark, in-
stinctively understanding the reason why it was done.

Joanna, when arrived at middle life, contrary to
what she had done in her youth, looked younger than
she really was; and, small though her income was
(she had given up the shopkeeping several years
before), she was really a person of some consequence
in the town. In every benevolent scheme she was an
operator, managing or serving; and a never-failing
counsellor and comforter to the poor in difficulty or
distress.

ee + ee



CHAPTER II.
THE OSBORNES AND THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES.

“Ir is a terrible evening for these poor people to
arrive on,” said Joanna to her sister, who sat knitting
on the sofa, upon that rainy evening of May-fair day,
as the baggage-wagons were unloaded before their
THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES. 21

windows, and one weary woman after another, stiff
with having sat so many hours up aloft among wet
boxes and tired children, was helped down from her
elevation, and seemed only to put herself in motion
with difficulty. The good Joanna was full of com-
passion, and pitied their having to find quarters in
the noisy and crowded public-houses, where they
would be unwelcome guests both to landlord and
landlady. Greatly interested as she was by the
whole arrival, her sympathies were presently enlisted
on behalf of a woman who, overcome by more than
fatigue, seemed unable to stand, and seated herself on
one of the chests; whilst a boy, of about twelve,
seemed to be the only one who took much thought
about her. She was wrapped in a large gray cloak ;
and the hood, which was drawn over her head, par-
tially revealed a face which was pale and dejected,
The boy ran hither and thither to the various groups
of women, who began to move off in various direc-
tions, and then back again to the sick woman, for
whose comfort he seemed very solicitous, for he
lugged along a small chest, upon which he made her
place her feet, and then wrapped her cloak about
her with the most affectionate care. All this Joanna
described to her sister, and then called her servant,
bidding her take her pattens and umbrella, and go
across, and ask if the poor woman would come in and
shelter. Instead of returning with her as was ox-
pected, Joanna saw her servant give her her arm, and
sheltering her with her large umbrella, move off
along the street, whilst the boy trudged after, carrying
a large bundle. On the return of tho servant, it
appeared that the woman, who was delicate, had been
taken ill on the road; that she was billeted to the
22 THE OSBORNES AND

Talbot ; and, as there were two public-houses in the
town of that name, it was supposed to be the one
lying at some distance, whereas it proved to be the
one just at hand, and thither the maid had escorted.
her. The woman, she said, seemed to be subdued
and spiritless, as if she cared not what became of her;
while the boy, on the contrary, seemed as if he would
move heaven and earth to get her attended to, for he
ran into the house, and demanded attention both from
host and hostess, and never rested till a comfortable
bed, in an upper room, was allotted to her, and then
set about opening his bundle, and getting her into
bed, just as if he had been a regular sick-nurse. The
woman had fallen into a fainting fit, she said, just as
she had told her that her mistress, Miss Kendrick,
had sent her ; but she thought the boy understood, |
as well as Mrs. Tunnicliffe, the landlady, that her
mistress, who was very good to the poor, would go
and see her if she was no better, and pray by her, or
she could have the clergyman, if she liked it better;
only he was such a young man, and many folks
would much rather have Miss Kendrick than he.
Miss Kendrick was very well satisfied with what
her maid had done; and commissioning her, the first
thing in the morning, to run over, and inquire after
the invalid, she went to bed. Scarcely, however,
was the servant down-stairs the next morning, when
a message came from the sick woman, requesting a
little conversation with Miss Kendrick ; to which |
was added, from the landlady, that she was so ill, she
could not last long. In half an hour, Miss Kendrick
was with her, and her first impression was that the
hand of death was indeed upon her. She was prop-
ped up in bed, and seemed feeble in the last degree.
THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES. 23

“Are we alone?” asked she, casting her mournful
eyes round the room. “ We are, mother,” said the
boy, throwing himself on his knees at the bed’s foot ;
“there is only the lady, and you and me.”

She looked steadily at Miss Kendrick, and then
said, slowly and with difficulty, “I am Rebecca—
your unhappy, outcast sister. God brought me here
to die. I knew it a8 I entered the town, when the
baggage-train could not enter the market-place, but
made halt before the very house where I had been a
child—from whence I set out when I took my fate
into my own hands!”

Joanna, petrified with astonishment and compas-
sion, seized her hand and gazed into her face.

“Yes,” said the woman, “I am Rebecca, your
sister, though you may not recognise me.”

“My poor, unhappy sister!” exclaimed J oanna,
embracing her with tears. “Thank God that you
are found at last! You shall live with us—-with
Dorothy and me—you shall yet be happy !”

“ Never more in this world !” interrupted she. “I
know I have not long to live, and yet I have much to
say—let me speak while I have the power.— My
first husband died. 1 thought to mend my condition.
I married a second time ; but there was not a bless-
ing on anything I did. I married yet more unhap-
pily. I have had nine children by my two husbands,
The youngest child, a girl, is left behind with its
grandmother,—a good woman. This is my youngest.
boy,—he is my Benjamin. The two older than he
died. It was good for them. Of the other six two
are married, two are beyond seas, and one—oh my
God, have pity on the outcasts of society ; for all are
thy children!” After a long pause, she again pro-
24 THE OSBORNES AND

ceeded :—‘ My husband is a soldier, ~a private in the
, now in Ireland, and which we follow. He was
a very handsome man ; and that was my bane. He
was of an unbroken temper, and was not loved in the
regiment. 1 suffered much from him; and yet I
would not leave him. I always went with the regi-
ment ; for the officers’ ladies liked me. I wasa good
laundress, and got up their fine linens to their mind ;
and for this reason, spite of my poor health, was per-
mitted to accompany the regiment to Ireland. I was,
however, taken very ill on the journey. I began to
spit blood ; and at Wolverhampton, I felt it was all
over with me; for a dreadful thing came to my
knowledge there.” With these words she drew
from under her pillow a part of a newspaper,
which she put into Joanna’s hand, and bade her —
read, but not aloud. She read how one Peter |
Reynolds, a private in the —— regiment of foot |
soldiers, bound for Ireland, who had been guilty
of some misdemeanor on the march, had de-
serted immediately on their arrival in Dublin,
been retaken, and sentenced by court-martial to be
shot.

“ He is my husband,” said the poor dying woman
after a time. ‘I thought I should have died as I
read the paper. 1 told nobody, however, but him,”
said she, looking at the boy, “and he has the sense
of a grown man. I knew how little Reynolds was
liked in the regiment, and that there was no hope
for him; and for that reason I wanted all the more
to see him before it. happened. I thought I might com-
fort him ; for oh, it’s a dreadful thing to die in that
way, when a man’s in his full strength.” She could
say no more. Her distress of mind was excessive *














THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES. 25

and one fainting fit succeeded another so rapidly that
she was unable to converse again through the day.
The boy in the meantime, who showed the strongest
affection towards her, and an intelligence and pru-
dence beyond his years, won the entire love of
Joanna.

In the evening, as the sick woman seemed some-
what better, she was removed on a bed to the house
of her sisters ; and in three days from that time she
died. It was an event of course which made a deal
of talk in the town. Many people remembered
Rebecca Kendrick and her unhappy marriage ; but
to the great joy of her sisters, the miserable and dis-
graceful end of her second husband was never or
scarcely known in the town.

“I wonder whether Mr. Osborne would take poor
William as an apprentice,” said Dorothy to her sister a.
day or two after the funeral; “a chemist and druggist’s
is a good business, and they are such kind people.”

“T have thought of that too,” returned J
“for we will do all we can for him ; what a clever,
nice boy he is! But it is odd that we have seen
nothing of the Osbornes for these three or four days ;
nor have they sent down to inquire after us. How-
ever, when it gets dusk, I will put on my things and
go and have some talk with them about William.”

The Osbornes were Miss Kendrick’s most intimate
friends, He, as it may be inferred, was a chemist
and druggist. He had one of those dingy, old-
fashioned shops, saturated with the smell of drugs
and physic, which are only to be found in old-
fashioned places. His wife and he, who had no
family, were patterns of conjugal felicity ; each
thinking the other as near perfection as poor human

»
26 THE OSBORNES AND

nature could be; and they were not very far from
the mark, for better people than they, making allow-
ance for some little intermixture of human weakness,
could hardly be found. They had been fast, life.
long friends of the Kendricks; and not a week
passed without their spending an evening together.
It was no wonder, therefore, that Joanna was sur-
prised that for the last three or four days they
had heard nothing of them. Joanna resolved to go
to them when it was dusk; but as it is not yet
dusk, we shall find the interval very convenient for
making the reader acquainted with some farther
particulars regarding them, which it is very import-
ant for him to know.

Mr. and Mrs. Osborne were now somewhat past
middle life, and had been married nearly thirty years.
At the time of her marriage, there was a young
sister, the daughter of her father by a second mar-
riage, dependent upon her. The mother died in
giving birth to this child, who, however, never felt
her loss in the love and care of her elder sister. The
father died when she was about ten years old; and
soon afterwards the elder sister married ; and in her
Lusband the child found a second father. She grew
up gentle and beautiful ; and the love of this affec-
tionate pair was lavished upon her. Never was girl
more tenderly nurtured, more beloved, or more in-
dulged. She had all her heart could wish ; and she
appeared to deserve it.

The Osbornes, though tradespeople, were well to
do, and the young lady was admitted to the best
society of the place; and as she advanced towards
womanhood, had the chance of making several ad-
vantageous matches. For some time she appeared
THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES. 27

difficult to please, till at length a gay young stranger,
whom she accidentally met, with, fixed her fancy.
Her friends objected somewhat to the match. In
the first place, he was a stranger; in the second
place, he lived far off, that is to say, in Liverpool ;
and to them, who wished to have their darling fixed
near to them for life, Liverpool seemed a long way
off ; thirdly, and which was most important of all,
there was a something—an indescribable something—
about this Louis Edwards which was unsatisfactury
to the plain-dealing and straightforward sincerity of
Mr. Osborne. He was plausible, had a reason for
everything, and though he was an American by birth
and connections, he had lived so many years in Eng-
land as to be English in his feelings. Still for all that,
and though he was a broker by trade, and hada part-
ner, a man of reputation and substance, and had altoge-
ther a very imposing manner, Mr. Osborne never liked
him; and felt so strongly that there was a something,
though it was impossible: to say what, which created
misgivings, that he and his wife refused their consent.

Edwards was dismissed; and the loving, gentle,
all-acquiescent Phebe promised to give him up. If
there be an occasion beyond all others which awakens
the affection of parents to their children—and the
Osbornes were as parents to Phebe—it is when they
see a child submissively giving up its beloved will
and wishes to their sterner reason and judgment.
The Osbornes felt thus, and thought that they could
not sufficiently show their affection to her ; and were
devising a thousand little schemes for her happiness
and indulgence, when one dreary day in November
she was gone! They could not conceive whither,
till the second day’s post brought a letter from her
28 THE OSBORNES AND

beseeching their forgiveness, and saying that as she
knew they desired her happiness, they must allow
her to become happy in her own way, which was by
uniting her fate to that of Edwards. This she had
done, and must now throw herself on their mercy,
assuring them that her future life should prove how
grateful she was for all their former kindness.

A letter like this is at such a time a mockery.
Better by far is it to weep over a child borne to the
grave with all its young fair promise in the bud, than
to see one that we love as our own life running wil-
fully and headlong into ruin spite of all our warning
and our prayers! The Osbornes thought so. Her de-
ceit and disobedience cut them to the heart, and their
prejudices were only the more strengthened against
a match which had begun so badly. Grieved how-
ever as they were, from the bottom of their souls
they pitied her; for they felt sure that a time would
come when she would bitterly repent.

‘* Alas, Phebe,” said good Mr. Osborne’in his reply
to her letter, “ what is this which you have done!
But we will not speak of the sorrow which we fore-
see. May God bless you, though you have grieved
us sorely! You are young, and life lies all before
you; be a good wife; be true to your husband in —
good and in evil ; atone for your want of duty to us
by your duty to him; and so may God Almighty
bless you !”

The Osbornes did not turn their backs on Phebe ;
but remembered her in sorrow rather than in anger ;
and this strong proof of their affection touched her
much more deeply than any evidences of their dis-
pleasure could have done. The match, however,
in a worldly point of view, did not appear so bad.
THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES. 29

Edwards lived handsomely ; and, though Phebe could
never persuade her brother and sister to visit her,
she failed not to tell them of her prosperity, of her
gay life and acquaintance, and of her happiness as a
wife and mother. Whether, however, she gave a
brighter colouring to things than they deserved;
whether she wished to deceive others, or was herself
deceived, we cannot say ; but at the very time when
she was writing of her happiness and prosperity, her
husband’s name appeared in the gazette, and they
were deeply insolvent bankrupts.

“The world is not surprised, my dear Phebe, at
what has happened, however you may be,” wrote Mr.
Osborne to her, “nor are we. The time of trial is now
come; faint not now, nor lose courage; and above all
things do not forget God, who chastises us only in love,”

Poor Phebe! the time of trial was indeed come ;
and, for the first time in her life, she learnt what it
was to deny herself and take up her cross daily.
Every one finds this to be a hard lesson; and Phebe
was one to feel it bitterly, Edwards removed from
Liverpool to London; had one clerkship after an-
other, and lived as he could, now with money and
now without; yet never losing his unabashed plausi-
bility, and buoying himself up with the notion that
after all he should do somehow or other.

Few and far between were the letters which Phebe
wrote to her friends; and though she never com-
plained of narrow circumstances, she wrote mourn-
fully of the sickness and death of two of her chil-
dren. The Osbornes on their part were extremely
anxious about her; and though she never solicited
aid from them, the five and ten-pound notes which
good Mr. Osborne occasionally inclosed were always

D2
30 THE OSBORNES AND

thankfully accepted. They invited her and her one
remaining child to come and visit them,—to remain
through a long winter with them; but this she de-
clined, without assigning any reason for so doing.
Not long afterwards, however, she wrote to them
a humble letter, and one which bore evidence of be-
ing written with difficulty ; it was on behalf of her
husband, to beg the loan of a few hundred pounds,
as he had the chance of entering into partnership
in a speculation which promised to return cent. per
cent. Mr. Osborne refused, on the plea of want
of confidence in Edwards and his schemes. The
next post brought a letter from Edwards himself, full
of the most plausible statements regarding his scheme,
and urging the loan of the money almost as a right
on behalf of his wife. This letter was immediately
followed by one from Phebe to her sister, begging her
in the most urgent and moving terms to use her in-
fluence with her husband, as not only Edwards’
worldly prosperity depended on this money being
raised, but her own happiness also. ‘There was an
urgent tone of almost desperation in the letter, and
an instability in the handwriting, that showed the
most agitated state of mind. The Osbornes were
moved ; and, accompanying the money with a letter
of grave tradesman-like advice to Edwards, Mr. Os-
borne remitted it on no other security than his note.
Within a few months, Phebe wrote again; the
cloud had evidently passed away ; but from this time
the tone of her letters was much more serious than —
formerly. She spoke little of her husband, but
much of her child, then six years old, of which she
scemed extremely. fond. A year went on, and letters —
came but seldom ; a second year, and then Edwards and
THEIR FAMILY TROUBLEs. 3l

his partner were again bankrupt. Edwards accused
his partner of roguery and mismanagement, and sume
person who accidentally had seen Phebe in London
brought news of her wan and care-worn appearance.

The relations thought more of her distress than of
the loss of their money. For two more years nothing
was heard of them ; and how they lived never came
to their relations’ knowledge. At length, one winter's
day, 8 woman wrapped in a large plaid cloak knocked
at the private door and begged to speak with Mrs.
Osborne alone. After some hesitation she was
brought in; and when they two were together, she
announced herself as Phebe Edwards.

“I know how shocked you are to see me,” said
she, “I am greatly changed; but that is of small
account, J am become regardless of my looks.”

The good people wept over her ; and received her
as the father in the gospel received his prodigal son.

“You are come to stay with us,” said they, “ you
will never leave us again.”

“I am going again to-night,” said Phebe, “ my
business is urgent. I dared not write, nor would I
let Edwards come himself.”

She then explained that by the kind interference
of a gentleman who had known her husband in
Liverpool, he had the chance of a situation in a
banking-house in London, provided some responsible
man would be surety for him to the amount of five
hundred pounds. Phebe paused ; for the money
her brother-in-law had already lost by her husband
was in her mind, and she saw that it was in his also.

“I know your thoughts,” said she, “‘and because
you have already suffered so much, F would not
write to you; but, brother, it is the privilege of the

t
o2 THE OSBORNES AND

good to forgive injuries—to return good for evil.
Forgive us, therefore, what you have already suf-
fered from us; I have prayed God to forgive us,
even as I knew you had done, and you will not
close your heart against us. Oh- ” said she,
clasping together her hands, and fixing upon him
her large, sunken, and tearless eyes, “I have
made my child pray to God every night to bless
you; because I thought that the prayers of a
child most surely ascended to heaven! I know,”
continued she more calmly, “that you have very
little reason to trust either Edwards or me; but if
you cast us off, then are we lost for ever! I do not
pretend or attempt to excuse Edwards; but he is
heartily sorry for the past—he has been unfortunate,
we have all suffered much, and we are all humble
now; and from you we ask this one chance of re-
gaining our place in society !”

“Qh stay with us, Phebe,” said Mrs. Osborne,
quite overcome by her sister's words, “‘ stay with us,
and you and your child shall never want.”

“The first letter,” returned Phebe, “which I
received from Mr. Osborne after my marriage, con-
tained these words, ‘atone for your want of duty to
us by your duty to your husband, and so may God
Almighty bless you!’ these words I have never for-
gotten. They have been hitherto, and shall still be,
the law of my life; let my husband's fortune be
what it may, I abide with him to the last.”

“She is right, Sarah, she is right,” said Mr. Os-
borne, wiping his eyes and rising from his seat ; “and
I will be surety for Edwards for her sake. I will
give him this one trial more.”

Poor Phebe, who hitherto had not shed one tear,
THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES. 33

now overcome by the generous kindness ot her
brother, covered her face with both her hands and
wept like a child. How the rest of the day was
spent may easily be imagined; the best which the
house could offer was set before her; and her sister,
taking her into her own chamber, questioned her
elosely of her wants and actual condition. But
whatever Phebe’s sufferings had been, she kept
much to herself. To poverty she confessed, and to
all the hardships and anxieties which poverty brings
with it ; but not one word did she utter against her
husband, although her sister never lost the impres-
sion that she had suffered much unkindness from him.

True to her first intentions, she returned by coach
that night to London, taking with her good store of
many things which the bounty and overflowing
affection of her sister heaped upon her.

Phebe’s visit had entirely reinstated her in the
hearts of her relations, and the next year Mr. Osborne
did such an unheard-of thing as go to London him-
self, on business he said, but in reality to see her and
her children: for a second child, a little girl, was
now born to her. On his return, he related that
they were living quietly, and with some appearance
of comfort ; but that there was still a look of depres-
sion and anxiety about her, while Edwards on the
contrary seemed scarcely changed, excepting that he
was grown slightly grey and much stouter than when
he married ; but he was as well dressed as then 3 as
gay in spirits, as plausible; and to the conscientious
and somewhat suspicions mind of Mr. Osborne, as
unsatisfactory as ever, For his own peaee of mind
as regarded them, it was a pity that he had ever been
to visit them. The only thing that gave them real
34 THE OSBORNES AND

satisfaction was that Edwards retained his situation ;
and at the end of the second year received an increase
of salary, which Phebe did not fail to communi-
cate to her relations. Three years had now gone on,
and we are arrived at the period when our story opens.

The Osbornes and the Kendricks were, as we
have said, fast friends; the somewhat similar mar-
riages of Phebe and the unhappy Rebecca, had made,
for years, a great sympathy of feeling between them.
Mrs. Osborne was at their house, and sitting by the
side of Rebecca’s bed when she died, and her husband
had attended her to the grave.

Much attached, however, as they were to their
friends, they said nothing of the disgrace which had
befallen Rebecca’s husband and the father of the
nephew whom they had adopted, thinking, with a
natural and jealous feeling of family pride, that there
was no good in publishing the dishonour of one’s own
connexions.

Some such feeling as this operated on the mind of
good Mrs. Osborne as she sat in the dusk of evening
in the little parlour beside the shop, with the candles
unlighted, and heard her friend Miss Kendrick in-
quire with astonishment about Mr. Osborne's sudden
journey to London, of which Mr. Isaacs the shop-
man had told her. «

Yes, said Mrs. Osborne, but in an incommuni-
cative tone, her husband was suddenly called to Lon-
don by a letter from poor Phebe. She feared things
were going on but badly with them,—how, she did
not say, merely adding, “but I wish nothing to be
said about it; the least said the better, as we all
know.”

Joanna was a reasonable woman, and she excused
THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES. 365

her friend’s reserve, sincerely sympathising with her
in having any new cause of anxiety and distress,
Leaving her, therefore, to open her business respect-
ing her nephew to Mrs. Osborne as a sort of prelimi-
nary step in the affair, we will communicate to the
reader that unhappy circumstance regarding the
Edwards's, which Joanna knew only later.

The letter which Phebe had written was rather
indefinite, but one which filled those to whom it was
addressed with horror. It spoke of temptation and
crime, of loss of character for ever, and of the severest
punishment of the law, and besought her brother-in-
law to hasten to them immediately. He did so, and
found his worst fears to be true. Edwatds had been
again tempted to embark in some wild speculation ;
money was wanted which his own means did not
supply, and having gained the confidence of his em-
ployers, he had taken advantage of it, and had, at
two several times, drawn money from the bank by
forged orders in the names of merchants who had
large dealings with the house. In the first instance,
six months had elapsed without detection; in the
second, to a larger amount, detection came speedily.

On the first moment of alarm, he had escaped on
board a vessel bound for Hamburgh ; but had been
pursued and taken while the vessel was under weigh.
There was not a word to be said in his extenuation ;
the fact was as it were proved upon him ; he was in
the fangs of the law, and was committed to take his
trial.

Such were the facts respecting which Mrs. Osborne
might well be excused from saying much. In a
week’s time her husband was again at home; and
Miss Kendrick made application on behalf of her
36 THE OSBORNES AND

nephew being apprenticed to his business. Mr. Os-
borne said that he had just engaged a young appren-
tice, whom he shortly expected; that two at once
was rather too much; but considering the case of
poor Reynolds, and that it was to oblige Miss Ken-
drick, he would talk with Mr. Isaacs and see if it
could not be arranged ; and that she should know in
a day or two. Within a day or two, Joanna and her
sister resolved upon going to Matlock for a few weeks,
and taking their nephew with them ; so that there
was full time to deliberate. The season was fine.
Miss Kendrick found company to their taste at
Matlock ; and to the great joy of the boy, who now
for the first time in his life knew what ease and
pleasure were, the stay was lengthened to the end of
July.

On their return, Miss Kendrick went to hear the
decision of her friend the druggist ; again he was not
in the shop, but there stood behind the counter a
slim, gentlemanly youth, who, under the direction of
Mr. Isaacs, was folding up, very successfully, penny-
worths of Epsom salts and flowers of brimstone. This
was evidently the new apprentice of whom Mr. Os-
borne had spoken. On inquiring for that gentleman,
Miss Kendrick learned, to her surprise, that both he
and his wife were in London.

** It must be about that miserable business of the
Edwards's,” said she to Dorothy on her return. Of
course it was, and all the town knew it by this time;
for the newspapers had detailed the affair from one
end of the kingdom to the other.

The trial was now over. Edwards had pleaded
his own cause most skilfully and eloquently, but in
vain ; he was found guilty, and condemned to four-
THEIR FAMILY TROUBLES. 37

teen years’ transportation. On hearing his sentence,
Edwards seemed to feel, for the first time, the crush-
ing weight of his unhappy circumstances. A paleness
as of death overspread his countenance ; and, but for
the support of the turnkey, he would have fallen to
the ground. Mr. Osborne visited him the next day
in prison; and, for the first time in his life, felt com-
passion for him. Edwards was in fact a man of real
talent and great power of mind, with some tendencies
to good; but alas! he was one of those who have not
the ability to resist temptation. He was of a sanguine
temperament, and was always confident of success
When, therefore, humiliation and failure did come,
he was only the more cast down. His spirit was
now broken, and the better parts of his character
came forth. These, as it were, took the kind heart
of Mr. Osborne by surprise ; and now, with a reac-
tion of feeling which is very natural to a generous
mind, he felt as if he must compensate for his hitherto
hard judgment; and this he did by more than free
forgiveness,

Phebe during the whole time had been calm and
collected. ‘The worst had come that could come ;
and God and good men had not abandoned her.
That kind brother, who had been as a father to her
in her youth, stood by her in this hour of trial. He
had already adopted her son as his own; and thus
removed, as it were, from the knowledge and con-
tamination of evil, she trusted that his course through
life might be easier and happier than that of his
parents. Phebe's resolve from the first had been to
remove with her youngest child, a little girl of two
years old, to the land where her husband was now a
banished man. Her brother made no objection; and

E
38 THE TWO APPRENTICES.

he and his wife accordingly came up, two weeks be-
fore the time of her departure, to provide for her
comforts on the voyage, and to take leave of her for
ever. She sailed at the beginning of August ; and
the convict ship in which was her husband at the end
of the same month.

Their careers seemed thus brought to an end in
this hemisphere ; and therefore leaving them, the one
with his weaknesses and his misdeeds, the other expi-
ating the errors of her youth by a life of patience and
duty, we will turn more particularly to the son, who
will henceforth be one of the principal heroes of our
little story.



CHAPTER III.
THE TWO APPRENTICES,

Tue youth, like his father, was called Louis, with
the additional Christian name of William, which his
mother had given to him in love and grateful remem-
brance of her brother-in-law Mr. Osborne ; and now
his good uncle and aunt, anxious to remove from him
any infamy connected with his father’s misconduct,
‘transposed and slightly altered his names, and called
him Edward Lewis Williams. Edward Williams
‘was therefore only an ordinary young apprentice—it
was given out that he was an orphan—with whose
history the world had nothing to do; and though
Mr. Isaacs and the whole household soon saw that he
was not treated like an ordinary apprentice, the world
did not readily conjecture that he was the son of the
convict Edwards.

“2,
.

“Let Williams come into the parlour,” said Mr.
THE TWO APPRENTICES. og

Osborne, as he was leaving the shop for the evening,
to his assistant Mr. Isaacs, *‘I would have a little
talk with him before his fellow-apprentice comes ;
he seems a sharp, clever youth, I think,” said Mr.
Osborne.

“A little too much of a gentleman at present,”
returned Mr. Isaacs, who was a thorough tradesman,
and had no patience with any dandyism behind the
counter, “‘and sharp and clever he is with a witness ;
he has broken half a gross of vials, two graduated
measures, and a Corbyn quart, within the last fort-
night; but he has taken prodigiously to practical
chemistry, and so that he does not blow the house
up, he may be of some use in time.”

** We must teach him to be careful,” said Mr. Os-
borne, advancing to the door, “‘send him in as soon
as he comes,” repeated he, and disappeared through
the half-glass door with the green silk curtain, that
led to the parlour where his good wife always sat at
her work.

Mr. Osborne had a little code of morals—it is a
thousand pities that it never was printed—which he
delivered orally to his apprentices many times during
the earlier part of their apprenticeship; and he now
wished particularly to insist on that part which re-
lated to “your duties towards your fellow-appren-
tices.” This warned of bad example, either set by
themselves or followed in others; insisted on truth,
sobriety, kindness; on advising in love; on “doing as
they would be done by.” Mrs. Osborne always cried
when her husband thus lectured his young appren-
tices. She felt asif the boys were her own children,
and she always said that no clergyman could preach
to them as her husband did. “And now remember,”
40 THE TWO APPRENTICES.

concluded Mr. Osborne, “that the happiness and
well-being of your future life depend upon the dis-
positions you cultivate and the habits you acquire in
youth ;—are you idle, wasteful, unpunctual, dilatory
in youth, it is vain to look for industry, frugality,
exactness, and promptitude in after-life. .A religious,
active youth will ensure, as far as human means can
do it, a respectable and prosperous age!’ These last
words Mr. Osborne never failed to speak with re-
markable emphagis, nor did he omit it on this occa-
sion. Thus far, the young apprentice had been fed
with what may be called, in the style of Jean Paul
or our Carlyle, the common apprentice-bread ; after-
wards came the cake-of-love which was broken for
his especial eating; and this was literally a love-feast,
at which the good aunt as well as uncle assisted.
Some little they said on his peculiar circumstances,
on the awful example which would ever remain be-
fore him in his father's career ; but oh, how tenderly
and lovingly was this warning enforced! The youth
—and he was a slender, handsome youth—sat with
his graceful head supported on his well-fermed hand,
and his intelligent brown eyes fixed on the counte-
nance of his affectionate monitors. He looked hand-
some; and they saw in him the fairest promises of
good,—they saw in him the support, and comfort,
and pride of their old age. They besought him to be
steadfast in his duties both to God and man; they
besought him to deserve the love which they were
willing to give him; and in them, they said, he
should never want a friend. They spoke with tears,
and as the seal of the covenant between them, they
gave him a new Bible, which they prayed him to
_ Study diligently. The youth began to say something
THE TWO APPRENTICES. 41

about gratitude ; but his voice trembled, and he was

so much affected that he could not go on. The old

people gave him their hands, and said that it was not

needful; they understood his feelings, and were sure ‘
he would try to deserve their love.

Mrs. Osborne ordered in a very good supper that
night ; the apple-pie that had been intended for the
morrow’s dinner was sent in, and cold beef, and
pickle, and roast potatoes with plenty of butter; and
then the smart young apprentice went out to put up
the shop-shutters, secretly rejoicing to himself that it
was for the last time, inasmuch as the new apprentice
would come the next day, and then, as the junior,
this would henceforth be his duty.

We have spoken of the Osbornes’ love-feast ; the
Miss Kendricks also made one for their nephew,
which they intended should last for a whole day.
They hired a post-chaise, and drove to the pleasant
village of Hanbury in Needwood Forest, where lived
some old friends of theirs,—a good farmer and his
wife. Their nephew walked about the farmer’s
abundant garden, and ate fresh-gathered apples from
the trees, and strolled out by himself into the fields,
and came home just in time for dinner. And what
a dinner it was, with game, and hot apple-pie, and
cream, and syllabubs! and how merry the little fat
farmer was, and his wife too, and how they all ate,
and drank, and chatted, and laughed! Even Aunt
Dorothy, she was as merry as anybody.

After dinner, William went out again by himself,
He had been rather low-spirited the day before about
leaving the aunts that he loved so well and going
'prentice; but now all dull thoughts seemed driven
away. There was something inspiriting in the bright,

» €
EZ
42 THE TWO APPRENTICES.

breezy autumn air, as he strolled along through the
old pasture fields, and saw the feathery seeds of the
thistle and the great groundsel lifted up and carried
over his head by the wind, and the yellow harvest-
fields lying amid the deep repose of the woodlands
around, and the harvesters piling up the golden
shocks of corn on the heavy wain, which moved om-
ward now and then, silently as ina dream. Heat
down on the dry slope of the field, with the little
shrubby tufts of the rosy-hued rest-harrow at his
feet ; and thought about his past life and his future.
There was a deal of hardship, and sorrow, and trouble
in his past life, which was best known to himself and
to his Almighty Father; and which he someway or
other shrunk from telling to his kind aunts. There
. was no use in telling it to them, he thought, and he
was right ; for it would have done them no good, nor
him either, All this now passed in clear review be-
fore him ; it was like a procession of dark shadows ;
one after another they went by, and ended in that
wet night of May-fair day and his mother’s death.
But yet that death was not as sad as many things in
her life had been; and the boy thought of her grave
in the little churchyard of her native town as of her
truest resting-place. The only pleasant thought in
the past was of his little sister,—the little rosy-
cheeked Susan, who was left with the old Methodist
grandmother at Truro in Cornwall. Susan was very
happy ; and above all things liked going with the old
woman to chapel, where the people all sang so loud.
It was a pleasant thought, that of Susan. Then came
his aunts,—Dorothy, blind, and with her hair like
snow, yet as cheerful as a lark, and so active! No-
. body that saw her at home could ever think her
THE TWO APPRENTICES, 43

blind! And Joanna, who never thought about her-
self, but was always working or scheming for the
good of somebody or other ; who was full of resources
for every difficulty, and who suggested good motives
for everybody’s actions, Never in all this world,
poor William thought, were there better women
his aunts; it would be impossible for him to
out badly, belonging, as he did, to such good
pe William thought of all the pleasure they
had given him, of the happy weeks at Matlock, of
the collection of minerals they had bought for him,
of the new clothes they had given him,—how they
were about to put him apprentice to a respectable
business, how they had given him a new Bible and
such a handsome prayer-book as would make it a
pleasure to go to church; and to wind up all, how
they had hired a chaise and brought him out into the
country, which he enjoyed so much, just on purpose
to make his last day of freedom pleasant. All this he
thought of, and then made a little vow with himself
that he would be very obedient and good as an ap-
prentice, and be industrious in learning his business ;
and then, when he was a man and his aunts were
old, that he might be able to do something for them
in return. He grew quite in love with his good
resolves, and then fell into a charming day-dream of
happily-accomplished wishes, from which he was
roused by the sound of voices and the creaking of
a loaded wagon, which, with its piled-up sheaves,
went brushing slowly past the tall hedge-row trees
behind him. It was the wagon which, two hours
before, he had been watching in the distant fields ;
and then the thought first occurred to him that it
was time for him to go back to the farm-house. He.
44 THE TWO APPRENTICES.

ran hastily back, buoyant-hearted with all his good
resolutions, and was a little alarmed to see the post-
chaise standing at the door. Aunt Dorothy and the
farmer’s wife were seated on the horse-block, and
Joanna and the farmer were looking out from the
farm-yard gate; they evidently were looking for
him, and then, all at once, for the first time since a
had been out, he remembered that his aunt Joamha-
had warned him not to be long, not above an hour ;
for they wanted to be at home in good time—how
could he have forgotten? Aunt Joanna looked dis-
pleased as he came up; he had never seen her look
displeased before.

“ Well, youngster, we’ve had a pretty hunt for
you,” said the farmer, when he reached the gate.

“You must have forgotten what I said,” remarked
Aunt Joanna.

“Ah, Master William,” began the farmer’s wife,
“I’ve had a pretty time to pacify your Aunt
Dorothy ; she thought you must have got drowned,
or some mischief.”

“Tam very sorry,” said William ; and felt quite
humble and submissive, but there was no time or
opportunity to say more. He hurried into the par-
lour to have tea, or coffee, or wine. There was
plum-cake, seed-cake, and bread and butter: he
must have something—he could eat nothing; he
wanted so much to make his peace with everybody.
But there was no chance for his getting in a word
his aunts, and the farmer and his wife, were at the
chaise-door, in the full energy and activity of leave-
- taking. There was a basket full of eggs, a bottle
of cream, and some fresh butter to go into the
chaise ; there was a hamper of apples and a couple
THE TWO APPRENTICES. 45

of fowls to be stowed away, for all of which the
aunts had, first of all, to express astonishment, and
then thanks ; and, amid all this, they and their
nephew seated themselves in the chaise, and off they
drove. William sat silent, and felt unhappy ; his
heart trembled at the thought of anger; he had seen
so much of it formerly, and so little of it in the last
happy weeks of his life. He wished his aunts
would but begin to talk; but for some time they
did not, nor did he.

At length began Aunt Joanna:—‘ My dear boy,”
said she, “nothing will be more necessary to you,
in life, than strict punctuality. Now, when I had
told you to be back soon, what could keep you out
so long—when you might see that it was getting
late, and the dew was falling. What were you
doing?” |

“‘ Nothing,” said he.

“Nothing!” she repeated. “That is hardly
likely—an active boy like you must have been
doing something.”

William might have said that he had been busy
with his thoughts, reviewing the past, and making
good resolves for the future. He thought of saying
so; but then it occurred to him that perhaps his
aunts would not believe him: he had often been
dishelieved in former days, when he had spoken the
honest truth. A sullen cloud, like the spirit of
those dark former days, fell upon him, and he again
replied to his aunt’s question, three times repeated,
that “‘ he had been doing nothing.”

His aunt said no more. Neither she nor Dorothy
said much during the rest of the drive homeward ;
they were sorry to see him, as they thought, per-
46 THE TWO APPRENTICES.

verse and sullen, and not wishing to excite an
antagonist spirit, which they fancied they saw in
him, they sat silent, and mourned to themselves.

He, on his part, sat between them, dispirited and
out of humour. This was the end, then, of all his
good resolutions: nobody would give him credit for
meaning to do right—that was always the way.
His aunts, after all, were as unjust as anybody else.
All his good resolutions seemed folly and nonsense ;
he despised himself for them, and said, in. his own
heart, that it was no use trying to be good. The
dark phantoms which he had called up from the
. past, and made to pass before him, seemed to have
possession of him, and he remembered mournfully
the chapter which, the evening before, he had read
in his new Bible to his Aunt Dorothy, of him who
took seven other spirits unto him worse than him-
self, and the last state of that man was worse than
the first. :

So ended their Love Feast. But it was a real
Love Feast for all that. It was only as if the love-
cake had been a little burned in the baking—human
endeavours are so seldom perfect.

But now, for six months after this time. Mr.
Isaacs went to church every Sunday evening; and,
as the Osbornes’ pew adjoined that of the Miss
Kendricks, and they regularly attended church
twice in the day, which Mrs. Osborne did not,
because her husband only went in the morning, he
mostly walked home with them; and when there
was no moon, and the streets.therefore as good as
dark—for the scanty oil lamps were not worth
speaking of—he offered an arm to each sister, which
had given rise, in the minds of the two most noto-
THE TWO APPRENTICES. 47

rious gossips of the place, Mrs. Morley and Mrs.
Proctor, that Mr. Isaacs had a liking for Miss
Joanna Kendrick. The report had even reached
the ears of the parties themselves ; but they seemed
so amazingly indifferent about it, that people left
them to do as they would, only just speaking of it
now and then to keep the idea alive, as a town
corporation walks its parish boundaries every seven
years or so, to keep their memory from dying out.

** And how does William get on,” asked Miss
Kendrick, therefore, one Sunday evening, figm
Mr. Isaacs, on whose arm she leaned.

“Pretty well,” said he, in a half-hesitating tone.

“* Only pretty well, still!” she returned.

“Why, you see,” said Isaacs, “he has not the
natural facility of mind that Williams has. That
youth has something quite uncommon about him—if
he had but stability he might do anything. They
now take regular Latin lessons, and that prevents his
attending to many other things. Latin is abso-
lutely necessary, and they neither of them under-
3tood a word of it.”

‘* What, then,’ began Joanna, somewhat cheered,
“had this clever youth been as much neglected as
our poor nephew ?”

“* He has knowledge enough, and to spare,” said
Isaacs, “but not exactly of the right kind; he is
prodigiously smart and clever, and knows hew to
make the most of what he has. If he have but
stability and good conduct, he may get on won-
derfully.”

These words sunk deep into the hearts of both
aunts. How was it? Was Williams above the
average capacity of youths, or was their nephew
48 THE TWO APPRENTICES.

velow it? They were troubled and discontented.
They feared that he did not make all the efforts in
his power; perhaps he was careless and inattentive :
they must talk with him, and try to rouse up a
spirit of emulation in him. Next moment, they
were half-disposed to be out of humour with his
companion’s facility of mind—it is so unpleasant to
be outstripped ourselves, or to see those one loves
and cares for outstripped.

The next evening, the aunts sent their compli-
ments to Mr. Osborne, and begged that he would
let their nephew drink tea with them. He came,
and by the gentlest manoeuvres in the world,
the affectionate aunts began to test the young
apprentice’s knowledge and skill. How did he
like his business ?—did he feel that he was getting
on at all ?—did light begin to break in upon him in
any way ?—did he feel that he could keep up with
Williams? To these questions he replied, that he
did like his business—that he felt he was getting
on—light was breaking in upon him, even in Latin ;
he had made up a prescription that very day—but
as to keeping up with Williams, that was not an
easy thing. Williams could make out a prescription
above a month ago. Williams was so very clever,
he could do anything that he liked; he learned
without the least trouble, and had such a memory
as never was !

Such was his report of his fellow-apprentice.
The aunts listened in silence, and concluded that it
must be as Mr. Isaacs had said; Williams was a
youth of extraordinary abilities. They sighed over
their nephew, who seemed to have but common
abilities, and were kinder to him than ever; per-
THE TWO APPRENTICES. 49

haps to compensate, if they could, for Nature’s
supposed unkindness. But long was the lecture
that they gave to him on patience and perseverance,
which, plodding on together, remove mountains of
all kinds, and make even ordinary abilities more
availing than the most meteor-like genius.

“Well, and how does Reynolds go on?” again
inquired Joanna from Mr. Isaacs, some twelve or
eighteen months later. .

“* Exceedingly well!” was now the reply. “He
has stability and perseverance, he will make a good
tradesman. He is much more practical than Williams,
and thus much more useful.” The aunts were well
pleased, and now could very well endure to hear
their nephew speak well of his fellow-apprentice.

The Osbornes, who had their reasons for being
particularly interested in Williams, saw his quick
abilities, and his attractive exterior, with uncommon
pleasure. As to Mr. Isaacs, he had begun some
time ago to have his own thoughts about the smart
apprentice, and let him now take his own flights,
Satisfied to have the more helpful services of Rey-
nolds. Isaacs soon saw, what Mr. Osborne seemed
never to find out, that Williams, unstable as water,
‘spite of his natural brilliant gifts, would, in the end,
excel in nothing. Besides this, there were slight
peccadilloes now and then, a missing half-crown or
80, which, while he never shut his own eyes to, and
always reproved in his own way, he never spoke of to
Mr. or Mrs. Osborne, unwilling to distress them, as he
said to himself, about the son of poor Mrs, Edwards,

Mr. Isaacs had mentioned to Miss Kendricks his
suspicion of the youth’s parentage ; and this suspi-
cion was confirmed to them by an accidental discovery

F
50 THE TWO APPRENTICES.

which their nephew made of what seemed to him
the transposed name of his companion, written in
his Prayer-book, “ William Louis Edwards ;” and
which, on being shown to him, he immediately tore
from the book, saying gaily that it was only a joke.
But Williams’s secret was safe, both with Miss
Kendricks and Mr. Isaacs; and, while the youth
did not trouble himself one jot about either the one
or the other, he grew tall and good-looking, and,
though he wore a shop-apron, had not at all the
look of a tradesman about him.

Time went on: the fellow-apprentices agreed
- remarkably well together. Reynolds plodded on
at the quiet drudgery of his business, and Williams
took discursive flights of all kinds. Now he was
deep among gases, and now he was up in the clouds
among the fascinations of the circulating library ;
now he dipped here and there into the Materia
Medica and Dr. Thomas’s Practice of Physic; and
now he laboured for three months in learning to
play the flute. He certainly had a variety of tastes,
if not of talents; and the Osbornes, good people as
they were, saw this as something quite remarkable.
Mrs. Osborne was fascinated with his handsome
figure and gentlemanly bearing, wifh his amusing
conversation, and his variety of little social talents
and accomplishments. She contrasted him, in her
own mind, with the more homely, unassuming
Reynolds. ‘“ Poor Miss Kendricks,” thought she,
“how proud they would be to have a nephew like
ours |”

She was the kindest-hearted woman that ever
_ lived, and she never thought thus without being

touched with compassion for the good, humbly-
THE TWO APPRENTICES, 61

gifted youth, as she thought Reynolds; and man y
a little kindness and indulgence did he unwittingly
owe to this sentiment in her heart towards him.

Time went on, and yet on. The apprentices had
each gone on in their own way, and were both
nearly nineteen years of age. Williams was now
above the middle size, and seemed to have done
growing ; while Reynolds, on the contrary, seemed
as if he had only just begun to grow, and was, as
his Aunt Joanna said, “coming on famously.” She
began to think, after all, that her nephew would, in
his way, be every bit as good-looking as-Williams.
He was stouter built, to be sure, and would never
be so tall, but there was such a firm, manly air
about him, something so honest and good in his
countenance—it was quite a pleasure tp look at him!

It was now the middle of winter—a cold, sleety
day, when no customers, saving such as wanted
physie, turned out of doors. The shop-door was
shut, the stove was burning cheerily, and the two
apprentices were standing together, looking over a
play-bill, which had just been thrown in.

Players were “come to the town; a theatre was
opened, and that night the performances began.
“The Beaux’ Stratagem :” it was a charming play,
said Williams; and read over the list of characters
and performers like a school-boy running over a
well-practised lesson. There was nothing in this
world that he enjoyed like the theatre; to see a
play well acted was the finest thing in the world—
the next best thing was to see one badly acted.
Oh, a tragedy acted by strolling players, there was
something quite racy about it! He declared that .
he should be a great patron of the theatre. He
52 THE TWO APPRENTICES.

would take care, he said, and get Mr. Osborne's con-
sent to their going.

There was no difficulty about that. Mr. Osborne
was the most indulgent of masters; and the two
young men set off arm-in-arm, in the highest spirits,
intending to be very critical, and yet very much
amused.

A great club-room at one of the inns had been
converted into a very pretty little theatre, which was
well lighted, and tolerably decorated. Neither boxes,
pit, nor gallery had one seat to spare ; the players
evidently had taken the little town at the right
moment. Williams, however, was at first amazingly
critical ; found unmeasured fault, and ridiculed
everything. He had seen, he said, in his time, the
finest theatres in London, and he knew what good
acting was, too. The acting, however, pleased him ;
above all things, the acting of Miss Jessie Banner-
man, who performed the character of Dorinda. He
declared that she was a goddess, an angel ; so young,
not above sixteen; so divinely beautiful! she was
equal to any actress in genteel comedy that he had
ever seen. He must know something about her!
He was very fond of players, he said ; loved, of all
things, to have the entrée of the green-room ; had
a vast fancy for acting himself; and ended by pro-
testing that he was deeply in love with that girl,
and would make her acquaintance, or know the
reason why.
JESSIE'S ACQUAINTANCE MADE. 53

CHAPTER IV.
JESSIE'S ACQUAINTANCE MADE.

We must now pay a visit to the house of a clog
and patten-maker, and, without using any ceremony,
enter the little parlour, which is but very humbly
furnished, with its home-made listing carpet hardly
covering its brick floor, and its furniture of blue and
white check. In the middle of the room stands a
round table, covered with a coarse huckaback “table-
cloth, on which plates, knives and forks, and an
earthenware salt-cellar, with bread and cheese, give
intimation that supper is at hand. The homely
furniture, however, did not cause a moment's
uneasiness to the persons who were there, and
whom we may as well introduce to the reader.
First of all, a little old woman, in a night-cap not
remarkably clean, and a pink bed-gown, who sat
bending over the little fire-place set in Dutch tile,
cooking on the fire a quantity of tripe, in a sauce-
pan rather too small for the purpose, while within
the fender stood dishes and plates to warm. This
old woman, known in the theatrical corps as
Mrs. Bellamy, though she never acted, seemed so
absorbed by her occupation as to take no notice
whatever of a young couple who sat together, in
very amicable proximity, on the sofa. These were
Jessie Bannerman, the fair prima donna of the com-
pany, and our acquaintance, Williams, who was now
paying by no means his first visit to the inmates
of the patten-maker’s parlour. Williams was very
handsomely dressed in his Sunday clothes, for it
was Sunday evening; whilst the young lady, a

F 2
54 JESSIE’S ACQUAINTANCE MADE.

slight, delicate young creature, was decidedly en
déshabillé, a costume which, although it bore unequi-
vocal marks of having been supplied by a scanty
purse, was not unbecoming to her remarkably inte-
resting appearance.

The youth held both her hands in his, and gazed
with almost devotion into her face. She seemed to
have been weeping, but a faint smile, like April
sunshine, passed at that moment over her face, and
she replied, in answer to some remark of his, “ Oh,
no, the dear old creature, she is very deaf; she
hears nothing we say, and if she did, she would not
interrupt us. Ah, she 1s a good creature 1” ex-
claimed she, snatching away her hands from their
confinement ; and starting up to the old woman’s
side, she put them on her shoulder, and spoke in
her ear, but not loudly, “I have been telling him
how good you are to me, and how much I love
you,” added she, and kissed the old woman's
wrinkled cheek. ‘The old woman understood the
action, if not the words, and gave several little,
short nods, without turning her head, or apparently
lifting her eyes from the saucepan.

The young girl sat down again, and continued,
“Tf it were not for her, my life would be worse
than that of a galley-slave. She is not as poor as
she seems, and has managed to make herself of
‘ eonsequence to the company; and Mr. Maxwell,
the manager, consults her in everything. He hates
her, however, for all that, and they quarrel dread-
fully.”

Whilst these few words passed, the old woman
had dished her tripe, which she covered up with a
basin, and set within the fender, while she went out
JESSIE’S ACQUAINTANCE MADE. 55

for ale in a small jug. When she returned, and
showed what her errand had been, the youth started
up, exclaiming against his own forgetfulness, and
took from the pocket of his great-coat, which he
had laid upon the floor, two bottles of wine, which
he said he had brought for them, and which he
believed would prove good. The old and the young
lady both expressed surprise, and then they all
three sat down to supper with the most apparent
cordiality. The old woman’s tripe was excellent,
and well cooked, and Williams's wine was as good
as need be drunk; but here, before it could be
drunk, there occurred a little difficulty. The wine-
glasses of the patten-maker’s wife were locked up
in a corner-cupboard of this room ; she would not
entrust her keys to her lodgers, nor would they
admit her into the room, lest she should recognise
Mr. Osborne’s apprentice, whom she well knew, in
the young visitor who usually came in so muffled
up and disguised that he passed for one of the
players themselves. Two little china cups, there-
fore, that stoodé on the mantel-piece as ornaments,
were substituted instead ; the old woman having one
to herself, and Jessie and her lover—for lover he was
—the other between them. After supper, which
all three had seemed greatly to enjoy, the old
woman swept up the hearth, cleared away the
supper-things, and sticking the corks into the
bottles, lest, as she said, such good wine should
spoil, seated herself in a low-armed chair, and,
throwing her apron over her face, lay back as if to
sleep ; whilst Jessie and the young man resumed
their seats on the sofa, and shortly afterwards fell
into deep conversation.
56 JESSIES ACQUAINTANCE MADE,

“ And must I tell yon all?” asked she.

“ All, every incident from your earliest memory,”
returned he, passionately. ‘‘ Whatever concerns
you, interests me.”

Jessie heaved a deep sigh, and was silent for s
few moments.

“J have heard her say,” at length she began,
looking towards the old woman in the chair opposite,
“that my mother was the most beautiful of women,
and perhaps, also, the most unfortunate. She was
the daughter of a village schoolmaster, a man pos-
sessed of some little property ; and she,” said she,
again indicating the old woman opposite, “ was, I
fancy, his wife, and consequently is my grand-
mother; but that she never will confess, although
I have besought her on my knees. My mother was
loved, or rather courted, by a rich gentleman. She
loved him—oh, too well: he deserted her, and
her father, who was a very severe, although in
his way a very religious man, never would forgive
her error. He turned her, one wild autumn night,
out of doors. It thundered and lightened, and
was a night on which to lose one’s senses, or else
to do some horrid deed. Her mother prayed the
father to relent, and to open the door; for she
stayed wandering about the house till long after
midnight, begging and praying that he would not
be so hard-hearted and so cruel—but it was all in
vain! He was one of those men who think
that it was the woman only who fell; he thought
that the man was a superior being, whose place
in creation was to domineer over woman, and
punish her, and subject her as much as he could.
It was a sort of virtue in his eyes, and so he
JESSIN'S ACQUAINTANCE MADR. 57

heither would listen to the prayers of his wife nor
daughter.”

“ What a monster he was!” exclaimed Williams,
in a very audible voice.

The old woman put her apron from her head, and
said sharply to him, “ It is fine talking, young man !
but you are all tyrants by nature—every one of you
——for al) you look so mild and gentle ! Every one
of you!” added she, again throwing her apron over
her head,

“I thought that she was deaf!” exclaimed Wil-
liams, amazed, and almost terrified. |

“And so she is,” returned Jessie, “ but you are
so violent.”

“ Well, go on,” said he ; “your story affects me.”

“* My grandfather,” continued she, “ would not go
to bed till long after my mother’s voice had ceased
outside, and then he took the key of the house-door
and put it under his pillow, to prevent his wife going
out. She was very much afraid of her husband, so
she waited till she heard him snoring in bed, and
then she got out at the kitchen-window; but no-
where could she find her daughter. She wandered
about all day, and went into the neighbours’ barns,
and up and down the river-side; but she found
no traces, nor had anybody in the village seen
her. Towards evening, however, she met a wagoner
coming with his team towards the village, who had
been out with barley to a neighbouring town; and
from him she learnt that, about three o'clock in the
morning, he had overtaken a young woman, who was
walking alone on-the road, and who seemed very
much distressed. She begged him, he said, to give
her a lift in his wagon, which he did ; he had also
58 YESSIE'S ACQUAINTANCE MADE

given her part of the refreshment which he had
with him for himself, and had spoken a good word
for her to the woman of the house where he put
up; but that, after she left his wagon, which was
at the town’s end, he had seen no more of her, nor
could he tell what it was her intention to do, or
where to go. My grandmother was so affected by
this mark of kindness, especially, as she said, in a
man, that she thought within herself, what could
she give him in return. She felt in her pocket, but
money she had none, excepting a crooked Queen
Anne’s sixpence with a hole through it, which she
had kept many years. This she gave to him, and
begged of him to keep for her sake; and for her
sake, also, to be kind to poor women whenever he
met with them, and to take her blessing for the
kindness he had shown her daughter. Instead of
going home, she at once turned herself round, and
walked through the night back to the town, where
she arrived at daybreak. The woman of the
public-house could give no information respecting
her daughter, so at night she set off home again.”
“‘She spent that day, and the next, and the next
after that,” said the old woman rapidly, interrupting
her, and throwing the apron from her face, and
sitting up in the chair; “three whole days she
spent in searching for her daughter! It was a
large town, and a wicked town, and nothing but sin,
and misery, and sorrow, did she meet with every-
where, wherever she sought for her poor outcast!
But she did not find her! Many a fair young
creature she saw, as desolate as her own child; but
her own child she found not, and, with a bleeding,
' downcast heart, and a weary body, she retraced her
JESSIE'S ACQUAINTANCE MADP. 59

steps homeward. Her husband, as she came back,
sat among the little boys in the school just as if
nothing had happened, and heard them read about
Mary Magdalene, in the Bible, that our Lord ‘and
Saviour Jesus Christ himself had mercy on, yet he
never had pity on his own flesh and blood! If I
were to tell you,” continued she, “of the tears,
and the heart-aches, and the prayers of that mother,
all in secret between her Maker and herself, you,
that are young, would maybe not believe me, so I
pass them all over. In a winter or two afterwards,
her husband got a rheumatic fever, and she then
had to wait on him night and day: he was as help-
less as a child, and was cross, and out of humour
with her, and with himself, too. She had a weary
life of it. The parson came to see him, and
preachers of all sorts, from far and near; for he
was reckoned a religious man; and being parish
schoolmaster, and a man of property besides, folks
thought much of him, and his wife got them to talk
to him of his daughter, now that he was sick and
helpless, and turn his heart towards her, if they
could. But he was as hard as iron, and he would
not even have her mentioned in his prayers. Well,
it pleased God to afflict him it many ways, and he
had fits and spasms, and was speechless for months.

“** Stephen,’ said his wife to him, one night,
‘God is punishing you for your hardness to poor
Mary. You deserve it! and I hope he will never
take his hand off you till you’ve forgiven her, and
acted as a Christian should do !’

“< He had not spoken for months and months, and
you may think what was her surprise when he lifts
himself slowly up in bed, and fixing his hollow
60 JESSIES ACQUAINTANCE MADE.

eyes on her, says, ‘ He has punished me—punished
me severely. I forgive her, and may God Almighty
forgive us both!’ With these words he dropped
back on the pillow, and his poor wife was so over-
come by what she heard, all so unexpectedly, that
she sank down as if she had been smitten, and when
she had strength to rise again—he wasa corpse! A
bitter feeling now came over her towards herself:
she had been angry with him—she had done her
duty to him only as duty, not as love. What would
she not have given then for one week, one hour, of
his past life! Ah, children, children!” said she,
addressing the two before her, “‘ never grieve those
you love; never lose an opportunity of doing a
kindness to those you love; never give way to
bitterness and hardness, else you will lay up a
punishment for yourselves which will pursue you as
with a whip of scorpions !”

A silence of a few minutes ensued. Jessie had
thrown herself back in a corner of the sofa, and
Williams sat staring at the old woman, who now,
as if with all her faculties awake, continued :—

“Some indistinct rumour reached the mother,
some time after her husband’s death, that her
daughter was in London; so she turned all the
little property that was left into money, and to
London she went. She went to London to find her
daughter. And how was her daughter to be found
among the thousands of other women’s daughters,
that were outcasts in society—-women with beauty,
talents, affections, all trampled under foot, viler than
the very mud of the streets! She went out on
the evenings of summer days, when the birds of
’ heaven were singing, and the dew lay as pure as
JESSIE'S ACQUAINTANCE MADE. 61

angels’ thoughts on the grassy fields; and what did
she meet? Women that the rich and pampered
daughters of untempted virtue loathed ; but she met
not with her daughter. She went out on cold, deso-
late, pinching nights of winter, when happy fami-
lies sat round happy hearths—fathers, and mothers,
and little children, and blessed God that they lived
in a Christian land, where all misery was cared for ;
and what did she still meet? Poor, unfortunate
women again—creatures that God had made a little
lower than the angels; for what? To be the prey
of the vilest passions of man; to be despised,
scorned, pointed at, trampled on; to be miserable
and outcast! These she saw, winter and summer,
alike ; these, beauty and misery, going hand-in-hand
down to the pit! Yes, young man,” said she, lifting
up an admonitory finger, “such as you it is that do
this work of death and the devil! and think not
that you shall come here, paying your flattering,
false attentions to that old woman’s grand-daughter
unwatched and unprevented !”

“Upon my soul,” said the young man, quite
taken by surprise, “I am sincere as the very sun
in heaven! Only, you see, as yet, I am in tram-
mels; I am not my own master.” ,

* Enough ! enough!” said the old woman. “ But
I have not yet done. You asked for Jessie's history,
and we are not yet come to it. I had been out
one night to get a bit of butcher’s-meat ; I had not
had a bit for months, and somehow or other the
fancy took me to have a bit; so I went out that
Saturday night, and had not gone far, before I was
stopped by a crowd at the door of a house,.where
they said that a man was ill-using a woman. ‘It’s

e |
62 JESSIES ACQUAINTANCE MADE.

only his wife!’ said somebody near me ; just as if
he had said, it’s only his dog. These were things
that I felt in my very soul; so I rushed into the
house, just as the brutal husband, mad with liquor
and cruelty, and with blood upon his clothes, threw
himself out of the door into the middle of the crowd,
which, ‘spite of the attempts to seize upon him, he
struck off right and left, and made his escape. A
crowd of people beside me had rushed into the
house, and up-stairs where the woman was, whose
blood we met, trickling down-stairs, before we
reached the top. She was bleeding from face, and
neck, and arms, where she had many great gashes.
She looked as if she were already dead, and a little
child, not six months old, lay crying on the miser-
able bed beside her. The sight of the woman
caused a cry of indignation and horror in the people,
and half of them turned back to overtake and secure
the man whom they now regarded as a murderer.
From a feeling of pity which wrung my very heart,
I took up the child in my arms; it looked into my
face, and smiled! It was she!” said the old woman,
pointing to Jessie, who now, pale and excited, was
weeping again. |
“They took the woman to the hospital,” con-
tinued she. ‘“ She was one of a travelling company
of comedians and horse-riders; her husband and
she acted the principal parts: she had been, and
still was, very beautiful. She was the school-
master's daughter—the daughter of that mother
who had sought her so long and so wearily! She
did not die. There were two children: the infant,
and agirl of seven years old, a young creature that
played night after night, and was the great attrac-
JESSIE'S ACQUAINTANCE MADR. 63

tion of the company. She was ill, and’it had been
about her acting that the parents had quarrelled
that night. She was a wonderful child. Oh, why
are such gifts as hers given, when they can lead but
to misery and ruin! The little Fanny danced on
the tight-rope night after night, and performed the
most wonderful feats of horsemanship as the Flying
Circassian; and acted and sung to the delight of
crowds of thoughtless, admiring people. She played,
and danced, and rode, and grew weaker and weaker
day by day; but there was no pity either for her
or the infant, which, as soon as it could walk, was
made to ride and dance, and which promised to be
as great a prodigy as her sister. When the mother
was dead, I joined myself to the company. The
father hated me, but he could not get rid of me.
I stayed, because there was no law to take them
forcibly from the father. After I had been with
the company some years, things mended. All were
not as bad as he; poor they all were, buts many of
them had kind hearts, and there were those with us
who would take our parts; and besides, as Fanny's
health mended under my care, the father no longer
tried to make my life intolerable ; besides which, a
cold which I took made me deaf, so that I could not
hear him. He married again, and then I took the
children to myself; the travelling life was not un-
pleasant to me, and Fanny was a very angel.”

‘And where is Fanny?” asked Williams. The
old woman made no reply.

Jessie took the handkerchief from her face, and
laying her hand on his arm, said solemnly, “ Fanny
is dead!”

He looked shocked, and she continued, “Had
64 JESSIE'S. ACQUAINTANCE MADE.

you known Fanny, you would never have loved
me. I am no more to be compared to her, than
the moon to the sun. She was nineteen when she
died ; I was then twelve. She,” said she, pointing
to the old woman, “had much more reason to love
Fanny than me. She was much handsomer than
me, and was so witty and merry! Ill as she was,
it never cast her down; and her laugh! Oh, I
remember it now! I never heard a laugh like it—
80 sweet, so joyous, so musical! My father used to
say that her laugh would make her fortune; but
she took cold one night at the theatre, and in three
days she died! They think of making another
Fanny of me,” said she; “ but it will not do. My
father is disappointed in me. I am not as brilliant
as my sister. My life is not happy—not at all
happy,” said she, clasping her hands, and bursting
into a passion of tears.

“Adorable girl!” said Williams, quite beside
himself with love and pity, and throwing himself
on one knee before her. ‘“ My whole life shall be
devoted to making your life happy !”

The fair Jessie bowed her face, and wept upon
his shoulder,

“ Hey-day !” said the old woman, starting up from
her chair, “ what nonsense is all this! I know what
it means when men talk of life-long devotion, And
what are you, young man? Can you rescue her
from the life of misery that lies before her ?”

““T am one who love her better than life,” said
Williams, starting to his feet, and facing the old
woman with quite a theatrical air. ‘I love her,
and, were I but free, I would marry her to-morrow.”

“Fine talking!” said the old woman, with a
JESSIE’S ACQUAINTANCE MADRE. 65

sneer; “if I were but free! that is always the
way! If I were but free, indeed! Why, when
you are free, your mind will have changed. Then,
then! ah, I know you men! You are a pack of
designing, selfish knaves, and I’ll have none of you!
I'll take care of Jessie Bannerman, if she cannot
take care of herself; and so you had better take
your leave, for the decent people at your house
must have been in bed these two or three hours.”

“ By Jove, and so they will!” exclaimed Wil-
liams, looking at his watch, and horrified to see that
it was past two o'clock.

“YT shall never get in to-night,” said he, almost
dolefully. “ For Heaven’s sake let me sleep where
Iam. I will lie on the sofa, or anywhere, and
early in the morning 1 will be gone.” |

The old woman was again deaf; and it was only
by his forcibly taking possession of the sofa, that she
seemed to understand him. Jessie laughed as merrily
and as musically, Williams thought, as Fanny could
have done, and applauded the idea. But the old
woman was inexorable, and turned him literally out
of doors. :

Well was it for him that, in that quiet town,
every soul, excepting the watchman, was in bed.
The night was fine and starlight, and avoiding the
watchman, who made himself perceptible by his
cry, he walked through the town right into the
country, which was not inconvenient to him, as he
had excused his yesterday's absence on the plea of
spending the afternoon with some friends in the
country ; and the next morning he entered Mr. Os-
borne’s parlour just as they were about to sit down to
breakfast, nobody suspecting one word of the real truth.

G2
66 A SPOKE IN THE‘WHEEL-

CHAPTER V.
A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL,

My readers may imagine how confusing must
have been all the inquiries which assailed the young
man from Mrs. Osborne during breakfast. “ Well,
and how were the Yates’s? Is he better? and is
John come from Birmingham? And what news
have they from Mrs. Benjamin? Are the children
better? And has Jenny had the measles ?”

Williams was not a young man to be easily dumb-
foundered ; his replies really were all so straight-
forward, that nobody could have had the slightest
suspicion of all not being quite straightforward re-
garding them. ll this, however, was nothing to
the difficulty he found after breakfast, when he was
told to assist in the putting up of a large order for a
country-shop. What room had he in his mind for
6 lbs. of yellow ochre, and 2 lbs. of camomile flowers,
and glue, and lamp-black, and syrup of squills, and
opium ?

“ What, are not those things put up yet?” asked
Mr. Osborne, looking down into the lower ware-
house, as he saw Williams by lamplight, towards
dinner-time, weighing out whitening, which he knew
came fourth in a list of seven-and-twenty articles.
No, indeed! they were not put up. Williams had
thought of nothing all the morning but the fair Jessie,
and her sad family history, and her deaf old grand-
mother, who, after all, was not deaf. He went over
the history, incident by incident, and asked himself
many questions. Who, then, was Jessie's father ?
Was it that Mr. Maxwell, the manager, with whom
A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL 67

she had said that the old woman often quarrelled? —
and if so, why was she called Bannerman? Was
that her mother’s name? and if so, why, then, was
the old woman called Bellamy? He could not
understand these things. One thing, however, he
could very well understand, and that was, that he
was desperately in love ; should never love anybody
else as long as he lived; and if he were but out of
his time would marry her instantly, even if he had
to starve all the rest of his life for it.

What an awkward thing it is for a young man
violently in love, and a little headstrong into the
bargain, not to be out of his time—not to be at
liberty to do just as he likes! He grew quite
desperate there, down among the whitening casks
and the hogsheads of oil and vinegar. He remem-
bered her tears, and that she had declared herself to
be unhappy; and that she had to display all her
charms and her powers of pleasing every night to
worthless crowds, whilst he was dying but for one
glance of hers. And then, how did he know but
that some young fellow who was “ out of his time,”
and his own master, might not fall in love with her,
and carry her off at once! What so likely? He
then laid a thousand impossible plans, which at the
moment he vowed to execute. He would join the
company, and travel with her. He would run off
with her, and get married; his uncle and aunt
would be angry, he knew, but in the end they
would forgive him. Jessie should throw herself at
their feet; they could never withstand her beauty
and her tears. In the midst of this scene he was
woke to reality and a dinner of boiled beef and
turnips. Poor Williams! he had no appetite, and
6% A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL.

he looked as woe-begone as it was possible for any
young apprentice to look who was over head and
ears in love. He was not well, he said ; he was, to
use the words of a country swain in love, “ hot and
dry, like, with a pain in his side, like ;” and he pre-
scribed for himself a walk in the fresh air, which
Mr. Osborne freely permitted to him, deputing
Reynolds to finish his work below.

Williams dressed himself with great care, and putting
on his great-coat, made the best of his way to the
clog and patten-maker’s, not failing to sec, as he
passed along the streets, on every blank wall and
every projecting house-corner, the name of his fair
one in the play-bills for the night, “‘ To be performed
this evening, the Fair Quaker of Deal, the part of
the Fair Quaker, by Miss Jessie Bannerman.” Jessie
was the attraction of the company—the whole town
acknowledged it. The sight of her name added to
his impatience ; he reached the house, and thinking
neither of the patten-maker nor his wife, rushed
through the kitchen, where they sat at tea, without
any precaution of concealment, and knocking hur-
riedly at the parlour-door, entered without waiting
for permission from within.

“ Why, that’s Osborne’s smart apprentice, for
sure,” exclaimed the patten-maker’s wife ; “so, he 8
smitten, is he, with that young player-wench ¢”

“Why, how many young chaps are there after
her?” asked her husband.

“ Half-a-score,” said the wife, “at least ;” and
began counting them on her fingers.

Williams's entrance produced quite a sensation
among the three persons in the room. The old
woman, who sat with her spectacles on, sewing
A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL. 69

white muslin cuffs into the slate-coloured stuff gown
which was evidently to be the dress of the Fair
Quaker of Deal, knocked down an old pasteboard
box which held her store of sewing materials. Jessie,
who stood en déshabillé, as yesterday, with her little
Quaker’s cap in her hand, turned first red and then
pale at the sight of him; and a tall young man, of
perhaps two-and-twenty, who was at that moment
presenting her with a bouquet of splendid green-
house’ flowers, started back a step or two, as if a
snake had stung him, and then stood, with the flowers
in his hand, and a look of defiance in his eye, at the
unexpected rival, whom the lady might be supposed
to favour from her changing colour. A glance told
all this ; and Williams, on his part, looked as much
taken by surprise as any of them. Here had he
flown on the wings of love and impatience only to
find a rival—a favoured rival his jealousy whispered,
and that in the handsome person of Tom Bassett, a
young man of family—an articled clerk of the first
lawyer in the place ;—he was in love with her foo—
it was death and destruction !

“Shall you see me to-night as the Fair Quaker ?”
asked Jessie, with one of her sweetest smiles.

‘“‘ Most certainly I shall,” said Williams, who, in
the face of his rival, felt that it must be so.

She showed him the cap, and pointed to the dress
which the old woman was engaged upon for the
character ; and while he turned to speak to the old
woman, who seemed now deafer than ever, Tom
Bassett again presented his flowers, which were
graciously accepted. Williams did not wait for the
old woman’s answer, but was, the same moment,
at Jessie’s side again, looking daggers at the free-and-
70 A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL.

easy young lawyer. With the air of a queen, Jessie
motioned the two to be seated. Bassett laughed
and talked with the most provoking ease and con-
fidence. In his eyes, evidently, Williams was a
rival not worth noticing. Jessie laughed at his jokes,
and seemed not to trouble herself about the other.
It was mortifying, it was provoking, it was enough
to make a saint swear, thought Williams. “ Here I
sit,” thought he to himself, “like a fool, without
a word to say for myself! ” If he were to speak, he
knew that his voice would betray his feelings—he
wished his rival at the devil. We beg our readers’
pardon, but it is truth; he did so, and he wished
more than that—that he could challenge him, and
put a bullet through his body. It was a ‘most
uncomfortable time to him. He called Bassett an
ass—a stupid, conceited ass—in his own mind ; and
perhaps he might have been excited to call him so to
his face, if the old woman, who had finished her
work, had not got up, and shaking out the gown,
said it was now ready, and as it was five o'clock, the
gentlemen had better both take their departure.
** Did they hear?” she repeated, as if she thought
them as deaf as herself.

They both rose, and Jessie offering a hand to each
at the same moment, curtseyed them a graceful
adieu.

‘“* I must say a word to you,” whispered Williams,
as Bassett left the room.

*“ To-night, after the play. I do not act in the
after-piece,” said she, hurriedly, and closed the door
upon him. But that was enough; he wanted no
more ; he felt as if wings had at once sprung from his
shoulders. |
A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL. 71

The patten-maker sold tickets for the play, and
the words that he heard after the parlour-door had
shut were, “ten box-tickets for to-night.”

The patten-maker counted out the tickets, and
Bassett, who had drawn forth a handsome scarlet
purse with gold rings from his pocket, laid down
a guinea, and without waiting for the change,
drew on his gloves, and pocketed his purse and the
tickets.

“Ten box-tickets,” said Williams to the patten- ©
maker, who looked as if he had expected it; and
thinking of a bootmaker’s bill, for the payment of
which he had received money from his aunt, drew
forth a very modest little brown purse, which Miss
Dorothy Kendrick had netted for him, and paid for
his tickets with a half-guinea, a half-crown, five
shillings, and four sixpences ; the coin looked quite
_ beggarly, and the purse was left so empty that the
rings slid off as he put it again into his pocket. But
he was not going to trouble himself Just then on that
subject. Tom Bassett also stood on the door-step as
he went out, and drawing forth an eye-glass, con-
temptuously surveyed him from head to foot. Eye-
glasses, in those days, were not as common as now ;
and Williams, though he felt stung, as it were, from
head to heel, hummed, with a gallant, careless toss of
the head, one of Jessie’s favourite airs; and recollect
ing how inconvenient any public quarrel would be,
or, in fact, any quarrel at all, as it would bring more
than he liked to the knowledge of his uncle, turned
upon his heel and walked down the street.

Now came the consideration respecting the ten
tickets, and he almost thought himself a fool for
having bought more than one for himself, What
72 A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL.

was he now to do with them? He walked across
the fields towards the Dove-Bridge, and came to the
very wise conclusion, that two of them he would
keep, and the other eight, wrapping neatly in paper,
he would drop, on his return, in the market-place,
where they would be sure to be found. As to the
two that he retained, he would boldly confess the
having purchased them, and ask permission for
Reynolds and himself to go to the theatre that night.
He did as he had resolved; and, after just about
as much reproof as he expected from Mr. and Mrs.
Osborne, tea was hastened, and, grateful to his com-
panion for having obtained for him this unexpected
pleasure, Reynolds ran up-stairs to prepare his
toilet.

The little theatre was crowded, and the fair Jessie
was received most enthusiastically. Williams thought
her lovelier than ever in her quiet Quaker costume. ©
“All the town is in love with her,” said he to his
companion ; “and is she not an angel ?”

It was quite a brilliant night. The very gentry of
the town were there ; and there, seated between the
two daughters of the lawyer, sat Tom Bassett.
Williams was delighted, for with these two young
ladies he was quite secure for the night.

“ And now, my dear, good fellow,” whispered
Williams to his companion, just before the curtain
fell, “ you must stand my friend. You will ; promise
me you will!” said he, laying his hand on his arm,
and: looking quite agitated. “J am in love with
Miss Bannerman; she knows it; she loves me, too,
and has promised me a little interview this evening.
She is a very angel : she is a good girl, I assure you :
I love her as my life, and I am sure you will be my
A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL. 73

friend. She does not act again to-night,” continagl
he, rapidly, and not allowing Reynolds time to speak,
“but you will stay the after-piece—it is the most
amusing thing in the world ; and if Iam not at home
by the time you are, don’t let anybody miss me—
and I ‘ll do as much for you any time!”

*“‘ But, Williams,” began he. Williams, however,
did not wait to hear. The curtain fell, and he was
ZOLe.

He knew perfectly the back-entrance by which
Jessie would leave the theatre ; and there, at the very
moment of time, stood she, wrapped in a cloak, and
attended by the old woman with a lighted lantern.
‘Spite of the lawyer's daughters, there also was
Bassett, making a thousand protestations of regret
and chagrin at not being able to accompany her.

“She wants no escort,” said Williams, rendered
bold by his good fortune ; “‘T shall have that hap-
piness,” and taking J eeaic’s little hand, which he
drew within his arm, he walked off triumphantly.

“ The jackanapes! the conceited jackanapes !”
exclaimed Bassett ; but not imagining for a moment
that Jessie would give a druggist’s apprentice the pre~-
ference over him, he went back to the theatre laughing
to himself at the youth’s “ ignorant conceit.”

Williams walked off triumphantly with Jessie on
his arm, and the little old woman trudged beside them
with her lantern ; but scarcely had they gone ten
yards when they were stopped by a man who puf a
small paper into their hands.

What had they here? They stopped; and, by
the light of the lantern, read the words, printed
in great, black, awful-looking letters, ‘°° Tue Doorr
or Tar Piay-House Leap To Hei!”

i
74 A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL.

It’s the parson’s doing!” said Williams, shocked

* at what he had read aloud, and, crumpling it in his
hand, threw it from him. ‘“ He is a narrow-souled,
bigoted, methodistical fellow, who sets his face
against every kind of pleasure! It is just like him!”
This little incident, however, seemed to throw no
gloom on him, after the first moment; so, leaving
them to their full enjoyment, we will return to Rey-
nolds, who was thrown, by his companion’s sudden
desertion, into a state of the most complete perplexity.
Reynolds was a good-hearted fellow; he always
looked upon Williams as much older in worldly
experience than he was; he, himself, was a child in
comparison of him, a mere apprentice; whilst the
other had been, as it were, “out of his time” this many
and many aday. He had long known that Williams
would never exeel in his business ; he had neglected
the study of every branch of it ever since the first
glow of novelty was worn off. He was frank in his
confession about it; he hated business, and would
never do any more than he was obliged; yet the
impulses of his nature were often good and kind; he
knew his own weaknesses and acknowledged them,
and was quite willing that Reynolds should stand
a long way before him in the good opinion of Mr.
Isaacs. Reynolds really liked him, and had so con-
stantly and for so long done his work, and hidden
all his misdemeanors, and made up for his short-
comings, that Williams had the fullest confidence
that he would befriend him also in this instance.
Betray him he never would; and he would smuggle
him, safely and unseen, into the house, if he sate up
the whole night for it. Yes; that was all true. But
for all that, Reynolds was not at all pleased with the
A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL. 765

position he was now placed in. This, then, was
what he had been brought for; he had been made
a cat’s-paw of, and he felt vexed ; besides this, he
was very honourable and religious in his principles
and notions; and the hurried and candid confession
of his companion had utterly shocked and confounded
him. For his part, he would as soon have thought
of falling in love with his grandmother as with a
player—for so he called her, not “actress,” as
Williams did, let her be as beautiful as she might :
and then to make appointments with her at night ;—
there was something quite frightful to him in it.
And all at once the whole scene before him lost its
attraction. It was a wicked place! that which they
had just seen performed was low and disgusting—a
burlesque, a coarse caricature! He was offended
—ashamed—angry with himself @r having been
amused ;—and now this “ after-piece” was worse
and worse—there was not even the beauty of Jessie
Bannerman to set it off ; the women were painted,
gaudy creatures ; the men fit associates for them.

It was in this spirit that Reynolds sat out the
*‘ after-piece.”

When the company dispersed from the theatre,
there was not one man but three who distributed their
little printed papers. Everybody had one, some two
or three ; and everybody, on reading them, exclaimed
—“ This is Mr. Goodman’s doing ;” or “ This is the
parson’s doing ;” or “ We shall have a sermon against
the players on Sunday.” |

And all these exclamations were right. There
was a sermon against them on Sunday, and a severe
one, too; and not alone against players and play-
houses, but against all playgoers, also. But before
76 A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL.

Sunday, the clergyman, who was one of the best of
men, although one of the most rigid, called on the
Osbornes, as he had been doing for some days on his
delinquent flock, to remonstrate with so respectable a
man, and so good a church-goer as Mr. Osborne, on
allowing his apprentices to frequent places of such
awful wickedness as theatres !

Williams was faint with apprehension lest the
clergyman knew also of his passion and his acquaint-
ance with the fair Jessie ; the patten-maker and his
wife knew of it; Tom Bassett knew of it; oh, it
must come out! He felt quite ill, and went into
the upper warehouse, looking like anything but a
bold lover, where he sat down on a resin-tub,
waiting for the judgment which he feared might be
at hand.

Mr. Oshorne @as a very good, kind-hearted man,
good to the poor, and charitable in the gospel-sense
of the word to all mankind. He thought players
bad, low people ; but, for his part, he saw no use in
commencing a crusade against them. We should
never exterminate them, they would exist ‘spite of
us; and people, he said, would go to theatres to be
amused. People must be amused ; he saw no harm
in it at all. He had had some thoughts, he said, of
going himself ; and as to his apprentices—why, if his
young men were good and steady, and attended to
their business, he thought it only right now and then
to give them a bit of pleasure. He had always done
so; he had been forty years in business; had had
about seven-and-twenty apprentices, all of whom,
for what he knew, had turned out well. He thought
that was a proof that his system was not a very bad
one ; and with all respect for the clergyman, whom
A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL. 77

nobody respected more than he did, he must still be
allowed to pursue his own course.

The clergyman used his strongest arguments; he
knew nothing as yet of Williams’s affairs, or he
would have had a famous argument in his hand; but
still Mr. Osborne adhered to the very last to his own
opinions—perhaps even went a little beyond them in
opposition to what seemed the ultra opinions of the
other.

All this went on in the parlour, and Mr. Isaacs
and a customer, who was of the clergyman’s way of
thinking, discussed the subject in the shop, whilst
Reynolds went on with his weighing and labelling
and pill-making, and thinking that they were right,
every word they said. He did believe all players,
men, women, and children, to be a wicked, low,
dissolute, unprincipled set of peopl and it was not
his intention ever to go near them again.

Next morning, before church, came Miss Joanna
Kendrick to beg that her nephew might go to
church. She was warmer even than the clergyman
had been, and really censured Mr. Osborne for letting
his young men go to the play-house. If she had
been asked, she said, she should have prevented it,
at least as far as her nephew was concerned. Mr.
Osborne could do just as he liked with regard to the
other.

Mr. Osborne felt quite vexed—for the first time in
his life vexed with Miss Kendrick. He repeated to
her what he had said to the clergyman about his
forty years experience in business and the manage-
ment of apprentices ; but it was quite in another tone
of voice, and Miss Kendrick was hurt. She replied
warmly, and so did he; and really these two excel-

H 2
78 A SPOKE IN THE WHEEL.

lent people might have quite come to a quarrel had
not a note at that moment, from a physician, required
Mr. Osborne’s particular attention.

This note was an awkward affair, indeed ; such a
thing as this had never occurred befiep i in the whole
forty years of Mr. Osborne’s practice. He started
up, and, with the note in his hand, went into the
back-room, which was appropriated to Mr. Isaacs
and the young men.

‘“‘ Who made up that prescription of Dr. Chawner’s,
yesterday 2?” asked he.

Mr. Isaacs considered for a moment, and then

replied that Williams had done it.

Williams was sitting there reading a volume of
Massinger’s plays, which he had borrowed from
Anderson, one of the actors; he started, and looked
frightened. “ Wily, what of the prescription ? ” he
asked.

“Did you make that up yesterday?” asked
Mr. Osborne, in an angry tone.

“T did, sir,” he returned, submissively.

* And how came you, then, to put in 40 drops
tinctura opii and 6 tinctura scille, instead of 6 drops
tinctura opii and 40 tinctura scille ?”

Williams could not tell, unless he had mistaken it.

Mr. Osborne swore—yes, actually on a Sunday
morning. Williams’s answer had provoked him to
it. ‘* Mistaken a physician’s prescription! What
the deuce did he mean by mistaking a physician's
prescription, or anything else! He would he poison-
ing people some of these days; what had he learnt
his business for,” &c., &c.

Never had Mr. Osborne, in all his forty years’
practice, been so angry as then. It was the first
DEEPER AND DEEPER. 7

time in his life that ever a mistake had been made at
his counter in a physician's prescription.

Williams knew well enough the cause of his
blunder—he krew where his thoughts had ‘been
when he made up the prescription. He had not a
word to say for himself.

Mr. Isaacs, almost as vexed as Mr. Osborne, made
up the prescription, vowing with himself that he
never would put another into Williams's hands.
Mr. Osborne wrote the best apology he could to the
physician, and Williams sat all the morning reading
Massinger's plays.



CHAPTER VI.
DEEPER AND DEEPER.

Tue whole town talked of nothing but the players.
One half the inhabitants sided with the clergyman,
the other half with Mr. Maxwell’s company. The
theatrical party was headed by the family of the
lawyer with whom was Tom Bassett; and this same
lawyer not only bespoke a play, but talked of giving
a supper to the principal performers.

_ The lawyer's daughters thought of nothing but
private theatricals ; and Tom Bassett, who was hand
and glove with half the theatrical staff, as well as
desperately in love with the prima donna, borrowed
the actors’ own copies of plays, and was au fait in
all that appertained to theatrical life.

On the other hand, among the persons most active
on the side of the clergyman, were the good Miss
Kendricks. It was as good as a sermon to hear
Miss Joanna talk ; she really was more effective than
80 DEEPER AND DEEPER.

the clergyman, because she was less violent. He
talked of the theatre as the “ devil’s house,” called
theatricals the “‘ work of hell,” and denounced all
such as, after thus being warned, wilfully aided and
abetted them, “as heirs of damnation.” It was quite
awful to hear him talk. Miss Joanna, on the
contrary, spoke in love and tenderness, pitied the
“poor, benighted creatures,” the players; who, she
said, were more to be lamented over than pagan
Hottentots, and she besought people, for the love of
their own souls, not to give them encouragement ; nor
would she at all go the length that the clergyman
did, in saying that it would be a good thing if every
copy of Shakspeare had been burned publicly by the
hand of the hangman. No, Miss Joanna, in all her
zeal, talked like a tender-hearted Christian, and
people listened toher. But, spite of all that she said,
and spite of all the clergyman thundered forth, the
little theatre was crowded night after night.

Mr. Maxwell, the red-faced manager, said that he
liked nothing so well as the opposition of a parson ;
it always did the house good, and he did not know
whether he should not introduce Mr. Goodman some
night on the stage.

All this time the rivalry between Tom Bassett and
our apprentice went on as hotly as ever. Each
thought himself the favoured lover, yet still each
hated and feared the other. Between these two
young men, however, there was one great difference.
Bassett had plenty of money, Williams had none.
All that he had of his own had long been gone; the
pound that had been given to him by his aunt to pay
the poor bootmaker had been spent in tickets, as we
know. He had borrowed since then every farthing
DEEPER AND DEEPER. 8T

of money from Reynolds, and which, being but a
scanty allowance, was always hoarded and husbanded
with the greatest economy. From Mr. Isaacs he
dared not borrow ; nor, just then, when the memory
of his blunder was fresh in his mind, durst he ask
money from his uncle. There was, however, the
cash in the shop-safe. His uncle placed the greatest
confidence in him as regarded money—a great deal
more than Mr. Isaacs had done for a long time.

“Shall I or shall I not ?” questioned he with him-
self. Oh, how bad it is when we begin to parley with
principle! |

“* No, I will not !” said he ; but he said it feebly,
as if he were not at all sure—as if he wanted, if he
could, to deceive himself into a notion of his own
virtue. “No, I will not!” said he, again and again
-—“ at least, not to-day!” he should have added, to
be quite honest to himself.

The next week was Christmas week, and it had
been long an understood thing that Williams was to
have a holiday on Christmas-day : he ventured to
mention it to Mr. Osborne, spite of the unpleasant
“memory of the prescription. He had heard, he said,
how beautiful the gardens at Alton ‘Towers looked in
the winter, with snow on the ground and hoar-frost
on the trees; he hoped he might be permitted to go
there on Christmas-day. ‘‘ He would be very indus-
trious,” he said, “in future ;” and being once on the
subject, he launched out freely. “He was so sorry,
so ashamed,” he said, “‘of the blunder he had made.
Mr. Osborne had touched him so by his patience
and forbearance.” Mr. Osborne, himself, thought
that he had not shown much; but so the young
man said— “and would he only grant him this
82 DEEPER AND DEEPER.

favour now, he would show how grateful he was.”
On Mr. Osborne — plain, honest, straight-forward
man as he was, and with every tendency to the in-
dulgence of his nephew,—all this made the very
impression which was desired. ‘Poor fellow,”
thought he, “he is so cut up about that blunder ;
he has never looked like himself since—seems all in
a tremble and a dream ; one must not be too severe
with him !”

“Yes, surely, he might go ;’ but Mr. Osborne
could not imagine how there would be any pleasure
in going alone—could not Reynolds, too, have a holi-
day? Williams, who did not by any means think
of taking a companion like Reynolds, reminded
Mr. Osborne that Mr. Isaacs went out on Christmas-
day, too, and Reynolds was to have his holiday on
Christmas-eve with his aunts.

Miss Kendricks had not been to the Osbornes’ since
the little rencontre on Sunday morning ; both they
and the Osbornes still let the little affair rankle in
their minds. It was that sort of quarrel which
sometimes the merest trifle occasions between friends,
and whether it shall be healed, or whether it shall
become a wide and lasting breach, depends upon one
or other of them on the first occasion of anxiety r
sorrow. As yet, however, that occasion had not
presented itself, and Reynolds went to spend Christ-
mas-eve with his aunts without being the bearer of
any message from Mrs, Osborne. Such a thing had
never happened before. The Osbornes, also, were
spending Christmas-eve out, and nobody was left at
home but Mr. Isaacs and Williams.

With Williams it seemed as if the crisis of his fate
were come; he had formed his own plans both for
DEEPER AND DEFPER. 83.

that evening and the morrow ; as far as regarded that
evening, he had formed them in counsel with himself
and in desperation, and to the stifling of the voice
of conscience within him. “But what must be,
must,” said he ; “go there with her I must and shall,
and to go I must have money.”

His plans were, therefore, formed. Reynolds was
out of the way ; his uncle was So, too; and he made
himself sedulously useful in the shop ; he made pills,
and mixed emulsions for coughs and sold boxes of
issue-plaisters, and moved here and there with such
alacrity as astonished and delighted poor Mr. Isaacs,
who was racked that evening with toothache.

“Go and sit down by the parlour-fire,” said
Williams, as the time for shutting up the shop
approached, “TI ’ll make up the books and see that
all is left straight, and you go and make yourself
comfortable.”

Mr. Isaacs, well pleased to leave his post at the
desk, where a draught of cold air came in keenly
against his ailing tooth, went into the back-parlour,
and Williams had the shop all to himself. The
. warehouse-boy put up the shutters, raked out the
fire, and was dismissed for the night. Williams
added up the day-book, counted the money in the
till, put three-and-sixpence in his pocket, and entered
the amount, minus this, in the day-ledger ; and then,
unlocking the shop-safe with a trembling hand,
looked this way and that, and thought if Isaacs should
come in, or if Mr. Osborne should be returning early
by some chance, and peep through a crack of the
shutters. Oh, that miserable if! But why was he
so fearful! Alas, because he intended to take money
as he had already done from the till.
84 DEKPER AND DEFPER.

Oncé or twice before, Mr. Isaacs had found some
deficiency ; Mr. Osborne had never even suspected it ;
he would as soon have thought of his wife robbing
him as Williams.

The money was taken and dropped into the waist-
coat pocket ; the safe was locked, and double-locked.
If he could have seen his own face at that moment
he would have started. But he did not ; and, rallying
himself, he put out the shop-lights, and went into
the back-parlour, where the candles were burning
dimly with long, unsnuffed wicks, for poor Mr. Isaacs
was gone to bed.

There was nobody in the room; it was almost a
shock to be thus thrown, as it were, upon himself and
his own conscience.

“ Suppose,” thought he to himself, “‘ that, after all,
I have only taken silver, two shillings and sixpence ;
should I then go back and change them, though I
know what a horror this stealing is? I wish one had
no need to do it!”

He put his hand into his pocket and drew the
money forth to the light. It was gold—two guineas
and a half. He felt glad that it was so. The
next moment Reynolds returned—the gay, laughing,
unanxious Reynolds—Williams envied him his light-
ness of heart.

The next morning the church-bells rang ; the sun
shone bright, and the slight covering of snow and
hoar-frost was like the festal garment of nature. The
houses were decked with holly and ivy, people were
moving briskly about—the whole town was merry ;
even the paupers in the parish workhouse arose that
morning with cheerful expectation, for that day they
were to have roast-beef and plum-pudding for dinner.
DEEPER AND DEEPER. 85

Many people hired horses and gigs that day and
drove out into the country, so that there was nothing
at all remarkable in the circumstance of old Evans
driving one of his miserable hacks, which, however,
was made to wear its best looks that day, in one of
his smartest gigs, along the high street and half-a-
mile beyond the end of the town. Of this nobody
took any notice, and it was so contrived, also, that
nobody saw Williams, whose great-coat collar stood
up above his ears, whilst his hat was slouched over
his eyes, assist into the said gig Miss Bannerman,
dressed in a dark blue cloak trimmed with fur, and
a black velvet bonnet, and then take his seat beside
her, and drive off briskly. On they drove, and pre-
sently overtook two other gigs, in which were seated
five members, male and female, of the theatrical
corps, who, like them, were going to spend the day
in the gardens of Alton Towers. But as with these
other five persons we have very little to do, we shall
drop them for the present, and confine ourselves to
our young couple, just as if they were quite alone.

Williams was enraptured with his fair companion.
She looked lovelier than ever in that black velvet
bonnet ; the walk in the clear winter air had brought
a colour to her cheek like that of the June rose. She
was, indeed, very lovely—but not with that vulgar
loveliness which alone consists of beauty of com-
plexion, hair as dark and glossy as “the raven’s
wing, and “ dark, blue eyes, as soft as those of the
dove.” These she had, it is true; but that which
constituted the real charm of her countenance was a
sentiment of tenderness, calm decision, and truth and
love. It was a face to fill with tears the eyes of any
beholder capable of eppreciating qualities such as

I
86 DEEPER AND DEEPER.

these, in a being exposed to every temptation which
can assail beauty and taint the delicacy of woman.
Jessie Bannerman, though a “ player-wench,” as half
the town called her, was an extraordinary girl. She
knew her own personal worth, and her own dignity
as a woman, and she made her lovers feel it, too. It
is impossible to say what was the peculiar charm
which attracted her towards Williams, but to him she
had really given her affections ;—this she had never
denied, she was really in earnest in her love ;—and
Williams was never with her without feeling, as it
were, under the influence of a superior nature. He
fancied that he adored her, that he would have laid
down his life for her: he bought the pleasure of
being in her company at the expense of his own
probity ; and yet he felt sure all the time that could
she have only known this she would have rejected
pleasure at such a cost.

Beautiful as were those magnificent gardens, which
are said to be laid out on the traditional plan of the
hanging gardens of Babylon, the lovers took but little
notice of them ; he was engrossed by her, and she by
her own thoughts. At length they reached a pavi-
lion, which, lying in the full sunshine, was warm
almost asin summer, Here they seated themselves,
and Jessie, turning to the young man, said—

“Now, we have had enough of flattery and non-
sense—we must talk seriously. You have talked
hitherto ; you must now listen to me. My unhappy
family history, which you have heard, can only give
you the idea of me as of a creature sprung of
wretchedness and crime, to whom God has given, for
some mysterious purpose, remarkable gifts—gifts
worse than useless if I am to become only the poor
DEEPER AND DEEPER. 87

degraded being which my present life may seem to
foretell. But, Edward,” said she, fixing her large,
calm eyes upon him, “it must not be so; our
destinies, after all, are, in great measure, in our own
hands; a spirit within tells me So, and that spirit
shall be my guide,

“I have many lovers, but how few there are who
would marry such a one as me. I speak plainly,
Edward, for one of us must do 80; and as I have go
much more experience in life than you, and under-
stand you better even than you understand yourself, I
speak to you openly. You talk of marriage : what
nonsense it is of you, who are as yet a boy, and do
not know even your own mind! J believe that you
love me ; but as yet you do not understand me per-
fectly, for you have seen only that which is idle and
trifling in. me; but indeed I am capable of much that
is good and ennobling and valuable in life.”

* Oh, Jessie,” said the young man impatiently, and
ready to throw himself at her feet, “let us unite our
fates at once. 1 know what you are—TI wish you
not other than you are—let me rescue you from a
fate which is unworthy of you! My aunt is good.
When she knows your excellence she will love you
as a daughter: they love me, but how much more
will they love you!”

** All nonsense,” returned Jessie ; “ you talk like
a child, as you are; you, that dare not even let
them know of our acquaintance, to talk thus! No,
no; we must have patience, and wait for the true
time. You must wait for me for five years.”

“TI will go with you,” interrupted Williams ;
“ what is all the world to me without you! I know
that I, too, have talents—I would be prompter
88 DEEPER AND DEEPER.

even, or candle-snuffer, or anything to be near
you!”

Jessie laughed and shook her head—“ That would
never do,” said she; “ that would not satisfy me.
My father,” she continued, ‘‘ blames me for want of
amuvition ; but he mistakes me: I am ambitious—
ambitious of the greatest good which life can give,
and that is real love and domestic happiness! Not
such love as we act night after night, poor, unreal
love, all tinsel and glitter ;—no, no, the love that I
mean is self-denying, long-suffering, unobtrusive, as
free to the poor as to the rich. Oh, Edward, I was
ill not long ago ; the company went on without me,
and I and my good grandmother—for such she is—
remained in the house of a poor tailor. Would you
believe it, but it was truly in that house, and with
those humble people, that I first learned what true
Jove was, and what was the real meaning and worth
of life. Happiness there was a substantial thing, not
dependent on wealth or the world’s favour, for of
these they had nothing ; not wavering or uncertain,
according to the whim of the moment, but as real
and steadfast as life itself. Love was never talked of,
but they dwelt in its spirit; it was as if the atmo-
sphere of a better region filled the house ; the children
were born in it, and breathed it as their native air,
and they were good and kind like their parents. A
light then broke in upon my rind. My grandmother
saw and felt these things as [ did ;—she is not,
Edward, the deaf, stupid old woman which it is her
will to appear ; but that is her secret—she and I
understand each other. ‘The goal which I have set
before my ambition is a hore of love, and my prayers,

Heaven knows, are, that I may be kept pure and
DEEPER AND DEEPER, 89

made worthy of it. This is, perhaps, my religion :
in the eyes of thousands of good people I am but as a
poor outcast child of perdition—worse than & pagan,”

“ You are a real divine angel,” exclaimed the young
man ; “* Mrs. Osborne would love you—she must and
shall know you,” cried he, for at that moment every-
thing seemed easy tohim. “ When they know you
they will not Oppose our union. I will steadfastly
stick to business ; my uncle is not a poor man ; he
will, I am sure, give me a share in his business, [|
will work so hard for you, and we will be so happy.
I shall become good through you; I shall owe my
salvation to you !”

“Amen !” said Jessie, solemnly ; “but I, that am
wiser than you in some things, must guide you 4
little. You are yet an apprentice—I am yet under
my father’s control: a time will come when we shall
both be free. If you love me truly, you must wait
till then. Five years from now shall be our time
of trial. This is Christmas-day. You shall hear
from me on the fifth anniversary of this day, but
to me you shall not write. Five years from this
time our trial shall have ended. Can you be true
to me for so long ?—I know that I shall be true to
rou !”

' Lovers’ vows sound foolish ; therefore, we will not
write down the violent protestations with which
Williams responded to this singular proposal. He
swore that neither heaven nor earth could ever
change him—and at the time he thought so.

(For my part, I, that narrate this story, must here
put in, by way of parenthesis, that had I been present,
or had been in any way consulted, I should have

12
90 DEEPER AND DEEPER:

said that such a connection was of that doubtful
character, that, spite of Jessie’s really superior nature,
the best thing would have been to have put an end
to the whole affair as soon as possible. But, as
neither I nor anybody else of great discretion was
present, the lovers made this compact, and then, the
rest of the party joining them soon afterwards, they
all adjourned to the village inn to dinner.)

It was as merry a dinner as ever was eaten by a set
of‘poor players. They ate, and drank, and sung, and
told witty anecdotes, and were ten times freer and
easier than so many lords and ladies. The host and
the hostess came to the parlour door, and listened
and laughed too, and, spite of the really serious con-
versation which had passed between him and Jessie
in the garden, Williams caught the infection of the
company’s mirth, and was as gay as any of them.
Something was said of Mr. Goodman, and Williams,
who had always maintained that he had some talent
for acting, began to mimic his grave and measured
way of speaking. His personation was called for
again and again, and he was declared quite a genius.
Bassett, they said, could not do it half as well. They
then revealed to him asecret. Anderson, who had
the talent for writing little comic pieces of one or two
acts, had written one called “ The Parson in Love,”
intended to ridicule Mr. Goodman: there was a
young actress in the piece, Lucinda, who was to
personate a puritan lady, Mrs. Tabitha T wiggem, who
was to inveigle the clergyman, and lead him into
endless fooleries. Jessie was to take this character
and Bassett was to take that of Parson Perfect—and
. it was to be given out that he was a new actor from
DEEPER AND DEEPER. 91

London. Now Williams was so superior to Bassett
that if he would only consent to take the character
and act, they would manage it 3—they would put off
Bassett with something else, or let him act in another
piece,—but Williams must be their Parson Perfect ;
~—they would have no nay. Anderson, who was of
the party, had a scene in his pocket, Williams
must look it over and try it—he did so—Bravo!
bravissimo! they exclaimed: it was inimitable !
Parson Goodman would never show his face after
the public had seen that ; he would have had enough
of preaching against players! Williams, delighted
to excel Bassett in anything, consented to act. Jessie
heard all that went on, and did not oppose his acting.
It was very clever, she said, and much better than
she expected.

And now the company rose and began to talk of their
departure. It was already dusk, and bitterly cold.

“ Ah, my good fellow,” said Anderson, who was
deputed to be paymaster-general for the players, as
he saw Williams about to put his hand in his pocket
for his own share of the expenses—“ have you a few
spare shillings in your pocket, for the fellow has made
me a deuced great bill—let me see, have you five-and-
twenty ?”

Williams, who was in high good humour, and
greatly flattered by the applause which his acting
had obtained, drew out from his pocket a handful of
loose change.

“Ah! capital!” said Anderson, and took some-
where about seven-and-twenty shillings, saying,
“we 'll have a reckoning when we get home,”

Away drove the company. The snow, which had
thawed in the morning, had frozen again in the after-
92 DEEPER AND DEEPER.

noon, and it was terribly slippery, as well as cold,
The gigs drove off, agreeing, on account of the bad
State of the roads, to keep incompany. Williams
and Jessie were last. Perhaps Williams might be the
worst driver in the company; perhaps, and most
probably, his horse was the worst conditioned ; how-
ever that might be, within the first two miles their
companions got farahead of them, and with every mile
their horse seemed to become stiffer and clumsier $
at last, down he came, but, fortunately not lower
than his knees, Williams pulled him up again, and
giving him a series of cuts with his whip, broke that
useful instrument, but fortunately sent on his steed,
for a short time, at least, at a much brisker and there-
fore safer pace. Everybody knows what a hopeless
thing it is to drive a dull worn-out horse with a
broken whip ; slower and slower went the creature,
and Williams pommelled with the stump of his whip,
and flapped with his reins till he made himself quite
hot,

“ Ah! if our path through life should be like this,”
sighed poor Jessie; and scarcely had she finished
the sentence when down came the horse flat to
. his nose, with his legs doubled under him. Crash !
went one shaft, and out flew Williams on one side
and poor Jessie on the other. It was a miracle that
they were not both killed or had some bones broken.
Williams spraug to his feet, hardly knowing that he
was down, and with very becoming lover-like anxiety
flew to look after his lady. Fortunately she was
not hurt, not the least in the world, said she eagerly,
in her turn inquiring after him. No, they were not
either of them hurt—only Jessie then confessed to.a
. very little pain in her wrist ; she thought that she -
DEEPER AND DEEPER. 03

must have sprained it. Williams was in the greatest
distress—what was to be done? For her, nothing, she
said. There was a village just at hand, and thither
she would hasten for help, whilst he stayed with the
horse ; and off she went, firm-footed as a young roe.
The village was just by, and the most ready help was
obtained at the first house. Men returned with her,
with rope and lanterns, and presently the horse was
on his legs again, not looking much worse than before,
excepting for his broken knees; the shaft was tied
together, and they were assured that there would be
no difficulty about going forward, as the road was
well tracked beyond the village, besides which, a
peasant offered, for half-a-crown, to accompany them
to the town with a lantern.

Very little was said by the lovers during the
remainder of their journey. Jessie seemed sunk in
thought, and so was Williams, for he was really
frightened to think how he should get off with Evans,
regarding the broken shaft and the broken knees of
the horse. ‘Money, he knew, would make all straight ;
but where in the world was the money to come from?
He did not believe that he had more than a guinea
left ; thirteen shillings he had to pay for the hire of
the horse and gig, and half-a-crown must go to the
man with the lantern.

How those anxieties about money thrust them-
selves like evil demons between us and our pleasures
——nay, even between us and our comforts! We
have known many a dinner spoiled by the thought
of the cost ; many a good night’s rest broken because
some dire thought or other about want of cash has
been gnawing at our heart! And thus it was with
Williams ; all the day’s pleasure was spoiled to him

.
94 DEEPER AND DEEPER.

now by the thought of the reckoning. At length the
unfortunate steed stopped at the gate which led to
his stable. It was not so late after all; it was only
eight o'clock. Their companions had arrived long
before and were all dispersed ; but the first person
whom Williams saw on dismounting was no other
than Reynolds, who, on his side, stared in amaze-
ment, and then looked reproachfully. He had then
been with that young actress to Alton! This was
what he wanted the holiday for !

Without, however, waiting for a word from him,
Williams called him aside, and putting the guinea
into his hand, said, “ Just run over, there’s a good
fellow, to Reeves’s”—this was a smal] druggist and
grocer’s shop opposite, which Mr. Osborne supplied —
“ and get me change,” for Williams knew that if he
offered the full sum to Evans he should get no change,
and change he must have to dismiss the peasant.

Reynolds, amazed as he was, yet thinking no
harm, for he had always seen Williams with plenty
of money, brought back the change.

‘* And now stop one moment with Miss Banner-
man, said he, “ whilst I get the fellow paid,” for
Williams preferred doing this alone. Reynolds,
though full of prejudices against players, both male
and female, could not refuse, and Williams soon after
joined them, when both young men having accom-
panied Jessie to the patten-maker’s door, went home
together, but not before Williams had prescribed
bandages and fomentations for the sprained wrist, and
had promised to bring her that very night an embro-
cation himself. ‘isa,

If Williams had before been unfit to attend to his
business, he was much more so now. J essie was never

<&.
DEEPER AND DEEPER. 95

out of his thoughts ; considering that his aunt and
uncle as it were espoused the cause of the players, he
was for ever scheming whether he could not bring
Jessie and his aunt acquainted ; he thought of her
being adopted as a daughter into the family—he
thought of a thousand unlikely things—in fact, in
the excited state of mind he then was, he could not
tell probable from improbable things; not at all!
He even thought of getting the two guineas which
Evans demanded for the damaged horse and gig from
poor Reynolds. Reynolds could borrow the money
from his aunts as if on his own account, he thought,

Thus pondered and thus schemed Williams, and
in the mean time his friends the players were pre-
paring to bring out the new comedy of “‘ The Parson
in Love ;” the character of Parson Perfect to be
performed by “a new actor from London,” and the
double character of Lucinda and TabithaT wiggem by
Miss Jessie Bannerman.

Williams duly received his part in MS., which he
privately learned and rehearsed, not daring, for the
life of him, however, to take Reynolds into his con-
fidence on this subject, for ever since the night of
the Fair Quaker of Deal he had been as vehement
against players and playgoers as his aunts or Mr.
Goodman himself.

A rehearsal of the whole piece was proposed at
Mr. Maxwell’s lodgings on Sunday afternoon, and
thither of course Williams was summoned. But
when he got there something very peculiar presented
itself. There was ‘Tom Bassett, to whom also a
copy of the part of Parson Perfect had been sent—
there he was, come to rehearse his part, and had
brought with him an order for five-and-twenty
96 DEEPER AND DEEPER.

tickets. How was this? both young men seemed
to inquire—but there was nobody to answer them—
the whole theatrical staff seemed to be in the next
room, which was Mr. Maxwell’s bed-room. Voices
were heard in this said bed-room, loud voices and
angry voices, too, and now and then the two rival
amateur-actors had the pleasure of hearing their own
names mentioned.

To pass away the awkward time, and to seem at his
ease, Williams threw himself into an arm-chair
and drew his manuscript from his pocket, and began
to turn it over. Bassett seeing this, and instantly
detecting that his rival's part actually was his own,
pulled out his also, and seating himself opposite,
glanced from the paper in his hand at his rival, with
no very amicable expression of countenance. Just
as Williams was about to return the expression the
door opened, and in walked Jessie. She bowed
courteously to both young men, and thus addressed
them :—

“There has been a strange and almost ludicrous
mistake made with regard to the part of Parson
Perfect. Mr. Anderson, it seems, intended it for
Mr. Williams.”

“* He himself offered it to me, my dear Miss
Bannerman,” interrupted Bassett.

Jessie waved her hand, and continued, * Mr.
Anderson says that it was his wish that Mr. Williams
should take the character. Mr. Maxwell on the
contrary very much prefers Mr. Bassett having it.
Very warm words,” said she, smiling, ‘* as no doubt
you have heard—for the walls are thin—have arisen
on the subject. This, however, is their decisian,

that I, who take the part of Lucinda, shall make the
THE BUBBLE BuRsT. 97

choice between you. Will you, gentlemen, give me
your hands to be satisfied with my decision, and not
let ill-will arise between you in consequence, for to
one I must show a preference ?”

* We will be quite satisfied,” said they both, each
sure of the preference, and took the offered hand,
which was extended with the sweetest of smiles,

“Then, Mr, Bassett,” said she, “you take the
part. You are Parson Perfect and I Lucinda.”

Williams dashed his manuscript to the floor and
looked daggers at them both.

|
CHAPTER VII,

THE BUBBLE BURST.

Tue next day the walls were placarded ; the new
comedy of The Parson in Love was to be acted with
new scenery, new actors, and endless new attractions,
The sight was gall and wormwood to Williams. He
had nevertheless in the bottom of his soul the convic-
tion that Jessie’s decision was influenced by some
feeling of advantage or propriety as regarded himself,
but still he was mortified. In the eyes of his rival
he was rejected.

The whole town talked of the new piece; a
rumour got abroad that Mr. Goodman was to be
quizzed. Some of the young actors’ pranks in the
town had caused a little scandal ; the public mind
was inclining against them. Good, sober house-
keepers found their servants’ heads turned about the
theatre ; housemaids read plays while they should
have made beds; cooks gossiped for whole hours
at the bakehouse about the handsome actors and
actresses. Everything was evidently going wrong.

K
98 THE BUBBLE BURST,

“It is high time those people left the town,”
said those who were just beginning to veer to the
clergyman’s side,

“ Those disreputable people ought to be packed
off by authority,” said they who had thought with
the clergyman all the time ; “and if they venture
to ridicule him in their obscene plays, they shal
be packed off—and that handily.”

Williams had told Jessie that he would not g0
to the theatre that night ; that he could not bear
to see her acting with. Bassett, It would drive
him mad, he said. Jessie did not urge it, and he
was almost out of his mind with jealousy and cha-
grin. It is possible, however, that, after all, he
might have gone, had it not been for an awkward
affair which just then happened.

Mr. Osborne and Mr. Isaacs were together in the
shop, when Mr. Reeves came in, and scratching his
head, said, “ Is young Reynolds anywhere about 2”

He was not, said Mr. Isaacs, he was gone into the
country on business,

“Why, you see,” said Reeves, addressing Mr.
Isaacs, and leaning on the counter with both his
elbows, and taking a guinea from his pocket—“ that
young gentleman got me to give him change, maybe
a fortnight ago—on the evening of Christmas-day.
Now it is an awkward thing to come with money so
long afterwards—but I put the guinea aside at the
time—I'll swear to it that jt ’s the same—and
now you see it’s light weight. But young Mr,
Reynolds will know all about it in @ minute.”

Long before this speech was ended, Mr. Osborne,
who had come round the counter, took the guinea
' Out of Reeves’s hand and carefully examined it,
THE BUBBLE BURST. 99

He then went to his money-safe, and looking among
his gold came back and asked Isaacs in an under-
tone from whom he had the guinea?

“From Reynolds,” returned Isaacs, and went on
industriously polishing a pair of scales.

Williams came in at that moment, but Reeves
was so often there on business that he took no
notice, and seating himself at the apprentices’ desk
began to think of Jessie and the play.

“We will have it made right, Mr. Reeves,” said
Mr. Osborne hurriedly, when Williams came in.
‘* Mr. Isaacs shall see you to-morrow.”

When Reynolds returned in the evening he was
summoned to Mr. Osborne’s presence, who, producing
the guinea, asked, “ Do you know anything of this
guinea ?”

Reynolds took it into his hand, and examining it,
returned it, saying that he did not.

“Did you,” inquired his master, “get change
some little time ago from Mr. Reeves for a guinea?”

Reynolds changed colour slightly, and after a
moment’s pause, said, ** I did.” |

‘* And whence had you the guinea ?” asked he.

Reynolds looked confused and was silent.

** There is something singular in this,” said Mr.
Osborne, “I must have an answer. The money
was in my possession a little time ago. I knew
it to be light, and marked it with a penknife that
I might not pay it away. It has gone from my
cash-box. I may have paid it away by mistake—
but then how came it into your hands, or why do you
refuse to account for it? I would not willingly
suspect.”

“ Sir,” interrupted Reynolds, “I am innocent of
100 THE BUBBLE BURST.

what you suspect—I never took a sixpence which
was not my own—but yet of that money I cannot
give an account.”

“ It looks suspicious,” said Mr. Osborne.

“It does,” said Reynolds, “but that I cannot
help—all I can ask igs four-and-twenty hours for
consideration.”

“ You shall have it,” said Mr. Osborne.

It was Mr. Isaacs’s custom after seven o clock to
sit in the back parlour, where he read the newspaper,
or dozed a little,—after that time the apprentices
were alone.

“ Williams,” said Reynolds, as soon as he was
gone, “you have got me into a pretty scrape about
changing that guinea for you.”

Williams felt as if his very heart grew chill.

“It -was light weight,” said Reynolds, “and
Reeves has brought it back again. Mr. Osborne in-
sists on knowing how I came by it; there was, it
seems, his private mark on it,”

“ How came he to know anything about it?’
asked Williams angrily. Reynolds told,

“ The deuce take it!” muttered Williams.

“ Well,” said Reynolds, “ it is your own affair, you
know. I have confessed nothing, because I would not
betray you—but if blame there be about it—you
must bear it. I am innocent and can clear myself in
& minute, and would have done so if it had not been
for getting you into trouble about that girl.”

“ The deuce take it,” again muttered Williams,

“ You must make up your mind about what
you ‘ll do,” said Reynolds, “ I shall clear myself to-
morrow.”

“ Clear yourself, and be hanged to you,” returned
oo
THE BUBBLE BURST. 101

Williams—“clearing one’s-self is easy enough—what,
do you take me fora thief? It’s easy enough to
clear myself about the money—I don’t look at every
guinea that is given me—I received only the other
day some money from Mrs. Osborne !—What a fuss
is here about the money !—but the point is not to let
it come out about taking Miss Bannerman to Alton.
And then there is that wretched Evans dunning
about his old dog-tit of a horse and his tumble-down
gig—I was a fool for ever going tohim! The fellow
is as importunate as death. Now, I say, Reynolds,
cannot you borrow the money for me? Won't your
aunts or somebody lend it you?”

“You owe me already two pounds fifteen,” said
- Reynolds,—“ and as to borrowing from my aunts I do
not believe that they will lend me any.”

“Oh, for heaven's sake, go and try!” said Wil-
liams, deeply excited—“ this shall be the last time
that I ever will borrow from you. I'll turn overa
new leaf, I do assure you I will! Ill be as steady
as you are!”

We need not go through all the conversation that
ensued, the flatteries, the entreaties, the confessions
of past folly and extravagance, and the humble, con-
trite promises of amendment, all of which so worked
upon Reynolds that he consented to make one more
attack on his aunts. | 7

When he reached his aunts, he found them in a
state-of vast excitement. Mrs. Proctor, the great
town gossip, had just been there, and had brought a
* long exaggerated history of how the heads of-all the
apprentices in the town were turned with the players,
and how, in particular, both of Mr. Osborne’s young
men were in love with one of them; they had been

K 2
a
102 THE BUBBLE BURST.

seen walking late at night with that good-for-nothing
Bannerman ; they had hired gigs for her and driven
about the country with her, and spent money upon
her without end.—There was a bunch of flowers
that somebody had given her—no doubt one of them
—which cost fifteen shillings, and which Mary
Parker, the butter-buyer, had brought by order from
a gardener’s in Birmingham. It was a sin and a
shame that they were allowed to remain in the town,
for thus these young men might be led into practices
that might ruin them for life.

As he entered he found his aunt Joanna with her
bonnet and cloak on, and with her servant dressed
also, and with a lantern in her hand. Joanna, late
as it was, full of zeal for the good name of her nephew,
was setting out to Evans's, to make him recall his
words withy regard to her nephew taking out the
players in gigs. She knew, she said, that Evans was
wrong, and those who were to blame should bear the
blame, and not the innocent. It was in vain that
Reynolds made light of the matter as regarded him-
self; she was bent upon vindicating him, and he,
half in anger and half with miserable apprehension
‘or his friend, whose cause he felt as if he must
espouse, sat down with his aunt Dorothy to wait
the other’s return.

On her return she came fraught with new tidings.
It was Williams who had hired the gig; he had
taken a tribe of players with him to Alton, had
treated them at the inn, where they had all got
drunk, and in driving home like so many mad
folks Williams had thrown down his horse, ruined
it for ever, and broken the gig into the bargain.

* This comes,” said Miss Kendrick, “of Mr.
THE BUBBLE BURSTi 103

Osborne's encouraging those abandotied people ; con-
sidering what might be the naturabiand inherited
impulses of Williams, Mr. Osborne ought to have
been doubly on his guard. But he has sown in
the whirlwind and he may reap in the storm,”
said Joanna with emphasis.

Reynolds fired up at once. ‘“‘ It was not generous
to be ripping up poor Williams's family misfortunes
—what would she say if people did so by him ; he
never would stand by silently and hear his friend
thus spoken of.”

It was a luckless rencontre. There was always 4
something in what the one said to excite the other.
Poor Dorothy tried to make peace between them,
but did not succeed. However, the end of it was
that Reynolds must stay supper with them, and
then, grown quite bold and desperate, he asked his
aunts to lend him two guineas.

Joanna actually started ; “ here was more of the
devil's work,” she said, adopting for the first time
the clergyman’s phrase—‘‘no, she would not lend
him a sixpence.”

“ T will,” said Dorothy, “ not that I am satisfied of
all being right. But if he have done wrong we will
hope that he may do so no more. We must endeavour
to rule by love and not by severity, Joanna.”

Reynolds returned home with the money.

There was not a deal of sleeping at the Osbornes’
that night. Mr. and Mrs. Osborne talked over,
with the deepest sorrow, the sad discovery which
they believed was about to be made regarding
Reynolds ; he who had seemed so steady, so, almost
religious—how they grieved for his poor aunts.
All the little pique was forgotten. Mrs. Osborne
104 THE BUBBLE BURST.

felt as if, from this time forth, she should show
them nothing but kindness, for this was indeed a sore
grief that would cut them up sadly, “ Poor Miss
Kendricks!” that was the beginning and the end of
their consultations.

Very little sleep, too, was there in the apprentices’
room; none at all in Williams's bed. Now he
thought of throwing himself at his aunt and uncle’s
feet, and confessing his love for Jessie and begging them
to see and to hear her—if he could not move them,
he was sure she could! Now he thought of confess-
ing to having taken the money, and leaving Jessie to
stand or fall, trusting to the future as regarded her;
for their own credit’s sake, he believed that they
would shield him from public disgrace; then he
tried how it would be if he steadfastly declared the
light guinea to have been given him by Mrs, Osborne
—but then came the difficulty about its being
changed at Reeves’s, It was a bad, entangled affair,
and he vowed with himself, that once clear of it, and
all his little debts paid, he never would get into any
such mess again !

The next morning he was up early, and set out to
pay Evans and have done with him. Unfortunately,
however, he went a little out of his way that he
might pass the patten-maker’s, and thus have the
pleasure of passing the house that held Jessie. A
slight tap at the parlour-window arrested his steps.
It was old Mrs, Bellamy, who in her old night-cap
stood there, and beckoned him in. Jessie was down
also, and, early as it was, they were going to breakfast.

“ We shall not now remain many days here,” said
Jessie on his entrance, “ if, indeed, many hours,
You are angry with me I know, but you will pre-~
THE BUBBLE BURST. 105

sently see that it was the truest regard for you which
influenced my decision. This wretched pasquinade
was not my doing ; and when you hear those who are
really good and excellent in the town—among the
rest the Osbornes—censuring me for my part in ‘it,
then, remember, I was but as the puppet; others
pulled the wires; had I been a free agent it should
not have beenso. But Edward,” said she solemnly,
“if you hear the worst and the most unjust things said
against me, do not bring yourself into trouble by
defending me. You know me better than they, and
that is enough.” 7 |

“You shall not go with these people!” said
Williams. “Oh, if Mrs. Osborne did but know you !”

“It is impossible,” returned Jessie, “ she, like
everybody else, will take against me. You will hear
how we shall be abused ; it will be a disgrace to have
been acquainted with us. AllI ask, then, is, that in
your own heart you will not disown me. Never
mention my name—but oh, Edward !” said she, with
tears in her eyes—“ if young men ever have serious
moments of prayer—then remember me.” |

The young man made the most passionate vows of
fidelity. |

“And now,” said she, “ we part—you must not
attempt to see me again. We shall meet again—but
not yet—in five years—and then, perhaps, not to
part again.—Till then, farewell ! ”

There was something so singular and solemn in
her manner, that Williams felt almost awed. He
seemed to himself to stand like a block, and do
nothing—what was vowing fidelity—he must give
her some token of his truth. He had not a ring to
break between them, but he had a guinea—he rushed
out to the patten-maker's shop and cut a guinea in
106 THE BUBBLE BURST.
two. “ Here is gold broken between us,” said he,

“ keep one half for my sake !”

“It is cut, not broken,” said the old woman,
“ and that is unlucky.”

“Money,” said Jessie, ‘ was not needed between
us—what nonsense it was to do so—a lock of your
hair would have been better—or, best of all, nothing
—for true-love needs no token—yet I will not refuse
your gift,” said she, putting the gold into her bosom.
~—Now farewell—and when I am evil spoken of—do
not let your heart be ashamed of me! ”

“* Never,” said Williams; “ the worse they say the
better shall I love you!”

No sooner was Williams ont of the house than he
thought how foolishly he had done in sacrificing the
guinea! How much wiser she was than himself !
He could not now pay Evans, and there was nothing
to do but go home to breakfast.

“It never rains but it pours,” says one proverb; and
another, which means the same thing, says that
“ misfortunes never come alone.” It was so now with
poor Williams. But before he reached home we must
mention what he saw as he left the patten-maker’s
door. A group of men and boys were tearing down
from the walls the players’ bills, and daubing those
which they could not reach, with mud. It was as
Jessie had said; public abhorrence had set in against
the players.

When Williams arrived at home, who should be
standing in the shop but Evans ; fortunately Reynolds
alone was there.

“Oh,” said Williams, without allowing Evans
time to speak, “ I have been in search of you—there’s
a guinea for you. What do you come after me for 2?”

““ After you,” said Evans, looking at the guinea
THE BUBBLE BURST. 107

with disdain, “ why am I to be overhauled as I was
by Miss Kendrick last night, as an abettor of players
and the very scum of the earth ; why ? I say, and I'll
ask it of any man!”

“Ask who you will,” returned Williams in an
agitated voice, “ but, for Heaven’s sake, begone with
you. You know that I mean to pay you honestly.—
I set out this morning to pay you.—N ow, for
Heaven's sake, I would not that Mr, Osborne knew
anything about it ! ”

** Will you pay me or not ?” asked Evans doggedly,
holding out his hand with the one guinea in it.

“Are you indebted two guineas to this man for
mischief done to a horse and gig hired by you to take
a player to Alton on Christmas-day?” asked Mr,
Osborne in an awful voice close behind him.

He saw that he was betrayed, and turning pale as
death he said not a word.

Evans, who really was not a bad-hearted man, was
sorry in a moment for what he had done, and began
to apologise—he could wait—he was sorry, only he
had been provoked, &c.

It was too late either to be sorry or to apologise.
Mr. Osborne again sternly demanded from his nephew
if the money were due—if he had promised to pay it.

“He makes that demand,” said Williams, “ but
the horse was broken-knee’d and broken-winded—”

Mr. Osborne cut his explanation short by putting
another guinea into Evans’s hand and bidding him go
about his business.

With a sad countenance Mr. and Mrs. Osborne sat
down to breakfast. Everybody were drinking their
coffee in silence, when a loud knock at the private
door startled them all. The next moment the Rev.
Mr. Goodman entered; and Mr. Isaacs, who had not
108 THE BUBBLE BURST.

made half a breakfast, rose from his chair and went
out. The two apprentices were about doing the same
thing, when Mr. Goodman begged that they might
stay. He seemed very much excited; he came, he
said, to complain of the vile, obscene pasquinade,
which had been acted the night before, and in which
he heard with sorrow and the deepest astonishment
that a character intended to ridicule himself had been
performed by this young man, said he, pointing to
Williams, and with this he drew from his pocket a
play-bill, and pointed out, “ Parson Perfect—a young
amateur actor from London.”

** You are under a mistake, my dear sir,” said good
Mr. Osborne, really glad to be able to defend hisnephew.

“I think I may go,” said Reynolds, anxious not to
witness the trouble which he feared hung over his
friend.

“ You may not go,” said the clergyman sternly.
“ [have promised your excellent aunts to question
you. I thought well of you, Reynolds,” said he
mournfully—*“ it has cut me to the heart to be
deceived in you !”

** And what have I done 2” asked he.

“ This impatience is unbecoming,” said the clergy-
man, “yery unbecoming! Can you deny that you
walked up and down the town, arm-in-arm, with that
young girl, Barnerman, on Christmas-day-night ?”

As Reynolds was about to reply, Miss Kendrick
walked ia, and scarcely. was she seated when in
rushed Mrs. Proctor, regardless of times and seasons,
She came with a budget of news; but nobody could
listen to her, and she went out again with something
more interesting than all the rest to spread abroad,
and that was of the awful conclave that was sitting
- in Mr. Osborne’s parlour,
PART II.

CHAPTER I.
OLD ACQUAINTANCE AND NEW.

Mrs, Procror and her favourite friend and gossip,
Mrs, Morley, who now, after an absence of some
years, had returned to reside again in the town, were
sitting together at tea. The little white muslin blind
was taken down from the window, for they wanted
to have a good view of a funeral that was about to
take place. Mrs. Proctor fortunately lived just by
the church, so that she consequently saw all the
marriages and funerals, and mostly invited some of
her friends to see them with her. The funeral-bell
now tolled solemnly ; the sun shone calmly over the
beautiful church-yard, and on the open grave, and on
the slow procession that now advanced towards it.
The ladies at their window made their remarks; “it
was a very handsome funeral ; the very first people
of the town at it, and no wonder, for Mr. Osborne
was respected by everybody.—And there was young
Williams, whom the Osbornes had adopted as their
son—what a handsome young man he was, and how
well he looked in his mourning !”

L
110 OLD ACQUAINTANCE AND NEW.

Thus they made their comments and then sat down
to talk.

‘Well, I ‘ve heard say,” said Mrs. Proctor, “ that
young Williams is as a relation of theirs—some sup-
pose a son of that poor Phebe Phillips, Mrs.
Osborne’s sister, that married so badly—but I don’t
know—it may or it may not—however, you see, they
were always very fond of him, and behaved to him as
if he were their own son. When there wasall that
stir and scandal about the players! Lord, what a stir
it made! They took his part and cleared him through
thick and thin—though folks said there was some-
thing very scandalous and shameful, if it could only
have come out. Nobody knew justly what it was,
but those Miss Kendricks, who after that time were
ten times more intimate than ever,—and Mr. Good-
man, who was vicar here at that time. Well, as I
was saying, after all that scandal, poor Mrs. Osborne
never rightly was herself again. She had no regular
complaint, but she got ailing ; now she went here and
now there—now for change of air, now for mineral
waters, and now for sea-bathing. It was well for
Mr. Osborne that he had such a trustworthy person
in his shop as Mr.-Isaacs—young Reynolds was out
of his time and was gone—was gone to some great
house in London—his aunts thought of making
something out of the common way of him-~and it
was weli I say that Mr. Osborne had that steady Mr.
Isaacs with him, for after his wife was so poorly he
never rightly cared about business—there ain't many
such husbands ! ” “

‘© I’ve heard say,” remarked Mrs. Morley, “ that
it was a love-match at first.”

“ Like enough,” returned her friend, “ and old
OLD ACQUAINTANCE AND NEW. Ill

folks as they were, they were like lovers to the last.
Folks said,” continued she, “ that all the trouble he
had with his apprentices made him sick of business,
and so he made Isaacs a sort of partner, and turned all
management over tohim. Young Williams was gone
too—and then after three or four years they sent for
Reynolds again—old Isaacs couldn’t do without him
—and when he came, Lord, what changes he brought
with him—he ’d got new notions in London—must
have the old shop-front out—puts up new windows.
—-Inside and outside all was changed—begins some
sort of manufacturing—gets head-man at once—
Williams then comes back too—a fine young man
indeed is he! —puts on a shop-apron again and buckles
to—but anybody could plainly see that it was only to
please the old folks. She died, however, and then
when she was gone the old man wasa regular wreck—
broken-up in no time!—Why he was only sixty-
nine when he died !—”

“ I’ve heard Nurse Gee say,” remarked Mrs. Mor-
ley, “ that it was quite cutting to hear him in his
dreams talking to her—and then when he woke and
found how it was—it was up with him for days.—He
got quite cliildish before he died.—I wonder how he
has left his property ¢”

Some weeks after this the ladies were again
together, and with them Miss Jenkins, who was
cousin to Lawyer Bishop’s wife, afid she it was who
had first brought the news to her friends that Mr.
Osborne’s will had surprised everybody—he had left
positively twenty thousand pounds, every penny of
which went to Williams, without a farthing’s legacy
to go out of it. His house and business he left
jointly to old Isaacs, Reynolds, and young Williams,
112 OLD ACQUAINTANCE AND NEW.

only Williams’s name was to stand first in the firm.

The ladies were again talking on this subject,
which was not easily exhausted, when another was
introduced in consequence of a small modest-looking
card being brought in by Mrs. Proctor’s maid, and
which ran thus, ‘‘ Marianne Jervis, Miniature-painter,
and Teacher of Fancy Work of all kinds, at Mrs.
Cope’s, Milliner, Balance Street.”

“ Oh,” said Miss Jenkins, recognising the card at
first sight, “ that is really a wonderful girl, have you
seen none of her work? She does all kinds of work
—paints miniatures delightfully —does poonah
painting, and makes rice-paper flowers and wax
flowers—just like life—and makes bags of bead-
work ; and paints screens ; and does everything ; and
so cheap—it’s wonderful !—You may find your own
materials if you like ; and she makes them up beau-
tiful! Mrs. Tom Bevington has bought some wax
flowers from her, and my cousin Mrs. Bishop is going
to have her to paint the baby, and the black spaniel.
She has Mrs. Cope’s parlour: there is her father with
her, a very old-looking man, who goes about with
little packets of stationery, boxes of steel-pens, wafers
and sealing-wax, wrapped up together, saying that,
‘ all these are for one shiJling only :’ he leaves them
one day and calls for them the next; and looks likea
broken- down gentleman.”

“‘ He has been here,” said Mrs. Proctor, “ but I
make a principle of never encouraging beggars of
any kind.”

“ They are not exactly beggars,” said Miss Jenkins,
who had established herself as a patroness of the
young artiste—“ and she is the loveliest little
creature you ever saw, so smal] and delicately
OLD ACQUAINTANCE AND NEW. 113

made; with a complexion like marble; and yet
pretty as she is, she is so steady and so kind to her
father, and works so hard—Mrs. Cope says she is
always up till after midnight.— Have you never seen
her?” asked she—neither of the ladies could recollect
having done so—but how did she dress ?

‘¢ Always in black,” returned Miss Jenkins, “ in a
black stuff frock, little black cloak, and a close black
chip bonnet.”

No, the ladies had never seen her, nor had they
much desire to see her. There was something mostly
not quite right about such people. Many thought
that Mrs. Cope, considering that she was now a
widow, and had just begun business, ought to mind
whom she took into her house. She got into a sad
scrape some years ago, when her husband was living,
with having some good-for-nothing players lodging
there. They wished, for her sake, that it might all
turn out right. .

We will now, the friendly reader and myself, look
into that same little parlour, which formerly we
called the patten-maker’s, but which for the last
twelve months served the patten-maker’s widow as
her little show-room ; but which now she had let,
business not being very successful, to the young
miniature-painter and maker of fancy-work, and her
dejected-looking father.

“ And, father dear, don’t be cast down,” said the
young girl, “ I am sure that he would not have the
heart purposely to avoid you. There must be some
accident about the Ictter being returned ; depend
upon it, one so young, and brought up with such
good people, must be good like them. All will be
right in time; only, father dear, do not be cast

L 2
114 - OLD ACQUAINTANCE AND NEW.

down !” said she, throwing her arms round his neck,
and playfully twisting her small fingers in his thin
gray hair. ‘ It has not been combed,” said she, “ all
the morning;” and, taking a small case-comb from her
father’s waistcoat pocket, she began smoothing and
arranging his hair. It seemed to have a soothing influ-
ence on him; he sat still, and his face grew calmer.

“ Well, well, child,” said he at length, putting her
gently from him, “ I must be going, and if I am not
back to-night, don’t be alarmed. I shall go round
by Lichfield and Burton, and may be absent two or
three days.”

“ But I must know, first of all,” said she, cheer-
fully, “that all is ready for your journey. Have
you got your night-cap? Nay, I must see it before I
can believe. Ah, good, yes! And your gloves? and
let me see that there are no holes in them. Sit down
like a dear father, while I mend them ; you will have
walking enough before you come back!” and, so
saying, the dear, cheerful, little creature took out
her little needle-book and thimble, and mended up
the old gloves as tidily as if they had been new,
though anybody but she would have said that they
were past mending months ago. How like the most
skilful of valets she brushed his old coat, which, like
his gloves, had seen its best days long ago, chatting
and singing all the while like a spirit of love and
gladness as she was.

When all these little offices were done for him, and.
the neat little paper of sandwiches put into his pocket
before his eye, and he duly warned to remember that.
he had them with him, and not to do as he did some-
times, go famishing all day, and then bring them
home dry in his pocket at night—which she assured
A OCONTRE-TEMPS. 115

him was anything but economical.— When all this
was done, and his blue camlet-bag, which looked very
much like a lawyer's, and which contained his neat
little packets of stationery, was set on the table
before him, she brushed his hat, and set his stick
ready for him; and then kissing him, woke him
from a reverie into which he had fallen.

Poor man! he looked harassed and weary, and
not fit to begin a foot-journey, even of two days;
and so his daughter thought, and at another time she
might have urged his staying at home, but now she
had reasons of her own for wishing him out of the
way, at least for a little while; so begging him always
to keep the shady side of the road, and not to be
afraid of spending sixpence or a shilling in getting an
occasional lift in a returned chaise or even a cart,
and never to walk too far without resting, she did
her best to speed him on his way, and the poor day~
dreaming, unfortunate man took up his bag and stick,
and, kissing her tenderly, went out.

CHAPTER II.
A CONTRE-TEMPS.

As soon as her father was gone, she set herself
busily to work; first of all, she took all her little
store of fancy-work and painting out of the window,
dusted the inside of the window, blew every particle
of dust from the various articles, and thought to
herself how fortunate it was that this window lay to
the north, and thus had so little sun to fade the
things, though it was a pity that even here the flies
made such work over everything. But, however,
all was now neatly arranged in the window, an@she
116 A CONTRE-TEMPS.

thought that they had never looked so nice before ;
next she set out her little table with her drawing
materials, and reared up the miniature of Mrs. Bishop's
chubby baby, which was not at all amiss, and the large
drawing of the black spaniel, and made everything
look neat and business-like, that if Mrs. Cope had to
bring anybody in during her absence, things might
look to advantage.

All this ended, and nobody in this world could make
poverty wear a fairer face than Marianne, she went
into her little chamber to dress. She had her own
reasons for wishing to look very charming this morning.
She had often been to the smart new-fronted shop of
Williams, Isaacs, and Co. ; she had been sent there by
her father for wafers and ingredicnts for his cheap
sealing-wax ; and old Mr. Isaacs and young Mr.
Reynolds had taken great notice of her; Williams
she had never seen. Some way or other young
Reynolds always served her ; she liked to be served
by him in preference to any one, and whenever she
had been to the shop, he could never think of any-
thing but her all day long, and many a night he had
dreamed of her. She had done the very same thing
by him. He talked of sitting for his miniature, and
she wished with all her heart that he would.

Marianne knew her father's history, knew the
reason for his coming to that town. It was the
parable of the prodigal son reversed—it was the pro-
digal father seeking reconciliation with his fortunate
son. He had sought for that reconciliation, and had
been repulsed, disowned, treated as an impostor, and
now his humble, touching letter had been returned
unanswered. Hae was disheartened, wounded, crushed
to the earth. He understood that his son passed much
A CONTRE-TEMBS. 117

of his time at Burton; to Burton therefore he went,
but without explaining his intention to his daughter,
determined to have an interview, and to drag pity
and justice from him. Marianne, knowing her father's
unsuccess, doubted in her own mind if he had gone
wisely to work. She could not conceive her brother
to be the harsh, proud, cold-hearted being that her
father had found him. Her father had forbidden her
interfering, but now, however, she was resolved to
make the attempt upon her own responsibility, and
her good, hopeful heart said that she would succeed.

She was still dressed in the black stuff frock, little
black cloak, and chip bonnet, but when she went.
tripping down stairs, and through Mrs. Cope’s room,
that good woman thought she had never seen her look
so gay and lovely. “ What in the world has the young
creature in hand,” said she, as she looked down the
street after her, “* she is a good angel, bless her little
heart! that she is!”

Down the street went Marianne, and across the
next, right up to the smart chemist’s shop, where
stood Reynolds, looking very gay and smart too, while
two apprentices and old Mr. Isaacs were attending to
customers, Reynolds, like Mrs. Cope, thoyght that
he had never seen Marianne look so charming before,
—there was a half-timid, half-trustful, and most
peculiar expression, so good, so kind, yet so modest,
in her face, as she looked at him, and asked for two-
_ pennyworth of Indian rubber. He flew behind the
counter, took out a drawer, picked out the very
nicest pieces, all square and smooth, and every one of
them sixpence a piece.

“Ts this two-pence?” asked she, taking up the
very largest and nicest.
118 A CONTRE-TEMPS.

** It is,” said he.

She took two-pence from her little black silk bag,
and wrapping them up in a small piece of writing
paper, on which some words were written, gave them
to him.

She saw him read the words—that was what she
intended—and yet, for the life of her she could not
help feeling almost faint as she did so ; and without
venturing another glance at him, she put the Indian
rubber, which he had carefully wrapped up for her,
in her bag, and hurried out paler than ever ; and with
such a trembling in her knees, that she thought
certainly she should drop.

Reynolds, on his part, was no less agitated ; the
words on the paper were these: “I am deeply inte-
rested in the happiness of one dear to me as life;
this obliges me to ask a private interview with you.
Will you meet me this afternoon at four o clock, in
the fields between the old cotton mill and Crake-
marsh.” -

Reynolds asked himself a thousand questions, not
one of which he could answer. His feelings were of
a very mixed kind. For one moment he was sorry
that she had done this; the next he was charmed and
flattered. What young man of five-and-twenty would
not have been so too ?

At half-past three, he was sitting, very carefully
dressed—he had never taken such pains with his
person before—on the stile just beyond the old cotton
mill, looking towards the town, that he might catch
the first glimpse of her; and a little after he saw
the light, neat, black-apparelled form of Marianne
approaching. He leaped down from his seat, and
sprang forward to meet her. She looked paler than
A CONTRE-TEMPS. 119

ever, and greatly agitated. He would have taken her
hand, but she withdrew it hastily, but not without
his feeling how it trembled ; and standing still, she
said gravely, “As yet all liberties with me are insults.
Listen to me before you touch my hand, for as yet
I appear to you but in a doubtful light. Fifteen
years ago you parted with a little sister—do you
remember her ?”

“‘T do,” said the young man, striking his hand
upon his forehead, “‘ I remember her well.”

‘¢T, then, am that sister!”

“ You!” exclaimed-he, with a feeling of almost
disappointment. ‘* You that little Susan whom I
loved so much!”

“‘ If I were then called Susan,” said she, * I have
since then been called Marianne—there was much in
that time to be forgotten.”

“There was! there was!” said Reynolds, ‘ but
we will not think of it now. We will forget all the
past just now ; some other time you shall tell me all,
we will rejoice now in the present,” said he, taking
her now unresisting hand, and putting it within
his.

“ And you will see our poor father, then,” said she,
“and acknowledge him ?”

He started, stopped short, and looked at her almost
in horror.

_ “It is so, then!” she said reproachfully, “you

_ refuse to acknowledge him! ”

_ “How can this be?”’ said he, “is our father living?

I thought that they had taken his life.”

_ “No, thank God!” she returned, “ he was trans-
ported ; but,” she said, imagining that now she saw

why her father had been treated as an impostor by
120 A CONTRE-TEMPS.

his son, ‘they never told you how it was really. I
daresay he was but seldom spoken of.”

“Never!” said Reynolds, “I never heard them
speak of him; my feelings have always been so much
considered. And he lives then, actually ?”

“Yes, lives,” said she, “and is so changed that
even you—that nobody—need be ashamed of him—
poor as he is. But he is so good, so gentle, his only
fault is that he loves me too well, has adventured too
much for me. Oh, how thankful I am that you will
own him! I always thought you would. Often have
I come to the shop, just to see you—you looked to
me so good and amiable,” said she, blushing, and
looking affectionately in his face.

“I declare I never saw anybody’s bonnet fit their
heads so prettily as yours,” exclaimed he, stopping
suddenly, and letting go her arm. “Come, I must
see this bonnet off,” said he, suddenly untying the
strings—“ No, I won't crush the dear little bonnet,
not I. I tell you what, you ought never to wear a
bonnet ; it’s a sin and a shame to hide your head.”

“Oh, give me my bonnet,” said she, “ you make
me quite ashamed ! ”

] shall not give up the bonnet till I have had a
kiss,” said he ; and without further ceremony caught
her in his arms, and kissed her forehead and lips.

“TI tell you what,” said he, “I really am sorry,
after all, that you are my sister. I would a deal
rather have had you for my wife.” >a

“I'll come and keep your house for you,” said she,
“that I will; ; you have no notion what a good hotiges”
keeper I am.’ ee
' “ No, you shall not keep my house,” said he, « -
I know somebody that will be falling in love w





A CONTRE-TEMPS, 121

you, and then you will never care a jot forme. No,
I shall put you under a glass case, and keep you all
to myself.”

Thus talked he; and Marianne, happier than ever
she had been before in her life, walked by his side,
addressing him as “ William” and “ brother” most
affectionately, and thinking that she could not have
patience to wait till her father’s return. At length,
in the midst of her happiness, one thought of regret
came to her mind, and she said, ‘* It was a great dis-
appointment to my poor father to find my aunt dead.
He hoped with her to find me a home.”

Again Reynolds stopped. ‘* Dead!’’ repeated he.
‘She is not dead. She is alive and well, and will
love you dearly, that she will; and so will poor Aunt
Dorothy. Come, we will go there at once—how I
shall surprise them! Aunt Dorothy shall lay her
hand on your head, and feel your face, and then she
will know how lovely you are.”

“ Aunt Dorothy?” asked Marianne, “of her I
never heard.”

“I daresay you never did,” said he. ‘She is
blind, poor thing, and thus is not as active as her
sister ; but she is as good. You will love her dearly.”

** Now I shall go right through the town,” said
he, ‘* with you leaning on my arm, and only be sorry
that I cannot tell everybody I meet that you are my
sister.” And so he would have done, had he met
anybody whom‘he knew; but it was one of those
days when one chances to meet nobody, when nobody
seems to be out: so he reached his aunts door without
remark or interruption.

‘“‘ Now I shall astonish the old ladies,” said he,
rushing in. ‘ Guess what I have brought you,” said —

M
122 A CONTRE-TEMPS.

he, leaving Marianne in the outer room. The old
ladies were very indulgent to their nephew; they
guessed all kinds of things, but could not come near
the truth. At length he went out, and returned with
Marianne, saying, “ My dear aunts, I introduce to
you your niece.”

It was a most complete shock—they thought that
he was married, and that this was his wife. ‘* Your
wife ?” asked they.

“ No,” returned he, “not my wife, I wish it were,
but my sister, that sweet little sister Susan of whom
1 used to talk so much. Is she not sweet and charm-
ing, and does she not look good and loveable ?”

“ Sit down, sit down, my dear,” said Joanna, who,
though taken so by surprise, could not help seeing
how confused and agitated the poor girl seemed.

Reynolds, who was quite vehement in his delight,
would not, however, let her sit down till she had
taken off her cloak and bonnet, that they might see,”
he said, “‘ what a sweet little sister she was.”

Poor Marianne, more confused now than ever, took
the seat which Joanna offered to her. She was more
confused and agitated every moment. That Reynolds
was her brother she had never doubted for a moment ;
but this surely was not the aunt which she had heard
described by her mother. This aunt had never been
married surely! she wore no wedding-ring. The most _
fearful misgivings came over her mind ; she felt almost
faint with apprehension. ‘ And where then is Mrs.
Osborne?” asked she with anxious fear.

“ My dear,” said Joanna, ‘“‘ Mrs. Osborne has been
dead these four years.”

“‘She was my aunt! I have made some strange,
some frightful mistake,” said she, rising, and almost
A CONTRE-TEMPS. 123

bursting into tears. ‘* Tell me,” she said, addressing
Reynolds, “ were you not born with the name of
Edwards, whatever you may now be called?”

*‘ This is the daughter of poor Mrs. Edwards,”
whispered Joanna to her sister, who, though blind,
took the most lively interest in what went forward.

Reynolds made no reply—a strange light burst in
upon his mind also, anda reality of happiness filled
his heart—but at that moment he could not have
expressed it.

‘“‘ Oh, I have made some great, some frightful mis-
take!” again exclaimed the poor girl, looking round
her.

Joanna ran, and taking her hand, said with a look
of infinite kindness, ‘‘ No, my dear, you have made
no great mistake after all; you are right in one
respect—you are among kind friends; we were friends
of your mothers—friends of your aunt’s—we will be
friends also to you.”

These words were meant to be consolatory. Mari-
anne felt that they -vere spoken in the very spirit of
kindness, but the presence of the young man troubled
her beyond words ; she feared to ask who he was,
and how it was possible that this mistake could have
been made between them ; she dared not lift up her
eyes to him. He too was bewildered in his turn—
this, then, was not his sister, but Williams's ; she had
mistaken him for Williams. The truth filled-him
with rapture ; his heart from the first had told him
that he wished in her something dearer than a sister.
He almost shrunk back at the thought of the fami-
liarity which he had used towards her. He saw how
she felt too ; they stood in a very painful and embar-
rassing relationship to each other. He rose, and not
124 A CONTRE-TEMPS.

venturing even a glance at her, said that he would
leave the young lady with his aunts. A cup of their
excellent tea would do her good. In the evening he
would return.

The quiet kindness of those amiable sisters, on
whose every action sincerity was stamped, reassured
the poor girl. They asked her no questions regarding
herself, but talked of the bright young days of her
mother, when they three had been happy, thoughtless
girls together. They spoke of her aunt and uncle
Osborne, as her mother had done; and when she
asked of her brother, they told her nothing but what
was good of him. He had been the companion and
friend of William Reynolds, their nephew, for these
ten years or more. Their nephew was the best young
man in the world—on this subject they never were
tired of speaking—they did not know what an agony
it was to the poor girl. At length, in the fulness of
her heart, she told all that had passed between them
—her frequent visits to the shop, her hope of surpri-
sing her father in making themselves known to him,
and being acknowledged by him, (of his unsuccessful
attempts she said nothing,) and, now, what had she
done? claimed a wrong relation—made herself appear
forward and ridiculous, and all the time he must have
known how inapplicable every word she uttered was
to him. Oh! why had he allowed her thus to commit
herself—thus to betray her father’s secret 4

The sisters could enter into her feelings—and to
show their confidence in her, as well as to excuse
- their nephew, they told her what hitherto they had
told to none—that their nephew's early history and
family connexions bore sufficient resemblance to those
of her brother, to make the mistake which had occur-
A CONTRE-TEMPS. 125

red so easy at first. Thus they proved to her that
they thought her worthy of their confidence. In
return she gave them hers; she told of their life in
Australia; of her mother’s goodness and industry,
and her father’s hardships and sufferings; how his
spirit was broken by his disgrace, and how home-sick
he was for England. Her mother lived in a school,
and by her services paid for the education of her
daughter. She did more than that—she gave daily
lessons in Sydney, where they lived, and saved money.
Anxiety and excessive labour, however, at length
preyed upon her health; she had some kind friends,
and by them her death was made as easy as possible.
She had no anxiety about her daughter, for many
desired to befriend her: her wish, however, was that
she should return to England; she left written instruc-
tions to her husband, with three hundred pounds for
this purpose ; she left her daughter as a legacy to her
beloved Aunt Osborne. Four years after her death,
the father’s term of transportation expired. He
yearned to be back in his native land, and, taking
his daughter and the money, embarked in one of the
first ships sailing for London.

“In England,” said his daughter, “he flattered
himself, that, broken-down though he was in spirit
and constitution, he could begin a new career. On
the voyage he spoke with the utmost impatience of
re-union with his son, of whom he was very fond.
His nature was softened, rather than hardened, by
calamity ; he often wept like a child. He loved her,”
she said, “dearly, and was the most indulgent of
fathers, and had formed, she could not tell what
extravagant notions of her prosperity in England. He
talked of London almost as the nursery song does, as

M2

~
126 A CONTRE-TEMPS.

if the streets were paved with gold, Scarcely, how-
ever, had they landed in England, when he returned
home to his lodgings almost on the verge of despair.

He was again a ruined man, almost pennyless.
How it happened she could not tell; she suspected
that he had fallen into the hands of designing gam-
blers who had robbed him of all. He was in despair ;
his health gave way, and, at the suggestion of the
kind woman with whom they lodged, she began to
paint miniatures and make fancy-work. She worked
incessantly, and made a large stock of things, which |
she sold at good prices to the bazaars and shops. A
fellow-lodger, who took a great fancy to her father,
and who supported himself by dealing in common
stationery, was then ill, and shortly after died, leaving
to her father his little stock in trade, and his recipes
for ink and sealing-wax. This and her fancy-work
and painting had since then supported them. As
soon as he was better in health, and had somewhat
recovered his spirits, they came down here, intending
to make themselves known to her mother’s sister; she,
however, was dead. And, then, as to her brother—”
poor Marianne blushed deeply —“ yes, indeed, what
a strange blunder she had made!”

Such was her narrative ; and the two sisters, even
the blind one, were as much charmed with her as
their nephew had been. Pretty she was, beyond
words ; and she was wise, and clever, and cheerful-
hearted, had had sorrow enough to have bowed her
down to the earth, and yet she was as gay as a bird:
the truth was, there was a well-spring of gladness in
her heart, and that was the spirit of love that never
wearied in well-doing. She was a very jewel of a
human being, and so neat and fairy-like withal, and
AGAIN, OLD AND NEW ACQUAINTANCE. 127

had such pretty turns and ways with her that were
quite natural to her, and looked so arch and good-
tempered, that it put one in humour with life and
one’s-self, only to look at her. She was a perfect mis-
tress of the art of pleasing—it was born to her, and
therefore it was so easy.

She stopped all night at the Miss Kendricks, Their
little maid went to Mrs. Cope’s, to say so, and to bring
her night-things ; and Reynolds never got home that
night till the clock was on the stroke of one.



CHAPTER III.

AGAIN, OLD AND NEW ACQUAINTANCE.

We have not now seen anything of Williams for
some time ; not, in fact, for seven years. Time goes on
with such strange rapidity now-a-days! Seven years it
is since we saw either him or Jessie Bannerman. We
will, first of all, inquire after him, and know some-
thing of the workings of his mind, for, if we are not
mistaken, he must in some things be changed, since
we saw him last. We have long known his growing
aversion to trade—there is nothing at all remarkable
in that. But as concerns Jessie, we must make some
inquiries. This, then, is what regards her.

When all that great affair of the players occurred,
his acquaintance with Jessie came to the knowledge
of the Osbornes, and the painful circumstances re-
garding their nephew that came to their knowledge
with it, caused them to imagine the worst things of
Jessie. It was in vain, when he had confessed his
love-engagement, that he tried to place her character
in its true light. They could not, and did not,
believe what he said. They regarded her as the most
128 AGAIN, OLD AND NEW ACQUAINTANCE.

designing and artful of intriguuntes, only the more
detestable because she had worn the mask of innocence
and virtue, Williams yielded to the storm against
her. The storm blew over ; the sunshine of his good
relation’s favour again fell upon him. The time of
his apprenticeship expired; he was sent into the
world to look about him, not to labour. Poor Mrs.
Osborne's health began to give way, however, and
then he was recalled ; her husband had not a thought
for anything but her; they took their adopted son
with them, and went from place to place to regain,
if possible, her health. She grew only worse and
worse, and died, blessing her nephew for having given
up his inclinations to please her. In reality, however,
he had not given up his inclinations from any sense
of duty; he had only become indifferent about them.
He had begun to look back to the days of his ac-
quaintance with Jessie, and his jealousy of Tom
Bassett, as of days which it was as well to forget ;
not but that certain uneasy qualms came over his —
heart when he thought of the fair Jessie, and his
plighted faith to her. But sufficient for the day is
the evil thereof, thought he, and left it to care for
itself. The appointed day at length came—the fifth
anniversary of that strange Christmas day at Alton,
and he had curiosity enough to inquire at the Post-
office if there were a letter for him. There was a
letter from Jessie, and it ran thus :—

“ Punctually at the time fixed I now write. A
few words are Enough. I will deal candidly with
you. Life has gone variously with me since we
parted. I have now nothing more valuable to offer
you than love and gratitude. Wealth, however, in
comparison of these treasures of life, is mere dust,
AGAIN, OLD AND NEW ACQUAINTANCE. 129

Are you ready and willing to fulfil your engagement ?
I have been true to you. If there be a moment’s
doubt on your mind, you are free. J. B.”

Such was her letter. Williams sat and pondered.
It troubled him ; but then could he really marry,
and bring home as his wife, that girl against whom
so much had been said? No, he never could! besides,
what would his uncle say ?— what would Mrs. Proctor,
what would everybody say ? It was a very silly affair
altogether—a boyish folly. People could not live on
love and gratitude ; if there were plenty of money,
it would be a different affair. No, no, he must put
an end to it at once.

He wrote. His letter might have served as a
model for the Complete Letter-Writer. He spoke
most feelingly of the death of his aunt, of his sense of
duty to her, of the force of circumstances, of his own
future and present dependence on his uncle, of the
sacrifice he had been compelled to make of his feel-
ings, of his unworthiness of her, of the certainty
that she would meet with one much more deserving;
in short, the letter said, as plainly as letter could say,
that, to use a common phrase, he desired to wash his
hands of the whole thing. ,

He heard no more from her. She sent no letter
of reproach or remonstrance; and he began to
congratulate himself on having so well got rid of the
connection.

Not long after this, his uncle’s death left him very
unexpectedly possessed of so handsome a legacy as
gave him quite another position in life. He began to
take ambitious views, but still he was man of the
world enough to bear his greatness with a very philo-
180 AGAIN, OLD AND NEW ACQUAINTANCE.

sophical calmness, and had it been twenty times the
sum, he would have done the same. What infinite
folly seemed now all his connection with players and
all such low people! It seemed to him a merciful
deliverance to have done with Jessie Bannerman.

He renewed his acquaintance with Tom Bassett,
who was now a prosperous lawyer, living on the
sunny side of life, in the pleasant little town of
Burton-on-Trent. Tom was a very prosperous man,
and had just married the daughter of a rich country
gentleman, A prosperous country banker too was
the elder brother, with a fine country-seat as well as
his house in the county-town. The Bassetts were
people with whom it was creditable to associate, and
with them Williams talked of investments and pur-
chases. He began to turn his mind to the buying of
a country-house. Though his name was the first in
the firm, and stood in great gold letters over the
shop-door, he was very rarely now at the shop—came
now and then as a convenience—dined there and
slept there occasionally, but ‘passed most of his
time in a lovely cottage ornée, which he had taken
furnished, by the’ month, near Burton.

Williams cultivated the Bassetts’ acquaintance with
more zeal than they his. All at once, however, the
lawyer became very zealous; it had occurred to him
that the family might make use of him on a particu-
lar occasion. Williams talked often of buying a small
estate, with a good house upon it. The Bassetts
had one to sell. It had belonged to the late Mrs.
Bassett ; it was the property of the daughter, who
now occupied it, but, finding it lonely during the
winter, she wished to leave it. Her brothers advised
her to sell it, and invest the money in railroad shares,
AGAIN, OLD AND NEW ACQUAINTANCE, 181

which would pay much better interest. Williams
was just the purchaser they wanted, one who had
plenty of money, and wanted to lay some of it out,
They were charmed with the thought, and nothing
could exceed the lawyer’s friendliness. The next
time Williams talked of investing some of his money
in the purchase of a small estate, Bassett suddenly
recollected that his sister might be induced to sell.
Nothing in the world could be more desirable than
her place, it was just what he wanted—in excellent
condition, neither too large nor too small, with just
the right quantity of land—a thorough gentleman’s
place. Williams's wishes were excited; and then he
was informed that the sister was willing to sell ; he
might see the place; he should take a note to her the
next day.

“He'll bite!” said Tom Bassett, chuckling to
himself, and thinking that he had managed it famous-
ly. A word, now, respecting the lady herself. She
was older than her brother, was in fact two-and-
thirty, a really good, excellent creature, who, if she
looked as old as she was, made you forget everything
but how good she was. She was spoken of in her
own neighbourhood as something quite uncommon.
She had a school for the poor children, which she
superintended herself every day; she visited the poor,
lent them good books, and befriended them in a
hundred ways ; she was just the person calculated
for a country clergyman’s wife. Her brother had a
husband in view for her, and desired nothing more
than to get her away from her cottage in Needwood
Forest, where, he said, she buried herself alive. He
wanted her to marry a man who was willing to marry.
her, and who would have the means of putting busi-
182 AGAIN, OLD AND NEW ACQUAINTANCE.

ness in his brother-in-law's hands. She was a very
strictly religious lady, too, and, some people said, had
but little charity with the shortcomings of others—
but they might be wrong, and we think they were.
The note of introduction which Williams brought
from her brother, insured him quite a friendly recep-
tion; she ordered luncheon in for him, and then led
him over her grounds, showed him her shrubbery-
walks, and her rockery, and her grotto, and her
summer-house, and her little pond with water-lilies,
and her little greenhouse, and all her geraniums and
her fuchsias and cape-heaths, and heaven knows what,
growing in little heart-shaped beds, and standing on
elegant green stages and rustic flower-stands ; they
sat down together on garden-seats side by side, and
she pointed out views to him which he admired; they
looked into the kitchen-garden, and talked about
marrowfat peas, and the best mode of growing toma-
toes ; they peeped together into the melon-frame,
and she gathered a melon which he carried into the
house. It is astonishing how friendly they became
in that short time. Then they came into the house,
and he was taken into the nice little breakfast-room,
where were her books ; and the dining-room, and the
little boudoir—it was too small for a drawing-room
—where stood her harp, and her piano, and again her
flowers; and there were pictures of herself smiling
on the walls, here with her hair cut short, and in a
prim white frock and pink sash, a demure little
school-girl ; and there at eighteen, fresh as a rosebud.
Williams thought to himself what a wonder it was
that she was not married at eighteen. After he had
gone through the house, he went to take his leave of
her, but he did not take his leave; they sat.and
AGAIN, OLD AND NEW ACQUAINTANCE. 1383

talked ; then he had forgotten some little particular
about the garden-fence ; he begged again to see it ;
the afternoon was charming—it was a long way to
the end of the garden—he feared he might lose his
way ; it was very polite of her indeed—she put on her
bonnet and shawl, and walked with him again. All
along those winding walks they went, on grass as
smooth as velvet, and passed first one flower-stand and
then another, up by the rockery and pool of water-lilies,
till they reached the very end of the garden—and there
they sat down in the summer-house. Miss Bassett
was older than her visitor; he was her brother’s
friend, so they felt quite at ease one with another,
and the end of all this walking and talking was, that
Williams, instead of negotiating about the purchase ot
the place, made her an offer of marriage—she had
fifteen thousand pounds beside the place—he made
her an offer of marriage, and was accepted. —

He felt that he had done a good day’s work—
he never was so well satisfied with himself before.
He mounted his horse, and rode home, not to his
cottage at Burton, but to the shop. The side parlour,
where in former days his uncle and aunt, good, quiet
people, had passed their time, and received their
friends, was now his own particular room. Nobod y
entered it without his permission, and there he trans-
acted his private business: and there, as he sat that
evening, in a large easy-chair, in the pride of his
successful wooing, never dreaming of his father, came
that father, for the first time, to claim his love and
his compassion. Had Mr. Osborne risen from the
dead to snatch from him his twenty thousand pounds
of legacy, the shock could hardly have been greater
than it was, when that man, who seemed to belong to

N
134 AGAIN, OLD AND. NEW ACQUAINTANCE,

the class of genteel beggars, or broken-down trades-
men, stepped forward, and in words almost inarticulate
from emotion, said in a hollow voice, “ William !
my son! I am your father!”

It might, or it might not, be so—the stranger bore
no resemblance to his father, as he remembered him ;
but, at all events, the rencontre was unpleasant. He
assumed his coldest air; he seemed to disbelieve ; he
refused to look at any documents which the stranger
produced ; he said he had an engagement, looked at
his watch, and rose from his chair. The father, who
was much cut down, wept; and the son, disturbed
and displeased, and yet troubled with the apprehen-
sion that it might be true, gave him two guineas, and
begged that he might not hear of him again; he
really could not thus be molested—it was extremely

unpleasant.

The poor man walked submissively away ; he felt
in the depths of his soul how hard it is for the poor
to take hold on the souls of the rich. Again and
again they met, and Williams, who, of all things,
saw how undesirable was such a claimant and such a
connection, shut his heart against conviction, and
doled out relief as if to a common importunate beggar.
The father grew angry, rose in his demands, talked
of an appeal to the magistrates to have his claim
on his son enforced: and the son, on his part, who,
however, would have made any sacrifice rather than
that the thing should become public at all, threatened
to have the father prosecuted as an impostor.

During these hard contests between father and son,
the Bassett brothers heard, with the utmost amaze-
ment and vexation, of the engagement between their

sister and Williams. They were fairly taken in their
AGAIN, OLD AND NEW ACQUAINTANCE. 135

own net, and were only the more angry from that
fact. Every argument now that could be advanced
against Williams was brought forward—his being,
as it were, nobody—his early connection with the
players—his shop. But these arguments had no
weight with the lady ; she was not a child, she said,
to be turned about by the first adverse opinion; she
had chosen him in the maturity of her judgment ;
she had no fear but that he was of honest descent :
and, in spite of old scandals, in spite of the shop, it
was her firm intention to unite herself to him. For
a short time the brothers were silent; but again they
came forward triumphantly against Williams, full of
the most fearful anxiety for their sister, They had
been making inquiries—a rumour had reached them,
they were themselves convinced of the truth of it—
Williams was the son of a convict swindler! the son
of that Edwards who was transported sixteen years
ago for forgery. He had been adopted by the
Osbornes, and did not bear even his own name! Their
sister never should marry the son of a convict—they
would oppose it in every way—she might turn
Catholic, and enter a convent, but marry him she
never should.

Thus the brothers wrote to her, and at the very
same time poor Edwards wrote to his son a letter
of humility and prayer. He was ill, he said: his
daughter was wearing herself away over her work,
which brought her no profit. If he, the son, would
only allow them a hundred pounds a year, to be paid
by a respectable banker, they would quit the town for
ever, to live in some quiet, secluded place, where he
should never hear of them more. Oh! for the love
of mercy, would he but do this?

~
136 AGAIN, OLD AND NEW ACQUAINTANCE.

This letter was returned unopened and unanswered,
and it was at this crisis that poor Edwards, as we have
seen, disheartened and disappointed, left home with
his camlet bag for an absence of two or three days,
Williams was by no means in an easy state of mind,
when a letter came to him from Miss Bassett, which,
as we may believe, considerably agitated him. It
was short, but still it said much. “ Mere rank,” she
said, “was of no value in her mind, nor was great
wealth; and, therefore, as h : knew, she had made
light of her brothers’ objectiors aguinst him on the
score of his being of ordinary bir‘h, and connected with
trade: but an unsullied name and a fearlessly upright
character were another thing ; she now, therefore, put
it to him solemnly, as he would answer before heaven
—No; she would not put it thus,” she said, “she
would merely put it to his honour, to his regard for
her, was he, or was he not, the son of that unhappy
convict, Edwards, who was married to Miss Phillips,
the sister of Mrs. Osborne 2?”

Terror now fell upon him strong as anarmed man.
His first thought was to get his father out of the way
at any cost. He actually went to Mrs. Cope’s, and
asked to sec him. He was out—his daughter was out ;
there was nothing to be done then, and, therefore,
he sat down and wrote his answer to the lady, whom
he was resolved not to lose. He talked of malice,
and false friendship, and base attempts which were
made to ruin him in her eyes, all which he said he
defied. He deplored himselfas the most unfortunate
of men, because having been early left an orphan,
he himself had not known his parents. He prized
an unsullied name as much as she did, and would
make one for himself. With her love, and for her
AGAIN, OLD AND NEW ACQUAINTANCE. 1387

love, he could do anything ; without it he should be
the veriest outcast in the world! He was not the son
of that unfortunate man, Edwards ! and he earnestly
besought her to close her ears against that malice
which was bent upon ruining him. “ He felt,” he said,
“ that, once united, they should be happy ; till then,
endless plans would be formed to separate them. Might
he beseech of her at once to set this malice at defiance
by allowing their marriage to take place immediately.”

It was a bold letter. He trembled as he despatched
it. The next post brought him an answer. “ Thank
you ; you have taken a load from my heart. I knew
that you had not willingly deceived me, and I believe
you. But, Edward, shall I now confess my weakness
—had you, fearing to speak a falsehood, even for a
great reward, said, ‘ Yes, I am the son of that unhappy
convict, and in reality I bear his name,’—I could not
have abandoned you. Oh, my friend, you have gained
great power over me—you are very dear to me, and
I would have stood by your side to the last; and if the
world had upbraided you, it should have upbraided
me also. But, thank God, it need not be so. I will
be candid with you. My brothers are extremely
inveterate against you. Their consent to our marriage
will not be obtained, I fear. I wish to see you soon.
Come over for an hour to-morrow.”

There are no reproofs to a heart not naturally bad,
So severe as those of kindness. Williams sat silent
and self-accused. All his life long it seemed to him
that he had lived in the midst of kindness, which he
had ill requited. He thought of Jessie Bannerman—
oh how often had Miss Bassett reminded him of Jessie
in her calm truthfulness! he thought of his good
aunt and uncle, how he had cheated and deccived

N 2
138 AGAIN, OLD AND NEW ACQUAINTANCE.

them. He was a moral coward ; he had not the
courage to do right—and he sat now humbled and
chastised by his conscience. Oh that I had dared to
speak the truth! Oh that I had but had the courage
to speak the truth—that I had but had faith in the
real greatness and goodness of her soul! I ama liar
and a cheat, let me bear as fair a face to the world as
I may, and a day will come when all my falsehood
will come to light!

The next day he set off to the Forest for the inter-
view which she desired, but not before he again made
inquiries after the lodger at Mrs. Cope’s, but the
lodger was not returned, and, racked with the appre-
hension of something terrible hanging over him, he
set out. He was prepared for some dreadful catas-
trophe, and felt more like a criminal going to judg-
ment, than a lover on his way to arrange with a
loving mistress for an early marriage. But what whi ps
and stings has an evil conscience—how it torments
with everlasting suggestions ; suppose Miss Bassett
should meet him with the full knowledge of all his
baseness—suppose his father had actually been with
her brothers, or herself—suppose he should be there
with her, and she should confront them face to face !
What should he do? Had he not now better go and
throw himself at her feet, and confess all? Could
she indeed love him after such a proof of his weak-
ness? Or should he boldly adhere to his lie, and
dare all consequences? He could not tell—he knew
not what to do—he was like a weed on the tempested
water, tossed here and there. A bitter curse is a mind
ever wavering between right and wrong! and thus—
iniserable, vacillating, apprehensive, repentant, and yet
ready to commit fresh sin to save himself, he went on.


AGAIN, OLD AND NEW ACQUAINTANCE. 189

As he rode slowly up through the plantations to
the front of the cottage, a tall, but bending figure,
was slowly passing down a side walk from the back
premises, The rusty, but well-preserved black suit,
the old hat, the blue camlet bag, he recognised them
instantly. It was as if a dagger had pierced through
his heart. He stopped his horse instantly—he had
better at once fly than face her—his father had really
been there—had revealed all, no doubt—he had not
yet been seen from the house—there was time to fly
—shame and terror overwhelmed him.

“* Good morning, sir,” said the cheerful voice of the
gardener. “ Shall 1 lead your horse up to the stable ?
Missis is in the little flower-garden.”

The gardeners voice reassured him, so did his
words ; Miss Bassett was in the garden—she had not,
then, seen his father. “‘ What a coward apprehension
has made of me!” thought he, and rode up to the
house, bidding the gardener say nothing of his being
come, and he would join Miss Bassett presently.

He was glad of this respite to recover himself
the servants received him like a welcome guest at the
house ; servants by instinct learn the tone of their
employers’ feelings—he knew that at present all was
right.

“ What did the old man want, with the blue bag,
who was here just now 2?” asked he.

“He has left a packet for the lady,” the servant
replied.

“ The packet is for me—let me have it instantly,”
said he in a spasm of fear. “ Fly, quick !”

The servant, interpreting his impatience to be that
of a lover, flew quickly, as he desired, to put into his
hand one of those small packets of stationery whic
140 AGAIN, OLD AND NEW ACQUAINTANCE.

poor Edwards carried about. “To the inhabitant of
this house,” he read on the outside. Again there
seemed something pitiful in his fear. There was
nothing but innocent pens, sealing-wax, and wafers,
inclosed in @ wrapper, on which was printed, “ All
these for one shilling. The maker, who humbly
solicits the benevolent to purchase, will call again to-
morrow,”

“The man is poor, véry poor,” said Williams,
wrapping up the box again. “ When he calls, give
him this,” said he, giving the servant a guinea—“ he
is very poor, though importunately troublesome ; bid
him not to come here again, however ! ”

Miss Bassett, so far from having any quarrel with
her lover, or any suspicion of wrong against him,
received him with the most marked, yet delicate kind-
ness. Not one word did she say of the painful subject
of their letters, but she spoke with tears of the harsh-
ness and unkindness of her brothers. They had quar-
relled with her—she had no hope of reconciliation with
them—she wished to leave the neighbourhood.
Williams proposed their immediate marriage—she
made no opposition—she felt as if she had no friend
but himself. They arranged their plans rapidly.
Williams, amazed at his own good fortune, was
quite at his ease. The matriage, it was agreed, should
take place, secretly, early in the next week—they
would go at once to London, and from thence her
brothers should know that their Opposition was
useless, and from London they would go to the Con-
tinent, here they would remain till the family dis-
pleasure had cooled.

Whilst thus arranging so agreeably his affairs with
his affianced bride, his mind was busy about his
THEY ARE OFF.—THEY ARE MARRIED. 141

father, and he formed a plan, which, under the better
feeling inspired by the secret influence of this excel-
lent woman, was not without kindness. He gave a
sealed paper to the servant, which he ordered her
to give to the man, and then, after waiting to ascer-
tain that it was delivered into his hand, he took
leave of his bride, to meet her again only for the
marriage.

From the Forest Lodge he went to the Three
Queens, in Burton, where, as he expected, the poor
man with the camlet bag was not long in making his
appearance also. They had a long interview, which
ended apparently most amicably, They both left
Burton that night—Edwards by one coach, and his
son by another.



CHAPTER IV,
THEY ARE OFF.—THEY ARE MARRIED.

Ir was two days after this before he reached home.
He came by the Birmingham coach, but he was so
entirely his own master, that nobody ever thought
of asking wherefore he had been there. Reynolds,
however, who had been looking for him every hour
since the discovery he had made regarding his sister,
met him at the shop-door with that sort of impatient
good-news countenance, which seems to say, “ Here I
am! ask me what I have got totell!” But Williams
did not ask, and at last Reynolds, who could contain
no longer, invited him to a private conference, and
then began in a low voice of the most heartfelt joy—
“ I say, my good fellow, do you know that your sister
is in this town? The most beautiful little angel that
Cver was seen, and as good as she is beautiful | And


142 THEY ARE OFF.—THEY ARE MARRIED.

do you know,” added he in a more measured tone,
“* that—your father is here too 2?” |

Williams turned pale as death, and Reynolds attri-
buting this to shame regarding his father’s disgrace,
wished he only knew how to show his good and kind
intentions. “Iam sure, my dear fellow,” he began,
“if I were in your place, I would not let it trouble
me a bit; the world need not know anything about
it; and to make you quite at ease with me on the
subject, I will confess something to you. I too have
had sorrow in my family, and deeper sorrow than
yours, for here is your father come back, with time,
and opportunity, and willingness to retrieve his
character in life. My poor father, alas, had not time
hardly to repent. You and I are old friends; there
need be no secrets between us, though nobody else
need know about your poor father—nobody, indeed,
ever dreams that this is your father—nobody but Miss
Kendricks and myself.”

“* What, in the fiend’s name, does all this mean?”
demanded Williams, again assaulted on this fearful
subject from a quarter where he least expected it.

“What does it mean?” repeated Reynolds, quite
taken aback. ‘ Why, that your father is come back,
and that your sister is here, and that my aunt
Kendricks can see in her a strong likeness to your
mother.” .

Reynolds had never in his life before mentioned to
Williams suspicions of his parentage, and he now said,
“I’ve known it long, Williams, that Edwards was
your father, and it’s no use trying to impose upon
me ; nor really, if you knew me, would you think it
needful to try; so let us deal openly with one
another—here are your father and sister.”


THEY ARE OFF.—THEY ARE MARRIED. 143

“They are impostors,” interrupted Williams, in a
low, but firm voice, “Arch impostors ; and don’t
you go and let your good-nature believe every artful
lie that is told you. They are impostors, I tell you;
I have seen him, and I am mistaken if he be not off
pretty handily.”

“ And do you actually pretend not to believe it ?”
cried Reynolds, growing quite warm. “TI appeal to
your conscience, Williams, whether, in the face of
heaven, you dare to disown them. They are not
impostors, and that youknow! How dare you, with
your plenty,—or even if you had to slave for your
daily bread it would be the same thing,—how dare you
cast your father into poverty, perhaps into crime, and
what is ten thousand times worse, cast that lovely
creature, your own sister, who is pure as the very
stars of heaven, friendless upon the world? I will
stand between you and your pride, Williams, if pride
it be, or your false shame, or want of moral courage,
or whatever it is, and force you to do them right!
They are your own flesh and blood, and as you hope
for the blessing of God on your own life and under-
takings, be just to them.”

Williams heard all in gloomy silence, and then
inquired where he had seen “ these people.”

Reynolds related what had occurred between
Marianne and himself, and showed how the peculiar
circumstances of his own early life had rendered him,
as it were, innocently a party in the misunderstand-
ing ; he told how pleased his aunt Kendricks had
been with her, and how they had kept her at their
house for one, if not two, nights,

A peculiar smile passed over Williams’s counte-
nance, which Reynolds could not understand. “ What
144 THEY ARE OFF.—THEY ARE MARRIED.

a fool the girl must be, if this be not a double-dyed
piece of artifice,” said he. ‘‘ And how famously you
have been imposed upon!”

With these words he left him, and Reynolds,
burning with indignation at what he felt to be his
cold-blooded pride, felt, nevertheless, an uncom-
fortable query in his own heart—‘ And can I, after
all, have been duped ?”

“No! no! no!” said every sense of honesty and
sincerity in his own breast. “As soon would I
disbelieve the sun in heaven as that girl.” He was
sure he was right, and, within half an hour, set off to
Mrs. Cope’s, to see both father and daughter. He was
bent upon obtaining from them such evidences as
Williams should not gainsay. He knew enough
of Williams to believe him capable of prevarication
and falsehood, but he had great faith also in the good
that was in him, and on that he resolved to work—in
the meantime he must see these two—he wanted to
see father and daughter together, to question and
cross-question, to know how they were in health, to
cheer up their spirits, in short, he was for the first
time in his life in love—he wanted to see his mistress,

Wiiliams on his part did not trouble himself about
them. He had plenty of business of other kinds on
his hands. He was busy about his marriage. He
wrote to his banker, to his lawyer, and to his tailor ;
there was a world of business to be done in the next
few days.

Great was Reynolds's astonishment, and almost
horror, when, on passing the little parlour window
at Mrs, Cope’s, he saw, instead of the miniatures, and
profiles, and pretty bags and rugs, which were usually
arranged there—two caps on wooden stands, and two
THEY ARE OFF.—THEY ARE MARRIED. 145

pieces o. printed cotton, and one of shot “silk, which
were in progress of gown-making. Mrs. Cope was in
possession of her little parlour again ; her lodgers
were gone!

‘What ; was he in your debt for sealing-wax and
such things?” asked Mrs. Cope, in reply to Reynolds's
sudden exclamation at hearing that they left the day
before.

“Where are they gone?” he inquired.

Mrs. Cope could not tell; it seemed all a sudden
thing ; the old gentleman had come home after being
away for three days. He seemed very poorly and
out of spirits when he went, but when he came back
he was quite another person ; he sent out for half
a pound of cheese, a beefsteak, and a pot of porter,
and had a good supper. He seemed to have plenty
of money ; he was up all night packing up his things.
The daughter was not half as cheerful ; she sat
painting at those things for Mrs. Bishop, and sweet
pretty things they were. Mrs, Cope’s girl took them
home. Mrs. Bishop, she said, wanted something else
painted, and she wished her to go there, and then she
would pay her for them all together. The father, how-
ever, would not let her go, nor somewhere else, where
she wanted to go, and she cried even—but the old
gentleman was angry, and would not let her. He
said there was not time. He said that he had met
with a friend, and that they must meet him that day
—so they went by coach to Lichfield, he outside, and
she in. She seemed quite down-hearted at going, and
said that Mrs.Cope must take, for her own trouble, the
guinea and a half which Mrs, Bishop owed, and she
had left a bag worked with beads, and a very pretty
bunch of wax roses for Miss Kendricks, with her

0
146 THEY ARE OFF.—THEY ARE MARRIED.

love, and she should never forget their kindness.
Mrs. Cope said that she took shame to herself for not
having been down with them, but one of her young
women was ill, and she was so full of work—but she
meant, if she could get a bit of time, to take them
that night.

Reynolds said that he would save her the trouble,
that he was going to his aunt's, and would carry them
with him.

Mrs. Cope’s tidings quite upset him—he thought of
Williams's words—‘* They are impostors. I have
seen him, and I am mistaken if they are not speedily
off.” Off they certainly were, and he had no doubt
but that Williams had a hand in it; but that they
were impostors he could not believe. His aunts
were of his opinion, and without knowing their
nephew's private reasons for anxiety, seconded all
that he said in behalf of their truth. It was impos-
sible that they could be impostors, the young lady
was too much like her own mother for that. Ohno;
Williams knew very well where they were ; he had
sent them out of the way, and, no doubt, would
provide for them ; there seemed to them nothing so
strange in his wishing them not to appear just now.
Did not people say that he was paying his addresses
to Lawyer Bassett’s sister? They could understand
exactly how it was, only they must confess that he
need not have told lies to an old friend, like their
nephew, that he might have known would never
make mischief or betray him in any way. But it was
like Williams, they said, and they had no right to be
surprised at it.

Reynolds became again easy in his mind, and
returned home to prepare for the morrow, which was
THEY ARE OF¥.—-THEY ARE MARRIED. 147

May-fair day, when they would all be busy with
country customers. He did not see Williams again
that night, but he resolved on the very first opportu-
nity to place the utmost confidence in him as regarded
himself; to confess his love for his sister, which he
~ could not doubt being agreeable to him, and obtaining
from him a knowledge of their residence, to lose no
time in making her an offer of his heart and hand.
He would by this means prove to Williams how little
he thought of the painful past as regarded his father
—nay, on his marriage, he would enter into a bond
on behalf of his wife, to make some provision for the
old man. He would in every way do that which was
generous and honourable, and this he would tell Wil-
liams. Nothing puts one in such good humour with
one’s-self and all the world as the intention of doing
something remarkably generous, especially when one
can serve one’s-self at the same time. It was this
feeling which made Reynolds alert and cheerful all
the day. The country people said, “ What a nice
gentleman he was!” He listened to all kinds of
weariful histories about diseases in cattle and children,
and old folks; he prescribed for dry-rot in houses,
and the fly in turnips; he did not sell even a penny-
worth of turmeric without a pleasant word. Every
customer was charmed with him; he “ quite cut
out” their old favourite, Mr. Isaacs, who happened to
be rather out of humour that day, it must be con-
fessed. At the end of the day, Mr. Reynolds informed
his partner that there never had been such a day
since he had known the shop; it had been quite
crowded all day : and on adding up the day’s receipts,
besides booking, it was half as much again as that
day last year.
148 THEY ARE OFF.—THEY ARE MARRIED.

Mr. Isaacs said it need, for that Williams had sud-
denly called for two hundred pounds out of the busi-
ness, which he said had worried him no little. Wil-
liams was gone off with a good deal of luggage, and had
said that he should not be back at present, but that
he would write. Here was news of astonishment for
Reynolds! He was gone, no doubt, after his father
and sister; the two hundred pounds was for their
use ; he was gone to settle them comfortably some-
where; he rose at once fifty per cent. in his
young partner's estimation ; he was welcome to draw
two hundred pounds from the business ; Reynolds
would almost have given it to him. These were his
thoughts, and he replied cheerfully to his senior,
“Well, I don’t see that we need trouble ourselves
about that ; he takes no part in the business now, and
we are just as well without him as with him.”

“ But,” said Mr. Isaacs angrily, “ it’s an unpleasant
thing to have money drawn out at a minute's warning
——to be sure the firm has money in the bank—but
with his twenty thousand pounds—and he a bachelor
—he should not do it !”

“ Here is news!” exclaimed Reynolds within a very
few days, looking up from the London paper which
he was reading. “ Now listen, Mr. Isaacs, and I
shall amaze you,— and he read—‘ On Saturday, the
7th inst., at St. George’s, Hanover Square, Edward
Lewis Williams, Esquire, of Utceter, to Emmeline,
sole daughter of the late George Vernon Bassett,
Esquire, of Henshall Hall, Staffordshire.’ ”

“* And he really is married, is he?” exclaimed the
old man. “At St. George's, Hanover Square !
Bless me!”

“Well, here’s a bit of news!” exclaimed all the
THEY ARE OFF.—THEY ARE MARRIED. 149

Mrs. Proctors and Mrs. Morleys of Utceter and of
Burton-on-Trent, “ Here's a bit of news that will
take a deal of talking over. Married are they after
a six weeks courtship, and she gone off to London,
pious as she was reckoned, all on the sly, with only
her maid; why, it is not much better than being
married at Gretna Green ;” and everybody's tongue
was set in motion.

“And she really has married him after all!”
exclaimed the two brothers Bassett. “ After all, has
married the son ofa convict! Well, we hope they ’Il
go abroad, and live abroad too, and never come back
again |”

“And yet,” said they a week after the first anger,
‘we must not say anything about his father—for
the credit of the family we must not! And, seeing
she was determined to marry him, it was almost
a pity that we said so much—but after all it was only
among ourselves, so there is no great harm done—but
we wish to heaven that they may live abroad alto-
gether |”

The new Mrs, Williams wrote from London to her
brother at Burton, and informed him that it was the
joint wish of herself and her husband that the Lodge
should be now let for a term of years; that the furni-
ture should be sold by auction, and her books,
pictures, musical instruments, &c., should be depo-
sited in the hands of certain persons whom she
named. It was their intention, she said, to be
absent for some years, and she felt sure that her
dear brother, in accordance with his usual kindness
to her, would transact this business for them, and
it was the wish of her husband that he (the lawyer)
should remunerate himself for all his trouble out

02
150 ANOTHER OLD ACQUAINTANCE.

of the rent, which might lie in his hands till
called for.

It was evidently the intention of Mr. and Mrs.
Williams to keep up a good understanding with her
family ; the family were satisfied that it should be so,
but, as a means of keeping them abroad, they soon
found a good tenant, for a term of years, for the very
pretty Forest Lodge.



CHAPTER V,
ANOTHER OLD ACQUAINTANCE,

We hope our readers are disposed to like Mrs.
Williams ; she was a good woman ; she had some of
those sterling qualities which he had not, but which
always in others had a great influence on him; it is
strange to say it, but it is, nevertheless, true, her first
charm to his feelings was that singular transparency
and evident truthfulness of mind and character which
he had always felt so strongly in Jessie Bannerman.
They both had the power of awakening the better part
of his nature, of producing in him, as it were, an
acquiescence to good. He had deceived his wife, it
is true ; he had fallen into the gulf of falschood, that
fatal gulf which, it seemed to him, ever lay before
him. And oh, what a bitter weight of self-condemn-
ation lay upon his soul for it; how did it come
between him and his happiness, between her love and
his peace of mind. “ Would that I had wist !” is the
most painful expression of a saddened spirit—for it
implies that we have been the fashioners of our own
anguish.

We must now see them in London. All the world
was then talking of Mademoiselle Angela. She was.
ANOTHER OLD ACQUAINTANCE. 151

a young actress ; the most beautiful of women, accord-
ing to report, and the most accomplished of actresses,
She had been abroad, in Petersburgh Paris, and
had created an extraordinary sensation there. Her
fame had come before her: people who had seen her
abroad raved about her in London, and now she was
come, in the month of May, in the full blaze of the
London season, and had at once taken the heart of
the whole town. Her portraits were in the windows ;
she set the fashion in caps and gowns ; her voice, her
attitudes, her smiles were the theme of every one’s
admiration ; but, more than all, was talked of her
beautiful character. Her life, it was said, had been
as strange as a fairy tale; she had gone through
poverty, hardship, and temptation of every kind, but
all had been unable to tarnish the pure gold of her
nature. She was, fame said, the most gifted and best
of human beings; people told endless anecdotes about
her; her life was so pure, yet brilliant, and people
were so enthusiastic about her, that one might have
thought her sent down from heaven to make goodness
fashionable.

Mrs. Williams, who had from principle a terror of
the stage, refused, spite of the entreaties of their
London acquaintance, to attend the theatre. Chance
had led them among a circle of people who were
most theatrically inclined, and who were going to one
theatre or another every night. Williams, who had
a strong desire to join them, declined, for some time,
from regard to his wife. She became aware, however,
at length, of the self-denial he had practised for her
sake, and insisted upon it that he should go to see this
wonderful phoenix, of which the world talked so
much. He was to accompany a party, which was to
152 ANOTHER OLD ACQUAINTANCE.

‘occupy one of the stage-boxes. The gentlemen took
with them bouquets and wreaths of flowers, to fling as
offerings atgthe feet of the queen of the night: rings, it
was said, ornaments of great value, had frequently
been conveyed to her feet in this way, and Mrs. Wil-
liams gave to her husband a small wreath of myrtle

and jasmine, which, she said, if he found her to be as °

beautiful as she was said to be good, he was to fling to
her also.

A strange, bewildering, dream-like feeling came
over Williams as he stood behind the row of ladies of
their party, waiting for the drawing up of the curtain.
The orchestra played Mozart’s overture to Don Juan.
His mind went back tothose strange, far-off days when
he stood in the little theatre at Utceter, waiting
for the drawing up of the curtain, to see her whom
he then reckoned the angel of his life. Fancy is
a very powerful anda very deceptive thing ; the great
house seemed to dwarf itself down to the dimensions of
the little one—the gay audience were the dowdy gentry
of acountry-town. The huge curtain drew up, and
there, like the glorified image of the heroine of former
days, stood the splendidly attired, and serenely beau-
tiful Mademoiselle Angela. The whole house rose,



and the gentlemen shouted for very enthusiasm ; the ~

ladies waved their handkerchiefs, and the newspapers
of the next morning said that nothing could exceed
the rapture with which the young actress was received,

“T protest!” exclaimed one of the gentlemen in

their box, “that Williams has been standing like a.

mummy all this time.”

Poor Williams ! and there was good reason why he
had done so. A dizziness had come over him; he
fancied that he must have fainted, but nobody then
ANOTHER OLD ACQUAINTANCE. 153

observed it. They said now that he looked pale; he
said that the theatre was so hot.

Everybody was engrossed by the piece, and he too
looked on. It was Jessie Bannerman; â„¢fe saw it
plainly ; the same being, who, sitting with him in
the patten-maker’s parlour, had told him her sad
history ; the same who had gone with him on that
Christmas-day to Alton Towers ; who had made that
strange compact with him of trial and fidelity for five
years ; the same who had been true to him for five
years, and then offered him, herself, her love and her
gratitude, and had been rejected by him; and who,
with her love and gratitude, had he but been worthy
of them, would have conferred upon him wealth,
splendour, honour, the world’s renown, only to have
been allied to her.

The piece was Othello. And now she came to the
second scene of the fourth act, Where Desdemona, on
her knees before Othello, asserts her innocence.

She seemed to surpass even herself; the public
enthusiasm rose to the highest pitch ; flowers were
rained down from every box near the stage, and came
flying from pit and gallery.

“Now, Williams, fling down your garland to her,”
resounded distinctly on the stage from the box above.
She cast her eye in the direction of the voice instantly ;
their eyes met, it was but for a moment, but to Wil-
liams it seemed as if he had shrunk into nothing-
ness before the clear, keen gaze of those beautiful
eyes. He groaned inwardly ; he felt how little, how
mean he was; how wretched, how despicable had
_ been all his aims in life. She rose higher and higher ;
there was a majesty in her action, a thrilling tone in
her voice that crushed him. He felt at once humbled
154 ANOTHER OLD ACQUAINTANCE.

before her ; he felt again, as he had felt before, that
high moral tone in her, which, combined with great
re power, is the very essence of the divine
nature.

“How omnipotent is goodness! how godlike!”
he exclaimed inwardly. ‘“ How could I ever have
been worthy of her!” °

He stood, and gazed upon her, and wept like 4
child. People seemed to take no notice of him, they
were so occupied by her and by themselves.

The theatre-going world said that she had never
acted so well as on that night.

This discovery of Jessie Bannerman in the renowned
Mademoiselle Angela was not a circumstance calcu-
lated to add to Williams's matrimonial happiness. He
drew invidious comparisons between the favourite
actress and his wife, between himself-now and that
which he might havé been had he married her. He
was enraged with himself; called himself fool and
blockhead, and made himself very unhappy.

At the end of the month, as had been at first pro-
posed, Mrs. Williams insisted on their going to Paris ;
she was tired of hearing of Mademoiselle Angela ; she
did not like her husband going so continually to the
theatre, where she never accompanied him ; according -
to her notions of things, it was not right.

To Paris, therefore, they went.

‘“‘ Edward, my love,” said his wife to him one day,
not long after their arrival there, “ will you be my
father confessor ? ”

‘Can you, who are so good, have anything to con-
fess?” he exclaimed.

‘“¢ Listen,” she said, “‘and you shall hear. I was
jealous of Mademoiselle Angela.” He started. ‘Nay,
ANOTHER OLD ACQUAINTANCE. 156

upon my word,” she said, “ you will make me think
that I had cause. Mrs. Moorwood told me of your
agitation when you saw her first. You know not,
Edward,” she said, “the anguish I have felt; I
fancied that you were cold to me ; I fancied that your
heart seemed turned from me—there is something so
entire, so true in a woman’s love, Edward, and I
was jealous of that fair Angela, who seemed to have
deprived me of yours in return. Now I have been
candid with you. I have told you my weakness ; let
there never be suspicion between us, and, as a proof
that your love is not diminished, tell me, was Made~
moiselle Angela known to you before ?”

Without replying, he looked into his wife’s face.
His first impulse was to deny altogether the truth of
her suspicion—was to deny any knowledge of the
actress. .

“ Edward,” continued she, solemnly, “answer me
truly—love and falsehood cannot exist in the same
bosom. The happiness of our whole life may depend
on this moment—do not deceive me! You have
loved Mademoiselle Angela! ”

Again he felt that singular resemblance between
his wife and Angela—that spirit of truth which had
made him submissive before the spirit of a girl
in former years. He felt that, sustained by this
spirit, he dared to speak the truth, even to his own
condemnation.

“Yes,” he said, “ you are right ; I have loved her
—and, perhaps, love her still; but oh! Emmeline,
since we have thus spoken, you need not fear her.
Truth is, indeed, a broad shield against sin. You
need not fear her. I love her less dangerously, and
you more truly. But you shall hear all.” He then
156 ANOTHER OLD ACQUAINTANCB.

related that which the reader already knows; perhaps
not in its fullest details—perhaps disguising a little
of his own weakness—but still with that sufficient
adherence to truth as left him guilty. Emmeline
sat with her calm eyes fixed upon him—she did not
speak one word to interrupt him.

“ Thank you, my beloved,” said she, when he had
finished, and when, overcome by emotion, he sank
his face upon his hands, and wept. ‘Thank you,
from this day forth a new covenant is made between
us. We shall neither of us err greatly while we
have courage to face the truth. You have given me
the greatest proof of your love by placing confidence
inme. May God Almighty enable me to make you
happy!” She sank her head on the shoulder of her
husband, and wept with him.

A new era in the life of our married pair might be

dated from this time. Mademoiselle Angela was —

never mentioned between them, but she was the bond
of their better understanding. One thing only embit-
tered Williams's life; that was his falsehood regarding
his father. Often and often he was on the point of
confessing the whole terrible truth, and his own cul-
pable weakness, but then he dared not; she seemed
so happy, she had such faith in him, the knowledge
of this must blast all. It lay like a festering sore on
his soul, and led him only into new difficulties and

deceptions. He dreaded the arrival of letters; his —
wife showed him all hers, and seemed to expect the —

same from him. She was one of those clear-headed,

straightforward women who have a capacity for

business; she took the management of all their pre-
sent affairs into her hands, and her husband, who
had a decided distaste for business of every kind,

St dient“


ANOTHER OLD ACQUAINTANCE. 157

was quite willing that she should do so. But
now and then came letters which she must not
see. Reynolds wrote to him, begging most urgently
for the address of that person who called him-
self Jervis; why he wanted it, he did not say,
but stated merely that it was on a. matter of vital
importance to himself. This letter put Williams in
a state of the greatest uneasiness ; for what purpose
could Reynolds want the address? Were the Bassetts
reviving the old subject? Was Reynolds himself going
to meddle in it? He wrote back a short reply. He
knew nothing of the person calling himself Jervis,
farther than that, to prevent the circulation of
reports unpleasant to himself, he had caused him
to remove to Birmingham. Reynolds must re-
member that he, Williams, had always considered
him an impostor.

Next came a letter from Williams's father. He
had obtained the address from the banker in London,
who was empowered to pay his allowance. He wrote
from Bath, whither he had removed from Birming-
ham, in consequence of the illness of his daughter.
He had been obliged to consult physicians for her;
her illness was expensive to him. He must trouble
his son for a further advance of money to meet this
exigency.

This letter, even more than the former, discom-
posed him, and, to silence this most fearful of corre-
spondents, he sent him an order on his banker, not,
however, without forbidding any further application
to himself ; and to his banker he also wrote, forbid-
ding his address in future being furnished to this his

P
158 ANOTHER OLD ACQUAINTANCE.

After this, Williams changed his lodgings, and did
not in future allow his letters to come to his resi-
dence. Early in the next year he removed from
Paris to Vienna.

On the second day of their being in this city, and
whilst yet at the inn, one of those singular coinci-
dences occurred which are by no means as unfrequent
as some persons imagine. They dined, as is custom-
ary, in a public room, where many persons were
dining at separate tables. A party of gentlemen sat
at a table beside them ; they were English, and were
ta king loudly. One of them was a Mr. Burndale, of
London, a banker, and the conversation was about
forgeries, when Mr. Burndale was appealed to.

** By the bye, Burndale,” said one of the gentlemen,
“is it true that that fellow, Edwards, whom you
transported some sixteen or eighteen years ago, for a
forgery on your bank, is come back, and has opened
some sort of eating-house or tavern at the West End 2?”

Long before thus much had been said, Williams
felt as if the soup which he was eating would choke
him. His wife, too, had heard what was said, and
was almost as much agitated as himself ; for she knew
that this was the man with whom her brothers had
connected her husband.

“Are you not well, love,” said she, tenderly ;
“shall we leave the room ?”

He was not unwell, he said hastily, and called for,
wine, and the gentlemen went on: “ Yes, it was
quite true; he was come back; somebody had
advanced him money, and he had actually opened a
tavern or gaming-house, or something of the kind ; it
was astonishing,” they said, “how some people got,
on through life.”
ANOTHER OLD ACQUAINTANCE. 159

Williams drank wine and made the most violent
efforts to look composed, and to a great degree he
succeeded. His wife remembered what had passed
between them on the subject before their marriage,
and his agitation appeared natural ; she began a most
cheerful conversation with him, and used every effort
in her power to drive away all unpleasant thoughts.

The next day they left the inn. Mrs. Williams
was expecting to become a mother in a few months ;
they, therefore, took a suite of rooms for the summer,
intending before winter to remove to Florence, where
they proposed taking up their abode.

One thought for ever haunted Williams, and that
was his father, and the discovery which, sooner or
later, his wife would make. He loved her extremely ;
Mademoiselle Angela was no longer her rival; he
would have given thousands, that he only had never
deceived her ; but every day made it more difficult
now to confess the truth. His letters never came to
the house ; he dreaded going into public lest he should
be recognised in some way ; he was become the slave
of perpetual apprehension. He bought a horse and
rode violently ; it was the only thing that seemed to
remove him from himself; yet he never returned
home without fearing that the frightful secret was
out. All this preyed upon his health ; he looked ill
and haggard ; his wife grew anxious about him ; he
assumed spirits which he did not feel, and was all the
time miserable. To add to his anxiety, Reynolds
still pursued him with letters, and at length came in
person. He came with the most resolute purpose of
dragging from Williams the secret of his father’s
residence. He came with tidings for which Williams
160 ANOTHER OLD ACQUAINTANCE.

was not prepared—the happiness of his life depended
upon his marriage with Williams's sister—he would
not speak of her in any other character than as his
sister ; he defied him, before Heaven, to deny that
she was so, or that her father was other than his. He
was so firm, so much in earnest, that Williams
quailed before him. Life and death, he said, was in
his errand, and he would not be trifled with. He
unly wanted to be eriabled to find them, and then
Williams might cast them off for ever—might dis-
own them—might lie before God and man; they
should from that day want neither friend nor support,
for he himself would maintain them. Williams told
him honestly that which he knew ; he had established
them as he hoped permanently in Birmingham, and
had secured to them a hundred a year by quarterly
payments. They had left Birmingham, however, and
gone to Bath, and after that he had incidentally
learned they were in London, where the father had
opened some kind of tavern at the West End—a mad,
foolish scheme, said Williams, and that was honestly
allhe knew. Reynolds, on his part, knew as much,
which he related: he had traced them from town to
town, and at length to London, where, as was stated,
the father had been unwise enough to enter into some
sort of scheme, but not in a tavern or gaming-house,
in what was designed for a small respectable coffee -
house and news-room. He had had a stroke, however, ,
which incapacitated him from business. The whole
place was broken up—all was complete ruin—and
after that, he and his daughter seemed lost amid the
vastness of sorrow and disappointed hopes in London.
Reynolds was a man, physically and morally, with
ANOTHER OLD ACQUAINTANCE. 161

nerves as of iron ; he was not to be daunted by diffi-
culties, er impeded by obstacles of one kind or another,
and now he stood before Williams like the personifi-
cation of determined will, and demanded from him
where was his sister ?

“Would to Heaven I could tell you!” said
Williams, with sincerity.

Reynolds did not believe him. Williams tried every
means in his power to convince him ; offered him an
unlimited order on his banker for their use ; but
Reynolds rejected it. “It isa mockery,” said he,
indignantly, “to offer money now, when you have
compelled them into unknown misery and perhaps
ruin !”

A violent quarrel ensued, and Reynolds returned
to England, cursing what he considered the heartless,
selfish, unnatural pride and unkindness of his partner,
and resolved to spend his life, if needful, in rescuing
the girl he loved so tenderly from the misery which
seemed to encompass her.

It was impossible to keep from Mrs. Williams's
knowledge the fact that something unpleasant had
caused this unexpected journey of her husband’s
partner to such a distance, and no doubt Williams
would have found the concealment of the truth much
more difficult than he did, had not fortune favoured
him ; his child was born, and the mother forgot every
unpleasant thing in the joy of her first-born.

Months went on. A house was taken for them at
Florence ; the day fixed for their journey was come.
At the moment of departure a letter from England
was put into Williams's hand ; it was in a woman’s
hand-writing, and had been sent merely directed to

P 2
162 ANOTHER OLD ACQUAINTANCE.

his name through the English ambassador. It was
from his sister, and was a most touching appeal to
his humanity, if not to his affection. Her father,
she said, had lost the use of one side; had lost his
memory completely, and in part his speech—he was a
pitiable and infirm object. She was making the most
gigantic efforts in her power for their support ; but
she had no friends, She knew not the banking-house
whence her father drew their quarterly payments, and
her father’s efforts to recall it were hopeless. Her
own health was giving way, and she besought him,
without loss of time, in the name of that Great
Father before whom they must all one day answer
for their deeds, to inform her of the name of his
banker, and thus rescue them from the horrible
misery which already stared them in the face. His
heart was wrung as he hastily perused it. His wife
came in at that moment; the carriage was at the
door ; the servants and the courier came bustling
about; his wife said all was ready, and she was
impatient to be off; he crumpled the letter hastily in
his hand, gave his arm to his wife, and placed her in
the carriage ; the nurse and the child followed quickly,
all was bustle and confusion; he took his seat: there
were yet cloaks, and shawls, and travelling baskets,
and little bags, and endless things to be looked after,
for Mrs. Williams was one of those provident persons
who cared for every want beforehand. Scarcely were
they off, when Williams recalled the letter; it was
not in his hand—it had not been in his hand for some
time—where had he put it? He was alarmed; he
quietly felt his own pockets, looked behind his wife,
looked behind the nurse, but it was not to be seen.
ANOTHER OLD ACQUAINTANCE. 163

He dared not ask about it, but sat troubled and
uneasy in the corner of his carriage, trying to recal
to his recollection what had occurred but a few
moments before. That he had it crumpled up in his
hand as he assisted his wife into the carriage he could
recollect ; but his mind was so agitated and bewildered
at the moment that he knew not what he did ; he
could remember nothing more about it till he had
missed it ; he feared that he had dropped it in getting
into the carriage, and in that case it would be found
and might be made public—might be sent after him
—nay, he could not tell what might be the conse-
quence ; but that which seemed even worse than
this, was the chance of his never finding it, for thus
he had not the slightest idea of what the address
was, to which his reply should be sent. It was a
most agonising thought. He hoped, however, that it
might still be in the carriage among its various con-
tents. At the first place they stopped he had every-
thing taken out—but no letter was there !

They came to their journey’s end ; took possession
of their new house—a beautiful prince-like villa on
the banks of the Arno; his wife was happy ; the
child was lovely, and throve like a flower in May ;
she was the fondest of mothers. Could she but have
seen her husband happy, she would have been the
happiest of wives. As at Vienna so here, he spent
most of his time on horseback ; he was as little as
possible at home. Had his wife’s mind been less occu-
pied by the child than it was, she never would have
rested without penetrating the secret of his sadness.
But when she saw him at home, she saw him with
assumed spirits, and she had no idea of his hours of
164 MADEMOISELLE ANGELA.

secret, untold agony of mind ; she saw that there was
something wrong, and with all the power of her love
she tried to set it right; she carefully kept from him
every painful subject, met him ever with smiles, and
tried all in her power to make him happy.

He in the meantime had written to Vienna about
the lost letter ; instituted all kind of search, and
offered reward, but to no purpose. The letter did
not appear, and the thought of the paralytic, speech-
less man, and the young girl thrown friendless on the
heartless world of London, haunted him day and
night. Oh, how bitterly was he punished, He was
willing now to help them—nay, to make any sacri-
fice for them, and he had lost the power of doing so.
He thought of old Mrs. Bellamy’s words, “ children,
children, never let pass an opportunity of doing a
kindness to those you ought to love, or the time may
come when the thought of not having done so will
pursue you as with a whip of scorpions !”

CHAPTER VI.
MADEMOISELLE ANGELA.

THE newspapers announced one morning that, in
consequence of the severe illness of the grandmother
of Mademoiselle Angeia, that favourite actress would
not perform that evening as usual. The public, who
lost a night’s pleasure in consequence of the old lady’s
illness, sincerely wished her better—but the wish
availed nothing ; the old lady died.

‘** Mademoiselle Angela desires to have some one
MADEMOISELLE ANGELA. 165

sent to her to alter her mourning, to-day,” said Mr.
Jones, of one of the great mourning warehouses in
London, to his head man; “ see that some one is sent
to her immediately.” The head man communicated
the order to the principal work-woman, adding, “ that
she had better send one of the cleverest hands.” The
principal work-woman glanced into the large room,
where there sat thirty young women at their gloomy
trade, and without waiting to make any selection,
called out that “ Miss Jervis must take her working
materials and go instantly to Mademoiselle Angela
and make such alterations in her mourning as she
required.” It was an every-day occurrence, and the
young lady to whom the commission was given having
prepared all that was needful to take with her, which
were contained in a little black box, found a cab wait-
ing for her at the shop-door, and drove off to the
handsome house of the renowned actress.

A man-servant conducted her up-stairs, and there a
grave, middle-aged waiting-woman received her, who
led her into Mademoiselle Angela’s own bed-room.
The chamber was the handsomest that the young
work-woman had ever seen, and she was rather
excited, for she knew how renowned was the lady to
whom it belonged ; her very heart beat at the thought
of seeing her. The rich mourning lay on the bed,
and while she took off her bonnet and cloak, Made-
moiselle Angela entered.

“ How beautiful she is, and how good she looks,”
thought poor Marianne.

The great lady smiled kindly at the young, modest
dressmaker—she too was struck by her appearance ;
a sentiment of great kindness filled her heart—
166 MADEMOISELLE ANGELA.

she made up her mind instantly as to what she
would do.

The young girl sat down to the work which was
pointed out to her, and Mademoiselle Angela, order-
ing a book to be brought to her, and dismissing the
woman, with the desire that no one should interrupt
her that morning, seated herself on the sofa, and
began to read. ‘The room was so still that the quick
movement of Marianne’s needle and the turning of
the pages of the book were audible. At length
Mademoiselle Angela, closing the book, said, “‘ Yours
is a melancholy occupation ; all day long, the whole
year through, working for sorrow, or what is worse,
the mockery of sorrow.”

The young girl sighed.

“It must be,” continued the actress, “a weary
trade to you.”

“T am,” said Marianne, “so thankful to be
employed, that to me it is not so.”

“ Have you then known distress?” asked the other,
but in so kind a tone that Marianne continued—

“IT have a father dependent upon me—we have
been very unfortunate,” she said, hardly keeping back
the tears ; ‘‘ very unfortunate in many ways. I have
feared starvation almost for us both, I have feared—
Oh, I cannot tell what I have feared—London is an
awful place for any one who is friendless—for a young
girl especially.”

The actress laid down her book, and taking a chair
sat down by the table where the girl was working.

“Tam a stranger to you,’ she said, very kindly;
‘* you know nothing of me; can feel no reason why
you should make a confidant of me—yet I wish you
would do so.”
MADEMOISELLE ANGELA. 167

The girl sighed again; and wiped away the tears
which this kindness had called forth. “| have
heard a great deal of you, Mademoiselle Angela,”
she said ; “‘ everybody talks of you, and I have heard
that you are very good, but Ihave nothing to tell you
that can interest you much, there are alas, so many
unfortunate people in London.”

“The unfortunate are always interesting to me,”
said the actress, with that air of simple, emphatic
truth which was her distinguishing characteristic.

Marianne felt its influence, and replied, “* There are
circumstances connected with my family which are
of a painful and altogether private nature—my
father, who is old in experience and sorrow, rather
than in years, and who is now helpless as a child in
mind and body, has been wholly dependent upon me
for the last twelve months. He was extremely fond
of me ; he expected that I should make my fortune
by marriage ; what little money we have had he has
risked to make more for my sake—and all has been
lost! We have now been in London a year and a
half, and in that time I have tried endless means of
obtaining our livelihood. I have been well educated,
and as I know myself as well qualified for teaching
as nine out of ten who do teach, I offered myself as
daily governess, as teacher in a school, as instructor
in various ways, but there always were for such
situations twenty or more applicants besides myself,
all of whom came supported by friends or interest of
some kind or other. I had none. I tried to take
pupils, but none came. I made fancy-work of all
kinds, and taught it, but by this I lost money. I
painted miniatures—children, dogs, cats, parrots, any-
thing—and if dogs, cats, and parrots had alone been
168 MADEMOISELLE ANGELA.

my subjects and sitters, I might have done; but a
young lady, at least a poor one, cannot in London
attempt this mode of gaining her living without being
subjected to the most annoying insults. People,” said
she, blushing deeply, “thought me pretty, and in
every way, in every situation, this was against me,
Oh,” said the poor girl, with tears in her eyes, “ how
often have I thought it would have been a blessing if
I had had the small-pox!”

“ And have you no friends at all?” asked Made-
moiselle Angela.

“ Friends!” repeated she, blushing deeply and
sighing ; “friends! yes, perhaps so. We ought to
receive an annuity, which would make us inde-
pendent, but he who should pay it is abroad. Oh, it
is a sad thing,” said she, bursting into tears.

The actress was deeply interested, “ And why does
he not pay it ?” she asked.

“I have written to him,” replied she, “since my
father’s memory has failed him, and have told him all
our distress ; but he takes no notice.”

“ But have you not other friends?” she asked,
“no connections, nobody that knows your family ?”

Again the girl blushed: “ Yes,” she said, “ there
are two ladies, very good and kind, who showed me
great kindness, who knew my mother—but circum-
stances forbid my applying to them—yet I do believe
that if they only knew what I have suffered they
would befriend me.”

** Do they live in London?” asked the actress.

“No,” she returned, “ they live in the country, in
Staffordshire.”

. “Could no one interfere for you—write to them
for you?”
MADEMOISELLE ANGELA. 169

Marianne looked up from her work for a moments
and fixed her eyes on the lovely face of the actress
and said, “ perhaps they might, but—”

‘“‘Tam curious about you,” interrupted Made-
moiselle Angela; “I have been in Staffordshire—
perhaps I know your friends—where do they live—
tell me ?” she said in a manner so unlike her usual
calmness, that Marianne again looked in her face.
“T once knew some parts of Staffordshire; tell me
who are your friends, and where they live.”

“They live at a small town called Utceter,” said
Marianne ; “their name is K endrick.” ;

The actress rose instantly from her seat, and walked
across the room—she seemed agitated — put her
handkerchief to her face, and then sat down again.

“I told you,” said she, hurriedly, “that I knew
something of Staffordshire, « Utceter I know, but
not your friends. No,” said she, in her usual calm
and simple manner, “ your friends, the Kendricks, I
never knew,”

Marianne ventured a remark which made her
heart tremble. “ There was a Mr. Osborne there,”
she said, “and a young Mr. Williams, his nephew—
but I daresay you never knew them.”

“Ah!” said the actress, with an emotion which
made her cheeks as pale as marble ; “ what of them
—what of young Mr. Williams? Has he been a
false lover of yours 2”

“Oh, no, no?” said Marianne, looking at her in
amazement ; “but oh, Mademoiselle Angela, if you
know anything of him—for he is a rich man now—
for the love of God, do tell him that the old man—
he knows who—is almost in want—would be in want

Q
170 MADEMOISELLE ANGELA.

but for me—and I, what canI do? with all my
utmost exertion I can earn but fifteen shillings a
week. Oh, Mademoiselle Angela,” said she, dropping
on her knees before her, “if you know him, do this
for the sake of Christian love ; oh, do it! for if you
ask, who can resist you ? ”

“Rise!” said the actress, deeply affected ; “rise,
my good girl, With the man you name I can do
nothing—but remember that I am your friend !”

With these words she went out, leaving poor
Marianne to her tears and her astonishment.

Two days after this a letter came to Miss Kendrick,
which excited the greatest astonishment and delight,
and well might it do so. It was from that celebrated
Mademoiselle Angela, whose fame had spread all over
England, and it told, as the incomparable Angela only
could tell it, the story of her acquaintance with
Marianne Jervis. Miss Kendrick, the letter said,
would know how they could best befriend her; for
the present, however, this young girl was her inmate,
and her father, who was feeble and infirm in the last
degree, was about to be removed to one of those
blessed institutions — the Sanatorium — where for
invalids of the middle-class every comfort of home is
combined with the most skilful medical treatment.

What did Miss Kendrick do when she read this
letter? First of all she had a good fit of crying, and
then she put on her bonnet and shawl and trotted off
to her nephew, to whom she knew its contents would
be like a message from Heaven.

The next day, though it was a market-day, Rey-
nolds set off for London. “I shall be at home again
MADEMOISELLE ANGELA. 171

with all my faculties to attend to business for the
future,” said he. “TI will not take a holiday again
on market -day.”

“Oh, go, go! and God bless you!” said good
Mr. Isaacs, twinkling his eyes.

Reynolds had forgotten that he had never actually
declared his love to Marianne ; he fancied that she
knew it as well as he did ; and, perhaps, after all, she
was not very much astonished when he rushed into
the room and clasped her in his arms. What a joy-
ful meeting it was! There was nevertheless a great
deal which was both painful and sad to be talked
over.

Reynolds, like all the rest of the world, was pre-
pared to see an almost divine creature in Mademoiselle
Angela, and she equalled his expectations,

“ Ido not know how it is,” said Reynolds, “ but
she reminds me of a young actress that Williams
knew in former days.”

“I think it is she,” said Marianne. Of their
conjectures, however, they wisely said not a word.

Marianne was two months with Mademoiselle
Angela, and then Reynolds, having put his house in
order to receive a wife, they were married. Made-
moiselle Angela gave the breakfast, and even accom-
panied the bride to church. It made quite a stir in
Utceter, that Mr. Reynolds had married a protégée of
the celebrated actress,

“But,” said Miss Kendricks zealously to all their
friends, “she is no actress herself, and never had
anything to do with players. There can only be one
Mademoiselle Angela in the world,”

Within three months after the marriage, the poor
172 MADEMOISELLE ANGELA.

father died. Reynolds, who had never communicated
his own and his sister's marriage to Williams, wrote
to him now with the news of his father’s death ; the
letter, however, reached Florence exactly two days
after the Williams's had left there for England—why
we shall see.

The Williams’s had now been twelve months in
Florence. He continued as melancholy as ever ; at
times he spoke of returning to England alone, but
of that his wife would not hear. She urged him to
consult physicians, but he, who knew too well what
was his malady, would take no physician’s advice.
His wife now began to suspect some concealed grief
or other, some sorrow of which he spared her the
knowledge from affection and tenderness. ‘* Oh, how
you mistake me, Edward,” she said, “if you think
I cannot share in your grief!” Her affection pained
him deeply—he believed that there was a grief which
she could not bear—the grief of his falsehood and
deceit. He avoided his wife as much as possible,
and spent his time alone. All his passion for Made-
moiselle Angela was gone; his wife was in his eyes a
superior being, and he coveted only her love, and
could he have felt that he deserved her love, he would
have been the happiest of men ; but he had deceived
her, and in deceiving her, had compelled himself to
the cruellest neglect of his father and sister. These
thoughts never left him.

One day his wife drove out with the nurse and
child ; they went out for the day, and according to
Mrs. Williams's custom, took with them provisions
for every possible want. One of the pockets of the
carriage was stuffed with biscuits for the child ; the
MADEMOISELLE ANGELA. 173

nurse fed him from them, and the child finding how
good they were was never satisfied with them ; when
she thought that he had had enough, she took the
cakes out and said, “ Now he might have everything
he could find there.” Down went the little fat hand,
but there was not much to find, and still the little
fellow kept groping down, in the hope that there
might yet be something; at last, up he brought a
crumpled piece of paper—a closely crumpled letter,
which seemed to have lain there a long time. His
mother saw it—a letter in a female hand—it excited
her curiosity ; she took it and read it. She read it,
looked hurriedly at the address, grew pale, and care-
fully folding it up put it in her reticule. She called
to the coachman, and bade him turn back ; she had
altered her mind, and would go no farther that day.

The boy laughed and prattled on the homeward
drive, but his mother neither heard nor saw him.
A terrible secret had been revealed to her, and she
could think of nothing but that,

On her return home she shut herself in her
chamber ; her husband was out on one of his hasty
rides, and she re-read the letter. It was that letter
which had been lost, that heart-breaking letter from
Marianne to her brother. All was now clear to his
wife. Her husband was then in reality the son of
that unfortunate convict, Edwards—he did not bear
his proper name—her child was descended from such
& parentage. That might be galling to a proud spirit,
but it was nothing to the cruel sense that she had
been deceived, wilfully and deliberately deceived by
her husband ; and then that he had suffered these
unfortunate relatives to suffer want—to die, perhaps

Q 2
174 MADEMOISELLE ANGELA.

perhaps had driven them to crime through his
falsehood.

“* Edward,” said she sternly to him, on his return,
‘why have you dealt treacherously by me?”

He turned deadly pale, and sank in a chair. She
spread the letter before him.

“ Why have you deceived me ?” she asked, “ Oh,
Edward, that we should have lived thus long together
and you not have the candour to tell me the truth |”

He raised his eyes from the paper to her face, but
said not a word.

“You have done very unkindly by me,” said she,
“‘ and it is time now that we understood one another,
This is no light thing, Edward, it isa grave sin before
both God and man. To-morrow I leave you!”

He started up, and clasping both his hands toge-~
ther pressed them tight] y on his forehead, ‘ Leave
me !” repeated he, in a voice of heart-rending agony.

“Yes, Edward,” she said, with stern calmness,
“leave you, and seek out these unhappy relatives
whom you have cast off !”

“Angel of God!” exclaimed he, falling at her
feet ; “oh, that you could only look into my heart
—could have looked into it long ago—could have
known only the anguish I have endured— the punish-
ment which I have suffered.”

“* But,” said she, “you have let your father and
sister want—your own flesh and blood—and you,
yourself, have lived in ease and plenty! God
Almighty grant that the sorrow you have brought
upon your own parent may not be visited upon
you!”

She sank upon her knees beside her husband, and


MADEMOISELLE ANGELA. 175

bowing down her face, prayed earnestly, though
without words.

They both rose from their knees, His wife laid
her hand in his, and looking in his face with an
expression of the most undying love, said, in a low
voice, “ In joy and in Sorrow, in good and in evil, I
am ever thine! Let us go together, and retrieve the
wrong that has been done—and so may the Almighty
bless us !”

He bowed his face to her hand, and wetted it with
tears.

THE END.

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12 WILLIAM TEGG AND CO.’8 CATALOGUE
aaa iineeaiidatitiaaala aetna aint ei oe



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