Citation
Whispers from fairyland

Material Information

Title:
Whispers from fairyland
Creator:
Brabourne, Edward Hugessen Knatchbull-Hugessen, Baron, 1829-1893
Pearson, G ( George ) ( Engraver )
Longmans, Green, and Co ( Publisher )
Place of Publication:
London
Publisher:
Longmans, Green and Co.
Manufacturer:
Spottiswoode and Co.
Publication Date:
Copyright Date:
1874
Language:
English
Physical Description:
viii, [3], 345, [2] p., [8] leaves of plates : ill. ; 19 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Children's stories ( lcsh )
Children's stories -- 1874 ( lcsh )
Publishers' advertisements -- 1874 ( rbgenr )
Fantasy literature -- 1874 ( rbgenr )
Bldn -- 1874
Genre:
Children's stories ( lcsh )
Publishers' advertisements ( rbgenr )
Fantasy literature ( rbgenr )
novel ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
England -- London
Target Audience:
juvenile ( marctarget )

Notes

General Note:
Publisher's advertisements follow text.
General Note:
Illustrations engraved by Pearson.
Statement of Responsibility:
by E.H. Knatchbull-Hugessen.

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:
ALH2995 ( NOTIS )
31726533 ( OCLC )
026836263 ( AlephBibNum )

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Full Text
nt

ie





The Baldwin Library





Mt NAd.
“Lae Pee



WHISPERS from FAIRYLAND



LONDON : PRINTED BY

SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-!



TREET SQUARE

AND PARLIAMENT STREET







Ze

ty
Uff

tf

UY





THE LOST PRINCE





WHISPERS FROM
FAIRYLAND

BY THE RT. HON.
E. H. KNATCHBULL-HUGESSEN, M.P.

AUTHOR OF ‘STORIES FOR MY CHILDREN’ ‘MOONSHINE’ * QUEER FOLK’ ETC



THE LOST PRINCE

LONDON
LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CoO.
1874

All rights reserved



TO THE

MOTHERS OF ENGLAND.

—+-—

DsAR LADIES,

So many of you have spoken kind words to me of
my books for children, that I venture to dedicate to you that
which I have just finished.

It is difficult to please all readers. The child just
out of the nursery, the young lady ‘in the schoolroom,’ the
school-boy, and the ‘grown-up children’ who do me the honour
to read my books, cannot all be exactly suited in every story.
Sometimes I am too ‘old,’ sometimes too ‘young’ for my readers.
But to your kindly judgment I readily and humbly submit my
present volume. I hope and believe ‘that, whatever may be its
defects, there is nothing in it which can do harm or teach evil
lessons to the child-world, which I love so well. Were it other-
wise, I should not be bold enough to dedicate it to that body
of English women whom, above all others, I respect and admire ;
because it is to them and to their guidance of the home-life of
their children that England has owed her greatness in time past
and will continue to owe the same in that future for and in
which those children have to work.

I am yours most respectfully,

E. H. KNATCHBULL-HUGESSEN,



PREFACE.

——4-——

I HOPE no one will blame me for the title which
I have ventured to choose for my new book of
Fairy Tales. There is no particular reason why
such tales should not be spoken out in a loud voice,
but there is something more mysterious and Fairy-
like in a ‘whisper,’ and therefore I have chosen the
word, There would be something inappropriate in
‘Bawls from Fairy-land,’ ‘Shrieks’ or ‘ Yells’ would
be wholly out of the question, there is a sulky
sound about ‘ Mutterings,’ and ‘Howls’ would be
extremely objectionable. So, upon the whole, I
prefer ‘ Whispers ;’ and, indeed, the title is all the
more appropriate, because it is in this tone of voice
that the little elves generally impart information to

those whom they honour with their confidence.



vill PREFAGE.



Through the rustling leaves in the soft summer
evenings; in the hay-fields after the hay-makers
have gone home, and the old white owl flits slowly
along in her search after the field mice, who are
no longer shielded from her sight by the long grass ;
early in the mornings before the world of man is
astir, and whilst the world of nature is still quiet
and fresh—at such times the Fairy-whispers come
to me ever and again; gentle, pleasant whispers
they are, and they tell such strange things, that I
cannot keep them to myself. So I cast them forth
for my child-friends to read and interpret for them-
selves, and if they cannot understand them all,
only let them tell me so, and I will ask for a full

explanation the very next time I go to Fairyland.



Ti:

Il.

IV.

V.

VI.

VII.

CONTENTS.

THE Lost PRINCE.

Tur HIsToRY OF A ROOK
THE SILVER FAIRIgsS . .
THE WITCHES’ ISLAND.
HARRY’S DREAM

THE RED BARON

THE Two ETONIANS



ILLUSTRATIONS.

PAGE

THe Lost PRINCE. : . . ; . loyace ‘1

THE GIANT PATTLE-PERRY . : . . se.55 4t
THE SILVER FAIRIES. . : 7 : : » 122
MOLLY AND THE DEVIL-FISII : » 173
Tue WircHes’ IsLaND . . . eC » 221
Harrv’s DREAM. : : : s . » 274
THE RED BARON : ; : . 7 : 9. 287

TuE Two Eronians . . 7 : : ” 339



Whispers from Fatryland.

sd Pate

I.
THE LOST PRINCE.

THERE was once a King who ruled over a people
faithful to his dynasty, and contented with his govern-
ment. His country was prosperous, his arms success-
ful, his power great, and the splendour of his court
unrivalled. Nor was this all; his Queen was a lady
of surpassing beauty and amiable disposition ; his
domestic happiness was complete, and he was blessed
with a son and two daughters, who were all that their
parents could desire. Fortune seemed to have smiled
upon that happy family, and nothing was wanting to
render their existence one of unalloyed bliss. At the
birth of each child good fairies had attended with
presents and good wishes, and everything promised a
long and joyful career to the children of those royal
parents.

It was not until the youthful Prince had attained
the age of ten years that the shadow of misfor-
tune first fell upon the King’s house, and dark-
ened an existence which had hitherto been one of
unmitigated joy and tranquillity. The little Prince

B



2 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.





had been christened Mirabel, but from his lively and
cheerful disposition had been usually called by the
short and tender designation of Prince Merry. He.
had dark hair and grey eyes, his form was graceful
and agile, his limbs well shaped, and his features de-
cidedly handsome.

According to the custom of that country, his dress
was richly ornamented with diamonds and precious
stones, and he wore a girdle which was thickly set
with jewels. One of these having become detached
the boy, somehow or other, contrived one day 'to inflict
a severe scratch upon his thigh, and although the
wound speedily healed, the scar remained, and caused
a certain disfigurement which his mother and nurses
greatly regretted. One of the toes of his left foot
moreover, was somewhat curiously shaped, for all the
world as if it had been cut in half, or rather as if a
piece had been cut out of the middle, for it was a
perfect toe, only very much shorter than the ordinary
run of toes; and besides this, he had upon one of his
arms a strange blue mark not commonly observable
upon a child’s limb. All these, however, were but
trifling defects, and in no way interfered with the
young Prince’s comfort.

He was about ten, as I have already remarked,
when something more serious befell him than a mere
personal blemish. Having been sent out one fine
summer’s afternoon with his favourite nursery-maid,
the latter took him for a ramble in the large forest
which joined up to the palace gardens. Somehow or
other one of the soldiers of the King’s guard happened
to be off duty, and walking in the same direction.



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 3



As this soldier chanced, by the merest accident, to be
a particular friend of the nursery-maid, nothing was
more natural than that they should stop and converse
together. In fact, they sat down upon a bench under
one of the big forest trees, and chatted away so much
to their mutual satisfaction that the moments slipped
by without either of them taking any account of time.
Suddenly, however, the loud sound of the palace dress-
ing bell fell upon their ears, and they became aware
of the fact that they had greatly outstayed the limit
of time allowed for the young Prince’s walk. Up they
started in some consternation, which was enormously
increased when they found that Prince Merry was no
- longer with them. The nursery-maid called him in
vain, then the soldier raised his louder voice, but with
a similar result, and they both commenced a hurried
and eager search in every direction. But their search
was fruitless. The young Prince had disappeared.

In vain they made the forest re-echo with his
name ; there was no answer, and a silence reigned
around which struck deep terror into their trembling
hearts. They stayed as long as they dared, and at
last returned to the palace in a dreadful state of alarm.
The nursery-maid rushed frantically to the nurse, told
her tale with incoherent vehemence, and went into a
violent fit of hysterics, from which she was only re-
covered by a liberal application of cold water.

It was some time before anyone dared to inform
the King of the loss of the son to whom he was
so devotedly attached. His Majesty was playing
billiards with the Lord Chamberlain, and as the latter

took very good care to be beaten, was in high good
B2



4 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [

humour, and quite prepared to forgive the Queen,
who had gone out driving, for being, as she certainly
would be, late for dinner.

But those who knew the monarch’s fondness for
his child, trembled with apprehension at the thought
of breaking to him the melancholy news. It could
not, however, be long concealed, and the disappear-
ance of the young Prince was announced by the Here-
ditary Grand Pig-feeder, a nobleman of high descent,
whose especial duty about the court was to super-
intend the supply of hams, bacon, and pickled pork,
of which large quantities were daily consumed in the
royal household. Entering the billiard room, he ap-
proached his sovereign with lowly obeisance, and
kneeling upon one knee, presented to him a silver
trough in which was deposited a note signed by three
of the ministers, narrating the circumstance of the
nursery-maid’s arrival, and report of the catas-
trophe.

Scarcely had the King read the missive through
when his countenance turned deadly white, and then
immediately flushed red with rage, as he flung his cue
at the Lord Chamberlain, and the silver trough at the
head of the Hereditary Grand Pig-feeder; then he
used violent words (which I shall not repeat, in case
any Kings should read this story, and be scandal-
ised at hearing what strong language some of their
royal race occasionally use, when their temper gets
the better of them) and bounced about the room
and the palace like a madman. Presently he gave
orders that the nursery-maid should be sent to
him, and after hearing all that she had to say, de-



1.] THE LOST PRINCE. 5



clared that she should be instantly condemned to be
eaten alive by white mice, and the soldier put into a
bag full of hedgehogs and rolled down the side of
the steepest precipice in that part of the world.

The unhappy maid wept bitterly and implored
mercy in piteous terms ; but it is doubtful whether she
would have obtained it, had not the King’s favourite
jester (who generally turned out to be the wisest
man at court) reminded the angry monarch that the
nature of white mice was not such as to render it
probable that they would do their part in carrying out
the sentence, and that hedgehogs being exceedingly
rare in that country, there would most likely bea great
and undesirable delay in the execution of the soldier.

After a little while, the King seemed to become
somewhat appeased, and turned his attention to the
consideration of the best means of recovering his
lost child. He ordered the forest to be thoroughly
well searched, and sent servants and messengers far
and wide along every road and pathway in the vicinity
of the palace. While he was engaged in giving these
commands, the Queen came in from her drive, and on
being informed of the misfortune which had befallen
her, gave vent to several shrill screams, and then
fainted away. Some time was occupied in bringing
Her Majesty back to consciousness, and when this
had been effected, her state was truly pitiable to
behold. She wept bitterly, let down her back hair,
tore her best pocket-handkerchief, trampled her new
bonnet underfoot, and scratched the faces of her
Mistress of the Robes and the three principal Ladies
in Waiting, to their great and visible consternation.



6 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.

In short, she behaved in every respect as if she had
been a mad woman, and upon the King’s attempting
to pacify her, she so far forgot her wifely duties as to
box his royal ears, and with another wild shout of
‘My child, my child!’ relapsed into her fainting fit;
from which the King thought it was by no means
desirable that she should speedily revive, if the same
scenes were to be re-enacted on her recovery. So
they carried the poor Queen up to her bed-room, and
left her quiet there until she came to once more, and
appeared somewhat less agitated. Then the King
paid her a visit, and, the first frenzy of grief being
‘over, the royal pair wept in each other’s arms over the
disaster which they both had to endure.

The servants, messengers, and soldiers who had
been sent to scour the country all returned without
any tidings of the missing Prince. The wells were all
examined, the ponds all emptied, the rivers dragged,
but nothing could be found nor any trace of Prince
Merry discovered by the searchers. For three days
and three nights the search was continued in every
direction, and at the end of that time the King and
Queen no longer ventured to hope that their beloved
son would be restored to them.

But what, in the name of all that was mysterious,
could possibly have become of him? The wild beasts
in that country were few and far between, and if any
savage animal had seized the boy, his cries would
surely have attracted the attention of the maid and
soldier, and even if this had not been the case, some
marks of his seizure, such as blood, torn raiment, and
signs of struggling would surely have been left behind.



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 7

Robbers were almost unknown in the kingdom, which
possessed an organised police, with staffs, helmets and
all complete, and was consequently very little troubled
with marauders of any description. It was very
unlikely that the Prince had run away of his own
accord: such an idea was at once negatived by the
consideration of his tender age, his lively and affection-
ate disposition, and the entire want of probable motive
on his part for any such a proceeding.

All, therefore, was enveloped in mystery, and the
more his ‘parents thought over the affair the more
completely puzzled did they become. The soldier
and the nursery-maid were closely cross-questioned
as to the affair, and both persistently adhered to
the same story. The Prince, they said, had been
playing about near them when they first sat down,
and had never asked them to walk on, or expressed
the slightest annoyance at their remaining where they
were. They owned, with sincere penitence, that they
had been grossly careless in not keeping watch over
the precious child, and the soldier readily admitted that
he had no business to have been in the forest at all. But
they both vowed and declared that they would have
given their lives for Prince Merry, and were utterly and
completely surprised and -horrified at his disappear-
ance, of which they could give no account whatever.

The King, when he thought quietly and soberly
over such matters, was not inclined to be severe upon
offenders generally, and retracted the sentence which,
in the first moments of his wrath, he had passed upon
these two individuals. As, however, it was impossible
to overlook the matter altogether, he directed that a



8 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.

large and strong cage should be made, of sufficient size
tocontain them both, and inthishe ordered the unhappy
pair to be confined, telling them that, as they were so
fond of each other’s society, they should enjoy it at
all events for some time to come, and should be kept
in their cage until Prince Merry should be found
again. After this, the King summoned his ministers,
and took counsel with them as to the best course to
be adopted in order to discover, if possible, what had
become of the heir to the throne. Many different
opinions were given, some of which had the appear-
ance of wisdom about them, whilst others were absurd
and beneath contempt. All, however, were agreed
that advertisements should be inserted in all the
newspapers of that and the adjoining kingdoms, and
large rewards offered for the restoration of the lost
Prince.

The task of drawing up the advertisement fell to
the Newsmonger General, a high officer of state whose
duty it was to watch over all the publications of the
day, and exercise a general supervision over the news-
paper press, which was never allowed to write nonsense
or to say anything abusive about anybody. This
great functionary found no difficulty in drawing up
an advertisement to the following effect :

Lost, stolen, or strayed,

As in Forest he played,

Prince Mirabel, often called ‘ Merry.’
He was perfectly made,

His parents obeyed,

And was gentle and tractable, very :
A lively lad, too,

On his arm a mark blue,



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 9

And a diamond-set girdle around him,

Gold pieces not few

Shall be given to you

Who bring the Prince here, when you’ve found him !

This advertisement was forthwith inserted in all
the newspapers, and every means was taken to give
publicity to the astounding circumstances of the
case. Not content with the newspapers, huge adver-
tisements were stuck up at all the principal railway
stations, on the sides of all blank walls (especially
those upon which ‘Stick no bills‘ had been prominently
affixed by the owners) and in every situation where
people were accustomed to congregate. All this,
however, produced not the slightest effect. No tidings
‘whatever were heard of the young Prince, and no
answers were given to the advertisements, except such
as turned out on enquiry to have been sent by rogues
and swindlers who wanted to make a good thing of
it, and were in several instances detected and hung
for their pains.

The worst of it was, in the opinion of the Royal
family, that in spite of the misfortune which had be-
fallen their illustrious house,everything went on just the
same in the rest of the kingdom. No general blight fell
upon everybody and everything, but the people per-
severed in prospering most provokingly, the harvests
were just as good, trade and commerce flourished
equally well, men bought and sold, married and
reared families, and in every respect conducted their
business and passed their lives just as comfortably as
if the young Prince had never been lost at all. That
common people should be happy when Royalty



10 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [I.



suffered was something totally opposed to those first
principles which taught the monarchs and great
people of those days that upon them and their hap-
piness the whole world hinged and depended, and
there might well have been Kings who would have
resented such an unnatural condition of things, and
have turned their wrath upon those who dared thus to
thrive during their sorrow. But, being a philosopher,
this worthy Prince only saw in the circumstances of
his country another proof of the heartlessness and infe-
riority of the common herd, who had not indeed the
graceto suffer with their ruler, but were on that account
rather to be pitied and despised than punished.
With great magnanimity, therefore, he endured the
prosperity of his people, and visited upon them the
callous indifference to his sorrow which they showed
in this practical manner, in no other way than by the
imposition of a few more taxes, in order to defray the
expenses consequent upon the continued inquiries
after the lost Prince.

Things went on in this manner for some time;
year after year slipped away, no more children were
born to the Royal couple, and it seemed as if the
kingdom would pass, after their decease, into the pos-
session of their two daughters, of whom it is now high
time to make mention.

Malvina and Pettina were two beautiful Princesses,
though their style was somewhat different. Malvina
was a queenly creature; tall, but not too tall, with
raven hair, finely-cut features, and dark eyes that
flashed brightly as lightning on asummer’seve. Her
temper was perhaps just a little imperious, but then



1.] THE LOST PRINCE. Il

she seemed born to command, and there was no
reason to doubt the goodness of her heart. Her
younger sister, however, was entirely different. She
was one of those creatures whom you could not better
describe than as a little fairy. Somewhat below the
average height of women, her figure was the most
graceful you can imagine, her limbs exquisitely
moulded, her light tresses had a special beauty of
their own, and if her features were not regularly
handsome, there was an expression of happiness and
heart-cheerfulness in them which made her face lovely
to look upon, and her whole being seemed to sparkle
like the morning light of a summer day. Pettina was
as much loved as Malvina was admired ; and the King
and Queen might well be, as indeed they were, proud
of their charming daughters, though even in the
pleasure thus afforded them they could never forget
the lost hope of their ancient house.

At the time of which I write the two Princesses
had reached the respective ages of eighteen and
seventeen, and were daily growing more beautiful and
accomplished. As may well be believed, no pains
had been spared upon their education. They played
excellently well upon several musical instruments,
their singing was something quite out of the common
way, they spoke modern languages with a facility and
fluency which was really wonderful, and in their
knowledge of history, geography, and other branches
of education their proficiency was far above the
average.

It is not surprising that under these circumstances
the suitors for the hands of the two Princesses should



12 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [I.

have been neither few nor far between. Perhaps the
number may have been increased by the knowledge
of the great probability that the whole kingdom would
eventually come to one or both of the sisters, but, be
this as it may, there was certainly no lack of eligible
persons who desired to form a matrimonial alliance
with one or other of the pair.

The powerful King of the Islands, where was the
finest and most numerous breed of white horses ever
known, had long regarded Malvina with loving eyes ;
the Prince of the River Country, whose immense in-
come was entirely derived from the swans which he
preserved by thousands, had cast tender looks upon
Pettina; whilst the mighty Giant Pattle-perry, who
lived in the Coal Country, had been heard to declare
that either of the damsels was more precious than
coal, which was saying a great deal and plainly
showed his appreciation of their worth. The King
and Queen, however, had no desire to part with their
children, and no wish for any marriage save one of
affection. The girls themselves were very happy at
home, and for some time all the rumours of offers to
be made by the various potentates I have mentioned
never came to anything more than vague reports.

Nine years had elapsed since the disappearance of
Prince Merry, and his parents had at last abandoned
all hopes of his recovery, and bowed in sorrowful sub-
mission to the terrible affliction which had befallen
them. Whilst the King devoted himself with in-
creased energy to public affairs, and gave all his spare
moments to literature ; the Queen, finding her house-
hold occupations insufficient for her amusement,



1} THE LOST PRINCE. 13

betook herself to the healthy and pleasant pursuit of
gardening. As it might well be in the case of a
palace belonging to so great a monarch, the gardens
attached to the royal residence were very spacious,
and no expense was spared to bring them to the
greatest perfection. Numerous gardeners were em-
ployed, some whose special duty it was to look after
the acres of glass under which the choicest fruit was
reared for the royal table, others who devoted their
attention exclusively to flowers, a third body to whom
vegetables were the sole care, and a staff of labourers.
whose whole occupation consisted in keeping the lawns
well mown and smooth, in sweeping dead leaves from
the paths, and in raking and keeping in proper order
the miles of gravel walks for which the royal gardens
were so famous.

In these gardens and the adjoining shrubberies
the Queen passed a great part of her time, sometimes
alone, and not unfrequently accompanied by one or
other of her daughters. One very lovely evening Her
Majesty had strolled to the further extremity of the
garden, and taken her seat upon a rustic bench which
she had long ago caused to be placed under an ancient
oak close to the forest. She was quite alone ; and as she
sat listening to the many soothing sounds which filled
the air, her melancholy became quite irrepressible,
and the tears ran fast down her cheeks as she thought
of her past happiness and present sorrow. The voice
of Nature seemed to speak of peace and joy and love.
The tender woodpigeon gently coo’d her ‘ good-night’
to her faithful mate, the clear and melodious note of
the nightingale fell with pleasant cadence upon the



14 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [..

listener’s ears, the bees were humming their drowsy
farewell to the sun, the robin chanted hisevening hymn,
the timid bats had begun to flutter out to meet the ap-
proaching twilight, and the busy life of day was just
giving place to the quiet sleep of night. Touched to the
heart by the influence of the hour, the Royal lady
continued to weep softly for some moments, and then,
clasping her hands together with fervour, she exclaimed
aloud—

‘Everything seems happy and peaceful—I alone
am wretched—I alone have no joy in life, for the love
of my heart was for my boy, and he has been taken
from me. Oh! will he never, never, come back?
Shall I never see him again ?’

As she spoke, the Queen threw a supplicating
glance heavenwards, and would probably have con-
tinued to say more in the same strain, had not her
last question been suddenly answered in a most
unexpected manner.

‘Why not?’ exclaimed a voice in a short, sharp
tone, which of itself, coming from an invisible speaker,
would have been startling enough, but, considering the
particular time and place at which it was heard, was
alarming in a remarkable degree.

The Queen started violently, and looked right,
left, and behind the tree, without seeing anything at
all. Then it struck her to look straight in front of
her by way of a change, and immediately that she did
so she perceived the person from whom the voice had
proceeded. It was a man so small that you might
fairly have called him a dwarf without being accused
of misrepresentation. He could not have been four



1 THE LOST PRINCE. 15



feet high, or anything near it, and although he held
himself as upright as possible, nobody could have
complimented him upon his height, except those who,
for reasons of their own, prefer short men to tall.
Upon his head he had a small close-fitting velvet cap,
his coat was ofa bright green with enormous brown
buttons, upon which were carved the figures of various
woodland animals ; similar buttons also adorned his
buff waistcoat, whilst his lower members were incased
in thick cord breeches, with leather gaiters overtopping
highly polished boots. In his hand he held a spud
nearly as tall as himself, and this he swung to and fro
as he sat upon the large root of a tree in the midst of
some ornamental rockwork exactly opposite the bench
upon which Her Majesty was sitting.

As soon as this strange individual perceived that
the Queen had seen him and fixed her eyes upon him
with great surprise, he calmly nodded at her, and
again repeated the words, ‘Why not?’ after which
he apparently waited for an answer to his question.

This, however, it was scarcely possible for the
Queen to give: the only reason ‘why’ she feared she
would never see her son again was that he was most
likely dead or carried to some remote region of
the earth, or else he would surely have been heard of
before nine years had expired since his first dis-
appearance. But to the good mother’s heart hope
was immediately conveyed by the words of the little
man, and not only could she give no reason why she
should not see her son again, but the probability of
her doing so instantly suggested itself to her mind,
and a thrill of joy darted at once to her very soul.



16 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, i.

She sprang from her seat hastily, and throwing
herself upon her knees in front of the little gentleman,
clasped her hands again, and exclaimed in a tone of
piteous entreaty—

‘Oh sir, caw you tell me anything of my lost
one—yours are the first words of comfort I have
heard for many a long day: give me, oh give me my
boy, and I will bless you for ever !’

‘Do you like your turkeys roast or boiled?’
calmly enquired the individual thus addressed, which
question appeared so ill-timed and extraordinary to the
Queen that she was utterly confused for the moment.
‘Because, continued the speaker, ‘there are two
opinions upon that point, as upon everything else.
Roast turkey is excellent when hot, but the bird is so
much better cold when it has been boiled, that I can
never quite agree with those who say that “a turkey
boiled is a turkey spoiled.” ’

By this time the Queen had somewhat recovered
her equanimity, and again earnestly accosted the
dwarf, for so indeed he might be called.

‘ Sir, sir,’ she cried, ‘I beseech you trifle not with
a mother’s feelings. If you know anything of my lost
darling, tell me ; by all you hold dear, I adjure you to
tell me at once.’

‘There are three things,’ gravely replied the little
man, ‘ which through life, you will do well to avoid.
Never fly into a passion—never sit: long with wet
feet, and do not takea hedgehog in your hands without
gloves.’

At this disrespectful and trying reply to her
entreaty, the Queen began to wax wroth, and rising



| THE LOST PRINCE. 17



hastily to her feet, she exclaimed in an indignant
tone, ‘Sir, I know not who or what you are, but no
one with the feelings of a gentleman would treat a
lady thus, and no one who was worthy of the name of
man would thus deal with an unhappy mother,’ and
so saying, she burst into tears again.

“Suet pudding,’ calmly observed the Dwarf, ‘is
improved by treacle; game should always be dressed
with its own gravy ; and you will do well to have the
chill taken off your claret before drinking it’

The Queen now became more angry than ever.
“What do you mean?’ she cried in louder tones.
‘What right have you to come and talk nonsense here
in such a heartless manner? What is your name, and
wherefore do you come without leave or licence into
these gardens ?’

As Her Majesty spoke, she took a step forward
towards the rockwork, as if determined to bring the
intruder to account forthwith. But the Dwarf now
rose from his seat, and bowed to the Royal lady with
the utmost gravity. ‘Madam,’ he said, in a voice
which was quite deferential in its tone, ‘I am really
grieved to have been the cause of so much excite-
ment; I might almost say irritation, in your Majesty.
My name is Rindelgrover ; my abode is in the forest ;
my profession that of a dwarf and philosopher ; and
my intentions are of the very best description.’

‘But, sir,’ rejoined the Queen, scarcely mollified
by the statement to which she had just listened, ‘if
this be so, why pretend to have news of my beloved
son, and then answer my earnest inquiries with irre-
levant and impertinent remarks ?’

Cc



18 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [.

The little man shrugged his shoulders. ‘Boys
will be boys,’ said he, ‘and dwarfs will be dwarfs, to
the end of their days, and it is not of the slightest
use'to expect them to be anything else. It isnot our
habit to answer questions directly they are asked, if we
doso at all. A few wise sayings or remarks, thrown in
in an interjaculatory manner, tend to compose the
mind and clear the way for a better reply than one
might give upon the spur of the moment. Since,
however, you object to my method of proceeding, I
will annoy you no more. In fact, all I came here to
say was that I wish to be your friend. The charms
of your two daughters have quite vanquished me.
Pettina is a duck and Malvina is a darling. To
restore to them a brother and to you a son seems to
me to be something which would entitle me to the
gratitude of you all. Mow am I talking nonsense?’

‘Oh, sir!’ tearfully exclaimed the Queen: ‘If
you are not deceiving me with false hopes, you will
indeed prove yourself to be my best of friends. But
say, oh say, what I am to do to get back my lost
darling ?’

‘Bread-and-butter with fresh water-cresses makes
a wholesome and delicious meal,’ replied the Dwarf,
and then with a violent effort breaking himself off from
his accustomed mode of answering questions, thus
continued : ‘I beg your pardon, madam, for this short
digression ; I will endeavour to help you by every
means in my power, and if I don’t succeed in doing
so, call me Macklethorpe, instead of Rindelgrover.’

‘J have no intention of calling you anything so
ridiculous, returned the Queen ; ‘nor indeed do I wish



es] THE LOST PRINCE. 19



to call you anything at all, if you will only cause the
realisation of the hopes to which you have given birth.’

“I see,’ replied the little man, ‘that I must explain
myself. Macklethorpe is the Dwarf of the Meadows
—a poor, dandelion-crowned fool, with whom I am
not on terms, for reasons which JI need not now ex-
plain. Z£ am the Dwarf of the Forest, and a vastly
superior being, as you may suppose from what you
see. I would tell you all I know about your son
with pleasure, if I were not bound by an oath of
fearful import not to do so. But if you want to
know, and to recover your lost boy, there is only one
thing to be done. Let your two daughters eat an
acorn apiece from off the tree under which you have
been sitting for three nights, just before they let down
their back hair on going to bed. On the next morn-
ing they will understand the language of the forest
creatures. Then let them walk boldly into the forest
without any attendants, and you will see what you
will see!’

With these words the Dwarf made another low
bow to the Queen, and then walking up to the gate
which opened into the forest, passed through it, and
disappeared in the most natural manner possible.

The Queen remained plunged in deep ‘thought.
What did it all mean? Could she trust to this
little gentleman, who called himself ‘Rindelgrover’?
Would it be safe for her daughters to go alone into the
forest ? She pondered over the matter for some little
time in great doubt as to what it would be best to do;
and at last resolved that she would go and consult

the King, for in those days wives were not above
c2



20 WHAISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [.



consulting their husbands, and husbands their wives,
even upon matters of the greatest importance.

She found His Majesty in the library, where he
was deeply engaged in writing an essay upon
‘ Poverty, its causes and remedies,’ which he was quite
justified in doing, as he probably knew less upon the
subject than any other man in his kingdom, which,
as lookers-on see the best of the game, was perhaps
the best qualification for giving an opinion upon it.

The King readily left his employment when in-
formed of the Queen’s errand, and only regretted
that he had not been with her during the interesting
interview which had just taken place. He was not
long in deciding that his daughters had far better do
as the Dwarf had directed. He could not believe, he
said, that so great a misfortune would be permitted
to fall upon a crowned head as that he should lose
all his children, and he felt the greatest hope that
some good might be in store for their house from the
visit of the Dwarf.

The Queen entirely agreed in this view of the
case ; and upon the matter being stated to the persons
principally concerned, the two Princesses vied with
each other in the readiness with which they declared
that they would run far greater risks than those
entailed by a walk in the forest if they could only
be the means of recovering their dear brother, and
restoring peace and happiness to their beloved parents.
The King, however, being an eminently just man, and
unwilling to take advantage of the first ebullition of
sisterly affection, desired the young ladies to go to
bed and think over the matter before finally deciding,



1] THE LOST. PRINCE. 21



since it must be of their own free will that they
encountered the dangers which might possibly be
before them. Like dutiful children they quickly
obeyed, especially as it was getting very late,and was
already beyond their usual bed-time.

Next morning, however, found them exactly in
the same frame of mind, determined to face anything
for the sake of the object in view. Accordingly, in
the course of the day, six acorns were carefully
gathered from the old oak, and the sisters, not
without sundry wry faces, each ate one before going
to bed. This process they repeated upon the second
and third days, and the following morning prepared
to fulfil their appointed task.

As no particular time had been fixed by the
worthy Rindelgrover for their excursion, the Queen
kept her daughters with her until after luncheon, when,
having been duly fortified by cutlets, sweetbreads, and
light claret, the Princesses sallied forth, walked down
the garden, one on each side of their mother, and
having reached the great oak under which the latter
had been sitting upon the occasion of the eventful
visit of the Dwarf, bade the Queen a tender farewell,
and boldly entered the forest.

The afternoon was warm, but the luxuriant
foliage of the large trees kept off the sun, and
rendered the walk rather pleasant than otherwise to
the Princesses. They walked for some distance
without any adventure whatever. All was silent ;
the birds seemed disinclined to sing—the animals
were doubtless couching in the fern and shady places
—there was scarcely a breath of air stirring, and



22 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [I



everything was as quiet as can be imagined. After
a time, the two sisters began to get tired of walking
on, constantly expecting something to happen which
never did happen, and thought that, under the cir-
cumstances, they might as well sit down.

A little stream ran through the forest, and upon
its banks they were standing when they came to this
determination. It was a very little stream, such as
one could jump across without much difficulty ; but
its clear waters gurgled on, for all it was so little,
with a cheerful sound, now and then quite shallow, as
they passed over some bed of sand or gravel which
rose near to the surface of the stream, and anon quite
respectably deep, giving room for trout to lurk in
deep holes under the banks and for shoals of smaller
fish to dart about and disport themselves in the water.
Here the Princesses took their seats upon the bank,
and began to watch the stream and listen to its
pleasant rippling-sound.

They had not sat there long before a kingfisher
came darting by them like a flash of lightning, and
uttered a short sharp cry as for one instant he dis-
played his gaudy colours before their eyes, and then
sped away with a swiftness which it defied their gaze
to follow. The two sisters looked at each other with
surprise, for, by the miraculous power which they had
derived from their acorns, they heard with perfect
distinctness, and understood into the bargain, the
observation which the bird had made as he flew past
them. To ordinary mortals it would have seemed
but an unmeaning sound, but to them it was far
otherwise, and they knew that the kingfisher had said,



I.] THE LOST PRINCE. 23



‘Hurrah! now there’s a chance for the poor Prince!
Well done, Rindelgrover !’

The Princesses looked at each other, as I have
said, with surprise not unmixed with awe; and these
feelings were rather increased than diminished, when
almost immediately afterwards they heard two wood-
pigeons cooing to each other in conjugal and agreeable
manner, and comprehended with perfect ease the sum
and substance of their conversation.

‘These are good girls!’ said the one. ‘ Well done,
Rindelgrover !’

‘That they are indeed,’ returned the other bird.
‘ Loving sisters and dutiful daughters. They are sure
to succeed, and what is more, they will thoroughly
deserve to do so. Well done, Rindelgrover!’

At these words hope at once filled the hearts of
the Princesses ; but they had not time to exchange
ideas upon the subject before a robin struck up his
song in a neighbouring bush, and spoke to the follow-
ing effect :

‘How long has been the time since the poor little
Prince has been kept from his home and all who love
him! Not quite so, however, for we birds and wood-
land animals have ever loved him, and would have
set him free long ago if we could have done so. But
the power was not ours, and we could only wait and
hope. Still, now these two charming Princesses have
come, doubtless all will soon be well, and the Prince
will be restored to his own again. Well done, Rindel-
grover!’

‘Well!’ cried Malvina, now fairly astonished and
puzzled at what she had just heard, ‘ of all the strange



24 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. {1



things that ever have happened certainly this is the
strangest. The birds all seem to say the same thing,
but yet none of them seem to think it necessary to
tell us what to do in order to obtain the success which
they foretell for us.’

‘ Suppose we ask one of them ?’ suggested Pettina,
who was not without natural acuteness, and being
young and innocent, had an idea that the best way to
obtain information was to ask questions of those who
possessed it.

Malvina raised no objection to this view of the
case, and accordingly they both looked round, and
presently perceived a woodpecker crawling quietly up
a tree and preparing himself for a little tapping
amusement.

‘Mr. Woodpecker,’ said Malvina in a courteous and
reassuring tone,—‘ Mr. Woodpecker, could you, would
you tell us how we ought to proceed so that we may
get back our lost brother ?’

‘T don’t know everything,’ sharply returned the
bird thus addressed. ‘I know something about it,
but not enough; ask the squirrels? It’s a good job
you have come, though. Well done, Rindelgrover!’
and so saying, he resumed his tapping with much
enthusiasm.

At this moment Pettina observed a hare sitting
on the opposite bank of the stream, nibbling the
young grass and enjoying itself after the innocent
fashion of such animals. ‘Puss,’ cried the Princess
immediately, ‘please tell us how we can find our
brother, and what we ought to do next?’

The hare started at the voice, as if she had not



I.] THE LOST PRINCE. 25



previously observed the speaker. ‘Guns and dogs!’
she cried, ‘how you did startle me! I would willingly
tell you all I know, for you look so kind that I am
quite grieved that you should be in sorrow. But you
must know that I really can say no more about it, for
in this forest we leave all such matters entirely to the
squirrels, You had better ask them, I should think.
Well done, Rindelgrover!’ and having thus spoken,
the hare quietly returned to her occupation of grass-
nibbling, and took no further notice of the Princesses.

The latter now began to think that the squirrels
were evidently the people to be sought, and they
therefore determined to wander along the banks of
the stream in hopes of encountering some of these
little animals. Nor had they far to go before their
object was accomplished. Not many yards from the
spot where they had been seated, they perceived two
squirrels chasing each other round and round a tree,
climbing over its branches, jumping from place to
place, and having a regular good game of hunt-the-
squirrel, or hide and seek, or by whatever name the
squirrels call it when they are at home. The Princesses
approached as near as they thought they might ven-
ture to do without giving offence to the graceful little
animals, and then Malvina addressed them in the
following words:

‘Kind squirrels, would you be so very good as to
inform us where our dear brother, Prince Merry, is;
and what we are to do in order to get him back
again?’

As she spoke, the squirrels approached near to
each other, and sat sedately, about a foot apart, on a



26 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. . [.



tolerably low branch of a mighty oak which stood
near. When Malvina had ceased speaking, they looked
at her, then at Pettina, and then at each other, and
then began to sing the following extraordinary
words :—

I.

Two sisters went walking out into the wood ;
Out into the wood when the sun was high.
Their brother they wanted to find if they could,
And their mother stayed back with a tear in her eye!
For girls must seek when their brothers are lost,
And the longer time passes, the greater the cost,
And the furnace fires are roaring !

Il.

The Prince he was playing all under the trees,
All under the trees with his nice new ball,
He wandered away till at last by degrees
No more could he hear his poor nurse’s call.
So girls must seek when their brothers are lost,
And the longer time passes the greater the cost,
And the furnace fires are roaring !

IIt.

The Giant has seized the young Prince in his arms,
His struggles and cries they are all in vain,
In the Country of Coal there are wiles and charms,
And ne’er may Prince Merry come home again !
Yet if girls do seek when their brothers are lost,
Dear to the Giant his prize may cost,
And the furnace fires stop roaring !

Having concluded their song, the squirrels imme-
diately exclaimed as if with one voice, ‘Well done,
Rindelgrover!’ and began their game again as un-
concernedly as if nothing had happened out of the
common way.



LJ THE LOST PRINCE. BOF.



The sisters were full of wonder at the words of
the song which they had just heard. Their thoughts
were of course directly pointed to the Giant Pattle-
perry, who, as has been already mentioned, had ex-
pressed himself in terms which had led them to
believe that he might appear at Court as a suitor for
the hand of one or other of them. Was he, then, the
captor of their dear brother, and the cause of all the
sorrow which had so long overshadowed their family ?
Then the thought passed quickly through their brains
that their invitation to walk in the forest might be a
trick of this very Giant, who, according to the squirrels,
had there entrapped their brother. Still, if this were
the case, what had the Dwarf to do with it, and why
should all the animals conclude their observations
with a panegyric upon that small individual? The
whole affair was quite incomprehensible to the two
sisters ; and they both felt that it would never do to
leave the squirrels without further information upon a
subject so important to themselves and their family.
Therefore, without further delay they proceeded to
make another appeal to the little animals, who by
this time were merrily pursuing one another round
and round their favourite tree, at a considerable height
from the ground.

‘Dear little squirrels!’ cried Malvina. ‘You dar-
ling little pets!’ exclaimed Pettina, and having thus
attracted the attention of the small creatures, who
were probably unused to such endearing epithets, both
the young ladies continued, in one and ‘the same
instant : -

‘Do tell us what we ought to do! If you would



28 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.

but tell us! We quite trust you, but we really don’t
know what to do next.’

With these words they gazed upwards with such
a beseeching air that mortal squirrel could hardly have
resisted them. The squirrels, being but mortal, were
quite unable to do so; and both ran down the tree
again without a moment’s hesitation, and seating
themselves upon the same branch from which they
had previously addressed the sisters, began to sing as
follows :—

Follow the stream till you come to a mound

Where pigs and wild strawberries greatly abound :

Tis there you will find your best friend in the wood,
Who hates what is evil and follows the good.

Call him once ; call him twice ; by the name you have heard,
And add to that name just one magical word :

© Ri-too-ri-lal-lural’—remember it well !

For Dwarfs—aye, and Giants, must bow to the spell.
Now, plague us no more with your ‘ifs’ and your ‘buts,’
For squirrels hate trouble as much as bad nuts,

The one hurts the teeth, and the other the heart,

So list to our counsel, and haste to depart !

‘Well done, Rindelgrover!’—and with these words
the squirrels jumped up again, and recommenced their
gambols as if nobody was there and no business but
their own had to be thought of.

The sisters eagerly listened to every word which
had fallen from the little animals; and having now
received clear and definite instructions, resolved to
follow them without delay. Rising from their seats
upon the bank, they followed the course of the little
stream, earnestly looking out for the place which the
squirrels had indicated to them as the abode of their



I] THE LOST PRINCE. 29



“best friend in the wood,’ whom they naturally sup-
posed to be the Dwarf who had invited them thither.

For some time they saw nothing at all like the
place which had been described to them: the stream
wound its way through the forest like a sensible stream
would naturally do, running along through the prettiest
places, never going up hill, and winding to and fro as
if it was in no hurry to get out of the wood, but
wished to see as much of it as it could before it came
out again into the hot sun and open country. At
last, when they were nearly tired of walking along by
its side, listening to the casual remarks of various
birds and beasts, which all ended in the same lauda-
tory observation upon the mighty Rindelgrover, a
sudden turn of the stream brought before them a new
and unusual scene.

The ground sloped upward upon one side of the
rivulet, forming that which might fairly be called a
mound, which was perfectly covered with a bed of
wild strawberries. There was no mistake about it,
for the fruit was there in profusion, and so tempting
did it look that the sisters, being somewhat thirsty
after their walk, would have been inclined to make
closer acquaintance with the red berries at once, had
not there been other things to observe at the same
time. A number of pigs were feeding all round the
mound, grubbing away here and there, but none of
them venturing to touch the strawberries. They were
pigs of various sorts and sizes, dark and light, big and
little, but all seemed to be as happy and contented as
if hams, bacon, pickled pork, and pigs’ feet and ears
had never been thought of by hungry mortals. Still,



30 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. i.



as nothing was to be seen but pigs and strawberries,
the Princesses felt that they must take action accord-
ing to the advice of the squirrels, if they wished to
see that best of friends who was said to have his abode
in the place before them. Accordingly, they ap-
proached the mound and stood upon the edge of the
strawberry bed, the pigs taking no notice whatever of
them, and not appearing in the slightest degree dis-
turbed by their presence. Then Malvina raised her
voice and pronounced in a clear, firm tone the word
‘Rindelgrover!’ Pettina followed her sister’s -ex-
ample; and the words were scarcely out of their
mouths before a chorus of grunts arose around them,
every pig in the place loudly exclaiming in his native
tongue, ‘ Well done, Rindelgrover!’ Once more the
sisters spoke aloud the name of him whom they had
been taught to consider their best friend in the wood,
and then both speaking at once, and not without some
little difficulty, they pronounced the magic word of
words, ‘ Ri-too-fi-lal-lural.’

The effect was instantaneous. From a thicket at
no great distance a pig of larger than ordinary size
suddenly made his appearance. Not, however, a
common pig undistinguishable from the rest of the
herd, but a pig adorned with saddle and bridle and
all the trappings of a horse. He held his head
proudly and bore himself like a pig of importance as
he cantered downwards to the stream ; and so indeed
he well might do, for he bore a rider whom, from the
description given by their mother, the Princesses
instantly recognised as the Dwarf Rindelgrover.
Upright he sat upon his porcine steed, with the



1.] , THE LOST PRINCE. 31



golden tassel of his velvet cap streaming in the air as
he rode down towards the astonished sisters, before
whom he reined in his pig, and stood at a short
distance, bowing gracefully to his visitors. A general
grunt of ‘Well done, Rindelgrover!’ burst from the
surrounding swine upon the appearance of this
evidently powerful individual, but he appeared to
object to any such demonstration. Rising in his
stirrups, he waved his hand in a careless manner as
if to forbid further observations of a similar character,
and then bowed again to the Princesses, apparently
awaiting their pleasure.

‘Oh, sir!’ exclaimed Malvina, ‘can you—will
you—help us to get back our brother?’

‘Devonshire cream is an excellent thing for break-
fast, especially with strawberries, replied the Dwarf,
with a smile.

Pettina, who was as clever as beautiful, at once
remembered her mother’s account of the behaviour of
Rindelgrover upon their first meeting, and the ob-
jection which he had to questions. She therefore
took her part in the conversation in the following
manner. Smiling back pleasantly upon the little
gentleman, she said in her sweetest tone:

‘How nice it is to have friends in the forest to
help one when one wants anything! How happy we
should be if we knew all about our brother's disap-
pearance and what to do in order to get him back
again!’ and here, nudging her sister, who readily
understood her meaning, they both exclaimed at one
and the same moment: ‘ Ri-too-ri-lal-lural !’

The Dwarf’s face lighted up with unmistakeable



32 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.



joy: ‘Well done, young lady,’ he cried ; ‘you. have
spoken just as you ought to have spoken, and al-
though your dear sister fell into the error of asking a
question, instead of calmly stating her wishes, the
fault is one of a trifling nature, and shall at once be
overlooked. You have now only to listen to me,
which I beg you to do with great attention. The
Giant Pattle-perry is the sole cause of all the misery
which you and your parents have endured for the
last nine years. This fellow is one of the worst giants
the world ever saw, which is saying a great deal, for
those overgrown rascals are a bad lot altogether.
He inhabits the Coal Country which lies beyond this
forest, and is a terrible tyrant to his unfortunate
people, whom he compels to work in his coal-pits,
which of course bring him in a large revenue. As
the inhabitants of his country are insufficient to
supply him with all the workmen he requires, he has
long been in the habit of kidnapping anybody and
everybody he could, and being well versed in the
arts of magic, has frequently resorted to the most
unfair measures in order to carry out his ends. He
has, properly speaking, no power in this forest, except
that, being bigger than I am, I cannot drive him out
of it if he chooses to walk in it. This he does not
often do, though oftener than I could wish, and many
a roast leg of pork has graced his table which ought
now to be a living limb of one of my faithful pigs.
The Giant knows, however, that two can play at
magic as well as one, and has not lately troubled me.
But nine years ago he was here, and approached
nearer to your father’s palace than he had ever done



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 33



before. He saw your brother playing, and whether
from any old grudge against your family, or from a
naturally evil disposition, determined to kidnap him,
and did so accordingly, disguising himself as a puppy
until he had drawn the child some distance in pursuit
of him, and then suddenly resuming his own form,
and carrying off the astonished little fellow under his
arm. It was all the worse of him, because the poor
young Prince was too small to be of any use to him
in his coal-pits. Nor, indeed, am I certain that he
has ever been employed there. All I do know is
that, like many others, he is a captive in the Giant’s
kingdom, which can be entered with comparative
ease, but to leave which requires much care and some
little magical knowledge on the part of those who
wish to do so. You, my dear young ladies, will have
to seek your brother in that kingdom.’

The Princesses gave a start and a shudder at
these words, but the Dwarf continued with a smile:

‘There is no need to be afraid. You have power-
ful friends, and will, with proper attention to the
directions given you, overcome all the difficulties
before you. The King of the Islands and the Prince
of the River Country are my friends, and will, I know,
aid us, if necessary, with their full power. But, in the
first instance at least, cunning is more requisite than
strength. Pattle-perry himself is no match for many
others in magic. There is, however, a person called
Macklethorpe whom we have to fear more than the
Giant, whom he advises and aids. This fellow is,
like myself, of a respectable size, and not an over~
grown bulk of flesh like Pattle-perry, but this makes

D



24 WATSPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [t.



him all the more dangerous. Remember, however,
the mystic word of power, which, pronounced by
mortal mouth under certain conditions, cannot be
resisted by Dwarf or Giant.’

‘And what are the conditions?’ hastily asked both
the sisters in one breath. .

‘It is most desirable to have a parasol if you go
out in the sun upon a hot day,’ rejoined the Dwarf.
‘What! both of you asking questions again? Pray
get out of this bad habit at once, or we shall never
get on together. I was about to say that this word
has only its full magic power when pronounced by
persons of innocent hearts, who have not reached the
age of twenty, who never use bad language, speak ill
of their neighbours behind their backs, or eat fish
with their knives. As you two young ladies combine
allthat is necessary for the effective pronunciation of the
word, it will have great power in the mouth of either
of you, andas I am about to devote myself to your ser-
vice, you will perhaps be good enough to recollect that
if I should get into any trouble with other persons who
may employ magic arts as well as I do, you may be
of the greatest service to me as well as to yourselves
by the judicious use of the word in question.’

Rindelgrover now came to a conclusion, and the
sisters burned with curiosity to know several things
more, which, however, they dared not ask, after his
repeated statement of his objection to questions. That
which puzzled them most was why, since the worthy
Dwarf seemedto have knownthe circumstances attend-
ing the abduction of their brother for so long, he had
waited for nine years before speaking, when he might



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 35



at once have somewhat relieved the anxiety of their
parents. Then, why should he zow interfere at all,
and run the risk of bringing Pattle-perry’s vengeance
upon his own devoted head? They pondered deeply
upon these things, but deemed it best to remain silent
under the circumstances. And indeed I think they
were right, for it is impossible for us mortals to know
the ways of dwarfs, giants, and fairies, or to attempt
to fathom the motives by which such creatures are
actuated. So the sisters asked nothing more and
waited patiently until their little friend spoke again,
which he presently did.

‘Now,’ said he, ‘young ladies, we have a journey
to go and had better start at once. First, however,
let me recommend you to eat some of these straw-
berries, which you will find singularly refreshing’

Nothing loth, the sisters consented to this propo-
sal, and found themselves immensely strengthened by
the fruit, which had not only a delicious taste but all
the qualities and virtues of a tonic without any of its
bitterness.

“Now then,’ rejoined Rindelgrover, ‘we must be
off, and as the distance is long, I hope you will consent
to ride.’

The girls looked round, and perceived to their
surprise two pigs standing near, with side-saddles on,
all ready for their reception. They looked at each
other half doubtfully, and greatly inclined to laugh,
but wisely remembering how serious was the business
in which they were engaged, they preserved their
gtavity, mounted their respective pigs, and prepared

to follow their leader. The pigs were of good size,
D2



36 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.



and although their trot was rather rough, the
Princesses found their canter quite tolerable, and in
any case, as they had come some distance, this kind
of conveyance was just then far more agreeable than
walking. The Dwarf rode between them for some
way, discoursing in an ordinary manner about things
and people, and making himself as agreeable as he
could to his companions.

Presently the forest got thicker and they had to ride
in single file, and then again the trees became fewer
in number, the bushes and underwood less thick, and it
was evident that they were approaching the outskirts
of the forest. Their way now lay up rising ground,
or in fact the side of a mountain, upon which the trees
became still fewer, and masses of rock lay around
the travellers, gradually taking the place of the
vegetation they were leaving behind them. The
journey was no longer so pleasant, but as it was late
in the afternoon and the sun had lost its power, the
sisters continued to travel without inconvenience.
Suddenly the Dwarf stopped.

. ‘Now,’ said he, ‘my dear young ladies, we are very
near the boundary which divides us from the Giant’s
kingdom, which you will presently see. Before entering
it, however, it is desirable to let the sun set, which he
will very shortly do. You must not be surprised or
alarmed at any change which you may see take place
in my personal appearance. I shall have to disguise
myself, probably in more than one shape, as to appear
in my natural form would be fatal both to your success
and to my own existence. As, however, it is most
desirable that you should both keep those shapes



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 37

which you must allow me to call charming, I
would strongly caution you as to your behaviour.
Keep the great magic word for use in case of diffi-
culty. Meanwhile, above all things look anybody
to whom you speak straight in the face. Nothing
disconcerts a knave more than a pair of honest
eyes looking into his. Don’t look behind you or down
upon the ground. Eat and drink what is offered
to you, but always remember to say the word to
yourselves before you do so. Nothing can hurt
you then. We must abandon our steeds here: in fact
no pig would be safe for a moment in the Giant’s
country, and their presence would betray us at once.
You had better walk straight forward into the country
—in fact I will lead the way—and when accosted,
say you are come on a visit to Pattle-perry, and
demand to be led to his palace. When there, boldly
tell him that you have come in search of your
brother, lost some nine years ago, and whom you
have reason to believe is in his kingdom, and
when the matter has been thus fairly started, I can
only leave you to the instincts of your own common
sense, guided by the advice and instructions which I
have had the honour and pleasure of giving you.’
With these words, the worthy Rindelgrover jumped
lightly from his steed, and having politely assisted the
Princesses to dismount also, turned the three pigs’ heads
' in a homeward direction, and waved his hand towards
the forest. The sensible animals needed no further
orders, but set off at best speed down the hill with
deep grunts of satisfaction. Then the Dwarf pointed
out the ledge of a rock upon which the sisters might



38 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. [i.

sit down, and taking his own seat near them, waited
until the sun should have hid his head before the
approaching shades of evening.

In a few minutes this was the case, and at the
direction of the Dwarf, the three travellers all rose up
and ascended the hill once more. They had not far
to go, for at the distance of a few yards they were on
the top of the ridge of hill, and suddenly came upon
the view of the country beyond. The girls started
back with “astonishment. Their own country was full
of meads and dales, woods and streams, plants and
flowers, the glorious vegetation of a fertile land.
Before their eyes was.a country entirely different.
Bare and bleak and barren it looked, the treés stunted
and rugged, the green fields few and far between.
But, ever and anon, bright fires flashing up over the
surface of the country showed its character at once to
those who knew what they betokened. The wealth of
that land was below and not above the surface. It was
the country of coal and iron, and the furnace fires
spoken of in the squirrels’ song were roaring in every
direction. Strange and weird and wiid it looked to the
sisters as they gazed upon it that night, and much
they marvelled at the contrast between this country
and that which they had left behind.

Glancing round at their companion to make some
observation upon the view before them, to their utter
astonishment they perceived that he had disappeared.
In his place, however, was a black and tan terrier, who
ran sniffing about from rock to rock and presently ran
up and fawned upon them in the most affectionate
manner. They could scarcely believe that this ani-



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 39



mal was none other than their diminutive friend, but a
few words from him at once showed them that this
was the fact, and they became more than ever con-
vinced of his power to help them in the matter which
they had so much at heart. So they patted the little
fellow with much kindness, called him ‘ Pincher,’
according to his expressed desire, and forthwith
entered the Giant’s country with this faithful coun-
sellor at their heels.

They had not proceeded far down the side of the
hill which they now had to descend, before they per-
ceived several persons standing and sitting about upon
the rocks some little way in front of them, apparently
awaiting theircoming. A whine from Pincher warned
them to be on their guard, and they accordingly ad-
vanced quietly along the track into which they had
come, and which led them directly towards the spot
upon which these individuals had placed themselves.
As the Princesses drew near, the persons in question
all stood in the roadway, and an ill-looking set of
fellows they were. Begrimed with coal-dust, un-
shaven, most of them in their shirt-sleeves, they were
not exactly the description of persons whom delicately
nurtured princesses would have desired to encounter.
Still the sisters resolutely proceeded down the road,
and such was the dignity of their appearance and
manner, that the men instinctively recoiled before
them. However, one of the party, who wore a red
sash round his waist and appeared to be in a position
of authority, stepped forward in front of the rest and
accosted the travellers.

‘Hallo! my wenches!’ he cried, ‘Who be ye



40 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.



that would enter the territory of the great and
glorious Pattle-perry ? Show us your passports !?

The sisters were sadly confused in this address, for
neither Rindelgrover nor anyone else had hinted at
passports being necessary in order to enter the country
of the Giant, and they certainly had nothing of the
kind about them. The ready wit of Pettina, how-
ever, came to their aid, and she said, whilst both she
and her sister looked the speaker straight in the
face,

‘What nonsense you are talking! no passports
are necessary when we are going to visit our uncle
Pattle-perry. Leave the road free, or you shall be
reported without fail.’

At these words the man turned as pale as the black
dust on his face would permit, and drew back re-
spectfully without another word, as did his companions
also. The two Princesses walked calmly through
them, followed closely by Pincher, and descended the
rest of the hill without interruption. They observed,
however, that two of the men followed them at a
distance, which caused Malvina some alarm.

‘My dear sister,’ she remarked, ‘you have doubt-
less done cleverly in getting us over ¢hat difficulty,
but I greatly fear what the result may be. Those
who follow. us will doubtless report your words at
court, and if the Giant hears that we have claimed him
as our uncle, he may take advantage of the pretended
relationship to detain us in his kingdom for a longer
time than we wish to stay.’

‘Never mind, my darling sister,’ replied Pettina,
‘T was obliged to say what came uppermost at the























THE GIANT PATTLE-PERRY



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 41



moment, but I feel sure that we shall get out of the
difficulty if it arises. Let us go boldly on, and hope for
the best; see how Pincher is showing his teeth in a
pleasant manner, and wagging his tail at the same
time. I know se approves—don’t you, Pincher ?’

A low whine from the little animal was perfectly
understood by the sisters to signify ‘Yes—but be
cautious, and they were about to continue their
conversation, when it was prevented by another inci-
dent. The roll.of a drum was heard not far in front ;
then the shrill blast of a trumpet, and the heavy tread
of men marching, betokened the approach of some
military body. The sisters paused, in doubt as to what
they had better do, and in another moment a cloud
of dust showed that the force, whatever it might be,
was close at hand. Round the corner of the road
there presently turned the drummers, vigorously drum-
ming away as they came on, and then followed a band
of mixed instruments, making clamour enough to make
the two ladies stop their ears and wish themselves a
thousand miles off, inasmuch as the noise was not
relieved by tune or harmony. Then, marching four
abreast, came a body of men all above the usual
height, dressed in white tunics, bare from the knee
to the feet, which were shod with thick sandals, and
carrying in their hands axes which rested upon their
brawny shoulders. They were a rough-looking set of
soldiers, but not so rough as the person who followed.
In an open car, larger than any car that ever was
made before or since, and drawn by eight immense
black horses, sat the Giant Pattle-perry: he was at
least ten feet high; his head was in proportion as



42 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.



enormous as his body, which, though stupendous in
size, was not unwieldy, and betokened the possession
of vast strength. In truth, his arms, which were bare,
showed one mass of muscle, and his legs were equally
powerful. His black hair clustered in curls over his
head, on which he wore a small white ‘wide-awake,’
which gave him rather a ridiculous appearance ; his
forehead was low and receding, his eyes large and
staring, his nose came forth like a small hill out of his
face, and when he smiled, his large mouth disclosed a
set of teeth which might well have frightened any-
body who did not know that since the days of steam,
railways, and vote by ballot, giants have given up
being cannibals, and only eat beef, mutton, pork, and
such like things, after the fashion of ordinary mortals.
Around the car of the Giant ran a number of young
men on either side, lightly clad and armed with short
spears, whilst behind there followed a motley crowd of
horse and foot, among whom dirt and coal-dust were
the distinguishing characteristics.

The two Princesses, when they saw this procession
advancing towards them, turned aside out of the road
and sat down upon a rock at a short distance off ; but
as soon as the Giant’s car came opposite to them, he
shouted out in a mighty voice the order to halt.

‘What ho!’ cried he, when this had been done,
‘What ho! whom have we here! damsels wandering
alone through our country, and damsels, if we may
judge by their appearance, of no mean birth. Draw
near, my children, draw near, and tell us whence ye
come, and what ye seek in our kingdom ?’

As he spoke, the Giant cast a look upon the



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 43

sisters which he possibly intended to convey a friendly
feeling in the form of a pleasant smile, but which to
their eyes presented the appearance of such a frightful
grimace that they felt more than half inclined to run
away there and then. Knowing, however, that this
would be worse than useless, they very wisely re-
strained their inclination, and, rising from the rock on
which they had been seated, approached the Giant in
a timid but respectful manner.

“Who are ye, maidens?’ asked Pattle-perry with
another awful leer which he meant for a reassuring
smile.

‘We are the daughters of the King of the Flowery
Vale, answered Malvina, looking him straight in the
face.

‘Fool and dolt and idiot that I was,’ immediately
cried the Giant, slapping his thigh violently, whilst his
face lighted up with a sudden and indescribable joy ;
‘aye, and ass and pig, and wooden-headed ape into
the bargain, not to have known at the first glance
that it was the daughters of my good neighbour upon
whom I was gazing. No other ladies are so lovely,
and none others would I welcome so readily to my
country. And what seek ye, fair damsels, that ye
have wandered so far from home?’

‘We have come,’ answered Malvina, still keeping
her eyes fast fixed upon the Giant’s face—though it
was by no means a pleasant object for a girl to gaze
upon, especially as he seldom washed and had cer-
tainly not shaved that morning—‘ we have come to
seek our brother, who was lost some nine years ago,



44 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. fi.



and whom we have reason to believe is somewhere or
other in your kingdom,’

The Giant’s face crimsoned—then turned pale—
and then crimsoned again at these words.

‘By the memory of my great ancestor Grind-
bones !’ exclaimed he (referring to a fearful giant of
olden time, whose name is well known to all those
lovers of Fairy-tales who have read the marvellous
adventures of Joe Brown and Puss-Cat-Mew®*), ‘ what
wonderful tale is this ye bring! How can I tell where
everybody’s brother may be who happens to get lost?
However, come with me, my chickens, come with me,
and we will see all about it. Lucky it is that I made
my progress through the land in this direction to-day,
else had I missed ye. Come, jump up on to my car!’

As he spoke, the young men on the side of the car
nearest the Princesses made way for them to approach.
: The sisters trembled and hesitated, but it was very
plain to them that neither trembling nor hesitation
would avail in the slightest degree, and that there was
nothing for it but to obey the Giant’s orders. As he
was alone in his car, there was plenty of room for both
the girls by his side, especially as the vehicle was con-
structed to carry two (supposing they could be found)
of the same size as himself. With some little difficulty
therefore, and much greater dislike to it, they clam-
bered up into the car, or open chariot, as it might
more properly be called, when, at that moment, the
eye of the Giant lighted upon the dog Pincher, who
was following closely at their heels.

‘Ha!’ said he sharply and suddenly, ‘what dog

* See Stories for my Children, by the same Author.



1] ‘THE LOST PRINCE. 45



is that? I like not his looks—run me that cur through
with a spear, men!’

In another moment his order would have been
obeyed, had not Pettina remembered on the instant
how much might depend upon Pincher’s safety, and
how ungrateful it would be, if she did not, without the
delay of a second, interpose to save him.

‘Ri-too-ri-lal-lural!’ she hastily called out, looking
at the Giant as she did so; ‘that is my favourite dog,
sir, and I must beg of you not to have him hurt!’

Several men had already lifted their spears to
strike, when the younger Princess uttered the magic
word. On the instant every spear was stayed, whilst
the Giant put his hand to his forehead as if confused
by something, and muttered moodily to himself as he
gave the orders to march. Poor Pincher, meanwhile,
took the opportunity of following the Princesses into
the carriage and jumping into Pettina’s lap, where he
nestled down and made himself comfortable, though
she felt him tremble and his heart beat violently as
she patted him. When they had gone a few paces
further, they met the two men who had followed the
Princesses down the mountain, and the Giant, recog-
nising them as some of his border police, stopped to
ask for their report, which they accordingly gave.
Pattle-perry grinned from ear to ear when he heard
that the Princesses had claimed him for their uncle.

‘My charming nieces!’ he cried, ‘though I knew
it not before, I am delighted to own such relations—
you shall stay a long time with your old uncle, my
pets, that you shall!’ and he laughed and chuckled
_loudly to himself as he drove on.



46 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [r.

Presently the road turned to the right, and’
gradually bore round towards a huge mass of buildings
which the sisters perceived in the distance, and which
the Giant informed them with a gracious air was the
castle which he used as a palace, and in which he
would take care that they were provided with apart-
ments suitable to their rank. Not deeming that
moment a fitting opportunity for entering further
upon the business which had brought them there, the
sisters merely bowed their thanks for the proffered
hospitality which they would have given their ears to
have declined if possible.

The procession advanced nearer and nearer to
the palace, and at length reached it. The carriage
drove into an enormous court-yard, paved with
iron, over which it rumbled up to a vast gate which
was thrown open as one of the attendants touched
a huge bell which sent forth a deafening peal. The
Giant now descended, and assisted the trembling
Princesses to do the same, which they accordingly did,
Pettina keeping Pincher safe under her arm. Inside
the gate was a smaller yard, which the Giant crossed,
and opened a door on the further side, opposite which
was a flight of handsome stone steps leading into a
spacious corridor. From the latter folding doors
openedinto a magnificent drawing-room, into which the
Giant conducted his guests, and prayed them to make
themselves at home, whilst he went to give orders for
the preparation of the apartments which they would
occupy. Just before he left the room, however, he
turned to Pettina, and observed somewhat moodily,

‘T don’t allow dogs in my drawing-room.’



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 47

“Oh, sir!’ replied she, ‘I am sure you will not object
to my little pet ; I assure you he will hurt no one,’

‘But I do object, retorted the Giant with an angry
look ; ‘I object very much, and I do not see why Iam
to have what I don’t like in my own palace,’

As he spoke, he turned back and took a step to-
wards the Princess, as if he were half inclined to take
the animal from her. ‘ Ri-too-ri-lal-lural’ gently
hummed the maiden as he approached. He stopped
suddenly.

‘Well,’ said he, ‘I suppose you must have yout
own way,’ and abruptly left the room.

As soon as ever he was gone, Pincher struggled to
be set free, and in a low and whining voice told the
sisters that it was evident the Giant knew or suspected
that there was something wrong about him.

“Still,” said he, ‘as long as he is alone, I fear not,
but should others more powerful than he come to visit
him whilst we are here, I shall have to “look out for
squalls,” and you must be prepared to see me assume
different shapes, and must take care to help meas I
have directed you. Meanwhile, do not lose any time in
pressing him upon the matter which you have in hand,
otherwise he will continually put you off with excuses,
and you may find greater difficulties than ought to be
the case.’ Having said these words, the little fellow
ran under a sofa and hid ; shortly after which the Giant
re-entered the room.

‘Princesses,’ he said, ‘your apartments are prepared
for you; and as you have brought no maid with you,
my worthy housekeeper, Dame Skrinklegriggs, will be
happy to attend upon you.’



48 . WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [I.



‘Sir, responded Malvina, with a queenly air, ‘ pray
do not disturb your excellent domestic on our account
—for excellent I do not doubt she is, albeit her name
chance to be none of the most euphonious. We
can wait upon each other, and have long been ac-
customed to dispense with maids, who constantly pull
one’s hair, talk when they are not wanted to do so, and
not unfrequently smell disagreeably of beer. We will
beg, therefore, to dispense with your housekeeper’s
assistance. And before we proceed to the rooms
which you have been good enough to provide for us,
we would fain enquire of you as to the brother of whom
we are in search. What steps do you propose to take
in order to make that search effectual ?’

The Giant’s brow darkened as Malvina spoke these
words. ‘Quench my philanthropy !’ cried he—using
an oath now almost out of date, but once greatly in
vogue among giants and ogres, and bearing at that time
a fearful import,—‘ you speak like a queen, young lady,
and seem to intend to have it all yourownway. Scorn
the attentions of my housekeeper and require me to
proceed to business before dinner! May I never
touch pickled pork again—let alone cabbage—if I do
any such thing. Let us eat and drink, and talk of
business to-morrow morning. Surely that will be time
enough !’

‘Sir, replied the elder Princess in the same calm,
cold. tone, ‘we would not be discourteous, neither
do we desire to trouble you unnecessarily. Neverthe-
less, we may not be backward in urging the matter
about which we have come hither, neither can we pay



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 49



you a long visit, considering that our parents are
left sorrowing at home.’

‘Not pay me a long visit!’ shouted the Giant.
‘As sure as my name's Pattle-perry you will find
there are two words to ¢kat bargain. It is easier to
get into this kingdom than to get out of it, my
dears! Besides, he added with a grin, ‘when nieces
come to see their uncle, and openly acknowledge him
as such, neither law nor magic can prevent his keep-
ing them until all parties are agreed that the visit
should come to an end. So don’t think to leave me
just yet, my pretty pets!’

The sisters changed colour at these words. They
felt it was but too probable that their public recogni-
tion of the Giant as their uncle (to which title he had
no more claim than the Manin the Moon) might have
put them in some measure in his power, and they
trembled at the thought. However, it was evidently
desirable to put the best face on the matter, and so
Pettina, taking up the conversation, said :

‘Sir, we have no desire save to do what our duty
compels us; and since you say it will be inconvenient
for you to discuss this question to-night, be so good as
to fix an houras early as may be to-morrow morning
when we may have it thoroughly sifted. And as to
scorning the attentions of your housekeeper, such a
thought never fora moment entered our heads. We
only wished to avoid giving the old lady unnecessary
trouble, and we shall still prefer to do our own hair
and dress ourselves. But if the housekeeper chooses
to bring us our warm water, put our things straight,

E



50 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [t.

and see us safe to bed, I am sure that neither my
sister nor I will have the slightest objection,’

Somewhat mollified by this speech, the Giant said
he would tell Dame Skrinklegriggs, and muttered
something about ‘seeing after the other business to-
morrow morning, with which the sisters were obliged
to be contented. They declined dinner, however, on
the score of being greatly fatigued after their long
journey, and having had some tea in their own rooms,
went early to bed.

The night was passed seaiely as quietly as they
might have wished, inasmuch as the household of a
giant is generally one of riot and revelry. Being, how-
ever, nearly worn out with the day’s exertions, the
sisters slept soundly, and were obliged to be roused
by Dame Skrinklegriggs, a withered, blear-eyed, old
crone nearly as ill-favoured as the giant himself, who
accomplished her purpose by untucking the clothes at
the foot of Malvina’s bed, and pinching her great toe
violently, that being among giants the approved mode
of waking the heavy sleeper. The faithful Pincher
passed the night under the sofa in the drawing-room,
and, having taken care to avoid the Giant’s eye, joined
the Princesses as they descended the grand staircase,
and once more entered the drawing-room, whence they:
were ushered by obsequious lacqueys into the dining-
room in which the giant usually breakfasted. He was
already there, and roared out his welcome as soon as
the sisters made their appearance.

‘Now, my little ducklings,’ he said, ‘come and
‘breakfast with your old uncle Pattle-perry. You must
‘get used to our ways at once, for now I’ve got ye I shall



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 5I



keep ye, and he laughed and grinned more hideously
than ever.

‘Sir, observed Malvina sternly, ‘neither my sister
nor I are disposed for joking at present.’

‘Do you callit joking indeed ?’ rejoined the Giant.
“Were the King your father here, he would tell you that
it is no joke to be once within the walls of the Castle
of Pattle-perry. But more of this anon: fall to and
eat, my lambkins !’

‘Not so, sir, exclaimed Pettina, now stepping to
the front. ‘You deferred until this morning the busi-
ness upon which we have come to your kingdom,
and we must now press upon you that immediate
search be made for our brother.’

‘ Hoity, toity ! pig’s fry and potatoes!’ laughed the
Giant at these words. ‘Must you rule everybody,
little lassie? Suppose I will have nothing to say to
your request ? What then, eh?’

Pettina regarded him with a steady gaze: ‘ Ri-too-
ri—’ she began.

‘Hold!’ cried the Giant : ‘Don’t sing at breakfast
time! But what the dickens should I know of your
brother ?’

‘ Sir” exclaimed Malvina hastily, ‘we know that
you carried him away nine years ago and we want
him back !?

‘No!’ roared the Giant. ‘Who told you that?
Bumble-bees and blackberries ! Somebody has been
telling tales out of school! But suppose somebody
has told a cram—a buster—a story—a regular down-

right fib? Am 1a likely fellow to trouble myself to

E2



52 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.

carry off a boy? Don’t you go and believe every-
thing you hear, my pretty little poppets !’

‘Then sir, promptly replied Pettina, ‘if you had
nothing to do with carrying him off, you cannot object
to enquiry being made for him.’

‘Not a bit of it!’ cried the Giant. ‘Only let us
have a bit of an agreement. If I find your brother for
you, one of you will have to marry me, and stay and
live here always !’

At this remark the sisters felt a thrill of horror
run through them, but, thinking it best to dissemble,
Malvina, as soon as she could find voice to speak,
answered the Giant in these words :

‘We cannot think of marriage, sir, until our
brother is found and restored to his disconsolate pa-
rents: then, indeed, gratitude to the restorer will
incline us most kindly towards him, whoever he may
be.’

‘Well said, young lady, cried the Giant at this
speech, ‘But now, pray tell me, how shall you dis-
cover your brother if you see him after so long an
absence? He must be mightily changed since you
last saw him.’

Thus interrogated, the Princesses looked at each
other with some doubt and distress, for this was a
difficulty which had never hitherto struck them. No-
thing daunted, however, the clever and thoughtful
Pettina presently pulled out from her pocket a copy of
the original advertisement, published, as has been
already mentioned, upon the loss of Prince Mirabel,
and this she handed to the Giant, who attentively re-
garded it, although as, like most other giants, he was



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 53

unable to read, he derived but little information from
the document. However, the thought crossed his
mind that if any fair description of the boy were
given in this paper, he might easily palm off upon the
girls one of his people, and thus obtain from their
gratitude the promise of marriage which he saw would
be otherwise difficult, especially as Pettina, at least,
appeared to have a certain knowledge of magic, and
it was her he rather preferred of the two. So, under
pretence of making some enquiries he left the room,
and submitted the advertisement to his housekeeper,
who read and explained it to him.
‘Well, said he, on hearing what were its contents,
‘I don’t see why we shouldn’t try it on. Let me see.
It will be easy to produce a diamond-set girdle, for ten
to one the Princesses won't recollect the right one ;
then, “on his arma mark blue.” I wish it were “black
and blue,” for most of the servants in the palace could
show marks answering to that description. Search
and look, Dame Skrinklegriggs, and send up some
one soon with whom I may satisfy these girls.’
- When the old housekeeper had promised to do her
best, the Giant returned to the Princesses, and told
them that he had good hope of being able to produce
their brother, for that he had just heard that there
was a youth attached to his household who had
wandered there, no one knew whence, about the time
of the loss, and who certainly had on a girdle of the
description mentioned, and a mark upon his arm of a
decidedly bluish tinge. This speedy compliance with
their: wishes surprised and pleased the sisters, but
Pincher took an opportunity of winking his eye when



54 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [..



the Giant was not looking, as if to caution them
against being deceived. No long time elapsed before
a knock at the door was heard, and a young man was
ushered into their presence. He was tall and well-
built, and generally of good appearance, although the
Princesses could recognise no resemblance to their
brother’s features. Then the Giant commanded him
to bare his arm, which he did, having previously, how-
ever, endeavoured to embrace his supposed sisters,
which they declined to allow, and having given a
short statement of having been lost in the forest, and
having strayed into the coal country, upon which they
did not care to question him until the mark had first
been seen. Accordingly, he bared his right arm and
displayed an undoubted blue mark which would
have corresponded with the advertisement perfectly
well.

‘This, then, must be your lost brother!’ cried the
Giant.

‘ Alas, sir!’ answered Malvina, ‘the only drawback
we at present perceive was, that the blue mark upon
our brother was upon the /ef¢ and not the right arm ;
so that this cannot be he.’

At this the Giant flew into a passion, which, how-
ever, he had the discretion to vent upon the young
man, whom he denounced as an impostor, and vowed
he should be torn in pieces by wild dogs forthwith.
The Princesses, however, begged that he might be
pardoned, since no one really suffered from his fault,
and this they did the more earnestly as they were
now well. convinced that the Giant had himself con-
cocted the fraud. They then asked him again to be



ral THE LOST PRINCE. 55



so good as to direct further enquiries to be made; to
which he somewhat reluctantly consented, being im-
pelled thereto by the conduct of Pettina, who kept
her eye upon him, and hummed the magic word in a
low tone whenever she saw him inclined to adopt his
natural tone and quit the politeness which he had
assumed for the occasion.

At last he promised that all the younger members
of his household should be paraded before luncheon,
and that the youths from the colliery should pass
before the Princesses in the afternoon. This was
accordingly done, but without any satisfactory result.
Several people showed blue marks on their arms;
and such was the desire which each of them had
to be proclaimed a Prince, and the brother of two
such lovely ladies, that they all declared they had
strayed into that country nine years ago with a
diamond-set girdle around them. But the sisters
were not to be taken in: they knew of more than the
advertisement, and either the unusual toe or the
scratch on the thigh, proved fatal to all the claims
which were advanced. At last the two Princesses
became quite tired of the amusement, and plainly
told the Giant that they believed he knew all about
their brother, and was only trifling with them. The
wily Pattle-perry assured them that they were mis-
taken, and was about to make some further excuses,
when he suddenly exclaimed :

‘Ah! here comes a friend who will help us all out
of our difficulties.’

Looking round, the young ladies perceived a very
small gig with a very small man in it, driving along
at a great pace, and rapidly approaching them. At



56 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [.

the sight of this man Pincher trembled violently, and
crouched behind the sisters. The new comer was
clad in a bottle-green coat with brass buttons, white
waistcoat and kerseymere trowsers, and he wore upon
his head a glazed sailor’s hat, gaily ornamented with
buttercups, daisies, and dandelions stuck all around it.

‘ How are you, Macklethorpe ?’ shouted the Giant
in a loud voice, as the little man drove up.

‘So-so, thank you, Royal Pattle-perry,’ replied
the other. ‘But I have come to tell you to be on
your guard. That nasty little Rindelgrover is out on
mischief somewhere. I know it from a pig which I
met and killed as I was driving on the edge of the
forest, and-who confessed it in the hopes of my spar-
ing his life, which I didn’t, knowing your fondness for
pork, and wishing to make you a present. The little
scamp is, I have good reason to believe, within your
kingdom at this moment—perhaps within your
very presence. To prevent mischief, therefore, I have
brought my magic onion, with which, when one
touches one’s‘eyes one can penetrate every disguise,
however cleverly assumed; so in a moment or two
we shall know whether I have been rightly in-
formed.’

So saying, the wily Dwarf put his hand into his
trowsers’ pocket, pulled out an onion, and gently
touched his eyes with it; then he looked right and
left, and presently his eyes fell upon the two Prin-
cesses.

‘Daisies and dandelions!’ he cried, ‘why here are
the two daughters of the King of the Flowery Meads!
who'd have thought of seeing hem here of all people!’



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 57

Out laughed the Giant as he heard this observa-
tion. op

‘Sweet girls!’ he said. ‘Know you not, Mackle-
thorpe, that these maidens claim me as their Uncle
Pattle-perry ? they have come to look for their brother
forsooth—ha ha!

At these words, and at the manner of the speaker,
Pettina grew very angry, and stepping quickly forward
was about to address to the Giant some remark by
which he would not have been flattered. Unfortu-
nately, the suddenness of her movement left Pincher
for a moment unconcealed, and the eyes of the Dwarf
Macklethorpe fell directly upon him. With a shrill
yell, which so startled the girl that she quite forgot what
she was about to say, the Dwarf screamed out fran-
tically :

‘That's he! that’she! I see him! Isee him! The
little beast has taken the shape of a dog! Kill him!
kill him!’

And now ensued a most extraordinary scene.
Macklethorpe placed one of his hands on the small
of his back, the other on his forehead, and uttered a
strange sound, immediately after which he became a
large bull-terrier of twice the size and weight of his
adversary, and rushed furiously at him. But Rindel-
grover was equal to the occasion; curving his tail
over his back, lifting his paw on to his nose, and
giving vent in his turn to a wondrous noise, he in-
stantly became a tremendously powerful mastiff, from
whom the bull-terrier had only just time to escape.
In another instant, however, he reappeared in the
form of a tiger, with whom the mastiff would have



58 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.



had but little chance had he not, with equal celerity,
converted himself into a lion, and stood boldly in
front of his enemy, roaring horribly. Macklethorpe,
not to be outdone, immediately changed into a rhin-
oceros, and secure in his impenetrable hide, savagely
ran at the lion, who as quickly became a pigeon, and
darted off at best speed. Within a second a large
hawk followed the poor bird, which would certainly
have been in great danger had not Pettina at this
eventful moment recovered her presence of mind and
her voice together, and loudly shouted, ‘Macklethorpe!
hawk! Ri-too-ri-lal-lural!? The effect was instan-
taneous. The pigeon flew off unharmed, whilst the
hawk, suddenly stopping in its flight, wheeled round,
alighted on the ground, and speedily resumed its
proper shape, disclosing a countenance full of baffled
spite and rage, as the owner stood before the young
Princesses.

‘Q-o-0-0-0-h!’ he bellowed out as soon as he
could find breath to do so. Yow are friends with that
little wood-beast, are you? You've learned how to
help your friends, have you? That’s it, is it? But
you haven't learned everything yet, I can tell you!
You called me by my name when you used that word
of power just now. When you do ¢kat you can’t use
that word to me any more fora month, my vixen; so
now you shall find out what it is to have made an
enemy of me. You little puny, skinny, scullery-maid
of a girl—how dare you ?’

So saying, the infuriated Dwarf stepped up to the
poor Pettina, who had unwittingly fallen into so
serious an error, and seemed much inclined to inflict



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 59



upon her personal chastisement then and there. But
Malvina stood forward with her queenly air and
waved the little man backwards.

‘How dare you use such words to a lady?’ said
she. ‘Remember that J have not called you by your
name, and I will not have harm done to my sister.’

At this the Dwarf recoiled for a moment, but
having recovered himself, he accosted the Giant in
these words:

‘Great and Royal Pattle-perry, you have seen
how these two she-foxes have deceived you. By so
doing they have certainly given you every right to
consider them as your slaves, and as such I certainly
advise you to treat them. They may talk big and
think great things of themselves if they please, but
so long as you do not lay violent hands on them, they
will find their magic word of little value against my
magic arts. I would confine them in separate
dungeons and keep them there until they make
humble submission to you and consent to do what-
ever you require of them.’

The poor sisters were so oppressed by the de-
parture of their friend, and so overwhelmed by the
words of the Dwarf, who appeared to know so much,
that they knew not what to do, and when the Giant,
evidently enraged at the deception practised upon
him by Rindelgrover, gave the orders suggested by
the Dwarf, they suffered themselves to be led away
without a murmur or remonstrance. It was not,
however, to a dungeon they were taken, but to two
small rooms in a high tower, in one of the wings of
the Giant’s palace. This was called the ‘turret



60 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [.



tower, and was ascended by a spiral staircase. The
Princesses were conducted up to a considerable height
from. the ground, until they came to a landing from
which doors opened right and left into two rooms,
one of which was appropriated to each of them. This
was the first real trouble they had had to endure, and
it was rendered worse by the fact of their being
separated for the first time in their lives. They wept
bitterly, and would have felt inclined to give way to
despair, if it had not been that their pride of birth
and the old courage of their race alike forbade them
to do so. .

So having cried as much as they thought neces-
sary, they each began to look about them, and then
discovered that not only was there only one wall
between their two rooms, but that, although this was
of a thick and substantial character, grates had been
let in at one or two places, for the purpose of ventila-
tion, through which they could without difficulty
converse from time to time. As this tower faced the
mountain-side down which the Princesses had de-
scended into the Giant’s country, the intelligent reader
will at once remark that the side windows of the
rooms in which the sisters were confined naturally
afforded a view right and left. It so happened that
Malvina had the right hand, Pettina the left hand
view, and each described to the other that which shesaw.

‘Pettina, my darling!’ said her elder sister, ‘I
can see miles and miles away; the tower is so high
that I almost lose my eyesight in the distance—it
seems endless.’ ;

‘But what do you see?’ asked the other.



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 61



‘Why, far, far away I see the waters of the blue
sea. The country from hence is rough and rugged
for some way, but beyond it I see green fields and
trees far off, and the sea still farther off; and I see
islands dotted about in the expanse of blue ocean.
One, two, three—several of them—they must be very,
very far off.’

‘And I, said Pettina in her turn, ‘I also see a
long way. First comes the country such as you
describe it, rough and rugged and barren, and then I
see a large tract of beautiful meadows and corn-lands,
and a beautiful large river winding its way through
what is evidently a fertile country; but it seems a
long way off!’ and Pettina sighed as she spoke.

At that moment they heard a voice on the stair-
case, and in another moment Malvina’s room was
entered by no less a personage than Dame Skrinkle-
griges herself.

‘Well, my fine Miss,’ she began at once, setting
her arms akimbo. ‘So you’ve been trying to humbug
the master, have you, you brother-hunting jackanapes?
Pll warrant me you'll be cured of your tantrums be-
fore we've done with you! Here’s your supper, my
young hussy; bread and water—and that’s all the
victuals you are likely to get for some time to come,
f can tell you!’

So saying, the old woman put down a jug of water
and a loaf of stale bread upon the table, and as
Malvina vouchsafed her no answer, went away to the
next room muttering to herself. She entered Pettina’s
room, and accosted her in much the same manner,
assuring her that she would never leave that tower,



62, WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [I.



unless the Giant was fool enough to marry her, in
which case she would most likely soon follow the fate
of the seventeen wives whom he had already wedded
and sent off into the coal-pits as soon as he got tired
of them. As Pettina thought this was very likely an
invention of the old woman’s, she took no notice of
it, and, finding she was not likely to get much out of
either of her prisoners, the housekeeper shortly after-
wards took her departure. The night passed wearily
for the two Princesses. Sleep was absent from their
pillows, and to the recollection of their lost brother
was added their own misfortune, involving a captivity
which appeared, for all they could tell, likely to be
permanent.

They were early astir upon the following day, and
wished each other ‘good morning’ through the grating.
It was a lovely morning : the sun was shining brightly
in at their windows, and everything looked beautiful
in -his glowing light. As soon as the sisters had
dressed, and eaten the frugal breakfast of bread and
water which had been left them over-night by the
crabbed old housekeeper, each repaired to her window
in order to gaze upon the view therefrom, which ap-
peared likely to be the principal amusement by which
their captivity would be lightened. At the same
instant each gave vent to an exclamation of surprise.

‘Pettina! Pettina!’ cried Malvina; ‘I see an
army of white horses, miles away still, but evidently
coming in this direction. Can it be that they are
coming to help us poor girls?’

‘Oh, Malvina!’ cried her sister; ‘what do you
think Z see? Thousands upon thousands of swans!



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 63

the air is positively dark with them, although they
are as yet at some distance! What caz it mean?’

Whilst they were still giving vent to such excla-
mations as these, suddenly a bird flew up against
Pettina’s window and pecked loudly for admittance.
The Princess immediately threw open the window
and in flew the bird. It was a pigeon, and had
scarcely alighted in the room when it made sundry
contortions, and directly afterwards assumed the form
of the Dwarf Rindelgrover.

‘Dear Princess!’ he exclaimed as soon as he was
sufficiently recovered to speak. ‘All will go well
with you and your sister. Be not afraid. The King
of the Islands is coming at the head of his army on
white horses, and the River King is half way here
with his swans, against which it is well known no
magic power can ever prevail. I have hurried here
as fast as possible in order to relieve your anxiety,
and must now go and tell your lovely sister the good
news.’

“You need not do that,’ said a voice through the
grating, which they recognised at once to be that of
Malvina. ‘I could not help hearing what you said,
and am overjoyed to hear that succour is near at
hand,

Scarcely had she spoken, before a loud noise of
voices was heard upon the stairs, and in a few mo-
ments messengers from the Giant appeared, who had
been ordered to conduct the Princesses to the draw-
ing-room without an instant’s delay. Before they
left their rooms, however, the good Rindelgrover had
just time to change himself into a bluebottle fly, and



64 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. (i.



buzzing round the heads of the two sisters as they
descended the stairs, he told them that if the magic
word was at all weakened in its force as regarded
Macklethorpe, by what had passed, the word ‘ Fol-de-
rol-liddle,’ repeated after it, would be quite too much
for him. Thus cautioned and advised, the Princesses
entered the drawing-room, where they found the Giant
pacing up and down in great agitation and excite-
ment, whilst Macklethorpe was sitting cross-legged on
the hearth-rug. As soon as ever he saw them, the
owner of the palace began to speak.

“What does this mean ?’ he said. ‘I received you
kindly ; Idenied you no request ; yet you have intro-
duced an enemy into my kingdom, and I am now in-
formed that an army is advancing against my people
from two separate quarters. Queer kind of nieces
are ye, I think !’

‘Sir, returned Malvina in a grave tone, ‘we have
done you no wrong, neither do we desire that any
evil should befall you: only give us our brother and
let us go, and we will do our best to prevent mis-
chief.’

‘Harrico your brother, and you too!’ cried the
Giant ina rage. ‘I'll see about both of you presently.
Meantime I shall leave you in friend Macklethorpe’s
charge, for I must go and drive off those friends of
yours, whom I hear of as coming to invade my
country. When I return I shall probably marry one
of you girls myself, and give the other to Mackle-
thorpe ; so now you know what to expect ;) and with
these words he left the room in a passion.

Macklethorpe now rose from the hearth-rug, and



1] : THE LOST PRINCE. 65



approached Pettina, under whose sleeve the Blue-
bottle fly had carefully hidden himself.

_ ‘Now, my vixen,’ he said, ‘you are under my care
for the day, so you had better behave yourself. When
the Giant has slain and captured your friends, you
will see what fools you and your sister have been to
come on this wild-goose chase after your brother.’

‘Wild-goose chase, indeed!’ retorted Pettina; ‘ you
had better take care you don’t have to deal with
swans instead of geese.’

As she spoke she glanced at the windows, and
saw the swan army rapidly approaching the castle,
while the shouts upon the other side told that the
army of white horsemen were already engaged with
the Giant’s people. Irritated by her words, the Dwarf
approached close to her and raised his hand as if to
bestow upon her the undignified rebuke of a slap on
the cheek. The indignant Trincess stepped hastily
backwards, exclaiming as she did so—‘ Ri-too-ri-lal-
lural!’ :

‘That cock won't fight, my pert miss,’ cried the
Dwarf ; and advancing a step nearer, actually aimed a
blow at her fair cheek with his wicked hand.

‘Fol-de-rol-liddle !’ cried the girl in an alarmed
tone as he did so.

The effect was magical—the blow fell short, but the
hand of the little man dropped lightly upon her arm,
and in so doing shook the bluebottle fly out upon the
floor. Hardly had he touched it when he assumed
his proper shape once again. Macklethorpe started
back at the sight ; magical power was suspended for
the moment before the force of natural instincts, and

F



66 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [.



with a mutual yell of fury the two Dwarfs rushed
savagely upon each other, striking right and left in
ungovernable rage. The sisters, with clasped hands,
stood watching the combat, almost insensible to the
loud cries of battle which were all the time filling the air
outside the castle. Both the little men fought des-
perately. Macklethorpe scratched, bit, and kicked
with an almost supernatural energy ; whilst Rindel-
grover, hopping about with marvellous agility, planted
some terrible blows upon the face of his enraged ad-
versary. The sisters would willingly have said the
magic words, had they not feared what the effect
might be upon their friend so long as he had not the
worst of the combat. At last, however, he had de-
cidedly the best of it, for a well-aimed blow taking
effect upon the nose of Macklethorpe, stretched him
upon the floor. Rindelgrover, without an instant’s
delay, leaped upon him-with a cry of triumph, when
at that very instant the doors of the drawing-room
were thrown violently open, and new characters ap-
peared upon the scene. Foremost among these were
two men of royal appearance, armed to the teeth, and
evidently just emerged from the fray. They led
between them, conquered and bound, none other than
the Giant Pattle-perry himself. It needed no wizard
to inform the sisters who were the victors who thus
appeared. The noble King of the Islands was on
one side, the young and handsome River King on
the other. With joyful and triumphant looks they
led their captive to the feet of the two Princesses, to
whom they made a lowly obeisance.

“Royal ladies !’ said the King of the Islands, who,



1.] THE LOST PRINCE. 67



being the eldest, was, according to the fashion of
those barbarous times, entitled to speak first: ‘we
bring you your vanquished enemy, and place his life
at your disposal,’

Both sisters clasped their hands in speechless
gratitude, and then, when they found their voices,
both exclaimed at once, ‘Oh, noble Kings! can you
make him restore our brother ?’

‘Dear ladies, said the River King, ‘that is
already done. Come forth, Prince Merry.’

Scarcely had he uttered the words, when a young
and singularly handsome youth came forward, in whom
the sisters both instinctively recognised their long-lost
brother, and immediately rushed to embrace him,
for which he appeared to be perfectly prepared.

‘Oh! where have you been all these long years ?”
they exclaimed both together, and fell to hugging
and kissing him again, before they could possibly re-
ceive an answer.

‘Let me explain to you what we have discovered,’
rejoined the King of the Islands, ‘and all the more
so because it may incline your tender hearts to show
some mercy to your unfortunate captive. It is true
that the Giant did what Rindelgrover has already told
you. He enticed the boy away from his nurse, prin-
cipally, I believe, for the sake of his diamond-set
girdle, and carried him off to his own country. How-
ever, when there, he conceived so great an affection for
the young Prince that he determined to adopt him as
his heir. Accordingly, he had him educated by the
best tutors he could procure, and has invariably

treated him with the greatest kindness, excepting
F2



68 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. fr.



always that his utmost endeavours have been em-
ployed to make the boy forget his family and his
native country. No wonder, then, that he attempted
to deceive you in every possible way, and to palm off
impostors upon you as your brother. He has failed,
however, and, moreover, the young Prince has by no
means forgotten his old home and relations. Here
he is safe and sound, and you will have the satisfac-
tion of restoring him to his and your anxious parents.
Now, what shall be done with the Robber-giant who
has caused all these troubles? We have taken him
entirely by surprise. The oppressed people of his
country received us gladly ; we have completely routed
and dispersed his army, most of whom have either
been ridden down by my white horsemen, or have
had their left eyes pecked out by the swan warriors
of my royal brother. In fact, the Giant is at your
mercy, and you have only to say the word and his
head shall be struck off immediately.’

‘Oh no!’ cried both the sisters simultaneously ;
and then Malvina continued: ‘We should be sorry
indeed to return evil for evil, especially as the Giant
has done us no harm in reality, and the joy of re-
covering our dear brother has effaced from our minds
the trouble we have endured. Let him live, provided
that he will take an oath never to interfere with our
father’s kingdom again or to carry off straggling
children, be they princes or peasants.’

At these words the Giant’s face, which had hither-
to been mightily downcast, lighted up with a sudden
joy.

‘Lovely and merciful ladies!’ he exclaimed, in a



1.] THE LOST PRINCE. | 69



deep but trembling voice, ‘I will swear by the Great
Giant Oath—by all that giants hold sacred, by any-
thing else you please—to be your faithful vassal and
slave to the end of my days, if you will but spare my
life. Your brother is safe and sound, and had I not
loved him as my own son, and intended to make him
my heir, he might have gone home long ago. Say,
Prince, do I not speak the truth ?’

‘It is quite true,’ said Prince Merry, in a voice of
singular sweetness, ‘that I have no recollection of
anything but kindness since I have been here, although
now that memory has been awakened and I recognise
my beloved sisters, I feel a sense of the cruel wrong
which has been done me in depriving me for so long
a time of their sweet society. But I give my voice
for mercy, and hope that we may henceforth all be
friends. Meanwhile, what are the little men doing?’

At these words everybody looked round at the
two Dwarfs, who had been forgotten during the above
conversation. Rindelgrover was still standing upon
his prostrate enemy, and giving from time to time a
triumphant stamp upon him which must have been
the reverse of agreeable. As soon as attention was
called to them, Macklethorpe, with a deep groan,
besought the Princesses to call off his adversary, and
they accordingly begged their little friend to spare his
fallen foe. Thus requested, the worthy Rindelgrover
desisted from his amusement, and the crestfallen Mac-
klethorpe arose, bruised and vanquished, and with the
breath nearly stamped out of his body. The Wood
Dwarf was at first inclined to claim him for a slave
as the reward for all he had done, but on its being put



70 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [.



to him forcibly by Pettina that he would in the long
run gain more by generosity, and that a slave who
detested him would be less useful than a friend
bound to him by ties of gratitude, he was gradually
brought round to that view of the case, and agreed
that his enemy should be spared and liberated, on
condition of owning himself inferior to his conqueror,
and binding himself never more to destroy the pigs
of the latter.

The rest of the story will not take long to tell.
The victorious army having feasted royally at the
Giant’s expense, prepared shortly afterwards for their
departure. Old Dame Skrinklegriggs, however, first
appeared upon the scene. Dreadfully afraid that her
impertinent language to the two Princesses would be
remembered against her, she endeavoured to atone for
it by the most abject servility and fawning adulation.
Throwing herself at the feet of the sisters, she ex-
claimed :

‘Oh, Royal Ladies—more lovely than ladies ever
were before, and more charming than any that shall
ever come after you. Beautiful creatures, have mercy
on an old servant who has only erred from zeal for
her old master! Let me kiss your feet and be your
slave for ever, and bear no malice against so humble
a being as Iam,

At these words the sisters smiled.

‘Be under no apprehension, old woman,’ said Mal-
vina. ‘We scarce remember your words, and have no
thought of injuring you. Still, we would advise you
and all others who hear us to remember that civility



1] THE LOST PRINCE. 71

costs nothing, and is far more becoming than harsh
and rude language.’

With these words she dismissed the old house-
keeper, who was overjoyed at having escaped so easily.
Then the whole party proceeded to leave the palace
on their way back to the old home of Prince Merry,
taking with them the Giant, to present as a prisoner
to the injured King and Queen, though they had no
doubt that these would ratify the sentence already
pronounced by their daughters.

It would be hopeless for me to attempt to describe
the entry into the Kingdom of the Flowery Meads, or
the meeting between the parents and their long-lost
son. Universal joy spread all over the kingdom, a
general holiday took place, and nobody did any work
for a month, which greatly interrupted the trade of
the country and so damaged its revenue that there
had to be new taxes the year after in order to make
up the deficiency. However, nobody cared for that
or for anything else, now that the Prince was back
again. The nursery-maid and soldier were not for-
gotten in the general happiness, but were set free
from their cage and told that they might now be
married as soon as they liked. But somehow or other,
nine years of each other's company had so altered
their views of matrimony as between themselves, that
they respectfully declined the offered boon, and pre-
ferred to take a separate course in their future lives.
There was marrying, however, at the Court, and that
before long. The King of the Islands proclaimed his
continued devotion to Malvina; the River King was
no less attached to Pettina, and the Princesses, swayed





42 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [I.



by emotions of mingled love and gratitude, consented
to share the fortunes of their royal suitors. Accord-
ingly, the weddings were celebrated upon the grandest
scale which you can imagine. The Giant Pattle-perry
was present, having received his pardon from the
King and Queen, and solemnly vowed himself the
vassal of the Kingdom of the Flowery Meads for ever
and a day.

You may well believe that Rindelgrover was not
absent from the ceremony, nor indeed from the ban-
quet afterwards. Upon that occasion many interesting
speeches were delivered, and more ale and wine con-
sumed than had ever been the case before in that
country. Everybody enjoyed themselves thoroughly,
and everything passed off remarkably well. Of course
Prince Merry was the hero of the evening. His
health was drunk with ‘nine times nine and one cheer
more,’ and in return he made a speech which delighted
everybody, though, for the matter of that, as every-
body was determined beforehand to be delighted, it
did not much signify what he said.,

It is needless to relate anything further of the
history of these good people. The King and Queen
passed the remainder of their days in great and un-
interrupted happiness. The worthy Rindelgrover was
always a welcome guest at Court, and much amused
the royal family by his eccentric observations and
curious ways. Sometimes Prince Merry wandered
' with him in the forest, over the animals of which he
held such authority. At the particular request of the
Prince he was induced to allow them to abandon the
somewhat monotonous chorus of ‘ Well done, Rindel-



1.1 THE LOST PRINCE. 73



grover!’ which he had imposed upon them as an ac-
knowledgment of his sovereignty, and after a while
he was persuaded to prefer a pony to a pig when in
want of equestrian exercise. Otherwise he remained
the same to the day of his death, if that day ever
arrived. Of that Ihave no certain information. I can
only tell you the legends of dwarfs and giants which
the Fairies tell me from time to time, and they gener-
ally like to leave off with the good people in the
story alive and happy. So let it be, then, with our
_ present tale. Ihave no reason to doubt that Prince
Merry, his sisters and their husbands, are at this
moment living, well and prosperous, nor have I any
reason to suppose the contrary of the conquered
Giant, or any other of the personages of whom I have
spoken. Let us suppose them so, at all events, and
having consoled ourselves with this supposition, bring
to a conclusion the wonderful history of Prince Merry
and his charming sisters.



74 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. (ir.

IT.

THE HISTORY OF A ROOR.

OF late years it has been the fashion for animals of
various sorts and sizes to relate their history for the
benefit of a curious world. I feel that I need no ex-
cuse for following an example which has been set by
many whose species entitles them to no more con-
sideration than my own, and who have possibly seen
less of stirring adventure than it has been my fate to
witness. And although I am only a bird, Ido not
see, for my own part, why birds have not as good a
right as anybody else to come before the reading
public. A horse is frequently termed a noble animal.
A dog is thought to have special claims upon the
sympathy of men; and both dogs and horses have
frequently thought it right and becoming to appear
in print. Nevertheless, I feel entitled to observe that
birds of my race are, in one respect at least, superior
to both dogs and horses. ‘These are, after all, the
obedient slaves of man. Trained to obey his will,
taught from earliest youth to acknowledge his superi-
ority, they pass their existence for the most part in
willing thraldom, ignorant of those free aspirations
and that untrammelled liberty of which I and my
feathered comrades can truly boast. Not that this is



I1.] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 75



equally applicable to all birds. The parrot, ignomi-
niously seated upon his perch, looks to man for his
daily pittance of food, screeches out that which they
suppose to be his gratitude in inharmonious accents,
and seeks no higher aim than occasionally to imitate
the tones and words of his enslavers. The starling,
the magpie, and other kindred birds, from time to time
own the dominion of man. The unhappy thrush too
often languishes in his wicker cage, suspended before
the cottage door of his unfeeling master; and even
the crafty jackdaw frequently becomes the pet and
plaything of the human race. But who ever heard of
a tame rook? My noble race loves, indeed, to domicile
itself near the haunts of men; but this is rather with
the object of proving to our young, by the force of
daily contrast, our innate and immense superiority
over the unfeathered bipeds who walk the earth from
which they cannot rise, and pass a wingless life in a
conceited belief in their own greatness. Often and
often have I seen them walking near, though not asa
rule beneath, my native rookery, and wondered to
myself how such tame crawling creatures could have
the arrogance to deem themselves ‘the lords of that
creation which contains so many nobler races. But
asmy intention to-day is not to point a moral, but to
relate a history, I will proceed at once to the per-
formance of my task.

I am a rook of old family. . All rooks are rooks of
old family. Unlike human beings, who depend upon
the preservation of written records, without which they
are not supposed among their fellows to have esta-
blished a claim to good family and high descent, we



76 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. {ir.



rooks, acting upon the glorious principle of universal
equality, recognise in our community the undoubted fact
that we all descend from common ancestors who existed
in remote antiquity, and we require no written proof to
establish the fact that we are all illustrious, and all of
high descent. I could tell you where I was born, aye,
to the very tree and to the very nest. I could de-
scribe the place which had the honour of witnessing my
birth. But I forbear. There may be those yet alive
to whom a minute description of the locality might be
painful, and no right-minded rook ever willingly gives
pain to anyone.

Yet as I recall the old familiar scene, I feel a
strange longing to make others acquainted with the
spot which I still love so dearly. How well do I re-
member the place! The group of waving elms in which
our nests were built, standing as they did at the extreme
end of a wood which joined close up to a farm-yard,
had the double advantage of proximity to rich corn-
fields on one side of the aforesaid wood, and pleasant
meadows, well stocked with friendly sheep, on the other.

There was the pond too, at the end of the farmyard
nearest the rookery, whereon sundry ducks quacked
a homely accompaniment to our domestic cawing, and
frantic hens cackled in agony over the supposed
danger of the little ducklings whom they had unwit-
tingly hatched. The orchard hard by, with its apple and
cherry trees laden with luxuriant fruit ; the large wal-
nut tree famous for its size and quantity of nuts, which
stood opposite the stable; the high old-fashioned
hedges which enclosed the meadows; the winding paths
cut through the home wood, and the trim old-fashioned



11.) THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 77



garden, with its high brick wall. around it ;—all these
things come back to my memory, and seem to flit
before my aged eyes'as I muse over the early and
happy days of my youth. But stay: I have said
enough of a place which you, dear reader, cannot
identify, and to think of which, now that I am so far
from it, makes my beak feel dry and my eyes watery.
So I ruffle up my old feathers, give my tail a shake,
and taking in my claw the pen which my kind old
neighbour Owl has manufactured for me out of the
feather of a wood-pigeon’s wing, set myself to tell you
that which I have to relate.

This beak, which many years have hardened, was
soft and tender when its first infant effort chipped the
egg which contained my puny form. I cannot actu-
ally remember the event, but from what I have seen
in after years, I imagine that I must have presented a
somewhat ridiculous appearance when I first emerged
from the maternal shell. My first distinct recollection
is of the ousting from the nest of two little crea-
tures, brothers and sisters I suppose, I know not which,
on whom my mother had unfortunately trodden, and
the sending after them of an egg at which we little
ones had stared for some hours as at an object of im-
mense interest, but which the wiser instincts of my
mother discovered to be rotten.

There were three of us left, and certainly we had
nothing to complain of in our treatment. Never had
young rooks a more devoted mother, or a father who
better understood the duty of bringing home slugs
and other tender edibles to his as yet helpless off-



38 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND, [it



spring. Well nurtured and cared for, we grew daily in
size, and improved in health and vigour.

Our naked forms became gradually covered with
protecting feathers, although it was some time before
they acquired that black and glossy appearance which
is so highly vaiued among rooks who value their per-
sonal beauty. As days rolled on, although we grew
bigger, our nest unfortunately did not follow our
example, and consequently that which had at first
seemed to us, as indeed it was, a spacious and com-
modious abode, began to afford scant accommodation
for our developing frames. In short, we were more
crowded than was at all pleasant, and I do not know
how we should have managed, had not our maternal
parent one day suggested that there was an outside
as well as an inside to every nest, and that we must
not confine ourselves entirely to the latter. Shecon-
veyed her meaning in a somewhat forcible manner,
pushing us all three bodily over the side of the nest,
and bidding us take the fresh air as best we could.

Trembling with fright, we sat shivering on the
nearest branches, our little hearts penetrated with the
most profound grief at that which appeared to us the
cruel and unnatural conduct of the mother in whose
love we had hitherto so implicitly trusted. Ah! we
did not know then, as I know well enough now, that
our parents are the best judges of what is good for us,
and that things which sometimes seem harsh and un-
just to us are really intended for our benefit, and are
in fact the very best things which could have hap-
pened to us. So indeed it was in this case. We
soon learned to balance ourselves on the branches



11] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 79



without fear of falling, then we found that we could
easily hop from twig to twig, and meanwhile the ex-
posure to the open air gave new strength and hardi-
hood to our bodies. Then, joy of joys, we awoke to
the knowledge of the great fact that we had wings!
Never shall I forget the moment when this first
dawned upon my infant mind! It was again through
the agency of my mother, who, after I had sat for a
day or two as near as I could to the nest (to which.
we were still allowed to return at meal-times and for
the night), flew quietly up to me one morning and de-
liberately pushed me off my perch. With a croak of
horror, down I fell, expecting nothing less than in-
stant destruction. Great, however, was my surprise
and delight to find myself most agreeably undeceived.
Guided by some natural instinct, I spread out my
wings, and immediately found that I had not only
arrested my fall by so doing, but that I was able to
flutter away to another branch without the slightest
difficulty, and could sustain myself in the air as well
as another bird. My brother and sister, having been
similarly treated by our mother, and with the same
result, were equally pleased with the discovery of
their new powers, and we all three felt as proud as
cock pheasants.

Day by day we made trial of our new wings, and
very shortly found that we could fly from tree to tree
with tolerable ease, and that a little more practice
and some additional strength would soon enable us to
take a longer and more daring flight. We warmly
thanked our beloved mother for having taught us that
great lesson of self-reliance which is so necessary for



80 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. [rt



a young rook or indeed for anybody else who hopes
to succeed in the world, and a new vista of joyous
and peaceful life seemed opening out before us. But
alas! it was rudely interrupted. This world is full of
cares and woes, and I have observed that oftentimes
when our happiness is the greatest, our hearts the
lightest, and our prospects apparently the best, mis-
fortune falls upon us, as if to prove to us the vanity
and instability of earthly happiness. So it was with
regard to the happy family to which I then belonged.

On a beautiful morning in the month of May, I
was surprised by a sudden commotion in the rookery.
Respectable middle-aged rooks, ordinarily accustomed
to wing their steady flight from field to field, and some
of whom had been recently engaged in the domestic
occupation consequent upon the nesting season,
suddenly rose on all sides high into the air, and
uttering shrill cries of affright and dismay, wheeled in
eddying circles far above the trees which composed
our rookery. At first I thought that the world had
gone mad that May morning, or that my elders were
indulging in some wild and extraordinary pastime as
yet unknown to the juvenile members of the society.
But before long I became painfully aware that the
movement of our fathers and mothers was caused by
their knowledge of the proximity of awful danger to
their young. ears—a report which arose, as it seemed, from the
ground below the rookery, and was succeeded by a
redoubling of the cries of affright uttered by the parent
birds. Eagerly peering through the branches of the
tree in which I sat, I perceived three individuals



It] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 81

standing in the precincts of our sacred grove. One of
them carried in his hand a weapon which asI have since
discovered is familiarly known among men asa pea-
rifle. This person was evidently the chief of the
party, for one of the others carried his ammunition,
while the awful occupation of the third became only
too soon apparent. The gunner kept up a steady fire
against such of our youthful companions as exposed
their bodies to his aim, and when any ill-fated rook
dropped upon the ground, as, alas! was but too fre-
quently the case, this third man hastened to gather
the bleeding body of the victim, and placed it beneath
a tree, where before long a goodly array of murdered
victims lay side by side. For the first few moments,
while this continuous firing was going on, I hardly
realised its meaning, or the perils of my own position.
But my brother, and sister, and myself were seated
upon a bough near the maternal nest, and afforded
but too obvious an object to the eager marksman,
Ere long I perceived him standing beneath our very
tree, with his deadly weapon pointing directly up-
wards. Even yet, we none of us realised the danger-
ous position in which we were placed; but in another
- moment the awful sound rang in our ears, and we
heard the shrill whistle of a bullet passing close above
ourheads. Being still, however, unacquainted with
the nature of firearms, we remained still and silent,
whilst the marksman hastily reloaded, and again level-
led his piece. This time the bullet struck the branch on
which we were seated, almost severing it in two, and
causing such a vibraticn as seriously disturbed us.
We all cawed lustily, and slightly shifted our posi-
G



82 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [u.





tion, though even now we remained fully exposed to
view ; but at the third shot, the bullet passing beneath
me at a distance from my body, far too near to be
pleasant, penetrated my tail feathers, and went whist-
ling on in its upward journey. Being now thoroughly
alarmed, I awoke to the necessity of adopting some
measure to prevent greater damage to my sacred
person, and being (though I say it that shouldn’t)
a rook of wariness beyond my years, I determined
forthwith to seek shelter in our friendly nest. With-
out more ado, therefore, I hopped lightly to my refuge,
and with a croak of satisfaction ensconced myself in
the same place whence I had first seen the light of
day from the inside of my parent egg.

O why did not my dear relations share at once my
prudence and mysafety! With a courage more resolute
than wise, they maintained their position, and the very
next bullet, striking my brother in the wing, wrung
from him a moan of agony, and prevented his following
my example. MHorrified at the sound, I peered over
the nest to watch what would follow, and waited in
breathless expectation whilst the cruel enemy loaded
and fired again, and this time with but too true an
aim. The fatal bullet shot my brother full in the
breast, and passing through from breast to back, left
behind it only a lifeless carcase from which the bright
young life had passed away for ever. The body of
my innocent brother fell with a dull heavy thud upon
the ground beneath, and soon swelled the heap of
victims already collected by the attendant keeper.
My sister, now fully awakened to a sense of her
danger, hopped with trembling legs towards my place



IL] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 83



of safety, uttering a faint caw of complaint and alarm.
But before she reached the nest, another bullet, speed-
ing on its deadly errand, struck the bough imme-
diately beneath her, lacerated her right foot, and gave
a shock to her nervous system from which she never
afterwards entirely recovered. Happily, however, she
succeeded in scrambling over the sticks and twigs of
which our home was composed, and nestled down by
my side in a state of alarm and agitation such as I
have seldom or ever witnessed in a female rook.

Fortunately for us, there were so many of our
species sitting out upon the different trees of the
rookery, that the sportsman (if such a term can be
rightly applied to a cruel rook-killing monster) found
plenty of amusement without troubling us again, and
we crouched down without further molestation during
the rest of his stay, though our blood ran cold, and
our hearts beat faster, at every sound of his horrible
gun. But as all things in this world come to an end,
so did this attack upon our peaceful homes, and our
enemies at length retired, laden with the carcasses of
our unhappy relatives. I could not imagine at that
time the purpose for which the remains of our friends
were thus carried off. But a singular conversation
which I shortly afterwards overheard disclosed to
me the horrid truth, whilst at the same time it
afforded a notable example of the cringing and
sycophantic nature of the human race.

Not many days after the occurrence which I have
just related, a number of fiends in the shape of men,
armed, not with pea-rifles, but with ordinary shot-

guns, appeared in our luckless rookery, and opened a
G2



84. WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. pen



cruel and destructive fire upon our unhappy race.
Alas for the ruin and devastation which they spread
around! In vain did youthful rooks send forth their
wailing caw for pity and succour. In vain did the
agitated and miserable parents wheel high above the
heads of the gunners with plaintive and indignant
cries, protesting against the unjustifiable slaughter of
their young. They spoke to hearts harder than stone,
and to beings inaccessible to the cries alike of suffering
innocence and parental affection. By tens, aye, by
twenties, the youth, the flower of rookdom fell around,
and sadly were our numbers thinned by the continued
onslaught of our merciless foes. Wise by experience,
my sister and I at the first sound of the gun sought
shelter in our nest, and remained there until the last
of our enemies had departed.

It was on the afternoon of that same day that I,
deafened with the cannonading which had been going
on around us, and with a heart full of misery at the
undeserved misfortune that had fallen upon our race,
flew out from the rookery, and perched myself in the
thickest part of a large chestnut tree which stood at a
short distance from my home. From this post of
observation I saw two men approach, and soon dis-
covered that their purpose was to collect the bodies
of the slain. One of these men, whom the other ad-
dressed as ‘Jem,’ evidently filled the honourable posi-
tion of a gamekeeper. He had a black velveteen
coat on, and a gun in his hand, which he deposited at
the foot of my tree while performing the melancholy
business on which he had come, and his evident as-
sumption of superiority over his companion, together



11.] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 85



with the deferential bearing of the latter, sufficiently
indicated his official position. It was while they were
resting from their labours beneath the tree in which I
was perched, that the following conversation ensued.

‘A fine lot o’ young rooks, Jem, surelie, said the
other man.

‘They be, Bristow, that they be, was the reply ;
and presently, after a pause, ‘They tell me, Bristow,
that there’s many people as thinks a rook pie better
nor a pigeon pie. That can’t be, but I don’t know as
it’s a thing to be despised, after all is said and done,’

“Oh no,’ replied the other, ‘not noways to be de-
spised, but nothing like a pigeon pie, o’ course. Oh
no, oh no.’

“And,’ continued the keeper, ‘I don’t know but
what a rook pie, if the rooks is young, and the crust
made about right, very nigh comes up to a pigeon
pie after all.’

‘Sure it does,’ returned Bristow in meditative tone,
‘not so good as a pigeon pie, but very nigh it if rightly
made, as you say.’

In another minute the keeper continued: ‘And some
folks will tell you, and as far as my opinion goes they’re
in the right of it, that just at this season, when the
rooks is young and tender, a rook pie is quite as good
as a pigeon pie, after all.’

‘Very little difference, replied Bristow at once, ‘if
the birds is young and tender, rook pie or pigeon pie,
what’s the difference ?’

‘And for my part,’ added the keeper, ‘7 like a
rook pie better than what I do a pigeon pie, and that’s
the truth of it.’



86 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [11.



‘Oh yes,’ responded Bristow without a moment’s
hesitation, ‘better than any pigeon pie. Not a doubt
of it?

And so the conversation terminated. Though I
could not help being amused at the obsequious servility
of the cringing Bristow, this conversation explained
to me the cause of the murderous onslaught made
upon my hapless people, and revealed the fate which
was to befall their carcasses. Stripped of their black
and glossy feathers, they would doubtless be thrust
into a pie or pudding, to gratify the palates of their
greedy slaughterers, whom I devoutly hoped might
be choked in the operation of devouring them. This,
however, would after all be but a poor revenge for: us
survivors, and would not bring our lost ones back to
life again. I could here indulge in many moral reflec-
tions upon the cruelty of man, and the sufferings of
rooks and other birds and animals which he chooses
to regard as his lawful prey. But I prefer, and perhaps
my readers may agree with me, to quit a theme
which, as far as I am concerned, is fraught with
melancholy recollections, and pass on to other remi-
niscences of my eventful life.

Perhaps some of my readers will be surprised to
hear me use the word ‘eventful’ in connection with
the life of a rook. We are, I believe, for the most
part, regarded as dull, commonplace birds, whose
chief avocation is to rear and feed our young, to eat
grubs and insects by way of food, and to promote
the domestic felicity of mankind by cawing in a
homely manner around their mansions. This, how-
ever, is a grand mistake, though only one of the many



11.] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 87



misapprehensions into which man is led by his selfish
and overbearing vanity. The real truth is that the
world was made for rooks, and not for man, and that
although the greater strength and destructive skill of
the latter give him at the present moment an advan-
tage over our noble race, those who believe in the
great and immutable principles of justice cannot but
rest assured that this advantage is but of a temporary
character, and that hereafter the rights of rookdom
will be triumphantly vindicated, and servile man shall
bow and cringe before his feathered superiors. Even
now, unwittingly and unwillingly, they minister to our
necessities. Why do they plough the ground with so
much care save to expose to our hungry beaks the
animal food in which we delight? Why do they plant
trees whose maturity will not be witnessed by their
own eyes, but by those of the generations to come?
Is it not that we rooks may have places in which to
build our nests in safety? And do they not, more-
over, show us. constant marks of respect by planting
boys as guards of honour in their fields, who by shouts
of ‘away crow!’ by discharges of antiquated firearms
incapable of injuring anything but the gunner himself,
and by fantastic displays of strangely attired figures
on sticks, serve to show how much our presence is
feared, if not appreciated, by the human race?
Thoughts upon all these subjects have frequently
occupied my mind, and although my race may be
depressed at present, in the dim vista of the future I
picture to myself a free, a great, and a glorious rook-
dom. But to my story.

After the breeding season had been finished, and



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'334375' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATRT' 'sip-files00148.jp2'
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75210e35ac1c0e4a2246885a632d33bc7a8fd281
'2012-05-27T15:22:39-04:00'
describe
'41868' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATRU' 'sip-files00224.pro'
13894fe722284ec9ad0f11a16608d577
eb52ccb4c604bd0ff903c7ca682ad37f22b72531
'2012-05-27T15:24:23-04:00'
describe
'74431' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATRV' 'sip-files00312.QC.jpg'
51f8b164fe43f46c7dfdccfed949de45
e6ec990e57e15bab6671311e211db5b189a279f4
'2012-05-27T15:27:59-04:00'
describe
'357330' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATRW' 'sip-files00183.jp2'
59fbdd5800bb04dcc5f5101ff3b37357
d921ad4dcd5b0d71ae5edb66013163879b99bfe1
'2012-05-27T15:28:41-04:00'
describe
'71892' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATRX' 'sip-files00152.QC.jpg'
306749445fb3c1a9fcc569728521b8ff
1a763b1eca3f5a8aeb62432c5d6b4a23af543fb1
'2012-05-27T15:26:20-04:00'
describe
'22111' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATRY' 'sip-files00276thm.jpg'
047f671053c9c4047e3dd5237dc97cd9
03237c1489cc7a4046056af14c17bd67de0243b9
'2012-05-27T15:18:22-04:00'
describe
'2623108' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATRZ' 'sip-files00109.tif'
dbdbbebd65fb1f6072dea7f9dcea9fcf
e990e519c334bc8b3135fcb89a85d02b1b94d2db
'2012-05-27T15:31:44-04:00'
describe
'2705300' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSA' 'sip-files00190.tif'
951e2ad353a089beb34796a240f3cd37
9cf8dad4c8830f4b0a22b4cf351196d1b6601a79
'2012-05-27T15:21:18-04:00'
describe
'359700' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSB' 'sip-files00173.jp2'
7c12795e46377d513a1e7ded5093cbce
560d04a056458bcf1b6ef8b1628aaa52f07a59e2
'2012-05-27T15:17:30-04:00'
describe
'2799652' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSC' 'sip-files00204.tif'
fe6a082cc13c8df84bc5390f48bef7ad
588c767aa60325152d4ca16c6142d7ad9ace156b
'2012-05-27T15:30:08-04:00'
describe
'2769520' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSD' 'sip-files00265.tif'
5950a4ef68b2096f42f2a10e78b98ed7
34f36e5d11dff7238bf271718ad606d2fdf3c9f9
'2012-05-27T15:26:14-04:00'
describe
'1676' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSE' 'sip-files00271.txt'
fc3fd74f33b7edc7521b0e35cb308c64
f446f232757dcc9dbc8f1b50d284bc5582e82075
'2012-05-27T15:29:50-04:00'
describe
'351307' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSF' 'sip-files00284.jp2'
748588d3b8978731542a9d43d4022065
fb475e2beef1608b03b842a28f02464fcb25139d
'2012-05-27T15:21:42-04:00'
describe
'230586' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSG' 'sip-files00239.jpg'
5a55bb9b3f7d5df9e32721e649150d40
82047fd652fc6ce28627fa044b0bc662dd2e54f5
'2012-05-27T15:21:43-04:00'
describe
'351' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSH' 'sip-files00008.txt'
7e6de0d199b00df5c5d031ddaf6c458b
ecdc29db4ce2d45ec7789bbc6c027352eb569a9c
'2012-05-27T15:29:39-04:00'
describe
'2514148' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSI' 'sip-files00140.tif'
cca89b624685ff7c994a4baaf5bf8a5c
9c5de001dfbebc6d9116eba08ba80de5399f2cbd
'2012-05-27T15:27:21-04:00'
describe
'44032' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSJ' 'sip-files00116.pro'
2625c87568ff363563a3d9d586b3f582
f3b39740de78e409db587f43e1c2a13e8af0a3e6
'2012-05-27T15:23:55-04:00'
describe
'238008' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSK' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
22b1ac8e74d412c418918c32bd6e5a2b
b24118c11dccea5018db18445066710fe5f1d27e
'2012-05-27T15:23:48-04:00'
describe
'199451' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSL' 'sip-files00319.jpg'
807dbfa0de67f62c0df12217ad112d18
9a670cc9c62e3240c69f84a63be2899ffa0395d8
'2012-05-27T15:22:26-04:00'
describe
'1731' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSM' 'sip-files00025.txt'
3e87c2ebf59938f6cc9112cb2664e7fa
fc73e32170592e39fc273db182637b2854295118
'2012-05-27T15:18:17-04:00'
describe
'1714' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSN' 'sip-files00358.txt'
b3fd3401ad7dc32be01cd06c440c2b5a
0c7d7e7656b0b022e142933e2341929ea93f1659
'2012-05-27T15:31:48-04:00'
describe
'84023' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSO' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
f46c09bae9b920d39c18eac6e6d485c9
2f942de42522c44e2a32f8a324816a24ab8b6c06
'2012-05-27T15:27:55-04:00'
describe
'322872' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSP' 'sip-files00119.jp2'
f702776fc4a10855488a8c346da2614c
0c3e8ca788208b01ce10ca25a49dbb40bbc0178e
'2012-05-27T15:25:49-04:00'
describe
'214337' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSQ' 'sip-files00244.jpg'
2e5b2f16aa444bd74d39f30a2c28a29b
b489f232dbdeb8bb012a7bacdf7c7d5ea10ddb23
'2012-05-27T15:18:09-04:00'
describe
'225268' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSR' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
cee3eb20b28e91eb1b081994caa2f927
fe314c7aff369b4d7e1eb291975cb9cab83388d1
'2012-05-27T15:23:08-04:00'
describe
'28246' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSS' 'sip-files00142thm.jpg'
11a4c918deafe3a21a5454c7a4556e0b
6c20b30ee719f8d1be33e8d568696e098f58db2f
'2012-05-27T15:27:58-04:00'
describe
'43523' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATST' 'sip-files00182.pro'
1a781cba22832eea5480f97c7f3cea8d
4bb387dd53775f018a7e946098ec1816827dbe54
'2012-05-27T15:19:14-04:00'
describe
'205719' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSU' 'sip-files00329.jpg'
e4b62c13e913a4497b3a86e15b9b4592
1c8458b6b6b5a75ce94a3ce0edca8fd8988f0679
'2012-05-27T15:20:55-04:00'
describe
'42350' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSV' 'sip-files00242.pro'
897053317983ca9c09f719b51ac0322c
f2ade140cc773dcf13190981e8cd4ef6b3debf1d
'2012-05-27T15:31:34-04:00'
describe
'212150' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSW' 'sip-files00306.jpg'
65f2de802b0ac9ed18bbd18d14d0bd2e
fb852e6af5628e324523827862ca68adde8ec23c
'2012-05-27T15:29:21-04:00'
describe
'74584' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSX' 'sip-files00302.QC.jpg'
b247022a625a0ae1017c9cb35a1af611
d075a0f56654291c7aa1c3cbba7c5df3b1f194d3
'2012-05-27T15:18:57-04:00'
describe
'1750' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSY' 'sip-files00354.txt'
339d80f44af5c6d2ec17cfe8f8c28dd6
b6213ac05c2827f30cace77ea6e863e6130e2058
'2012-05-27T15:27:51-04:00'
describe
'43333' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATSZ' 'sip-files00199a.pro'
d6ab1916603ebd0d980f5ad069bcae05
1976c631121ae7c3ffff987862ab85722802e98e
'2012-05-27T15:18:28-04:00'
describe
'224052' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTA' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
2b57158127b50b5965c94d48d797ab48
ea4bf4c9310d10c46eca586dc176d9a69d30991b
'2012-05-27T15:20:57-04:00'
describe
'2728884' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTB' 'sip-files00286.tif'
add61832a7c4b26058b5acff9c94eea2
a1c8d341567bfe372af85d4669ecabe1e65e7564
'2012-05-27T15:26:08-04:00'
describe
'28441' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTC' 'sip-files00186thm.jpg'
30044730dd047ce3f43b21fcbcb7528e
c8eac8d42413346f88db2963a7205b3780952af8
'2012-05-27T15:22:17-04:00'
describe
'2495044' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTD' 'sip-files00103.tif'
de0401f1721f699f8aa62f17368d7e27
c4eae8db36434ee603453928400278f12b706cbd
'2012-05-27T15:26:15-04:00'
describe
'1764' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTE' 'sip-files00172.txt'
643f87dc99c6c638a3fcc7637fc4e3ca
857c26ed228d6b4b6ffd50b7b64b96f2d42682a5
'2012-05-27T15:17:34-04:00'
describe
'2695456' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTF' 'sip-files00088.tif'
8aaa7e5a1b7eeda0097341bcfdaf9a72
a5460fc40f587b844b0cc633b8ffe0b849dd608b
'2012-05-27T15:29:44-04:00'
describe
'240099' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTG' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
9319e9af7d246da0610ac0f220b590a6
c128b5325f5f5a5022923bc8cc3e3a6b3852d148
describe
'25942' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTH' 'sip-files00173thm.jpg'
833fa8d97be97c66e827198053c8226b
1c4f606896b8f2d862d9fd419f39c0b1bae457f2
'2012-05-27T15:25:58-04:00'
describe
'1747' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTI' 'sip-files00189b.txt'
cdbb2239cf93a06bdbe6c97fdf459fc7
f9e37b78048e3ac1bf980d95a90af2b7d2d5c1da
'2012-05-27T15:23:04-04:00'
describe
'43418' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTJ' 'sip-files00239.pro'
7cbdc57bf84ae27a861c7cb9cf060a1d
7363b4a486d742ac541afe3e5c52c3970db38457
'2012-05-27T15:23:21-04:00'
describe
'1684' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTK' 'sip-files00147.txt'
268f7aa7ee489a24119d6cb1cef1ad6f
8ad637739e79ea3ac088e059019c33306a9996b8
'2012-05-27T15:29:33-04:00'
describe
'343748' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTL' 'sip-files00310.jp2'
39e2cf1b6162bbbc629e0e25fcc60ccc
f466d656d42445e954b2e3442fb3cf5f298e54ec
'2012-05-27T15:27:39-04:00'
describe
'219486' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTM' 'sip-files00293.jpg'
95c8bb8271047112197b1dbe0ef51d5f
9f09f24f5fb325dae1f8246bfa6d93f350cca9cc
'2012-05-27T15:20:52-04:00'
describe
'41974' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTN' 'sip-files00164.pro'
9f2010b67cf3a25471710ae6997050af
6ee99e5322b2f8ca47ff7b27c9f61163c0fc11c8
'2012-05-27T15:25:02-04:00'
describe
'41327' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTO' 'sip-files00108.pro'
431ae099716436004e7286cba7e767a5
947978fef448d023539b6d6208d0f8566fd9972f
describe
'229601' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTP' 'sip-files00222.jpg'
87c0a2c14eac57e0726078cd8dced099
617d9068ba1a2d891515df385d4150e333ce6aa1
'2012-05-27T15:18:03-04:00'
describe
'81574' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTQ' 'sip-files00219.QC.jpg'
5f91a5a0c04888f71a85ce70f2dac3f1
5fbaf449f800298b9e675e7d35e8baeb0a86b43d
'2012-05-27T15:24:10-04:00'
describe
'74276' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTR' 'sip-files00295.QC.jpg'
0b291c717b2bbfecf0ee453173266edd
e9ac3e315356aa9ea320663787c6c8075731d755
'2012-05-27T15:28:48-04:00'
describe
'75371' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTS' 'sip-files00156.QC.jpg'
2d9544b44030f5e3a091898ba87921ef
10c5da464fca14df55347fba749ac82d3e69b929
'2012-05-27T15:20:33-04:00'
describe
'7901' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTT' 'sip-files00012.pro'
4fda4862461fce71a77ec02940692af6
62bfd987a11ddea9842708e86e86a11955f544c0
'2012-05-27T15:31:25-04:00'
describe
'242115' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTU' 'sip-files00253.jpg'
f6c8f31c7011778df248314ac3d2d69e
98a2d2d33b7497052d20486abad1eddc04ed6266
'2012-05-27T15:27:47-04:00'
describe
'51829' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTV' 'sip-files00005.jpg'
495d0bbcffa82ad765b5b94fff82ca07
b8b560452304adc19d8203d494e7fb683ffffcc0
'2012-05-27T15:19:56-04:00'
describe
'28446' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTW' 'sip-files00197thm.jpg'
3b67c43a34c8a700eaa5756e34531fcf
6132258b2573af8d11cbad25852faa64f488c480
'2012-05-27T15:30:23-04:00'
describe
'40869' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTX' 'sip-files00040.pro'
ec6d3f9068ff68508f4de5efd7aa5ea9
c00c06ae333e74991f0e17107391dea8f3f9b150
describe
'1832' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTY' 'sip-files00276.txt'
d8ac1f1978f9a2afcf0d9a4205962a68
557ac51fb45b2eee34d30058e823d4afa93c96da
'2012-05-27T15:29:27-04:00'
describe
'41521' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATTZ' 'sip-files00174.pro'
a5f98c6e3bbea1df629f1befbe450e42
5826c36b08cbe425553f7a334977d83f455b2fd7
describe
'1874' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUA' 'sip-files00210.txt'
7404d39a27c9176a32925688a89b2ec3
2094c2f2f3f885e797b2159b7c74058ebc9244d9
'2012-05-27T15:30:54-04:00'
describe
'1845' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUB' 'sip-files00215.txt'
4f04dd5572c3678ebd9972d0a8810ee2
18e858d9e7ac9668fe3c8961ae59651e08ee2802
'2012-05-27T15:26:57-04:00'
describe
'28248' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUC' 'sip-files00201thm.jpg'
3ee9e996e47b4d8e93a21c87b3c4c5b1
5cb9deb26332bd3c598ad6993a57b15d76898779
'2012-05-27T15:30:13-04:00'
describe
'42008' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUD' 'sip-files00111.pro'
0663acf795751382f63462ae75fd9d60
b77cf414b0aa0a00ecd21a8d611a75d6b8684ced
'2012-05-27T15:22:48-04:00'
describe
'333714' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUE' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
977e4a71d44b9c39f941f3c91f2cedc2
3c4159ada5123118ea597e6980672f05b04a4041
'2012-05-27T15:22:38-04:00'
describe
'340006' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUF' 'sip-files00155.jp2'
4ef57c71f571d67e4068c857a4559e97
1643d63192a3b850afc9798695607bac2c60964d
'2012-05-27T15:26:03-04:00'
describe
'334045' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUG' 'sip-files00161.jp2'
111947f5854d085241addc753dbe019d
5e78a8d130145901236a55997fb19ec02419b667
'2012-05-27T15:24:45-04:00'
describe
'73242' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUH' 'sip-files00148.QC.jpg'
f71d7c8629692c16695bd2e07fe0709b
526e2122bdd3ae4cf166175fada17a685c716c66
'2012-05-27T15:23:54-04:00'
describe
'26250' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUI' 'sip-files00110thm.jpg'
ea83ff4a4d6f066daa2be47328876a50
c1ec04eb27e1ec1f2c2792b57a2b233aa728533b
'2012-05-27T15:27:06-04:00'
describe
'25778' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUJ' 'sip-files00074thm.jpg'
b74f41a6a62cc03123722ebb5b780756
17c0e0d9211f1c6fa94e22b0a435b8f5429c6960
'2012-05-27T15:22:47-04:00'
describe
'67993' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUK' 'sip-files00122.QC.jpg'
bda8a0b28a63b753ca5fe5de62e48e56
5fe6e95e896a6348abc32b81c70bf37957d36c2f
'2012-05-27T15:30:09-04:00'
describe
'311847' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUL' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
be0a7d459babe371a7d9b0f074657f67
37e8cade2ca795c2b2e3b1f6e22e5449ba93d011
'2012-05-27T15:26:58-04:00'
describe
'211141' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUM' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
8fa8b43d8f018b08196fc15d80afdad8
d64922ac273f8f54fd5898505b3df92a684cf083
'2012-05-27T15:17:24-04:00'
describe
'1698' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUN' 'sip-files00235.txt'
fba6b6d8006f6652579bccab1ac142df
f334550cce5d85cd7ec398869c43eb3498fa9f99
'2012-05-27T15:18:46-04:00'
describe
'82143' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUO' 'sip-files00201.QC.jpg'
ba9b6ae068f7eab2836de913b01bebf7
2d2d9a6be3a02f59d99e5e342af268f0f9ba477a
'2012-05-27T15:17:53-04:00'
describe
'2706496' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUP' 'sip-files00335.tif'
6d4ff4003bb4064c3f8c34568f6559f9
7a0eba264178c1bd2e3afb48afe6e367d4e47800
'2012-05-27T15:23:49-04:00'
describe
'43998' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUQ' 'sip-files00311.pro'
b9fa1c422f8ddfbe0ecd8368c4d50404
465ec684643073d9c86b0008f3b14739444da286
'2012-05-27T15:30:48-04:00'
describe
'43057' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUR' 'sip-files00134.pro'
ce690b8990fb13bce4769f6d69c843f0
7a64d3e2e280707e010cc33d610e01cece4095f2
'2012-05-27T15:29:57-04:00'
describe
'2884220' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUS' 'sip-files00362.tif'
1a7692aa646c6ae43618e2d81a73ad46
17e0dc40f8b5c4f78a3630ea25efde154cf95138
'2012-05-27T15:21:59-04:00'
describe
'128738' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUT' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
866fa4f26c900e80149dfa134938ec06
ca8a73c7f09a6f19947f5b0eab19745e427d3295
'2012-05-27T15:17:41-04:00'
describe
'229673' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUU' 'sip-files00298.jpg'
ac02e480a59437888f66d4f7456ae7b0
d47a28596b484ace8597a25f5260028af8c3ec84
'2012-05-27T15:24:49-04:00'
describe
'220297' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUV' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
e8c46ef02c9ff60fe39c3284b3eb18b5
b8c6d2c8ed8192feb6bae3fb1d252958c5d205c2
'2012-05-27T15:23:35-04:00'
describe
'246249' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUW' 'sip-files00201.jpg'
07ffd4f60c7ebfbe2d7b99c27b52e6f1
90c96372cb619f01a4f1b258f01548fbc0e79777
'2012-05-27T15:30:03-04:00'
describe
'27597' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUX' 'sip-files00086thm.jpg'
4c310e32e1cd48419d7174b68bcde7a6
a745f2ff572694b7f54e5400bc59cab3f5c464d3
describe
'1969' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUY' 'sip-files00229.txt'
332896a1ab5b2fa5740b82be87559414
cfa2a0a5b2c0974a37becf908645b7a85551b233
'2012-05-27T15:26:42-04:00'
describe
'1724' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATUZ' 'sip-files00192.txt'
fa4727a471216a4f8660015641b73522
2d3aab4bd4d4838284f93585f674fd3a72fbedb9
'2012-05-27T15:20:04-04:00'
describe
'339105' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVA' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
dfd769db9892484c988e32c4eebe3299
e0cab86b7d51a2d5bfaa211d053d2828235483c6
'2012-05-27T15:26:37-04:00'
describe
'2911464' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVB' 'sip-files00178.tif'
facd8e16df949e84bff8e9fde2a747b4
81b61ceb4e500eba639d5cf578f519100a27225a
'2012-05-27T15:19:27-04:00'
describe
'183320' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVC' 'sip-files00194.jpg'
6830d84389a048dbc239d4860786e3aa
5994761adfd375a69028924e75e047e0bd167ce7
'2012-05-27T15:27:38-04:00'
describe
'27710' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVD' 'sip-files00219thm.jpg'
c770fa10915b04f33349b8e08c8ca1be
8185cef41725c0c1989d1a1b02165c953bbc10ae
'2012-05-27T15:19:29-04:00'
describe
'27021' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVE' 'sip-files00130thm.jpg'
bac2e2121ccaec86eecae0b66bbdc62d
298c14fa895485893d86a3d12e140b51661182af
describe
'344769' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVF' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
f0e43b2246ea2088281b7254aa44201f
32bee383b84573a409cd5a4088b07fbf79c3e38f
'2012-05-27T15:23:50-04:00'
describe
'20605' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVG' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
c0b9a8d4a58d061b51628b315c3202c2
a1d998cca44bb531e620a6de283644c1fa21c936
'2012-05-27T15:29:10-04:00'
describe
'26912' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVH' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
7bdb09351da25530974b87292227a4a1
48a31b94cbcee225e54868bbe1e7eb6697d76b44
'2012-05-27T15:29:31-04:00'
describe
'59650' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVI' 'sip-files00194.QC.jpg'
4749d785716da226b8252e276435373b
33eb477bbcdaa452656f826a6d45543189964caa
'2012-05-27T15:24:40-04:00'
describe
'330548' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVJ' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
a8761781abd7734469a2abbf75aee94d
251c29cc7629b7e761aa7abb7b2a61098095fab7
'2012-05-27T15:30:18-04:00'
describe
'320484' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVK' 'sip-files00250.jp2'
a65cf653bb2c33824a583285176e1972
071aef31225abc95fab1df5918f47a4cf7e009eb
'2012-05-27T15:26:30-04:00'
describe
'39726' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVL' 'sip-files00165.pro'
d32fad719817b37c961d0ad9bb5e17af
c1188ff4e5fbc0b1df39e58bfd573101fc0ac05c
'2012-05-27T15:26:17-04:00'
describe
'232233' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVM' 'sip-files00192.jpg'
2876931cc3a13ea2d31d653abcef57f8
3b6958b9f83c55f6174b74b74ce7e2aafa9b79f3
describe
'207972' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVN' 'sip-files00287.jpg'
f92684dd8c1f49b011a0a31a107a1fc5
a1b490431d313dcbdf5dd1550af2c0d9c6c397b4
'2012-05-27T15:29:03-04:00'
describe
'2750440' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVO' 'sip-files00328.tif'
16b68d18905a664ec87980f784943b5b
8b3e07d32aaf954af2279335e54447a90de557cc
'2012-05-27T15:27:33-04:00'
describe
'2755752' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVP' 'sip-files00153.tif'
bb43763cac5fbb3ad8333227ab50f117
2d40551802b8f2fe3a75dbeadf2fcd1f2ccfb751
describe
'338130' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVQ' 'sip-files00222.jp2'
e7c5b9c444e6b3a56a6c1590aaacf9bb
cc08350a3e3d9e9bac6eae0c66c478298f49d2b6
'2012-05-27T15:29:17-04:00'
describe
'43298' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVR' 'sip-files00058.pro'
b60c5065698af61384d3f790ccccd614
f88f892cc7ee401a11f8ca065e3834fe53b8043a
'2012-05-27T15:20:06-04:00'
describe
'330580' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVS' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
b4300ddf4b769bb102c836524f4532fa
eba66c8c57812bc07a854f4cb100959b9c07af6b
'2012-05-27T15:25:53-04:00'
describe
'1670' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVT' 'sip-files00274.txt'
35b8863090d1ef7fcb93a28b8d8ff4fd
93f10f801cb5748c9a43e0fddcae46cc7f6e4d76
'2012-05-27T15:22:27-04:00'
describe
'246739' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVU' 'sip-files00226.jpg'
ec807053a38c755088c1c48b3eae572b
24c90f171749f736a74dca166fe3ccb5df5a9222
describe
'1716' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVV' 'sip-files00338.txt'
4a6722237c036a7b8da3d23ad6df9a79
17c9ac563d702fd4e9728b605aa95b495e0c87a5
'2012-05-27T15:30:43-04:00'
describe
'1713' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVW' 'sip-files00209.txt'
a83b7ddb33ae1325c675f6145495fe44
3d48192095be4e13d4b8692869cce165728a886b
'2012-05-27T15:18:16-04:00'
describe
'16376' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVX' 'sip-files00343.pro'
4de2d6c32d51d77d99c1871b04e30311
c2949792292f416663f06ac165dc77345b529787
'2012-05-27T15:31:05-04:00'
describe
'331839' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVY' 'sip-files00238.jp2'
ce5d83df2e692333d249f1e7389f8656
449f280c5d5c5b4aa08b39b3b9c5e64a3143759c
describe
'76988' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATVZ' 'sip-files00171.QC.jpg'
d995d1b7d713635646bf0a8e18236070
e3d522aecfca5958774139c566fd45b1c5927101
'2012-05-27T15:22:49-04:00'
describe
'226783' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWA' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
3cd0617e7464fc98e2b97e714363009a
cf21aa7729bdcdbb486426973b377501b997e549
describe
'42017' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWB' 'sip-files00230.pro'
0e2b593f85d5e22c4930e6e8ad759949
7b719c9d83d335a9ec6e29adc0154b8fbb90cb65
'2012-05-27T15:17:52-04:00'
describe
'227856' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWC' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
591f3596e127ebfa9b2a6906ddf01dac
b927a592aefea75cd855c3d8698422f15de937b2
'2012-05-27T15:18:53-04:00'
describe
'2819852' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWD' 'sip-files00239.tif'
dd1105ebab5f89b78cfa1ef831bf345f
a9dc5128bfb61288c975cb467f58c6d23294da8f
'2012-05-27T15:28:36-04:00'
describe
'221140' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWE' 'sip-files00261.jpg'
8b4f50282f41044a7fa2dd98e0267240
cb2c6f86c70eeaceb7ffc756fdb3189578566552
'2012-05-27T15:24:17-04:00'
describe
'210869' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWF' 'sip-files00280.jpg'
ed0f4b45f233f32fb73513d8ecb7bc79
c2f43f79b793621f1a6ad1126b46a5f953e25d72
describe
'106977' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWG' 'sip-files00002.jpg'
27dded0d846466314487412d6667a9b5
68a25bb790d2be28c9199cdf46486362d1b36ef4
'2012-05-27T15:22:11-04:00'
describe
'353279' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWH' 'sip-files00361.jp2'
a75be8585ec3dbd2d3b7b1ab62b8b750
f80dd1c711c14f3355e116b061a32b5bf3ed52b4
'2012-05-27T15:29:46-04:00'
describe
'216998' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWI' 'sip-files00279.jpg'
df55e328f26cfd51b77a1a1834350a62
4abcddf5831e21c000ed3d265c0ef8eb8aa380d5
'2012-05-27T15:26:38-04:00'
describe
'27592' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWJ' 'sip-files00239thm.jpg'
dce3221d801e8208d246b459259104ef
ba0a34faf78c14680e951634150d381ed8e6dd07
'2012-05-27T15:24:47-04:00'
describe
'206857' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWK' 'sip-files00332.jpg'
8141bc1689d53a7b8172014bba044884
dfb0dffbdb004b7dd97c1f42d7cba586b7bf5614
'2012-05-27T15:20:23-04:00'
describe
'342005' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWL' 'sip-files00163.jp2'
d2290c13cf088e926df07f3affae57d5
2ebb406bbe5956a9e35e70a3167fe3aff412bce9
describe
'26946' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWM' 'sip-files00076thm.jpg'
f76c450a78d2f2189546c72ca5ecca5f
b779d18776b6bd2638da6b6546bc20795971b2de
'2012-05-27T15:31:07-04:00'
describe
'293458' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWN' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
e32a88b611324191df4fc15de0c3e5a7
1a7c688fe72ce941db9bbd872a0152638c4df442
'2012-05-27T15:22:03-04:00'
describe
'1778' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWO' 'sip-files00097.txt'
2eb0b7599a6d20502bfa22fc1079dee5
bec8a9415ff2ed967df87cd0e02aba302b8bc6c8
describe
'1735' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWP' 'sip-files00346.txt'
7609e0c697020223dbbb91392f80a9ba
855a2da14235dfb420c64fcfb4edf04a56edc4ea
describe
'20838' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWQ' 'sip-files00121thm.jpg'
a355a2143a8c7fdcd0cf5121e36f7d9e
e6559b05a7525884359eb8c5544e9d1aeb79153f
'2012-05-27T15:26:39-04:00'
describe
'327941' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWR' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
8e9653fcc41dab0ef46bfe18a85652f3
043666e3b68291a9953726f27ab5371e17d92b82
'2012-05-27T15:29:04-04:00'
describe
'2799832' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWS' 'sip-files00277.tif'
2afda825581b811fc31f88fcc13f75fb
32c9d8c12ac7743d4f25548a0e5d4d66f0039d6e
'2012-05-27T15:27:04-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWT' 'sip-files00154.txt'
afda64fb8bc04668b538151c0ebb45ce
1e92abcc57f4ea1cef9158193f40b8a958230c2f
describe
'42188' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWU' 'sip-files00255.pro'
578a98e15c99c45d1ddac9de1cb18630
743cc2520abb975ac7a7032c9416331416388610
'2012-05-27T15:23:13-04:00'
describe
'81434' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWV' 'sip-files00207.QC.jpg'
22e9aa4e37d1d1dd264cb4422539376b
4a20601e8f5cee88cfee60b01dd17f00fadc17c8
'2012-05-27T15:24:22-04:00'
describe
'223303' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWW' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
dc270fe05b9a20c8a0fecebce1353dcd
b6b790acae2a0392fc6a8b2fd6df6a575f01e108
'2012-05-27T15:20:49-04:00'
describe
'1652' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWX' 'sip-files00356.txt'
88490f4beacafd2401cd0d93832df235
65dacc85ca9ab37977a71f5636a9277025430478
'2012-05-27T15:20:54-04:00'
describe
'73323' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWY' 'sip-files00306.QC.jpg'
4b5ae9755549e85e930455b732121322
e74808a8aec7a9f055667bed67e3ecfda084e1a7
'2012-05-27T15:21:41-04:00'
describe
'1708' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATWZ' 'sip-files00328.txt'
df21da5fda3483dc22da69523033c3ca
5682e05e7d1ed40735e1b8bb329eabb9be565031
'2012-05-27T15:19:11-04:00'
describe
'2638888' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXA' 'sip-files00064.tif'
55141435957aa11d4c710a08b913c0a4
907137b64593b20dffb32effa12a9fc02cc3d4c4
'2012-05-27T15:31:19-04:00'
describe
'18483' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXB' 'sip-files00291thm.jpg'
2ab5e49a06ee6cbdf8dd23fdb876bb2d
dc21875ae27c003d1d46fb53bd85103e8c985bb4
describe
'42978' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXC' 'sip-files00209.pro'
aea945e8857b883ce8ab134ef838dc70
e47a8c7b0f4939ba84a1271bc8dcb601e64f8dd5
'2012-05-27T15:31:38-04:00'
describe
'1692' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXD' 'sip-files00219.txt'
7acea316d18bd73823dd04f0469a402c
e996f53c52d44bb538f428645d5ce5c597dafff8
'2012-05-27T15:25:35-04:00'
describe
'26030' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXE' 'sip-files00098thm.jpg'
4ef922793d086c832cb157b76ab34176
8145a53960454e3dc5365c38d500e2a02244e6a6
'2012-05-27T15:30:42-04:00'
describe
'225928' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXF' 'sip-files00257.jpg'
2b750ac675089f8e3e5b896374afd87e
f90a9ae2a160c6c2dd58bb4079247ed1653bff71
describe
'233316' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXG' 'sip-files00218.jpg'
8dd8f459d9666d59642996c0179dcc11
a70e6dcea2e503cbde9db38f102ed9b86875b816
'2012-05-27T15:21:16-04:00'
describe
'52563' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXH' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
03d989d00ced6933ae4bb43e545768da
0911b722f64f72f96103fbe2c2eb4889958e0abc
'2012-05-27T15:29:53-04:00'
describe
'79913' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXI' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
653261ba2e3acbf792f2e44e00aac7f3
e6300459d16d96491b1f9e87cfdb3c7d51316086
'2012-05-27T15:31:10-04:00'
describe
'348179' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXJ' 'sip-files00297.jp2'
21207f6713754fe7ea2106900103726b
5115d55787b26ceb65195b1009f94aeecb72a4a7
'2012-05-27T15:21:37-04:00'
describe
'76313' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXK' 'sip-files00279.QC.jpg'
29dad44ea2d7fa9b4377f842666c942c
df5c370eac81d832a736798f4c59839b6c1fb75a
'2012-05-27T15:20:26-04:00'
describe
'2750520' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXL' 'sip-files00251.tif'
03de8c5ae3f3252b1a015784ba0d4088
f049de27f79764d533fee39b5a80e1d38bb1c16d
'2012-05-27T15:20:16-04:00'
describe
'342211' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXM' 'sip-files00221.jp2'
afec30f671f07e43ee039f0d83183398
7a56b2b74b50a36b766a603f92121ac9279eeab3
'2012-05-27T15:20:01-04:00'
describe
'42893' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXN' 'sip-files00028.pro'
9baa485435942af994ab77c61b5a5828
c9800433ef462d4aa9e206ed0a25d417cfd002ce
'2012-05-27T15:28:39-04:00'
describe
'1640' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXO' 'sip-files00132.txt'
8107a7bab6115bc34cd2f09a68254948
30def60e5a1db9df13f477909e8d53e273ed68e5
'2012-05-27T15:29:24-04:00'
describe
'337975' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXP' 'sip-files00333.jp2'
2e4bac2ca23e5e5126f6964e0d49945b
686ab9cbc8169ad83bc8226d0e109deebb950f24
'2012-05-27T15:24:56-04:00'
describe
'259662' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXQ' 'sip-files00232.jpg'
1868a07c42b5226e946818b1142985fc
6074c8ecd4b7e5b578c60ad6f96681688e8e47c2
'2012-05-27T15:24:48-04:00'
describe
'2678420' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXR' 'sip-files00246.tif'
fd29b4e81ef347811338511937a3ecdd
4b4a1bb3c72eca93b6881829025831f7bba1c164
'2012-05-27T15:19:33-04:00'
describe
'343139' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXS' 'sip-files00312.jp2'
7a05eb57cb98897a0b91c727a9b4cd9a
b59253158036c17e27fefa9d6f2d9c8aef387c9f
'2012-05-27T15:24:31-04:00'
describe
'210605' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXT' 'sip-files00314.jpg'
0be00e74d4246ce73a82a0322574eea1
cca108909e51b0bbdc42e1ef6dd552116511b2f0
'2012-05-27T15:27:07-04:00'
describe
'234556' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXU' 'sip-files00204.jpg'
2c85d5fa0bf1ada4fa8350b36c6ad096
6d173732a93f3235a41c206d3af4cc01785583fa
'2012-05-27T15:26:25-04:00'
describe
'42062' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXV' 'sip-files00126.pro'
a448c0df0678fc1b3e848735d28f7219
c942ead0116e30f0a1c7e6ffd0d73edea51ab5e6
'2012-05-27T15:21:13-04:00'
describe
'205868' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXW' 'sip-files00262.jpg'
e971fe1bff50e1b7b8f3e6088aaf29a2
6e37408cbabca46c5caf3046faec688686c83640
'2012-05-27T15:22:33-04:00'
describe
'44337' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXX' 'sip-files00342.pro'
21d3c7f919c50317ca313e2fee37305d
51a4ea169ccfe48c18989b61d7a30cdbb029eba9
'2012-05-27T15:22:24-04:00'
describe
'2744168' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXY' 'sip-files00223b.tif'
d3b21ea4bf3ef6772fc1cc7e829600b0
0f966618c09d5577ba79cb118d0318bc896872c0
'2012-05-27T15:25:32-04:00'
describe
'1707' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATXZ' 'sip-files00198.txt'
2b5c2c972f3a408ad5173efa92af8cba
9721b982d9534f120aa4eb6d29a94b851a9f28ee
'2012-05-27T15:27:18-04:00'
describe
'2453844' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYA' 'sip-files00026.tif'
2acda30950f54052648fc830c3748d88
1bd06e638d26107344ec66f964b9734e08170363
'2012-05-27T15:22:54-04:00'
describe
'359904' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYB' 'sip-files00168.jp2'
63d64d7a3f5fd8609e539cf5c0a8603f
95148f688da5ec80a3d4dd1097262a76373dd599
describe
'1693' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYC' 'sip-files00230.txt'
3a87ddbe5f8abe3e515aef95479981e9
76c3fe20af883d049c70236c8d6743ec1da3bfa0
'2012-05-27T15:19:37-04:00'
describe
'81832' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYD' 'sip-files00238.QC.jpg'
ad14ced05757d7840eea93f9eaa6562e
34deddd4b956eeb48d6e1ea7e56827be0cdc8c53
'2012-05-27T15:29:16-04:00'
describe
'2908540' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYE' 'sip-files00179.tif'
decaa907f058c2af40a834fb3aea3af7
95cc7fc130ba43ba6fa0566bee5d9a4b20840a7e
'2012-05-27T15:31:31-04:00'
describe
'1751' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYF' 'sip-files00018.txt'
4df829e3134f2c3d9842b32e6331977e
0c4b4a9feeb28a6f6c3bc76f7c88972dd0dda5e4
'2012-05-27T15:23:41-04:00'
describe
'232536' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYG' 'sip-files00143.jpg'
85a717179b6b08baef5eee78c70a1174
e76535d791b6e3a5821368110eda525666aa8b3e
describe
'40848' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYH' 'sip-files00199.pro'
7053dd55cf6ef7909e3b0af3729393de
7a2be44af04b2d501b6a069bdf502d579d47ed47
describe
'73987' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYI' 'sip-files00351.QC.jpg'
e930a8ac78399b0cf7ad5678c3a43f07
bb34ae90c5c69d93e70684e1b08f3a818b219a88
describe
'50938' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYJ' 'sip-files00267.QC.jpg'
dc364c28e7ced750adf3f64f658c9674
8929cb28a93938d8072fcb8f0bd404b9da6673e6
'2012-05-27T15:28:38-04:00'
describe
'26002' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYK' 'sip-files00075.pro'
b58a52973b87ccfe99026d70686fe42b
b4a1c386086880c3210c9275e0262fa2b25e87c3
describe
'2745468' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYL' 'sip-files00336.tif'
22578ceb8b80f15dd2b771458badae13
09ecaee37f8e5dbc7ff5e6957ec704fb6105fbb0
'2012-05-27T15:31:29-04:00'
describe
'351092' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYM' 'sip-files00257.jp2'
4cb75fe6243ef1be806a2a0c8882c7cf
36f3138df8fe6cba7f7855738543ed979978f075
describe
'2736520' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYN' 'sip-files00005.tif'
d9d4fb409b9c727843d2afaca3f820f1
2eaa8bf656a31d163beb7610e15bce652de9cece
'2012-05-27T15:17:27-04:00'
describe
'42486' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYO' 'sip-files00190.pro'
dc319bc95b32e291a4a12f79178d390b
3a30c60acbe62c1122b4d1487b54367cbf86d7ba
'2012-05-27T15:30:20-04:00'
describe
'236120' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYP' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
7d78c9c467270b147862c14217f69e6c
20c1845edfee2b93127275399e5c367e4f93575e
'2012-05-27T15:28:28-04:00'
describe
'2869236' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYQ' 'sip-files00169.tif'
0429ce702b2b23cc3353fbf27068d3d3
a095dee04769addc984a424188e79cd8435caae1
describe
'1781' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYR' 'sip-files00142.txt'
87c3fb582f9038f9a4840c27febe61b4
39872eb004407d4745d7cfb593a2b2ca0f1e95fa
'2012-05-27T15:31:30-04:00'
describe
'39344' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYS' 'sip-files00244.pro'
c72e451ff1b74cda25ff4abf3d7cb924
e936fa2f6f2db7ad7be00269590667274fca0b64
'2012-05-27T15:20:42-04:00'
describe
'2565580' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYT' 'sip-files00253.tif'
05214102d33fcb61a7cc1cdd0564861b
283aaa7bcdfa5b6184f48a1da9f135d3dccac5f3
'2012-05-27T15:21:24-04:00'
describe
'232645' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYU' 'sip-files00105.jpg'
800afeaf9e8b0a9c08f22254d9e07d38
19e1e30634ea58cc1164fb7bc0ee1e2f5b18627f
'2012-05-27T15:18:00-04:00'
describe
'337122' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYV' 'sip-files00128.jp2'
03a1a936d17730b7574afcfe74165985
811c7e53a8c75b0dc1db3e00d5d83e758a81af67
describe
'2795008' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYW' 'sip-files00321.tif'
e8f771c1d67f587d02cc12054e3f4103
7fd7c3ba69facb422a4242e2e87b64a82801aff9
'2012-05-27T15:27:15-04:00'
describe
'2407628' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYX' 'sip-files00020.tif'
e227023bc2598a8c7937f1ff5e92e334
c8a2a1d0f5abc9aafaf9b7c175d7138531cbe959
'2012-05-27T15:30:17-04:00'
describe
'81989' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYY' 'sip-files00143.QC.jpg'
b53a018e65ea21ce51d713ae88cc3c84
88c68130a867db39728c60cd7d740b0c62851c7c
describe
'83933' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATYZ' 'sip-files00234.QC.jpg'
140bdd1b1835bd0e69bcdf7e5abdaf83
46e589f63707b8a6ac54a2313e92918c687b2d17
'2012-05-27T15:28:47-04:00'
describe
'28741' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZA' 'sip-files00234thm.jpg'
205774e2ca12399d2c4af56744ff63fb
6ab7924c9546270ede16dd8490a1a6f13204d3ba
'2012-05-27T15:27:31-04:00'
describe
'328000' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZB' 'sip-files00242.jp2'
57f110e740d0a26dcacb0e1ac5390506
ba0dc952a39ff5b802777999a2c242000a8f90a5
'2012-05-27T15:28:29-04:00'
describe
'41907' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZC' 'sip-files00118.pro'
2482517f2e623d473f7163d65bbe1340
10b09c649fa8bea86ce300e1983890e389201f4a
'2012-05-27T15:17:31-04:00'
describe
'212238' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZD' 'sip-files00316.jpg'
34866d538217fea4271760cca0533b78
18809d2d4d0cffc816a192c34322e9ce59bda7f8
describe
'323381' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZE' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
ab645868c04499ec905a65793abc7026
dc77f836273fe2231d6ccfd487f3e63e51a1e926
'2012-05-27T15:23:38-04:00'
describe
'28845' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZF' 'sip-files00009.pro'
4b2a2be40d8d2423e718a96110885e97
3a6e93003dbb4df4338aea0e0ce0fbf90ebce768
'2012-05-27T15:30:10-04:00'
describe
'318708' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZG' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
496accace35a17da480c5a7b943e1b49
e769d8b6d50f6055608e817c3562b928fde7f970
describe
'43287' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZH' 'sip-files00280.pro'
f579b7d7ad4a03058e68188e8491870a
fdb87ad75ef1beb93904a2dc218c7bf68d6ec916
'2012-05-27T15:19:46-04:00'
describe
'2853276' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZI' 'sip-files00192.tif'
1d11d03febaaeb4d8d9967c4d4bab58b
009acb368a61ea16ebe11f392842561ac19eff31
'2012-05-27T15:23:10-04:00'
describe
'326710' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZJ' 'sip-files00130.jp2'
98a0d5fd572f368b7c5e7c735ade9516
9a29d2a811659b2ce6d552426c98cb04678b31fb
describe
'118355' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZK' 'sip-files00286.jpg'
ba750c742a6dd183ebbd6029266995b9
e605d3803163deb28ff81470b3195483a97b2a8b
'2012-05-27T15:19:45-04:00'
describe
'74486' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZL' 'sip-files00116.QC.jpg'
022e68aa05c68cc81c0f656dbfe4c994
0d508dd2114ea524d2f0a5b83213f53f8e01f5a5
'2012-05-27T15:25:16-04:00'
describe
'338937' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZM' 'sip-files00121.jp2'
194e634f5dcca7d7c3a29bd9a2fcbaa6
d5dd268c12d542864ef88de913437671ad26509a
'2012-05-27T15:17:49-04:00'
describe
'23629' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZN' 'sip-files00212thm.jpg'
f10c9acfcb9e7809cb0a668ff12accd9
401998342f5c5e469df74ed078c378313bb9f92b
'2012-05-27T15:25:36-04:00'
describe
'798' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZO' 'sip-files00362.pro'
f10251be79a02dac9cbf976e3fe567eb
e77f400457ff8381480f301deb863af8b9eaec1b
'2012-05-27T15:22:13-04:00'
describe
'313810' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZP' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
2fa5fafceadf22fc72efa47ca86bd427
7030f44480513d224c824a9bfec14f4d7cd9e620
'2012-05-27T15:23:26-04:00'
describe
'2779504' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZQ' 'sip-files00213.tif'
4d88ca23109b59b4e4ce6a61e175b14a
aa8e4fa767d384042a9bd204d9de542405c7b2c5
'2012-05-27T15:29:11-04:00'
describe
'28740' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZR' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
915c9ff0711578027ec6db27d700ce64
564c03200ae24fc528aa791508dcb863293f3376
'2012-05-27T15:21:15-04:00'
describe
'1712' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZS' 'sip-files00185.txt'
096ea7fc94ed658bef8dfbb6c9233a4e
c275b01253f8c5ec3d0d1344a3653e399177045d
'2012-05-27T15:22:06-04:00'
describe
'1741' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZT' 'sip-files00051.txt'
6ee7de3d7a197c89c73409ea42ecb9c8
338d231d2d9f47747e85c8bb1efa7d91e328668c
'2012-05-27T15:24:16-04:00'
describe
'2419068' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZU' 'sip-files00028.tif'
1dd36b52870fe7ce108677a4910c5c55
50b256ba07ac644b7601b5d37647cb99e977a860
'2012-05-27T15:26:51-04:00'
describe
'328155' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZV' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
652a71643f941146530b157e3252a716
e8cfacea87aecbf8362e586ba5f82f7aa2e83013
'2012-05-27T15:31:06-04:00'
describe
'75833' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZW' 'sip-files00167.QC.jpg'
f0170e2938d8135cfbd4e552d3e0d230
6c735da18bbe364780faaaf9621f0edbc763cb65
'2012-05-27T15:28:12-04:00'
describe
'341943' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZX' 'sip-files00189.jp2'
707f66846234b22e5866c5ce63fec2e6
711d9f38ac2150b813d54ff4a5cdd1390e1bf7dd
describe
'41817' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZY' 'sip-files00329.pro'
7c0b66fb0659cac325cadcd3245658dd
01e9dbcb25dbd85765fdf0306d46393a6980cacf
'2012-05-27T15:24:21-04:00'
describe
'234401' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAATZZ' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
bfddeeaf5710d3cc8599a6b957f9527b
b7c728a22c169fda36535956b1ad976c40cde1a0
'2012-05-27T15:21:57-04:00'
describe
'342371' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAA' 'sip-files00272.jp2'
70f2fc05449205a29b55c1c38626a1cd
84ce8082bb0d31b7dce3f93697a3de34df773356
'2012-05-27T15:28:34-04:00'
describe
'70756' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAB' 'sip-files00189.QC.jpg'
8bce1b97c00a969d8daddd4f85d20293
0d61d13e1438c721307ca2010a9a9c89b23ed799
'2012-05-27T15:26:59-04:00'
describe
'38456' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAC' 'sip-files00341.pro'
2822d9be221ef1b160c580cc0f424a03
0a2edac7e3a2f60440b1e8ae113d8e9186003d66
'2012-05-27T15:23:56-04:00'
describe
'221265' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAD' 'sip-files00311.jpg'
fa801bbaaa5918a728cca64830a459b9
056e6c1147a232fff43cd172aa48ec6e708a9c18
'2012-05-27T15:23:05-04:00'
describe
'1702' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAE' 'sip-files00040.txt'
e19788afef64e0fc8a8d7947e45d8668
70561078e79f917fe7cba8d95a1e592b01615997
'2012-05-27T15:26:18-04:00'
describe
'80747' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAF' 'sip-files00102.QC.jpg'
cf47f09d10e696de3b3afb05f5d6bcfe
3d89716c975bacab0d22d245832af9347521d56f
'2012-05-27T15:24:41-04:00'
describe
'26082' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAG' 'sip-files00333thm.jpg'
923146d0b853424643cefaaab39f5b73
7b290b608ea17ab9f3818669b47053144216ad4c
'2012-05-27T15:30:06-04:00'
describe
'316308' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAH' 'sip-files00143.jp2'
95ad0e7b5576c2fb0bf93dd22a69764c
2f9255215440022ba160db263516e72573185b53
'2012-05-27T15:30:45-04:00'
describe
'190506' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAI' 'sip-files00228.jpg'
b8657cd085a26a2268d42acf26146fa3
4e20f74e58b3148e31b7c72ae2a394e7bf5c815d
describe
'26407' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAJ' 'sip-files00353thm.jpg'
28389ae8de662d84048065644181db02
aa4358162fe6c9b363bd794f47cd22f1843f860a
describe
'74037' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAK' 'sip-files00342.QC.jpg'
c26a3e23495960e6ce0b2e9a0610a3b3
bf37a50491b5943141b6339058f25ed8e67280c0
'2012-05-27T15:24:35-04:00'
describe
'27412' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAL' 'sip-files00214thm.jpg'
7b8bbec072ccd3a9d18c9eb304976ac3
db1d90223f014c20c308c4346d5d64c8931b7c81
'2012-05-27T15:30:44-04:00'
describe
'2764056' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAM' 'sip-files00056.tif'
0a648e0c027cd5398b470078738998db
90e8624d77bca3be0b3f968f7fb435e09eaa620a
'2012-05-27T15:17:55-04:00'
describe
'43296' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAN' 'sip-files00178.pro'
2f2cb191fa7175d3509470a4feea178e
318bc17ca5898fa04c0ef0f8054dfc8975165101
'2012-05-27T15:19:53-04:00'
describe
'2663244' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAO' 'sip-files00233.tif'
58abb92368fc3c74d85df86e920400e9
cb3eb897fd9835ade8b8a8eba708556fd6b80128
'2012-05-27T15:23:37-04:00'
describe
'9285232' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAP' 'sip-files00002.tif'
9cc647b11a73c0eb92e26963c364cd59
d1599aa4480695eb4ce9cd35508e324aee2595c6
'2012-05-27T15:22:12-04:00'
describe
'1657' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAQ' 'sip-files00149.txt'
2bc52e73ae33a107f4f65288d48066ad
75353fabac860c9179a8d74d4c8eed7fc79ebf01
describe
'2863100' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAR' 'sip-files00260.tif'
a0d34ae5ec3e3cc70f3953d571dbb9e1
d272713b42d4304908b60682351abe23773669b8
'2012-05-27T15:23:25-04:00'
describe
'222903' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAS' 'sip-files00296.jpg'
af13a5b8858702232ae57a4e4743146a
86b5f797efed99968f820994fa24296d9a0527af
'2012-05-27T15:24:38-04:00'
describe
'322785' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAT' 'sip-files00102.jp2'
19c7d50752ef2c933991a629fffd384d
9c704ba38eccde8dd8c223c278801b52c89316f5
'2012-05-27T15:20:29-04:00'
describe
'85077' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAU' 'sip-files00250.QC.jpg'
e6d14e4820d72293a29dd66f105dfb51
16fd368367a837ceb8c6fcfa21582eacafa798ec
'2012-05-27T15:24:58-04:00'
describe
'346509' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAV' 'sip-files00207.jp2'
63b4f8196655cef528f0febfebc0db28
815f65873e4ec0e0c56b39562a667c2f90cb02cb
describe
'1736' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAW' 'sip-files00327.txt'
9bae2f81b38eae2239ecd5c17f9ace60
cda7b248e36c24b58d535302b0bdca40afa6ff49
'2012-05-27T15:29:09-04:00'
describe
'35220' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAX' 'sip-files00188.QC.jpg'
33a04a81a5e4b3cba105a57b40249548
94b3930075899da34511b16e2a64365fa71f71f0
'2012-05-27T15:23:14-04:00'
describe
'42110' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAY' 'sip-files00315.pro'
68b603195ef37bcc1bd77a87e944c5d9
c589375fe5631a18ffe520f79666e53dbedc55c0
'2012-05-27T15:24:54-04:00'
describe
'1788' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUAZ' 'sip-files00146.txt'
31c2b929c6d037432697a713c47f8cd4
a6838df9631a8726884360b8aa86b60650d1d2f6
describe
'2543724' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBA' 'sip-files00143.tif'
696e180eac9293128a634f1f45f88dd2
9bbbe7d0ab8f57cc700db881e9e4fe18e7a6f8dd
'2012-05-27T15:31:47-04:00'
describe
'244325' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBB' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
1b76ab35f13906c217ebf9dd7432aceb
53f9fe586ff64abfe6667aac2cc085ca5bf65560
'2012-05-27T15:20:40-04:00'
describe
'2642008' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBC' 'sip-files00008.tif'
97f4da282d7d22e1ee56edd6d512bc24
3e8ed0001d14472f6afc34d2a35f49cb1e986adc
describe
'353210' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBD' 'sip-files00263.jp2'
458b7465347189fe389a861f501858ab
d3a0ee49b91d1e958126ce0ac4c481bccf613add
describe
'201076' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBE' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
6c25e453a126946aaa7de0babd5a938a
e0d685b96056e8aaa8072c11cce81d9396cb0190
'2012-05-27T15:27:25-04:00'
describe
'222160' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBF' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
aaf0fef3fefe17184346c1addf9c763f
708f735c69c3a771bc5818e1c2b99434f3ad8013
'2012-05-27T15:18:58-04:00'
describe
'24907' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBG' 'sip-files00303thm.jpg'
bfc44ec2793ccbdc15258f6ff2340b04
1d762c19a666982129e1e4917cee020e20b6082b
'2012-05-27T15:28:52-04:00'
describe
'27849' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBH' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
89441764157fb4c2ea1229f2e470f09f
777f759743dbd252ef135f0e06b98b55e1816fd0
describe
'346192' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBI' 'sip-files00329.jp2'
c5e5b1334f72af2d225817bca166d4a0
675fb6333542277eaf3e50596ca37ed801e2feaa
'2012-05-27T15:26:12-04:00'
describe
'244628' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBJ' 'sip-files00199.jpg'
733ed56bda90ddb66c646995d58ce8b7
2d033801f19fb4d9d92a0536a62e3fe28ca5674e
'2012-05-27T15:21:10-04:00'
describe
'324379' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBK' 'sip-files00226.jp2'
649466b704b480cb4df3c2866f4a242a
949e43bced9b320ec89b6f8c62f677c998861853
'2012-05-27T15:26:01-04:00'
describe
'2789252' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBL' 'sip-files00319.tif'
45037cd4289361e8040092ae331f8373
d12c97b02db960317285748a46a4029b01586dc2
'2012-05-27T15:23:24-04:00'
describe
'76674' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBM' 'sip-files00265.QC.jpg'
4c7d82c66f79355e67d33e6353e41c0d
af2540a2d81053f478b9083d8967f0beb4245e5b
describe
'218956' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBN' 'sip-files00308.jpg'
983a22eaac6f0855796ae8ce7efb3234
f74ccd182977084df6ad76ab658f8d3481d1fe3a
'2012-05-27T15:29:26-04:00'
describe
'2680644' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBO' 'sip-files00046.tif'
4bcd1f0c5d91b505ac6fcc49eb3161a6
e6e5dc7671dbc92a089f74e252dc16642eb02ac0
'2012-05-27T15:22:20-04:00'
describe
'344772' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBP' 'sip-files00295.jp2'
66af03cf9266037f37dac6ea877282b7
432bcf25b289f1c96f7103b9e2a5ba6113119a19
describe
'1122' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBQ' 'sip-files00121.txt'
1819aaff8910d8d8fb982a5ec27c6387
3fe71520d17d0fceff9c16ffdce5adc0f829bbaa
'2012-05-27T15:20:31-04:00'
describe
'1763' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBR' 'sip-files00342.txt'
a3edd727dc5f8af6b42b5a5fe55c6838
77a36951eb6a692799aa299992a8c340c93649ff
'2012-05-27T15:29:28-04:00'
describe
'38057' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBS' 'sip-files00284.pro'
942133fb0d6cf3ef49241dea602a5a0a
18f7f16b061ef0cd1e5ea54f9a91282744505b95
'2012-05-27T15:23:12-04:00'
describe
'321446' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBT' 'sip-files00133.jp2'
751caa727a8e7fc3eb531030ed95ecd7
8f7e47cf2c462bdcb50906204422105c2bc40f03
'2012-05-27T15:26:48-04:00'
describe
'194680' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBU' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
0c35fdb2f8eca9fc72b8cb94f879b2cf
0a1b0c9861796b9dca848113e86c0bba82415b01
describe
'333488' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBV' 'sip-files00246.jp2'
1bd46012f7b0279b59338dd3f2e68395
27979e0490e1412e63d0813b6b115fb63f77ce0a
'2012-05-27T15:30:16-04:00'
describe
'2462792' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBW' 'sip-files00138.tif'
1b2adb08fa475576f4d645b7373c56a7
7ca05471e922ef8aadc5caffaa3bedf2d7ac42d9
'2012-05-27T15:30:40-04:00'
describe
'1730' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBX' 'sip-files00294.txt'
f1f73a9540b393647b082b866ac1ec58
ca9673132ce0be6de7c9e09492c94a57cf55864c
'2012-05-27T15:23:23-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBY' 'sip-files00334.txt'
5676cf1047a836a0d84b3d8432625414
c4a428cf0b89eee934a1bcbad4ac67f5130eb0f4
describe
'217217' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUBZ' 'sip-files00167.jpg'
84e81eb4bb5284d682c92e9e2b316d3d
95e93ef6ac5d6a97a41fd351e9ec775f1baeb670
describe
'25857' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCA' 'sip-files00099thm.jpg'
a4d57be3fc4a6744cae2befe2823bd38
dfafe5ad5c3a36a1f0608417672f25e9adc9aad0
'2012-05-27T15:18:56-04:00'
describe
'42477' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCB' 'sip-files00357.pro'
620ba118ac4b673f6df3fd6d138fa110
ab15738a2fbcf1dfe823782ce9475e914c6ebbff
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCC' 'sip-files00170.txt'
ad013235f89d7dd2935806510b5c46ad
ec8512dd30e15158cc210bdce0ca4fdb7e2696d5
'2012-05-27T15:18:08-04:00'
describe
'231231' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCD' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
332264cc4148b3f98c093793de518cd1
9f84efaecdfc41f579f1278c309d2752460d7581
'2012-05-27T15:19:49-04:00'
describe
'74096' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCE' 'sip-files00280.QC.jpg'
cee357950d0f6f3ecaf60e4553dc8688
7bbf27a641656b906926ee95a7b81748ee674827
'2012-05-27T15:25:39-04:00'
describe
'345957' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCF' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
54c56a73dd4aaef8b80261857e9ccd97
242f7d139c05d7ddb0467b69cdb8598358b599ce
describe
'25910' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCG' 'sip-files00199bthm.jpg'
0f1099f8fdb69c0e078c30b88dadea04
96b45d03a8794c307c1088b84222b995c11d28b3
'2012-05-27T15:20:46-04:00'
describe
'38079' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCH' 'sip-files00099.pro'
e5051090f2f3c15a33c0b5415a29eaba
6e06e104040d9b8979a6ab2296f56cc005a15498
'2012-05-27T15:28:43-04:00'
describe
'41804' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCI' 'sip-files00243.pro'
96fbdba3efc127b88670226fdc635749
c0c5246dbce1af5d760094e17ffee6e1d6a4ba2f
'2012-05-27T15:18:50-04:00'
describe
'2711820' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCJ' 'sip-files00018.tif'
ea45510e7b746e93c542d52c49ed553e
33d28a8998326a398bdb095bd3f94b3ec6d1e1a0
'2012-05-27T15:19:24-04:00'
describe
'311248' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCK' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
eb1e93b994a46054010693f72c9305ac
23f9d93ee41b852e2144948f8786974b28b7d156
'2012-05-27T15:24:33-04:00'
describe
'5484' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCL' 'sip-files00008.pro'
273312dc93c8b8d250a67cac60704ea1
24734ac1f730d0d69a41a86396ce7159c23c785e
'2012-05-27T15:27:43-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCM' 'sip-files00108.txt'
1e24630fd99e6934037d9d51cc22cdea
2a625f6bea2bf7a59096d51482c774844703fdb9
'2012-05-27T15:25:27-04:00'
describe
'44694' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCN' 'sip-files00117.pro'
ee64aba65258e84269b977b7f0bda705
e7dbbe7f03a1b51ea25543c1f2ce36fafb701be4
'2012-05-27T15:26:35-04:00'
describe
'2831304' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCO' 'sip-files00353.tif'
877762fc55e9aafd4c79f99da65a9742
0f899831ce549da3a5049398eac6e4e17d1c3263
'2012-05-27T15:28:44-04:00'
describe
'71822' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCP' 'sip-files00211.QC.jpg'
fc0ad4dc811c074af891582ee54f72f7
6e23787584663c7844aefe224a36988aa0fd9343
describe
'26303' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCQ' 'sip-files00171thm.jpg'
4f82f4276c07ec20e61d892c9b92bd3f
e0039680bb2d2fe7c7b9a4dd331849b04b53a339
'2012-05-27T15:18:40-04:00'
describe
'22858' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCR' 'sip-files00177thm.jpg'
cbeaff390b2a2a47cce2a6057ccfd054
664beb25922a862335e733915453c4f3ff7422e3
'2012-05-27T15:25:01-04:00'
describe
'78409' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCS' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
6454973befd1e7b74886eeefbbfc8950
41c5a3fc3036609836a501a68e2b26ba190c36fd
'2012-05-27T15:30:29-04:00'
describe
'1898' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCT' 'sip-files00318.txt'
bd66fc5a5727aec805e749a0a2eb706c
a1c7d8b74a22ef949abebb8c909d225cfabb42b9
describe
'340' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCU' 'sip-files00344.txt'
2fe47ddd0e84efb8767a64d4ec0f578e
6c2f47fe1b642cfaf29be0e62799c584ca6205fb
describe
WARNING CODE 'Daitss::Anomaly' Invalid character
'72056' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCV' 'sip-files00244.QC.jpg'
035349a069a1541c4cbd3b977b933b89
8b51355097505cb47b127522933ddb492318d40d
'2012-05-27T15:30:56-04:00'
describe
'1711' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCW' 'sip-files00270.txt'
1ae0cd09d3b0dc3cbdcb0d0ae552d4f8
a3e3a9d5e07c7f7c25f9500c3a17cd7fa389e47d
describe
'24589' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCX' 'sip-files00176thm.jpg'
a095aff0db3b8c3c7aac973b13ef69ff
52e1ae02eede51c46629e013c286082014c771d5
describe
'27303' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCY' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
b3755f7a567636d87dd76e5adc7815e1
21e902ace240e297b4b78f6eb0a5147736253921
'2012-05-27T15:21:50-04:00'
describe
'2752620' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUCZ' 'sip-files00291.tif'
3e66b606ca0768cd0c696832a4ec3cfe
f8095f304812539b3ff0e85ade1f6bba6e5c063b
describe
'81635' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDA' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
a62726dd417f1ff0db3ac8dddeb62e07
582c3e39c6e6b96ad238ce811bff7d703a56acdc
'2012-05-27T15:17:36-04:00'
describe
'44048' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDB' 'sip-files00204.pro'
2871f887d5acded4c5bb14a5e2cb5563
315a6441997394b5ebfb73aa8103a3d330ceb52d
'2012-05-27T15:30:53-04:00'
describe
'39547' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDC' 'sip-files00240.pro'
d734d6e1de04436a979f1b4906d057a8
13348b98f51915db14f16d9068f1ccf8ce605256
describe
'80038' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDD' 'sip-files00335.QC.jpg'
172d339bbf1902e3375899a64eeedc80
f05a0b02e6cc69f067a4171d35e060e34a52ddf1
'2012-05-27T15:28:55-04:00'
describe
'27281' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDE' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
9b66ff7a5a41af5013174a7025c3cbc4
2ebc4f48c0ad84dbae323fc32c8b6848874982c9
describe
'44230' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDF' 'sip-files00153.pro'
93bca8fc64eb3cf49ff63cc5e3b1ea48
82e94b738147350dee335d2df5f5b4bca04e1211
'2012-05-27T15:27:50-04:00'
describe
'24' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDG' 'sip-filesprocessing.instr'
40f744e653e5ddc0bdf576d84fab25d1
49f47de1a6e331839b842fb41cb9a947e4a89327
describe
'77244' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDH' 'sip-files00147.QC.jpg'
04984bd469c4995065adc6380e616d6a
8e3fcfe02d0da38215784a22d10fa7878c0bbf84
'2012-05-27T15:31:41-04:00'
describe
'326535' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDI' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
0f09f75a0c4b7cd15ac60ccb9b05261a
95ed7d49fd5f5319ecf3f1d23c043089bc168048
'2012-05-27T15:18:39-04:00'
describe
'1749' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDJ' 'sip-files00055.txt'
faca1e130f29bca30cef9c92ef7a0d89
a6fb48e019c6fb7a72f5ac4609ed2682be96ca0e
'2012-05-27T15:23:36-04:00'
describe
'25903' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDK' 'sip-files00264thm.jpg'
102867b6dc184ab7024909f9ffdbb887
d000976d3995cc22ed80d31938787eaa0c1fb204
'2012-05-27T15:21:38-04:00'
describe
'210981' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDL' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
5f95093e61265e5cc136036acc47065f
f786d14d697015c6d4d17a01e44991ddb15b0ff4
describe
'43166' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDM' 'sip-files00215.pro'
e9a17ab69211c0bfb9800b352f005fbf
cdca638dad1f5ba4847f8e44eaa5a1fdc9a90694
'2012-05-27T15:27:57-04:00'
describe
'43275' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDN' 'sip-files00258.pro'
1b51ddc039c4132440ac5c8dfc50ebe6
1d9cc38c96e61eb553c3c9321a9c6dde4ff42b01
'2012-05-27T15:28:11-04:00'
describe
'72302' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDO' 'sip-files00260.QC.jpg'
258175ddf908c6c361c852a2a64a6507
cee5090a2345bfdc1885479429dd6d70491da49a
describe
'1760' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDP' 'sip-files00217.txt'
a23e64e7ef6d5e5caa0ff29299ec8e1b
952fba1cc80fb58127b96ac369279809d593c2e4
'2012-05-27T15:17:57-04:00'
describe
'36625' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDQ' 'sip-files00278.pro'
d41f94d981779f6dc0beba92ad8239e4
4c91e217a8db3f2b8feb45e6ec772427955e4534
'2012-05-27T15:31:43-04:00'
describe
'345871' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDR' 'sip-files00225.jp2'
4bca3dbd09c2920d1d3bc62eec584e56
4d38dfa5c4f597b55b0de071df20b5644c1e2ab5
describe
'1729' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDS' 'sip-files00093.txt'
319d54eb42b7003019a76732824f8bfb
1f9cee3e1f79a966b8c3d0515e33e266329df1b0
describe
'25080' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDT' 'sip-files00284thm.jpg'
4932e6720843ef0b39a5aa71730bf3da
4e010d1bf0b26e44c649434c5afa16f0832142a3
describe
'232029' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDU' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
33ec877e45e8ee98fe3c0f0774b550fd
ddb2aad22632fc4a213209012b9df3bac73ded34
'2012-05-27T15:28:13-04:00'
describe
'28044' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDV' 'sip-files00224thm.jpg'
c55230cd684f358358e6a3ffa5fc876a
888f3207d1d6395ef6b26465fe9f011d6a40cbb5
describe
'224396' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDW' 'sip-files00356.jpg'
5b38c3f7acc580a7add491b8d8482ce2
ee19fb184f4a03decdbaacbbe80432444340bf52
'2012-05-27T15:20:37-04:00'
describe
'227183' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDX' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
d19bafc4919de7b0f255a358f28b2b26
47922e710f83d591f0f3e8404ec6a604d3262a08
'2012-05-27T15:29:38-04:00'
describe
'27715' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDY' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
b07672f4d89e8e4f750fc8d6b780473c
a3f1ebf1f09503249303dd2e092eb16196c17888
'2012-05-27T15:30:22-04:00'
describe
'211267' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUDZ' 'sip-files00288.jpg'
85ead95659646aba3bf0e4b41cab6112
ad74e1c4df2efa3989996d5fd1a37f79f89d8a38
describe
'321107' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEA' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
78c9557247709b70c52ec72575d5870e
959df2929b70a1dde0d4349622ed91b8a5bb2a1f
'2012-05-27T15:23:46-04:00'
describe
'1805' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEB' 'sip-files00280.txt'
b56bfcedc97368c78b064418ef431c7f
f32e73796d9ccb69a5a89e0a632822e167db9a72
describe
'349988' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEC' 'sip-files00215.jp2'
92e6592bd1d0dc80051f863759aa908c
8bdbb390c509dbe67b91b63ea007f4dcfc5ccaa0
'2012-05-27T15:20:13-04:00'
describe
'334522' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUED' 'sip-files00254.jp2'
2affd0031751a56183547a62109026d2
9003702ffd0cebd52c09ec350942986772cc55a3
'2012-05-27T15:31:17-04:00'
describe
'354735' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEE' 'sip-files00313.jp2'
34be717cb3b97274c45d1fba13b40e1a
0579def820b40f2def25c1543b31240426357325
'2012-05-27T15:22:07-04:00'
describe
'1742' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEF' 'sip-files00330.txt'
8992dd3865c43e3e6f441e011b9e5b79
7b944f31a15d87cf5f5d610ecd85a786e3ba1fc9
'2012-05-27T15:23:53-04:00'
describe
'41218' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEG' 'sip-files00027.pro'
8f31c1c085125e1d2d2c8bc0c7a84eba
4c8b48ec91ec8f277bc80510230af2c0d19c134e
'2012-05-27T15:24:44-04:00'
describe
'2674020' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEH' 'sip-files00080.tif'
2c2fc7777cbcd63c2c85d8f1a1ec1a2c
49ab960ae5874c82d1e1c8d464bae15add013553
'2012-05-27T15:18:29-04:00'
describe
'76569' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEI' 'sip-files00202.QC.jpg'
3d1b0281185fdd7bbabe025cc74f0b83
7ac888cf7799088cf25e6def1a1f985a8513860a
'2012-05-27T15:26:28-04:00'
describe
'32997' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEJ' 'sip-files00189.pro'
fc221591f7d428a8524e924886667fdd
e2fe1c2a1852c8bd29d02cd60d29da5b6251e642
'2012-05-27T15:31:39-04:00'
describe
'348922' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEK' 'sip-files00356.jp2'
ce4824c0387be48e59696cfe6bd66852
d1c00c72a084e113c0cefc67ed766c6b22ee17a1
describe
'217558' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEL' 'sip-files00211.jpg'
9e0a0b6c578f46165b366fe15c1c261e
cc11ad113a147f043f7b86766cb04d41cb7df4e6
'2012-05-27T15:25:00-04:00'
describe
'73428' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEM' 'sip-files00168.QC.jpg'
bbbf1f2e2ff71d7868ccfc02d0f5a448
b1e0352771a828c9901283062e66d84b72f2f3e4
'2012-05-27T15:18:59-04:00'
describe
'344869' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEN' 'sip-files00149.jp2'
4319811ded86dc332c0268761846a9af
4d1d4ea668fdfa14960658e2383163ce2ddedca5
'2012-05-27T15:28:56-04:00'
describe
'125411' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEO' 'sip-files00231.jpg'
5af0e8758892a1b230d97c8277bf06ab
ca654a51ddf61ffa2e6a0f36069456c749667aab
'2012-05-27T15:29:19-04:00'
describe
'41235' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEP' 'sip-files00287.pro'
859557379c6db7971b62edf46701bc33
adc09f4ab5b5dd73d45846402e2714852176120d
describe
'2732584' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEQ' 'sip-files00155.tif'
9f8f99d05869b66482e11e20b2c23642
2e625892b72dfbb3be8b57c49c062fe674f5d74f
'2012-05-27T15:21:20-04:00'
describe
'1744' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUER' 'sip-files00104.txt'
ef2e84d9c7dac9f3beb6bdd77f8bb552
22b0ff7ac9f97cd013d07913e3ad60a8e66fb48f
'2012-05-27T15:19:17-04:00'
describe
'43695' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUES' 'sip-files00343.QC.jpg'
efe961168282faf1b458dc8e2717868a
1424c7479c866410997325629c602516133243d7
describe
'1838' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUET' 'sip-files00296.txt'
51d69c36b28bd6508426815172d21f5c
74b84fbc0b5f7246487eb47f1cb70cfaea8688fe
'2012-05-27T15:29:36-04:00'
describe
'17928' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEU' 'sip-files00343thm.jpg'
19868e7a1ad6f440d0b89bc15d5ea65b
f8547b31ddd411e390cec334bc9f96ea989cb391
'2012-05-27T15:24:18-04:00'
describe
'333445' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEV' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
5df8f47fea1148d3f637d086c43872b0
0e603501baaea4387140196c48c3c4a3051bab0e
'2012-05-27T15:25:18-04:00'
describe
'42150' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEW' 'sip-files00135.pro'
b253c38a694b0cc079121a692a24a02d
ca19cbabaec8c17d9ffe11d9f10560b9b5a7e422
'2012-05-27T15:22:35-04:00'
describe
'41724' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEX' 'sip-files00336.pro'
6b323e77f739f00a806dd02fbfd04630
542e50d56858b09b090c5b04a907821dc129bf9d
'2012-05-27T15:22:02-04:00'
describe
'217600' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEY' 'sip-files00281.jpg'
084663407264ca53f780081e3d7c054f
d1e42e75d13bd651ce77e797b5b9ad329cc6d563
'2012-05-27T15:22:37-04:00'
describe
'218368' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUEZ' 'sip-files00266.jpg'
a69cafce1bb4420589c30374c29bb738
2a85b7d3eeb01f2820d02af55073480753cc6e2b
'2012-05-27T15:24:13-04:00'
describe
'22878' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFA' 'sip-files00278thm.jpg'
571ab602b7c28729310bfb5ac72310a9
036eceb4c5b9560cd201c856a91836f464f225f2
'2012-05-27T15:26:31-04:00'
describe
'323163' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFB' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
556714c03d04e72f4963789ce840d362
b6edb73a1e500ad8eecbc2c0280561bdebf1a836
describe
'45255' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFC' 'sip-files00156.pro'
5ac1c52663392d922fd7460c347b665d
010e8828127d254d8fb227c90997e7f898463db7
'2012-05-27T15:30:30-04:00'
describe
'40065' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFD' 'sip-files00353.pro'
e837487b6508c59bf17f7c6e9d66d5c4
8324d62b75a400a2ba38a8572805836fe236366d
describe
'2675408' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFE' 'sip-files00200.tif'
ba603c0426eaacf5792011347a02e074
ad22f4c216e78fcd66fcee322ad2af6939305f73
'2012-05-27T15:17:44-04:00'
describe
'2507532' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFF' 'sip-files00038.tif'
dd35e365351536d2bb49ef9d01f5e854
ed703a87d43cf63c6ad69f5b119f12ad0762d587
'2012-05-27T15:20:18-04:00'
describe
'40950' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFG' 'sip-files00340.pro'
9c192324eb95d0691627d564fa8de2e9
e1b61a561300c9ccd32b0604082306b1ca3f9ff6
'2012-05-27T15:29:06-04:00'
describe
'224918' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFH' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
7b0e2b87c20da0814784b32f1bf44a8e
b3cb208e665051ca2ec82da91018f335dc4d5ef7
'2012-05-27T15:25:11-04:00'
describe
'224926' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFI' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
cf878d105f89de47a42b1a3de8af1b01
29cc0c001d8039c7ef8db7095c2cc3519c03bbde
'2012-05-27T15:22:25-04:00'
describe
'1774' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFJ' 'sip-files00242.txt'
0e084e29150a9581daad9d185e430e8d
f31338f34bc707144bc4e793b7a11377ce6f0364
describe
'44467' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFK' 'sip-files00199b.pro'
b33d3a1e31b7053ec1fdee90ff593dcd
5febd3eafb3beabd1e39846af55ec7b494b3e65d
'2012-05-27T15:19:12-04:00'
describe
'1614' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFL' 'sip-files00284.txt'
b1da751a9b63dc3b1606a51cbc848546
5094241dd0d010d7843514a201a8f83d4b60f456
'2012-05-27T15:21:21-04:00'
describe
'226708' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFM' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
e3821c44bd2b439dedc7618c06177872
c4624594eada710a6b56b410693be5ead121a022
'2012-05-27T15:26:11-04:00'
describe
'337361' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFN' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
524bedcf8e424206da4c69de82753237
54c4a94d92efc7c97991d414735f4939af543119
'2012-05-27T15:19:22-04:00'
describe
'42589' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFO' 'sip-files00015.pro'
7fcbe64d00c79807f84d35b1350ccc91
538bcf7c20417413d7415f199bf5f51e57893fb0
'2012-05-27T15:24:12-04:00'
describe
'26216' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFP' 'sip-files00318thm.jpg'
ef6430d4a53867d655cec2d57a613efa
6088f92a9813d1413e5714fd5d0a139da754713d
describe
'26539' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFQ' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
6579e9607f2a5d83d5c37e91604a75a5
9e5ea56abb2210e70f646a9fabf4eaa94159e68c
describe
'72401' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFR' 'sip-files00282.QC.jpg'
2b381cfa26afb5a73b73b0aae4b15254
b8520d42fb52a52ae411397d1d2025cfccda6100
'2012-05-27T15:30:02-04:00'
describe
'83324' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFS' 'sip-files00206.QC.jpg'
8b4e7aa0ffe76382f66d6e4c9a2002d6
e73c5f07188143d846c789dd87e4b517985319ee
describe
'83629' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFT' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
85c5af61bd7313097c84a39f59e347ff
9b9a2dfa691bcff5cbdf46f66e621378889a34e5
'2012-05-27T15:26:13-04:00'
describe
'43632' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFU' 'sip-files00160.pro'
aff9c7b712ff24f74f362abfd6aaea0f
40ee5ec0e39bf5dfcef33daf5aded6b82ef958b4
'2012-05-27T15:21:00-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFV' 'sip-files00295.pro'
a474c350971d3a95694f6cd41a3be15e
934359b2314afcc802b50e2a7a9cc22263c86e8b
'2012-05-27T15:17:40-04:00'
describe
'2717468' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFW' 'sip-files00198.tif'
a3851b7c6a8a438d34322f042f5057e1
7301e1a82c0fc35bca6906be7349de778da50253
'2012-05-27T15:23:22-04:00'
describe
'343158' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFX' 'sip-files00232.jp2'
b6ecaa20fe1067fe3593426e374e8bf5
58e219d98827e494af3cc19a2fdc58be23853f90
'2012-05-27T15:24:52-04:00'
describe
'306492' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFY' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
f4f04fc4a004f5f0316e73e3d6bdec20
001909baefb34d7582e00590dee38bc346b41c72
'2012-05-27T15:21:58-04:00'
describe
'317837' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUFZ' 'sip-files00141.jp2'
4581cd6ebdd686961890534b2699a751
cf79605d6f03feca46386d8718e22d2827213982
'2012-05-27T15:26:05-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGA' 'sip-files00259.txt'
d66f75051fc99836c5dc2aa24ea2eeca
0ba4e2661f8a29dd00d1231dd1291121a32a9bf1
'2012-05-27T15:29:20-04:00'
describe
'72088' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGB' 'sip-files00346.QC.jpg'
b35a206754dc024bd132886a3bbf98a9
fd600b58d6b8fb38602df0003985c5653de06da8
'2012-05-27T15:25:57-04:00'
describe
'28092' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGC' 'sip-files00121.pro'
46e4bb7a03e04b2ecc34e4c627651deb
37aba5ad46f3f81bf1425435d53437258d9ddbaa
'2012-05-27T15:24:20-04:00'
describe
'3327' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGD' 'sip-files00344.pro'
bc3fa5d3b8726b9552d5346bfa86e3a6
98076ed26811a952c786cde2e6fbb261910fa857
'2012-05-27T15:18:37-04:00'
describe
'303147' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGE' 'sip-files00007.jpg'
d620205ed0a48cc3f1521502ee13562f
d31e01f8fb863f320c3c126897bc7461e88888e4
'2012-05-27T15:22:57-04:00'
describe
'81454' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGF' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
e64524aca84ee1bfe2b86cc6c7d507b7
b10a3ddcbe50d7293f2114fca7f99389852cd815
'2012-05-27T15:22:22-04:00'
describe
'79202' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGG' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
10ea1b306f9707c49e12dfad6cd6f19a
c63cbdfc52276eedb589da45fb145222bb527f2c
'2012-05-27T15:30:38-04:00'
describe
'213821' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGH' 'sip-files00175.jpg'
88320d9707df6a4fdae6c012b7f57666
b25231224dc6eaf218f230a96ea74749e57bce32
'2012-05-27T15:31:27-04:00'
describe
'26294' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGI' 'sip-files00078thm.jpg'
96a8b97169c57094813124f72f2f4908
1b043d6d85941e19b8caf034b6dbadd99f6aeb00
describe
'40428' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGJ' 'sip-files00083.pro'
6cf8d5d7d6daeb4aac48a056d65cb352
4f653967f609b1aaa0625a1940033ba5cded69e7
describe
'1678' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGK' 'sip-files00349.txt'
907aaf12990ba090c79a5ae2baf3bd84
d3ee13e79125cc517843b4b31061e8cf3cd476c0
'2012-05-27T15:25:03-04:00'
describe
'27474' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGL' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
9cf097d96bc80fa0fef4f420d3f452a9
bc08c59eb72c9f88c4bff2dbae5f75ddbf4e3653
'2012-05-27T15:31:40-04:00'
describe
'40949' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGM' 'sip-files00214.pro'
e36b38718cd1334b24a5418e81ba2913
f954ecbc89ccc9532927ba78dde3b9caa6bdcb14
describe
'1672' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGN' 'sip-files00062.txt'
939398424290f47406e526469a02ef18
ba4c402d8905d8dcdb0dd8d5c60398a7a165280d
describe
'2511424' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGO' 'sip-files00031.tif'
b3cd6f45d5dc49b378f508563e5c9106
5b4457e435b5f00048119abc1d75215fcb50fdd7
'2012-05-27T15:25:44-04:00'
describe
'331805' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGP' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
6a30fe910b2bc3e8ee9fb5aeea6282a7
18f8c615dde5071e28ad1a7b640dea526b6cc261
'2012-05-27T15:23:09-04:00'
describe
'42508' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGQ' 'sip-files00136.pro'
836987a8b4b9589ef55676cd083fc26e
28a8b274f0c59833d64c73045885d50070a5ec4a
describe
'82615' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGR' 'sip-files00220.QC.jpg'
aab1f106ec55e4e2c068d68c0565f6b0
110fb95a1deee15405870c2159924bff4baaecbe
describe
'353171' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGS' 'sip-files00349.jp2'
b3168d5daf3d4060e6efdda8a20efb44
9e2a0a03004dc43ed9b9f803cd5d56c7b322522b
'2012-05-27T15:27:41-04:00'
describe
'815' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGT' 'sip-files00011.txt'
c8fa08239efd2c308205b4fe24ac28d9
276a4a761d813006461fd05bd118d5148e9bc852
describe
'231083' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGU' 'sip-files00141.jpg'
0cdf2a7a97b2c48962b4375b7db1f137
09fb23b641c60541ed8553e4062c48990b1c8fe9
'2012-05-27T15:28:32-04:00'
describe
'322992' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGV' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
d44f3193449f753338e50fa974740864
bd0a94a86b1938a4c460485eddd44f08143a0989
'2012-05-27T15:27:11-04:00'
describe
'71410' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGW' 'sip-files00176.QC.jpg'
8b155ca76b097c66bee58263b43b4d22
91dc35fb205735e0edb03c530ea8cfaeca567721
describe
'82502' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGX' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
e8e9c1b0cc4e7e3da9b958bb17cad2c8
f21a3ea9d48d7a572667782aa784529941466331
describe
'25572' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGY' 'sip-files00331thm.jpg'
2e81b5af7b9d839f50f4280f28382ed5
b53af716cf939293244a94c5faaebc2317fa7df1
'2012-05-27T15:20:59-04:00'
describe
'43813' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUGZ' 'sip-files00327.pro'
7117b5a4d1510a128e9166d0866c7905
53221ea784344f1d917321f0b1e477d6c9206438
'2012-05-27T15:19:52-04:00'
describe
'39605' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHA' 'sip-files00053.pro'
3f5a02f407827b6523db4e801f65c145
cbe713543a93b114896ddc31af3b2d537bee1c59
'2012-05-27T15:20:14-04:00'
describe
'331120' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHB' 'sip-files00100.jp2'
f127fed401d716e3aaf2e1156fc7a1c6
4ffba4c7c3dbae5acd98a89618d26837e5a3fb98
'2012-05-27T15:21:47-04:00'
describe
'25156' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHC' 'sip-files00189thm.jpg'
ff8ec9bb5d7d8e4fa4c12bbd1396fe00
c646827387198e5c61ea15aceea34633eb2c033b
'2012-05-27T15:30:25-04:00'
describe
'80964' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHD' 'sip-files00243.QC.jpg'
23fde04b763164dd5f70a78448c4560f
12fa78bdb3fb8495d9391b1f5b82eb4feb722bcd
'2012-05-27T15:27:52-04:00'
describe
'341960' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHE' 'sip-files00282.jp2'
7e78a27ccd5dba35661ca121d5ab1e61
1c2204d5c937c21cb6beaac8abc6f9b64c3be511
'2012-05-27T15:17:58-04:00'
describe
'199547' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHF' 'sip-files00268.jpg'
b6f0dc0ccb1431407abad11ff8889b01
c8016d07d42b200a35e243f694706bb8ba7e3d16
'2012-05-27T15:29:54-04:00'
describe
'349655' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHG' 'sip-files00301.jp2'
4c9a0c3c413b35760fdd8e139e7e0e2a
d3f6e24afd76cf01b7155a474e4561de117f14db
'2012-05-27T15:31:12-04:00'
describe
'2629132' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHH' 'sip-files00067.tif'
d83dd269601ff13ed4c9aa465e477db2
fa9717cd286a3672ec5a909678f94296effcbf0b
'2012-05-27T15:25:08-04:00'
describe
'339587' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHI' 'sip-files00249.jp2'
c324446de7892debabea2bf832d6b5e4
43c94163f46544faaaee8cf35709d0841f3dba93
'2012-05-27T15:19:31-04:00'
describe
'233900' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHJ' 'sip-files00084.jpg'
8359393d6dd3e975928e8ee648f52de3
2fe8aac5de306d317debacea283e1fe85e06d3ad
'2012-05-27T15:23:32-04:00'
describe
'321486' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHK' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
b30e83a6b6692298f8d430a5d7b85b23
cb5650117ad3df55c9335d3807a0c21f3da4f2ce
'2012-05-27T15:20:44-04:00'
describe
'78697' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHL' 'sip-files00298.QC.jpg'
6884b566f6944deccace5e7262b6ee46
e3e1a7ff5a67b3e407a9ae92a40925d0364757de
'2012-05-27T15:20:45-04:00'
describe
'76481' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHM' 'sip-files00301.QC.jpg'
696f35f5483e927d3410f9ea780cfacc
e629f98bd93ba0a65979e99ea4c1e78308a72620
'2012-05-27T15:19:42-04:00'
describe
'28407' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHN' 'sip-files00237thm.jpg'
08d3cf09bf72eb457e65394c59a27540
37f08c88952542045443440a9613e2faa4a06db2
'2012-05-27T15:18:55-04:00'
describe
'21596' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHO' 'sip-files00203thm.jpg'
b9dbfad2c4155af4b8a56e6beb2453c2
d4d87b911329f5df020e895afa7df097a83eb2da
'2012-05-27T15:21:09-04:00'
describe
'26329' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHP' 'sip-files00272thm.jpg'
c4e53733febef98fa8ce6f71fb097713
882c9de1d7a64aa536cfc981c15d51b3d1db7a7d
'2012-05-27T15:21:25-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHQ' 'sip-files00263.txt'
e409938941cf7fc1807acc003d808fb3
32a0263f3fc587b48f92a22c1537d0ea3eeebf88
'2012-05-27T15:29:40-04:00'
describe
'217026' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHR' 'sip-files00349.jpg'
fc93b6eeb4c2bc6d61d6e8490f527c73
665fea50e463068daf73a658669f2eb935b6cc83
'2012-05-27T15:31:23-04:00'
describe
'28410' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHS' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
29afa955e8f117ad911328114a4cd2f0
8dfb02b90d7b03cc9bb80640e2ea67e79c553399
'2012-05-27T15:24:43-04:00'
describe
'2682604' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHT' 'sip-files00023.tif'
3845a63d72f4763404edeef26b860e83
d50f6d7419ce6c8d6f308e0649f5af8f27b757bd
'2012-05-27T15:26:32-04:00'
describe
'27266' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHU' 'sip-files00117thm.jpg'
f1a275c5ae3c6509234ab55d7772d33e
1b28a010c825e57524f3bacf60034ba1bfbb833f
describe
'350444' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHV' 'sip-files00331.jp2'
19cc1449d918a56613e2c5b39a34c27c
ba486df18020814083ef8d357d4f2f7103eb33dd
describe
'341302' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHW' 'sip-files00223b.jp2'
c2812e77f55579cc8b7bde29b22b5ea1
d794ff019b5020b4530c1fc477b36951156edbce
'2012-05-27T15:25:59-04:00'
describe
'2780792' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHX' 'sip-files00316.tif'
d857906f255f82b62485ce8817c3c087
4eb6132f46f75df1d7d2f01b32b0049ef32724f0
describe
'63903' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHY' 'sip-files00292.QC.jpg'
06ffc3b490fa85e2962b540d0c2f4aa1
ee2a97d26b00c27164a2896e1215537684ab8705
describe
'27432' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUHZ' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
31c276b50c66799eed9181ad44caccdb
79e74e75c7015c83c3c09ec1defbb091a7704d9c
describe
'63391' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIA' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
68c14f4b84bf4f62cc4db27b83a0ed50
692d93ba817ae377c4c7e8c1ac45145bd13b97a7
'2012-05-27T15:17:59-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIB' 'sip-files00145.txt'
80ca8dfdaf408e8986b109a3773be0fc
88ded14c67edac420293d20599d671697d503057
'2012-05-27T15:24:08-04:00'
describe
'43676' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIC' 'sip-files00302.pro'
fb54b9a9ef9d86c112f701cb4c8998e4
9f460b9ae2e2bd3d700ce39b1e8e96e25011de75
describe
'44800' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUID' 'sip-files00296.pro'
6a04e2c9f034b254ae43453360b753d7
d44ec758e20b2f943ff5a88c5921365e17ab5272
'2012-05-27T15:26:46-04:00'
describe
'25854' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIE' 'sip-files00327thm.jpg'
b3ab955f69c28856417f437b8f9c5299
8184d7c4106a4934fdc51a97999bb080405dbac2
'2012-05-27T15:31:22-04:00'
describe
'215005' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIF' 'sip-files00340.jpg'
bb76c4a98f44719680a795be6b33f65d
b229f5f9e252123e0d418a2a449f70493e7b9bcb
'2012-05-27T15:26:09-04:00'
describe
'344790' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIG' 'sip-files00203.jp2'
85a488d5beb7c1e6034447244074f0e7
1dbb6ca73b71261162c21750df2282480ba188fe
describe
'68448' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIH' 'sip-files00174.QC.jpg'
5b9b1d1b1f2d61d4e0858e4edf3c4f96
f60a8ff3dce570ee232307bc5413083f30f86d1e
'2012-05-27T15:25:07-04:00'
describe
'41759' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUII' 'sip-files00221.pro'
8c013236b0d64082e8a844f03d5e8762
3dfdbaa4aba483925f0cc83c9be0c2dfc1007ae9
describe
'70224' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIJ' 'sip-files00303.QC.jpg'
4b79316511b074b8ef072653c3c6c0f3
9b22256719ac4ca57264f33e92340cb38a7dae8c
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIK' 'sip-files00098.txt'
e0467eb00972f029125e701a35171d4d
a6cb33698bb3e0694103380bc93098c29a6ed2ce
'2012-05-27T15:24:06-04:00'
describe
'1673' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIL' 'sip-files00024.txt'
3d5006ca8e61521c74e52bb8f5dc5252
27b98de51ff1dd77b79759cf08f950051888c753
describe
'2573520' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIM' 'sip-files00061.tif'
45a279fa40680292f6461a444d228e35
f11bbe697daecd4fbe11f33e4d33a2cab2fb9bbf
describe
'362896' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIN' 'sip-files00166.jp2'
ae4c23d1089b8f25885075dde24191f5
a52644022289845249f4d43c44cff7da24fee653
describe
'2585084' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIO' 'sip-files00063.tif'
edef87c80e219e6121fc5422cefb90ed
bf84620f417df5be52ff6ecc9eb5d22d64c7f91d
'2012-05-27T15:23:52-04:00'
describe
'345913' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIP' 'sip-files00334.jp2'
76604d94e91d0010ab22b970cf7518d8
a528ef6e01694f8a78da4173ee129946fe738b56
'2012-05-27T15:21:17-04:00'
describe
'25693' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIQ' 'sip-files00340thm.jpg'
eb016429b66e24e38bbd55b66aa91eeb
d4057624364bdbaa2eb3cd8481c3386cb2e170cf
describe
'1539' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIR' 'sip-files00187.txt'
c5185f8c33cb7415d3a590481e6d7e46
dbbd9a6b0858cb8885fa751d5afdd1f27bd3c36d
describe
'2724800' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIS' 'sip-files00014.tif'
1390f33efec352680e92f17485d0c483
dde37220b2422ecb34e2f9bc968e4b8cd8f51756
'2012-05-27T15:27:12-04:00'
describe
'28134' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIT' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
7fe0123e972175951cde099228ca5d42
4d0b3833d6d7363b640f1cc6f45441ae67bdff6a
'2012-05-27T15:21:27-04:00'
describe
'2750636' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIU' 'sip-files00221.tif'
80354b3f0e417d0fb94b3f28ca02ccc2
0c92dd821a0f549954828d4362fde2c44b249a12
'2012-05-27T15:19:06-04:00'
describe
'44244' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIV' 'sip-files00172.pro'
3f44d3d9ba76bc320ce52369202f4a9c
5bbab4c34475172f6fce8a9c62526f917d5c469c
describe
'317372' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIW' 'sip-files00101.jp2'
6171fa918776fec62c406a95d4e0d2ef
23d760661f806e8bbf1ef74a38ba8a824f759902
'2012-05-27T15:21:44-04:00'
describe
'300782' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIX' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
b7a9c1ce67613065f6091d2ba70edc21
4a7ff6fa1b08d268b29894e80274087dd28ed28c
'2012-05-27T15:22:30-04:00'
describe
'352272' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIY' 'sip-files00353.jp2'
31b1ea2be836f50144d98598967c2a3d
28fab29c42f4c15a19412f2d5e93cde01d048036
describe
'79469' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUIZ' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
3930039f13190260c7b9fe352b84fc99
09e22b50b011e2994f814c2c2dea35dc1d21c779
describe
'696' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJA' 'sip-files00365.pro'
e3e54d4f82ca3ad450d123aa900df1a3
665b6ab10998309980a9b7feb662ab06ea166006
'2012-05-27T15:22:01-04:00'
describe
'338286' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJB' 'sip-files00261.jp2'
c2c178e45dc7797bb548db6a75dc0e80
415164a9a57f613ce2073323c2b6bb3ed7bf6c7d
describe
'78381' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJC' 'sip-files00223.QC.jpg'
bdacb312eb40f535e78a885061040d28
0b314255d3cb190c9e6dc311d41b536befddaf2b
describe
'75477' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJD' 'sip-files00293.QC.jpg'
fe3c8e604b703703567a7da66c125ab0
adc7a7ebc1d1b85a3a1a7268cfe81d8ad560c558
'2012-05-27T15:22:55-04:00'
describe
'2656952' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJE' 'sip-files00099.tif'
e4499be0c89fd9a3eea651ed3e8d3c5f
88187aa16beaed510ca9f4b578b7515d517685f5
describe
'345035' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJF' 'sip-files00270.jp2'
0fbfc25169ca67c30e1170032c7b4bbb
4fffb754d1d7bdc912f92c7e021a8638087b7eea
describe
'235782' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJG' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
1cf585fc46b3458b6fe04234b6f5e9d0
ab93977ca8903ecea276e2983b702928def865e1
'2012-05-27T15:17:39-04:00'
describe
'1580' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJH' 'sip-files00085.txt'
d6304ba3a6fe0ca34b9704371172a690
dc8977578245bc9642d60a2a3f5cdac64ce7940c
'2012-05-27T15:26:40-04:00'
describe
'131245' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJI' 'sip-files00362.jpg'
3edd741478c3a2f8a99f465734106a8e
b81ae2d4b77901dbe3311399542ef41c85a9deeb
'2012-05-27T15:31:52-04:00'
describe
'313278' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJJ' 'sip-files00129.jp2'
31fddcc19d482ec9eb188a43b53840b0
ab027813574390812c2c14b7b325a500206ea95e
'2012-05-27T15:27:10-04:00'
describe
'28935' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJK' 'sip-files00222thm.jpg'
95cc98356f9cf1b0adddf00d6cb221b8
3b5365a1f9e8f9b83acd179f2ad46e9cbbbe3962
'2012-05-27T15:24:14-04:00'
describe
'38353' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJL' 'sip-files00071.pro'
a5126be49d11b51ae25a552a2da6be5b
8e50508502a55e111ea9860645563bc9bac79269
describe
'356972' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJM' 'sip-files00169.jp2'
eca50df184d63d5a3316cffa44868b03
f29ea2de635cd36846b4db46b0832a640398e03b
describe
'40107' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJN' 'sip-files00062.pro'
d4e79d6879b246b74bdb348c67be0baa
2f543510592c1250cf31b95827d3b2c89e40aed6
'2012-05-27T15:23:07-04:00'
describe
'40229' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJO' 'sip-files00030.pro'
97587dd54e77fec0ae3f9f1247a00ca9
b74d73950652cd29c3bd73d23b1e7ceb0211c685
'2012-05-27T15:20:39-04:00'
describe
'1681' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJP' 'sip-files00169.txt'
9ed9973c407f5cab642b16c2cba5211d
b5f4051b811a0b8a4f2b4b76c5f3815a24bef64a
describe
'356206' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJQ' 'sip-files00345.jp2'
5088d9635aaed3f64351bd6ee51555b0
7603fc15419b9ba1118ccf7667cfbf5d7f1e7053
describe
'2502972' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJR' 'sip-files00095.tif'
fc89920b80b17293de65cf0339d38589
e3d18373caba728e9ef653e2fd843a41741c91ab
'2012-05-27T15:30:49-04:00'
describe
'2775952' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJS' 'sip-files00315.tif'
72fdf4e132ac4cec8f5f1a768262c150
010cc8112f3c85621cb4ade0414824ff5107a617
describe
'232105' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJT' 'sip-files00255.jpg'
aa7dc8c7250d3bbc3998eaeeeaebb559
81f6b5f8f1ae9d15fb4d3d87fc8158e96f5eb005
'2012-05-27T15:26:34-04:00'
describe
'45557' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJU' 'sip-files00006.jpg'
bb398d70ea07e13ce46e511fc50e6549
0dfe5a434c8971badb86acdcb7451cfc8c8e61b2
describe
'224821' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJV' 'sip-files00135.jpg'
86736da54830fe151ab9dd878fc3cd46
40b54f0b50f311a39ba392c47cccde7d8f535c41
'2012-05-27T15:20:47-04:00'
describe
'21356' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJW' 'sip-files00286thm.jpg'
d00286929c9df01e6a55c4d41683d4c5
a29f6faa597e8755cae7999fc7dd2322f3373bef
describe
'15909' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJX' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
e7f824d8656dc7e7f7eadb32bb37bd9c
653c9ca3aa034bf3a37d23ccdc6950a7f8ee58ec
'2012-05-27T15:17:45-04:00'
describe
'246938' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJY' 'sip-files00186.jpg'
611c8ca0454caacc388111ac912a368f
682c9168fd830d814f146be7da3637018531afa7
describe
'2667740' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUJZ' 'sip-files00122.tif'
1f255047411a78fa4907cd67af41c426
80931ca2160f55ad574f831298578976eb3ac97e
describe
'62048' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKA' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
c823c4d837106189728ea4bc350e43f5
feb9f7f366d48628f706281ec28aadfbe4f9f0e6
'2012-05-27T15:25:06-04:00'
describe
'2481356' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKB' 'sip-files00040.tif'
113e394a3c8a508b8fb7a2ad1a1c01d5
82ac25081e1843ce74a7fadd26bd3695e1c99f4c
'2012-05-27T15:23:29-04:00'
describe
'146' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKC' 'sip-files00002.txt'
b7b27e067ef51105492a78812ef168e2
0b5a9cf586a6f84fdbecce167a7210f50b36391a
describe
'769' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKD' 'sip-files00359.txt'
d497e63bbe7b0b2dc63665952cd931ca
8f91dc1734d1f2e347a178656daea88165ba032a
'2012-05-27T15:30:35-04:00'
describe
'43234' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKE' 'sip-files00269.pro'
abd75c95ca6b7094150126ff83955075
fe6e040f86248680a315a7451b8bdc458d2a8d22
'2012-05-27T15:22:32-04:00'
describe
'225890' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKF' 'sip-files00133.jpg'
a8c16c7d11f069ee05ff52b8fc61b11e
d3b0ed2e63b3c9f3c85b74b0fffaa5ec30f95e1b
'2012-05-27T15:28:23-04:00'
describe
'336303' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKG' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
c3c870672590bbbf6114f3575ac8be42
26603be8c76ef3da08a7dbeac9642f17144ba1ac
'2012-05-27T15:22:09-04:00'
describe
'28350' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKH' 'sip-files00195thm.jpg'
3d1c4a06257a49d5228ec0954874f387
0cb7d32547bbd5342137498bebc630b0a8653924
'2012-05-27T15:31:50-04:00'
describe
'2622532' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKI' 'sip-files00115.tif'
6580066cb2439429369e8de51eb4e58c
e73c5ba89f1f585ba58b87d31d443dbc9d703385
'2012-05-27T15:27:48-04:00'
describe
'42670' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKJ' 'sip-files00031.pro'
07cac13f4739d4b45c2c7f6f206c85c4
5c880b21a1461db453c6113237af5a6f368b9460
describe
'312533' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKK' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
552ccf1dc71e8f6b03b743d054790c71
c463e9884a542d78aa40c8b9fb2ce991ffac99e2
describe
'77975' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKL' 'sip-files00355.QC.jpg'
dfabd2a172ef9448aa8bf5a4b5bcb489
35f99cb9ba51c621b8cf8299c3e7c54d1bd78794
'2012-05-27T15:29:45-04:00'
describe
'2743620' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKM' 'sip-files00293.tif'
6c220c7ab44a22a14ebdf7406514e472
62c61dd6fa65b90dc84e06dcf7315cb6593ff81a
describe
'2813760' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKN' 'sip-files00258.tif'
cabf23df0d1c5b1e05d7dc3ba12dfa42
cfa0771128b26f55a19390c17e8168f56091e084
describe
'337407' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKO' 'sip-files00220.jp2'
c749ae8ebc96f3240eeeb06ec8117d03
2bd895e93a3d5ed58df090cce924b9358b920d2a
'2012-05-27T15:17:38-04:00'
describe
'1363' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKP' 'sip-files00088.txt'
c6950d613f2330120830eaf82dc11dd5
ef6e52db2a57cbf3682e4d2dbaaa513e0e53f3e1
'2012-05-27T15:21:07-04:00'
describe
'42289' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKQ' 'sip-files00270.pro'
70e97baa57585535834da0ee961184d5
09369574648207b9e7c58b11c685a48a4761a14d
describe
'2824172' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKR' 'sip-files00223.tif'
7f47451c10889c4ced5e3df9bce35cbe
981a5fa2b0a5a614a1311958a3d0fe21e36f130c
'2012-05-27T15:18:47-04:00'
describe
'343086' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKS' 'sip-files00241.jp2'
d0e86f54a01b108f8213558b08de8746
b5349040aff16c6985f4e1ad225a7006631eecb1
describe
'2778752' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKT' 'sip-files00264.tif'
065f354ef53a44b83d8740c950301377
d03641b57a9adbb377bb8fa5e88b3cc3317a7b62
'2012-05-27T15:22:16-04:00'
describe
'82312' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKU' 'sip-files00140.QC.jpg'
20f1f411c3266111cc99b1511c3dd832
0d5df84e2064a3bbbc0cb00f230548ddd30868de
'2012-05-27T15:18:36-04:00'
describe
'2828368' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKV' 'sip-files00311.tif'
8da4c8455ff76454694adc54c2dd3019
80804ffb2f2357cf1e0c47f12a3e7966a865bce6
'2012-05-27T15:22:40-04:00'
describe
'366010' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKW' 'sip-files00177.jp2'
a86c8580cbed250f387c7d0cc8f660a9
42febd3391b6963da568995cbce41fc2f1de3db3
'2012-05-27T15:30:27-04:00'
describe
'2114' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKX' 'sip-files00194.txt'
2918e4bb3776dfb6c3c263c90a25f7c6
e3b3a56686c2e4815252e9c391ec2109e07f03c8
'2012-05-27T15:27:56-04:00'
describe
'85271' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKY' 'sip-files00232.QC.jpg'
b3d439edce97e6c425be6bd10d722306
ccde3f3f362a1237b4fb1fbe01d3b9f60a87be05
'2012-05-27T15:20:34-04:00'
describe
'345208' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUKZ' 'sip-files00279.jp2'
1a3eae860bbba08625332a888ead363f
98b229adf071218c64f352ac9731a11203753163
'2012-05-27T15:31:54-04:00'
describe
'348622' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULA' 'sip-files00277.jp2'
f8ea2e458aba0a39a44d80a341fddfe9
cab634aa41239c7f06cac2132c623fa6d419c3e8
'2012-05-27T15:31:04-04:00'
describe
'2468' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULB' 'sip-files00231.pro'
55b8a2b6719b5e4a8b567c4079861029
2409115d4b1367bf28cc0ae02cd89a7351fcdfd0
'2012-05-27T15:23:40-04:00'
describe
'1757' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULC' 'sip-files00094.txt'
a0a027a5f3f998a6c018c806aa8976aa
b4835debb77838fb5e616f145b5f95604be93dbb
describe
'324308' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULD' 'sip-files00147.jp2'
2cbdddd7c14d585e1d68d311fbfc15a2
54942effc0ed6cc45ca401bf47a4eb5afac9518e
describe
'85336' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULE' 'sip-files00253.QC.jpg'
97e0d655f16720fd2064b5560437a112
9830ca63ff5dd9ab0548bd0d487fb43f13a25ece
describe
'2788852' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULF' 'sip-files00216.tif'
f659beef98d7e0514857f10af9df688d
2f7d8ed624f495319b8380e02aa75bcaea5e78fd
'2012-05-27T15:29:48-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULG' 'sip-files00228.txt'
9cc602e14af8ab7001b3c9ad7b6c03bb
82f31fb47348d631d8016b3ebbb550926d6d0c00
'2012-05-27T15:25:14-04:00'
describe
'28005' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULH' 'sip-files00204thm.jpg'
bac9be7ea899df014885e2e88f279437
8e4f1800a90e0e0ef204894d552487861e3ac8c3
describe
'324919' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULI' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
5bd7151109f667809997304c6495cfb5
019ede5d37b0b1a8bdc0db1abdcfc0146ab68c29
'2012-05-27T15:17:56-04:00'
describe
'30231' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULJ' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
7185ce84a3e8cdfc72434fdac05fbe0c
d8fd0a133fbe3a07c9da2d71ed93aade2d9b1f85
describe
'221405' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULK' 'sip-files00354.jpg'
8470e975d7cd9de4e578b97386669d5c
0dfbb9e804cdee40fe4cd027dc2e50eb5b95b1f5
describe
'77498' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULL' 'sip-files00266.QC.jpg'
bf059d80dd51775244ceabb1048b9a68
383e95e82d3afeb29a4ec7644bbf3b0f593849b2
'2012-05-27T15:19:01-04:00'
describe
'2659660' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULM' 'sip-files00136.tif'
c2f21408bd67bd125c58bb469ca0d523
c2e3466e69694d82514c53be3f606c287b082b6d
'2012-05-27T15:24:39-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULN' 'sip-files00290.txt'
621c6ddb6e4739a68782697b9e71d485
cbd43afe9e0ea02ab3b76e445e8631a19a2d18ad
'2012-05-27T15:21:40-04:00'
describe
'41285' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULO' 'sip-files00079.pro'
0b90b2f345c6019b01d6b7fcebd646cc
42f860668815a01c9bdb17f5979e9f6bd37b2757
'2012-05-27T15:30:21-04:00'
describe
'44868' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULP' 'sip-files00297.pro'
780b70ec069281844f617db6d10d3e64
b07d2fdd1b9aa9716d12958b54888d74cbcaa4b5
'2012-05-27T15:17:29-04:00'
describe
'90025' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULQ' 'sip-files00252.QC.jpg'
6033f67619baf7d9be1396656651027b
eef34c4ee0cf685f536357fce5afe1fe0453eea0
'2012-05-27T15:24:19-04:00'
describe
'11576' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULR' 'sip-files00005thm.jpg'
b9323262958462e8ec7241a0bb3470c0
8103d33aee4851af02f32fc6c5bcfaab78791c67
describe
'76769' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULS' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
867e311ed8e67a74683ddedfefb124d9
442087aeed82b610f7895be4e99408d524f48855
'2012-05-27T15:24:27-04:00'
describe
'210122' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULT' 'sip-files00327.jpg'
1413ad768f0605e0bc0cb657784c4a67
83b314ca94f0d167f27c4476248fafe8c457c903
'2012-05-27T15:23:17-04:00'
describe
'25510' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULU' 'sip-files00172thm.jpg'
dfcb2d1232cb5641a96d7f6ca5a88689
9fbdfe5797e7d013d8a445dfda801f78b33b40f4
describe
'305117' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULV' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
5f1df6b0fdc1d10680c67bee744f3c76
a177e58a2a35486d1d46d4167cb72dff2e5d9a9f
'2012-05-27T15:28:50-04:00'
describe
'1660' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULW' 'sip-files00303.txt'
9bcde6a6fdff6e5c7508365b97e6d68a
61651de50bf24802981f9d0fb29e844207fd6a69
'2012-05-27T15:25:41-04:00'
describe
'216' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULX' 'sip-files00231.txt'
4d9ceb5b330eed61e56e8048c82cde96
8ecaa3eac66a67a1f19196ad07b3d7da63823e2b
describe
Invalid character
'1796' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULY' 'sip-files00156.txt'
550d95c08318d57f0b5761200571ca15
a3521faba76c96857dbb6a548ded509f0e678354
'2012-05-27T15:18:07-04:00'
describe
'38130' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAULZ' 'sip-files00021.pro'
11d2344be34a53ae418b4886cb229920
9ee677a98c78046881acdbad8ddfd0ba6261433c
describe
'2584384' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMA' 'sip-files00133.tif'
1e94b62778eae9fd71b3025027ab407f
a5b193087beb21fd5d746be7636d55172dd89a32
describe
'69494' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMB' 'sip-files00304.QC.jpg'
c547ab88444e242dcd0069f0e527c06a
f9d9bbc49d3523c87b4abdf051933e189481b227
'2012-05-27T15:25:19-04:00'
describe
'227205' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMC' 'sip-files00243.jpg'
f7fc1bc116adb099d1ca293c00734630
5ae4dbf6f7ca2103227b61d7b66246eff900d04a
'2012-05-27T15:22:52-04:00'
describe
'40082' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMD' 'sip-files00066.pro'
6c65db595327acfd895bed42aa8121b2
b64add3c5b52a265d9db707b558cdce3b34d7329
'2012-05-27T15:19:35-04:00'
describe
'74867' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUME' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
38c28a9ec863cd817208f3037b1c484f
d7b5973a6150542ee64b3053e84852122d67e69a
describe
'222409' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMF' 'sip-files00187.jpg'
58d1fc301c1332ed4491066746e2f5d4
da423772f9df134717d2a255685799566c2e5e49
'2012-05-27T15:23:27-04:00'
describe
'75350' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMG' 'sip-files00223b.QC.jpg'
0a23a2366ca9c0f7b71ebaa6a2201392
092d0aa9264bf341faeeea1531a8eab734584c02
'2012-05-27T15:30:32-04:00'
describe
'306845' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMH' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
80a6cee2c12771ce333c994891880245
01bc6398dd669fedc46d0ac6c36cccea1dd5622b
'2012-05-27T15:18:42-04:00'
describe
'25098' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMI' 'sip-files00179thm.jpg'
4bd957f140bada4f94ca94f17fe04554
59efd0ff6306700120bc53e9e14b85d3a01b49aa
describe
'333410' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMJ' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
2bdbe97b4147920e47ffa5cc7c74fe8d
06839abcbb9976f06f666f758d8bc17a484f37e4
describe
'84425' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMK' 'sip-files00209.QC.jpg'
a8a6db83cbe66db92abdd9041f355d5e
214c262cce50e13a270a5df5b4c227883dbe7d03
describe
'42755' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUML' 'sip-files00127.pro'
936f0d530185b4917e685f6decefecab
a321337aba37d6a103b82d9c8eedb6bcf682fe4a
'2012-05-27T15:30:58-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMM' 'sip-files00295.txt'
f63f8a72208fb8252cfd6ea220291bb0
69726b6360e8d477b080dae9fd4ad30ef75ee789
'2012-05-27T15:29:47-04:00'
describe
'41162' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMN' 'sip-files00313.pro'
d020535097b891df26757149548805fe
49e5f9023a043570aec6e5a6114849ab38cd3cb2
'2012-05-27T15:27:14-04:00'
describe
'2767492' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMO' 'sip-files00269.tif'
69285c650f8e61bf406a777bca9c3a43
1339afff9d71bd6e1a8d237c1d472bec2d8e3d8b
'2012-05-27T15:18:52-04:00'
describe
'210618' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMP' 'sip-files00170.jpg'
8779b962f80f6b82423f2e5796cba189
b7f4ea6360af04f6d30715083689f2c1ad03b37a
'2012-05-27T15:26:04-04:00'
describe
'135925' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMQ' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
e7abfcfb225d80c329e8c3b29605f1ad
73b13260899e880aad26e242d7f8c3654c74ec01
describe
'78244' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMR' 'sip-files00125.QC.jpg'
c0be63745b75d0e486ddccd6f0f3afd3
6b994da7b4a9304e450044f8a82cea645e521878
'2012-05-27T15:21:11-04:00'
describe
'29569' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMS' 'sip-files00253thm.jpg'
1f893f647bfbb6a3a0c64e45325b3950
7167834d304b5656f2c0ee0961c2457918889fee
describe
'242158' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMT' 'sip-files00256.jpg'
afe2315c554d1f10f6a05e71a0a7a219
7b6903473ee1dc026790a6dc00d71e7c0827e432
'2012-05-27T15:21:28-04:00'
describe
'82804' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMU' 'sip-files00195.QC.jpg'
6ac737d2d10231b473eabc2545b843ef
e01bfa90a6945e5d0d30bf34e1e98ec13459b79b
'2012-05-27T15:26:53-04:00'
describe
'76472' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMV' 'sip-files00294.QC.jpg'
aff352a909c616a87576211668fd4157
70b5ffe71adafb5fec96926e6c9b5b8d734276f6
'2012-05-27T15:29:41-04:00'
describe
'54316' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMW' 'sip-files00121.QC.jpg'
579ae3e4b7c5c171fb881c5d30ca883e
94ca2da83adb74b622ec912069d4a55757373ca2
'2012-05-27T15:30:28-04:00'
describe
'2617524' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMX' 'sip-files00132.tif'
9281f0163bb183a537965e1506d021f5
c52a460f563cde83e5c10db3928ff3568b064ce6
'2012-05-27T15:21:12-04:00'
describe
'29158' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMY' 'sip-files00206thm.jpg'
565cac45a30a3af395de200e9b018885
b6a2ad84d5f626ad4a0cea90054f557860920674
'2012-05-27T15:20:48-04:00'
describe
'43557' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUMZ' 'sip-files00064.pro'
9004b113d83de16bbc1685197b049626
de2cc5f97d731048026ccc552a3c85a597454d74
'2012-05-27T15:28:15-04:00'
describe
'42102' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNA' 'sip-files00339.pro'
a8a897b1556f59ac6130d05b82006d19
6dfe0810dadde4fe4cd8595bc377698adae09970
describe
'317894' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNB' 'sip-files00111.jp2'
7986d24f533d23e16a313334af34f7d7
f14c2bb713eee7f195ee454d6a697805205b7f47
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNC' 'sip-files00125.txt'
d041834914a3a6c56dd5df04ff87ab12
bb556efed1d0a15687dbdcbc546386ae33d5daae
'2012-05-27T15:20:11-04:00'
describe
'28483' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUND' 'sip-files00243thm.jpg'
905219acd2b579d8a37263f7c220a788
1e8be8af1aee23468f341acfe3ee240d62fc89e3
describe
'2615076' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNE' 'sip-files00125.tif'
8355ff4e9a86b8bf9ee4e791d9ba59a1
05cabf6eef0230ec0bbf22266c65689b5ddfbc91
'2012-05-27T15:21:36-04:00'
describe
'43217' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNF' 'sip-files00124.pro'
bf8e091e04434e9653a2cdcb6194949e
00b1fc7720188e96fe3ec49c7772655168fefe02
'2012-05-27T15:24:26-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNG' 'sip-files00017.txt'
afd1fb7856d87a186e29c32c7813888b
1ebb9b4ddbfc9968e3b2fa375d3fd920c92b7cd3
'2012-05-27T15:23:42-04:00'
describe
'2456712' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNH' 'sip-files00126.tif'
58a5d58e5872ff705237097fa9c76cb8
3af56dd8d6bccf97d6ac51586636bbb2556e50c2
'2012-05-27T15:31:45-04:00'
describe
'397975' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNI' 'sip-files00364.jp2'
ea9109a73c634916acd3cede93611d52
61bf0f457c67d97b603ac43e9ae9766c622a4e4f
describe
'345774' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNJ' 'sip-files00264.jp2'
73841f42d606c597646a3b0e2850924d
2fa493f8f25b506f176915add11caa462bae5099
describe
'72316' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNK' 'sip-files00085.QC.jpg'
b3b7f4338ec9a32401191193d70efe09
cd2e40dbc56d11dc769af86eb66073a3808140ce
describe
'2792384' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNL' 'sip-files00191.tif'
8aebd72f0968ed18ac1be150ca98cdf5
67e07ee7228c6cedbfa3a0307c0bee44e50ba462
describe
'28656' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNM' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
052eaf53ee01fb6a9b3acc2e0ea4cd59
787df9c8126e53734ed0e1cf66f125f7ece62d49
'2012-05-27T15:17:19-04:00'
describe
'1628' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNN' 'sip-files00285.txt'
b47897f6661c0a3736819765cf05036c
db2a33e3730cf429f8144c19e1bee05493094921
describe
'43421' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNO' 'sip-files00261.pro'
1f29314b8604e72f76cc5f2923a24b37
56dbd06aa53e9b76452fb357ad74efa0842babba
'2012-05-27T15:19:47-04:00'
describe
'2573552' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNP' 'sip-files00206.tif'
f037416e36b39509a9ff6875e3075ff0
314d2bd22910983b0acdcff068b96ecf29a99b5a
'2012-05-27T15:19:58-04:00'
describe
'2522988' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNQ' 'sip-files00030.tif'
fed1a0bd7321db0da271b02426111475
dc0680e57dc3d108518598cf0359b8025f3c1be7
'2012-05-27T15:28:46-04:00'
describe
'42036' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNR' 'sip-files00271.pro'
78ea5dbaec7b8f60c9c07309eac29167
db685aca221fc342742cf031cd71089e27659b5c
describe
'43553' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNS' 'sip-files00263.pro'
8018c6262146ff29ff8772dca243fab5
d8f4e078213578a33925556eba5adedf08536af6
describe
'43024' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNT' 'sip-files00155.pro'
e7281d31367a947e74d73189f7120659
cdb049f1c76013437c459305c75102fcfb7931d9
'2012-05-27T15:21:02-04:00'
describe
'25630' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNU' 'sip-files00146thm.jpg'
2bf288ec5d52ee25042610297c134f05
ec8cfe45bb79566769ab19f1ec5f7a834d0d0970
describe
'2623440' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNV' 'sip-files00010.tif'
e44e77d93740c821a4fc52166aa2cc2a
537375866e21eeabd22adf14ba412c2570bb9dc6
describe
'2727872' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNW' 'sip-files00236.tif'
ec1f1d673de7d4ab2af8a8af9ee5189e
0cac018b3b10553910429f5ba15410f7b433b974
'2012-05-27T15:27:08-04:00'
describe
'343873' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNX' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
8fe468f14b228b4aed23c529205dd85a
c157c494e06ed030d7e8216a344d4d92008e9355
'2012-05-27T15:23:45-04:00'
describe
'72986' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNY' 'sip-files00287.QC.jpg'
70eb5d15b151ee4a334db45f776c75d9
3a1c713c70669636cff7f90fddf470fde2840982
'2012-05-27T15:22:10-04:00'
describe
'1685' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUNZ' 'sip-files00250.txt'
c955e6547a3a2f55603a1ac4eb109f9c
c16ed7149c0415bc7042a9c5380db333a5ddf326
describe
'1743' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOA' 'sip-files00183.txt'
55522bf2bd200153282a573fd5450504
f983a4c7caf89eaa49418ba29e34096a6bf5bb3b
'2012-05-27T15:17:35-04:00'
describe
'1811' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOB' 'sip-files00207.txt'
113a790580479f41cea2c60f48b245ef
c3ae8eb1838328546ba7cee30cacb6a2f3a30ebf
'2012-05-27T15:25:04-04:00'
describe
'204023' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOC' 'sip-files00337.jpg'
f4252d91d71dc137c46ee52b82f20cc7
3a3b43487d8c0198921fde00d8d67c4895bd56d4
describe
'1719' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOD' 'sip-files00199a.txt'
21e062c544caac3ec5f910173f60eca6
b7590b50f0441706f3dd43dbe6cbfcb3fd47ad66
'2012-05-27T15:28:02-04:00'
describe
'222834' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOE' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
2c63954879dc26294fc71f87cfef829e
5ab683409ea519d2270ca400d7edcc2b05a6e329
'2012-05-27T15:28:42-04:00'
describe
'2507764' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOF' 'sip-files00252.tif'
8826155b4d29499af9e69ec901368575
61695ecf874ea8d488de44b24cc81140d5222fea
'2012-05-27T15:27:49-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOG' 'sip-files00050.txt'
4d37a404e589a865f4f731bae4a3db0e
aa4dbe91472e5d8fb8b7ef9351224c92a5262aea
describe
'40692' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOH' 'sip-files00107.pro'
d081723ddaf25c17c185107740919fe4
179bb6b1b6644ea5611d4515c51b573bd6dab1ba
'2012-05-27T15:23:58-04:00'
describe
'77302' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOI' 'sip-files00257.QC.jpg'
5da0f816dbff64674f44d4151da0a167
863bc6fca6ed70b75930a8abcc88e5af2e447916
describe
'226190' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOJ' 'sip-files00140.jpg'
1360ddc969329ded02e05741a235a957
c6f1b7bea2664d7320f2e5cb8998da47761925e8
describe
'215980' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOK' 'sip-files00169.jpg'
2ef85caf959eaa045bb4657f4e374257
71442a842fb3f219d61675424f825ee71b49db3a
describe
'20902' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOL' 'sip-files00267thm.jpg'
0a5297e7f8e4369d5ceaa9773dfba785
6bf6f0725188f3bca4638f44bd0910eafcb5d4d6
'2012-05-27T15:23:59-04:00'
describe
'2725996' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOM' 'sip-files00332.tif'
788a5bec4a2cca7e9076c9be3f552227
324ef6beb62a42a3da07cdaf0ff6d718aea234d1
'2012-05-27T15:25:42-04:00'
describe
'27870' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUON' 'sip-files00129thm.jpg'
c530d5bd45b48afa20cd15edaf3a87e4
8be82ec39e855447a86769f8c7d09742fca34217
'2012-05-27T15:28:01-04:00'
describe
'42937' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOO' 'sip-files00175.pro'
6fde9ae5a8ebe44d7eba6930baea6d69
07a15fe5e4c7edc438f082ea558ad4249d69858f
'2012-05-27T15:17:50-04:00'
describe
'42398' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOP' 'sip-files00140.pro'
791c1c88a51765cccb02412f34da5c98
067dc567db9026182af213e4b93886468591aeee
'2012-05-27T15:22:04-04:00'
describe
'2780284' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOQ' 'sip-files00281.tif'
d30f20c9897b3e83ce7b5a9383d24b3e
0a5b82fa57716730be29744e2fa475e991763dce
'2012-05-27T15:20:10-04:00'
describe
'43635' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOR' 'sip-files00025.pro'
efd18b3953d5f2fdf9640faef6cb2a25
26f4e986dfe4c2f4d5fe258d37469ceb2e4d87a2
describe
'341744' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOS' 'sip-files00276.jp2'
1892adf05f0dccc48b861772be7fc86e
42a9b272b1571d9d76944e8b4f2e59378db2aa53
describe
'43621' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOT' 'sip-files00231.QC.jpg'
4c6f07840fa8c6e037ec67a37fefc595
0189ddd67d1a7538c720e6d5f0a7965bee2dd082
'2012-05-27T15:25:52-04:00'
describe
'174260' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOU' 'sip-files00278.jpg'
c37ae6dbec23528b76ce238a95a3e213
e54f4af16a90da8b4435b916b856325eb91fc89d
'2012-05-27T15:22:14-04:00'
describe
'28367' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOV' 'sip-files00066thm.jpg'
91de6a68d209eb5e3de471617c176f43
b0f482e51c1c85dd32e1a5702b4e7c46e802d65d
describe
'16611' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOW' 'sip-files00363thm.jpg'
fac51f37cc3a1649e7493770aab3ce7f
80502eed1417d41565102c721b1a50591431906e
'2012-05-27T15:24:36-04:00'
describe
'2741704' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOX' 'sip-files00195.tif'
9fbfc15b1757b2212973c45cbc6c2577
39e50b49f1918b70287c1ef859bae403c4739dc9
'2012-05-27T15:30:07-04:00'
describe
'242087' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOY' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
6e13f8d7070a7a1cef23a402480b118e
ece8e465b2c5f0c8764b43cb2bac214a6bbaa0f7
'2012-05-27T15:21:32-04:00'
describe
'81030' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUOZ' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
1c640a71d00ce3f54d2c18c156cf209a
bccbe2393028935e802993b51cc33adb7f3588d1
'2012-05-27T15:28:08-04:00'
describe
'1655' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPA' 'sip-files00321.txt'
b7fc0b2f6c564460370f32b14fe730d1
65d933b937b9cb988bbc08f71eb8c315e45ebc8e
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPB' 'sip-files00136.txt'
dfe66378cd8f8eac19b23879631b0acf
109737e4d3ffedcd674b00dc7825ed68525e6375
describe
'2748328' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPC' 'sip-files00244.tif'
ad99193cdfdc7d21c7bcd7ee21e6fa5e
09e26fc95ac042adee1bf461db7cccf5195394fd
describe
'325642' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPD' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
a46cd2705aac41b5833411e2a0247a93
0cd1382d33eefc5aa9fd0efd31f7aec09b23d45f
'2012-05-27T15:17:20-04:00'
describe
'71615' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPE' 'sip-files00319.QC.jpg'
93d22e3895496493bc79ab4bea621d6a
1300f0ef64dd2fa7342a858c521849ee9ffeca6c
'2012-05-27T15:24:59-04:00'
describe
'300215' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPF' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
b8b0b0d8a0f2918714caac878f4ebaee
d4e26c5d9c8cd1513f95b205f41c60fb8a84e7d1
'2012-05-27T15:29:55-04:00'
describe
'1748' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPG' 'sip-files00180.txt'
b1ff1248194b240d0929215d91fda6ac
a2a5c45877516e1919f4e250f2c75fc6e887fed3
describe
'78810' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPH' 'sip-files00107.QC.jpg'
8c3ea19658a67b47c0354a5dcdae5bd0
a02f24fe709eb26c5b98960e6919fff0b94b160a
describe
'31061' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPI' 'sip-files00267.pro'
674b5fe4ebd042dad97edf7933d32a65
1cedf134aed35ddd59ff3c971734f3d98e31db6c
describe
'76272' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPJ' 'sip-files00271.QC.jpg'
3fa589e612403d95f1cef7ec862600a6
5e8d437bd780bba3b37b7e7ebbd6b1aabaccdb70
'2012-05-27T15:25:10-04:00'
describe
'49155' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPK' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
22b98bc54df19aa9a886dfceb1016c19
6f94942da793043df54e030eefe2286c2137a608
'2012-05-27T15:19:41-04:00'
describe
'2594084' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPL' 'sip-files00193.tif'
35655cd2eb366a6d5e7642be6bad2fa4
43cb111f81e73dd733519b8dffe44fcf05391882
'2012-05-27T15:18:49-04:00'
describe
'27113' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPM' 'sip-files00112thm.jpg'
8ce15c5d7f6c8a5c9b4b33585ef1a135
74b6a3c9b19e576f537bee24bf95b51dcd808b9b
'2012-05-27T15:30:57-04:00'
describe
'44581' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPN' 'sip-files00305.pro'
57942c835e8f74ea6f6bc6dc36c24b1b
b2bb083df5e42474d3388c824ea10642392a6a0d
describe
'1680' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPO' 'sip-files00214.txt'
f147bd0adca99bd6626108625a9a6e2d
d56e9932c4fb6738e2d71a4d59229cdff947bfd3
describe
'26086' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPP' 'sip-files00157thm.jpg'
e76e13b8237a230f95c841ba3470279c
bf0d8fb854039a58c4e781c3f0699353087143d7
'2012-05-27T15:24:24-04:00'
describe
'2766624' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPQ' 'sip-files00262.tif'
72ca9a30337df6d9f4dcc9ee07f83392
3e6b55e6b08ab5fa7788fa113c5a070557c7ef48
describe
'2750028' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPR' 'sip-files00266.tif'
67e3348eaf6914ff2750e71027ca3ad4
3695ef6670650e4954e2ade880831f8c13d99cb3
'2012-05-27T15:30:31-04:00'
describe
'2837616' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPS' 'sip-files00349.tif'
10944c3e543fe23c8a67b84fa660f714
ae605c56d73403b0dcbd86b6208ffcc6b46e96da
'2012-05-27T15:18:10-04:00'
describe
'42523' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPT' 'sip-files00202.pro'
1308805518e295904ee98245cca0f47c
b097f1612a672824dc9d2b0fedb34b0451f69166
'2012-05-27T15:22:51-04:00'
describe
'74293' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPU' 'sip-files00214.QC.jpg'
f1f3d9978c208ca9743b366ad46466df
23874bc523d94a190401a57444853ff9abf3569d
describe
'2466864' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPV' 'sip-files00053.tif'
dab74a822c4468d78422c274aed3c8e6
126748eb76936354524b09b7cec3d294789a99d7
'2012-05-27T15:26:36-04:00'
describe
'1773' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPW' 'sip-files00102.txt'
f661742f6238fe4b7fbd3a27ef6a3eae
623b6ddda1586f37545cc4290674a9dbcae5ba36
'2012-05-27T15:28:58-04:00'
describe
'78449' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPX' 'sip-files00132.QC.jpg'
cf8c8e576b3e4062739bc19455be06fd
7b0572a2516e7b711309412352b63a5222f62304
describe
'199867' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPY' 'sip-files00284.jpg'
d10edcd9c17c09b66d15ec1fa7053489
b370bf615a247f4fde4141a3605a745cf6f44c3d
describe
'218704' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUPZ' 'sip-files00214.jpg'
28325e806385d47fc1fc4bbf904c7c51
074063cd3b0d1be924965c7889d301962eaf0af3
'2012-05-27T15:19:13-04:00'
describe
'81511' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQA' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
9a48d904b349b693e5930e8ff8afed24
b661b7927b14f41634af1415933515e694e72078
'2012-05-27T15:20:56-04:00'
describe
'1752' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQB' 'sip-files00131.txt'
4d90b0149af9d5e197fd09fb43266eb2
5a9a682728173a9dddca43517a6adfd71dd5dcae
'2012-05-27T15:26:27-04:00'
describe
'42737' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQC' 'sip-files00032.pro'
ebf7302dac337711f2682d481a4493b2
f1d1576ed3348874c8c90eb53248783a126ad49f
describe
'2764196' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQD' 'sip-files00205.tif'
758095108dfe53ea62aafdc7179e4aa7
cc3466454981f23cea2e605eb7e5c1738c65bc53
'2012-05-27T15:17:17-04:00'
describe
'2515772' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQE' 'sip-files00059.tif'
79ac8e9a55f1ba84ea89435cabd52f5d
41bfa0e121a205d540a5a2dc685a4d4521be0463
'2012-05-27T15:29:00-04:00'
describe
'2785688' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQF' 'sip-files00207.tif'
f716238affcfc32450fca9986a15266c
1290c0d406b937cdb639c81ac8ec369321961bb2
'2012-05-27T15:24:15-04:00'
describe
'27727' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQG' 'sip-files00223thm.jpg'
85a383ed3898af7a5f203cca7cdfd0e1
765f42a4583bfa66d65cec0a3fbc55034748917a
'2012-05-27T15:22:42-04:00'
describe
'333037' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQH' 'sip-files00197.jp2'
3a44f415697b019b96ee12c68a6c33ab
3aea50844ccdc30eefb8a44a20552ba234578e2e
describe
'86437' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQI' 'sip-files00226.QC.jpg'
77cc3dbed158070868d22b12844bed47
bb7bbe393fb371bf8185d18c85ebcaea537a1bc4
'2012-05-27T15:29:07-04:00'
describe
'1667' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQJ' 'sip-files00070.txt'
7e6e02d9214f03bab4546544ccae22bb
c02e82d4baf7abf350c21a96720aebcee79fd5a0
'2012-05-27T15:18:27-04:00'
describe
'308133' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQK' 'sip-files00107.jp2'
5c7a8702d732220202c986e6623405d4
0159a6fe67373a413d867f698343f29ff0912e4c
'2012-05-27T15:24:09-04:00'
describe
'332649' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQL' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
1f7d07ee357a236bec21313fd9a5c24b
023bccbdd0a70c4c3cc9cff76f4f4ec81687f777
'2012-05-27T15:19:26-04:00'
describe
'1629' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQM' 'sip-files00078.txt'
3e949c9fca1884c9597c9f40f9388115
a6643d3030ff1086f324f99b22310d55372c05e5
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQN' 'sip-files00324.txt'
f4b0ab989787d3991ef7a1befa40375e
999b01caafad874e0faa0748ebecc0ca2c4490a3
describe
'354754' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQO' 'sip-files00194.jp2'
f4d5a581844161abf96313141e2356e6
1c2dbdfe5875bd168008ef99faa7148bb68d0308
describe
'341924' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQP' 'sip-files00292.jp2'
7134033a39f9807343caf943e4954864
1226f86ec18ce0c97c5dc0a168548a9348751b8d
describe
'20308' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQQ' 'sip-files00075thm.jpg'
9fa6aa9021917a4265bacf71ddc3b84f
d25c976cfe22c031b526f0c31d1e167923f8523c
describe
'2866940' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQR' 'sip-files00352.tif'
c800e985496c544dbad77f293cdd8bfe
59458afe9f7c9f3e3e6c9d0cf68882924642bb92
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQS' 'sip-files00259.jp2'
05dbd79d98d3f1e86425287173a706bc
767fabe8b912cc8aa8fcc0bb351b81af16f4b596
describe
'39991' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQT' 'sip-files00225.pro'
d400ff07e8ad6fe2b04bee2826e3c677
6db727bce37a0d00dcdce806d2a93cbd4f2c3b5c
describe
'1631' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQU' 'sip-files00107.txt'
bc18682252c6770546243aae6dfcd6a5
ef3c6bff98263927b21a14a080adc7752a3b6b0e
'2012-05-27T15:19:05-04:00'
describe
'2834808' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQV' 'sip-files00189b.tif'
61da5907f6ab1342daf8a496e98bab7f
44b70deae7f05cfbd5d11e366c945b78a95ffd92
'2012-05-27T15:24:55-04:00'
describe
'335445' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQW' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
9dd6f5480d82d14cd8182fc74088f362
fb64648825f7296a663d7e4ebf7ba17755c2ad54
describe
'234226' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQX' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
ae49f04b515cae423d8e05abca3db2c6
65643ff362780ac6caca00c5823c73c1894b6503
describe
'25340' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQY' 'sip-files00180thm.jpg'
aaef949d3286afe0881d5f1cfe042cbe
c35b1bb961ba66a7c2a9374f34ffbce1bbbdcaa9
describe
'28427' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUQZ' 'sip-files00104thm.jpg'
723898e94255ed482b49b2057db579d9
69d6880c81dbd5997031fe01d4f7c8d58d7b73ca
describe
'232077' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURA' 'sip-files00241.jpg'
91aad51776bef23bc0550895931441cf
e2311b06fddc38af6d73a60286b2158e364cd52e
describe
'205196' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURB' 'sip-files00148.jpg'
065fc29b853c08360b6104a40fd7f8b7
205980e4b197a6e210df18f1e6ce31ddfd53c3b5
describe
'1755' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURC' 'sip-files00322.txt'
56ef71467889b9a435fd7a5b788c3e70
1cd36934bf6993765219b6752abb12097687d3bc
'2012-05-27T15:21:49-04:00'
describe
'2640088' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURD' 'sip-files00090.tif'
3dd24dc4d26428fde19840d0f1332676
74d751995812bdb8df17ef6387174ef7f192e6d1
'2012-05-27T15:21:14-04:00'
describe
'76142' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURE' 'sip-files00285.QC.jpg'
6c88dd6439a738f74403be62f6656dcc
7be25431bd215ae76d14effc1a92e8cb344e303d
'2012-05-27T15:29:52-04:00'
describe
'2780440' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURF' 'sip-files00225.tif'
9930345904c5b84f964840b846c6df07
956eb476cb634ee764791a5b6421fe7f8f1d2a35
'2012-05-27T15:22:53-04:00'
describe
'1675' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURG' 'sip-files00148.txt'
77cb5819a5eebf094bd02092769118c6
1cabb299627d8a954edd6931631e6f7bb2542950
'2012-05-27T15:18:21-04:00'
describe
'1738' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURH' 'sip-files00150.txt'
17fd8fe4968faa0eb530c00550f05984
86d5c76e293aab17f56558ee9cb99fddb6e114cf
'2012-05-27T15:31:16-04:00'
describe
'1598' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURI' 'sip-files00341.txt'
5cc67e4c52b9f32a0cfb50e1c0b5b7d9
7a08bb74d481bef5f5e890be98e2d6bd39a60a0d
'2012-05-27T15:22:43-04:00'
describe
'1599' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURJ' 'sip-files00262.txt'
e475f949ab3f538cd5665a85ba86e3ee
e65d9b98523d9ca0f874990e7eb7d62858f6e873
'2012-05-27T15:24:05-04:00'
describe
'326943' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURK' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
5d74850b84ba929de57528b7959abd18
6df0b0cddcf702dd95e0912ed3dac20e21f49f22
describe
'338577' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURL' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
47acf8d77c1adb56f50f18bf1fbbe991
298d80eaaf972d96d6135a8ec44e489c66252253
'2012-05-27T15:19:57-04:00'
describe
'71156' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURM' 'sip-files00181.QC.jpg'
15367af042240d4a17399c0d961203cd
84056edc405c40acfbbe8baa6ab7637f23af299e
describe
'2780216' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURN' 'sip-files00334.tif'
5d6d470fc211a934bd2ed2aae9aa4e61
1c7710d254a51b7a3719d4ddcc471334b91cfd8d
describe
'83290' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURO' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
e2e919b5d339d665922c841063da157b
b334853e3f2c81440038d131873a5e47802cb879
describe
'336375' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURP' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
508a6238f8c9efb3f20e419b2c240407
65b57aecb763cac35f803c052bbbca2858fe49b7
'2012-05-27T15:18:45-04:00'
describe
'72130' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURQ' 'sip-files00329.QC.jpg'
1b222c06b0cb5de9fd34ea3e4def632f
396fe359c44bd68d92b8414472d1ebf403843d8c
'2012-05-27T15:20:20-04:00'
describe
'359403' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURR' 'sip-files00362.jp2'
8efc40a4656668a89fbdb7bbee798b14
b27b2dc11277e0cd79e795f883a818ef0f851bb7
'2012-05-27T15:19:09-04:00'
describe
'43442' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURS' 'sip-files00200.pro'
eeed4601d0a22fd23d2d6cb30d83eb9d
c4b6f4ac5ddf0251b74bcdcc354f90c1c84c79c6
'2012-05-27T15:21:55-04:00'
describe
'2701176' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURT' 'sip-files00159.tif'
eec12d25c69e4a574f47672593318ec9
b4a9de80f791abe1e27772a69ed2dffef226e110
'2012-05-27T15:31:20-04:00'
describe
'21827' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURU' 'sip-files00227thm.jpg'
6db26e4e316b39c5067448165c56219a
7814643a29dea0bf0d9806daf163ec9be1aa45cb
'2012-05-27T15:17:48-04:00'
describe
'42236' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURV' 'sip-files00167.pro'
23db83f1ea0e9346251aa7ae5203b7fb
d1cf416ca38429f2949f51be29d911c556f0ea04
describe
'78622' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURW' 'sip-files00296.QC.jpg'
865ced4ecd85bc35c4bfd23cf1850f6d
c9beefe7f71363aec78fd2be6ee84c63bda041fd
describe
'25552' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURX' 'sip-files00339thm.jpg'
5f9cb7cfb1f1fb74c2d3f2f5410c82b4
0a581906cead5b4f77cb80f16d7d6bc320cddfda
'2012-05-27T15:23:31-04:00'
describe
'209313' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURY' 'sip-files00333.jpg'
c0cabc95673009cb7d9256b16f91c5e3
617e6b678f5031acdff1103c7d76ddff0b7287f6
describe
'63496' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAURZ' 'sip-files00177.QC.jpg'
0779cb2d24236a4213f7faf551542dbc
5bdd24a4f5e417152aabc07713c1dde599199037
describe
'38949' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSA' 'sip-files00037.pro'
aa070a8364e47973ed27874f210a790d
1a003f6f42b635d32f016b7991e7bcff09552eb7
describe
'26894' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSB' 'sip-files00115thm.jpg'
af1f5da47160e6e5716275d3f2b03183
9899361db9e23423506e24071cc860f8ef705a5a
describe
'220362' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSC' 'sip-files00289.jpg'
58ee18906c6f11bdc99a7dae65125e73
d9d94cde24691223489c90509e157dd49a34b348
'2012-05-27T15:23:47-04:00'
describe
'2947472' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSD' 'sip-files00176.tif'
3fe05c34102c0e513c1855fb57e707cb
9ff7262a6a8f4e92d0f58e8b020a8574df5a42b5
describe
'67519' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSE' 'sip-files00360.QC.jpg'
3cac43af1fa94e65703b1428caa8ab34
2ab9f8e0c85f5783b12f0973cd3f974aa66c0df0
describe
'328697' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSF' 'sip-files00120.jp2'
f66e11ef0c62bffdf3834bd90e4b8a2f
06bf6d91e4295182bc921592f20ea572ace2a7c6
'2012-05-27T15:31:01-04:00'
describe
'213334' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSG' 'sip-files00323.jpg'
62ce75b8a83be480957a818b2e35fb32
b3dafe51aaafcd8dac33cb6434a417e78e0a57cc
describe
'2502412' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSH' 'sip-files00094.tif'
0a768d185b3408b69d7efc9b079a7a66
77f01b710225c94ef13d46f2ede9da202def5ecb
'2012-05-27T15:22:00-04:00'
describe
'29497' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSI' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
b76637daad75986e7a453412a33e353a
84cbb8d550165858c2eb7cd1075d2d20f1926a52
'2012-05-27T15:21:30-04:00'
describe
'2726780' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSJ' 'sip-files00116.tif'
ba71cbae8e74ebcd39e14eebf5f94697
49e6db65c35d288a22e1b8823bb62130ccd5f561
'2012-05-27T15:25:28-04:00'
describe
'25791' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSK' 'sip-files00163thm.jpg'
db81e95441efaec0501dc80f695c4630
82af75b86c4fe80e8c98d7e18513a6691a40f3ac
describe
'81984' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSL' 'sip-files00141.QC.jpg'
5886091925580357790479fd37b03023
fea7b101de1b2e8e34444b3294ff88c9f4274c2d
'2012-05-27T15:26:23-04:00'
describe
'75318' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSM' 'sip-files00163.QC.jpg'
952f580ffe773c7d61c175908a14ff25
5cd9a2dbd9385d814e0655583d62fe14be4d1b2b
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSN' 'sip-files00182.txt'
e5262e3efa25061f9db1dafc6061e99c
78fb639934e74f58cfcb7bad45e399268f41856f
describe
'345120' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSO' 'sip-files00303.jp2'
c8a23ea25988b76f1d50667951fcdb4a
62dd64f21b60c446bbd63afde7b592f9c17fd479
describe
'26001' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSP' 'sip-files00358thm.jpg'
074bf47ad10af351dd9bc464f03e3db0
6287de00143d10e98c33558edf2701ad0d5543f1
'2012-05-27T15:23:39-04:00'
describe
'16439' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSQ' 'sip-files00246.pro'
9d384e6254a14a304f5d5280ae8d8800
a1f33a5a1648e4744a73e07d55cb2cbc5f829fea
describe
'23158' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSR' 'sip-files00345thm.jpg'
1162afa9a5763b77bff57ebbf07dd8bc
d6993d193a1acb5328fbfe509ce84d75c1ff7e54
describe
'210100' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSS' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
76b7da977181df309bdbe37f6a2d4feb
43b4137894c95d9e3a5d90da3552593eca33d7eb
describe
'341005' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUST' 'sip-files00005.jp2'
d92256d4c5ebe19af3633dea2c8e7f72
be22d88966e910107b70d1e43703698b0d349191
'2012-05-27T15:30:36-04:00'
describe
'42138' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSU' 'sip-files00148.pro'
2d04cbbeeb3cce9a7a7fc6699f3648a6
3994f90e251f4e4cee643bdaab717b05283bf6c3
'2012-05-27T15:19:10-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSV' 'sip-files00191.txt'
69133970f96220259271431d12c10c47
a9ffc6453a83e080c364ee8ed19242ee1d7eafaa
describe
'25445' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSW' 'sip-files00347thm.jpg'
b597379416877d45ab6692b3f5456254
92323a42c2d6ea68e0bb6d385eb34a215d2ffb43
'2012-05-27T15:19:20-04:00'
describe
'28666' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSX' 'sip-files00232thm.jpg'
0d7ffa96db1a85df7f3e97b77d3df55f
2879aaa7d20fc8ca0cd42e14920165ef84a7f72f
'2012-05-27T15:18:32-04:00'
describe
'346029' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSY' 'sip-files00316.jp2'
e4ea9d144f0a3bc53c25d515b781dfbb
c7459b5c628997675c9077e3a6b95e30d97b2ee2
describe
'76655' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUSZ' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
55319851ee41ba5c3ea41b737776d621
96769a07ea8f8be84ca03497a87a29bfceb9ac26
describe
'83237' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTA' 'sip-files00104.QC.jpg'
f59a7cde6f5b28fc50d757f3fe30b3b8
7546e28a256cf46d4d60e896872a4c76cedad29a
'2012-05-27T15:24:25-04:00'
describe
'217421' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTB' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
dfce2ce6b07172cd11a2a5e232ebe513
710fe8ac54135e2e6b7b6ea8072d6b3a68480500
'2012-05-27T15:19:30-04:00'
describe
'83599' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTC' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
f06e3c394ef6eaaafebba0ee7f2306a7
41bd456d368bb6904c549531441510ea98f45264
describe
'26705' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTD' 'sip-files00147thm.jpg'
60e911e45169811c8f63ee5e1a592de8
2451f923dcea51117ac84b03845928a8975288fe
'2012-05-27T15:18:43-04:00'
describe
'1701' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTE' 'sip-files00069.txt'
ef512bab7cb6d37ec150cd747fb68f05
4e6679925233e17f4ece6e2892d9b4935e373847
describe
'2708992' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTF' 'sip-files00271.tif'
7da7090c22211d17244be4912021fb91
b12346ef432797ec86a25f6add1cee6a1a666c77
describe
'1772' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTG' 'sip-files00134.txt'
42bf017399a878f57a786615a54ec782
7e71dfb922e20c929066e03b5720797668a6b45f
'2012-05-27T15:30:26-04:00'
describe
'2662252' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTH' 'sip-files00100.tif'
f57bfc583fad745b1aca1a8ce4f07b95
26c0a084707f7c89a01d4d8b56a8272badbe98e0
'2012-05-27T15:29:12-04:00'
describe
'24837' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTI' 'sip-files00315thm.jpg'
50458024331cc8d4980f69eeec1ea341
7995d1433d899003ec61e389884dbe490221d4f2
'2012-05-27T15:31:42-04:00'
describe
'334536' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTJ' 'sip-files00187.jp2'
52999e0aa2e425e28e52e85d5886bbfe
f6a511e675b418945483b488452cf9971e46d5c2
describe
'226620' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTK' 'sip-files00223a.jpg'
067592540ee18bde3daf4bcaf27b50b8
4f8efc608927089e4bb6d39a1c7a9ccfc0d64957
'2012-05-27T15:17:22-04:00'
describe
'1677' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTL' 'sip-files00323.txt'
999271050a5e4087f5c2d145f1815f2a
51eb088913a6f477de68774bdc812e52234f5a75
'2012-05-27T15:21:29-04:00'
describe
'2725580' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTM' 'sip-files00330.tif'
ebd3ee66d7631e2e9b367dc804ea48c3
9d4c281809da0839ba97a9c6f87209029e8a3a6f
describe
'130443' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTN' 'sip-files00344.jpg'
2c973f6d2da33f8a470c12240a0711e9
2d8651f917afef456f47686a9e6aef393c0b1850
'2012-05-27T15:19:16-04:00'
describe
'74677' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTO' 'sip-files00259.QC.jpg'
f638bb98d5304b02d2c53dfbe9e872ce
735c063c79423cd276d1bd0d4d4992db54a8c090
describe
'42385' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTP' 'sip-files00130.pro'
3149965addc1edec6e88e6e417510c2b
398951a7efac462e677d81f7d423bda52bf6415c
'2012-05-27T15:21:56-04:00'
describe
'24698' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTQ' 'sip-files00304thm.jpg'
42fb248411ae7134325bce0a125f8408
5e13013fdf52deef1ea702f3e49851a8793da63a
describe
'38142' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTR' 'sip-files00085.pro'
4d69a91dfa5bf16cab525b95480dd2e1
e1c825d02b7448d2f5d0952a3cf0c8093c52e611
describe
'2709888' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTS' 'sip-files00298.tif'
4bd362501219d95f2340fbcab8b0b9ab
be64b14ea7ae240c9e317b451889ad6b71dbf4a9
'2012-05-27T15:26:16-04:00'
describe
'26832' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTT' 'sip-files00125thm.jpg'
8f7c926efdfc28ec47a268aae8f3fad9
498295bbed5d838272c50030745f2a19a40be4e7
describe
'2849360' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTU' 'sip-files00194.tif'
77bfbee79b68436309fb4bc32756cdfa
3569039c305163920bd6a60852e6c16f7f8cbc5c
describe
'2765444' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTV' 'sip-files00201.tif'
80abba69dfff517e9847f642e3a77bfb
3e4d38df1baa7333b747d669bbbe0981a5b3878d
'2012-05-27T15:28:49-04:00'
describe
'2891608' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTW' 'sip-files00168.tif'
9a50de711ba38ccccb77b7f496089900
df915869235c95bd88821276949106755f057f02
'2012-05-27T15:31:21-04:00'
describe
'345353' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTX' 'sip-files00152.jp2'
2dc43c4dc9f8b81b36658ba3a9741f8b
e8ed9c62a6ab90743d400e20bbde8f8ff42e58d1
describe
'2894124' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTY' 'sip-files00180.tif'
68044fc3d4d96931082e4e6c002f1402
18ba1935b38bc6fea629490aa80ac1d09b1cc687
'2012-05-27T15:28:22-04:00'
describe
'19058' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUTZ' 'sip-files00277thm.jpg'
8158721d71a5e7e7f566d33cffb3a902
10aa6fed97aa4c2128619ecad7f81e5c92b348a4
describe
'39503' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUA' 'sip-files00262.pro'
424fede7bba06e3c1a7f7d1525db77f2
29e7b12f73fe8685e635d90d5708c32237b229e7
'2012-05-27T15:26:07-04:00'
describe
'1683' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUB' 'sip-files00314.txt'
06a2c687c09d58341ccb30eca8b53e54
ad253d5f2822a8176b48b08af819974a6d9bb1dc
'2012-05-27T15:27:24-04:00'
describe
'1818' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUC' 'sip-files00249.txt'
73dbd78b1164dba8dc23f58937f2ab46
c266d8313c91f87ed7a75f30b9067fb906128641
describe
'2766596' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUD' 'sip-files00290.tif'
6da4620949be106e8db92c4c521f26eb
62f02785789ea9d471467c32a148a27db33fcdfe
describe
'27167' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUE' 'sip-files00223athm.jpg'
4b7aa89e49b4dea846f4ed642d6e7deb
b75a6087fc0aa50ac1d99107e372113e8cde05c6
describe
'232113' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUF' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
eb61b31350d9dfc0ebdb7a9915968985
b79fe847fbd1ee1643f9541924379cf8a2fa73d4
describe
'74808' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUG' 'sip-files00338.QC.jpg'
8261a9ccca9bf2e3661bac78ebbec6f6
491dd2baf5ac0e5b348079dcb56c8679e4d43878
'2012-05-27T15:18:06-04:00'
describe
'239496' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUH' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
64c827c4d21ae635880a3a693cb5cbd9
ebefb62abb7da296194947061df06fc15185ffb9
describe
'24953' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUI' 'sip-files00350thm.jpg'
361efb007e1107363e56156550a93e71
57fea47be039875ab907ca4421fa17fc7a9a4f8b
describe
'37343' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUJ' 'sip-files00210.pro'
c902cdf89944bc64d10f283b02220d12
0e1418b84d6c3bfa0ee0bcba025a732d30f3f0a9
describe
'80390' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUK' 'sip-files00126.QC.jpg'
aadd3ddf298b5307f9d3da2bfe03b8e9
6663d08e77946c7c84b4b70d61dceba17e0efc0a
'2012-05-27T15:20:09-04:00'
describe
'225907' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUL' 'sip-files00353.jpg'
675a6f4e6246a126eb61a7eff0966d8d
e8e7517708d8e495224fd6e8fc4f76b56c2671c3
'2012-05-27T15:30:33-04:00'
describe
'2758808' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUM' 'sip-files00219.tif'
1568a6a1ded130864d884febe3d5d73d
1a30341047da73d9aeed41d89d8d2384269427e0
describe
'80231' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUN' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
e65b963b85b3a37af28eb80f7849706f
7c5de1b0b07dc4de86605b77f1f8d128a7788b4e
'2012-05-27T15:20:25-04:00'
describe
'149510' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUO' 'sip-files00121.jpg'
d6b07a28475f1dc0669ba0556a8bb6dc
098ea385459bd11a9423e2726b29407cb4a0d0c4
'2012-05-27T15:24:53-04:00'
describe
'192425' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUP' 'sip-files00165.jpg'
1ff512431b646db3c6ff14ab14a4f4e8
fa8e99f43ae38b462a8594bef8e4158fb27c8cee
describe
'218194' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUQ' 'sip-files00189a.jpg'
9220d1a5cc19968ab961f1831074bc4b
9dd57a5fed6eb7a9818523d1db90347a8c4039eb
'2012-05-27T15:20:28-04:00'
describe
'2838388' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUR' 'sip-files00361.tif'
478c5b1d6ff518431a5cb5030ed80982
588ef2e168d5578eeece7573945b12464203d09a
'2012-05-27T15:24:07-04:00'
describe
'21995' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUS' 'sip-files00231thm.jpg'
5038561e150d59a8d8890622a1ccee33
69b1510d5dc77e4dad9028aed05545b9ae0b1d68
describe
'1740' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUT' 'sip-files00348.txt'
8dd67f733aa5fb678ef07224ba029c30
90221b710fd73eb56982525f988ffd583d1ae24a
'2012-05-27T15:25:48-04:00'
describe
'1725' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUU' 'sip-files00043.txt'
674823fd35e20f8c14f03712f2f99ec0
21dcf3aa9a97a44ef436e046fa5d973b67b5d438
describe
'348210' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUV' 'sip-files00306.jp2'
fc4a265802433318fad1b0a9bb6f57f9
a681d057090dd3cda47b47b26e103d6e0594f9c4
'2012-05-27T15:27:34-04:00'
describe
'2798556' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUW' 'sip-files00306.tif'
0a8becf1b37afba803853a680925deb3
991e428d5d9c16c6ac28abcfa445d29b3e6d4c47
'2012-05-27T15:25:40-04:00'
describe
'337098' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUX' 'sip-files00320.jp2'
a377e217c24edd910b44037899294c64
577d6a2c135ca135332bb30411382585052c10d8
describe
'73958' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUY' 'sip-files00327.QC.jpg'
79b73fb53bcbd2df1f7d01157e2f0a4c
2541b4b4783d075bd60c71cda590bc762807675c
describe
'25593' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUUZ' 'sip-files00189athm.jpg'
dbb190c5a11ccdb60bb9bac692dba7cd
4f7f18a6445d0b15b405413484bf95047eb0bcdc
describe
'2830048' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVA' 'sip-files00300.tif'
5025acd380f0fd78354809224c0a478e
665f99ac328180b47f8489dd4e25a2efdad1f9f4
describe
'2718196' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVB' 'sip-files00222.tif'
b40d13ffc60078e7402e9ba909c8f6db
a241a66887d09cb0fc335f15e353c51078100241
describe
'43107' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVC' 'sip-files00142.pro'
0e11757d1bd6b80b3fefad15f21f8a49
1196360b5557083dde270192897e95817e156b91
describe
'25662' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVD' 'sip-files00182thm.jpg'
130ffe472974d125c23ea365bfbb8323
4386bf686adefd780f0063a3fcd976f1bc25a567
'2012-05-27T15:19:28-04:00'
describe
'2817008' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVE' 'sip-files00131.tif'
c426b250c68d36bc73f3214c596328f8
e3b61e01a895198f6677e974a9c25c65f79c93a2
'2012-05-27T15:25:37-04:00'
describe
'240277' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVF' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
b95c48f1416bc894efbca05deac4d72c
6570131726a0d15bcc010bdf23577d50f5dee50a
'2012-05-27T15:21:52-04:00'
describe
'2745376' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVG' 'sip-files00289.tif'
b161e2051252e9906398160ca2ec1396
94d572a6a497f3b9491efb72a902eedbd7cccd70
describe
'213379' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVH' 'sip-files00110.jpg'
04b63f42427b714ee24e6cda8a44681e
23cf94ea42c4b8857964eea216c06017a9787b61
'2012-05-27T15:26:56-04:00'
describe
'40014' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVI' 'sip-files00356.pro'
243c28552c271749b6e5bb32d020aca2
f8df8cc832a22c135d598459fb3bde160d9a7611
describe
'2771440' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVJ' 'sip-files00149.tif'
029555354ea6be05c3534a551ca62851
90bea78db5355f49cfc4506098239c70198150b3
'2012-05-27T15:19:44-04:00'
describe
'38892' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVK' 'sip-files00187.pro'
6dd537b8da459a9f594a2ac911c3c1c3
a9eefafd0180db76f64da148c898a3ce8074f80c
'2012-05-27T15:22:45-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVL' 'sip-files00186.txt'
85c2ae36524056e1781277cd846349e9
232cc97903d54213f1533f77de05bd45a736312b
describe
'2776316' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVM' 'sip-files00317.tif'
e6f277ae270cb59676870abccd10fcb0
437710e52bdf2221c39ef178dc23380bde20f726
describe
'76679' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVN' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
b519a4f4d5376ff6704907cbccf4d159
14b4306cd0fb4d661ccf8fd6c692587fdd414b5a
'2012-05-27T15:18:14-04:00'
describe
'27994' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVO' 'sip-files00105thm.jpg'
84628bb4061117ea106feb5e26ed449e
9f86f25163301b6d9c9ebed5a6882965079950bc
'2012-05-27T15:29:29-04:00'
describe
'3115132' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVP' 'sip-files00365.tif'
464f6f82b7617ca441e4371e954776bb
3c5c78c8ca6d56fe143dd000aeb25b008cf24213
describe
'27400' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVQ' 'sip-files00235thm.jpg'
5b1998d9aa52d2d786365cf2d6ff19cb
63d248a853d0c50bb7d970f9585fc1e008532b71
describe
'2828936' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVR' 'sip-files00342.tif'
5d71f81e1330366735c97bfe31141a33
e3ae9d87923a539300b210d7500569b214d62fc6
describe
'2881820' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVS' 'sip-files00172.tif'
8d00c64325c94b0eb380b2ad70d821bc
06984f79cf5a82f1ddc818a6ba0a02ca5e171297
'2012-05-27T15:19:18-04:00'
describe
'2763032' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVT' 'sip-files00243.tif'
074aa7f31948cf0abec20c9248570d35
cf15d49f312526bbc88d319d3f604d867d137348
describe
'44233' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVU' 'sip-files00020.pro'
32772a190b6e6539a0f4c6e00d0e98d1
371c345d9395de1500738d7be6fff4449d344eac
'2012-05-27T15:29:34-04:00'
describe
'81727' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVV' 'sip-files00142.QC.jpg'
c8ed4614a7876e201a718ca469bb0ec9
2d4e2a58a9870fb96dafa26a26022693a47628e1
'2012-05-27T15:29:58-04:00'
describe
'195819' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVW' 'sip-files00247.jpg'
4657089e94dc75215802efecf32e3c44
737a58291a951d0075ad8c9b4470b8c6b0f08aa5
describe
'209' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVX' 'sip-files00006.txt'
d61cd94276d017b086f8e727332218d8
75aad10ffe9f84dd275774de4bf48fb2f43b6c22
'2012-05-27T15:25:23-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVY' 'sip-files00281.txt'
f1f7c4afec52989f1cf595b9a0961577
717bda947288ef0754c8b3100677ca4f974f4c67
describe
'81449' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUVZ' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
247bfc14f55fa8c4bda9236dd6be875c
38d11ed10e54f9353dc134c1f549e0fcc8392dbc
describe
'14682' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWA' 'sip-files00362thm.jpg'
8baa639542b498d9dbba38aea387e3f1
3a0fa4c4e7af7f5213cdbbe046f07f892db8c7e2
describe
'213279' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWB' 'sip-files00115.jpg'
2211997535be81fa06c6405bce2a228d
7ce874c74b89a881f2c56035c06e259c0e5ca92e
describe
'39934' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWC' 'sip-files00029.pro'
f68cf157941e9f7b632d80cfa217eca5
e7167839d4f35240922a069d8df7c4d176852f4e
'2012-05-27T15:25:17-04:00'
describe
'82923' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWD' 'sip-files00205.QC.jpg'
0eee7d639d7f2c737c22cff7086e31e9
d669fcc2383d80aabb1920188bd73490021f8574
describe
'2775596' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWE' 'sip-files00152.tif'
775a0a7d5e63c070d2cbc93e73675243
c0671834dec6f9dbadf87c65dae27a8d2db784c9
'2012-05-27T15:23:28-04:00'
describe
'42656' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWF' 'sip-files00151.pro'
3cf5f4ebf19a66553f75d24f005f4e7e
999e93dfd6c9a61b96c4e8e1163732b349f00ba9
'2012-05-27T15:27:17-04:00'
describe
'257882' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWG' 'sip-files00242.jpg'
1c7bb8550c72ae0489a56e995db931f7
edc3942a3b93226e0ae5ab37d802c19112f41d1d
describe
'321504' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWH' 'sip-files00112.jp2'
0abe2539c1006cb8ca07697a6451f481
8ff94199e06eed1c7430bf666ff898d5f6072b16
'2012-05-27T15:28:24-04:00'
describe
'342208' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWI' 'sip-files00288.jp2'
3ff17c753e0c7960d5e9809e79a5f106
4eb5a94a8e1b2d6f99d7f8b432fa5a7063f0d54e
describe
'333176' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWJ' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
2d2b67ff617eda232e65c297044d9d56
27399d52ae6788c14f4200a60b2c90f7fecedd40
describe
'43495' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWK' 'sip-files00201.pro'
14666ab6fef40ff2db4e70635872b07f
6502ff361523c84fc87373aedd5ce159f054ba7d
'2012-05-27T15:17:42-04:00'
describe
'81538' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWL' 'sip-files00222.QC.jpg'
9ef41172bf65ed2484f6911e5ab7f9fe
d13ecb48d8cdc539adefaba52377286c8de418ef
describe
'25963' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWM' 'sip-files00282thm.jpg'
b7eb748b7c0485e1f09fc44d8142147d
9cf90a05bb63f21def349f26fe575798726e49f9
describe
'43181' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWN' 'sip-files00254.pro'
ecd7a628fbb491cdb8fb1197e6fc6a87
8282224dfbcea6adea7caf2a9cb9bc665c31eb64
describe
'388521' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWO' 'sip-files00001.jp2'
6108a41c4cb22bc15c744e4c7c5d6220
499c9fdf5a6f89c04d7e753d9a4716cdd5ea51c8
describe
'219855' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWP' 'sip-files00159.jpg'
3a5a88df3af8a6d42620803461863b31
c756248f515acd1fff26c381db8ba7c6b46bffa7
'2012-05-27T15:21:46-04:00'
describe
'219898' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWQ' 'sip-files00171.jpg'
99e9eec571ea0e32914ddb43dc7d1900
ee4bd71b09c20e61bd37e0587df94c6be27ed88f
'2012-05-27T15:27:22-04:00'
describe
'76984' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWR' 'sip-files00139.QC.jpg'
d620caae9cfe81ee94b6d3527cc17333
605ef00d585bdde4aeb2a7ef658aabf31b520eae
'2012-05-27T15:25:31-04:00'
describe
'43522' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWS' 'sip-files00289.pro'
7e05d6ad671bd7cb7a9fea2eb05199ba
844216ddbc63c62384546d0aaebf5593a155fde9
describe
'2798312' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWT' 'sip-files00359.tif'
f8f6c2c0dcf5dc09283e057778fc1120
936eea55c5081709fed1ca39d66298813514004a
'2012-05-27T15:28:26-04:00'
describe
'230088' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWU' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
3de02c323dca39ce5da3665b936f76d5
ce51dfdfbf906031dbe2c38707a04d057ab15407
'2012-05-27T15:29:14-04:00'
describe
'2841132' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWV' 'sip-files00212.tif'
11adff52ff57d5a206489c4aeef4cdb9
dacea9fe749751d76ac77efc7eeaed1c73bbf13d
describe
'20678' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWW' 'sip-files00001thm.jpg'
30db14bb1dec84e693219ca467e1970d
6b72287be642f3a019b6fdd9971ce4505ee128ea
'2012-05-27T15:18:18-04:00'
describe
'314415' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWX' 'sip-files00105.jp2'
41949464892fd7787b3d10cb6ccdf6e1
5950be0f490f82dfdda86df277e15081bdd4120f
describe
'27202' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWY' 'sip-files00128thm.jpg'
8df1bcd29104136bad38864a17ca8f56
f356110a37a1b47cec67dadfc414a787abf09c06
describe
'2518684' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUWZ' 'sip-files00129.tif'
4b03a1340bc07d39677d49fd86f05cfa
8a8656463cc1a32ddd18f3e5ca692183bc3d1796
'2012-05-27T15:20:53-04:00'
describe
'26575' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXA' 'sip-files00149thm.jpg'
e30cad7f1cedbd3f6aac8ac065e9995a
078186adb7597d4e32d290a0ea492f2286bf08ec
'2012-05-27T15:17:23-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXB' 'sip-files00126.txt'
057fd4693f34e7377bb124e2ba3a2f8e
afe591e67605a45008a2dad4e1c62e9f6fa6e819
'2012-05-27T15:31:53-04:00'
describe
'75430' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXC' 'sip-files00290.QC.jpg'
c4f5edd793e9538fca23131f25effe22
1b3732e56479e73d0a0b56eaa953666ae7226b94
'2012-05-27T15:20:03-04:00'
describe
'2652724' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXD' 'sip-files00037.tif'
c0585cf719d828229f1891406b69b916
20b70b065824f1580b6d6bf855bf84f701ff6621
describe
'2710132' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXE' 'sip-files00128.tif'
b325b789810e37ca99aefade55fe914e
972dc1ecf11b9084281ff6d19b3f6488f788ae67
'2012-05-27T15:22:23-04:00'
describe
'359254' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXF' 'sip-files00339.jp2'
98945769aca0b2c99204ed0c519879f8
30436e90f8983530395a2d6c62e04a6fe2b7846d
describe
'2607728' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXG' 'sip-files00123.tif'
a4d7aac2cb0da771b841c7adc0ddebe3
55dbba8904454d2cc5db79a06d8d9422e3ff45a5
'2012-05-27T15:25:22-04:00'
describe
'314631' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXH' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
b54bcbb3ca1d12cd18a2bca3dd967ac1
d18c8d233dba56b6fd7369195e50029bf8d63524
'2012-05-27T15:20:30-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXI' 'sip-files00032.txt'
fbeae45f89340d783efc340beefdae04
579cb1d5854a1679b361659e453f99085d477197
describe
'2804324' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXJ' 'sip-files00356.tif'
6fd18fd3fcd755336c9aacdd5c10404e
a424d026ee25a3394348c57de4206be914ee8bf0
describe
'81922' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXK' 'sip-files00255.QC.jpg'
dff0cbec55215d0dcde73dfbfd0d0353
5d85998d2806ba0368fb83be2fa86ea840ca37ba
describe
'2601148' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXL' 'sip-files00068.tif'
647583a8706b4b881f725e2265f8ec9c
68218978ddc56facc8f23e4d335df02f73f68335
'2012-05-27T15:27:35-04:00'
describe
'220058' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXM' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
423be336c3dc8bcaf9a285c5b993adf7
d11fe09379f30e146f6a75aef03d0430f5a08a22
describe
'1924' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXN' 'sip-files00277.txt'
5f34e088b7b821b0c7059968bf8f9db1
73c8dd19dd14a66b7c6928fb98fbb958bde1eb76
'2012-05-27T15:25:56-04:00'
describe
'2685424' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXO' 'sip-files00161.tif'
c0977ea20d68feb3678230fde77c652b
210701bf584cdab86055917d54871a8c585e287c
describe
'27359' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXP' 'sip-files00106thm.jpg'
02da3f4e6c6a5777cc8e631d59ce486c
600534c443e0cdca11cfbf2d798b6737b083bfbd
'2012-05-27T15:23:03-04:00'
describe
'2574844' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXQ' 'sip-files00135.tif'
32e7e9ff7f7df8d7672730499b433a24
b6b4beac3554687c6589bf64d8da38fc3b882580
'2012-05-27T15:26:00-04:00'
describe
'2688928' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXR' 'sip-files00229.tif'
4def8eae20912093a4a8d4df31bc8509
19f56bd0747256f182c66c0877957ab7748ba0ac
describe
'206464' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXS' 'sip-files00109.jpg'
46b139b53c28eb4d7b5635e1dcc6cdcb
076d823500d1ece70fb200c94d966cc53e1e48ae
describe
'234342' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXT' 'sip-files00230.jpg'
c7ddc85176d9b9f01431ca6a3a65974f
b16c882dc7a3a88430f7ef0d30676c81af62fc1a
describe
'129250' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXU' 'sip-files00365.jp2'
71b7f9e9b412ce52801b5c498a761763
0638fccc23ecc47fe79bc035ba402fe806e28be5
describe
'1851' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXV' 'sip-files00326.txt'
c0b9f8af49a23a5a6bb2d14a0c9691b1
b4486c792a34d8dfa08251f7d8c132b2f9dd59d6
describe
'211753' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXW' 'sip-files00307.jpg'
4c7d78722404de98a43d7cef7de78ed2
13e2a715ee6930d9e549e50cdafc2152ffc2b75d
'2012-05-27T15:24:11-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXX' 'sip-files00258.txt'
84979ee37d0fa5d0412a39607d517ea7
15ac289bc1935c33de4b04daf70e32cecea0431e
describe
'77547' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXY' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
f12dc8b52eb2dfd9e811c25398720d58
b5639a5eb23b156a99e45cbb1b651234f316bdda
describe
'213924' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUXZ' 'sip-files00176.jpg'
615de7230e54a6ccce8924023521f993
b7d3ffcaf29e57b55a71a4643c50ab16af89fbf4
'2012-05-27T15:31:46-04:00'
describe
'74194' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYA' 'sip-files00358.QC.jpg'
e6382d665a1f9de344182ea37df6c000
52b7d2dc2cb4d6eb59179fb591258a6ab6e29b94
'2012-05-27T15:26:50-04:00'
describe
'857' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYB' 'sip-files00005.pro'
d3e3886a5b7eb71a7bc7702bf02c024c
384f1b97d325ce80ec471787e88e3092d957eb0f
describe
'1762' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYC' 'sip-files00254.txt'
bec07977dcabcf0b78571a8e38049e10
0f11e698ff592dd7c001eb3e62b4cfa65a9cc75d
describe
'27332' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYD' 'sip-files00058thm.jpg'
8c56f3ced9ceafc237b9b1394672f41e
1a65df5e4ceb9f738bee938a83311a3af5c6680e
describe
'2698400' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYE' 'sip-files00245.tif'
5dac1d1451ed1005dd0b2c97e0ee1cc9
a1eab68a27b89097a7872f70d6f678279d8c41fc
describe
'2762800' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYF' 'sip-files00310.tif'
032ef0b86f747cbc409dccb740c79e1e
508def8e1ee5c3cde9c6901b325031f012b1adbd
describe
'26598' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYG' 'sip-files00159thm.jpg'
79c71aec5a8c91099a11f4ca7b3b9528
5960b147add56b2300c6b72cb111b29f40194a5b
'2012-05-27T15:27:16-04:00'
describe
'1768' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYH' 'sip-files00020.txt'
6e41b423e984829e1773d699bdc17907
9f45694f30e9f0c030bb7432a67b46ca59884604
describe
'75162' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYI' 'sip-files00145.QC.jpg'
b54c29e78f948978f1e3bd4951846ca8
b48df6b69dcab164edcf4b6d2cf407f93368673e
describe
'44066' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYJ' 'sip-files00348.pro'
a305bb343b474842305cb4af81bb3947
df50c61019979ef5b779e6a9f3bf9e5a4dd83a52
'2012-05-27T15:22:05-04:00'
describe
'41526' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYK' 'sip-files00223.pro'
f580294133a0bb3f504d5f04a158de41
c17cde86e657d9db6d7f93de5dfc919e8a0e83b3
'2012-05-27T15:27:05-04:00'
describe
'341743' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYL' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
6b8de6fee151e0d578cc5213764f595c
2f2a7a00dc82591ca35391e22a59bcb6bedb7845
describe
'43005' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYM' 'sip-files00241.pro'
92f8bea6372d9c4ae7a5d403b3a1eaa4
b7b685f341fb86623f3ec3009be6019d1fb90e86
describe
'214677' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYN' 'sip-files00258.jpg'
d04aa88f695e93c8696b256036d854cf
c769f3aa3813057fa8330a339f17c8176e0770a9
'2012-05-27T15:30:12-04:00'
describe
'190500' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYO' 'sip-files00177.jpg'
5849dac2811a6b8290f442ad32f80b24
4eec590fee97b9746a6a053db5d236dfac3f6562
describe
'106423' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYP' 'sip-files00188.jpg'
d2fac71ae38254d0597e71d1a5ce7364
cdd619e4b11a0e74d4410860ebe268d4d8df62b4
'2012-05-27T15:25:47-04:00'
describe
'332306' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYQ' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
ead7fc989a197bfb7f6f20996121f4b7
7e2ea6b0ebc3bdf65596eac427ef891caaa12d38
describe
'1706' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYR' 'sip-files00059.txt'
9477895a54f30f47401111afc4254818
6a80137b1a477d99dd2ce20955f62907f3703f55
describe
'2846696' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYS' 'sip-files00347.tif'
20781f012b1f1629fa1115ecfe436dc4
3341ac78506fdddffb15aaa21a00d30cd8ccee3e
'2012-05-27T15:21:51-04:00'
describe
'2836904' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYT' 'sip-files00214.tif'
4778c883dae7c0a1281f691cf48b7179
68d48c1b0870b601d99bb9ce95c9351ad828b70e
'2012-05-27T15:28:06-04:00'
describe
'237953' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYU' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
55918a0fe90432d321b29db384926cdf
b8aa9bef7d0b79090ae2b6d0f231b9d6128790db
describe
'1733' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYV' 'sip-files00353.txt'
7b7acb91d16de6f2e66ce9d6ce98a78e
25bd50d7866a3e5f55c8376da25ad8e6b75ca5cc
describe
'2783248' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYW' 'sip-files00054.tif'
b51e4e786e890d8632d5e3abb7dc84ae
8374812c0d7242b93666803e60f16799288c74c3
describe
'43420' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYX' 'sip-files00035.pro'
c99f25f0fb85053b79eea32c20bfed5c
ab8f3c0c213cd38a1b10518f0383136970cc06b6
describe
'44772' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYY' 'sip-files00090.pro'
bf219702721307c34c85fbc4991ded41
a2ceeb9bed667d83f2a319eea8a7b32bd2ec9382
'2012-05-27T15:20:21-04:00'
describe
'1718' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUYZ' 'sip-files00236.txt'
5900acba629ed987473ac9f9d1fa1cc6
1cc9fbf0054be68b73af97882867320e16c18f6f
describe
'247325' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZA' 'sip-files00207.jpg'
86eecfa999081cb7c31a993af4439bd1
aac0dd0db33f316151c5e3eb242858e2a43c90d6
describe
'25664' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZB' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
794ad216635744a3cb342e8d071343b4
433b022110c773c7cd950b47ad6ae8a6d9975be0
'2012-05-27T15:25:20-04:00'
describe
'1686' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZC' 'sip-files00140.txt'
d1fbb8d331c2d9722ab6aa6c7cdfb3b8
1a74fe765aea61ee1bc40830cc195b1e0dcd4c17
describe
'209017' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZD' 'sip-files00107.jpg'
cd91723ccb6c297e96ff62f77d6fe259
14cb97408548e8e8ecd594ec82ca4fba34ea1adf
'2012-05-27T15:25:12-04:00'
describe
'1732' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZE' 'sip-files00265.txt'
bd53bec1cc9b924534588b9c3b384916
8f283fe8d78473ce7ad28673adef1cdc3cdca005
describe
'76189' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZF' 'sip-files00169.QC.jpg'
f7b4b43d374eb50b38910526776d0cb1
801665c6e96a040d6bae2891902d72db77daf986
describe
'2816792' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZG' 'sip-files00299.tif'
f9b3cff6c95d8351ddc0f28c774dc1e9
f55b55632b424570c73d76a9c9611873fad26be4
'2012-05-27T15:22:08-04:00'
describe
'25943' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZH' 'sip-files00148thm.jpg'
c0d23a547342bdc2a8fa19ab74d8d092
4a44d3debb2ffd79cfd7d3eb10c9cc2401232162
describe
'78150' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZI' 'sip-files00123.QC.jpg'
f88a5c938020caf52738ff7993c9838f
29b84750c7f1957f3e32f19f1a6c6196ba2e3663
describe
'48520' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZJ' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
f363e389f6e65b77970e2cd18530e3f5
a0ba44c757a18736527b0b541ed5c76af3ed06b8
describe
'2787324' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZK' 'sip-files00268.tif'
e8a6023d2388f876f9ec76f2440f3616
153d89b3ea1dfbc622a949d6c00481a2063cace3
'2012-05-27T15:23:43-04:00'
describe
'25673' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZL' 'sip-files00352thm.jpg'
66a85bc2ef2950e2d1117e54d61f393d
57c73adf52c28c4323a4c8378202482007e5bda5
'2012-05-27T15:31:37-04:00'
describe
'28249' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZM' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
d7394b07639eef6a06cfeb7400bebc20
a8ed6482e98a2974cf00e60f612a65dc5fd72f54
'2012-05-27T15:31:15-04:00'
describe
'1630' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZN' 'sip-files00076.txt'
3a1bc9566ea286c46b26c686c744448c
c122fa3f21e81f3a3031ad3672b15a9c1a02506a
describe
'338351' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZO' 'sip-files00114.jp2'
6ea822e8fa999132ba010fe658695b63
ed4506cc0ffac16a9d6488f89f58a147e3ede931
'2012-05-27T15:27:27-04:00'
describe
'79231' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZP' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
a798c3ed993e927bd21700f68d251520
22af15af98f89a625bc0aeb199a499f65ff582a3
describe
'299344' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZQ' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
ba83a8993be260a299b72f963a00984d
ea39dbdc7b10b6dd8678d8454a075c8a6e3f8e6c
'2012-05-27T15:31:51-04:00'
describe
'73202' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZR' 'sip-files00350.QC.jpg'
0522e3c4ac4928b2d49041f954e970a5
5aa751a181c0606809ae09cfa4b4e4b698a01a4b
describe
'2742012' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZS' 'sip-files00294.tif'
017a986a3407a631974cfa22eb8d7ec1
c5c6a8c84d68560ba0aa06caed0f2d7a5ff85050
describe
'2758960' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZT' 'sip-files00209.tif'
4301353c291aabaf0335cf4c82ab1686
14ee9ed15e5e6ebf514a4f976add93318b28bd5d
describe
'2504232' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZU' 'sip-files00097.tif'
b585e1a9fc70025d200c8062264337be
ac5c4864fd6de030e204ea310dadb0b212e46dcb
'2012-05-27T15:28:59-04:00'
describe
'2886224' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZV' 'sip-files00339.tif'
4a649a4716117d900edc3caa6b830e8d
412b84b5182a9e39e1e1346c2d20b31f4092ebaa
describe
'245771' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZW' 'sip-files00217.jpg'
a4ea12b86c9ba271716ba5f90f6affd0
536058ccd475f4213f56855f8aa3451d2240757f
'2012-05-27T15:28:07-04:00'
describe
'258844' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZX' 'sip-files00191.jpg'
9e695c61befddd6a142cf60d7f745665
f151a1eeaa30d9b40069c85854bc5ebd23dc7b07
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZY' 'sip-files00130.txt'
a24d858fc4b74d77e4c227b2e937d458
66c886714f8d93def453dc627fe6f7899305cb0c
'2012-05-27T15:17:54-04:00'
describe
'26518' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAUZZ' 'sip-files00360thm.jpg'
4e9f473d0483b42d13a71a92f1f3b6f5
83dbbae4f7819e6a806954e52f26be7117ed42d4
describe
'1782' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAA' 'sip-files00302.txt'
ecc5442dbe818de57666516ba82827e0
85b84c6bb8b765db0d947439de54e4684e9c54e6
describe
'42402' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAB' 'sip-files00069.pro'
9b0dbd81758ec6364e78dcb30b6d3270
a944ec448a4ec430c4b8294b13ba175b3f100446
describe
'2577636' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAC' 'sip-files00250.tif'
e9bc0b14c84b0155d71212ade1d54eb5
443146d5e610c04362c07d4d070ad3a9dbcf1712
describe
'2466208' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAD' 'sip-files00072.tif'
0d395c139ddc2c060b74ca1a0e4123ff
e9a02fb93657690a7916779cffbb004b009d45c8
describe
'1653' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAE' 'sip-files00079.txt'
fb3b249805fb594fd2a6c4c2925f68f0
4017de49dff4a67a508add1bdd3709f21465a44c
'2012-05-27T15:27:03-04:00'
describe
'43064' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAF' 'sip-files00170.pro'
498943593da8e1dbc0834a4c3a2f93ca
23c43628cbe51a43c0f194991b4bead9786da456
describe
'223028' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAG' 'sip-files00127.jpg'
a03ee5ddeca0e25d46bd01229f02902f
e6057483ec6c64029505e06269a3068595f1ed9f
describe
'2720440' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAH' 'sip-files00114.tif'
591a44b113b963b04d0f6fffc9dcd106
c16366e10836c89c36e780eb2c4327b6321e9737
describe
'2749500' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAI' 'sip-files00163.tif'
007ad0b696afadb73d3eecdb6031c08c
42055240d325894d91606495dbf787a282e8db57
describe
'81779' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAJ' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
f02b574fc26abe3a6cde35475ebbaa72
3f08f38e02d393eda579ec96fda8b145c841bb92
describe
'217780' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAK' 'sip-files00085.jpg'
993741be49b1ce1b434361d50313f2c9
17a4bcc8638371aafc607ac9d4b270f481549140
'2012-05-27T15:19:38-04:00'
describe
'192639' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAL' 'sip-files00210.jpg'
92c5bd644c356c043fcbf35dcd8a9850
6bd2aa7371f168a2e851f0240548e875fcaae846
describe
'43615' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAM' 'sip-files00265.pro'
23b88a85e9b369d36c2fab3913acd8ea
0e59b4da2e622f9e6f5a807c5c5cc10d03096090
describe
'42384' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAN' 'sip-files00154.pro'
278cb500f2d192a0f25efdfdaee30204
93d8fa09f3fb048f5017d53ffa18d1fbcccb90bb
describe
'214' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAO' 'sip-files00364.pro'
603e4944936205d43f4e2a67cf707b02
c03fb53e4f2bcf80461a1e61adb4f6e1073776f5
describe
'26629' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAP' 'sip-files00265thm.jpg'
3f137766d240c0109bc382eda9196e40
62321c84422ca1f31f9e4179dec42862c9b7e02e
'2012-05-27T15:20:02-04:00'
describe
'226821' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAQ' 'sip-files00101.jpg'
f24f0843e9b3102d77079ca7b6916b6d
d3e2b75d2939074b0756b47a134ce369524aed74
'2012-05-27T15:24:02-04:00'
describe
'1721' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAR' 'sip-files00199.txt'
28bd871e402441c7ba638089742cb183
ebc25622b4c12a1f49934ab6ee1e9fa3370e54d5
'2012-05-27T15:30:14-04:00'
describe
'27924' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAS' 'sip-files00096thm.jpg'
cfe76024608f59ec22a3378976f9161f
45f0a43e5fcb8fffb175af88a5bd19f28cb4b5da
describe
'1310' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAT' 'sip-files00009.txt'
6ef965538409c744545c25b83680f0ee
61a5a3905ab126ab50ce5b1e80a4b7094690e4c3
'2012-05-27T15:24:00-04:00'
describe
'221135' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAU' 'sip-files00352.jpg'
62665eed26204fbd6fbbb4501e8a1a49
c1036a2f685f5cd3f0a44d4cf2784a4e88820c0a
describe
'585' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAV' 'sip-files00286.pro'
18cc1fa24c2ed842843ca2a20e304cc9
7a4a764cc2d814fb5000906037e9a6517fe8c931
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAW' 'sip-files00179.txt'
1edaae31a72c6015000dad8693365579
fc3ae4f5b8283aeea62ccb9224b57c3a35a83a18
describe
'36200' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAX' 'sip-files00065.pro'
7ebf3c8506a01dd5a12ff54022fbc63c
8ab6209a7f3a4e1de6e449a7b166cc096676b1ad
describe
'25240' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAY' 'sip-files00158thm.jpg'
bb3e8257001106d42416a0e288fd4b62
3883ef697c0df3f890d123871342158b21209f96
describe
'319673' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVAZ' 'sip-files00142.jp2'
e85ad7b39f0dc2c01bfbb5efeaf9b9e7
64eed2028920298a9b573c7cd837f7220d2e7c86
'2012-05-27T15:21:26-04:00'
describe
'26004' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBA' 'sip-files00329thm.jpg'
ee91b6f4495d51185c89d1566eff20a3
2b2fa5569e5b64343f51b1f8975e9444d9a32635
describe
'2939768' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBB' 'sip-files00177.tif'
68e424341e58fd376c2cd5cd9967f103
2c21077b525add09998f4d0a7b606b9432dacbbc
'2012-05-27T15:22:36-04:00'
describe
'2651868' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBC' 'sip-files00011.tif'
2d893e8bc5b00bbfb704f978a969ae4b
e5af4f683ecfa64b45834a201561c35c378acf10
'2012-05-27T15:19:15-04:00'
describe
'43880' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBD' 'sip-files00084.pro'
3f63d630b40354ca8b1c64453e19a31a
38e9bc2dbfc586c541e572adb59710872b3ea683
'2012-05-27T15:17:32-04:00'
describe
'2715648' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBE' 'sip-files00248.tif'
3cc582d8880559555fc1c745d30fc9a6
e9f0327c6688dae6d03800930796b31f79647152
describe
'1699' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBF' 'sip-files00030.txt'
cb1a122056d2be25813bda843f4377eb
ec4802f84d4ce7785aa004f73fcea9fbc0cf9a17
'2012-05-27T15:22:29-04:00'
describe
'28796' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBG' 'sip-files00227.pro'
18146cec8c88986334a92399d01a1254
35f325287b975983077dc9a9a5e0363b172c1f74
describe
'28528' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBH' 'sip-files00218thm.jpg'
3ea39c8f2571f7e215907b698a75a0bc
22a783e3c19197d06f8cda727417e0af0bcbeb70
describe
'322669' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBI' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
474faca08934640bc1a9b13a725fc127
0dd5fc752d346b10d22c9e2b902aa5651e01ff94
describe
'339154' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBJ' 'sip-files00332.jp2'
3bd348413e9f81540601b53c104f1fc8
9fa3dcc28d31e7a04a321ec722940e0e5adf8eb4
'2012-05-27T15:26:44-04:00'
describe
'42862' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBK' 'sip-files00198.pro'
aad1d588d364692c2b4cb9708477560a
7492dfe076156ac32e220c1119ceb29d05df145d
describe
'220782' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBL' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
c7621d804fe31f84d2ece30d7f24e2f8
fbfe25167e13aefe918638e58836b46a1d489865
describe
'2797816' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBM' 'sip-files00297.tif'
0c33efeff5296a584c5b519552fe9813
6fb85b6341cd26253004a47cfe565b88b7c0d1a0
'2012-05-27T15:28:25-04:00'
describe
'356052' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBN' 'sip-files00196.jp2'
d1a88516fd5748b1ecc634d4590c1a8f
98d932bf6cf6aafb504787ac5e340d061c1fb846
describe
'225018' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBO' 'sip-files00104.jpg'
cff529eb4d0bd0b1479bf99ec6f9c064
d3ef027cdc236d58be4bbb88df52e684169329a3
describe
'75738' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBP' 'sip-files00325.QC.jpg'
5f4cce1858ef50093b3b7fa2066051e8
8d350931f5e9e165495c38c1b3f075d95c03fbe2
'2012-05-27T15:25:34-04:00'
describe
'226746' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBQ' 'sip-files00112.jpg'
d0a761e3d50e900a5fc95d3ab6373d94
d7c5c758f182333f8f50aada87438876dad245cb
describe
'2775776' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBR' 'sip-files00154.tif'
617414f355b66d7a132fd1a579df0b64
0bd4bd4b13a13c7e10e29d5a3305ae525d170099
'2012-05-27T15:19:25-04:00'
describe
'237694' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBS' 'sip-files00184.jpg'
d617d812e192663b8069b1b1b213f38c
9dd86982ea4a367d928f9f1db77b16a2989093ee
'2012-05-27T15:19:07-04:00'
describe
'225538' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBT' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
ba0491b80388d808612feae1167d31da
82ed8e8693ec4b4796e246ccfe9b22cfa79f51e5
describe
'1737' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBU' 'sip-files00311.txt'
dd6ed93fad3c7f2b6be866ce5d6468ea
f6151dcfbd12556c8281b5074b0fd5a8e9a8325c
'2012-05-27T15:28:27-04:00'
describe
'43293' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBV' 'sip-files00281.pro'
3ab4cbc08336bb121affad2b11be6ab1
39b991b393a8b0b05e0bed873bb27b2a905155a5
describe
'43475' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBW' 'sip-files00234.pro'
47ecd753c3ccab2966d16f510c04312d
bdf0360fce1bd20527cee337919d0a8ff168a0ff
'2012-05-27T15:26:43-04:00'
describe
'44339' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBX' 'sip-files00176.pro'
a996c94971ee89826023af6a28e5386a
4ddd251ee5b42dedc3f79db0b2509c4b212576c6
'2012-05-27T15:24:46-04:00'
describe
'33146' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBY' 'sip-files00247.pro'
03b33af09a58538888e28133be39cabd
7cd24b43c6108ab5021d78a7c75683b6fb252777
describe
'2703664' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVBZ' 'sip-files00217.tif'
c05168155fab39e9e7871c598cc39227
61dcb1dad4269447231a87c4020f270fc85549e8
describe
'235982' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCA' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
66d36b08c69754c95bc2cc11a389333e
257b92fa96de427a7b5e27e0cb792b3358301333
describe
'29796' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCB' 'sip-files00208thm.jpg'
6dda1935cf892afa8ef09047e3a177ec
fc473851bddaaca9bdc8718735165c8d9bb32a4b
'2012-05-27T15:19:39-04:00'
describe
'40472' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCC' 'sip-files00285.pro'
0bbc3c10d62c515d09f7571c955b96fd
e5b3f4e5af7614937a67acc6ff754ce483df0eea
describe
'25534' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCD' 'sip-files00131thm.jpg'
0c8c7ff3e71111fd5beec04de45fa9ed
1edb5de138af200cd8708b77641a1fd6cfc40518
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCE' 'sip-files00252.txt'
f88846d4b900b9d61c3937c97232cf27
4f8aaf338fd11b4a656c63ab3e4da1efbb419603
describe
'74833' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCF' 'sip-files00297.QC.jpg'
9f1ab7a1ad70d25723a2f47d8328a4a6
fb91ff95e3bf624533cd2a2a439ffb4841854fb4
describe
'25658' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCG' 'sip-files00145thm.jpg'
2f9f7b81d7956c96abc619e132f8b168
951d3d9090dfd0cb9a2fc2ecf0d6cae69cd784d9
describe
'22114' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCH' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
0216d8adfcc62b8254d89f0524e79b47
b7d8e52653ae3429b5d45400d26ea897ddc9c94f
'2012-05-27T15:25:25-04:00'
describe
'350559' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCI' 'sip-files00131.jp2'
4fb26c963b2c71a0484d0d05c1294a95
ec04e9a110f81daa952e9899a3281cf0e6fdf37f
'2012-05-27T15:20:51-04:00'
describe
'1704' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCJ' 'sip-files00245.txt'
2933bf1ab39e954c79892147f71451fb
166640e0b1b6e55db0edc30c9e50f4025509bbe3
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCK' 'sip-files00119.txt'
72c07e1298d8d38f9ea8a146552632e8
83f3881bb88326adeb64e6f2759b0f1940ec86a0
'2012-05-27T15:27:28-04:00'
describe
'2577692' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCL' 'sip-files00027.tif'
8dfd5dad1519e36015d8f898713eec6c
1c9acf4ee9c1cf7975f95159ba6f8b11437fef26
describe
'40312' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCM' 'sip-files00024.pro'
96223101c7b1c479c69c9d8a0819713f
3398d7623a1aee45e264fc0887a61c950c8df76d
describe
'2737712' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCN' 'sip-files00296.tif'
6f25cfebc23bad598993acdd0323bb0a
cf3b098b537ef6445f75c3bc5a4e1763d8c3fcf7
'2012-05-27T15:29:22-04:00'
describe
'1665' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCO' 'sip-files00109.txt'
d2c0180a2006f6836bb37f50023cf1f0
ea7504dcb393d5d8f1e34c63b2e6af5bef1ca355
describe
'44663' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCP' 'sip-files00016.pro'
db768f97a51235a13cdf003ac792dda5
63ec2846a2d8656affe922d47c598d8706ca26e8
describe
'1689' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCQ' 'sip-files00336.txt'
067dad00aec891794f2b5a58434e9e4f
1fb003442e930550f41f8f1674208e85163e0793
describe
'43387' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCR' 'sip-files00248.pro'
d7b90964cd231eb9fe9e3f20038a41f2
f3abacf92405708b07bf7bf74fc7076496da1b48
describe
'222968' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCS' 'sip-files00136.jpg'
fe8f4dc28947e8c706a8e7482a9e086e
61f75c0388d5b3dd645a423aea1fbe4621c52cf4
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCT' 'sip-files00052.txt'
49c221808fb0f8db98920f053f157499
abd2c9cf0f65d4241edc2015f927564f4e1c086e
describe
'26632' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCU' 'sip-files00196thm.jpg'
283e34612ea710140ff8e5f98bbdeb17
c54bf26192b2bfc44ab3f87d18713f716858f7cd
describe
'136308' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCV' 'sip-files00291.jpg'
a5b8ad69862cf21aaa0ec489f7f96acd
3cf3614bf1d948a2de4357e6de67a7588e553db7
describe
'1819' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCW' 'sip-files00298.txt'
c7e4022b6e04afcb4e7cf86edd96fbe2
a1e3623f3f501b33be63d262ab428e9aaa60059c
describe
'44454' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCX' 'sip-files00143.pro'
8060b317311b5c8d1e600097061e82bd
48c79c5cff5d3e7b059d48c8e76c5ce3d4438c3d
'2012-05-27T15:18:01-04:00'
describe
'2781784' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCY' 'sip-files00228.tif'
e29344645f7a1dc67ae54579a841598f
53e62697dcbca03a6dc4c88ba39b217c903f58ac
'2012-05-27T15:21:01-04:00'
describe
'81725' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVCZ' 'sip-files00193.QC.jpg'
f3fddd9f98138851687963dd99d66c44
c56776e9bc441aa798f2af8e2eff74c4ed9f8b5e
describe
'42499' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDA' 'sip-files00131.pro'
82b0014ec27133b418aadb994b54a9b0
4219c466031d7dd419d99d17bf74b2b362a0d349
describe
'71434' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDB' 'sip-files00337.QC.jpg'
fa0e478d3baef9579b2c559f8c218b61
bb370e29f476845e7e7c6cf575766f0a3c4045b9
describe
'27913' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDC' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
ad1efc045dcb84ae20d70bf906cdaf88
a63f9191c7d6b49a345a5172694a6f216757366e
'2012-05-27T15:24:42-04:00'
describe
'238284' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDD' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
366250093e0512f192619d0086462a75
2705028c9c91fd9b4e31a4bcaef1107076ee7227
'2012-05-27T15:30:51-04:00'
describe
'2782140' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDE' 'sip-files00329.tif'
eefcb4cea996881f6bc6828f81c01cb2
bf8d5aef7e80b1c9f676bdbae5f970d6ce2c9a9f
describe
'39834' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDF' 'sip-files00063.pro'
f7071f73533df1a50791d46be8380eac
a3d9ba32c27ad83ef1164119bed36de0b31f264c
'2012-05-27T15:27:46-04:00'
describe
'1688' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDG' 'sip-files00266.txt'
b965dc763264a4e7d5e8623a94ef9623
6166ce108a7eb49bdd85aa4d61d593a9b3c67394
describe
'213532' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDH' 'sip-files00339.jpg'
1a3953d49b181c84a7812523150d786c
c9ab04479cabdb577368bf4f5f72ab36207c1057
describe
'2668664' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDI' 'sip-files00238.tif'
0e0773bb4986235e6d2abc234137f098
68d8f6fdea4d0461c32c4c05249e0c30c63c44af
'2012-05-27T15:18:35-04:00'
describe
'206476' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDJ' 'sip-files00313.jpg'
e6889666d0f2b01b59adea85280df9b6
3e9557afba26b5a2dde15f63b6d8c9daba2f40fa
describe
'42266' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDK' 'sip-files00041.pro'
f8fedbae5703df42288815b918ee2c81
c1dfff68f33328e853fb01efd7aff9910e5015fa
describe
'224741' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDL' 'sip-files00130.jpg'
e35487e736f10263fec24e82876182ee
882233aff9e405ab9b8bdc4dcc27c6a076b55190
describe
'334849' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDM' 'sip-files00113.jp2'
441e8591ebb273fa027bc6c6477356c8
cc4bdfae9731f488fb046b822f9d7b57bbe456b7
describe
'78567' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDN' 'sip-files00356.QC.jpg'
0cb491b87005c176eb8ed9f6f0532c66
8adab5c94e4c29760451ad8f70b4bfc1970afc61
'2012-05-27T15:31:26-04:00'
describe
'28411' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDO' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
a7d4c5660373bc5f349ee79edce5ec4c
d50e42a96e2b64be77f081d344a7d55c9948c22f
'2012-05-27T15:29:15-04:00'
describe
'365660' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDP' 'sip-files00175.jp2'
12f7fefd8cd0796407f24b603603c938
30eb5ee1f0f3a63b01fb236cb9a5ab5853df4e18
'2012-05-27T15:25:24-04:00'
describe
'42584' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDQ' 'sip-files00086.pro'
60063c68a644fed01bde2c7b09129faf
a87375e7be1a7d896fa56b0faf4132cb1c69ba85
describe
'127337' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDR' 'sip-files00359.jpg'
b506c48999820cac496f3f3ed60b96e8
bb7b407b869fcdbf5ec0b2a6a0dccc2128fa3f1e
'2012-05-27T15:25:21-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDS' 'sip-files00223a.txt'
07aeab000e7093ed0df2ea0e5aa8ffe0
52d168736c916382ee7229012bc25716543ca888
describe
'24741' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDT' 'sip-files00160thm.jpg'
a4228785e4ed528d157824accba28002
d653fee92909702f07f2d09fb47f394ccc657cc0
describe
'42151' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDU' 'sip-files00238.pro'
3b1e85c21f90aabb5d3eac73d3471130
fe5de3880dab7f6aeab47a510fb4312b301e4153
describe
'2498656' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDV' 'sip-files00065.tif'
105d1d30f438183507404bdcb6c07adc
d034534c5531315100632b69ef1e01fa77f486be
describe
'28548' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDW' 'sip-files00097thm.jpg'
96d4678642101ab48b842f1e74bb027c
24cc8540014bdb73394a4ea7a73ea0135cedfe49
'2012-05-27T15:30:04-04:00'
describe
'78689' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDX' 'sip-files00111.QC.jpg'
ab05f334382a38a9d2221d7c0b781a58
9cb94c4551271910dad3297b01989b6534bb9f9a
'2012-05-27T15:22:58-04:00'
describe
'1682' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDY' 'sip-files00061.txt'
5b54b86e65ddef0d1c063b2ece9f7a5b
5d1ca21211dccfa10401144909ec70acedac5e1f
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVDZ' 'sip-files00213.txt'
5e0a6780bd74ab38f9d2b91decc7dff7
528f4a4b81c9792f7d970a2617b1d9b5438a6aaa
describe
'26876' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEA' 'sip-files00108thm.jpg'
966a7c68c04148311b97f61b66ce915e
debcc240b052d46184c60f0fdaddc2bf07d1972d
describe
'43371' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEB' 'sip-files00125.pro'
1954d7ab9693204b61efec4964c83976
095564fb0990f79ef82856c388371611f5f7210e
'2012-05-27T15:20:12-04:00'
describe
'46939' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEC' 'sip-files00277.QC.jpg'
96c23d94f328cce52465df24977f9981
ea908ff9c3c8550e734ef88db0f20196a6df150d
describe
'2523456' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVED' 'sip-files00144.tif'
43830425e67cb413cc0e9c9724cb7894
08c78721347aa0ab8745d77f7f8f7ecccd5226bf
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEE' 'sip-files00264.txt'
20d300ce9df5368abcaaca49b82f670c
cb5bc3da7a22412b749208dfd8b6aba56eef3ae9
'2012-05-27T15:30:19-04:00'
describe
'26203' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEF' 'sip-files00297thm.jpg'
8e70698cda8ad7098548b92ad8774d48
a5efd128faa26f8498e0a73ac0be875581a6bf70
describe
'34162' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEG' 'sip-files00362.QC.jpg'
8a7c44e47d9266ce11fe94b280cf6c07
2c629874d7851dfb1bad1243557c9376fcd8f9a2
describe
'41626' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEH' 'sip-files00141.pro'
b5ebbd9255768fd6a8a4668bc201a1bf
11b13dd6375a96a7c4684a3caf80333222cc73ef
'2012-05-27T15:27:30-04:00'
describe
'80744' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEI' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
c83f41654a0cd64c806e9152edc9dc86
eb3fee8bc6a3fdd71436e5b714f5a94127a8ecf1
describe
'2574340' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEJ' 'sip-files00184.tif'
44dd1c529cf3a04a61fd3ed4440590f5
8c7fa4cc415e1f0bb25c4e432466f5b3a4d7bc93
'2012-05-27T15:17:25-04:00'
describe
'75706' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEK' 'sip-files00124.QC.jpg'
12ba607341373166540d33d5e6d1ed59
56b1b1631d43b80e6d99aa78a61ad5ac21048462
describe
'220642' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEL' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
f664fd0ea3e794e0cf3b778b74769d18
8766f5283daffa14eb093633a8640f786e753a70
describe
'27801' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEM' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
edab803d2ebee43234c879a6d30f7fb9
da3b94479ef04cf235172226480de74af1c7a062
describe
'344017' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEN' 'sip-files00110.jp2'
0ea483e321419372c31549bc5d108994
7bb95248593efe3d3331b23d0e7009d76d505ad8
'2012-05-27T15:18:44-04:00'
describe
'342041' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEO' 'sip-files00199b.jp2'
69561eba273eafa8396323bbe958c3da
dd48e2243082ad15d7f527d96e9afe73dd32ecf8
'2012-05-27T15:23:44-04:00'
describe
'326164' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEP' 'sip-files00115.jp2'
345378323b7480b53033bc81b67a8028
99d36173d5a8d434093d65cd5048c4d142539690
describe
'337827' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEQ' 'sip-files00248.jp2'
5510d1aab6362f1678c14aef9f62dd2f
2eafbfe5c90ef7d53ec5694f0962b186cb618641
'2012-05-27T15:20:38-04:00'
describe
'499' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVER' 'sip-files00012.txt'
efe85af6ea673c65bb3f0f9bd89448a3
03b88eb5a6922d77f4533dd7b2c69666899f67c9
describe
'2834152' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVES' 'sip-files00202.tif'
7393921e5e19e5ccf48b29b91db986f4
e7d55a5e35a93f248741930189024b21f2a303f6
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVET' 'sip-files00063.txt'
501028785a3273c07daae1c320c330dc
3baadf625d7bf296bbea8d8168f75e228853cf4d
describe
'1720' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEU' 'sip-files00218.txt'
6f1146c723319561b09bbe26a1ae482e
c8c065a347be7f64992c489f7c71979443295d9b
describe
'44449' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEV' 'sip-files00251.pro'
168bf11f586540293ab52a86b78935a6
52f4bec0a588257bc2d37728f66083f1d4baf129
'2012-05-27T15:18:31-04:00'
describe
'74233' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEW' 'sip-files00310.QC.jpg'
a15333aaa3ffbdfe430bdc28d2177b9d
647cc78a62b2bac18a626a659ca7a1e54dec11df
'2012-05-27T15:22:46-04:00'
describe
'305512' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEX' 'sip-files00126.jp2'
3450a5479432e1935b82a5577a95afd7
2ee8409d8cb181819c2536c53a596e1d015119ba
describe
'346179' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEY' 'sip-files00228.jp2'
0c814c71e9888d4b049dbdb97a449f8a
58e5ac0f9046b6f87bdc3ba93b10efc4fc78d95f
describe
'1505' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVEZ' 'sip-files00065.txt'
c8f3347908068bbb13674e21135290b1
71b4ade050e988f1776e1d008c28bc273a886a60
describe
'1691' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFA' 'sip-files00100.txt'
744c152a933269a5a94a5cc05ebcedb5
b5779849976e6d0ff9d793ff4dc19cc74414c4e2
describe
'25422' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFB' 'sip-files00260thm.jpg'
160f800113bb9531aedc71a3bc94a00a
358f19c8836dcff49adad6f10c6091ddbf4b2a8a
describe
'26043' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFC' 'sip-files00113thm.jpg'
36e22da5ed29f9d7c0a79f64c63fba19
2bc05e3a3e9a79b38389844ce427ae72c2484c11
describe
'70944' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFD' 'sip-files00315.QC.jpg'
0d0a17b6e7253c21bc54085791a3e895
85a5f98de37e4396654a0d3ef2e30f93e1ac0277
'2012-05-27T15:21:48-04:00'
describe
'337129' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFE' 'sip-files00298.jp2'
5ec13e9daea858e31c66ec60c458b6ea
7e3c23c058f410c0d659a910f6211a7a132b3140
'2012-05-27T15:18:23-04:00'
describe
'77933' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFF' 'sip-files00164.QC.jpg'
ac2a059751f375c6f64b94b0e7d40398
003f75db3207c385c25f34110d92e1087a088479
describe
'28323' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFG' 'sip-files00138thm.jpg'
9b8e1101683178b325bf84214b42b47e
825d155ef32f2f93c49620de8cb47d1ddf8665f8
'2012-05-27T15:26:33-04:00'
describe
'2720292' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFH' 'sip-files00223a.tif'
c3778a61806b08ea3b41c7e0121e1c1d
fc2008c2deaa1e459355e3dfc4903d97f99eff2f
'2012-05-27T15:26:52-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFI' 'sip-files00113.txt'
853a041e3ad089d1e7247b0d44888135
67ad3a5bfa76211afe748154119e9ccf6e1261c6
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFJ' 'sip-files00112.txt'
492ba20efa235a4765c31a78c2a0ce20
f314a079ad946f6d273f8e9196efdcede9af6c80
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFK' 'sip-files00189a.txt'
c9ef05970c45acfebf7cd883d16fc47c
f87ab0186e7177ad25a9ca3405f5341c4eb6fe88
describe
'27221' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFL' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
74e5e5eab6ec7d2291f77de8696b8549
e713c15bf0495153a279b3faa94ad775e9f234ae
describe
'336094' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFM' 'sip-files00159.jp2'
769df2f7c1daeee031e9c890bdce162d
f91eeb01d742f287d0d2a2a71eb8814df52870d7
describe
'347590' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFN' 'sip-files00160.jp2'
ff7315512823a7246d64bcffa19df57a
595e077e8549f0873b50a856b48d2201e77a2f53
describe
'329118' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFO' 'sip-files00234.jp2'
509ed37f60eaa77a9312b07091309ae3
2bd1d9efa2ae90ecfb319ccb3617dac13c995035
'2012-05-27T15:29:51-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFP' 'sip-files00141.txt'
80e85891d990f8096e1b87c69eabb442
78b953c27469c5c69aa9ae80e492fb6bc9818a62
describe
'2580180' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFQ' 'sip-files00185.tif'
2309021748eaab8aadec1d70d0bb87e4
a82b391ba03459a48eadb19d50b856614a1090ca
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFR' 'sip-files00138.txt'
8d1bf3d160ba9692e00b40269ef0fffb
74a83637f0bf474b7282b61ca988703b9f6bbe4c
'2012-05-27T15:20:43-04:00'
describe
'237113' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFS' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
6c232c28dabd1f0406111a2c3a556e4d
25d41f03e8eeb8bb156a0fb4b8bef79f0dae2138
describe
'223837' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFT' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
483fb572ff9b66e1461c401aa432a35a
9c0f9c606958ef1d3b5cb22b045491c3e2c0cf95
describe
'352613' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFU' 'sip-files00202.jp2'
40a40c1740671a748f28fdec2f321a2e
6f9b34cfb25e4571a7b2c782004729a7ab2be053
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFV' 'sip-files00117.txt'
ce51409bfbc06d8e8d70ae757480d554
bb33567d378d534c28e2b6dcdb1427acc78c1be0
describe
'2822516' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFW' 'sip-files00167.tif'
f910e44f478e6b8c4efa324d73af0819
f81178066211419ba9d13cec92836ec68a3dd728
describe
'17189' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFX' 'sip-files00359thm.jpg'
068fb835b8d837f14c7b4a095e140913
32d39badfe4338bded5120d10a07c2c8e73db1f2
describe
'2739436' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFY' 'sip-files00145.tif'
bd5181e1f081396075bca1bf561a6978
538d86e1b5ac1d932ca30482375d78eb9fee2865
'2012-05-27T15:22:41-04:00'
describe
'354508' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVFZ' 'sip-files00351.jp2'
6422fa0c6b168e900c73a86e620b188f
09a31f91f5cabcfebcd522679abbf08a5dc13890
describe
'42215' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGA' 'sip-files00046.pro'
a8814b78bf47d16251b4b24798a4d8d8
3e910a301b8f91bd1d5ae22c6547c54815d0bde4
'2012-05-27T15:30:00-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGB' 'sip-files00220.txt'
699cc7d8b128b5b4369383f38fe376d9
43b26a869b301dbaf19de662c97bde3fb8ce1770
describe
'308592' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGC' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
2a63d4d7d78cc53d36bb0f99b1048a87
67c59d8ef34557605e3527683ee7bb723575187c
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGD' 'sip-files00309.txt'
00e62fc60999439a9dc00017ec8eed0e
fea688c89aa17ff9aec360ce79103c8e70bcbd54
describe
'1734' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGE' 'sip-files00129.txt'
03aba41620664907b9df4dfe549fb567
2c69a8aab4a51c90b7cf15014567c66f8fea5e17
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGF' 'sip-files00028.txt'
fcfe8b526209ff4dcdf933de1b90113c
d46b11913a3757eb0cc2a7c09b134824e196d9a3
describe
'26273' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGG' 'sip-files00309thm.jpg'
59d78e8dd66a8dbf86eddb4aff496127
00704d83b642689d369249fbf3c003b1b6952871
'2012-05-27T15:25:54-04:00'
describe
'213249' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGH' 'sip-files00161.jpg'
e052fa288cae5b83750d63204a010908
45dea1a9ad4fb0d9cd9b35ec8a19663e874dfb0f
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGI' 'sip-files00074.txt'
5105a7fe899f63941dff44254d001366
e6d014b0c1ef088abba49fc90610ac19bf4b7fe4
'2012-05-27T15:19:48-04:00'
describe
'337876' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGJ' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
5e7b4d0a10a6d1ee0e6939a158d9def0
0cc472c0a311d2ddc407dd6888cb22b13407b281
'2012-05-27T15:28:17-04:00'
describe
'326705' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGK' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
f60e23ff098c451ab515b4da59f4a4e2
d2d72c28b1609036a6f077b6f7ca6f8951a1cf1a
'2012-05-27T15:21:03-04:00'
describe
'46083' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGL' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
311c60c608b559e884ab2af2e7aa7c0d
32a401156c4ab40ec972fde9e4086820fb8eb6f2
describe
'2649928' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGM' 'sip-files00208.tif'
9b09af0b84e4ecd993957fb653831ed8
0387a46c190e798d4d3cd96b35de6c2fffa24733
'2012-05-27T15:18:48-04:00'
describe
'2626636' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGN' 'sip-files00130.tif'
d5d481f12d038fbaba2043460affb3ce
a1ff5ad46e51308a84a0e9972e68dd7c87b3545a
describe
'316337' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGO' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
64a531627952d87f3fdc17995c961193
95ce2415462310771907f0a2d8f7d4ea7a31d2b5
'2012-05-27T15:21:54-04:00'
describe
'353115' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGP' 'sip-files00357.jp2'
3ca76fb671fef363b0083cb8f6b42ed8
df056d728a73f70a623dbb4eb7b86943735969a0
describe
'52918' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGQ' 'sip-files00246.QC.jpg'
fad55ad977d8e0a27eb7db4ec68eaee9
c635397b5874597d73ad3f288b791a74f703883a
describe
'329279' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGR' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
a3ceb51c29e25db31dab5dec7dcb972b
15d740ea83f4b4dc707b905d5eb22d6c1b9ef090
describe
'217920' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGS' 'sip-files00157.jpg'
ca7c2a79cb60e444efc145704f1228c1
0f28f677c97ae9de3a378098c848ebd7422c470c
describe
'1695' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGT' 'sip-files00202.txt'
d27819be6ef6e836286c43710b7955f2
799eb87d76a3f264547bfa5db554560a5c89a6a6
'2012-05-27T15:18:15-04:00'
describe
'428610' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGU' 'sip-filesUF00027872_00001.mets'
efafb9ed60255af0a0ec7fac46457375
fe5b59dc20ead484c50271e1ab8289bb1514ec86
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/'.
'2013-12-06T19:50:53-05:00' '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/'.
'236250' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGX' 'sip-files00001.jpg'
7882c81b31686b2d053543154d33100c
7df9cb10a9dcd615ebf8d08c3c3aa346d8e26f4a
'2012-05-27T15:18:30-04:00'
describe
'121097' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGY' 'sip-files00003.jpg'
dc463257937182a26ba28c18bd931073
65cfc6095a9e73697d5dcf78942e9838948257c1
'2012-05-27T15:20:58-04:00'
describe
'130393' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVGZ' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
0a8effb190f9727abdd2ee6e2a955bca
18f2822fa01de785b816acc25580494c8fd06ee4
describe
'122395' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHA' 'sip-files00010.jpg'
0ee4b3f85ab628054cdefa9e3fc8e436
8927133a0696416067edb792d5125dcd55f83700
describe
'73290' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHB' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
fe14a68d239cdc1497732e06900fd0a7
85145b6910da30e8200c8c73379fa4b3943e6e57
describe
'173560' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHC' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
955e5518f32727da6f8cdc5ee1dd4b96
8a411f706f194c9e01a2f17a271367d2e35e86e1
describe
'218286' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHD' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
6a76d438a6010941e2993fa643e6d09b
72a740663c79a4c0f36fa17e5c30331ad5b5c5db
describe
'234473' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHE' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
cfecaa0b20e477a493a4dc1ae1b501d6
6f351de8b636efc75129dd1202d85f29ae10c8a1
describe
'242008' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHF' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
5462011fc3d5ac032c492189338118af
82283bed398e578d63c76dd480588a060ca2fcbe
describe
'212123' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHG' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
e5f27e651161f9d4617bb1d9c4fb3c4d
5542473ff220dcbe1773159143111c39cbeda10d
'2012-05-27T15:26:06-04:00'
describe
'225498' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHH' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
477b78a88a64fead9d7ef5750213ef6b
28aab4615e83cd4871e354ea051c0b42e4a1c274
describe
'232384' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHI' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
c80a3e6421cdf86eb470354b1f3e4791
c36241a5ee7b6c2b17ddd7419c92f228e24edb0b
describe
'232857' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHJ' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
595502df5d514542520b5895437f4636
4b6f584c0958b260a71b76c0027e777ff97ec0f9
describe
'246091' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHK' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
33293496cc7cb044b396367a8a9cd3a9
6964d814984b68bd61086f7cf70062931c200c0f
'2012-05-27T15:19:08-04:00'
describe
'224984' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHL' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
121e56ebe8fc3261064db5e691c1f6b6
8acc99cc471a878c45d4f4c7f8e53c78475fed52
describe
'238034' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHM' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
031ab598c329fb5441106ad9a2cab0f1
19c1f852d093df81b74e37475c511c0480aeb369
describe
'243858' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHN' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
4f2919a589e7476ff4e8f59f2b5b7d1d
4b1d8f7d27d50e8b712b3ec07c683136a90ad92a
describe
'229949' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHO' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
1ded9fb49f75f6254288ae5d73d8f3f3
6358d3e8f6f61369fe452f81a1c0a97101962f35
describe
'237905' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHP' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
273743699f12184f7e1b05b4b58b616a
7141dec7c6f00f9c8fcd84f61458ff6674bcc363
'2012-05-27T15:20:32-04:00'
describe
'230081' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHQ' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
feac1242b170640f3a4c44da31637486
7d800af15b0726efebceec06b6130d9bed068ccb
'2012-05-27T15:17:43-04:00'
describe
'235116' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHR' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
8b318d27f9476231bf619edfac06be20
bafd9c6ff4caa2ce68b1093dc165979e77c43705
describe
'240217' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHS' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
7e6e5968805a2b3dc0818922390dff6c
9d61b6415ea696b3cc4ddaa275203786fd6ec915
'2012-05-27T15:26:22-04:00'
describe
'244873' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHT' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
10748e033dce384079fe28d6c9947519
159ac14d31dcb863340d932f795c86ead0e66ff0
describe
'241147' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHU' 'sip-files00052.jpg'
e61f305ab7d0c1ce6a702d337557c165
94c36bee0c4dc0601fc11e36d6b25534348446ec
describe
'227993' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHV' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
c4ebcc46a63e11a6f7eeef16acb4091b
d2bccbde9dc5475078203be3bc50f9bbf497c635
describe
'261561' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHW' 'sip-files00054.jpg'
5abc291c06a7483047004140211289eb
8042ba674f9b2ee999675eb954dfaba28fd21621
describe
'226221' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHX' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
adc2e2a748422c871e4739dbc3ffae6d
96308cd6674843df9631a0983f9fd0c534171922
describe
'226364' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHY' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
9c2296c087db641098ac845120151546
dea2f7c5ceaa1ff557b570e1a1d1b7febb70029a
describe
'237112' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVHZ' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
b63cff8f60b370c71f18c8a653c31ec9
875418e59a96a45b8fb7e858d5ca1538fd38d8cf
describe
'230655' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIA' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
22cb76538cd7b350003f8198ae54ffc9
a36900cfbe4f2aa985ecdcf3ca2c80dd9163b6d5
'2012-05-27T15:18:24-04:00'
describe
'229260' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIB' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
79c867b3668b02d3fbcbc934f5378d44
b6adbf3bde5d3f2347d62045d526285e5d4cfcb9
'2012-05-27T15:31:11-04:00'
describe
'230488' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIC' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
9cd209529e9c110f89292779ed72009a
c82da1cc5073b0fb505116c400457f2975ea600b
'2012-05-27T15:19:21-04:00'
describe
'234584' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVID' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
f49b1eedbe794024da977dcee2cf0b85
7f8a6f9c1a4c208cf33b8ffe01861f55aec6aa94
describe
'238522' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIE' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
b71d8a2113ca9820473b5807052a4097
8c6be618de465fad03c2294ab6d5357f7f0bb902
describe
'217011' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIF' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
9d661b31228dd060a0618953d576d69f
67eb2251bfb3707c2fc1aaf0a2daacec8c5422fe
'2012-05-27T15:28:51-04:00'
describe
'160032' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIG' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
2dd344051d1465d670908365dd2a767e
36185deb6a5f3959bd0bafcdec50acad22ae27cb
describe
'234356' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIH' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
66543e4e9cbeabe32e2fcb4256db8b32
132e3ab32e0185ea3c8247aa9926b1b8114fe05d
describe
'221520' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVII' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
e31396d5b5404415d202348356d0f187
766e0be0089db1c0c18a0df7386eb2fe25904225
'2012-05-27T15:26:54-04:00'
describe
'230630' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIJ' 'sip-files00083.jpg'
b04796434bfcf6d8b14d10342da03c17
612ec27b6413fa4a8cff54f6e3270ba09cb9be92
describe
'238858' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIK' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
e6a2cebca3739b8b182552de06922be6
8bb2bf4885eb8b45545508d05226ee50df171b0f
'2012-05-27T15:18:12-04:00'
describe
'230763' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIL' 'sip-files00087.jpg'
886190cb9f732f46cc685d267a9f7f01
28b94c37c81342e275ba0616a7346a66bb120bb7
describe
'168540' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIM' 'sip-files00088.jpg'
4a8777e164a157649939292cd48ff91e
2b0df13aea21a8622b47d5aae4a1c45a51b71acd
describe
'220508' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIN' 'sip-files00089.jpg'
81808a86e42943f2d00e6714ce3c38ea
6e8959749fe0ff74f2ceddda3258bd09e7fb9952
describe
'218698' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIO' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
7d9733a991cde31b8d7e2aa582d1f244
73fdab58177a308011f55d32c14a5ab2d300779d
'2012-05-27T15:17:26-04:00'
describe
'229899' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIP' 'sip-files00094.jpg'
65dc22cd583882194d09f9693025b9dd
f1a879aed2d36ffa63c444be37cbee1117eaa4fe
'2012-05-27T15:23:02-04:00'
describe
'213825' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIQ' 'sip-files00098.jpg'
f287e063bceb66d61db783559f4d7d5e
b09a7eead27f0aff426b74f5b4255e29893ea8cc
describe
'189687' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIR' 'sip-files00099.jpg'
8750f8f31f6d83a282c1dfddc2a64bdb
8fb8d541b6012fcfdda9129907ee7a5b8c8b83be
describe
'219307' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIS' 'sip-files00100.jpg'
1029694d234795daba7f6e65bd8c554e
8f4682c3b559617302a0bdda15e41b4ea24be313
describe
'222402' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIT' 'sip-files00102.jpg'
91a0632faf1a7dafcaa8a305e2ec42dc
f940c5ba3b04e8291230ab8ae0528f18dab8d36f
describe
'216432' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIU' 'sip-files00103.jpg'
9969b451e0aa606317b095fb0b9e9d4c
98604055fc5a24b083ecfccca6f89038c23d8233
describe
'219744' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIV' 'sip-files00106.jpg'
82a252c09ff0157aecca3eaa025b2073
ca463634128d4a5c7959db3372b4c0e8fb5d495c
'2012-05-27T15:25:55-04:00'
describe
'210370' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIW' 'sip-files00108.jpg'
fd1177f3dcf1741b333277fc7f5c8a28
40fe64f94884fc9dc0489d4220f6fa3fb6c13d7a
describe
'213117' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIX' 'sip-files00111.jpg'
8cae4e4a6b85d1d484b2a02ef6b4f095
0e06236a911cd2344b4b1e87a3f68dfab0fd5ab9
'2012-05-27T15:18:19-04:00'
describe
'208685' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIY' 'sip-files00113.jpg'
22f494bfff9157de8262332dddc282f8
6bd4a597b8237f76afc5641a089acc4dec06831e
describe
'218361' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVIZ' 'sip-files00114.jpg'
340ca495f765cc6e3cbf2a1dff6e1211
d593b6727d679076e4a90e28f1a98023377cb565
describe
'214148' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJA' 'sip-files00116.jpg'
2591fb18877f37d38c74006c8edf9c88
9246f44f64c8dc09073089bd9e5d99394df4aadf
'2012-05-27T15:24:50-04:00'
describe
'233568' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJB' 'sip-files00117.jpg'
79a52e2250f2866adb1a260895ca08a3
a049a9dd91c5f769c811e770177e12e2fb560007
describe
'229245' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJC' 'sip-files00118.jpg'
7440b3c9423ba97b6f9450b89fb3ae08
2e9f26fe0b4ee31808cb0a3d829815c93ea6f157
'2012-05-27T15:25:50-04:00'
describe
'210189' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJD' 'sip-files00120.jpg'
e855a144f7543ab44ea87939e47dc1c3
a5da54f479674db2a663d20078b92beee66e6e0e
'2012-05-27T15:30:39-04:00'
describe
'186586' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJE' 'sip-files00122.jpg'
f044434fc56c3fab874689f02d62f27d
8dd44292bbfe8e140cf7086274c6aa22c881d606
describe
'214692' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJF' 'sip-files00124.jpg'
2cc1a0e723873cd25085323d55ff9a0c
524178f0597f01df62fd0e1459371a66e8e9fc7f
describe
'220523' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJG' 'sip-files00125.jpg'
13f66120361a5bd9b4a1bb60cbb5059a
ff655563849eb67daf75a95d4f3d95c693179075
'2012-05-27T15:29:43-04:00'
describe
'222363' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJH' 'sip-files00126.jpg'
be1621ef8c08181a03a042f6b31333f0
b8d5299594fc0e8554fdeaa809096b436a457737
'2012-05-27T15:20:15-04:00'
describe
'228175' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJI' 'sip-files00128.jpg'
c92f22ec87c1927d44fcb203615fac80
67b44a494d29bcdf3dae1ac244669fff945d7269
describe
'229209' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJJ' 'sip-files00129.jpg'
6ce9bc9f65f306fb1614f0cd929fbc3a
2587f6e664664c3d46aa2a7c5bdaa04b7b36cda7
'2012-05-27T15:23:57-04:00'
describe
'211220' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJK' 'sip-files00131.jpg'
c5dedf091c05b9c8534f5635268404c0
f330f1a105572140cdc8c30c642cb0883a6f042b
describe
'226707' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJL' 'sip-files00132.jpg'
92fa72e7e6ef69f68d2b321625dd9615
d030d331d02a15d45b7d0b158635095431b98cba
describe
'230390' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJM' 'sip-files00134.jpg'
e94373c3c88e65e25fd6d20e0049c3f9
2980bcb07abfeee51070b1ff8483dc1a5d9c84df
describe
'127511' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJN' 'sip-files00137.jpg'
66f922599c7c92a252bab9c927c5d08b
7cf4e33249826ca05f3f8353779f8a5db3d4d481
describe
'229378' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJO' 'sip-files00138.jpg'
4e292762e2bc6c2c773330c4681b2ada
9e0a7a78f1bdf54f738f1ac38479f78ebe49a831
describe
'213982' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJP' 'sip-files00139.jpg'
8e75778a00e9c7e0d2840ff1f789e857
5317cd19b1d5c86929826199be4b725e883754f8
'2012-05-27T15:20:50-04:00'
describe
'231829' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJQ' 'sip-files00142.jpg'
bde127753afaf5c6aab450186b2704e4
3ad9817c0cfb7ef3ed720c58f9b6a9f4ccb9cf5a
'2012-05-27T15:20:36-04:00'
describe
'226900' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJR' 'sip-files00144.jpg'
d850a1cceecc8e4ba96a79fa0e63b9b5
e96bc663b7178ddaf2297e9c7965414845f5756e
'2012-05-27T15:21:08-04:00'
describe
'216700' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJS' 'sip-files00145.jpg'
779edc054b202d7f4929c566f21ce6b2
697ae4b2b9aa23f960d94ebb922c98c385d1aa2e
describe
'217351' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJT' 'sip-files00147.jpg'
5a598e63eeed0c4d54ca9745d2a533a0
4ecdfdea1f153ff4b9efb7ee3de1285cd6b09f78
describe
'215572' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJU' 'sip-files00149.jpg'
f19b90a07e92486430cf0885d2df333f
420a54bef1dfd9f9b89b752f53e965e0443947eb
describe
'208617' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJV' 'sip-files00150.jpg'
50ed0b446e9a06433bf6439fc78b929a
c9bfb25e4d2a4da6ac5337e00bccc4dbcdbf9624
describe
'216556' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJW' 'sip-files00151.jpg'
7a73be77bd0a01f1536ccc0a8a78fc14
4b6a4a42ea46e20db2d1f681f5ec5c221fadc7c4
describe
'205475' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJX' 'sip-files00152.jpg'
0e93743bfa637c8c169951641bf1d0c6
bc8a9074161ecfce9a22b025ede1ee1b234227bd
describe
'223590' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJY' 'sip-files00153.jpg'
ce543217e20bde54a3ab88ce0e9a2650
15093ae2b7f9cf62779a0e2b0fd0f1b0cbb7c44b
'2012-05-27T15:25:15-04:00'
describe
'208710' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVJZ' 'sip-files00154.jpg'
e951eaf9439c25f37aabb8ac8399d449
b4380f66b34085274ea010b2889487424b6c0dc8
describe
'214838' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKA' 'sip-files00156.jpg'
095d93275d708cf0834c9dd71c349ec8
549e76a64d2639241d0db4d0c35d2f74ea4c165e
describe
'209179' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKB' 'sip-files00158.jpg'
9cc09f67e19f84de5ad7b0191577bd5d
b20529f39a95699b3099b9448e64a5b24d900e39
describe
'204163' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKC' 'sip-files00160.jpg'
7da9f6a390eeef1e56ba9e4488612369
62cdad997f1a688315bfb5bf64f55220bb9bff49
describe
'221957' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKD' 'sip-files00162.jpg'
004ecdacf66c585f51006bfdccfbfdf7
fa12c1bfda8223aa1bf11175b24cc4acf04c8f2a
'2012-05-27T15:22:15-04:00'
describe
'216422' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKE' 'sip-files00163.jpg'
0bd391da9b6ed8972333836e9594222a
bf9d0179a12f89db78d2db0dcbb438e5c904276e
describe
'217808' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKF' 'sip-files00164.jpg'
923de93d30c92bd366d49c67dc6db3fe
f50ae960f6539dc3aaaf3895ee9e16af0c927839
describe
'195599' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKG' 'sip-files00166.jpg'
f4009147f61aa497e28fd1282c2a5059
1ed895b030d6d783a774e5500a71eab02738226a
'2012-05-27T15:26:55-04:00'
describe
'208881' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKH' 'sip-files00168.jpg'
0c4ba7e79f0c36a469a616c9e33f2b58
64c2848b583d54413f762f7a467ae7cdabc264c7
describe
'215467' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKI' 'sip-files00172.jpg'
a38a480c8086cffd92d521a5516a292e
c1dde475630ea6db4f04f93e940606c7e104edf3
'2012-05-27T15:18:51-04:00'
describe
'217054' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKJ' 'sip-files00173.jpg'
80783ecc3b24a625b1eee7b66b67eff8
7fbe4bc7b9e729dec87fb88ac7421bd67be526f5
describe
'200642' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKK' 'sip-files00174.jpg'
9babbe5c6ad2990b2eec95c8bf0be224
2df4c9743b52be35c035651eb87ee3ab549dc4b0
describe
'215466' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKL' 'sip-files00178.jpg'
229adfb79e754df9824db31ebaa07f1c
3a15a0ee313517cadfec6710d04c694b7aa2afe9
describe
'205079' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKM' 'sip-files00179.jpg'
0f89a1631f105c007d8bbe9a7d55213f
da6498b81621aeb38c2abbb384d7e9102c296f85
'2012-05-27T15:18:05-04:00'
describe
'219391' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKN' 'sip-files00180.jpg'
4b1039cc718ebfa7208f44ab36e73bec
719c6d0563bcf0e45e6f797dfd8038f664f62328
describe
'211408' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKO' 'sip-files00181.jpg'
6362610296d719728ac86c15ed8977b4
101d1d6f7a823172562c9182d42a4090579ec7ff
describe
'222497' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKP' 'sip-files00182.jpg'
11df373682e91fd6da3616bc5732ca25
2e3474809a1345eb0d1fab75ecf9ab5068798ba8
describe
'229839' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKQ' 'sip-files00183.jpg'
78edf1a9d8db6958afff1838ae8ad1fb
9d3997afe6900689b22ee8d8092512a8120a7810
'2012-05-27T15:18:04-04:00'
describe
'242024' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKR' 'sip-files00185.jpg'
0bdbd98f48a453677d61a36c59a642ec
c6f4f903dc05d773009bcd3ce30c521ff50fc98f
describe
'220169' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKS' 'sip-files00189.jpg'
1d532cc876fa77d406cb4d8acac5a3c2
3b029916483893ef02cbf7324bb0c266aee753ee
describe
'218254' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKT' 'sip-files00189b.jpg'
97ca0d51bb6860bc6b8422f80e581212
6753ffd5d5f79f662cae175aeb9fb20db3019d94
describe
'235778' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKU' 'sip-files00190.jpg'
d001712cea925e5d43fe4d03a822cad7
c72e69142651ba85baf2712839c4535e4fd716a4
describe
'247423' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKV' 'sip-files00193.jpg'
2a6c18bc505532938221933bd4aac374
2f3ea7683001e0dca4dde1110a535d64682017ee
describe
'245281' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKW' 'sip-files00195.jpg'
49ee31413b17de071a080b4c43ecd751
c3ea91a630760d1b2a8de85ed9b80c1aee445ae3
describe
'223038' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKX' 'sip-files00196.jpg'
1b39e1ffbbcb439b5706b3463381b980
437e91e8a5afd44b6278fdac5f7dc514995edcb3
describe
'249002' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKY' 'sip-files00197.jpg'
a359f172b7c20fbf75c275b9e6a1a324
1ad5f67ec0492c11d16c0e5d31ece28a58dfcdfa
describe
'234692' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVKZ' 'sip-files00198.jpg'
cd18093e37699f2c249b4fb5940a08bf
9e6ff6e9827cb1f1f76a9be71ae6dbc77b83e6eb
describe
'221982' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLA' 'sip-files00199a.jpg'
ba182bd0888feafad2881b5a3a107367
c4641cb762179f08562a2e7a7a67c6523cb7c923
describe
'219424' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLB' 'sip-files00199b.jpg'
8e882955081726151c39c8ffd6ee1a2b
3653b98ad3244d787f93c17b5ded658f8ea37450
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLC' 'sip-files00202.jpg'
0f98fcab15dd2075bd21ea8e0c21f53e
6942710fab8c21d250b79b64e5d379a9a0a70d9f
'2012-05-27T15:28:31-04:00'
describe
'179195' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLD' 'sip-files00203.jpg'
8d04d331cd045db00c4921a3c870627c
7d1423985d17701b1372b959c0ab2ad2a2ff7012
describe
'247592' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLE' 'sip-files00205.jpg'
df9ff592cde85aab907b4fc2cd99b230
f1c7d991d1c44863a6f71cd2e84bb3bfcc3e709d
describe
'236461' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLF' 'sip-files00206.jpg'
6a83b5d8c820e6d33dab91a61168dc57
68d52d97496bab9de613b1d093bc76687b003337
describe
'235581' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLG' 'sip-files00208.jpg'
79c010ddea1897933bc0dbaa8c9a5450
252f1837c39b6ad804a88079dd1569ba2fcf1439
'2012-05-27T15:29:01-04:00'
describe
'190286' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLH' 'sip-files00212.jpg'
dedb06363364b6ec21de1f0f83a634aa
62a1a8d5a4b2f42a8e9b7bf0bed7f716d6a44207
describe
'209042' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLI' 'sip-files00213.jpg'
fc9e1b8e010cd2cad6396952300ded94
e720d2a3ca65988c0ea1068a235f8219b8432f81
describe
'246651' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLJ' 'sip-files00215.jpg'
ef16e305634ff13a35916351ecdd30be
64814727d52e88c59a5c780aa3350791aaac0d6d
describe
'228096' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLK' 'sip-files00216.jpg'
2e10e26e8645659b14f24e316d8e8154
8b0561aa035244639b88d8a65b6f91c9db84a04e
'2012-05-27T15:29:18-04:00'
describe
'235667' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLL' 'sip-files00220.jpg'
5d46ae4a454bfbf4ba99367300181eb1
15ea5a74c3876b0d7e9686c2f53ae0640c6f1d67
describe
'234767' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLM' 'sip-files00221.jpg'
a6265d98b3119b0b4959b362c2957351
fbcec811fb0b58ca15cf124e655c36bcb62ceab1
describe
'232416' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLN' 'sip-files00223.jpg'
6fccae254b4d9a66d4f78b794fd4acb2
214cc3507036ded4a5645eafa3f114eca509f156
describe
'217193' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLO' 'sip-files00223b.jpg'
3edfe552fdcc70449883dc6a1029ed99
3bb4ac0cf1b7320d22d29e12d23f3dda85eff7dc
'2012-05-27T15:23:00-04:00'
describe
'228708' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLP' 'sip-files00224.jpg'
05fe067bb8f728ea4d345986ca4d90f6
bacba1bcb5a467f2ff9672a260a51609784a43be
describe
'227919' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLQ' 'sip-files00225.jpg'
223c781d08632fc7cd0786131469d978
8577ad03e641cfadf41d40a88f9f1e394c1b52ca
describe
'178771' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLR' 'sip-files00227.jpg'
c16359218e75d282db68580ff7de2724
64291ca7df1f6b3b06a921ae2c4595f37d2f9914
describe
'249849' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLS' 'sip-files00229.jpg'
61568ccd24352bd1120b7026c869476b
6f01f0bb2cc6ecdc77b39839d3cb021e04efedf2
describe
'240289' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLT' 'sip-files00233.jpg'
ecc157285acb4ce3464b9b983cb5a395
12a1b5d3f78c44bed696066a743b5bb46a428128
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLU' 'sip-files00235.jpg'
89b0d9afd1ce9773f189cd17969b58c4
b5ab4a2dc4bf5f5381862a80c20460d02b693e1d
describe
'248784' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLV' 'sip-files00236.jpg'
df136695c788895d78a345529b256d47
a7a971a2b1f65f04b3857f378bbeb241169e6acc
describe
'234695' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLW' 'sip-files00237.jpg'
80fd1e150c1681e3625e6afeb4d1b42b
9622a08766079462ffcec5a12beeef53fbd267f0
describe
'244050' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLX' 'sip-files00238.jpg'
ddff0d071a379b93d35e854b49d53ed2
f0961edf6865878b4e0a0791f9267c44109bb016
describe
'235455' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLY' 'sip-files00240.jpg'
34766d76fda4f14bce3a3993f425fc0b
0a5722f51e11fb28d08a780cde3ccf6cf13deb02
describe
'236051' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVLZ' 'sip-files00245.jpg'
ecbb9dfd480092e1d8734a775a7183fa
39f041bf93b693716c8912ce06f02e58a419bc91
'2012-05-27T15:25:33-04:00'
describe
'164050' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMA' 'sip-files00246.jpg'
b033a0b4655293f2036f02ce0b3e47ce
5ce89996a33912cf4a4dce1fc51f32fb15028414
describe
'249552' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMB' 'sip-files00248.jpg'
79b429229039017298832a5c48ba2289
f482234645d411b0ae82dac2ddde8d1af0761e0c
describe
'240108' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMC' 'sip-files00249.jpg'
e2ef13ed8218d692eaf65ba2a6af93a9
09bc0ab787d078e026e48047255896969f381771
describe
'249055' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMD' 'sip-files00250.jpg'
597624be499494056b04e315b399c36e
6796a572337c6b4a69f26f86f8e04c6705fca0c2
describe
'236885' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVME' 'sip-files00251.jpg'
7f7df4c067e1da4ad239ad9eff9a3ea8
77c5ce297ec86a4dc8fd5703e81f3c79fe17d17b
describe
'260470' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMF' 'sip-files00252.jpg'
79a7ba370853dae2874434ab89210ede
617f52ae365389877081b7083c87238d9e0f7e5e
'2012-05-27T15:24:29-04:00'
describe
'251112' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMG' 'sip-files00254.jpg'
2f8abbfa5a0f70345bb6b8187e974d88
b7db74a1cf56af782d9a3ad04b6f7f1840738c1b
describe
'213112' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMH' 'sip-files00259.jpg'
de149cc881455217bc76f1a838226c87
6c0409c34890db1421b57e80e2afafd336a3053e
describe
'205886' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMI' 'sip-files00260.jpg'
9d5390dbf44890e7f79a3a0c30f27128
b4d39c51bb392737ff82616b3815cd082470617b
'2012-05-27T15:31:24-04:00'
describe
'214617' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMJ' 'sip-files00263.jpg'
0547daaabbc75b51de29e67181310a45
1c3d18b76d3ea26812143389ba32f68894ba9235
'2012-05-27T15:27:37-04:00'
describe
'209465' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMK' 'sip-files00264.jpg'
a64fa1531d765f750a6fafd0fe1f094f
ae84bd5ded3061949ccb56e177ca5db82b935558
'2012-05-27T15:28:21-04:00'
describe
'223761' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVML' 'sip-files00265.jpg'
4d770af4bcb7722746229a6adc7eb589
078b1ac53170f17cedf0f271dcdad0d334c66180
'2012-05-27T15:27:13-04:00'
describe
'144448' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMM' 'sip-files00267.jpg'
5aff3aeff7f4dcb2e46e557b919267ca
f20d3f535b2892b6dc319c8c20e93208aae31813
describe
'218123' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMN' 'sip-files00269.jpg'
c259741f71f72460202b4e2b179b2dba
8f78049cc81e7d2590563a66c153577d82d4431b
describe
'211394' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMO' 'sip-files00270.jpg'
81ff8f55d1977658a98845ff9fee183f
613f616fdd7a6b0c7a0ccf16ffcbaf31bd679898
'2012-05-27T15:27:26-04:00'
describe
'206796' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMP' 'sip-files00271.jpg'
5607bce79d3c20a04752457c860f117e
939597e615ae6d05309660cd1fb9ae65c23bd1f0
'2012-05-27T15:26:21-04:00'
describe
'213830' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMQ' 'sip-files00272.jpg'
a77fc11a3265a142fff34e975c15ad58
94ffa18036316e20e275d7a2b4638149c3ca550f
describe
'221588' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMR' 'sip-files00273.jpg'
5cb982d36d6cbf88f2949aee6ef27408
8ea245e230c89f104309cb7c88db2e8845f89a8e
describe
'203664' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMS' 'sip-files00274.jpg'
e673cb14563a4e66aaa16a5276b868c6
773c58f41e6ed51184faaa6ffe8233a5d832eca8
describe
'219887' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMT' 'sip-files00275.jpg'
d0aed4887dbed51cc3a9b9ffeb734504
effafcb0cf2ef11d7557100683467cbe147be2ee
describe
'170083' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMU' 'sip-files00276.jpg'
b87a16748c5de73158004f6936ebf11d
009fcd33ee772fbc7cec81b8b38f79feae3ba6eb
'2012-05-27T15:30:50-04:00'
describe
'145129' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMV' 'sip-files00277.jpg'
2352fa6370afa77fbb61ed90a7fe5ab6
f80c00577856abb7876a8e9a7261a9d496346168
describe
'201211' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMW' 'sip-files00282.jpg'
67588618f7932cba24f6ce6ab7e2d521
edd79f578c85c03eca79baf79b7365acd8ea329c
describe
'214486' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMX' 'sip-files00283.jpg'
078b6bc85355db23d297663372528b4b
b3249852967f71bff4db137d6db603a4dec5204d
'2012-05-27T15:29:05-04:00'
describe
'219349' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMY' 'sip-files00285.jpg'
5beacd7eca7c532d716125ce6135f67d
6115f57ab6f44da7b8993ee558cfb45ecbe28a90
describe
'219354' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVMZ' 'sip-files00290.jpg'
428d8aa3a8a6459eb4a028a3bd2ff48a
dd3ccc795e57482b0db10936977e46c5dbfd2434
describe
'181320' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNA' 'sip-files00292.jpg'
0b6246e6eae37323cb069d4c163cd696
c6bb3adb8bc66e72d9af15dfc71d2512260c1447
describe
'218436' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNB' 'sip-files00294.jpg'
d5f1dbb8786a76122afb982af927e8ec
28e38e6eb5e4f27a7906590d1a10465bc05a848e
describe
'220248' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNC' 'sip-files00295.jpg'
a7b32e15e1f0423cd456a2a6bf02a436
0d9689b01f5e1fc1fb5454e2bb60e6552e3caf58
'2012-05-27T15:20:00-04:00'
describe
'217449' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVND' 'sip-files00297.jpg'
2fbc33714bff459d9fe10ad9be696bba
b088005a16343ddb560bceae8397c1ff1e684fe0
describe
'266356' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNE' 'sip-files00299.jpg'
92665aafdc5eff02e83d5d71cb750d3a
01cf252705dd3a9a8df34230dc52e31528eb241b
describe
'219706' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNF' 'sip-files00300.jpg'
53b4f531b2a946015f507c8c3c52ae10
14341fe48d4d6ba02269dddf2480d780b8d1503a
'2012-05-27T15:27:02-04:00'
describe
'220271' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNG' 'sip-files00301.jpg'
e2c0306b85dc7af15d452164528d34a2
49b517e946ad397d828add269b5c33463ec70978
describe
'218970' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNH' 'sip-files00302.jpg'
060dfe762e23fc460cf88c6233094e50
fbdc71977e91e2aeb6accc629cb019dbf276a01a
'2012-05-27T15:19:36-04:00'
describe
'204292' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNI' 'sip-files00303.jpg'
98f39bc283855dc35a6bbd029b4bca0b
36ceb70bf46c4a04cef0fba5f7f5f8a7b1c68671
describe
'205732' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNJ' 'sip-files00304.jpg'
290b2221d4df285fb07e84fc92e42f48
4b316ddfe0adcd03963762fe4499c61c2010ba03
describe
'214934' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNK' 'sip-files00305.jpg'
863777853cab8f6c4acb7147cc639918
8751c34b917385b1dbabc250e9747f9ebc39964a
'2012-05-27T15:30:24-04:00'
describe
'218086' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNL' 'sip-files00309.jpg'
903b5bf828dadeb584973df9e24766ac
38de7beceef9a92bd3b3e3e8caccd74286dc4d39
'2012-05-27T15:21:22-04:00'
describe
'209573' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNM' 'sip-files00310.jpg'
737c5fa4abb08075c6e5790e7ec01a0b
6695aac813c6f479168365837243c932af9a3e43
'2012-05-27T15:19:50-04:00'
describe
'214825' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNN' 'sip-files00312.jpg'
365abffa6907f157057c6268fc0b5d12
3898cfc3fa2ca79e5894ed146ba56918ff337350
describe
'202686' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNO' 'sip-files00315.jpg'
49727c71025308eca11658b3abeede85
01b1e1783bdc47283ea60d036a8f668050bd114e
describe
'215534' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNP' 'sip-files00317.jpg'
84d779038d982c182754fa71a26611bb
efb275505ed9b83191f0ddff8813e260e100c62f
describe
'219083' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNQ' 'sip-files00318.jpg'
9f01fd51f36ce73f2d8517a251ce98bd
c1e9c8ed5f928511b1f96d1524d61ff1a98becd2
'2012-05-27T15:30:05-04:00'
describe
'220678' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNR' 'sip-files00320.jpg'
1f2916eaff1e115e644c4d2a4e05d608
b6caf4eb6d6f7c518033396f11c0cde281a939a3
describe
'207156' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNS' 'sip-files00321.jpg'
1faf5c5e1f5ba06d7f41f80baab54857
57c6173858e5b8f0138e3b361dbaaeb98193e813
describe
'218735' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNT' 'sip-files00322.jpg'
73067eec42f6fac2ad180145727434a2
4b393ddf2dd6cc7d37f61abfd0836703fb89d136
describe
'218547' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNU' 'sip-files00324.jpg'
0eede20db5e51cc1996e601b89f0e543
2b381671ce134f632955dc8421ebfbc3134472ea
'2012-05-27T15:21:23-04:00'
describe
'213744' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNV' 'sip-files00325.jpg'
210753f3d5e4363a09db91f5202b74fa
1dbbb3f473437edcd94e15a2c15af14cb3f7592c
describe
'208222' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNW' 'sip-files00326.jpg'
b79401a2df9fc26876ee7a3cabec055d
2d8ee8d191caf772ea105c13cf9c00befa1628fe
describe
'209658' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNX' 'sip-files00328.jpg'
d0b27d2d78311ff3db9fe049770c2563
529df2929de5ed3c9c3d2ae839d487616246d606
describe
'219921' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNY' 'sip-files00330.jpg'
a70fc0087b3a3ba45f2034c0124b00c2
d5be7971f2393e9ca419d6438e912f7487ce2ac5
describe
'215766' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVNZ' 'sip-files00331.jpg'
4976f82ea074c0ca6113fcc704556450
2badafda42ddb7605a134dac058eda0b49033ac7
'2012-05-27T15:22:59-04:00'
describe
'213980' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOA' 'sip-files00334.jpg'
941f58ac697f1702223845c65e8faf11
0905950c6ca7896e023fef114ce092b7f730fea4
'2012-05-27T15:28:54-04:00'
describe
'222720' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOB' 'sip-files00335.jpg'
ac34c09e587a3dcd9110383a6d4e35c0
351b77ca41d9465fb3e909f6bf9a9a722a39e3ad
describe
'217948' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOC' 'sip-files00336.jpg'
0400be029bc89de93c20ffa26b734171
51fa4d2f4e5bbd8aa3b8e4ca091a837e873da316
describe
'216696' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOD' 'sip-files00338.jpg'
19b939453899648b86f660a1b1960d54
dfb989202c53c135ae67a43b00b608e364a05073
describe
'205741' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOE' 'sip-files00341.jpg'
96122d7e0eb97c68c9d38df1100f1e23
c320809a043f2cc8a5a50599998f2ba4f793e8e2
describe
'219413' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOF' 'sip-files00342.jpg'
064e4c4d5a42487a2db8c38d1722a019
5ecd0b45f5fb999cd7d379423b374bee77669146
describe
'128983' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOG' 'sip-files00343.jpg'
f00e04aaacd1e52d25e3bdf5a2159d94
c335ceb75f5cfc26196ef34d354cc156ac434f14
describe
'188694' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOH' 'sip-files00345.jpg'
358b139041d638ecfeb845bbe14ac647
e5de02a874c523e4db2382d79f93b35b63a9a40d
'2012-05-27T15:28:03-04:00'
describe
'211296' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOI' 'sip-files00346.jpg'
a2e9bd8cbe03bdd21a878bc95c3f8a35
ec0c21cb10f31835019e6ad07ebb0a1612f82bc6
describe
'220139' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOJ' 'sip-files00347.jpg'
5d9b1ea9b830d25d51167509fcfa0d05
a0fce122f04a77a14cd5a057c0ebe44e5dd1260a
describe
'216392' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOK' 'sip-files00348.jpg'
97ba3e04af7b349b88e4b8e9c0055c25
f216a87e9f0c6c68b9dec229ae775d5d9fc94cdb
describe
'213912' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOL' 'sip-files00350.jpg'
2da6e6f3503cee891527b90212fa6b67
41b9fb5ede4a0b0954372e84fc5ed03e58f19e46
describe
'222166' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOM' 'sip-files00351.jpg'
1caa7f3c484c87c0e9b59cfafed0bd14
4fbe8b19e7ae2b99b86b88abc05f68251079a912
describe
'230692' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVON' 'sip-files00355.jpg'
b309028ce663eb67186bd810b9d9ed9d
0ca0594a0a86e70adf67ddf5d53ced869d73c0fb
describe
'230236' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOO' 'sip-files00357.jpg'
e4868baedc475474524fbb95ae8dec74
a6ba42f2d8214c2abffd7621effe7607844e673e
describe
'216539' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOP' 'sip-files00358.jpg'
2067d0a1b385d0b3047a4ba6490cd2f0
4a1a217bae227b4526c3d5f9a2ae8bd55b831d1c
describe
'205511' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOQ' 'sip-files00360.jpg'
04950f606c0aa0c090ca92f7e4e42e7b
938d7afd70ee3fa4301b0ab5c80c371629b7657c
describe
'205632' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOR' 'sip-files00361.jpg'
31e984083bc51846e3a99d019c570c28
b622dc30d0b84c78f71821a881ed90bd263294b1
describe
'122167' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOS' 'sip-files00363.jpg'
00680f5bc66423ba34802054a5cd1248
366ecf7ecc0eba3bd28ea731b543d7df8e52dd51
'2012-05-27T15:25:46-04:00'
describe
'196353' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOT' 'sip-files00364.jpg'
39d0ee0c6c0da82e31d53668fbe21ada
e12b5938ddd4d529ad163338b9dc80e89ccaaa76
'2012-05-27T15:20:35-04:00'
describe
'123099' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOU' 'sip-files00365.jpg'
6c66435a8af651d557c4e56d60c65bdb
840ade109d958d4e4794d4274a1888d5af8a7d3a
describe
'386596' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOV' 'sip-files00002.jp2'
22294788d2c54ddd44d0e272afc0e8eb
f100c9c1b6dbaf1ae8fe8fb06242dd8a5921d8f1
describe
'338919' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOW' 'sip-files00003.jp2'
b52b674fcc6af2e23358adecb6568b37
caf71eeefd5c8e6aa939b1fcc8742ceeb1f3ae43
'2012-05-27T15:26:49-04:00'
describe
'321654' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOX' 'sip-files00006.jp2'
8d07c36ea5b8e6f64634ca99535cea8a
31486dc2b0ee0655ff1b1587f661cef3e2998f76
describe
'317881' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOY' 'sip-files00007.jp2'
7c0c0d1e8af5771feaa71db9ca5d8f1b
264d301ba5c4e52efb5cb16bc3822a031c8b6212
describe
'328664' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVOZ' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
5db2e9075a39a9b6f60bd1a098c68872
94e660e1b98d5d4bc530ed323b9a20cbb0b63338
'2012-05-27T15:21:34-04:00'
describe
'340232' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPA' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
9917aea2f36f9c54c4f49ecb07b162b5
257a6a6f6faa13937303f5935826e2ffb2da2e79
'2012-05-27T15:18:38-04:00'
describe
'330125' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPB' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
4a2e7b788deb2ea9b791efe6b8f0b84f
fc7285352227d87e20e3b0f90a98b8e0a4eb12bb
describe
'335107' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPC' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
a3420fca1aefcd097844639041fd73cf
e4f4838b17bd80d80ecd58e8a025aaee08c65a2e
describe
'319309' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPD' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
84d42107d06a6f0532e173d018907a6f
d3ab0fc1365030a7e2368312fc0316da6fac0ad7
describe
'334210' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPE' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
f9892c6980773e1a85b9851a0a9b8cdf
25b47dc7aefcfdf20796eee47fd407e7436ae60e
'2012-05-27T15:23:34-04:00'
describe
'338296' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPF' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
e013a698714bb26327600b2adf5a4498
91ab49bfbceaa21e309efd521807123803b32d12
describe
'337337' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPG' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
17d2ae98961174f10b679eee0f49d1f6
eae91ad8acfd5686cce452f51a73f288b2159394
describe
'308329' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPH' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
f744b92d6dc882b74c500d3cccfd3ae8
4feb615efd82f7dc0c89a9a8ffc0298ed2e014f9
describe
'320644' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPI' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
0e02a23679b6b256738cfe7025e50494
64bac4e238a528ffc2cd2352ff24f4852d3466c1
'2012-05-27T15:29:42-04:00'
describe
'313643' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPJ' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
9e4e238e36fc41bb569b4fc7ffafad0d
e24d7d8274e66dac85d9e520a4152297239e571c
describe
'312233' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPK' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
d47cf816f85e9d244fce049fd2e279ea
8fbd4ed00318b4302cdbe573cde4b7b91607deb8
describe
'342250' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPL' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
573968bc5d2a08ceca54b15a25b6ab2e
d2d84f0aa21973b69c609c6fbaebb169ef1444f1
'2012-05-27T15:18:13-04:00'
describe
'322144' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPM' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
0c2c0054507d62e478a993d33319618a
9cdb165208a7cbf5345791c4abf027abc2c52cd4
describe
'330023' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPN' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
e8fdade192d6d32073362fbf4b09024e
736bc39caa98a8fb20777be01a102b8c41b90dbd
describe
'335886' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPO' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
54fb05b759d7bdb96e1b91dddd399af5
7213c01dbb2d08a971af1dc10bd2538c470238ff
describe
'341230' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPP' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
ccb686b5dc76a6d6dbbf3ea9f679f9de
c97250d3a80d501aaa69b140a719b71332c1e2ed
describe
'336337' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPQ' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
033dd7bb9d22392f738fa72b597cab35
543c35adfbfee406aacaf8fe846e1e26add65401
describe
'331900' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPR' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
1662fb7e0421a88c8b282086fcd08afe
37ce0e9928618dbf23663be94cac2cbb8e9bd31b
describe
'332138' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPS' 'sip-files00052.jp2'
e77e2edc518986b3664765231b5459d2
25ebac184e86dd0f18a3e0968bd21e9e643d9f3b
'2012-05-27T15:28:33-04:00'
describe
'319203' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPT' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
c8b9c0b0609d5a7b23f0fa0a961ac199
8da21961f67f7e956bc1259fe59f3287646fd9c0
describe
'327527' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPU' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
bea13c9161680b0bdac6b5624598ee71
4db029ac81a5240e7a0eab06b04a1cb6e985641d
'2012-05-27T15:23:06-04:00'
describe
'312788' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPV' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
7852cd0117c258b9c921d350283f4539
909ad6ebf333b81b85de2c11f4dcfd0293b84146
describe
'320042' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPW' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
60d69b5d99acb3c93bb1128cbf442620
cf5ff57fb74ad91c2ead120f8920ba30ae2b6db4
describe
'310673' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPX' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
5a88b20f86ead11e155cfc9a56373b96
386afe4eead92ca5e0c9237932f1b8e58bead21d
describe
'315889' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPY' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
4316fb09385804ed29a4ebaa1282e81f
864c49c434a80e58ffc0f5cea91946a4f4214445
'2012-05-27T15:24:30-04:00'
describe
'314866' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVPZ' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
3559ed10f45a366d061f02c7bc70f521
bd168bd6b1c3d4d9520830ad3b2c6e866aea6aa7
'2012-05-27T15:30:59-04:00'
describe
'327028' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQA' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
baf776adcb5157161dc8c57610777ef3
197ada94ad9c43e48eaf816370e7c8db3fb2d651
describe
'322927' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQB' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
40ec7577e0205e11e0bf60351972d0c2
740c36fbeb9dc857c4cd5800a56cb75e6a3f9d4b
'2012-05-27T15:22:56-04:00'
describe
'300802' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQC' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
1c1d0803c262e34e363dab9b6ac99ec0
e0bb2f2f21d8d063884afe6459e65476b40ba225
'2012-05-27T15:23:15-04:00'
describe
'335619' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQD' 'sip-files00082.jp2'
cba97a798085273d93cfa2b2a692c8f4
573b4895d8abf89f25b0f7b272d8241276a419da
describe
'325354' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQE' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
1578c857a0ee4f908f5d5ef0f18a71be
36aa250d58696b154ce53ce2e69d26c641afa176
describe
'332309' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQF' 'sip-files00084.jp2'
17b09e1cf306397f273c053df29753ff
09fbd263726f8faa29b90611735d4a4888ba7b1b
describe
'343516' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQG' 'sip-files00085.jp2'
eebcbd715d1d4771c146ecb194e42a6b
751bfa7ff585824113e3109102fed5dae008f256
describe
'333522' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQH' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
e8046365493143f26ac6df985327eb23
369b348f1f2d50472b3dc57640f9ad0582b928fb
describe
'328342' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQI' 'sip-files00090.jp2'
cf3b13c1a3fc33fa828ac444dfdb142b
9c5edc9376d15eafb0fc97148f8052dd36a62286
describe
'328867' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQJ' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
5a9971f3061a0fc3eb1d483f856496a1
245473fe49025f2044c62917c1006ab6aa79c0a1
describe
'320533' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQK' 'sip-files00093.jp2'
55870787b71ef0de22ae5494afbcfdb0
961a05139ac5a92d64e18064ad872d887b6d6a27
describe
'311186' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQL' 'sip-files00094.jp2'
35d14b9c13c7ff1844efcf3b9d8e6b8a
3080c3e3871c216ce47ec8ff5464659be59a1889
describe
'322810' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQM' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
8881cc8827f451793b3ccdf15b5a8957
264113ff3bb19924fa7251625965e791707d56fd
describe
'311417' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQN' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
c63d003d76180e26ae48df675af43276
27b5e405a45c60346411595236649ee5f49fd3de
describe
'330503' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQO' 'sip-files00099.jp2'
f8bcf087c2ca7700db60c856b44c3115
e7188457755d8bbd49680f1999d21c4a5b31e92a
describe
'310238' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQP' 'sip-files00103.jp2'
4feb6c94e7372ec677e2488f62cbe4a4
c231a7097ac5b20297f02a7431f929be36563f2a
describe
'309947' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQQ' 'sip-files00104.jp2'
d0973df39ea34bc7126a18fdab1408be
860fa89277432ea71d2865c78c0ac82a7f2a45a8
describe
'325370' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQR' 'sip-files00106.jp2'
21719b14564dc9f1426f73cf1bf19dba
e1ac5d84fe29d949a12da7630a5bb7ee356d5970
describe
'333365' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQS' 'sip-files00108.jp2'
4851abefaebed2e89013faaf993461ee
fc0472a3daa4b410f405538e66b24728402badc3
describe
'326252' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQT' 'sip-files00109.jp2'
32d68fd91dd166548c742a31ffcc69c6
de7554a14fb333fcd1379555dd3dda46c26c20f7
describe
'339218' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQU' 'sip-files00116.jp2'
af35fdac3ca2bb1c1a5599d18866f56a
55e9dc3159117a15c9806fccbda3fd4849a86ad2
describe
'320813' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQV' 'sip-files00117.jp2'
569d5396e528eb4d9a96fa9a954aecae
b63190ae09938f3608fb41c918e1a87cd7e0c373
describe
'323951' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQW' 'sip-files00118.jp2'
da6e0cd9087a0dfd232d752b78704d99
594fd8ed35dfc918a213ef8fa296c9672cbbadeb
describe
'331863' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQX' 'sip-files00122.jp2'
478286c10f50b804b69fd4efc94362ef
db5b156863c1301c930fe14aa555b75ee2497e0f
'2012-05-27T15:31:08-04:00'
describe
'324339' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQY' 'sip-files00123.jp2'
490200aa02e23c6ade1889d808b1a81c
7971962be2432d8d62c88dec1ecb734ceb9270be
describe
'335947' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVQZ' 'sip-files00124.jp2'
66febe521c97673d1dad6d66f25fa2f0
c3cbe8708b814ff6610b72685a27edfec246ae35
'2012-05-27T15:21:33-04:00'
describe
'325227' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRA' 'sip-files00125.jp2'
b3c30e872fb2523f10d07c9fc2936353
a81e14d4e36606ee3f3ddab344c55cea72e66af4
describe
'311023' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRB' 'sip-files00127.jp2'
7c8ffc44c57be6f97328020a3bbc23eb
22ef0909dfaf9063654ba8a4ed02d1f6067d891e
'2012-05-27T15:28:18-04:00'
describe
'325525' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRC' 'sip-files00132.jp2'
d5b6f8ef9531ed802dc843c73ab971f0
65697fea4113715449b8a8f32be73311b685a475
describe
'317760' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRD' 'sip-files00134.jp2'
7aae156620f8ebf11783719cbb3bc508
76d632693cf1cf141b3f4314f301f6f01e6b84b3
'2012-05-27T15:18:25-04:00'
describe
'320161' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRE' 'sip-files00135.jp2'
2dc2f3637b77918714d845f16ffcfd6e
3c8bb27f0168b928acad96a8350861b269af5dda
describe
'330814' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRF' 'sip-files00136.jp2'
847082d67743582b0c59594d0d504c15
6e8fe9c4be6c938b0fc469c054398594b4344bed
describe
'324413' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRG' 'sip-files00137.jp2'
867ee45a8c95628e7d7aeac6b4256972
62b59e3f32e40b3b573ea4976b9f2bb11a080bba
describe
'306220' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRH' 'sip-files00138.jp2'
9a8fb41e3ceff71964328e967012f471
270d7a9b8cabef847b23ff7421670b8c718eb002
describe
'331299' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRI' 'sip-files00139.jp2'
1d38262af88ff152760053c2c6daee1e
4ca6cd85c218cc68a2b2c8225288cef8889d76e4
describe
'312591' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRJ' 'sip-files00140.jp2'
cabb0f345142d790a99a43e4422b968d
352cbccc3acd3f474d99f59b5102bc9e800e3fd5
describe
'313784' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRK' 'sip-files00144.jp2'
820171c31e988dfc6a80c2a1d6021e85
ecc52e76853e46f119cbf36baf89b02b1d00c9d5
describe
'340891' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRL' 'sip-files00145.jp2'
c769518684a3ea29d251f069525746b5
0a1840cb76fef637664b00781e021f6262f960bb
describe
'344167' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRM' 'sip-files00146.jp2'
50be71d699c07e67a26809a9c45af670
a07848503f4d26fb753b6cf99a938c08889b2099
'2012-05-27T15:17:33-04:00'
describe
'345712' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRN' 'sip-files00150.jp2'
be77e70ba0408c78b87e4d74b345fa40
3a9113aac2340019c6c6b43865f9e7b5051fdbb2
describe
'336235' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRO' 'sip-files00151.jp2'
718ff6df66af3aa7e69916f3093e9248
0f3e16c5ff3c5307e4615e6988da9768b6b20fb2
describe
'342904' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRP' 'sip-files00153.jp2'
bb225a0d5231928c4f0dddfd6a65e0a8
7efb613275911682cbee50b69e1ebf80b1a9c1a1
describe
'345350' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRQ' 'sip-files00154.jp2'
39f06f8cf69b391530117c22b0fb6942
7c4ebb635f59f24286ded4f5e8f093085314fd41
describe
'346808' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRR' 'sip-files00156.jp2'
78adbe31479a0d909d439221ecd2670b
31bee0f66b949133eef1ab15834ad4c1c9897148
describe
'342453' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRS' 'sip-files00157.jp2'
03dd31359fc48fba2377dca191d35be0
0bdd3ce7b96bfde268872a1730f469747c25e18c
describe
'342261' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRT' 'sip-files00158.jp2'
74591ef28e1d144f0974611bac058fee
622acdd29b63a4da067a14399e3b87cc5b2865e2
'2012-05-27T15:29:13-04:00'
describe
'320499' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRU' 'sip-files00162.jp2'
75d3fb679b3c0cc75103827aff6e9958
4b097a5cc9e33b5a8d102f436349602ca7d67032
'2012-05-27T15:27:01-04:00'
describe
'322623' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRV' 'sip-files00164.jp2'
5806b23eeed9a11ac77de7d6c19cb75a
9a9c194b7b9c36ac08169ff961bd78df18776285
'2012-05-27T15:26:19-04:00'
describe
'357508' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRW' 'sip-files00165.jp2'
f30608d6a56f99b2d920ef31b4b8c337
44e6239ae61acc443015351c19bde2c558b357a5
describe
'351266' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRX' 'sip-files00167.jp2'
00ef7dd825a360bdfa5efc03254d1d1b
bd76301ed7ead46db44b0eedfc0f97a480a96009
describe
'362415' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRY' 'sip-files00170.jp2'
15e40ac9398aab1561d12399b3e8d011
56f450990fc6cc8cf03a9979a19a6209f315f0e8
describe
'355844' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVRZ' 'sip-files00171.jp2'
7dd8c336c7f0c5daa6b21c495ddd50e6
e89f1e7cbcce3b479c23f7b82af696b5dea90e96
describe
'358614' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSA' 'sip-files00172.jp2'
6d1369e423326f9086f5c630c0af849d
bd39c3e2800944f37465f5b502fac15bea9ec444
describe
'363149' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSB' 'sip-files00174.jp2'
3023f7bc176e5bb8c8c0b9da12f3a84a
2ef05ea10d6bf35b8fb87a2c6d5e64d93bece68a
describe
'366901' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSC' 'sip-files00176.jp2'
237cf75ff94d02650a807cae9f9c4c9a
3ec643c6b9e3633936a7a81c018f02574e3404c9
describe
'362402' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSD' 'sip-files00178.jp2'
792eee0b5ab451d880ced037b79327a2
df44649f559b97932bfe9aac86a6cdd04679b71e
describe
'362051' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSE' 'sip-files00179.jp2'
758cb826e7bd3a04eed90c8ca218be1c
565eaf5c89ed3941630bdfc91847b5144e161e8a
describe
'360222' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSF' 'sip-files00180.jp2'
4e30fa2e473ec78228d08829d80cc841
92eeb7110840bc298f8b80ec9751d4e8f55e65be
'2012-05-27T15:28:20-04:00'
describe
'360471' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSG' 'sip-files00181.jp2'
e005e38c881cd0a59a67e8d4a68e8d7a
14cd515179d211c608815a781a4948a26c90aebf
describe
'362945' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSH' 'sip-files00182.jp2'
c34380a59caddefd0ba38328c986f8ce
6ca8b254313034d8ec250d252df38f4879a0ddf6
describe
'320169' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSI' 'sip-files00184.jp2'
e3cfcfba18bdedae12a95bec76f56143
64f72c10e4d9984de5c637ae534419c1723a0c0f
describe
'320850' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSJ' 'sip-files00185.jp2'
2bcb7adc218780f6ba8e31d8172f0f4e
db7c10767da3b11c0e7a89832bb995e27227a767
describe
'336697' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSK' 'sip-files00186.jp2'
d6544bd292860df72d05a7806308c056
47174b601af009f642598c384373b6ad7fbe5d67
describe
'351601' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSL' 'sip-files00188.jp2'
024ec593577bc35ef8293f225493bfa5
4f7e8cbe78bbcb6922cc5d50aaced3fc7ee1d324
describe
'355277' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSM' 'sip-files00189a.jp2'
3bb9cabdd900f41bfd78f6d621f10933
57f659f4ec19257da466fe1bae5adadc7be4e696
describe
'352788' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSN' 'sip-files00189b.jp2'
18511ad2d92e192ebe0eb8cc749176c3
025d2c2010cf0afee1ad3470dfffa9339ff6bfc0
describe
'336572' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSO' 'sip-files00190.jp2'
fd9f9c3b6254088744bd142c4ff6314d
4a9e72c8750417fdda2aa9456e2cc72366ceb55b
describe
'347453' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSP' 'sip-files00191.jp2'
cb315282fa29a11ab16c753eed0c36e3
d6e1aa1cba4be18b2f26ffa07d4fd8ecf933c537
describe
'354980' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSQ' 'sip-files00192.jp2'
9875185c930aafb2e7a20d80082b001b
d1113c3ecb08447788ee559c93c76eeac17c9e92
describe
'322510' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSR' 'sip-files00193.jp2'
5b35b0047601577a4dab02f0083401de
2693f9f72bdd2ae13a33c65738aa2e17ffc9a842
describe
'341000' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSS' 'sip-files00195.jp2'
a6800d4a6035adba8924e8dc449b6be9
60e636bb985d7062cf90087bc6d52eb4fd29a63b
describe
'338075' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVST' 'sip-files00198.jp2'
d6440e376289c67a077262ab427fe6e5
f8f9aa520d457b9018cf082694f17ace27a0ec80
describe
'345155' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSU' 'sip-files00199.jp2'
8e66930f8d438429f9b45bd9287bf923
c98480660b0de596852b3c2ac5c7e45c594675ce
describe
'349676' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSV' 'sip-files00199a.jp2'
8fde79827464cfec24c7af27aad7ce07
b8985c063ed221029873eb3c106a0cb591f78f8a
describe
'332722' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSW' 'sip-files00200.jp2'
3c7523d39c9fd05055f78ecb3ddcd677
9d8569ff688ca7a6eb600e71d93403468fbc37fb
'2012-05-27T15:24:57-04:00'
describe
'344068' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSX' 'sip-files00201.jp2'
77f6aadc1052239845728a4ff90800c4
927a637266b54344ed072a28ce7ff63a814a595a
describe
'348304' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSY' 'sip-files00204.jp2'
15049918a2b858ed11ca4742afa492e4
aa4838896e3328f8bbead4c1a2a4d0dfae2662ce
describe
'343884' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVSZ' 'sip-files00205.jp2'
7912f177421f5582e825cee3fd098b7e
3ed9c78a8d1d48c85e4796c5b287b0ec4b874885
describe
'320020' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTA' 'sip-files00206.jp2'
5f40e97842855afb630389052f308851
aaf345d8f1c90042981b1beec4bb42e4641c137a
describe
'329542' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTB' 'sip-files00208.jp2'
6caf27b97ba2071624e49ee967458f73
a02f5ac744bd952a41a232353e080c722a9e96f8
'2012-05-27T15:17:51-04:00'
describe
'343179' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTC' 'sip-files00209.jp2'
3971148006c336dd5d9db33ff118ae04
3562ee3b04ef016d254400fddb4fddd16dfaa862
describe
'340783' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTD' 'sip-files00210.jp2'
91d6c5f6aaa2c761e68fc5b8853ad699
29968f2730a3fc3d4445da5887a5bbf9ab70d4b3
describe
'354012' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTE' 'sip-files00211.jp2'
f60a52833a7ea4d62ccefd7715ef0934
4a1089a620190cb694e733be801c8c64efedaff2
describe
'353644' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTF' 'sip-files00212.jp2'
9cce85e831b62b9fbe2d4592fa34acb0
56ab5b0c7464cbbf3b041a735b686a89e3cc629d
describe
'345905' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTG' 'sip-files00213.jp2'
aff3e282b00ac67027d386b0642fb5a4
e6481b790a64deda1d8a205e392f2648fdb7af39
describe
'352973' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTH' 'sip-files00214.jp2'
394b24a027844ce78459aaa633a299ec
4938669f9ba513023be1a429bca98fef7f15eda3
describe
'346870' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTI' 'sip-files00216.jp2'
db4b1cbd4c07fbb4d748810cc3736b17
cc54852340b76934a8fd2052bebc1cfa8fae039e
'2012-05-27T15:22:28-04:00'
describe
'336352' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTJ' 'sip-files00217.jp2'
a1946a806f9b0fa264a57468e5582eec
5a1b386812202ed80a935d6d1e6eb6a3ea8cc650
describe
'324591' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTK' 'sip-files00218.jp2'
626dedfb3a44656d74da7637a6346e0b
0b745bd7b9267459d10fb14ba896070f7ba1f887
describe
'343118' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTL' 'sip-files00219.jp2'
11b50bf56418efac1a09dfa65146e872
da153e05afa1dec78f435ac92a77872a9af61f42
describe
'351291' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTM' 'sip-files00223.jp2'
7a9fa746dbe7b816c17bae9e7b67c63c
f5129e5975f8ba83b1eac877949fa0a78670c240
'2012-05-27T15:28:37-04:00'
describe
'338366' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTN' 'sip-files00223a.jp2'
c9de8ace16fac7303d3f6e5cb70896d3
e2cf904c07b28e3e43297faf28e94ed5c03847d3
describe
'347257' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTO' 'sip-files00224.jp2'
35311a9b0aae39ff2a40f9717294300f
8e227f94c46323354e994a38ebc4b683264f1591
describe
'336592' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTP' 'sip-files00227.jp2'
7766ec75bc15426b38489d715277fc27
552c7942245063288863f010c5e342ef82b1f655
describe
'334462' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTQ' 'sip-files00229.jp2'
5c92bbcdaffcd27104d6a33564e881d5
aba5bbd475f4081bd871b7efbb1222034857353e
describe
'340932' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTR' 'sip-files00230.jp2'
a70c4ba5a52ccd189f34fe122aec234b
53b7f656bfabaa071a4f9f2e13bae36a95604b37
describe
'350424' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTS' 'sip-files00231.jp2'
fcb34bbd02191ee7c551bc476cb7a54a
cd410486f11954ff0e08dd012ff69348d944f643
describe
'331235' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTT' 'sip-files00233.jp2'
8f46dda179fd3a89a639f0442d3fbfdd
7acfd564de2d1cb27eaeafe357b5ba7e4a39fb61
describe
'340440' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTU' 'sip-files00235.jp2'
1a0d30a3b1bc79fbcf9d6ce5bab88af9
5fddb5d713c5c4697ff0dc54eb9da4e484b752a0
'2012-05-27T15:21:39-04:00'
describe
'339287' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTV' 'sip-files00236.jp2'
c6697209072d1d347788805fee9d8e4e
d9e2f0c023352efed7e9524ee0c427c15419bf8e
describe
'341095' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTW' 'sip-files00237.jp2'
7b87a59cc9a85ffec5f21b70cbf6ad64
cff1c80abc06c6d136364d41ea11d61bd07bd8cd
describe
'350800' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTX' 'sip-files00239.jp2'
a66a452cf7893c4be92389d8218d8f1a
d30912dd4d9ed871ce6dc734e416e39bcbe440a9
describe
'344355' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTY' 'sip-files00240.jp2'
d400f1452400f592c55b665a21668090
61c2a082da0dad8dad9e6ae4183fc79f3feecc9b
describe
'343628' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVTZ' 'sip-files00243.jp2'
83e109417abf60d31ecda9db6be84e41
56b3ccfab0c0eb3a709c6654d874b21f105a6f71
describe
'342011' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUA' 'sip-files00244.jp2'
aee6ab553b55a9a3ea99ed4a8a50b96c
3042cfeb2246aae8aca72fa6cf5e435045417c74
describe
'335605' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUB' 'sip-files00245.jp2'
db2f20d29fabb75296cef93e00e2227b
891bc81a127f2c104a627f6475bfd2aaca841a4a
'2012-05-27T15:21:19-04:00'
describe
'335945' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUC' 'sip-files00247.jp2'
e0309af29cb97889a4524fed8f897eb2
3d0229ae2e7bdda25fb208f79cfbcb55d6d40e63
describe
'342195' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUD' 'sip-files00251.jp2'
6546dfb307fa2cfad6e3065ca42921c4
b75bf9c525d1c31eb656e02de37dd712c22e1299
'2012-05-27T15:18:33-04:00'
describe
'311820' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUE' 'sip-files00252.jp2'
c967c424f7ce0e170eecc714c8af4216
088a9a9f4885d402fdd31461a91d5bc3db9f7855
describe
'318906' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUF' 'sip-files00253.jp2'
81b902f51841776ef1e4d79facee524b
6a21dc4841201ccbec1157f01202c595869dbc15
'2012-05-27T15:31:55-04:00'
describe
'333697' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUG' 'sip-files00255.jp2'
a4db6d5c600233fabded14256a91b635
97608268ec146846ba198f41115abb40c6628510
'2012-05-27T15:26:45-04:00'
describe
'335349' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUH' 'sip-files00256.jp2'
1bf54c1bab7b427e2ac7af268c98c088
b4dae22195fbccf7bae6a81fa4d618f44005460a
describe
'350069' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUI' 'sip-files00258.jp2'
75a7f93fea0376bf2d16a4c5f8af893d
02ca9ca93e06af2031967b9aeb9616d97ec54861
'2012-05-27T15:27:20-04:00'
describe
'356271' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUJ' 'sip-files00260.jp2'
2cbcc57feca9c3ff70e8a40834302a07
4c48e2a5b01890567a2ca0660baada738e83ca13
'2012-05-27T15:19:23-04:00'
describe
'344238' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUK' 'sip-files00262.jp2'
44c3cb95e75d1b1db4e16437f1c3d40d
266b5646aaca9f1f62a0b9eacfcdefcf01e68a2b
describe
'344624' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUL' 'sip-files00265.jp2'
b6a20bd257f051e6659d2d38762319ba
7b89d56a9f4280fc397dca707df4d02be3888881
describe
'342101' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUM' 'sip-files00266.jp2'
ea91ff9f65b6f8fe1afe55b33a979b7d
9673c83a6061becc16f60bb1d164753f35f79341
describe
'325181' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUN' 'sip-files00267.jp2'
6eacb63334573b03d640d1c45713b980
34b0328c281c7ae4e106ef7a68898644bbed526a
'2012-05-27T15:30:11-04:00'
describe
'346883' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUO' 'sip-files00268.jp2'
a552e991f87f02ebd6c90c8ba58b2452
057ef3150b5cb62ac97ef881fbf8eee90e6da1b8
describe
'344417' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUP' 'sip-files00269.jp2'
0756251c39714d3902a7cbb373245142
1c5c4a53c052f7b77b205e6f2428183ad9e170db
'2012-05-27T15:22:44-04:00'
describe
'336973' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUQ' 'sip-files00271.jp2'
fa4cf27a94d1eab17b17f7faa7ff4c59
069244176c384fd4cb3aac2efc6cca1a1b6da05c
describe
'345252' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUR' 'sip-files00273.jp2'
2ffb1ddfe05367a607407f748cbedd80
0de14f94b61c1edc917a003b71869bbb46be6960
describe
'350139' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUS' 'sip-files00274.jp2'
b47176c6d424c408141b4eb8e7b5f8c0
87743aa007b359e459e824fd5f28e057413ba72e
'2012-05-27T15:28:05-04:00'
describe
'345916' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUT' 'sip-files00275.jp2'
646e16f41e16348a26f874101528ef61
a8cd341fd874763e9096aacc3e6125bf8360471f
'2012-05-27T15:30:34-04:00'
describe
'347541' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUU' 'sip-files00278.jp2'
2f38ebdec6b4948261b0dcedf3a57cdb
1790b479ef14dfdf4e6c5e6c22e2ebd139c7bf81
describe
'347328' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUV' 'sip-files00280.jp2'
aacdef9ab7d2d3b3a26ff137043b5900
1661ac705553854342c0740cd2054c49165bb7f3
describe
'345902' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUW' 'sip-files00281.jp2'
74ac245a7779a734de3deb6e6d1e1e9c
a930964085de4ecb49911636baa3d647f3a7bead
describe
'344645' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUX' 'sip-files00283.jp2'
ded2867b3d2657dc4dd47922abcd7a00
ef8dca4b6b0e220c35c270bf894819241f9579c1
describe
'344451' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUY' 'sip-files00285.jp2'
50cfb0f21f0ea0139a0bae9e8dc7e30e
0c3e8c57a08fa1c1acc5b2f62904ef97b2185f86
describe
'339354' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVUZ' 'sip-files00286.jp2'
9b0b9a10582d9f15b68792a772ec5e15
c2f0e670e01f035d3b8670e575a7b97f37e9ff08
describe
'338762' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVA' 'sip-files00287.jp2'
aaede63b166a44d8006716df568b8636
c15443ac63d19155cf306c6212968eb783cc2363
'2012-05-27T15:22:18-04:00'
describe
'341531' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVB' 'sip-files00289.jp2'
9754846d353a3ae5fb22caa7adc03ed1
8a84db4c270f1bb113a886c3a1f437f54e169388
'2012-05-27T15:23:20-04:00'
describe
'344266' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVC' 'sip-files00290.jp2'
269768d83cf4637f69425f52596d5118
ce08e1f0baf83a057f0c88ea3f8992f16db4e064
describe
'342563' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVD' 'sip-files00291.jp2'
0c64fed71e0d0deb8c8f1ce633ba24dc
9d0c3c3c4fc77904edda604d528cb4af48c938f1
describe
'341296' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVE' 'sip-files00293.jp2'
9f714fa977f88ebc770bcf0d2aa6f249
8ce964078ff1c45c7ea1f1eb063774b0a1b26af5
describe
'341167' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVF' 'sip-files00294.jp2'
bd34ec7e8a1502e99e1361c98d3e9e2f
8546fe28da1e9920993b54057c7ccd890e74da55
describe
'340598' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVG' 'sip-files00296.jp2'
89ec0c8a21dcac1838d3ba0d37dadd52
ac8d7fc38267021842c8f2fcd6ea7aa1572713de
describe
'350433' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVH' 'sip-files00299.jp2'
3d443e1023b7cfd32b77b7670de61270
0fe104e7fcd58fb34776e792c5fabd25997f161a
'2012-05-27T15:30:15-04:00'
describe
'352188' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVI' 'sip-files00300.jp2'
a60113e31455e015cdfdcc13d880c8a6
20c1a7b96f45a4d144ea7b1b8c9a695a9d0b7b8a
describe
'342251' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVJ' 'sip-files00302.jp2'
3f51d1055ad6a041e6a941fe3b9b34fa
3c823166a88b3f8604763f5d1b74123599958cf8
describe
'346258' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVK' 'sip-files00304.jp2'
047ea17fc4312788f89a60d3c781019d
0ecff46be7541790b9d14166f3dfe00abde1d63d
'2012-05-27T15:31:03-04:00'
describe
'340741' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVL' 'sip-files00305.jp2'
8f57ad3b8edd683bec6b4ea8aacc83b6
06c5f4d6d8e73e72a2b5417d18d3d949e2d95844
describe
'347933' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVM' 'sip-files00307.jp2'
4469a4ef704bfd61e119697e0b1b533a
b66ddf3a69ebc548b7314491f435a6441f26fa5a
'2012-05-27T15:20:41-04:00'
describe
'341704' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVN' 'sip-files00308.jp2'
ba4c2b087be0f4b800c8f9b8de8bceb7
0aedf957c7231f547e84326f8cf75b5364c0e6ae
describe
'349898' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVO' 'sip-files00309.jp2'
ad8b192ea9cf15d6b6e0df0f450fb8e7
4bdfe6b2865e8356be91e7ce34caad608be3647c
describe
'351960' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVP' 'sip-files00311.jp2'
42ac84d7eef4ca022d8bb79a0ebf76d9
ee46591d3f44ee3c9f3e43642f1066a692ac7811
describe
'346799' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVQ' 'sip-files00314.jp2'
b3a0619b5a1fb1555344046d490371ab
1a0a230932fe9554fb67a5753edd231f0ab829e7
'2012-05-27T15:31:56-04:00'
describe
'345519' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVR' 'sip-files00315.jp2'
dfb1fcf1374a829a167a027244e7cf6f
df345af42c1cc8f500661830a4b3cfe1dceb7947
describe
'345419' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVS' 'sip-files00317.jp2'
6bb50f3dea3e5c581fd8c5406b98ce54
e9db5677872b65a2738a91131fd3df1ab7c3d509
describe
'337613' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVT' 'sip-files00318.jp2'
4c9f880f06a4a92aa8a251d45f64a412
545d436f7dc453b5e53b6bd698a26be0a3f3ea3c
'2012-05-27T15:19:03-04:00'
describe
'347171' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVU' 'sip-files00319.jp2'
9f4f8609a0c7d4443c022c01bcbdeba1
7e23703592f72d167404476fdbf2ab69e169e6b6
describe
'347825' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVV' 'sip-files00321.jp2'
862d592e442a8299b207cf3a4e8c706b
e55622e23a3702152ee6feaf2e0b5d8ae7edc84e
describe
'341760' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVW' 'sip-files00322.jp2'
2bb757db3b89b050805c0f8db3c2ff1a
10ee623c9dbe3f94ef0578e0111257eb152b366a
'2012-05-27T15:27:40-04:00'
describe
'341369' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVX' 'sip-files00323.jp2'
fe66e4bd2452b2145af2e996c0739cf7
9a860c1d0003e1267cb5fc7678e6b5a8315a268a
describe
'344418' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVY' 'sip-files00324.jp2'
865c093438553725bf6071d3e29c433d
47ed12c907cb22386834fe85d1bcb078a4fb5252
describe
'342152' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVVZ' 'sip-files00325.jp2'
275804e02254aac4ed8f6cf75634dbce
3b9771bfc2e2efaab0540294d5ef4f52abef83e6
'2012-05-27T15:30:52-04:00'
describe
'343240' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWA' 'sip-files00326.jp2'
7d713be4a34e8690f90ad0eeb0a4ee3f
9f77c97b442f2d171d10f213944e62b2452f54ac
describe
'344450' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWB' 'sip-files00327.jp2'
1fca25174440f777d48848a9e4d3595a
e5f6aefca5494671118fb1a7308ef99d6117e55b
'2012-05-27T15:17:21-04:00'
describe
'342144' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWC' 'sip-files00328.jp2'
ff79aedfffb5234ff742ee369c790ac9
1a1c3164dbbdea5a26fc7a8cc045add4cbee2080
describe
'339128' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWD' 'sip-files00330.jp2'
a2944ead410f4fd0561cc04f3bbd06ff
704b33f38ccc6ca6e02266ba5e444f179345ac28
describe
'336684' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWE' 'sip-files00335.jp2'
f6452b8e358f9c95683dff6914f4056b
8fed525426fec31c687d011fe6be4be754dedae5
'2012-05-27T15:31:33-04:00'
describe
'341615' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWF' 'sip-files00336.jp2'
6e26eeeef913c92edbe2b7513cdd7577
b50d7228c4d06f160bddeaa05f97bb09bf0cf19b
describe
'346024' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWG' 'sip-files00337.jp2'
02046ad268189c1a86147c0dc93e4a29
318efd5c7c8b20e94f867c2ab66bd7302c6812f2
describe
'342876' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWH' 'sip-files00338.jp2'
315a8de56dee267dda869a6bae880b06
6e37e28f334da44dbde6932a532abf8976af214a
describe
'354450' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWI' 'sip-files00340.jp2'
553e2dd07932ab34fa36ab9b1c50cbae
e962dea4b8e4692e9d10a5c8afea0de795d40765
describe
'350744' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWJ' 'sip-files00341.jp2'
845f56f230355fec231e1cdb0fac3efa
075995eb47a4b77b92ddf24b7c92adabc44340f0
describe
'352071' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWK' 'sip-files00342.jp2'
78f26e0fd22dff501aef5726afbe5231
67c65003e845992863790ea61c069e82d9c6ece2
'2012-05-27T15:25:29-04:00'
describe
'341792' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWL' 'sip-files00343.jp2'
80af9bb9334d6c2aa4b943ca842534df
584e2abe77741fbfad9454b4e40db2f19e008391
'2012-05-27T15:24:04-04:00'
describe
'353863' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWM' 'sip-files00344.jp2'
16964afe822cf0cb6240864fe5a62a22
cbc8b3e4e2615036f4ff866954fd66ac2ae98c1b
'2012-05-27T15:17:47-04:00'
describe
'365108' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWN' 'sip-files00346.jp2'
0d4090c62fbbe7ed92f0419cfa582559
b91a344b899c6e50088ca916eda8b8bfc1fcc28e
describe
'354287' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWO' 'sip-files00347.jp2'
8bf72d1b360a36e57f34c55e65c25361
24d6b422ac3082974478102d73dbef611f2afcdf
'2012-05-27T15:28:19-04:00'
describe
'357631' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWP' 'sip-files00348.jp2'
1a7b94d2712c848dc7e0fbaaf68ccf20
40b99bcd07289381f48bafcc3d40332e6ff29e2d
describe
'355180' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWQ' 'sip-files00350.jp2'
838b67a0d4f85e2abae15c5ac01c6238
e864a861ad787fcffe0c5c473dd6130e3b81ba9b
'2012-05-27T15:28:57-04:00'
describe
'356739' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWR' 'sip-files00352.jp2'
47f568959e28f3cb55a2f101933b8f47
c2f27687300bfff6c5f2bbe511c3e6686be93383
'2012-05-27T15:31:28-04:00'
describe
'350105' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWS' 'sip-files00354.jp2'
65e94457f6c64829456ec596d8573838
9ec53a39010af53b957eebe2c55a1448bc8245ab
describe
'347466' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWT' 'sip-files00355.jp2'
f058288c70b89f6ece6212ac1ff0725b
cef7cf9450be601a38fdc0cec109d0d18706a830
describe
'357513' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWU' 'sip-files00358.jp2'
91bffc901f8ceee48fd6d6eb14be3fd8
f659c636516dec5b347e7b102e217ca33a305c00
describe
'348567' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWV' 'sip-files00359.jp2'
35bd58ca4cd663777d98c2c61ac3be46
f27ad04dd8a3721958298556edd8c1bdd46f270e
'2012-05-27T15:18:20-04:00'
describe
'347419' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWW' 'sip-files00360.jp2'
d2f4a9e540c1291c556d5852fff3ae39
a91d3c51a3a12124516740e2fac6aced1420a5af
describe
'387130' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWX' 'sip-files00363.jp2'
ca2c9f429fd0c3bf0358b74f8d3bc705
8e9b9e1a9b273ddfa62b81e14c51a4fe183809ae
describe
'9332584' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWY' 'sip-files00001.tif'
77116d51e37bbc6e170f048121ca1b95
7678d22b8be9561ebfcd09a3eb15df1acf04d0cd
'2012-05-27T15:29:49-04:00'
describe
'2722396' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVWZ' 'sip-files00003.tif'
50e83a9a03ad495977509df7862412c5
96732338ce7d6aab4999d2f248d29d04ebb342e6
describe
'2582048' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXA' 'sip-files00006.tif'
d5c93f0596e8a74667efd9cc8988cc18
a4c02aafbbafd9bf477bee31186049313d2e7ab1
'2012-05-27T15:28:14-04:00'
describe
'2558356' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXB' 'sip-files00007.tif'
c2f49793e2e3dea232c5188e2ab08860
66499fd01ff746b487e224238c885081fafe216f
describe
'2733000' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXC' 'sip-files00009.tif'
11fffeefd37cc40fb4c17f354d2169e5
4bf7c2677bd2bfdeec5b27090c76a052dafe3538
describe
'2690328' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXD' 'sip-files00012.tif'
2e806695ad113fce98b1121f0f872a0c
6867572da58322b0fe2ea8b3305a4742be6b6fb6
describe
'2357552' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXE' 'sip-files00013.tif'
42d17341a2d13e426d606dc1bcb7b8d2
c06eaa4f81d0e50eddaaae57ee5922caadb08ffc
describe
'2567444' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXF' 'sip-files00015.tif'
fc165bd6ea35a391c1b1dddf4170be60
54db098b56d5621e8c0479a3183a74e25e652c15
describe
'2686312' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXG' 'sip-files00016.tif'
f9bf7dc939f4a2e7a69a3e4267237638
4caef26db5942be000d71d941f83a5e4343d7838
'2012-05-27T15:22:19-04:00'
describe
'2719368' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXH' 'sip-files00017.tif'
f8a467cdc2dc0441104571b61388f86c
89ee336482525e8b354d0dd410188cf208645315
describe
'2479552' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXI' 'sip-files00019.tif'
1d6f2325b5845336f41131ad02920318
7e5a168b725976995621cd55c0a3cd3c752d3676
'2012-05-27T15:24:28-04:00'
describe
'2617852' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXJ' 'sip-files00021.tif'
a86a5118f29481d1819fb011db9062ea
a5af3defc93b8425a62a3f48e77e02eb2e133b48
'2012-05-27T15:23:11-04:00'
describe
'2593928' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXK' 'sip-files00022.tif'
cacc6df355557bdfaf9a2ebe958fd8ca
5069c33ccbdec28263204f189ec14483a0acf4bd
describe
'2513496' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXL' 'sip-files00024.tif'
e69d27f76024a1f9afa0d374bfa779c2
f3ae3e94b2a5f875e0b545abf6ab90cf4d74a4a6
'2012-05-27T15:26:41-04:00'
describe
'2626560' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXM' 'sip-files00025.tif'
3b959dd1b8b54bad95068be659e43eec
069ebfda621090149850e0434cd705d76b9a568b
describe
'2529876' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXN' 'sip-files00029.tif'
7c165b578740036f7d48bb0e642cd3a2
d567351fcd034f7813142be70142c1971c2ae806
'2012-05-27T15:19:40-04:00'
describe
'2703344' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXO' 'sip-files00032.tif'
dcde01ebb2cbbdbf72594298e79b6597
3c1d35c4e9f11665a09536a1fa422c687963159a
describe
'2750588' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXP' 'sip-files00033.tif'
3bf06c994d5445727961aa76c11af706
7d6da7e1d8212f7620176b42bd6deb491f5dbaa3
describe
'2590380' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXQ' 'sip-files00034.tif'
07e27077f7a7172d06a362c45fbd116a
29f9c2e2079c3059b03223f22cbd8b414847ad86
'2012-05-27T15:29:25-04:00'
describe
'2582412' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXR' 'sip-files00035.tif'
1d255ab8dbf2005124e50d836d071472
ca469e9e121d5e0d15d1598b9dd63fc38d6e4597
describe
'2543068' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXS' 'sip-files00036.tif'
a17e50c75bdd113031ab8d28c3385a2b
d7043df5f279701e501346c80ac8e4d8c50c8fad
'2012-05-27T15:21:05-04:00'
describe
'2699768' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXT' 'sip-files00041.tif'
e6239cd395223634c3d717053a5b9aa2
58697bea96f4ff6eb23629f567e7213c00b8b413
describe
'2742136' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXU' 'sip-files00043.tif'
a4a94b2802ca8b8b53f42b85c5b94484
a5f94b4bf39f10475884502338d506c048d99005
describe
'2671436' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXV' 'sip-files00044.tif'
94dd76f03dfd68128a7db35d612ec1a9
1b86d5365047df5335951365028bb3b28f36b4ea
describe
'2657448' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXW' 'sip-files00045.tif'
ffbeb4eb54eb6e0790aaf0a7e1732694
de808a7f5f531e4fcf8628b4e46d608e14931851
describe
'2722316' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXX' 'sip-files00047.tif'
9f92a8e16a09e3b1633d962fc3c68789
8462d46fd7668c07e4671733c6d72277f4da551e
'2012-05-27T15:25:51-04:00'
describe
'2703360' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXY' 'sip-files00048.tif'
20b309de1b571b3e1860291aa7a56d48
818dc93c4e2b2fc52cbb75588255b8e56edbfadc
describe
'2598920' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVXZ' 'sip-files00049.tif'
d10097d6a9968050245a3f0cdc70e5cb
d0d58cab5005308fb8e413e29eccf443535265a5
describe
'2668308' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYA' 'sip-files00050.tif'
a0986b56fe6fe0d7eee4020b28512599
c2865330d5d103913953ef70636c88766886b821
'2012-05-27T15:20:22-04:00'
describe
'2523904' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYB' 'sip-files00051.tif'
214ed16f50c9a51ee015138eb0b637b6
333590cce65e3253959c4f39809ff07f63232a62
describe
'2670168' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYC' 'sip-files00052.tif'
8f36376dcee2209f3993ae36ff2a916b
735fb26006b57b384cbd45bed303982b666593b9
'2012-05-27T15:19:59-04:00'
describe
'2566812' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYD' 'sip-files00055.tif'
a7d7cd8aebc4e7bd68c34894781d46ab
37cdcb9653c93576c724e99fccd82ec41dbf5c2a
describe
'2632932' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYE' 'sip-files00057.tif'
bd0721305adf6bcabbd4b381e876f1e6
20ae150c536a0e748e0ab671152c44a9ab8f9f58
'2012-05-27T15:31:32-04:00'
describe
'2598280' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYF' 'sip-files00058.tif'
a107324c1f4b0c270c592cbaa950e072
59bbcbed8914c20d145e8b5c450c53eec96c1134
describe
'2715844' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYG' 'sip-files00060.tif'
b468d8e2a9faec77da787bf5f343423c
b969204b992f854c4f928945325232d993703cf1
describe
'2618296' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYH' 'sip-files00062.tif'
7d7085efc1c4e65a002eb6460a9216b0
2f5aec8b9cb3b4ccf62cc6fa3f198e8a625cea0b
describe
'2540352' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYI' 'sip-files00066.tif'
d818ddd62504dbc7d99dd171148a358e
2ef6bacf2de45808662853f1c83baabafc234503
describe
'2533432' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYJ' 'sip-files00069.tif'
505231bc4822471d279d8e35f58c96ec
6389c05ce48417503ef3ad913a7c80bf3a910040
describe
'2630084' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYK' 'sip-files00070.tif'
369b58ae83e6c1994c9cc3f654c4b6fe
b9ca280ec3054fead4919399e6c02767fa767640
describe
'2596864' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYL' 'sip-files00071.tif'
d721b7965c93d318dfa0b93f7c9e22b3
5c96cae694d9ab6f361776fc1a0715c148f4fc21
describe
'2420416' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYM' 'sip-files00073.tif'
04ff68e0a9835e20618a622622e54054
c1f21878854ce410eb6540ce5ebc588e5f8dc14f
'2012-05-27T15:23:51-04:00'
describe
'2770912' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYN' 'sip-files00074.tif'
23c9b7f8d7700bfa87ac341838b26ac1
6701bc57edc033356109cf7e69a6c013a91db113
'2012-05-27T15:28:45-04:00'
describe
'2665692' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYO' 'sip-files00075.tif'
7a99fe70a9165143fba5dcf8d40e3d33
1b919c57d5973bd3c8ed817603e499b0d95e06d2
describe
'2646776' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYP' 'sip-files00076.tif'
667b3c7bfae5f04d48ce5d8ffc7bea75
a82dbaa1a52177bf2faf467428d3b85b66e395d1
describe
'2746648' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYQ' 'sip-files00077.tif'
37af6e11ada1753c3b885412639f5beb
809750349f4fcd16f9724df0775e1e8368b442e4
describe
'2711652' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYR' 'sip-files00078.tif'
0e2594b5be3c9945e25603a1c6b4d9ff
35f771d93ada5f95d74f9f367e4991f01bd5902d
describe
'2704280' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYS' 'sip-files00079.tif'
c08b62ba38340694be815643d8da18b0
ae3f7a50d7e8f1d084d91a1dee0a478cb0d55178
describe
'2657548' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYT' 'sip-files00081.tif'
f293926510dc767ce614a058ab2096f9
7fe0319029221a7451273dde57a6860ebcec37df
describe
'2697892' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYU' 'sip-files00082.tif'
efd5597480ad1a92af5b27d2ed476c85
46a0f728cf1a9487b0765ddc77e08a294cd1275c
describe
'2616008' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYV' 'sip-files00083.tif'
479feacbc7cb6468c612c959f236ace0
732aea996ed9245c9047e816e37e9992184dea3a
describe
'2671532' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYW' 'sip-files00084.tif'
0a92291e5368ac03c2c5f7364eb44ca1
673dd9d649a7ce1b6b40a37767a67a22c1a0561f
describe
'2760300' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYX' 'sip-files00085.tif'
75560e88f473ec090da752e195ee8494
edc494a42040def4c463759dc0b5dd765c3983eb
describe
'2680020' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYY' 'sip-files00086.tif'
b014c4ad7cf320bcfed707bc68ba86f7
931f9b345be28712220f96a3332284cd18146722
describe
'2681472' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVYZ' 'sip-files00087.tif'
f1a91aba6bcd177b234c8ec831227b35
c949ef162f955fbde8a5a858c08591f3c37625d0
describe
'2636016' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZA' 'sip-files00089.tif'
f879da79b0ebec47dd7fb72efe63eddb
c823a770b375afca4a1fca45308f867b12dfcebd
describe
'2643072' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZB' 'sip-files00092.tif'
8ec67dd3e33bd4005285c51b15ae89b6
cec552991bb131dfea9db953f4ea0a346afec472
'2012-05-27T15:27:53-04:00'
describe
'2595024' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZC' 'sip-files00096.tif'
95162853fe5df25fbb020acda8895c69
dd01598ca39db845eb8421cd7b702047f659b203
describe
'2678648' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZD' 'sip-files00098.tif'
32985b37d7fe25bf03f8e9f6f57326d1
e26ac684628fb9070fcd8f6d2af841c1dea246d0
describe
'2551616' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZE' 'sip-files00101.tif'
bb46ca3a43479b1e57a696ef4d5db2b3
0defec11a2a1106ca102cd9b74742e9cda7d0723
'2012-05-27T15:17:37-04:00'
describe
'2595440' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZF' 'sip-files00102.tif'
e1f276a472ff1d0554115337210954c5
2da5f250660b24fe2d8475c870edc18ca8955f0a
'2012-05-27T15:22:34-04:00'
describe
'2492208' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZG' 'sip-files00104.tif'
0a49a7ceef417ce6456d93fe1faa3031
149f56c30fe9ed9cc37b6976e5eb17f1ad8db468
'2012-05-27T15:25:05-04:00'
describe
'2528172' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZH' 'sip-files00105.tif'
c030cc13ce17710750470be73c80f3fb
2e1dc2ec62951bd0f24bb4a4494289611605e3d8
describe
'2616300' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZI' 'sip-files00106.tif'
f98a790f4a1937d0494b64f113329910
dafc99261117996c2e43a907ce6913b6b8e326bf
describe
'2478092' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZJ' 'sip-files00107.tif'
c146e89ff978c3436796d4404d064e1a
cb2662b1923a37d55ca1ce6724c1b95cca979c8e
describe
'2679532' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZK' 'sip-files00108.tif'
9b667a94b9b8a9ebdb248a554b03abff
418b8eb640fb7d41daa2811f908cd575fc3e8e91
describe
'2764780' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZL' 'sip-files00110.tif'
1b591301dca435f4a87c1f0d83a505db
e69a7e1d86bfb11fefd13bb8578880618f770253
describe
'2555684' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZM' 'sip-files00111.tif'
ec0078a0380bd3298d97c717352a5335
f0c794d106b9b58143c3e82a4dc82b511d233c55
describe
'2585144' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZN' 'sip-files00112.tif'
c5c3e048b5acfed94fd48767a3899ee4
d9ec68028ad7b0ec9a4f204385af7230b00bbe1e
describe
'2691128' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZO' 'sip-files00113.tif'
d62a8cc68ee7359624cbcf1da2d07f64
fcaa355647e8dac5e8032aed1ee0fd1ac418cf07
describe
'2579416' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZP' 'sip-files00117.tif'
c5390bb9a777c4dbc7ff35194bfebc35
bd36851c37419628045fe5871a0f59aac1bb97a1
describe
'2596076' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZQ' 'sip-files00119.tif'
924dd47939822feca2f08a6b0a939d04
db78a02e2c312d1e158763e613c94e287285046b
describe
'2642688' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZR' 'sip-files00120.tif'
db253d080638badcbb820fb75ca3e4fc
44f80b4fca88ef696acc006fd7b650eca8c0eb08
describe
'2722536' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZS' 'sip-files00121.tif'
adf539b1a2d8a8270b2233d5c545cb27
cf99397e0003a96c172c68e260733cc8c3b8b825
describe
'2700924' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZT' 'sip-files00124.tif'
6e6a1b69b2464f2090ce143ff5c51152
928232ef19e92e890e36a49170115503556aac7f
describe
'2555332' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZU' 'sip-files00134.tif'
aa5356c5ba3918d7bec4eec2a6664217
bd4051add2e294fa7fc144395e1e70af50a40bea
describe
'2610840' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZV' 'sip-files00137.tif'
40c1f50e851074f89c366dbd03f02861
c2c8ddb055aaa0792e068673c2b87fab37c18832
describe
'2663280' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZW' 'sip-files00139.tif'
2536d58ef63b2ba0170f765d891d29be
d33fba86c0dc7417b17c4518fd68827cd1cf5c8f
describe
'2556764' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZX' 'sip-files00141.tif'
9c823b2f1f7d7e9ee687062cfd4fa203
cd6bd042d675038885df81dba6f2c6f2e13e6adb
describe
'2570196' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZY' 'sip-files00142.tif'
2e645b322fb98c6eef0c6000e2fd68db
d56a8d64a2530379b78df838e63a7610c6a08c8b
describe
'2766936' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAVZZ' 'sip-files00146.tif'
04e0360bcb11000d953ed5ea90bebce0
fe622e40063af63978839a39441a3fad4ddff927
'2012-05-27T15:30:41-04:00'
describe
'2687996' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAA' 'sip-files00148.tif'
ae5b3b187f06d2606c5dbba9cf08093d
60f610fdaab3ded860f75ede17586fe20805f94c
describe
'2778120' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAB' 'sip-files00150.tif'
6dacac3b7972b8d5370af44225bccef1
ec0ab643d279cedfc8711849901bdbe6c0245530
describe
'2702284' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAC' 'sip-files00151.tif'
edda78cb10f4b54930421fea3e9e1112
1cc2f3b95b5fbce238874cb1840b9b4684962ae6
describe
'2787596' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAD' 'sip-files00156.tif'
67768779ded83fee89e4d333a460dca4
65667c0d461caecdf29f5727845c835794eed381
describe
'2752880' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAE' 'sip-files00157.tif'
c616cf0ce471507a5d4b71cb25be76c6
2dd320fd50eb909b50aaee36b6500e049661e1b8
describe
'2751108' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAF' 'sip-files00158.tif'
71cb0cfdf07b0eb8eb4029c631037cd5
7cd90d9bb7e04d9cc9205a48dade2bf359297b99
describe
'2793628' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAG' 'sip-files00160.tif'
57b3ab515a24ea33d4b9d3b377f01afe
ea95d3b39510287a3e42884a39435bb099734d25
'2012-05-27T15:27:54-04:00'
describe
'2576612' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAH' 'sip-files00162.tif'
6b7012cf9840631a808cada806a3c17d
edd108bff3e912ba9da32ed67e6efc5403aba64a
describe
'2594036' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAI' 'sip-files00164.tif'
6a7aeea9edffeb2cf0ff071c2b4f6069
f67e3d5396f16411dcb9735e5c24f7d8be8ffce5
describe
'2871428' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAJ' 'sip-files00165.tif'
0f53dc772e646460ddbd6481837b9afa
ec4e2e23fab21d136f0082957082972b08cf049a
describe
'2915632' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAK' 'sip-files00166.tif'
00a67e1c7b1ce847c20e03943f4f6d3f
2ac63885c9a36e243794c2bf2e0675cb4549e1a3
'2012-05-27T15:26:29-04:00'
describe
'2911472' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAL' 'sip-files00170.tif'
1274247fec59e1b39e4030465a7a4106
9ce0957994f6042e8cfd3bc5db81c99e7a6dcf7b
describe
'2859140' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAM' 'sip-files00171.tif'
c954b79b1c978192a4419f04e9f5239a
e0b73e505544aa7284556158e60d48627640020c
'2012-05-27T15:23:30-04:00'
describe
'2889724' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAN' 'sip-files00173.tif'
632fae143aeb0dbe3b3993fc70580074
f00698fc5aff871d3d149b76f1829e7f99357700
describe
'2917348' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAO' 'sip-files00174.tif'
3c8bd98c3fc9c93f16f94015d8b2c9f7
f01f2de126d7b9d79b19df3cf81bb4886983c5cb
describe
'2937332' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAP' 'sip-files00175.tif'
09ca1140d813fe1f6bc13b429fdf8be1
5acd60ceb2a43a3631efcf21d830eb132f28e150
describe
'2895664' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAQ' 'sip-files00181.tif'
25f7f06ea94b73707108e9426cf78691
f12d1a946cdbbab6cc23e025bb13a2e0f035c349
'2012-05-27T15:18:41-04:00'
describe
'2916864' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAR' 'sip-files00182.tif'
7ef33b5bff49b8f23969b3f8b5341eae
10ddb2b9853126ee3d3563d9aac28bac1ea5b547
describe
'2871380' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAS' 'sip-files00183.tif'
e23a531ca9ef48a327a90d331d0f570d
d58a4cd54005ea234a0065cac27ef3034fca2b95
describe
'2707664' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAT' 'sip-files00186.tif'
0c588bd21dab31c6a50f110e5704bed5
872e063c676c40cd6512b68d1d0d21eaa48fd094
describe
'2689260' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAU' 'sip-files00187.tif'
bc9c0930d29f71cfc8edfab5178aaa4a
6e57977c7f9ac45717c9f641d7869c4b3224a113
'2012-05-27T15:27:32-04:00'
describe
'2825640' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAV' 'sip-files00188.tif'
5c9af57439b4b35466bc44c0725de976
92325c0d0d13c4e3bda63f9fc9dcff54eaf5d5f2
describe
'2747608' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAW' 'sip-files00189.tif'
476afb9c50767d995576e75a68069c5b
2a7413f30972eda2df0cd86995528ac62a64fb44
describe
'2854660' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAX' 'sip-files00189a.tif'
3d954810278d75143005964c6fc70329
2cad447586258a3126847e98b0a4e038f699ad2d
describe
'2860944' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAY' 'sip-files00196.tif'
27f873541f3b38dcf781cc3e3d4f8ce0
e179c3acc8a7ec01c0df087ec4fce677c76f1535
'2012-05-27T15:27:36-04:00'
describe
'2678120' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWAZ' 'sip-files00197.tif'
526b71e7f3328e4a35be627eefe252c1
31eb8e2c9a56e33ace337bdc49d71f7df34dab31
describe
'2773920' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBA' 'sip-files00199.tif'
c0df9e26c6fd3b4692544134fa2a99c1
843a8534975ee5a87b5f4d8b3fdbaa92c64d337e
'2012-05-27T15:30:37-04:00'
describe
'2810220' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBB' 'sip-files00199a.tif'
1fd1d9c079d0931828e5e2793e2d66bc
e8403135b2d3aafa5bf85aac63a3e7ec21721e26
'2012-05-27T15:22:50-04:00'
describe
'2749588' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBC' 'sip-files00199b.tif'
aefed674a961839638a9856fa04332bd
5db8f57ce14f65c2611e56668187358315beb88d
describe
'2770424' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBD' 'sip-files00203.tif'
110e25d38938531de5abb19c1b1c8489
84269f96db244eeb6d3b7ec7e49cfca13b207af8
describe
'2738060' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBE' 'sip-files00210.tif'
30f158c6f0b4378e889ab8fd3105eb8f
6e8a6ba1a1a4623c32dde08f812302b69da9b082
describe
'2844884' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBF' 'sip-files00211.tif'
861ba1cb728c2fab59711175f8b1453e
acd0233f854432b770bc7e4024b77c0e783dbe7b
describe
'2813436' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBG' 'sip-files00215.tif'
965f4bde23c9d1900538c8063284eafa
844230fad67058b49d421b33e2174a5d435c839e
describe
'2609732' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBH' 'sip-files00218.tif'
43578f0d4fccbdb3af293ed382b5eb11
a2d47979b1d89c2f860c35794756002386c79ece
describe
'2712828' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBI' 'sip-files00220.tif'
41927f2bff838e80cc329c9dc553c5a1
ada1b3f70c304f66dd7d59568ba7f2eb36f0ebe8
describe
'2790916' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBJ' 'sip-files00224.tif'
ec35b8486e616a229334adf76aa0111f
1267f753450a1765f8552801a83285b87ad78aeb
describe
'2608916' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBK' 'sip-files00226.tif'
5ae68b0dd0e49cb480ca048f45e11358
dc59bdd440de785ba239cd5181627a630625fae8
describe
'2704840' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBL' 'sip-files00227.tif'
b1e7607eb491a8e44920723f1ad3e4b8
568d4f4424cca7dc5ba27e1dc1d4e00719e459c0
describe
'2740568' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBM' 'sip-files00230.tif'
969fd8116f36331cb35b235933589f7d
75b05971aaf6f3428262523c06f7fed69ec967fb
describe
'2817772' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBN' 'sip-files00231.tif'
c821baad8be0ce43d84bd0e9f2468e8c
22a637e6c18c7f74477795e725247f3d479dac47
describe
'2758728' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBO' 'sip-files00232.tif'
1e5ceed7e253e1c8a738c3f442e713be
84e1ddcc45acdb423ca1b5b0b3c5b1f8fe572eaa
describe
'2646504' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBP' 'sip-files00234.tif'
0cffd0381563858494cac89edb24524e
df3f58cb441d01b9e9588869c4e1c73f6b21c163
'2012-05-27T15:28:09-04:00'
describe
'2737024' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBQ' 'sip-files00235.tif'
db3cf74a21025364cecb6a2ac2e4f74d
dfd5855c571e85f457480bf7bebfb625769410f5
describe
'2741856' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBR' 'sip-files00237.tif'
c7abfe47545b7e1321ad903dbe77fee0
746933446f5668251a0feb3b5f6879d6f369aea7
describe
'2768556' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBS' 'sip-files00240.tif'
a9a0cf04bee3627f3428e9c592cd037f
bf20727375dd24974d6ebc4453f5d0f4b1b27eda
describe
'2758596' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBT' 'sip-files00241.tif'
46daca6d15ff43edc053b322ff0279ba
4dd369867a2ff3ae7998ceb2775d5376abf447a5
describe
'2637728' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBU' 'sip-files00242.tif'
3b93a850bdc83dfea17c061063f39e1a
bf4162e6a1ad62c713750b64e13592504170a79d
'2012-05-27T15:21:53-04:00'
describe
'2730864' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBV' 'sip-files00249.tif'
0a3fc336fa703ffc49209a57243f0ebc
34c5b860aa8b575ee851d28b0a72983df72f439e
describe
'2690552' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBW' 'sip-files00254.tif'
dc09d5f03c480cd3b0e57d0737ba5d23
d45adf053d0698b2d43c389afa702fe155a1269d
'2012-05-27T15:27:42-04:00'
describe
'2682744' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBX' 'sip-files00255.tif'
3841f2356959f0a1aedfee2c1570c1c0
b6c72894ec5fce3164218040e5abe1ffd91fbaaa
describe
'2696016' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBY' 'sip-files00256.tif'
faa03dc9e8ffded8fec95d73e9ec76f1
19f759d6eefa133b192c28157dc9d372c387ffea
describe
'2821864' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWBZ' 'sip-files00257.tif'
c25c359fbfd7c709c491fd16be36de42
5563f18d96003d5ba37abccfc5705a01a60f718a
describe
'2719696' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCA' 'sip-files00261.tif'
b949dbdf543ae60b2041e68ce168e497
a90847361270a4df5e8fc24aef5a2b1dd6a2598f
describe
'2838348' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCB' 'sip-files00263.tif'
29a9ec482db59880e6e0c1da2dd467d0
91b26cbe81e5ad6e309b740b7db461e1313ce99e
describe
'2612556' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCC' 'sip-files00267.tif'
6d9418323b035bb8d5afbc62836531a4
9264ad18287b5c43dba3acb0c21c9386536685fd
describe
'2773424' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCD' 'sip-files00270.tif'
b2440ee98467889ed56ae5fc76afa13c
f5fbd119ce05103b349d78303ffd86469ba2fa19
describe
'2751628' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCE' 'sip-files00272.tif'
d685d3dc3e1aa0c3659653e4a041a3bd
b754e55fefc57e792ccadb3a51f367d1d4738a7e
describe
'2813304' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCF' 'sip-files00274.tif'
8aafc2037926af092ded180fa711efe2
cdf16af86807d45d72e3f24f57baa92521b36459
describe
'2780008' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCG' 'sip-files00275.tif'
0cc8f500e5273ea4678313c9d418852b
c8ae067647023572b2108737f9d137f1f7bb9d51
describe
'2745520' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCH' 'sip-files00276.tif'
9bfffa1eb358bd8152cae805e491b318
a76e0fa77122f03d0b7c83fc59a9cd97fef43c6e
describe
'2792232' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCI' 'sip-files00278.tif'
27bea848e892fb0e17d3b627999d5ea8
dae1fd833dad6b66c0458c343b866ea1638ec56a
describe
'2774056' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCJ' 'sip-files00279.tif'
54cc613d39192a8ab0b0815503bf7429
91c9a2f0049ddd0d2cdf6bacf74634c2867a7bde
describe
'2791764' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCK' 'sip-files00280.tif'
d07ebb20c238a9ccdbc8478cab445c12
b33d59e771d66828671b6dc33262ca8cc25e66fc
'2012-05-27T15:29:32-04:00'
describe
'2748060' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCL' 'sip-files00282.tif'
24257da5716345d841d50b8524195392
d328c2a48fec77fbde947498a91ca67a2f3f3d7b
'2012-05-27T15:31:35-04:00'
describe
'2822740' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCM' 'sip-files00284.tif'
5b68e8b20ca666ff8b5c916b1ef8fbe8
7a3f526c536e0520935dd2ac7bf92bd027dd68e6
describe
'2768332' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCN' 'sip-files00285.tif'
7b06167d62e2112a031c8ec52ad2efe8
b503ca9f43caaafce7d61c7915d880ecdaa5f97f
describe
'2721976' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCO' 'sip-files00287.tif'
44a1e7999da20422fda009a1d33a30b4
2cee257194c17c2a622a2d923d07ad233afceba9
describe
'2750580' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCP' 'sip-files00288.tif'
4a296e5e3994e1013c3f02f76b1c2a5a
f1f9c8bac4b9ba17e77f0e8bc4acb3daf14e52c8
describe
'2747476' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCQ' 'sip-files00292.tif'
c668eed64ce989d16bdf732b0f261e90
5ca0147a6c1fe2f3d4ad462fabca6b1f188f4a1a
describe
'2771328' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCR' 'sip-files00295.tif'
a821dac774599b83a55ae3f03ee589ea
139474354006235ee3af905ed9d5d698027e9a3a
describe
'2810136' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCS' 'sip-files00301.tif'
74e69f84db517e9445e176c24f394d2e
2e56faf6baa2fe8c61f7395e99ba5941b50b8e6d
'2012-05-27T15:31:14-04:00'
describe
'2751240' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCT' 'sip-files00302.tif'
68ea5d158e68d4ecf08ddbd3ce6feabe
7b12cd4595fe092aa36c7954f6f8f0bf844e657b
describe
'2773084' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCU' 'sip-files00303.tif'
ad5c79328558f08bad2016f31a09414f
d19a093a5926ac6814dc4af1a3218289cb041b05
describe
'2782556' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCV' 'sip-files00304.tif'
5c809de736dca684a4db0dc382467af1
54311a0ca4d0d71a5bcb8dc16eb6bb039c781660
describe
'2738408' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCW' 'sip-files00305.tif'
960b7624fda5fd2376feee31793411c9
15d5cc0b690b586ed6f73bc81f994fc36cbcc686
describe
'2796196' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCX' 'sip-files00307.tif'
a0d3c9de8b1e131f66757c49e574e6ee
d2be8a56c0999974d5b6430a665aa0235bf366c3
describe
'2746116' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCY' 'sip-files00308.tif'
9143a2385024b0f2ef32c7c3c6e6b801
e5fbfc5b3b1afc640148cf2b819287067daeaff8
describe
'2812324' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWCZ' 'sip-files00309.tif'
6066b4b60f3f6fb900c70fc8ef1db6d6
6a59fc316d1939577a273feb2a0a29426e3393d1
describe
'2757456' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDA' 'sip-files00312.tif'
fc3fcd65d9f51ec6f8046a4d0ce90612
96aafc39f90e57f8cb933d37e3860939ab6e77f7
describe
'2850504' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDB' 'sip-files00313.tif'
0b3ede9f501269c3b4a4bfd4322016ae
b63f79907dfe0405faa1391a8148ac2ac9c64122
describe
'2787580' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDC' 'sip-files00314.tif'
76163c780fbbd68b208f726dbe1f5695
af586652e263ec5b169185b5d77843ae2deaf8e3
describe
'2714144' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDD' 'sip-files00318.tif'
0a58d9a381c015bbc3eb8f26c3414d6f
558a21209b399f8bd40a171367927f3a28ee7672
describe
'2709676' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDE' 'sip-files00320.tif'
107934208d2895fe2a410fe45549e28b
56f65716f195f8d3ec43d8942cc097852d3beff0
describe
'2747256' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDF' 'sip-files00322.tif'
9e1684dbe258976f3b59e764245daeb5
3b06ad8bc328ab19093b669ffc668ecac0c7afd6
describe
'2743112' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDG' 'sip-files00323.tif'
765271cdd470c479fde492686caa7ab9
b17c09ac45f868081c5a4a9a9a3bddd0957540b7
describe
'2768516' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDH' 'sip-files00324.tif'
788ba340af54d8b17c5987c152ff2278
c33729d5dc84c23c0c2960757f38334b6e854eb5
describe
'2749780' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDI' 'sip-files00325.tif'
380c2a4690fb64704e8ae4c858c8c2f6
3ea017f125a920d018edf13091776cd981692caf
describe
'2759052' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDJ' 'sip-files00326.tif'
504b47800511fa6ee0dfcf9c9ca318b4
9422bd561ad8cab26b10fccfb4524c72484a813c
describe
'2767884' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDK' 'sip-files00327.tif'
3336069f9f7a9264952b18851978abbb
261689f2663f6e41a182aee02eade72263bee322
describe
'2816272' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDL' 'sip-files00331.tif'
ff551c23a73fa2857481a661e18721f6
9a8c549b45ac04bb8728dccd09174b2dd6022a99
describe
'2716156' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDM' 'sip-files00333.tif'
d4c5befbf9232a3e76da91506d08cae5
f28993798fac72ca3f45b31e94b31099d0d8cae9
describe
'2780380' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDN' 'sip-files00337.tif'
97f6a2be26b7ec177844e45c9a96d805
4e11277e1f597d4d0f252645ec1f34e8449c3047
describe
'2755472' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDO' 'sip-files00338.tif'
01bc9ee797da8c2056a7b4a55edbb834
9cb793cb9ae1c67b0b0ec064d65c0bef87285e1a
'2012-05-27T15:23:16-04:00'
describe
'2848188' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDP' 'sip-files00340.tif'
13d7c04678ece7a7ee889ec378863c0f
d72803a9779a2a2ea3ea91c492d39a70553a1ca3
describe
'2818188' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDQ' 'sip-files00341.tif'
7ceaee2e43ab5efd261c44a17351413c
f16fff6edad793c13f17137d39ce943998cc33f8
describe
'2744440' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDR' 'sip-files00343.tif'
2018fc14e8ad3d0bccead59f3fa2d3d8
522e17722df3b89d6de5125ff7ebbcc281c270d6
describe
'2845944' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDS' 'sip-files00344.tif'
1f1364b2de87a1a6e1b9a497df647ebc
617578c2fe905e8d69d718adc4fc379ec6ca102a
describe
'2861372' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDT' 'sip-files00345.tif'
08059a62303ad8f4fada39dca517a023
0731feddebf6d6743b7def203a5264f84a89b56d
describe
'2933080' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDU' 'sip-files00346.tif'
63b5bd3aa44e2de92734120c145635c3
cd0ca5562088f466fc5e3e190d35c119e9d43e14
describe
'2874056' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDV' 'sip-files00348.tif'
8b0537671d220161e4379563d9f9f222
4fdaf4a06c6458ef2427f389f368901911038e8f
describe
'2853496' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDW' 'sip-files00350.tif'
750f9800d8417045b6033420be258cb1
5cc0fbceaffc71b8466ac33775adedcc9247d394
describe
'2848140' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDX' 'sip-files00351.tif'
d634bf30e83097df5dab1ab3783de67b
4333f643acb6fc383e0f147bafa682363e8f1df0
describe
'2813096' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDY' 'sip-files00354.tif'
a7a299e8958941c3b20270d62d2b9ca3
cb72bf46ad0cc650cef7f122b6b9c4d7e3b60c28
describe
'2837892' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWDZ' 'sip-files00357.tif'
5792d7d05bdf914221b7fa146e9b7e64
693a0e17cd63b4502c89b39594cd66790fb25847
describe
'2873060' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEA' 'sip-files00358.tif'
c687b991ccc2d7ce7b7644a7281d1707
005f0fa6cdebea36f437e86c0fc9e0ddb75a9782
describe
'2792244' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEB' 'sip-files00360.tif'
0cee3a573bf2a716b00c0ba5a855fdcf
5cbf5080a5ff613c912c8fa835733cbcca319f28
describe
'9300628' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEC' 'sip-files00363.tif'
1bdd19cadb116caaad94cae1be4d0e15
f0934c7d59484d20052704108c56410f826a3251
describe
'9559664' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWED' 'sip-files00364.tif'
0aba8acaa3e7c75d8d75d9052117d9cb
d46f3af03bc068543f6fe1629a5469125d60e9e6
describe
'1248' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEE' 'sip-files00002.pro'
9021d4bb9e7bce045efb153323307a7e
ca5206a663413f2e329a57b048be0adf03ca4631
describe
'287' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEF' 'sip-files00003.pro'
b344e0212da9d3066b475df3baeb257c
5c8fbf99f744015c7b911c9f866b740f27bf992f
describe
'2390' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEG' 'sip-files00006.pro'
3694295318d5eb97dd9368c43d1cbaa5
ad04c5f3e9240eea38d13034c7e18f3fc1121ec3
describe
'2691' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEH' 'sip-files00007.pro'
1c2aa5a8c5d87ecc4bbaf7342d7923f9
b89b90782ef563dbb1990a60b49a158a1c9ac3d7
describe
'20046' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEI' 'sip-files00010.pro'
8aeccad8f9ee2780aa99125e5d2de79c
58edc7a6ae19ff57f8922d5fd618de12f738b531
describe
'20359' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEJ' 'sip-files00011.pro'
db96999aaad5df4f49acf4f572a6c004
b18b0c900477afb09808d7e2d9502636a931e65e
describe
'9249' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEK' 'sip-files00013.pro'
d8708b60d5fb5ef411f4744395772e76
677ce73d37715e4bfa1f28b2e1b35f27e16bd2e0
describe
'27294' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEL' 'sip-files00014.pro'
143ed61736cf647cf19d469f4b0cc314
00416d3fad243175b8bfda7985ae6a37c0784ff8
describe
'41911' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEM' 'sip-files00017.pro'
b67cff29e0f6f29cc6effbe96a7ac619
50ce61c690446cbe65c34c732475e78136f1d8b9
describe
'44064' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEN' 'sip-files00018.pro'
ec0bb493dc2b3c573da66a11d3385043
25f23b47c97f42c0891b30967a46c50e76b814db
describe
'43721' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEO' 'sip-files00019.pro'
089985aac2e729207bf1e93f92c9b0e5
17d46591898427c4125742f7ea7c296dc9a4baa0
describe
'41221' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEP' 'sip-files00022.pro'
342df71d6ac566fe5b7a491685d0c200
0871617a24f345604b35a8e87595c8a0e56a06d3
describe
'42907' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEQ' 'sip-files00023.pro'
93ab6ffb7410884a4be094a66c831ae0
30323ea6f972f8360c0974873098c9eae139a690
describe
'43697' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWER' 'sip-files00026.pro'
e873cd2518134b7da67b5ddcc0e5bdc8
ba533c183609276fc019d1ddbdc687c5ebef9045
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWES' 'sip-files00033.pro'
78e401fcf4606d3cf6cd7d21b716d7bf
3517f7d2179bd607a2eb70d0c56e61fae5d0d958
describe
'39598' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWET' 'sip-files00036.pro'
3c13aa72f6ce4a57c233e32ae64a0c93
d8796a9db1e8e6910b827013835b575615a6c224
describe
'42011' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEU' 'sip-files00038.pro'
ecffa88685afd332a7e3a876501bfcfa
defed43e1b9b9b4d86339c42463c61524af19ab8
describe
'36686' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEV' 'sip-files00039.pro'
46b6bd5d72438dc1bd5b9addfa3cb7b5
8765d94542eb13ab55e2e7ef9c6a3cc474b05949
describe
'42301' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEW' 'sip-files00042.pro'
252e28baa7c1db3ea6761b8fa87e97eb
453f917501467c0d0932868e03fd343764651e7d
describe
'43571' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEX' 'sip-files00043.pro'
cf32998cc1020b856e75c3d62e1b7387
064658fb2a7196eaaf3c501ca54f44aa104a94c2
describe
'39901' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEY' 'sip-files00044.pro'
23acc30c750f4c4889ba48fc9639a471
2eafb116136d00a2c351c4efe00450a31171c241
describe
'42527' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWEZ' 'sip-files00045.pro'
7b4440e44b377a5cc3a82918f79fe52c
a0a440400adada68048f984cdda2412f4e6399ac
describe
'43410' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFA' 'sip-files00047.pro'
72e1e8d2b68a816bb63f03b7797c9be0
cf6c9abec9ef8aadeb233b4c710284cfc994788c
describe
'41919' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFB' 'sip-files00048.pro'
0f58b29f09552663c60bc8a1842593b1
6691e2d4cf481ca708a41dc9bb756e28d854c76c
describe
'41534' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFC' 'sip-files00049.pro'
533094287769f2563085853769aa4918
87a8bf6b72f1374ff2c1ac754f7bc4888f885a70
describe
'41376' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFD' 'sip-files00050.pro'
867f4dae0380f195574947465572baca
67bbc94b16b2b8f82fd69ca47e29201e8c877e53
describe
'42604' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFE' 'sip-files00051.pro'
d9e2f5090dcfbe62372cdd8ee133c798
7debd533dae3be701b4817e57ac8508c9bb46a75
describe
'42709' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFF' 'sip-files00052.pro'
ea7bdb10d8f8e875e50b417aaffb3595
b3066fc11085f7c208a5262db416d64a06b2fc05
describe
'1727' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFG' 'sip-files00054.pro'
0f0acaf8607faa015ca8dbce8294fe4b
bf4c6cbaa46705f5b13afc6854baa69a4d71f966
describe
'43987' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFH' 'sip-files00055.pro'
767155c1f7440e6a1c31d233be2ce87a
e2247136d79363e2c84e08829f07734717e16c75
describe
'42207' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFI' 'sip-files00056.pro'
526620df608c55aa0597cdc171f655da
c4254b0cf21f71278f6657447b56257f5783e47a
describe
'38102' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFJ' 'sip-files00057.pro'
0c307fe03ebe505b31f1113fc5ef489c
1991caba291fff41e92c924b511e73e8a12d4e35
describe
'42424' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFK' 'sip-files00059.pro'
21d440088bc6bb0d0260ec35fe09bca7
82d9c671ebe352068ed9243a296dfaf8d07b436d
describe
'42950' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFL' 'sip-files00060.pro'
0c76543517a720a08fdb7e6f69af726f
b7d76dfccc9e0e02dd74ba210c88ada49cb53d65
describe
'41799' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFM' 'sip-files00061.pro'
f63481ad939f1362d7d238cc146ded88
e419d600e7e16307b08d006b4216bc3fde654350
describe
'44050' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFN' 'sip-files00067.pro'
f83aaf8693f72fc3fe9011e46c3c4d01
285fa39d58b2c2c569bc5dc6188eb02a1febce03
describe
'39485' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFO' 'sip-files00068.pro'
3587cd9b58652fbe34637f6dd7f61fd8
0f4229c0cd5ab8dd9f8865cda9eecfbc82d21e5b
describe
'41501' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFP' 'sip-files00070.pro'
b1771e572e277435130be64dbbf691c4
e529aa3be5c7e619cf6cd34714cbd9f0f56ff318
describe
'40996' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFQ' 'sip-files00072.pro'
54d7db7e93fd49a03a79294d16351d38
a503e38c7c0180a9d4130db689c5b633b0c9cf4b
describe
'40256' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFR' 'sip-files00073.pro'
3b78751cb6ca0bb86e5539bd01a1b802
ff5e5eb73961cc2b501778b6b517d251e4dfb717
describe
'42526' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFS' 'sip-files00074.pro'
30fb65e60a6797e0db635300e41928c1
b4df09070f24108f023dec45f9287fc5cd37950a
describe
'40536' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFT' 'sip-files00076.pro'
7a7f59d63d14bea16b676bb8518188c7
921ff0991d1442c69a809f82558dfd20b293c8a8
describe
'43040' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFU' 'sip-files00077.pro'
2b0dd9df3f737fc9852afad18256fa6a
8000e0859d009dde847674aec3523c36fc45c915
describe
'40389' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFV' 'sip-files00078.pro'
fbd46e99ae7ed8e88daf8ecba5463b09
2a355b17f07083c488c2e36a62081b1d908bab40
describe
'39148' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFW' 'sip-files00080.pro'
9c95afaa620bf31735c4c6d229b11f2a
ea16e49fa4b5b378ac778ffefda0fb98e469a4d6
describe
'43796' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFX' 'sip-files00081.pro'
b631aac8d0f4fae5a4d958e6d89f562e
251d6e46506a6cdb97c92224c235dba5801a8bc0
describe
'41375' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFY' 'sip-files00082.pro'
35e6fce5ec90e0b5f0ad90866718fa96
e9dcdfe4d6d84bca6c3de3b0321a1c316ae2ea7c
describe
'40676' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWFZ' 'sip-files00087.pro'
e2007c5a8180156ecdc3a609da5c7690
882d2a02b8b9b82bf9d011f9e0c4bb0d89d2470b
describe
'41714' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGA' 'sip-files00091.pro'
fe14618a572e723f2e8573e24a58fcb9
8b1b7e97a634f8f39350a73947d6afc4464e16c2
describe
'42484' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGB' 'sip-files00092.pro'
6c125ddfd867fdc62852404b6152750a
bb260012e26fe8393ab7f85b00356968bef971ac
describe
'43502' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGC' 'sip-files00093.pro'
019a3b2e90a5f7ec4b8ad0210fb564f4
d7ade36eae44bb5541e868c67e7bd0e42cffa380
describe
'44268' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGD' 'sip-files00094.pro'
843bdf7ee10e719c76425fb3ff64e77f
62a48e851e0f23e19bc6a533efd7cca8963e0084
describe
'44786' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGE' 'sip-files00095.pro'
c3b118d338ffaf4311366f2172a29f93
f61d5e86aa398343c60fd3dd13d846988c2ce265
describe
'44136' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGF' 'sip-files00096.pro'
3dd9dc7c893e0d2a273afe72ecd6e109
9eca41442981a23be03b6d97042b59a8ec6aeb6e
describe
'44003' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGG' 'sip-files00097.pro'
0a235bbb7e2c08bba042d4f1dc82b375
284797d815d2838a45b686265a9713425cb4e599
describe
'42814' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGH' 'sip-files00098.pro'
84c0c694cc1a5e64b703f1faef003090
7804bba55c904accaa1c819298fde136bfc5cdba
'2012-05-27T15:29:37-04:00'
describe
'40975' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGI' 'sip-files00100.pro'
2c7aa3edf415c9e0a37a220a15461e47
599f99a7d11ddbfe0e33e4404eea6fe958d2a615
describe
'42216' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGJ' 'sip-files00101.pro'
7fc4e442b09d7edc5fa859e1852e81b8
7ae48f23c7039760490a45f93ffd9afd7c5bd828
describe
'43113' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGK' 'sip-files00102.pro'
3b7c7f0ffdba7fc4c3752a00e692a325
726c1c1be6b0b779f0db58b5fb14c1420f41651a
describe
'43228' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGL' 'sip-files00103.pro'
5b54b1348456c8dd330f64ae015ce027
ffce744a539093a39fb589d0d3b91796c625148e
describe
'43976' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGM' 'sip-files00104.pro'
966790b7ba0bd27065c88a2046e9986a
4971570a4e97af44086816162047dc4d172f54d0
describe
'44842' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGN' 'sip-files00105.pro'
5500236d1b5e416550822276b717b9ee
890b1747952fd94995b08d14b82bb2793901b7d2
describe
'43215' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGO' 'sip-files00106.pro'
030a939f24b484437223e34151da8fb9
68c0dc8d7672ef3cd9ebbd335a37503fdc783916
describe
'41621' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGP' 'sip-files00109.pro'
9d028adede6dd055cfb6ff3f2d472917
44a4663783ba19cb75de46d8bdcf34b3151a64ff
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGQ' 'sip-files00110.pro'
899755e790d09579cc158ae0f45a924a
b5db51eadef5be15334543488ebfc59db18068a4
describe
'42300' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGR' 'sip-files00112.pro'
6de9c9a4542e080664e86cbe3cc6c36d
cf05672524668949af71a32439d4a5613a41cf62
describe
'42386' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGS' 'sip-files00113.pro'
31162b866c44d7474e9357c7b9056f1e
88e78478bffc65d9cacc25ea8735e50cf3c60346
describe
'43583' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGT' 'sip-files00114.pro'
8dd5d0ef5a24a9a27cfe19e4cb6a75f7
737cc7d6fdb3500b23b23a6e35a234c2be3b6abf
describe
'44737' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGU' 'sip-files00115.pro'
10c46dc75e8e4b0032a8eff788c0fa62
e6162b0a87e33af19b9e5c0366d78d2c566a9e68
'2012-05-27T15:26:10-04:00'
describe
'41237' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGV' 'sip-files00119.pro'
b6f11d3c16093f51ea6efbaf4280cf3f
16d52edd4203bb81c48f72bf942af41125d31e4c
describe
'41704' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGW' 'sip-files00120.pro'
0637700f2180b48a8720f78d979d0ec8
00445d3f6dc03938d48d35a59145f0cc49ee3fde
describe
'33128' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGX' 'sip-files00122.pro'
954bf364134cd0eb30617a2bc2bfe553
0374d2b4d8ccfa5672d65312741d1bb7080c44e9
describe
'41637' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGY' 'sip-files00123.pro'
2cb7115b2bf02066462c1d110893ec16
a936d1cb7bec658b621693b394a67414fdbf2930
describe
'44514' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWGZ' 'sip-files00128.pro'
1327281d70909f518f8bd2f9e68ce749
a6794dc4357d8704f55c7e93b2f7f7c03b72c53f
describe
'42419' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHA' 'sip-files00129.pro'
2066e56a12b8f336ab9ee87192434ea8
8d6c2d08e90fd5480682adde16e2d49133786a9d
describe
'41149' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHB' 'sip-files00132.pro'
c4cbe069ecc4db857f204e6964271634
2f3be8f908f5e6b31c1a9e51a1f68873a6df7e18
describe
'44507' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHC' 'sip-files00133.pro'
6fc67e95d99338b483614c29e49d6273
bcabb5758898e0789392dadd106ae1abcf2f6945
describe
'42586' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHD' 'sip-files00138.pro'
7577d961b58d0fd9fdefff09664211a3
09aa4863ef36dfb64f2d64ae5ce55a297980c651
describe
'41420' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHE' 'sip-files00139.pro'
7954179995b39dc5492f83fdccc44321
9214a6e3f42dc65b8b41e1b1f6ecf3d9178cf495
describe
'43564' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHF' 'sip-files00144.pro'
65f7512e49ba09231b861f06c9d66116
579db2dd6ef518f3b337b56f220070ebc12fb51a
describe
'43550' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHG' 'sip-files00145.pro'
21e8b27ea53a38d3167d366e24950f1f
75dd336ba5afb2239352a87ce440b08af1ae0b40
describe
'44409' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHH' 'sip-files00146.pro'
76db785e2433ab8880b95ddb3704877a
51d78fe059001ba21b6cf5171b5163ea424c9a71
describe
'40760' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHI' 'sip-files00147.pro'
a5e019fe5058d794b123a2736bc99a08
b4bb5dbb7d679464b4beedf60dcf9626e1607863
describe
'41517' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHJ' 'sip-files00149.pro'
b2866e33df02665ac21c72dcf48004e7
baa183024d7f86b8f9e49aa10ae80b87877fbb0f
describe
'43691' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHK' 'sip-files00150.pro'
c727e89f31bc197955415184751027cd
6b5ef35a978dae5160945e9d4b6419d96f7f8cdc
describe
'43084' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHL' 'sip-files00152.pro'
97c991e6c484b41a8c48f11af4b9e5dd
56db00c8e706745e88c3e3f51799f1f652a4cde4
describe
'44042' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHM' 'sip-files00157.pro'
ba22366917c8fe181bbcd2836a272b71
801507fbe9b1e966e195ad7bad879c7ce908795c
describe
'43985' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHN' 'sip-files00158.pro'
59a300042be9a99cf6d4646d38e2640b
e6b5b7ed8ca15d2434f908366a4d8e378e327518
'2012-05-27T15:19:34-04:00'
describe
'44625' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHO' 'sip-files00159.pro'
087f9a68e0bb0264362184d49e91868b
16ec40048b3b5f6d70047d457119a9604aa3efe9
describe
'41689' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHP' 'sip-files00162.pro'
534df37c90a98e23f7d6a02414a835cb
69794198be04724ea54aee95b44e962a7ac6eadc
describe
'43988' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHQ' 'sip-files00163.pro'
df55c7cae9d4f7d96baa75f95d029380
fff9b520dfaf644f97161ff660e1a4652f36bbbd
describe
'40843' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHR' 'sip-files00166.pro'
21a7db1b96975a02691263f48e1dd65c
c0d5395ef08e423addb82af14f4faf699467cc7b
describe
'41007' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHS' 'sip-files00168.pro'
e9ae80710f9ea91e30d853a43a6cd53d
d7a9f2d370ac83ede38028d13a4bf2971f4415da
describe
'42454' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHT' 'sip-files00169.pro'
ed0a75ab4abf00ab961b25d501a1cf8a
e534e4758f6728b25d92feb30ad69f2983260101
describe
'42756' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHU' 'sip-files00171.pro'
0d6a824d14bdd417909423551b69695f
fa5ce6c7e8e4cb0c8c1fba6ef75afaf302796b57
describe
'42544' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHV' 'sip-files00173.pro'
f891dfa589867a056bb3d9c4911b773d
15c0ba89cadbd85141055ddb81ca9fd8c7e77544
describe
'43285' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHW' 'sip-files00179.pro'
48c4a562f76704179cb86e13fcf76d13
f661aaff92793b28b7ad75d2a7277077201f15ce
describe
'42521' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHX' 'sip-files00180.pro'
c1a532544dad860844b6d35430eac4e2
e36db4695f7a89cc41e4f2d92183d18ed81e3bbf
describe
'43016' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHY' 'sip-files00181.pro'
0715e0a950cfbeaf6a98f4726ba6bd8f
5dce7c5281a4fef259effd04b489bb58d21d03ff
describe
'43957' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWHZ' 'sip-files00183.pro'
6bcc030b214d8597add37ae670b0c897
3a9c7520dfdcb7bd891480b1d5920ad3e1fdea2d
describe
'41640' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIA' 'sip-files00184.pro'
0f0e68ed2429752ba609e5f160d0f530
07da6412852c3ac2915dbaca3f554c4e7c7e5ce0
describe
'42804' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIB' 'sip-files00185.pro'
a0535d0559c1b3f73f863ea90803f36f
c8023404d3b4b4f45f27af9b65abb10f36805e66
describe
'43743' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIC' 'sip-files00186.pro'
ee24dbfdb20630e42cd3b3dc45d37608
44165cf98eccad92bd71a584e986af8117656c23
describe
'2527' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWID' 'sip-files00188.pro'
a0fc6a13dc678e8698befe331571877d
a8048c5cbcf83046e6c7c8024002c6de8757b437
describe
'44012' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIE' 'sip-files00189b.pro'
11586d1b60b03caa22c6c7e70ec0d917
e5f2391f86f6f4c9d5e73b319f812318bf0e7b24
describe
'41592' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIF' 'sip-files00191.pro'
9985ef709be4ba9625c494d63d6b3d5f
cf935f969c9ae12dd62b4d8b0657154b8198433b
describe
'43688' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIG' 'sip-files00192.pro'
999770d468c12a9c647fcd27014431a8
32d033c8e6943c320c0c16ae30835b6bc6d89d97
describe
'41006' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIH' 'sip-files00193.pro'
38539d720f117ed3a2e2260166830a7a
23e61078d82b4db6814c2a04c52d530fe548046c
describe
'40087' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWII' 'sip-files00194.pro'
9fe5377808b079bfd38e49a7475baa00
97ec8450a6b7c272651f5127c2e8ef67aedd716a
describe
'43083' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIJ' 'sip-files00195.pro'
e68b2ae5a599001e1ae4f0a4624cbcde
fc0e4002bf9c9c0b0cc1c77794a71f502333baf8
describe
'42256' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIK' 'sip-files00196.pro'
6b97d18b90deb15a1f5aaac506cc0b87
7959e4cf84a43bb00c4a386949e50eb0c3584b76
describe
'43468' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIL' 'sip-files00197.pro'
9a6aca89a5d1992be7b69e0ae75dd2da
d6af2e73f7e7bf627adf7a308d45866ef77b21f3
describe
'28713' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIM' 'sip-files00203.pro'
e9bf0eb99fd3cbfe162d4b6e26bf3cfd
0a49c04e44ae302ed6449d783760863388f2f70d
describe
'40488' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIN' 'sip-files00205.pro'
ccc2a11fa9859123659d27b4e8377d15
45eefd8998871c94e00d5700000d1fc710f34d7f
'2012-05-27T15:19:32-04:00'
describe
'40726' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIO' 'sip-files00206.pro'
ffe8f685e4f168e79e1466f2e211eeca
95b9a6bff8c37d3cdb305d0e603ec381fcd24225
describe
'41792' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIP' 'sip-files00207.pro'
5a62eeca9be316160322dca4609fd55f
25315e8948259fcbc6daf76374307c737d3b7f99
describe
'42944' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIQ' 'sip-files00208.pro'
802ba0f8c492d71a151575b553844720
d96290de0cee56e9b1f2be797172bc184bf93cef
describe
'39576' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIR' 'sip-files00211.pro'
0907a9fb4195d6402977878169366baf
ecacb67c25be08ab24aab86ee032a73e8a97e9f4
describe
'39200' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIS' 'sip-files00212.pro'
d8c2ba9e8cfc9b43cc3df983f9dff9b6
b65704ecd8cc1f924923ebdee8f70efe068fe05a
describe
'36249' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIT' 'sip-files00213.pro'
fddcca274937fad7055ebf916faacb5a
f30fccb66301a476309a07894addf1dd71e4b615
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIU' 'sip-files00216.pro'
93011a0da73d1cf1519c08165ce4dac1
1bb5c823f5f507fcbc7331fac7420a0e89c0db34
describe
'42168' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIV' 'sip-files00218.pro'
faa9860c376ae0fea2e702b78a4354a6
0129c5f4f9461aab4f5306bbcb8e328e9579d2d1
describe
'42372' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIW' 'sip-files00219.pro'
27710f25e7d7aadf93cefd705e6b23cd
96afaa380b3e96ba19d98564f91fbb82e8ff3002
describe
'42838' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIX' 'sip-files00220.pro'
96e5d21e3415ff59a9ff55c25853085e
9f023ed794c64c3edf28a01c23d3b915f5673fac
describe
'41883' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIY' 'sip-files00222.pro'
30fd4a95df43cce90c3c96c9a28634fa
7dccd767471d75ee4ee81a812d50730eae315120
describe
'40512' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWIZ' 'sip-files00223a.pro'
0481083849cadea7b0376bb60a60abe4
d2e83484852ee45373a8b244fd0c0441dd37623b
describe
'44354' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJA' 'sip-files00223b.pro'
4d094f7c06ebc2beb2eab99653005af8
22a68fb7e1be6b9505d3eeae583f04585426e900
describe
'42794' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJB' 'sip-files00226.pro'
322f64014e6cfc2b933322fc1dcaa662
a1f484fc6d5c942b11a3f5a6b4d2ade22cfc43f7
describe
'36455' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJC' 'sip-files00228.pro'
ddac510b0e5de2b13c03a4471fe03046
89ec15314913d1092644acdebb093876fdef1b85
describe
'43459' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJD' 'sip-files00229.pro'
4ded3313e58c6b8245309869d5735857
e52782d23db325bcf64cc761aa0e77f7d10bda15
describe
'43458' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJE' 'sip-files00232.pro'
8b89c82310150df3eb75050af250d834
f0adc3be575e43f9337d87640d93525b739f13c2
describe
'44105' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJF' 'sip-files00233.pro'
ee789ef7d991217c55c224722ee6b31b
72e3d8036a82536d685a2ab55903b3fbd9372a86
describe
'42921' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJG' 'sip-files00235.pro'
b4b75177b4fc04c3ad13bce06537226e
6da503882671f156eeba40664a088e58e208db4d
describe
'42106' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJH' 'sip-files00236.pro'
11073cfa8189f3a4db589611588a9621
2fe95a14e3b7e703c912cdca5066b7b89bdf4e81
describe
'40740' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJI' 'sip-files00237.pro'
b4168e353b680f8eddf972d4d4f7ff33
21c5a6331e253146c1078dbc6de845a17333236b
describe
'42714' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJJ' 'sip-files00245.pro'
7017b378ed5705231e376b504b7d1d4d
8380e6211fd1f0c7c4e1d593cd5949af6e43bebc
describe
'45986' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJK' 'sip-files00249.pro'
1a7af906c0afb60ce32ec27b87a7cea6
f68adff5e00be174bd0f98e11d87b70eee2b6527
describe
'42081' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJL' 'sip-files00250.pro'
e5ea74186e1b05b98dc2f534038545ca
8e6e058f8888afc0d36a0ad6daed7a12a589bde2
describe
'43325' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJM' 'sip-files00252.pro'
68e1eb61d5d81fcbefc3734728ad7a24
b965f0f035b21d443d883ef8b61cf29ab27b226a
describe
'42378' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJN' 'sip-files00253.pro'
9c5226faaefb105a209da394a68e9c32
646d7c568ee735cda0434b8d27b8c4ca9c141f43
describe
'42784' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJO' 'sip-files00256.pro'
e0f8a006f55c186bd675d9d4854d2967
9b2fa3201ddf4c066e771043ae869ef84d221afa
describe
'43059' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJP' 'sip-files00257.pro'
89ce79de2b146b610a5a37e6600d24f2
cbba105017136943d93c2e19c787fcd45f2a064a
describe
'42470' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJQ' 'sip-files00259.pro'
70e107f97798204ed6878f69891f18bc
f40b3c42cec79de996e920136249c9e5363ad5ff
describe
'43338' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJR' 'sip-files00260.pro'
e6d478694519d24a06db621941be642e
50f427372de4a9b4ae5805cca5bc33bca14d088f
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJS' 'sip-files00264.pro'
16e69cf56073b48c04bc469333dcabba
7c1bc5320635ddd56645fb6a96aff9ad741d6f96
describe
'40555' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJT' 'sip-files00266.pro'
d8c6373ad44f7468811688227bfaf8c1
bafd557f5327e2ff711c2f2245e793a8a8ad2db1
describe
'38974' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJU' 'sip-files00268.pro'
348eca5a25df60acedc7e71c355f8216
91b90ed88e72d45a049b3d20774d90305b0a8f87
describe
'43630' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJV' 'sip-files00272.pro'
467890826fa97663ab8be1ac9821a689
4671bdf5cd24bccaf32f7b67a5623194a40e4042
describe
'44293' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJW' 'sip-files00273.pro'
c98d54b0dc36c7807de15606754c7c29
a11d370ef10bdc67f0ef3f6a3e6b7295f0a913ff
describe
'41781' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJX' 'sip-files00274.pro'
c91568689e3e76c0e5693d25e96e4b38
010377a5dfa1368902f7944cdb9b74539c5e32b8
describe
'43247' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJY' 'sip-files00275.pro'
43696273f10e6ce1d03ace9b50112f00
7dd2659a6f35e67514eb08abfc1f489f8c04aba8
describe
'37353' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWJZ' 'sip-files00276.pro'
e62fd74afc010fb6eadde98402c536e8
eedb4ebeea391a080cea4f095a689c992e3b8e2f
describe
'34716' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKA' 'sip-files00277.pro'
7e042ba47d3b701a0b769e8b13df5561
c23c16ae6bffca0f5f8b4313fb855b6274dd6c7b
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKB' 'sip-files00279.pro'
26721121474b72d8cf13790c06fb6cd6
f952f99fc7711de1bf7f69310c763fae5353b8e2
'2012-05-27T15:23:33-04:00'
describe
'40059' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKC' 'sip-files00282.pro'
0c4f709144fc5d7028ce3db282d3258d
d3745a02ab27a3b27b56d1a627c8af98667c201e
describe
'44542' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKD' 'sip-files00283.pro'
e6f2906a20449c0ff46d7fd21a9a1b1c
f9a124534744b9678f6c6d27996b57f71cb785e2
describe
'41723' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKE' 'sip-files00288.pro'
acf3756d4677e1d8207affdf4b622f7a
ecac811f7f08acef7c97e4ffcec38522c830cfdc
describe
'42161' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKF' 'sip-files00290.pro'
9ce5eef721e1c8dbff5c9d0c6942b154
ee975d46a9f44a834c63929f5ff7ae0eaf399a96
describe
'18909' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKG' 'sip-files00291.pro'
48e743719a3a614c86b5dd3448e09457
a7df36905b0770ad493026b0b55884d22d7afe7b
describe
'32725' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKH' 'sip-files00292.pro'
06238fb722364fe483451009f139177c
25004052340d680f58f4db5a828b5556efe55216
describe
'43714' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKI' 'sip-files00293.pro'
e9d2679dccc06815d659145389bbb764
4f04c5b47ff409062ec46c05acf0882f57b42e0b
describe
'43730' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKJ' 'sip-files00294.pro'
0e95f5b58a2a80b50ffc410227d5bfc8
0f099a940938245155969e9f8cebbcd273264613
describe
'46074' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKK' 'sip-files00298.pro'
00b6fff41f25d8465e47342f79f74cfc
c0e01ad5bda15c9cc36a2fd2863d325411ebcfea
describe
'1275' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKL' 'sip-files00299.pro'
904b257e556e666f2ba9c774e5002cc8
b66f29da6aa785a6b63ca9c4de20d9d4e084d8c9
'2012-05-27T15:23:18-04:00'
describe
'41843' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKM' 'sip-files00300.pro'
2dd8d12c94b834306dc47dba3af86f41
7fa0b59326d1355683231826aeb2a0ead4190b83
describe
'40286' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKN' 'sip-files00303.pro'
3509d41add6bb006970f8ad74ac54cd0
ea0b48b0598155198e0da92f3c1c7c22a9a20e0c
'2012-05-27T15:28:35-04:00'
describe
'42965' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKO' 'sip-files00304.pro'
5ca1bb74b70b0c403fdc65dfb3fd2e42
4fd183947d45b44f7b51aba0258b7866b0942af4
describe
'42092' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKP' 'sip-files00306.pro'
f1beebc2c5472ff1ca4be6d8b50f85a4
fd37804dbc392475b5279c92845c4cc43a666de7
describe
'42143' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKQ' 'sip-files00307.pro'
3de014ab81ce073bc7e90409336d101b
7fab639597674d00e2e4c5067f97fd54f44ecd8d
describe
'42710' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKR' 'sip-files00308.pro'
c5430770799bb38c3fc2fbcef039b753
6072f07255bf031df1bf671cd0521ab469fb5607
describe
'44681' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKS' 'sip-files00309.pro'
078fab31c221cde86ad2333101ae12c7
09f4769804b74819d6cb69b0fd272ef90e403da5
describe
'40390' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKT' 'sip-files00310.pro'
f21ec15a5f5cb55025d8774fb0ae9212
e88a82882bea5f3ff69a04acf293e938b3130755
describe
'41208' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKU' 'sip-files00312.pro'
2d0f43773f6d54b97a70b0d75f7307c5
e315a5c596cc4defc40317c80ef6214c57e8d852
'2012-05-27T15:20:27-04:00'
describe
'41947' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKV' 'sip-files00314.pro'
309e4710a8efd4ecc11d23fb8b3b70d1
c55be7ad4571cbb756bdeed53b3e8c4d8c32f5ed
describe
'41784' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKW' 'sip-files00316.pro'
bad1f7f481cdf955a42ec8d763ff816b
6699d2ef33c2f31b76117b8286a3b190624013b2
describe
'43605' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKX' 'sip-files00317.pro'
a2a08cad04aeaa0cbce345c747e5d945
fb47246f53f3e273ecfe714fe6f41280b1632d64
describe
'43602' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKY' 'sip-files00318.pro'
173298c417fd20ef35f6d50e17225830
be47e05c7a6757f07c5e6b6d7afd456a43c60c42
describe
'41137' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWKZ' 'sip-files00319.pro'
ca938d79594b79f6f01d917f235c49c7
a8c8d5041cc9b6ca9105767aef0ff98bdbc35549
describe
'43845' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLA' 'sip-files00320.pro'
5a590867efc2a792913ac2d3febec752
d87350858bf5649207a41d59e71641a1f36f107f
describe
'41740' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLB' 'sip-files00321.pro'
72ac146458270bfba7e8d7634c59aba2
2a7ba25595555e2023ef7378b30455f8f26c94b1
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLC' 'sip-files00322.pro'
c86e1e0306d7875e731d45ada9a75628
bedc7988eea411b5c590c1892c5427eb8f8c62a3
describe
'42245' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLD' 'sip-files00323.pro'
5691c69822c1b55bdb4e5869186c1ad6
ef99253363c9c3b6fff04392b6f8b13a3f48aeda
describe
'44098' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLE' 'sip-files00324.pro'
896205f59faebf12b19ac29d22643391
3da01003b5e2ad828cbaa9317974c6df6d82ef93
describe
'43848' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLF' 'sip-files00325.pro'
4130b3fae8d2ca60efd91056080f6746
a2debbd4c72b3dcf692f2903062577d069527e11
describe
'44582' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLG' 'sip-files00326.pro'
e642d5d78cc248fe979a30452b60bd18
50dd6d92796a49fdee5c94e510dfd7a584c72e90
describe
'42416' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLH' 'sip-files00328.pro'
67bcd914733ebd1ee5768374740f50d9
047d47ff471a0e45154e50a964dfaa5279a35e88
describe
'43174' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLI' 'sip-files00330.pro'
1b12573e02949a6465fe84201d1f4e1f
cb64339c5f6cff45d7c1f553ad1615c55ef61989
'2012-05-27T15:25:09-04:00'
describe
'43120' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLJ' 'sip-files00331.pro'
49a15fd39230a5b5434957dd478c5a63
61c7df6280656e052b70014db4e4a5bd11018660
describe
'39545' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLK' 'sip-files00332.pro'
5831bb1f29fbb8605601905e36ab6866
814e2125e1d7de1b43592ab6311a22ca169117f2
describe
'42650' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLL' 'sip-files00333.pro'
3d1f7e0007f2b6d1fd4b5d27a276808b
428b2a378c6a04f456243dcc589394386c8cfe8f
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLM' 'sip-files00334.pro'
39558f9224a73d9461ed5e2c981c40a0
254125ed4096ac4f363f376970b10a16e703f581
describe
'42837' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLN' 'sip-files00335.pro'
81c258fcdd9d99e22dcc9cbad25cddc2
4893270394a72544560d7bfae1195e29a128ca2e
describe
'41261' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLO' 'sip-files00337.pro'
a7ae6b06977669e92ff9c5126343f415
5a3ab68ca329e42191af6f57710ca00bef84979c
describe
'43088' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLP' 'sip-files00338.pro'
7b12cb6dcc6cee91fbfe550fe58940bc
802d092e7c97f9c5f69f6558c2f389b22e06a6e6
describe
'32672' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLQ' 'sip-files00345.pro'
7c86f74a54e3ac0a3a26ed3fde6f32e4
9998ef808ea576c2dc12e48c1d4ce1d6ab5cc279
describe
'43698' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLR' 'sip-files00346.pro'
0012dd69e51024e0a78ec32d67f988da
de03d94ad2756b542aa5f17c281d0efa234bb6ed
describe
'44533' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLS' 'sip-files00347.pro'
17897acc633d867c19ee1cd13dd23bd0
d944a9714e9c3532511822a5fc72266351945bd0
describe
'42095' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLT' 'sip-files00349.pro'
2d80b1501695a537c7856acaf87547c2
4a63fcfcbd3cddf682cf786fae9ffeb56eb467f5
describe
'44312' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLU' 'sip-files00350.pro'
8a2902876667ad051be8c2b8e0506f3b
fbd47b4bd54a8f7818309ba6ef262c79d175f2cb
describe
'44598' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLV' 'sip-files00351.pro'
329bee1dc1855804d22bf8d463e55f16
123c5ad3827cc4bd76be1cece7b1e4c31b78fc6b
describe
'43326' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLW' 'sip-files00352.pro'
50aff6e58f579a7de10a10ba82b6e547
cbe36a53e76d856fd86ba337487af3b7076005f0
describe
'44135' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLX' 'sip-files00354.pro'
d33129807535c19b305af109af6da339
569525b904383e5be52d49062d88d90c196e6381
describe
'42413' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLY' 'sip-files00355.pro'
35b5bd9ab5fdf5a10ee3e0a8fd38c4d2
910f2c69853575e7a944137f63d982804b6d4406
describe
'43128' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWLZ' 'sip-files00358.pro'
a74c4620cc9c2cfe9b872d86f734cdd7
9ad1233c22d24c75594c580ba29c4ffd78ebe26f
describe
'18350' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMA' 'sip-files00359.pro'
2335af89567d9e7666f2ee6c15bf0e92
94a56d5ba898f365b5eb42a30d4fd44d5a9a2e2e
describe
'37511' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMB' 'sip-files00360.pro'
59c72782a7b242f5fbedce20bc287be8
37d2ad12864b4437a3ad4ae39dd4a922efe07762
describe
'38029' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMC' 'sip-files00361.pro'
787f827638556dbd3505fa7e0ae150fc
0f3fed5fcdd0e7d33c563c0158244925d5481ce3
describe
'612' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMD' 'sip-files00363.pro'
c53ffd28135c0fb00211ecbe059e48d2
fef876fb412152b4ec20f8867adcc5ac09f6ca76
describe
'59' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWME' 'sip-files00001.txt'
467e9ed38f01addc2516973d446a50e4
cf999bd7a0a6d7846faa9f25d3b206f8970410e2
describe
'22' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMF' 'sip-files00003.txt'
2fa285f221d2d26fb2e6befd06137dfd
9a888f89d7b5ffb03c87d4601d4505b46a1f05cd
describe
'68' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMG' 'sip-files00005.txt'
179f192849773a686983e34043232bc9
cc171edf10e5e897d60b1ddba1605130fbc27975
describe
'260' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMH' 'sip-files00007.txt'
409539f850923543e5d335a49d3c9fd7
b694c703c62481b2732cfaea6baee2c181469404
describe
'832' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMI' 'sip-files00010.txt'
cea733601261247b4369d9635b0e9a20
bce8fbab9714655964b482819ffe52361429d716
describe
'501' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMJ' 'sip-files00013.txt'
05df0e660a246bf05489d61563041665
56dbf4b4247cbf8e36d757beb197543b872f7b4a
describe
'1169' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMK' 'sip-files00014.txt'
4b61cfa6d7dfd77e242743a6d629ffe4
5ce300a6764f630549e8932c3706692e0c1043bc
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWML' 'sip-files00015.txt'
2f1473fd3ac0c0140991aef0ec8b8802
111d7555840805da2da4f83243a826b24f7f59d5
describe
'1803' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMM' 'sip-files00016.txt'
dc1f480a6dbdd830d7a1686a0170622f
53a68668f2020c1d7aa4cfc8ffcf53c202801445
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMN' 'sip-files00019.txt'
af102e19a91d78553dc9495859ac169f
c8da9f2b341029560e2a7e96c17d585bc0d4fd4e
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMO' 'sip-files00021.txt'
5c3ae97a75e232179a697612dc221257
9c6f1f940d21b6f64cb20a2e7b7cdee20618c3b3
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMP' 'sip-files00022.txt'
ed70418ca11ed16bcc83f75ac81fbc9e
5ee6ea0f36b42998f2741715707dbef6ff4f4205
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMQ' 'sip-files00023.txt'
db4462d74346d6a98f787ab05df13fee
6264f4bc4abb3c10b7a2c95c82741cbf2fdd0013
describe
'1746' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMR' 'sip-files00026.txt'
265ac2caa8cd7807782b8c69c6485e7e
6eb32d62b08e6816c3e72bd39d2646a5b8d9e625
describe
'1649' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMS' 'sip-files00027.txt'
7ec986a55148cb24afd892674ea7f074
e9bc0e91e10a850044e0eb5e5675277170b4fad1
describe
'1608' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMT' 'sip-files00029.txt'
9f6dd9edd9fe31da126a2eb3eda2f595
b207492ccb18b56b3096a04c8e3e70a0553768d7
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMU' 'sip-files00031.txt'
a355c1a3dda14f89c6caca4e2502c5e0
a16eb852e7e5bda4a29a1769873ea356e3aa89c0
describe
'1728' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMV' 'sip-files00033.txt'
5d63472037f9d8edcd88d98087dc5b33
6606b5f198b5fc8a77f853ac91cf13c47dbbcf98
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMW' 'sip-files00034.txt'
b73df87c853fe5e9f02b8165fcb6f86e
4e1523f9556c79a8a9466e204bfaef13404ed35f
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMX' 'sip-files00035.txt'
7838356ea7e7af2bece37dfc56bc58ca
57ad3291d889e6ac2660832a532c69d1bd4b55f1
describe
'1611' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMY' 'sip-files00036.txt'
44cab4c32fdefe0cc3213716acf40733
a61c70d92b0e742fc4aad1efaadb4c83854505b7
describe
'1573' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWMZ' 'sip-files00037.txt'
7fae3b231efbad3a1b0ba00d19f70681
f78a03ee97a3e384fdd31e57b4b83d72fec769c9
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNA' 'sip-files00038.txt'
d734dd13959612a0c1731cf1061f11b9
f158cbfb046993a9ec164c347c8952f8960788f8
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNB' 'sip-files00039.txt'
393b2e1dec3d148b05a4e1bf353217c6
76e144420de3836c8839c8b591e63ac051d72eda
describe
'1765' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNC' 'sip-files00041.txt'
8ab8cdde4801d3d6de99492c3dee865e
c29c191d2d4af8d3b179f363b56d90846fd101f9
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWND' 'sip-files00042.txt'
498d220ff1fde1b51c8ee68d4c1f740f
4d55b5478afa8a9e452dcfadca92f14aed883966
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNE' 'sip-files00044.txt'
322ecbcb69532ec2382e6beed5902921
7a992e77945f56c5916c673603ddfd96eb830b41
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNF' 'sip-files00045.txt'
252efc6c54185d7256702dc4d99c1a17
47a811e707314edd6598afe8c2bfcba89685621a
describe
'1771' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNG' 'sip-files00046.txt'
ed013559674ec2ab4a5246d0ca6d59bd
15f588379a0fff7c52f94c75a76ce9fcd8639fb9
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNH' 'sip-files00047.txt'
42525bea7c6e22743d702ce15fe0abc9
4ef15d0c67ff3e07c1c731842e9112ac1cd7b9af
describe
'1705' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNI' 'sip-files00048.txt'
46e50bda69709ab75ef5787accb792f6
eb6057926e56cc4579aaa9cc7082ce40780869cd
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNJ' 'sip-files00049.txt'
8ee280859225daa0e9d138f917e1cb1b
0148a3542352b87f0064ab027a00e7987bcd0b33
describe
'1651' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNK' 'sip-files00053.txt'
af8ec7776f45d1fccdeac8a09151506b
6be5979b057628080d96a1e792e2973a108a80d9
describe
'180' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNL' 'sip-files00054.txt'
b7fc9449b0b7bfde0f13e803bb1f748e
644f683a14a1e1c8403e4a75820b4b50bd725138
describe
Invalid character
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNM' 'sip-files00056.txt'
c186f4e8a1e1a8896227b9f6ed70e084
2d94c7906471a4754287689a91e043b81e9c133a
describe
'1588' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNN' 'sip-files00057.txt'
2d8119c417fada2f53e91098ba07be65
f738df86c789823e1552c3e9caeb729c2e6d6d37
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNO' 'sip-files00058.txt'
431c20aa8777f6e625aaf01edf78e626
277b3316f558fd74abb67301996fbd8b74c62783
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNP' 'sip-files00060.txt'
22308bffb42df58f657964aa354ff068
1a76a4fc137c8aab6c68f656686945fb3b05b41f
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNQ' 'sip-files00064.txt'
9d8f66d832b2928c9d10b5af30b7aea3
fbfbb04949d6efcb826e2110952183dbde64d3f2
describe
'1613' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNR' 'sip-files00066.txt'
ee4cb0ead8bdeeece714ff89ad0ed08d
c3a7a382f004785310df35b419390126fe76dbd6
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNS' 'sip-files00067.txt'
b0f6729974bae876e598edf6dfe4d517
306761ce8c3eb48569f33824c263f2889db5fe8e
describe
'1648' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNT' 'sip-files00068.txt'
5e085148205ce7afb6649770bc0db51e
ba0c390c4c808517afd8ec6927f0d26f744c5035
describe
'1600' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNU' 'sip-files00071.txt'
aed87cbd01c8aa5db16d6ce14c8c7eb1
29253022c04662087373956045a9ee20b4bd7525
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNV' 'sip-files00072.txt'
9929a95d7f95492aecf951c48ccdf243
1d8c30c1bbcdf118c86e46ac99e0e415596342dd
describe
'1619' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNW' 'sip-files00073.txt'
076f323325f267d8e847da3bb7cb46dd
b0b841fb2540648cd0e6ff2004fc3a32856b7cad
describe
'1044' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNX' 'sip-files00075.txt'
c558482eb7ed59060a653767665637c7
01ca91017aba446728723c9724fd815f2d360871
describe
'1666' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNY' 'sip-files00080.txt'
99def2405606f039ad66c87ae55e735c
a408a39f2ef21c555e6d695664818838696c5fc3
'2012-05-27T15:19:54-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWNZ' 'sip-files00081.txt'
3129db020dce2e48172d496dbb585495
b1fd7248547184497b11a02d3a22c1dc54345650
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOA' 'sip-files00082.txt'
7d0ede597056f77409432ee8a23ffc2f
9f9aa90e3c91b11a4daf5ca8b2f6d3e9886ab167
describe
'1671' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOB' 'sip-files00083.txt'
b62d6e7a33c975a33ade017aa77f5ada
be89a8cccf805ef65714e3929aaa57976f3578f8
describe
'1745' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOC' 'sip-files00084.txt'
871615dc9141aa84f62361d4bff2e0bb
bc75aa527bf277a0d096240f7c04cbd7e539d9fd
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOD' 'sip-files00086.txt'
02254bef62aa48eff3d0e0ae01412724
1eb2a0aee5dbca9c9eb276defb71d5adfdebac41
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOE' 'sip-files00087.txt'
796fc30acd61343d4ab79766c213744a
e41b7440ff158bd2318747e0da363a2b95276ea3
'2012-05-27T15:31:09-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOF' 'sip-files00090.txt'
66615bdd8b6af1db233a11e112d8eb2d
ed54625a65e1be966c5e5d36f1313122b06112d7
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOG' 'sip-files00091.txt'
8c72725bd3ff6aca1bd9eb118af10ee9
f7fe1f65931a39f7122a1857b66d46126f2a7486
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOH' 'sip-files00092.txt'
921c1e7699227aa1555f0823d2bfcc17
1ec869b7efc417b428fc67e725f9e32000509a89
describe
'1808' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOI' 'sip-files00095.txt'
fdfc6db6fbcce86e5b50b52ec9908b32
97025c6938f304c57edbaa7e93716b8a5152c859
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOJ' 'sip-files00096.txt'
67b156c9f9af5d3ad4dd80b2ed4a2513
5ecaac41d10ddf4f4bb91ed1a800c121f6fde70c
describe
'1595' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOK' 'sip-files00099.txt'
040bec49bfedbc92a9e97d076c1f595c
69f122b7e1df853a5b17daab00c3fd9546ce6fe2
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOL' 'sip-files00101.txt'
087cb54f6b8897f5cb627c1849b64975
35788ef89e5af5c48fea6f5ac93a36646e713881
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOM' 'sip-files00103.txt'
113ec0ee994a1df40cfc59255daf75c6
485e2ab73f2f50e8046b485047a403f937994258
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWON' 'sip-files00105.txt'
c3207e9ed2ea479ce04a4251a2e7d6db
9d26e08f60e8d8fd446da7999ab7caccb4cc5822
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOO' 'sip-files00106.txt'
c65529d2b07482782c64e909c28d8ad9
1cb1d051694308086252a78b4710961bc5a8f53a
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOP' 'sip-files00110.txt'
983897cdd7ec1bc2cbde281a938bcf3d
e87772b207b9da7983dec3f1254ef1240e7518fb
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOQ' 'sip-files00111.txt'
c6083ea0c02308423c8ae3827141a21a
ecadbf8ecdddb36fe24008d1ce0993ede525157a
describe
'1790' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOR' 'sip-files00114.txt'
6e84a2a7e0e8721d32510ff5b7fe10a8
5f8a3233e3fee63b060d6fcc03031ff537229cb0
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOS' 'sip-files00115.txt'
a36e593df1f53f8563e9981f1c74f023
404d7ab2283248d04bba6be84d3490133f676eb3
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOT' 'sip-files00116.txt'
4368d3b630e2d218bc3b9b6063cc7641
fc9b8f8e79eade3de32c5cab938cfc5c081995c4
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOU' 'sip-files00118.txt'
6c88c0351b1de08c3dae452acf4e3f56
cd9e57a79570e2c7f7fdf4da3f093a8e6de83e05
describe
'1659' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOV' 'sip-files00120.txt'
cdfb1eba9d9c5203f8966db7ca40208a
b91fd6ef46592fe6724056f0d71d5579339b5cee
describe
'1412' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOW' 'sip-files00122.txt'
8e0157faabc2dd941c5b5bac8254ef93
36a5e3b3caf8ccd7093c4fc9fc01fd81ff8438c5
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOX' 'sip-files00123.txt'
b6ee04454e76a3944fae2366b2689c7e
ff431d199bdfd00673acd6bf7ac3014fae04e4ee
describe
'1715' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOY' 'sip-files00124.txt'
f4282f8b724ada72b751ee73a1207deb
e69df06e60559de9d7e9b0ff22545a192fbc4339
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWOZ' 'sip-files00127.txt'
52d127250f76f429fa3f855dc06b65b1
a0b01e7f01638a66a4fee077c662150783b873e7
describe
'1770' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPA' 'sip-files00128.txt'
d9c8de1cb159f6a980c6d9ac480e728c
a0ea1e930dde3d3e4be980371a83e92e742ee89e
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPB' 'sip-files00133.txt'
082c8d002428857e10c18ecdbe17b2f8
cb5ffe85f585c508847bb82f2404c0b9074294e5
'2012-05-27T15:29:56-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPC' 'sip-files00135.txt'
024951f12f9bd61cbf376f3aa4f82d15
987ca2953db0f865ad43b6fc6f93240e69203bf2
describe
'314' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPD' 'sip-files00137.txt'
44f4a4a251e944f899db8d1589ee0327
701568ef333bb7e5efe06b39decb9e947e0d6420
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPE' 'sip-files00139.txt'
1fbb16b5210ab70a622beebc2d9ab887
407770939a25a2cd56cc01359688cd15a018fd36
describe
'1759' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPF' 'sip-files00143.txt'
fe5c589336fe3005db701eb41c55e98a
52d2b13ad90233fb45fe92f35e94c9852807d5a8
describe
'1761' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPG' 'sip-files00144.txt'
b6f214292a0b4209c5e5f0ee523fd624
ee61630a0f5fb3687ee71d14bf36b19727334806
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPH' 'sip-files00151.txt'
27058b20643669b8dcfec49d2d7c98d1
63ad9af8c17e7ba244b96a5d731ed329dac87b88
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPI' 'sip-files00152.txt'
c027a8708b4c4912875533797b62a4e4
f852d2c4aca358278dc6420850afd64c9a684a93
describe
'1754' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPJ' 'sip-files00153.txt'
114d6d7513a494e09e601fc0263d9706
5ba96d955b6c94e3aba52f335e79941403c4f2c2
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPK' 'sip-files00155.txt'
c75182006d6f2e9c2444ed0a2b495c01
ded2555af78514fdde2817b681d5acf4308393a7
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPL' 'sip-files00157.txt'
67b06e321562535bdae3ad02a387583c
c6a42b8217656947c016a3b2413b0532c8b9a526
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPM' 'sip-files00158.txt'
5cbfa984945805545db1bc56066e78fa
441b44a208e5a16d219bed67078be786879fbede
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPN' 'sip-files00159.txt'
1c978bf5edfec55a11e23f168c76de90
bf86d494424520332f65718d16ca8f406a481aeb
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPO' 'sip-files00160.txt'
77b2a22657aa6e623dcda3d4386dbfa4
c503c2cc3c6de4e7c1ada0bdbbe4c796cbb59131
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPP' 'sip-files00161.txt'
f479dda96e5074d4bc0bdb40bf1026e5
0a28987a50569977e559ba2d33977cb38aee331f
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPQ' 'sip-files00162.txt'
785e5e2622581462e8bd529145840adc
5070d37e7f1a1d1763639602cde6d39d4171fd30
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPR' 'sip-files00163.txt'
afc24f0ddf4fcb23a1ae736869317266
400b8c90ec938b8c1df7f932cd5b203e7ec873a8
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPS' 'sip-files00164.txt'
4bd396b19f61ce39f4cd8c73988e73cf
2761740d35e92843ba9f9aa66a7d8c304726f744
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPT' 'sip-files00165.txt'
42b03e0091eb282ecdfbeb6f5a39fc95
1ccc7ec493b65fbfe3c9087680eb628a0a0b58e0
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPU' 'sip-files00166.txt'
e9b07e02f0e3f89d9c30fe25f11b0e56
a939964de20199417f56eeffbd3f79ced1d7becf
describe
'1674' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPV' 'sip-files00167.txt'
b59037eb278cc2438b577f1487a098a7
9bf16057fe426c2cc509ed0ec1fcc2aae7f8acec
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPW' 'sip-files00168.txt'
04b0c342600656daa088c0e4e176b115
8da6d3d5321d3e627ce8e8b0ad8f8e2a81684fec
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPX' 'sip-files00171.txt'
8199539361c1f1731832f0e8d975735a
561412c20da226e051b25ef9ace7f552e2a2abaf
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPY' 'sip-files00173.txt'
d3aa1258d7aff382fcf7aa66350845c4
8e1400e8dd2560a8408a34061d9519657bd4005e
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWPZ' 'sip-files00174.txt'
37dd3e3d1096bf9659a8cb613ffd285b
0af30572f58d1a884a91f729f94b992a420f2cd5
describe
'1795' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQA' 'sip-files00176.txt'
c6e94c507418d1d6c6fc919b320600a6
612379c17a354b5f2c4b10b1631f1e89f32aa1d7
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQB' 'sip-files00177.txt'
bd8c904452267d3760d5446aada1a59c
54a352cc878d226bcb66e06fffc198d618a2a54f
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQC' 'sip-files00178.txt'
70f2f02acfee33ab036cb38226e4372d
d13c75a64f12727e1cd4c001b4d35dfdd092c7e7
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQD' 'sip-files00181.txt'
08c443c7fe251298f0ee9ab05f90ecc4
29fe061c280878a7ba0e7ce2743f6173897205f5
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQE' 'sip-files00184.txt'
ef10fd04656dcc3de0b964f6bba2d9f0
250fd6acada120f76655af048668e980f8060b3f
describe
'235' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQF' 'sip-files00188.txt'
f7c62467411169ca94c7cb228c905727
0c700493fae8687ee8b834c4c2f006eadf6eed85
describe
'1411' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQG' 'sip-files00189.txt'
4d063936cf0860ec11acc8d318aa3b8e
9e9642a12bf795979012437fe644e08de04c161a
'2012-05-27T15:19:02-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQH' 'sip-files00190.txt'
82099a54a70576babacdfc5f3b6eb70a
0f16f1aa9fb0db6aefffb466cc500f9546f21576
describe
'1661' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQI' 'sip-files00193.txt'
c9eeecfd69c29bfebad2ffbd32c6bbcb
52a7ef179dd5849102f249882847069290562e29
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQJ' 'sip-files00195.txt'
1dbf7972fcadd61d4486be46e6700723
fa8714ef637e4083a6be83f8645be57f91a32ffd
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQK' 'sip-files00196.txt'
5aa28c8adccd422122d5e0723216875b
d3b83ddaf90b20df2e660941f89852e73ab1145e
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQL' 'sip-files00197.txt'
cb582d5203ac577260403ca64c365c03
073a4f3cc8998cdfee215024cd34644796d96935
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQM' 'sip-files00199b.txt'
be3c50c4c98ba8e22f9ca5d48770a136
84de7a13c312cdbbcc49dfed50d21cf960cf6eb3
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQN' 'sip-files00200.txt'
fd4aed060bc51fb236a04bdf92a0340f
e2300481367c4be5a78f970311785b82cfc7ea3f
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQO' 'sip-files00201.txt'
89b6dc8b52aff2c3388bac60ae1b14f4
7d7b8098b78b469d01a5a1e84222879727598469
describe
'1836' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQP' 'sip-files00203.txt'
0aa2426d689b7c654fe2b74ac7fd0fb5
16a6dc738edaae28ee37f535a39ed0a79ae3622f
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQQ' 'sip-files00204.txt'
897ceca3bdb777bae615e741e82f84eb
abf3fb301428a325f45c340e43c317b22a2a31d7
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQR' 'sip-files00205.txt'
648ca49591cec4999eed401c5e231893
866ef6c5298d645bfc0b73c128e84efe35a1345c
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQS' 'sip-files00206.txt'
79264d571efb15a17a690339886da7fd
5e0401c58a4bf3e74574ca2caa24fe3c1e67ebad
'2012-05-27T15:31:49-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQT' 'sip-files00208.txt'
f23be4a0be42884364465f9293e9f5ce
2e9077c438e65f1331dbe3d2f9b2a350bc5288f1
describe
'1869' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQU' 'sip-files00211.txt'
1f5e00a5b0916422ccc91e27efc1f9d8
9138cd0f9f0622e24a378bb84dded70fdaa74371
describe
'1970' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQV' 'sip-files00212.txt'
e2d2f59230cea64458c32b172b3fb486
6a2ea4fe3798f664960aeef54fad0178dfd8526d
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQW' 'sip-files00216.txt'
b199cf1ce854f4634ffaf3e305813083
5fc72d0b0783679ecf6290a9ef8f1d3ba478b751
describe
'1855' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQX' 'sip-files00221.txt'
3e902453d8525221a8aa281dbb919f37
efd8652ab38966cf66af032dbced8f4c3fa1fd9c
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQY' 'sip-files00222.txt'
a5f5efe3f2b62103b78cd1b93c4cc1c1
bf8298b9bdf752804c8d48ff4969a06ca2214099
describe
'1779' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWQZ' 'sip-files00223.txt'
3aac8b8e2f2dd858dc691c3f31c05cce
1ec947c5391677efa915809ce6e4e66dbf7e38e1
describe
'1756' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRA' 'sip-files00223b.txt'
d7cc82014e98cdabd6cff7dc6e35d742
3cd989044191a3bfc6da3c583ab0528b7fc8da68
describe
'1697' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRB' 'sip-files00224.txt'
900b849d12c873c55d04c6ee45329c99
8c46d503908bba00ea7813ac140755ac0f5df52c
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRC' 'sip-files00225.txt'
ca03b95f0a11e154759f01ff433085d9
0461b7bf89231fe4ff08f8cdea49839b7046b300
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRD' 'sip-files00226.txt'
7ab458cbaaab6abc745ebf4fdcbf3a4b
de3ce512b8b8a30bf366cf37142da234928e1f5e
describe
'1644' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRE' 'sip-files00227.txt'
4621c8e246434aee30239232d1200a8d
cfd15687e1b679ab1677d79bf8a9ecba7f20fc94
describe
'1887' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRF' 'sip-files00232.txt'
14666a81b5614c823b4bc184502419f0
e99731fb7183f01fd207edb3c4e9164bd02247a6
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRG' 'sip-files00234.txt'
7e69ffac063373f9a444c9f1828a63f2
28f2bd44923440ead75f58e79c76698a52b37eb7
describe
'1850' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRH' 'sip-files00238.txt'
a09c9a428c50f5c5c247648f43afdc11
f70fb32169bd32c1683086f0628e0c34acd427fd
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRI' 'sip-files00239.txt'
580a5122da3308630afc9c32c4f8df74
081a20da2b3806e1d0fb71e00f51570865926751
'2012-05-27T15:27:19-04:00'
describe
'1637' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRJ' 'sip-files00240.txt'
84b72c5a5f33143a7eaa3fdcc369eef3
3666b763df31721d67d15ebe429e97ac447b1ddb
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRK' 'sip-files00241.txt'
55a0c12f970b66ddfeb967eb160dd384
5acbfdbcaaf6e3ab02cc1c3592d1320e7da1f168
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRL' 'sip-files00243.txt'
84d5b8b35c96c39028616914de6c8de8
2f934af0ce608e7a609ee95b00d75dd0b53239dc
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRM' 'sip-files00244.txt'
654d9aab5194407bd44a097d3f3d8b5a
0669da791547f8574662d21f89a3c9ccf607cf25
describe
'699' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRN' 'sip-files00246.txt'
2d99038c06706e34b49ef48f8b972742
739ec3164d75a8c85e3178d5210433c80536ac9c
describe
'1366' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRO' 'sip-files00247.txt'
f0713c33950a7e8659c2f0d54d8997ab
638daab545f85819e8b1203267450dc090cb4a05
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRP' 'sip-files00248.txt'
9782c01139698d8da9227306315fea82
30dc331b97589180a11cc49dc85cd0e8d88590f9
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRQ' 'sip-files00251.txt'
b988115bc376973c9467edf09fbc41dc
41c4ccaffee46e550e4e2de1c3fcf835aa67af66
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRR' 'sip-files00253.txt'
9e4d7a7fd356f2b1fbc31b0714d3ef9e
d223310e1a61575893e81537530f5e52096b62aa
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRS' 'sip-files00255.txt'
31e58eea061a6c3689b067093de38712
8757abbf6753da543c4a6311f7a2b83c3425666e
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRT' 'sip-files00256.txt'
a5280d8cc4eb25faa5d4c2f59de31161
9075e39bc4a3fbfffd2ffcff7c4d8811b5497f56
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRU' 'sip-files00257.txt'
ccd9e3acbf7b6922758d79d0ba8ef588
251c910671bb0b2a3b5a51f0452c34020916578b
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRV' 'sip-files00260.txt'
80622e83418e5624f7b9c5e0a42a6bc8
1d0153d02ea8fcc586a93e1d5c9035322604677e
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRW' 'sip-files00261.txt'
19d7b38641885a36ce4088dd1b38d2aa
190e223e2316c981f202afd73bf5eb5b179a4439
describe
'1753' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRX' 'sip-files00267.txt'
48e54a7d5d67cc155ab8e9a8f7725d8f
d77c6bd08f7cacb2bfb8c09a10f51df4e3eb924a
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRY' 'sip-files00268.txt'
2aff7ade3e4f56ea9cd0dd3c1b73eb4c
424e0126eedd6174eeeb89170b04baeb04560329
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWRZ' 'sip-files00269.txt'
5106d367099be397c4eebcdaef24b8fd
743da50d5f1496ce3a8bd3256d40985332703824
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSA' 'sip-files00272.txt'
d0d125730a6fb772a18502bb47bb2f33
795bc8735e007d68d03991b76b3d00429df7cd2a
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSB' 'sip-files00273.txt'
9cb81c25c011b03aca0054508e20ceb8
b288bd5eefa178b9b2212e3b5c613ebed3ace89a
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSC' 'sip-files00275.txt'
1d0c2f803de2928879372979cad0e815
484bee6d2d302fabfb07b9612549880d0b89bbf2
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSD' 'sip-files00278.txt'
0cb0e4ce35f4cefa10b83a356ec814e4
b7a1f730fa42d4eaf584071a74f0e881c0cdf993
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSE' 'sip-files00279.txt'
e225e8489b52c9c8f7c80711c7a2c712
a982e7a433e8a26e7afed8bd745b613448df5e21
describe
'1627' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSF' 'sip-files00282.txt'
1061931218c612fa70a40be3b67ab6c4
60c9c727e529bad2ddc9d7ab43edd5158afbb9b2
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSG' 'sip-files00283.txt'
b1d01e7f691317601244edc85db26f6d
1abdac18a8220b2202075370b12c1a542a524ed7
describe
'120' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSH' 'sip-files00286.txt'
589c630998ea47e8fdeb33010172fb3a
21aab15bb5b11eddf629c205448ec93063d4dc8d
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSI' 'sip-files00287.txt'
69281da09d41144809300a145f2de03a
2ea597c52ec2befaf8b20dbee239d6df51927539
'2012-05-27T15:28:16-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSJ' 'sip-files00288.txt'
9d36cc951fab73be5ab4acc485de1719
ac4c677561d863f2d5f29f65eb548b128116d49e
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSK' 'sip-files00289.txt'
de0411bc7b20fefe4071453e2b1d59a6
cb652f8cb462c4e9bc69d4c7e1e0854418296f07
describe
'790' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSL' 'sip-files00291.txt'
9c30b06704dbe02b59e6f069a5c25504
db625a9d2dad2655bf0b944d7f03930a832304d6
describe
'1350' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSM' 'sip-files00292.txt'
3951ce4d97ee5ac7712af91324c20991
2635e1f9420edb967af472af14ab350b8b15b4c8
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSN' 'sip-files00293.txt'
cbbbacd516a3e68460567b15f1c773af
1928537d35fea14dbef7593231a552e5950f7ce9
'2012-05-27T15:17:46-04:00'
describe
'1784' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSO' 'sip-files00297.txt'
8df99b3e0dbd48c5d84df9aa1ad66df0
ff7db76bdec4f9286657d944951eb26486c28c93
describe
'175' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSP' 'sip-files00299.txt'
6236eeb528b06bb4f53fffeae673e902
fa14eeff99c8eb2851ae3ed116f6d1aa6fdd75f2
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSQ' 'sip-files00300.txt'
d9ab0faa0be33122c93f12795f337c76
61b12bc0ecbc500fa722c71c70f3260f851e6dfa
'2012-05-27T15:20:08-04:00'
describe
'1849' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSR' 'sip-files00301.txt'
7fa70d9824c06ffaf18e2771a5d38b58
bb1609f536340f0e679455e7e2a9de92d45aa476
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSS' 'sip-files00304.txt'
e015155de18e97c91143c384beb0b1ba
731f6ea9566c8f4a597855575c8a9eb40c8d7c32
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWST' 'sip-files00305.txt'
4193237b7fd782bf2ffdb0fb48aa35d3
6e53fd7af2d217ff94acd16e412a20a0343c9439
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSU' 'sip-files00306.txt'
38c974ee170d8d4992f21264591c17f9
97afbd4614413ac1426fa9ccee131c1b773ba898
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSV' 'sip-files00307.txt'
a987b875f37123743370afc3030b6595
0190aeb812386b00d06a0f7d1dca033c311cf7e2
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSW' 'sip-files00308.txt'
cba0774c46a49fb4f6f041e9f71f1416
7e7688c3b7d22cec725abc69b462b4948c6c5582
describe
'1612' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSX' 'sip-files00310.txt'
8cd058013545d5cc0ebe0fb02c0b15f5
5a413ee3e3f517ac7c97f9b3a7b22b542cac9ee3
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSY' 'sip-files00312.txt'
48f307e3fee1d0200167154d1f8e32ec
9847b0451acb4d0429c266104c2db4cf9bfe4b4c
describe
'1723' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWSZ' 'sip-files00315.txt'
1e22ed053313d4085abfd8a409d12daf
faff3cf04d507f456a1c4e1b1ce588d17c34941b
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTA' 'sip-files00316.txt'
e39c1bbce6f588b011232d61378d0344
d9ad2ee08f7ba7144e454a6f7d5f6adaa1093ca7
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTB' 'sip-files00317.txt'
17ea217b4b9d43e973d5e56198f23b1a
1d428e04c418d184f63bd1921a2ee39ccb69d88b
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTC' 'sip-files00319.txt'
15fbeafcd4e3b34a79be4c7eb59eaaba
23657bae9c1dc301d0e5a938f9ab68249ee6e84e
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTD' 'sip-files00320.txt'
66aa2e7099af2ce6f77fa419f5545fc7
6a2d4b518dd0461e534f7c48d44ed5eab1d0697c
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTE' 'sip-files00325.txt'
38068f70f6c47501339f91581589016f
ae4e0dff2dcbf09250772499c7dc9fd7d07ac4ad
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTF' 'sip-files00329.txt'
b1ce962e53e29b5d329560457b55f2c4
0b2f9dc0069feca5ca2e0a435fb948e617534e3e
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTG' 'sip-files00331.txt'
c608bccd8182e0e35a2e8a93b03f7773
b1a85e0499341fea57405bcab5e6b49c5dc4144c
describe
'1635' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTH' 'sip-files00332.txt'
ee4cb9b8ccf8fa134cfe2bacc51f7388
0d74a9476b1bead0b5f9526a11068da5a9ddd242
describe
'1700' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTI' 'sip-files00333.txt'
b0d74bd65e1c5812e3477c3e7b8c17e9
ce62e375667e55ed870e823650838aeef16c6ec5
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTJ' 'sip-files00335.txt'
4b22846f8d97e05342ab3b9b842eaa50
e2392c4696c96debcb7ce28a44a696b7f42a5ed4
describe
'1646' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTK' 'sip-files00337.txt'
c805351f43c42fd90508b35a2486fa2e
9a7fe7001c55b172866135783b46aebbc9ed31bc
describe
'1668' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTL' 'sip-files00339.txt'
35443311add24f6e512420184f529b67
a73ae69b5459fdacaeceb4460a73d6af4f947ca7
describe
'1642' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTM' 'sip-files00340.txt'
7d0f976813baae25e24b2ca9d0a9a602
8043cc693a58bd57f406859dd357d796282a6d76
describe
'664' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTN' 'sip-files00343.txt'
37bb4c4471b6d67f8d6654b4159ed712
0f07f7981e4bef99eca5b1f49493365e23a9861d
describe
'1375' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTO' 'sip-files00345.txt'
5b74df8ec7f0504509104c64c9e18de9
435180404184e563507e28026962c17f17d1bcb6
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTP' 'sip-files00347.txt'
93eaf246cf894e21b378cb6f8edcef1f
1eb3cf329d173550a3cf125efadb6949093316f9
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTQ' 'sip-files00350.txt'
23444f06a38a6865cf580e38125ef402
1bc39397d9352b32cf3918aa9e41aa6f5dc6dbec
'2012-05-27T15:28:00-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTR' 'sip-files00352.txt'
2d2d6c59b30071c708f3ea593a9a7441
eb9d625c45b239120281cf698aadb7a32dabceb3
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTS' 'sip-files00355.txt'
57a0138606ae548b0dca79bdc68d003f
48cd4db6a7f72fce7284ce09ee6f8df4a2789c81
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTT' 'sip-files00357.txt'
fcaf746bd12b952c9e36110501642655
304cd1ba70aae851814a175a1e3b12d688ccb3db
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTU' 'sip-files00360.txt'
55b3c84fa522487f6fdb733d03a1bfa9
789eef59c5a9eaf6c8a7c1afd883be1514c8dd40
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTV' 'sip-files00361.txt'
2f0101f43ae9f990591634a05156487a
b013cd3d96658fc679a1bd39a5113e8635d35590
describe
'36' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTW' 'sip-files00362.txt'
2caf183ef9baac125ffea19d4b3e53dc
6b3a7b747ddba8516a62232826534b77c9065fed
describe
Invalid character
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTX' 'sip-files00363.txt'
245d135ae609a6c9eb2a0ab2555a7eaf
9d3a7d14b7c1d3ec4a6c458941291eb9727496d8
describe
'3' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTY' 'sip-files00364.txt'
bc949ea893a9384070c31f083ccefd26
cbb8391cb65c20e2c05a2f29211e55c49939c3db
describe
'64' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWTZ' 'sip-files00365.txt'
0d680e1acf2675825e17196c8f70ab55
0417a1b42235ed7e03b7d206dfdb1a2d8fe54e78
describe
Invalid character
'73826' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUA' 'sip-files00288.QC.jpg'
624d1d0aa2c7292dee1783889fc2e615
735ee74b6c70234781021d1c254964eac68ab0bd
describe
'79968' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUB' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
96357042d33bd075d16701567075433f
43bc6d1d765b359fc175354b7ff9a5bc2ff3924a
describe
'25866' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUC' 'sip-files00281thm.jpg'
fa0be5ee3e4fa3b0f87f6b5b10c62f64
b40a0c5649268785591cb3e2d35c9634b5c11e2b
describe
'26328' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUD' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
76652f859fececbf1b5ce0f8e6a18ee8
635987b30e47dec991b88b78ad90773f16af01a8
describe
'25063' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUE' 'sip-files00178thm.jpg'
cd5cb7a6dbd0721c0b32ea8785496e20
8dfe31103d119db3ce66b177d9c2abef707402b9
describe
'26330' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUF' 'sip-files00288thm.jpg'
b038582b017d527795be99e74218fccf
2fe28a41f25f434eb672f8f5adf5582ae40910a4
describe
'29173' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUG' 'sip-files00249thm.jpg'
04ee737669b321d5bf09851740a1e70a
d0dfc54601265e30fa3d719325c0cf8d490e8bbf
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUH' 'sip-files00263thm.jpg'
9f952db3345c143f44a0881e3e0e78e2
739b2630b5adebc83b3fa5a771e51c279e645fc3
describe
'81032' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUI' 'sip-files00127.QC.jpg'
7c4703b747bca605105df9ff997af809
02f31c4419fe2b7919f8d7ecc16baac0edb1635c
describe
'80909' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUJ' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
89ce1e8f41da84c01f3a8484e52131df
deb12375aadf02bcc5fb706d077b9654761a81b4
describe
'74872' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUK' 'sip-files00331.QC.jpg'
3e19b82d6dbcc8549384168e868005ae
3ee596406a50944fa6a4cabed30814fa998c899e
describe
'78340' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUL' 'sip-files00240.QC.jpg'
7e3e30d3e75936bd4e6316abae325d4c
196cef6b33c8fd48ab2eb261709b55f36f093f71
describe
'15102' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUM' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
cd0363c9458791d6bcb6d7eb8e1cba80
a4d3339e1771e8e4a0a0011a31c4f9270d8ba17d
describe
'27484' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUN' 'sip-files00118thm.jpg'
bc97be02e64e52a975be2f407e630f16
09f7efda2bc415b829b72fa8136c08c9df92809a
describe
'73785' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUO' 'sip-files00154.QC.jpg'
5b4c53da42432a01593c1c07cfc69832
6a91f2ef0cb77f2f3d457604500489d28d8bf745
describe
'75695' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUP' 'sip-files00333.QC.jpg'
31a421cd12b84b35db25963528ca2e1c
95d3cda2f28d57e0594b39a3adb1bd010786b16f
describe
'26208' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUQ' 'sip-files00116thm.jpg'
33177a7db29840c39f89440e283573e0
c8f0442dd45f1c1257c76cb726af9d67d8131ee1
describe
'76274' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUR' 'sip-files00161.QC.jpg'
fab18d7a6ee411b42223e5e0dfd2f5c5
a115604d38bb495ddb37b452c762ceb48dec86ef
describe
'27206' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUS' 'sip-files00192thm.jpg'
56a085dc8d954faef0254e31c10aff1c
1a92d7f9080f108ba24b4901ad896cb4c597fab6
describe
'83512' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUT' 'sip-files00138.QC.jpg'
b6180c31df06f6fd4dc8bdc652592a5b
86fdc0aa21c94fdda6ae2bd3dddc52cbcbd03759
describe
'26929' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUU' 'sip-files00077thm.jpg'
b345b1ecccb17830d21261c5b7e664ad
92b305569b0504bb83c27d568a551846e9e73bda
describe
'25187' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUV' 'sip-files00287thm.jpg'
f2694f695d1fd0fee01ac40ca1cf7367
943bde19a544ad2a347ceb982e6f4cf4740c87b5
describe
'82749' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUW' 'sip-files00229.QC.jpg'
8226a3195b57ec864f362cdbec48b0f2
ab9d680a3a130868c8746cd0480c389f46a5f9cc
describe
'27015' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUX' 'sip-files00164thm.jpg'
1e20e7565f8d164a16839e24647e7a20
0ef1fc675c36efaaf5553ae19979c2d5deabaef3
describe
'81990' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUY' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
5be7a0c5669dbfe439b12be4ec423e9a
3f6ad2c006c4ac48fc6b082d0f3a86ba55eda99c
describe
'25971' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWUZ' 'sip-files00324thm.jpg'
d7768cdacecc7d0bd0f8c8d44d7d5163
d75e5f34293cd8ad50868cb57118b1f89d594631
describe
'21832' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVA' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
4a64a1a304025418a064412e8e57b083
48c78be640c3b009c2def0495a00e1a499ad4cdc
describe
'80739' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVB' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
b5555540f5d398ed35e55ff68d05ac37
e497171797e6e437d0574ff834f6bc82d0694c91
describe
'78386' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVC' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
7df379ed49fa4550f76abeb7070a7d4b
fe91d10c230c60d53bcfe0522e73ade447a39025
describe
'72359' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVD' 'sip-files00328.QC.jpg'
5a6232b58116f5820a18018637d49b03
1fe46a9e83906d262b0159bb3cde2965dddd956a
describe
'26380' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVE' 'sip-files00301thm.jpg'
9c84bb34de606c17be9c12c32d9ae876
7d645a1688b367f0626c24ea7912bf5f67335164
describe
'25412' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVF' 'sip-files00338thm.jpg'
edf140927fccafbaf51fcc028268aa96
da5afc8927d8031255f4939503d203a22ad4cbe1
describe
'26980' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVG' 'sip-files00285thm.jpg'
dacb2d27143c8b544ffa4b72c310b21d
8b0ca3e6224b8e36257f34854ce7ecba0716887e
describe
'74561' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVH' 'sip-files00321.QC.jpg'
1d90ac1750bbe8925eb99591cba1a7eb
58679fbb0776b2e60f5bc6c262fe1f16c0ff465c
describe
'28221' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVI' 'sip-files00230thm.jpg'
6829f4543048e64275d7c93065b3f1e1
ffc8aa491eacac1422e15a57073ff7c3104cc3f5
describe
'77385' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVJ' 'sip-files00311.QC.jpg'
52c85d1aa42da5fb83e994acbcce036a
12fa7e6a216da4b429a3667642e1952af65ff16b
describe
'83010' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVK' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
55e7ecca7d1e3b521a020b8712eae5e7
7b0432e9727e8f0dc7c4fe6d727a3fada1718470
describe
'74101' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVL' 'sip-files00339.QC.jpg'
4aba547d94a0c20e1c19957ad73d14f9
96fb64623a8ed49bf389d0df50aaab36bfd03569
'2012-05-27T15:26:24-04:00'
describe
'72884' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVM' 'sip-files00307.QC.jpg'
d7999acb30691eca25d3d3164f424c2e
fbabbdfcf1ab72b7e2e1e2eb73043aee30618948
describe
'26394' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVN' 'sip-files00294thm.jpg'
d1abfaccf0a395605605d7c764f52a9c
b59ebca2babecf49d567a605abb74a424dad411b
describe
'81324' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVO' 'sip-files00084.QC.jpg'
7cd4661afd3ab6b075b191ef7a4886b4
ca802f2e125ed6af0c6af6d2e9e564fcd58499e7
describe
'19447' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVP' 'sip-files00005.QC.jpg'
921d272eaffd1f85c436b7a955cdf781
2c18c3f4f61a440a548dbfa21d86d8f8ff3486fc
describe
'26221' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVQ' 'sip-files00271thm.jpg'
0a63a49073d0d86cfb4abbb980b7cfc9
2406cb09f4fbba2519783000a331be5bd1458f58
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVR' 'sip-files00262.QC.jpg'
fbdfb87550316d87973a38f3cf30a565
845d7fc79a41d6d61e554e285c050cbfd1d4f293
describe
'29825' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVS' 'sip-files00054thm.jpg'
0ab4d9da284bad767836ee2e218a2796
e7cd9779f459a11bf794b76be263fba3833d4bdb
describe
'29114' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVT' 'sip-files00245thm.jpg'
0d67cdc9a4d5d863a88931ee65c89a9e
69b90d24ce56c37f6bb32e7388c25153c0ad9da2
describe
'76982' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVU' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
796a5c6b55eee297bf13fcc3f7a51d38
93e77021b07635142bb97a0e7fb56f9e9112b5ab
describe
'80207' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVV' 'sip-files00133.QC.jpg'
becac99ef7db3f8eb1256eca9dc70d24
95988d75cb6bdbd54c5752215b87d5cbb7a35aef
describe
'75950' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVW' 'sip-files00275.QC.jpg'
d1ff682d4436b2198eead70e15212f67
7c00fe54101258dc0adf5dcffde084aeb3ed84bb
describe
'25253' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVX' 'sip-files00319thm.jpg'
59c4fc7fefaa4ad513e9113e12a66ce1
37a95543ad2b35a5074c86e799f4355a15fda3f9
describe
'82730' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVY' 'sip-files00233.QC.jpg'
3fc1b552b256f656ccfc79667595dbf7
1ff06bd9ffe064f87924ae1edfe37e8b4ed26b1a
describe
'25793' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWVZ' 'sip-files00295thm.jpg'
e49fe0ebffc447c694111143750305ad
a93b718b1ce3c000dbd7fc8b29bd98c8f6d1472c
describe
'75168' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWA' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
8e1bf68beadcb51b8182ccbcc2661d9b
3a59e2b46104f4560b7b7f96fdd2c17f7517a8e7
describe
'28191' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWB' 'sip-files00200thm.jpg'
2ddbe78f858ca1a4af9246402c0f4052
d8b9549cc9348395d7bf6aa97fd8cc0bcb062cd6
describe
'42534' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWC' 'sip-files00359.QC.jpg'
c514215681a28227288a690c8c6d9b92
61fd777c9fcaf244a1ee0f5578b3ab8ce69e8dfc
describe
'28136' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWD' 'sip-files00107thm.jpg'
91fca8b651969ca6ceb44a690efa8e0b
42031b790969cd38637b4bfd51d08982ab9017b0
describe
'73037' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWE' 'sip-files00316.QC.jpg'
c70966ae40de91a3f516120084e1709b
b9e9063813ea910dc1303f114e9f4253d900ebdb
describe
'73610' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWF' 'sip-files00175.QC.jpg'
58cdbd2c27ef3b38e470f92b61fabce2
f12205ff9d3a756dcd7ec68cec12ab630e43872a
describe
'74075' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWG' 'sip-files00340.QC.jpg'
d9f1a98918b4a0d7173f1d9367debf84
f4b16b217e1cf59768419dac8028a9696a79e1b3
describe
'24190' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWH' 'sip-files00228thm.jpg'
e23335204dc5ccfa6b024163c5ac396e
cb818677865dbf731bb432fa52220ff73eca6179
describe
'21421' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWI' 'sip-files00137thm.jpg'
874f0c14f00a8b68ee8262db9433986c
01499f2306d016a6518c933694ae1b7dd50a5992
describe
'13627' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWJ' 'sip-files00002thm.jpg'
2f84015eaeea1539d130ccc41d4da940
e3d0f8a989ceb8ef4adece61b5d883808f2810d6
describe
'26618' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWK' 'sip-files00114thm.jpg'
56b5284a4d9c17bff38967dd3f619474
f9dbb1577ceb1d3bc4ad77a8bb3647c53abfd58d
describe
'75053' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWL' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
b12eaa1539b66163fd0592664bc067d9
3362c9c8007afd47fe87d8969a899358b14633f9
describe
'27371' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWM' 'sip-files00056thm.jpg'
39c2e5b9b65e5ee91e2f5188c0e42d20
4b9a677a1567aa68843d1ceead6be3c6f4fe4db9
describe
'82754' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWN' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
fa13be585c3c87fdd9dd75b3f238cfa9
363284ad7e1ea75a90cdcb0885b74dead9d17669
describe
'24842' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWO' 'sip-files00346thm.jpg'
7a647125d002aceba2e34dda3e98feb7
2ed500636f1b64c096767e643d8dbdebe9317c25
describe
'27925' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWP' 'sip-files00225thm.jpg'
f9f81780587b152daf261115fbb6ad02
a7edf40e2a8f0ceb32c57d157ecb5705e2700770
describe
'76314' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWQ' 'sip-files00187.QC.jpg'
cb5e24d66dfb3a4eaa3a386bf8277b35
90f7326fe189113e74d44818809b34e0904430f1
describe
'81437' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWR' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
4c27e4dc6099ccc519e2a2b5e64bb123
76c8ecc5879949ec518005267a6cea9c87327c9e
describe
'26010' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWS' 'sip-files00312thm.jpg'
94bd35bd49df3a4e11dd05f420b66ed5
e7f8969d4c3ede093fa996309636c636c330b1e7
describe
'28207' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWT' 'sip-files00111thm.jpg'
5ffd7fc3708ae570874aeb45d126c56c
b45fd45eedf84542b9de2a3b6610c170a7fab671
describe
'29920' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWU' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
21422d616a16a129f9ffb1948969b0bf
ec69810584853c6ce6b8cb3d8ba8e517e093a6a4
describe
'78392' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWV' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
92f573f1a02a8346d2065d6d8671bceb
33cc52631a82db987a709058560a30b814485865
describe
'71924' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWW' 'sip-files00332.QC.jpg'
de642efa4dd4991f5c9fc1ca656962ff
607a951ff455ccc7267900447509aaba1424b771
describe
'29482' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWX' 'sip-files00193thm.jpg'
a7ad9931e4c99a2ede71cc6634aa928e
e5523929f20bec856c4edc868868239582a37cf4
describe
'29125' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWY' 'sip-files00073thm.jpg'
498c30392c97ca3e18dcc756a5804998
3bb0987b41066df04f9074f14278a414fa5eb0a9
describe
'76788' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWWZ' 'sip-files00273.QC.jpg'
14d6feee6d6d9782be9282cd6af4c40a
a4b4a227d64ad267b1cc8a6b50357c38bdc884b7
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXA' 'sip-files00053thm.jpg'
fe41afbb9b69466d2bb743c832fda6f2
f95b5e58a547f122137500ab7c5adda910d26cc4
describe
'24930' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXB' 'sip-files00332thm.jpg'
795d715f3b0b030588e879511a0bb746
c0a0b29a56eb5a6855f12cbc78f0641eec0ca660
describe
'26957' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXC' 'sip-files00317thm.jpg'
367352904033e04294f8ffdc75936399
a8e7909cea56f3863251ac435211ccce71cf1ba9
describe
'27952' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXD' 'sip-files00070thm.jpg'
7c4db578646f4f2a3419eaa0f92c566a
48e48313e75786491a574ddfa444c609b7f65ded
describe
'84999' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXE' 'sip-files00094.QC.jpg'
9015b159571477fd5ec3c85c642da9ad
d8cadc76cb772292b060f08ef024bc658263ff6e
describe
'36068' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXF' 'sip-files00363.QC.jpg'
473b42b0b4bbe85bbafbd4dee053664b
1dda1f11870677a7fd910378c206ee01d5d92eb8
describe
'24684' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXG' 'sip-files00181thm.jpg'
ce19470ef1b17a62d24922c886f10ecb
7d1682a3b34ddee586ab5f39a3dc92d1ed059744
describe
'27095' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXH' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
9793fbb023980500161b341258d71eeb
8784ab6a9dfd0324e37ed5d4a60876cf9a22ceb3
describe
'75973' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXI' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
e2328062d7f1dcce2117c1584a605145
91e2ea125f54b2fad7e4fc39624c2c1a5f8881dc
describe
'27644' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXJ' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
64b33da3d17f8d83acafd33bb8dde1f8
e140022d1467cd5c2dd2c35eead51b57503c8af4
describe
'26390' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXK' 'sip-files00124thm.jpg'
ecea6776ec32ed1936fc52990b1f037b
ccb22c4942a577581a390b1bf274bffb9e5aae34
describe
'25908' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXL' 'sip-files00152thm.jpg'
4b802e5805c8f9a0172cdb16054d78cf
ecc8cc0d538dee073ef19b04998a69f66fff621a
describe
'81910' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXM' 'sip-files00241.QC.jpg'
1e3355ee5630867e8b07a76d5f82def1
8a0f05116a6453eda88c4f2ca550f024701bb668
describe
'27482' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXN' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
b747c2bcf79889d8e5c17325d4399210
2f69e37de8607293703580cc4ca4da3833d64679
describe
'25542' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXO' 'sip-files00270thm.jpg'
222527fe4c15495d352361e267cb009a
ad1e651f92d8fef568c2e6f29a659641f16de318
describe
'26426' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXP' 'sip-files00167thm.jpg'
c35fd21bde0a1575a954ac194fd1a2ee
ac826e39d28cc13f0e38785e2862709764d2b6da
describe
'76726' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXQ' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
dd082e73468afe2f8cf61f08b1b56c4c
3bce59031fdb98250f5dce5b19b91870ebc4c821
describe
'73587' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXR' 'sip-files00313.QC.jpg'
b8f7959485bb8a677f0c0ddeaed75733
ca2c5dd8c95dc1abce7b5058a82e0062a1dd1469
describe
'23362' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXS' 'sip-files00165thm.jpg'
9e637c6af49dccd329e74e2cbbcff43d
89c8d08dc75431c7320598a25b4667173f91e862
describe
'28665' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXT' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
d9df9938908319bc1a85f1a13f2d82da
c1bde51406ea07f02f73aab6392606468ddb7aec
describe
'75492' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXU' 'sip-files00281.QC.jpg'
5d6ee2938fbcf8ddc6d8da31cac0904a
8f10a70ce272698243c53110ae1149c794e1fe23
describe
'31305' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXV' 'sip-files00002.QC.jpg'
e7bebd46af5c44622a988dbed3b5b173
18a56ab3a1cc7ab7ebd0ff28e0a009d65e0385fc
describe
'81558' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXW' 'sip-files00144.QC.jpg'
7969719259afbc79cea8049f38a3c56a
bc33255d670b7028c8446043fa9f1995beddf5f3
describe
'74702' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXX' 'sip-files00108.QC.jpg'
102945035c5305dbc28e6c1da2a2296c
91d673af35be58f3f92f0efc6528fc94471ba767
describe
'550686' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXY' 'sip-filesUF00027872_00001.xml'
3f4a1995b19dba871bef7ee78f36f78f
a1635d3fa1b27d34e5b562da5186a3419b408848
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/'.
'2013-12-06T19:50:58-05:00'
xml resolution
http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsd
http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsd
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/'.
'56383' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWXZ' 'sip-files00001.QC.jpg'
472ba72d1bada51904355a7d6f29cdcd
b4c400f3027e84ccf8a856b3075775034cdbbccc
describe
'33361' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYA' 'sip-files00003.QC.jpg'
f91a321ad6ad27057f548f24eaa0a8ab
dc6ac5978516264058709dd0055830239bb707c5
describe
'15034' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYB' 'sip-files00003thm.jpg'
cdc5dbc6d7ba8fd9edd8ddc85d552428
0fbc960c039578e1df41f82a2af7c1ce10c30961
describe
'16323' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYC' 'sip-files00006.QC.jpg'
fba7b809bbbae070f01c85f2f7ddff8e
876b75866c30ad6732363ed9cf8c40aefac5fdae
describe
'10191' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYD' 'sip-files00006thm.jpg'
47e37f095ad69b05f0b201cb803a1815
552df3980f8ab9e7cc25748ae8fff8a59f0192b2
describe
'85623' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYE' 'sip-files00007.QC.jpg'
1c41794bd5e56ff17dd21fdaf42309d4
7aef2608932e860bef0af853a687b376e024b6b5
describe
'31489' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYF' 'sip-files00007thm.jpg'
d000f27820f44383e8d486719ed50242
96f571beeb271a3803d2d2cc14f03215b26fbc77
describe
'20441' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYG' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
c737f58e60f8a49a1c7324181ab20d7c
843f8138635b674400751a85759f44038f20047a
describe
'21137' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYH' 'sip-files00010thm.jpg'
2616740fe45c63b6cea3fb3aa2f05fb4
2c43cde692a8f6924462e8595155d36c698cf6d8
describe
'28040' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYI' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
2369ea6d2522dbc342cf9a47b4b6fce3
21e08ce10840b80ae9ab1a9087c269939c1e83eb
describe
'58916' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYJ' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
e8c34e8e006bb7230d009715b4952858
6f86ea61b0bfcba2f7492c9bde6ca356e4955f0f
describe
'28155' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYK' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
26d8e0bf7c6e0e237460e457b3701846
755fa2dc4557a9507617f1acd6be882104d44ef0
describe
'26952' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYL' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
b9d35f87620baa1106b847a2ae5055b8
2fd3888ce0d49d07af73a3a72847a81b6c91d304
describe
'27138' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYM' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
c6dfa15587116bbddf0827c777203668
b39df7c6c1b0173bf575f3f0cbb0281815486780
'2012-05-27T15:20:07-04:00'
describe
'28952' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYN' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
57274eb541dda19c669528d9bdea18f7
dcda19e0fb07026b0d0e88dd28f061678c662fb9
describe
'85611' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYO' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
ce0467ad3819795ff8e3558f97e397fd
b1d71796952d0abde1c0968f064e87a60fafc0f0
describe
'71095' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYP' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
fa03a7f158b9fa6fd82f98ab1b246f37
d6c6bb6be7ac3d3ea74edd643fe5d8c2242abf20
describe
'25131' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYQ' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
29fde575364a69ddf6e6a32f9e8913b3
ea36008b557418a74123937c35dcf512d11f0aab
describe
'26906' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYR' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
315eb5ac31ec3dea62e5b4c74ed29e09
8393df95bc9987e43d1729a9924bc8866cbb797b
describe
'78979' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYS' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
e9f06351ac4dbd4011a068b8b2bb5d88
ff0c836a35ec0d486f47576ff185bc3b70463611
describe
'27481' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYT' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
5fc88e5164d07563c57eba48c00a77b5
a0a588ef7be961f60454e145f8e17ad1a2cf9f66
describe
'30146' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYU' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
9ce7c5a6f5fab0caa29bf3650f565fe2
9d12a095b509ac659b543dd11b8722536d14867b
describe
'77664' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYV' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
e2bde9a10510a84f70112eed308620ea
e623ef57b4999b8df99059406c958fca7c92a2a2
describe
'27780' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYW' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
eeb9fe62e7a365329ead0e4a20ad13ae
04824dc89f7fd2e0c869e98b66c94a81f8150804
describe
'27586' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYX' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
00f58b740811183bed75e36185849df7
85932cde937ab416b0c000270d4730514eb494ca
describe
'27879' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYY' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
3589e4138c19dd5a4b76e9c3c9093401
ea4e39cfe882e19f7f3fd89bbfc14b35f44eae9b
'2012-05-27T15:21:45-04:00'
describe
'83917' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWYZ' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
66aea76753d0db3932a7a9cd84f3ab37
009a5e864400982359f12943e4a1c158e947e0d0
describe
'27684' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZA' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
ab77ededb164f43b1d9a1ee2913f283c
c0331b8fd2cdfb47206d0f063a092b7c99b86acc
describe
'73923' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZB' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
2fdbbdc59f609ad82030f0667de7e553
32edc7deb7f66b8ea53935c32f00fb39976c035d
describe
'78595' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZC' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
7335d4b391859afcd8ddcec3e88fae87
5084fd2943273774c1e3118dc29ab6fc88f25435
describe
'77317' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZD' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
5fb3993aeac52262f2bf4479f83b89b5
a22ded6bd3fbd1ddbff2f1794c78ff7c8204a274
describe
'83093' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZE' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
3003ff27ca83b0cc5f4af649aab35abf
9a73346692adbb58c266a84198a8d23499fafda4
describe
'63039' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZF' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
30fb95cd36d128526109f4e9b0e140bd
84f8d6f27b5f65066ae00a8549aaeb5cdd88c2f2
describe
'23163' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZG' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
abe4be09946c4295b0872a9628eac491
b1696b7a3a3e1ea0091848870895d476f1d02043
describe
'70972' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZH' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
8f775ffe15d60932d2a47b1a682b3ef9
51da21e0402d884d1d994901844b1ba2eba12c3a
describe
'25826' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZI' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
0d8dde27a496eabdd5fa88a7993bfe1b
98d0a146109200c57671f81ebfc6683c7d0d42b7
describe
'76818' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZJ' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
0e2a9465af2927de33a1db53596afd58
12e2e5e37ca0e4dcb0c871894e4355076e14b4fd
describe
'26342' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZK' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
5e6db403659a02eb104ccdc9dff28b2f
70c4c518c9d518d27c5e02de868c08a13ac07e6d
describe
'27695' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZL' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
31134d7b199a74b0d3426670c6a5c06e
a88d431044265e3a60315bd7178f22e2201417c9
describe
'78584' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZM' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
64309c5f4637b180624ebc367dd87c88
08fe89d50ee3006f54830b3ac0869fd97a896ad1
describe
'27173' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZN' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
fea92e4f701e72c83a614b6fba32d89b
4eca30fc24498fd02d57685ee43bff9ad37ba4da
describe
'26895' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZO' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
89a7b2ab9eec9df892a99dfc4964a881
affd5b71e561647dff6052126e4900e9cc88cd8d
describe
'77686' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZP' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
b3ef3492ebe5fc562db54787148b6755
a1139d7ffcc306a40baeec331a803be77c1abb6d
describe
'82243' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZQ' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
6f1c1dcc2b5a7b2c41bb87bcbc8b4d0a
751d5718dfacb8347c38bd79ff553907ff9c2c56
describe
'28642' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZR' 'sip-files00051thm.jpg'
e5eee76cf67bc30bd200ea685292e4ea
e5beba3d29aa2f1d0ecd1bb53c4ca3a1dac7ded9
describe
'82277' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZS' 'sip-files00052.QC.jpg'
735fbf15378bcfd6f8f59816df01ca76
5b40b70fc45c9016ac44a69348a4a37cbedff9b0
describe
'27593' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZT' 'sip-files00052thm.jpg'
f441415f142440d6000a6b7455cfd75b
5084e2d0df519e6e7b50ed6bcb18f6ce6eabfde5
describe
'76910' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZU' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
9a201a2d5b4fcbfb3c045ed1375783de
6f4e97943a626d0787ff5af4dca8c88a59ad14cf
'2012-05-27T15:29:23-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZV' 'sip-files00055thm.jpg'
15463d0106baad523dd97ee03704e331
802e4d8791dca02f07f6a20a29cb5d100c33b135
describe
'75975' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZW' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
2124eeae9a7f6d5b971773252faf48cd
bae0d60d77494ef58db2431ffe5438113ffbe12a
describe
'27449' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZX' 'sip-files00057thm.jpg'
3bfea578556628c4d8b6a384f4cc9d61
34b088aa2444d0b1003b85d91ccd3e94edacfbf6
describe
'81107' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZY' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
951705aa1be7f379e51a1ee0cecd25b8
fbee18d7c9e73e3bc12b69a17583c02a1ec0ee0d
describe
'28497' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAWZZ' 'sip-files00059thm.jpg'
687b506d59187001958d9d9938525b6c
f9515ff4d547f5f7fbc3d54f19ffd587941230e4
describe
'79400' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAA' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
c8d6f8e73b2a1dd53410457722df2e06
31f4b8a548ab296a31f3cce674c79212def1bb9d
describe
'77964' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAB' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
0abaad27952904a4e5b8ad35f8c20034
6d4b3867da873b93a8d3f296f843d00db9f03ab3
describe
'77813' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAC' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
d3d08046a1900d595cd06fe61619d1ec
56f588a251fd98e842f98b0ea8ed11d7e7850346
describe
'80818' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAD' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
f1b4af77d4319100578b300dbb14e4b9
9be7230f649e52a20e7d4667f622ac6a372f1f2e
describe
'76312' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAE' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
28b55ca26252fe8e63b1504fd23d1cc1
444a5265a213c925c8460ce8f193a60c31096351
describe
'27547' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAF' 'sip-files00067thm.jpg'
0d896d199f6345fe10917aaf8a7bc814
00ef11803b6d6d3f29269459681693c6e315ead3
describe
'78703' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAG' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
e5399202bea730b32fa0971ccaee0738
866c27737bd297bd219d6d161130de54cae379e8
describe
'85085' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAH' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
3b3f8fb283693366d6886f1a591a6237
967327f5c8fd155b217d8eee61c5df4a2da52250
describe
'29641' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAI' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
3ac44adb49cd2be9b91f3cac0113db13
65e80d5fb020777715ae527a3705d2fb0573594a
describe
'79477' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAJ' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
a42b95b16be16201e89a21e7f0d575a2
e4d1ea3cb14e735828b809a95012288ee38ca35e
describe
'77129' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAK' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
44ae5d0a0c1b3e5fe50ee91775ff49ba
89cd2c65ab0be507d8a8a6b3473a1cc8b8bfca85
describe
'28664' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAL' 'sip-files00071thm.jpg'
e05ab7babbaa0cdcd24d600b7a842f60
62f8ade3509930310226b392e4b0362981c2885d
describe
'84599' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAM' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
0ee432b7d337c1ee83448d6ba8faf52b
ff8591dfd4d18da2c9a63c773f16ac873ecaeaa2
describe
'54686' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAN' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
5c7bf39aef52d353b90c769a45a53a06
b993af49927d799ab0b4aa54f34952fd2e775eb3
describe
'77979' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAO' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
6da0bcbfa83b2605209160bf59a7f881
21bcdf7508aae6786ecc3e578e6ac54b5ab8ce6b
describe
'77440' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAP' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
25f75c180d1ba32dcd173d5eaaccd09a
44898d81ff988f08720c7a03ac9885fe133b3fc4
describe
'74695' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAQ' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
5aba411dba543c312998e93a3247111a
6f713449279d06e431bdd40d64c9ec68953998ab
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAR' 'sip-files00079thm.jpg'
e149777d72384d77f5217f073a403c35
40830e3f3ddca9bb54d250d8a3e8fb6c97a95f5a
describe
'77325' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAS' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
4feb3deba0cfedb2a228f83747fd72f5
dae6fa7ff45ef41730bfd55a920ad5f49665d001
describe
'26536' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAT' 'sip-files00080thm.jpg'
2d2abd52471edd03ae721d204c71cf98
9b216e967398b8297e26bb3f6f500ed7246c2d8c
'2012-05-27T15:28:10-04:00'
describe
'27497' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAU' 'sip-files00081thm.jpg'
654a9434ae61b845a339aa61be9b6621
ac9c18a599fe78faff15d7d7e5bb738b46c75804
describe
'76990' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAV' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
2621d828df12f8e9735a82eff79b76e9
bdf67425d89306e75009f9135d9b6750c822ffb2
describe
'26347' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAW' 'sip-files00082thm.jpg'
b0472c37862901921db75670b1502bda
7e9e6c7c2119168c3f55ecdaecdc45da39ddc0ab
describe
'79249' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAX' 'sip-files00083.QC.jpg'
fd2dcda8b225644c0b04949151bc0cf0
f7a5e73034c7f53906bd803d6251dfea1fa4a8a8
describe
'27260' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAY' 'sip-files00083thm.jpg'
5af5b7d689be8c48e57901ab3cf34de1
ac8f48aef5483eddb36cbf7cbc0cc8187c320b79
describe
'27078' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXAZ' 'sip-files00084thm.jpg'
cc5bf91dc0c2b31e63aa153b3ffbabcc
acf6941abc89d334787bfdcde83f5cba4c5b62c1
describe
'25821' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBA' 'sip-files00085thm.jpg'
df5be200e7f7d66c3afaa12ed9eb6ff6
b0532ea58ffc9a56dec3e9f0d36c495aa07283ab
describe
'78033' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBB' 'sip-files00087.QC.jpg'
8d7133a8955e5bfd9b379ea3d9d0c364
23957501839689833e737f9fe218554b7ee83cf3
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBC' 'sip-files00087thm.jpg'
dc4dee5674a8a3d7a81f63c84ba0422c
2aa488e405f41887fbc9c0988f9d2de137624233
describe
'22869' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBD' 'sip-files00088thm.jpg'
90fcded66d078c436fbd6687875a9112
612af20756827657fd114349ac55cfbfa8c8a65a
describe
'78479' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBE' 'sip-files00089.QC.jpg'
46b3fced160be1126c9ab78857caff6f
8176a0c60bd217a2ebae0e8a51927e794ff25b90
'2012-05-27T15:31:18-04:00'
describe
'26697' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBF' 'sip-files00089thm.jpg'
bdb8dfea35570ce0fa3d56e3c0cc763c
bbb7d007e2ccb5349711db6c0bc9bd4e61c12419
describe
'26537' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBG' 'sip-files00090thm.jpg'
57ae3586558e35d6b7329fc8ebaf46a9
7227126d524392186ca4924db59c650724572087
describe
'80586' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBH' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
e537b22e17ee7b1aa96ad22f54652a62
ee9c21d8ea2d4a5559218c76f3c630908ce2e000
describe
'28279' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBI' 'sip-files00091thm.jpg'
6c6657bbb6bb913528750c682f24d266
7f2bb37bb61f3356b5a1bb1b3d9f8104ea32640e
describe
'74201' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBJ' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
1ca23a724506d462608deca97b1dd893
b6c42ce4008d21babd1c7d38910b5cebbe448d43
describe
'25649' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBK' 'sip-files00092thm.jpg'
9e9e573ceef8f14be6093a7523518f54
f76615969d392984f66943fd34081f100244e236
describe
'27897' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBL' 'sip-files00093thm.jpg'
f5c787f8a0959c92c462181a366727b5
faa3cfd5ad218dcec1bb46a7db1dbf0689fee006
'2012-05-27T15:28:30-04:00'
describe
'27755' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBM' 'sip-files00094thm.jpg'
c43a0b06f5068c973daa7eb56911b099
64e50ee113b9f07ea11b20e5ce8724a9deace44a
describe
'77092' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBN' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
e3a56419597bca2dd54b0373d7c817a4
055b5f3ef96585c9549acefdfb98fe480d1f5d5f
describe
'70139' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBO' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
f9b6081050b38b589fb17f13169bf2da
6af45ecbdb21904c5cbb4aa7f86297f60daea3bb
describe
'77674' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBP' 'sip-files00100.QC.jpg'
60f02c5d973fbf72c7129f845d0325c3
206ec618b2743c26a9f8c318736be805b59f3f1b
describe
'26767' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBQ' 'sip-files00100thm.jpg'
7a4ff6f57da4fad25478bd4bbe6ac18f
063fc5e002dea0271cbfcf63f9813e3e73e5efec
describe
'83181' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBR' 'sip-files00101.QC.jpg'
87380e1549d316447d8e5c9bf4d92b7b
0007ffd955b1edc59733a7ebf792bcf41149bb12
describe
'27255' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBS' 'sip-files00101thm.jpg'
f9a8b756037361ec107b590f52fcf9c8
f26d2c2eaf6ec3e7845318847a8d704ac90b1020
describe
'27396' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBT' 'sip-files00102thm.jpg'
def228324b95cbac38a576815c7a4d8a
11bc2ea65e04fe0f30f23f0d9d276c2812ba375b
describe
'78747' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBU' 'sip-files00103.QC.jpg'
bd2847480f8102fb118af4ce96af7c4e
499789a7614f085b2b44e2fc51e17f756f88b2fe
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBV' 'sip-files00103thm.jpg'
d0484d07882a9c1afc2093f1ccaa87ee
269ba358ec5e84037d0285eb62e9523f68150041
describe
'82156' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBW' 'sip-files00105.QC.jpg'
fcf2e6bdf2b95600ae9ee5db6ab4f86d
69c3e27a57857a8a426add14e98be27ee59da656
'2012-05-27T15:19:04-04:00'
describe
'80373' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBX' 'sip-files00106.QC.jpg'
f17e6eb65eff218cabc64ddd560f85dc
cf5d974f1358c62e87adb25df8dc7fb75bbb752e
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBY' 'sip-files00109.QC.jpg'
dc1fd2f2b238d426042716540b2696b6
8993e6f605a0b2a61f240d039c68d15f1b0d9459
describe
'26349' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXBZ' 'sip-files00109thm.jpg'
58fe2490ae9cab7d70f54cc1939d30a7
144737915f50e8a3d4177823389bbf89781e66a1
describe
'76588' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCA' 'sip-files00110.QC.jpg'
81c326a3df663e2d6d67e75c94986620
fc5de47e2edd97403da2ec3532474dfec64c2204
describe
'80056' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCB' 'sip-files00112.QC.jpg'
50c560cafaa6c2a95a5bdcd9b7863f45
fda388d2ae7f35b4eaeeec1a98f9efe9b4de828a
describe
'74628' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCC' 'sip-files00113.QC.jpg'
586ffdcfc5534f60fc93d803d1e18ef8
bca65c48addcb95250aa9c99bac10d53901e6d2a
describe
'76877' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCD' 'sip-files00114.QC.jpg'
be4c2950c5446f38d0bc2c5d832f9359
7ad171d8b2ebe678d4158d31c0c286e213ff76a9
describe
'77011' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCE' 'sip-files00115.QC.jpg'
31e52106c6804dc4bcc1c3b17ddbcf48
5f039549f0cf1afd4d6d0b2e37fe194c56334640
describe
'82725' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCF' 'sip-files00117.QC.jpg'
c1557ed554b991d6bb0592184bf8026f
56bed53c74b1871dadb2245a6d41b5ede260d6fe
'2012-05-27T15:19:19-04:00'
describe
'81806' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCG' 'sip-files00118.QC.jpg'
0624bb0c1de21981b6ef8ec90f131e48
babb1bbd7c7baad749afc98603424c6e3857a4f6
describe
'80955' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCH' 'sip-files00119.QC.jpg'
9520a43d081d77b2433f8947f1c71140
6798097275177139e8b9dfafd65b2c2730ba27fd
describe
'27375' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCI' 'sip-files00119thm.jpg'
fa6313f90ed0158869c5fd567c408265
38849c6c930bcd3ec4f67f372df3a454b2fed77c
describe
'75951' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCJ' 'sip-files00120.QC.jpg'
986b862b5cf4d10bc865d7db2c20e3c0
692dfb635b223c4322ef1fad712d7e84147cdf38
describe
'27007' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCK' 'sip-files00120thm.jpg'
4dd22f4490ec120d3f1dba1fed0dd8d2
800a9385d673a14e51162e49b0d0ff04d280c9af
describe
'27089' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCL' 'sip-files00123thm.jpg'
8349fe730d822bb9e5ad58bb0e7584bb
56da30e7b628838d5481d3c801cce0fdc9eec393
describe
'29521' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCM' 'sip-files00126thm.jpg'
10ecf217e7435d4357a06ff62dff242a
619359a649fe411d2d5d5f596b637154af06f476
describe
'28324' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCN' 'sip-files00127thm.jpg'
5eb381b29068abca2fce4e7660257894
4e437e0f7c5ffb1ed8251e05dad8da45b447ab04
describe
'79687' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCO' 'sip-files00128.QC.jpg'
9deb0e2fd7faaadffb973c2c9fc00724
4b2f540d18d80f9b3dc1f52e93f90e692a0bb8e5
describe
'80202' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCP' 'sip-files00129.QC.jpg'
acd53c25f2d57ce631b16535c52dd828
6d8b1c62348ac85e531afb1e9f0710f02ed06aca
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCQ' 'sip-files00131.QC.jpg'
7e04a1bb5ef1b7af5e2e7bf835b14720
95a378edf230fe08904337bdead87e8b87372011
describe
'27267' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCR' 'sip-files00132thm.jpg'
d410239850216563b9aad3f9c3cbdef8
c9b8f7de54e58866aa4bcfaae8d0adebc31e6b99
describe
'81903' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCS' 'sip-files00134.QC.jpg'
9041388492e6ac9985ccffd22b988c6e
d88aafe3d70138c47e807228ab43749854797057
describe
'27668' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCT' 'sip-files00134thm.jpg'
896a4211376516196a5bb9dc4d875287
fc1053b275e834cce4ab6dc6bfff7f2fe37122b5
describe
'81285' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCU' 'sip-files00135.QC.jpg'
47200b87d80bbb84a7caf9c5a1a6ddd7
e38725264d1bec45ca34b10cbc290678fc6dc365
describe
'27319' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCV' 'sip-files00135thm.jpg'
745435cafc7dca2c9e3c5e11bb7c600a
f70e4ae6e22a728ecfc96e82195e9bb4efb9ab33
'2012-05-27T15:22:21-04:00'
describe
'78606' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCW' 'sip-files00136.QC.jpg'
ca88e40111d9dc3503e10f430f08087b
947b254b85a5f5bb472b3d72b957e6d4497f1b97
describe
'27406' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCX' 'sip-files00136thm.jpg'
c83028fd6d2a8b29361d2091c2f43b0d
e55b9e27084e980f2ce678bd76e4db0144046cf0
describe
'42570' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCY' 'sip-files00137.QC.jpg'
fcee3ae00946336f74df3b4647e28453
bae25354b48f7810f449f24fbba6bdb5c168b5a4
describe
'27010' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXCZ' 'sip-files00139thm.jpg'
fa8da51a19b59d3f9c89e5a3bf85ed0e
dbe1cdd6c0249f004fc96f483d518ec621cbe6da
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDA' 'sip-files00140thm.jpg'
ae28b211497c6d637ed01138e6121c6f
5bca0d13374571a95e87b987802338a19f0b247c
describe
'27809' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDB' 'sip-files00141thm.jpg'
54455dccb76ecc11d36e529cb55d6a58
7da098742f081540bdb6f82afda5db9cd1475554
describe
'27677' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDC' 'sip-files00143thm.jpg'
253f8e78d3d79f817026aaa2c89cb0d5
0cc767d8026007fc670758e992d13adc2fcc256e
describe
'26954' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDD' 'sip-files00144thm.jpg'
7a6fe2932e2a2994ea58068b373a53ca
a219d403137c73330e5b7d935f244bab064cdd43
describe
'74842' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDE' 'sip-files00146.QC.jpg'
77a887ef8064d244b6502d465ac7abac
cd13baf41525ce1c82c7cbbb8b22c6dfde55d9a5
describe
'75525' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDF' 'sip-files00149.QC.jpg'
8dde52f9eec224563e75827243923dea
84b87c547cddb8ff711bb39330d5956b9595280c
describe
'73113' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDG' 'sip-files00150.QC.jpg'
fda13eafec824329fcf9a3d89f815e80
dddbda69a6c1540a6df95d1efc338ee2d64bfcf1
describe
'25247' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDH' 'sip-files00150thm.jpg'
b50185dcbb73c2b0ea4c12fb8ddd1de1
702e807204a2501209a90b5d34d85abf3c8bc8af
describe
'74432' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDI' 'sip-files00151.QC.jpg'
365892ca6529a814e2b060e3c1eb73b2
becfc0a75bc668339a476f32d0b6e8946fdfdaa6
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDJ' 'sip-files00151thm.jpg'
b99e01cfb0b6a109064be9dc5dd0c006
fb40749cf32dc2736c549024755df8d218ed1947
describe
'76578' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDK' 'sip-files00153.QC.jpg'
4104298ae6d8bb389bfdebf611817d7b
a71363220cc57d476f7e7af83e19c1ba785305dc
describe
'26177' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDL' 'sip-files00153thm.jpg'
eadece36b6607910656ab7d78ad1ab7b
06e29fafcec228e11a31db2881e1e9c412686891
describe
'25361' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDM' 'sip-files00154thm.jpg'
1845063a05a2a95e3615b61822dae240
5230a1bbcfbd293ad4d8c08165672f996f445912
describe
'76672' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDN' 'sip-files00155.QC.jpg'
34795f475b791af6e9bb1260717a5b19
8f8719e9a65f2a8d2cdcf2aede7167ec6838dfa5
describe
'26579' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDO' 'sip-files00155thm.jpg'
6bfa3910092893f788af9b508f40a6ed
fe22ae1929250b6d557e1d65ba6a27fce8cb0336
describe
'25390' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDP' 'sip-files00156thm.jpg'
b60049ff2499fd309247b632215efc19
3371ed3a5451470de58017be7ea7e8985a710f67
describe
'75057' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDQ' 'sip-files00157.QC.jpg'
5e2dabd633c41e565e867ff42d0ee26b
11264228b45f5327c5df8c9fba17464fac5838cd
describe
'72914' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDR' 'sip-files00158.QC.jpg'
4f01d073d00724cdbb968c67593bf626
57995b12b116c1aa8bbfdccecc22c50bb42aec16
describe
'76923' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDS' 'sip-files00159.QC.jpg'
246277c346547ec2e7278984cf88456a
a0650bb40beeb032da5aa38ca6c93f02c2436936
describe
'72103' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDT' 'sip-files00160.QC.jpg'
2eddd952a5a72bd0a7ffdea132150061
2fd2168af75053aa77e8c5042b8bdb6563175603
describe
'26642' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDU' 'sip-files00161thm.jpg'
61a17cf983e40b0f6155f81f6326b724
391e40e3f33ee38f7ce27c34ce47b444ec6fe3d6
describe
'78756' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDV' 'sip-files00162.QC.jpg'
cb8289882a921d8bc61cfb3d6fa0117b
a7fd37ea912814509377de81977d72265072917e
describe
'27355' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDW' 'sip-files00162thm.jpg'
ac7c6c883c7a0d17770e8a414db12324
f4fdd7be24cb45aedb80b68dacf81280fd4e3dad
describe
'64197' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDX' 'sip-files00165.QC.jpg'
2eb86ba220d3cbce337c400ab3f163a8
1528c54638831f1da273ddb2ae3408bce67cdd73
describe
'67594' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDY' 'sip-files00166.QC.jpg'
fba8820d3e13cb7a3f0b79762db3f975
f42b446c6850b87f4cc5e5dbf72259602df6f8ae
describe
'24512' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXDZ' 'sip-files00166thm.jpg'
1ce9410c2fb3d4f0aecf0d79f0effbb1
ca27b7f00a71c150f6835c61f0b9a2357d2880ff
describe
'25470' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEA' 'sip-files00168thm.jpg'
38b0d518051922c2536eafa3b4df4155
ec1a2a77a834468d9a928cfe523b46205ab0e1d4
describe
'25928' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEB' 'sip-files00169thm.jpg'
7f67469bab8ced3b2338d8a0cebdba64
3f1b8e9bdcbbf2b8e3ddca7b09c980856a005c4a
describe
'72237' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEC' 'sip-files00170.QC.jpg'
ddb88a56a91daf414111516f6d798811
4baed3c7035cbd1a50026b14371fe1d58bd5e804
describe
'25166' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXED' 'sip-files00170thm.jpg'
b6230bf19bc722f4fa2304d76221d4a8
b5583743b60ede2017709b95e7c26a210a292b98
describe
'74108' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEE' 'sip-files00172.QC.jpg'
46fc9c3ed0f48c548a73d259917e0cce
1f248c78b67d121d09bfd842d3ff33781b64e883
describe
'75348' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEF' 'sip-files00173.QC.jpg'
ac754d6c34c62db2554d8888fcd927cb
9f30ecf7fb6631163d9dab8460c16dbb0dfbd510
describe
'24421' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEG' 'sip-files00174thm.jpg'
91a624b248b6f95def8a9e487c1ebb8c
9d429071cc3bf00393b29425908320e7263efcaa
describe
'25612' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEH' 'sip-files00175thm.jpg'
8b34400976bf7ed296ef821f78e682a2
2f7cac88ef09a9c362be5a3aae0997a8cb772b90
describe
'72387' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEI' 'sip-files00178.QC.jpg'
b34828d79920bbde550629e2e83adbb4
a95dec503aaaccaf678e78a702c9d3890704757d
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEJ' 'sip-files00180.QC.jpg'
269b4cf68a6002a24b10f84333ff7489
dd77bc3c0f86864b0ae9386b89f64b65318e7276
describe
'73774' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEK' 'sip-files00182.QC.jpg'
8d8b091c72144ba091d4240b380fabdb
e3a60faa79d8a2024314c8a02055a93983b9ff5c
describe
'77634' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEL' 'sip-files00183.QC.jpg'
0fe5ba34d45b66e1528858d2d3514846
a4a3a54efae1d681c169670496c0b2a961eec7c8
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEM' 'sip-files00183thm.jpg'
7f220f2c811b3738ee06cbb0b95cf4ff
ef14811dde0862dedfd9356e9c6a46955b140e36
describe
'82463' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEN' 'sip-files00184.QC.jpg'
8da1f9260cbf7b160f04118c7bbc8b6c
2b888bd53aaf22fb4a050e4b000c4f59b07789ea
describe
'28297' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEO' 'sip-files00184thm.jpg'
5894573f6df60f480a423f5255394fde
2d15dd1457e333cf592ef0bbf6437459cf982d8a
describe
'84150' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEP' 'sip-files00185.QC.jpg'
453e6e189dd3d7bba05740ac6fbb79e0
f844dbdfc46e264f604281c8bf93a3a16812cba6
describe
'28818' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEQ' 'sip-files00185thm.jpg'
ed719024e643fb3ce35052f1096cc72e
64d0f3c3077384975e4939032fc856821b7b9501
describe
'26281' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXER' 'sip-files00187thm.jpg'
b1f49e3dd5f5629741cb8b8ca5668223
98494739e38a4f6ee2a06d29a5cade753d6b1c7e
describe
'18514' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXES' 'sip-files00188thm.jpg'
c2998b2f9b1ddeb5ccc751f6a1c70b2d
c998b70b10aaac256f430cd5f11624833ee4bf16
describe
'73312' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXET' 'sip-files00189a.QC.jpg'
6e3b92d32aa0da844d126aa239fcd122
c2a1c4f6197b5b8ac752df5331fbb4b60572e127
describe
'73105' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEU' 'sip-files00189b.QC.jpg'
d237df7876d11652febe3258b691b24c
dab7171e368874dfdae763745ac43277854fc099
describe
'25095' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEV' 'sip-files00189bthm.jpg'
b70eaf1c564a65e5338367663f433f18
b0ec3f8d19ba9b4e9b37eb56d86ab5c6bd2412ed
describe
'79182' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEW' 'sip-files00190.QC.jpg'
44e54b32257dab47c659a6a1cd5af277
9bfdb2cac08bf493fc2f57480ecb71e02506ab5e
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEX' 'sip-files00190thm.jpg'
909ec9f57ef12bf77954c21c9632f967
f51bfa4f32f3c9181cfd8ac552eb4a02b47236e0
describe
'83061' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEY' 'sip-files00191.QC.jpg'
4b100627adb3c79acb42e9a3bf738e18
09e118f131528a7e8e5295316352098a8f9a687e
describe
'27871' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXEZ' 'sip-files00191thm.jpg'
75269eafac4ea9bcdd1eb20689e2f109
3617e4340c65c97669ccbd7d016430b368893ce9
describe
'78008' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFA' 'sip-files00192.QC.jpg'
06ad2e3369f27effeedf916d1368e85c
df29388ca0de1f2e1577cce91081db45fba93f9b
describe
'22619' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFB' 'sip-files00194thm.jpg'
8b56c7ef8f1657594269a68af3291a78
bf316bfe1501733c9ca50a2ee57490cb23af556a
describe
'75740' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFC' 'sip-files00196.QC.jpg'
46710d121a05f1f17fd67b7699b86ad2
1d3e9ca0069321aa4e41f734f5320309f2b132a4
describe
'83342' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFD' 'sip-files00197.QC.jpg'
c66e9a6bc17da237df51da1d55ca31c7
11732401a2d7106c77acd0b4942a57ee657818f8
describe
'79648' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFE' 'sip-files00198.QC.jpg'
cddb28b992633ed43e649f59843d3fa2
7d8231435aed7873e83a4d4237c9d919a43ec6db
describe
'27391' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFF' 'sip-files00198thm.jpg'
feb81b77a58292fe7c9c827506e6a15c
89dd7f31f57ece68f42cc749735c66742287901f
describe
'81316' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFG' 'sip-files00199.QC.jpg'
292625231b97e1cee87d5f28eaf9e71f
20d92d8c00c87aa44e22ae7c14f5f813f4a1bfc3
describe
'75987' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFH' 'sip-files00199a.QC.jpg'
48e7316979000dc8488a263a4c7226b9
5eed0cd9067c6717fc5bbf123b929acbd17a9e54
describe
'26092' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFI' 'sip-files00199athm.jpg'
feb5ba97ce84a85066c81b8e8e87ec49
014807057e436616c3159cbcbd9aa433ef93ad1a
describe
'74420' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFJ' 'sip-files00199b.QC.jpg'
8e1fa6a956d333c1e73d881e385a3122
ee5b7b53a899f8c575c030d0bd3947e17fd5807b
describe
'28202' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFK' 'sip-files00199thm.jpg'
8be23fbf940cb5d15320026f59b60705
283a536eb04b33668fa9853e094aef800058c2c6
describe
'81204' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFL' 'sip-files00200.QC.jpg'
32cc3be62a5b6bffd9ea14ec749a1cbb
c488fd0eb194d2495482a989a4aae16a34c0318d
describe
'27475' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFM' 'sip-files00202thm.jpg'
1afb51b0b4ff63b5ca67bedab15509e8
35a8b7511528d6ff229a7d363f9fb1a902d88673
describe
'53880' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFN' 'sip-files00203.QC.jpg'
05d489dc0e1237c15bc6fa2f8505bda3
998617d50d98be94a3f4955db4c149fce4933cb2
describe
'80751' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFO' 'sip-files00204.QC.jpg'
aa4a9e5734464853da15d072b7ac2415
f3368180a40809bc7966e204a12721282df56638
describe
'29163' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFP' 'sip-files00205thm.jpg'
55c61d566cbbf5818bbd28a4d7a650c9
a585f63aa7b32c23d16a304cb0b8fcc0e4309f70
describe
'28773' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFQ' 'sip-files00207thm.jpg'
183b67da8568852095d7805dfe3735a0
a8f448b60cd1f8c7238f891e6c69ab06b1febb67
describe
'82162' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFR' 'sip-files00208.QC.jpg'
597a136a300b28579afa196ced0b25f9
8161a2345e271c3bcb291270868e85c89559c54b
describe
'29000' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFS' 'sip-files00209thm.jpg'
58a339365e1d5898f034493b252d9ed0
fd67a0ea3a5a355f0bfb6e17d67886d351f9405e
describe
'63775' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFT' 'sip-files00210.QC.jpg'
903eab280d56d04081dd8423695d023a
ec9d70df5e77dbc53650e33190e40a9e398c26f0
describe
'24028' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFU' 'sip-files00210thm.jpg'
7207c92b4b4713478323946e09363094
dec2c6261759746a0df356530e489d41e2784b50
describe
'26112' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFV' 'sip-files00211thm.jpg'
1b6ebc0932917234e2bc829942bb6a26
2fe1803a0ea2581fd145b732089fcd43dadb143b
describe
'61634' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFW' 'sip-files00212.QC.jpg'
5cf38c1c6686ecde62fe5084d9833e0b
9428c03847fd895b56432778bfa66a6039663730
describe
'68759' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFX' 'sip-files00213.QC.jpg'
72b4f39d87989e2a79e2ecc9c77d2064
b9cb60a332c6d831f088f17140e87302447c8893
describe
'25685' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFY' 'sip-files00213thm.jpg'
3cb8cf41bd97291250628a9638fb1bb1
b2d1a9e6072c724ca6de773efd5ccfb0ba902069
describe
'83681' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXFZ' 'sip-files00215.QC.jpg'
02692be3826fb2d4cd0e7c83cc96d11e
0349fa05a53a4960d5d6109ad3447f47885220f4
describe
'28009' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGA' 'sip-files00216thm.jpg'
217a7af43c9418bfdc5d347dacc7ae76
b23bf3d603584580f7d7bff89927084c82b399bc
describe
'81726' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGB' 'sip-files00217.QC.jpg'
7395d8ec523a6d3a152dbe9122d22720
4c97cf9af0681d59233d5b2cab6b01d6eb0749b8
describe
'28623' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGC' 'sip-files00217thm.jpg'
f80c628ac78471376e88ecc1018333c7
cc5d585ed087a174407aa1f988f6ca3623dd528b
describe
'81453' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGD' 'sip-files00218.QC.jpg'
d960ea4acd44f3ee0989977c1e886be4
18af73a9ba40eacef0cf303d09bc84e1bd4dc0db
describe
'28874' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGE' 'sip-files00220thm.jpg'
f6099dfac7dd5c27bc037050985a0342
72be005891994153479aab4b49172257ea893b8d
describe
'76767' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGF' 'sip-files00221.QC.jpg'
3dc416fbba487295933c2b3150ad256b
68408fb255bb6eca6add5ddecf039ebc8ae4c7b5
describe
'26934' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGG' 'sip-files00221thm.jpg'
e212ac84a86b0748a6f0ac11ab1fe43d
77f28bf73fde6752f0a2e8222f40e0554c13d6e9
describe
'79444' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGH' 'sip-files00223a.QC.jpg'
4cacfd2854d44dd15d02ac6d716caf9c
23ddf797892b4e05db8aee9a6801663ef3f29437
describe
'79067' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGI' 'sip-files00224.QC.jpg'
5b86583a77b4e2d2d6efa1ba5bdb1be2
f816581d0f5c5cd52931134756d5d9751967c6f8
describe
'78721' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGJ' 'sip-files00225.QC.jpg'
db1757ecd3a9a93f1e7a9fc729ebe971
9dc3728e7f8644e92c4817f63c0ed4e1fe910cd8
describe
'29608' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGK' 'sip-files00226thm.jpg'
7630a14bb4632a718e21f4a9a37a27b5
60d1ff91301c88f4bdda45d4039a727974bed3c8
describe
'54559' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGL' 'sip-files00227.QC.jpg'
0d7a04bfabe9af9adc77c8035da11ccd
5c538415e7f16cc12c130174743defe832167e8a
describe
'64899' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGM' 'sip-files00228.QC.jpg'
912ff89f6e642a9d5764318fbccd2b3e
caa86aa17f4d912673e4be838e68687669b046d9
describe
'29111' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGN' 'sip-files00229thm.jpg'
b8fee0006d8772a35b572e7f60854ba4
fe7c925bd5d09d83ccda7b14c5bb1df286f387fe
describe
'81210' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGO' 'sip-files00230.QC.jpg'
a805fd35f7dd338185ab26adcaf263dc
f289ebca671b12f83b46cc0de71a100b15c673a3
describe
'28709' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGP' 'sip-files00233thm.jpg'
bea5add750f03614075866785f006fb3
b0974006215d795dfb3c3ea7b5da5c61468d97ab
describe
'80422' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGQ' 'sip-files00235.QC.jpg'
7d38a74ba3b2ea50e1e19f22f6d86aed
179414774efc1191a99c81de375e9185c094b250
describe
'83326' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGR' 'sip-files00236.QC.jpg'
61b7b936b5213233d103be2c855853bf
80e242ee5bd12fcfef4836a5098f86f67e149652
describe
'28152' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGS' 'sip-files00236thm.jpg'
d27319a2a18ec4ae9d2fa5d9fa20ce1b
6cb9b156c510e58537efd48134a5c75f0bd67fd2
describe
'79120' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGT' 'sip-files00237.QC.jpg'
845be794a9768135bbe2180ef48c767b
a16ac4cdbfa3e22fb475212d09b24724cc5a9a9b
describe
'28444' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGU' 'sip-files00238thm.jpg'
db02285a684f64c0d6a7d2ed8e19a03b
c60074ee67a85f0dd2c489462e507453093f8026
describe
'78503' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGV' 'sip-files00239.QC.jpg'
e3ef3070836e731ca5d3a5f1f0cdcce3
4c0d022fe890cfdc321fcbec8921517b084c19ac
describe
'27538' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGW' 'sip-files00240thm.jpg'
81af8671130ee609a228269aecb118d2
1e614f62fb5421c54d38291c994fb617f8be61f0
describe
'86674' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGX' 'sip-files00242.QC.jpg'
867ca2de20f9361830c11c450e712773
7671fbd58b9ccf8893b5fc135c2a21a0701a9138
describe
'30629' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGY' 'sip-files00242thm.jpg'
546e96c38697d918b8ab90515fc70bee
dc58520f1e2c389d65b82ac4891d9af8778461bb
describe
'25920' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXGZ' 'sip-files00244thm.jpg'
216e5ff13485dc42a411f7964041844c
bd0725fd7a1a93af288a026bd93bf8177e10b5aa
describe
'85533' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHA' 'sip-files00245.QC.jpg'
b260de16bbe465ee670aeb1f0440b784
77f773e597b58b3081c75170ce309d9612b0791e
describe
'19678' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHB' 'sip-files00246thm.jpg'
25f4496ace6289ccc0115fe0fd078166
b4fd7c28604f8d891d851a7e7db0295d30ca9337
describe
'67745' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHC' 'sip-files00247.QC.jpg'
3e9ced45578302b5c1fbea1bb5b76fba
5b0ef0a88be62d8a07a54c76453607ba2fc967ba
describe
'24428' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHD' 'sip-files00247thm.jpg'
e897251417bf89ef4af2c7112720d988
c7b097710d9bafa6bf833653d2318e0f1224c6a0
describe
'83860' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHE' 'sip-files00248.QC.jpg'
87720ee9e0d05e6bf2b559044bc5466a
31ffa6c4e86ad237a705d7a0a268d66772581345
describe
'28670' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHF' 'sip-files00248thm.jpg'
a449d328d85c033f5d16e776b3cc70aa
abd9c7c7eadc597aa11e10ca6289123fcebb0666
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHG' 'sip-files00249.QC.jpg'
8b159dcf50decbef6e0f33928fa145df
ec93337ad0150ce4613dfab37fdad7b551958f4f
describe
'28944' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHH' 'sip-files00250thm.jpg'
fb631263fe89dbce8c552aa69bc70fcd
4d8bffb491979de684677ba9cb4d7744139afb51
describe
'81900' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHI' 'sip-files00251.QC.jpg'
8443be381cf9b78dae17ae2b6c4e9ea1
4a86a25b78f4d78e302127d7d81d4ed57638bf37
describe
'27991' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHJ' 'sip-files00251thm.jpg'
63fe993618d20ea0c481970b07917ba5
7a7acdeba7f6f57f4f778a6c2d8432aaf635c90b
describe
'84087' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHK' 'sip-files00254.QC.jpg'
9ba555dd5cc893eaaa90d68dc07f4bf5
5c35098871650365c5df02e9fb2347e653711f98
describe
'29349' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHL' 'sip-files00254thm.jpg'
3559ed46c13ffb5e89c3195887b0a283
428c19b66d27f321d4d431ae5b9c934282588f72
describe
'28316' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHM' 'sip-files00255thm.jpg'
d50a06713d8bd4b666389db4f5c49341
2bac44091460d2cd67cb0647a6a554d92d1b232a
describe
'82630' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHN' 'sip-files00256.QC.jpg'
618b6bbd94b80197da4fa96de6f86f87
3fc47c0ae916fbd5dbcb1536ca2efc330be74cc4
describe
'28742' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHO' 'sip-files00256thm.jpg'
58f9cb783ba20681952f04e74719f8f9
61a7f2a9dee6745ecf9325e00876a7ce03643825
describe
'27076' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHP' 'sip-files00257thm.jpg'
7263baf3ead53a798a46fe7eeb6f64af
6415e673258d8be06fe6fa04df7981ae5ccdb81d
describe
'74487' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHQ' 'sip-files00258.QC.jpg'
74fef37934959800dcfec49ff420477e
7cb838e95512481ef92a99a2fe16494191cd2f0d
describe
'26711' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHR' 'sip-files00258thm.jpg'
58616e24cb3916acb644388959748dc0
b434d9aafd561294dde336008e5f4ffcb18ac3b9
describe
'26473' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHS' 'sip-files00259thm.jpg'
dc4292d0c041cf2dd242f6201b584386
a04dd28a66862c182468519d67caa2db00d7a063
describe
'80012' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHT' 'sip-files00261.QC.jpg'
c741821ff1b13e3dafca20c95d5128a5
e4ac84168bea68c9ea264a160dd5d20fb66c845a
describe
'27790' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHU' 'sip-files00261thm.jpg'
1da7aa9045c2cf0703b0c7a8c1c7a5dc
2b45fe726aea607fade8e7571736839bc6fdfc3f
describe
'74838' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHV' 'sip-files00263.QC.jpg'
61672352ad51752892e5585d55876250
763da7dbb4a8b85716f4f2a08892ed727cd3c325
describe
'74283' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHW' 'sip-files00264.QC.jpg'
ef251b85107454ac171a1bc4b75bd716
91cb5221c7e46e5c93959e2f46bfcca08251b0d8
describe
'27169' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHX' 'sip-files00266thm.jpg'
8cca5755cd3f194355261988dc424a8a
46557d7526c1339eb5d7023d23ebb690e207fbff
describe
'68280' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHY' 'sip-files00268.QC.jpg'
b4bb48e61381d353cdb688483f117e47
1c8633b9103d832f9b8d2b5e2ae62441626f675a
describe
'25442' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXHZ' 'sip-files00268thm.jpg'
e2e52c3f530d7a1b56df929452a0395f
8951f7c1b06a6f9a2cb57b622ec9834f5b622572
describe
'74875' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXIA' 'sip-files00269.QC.jpg'
6b0c1b979758df6d07be21d0823fe02e
37a9e74f1886b14ddff0f4a01359f8d85612c065
describe
'25489' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXIB' 'sip-files00269thm.jpg'
ceb7b6847865621080be1c6136e17bea
bc681536108b58bec2192f449c546b0c127daa27
describe
'73684' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXIC' 'sip-files00270.QC.jpg'
e1d0e63dab89d0d6903c0cc1985267da
c64e406bc972cffdae3f9c804952cc4669a313f7
describe
'74579' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXID' 'sip-files00272.QC.jpg'
3163c78dfef7350157b24956d39646c6
58e2407418423ed7997ff85607987728e107310c
describe
'26617' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXIE' 'sip-files00273thm.jpg'
a9a1358bf570ae584c653e0174c82bc6
4080b04f6f8851890dde32a752f7d3ed74fb1750
describe
'24379' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXIF' 'sip-files00274thm.jpg'
41080d80034a5c147a54d86f317079b7
25006235a2efd80ba95b27a8236c81fe69a3694a
describe
'26327' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXIG' 'sip-files00275thm.jpg'
b4d7a70e166e1039ae811a399d63fe1c
1ef0df0807e223d2ca82313c8338263dfa19e7b8
describe
'58182' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXIH' 'sip-files00276.QC.jpg'
e465e647efca573952ec9393fdb9b3fa
c4923456cdbdb25711ab5bedf44f262eda00b33f
describe
'59843' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXII' 'sip-files00278.QC.jpg'
daa73a88b54a0eb398f7f05312d5dedb
5b9e10edf5183cbd3634f346f8083b32bac633ce
describe
'26345' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXIJ' 'sip-files00279thm.jpg'
ac93b6d70aa04adb63c166d00a460396
b6fa553de5455cbae72d5eaf0de6010a4cc1f573
describe
'74894' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXIK' 'sip-files00283.QC.jpg'
6b5b13d6c3612fcc5be12d8e310e5750
6205602ceb7e979c227b6bba3cf6e488f0375d66
describe
'26137' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXIL' 'sip-files00283thm.jpg'
143de041d85c8b57352727312d63b625
49b52d05939c7ef90729c61e8fa6f4c1959d35ad
describe
'68953' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXIM' 'sip-files00284.QC.jpg'
d64de365927f77d598654e1bbb636539
6003f75798f9fad3dfd0cee551338514f49e8d1c
describe
'41451' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXIN' 'sip-files00286.QC.jpg'
333f9b443b2fae05593ea9bf859257e6
dc1b1ca037f1ef4cb3daa5782749f4b8c4499eaf
describe
'75648' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXIO' 'sip-files00289.QC.jpg'
056363ef5e9e5f7e92e9aa0019a6a01b
7a435dd609f70bdbc95c3fb972a11f7b086befc3
describe
'25486' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXIP' 'sip-files00289thm.jpg'
cd16a0f5106d7649a6f8a5fcba3acfae
0b69d5d5b4c528ca9d04deb405be9342493e7ce6
describe
'25906' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXIQ' 'sip-files00290thm.jpg'
a36f0ac4f60f44605fb60db7ff9783e5
889b0dc4b914cb87f23f6caf9d35d829fdbe054f
describe
'46568' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXIR' 'sip-files00291.QC.jpg'
c3923c21132943e7e9b23b1c944961e1
b270f95a8fc244a69fc68a21acf88447b7fbd517
describe
'23268' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAABAfileF20100403_AAAXIS' 'sip-files00292thm.jpg'
904bac2e9b2139d72292dde577674e6e
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nt

ie


The Baldwin Library


Mt NAd.
“Lae Pee
WHISPERS from FAIRYLAND
LONDON : PRINTED BY

SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-!



TREET SQUARE

AND PARLIAMENT STREET




Ze

ty
Uff

tf

UY





THE LOST PRINCE


WHISPERS FROM
FAIRYLAND

BY THE RT. HON.
E. H. KNATCHBULL-HUGESSEN, M.P.

AUTHOR OF ‘STORIES FOR MY CHILDREN’ ‘MOONSHINE’ * QUEER FOLK’ ETC



THE LOST PRINCE

LONDON
LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CoO.
1874

All rights reserved
TO THE

MOTHERS OF ENGLAND.

—+-—

DsAR LADIES,

So many of you have spoken kind words to me of
my books for children, that I venture to dedicate to you that
which I have just finished.

It is difficult to please all readers. The child just
out of the nursery, the young lady ‘in the schoolroom,’ the
school-boy, and the ‘grown-up children’ who do me the honour
to read my books, cannot all be exactly suited in every story.
Sometimes I am too ‘old,’ sometimes too ‘young’ for my readers.
But to your kindly judgment I readily and humbly submit my
present volume. I hope and believe ‘that, whatever may be its
defects, there is nothing in it which can do harm or teach evil
lessons to the child-world, which I love so well. Were it other-
wise, I should not be bold enough to dedicate it to that body
of English women whom, above all others, I respect and admire ;
because it is to them and to their guidance of the home-life of
their children that England has owed her greatness in time past
and will continue to owe the same in that future for and in
which those children have to work.

I am yours most respectfully,

E. H. KNATCHBULL-HUGESSEN,
PREFACE.

——4-——

I HOPE no one will blame me for the title which
I have ventured to choose for my new book of
Fairy Tales. There is no particular reason why
such tales should not be spoken out in a loud voice,
but there is something more mysterious and Fairy-
like in a ‘whisper,’ and therefore I have chosen the
word, There would be something inappropriate in
‘Bawls from Fairy-land,’ ‘Shrieks’ or ‘ Yells’ would
be wholly out of the question, there is a sulky
sound about ‘ Mutterings,’ and ‘Howls’ would be
extremely objectionable. So, upon the whole, I
prefer ‘ Whispers ;’ and, indeed, the title is all the
more appropriate, because it is in this tone of voice
that the little elves generally impart information to

those whom they honour with their confidence.
vill PREFAGE.



Through the rustling leaves in the soft summer
evenings; in the hay-fields after the hay-makers
have gone home, and the old white owl flits slowly
along in her search after the field mice, who are
no longer shielded from her sight by the long grass ;
early in the mornings before the world of man is
astir, and whilst the world of nature is still quiet
and fresh—at such times the Fairy-whispers come
to me ever and again; gentle, pleasant whispers
they are, and they tell such strange things, that I
cannot keep them to myself. So I cast them forth
for my child-friends to read and interpret for them-
selves, and if they cannot understand them all,
only let them tell me so, and I will ask for a full

explanation the very next time I go to Fairyland.
Ti:

Il.

IV.

V.

VI.

VII.

CONTENTS.

THE Lost PRINCE.

Tur HIsToRY OF A ROOK
THE SILVER FAIRIgsS . .
THE WITCHES’ ISLAND.
HARRY’S DREAM

THE RED BARON

THE Two ETONIANS
ILLUSTRATIONS.

PAGE

THe Lost PRINCE. : . . ; . loyace ‘1

THE GIANT PATTLE-PERRY . : . . se.55 4t
THE SILVER FAIRIES. . : 7 : : » 122
MOLLY AND THE DEVIL-FISII : » 173
Tue WircHes’ IsLaND . . . eC » 221
Harrv’s DREAM. : : : s . » 274
THE RED BARON : ; : . 7 : 9. 287

TuE Two Eronians . . 7 : : ” 339
Whispers from Fatryland.

sd Pate

I.
THE LOST PRINCE.

THERE was once a King who ruled over a people
faithful to his dynasty, and contented with his govern-
ment. His country was prosperous, his arms success-
ful, his power great, and the splendour of his court
unrivalled. Nor was this all; his Queen was a lady
of surpassing beauty and amiable disposition ; his
domestic happiness was complete, and he was blessed
with a son and two daughters, who were all that their
parents could desire. Fortune seemed to have smiled
upon that happy family, and nothing was wanting to
render their existence one of unalloyed bliss. At the
birth of each child good fairies had attended with
presents and good wishes, and everything promised a
long and joyful career to the children of those royal
parents.

It was not until the youthful Prince had attained
the age of ten years that the shadow of misfor-
tune first fell upon the King’s house, and dark-
ened an existence which had hitherto been one of
unmitigated joy and tranquillity. The little Prince

B
2 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.





had been christened Mirabel, but from his lively and
cheerful disposition had been usually called by the
short and tender designation of Prince Merry. He.
had dark hair and grey eyes, his form was graceful
and agile, his limbs well shaped, and his features de-
cidedly handsome.

According to the custom of that country, his dress
was richly ornamented with diamonds and precious
stones, and he wore a girdle which was thickly set
with jewels. One of these having become detached
the boy, somehow or other, contrived one day 'to inflict
a severe scratch upon his thigh, and although the
wound speedily healed, the scar remained, and caused
a certain disfigurement which his mother and nurses
greatly regretted. One of the toes of his left foot
moreover, was somewhat curiously shaped, for all the
world as if it had been cut in half, or rather as if a
piece had been cut out of the middle, for it was a
perfect toe, only very much shorter than the ordinary
run of toes; and besides this, he had upon one of his
arms a strange blue mark not commonly observable
upon a child’s limb. All these, however, were but
trifling defects, and in no way interfered with the
young Prince’s comfort.

He was about ten, as I have already remarked,
when something more serious befell him than a mere
personal blemish. Having been sent out one fine
summer’s afternoon with his favourite nursery-maid,
the latter took him for a ramble in the large forest
which joined up to the palace gardens. Somehow or
other one of the soldiers of the King’s guard happened
to be off duty, and walking in the same direction.
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 3



As this soldier chanced, by the merest accident, to be
a particular friend of the nursery-maid, nothing was
more natural than that they should stop and converse
together. In fact, they sat down upon a bench under
one of the big forest trees, and chatted away so much
to their mutual satisfaction that the moments slipped
by without either of them taking any account of time.
Suddenly, however, the loud sound of the palace dress-
ing bell fell upon their ears, and they became aware
of the fact that they had greatly outstayed the limit
of time allowed for the young Prince’s walk. Up they
started in some consternation, which was enormously
increased when they found that Prince Merry was no
- longer with them. The nursery-maid called him in
vain, then the soldier raised his louder voice, but with
a similar result, and they both commenced a hurried
and eager search in every direction. But their search
was fruitless. The young Prince had disappeared.

In vain they made the forest re-echo with his
name ; there was no answer, and a silence reigned
around which struck deep terror into their trembling
hearts. They stayed as long as they dared, and at
last returned to the palace in a dreadful state of alarm.
The nursery-maid rushed frantically to the nurse, told
her tale with incoherent vehemence, and went into a
violent fit of hysterics, from which she was only re-
covered by a liberal application of cold water.

It was some time before anyone dared to inform
the King of the loss of the son to whom he was
so devotedly attached. His Majesty was playing
billiards with the Lord Chamberlain, and as the latter

took very good care to be beaten, was in high good
B2
4 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [

humour, and quite prepared to forgive the Queen,
who had gone out driving, for being, as she certainly
would be, late for dinner.

But those who knew the monarch’s fondness for
his child, trembled with apprehension at the thought
of breaking to him the melancholy news. It could
not, however, be long concealed, and the disappear-
ance of the young Prince was announced by the Here-
ditary Grand Pig-feeder, a nobleman of high descent,
whose especial duty about the court was to super-
intend the supply of hams, bacon, and pickled pork,
of which large quantities were daily consumed in the
royal household. Entering the billiard room, he ap-
proached his sovereign with lowly obeisance, and
kneeling upon one knee, presented to him a silver
trough in which was deposited a note signed by three
of the ministers, narrating the circumstance of the
nursery-maid’s arrival, and report of the catas-
trophe.

Scarcely had the King read the missive through
when his countenance turned deadly white, and then
immediately flushed red with rage, as he flung his cue
at the Lord Chamberlain, and the silver trough at the
head of the Hereditary Grand Pig-feeder; then he
used violent words (which I shall not repeat, in case
any Kings should read this story, and be scandal-
ised at hearing what strong language some of their
royal race occasionally use, when their temper gets
the better of them) and bounced about the room
and the palace like a madman. Presently he gave
orders that the nursery-maid should be sent to
him, and after hearing all that she had to say, de-
1.] THE LOST PRINCE. 5



clared that she should be instantly condemned to be
eaten alive by white mice, and the soldier put into a
bag full of hedgehogs and rolled down the side of
the steepest precipice in that part of the world.

The unhappy maid wept bitterly and implored
mercy in piteous terms ; but it is doubtful whether she
would have obtained it, had not the King’s favourite
jester (who generally turned out to be the wisest
man at court) reminded the angry monarch that the
nature of white mice was not such as to render it
probable that they would do their part in carrying out
the sentence, and that hedgehogs being exceedingly
rare in that country, there would most likely bea great
and undesirable delay in the execution of the soldier.

After a little while, the King seemed to become
somewhat appeased, and turned his attention to the
consideration of the best means of recovering his
lost child. He ordered the forest to be thoroughly
well searched, and sent servants and messengers far
and wide along every road and pathway in the vicinity
of the palace. While he was engaged in giving these
commands, the Queen came in from her drive, and on
being informed of the misfortune which had befallen
her, gave vent to several shrill screams, and then
fainted away. Some time was occupied in bringing
Her Majesty back to consciousness, and when this
had been effected, her state was truly pitiable to
behold. She wept bitterly, let down her back hair,
tore her best pocket-handkerchief, trampled her new
bonnet underfoot, and scratched the faces of her
Mistress of the Robes and the three principal Ladies
in Waiting, to their great and visible consternation.
6 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.

In short, she behaved in every respect as if she had
been a mad woman, and upon the King’s attempting
to pacify her, she so far forgot her wifely duties as to
box his royal ears, and with another wild shout of
‘My child, my child!’ relapsed into her fainting fit;
from which the King thought it was by no means
desirable that she should speedily revive, if the same
scenes were to be re-enacted on her recovery. So
they carried the poor Queen up to her bed-room, and
left her quiet there until she came to once more, and
appeared somewhat less agitated. Then the King
paid her a visit, and, the first frenzy of grief being
‘over, the royal pair wept in each other’s arms over the
disaster which they both had to endure.

The servants, messengers, and soldiers who had
been sent to scour the country all returned without
any tidings of the missing Prince. The wells were all
examined, the ponds all emptied, the rivers dragged,
but nothing could be found nor any trace of Prince
Merry discovered by the searchers. For three days
and three nights the search was continued in every
direction, and at the end of that time the King and
Queen no longer ventured to hope that their beloved
son would be restored to them.

But what, in the name of all that was mysterious,
could possibly have become of him? The wild beasts
in that country were few and far between, and if any
savage animal had seized the boy, his cries would
surely have attracted the attention of the maid and
soldier, and even if this had not been the case, some
marks of his seizure, such as blood, torn raiment, and
signs of struggling would surely have been left behind.
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 7

Robbers were almost unknown in the kingdom, which
possessed an organised police, with staffs, helmets and
all complete, and was consequently very little troubled
with marauders of any description. It was very
unlikely that the Prince had run away of his own
accord: such an idea was at once negatived by the
consideration of his tender age, his lively and affection-
ate disposition, and the entire want of probable motive
on his part for any such a proceeding.

All, therefore, was enveloped in mystery, and the
more his ‘parents thought over the affair the more
completely puzzled did they become. The soldier
and the nursery-maid were closely cross-questioned
as to the affair, and both persistently adhered to
the same story. The Prince, they said, had been
playing about near them when they first sat down,
and had never asked them to walk on, or expressed
the slightest annoyance at their remaining where they
were. They owned, with sincere penitence, that they
had been grossly careless in not keeping watch over
the precious child, and the soldier readily admitted that
he had no business to have been in the forest at all. But
they both vowed and declared that they would have
given their lives for Prince Merry, and were utterly and
completely surprised and -horrified at his disappear-
ance, of which they could give no account whatever.

The King, when he thought quietly and soberly
over such matters, was not inclined to be severe upon
offenders generally, and retracted the sentence which,
in the first moments of his wrath, he had passed upon
these two individuals. As, however, it was impossible
to overlook the matter altogether, he directed that a
8 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.

large and strong cage should be made, of sufficient size
tocontain them both, and inthishe ordered the unhappy
pair to be confined, telling them that, as they were so
fond of each other’s society, they should enjoy it at
all events for some time to come, and should be kept
in their cage until Prince Merry should be found
again. After this, the King summoned his ministers,
and took counsel with them as to the best course to
be adopted in order to discover, if possible, what had
become of the heir to the throne. Many different
opinions were given, some of which had the appear-
ance of wisdom about them, whilst others were absurd
and beneath contempt. All, however, were agreed
that advertisements should be inserted in all the
newspapers of that and the adjoining kingdoms, and
large rewards offered for the restoration of the lost
Prince.

The task of drawing up the advertisement fell to
the Newsmonger General, a high officer of state whose
duty it was to watch over all the publications of the
day, and exercise a general supervision over the news-
paper press, which was never allowed to write nonsense
or to say anything abusive about anybody. This
great functionary found no difficulty in drawing up
an advertisement to the following effect :

Lost, stolen, or strayed,

As in Forest he played,

Prince Mirabel, often called ‘ Merry.’
He was perfectly made,

His parents obeyed,

And was gentle and tractable, very :
A lively lad, too,

On his arm a mark blue,
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 9

And a diamond-set girdle around him,

Gold pieces not few

Shall be given to you

Who bring the Prince here, when you’ve found him !

This advertisement was forthwith inserted in all
the newspapers, and every means was taken to give
publicity to the astounding circumstances of the
case. Not content with the newspapers, huge adver-
tisements were stuck up at all the principal railway
stations, on the sides of all blank walls (especially
those upon which ‘Stick no bills‘ had been prominently
affixed by the owners) and in every situation where
people were accustomed to congregate. All this,
however, produced not the slightest effect. No tidings
‘whatever were heard of the young Prince, and no
answers were given to the advertisements, except such
as turned out on enquiry to have been sent by rogues
and swindlers who wanted to make a good thing of
it, and were in several instances detected and hung
for their pains.

The worst of it was, in the opinion of the Royal
family, that in spite of the misfortune which had be-
fallen their illustrious house,everything went on just the
same in the rest of the kingdom. No general blight fell
upon everybody and everything, but the people per-
severed in prospering most provokingly, the harvests
were just as good, trade and commerce flourished
equally well, men bought and sold, married and
reared families, and in every respect conducted their
business and passed their lives just as comfortably as
if the young Prince had never been lost at all. That
common people should be happy when Royalty
10 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [I.



suffered was something totally opposed to those first
principles which taught the monarchs and great
people of those days that upon them and their hap-
piness the whole world hinged and depended, and
there might well have been Kings who would have
resented such an unnatural condition of things, and
have turned their wrath upon those who dared thus to
thrive during their sorrow. But, being a philosopher,
this worthy Prince only saw in the circumstances of
his country another proof of the heartlessness and infe-
riority of the common herd, who had not indeed the
graceto suffer with their ruler, but were on that account
rather to be pitied and despised than punished.
With great magnanimity, therefore, he endured the
prosperity of his people, and visited upon them the
callous indifference to his sorrow which they showed
in this practical manner, in no other way than by the
imposition of a few more taxes, in order to defray the
expenses consequent upon the continued inquiries
after the lost Prince.

Things went on in this manner for some time;
year after year slipped away, no more children were
born to the Royal couple, and it seemed as if the
kingdom would pass, after their decease, into the pos-
session of their two daughters, of whom it is now high
time to make mention.

Malvina and Pettina were two beautiful Princesses,
though their style was somewhat different. Malvina
was a queenly creature; tall, but not too tall, with
raven hair, finely-cut features, and dark eyes that
flashed brightly as lightning on asummer’seve. Her
temper was perhaps just a little imperious, but then
1.] THE LOST PRINCE. Il

she seemed born to command, and there was no
reason to doubt the goodness of her heart. Her
younger sister, however, was entirely different. She
was one of those creatures whom you could not better
describe than as a little fairy. Somewhat below the
average height of women, her figure was the most
graceful you can imagine, her limbs exquisitely
moulded, her light tresses had a special beauty of
their own, and if her features were not regularly
handsome, there was an expression of happiness and
heart-cheerfulness in them which made her face lovely
to look upon, and her whole being seemed to sparkle
like the morning light of a summer day. Pettina was
as much loved as Malvina was admired ; and the King
and Queen might well be, as indeed they were, proud
of their charming daughters, though even in the
pleasure thus afforded them they could never forget
the lost hope of their ancient house.

At the time of which I write the two Princesses
had reached the respective ages of eighteen and
seventeen, and were daily growing more beautiful and
accomplished. As may well be believed, no pains
had been spared upon their education. They played
excellently well upon several musical instruments,
their singing was something quite out of the common
way, they spoke modern languages with a facility and
fluency which was really wonderful, and in their
knowledge of history, geography, and other branches
of education their proficiency was far above the
average.

It is not surprising that under these circumstances
the suitors for the hands of the two Princesses should
12 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [I.

have been neither few nor far between. Perhaps the
number may have been increased by the knowledge
of the great probability that the whole kingdom would
eventually come to one or both of the sisters, but, be
this as it may, there was certainly no lack of eligible
persons who desired to form a matrimonial alliance
with one or other of the pair.

The powerful King of the Islands, where was the
finest and most numerous breed of white horses ever
known, had long regarded Malvina with loving eyes ;
the Prince of the River Country, whose immense in-
come was entirely derived from the swans which he
preserved by thousands, had cast tender looks upon
Pettina; whilst the mighty Giant Pattle-perry, who
lived in the Coal Country, had been heard to declare
that either of the damsels was more precious than
coal, which was saying a great deal and plainly
showed his appreciation of their worth. The King
and Queen, however, had no desire to part with their
children, and no wish for any marriage save one of
affection. The girls themselves were very happy at
home, and for some time all the rumours of offers to
be made by the various potentates I have mentioned
never came to anything more than vague reports.

Nine years had elapsed since the disappearance of
Prince Merry, and his parents had at last abandoned
all hopes of his recovery, and bowed in sorrowful sub-
mission to the terrible affliction which had befallen
them. Whilst the King devoted himself with in-
creased energy to public affairs, and gave all his spare
moments to literature ; the Queen, finding her house-
hold occupations insufficient for her amusement,
1} THE LOST PRINCE. 13

betook herself to the healthy and pleasant pursuit of
gardening. As it might well be in the case of a
palace belonging to so great a monarch, the gardens
attached to the royal residence were very spacious,
and no expense was spared to bring them to the
greatest perfection. Numerous gardeners were em-
ployed, some whose special duty it was to look after
the acres of glass under which the choicest fruit was
reared for the royal table, others who devoted their
attention exclusively to flowers, a third body to whom
vegetables were the sole care, and a staff of labourers.
whose whole occupation consisted in keeping the lawns
well mown and smooth, in sweeping dead leaves from
the paths, and in raking and keeping in proper order
the miles of gravel walks for which the royal gardens
were so famous.

In these gardens and the adjoining shrubberies
the Queen passed a great part of her time, sometimes
alone, and not unfrequently accompanied by one or
other of her daughters. One very lovely evening Her
Majesty had strolled to the further extremity of the
garden, and taken her seat upon a rustic bench which
she had long ago caused to be placed under an ancient
oak close to the forest. She was quite alone ; and as she
sat listening to the many soothing sounds which filled
the air, her melancholy became quite irrepressible,
and the tears ran fast down her cheeks as she thought
of her past happiness and present sorrow. The voice
of Nature seemed to speak of peace and joy and love.
The tender woodpigeon gently coo’d her ‘ good-night’
to her faithful mate, the clear and melodious note of
the nightingale fell with pleasant cadence upon the
14 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [..

listener’s ears, the bees were humming their drowsy
farewell to the sun, the robin chanted hisevening hymn,
the timid bats had begun to flutter out to meet the ap-
proaching twilight, and the busy life of day was just
giving place to the quiet sleep of night. Touched to the
heart by the influence of the hour, the Royal lady
continued to weep softly for some moments, and then,
clasping her hands together with fervour, she exclaimed
aloud—

‘Everything seems happy and peaceful—I alone
am wretched—I alone have no joy in life, for the love
of my heart was for my boy, and he has been taken
from me. Oh! will he never, never, come back?
Shall I never see him again ?’

As she spoke, the Queen threw a supplicating
glance heavenwards, and would probably have con-
tinued to say more in the same strain, had not her
last question been suddenly answered in a most
unexpected manner.

‘Why not?’ exclaimed a voice in a short, sharp
tone, which of itself, coming from an invisible speaker,
would have been startling enough, but, considering the
particular time and place at which it was heard, was
alarming in a remarkable degree.

The Queen started violently, and looked right,
left, and behind the tree, without seeing anything at
all. Then it struck her to look straight in front of
her by way of a change, and immediately that she did
so she perceived the person from whom the voice had
proceeded. It was a man so small that you might
fairly have called him a dwarf without being accused
of misrepresentation. He could not have been four
1 THE LOST PRINCE. 15



feet high, or anything near it, and although he held
himself as upright as possible, nobody could have
complimented him upon his height, except those who,
for reasons of their own, prefer short men to tall.
Upon his head he had a small close-fitting velvet cap,
his coat was ofa bright green with enormous brown
buttons, upon which were carved the figures of various
woodland animals ; similar buttons also adorned his
buff waistcoat, whilst his lower members were incased
in thick cord breeches, with leather gaiters overtopping
highly polished boots. In his hand he held a spud
nearly as tall as himself, and this he swung to and fro
as he sat upon the large root of a tree in the midst of
some ornamental rockwork exactly opposite the bench
upon which Her Majesty was sitting.

As soon as this strange individual perceived that
the Queen had seen him and fixed her eyes upon him
with great surprise, he calmly nodded at her, and
again repeated the words, ‘Why not?’ after which
he apparently waited for an answer to his question.

This, however, it was scarcely possible for the
Queen to give: the only reason ‘why’ she feared she
would never see her son again was that he was most
likely dead or carried to some remote region of
the earth, or else he would surely have been heard of
before nine years had expired since his first dis-
appearance. But to the good mother’s heart hope
was immediately conveyed by the words of the little
man, and not only could she give no reason why she
should not see her son again, but the probability of
her doing so instantly suggested itself to her mind,
and a thrill of joy darted at once to her very soul.
16 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, i.

She sprang from her seat hastily, and throwing
herself upon her knees in front of the little gentleman,
clasped her hands again, and exclaimed in a tone of
piteous entreaty—

‘Oh sir, caw you tell me anything of my lost
one—yours are the first words of comfort I have
heard for many a long day: give me, oh give me my
boy, and I will bless you for ever !’

‘Do you like your turkeys roast or boiled?’
calmly enquired the individual thus addressed, which
question appeared so ill-timed and extraordinary to the
Queen that she was utterly confused for the moment.
‘Because, continued the speaker, ‘there are two
opinions upon that point, as upon everything else.
Roast turkey is excellent when hot, but the bird is so
much better cold when it has been boiled, that I can
never quite agree with those who say that “a turkey
boiled is a turkey spoiled.” ’

By this time the Queen had somewhat recovered
her equanimity, and again earnestly accosted the
dwarf, for so indeed he might be called.

‘ Sir, sir,’ she cried, ‘I beseech you trifle not with
a mother’s feelings. If you know anything of my lost
darling, tell me ; by all you hold dear, I adjure you to
tell me at once.’

‘There are three things,’ gravely replied the little
man, ‘ which through life, you will do well to avoid.
Never fly into a passion—never sit: long with wet
feet, and do not takea hedgehog in your hands without
gloves.’

At this disrespectful and trying reply to her
entreaty, the Queen began to wax wroth, and rising
| THE LOST PRINCE. 17



hastily to her feet, she exclaimed in an indignant
tone, ‘Sir, I know not who or what you are, but no
one with the feelings of a gentleman would treat a
lady thus, and no one who was worthy of the name of
man would thus deal with an unhappy mother,’ and
so saying, she burst into tears again.

“Suet pudding,’ calmly observed the Dwarf, ‘is
improved by treacle; game should always be dressed
with its own gravy ; and you will do well to have the
chill taken off your claret before drinking it’

The Queen now became more angry than ever.
“What do you mean?’ she cried in louder tones.
‘What right have you to come and talk nonsense here
in such a heartless manner? What is your name, and
wherefore do you come without leave or licence into
these gardens ?’

As Her Majesty spoke, she took a step forward
towards the rockwork, as if determined to bring the
intruder to account forthwith. But the Dwarf now
rose from his seat, and bowed to the Royal lady with
the utmost gravity. ‘Madam,’ he said, in a voice
which was quite deferential in its tone, ‘I am really
grieved to have been the cause of so much excite-
ment; I might almost say irritation, in your Majesty.
My name is Rindelgrover ; my abode is in the forest ;
my profession that of a dwarf and philosopher ; and
my intentions are of the very best description.’

‘But, sir,’ rejoined the Queen, scarcely mollified
by the statement to which she had just listened, ‘if
this be so, why pretend to have news of my beloved
son, and then answer my earnest inquiries with irre-
levant and impertinent remarks ?’

Cc
18 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [.

The little man shrugged his shoulders. ‘Boys
will be boys,’ said he, ‘and dwarfs will be dwarfs, to
the end of their days, and it is not of the slightest
use'to expect them to be anything else. It isnot our
habit to answer questions directly they are asked, if we
doso at all. A few wise sayings or remarks, thrown in
in an interjaculatory manner, tend to compose the
mind and clear the way for a better reply than one
might give upon the spur of the moment. Since,
however, you object to my method of proceeding, I
will annoy you no more. In fact, all I came here to
say was that I wish to be your friend. The charms
of your two daughters have quite vanquished me.
Pettina is a duck and Malvina is a darling. To
restore to them a brother and to you a son seems to
me to be something which would entitle me to the
gratitude of you all. Mow am I talking nonsense?’

‘Oh, sir!’ tearfully exclaimed the Queen: ‘If
you are not deceiving me with false hopes, you will
indeed prove yourself to be my best of friends. But
say, oh say, what I am to do to get back my lost
darling ?’

‘Bread-and-butter with fresh water-cresses makes
a wholesome and delicious meal,’ replied the Dwarf,
and then with a violent effort breaking himself off from
his accustomed mode of answering questions, thus
continued : ‘I beg your pardon, madam, for this short
digression ; I will endeavour to help you by every
means in my power, and if I don’t succeed in doing
so, call me Macklethorpe, instead of Rindelgrover.’

‘J have no intention of calling you anything so
ridiculous, returned the Queen ; ‘nor indeed do I wish
es] THE LOST PRINCE. 19



to call you anything at all, if you will only cause the
realisation of the hopes to which you have given birth.’

“I see,’ replied the little man, ‘that I must explain
myself. Macklethorpe is the Dwarf of the Meadows
—a poor, dandelion-crowned fool, with whom I am
not on terms, for reasons which JI need not now ex-
plain. Z£ am the Dwarf of the Forest, and a vastly
superior being, as you may suppose from what you
see. I would tell you all I know about your son
with pleasure, if I were not bound by an oath of
fearful import not to do so. But if you want to
know, and to recover your lost boy, there is only one
thing to be done. Let your two daughters eat an
acorn apiece from off the tree under which you have
been sitting for three nights, just before they let down
their back hair on going to bed. On the next morn-
ing they will understand the language of the forest
creatures. Then let them walk boldly into the forest
without any attendants, and you will see what you
will see!’

With these words the Dwarf made another low
bow to the Queen, and then walking up to the gate
which opened into the forest, passed through it, and
disappeared in the most natural manner possible.

The Queen remained plunged in deep ‘thought.
What did it all mean? Could she trust to this
little gentleman, who called himself ‘Rindelgrover’?
Would it be safe for her daughters to go alone into the
forest ? She pondered over the matter for some little
time in great doubt as to what it would be best to do;
and at last resolved that she would go and consult

the King, for in those days wives were not above
c2
20 WHAISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [.



consulting their husbands, and husbands their wives,
even upon matters of the greatest importance.

She found His Majesty in the library, where he
was deeply engaged in writing an essay upon
‘ Poverty, its causes and remedies,’ which he was quite
justified in doing, as he probably knew less upon the
subject than any other man in his kingdom, which,
as lookers-on see the best of the game, was perhaps
the best qualification for giving an opinion upon it.

The King readily left his employment when in-
formed of the Queen’s errand, and only regretted
that he had not been with her during the interesting
interview which had just taken place. He was not
long in deciding that his daughters had far better do
as the Dwarf had directed. He could not believe, he
said, that so great a misfortune would be permitted
to fall upon a crowned head as that he should lose
all his children, and he felt the greatest hope that
some good might be in store for their house from the
visit of the Dwarf.

The Queen entirely agreed in this view of the
case ; and upon the matter being stated to the persons
principally concerned, the two Princesses vied with
each other in the readiness with which they declared
that they would run far greater risks than those
entailed by a walk in the forest if they could only
be the means of recovering their dear brother, and
restoring peace and happiness to their beloved parents.
The King, however, being an eminently just man, and
unwilling to take advantage of the first ebullition of
sisterly affection, desired the young ladies to go to
bed and think over the matter before finally deciding,
1] THE LOST. PRINCE. 21



since it must be of their own free will that they
encountered the dangers which might possibly be
before them. Like dutiful children they quickly
obeyed, especially as it was getting very late,and was
already beyond their usual bed-time.

Next morning, however, found them exactly in
the same frame of mind, determined to face anything
for the sake of the object in view. Accordingly, in
the course of the day, six acorns were carefully
gathered from the old oak, and the sisters, not
without sundry wry faces, each ate one before going
to bed. This process they repeated upon the second
and third days, and the following morning prepared
to fulfil their appointed task.

As no particular time had been fixed by the
worthy Rindelgrover for their excursion, the Queen
kept her daughters with her until after luncheon, when,
having been duly fortified by cutlets, sweetbreads, and
light claret, the Princesses sallied forth, walked down
the garden, one on each side of their mother, and
having reached the great oak under which the latter
had been sitting upon the occasion of the eventful
visit of the Dwarf, bade the Queen a tender farewell,
and boldly entered the forest.

The afternoon was warm, but the luxuriant
foliage of the large trees kept off the sun, and
rendered the walk rather pleasant than otherwise to
the Princesses. They walked for some distance
without any adventure whatever. All was silent ;
the birds seemed disinclined to sing—the animals
were doubtless couching in the fern and shady places
—there was scarcely a breath of air stirring, and
22 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [I



everything was as quiet as can be imagined. After
a time, the two sisters began to get tired of walking
on, constantly expecting something to happen which
never did happen, and thought that, under the cir-
cumstances, they might as well sit down.

A little stream ran through the forest, and upon
its banks they were standing when they came to this
determination. It was a very little stream, such as
one could jump across without much difficulty ; but
its clear waters gurgled on, for all it was so little,
with a cheerful sound, now and then quite shallow, as
they passed over some bed of sand or gravel which
rose near to the surface of the stream, and anon quite
respectably deep, giving room for trout to lurk in
deep holes under the banks and for shoals of smaller
fish to dart about and disport themselves in the water.
Here the Princesses took their seats upon the bank,
and began to watch the stream and listen to its
pleasant rippling-sound.

They had not sat there long before a kingfisher
came darting by them like a flash of lightning, and
uttered a short sharp cry as for one instant he dis-
played his gaudy colours before their eyes, and then
sped away with a swiftness which it defied their gaze
to follow. The two sisters looked at each other with
surprise, for, by the miraculous power which they had
derived from their acorns, they heard with perfect
distinctness, and understood into the bargain, the
observation which the bird had made as he flew past
them. To ordinary mortals it would have seemed
but an unmeaning sound, but to them it was far
otherwise, and they knew that the kingfisher had said,
I.] THE LOST PRINCE. 23



‘Hurrah! now there’s a chance for the poor Prince!
Well done, Rindelgrover !’

The Princesses looked at each other, as I have
said, with surprise not unmixed with awe; and these
feelings were rather increased than diminished, when
almost immediately afterwards they heard two wood-
pigeons cooing to each other in conjugal and agreeable
manner, and comprehended with perfect ease the sum
and substance of their conversation.

‘These are good girls!’ said the one. ‘ Well done,
Rindelgrover !’

‘That they are indeed,’ returned the other bird.
‘ Loving sisters and dutiful daughters. They are sure
to succeed, and what is more, they will thoroughly
deserve to do so. Well done, Rindelgrover!’

At these words hope at once filled the hearts of
the Princesses ; but they had not time to exchange
ideas upon the subject before a robin struck up his
song in a neighbouring bush, and spoke to the follow-
ing effect :

‘How long has been the time since the poor little
Prince has been kept from his home and all who love
him! Not quite so, however, for we birds and wood-
land animals have ever loved him, and would have
set him free long ago if we could have done so. But
the power was not ours, and we could only wait and
hope. Still, now these two charming Princesses have
come, doubtless all will soon be well, and the Prince
will be restored to his own again. Well done, Rindel-
grover!’

‘Well!’ cried Malvina, now fairly astonished and
puzzled at what she had just heard, ‘ of all the strange
24 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. {1



things that ever have happened certainly this is the
strangest. The birds all seem to say the same thing,
but yet none of them seem to think it necessary to
tell us what to do in order to obtain the success which
they foretell for us.’

‘ Suppose we ask one of them ?’ suggested Pettina,
who was not without natural acuteness, and being
young and innocent, had an idea that the best way to
obtain information was to ask questions of those who
possessed it.

Malvina raised no objection to this view of the
case, and accordingly they both looked round, and
presently perceived a woodpecker crawling quietly up
a tree and preparing himself for a little tapping
amusement.

‘Mr. Woodpecker,’ said Malvina in a courteous and
reassuring tone,—‘ Mr. Woodpecker, could you, would
you tell us how we ought to proceed so that we may
get back our lost brother ?’

‘T don’t know everything,’ sharply returned the
bird thus addressed. ‘I know something about it,
but not enough; ask the squirrels? It’s a good job
you have come, though. Well done, Rindelgrover!’
and so saying, he resumed his tapping with much
enthusiasm.

At this moment Pettina observed a hare sitting
on the opposite bank of the stream, nibbling the
young grass and enjoying itself after the innocent
fashion of such animals. ‘Puss,’ cried the Princess
immediately, ‘please tell us how we can find our
brother, and what we ought to do next?’

The hare started at the voice, as if she had not
I.] THE LOST PRINCE. 25



previously observed the speaker. ‘Guns and dogs!’
she cried, ‘how you did startle me! I would willingly
tell you all I know, for you look so kind that I am
quite grieved that you should be in sorrow. But you
must know that I really can say no more about it, for
in this forest we leave all such matters entirely to the
squirrels, You had better ask them, I should think.
Well done, Rindelgrover!’ and having thus spoken,
the hare quietly returned to her occupation of grass-
nibbling, and took no further notice of the Princesses.

The latter now began to think that the squirrels
were evidently the people to be sought, and they
therefore determined to wander along the banks of
the stream in hopes of encountering some of these
little animals. Nor had they far to go before their
object was accomplished. Not many yards from the
spot where they had been seated, they perceived two
squirrels chasing each other round and round a tree,
climbing over its branches, jumping from place to
place, and having a regular good game of hunt-the-
squirrel, or hide and seek, or by whatever name the
squirrels call it when they are at home. The Princesses
approached as near as they thought they might ven-
ture to do without giving offence to the graceful little
animals, and then Malvina addressed them in the
following words:

‘Kind squirrels, would you be so very good as to
inform us where our dear brother, Prince Merry, is;
and what we are to do in order to get him back
again?’

As she spoke, the squirrels approached near to
each other, and sat sedately, about a foot apart, on a
26 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. . [.



tolerably low branch of a mighty oak which stood
near. When Malvina had ceased speaking, they looked
at her, then at Pettina, and then at each other, and
then began to sing the following extraordinary
words :—

I.

Two sisters went walking out into the wood ;
Out into the wood when the sun was high.
Their brother they wanted to find if they could,
And their mother stayed back with a tear in her eye!
For girls must seek when their brothers are lost,
And the longer time passes, the greater the cost,
And the furnace fires are roaring !

Il.

The Prince he was playing all under the trees,
All under the trees with his nice new ball,
He wandered away till at last by degrees
No more could he hear his poor nurse’s call.
So girls must seek when their brothers are lost,
And the longer time passes the greater the cost,
And the furnace fires are roaring !

IIt.

The Giant has seized the young Prince in his arms,
His struggles and cries they are all in vain,
In the Country of Coal there are wiles and charms,
And ne’er may Prince Merry come home again !
Yet if girls do seek when their brothers are lost,
Dear to the Giant his prize may cost,
And the furnace fires stop roaring !

Having concluded their song, the squirrels imme-
diately exclaimed as if with one voice, ‘Well done,
Rindelgrover!’ and began their game again as un-
concernedly as if nothing had happened out of the
common way.
LJ THE LOST PRINCE. BOF.



The sisters were full of wonder at the words of
the song which they had just heard. Their thoughts
were of course directly pointed to the Giant Pattle-
perry, who, as has been already mentioned, had ex-
pressed himself in terms which had led them to
believe that he might appear at Court as a suitor for
the hand of one or other of them. Was he, then, the
captor of their dear brother, and the cause of all the
sorrow which had so long overshadowed their family ?
Then the thought passed quickly through their brains
that their invitation to walk in the forest might be a
trick of this very Giant, who, according to the squirrels,
had there entrapped their brother. Still, if this were
the case, what had the Dwarf to do with it, and why
should all the animals conclude their observations
with a panegyric upon that small individual? The
whole affair was quite incomprehensible to the two
sisters ; and they both felt that it would never do to
leave the squirrels without further information upon a
subject so important to themselves and their family.
Therefore, without further delay they proceeded to
make another appeal to the little animals, who by
this time were merrily pursuing one another round
and round their favourite tree, at a considerable height
from the ground.

‘Dear little squirrels!’ cried Malvina. ‘You dar-
ling little pets!’ exclaimed Pettina, and having thus
attracted the attention of the small creatures, who
were probably unused to such endearing epithets, both
the young ladies continued, in one and ‘the same
instant : -

‘Do tell us what we ought to do! If you would
28 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.

but tell us! We quite trust you, but we really don’t
know what to do next.’

With these words they gazed upwards with such
a beseeching air that mortal squirrel could hardly have
resisted them. The squirrels, being but mortal, were
quite unable to do so; and both ran down the tree
again without a moment’s hesitation, and seating
themselves upon the same branch from which they
had previously addressed the sisters, began to sing as
follows :—

Follow the stream till you come to a mound

Where pigs and wild strawberries greatly abound :

Tis there you will find your best friend in the wood,
Who hates what is evil and follows the good.

Call him once ; call him twice ; by the name you have heard,
And add to that name just one magical word :

© Ri-too-ri-lal-lural’—remember it well !

For Dwarfs—aye, and Giants, must bow to the spell.
Now, plague us no more with your ‘ifs’ and your ‘buts,’
For squirrels hate trouble as much as bad nuts,

The one hurts the teeth, and the other the heart,

So list to our counsel, and haste to depart !

‘Well done, Rindelgrover!’—and with these words
the squirrels jumped up again, and recommenced their
gambols as if nobody was there and no business but
their own had to be thought of.

The sisters eagerly listened to every word which
had fallen from the little animals; and having now
received clear and definite instructions, resolved to
follow them without delay. Rising from their seats
upon the bank, they followed the course of the little
stream, earnestly looking out for the place which the
squirrels had indicated to them as the abode of their
I] THE LOST PRINCE. 29



“best friend in the wood,’ whom they naturally sup-
posed to be the Dwarf who had invited them thither.

For some time they saw nothing at all like the
place which had been described to them: the stream
wound its way through the forest like a sensible stream
would naturally do, running along through the prettiest
places, never going up hill, and winding to and fro as
if it was in no hurry to get out of the wood, but
wished to see as much of it as it could before it came
out again into the hot sun and open country. At
last, when they were nearly tired of walking along by
its side, listening to the casual remarks of various
birds and beasts, which all ended in the same lauda-
tory observation upon the mighty Rindelgrover, a
sudden turn of the stream brought before them a new
and unusual scene.

The ground sloped upward upon one side of the
rivulet, forming that which might fairly be called a
mound, which was perfectly covered with a bed of
wild strawberries. There was no mistake about it,
for the fruit was there in profusion, and so tempting
did it look that the sisters, being somewhat thirsty
after their walk, would have been inclined to make
closer acquaintance with the red berries at once, had
not there been other things to observe at the same
time. A number of pigs were feeding all round the
mound, grubbing away here and there, but none of
them venturing to touch the strawberries. They were
pigs of various sorts and sizes, dark and light, big and
little, but all seemed to be as happy and contented as
if hams, bacon, pickled pork, and pigs’ feet and ears
had never been thought of by hungry mortals. Still,
30 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. i.



as nothing was to be seen but pigs and strawberries,
the Princesses felt that they must take action accord-
ing to the advice of the squirrels, if they wished to
see that best of friends who was said to have his abode
in the place before them. Accordingly, they ap-
proached the mound and stood upon the edge of the
strawberry bed, the pigs taking no notice whatever of
them, and not appearing in the slightest degree dis-
turbed by their presence. Then Malvina raised her
voice and pronounced in a clear, firm tone the word
‘Rindelgrover!’ Pettina followed her sister’s -ex-
ample; and the words were scarcely out of their
mouths before a chorus of grunts arose around them,
every pig in the place loudly exclaiming in his native
tongue, ‘ Well done, Rindelgrover!’ Once more the
sisters spoke aloud the name of him whom they had
been taught to consider their best friend in the wood,
and then both speaking at once, and not without some
little difficulty, they pronounced the magic word of
words, ‘ Ri-too-fi-lal-lural.’

The effect was instantaneous. From a thicket at
no great distance a pig of larger than ordinary size
suddenly made his appearance. Not, however, a
common pig undistinguishable from the rest of the
herd, but a pig adorned with saddle and bridle and
all the trappings of a horse. He held his head
proudly and bore himself like a pig of importance as
he cantered downwards to the stream ; and so indeed
he well might do, for he bore a rider whom, from the
description given by their mother, the Princesses
instantly recognised as the Dwarf Rindelgrover.
Upright he sat upon his porcine steed, with the
1.] , THE LOST PRINCE. 31



golden tassel of his velvet cap streaming in the air as
he rode down towards the astonished sisters, before
whom he reined in his pig, and stood at a short
distance, bowing gracefully to his visitors. A general
grunt of ‘Well done, Rindelgrover!’ burst from the
surrounding swine upon the appearance of this
evidently powerful individual, but he appeared to
object to any such demonstration. Rising in his
stirrups, he waved his hand in a careless manner as
if to forbid further observations of a similar character,
and then bowed again to the Princesses, apparently
awaiting their pleasure.

‘Oh, sir!’ exclaimed Malvina, ‘can you—will
you—help us to get back our brother?’

‘Devonshire cream is an excellent thing for break-
fast, especially with strawberries, replied the Dwarf,
with a smile.

Pettina, who was as clever as beautiful, at once
remembered her mother’s account of the behaviour of
Rindelgrover upon their first meeting, and the ob-
jection which he had to questions. She therefore
took her part in the conversation in the following
manner. Smiling back pleasantly upon the little
gentleman, she said in her sweetest tone:

‘How nice it is to have friends in the forest to
help one when one wants anything! How happy we
should be if we knew all about our brother's disap-
pearance and what to do in order to get him back
again!’ and here, nudging her sister, who readily
understood her meaning, they both exclaimed at one
and the same moment: ‘ Ri-too-ri-lal-lural !’

The Dwarf’s face lighted up with unmistakeable
32 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.



joy: ‘Well done, young lady,’ he cried ; ‘you. have
spoken just as you ought to have spoken, and al-
though your dear sister fell into the error of asking a
question, instead of calmly stating her wishes, the
fault is one of a trifling nature, and shall at once be
overlooked. You have now only to listen to me,
which I beg you to do with great attention. The
Giant Pattle-perry is the sole cause of all the misery
which you and your parents have endured for the
last nine years. This fellow is one of the worst giants
the world ever saw, which is saying a great deal, for
those overgrown rascals are a bad lot altogether.
He inhabits the Coal Country which lies beyond this
forest, and is a terrible tyrant to his unfortunate
people, whom he compels to work in his coal-pits,
which of course bring him in a large revenue. As
the inhabitants of his country are insufficient to
supply him with all the workmen he requires, he has
long been in the habit of kidnapping anybody and
everybody he could, and being well versed in the
arts of magic, has frequently resorted to the most
unfair measures in order to carry out his ends. He
has, properly speaking, no power in this forest, except
that, being bigger than I am, I cannot drive him out
of it if he chooses to walk in it. This he does not
often do, though oftener than I could wish, and many
a roast leg of pork has graced his table which ought
now to be a living limb of one of my faithful pigs.
The Giant knows, however, that two can play at
magic as well as one, and has not lately troubled me.
But nine years ago he was here, and approached
nearer to your father’s palace than he had ever done
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 33



before. He saw your brother playing, and whether
from any old grudge against your family, or from a
naturally evil disposition, determined to kidnap him,
and did so accordingly, disguising himself as a puppy
until he had drawn the child some distance in pursuit
of him, and then suddenly resuming his own form,
and carrying off the astonished little fellow under his
arm. It was all the worse of him, because the poor
young Prince was too small to be of any use to him
in his coal-pits. Nor, indeed, am I certain that he
has ever been employed there. All I do know is
that, like many others, he is a captive in the Giant’s
kingdom, which can be entered with comparative
ease, but to leave which requires much care and some
little magical knowledge on the part of those who
wish to do so. You, my dear young ladies, will have
to seek your brother in that kingdom.’

The Princesses gave a start and a shudder at
these words, but the Dwarf continued with a smile:

‘There is no need to be afraid. You have power-
ful friends, and will, with proper attention to the
directions given you, overcome all the difficulties
before you. The King of the Islands and the Prince
of the River Country are my friends, and will, I know,
aid us, if necessary, with their full power. But, in the
first instance at least, cunning is more requisite than
strength. Pattle-perry himself is no match for many
others in magic. There is, however, a person called
Macklethorpe whom we have to fear more than the
Giant, whom he advises and aids. This fellow is,
like myself, of a respectable size, and not an over~
grown bulk of flesh like Pattle-perry, but this makes

D
24 WATSPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [t.



him all the more dangerous. Remember, however,
the mystic word of power, which, pronounced by
mortal mouth under certain conditions, cannot be
resisted by Dwarf or Giant.’

‘And what are the conditions?’ hastily asked both
the sisters in one breath. .

‘It is most desirable to have a parasol if you go
out in the sun upon a hot day,’ rejoined the Dwarf.
‘What! both of you asking questions again? Pray
get out of this bad habit at once, or we shall never
get on together. I was about to say that this word
has only its full magic power when pronounced by
persons of innocent hearts, who have not reached the
age of twenty, who never use bad language, speak ill
of their neighbours behind their backs, or eat fish
with their knives. As you two young ladies combine
allthat is necessary for the effective pronunciation of the
word, it will have great power in the mouth of either
of you, andas I am about to devote myself to your ser-
vice, you will perhaps be good enough to recollect that
if I should get into any trouble with other persons who
may employ magic arts as well as I do, you may be
of the greatest service to me as well as to yourselves
by the judicious use of the word in question.’

Rindelgrover now came to a conclusion, and the
sisters burned with curiosity to know several things
more, which, however, they dared not ask, after his
repeated statement of his objection to questions. That
which puzzled them most was why, since the worthy
Dwarf seemedto have knownthe circumstances attend-
ing the abduction of their brother for so long, he had
waited for nine years before speaking, when he might
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 35



at once have somewhat relieved the anxiety of their
parents. Then, why should he zow interfere at all,
and run the risk of bringing Pattle-perry’s vengeance
upon his own devoted head? They pondered deeply
upon these things, but deemed it best to remain silent
under the circumstances. And indeed I think they
were right, for it is impossible for us mortals to know
the ways of dwarfs, giants, and fairies, or to attempt
to fathom the motives by which such creatures are
actuated. So the sisters asked nothing more and
waited patiently until their little friend spoke again,
which he presently did.

‘Now,’ said he, ‘young ladies, we have a journey
to go and had better start at once. First, however,
let me recommend you to eat some of these straw-
berries, which you will find singularly refreshing’

Nothing loth, the sisters consented to this propo-
sal, and found themselves immensely strengthened by
the fruit, which had not only a delicious taste but all
the qualities and virtues of a tonic without any of its
bitterness.

“Now then,’ rejoined Rindelgrover, ‘we must be
off, and as the distance is long, I hope you will consent
to ride.’

The girls looked round, and perceived to their
surprise two pigs standing near, with side-saddles on,
all ready for their reception. They looked at each
other half doubtfully, and greatly inclined to laugh,
but wisely remembering how serious was the business
in which they were engaged, they preserved their
gtavity, mounted their respective pigs, and prepared

to follow their leader. The pigs were of good size,
D2
36 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.



and although their trot was rather rough, the
Princesses found their canter quite tolerable, and in
any case, as they had come some distance, this kind
of conveyance was just then far more agreeable than
walking. The Dwarf rode between them for some
way, discoursing in an ordinary manner about things
and people, and making himself as agreeable as he
could to his companions.

Presently the forest got thicker and they had to ride
in single file, and then again the trees became fewer
in number, the bushes and underwood less thick, and it
was evident that they were approaching the outskirts
of the forest. Their way now lay up rising ground,
or in fact the side of a mountain, upon which the trees
became still fewer, and masses of rock lay around
the travellers, gradually taking the place of the
vegetation they were leaving behind them. The
journey was no longer so pleasant, but as it was late
in the afternoon and the sun had lost its power, the
sisters continued to travel without inconvenience.
Suddenly the Dwarf stopped.

. ‘Now,’ said he, ‘my dear young ladies, we are very
near the boundary which divides us from the Giant’s
kingdom, which you will presently see. Before entering
it, however, it is desirable to let the sun set, which he
will very shortly do. You must not be surprised or
alarmed at any change which you may see take place
in my personal appearance. I shall have to disguise
myself, probably in more than one shape, as to appear
in my natural form would be fatal both to your success
and to my own existence. As, however, it is most
desirable that you should both keep those shapes
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 37

which you must allow me to call charming, I
would strongly caution you as to your behaviour.
Keep the great magic word for use in case of diffi-
culty. Meanwhile, above all things look anybody
to whom you speak straight in the face. Nothing
disconcerts a knave more than a pair of honest
eyes looking into his. Don’t look behind you or down
upon the ground. Eat and drink what is offered
to you, but always remember to say the word to
yourselves before you do so. Nothing can hurt
you then. We must abandon our steeds here: in fact
no pig would be safe for a moment in the Giant’s
country, and their presence would betray us at once.
You had better walk straight forward into the country
—in fact I will lead the way—and when accosted,
say you are come on a visit to Pattle-perry, and
demand to be led to his palace. When there, boldly
tell him that you have come in search of your
brother, lost some nine years ago, and whom you
have reason to believe is in his kingdom, and
when the matter has been thus fairly started, I can
only leave you to the instincts of your own common
sense, guided by the advice and instructions which I
have had the honour and pleasure of giving you.’
With these words, the worthy Rindelgrover jumped
lightly from his steed, and having politely assisted the
Princesses to dismount also, turned the three pigs’ heads
' in a homeward direction, and waved his hand towards
the forest. The sensible animals needed no further
orders, but set off at best speed down the hill with
deep grunts of satisfaction. Then the Dwarf pointed
out the ledge of a rock upon which the sisters might
38 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. [i.

sit down, and taking his own seat near them, waited
until the sun should have hid his head before the
approaching shades of evening.

In a few minutes this was the case, and at the
direction of the Dwarf, the three travellers all rose up
and ascended the hill once more. They had not far
to go, for at the distance of a few yards they were on
the top of the ridge of hill, and suddenly came upon
the view of the country beyond. The girls started
back with “astonishment. Their own country was full
of meads and dales, woods and streams, plants and
flowers, the glorious vegetation of a fertile land.
Before their eyes was.a country entirely different.
Bare and bleak and barren it looked, the treés stunted
and rugged, the green fields few and far between.
But, ever and anon, bright fires flashing up over the
surface of the country showed its character at once to
those who knew what they betokened. The wealth of
that land was below and not above the surface. It was
the country of coal and iron, and the furnace fires
spoken of in the squirrels’ song were roaring in every
direction. Strange and weird and wiid it looked to the
sisters as they gazed upon it that night, and much
they marvelled at the contrast between this country
and that which they had left behind.

Glancing round at their companion to make some
observation upon the view before them, to their utter
astonishment they perceived that he had disappeared.
In his place, however, was a black and tan terrier, who
ran sniffing about from rock to rock and presently ran
up and fawned upon them in the most affectionate
manner. They could scarcely believe that this ani-
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 39



mal was none other than their diminutive friend, but a
few words from him at once showed them that this
was the fact, and they became more than ever con-
vinced of his power to help them in the matter which
they had so much at heart. So they patted the little
fellow with much kindness, called him ‘ Pincher,’
according to his expressed desire, and forthwith
entered the Giant’s country with this faithful coun-
sellor at their heels.

They had not proceeded far down the side of the
hill which they now had to descend, before they per-
ceived several persons standing and sitting about upon
the rocks some little way in front of them, apparently
awaiting theircoming. A whine from Pincher warned
them to be on their guard, and they accordingly ad-
vanced quietly along the track into which they had
come, and which led them directly towards the spot
upon which these individuals had placed themselves.
As the Princesses drew near, the persons in question
all stood in the roadway, and an ill-looking set of
fellows they were. Begrimed with coal-dust, un-
shaven, most of them in their shirt-sleeves, they were
not exactly the description of persons whom delicately
nurtured princesses would have desired to encounter.
Still the sisters resolutely proceeded down the road,
and such was the dignity of their appearance and
manner, that the men instinctively recoiled before
them. However, one of the party, who wore a red
sash round his waist and appeared to be in a position
of authority, stepped forward in front of the rest and
accosted the travellers.

‘Hallo! my wenches!’ he cried, ‘Who be ye
40 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.



that would enter the territory of the great and
glorious Pattle-perry ? Show us your passports !?

The sisters were sadly confused in this address, for
neither Rindelgrover nor anyone else had hinted at
passports being necessary in order to enter the country
of the Giant, and they certainly had nothing of the
kind about them. The ready wit of Pettina, how-
ever, came to their aid, and she said, whilst both she
and her sister looked the speaker straight in the
face,

‘What nonsense you are talking! no passports
are necessary when we are going to visit our uncle
Pattle-perry. Leave the road free, or you shall be
reported without fail.’

At these words the man turned as pale as the black
dust on his face would permit, and drew back re-
spectfully without another word, as did his companions
also. The two Princesses walked calmly through
them, followed closely by Pincher, and descended the
rest of the hill without interruption. They observed,
however, that two of the men followed them at a
distance, which caused Malvina some alarm.

‘My dear sister,’ she remarked, ‘you have doubt-
less done cleverly in getting us over ¢hat difficulty,
but I greatly fear what the result may be. Those
who follow. us will doubtless report your words at
court, and if the Giant hears that we have claimed him
as our uncle, he may take advantage of the pretended
relationship to detain us in his kingdom for a longer
time than we wish to stay.’

‘Never mind, my darling sister,’ replied Pettina,
‘T was obliged to say what came uppermost at the




















THE GIANT PATTLE-PERRY
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 41



moment, but I feel sure that we shall get out of the
difficulty if it arises. Let us go boldly on, and hope for
the best; see how Pincher is showing his teeth in a
pleasant manner, and wagging his tail at the same
time. I know se approves—don’t you, Pincher ?’

A low whine from the little animal was perfectly
understood by the sisters to signify ‘Yes—but be
cautious, and they were about to continue their
conversation, when it was prevented by another inci-
dent. The roll.of a drum was heard not far in front ;
then the shrill blast of a trumpet, and the heavy tread
of men marching, betokened the approach of some
military body. The sisters paused, in doubt as to what
they had better do, and in another moment a cloud
of dust showed that the force, whatever it might be,
was close at hand. Round the corner of the road
there presently turned the drummers, vigorously drum-
ming away as they came on, and then followed a band
of mixed instruments, making clamour enough to make
the two ladies stop their ears and wish themselves a
thousand miles off, inasmuch as the noise was not
relieved by tune or harmony. Then, marching four
abreast, came a body of men all above the usual
height, dressed in white tunics, bare from the knee
to the feet, which were shod with thick sandals, and
carrying in their hands axes which rested upon their
brawny shoulders. They were a rough-looking set of
soldiers, but not so rough as the person who followed.
In an open car, larger than any car that ever was
made before or since, and drawn by eight immense
black horses, sat the Giant Pattle-perry: he was at
least ten feet high; his head was in proportion as
42 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.



enormous as his body, which, though stupendous in
size, was not unwieldy, and betokened the possession
of vast strength. In truth, his arms, which were bare,
showed one mass of muscle, and his legs were equally
powerful. His black hair clustered in curls over his
head, on which he wore a small white ‘wide-awake,’
which gave him rather a ridiculous appearance ; his
forehead was low and receding, his eyes large and
staring, his nose came forth like a small hill out of his
face, and when he smiled, his large mouth disclosed a
set of teeth which might well have frightened any-
body who did not know that since the days of steam,
railways, and vote by ballot, giants have given up
being cannibals, and only eat beef, mutton, pork, and
such like things, after the fashion of ordinary mortals.
Around the car of the Giant ran a number of young
men on either side, lightly clad and armed with short
spears, whilst behind there followed a motley crowd of
horse and foot, among whom dirt and coal-dust were
the distinguishing characteristics.

The two Princesses, when they saw this procession
advancing towards them, turned aside out of the road
and sat down upon a rock at a short distance off ; but
as soon as the Giant’s car came opposite to them, he
shouted out in a mighty voice the order to halt.

‘What ho!’ cried he, when this had been done,
‘What ho! whom have we here! damsels wandering
alone through our country, and damsels, if we may
judge by their appearance, of no mean birth. Draw
near, my children, draw near, and tell us whence ye
come, and what ye seek in our kingdom ?’

As he spoke, the Giant cast a look upon the
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 43

sisters which he possibly intended to convey a friendly
feeling in the form of a pleasant smile, but which to
their eyes presented the appearance of such a frightful
grimace that they felt more than half inclined to run
away there and then. Knowing, however, that this
would be worse than useless, they very wisely re-
strained their inclination, and, rising from the rock on
which they had been seated, approached the Giant in
a timid but respectful manner.

“Who are ye, maidens?’ asked Pattle-perry with
another awful leer which he meant for a reassuring
smile.

‘We are the daughters of the King of the Flowery
Vale, answered Malvina, looking him straight in the
face.

‘Fool and dolt and idiot that I was,’ immediately
cried the Giant, slapping his thigh violently, whilst his
face lighted up with a sudden and indescribable joy ;
‘aye, and ass and pig, and wooden-headed ape into
the bargain, not to have known at the first glance
that it was the daughters of my good neighbour upon
whom I was gazing. No other ladies are so lovely,
and none others would I welcome so readily to my
country. And what seek ye, fair damsels, that ye
have wandered so far from home?’

‘We have come,’ answered Malvina, still keeping
her eyes fast fixed upon the Giant’s face—though it
was by no means a pleasant object for a girl to gaze
upon, especially as he seldom washed and had cer-
tainly not shaved that morning—‘ we have come to
seek our brother, who was lost some nine years ago,
44 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. fi.



and whom we have reason to believe is somewhere or
other in your kingdom,’

The Giant’s face crimsoned—then turned pale—
and then crimsoned again at these words.

‘By the memory of my great ancestor Grind-
bones !’ exclaimed he (referring to a fearful giant of
olden time, whose name is well known to all those
lovers of Fairy-tales who have read the marvellous
adventures of Joe Brown and Puss-Cat-Mew®*), ‘ what
wonderful tale is this ye bring! How can I tell where
everybody’s brother may be who happens to get lost?
However, come with me, my chickens, come with me,
and we will see all about it. Lucky it is that I made
my progress through the land in this direction to-day,
else had I missed ye. Come, jump up on to my car!’

As he spoke, the young men on the side of the car
nearest the Princesses made way for them to approach.
: The sisters trembled and hesitated, but it was very
plain to them that neither trembling nor hesitation
would avail in the slightest degree, and that there was
nothing for it but to obey the Giant’s orders. As he
was alone in his car, there was plenty of room for both
the girls by his side, especially as the vehicle was con-
structed to carry two (supposing they could be found)
of the same size as himself. With some little difficulty
therefore, and much greater dislike to it, they clam-
bered up into the car, or open chariot, as it might
more properly be called, when, at that moment, the
eye of the Giant lighted upon the dog Pincher, who
was following closely at their heels.

‘Ha!’ said he sharply and suddenly, ‘what dog

* See Stories for my Children, by the same Author.
1] ‘THE LOST PRINCE. 45



is that? I like not his looks—run me that cur through
with a spear, men!’

In another moment his order would have been
obeyed, had not Pettina remembered on the instant
how much might depend upon Pincher’s safety, and
how ungrateful it would be, if she did not, without the
delay of a second, interpose to save him.

‘Ri-too-ri-lal-lural!’ she hastily called out, looking
at the Giant as she did so; ‘that is my favourite dog,
sir, and I must beg of you not to have him hurt!’

Several men had already lifted their spears to
strike, when the younger Princess uttered the magic
word. On the instant every spear was stayed, whilst
the Giant put his hand to his forehead as if confused
by something, and muttered moodily to himself as he
gave the orders to march. Poor Pincher, meanwhile,
took the opportunity of following the Princesses into
the carriage and jumping into Pettina’s lap, where he
nestled down and made himself comfortable, though
she felt him tremble and his heart beat violently as
she patted him. When they had gone a few paces
further, they met the two men who had followed the
Princesses down the mountain, and the Giant, recog-
nising them as some of his border police, stopped to
ask for their report, which they accordingly gave.
Pattle-perry grinned from ear to ear when he heard
that the Princesses had claimed him for their uncle.

‘My charming nieces!’ he cried, ‘though I knew
it not before, I am delighted to own such relations—
you shall stay a long time with your old uncle, my
pets, that you shall!’ and he laughed and chuckled
_loudly to himself as he drove on.
46 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [r.

Presently the road turned to the right, and’
gradually bore round towards a huge mass of buildings
which the sisters perceived in the distance, and which
the Giant informed them with a gracious air was the
castle which he used as a palace, and in which he
would take care that they were provided with apart-
ments suitable to their rank. Not deeming that
moment a fitting opportunity for entering further
upon the business which had brought them there, the
sisters merely bowed their thanks for the proffered
hospitality which they would have given their ears to
have declined if possible.

The procession advanced nearer and nearer to
the palace, and at length reached it. The carriage
drove into an enormous court-yard, paved with
iron, over which it rumbled up to a vast gate which
was thrown open as one of the attendants touched
a huge bell which sent forth a deafening peal. The
Giant now descended, and assisted the trembling
Princesses to do the same, which they accordingly did,
Pettina keeping Pincher safe under her arm. Inside
the gate was a smaller yard, which the Giant crossed,
and opened a door on the further side, opposite which
was a flight of handsome stone steps leading into a
spacious corridor. From the latter folding doors
openedinto a magnificent drawing-room, into which the
Giant conducted his guests, and prayed them to make
themselves at home, whilst he went to give orders for
the preparation of the apartments which they would
occupy. Just before he left the room, however, he
turned to Pettina, and observed somewhat moodily,

‘T don’t allow dogs in my drawing-room.’
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 47

“Oh, sir!’ replied she, ‘I am sure you will not object
to my little pet ; I assure you he will hurt no one,’

‘But I do object, retorted the Giant with an angry
look ; ‘I object very much, and I do not see why Iam
to have what I don’t like in my own palace,’

As he spoke, he turned back and took a step to-
wards the Princess, as if he were half inclined to take
the animal from her. ‘ Ri-too-ri-lal-lural’ gently
hummed the maiden as he approached. He stopped
suddenly.

‘Well,’ said he, ‘I suppose you must have yout
own way,’ and abruptly left the room.

As soon as ever he was gone, Pincher struggled to
be set free, and in a low and whining voice told the
sisters that it was evident the Giant knew or suspected
that there was something wrong about him.

“Still,” said he, ‘as long as he is alone, I fear not,
but should others more powerful than he come to visit
him whilst we are here, I shall have to “look out for
squalls,” and you must be prepared to see me assume
different shapes, and must take care to help meas I
have directed you. Meanwhile, do not lose any time in
pressing him upon the matter which you have in hand,
otherwise he will continually put you off with excuses,
and you may find greater difficulties than ought to be
the case.’ Having said these words, the little fellow
ran under a sofa and hid ; shortly after which the Giant
re-entered the room.

‘Princesses,’ he said, ‘your apartments are prepared
for you; and as you have brought no maid with you,
my worthy housekeeper, Dame Skrinklegriggs, will be
happy to attend upon you.’
48 . WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [I.



‘Sir, responded Malvina, with a queenly air, ‘ pray
do not disturb your excellent domestic on our account
—for excellent I do not doubt she is, albeit her name
chance to be none of the most euphonious. We
can wait upon each other, and have long been ac-
customed to dispense with maids, who constantly pull
one’s hair, talk when they are not wanted to do so, and
not unfrequently smell disagreeably of beer. We will
beg, therefore, to dispense with your housekeeper’s
assistance. And before we proceed to the rooms
which you have been good enough to provide for us,
we would fain enquire of you as to the brother of whom
we are in search. What steps do you propose to take
in order to make that search effectual ?’

The Giant’s brow darkened as Malvina spoke these
words. ‘Quench my philanthropy !’ cried he—using
an oath now almost out of date, but once greatly in
vogue among giants and ogres, and bearing at that time
a fearful import,—‘ you speak like a queen, young lady,
and seem to intend to have it all yourownway. Scorn
the attentions of my housekeeper and require me to
proceed to business before dinner! May I never
touch pickled pork again—let alone cabbage—if I do
any such thing. Let us eat and drink, and talk of
business to-morrow morning. Surely that will be time
enough !’

‘Sir, replied the elder Princess in the same calm,
cold. tone, ‘we would not be discourteous, neither
do we desire to trouble you unnecessarily. Neverthe-
less, we may not be backward in urging the matter
about which we have come hither, neither can we pay
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 49



you a long visit, considering that our parents are
left sorrowing at home.’

‘Not pay me a long visit!’ shouted the Giant.
‘As sure as my name's Pattle-perry you will find
there are two words to ¢kat bargain. It is easier to
get into this kingdom than to get out of it, my
dears! Besides, he added with a grin, ‘when nieces
come to see their uncle, and openly acknowledge him
as such, neither law nor magic can prevent his keep-
ing them until all parties are agreed that the visit
should come to an end. So don’t think to leave me
just yet, my pretty pets!’

The sisters changed colour at these words. They
felt it was but too probable that their public recogni-
tion of the Giant as their uncle (to which title he had
no more claim than the Manin the Moon) might have
put them in some measure in his power, and they
trembled at the thought. However, it was evidently
desirable to put the best face on the matter, and so
Pettina, taking up the conversation, said :

‘Sir, we have no desire save to do what our duty
compels us; and since you say it will be inconvenient
for you to discuss this question to-night, be so good as
to fix an houras early as may be to-morrow morning
when we may have it thoroughly sifted. And as to
scorning the attentions of your housekeeper, such a
thought never fora moment entered our heads. We
only wished to avoid giving the old lady unnecessary
trouble, and we shall still prefer to do our own hair
and dress ourselves. But if the housekeeper chooses
to bring us our warm water, put our things straight,

E
50 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [t.

and see us safe to bed, I am sure that neither my
sister nor I will have the slightest objection,’

Somewhat mollified by this speech, the Giant said
he would tell Dame Skrinklegriggs, and muttered
something about ‘seeing after the other business to-
morrow morning, with which the sisters were obliged
to be contented. They declined dinner, however, on
the score of being greatly fatigued after their long
journey, and having had some tea in their own rooms,
went early to bed.

The night was passed seaiely as quietly as they
might have wished, inasmuch as the household of a
giant is generally one of riot and revelry. Being, how-
ever, nearly worn out with the day’s exertions, the
sisters slept soundly, and were obliged to be roused
by Dame Skrinklegriggs, a withered, blear-eyed, old
crone nearly as ill-favoured as the giant himself, who
accomplished her purpose by untucking the clothes at
the foot of Malvina’s bed, and pinching her great toe
violently, that being among giants the approved mode
of waking the heavy sleeper. The faithful Pincher
passed the night under the sofa in the drawing-room,
and, having taken care to avoid the Giant’s eye, joined
the Princesses as they descended the grand staircase,
and once more entered the drawing-room, whence they:
were ushered by obsequious lacqueys into the dining-
room in which the giant usually breakfasted. He was
already there, and roared out his welcome as soon as
the sisters made their appearance.

‘Now, my little ducklings,’ he said, ‘come and
‘breakfast with your old uncle Pattle-perry. You must
‘get used to our ways at once, for now I’ve got ye I shall
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 5I



keep ye, and he laughed and grinned more hideously
than ever.

‘Sir, observed Malvina sternly, ‘neither my sister
nor I are disposed for joking at present.’

‘Do you callit joking indeed ?’ rejoined the Giant.
“Were the King your father here, he would tell you that
it is no joke to be once within the walls of the Castle
of Pattle-perry. But more of this anon: fall to and
eat, my lambkins !’

‘Not so, sir, exclaimed Pettina, now stepping to
the front. ‘You deferred until this morning the busi-
ness upon which we have come to your kingdom,
and we must now press upon you that immediate
search be made for our brother.’

‘ Hoity, toity ! pig’s fry and potatoes!’ laughed the
Giant at these words. ‘Must you rule everybody,
little lassie? Suppose I will have nothing to say to
your request ? What then, eh?’

Pettina regarded him with a steady gaze: ‘ Ri-too-
ri—’ she began.

‘Hold!’ cried the Giant : ‘Don’t sing at breakfast
time! But what the dickens should I know of your
brother ?’

‘ Sir” exclaimed Malvina hastily, ‘we know that
you carried him away nine years ago and we want
him back !?

‘No!’ roared the Giant. ‘Who told you that?
Bumble-bees and blackberries ! Somebody has been
telling tales out of school! But suppose somebody
has told a cram—a buster—a story—a regular down-

right fib? Am 1a likely fellow to trouble myself to

E2
52 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.

carry off a boy? Don’t you go and believe every-
thing you hear, my pretty little poppets !’

‘Then sir, promptly replied Pettina, ‘if you had
nothing to do with carrying him off, you cannot object
to enquiry being made for him.’

‘Not a bit of it!’ cried the Giant. ‘Only let us
have a bit of an agreement. If I find your brother for
you, one of you will have to marry me, and stay and
live here always !’

At this remark the sisters felt a thrill of horror
run through them, but, thinking it best to dissemble,
Malvina, as soon as she could find voice to speak,
answered the Giant in these words :

‘We cannot think of marriage, sir, until our
brother is found and restored to his disconsolate pa-
rents: then, indeed, gratitude to the restorer will
incline us most kindly towards him, whoever he may
be.’

‘Well said, young lady, cried the Giant at this
speech, ‘But now, pray tell me, how shall you dis-
cover your brother if you see him after so long an
absence? He must be mightily changed since you
last saw him.’

Thus interrogated, the Princesses looked at each
other with some doubt and distress, for this was a
difficulty which had never hitherto struck them. No-
thing daunted, however, the clever and thoughtful
Pettina presently pulled out from her pocket a copy of
the original advertisement, published, as has been
already mentioned, upon the loss of Prince Mirabel,
and this she handed to the Giant, who attentively re-
garded it, although as, like most other giants, he was
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 53

unable to read, he derived but little information from
the document. However, the thought crossed his
mind that if any fair description of the boy were
given in this paper, he might easily palm off upon the
girls one of his people, and thus obtain from their
gratitude the promise of marriage which he saw would
be otherwise difficult, especially as Pettina, at least,
appeared to have a certain knowledge of magic, and
it was her he rather preferred of the two. So, under
pretence of making some enquiries he left the room,
and submitted the advertisement to his housekeeper,
who read and explained it to him.
‘Well, said he, on hearing what were its contents,
‘I don’t see why we shouldn’t try it on. Let me see.
It will be easy to produce a diamond-set girdle, for ten
to one the Princesses won't recollect the right one ;
then, “on his arma mark blue.” I wish it were “black
and blue,” for most of the servants in the palace could
show marks answering to that description. Search
and look, Dame Skrinklegriggs, and send up some
one soon with whom I may satisfy these girls.’
- When the old housekeeper had promised to do her
best, the Giant returned to the Princesses, and told
them that he had good hope of being able to produce
their brother, for that he had just heard that there
was a youth attached to his household who had
wandered there, no one knew whence, about the time
of the loss, and who certainly had on a girdle of the
description mentioned, and a mark upon his arm of a
decidedly bluish tinge. This speedy compliance with
their: wishes surprised and pleased the sisters, but
Pincher took an opportunity of winking his eye when
54 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [..



the Giant was not looking, as if to caution them
against being deceived. No long time elapsed before
a knock at the door was heard, and a young man was
ushered into their presence. He was tall and well-
built, and generally of good appearance, although the
Princesses could recognise no resemblance to their
brother’s features. Then the Giant commanded him
to bare his arm, which he did, having previously, how-
ever, endeavoured to embrace his supposed sisters,
which they declined to allow, and having given a
short statement of having been lost in the forest, and
having strayed into the coal country, upon which they
did not care to question him until the mark had first
been seen. Accordingly, he bared his right arm and
displayed an undoubted blue mark which would
have corresponded with the advertisement perfectly
well.

‘This, then, must be your lost brother!’ cried the
Giant.

‘ Alas, sir!’ answered Malvina, ‘the only drawback
we at present perceive was, that the blue mark upon
our brother was upon the /ef¢ and not the right arm ;
so that this cannot be he.’

At this the Giant flew into a passion, which, how-
ever, he had the discretion to vent upon the young
man, whom he denounced as an impostor, and vowed
he should be torn in pieces by wild dogs forthwith.
The Princesses, however, begged that he might be
pardoned, since no one really suffered from his fault,
and this they did the more earnestly as they were
now well. convinced that the Giant had himself con-
cocted the fraud. They then asked him again to be
ral THE LOST PRINCE. 55



so good as to direct further enquiries to be made; to
which he somewhat reluctantly consented, being im-
pelled thereto by the conduct of Pettina, who kept
her eye upon him, and hummed the magic word in a
low tone whenever she saw him inclined to adopt his
natural tone and quit the politeness which he had
assumed for the occasion.

At last he promised that all the younger members
of his household should be paraded before luncheon,
and that the youths from the colliery should pass
before the Princesses in the afternoon. This was
accordingly done, but without any satisfactory result.
Several people showed blue marks on their arms;
and such was the desire which each of them had
to be proclaimed a Prince, and the brother of two
such lovely ladies, that they all declared they had
strayed into that country nine years ago with a
diamond-set girdle around them. But the sisters
were not to be taken in: they knew of more than the
advertisement, and either the unusual toe or the
scratch on the thigh, proved fatal to all the claims
which were advanced. At last the two Princesses
became quite tired of the amusement, and plainly
told the Giant that they believed he knew all about
their brother, and was only trifling with them. The
wily Pattle-perry assured them that they were mis-
taken, and was about to make some further excuses,
when he suddenly exclaimed :

‘Ah! here comes a friend who will help us all out
of our difficulties.’

Looking round, the young ladies perceived a very
small gig with a very small man in it, driving along
at a great pace, and rapidly approaching them. At
56 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [.

the sight of this man Pincher trembled violently, and
crouched behind the sisters. The new comer was
clad in a bottle-green coat with brass buttons, white
waistcoat and kerseymere trowsers, and he wore upon
his head a glazed sailor’s hat, gaily ornamented with
buttercups, daisies, and dandelions stuck all around it.

‘ How are you, Macklethorpe ?’ shouted the Giant
in a loud voice, as the little man drove up.

‘So-so, thank you, Royal Pattle-perry,’ replied
the other. ‘But I have come to tell you to be on
your guard. That nasty little Rindelgrover is out on
mischief somewhere. I know it from a pig which I
met and killed as I was driving on the edge of the
forest, and-who confessed it in the hopes of my spar-
ing his life, which I didn’t, knowing your fondness for
pork, and wishing to make you a present. The little
scamp is, I have good reason to believe, within your
kingdom at this moment—perhaps within your
very presence. To prevent mischief, therefore, I have
brought my magic onion, with which, when one
touches one’s‘eyes one can penetrate every disguise,
however cleverly assumed; so in a moment or two
we shall know whether I have been rightly in-
formed.’

So saying, the wily Dwarf put his hand into his
trowsers’ pocket, pulled out an onion, and gently
touched his eyes with it; then he looked right and
left, and presently his eyes fell upon the two Prin-
cesses.

‘Daisies and dandelions!’ he cried, ‘why here are
the two daughters of the King of the Flowery Meads!
who'd have thought of seeing hem here of all people!’
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 57

Out laughed the Giant as he heard this observa-
tion. op

‘Sweet girls!’ he said. ‘Know you not, Mackle-
thorpe, that these maidens claim me as their Uncle
Pattle-perry ? they have come to look for their brother
forsooth—ha ha!

At these words, and at the manner of the speaker,
Pettina grew very angry, and stepping quickly forward
was about to address to the Giant some remark by
which he would not have been flattered. Unfortu-
nately, the suddenness of her movement left Pincher
for a moment unconcealed, and the eyes of the Dwarf
Macklethorpe fell directly upon him. With a shrill
yell, which so startled the girl that she quite forgot what
she was about to say, the Dwarf screamed out fran-
tically :

‘That's he! that’she! I see him! Isee him! The
little beast has taken the shape of a dog! Kill him!
kill him!’

And now ensued a most extraordinary scene.
Macklethorpe placed one of his hands on the small
of his back, the other on his forehead, and uttered a
strange sound, immediately after which he became a
large bull-terrier of twice the size and weight of his
adversary, and rushed furiously at him. But Rindel-
grover was equal to the occasion; curving his tail
over his back, lifting his paw on to his nose, and
giving vent in his turn to a wondrous noise, he in-
stantly became a tremendously powerful mastiff, from
whom the bull-terrier had only just time to escape.
In another instant, however, he reappeared in the
form of a tiger, with whom the mastiff would have
58 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1.



had but little chance had he not, with equal celerity,
converted himself into a lion, and stood boldly in
front of his enemy, roaring horribly. Macklethorpe,
not to be outdone, immediately changed into a rhin-
oceros, and secure in his impenetrable hide, savagely
ran at the lion, who as quickly became a pigeon, and
darted off at best speed. Within a second a large
hawk followed the poor bird, which would certainly
have been in great danger had not Pettina at this
eventful moment recovered her presence of mind and
her voice together, and loudly shouted, ‘Macklethorpe!
hawk! Ri-too-ri-lal-lural!? The effect was instan-
taneous. The pigeon flew off unharmed, whilst the
hawk, suddenly stopping in its flight, wheeled round,
alighted on the ground, and speedily resumed its
proper shape, disclosing a countenance full of baffled
spite and rage, as the owner stood before the young
Princesses.

‘Q-o-0-0-0-h!’ he bellowed out as soon as he
could find breath to do so. Yow are friends with that
little wood-beast, are you? You've learned how to
help your friends, have you? That’s it, is it? But
you haven't learned everything yet, I can tell you!
You called me by my name when you used that word
of power just now. When you do ¢kat you can’t use
that word to me any more fora month, my vixen; so
now you shall find out what it is to have made an
enemy of me. You little puny, skinny, scullery-maid
of a girl—how dare you ?’

So saying, the infuriated Dwarf stepped up to the
poor Pettina, who had unwittingly fallen into so
serious an error, and seemed much inclined to inflict
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 59



upon her personal chastisement then and there. But
Malvina stood forward with her queenly air and
waved the little man backwards.

‘How dare you use such words to a lady?’ said
she. ‘Remember that J have not called you by your
name, and I will not have harm done to my sister.’

At this the Dwarf recoiled for a moment, but
having recovered himself, he accosted the Giant in
these words:

‘Great and Royal Pattle-perry, you have seen
how these two she-foxes have deceived you. By so
doing they have certainly given you every right to
consider them as your slaves, and as such I certainly
advise you to treat them. They may talk big and
think great things of themselves if they please, but
so long as you do not lay violent hands on them, they
will find their magic word of little value against my
magic arts. I would confine them in separate
dungeons and keep them there until they make
humble submission to you and consent to do what-
ever you require of them.’

The poor sisters were so oppressed by the de-
parture of their friend, and so overwhelmed by the
words of the Dwarf, who appeared to know so much,
that they knew not what to do, and when the Giant,
evidently enraged at the deception practised upon
him by Rindelgrover, gave the orders suggested by
the Dwarf, they suffered themselves to be led away
without a murmur or remonstrance. It was not,
however, to a dungeon they were taken, but to two
small rooms in a high tower, in one of the wings of
the Giant’s palace. This was called the ‘turret
60 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [.



tower, and was ascended by a spiral staircase. The
Princesses were conducted up to a considerable height
from. the ground, until they came to a landing from
which doors opened right and left into two rooms,
one of which was appropriated to each of them. This
was the first real trouble they had had to endure, and
it was rendered worse by the fact of their being
separated for the first time in their lives. They wept
bitterly, and would have felt inclined to give way to
despair, if it had not been that their pride of birth
and the old courage of their race alike forbade them
to do so. .

So having cried as much as they thought neces-
sary, they each began to look about them, and then
discovered that not only was there only one wall
between their two rooms, but that, although this was
of a thick and substantial character, grates had been
let in at one or two places, for the purpose of ventila-
tion, through which they could without difficulty
converse from time to time. As this tower faced the
mountain-side down which the Princesses had de-
scended into the Giant’s country, the intelligent reader
will at once remark that the side windows of the
rooms in which the sisters were confined naturally
afforded a view right and left. It so happened that
Malvina had the right hand, Pettina the left hand
view, and each described to the other that which shesaw.

‘Pettina, my darling!’ said her elder sister, ‘I
can see miles and miles away; the tower is so high
that I almost lose my eyesight in the distance—it
seems endless.’ ;

‘But what do you see?’ asked the other.
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 61



‘Why, far, far away I see the waters of the blue
sea. The country from hence is rough and rugged
for some way, but beyond it I see green fields and
trees far off, and the sea still farther off; and I see
islands dotted about in the expanse of blue ocean.
One, two, three—several of them—they must be very,
very far off.’

‘And I, said Pettina in her turn, ‘I also see a
long way. First comes the country such as you
describe it, rough and rugged and barren, and then I
see a large tract of beautiful meadows and corn-lands,
and a beautiful large river winding its way through
what is evidently a fertile country; but it seems a
long way off!’ and Pettina sighed as she spoke.

At that moment they heard a voice on the stair-
case, and in another moment Malvina’s room was
entered by no less a personage than Dame Skrinkle-
griges herself.

‘Well, my fine Miss,’ she began at once, setting
her arms akimbo. ‘So you’ve been trying to humbug
the master, have you, you brother-hunting jackanapes?
Pll warrant me you'll be cured of your tantrums be-
fore we've done with you! Here’s your supper, my
young hussy; bread and water—and that’s all the
victuals you are likely to get for some time to come,
f can tell you!’

So saying, the old woman put down a jug of water
and a loaf of stale bread upon the table, and as
Malvina vouchsafed her no answer, went away to the
next room muttering to herself. She entered Pettina’s
room, and accosted her in much the same manner,
assuring her that she would never leave that tower,
62, WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [I.



unless the Giant was fool enough to marry her, in
which case she would most likely soon follow the fate
of the seventeen wives whom he had already wedded
and sent off into the coal-pits as soon as he got tired
of them. As Pettina thought this was very likely an
invention of the old woman’s, she took no notice of
it, and, finding she was not likely to get much out of
either of her prisoners, the housekeeper shortly after-
wards took her departure. The night passed wearily
for the two Princesses. Sleep was absent from their
pillows, and to the recollection of their lost brother
was added their own misfortune, involving a captivity
which appeared, for all they could tell, likely to be
permanent.

They were early astir upon the following day, and
wished each other ‘good morning’ through the grating.
It was a lovely morning : the sun was shining brightly
in at their windows, and everything looked beautiful
in -his glowing light. As soon as the sisters had
dressed, and eaten the frugal breakfast of bread and
water which had been left them over-night by the
crabbed old housekeeper, each repaired to her window
in order to gaze upon the view therefrom, which ap-
peared likely to be the principal amusement by which
their captivity would be lightened. At the same
instant each gave vent to an exclamation of surprise.

‘Pettina! Pettina!’ cried Malvina; ‘I see an
army of white horses, miles away still, but evidently
coming in this direction. Can it be that they are
coming to help us poor girls?’

‘Oh, Malvina!’ cried her sister; ‘what do you
think Z see? Thousands upon thousands of swans!
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 63

the air is positively dark with them, although they
are as yet at some distance! What caz it mean?’

Whilst they were still giving vent to such excla-
mations as these, suddenly a bird flew up against
Pettina’s window and pecked loudly for admittance.
The Princess immediately threw open the window
and in flew the bird. It was a pigeon, and had
scarcely alighted in the room when it made sundry
contortions, and directly afterwards assumed the form
of the Dwarf Rindelgrover.

‘Dear Princess!’ he exclaimed as soon as he was
sufficiently recovered to speak. ‘All will go well
with you and your sister. Be not afraid. The King
of the Islands is coming at the head of his army on
white horses, and the River King is half way here
with his swans, against which it is well known no
magic power can ever prevail. I have hurried here
as fast as possible in order to relieve your anxiety,
and must now go and tell your lovely sister the good
news.’

“You need not do that,’ said a voice through the
grating, which they recognised at once to be that of
Malvina. ‘I could not help hearing what you said,
and am overjoyed to hear that succour is near at
hand,

Scarcely had she spoken, before a loud noise of
voices was heard upon the stairs, and in a few mo-
ments messengers from the Giant appeared, who had
been ordered to conduct the Princesses to the draw-
ing-room without an instant’s delay. Before they
left their rooms, however, the good Rindelgrover had
just time to change himself into a bluebottle fly, and
64 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. (i.



buzzing round the heads of the two sisters as they
descended the stairs, he told them that if the magic
word was at all weakened in its force as regarded
Macklethorpe, by what had passed, the word ‘ Fol-de-
rol-liddle,’ repeated after it, would be quite too much
for him. Thus cautioned and advised, the Princesses
entered the drawing-room, where they found the Giant
pacing up and down in great agitation and excite-
ment, whilst Macklethorpe was sitting cross-legged on
the hearth-rug. As soon as ever he saw them, the
owner of the palace began to speak.

“What does this mean ?’ he said. ‘I received you
kindly ; Idenied you no request ; yet you have intro-
duced an enemy into my kingdom, and I am now in-
formed that an army is advancing against my people
from two separate quarters. Queer kind of nieces
are ye, I think !’

‘Sir, returned Malvina in a grave tone, ‘we have
done you no wrong, neither do we desire that any
evil should befall you: only give us our brother and
let us go, and we will do our best to prevent mis-
chief.’

‘Harrico your brother, and you too!’ cried the
Giant ina rage. ‘I'll see about both of you presently.
Meantime I shall leave you in friend Macklethorpe’s
charge, for I must go and drive off those friends of
yours, whom I hear of as coming to invade my
country. When I return I shall probably marry one
of you girls myself, and give the other to Mackle-
thorpe ; so now you know what to expect ;) and with
these words he left the room in a passion.

Macklethorpe now rose from the hearth-rug, and
1] : THE LOST PRINCE. 65



approached Pettina, under whose sleeve the Blue-
bottle fly had carefully hidden himself.

_ ‘Now, my vixen,’ he said, ‘you are under my care
for the day, so you had better behave yourself. When
the Giant has slain and captured your friends, you
will see what fools you and your sister have been to
come on this wild-goose chase after your brother.’

‘Wild-goose chase, indeed!’ retorted Pettina; ‘ you
had better take care you don’t have to deal with
swans instead of geese.’

As she spoke she glanced at the windows, and
saw the swan army rapidly approaching the castle,
while the shouts upon the other side told that the
army of white horsemen were already engaged with
the Giant’s people. Irritated by her words, the Dwarf
approached close to her and raised his hand as if to
bestow upon her the undignified rebuke of a slap on
the cheek. The indignant Trincess stepped hastily
backwards, exclaiming as she did so—‘ Ri-too-ri-lal-
lural!’ :

‘That cock won't fight, my pert miss,’ cried the
Dwarf ; and advancing a step nearer, actually aimed a
blow at her fair cheek with his wicked hand.

‘Fol-de-rol-liddle !’ cried the girl in an alarmed
tone as he did so.

The effect was magical—the blow fell short, but the
hand of the little man dropped lightly upon her arm,
and in so doing shook the bluebottle fly out upon the
floor. Hardly had he touched it when he assumed
his proper shape once again. Macklethorpe started
back at the sight ; magical power was suspended for
the moment before the force of natural instincts, and

F
66 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [.



with a mutual yell of fury the two Dwarfs rushed
savagely upon each other, striking right and left in
ungovernable rage. The sisters, with clasped hands,
stood watching the combat, almost insensible to the
loud cries of battle which were all the time filling the air
outside the castle. Both the little men fought des-
perately. Macklethorpe scratched, bit, and kicked
with an almost supernatural energy ; whilst Rindel-
grover, hopping about with marvellous agility, planted
some terrible blows upon the face of his enraged ad-
versary. The sisters would willingly have said the
magic words, had they not feared what the effect
might be upon their friend so long as he had not the
worst of the combat. At last, however, he had de-
cidedly the best of it, for a well-aimed blow taking
effect upon the nose of Macklethorpe, stretched him
upon the floor. Rindelgrover, without an instant’s
delay, leaped upon him-with a cry of triumph, when
at that very instant the doors of the drawing-room
were thrown violently open, and new characters ap-
peared upon the scene. Foremost among these were
two men of royal appearance, armed to the teeth, and
evidently just emerged from the fray. They led
between them, conquered and bound, none other than
the Giant Pattle-perry himself. It needed no wizard
to inform the sisters who were the victors who thus
appeared. The noble King of the Islands was on
one side, the young and handsome River King on
the other. With joyful and triumphant looks they
led their captive to the feet of the two Princesses, to
whom they made a lowly obeisance.

“Royal ladies !’ said the King of the Islands, who,
1.] THE LOST PRINCE. 67



being the eldest, was, according to the fashion of
those barbarous times, entitled to speak first: ‘we
bring you your vanquished enemy, and place his life
at your disposal,’

Both sisters clasped their hands in speechless
gratitude, and then, when they found their voices,
both exclaimed at once, ‘Oh, noble Kings! can you
make him restore our brother ?’

‘Dear ladies, said the River King, ‘that is
already done. Come forth, Prince Merry.’

Scarcely had he uttered the words, when a young
and singularly handsome youth came forward, in whom
the sisters both instinctively recognised their long-lost
brother, and immediately rushed to embrace him,
for which he appeared to be perfectly prepared.

‘Oh! where have you been all these long years ?”
they exclaimed both together, and fell to hugging
and kissing him again, before they could possibly re-
ceive an answer.

‘Let me explain to you what we have discovered,’
rejoined the King of the Islands, ‘and all the more
so because it may incline your tender hearts to show
some mercy to your unfortunate captive. It is true
that the Giant did what Rindelgrover has already told
you. He enticed the boy away from his nurse, prin-
cipally, I believe, for the sake of his diamond-set
girdle, and carried him off to his own country. How-
ever, when there, he conceived so great an affection for
the young Prince that he determined to adopt him as
his heir. Accordingly, he had him educated by the
best tutors he could procure, and has invariably

treated him with the greatest kindness, excepting
F2
68 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. fr.



always that his utmost endeavours have been em-
ployed to make the boy forget his family and his
native country. No wonder, then, that he attempted
to deceive you in every possible way, and to palm off
impostors upon you as your brother. He has failed,
however, and, moreover, the young Prince has by no
means forgotten his old home and relations. Here
he is safe and sound, and you will have the satisfac-
tion of restoring him to his and your anxious parents.
Now, what shall be done with the Robber-giant who
has caused all these troubles? We have taken him
entirely by surprise. The oppressed people of his
country received us gladly ; we have completely routed
and dispersed his army, most of whom have either
been ridden down by my white horsemen, or have
had their left eyes pecked out by the swan warriors
of my royal brother. In fact, the Giant is at your
mercy, and you have only to say the word and his
head shall be struck off immediately.’

‘Oh no!’ cried both the sisters simultaneously ;
and then Malvina continued: ‘We should be sorry
indeed to return evil for evil, especially as the Giant
has done us no harm in reality, and the joy of re-
covering our dear brother has effaced from our minds
the trouble we have endured. Let him live, provided
that he will take an oath never to interfere with our
father’s kingdom again or to carry off straggling
children, be they princes or peasants.’

At these words the Giant’s face, which had hither-
to been mightily downcast, lighted up with a sudden
joy.

‘Lovely and merciful ladies!’ he exclaimed, in a
1.] THE LOST PRINCE. | 69



deep but trembling voice, ‘I will swear by the Great
Giant Oath—by all that giants hold sacred, by any-
thing else you please—to be your faithful vassal and
slave to the end of my days, if you will but spare my
life. Your brother is safe and sound, and had I not
loved him as my own son, and intended to make him
my heir, he might have gone home long ago. Say,
Prince, do I not speak the truth ?’

‘It is quite true,’ said Prince Merry, in a voice of
singular sweetness, ‘that I have no recollection of
anything but kindness since I have been here, although
now that memory has been awakened and I recognise
my beloved sisters, I feel a sense of the cruel wrong
which has been done me in depriving me for so long
a time of their sweet society. But I give my voice
for mercy, and hope that we may henceforth all be
friends. Meanwhile, what are the little men doing?’

At these words everybody looked round at the
two Dwarfs, who had been forgotten during the above
conversation. Rindelgrover was still standing upon
his prostrate enemy, and giving from time to time a
triumphant stamp upon him which must have been
the reverse of agreeable. As soon as attention was
called to them, Macklethorpe, with a deep groan,
besought the Princesses to call off his adversary, and
they accordingly begged their little friend to spare his
fallen foe. Thus requested, the worthy Rindelgrover
desisted from his amusement, and the crestfallen Mac-
klethorpe arose, bruised and vanquished, and with the
breath nearly stamped out of his body. The Wood
Dwarf was at first inclined to claim him for a slave
as the reward for all he had done, but on its being put
70 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [.



to him forcibly by Pettina that he would in the long
run gain more by generosity, and that a slave who
detested him would be less useful than a friend
bound to him by ties of gratitude, he was gradually
brought round to that view of the case, and agreed
that his enemy should be spared and liberated, on
condition of owning himself inferior to his conqueror,
and binding himself never more to destroy the pigs
of the latter.

The rest of the story will not take long to tell.
The victorious army having feasted royally at the
Giant’s expense, prepared shortly afterwards for their
departure. Old Dame Skrinklegriggs, however, first
appeared upon the scene. Dreadfully afraid that her
impertinent language to the two Princesses would be
remembered against her, she endeavoured to atone for
it by the most abject servility and fawning adulation.
Throwing herself at the feet of the sisters, she ex-
claimed :

‘Oh, Royal Ladies—more lovely than ladies ever
were before, and more charming than any that shall
ever come after you. Beautiful creatures, have mercy
on an old servant who has only erred from zeal for
her old master! Let me kiss your feet and be your
slave for ever, and bear no malice against so humble
a being as Iam,

At these words the sisters smiled.

‘Be under no apprehension, old woman,’ said Mal-
vina. ‘We scarce remember your words, and have no
thought of injuring you. Still, we would advise you
and all others who hear us to remember that civility
1] THE LOST PRINCE. 71

costs nothing, and is far more becoming than harsh
and rude language.’

With these words she dismissed the old house-
keeper, who was overjoyed at having escaped so easily.
Then the whole party proceeded to leave the palace
on their way back to the old home of Prince Merry,
taking with them the Giant, to present as a prisoner
to the injured King and Queen, though they had no
doubt that these would ratify the sentence already
pronounced by their daughters.

It would be hopeless for me to attempt to describe
the entry into the Kingdom of the Flowery Meads, or
the meeting between the parents and their long-lost
son. Universal joy spread all over the kingdom, a
general holiday took place, and nobody did any work
for a month, which greatly interrupted the trade of
the country and so damaged its revenue that there
had to be new taxes the year after in order to make
up the deficiency. However, nobody cared for that
or for anything else, now that the Prince was back
again. The nursery-maid and soldier were not for-
gotten in the general happiness, but were set free
from their cage and told that they might now be
married as soon as they liked. But somehow or other,
nine years of each other's company had so altered
their views of matrimony as between themselves, that
they respectfully declined the offered boon, and pre-
ferred to take a separate course in their future lives.
There was marrying, however, at the Court, and that
before long. The King of the Islands proclaimed his
continued devotion to Malvina; the River King was
no less attached to Pettina, and the Princesses, swayed


42 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [I.



by emotions of mingled love and gratitude, consented
to share the fortunes of their royal suitors. Accord-
ingly, the weddings were celebrated upon the grandest
scale which you can imagine. The Giant Pattle-perry
was present, having received his pardon from the
King and Queen, and solemnly vowed himself the
vassal of the Kingdom of the Flowery Meads for ever
and a day.

You may well believe that Rindelgrover was not
absent from the ceremony, nor indeed from the ban-
quet afterwards. Upon that occasion many interesting
speeches were delivered, and more ale and wine con-
sumed than had ever been the case before in that
country. Everybody enjoyed themselves thoroughly,
and everything passed off remarkably well. Of course
Prince Merry was the hero of the evening. His
health was drunk with ‘nine times nine and one cheer
more,’ and in return he made a speech which delighted
everybody, though, for the matter of that, as every-
body was determined beforehand to be delighted, it
did not much signify what he said.,

It is needless to relate anything further of the
history of these good people. The King and Queen
passed the remainder of their days in great and un-
interrupted happiness. The worthy Rindelgrover was
always a welcome guest at Court, and much amused
the royal family by his eccentric observations and
curious ways. Sometimes Prince Merry wandered
' with him in the forest, over the animals of which he
held such authority. At the particular request of the
Prince he was induced to allow them to abandon the
somewhat monotonous chorus of ‘ Well done, Rindel-
1.1 THE LOST PRINCE. 73



grover!’ which he had imposed upon them as an ac-
knowledgment of his sovereignty, and after a while
he was persuaded to prefer a pony to a pig when in
want of equestrian exercise. Otherwise he remained
the same to the day of his death, if that day ever
arrived. Of that Ihave no certain information. I can
only tell you the legends of dwarfs and giants which
the Fairies tell me from time to time, and they gener-
ally like to leave off with the good people in the
story alive and happy. So let it be, then, with our
_ present tale. Ihave no reason to doubt that Prince
Merry, his sisters and their husbands, are at this
moment living, well and prosperous, nor have I any
reason to suppose the contrary of the conquered
Giant, or any other of the personages of whom I have
spoken. Let us suppose them so, at all events, and
having consoled ourselves with this supposition, bring
to a conclusion the wonderful history of Prince Merry
and his charming sisters.
74 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. (ir.

IT.

THE HISTORY OF A ROOR.

OF late years it has been the fashion for animals of
various sorts and sizes to relate their history for the
benefit of a curious world. I feel that I need no ex-
cuse for following an example which has been set by
many whose species entitles them to no more con-
sideration than my own, and who have possibly seen
less of stirring adventure than it has been my fate to
witness. And although I am only a bird, Ido not
see, for my own part, why birds have not as good a
right as anybody else to come before the reading
public. A horse is frequently termed a noble animal.
A dog is thought to have special claims upon the
sympathy of men; and both dogs and horses have
frequently thought it right and becoming to appear
in print. Nevertheless, I feel entitled to observe that
birds of my race are, in one respect at least, superior
to both dogs and horses. ‘These are, after all, the
obedient slaves of man. Trained to obey his will,
taught from earliest youth to acknowledge his superi-
ority, they pass their existence for the most part in
willing thraldom, ignorant of those free aspirations
and that untrammelled liberty of which I and my
feathered comrades can truly boast. Not that this is
I1.] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 75



equally applicable to all birds. The parrot, ignomi-
niously seated upon his perch, looks to man for his
daily pittance of food, screeches out that which they
suppose to be his gratitude in inharmonious accents,
and seeks no higher aim than occasionally to imitate
the tones and words of his enslavers. The starling,
the magpie, and other kindred birds, from time to time
own the dominion of man. The unhappy thrush too
often languishes in his wicker cage, suspended before
the cottage door of his unfeeling master; and even
the crafty jackdaw frequently becomes the pet and
plaything of the human race. But who ever heard of
a tame rook? My noble race loves, indeed, to domicile
itself near the haunts of men; but this is rather with
the object of proving to our young, by the force of
daily contrast, our innate and immense superiority
over the unfeathered bipeds who walk the earth from
which they cannot rise, and pass a wingless life in a
conceited belief in their own greatness. Often and
often have I seen them walking near, though not asa
rule beneath, my native rookery, and wondered to
myself how such tame crawling creatures could have
the arrogance to deem themselves ‘the lords of that
creation which contains so many nobler races. But
asmy intention to-day is not to point a moral, but to
relate a history, I will proceed at once to the per-
formance of my task.

I am a rook of old family. . All rooks are rooks of
old family. Unlike human beings, who depend upon
the preservation of written records, without which they
are not supposed among their fellows to have esta-
blished a claim to good family and high descent, we
76 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. {ir.



rooks, acting upon the glorious principle of universal
equality, recognise in our community the undoubted fact
that we all descend from common ancestors who existed
in remote antiquity, and we require no written proof to
establish the fact that we are all illustrious, and all of
high descent. I could tell you where I was born, aye,
to the very tree and to the very nest. I could de-
scribe the place which had the honour of witnessing my
birth. But I forbear. There may be those yet alive
to whom a minute description of the locality might be
painful, and no right-minded rook ever willingly gives
pain to anyone.

Yet as I recall the old familiar scene, I feel a
strange longing to make others acquainted with the
spot which I still love so dearly. How well do I re-
member the place! The group of waving elms in which
our nests were built, standing as they did at the extreme
end of a wood which joined close up to a farm-yard,
had the double advantage of proximity to rich corn-
fields on one side of the aforesaid wood, and pleasant
meadows, well stocked with friendly sheep, on the other.

There was the pond too, at the end of the farmyard
nearest the rookery, whereon sundry ducks quacked
a homely accompaniment to our domestic cawing, and
frantic hens cackled in agony over the supposed
danger of the little ducklings whom they had unwit-
tingly hatched. The orchard hard by, with its apple and
cherry trees laden with luxuriant fruit ; the large wal-
nut tree famous for its size and quantity of nuts, which
stood opposite the stable; the high old-fashioned
hedges which enclosed the meadows; the winding paths
cut through the home wood, and the trim old-fashioned
11.) THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 77



garden, with its high brick wall. around it ;—all these
things come back to my memory, and seem to flit
before my aged eyes'as I muse over the early and
happy days of my youth. But stay: I have said
enough of a place which you, dear reader, cannot
identify, and to think of which, now that I am so far
from it, makes my beak feel dry and my eyes watery.
So I ruffle up my old feathers, give my tail a shake,
and taking in my claw the pen which my kind old
neighbour Owl has manufactured for me out of the
feather of a wood-pigeon’s wing, set myself to tell you
that which I have to relate.

This beak, which many years have hardened, was
soft and tender when its first infant effort chipped the
egg which contained my puny form. I cannot actu-
ally remember the event, but from what I have seen
in after years, I imagine that I must have presented a
somewhat ridiculous appearance when I first emerged
from the maternal shell. My first distinct recollection
is of the ousting from the nest of two little crea-
tures, brothers and sisters I suppose, I know not which,
on whom my mother had unfortunately trodden, and
the sending after them of an egg at which we little
ones had stared for some hours as at an object of im-
mense interest, but which the wiser instincts of my
mother discovered to be rotten.

There were three of us left, and certainly we had
nothing to complain of in our treatment. Never had
young rooks a more devoted mother, or a father who
better understood the duty of bringing home slugs
and other tender edibles to his as yet helpless off-
38 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND, [it



spring. Well nurtured and cared for, we grew daily in
size, and improved in health and vigour.

Our naked forms became gradually covered with
protecting feathers, although it was some time before
they acquired that black and glossy appearance which
is so highly vaiued among rooks who value their per-
sonal beauty. As days rolled on, although we grew
bigger, our nest unfortunately did not follow our
example, and consequently that which had at first
seemed to us, as indeed it was, a spacious and com-
modious abode, began to afford scant accommodation
for our developing frames. In short, we were more
crowded than was at all pleasant, and I do not know
how we should have managed, had not our maternal
parent one day suggested that there was an outside
as well as an inside to every nest, and that we must
not confine ourselves entirely to the latter. Shecon-
veyed her meaning in a somewhat forcible manner,
pushing us all three bodily over the side of the nest,
and bidding us take the fresh air as best we could.

Trembling with fright, we sat shivering on the
nearest branches, our little hearts penetrated with the
most profound grief at that which appeared to us the
cruel and unnatural conduct of the mother in whose
love we had hitherto so implicitly trusted. Ah! we
did not know then, as I know well enough now, that
our parents are the best judges of what is good for us,
and that things which sometimes seem harsh and un-
just to us are really intended for our benefit, and are
in fact the very best things which could have hap-
pened to us. So indeed it was in this case. We
soon learned to balance ourselves on the branches
11] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 79



without fear of falling, then we found that we could
easily hop from twig to twig, and meanwhile the ex-
posure to the open air gave new strength and hardi-
hood to our bodies. Then, joy of joys, we awoke to
the knowledge of the great fact that we had wings!
Never shall I forget the moment when this first
dawned upon my infant mind! It was again through
the agency of my mother, who, after I had sat for a
day or two as near as I could to the nest (to which.
we were still allowed to return at meal-times and for
the night), flew quietly up to me one morning and de-
liberately pushed me off my perch. With a croak of
horror, down I fell, expecting nothing less than in-
stant destruction. Great, however, was my surprise
and delight to find myself most agreeably undeceived.
Guided by some natural instinct, I spread out my
wings, and immediately found that I had not only
arrested my fall by so doing, but that I was able to
flutter away to another branch without the slightest
difficulty, and could sustain myself in the air as well
as another bird. My brother and sister, having been
similarly treated by our mother, and with the same
result, were equally pleased with the discovery of
their new powers, and we all three felt as proud as
cock pheasants.

Day by day we made trial of our new wings, and
very shortly found that we could fly from tree to tree
with tolerable ease, and that a little more practice
and some additional strength would soon enable us to
take a longer and more daring flight. We warmly
thanked our beloved mother for having taught us that
great lesson of self-reliance which is so necessary for
80 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. [rt



a young rook or indeed for anybody else who hopes
to succeed in the world, and a new vista of joyous
and peaceful life seemed opening out before us. But
alas! it was rudely interrupted. This world is full of
cares and woes, and I have observed that oftentimes
when our happiness is the greatest, our hearts the
lightest, and our prospects apparently the best, mis-
fortune falls upon us, as if to prove to us the vanity
and instability of earthly happiness. So it was with
regard to the happy family to which I then belonged.

On a beautiful morning in the month of May, I
was surprised by a sudden commotion in the rookery.
Respectable middle-aged rooks, ordinarily accustomed
to wing their steady flight from field to field, and some
of whom had been recently engaged in the domestic
occupation consequent upon the nesting season,
suddenly rose on all sides high into the air, and
uttering shrill cries of affright and dismay, wheeled in
eddying circles far above the trees which composed
our rookery. At first I thought that the world had
gone mad that May morning, or that my elders were
indulging in some wild and extraordinary pastime as
yet unknown to the juvenile members of the society.
But before long I became painfully aware that the
movement of our fathers and mothers was caused by
their knowledge of the proximity of awful danger to
their young. ears—a report which arose, as it seemed, from the
ground below the rookery, and was succeeded by a
redoubling of the cries of affright uttered by the parent
birds. Eagerly peering through the branches of the
tree in which I sat, I perceived three individuals
It] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 81

standing in the precincts of our sacred grove. One of
them carried in his hand a weapon which asI have since
discovered is familiarly known among men asa pea-
rifle. This person was evidently the chief of the
party, for one of the others carried his ammunition,
while the awful occupation of the third became only
too soon apparent. The gunner kept up a steady fire
against such of our youthful companions as exposed
their bodies to his aim, and when any ill-fated rook
dropped upon the ground, as, alas! was but too fre-
quently the case, this third man hastened to gather
the bleeding body of the victim, and placed it beneath
a tree, where before long a goodly array of murdered
victims lay side by side. For the first few moments,
while this continuous firing was going on, I hardly
realised its meaning, or the perils of my own position.
But my brother, and sister, and myself were seated
upon a bough near the maternal nest, and afforded
but too obvious an object to the eager marksman,
Ere long I perceived him standing beneath our very
tree, with his deadly weapon pointing directly up-
wards. Even yet, we none of us realised the danger-
ous position in which we were placed; but in another
- moment the awful sound rang in our ears, and we
heard the shrill whistle of a bullet passing close above
ourheads. Being still, however, unacquainted with
the nature of firearms, we remained still and silent,
whilst the marksman hastily reloaded, and again level-
led his piece. This time the bullet struck the branch on
which we were seated, almost severing it in two, and
causing such a vibraticn as seriously disturbed us.
We all cawed lustily, and slightly shifted our posi-
G
82 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [u.





tion, though even now we remained fully exposed to
view ; but at the third shot, the bullet passing beneath
me at a distance from my body, far too near to be
pleasant, penetrated my tail feathers, and went whist-
ling on in its upward journey. Being now thoroughly
alarmed, I awoke to the necessity of adopting some
measure to prevent greater damage to my sacred
person, and being (though I say it that shouldn’t)
a rook of wariness beyond my years, I determined
forthwith to seek shelter in our friendly nest. With-
out more ado, therefore, I hopped lightly to my refuge,
and with a croak of satisfaction ensconced myself in
the same place whence I had first seen the light of
day from the inside of my parent egg.

O why did not my dear relations share at once my
prudence and mysafety! With a courage more resolute
than wise, they maintained their position, and the very
next bullet, striking my brother in the wing, wrung
from him a moan of agony, and prevented his following
my example. MHorrified at the sound, I peered over
the nest to watch what would follow, and waited in
breathless expectation whilst the cruel enemy loaded
and fired again, and this time with but too true an
aim. The fatal bullet shot my brother full in the
breast, and passing through from breast to back, left
behind it only a lifeless carcase from which the bright
young life had passed away for ever. The body of
my innocent brother fell with a dull heavy thud upon
the ground beneath, and soon swelled the heap of
victims already collected by the attendant keeper.
My sister, now fully awakened to a sense of her
danger, hopped with trembling legs towards my place
IL] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 83



of safety, uttering a faint caw of complaint and alarm.
But before she reached the nest, another bullet, speed-
ing on its deadly errand, struck the bough imme-
diately beneath her, lacerated her right foot, and gave
a shock to her nervous system from which she never
afterwards entirely recovered. Happily, however, she
succeeded in scrambling over the sticks and twigs of
which our home was composed, and nestled down by
my side in a state of alarm and agitation such as I
have seldom or ever witnessed in a female rook.

Fortunately for us, there were so many of our
species sitting out upon the different trees of the
rookery, that the sportsman (if such a term can be
rightly applied to a cruel rook-killing monster) found
plenty of amusement without troubling us again, and
we crouched down without further molestation during
the rest of his stay, though our blood ran cold, and
our hearts beat faster, at every sound of his horrible
gun. But as all things in this world come to an end,
so did this attack upon our peaceful homes, and our
enemies at length retired, laden with the carcasses of
our unhappy relatives. I could not imagine at that
time the purpose for which the remains of our friends
were thus carried off. But a singular conversation
which I shortly afterwards overheard disclosed to
me the horrid truth, whilst at the same time it
afforded a notable example of the cringing and
sycophantic nature of the human race.

Not many days after the occurrence which I have
just related, a number of fiends in the shape of men,
armed, not with pea-rifles, but with ordinary shot-

guns, appeared in our luckless rookery, and opened a
G2
84. WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. pen



cruel and destructive fire upon our unhappy race.
Alas for the ruin and devastation which they spread
around! In vain did youthful rooks send forth their
wailing caw for pity and succour. In vain did the
agitated and miserable parents wheel high above the
heads of the gunners with plaintive and indignant
cries, protesting against the unjustifiable slaughter of
their young. They spoke to hearts harder than stone,
and to beings inaccessible to the cries alike of suffering
innocence and parental affection. By tens, aye, by
twenties, the youth, the flower of rookdom fell around,
and sadly were our numbers thinned by the continued
onslaught of our merciless foes. Wise by experience,
my sister and I at the first sound of the gun sought
shelter in our nest, and remained there until the last
of our enemies had departed.

It was on the afternoon of that same day that I,
deafened with the cannonading which had been going
on around us, and with a heart full of misery at the
undeserved misfortune that had fallen upon our race,
flew out from the rookery, and perched myself in the
thickest part of a large chestnut tree which stood at a
short distance from my home. From this post of
observation I saw two men approach, and soon dis-
covered that their purpose was to collect the bodies
of the slain. One of these men, whom the other ad-
dressed as ‘Jem,’ evidently filled the honourable posi-
tion of a gamekeeper. He had a black velveteen
coat on, and a gun in his hand, which he deposited at
the foot of my tree while performing the melancholy
business on which he had come, and his evident as-
sumption of superiority over his companion, together
11.] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 85



with the deferential bearing of the latter, sufficiently
indicated his official position. It was while they were
resting from their labours beneath the tree in which I
was perched, that the following conversation ensued.

‘A fine lot o’ young rooks, Jem, surelie, said the
other man.

‘They be, Bristow, that they be, was the reply ;
and presently, after a pause, ‘They tell me, Bristow,
that there’s many people as thinks a rook pie better
nor a pigeon pie. That can’t be, but I don’t know as
it’s a thing to be despised, after all is said and done,’

“Oh no,’ replied the other, ‘not noways to be de-
spised, but nothing like a pigeon pie, o’ course. Oh
no, oh no.’

“And,’ continued the keeper, ‘I don’t know but
what a rook pie, if the rooks is young, and the crust
made about right, very nigh comes up to a pigeon
pie after all.’

‘Sure it does,’ returned Bristow in meditative tone,
‘not so good as a pigeon pie, but very nigh it if rightly
made, as you say.’

In another minute the keeper continued: ‘And some
folks will tell you, and as far as my opinion goes they’re
in the right of it, that just at this season, when the
rooks is young and tender, a rook pie is quite as good
as a pigeon pie, after all.’

‘Very little difference, replied Bristow at once, ‘if
the birds is young and tender, rook pie or pigeon pie,
what’s the difference ?’

‘And for my part,’ added the keeper, ‘7 like a
rook pie better than what I do a pigeon pie, and that’s
the truth of it.’
86 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [11.



‘Oh yes,’ responded Bristow without a moment’s
hesitation, ‘better than any pigeon pie. Not a doubt
of it?

And so the conversation terminated. Though I
could not help being amused at the obsequious servility
of the cringing Bristow, this conversation explained
to me the cause of the murderous onslaught made
upon my hapless people, and revealed the fate which
was to befall their carcasses. Stripped of their black
and glossy feathers, they would doubtless be thrust
into a pie or pudding, to gratify the palates of their
greedy slaughterers, whom I devoutly hoped might
be choked in the operation of devouring them. This,
however, would after all be but a poor revenge for: us
survivors, and would not bring our lost ones back to
life again. I could here indulge in many moral reflec-
tions upon the cruelty of man, and the sufferings of
rooks and other birds and animals which he chooses
to regard as his lawful prey. But I prefer, and perhaps
my readers may agree with me, to quit a theme
which, as far as I am concerned, is fraught with
melancholy recollections, and pass on to other remi-
niscences of my eventful life.

Perhaps some of my readers will be surprised to
hear me use the word ‘eventful’ in connection with
the life of a rook. We are, I believe, for the most
part, regarded as dull, commonplace birds, whose
chief avocation is to rear and feed our young, to eat
grubs and insects by way of food, and to promote
the domestic felicity of mankind by cawing in a
homely manner around their mansions. This, how-
ever, is a grand mistake, though only one of the many
11.] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 87



misapprehensions into which man is led by his selfish
and overbearing vanity. The real truth is that the
world was made for rooks, and not for man, and that
although the greater strength and destructive skill of
the latter give him at the present moment an advan-
tage over our noble race, those who believe in the
great and immutable principles of justice cannot but
rest assured that this advantage is but of a temporary
character, and that hereafter the rights of rookdom
will be triumphantly vindicated, and servile man shall
bow and cringe before his feathered superiors. Even
now, unwittingly and unwillingly, they minister to our
necessities. Why do they plough the ground with so
much care save to expose to our hungry beaks the
animal food in which we delight? Why do they plant
trees whose maturity will not be witnessed by their
own eyes, but by those of the generations to come?
Is it not that we rooks may have places in which to
build our nests in safety? And do they not, more-
over, show us. constant marks of respect by planting
boys as guards of honour in their fields, who by shouts
of ‘away crow!’ by discharges of antiquated firearms
incapable of injuring anything but the gunner himself,
and by fantastic displays of strangely attired figures
on sticks, serve to show how much our presence is
feared, if not appreciated, by the human race?
Thoughts upon all these subjects have frequently
occupied my mind, and although my race may be
depressed at present, in the dim vista of the future I
picture to myself a free, a great, and a glorious rook-
dom. But to my story.

After the breeding season had been finished, and
88 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. {11.



the youth of our rookery (alas! sadly diminished in
numbers by the events which I have narrated) had
learnt to use their wings with tolerable facility, they
were required to make themselves perfect in flying
under the able tuition of several experienced rooks,
who held their classes in the immediate vicinity of the
rookery. There was the soaring class, the object of
which was to teach young rooks to fly as high as they
could, balancing themselves upon their wings like a
hawk at a distance from the earth which rendered them
secure from human attack. There was the wheeling
class, by which we were instructed to wheel about,
swing round shortly, and accommodate ourselves to the
necessities of a windy day. There was the vocal class,
instruction in which was generally carried on by an old
rook perched upona dead branch on the top of a tree,
whence he cawed vehemently to us youngsters seated
below. To this class I belonged, and it was there that
I acquired that clear and ringing caw for which I have
long been famous. Then there was the shifting class,
which taught us when flying steadily in our course, to
swerve hastily aside so as to avoid any danger from
below. And many other lessons did we learn during
the last weeks of our youthful rookery life. But the
time came when all these juvenile exercises termin-
ated, and we youngsters were sent abroad into the
wide world to get our own living.

Ah me! you children of human parents, who are
tended and cared for in early youth, whose growing
years are watched with affectionate solicitude by your
parents, who enjoy the blessings of maternal love, and
perhaps for much of your life are guided by the kind
11.] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 89



expression of a father’s will, little do ye know of the
loveless, uncertain career of a youthful rook. I do
not complain. Mine is not an envious nature. But
when I think of your condition and of my own, my
heart swells within my breast, my feathers ruffle, and
I feel as wicked as a carrion crow. Little of parental
care had I! A parting peck from my mother was all
the token of affection which I received on quitting
the scenes of my early youth. But my heart was
stout, my confidence great, my feathers glossy, my
beak yellow, and my spirit unsubdued ; so, with the
determination to do my duty as an honest rook, I left
the home of my ancestors, and went forth to do battle
with the world.

I fear I should but weary my readers, if I were
to chronicle the events of ordinary every-day rook-
life. They would not care to hear how I occupied my
time in searching for the food with which to support
my existence, in travelling with my comrades from
place to place, always, when it was possible, returning
to the same roosting-trees at night, and occasionally
in sitting upon favourite branches with clusters of
fellow-rooks, cawing to them and they to me in
friendly if not melodious accents. I prefer to pass on
to those occurrences of my life which may be considered
more than ordinary, and may perhaps interest or
amuse the thoughtful peruser of my history.

It was upon a bright morning in January that I
experienced my first real misfortune since quitting my
early home. I had been sitting for some time upon
the top of a high elm tree, cawing cheerfully to myself,
and looking down upon a world white with a frozen
90 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [ur.



mantle. The ground was covered with a thin coating
of snow, which had fallen during the night, and which
now crackled beneath the feet of the walkers with the
crispness of the frost. The sun was bright, and the
frost melted wherever his rays came full upon it, but
the air was cold, and apparently we were likely to
have a continuance of hard weather. I had been
musing over the various changes of temperature which
we rooks boldly encounter with precisely the same
clothing, whilst men and women, poor things, change
their garments according to the seasons, which to my
mind affords another evidence of their inferiority to
our noble race.

Whilst thinking over this, it came into my head
that there was one thing common to us all, namely,
hunger, and that this same feeling was gradually
stealing over me to such a degree as to make break-
fast a most desirable event in anticipation. With this
thought came another which somewhat troubled me.
Where and how should I find my breakfast on this
particular morning? The fields were hard with frost ;
no farm-yard was close at hand, and I hardly Rtew
where to look for food. Fortunately I recollected
that in flying over a neighbouring wood the day
before, I had observed a number of pheasants eagerly
feeding in a certain track which I knew I could easily
find again. I argued with myself that what a phea-
sant could eat would be equally wholesome for a
rook, and that the best course which I could pursue
would be to proceed at once to the spot. Accordingly
I shook my wings, rose from the tree, and with a
parting caw, sailed away through the cold air, gaining
additional appetite as I flew.
11.] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. ot



I found the wood, and the track, without much
difficulty, and before settling down in it, took the
precaution of perching in the branches of a neighbour-
ing oak, in order to make sure that the coast was
clear. No human being was in sight; the pheasants
were feeding quietly in their accustomed place, and I
saw with delight that their food was maize, large,
delicious-looking grains of which lay plentifully scat-
tered upon the ground. As numerous cock pheasants
were making their breakfast near my tree, and I knew
cock pheasants to be birds who are occasionally of a
selfish nature, I deemed it best to alight at a respectful
distance from them, in order to avoid the possibility
of a quarrel. Accordingly, I flew some little way
along the track, and then settled upon a spot where
the maize was not so thickly scattered, but where
there was still an ample supply for my wants. Being
remarkably hungry that morning, I did not scruple to
feed heartily upon this wholesome food, and, hopping
along as I picked up the grain, I found myself near
the hedge which separated the wood from a field.
The maize appeared to have been strewn right up to
the hedge, and observing that there was plenty of it
at one particular spot, I hopped rapidly on thither.
What was my horror at hearing a sudden ‘click, and
almost before I heard it, to feel the snow-clad leaves
rise up beneath my feet and the sharp fangs of a steel
trap close around one of my unhappy legs! At the
same instant the horrible truth flashed upon me.
Either some poacher, or a rascally keeper who wished
to trap his master’s pheasants, had spread maize close
up to the hedge in order to entice the birds, and where
92 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. {ut



the maize was thickest had craftily placed a trap,
carefully concealed by dry leaves artfully laid upon it.
Miserable wretch that I was, I had unwarily hopped
upon this hidden engine of destruction, and in all
probability should pay the penalty with my life!

For the first moment or two I was so stupified by
the suddenness of the misfortune into which I had
fallen that I remained perfectly dumb. Then, as a
racking pain shot through my poor leg, I gave vent
to a caw of agony which attracted the attention of all
the birds near me. The hen pheasants began to
scurry away into the thick underwood, the cock birds
stared at me with amazement, let fall several unkind
remarks about thieves coming to no good, and stalked
slowly away from the place as if it was no business of
theirs at all. A blackbird or two answered my cries
with a sympathising chuckle, and a robin red-breast
calmly regarded me with a pitying eye from the twig
of a hazel-tree on which he was perched. But none
offered to help me—no kindly claw was outstretched
to aid—no pitying beak opened to comfort me, and,
to make matters worse, several jays came flying at

_once from other parts of the wood, screeching and
laughing over my head as if my agony was the best
joke in the world.

I had sense enough to know that it would be the
height of folly to continue to cry out, for I should by
this means certainly attract the attention of some
keeper or labourer in the fields, who might very
possibly put an end to my pain and my life together
if he found me in the trap. Therefore I tried to
bear the pain as well as I could, and waited perfectly
IL] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 93



quiet for at least half an hour. Then I thought
I could bear it no longer, and I began to peck the
trap with frantic energy, by which means I hurt
my own beak without doing the slightest good.
Luckily for me—if I can call that ‘luck’ which, after
all, was only a mitigation of a cruel misfortune, the
trap had sprung so quickly together, or I had trod so
lightly, that I was caught very little above the claw.
Had it been otherwise, indeed, and had I sunk so far
as to have been caught by the thigh, nothing could
have saved me from an agonising death, and this story
would never have been written. My leg, however,
just above the claw, was nearly cut in two, so you
may suppose that the pain was not slight. I was in
great doubt what to do, and in dreadful fear of what
might happen next, when I heard a little rustling
sound near me, and turning my head, perceived a
squirrel seated upon a branch of the tree above my
head. Uncertain of his intentions, I cast a piteous
look towards the little animal, but said nothing.
After a moment’s silence, however, he accosted me in
a friendly tone of voice.

‘Why, gossip rook,’ said he, ‘vou have fallen into
a scrape, I fear.’

‘Scrape, indeed, squirrel,’ cawed I sorrowfully,
‘and one that I know not how to get out of. Woe
betide the day that ever I saw this wood !’

‘Cheer up, friend, cheer up, replied Pug ; ‘the wood
is not a bad wood after all, if it were not for the
keepers and their traps, and the pheasants which
tempt the poachers. Can nothing be done to help
you?’
94. WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [i1.



These words of kindness cheered my failing heart
and revived my drooping courage. °

“Oh do come down and try, Pug,’ said I. ‘Look at
my poor leg and see what can be done!’

Thus implored, the worthy squirrel ran nimbly
down from his seat and squatted close to the trap
which he regarded closely.

‘Ugh!’ he exclaimed at last, ‘the nasty, cruel
thing! I wish the fellow who set it had his finger in
it, that I do! But, he added, ‘I fear there is only
one chance for you, friend rook. You must leave
your foot behind and lose a limb to save a life, as the
saying is.’

As he spoke, telling me in truth that which my
own instinct had already suggested to me as my only
chance of escape, I felt that he was right. The only
thing was, how could I bear the pain which it would
cost me to tear myself away from the fangs of the
cruel machine which held me like a vice?

Oh ye men and boys, whoever ye be, who chance
to read this history, just think for a moment of the
misery you inflict upon poor birds and beasts, if ye
set or allow to be set in your woods and shrubberies
these horrible steel traps. The traps you set for little
birds are of a different nature. Three bricks and a
tile, supported by.a small bit of stick which rests on
a twig balanced on another bit of stick thrust into
the ground, constitute a trap, into which, if a small
bird is fool enough to hop after your crumbs, he
richly deserves to be caught. Then, however, he has
no pain to endure except reflections upon his own
folly, until you sake him out and deal with him as
“1n] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 95



you will. Buta steel trap is a shameful and wicked
invention, for whatever animal it may be set, and one
the use of which nothing can justify. It is generally
set overnight, and after setting it, the trapper goes
quietly to his bed until the next morning. But the
unhappy animal who may chance to set his foot in
the trap, very likely within an hour or two of its
having been set, is kept in agony all night long—
perhaps far into the morning, until either death from
pain or exhaustion puts an end to his sufferings, or
his captor comes lazily along to see the result of his
trapping, and ruthlessly knocks the captive on the
head or wrings his neck. No bird or beast, say I,
can ever have done mankind harm enough to justify
such cruelty as is inflicted by these steel traps, and
you will all allow that I speak feelingly.

The squirrel had hardly given me his opinion,
when I heard the voice of a man calling to a dog on
the other side of the wood. Probably it was the
keeper, but whether it was.so or not, it warned me
that I had no time to lose, and that the effort for
freedom must be made. Accordingly I gave a tre-
mendous flutter and tried to rise from the ground.
Never shall I forget the intense agony of that moment.
It seemed as if all my limbs were being torn from
my body—my heart beat as if it would burst—a film
seemed to come over my eyes, and I as nearly as
possible fainted away.

“Courage, brave bird!’ shouted the excellent
squirrel in my ear; ‘one more such effort and you are
saved!’

I heard him, but could not muster strength for
96 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. (tr.



another attempt until a minute or two had elapsed.
Then, much nearer than before, the sounds of a
human voice reached my ear and awakened me to life
again, With another flutter I rose from the ground,
a sharp pang ran through my right leg right up into
my body, and my whole leg seemed to have been
left behind as I rose a free bird from the ground. It
was not so, however. My leg was left me, but my
foot, severed at the ankle, remained in the trap, and I
fluttered with only one foot on to the top of the
hedge, and sat there ready to die with pain and ex-
haustion. The good little squirrel watched me with
the greatest interest and gave me such words of com-
fort and encouragement as he had at his command. -
As, however, he did not feel over and above secure in
the immediate neighbourhood of man, he scuttled
away over the dry leaves as fast as he could when he
heard footsteps drawing near. From my post in the
hedge I observed a man in a black velveteen coat,
thick trowsers and gaiters, with a stick in his hand,
come slowly along the track, followed by a black re-
triever. He stopped when he came near the hedge
and stood looking at the trap which my struggles had
dragged from beneath the leaves.

‘Drat them poachers!’ he exclaimed after a
moment, ‘they’re at it again—that rascal Bailey set
that trap, Pll be bound. Pretty bold, too, right inside
our wood ;’ and stooping down he took the trap up in
his hand and examined it. ‘Well, he presently con-
tinued, ‘no pheasant for him this time, at all events.
Nothing but a rook’s foot, and that’s more than he'll
get,’ and so saying, he opened the teeth, let my poor foot
II] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 97



fall'on the ground, and taking the trap and the chain
by which it had been fastened in the ground, walked
away with them, muttering to himself as he went in a
manner by no means complimentary to the trap-
setter.

I felt a small glimmering of satisfaction when I
found that the fiend who had been the cause of my
misfortune had lost his trap, but this feeling was far
overbalanced by the sense of the great loss which I
had sustained. Not to dwell longer upon so painful
a subject, I may as well say, without further parti-
culars, that after I had rested for a time sufficient to
recover my strength, I betook myself to the abode of
one of those owls who had studied the art of surgery,
and having been successfully treated by this skilful
practitioner, was enabled, after a short time, to re-
sume my daily pursuits. But for a long while I felt
great inconvenience from the loss of my foot, and
even to this very day I find it wearisome work to be
‘obliged to stand on one leg continually. I declare it
is worse than always harping on one idea or invari-
ably telling the same story. I have known people
who do both the one and the other, but then ¢hey
have this advantage, that they only bore others,
whilst standing on one leg bores oneself to a great
extent.

After this adventure, you may well believe that I
was exceedingly careful in my search for food, and
indeed in all my proceedings. There was always a
good deal of danger to be apprehended from mankind
especially at particular seasons of the year. One of
the worst—perhaps I ought to say the very worst—of

H
98 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [iI.



these I found to be the time which ought to be the
happiest time for all created beings: I mean Christ-
mas-tide. It would be happy enough for birds and
beasts, in spite of occasional frost and snow, but for
the doings of the monster Man. On ‘Boxing Day,’
as they call it, and indeed on sundry other days, as far
as I could ever make out, half the men and boys run
about with guns in their hands, which they use in the
most reckless manner. I do not think that they pur-
sue any particular kind of game, but, as the saying is,
‘all is fish that comes to their net.’ I do not suppose
that a pheasant or a partridge would be spared by
these gunners if they came upon such birds in their
wanderings, but they are satisfied with birds of much
less importance. Sparrows, robins, tomtits, and all
such small fry they pursue with as much eagerness as
if their lives depended upon the success of their enter-
prise. A lark mounting slowly in the air with his joy-
ful song, affords a fair mark for their aim, though to kill
anything when flying is rather beyond their skill.
But a blackbird in a hawthorn hedge is a grand prize
for them, and I have seen the would-be sports-
men follow such a bird from hedge to hedge with
a perseverance and enthusiasm worthy of a better
cause. These people are a great nuisance to an
honest rook who has his living to get, and plenty to
do to find food for himself when the ground is covered
with frost and snow.

I remember on one occasion J had flown down with
some mates of mine into a sheep-fold, where the ani-
mals had trodden away the snow to a considerable
extent, and we thought we had a good chance of
a THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 99



picking up something for dinner. There was a hedge
not far off, and along this same hedge came several
of these Christmas sportsmen, on the look-out for any-
thing they could find to shootat. Iwas pecking away
very quictly, with several of my companions near me,
and sheep scattered here and there all round about
us. Presently I thought I would perch on the back
of one of these animals, where there is frequently food
to be found, and I followed the bent of my inclination
in doing so.

Of course I fancied I was quite safe, although
the gunners were tolerably near. I knew that the
sheep would be my protector; and, moreover, the
weather was so intensely cold and my hunger so
great that I cared less for possible danger than perhaps
was prudent. Anyhow, neither I nor any rook in his
senses could have expected what followed. From the
hedge about thirty yards off, one of the younger of
the sportsmen took a deliberate pot-shot at me
whilst I sat on the top of the sheep! Fortunately
for me, this class of sportsmen are not addicted to
hitting the object at which they aim, or it might
have gone hard with me. He hit the sheep, however,
and the poor animal, astonished at this unexpected
treatment, bounded up so suddenly that I was forced
to fly off, which I did without delay. From the
gestures and voices of the men I found that the reck-
less youth who had fired at a bird among the sheep
got at least a good scolding for his pains, but this
would have availed me but littie had I been struck
by his shot as he intended.

The wood-pigeons were a source of considerable

H2
100 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1I.



annoyance to us rooks at this time; and, for the
matter of that, they are so still. They have always
had a habit of flocking together in the winter time,
and descending in large flights upon the turnip-fields,
or anywhere else where they imagine that food is
to be foand. Ofcourse no one objects to a wood-
pigeon getting his own living like any other fellow.
‘Live and let live’ is an excellent old adage, and I
wouldbe the last rook in the world to caw a noteagainst
another bird of a different species who was only doing
his duty to himself and his family.

But it was not only always the case (asI have found
to my cost more than once) that in severe winters, when
the quantity of food was insufficient, the proceedings
of these wood-pigeons in congregating in such large
numbers, materially clashed with rook interests, but
they were also productive of very serious consequences.
Farmers and others, who could bear with equanimity
the presence of a few rooks, were inspired with fury
at the devastations of the other birds, and were more-
over possessed with the idea (which I am bound to own
that experience is said to have justified) that the flesh
of a wood-pigeon, roast or baked ina pie, was exceed-
ingly good eating. The result not unnaturally was
that wherever these birds assembled, we used to have
gunners after them, hiding behind hedges and stalk-
ing their victims over turnip-fields until no place was
safe. True, these men were generally a better class
of sportsmen than the Christmas gunners of whom I
have already made mention. They scorned small birds,
and were, moreover, not such despicably bad shots as
the others. Still, you know, a man with a gun in his
11.] . THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. IoT



hand is zever to be trusted. He may be of a naturally
cruel disposition and fond of killing for killing’s sake ;
he may be ignorant of the nature and character of
rooks ; he may be short-sighted, and mistake a rook,
flying in the sun, for a pigeon; he may be in want
of a bird to serve as a scarecrow, or indeed, even
if none of these things chance to be the case, he may
bea good shot, fond of showing his skill, and if a rook
or any other bird comes over him as a somewhat
difficult shot, he may fire upon it, in no particularly
cruel spirit, but just to try his skill, to ‘keep his hand
in,’ and to prove his prowess, without once casting a
thought to the pain and misery he may thus inflict
upon an innocent and friendly bird.

One of my dearest friends fell a victim toa sports-
man of this kind. He was returning home, I sup-
pose, from some shooting excursion, on a windy day,
and at the corner of an avenue of trees, a number of
rooks, among whom was my lamented Glossy-back,
whirled high in the air above his head with no suspicion
of evil for a moment. The man was, I suppose,
struck with the eccentric nature of their flight, and
the difficulty which it would present to an unskilful
sportsman, and desirous of indicating his own reputa-
tion (which nobody had attacked) fired right and left
at the poor birds without the slightest provocation,
and my poor Glossy-back and another fell wounded
to the ground. The hard-hearted monster who had per-
formed this barbarous deed merely smiled a self-satis-
fied smile at his success, and then walked calmly home-
wards without bestowing another look or thought upon
his unhappy victims. I happened myself to be among
102 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, [u.



the crowd of rooks present at this sad occurrence.
We were all much frightened at the report of the
double shot, and when we ascertained the cause, and
the extent of our loss, we were terribly embittered
against the perpetrator of so nefarious a deed. Were
zo mortal men, then, to be trusted ? Could not evena
sportsman, returning from the pursuit of hislegitimate
prey, withhold himself from attacking birds who had
never harmed him, and whose flesh, at all events at
that particular season of the year, was neither deli-
cate to the palate nor nutritious to the internal orga-
nisation of man? Was there no remedy against these
hard-hearted oppressors ?

We ruffled our feathers with intense anger, and
cawed forth our indignation in vociferous tones upon
the neighbouring trees. But, after a short time, anger
against those who were beyond the reach of our puny
vengeance gave way to deep, heartfelt sorrow for the
lamented dead. I may as well tell you that Glossy-
back, the friend and companion of my middle-age,
had been a deservedly popular bird, of singular purity
and amiability of disposition, and in fact the very light
and life of the rookery to which I belonged. This
circumstance, coupled with the peculiarly tragic nature
of his fate, induced some of us to determine upon
giving him and his fellow-victim a public funeral.

The idea had hardly been broached before it was
eagerly accepted by the whole of rookdom. Hard
by the old rockery there was a large plantation,
which, from its shape and formation, I should imagine
to have been formerly a large pond or lake. It sloped
‘away downwards from each side, forming a large, long
I1.] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 103



basin, and tall trees grew in and around it, whilst the
brushwood was very slight and straggling. Here,
time out of mind, the bodies of the best and most
illustrious of our race had been deposited, when they
had been fortunate enough to die near home, and to
escape the worthless hands of those who would have
devoted their carcasses to the melancholy and de-
grading use of serving as a scarecrow to keep others
of their kind from the newly-sown corn.

It was in this sacred spot that we resolved to place
those two noble birds who had fallen in the manner
which I have related. No trouble or expense was to
be spared on this occasion. Rooks were summoned
from every quarter, and attended in large quantities:
crows came up from the sea-shore to join the troop of
mourners ; myriads of starlings assembled to witness
the sad ceremony, and even the saucy jackdaws sent
a strong contingent of their noisy tribe, who were
singularly quiet and well-behaved on the occasion.

But I think what touched us most was the presence
of the two old ravens who had inhabited the tall fir-
trees for many nesting seasons past, and were popularly
believed to be ‘as old as the hills.’ How old that may
be Ihave never been able to ascertain with accuracy,
but I have no doubt that, as a well-conducted and sober
raven is said to live for several centuries, and there are
grave doubts about the necessity of such a bird ever
dying at all save by mischance or murder, these two
birds were of a very great age indeed. Struck with
pleasure indeed were we rooks when the two venerable
creatures came to pay this tribute to departed - worth,
and sat with melancholy croak upon the dead branches
104. WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. {il





of an oak hard by. Then and there we vowed friend-
ship for the future with birds who had shown them-
selves to be of so feeling and kind-hearted a disposi-
tion, and every rook there present felt, I venture to
say, an increase of his own self-respect when he saw
how his race was honoured by this attention of the
larger and stronger bird whose claim to the chieftain-
ship of the rook and crow tribe has been generally
admitted. So pleased and proud are we all of a little
attention bestowed upon us by those of high birth and
position, and so much is Rank respected even in our
great Rook Republic.

When the mournful ceremony was concluded, and
we had all departed upon our several occupations, I
found myself overwhelmed with sadness on thinking
over the friend I had lost.. I could tell you many
incidents that had occurred to us both, but that, to
my mind, friendship is too sweet and solemn a thing
to parade before the public eye. Suffice it to say
that I was never so perfectly happy as when alone
with Glossy-back. He shared my joys; I poured out
my sorrows into his friendly ear; we had no secrets
from each other, and felt a mutual happiness in help-
ing each other in our journey through life. Oh, what
is there to equal such a friendship as this? I have
known and loved more than one female rook in my
time, and found pleasure in ladies’ society all my
life. But I have ever found them more or less fitful
and changeable, their tempers often uncertain and
variable, and their disposition generally capricious.
The longer I live the more I become convinced that
in a deep, true, heart-exchanging friendship with a
1] THE HISTORY OF A-ROOK. 105

rook of my own sex the only secure and trustworthy
happiness is to be found. Such indeed was my re-
lationship with my beloved Glossy-back, and to think
that the hearts which had been thus knitted together
by such a bond should have been disunited by the
cruel hand of death was a misery which made me
half inclined to terminate my own existence. No
more might J roam abroad with my friend of friends,
searching the fields together for our food, racing
together in the high wind, or sitting side by side upon
the tall elms, cawing over the state of the world in
general and rookdom in particular. No more might
we unfold to each other the legends of old days of
which educated rooks are so fond, or prophesy the
future history of the world which we saw daily pro-
gressing around us. All this was past, and on my
solitary roosting-tree that night I passed a miserable
time indeed, looking round with sleepless eyes for my
lost friend—alas! in vain! but hardly able to realise
that he was not by me, or falling asleep only to dream
of him and to wake again to the sad consciousness of
my terrible loss,

My life became a perfect blank. My food palled
upon me; I refused corn—neglected insects—grubs
became positively distasteful to my feeble appetite,
and I avoided the favourite feeding-grounds upon
which my beloved Glossy-back and I had so often
fed together. No occupation could take my thoughts
from the past; as for pleasure, I hated the very
word, and day succeeded day without bringing to
me any solace whatever. Under these distressing
circumstances my health visibly suffered. My eyes
106 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [it



ran with tears; I felt a constant chill through my
breast and under my wings, and several of my tail
feathers dropped out, to my great disfigurement.
My friends strove in vain to arouse me from this state
of dejection.

‘Bea rook!’ they cried; ‘it is unworthy for such
a bird as you are to give way in such a manner to
this inordinate affection and regret. Your friend—and
our friend—was indeed an estimable, nay, a noble
bird; but there are others who love you well—even
some connected with you by the ties of blood, which
he was not, and you owe it to them to give way no
longer.’

Alas! how little did these would-be comforters
know of the rook-heart and its workings! One
cannot love by law and rule, and I had given my
whole heart to Glossy-back, and could not replace
him at the bidding of duty, if duty it was to do so.
However, as I had my own reasons for not wishing
to die, to which consummation my grief was rapidly
tending, I at length made a gigantic effort, and so far
rallied from my grief as to seek consolation in litera-
ture. I had always been a great reader, and I found
it possible to resume some of those studies which in
my later years and during the period of my heart-
sufficing, life-engrossing friendship I had somewhat
neglected. I read Long-beak’s ‘ History of Rookdom,’
Grub-lover’s ‘Man a necessary Evil, Follow-plough’s
‘Grubs and how to get them,’ and a variety of pam-
phlets bearing on social questions, and exposing the
rapacity, tyranny, and cruelty of mankind, at the
same time pointing out the noble and excellent
I1.] THE HISTORY OF A ROOK. 107



qualities of rooks in general, and the happy future of
dominion over all other creatures which certainly
awaits our race. Then, wishing to vary my studies,
and to drown my still ever-present sorrow by greater
intellectual exertions, I became a contributor to the
‘Rookery Magazine ;’ and thus it was that I was
induced to write the account of my life and adventures
which J have just been able to give you.

If anything which I have said should prove bene-
ficial to young and inexperienced rooks, just about to
enter a life, of the sorrows and vicissitudes of which
they may gather some knowledge by my experience,
I shall be amply rewarded for the trouble which I
have taken; and I can only conclude by saying that
I hope they will be of opinion that in the course of
my passage through life I have done nothing to
deteriorate from the position which I occupy as a
rook of good family and position, nothing which could
lower the dignity of rookdom; above all, nothing
which might be deemed unworthy of the friend of
Glossy-back !
108 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [itn



ITI.

THE SILVER FAIRIES.

IT was an old piece of furniture—a very old piece of
furniture, and it stood in an old house, too. Nobody
knew when that house had been built, or how long it
had stood in the corner of the dark dismal London
street of which it was certainly the principal mansion.
You had only to look at it, however, to be certain
that it had occupied its position for a very great
number of years, and that if age could make houses
respectable, it had reached the very climax of respect-
ability. But, like other respectable creatures, it had
its reverses of fortune; and at the time of which we
write it was being ransacked and trodden down by a
motley tribe of persons hardly so respectable as itself,
who had come to witness that desecration of an
ancient building and dismemberment of its internal
arrangements which are popularly known as a sale by
auction. Ah! what a melancholy thing is that self-
same transaction, when household gods are scattered
to the winds, and objects which have been the
hallowed treasures of a happy home are exposed to
the gaze of the vulgar herd, and chaffered for by
greasy and disreputable bidders. Not that all bidders
are of necessity cither disreputable or greasy, but
that such characters not unfrequently preponderate
m1] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 109



at a metropolitan auction. Anyhow, there were
plenty of such present upon the occasion of the sale
of old Mr. Titledeeds’ effects in the aforesaid house,
and great was the competition for the books and
china sold that day. For Mr. Titledeeds, an eminent
lawyer lately deceased, had left behind him a repu-
tation which would have filled the house of any man
who left directions that his property should be dis-
posed of by auction. He was reputed to have been a
first-rate judge of china, and his collection of old books
and manuscripts was supposed to be of great value.
So when his legal subtlety failed any longer to defeat
the great suitor Death, and the final verdict had been
given against him, after vainly attempting to obtain
a decree of ‘ne exeat’ against his breath, he yielded
it up, without a ‘demurrer, and having nobody to
whom he cared to bequeath his property, directed
that everything should be sold by auction and the
proceeds divided among certain charities for which
he had never shown the least predilection or sympathy
during his lifetime. Then the undertaker executed
a writ of ‘habeas corpus’ upon his carcase, and Mr.
Titledeeds was known no more upon earth.

Hence it came to pass that the sale took place in
the old house, and that on the appointed day a numer-
ous crowd attended, and a brisk competition ensued
for the books and china. Nobody thought much of
the furniture.

The tables, of strange and antique fashion and of
unwieldy dimensions, fetched comparatively nothing.
The chairs went for an old song, and wardrobes, beds,
and chests of drawers realised but little. And when
Tyo WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. [ru



the strange old piece of furniture the technical name
of which I am utterly unable to give, was put up by
the auctioneer, it attracted but very little attention.
It was made of oak, had strange knobs of brass
about it where you would least have expected them,
and it stood upon four large wooden claws by way of
feet. It opened towards you, and thus formed a flat
desk at which you could write, with large drawers
below, whilst the upper part opposite you as you sat
writing was a combination of drawers and pigeon-
holes more easy to be imagined than described.

I don’t know what possessed old Simon Ricketts
with an idea that he should like to become the owner
of this strange piece of furniture: nevertheless he had
the idea, and eventually, as will be seen, he had the
furniture too. Simon Ricketts was a milkman ina
large way of business, and as honest as milkmen
usually are. He never watered his milk when he
could supply his customers all round without it,
though as his customers were many, and his supply of
milk limited, he felt himself occasionally bound to
strain his conscience rather than disappoint his friends.
He paid his debts when he had money to do so, and
sought credit when he hadn’t. The latter, however,
was not his ordinary condition, for close attention to
business and a thrifty habit of life had enabled Simon
to save a little capital, and he was beginning to feel
rather above the world. Still, he had no idea of
giving up his trade, at which he still laboured, though
he allowed himself somewhat more holidays than when
his means were smaller and his labours necessarily
greater.
111.] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 111



It is well-known to persons who have considered
the subject that there is no question the correct
answer to which is more entirely a matter of opinion
than what is the best way to spend a holiday. Dif-
ferent people have different ideas upon this important
subject. Some like a trip to the sea-side. ‘A happy
day at Rosherville’ has its attractions for others ; while
there are those who firmly believe no other enjoy-
ment to be equal to that of sitting still with your
hands in your pockets, doing absolutely nothing.
None of these, however, would have suited Simon
Ricketts, whose great delight upon his leisure days
was to frequent public auctions. There was some-
thing fascinating to him in all the circumstances
attending such transactions. The pleasure and pri-
vilege of being able to walk into somebody else’s
house and wander all over it as if you were its master,
were highly valued by Simon, although enjoyed in
common with the rest of the world. He loved to look
over all the lots, to scrutinise the china as if he knew
all about it, to gaze upon the pictures as if he were
an artist born and bred, and to wonder what various
articles would fetch of the cost and value of which he
knew absolutely nothing. Then, the proceedings of
the auctioneer were of enormous interest to Simon,
and he would watch the biddings for each article as it
was put up, with a gravity and attention which one
would hardly have expected from a person in his con-
dition of life.

Upon this occasion Simon had been no less eager
and attentive than usual. He had seen the old port-
wine (so well known among those friends of the de-
112 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [ru



parted Titledeeds who had been fortunate enough to
be upon his dining-list) knocked down at fabulous
prices, he had marked the eager competition which
took place over rare bits of china, and probably had
been somewhat astonished at the sums which certain
lovers of the same had given for the specimens upon
which they had set their affections. Still Simon
Ricketts spoke never a word, and joined in no bidding,
for wine and china were not in his line of business,
and the money bid scemed to him altogether too much
for consumeable commodities or brittle articles. But
his ears pricked up when the auctioneer came to the
furniture.

By this time some of the most ardent bidders
had taken their departure, and among those -who
remained the competition appeared less earnest
and vehement. Therefore it was that the furniture
did not bring much, and, as I have already said,
tables went cheap, chairs fetched a mere nothing,
and much well-made furniture, being of a style and
pattern somewhat out of date, was sold at a bargain
for the purchaser. So convinced was shrewd
Simon of this fact, that he now and then ventured
upon a ‘bid’ for some article which appeared to him
to be going for a figure much below its real
value. But the professional brokers, among whom
were sundry men with hooked noses and keen eyes
who seemed to understand one another pretty well,
would not let Simon buy when he wished to do so.
They overbid him each time, and one or two of them
indulged in sarcastic observations upon his personal
appearance which were little calculated to flatter the
Itt] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 113



pride or self-respect of the worthy milkman. At last,
however, the old piece of furniture already mentioned
was put up, and pronounced at once by those present
to be an antiquated affair, only fit for the lumber-room.
Some one bid a sovereign, another followed with a bid
of five-and-twenty shillings, and amid some laughing
and chaffing, the article was run up tg thirty-seven
shiliings and sixpence, and the auctioneer, lifting his
hammer and his voice at the same time, exclaimed,

‘Now then, gentlemen, only thirty-seven shillings
offered for this valuable lot—why, its age surely en-
titles it to more respect—will zodody give me another
bid? Ifthere’s no advance I don’t dwell upon it.
No one else? Going! going!’

The hammer was upon the point of descending,
when a solemn voice exclaimed in deliberate tones,
‘Five pounds.’

Everybody pricked up his ears immediately, and
the knowing ones fancied fora moment that Simon
was either an artful old dodger who had discovered
the worth of the article in question to be greater than
was apparent to a casual observer, or that he was
some one so utterly unversed in the art of bidding at
auction sales, that he might serve as an object for
their amusement, and be run up a few pounds more
for an article to which he had taken a fancy. But
their second thoughts induced them to change their
minds, and one and all came to the conclusion that
the old man, being angry at having been outbidden
in all his previous attempts, had determined to run
them up by way of revenge, feeling sure that they
would outbid him now as before. From this point of

I
TI4 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. {rit.



view their obvious policy was to let the poor fellow
fall into his own trap, and become the possessor of the
lot in question for more than double the sum already
offered for it by themselves. So, being possessed by
this exceedingly clever idea, they forbore from bidding,
and joined in a hearty laugh when the old piece of
furniture was, presently knocked down to the worthy
milkman. This was exactly what Simon had ex-
pected and wished, and having thus obtained the
article upon which he had strangely set his heart, he
quietly withdrew from the auction room, and having
paid for his new possession, made the necessary ar-
rangements for its transfer to his own house.

Now the dwelling of Simon was in no very fash-
ionable situation, nor was it one in any way remark-
able for its size, architecture, or general convenience.
It was more than a cottage certainly, but hardly to
be called a large house, and, in fact, there was nothing
comfortable about it, outside or inside, excepting in
two rooms—the kitchen, and Simon’s own particular
Den, beyond that necessary apartment. Simon
Ricketts was a widower. Although he had had
several children born to him, none remained to cheer
his fireside or comfort his old age. His eldest boy had
gone to sea, and had not been heard of for many
years ; his only other son, who had been a railway sig-
nalman, had died, some said of a broken heart a few
months after his dismissal on account of an accident,
the occurrence of which had been attributed to his
wicked (though scarce. extraordinary) conduct in
going to sleep at his post, after having been thirty-six
hours on duty at a stretch. Simon’s daughters, too
1] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 115



had not been entirely satisfactory to him, having, with
one exception, declined to be reared, and resolutely
died in their infancy. The exception was Polly—
pretty Polly Ricketts, who might have been called ‘the
apple of her father’s eye,’ though somewhat of a crab-
apple, perhaps, from a natural sourness. of disposition,
until she mortally offended her affectionate parent,
first by running away with a journeyman baker, and
then by dying before there had been time for a family
reconciliation. However, as the baker made what
atonement he could by shortly afterwards dying also,
Simon bore up, and not only so, but took home the
infant daughter whom Polly left behind, and brought
her up in his own house.

At the time of our story, little Dorothy Matson—
or Dolly, as she was generally called—was about
seventeen years old, and, both in appearance and be-
haviour, did great credit to old Martha Pattison, who
had presided over Simon’s establishment, ever since
his wife’s death, in the capacity of housekeeper and
general manager of everything about the premises,
Simon himself excepted. Nobody could manage
him, and nobody tried to do so. He went his own
way, and liked everybody else to go theirs, as long
as they did not clash with him. Martha took care
not to do this, and as she was a near relation to
his departed wife, the arrangement answered well
enough both for father and daughter.

Old Simon was not a hard man to live with, pro-
vided nobody went into his Den, and this was what
nobody dared to do unless specially invited. The

Den, as I have already said, was entered by a door
I2
116 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. ful



from the kitchen, which was itself rather a large, com-
fortable room, and served Dolly and old Martha for
their usual sitting-room, the parlour being seldom
used, but kept as a state apartment into which
visitors out of the ordinary run might be shown.
Those who were fortunate, or unfortunate, enough to
have obtained access to Simon’s Den, wondered what
the old man could find therein to make him so fond
of it, as he certainly was. It was lighted by a sky-
light, and consequently somewhat ill-ventilated, as
the sky-lights of that locality were not constructed
with a view to the admission of air. It was there-
fore less pleasant to the nose than might otherwise
have been the case, whilst dust and dirt were by no
means strangers; and the broom of the housemaid
being almost unknown, there existed in every corner of
the little room that which worthy Martha designated
a ‘dreadful litter ;’ a carpet, or rather the pieces of
what had been a carpet in its earlier days, covered
the floor; the walls might, or might not, have been
originally papered, for age, dirt, and inattention had
combined to discolour them to a degree which made
it exccedingly difficult to determine what their condi-
tion might formerly have been. In short, the appear-
ance of the little room was not prepossessing to the
fastidious stranger, but to Simon Ricketts it was
Paradise. ‘The Den had one redeeming feature, the
chimney never smoked ; this, however, could not be
said of Simon, who loved to sit in his old arm-chair
opposite the bright little fire which Mrs. Pattison’s
care provided for him, and to find solace in his pipe
after his day’s work.
I11.] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 117



I am not sure but that it was during one of
these evening sittings that the idea came into his
head that there might with advantage be more fur-
niture in the Den. There was a large recess on one
side of the room, into which different boxes, packing-
cases, and various other articles had from time to time
been cast, but which could well have accommodated a
respectable piece of furniture. So thought Simon as
he sat and smoked ; and hence it probably arose that
when he entered the house in which the sale was going
on, and cast his eyes upon the article which forms the
subject of our story, the recess in his little Den rose
before his mind, and he began to think how the one
would fit into the other. Be this as it may, the
result was, as we have seen, that old Simon became
the purchaser of the piece of furniture, which was duly
conveyed to his house, and actually fitted into the
recess, after the boxes had been banished, just as if
it had been made for it.

Old Simon was uncommonly proud of his new
possession. As soon as it had been safely established
in the recess, and those who had brought it were well
out of the house, he placed himself in front of it and
gazed upon it for several minutes with an eye of affec-
tion ; then he proceeded to examine it more carefully
and thoroughly than he had been able to do at the
sale. It was certainly very substantially built, for in
the days when it had been made, people thought more
of strength and durability in their furniture, as well as
in their houses, than has since been the custom.
Perhaps they were more careless of elegance and
classical design than their successors; perhaps ma-
118 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, — [itt



terials were cheaper and more plentiful with them
than with us; at any rate, such was the case, and the
result was, that Simon found himself the owner of a
piece of furniture which would last the length of his
own life and a good many more lives if it had decent
and proper treatment. He opened it with becoming
care, looked into every drawer and pigeon-hole, tapped
it in various places where he suspected the possible
existence of a secret recess, and felt more and more
satisfied with his wisdom in having made so good a
purchase.

‘Five pounds!’ he exclaimed to himself at the
conclusion of his investigation: ‘Five pounds! why,
the thing would have been cheap at double the money!
Sour my cream if I haven’t done well in buying it,
that I have!’

‘That you have !’. said a voice as Simon concluded
his sentence, and it so startled him that he jumped
back a yard and a half immediately in the greatest
astonishment.

Who had spoken, and from whom did the voice
proceed? He looked in front of him; he looked
behind ; he gazed up at the ceiling and then down
upon the floor ; he turned first to the right hand and
then to the left, but there was nothing whatever to be
seen. Yet most assuredly some one had spoken. It
could not be fancy, for he was not a fanciful man ; he
could scarcely attribute the sound to the echo, for
there was not, and never had been, any echo in that
room since it had first been built—could he have been
dreaming, and had he not really heard his own words
repeated ? Simon stood for several moments wrapt in
II] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 119



mingled astonishment and dread, but as he heard no
more and saw nothing, he gradually, though very un-
willingly, came to the conclusion that he must have
been mistaken, and that the voice had existed only in
his imagination. However, he felt somewhat less at
his ease for the next few minutes, and during the rest
of the afternoon was almost nervous—a thing which
he had never been before in all his life. He caught
himself looking sharply round over his shoulder now
and then, he knew not why, and felt a coldness about
the region of the heart which was not usual. Still,
nothing happened to alarm him ; he took his tea with
Martha Pattison and Dolly in the kitchen, as was com-
monly his practice, and afterwards retreated again to
his Den, seated himself in his arm-chair by the fire,
lighted his pipe, and began to enjoy himself as an
Englishman anda milkman might fairly do. He had
not half finished his enjoyment or his pipe, but was
proceeding to his entire satisfaction with both, when a
strange and novel occurrence turned the whole current
of his thoughts and filled him with the most profound
astonishment. He had been pondering over cows and
calves, cream and milk, curds and whey, and every-
thing connected with the honourable trade of which
he had so long been the ornament in that locality.
But all such ideas were entirely driven out of his head
by the events which suddenly took place.

There was a strange creaking within his new pur-
chase, as if it was greatly troubled in its internal
arrangements, and could by no means compose itself
into that state of tranquillity which befits an ordinary
article of household furniture. When this creaking
120 WiéTISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [uur.

(which first attracted Simon’s attention) had continued
for a short time, the front part of the piece of furniture
deliberately opened itself, just as if it had been un-
fastened by an invisible hand. Immediately afterwards,
a low, sweet strain of music broke upon the astonished
ears of the old milkman, and from the pigeon-holes
(as it seemed to him) there issued a variety of little
figures of the most extraordinary character. They
were all apparently made of frosted silver, or clad in
garments of that metal, which fitted so closely to
their bodies as to give the latter the appearance of
being really made of the same. As nearly as Simon
could judge, his visitors averaged from six to eight
inches in height ; their figures were all excellently well
proportioned ; they wore hats of varied and fantastic
shape upon their heads, but all of silver also, and the
beauty of their general dress and appearance was
perfectly marvellous .to behold. When as many as
twenty or thirty of these little creatures had come
down upon the desk which was formed by the open-
ing of the front of their abode, the music struck up a
more lively air, and they began to dance.

Simon knew very little about dancing, but he had
seen various shows perambulating the streets, in which
puppets hopped and skipped about, to the great
amusement of children whose parents could be
prevailed upon to allow the said shows to stop before
their windows. But no dolls of this kind that Simon
had ever seen could dance like the little figures now
before him. They moved lightly, nimbly, and in
perfect time with the music; they twisted themselves
about in the strangest and most fantastic attitudes,
I1.J THE SILVER FAIRIES. 121



but always gracefully, so that it was impossible not to
admire them even in their most grotesque postures,
The music varied too, in a manner which enabled the
performers to exhibit their powers to perfection. Now
it was slow and solemn, and the movements followed
it faithfully, everyone of them displaying a mixture
of dignity and graceful action very pleasant to behold;
anon, when the tune was more lively, their motions
corresponded with the change, and as it became
faster still, more and more animated was the perform-
ance of the dancers.

Simon Ricketts, as may be well supposed, gazed
upon the scene before him with the greatest astonish-
ment. He had let his pipe fall from his mouth, and
leant forward in his arm-chair, with his hands on his
knees, staring forward at the strange proceedings
which were taking place, and keeping his eyes firmly
riveted on the wonderful little beings who had so
unexpectedly favoured him with a visit. Like every-
one else, Simon had certainly heard of fairies, but his
knowledge of them was but very limited, as his life
had been one of too practical a character to admit of
much enquiry into the existence and habits of such
strange beings, and his education had been too much
neglected to allow of his having read or studied much,
even upon such an important subject. He was very
certain, however, that those upon whom he now gazed
were no ordinary, every-day creatures, and after the
first moment of wonder had passed, the thought
crossed his mind that his new purchase might, after
all, turn out to have been dear at the money. Suppose
it was, as seemed beyond the possibility of a doubt
122 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. (ui.

to be the case, haunted by beings who were more than
mortal, how could he tell whether they would be
friendly or the reverse to the man who had brought
them and their abode from a place to which they were
very probably bound by the strong ties of old associa-
tion? For all he knew, they might bitterly resent
their removal, and visit the consequences upon his
devoted head.

Simon was not left long in doubt upon the ques-
tion which he thus asked himself with some trepida-
tion. After their dance had continued for a short
time, the music suddenly ceased, when the little
figures ranged themselves on each side of the plateau
on which they had been performing, and bowed with
deep and courteous respect as another figure, very
little larger than the biggest of themselves, emerged
from the centre pigeon-hole, walked calmly and
deliberately down their ranks, carelessly nodding its
head right and Icft, until it reached the end of the
desk, when it gave a slight cough, cleared its throat,
and was evidently about to address the wonder-struck
Simon. This figure was clad, like the rest, entirely in
frosted silver, and was only to be distinguished from
the others by the circumstance that the cap which it
wore upon its head was circled by a broad band of
pure gold. Its demeanour was graceful and dignified,
and as its dress gave no particular indication of its
sex, Simon marvelled whether it was male or female,
until it opened its mouth, when the tones of its voice
proved to be far softer and sweeter than those which
commonly fall to the. let of the rougher portion of
created beings. It was evident at once to the old
ay





et





=



SAPP eee

ga ty Le

Hy



SILVER FAIRIES

THE
III.] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 123



milkman that a Fairy Queen of some sort or other
was before him, and he prepared to listen with respect-
ful attention to the communication which she was
apparently about to make.

‘Simon Ricketts!’ she exclaimed, upon which
Simon, confused and startled at the somewhat abrupt
manner in which the words were uttered, mechanically
continued the description of himself as he had seen
it upon some parish list: ‘Milkman—23 Ebenezer
Street—South Road London,—that’s me!’ he said, as
if to assure himself and his visitor of his identity.

The Fairy took no notice of the interruption, but
again pronounced the good man’s name in a clear and
emphatic tone of voice.

‘Simon Ricketts! you have fallen in with a piece
of good luck, if you only know how to turn it to
proper advantage. The old piece of furniture which
you bought at the auction has long been the home of
my people, the Silver Fairies ; we have occupied it for
many years, and have no desire to leave it. It is our
desire and our habit to assist and bring good-fortune
to the families which, from time to time, become the
owners of this precious possession. We do not wish
to alter our custom in this respect; you and your
family will receive the full benefit of our residence
within your house, if you treat us with proper respect
and consideration ; and indeed it is not much that we
require of you. Only let us remain quietly where we
are, and do not move our home again if you can
possibly help it. Whilst we are here, do not let our
ears be offended by any bad language, and let not
anything dishonest or evil be discussed or performed
124 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, ~- {tt



in our presence. If you only observe these conditions,
you will find the result greatly to your advantage.
We will afford you information upon any subject you
may desire, we will forward your views, for yourself
and relations, in any manner you wish, and we will
give you our very best advice whenever ysu shall
think fit to ask it. I hope you will be of opinion that
these conditions are as favourable as you could have
expected, and that you will readily fall in with our
views upon the subject.’

Here the Fairy stopped, and Simon, as he after-
wards remarked, felt so flabbergasted, that for a
moment or two he could not find his tongue, and
therefore remained silent. Presently, however, he
somewhat regained his composure, and, as politeness
and self-interest both required, made answer to the
Silver Lady as well as he could, at the same time
scratching his head as if to assist his ideas.

‘I bean’t no scholard, marm,’ he said, ‘nor I don’t
know werry well how I ought to speak to sich as you.
But if so be as you means well to I, then I means well
to you, and there an’t no call to say more as I knows
on.’ With this answer Simon contented himself, and
waited to see if his visitor would be satisfied.

Apparently she was so, for with a pleasant smile
and a laugh which you might fairly call silvery, she
said, ‘I think we understand one another, good Simon.
Depend upon it I shall keep my part of the bargain,
and mind you do the same. Now, is there anything
you want to know, or any service I can render you,
before retiring for the night ?’

Simon scratched his head again, and then said
an] THE SILVER FAIRIES, 125



solemnly: ‘If I bean’t too bold: an’t you werry
cramped in that there old consarn, and if so be as
you know so much and can move about so uncommon
nicely, why don’t you take your pleasure over the
whole place instead of boxing yourselves up in a
prison like ?’

The fairy smiled at this question, but less
pleasantly than before. ‘Simon,’ she replied, ‘“ mind
your own business” is a very good rule, and one to
which I should strongly advise you to adhere if you
mean to do well. Fairies are governed by laws
which mortals cannot understand and which it would
be impossible for me to explain to you. Moreover,
we have a great dislike to being asked questions
about ourselves, and invariably refuse to answer.
When I asked you just now if there was anything
you wanted to know, I referred entirely to matters
concerning your own welfare and happiness, upon
which I should have been happy to have enlightened
you. But, since you have nothing to ask, I will stay
here no longer. I may as well tell you, by the bye,
the manner in which, during my residence here, you
can summon me if you should at any time require my
assistance. You must be alone—or at least have no
more than one other person, and that a relation—with
you, and you must not call upon me before evening,
or later than four o’clock in the morning. When you
want me, open the piece of furniture, tap three times
upon the desk and pronounce the word ‘ chuck-a-
chuck’ as distinctly as you can. Either I or one of
my attendant fairies will certainly respond to the call
if adjured by this mystic expression. And now, fare-
126 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. (rt.



well for the night.’ So saying, the fairy kissed her hand
gracefully to the old milkman, walked back through
the ranks of her followers to the centre pigeon-hole,
entered it, and disappeared from sight.

The other fairies speedily followed the example
of their queen, all making friendly and respectful
bows to the mortal before they retired for the night.
When they had all re-entered their pigeon-holes, the
desk slowly shut itself up again, and the old piece of
furniture resumed its ordinary appearance of quiet
though quaint respectability.

When Simon Ricketts found himself alone again
he pondered deeply over the scene which had just
passed before his eyes, and the words to. which his
wondering ears had listened. This was the most ex-
traordinary thing that had ever happened to him in
the whole course of his existence. He had seen, in
his time, many curious things and had known of
many queer-looking and strangely-fashioned articles
of furniture, but never had he before encountered one
which concealed within itself such marvellous inhabi-
tants, nor had he ever believed that such beings as
those whom he had that day seen were really the
occupants of any place accessible to mortal men.
But Simon had always been accustomed to believe
his own eyes, and, this being the case, the fact of the
existence of the Silver Fairies was no longer a matter
of doubt with him. Moreover, being an individual of
a practical turn of mind, he at once determined to
take what advantage he could of their presence in his
house. That presence might certainly be turned to
good account. There was no reason to doubt the
11.] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 127



ability, and he had been assured by herself of the
goodwill of the Fairy Queen to be of service to those
with whom her people resided, and the only question
in Simon’s mind was as to the particular manner in
which that service could in his case be best and most
efficiently rendered. Over this point he pondered for
some time, until it occurred to him that the best
thing he could do was to go to bed and sleep over it
before coming to any decision. Accordingly, he
retired to rest, as the saying is; but alas! there was
neither rest nor sleep for worthy Simon that night.
Never was mortal milkman in so sleepless a condition.
As he lay awake, the events of the evening rose up
again and again before him, and the more he closed
his eyes the less could he find that oblivion which he
would gladly have welcomed. He tossed and turned
about, but all to no purpose, the fairy forms still
flitted before his vision, the voice of the Fairy Queen
still sounded in his ears, and sleep was simply impos-
sible. At last, indeed, he went off into a species of
doze, during which he dreamed on the same subject,
and awoke with a start, having in his dreams seen at
least fifty old pieces of furniture from which emerged
hundreds of Silver Fairies, who instantly turned -into
cats and began lapping up all his fresh cream.
Aroused by this singularly unpleasant vision,
Simon slept no more that night, and accordingly felt
somewhat tired and unfit for business when the arrival
of morning once more awakened his household. He
said not one word to Dolly or Mrs. Pattison upon the
subject of his extraordinary visitors; but during the
whole of that day was remarkably silent and reserved
128 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, [rit.



deeply musing over what had occurred. Towards
evening, however, he had pretty well made up his
mind that some further steps should be taken in order
to realise the advantages promised by the Silver
Fairy’s residence in his house. So, after much consi-
deration, he joined his granddaughter and housekeeper
in the kitchen, and informed them of what had taken
place, to which piece of news the former responded by
opening her eyes very wide, whilst the latter inter-
rupted the narrator more than once by exclamations
of ‘My Goodness!’ ‘ Well, I never!’ and evinced the
greatest surprise and astonishment, which was not un-
natural, as Martha Pattison was a plain and homely
woman, eminently useful in her sphere of drudgery,
but ignorant altogether of fairies and fairyland, having
got on perfectly well all her life without either.
When the first moments of wonder were over, and
Simon had answered, as well as he could, all the
questions which were put to him, he solemnly asked
the advice of the two women as to the best means of
profiting by the presence and goodwill of the Silver
Fairies. Upon this point neither of them seemed to
have any very definite idea. One thing was very
clear. They would certainly be better off in the way
of worldly wealth than they had hitherto been. Upon
this they were all agreed. Simon, as I have already
said, was a well-to-do man; his house was his own,
so were his cows, and he had a bit of money put by
for a rainy day, as he was wont to say. But nobody
yet, that I ever knew, was so well off that he did not
think it would be very nice to be a little more so, and
although I wish I could have told you that the ladies
1il.] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 129



of the family. took a higher and nobler view, and
wished they might all be made better instead of
richer, which would have-been a very proper and
praiseworthy proceeding on-their part, yet the truth
must be told; and the truth was that the council
of three all agreed, first and foremost, that they would
certainly ask the fairies to improve their position in
the way of worldly substance. >

After all, there was nothing very wrong or very
extraordinary in such a wish. No one who has ever
‘kept house’ can be unaware of the fact that bills are
things which increase upon you as time goes on, and
that one never has quite enough money to settle them
without inconvenience. Rates and taxes, too, have an
awkward habit of requiring to be paid just when you
want to do something else with the cash you happen
to be possessed of, and numerous little expenses are
always coming upon you when you least expect them.
Therefore I hold it to have been not only far from
unreasonable, but exceedingly natural, that the object
of getting more money should have been one of the
first that presented itself to the minds of our friends
as desirable of accomplishment.

Even Dolly fell in with this view when seriously
put before her by the two elder members of the family
conclave, although at first her ideas had rather flown
in another direction, and she had imagined her grand-
father free from the rheumatics of which he had so
often complained of late, Martha relieved of a certain
lowness of spirits on which she was wont to dwell much
at times, and herself—but I don’t think Dolly had
arrived at imagining or wishing anything for herself

K
130 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [I11.



before the graver and sterner views of the others had
been asserted and established as indisputably correct.

Money—more money—-was the first and great
advantage to be desired from the Silver Fairy’s visit.
Next came the question, on what scale would she
be likely to enrich the family she had thus honoured
with her presence? Then came before the eyes of the
worthy people visions of the abolition of certain petty
economies in their household arrangements which had
always been practised but which might be suffered to
pass away without regret.

There might certainly henceforth (Gf the Fairy
were half a Fairy) be meat for dinner every day; the
‘appearance of pudding need not be restricted to
Sundays and High Holidays, and Martha might be
less chary of the tea when the hour arrived for par-
taking of that precious beverage. Sundry old and
dilapidated articles of furniture might be replaced with
new, provided always that the liberality of the Silver
Queen sufficed for such extravagance, and I am not
sure that the idea did not flit before the minds of the
female members of the council, that the papering of
one or more of the rooms in the house might possibly
be within their reach.

It was abundantly clear, however, that it would be
worse than useless to make any definite plans as to the
appropriation of the expected addition to their wealth
until the amount of such addition had been safely as-
certained, and the three accordingly resolved that the
first step to be taken was to bring this to a test.
They therefore determined to follow the directions
given by the Fairy, and having waited until it was


IIl.] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 131



late enough to be undoubtedly evening, they entered
Simon’s den in a state of nervous anxiety bordering
upon fear.

Here, however, the worthy man recollected that
only one person, if any, besides himself, was to be
present when he summoned his mysterious visitor, and
that person must be a relative. Old Martha stoutly in-
sisted upon it that she was quite sufficiently a relative
to be admitted into the category of persons qualified
under the Fairy’s rule. She maintained that the rela-
tives of aman’s wife were a man’s own relatives, because
a man and his wife were one, and it was wicked to main-
tain the contrary. Moreover, she alleged that her years
(though not so many, perhaps, as some people might
fancy) and experience made her a more fitting person
than Dolly to be present upon such a solemn occasion,
and that the latter might find the scene too much for
her. In short, Mrs. Pattison pressed the point so warmly,
and Dolly was so yielding and sweet-tempered about
it, that the old lady had her own way, and entered the
den with Simon, while Dolly remained in the kitchen
with only just one little sigh of disappointment.

When the door had been shut and there was no
longer any reason for delay, the milkman slowly and
reverently approached the old piece of furniture, and
opened it as he had been directed; then he gave three
taps upon the desk, slowly and carefully, at the same
time pronouncing the mystic word ‘chuck-a-chuck’
as distinctly as he was able. But no result followed.
All was still and silent save the old clock ticking on
the wall, and there was no sign whatever of the exist-
ence of anything out of the common way. Again

K2
132 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [ua

and again did Simon knock and repeat the word, but
nothing happened, and he stood aghast for a moment.
Then he turned suddenly to his companion.

‘Martha Pattison, he said, ‘there is something
wrong here. Hap you bean’t a relation after all!’

‘Not a relation, good man!’ replied that worthy
woman in an offended tone: ‘Lauk-a-mercy! who
could go for to say so! No, no, Simon, chaz ain’t the
reason, you may depend upon ’t. I bean’t so sure
about this here Fairy of yours, J bean’t ! Now, wasn’t
you a trying the old Hollands last night, good man?
Just say—wasn’t you a doing of it? ’Twouldn’t
no hows amaze me if that was how you come for to
see Fairies, and there ain’t none here after all! A pack
of nonsense you and your Fairies !’

‘Hold your tongue, Martha Pattison!’ sternly
answered Simon ; ‘this ain’t no place nor no time for
your tantrums. Tis pjain to me these Fairies don’t
hold a man’s wife’s relations to be the same as his
own, and so ’tis Dolly we must have here along
with I.’

‘A man’s wife’s relations not his own!’ retorted
the angry Martha ; ‘who dares to say such athing? If
that’s their ways, drat the Fairies, say I—ah! ah!’
and here the good woman broke off into a scream of
pain, and began violently rubbing her leg. ‘ Lack-a-
daisy me!’ she said, ‘something give me such a
terrible pinch, sure-ly—oh dear! oh dear! I don’t
want no more of this, not no ways ;’ and so saying she
turned her back upon the old piece of furniture and
made the best of her way out of the room, muttering
to herself about fairies and demons in a most dis-
ut] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 133



respectful manner, and ever and anon rubbing her leg
again as if to get rid of the effects of the mysterious
but no less painful pinch.

Then Simon, feeling sure that he was right as to
the reason why his first summons had met with no
response, called Dolly, and the maiden, nothing loth,
came into the den and joined her grandfather. The
latter now once more approached the piece of furni-
ture, again tapped deliberately three times upon the
desk, and said in as clear and distinct a tone of voice
as he could manage, ‘ Chuck-a-chuck!’ The effect was
instantaneous. At the mouth of the centre pigeon-
hole the Silver Fairy Queen appeared, so suddenly
and quickly that both Simon and his granddaughter
started back half afraid. The Fairy smiled a pleasant
smile upon them, which greatly reassured their doubt-
ing hearts, and at once spoke in a sweet and kindly
voice. ‘What want you, good Simon, and you, my
tender maiden, that you thus summon the Silver
Fairy ?’

Now, although the two mortals knew perfectly
well what they wanted and why they had summoned
the Fairy, neither of them exactly liked to answer.
Dolly, for her part, felt that it was her grandfather's
and not her place to speak, seeing that he, as is not
unusual with grandfathers, was much older and more
experienced than his granddaughter. Simon himself,
however, felt some strange kind of compunction at
naming such things as money and gold to a being so
evidently superior as she who stood before him, and
felt quite ashamed and dumb-foundered at having to
speak. So, for several moments both of the pair
134 WAISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, [ut

remained silent, looking alternately at the Fairy Queen
and at each other without finding words to speak.
Presently the Silver Fairy smiled again, and stamped
her foot with just a /zté/e impatience in the gesture.

“Come, good people,’ she said, ‘do not keep me
waiting here all day. You cannot have summoned me
without wanting something, and that something you
are not at all likely to get unless you can make up
your minds to ask for it!’

Then Simon nudged Dolly, and whispered to her
to speak, and Dolly blushed and said, ‘Oh no! grand-
father, you speak!’ and a fear came over Simon which
made it more difficult than ever for him to find his
voice, so he whispered again, ‘Go on, Dolly, speak up,
wench, I tell ye!’

Upon this Dolly trembled and blushed, and
blushed and trembled again, and then made a low
curtsey to the Fairy and said ina meek voice: ‘ Please,
my lady, grandfather, and Martha, and I—if we might
make so bold—we all thought—we all wanted—if you
would be so kind—-if we could have it—if it might be
done—times are so bad, and there’s so much to pay
for—— How long Dolly would have gone on stam-
mering out these disjointed sentences will never be
known, for when she had got thus far, the Silver Fairy
interrupted her with these words:

‘You need say no more, my little maiden. I see
what it is you have been told to ask for ; the old, old
story. Your grandfather would be richer than he is—-
is not that the truth ?’

Dolly could only curtsey again, but Simon who
was by this time re-assured, especially as the Fairy
IIL] THE SILVER FAIRIES, 135



had so readily understood what was the object of his
desires, now took part in the conversation.

‘Sure-ly that’s what it is, he said. ‘We don’t
want nothing out of the way, Marm, so to speak ; only
if so be as you caz make things a bit more easy and
comfortable, why it do seem as if we might as well
speak up for to have it done. There’s a many ex-
penses in a business like mine, and folks is terrible par-
ticlar about their milk now-a-days, they is. Cows be
uncertain animals too, they be, and as for them rates
and taxes, ¢hey be certain enough, sure-ly, reg’lar as
clock-work and no mistake but what one must pay
’em. So we'd make bold to ask :

‘That will do, Simon Ricketts,’ here interposed
the Fairy. ‘I perceive that you are not exempt from
the common error of mortals, who invariably believe
that riches bring happiness as a matter of course.
This, however, is no business of mine. I have but to
do as you ask me, so long as it is not beyond my
power, and since you desire riches, you shall certainly
have them. Open the little drawer below the pigeon-
hole upon your extreme left, and you will find what
you want. JI only trust that you will have no reason
to repent the accomplishment of your wishes” With
these words the Silver Fairy waved her hand grace-
fully in.the air and forthwith disappeared, leaving
Dolly and her grandfather standing where they were.

They looked at each other for a moment without
speaking, and then the old man stepped forward, and
without more ado opened the drawer which the Fairy
had pointed out. Scarcely had he done so when he
started back in amazement. It was perfectly full of


136 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [ir.

new, crisp bank-notes, looking as if they had just
come from the Bank, and so closely packed that the
amount of wealth which they represented was evidently
considerable. With trembling hands Simon began to
remove the treasure from the drawer, and as he did so,
to his intense surprise and delight, found. that the
bulk appeared still undiminished, so that apparently
he had here an inexhaustible supply of wealth, beyond
anything which he had ever hoped for in his wildest
dreams. He bade Dolly call Martha Pattison in, and
at the sight of such riches the old lady actually forgot
her grievances and went off into a series of exclama-
tions which betokened her joy and astonishment.

‘Oh my!’ she cried. ‘ Did anybody ever? Lauks-
a-mercy! God bless the King and all the Royal
Family ! Goodness gracious me! I never did!’ and
with many other interjaculations of a similarly inco-
herent character did the worthy dame proceed to dis-
close the emotions of her soul.

Dolly was overwhelmed also. I cannot say what
visions floated before her eyes as regards the future,
but of course she felt that there would be some change
in the whole order of their lives, consequent upon this
transition from comparative poverty to unheard-of
wealth, and probably she was somewhat more doubt-
ful and uncertain about the matter than her elders.
For Dolly was young, and youth does not as a rule
set its affections upon wealth, at all events in the same
way that it is loved by those who have left their young
days and young feelings behind them. She was glad
for her grandfather’s sake, but I doubt whether her
personal gratification was intense, and perhaps if the
IIL] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 137





matter had been left to her decision she might have
asked something different from the powerful friend
who had proved so ready and so able to do what was
required,

It is impossible to say how long Simon would have
stood there fingering his newly acquired riches if at
last his granddaughter had not called his attention to
the lateness of the hour. It was long past his usual
bed-time, and rest is as necessary to an old milkman
as to anybody else. Moreover, after a short time
given to considering how and where he should stow
away his treasure, he came to the conclusion that it
would be far better to leave it where it was, and take
out notes from the drawer as he might require them
from time to time. So he stowed away those which
he had already taken out, to the value of several
hundreds of pounds, in another drawer, then closed
the treasure-drawer carefully, shut the desk, and left
the old piece of furniture to its former condition.
After this ceremony had been performed, the three
members of Simon’s family separated for the night,
each of them to get what sleep might be possible after
the strangely exciting events of the evening.

The next morning dawned brightly upon the little
household, and they assembled at the breakfast-table
with a feeling that a new state of existence was about
to open up before them. Simon conversed with
greater freedom than was his wont during the repast,
and was not above consulting both Martha Pattison
and Dolly as to the best method of employing that
wealth of which he had so unexpectedly become the
possessor. All agreed that the milk business should
138 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [ut



at once be abandoned ; and it was curious to see how
many objections to the trade, which had never been
spoken of in the family before, had all along been
entertained by the various members thereof.

It was a ‘low business altogether,’ said Martha ;
‘terrible wearing at times, remarked Simon himself ;
and even Dolly observed that there were great anxie-
ties connected with the uncertainty of the supply at
times, and the complaints made by some people of the
quality of the article supplied. It turned out that
Simon had never liked it, that Martha had always
thought it a degrading employment, and Dolly had
often wished that her grandfather lived in the country
and had some more agreeable occupation. So from
that morning the old-established firm of Simon
Ricketts and Co. (though the Co. only existed in im-
agination) was summarily dissolved, and the stream of
milk from that quarter ceased to flow.

But although to relinquish one occupation was
comparatively easy, it was a different matter altogether
to select another. Simon had reached a certain age,
at which men cannot learn a new business, and if he
had possessed the greatest talent for doing so, he
would hardly have been able to bring himself to
select one rather than another, being perfectly ignor-
ant of all. There was of course the alternative of re-
maining idle for the rest of his life, and living, as he
expressed it, ‘like a gentleman ;’ but to this he felt
scarcely equal, To a man who had worked all his
life idleness would be anything but agreeable, and of
this fact Simon was quite clever enough to be aware.
So the three talked matters over for some time with-
II] . THE SILVER FAIRIES. 139



out being able to decide what course would be most
likely to promote their happiness. Dolly suggested
that her grandfather might keep a shop—a large shop
with beautiful plate glass windows and occupying
some good position in the town. He might employ
himself with the accounts and general management of
the business, whilst she and Martha Pattison could
serve the customers, which they would be able to do
better than the proprietor himself. It might be a
haberdasher’s shop, or even a milliner’s and dress-
maker’s, for they would have plenty of money to hire
attendants who understood the business, and there
would be a great deal of amusement to be got out of it.

Martha Pattison, however, saw things in a different
light. What was the use of troubling to keep a shop,
she wisely remarked, if, as was the case with Simon,
you had got money enough to live without it? Better
by half hire a nice house in a fashionable part of the
town, and take lodgers, which was a genteel as well
as fashionable occupation. She, Martha, could man-
age the cooking, Dolly could look after the house, and
as for Simon he could amuse himself in any way he
liked.

This plan, however, did not commend itself to
the old milkman any more than the other, and he
already began to experience the difficulty of having
more money than he knew what to do with, which is
a difficulty in which no one believes who has not had
the opportunity of trying it. So the three good people
talked matters over during the whole of breakfast-
time without coming to any’conclusion, until at last a
bright thought dawned upon the master of the house-
140 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. (ur.



hold, and striking his hand forcibly upon his knee, he
exclaimed with emphatic vehemence, ‘Dash my wig
if I don’t ask Joe Muggins !’

The person thus referred to was one of consider-
able importance in the estimation of his neighbours as
well as his own. Joe Muggins kept the public house
at the corner of the street, and, what is more, managed
to make the public house keep him. He was a know-
ing man in all matters of sport, from horse-racing
down to rat-killing, and was moreover consulted by
many of his acquaintance upon affairs of a totally
different character. For Joe had an air of wisdom
about him which went a long way of itself towards the
establishment of a reputation for knowledge beyond
that possessed by the average of mankind. He had
not unfrequently a pipe in his mouth, and when he
removed this for the purpose of giving his opinion, in
pithy and oracular words, upon the business which
might be in hand, his appearance and manner were
most impressive, and seldom failed to carry conviction
to the bystanders.

Now Simon Ricketts was not what is called ‘a
public-house man.’ He preferred smoking his pipe in
his own den, and choosing his own company when he
wanted any company at all. But inasmuch as Joe
Muggins could not be expected to visit him in a snug
and confidential manner unless he occasionally joined
the party at the ‘Royal George,’ Simon used as a
matter of duty to frequent that place of entertainment
from time to time, and drink in with contented ears
the instructive remarks which fell from the lips of the
oracle. The latter had gh his part a great respect for
t1t.] ‘THE SILVER FAIRIES. I4l



Simon Ricketts, whose appearance in his parlour did
good to the house and was always hailed with satis-
faction by the respectable company therein assembled.
Therefore, the proposition to consult Joe Muggins
was one hardly unexpected by Dolly and Martha Patti-
son, and they readily gave in their adhesion to a plan
to which they knew well enough that resistance would
be useless. True, family affairs were better kept with-
in the family circle, but a man like Joe Muggins was
not to be found every day, and in a matter of such
immense importance it was certainly very desirable
that the best possible advice should be taken. How-
ever, as a discussion upon money matters is always
one of considerable delicacy, it was obvious that the
one in question could not with propriety be carried on
in the parlour of the ‘Royal George,’ where a certain
amount of publicity would be unavoidable. It was
therefore determined by the family conclave that a
formal and pressing invitation should at once be sent
to the redoubtable publican to drop in that evening,
with an intimation that business of an important and
particular nature would be brought under his notice.
On receiving the message Joe Muggins, as was his
wont when moved, took a deep draught of his favourite
ale, followed by a sigh which shook his mighty frame,
and then gave a nod of assent which implie@ at once
that he would not only be there at the appointed time,
but would be prepared to give his whole attention to
the matter, whatever it might be, and was perfectly
conscious of the enormous importance of his doing so.
Thus assured of the counsel of which he stood so much
in need, Simon got through the rest of the day as well
142 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [11.



as he could; looking through old accounts, contemp-
tuously throwing aside unpaid bills of doubtful cus-
tomers whom it would never be worth his while to
dun now, and wondering to himself how he could
ever have taken the trouble with his trade which but
a few hours ago had appeared so necessary and had
indeed produced to him such good results.

For, had not Simon been an industrious and hard-
working man, he would never have saved up money
enough to justify his relaxing his efforts in the after-
noon of life; had not those efforts been relaxed he
would have had no time for roving about, and now and
then attending sales by auction; and had he not so
attended, he would never have fallen in with the old
piece of furniture, never heard of the Silver Fairy, and,
worse than all, as a natural consequence, this veracious
story would never have been written. The labour of
his past life, however, seemed to Simon to have been
somewhat useless, seeing that in a moment of good
fortune he had apparently stumbled upon a means of
amassing wealth far more easily, and in fact without
any labour at all.

And such is the perversity of human nature, that
instead of being filled with gratitude at the luck
which had befallen him and the happy prospect before
him, Iam afraid that Simon cast back thoughts of
regret to the long years of life spent in toil and labour,
and felt injured because he had not discovered the Silver
Fairy at an earlier period of existence, when he had
youth and vigour to enjoy her bounties in a greater
degree and for a longer time than he could nowhope for,
He passed, as I say, a good part of that day in look-
Ill.] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 143



ing over old bills and accounts, and then he sauntered
forth into the streets and took a long walk. Still,
time hung heavy on his hands, and this first day of
riches seemed to the old milkman by far the longest
and dullest day he had ever passed. At last, to his
great satisfaction, evening came, and, true to his time,
the faithful Joe Muggins appeared, and took his seat
by the fireside, filled his pipe, gazed contentedly upon
the large tumbler of strong liquor which was dutifully
placed at his right hand, and prepared to deal, wisely
and well, with whatever matters might be brought
before him.

Simon seated himself exactly opposite his guest,
and having settled comfortably down in his arm-chair,
and seen that his womankind were in a proper atti-
tude of respectful attention, began his narrative. With
most ‘accurate regard to every detail, he related all
that had occurred, from the first moment of his having
quitted his house for a saunter in the direction of the
sale at old Lawyer Titledeeds’ mansion down to the
final appearance of the bank-notes in the little drawer.
He omitted not a single circumstance and added
nothing, but told the simple truth in his own way, and
kept his eyes steadily fixed upon his guest and neigh-
bour as he did so. The latter listened gravely, his
large saucer eyes opening more and more widely as
his friend proceeded, but never a word spake he during
the recital of the marvellous history, and when it was
finally concluded, he still maintained for some mo-
ments a deep and solemn silence, as though the
matter was not one to be lightly dealt with, or upon
which an opinion should be hastily given.
144 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. {uit





Presently, however, Joe Muggins roused himself to
action. He slowly and with much deliberation
removed his pipe from his mouth; then he carefully
laid it upon the table near him; next, he solemnly
lifted the tumbler to his lips and took a deep draught
of the beverage which it contained; then, drawing
from his capacious pocket a large red handkerchief, he
leisurely unfolded it upon his knee, and proceeded to
wipe his lips with the gravity of a man who feels that
he is performing an important act; this done, he
placed a hand upon each knee, bending forward in
order to do so, and staring Simon Ricketts full in the
face. He cleared his throat twice before he spoke,
and having by this time apparently made up his
mind and found his voice, propounded his views upon
the subject in the following momentous words:

‘Be a Parliament-man,’ and, having thus spoken,
maintained his position for some minutes, steadily
staring at his friend as if to mark the full and exact
effect produced by his words.

Simon was for the moment completely taken
aback. The oracle had spoken and had certainly
changed the whole scope and current of his ideas. He
had thought and pondered over many possible occu-
pations, but amongst them all, that of a member of
Parliament had certainly never been included. Indeed,
the worthy milkman had no very clear and definite
ideas upon the subject of the duties of a representative
of the people. He had some vague notion that the
position must be one of value, judging from the eager-
ness with which it was sought after by the candidates
at an election. Morcover, from newspaper reports
and public-house gossip, he fancied that the posses-
1i1.] THE SILVER FAIRIES 145



sion of a drawer containing an inexhaustible supply of
bank-notes might greatly facilitate his obtaining that
position to which he was now advised to aspire.

But, excepting that members of Parliament had to
live in London half the year, and make laws—-that
they talked a great deal in doing so, and that their
proceedings took up a great deal of space in the
newspapers which might otherwise be filled with more
amusing matter, Simon knew very little about them.
The worthy man was no politician, and, in fact
generally followed the lead of Joe Muggins at an
election, together with the other frequenters of the
‘Royal George’ parlour, with no very definite idea as
to the political party which he was supporting. It
was therefore an extraordinary idea to him that he
should suddenly be invited to become a prominent
actor in the arena of politics, and a proposition so
strange and unexpected almost took his breath away
at the first moment.

So he stared back at his sapient adviser without
uttering a word, and for some few seconds the two men
sat there gazing at each other with grave countenances
in a manner which would have appeared somewhat
ridiculous to a stranger. Not so, however, did it seem
to the females of the party, who had been cagerly
waiting to hear the opinion of the great cracle, and who,
now that it had been given, were puzzled and aston-
ished beyond measure. As to Dolly, Parliament being
in her mind intimately connected with that species of
ginger-bread which goes by the same name, she at first
imagined that her grandfather was advised to start a
shop in that line of business, which indeed would

L
146 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. (ut.

furnish him with some kind of occupation, though why
and wherefore it should be more desirable than his
present employment was hard to discover.

Martha Pattison, however, had more accurate
notions upon the subject. Being a staunch church-
woman and fond of her prayer-book, she had very
frequently studied the Prayer for the High Court of
Parliament therein contained, and from its expressions
had been led to the belief that members of Parlia-
ment were a grave, reverend, conscientious body of
men, whose only wish and object was to deliberate
and take counsel together to promote everything
which was right, to support religion, discourage vice,
pass good laws for everybody’s benefit, and generally
advance the safety, honour, and welfare of our sove-
reign and her dominions, and establish truth, justice,
religion, and piety amongst us for all generations.
That Simon should ever belong to such a body ap-
peared to Mrs. Pattison something almost unattain-
able, but the glory of attaining thereto would be great
indeed, and of asurety Joe Muggins would never have
proposed it had it not been possible. So it came
about that, after the two men had gazed earnestly at
each other for a certain time, as if the extraordinary
wisdom of the one and the marvellous increase in the
worldly importance of the other had inspired a mutual
reverence and awe which could scarcely find expression
in words, the female portion of the company were the
first to break the silence.

“Oh deary me, Simon!’ exclaimed Martha in an
earnest tone of voice, as if fully conscious of the
solemnity of the occasion: ‘Oh deary me! To
nt. “" THE SILVER FAIRIES. 147



think of you amongst all them wise people in the
Parliament House! Td never have thought of it
myself, but Mr. Muggins—/e knows—and why and
wherefore not I should like to know? Oh, he do
know a lot, Mr. Muggins! Just hear him!’ And
Martha clasped her hands and raised them before her
in a supplicating attitude as if appealing to the world
at large to bear testimony to the knowledge and
sagacity of the immortal Muggins.

Dolly, solely ejaculating the words ‘Oh la!’ sat
still and wondered greatly, whilst, at the conclusion
of Martha’s address, Simon opened his mouth and
spoke, scratching his head at the same time as if
thereby to give greater force to his words.

‘I bean’t rightly sure, he began, ‘whether I be
standing on my head or my heels;’ a remark which,
taken by itself, showed but small appreciation of his
own position, seeing that he was comfortably seated
in an arm-chair by his fireside, and not standing at
all. ‘It seems all curious like, he continued,
scratching his head with greater vigour, ‘and I can’t
make it out nohows. How be I to get made Parlia-
ment man, neighbour?’ and here Simon stopped
scratching and again stared at Joe Muggins with the
air of a man who had propounded a question difficult
of answer.

But Muggins was equal to the occasion. Without
altering his position or indulging in explanations of
unnecessary length, he simply remarked : ‘ Beer: jaw:
them notes ;’ by which it is to be feared that the astute
publican intended to convey the intimation that by
the bestowal upon the enlightened electors of malt-

L2
148 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [Ir



liquor, oratory, and money, the object which he had
proposed to Simon might be attained.

This answer had the effect of making the old
milkman still more confused, and he applied to his
guest for further and fuller information upon the
subject under discussion. A conversation thereupon
ensued, the particulars of which it would be difficult
to give. Suffice it to say that the advantages of
becoming a member of Parliament were so clearly
pointed out by the publican that all three of the
family party became convinced that nothing could be
better or more desirable for Simon under his altered
circumstances. It is possible that the fact of a general
election being about to take place had suggested the
idea to the excellent Joe Muggins; but, be this as it
may, the existence of this particular crisis seemed to
offer a tempting opportunity for the successful ac-
complishment of the design. It was therefore deter-
mined that the matter should be brought before the
frequenters of the ‘Royal George’ the very next
night ; that, without mentioning how or from whence
it came, it should be stated that Simon Ricketts had
come into a good bit of money, and that his readiness
to represent his fellow-citizens in Parliament on the
strength thereof should be duly set before them.

Accordingly, the host of the ‘Royal George’ took
measures to secure as large a party as possible for the
following evening, hinting in a mysterious manner
that something of uncommon importance was in the
wind. His room was well filled, and at the proper
moment Joe Muggins introduced the subject of the
election, hinted at the desirability of their being
III. ] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 149

represented by one of themselves, and forthwith
placed before the company the fact of Simon Ricketts
being able and ready to undertake the task.

The announcement was received with great satis-
faction by the assembled party. So ignorant were they
of the dignity which surrounds Englishmen in the dis-
charge of the sacred duty of electing men to repre-
sent them in Parliament, that their notion of the
proceeding went little further than the belief that it
presented an opportunity more than usually favour-
able for eating and drinking at somebody else’s
expense, and perchance pocketing a certain amount
of cash in consideration of recording their votes in
favour of a particular person. No sooner, therefore,
did they find Simon able and ready to pay for the
privilege of becoming a Member of Parliament than
they eagerly adopted him as their candidate, and
pledged themselves then and there to do all in their
power to promote his election. One or two of them
there were, indeed, who said that they should like a
statement of Simon’s views upon some of the great
questions of the day, but they were soon put down as
troublesome meddlers, and it having been ascertained
that the candidate was really in possession of plenty
of cash, he was received with open arms by the
electors present, and the very next morning ‘ Ricketts
and Independence’ might be seen placarded over
every wall in the vicinity of the ‘Royal George.’

That same evening good Simon found it necessary
to have recourse to the drawer again. It never struck
him that he might as well have asked the Silver
Fairy’s advice as to the step he was about to take,
150 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [iI



for so impressed was he with the unbounded wisdom
of Joe Muggins that he required no further counsel
after having taken that worthy’s opinion. So when
the evening had arrived he retired to his den, opened
the piece of furnitur@&nd extracted from the treasure-
drawer a goodly supply of notes, after which he pro-
ceeded to indulge in his usual pipe, and dozed over
it according to habit.

Presently there fell upon his ears the same creaking
sound which he had heard before, but which did not
now surprise him as on the previous occasign. He was
not surprised, either, when the same low, sweet strains
of music broke upon his sense of hearing, and through
his half-opened eyes he saw the piece of furniture open
and the graceful forms of the Silver Fairies come forth.
They seemed, however, to dance more sedately and
with less spirit and animation than at the time of
their first visit, and ere long they stood still as if by
common consent, and a voice sang, in soft and sub-
dued, yet clear tones, a song which sounded strangely
to the old man’s wondering ears :—

‘It chanced upon a summer’s day

The sparrow longed to be a pheasant,
And thought to strut in plumage gay
Could ne’er be anything but pleasant.
What joy! his earnest prayer was heard,
His homely feathers soon rejected,

And, in his new attire, the bird

Could ne’er as sparrow be detected.

But summer passed away, and then
Advancing months gave thoughts more sober
Of dogs and guns, and sporting men,
Who bid a welcome to October,
III.] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 15



Our sparrow now would fain return
To feathers brown and former station,
But meets, alas! refusal stern

And vainly asks for transmutation.
The hour arrives—he mounts—he flies,
And vainly like a sparrow twitters,

He falls ; proclaiming as he dies—

‘* Alas ! all is not gold that glitters !’”’

At the conclusion of these words the voice stopped,
and after a brief space of time, during which the
music sounded somewhat mournfully, the Silver
Fairies retired, and the piece of furniture shut itself
as usual,

Simon could not understand it at all. For one
moment an uncomfortable doubt stole over his mind
whether the allegory. of the sparrow in pheasant’s
feathers was not intended to signify himself and his
new aspirations ; but after a moment’s thought, he
rejected the idea, or at all events put it aside as one
too unlikely to be seriously entertained. Nothing,
indeed, could at this period have shaken his confi-
dence in Joe Muggins, or his conviction that he had
done well in the choice which he had made of an
-accession of wealth in preference to any other gift
which the Fairy could have bestowed. In fact he
felt supremely happy and contented. For, although
those good and wise people are doubtless perfectly
right who tell us that riches do not constitute happi-
ness, yet so long as the perversity of human nature
leads people to fancy the contrary to be the case,
those who find themselves suddenly elevated from
comparative poverty to unbounded affluence cannot
be prevented from feeling just as happy as if the
152 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. (111.



aforesaid good and wise people were entirely wrong.
Wherefore not only did Simon at this time wear a
look of contentment upon his rugged features such.
as it was pleasant to behold, but the generally un-
prepossessing countenance of good Martha Pattison
positively beamed with exultation, and even Dolly,
who was always cheerful and lighthearted, appeared,
if possible, more so than usual. Their happiness,
therefore, was not checked or interrupted by the song
which Simon had heard, nor indeed am I sure that
he deemed it worth while to say anything about it to
the others.

It is needless to relate the occurrences of the
following week. The wisdom of Joe Muggins was
completely proved, as far as the result to himself was
concerned. The ‘Royal George’ never before drove
such a roaring trade. Beer flowed like water, Simon
Ricketts grew immensely popular, and the drawer of
bank-notes had to be repeatedly opened. Once or
twice Simon heard the strains of fairy music at
night, and they sounded more mournful than when
they had first fallen upon his ears, but he was too
much occupied with other thoughts to take much
notice of them now, and as he was constantly from
home until bed-time, he heard them less than he
would have done under ordinary circumstances.

Allappeared to go prosperously with his new plan.
There were, indeed, some people who opposed his
election, and expressed their opinion that a member
of Parliament should be a person of some political
education and, if possible, of experience. These,
however, were but few in comparison with those who
I11.] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 153 |



took a larger and more enlightened view of the
subject. It was sufficient for them that their candi-
date should be a man with a stake in the country,
and Simon’s stake was evidently so considerable that
his fitness could not be doubted for a moment. And
so it came about that, when the election came on,
without having made a single intelligible speech or
propounded a single political opinion beyond the
broad statement that he thought public-houses should
be kept open as long as people liked to drink in them,
and was otherwise generally in favour of supporting
the British Constitution in Church and State, Simon
Ricketts was triumphantly elected a member of
Parliament.

Great were the rejoicings that followed, more beer
was consumed, more notes were taken out of the
drawer, and joy and exultation filled the heart of the
female members of the family. The worthy milk-
man, however, was not long before he began to find
out that he had entered upon a state of life very
different from that to which he had hitherto been
accustomed. Even when dressed in his best Sunday
clothes and smartened up under the careful eye of
Martha Pattison, he hardly felt easy in the new
society which he had entered. The company was not
altogether so select as he had been used to believe
before he had become one of them himself, and being
aman of much natural acuteness, he soon found out
that a man did not necessarily become a gentleman
either in tone, manners, or education, as soon as he
became a member of Parliament. Then they kept
very bad hours, and Simon, who had habitually sought
154 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [111.



his bed about nine o’clock, by no means approved
of having to sit up until one or two in the morning.

To his untaught mind, moreover, many of the
speeches made appeared very useless and unneces-
sarily long, and he could not understand why the
House of Commons, though it occasionally stopped
an orator by clamouring him down with undignified
shouts, had no regular method by which it could
prevent its time being wasted, and put an end to
fruitless discussions and prosy speeches. He was also
puzzled to know why the Chairman was called the
Speaker, as he spoke less than anybody else, and why
he and the clerks at the table before him wore great
wigs, when they had plenty of very good hair of their
own. The huge mace, too, which hung at the end of
the table, was an object which excited the mingled
astonishment and reverence of Simon Ricketts, and
scarcely less so the court dress and sword of the
Serjeant-at-Arms, with awe of whom he was mightily
impressed.

The worthy milkman was not altogether unhappy
at first : he made great friends with the door-keepers,
who, stern and haughty in their demeanour to the
outer world, are ever affable and condescending to
those who have once passed the sacred threshold
and become members of the august assembly whose
avenues they guard. Simon found, moreover, an
excellent friend in the worthy individual who presided
over the corridors in which members hung their coats
and deposited their umbrellas, and from him our good
friend received many useful hints as to the forms and
ways of Parliament. But, somehow or other, he felt
IIL] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 155



that he was not exactly in his element, and the song
of the Fairy, about the sparrow who sighed to become
a pheasant, recurred to his mind more than once about
this time.

It was not only the actual new life which troubled
him. Things did not go on at home quite as smoothly
as of old. Martha Pattison—or Mrs. Pattison as she
insisted upon being called now—was by no means
satisfied that things should remain as they had been
when Simon was only a milkman. Their house was
in a quarter scarce fashionable enough for a member
of Parliament, she said, and the whole style and
manner of living of the family ought now to be
changed. Simon resolutely set his face against this
at first, and declared that nothing should induce him
to live differently from the way in which he had so
long carried on his existence with tolerable comfort
to himself and others. Still he found it difficult to
withstand the constant hints—and more than hints—
which were dropped by Martha Pattison, whose views
upon the subject were very different from those which
Simon entertained, and who at last ‘capped the cli-
max’ by declaring that it was a sin and a shame that
Dolly shouldn’t go to Court, for ‘you couldn’t find a
better-looking nor a better-behaved girl among the
whole boiling of ’em.’ She added that the grand-
daughter of a member of Parliament was in duty
bound to pay her respects to Royalty, and Dolly her-
self, on being appealed to, avowed with many blushes
and simpers, that she should dearly like just for once
to go and see the Queen and all the fine ladies, if her
grandfather saw no particular objection.
156 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. ipeee

Poor Simon was by this time nearly beside him-
self with the changes which his new position had
entailed upon him, and having hitherto withstood the
alteration in house and manner of living which'had
been so pressed upon him, thought he had better
make the concession now demanded. Accordingly
Dolly Matson had to make those preparations for
going to Court which are necessary to all ladies who
perform this duty, but which were tenfold more terrible
and troublesome to her than to the majority of such
fair creatures. For fashionable dresses and fashion-
able dressmakers were as yet unknown to Dolly, and
their acquaintance was not to be made without much
trouble. You may depend upon it that Simon had
to go to his treasure drawer more than once during
the intervening time between his yielding the point
and the arrival of the day upon which the wished-for
ceremony was to be performed. Dolly, however,
fortunately fell into clever hands, and having a figure
which it was a pleasure to dress well, was turned out
in a most becoming manner for the great occasion.

I suppose there was hardly a nicer-looking girl at
the Drawing-room that day, and moreover she had
taken such lessons in curtseying as to be quite perfect
in the art, provided that she did not lose her nerve
upon the first occasion of finding herself face to face
with Royalty. What the exact result of that awful
moment really was has never been accurately ascer-
tained. All that may here be told is the fact that the
day was one of great and sad disappointment. Dolly
had formed high expectations of the courteous good-
breeding which would be uppermost among those
1II.] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 157

a ND,

ladies whose station entitled them to visit their Sove-
reign, and of the decorous, not to say graceful beha-
viour which would distinguish the assembly and which
she would have to imitate as best she could. Great,
then, was her astonishment and dismay at finding the
extraordinary difference of the reality from the scene
which she had expected.

A. crowd of ladies, more or less well-dressed, but if
well-bred, ladies who had left their good breeding be-
hind them for the day, jostled each other in the ante-
rooms, pushed, struggled, looked daggers, dropped re-
marks more cutting than their looks, and positively
fought their way almost into the presence of Royalty
in a manner which, to the milk-man’s granddaughter,
appeared anything but dignified, and scarcely respect-
ful to the august lady to whom they had come to do
honour. Dolly, after a severe struggle with this ill-
behaved throng of her fair sisters, found herself once
more in the carriage of the lady who had taken her
to the Drawing-room, being the wife of a brother
member who had made Simon’s acquaintance and
had good-naturedly offered to help him out of the
difficulty he experienced in finding some one to look
after his granddaughter upon that eventful occasion.

The poor girl returned home with her gown half
torn off her back, her shoulder scratched by the epaulet
of an unscrupulous gentleman in attendance upon some
other ladies, and her arm smarting from the savage
pinch of a malicious old dowager whose progress
towards Royalty she had unwittingly barred. She was
dreadfully disappointed at the’whole scene and was
effectually cured of her Court-going propensity, so
158 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. pee



that Simon was exposed to no further requests in
the same direction.

By this time, however, he had already begun to
weary of his new existence and actually to doubt
whether he had been wise in so readily following the
advice of the sapient Muggins. It was not only the

late hours and the tiresome speeches of which he had
to complain, but the innumerable letters which were
addressed to him by that large class of persons who
think that as soonas a man has been enabled to write
M.P. after his name, they have aright to communicate
with him upon every conceivable object under the sun
and several more into the bargain. Simon Ricketts was
pestered with applications for subscriptions, and with
so many other requests that he lost all patience with
his correspondence, and at last took to the use of
strong language whenever a new batch of these trouble-
some letters was delivered.

Now Simon was not a man habitually given to the
use of hard words, and it was only under the pressure
of the troubles caused by his new phase of life that he
had acquired the habit. But the increase of corre-
spondence and the whirl into which his brain got at last
through the multiplicity of changes which had befallen
him had really quite confused and bewildered him
altogether, and he became liable to fits of rage to
which he had never before been accustomed. Several
times he wished the letters and their writers all kinds
of bad wishes, and this generally occurred when he
was seated in his den, into which the letters were
always brought.

On one occasion, after having given vent to a
1H. ] THE SILVER FAIRIES, 159



burst of passionate exclamations which cannot with
propriety be here inscribed, he had shortly afterwards
occasion to go to his treasure drawer, which to his
surprise stuck fast, and resisted all his efforts to open
it. Dismayed at so unpleasant an occurrence, he
sought the advice of his female relations, but even
with their assistance failed to open the drawer. He
feared, however, to resort to any violent means to
do this, lest he should give offence to the Fairies, and
determined to wait until next day in hopes that the
drawer might be less obstinate.

That same evening it chanced that the House of
Commons was not sitting, and Simon smoked a pipe
in the den after his old fashion. After a while, the old
creaking sound fell again upon his ears, the piece of
furniture opened, and the Silver Fairies once more ap-
peared. Mournful, however, was the strain which the
music played, and sad were the countenances of the
dancers, and presently Simon heard a voice singing
words which ran as follows :—

‘ Where Silver Fairies make their home
And bounteous gifts on men bestow,
No evil thoughts or words may come,
Or gifts and Fairies thence will go.
Warned once again by Elfin rhyme,
Mortal! from evil words forbear,
Lest, banished by thy foolish crime,
The Fairies make their home elsewhere.’

The meaning of these words was easily understood
by Simon, who now recollected that the Fairy Queen,
when she had appeared to him on the first occasion,
had warned him against allowing her to hear bad
language whilst she was domiciled in his house. He
160 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, {rz1.



was struck at once with a fear of what might be the
consequences of his indiscretion, and determined to
avoid again falling into an error which might cost him
so dear. As yet, indeed, he was uncertain whether or
no his drawer of notes was not already permanently
closed, and it was with fear and trembling that he once
more tried it upon the next morning. To his great
joy it opened the same as of old, and was as prolific
as ever. Apparently the Fairies had only intended
to give him a warning, and this he resolved should
not be lost upon him. Therefore, as he found himself
quite unable to refrain from occasional violent excla-
mations directed against the writers of the numerous
begging letters which he daily received, he took the
wise precaution of having them always placed in the
parlour, so that he got over his rage there before pro-
ceeding to establish himself in his den.

As time wore on, however, other difficulties cropped
up, and among these the first and foremost was the
increased determination on the part of his friends to
press upon the worthy milkman the absolute necessity
of his moving to some larger and more fashionable
residence, such as would better become the exalted
position which he had been called upon to fill. Of
course Martha Pattison was very urgent upon the
point, and although Dolly did not press it, there
could be but little doubt that the change would be
agreeable to her. Poor Simon stood out as long as
he could, until at last he was induced to give a re-
luctant assent to the change. It may be wondered
why the good man, in this and his other troubles,
never asked the Silver Fairy’s advice, and indeed the
It] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 161



answer would be difficult to give. The only thing to
be said is that Simon considered that the Fairy Queen,
in giving him riches which were apparently unlimited,
had done so much for him that he could not decently
ask for more, or perhaps he thought that to go for
advice would be evidence of a weak and uncertain
spirit which he did not wish to give, and might more-
over look as if he thought the Silver Fairy had not
already dealt with him in a sufficiently liberal manner.
Be this as it may, he yielded to the pressure of Martha
Pattison and his friends, and allowed a large house to
be taken for him in a fashionable part of the town.
They could not persuade him, however, to part with
his old home, and although strenuously urged to let
or sell it, he resolutely refused to do cither the one or
the other. An old woman was accordingly hired to oc-
cupy and look after the premises, and Simon promised
himself an occasional visit to the place in which so
many of the happiest days of his life had been spent.

The night before the family quitted the old house
Simon felt much depressed, and all the joy of Mrs.
Pattison and light-hearted conversation of Dolly failed
to rouse him even to tolerably good spirits. After
the others had retired to rest, he betook himself to
his den for the last time—took out a quantity of
notes and put them into a small desk in which he
generally kept his private papers, and then, throwing
himself with a groan into his arm-chair, lit his pipe
and tried to smoke away the grief which rose within
his breast.

It was in vain. Visions of past days of tranquil
enjoyment flitted before him, faces loved and lost

M
162 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [Tt



seemed to rise before his eyes, and the contrast
between his former state of happy industry and his
present condition of idle luxury (for so he deemed it)
became indescribably vivid and at the same time
painful. Presently when he was between dozing and
waking, the old creaking noise came once more from
the piece of furniture, which again opened as on
previous occasions.

Simon seemed to be unable to rouse himself from
the dreamy state of languor into which he had fallen,
but yet he saw with sufficient clearness what followed.
The music played in a strain more melancholy than
ever, and fell upon his ears with so mournful a cadence
as to add greatly to the grief which, even in his half-
sleep, he felt so acutely. Forth came the little figures,
too, as usual, but across the beauteous white of the
frosted silver breasts of each a black scarf was thrown,
and their whole deportment was one which betokened
great and intense sorrow. Very slowly they moved to
and fro, and in a voice which seemed agitated by the
most profound emotion, the same singer whom Simon
had previously heard chanted in a low and grave
tone the following verses :—

‘ Farewell to happy moments past,
Never, ah! never to return !
What happiness on earth may last ?
When will mankind true wisdom learn ?
Farewell! ‘Farewell !” oh! cruel word,
‘From home and friends when forced to part,
“What sound more sad is ever heard
To try the fond and faithful heart ?
In vain we strive for grateful rest,
We yield to some resistless spell,
And, forced from all we love the best,
Are tortured by that word ‘‘ Farewell !”’
III.] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 163



Simon listened to these words with as much attention
as his dozing condition permitted, and felt somewhat
uneasy at the tone and manner in which they were
sung, as well as at the actual words themselves.
Their meaning was not very clear to him, but he
supposed that the Silver Fairies, like himself, disliked
leaving the old den, and were taking their last fare-
well of the same, as in fact he himself was doing,
though after a different fashion.

In fact, the next day the old piece of furniture,
together with such of Simon’s other household goods
as had not already been moved to the new house,
was to be taken thereto, and placed in the room which
had been fixed upon for the study of the master of
the house. Doubtless, thought Simon, the Fairies
knew this as well as he did, and perhaps liked the
proposed change little better. However, it was too
late to make any alteration in his plans, and there-
fore he deemed it best to say nothing upon the
subject, but, after the scene which has just been
described, retired to rest with a heart by no means as
light as that with which in old days he had been used
' to close his evenings after a good day’s work anda
comfortable pipe at the end of it.

Next morning all was bustle and confusion in the
old house, men running to and fro, luggage being
moved from one place to another, would-be helpers
standing in the way at every corner, idle people
looking on, and all the usual preparations going for-
ward for the migration of a family from one house
to another. Simon felt more melancholy than ever,
but it seemed useless to indulge in such feelings, and

u 2
164 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. pase



he therefore bore up against them, and went off in a
four-wheeled cab to his new home, in company with the
female members of his family. They arrived there
without accident, and in due time their luggage fol-
lowed, and amongst other things the old piece of
furniture was safely brought, and duly deposited in
its destined place.

’ The room in which it was placed was in great
contrast to that from which it had been brought,
being of a bright, new appearance, with a smart
carpet, fine curtains, furniture just bought, and alto-
gether fitted up as a study fit for so eminent a per-
sonage as a member of Parliament. There was no
niche into which the old piece of furniture exactly
fitted, but as Simon naturally wished to have it near
him, it was placed in a corner of the room where it
certainly contrasted somewhat strangely with all the
new furniture, but still, from its own natural respect-
ability of appearance, was by no means so much out
of place as a less substantially built article might
have been. Out of place or not, however, there it was
deposited, and after a while the rest of good Simon’s
things were duly arranged and he found himself es-
tablished in his new home.

As evening drew on, the ex-milkman’s depres-
sion of spirits returned, and he avowed to Dolly that
he didn’t like ‘these here changes’ and had never felt
in worse spirits than he did that day. Dolly, poor
girl, was not particularly happy herself, for the break-
ing up of a home, however humble, is not a pleasant
business when it comes to the point, and there were
many old associations which could not be parted with
IIl.] THE SIL VEN FAIRIES. 165



entirely without regret. She knew, however, that
her grandfather had one source of solace which in
old days had never failed him, and advised him ac-
cordingly to have recourse to that faithful comforter —
his pipe. By no means unwilling to follow this
counsel, the old man betook himself to his study,
pulled an arm-chair in front of the fire, lighted his
pipe and sat down for his first smoke in his grand
new home. After a whiff or two, however, he be~
thought himself that he would take a look at the old
piece of furniture in its new position, and just see
that everything was right with it. Somehow or other,
it did not look to him quite the same as usual. What
it was, he could not tell, but certainly there was a
difference, just as you may observe in a human being,
whose features indeed remain the same, but who
sometimes varies extremely in expression according
to his or her condition of mind and body. So there
seemed, somehow or other, to be an unusual and un-
accountable heaviness about the old piece of furniture
which struck Simon at once. He rose from his chair,
walked to the corner of the room in which stood the
article in question, and opened it forthwith. ‘There
were the pigeon-holes and drawers exactly the same
as usual, and Simon stretched out his hand and
opened the treasure drawer which had stood him in
such good stead. There was no difficulty, as once
before, in his doing this, but when he had done so,
dreadful to relate—‘ the drawer was empty!’ Nota
note, not a scrap of paper, not a vestige of anything
whatever. Empty, positively empty, was the drawer,
and the fact was too plain and certain to admit of a
166 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [riI.



doubt. Simon gave a groan from the very bottom of
his heart, and sank into the nearest chair. Visions of
ruin passed before his eyes at that moment. Here
were his riches apparently swept away in an instant,
and what was to become of him he knew not.

Rousing himself, however, by a mighty effort, he
determined to ascertain the full extent of his mis-
fortune, and for that purpose proceeded to open every
drawer in the piece of furniture, but alas! with
exactly the same result. The fountain of bank-notes
had evidently dried up, and thg wealth of Simon was
atanend. One more hope remained: the Fairy might
besummoned. Before venturing, however, upon this
experiment, the old man thought it best to break the
news to his female relations, and. accordingly pro-
ceeded to the drawing-room, from which they had
not yet retired for the night. His strange and haggard
appearance struck both the women at once,

‘Oh, Grandfather!’ cried Dolly, ‘what zs the
matter? What /as happened ?’

Then Simon unfolded the tale he had to relate,
and the consternation it created may be more easily
imagined than described. Both Martha and Dolly
agreed that the only hope remaining was to summon
the Fairy once more, and as Dolly’s presence had
been successful upon the last occasion, it was settled
that she should go with her grandfather to the study
in the present crisis. The two, therefore, marched
off to the room without further delay, with the inten-
tion of using the means which they had been bidden
to employ in order to summon the Silver Fairy when
they required her advice. Those means, however,
1I.] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 167



were not required upon the present occasion. Just
as they reached the door of the study a loud noise as
of a heavy fall startled both grandfather and grand-
daughter. They looked at each other for a moment
in wonder, and then opened the door.

The cause of the noise was at once apparent. The
old piece of furniture had fallen forward upon its face,
and lay on the floor smashed and broken, the very
wreck and ruin of its former self. Whether impelled ~
by some supernatural power, or animated by some
internal feeling not common to furniture in general,
it had apparently made a determined effort at self-de-
struction, and had nearly, if not quite, accomplished
its purpose. This, however, was not the only sight
which met the eyes of the two persons who entered
the room. Standing upon one of the fragments of
the broken piece of furniture, and gazing upon the
destruction around her with a mournful eye, was a
figure which they instantly recognised as the Queen
of the Silver Fairies. She looked up as they entered,
and fixed her gaze upon the two wondering mortals
in silence for a few moments, whilst they stood rooted
to the spot with amazement : then she spoke.

‘Simon Ricketts !’ she said, ‘you may well look
with wonder and sorrow upon the scene before you,
of which, indeed, you yourself have been the cause.
When you purchased and brought to your house the
ancient, happy home of the Silver Fairies, you re-
ceived full notice of what you might gain from such
guests, and what you should do in order to retain
their fortunate presence. Alas! you have followed in
the usual track of mankind. Advice you might have
168 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [U1



had, which, if obeyed, would have made your life
happy—but advice you have never once asked. Im-
pelled by the insatiable desire for wealth which has
ruined so many of your race, you demanded riches,
and believed that in their acquisition you had ob-
tained everything which mortal man could desire.
By this time you have probably discovered your mis-
take in this respect. But it has not been your only
mistake. You were warned not to offend the ears
and good taste of the Silver Fairies by language
which they dislike, and you required a second warn-
ing. Worse still, however, you neglected the more
important injunction as to moving our ancient home,
and, in spite of warning, you have conveyed it to a new
dwelling in which no fairy could remain a single hour.
You might have understood that novelty and fashion
are things ill-suited to the life of a Silver Fairy. You
might have known that our home could not exist side
by side with the furniture in this room. By removing
it from your own old home you have sacrificed it and
our happiness as well as your own to the inordinate
love of riches, and you will now find that the latter
have vanished as well, and that you have gained
nothing, but lost everything, by the course you have
so foolishly adopted.’

As the Silver Fairy spoke these words with a stern
voice, poor old Simon felt his heart sink within him.
What a prospect lay before him! After a life of com-
parative prosperity he had risen suddenly to affluence,
and now saw himself about to be plunged into hope-
less poverty; for the debts which he had incurred
since his election, and the expenses of his altered
I1I.] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 169

household, had been such as he could never have
hoped to defray save by the assistance of the treasure
drawer, and with its loss there seemed nothing before
him but utter ruin. This thought, and perhaps in
addition some little remorse at having seemed un-
grateful to his benefactors the Silver Fairies, cut the
old man to the heart. His knees trembled beneath
him, his voice would not come at command, and he
stood before the old piece of furniture the very
picture of hopeless misery. But with Dolly it was
happily otherwise. Her loving heart felt more deeply
for the blow which had evidently fallen with such
severity upon her aged relative than for any possible
consequences to herself, and to shield him from harm
was her first and only thought at that moment.
Throwing herself on her knees before the Fairy Queen,
she addressed her in an earnest voice of entreaty.

‘Oh please don’t say such cruel things to grand-
‘father, great Fairy! Indeed and indeed it wasn’t his
fault ; it was Martha Pattison and I who persuaded
him to want more money, and to be grand and great,
and to move from the dear old home and come here.
Don’t let A212 be punished for our fault! Oh please
don’t! Just think what an old man he is, and how
hard it will be for him to be so poor.in his old
age! Do punish me instead, and let grandfather off!’
As she spoke these pleading words, the tears stood in
Dolly’s eyes, and presently rolled down her cheeks,
and she clasped her hands in the intensity of her
earnestness, ;

The Fairy Queen looked upon her and smiled
pleasantly.
170 - WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [ur

‘Dear child!’ she said, ‘who could resist such an
advocate? Yet there- are things beyond the power
of even a fairy. A lost home and a broken heart are
neither of them things easy to restore, and our home
is gone for ever. Still we must not be unjust and
punish your grandfather as if he had intentionally
done us this evil. Let him look to the notes he
_ placed in his desk last night, and he will find enough
to save him from the calamity he dreads. But be
wise in time. Your old home is not destroyed like
the home of the Silver Fairies. Return there—be con-
tent—and all may still be well with you.’

She spoke, and as the last words left her mouth
her figure became gradually more and more indistinct
and presently faded away entirely out of the sight of
the two mortals. Her speech, however, had rekindled
hope in the bosom of Simon Ricketts. Recovering
himself from his state of despondency, he turned to
his granddaughter, and having tenderly kissed her,
then and there made a solemn vow to get quit of his
new house and all its contingent expenses with as
little delay as possible, and to return forthwith to his
former home, and the old Den. Martha Pattison
raised a feeble remonstrance on being informed of
this determination, but on finding Simon quite re-
solved on the change, and warmly supported by his
granddaughter, she wisely submitted to that which
could not be avoided.

I am glad to say that on examining his desk,
Simon found that the notes which he had so luckily
stowed away were sufficient to pay off every farthing
of debt which he owed, and to leave a balance over
®

III] THE SILVER FAIRIES. 17I



and above which was quite worth having. Ere long,
therefore, he was not only back in his old home, but
re-engaged in his old trade, having resigned his seat
in Parliament, and returned with real pleasure to his
cows. In one thing only did he venture to act if not
in opposition to, at least quite independently of, the
suggestions of the Fairy Queen. He had the old piece
of furniture carefully repaired, and placed once more
in the recess in the old den which it had formerly
occupied. And whenever Simon felt an angry ora
covetous thought rising in his heart, he would go and
sit down before the old piece of furniture, and as he
contemplated it, would call to mind the occurrences
with which it had been connected, and forthwith
banish from his heart the unworthy guest.

After all, he had no great reason to regret what
had happened. He had learnt the great lesson of
contentment, and had, at the expense of a short time
of trouble and vexation, rather improved his prospect
of ending his days comfortably. Things continued to
go right with him, and before he died he was gener-
ally looked upon as a well-to-do man, and that upon
very good grounds, as he had greatly increased his
business and had evidently prospered therein. Neither
did he leave this world until he had seen his grand-
daughter happily married to a deserving young farmer
who had long looked upon her with loving eyes, and
to whom she made an excellent wife when he took her
to his country home.

Joe Muggins, after the return of Simon to his old
trade, fought rather shy of him at first, fearing to be
accused of having been the cause of his loss of wealth,
172 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [ur



However, when he found that the worthy milkman felt
no regret upon the subject and certainly bore no malice,
he gradually came round, dropped in again now and
‘then as in old days, and eventually gave the final
proof of his wisdom by taking Martha Pattison for his
wife. Itis no part of my business to narrate what
effect this step had upon the trade of the ‘Royal
George’ or the comfort of its keeper, but I am in-
clined to believe that Simon Ricketts sorrowed but
little at the event. Anyhow, he lived on for several
years afterwards without seeming any the worse for it,
and probably died none the sooner from the loss. He
ended his days peacefully and happily, and there were
those that said he had further help and assistance
from the same source from whence had come his sudden
wealth. This, however, is probably untrue. People
who have once banished fairies from their homes are
seldom lucky enough to get them there again. They
may forgive ; they may even leave behind them words
of wisdom and good advice by attention to which
mortals may thrive and prosper. But seldom if ever
do they revisit with their sweet presence the -scenes
where they have once been happy and have lost their
happiness ; and whatever ignorant people may have
thought and said, I feel very sure that when he left the
new study after that important interview with the
great queen, Simon Ricketts had taken his last look,
for ever and aye, at the Silver Fairies.














































































































































































































































































































































































































































MOLLY AND THE DEVIL-FISH
Iv.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 173



IV.

THE WITCHES’ ISLAND,

IT was raining in torrents : ‘raining cats and dogs,’ as
some people say, though I never knew the exact origin
of the saying, and never witnessed the actual and
literal occurrence of such an event. Anyhow, however,
the great drops fell fast from the dark heavy clouds,
and what made it worse was that the wind was blow-
ing so fiercely at the same time, that to hold up an
umbrella was simply impossible. A most troublesome
wind it was, too, not coming like a respectable wind
from any particular quarter, but taking you on all
sides as if it had the special privilege of coming from
every quarter at once, or of selecting the point from
which it could make itself the most disagreeable at
any one particular moment.

So Molly Goodchild found it rather difficult to
keep dry as she struggled against wind and rain,
wrapped her old red cloak round her as closely as
she could, clutched more tightly the handle of the
covered basket which she was carrying, and made the
best of her way along the road by the sea-shore. On
a bright, calm summer evening it was pleasant enough
to stroll along this road and enjoy the soft breezes from
the ocean. But there were no soft breezes now, and as
to walking nearer the sea than you could help, it wasn’t
174 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND [1v.



to be thought of. The waves were running mountains
high and dashing themselves like mad things upon the
rocks, scattering their spray far before them as they
broke with a crash like thunder. The sea-gulls were
flitting like uneasy spirits over the sea, and every now
and then uttering a shrill cry which you might take
to mean delight, fear, or excitement, whichever you
pleased, but which was neither musical to the tender
ear nor reassuring to the timid heart.

I don’t know much about Molly Goodchild’s ear,
but her heart was certainly timid, and particularly so
upon the evening upon which she is introduced to our
notice. For John Goodchild, her husband for ten
years past, albeit a sturdy man and well able to earn
his living and support his family by following his trade
as a fisherman, was unfortunately given to combining
other and less lawful pursuits with that legitimate
occupation. In those days, smuggling was deemed
no great crime by the seafaring population of the coast,
and John Goodchild was generally supposed to be one
of the gang who had run many cargoes and success-
fully eluded the vigilance of the Preventive men for a
long time.

Nor was rumour so much in the wrong in this
particular instance as is frequently the case. John
Goodchild was in the thick of the smuggling, sure
enough, and a bolder and more fearless fellow could
hardly be found. His cottage was handy to the shore,
being built into the chalk cliffs which rose like giants
from the sea, close to it at one place, then falling back
for a hundred yards inland and then jutting out again as
if to give the waves something to dash against in high
Iv.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 175



tides. The road by the sea, therefore, to which I have
alluded, was not very straight or very even, and
seemed to have been constructed by some one whose
object had been to keep as close as possible to the
water’s edge, but who had been obliged. at various
places to bore through the cliff or to take a turn some
way inland in order to protect his work from the
action of the sea.

Molly Goodchild proceeded on her way for some
distance until she came to a spot at which the road
turned its back altogether on the sea and dived into
the cliff as if it had become suddenly tired of the sight
of the blue ocean. At the distance of a hundred yards
or soit came out again and faced the open air, but
the passage from one end to the other was somewhat
dark and dismal, and so Molly thought as she paused
at the entrance for a moment as if hesitating whether
to advance. She did not, however, hesitate long, for
fishermen’s wives have no time for hesitation, especi-
ally when they are hurrying home to prepare their
husband’s supper, and feel an inward consciousness
that they are a good bit behindtime. This being the
case with worthy Molly, she quickly nerved herself to
the task, and plunged boldly into the gloomy passage
before her without further delay. As she did so the
air struck keen and chill, and she wrapped her cloak
still more tightly around her, and shivered withal. She
hurried along as fast as she could until she had got
about half-way through the passage, when suddenly
she stopped as if she had been shot. A voice, soft and
gentle, but still a voice, sure enough, although the
owner thereof was nowhere visible, whispered into
176 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [rv.



her ear in perfectly audible tones— ‘Molly Good-
child!’

"Utterly confounded, astonished, and not a little
alarmed, the good woman could for an instant say or
do nothing. Almost immediately afterwards, another
voice in tones as loud as a trumpet calling to battle,
shouted her name again, apparently from the farther
end of the passage to which she was advancing—
‘Molly Goodchild!’ and with scarcely the interval of a
second, another voice sounded in tones equally loud
and clear from the entrance which she had left behind
her, ‘Molly Goodchild !’ and immediately afterwards
other voices joined in, and the bewildered woman heard
the whole place reverberating with the sound of her
own name, shouted forth again and again as if it had
been a war-cry, or a chorus, or something to which
everybody else had a right, instead of being, as she
considered it, her own private property.

Under these extraordinary circumstances there was
in Mrs. Goodchild’s opinion nothing for it but to go on
as fast as she could, inasmuch as between voices before,
voices behind, and voices on both sides of her, she
had not the remotest conception which way any of
the speakers wished her to go. So without more ado
(though trembling considerably as she did so) she
hurried forward again with the utmost possible
speed, whilst the same sounds still continued to ring
in her ears until she reached the farther end of the
passage, and with a sigh of joy came out once more
into the open air.

Ata little distance from the passage, the road bore
upwards and passed between two great masses of rock
1v.| THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 177



on either side of it, which seemed for all the world as if
one of the great crags had taken pity on the engineer
at that particular spot, and split itself on either side
so as to allow his road to run through it without
further trouble. But just before it reached this point

_ another road, or rather cart-track, bore away from the
.main road down towards the sea, and led to the cot-

tage in the cliff which was the abode of the smuggler-
fisherman and his wife. When the latter had arrived
at this point, she turned off and was about to hurry
down to her home, when her attention was suddenly
arrested by a loud and discordant laugh which appar-
ently proceeded from the cleft rock immediatély before
her.

Once more she halted, and looked in the direction

', from whence the sound seemed to come. The sight

which met her eyes was by no means calculated to

calm her already perturbed spirit. Seated upon the

side of the rock, as if it was in a position of extreme
comfort and one to which it was daily accustomed,
was a gigantic Turbot, surveying her with great com-

-placency, and apparently shaking its fat sides with

suppressed laughter.

Molly Goodchild was struck dumb with astonish-
ment. ‘Turbots she had often seen, and, as a fisher-
man’s wife, was well acquainted with their natural
habits and usual methods of proceeding. But so large
a turbot—so far from the water, and evidently so com-
pletely at his ease, Molly had certainly never seen
before, and for a moment she stared at him with open

mouth, scarcely able to believe her own eyes. Was

ita turbot ? and could it have been from Aim that the
178 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. [1v.

laugh had proceeded? Another moment put the matter
beyond a doubt. A second burst of laughter again
sounded forth from the rock, and most decidedly it
came from the Turbot. His enormous fins positively
wagged with the effort, his huge mouth opened and
shut as if he were gasping for breath, and it was pal-
pable that he was enjoying himself ina manner which
few turbots could have done save indeed in that native
element which the fish in question appeared to have
left for the time.

Molly knew not what to make of it. The first
thought that crossed her mind was one regarding the
great size and probable weight of the creature before
her, and how much he would fetch in the market, if
she only had him there. This thought, however, passed
away. in a moment, for Molly was far too sensible not
to perceive at once that this could ‘be no ordinary
turbot. How he came there, what fun he could find
in lying on the rocks instead of swimming in the sea
as most respectable turbots generally did, and above
all, what he meant by laughing in that strange and
unaccountable manner,-were questions to which the
good woman could return no answer, and for a full
half-minute she continued to look at the creature
‘without either the will or the power to say a word,
Indeed, the Turbot was the first to break the silence,
for when he had sufficiently recovered from his fit of
laughter, he said, in a wheezy choky kind of voice,
such as you might have expected from a fish of his
size and corpulence, ‘Molly Goodchild! where's
‘your husband?’ and having said these words, he
went off into another fit of laughter of a kind which

=
Iv.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 179



threatened to choke him speedily if it continued much
longer.

_ Molly, however, was by no means disposed to
laugh at his words. She had gone off quite early that
morning to the neighbouring town in order to make
certain purchases of housekeeping necessaries, and, of
course, knew nothing of her husband’s doings during
the day. The laughter of the Turbot, however, at
once awakened in her breast the suspicion of evil. For
as turbots may be supposed to be naturally hostile to
fishermen, it was unlikely that any good luck which
might have befallen John Goodchild would have
excited the fish in question to the degree of merri-
ment with which he appeared to be possessed. Where-
fore the excellent Molly, losing at once any fear which
she might have entertained of the strange creature
who had accosted her in such an unwonted manner,
and feeling only anxiety for the husband whom she
had left safe and sound in the morning and whom
she was hastening to rejoin, spoke out at once in
answer to the fish, and ina voice somewhat shaken by
an undefined dread, gave utterance to the following
words :— _

‘Lack-a-daisy me, Muster Turbot, whatever do you
mean? Has anything happened along o’ my John?
Sure-ly he be at home and ready for his. supper, too,
bean’t he?’.

At this response to his question the Turbot posi-
tively roared, till great, juicy tears rolled from his eyes,
and his whole frame quivered with emotion. Molly
knew not what to make of it, or how to proceed un-
der these extraordinary circumstances, and was still

N2
Q

180 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. [iv.



hesitating and wondering, when, with a mighty effort
the creature recovered himself, and after a puff or two
which were rendered necessary by the great exertion
he had undergone, droned out, with as much gravity
as he could, the following astounding words :—

‘The Fisherman’s wife she is gone to the town,

Hey ho! sing by the sea! :

With her very best bonnet and very best gown,
Roar away, waves, and ye winds, blow free !

The Fisherman sauntereth down to the shore,
Hey ho! sing by the sea!

Shall he ever come sauntering back any more?
Roar away, waves, and ye winds, blow free !

~ The Fisherman lieth full length on the beach,
Hey ho ! sing by the sea !
Loud laugh the fishes, aye! all and each,
Roar away, waves, and ye winds, blow free!

The witches are watching the crest of each wave,
Hey ho! sing by the sea!
Long have they looked for a mortal slave,
Roar away, waves, and ye winds, blow free !
A mortal slave must the witches get,
Hey ho! sing by the sea!
To row their boat and to mend their net,
Roar away, waves, and ye winds, blow free !
The Fisherman slumbereth, long and deep,
Hey ho! sing by the sea !
Hurra ! for the witches have caught him asleep,
Roar away, waves, and ye winds, blow free !
They have carried him off to their sacred isle,
Hey ho! sing by the sea !
Who shall reclaim him by force or guile ?
Roar away, waves, and ye winds, blow free !
Vainly his widow her hands may wring,
Hey ho ! sing by the sea !
But loudly the fishes will laugh and sing,
Roar away, waves, and ye winds, blow free !’
Iv.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 181



As the Turbot came to a conclusion, Molly Good-
child felt a terrible sense of calamity steal over her, |
and a conviction that the words which she had just
heard were certainly true and that her husband was
lost to her for ever.

Upon that wild coast there were many strange
traditions, and wonderful legends, but none upon
which all authorities were more completely agreed
than that of the Witches’ Island. Who, or what
the witches were had never been accurately ascer-
tained; their number was unknown, the extent of
their power uncertain, but of their existence none of
the inhabitants of the coast entertained the slightest
doubt whatever. The island which bore their name
was but a few hundred yards from shore, and as nearly
as possible in the middle of the large bay close to
which the cottage of the Goodchilds was situated.
Molly had more than once been in her husband’s boat
when he had rowed or sailed past this island, and had
never at such times remarked anything peculiar about
it, or seen any traces of the evil beings who were said
to make it their home. But at nights, when the waves
were breaking with their heavy, thundering crash
upon the rocks, and the winds were whistling around
the little cottage, both Molly and her husband had
fancied that they heard sounds like human voices
borne on the blast from the direction of the island.
Sometimes a scream, but more often harsh, dis-

‘cordant laughter, singularly out of place at such an
hour and in such a locality, came ringing in the
ears of the smuggler-fisherman and his wife, and at
such moments they would draw nearer to each other
182 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [iv.



and closer to. the fire, and mutter words of fear and
wonder.

More than this, too, sundry of the fishing folk had
vowed solemnly that at times they had seen strange
weird figures flitting about on the shores of the island,
and John Goodchild himself,though never very commu-
hicative on such subjects, had more than once dropped
hints of having seen more than he cared to mention.
Anyhow, both he and the other fishermen of the coast
never went nearer to the Witches’ Island than they
could help, and, indeed, seldom alluded to it in their
conversation, recognising it as something which must
exist, but with which it was desirable to have as little
to do as possible. So when Molly Goodchild heard
this strange song sung by such a strange singer, no_
wonder that terror at once struck chill upom her heart,
and she felt sure that some dreadful misfortune had
befallen her husband.

As soon as he had finished - his ands. the Turbot
again relapsed into an uncontrollable fit. of laughter,
which, to Molly Goodchild’s mind, appeared to be
in exceedingly bad taste under the circumstances.
Anxiety for her husband being, however, uppermost
in her mind,.she swallowed the rising wrath which
would have prompted her to tell the Turbot pretty
plainly what she thought of his conduct, and clasping
her hands together in a supplicating attitude, ex-
claimed in.a tone sufficiently pitiful to have melted
the heart of any fish that ever swam in the sea, ‘Oh
please, Mr. Turbot, if anything bad ’s happened to my
man, do tell us what’s to be done for to set things
right again |’
IVv.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 183



‘Boil me if I do!’ shouted the fish in reply. ‘Boil
me, and dish me, with lobster sauce into the bargain,
if I tell John Goodchild’s wife how to get back her
husband ! No, no—I know a trick worth two of that.
The rabbits may do as they please, but no fish that is .
worth boiling will help a fisherman’s wife! Sprats and
herrings! the woman must be a fool to ask me!’

‘Fool, yourself, you great ugly fish!’ cried Molly,
now losing her temper. ‘Drat your impudence,
laughing and grinning at other people’s troubles! I
don’t believe a word you say, and I wish you was
cooked and eaten too, that I do!’

At this the Turbot’s fins visibly bristled, and he
answered in the same tone of voice as before : ‘ Believe
or not, as you please, Molly Goodchild, you will find
that the voice of a turbot is as truthful as an angry
woman’s passion is ridiculous; but, anyhow, you can ~
go and see for yourself!’ a

The same thought having crossed Mrs. Goodchild’s
mind while the Turbot was speaking, she had already
determined that her best plan was to go home at once
and ascertain the truth or falsehood of the tale she had
just heard. The instinct of a fisherman’s wife was,
however, still strong within her, and she could not help
thinking how very acceptable a gift-the prophet of
evil would be to her husband. So, having by this
time quite overcome any fear or astonishment which
she might have felt at the first moment of hearing a
fish laugh and speak, she stepped boldly forward
towards the rock on which the creature had placed
himself, exclaiming as she did so, ‘True enough,
Mr. Turbot, I qwd/ see for myself, and you may as well
184 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [Iv.

come along with me and see too, and why not to
market afterwards, I should like to know ?’

Scarcely were the words out of her mouth, when,
as her hand was outstretched towards the rock, it
suddenly opened before her, and to her amazement
she perceived a stream of water inside the cliff, evi-
dently flowing internally down to the sea. Into this
the Turbot, with a hoarse laugh, quietly glided before
her very eyes, and in an instant after disappeared,
whilst the rock closed behind him, and once more
returned to its original condition.

Molly Goodchild opened her eyes wide with
astonishment not unmingled with dismay. For the
thought crossed her mind that a creature with such
power at his command was but too likely to be gene-
rally well informed and to have told the truth re-
garding the fate of herhusband. Evidently, however,
it was useless to wait any longer by the rock,’ and
therefore without further delay, she hurried down the.
track which led to her cottage, and entered the latter
with a heart full of fear.

‘John!’ she cried, as she stepped over the threshold
of the open door; ‘John, my man, where are ye?’

But no voice answered her call, and all within
the cottage was still and silent as the grave. It was
evident that her husband was not there. She went
into the kitchen, but no sound was to be heard save
the steady ticking of the clock, a dreary and melan-
choly sound to an anxious mind, recalling to one as it
does the fact that time goes on just the same in our
misery as in our happiness,.and that it makes very
little difference to the progress of the world around
Iv.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 185



us whether we are cheerful or wretched. Then Molly
looked into the little side room in which she and her
husband were wont sometimes to sit when the nets
were drying in the kitchen, and which was full of the
various implements appertaining to the craft of a
fisherman. It was untenanted, however, by human
being, and her search through the rooms upstairs was
equally. fruitless. Then she rushed out again on to
the beach and down to the sea calling ‘John! John!’
at the top of her voice. But no John replied, and
the wind and waves seemed to mock at her as the
one howled round her head and the other crashed
upon the beach before her. The full conviction of
the truth of the Turbot’s story flashed across her
mind, and, regardless alike of wind and wave, Molly
Goodchild threw herself down upon the beach and
burst into a fit of sobbing and crying as if her heart
would break.

I do not know how long she would have con-
. tinued this pleasant occupation, if she had not been
sufficiently sensible to be aware that it could do her
no possible good, and would in no way contribute to
bring back her lost husband. That he was lost she
had no. longer the smallest doubt, and she greatly
feared that he had been taken from her in the manner
related by the laughing fish. What, then, could she
do? Timid as she was in all things concerning the
supernatural, yet her love for her husband was stronger
than even her fear of the witches, and if anyone would
point out to her the way to proceed, she felt that she
had within her the courage to do and dare everything
to regain her lost one,
186 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [rv.



So, gathering herself up from the beach, she
began, still sobbing as she did so, to ponder over
the events of the last hour and run over in her mind
everything that had occurred, and every word that
had fallen from the Turbot. Suddenly she gave
a start, as she remembered one expression which
had fallen from that cruel fish, though she had paid
little attention to it at the moment. ‘ The rabbits
may doas they please, he had said, whilst refusing to
assist her in any way with his own advice, and this
appeared to give some clue to a means by which,
possibly, aid might be obtained. Rabbits abounded
in the neighbourhood, and if their agency could in
any way be made available, it ought to be procurable
without much difficulty.

But, alas! what right had the wife of John Good-
child to expect assistance from the furry any more
than from the finny tribe? Had she not often
helped her husband to devour a rabbit pudding, and
looked on him with happy eyes as he smacked his
lips after the dainty bits and the fat slices of bacon
with which she had flavoured the favourite dish?
Must not every rabbit of common feeling entertain a
grudge against those who could thus rejoice in feeding
upon his kind, and had she any right to expect favour
or consideration from this injured and long-suffering
race? Still, the words of the Turbot had doubtless
ameaning, and it might be the case that rabbits took
a different view of their position from that which
would undoubtedly have been taken by men under
similar circumstances. At all events, the experiment
was worth trying, and no harm was likely to result
Iv.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 187



from it. But where to go to and what to do were
questions which rather puzzled poor Molly Goodchild,
after she had come to the wise conclusion that it would
be well to go somewhere and to do something.

As she stood doubting and wondering upon the
beach, the thought suddenly came into her head that
although she had lost her husband, there could be no
reason why she should lose her supper into the bargain.
If she had been a fine lady, she might possibly have
begun to cry again, and afterwards have refused food,
bathed her head with eau-de-cologne, fainted, gone
into hysterics, or have done something else equally
useless and ridiculous. But, being only a fisherman’s
wife, and withal very hungry after her long walk, she
was by no means ashamed of her appetite and not at
all disposed to refuse to satisfy its cravings. More-
over, to stand out on the beach for any length of
time when the wind was blowing a gale, was not
particularly pleasant to herself, and could do her
husband no good. Wherefore Molly came to the
determination to go back to the cottage and eat her
supper by herself,.and having adopted this sensible
idea, proceeded at once to put it into execution.

I don’t mean to say that she did not regret her hus-
band’s absence, which she certainly did, but it cannot
be denied that it had but little effect upon her appetite.
She ate heartily, drank her beer with a keen relish,
and never cried again until she had quite finished her
meal. Then the tears began to come into her eyes
as she thought of her trouble, and she wondered what
she could possibly do in order to get back her hus-
band. She remembered that there was a large rabbit
188 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [iv.



warren about a mile off over the cliffs, and also that
many of the little animals were to be seen in the
large wood which ran down nearly to the sea at a
break in the cliffs which occurred some mile anda
half along the shore. To neither of these places,
however, could she very well go that night, and
eventually she came to the conclusion that she must
spend a solitary evening, and wait until the morning
light should enable her to take active measures. By
this time the wind had fallen, and the waves beat less
violently upon the beach. The cottage seemed more
lonely than ever, and Molly felt desolate indeed as
she sat by the window gazing out over the sea in the
direction of the Witches’ Island. As she gazed, a
dim light appeared to glimmer along the edge of the
island, as if a boat were moving along close in by
the shore. Presently other lights seemed to flicker
up, and evidently something was _taking place upon
that mysterious shore.

Molly kept her eyes steadily fixed in the same
direction, and fancied that she could see dark figures
flitting to and fro—then they seemed to come down
close to the sea, and after a while the light she had
first seen appeared to leave the island and come
towards the mainland. The eager watcher could for
some time make out nothing in the darkness which
had now fallen upon the sea, but after a little while
she clearly distinguished a boat, rowed by a single
individual, but containing several others seated in the
stern. Nearer and nearer it came, until at last it
touched the beach with the usual harsh, grating noise
of a boat pulled sharply in, and grounded within a
Iv.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 189



hundred yards of the spot where Molly Goodchild
was sitting. She peered out into the darkness as well
as she could, but could make out little in the increasing
gloom. Suddenly, however, a vivid flash of lightning
illuminated the whole scene. It was but for the space
of a second, but in that brief time Molly saw enough
to cause her considerable excitement. Four strange
and weird-looking old women had landed on the
beach, for what purpose she could not tell, whilst the |
man who had pulled them across remained sitting in
the boat, and that man was none other than John
Goodchild !

Molly’s first impulse was to rush forth from the
cottage and call loudly upon her husband. But her
limbs refused to do her bidding, and her tongue clove
to the roof of her mouth. She could neither move nor
speak, and continued to gaze upon the scene before
_ her with mingled astonishment and dread. Though
_the darkness still brooded over land and sea, she

could faintly discern the figures of the females, whom
she at once concluded to be witches and nothing else.
Moreover, from time to time a flash of lightning
momentarily lit up the coast, and in one of these
instants she caught sight of her husband’s face as he
sat in the boat, pale and wan, and with an air of spell-
bound quiet which at once, to her mind, corroborated
the Turbot’s story, and told but too surely that he
was under the dominion of the fearful Island Witches.
The latter had moved up somewhat nearer to the
cottage, and having made a place for themselves upon
the beach, deposited upon it certain faggots and pro-
ceeded to light a fire, upon which they placed some-
190 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [iv.



thing which looked to Molly Goodchild remarkably
like a‘pie-dish. Such indeed it probably was, and
most likely one of those primitive earthen dishes
which folks of old used to place on their fires in order
to bake the meat within.

However this may be, the fire soon burned up,
and while it cooked the Witches’ meat, gave Molly
a better opportunity of observing their countenances
and general appearance. They were certainly an ill-
looking lot. One had the most awful squint you can
imagine: another had very small eyes, a very thick
nose, and a beard like that of a man; the third was
humpbacked ; and the fourth had her nose slit, and
bore such an evil expression on her face that Molly
thought she was certajnly the ugliest old woman she
had ever set eyes upon.

Whilst their supper was cooking the Witches pro-
duced several black bottles, the contents of which they
poured into drinking-horns and appeareto imbibe
with much satisfaction. Then they poked the fire and
blew it to increase the flame, and turned the pie-dish
round until they seemed to think the inside was
thoroughly cooked, when they proceeded to take it
off the fire, and, dividing it into four portions, began
to devour it ravenously, only stopping to take occa-
sional deep draughts from their horns.

When they had apparently concluded their repast,
the Witches arose and shook the crumbs from their
clothes for all the world as ordinary mortals might
have done, and then, joining hands, danced slowly
round the expiring fire, chanting as they did so ina
slow, monotonous tone. And thus ran their song :—
THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 191



I.
‘ The life of an island witch for us,
Harum scarum diddledee dum !
Away from the mainland bother and fuss :
Come to the island—won’t you come?

II.
‘Merry the life which we there do dwell,
Harum scarum diddledee dum !
Though what we all do, we decline to tell:
Come to the island—won’t you come?

III.

‘Shines on the water the glaring sun,
Harum scarum diddledee dum !
Then the wise witches are seen by none :
Come to the island—won’t you come?

Iv.

* But when darkness falls on the rolling wave,
Harum scarum diddledee dum !
Hither we come with our boatman slave :
Come to the island—won’t you come ?

a v.

‘Crafty and brave are the mortal men,
Harum scarum diddledee dum !

Till once they are safe in the witches’ Den:
Come to the island—won’t you come ?

VI.

‘There, though he chance to be lord or knave,
Harum scarum diddledee dum!
Man may be only the witches’ slave :
Come to the island—won’t you come?

VIL

‘See the new slave in the boat sits still,
Harum scarum diddledee dum !

Bound by the spell he must do our will :
Come to the island—won’t you come ??

“ee
192 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. ftv.





Molly had sat listening with terror-stricken ears
to the whole of this song, marvelling greatly at the
whole proceeding. But the latter words changed the
whole current of her ideas, and, for a time at least,
banished terror from her soul. The idea of her hus-
band—her own brave John, who, whatever might be
his faults, had been her first and only love, and a’
faithful husband to her from their first days of mar-
riage—the idea, I say, of her own man being the
obedient slave of four old women—and such ugly old
women, too, into the bargain—left no room in her
mind for anything but rage and indignation. Spring-
ing from her seat by the window she hastened to the
door, unfastened it as quickly as she could, and rushed
frantically out on the beach, shouting as she did so
at the top of her voice, ‘John! John! I say, John!
Come to I directly! ’Tis your own Molly ! Come to
I, John, and drat them witches !’

Now in all. probability Mrs. Goodchild could not
possibly have selected a form of address better calcu-
lated to defeat its own object. Had she sallied forth
with good words in her mouth, or even a good book
in her hands, it is impossible to say what the result
might have been, or how the witches might have
been affected. But the use of the words she uttered,
disrespectful to the witches themselves, and scarcely
elegant or becoming in the mouth of a female, if
indeed in that of anybody else, was indeed but little
likely to have any influence over the evil powers of
magic. As soon as Molly had got outside the cottage
the fire on the beach seemed to go out at once, and

the darkness became more dense than ever, and she
Iv.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 193

only heard a scuffling, shambling sound, as if people,
neither very young nor agile, were hurrying down
to the sea as fast as they were able. Then there
followed the sound of oars dipped in the water and of
a boat going off.

‘John! John! come to I! again shouted poor
Molly ; but the only reply was a stifled groan, as if
some one was making a violent effort to cry out, but
failing signally from some cause unknown, and then
came a low chuckle as of mocking laughter from the
sea.

Molly stood still and listened in despair. The
sound of the oars grew fainter and fainter—the
laughter ceased—and she could hear nothing but the
heavy, dull beating of the waves, which kept on
breaking upon the beach as if they rather liked the
operation and had no. idea of ever leaving off.
Then Molly returned to her cottage with a heart full
of heaviness, and, sitting down upon the floor, fairly
gave way and burst into a regular good fit of crying.
I do not know—neither did she herself—how long
the good woman continued in this state before she
was aroused by a little tapping noise at the window,
and looking sharply up, saw through her tears a small
bird fluttering outside. Without the delay of a mo-
ment she arose and opened the casement, when a
little sandpiper flew i in and perched at once upon the
table. .

Now Molly Goodchild had always entertained a
friendly feeling towards birds in general, and sand-
pipers in particular. Not that there was anything
especially attractive in these’ birds, but they made

oO
194. WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1Vv.

their nests in the cliffs near the cottage, and were
quite like companions to the good woman sometimes
when her husband was away at sea. True, she had
never interchanged words with any of them, and was
not even aware that they could speak ; nor, indeed, was
it-usual for birds of this sort to come flying up against
the cottage window and peck for admittance. Still,
after the wonderful incident of the Turbot, Molly was
prepared for anything, and it was therefore almost
if not altogether without surprise that she heard the
Sandpiper, after having shaken his damp feathers and
wagged his head once or twice in a knowing manner,
accost her in good English after the following
fashion :—

“Dear Mrs. Goodchild,’ said the bird, ‘I am dis-
tressed—though not surprised—to see how unhappy
you are.’

‘Why, so would you be, my birdie,” answered the
woman at once, ‘if so be that you had a mate carried
off by witches.’

‘Indeed I should, replied the bird ; ‘and it speaks
well for the terms on which you have lived with your
husband that you should miss him so much. But I
do not come to bewail with, but to aid, you. I well
know that you are in great grief, but I also know that
itis a grief which may be remedied. I was flying
past the large wood near the shore just now, and
heard some of the little people talking the matter
over. I heard them say that if you would only go
and consult the Wise Rabbit, who burrows below the
old hollow thorn-tree on the mound, they were quite
sure he could and would help you out of your trouble,
1v.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 195



So I thought, as you have always been friendly with
us sandpipers, I would do you a good turn and come
off and tell you at once.’

‘Thank you kindly, birdie) said the grateful wo-
man ; ‘ thank you kindly for your good news. I know
the mound and the thorn-tree too, and I will certainly
go there the very first thing to-morrow morning.
But if my man is really the slave of them wretched
creatures, I’m sure I don’t know what ever I can'do
for to get him back again.’

‘Leave that to the Rabbit!’ cried the Sandpiper.
“And now, as I have done my errand, please to let
me out of the window again, and if you will take my
advice, you will forthwith go quietly to bed,’

Molly, being a sensible woman, saw the wisdom of
this advice at once; she therefore first opened the
window and let her little visitor depart, and then,
feeling very tired, and knowing that she could do no
more that night, turned into bed with as little delay
as possible. There can be little doubt that she
dreamed of witches, turbots, rabbits, and sandpipers
during the night, but truth compels me to declare
that, whether troubled.by dreams or not, she managed
to sleep until the sun had lighted up the sky with
his morning beams, and all nature was again astir.
The wind had lulled in the night, the waves had
ceased to roar, and broke“ peacefully upon the shore,
as if they wished to make friends with it and apolo-
gise for having dashed against it with such vehemence
on the previous night. In short, it was one of those
glorious mornings upon which everything looks its

: ‘ 02
196 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v.

best, and people really feel that they are alive and that
living is a privilege and a pleasure.

Molly Goodchild was not long in rising and getting
her breakfast, and although she felt lonely without
her husband, she was cheered by the thought that she
was about to takea step which, if all went well, might
lead to his recovery. The Turbot had first turned
her thoughts in the direction of the rabbits, and the
kind little Sandpiper had just put her on the right
scent as to.the particular quarter in which she should
enquire. His words had reminded her that among
the scattered trees of the wood which I have already
mentioned as stretching down to the shore, in a large
valley formed by a break in the cliffs, there was a
thorn-tree around which were several rabbit-holes.
There was a clear space of green turf, in the middle
of which, upon a species of mound, stood this tree,
which was one of gyeat antiquity, the very place for
a Wise Rabbit to inhabit, if such an animal there
were. As to this fact Molly would have been doubtful
only the day before, but the scenes which she had
witnessed made her ready to believe anything ; and
if a Turbot could laugh and sing, and a Sandpiper
talk English like a native, why should not.a Rabbit
know as much as either of them? So Molly made
ready directly after breakfast, put on her bonnet and
shawl, and trudged away along the shore in the
direction of the wood, which she reached without
adventure.

Ascending the valley for a short distance, she
presently approached the green space which has been
already mentioned, and as she drew near, saw several
THE WITCHES’ ISLAND, 197





rabbits basking in the morning sunlight outside their
holes. These animals, however, behaved after the
usual manner of their race. Some disappeared im-
mediately beneath the surface of the earth, others
sat up, drummed violently and nervously upon the
‘ground with their forefeet, as if to give their friends
warning of the approach of a stranger, and then
dived into their holes also; while some went down
more slowly, leaving their heads visible above the
earth as if they left the sun’s rays with reluctance,
then gradually drawing their heads downwards until
only the tips of their ears were to be seen, and finally
disappearing just as Molly set foot upon the outside
of the roots of the old thorn-tree round which were
their dwellings. These roots extended for some little
way, forthe thorn-tree was large as well as old, and
Molly paused as soon as she had reached the first
rabbit’s hole.

To tell the truth, now for the first time it struck
her that she did not know how to obtain from the
Wise Rabbit the information and aid she desired.
In that part of the world rabbits were not generally
inthe habit of communicating freely with mankind,
from whom, indeed, they usually fled, and those of
the race who inhabited the earths around the thorn-
tree appeared to be no exception to the general rule.
Moreover, she did not understand the Rabbit lan-
guage, and had not the least idea how to address
the ariimal she sought, so as to make him understand
what she wanted.” So. she stopped at a few yards’
distance from the tree, and stood in doubt and hesita-
tion as to what she should do next. However, as
198 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. {iv.

she had come to that place for a certain purpose, she
determined not to depart without at least an effort to.
accomplish it, and therefore, after a few moments’
thought, she spoke as follows :—

‘Wise Rabbit, if so be that you live here, can you
tell ‘me what to do for to get my John back ?’

_A faint breeze seemed to rustle the leaves of the
old thorn-tree, and to sigh gently through the air, as
almost immediately a voice replied, which seemed to
come from the very tree itself, and was, though clear,
a thin, weak voice, such as might have been expected
to proceed from a person whose vital powers were
weakened by age or illness ; and this is what it said :—





‘The rabbits are an ancient race
Of very noble birth,
From mortal men they hide their face
Beneath their mother Earth.
For cruel man their race pursues
With snare, and dog, and-gun,
So, lest they prematurely lose
Their lives, away they run.
Yet though thy friends this race oppress,
Some succour shalt thou find, Q
Since, ever, to relieve distress
Is worthy of our kind.
And though, as I have said before,
To man no thanks we owe,
A witch ten thousand times the more
We count our deadly foe.
Between us there is constant war,
For hundreds yearly die,
Because for food a witch by far
Prefers a rabbit-pie.
And so revenge we love to take
(Although the gain be man’s),
And cause the witches’ hearts to ache
By thwarting all their plans,’
tv.] THE WITCHES? ISLAND. 199.

Here the voice stopped, and Molly derived some
satisfaction from its words, inasmuch as they assured
her that the rabbits had reasons of their own for
hating the witches, and she was wise enough to know
that however kindly people may be disposed towards
others, they usually act with more vigour and zeal if
some motive of self-interest be added: But although
the words she had heard were so far reassuring,
Molly had not as yet been told what she was to do in
order to rescue her husband from the power of the
witches, and the fondness of the latter for rabbit-pie
was of itself a circumstance which interested the good
woman in a very small degree. So when the speaker
came to an end, Molly became impatient, and without
waiting many seconds, took up the conversation in
her own way.

“Aye, they’re a bad lot, them witches, so they are ;
but what be I to do for to sarcumvent them, Master
Rabbit ?’

And then the same voice uttered the following
words :—
; ‘By a witch when a man is enslaved
In an awkward condition is he,

' And perils immense must be braved.

By those who’d again set him free.

Yet things still more hard may be done

By a rabbit’s invincible guile,

If the risk thou art ready to run,
" And face the old hags on their isle !’

As the voice paused here, apparently expecting an
answer, Molly at once boldly replied: ‘Face ’em on
their isle!‘ aye, Rabbit, that I will, and scratch their
eyes out, too, if I .get a chance, for carrying off my
John!’ .
200 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. (iv.



_ Upon this a low chuckle of approbation proceeded
from the old tree, and the voice again made itself
heard to the listening ears of the anxious woman.

’ ¢Thirst and hunger are hard when unslaked,
But your husband to lose is still harder,
Though like rabbits he may not be baked,
Or hung by the legs in a larder.
* But now to my words if you list,
Bright hope in your heart may rekindle ;
Agairt by your John you'll be kiss’d,
‘ And the witches you'll certainly swindle.
A boat you must take to the isle,
Where mortals have scarce been before you,
And take all precautions, meanwhile,
Lest the witches by magic come o’er you,
For monsters, no doubt, they will send
To fright you with grinning and frowning,
But never turn back, or you'll end
Your fortunes directly by drowning,
Before you launch out on the seas
Take one of your husband’s old jackets,
For the pocket of which, if you please,
I will presently give you three packets.
* Number one,” ‘number two,” ‘¢number three,”
On each you will see its own label ;
And mightily useful they’ll be,
If to follow my orders you’re able.
These orders I’ve written in prose,
Your intellect carefully priming,
For ne’er a wise rabbit but knows
What blunders may happen from rhyming !’

The voice ceased, and immediately afterwards three
packets, apparently thrown by an invisible hand from
the middle of the old thorn-tree, fell at Molly’s feet.
They were carefully done up in brown paper and
labelled as the voice had stated, the words being
Iv.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 201

written in a large school-boy hand and being unmis-
takably clear. .

_ There was also an envelope tied on to one of the
packets, on which was written in the same hand,
‘Mrs. Goodchild’s Directions; so that everything
was as plain as possible. There were several other
things, however, which Molly was anxious to know.
Supposing she got to the island, what should she
do next? There were evidently dangers to be en-
countered before she did get there, but what was to
happen afterwards? Struck by this thought, and
with the absolute necessity of knowing something
more about it, Molly took courage to ask, as the
most likely way of obtaining the information she
wanted.

‘Thank you, indeed, Mr. Rabbit,’ said she in her
most respectful tone, ‘for what you have already
done ; but will you tell me what be I to do if so be as
I get safe on to the island ?’

‘To her great joy the voice replied at once :—



‘One word of power to thee I tell,
Potent to break the witches’ spell, ‘
Eat not—drink not—nor look behind
Lest evil consequence ye find.

Be firm yet civil ; should they spare

_ Thy husband to thee then and there,
Come back at once, let no delay
Or wish for vengeance clog thy way.
But should they thy request deny,
Their malice thou canst still defy ;
For ifin danger or distress,

Say boldly ¢zen—but not unless—
‘¢Whurlmone !” The magic word of might
More than all else will help thee right
«

202 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. + [Iw-.



Molly had listened with the utmost attention to this
speech, and was exceedingly glad that ‘she had asked
the question. Still, she did not feel very certain what
she should do when once upon the Witches’ Island,
and determined to ask for still further and more par-
ticular orders. But not another word, good, bad, or
indifferent, could she extract from the Wise Rabbit.
So, after a while, she left off trying, took up the three
‘packets with great care, and returned to the cottage
without further delay. When she had arrived there,
she sat down and thought carefully over all that had
passed, calling to mind as well as she could the exact
words which had fallen from her thorn-tree adviser.
Then she deliberately opened the envelope which was
addressed to herself, and read the directions therein
contained. The first was easily to be comprehended
and required no explanation :

‘Do nothing until after dinner,’

As Molly was somewhat tired with her walk in the
sun, and it was then getting towards eleven o'clock,
_she was by no means indisposed to take this first

piece of advice, especially as, according to the habits
of the labouring classes in that part of the world, she
usually dined soon after noon. Then there followed
some directions of a more dubious and elaborate
character.

‘Row gently, but stop for no one.

Packet ‘‘ number one” is for Babeface the Skate.

Packet ‘‘number two” is for Grimjaw the Dog-fish.
Packet ‘‘ number three” is for Scareman the Devil-fish.’

These were words which Molly entirely failed to

\


_ Iv] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 203

a i

understand ; but having by this time arrived at a state
of complete confidence in her counsellors, she made
up her mind to observe all the directions faithfully,
and leave to those wiser than herself the task of show-
ing to her the moment at which she was to act in
any particular manner.

So, first and foremost, she busied herself in pre-
parations for her dinner, and when the hour for that
repast had arrived, sat down and ate as heartily as
could have been expected under the circumstances.
Having done this, she went into a little shed attached
to the cottage, in which a couple of boats were always
kept, one of which was of a small and manageable
size for her powers of rowing. This, without much
difficulty, she pushed down to the water’s edge.
Then she fetched one of her husband’s old jackets,
put it on, and placed in the pockets the three packets
which she had received. Next she provided herself
with oars, and having ascertained that she had every-
thing in the boat necessary for her trip, launched
boldly forth upon the sea, and pulled straight towards
the Witches’ Island.

The sun was shining brightly above her head, and
the sea was calm and as clear as crystal, a mighty -
contrast indeed to its appearance on the previous
evening. As she looked over the boat’s side she
could see quantities of fish darting about here and
there, or sailing quietly round her as if wondering
who it was that was invading their domain, and mak-
ing such a splashing noise above their heads. Sud-
denly, however, a change came over the face of the
deep. Molly’s boat had got about half-way between.
204. WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [iv.



the mainland and its destination, when a little wind
began to rise and a ripple to come upon the surface
of the sea. Gradually, too, the sun seemed to become
dim, and a kind of twilight shade stole over the
heavens, much as if it had been an hour after sunset
instead of two o'clock in the middle of the day. Still
Molly rowed. bravely on, when, without any previous
warning, a voice close behind her boat called out in
accents of despair, ‘ Stop! stop! pray pick me up! I’m
drowning !’

Now Molly was a woman of’ tender heart, and
under ordinary circumstances would not have hesi-
tated to do as she was requested, and make every
effort to save the person who thus accosted her. For-
tunately, however, the written directions of the Rabbit
were still vividly impressed upon her recollection.
Moreover, she knew very well that she had passed
nobody hitherto in her passage, and if anybody had
been swimming so close to her boat as the voice
seemed to be, it was impossible but that she must
have seen that ‘anybody.’ So she continued to row,
perhaps a trifle more slowly for an instant, and then
at the same pace as before, gently but steadily, en-
tirely disregarding the voice and its request.

In another moment or two another voice, appa-
rently just in front of her boat, shouted, ‘ Look ahead !
you can’t pass here!’

Molly glanced round, still gently rowing on, and
seeing nobody in the way, still rowed on at the same
pace. But the water now grew rougher, and the
waves dashed against the little boat as if they would
swamp it. Somehow or other, though, they did not
1v.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND, 205



fill her, and she rode gallantly on the crest of the
waves, although, now on one side, now on the other,
she bowed before their force and seemed as if nothing
could prevent her from filling and sinking. Nothing
daunted, Molly rowed steadily forward, and looked
neither to the right ngr the left. She was now within
little more than a Wicca yards from the island,
when, suddenly an enormous Skate reared itself out of
the water quite close to her with its mouth wide open,
presenting an appearance more repulsive than she had
supposed possible even in one of those remarkably
ugly creatures. ‘Come below, Molly!’ it said, as it
yawned with a palpable wish that she should jump
down its throat, which was the very last thing she
would ever have thought of doing. Stretching out
her right hand, while still rowing with the left, though
of course very softly, and only so as just to keep the
boat in motion, she took from her husband’s jacket
the packet marked number one, and threw it quietly
. into the creature’s mouth.

The effect was instantaneous. The packet burst
as it entered the place into which it was thrown, and
evidently contained a powder of an explosive cha-
racter. With a sound like the popping of a thousand
soda-water bottles all at once, the unhappy Skate
blew up instantaneously, and sank below the waters
in many pieces. Molly had not taken more than.a
second or -two in the performance of her part of this
drama, and went on rowing as unconcernedly as if
nothing had happened. It was startling, certainly,

, but after all a skate was nota fish of much account, and
~

206 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [1v.



she was delighted to have so satisfactorily tested the
efficacy of the Rabbit’s powders.

Within a very short distance, however, another
interruption took place. A huge Dog-fish, of fierce
and brutal appearance, reared his head out of the
water, and in an awful voice shouted, ‘ Look out for —
Grimjaw!’ as he made a snap at her right-hand oar,
which, had he succeeded in catching hold of, he would
undoubtedly have severed in two, and thus seriously
-impeded her progress. Most luckily, however, he
missed it by a hair’s breadth, and in another instant
packet number two was in his mouth. Bursting as
it entered his jaws, it filled them completely with a
quantity of the strongest glue, which was not only
unpleasant to taste and smell, and nearly choked him
at once, but, on his first snapping his teeth to pre-
vent more of the nauseous stuff coming therein, held
them together as with a vice, and in fact stopped his
jaw in a prompt and effectual manner.

On rowed Molly, better satisfied than ever: with
the result of her journey, as far as it had gone, and
in most excellent hopes of success. She was now
scarcely thirty yards from the island, when there arose
from the sea the most awful creature which she had ever
seen in the shape of a fish. Its head was more ugly
. than she had supposed possible, its mouth was armed
with a double row of teeth, sharp as a needle, and
evidently strong enough to make short work of any
creature upon which they were once fastened ; it had
little arms instead of ordinary fins, and a tail of
mighty power, which it swung viciously to and fro as
if to stir itself up to action,


|
b

iv.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. ° 207

The sight of this terrible thing, which Molly at
once came to the conclusion was the ‘Devil-fish’
alluded to in the Rabbit’s directions, was almost
enough to have frightened any ordinary person into
afit. With a kind of hissing roar the dreadful creature
launched itself against the side of the boat, and
accosting the astonished Molly in her own language,
remarked in a gruff and decidedly unpleasant voice,
‘You are mine, woman! you are mine! No mortal
woman can touch this island. You shall make a meal
for Scareman,’

The mouth of the hideous monster was so close to °
her that Molly had scarcely time to perform the act
by which alone she couJd hope to be delivered from
his attack. She was jus¢ able, and only just, to seize
packet number three and hurl it into his mouth, and
had she been a second later it would have gone hard
with her. But the packet was no less valuable to her
and fatal to her adversary jthan the others had proved
before it. Like them, it burst as soon as it touched
the open mouth of the fish, which it completely filled
with sulphuric acid. Ina moment his face changed
to a woful expression of fishlike despair, and he sank
like a log tothe bottom of the sea and was seen no

‘more. Thus, then, her three packets had each de-

livered her from a formidable foe, and the fisherman’s
wife felt that the power and friendship of the rabbits
had not failed her.

THere was still, however, much to be done, and
her main diffitulty at the moment was to decide
what to do when she had landed. She was: now

. within a dozen yards of the island, which at that
4. ,
208 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. [Iv.

part was girt with a fringe of reeds, into which she
could easily run her boat and step out upon the
shore. Her natural impulse would have been to stop
and look out for some natural landing place, but as
she had been told on no account to stop rowing, she
deemed it best to go straight on, and in another
minute the boat made its way into the reeds,.and
could go no farther. Molly rose, and having laid
down her oars, stepped lightly forward and jumped
from the boat on to the shore. It was somewhat dif-
ferent from that which she had quitted.

A grass bank came quite down to the water, and
upon this she at once set her feet. Some twenty
yards before her was a wood of low, stunted oaks, ~
extending on either side for some distance, but never
nearer to the sea. The trees appeared as if they had
most of them been struck by lightning, or exposed to,
some blighting influence which had dwarfed their
growth, and rendered their foliage unnaturally sere
and yellow. Ever and anon great rocks of a dark
grey hue, o’ergrown by a coarse kind of moss, rose
abruptly among the low trees, which were by no
means thickly planted, and here and there a tall
cedar or Scotch fir reared its head on high, looking as
bare as trees could look, and giving a somewhat wild
appearance to the place. All was still and silent as
the grave, and although the wind had fallen again
and the sea was calm, the sun had not again re-asserted
his right to shine, but twilight was still reigning over
the face of the earth.

When she found herself safe. on shore, Molly
Goodchild stood still, in great doubt as to her next
Iv.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 209



movement. Whilst she hesitated she heard a kind of
low twittering noise behind her, and looking round,
perceived a sight which filled her with surprise. At
a few yards distant from the spot at which she had
landed, there was a break of several yards in the reeds
which girt the shore, and this was occupied by a bed
of light-coloured sand, sloping down from the green
bank to the water. Upon this bank were assembled
a great multitude of shrimps, among whom were a
few prawns, who had apparently left their native
element for purposes of festivity. Standing upon
their tails, this multitude of small fishes was engaged
in dancing, tumbling about, and jostling one another
after the most curious fashion, and to all appearance
enjoying themselves exceedingly. As they danced
they sang, and Molly listened with attention to’ the
words of their ditty, although their shrill and small
voices rendered it somewhat difficult to interpret their
meaning.
.¢ Fisherman John he is fast spell-bound ;
Ho! Ha! Fisherman John!
Where would another poor woman be found
Such a fool’s errand to journey upon !
Molly has followed the watery track ;
Ho,.! Ha! Fisherman John !
Thinks she to get her poor fisherman back ?
Vainly his jacket she’s ventured to don !
Joy to the fishes, the small and the great,
Spell-bound is Fisherffian John !

Loudly they joy at their enemy’s fate,
Now for the villain escape there is none!’ -

Molly understood quite enough of this song to

“render it very unpleasant to her ears, and what made

it all the more so was the circumstance of its being
P
210 WHISPERS FROM YAIRVLAND. [Iv.

sung by what she called ‘a parcel of little hgp-i-my-
thumb creatures,’ such as she had often eaten on
bread and butter, three or four at a mouthful, for her
tea, and thought nothing of it. In fact, as she gazed
upon them, she could not help thinking how much
better the little things looked boiled than when alive
in the water, and heartily wishing that she could
sweep the whole lot of them into one of her husband’s
trawling nets: this however was impossible at the
moment, and her meditation was broken in upon by
another incident of a very different character.

Walking along the bank, and coming directly
towards her, were three ladies dressed in the height
of fashion. They had such small bonnets upon their
heads that you could scarcely tell whether they were
bonnets at all, or only a few feathers fastened together
upon the hair, especially as they had no strings upon
them. Their dress was altogether such as I cannot
pretend to describe, not being used to the sort of
thing, but if any young gentleman who reads this
story will consider which of his sisters dresses best in
the London season, he will be able to form some
idea of the appearance of the three persons who now
approached Molly Goodchild. Nearer and nearer
they came, and wore sweet smiles upon their faces as
they accosted the fisherman’s wife.

‘Good woman,’ said one of them, fixing upon
Molly a pair of eyes which were bright with an un-
natural light which made her almost tremble in spite
of herself, ‘how came you here? Not but what
you are very welcome. Come into the wood-walks
with us, and you shall see how pleasant the island is,’
Iv.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 21r



‘No, thank you, Ma’am,’ replied Molly with a re-
spectful curtsey ; ‘I be come upon business and aint:
got no time to go pleasure-seeking,’

‘Oh! but you really must come) cried the
second, advancing a step nearer; ‘and if you should
like the place well enough to live with us, it so hap-
pens that we are in want of a cheerful companion,
and might very likely engage youif we could come to
terms.’

‘Ay, observed the third, ‘and you shall be
dressed in fine clothes as we are, and live in clover
-and have everything of the best.’

As they spoke, the three ladies all looked eagerly
upon Molly, and she felt a kind of curious sensation
as she remarked the strange, weird brightness of their
eyes, and a certain wistful expression of pain which
seemed to be stamped upon the countenance of each.
I will not say that the vision of fine clothes and good
victuals, without toil or trouble to obtain either, might
not have had some momentary attraction for the
fisherman’s wife. But the thought of her John,
stolen or charmed from her, and of the dangers of
the place in which she was, was instantly present
with her. -So she boldly relinquished any latent
inclination she might have had to entertain the pro-
posal made to‘her, and with a firm and bold voice
replied: ‘No, I thank you, ladies, I be come here
for my John: Goodchild by name and fisherman by
trade, and if I get him back I don’t care for none 0’
them things you talk of’

Upon this all three of those she addressed cried

out with one volte. ‘Oh the brazen-faced hussey !’ said-
P2
212 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [tv.



the first. ‘Hear the impudent jade!’ cried the second.
‘Look at the vile creature!’ shrieked the third; and
as they spoke they all rushed together upon Molly,
as if to punish her for her prompt rejection of their
proposals.

The time for action had evidently come. ‘ Wharl-
mone!’ exclaimed Molly in a loud voice, and no
sooner was the word out of her mouth than a wonder-
ful change came over the beings she addressed.
Their fine clothes turned into shabby old gowns, their
smart bonnets became hideous caps of an antiquated
fashion, from beneath which scattered grey hairs
streamed out as they started back, and in place of
three fashionable ladies, there appeared before Molly
three wrinkled old hags who turned their backs upon
her without more ado, and fled away into the wood
as fast as they were able.

Molly stared with astonishment at this strange
occurrence, but became more than ever convinced of
the dangerous character of the island as wellas of the
power of the Wise Rabbit. As it was evidently useless
to stand still, she thought she had better take the
only other alternative, and move on. She therefore
turned to the right, and walked along the shore,
calling from time to time to her husband in hopes of
an answer. ‘John Goodchild! John, I say! John!’
were the words with which she made the island shore
re-echo as she walked on by the sea.

But no John replied to her call. The waves
rippled gently against the shore, the same shades of
twilight hung over the island, and the wind softly
rustled in the leaves of the oak-trees, but no living
Iv.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 213



creature appeared, and Molly knew not what to do
or whence to seek for aid. She must have wandered
on in this way for half a ‘mile or more, when she
began to think that it was evidently no use to look
for her husband by the sea, and that there was nothing
for it but to make up her mind to go boldly into the
interior of the island. Scarcely had she come to this
conclusion when she perceived a path leading from the
shore in an inland direction. It was not a very wide
path, but quite wide enough for one person to wall
on, and it was apparently the only road on that side
of the island from which the wood could be entered.
So Molly boldly turned up this path and moved
forward, still calling upon John as she advanced.
Presently the wood grew thicker, the oaks appeared
to be less stunted, ivy plants of great size clung round
them, immense creepers interlaced their branches,
thick bramble-bushes and low-growing thorn-trees
filled the intervening spaces, and Molly could see little
either to her right or left as she advanced along the
path. Suddenly, her attention was attracted to a
large board fixed upon a tree at the side of the
path, upon which was inscribed in large letters, ‘No
thoroughfare! trespassers in these woods will be
prosecuted as the law directs. Whilst on another
board immediately below the following startling in-
formation was given to the traveller: ‘Man traps
and spring-guns in these woods!’ Molly stopped for
an instant in surprise. This all seemed so very like
what she had seen in certain localities on the main-
land, that she could hardly believe she was in the
Witches’ Island. They could certainly have no need
214 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, [iv.

Yh
of the law to enforce their rights, and she would have
thought that they would naturally have steered as
clear of it as they could. When she read the second
notice she gave a heavy sigh.

“Ay, she said, ‘ sure enough, man-traps there be,
for my John has been caught here; but for all that
T’'ll get him back. Law orno law, I must search till I
find my man!’ and again she loudly shouted, ‘John !
John Goodchild!’ at the top of her voice.

This time she was not left without an answer.
‘There he is!’ cried a voice apparently a little way in
front of her. She moved hastily forward. ‘ Here he
is!’ called out another voice which seemed to come
from behind her; and similar voices gave utterance to
the same words on her right hand and on her left.

‘Where ?’ exclaimed Molly. ‘Where is he?
Where are you, John ?’ ¥

‘Here!’ ‘Here!’ ‘Here!’ cried the voices again
from all quarters, and then peals of wild, mocking
laughter rang through the air, and all was again silent.

As may be easily imagined, Molly felt entirely be-
wildered, and, moreover, a sensation akin to fear stole
over her when she heard these unearthly sounds. But
she summoned up all her courage, and took several
steps forward, exclaiming as she did so, ‘John! John!
’Tis I, your own wife Molly. Come to I!’ Again the
same wild laughter sounded in her ears, but she saw
nothing, and began to despair of succeeding in her
mission.

At that moment, however, she heard a fluttering
of wings almost close to her, and before she had time
to turn round, a bat flew quickly past her, dropping


Iv.] THE WITCHES?’ ISLAND. 215



as he did so a letter, which fell at her feet. _ Stooping
down, she saw with some surprise that it was directed
to her, at least the words, ‘For Molly’ were written
on the envelope, and this could certainly mean no
one else. So she opened it without delay, and found
these words :—

-‘Dear Wife,—I am very well and very happy. It
is quite a mistake to suppose that witches are bad
people. The ladies who live in this island and whom
we have always called witches, are charming people
and very kind to me. Make friends with them if you
can, it will be better for both of us, and you will be
glad afterwards.

‘Your affectionate husband,
‘JOHN GOODCHILD,’

Never had Molly been so much astonished in her
life as at the perusal of this letter. The advice which
it contained appeared extraordinary, the manner in
which it had been delivered was, to say the least of it,
unusual, and, coupling it with the invitation given her
by the three strange beings whom at her first landing

_she had encountered in the shape of well-dressed
ladies, she felt that there was evidently a design on
the part of the witches to afford her, as well as her
husband, a permanent residence on the island. ;

But, as Molly was no fool, she not only regarded
with suspicion the advice contained in the letter, but
entertained the gravest doubts with respect to the
letter itself Had it really come from John? he had
never written her such a letter before in all his life.
Indeed, writing was not an art in which he at all ex-
»
216 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [rv.

celled, and the well-written copy-book-like hand in
which this letter was written was as different from
John Goodchild’s zig-zag tumble up-and-down scrawl
as chalk from cheese. The spelling too, which had
never been John’s strong point, was, as far as Molly
could judge, quite right all through the letter, and
there was not a single smudge or blot on the whole
paper. This last point quite decided Molly’s opinion.
Throwing the letter down upon the ground she con-
temptuously kicked it with her foot, and exclaimed
at the same time, ‘ My John never sent no such letter
as that, not he.’ :

This little incident put Moliy, if possible, even
more on her guard than she had been before. It was
evident that the enemy was now dealing with her
rather by fraud and guile than by open violence, and
she determined to be. doubly careful. She thought
carefully over the words of the Wise Rabbit, and
remembered that she had just now very nearly dis-
obeyed his injunctions by looking behind her when the
bat flew up from that direction. But it was difficult
not to look behind as well as before and on each side,
when her object was to discover her husband, and
for the last half hour she had seen no one who could
tell her anything about him. However, at that
moment the path led her into a new scene, which
made her for the moment forget the letter and its
advice. An oak-tree larger than its neighbours stood
so close to the path that a portion of the latter was
occupied by its trunk, past which Molly saw she
would have to brush if she wished to go any farther.
As she came within a few feet of it, a voice suddenly
IV. THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 217



issued from the tree, and addressed her in the
following manner, singing new and strange words to
the tune of a song which she had often heard her
husband carol forth in his manly tones in former
happy days :—

L

‘John Goodchild one day
From the mainland did stray,
Saying, ‘‘ Barren and dreary is my land,
*Twould be much more jolly
To quit melancholy,
And dwell on yon beautiful island.”
Oh ! ’tis a sweet little island!
The witches they live on the island ;
They heard what he asked
On the beach while he basked,
And took him to live on their island!

Il.

* His wife was from home

When he hither did come,

Or scarce he’d have ventured to try land;
But the sea he’s now left,
And his wife, all bereft,

Comes to drag him away from our island.
Oh ! ’tis a nice little island !

Come, Molly and live on the island !
Come, nothing loth,
There is room for you both,

And you’re welcome to stop in the island !

Ill.

‘Both, well shall we treat ;
You'll have plenty to eat,
And have no occasion to buy land ;
For yours it will be,
Both the earth and the sea,
If you stay in this beautiful island.
218 WHISPERS FROM FAIRWLAND. [iv.



Oh! ’tis a beautiful island !
Pray, Molly, stay in the island.
Listen to me ;
Happy you'll be,
If only you stay in the island.

Iv.
‘But if you desire
That John should retire
And go with you back to that nigh land,
T vow and declare,
And solemnly swear,
You shan’t take him off from the island.
Oh ! ’tis a dear little island !
John is so fond of the island !
Do what you will
John stops here still,
And never goes back from our island !’

Molly listened with open ears to this song, which
plainly showed that the policy of the witches was still
the same. Evidently they intended to keep her hus-
band if they could, and were for tempting her by every
possible device from continuing her endeavours to get
him back. But two thoughts occurred to Molly as
she listened and considered the meaning of this song
and the reason of its being sung. One was that the
witches could not. really be very desirous of her
company, even if they really would treat her as kindly
as they promised. For, in the first place, had they
been of friendly disposition towards her, they would
not have carried off her husband and left her alone,
without any invitation to follow, or information as to
where they had taken him; and secondly, it struck
her, that they must know her to be under the pro-
tection of beings more powerful than themselves, and
to be worth conciliating, otherwise it was most im-


1V.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 21g



probable that they would make these tempting and
flattering proposals to one who had, unasked and in
spite of opposition, invaded their island and penetrated
the woods from which trespassers were so carefully
warned. So the effect of the song was to make Molly
more determined than ever to persevere, and not to
lose heart in her attempt to recover her lost John.

Had she been a better-educated woman, she would
' probably have replied to the songster of the oak after
the same fashion in which she had been addressed,
and perhaps have stung him or her with terse and
epigrammatic verse, so that matters might have been
brought to a crisis without further delay. But Molly
lived in days when the advantages of a high educa-
tion for the working classes had not been fully appre-
ciated. She could read and write and knew enough
of sums to be able to manage her husband’s accounts
‘to his and her satisfaction. Moreover she could do
plain cooking, roast a bird or joint, broil or fry a fish,
and make a pudding against any fisherman’s wife in
the neighbourhood. And, in those dull times, these
‘practical accomplishments were thought sufficient for
persons in Molly’s station in life and they rarely
aspired beyond them.

So she made no attempt to answer in rhyme, nor
did it once enter her head to undertake such a task,
in which, if she had done so, she would undoubtedly
have failed. She merely waited until the song was
finished and then marched calmly on, brushing past
‘the oak as if nobody was there, or, at all events,
nobody whom it concerned her to notice. She had
not gone many steps farther, when an enormous
220 WHISPERS FROM FAYRYLAND.. [iv.





hedgehog placed itself in the path before her and
obstructed the way. It was_as big as an ordinary
mastiff, with bristles of proportional length, and a
snout of remarkably disagreeable and threatening
appearance.

Altogether, a more unpleasant animal to meet in
a narrow path could hardly be imagined, and there it
stood, as if its object and intention was to prevent
Molly from going on. For a moment she hesitated—
“the creature looked so repulsive, and it was impossible
to pass without touching him. Pass, however, she
must, and it was no use being afraid now, after all
that had happened. Molly felt, indeed, that she was
fairly ‘in for it, and that the time for doubt and
hesitation was over. So she stepped boldly up to
the hedgehog, just as if he had been one of ordinary
size, whom she could kick out of her way.

She was within a yard of him when, to her extreme
astonishment, he utterly disappeared, and instead of
him a gigantic snake coiled itself up in the path a
little farther on. Unable, however, to see why a
snake should not be treated in the same way as a
hedgehog, and feeling more than ever confident in the
power of her Protectors, Molly walked resolutely on ;
and the snake presently vanished like the other, his
place being taken by a toad of wonderful size. He, .
however, failed to frighten the fisherman’s wife any
more than those who had gone before him, and she
pressed forward until the path led her out into an
open space, where other and surprising sights greeted
her wondering eyes.

A table was set in the middle of the place, covered

‘






ISLAND

’

THE WITCHES


|



Iv.] : THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 22r



with the good things of this world in great abundance.
Fish, meat, pastry, cheese ; all were there in sufficient
quantity to have feasted a regiment. Flowers and
fruit were scattered in profusion all over the table,
gay festoons of the former hung from the branches of
the surrounding trees, and flags were streaming in the
air on every side. All around the table were chairs,
placed for those who had the honour of partaking of
that feast, and in those chairs were seated some dozen
or more ladies, dressed in different costumes, and
apparently bent on enjoying themselves as much as
possible. They were waited upon by such waiters as
Molly had never before seen or heard of as acting in
that capacity. A number of cats, each in livery, ran
nimbly round the table upon. their hind legs, handing
the dishes and offering them to each guest with re-
spectful alacrity. Each cat had a napkin in its paw,
and was in every respect dressed as a footman should
be. One, larger and fatter than the rest, evidently
acted as butler. He was a great tom cat, who bore
himself in a manner entirely corresponding with the
high dignity to which he had attained, and confined
himself principally to helping the guests to wine,
which he did continually and with much regularity.
But the most extraordinary thing of all has yet to
be related. Seated in alarge arm-chair at. the head of
the table was a real and veritable Donkey. Yes: from
head to tail, feet, ears, skin, everything was undoubtedly
real about him, and there the animal was seated as
comfortably as possible. More than this, however, he
appeared to be the object of general attraction on
the part of the ladies present. Not only did those
222 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [Iv.



who were sitting at table repeatedly nod and bow to
him, drink his health, and make him pretty speeches
every other minute, but several more, standing close
to his chair, showed. such a desire to supply all his
wants, that it was quite superfluous for the servants to
wait upon him at all. One lady, fashionably attired
in a blue silk dress with an expensive lace shawl
‘negligently thrown over her shoulders, held a parasol
over the beast’s head to shield him from the rays of
the sun, which, as the sun had not re-appeared, seemed
to Molly rather an unnecessary measure of precaution.
Another kept filling his glass and trying to pour the
wine down his throat even before he was ready for it.
A third stood anxiously waiting to change his plate;
whilst a fourth was busily engaged in placing a garland
of flowers upon his head.

Molly stared in the greatest astonishment at the.
sight of so extraordinary a spectacle, the meaning of
which she could in no way make out to her own
satisfaction. She had not long to stare, however, for
as soon as she had stepped forth from the path into
the open space, a cry arose from the ladies at the
table, half-a-dozen of whom shouted out all at once,
‘Here comes dear Mrs. Goodchild at last! Good
morning, Mrs. Goodchild! Pray come and join our
party ; we are so glad to see you!’

In spite of all that had already happened, Molly
was entirely confused and astonished at this reception.
It was all so different from what she had expected.
She thought she should have had to encounter dangers,

- threats, perhaps bodily suffering, before she could
attain the object of her wishes. Instead of this, how-
Iv.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 223



ever, it seemed that the witches (if they really were
witches) were all milk and honey in their dealings
with her, and whatever their ultimate intentions might
be, they certainly showed no desire to do her evil, now
that she was fairly in the island, whatever they might
have had to do with.the marine monsters who had
opposed her landing.

Still, she remembered the old proverb that ‘All
is not gold that glitters,” and moreover she bore in
mind the caution of the Wise Rabbit that she was
not to eat or drink upon the island. Therefore she
determined that she would not yield to the blandish-
ments of the beings before her. Encouraged, how-
ever, by her momentary silence and apparent hesita-
tion, several of them rose from their places and held
out towards her dishes containing various eatables,
which at that moment, after her row and her walk,
would have been decidedly, acceptable to the good
woman. Moreover, at a sign from one of the party,
several of the cats advanced towards her with wine
and cake, and one sorely tempted her with acup of tea
and some remarkably nice-looking slices of bread and
butter. But Molly was proof against it all. She
looked straight at the table and exclaimed in a clear
voice but with a manner perfectly respectful, ‘I thank
ye kindly, ladies, but I don’t want nothing only my
man John.—John Goodchild! where be you?’

As soon as these words were out of her mouth, a
loud burst of almost hysterical laughter from all the -
party caused Molly to look at them with still greater
surprise. What were they doing ?- Everyone of them
pointing with outstretched arms at the Donkey in the

-
224 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, [rv.



chair at the head ‘of the table, and positively yelling
with laughter, which, however, had a ring of pain
about it as it died away almost in a moan. Molly
could not understand it at all, and possibly never
would have done so, had not a new and still more
extraordinary event followed. The Donkey spoke!
Not in the natural bray of that worthy animal, but in
a human voice, and that voice none other than the.
voice of John Goodchild himself! And this is what
it said :-—

‘Really, Molly, it is very rude of you to refuse the
kindness which is offered you by these excellent ladies.
I wonder you can behave so, though why you should
intrude here at all is more than I know. Either join
us or leave us, if you please.’

Molly stood perfectly aghast at these words. The
language was better than that in which her husband
habitually expressed himself, but the voice was most
unmistakably his. It was not this, however, of which
Molly was thinking, but of the base ingratitude of the
man for whom she had ventured so much. Not only
did he not thank her for her attempts to save him,
but actually appeared to resent her coming! Was
he, then, after all, there by his own choice, and happier
than he had been before? Was it possible that he
had gained by his change and that she would be doing
him an injury instead of a benefit by reclaiming him ?
And—worse than all—had he found some one among
the fashionable ladies who formed his present society,
whom he preferred to her, Molly, his lawful wedded
wife, and from whom he was now unwilling to part?
All these thoughts passed like lightning through the


¢

Iv.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 225



poor woman’s mind, and were then succeeded by others
which drove them thence.

No: she argued to herself; ‘men might be false ;
she had often heard her female friends say so, though
from her experience of her John, she had never
greatly, believed them. Men might like pleasure
better than work, men might be fond of good eating
and drinking, and lively society, and for such things
they might, for a time at least, neglect and leave the
domestic comforts of their own firesides. Nay, more
than all this, it was just within the range of possibility
that. some men might even go so far as to prefer,
upon certain occasions, the company of other ladies to
that of their own wives, though this was a point
not readily to be conceded. But no man that ever
existed willingly assumed the shape of a donkey, and
delighted in. the company of those who had invested
him with that uncouth form and appearance. There-
fore, if that animal were really her husband, it was
clear to Molly that he was under some magic spell,

and that the words he had used, and the sentiments he

had conveyed in those words, were not really his
own. Once firmly convinced of this, the fisherman’s

wife did not hesitate as to her reply.

“You great Donkey !’ she exclaimed, ‘I know your
voice is my John’s voice, and as sich I answer it. You
are not the first man, no doubt, that has been made

_an ass of by a woman, and probably you won't be the

last. But how ever you can go for to wear such a
shape is more than I can tell! Come home, John, I
tell you, and don’t oe mumbling and grumbling there
like a great porpoise,’

*9
226 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [Iv.



As she spoke Molly kept her eyes steadfastly fixed
upon the Donkey, in whom there appeared to be some
violent internal struggle going on, as if he wanted to
speak and couldn’t, and was at all events not as happy
in his own mind as an ordinary donkey ought to be.
The ladies around him redoubled their attentions, and
those at the table, all rising up with one accord and
holding full glasses in their hands, cried out at the top .
of their voices, ‘ Here’s a health to our dear Donkey !’
entirely drowning Molly’s concluding words.

In noways disconcerted by this conduct, Molly
took a step forward, and finding that her ass of a hus-
band either could not or would not give a satisfactory
response to her appeal, determined upon addressing
those to whom he doubtless owed his present con-
dition.

‘Ladies!’ she cried. ‘If sich ye be, and if not,
by whatever may be your right name, I asks you for to
give me back my John. Bean’t you ashamed for to
keep him away from his. home and his wife like this ?
And to clothe a Christian man in that there donkey’s
skin, it is a sin and shame I do declare !’

Once more arose the shrill and discordant laughter
at Molly’s words ; and, seeing that she was resolute in
her determination not to join their party, the company
all rose from the table, and forming a circle round the
Donkey, began to sing in as louda tone as possible, as
if they would scare Molly away by their noise :—

Fisherman John is a donkey now,

Vainly his wife may require him on shore ;
Vainly she asks us her wish to allow ;
Johnny shaJl never go back any more !
Ivi] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND. 227



Slave of the island he rows in the boat,
So the salt sea we can merrily pass ;
Then, when we care not to venture afloat,
Johnnie we turn to a regular ass.
Johnnie shall row, aye ! and Johnnie shall bray,
But never again from our isle go away !”

_ As they sang these words, the whole party began
to dance round and round the Donkey, who sat there
with imperturbable gravity, having apparently had
quite as much wine as was good for him, or at all events
seeming to be quite confused by what was going on
around him. What made the dance appear stranger
still was that all the waiters joined in it also; and to
see a number of cats in livery dancing about in this
manner was so absurd that at any other time Molly
would certainly have gone into fits of laughter. She
was, however, in no laughing mood just now, especially
as the dancers cast glances at her,the reverse of friendly,
and some of them began to approach her in their

antics with demonstrations which appeared decidedly
hostile. She could bear it no longer, so stepping for-
ward with a courage which you would hardly have sup-
posed her to possess, she advanced close to the dancers,
and remembering the word which the Wise Rabbit had
given her as a talisman against evil, she exclaimed in a
loud voice. ‘John Goodchild! come home! Wharl-
mone, I say !’

The words were scarcely out of her mouth when a
scream broke forth from every individual present—not
an ordinary scream, but a terrible, unearthly, painful
scream, such as may be imagined by those who have
powerful imaginations, but can hardly be described by
the pen of a living writer. It pierced through Molly’s

Qu?
228. WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. {iv.



ears with such a shrill and awful sound that she put
up both her hands immediately to keep it out.
Nevertheless, being determined to carry out the thing
to the end, and not knowing whether the mere mention
of the magic word once would be sufficient, Molly
resolutely pronounced itagain. ‘Come!’ said she, ‘I
be come here for my John, and I'll have him in spite
of ye all. Wharlmone !’ ;

A second, but more feeble cry once more burst
forth from the dancers. In another moment the same
curious metamorphosis took place which Molly had
witnessed in the case of the three ladies who had first
accosted her upon the island: the fine clothes of all the
ladies present turned to shabby garments, they them-
selves assumed the appearance of ugly and decrepid
old women, the livery fell off from the attendant cats,
and the whole company fled groaning and moaning
and howling into the woods on either side of the open
space. But this was not all. The table, with all the
good things that had been upon it, utterly disappeared.
In its place there was only.to be seen the large stump
of an enormous tree which had long ago been: blown
down or struck by lightning so that only a portion of
the trunk remained, and instead of the Donkey who
had so recently been reposing in state at the head of
the table, Molly perceived her husband sitting at the
foot of the tree, leaning against it, and rubbing his
eyes in a confused and woebegone manner. She
went up to him at once.

‘Oh John! come home at once, my man ! what fas
come to you and what have you been doing?’ John
looked up and rubbed his eyes again. ‘What, Molly
1v.] THE WITCHES?’ ISLAND. 229

lass, is it you come after me ? I don’t rightly know what
has happened or where I be? Bean’t I on the beach,
then?’

‘Oh no, John, my man, you are on the Witches’
Island, and a terrible place it be sure-ly. Come with
T at once or goodness only knows what may happen
yet |’

John still rubbed his eyes in an uncertain manner ;
but Molly was not to be denied. Rousing him from
his dreamy state by sundry exhortations accompanied
by judicious pinches in the fleshy part of his arm, she
got him on his legs, turned his head towards the path
by which she had herself come, and hastened him on
his way towards the spot where she had left the boat.
She determined to ask no more questions at that
moment, but to concentrate all her energies upon the
one object of getting her husband safe home again.
John tramped along unresistingly, like one still ina
dream, and no obstacle appeared in the path.

Meanwhile the sun had reasserted his right to
shine. All these proceedings had not taken half so
long as it takes to write them, and it was not yet five
o'clock. Molly and her husband reached the boat
safely, and entering it without molestation, were just
about to put off from the shore when suddenly a young
and by no means ill-looking damsel ran hastily out of
the part of the wood nearest to the place where the
boat had been moored, and exclaimed in a voice of
entreaty, ‘Oh do take me on board! Please do! I
am so very anxious to get away from this island if I

can! .Let me come with you—there must be room for
one more !’
230 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v.

John turned his head sheepishly round, too much
confused and ashamed to say anything to this request,
and Molly saw that it would fall upon her to deal with
it. The woman looked respectable, but then the
Witches had looked even more than respectable, and
she could not but feel misgivings, though she knew not
how to express them without appearing rude or un-
kind. So she backed the boat a little, and said in —
her own good-natured voice, ‘ Well, if so be that you
really wants to come along with us, there’s room
enough if you sit quiet.’

Without another word the person addressed
stepped into the boat, which John then mechanically .
pushed off, and Molly, who had thought it best that
she should herself take the oars, began steadily to row
towards the shore. But the boat appeared to be so
unusually heavy that she made but little progress, and
felt she was tiring herself for nothing.

‘Here! John, my man,’ she said, ‘do you take an
oar and lend a hand. She don’t go just as should
be.” The words were scarcely out of her mouth when
the young damsel, who had until that moment been
sitting quietly near to John, suddenly threw her arms
round his neck, shouted in a wild discordant voice,
“Come back, my Johnnie! ehaw! ehaw!’ and cap-
sized the boat before you could say Jack Robinson.

In a single instant Molly realised the state of
affairs. The crafty witch whom she had been foolish
enough to take on. board was guiding John by the
scruff of the neck towards the shore, sitting cosily on
his back, and making him swim as she did so. Mean-
time, at the head of a whole shoal of mackerel and
1v.] _ DHE WITCHES? ISLAND. 231



other fish, a creature whom she firmly believed to be
her old friend the Turbot, rose up in the sea and came
darting towards her as if to prevent her from either
escaping or succouring her husband.

But Molly was equal to the occasion. Without the
delay of a second she pronounced the word ‘ Wharl-
mone !’ which sent the fishes hurry-scurrying off as
fast as they could. To right and empty the boat,
however, was not such an easy matter, and meanwhile
John was swimming in a listless way towards the
shore, evidently under the complete control of his
witch rider. Molly could swim pretty well, but she
had the boat to look after and dared not leave it; 3 so
she raised herself out of the water as well as she could
by laying hold of it, and shouted at the top of her
voice, ‘John! Wharlmone! I say, come back!’ In-
stantly John stopped, and then dived as if he had
been shot, in which action he dislodged the damsel
from his back, who yelled lustily as she found herself
struggling in the water some twenty yards from shore.

- John, meanwhile, rose again nearer to his wife, and
now came straight to her Assistance. Between them
they managed to right the boat, which they presently
succeeded in emptying of the water which remained
in her, and then set off rowing homewards once more.

Not one whit was Molly moved by the screams of
thedrowning witch, which, however, attracted a number
of fish, to whom she was fair game ; and the last that
Molly saw of her was the great pool of water splash-
ing to and fro, and fishes jumping around it in great
glee. Whether she was drowned or not the fisher-
man’s wife neither knew. nor cared. She made her

Cd
232 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [Iv.

husband take an oar, and they pulled together with
such good will that in a very short time they ran the
boat on to the beach very near their own cottage
door. Then Molly and John got out, dragged the
boat up a bit on the beach, and once more entered
their cottage together. And when they were safely
there, poor Molly sat down on the nearest chair and
cried as if her heart would break at the thought of all
“ she had gone through. John comforted her as well
as he could, and: after a while she got better; Still,
she said, she should never be as happy as she was
before, since evil habits were hard to get rid of, and
now John had once been on that island, he might
find it difficult to keep away.

Whilst they conversed in this manner Molly pre-
pared tea, of which they both partook, and then,
although it was getting late, she declared that she
could not possibly sleep without. thanking the
Rabbit, who had proved so kind a friend. As John
could not, in her opinion, be-safely left behind, and
was, moreover, quite as much indebted to the Wise
Rabbit as she was, it was agreed that he should ©
accompany his wife to the old-thorn tree, to thank
their mutual benefactor. Accordingly the two set
off together, and marched quietly up to the place
whence Molly had derived such wise and successful
instructions. With a face beaming with delight
she stood near to the thorn-tree, and said in joyous
tones :—

‘Wise Rabbit! we be come to say how thankful
we be to you. I have got my John back all through
you, and here he is with me. If you could only tell
1v.] THE WITCHES?’ ISLAND. 233



me how to prevent those witches from getting of him
again, I would be mortal obliged, so I would.’ -

After a moment’s pause the old voice spoke once
more, and the fisherman and his wife eagerly listened
to the words it uttered :—

‘When mortal man by witch is slaved,
By wile alone can he be saved,
And by ‘the word” of magic power
Alike in witch or warlock’s bower.
Once freed, he still shall free remain,
Ne’er by such arts enslaved again.
And those whose malice has been foiled,
Whose plans are neutralised and spoiled,
No more have power to vex thé man
Nor any of his kindred clan.
Wherefore, good dame, attend to me!
Thy foes thou ne’er again wilt see :
Defeated, they will elsewhere fly,
And leave to thee the victory !’

The voice ceased, and Molly, though much pleased
with the purport of its words, earnestly desired
further explanation of their meaning. This, however,
she could by no means obtain. Not another word
would the Rabbit say, and she and her husband were
obliged to go home satisfied with what they had
heard. That same night there came a terrible thunder-
storm. Thunder at least there was, awful to hear, and
the lightning flashed more vividly than the fisherman
and his wife ever remembered to have seen it before.
Yet not a drop of rain or hail fellpyand the night was
dry and sultry all through.

The first thing next morning the. fisherman and
his wife walked out on the beach and looked towards
the sea. Wonder of wonders! There was nothing
234 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [iv.

.to be seen of the Witches’ Island but a dense mass
of smoke. During the day a breeze sprang up which
swept away the smoke, and showed a complete desert
where had been the woods of stunted oak. Evidently
the brushwood had caught fire in the night, and the
whole place had been-consumed by the flames. So
said the people on the coast, but John and Molly
knew something beyond ¢hat. It was plain enough
to them that the Witches had determined to leave
the country, because, as the Wise Rabbit had said,
their power was broken, as regarded that neighbour-
hood at least, by the escape of the man they had
enslaved ; and what was more probable than that.
they had set fire to their island home, resolved that
no one else should enjoy the woods and shady re-
treats from which they were about to be banished ?
However this may be, it is certain that these fearful

y creatures were never seen any more upon that part of
the coast. :

Molly lived to a good old age, but she saw no
more of them, neither was she ever addressed by a
Turbot, comforted by a Sandpiper, or instructed by a
Wise Rabbit during the remainder of her existence.
The principal event of John’s life was, that he gave
up smuggling shortly after these events had occurred.
They ‘had made him think seriously upon all matters,
and he came to the wise conclusion that ‘as witches
were people who cared for and respected no laws at all,
he had better be as different to them as he possibly
could; therefore, for the future he respected the
revenue laws, avoided all smuggling, and took to
honest fishing. Being one of the best fishermen on
IV.] THE WITCHES’ ISLAND 235



the coast, he got on very well at the business, and he
and Molly lived very comfortably together for many
years. But Molly always had a hold on him in re-
spect of the event of which I have been telling you,
and if ever she saw him talking to any other person
of the fairer sex whom she didn’t happen to like, she
was down upon him like a shot with some words
which brought him at once to a properly submissive
frame of mind ; recalling to his recollection the dangers
he had passed through, and the happy escape which,

through her instrumentality, he had had from the
Witches’ Island.
236 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. | \v.



V.

HARRY’S DREAM.

It was a warm day, in fact decidedly hot. So thought
the sheep as they shrank from the open field, and
clustered together beneath the shade of the elm-trees
which sent forth their spreading branches in a manner
which no sheep worthy of the name could fail to
appreciate ; so, too, thought the oxen as they stood
in the shallow water of the river ford, and bellowed
out. their gratitude as the cooling stream flowed round
their legs; aye, and so thought the boys who were
playing a cricket match on Northwell Green, and
although everybody knows that ‘it is never too hot
fox cricket, I fancy they would have been glad
enough if the sun would have hid his face behind a
good thick cloud for a while and left off shining down
so fiercely, on their heads. He wouldn’t though, but
kept on shining his brightest and strongest, until the
cricketers became so baked and broiled, that it was a
wonder they went on playing.. But English boys
never give in, and in spite of all the sun could do,
they persevered in their match and worked as hard as
if it was the main object of their lives. Well, and so
it was, just for that day. The village of Northwell was
pitted against Mr. Binning’s school from Prye, a small
v] HARRY’S DREAM. 237



town, as all the world knows, not two miles from
’ Northwell, and one which boasted a school which
called itself a college, and the boys whereof, as boys
should be, were much given to cricket. The two
elevens were supposed to be pretty equally matched,
for Northwell had a very tolerable club of its own,
fostered and supported as it was by the squire’s two
sons, Harry and George Sanderson, who both agreed
that there was nothing in the whole world to be com-
pared with cricket, and no such glorious fun as a
cricket-match. On the present occasion, however,
Harry’s ‘glorious fun’ had been cut short by the
decision of the umpire belonging to the other side, who
had given him ‘ out’—‘ leg before wicket.’

Now I have been given to understand that there
are three individuals never yet encountered in
society :—-A man who thinks himself a fool, a woman
who believes she is absolutely ugly, or a boy who is
satisfied that he was fairly given ‘out’ leg before
wicket. Harry, being no exception to this general
rule, was, J am sorry to say, in no very good temper
when he left the wicket. What made it more pro-
voking was the fact that his side only wanted twenty
runs to win, and there were only two more wickets to
follow him. He had been ‘ well in, and, but for this
misfortune, felt certain that he could have won the
match off his own bat. But fate, and the umpire,
prevented this, and Harry, too much of a gentleman
to show any ill-temper in the field, retired to his tent
in no very. amiable frame of mind. Nor was the
latter by any means improved by the remarks and
condolences of his friends. ‘A horrid shame!’ ‘I
238 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v.

declare it wasn’t out.’ ‘That old muff Watkins, he isn’t
fit to be umpire,’ and a score more of similar remarks
greeted the boy, and were scarcely calculated to make
him alter his opinion on the matter. He watehed the
game, however, with great interest, in the hope that
the fortunes of the day were not yet irretrievably lost.
Young Smith of the Mill had followed him, and
scoring two from the first ball of the Prye bowler, had
raised the hopes of his side, which, however, fell again
as the next ball lowered his wicket. Seventeen to ‘tie,’
eighteen to ‘win, and all depended upon Jones and
Mopson, the last two of the Northwell players. Jones
hits a full pitch for four amid loud cheering from the
Northwellites. Little Mopson tips a ball in among
the ‘stips’ which they cleverly let pass,:and two more
runs are obtained, then a wide is bowled, and the
score shows ten to ‘tie’—eleven to win. All. is
anxiety as the play continues. Jones gives a ‘chance’
to cover ‘ point’ which is not taken, and two runs are
the result; the next ball is ‘blocked’ steadily, and the
third flies away to leg for two more runs. Six to tie
and seven to win, when. the ‘long-stop’ misses the
ball, and little Mopson calls Jones to run. They do
run and get a bye, when, as ill-luck will have it, they
fancy they can run a second, and the long-stop, with
a shot from afar, sends Jones’ stumps flying while he
isa full yard off from home, and victory rests with the
Prye eleven by five runs! Only by five runs! If Harry
had not been given ‘out’ in that manner, in all
probability the result would have been different. So
felt the Northwell eleven and their friends, and so
felt Harry himself, and he could not avoid a sensation |

-
Vv.) HARRY’S DREAM. 239

of disgust towards the unfriendly umpire who had so
materially contributed to the untoward result. Being
of a warm temperament, in which he closely resembled
the day, Harry’s irritation was increased by the
‘ chaff’ of one or two of the Prye boys, and became at
last so great that he could face it no longer. No
doubt it was weak and foolish of him, but so it was ;
and as the match was over and there was no occasion
for him to stay any longer on the ground, he slipped
away from the busy crowd on the green into his
father’s park hard by.

Squire Sanderson had a handsome mansion and a
beautiful park, in which much of Harry’s and his
brother’s leisure time was passed, and which was
certainly a first-rate place for a boy or anybody else
to pass his leisure time in, if he had the opportunity.
Like some other English parks, it was tolerably full
of oak-trees and fern, and the combination of these
two things would go far to make beautiful, at least in
the summer time, a place which was otherwise flat and
ugly. This, however, was not the case with Northwell
Park. The oak-trees and fern only added to the at-
tractions of scenery which would have been lovely
without either. The ground was tossed about in
beautiful undulations; the lake, and also several
smaller ponds, varied the scenery, and the park
abounded with picturesque views and bits of land-
scape which would have been delic#ous to the eye of
an artist, or in fact to the eye of anybody else who
had an atom of taste. :

But its chief beauty were the two large woods
which bounded it on either side: they were such
240 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, [v.

woods as are not to be met with every day. They
were full of trees of enormous size and of unknown
age. Many of them had been pollarded, and so from
their crown sprang up sundry branches, each of which
was a small tree in itself, overshadowing the ground
far and wide on either side. These trees were princi-
pally hornbeam, beech, and ash, but a goodly sprink-
ling of oaks was intermixed with the others. As
spring advanced, these woods presented to the eye
a perfect carpet of blue-bells and other woodland
flowers, most pleasant to behold‘in their fresh beauty
and the variety of their colouring. Then gradually
the fern grew up and covered the greater part of the
earth within the precincts of the wood, where its green
contrasted with that of the leaves, above it, and the
eye rested gratefully upon the beauty of both. What
could be more delightful than to wander through such
woods in the height of.summer? At some places the
fern was higher than the head of an ordinary-sized
man, and as the overhanging branches of the trees,
drooping with their pondetous load of leaves, touched
its uprearing crest, it was not easy to make a passage
through it. At other spots it was thinner, and anyone
who knew the woods well could wind about in the
tracks made by the deer, and enjoy an exceedingly
beautiful and wild walk without keeping to the bridle
road which ran through each of the woods.

It was indeed a glorious place. Now and then a
startled doe, with her fawn by his side, would start,
from her lair in the fern, give half-a-dozen jumps with
her feet together, as if moved’ by mechanism, stand
staring at you with doubtful eyes for a moment or
v.] HARRY’S DREAM. 241



two, and then, with a little grunt of suspicious indig-
nation at being disturbed, plunge again into the thick
fern and disappear from your sight. Then again,
with a noise that made you start in spite of yourself,
the woodpigeon would suddenly burst out of the thick
foliage just above your head, where she had been
quietly dozing in the tree, enjoying the rays of the
sun shining in upon the thick leafy screen she had
chosen for her afternoon’s meditation. Dash, rush,
crash, out she would come just as you were close
under the tree, and for a moment you would wonder
what the noise could be all about. Then rabbits innu-
merable would cross your path; squirrels would
chatter above your head; the jays would let you
know their powers of imitation if you stopped to listen
to them without their discovering you, and then, when
roused, would give vent to the discordant note by
which they are generally known, and fly shrieking
away to hide themselves in the dense foliage. In
short, both animate and inanimate nature gave a
charm to these woods which everybody with ay
taste at all would appreciate and enjoy.

This was the scenery into which Harry entered,
as soon as he was in his father’s park. He carried
his hat in his hand, which ,he swung to and fro as he
walked along, meditating on the events of the day,
and intending to stroll quietly through the woods and
then home across the park, instead of taking the foot-
path which led direct to the house from the green
without passing through the wood. As he walked
and thought, it was not unnatural that the conduct of
the umpire should form part of the subject of his

R
242 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v.

meditations, and at last, coming to a mossy bank
where was aclear space beneath the branches’ of a
mighty beech, he threw himself down thereupon for a
little rest, and after listening to the woodland sounds
about him for a few seconds, again found his thoughts
reverting to the event which had so disturbed him,
and almost involuntarily exclaimed aloud, ‘Confound
that old ass Watkins !’

T hope nobody will find fault with me for ventur-
ing to chronicle this naughty observation. There are
some critics so fastidious that@€ they blame the
thoughtless or worse than thoughtless writer who
’ ventures to make his heroes or h€roines say anything
which is not perfectly proper as well as grammatical.
But, unfortunately, people are zot always perfectly
proper, let alone grammatical, in their utterances, and
I do not pretend to relate only the sayings and
doings of people who always said and did exactly
what was proper and correct. I should, myself, find
it dull and insipid to do so, and possibly there are
others in this wicked world who might agree with me.
It must not be supposed for a moment that I defend
Harry for having made the above observation regard-
ing the hostile umpire. No doubt he was wrong, but
unfortunately he said it all the same, and I can only
tell what really happened as it was told to me by
those who know.: Again, then, do I’ respectfully
chronicle the fact that Harry, with some emphasis
and energy, observed, at the particular moment of
which we are now speaking, ‘Confound that old
ass Watkins!’

To his infinite surprise, the words were hardly out

e
v.] HARRY’S DREAM. 243



of his mouth before a voice remarked, as if in answer
to the observation he had just let fall, ‘Never give
way to temper.’

‘The voice was in no respects curious or uncommon,
though the circumstances under which it was uttered
were undoubtedly both the one and the other. The
spot upon which Harry was seated was far away from
any foot-path: no one had the slightest right to be
there save members of the family, or, indeed, the park-
keepers, and it was unlikely that such an observation
as had just been made would have fallen from one of
the latter. Harry, therefore, was greatly surprised,
not to say startled, at-an occurrence so totally unex-
pected. The voice seemed to come from some
quarter very near to where he was sitting, and accord-
ingly he turned his head right and left to discern who
could be the speaker.

-- He had not far to look. Ata short distance from
him, in fact, from one of the branches of the. very
tree under which he -had stationed himself, a little
old gentleman was dangling. Yes, dangling ;~ and
what is more extraordinary, dangling by the feet, and
swinging his arms leisurely to and fro as if he rather
enjoyed it. His feet were twisted somehow or other
over the branch, and there he hung as comfortably
as if he had been used to it all his life, as indeed
might possibly have been the case. His attitude was
indeed extraordinary, especially in a person of his
time “of life, for he was evidently advanced in. years,

@

at all events sufficiently so to justify the appellation

of ‘old gentleman’ which I have ventured to give

him. But his dress was no less extraordinary than his
R2
244 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, {v.

attitude. At least, so Harry thought it, for it was
not customary in those parts to see people clad en-
tirely in brown velvet, and such was the old gentle-
man’s costume. Brown velvet’ shooting-coat and
waistcoat, brown velvet knickerbockers, and a wide-
awake of similar material which he held in one of his
hands, probably because it would otherwise have
fallen to the ground as he swung with his head
downwards. ;

Harry perceived ata glance that his ngw acquaint-
ance was no ordinary personage, although who or |
what he might be would have puzzledéa wiser head
than Master Harry’s to have determined. However,
Eton boys are never disconcerted at trifles, and
Harry, being an Eton boy, was not much put out,
however much he might have been surprised, by the
address of the individual in question. Perhaps his
first idea was to be somewhat offended at being so
coolly accosted by a-perfect stranger, but this feel-
ing did not last long, and the more so because he
felt that there was some force in the advice so un-
cerémoniously tendered. Though not really angry,
he had certainly felt more vexed than he liked to
own at the umpire’s decision, and the observation
which he had uttered aloud might well have led a
casual hearer to come to the conclusion that He had
slightly given way to a temper which it would have
been. better to have restrained. So, after the first
moment of surprise, he burst out into a hearty fit of
' laughter, without saying a word.

‘That’s better!’ observed the old gentleman ; ‘ that’s
much better, my boy! Laughter is a capital cure for
v.J HARRY’S DREAM. ‘ 245



a fit of the spleen. I like to hear you laugh: it does
me good!’

‘I am very glad to hear it, sir, replied Harry, who
had now partially recovered his composure, and then
paused, hardly knowing what he ought to say next.

But Eton, although her enemies say that the classi-
cal knowledge which she imparts to her sons is not
always carried away by them in such quantity and
quality as could be wished, and although the mathe-
matical instruction which they receive has been known
to require supplementary care, never fails to teach
politeness to all those whose natures allow them to be
the recipients of this useful lesson. Harry, therefore,
as an Eton boy, was bound to be polite, and he felt
that he had already gone near to commit a breach of
good manners in laughing so loudly at the stranger
without making any further answer to his first obser-
‘vation. Sitting up, therefore, upon the moss, he said
with a respectful air, as was becoming in a boy address-
ing one so much his senior in age:

‘Really, sir, you must excuse my apparent rude-
ness, but your first observation startled me so much
that I hardly knew what to say or do, and it is so un-
usual for us to see gentlemen hanging head downwards
in this wood that I positively could not help laughing.’

“No offence, Harry, no offence at all,’ rejoined the
other ; ‘and I am glad to find, by the readiness and
heartiness.of your laugh, that you were not so much
out of temper with that fellow Watkins as I had sup-
posed. It was a bore, though, I must confess, to be
given “out.” like that!’

. Harry was more than ever surprised now. The old
246 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v.

5 a eee!

gentleman, then, knew his name, and all about the
cricket-match, and what good reason he had to be
vexed with Watkins. . Who could he be ? where could
he have come from? Harry was very certain that he
had not been among the lookers-on at the match, for
he could not have failed to observe anyone who had
appeared there in so strange adress. He could not
make it out at all, and looked hard at the old gentle-
man for several seconds before he spoke again.

‘Well,’ said the other after a while, ‘you'll know
me again, I should hope!’

‘I beg your pardon, sir, replied Harry, ‘I was
just thinking where I had seen you before.’

“You ever saw me before, interrupted the old
gentleman ; ‘so it’s no use thinking about zat. Ilive in
this wood, though, and perhaps you may see me again
some day, for I have taken rather a fancy to you.’

‘Thank you, sir, said Harry. ‘Iam very glad to
hear it ; but pray whereabouts do you live? I know
the wood pretty well; of course I do, because it is in -
my own father’s park, but I never knew that anybody
lived there. I thought the deer and rabbits and birds
and squirrels had it all to themselves.’

‘Sanderson Minor,’ gravely observed the old
gentleman, ‘there are a great many things which you do
not know yet, and a great many more which you very
likely never zz// know at all. I have told you already
that I live in this wood. Never mind how or where.
Perhaps I live in the trees and fern during the warm
summer months, and coil myself up in a hollow tree like
a dormouse all the winter. Perhaps I don’t. Anyhow,
you see me here to-day, and that must be enough for
v.] HARRY’S DREAM. 247

you for the present. However, since we have met so
conveniently, we may as well have a little more con-
versation before we part, which J think I should like
to carry on in rather a different position from that
which I occupy at present.’ So saying, the speaker
suddenly swung up and caught with his hands the
branch from which he had been hanging, and by this
means was enabled to let himself down so as to fall on
his feet. Then, crossing his legs under him, he sat
down within three or four yards of Harry, put on his
wide-awake, folded his arms across his breast, and
looked the boy steadily in the face.

Harry regarded all these proceedings with great
equanimity, and began to wonder what would happen
next. He had not, however, much opportunity for
wondering. A drowsy, dreamy feeling stole gradually
over him under the gaze of the old gentleman. The
trees, the fern, the strange little figure before him, all
seemed to grow dull, shadowy, and indistinct, and the
last thing Harry remembered was that a gratified and
triumphant smile stole over his companion’s face as if
he had completely succeeded in some desired object.
With that smile before him, Harry lost all conscious-
ness for a time.

When he awoke it was to gaze upon a scene en-
tirely different from that upon which he had closed
his eyes. He was lying upon a small sofa which fitted
into a recess in the window of a drawing-room. The
window was open, but before he looked out of it he
took a survey of the room itself, first rubbing his eyes
hard to assure himself that he was really awake.
The room was beautifully furnished, Costly mirrors
248 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v.



hung upon the walls, which were also adorned with
first-rate pictures by the best artists of the best
schools. There were tables of different kinds of ex-
pensive woods; chairs of various sizes and shapes,
covered with rose-coloured chintz; cabinets filled
with rare and precious objects; all these things met
his eye as he gazed around him in mute surprise and
admiration at the exquisite taste which was every-
where displayed, and the evidence of wealth which he
saw on all sides. A soft carpet of beautiful pattern
covered the floor, the mantel-piece was of white
marble, on the front of which was a wonderfully carved
figure of Cleopatra, with the fatal asp about to be
applied to her breast, a marvellous work of art which
caught the eye immediately, and invited it to rest with
pleasure upon so beautiful a design. The room was
lighted by three windows in the large bow which
formed its front, and in the centre window was
the sofa upon which Harry found himself.
Having completed his survey of the room, he
looked out of the window upon a beautiful lawn, en-
tirely surrounded on three sides by a circle of magni-
ficent rhododendrons, which must have ‘been most
delightful to look upon.a few months earlisr in the
year. As it was August, however, they had gone off
after the usual fashion of rhododendrons, and had
only their green leaves to remind you of what they
had been in the days of their beauty. In the front
part of the lawn, facing the house, there was nothing
to intercept Harry’s view, and it was upon this that
he fixed his eyes after the first moment. Several
gardeners were employed in the seasonable practice. of
v.J HARRY’S DREAM. 249



“bedding out, which employment they followed with
the greater assiduity from the fact that they were
overlooked by a lady and gentleman to whom ap-
parently the place belonged. : The lady sat in a large
bath-chair, the head of which had been drawn forward
so as to shield her from the sun, whilst she could thus
sit comfortably enough with her face to the gardeners
and superintend their work without being exposed to
the heat and glare of the summer’s day.

Upon her head she wore a straw hat, about which
there was nothing remarkable, and her dress was of
exactly ene and the same colour all over, which colour
was, like the coverings of the chairs, rose-colour, and
seemed to Harry rather smart to wear in the garden
in the middle of the day. Her companion, however,
was none other than the little old gentleman whom
Harry had seen in the wood, and his dress was pre-
cisely similar to that which he had worn upon his first
appearance. Brown from head to foot was he, and
had his ‘wideawake’ of the same colour upon his
head. He was giving directions to the gardeners as
they went on with their work, and appeared to take
a lively interest in their proceedings.

On looking more closely at the men who were
working, Harry could not but be astonished at what
he saw. Their bodies, arms, and legs appeared to be
in every respect similar to those of ordinary mortals,
but instead of heads, he could see nothing upon the
shoulders of each of them but something closely re-
sembling a pudding. Yes; it certainly was so; the
- man nearest him had a most undoubted plum-pud-
ding instead of a head, and the next to him had
250 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v.



something more like a boiled tapioca pudding than
anything else. Still the men worked on just as if
they had regular heads like other people, and the
puddings never broke, or crumbled, or fell off, but
kept on the shoulders quite well, as if they had been
used to it all their lives. Harry was never so as-
tonished in his life, but before he could say or do
‘anything to express his astonishment, it was greatly
increased by the sight of another marvel. The gar-
deners, as I have said, were ‘ bedding out,’ or, in other
words, planting ‘annuals’ in the little beds upon the
lawn, which were fantastically cut about in different
shapes and sizes. But the plants which they were
putting in at the moment when Harry began to ob-
serve them bore a curious resemblance to men’s heads,
and when one of the men drew back to let the little
old gentleman see how he was getting on, Harry saw
a number of heads planted in the bed at which he
had been working, every head of which bore an un-
mistakable resemblance to that of his old enemy, the
umpire Watkins! Yes! Facing every way, So that
a person walking round the bed might have the ad-
vantage of studying the features of his beautiful and
intellectual visage from every possible point of view,
there was Watkins !

How one man could have so many heads, how he
could be alive and smiling (as the faces were) after
having had his head cut off, or how indeed he ever
got there at all, whether with one head or five hun-
dred, were questions which mightily perplexed Harry,
and which he found himself totally unable to answer. °
As he gazed and wondered, with perhaps some shade
v.] HIARRV’S DREAM. 251

of pity for the luckless umpire who had apparently
expiated all his offences at last, and would no longer
be able to give boys out unfairly, a ray of light was
shed upon the subject by the lady, who languidly re-
marked to her companion,

‘There, I really think that head does very nicely.
How very well it looks, when it grins with that com-
placent, self-satisfied air! Iam so glad we have got
him !”

“You may thank the boy for that!’ cried the old
gentleman. ‘If he hadn’t said, “Confound that old
ass Watkins!” just at that particular time and place,
we should never have caught the old fellow at all.
But now we've been able to “confound” him indeed.
What a comfort it is when one is able to take people
at their words, and do the things they say they wish—
though very likely they don’t wish them at all, only
they never know their own minds!’

‘True, remarked his companion: ‘Mortals are
queer creatures. It is lucky for them that there are
only certain places in the world, and those few in
number, where we have the power to-take advantage
of their words, or they would have many more
troubles than now.’

‘Certainly they would,’ observed the other. ‘At
least some of them would have a rough time of it.
But how should we manage in such a case? We
should have more to attend to than any Fairy
could manage.’

Harry had listened to the dialogue thus far with
great attention, and had gathered from it that he
himself had been, unwittingly, the ‘cause of the mis-
252 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. [v.



fortune which seemed to have befallen poor Watkins.
But when by the concluding words of the old gentle-
man, he gathered the fact that it was (as he had
already suspected) his fate to have fallen into the
hands of Fairies, he began to feel exceedingly doubt-
ful as to his own position. It did not seem as if any
evil was intended to him, at least for the present, and
indeed the old gentleman had volunteered the state-
ment that he had taken a fancy to him. But people
who were capable of cutting off umpires’ heads, multi-
plying them many-fold, and then bedding them out
as plants in their gardens, might at any time deal in
a similarly unpleasant and singular manner with a
person who was zof an umpire. Therefore Harry
began to think that it would behove him to be careful
and cautious, lest the wrath of the Fairies should be
turned upon him. The darkest suspicion, also, arose
in his mind about the heads of the gardeners, who
were very unlikely to have been born in the condition
in which he now saw them. So, upon the whole, the
boy felt rather uncomfortable, and would sooner have
been lying in the tent on Northwell Green, or in the
playing-fields at Eton, than upon the sofa in that
magnificently furnished drawing-room.

At that moment, however, whilst he was still in a
state of perplexity and doubt as to speaking or not
speaking to the lady and gentleman, so as to call their
attention to his presence, an uncontrollable desire to
sneeze settled the point for him by causing him to
make such a noise as immediately induced both the
one and the other to turn their heads in the direction
of the window.
v.] HARRY’S DREAM. 283



‘Ha!’ cried the brown gentleman, ‘our young
friend is awake. Come, Cinderella, let us go and talk
to him.’

Upon this the lady without more ado stepped out
of her bath-chair, and in so doing exhibited a remark-
ably small foot with such a tiny slipper upon it that
Harry began to think he had before his eyes the verit-
able Cinderella of the olden story. The old gentleman
offered her his arm, and they walked together straight
up to the window at which Harry was now sitting up-
right on his sofa. Then he perceived for the first time
that the lady was somewhat smaller than the gentle-
man, and that her features bore an extraordinary re-
semblance to those of his own sister May, of whom he
was excessively fond, but whom he never expected to
find walking arm in arm with a brown gentleman in
what was evidently a fairy garden. But not only was
it like May but it absolutely was May: Harry was
perfectly sure of it; so sure, indeed, that as soon as
the pair came close to the window, which they presently
did, he shouted out in a tone of surprise, ‘Why,
May? is that you? How ever did you come here, and
what are you doing ?’

The person addressed received his words in a
strange and novel manner. She sat plump down
upon a rosebush (which to most persons would have
been exceedingly inconvenient) and began to cry ;
whilst the old gentleman, as if it was a thing of every-
day occurrence, to which he was quite accustomed,
deliberately drew from his pocket a clean brown
pocket-handkerchief, gracefully unfolded it and began
with tender care gravely to dry the tears as they
254 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v.



coursed down her cheeks. Then stopping for a mo-
ment, he turned with the utmost gravity to Harry, and
holding up his forefinger in a warning’ manner, re-
marked, ‘Hush! pray be quiet! don’t mind her! It
will all be right presently. She is often like this in
the fruit-season,’ and then returned to his occupation.

Harry gazed upon the two with increasing wonder.
What connection there could be between his words,
the fruit-season, and May’s tears (for it certainly was
May) he had not the least idea, but as the old
gentleman told him to be quiet, he saw no reason why
he should not obey. So he waited patiently for several
moments while the crying and. tear-drying continued,
when all of a sudden the lady jumped up with quite a
radiant smile upon her countenance, and observed in
a remarkably cheerful tone, ‘Buzzing bumble-bees
bravely beating briary bramble bushes for a burnt
Barnstable baronet :’ say that fast three times after me
without a mistake and I’ll give you a sixpence!’

Harry was extremely surprised at this observation,
which, however, appeared nowise to disconcert the
little old gentleman, who immediately desisted from
his employment, and began to say the words after
May as fast-as he could, failing signally in his attempt
to do so without mistakes.

‘Stupid!’ at length she said, and then turning to
Harry, called out, ‘Now, you try!’

Harry did as he was told, thoughhe didn’t see much
fun in it, and thought that the old words, ‘ Peter Piper
picked a peck of pickled pepper, presented much
greater difficulties to rapid pronunciation. He ven-
tured to suggest this, upon which May pouted and
v.J _ HARRY’S DREAM. 255



said she shouldn’t play any more, and the old gentleman
told Harry that he was evidently no judge of such
matters. At this Harry was rather nettled, not con-
sidering that the question was one sufficiently deep to
require age and experience in order to understand it
thoroughly. He ventured to hint as much to his brown
friend, upon which the latter looked up at him calmly
and asked the following startling question :-—

‘ How long have, you been at Eton?’

‘More than two years,’ replied Harry.

‘And how many times have you been flogged ?’
demanded the inquisitive old gentleman.

Harry coloured, for though he had, like other
boys, been in a few trifling scrapes which had terminated
in an acquaintance with the head master’s right arm,
and was not ashamed of the fact, yet he did not care
to be questioned about it by a comparative stranger,
and was at first doubtful how to answer. On the
whole, however, he thought that he might as well speak
out ; so he replied, with as careless an air as he could
assume at the moment, ‘Oh, two or three times, about
like other fellows, I suppose. I dare say you were
flogged in your time, too, sir?’

‘I flogged!’ cried the little brown gentleman, ‘I
should just think so! From the time I left my cradle
up to a moment too recent to be mentioned, I have
been continually becoming acquainted with personal
chastisement. I wrote a song about it once, which I
may as well sing to you at once, as I feel musically
inclined.’ So saying, he broke off into the following
lively ditty to the tune of that beautiful melody,
“Over the sea,’
256 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v.



I.

Over her knee, over her knee,
How my old grandmother used to spank me ;
Over her knee, over her knee,
When I was quite a small boy !
It was spank, spank, spank !
Ne use was it kicking, for on she went licking,
With spank, spank, spank!
The thing she quite used to enjoy !
(Chorus) Then it’s over her knee, &c.

Il.

Over her knee, over her knee,
Oft she would turn me as if for a spree,
Over her knee, over her knee,
Turn me again and again.
It was spank, spank, spank !
In vain was my crying, she kept on applying
The spank, spank, spank !
Oh, it was terrible pain!
(Chorus) Then it’s over her knee, &c.

Ill.

When I was free down from her knee
Naughty again I was certain to be,
‘Then she took me back on her knee,
Acting the same as before ;
Ti was spank, spank, spank !
Wretched young fellow, oh, how I did bellow!
Still spank, spank, spank !
O, ’twas no end of a bore !
(Chorus) When over her knee, &c.

‘There!’ cried the little brown gentleman as he
came to an end of his song, ‘I call that a sensible
kind of a ditty, and what is more, it is strictly founded
upon fact, which is more than many of my friends can
say who write songs and stories. Now, then, can’t
v.] HARRY’S DREAM. 257
you sing a song in your turn, or say something amus-
ing ? You seem as dull as ditch-water to-day,’

‘Thank you!’ said Harry with a laugh ; ‘I would
sing if I could, but I really can’t. I don’t belong to
the musical fellows at Eton. Now if Ronaldson were
here, he would sing you “Simon the Cellarer” in no
time—he’s the chap to sing, and as for making you
laugh, to see A272 laugh would set you off for a week,
he is famous for his laugh.’

‘Who is he?’ asked the lady, whose attention had
now been attracted by the conversation, to which she
had hitherto paid marked disregard.

‘Oh! one of the sixth form at Eton, said Harry.

‘What are they ?’ she demanded.

‘ What are they ?’ said Harry, somewhat indignant
at there being anybody who did not know what a
sixth-form boy at Eton was, ‘why, the head fellows
in the school of course!’

‘No “of course” at all,’ interposed the little old
gentleman. ‘The head fellows must be the jist
fellows, and therefore the frs¢ form and not the sza¢h
form must contain the head fellows.’

‘Oh no!’ cried Harry, ‘you don’t understand. |

‘Z don’t understand !’ bawled the other at the top
of his voice. ‘How dare you say so? I understand
everything and know everything best, and therefore
either I’m quite right or else Eton has made some
stupid mistake in the matter. At all events, the great
thing is that J am right; so pray say no more about it,
especially as this singing fool of yours is not here,
thank goodness,’

Harry was very much tempted to reply, but thought

Ss
258 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. Lv.



that under the circumstances he had better refrain from
doing so, and accordingly contented himself with
attributing the contemptuous epithet applied to his
friend by the old gentleman as merely the proverbial
jealousy of one singer towards another who had been
praised in his hearing. Wishing therefore to change
the subject, he turned round to his two companions,
and addressing them with much respect, said, ‘ Will
you kindly tell me how it is that your gardeners have
such curious heads ?’

‘Curious heads!’ cried May, ‘I don’t see it at all.
They have the heads bestowed upon them by their
masters, who, in a properly enchanted place, called
them “ Pudding-headed fellows,” and hence the result.
I don’t see what they have to complain of, they do
very well?

‘But,’ rejoined Harry, ‘what right had their masters
to make them thus?’

‘My boy,’ remarked the little brown, gentleman,
‘do not seek to know too much. However, I may
frankly tell you that their masters did not know that
this result would follow their application of such an
epithet to their servants. They knew not, any more
than the men themselves, that they were standing
upon an enchanted spot, where a wish formed by one
mortal with respect to another, or an expression ap-
plied by one person to another, would instantly be
followed by practical results. But as no mortals do
know where these enchanted places happen to be
situated, they ought to be much more careful than they
are as to what they say or wish about other people.
No one knows the effect a careless word may have.’

This struck Harry as being a sensible remark, and,
v] HARRY’S DREAM. 259

associating it with the state of Watkins the umpire, he
began to feel rather uneasy in his mind. Probably
his countenance gave some indication of his feelings,
for the old gentleman presently exclaimed, ‘Come,
don’t be downcast or unhappy; we don’t like that
kind of thing here. Wouldn’t you like to see the gar-
dens ?’

Harry saw no reason for saying anything but ‘ Yes’
to this proposal, and the three set off together at once.
They crossed the lawn, during which process Harry
carefully averted his eyes from the border of Watkins’
heads, but ‘only to observe that many other counten-
ances of people, known and unknown to him, appeared
to be placed in a similar position in other borders, which
rather relieved his mind, as showing that the unhappy
umpire would at least have company in his punish-
ment. Then, passing through a narrow passage cut
through the rhododendrons, they came on to another
larger lawn, on one side of which was an enormous
extent of glass—green-houses and hot-houses, peach-
houses and grape-houses, as Harry thought, enough
to have supplied all Eton through the whole summer
halfand even then have left plenty of fruit over. But
when he came near, he found he had been mistaken.
These were not houses for ordinary fruit, but contained
new and extraordinary plants. The first house was
completely filled with plants the like of which Harry
had never seen before and about which he eagerly
questioned his companions.

‘Oh!’ said the little brown gentleman, ‘ these are
Observation-trees : don’t you see their names written
on the stem of each?’
; $2
260 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. {v.



‘Yes, replied the boy ; ‘but what do they mean?
and how do they grow here? I never saw them at
home.’

‘Certainly not, returned the other, ‘ because home
and Fairyland are two different places. The Observa-
tion-tree springs from the observations which people
let fall in the world of which you are a member. If
they are not broken by the fall, Fairies very often pick
them up and plant them, when, according to the in-
tention and feeling with which they came from the
person who was first responsible for them, they either
flourish or the reverse. See for instance this tree.
“What a fine day it is!” was the seed-observation, and
as it was probably a true remark, uttered with sincerity,
you see how it has blossomed out and how the obser-
vation is enlarged and elaborated on many of the
buds.’

Harry looked closely and observed that each of the
buds of the tree had some kind of remark appertain-
ing to the subject of the parent-observation. “It is
warm, bright, and pleasant. ‘The sun is cheering
everything with his bright rays.’ ‘ The air is really deli-
cious,’ and many other similar inscriptions.

‘ This,’ said the little brown gentleman, ‘is a very
common observation, and we have more specimens
than we care for. Here, however, is another, of which
there are many and great varieties.’

As he spoke, he pointed to a plant growing near,
upon the stem of which was marked, ‘ How d’ye do?
I am so very glad to see you!’ Another plant of the
same sort was growing side by side with this, and
Harry observed a marked difference between the two,
v.] HARRY’S DREAM. 261



Upon the first, where the observation let fall had been
perfectly sincere, there was much blossom, and the
buds, which were numerous, were inscribed with such
words as ‘It is really so very long since we met.’ ‘It
is always a pleasure to me when we run against each
other” ‘How pleasant it is for two friends to meet
unexpectedly!’ The second, on the contrary, having
evidently been a mere polite remark with no real
feeling in it, had grown up a sickly plant, with little
blossom and few buds, the latter bearing inscriptions
already blighted, such as ‘I never expected to meet
you here. ‘How tiresome one’s acquaintances are,
meeting one at every corner!’ ‘Dear me, what a bore!
here is somebody else one must speak to!’ remarks
which may often have crossed the minds of people
who have saluted their acquaintances with civil words
without civil thoughts, but which it would be exceed-
ingly disagreeable to have paraded in the form of buds
on a tree immediately after they had been made.
Harry told his companions as much, but they only
laughed, and said it was to expose the humbug of
mortals that Fairies kept such things, and that they
were useful as a warning to the inhabitants of Fairy-
land itself.

The next glass-house was entirely filled with a
particular kind of shrub which the little brown gentle-
man informed Harry was called the Good-Intention-
tree. There were numerous specimens, ‘for,’ said the
owner, ‘so many people have good intentions in your
world that we encounter no difficulty whatever in ob-
taining as many as we like. Some, you see, blossom
and come to maturity as well as we could wish, but
262 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, [v.



with the great majority it is otherwise. The plant is
exceedingly tender and difficult to rear, and all the
more so because it always looks so healthy at first
that one is tempted to think it requires but little care.
The very reverse, however, is the case. Nothing is
harder than really to bring a “good intention ” to per-
fection. Various kinds of worms assail it, known here
as the “temptation worms,” and more frequently still
it falls a victim to the blight which we call “Indo-
lence,” and so the promised fruit is never gathered.’

Harry listened and wondered at. the account of
this plant, and would have asked some more questions
about it, only that his companions hurried him on to
the next compartment, which, like the last, was one of
considerable size.

‘This, said the brown gentleman, ‘is the Hope-
house, which contains some curious varieties of a plant
which, while life lasts, is always found growing in the
breast of man, which is its favourite soil. Here you
may observe some very fine and thriving plants, which
we call Realised Hopes, whilst these which seem
blighted and dying are Disappointed Hopes, and these
pale and sickly-looking plants, which appear as if they
might either fade or recover according to the care
with which they are tended, are known by the name
of Hope Deferred, a most trying plant to rear,’

As he spoke, he led the way into another compart-
ment, in which were a number of trees with plenty of
branches, but with scarcely any leaves to speak of.

‘This,’ said he, ‘is the Repentance-tree, of which we
have, as you may see, a vast number. It is one ex-
tremely common in your world, and one which we
v.] LTARRY’S DREAM. 263



have no difficulty in rearing here in any quantity we
please. Its peculiar quality is that in nine cases out
of ten it buds and blossoms too late to be of any use.
If we could but get it to come out now, in the warm
summer, its leaves would be the greatest comfort by
way of shade from the rays of the summer sun, but
instead of this, it persists in remaining with bare
branches now, and only puts forth its leaves in the
winter, when the sun has lost its power, and when its
shade can be of little service to anybody,’

- As he spoke, the little gentleman opened another
door and remarked to the boy, ‘Here you may see
another curious species of plant. This is the Dream-
tree, from which we supply people in your world with
all kinds of dreams, some of which, I can assure you,
are very pleasant and others equally disagreeable.
Look at this horrible specimen with all kinds of ugly
faces on its leaves: that is a tree of alarming dreams.
There again, the tree which sparkles so is one which
only bears cheerful, happy dreams: this kind is much
rarer than the other.’

‘But,’ said Harry, ‘ ever so many of the trees seem
to be growing root-upwards, how does that come
about ?’

‘Don’t you know?’ interrupted May eagerly, as
if anxious to display her superior information. ‘Silly
boy ! Dreams generally “go by contraries:” so of course
the trees have to grow topsy-turvy in order to enable
them to do so.’

Although Harry did not feel perfectly satisfied
with this explanation, he deemed it inexpedient to
enquire further, and so they passed on through several
264 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v.

more houses, containing many curious specimens of
plants and trees of which he had never heard before.
One which rather amused him was the ‘ Letter House,
in which grew a number of specimens of the letter H,
which people in his own world had let drop, and which
had immediately been planted by the Fairies. They
had not, gowever, so many specimens of this sort as
they could wish, remarked the little brown gentleman,
owing to the fact of there being so many world-people
who, instead of dropping the letter, seized it and
clapped it on in words where it was not wanted, by
which means a great many letter-H plants were ab-
sorbed, which would otherwise have found their way
to Fairyland hot-houses.

By this time Harry had had nearly enough of the
specimens under glass, and was by no means sorry
when May suddenly exclaimed, ‘Let’s have a game
of croquet !’ to which her companion instantly assented,
and went off to get the mallets and balls, telling
Harry to look after the lady meanwhile. As soon as
he was gone, the boy turned to his sister, and said
earnestly, ‘I wish you would tell me what it all means,
May: I know you are May, you know, and it’s no
use pretending to be somebody else.’

This time the person addressed neither sat down
nor cried as she had done before, but, turning her head
towards him, made a face as if she didn’t wish to be
bothered, and replied, ‘What is “it” ? I don’t know
what you mean by “it,” and why “it” should mean
anything at all. Why can’t you be quiet and nice,
and not ask stupid questions. I’ma Fairy now, and
it’s absurd of you not to know it. And then she
v.] AARRY’S DREAM. 265

suddenly broke out into the good old song, which, by
the way, she sang with especial sweetness :—

‘Tell me where do Fairies dwell,
Where they weave each mystic spell ;
Tell me where their homes can be,
Where they sport in phantasy ?’

As she sang, the little brown gentleman suddenly
re-appeared, laden with mallets and balls, which he
‘immediately threw down upon the ground, and plant-
ing himself immediately opposite the. lady, waited
until she had quite done singing. Then, as if the
passion for verse had suddenly seized upon him, he
put his left hand behind him under his coat-tails,
stretched out his right arm in the air, and began to
deliver himself, ina somewhat theatrical fashion, of the
following rhymes :—

‘You ask me where the Fairies dwell,
Of whom you sing in tuneful strain,
And, though ’twere harder task to tell,
Those lips should never ask in vain.
They dwell not ’mid the haunts of men,
Or in the busy walks of life,
Where feeble mortals plot and plan
All in the same unholy strife :
Beneath one banner all enrolled—
Mammon their God—their Heaven, Gold!

‘Ne’er to the crowded dance they steal,
Where whirl around a giddy train,
And in the mazy waltz may wheel
Alike the body and the brain :
Such scenes avoid with mournful eye
Our Fairies in their modesty.

‘The lofty church and deep-toned bell,
And fragrant incense widely spread ;
The organ’s all melodious swell,
And solemn chaunting o’er the dead:
266 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v.



Religion ruled by Priestly hand—
Such have no place in Fairyland.

‘Where the blue Ocean swells in might,
And roll the waves with ceaseless. roar,

And the white surge, in mad delight,
Breaks on the solitary shore ;

No Fairy form the wave conveys,

There may we list no elfin lays.

‘ Still will you ask where Fairies dwell?

Dear Lady, I will strive to tell.

Oft have you seen, in childhood’s hours,
When merrily you loved to roam

Amid the oak-encircled bowers
That waved in splendour round your home,

Near some moss-bank or crystal spring

The diamond-sparkling ‘* Fairy Ring.”

‘Here is it that our Fairies dwell
(Though unperceived by mortal eye),
The peaceful spot could truly tell
Tales of their midnight revelry.
The grass still drooping, lately prest
By elfin feet in playful sport, .
Shows how, when earthborn creatures rest,
Hither our Fairy bands resort,
And, on the moss and couches green,
Disport around our elfin queen !
I cannot ope to mortal eye
These scenes of sweet felicity ;
I cannot in my verse express
One tithe of all their happiness.
It may not be—your fancy’s eye
Alone may view their “‘ phantasy” ;
Alone may know the modest dance
Of graceful Fairy elegance ;
Alone may hear that lovely strain
The words re-echo back again.
For should you seek their dear retreat,
From mortal sound my elves would hide,
v.] HIARRY’S DREAM. 267



And at the the tread of mortal feet

Fly to their caverns terrified,
You may but guess that here they dwell,
And love them, though invisible !

‘Yet am I wreng. Though far away
Our Fairies sport in woodland shade,
And mortal man were rash to stray
Within the spell-enchanted glade ;
Still are their strains to mortals known,
In notes that make the heart rejoice ;
And softer e’en than Fairy tone
I deem the tones of that sweet voice
Which doth to a// enchantment bring
Whene’er my Maiden deigns to sing.’

Here the little brown gentleman came to a stop
(as indeed it was time he should after such a prepos-
terously long spell of verse), and bowed low before
May, as if he had paid her the prettiest compliment
in his power. But quite a different idea struck
Harry.

‘There!’ he shouted, ‘you see you awta Fairy,
May, not the least in the world. The old gentleman
has plainly told you so, and called you a mortal to
your face! What a humbug you are, pretending to
be a Fairy when you are nothing of the sort! just like
a girl!’

To his infinite surprise, the young lady took no
notice whatever of this somewhat rude address, but
made a polite bow to the little old gentleman, and
merely remarked in a careless sort of tone, ‘Don’t
you think we had better play croquet, now that you
have brought the things ?’

The other nodded his head, and they proceeded
to the croquet ground, which was quite close by.
268 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, [v.





When they got there, the old gentleman proposed
that they should play one against the other, with
two balls each, but May declared that it would
make a much better game if they played together,
the two who belonged to the place, with one ball each,
against Harry with two. Of course the lady had her
own way, and the game began as she had wished it.
But fancy Harry’s horror and dismay when he found
that the croquet balls were simply people's heads, cut
off short so as to be round enough to run on the level
ground, and perfectly alive all the time! In fact, they
rather seemed to like it, and grinned and winked
when they were struck one against the other. There
was, however, a worse feature in the case. Every
head bore the features of one of the Eton masters.
Now to knock about a stranger’s head would have
been bad enough, but to be obliged to punch the head
of a fellow who had it in his power to have you flogged
for it, under some pretence or other, as soon as he got
you safe back at Eton, was very far from being agree-
able to Harry, who felt acutely the critical nature of
his position.

There was one very Young-looking head, another
very Woolly, another which had been light but was
Browning by exposure to the air; one was as hard as
Stone, one as white as Sxow, and one with a Warlike
appearance which made Harry quite afraid to strike it.

The worst of it was, too, that some of the heads
were so exceedingly soft that Harry was quite sure he
should hurt them, and the consequence was that he
played very badly and was easily defeated by the
other two. Naturally, therefore, he soon got tired of
Vv HARRY’S DREAM. 269



the game, and was much rejoiced when May threw
down her mallet and exclaimed, ‘ How hot this makes
one! Let us leave off now, and have five o’clock tea !’

As nobody raised any objection to this proposal,
they all left the croquet ground and went back to the
house, which they entered by the drawing-room win-
dow, and the little brown gentleman rang the bell
forthwith. Presently afterwards a scuffling noise was
heard, and in another moment the door opened, and,
to Harry’s great astonishment, in walked a squirrel.
He was dressed in green livery, trimmed with white,
fitting close to his skin and very neatly made, and his
head was powdered like that of a regular footman in
those establishments in which that practice is still con-
tinued. But, for all that, he was nothing more nor
less than a squirrel, as was abundantly proved by his
head, ears, and restless little eyes, to say nothing of
his bushy tail, which he carried with great dignity as
he entered the room on his hind legs.

‘Bring tea under the arbutus!’ said the little old
gentleman ; upon which the other bowed and withdrew.
The party then again went into the shubbery, and sat
down under a beautiful arbutus which spread its shade
around in an agreeable manner, and under which were
several garden chairs conveniently placed. Ina few
minutes the squirrel, with three others of his kind
similarly dressed, came hurrying out of the house with
the tea which had been ordered. They carried with
them a table of circular form, and of size sufficient to
contain a silver tray which they placed upon it, and
established it opposite the young lady. Upon the tray
were a small silver tea-pot, and three cups and saucers,
270 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v.

the same number of plates, a cake and several slices
of thin bread and butter, and a small silver cream-jug
of ancient and fantastic pattern. There was nothing
remarkable in all this apparatus, which was in fact
very similar to that which was employed every day at
home for his sister’s five o’clock tea. But as soon as
it had been set before May, the table began to turn
slowly round and round, as if it was not quite satisfied ,
with its position, and wanted to alter it.

Harry had heard a good deal about table-turning,
but it struck him that the practice was an exceedingly
inconvenient one when adopted by tables which had
your meals upon them. May and her companion, how-
ever, did not seem to think there was anything extra-
ordinary inthe matter. The former, in no way puzzled
or surprised, cleverly lifted the tea-pot as it moved
past her, and dexterously poured out three cups of tea
without spilling a drop. Then she asked Harry.to
cut her some cake, which he found the greatest diffi-
culty in doing, as the table resolutely refused to stop,
and kept on going steadily round. However, as an
Eton boy never gives way to any difficulties, Harry
managed, somehow or other, to chop a bit out of the
cake as it passed him, which he handed to his sister.
He was not so fortunate with the cream, which he
could not pour into his cup without spilling, and was
much irritated at seeing the squirrels, who were all
standing in a row behind May’s chair, evidently
laughing to themselves at his awkwardness.

‘JT don’t see why your servants should laugh,’ said
he rather crossly. ‘It is an absurd thing to have such
a table like this for your five o’clock tea. It would be
v.] HARRY’S DREAM. 271



all very well if one happened to be a juggler or con-
juror, or anything of that kind, but I don’t see any
fun in it as it is.

‘Fun in it?’ said the little brown gentleman at
once. ‘No, of course not, but you see tea on it, which
is much better. Who ever saw fun in a tea-table ?’

“You know what I mean, quite well,’ replied
Harry, by no means improved in temper by this
rejoinder. ‘And I don’t see why you should turn
everything a fellow says into a joke. I say it is stupid
to have a table which never stands still—I know I
wouldn’t have one in my room at Eton if I knew it’

‘Probably not,’ remarked the old gentleman in a
grave tone. ‘Probably not. But then we know that
everything is exactly as it should be at Eton. There
is a wisdom and consistency in the arrangement of
that ancient school which we in Fairyland immensely
admire, but which we cannot hope to equal.’

‘Well, cried Harry, naturally pleased to hear
praise of the place of which all Etonians are so proud,
‘I’m glad you stick up for the old school, at all
events !’

‘Who would not do so ?’ replied his friend. ‘ Fairies,
who love absurdities of all kinds, could hardly help
giving their approval to that excellent place of educa-
tion.

‘Absurdities!’ exclaimed the boy. ‘I don’t
understand what you mean,’

‘Oh dear no! not at all!’ observed the old gentle-
man sarcastically. ‘There is nothing absurd about
Eton ways and Eton ideas at all. It isn’t the least
absurd, for instance, to make it essential to a boy’s
272 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v.



education that he should come up to a certain stan-
dard in mathematics, which not five boys in a hundred
ever need or do look at again in after life, and to make
a knowledge of French and German a secondary and
minor consideration, which would be of material ad-
vantage, probably, to ninety-five boys out of the same
number. It isn’t the least absurd, either, (though it
isn’t Eton’s fault, poor thing) to take pains to get a
good Head Master, and then, instead of leaving him to
command, as the colonel of a regiment does, those over
whom he is placed, to put over him a Governing Body
who know nothing at all, except theoretically, about
education or the management of boys, and whose only
chance of being useful is never to interfere at all.
And your own peculiar Eton ways are not absurd at.
all, either. Oh no! You don’t call it “six o’clock
lesson” when you go into school at seven ; when your
“presence” is necessary to answer to your names ‘in:
the school-yard, you don’t call it “ absence ;” and when
you are ill, and have to stay zz, you néver term it
“staying out/” Oh no! there’s nothing absurd about
Eton at all!’

These words, and the tone of the old gentleman,
not unnaturally irritated Harry considerably, and he
began to prepare to answer in an angry manner. He
felt bound to make a gallant defence of the Governing
Body (so dear to those Etonians who think their
school has been improved by its constitution), to vindi-
cate the necessity of mathematics (so beloved by all
boys, and the comfort and solace in after life of every-
one who, whatever his natural taste may be, has been
forced to study them), and toexplain the school phrases,
v.] HARRY’S DREAM. 273

which the old gentleman had so palpably misunder-
stood and misrepresented. Before, however, he could
say a word, May gave a tremendous yawn, which,
under all the circumstances of the case, was not re-
markable.

‘Dear me!’ she said, ‘what nonsense you two
are talking about! Do choose some more amusing
subject.’

Harry instantly stopped, for he felt that May was
quite right, and that it was hardly fair upon her to
discuss matters about which she knew nothing, and
probably cared less. So by way of changing the con-
versation he remarked, ‘What an odd fancy it is to
have squirrels for servants! Don’t they wear out their
livery, climbing about in the trees?’

‘Dear me!’ said the old gentleman, ‘how very
foolish you are, if you will excuse me for saying so.
Fairy livery doesn’t tear so easily, and squirrels are
first-rate servants: clean, active, sharp, and capital
fellows to get up early in the morning, which is more
than can be said for some servants. But now you
mention them, we will have tea taken away. So
saying, he made a sign to the attendant squirrels, who
instantly ran forward, and with graceful alacrity re-
moved the table and tea-things.

‘Now,’ said May, ‘somebody tell me a story,
please.’

Harry looked at the little brown gentleman, and
the little brown gentleman looked at Harry, but
neither of them seemed inclined to begin. Then the
other nudged Harry and whispered in his ear, but
so loud that May could hear quite easily, ‘You begin.

T
274 - WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. [v.



She knows all my stories, and she’s frightfully particu-
lar about not having the same stories told over again’

Harry was quite ready to oblige; so he coughed
and cleared his throat, as people do when they are
going to sing, or tell a story, or anything for which
they wish the company to be silent and give their
attention. Then he began—‘ Once upon a time ;

‘Stop!’ said May. ‘I want to know why people
always begin their stories like that. “Once upon a
time.” What does it mean? Why omce—more than
twice—why not twice under an eternity instead of once
upon a time—I don’t see the reason for it at all.
Don’t begin so.’ ;

Harry cleared his throat again and said, ‘In days
now long gone by

‘Stop!’ cried May again. ‘ 7haz isn’t the least
bit better than the other. Why “in” days more than
“out of” days? Why only “ days,” either? what have
the poor nights done to be left out, and why “ow”
long ago, it was “then” long ago, wasn’t it ?’

At this second interruption Harry was rather
annoyed. ‘Really,’ said he, ‘one cannot tell a story
if one is to be interrupted every moment.’

‘Nonsense!’ replied May; ‘it’s your own fault.
Begin properly, can’t you ?’

So Harry, determined not to take offence where
none was intended to be given, began once more. ‘A
king lived in a far country——~

‘Please don’t be so silly,’ again interrupted his
sister. ‘Of course he lived, we know that—but why
a far country more than a near country? if it was far
from some places it was near to others, wasn’t it?






































HARRY’S DREAM
v.] HARRY’S DREAM. 275



And why a king ?. other people lived there, I suppose,
as well ashim. Ihave no patience with kings who
live alone. Tell us something better than chat /’

‘TI shall tell you nothing at all, replied Harry, ‘if
you keep on interrupting so: it’s no use trying to tell
you a story. Let the old gentleman try!’

‘/ tell a story!’ shouted that individual loudly.
‘Never did such a thing in my life. J always tell the
truth,

‘ How tiresome you are!’ said Harry ; ‘you know
perfectly well that we are not talking about sat kind
of story—but a real history of something that hap-
pened to somebody at some time or other,’

“Oh! my dear!’ interposed May,‘ I am sure you
have put a great many too many “somes” and
“ somebodies” into that sentence. Speak properly or
not at all.’

‘To speak a proper-lie would be to tell a story,
gravely interposed the little brown gentleman.

“No punning allowed!’ cried May, and instantly
jumping up, gave the speaker a tremendous box on
the ears. To Harry’s utter astonishment, off came
the old gentleman’s head with the blow, and began
rolling away as hard as it could over the lawn, pre-
serving the most imperturbable gravity upon its coun-
tenance all the while, and avoiding the flower-beds
with the greatest dexterity. His body at first re-
mained immovable, but presently took its seat in one
of the chairs as gravely as if nothing unusual had oc-
curred, and stretching out one of its hands, recovered
the brown wide-awake, which had dropped upon the

ground from the effects of the blow, and calmly
T2
276 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v.



placed it upon the table. Harry, however, was still
more amazed when he saw that May, instead of show-
ing the smallest signs of sorrow for what she had done,
or pity for the sufferer, instantly darted forward in
pursuit of the head, kicking at it repeatedly with great
violence, just for all the world as if it had been a
foot-ball ; the head, however, eluded her kicks continu-
ally, winking at Harry all the time in a knowing
manner as he did so, until at last May got so vexed
at her want of success that she suddenly stopped and
cried out in a loud voice, ‘It isn’t fair—no one
can catch a dodging idiot of a head like that, and I
won't try any more. I say, Harry /’

The words rang through his ears like the blast of
a trumpet, and—-Harry awoke! Yes. He awoke,
and there he was seated on the mossy bank where he
had sat down to rest, the woodland sounds still about
him, the woodland beauties all around, and not least
among them, his own dear sister May standing close
to him and laughing merrily.

‘Harry, dear!’ she said, ‘how sound asleep you
were! I have been gathering flowers all round
you for this ten minutes without your ever hearing
me, and I shouldnit have woke you now, only the
dressing bell has rung ever so long, and we shall be
late for dinner if we don’t go home directly,’

Harry sat up and rubbed his eyes as if he meant
to bring them out of his head, then he looked at May
in a confused, dreamy kind of way.

‘But where’s the little brown gentleman’s head ??
he asked.

‘On his shoulders, I suppose,’ replied his sister,
v.] ffTARRY’S DREAM. 277



laughing ; ‘I have seen no little brown gentleman
except the rabbits, of whom there are plenty about.’

Harry could not quite understand it yet. As to
having been asleep, he might perhaps have dozed a
little, but what he had seen and heard had been too
real and vivid not to be true. Besides, there, straight
before his eyes, was the very identical branch from
which the little brown gentleman had been dangling
when he first saw him, and he felt quite convinced that
he could not be far off at that moment. However,
when he questioned May again, and found that she
only laughed at the whole thing, and told him he had
certainly had a most amusing dream, it was evident
that it was useless to expect from her any further in-
formation upon the subject. The only thing to be
done, in fact, was to go home with her and dress for
dinner, which accordingly he did.

The brother and sister walked through the beauti-
ful old wood together, laughing and talking to each
other, in the full enjoyment of one of the sweetest
ties of kindred affection which Heaven has given to
mortals. Remember, you brothers, who chance to
read this little story, that a sister’s love is among the
greatest blessings which your boyhood will ever have,
and happy are you if you know how to value and ap-
preciate that blessing. Remember too, sisters, that
- you will not find many friends in life so firm
and true and faithful as a brother. Remember,
both brothers and sisters, that according as you
value and cherish this tie of relationship in early
life, so will the memories of your youth at home be
happy or the reverse. Harry and May loved nothing
278 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, [v.

better than to be together, and right happy were the
Eton holidays which they spent in the old home at
Northwell Park. On this afternoon they rambled
homewards through the old wood and across the park,
and as they did so, they talked of many things and
people, but their thoughts principally ran upon the
strange dream—if dream it was—that had come to
Harry under the shade of the old beech. I cannot
tell you more about it now than that Harry would
never, from that day to this, allow that it was a dream.
Perhaps he had other visions afterwards which con-
firmed him in this idea. Perhaps he had more visits
of a friendly character from the little brown gentle-
man. Ifso, I hope I shall hear of some of them and
be able to tell them to you at some future time.
When the sun is hot, and the green leaves of the
neighbouring woods tempt me to wander beneath
their friendly shade, I, too, like Harry, like to rest
upon mossy banks and listen to all the soothing
sounds of woodland life. Then it is that tiny feet
come tripping around me, tiny voices whisper in mine
ears, and the wondrous legends of Fairyland are told
me by those who alone have the right to tell them ;
they come to me so kindly and they speak so softly
and sweetly, and their loveliness of face and
figure is like But, Hush! I must not say any-
thing else about them, or they will be angry and
come no more. So I will not say another word upon
the subject, and will only promise that if Harry has
another visit from his friend, and tells me about it, I
will not keep the knowledge to myself, but will as
soon as possible take steps to let my friends know as


v.] HIARRY’S DREAM. 279



much of the matter as Ido. I know that the dream
(if dream it was, which I very much doubt) did Harry
a great deal of good. True it is, he could never look
at old Watkins without laughing at the idea of his
head being stuck as an annual in the little brown
gentleman’s flower-beds, but at the same time he
never ‘confounded,’ the worthy man again, and
whilst unable invariably to respect him as an umpire,
always gave him credit for good intentions, and for-
bore to question his decisions even when they resulted
so unpleasantly to himself as on the occasion of the
Prye and Northwell match. And this is all I can
at present tell you about the meeting between Harry
Sanderson and the Little Brown Gentleman.
280 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, [vL

Vi.
THE RED BARON.

THERE was once a young man who, having a good
house of his own, lots of money, and, plenty of friends,
became, as a natural consequence, exceedingly discon-
tented with himself and everybody about him. Having
nothing to do but to amuse himself, it followed as a
matter of course that nothing amused him. Every-
thing about him seemed dull and stupid, and the plea-
. sures of other people were to him wearisome beyond
measure. Riding was insipid—shooting bored him
—cricket was too much exertion—and as for croquet,
he positively detested its very name. Under these
circumstances, life became a burden to him, and he
frequently remarked that there was nothing worth
living for in the world. This feeling took such strong
hold upon his mind that it was very doubtful whether
he would not have taken measures to get rid of that
which he found himself so utterly unable to enjoy, had
not an occurrence taken place which turned his
thoughts into an entirely novel and different channel. .
He casually encountered a great traveller, who had
visited every quarter of the globe and was full of
anecdotes of things and people of whom our hero had
scarcely ever heard.. He listened with attention to
v1] THE RED BARON. 281

this gentleman’s stories, some of which were of a very
interesting and exciting character, and became at last
fired with an earnest desire to travel and see for himself
all the wonderful things of which he heard. There was
little difficulty about his doing so, inasmuch as he had
no person to control and no business to hinder him, and
it soon became evident to his friends that he had quite
made up his own mind upon the subject. He was
perfectly resolved to travel in search of adventures ;
and as no one had any interest in attempting
to dissuade him from the undertaking, he found it
easy to make his arrangements, and was prepared to
start almost before he had made up his mind where
to go to. Upon one point, however, he was firmly
resolved, namely, that he would travel alone, without
servant or equipage, being of opinion that in this
manner he should enjoy himself more, and should
be more likely to encounter the adventures which he
desired. Accordingly, having packed such things as
he considered absolutely essential into a knapsack, he
slung the latter across his shoulders, and set out upon
his journey with courage in his heart, a stout oaken
staff in his hand, and a green ‘wideawake’ on his
head.

For many miles our traveller pursued his way
without the occurrence of any incident worthy of
notice: sometimes the weather was bright and fine,
which had a palpable effect upon his spirits, and caused
him to step forward upon his journey with light and
elastic steps ; sometimes it rained, which generally had
the effect of damping his ardour as well as his clothes,
and suggesting the idea that he had much better have


282 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [vr.



stayed at home. However, having once undertaken
the expedition he determined to persevere, and so
kept on walking from day to day until he reached a
part of the world to which he was an entire stranger,
and about sunset upon a fine December afternoon
entered a large straggling village which seemed to
promise rest and shelter for the night.

As he felt rather in want of both, our hero strode
cheerfully along that which appeared to be the village
street, looking right and left for some inn at, which his
wants might be supplied. For some time, however, he
could see nothing of the kind, nor did he encounter a
human being of any sort, size, or description from
whom he might obtain information as tothe nearest and
best place of entertainment. This struck him as rather
strange, but at first he set it down as being probably
the fashion of the country for people not to stay out
after a certain hour, and as it was already drawing
towards evening, so far from blaming those who had
sought the shelter of their roofs, he felt all the more
inclined to follow their example. Having, however,
unfortunately no roof at hand to shelter him, he was
rather disconcerted at the apparent absence of popula-
tion, and still more so when, having knocked at the
doors of several of the houses, he received no answer
whatever. This, however, might proceed either from
the absence of the inhabitants, who, as he judged from
the vast forests near at hand, were probably wood-
cutters, who camped out at night when working at a
distance from home, or from their being assembled
together at some place of entertainment in the neigh-
bourhood.
v1. THE RED BARON. 283



None such, however, could he find, and the situa-
tion was beginning to be uncomfortable, when upon
his rapping hard at the door of a small cottage, an old
woman put her head out of the window close by, and
asked what he wanted. As she spoke a language
which he could by no means understand, he had some
difficulty in explaining that he desired food and a
night’s lodging. When at last she comprehended his
meaning, she shook her head vehemently as regarded
his latter request, but presently thrust her hand out of
the window with a moderate-sized, black-looking loaf
of bread which looked anything but inviting, but which
our friend was fain to accept under the circumstances
in which he found himself. Still, bread was not
shelter, and he began to wonder where he should have
to pass the night.

Suddenly, however, as he moved along the road,
and had almost passed the village, he saw two large
gates at the entrance of what seemed to be an old
avenue immediately upon the right hand. The gates
were very old, and one of them stood partly open, so
that he had no difficulty in entering. Having done so,
he argued to himself that as most avenues led to
houses, it was probable that this one formed no excep-
tion to the general rule. So he marched boldly up the
avenue for at least half a mile, and then found himself
immediately opposite a large castle. There was a
moat around it, across which was an ancient draw-
bridge, on to which opened two large gates whose an-
tiquity prevented their forming any impediment to his
advance, especially as they stood wide open as if to
invite him to enter. He did so, and walked into a
284 WATSPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [vI.

small court-yard, which was completely overgrown
with grass, and looked as if neither the foot nor the
scythe of man had been there for years. Immediately
opposite him were doors, which, following the custom
of the place, were also ajar, and which opened into a
small stone-paved entrance hall, from which a passage
led straight forward into a large corridor.

The traveller paused for a moment to listen, but
hearing nothing, determined that his only course was
to seek for himself the lodging which he wanted, and
accordingly walked forward along the passage and
stood at the end deliberating whether to turn to the
right or left, as he appeared to be standing in about
the centre of the corridor. As it was quite chance
which was the best way, he eventually chose the right.
Accordingly he marched up the empty corridor, which
resounded with the noise “8 his footsteps, and the
old pictures which hung on its walls on either side
appeared to frown down upon him as if he was an
intruder, which, in fact, he decidedly was. Presently
he came to a door on each side, and after a moment’s
hesitation, again chose that on the right. It led into
a long apartment, which, at some time or other, must
have served for a dining-room or banqueting-hall in
which the former owner of the castle had feasted his
friends and vassals when inclined to be generous. Our
friend paused on the threshold of the door, and
meditated on various subjects suggested by the place.

‘Here, he thought, ‘has often sat the Baron to
whom this castle belonged in old days, if Baron he was
—and as most owners of castles in this part of the
world are Barons, unless they happen to be grand Dukes
vI.] THE RED BARON. 285



or Princes, I am probably not wrong in attributing to
him this title. Here, then, the old Baron has often sat
at the head of his table, drinking huge draughts of red
wine, or strong ale, and watching with paternal grati-
fication the revelry of his retainers. Perhaps some
poor wretches, taken prisoners in a raid against a
neighbouring village, have been bound to these great
pillars which seem to support the roof, and compelled
to watch the jovial proceedings of their captors, trem-
bling all the while with fear as to what their own fate
would be. Perhaps the castle has, at some time or
other, been stormed, and within this very hall the brave
old Baron has made a gallant stand to defend the
home of his forefathers against an invading force.
Perhaps ’ but at this point he suddenly recollected
that these romantic fancies would by no means satisfy
the cravings of hunger which beset him, and that he
might as well postpone them until he had partaken of
food and arranged his quarters for the night.

He strode forward, therefore, into the hall, and
proceeding to the farther end, found that the ancient
fireplace and chimney were of such an enormous size
that it would take.him a great deal more of time and
trouble to light a fire there than would be the case if
he could discover some smaller and more convenient
chamber. Accordingly, he left the hall by the same
door as that by which he had entered, principally
because he saw no other, and opening that immediately
opposite, perceived a noble old oak staircase before
him, which he proceeded to ascend without delay.
The stairs creaked under him as he advanced, they
had evidently been unused to be mounted for some


286 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v1.



time, and showed their resentment in this manner, being
the only way which stairs have of expressing their
feelings. At the top he paused, and found himself in
a good-sized lobby, from which passages ran right and ~
left, and immediately in front of him were three doors.
Remembering the old Latin proverb, that the middle
is the safest place, he tried the handle of the middle
door, and entered a room which had evidently been a
bed-room, and, for the matter of that, was one still.
An ancient bedstead occupied one corner, a still more
ancient wardrobe filled another, a rickety old table stood
opposite the fireplace, while several chairs, in a state
of worm-eaten dilapidation, constituted the only other
furniture of the apartment. It was altogether rather
a comfortless place to look at, but at all events it was
a better spot to sleep in than the open air, and the
traveller had no doubt that matters would mend if he
could only light a fire and eat the supper for which
he was beginning to be more than anxious.

The fire did not seem to have been lighted in that
room for some time past, but that was no reason why
the fireplace should not be put to its proper use; and
as the old chairs appeared to be fit for little else than
fuel, for which they would serve most admirably, the
traveller determined to lose no time in setting about
the matter, and endeavouring to make himself as com-
fortable as the circumstances of the case would permit.
There was an old stump of a poker of which he could
make use, and some of the faded hangings of the bed
would admirably supply the place of paper. He ac-
cordingly tore some off without difficulty, placed it in
the grate, then proceeded deliberately to break up one




















































THE RED BARON
vi.J THE RED BARON. 287



of the old chairs, and carefully laid a fire, placing on
the top of the smaller bits of wood the large arm of a
venerable arm-chair which he thought would be sure
to smoulder on and last some way into the night.
Then, having previously placed his food upon the old
table, he drew the latter as near the fireplace as he
could, and, taking from his pocket a box of matches
which he always carried about him, struck a light, and
applied it to the bed-hangings in the grate. They
caught at once, and it seemed for a moment as if he
would very quickly have a blazing fire. But the wood
of the chairs seemed doubtful about catching light as
soon as our traveller could wish, and therefore he
knelt downgbefore the fireplace, stooped forward, and
lowering his head to the proper level, began to blow
softly at first and then more vigorously, in order to
kindle the flame which appeared to require this en-
couragement.

As he was thus employed, all of a sudden he re-
ceived a violent kick upon a part of his body which
in the stooping position that he had assumed was
naturally exposed to the attack of an enemy, and so
totally unexpected was the assault that he very nearly
fell forward against the bars of the grate. Enraged
beyond measure, and astonished even more than he
was enraged, at this extraordinary attack, at such a
time and in such a place, the traveller jumped up and
faced round in the greatest indignation.

“ At,a short distance from him stood a little Red
man: indisputably and decidedly a little Red man,
for everything he had on was of that colour, even to
the conical-shaped hat upon his head, like the paper
288 WHAISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [vI.



foolscaps which children make for each other, and the
boots upon hisfeet, the toes of which turned up after the
fashion of a Chinaman’s shoes. Red he was in dress,
and as nearly red as possible in the colour of his face,
but whether that arose from natural causes or from
temporary irritation it was impossible to say off-hand.
He was choking with suppressed passion. His red
eyebrows frowned over his curious ruby eyes, his red
whiskers stood out as if each hair was in a rage, sepa-
rately, by itself, and his nose and cheeks shone like
the shell of a lobster as the light from the now kindled
fire fell upon them. He could scarcely have been
four feet high, and there was nothing very powerful
in his make, nor did he carry arms which might have
made him appear more formidable than his appearance
would have otherwise led you to suppose. But, for-
midable or not, there he stood, speechless and bursting
with rage, and the sight was really so ludicrous that
the traveller would scarcely have been able to restrain
himself from an immoderate fit of laughter if it had
not been that he still felt the force with which the toe
of the little Red man had been fundamentally applied
to himself. Assuming therefore, an angry tone, as
soon as he had sufficiently recovered from his surprise,
he thus addressed the new comer :—

‘How dare you behave in this aaah? Is this
the way you treat strangers in your country?) What
do you mean by this cowardly assault ?’

The eyes of the little Red man glared fearfully as
the traveller spoke these words, and as soon as they
were finished, he jumped at least half his own height
in the air with fury, and then replied as follows :—
vi.] THE RED BARON. 289

‘Assault ? you may call it a salt, or a pepper and
a mustard into the bargain, if you please. How dare
you come into a fellow’s house and break up his chairs
like this without asking leave? Why, here have I
lived two hundred and fifty years in this place, and
never a man before has had the audacity to do what
you are doing. Paint me green if I stand it!’ and
he jumped up again in his fury, coming down in
dangerous proximity to the traveller’s toes.

‘Paint you green!’ said the latter, ‘with all my
heart, so that I could make you the “ Green Man and
still,” for if you jump about in this way you'll presently
do mischief. But allow me respectfully to observe
that if you have really occupied this castle so long, its
condition reflects no little discredit upon you, whether
you be owner or tenant. It is evident that carpenters
and bricklayers have not been inside the house for
many a long year; it wants painting dreadfully, and
its general state of repair, or rather of non-repair, is
absolutely disgraceful to all concerned.’

‘What’s that to you, man?’ angrily asked the
other. ‘The castle is not yours and never will be—
why can’t you leave it to take care of itself?”

‘ Because,’ calmly replied the young man, ‘there
appears to be no inn in the village, and nowhere else
for a travellerto obtain anight’s lodging; and this being
the case, I could do nothing else except come here.’

‘But, remarked the little red man, looking the
other steadily in the face, and somewhat calming down
from his previous state of fury, ‘didn’t they tell you
the castle was haunted ?’.

‘Perhaps they did and perhaps they didn’t,’ said

U ‘
290 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v1.



the traveller; ‘but really one cannot be turned away
from the only available shelter by such trifles as chaz.
Ghosts and such things are all very well in their way,
and may do a great deal of harm to people who
choose to be afraid of them. But there is something
much worse than any ghost that ever yet made a fool
of himself by coming when he wasn’t wanted, and
that something is a bad cold, which I should certainly
have caught if I had passed this December night in
the open air. Bad colds, too, not unfrequently pro-
duce rheumatic fevers; so, all things considered, I
think I have done what any sensible fellow would
have done in coming here.’

‘Ain't you afraid, then?’ asked the little red man.
‘Look at me and tremble!’ and so saying he began
to make the most hideous grimaces you can imagine,
puffing out his cheeks, glaring with his eyes, and
twisting his limbs into the most curious and unnatural
contortions.

‘Afraid?’ said the traveller in a tone of surprise.
‘What is there to be afraid of ina little chap like you
who comes in and gives one a kick when one isn’t
looking? I wonder you ain’t afraid yourself of the
probable consequences of such a cowardly attack upon
a fellow so much bigger than yourself; and as to trem-
bling, I don’t myself see what there is to tremble at
in a little muff that comes and twists his face into an
uglier grimace than that which nature has fixed upon
it. Goodness knows you're frightful enough without
making yourself any worse!’

At these words the little red man waxcd more
furious than ever.
vi] THE RED BARON. 291



‘But you must be frightened!’ hescreamed out,‘ you
shall be frightened! All the people about here are
frightened at me, if I ever deign toshow myself to them!’

‘More fools they,’ responded the traveller, and then
added in a meditative tone, ‘I have always thought
that ghosts were only terrible on account of the folly
of mortals which makes them so. There caz be
nothing terrible in them really, if people would only
treat them in an ordinary manner.’

“You shalt be frightened, though, said the little red
man in a threatening tone, ‘before you leave this castle!’

‘Very likely, remarked the traveller with imper-
turbable calmness. ‘I never said I shouldn’t. However,
now that my fire has burnt up, allow me, thanking you
kindly for your chairs, if indeed they ave yours, to sit
down to my supper. I would ask you to join me, in
spite of your rudeness, only unfortunately I haven’t
got enough here for two.’

‘Well!’ exclaimed the other in a tone of surprise,
‘I wll say you are the coolest hand I have seen for
many a long day. I say! I know where there is some
wonderful old madeira in this castle. If I fetcha
bottle, shall we share it ?’

‘Oh you old rascal!’ said the traveller, who by
this time had drawn up the best of the remaining
chairs to the table, and, seating himself thereupon, had
begun to make preparations for his meal. ‘Oh you
old scamp! You are up to your tricks, I know! You
would doctor the bottle, and I should find myself
bewitched, or changed into a ghost mysclf, or some-
thing uncomfortable before morning’

‘No!’ cried the little red man. ‘Upon the honour

U2
292 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [vI.



of a ghost and a gentleman I mean fair. And what’s
more, that black-looking loaf of bread and musty old
cheese looks but poor fare for a fellow like you. I will
give you something better. To say the truth, I like
your pluck: you are the first fellow I have seen here
who has not been frightened out of his wits at me or
my friends, for there are quite a company of us here.
You shall be rewarded for your courage. I don’t mean
-to say Iam going to show you buried treasure or to tell
you something wonderful which will happen if you do
some feat which you would probably much rather not
have to do, and which would be no real good to any-
body if you dd. But this I can and will promise you.
I will bring you up a supper which you shall find good
enough to please you; I will share that supper with you ;
and you shall go forward on your journey to-morrow
in no respect the worse for your night passed in the
Haunted Castle. All I will ask of you is to promise
not to go and tell a lot of other fellows what has hap-
pened to you here, because it might be unpleasant.’

‘That I will readily promise,’ said the traveller;
‘and as I really think you seem a respectable kind of
ghost, who would not seek to take a mean advantage
of a fellow, I will take you at your word and trust
to you for the supper.’

‘Done along with you!’ cried the little red man at
this: ‘Wait here a bit, and keep up the fire. I will
be back again in the twinkling of an eyelid’

So saying, he left the room, and the traveller pro-
ceeded to break up another chair so as to keep the
fire going, and then drawing the next best one he
could find up to the table, placed it on the other side,
v1] THE RED BARON. 293



and awaited the return of the strange individual with
whom he had just made acquaintance. True to his
word, the latter was gone but a very few minutes, and
when he re-entered the room, it was with a tray which
he carefully deposited upon the table before he took
his seat. Upon the tray was a gigantic pasty of ap-
petising appearance to the hungry traveller, and, more
than the pasty, there was an addition to the supper
which made his eyes gleam with pleasure. Not one,
but four bottles of the old madeira stood side by side
together, the cobwebs still clinging to them with
affectionate tenacity, and their appearance giving every
promise of internal goodness.

‘You're a regular brick, I declare!’ cried the
traveller as the little red man arranged the tray com-
fortably upon the table.

‘Ah!’ replied the other, ‘that is just what my
poor old friend Smith (he was from England, too, as
I see you are) used to say—let me see—just two
hundred and thirteen years ago come next Lady-day,
when he died.’

‘What sort of a chap was /e when he was at home?’
asked the traveller carelessly, as he watched his com-
panion, who had now taken up a large silver-handled
knife and a fork of similar description, and was pro-
ceeding to cut a large slice out of the dish before him.

‘IT don’t know what he may have been at home,’
said he, ‘but he was a right good fellow out here, and
would have married my daughter—-only he didn’t.’

‘Why not?’ demanded the other.

‘Ah!’ said the little red man, ‘that’s a long story,
and perhaps you wouldn't care to hear it. Have some
pasty?’
294 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [vr



‘I should think so! Just a little!’ laughed the
traveller. ‘Never was so hungry in my life! But I
should like to hear that story all the same. By Jove!
this is a Venison Pasty, and first-rate too!’

‘Glad to hear it, I’m sure, observed his host. ‘ You
shall hear the story after supper, if you really care
to do so. Meanwhile let’s have a glass of madeira
together. Got a corkscrew ?’

‘To be sure I have, returned the traveller.
‘Never travel without such things.’ So saying, he
pulled out a large clasp knife, part of which formed a
strong corkscrew, and with this he carefully extracted
the cork of one of the bottles near him, and with much
caution wiped the mouth of the bottle with a clean
pocket-handkerchief. Then he filled two large wine
glasses which his host had brought upon the tray, for
ghosts do not, any more than mortals, like to drink
out of the bottle if they can help it.

The two looked at each other; bowed ; took a
long sip at the wine, and then by a simultaneous and
knowing wink of the eye, bore testimony to its excel-
lence. So excellent indeed was it, that they very
soon filled their glasses again. Their attacks upon the
pasty, meantime, were frequent, and sustained with so
much vigour that the mighty fabric began to melt
away and disappear before the joint appetites which
it had to satisfy. At last both laid down their knives
and forks, and mutually acknowledged that they could
do no more that night in the way of eating. Then
they drew their chairs one on each side of the fire-
place, replenished the fire once more, uncorked such
of the madeira bottles as had not yet undergone that
vi] THE RED BARON. 295



process, and arranged themselves as cosily and com-
fortably as if they had been man and wife, or two
college companions, or two gentlemen tired of a good
day’s hunting, instead of a weary traveller in a haunted
castle and the identical ghost who had given that
castle its reputation.

After a few minutes devoted to reflection and
digestion, the latter of which was necessary to the
traveller, if not to his companion, the latter gravely
enquired whether his new friend objected to smoke,
and an answer in the negative having been returned,
drew from his pocket a pipe, coloured red like every-
thing else belonging to him, which he presently
lighted, and began to puff away with great assiduity.
Our friend, nothing loth to follow so excellent an
example, produced his own pipe and set to work to
enjoy himself after the same fashion. For some few
moments they smoked in silence, until the traveller,
who was always for making the most of opportunities
which threw themselves in his way when on a
journey, bethought him of what had fallen from his
companion at the commencement of their supper, and
asked him whether he felt inclined to relate to him
the story to which he had alluded. With a deep
sigh, as if the request had evoked painful memories,
the little red man said that he would not refuse.

‘ Still” remarked he, ‘I would have you know
that the story is one which I would only tell to a
boon companion like yourself. You eat with an
appetite worthy of a peasant—you drink with a relish
worthy of a prince—you smoke also like one who
knows how to enjoy it, and not like those numerous
296 WAISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [vI.



fools who do it because they think it fine or fashion-
able, without the least enjoyment in the world. Al-
together, I hold you to be a capital fellow, and
henceforward I shall always entertain for you feelings
of esteem—I may even say regard. This being the
case, I shall not refuse to tell you the story of my
life, or rather of that part of it which ‘relates to your
compatriot Smith. I know you will forgive me if I
should become affected during the recital. The story
relates to events which happened long ago, but which
will never be effaced from my memory as long as I
am a ghost.” So saying, the little red man once
more sighed deeply, and then, after a long pull at his
pipe and one more glass of madeira, began as follows :—

* Some two hundred and twenty years ago, I was
the baron who owned this castle and a fair domain to
boot—though why one should say “to boot” rather
than “to shoe” or “to stocking” is a thing which has
always puzzled me considerably. I was in the prime
of life, strong, hearty, as wealthy as need be, and
pretty well feared, if not respected, in the neighbour-
hood. I say I was not respected, and in fact it was
hardly possible to respect me, for a more desperate
scamp than I was could hardly be found anywhere in
the country. I lived a bad life. I drank hard,-I
swore hard, I lived hard altogether, and none of the
neighbours cared to cross my path if they could pos-
sibly avoid it. I had been engaged in constant feuds
with my brother-barons ever since I came to the
property, and by force or cunning had got the better
of all of them with whom I had come to open rup-
ture. Some there were who fawned upon and flat-



¢ 297
tered me, and withâ„¢ Kept on good terms,
though they had, so to say, to eat dirt in order to
avoid falling out with me, for I brooked no inter-
ference and no contradiction whatever, and did what
I pleased when I pleased and where I pleased always,
wiaich was my idea of enjoying life as a Baron should
emjoy it.’

‘Why, what an old rascal you must have been!’
here iterrupted the traveller.

THe little red man frowned. ‘If you interrupt,’
he said, ‘I shall shut up directly. I have already
told you what a bad fellow I was, and I don’t think it
very civil of you to recall attention to the fact.’

‘Upon my word, I beg your pardon,’ said the
traveller. ‘It was very thoughtless of me, and quite
unnecessary.’

‘Don’t do it again, then!’ observed the other
severely ; and then, taking another whiff of his pipe
and another glass of madeira, continued his narrative.

“My fame in battle had become considerable, and
not only my fame in battle, but my reputation for
cruelty had also spread abroad near and far. To tell
you the truth, I was naturally of a merciful disposi-
tion. I could not bear the idea of immuring poor
creatures in the dungeons of my castle (which are
exceedingly damp and unpleasant even at the present
day), or of subjecting them to torture in order to ex-
tract ransom from their friends. These things were
done, I knew, by other barons, but for my part I al-
ways thought it best to kill people outright rather
than resort to such expedients. Besides, I hated to
be troubled with prisoners, and altogether I made up


298 WHISPERS FROM -FAIRVLAND. [vi.



my mind when I first began’ my life of warfare that
the most desirable plan really was to take everything
you could get from the people you conquered, and
then to put them out of their misery as soon as pos-
sible. The world, however, taking a different view of
the matter, called my proceedings cruel, and in con-
sequence of them gave me the distinguishing title of
the Red Baron, because of the blood which I was,
with some reason, supposed to have shed. I may
mention to you, in passing, that this name, which has
stuck to me in the spirit world, has been the cause of
my being obliged to wear always garments of the
colour which you have doubtless remarked, and of
which I confess I sometimes get uncommonly tired.
“Well, the name of the Red Baron, now almost
forgotten, save in legends of the timid peasants, was
well enough known in my lifetime. Now, indeed, I
wish heartily enough that it had been known for Sood
instead of evil deeds. But it is too late to talk of
that. My home life was not so happy as it might
have been. I married the daughter of a neighbour-
ing baron, who was partly engaged to somebody else.
That was the chief reason why I wished to marry
her. She was beautiful, certainly, but so were many
others, and I did not particularly care for her. But
she had slighted me once, or I fancied she had, which
came to the same thing with me in those days.
Moreover, I knew she loved the other fellow, and he
was fond of her—devoted, I may say. I hated /zm,
so I resolved to marry her, which I was able -to ac-
complish through the hold I had upon her old fool of
a father, who was rather richer than his neighbours
VI.J THE RED BARON. 299





(an additional reason for me to marry his daughter),
and dreadfully afraid that if he refused me anything,
I should come and take it. He wasn’t far wrong,
either, for when I had made up my mind to marry his
daughter, marry her I would, if I had had to carry
her off from her father’s castle. It didn’t come to
that though! ‘The old fellow pretended to be over-
joyed at my proposal—the girl made some show of
resistance at first, and appealed to my better feelings,
forsooth, saying that she loved another. That I
knew before, but to make matters more certain I
had the favoured lover dealt with after a summary
fashion. He was found dead at the foot of a high
cliff one fine morning, having got there from the top
in a manner incompatible with the preservation of
life. Then matters went more smoothly. Adeline
resisted no longer. She behaved like a lamb,
obeyed her father without demur, and became the
bride of the Red Baron.

‘I wish I could say that I can look back upon my
married life with any feelings of satisfaction. She
was too good for me, Poor Adeline! hers was a sad
existence. I don’t think she ever quite got over the
loss of that fellow, for she had really loved him.
However, she did her duty by me, only she irritated
me beyond measure by trying to persuade me to give
up some of what she called my wicked ways. Her
advice and tears had not, I regret to say, the slightest
effect upon me, and I went on just the same. We had
three children: Rudolf, Frederick, and Christina,
They were little things still when their mother died.
That was through me, too. I don’t mean to say I ever
300 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. {v1.



struck her or was cruel to her save by neglect and by
words. Not so bad as that was I, though bad enough
in every other way. But one evening when I had had
my fill of liquor, and was going on in my old ways,
and boasting of some cruel exploit or other, my wife
expostulated and advised until she drove me nearly
wild. In a moment of bitter folly I taunted her
about the lover of her youth, and let her know that
his death was no accident. Never will her look of
horror be effaced from. my memory. She started
back from me with disgust. With all my faults, she
had never deemed me capable of wilful, deliberate
assassination. In her pure soul she could not have
imagined such a depth of wickedness to be possible.
It broke her heart. She never held up her head
again, and left me-with those three children in this
old castle, a lonely widower, with my good angel
taken from me for ever.

‘I never married again. I never cared much for
any of the other sex, save and except for that
daughter of whom I spoke to you at first. Christina
was the apple of my eye. My pet, my darling, my
own beautiful child—I can scarcely speak of you
now. At this point the little red man paused, lit
his pipe, which had gone out, gave a whiff or two,
replenished and emptied another glass of madeira,
heaved one more sigh, and then continued his story,
in which the traveller had become so much interested
that he took very good care not to interrupt.

‘My sons grew up strong and vigorous; they
hunted and shot, scaled the mountains and explored
the forests, excelling in every active and manly sport.
vI.] THE RED BARON. 301



I saw but little of them—they feared more than they
loved me, and no wonder it was so, for I was a hard
father, and the only good 1 did for them was to
refrain from making them ride with me in my raids
against neighbouring barons and others whom I
deemed it proper to attack when it suited me. Their
mother had begged me to leave them at home on
these occasions, and I did this little in atonement for
the wrong I had done that angel-woman. But my
daughter was always with me when I was at home.
Home would not have been home without her. She
was the light and life of the castle. Everybody and
everything loved her. The horses knew her footsteps
and neighed when she passed their stable—the dogs
preferred a friendly pat from her to the caresses of
anybody else—whilst as for my retainers, there was
not one who would not willingly have laid down his
life for the young Baroness.

‘We had an affliction to endure ‘eetiiel which
rendered us still more dear to each other, for my
daughter loved me; yes, me, the cruel wretch, the
plague of the neighbourhood, the Red Baron! She
loved me, I say, and it is my one happy thought
now to have been loved by that sweet saint. The
affliction I mean was the loss of my second boy
Frederick. As if to punish me especially, he fell
from the very cliff from which I had caused my poor
wife's lover to be thrown, and was killed in the
same manner as that unhappy wretch. The blow
fell upon me with unusual severity, for I had always

-made the boy my favourite of the two brothers,
and the manner and place of the accident affected
302 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v1.

me strangely. Christina was my only comfort, for
Rudolf was not confident enough with me, or perhaps
not fond enough of me, to play the part of consoler.
‘It was during this period of mourning that your
compatriot came amongst us. Sir Smith the Eng-
lander, we called him. You had some internal wars
going onamong yourselves at thattime. So, at least,
I gathered from his conversation. Your king had an
enemy which was called Parliament, and as he tried
to persuade and cajole his enemics instead of cutting
off their heads, as I should have done, he naturally
lost his own. I remember Sir Smith and I used often
to talk over the matter, for he had fought, had Sir
Smith, for the king, and had lost home and lands
when the cause failed; thus it was he came to us.
Far and wide had he wandered in search of adventure,
until he came inte our country, and heard (as who
had not heard?) of the Red Baron. He was in-
stantly seized with an uncontrollable desire to make
my acquaintance. Thunder and lightning! ¢hat was
not difficult to do, and he took the right way, too.
One day, when we were hunting the wolf in the
great forest which you passed some two miles beyond
the village, we suddenly perceived a stranger amongst
us. He bore him right gallantly in the chase, and
when one monster of a wolf was at bay, he it was
who outstripped our lazy knaves and slew the beast
with his own hand in a manner which mightily
pleased me. So instead of killing him, as I should
most likely have served a stranger whom I did not
fancy, I took to Sir Smith very kindly, brought him
home with me and established him in the castle. He
v1] THE RED BARON. 303

soon made himself quite at home. It is the way with
you Englanders wherever you are. You think the
world is made for you to enjoy, and you do enjoy it
wherever you find yourselves, without caring for any-
body else inthe matter. Sir Smith was an Englander
all over. He ate and drank with the best of us, he
shot and fished and hunted, and he was good at all
those little home amusements which women appreciate.
He treated Christina, not as a child or a fool, as men
often treat women, but as a reasonable being and his
own equal. He talked to her, not in extravagant
compliments and upon nonsensical subjects, but
about books, and flowers and birds, things about
which he knew much, and she, poor child, was able to
understand and to learn; then he sang with her and
rode with her, he drew sketches of her favourite views,
he admired her pet dogs and horses ; in short, he did
everything which an agreeable man could do to make
himself dear to the maiden he loved. He succeeded.
How should he not succeed? My child saw but few
persons of her own rank, and certainly none who could
compare with the Englander.

‘Sir Smith had travelled much ; he knew more of
men and things than most people whom I have met.
He acquired over me some influence, though not
enough to make me alter my life, even if he had set
his whole wits to work in order to effect that object,
which he certainly never did. But I liked him well
enough to allow him to go on as he was doing at the
castle, though I ‘might have known that if things
went on as he wished, it would end in his carrying off
from me the treasure and comfort of my life. But in
304. WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [v1.



truth, I did not often think of that matter, and when
I did, I said to myself, “ Mine is a rough life. Some
day enemies may prevail against me. Better the girl
were wedded to the Englander and far away before
such an evil day came upon our house.” So I let
things go on. Christina became more and more fond
of the Englander, and he was evidently devoted to
her.

‘There was one person, however, who took a
different view of the matter. Rudolf was very
warmly attached to his sister ; from the earliest hours
of childhood they had been companions and friends.
When I was enraged with the lad, which was often
the case upon slight cause, it was Christina who al-
ways stood between him and my wrath ; their mother
had bid him take care of and watch over his sister,
the one little lamb left to grow up in the nest of
wolves which my castle might well have been called,
and to stand by her whenever she needed a friend.
Well did Rudolf fulfil the charge. If her finger
ached, he would have ridden night and day in search
of a remedy, and his: life would have been freely
risked in her service at any moment.

‘Well, Rudolf did not like the Englander. I did not
know how it first began, nor can I now say which, if
either, was in fault. Perhaps Sir Smith took not
enough notice of the boy at first, and Rudolf was of
an age when boys like to be thought men, and to be
noticed by men. Then, no doubt, the lad grew jealous
when he found how much of his sister's time was
monopolised by the stranger, and how she gradually
grew to prefer his company even to that of her brother.
I saw, now and then, how things were going, but took
V1.] THE RED BARON. 305



no pains to stop it. Why should I interfere ? All would
go on rightly, I doubted not, and it rather amused me
tosee Rudolf lose his temper before the cool Englander,
who always had the best of it if they came to hot
words. There was no wise counsellor to set matters
straight. Christina, poor child, did her best, but she
seemed to have lost her influence with her brother in
this case. There had once been a chaplain in the
castle, who might have been of use at this time. But
in the earlier part of my career, I found chapels and
chaplains somewhat in my way, so I shut up the former
and kicked the latter out of the place. He used to
remonstrate against certain practices of mine which I
did not choose to relinquish; so out he went, and none
of his kind had entered the castle for many a long day.

‘At last matters came to a crisis. Sir Smith
formally demanded the hand of my daughter in
marriage. I had nothing to say against it, the
more particularly as he did not propose to take her
away from me for some time. His own country, he
said, was in confusion: he could not return there
until times should be quieter and the King should
have his own again, and therefore he would stay with
me for some time at least after my daughter should
have become his wife. So I gave my consent, and it
was settled that the marriage should take place.
Some difficulty, indeed, there was about getting a
priest, for those gentry did not love me, nor I them,
and they were not over ready to trust themselves
within the clutches of the Red Baron. This obstacle,
however, would no doubt have been got over, if other
events had not occurred.

x
306 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [vI.



‘Rudolf was furious at the projected wedding.
He abused Sir Smith so that Christina had to inter-
pose to prevent words coming to blows. He used to
me-—to me—his father and the Red Baron whom
everyone feared, words which made me mad. Never
would he have done so had I treated him as a father
should have done. I should have remembered this
and been more gentle than I was. But I was beside
myself with rage. J struck the boy: had I had a
weapon in my hand at the moment, I tremble to
think what might have been the consequence. I
struck him—he rushed from my presence and left the
castle that night.

‘What was to be done? He did not return next
morning, nor next, nor the morning after. We looked
everywhere ; we asked everybody; no one knew or
had heard anything of the lad. We had not news-
papers in those days as there are now. To-day, if a
dog or a watch is lost, the world knows it soon by
means of advertisements printed everywhere, and the
chances are that more dogs and watches are brought
to you than you thought would have been lost by all
the country in the time, especially if you have offered
enough reward. But in the good old times in which
I lived you might lose your son or yourself (if that
were possible) and no one would hear of it out of
your own immediate neighbourhood except by the
merest chance. Sowe could hear no news of Rudolf,
and those who cared about him were very uncomfort-
able.

‘I confess that I did not quite like it myself, for I
felt I had not done all I might have done for the
vi] THE RED BARON. 307



boy, and now that he was my only son—the sole hope
of my house, I was by no means anxious to lose him.
At the same time, Iam bound to say that I was so
selfish and bad at heart, that so long as things went
smoothly and easily with myself, I did not much care
what became of anybody else. And as to my suc-
cessor, what, after all, did it matter to me whether it
was my son or not? J must be gone and my fun
over, anyhow, before he came to the castle and
estates, and therefore it seemed to me that as far as I
was concerned it mattered little what happened here
afterwards. The true philosophy I held to be this—to
enjoy oneself as much as possible and let other people
look out for themselves. You needn’t smile con-
temptuously. I know wow that I was wrong, and
that happiness zzws¢ depend on other people, and that
to make others happy is the best and truest way of
being happy oneself. But I didn’t know it chen, or
at all events I didn’t act upon it. So when Rudolf
disappeared I was not nearly so much grieved as
might have been expected in the case of a better man,

‘Christina, however, was inconsolable. She cried
her dear eyes out at the loss of her brother. She was
sure he was dead. Nothing could comfort her, and
as to her marriage, she would not hear of it; so
that the boy had really taken the very best way in
the world to prevent the alliance he so much disliked.
It was rather hard upon the Englander, Nothing
that he could say was of the slightest use. No—he
must bring back her brother before she would have
anything more to say to him. This was doubly hard

upon Sir Smith, because, in the first place, he had not
X2
308 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [vI.



the remotest idea where to find the lost sheep, and in
the second place, if he had been able to do so, he
was the very last shepherd with whom it would have
returned.

‘So you may suppose that things went on rather
uncomfortably at the castle, and as a natural conse-
quence, I became very cross and morose. To make
a diversion, therefore, I determined upon undertaking
an expedition against a certain neighbour of mine
who possessed a castle some fifteen or twenty miles
distant from my own. To say the truth, he had not
given me any very grave cause of offence. He had
indeed flogged one of my vassals whom his people
had caught in the act of robbing a hen-roost, but as
barons usually stood by each other in such matters,
and I should undoubtedly have hanged the fellow in
similar case, there was not much to complain of. But
when one is looking for an excuse, one can always
make anything serve for one, and this did as well as
a better.

‘I pretended to be very indignant at the rough
usage which my worthy retainer had received; and
without any preliminary message of defiance, I
gathered together my men-at-arms, summoned my
vassals, and rode off at the head of over a hundred
and fifty of the greatest rascals you could have found
in this or any other country. They all hada keen
eye for plunder, no scruples of any kind to interfere
with their due execution of the work before them,
and no merit that I could honestly attribute to them
except fidelity to their feudal chief and unflinching
courage in the hour of battle. I had wanted Sir
vi.] THE RED BARON. 309



Smith to accompany me, but he had excused him-
self upon various grounds, the real reason of course
being that he wished to stay with Christina. In an
ill-omened hour I permitted this, and leaving a dozen
men, which in those days were ample to guard the
castle of a man so much dreaded as I was, I rode forth
with the rest upon the expedition which I had planned.

‘My worthy neighbour had somehow or other got
an inkling of my intention, so that Ihad not the plea-
sure of taking him by surprise, asI had fully intended
to have done. There was, and is, (though it has been
widened and improved since the days I speak of) a
certain pass some twelve miles from this castle,
through which you emerge from the mountains imme-
diately upon the only place for some miles where you
can conveniently cross the river. It was at that time
rather an easy pass to defend. The passage between
the sides of the mountain were narrow ; the rocks rose
perpendicularly on either side, and between the mouth
of the passage and the river a space of some thirty or
forty yards intervened, and on either side of the road
the ground, naturally rough and rugged, sloped up-
wards, and at the distance of a very few yards was
covered with thick brushwood and stunted trees such
as often grow on the side of our mountains.

‘Nothing could have been more easy than to
defend this pass. A few rocks and trunks of trees
placed at the river end would have checked the ad-
vance of troops. The cliffs above the passage might
have been held, whence rocks could have been rolled
down upon the invaders, and as the passage would
not allow more than half a dozen men to walk abreast,
310 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. [vI.



a comparatively small force might have held an army
at bay, whilst if the passage had once been forced,
a body of men well placed in the woods on either
side would have proved most awkward and incon-
venient to any attacking party.

‘ Through the pass I had to go, and as I neared it
I could not help thinking how easily what I have de-
scribed might have been done if the baron whom I
was about to attack had received warning of my
coming. I knew not that he dad such warning, but
still less did I know that he had not the wisdom or
knowledge of war to take the measures to which I
have alluded. Had he done so, I and my people —
could hardly have avoided a complete and most
humiliating defeat.

‘Unfortunately for him, however, my neighbour was
what you Englanders would call a thundering fool.
Instead of occupying the pass or the wood, he, having
some foolish scruple about staying in his own territory,
which the river divided from mine, remained on the
other side, and drew up his forces on the open plain
about a quarter of a mile from the ford, with a forest
behind him anda morass on one side. The conse-
quence was that I was enabled to pass the dangerous
point and to cross the river with my men without any
difficulty. Then the baron whom I was about to in-
vade thought it was time to move, and accordingly
advanced in front of his men, waving a white flag
in token of his wish to parley. It was never my
habit, however, to do anything of the kind when once
I had set out upon an expedition for a certain pur-
pose. Parleying is only “jawing” one against the
vI.] THE RED BARON. 311



other, to see who can get the best of it, and little good
comes of jawing, any day in the week. As for his
white flag, I didn’t care a rush about that, and if I
had thought there was any danger of my followers
being beaten by his, I should very likely have taken
advantage of his folly in bearing the white flag him-
self, let him come near and then captured him as a
hostage for the behaviour of his men. But I saw at
"a glance that we were as strong as they, and I was
impatient to be at them; so I paid no respect to his
flag or him, but gave the word to charge at once.

‘At it we went ding dong. The other chaps fought
like mad, for they were in their own country, and as
your English proverb says, “ Every cock fights best on
his own dunghill.” But my cocks were more of the
game breed than they were, and after about a quarter
of an hour, they gave way and fled in every direction.
My blood was up by this time, and I laid about me
right and left, cutting and slashing the beggars like any-
thing, until at last I encountered the baron himself.
He would fain have avoided the battle even then.

““ What have I done?” he cried. “Why are you
thus attacking me and my poor people?”

‘TI only laughed in his face, and rode him down
forthwith, for I was better mounted and a stronger
man withal. Then I pursued his men and knocked
as many of them on the head as I could, after which I
had him bound with his legs under his horse’s belly,
and rode forward in triumph to his castle, which, being
ill defended, soon yielded to my victorious army. Oh!
we had a rare time of it then! We sacked the old
place from top to bottom, and my fellows said they
312 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [vI.



never had better fun in their lives, for there was every-
thing a soldier could want, and the only drawback
was that the thing came to an end too soon. I will
net enter into all the details of the transaction, for
they might perhaps disgust you, and are not now
pleasant for me to look back upon.

‘We did the thing completely, at any rate, and as
the baron had few goods or people left to add to the
enjoyment of his after life, I thought it would bea
real kindness to put an end to him. So I first let
the rascal whom he had flogged inflict the same
punishment upon him, in front of his own castle,
which the fellow did with a will, and then, as I rather
disliked to see one of my own rank so degraded, I
hung both of them together from the battlements.

t was an awful “sell” for my knave, who thought I
had undertaken the whole business for his sake alone.
But I told him it was but fair that if both were
flogged, both should be hung, and I think the baron
saw the force of the argument if the other did not.
At all events, I turned them both off, and there was
no one to dispute the justice of my sentence.

‘But scarcely had the deed been done, when I heard
a voice behind me which took my thought and atten-
tion from the execution in which I had just delighted.
A very old woman stood behind me on the battle-
ments, close to a long narrow window in the castle
wall. She was clad entirely in black, and was dressed
like a nun, or some member of a religious order. How
she came there I know not, for I thought we had
routed out every man, woman, and child in the castle,
and none of us had seen her before. There she was,
vi] THE RED BARON. 313



however, sure enough, and to this hour I remember
the haughty, piercing, vengeful glare of her eyes
as they were fixed upon me. She raised her arm
and shook her aged fist at me with a vehemence
unnatural in one of her years, whilst she uttered ina
clear voice these unpleasant words :—
‘*T saw the Red Baron in th’ hour of his pride,
The castle he sacked, and the baron he slew.
The hour of my vengeance I patiently bide,
Tis near, when the Fates shall 27s Fortune undo.
Red Baron ! thy triumph shall soon turn to tears ;
With innocent blood have thine hands been imbued ;
Go home, whilst these words shall still ring in thine ears,
The Boar shall be worried, and by his own brood !”
‘You will agree with me that this was not a pro-
phecy calculated to make one feel comfortable, or put -
one in a good humour with the prophetess. As soon,
therefore, as ] had recovered from my astonishment at
being thus addressed, I cried out to my men-at-arms
to seize the old hag, and hurl her from the battle-
ments from which her master was already dangling.
‘They attempted to execute my orders forthwith,
but, with a smile of mingled scorn and malignity, she
stepped through the narrow window behind her, and
one of my people who rushed through after her, found
to his cost that it overlooked a steep staircase inside
at a height of some forty feet, down which he fell, and
paid the penalty of his rashness with his life. It was
evident, then, to us all, that the old woman had been
no mortal, and indeed I afterwards learned that there
was a legend in that family of an old abbess, a
daughter of the house in days gone by, who usually
made her appearance at the death of the head of the
314 _ WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, [vI.



house. As, in this instance, she found him perishing
in a manner not likely to add much to the credit or
dignity of the family, I suppose she thought she might
as well say something nasty to the person who had
caused his end. At all events, whatever her reason
may have been, she gave vent to the speech which I
have told you, and I confess that it did not improve
my temper or spirits by any means.

‘J stayed in the castle long enough to ransack it
completely, which took me a couple of days, not so
much on account of the quantity of booty in the build-
ing itself, but because of the cattle which had to be
driven in, and moreover on account of my followers,
who always required a little time for enjoyment when
they had the luck to sack such a place. On the third
day, however, I told them that it was high time we
should be off, or our folks at home would certainly
think we had met with some misfortune.

‘I had not thought it necessary to send a messenger
with the news of our success, partly because I ex-
pected to be back so soon, and partly because I was
not over well pleased with the lack of interest which
the Englander had shown in my expedition. In fact,
he had seconded Christina’s efforts to induce me to
abandon my intention, pointing out to me that these
raids were things discreditable in themselves, and
likely some day to lead me into trouble, by drawing
down upon me the united vengeance of those who
would eventually become tired of being attacked one
at a time and destroyed in detail. So I thought it
would be quite time enough to tell Sir Smith in my
own words what had happened, and tell him that at
v1] THE RED BARON. 315



least this particular baron could never join with others
against me, as I had made a clear sweep of him and
his once for all.

‘We started leisurely about mid-day, and as the
cattle we drove before us somewhat delayed our march
it was well on in.the afternoon before we reached the
village near the.castle. No one came out to meet us ;
but this was not surprising, for the villagers rather
shunned than sought the presence of the Red Baron,
and I marvelled not that Isaw none of them. All was
quiet, too, as I rode up the old avenue at the head
of my men, and advanced up nearly to the castle gate.
Then, all at once, a piercing shrick rang through my
ears and filled my soul with terror. I knew—surely
I knew—that voice. It was my own, my darling
daughter whose lips had uttered the sound. But how
shall I describe the mingled anguish and horror which
it seemed to convey !

‘T pushed forward at once across the drawbridge,
which was down, and the castle gates were open.
All was silent, but a wail, softer but if possible more
heart-rending than the shriek I had first heard, smote
upon my hearing as I neared the door. It seemed
to come from the banqueting hall. The moments
which elapsed whilst I hastily traversed the corridor
were the most agonising in the whole of my earthly
existence. I knew not what to expect, and I feared
the worst. I rushed into the banqueting hall—what
a sight met mine eyes! The bodies of several men
lay here and there, who had evidently fallen after a
severe struggle—and at the end of the room, near
the head of the table, sat Christina—my own Chris-
316 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [vI.



tina—my lovely, my darling one— upon the floor,
supporting a man’s head and shoulders in her lap,
and wailing over him like a mother over the child
of her love. Frantically I rushed forward, and per-
ceived that my daughter held in her arms the lifeless
body of the Englander.

‘Rage and astonishment filled my heart. How had
he been slain? Who had been the savage combatants
the traces of whose recent fray were so plainly per-
ceptible around me? Had treason been at work, or
had any open enemy stormed the castle and
slaughtered my guest in my absence? Dead enough
he was in all conscience, with a gaping wound in his
breast enough to have let out half a dozen lives if he
had happened to have them. My chief thought was
for my daughter. I called to her. She answered
but by an incoherent moan.

‘I threw myself upon the ground by her side. I
spoke to her in my tenderest and softest voice, and
applied to her all the most affectionate epithets by
which I had been used to address her since the days
of her earliest childhood. All was in vain. She shrank
from my caresses with a shuddering glance of fear,
and remained deaf to all my entreaties that she would
speak and tell us whence this dreadful calamity had
befallen us. Alas! it was but too plain that the
catastrophe was greater than the loss of the Englander,
though for that I should have grieved sincerely. The
light of reason had for ever been extinguished in my
beloved daughter, and she would never more know
the father who so adored her, and whose sole hope
in life she had been.
vi] ._ THE RED BARON. 317



‘It was from the lips of a wounded retainer that I
at last gathered the truth; and sad enough it was
when known and realised. It seems that for some
time past some of my discontented vassals, leaguing
themselves with those of other lords whose masters I
had at different times dispossessed or slain, had taken
refuge in the great forests beyond the village. They
had, I suppose, had friends among the peasants, and
although they occasionally committed depredations,
yet for the most part they carried on their robbing
and marauding business so stealthily and craftily, that
I had no idea of the existence of such a formidable
band as they had become.

‘In an evil hour, my boy Rudolf formed the ac-
quaintance of some of these men. Stung by my
neglect, and beyond measure irritated at my prefer-
ence for Sir Smith, and the influence which the latter
had acquired over his sister, Rudolf began by absent-
ing himself, as if on hunting excursions, from_ the
castle, in. order to join these men in their lawless ex-
peditions. Ere long, as he was the only man of rank
among them, and a brawe lad withal, they elected him
as their captain. It was very shortly after this event
that the outbreak occurred of which I have told you,
and which resulted in my son’s flight from the castle.
He went direct to the haunts of his freebooting band,
and declaring the insult to which he had been sub-
jected on the Englander’s account, vowed vengeance
on the latter. His followers were only too ready to
encourage him in such a design, but were uncertain
how to carry it out. .

‘Rudolf, however, was a youth full of ability, and
318 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. [vI.



moreover determined to accomplish his purpose.
Alas! had I ever taken care that he should receive
instruction, had I ever attended to him myself, had
his sainted mother been spared, how different it would
all have been! Neglected, slighted, uneducated, un-
taught save by the early lessons of his dead mother
and the natural instincts of good which Christina
-imparted to all around her, the boy had no self-
control, nothing to draw him back from the evil pur-
pose which he meditated.

‘He drilled and disciplined his band as well as
he was able, and taught them to rely upon him and
obey his directions. They did so only too well. My
departure was watched, and the very next day
measures were taken to surprise the castle. Some-
thing postponed the attack until the night before my
return, so that had I dealt more mercifully with my
neighbour, or even spared their flocks and herds to
his people, the evil might yet have been averted. But
it was not to be! On that fatal evening, the full force
of the robber band, some fifty men, fell suddenly upon
the unsuspecting garrison. It was the supper hour,
and they were together in the banqueting hall when
the attack commenced.

‘Taken at such disadvantage, resistance against a
force four times their number was simply impossible.
I gathered from my retainer that Sir Smith, the lion-
hearted man that he was, performed prodigies of
valour, and that no less than five of the robbers fell
by his hand. They say, but I cannot think it true,
that it was Rudolf, the remorseless Rudolf himself,
who struck the fatal blow which at last felled him to
VL] THE RED BARON. 319



the earth. Be this as it may, however, it is certain
that Christina entered the hall as he fell, and that
the: horror of that awful moment was too much for
her pure and peaceful soul. Her father’s people
beaten down and her affianced spouse slain, and that
by a brother's hand, was a sight which would have
shaken nerves more rudely strung together than those
of my darling child. What she said or did I know
not. At any rate, Rudolf was so struck to the heart
with remorse at the result of his vengeance that he
fled the castle with his followers, and my daughter
had remained there with the Englander’s body until
the hour of our arrival.

‘You may imagine my feelings. Rage and despair
struggled for the mastery in my bosom. Anon I
cursed the wretched boy who had brought this misery
upon our house, anon I directed my imprecations
against the abominable old hag who had prophesied it.
At one moment I prayed and implored my darling
Christina to be to me what she had been before, at
another I called frantically upon Sir Smith to return.
Alas! that was what he could never do. They had
made sure work of him, and I wished at onetime that
I had been in his place.

‘The rest of my story will not take long to tell. It
soon became known that she whom everybody loved,
she who was the pride and delight of the castle,
worshipped by the rough soldiery, adored by her fond
father, that she was mad, hopelessly mad, and that
instead of the sweet smile and kindly word which had
ever been ready for each and all of us, nought could
320 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. {v1.



be heard from her sweet lips in the future but the
vacant laugh and wild shriek of insanity.

‘Then came the next blow. Had Rudolf returned,
I would have forgiven him all, even then: was he not
my last child? my last child with reason and sense
left to him? Despite my terrible grief, I could not
have avoided calling him to me, and sharing my
affliction with the last of my race. But it was not to
be. The unhappy boy, hearing of his sister's melan-
choly fate, lost all desire to live and abandoned him-
self to the pangs of remorse, Whilst still I mourned
the Englander and yet longed to receive once more
his slayer to my bosom, fate dealt me the cruel stroke
she had in store and robbed me of my only remaining
boy. Unable to endure his misery, he sought in
death the peace which life had denied him, and his
body was found in the deep lake near the forest, where
he had drowned himself in sheer despair. My cup
was now nearly full. I had but one aim and object
left, namely to alleviate, if possible, the condition of
my idolised Christina.

‘T tell you, stranger, that I passed moments,
hours, aye, days of agony which might have atoned,
I think, for greater crimes even than mine, if any
atonement for crimes could be made by mortals.
Comfort, or even relief to my child, was impossible.
Again and again would I visit her in the futile hope
that some returning gleam of reason might enable her
once more to speak to me—if but one singlesentence—
as of old. It was denied.

‘Nor was this the whole of my sorrow. I have said
that we were constant companions in the past days. I
vi] THE RED BARON. 321



have told you that she was my light and life, and that
she loved the father who so worshipped the very
ground she trod on. Fancy if you can the agony
which racked my soul when I found that my presence
had now become hateful to her. . She constantly
shuddered at my approach, and fled, moaning and
wailing, into the’ farthest corner of the room, where
she would crouch down as if to get as far as possible
away from me. What pangs of anguish did I endure
at such moments! It was but too evident that, for
some inscrutable reason or other, I was associated in
her mind with the misfortune which had befallen
her, and had so become positively hateful to my
darling child. Often and often have I, the rough
soldier, the cruel victor, the Red Baron, crouched
like a whipped hound outside my daughter's door,
listening for some sound from her lips which might
not be one of sorrow or of terror. My punishment
was heavy indeed, and I see you think so by the look
of pity which comes over your countenance.

‘Well, the end came at last. - As J had ceased to
lead them on expeditions in which plunder, if not
honour, was to be gained, my followers began to fall
away from me, and I knew that I was spoken of in
terms the reverse of respectful even in my own castle.
Now and then I rallied for a while, swore a few great
oaths, and flogged or hung a rascal or two who
seemed insubordinate. But this state of things could
not continue. The men began to desert, and within
three months from the events I have been narrating
I had not above half the number of retainers at com-
mand which I could have summoned to my banner

Â¥
322 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [vi.

before that awful day of retribution. Still, I cared
little for this. The hope and pleasure of my life had
gone by, and I was beginning to feel that the seed I
had sown was bringing up a crop which I had never
expected to reap. I dragged on my wretched exist-
ence in this manner, seldom quitting the castle and
neither hunting nor riding forth on raids as of old.
My only thought was of Christina, although, poor child,
she could never more be gonscious of my continued
care and love.

‘Well, as I have said, the end came at last.
Although she was tended with the greatest devotion by
some of her female domestics, it was impossible that
they could for ever guard her with the same vigi-
lance. One day, deceived by her apparent tranquillity,
they were less watchful than usual, and Christina
escaped from the rooms in which she had been
strictly confined ever since her madness had been
confirmed. The first thing she did was to go to the
banqueting-room where she had last seen her
affianced husband, and where had been enacted the
terrible tragedy which I have described. As the poor
Englander had been buried for some months, she
naturally didn’t find him there, so she sat down and
began to wail and sob upon the very spot where I had
found her with his head in her lap.

‘ After a while her attendants missed her and came
in anxious terror to tell me of her flight. In their
company I sought her, and after an ineffectual search
in the upper part of the house, descended with them
into the banqueting-room and there saw my darling
sitting as I have told you. The moment she saw me
VL] THE RED BARON. 323



enter; her worst paroxysms seemed toreturn. _ Perhaps
to her disordered brain there recurred the awful scene
which had taken place in that room, and the remem-
brance of my previous entry excited her diseased
imagination and drove her to fury. Anyhow, she
leaped from the ground and with a wild yell rushed
up the front staircase.

‘We followed as fast as we could, but she was
before us all the way, and when she reached the stair-
case on which were her rooms, instead of entering
them, she rushed to one of the large open embrasures
of the castle wall, turned round upon us for an instant,
waved her hand with a scornful, mocking laugh, and
springing through the embrasure was in another instant
dashed in pieces upon the pavement a hundred feet
below. My life virtually ended at that moment.

‘T can tell you no more of my own recollection ; but
as you will not be satisfied without knowing what
really became of me, I will relate what I now know
to have happened. I did not appear the next morn-
ing. They knocked at my door for some time, then
opened it, and found the room empty. They called
me all over the house without obtaining any answer,
and at last, on searching the rooms which my lost
Christina had occupied, they found me hanging from
an iron bar which ran across the top of one of the
windows, to which I had made fast an old shawl of
my darling’s and had contrived to arrange it in a slip
knot round my neck in such a manner as to need no
other executioner. This was the end of my life—if

not of my troubles. Of course I have had to haunt
ya
324 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [VI

the castle ever since; and I am sure you will agree
with me that I have quite as good reason for doing so
as the vast majority of ghosts have for frequenting
the various localities which they honour with their
presence.’

Here the little red man came to a stop, and
having again let his pipe out, rekindled it and tossed
off another glass of madeira whilst he awaited the
answer of his companion.

‘My dear sir,’ remarked the latter, ‘I do not
know how to thank you sufficiently for the remark-
ably interesting story with which you have just
favoured me.. Be assured that I sympathise most
truly and deeply with your sorrows, and feel sincerely
for all you have endured. Allow me at the same
time to observe, always with the greatest respect, that
after all, your present fate is not so bad as it might be,
or entirely devoid of those consolations which your
condition permits you to receive. I take it there are
few ghosts with such venison pasties and madeira at
command, and none, Iam sure, more capable of doing
justice to both than your worthy self.

‘Ah!’ replied the other with a sigh, ‘that is all
very true; but meat and wine do not confer happiness
upon ghosts any more than upon mortals. However,
as the hour is getting late, and IJ must be out of this
by cock-crow according to.all ghostly precedent, I
will take the liberty of wishing you a very good
night, and trust that your dreams will be light and
cheerful.’

‘I am sorry to part thus, Baron,’ replied the
traveller, ‘but you must of course fix your own hours
v1. ] THE RED BARON. - 325





in your own house; wherefore I will not seek to
detain you.’

Upon this the little red man got up, pushed back
his chair from the fireside, yawned, stretched his
arms, took one more glass of madeira (which hap-
pened to be the last in the bottle), put his pipe in his
pocket, and after nodding familiarly to his com-
panion, left the room and shut the door after him.
Being very tired and not a little sleepy, our traveller
did not sit up much longer. He found a certain
amount of covering upon the bed, and having thrown
his cloak over him by way of an extra blanket,
managed to compose himself comfortably to sleep, and
never had a better night’s rest in his life. The sun
was shining brightly into his room next morning
when he awoke, and for the first few moments
he could not remember where he was or how he came
there. Gradually, however, he recollected all the
events of the previous evening, and began to wonder
how he could have been on such good terms with the
ghost of an old baron, and to think how lucky he had
been to fall in with so hospitable a spirit. »

There was no doubt at all about the reality of the
thing. There were the two chairs as they were left the
night before; there were the glasses, and there were
the bottles, empty indeed, but still imparting, by their
pleasant fragrance, a knowledge of. what. they had
recently contained. There, too, better than all at that
moment, was a fragment of the mighty pasty, sufficient
for our traveller to break his fast upon, which he did
very shortly after he had completed his toilet ; then he
took a look into one or two of the other rooms, but
326 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND, [v1



without seeing: anything particular, and next de-
scended to the banqueting-hall, where he pictured to
himself the scene which the Red Baron had so vividly
described.

Then, having no further occasion to stay there,
and finding that his calling out to the Red Baron
produced no reply whatever, he came to two con-
clusions :—First, that ghosts would not come when
called, especially in broad daylight ; and secondly, that
as he could not possibly stay there until the evening,
he had better set: forth on his travels without further
delay. He did so accordingly, and if I had time to
tell you, and thought you would care to hear, I
could relate many other interesting adventures which
happened to the traveller. However, I will not yield
to the temptation to do so, but hasten on to the only
other event in his journeyings which bears upon the
present story.

It was some ten or a dozen years after the events
which I have been relating, when this self-same
traveller, grown, as you may perhaps think possible,
somewhat older, but still stalwart in frame and fond
of roaming abroad, came in his travels to the identical
village near which stood the castle of the Red Baron.
Things had changed, however, in that locality.
There were plenty of peasants to be seen at the
doors and windows of the cottages which formed the
principal street of the village, and, more than that,
there was a respectable inn at which accommodation
could be found for man and beast.

Our traveller stood even more in need of this than
in the olden days, for he came not alone upon this
vi] THE RED BARON. 327

occasion, A fair young girl was with him, upon whom
helooked with the eyes of reverential lovewhich showed
that she stood towards him in near and dear relation-
ship. She was his bride, whom he was taking over some
of the ground which he had travelled in his old bachelor
days, and as they drove up to the door of the little
inn, her bright looks and his manly, happy face and
bearing attracted the attention of the loiterers around
the door.

Right glad was the host to see such guests, and
to ascertain that they intended to pass the night
at his house. The best fare which the country
could produce was speedily placed before them,
and the host himself took care to wait upon such dis-
tinguished personages. Just as they were about to
commence their repast, the sound of a loud-toned
bell burst upon their ears, ringing, as it seemed, at
only a short distance from the place where they were
seated.

‘Ha!’ said the gentleman, after listening atten-
tively for a moment, ‘I have, as you know, my darl-
ing, a pretty good memory for places and distances,
and if anyone had asked me, I should have sworn
that the bell we have just heard came from some-
where very close to the old ruined castle about my
visit to which I have so often told you.’

‘Milord is right, here obsequiously interposed the
fat host. ‘The bell does come from the castle, but it
is not “ruined” now, though perhaps it deserved to
be called so some few years back. Has Milord then
been here before ?’

“Yes, certainly,’ replied the gentleman, ‘and |
328 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND,. [v1.



thought I could not be far wrong as to the direction
from which that bell came. But how is it that the
castle is not ruined? Has it been sold, or burned and
rebuilt, or what ?’

‘Neither the one thing nor the other, Milord,’ re-
turned the host ;‘ but the late owner died some three
years ago, and the present Baron, who was his cousin,
had money of his own before, and has thoroughly
restored the old place.’

‘But how—what do you mean ?’ asked the gentle-
man. ‘Who was the late owner, and how comes the
present man to be a Baron?’

‘I do not know what Milord means, Lobseeved the
host somewhat stiffly. ‘The Barons of the family of
Bundelhausen have held the castle and estates for
long, long years—most likely from a time very soon
after the Flood, if not before.’

‘How can that be?’ enquired the traveller some-
what incredulously. ‘I thought the line had come to
an end.

‘Not so, returned the other. ‘But pray how long
is it since Milord was here?’

‘Some ten or twelve years ago,’ responded the guest.

‘Ah! that would be in the time of the last Baron.
Milord might well think the place was deserted and
the family come to an end. The late Baron was a
curious fish altogether. Heaven rest his soul! He
was what you call “a character,” anda very queer one
too. Although he had fine estates, good shooting, and
one of the best cellars of wine in the country, he lived
in two little rooms at one corner of the house, and let
the whole place go sadly out of repair,
vi] THE RED BARON. 329



‘His fancy was to dress himself always entirely in
red ; and if he could ever get anyone up to the old castle,
he would indulge himself with telling the most frightful
and improbable tales. His great delusion was that he
had lived many years ago and committed great crimes,
whereas a better little man, barring his eccentric habits,
never existed ; he gave away heaps to the poor and
no one had a word to say against him. Poor man!
he was his own enemy—he had but one fault, and
that was his love of wine, and I have been told that
this it was which carried him off at the last.’

As the host spoke, the lady could not avoid steal-
ing a sly glance at her companion, whose countenance
wore an expression so extremely comical that at last,
she burst into a fit of laughter which greatly discon-
certed the poor host. He begged ten thousand
pardons if he had said anything to offend the distin-
guished visitors—perhaps they were related to the
noble family of which he had been speaking—if so, he
trusted he had said nothing disrespectful of them :
such had been far, very far, from his intention, and he
hoped he might be forgiven. The lady and gentle-
man both assured him that he was entirely innocent
of having offended them in the slightest degree, and
that they were not fortunate enough to be able to
claim the most distant relationship with the family in
question. When they were alone, however, the lady
resumed her laughter, in which her husband was
forced to join in spite of himself.

‘There,’ said she with an air of triumph, ‘did I
not always tell you that your ghost story was like all
the rest of the same sort, and only required a little
330 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. (v1.

more information in order to be cleared up in the
most satisfactory manner? What do you say zow to
your Red Baron, Sir Smith, Christina and all the rest
of them? What have you to say for yourself now,
sir?’ And the lady laughed again.

‘My darling, replied her husband with a loving
look, ‘ghost or no ghost, nothing can make me dis-
believe in the venison pasty and old madeira, which
were to my mind much better than the story. But,
he added with a rueful look, shaking his head as he
spoke, ‘I might have known that such a kick could
never have been given by a ghostly foot !’


Ue

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Fae a |
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ae ye iT




OR NA |! Vo RMT | WI Lal O51 Mra
YAS AA al aude | iW crane fi ee



THE TWO ETONIANS
vIL.] THE TWO ETONIANS. 331



VIL
THE TWO ETONIANS.

I.

A PLEASANT, mellow autumn day, with enough sun
to remind you of the summer which had just passed
by, and a freshness in the air which at the same time
warned you of the coming winter. A bracing air
withal, and a day which tempted everyone who had
any life or spirit in him to shut up his books, put.
away his papers, and rove abroad beneath the open
skies of Heaven. Such a day it was that beamed
upon the Eton world (never mindin what year) upon
the occasion of the School Steeple-chase. The Flat-
race had been run a week ago, the Hurdle-race was
over also, and this was the last ‘event’ in the way of
athletic sports which was to ‘come off’ that half.
Such an occasion, and such weather, was sure to bring
out the whole school—or all fellows who had any sport
in them—to see the fun ; and accordingly as soon as the
big college clock had sounded the hour of twelve, you
saw boys scampering out of school in every direction
with even greater haste than usual, and in a few
minutes more, having deposited their books at their
respective ‘Tutors’’ or ‘Dames’’ houses, trooping off
down the Slough road in numbers, bound to the par-
ticular place from which each had determined that the
332 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [vil



best part of the race was to be seen. Some would
like to see the start, and run behind the competitors
as far as they could. Some preferred to witness one
jump, some another, and the majority gathered in
‘the Field, where was the winning-post—for, although
the place of the start was varied from year to year
according to the state of the ground, or the fancy of
those to whom fell the duty of arranging the course,
the School Steeple-chase would not have been the real
thing at all unless the last jump had been the old
‘school jump’ over Chalvey, and the winning post in
‘the Field,’ hallowed by the memory of many a hard-
fought football match, and dear to the heart of every
Etonian.

Upon the present occasion the start was in the
Datchet direction, and after a two-mile circuit over
a line of country by no means light, the Slough road
had to be crossed, and the last half mile was straight
to the wirining-post. It was a trying course, and only
about fourteen boys had entered for it, young heroes
all of them, prepared to face the ordeal with un-
daunted courage. As the day of the race drew near,
however, several had dropped out of the list from one
reason or another: a sprained ankle had incapacitated
one, a hasty summons home had caused another’s
absence, and perhaps one or two more had judged their
chance too small to make it worth their while to run.

However that may have been, it is certain that |
upon the appointed day only nine came to the scratch,
between whom the hopes and fears of their brother
Etonians were divided. Of these there were five
fellows who may be said to have been decidedly the
VIL] THE TWO ETONIANS. 333



favourites. Oxley, who was ‘in the Boats, and high
up in the fifth form, wasa tall strongly-built boy, with
perhaps a trifle too much flesh on him, but with plenty
of muscle and, so fellows said, lots of pluck. Sundridge,
also a ‘Wet-bob’ (according to the Eton expression
to signify a boy who prefers boating to cricket); Penti-
man, a spare, thin boy, in the same remove with
Oxley, and reputed to be very fast ; Moore, a short
thick-set boy, who looked as if he could last; and
Ethelston, a ‘ Dry-bob,’ and one of the eleven. Each
of these five had many supporters: the ‘Aquatics’
were divided between Oxley and Sundridge; the
‘“Dry-bobs’ between Ethelston and Penliman ; whilst
Moore, who had not yet attained to the dignity of the
fifth form, had many partisans among the ‘ lower boys,’
who would have considered his victory their own. It
is unnecessary to speak of the other four starters, who
had probably entered rather for the credit of the
thing, than with any hope of winning, since the above-
named five were confessedly the best.

Great then was the excitement when the long-
expected day arrived and the relative merits of the
competitors were about to be proved. It may easily be
understood that the latter were themselves not among
the least excited: no light honour was it accounted to
be the winner of the School Steeple-chase, and if the
choice had been offered to any boy of either bearing
off this honour or being ‘sent up for good’ half a
dozen times, I have little doubt that, in the great
majority of cases, the choice would have been in
favour of the athletic as opposed to the scholastic
distinction. Be that as it may, however, the five
334 WHISPERS FROM FAIRVLAND. [vi1.



boys between whom the race lay were as anxious as
to the result as boys ought to be under such circum-
stances. Each had paid attention, for some weeks
past, to his condition of body so far as to eschew
heavy puddings, jam tarts, and such other edibles as
are generally supposed to be prejudicial to wind and
speed. An Eton boy’s ‘training’ is seldom of a very
rigorous character, but in this instance the runners
had not only exercised a wise abstinence from that
species of diet known to Etonians as ‘sock,’ but there
were rumours that several of them had gone so far as
to take an occasional run before breakfast, and it was
mysteriously whispered that wonderful trials of speed
had been secretly made with certain ‘cads’ of sporting
celebrity. However this may have been, upon the
appointed day the whole nine appeared at the scratch,
and a start was satisfactorily accomplished.

The first jump was a ditch of peculiarly uninviting
character; the banks were somewhat rotten, the
width was somewhat great, and the weeds which ap-
peared upon the surface of the water had a muddy
and unpleasant look about them which was anything
but tempting. The depth of water, however, was not
great, and it was a question whether a scramble
through the ditch was not likely to take less out of a
boy than a jump. So thought Oxley and Moore, who
both ran through instead of jumping over, whilst
Ethelston, Penliman, and Sundridge took the jump,
which they, with two other boys, succeeded in
clearing, whilst two were left behind floundering in
the mud. The next leap was overa small hedge and
ditch, which was taken by the whole seven, and then
vit] THE TWO ETONIANS. 335

came a grass field with a flight of hurdles in the
middle, which also were successfully managed.

The next field, however, was a piece of plough, at the
end of which was a stake-and-bind hedge, newly done
up and formidable to encounter. Across the plough
gallantly charged the runners; but the pace was too
good for the two unmentioned young gentlemen, who
gave up the contest when they found the other five
considerably ahead of them at the further end of the
field. Somehow or other, all the five got safely over
the hedge, and there was little to choose between
them when they entered the next field. Penliman was
the first, Moore the last of the five, for the next few
fields, the other three running and jumping closely
together.

So matters continued until they were within two
or three fields of the Slough road, in which were
congregated numbers of their brother Etonians,
anxiously looking for their coming. On they came,
charging a flight of hurdles up to which the ground
rather rose and thus rendered the jump somewhat
harder than would otherwise have been the case.
Penliman was still first, but, miscalculating his dis-
tance and perhaps going too fast at his jump, he
unluckily caught his foot in the top of the hurdle and
came down, rather a nasty fall, upon the other side.
He was fortunately not hurt, but at that criticalmoment
the fall and the shock were fatal to his chances of
success. The others were but afew yards behind him,
and before he could get into his speed again, he was
too far behind to have hopes that he could recover
his lost ground.
336 WHISPERS FROM FATRYLAND. [vit

Sundridge, Oxley, and Ethelston were almost
abreast as they jumped the hurdles, and Moore only
a dozen yards behind. Loud were the shouts of their
respective friends as they neared the Slough road,
which they crossed in the same order, and came into
the straight running without change of position. Now
was the moment for each boy to do his utmost; the
eyes of Eton were upon him; the ‘ Field’ was full of
spectators ; around the winning-post were crowds of
boys, and not a few were gathered on the bank near
the ‘school jump, in eager anticipation of that which
would probably decide the fate of the race.

A roar of conflicting cries arose as the five boys were
seen entering the last field before the final jump. Oxley
is the first into that field, bursting through the small
hedge and ditch without rising to the jump, Ethelston
and Sundridge, side by side, are scarce a couple of
yards behind him, and there goes up a mighty shout
from the lower boys as little Moore comes with a will
through the gap, gathers himself together like a good-
plucked chap as he is, and reduces the distance
between him and the others almost at every. step.
All four are nearly together when they are halfway
across the field—who is it that falls behind? It is
Sundridge—he has done his best, but the pace has
been too good for him, and he is fairly ‘ pumped out.’

Now come the cries from the opposite bank
louder and faster. ‘Oxley!’ ‘Ethelston!’ ‘Moore !’
shout a chorus of youthful voices, as the three
gallantly struggle on towards the far-famed Chalvey.
Twenty yards from the jump it becomes apparent that
the race will be between two. Ethelston and Moore


VII] THE TWO ETONIANS. — 337



leave Oxley labouring behind and charge the ditch
almost abreast several yards before him. A roar
from the ‘ Dry-bobs ’ and lower boys, and correspond-
ing shouts of disgust from the ‘ Aquatics,’ accompany
the sight of this extinction of Oxley’s hopes. Poor
fellow ! he was the biggest and the strongest of the five,
but although he would have trained with good-will for
a boat-race, he had probably held a land-race too
cheap to secure it by equal care and abstinence. from
unwholesome diet. So his natural strength, though it
served him well, failed him when tested beside boys
who had bestowed more care upon making the most
of themselves for this important occasion. i

Neither of the two, however, was in a condition to
enable him to clear the ‘school jump’ at the end ofa
fast-run steeple-chase. Both gallantly jumped,and both
were struggling in the ditch at the same instant, but so
close to the opposite bank that it was not long before
each scrambled up into ‘the Field’ and headed for the
winning-post. At this instant the excitement of the
bystanders was tremendous, and their shouts positively
deafening. As the two boys struggled manfully on,
each straining every nerve, a crowd of friends and
well-wishers ran by the side of each, encouraging their
favourite by word and gesture, and perfectly wild with
the intoxication of the moment.

Side by side kept the boys until within a very few
yards of the winning-post. Then each made his great
and final effort, and the result was no longer doubtful.
Moore’s pluck and strength had carried him well
through the day ; but Ethelston had the turn of speed,
and in these last few yards he succeeded in leaving his

Z
338 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [vu



opponent behind, and passing the winning-post a full
yard and a half before him, amid the enthusiastic
cheering of the ‘ Dry-bobs’ and the warm congratula-
tions of his numerous friends. There were few boys
more popular than Ethelston, and no one whose
success would have given more general satisfaction.
Moreover it had been a fast as well as a closely con-
tested race, and everybody was pleased with the sport
which had been afforded. The crowd in the Field
slowly dispersed and straggled back to college.

For the rest of the day, at the dinner table, ‘ after
four’ and ‘after six,’ the events of the morning formed
an occasional topic of conversation; but the school
settled down to its work again as usual, and the steeple-
chase of that year ranked among the events of the
past. The two boys who had been competitors at
the last were thrown but little together during the
rest of their Eton career. Ethelston being so high
in the school, and Moore a ‘lower boy,’ it was only
accidentally that they came in contact ; and gradually
the memory of the race and its results died away, over-
shadowed and eclipsed in the mind of the Eton world
by other similar events and the varied excitement
of Eton life. Had anyone prophesied that the two
. heroes of that day would again be brought together
in another and still more desperate race, he would
probably have been laughed at asa dreamer of dreams,
and certainly so if he had described in imagination
that which really occurred. Nevertheless the events
of real life are oftentimes stranger than imagination
itself, and so it would have proved in this case.
vit] THE TWO ETONIANS. 339

II.

The roll of the cannon was deafening the ears alike
of the besieged and the besiegers of Sebastopol. The
incessant roar, louder than the heaviest thunder-storm,
had continued for days together, and the mighty
armaments of England and France still darkly brooded
over the Russian fortress, whilst anxious hearts at
home beat fast and sad for warrior sons and brothers
in that distant camp, whose place in the old home
circle would, alas! be filled no more.

It was autumn again, but not such an autumn day
as that which I have described as the day of the Eton
Steeple-chase. A dark, heavy morning, with thick
mists rolling up the side of the hill, and covering as
with a shroud the camp of the allies. There had been
heavy rain for days past, and the whole place was ina
state of damp discomfort, unfavourable alike to health
and to military operations. But the man who feels the
grip of a foeman upon his neck has neither time nor
inclination to wait for favourable conditions before try-
ing to shake himself free. And Russia, with the enemy
overhanging her great fortress and threatening the life
of her empire with a death-stroke, had good reason
for a supreme effort to rid herself once for all of the
oppression.

On that night, then, trusting that vigilance might
have relaxed in the allied camp, and the continuous bad
weather might have lessened the discipline and dulled
the martial ardour of her foes, Russia massed her
forces and collected her artillery for one great attempt,
the success of which would have been the most glori-

Z2
340 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. [vit



ous of warlike deeds inher history. Never were greater
precautions taken to ensure that success, and perhaps
never was such a surprise effected—a surprise of an
invading army by the invaded.

There is no need for me to dwell upon the account
of the struggle of that terrible day. In the dim mist
of that November morning dense masses of Russian
soldiery were poured upon the English position—a
hand-to-hand battle of the most determined and fierce
character followed, and victory appeared to waver
between the contending parties. Unable to discern
friend from foe, our men fought at terrible disadvan-
tage ;—the most dreadful confusion prevailed, and
nothing but the undaunted resolution of the old island
race could have made head against a brave and excited
enemy so greatly outnumbering our troops.

How it fared with them has been already told in
more eloquent words than mine. How positions were
taken and re-taken, how the blood of England’s best
and bravest was poured out like water upon that fatal
hill-side ; how a terrible revenge was taken, and thou-
sands of Russian bodies strewed the ground, and how
the gallant Zouaves came up in time to scatter and drive
back the masses of the foe into their fortress, baffled
and defeated in their great effort—all this tale of thrill-
ing interest is known by heart to the reader of English
history. My task is but to tell of one of the incidents
of that eventful day which forms the sequel to the
Eton episode with which my tale commenced. ©

It happened during the heat and confusion of the
battle that a Russian column advanced upon an
English battery in the midst of a dense canopy of
vi] THE TWO ETONIANS. 341

smoke and fog. The gunners, uncertain whether they
were approached by friend or foe, hesitated to fire.
Their hesitation was fatal to themselves. . The enemy
chargéd up to the guns, cut down the men, and were
about to, capture the position. At. this moment,
English soldiers from two different sides of the battery
caught sight of the affair, and rushed eagerly to the
rescue. An officer led each of the parties, and here it
was that the two steeple-chase competitors met for
the first time since their old Eton days, for the officers
were Moore and Ethelston. The latter had been with
the army from the first, but Moore had only landed
a day or two before, and neither knew that the other
was so near.

Each rushed at the head of his men against the
Russians, who were actually in possession of the
battery, and almost together they met the foe. How
different this race from the last in which the two
had striven! No friendly faces, no joyous looks, no
encouraging shouts of boyish companions, but dark,
lowering visages of deadly foes, teeth closely clenched,
and eyes full of threatening rage and hatred en-
countered the two officers as, outstripping their men,
they hurled themselves against the enemy.

Not far behind, however, were their men, and a
furious struggle at once commenced, for the artillery-
men and their supports rallied to the charge again at
the sight of reinforcements, and boldly pressed upon |
their assailants. It was like one of the combats of
olden time ; no breathing space for loading was allowed,
but hand to hand the soldiers fought, and personal
strength and skill, the value of which has been so
342 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. (vii.

much lessened by the scientific engines of destruction
which modern warfare employs, were brought pro-
minently into play.

Whilst Ethelston was in the act of defending him-
self against the onslaught of three Russian soldiers, a
fourth had raised his weapon and was about to strike
a deadly blow upon his head with the butt-end, when
the sword of a British officer, anticipating the action,
was plunged into his heart. It was Moore, who im-
mediately turned further to assist his comrade, and
at that instant a glance of half-recognition passed
between them. There was no time for more; the
battle around them was too fierce and hot, the Russians
still vastly outnumbering their opponents, and main-
taining a desperate struggle for the possession of the
battery.

Only a few paces from the spot where the two
Etonians were engaged, a British officer of superior
rank, overpowered and wounded, was with difficulty
guarding himself from some dozen of the enemy who
had singled him out as the object of their attack.
Bareheaded, his grey locks streaming in the wind, and
already beaten down upon one knee, it was evident
that the old man could not long sustain the unequal
combat. Almost at the same moment Ethelston and
Moore caught sight of the scene, and rushed simul-
taneously forward, bursting through the ‘intervening
Russians with a desperate vehemence that overcame
all resistance.

Ethelston, destined to be first in this as in the
former less dangerous race, rushed headlong into
the fray as recklessly as he would have dashed into
vIt.] THE TWO ETONIANS. 343



a ‘bully’ at Eton, striking with hearty goodwill at
the savage foe. Too late, however, to save, he came
but to avenge the old officer, in whose body met the
bayonets of several foes even as Ethelston struck down
the first within his reach. The rest turned furiously
upon the new comer, and he and Moore found them-
selves instantly surrounded and exposed to a deadly
onslaught on each side. Determined to sell their
lives dearly, they stood back to back until a mound
of dead and dying around them testified to their
prowess and courage.

But what could two men do against the crowd
which pressed upon them? Their revolvers did their
work well, and right heavily did their swords fall upon
the servants of the Czar. But the tide of battle
rolled away from the battery, and at the spot where
most bodies of the dead were found, where the battle
had raged most fiercely, and the ground was trampled
and torn by the feet of hundreds of men struggling
for dear life, there lay the two Eton warriors side by
side.

Probably they had recognised each other, and had
had time to speak and to recall the past, for their
hands were clasped together as if in a parting grasp
of kindness and brotherhood. So it chanced that one
of the burying parties was led by an old Etonian who
had known the two, and he it was who found them as
TI have told. He it was, too, who witnessed the last
sad rites, when the bodies of the two school-com-
panions were laid in their resting place on ‘ Cathcart’s
Hill’ Together they died the death of the brave, and
together they rest, but their memory lives fresh in
344 WHISPERS FROM FAIRYLAND. (vil.



tender hearts at home, and love, that death cannot
abate nor time diminish, still cherishes the recollection
of these twe of Eton’s sons.

Alas! how many of her children had the old
College to mourn throughout that terrible war! How
many desolate homes, how many widowed hearts,
still testify to the miserable results of insatiable ambi-
tion and baffled diplomacy! how many ancient trees
bewail the rending of precious branches in the warlike
tempest. But, amid all those who fought and fell during
that eventful time, none fought more bravely, none
gave their lives more freely, than the sons of Eton,
and amongst the bold and fearless spirits whose deeds
have added another wreath to the deathless glories of
their country, none more bold, none more fearless, and
none more regretted passed away than the two of
whom my tale has told.

In a beautiful country home in one of England’s
midland counties, a venerable man mourns the hope of
his house cut off, and the prop of his declining years
removed when Ethelston fell ; other sons he has, and
other ties have wound themselves around him during
his busy life, but his heart is buried in that tomb on
Cathcart’s Hill, and the first-born child will never be
forgotten. And onthe banks of Father Thames, so
loved by Eton hearts, a quiet, homely, ivy-clad cottage
contains a widowed mother who still weeps for -her
only son, and the lapse of nearly twenty years has not
diminished the sisterly love with which the memory
of Moore is ever cherished by the two companions
of his early childhood.

So, alas! must it ever be : bright and joyous spirits,
vil.] THE TWO ETONIANS. 345



kind hearts, and loving natures beam upon us only
to pass away and leave us in darkness the deeper and
sadder for the transient light. But Faith that cheers
and Hope that lives for ever, comfort us in our heaviest
sorrow, and the clouds which overhang us and darken
our path-way whilst yet we journey through life, shall
break away at last before the brightness of the never-
setting sun in the land towards which we travel, when
to cherish the memory of the loved ones who have gone
before shall no longer be needful, for again they shall
be with us, and the sorrowful partings we have suffered
in the passage of Time shall be forgotten for ever in
the glorious re-union of Eternity.
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