Citation
Peter and Polly, or, Home-life in New England a hundred years ago

Material Information

Title:
Peter and Polly, or, Home-life in New England a hundred years ago
Portion of title:
Home-life in New England a hundred years ago
Creator:
Douglas, Marian, 1842-1913
James R. Osgood and Company ( Publisher )
Welch, Bigelow & Co
University Press (Cambridge, Mass.) ( Printer )
Place of Publication:
Boston
Publisher:
J.R. Osgood and Co.
Manufacturer:
Electrotyped and Printed by Welch, Bigelow, & Co. ; University Press
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
268 p. : ; 16 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Children -- Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Christian life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Family -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Aunts -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Clergy -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Parsonages -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Juvenile fiction -- New England ( lcsh )
Bldn -- 1876
Genre:
novel ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
United States -- Massachusetts -- Boston
United States -- Massachusetts -- Cambridge
Target Audience:
juvenile ( marctarget )

Notes

General Note:
Title page printed in colors in double ruled border.
Funding:
Preservation and Access for American and British Children's Literature, 1870-1889 (NEH PA-50860-00).
Statement of Responsibility:
by Marian Douglas.

Record Information

Source Institution:
University of Florida
Holding Location:
Baldwin Library of Historical Children's Literature in the Department of Special Collections and Area Studies, George A. Smathers Libraries, 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:
026672452 ( ALEPH )
ALG5774 ( NOTIS )
37033616 ( OCLC )
16003399 ( LCCN )

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Full Text
i

Prcdrithisth tte ditdad thetic dad

TES abet ay

fa

AS ox ste #4

3
e Sg ee : =
creed

Ng sty ate T
Rees a









meek AVD POLLY,

HOME-LIFE IN NEW ENGLAND

A HUNDRED YEARS AGO.

BY



MARIAN DOUGLAS.



iB Ose©sN =
JAMES R. OSGOOD AND COMPANY,

Late Ticknor & FigLDs, AND FiELDs, Oscoon, & Co.

Teoy7.0%







Corvaraur, 1876"
By JAMES R. OSGOOD & Co,

Universiry Press: Werte, Broztow, & Co,
CAMBRIDGE.













PETER AND POLLY.



CHAPTER I.

T was the autumn of 1775, and the pale
l sunlight of the Indian summer gave a
yellow tinge to the dry russet leaves yet
clinging to the boughs of the giant oak that
overshadowed the old Austin homestead, a
substantial dwelling-house in a pleasant village
in Massachusetts.

It was a hospitable, ‘comfortable-seeming
home, with two stories in front, and a “lean-to”
roof, reaching groundward, in the rear, while a
queer, bird-house-like porch sheltered the front
door, that now swung open, letting the wind
blow in the withered leaves, The sitting-



6 PETER AND POLLY.



room within was, as well, a cheery, home-like
place, where a tall clock, with elaborate brass
ornaments, stood in one corner, and, loudly
ticking, told the flight of time; and where, in
the fireplace, set round with gayly painted tiles,
after the Dutch fashion, a fire of green ash was
burning, that filled the air with the faint fra-
grance of its scented flames.

The room was strewn with articles of wear-
ing-apparel for all seasons, while over the nar-
row winding stairs that led to the chambers
above, ascending and descending like the an-
gels of Jacob’s ladder, little Peter and Polly
Austin were constantly passing, busily making
preparations for a long journey, and a lengthy
stay with some unknown relatives in New
Hampshire.

They were twins, and had just reached the
sweet years of indiscretion, being now thirteen,
—an age for them the more perilous, because,
having lost their mother by death the year
previous, they had now been compelled to part



PETER AND POLLY. 7

with their father, a young physician, who, hav-
ing received a commission in the new Colonial
Army, had, three days before, ridden away to
report himself at Cambridge, bidding them
“good by” with tearful eyes, not knowing
when he should return. He had not left,
however, without making every arrangement
he deemed possible for the care of his chil-
dren during his absence, a subject which had
caused him great anxiety. A worthy middle-
aged couple, who had lately come to the place
from Charlestown, where, in the stirring days
of June, their house had been burned by Brit-
ish fire, and the man’s right hand been par-
tially disabled by a random shot, had already
found shelter under his roof, and were grateful
to accept the care of his land and buildings
while he should be away. But, though excel-
lent persons in their place, they were scarcely
those to whom the watchful father cared to
intrust the guidance of his thoughtful son and
of his daring little Polly ; and it was with a



8 PETER AND POLLY.



sense of relief that he received an unexpected
letter from his sister Nancy, who resided in a
small but thrifty township in New Hampshire,
saying that three men from her vicinity were
shortly to be in his neighborhood on business,
and “if, as a patriot should, he intended to
enter the army, she trusted he would allow bis
children to be sent, in their company, to her
home, where, until his return, she would watch
over them with all of a Christian’s faithfulness
and all of a mother’s love.”

“Tut! tut! tut!” said Dr. Austin, on read-
ing this epistle; ‘“‘ Nancy promises too much.”
Yet, notwithstanding, his heart, always sensi-
tive to kindness, warmed, as he read, toward
the almost stranger sister whom he had only
seen for a few brief times since her marriage,
when he was but a boy himself. He recalled,
with brotherly pride, the many tributes to her
beauty and grace to which he had listened,
and remembering with pleasure that her hus-
band, whom he had met but twice, had, on



PETER AND POLLY. 9



those occasions, shown himself to have the
manners of a gentleman, and that he was,
moreover, spoken of by those that knew him
better than himself as a person of character
and position, as well as wealth, he gratefully
concluded at once to accept the invitation,
not even thinking, after the manner of parents
of to-day, of consulting beforehand the wishes
and opinions of two human fledglings of thir-
teen.

The three men foretold had in due time ap-
peared, and, all excitement at the thought of
going with them next morning, a new sense
of self-consequence half consoling them for
their father’s departure, Peter and Polly, this
. bright November afternoon, gathered together
their trinkets and treasures, anxious to carry
as many as possible away with them.

“But you must leave most of them behind,”
forewarned Mrs. Ellis, the housekeeper from
Charlestown ; “all your luggage, big and lit-
tle, you must get into those two bags.” And



tO PETER AND POLLY.



she pointed to two long sacks, woven of coarse
green and red yarn, with leather tops and bot-
toms, which stood partially filled upon the
floor.

“ Peter won’t need,” said Polly, “as much
room for his things as I shall for mine. I must
get in all my best clothes.” For Polly was, at
this time, a practical negative answer to the
prophet’s inquiry, “Can a maid forget her or-
naments?” “There are my short gowns and
my red stuffed petticoat, and my neckerchiefs,
and my tuckers, and my best long gown, and—”

“And what now?” broke forth Peter, in-
dignantly interrupting his sister's inventory.
“JT suppose you think you can have the fill-
ing of both bags yourself; but there are my
Cesar and Virgil, and my Dictionary and
Grammar, and my Introduction to the Mak-
ing of Latin! Father said they must be car-
ried, and if Aunt Nancy knows a minister, or
any other fit man, I shall be sent to him to be
taught.” For, if Polly was vain of her girlish



PETER AND POLLY. II



finery, Peter was equally so of his reputation
as a scholar, for his quickness in regard to
books had already made his friends foresee for
him college honors, and the then thrice-cov-
eted laurels of a “learned man” ; while Polly,
though a ready reader of anything akin to
stories, of which, either written or told, she
was passionately fond, was by no means in-
clined to hard study. She was not even yet
quite perfect in the Catechism; her spelling
was always original, and her “ pothooks” were
the most forlorn of their species, though much
good paper and many goose-quills she had
ruined in following the copies given her at
the village “reading and writing school.”

“But those Latin books, and the sum-book,
and the Psalter and the Catechism, and the
Bible with the letter in it that we must give
Cousin Keziah Hapgood, if she is living near
Aunt Nancy, are all the books we can take;
so you may as well put those two ‘ World
Displayeds’ back on the shelf.”



12 ‘PETER AND POLLY.



“Yes, indeed!” confirmed Mrs. Ellis, au-
thoritatively ; “there is no room for them in
the bags; and, if there were, books are too
costly things for you to be carrying round the
country, and, ten to one, losing in the end.
I’ve heard your father say he paid twenty-six
pounds for that set of books, and that’s a great
price to give for something you can’t eat, nor
drink, nor wear. Put them up, Peter.”

Peter obeyed promptly, like one who had
learned to mind what he was told, and re-
placed the books, with a sigh, in the small
mahogany “buffet,” that contained what was
then a valuable and expensive library. It
was made up chiefly, after the fashion of the
day, of those theological works and printed
sermons which the children of the Puritans
seemed to take such delight in perusing. Con-
troversial statements regarding the “ Order of
the Churches,” the “ Rise of Antinomianism,”
and the “New Light Ministry,” “Election
Sermons,” and, vastly different, “Sermons on



PETER AND POLLY. 13



Election,” mournful funeral discourses, and
sentimental wedding ones, with a sweetness
caught from Solomon’s Song, all were there ;
but it was to the lowest of the small shelves
of the buffet that Peter's eyes turned with
longing regret. There were gathered what
he deemed his treasures ; a stout edition of
Shakespeare, a well-worn “ Pilgrim’s Progress,”
and a less prized “ Paradise Lost,” which, after
all, was not unvalued by the reflective lad,
who had never owned a child’s or a young
person’s book in his life, and who, shut in to
them as he had been, for lack of other reading,
had found in each of these volumes a voiceless
friend, all the dearer because he realized that
what was best in them lay just beyond his
reach, and that to-morrow would give new
meaning to what he had learned to-day.

»

“Midsummer Night’s Dream” was, to Polly
and himself, the most charming of fairy tales ;
“Macbeth,” an unfailing source of delightful

horrors as a ghost-story ; Milton’s warlike an-



14 PETER AND POLLY.



gels, well-matched foes who fought bravely ;
and Bunyan’s Pilgrim, as real an existence as
the Pilgrim Fathers. But the “World Dis-
played,” in twenty diminutive volumes, with
brown covers, filled with pictures of scenes in
foreign lands, was most precious of all. It
was, as the title said, “a curious collection of
travels”; and Peter.and Polly, who, in body,
had scarcely been beyond their native town,
had, in soul, with these old voyagers, been
round and round the world, searching for
Prester John, discovering the East Indies,
setting up the cross of conquest on palmy
isles, watching the glittering icebergs on the
Arctic Sea, sitting in Hottentot huts, or roam-
ing through gold-decked palaces.

To leave these books behind, was to Peter
a sore trial; and as he replaced on the shelf
the two volumes he had especially chosen to
take with him, even Polly’s heart was softened
by the sight of his disconsolate face.

“There is one comfort, Peter,’ she said ;



PETER AND POLLY. 15



“there is no make-believe in our going to
New Hampshire. We've always wanted to
travel, and I can't help wishing, if we could
get out of it safely, that we might meet a
squad of British soldiers, or some roaming
Indians, or a cross bear and some cubs, or
anything of that kind, so as to have some
adventures on the road.”

“ You want to see cross bears?” said Peter,
contemptuously. “ You, who are afraid of
your shadow!”

“O, yes, I’m afraid at the time,” returned
Polly, nothing daunted; “but dangers, when
they are well over, are such charming things
to talk about.”

Next to having fine clothes, to be the hero-
ine of hair-breadth escapes, was, just then, the
dearest object of Polly’s ambition. “As for
filling the bags,” she resumed —

“About that,” said Mrs, Ellis, “there need
be no disputing between you; I will attend
to the packing myself; and, Polly, when you



16 PETER AND POLLY.





are gone, I hope you will work on your sam-
pler, and be sure and take your stitches even,
so as not to have to do them over. There has
been silk enough, now, picked. out of it to
make another good one, and it’s a pity to
waste materials in times like these.”

Polly flushed ; her sampler was a sore sub-
ject. She had commenced it with the thought
that it would prove a marvel of its kind, as
indeed it had. It was a long square of yellow-
brown canvas, surrounded, on three sides,
with a wreath where fruit and flowers and
birds were mingled; while underneath, trees,
buildings, and beasts, such as “never were
by sea or shore,” were wrought in many-
colored silks; but, alas! Polly, not content
with regular patterns, had ventured to draw
upon her imagination for designs, with most
unsatisfactory results. Even the central verse,
the only thing in which she had not sought to
be original, for, with slight variations, it was

the standard one of the time for the purpose,



PETER AND POLLY. 17



“Polly Austin is my namé,
America my nation;
Massachusetts is my State,
And Christ is my Salvation,”

was as sorry a specimen of needlework as of
poetry.

“Tt was,” thought Polly, “exceedingly cruel
in Mrs. Ellis to allude to this sampler before
Peter”; whose brotherly comments on her
fancy-work were wont to be more frank than
agreeable; so, starting up, “If we are going
to the graveyard, we may as well go now,”
she said.

The “ graveyard’ was a small, stone-walled
enclosure, on one side of the “ meeting,” as the
meeting-house itself was often called, treeless,
except a growth of wild cherry along its edges,
and one young elm, that waved over what
Polly styled “the black corner,” where the
village negroes were buried. Many of the
graves were unmarked ; but what stones there
were, were rich in epitaphs, from the long



18 PETER AND POLLY.



Latin inscription over the minister’s resting-
place to the odd rhymes on the humbler head-
stones of the flock. Without staying to read
them again, Polly knew every verse there.
She had spelled them out Sunday noons in
summer, when, between morning and _after-
noon services, she had rambled among the
graves, and fed the brown sparrows with the
crumbs of her luncheon.
“A Pious Soul, on wings of Love,
And Feathers of an Holy Dove,

He bid this weary world Adieu
And wisely up to Heaven flew.”

“ She was kind to all, She seemed contented,
She lived beloved and Died lamented.”

“ Reader
Behold as you pass by
as You are now Soe,
Once was I as I am
Now Soe You Must be
Prepare for Death
and Follow me.”

It had never occurred to Polly that there



PETER AND POLLY. 19

/



was anything in stanzas like these to awaken
a smile. The graveyard was, to her, a very
awful place, that still had a certain fascination
that made her like to visit it, with her little
schoolmates or with Peter; but nothing could
have persuaded her to enter there alone.

The ground all around the place was com-
pletely covered by a close network of running
blackberry-vines, still beautiful, and in many
places green, after the sharp October frosts,
but catching and clinging unmercifully as the
children passed through them to the farther
end, where their mother slept peacefully by
two little Timothies and a small Miranda, in-
fant children, whose resting-place was marked
by three small black stones, adorned by
curiously carved and exceedingly ill-visaged
cherubs. Polly stooped down and laid her
hand, as if for “farewell,” tenderly upon her
mother’s grave, while Peter stood by in true
awkward boy-fashion, feeling that a last visit
to such a place was a time when it would be



20 PETER AND POLLY.



proper to do or say something, and not know-
ing what.

“Polly!” he said at last, taking out of his
breeches-pocket a carefully folded square of
paper, “I think here would be a good place
to read this over again.”

He found, near by, a little space of grass free
from the thorny vines, and the two children
sat down, their arms around each other, to
read together their father’s farewell letter.

My DEAR CHILDREN: As, by the Providence
of God and the Need of my Country, Iam Now
called to Part with You for a Season, I leave be-
hind a few Words of Counsel, that, when I am
Away, may serve to remind You Both of your
Father and your Duty. You are now going to
Reside for the Present in what is to you a Strange
Place, and where I have No Friends to whose Care
I can Commend you, save my Sister and Her
Husband, unless it may Prove so that Miss Keziah
Hapgood, that Excellent Cousin of your Mother,
and Doubly Dear for Her Sake, may still be



PETER AND POLLY. 21

living somewhere in the neighborhood of your
Aunt.

As you will, therefore, be thrown among Stran-
gers, I Hope that your Conduct will be Discreet
even beyond Your Years. Let Your Behaviour to
your Elders be marked by Docility, Reverence, and
Obedience to Instruction. In company, Avoid
alike a Pert and Forward Demeanor and a Sul-
len, Silent one. Be Emulous without Envy, Kind
without Servility, and. by Patience, Forbearance,
and Truthfulness, merit the Reward of an approv-
ing Conscience, however the World may Regard
you.

As Concerns the Cultivation and Improvement
of your Minds, I have written to your Uncle to
Procure, for Peter, a Master in Latin and Greek,
that He may be properly fitted for College, and
to give Polly as good Schooling as lies in his
Power to Bestow; but, as I fear that, at Present,
you will have few Opportunities for Reading,
therefore I trust you will the more Carefully peruse
whatever Good Books you may be able to Obtain
and think over Attentively what You have Read,



22 PETER AND POLLY.



so if not Able to Learn all I could wish, You will
be constantly Adding something to your Store of
Knowledge.

Finally, never Forget your Mother’s Counsels,
nor Cease to give Good Attention to Reading the
Bible and to Prayer, for, without God’s Blessing,
we can never be Happy in this World or Reign in
the Next. 5

Whether it may be the Design of an All-Wise
Providence to Return me to You again, or wheth-
er, for the Last Time, I have Looked upon You,
May you ever Remember me with True Affection,
Knowing my Highest Wish is for your Prosperity,
and my constant Prayer that you may be Useful
on Earth and Blessed in Eternitie.

Your loving Father,
PETER AUSTIN.

Polly took out her blue-bordered handker-
chief and wiped her eyes; she was not
ashamed to have even Peter see her tears,
they seemed so poor a tribute of her sorrow
for her father’s absence. “If she could only



PETER AND POLLY. 23



see him,” she thought, “and tell him how
much she loved him, and how good and faith-
ful she meant to be.”

She rose, and as she did so Peter laid his
hand gently upon her arm. “There is one
thing, Polly!” he said, “that I have been
thinking about, and that is, you and I have
’ got to be all the family of us there is, now,
and if you will stick by me, I will stick by
you; won't you, Polly?”

“Stick by you?” said Polly; “yes, Peter,
through thick and thin, whatever comes ! —
but, don’t you think we should be happier if
we didn’t tease each other quite so much; if
I should give up calling you ‘ Book-worm,’
and you should have a little less to say about
my clothes?”

“ Yes,” said Peter, “ we should: I don’t like
teasing any betier than you do; but, about
your clothes, you ave too riggish, Polly.”

“Well, if I’m riggish, you’re priggish,”
retorted Polly. “If I were a boy, I would n't



24 PETER AND POLLY.



sit down with my cue half braided, and my
nose in an old Latin book, as you will.”

Just then a magnificent golden flicker,
lingering when his mates were flown, lighted
on one of the cherry-trees near, and watching
the gleam of his wings the children forgot
the dispute fast arising out of their resolutions
to be peaceful and considerate.

















CHAPTER II.

P in the morning, fluttering and twit-
U tering like a swallow making ready
for flight, was Polly, before the cocks had
begun to crow or the stars grow dim by the
pale light of the pretty green candle colored
with bayberry-wax, making herself fine before
the little looking-glass, quite as anxious as to
her appearance as would become a bride on
her wedding morning; for “to-day,” thought
Polly, “my path will take a new turn.”

Goed or ill, dark or bright, an untried ex-
istence lay before her. Far away in more
newly settled New Hampshire, who knew what
strange adventures might befall her? Her
head was full of Indian stories, which made



26 PETER AND POLLY.



up half of the old women’s talk in those days,
and all she knew of the locality to which
she was going was, that it was a township
not far from the place where, some seventy-
eight years before, the lion-hearted Mrs.
Dustin had fled from her tormentors, with
a string of Indian scalps. That was long,
long before, and tomahawks were not to Polly’s
taste; but she had also listened breathless to
the story of the fair Mrs. Howe, the “beau-
tiful captive” who, only twenty years before,
had been carried from Hinsdale, New Hamp-
shire, and sold to the French in Canada;
and of a little Rachel Meloon, who had been
borne away from Salisbury, and, after dwell-
ing nine years with the savages in their wig-
wams, had been brought back to her friends,
an Indian at heart, singing their songs and
speaking their tongue, and sorrowing, wher-
ever she went, for her dusky friends of the
forest. Reckless Polly, looking in the mirror
at the earnest, glowing little face it showed,



PETER AND POLLY. eT



felt, as she had said, that “if she and Peter
only came safely through, she was quite ready
for anything”; the more excitement the bet-
ter; for she had quite as wild a love for
adventure as if she had been brought up on
dime novels instead of the “Assembly’s Cate-
chism.”

“If anything should happen,” thought Polly,
“it is a good thing to be looking your best;
then if people get into trouble they have
something to help themselves out.”

She stooped just then to buckle her shoe.
Certainly, her feet were something to be proud
of, so slender and shapely, with such finely
turned ankles, such daintily arched insteps ;
“it was quite a pleasure to look at them,”
Polly thought; and, if any one knew, she
ought, for she had often taken pleasure in
mounting a high chair for the sake of a peep
at them, in the little bedroom mirror. But
this morning she was less satisfied with their -
looks than she was wont, for the stockings



28 PETER AND POLLY.



which Mrs. Ellis ‘had laid by for her to put
on were of gray woollen yarn, not the finest,
and now that they were on, she saw that the
legs were too large, and “bagged” about the
ankles. This was an affliction indeed. Polly
caught just that instant a glimpse of a little
pair of white silk stockings with lovely clocks,
which lay in the unclosed top of one of the
bags. She looked at them with longing eyes.
“The soul that hesitates is lost.” “ There is
plenty of time, and no harm in just trying
them on,” she thought ; and.drawing them up
very straightly with her garters close tied,
they looked even prettier than she had ex-
pected when she pulled off the others; so much
so, that she could not help rolling up the gray
woollen ones in a ball, and stuffing them as
far as she could beneath the other contents
of the bag. When she had done this, had it
not been for a certain restless pricking of her
conscience, she would have felt quite satisfied,
the rest of the clothes provided for her to ride



PETER AND POLLY. 29



in being, in truth, quite too good for the oc-
casion; for Mrs. Ellis, who, since her coming
to the house, had taken charge of her ward-
robe, had shared fully in her love of dress, —
perhaps, indeed, was the chief cause of it by
her injudicious conversation. She, in her
maiden days, had been a seamstress in great
Boston, and all her talk now was of the men
and women of fashion she had seen in the
fine houses there: bewitching gallants dressed,
for great dinners, in peach-blossom velvet
trimmed with silver-lace ; matrons with plumed
heads, like crested cockatoos; and fair young
maidens, in “raiment of wrought needlework,”
with love-locks on their foreheads and roses
on their breasts.

Dr. Austin was free-hearted and indulgent,
and Mrs. Ellis, in assuming the care of Polly’s
outfit, had made it, for “a growing girl,” al-
most an extravagant one. The gown the lit-
tle girl was to wear to-day was of imported
worsted damask, re-dyed black for Polly to



30 PETER AND POLLY.



wear as mourning for her mother; but her
cloak, which had been made with a thought
of long-continued future use, was of scarlet
broadcloth trimmed with sable fur, and her
best gown, also of worsted damask, was blue
and white, and flowered with red.

“Very fine indeed,” Polly thought, and cal-
culated to make an impression on all behold-
ers. Even her ambition, in regard to her pro-
spective appearance, was satisfied as to her
clothes. Polly’s careless spirits, however, all
vanished, when, just as her toilet was com-
pleted, she clasped around her throat the little
mourning-necklace which her father had given
her, according to the custom of the time, at her
mother’s funeral. The memento, thoughtlessly
worn till then, now that she was to leave all
the scenes with which she was familiar, brought
back to her thought so many tender memo-
ries, that the quick tears sprang at once to
her blue eyes. She was fairly sobbing when
Mrs. Ellis opened the door. ‘“ What! home-



~

PETER AND POLLY. 31



sick before you start? That will never do!”
she said; “keep up your spirits; you have
a long journey before you, and, if you get
hungry, you can eat, as you ride, one of the
honey-cakes I shall put in your pocket.”

The three men who were to bear the twins
away rode up to the door in good season,
mounted and ready to depart. Before they
came, Polly had tried to give her thoughts of
them a romantic coloring ; but Peter had said,
“They must be three cowardly loons, else
they would not have come all the way from
New Hampshire with no thought of joining
the army.”

When she came to start, Polly found, to her
dismay, that Peter was to “sit double” with .
the youngest and handsomest rider, and the
owner of the best horse, and was to keep in
advance of the rest of the party; the next
most attractive stranger, as far as she could
discern, in the gray light, for it was scarcely
morning when they came, was to ride with the



32 PETER AND POLLY.



saddle-bags ; while she, of course, fell to the
last of the three, and was to sit on a pillion
behind him.

It was not a pretty pillion. Almost dark as
it was, Polly could see the feathers, with which
it was stuffed, looking out through its worn
covering. It was an old bony horse, and the
rider was worst of all. Polly’s vain little heart
failed her as Mr. Ellis lifted her to the seat
behind him. “Good by! and don’t let Peter
spoil his satin breeches,” called Mrs, Ellis; and
that was her last farewell.

Polly waved one hand, while with the other
she clung to the man in front, and the tears
ran down her cheeks. The growing day, that
showed her companion more plainly, did not,
alas! lend him ‘attractions,—a man of fifty,
wrinkled, cross-eyed, and ill shaven; his hair
combed back and braided in a cue, tied round
with a piece of eel-skin and plentifully pow-
dered, which was his only attention to dress
as a fine art; his coat, of poorly woven home-



PETER AND POLLY. 33



spun, badly cut and worse made; his breeches
and long waistcoat of buckskin, old and black-
ened in places; his cocked hat, which had
seen hard service, much the worse for wear ;
while, sure signs of a sloven, there were marks
of candle-drippings on his sleeve, sprinklings
of hair-powder on his shoulders, and scatter-
ings of snuff on the dingy ruffle of his shirt. |

Polly, who was not accustomed to “judging
righteous judgment,” but to rating people by
outside show, was more and more prejudiced
against him as they jogged along; for in ad-
dition to his untidy looks, he paid no more
attention to her than if she had been a sack
of meal laid on behind him.

Why should he? One little girl was not
of much account to him. He was the father
of fourteen children, and, though the eldest of
them were now grown, by a second marriage
to a widow with five he had made his house
so full of little folks, that, when he had a
chance to be quiet, he was glad enough to



34 PETER AND POLLY.



embrace it. In truth, his heart to-day was too
heavy to say much. Mr. Burbean, for that
was his name, was not of the stuff that pa-
triots are made of, and the call of Freedom
woke in him no very ardent response. But he
was an honest, well-meaning man, and a kind
father and husband, and he knew what war
was better than Polly did. By and by he
began to mutter to himself, quite unconscious
of alistener. “There's a hard time coming,
there’s a hard time coming,” he repeated.
“Breadstuffs will be high, and cattle will be
scarce, and the border Injuns will be all
hawkin’ round, and the paper-money — Little
girl!” he said, suddenly remembering her, and
turning round so quickly that Polly was nearly
startled off her seat,—“little girl! do you
know how long your father thinks this war is
going to last?”

“No, sir, Ido not,” replied Polly, respect-
fully; “but I heard him say, last summer,
General Washington thought it would be over



PETER AND POLLY. af



pretty soon, and he should eat his Christmas
dinner at home in Virginia.”

“Christmas?” said Mr. Burbean, “that
comes in December, don’t it? We don’t
make any account of it in our region. It’s
a kind of a Popish day, anyhow.”

“J guess father don’t expect there will be
any peace at present. He said he thought he
might be gone a long time,” said Polly, al-
most with a sob at the thought.

“T guess he don’t! I see your father once,
and he looked like a man of sense,” responded
Mr. Burbean.

“He zs a man of sense,” confirmed Polly,
her heart warming for the first time towards
her companion. Then they rode on again in
silence. The road was rough, for there had
been a great rain the month before, a wild
storm, when in the White Mountains a new
river had broken forth, and the channel of
the Saco had been divided in its midst.
Here and there the road was badly gullied, ;



36 PETER AND POLLY.



and, as the old horse was given to stumbling,
Polly, on her pillion, had a constant thought
as to what might become of her. On, on
they went, now coming to some small village,
where every man they saw had some question
to ask, as to “how things looked where they
had been,” and “what was the news from
the army.” To all inquiries Mr. Burbean
replied, in the same words he had muttered
to himself, “There’s a hard time coming.
Breadstuffs will be high, and cattle will be
scarce, and the border Injuns will be hawkin’
round, and the paper-money won’t be worth
a crop of fire-weed. As for the army, some
said it was a little easier now, but they’d been
short for food and clothing and rum; some
of the soldiers’ time was up, and a good
many of ’em were gitting discouraged.”
“Well, well,” was the cheering answer of
more than one individual, “there are better
times coming. Benedict Arnold is up in the
North, and when he is in motion we are sure



PETER AND POLLY. 37



of good news.” “He ought,” said one young
man, whom they found sitting on a rock by
the way, and polishing an old Queen Anne.
musket, “to have been in Washington’s place.

- He’s the man for the day.”

“Well, no,” said Mr. Burbean, shaking. his
head ; “he’s a brave man, Arnold is, but he
ain't a prudent one. In the dark one needs
prudence, and there’s a hard time coming, —
a hard time coming.” -

This dreary prophecy, often repeated,
weighed down poor Polly’s heart; it seemed
in unison with the gloomy November wind
that wailed through the naked trees with the
voice of coming winter; but, as she rode on,
all other feelings were soon lost in a sense
of physical discomfort. Her shoulders were
well protected by her red cloak, but, in order
_ to shield it from being spattered with mud,
Mrs. Ellis had pinned it up all around, and
covered it with a brown, home-made shawl.

The air was sharp and keen, and her limbs,



38 PETER AND POLLY.



covered with the thin silk stockings, grew
colder and colder, till a chill ran over her,
and she shivered so she could scarcely cling
to her companion, though, on that stumbling
horse, she dared not loosen her hold upon
him for an instant. When she had left her
home, she felt glad that, in the dim morning
light, Mrs. Ellis had not noticed how her feet
were dressed; now, she was half sorry that
her folly had not been discovered, and she
compelled to wear something warmer, On,
on they went. “No haste, no rest,” was Mr.
Burbean’s motto as well as Goethe's. Peter
and his companion, on a dashing steed, quite
a marvel in those days, when, often ill-bro-
ken and commonly overworked, the farmers’
horses were a sorry set, were far in advance
of them. Seth Brown, with the saddle-bags,
though better mounted than they, was gen-
erally some distance in the rear, owing to his
disposition to stop at nearly every farm-house
for a little talk and a drink of cider. Slowly



PETER AND POLLY. 39



forward the old white horse plodded on: now
up some rocky hillside, shaded with white-oak
from which the autumn wind had not yet
stripped the dry and withered leaves; now
through a “valley of dry bones,” where some
makeshift settler had sought to make a forest-
clearing by girdling the trees, and where, dead
and decaying, the tall trunks were falling down
against each other, and the ground was strewn
with dry and broken branches; and now
through the solemn temples of the tall pines,
where, “no feller having come up against
them,” the great trees rose from a hundred
and fifty to two hundred feet, upon either side
’ the road, and where, far above, the low mur-
mur of their boughs seemed to Polly like a
voice from a world unknown. The king’s
mark, “G: R.,” was cut deeply in the bark of
the tallest and finest of them. They were not
common trees in the region where she had
lived, but Polly had heard of them often, “his
Majesty's pines,” that were the property of



40 PETER AND POLLY.



the crown, and which no one could cut,
even if owning the land on which they grew,
without incurring a heavy fine. Here and
there the road took a strange turn, which
had probably been given it by the men who
laid it out, years before, so as to take advan-
tage of the beaver-dams, which were safe and
convenient crossings of the running streams,
thus saving, at first, the expense of making
bridges. Now, the way lay beside a small
pond, and the freezing wind, blowing across
the water, beat against poor Polly pitilessly.
But at last they came out into a clear place,
and were climbing a steep hillside, when Mr.
Burbean, looking up at the sky, vouchsafed
another remark. “Little girl,’ he said, “you’re
used to a clock, ain’t you?”

“Yes, sir, I am,” replied Polly.

“Well, I ain't,” he returned ; “I don’t know
anything about luxuries, but I can tell when
noon comes as well as anybody. It’s ’most
here now, and at the next house I'll stop and
get dinner.”



PETER AND POLLY. AI



“And warm ourselves,” Polly added, her
teeth chattering, and her feet and limbs be-
numbed in her silk stockings.

The next house proved to be a comfortable
log-dwelling, surrounded with fields, several
of them black from being burnt over, the May
before, to rid them of the troublesome trees,
A herd of swine were scampering in and out
of an enclosed piece of oak wood, on one side
of the road, and a shock-headed child was
amusing himself by shouting to them and
pelting them with sticks. Inside of the house
there was a good-sized room, lighted by two
diminutive windows, with four small panes of
glass in each, while a square opening over-
head led, by means of a ladder, to a dark loft
above. A young woman with two children
clinging to her was cutting pumpkin in strips
to dry; and a brisk old dame, her gray hair
drawn straight back without a cap, dressed in
coarse butternut-colored cloth, with a pair of
rough home-made moccasins on her feet, met



42 PETER AND POLLY.



the travellers at the door, as they rode up,
saying “her men-folks were away, making
cider, but she would give them for dinner as
good as she had herself, and that was baked
pumpkin and milk.”

Mr. Burbean ate his from the shell, but
Polly’s was served up to her in a wooden
bowl. It was good enough, but she was too
cold to eat. She drew a small stool to the
fireplace and crouched down as near to the
blaze as possible. The children and young
woman stared at her, full of curiosity ; while
the old grandmother surveyed her with that
look of contempt with which the hard-working,
hard-faring new settlers were wont to regard
anything that seemed like an approach to the
effeminacy of fashionable life.

“You cold?” she asked, at length, indiffer-
ently.

“Yes, madam, my feet are,” said Polly, for
they really ached.

“TI should think so,” said the old woman;



PETER AND POLLY. 43



“those silk stockings look more nice than
wise.”

The rough truth of the speech cut Polly to
the quick. The tears came, and in a minute
more she was sobbing. Mr. Burbean, with his
mouth full of pumpkin, heard the sound, and
felt called on to explain.

“Her mother’s died, and her father’s gone
into the army; that’s what’s the matter of
her,” he said.

“Gone into the army?” asked the woman,
her wrinkled face losing its hardness in an in-
stant. “Well, I wouldn’t cry any more, if I
was you,” she said, turning to Polly ; “it won’t
do him any good, and I’ll get you some old
stockings to draw on your legs, and keep ’em
warm. — And what’s the news from the war ?”
she asked Mr. Burbean.

“Dark,” was the reply. “There’s a hard
time coming. Breadstuffs will be high, and —”

“Hard times! and what’s that to scare
me?” asked the old woman, her eye flashing,



44 PETER AND POLLY.



and the color coming into her face; “have I
lived so easy that I should be frightened by
’em? ‘Hard times! My father and mother
fit with the Injuns before I was born, and I
myself, when I was four years old, see my
Uncle John lying dead with his scalp off; and
me and my husband, hain’t we warred for
everything we’ve had? We've fit for our
sheep with the wolves, and our pigs with the
bears, and our geese with the foxes, and our
chickens with the skunks, and we’ve cut the
trees, and burnt the brush, and dug, and hoed,
and fit with the land for all the crops we’ve
raised. If you want anything, you’ve got to
strike for it, and I ain’t the kind that wants to
lie down, and have them Britishers step on us,
as if we were caterpillars. I hain’t forgotten
about them Connecticut River grants. There’s
been some queer works here in New Hamp-
shire. Hard times! I’m welling to have ’em,
if some of them old wigs in Porchmouth only
can be brought down where they belong !”



PETER AND POLLY. 45



“Well, we'll hope all will prove for the
best,” said Mr. Burbean, fidgeting round on
his leather-bottomed chair. He had the inter-
ests of his fourteen children, to say nothing
of his second wife’s little brood, to think about,
and the vision of outside troubles was, to him,
doubly perplexing.

The old woman, having expressed her mind,
now climbed up the ladder into the loft, and
came down with a pair of long stockings dyed
yellow with onion-skins. The feet were nearly
worn out, and the legs were full of holes, but,
“if keeping warm is what you want, they will
answer for you,” she said to Polly.

Polly had been too nearly frozen to be vain,
and, humbly thanking the giver, she meekly

‘drew them on, putting them over shoes, buck-
les, and all, as, between their large size and
the holes in them, it was easy to do.

The hostess would take no pay for their
dinner from Mr. Burbean ; but Polly wished to
seem grateful, and presented the children with



46 | PETER AND POLLY.



all the cakes that Mrs. Ellis had stowed away
in the pretty patchwork pocket tied on under
her gown, to say nothing of a yard of red
shoe-binding she gave to the young woman.

The afternoon ride was much like the
morning’s, through pine woods and oak, past
meadows and clearings, over shaky bridges,
up steep hills, into lonesome valleys ; almost
the same, only Polly was vastly more com-
fortable, or would have been, had she not
found that, since through excitement she had
almost forgotten to eat her breakfast before
starting, and since at noon she had felt too
chilled and sad to touch her baked pumpkin,
and since her honey-cakes were given away,
she was quite without food and exceedingly
hungry. “O, so hungry!” she thought, and
remembered numerous half-starved voyagers
she had read about in the “World Dis-
played.” The old horse was coming down a
long hill, when Mr. Burbean stopped and
pointed to a house a little way beyond.



“PETER AND POLLY. AT



“There’s the Winsley Tavern; we shall stop
there to-night,” he said. Just then they heard
a sound behind, and Seth Brown with the
saddle-bags rode past. “I'll be at Winsley’s
first,” he called, and waved his hat.

It was a cheery-looking place to Polly, in the
rosy light of the November sunset, now burn-
ing in the west. “Here, at last,” she thought,
“T shall find both fire and supper.” It was a
large house built against the side of a hill, so
that the barn, stables, and cart-houses were
all on a level with its chambers, the bar-room
being on the second story, yet having a ground-
entrance. A tall staff, on one side, swung
aloft the sign-board, which bore upon it a new
device, “The Liberty Tree,” painted in bright-
est green. It was a busy time of year, and
even Polly, with her inexperienced eyes, saw
at once the house must be full of company.
Well-dressed and ill-dressed, in broadcloth and
homespun, buckskin breeches and rawhide
leggins, all were there, and, waiting her arrival,



48 PETER AND POLLY.



close by the immense horse-block, was Peter,
his face aglow with delight.

“O Polly!” he asked, as he helped her to
alight, “did you ever have so good a ride?”
But just then looking down, “ What’s this?”
he asked ; “you, you, of all girls, Polly Aus-
tin! how came you to have those horrid
yellow rags on your feet? Come in, come
into the house, as quickly as you can, and
don’t let anybody see you!”

Poor Polly, completely humiliated, slunk
after him, and he led the way down through
a side door, where he thought they would be
unobserved ; for Peter had reached the house
some time before, and, boy like, already felt
acquainted there.

Polly, the first instant she could, twitched
off the yellow stockings and revealed the
offending silk ones beneath.

“Well, Polly, if you are not a fool, there
never was one!” was Peter’s plain-spoken
remark on seeing them.



PETER AND POLLY. 49



“But that’s a monstrous wicked speech to
make, if I was,” retorted Polly, sharply, never
slow in her own defence.

But O, the supper they had, when supper
came! broiled pigeons and cream toast! What
delicious fare it seemed to poor half-starved
Polly ! while Peter, sitting by, stopped eating
every now and then, to tell about his ride,
which had been as gay as his sister’s had been
dull; for the person that he rode with, instead
of “a cowardly loon,” had proved to be a
“most wonderful, companionable man,’ en-
tertaining him with wild tales of the French
War, and of Indian hunters, that had been
“as good as a book,” he said.

“That is the best praise you can give,”
said Polly; “but there are things in the
world / like better than books; lovely gen-
teel people to talk with, and beautiful things
to see, and merry times and romantic adven-
tures, all of one’s own!” And Polly sighed,
and helped herself to pigeon for the third time.











CHAPTER III.

T was gratifying to the young people, next
morning, to find that they were to stay
over the day at the tavern. Peter’s compan-
ion had business in the neighborhood. Mr.
Burbean, well paid beforehand for his charge,
saw that Polly, though used to horseback rid-
ing, from jogging round with her father, on
his visits to his patients, was not strong
enough for journeying two days in succession ;
and Seth Brown, stirring up great mugs of
flip in the bar-room, was only too glad to
make an excuse for stopping, by saying, he
thought it best the saddle-bags should not
go on before their owners,
Peter and Polly had such fresh young eyes,



PETER AND POLLY. 5I



so eager to see, and finding so much of in-
terest in everything they saw, that it is possi-
ble they looked about the premises quite as
much as was proper ; for, except the chambers,
there was scarcely a room into which they did
not peer. Peter led the way, and Polly, who
felt a cold coming on, and whose limbs were
stiff, but whose spirit was as willing as her
flesh was weak, hobbled after, wherever he
went. They put their heads into the great
kitchen, where, out of the big chimney oven
so large that a child of ten could have gone
into it, a red-faced cook was taking huge iron
pots of smoking baked beans ; into the parlor,
with its sanded floor, its fine looking-glass,
and its bright, glowing fireplace, holding
wood six feet long, to which Polly was always
coming back, and fluttering about like a moth
around a candle, warming her chilly, silken-
dressed feet ; into the little room where a
barber was dressing over a short white wig,
with curling-irons, and a half-dozen men sat



52 PETER AND POLLY.



by, each wishing to be the first to have his
cue re-braided and his face clean shaved, for
the barber was a busy man in those beardless
days; into the entry of the bar-room, filled
with the odor of tobacco-smoke and _ toddy,
and of the loud sound of oaths from some
men quarrelling over a game of cards, the
first real profanity that Polly, brought up in a
Puritan town, where the laws against it had
not yet spent their force, had ever heard.
As for the bar-room itself, where there was
the usual display of jugs and mugs and tank-
ards, and runlets and flowing bowls, in spite
of the recent great rise in the cost of spirits,
only Peter had a glimpse of it ; for, as he said,
“it was no place for a girl to look into.”

“Nor for you, either, where they take the
name of God in vain,” said Polly, solemnly
shaking her head.

But when Peter, anxious to extend his
observations further, went out into the wide
stable-yard, Polly put on her shawl and



PETER AND POLLY. 53



daringly followed after. There stood a half-
dozen great carts, from which the oxen had
been taken to rest and be fed. Two or three
of them were filled with new spinning-wheels,
held firmly in their places by bags of wool,
perhaps the property of some enterprising
manufacturer. A sunburnt hostler, lazy and
slow-motioned, and ready to have a word
with any one, was unloading a clumsy vehicle
in one corner.

“Tf you will look under that shed you'll
find something mebbe you hain’t seen _be-
fore!” he called to Peter, as he came by.
“It’s a chaise; once in a while one stops
here, but not often; a cart with two tongues,
my little brother Peleg calls it, and a good
many folks round here never see one.”

“ Never saw one!” said Polly, with a slight-
ly contemptuous accent. “Chaises are very
common things where I came from; I have
often ridden in them myself.” And with a
glance in the direction indicated, but without



54 PETER AND POLLY.



stopping to examine the wonder, she drew
her shawl closer, and, leaving Peter behind,
hurried into the house, glad to get in from
the bleak outdoor air, and to warm her feet
by the fireplace.

Sitting on a long settle on the side of the
room were two men; the one, a ruddy, blue-
eyed fellow, in a teamster’s striped frock and
long leggins and coarsely made shoes, with-
out buckles, who sat playing with an ox-
goad and talking with the other, an older
man, with a droll little white wig, and a com-
’ plete suit of coarse brown homespun.
“Very common people in very common
clothes,” was Polly’s comment. She wished
the great magnates who had come in the
chaise —a handsome man in fine broadcloth,
and his wife in a silk dress, with muffled
sleeves fastened by glittering buttons — would
only stay where she could take notice of
them. But as there was nothing else to do,
Polly listened to what the two men were

saying.



PETER AND POLLY. 55



“List!” said the younger man; “I haz’t;
but if the war holds out I sha; and when
I go into the army I sha’ n’t come back till
it’s over. There were some young blades
I knew, all in a hurry to be off as soon as
they heard of Lexington; and now that the
rations are cut down, and they find that sol-
diering is hard work and poor pay, they are
grumbling to get home again. ‘Fighting and
fifing are two things,’ as John Millin used to
say.”

“ Ah, what’s become of John?” asked the
elder. “I remember seeing him when he
first came up from Portsmouth, just married,
dressed in scarlet and gold-lace, and his wife
as pretty as a picture, with eyes like two
stars.”

“They were dull enough before she died,”
said the younger man,— “faded with tears;
John and she are both gone, and their last
days were full of trouble that all came from
getting in debt.”



56 PETER AND POLLY.



“Ah, that’s bad! How so?” asked the
other. “His father was a rich man, — ships
going and coming, a troop of black servants,
and a table covered with silver.”

“John had too much money when he was
young, and was too venturesome in using it,”
said the first speaker. “As soon as he was
heir to the property, he married and came up
to this part of the country to lay out new
townships. He had an idea that money would
grow on new lands as pigeon-plants spring up
on a clearing. But Pine Abel, — you know
who he is, —’t was a name he got when he
had a mast contract, and made a good thing
for himself looking after the king’s woods, —
he was too sharp for John. He joined with
him in buying and selling lands, but it some-
how happened, whatever way things went,
the gains were always Abel’s and the losses
John’s. By and by a ship went down, on its
way to England, that John Millin partly
owned, as well as half its cargo of timber



PETER AND POLLY. o7



and spars; and then he got into a lawsuit
about some Connecticut River grants he was
concerned about; and, first one thing and
then another, his property all seemed to go
like dew before the sun. He was in debt,
and his land went here and his money there
to pay his creditors. Old Justice Cram took
his house and part of the furniture, but Pine
Abel was the hardest of all. He took his
cattle and his clothes and his bedding, his
watch and his knee-buckles, and his wife’s
gold beads; and as things grew worse and
worse, and John grew poorer and poorer, he
kept sending the sheriff till there was noth-
ing left to lay hands on. He took their and-
irons out of the fireplace, and the brass
kettle, and their last knife and fork; and,
when there wasn’t anything else, a bag of
wheat that John had planted and raised, and
thrashed himself, and expected to have to live
on. That broke John down; he hadn’t
been used to hard times when he was a boy,



58 PETER AND POLLY.



and when that happened he gave up, sick,
and was as crazy as a loon. His wife bor-
rowed a bed of my sister Betty for him to
lie on, and I went and sat up with him three
nights running; and the fourth morning I
went down to the house, —a miserable place
it was too, made of half-fitting logs with one
small isinglass window ; the doors were open,
and I went in and looked everywhere, but
there wasn’t any one to be seen. The
sheets were turned down from the bed where
John had been, but he was gone. I went
out and searched through the fields near by,
and up in the pasture I looked about and
called, ‘Rob! Rob!’—that was the name
of John’s little boy about ten years old, —
but nobody answered. At last, down in a
bushy place, the first I knew I came upon
Rob, sitting half hid by the tall weeds. He
was white as a sheet, and his eyes were
fierce and shining as a wild-cat’s. ‘Touch
him if you durst!’ he said; and then he saw



PETER AND POLLY. 59



who it was, and he came to me and began
to cry, and he called his mother, — she was
hid close by, —— and she told me all about it.
All through the night before John was out
of his head, and kept saying he was dying,
and that Abel would come and take his
body for debt; and when the breath did
leave him ‘she knew Abel coud do that and
she was afraid he might, so she and Jock
Adams —he was a fellow near, not very
quick-witted, but kinder than many folks that
are — took the corpse and carried it out into
the pasture and hid it under some elder-
bushes. There he lay, the great white flow-
ers —’t was July — nodding and waving like
white feathers over him.

“*Don’t fret yourself, Mrs. Millin,’ said I;
‘Abel’s heart is hard enough for anything, but
attaching a corpse is ghostly work, and he
knows how folks look at it too well to try it.
I’ll make a coffin, and you go right ahead with
the funeral.’ So I nailed up a coffin and put



- 60 PETER AND POLLY.



him in it, and we got bearers, and the minis-
ter made a prayer; but I felt easier myself
when the ground was over him. And you
ought to have seen that boy, Rob, at the
funeral: he just sat by the coffin and watched
for the sheriff, his. great eyes like burning
coals. It almost scared me.”

“But what became of John’s wife?”

“O, she’s gone too. She was a sickly crea-
ture, and after her husband died, she failed
fast, though she lived nearly three years. As
for Rob, just before she died she ’prenticed
him to a man named Dow, a shoemaker. I
think her mind was broken when she did it.
Dow’s sister, a crafty-tongued woman, tended
her in her sickness, and doubtless influenced
her when her mind was wandering. It is, I
fear, a hard place for the poor boy.”

Polly’s romance-loving heart thrilled with
indignant pity as she listened to this tragic
tale. Her sympathies went out toward this
unknown, much-suffering “Rob.” She wished



PETER AND POLLY. 61



she could see him and tell him how sorry she
was for all his trials. “ But that will never
be!” she said, as she retold the story to
Peter, when, half an hour after, he came in,















CHAPTER IV.

OLLY’S heart beat very fast, when, on
the last day of their journey, the old
horse began to quicken his pace, and Mr. Bur-
bean pointed to a black weather-beaten build-
ing, on two sides of which an old barricade
was standing, built of hewn logs to the height
of the roof, with a sentry-box still perched in
the corner. “Little girl,” he said, “that’s the
old garrison; we are getting to the village,
and you will know your uncle’s, for it’s next
to the meeting, and the largest house in the
place.”
Polly sat up very straight, and tried to look
her best as she rode up the street, the village
dogs barking, and the ever-present hogs grunt-



PETER AND POLLY. 63



ing, and scampering, this way and that, before
them.

It was really a pleasant place, for, though
most of the dwellings were small and un-
painted, they were tidily kept, and most of
them recently built, giving a new, fresh look
to the village, to which she had not been ac-
customed in her Massachusetts home.

The meeting-house was a substantial-look-
ing building, with a square porch at one end,
surmounted by a belfry yet waiting for a bell;
and next it, separated by the graveyard, and
with a thrifty orchard of immense pear and
apple trees beyond it, — for there were “ giants
in those days” in the fruit-grower’s world, —
stood her Uncle Philbrick’s home, a large,
handsome house, painted of a light yellow
color, and with a multiplicity of windows
which even inexperienced Polly realized must
have cost a pretty penny, considering the price
of glass.

“ How lovely and genteel it is!” she thought,



64. PETER AND POLLY.



as she dismounted at the horse-block, beside
which Peter, already arrived, was waiting as
he had done at the inn. “No vulgar block,”
she noticed, with her grandeur-loving eyes,
like the pine stumps which served that pur-
pose by so many houses, but a fine round of
well-cut stone.

“ And how lovely and genteel she is!” she
thought again, when the door opened and her
aunt came out to meet her; a handsome wo-.
man of nearly fifty, with keen black eyes,
trim figure, and wonderful pink and white
complexion, whose fairness was enhanced by
a small black patch on her left cheek. Her
dress was of homespun, but of the nicest qual-
ity, her cap-border was trimmed with fine lace,
and her flowered silk neckerchief, where it
crossed her bosom, was fastened with a pin of
brilliant stones set in silver.

Polly returned her kiss with warmth. She
was quite sure she should like her, only she
wished her black eyes were not quite so sharp ;



PETER AND POLLY. 65



they seemed to see at a glance everything
about her. And Polly wished the pins were
out of her cloak, that it might display its
beauty, so as to make a favorable impression
upon her aunt.

“ Have the saddle-bags come?” she asked
Peter. He nodded in answer, but Polly no-
ticed that he had his most sober face.

“Won't you come in and have a drink of
cider?” said Mrs. Philbrick to Mr. Burbean,
who, having helped his charge to alight, was
drawing up the bridle to move on.

“No, madam, I thank you,” he answered,
deferentially. “I’ve had to come on slowly,
so as not to tire the little girl; and as I left
four of the children ailing, I want to get
home.”

“But I would like to ask you,” said Mrs.
Philbrick, stepping up by his horse’s side,
“what people are saying, and how things look
where you have been?”

“Well, I think things look dark,” he an-



66 PETER AND POLLY.



swered ; “here we are, a weakly young coun-
try, at war with a strong old one. It’s like a
small cub fighting with a grown bear. As far
as I can see, there’s a hard time coming.
Breadstuffs will be high, and cattle will be
scarce, and the paper-money —”

“What do people say about that?” inter-
rupted Mrs. Philbrick, anxiously.

“Well, some have hopes ‘of it, and some
hain’t,” was the reply; “but for my part, I
think it will be sure to bring trouble.”

“It’s a ruinous, mischievous thing, having
it,” said Mrs. Philbrick ; “I don’t know where
*t will end. My husband says—” She hesi-
tated, stopped, and began again, “But we
ought to be willing to make sacrifices- for
our country, and I’m sure we do. We wear
homespun all the time, and make herb-tea
three times a day ; and as for killing sheep, my
husband thinks the farmers ought to agree to
raise all the lambs to grow wool for the army.
I don’t think there is any one more ready to



PETER AND POLLY. 67



suffer than my husband and myself, as far as
we have opportunities.”

“Yes, madam, and we sha’n't be likely to
lack ’em,” said Mr. Burbean, a little ner-
vously, as if conscious he was nearing a dan-
gerous subject.

“And as for giving, I don’t know who’s
done more than we,” continued Mrs. Phil-
brick; “yarn, to knit stockings for the sol-
diers, and lead, and some pewter we ought
not to have spared, to run into bullets, and
flannel for blankets; and my husband gave
more money than any one to fit out the last
company with knapsacks and guns and bayo-
nets.”

“You never heard of my joining in saying
your husband had n’t done enough,” returned
Mr. Burbean, desirous to protect himself from
any thought of blame. “It’s a monstrous
raw day,” he added, turning the subject, “and
you must n’t stand out o’ doors, madam.” He
gave his horse a cut with the short stick which



68 PETER .AND POLLY.



he carried by way of a whip, and started off,
though Mrs. Philbrick would evidently have
liked to detain him longer.

“Come in, niece! come in, nephew!” said
Aunt Nancy, when he rode away, and led
first into a long, wide hall, then into a parlor
dark as Egypt, from the inside wooden shut-
ters being closely drawn, then’ into a hand-
some sitting-room, of which the snow-white
floor was sprinkled with shining sand, and the
- walls were covered with panel-work painted
bright blue. A tray, with wineglasses and a
silver tankard, adorned the heavy mahogany
sideboard, and in the corner stood a tall clock
with glistening peacock’s feathers nodding
over it.

“What a lovely, genteel place!” thought
Polly again ; and yet her first sense of delight
seemed somehow to have flown. Perhaps,
she reasoned, it was because she was so cold ;
for she was shivering, and in the wide fireplace,
with its elegant brass andirons, only a feeble



PETER AND POLLY. 69



blue flame was fluttering over two moist green
sticks.

Aunt Nancy helped Polly to take off her
wrappings. She looked sharply at the scarlet
cloak. “A very showy garment,’ she re-
_marked, as she folded it up; and, taking off
the protecting veil from Polly’s fine “ musk-
melon hat,” she examined it carefully, as if
with a milliner’s critical eye.

“Tf you want to warm your feet, you may
come into the kitchen,” she said, at last. And
Peter and Polly followed into a large room
that looked dark and cheerless, spite of the
great fire on its hearth, from its walls being
painted a dull Indian red, —a common color
for working-rooms in those days. There were
large beams in the ceiling, from which hung
long strings of dried apples, tufts of herbs,
. bunches of onions, crook-necked squashes, and
the glowing flame of bell-peppers. A tall girl,
with a mulatto’s complexion and crisp hair,

but with something in her features and bear-



70 PETER AND POLLY.

ing that suggested Indian blood as well, was
stirring, with a long wooden stick, a kettle
of boiling hominy that hung from the crane
over the fire. She looked out of the corners
of her eyes at the new-comers, as she moved
about doing her housework; and when she
sat down with a pan of apples to be pared,
she changed the place of her chair so as to
be where she could still watch them. Under
Aunt Nancy’s eyes and the girl’s, poor Polly
felt between two fires. “If she could only
have something to eat, perhaps it would seem
more cheerful,” she thought, as she smelt the
hominy, for her long ride had made her hun-
gry ; but Mrs. Philbrick made no mention of
luncheon, and she concluded she must wait .
for the family supper.

“You had better warm your feet,” said
Aunt Nancy ; for Polly, sitting before the fire,
had kept those offending members tucked
away under her dress in a most peculiar fash-
ion. Polly put them out towards the blaze,



PETER AND POLLY. 71



timidly. What lumpy ankles she had! What
gouty-seeming legs! She had changed about
to-day, and by dint of pulling and tugging, and
breaking a few stitches, had succeeded in
drawing on her silk stockings over the legs of
the yellow woollen ones. The feet she had
nearly cut away. Aunt Nancy spied the
trouble in a minute.

“Vou have n’t put those nice silk ones over
another pair of stockings, have you?” she
asked.

“Yes, madam,” returned Polly, not know-
ing how to evade.

“But you don’t wear silk stockings every
day, do you?” continued her questioner.

“O, no!” replied Polly; but looking up, and
seeing a pair of handsome jewelled knobs in
her aunt’s ears, she thought it best to main-
tain her position as a young woman of fash-
‘ion, —“O, no! but I have a good many pairs
of them, a good many pairs.”

Aunt Nancy’s face clouded. “Well, if you



72 PETER AND POLLY.

_ have, I hope you don’t expect to wear them
here,” she said, in a somewhat severe tone.
“Little girls like you, I am sure, have no need
of finery ; and, even if you were older, it is
more becoming for young women in times
like these to be learning how to card and spin
and weave, than to be thinking about bedizen-
ing themselves with rich clothes.”

“But father,” began Polly, by way of
apology, “bought and had made for me a
good many things before I came, because he
thought it would be harder to get them here,
and be troublesome for you beside; so he
bought what he thought would last a long
while, just as he got Peters Latin books, so
that he could have them for study as soon as
he could get a teacher, to be fitted for college.”

Aunt Nancy's face darkened again. “As
for Peter,” she said, turning to him, as he
stood gloomily looking toward the fire, “your
father writes me that you are exceeding fond
of your books, and an apt scholar for your



PETER AND POLLY. 73



years. I am very glad to find you have im-
proved your advantages, for, I fear, in times
like these, people will not have much leisure
for study. A great many young men have
gone to the war,.and those that are left have
to do double duty; some schools are being
closed for lack of teachers, and college educa-
tions will have to be scarce.”

“But Peter,” piped in Polly, always a little
too ready to put in a word, “must study,
whatever comes; for father says it’s a pity
not to have him get all the learning he can,
when he is such a forward lad; and father left
word —”

Peter shook his head savagely, to make her
stop.

“Your father left word, I trust,” said Aunt
Nancy, with impressive solemnity, “that you
should be obedient children, and do as your
uncle and I see fit. We shall give you every
advantage we think it right for you to have;

and if we deny you anything, we shall expect
4



74. PETER AND POLLY.



you to realize that we know what is best for
you, and do it for your good.”

Polly saw the odd-looking colored girl
glance up from her apple-paring with a queer
twinkle in her black eyes. She was evidently
pleased to have some one come in for a share
of her mistress’s counsels and reprimands,

“When you have warmed your feet, you
had better come up stairs to your bedroom,
and change your stockings, and I will help
you to unpack your bags,” said Aunt Nancy,
after a long silence that had followed her
last remark ; and Polly, completely subjugated,
obeyed without a word.

It was a neat little chamber that she found
ready for her reception. Its high-heaped,
single bed, with its heavy quilt of blue and
white woollen, was partially concealed by
“hangings” of checked linen of the same
color, and a snowy curtain, wrought with blue
yarn, hung at the window ; but Polly’s troub-
led eyes at once perceived that there was no



PETER AND POLLY. 75



looking-glass upon the wall, and, what was
worse, the one window looked out upon the
graveyard, where the autumn wind now chased
the dead leaves to and fro, over mounds cov-
ered with the brown frozen grass, — desolate,
unmarked graves, for there were but four or
five headstones in the whole enclosure. As
for unpacking the bags, Aunt Nancy certainly
performed her task thoroughly. She pulled
out every article, and examined it minutely
before she laid it by. She noticed the trim-
ming of the dresses, the quality of the linen
under-garments, the sewing of the patchwork
pocket, and the starching of the tuckers ;
she contemptuously sniffed at the sight of the
unlucky sampler, and even peered into Polly’s
box of mementos, locks of hair and scraps of
copied verses, the costless keepsakes of her
childish ‘friends,

“There is a cousin of my mother’s living
near here, is there not?” asked Polly, “a lady
named Miss Keziah Hapgood. My father



76 | PETER AND POLLY.

wanted me to find if there was, and to go and
visit her if she asked me, for he was sure she
would be kind to me for my mother’s sake.”

“There is such a person,” answered Mrs.
Philbrick, coldly, and counting over Polly’s
pairs of stockings as she did so, “ but she does
not live near here, and — she — is not a per-
son I have —a great deal to do with,” she
added slowly, as if reflecting what tosay. “As
for your clothes, I fear they are unseemly fine
for a girl of your age,” she remarked, when her
scrutiny of them was completed.

Poor Polly! The charm had flown from
Aunt Nancy. She seemed plainer to her than
even Mr. Burbean in his coarse> coat and
greasy buckskins. She quite envied Peter his
boy’s privileges ; for he, meanwhile, had left
the house and gone down to his uncle’s store,
the only one in the neighborhood.

The store was a long, low building with
two doors, outside of which a half-dozen ox-
teams were standing, while within the room



PETER AND POLLY. 77



was almost filled by customers and village
loungers,

At one end a great fire was roaring, and
round it a group of teamsters was gathered,
while near by was a small counter set with
mugs and glasses in front of a deep shelf dis-
playing jugs and decanters and various pew-
ter measures. Behind the counter stood a
handsome man of fifty-five, busy, when Peter
entered, in filling from a brown jug a wooden
bottle for a red-faced man wearing a shoe-
maker’s apron. He came forward and greeted
Peter cordially. “And this is the nephew
who has come to be a son to me!” he said,
taking the boy’s hand warmly in his own ;
“but since we shall have ‘plenty of time to
talk together, and as to-day is one of my busi-
est, when, as you see, I am taking a clerk’s
place, I trust you will look about for yourself
till I am at leisure.”

Peter, thus encouraged, and anxious to
guess at his future, boy like, sauntered round



78 PETER AND POLLY.



with his eyes wide open to see everything to
be seen.

What a busy, busy place it was!

There were more customers than Mr. Phil-
brick and his assistant could possibly attend
to. Here was a woman trying to barter some
green cheeses, flavored with johnswort and
tanzy, in part payment for a linen-wheel ;
there, a rough-looking boy was endeavoring
to dispose of a half-dozen hog-yokes, made by
himself; while a coquettish miss, with her
hair drawn over an immensely high cushion,
was making a poor bargain, for herself, by
exchanging a quantity of woollen yarn for a
tall horn comb and a necklace of showy
beads. Suddenly the loud talk around the
fireplace was checked ; a little man with rosy
face and snow-white wig appeared at the door;
Mr. Philbrick hastened immediately to serve
him, bowing low and respectfully ; and with-
out being told, even Peter was at once aware
of the presence of the village preacher.



PETER AND POLLY. 79



From floor to ceiling the store was filled
with articles of merchandise. Home-made
cloths, linen, tow, and woollen, wooden ware
of all kinds, “wheels within wheels,’ candle-
sticks and warming-pans, hoes, rakes, and
shovels, medicines for the sick, and ribbons
and laces for the would-be fair, — nothing was
wanting. In the back part of the building
were large bins heaped with grain, and one
small apartment divided from the main room
was partially filled with skins and furs; for
Mr. Philbrick had driven, heretofore, a brisk
trade with hunters and trappers. Black-bear
skins and gray wolves’, silver fox and red,
mountain cat and wolverine, glossy mink and
soft brown beaver,—how many brookside
builders, how many fierce wild creatures of
the forest, were represented by those heaps
of fur! As for the piles of deer and moose
hides, Peter scarcely gave them a look.

Surely, there was enough both to see and
to hear in this little store; yet Peter gazed



80 PETER AND POLLY.

about with a stranger’s homesick heart, and,
for some unknown reason, felt by no means
drawn toward his uncle. He wondered at
himself that he was not; for Mr. Philbrick
seemed, certainly, as his father had described
him, “a gentleman, both in looks and _bear-
ing”; not tall, but straight, with finely shapen
limbs, a beauty much appreciated in those
days. His complexion was clear, and his
features handsome, only his eyes had a cold,
hard look, and the smile which constantly
played about his mouth had a frigid bright-
ness, like ice in the sun. His dress, like his
wife’s, was of the best quality of homespun ;
but the value of his shoe and knee buckles,
and the fineness of his shirt-ruffles, proved
him to be by no means forgetful of the re-
finements of dress. The throng of customers,
many of whom had a considerable distance to
go home, all departed before the brief autumn
day had fairly passed, and Mr. Philbrick threw
round him his long cloak to go home to his
supper.



PETER AND POLLY. SI



“Nephew,” he said, as Peter walked beside
him, “I have heard, from your father, of your
ready parts and your industry as a scholar,
and, when circumstances permit, we shall be
most happy to obtain for you some master
who will bé able to further you in your
studies. Till then, with all respect to the
Greek and the Latin, I think the best thing
you can do is to try and obtain a practical
knowledge, both of the use and the proper-
ties of figures, such as you will acquire in
trade; and for this purpose I intend to give
you a place at the little counter near the
fireplace, where you found me, myself, to-
day. It will be light work,—all you will have
to do is to measure out for the various cus-
tomers the different kinds of spirits they may
want, and to see to keeping their scores, —
very light work; or, if some woman comes in
and wants a bodkin, or some cap-lace, or such
trifling thing, if you are not otherwise busy,

you can attend to her ;—no hard labor, and



82 PETER AND POLLY.



a great deal of knowledge to be gained,
Everything in its place, my lad; Greek and
Latin in theirs, and trade in its own. You
will always be the wiser for a little practical
knowledge of the use of figures.”

More sober-looking young folks are seldom
“seen than the two who sat opposite each
other at Mrs. Philbrick’s supper-table. The
keen-eyed maid-servant glanced first at one,
then at the other, and then smiled to herself,
when she brought in a plate of hot fire-cakes.
Polly’s heart was so full of her troubles
that even her traveller’s appetite was gone;
the hominy tasted to her like “bread of af-
fliction,” the catnip tea like a bitter draught.
She almost wished her cup could have been
filled from the little pot that stood by her
aunt’s plate, and from which she replenished
her husband’s teacup and her own. That
little pot breathed round it an odor which
made Polly think of what she did not, could
not believe would be in any honest American



PETER AND POLLY. 83



house. “ That was too much to suspect of
people!” she thought, as she trifled with her
pretty little silver teaspoon. It was marked
on the handle, “J. Millin.”

“Millin? Millin?” what was it connected
with that name? At last it came to her, —
the teamster’s story of the young bridegroom
in the gold-laced coat, and the dark-eyed boy
watching his father’s corpse under the white-
blossomed elder. “The same name,” she
thought, too full of her own dull forebodings
to dwell long on anything not directly con-
cerning herself.

“Polly,” said Peter, when, after supper, they
were alone together for a few moments, —
«Polly, I am afraid we sha’ n’t be very happy
here.”

“Afraid?” said Polly; “I am monstrous
miserable already!”

“Uncle Philbrick wants me to help in the
store, and, if I do, how can I study at all?”
asked Peter.



84 PETER AND POLLY.

“And Aunt Nancy only likes to have me
wear dreadful clothes,” bemoaned Polly.

“ Well,” said Peter, as his father had wished,
discreet beyond his years, “if we are not

-happy, let us keep our mouths shut and be
quiet; that is the bet thing that people in
trouble can do.”

Becky, the mulatto-girl, went up with Polly
to her room at night, to carry the candle and
see her in bed. “Ye'r gitting lonesum? And
how d’ye think ye’r goin to like?” she asked,
trying to make acquaintance. But Polly, just
ready to cry, was in no mood to be approached,
and gave, perhaps, too curt a reply. The girl
felt it. She laid down Polly’s little mourning
necklace, which she had taken up to examine,
and snatched up the candle with a malicious
twinkle in her eyes. “I hope yer’ll sleep well,
but I should n’t like to be so near that grave-
yard; more’n one have seen them dead folks
walkin’,” she said, shutting the door as she did

so, and hurrying down stairs, chuckling to
herself.



PETER AND POLLY. 85



Poor Polly drew the curtains close, and hid
her head under the sheet, till she heard the
great clock below strike the hour of midnight.
It seemed such a gloomy, dreary place she was
in! like a queen in a dungeon-cell, or a maid
forlorn in a castle-tower ; and then it was such
a perplexing puzzle! Her aunt’s inconsistent
harshness in speaking of Polly’s fine clothes,
and her evident fondness for wearing them
herself; the boastful mention of herb-tea to
Mr. Burbean, and the little pot by her plate ;
the fine house, the costly table-china, the odd
servant-girl with her Indian form and her mu-
latto skin and her twinkling eyes, —all to her
were mysteries. Wondering over them, she
dropped asleep. Peter, in the little chamber
on the other side of the house, sat up for a
long while and looked out of the window at
the orchard, where the tall trees stood, leaf-
less and cheerless in the white moonlight.
His boy life had but one ambition. “Come
what may,” he said, over and over to him-



86 PETER AND POLLY.

self, “I will, in some way, be fitted for col-
lege!”

Had Polly been older and shrewder, she
would not have seen so much to surprise her
in her uncle’s and aunt’s demeanor, Their
conduct was, in a worldly view, a perfectly
natural course. Abel Philbrick had in his
boyhood been poor himself and thrown with |
men of wealth. The sense of contrast between
his position and theirs had nursed in him an
intense desire for riches and power, which had
made itself the guiding motive of his life. By
perseverance, sagacity, strict economy, and the
most untiring industry, he had become pos-
sessed of what was in those days a considera-
ble fortune, while yet a young man, and could,
had he so chosen, have made himself a pleasant
home in one of the older towns of New Eng-
land. But, to be “second in Rome” was not
to his mind; and he accordingly turned his
thoughts toward the younger settlements in
New Hampshire, where, thought he, “I could



PETER AND POLLY. 87



lead instead of follow, and my power, if lim-
ited, would be undisputed.”

But the way of a would-be leader is not
always a primrose path. The sturdy settlers
in the neighborhood to which he came were
as independent thinkers as himself, and their
wives in their tow aprons were by no means
inclined to pay much deference to his hand-
some bride in her wedding brocade. In fact,
they soon found themselves standing quite
alone in society. But if not loved or ad-
mired, Abel Philbrick soon made himself an
object of fear. He was the only person in
the neighborhood whose property enabled
him to be a habitual money-lender to the
hard-pressed men, frequently in want of the
actual necessities of life about him. He es-
tablished, also, a small store, where he sold
largely upon trust, and made sharp bargains
in barter-trades. Woe to the delinquent
debtor when pay-day came round! He found
he must deal with a man who, “even to the



88 PETER AND POLLY.



uttermost farthing,’ would “demand his own
with usury”; and that, too, in a time when
there was scarcely an article of food, clothing,
or household stuff which it was not allow-
able for a creditor to seize upon. Improved
lands thus came into his possession, cleared
and made fit for cultivation by their first
unfortunate holders; cattle which luckless
farmers had sought to raise for themselves
browsed in his pastures and fed in his stalls.
His fine new house was filled with looking-
glasses, tables, silver and pewter ware, and-
irons and candlesticks, which had once be-
longed to other owners. It is impossible to
conceive the bitterness of feeling which those
who had, sometimes justly, been obliged to
yield up such articles of household use and
necessity, and were suffering for the want of
them, often felt toward the person that had
taken them. But the doubtfully gotten wealth
which had made Mr, Philbrick many secret
enemies in his own township had served to



PETER AND POLLY. 89



recommend him in other communities. Con-
scious that his new fortunes made him more
nearly their equal, he revived his old ac-
quaintance with two or three families residing
near Portsmouth, and through their influ-
ence and favor he received from the Gov-
ernor and Council an appointment as agent,
or under-surveyor, of “The King’s Woods.”
It was his care to see that none of the tall
white-pines, which, by British law, were re-
served for the use of the royal navy, were
cut without his authority. The largest of
these trees were marked, and a register was
kept of them, and a considerable fine exacted
from any one who had been found disobeying
‘the law by cutting one, or from any hapless
husbandman who, in clearing his own land,
had been so unfortunate as to damage one
growing upon it. In the exactions of these
fines Mr. Philbrick was exceedingly strict,
and would abate nothing; though some sus-
picious persons hinted their doubts if the



90 PETER AND POLLY.

king’s treasury was ever much richer for
his extreme zeal in collecting them. Year
by year, Mr. Philbrick’s fortune increased,
while his ambition grew with it, and his
style of living became more costly. His
wife sent to Portsmouth for stiff silk dresses
and real laces. Their table was set with
daintiest china, and, as a crowning act, they
purchased a chaise, in which, over the rough
roads around, they scarcely dared to ride
about. But at last even they found them-
selves under a shadow. The trouble between
the mother-land and our own became more
and more an acknowledged fact. “The air
was full of freedom.” The plain-spoken com-
mon people woke to a new sense of their
dignity as “sons of liberty.” Mr. Philbrick
thought it best to overlook the wanton cut-
ting of King George’s pines for the present.
He said nothing, and hoped the gathering
storm would pass. by; but no, the feeling
was too deep to be transient. The leading



PETER AND POLLY. QI

spirit of the place was the minister, a dar-
ing little man, Parson Piper, who loved to
rule by nature, and whose office in those
days gave to him the power to do so in reality.
An ardent politician, who never knew the
name of fear, and whom a little opposition
would only rouse to make more outspoken,
his sermons were at this time about as peace-
breathing as the Marseillaise Hymn. In his
pastoral calls, his conversation stirred up the
people to resistance to oppression like the
sounding of a fife. By and by, the reports
came of the battles of Lexington and Con-
cord, and afterwards of Bunker Hill. Like
one man, the people were united. Poor
“Pine Abel,” as in derision he was called,
found himself in a hard place. Some zealous
patriots banded themselves together not to
buy anything at his store, or have any deal-
ings with him, until his position should be
satisfactorily explained. “Brown Beck,” a

slave-girl of mixed white, Indian, and negro



92 PETER AND POLLY.



blood, whom Mr. Philbrick, like most of his
possessions, had taken in payment for debt,
brought to her mistress a startling tale of a
plan by some lawless young fellows of pay-
ing up old scores by riotous proceedings
against her master, ‘It never seemed to oc-
cur to her master and mistress that Brown
Beck was “as good to carry as to fetch,”
and, by her exaggerated revelation of affairs
in the household, — of the little pot by her
mistress’s plate, and of mysterious words
dropped by her master, — had done much to
awaken prejudice against them, and even to
sow suspicions which were wholly unfounded
among the lower classes of the village gossips,

Mr. Philbrick found he must take a de-
cided stand, although, in truth, beyond his
own interests, he had little concern as to what
form public affairs might assume. Accord-
ingly, in a gathering of the townsfolk, he
took the opportunity of declaring his position
in a speech, whose fervor, he thought, would



PETER AND POLLY. 93



make amends for his delay. He urged the
young men to enter the newly formed army,
and called on parents to offer their sons, and
wives their husbands, on the altar of freedom.

His wife laid by her costly dresses, and
talked of economy, frugality, and devotion to
her country wherever she went; for poor
Aunt Nancy was fond of display, and must
make a show of her patriotism, as she had
done before of her wealth and station. Be-
sides, Brown Beck’s accounts had sorely
frightened her. She thought if her brother
should enter the army, and her niece and
nephew come to her during his absence, their
presence would be, in a measure, a protec-
tion to her husband ; for, with all her faults,
she was a devoted wife. But when Peter
and Polly appeared, — Polly with the fine
clothes which she feared would scandalize
the frugal-minded- neighbors, whom now she
wished to please; and Peter with a letter
from his father requesting the procurement



94 PETER AND POLLY.



for him of some teacher in Latin and Greek,
just when the penny-saving Mr. Philbrick
(whose best clerk had left for the army) had
concluded to make him of service in the
store, — she was perplexed and troubled.

She had other troubles as well, for her hus-
band’s business anxieties she made her own,
and just then he was full of them. He had
lent large sums of money in such a way, that,
could he have collected his dues as usual, it
. would have added greatly to his wealth to
have done so. As it was, should his debtors
choose to pay in the newly issued paper cur-
rency, of which, with his shrewd eyes, he al-
ready stood in dread, — what then?

That was what Aunt Nancy was always
asking herself when she had a sharp word
for Brown Beck or a cross look for Polly.

EO Hig Br











CHAPTER V.

T was a bright Sunday morning in De-
cember. Polly sat in her uncle’s great
pew in the meeting-house, slyly looking around
her, it is to be feared, rather than listening to
the sermon. She had on her fine hat and
her scarlet cloak trimmed with fur; but she
had been made to wear her common dress
rather than her best one, and over her shoul-
ders was pinned a checked homespun necker-
chief, to make her look more as a “girl of the
period” should, in her Aunt Nancy’s eyes.
The meeting-house was yet unfinished ; for,
although

“Great church, high steeple,

Proud committee, poor people,”



96 PETER AND POLLY.



was a descriptive rhyme of the time, it was
still true that “pay as you go” was more the
motto of church-builders than it is to-day. It
was now seven years since the raising of the
meeting-house-frame ; but though, every town-
meeting since, some appropriation had been
made, there was still much remaining to be
done toward completing the building. There
was, as yet, no gallery in the place designed
for it, and some of the gallery windows were
unglazed, and boarded up until glass could be
procured ; the floor of the house had been
“lotted,” —that is, the aisles and the location
of each pew had been chalked upon the floor,
and a committee had been appointed to decide
what families should build upon the different
lots, — but times were hard, and only three
men, Justice Cram, Mr. Philbrick, and the vil-
lage doctor, had availed themselves of the
right to erect one, though, at the public ex-
pense, a pew had also been provided for the
minister's family. The rest of the audience



PETER AND POLLY. 97



still sat on benches. They were very grand
and genteel things to have, those pews “ with
winscot work.” Polly felt quite like a superior
being, as, seated in her uncle’s, she peered
round at the congregation a little more than
was becoming a temple worshipper ; at the old
men in their red flannel caps, and the old wo-
men with their great muffs ; at Parson Piper’s
large brood of little folks all trying to get their
feet on one small foot-stove ; at the solemn-
looking deacons, who, like the minister, faced
the assembly, while in front of their seat hung
on hinges a semicircular board, which served
as a table on sacramental days.

Parson Piper, this morning, looked unusu-
ally bright and rosy, and in his fervent sup-
plications for the triumph of freedom’s cause,
and the protection of freedom’s army, so lost
thought of all around him, as nearly to forget
to pray for poor Mr. Burbean, who had sent

in a note, having just buried his fourteenth
child.



98 PETER AND POLLY.



After the long prayer, Parson.Piper lined
out a hymn, one of Tate and Brady’s, which
collection had not, in this country place, yet
given way to the more modern Watts. How
one of the deacons scowled during the sing-
ing! Polly could not help seeing his discom-
fiture. A bass-viol had just been introduced
into the singers’ seat, a large square, walled in
like a pen, opposite the pulpit, with a long
table for the singers to lay their books upon.
Against the use of this instrument the deacon
had testified in vain. “The Lord’s house is
not the place for fiddling,” he had said, and its
profane notes were never heard but his face
showed forth his disapprobation. But one
good thing the viol did: it helped to drown
the singers’ voices ; for music then, through-
out the country, was a little-cared-for art, and
in this inland parish had been more neglected
even than in other places; the Rev. Shear-
jashub Smith, Parson Piper’s predecessor, hav-
ing been a narrow-minded man of the pattern



PETER AND POLLY. 99



of fifty years before, looking with disfavor on
all new movements, and thinking singing by
note, instead of by rote, a dangerous innova-
tion little short of sin.

When the text was given out, “The arms
of the wicked shall be broken, but the Lord
upholdeth the righteous,” everybody knew that
the sermon would be one for the times. Polly
wondered, as she listened, whether old King
George’s ears were not burning, over the sea ;
she was sure they would be, could he have
been in her place.

On one side of the meeting-house, directly
in the range of Polly’s gaze, was a long bench,
on which the boys were seated. Here sat
half a dozen lads, of about ten or twelve years,
and one somewhat older, fifteen or thereabouts.
He was coarsely dressed, and in garments far
too thin for the day. His tow frock had a
poverty-stricken look, and it made Polly al-
most shiver to see it in that unwarmed house.
Round his neck, however, was a warm black



100 PETER AND POLLY.



and red woollen muffler. That was better than
nothing, Polly thought, for she had a tender
heart, and never saw anything like discomfort
without a desire to relieve it ; yet she did not
quite dare to pity him, when by chance he
turned his head and she saw his face fully. It
had such a daring, resolute look, such a fixed
expression of determined purpose, that pity
seemed an unworthy feeling to have for him.
And still there was a patient sadness in his
large dark eyes, that made even Polly sure he
was not only poor, but lonely and in trouble.
She was wondering what that trouble might be,
when Price Hodgkins, the tithing-man, a dis-
tant relative of her uncle, and a clerk in his
store, came up the aisle. It was part of the
tithing-man’s duties to prevent travel on the
Sabbath, and to maintain order in the Sunday
services, to drive out the dogs from the sanc-
tuary, and to see that the boys, who were boys
even in those days, were not carrying things
with too high a hand. Such persons were not



Full Text
i

Prcdrithisth tte ditdad thetic dad

TES abet ay

fa

AS ox ste #4

3
e Sg ee : =
creed

Ng sty ate T
Rees a



meek AVD POLLY,

HOME-LIFE IN NEW ENGLAND

A HUNDRED YEARS AGO.

BY



MARIAN DOUGLAS.



iB Ose©sN =
JAMES R. OSGOOD AND COMPANY,

Late Ticknor & FigLDs, AND FiELDs, Oscoon, & Co.

Teoy7.0%




Corvaraur, 1876"
By JAMES R. OSGOOD & Co,

Universiry Press: Werte, Broztow, & Co,
CAMBRIDGE.










PETER AND POLLY.



CHAPTER I.

T was the autumn of 1775, and the pale
l sunlight of the Indian summer gave a
yellow tinge to the dry russet leaves yet
clinging to the boughs of the giant oak that
overshadowed the old Austin homestead, a
substantial dwelling-house in a pleasant village
in Massachusetts.

It was a hospitable, ‘comfortable-seeming
home, with two stories in front, and a “lean-to”
roof, reaching groundward, in the rear, while a
queer, bird-house-like porch sheltered the front
door, that now swung open, letting the wind
blow in the withered leaves, The sitting-
6 PETER AND POLLY.



room within was, as well, a cheery, home-like
place, where a tall clock, with elaborate brass
ornaments, stood in one corner, and, loudly
ticking, told the flight of time; and where, in
the fireplace, set round with gayly painted tiles,
after the Dutch fashion, a fire of green ash was
burning, that filled the air with the faint fra-
grance of its scented flames.

The room was strewn with articles of wear-
ing-apparel for all seasons, while over the nar-
row winding stairs that led to the chambers
above, ascending and descending like the an-
gels of Jacob’s ladder, little Peter and Polly
Austin were constantly passing, busily making
preparations for a long journey, and a lengthy
stay with some unknown relatives in New
Hampshire.

They were twins, and had just reached the
sweet years of indiscretion, being now thirteen,
—an age for them the more perilous, because,
having lost their mother by death the year
previous, they had now been compelled to part
PETER AND POLLY. 7

with their father, a young physician, who, hav-
ing received a commission in the new Colonial
Army, had, three days before, ridden away to
report himself at Cambridge, bidding them
“good by” with tearful eyes, not knowing
when he should return. He had not left,
however, without making every arrangement
he deemed possible for the care of his chil-
dren during his absence, a subject which had
caused him great anxiety. A worthy middle-
aged couple, who had lately come to the place
from Charlestown, where, in the stirring days
of June, their house had been burned by Brit-
ish fire, and the man’s right hand been par-
tially disabled by a random shot, had already
found shelter under his roof, and were grateful
to accept the care of his land and buildings
while he should be away. But, though excel-
lent persons in their place, they were scarcely
those to whom the watchful father cared to
intrust the guidance of his thoughtful son and
of his daring little Polly ; and it was with a
8 PETER AND POLLY.



sense of relief that he received an unexpected
letter from his sister Nancy, who resided in a
small but thrifty township in New Hampshire,
saying that three men from her vicinity were
shortly to be in his neighborhood on business,
and “if, as a patriot should, he intended to
enter the army, she trusted he would allow bis
children to be sent, in their company, to her
home, where, until his return, she would watch
over them with all of a Christian’s faithfulness
and all of a mother’s love.”

“Tut! tut! tut!” said Dr. Austin, on read-
ing this epistle; ‘“‘ Nancy promises too much.”
Yet, notwithstanding, his heart, always sensi-
tive to kindness, warmed, as he read, toward
the almost stranger sister whom he had only
seen for a few brief times since her marriage,
when he was but a boy himself. He recalled,
with brotherly pride, the many tributes to her
beauty and grace to which he had listened,
and remembering with pleasure that her hus-
band, whom he had met but twice, had, on
PETER AND POLLY. 9



those occasions, shown himself to have the
manners of a gentleman, and that he was,
moreover, spoken of by those that knew him
better than himself as a person of character
and position, as well as wealth, he gratefully
concluded at once to accept the invitation,
not even thinking, after the manner of parents
of to-day, of consulting beforehand the wishes
and opinions of two human fledglings of thir-
teen.

The three men foretold had in due time ap-
peared, and, all excitement at the thought of
going with them next morning, a new sense
of self-consequence half consoling them for
their father’s departure, Peter and Polly, this
. bright November afternoon, gathered together
their trinkets and treasures, anxious to carry
as many as possible away with them.

“But you must leave most of them behind,”
forewarned Mrs. Ellis, the housekeeper from
Charlestown ; “all your luggage, big and lit-
tle, you must get into those two bags.” And
tO PETER AND POLLY.



she pointed to two long sacks, woven of coarse
green and red yarn, with leather tops and bot-
toms, which stood partially filled upon the
floor.

“ Peter won’t need,” said Polly, “as much
room for his things as I shall for mine. I must
get in all my best clothes.” For Polly was, at
this time, a practical negative answer to the
prophet’s inquiry, “Can a maid forget her or-
naments?” “There are my short gowns and
my red stuffed petticoat, and my neckerchiefs,
and my tuckers, and my best long gown, and—”

“And what now?” broke forth Peter, in-
dignantly interrupting his sister's inventory.
“JT suppose you think you can have the fill-
ing of both bags yourself; but there are my
Cesar and Virgil, and my Dictionary and
Grammar, and my Introduction to the Mak-
ing of Latin! Father said they must be car-
ried, and if Aunt Nancy knows a minister, or
any other fit man, I shall be sent to him to be
taught.” For, if Polly was vain of her girlish
PETER AND POLLY. II



finery, Peter was equally so of his reputation
as a scholar, for his quickness in regard to
books had already made his friends foresee for
him college honors, and the then thrice-cov-
eted laurels of a “learned man” ; while Polly,
though a ready reader of anything akin to
stories, of which, either written or told, she
was passionately fond, was by no means in-
clined to hard study. She was not even yet
quite perfect in the Catechism; her spelling
was always original, and her “ pothooks” were
the most forlorn of their species, though much
good paper and many goose-quills she had
ruined in following the copies given her at
the village “reading and writing school.”

“But those Latin books, and the sum-book,
and the Psalter and the Catechism, and the
Bible with the letter in it that we must give
Cousin Keziah Hapgood, if she is living near
Aunt Nancy, are all the books we can take;
so you may as well put those two ‘ World
Displayeds’ back on the shelf.”
12 ‘PETER AND POLLY.



“Yes, indeed!” confirmed Mrs. Ellis, au-
thoritatively ; “there is no room for them in
the bags; and, if there were, books are too
costly things for you to be carrying round the
country, and, ten to one, losing in the end.
I’ve heard your father say he paid twenty-six
pounds for that set of books, and that’s a great
price to give for something you can’t eat, nor
drink, nor wear. Put them up, Peter.”

Peter obeyed promptly, like one who had
learned to mind what he was told, and re-
placed the books, with a sigh, in the small
mahogany “buffet,” that contained what was
then a valuable and expensive library. It
was made up chiefly, after the fashion of the
day, of those theological works and printed
sermons which the children of the Puritans
seemed to take such delight in perusing. Con-
troversial statements regarding the “ Order of
the Churches,” the “ Rise of Antinomianism,”
and the “New Light Ministry,” “Election
Sermons,” and, vastly different, “Sermons on
PETER AND POLLY. 13



Election,” mournful funeral discourses, and
sentimental wedding ones, with a sweetness
caught from Solomon’s Song, all were there ;
but it was to the lowest of the small shelves
of the buffet that Peter's eyes turned with
longing regret. There were gathered what
he deemed his treasures ; a stout edition of
Shakespeare, a well-worn “ Pilgrim’s Progress,”
and a less prized “ Paradise Lost,” which, after
all, was not unvalued by the reflective lad,
who had never owned a child’s or a young
person’s book in his life, and who, shut in to
them as he had been, for lack of other reading,
had found in each of these volumes a voiceless
friend, all the dearer because he realized that
what was best in them lay just beyond his
reach, and that to-morrow would give new
meaning to what he had learned to-day.

»

“Midsummer Night’s Dream” was, to Polly
and himself, the most charming of fairy tales ;
“Macbeth,” an unfailing source of delightful

horrors as a ghost-story ; Milton’s warlike an-
14 PETER AND POLLY.



gels, well-matched foes who fought bravely ;
and Bunyan’s Pilgrim, as real an existence as
the Pilgrim Fathers. But the “World Dis-
played,” in twenty diminutive volumes, with
brown covers, filled with pictures of scenes in
foreign lands, was most precious of all. It
was, as the title said, “a curious collection of
travels”; and Peter.and Polly, who, in body,
had scarcely been beyond their native town,
had, in soul, with these old voyagers, been
round and round the world, searching for
Prester John, discovering the East Indies,
setting up the cross of conquest on palmy
isles, watching the glittering icebergs on the
Arctic Sea, sitting in Hottentot huts, or roam-
ing through gold-decked palaces.

To leave these books behind, was to Peter
a sore trial; and as he replaced on the shelf
the two volumes he had especially chosen to
take with him, even Polly’s heart was softened
by the sight of his disconsolate face.

“There is one comfort, Peter,’ she said ;
PETER AND POLLY. 15



“there is no make-believe in our going to
New Hampshire. We've always wanted to
travel, and I can't help wishing, if we could
get out of it safely, that we might meet a
squad of British soldiers, or some roaming
Indians, or a cross bear and some cubs, or
anything of that kind, so as to have some
adventures on the road.”

“ You want to see cross bears?” said Peter,
contemptuously. “ You, who are afraid of
your shadow!”

“O, yes, I’m afraid at the time,” returned
Polly, nothing daunted; “but dangers, when
they are well over, are such charming things
to talk about.”

Next to having fine clothes, to be the hero-
ine of hair-breadth escapes, was, just then, the
dearest object of Polly’s ambition. “As for
filling the bags,” she resumed —

“About that,” said Mrs, Ellis, “there need
be no disputing between you; I will attend
to the packing myself; and, Polly, when you
16 PETER AND POLLY.





are gone, I hope you will work on your sam-
pler, and be sure and take your stitches even,
so as not to have to do them over. There has
been silk enough, now, picked. out of it to
make another good one, and it’s a pity to
waste materials in times like these.”

Polly flushed ; her sampler was a sore sub-
ject. She had commenced it with the thought
that it would prove a marvel of its kind, as
indeed it had. It was a long square of yellow-
brown canvas, surrounded, on three sides,
with a wreath where fruit and flowers and
birds were mingled; while underneath, trees,
buildings, and beasts, such as “never were
by sea or shore,” were wrought in many-
colored silks; but, alas! Polly, not content
with regular patterns, had ventured to draw
upon her imagination for designs, with most
unsatisfactory results. Even the central verse,
the only thing in which she had not sought to
be original, for, with slight variations, it was

the standard one of the time for the purpose,
PETER AND POLLY. 17



“Polly Austin is my namé,
America my nation;
Massachusetts is my State,
And Christ is my Salvation,”

was as sorry a specimen of needlework as of
poetry.

“Tt was,” thought Polly, “exceedingly cruel
in Mrs. Ellis to allude to this sampler before
Peter”; whose brotherly comments on her
fancy-work were wont to be more frank than
agreeable; so, starting up, “If we are going
to the graveyard, we may as well go now,”
she said.

The “ graveyard’ was a small, stone-walled
enclosure, on one side of the “ meeting,” as the
meeting-house itself was often called, treeless,
except a growth of wild cherry along its edges,
and one young elm, that waved over what
Polly styled “the black corner,” where the
village negroes were buried. Many of the
graves were unmarked ; but what stones there
were, were rich in epitaphs, from the long
18 PETER AND POLLY.



Latin inscription over the minister’s resting-
place to the odd rhymes on the humbler head-
stones of the flock. Without staying to read
them again, Polly knew every verse there.
She had spelled them out Sunday noons in
summer, when, between morning and _after-
noon services, she had rambled among the
graves, and fed the brown sparrows with the
crumbs of her luncheon.
“A Pious Soul, on wings of Love,
And Feathers of an Holy Dove,

He bid this weary world Adieu
And wisely up to Heaven flew.”

“ She was kind to all, She seemed contented,
She lived beloved and Died lamented.”

“ Reader
Behold as you pass by
as You are now Soe,
Once was I as I am
Now Soe You Must be
Prepare for Death
and Follow me.”

It had never occurred to Polly that there
PETER AND POLLY. 19

/



was anything in stanzas like these to awaken
a smile. The graveyard was, to her, a very
awful place, that still had a certain fascination
that made her like to visit it, with her little
schoolmates or with Peter; but nothing could
have persuaded her to enter there alone.

The ground all around the place was com-
pletely covered by a close network of running
blackberry-vines, still beautiful, and in many
places green, after the sharp October frosts,
but catching and clinging unmercifully as the
children passed through them to the farther
end, where their mother slept peacefully by
two little Timothies and a small Miranda, in-
fant children, whose resting-place was marked
by three small black stones, adorned by
curiously carved and exceedingly ill-visaged
cherubs. Polly stooped down and laid her
hand, as if for “farewell,” tenderly upon her
mother’s grave, while Peter stood by in true
awkward boy-fashion, feeling that a last visit
to such a place was a time when it would be
20 PETER AND POLLY.



proper to do or say something, and not know-
ing what.

“Polly!” he said at last, taking out of his
breeches-pocket a carefully folded square of
paper, “I think here would be a good place
to read this over again.”

He found, near by, a little space of grass free
from the thorny vines, and the two children
sat down, their arms around each other, to
read together their father’s farewell letter.

My DEAR CHILDREN: As, by the Providence
of God and the Need of my Country, Iam Now
called to Part with You for a Season, I leave be-
hind a few Words of Counsel, that, when I am
Away, may serve to remind You Both of your
Father and your Duty. You are now going to
Reside for the Present in what is to you a Strange
Place, and where I have No Friends to whose Care
I can Commend you, save my Sister and Her
Husband, unless it may Prove so that Miss Keziah
Hapgood, that Excellent Cousin of your Mother,
and Doubly Dear for Her Sake, may still be
PETER AND POLLY. 21

living somewhere in the neighborhood of your
Aunt.

As you will, therefore, be thrown among Stran-
gers, I Hope that your Conduct will be Discreet
even beyond Your Years. Let Your Behaviour to
your Elders be marked by Docility, Reverence, and
Obedience to Instruction. In company, Avoid
alike a Pert and Forward Demeanor and a Sul-
len, Silent one. Be Emulous without Envy, Kind
without Servility, and. by Patience, Forbearance,
and Truthfulness, merit the Reward of an approv-
ing Conscience, however the World may Regard
you.

As Concerns the Cultivation and Improvement
of your Minds, I have written to your Uncle to
Procure, for Peter, a Master in Latin and Greek,
that He may be properly fitted for College, and
to give Polly as good Schooling as lies in his
Power to Bestow; but, as I fear that, at Present,
you will have few Opportunities for Reading,
therefore I trust you will the more Carefully peruse
whatever Good Books you may be able to Obtain
and think over Attentively what You have Read,
22 PETER AND POLLY.



so if not Able to Learn all I could wish, You will
be constantly Adding something to your Store of
Knowledge.

Finally, never Forget your Mother’s Counsels,
nor Cease to give Good Attention to Reading the
Bible and to Prayer, for, without God’s Blessing,
we can never be Happy in this World or Reign in
the Next. 5

Whether it may be the Design of an All-Wise
Providence to Return me to You again, or wheth-
er, for the Last Time, I have Looked upon You,
May you ever Remember me with True Affection,
Knowing my Highest Wish is for your Prosperity,
and my constant Prayer that you may be Useful
on Earth and Blessed in Eternitie.

Your loving Father,
PETER AUSTIN.

Polly took out her blue-bordered handker-
chief and wiped her eyes; she was not
ashamed to have even Peter see her tears,
they seemed so poor a tribute of her sorrow
for her father’s absence. “If she could only
PETER AND POLLY. 23



see him,” she thought, “and tell him how
much she loved him, and how good and faith-
ful she meant to be.”

She rose, and as she did so Peter laid his
hand gently upon her arm. “There is one
thing, Polly!” he said, “that I have been
thinking about, and that is, you and I have
’ got to be all the family of us there is, now,
and if you will stick by me, I will stick by
you; won't you, Polly?”

“Stick by you?” said Polly; “yes, Peter,
through thick and thin, whatever comes ! —
but, don’t you think we should be happier if
we didn’t tease each other quite so much; if
I should give up calling you ‘ Book-worm,’
and you should have a little less to say about
my clothes?”

“ Yes,” said Peter, “ we should: I don’t like
teasing any betier than you do; but, about
your clothes, you ave too riggish, Polly.”

“Well, if I’m riggish, you’re priggish,”
retorted Polly. “If I were a boy, I would n't
24 PETER AND POLLY.



sit down with my cue half braided, and my
nose in an old Latin book, as you will.”

Just then a magnificent golden flicker,
lingering when his mates were flown, lighted
on one of the cherry-trees near, and watching
the gleam of his wings the children forgot
the dispute fast arising out of their resolutions
to be peaceful and considerate.














CHAPTER II.

P in the morning, fluttering and twit-
U tering like a swallow making ready
for flight, was Polly, before the cocks had
begun to crow or the stars grow dim by the
pale light of the pretty green candle colored
with bayberry-wax, making herself fine before
the little looking-glass, quite as anxious as to
her appearance as would become a bride on
her wedding morning; for “to-day,” thought
Polly, “my path will take a new turn.”

Goed or ill, dark or bright, an untried ex-
istence lay before her. Far away in more
newly settled New Hampshire, who knew what
strange adventures might befall her? Her
head was full of Indian stories, which made
26 PETER AND POLLY.



up half of the old women’s talk in those days,
and all she knew of the locality to which
she was going was, that it was a township
not far from the place where, some seventy-
eight years before, the lion-hearted Mrs.
Dustin had fled from her tormentors, with
a string of Indian scalps. That was long,
long before, and tomahawks were not to Polly’s
taste; but she had also listened breathless to
the story of the fair Mrs. Howe, the “beau-
tiful captive” who, only twenty years before,
had been carried from Hinsdale, New Hamp-
shire, and sold to the French in Canada;
and of a little Rachel Meloon, who had been
borne away from Salisbury, and, after dwell-
ing nine years with the savages in their wig-
wams, had been brought back to her friends,
an Indian at heart, singing their songs and
speaking their tongue, and sorrowing, wher-
ever she went, for her dusky friends of the
forest. Reckless Polly, looking in the mirror
at the earnest, glowing little face it showed,
PETER AND POLLY. eT



felt, as she had said, that “if she and Peter
only came safely through, she was quite ready
for anything”; the more excitement the bet-
ter; for she had quite as wild a love for
adventure as if she had been brought up on
dime novels instead of the “Assembly’s Cate-
chism.”

“If anything should happen,” thought Polly,
“it is a good thing to be looking your best;
then if people get into trouble they have
something to help themselves out.”

She stooped just then to buckle her shoe.
Certainly, her feet were something to be proud
of, so slender and shapely, with such finely
turned ankles, such daintily arched insteps ;
“it was quite a pleasure to look at them,”
Polly thought; and, if any one knew, she
ought, for she had often taken pleasure in
mounting a high chair for the sake of a peep
at them, in the little bedroom mirror. But
this morning she was less satisfied with their -
looks than she was wont, for the stockings
28 PETER AND POLLY.



which Mrs. Ellis ‘had laid by for her to put
on were of gray woollen yarn, not the finest,
and now that they were on, she saw that the
legs were too large, and “bagged” about the
ankles. This was an affliction indeed. Polly
caught just that instant a glimpse of a little
pair of white silk stockings with lovely clocks,
which lay in the unclosed top of one of the
bags. She looked at them with longing eyes.
“The soul that hesitates is lost.” “ There is
plenty of time, and no harm in just trying
them on,” she thought ; and.drawing them up
very straightly with her garters close tied,
they looked even prettier than she had ex-
pected when she pulled off the others; so much
so, that she could not help rolling up the gray
woollen ones in a ball, and stuffing them as
far as she could beneath the other contents
of the bag. When she had done this, had it
not been for a certain restless pricking of her
conscience, she would have felt quite satisfied,
the rest of the clothes provided for her to ride
PETER AND POLLY. 29



in being, in truth, quite too good for the oc-
casion; for Mrs. Ellis, who, since her coming
to the house, had taken charge of her ward-
robe, had shared fully in her love of dress, —
perhaps, indeed, was the chief cause of it by
her injudicious conversation. She, in her
maiden days, had been a seamstress in great
Boston, and all her talk now was of the men
and women of fashion she had seen in the
fine houses there: bewitching gallants dressed,
for great dinners, in peach-blossom velvet
trimmed with silver-lace ; matrons with plumed
heads, like crested cockatoos; and fair young
maidens, in “raiment of wrought needlework,”
with love-locks on their foreheads and roses
on their breasts.

Dr. Austin was free-hearted and indulgent,
and Mrs. Ellis, in assuming the care of Polly’s
outfit, had made it, for “a growing girl,” al-
most an extravagant one. The gown the lit-
tle girl was to wear to-day was of imported
worsted damask, re-dyed black for Polly to
30 PETER AND POLLY.



wear as mourning for her mother; but her
cloak, which had been made with a thought
of long-continued future use, was of scarlet
broadcloth trimmed with sable fur, and her
best gown, also of worsted damask, was blue
and white, and flowered with red.

“Very fine indeed,” Polly thought, and cal-
culated to make an impression on all behold-
ers. Even her ambition, in regard to her pro-
spective appearance, was satisfied as to her
clothes. Polly’s careless spirits, however, all
vanished, when, just as her toilet was com-
pleted, she clasped around her throat the little
mourning-necklace which her father had given
her, according to the custom of the time, at her
mother’s funeral. The memento, thoughtlessly
worn till then, now that she was to leave all
the scenes with which she was familiar, brought
back to her thought so many tender memo-
ries, that the quick tears sprang at once to
her blue eyes. She was fairly sobbing when
Mrs. Ellis opened the door. ‘“ What! home-
~

PETER AND POLLY. 31



sick before you start? That will never do!”
she said; “keep up your spirits; you have
a long journey before you, and, if you get
hungry, you can eat, as you ride, one of the
honey-cakes I shall put in your pocket.”

The three men who were to bear the twins
away rode up to the door in good season,
mounted and ready to depart. Before they
came, Polly had tried to give her thoughts of
them a romantic coloring ; but Peter had said,
“They must be three cowardly loons, else
they would not have come all the way from
New Hampshire with no thought of joining
the army.”

When she came to start, Polly found, to her
dismay, that Peter was to “sit double” with .
the youngest and handsomest rider, and the
owner of the best horse, and was to keep in
advance of the rest of the party; the next
most attractive stranger, as far as she could
discern, in the gray light, for it was scarcely
morning when they came, was to ride with the
32 PETER AND POLLY.



saddle-bags ; while she, of course, fell to the
last of the three, and was to sit on a pillion
behind him.

It was not a pretty pillion. Almost dark as
it was, Polly could see the feathers, with which
it was stuffed, looking out through its worn
covering. It was an old bony horse, and the
rider was worst of all. Polly’s vain little heart
failed her as Mr. Ellis lifted her to the seat
behind him. “Good by! and don’t let Peter
spoil his satin breeches,” called Mrs, Ellis; and
that was her last farewell.

Polly waved one hand, while with the other
she clung to the man in front, and the tears
ran down her cheeks. The growing day, that
showed her companion more plainly, did not,
alas! lend him ‘attractions,—a man of fifty,
wrinkled, cross-eyed, and ill shaven; his hair
combed back and braided in a cue, tied round
with a piece of eel-skin and plentifully pow-
dered, which was his only attention to dress
as a fine art; his coat, of poorly woven home-
PETER AND POLLY. 33



spun, badly cut and worse made; his breeches
and long waistcoat of buckskin, old and black-
ened in places; his cocked hat, which had
seen hard service, much the worse for wear ;
while, sure signs of a sloven, there were marks
of candle-drippings on his sleeve, sprinklings
of hair-powder on his shoulders, and scatter-
ings of snuff on the dingy ruffle of his shirt. |

Polly, who was not accustomed to “judging
righteous judgment,” but to rating people by
outside show, was more and more prejudiced
against him as they jogged along; for in ad-
dition to his untidy looks, he paid no more
attention to her than if she had been a sack
of meal laid on behind him.

Why should he? One little girl was not
of much account to him. He was the father
of fourteen children, and, though the eldest of
them were now grown, by a second marriage
to a widow with five he had made his house
so full of little folks, that, when he had a
chance to be quiet, he was glad enough to
34 PETER AND POLLY.



embrace it. In truth, his heart to-day was too
heavy to say much. Mr. Burbean, for that
was his name, was not of the stuff that pa-
triots are made of, and the call of Freedom
woke in him no very ardent response. But he
was an honest, well-meaning man, and a kind
father and husband, and he knew what war
was better than Polly did. By and by he
began to mutter to himself, quite unconscious
of alistener. “There's a hard time coming,
there’s a hard time coming,” he repeated.
“Breadstuffs will be high, and cattle will be
scarce, and the border Injuns will be all
hawkin’ round, and the paper-money — Little
girl!” he said, suddenly remembering her, and
turning round so quickly that Polly was nearly
startled off her seat,—“little girl! do you
know how long your father thinks this war is
going to last?”

“No, sir, Ido not,” replied Polly, respect-
fully; “but I heard him say, last summer,
General Washington thought it would be over
PETER AND POLLY. af



pretty soon, and he should eat his Christmas
dinner at home in Virginia.”

“Christmas?” said Mr. Burbean, “that
comes in December, don’t it? We don’t
make any account of it in our region. It’s
a kind of a Popish day, anyhow.”

“J guess father don’t expect there will be
any peace at present. He said he thought he
might be gone a long time,” said Polly, al-
most with a sob at the thought.

“T guess he don’t! I see your father once,
and he looked like a man of sense,” responded
Mr. Burbean.

“He zs a man of sense,” confirmed Polly,
her heart warming for the first time towards
her companion. Then they rode on again in
silence. The road was rough, for there had
been a great rain the month before, a wild
storm, when in the White Mountains a new
river had broken forth, and the channel of
the Saco had been divided in its midst.
Here and there the road was badly gullied, ;
36 PETER AND POLLY.



and, as the old horse was given to stumbling,
Polly, on her pillion, had a constant thought
as to what might become of her. On, on
they went, now coming to some small village,
where every man they saw had some question
to ask, as to “how things looked where they
had been,” and “what was the news from
the army.” To all inquiries Mr. Burbean
replied, in the same words he had muttered
to himself, “There’s a hard time coming.
Breadstuffs will be high, and cattle will be
scarce, and the border Injuns will be hawkin’
round, and the paper-money won’t be worth
a crop of fire-weed. As for the army, some
said it was a little easier now, but they’d been
short for food and clothing and rum; some
of the soldiers’ time was up, and a good
many of ’em were gitting discouraged.”
“Well, well,” was the cheering answer of
more than one individual, “there are better
times coming. Benedict Arnold is up in the
North, and when he is in motion we are sure
PETER AND POLLY. 37



of good news.” “He ought,” said one young
man, whom they found sitting on a rock by
the way, and polishing an old Queen Anne.
musket, “to have been in Washington’s place.

- He’s the man for the day.”

“Well, no,” said Mr. Burbean, shaking. his
head ; “he’s a brave man, Arnold is, but he
ain't a prudent one. In the dark one needs
prudence, and there’s a hard time coming, —
a hard time coming.” -

This dreary prophecy, often repeated,
weighed down poor Polly’s heart; it seemed
in unison with the gloomy November wind
that wailed through the naked trees with the
voice of coming winter; but, as she rode on,
all other feelings were soon lost in a sense
of physical discomfort. Her shoulders were
well protected by her red cloak, but, in order
_ to shield it from being spattered with mud,
Mrs. Ellis had pinned it up all around, and
covered it with a brown, home-made shawl.

The air was sharp and keen, and her limbs,
38 PETER AND POLLY.



covered with the thin silk stockings, grew
colder and colder, till a chill ran over her,
and she shivered so she could scarcely cling
to her companion, though, on that stumbling
horse, she dared not loosen her hold upon
him for an instant. When she had left her
home, she felt glad that, in the dim morning
light, Mrs. Ellis had not noticed how her feet
were dressed; now, she was half sorry that
her folly had not been discovered, and she
compelled to wear something warmer, On,
on they went. “No haste, no rest,” was Mr.
Burbean’s motto as well as Goethe's. Peter
and his companion, on a dashing steed, quite
a marvel in those days, when, often ill-bro-
ken and commonly overworked, the farmers’
horses were a sorry set, were far in advance
of them. Seth Brown, with the saddle-bags,
though better mounted than they, was gen-
erally some distance in the rear, owing to his
disposition to stop at nearly every farm-house
for a little talk and a drink of cider. Slowly
PETER AND POLLY. 39



forward the old white horse plodded on: now
up some rocky hillside, shaded with white-oak
from which the autumn wind had not yet
stripped the dry and withered leaves; now
through a “valley of dry bones,” where some
makeshift settler had sought to make a forest-
clearing by girdling the trees, and where, dead
and decaying, the tall trunks were falling down
against each other, and the ground was strewn
with dry and broken branches; and now
through the solemn temples of the tall pines,
where, “no feller having come up against
them,” the great trees rose from a hundred
and fifty to two hundred feet, upon either side
’ the road, and where, far above, the low mur-
mur of their boughs seemed to Polly like a
voice from a world unknown. The king’s
mark, “G: R.,” was cut deeply in the bark of
the tallest and finest of them. They were not
common trees in the region where she had
lived, but Polly had heard of them often, “his
Majesty's pines,” that were the property of
40 PETER AND POLLY.



the crown, and which no one could cut,
even if owning the land on which they grew,
without incurring a heavy fine. Here and
there the road took a strange turn, which
had probably been given it by the men who
laid it out, years before, so as to take advan-
tage of the beaver-dams, which were safe and
convenient crossings of the running streams,
thus saving, at first, the expense of making
bridges. Now, the way lay beside a small
pond, and the freezing wind, blowing across
the water, beat against poor Polly pitilessly.
But at last they came out into a clear place,
and were climbing a steep hillside, when Mr.
Burbean, looking up at the sky, vouchsafed
another remark. “Little girl,’ he said, “you’re
used to a clock, ain’t you?”

“Yes, sir, I am,” replied Polly.

“Well, I ain't,” he returned ; “I don’t know
anything about luxuries, but I can tell when
noon comes as well as anybody. It’s ’most
here now, and at the next house I'll stop and
get dinner.”
PETER AND POLLY. AI



“And warm ourselves,” Polly added, her
teeth chattering, and her feet and limbs be-
numbed in her silk stockings.

The next house proved to be a comfortable
log-dwelling, surrounded with fields, several
of them black from being burnt over, the May
before, to rid them of the troublesome trees,
A herd of swine were scampering in and out
of an enclosed piece of oak wood, on one side
of the road, and a shock-headed child was
amusing himself by shouting to them and
pelting them with sticks. Inside of the house
there was a good-sized room, lighted by two
diminutive windows, with four small panes of
glass in each, while a square opening over-
head led, by means of a ladder, to a dark loft
above. A young woman with two children
clinging to her was cutting pumpkin in strips
to dry; and a brisk old dame, her gray hair
drawn straight back without a cap, dressed in
coarse butternut-colored cloth, with a pair of
rough home-made moccasins on her feet, met
42 PETER AND POLLY.



the travellers at the door, as they rode up,
saying “her men-folks were away, making
cider, but she would give them for dinner as
good as she had herself, and that was baked
pumpkin and milk.”

Mr. Burbean ate his from the shell, but
Polly’s was served up to her in a wooden
bowl. It was good enough, but she was too
cold to eat. She drew a small stool to the
fireplace and crouched down as near to the
blaze as possible. The children and young
woman stared at her, full of curiosity ; while
the old grandmother surveyed her with that
look of contempt with which the hard-working,
hard-faring new settlers were wont to regard
anything that seemed like an approach to the
effeminacy of fashionable life.

“You cold?” she asked, at length, indiffer-
ently.

“Yes, madam, my feet are,” said Polly, for
they really ached.

“TI should think so,” said the old woman;
PETER AND POLLY. 43



“those silk stockings look more nice than
wise.”

The rough truth of the speech cut Polly to
the quick. The tears came, and in a minute
more she was sobbing. Mr. Burbean, with his
mouth full of pumpkin, heard the sound, and
felt called on to explain.

“Her mother’s died, and her father’s gone
into the army; that’s what’s the matter of
her,” he said.

“Gone into the army?” asked the woman,
her wrinkled face losing its hardness in an in-
stant. “Well, I wouldn’t cry any more, if I
was you,” she said, turning to Polly ; “it won’t
do him any good, and I’ll get you some old
stockings to draw on your legs, and keep ’em
warm. — And what’s the news from the war ?”
she asked Mr. Burbean.

“Dark,” was the reply. “There’s a hard
time coming. Breadstuffs will be high, and —”

“Hard times! and what’s that to scare
me?” asked the old woman, her eye flashing,
44 PETER AND POLLY.



and the color coming into her face; “have I
lived so easy that I should be frightened by
’em? ‘Hard times! My father and mother
fit with the Injuns before I was born, and I
myself, when I was four years old, see my
Uncle John lying dead with his scalp off; and
me and my husband, hain’t we warred for
everything we’ve had? We've fit for our
sheep with the wolves, and our pigs with the
bears, and our geese with the foxes, and our
chickens with the skunks, and we’ve cut the
trees, and burnt the brush, and dug, and hoed,
and fit with the land for all the crops we’ve
raised. If you want anything, you’ve got to
strike for it, and I ain’t the kind that wants to
lie down, and have them Britishers step on us,
as if we were caterpillars. I hain’t forgotten
about them Connecticut River grants. There’s
been some queer works here in New Hamp-
shire. Hard times! I’m welling to have ’em,
if some of them old wigs in Porchmouth only
can be brought down where they belong !”
PETER AND POLLY. 45



“Well, we'll hope all will prove for the
best,” said Mr. Burbean, fidgeting round on
his leather-bottomed chair. He had the inter-
ests of his fourteen children, to say nothing
of his second wife’s little brood, to think about,
and the vision of outside troubles was, to him,
doubly perplexing.

The old woman, having expressed her mind,
now climbed up the ladder into the loft, and
came down with a pair of long stockings dyed
yellow with onion-skins. The feet were nearly
worn out, and the legs were full of holes, but,
“if keeping warm is what you want, they will
answer for you,” she said to Polly.

Polly had been too nearly frozen to be vain,
and, humbly thanking the giver, she meekly

‘drew them on, putting them over shoes, buck-
les, and all, as, between their large size and
the holes in them, it was easy to do.

The hostess would take no pay for their
dinner from Mr. Burbean ; but Polly wished to
seem grateful, and presented the children with
46 | PETER AND POLLY.



all the cakes that Mrs. Ellis had stowed away
in the pretty patchwork pocket tied on under
her gown, to say nothing of a yard of red
shoe-binding she gave to the young woman.

The afternoon ride was much like the
morning’s, through pine woods and oak, past
meadows and clearings, over shaky bridges,
up steep hills, into lonesome valleys ; almost
the same, only Polly was vastly more com-
fortable, or would have been, had she not
found that, since through excitement she had
almost forgotten to eat her breakfast before
starting, and since at noon she had felt too
chilled and sad to touch her baked pumpkin,
and since her honey-cakes were given away,
she was quite without food and exceedingly
hungry. “O, so hungry!” she thought, and
remembered numerous half-starved voyagers
she had read about in the “World Dis-
played.” The old horse was coming down a
long hill, when Mr. Burbean stopped and
pointed to a house a little way beyond.
“PETER AND POLLY. AT



“There’s the Winsley Tavern; we shall stop
there to-night,” he said. Just then they heard
a sound behind, and Seth Brown with the
saddle-bags rode past. “I'll be at Winsley’s
first,” he called, and waved his hat.

It was a cheery-looking place to Polly, in the
rosy light of the November sunset, now burn-
ing in the west. “Here, at last,” she thought,
“T shall find both fire and supper.” It was a
large house built against the side of a hill, so
that the barn, stables, and cart-houses were
all on a level with its chambers, the bar-room
being on the second story, yet having a ground-
entrance. A tall staff, on one side, swung
aloft the sign-board, which bore upon it a new
device, “The Liberty Tree,” painted in bright-
est green. It was a busy time of year, and
even Polly, with her inexperienced eyes, saw
at once the house must be full of company.
Well-dressed and ill-dressed, in broadcloth and
homespun, buckskin breeches and rawhide
leggins, all were there, and, waiting her arrival,
48 PETER AND POLLY.



close by the immense horse-block, was Peter,
his face aglow with delight.

“O Polly!” he asked, as he helped her to
alight, “did you ever have so good a ride?”
But just then looking down, “ What’s this?”
he asked ; “you, you, of all girls, Polly Aus-
tin! how came you to have those horrid
yellow rags on your feet? Come in, come
into the house, as quickly as you can, and
don’t let anybody see you!”

Poor Polly, completely humiliated, slunk
after him, and he led the way down through
a side door, where he thought they would be
unobserved ; for Peter had reached the house
some time before, and, boy like, already felt
acquainted there.

Polly, the first instant she could, twitched
off the yellow stockings and revealed the
offending silk ones beneath.

“Well, Polly, if you are not a fool, there
never was one!” was Peter’s plain-spoken
remark on seeing them.
PETER AND POLLY. 49



“But that’s a monstrous wicked speech to
make, if I was,” retorted Polly, sharply, never
slow in her own defence.

But O, the supper they had, when supper
came! broiled pigeons and cream toast! What
delicious fare it seemed to poor half-starved
Polly ! while Peter, sitting by, stopped eating
every now and then, to tell about his ride,
which had been as gay as his sister’s had been
dull; for the person that he rode with, instead
of “a cowardly loon,” had proved to be a
“most wonderful, companionable man,’ en-
tertaining him with wild tales of the French
War, and of Indian hunters, that had been
“as good as a book,” he said.

“That is the best praise you can give,”
said Polly; “but there are things in the
world / like better than books; lovely gen-
teel people to talk with, and beautiful things
to see, and merry times and romantic adven-
tures, all of one’s own!” And Polly sighed,
and helped herself to pigeon for the third time.








CHAPTER III.

T was gratifying to the young people, next
morning, to find that they were to stay
over the day at the tavern. Peter’s compan-
ion had business in the neighborhood. Mr.
Burbean, well paid beforehand for his charge,
saw that Polly, though used to horseback rid-
ing, from jogging round with her father, on
his visits to his patients, was not strong
enough for journeying two days in succession ;
and Seth Brown, stirring up great mugs of
flip in the bar-room, was only too glad to
make an excuse for stopping, by saying, he
thought it best the saddle-bags should not
go on before their owners,
Peter and Polly had such fresh young eyes,
PETER AND POLLY. 5I



so eager to see, and finding so much of in-
terest in everything they saw, that it is possi-
ble they looked about the premises quite as
much as was proper ; for, except the chambers,
there was scarcely a room into which they did
not peer. Peter led the way, and Polly, who
felt a cold coming on, and whose limbs were
stiff, but whose spirit was as willing as her
flesh was weak, hobbled after, wherever he
went. They put their heads into the great
kitchen, where, out of the big chimney oven
so large that a child of ten could have gone
into it, a red-faced cook was taking huge iron
pots of smoking baked beans ; into the parlor,
with its sanded floor, its fine looking-glass,
and its bright, glowing fireplace, holding
wood six feet long, to which Polly was always
coming back, and fluttering about like a moth
around a candle, warming her chilly, silken-
dressed feet ; into the little room where a
barber was dressing over a short white wig,
with curling-irons, and a half-dozen men sat
52 PETER AND POLLY.



by, each wishing to be the first to have his
cue re-braided and his face clean shaved, for
the barber was a busy man in those beardless
days; into the entry of the bar-room, filled
with the odor of tobacco-smoke and _ toddy,
and of the loud sound of oaths from some
men quarrelling over a game of cards, the
first real profanity that Polly, brought up in a
Puritan town, where the laws against it had
not yet spent their force, had ever heard.
As for the bar-room itself, where there was
the usual display of jugs and mugs and tank-
ards, and runlets and flowing bowls, in spite
of the recent great rise in the cost of spirits,
only Peter had a glimpse of it ; for, as he said,
“it was no place for a girl to look into.”

“Nor for you, either, where they take the
name of God in vain,” said Polly, solemnly
shaking her head.

But when Peter, anxious to extend his
observations further, went out into the wide
stable-yard, Polly put on her shawl and
PETER AND POLLY. 53



daringly followed after. There stood a half-
dozen great carts, from which the oxen had
been taken to rest and be fed. Two or three
of them were filled with new spinning-wheels,
held firmly in their places by bags of wool,
perhaps the property of some enterprising
manufacturer. A sunburnt hostler, lazy and
slow-motioned, and ready to have a word
with any one, was unloading a clumsy vehicle
in one corner.

“Tf you will look under that shed you'll
find something mebbe you hain’t seen _be-
fore!” he called to Peter, as he came by.
“It’s a chaise; once in a while one stops
here, but not often; a cart with two tongues,
my little brother Peleg calls it, and a good
many folks round here never see one.”

“ Never saw one!” said Polly, with a slight-
ly contemptuous accent. “Chaises are very
common things where I came from; I have
often ridden in them myself.” And with a
glance in the direction indicated, but without
54 PETER AND POLLY.



stopping to examine the wonder, she drew
her shawl closer, and, leaving Peter behind,
hurried into the house, glad to get in from
the bleak outdoor air, and to warm her feet
by the fireplace.

Sitting on a long settle on the side of the
room were two men; the one, a ruddy, blue-
eyed fellow, in a teamster’s striped frock and
long leggins and coarsely made shoes, with-
out buckles, who sat playing with an ox-
goad and talking with the other, an older
man, with a droll little white wig, and a com-
’ plete suit of coarse brown homespun.
“Very common people in very common
clothes,” was Polly’s comment. She wished
the great magnates who had come in the
chaise —a handsome man in fine broadcloth,
and his wife in a silk dress, with muffled
sleeves fastened by glittering buttons — would
only stay where she could take notice of
them. But as there was nothing else to do,
Polly listened to what the two men were

saying.
PETER AND POLLY. 55



“List!” said the younger man; “I haz’t;
but if the war holds out I sha; and when
I go into the army I sha’ n’t come back till
it’s over. There were some young blades
I knew, all in a hurry to be off as soon as
they heard of Lexington; and now that the
rations are cut down, and they find that sol-
diering is hard work and poor pay, they are
grumbling to get home again. ‘Fighting and
fifing are two things,’ as John Millin used to
say.”

“ Ah, what’s become of John?” asked the
elder. “I remember seeing him when he
first came up from Portsmouth, just married,
dressed in scarlet and gold-lace, and his wife
as pretty as a picture, with eyes like two
stars.”

“They were dull enough before she died,”
said the younger man,— “faded with tears;
John and she are both gone, and their last
days were full of trouble that all came from
getting in debt.”
56 PETER AND POLLY.



“Ah, that’s bad! How so?” asked the
other. “His father was a rich man, — ships
going and coming, a troop of black servants,
and a table covered with silver.”

“John had too much money when he was
young, and was too venturesome in using it,”
said the first speaker. “As soon as he was
heir to the property, he married and came up
to this part of the country to lay out new
townships. He had an idea that money would
grow on new lands as pigeon-plants spring up
on a clearing. But Pine Abel, — you know
who he is, —’t was a name he got when he
had a mast contract, and made a good thing
for himself looking after the king’s woods, —
he was too sharp for John. He joined with
him in buying and selling lands, but it some-
how happened, whatever way things went,
the gains were always Abel’s and the losses
John’s. By and by a ship went down, on its
way to England, that John Millin partly
owned, as well as half its cargo of timber
PETER AND POLLY. o7



and spars; and then he got into a lawsuit
about some Connecticut River grants he was
concerned about; and, first one thing and
then another, his property all seemed to go
like dew before the sun. He was in debt,
and his land went here and his money there
to pay his creditors. Old Justice Cram took
his house and part of the furniture, but Pine
Abel was the hardest of all. He took his
cattle and his clothes and his bedding, his
watch and his knee-buckles, and his wife’s
gold beads; and as things grew worse and
worse, and John grew poorer and poorer, he
kept sending the sheriff till there was noth-
ing left to lay hands on. He took their and-
irons out of the fireplace, and the brass
kettle, and their last knife and fork; and,
when there wasn’t anything else, a bag of
wheat that John had planted and raised, and
thrashed himself, and expected to have to live
on. That broke John down; he hadn’t
been used to hard times when he was a boy,
58 PETER AND POLLY.



and when that happened he gave up, sick,
and was as crazy as a loon. His wife bor-
rowed a bed of my sister Betty for him to
lie on, and I went and sat up with him three
nights running; and the fourth morning I
went down to the house, —a miserable place
it was too, made of half-fitting logs with one
small isinglass window ; the doors were open,
and I went in and looked everywhere, but
there wasn’t any one to be seen. The
sheets were turned down from the bed where
John had been, but he was gone. I went
out and searched through the fields near by,
and up in the pasture I looked about and
called, ‘Rob! Rob!’—that was the name
of John’s little boy about ten years old, —
but nobody answered. At last, down in a
bushy place, the first I knew I came upon
Rob, sitting half hid by the tall weeds. He
was white as a sheet, and his eyes were
fierce and shining as a wild-cat’s. ‘Touch
him if you durst!’ he said; and then he saw
PETER AND POLLY. 59



who it was, and he came to me and began
to cry, and he called his mother, — she was
hid close by, —— and she told me all about it.
All through the night before John was out
of his head, and kept saying he was dying,
and that Abel would come and take his
body for debt; and when the breath did
leave him ‘she knew Abel coud do that and
she was afraid he might, so she and Jock
Adams —he was a fellow near, not very
quick-witted, but kinder than many folks that
are — took the corpse and carried it out into
the pasture and hid it under some elder-
bushes. There he lay, the great white flow-
ers —’t was July — nodding and waving like
white feathers over him.

“*Don’t fret yourself, Mrs. Millin,’ said I;
‘Abel’s heart is hard enough for anything, but
attaching a corpse is ghostly work, and he
knows how folks look at it too well to try it.
I’ll make a coffin, and you go right ahead with
the funeral.’ So I nailed up a coffin and put
- 60 PETER AND POLLY.



him in it, and we got bearers, and the minis-
ter made a prayer; but I felt easier myself
when the ground was over him. And you
ought to have seen that boy, Rob, at the
funeral: he just sat by the coffin and watched
for the sheriff, his. great eyes like burning
coals. It almost scared me.”

“But what became of John’s wife?”

“O, she’s gone too. She was a sickly crea-
ture, and after her husband died, she failed
fast, though she lived nearly three years. As
for Rob, just before she died she ’prenticed
him to a man named Dow, a shoemaker. I
think her mind was broken when she did it.
Dow’s sister, a crafty-tongued woman, tended
her in her sickness, and doubtless influenced
her when her mind was wandering. It is, I
fear, a hard place for the poor boy.”

Polly’s romance-loving heart thrilled with
indignant pity as she listened to this tragic
tale. Her sympathies went out toward this
unknown, much-suffering “Rob.” She wished
PETER AND POLLY. 61



she could see him and tell him how sorry she
was for all his trials. “ But that will never
be!” she said, as she retold the story to
Peter, when, half an hour after, he came in,












CHAPTER IV.

OLLY’S heart beat very fast, when, on
the last day of their journey, the old
horse began to quicken his pace, and Mr. Bur-
bean pointed to a black weather-beaten build-
ing, on two sides of which an old barricade
was standing, built of hewn logs to the height
of the roof, with a sentry-box still perched in
the corner. “Little girl,” he said, “that’s the
old garrison; we are getting to the village,
and you will know your uncle’s, for it’s next
to the meeting, and the largest house in the
place.”
Polly sat up very straight, and tried to look
her best as she rode up the street, the village
dogs barking, and the ever-present hogs grunt-
PETER AND POLLY. 63



ing, and scampering, this way and that, before
them.

It was really a pleasant place, for, though
most of the dwellings were small and un-
painted, they were tidily kept, and most of
them recently built, giving a new, fresh look
to the village, to which she had not been ac-
customed in her Massachusetts home.

The meeting-house was a substantial-look-
ing building, with a square porch at one end,
surmounted by a belfry yet waiting for a bell;
and next it, separated by the graveyard, and
with a thrifty orchard of immense pear and
apple trees beyond it, — for there were “ giants
in those days” in the fruit-grower’s world, —
stood her Uncle Philbrick’s home, a large,
handsome house, painted of a light yellow
color, and with a multiplicity of windows
which even inexperienced Polly realized must
have cost a pretty penny, considering the price
of glass.

“ How lovely and genteel it is!” she thought,
64. PETER AND POLLY.



as she dismounted at the horse-block, beside
which Peter, already arrived, was waiting as
he had done at the inn. “No vulgar block,”
she noticed, with her grandeur-loving eyes,
like the pine stumps which served that pur-
pose by so many houses, but a fine round of
well-cut stone.

“ And how lovely and genteel she is!” she
thought again, when the door opened and her
aunt came out to meet her; a handsome wo-.
man of nearly fifty, with keen black eyes,
trim figure, and wonderful pink and white
complexion, whose fairness was enhanced by
a small black patch on her left cheek. Her
dress was of homespun, but of the nicest qual-
ity, her cap-border was trimmed with fine lace,
and her flowered silk neckerchief, where it
crossed her bosom, was fastened with a pin of
brilliant stones set in silver.

Polly returned her kiss with warmth. She
was quite sure she should like her, only she
wished her black eyes were not quite so sharp ;
PETER AND POLLY. 65



they seemed to see at a glance everything
about her. And Polly wished the pins were
out of her cloak, that it might display its
beauty, so as to make a favorable impression
upon her aunt.

“ Have the saddle-bags come?” she asked
Peter. He nodded in answer, but Polly no-
ticed that he had his most sober face.

“Won't you come in and have a drink of
cider?” said Mrs. Philbrick to Mr. Burbean,
who, having helped his charge to alight, was
drawing up the bridle to move on.

“No, madam, I thank you,” he answered,
deferentially. “I’ve had to come on slowly,
so as not to tire the little girl; and as I left
four of the children ailing, I want to get
home.”

“But I would like to ask you,” said Mrs.
Philbrick, stepping up by his horse’s side,
“what people are saying, and how things look
where you have been?”

“Well, I think things look dark,” he an-
66 PETER AND POLLY.



swered ; “here we are, a weakly young coun-
try, at war with a strong old one. It’s like a
small cub fighting with a grown bear. As far
as I can see, there’s a hard time coming.
Breadstuffs will be high, and cattle will be
scarce, and the paper-money —”

“What do people say about that?” inter-
rupted Mrs. Philbrick, anxiously.

“Well, some have hopes ‘of it, and some
hain’t,” was the reply; “but for my part, I
think it will be sure to bring trouble.”

“It’s a ruinous, mischievous thing, having
it,” said Mrs. Philbrick ; “I don’t know where
*t will end. My husband says—” She hesi-
tated, stopped, and began again, “But we
ought to be willing to make sacrifices- for
our country, and I’m sure we do. We wear
homespun all the time, and make herb-tea
three times a day ; and as for killing sheep, my
husband thinks the farmers ought to agree to
raise all the lambs to grow wool for the army.
I don’t think there is any one more ready to
PETER AND POLLY. 67



suffer than my husband and myself, as far as
we have opportunities.”

“Yes, madam, and we sha’n't be likely to
lack ’em,” said Mr. Burbean, a little ner-
vously, as if conscious he was nearing a dan-
gerous subject.

“And as for giving, I don’t know who’s
done more than we,” continued Mrs. Phil-
brick; “yarn, to knit stockings for the sol-
diers, and lead, and some pewter we ought
not to have spared, to run into bullets, and
flannel for blankets; and my husband gave
more money than any one to fit out the last
company with knapsacks and guns and bayo-
nets.”

“You never heard of my joining in saying
your husband had n’t done enough,” returned
Mr. Burbean, desirous to protect himself from
any thought of blame. “It’s a monstrous
raw day,” he added, turning the subject, “and
you must n’t stand out o’ doors, madam.” He
gave his horse a cut with the short stick which
68 PETER .AND POLLY.



he carried by way of a whip, and started off,
though Mrs. Philbrick would evidently have
liked to detain him longer.

“Come in, niece! come in, nephew!” said
Aunt Nancy, when he rode away, and led
first into a long, wide hall, then into a parlor
dark as Egypt, from the inside wooden shut-
ters being closely drawn, then’ into a hand-
some sitting-room, of which the snow-white
floor was sprinkled with shining sand, and the
- walls were covered with panel-work painted
bright blue. A tray, with wineglasses and a
silver tankard, adorned the heavy mahogany
sideboard, and in the corner stood a tall clock
with glistening peacock’s feathers nodding
over it.

“What a lovely, genteel place!” thought
Polly again ; and yet her first sense of delight
seemed somehow to have flown. Perhaps,
she reasoned, it was because she was so cold ;
for she was shivering, and in the wide fireplace,
with its elegant brass andirons, only a feeble
PETER AND POLLY. 69



blue flame was fluttering over two moist green
sticks.

Aunt Nancy helped Polly to take off her
wrappings. She looked sharply at the scarlet
cloak. “A very showy garment,’ she re-
_marked, as she folded it up; and, taking off
the protecting veil from Polly’s fine “ musk-
melon hat,” she examined it carefully, as if
with a milliner’s critical eye.

“Tf you want to warm your feet, you may
come into the kitchen,” she said, at last. And
Peter and Polly followed into a large room
that looked dark and cheerless, spite of the
great fire on its hearth, from its walls being
painted a dull Indian red, —a common color
for working-rooms in those days. There were
large beams in the ceiling, from which hung
long strings of dried apples, tufts of herbs,
. bunches of onions, crook-necked squashes, and
the glowing flame of bell-peppers. A tall girl,
with a mulatto’s complexion and crisp hair,

but with something in her features and bear-
70 PETER AND POLLY.

ing that suggested Indian blood as well, was
stirring, with a long wooden stick, a kettle
of boiling hominy that hung from the crane
over the fire. She looked out of the corners
of her eyes at the new-comers, as she moved
about doing her housework; and when she
sat down with a pan of apples to be pared,
she changed the place of her chair so as to
be where she could still watch them. Under
Aunt Nancy’s eyes and the girl’s, poor Polly
felt between two fires. “If she could only
have something to eat, perhaps it would seem
more cheerful,” she thought, as she smelt the
hominy, for her long ride had made her hun-
gry ; but Mrs. Philbrick made no mention of
luncheon, and she concluded she must wait .
for the family supper.

“You had better warm your feet,” said
Aunt Nancy ; for Polly, sitting before the fire,
had kept those offending members tucked
away under her dress in a most peculiar fash-
ion. Polly put them out towards the blaze,
PETER AND POLLY. 71



timidly. What lumpy ankles she had! What
gouty-seeming legs! She had changed about
to-day, and by dint of pulling and tugging, and
breaking a few stitches, had succeeded in
drawing on her silk stockings over the legs of
the yellow woollen ones. The feet she had
nearly cut away. Aunt Nancy spied the
trouble in a minute.

“Vou have n’t put those nice silk ones over
another pair of stockings, have you?” she
asked.

“Yes, madam,” returned Polly, not know-
ing how to evade.

“But you don’t wear silk stockings every
day, do you?” continued her questioner.

“O, no!” replied Polly; but looking up, and
seeing a pair of handsome jewelled knobs in
her aunt’s ears, she thought it best to main-
tain her position as a young woman of fash-
‘ion, —“O, no! but I have a good many pairs
of them, a good many pairs.”

Aunt Nancy’s face clouded. “Well, if you
72 PETER AND POLLY.

_ have, I hope you don’t expect to wear them
here,” she said, in a somewhat severe tone.
“Little girls like you, I am sure, have no need
of finery ; and, even if you were older, it is
more becoming for young women in times
like these to be learning how to card and spin
and weave, than to be thinking about bedizen-
ing themselves with rich clothes.”

“But father,” began Polly, by way of
apology, “bought and had made for me a
good many things before I came, because he
thought it would be harder to get them here,
and be troublesome for you beside; so he
bought what he thought would last a long
while, just as he got Peters Latin books, so
that he could have them for study as soon as
he could get a teacher, to be fitted for college.”

Aunt Nancy's face darkened again. “As
for Peter,” she said, turning to him, as he
stood gloomily looking toward the fire, “your
father writes me that you are exceeding fond
of your books, and an apt scholar for your
PETER AND POLLY. 73



years. I am very glad to find you have im-
proved your advantages, for, I fear, in times
like these, people will not have much leisure
for study. A great many young men have
gone to the war,.and those that are left have
to do double duty; some schools are being
closed for lack of teachers, and college educa-
tions will have to be scarce.”

“But Peter,” piped in Polly, always a little
too ready to put in a word, “must study,
whatever comes; for father says it’s a pity
not to have him get all the learning he can,
when he is such a forward lad; and father left
word —”

Peter shook his head savagely, to make her
stop.

“Your father left word, I trust,” said Aunt
Nancy, with impressive solemnity, “that you
should be obedient children, and do as your
uncle and I see fit. We shall give you every
advantage we think it right for you to have;

and if we deny you anything, we shall expect
4
74. PETER AND POLLY.



you to realize that we know what is best for
you, and do it for your good.”

Polly saw the odd-looking colored girl
glance up from her apple-paring with a queer
twinkle in her black eyes. She was evidently
pleased to have some one come in for a share
of her mistress’s counsels and reprimands,

“When you have warmed your feet, you
had better come up stairs to your bedroom,
and change your stockings, and I will help
you to unpack your bags,” said Aunt Nancy,
after a long silence that had followed her
last remark ; and Polly, completely subjugated,
obeyed without a word.

It was a neat little chamber that she found
ready for her reception. Its high-heaped,
single bed, with its heavy quilt of blue and
white woollen, was partially concealed by
“hangings” of checked linen of the same
color, and a snowy curtain, wrought with blue
yarn, hung at the window ; but Polly’s troub-
led eyes at once perceived that there was no
PETER AND POLLY. 75



looking-glass upon the wall, and, what was
worse, the one window looked out upon the
graveyard, where the autumn wind now chased
the dead leaves to and fro, over mounds cov-
ered with the brown frozen grass, — desolate,
unmarked graves, for there were but four or
five headstones in the whole enclosure. As
for unpacking the bags, Aunt Nancy certainly
performed her task thoroughly. She pulled
out every article, and examined it minutely
before she laid it by. She noticed the trim-
ming of the dresses, the quality of the linen
under-garments, the sewing of the patchwork
pocket, and the starching of the tuckers ;
she contemptuously sniffed at the sight of the
unlucky sampler, and even peered into Polly’s
box of mementos, locks of hair and scraps of
copied verses, the costless keepsakes of her
childish ‘friends,

“There is a cousin of my mother’s living
near here, is there not?” asked Polly, “a lady
named Miss Keziah Hapgood. My father
76 | PETER AND POLLY.

wanted me to find if there was, and to go and
visit her if she asked me, for he was sure she
would be kind to me for my mother’s sake.”

“There is such a person,” answered Mrs.
Philbrick, coldly, and counting over Polly’s
pairs of stockings as she did so, “ but she does
not live near here, and — she — is not a per-
son I have —a great deal to do with,” she
added slowly, as if reflecting what tosay. “As
for your clothes, I fear they are unseemly fine
for a girl of your age,” she remarked, when her
scrutiny of them was completed.

Poor Polly! The charm had flown from
Aunt Nancy. She seemed plainer to her than
even Mr. Burbean in his coarse> coat and
greasy buckskins. She quite envied Peter his
boy’s privileges ; for he, meanwhile, had left
the house and gone down to his uncle’s store,
the only one in the neighborhood.

The store was a long, low building with
two doors, outside of which a half-dozen ox-
teams were standing, while within the room
PETER AND POLLY. 77



was almost filled by customers and village
loungers,

At one end a great fire was roaring, and
round it a group of teamsters was gathered,
while near by was a small counter set with
mugs and glasses in front of a deep shelf dis-
playing jugs and decanters and various pew-
ter measures. Behind the counter stood a
handsome man of fifty-five, busy, when Peter
entered, in filling from a brown jug a wooden
bottle for a red-faced man wearing a shoe-
maker’s apron. He came forward and greeted
Peter cordially. “And this is the nephew
who has come to be a son to me!” he said,
taking the boy’s hand warmly in his own ;
“but since we shall have ‘plenty of time to
talk together, and as to-day is one of my busi-
est, when, as you see, I am taking a clerk’s
place, I trust you will look about for yourself
till I am at leisure.”

Peter, thus encouraged, and anxious to
guess at his future, boy like, sauntered round
78 PETER AND POLLY.



with his eyes wide open to see everything to
be seen.

What a busy, busy place it was!

There were more customers than Mr. Phil-
brick and his assistant could possibly attend
to. Here was a woman trying to barter some
green cheeses, flavored with johnswort and
tanzy, in part payment for a linen-wheel ;
there, a rough-looking boy was endeavoring
to dispose of a half-dozen hog-yokes, made by
himself; while a coquettish miss, with her
hair drawn over an immensely high cushion,
was making a poor bargain, for herself, by
exchanging a quantity of woollen yarn for a
tall horn comb and a necklace of showy
beads. Suddenly the loud talk around the
fireplace was checked ; a little man with rosy
face and snow-white wig appeared at the door;
Mr. Philbrick hastened immediately to serve
him, bowing low and respectfully ; and with-
out being told, even Peter was at once aware
of the presence of the village preacher.
PETER AND POLLY. 79



From floor to ceiling the store was filled
with articles of merchandise. Home-made
cloths, linen, tow, and woollen, wooden ware
of all kinds, “wheels within wheels,’ candle-
sticks and warming-pans, hoes, rakes, and
shovels, medicines for the sick, and ribbons
and laces for the would-be fair, — nothing was
wanting. In the back part of the building
were large bins heaped with grain, and one
small apartment divided from the main room
was partially filled with skins and furs; for
Mr. Philbrick had driven, heretofore, a brisk
trade with hunters and trappers. Black-bear
skins and gray wolves’, silver fox and red,
mountain cat and wolverine, glossy mink and
soft brown beaver,—how many brookside
builders, how many fierce wild creatures of
the forest, were represented by those heaps
of fur! As for the piles of deer and moose
hides, Peter scarcely gave them a look.

Surely, there was enough both to see and
to hear in this little store; yet Peter gazed
80 PETER AND POLLY.

about with a stranger’s homesick heart, and,
for some unknown reason, felt by no means
drawn toward his uncle. He wondered at
himself that he was not; for Mr. Philbrick
seemed, certainly, as his father had described
him, “a gentleman, both in looks and _bear-
ing”; not tall, but straight, with finely shapen
limbs, a beauty much appreciated in those
days. His complexion was clear, and his
features handsome, only his eyes had a cold,
hard look, and the smile which constantly
played about his mouth had a frigid bright-
ness, like ice in the sun. His dress, like his
wife’s, was of the best quality of homespun ;
but the value of his shoe and knee buckles,
and the fineness of his shirt-ruffles, proved
him to be by no means forgetful of the re-
finements of dress. The throng of customers,
many of whom had a considerable distance to
go home, all departed before the brief autumn
day had fairly passed, and Mr. Philbrick threw
round him his long cloak to go home to his
supper.
PETER AND POLLY. SI



“Nephew,” he said, as Peter walked beside
him, “I have heard, from your father, of your
ready parts and your industry as a scholar,
and, when circumstances permit, we shall be
most happy to obtain for you some master
who will bé able to further you in your
studies. Till then, with all respect to the
Greek and the Latin, I think the best thing
you can do is to try and obtain a practical
knowledge, both of the use and the proper-
ties of figures, such as you will acquire in
trade; and for this purpose I intend to give
you a place at the little counter near the
fireplace, where you found me, myself, to-
day. It will be light work,—all you will have
to do is to measure out for the various cus-
tomers the different kinds of spirits they may
want, and to see to keeping their scores, —
very light work; or, if some woman comes in
and wants a bodkin, or some cap-lace, or such
trifling thing, if you are not otherwise busy,

you can attend to her ;—no hard labor, and
82 PETER AND POLLY.



a great deal of knowledge to be gained,
Everything in its place, my lad; Greek and
Latin in theirs, and trade in its own. You
will always be the wiser for a little practical
knowledge of the use of figures.”

More sober-looking young folks are seldom
“seen than the two who sat opposite each
other at Mrs. Philbrick’s supper-table. The
keen-eyed maid-servant glanced first at one,
then at the other, and then smiled to herself,
when she brought in a plate of hot fire-cakes.
Polly’s heart was so full of her troubles
that even her traveller’s appetite was gone;
the hominy tasted to her like “bread of af-
fliction,” the catnip tea like a bitter draught.
She almost wished her cup could have been
filled from the little pot that stood by her
aunt’s plate, and from which she replenished
her husband’s teacup and her own. That
little pot breathed round it an odor which
made Polly think of what she did not, could
not believe would be in any honest American
PETER AND POLLY. 83



house. “ That was too much to suspect of
people!” she thought, as she trifled with her
pretty little silver teaspoon. It was marked
on the handle, “J. Millin.”

“Millin? Millin?” what was it connected
with that name? At last it came to her, —
the teamster’s story of the young bridegroom
in the gold-laced coat, and the dark-eyed boy
watching his father’s corpse under the white-
blossomed elder. “The same name,” she
thought, too full of her own dull forebodings
to dwell long on anything not directly con-
cerning herself.

“Polly,” said Peter, when, after supper, they
were alone together for a few moments, —
«Polly, I am afraid we sha’ n’t be very happy
here.”

“Afraid?” said Polly; “I am monstrous
miserable already!”

“Uncle Philbrick wants me to help in the
store, and, if I do, how can I study at all?”
asked Peter.
84 PETER AND POLLY.

“And Aunt Nancy only likes to have me
wear dreadful clothes,” bemoaned Polly.

“ Well,” said Peter, as his father had wished,
discreet beyond his years, “if we are not

-happy, let us keep our mouths shut and be
quiet; that is the bet thing that people in
trouble can do.”

Becky, the mulatto-girl, went up with Polly
to her room at night, to carry the candle and
see her in bed. “Ye'r gitting lonesum? And
how d’ye think ye’r goin to like?” she asked,
trying to make acquaintance. But Polly, just
ready to cry, was in no mood to be approached,
and gave, perhaps, too curt a reply. The girl
felt it. She laid down Polly’s little mourning
necklace, which she had taken up to examine,
and snatched up the candle with a malicious
twinkle in her eyes. “I hope yer’ll sleep well,
but I should n’t like to be so near that grave-
yard; more’n one have seen them dead folks
walkin’,” she said, shutting the door as she did

so, and hurrying down stairs, chuckling to
herself.
PETER AND POLLY. 85



Poor Polly drew the curtains close, and hid
her head under the sheet, till she heard the
great clock below strike the hour of midnight.
It seemed such a gloomy, dreary place she was
in! like a queen in a dungeon-cell, or a maid
forlorn in a castle-tower ; and then it was such
a perplexing puzzle! Her aunt’s inconsistent
harshness in speaking of Polly’s fine clothes,
and her evident fondness for wearing them
herself; the boastful mention of herb-tea to
Mr. Burbean, and the little pot by her plate ;
the fine house, the costly table-china, the odd
servant-girl with her Indian form and her mu-
latto skin and her twinkling eyes, —all to her
were mysteries. Wondering over them, she
dropped asleep. Peter, in the little chamber
on the other side of the house, sat up for a
long while and looked out of the window at
the orchard, where the tall trees stood, leaf-
less and cheerless in the white moonlight.
His boy life had but one ambition. “Come
what may,” he said, over and over to him-
86 PETER AND POLLY.

self, “I will, in some way, be fitted for col-
lege!”

Had Polly been older and shrewder, she
would not have seen so much to surprise her
in her uncle’s and aunt’s demeanor, Their
conduct was, in a worldly view, a perfectly
natural course. Abel Philbrick had in his
boyhood been poor himself and thrown with |
men of wealth. The sense of contrast between
his position and theirs had nursed in him an
intense desire for riches and power, which had
made itself the guiding motive of his life. By
perseverance, sagacity, strict economy, and the
most untiring industry, he had become pos-
sessed of what was in those days a considera-
ble fortune, while yet a young man, and could,
had he so chosen, have made himself a pleasant
home in one of the older towns of New Eng-
land. But, to be “second in Rome” was not
to his mind; and he accordingly turned his
thoughts toward the younger settlements in
New Hampshire, where, thought he, “I could
PETER AND POLLY. 87



lead instead of follow, and my power, if lim-
ited, would be undisputed.”

But the way of a would-be leader is not
always a primrose path. The sturdy settlers
in the neighborhood to which he came were
as independent thinkers as himself, and their
wives in their tow aprons were by no means
inclined to pay much deference to his hand-
some bride in her wedding brocade. In fact,
they soon found themselves standing quite
alone in society. But if not loved or ad-
mired, Abel Philbrick soon made himself an
object of fear. He was the only person in
the neighborhood whose property enabled
him to be a habitual money-lender to the
hard-pressed men, frequently in want of the
actual necessities of life about him. He es-
tablished, also, a small store, where he sold
largely upon trust, and made sharp bargains
in barter-trades. Woe to the delinquent
debtor when pay-day came round! He found
he must deal with a man who, “even to the
88 PETER AND POLLY.



uttermost farthing,’ would “demand his own
with usury”; and that, too, in a time when
there was scarcely an article of food, clothing,
or household stuff which it was not allow-
able for a creditor to seize upon. Improved
lands thus came into his possession, cleared
and made fit for cultivation by their first
unfortunate holders; cattle which luckless
farmers had sought to raise for themselves
browsed in his pastures and fed in his stalls.
His fine new house was filled with looking-
glasses, tables, silver and pewter ware, and-
irons and candlesticks, which had once be-
longed to other owners. It is impossible to
conceive the bitterness of feeling which those
who had, sometimes justly, been obliged to
yield up such articles of household use and
necessity, and were suffering for the want of
them, often felt toward the person that had
taken them. But the doubtfully gotten wealth
which had made Mr, Philbrick many secret
enemies in his own township had served to
PETER AND POLLY. 89



recommend him in other communities. Con-
scious that his new fortunes made him more
nearly their equal, he revived his old ac-
quaintance with two or three families residing
near Portsmouth, and through their influ-
ence and favor he received from the Gov-
ernor and Council an appointment as agent,
or under-surveyor, of “The King’s Woods.”
It was his care to see that none of the tall
white-pines, which, by British law, were re-
served for the use of the royal navy, were
cut without his authority. The largest of
these trees were marked, and a register was
kept of them, and a considerable fine exacted
from any one who had been found disobeying
‘the law by cutting one, or from any hapless
husbandman who, in clearing his own land,
had been so unfortunate as to damage one
growing upon it. In the exactions of these
fines Mr. Philbrick was exceedingly strict,
and would abate nothing; though some sus-
picious persons hinted their doubts if the
90 PETER AND POLLY.

king’s treasury was ever much richer for
his extreme zeal in collecting them. Year
by year, Mr. Philbrick’s fortune increased,
while his ambition grew with it, and his
style of living became more costly. His
wife sent to Portsmouth for stiff silk dresses
and real laces. Their table was set with
daintiest china, and, as a crowning act, they
purchased a chaise, in which, over the rough
roads around, they scarcely dared to ride
about. But at last even they found them-
selves under a shadow. The trouble between
the mother-land and our own became more
and more an acknowledged fact. “The air
was full of freedom.” The plain-spoken com-
mon people woke to a new sense of their
dignity as “sons of liberty.” Mr. Philbrick
thought it best to overlook the wanton cut-
ting of King George’s pines for the present.
He said nothing, and hoped the gathering
storm would pass. by; but no, the feeling
was too deep to be transient. The leading
PETER AND POLLY. QI

spirit of the place was the minister, a dar-
ing little man, Parson Piper, who loved to
rule by nature, and whose office in those
days gave to him the power to do so in reality.
An ardent politician, who never knew the
name of fear, and whom a little opposition
would only rouse to make more outspoken,
his sermons were at this time about as peace-
breathing as the Marseillaise Hymn. In his
pastoral calls, his conversation stirred up the
people to resistance to oppression like the
sounding of a fife. By and by, the reports
came of the battles of Lexington and Con-
cord, and afterwards of Bunker Hill. Like
one man, the people were united. Poor
“Pine Abel,” as in derision he was called,
found himself in a hard place. Some zealous
patriots banded themselves together not to
buy anything at his store, or have any deal-
ings with him, until his position should be
satisfactorily explained. “Brown Beck,” a

slave-girl of mixed white, Indian, and negro
92 PETER AND POLLY.



blood, whom Mr. Philbrick, like most of his
possessions, had taken in payment for debt,
brought to her mistress a startling tale of a
plan by some lawless young fellows of pay-
ing up old scores by riotous proceedings
against her master, ‘It never seemed to oc-
cur to her master and mistress that Brown
Beck was “as good to carry as to fetch,”
and, by her exaggerated revelation of affairs
in the household, — of the little pot by her
mistress’s plate, and of mysterious words
dropped by her master, — had done much to
awaken prejudice against them, and even to
sow suspicions which were wholly unfounded
among the lower classes of the village gossips,

Mr. Philbrick found he must take a de-
cided stand, although, in truth, beyond his
own interests, he had little concern as to what
form public affairs might assume. Accord-
ingly, in a gathering of the townsfolk, he
took the opportunity of declaring his position
in a speech, whose fervor, he thought, would
PETER AND POLLY. 93



make amends for his delay. He urged the
young men to enter the newly formed army,
and called on parents to offer their sons, and
wives their husbands, on the altar of freedom.

His wife laid by her costly dresses, and
talked of economy, frugality, and devotion to
her country wherever she went; for poor
Aunt Nancy was fond of display, and must
make a show of her patriotism, as she had
done before of her wealth and station. Be-
sides, Brown Beck’s accounts had sorely
frightened her. She thought if her brother
should enter the army, and her niece and
nephew come to her during his absence, their
presence would be, in a measure, a protec-
tion to her husband ; for, with all her faults,
she was a devoted wife. But when Peter
and Polly appeared, — Polly with the fine
clothes which she feared would scandalize
the frugal-minded- neighbors, whom now she
wished to please; and Peter with a letter
from his father requesting the procurement
94 PETER AND POLLY.



for him of some teacher in Latin and Greek,
just when the penny-saving Mr. Philbrick
(whose best clerk had left for the army) had
concluded to make him of service in the
store, — she was perplexed and troubled.

She had other troubles as well, for her hus-
band’s business anxieties she made her own,
and just then he was full of them. He had
lent large sums of money in such a way, that,
could he have collected his dues as usual, it
. would have added greatly to his wealth to
have done so. As it was, should his debtors
choose to pay in the newly issued paper cur-
rency, of which, with his shrewd eyes, he al-
ready stood in dread, — what then?

That was what Aunt Nancy was always
asking herself when she had a sharp word
for Brown Beck or a cross look for Polly.

EO Hig Br








CHAPTER V.

T was a bright Sunday morning in De-
cember. Polly sat in her uncle’s great
pew in the meeting-house, slyly looking around
her, it is to be feared, rather than listening to
the sermon. She had on her fine hat and
her scarlet cloak trimmed with fur; but she
had been made to wear her common dress
rather than her best one, and over her shoul-
ders was pinned a checked homespun necker-
chief, to make her look more as a “girl of the
period” should, in her Aunt Nancy’s eyes.
The meeting-house was yet unfinished ; for,
although

“Great church, high steeple,

Proud committee, poor people,”
96 PETER AND POLLY.



was a descriptive rhyme of the time, it was
still true that “pay as you go” was more the
motto of church-builders than it is to-day. It
was now seven years since the raising of the
meeting-house-frame ; but though, every town-
meeting since, some appropriation had been
made, there was still much remaining to be
done toward completing the building. There
was, as yet, no gallery in the place designed
for it, and some of the gallery windows were
unglazed, and boarded up until glass could be
procured ; the floor of the house had been
“lotted,” —that is, the aisles and the location
of each pew had been chalked upon the floor,
and a committee had been appointed to decide
what families should build upon the different
lots, — but times were hard, and only three
men, Justice Cram, Mr. Philbrick, and the vil-
lage doctor, had availed themselves of the
right to erect one, though, at the public ex-
pense, a pew had also been provided for the
minister's family. The rest of the audience
PETER AND POLLY. 97



still sat on benches. They were very grand
and genteel things to have, those pews “ with
winscot work.” Polly felt quite like a superior
being, as, seated in her uncle’s, she peered
round at the congregation a little more than
was becoming a temple worshipper ; at the old
men in their red flannel caps, and the old wo-
men with their great muffs ; at Parson Piper’s
large brood of little folks all trying to get their
feet on one small foot-stove ; at the solemn-
looking deacons, who, like the minister, faced
the assembly, while in front of their seat hung
on hinges a semicircular board, which served
as a table on sacramental days.

Parson Piper, this morning, looked unusu-
ally bright and rosy, and in his fervent sup-
plications for the triumph of freedom’s cause,
and the protection of freedom’s army, so lost
thought of all around him, as nearly to forget
to pray for poor Mr. Burbean, who had sent

in a note, having just buried his fourteenth
child.
98 PETER AND POLLY.



After the long prayer, Parson.Piper lined
out a hymn, one of Tate and Brady’s, which
collection had not, in this country place, yet
given way to the more modern Watts. How
one of the deacons scowled during the sing-
ing! Polly could not help seeing his discom-
fiture. A bass-viol had just been introduced
into the singers’ seat, a large square, walled in
like a pen, opposite the pulpit, with a long
table for the singers to lay their books upon.
Against the use of this instrument the deacon
had testified in vain. “The Lord’s house is
not the place for fiddling,” he had said, and its
profane notes were never heard but his face
showed forth his disapprobation. But one
good thing the viol did: it helped to drown
the singers’ voices ; for music then, through-
out the country, was a little-cared-for art, and
in this inland parish had been more neglected
even than in other places; the Rev. Shear-
jashub Smith, Parson Piper’s predecessor, hav-
ing been a narrow-minded man of the pattern
PETER AND POLLY. 99



of fifty years before, looking with disfavor on
all new movements, and thinking singing by
note, instead of by rote, a dangerous innova-
tion little short of sin.

When the text was given out, “The arms
of the wicked shall be broken, but the Lord
upholdeth the righteous,” everybody knew that
the sermon would be one for the times. Polly
wondered, as she listened, whether old King
George’s ears were not burning, over the sea ;
she was sure they would be, could he have
been in her place.

On one side of the meeting-house, directly
in the range of Polly’s gaze, was a long bench,
on which the boys were seated. Here sat
half a dozen lads, of about ten or twelve years,
and one somewhat older, fifteen or thereabouts.
He was coarsely dressed, and in garments far
too thin for the day. His tow frock had a
poverty-stricken look, and it made Polly al-
most shiver to see it in that unwarmed house.
Round his neck, however, was a warm black
100 PETER AND POLLY.



and red woollen muffler. That was better than
nothing, Polly thought, for she had a tender
heart, and never saw anything like discomfort
without a desire to relieve it ; yet she did not
quite dare to pity him, when by chance he
turned his head and she saw his face fully. It
had such a daring, resolute look, such a fixed
expression of determined purpose, that pity
seemed an unworthy feeling to have for him.
And still there was a patient sadness in his
large dark eyes, that made even Polly sure he
was not only poor, but lonely and in trouble.
She was wondering what that trouble might be,
when Price Hodgkins, the tithing-man, a dis-
tant relative of her uncle, and a clerk in his
store, came up the aisle. It was part of the
tithing-man’s duties to prevent travel on the
Sabbath, and to maintain order in the Sunday
services, to drive out the dogs from the sanc-
tuary, and to see that the boys, who were boys
even in those days, were not carrying things
with too high a hand. Such persons were not
PETER AND POLLY. 101



unneeded, for the congregations of that time
were much larger, and far more mixed, than
those of to-day. The boys and younger peo-
ple often sat together, and some eye to over-
look them seemed, in many cases, indispensa-
ble. But Price Hodgkins, a short, fidgety
man, with a fondness for giving raps and cuffs,
magnified his office, and was always looking
round for a chance to exercise his authority.
To-day he thought there was a disturbance
among the boys, and made haste to bring the
offender to punishment. But, with all his zeal,
he had a time-serving heart, and, though he
must have seen that the real culprit was Caleb
Cram, a restless boy of thirteen, Justice Cram’s
only son, who was amusing himself by sticking
hedgehog-quills, which he had brought with
him for his entertainment, into the chubby
youngster who sat next him, and though, by
good rights, he should have been in his fa-
ther’s pew, the tithing-man dared not touch
him, but gave a sharp rap, with his long staff,
102 PETER AND POLLY.



at the older lad with the tow frock. It was
quite safe to do that! A bitter look of wounded
pride and injured feeling came into the boy’s
face ; a sense of injustice made his dark eyes
flash. He bit his lip, as if trying to conceal
how cruelly he had been hurt.

“Tt’s a shame!” said Polly, in a whisper to
Peter, beside her.

Peter looked up, wondering; his eyes had
been fixed on the preacher, and he had seen
nothing.

Aunt Nancy shook her head at Polly; but,
though she ceased to glance about, she could
not bring her thought back to Parson Piper
and his sermon. That terrible enigma of life
began to puzzle her. ‘“ Whence comes all this
pain and trouble in the world, and why is it so
unequally divided?” She was anxiously pon-
dering the question, in her blind, childish way,
when she found the “finally, brethren,” of the
sermon was fairly passed, and the people were
rising for the last prayer. As she went out
.

PETER AND POLLY. 103



with her aunt, she saw, on the negroes’ bench
by the door, Brown Beck, with a yellow ker-
chief round her neck, looking disdainfully
down on old Pompey, Justice Cram’s man of
all work, a patient, pious old negro, the only
other slave in the place. Just outside the
door, in a big beaver bonnet, and large cloak
of brown stuff, was a woman of perhaps forty-
five years of age, singularly straight and tall,
and well proportioned. Toil, care, and trouble,
—one saw from a glance at her strongly
marked yet gentle countenance that she had
met them all, and met them with cheerful en-
durance and fearless strength. Polly, coming
down the meeting-house steps, felt her hand
clasped by a firm grasp, like that of a man.
“T want to ask you,” said the tall woman, “if
you are Mrs. Philbrick’s niece, and Dr. Peter
Austin’s little girl.”

“Yes, madam, I am,” answered Polly.

“Then,” said the stranger, “you must be
my cousin Polly’s daughter. I knew that you
104. PETER AND POLLY.



must be, when I saw you in the pew, for you
have your mother’s face, and I love you for it!
And I am your mother’s cousin, of whom,
perhaps, you have heard her speak, Keziah
Hapgood.”

“T have, indeed!” said Polly. “She did a
little while before she died, and told how she
used to play with you, and be at your house
when you were children together. My father
said he thought you lived near here, and bade
us ask about you of Aunt Nancy; and I believe
Peter has a letter for you, which father wrote,
and laid in our Bible, for us to give you if we
saw you; but Aunt Nancy never told us you
went to this meeting.”

“Well,” said Miss Keziah, “if that is so, I
will walk over with you to your uncle’s house,
and get it. I have wanted to hear from your
family ever since your Uncle Philbrick told
me of your mother’s death, and have thought
very often of you, and, if your uncle and aunt
are willing, I shall want you and your brother
PETER AND POLLY. 105

-



to come over to my house, as soon as may be,
and make me a long visit.”

“T am sure I: should like to do so,” said
Polly, quite wondering at her inclination; for
Miss Keziah was anything but the “ genteel
lady,’ who had always been the ideal of her
fancy; but the tall Amazon brought with her
such a sense of love and protection, that she
clung to her instinctively.

Just at that moment the lad in the tow
frock passed by. Miss Keziah laid her large
hand, from which she had drawn the knit
woollen glove, upon his arm. “ Rob,” she said
gently, “don’t be discouraged. Fear God
and naught else. I saw you this morning,
and you were not to blame.”

“And I saw too!” put in Polly, always
ready for a word, and thinking her scarlet
cloak gave her dignity enough to speak first.
“I was very sorry, and the tithig-man was
very unjust.”

The boy blushed and smiled. His toilful
106 PETER AND POLLY.



life had made him feel so much older than
herself, that Polly’s forward sympathy seemed
to him like the friendliness of a kind-hearted
child; yet he had seen enough of hard usage,
and he valued it none the less. Mrs. Phil-
brick, who had stopped for a word with Mrs,
Cram, came down the steps just then, and
looked somewhat sourly when she saw Miss
Hapgood speaking with her niece. She
greeted her, however, with decent civility, and
the three walked together to the house.

The families who lived in close proximity
to a meeting-house were, on Sunday-noons,
expected to keep open doors,. Round their
cheery fireplaces the people, who had come
in from all sides of the neighboring country,
used to meet, and replenish the iron pans of
coals, which they carried in their tin foot-
stoves, eat their luncheons of bread and
cheese, discuss the sermon or the “ doctrines,”
whisper low the floating gossip, and pass
round the cider-mugs. Now, on these occa-
a

PETER AND POLLY. 107

sions, the state of the country was the one
subject of conversation, often dwelt upon with
such faith in God’s protecting care for what
they deemed his cause, as to make it seem
the most fitting theme for the day. Mr. Phil-
brick’s, though so near the meeting-house, had
never been a favorite Sabbath gathering-place,
but there were, commonly, a few who met
there: Price Hodgkins, the tithing-man ; and
sometimes Justice Cram and his wife, for
whom Mrs. Philbrick never failed to bring out
a little of their choicest spirit in decanters ;
and, on rare occasions, Parson Piper himself,
who liked to argue upon Arminianism, Anti-
nomianism, Election, Baptism, and the Half-
way Covenant with Aunt Nancy, who had a
taste for theological controversy.

To-day, all these were there, and Mr. and
Mrs. Burbean ; she with a mourning-scarf, in
token of her affliction, and he with a pair of
black gloves. It was the first time that Par-
son Piper had come in, at such a time, since
108 PETER AND POLLY.



Mr. Philbrick’s patriotism was called in ques-
tion ; but to-day he was in good temper with
all the world, except the British. The advice
which the general Congress had ‘given the
delegates from the late Exeter Convention,
the glorious prospect that New Hampshire
would take the lead in assuming a certain
form of self-government, till the present diffi-
culties were over, were, to him, so cheering
and inspiring, that he could scarcely find
words to express himself, however dark things
might seem from another outlook. As for
Justice Cram, he was quite as ready for the
new venture as the preacher, only for another
reason ; for he, alas, had creditors in England,
and the wider the disruption between the two
countries the easier it was to leave them un-
paid.

The last war-news which the weekly post-
rider had brought was of the capture of the
brig Nancy, an ordnance-ship from Woolwich,
with brass cannon and large stores of ammuni-
PETER AND POLLY. 10g



tion, triply precious when the Colonial army
stood in so much need of them.

“ said Parson’ Piper, repeating his text. “I had
another sermon, nearly finished, on ‘Inherent
Holiness, but when Seth Kelly rode up with
the news, I laid it away; the text I preached
on this morning came straight to my mind,
‘The arms of the wicked shall be broken’; the
weapons they have forged shall be turned
against themselves.”

“They are a wicked set,” said Justice Cram,
who had a vivid sense of the iniquities of
other men, although he bore a somewhat
doubtful reputation himself, —“a monstrous
wicked set, those redcoats. It’s enough to
call down fire from heaven, the doings of those
troops shut up in Boston, — taking the Lord’s
house to make a riding-school building ; and
that’s what Seth Kelly said they were doing,
the villains !”

“Those British officers,” said Parson Piper,
IIo PETER AND POLLY.



“have a persecuting spite against all the
Presbyterian ministers and meeting-houses,
for they call everybody Presbyterian that does
n't belong to the Church of England. They’d
call me so, though I am one no more than
a Quaker. As for Episcopacy, it is the child
of Papacy. I should have liked it better if
our Commander-in-Chief had had a good old
Puritan education.”

“And so should I,” said Aunt Nancy; “a
man that hain’t sound doctrinal views won’t
be what can be relied on in other matters.”

“JT don’t know about that!” said Mr. Phil-
brick, who, when he was surveyor of his
Majesty’s woods, had secretly felt a certain
drawing toward the Church of England;
“there are different views as regards Episco-
pacy. What Washington needs is courage
to press the British a little harder. If Howe
should have to give up Boston, in my opinion,
it would bring the war to a close; and what
we want is as speedy a termination of this
PETER AND POLLY. Ill



controversy as we can have consistently with
dignity.”

“ Well, I think things look dark!” said Mr.
Burbean. “It will take a long time to pay
up, so far as the war has gone, even if peace
should come to-day.”

“What costs nothing is worth nothing,”
said Cousin Keziah; “and freedom is worth
having, even if it is bought with blood!”

“Amen!” said Parson Piper, solemnly ;
“«Though an host should encamp about me,
mine heart shall not fear; though war should
rise against me, in this will I be confi-
dent.

Polly ran up stairs to get the letter her fa-
ther had sent; and Miss Keziah, when she had
received it, rose to take her leave, not stopping
to taste the Madeira that had been brought
foward in honor of the Crams ; for the Justice

x,”

was a man of influence, and his wife, though
now a wrinkled old woman, who found her
chief happiness in her snuff-box, had once
T12 PETER AND POLLY.



been an heiress in Newburyport, and had |
brought her husband a large fortune.

“Won't you stay and have your stove
filled?” asked Mrs. Philbrick of Miss Keziah,
as she tied her bonnet and joined the clasp
of her cloak.

“T brought no stove; I never use one,” said
Miss Hapgood, a little proudly, conscious of
the superb constitution which enabled her to
sit for hours in the unwarmed meeting-house,
in December, with no sense of discomfort.

“Well, there!” exclaimed Mrs. Cram; “you
ain’t much like me. My husband says I’d
like to use a warming-pan all summer!”

Miss Hapgood broke the seal of her letter,
and briefly glanced at its contents before she
left.

“Their father writes very kindly,” she said
to Mrs. Philbrick ; “and, if you are willing, I
want your niece and nephew to come to my
house and make me a long visit. I will send
for them with the horse-sled, or —it is only a
PETER AND POLLY. 113



little walk, three miles and a quarter — they
can run over some morning.”

“ Well, some time, some time, I will let them
come, perhaps,” said Aunt Nancy, a little ner-
vously, for it was a sore point with her that
her young relatives had a kinswoman on their
mother’s side living so near them; a person,
too, of so decided a character as Miss. Hap-
good.. She did not wish to encourage an inti-
macy between them, nor, on the other side,
did she wish to appear anxious to avoid it.

“She is a singular kind of woman,” said
Mrs. Philbrick, as the door closed behind her.

“T should think so, not to use a foot-stove,”
returned Mrs, Cram. “It freezes me to think
of it!”

“O, not that!” said Mrs. Philbrick, “ but
she’s a terrible outspoken, fear-naught sort
of a woman. Why, to-day, I saw her talking
with that Rob Millin as friendly as you please,
and, what is worse, when Polly here was with

her; and a monstrous wicked boy he must
H
II4 PETER AND POLLY.



be; to think of a lad of his size being rapped
by the tithing-man as he was this morning!
Shameful !”

“Rob Millin? He’s the shoemaker’s ’pren-
tice, ain't he?” asked Mrs. Cram. “ Well, I
overheard Caleb say ‘he didn’t want aught to
do with him’; and, if I do say it, there is n’t
a better boy than my Caleb is, anywhere.
But then, the boy’s an orphan. I have some
pity for him,” she added.

“But his father was a poor, broken-down
spendthrift, who could n’t have done much for
him if he had lived!” said Mrs. Philbrick,
as she rose and brushed a few ashes from
the hearth into the fire, as if, in doing so,
she were ridding herself of a reproachful
memory.

“Rob Millin!” Polly, overhearing the con-
versation, almost started at the name. Could
it be, in truth, that the dark-eyed boy in the
tow frock and the ill-starred orphan of the
teamster’s story were the same? If so, it
PETER AND POLLY. II5

seemed as though her Uncle Abel could be
none other than the hard-hearted creditor of
whom he had speken. She looked at him as
he sat in the arm-chair in front of the fire-
place. Ostentatiously dressed in homespun
throughout, his white hands (a large seal-ring
on one of them) crossed upon his knee with
its shining buckle, carefully shaven, neatly
powdered, he was a pleasant picture of the
country gentleman of the day; and yet she
turned from him almost with a sense of aver-
sion.

She went into the kitchen, where Peter, hav-
ing no other book, was reading aloud from the
Assembly’s Catechism to old Pompey, who had
come in with two great foot-stoves to fill for his
Master and Mistress Cram; while ‘four little
Pipers, whom the good parson had brought
with him (for, in this parish, the parsonage
buildings and the minister's farm were, con-
trary to the usual custom, at some distance
from the meeting-house), were eating dough-
116 PETER AND POLLY.



nuts, which they had brought with them ina
blue linen bag, and Brown Beck was whisper-
ing to a stout woman in a red gown, who had
come in with her. “One pair” —she heard

her say.








CHAPTER VI.

T was a long, dreary winter that opened
| before Polly, and often with a shiver she
thought of the army keeping guard around
Boston ; for her father, who was with them,
had written of their sufferings in one precious
letter which the post-rider brought on a
snowy.afternoon. The shrill north-wind had,
for her, a new sound. She thought, as she
heard its whistle, of the soldiers struggling
northward, under the brave young Arnold, the
godlike hero of her childish admiration ; or,
when it wailed in the naked branches, it
brought a vision of the wretched inhabitants
still lingering in Boston, of whom her father

had said in his letter, “it was reported by
118 PETER AND POLLY.



rumor they were suffering extremely from the
cold, many often lying in bed all day, because
they could afford no fires.”

“ But that is an idle, slovenly way of keeping
warm,” thought Polly; “I would keep up and
move about till I did freeze, if I were they !”
For motion was, to her restless self, one of the
prime elements of happiness, and the strict re-
straint under which her Aunt Nancy held her,
and the dull monotony of her daily life, grew
all the time more and more wearisome. If she
could only get out and have some companion-
ship, or excitement, or adventures! If she
were a man with a foe to fight and a cause to
win, or a woman, who could have some part
in the stirring scenes of the time, it seemed to
her she would not complain. But to stay,
week after week, shut up in this house, only
breathing a clear space on the frost-whitened
window, and looking out on the drifted high-
ways, where the teamsters broke the path
with their over-worked oxen, on the hemlock
PETER AND POLLY. T19



woods and ice-bound river, and to feel that she
had no work to share, and no pleasures to en-
joy, was very dull indeed.
. Mrs. Philbricks like most matrons without
‘children, had her own ideas of the training of
young persons, especially of girls, and Polly
was a good subject for the application of her
theories. If her rules did not work to her
satisfaction, the fault was always in Polly, and
not in her system of education. Young peo-
ple should, in her belief, be seen and not
heard ; speak when they were spoken to, and
come when they were called ; be, in fact, mere
puppets in the hands of parents and guardians,
and yet instinctively be fitted, when the time
should come, to act their parts as men and
women, with honor to themselves and their
instructors ; for Mrs, Philbrick was never in-
clined to judge too leniently those who might
prove themselves failures in the end.
“If I could only go to school!” thought
Polly, with less concern, perhaps, for the
120 PETER AND POLLY.



knowledge to be gained than for the com-
pany she would enjoy; but there was, alas!
that winter, no school for her to attend. The
interest in the war, so universally felt, had, for
the time, made everything else seem of minor
importance ; and, though each town of a hun-
dred families was required by law to have a
“grammar school,’ where the “learned lan-
guages” should be taught, and every town of
fifty families a school for reading, writing, and
arithmetic, many places of considerable size
and importance were that winter destitute of
either.

“ To have none is a shame and a disgrace !”
said Parson Piper; but even he was so ab-
sorbed with the proceedings of the Exeter
Convention, that he had little time to give
to other matters, that body having adopted a
constitution which had called forth a protest
from the people of Portsmouth, and had star-
tled the timid throughout the Colonies. “Only,
what my parish fails in doing now,” thought
PETER AND POLLY. I2I



he, “I will see to it they make amends for, by
having ‘more costly teachers and longer schools
another year.” For Parson Piper was a well-
meaning tyrant, and believed in ministerial
authority.

Without a school, Polly had no excuse for
going out every day; walking for exercise
was a thing unheard of, and so she was shut
up all the week, only peeping out when Sun-
day came round. “The proper place for a
woman is at home,” said Aunt Nancy, whose
own rheumatic twinges scarce allowed her to
put her foot upon the snow ; “and here, with
food and shelter, and clothes far too fine for
a girl of your age, if you are not happy you
must be very sinful.”

If it is sinful to be impatient of confinement,
Polly certainly was so, for she was discon-
tented as a caged hawk. How many arts she
used to drive dull care away! In how many
tasks she strove to find diversion! .She
wrought on her sampler and finished it ; she
122 PETER AND POLLY.



hemmed long ruffles ; she begged bits of cloth
and began some patchwork ; again and again
she turned the pages of each book in the
house, as well she might ; for, nicely furnished
as it was, there were only six in it besides the
Bible: “Law’s Serious Call to a Devout and
Holy Life,” quite a sprightly book Polly
found it, in spite of its title; a book of
“Sermons to Young Women,” doubly unat-
tractive because her Aunt Nancy had said “it
would be an excellent thing for her to read” ;
a handsomely bound copy of “ Paradise Lost,”
with “John Millin to his affectionate wife,
Miranda,” written on the fly-leaf; Tate and
Brady’s Hymns; a sermon entitled “Woe to
Sleepy Sinners”; and a quaint old book, by
Cotton Mather and other writers, which was
made up chiefly of witch-stories and specula-
tions in regard to them, Polly was half sorry
she had found this last volume, for the tales
in it would come back and haunt her when,
at night, she went to her little room overlook-
PETER AND POLLY. 123



ing the graveyard. “They were all foolish
fancies,’ she kept repeating to herself, as she
lay awake at night, with the sheet over her
face, and yet she could scarcely keep them
out of her mind. Against her will she seemed
to see, with her closed eyes, scowling witches
flitting through the midnight air, meeting for
unholy baptisms, or partaking of mock sacra-
ments, where the bread was “read as blood” ;
satanic cats, prowling round on errands for
their master; “ witch-poppets,” stuck full of
pins; illomened yellow-birds, flying hither and
thither, like golden feathered imps, — these
“frightly” fancies were sure to haunt her as
long as she was awake, and when, at last, she
dropped asleep, it was only to be troubled by
some ghostly dream. She did not dare to
say one word to Peter. “If she was afraid at
night,” she thought, “at least, he should never
have the comfort of teasing her about it.”

It would have been better for her if she
could have seen more of her brother; but all
124 PETER AND POLLY.



through the day he was with his uncle at the
store, and, when evening came, they were
sent off to their rooms by half past eight
o'clock, at most ; for “early to bed and early
to rise,” was a motto then enforced, and nine
o'clock was curfew-time for all wise families.
As for talking freely with her brother in the
presence of her uncle and aunt, could she
otherwise have enjoyed it, that would scarcely
have been deemed respectful to her elders.
Her aunt, it is true, made conversation enough,
but her remarks were apt to be so interspersed
with advice and reproof, to which Polly felt
a natural, though sometimes unjustifiable dis-
like, that her society had little charm for the
ardent girl; while, as for visitors at the house,
“they were, in those hard times,” Aunt Nancy
somewhat inhospitably said, “the worst of
moths”; and even the neighbors round, con-
scious that Mrs. Philbrick held herself above
them, came in infrequently and with shy for-
mality.
PETER AND POLLY. 125



Polly’s only resource, therefore, in the long
dreary days, was the kitchen and Brown Beck,
who, whatever were her faults, was certainly
not dull company; for her tongue, in her talka-
tive moods, ran like a miller’s wheel, and she
was always glad to have Polly with her, as she
sat, in the afternoon, knitting, or combing
wool, with the crooked wire teeth of her cards,
into rolls for the evening spinning. She was
a strange creature, whose mother was a mu-
latto slave, and her father a low Indian trapper,
and her half-savage blood showed in a hun-
dred different ways. It was her delight to
relate most marvellous stories, which well
supplemented those in Cotton Mather’s witch-
book: of a woman, whose soul used to go in
and out of her mouth in the shape of a spider;
of a wailing ghost, that haunted the old garri-
son at the end of the village ; of magic charms
and spells to lure good fortune, bring success
in love, or drive away poverty and sickness.
As for her own history, it was, to judge from
126 PETER AND POLLY.



her words, a most wonderful one. What suf-
fering she had endured! through what dan-
gers safely passed! perils by land and by sea,
— though how that could be was a mystery,
for she told Polly she had never seen the
ocean; and Catechism-taught Polly scarcely
dared believe of any one that she willingly
would lie.

She was always asking odd questions about
Mr. and Mrs Philbrick, which Polly instinc-
tively resented, and to which she made no
reply ; but, finding that Polly had a certain
dread of the graveyard beneath her chamber,
she vouchsafed a little advice.

“Tf I were you,” she said, “I should n’t be
afraid after I was fairly in bed; get a blanket
over your face, and I don’t think anything will
touch you; but I must say,.if I were you, I
should n't like to go up in that room as you
will daytimes ; I think, if there are any ghosts
or witches round, they are just as likely to
come in the daytime as the night.”
PETER AND POLLY. 127



Polly prided herself in feeling a great con-
tempt for Brown Beck’s hobgoblins, but some-
how, after that, whenever she went to her
room, she felt in a new hurry to get down
stairs again.

There was only one thing in the near future
to which she looked forward with pleasant
anticipation, and that was the visit to Cousin
Keziah’s. It was in vain, she knew, to ask
her aunt to allow her to walk over to Miss
Hapgood’s house; but every day, as it came,
however cold or stormy it might be, she used
to look out, hoping it would prove the time
when Cousin Keziah, or some messenger of
hers, should arrive to take her away. Ox-sled
or horse-sled or rough-built sleigh, whatever
means of transportation, it would be equally
welcome; but week after week went and no-
body appeared.

One mild morning in February, Polly had
the delightful privilege of going out for her
aunt, to carry a pair of shoes to be mended ;
128 PETER AND POLLY.



for cobbling held a more important place in
a shoemaker’s business then than it does to-
day. She skipped along, hurrying past the
graveyard, where the white mist of a winter's
thaw hung, phantom-like, over the black stones
marked with skulls and cross-bones; she looked
into the store, where Peter was mixing a bowl
of toddy for a thirsty customer, who had
brought in a large cake of yellow beeswax,
to exchange as best he could, and stopped to
caress the great tortoise-shell cat, that fol-
lowed when she left the store. It was so
pleasant to be out of doors, she was sorry
when she reached the shoemaker’s shop, a
small frame-house covered with boards, and
with a broken wooden doorstep. A half
starved looking colt was feeding on a wisp
of hay outside, and all around the threshold
the snow was colored blue, where the shoe-
maker’s wife had emptied her indigo-pot, as if
in confirmation of a little notice pinned out-
side the door, that she “didd all kindes of
PETER AND POLLY. T29



dying.” From within, as Polly's hand was on
the latch, she heard loud sounds of profanity
and anger; and as she opened it, half trem-
bling, she saw a short, stout man, with a red,
repulsive face, adding energy to his words by
violently shaking his fist, and giving way to
such a torrent of passion and coarse abuse,
‘as, in all her innocent life, she had never
heard before. “You dog, you!” he raved,
“T’ll break every bone in your body! Ill
flog the life out of you! I’ll—” But, seeing
Polly, he abruptly checked himself, and, with
a conscious air, snatched up his hat and went
out of the house by a back entrance.

Polly grew white as the ghosts she feared:
“Tt was so very dreadful !”

It was the same tall lad that she had seen
at meeting in the tow frock, who seemed to
have been the object of this outburst of rage.
He was seated on a high bench, sewing a pair
of shoes with white camlet tops wrought in
red and green silk, and, though flushed with
130 PETER AND POLLY.



indignation, was by no means as excited as
Polly was. She, poor child, was quivering,
and quite forgot her errand at the first.

“He won't kill you, will he?” she asked,
under her breath, looking up in the boy’s face,
as she drew close to him.

“Kill me? No! he would have to lose me
out of the shop if he did,” said the boy witha
half-smile.

“But he frightened me so!” gasped Polly.
“T’m afraid he will — for he said — he said —
he’d flog you. O, can’t you get out and run
away !”

“ Words don’t hurt anybody,” was the boy’s
reply ; “and, as for blows, he used to flog me,
but he won’t much more, I’m growing all the
time, and I’m sixteen now. It wasn’t any-
thing this morning, only Madam Cram’s shoes
don’t fit, and he need n’t be angry about that,
for I told him, at the time, he ’d given me the
wrong last to make them on. I’m growing —”
he repeated, half to himself, looking down at
PETER AND POLLY. 131



his arm, which was bared for his work, and
thinking how strong it was.
“ And I hope you we// grow! grow as strong

1

as Samson!” said Polly, who was good to
make others’ troubles her own; “and if I
could do anything for you, I would be glad,”
she said.

“Did n’t you come on any errand?” asked
the boy; for Polly, absent-minded, had lost
sight of her aunt’s message, and was starting
off with her bundle.

Polly blushed at her forgetfulness, and,
handing him the parcel, told him what to do.
“Tt is for my aunt, Mrs. Philbrick ; you know
who she is?” she inquired.

“T know who her husband is,” the boy an-
swered, with a certain unconscious bitterness
of tone, that made Polly think of the silver
spoons on her aunt’s table, and the handsome
copy of “ Paradise Lost.” .

“Well, now!” said Brown Beck, when Polly

reached home; “there’s been a woman here
132 PETER AND POLLY.



to see about taking you to her house, and your
aunt told her ‘she would n’t say about it some
time, but that at present she was n't es
you should go away anywhere.’”

“Not go anywhere!” said Polly, the iron
entering into her soul,— “not go anywhere,
when my father left word we should visit
Cousin Keziah!” she repeated, sullenly, to
herself, when she had taken off her bonnet
and sat down in front of the fireplace to warm
herself, feeling a gloomy satisfaction in the
thought that she was really very much abused ;
and yet, when she remembered the glimpse of
hard real life that she had had that morning,
her own trials looked smaller and more trivial
than she had ever regarded them before.
But, from that time, Cousin Keziah’s home
grew to be, in her fancy, a delightful Eden,
doubly desirable because she felt herself shut
out from it. To have Sunday come round
and bring to her a sight of the tall woman in
the brown cloak, and to receive from her a’
PETER AND POLLY. 133



bow and a smile, — for, after that first Sabbath,
Miss Keziah never came in at noon so that
she could speak to her,—and to watch and
see if the tall lad with the sad eyes was at
meeting safe and sound, were Polly’s chief
excitements,

Peter, meanwhile, was leading a very differ-
ent life. His uncle, when he came, had no
determined plan of breaking off his nephew’s
studies, but the times were such that he found
it really difficult to procure suitable assistance
in his store; so, although Parson Piper, who
was not only “learned in the Scriptures,” but
a Harvard graduate as well, and a good Greek,
Latin, and Hebrew scholar, might at least
have been solicited to give the boy instruction,
as was common for ministers to do in those
days, it was far easier and more profitable to
make Peter of service in his own employ.

It was his place to deal out such liquors as
were “drunk on the premises,” and, when not
thus engaged, to tend at the end of the coun-
134 PETER AND POLLY.



ter, where tapes, bodkins, stay-lacings, combs,
and such small wares were sold. It was not,
in itself, hard work, but to a boy who had only
just reached his fourteenth birthday, it was
both a laborious and an unprofitable employ-
ment, The drinking of spirits was then the
habit with all classes; yet he used to weary
of seeing the dull-eyed topers, who were his
most frequent customers ; and the women who
came to make barter-trades with their tow-
cloth and home-made flannels were often so
hard to please, that, when night came, he was
quite tired out. He used to look wistfully at
the covers of his Virgil and his Latin gram-
mar (a Latin grammar, indeed, without one
explanatory, helpful English word in it), and
wonder whether, after all, “he should ever be
so happy as to go to college.”

“Tf he only had Polly’s quiet opportunity
for study!” he thought; while to Polly, fret-
ting over her loneliness, Peter’s active life in
the store seemed a source of constant delight.
PETER AND POLLY. 135



“ How many faces,” she thought, “he must see!
how much he must hear of all that is interest-
ing around, and always learn first the fresh
news from the war!” The weekly post-rider,
when he came by, was sure to tarry at the
store long enough, not only to distribute what-
ever letters and papers (and few and far be-
tween they were) which he might have to
leave there, but also to report such rumors as
he might have gathered by the way ; for “ post-
haste” was with him by no means a descrip-
tive term. The men who came in to trade,
also, were sure to repeat whatever hearsay and
often visionary accounts had reached them,
of bloody battles that never were fought, and
glorious victories that never were won. The
tidings from Canada were so slow in com-
ing, and so often contradictory, that they had
almost lost their interest when they reached
this quiet neighorhood, especially as few or
none of the soldiers it had sent out had gone
in that direction ; but, in the movements of
136 PETER AND POLLY.



the troops around Boston there was felt an al-
most breathless concern. Where will the end
be? It was a question ever present. The
dissatisfaction of the Continental troops, the
difficulties of getting enlistments, the scarcity
of “fewel” and ammunition, the inadequacy
of many officers, and the insubordination of
others, the hard labor on the frozen ground, —
all these things were anxiously discussed every
day by the different customers that came in.
Peter, at the store, knew of the presence of
war by many other signs; salt was scarce and
dear, window-glass was scarcely procurable,
and rum, sugar, molasses, and spices of all
kinds grew more and more costly. Solicitors
came every little while, asking Mr. Philbrick
to contribute towards buying blankets, tent-
ing, clothes, and other necessaries for the sol- ;
diers ; for the public funds were insufficient for
their needs, and the reluctant storekeeper, hav-
ing once been an object of suspicion, felt com-
pelled to give as often as requested. “How
PETER AND POLLY. 137



long I shall have anything to give, is a ques-
tion,” he had said, on one such occasion, with
a dreary thought of the December emission of
paper-money, “issued in defence of American
liberty.” “ How long will you have anything
to give? I should think, from appearances,
for some time,” said blunt Parson Piper, who
stood by, looking round, as he spoke, at the
shelves of goods and the bins of grain and all
the overflowing plenty of that country store.
His eye, as he did so, rested upon Peter, who,
not chancing at the moment to be busy, had
taken up his Ainsworth’s Dictionary, which,
cut off as he was from most other books, he
had taken with him to the store, to amuse
himself, when not otherwise employed, in look-
ing up odd words.

Parson Piper’s eye kindled. “A youngerly

3

person” with studious tastes was, in his mind,
a sight worth seeing. “Well, my lad,’ he
said, when he had looked at the book, “if you

are as fond of learning as you seem to be,
138 PETER AND POLLY.



come up to my house, and I shall be willing
to show you some volumes, and to assist you
somewhat in your studies, for, in times like
these, there is no reason why education should
be neglected. ‘Get wisdom, get understand-
ing, it says in the Bible. Stirring times
need men of mark. We have need enough
of economy in the Colonies, but ignorance is
the worst extravagance! We can’t afford it;

1”?

we can’t afford it!” he repeated with em-
phasis. “We have too dull wits in New
Hampshire ; we ought to be thinking more
of raising up scholars for our little college in
the woods!” For, next to the success of the
Colonial army, the welfare of the infant Dart-
mouth, in its forest cradle, seemed to him of
most importance.

Peter's student’s dream came back at the
good preacher’s words, and he thanked him as
warmly as he dared, for a minister was, in his
thought, a very great and superior being ;
but just then his uncle, standing by, sent him
PETER AND POLLY. 539



out on an errand, and by some strange chance
it happened that, whenever after the minister
came into the store, there was always some-
thing his uncle wished him to be doing which
would take him away from it.

One bright morning in the last of March,
Polly was in the kitchen, where Brown Beck
was boiling maple-sap in the great kettle hung
over the fire. Everybody was trying to make
maple-sugar that year, when West India mo-
lasses and sugar were luxuries only to be
dreamed of. Far down the street she heard
the beating of a drum. It grew louder and
louder! there surely was news from the war!
Even Aunt Nancy was aroused, and told Polly
she might go out and find what was going on,
when Peter rushed in, all glowing with ani-
mation: “Howe has evacuated Boston, and
our troops are free to enter there !”

That very night, one arm around her and
Peter beside him, her father was with Polly
once more. He looked worn and tired, as
140 PETER AND POLLY.

well he might, after the dreary winter, but he
was happy in a little furlough, which, by the
long ride, pressing his way over the rough and
sometimes flooded roads of spring, he had con-
trived to spend with his children. A joyful
reunion, but how brief it must be! for he
could tarry but two days at most, and then
must be off again, to join that portion of the
army which was to follow Washington wher-
ever he might lead, probably to New York.










CHAPTER VII.

WO more busy days are seldom passed
than were those of Dr. Austin’s flying
furlough.

A crowd of village people thronged around,
wherever he went, anxious to hear the latest
news, and plying him with a thousand ques-
tions. The newspapers of the day were so
few, small, expensive, and unsatisfactory, that
a man who had been an eye-witness of any
event of public interest possessed an impor-
tance hard to appreciate at the present time.
Fathers and mothers, who had sons whom
they had not heard from since their departure
for the army, came, hoping that in some way
it might have happened that he could tell
142 PETER AND POLLY.

them of their welfare. Parson Piper hurried
in, impatient to learn how the late action of
the New Hampshire Convention was regarded
by military men; Mr. Burbean, hearing of his
arrival, jogged over on his old horse, to ascer-
tain “if things looked any less dark.” Polly
plead for him to recount all he knew of the
sufferings and the courage of her “ favorite
Arnold” at the north, and fairly wept over
the tidings of the death of the beloved Mont-
gomery ; while Aunt Nancy begged’ to know
“if Washington were not extravagant; if he
really had a French cook ; and if Lady Wash-
ington’s clothes were not unduly fine for a
patriot’s wife.” For, since she had felt com-
pelled to wear only homespun herself, she had
grown severe in her judgment of all display in
others, though still as fond, in her heart, of
elegant adornings as she had been in her
gayest days.

But, while making himself hoarse in talking
of army matters, Dr. Austin’s thought was,
PETER AND POLLY. 143



all the while, busy, pondering what he should
do with his children. Peter and Polly, who
had been educated to regard the decision of
their elders with submission, and who shrank
from coming to their father with their discon-
tents, made no complaints ; yet as, on asking
Peter ‘(what progress he had made in his
studies,” Dr. Austin found that he had been
too busy in his uncle’s store to give them any
attention, and as Polly, whose midnight vigils
in the haunted bedroom, and whose close con-
finement, all day in the house, told so plainly
on her appearance, that she looked more like
a young spectre than a blooming girl, and
sadly down-hearted as well, he began to feel
dissatisfied himself, and to wish he could find
some other place for them both. The more
he thought of the matter, the more indignant
he became, especially in regard to Peter ; for
he had sent, with the children, explicit direc-
tions regarding his education, and had for-
warded, besides, a considerable sum of money
144 PETER AND POLLY.



in silver, which he thought would be more
than sufficient to pay all expenses for a con-
siderable time. Mr. Philbrick’s conduct, un-
der these circumstances, seemed to him not
only a selfish and unwise course toward Peter,
but a breach of faith as regarded himself, and
he felt little inclined to continue in the keep-
ing of his brother-in-law the charge he had
intrusted to him.

As for his sister, since she left her father’s
house, a bride, in whose beauty he felt a con-
scious pride, child though he was, he had seen
her but a few brief times, when, still hand-
some, well dressed, prosperous, and chancing
to allude only to subjects on which they were
agreed, he had seen nothing in her to criticise.
Now, for the first time, he realized that she
was lacking in that tenderness of feeling and
that candor of judgment so essential to mak-
ing her a gentle companion or a wise adviser
for young people. To take his children again
to Massachusetts, had it been desirable, would
PETER AND POLLY. 145



now have been almost an impossibility ; and
when Polly besought of him (the only request
she made) that he would arrange with her
Aunt Nancy for her to be allowed to visit
Cousin Keziah, it seemed to open the only
possible way out of his difficulties. To be
sure, he realized, when, a few hours later, he
took his horse and rode over to Miss Hap-
good’s house alone, that it was a very rough
and common place, where hard work had
filled so much of the time that there was
little space left for those small refinements of
life that add so much to its beauty and its
pleasure ; that the neighbors round were un-
educated, hard-handed toilers for their daily
bread ; that his children, if placed there, would
be shut out from most that the world calls
best ; and yet, when he rode back, he had
decided, with Miss Hapgood’s consent, that
at least for the summer they should both be
put at board with her: Peter to be taught to
assist, as he could, every day, in light labor
146 PETER AND POLLY.



about the farm, and once or twice each week
to recite to Parson Piper, with whom Dr.
Austin soon made arrangements for his son’s
instruction ; and Polly to be made familiar with
knitting, sewing, and household duties. “At
Cousin Keziah’s,” thought Dr. Austin, “if
Peter rarely even sees a man of quality and
culture, and if Polly fails to learn to make
a graceful courtesy, or entertain a polished
beau with ease, and has none of the studied
prettinesses that make her sex so charming in
modish society, they will, at least, be taught to
speak the honest truth, to be patient and pure-
hearted and brave and self-reliant, and will be
rich in virtues, if time should make them poor
in purse.”

“ Well,” said Aunt Nancy, when, as adroitly
as he was able, her brother informed her that,
since she had been burdened with the care of
his children for some time, he was now intend-
ing to place them, for a season, with his wife’s
cousin, Miss Hapgood, —“ well, every one to
PETER AND POLLY. 147



his tastes; but,” she added with some asper-
ity, “I must say, Brother Peter, yours are ex-
ceeding singular, and as for Keziah Hapgood,
she may in the first have had some birth and
breeding, but she has thrown herself away
for people who are neither kith nor kin to
her.”

“Well, Nancy,” returned her brother, “ better
’ give our lives away to others than waste them
on ourselves ; otherwise, why worship as we
do that Life which was wholly sacrifice ?”

“That ’s no reason for Keziah’s doing as
she does,” said his sister, contemptuously, and
with a shade of anger in her tone, for she was
unaccustomed to having others dissent from
her opinions. “As for your putting Polly with
her, after you have said you would like to have
her learn to behave as a high-bred, genteel
young woman in society should do, it is some-
thing I wash my hands of. I was n’t for hav-
ing her visit them at all.”

Miss pened had, in her childhood, be-
148 PETER AND POLLY.



longed to a substantial family in Haverhill,
Massachusetts, at whose home Polly’s mother,
a fair young orphan, was a frequent guest ;
but, on her parents’ death, the affections of
Keziah settled on a sister, the last of the
household except herself, a pretty and impul-
sive girl, who, at the age of sixteen, made a
somewhat venturous marriage with a young
man whose only property consisted of some
wild lands in New Hampshire. Keziah could
not bear the thought of leaving the child-wife
to meet, unshared by her, the hardships of a
settler’s life; so, gathering together what she
judged would be of most service, and putting
a sad-iron, two candlesticks, a silver teapot, —
brought by her grandmother from England,
—andasmall brass kettle in the saddle-bags
with her clothes, and, woman-like, hiding, in
the bosom of her gown, six daffodil bulbs
and a packet of balsam and sweet-william
seeds, she had bidden friends and familiar
scenes farewell, and, mounted on her stout
PETER AND POLLY. 149



gray mare, had followed the young groom and
bride, who rode in front of her, to their new
home.

A perilous way it was, through the solemn
woods, the spotted trees alone enabling them
to keep in their path; and a hard life awaited
them in the rough log-house that, after a few
weeks’ delay at the crowded home of a set-
tler, ten miles distant, was erected for them.
Often, in the few years that followed, the howl
of the hungry wolf was heard about their
sheepfold, the black bears prowled about their
fields of corn, and straggling Indians, mad
with fire-water, thumped, at midnight, on their
cabin door. Drought and flood and army-
worm had spoiled their crops, and, last of ail,
sickness had entered their low door, and in a
pine coffin, made by the husband’s own hands,
the young wife had been borne out, to sleep in
peace beneath the tall oaks in the then newly
made graveyard.

At first Keziah was compelled to stay to
150 PETER AND POLLY.



care for her sister’s infant, a puny little thing,
that soon followed its mother; but when the
child had died she thought to leave, and might
have done so, only, just as she had begun to
make preparations to go, her brother-in-law
had been killed by the falling of a tree which
he was cutting, leaving, with no one to protect
them, his old mother and a sister by no means
firm in health, who had come to stay with
him. ;

Keziah, always equal to emergencies, had
then bought the place for herself, invited both
mother and sister to live with her, and carried
on affairs by her own right and in her own
way, meeting, too, with much success; for, as
all who knew her said, “she had a shrewd
head-piece, and her heart was as strong as
her hands.” New settlers had come in, and
she now found herself the owner of a well-cul-
tivated farm in a prosperous township. She
had had a new house erected, which, for the
time, was well furnished and comfortable. Her
PETER AND POLLY. ISI



apple-orchard of grafted fruit, Holland pippins
and blue pearmains, belibonds and summer
sweetings, was the marvel of the country
round. She sent twenty miles, over the rough-
est of roads, to procure a linen foot-wheel,
before they had come into general use; and
the sister of her brother-in-law, who lived with
her, being a famous spinner and weaver, had
filled for her great chests with the finest linen
and the softest wool.

Like most women who have made their way
in the world by their own sagacity, industry,
and prudence, Miss Keziah was somewhat self-
conscious of the fact. She was an ardent
friend of liberty, was zealous for all moral re-
forms, and interested in all modern improve-
ments, and was never afraid to advance her
opinions, which, fortunately, were commonly.
expressed with wisdom and always with kind-
ness.

Polly, when she began to pack her bag to
leave her Aunt Nancy’s, was surprised to find,
152 PETER AND POLLY.



on looking over her. clothes, that all her silk
stockings, save that unlucky pair she had worn
to ride in, were missing ; and where was the
little blue-bordered handkerchief, and her best
tucker with the lace edge? And, worse than
all, where was the little mourning-necklace
that her father gave her at her mother’s fu-
neral ?

She did not quite dare to go with the ac-
count, as she should have done, to her Aunt
Nancy; for the thought of her nephew and
niece being willing to leave her for Miss Hap-
good had so irritated her somewhat uncertain
temper, that she was doubly fault-finding. She
did ask Beck, who said, “ Well, there! I
never thought any good would come of your
sleeping in that chamber over the grave-
yard!”

A dreadful suspicion came to Polly. “Do
you think, Peter,’ she asked, when she chanced
to see him alone, “that it is possible that Beck
can have been so wicked as to meddle with my
PETER AND POLLY. 153



clothes?” And Peter had answered, “ You
don’t know, Polly, anything about this world,
if you have n't learned it’s a very bad place.
Why, it’s quite monstrous, the way Uncle
Abel waters his rum!”












CHAPTER VIII.

COMFORTABLE, two-storied house,
A painted red, was Miss Keziah’s, with a
promise of more room on the outside than was
fulfilled within, as the large central chimney
took up space enough for one good-sized
apartment, and only the rooms on the ground-
floor were finished. But a pleasant, peaceful
place it seemed to Polly, when she came to it
as her new home, one bright morning in the
last of April. In front, the fields sloped down
toward the river-bank, where, on the interval
lands, the flax was planted: on one side were
cultivated fields; on the other was the or-
chard, and then a chestnut grove ; while, in
the rear, stretched back the “ wood-lot,” as
PETER AND POLLY. acc



Miss Keziah called the large tract of primeval
forest of which she was the owner. Bright in
the little flower-bed, under the windows of the
house looking southward, was a line of golden
daffodils, just coming into bloom, children of
those Miss Keziah had brought from her early
home, and whispering to her of hope, and
childhood, and “old Haverhill.” A log-
cabin, with only two rooms, to which she had
come with her newly married sister, stood
only a few rods away, now occupied by a man
who helped cultivate her farm, and who, with-
in three miles, was her only neighbor.

“Your only neighbor!” exclaimed Polly, in
surprise, the day she came; for there was some-
thing in that quiet farm-house that took away
the sense of loneliness.

Out in the kitchen the blaze in the broad
fireplace was dancing and crackling around
the little kettle that hung on the crane, giving
out a delightful “woodsy ” smell, and a short-
cake was growing deliciously brown and crisp
156 PETER AND POLLY.



in a great iron pan in front of the fire ; for it
was just supper-time when Peter and Polly
and their saddle-bags appeared at Miss Hap-
good’s door.

An old woman, dressed in butternut brown,
and with two shawls pinned one over the
other, sat, mild though the day was, in a low
chair in the warmest corner of the hearth;
and a pale woman of about thirty, in a long
checked “tyer” of blue and white, and a
knot of “ may-flowers ” fastened in her bosom,
was spinning on a large wheel that made a
cheery, whirring sound, and went round as if
it had a half-consciousness that it was doing
service, and thought making woollen yarn the
most delightful thing imaginable.

The table was already spread with rye bread
and fresh butter, and some cold vegetables
on a pewter platter that shone like silver,
and furnished with plates and bowls turned
(as the best wooden ware was) from the
gnarled roots of the yellow ash, horn spoons,
PETER AND POLLY. 157



and a charming little pitcher, doubtless from
“old Haverhill,” all roses without and ma-
ple sirup within. Polly noticed her wooden
plates. She had never been accustomed to
eating from anything but stone or pewter
ware, save on fine occasions, when she had
lost all thought of her food in her admiration
of the pictures on her mother’s and her Aunt
Nancy’s best china.

“Come, Judith,” said Miss Keziah, turning
to the pale spinner, “you have stood too long
at the wheel already. If you have no judg-
ment when to leave off, you must quit spin-
ning altogether, for you are tired out.”

The pale woman made no reply, only she
smiled gently at Polly, and, putting away the
soft white rolls in a flag basket, set noise-
lessly back the wheel in the corner of the
room. A quiet creature, like a voiceless bird,
she seemed to Polly, who wondered if she ever
could understand what a restless person like
herself endured; for Polly, like most “ little
158 PETER AND POLLY.

women” of fourteen, had a vivid idea of her
troubles, and thought it probable few young
people had ever suffered so much.

“This checkerberry has boiled!” said Miss
Keziah, as she took the kettle from the fire,
and proceeded to fill a little silver teapot,
which was the only thing with any preten-
sions to splendor in the house. “ Boil check-
erberry-leaves, and all their virtue goes !”

“J am thinking,” she began, when, having
said grace standing, they were all seated at
the table, and the old grandmother had been
drawn up to it in her arm-chair,— “TF am
thinking, Judith, ] mean to try first one thing
and then another, of the green things growing
this summer, and some time we shall hit on
something as good, if not better, than the
China tea. This is a great country, and
everything discoverable ain’t found out yet.
We need n't be dependent on any other na-
tion.” Miss Keziah, like most women of char-
acter, had her hobbies, and, just then, her -
PETER AND POLLY. 159



“country’s greatness,” and her “country’s
cause,” so filled her heart, that in all her
houshold talk there was sure’ to be some
allusion to the one or the other.

“T have forgotten how China tea tastes,”
said Peter, “and I never drank checkerberry ;
but I have had enough of balm and sage and
mountain-mint and sweet-fern and catnip.”

“T like them every one,” returned ‘Miss
Keziah; “there is a flavor of freedom in
them all.” :

“Freedom’s well enough,” put in old Mrs.
Potter, Judith’s mother, who was apparently
somewhat broken and childish, “but I’d give
a good deal for a cup of old-fashioned tea, for
all that! Now when Deliverance Hobbs and
I were gals, and shet up in the garrison, the
food was growin’ skurse, and the meat was
gone; but Deliverance had a pound of tea of
her own, and when the men were out watchin’
on the sentry-boxes for Injuns, we’d brew a
cup, and it would stay our stomachs and cheer
160 PETER AND POLLY.



our spirits, both in one. Your medder-grown
stuff would n’t do that, Keziah. And as for
potatoes,” she said, when Judith proceeded to
help her to that portion of the boiled vege-
tables, “I didn’t eat ’em when I was young,
and I’m too old to begin now.”

“But what should we do without them?”
asked Keziah. “People are planting more
ground with them every year. They are a
sure crop, and a large one, and they do well
on the new-burnt lands.”

“We New Hampshire people ought to be
grateful to the Derry weavers for two things,”
said Judith; “for giving us potatoes to eat,
and for teaching us how to use the linen
foot-wheel. It’s a good deal the Scotch Irish
have done for us.”

It was the longest sentence that Polly had
heard her speak, and she noticed that her
voice was feeble.

Just then there was a tap at the side door,
and Polly glanced up as Miss Keziah rose to
PETER AND POLLY. 161



open it. There stood her old friend, the shoe-
maker’s apprentice, in a checked tow frock,
drawn around him with a leather belt, a big
and battered cocked hat, which evidently had
known some former owner, on his head, and
his arms full of sassafras branches, which he
had brought as a tribute to Miss Keziah.

“Come in, Rob; come in, and have some
supper,” said Miss Hapgood; but the boy,
seeing less familiar faces than her own, drew
back, bashful and blushing.

“But you must,” said Miss Keziah, laying
her hand on his shoulder like one accustomed
to control. “Come in, and tell us how you
are getting on.”

“QO, as usual,” answered the boy in a low
tone; and Polly looked at him with a pity she
could not express, for “what a dreary thing,”
she thought, “his ‘usual’ life must be!”

Miss Keziah would not take “No.” She
brought another bowl and plate, and quite
forced the shy boy, who had come in and sat
162 PETER AND POLLY.



down on one end of the long settle at the
side of the room, to take his place with them
at the table. “You shall have one quiet
supper, at least,” she said.

“T have had a pleasant day, to-day,” said
Rob, “walking through the woods. He let
me carry Mr. Burbean’s shoes home, as, in-
deed, he ought, for the man had been for them
seven times, and he would neither cut the
uppers himself, or let me do it; but, on the
way, I saw some sassafras, and thought you
might like some.”

“You are in a hard place, Rob!” said Miss
Keziah, thoughtfully, as if she were trying to
solve a problem in her mind.

“But as long as I am a ’prentice I won't
complain,” said Rob; “he’s my master till I
am free.”

“ And you are growing now!” put in Polly,
ready to speak, and remembering his own
words of self-consolation.

Peter looked at her with reproving eyes ; it
PETER AND POLLY. 163



seemed a very pert speech for his sister to be
making to a stranger; but the boy glanced up
with a smile that seemed foreign to his earnest,
serious face.

“Miss Keziah,” he said, at last, — and Polly
noticed that he was too preoccupied to more
than taste the food on his bountifully filled
plate, —“I want to ask you,— what do you ©
think ? does one man have as good a right to
his freedom as another, as people are saying
now?”

“Of course I do,” answered Miss Keziah.
“Is n't that what we are fighting for?”

The boy said nothing more, but, sitting
quietly, like one accustomed to keeping his
thoughts to himself, “ Yes, madam,” and “ No,
madam,” he replied to the questions asked
him, and, when supper was over, he left imme-
diately.

“A hard life he has, a hard life,” repeated
Miss Keziah to Peter and Polly, as she watched
him while he took the shortest way to reach
164 PETER AND POLLY.



the village, through the fields and pastures.
“ He is one of the best and kindest lads in the
world, but to-day he is down-hearted. Per-
haps it was seeing you young folks with better
advantages than himself, for rough days he
must have with shoemaker Dow, who cares
for nothing but drinking-bouts and wrestling-
matches, and has always had the name of
being a cruel master with his ’prentices. Rob
clings to me, for he knows I was a friend to
his mother,” she added. “She and his father
had known better days, but anxiety and pov-
erty and disappointment wore them both out
at last!”

“O, yes! I believe —I am quite sure—TI
have heard their story,” exclaimed Polly, all
alive with interest ; “and,” she continued,
with a sentimental air, “don’t you think this
‘Rob, as you call him, has a way as if he were
born for better things? A sad look, as if he
were a prince who had been shut up in a dun-
geon, and yet a proud, daring one, as though
PETER AND POLLY. 165



he might make a great hero, noble and brave,
like Benedict Arnold ?”

“He is a truthful, well-meaning young fel-
low,” said Miss Keziah. “He makes a better
shoe now than his master does, and, considering
what he has been through, he has done well.”

Polly breathed, that summer, in ‘deed and
truth, the air of freedom. Miss Keziah had
the entire control of the farm and all its be-
longings ; for Job Hart, the new hired man
(her former well-trained one having gone to
the war), was only a feeble instrument in her
hands; and she was so very busy, body and
soul, that she had little time for the close
supervision of such apparently correct young
people as Peter and Polly. “And I’ve been
thinking,” she said, by way of self-excuse, “ that
there may be such a thing as holding in young
folks a little too close; a colt won’t do the
better for being always kept tied with a halter.”

“Tied with a halter” Polly certainly was
not. Over hill and dale, through wood and
166 PETER AND POLLY.



glen, by meadow-pool and singing brook,
startling the ground-bird from her fern-hid
nest, peering into the shady thicket, where
the catbird brooded on her emerald eggs,
chasing the orange butterflies, and twining
wreaths of violets and pale wood-lilies, she
wandered at her will, only hedged in by the
fear of losing her way, and the dread of the
gray wolves and the brown bears, that still
now and then, though not frequently, were
seen,

“And I guess, if you once had had a moun-
tain-cat’s teeth in you, you would not be quite
so daring!” said Peter, who sometimes wearied
of his sister’s importunities for him to accom-
pany her upon her rambles.

But O, they were so fair, the great prime-
val woods, the fresh, new-broken fields, where
the sun shone, and. the birds sang,— how could
she stay within? She used to wonder at the
quiet Judith, who seemed never to care to
cross the threshold, save to go to the meeting
PETER AND POLLY. 167



on Sunday, and to watch the growth of the
ragged pinks, and marigolds, and lady’s-de-
lights, in the little flower-bed nestled under
one of the windows; but always, when she
was not ill, was busy at the great wool or
the linen wheel, or carding tow or wool on the
hand-cards, or knitting, or weaving at the
loom set up in one end of the long kitchen.

“A dull life she leads, with no one to talk
to, when we are out, but her old mother,”
thought Polly, who took more pleasure in the
company of the lively, outspoken Miss Keziah,
who, like herself, was always ready to find
some excuse for being out of doors. She often
accompanied her in her rides about the farm,
sometimes sitting behind her on the old gray
horse, sometimes mounted in the cart drawn
by an immense pair of oxen, — the same kind
of cattle which Captain John Mason brought
over in 1633, “to stock the plantations and
assist in drawing lumber”; big, yellow, intelli-
gent creatures, that were counted marvels even
168 PETER AND POLLY.

then, when large, strong oxen held the same
comparative place that thorough-bred horses
do to-day.

Miss Keziah was a wise woman in sickness.
For years she was the only “cure-all” the
little community round her knew, and now,
when any of her old acquaintance were taken
ill, they were sure to send for her to come to
them. All her prescriptions were of roots or
herbs, but her gifts of healing were quite as
great as the village doctor’s, who, in truth,
physicked and bled his patients most unmerci-
fully. Under her instructions, Polly grew rich
in woodland lore, and seldom came back to
‘the house without having her arms full of
boughs and herbs, and roots and flowers, which,
whatever they were, the good doctress without
a title always assured her were of almost price-
less worth in some form of disease. Witch-
hazel branches and jewel-weeds, wild-currants
from the swamp and white-balm from the
sunny hills, gold-thread roots and violet flow-
PETER AND POLLY. 169



ers, Indian-turnips and Solomon’s-seals, all
alike were precious to Cousin Keziah.

What sweet odors came, at night, to Polly,
as she lay in her little unfinished chamber,
that opened into a wide waste-room, with floor
. of loosely laid boards, where these woodland
stores were dried and kept!

Somehow, her old fears all vanished in that
little room ; Cousin Keziah’s cheery, sustain-
ing presence in the house, and the gentle
smile of the calm, patient Judith, had put them
all to flight !

A small, ill-lighted room it was, with an un-
curtained bed, corded with elm-bark, a common
substitute for hemp in cording beds in those
days, and with a stout little feather-bed, which
Miss Keziah had made from the feathers of
many kinds of birds, which had been caught
about her premises, in the various traps and
snares then in frequent use for procuring
game, or destroying the winged robbers of the
hen-roosts and poultry-yards. “There is noth-
170 PETER AND POLLY.



ing a new settler needs so much as a saving
disposition,” said Miss Hapgood ; and, accord-
ingly, hawks’ feathers and pigeons’, the snow
from the owl’s breast and sable from the
crow’s neck, the wood-duck’s dainty dress and
the shy partridge’s speckled plumage, all alike
had gone to fill the coarse tow sacking that
covered them. Lying on that little bed, whose
sheets and “pillow-beeres” smelt of lavender
and sweet-grass, Polly forgot all her witch ter-
rors, and dreamed only the happy visions of
innocence and health.

It was a warm midsummer morning, scarcely
nine o'clock, and yet the dew was dry upon
the grass. Outside the door, in the shade
of a great red-oak, Miss Keziah, Judith, Polly,
even old Mrs, Potter herself, were sitting,
picking wool, for it was after the sheep-shear-
ing, and a “monstrous busy time,” Keziah said.
It was not very pleasant work, handling the
soiled fleeces, and pulling from them the
sticks and burs ; but Polly entered into it
PETER AND POLLY. 171



with a will, for it was easy enough, and she
was ready to assist whenever she could do
so.

All four of the women were dressed alike,
in long blue “ tyers,” that covered them from
neck to heels; and Mrs. Job Hart, the wife of
the hired man, had come over “to assist,” as
she said, bringing in her arms a very fretful
-baby, with a grimy cap.

“This wool,” said Polly, beginning at last
to grow impatient, “is quite full of those abom-
inable, worthless burdock-burs ! ”

“Worthless ? O, no!” exclaimed Miss Ke-
ziah ; “their seeds are the best thing in the
world for a weak stomach.”

“Yes,” put in Mrs. Potter, “as long ago as
I was a gal in the garrison, there was a woman
there that was ailing, and —”

“There’s Peter, coming back through the
meadow, tearing along like mad !—there’s
something happened!” burst forth Polly ; for,
an hour before, Peter had started to go to
172 PETER AND POLLY.



Parson Piper’s, it being one of his recitation-
days.

“The old mare must be stuck in the bog, —
Oh!” cried Miss Keziah, starting up; for for-
‘mer trials had made this vision a constant
terror to her.

“And she won't get out, this time, I’m
thinking,” said Judith.

“ And just as I had learned to ride bare-
back,” moaned Polly; “it’s too bad!”

“There’s news! There’s news!” shouted
Peter, hoarsely, hurrying so fast that, when
he reached them, he dropped down in their
midst, too much out of breath to speak.

“ The mare ?” asked Keziah.

“The Gen-eral Con-gress,” gasped Peter.
“They ve drawn up a paper — and signed it,
and we ain’t under King George, or Great
Britain, any more. We’re ‘free and inde-
pendent States, and we’re going to fight for
ourselves |”

“Thank the Lord!” said Miss Keziah.
PETER AND POLLY. 173



“And the men who did it, too,” suggested
Polly.

“No, no,” returned the other, who was no
man-worshipper, “they were only poor cree-
turs, doing His bidding; to him be all the
glory! But there is one thing,” she declared,
“there sha’ n't be any more work done to-
day.”

“ But it is a pity not,” expostulated Judith.
“Tabby Burbean said she would come over
with her cards, and help us, as soon as the
wool could be got ready.”

“Tabby Burbean or not,” said Keziah, “no
more work shall be done to-day!” And, as she
spoke, she laid hold of the big basket of wool
with both hands, to carry it away; “such
news as this ain't heard more’n once in a
hundred years; it isn’t the time to work,
more’n on Sunday. I am going to get ready
and go over to the village; perhaps I shall
hear more.”

“And I too!” exclaimed Polly ; “ and I will
174 PETER AND POLLY.



wear my best clothes; I’m sure I have noth-
ing good enough to put on. — Did you know,”
she said, snatching up the Hart baby in its
grimy cap,—‘“did you know there was n’t any
old king over you any more!” At which the
baby, startled by her unmaternal manner of
tossing up, sent forth such a doleful cry, that
Polly dropped him in his mother’s arms, and
pulled off, in a trice, her long-sleeved “tyer,”
as her first preparation for honoring the day.
How bright she looked, as she started for
the village, with Miss Keziah, Peter,. Mrs.
Hart, and the baby, all in the ox-cart together!
Her eyes shone, and her ear-rings trembled,
and she was decked with all the finery she
possessed ; for Miss Keziah was as indulgent
in regard to her dress as her Aunt Nancy
had been strict. “ Wear out your foreign rigs
and have some good plain homespun ones,”
she had advised; but Polly had a prudent re-
gard for the welfare of her best clothes, and
seldom donned them, save on Sundays.
PETER AND POLLY. 175



Mrs. Hart, too, had put a pair of patched
shoes on her stockingless red feet, and the
baby shone forth with a washed face and a
clean cap. “I tried to make myself look kind
o’ decent,” she said, “though what I’m goin’
for, I don’t know. The ‘Gineral Congress,’
as you call it, and King George, it’s all one to
me ; but I guess Job knows sumthin’ about it.
Leastways, he said, ‘Go with ’em, Susanna.’
But there! if I can get the garden hoed, and
sumthin’ to eat, and enough cloth made for
Job a coat and breeches, and some stockings
knit, so our feet won’t freeze next winter, it
will be all the independence I want, seems
if!”

Polly shrugged her pretty shoulders, under
her gay pink and yellow flowered necker-
chief. A woman with no more patriotism
seemed to her unworthy to live at such a
time ; and a mother who would let her infant
be seen, even at home, with a dirty face and
a grimy cap was even lower in the scale
176 PETER. AND POLLY.



of existence. “Really, old Buck and Bright
were almost her equals,’ she thought. She
got down from the cart, and, as she walked,
she gathered wild grape-vine, and the great
rosy blossoms of the red mulberry, and, weav-
‘ing long garlands, hung them about their necks,
like triumphal wreaths. “ Hurrah! old Buck
and Bright!” called Peter as she did so.
“You'll never draw any of the king’s lumber
any more!”

“ And the great pines!” said Keziah, point-
ing to two towering forest sentinels, with
“G. R.” cut upon them; “the king’s mark
will never be put upon another!”

When they reached the village, they found
it all alive with excitement. The narrow
street was full of people. “Uncle Abel's store
is shut up!” said Peter. The tavern was
deserted, the dwelling-houses closed. Mr.
Philbrick and his wife were coming down the
long path that led to their house, Peter and
Polly, who had dismounted from the cart, and
PETER AND POLLY. 177



were walking, stopped to speak to them.
“The ‘Declaration’ has come, and Parson
Piper is going to read it in front of the meet-
ing-house,” said Aunt Nancy, casting her eyes
over Polly’s clothes, with a half-scornful, half-
reproachful expression.

“And I, for one, am glad of it,” said Mr,
Burbean, who had joined them. “ Things
look dark, but it is a little comfort to know
where we stand. We hain’t seemed to belong
anywhere for some time.”

. “That is true,” responded Mr. Philbrick ;
“a man begins to know where he is, but
whether things will be any better than they
have been remains to be seen. It’s a hard
thing to carry on a war with a nation like
Great Britain, and be as poor as this country
is. We.can’t tell,” he continued, with anxiety
in his tone. His business perplexities already
wore upon his looks, though, after all, he was
not without hope in a new quarter, having
invested somewhat largely with a company
178 PETER AND POLLY.



in an enterprise for the manufacture of salt-
petre, so necessary in time of war. “ Now
we are in for the contest, we must fight it
through,” he said.

Into the green space around the meeting-
house every one was pressing, men, women,
and children, — and what a brood of children
there were! Bareheaded, their sunburnt hair
flying about their faces, brown with tan or
yellow with freckles, with coarse tow frocks
and uncovered feet, but singularly quiet and
docile. Parson Piper was all awake; his
eyes gleamed like stars; his face glowed like
flame; he carried his head, with its snow-
white wig, with an air of triumph ; he moved
among his flock with a word for each, and
every one made him obeisance on beholding
him. “This is a time that will come back
to you when you are an old man,” he said,
patting on the head little Jabez Burbean, a
stout child with a great piece of short-cake.

“Ah, Miss Hapgood!” he asked, when he
PETER AND POLLY. 179



came on Cousin Keziah, “don’t you see how
Scripture ’s coming true, —‘A nation shall be
born ina day’? And what a day it is!”

Not till all had gathered together, and he
had offered thanks, did he read the “ Declara-
tion,” which from the nearest shire-town an
express-post had brought, at almost break-
neck speed.

How gloriously they sounded, when for the
first time those words were heard: “We
hold these truths to be self-evident: that all
men are created equal, that they are endowed
by their Creator with certain unalienable
rights ; that among these are life, liberty, and
the pursuit of happiness.”

Scripture-taught Miss Keziah, as she lis-
tened, thought of Miriam’s song of victory and
Deborah’s exultations. Whatever were her
present trials, whatever conflicts lay before
her, she felt our land had indeed “triumphed
gloriously,” since Freedom’s voice had here
found so full and clear an utterance.
180 PETER AND POLLY.



When the reading was finished, Polly no-
ticed the men consulting amongst themselves.
“The town-powder!” said one; “The town-
powder!” returned another, “just to make a
noise, when every grain may be needed to
fight with !”

A tall boy with dark hair came rushing up
the street with a stout pole in his hand, fol-
lowed by half a dozen others similarly equipped.
Across the street, with a field between, rose an
abrupt hill, so steep that it was hard to clam-
ber up its ledgy side. Polly saw that the
leader was Rob Millin, whom she had seen at
the shoemaker’s window as she came past,
‘busily stitching, though every one else seemed
out of doors ; but even he had broken loose at
last. He led the way, and up the sloping
field, up the rocky hillside, clutching at the
bushes and saplings to hold on, the others
pressed close after. Polly watched them, won-
dering what they were about. By and by she
lost sight of them, and presently half a dozen
PETER AND POLLY. 18t



other lads, all with iron bars or poles, were
seen climbing the hill in another place.

There was a little delay, and then, crash!
Breaking the bushes, snapping the young ash-
trees, loosening the smaller rocks and stones,
a giant bowlder came rushing down the steep
hill! Faster and faster, gathering force, it
plunged along. Every eye was on it. “So
fall our country’s enemies!” said Parson
Piper.

Long after it reached the bottom of the hill,
it rolled forward by its own force, but at last,
in the green field, just opposite the place of
worship, it ceased to move, “ There let it
remain, a monument forever!” said Parson
Piper; and Joud hurrahs rang on the air, from
the crowd lingering around the meeting-
house.

“Come, Polly,” said Miss Keziah, when this
exploit was over, and she had had a word with
her numerous acquaintances, — “come, Polly ;
it is time we were going.” And Polly, with re-
182 PETER AND POLLY.



luctant face, gave her assent. Mrs. Hart and
the crying baby were already in the ox-cart
when they reached it, but Peter was among
the missing. They found him, at last, by the
tavern, where all the boys had gathered, to
look at poor George the Third hanging igno-
miniously, with his head downward, as he
swung from the high sign-post; while, on an
open space near by, they were collecting to-
gether candle-wood and brush, in large quan-
tities, to make, when evening came, a magnifi-
cent illumination. “A splendid spectacle,”
Polly thought, “which she must return to the
farm, and leave entirely unseen !”

“And to-morrow night,” said Peter, pulling
away a half-withered garland from the neck of
one of the yellow oxen, “there is to be a grand
_ dance at the tavern.”

“O, let us go!” cried Polly ; “may we not,
Cousin Keziah ?”

“Vou can’t dance,” said Peter.

“O, but I can,” said Polly ; “I know by the
PETER AND POLLY. 183



feeling in my feet when I hear the music; I
could dance, just as a robin sings or a swallow
flies.”

“And queer dancing it would be,” said
Peter; “but if you could, you are not invited.”

“ And you are too young to go if you were,”
said Cousin Keziah. “They are getting too
lax here about times and seasons, and it won’t
anyways do for young folks like you to be out
after nine o’clock. The last ball I went to
was when Parson Piper was ordained. All
the ministers from the country round were in
town. Old Parson Swan preached in the
afternoon, on the final judgment, a fearful,
solemn sermon, and in the evening there was
a ball that was a ball. Parson Piper opened
it with prayer, and your Aunt Philbrick was
there, in a pink and white brocade, and her.
husband in a blue satin waistcoat wrought
all over with green and scarlet vines and
flowers.”

“O, how lovely! how lovely it must have
184 PETER AND POLLY.



been!” sighed Polly. “ But / never can see
anything! O dear!” From what ecstatic
pleasures she was shut out! she thought, as
she rode home in the jolting old ox-cart.

Peter had been permitted to spend the night
at Parson Piper’s, and go and see the great
bonfire. It was hard that, at least, that privi-
lege did not fall to her lot. She wished her
Aunt Nancy would have asked her to spend
the night at her house. She would almost
have slept in the ghost-chamber, if she could
have had a glimpse of the festal illuminations
beforehand. Miss Keziah was too much ab- -
sorbed by the real issue of the words she had
heard, to mind the sulky face of the little girl,
and the Hart baby, worn out by its travels,
was crying lustily in its mother’s arm.

“Let me down,” cried Polly, speaking to
Job Hart, who was walking beside the oxen,
— “let me down ; I had rather walk.”

The sky above was rosy with the sunset;
the soft wind sang in the boughs; great spotted
PETER AND POLLY. 185



field-lilies nodded here and there beside the
path; the air was sweet with the breath of
clover-bloom and elder; and the bobolinks
sang their merriest, down in the meadow,
where the brook flowed quietly, bordered with
white-blossomed weeds ; but Polly “cared for
none of these things.” Since she could have
no share in enjoying the fire-works and mer-
rymakings, what was all the loveliness of
nature to her? She snapped off the pretty
yellow lilies impatiently, and broke the great
elder-clusters and threw them away to wither.

By and by she heard steps behind her, and,
looking up, saw her old friend, Rob Millin,
He seemed sad and tired, and, for the first
time, it struck Polly that her discontent was
selfishness.

“Good day to you,” said the boy, respect-

fully.
“Good day to you,” returned Polly. “I saw

you out helping roll down the rock, and I was
so glad that the shoemaker let you -go free
186 PETER AND POLLY.



from your work, and that you could help cele-
brate.”

“T free?” answered the other. “I stole
the time, and a fool I was to do it, for what’s
freedom to me? I’m nothing but a slave my-
self.”

“O, yes you are! or, if you have been, you
won't be long,” was Polly’s comforting rejoin-
der. “But what will the man that has the
shop say to you? He can be so dreadful when

he is angry !”

“TY don’t know what he w// say,” answered
the boy, gloomily ; “I’ve seen him; I know
what he Aas said. But I will never stand
quietly and let him strike me again; he may
kill me first — he — may —”

The color fled from Polly’s face. The boy
saw it, and reproached himself. ‘Don’t be
troubled,” he said, ‘I’m sorry I spoke to you
about it. He has been drinking, and has lost
money on two Scotch-Irish men that were
here and had a wrestling-match, and to-mor-
PETER AND POLLY. 187



row morning he will be in a better mood, and
people will be coming to the shop, and I shall
get clear; but, just to-night, I would rather
not meet him. He’s threatened me; it ain’t
the place of a ’prentice to strike back if he’s
‘struck ; and, if it were, he’s older than I am,
and stronger. But don’t think of it any more,”
he said ; “I ain’t worth it, and ’t will all come
right.”

“But where are you going to stay to-night?”
said Polly ; “O dear !”

“Stay?” answered the boy. “Isn't the
sky big enough to cover me? and who needs
any closer roof, such weather as this?”

“But the wolves! I should be so afraid to
be out all night!” said Polly ; “and these
hemlock woods, — they look so black and
frightful!”

“As for the wolves,” answered the boy, “I
have some tinder and a flint-box with me;
I can strike a fire if I hear them howl]; but

wolves are not the worst things in the world.
188 PETER AND POLLY.

If there were more of them I should know
better what to do. Jack Crullis, — he’s half
Indian, you know, — he taught me how to bait
them with mackerel-hooks, and how to make
wolf-traps out of logs, as the Indians do; and
one night I killed two wolves, and if I could
have had the money for their heads, as I
ought, they would have brought me as much
as twenty shillings.”

“ And didn’t you get it?” asked Polly.

“Get it! Ask Master Dow who had the
pay for them!” said the boy, his cheek flush-
ing at the memory of his old grievance; “I
had n’t used much of 47s time setting the
traps ; I did it when I should have been abed
and asleep; this is not the first night I have
spent in the woods, because his house has
been too hot to hold me! But the wolves
were caught, and Id cut off their heads, and
hoped to get the bounty on them. But what’s
this to you?” he asked, interrupting himself ;
“TI won't trouble you any more.”
PETER AND POLLY. 189



“But you must; I want to know,” said
Polly ; “what was it?”

“©, I put them away, both heads, in an
old basket Jack Crullis gave me, and when I
went to get them to carry for the bounty, they
were both gone, and a marten’s skin that I had
put with them, — that was gone too, — and two
days after some one was telling how Master
Dow had killed two wolves and got the prize
on their heads.”

“O, that was too bad!” sighed Polly.

“But I sold their skins,” said Rob, “and
got something for them. If I could set some
more traps, and have good luck, I should be
glad, for there’s a high bounty on wolves, and
there are some things I want to get.”

“What things?” said Polly, her curiosity
getting the better of her politeness.

The boy hesitated.

“Tam sorry I asked; I forgot all my man-
ners,” apologized Polly.

“YT want a musket most of anything,” said
the boy.
1gQ PETER AND POLLY.



“A musket!” repeated Polly. “ You have
no time to go hunting, if you had one, and pow-
der is so monstrous scarce and dear, besides!”

“T know it,’ returned Rob; “but I want a
musket, for all that, and I ought to have one
by the law, and a bayonet and a cartridge-box,
a pound of powder, twenty bullets, and twelve
flints ; the law would give them to me, for I
am over sixteen; but I don’t have them, and
I sha’ n’t without I earn them, and I mean to
do it.”

“But what do you want of them without
you can use them? That is what puzzles
me,” said Polly.

The boy smiled. “ You think I had better
save my money and buy a hat?” he asked,
taking off his battered head-piece. “ Well,
it is no time I have to earn money now; so
it doesn’t matter.”

“ But I can’t bear,” said Polly, “to have you
stay out over night in the woods. If you will
come home with me, my Cousin Keziah will
PETER AND POLLY. Igt



give you a good supper and a good place to
sleep in; I know she will.”

“T know she would, too,’ said Rob; “she
is the best friend, she is the only friend I have
in the world; but I want to trouble no one,
and I am not afraid !”

“Cousin Keziah may be your best friend,
but she is not your only one,” returned Polly,
a little piqued; “I’m sure I always wished
you well, ever since the first Sunday I saw
you at meeting and the tithing-man was so
unjust.”

“And I’ve wished you well, too,” responded
Rob. “Do you suppose I shall ever forget
how kindly you spoke to me when you came
out of meeting there with Miss Hapgood ?”

“ But I can’t be happy all night,” said Polly.
“T shall think about you and the wolves and
the bears.”

“And I,” said the boy, “shall be asleep in
some quiet place, or else I shall sit in the
moonlight, and work on this.” And he touched,
192 PETER AND POLLY.



as he spoke, a cow’s horn, which, partly fash-
ioned for use, he had in his hand.

“You’re making a powder-horn to go with
your musket,” said Polly.

“Hush, there’s some one coming!” whis-
pered the boy. And darting into the deep
wood, in a moment he was out of sight.

It was Price Hodgkins, on horseback.
“Polly !” he called, — for, from being a relation
of her Uncle Philbrick, he was accustomed to
seeing her and addressing her by name,—
“Polly, has your uncle’s maid, Beck, been seen
up this way ?”

“No, sir, not that I know,” answered Polly;
“why should she have been?”

“ She’s missing,” was the answer, “and a
good many things are missing with her; all
Mrs. Philbrick’s teaspoons and her silver tea-
pot, and candlesticks, and some Spanish doub-
loons your uncle had in a bag in a little chest
in his bedroom, and likely they will find more
things gone as soon as they can look round” ;
PETER AND POLLY. 193



saying which, he struck his horse and hurried
along.

“Poor Rob!” said Miss Keziah, when Polly
came in with the pitiful account of her walk.
“Tt says, in this new ‘ Declaration,’ that ‘all
men are created equal,’ but some folks are
born to pretty hard lots, for all that; but if
quick wits and a kind heart are counted in,
Rob need not stand second to any one.”

“TI can’t sleep!” said Polly, “I know, to-
night, for fear the wolves will eat him; and
about Aunt Nancy’s teaspoons, you don’t
know how solemn it seems, somehow, Cousin
Keziah !”










CHAPTER IX.

\ N HAT a winter it was, the gloomy sea-
son of 1776 and 1777!

Others than Mr. Burbean looked out with
dreary forebodings of “hard times coming.”
Some, indeed, by the presence of the wolf at
the door, knew they were already here.

Poor Mr. Philbrick, mourning over his van-
ished doubloons, was kept in constant irrita-
tion by the sight of some debtor, too ready to
pay, presenting himself with his hands full of
bills of credit, to refuse which was to have the
whole debt cancelled; and yet to accept, unless
to be used in the same way, was to him nearly
as trying and unprofitable.

Aunt Nancy, scouring her own pots and
PETER AND POLLY. 195



pans in place of the lost Beck, whose where-
abouts were not to be found, and looking at
the brass candlesticks which took the place
of her silver ones, grew more and more gloomy
and dissatisfied, and showed no desire to invite
back to her home her restless young niece,
who when with her had been some care and
little assistance, or to undertake again provid-
ing three meals a day for “a growing boy”
like Peter. It was not an easy thing for Mrs,
Philbrick to find a hired maid to stand in her
slave-girl’s place. The doctrine of freedom
and equality was a new and popular one, and
the farmers’ daughters round, if willing to
“work out,” preferred to go as “help” into
poor families than as servants into wealthier
ones, Peter and Polly thus remained unmo-
lested under the shelter of Miss Hapgood’s
farm-house. All was not cheerful prosperity
even there. Some of the window-panes were
broken, and glass to reset them was not to be
procured, Peter, still struggling on with his
196 PETER AND POLLY.



studies, found the necessary books were too
“prodigious costly” things for him to even
dream of possessing; and college life; now
that he was so much nearer fit for it, seemed
to be farther and farther away. Breadstuffs
grew high and scarce, and salt to preserve the
winter’s stock of meat was quite wanting ; the
pigeons must be cured by smoking ; the beef
and pork must be packed down in snow, after
the Indian fashion, and an outcry was made
every time there was a melting season. Even
the small quantity of salt used on the table
seemed a precious thing ; and Peter, whose task
it had been to pound it, found his “occupation
gone.” Miss Keziah was busy half the time in
devising and procuring substitutes for the vari-
ous articles of constant use which the times had
made costly or unattainable. She pounded
fever-bush bark for spice, and prickly-ash for
pepper, to add flavor to her dishes, while Judith
carded the down from the silk-weed pods to

make into candle-wicks, and saved every avail-
PETER AND POLLY. 197



able “tag” of wool to put by toward making
yarn or cloth, which, if not wanted for them-
selves, would be sure to be needed by the
soldiers, to whom it was customary to forward
supplies whenever the opportunity offered.

“ Hard times” mean hard work. Peter and
Polly began to realize that the price of free-
dom was not to be paid alone by the sacrifice
of noble lives, but by daily acts of petty self-
denial and patient submission to discomforts
as well. Beyond, the aspect of the war was
gloomy indeed. The retreat from New York
had been followed by “terrible times” in “the
Jerseys,” and though the victories of Trenton
and Princeton made the beginning of 1777 a
“happy new year” for many a patriotic heart,
the reduced state of the army, the prevailing
sickness in it, and the increasing difficulty of
obtaining recruits, made the prospect for the
future exceedingly depressing.

In the two letters which the children had
received since their father’s return to the
198 PETER AND POLLY.



army, though written in a spirit of cheerful
trust, it was evident that he saw much to dis-
courage him. Small-pox, dysentery, and ma-
lignant fever had raged among the soldiers,
who were suffering for food, care, and medi-
cine, and many of his fellow-surgeons were
wholly unfit for their places: some basely
selling furloughs and discharges at less than
a shilling a man; others, well-meaning, but
with no fit education for their position; while
all alike were ill supplied with medicines and
surgical instruments. The New Hampshire
soldiers who in February returned to the little
community brought back a sickening account
of insubordination. among the men in the
army, and of lack of dignity and self-respect
among its officers ; but nothing for a moment
could dampen Miss Keziah’s ardor. “It’s
freedom’s cause and the Lord’s cause,’ she
said, “and it will be sure to prosper. It was
n’t the lamps or the pitchers, it was the Lord’s
will, that brought down the walls of Jericho.”
PETER AND POLLY. 199



After the yellow leaves fell and the birds
took flight in the autumn, Polly’s life in the
farm-house was dull enough. Peter found
in Parson Piper an exceedingly appreciative
teacher, who made him almost as much of a
companion as a pupil, and with his books and
lessons for friends, the studious boy was sel-
dom lonely ; but Polly, when the winter snows
had come and the roads were blocked, so that
Job Hart and the great yellow oxen had hard
labor to break them out, often grew impatient
for companionship,. She made work a substi-
tute for play, and learned to spin on big and
little wheels, and even to weave quite skil-
fully for a beginner, with Judith for a teacher.
Old Mrs, Potter, when in-a garrulous mood,
would. entertain her with stories of her own
young days when she lived in “a new set-
tling” in the woods, where ten families used
one frying-pan; or of the stirring time when
she took refuge in the garrison-house, and
helped load the gun while her young lover,
200 PETER AND POLLY.



Israel Potter, fired at the besieging savages ;
and how her eldest son, in the French war,
went forth with Rogers’s rangers, and returned,
one of the few who came back, finding his
way through the perilous, pathless woods,
chewing the buds of trees and gnawing his
knapsack-strap to keep himself from starving.

Sometimes the neighbors—that is, the
people living within five miles of them —
came in for a visit, and sometimes Polly went
out herself with Miss Keziah to a quilting or
a tea-drinking, in return. One happy time
Rob Millin brought over some shoes for
Judith, and as his master was away he ven-
tured to spend the evening; and Tabby Bur-
bean was there helping spin, and Parson
Piper's nephew had come to visit Peter; so
they had young folks enough for a merry-
making ; and they parched corn, and roasted
apples on the hearth, and told each other's
fortunes with burning nuts; and Job Hart
came in with a borrowed fiddle, and Rob sang
PETER AND POLLY. 201



“Yankee Doodle,” and Tabby Burbean, “My
Love is lost to Me!” and when she did so,
Polly saw Judith go to the window and wipe
her eyes ; and then they played games, blind-
man’s-buff and twirl-the-trencher, and Polly,
making up for her past quiet, frisked round to
her heart’s content, as gay as a bird on the
wing; and even Rob forgot his trials for the
time, only to have them come back to him
looking blacker and bigger than ever when
the clock struck nine, and he must return to
his uncongenial home.

The sweet-smelling spring came back at
last. The sap began to stir in the maples.
“More work for us,’ thought Polly, grown
practical, with a sigh in her heart, over the
labor of sugar-making. Then the bluebirds
sang, the willows filled the air with fragrance,
the may-flowers blossomed in the wood; and
after that the violets made purple all the
brooksides ; and before they had quite with-
ered, June had come, and the strawberries
202 PETER AND POLLY.



were just beginning to grow ripe, when Polly,
making haste to go out and gather the earliest,
thought the world had never seemed so fair as
it did that sweet summer morning ; for the
robins sang their loudest, and the hemlock-
boughs were fringed with softest green, and
the river gleamed in the sunlight, like a golden
stream, beyond the fields of budding flax.
Polly fastened in her hair an opening bud of
the wild rose, and was heaping her basket,
scantily filled with berries, so few as yet were
ripe, with the tender leaves of the new
checkerberry, when she heard a rustling near
her, and looked round, half startled. What
strange, yet familiar person was this? It
was Rob, dressed in a complete suit of brown
homespun, coarse, but not ill fitting, and show-
ing to advantage his straight, slender figure,
already beginning to have a strong and manly
look. He carried a musket, and a knapsack
was slung over his shoulder.

“ Polly,” he said, in a low tone, for the first
PETER AND POLLY. 203



time venturing to call her so, — “Polly, I’m up
and away ; and if I never come back you must
sometimes give me a thought, for it is often
enough that I shall think of you and Miss
Keziah and your brother, wherever I may
be.”

“ And where are you going to be?” asked
Polly, who was apt to be prompt with her
questions.

“My musket and knapsack tell you, do they
not?” asked Rob; “and here,” he added,
touching it, slung by his side, “is my powder-
horn; the same one I was making, last year,
on Independence day, when I met you on the
road as you were coming home.”

The tears sprang into Polly’s eyes. “ Yes,
they tell me,” she answered, solemnly ; “and
whether to be very glad, or very sorry, I can-
not say.”

“Be very glad,” said the boy. “I am a
man, for the first time, to-day; and a free
man. I have been a slave ever since 1 was
204 PETER AND POLLY.



a little child, and if I never come back it’s
all one; I have nothing to come to.”

“QO, yes, you have !” returned Polly; “we
all, Peter, and Miss Keziah, and Judith, too,
in her still way, and I,—O, I should be so
sorry if any evil befell you! And we shall be
so happy to give you a welcome when we sce
you again!”

“If you ever do,” answered the boy, with a
sigh. “You wonder where I earned these,”
he continued, touching his musket, and then
laying his hand on the cuff of his coat, as if
conscious of pleasure in being, for once, suit-
ably attired ; “but, ever since I first heard of
the fighting at Lexington, it has been in my
thoughts day and night. ‘There, I would say
to myself, every time I heard of the soldiers
going out, ‘is a chance for me. All the time
it has kept growing worse in the shop, till I
can’t bear it any longer. Perhaps I am fool-
ish, but, as I might be suspected, I thought
IT would rather go equipped with all the mili-
PETER AND POLLY. 205



tia law required. So every farthing I could
earn I saved. I laid snares for the crows
and got bounties on their heads; and when I
went over to the tanner’s, as I often had to, I
always carried a long pole, with an iron fork
in one end of it, and took my way over the
Ledge, and looked for rattlesnakes as I went,
and if I killed one I had a bounty for that ;
and last winter I made powder-horns, and sat
up at night in the cold to do it; and I’ve
had odd jobs of cobbling, — nothing but what
‘I had a right to,” he said, fearing he might
be thought to have used his master’s time
dishonorably, “but things that came in my
own way, that did not concern the shop;
and at last I earned my clothes and my mus-
ket ; —- they will give me a new one, I hope,
when I get where I am going, but I bought
this cheap; it is one that was used in the
French war fifteen years ago ; — and my knap-
sack Jotham Brown gave me; he is a man
you never saw, a teamster that used to live
206 PETER AND POLLY.



here, and was kind to my father, and has been
tome. Ifany one ought to fight for liberty, it
is I. I know what it is to long for it, enough.”

“T hope,” said Polly, piously, “that God will
keep you; and I am sure he will,” she added,
“for we shall never forget to ask him.”

“But I am not quite free yet,” said Rob,
“and I shall not feel so till there are a good
many miles between this place and me. I
must be gone now, for soon they will be out
searching for me, as they were for Brown Beck
and your uncle’s teaspoons; and if Master”
Dow offers a large reward, there will be
those ready enough to take me back. But
they never shall,—they never shall!” he re-
peated. “Good by, and give my love to all
at the house, and this to your brother,” he
said, and took from his breeches-pocket a
little hard package, like a book; “it’s all I
have in the world that is of value to any one,
and I thought, perhaps, as he is a scholar, it
would be of use to him.”
PETER AND POLLY. 207



As she took it, the great tears ran down
Polly’s cheeks, for she could not bear to
think of her first childish friend going out
alone into the world, soon, perhaps, to meet
death, and that in all probability they would
never meet again. Rob brushed his hand
across his eyes. “Polly,” he said, “be care-
ful of one thing ; keep the book hid, and tell
no one you have seen me till at least two
weeks have gone by, not even Miss Keziah
or your brother. They are both true friends,
but if they really do not know anything about
me, it will be easier for them to answer ques-
tions if they are asked them. Good by,” he
said, with a quiver of the lip.

“Good by!” sobbed Polly, wishing she had
some little memento that Rob could carry
away. She took her kerchief to wipe her eyes ;
it was a common one, coarse and ill woven,
for it was one of Polly’s first achievements at
the wheel and the loom, but she had nothing
else to give. “JTt’s all: I have with me,” she
208 PETER AND POLLY.



said, “and it’s very clumsily wove, but per-
haps it will make you think of us, and when
you see it you must always feel that you have
some friends who think of you wherever you
abe

“Thank you a thousand times,” answered
the boy, “for the kind gift and the kinder
thought! But I must be going,” he said, look-
ing all around, like one who feels himself in
danger; “I cannot stay! Good by, again!”
He took her hand, just touched it to his lips,
and was off, bounding like a deer up a steep
path along a rocky ledge, and finally vanishing
in a thicket of young sumachs.

Polly went home with her little basket half
filled with berries, and the wilted wild rose
in her hair, sad and anxious, but a little proud
withal, for she had come at last, she thought,
to a romantic chapter in what seemed, to her
adventurous spirit, like a mournfully prosaic
life.

Not a word did she utter when Peter, who,
PETER AND POLLY. 209



in his way, had learned to entertain a pleas-
ant, friendly feeling for Rob, whose ardent,
restless temperament was so different from his
own more quiet and studious one, came in
quite alarmed with the statement that Jacob
Dow, the shoemaker, had offered a large
reward for the capture of his runaway appren-
tice, and that he, and one or two rough men
like himself, and the sheriff, were out in hot
pursuit of poor Rob.

“He’s run away and listed,” said Miss
Keziah.

“How did you know he had?” asked Polly,
almost sharply, and nearly betraying her
knowledge.

“Know?” returned Miss Keziah; “it’s
what any sensible fellow ought to do in his
place, and so I guess he has; I’ve wondered
why he did n't, this long while.”

“But I am so afraid he will be caught!”
sighed Polly ; and felt, as she did so, of the book
which she had put for the time in the patch-
210 PETER AND POLLY.



work pocket under her short-gown and apron.
It was a Hebrew Psalter, with “John Millin”
on the title-page; the only thing that had
remained to the orphan child of a father who,
in his youth, had known wealth and luxury
and all bright anticipations of future pleasure
and honor.










CHAPTER X.

URGOYNE'S defeat! How it made
B the pulses beat and served to keep up
the waning courage of the Colonies! But for
that, what would have become of hope ?

Polly’s father wrote a glowing letter, which
. was a long, long while in reaching them, giv-
ing a heart-cheering account of it; and Par-
son Piper preached and prayed and returned
thanks, interweaving the good news with all
the exercises of public worship for four Sun-
days in succession, to the exclusion of almost
every other topic ; though, after all, his enthu-
siasm was hardly as great as it had been when
Stark carried all before him at Bennington,
for Stark was a New Hampshire man, and
212 PETER AND POLLY.



sectional pride was a stronger feeling then
than it is to-day, when we are all bound to-
gether “with sinews of brass and iron.”

But when the huzzas of victory had died
away, and snow had come again, what a de-
pressing, gloomy, fearful winter it was! Not
alone to the barefooted soldiers sitting all
night, hungry and homesick, by their camp-
fires, because they had no blankets in which
to sleep, but to every little village through-
out the land, how much of privation and
hardship it brought! Poor Parson Piper’s
salary, paid in paper currency, was insufficient
to buy decent clothing for his family (Mrs.
Piper being one of the few women who were
not accustomed to doing their own spinning
and weaving); and the little Pipers found
themselves brought to hard commons and short
fare, — an unexpected lot, for, as minister’s
children, they had been accustomed to carry
themselves not without arrogance among their
little mates when the eye of the good preacher
was not upon them.
PETER AND POLLY. 213



Polly, when she went to spend a brief time
with her Aunt Nancy, found that things in
the fine house were greatly changed. Her
uncle, during the two past seasons, seemed to
have grown almost ten years older. So many
of his debtors had come to make payment,
that the amount of paper-money he had on
hand was to him a matter of most serious
concern; and as it every day was losing in
value, his face grew longer and his brow more
furrowed all the while. Aunt Nancy enter-
tained Polly with distressing statistics of the
price of various articles of food and wear ;
telling her of an extravagant bride who was
to be married in a dress the satin of which
was seventy dollars a yard; and of a soldier
whose three months’ wages had barely pur-
chased a warming-pan ; and how the price of
ten acres of land which they had sold had
brought to them but little more than half a
peck of salt. Truly, Mr. Burbean’s prophecy
had come to pass; “breadstuffs were scarce
214 PETER AND POLLY.



and taxes high; the Indians on the borders
were all hawking round, and the paper-money
was worth little more than a crop of fire-
weed”; which, by the way, was a trouble-
some, exhaustive plant, springing up on newly
burnt lands.

Dr. Austin, when he had seen her at the
time of his furlough, had left with Miss Keziah
a sufficient sum of money to meet all the ex-
penses of his children for a long season in
advance, but he had hoped, ere this, to be able
to forward an additional remittance. It was,
however, almost impossible to send to her
securely, at so great a distance; and besides,
all he could now procure was in paper cur-
rency, which seemed of too little value to be
worth transmitting. So Peter and Polly be-
gan to have a sadly dependent feeling, and to
relieve it as best they could, bravely set to
work to make themselves paying members of
the family in which they were placed. Parson
Piper, out of pure love of bestowing instruc-
PETER AND POLLY. 215



tion, had insisted that Peter should continue
to come to him each week, and with the hope
that the lad would prove, in the end, a preacher
like himself, had constrained him to pursue
his study of Hebrew, in which Rob’s Psalter
was found to be a valuable assistance ; but if
at any time the pupil was unusually dull, it
would commonly turn out that Peter had been
in the woods helping Job Hart get in the
stock of “fewel” (a matter of interest to the
minister, the best part of his salary being then
made up of his annual supply of thirty cords
of fire-wood), or that he had been driving Miss
Keziah’s oxen in breaking out the road, or
preparing stakes (all cut by hand) for a new
fence, or, in warm weather, that he had been
busy swingling flax in the barn.

They all in that vicinity wore’old shoes that
winter, for the shoemaker, with no Rob to
help him, was habitually delinquent in meet-
ing his engagements. Polly often recalled her
old friend’s romantic farewell on the hillside,
216 PETER AND POLLY.

and wonderingly queried, with Peter and Miss
Keziah, what had become of him ; but no word
in regard to his fortunes had ever reached
them,

“No news is good news,” said Miss Keziah,
“but I only wish I’d known the boy was
going; I would have knit him a store of stock-
ings and made him a pair of shirts.”

“Tt is well to bear the yoke in one’s youth.”
Peter hard at work, and then busy at his
books, Polly learning to cook and sew and
spin and weave, were each acquiring, every
day, lessons of patience, industry, and thought-
fulness toward others.

Even for Mrs. Job Hart, indifferent whether

,

the “Gineral Congress” or “King George”
was in power, and whose baby still wore a
grimy cap, Polly began to feel a forbearing
tenderness. What must it have been to spend
one’s childhood with a family of nine in a log-
hut with but one small window and a smoky

chimney, with a drunken Indian family on
PETER AND POLLY. 217



one side, and a wolf-haunted wood on the other,
with a rough father who had fallen into roam-
ing ways in the French war, and who left, in
savage fashion, the chief care of the planting
and harvesting to his unfortunate “women
folks” ; with no furniture but a few stools, no
dishes or cooking-utensils, save some poorly
made wooden plates, a kettle, and a hand-basin,
with which the water for all the family use
must be brought from the river; with no bed
but one of hemlock-boughs or straw, — what
must such a life have been? Polly, in the new
light of her experience of hard work, was all
alive with sympathy, and instead of scorning
Mrs. Hart for her ignorance and her untidy
ways, looked at her with wonder that she had
preserved a clean heart through all; and when,
one bleak March morning, she found that
the last baby had been supplanted by a new
one, she took Miss Keziah’s old white horse,
and urged her through the mud and melting
snow of the worst of roads to Mr. Burbean’s, to
218 PETER AND POLLY.



borrow a blanket, that the little stranger might
be properly presented for baptism the next
Sunday; “delays are dangerous” being, one
would think, the motto of old-time New Eng-
land church-members as regarded christen-
ings. It was a pretty square of white linen,
quilted with many flowers, that had done good
service for the fourteen Burbean infants, to
say nothing of much lending, and was good
still for long years of future use.

Polly was quite indignant that Miss Keziah,
who had the chief rule of everything on her
place, did not think best that the little stran-
ger should be carried nearly four miles on
its first earthly Sabbath to be baptized; and
was, in turn, delighted when, three weeks
after, on a sunny April Sunday, the baby
could be wrapped in its borrowed mantle and
wear the new embroidered cap which she had
made, and go, carried in Miss Keziah’s arms,
in the cart, to the house of the Lord, where

he received a name of Polly’s own selection,
PETER AND POLLY. 219



“Peter Lafayette,’—a double name, which was
a rare thing in those days; but no single one
could have satisfied Polly, who, half jealously,
thought that Parson Piper, in his patriotic
prayer, offered more fervent petitions for the
French general than for his insignificant
namesake.

But it was less, after all, of births than of
death that the gentle spring was speaking to
them. A change had come over the quiet
home that the brother and sister had learned
to call theirs. The old grandmother, who had
seemed so very aged and frail that they had
thought she might die at any time, still kept
her place at the table and the hearth, and told
over the tales of the borrowed frying-pan, and
the besieged garrison, and the half-starved
soldier, as often as ever; but Judith, the pale,
still woman, whose hand had always been
busy from morning till night, was now too
feeble for toil, and patiently and serenely she
was “ wearing away, like a snow-wreath in a
thaw.”
220 PETER AND POLLY.



In vain thé village doctor, his great saddle-
bags stuffed, came to her with his prescrip-
tions; in vain Miss Keziah steeped for her
golden-rod, balm, life-everlasting, and queen-
of-the-meadow : every passing week found her
more wasted and languid. Her chief delight
was in the hymns of the new book, “ Watts’s
Collection,” which now took the place of “ Tate
and Brady” in the Sunday meetings. Polly
had learned many of these by heart, and used
to say them over to her, as they sat together
in the sweet summer twilight till it deepened
into dusk. There was one that she seemed

to prefer to all the others :—

“ A blooming paradise of joy
In this wild desert springs :
And every sense I straight employ
On sweet celestial things,

“ White lilies all around appear,
And each his glory shows!
The rose of Sharon blossoms here,
The fairest flower which blows.”
PETER AND POLLY. Zoe



Perhaps it was the thought of the celes-
tial blossoms that lent the hymn its charm,
for the flower-bed under the window had been
to poor Judith, for the last few years, her
greatest pleasure ; and now that she knew her
time was brief, and other earthly things had
lost for her their interest, she still watched the
unfolding of the buds with all ‘her old delight,
and even expressed the wish that she might
live to see in bloom a rare and beautiful rose-
bush, called the cinnamon-rose, the root of
which a friend of Keziah’s had sent all the
way from “old Haverhill” two years before.
It had grown well, but never flowered until
this spring, when it was covered with buds.
A few warm days, the first of June, seemed
to develop them all at once, and the bush,
among the green grass where it grew, gleamed
like a fragrant cloud dropped from the morn-
ing sky. They drew Judith in the cushioned
arm-chair up to the window, that she might

see it.
222 PETER AND POLLY.



«“* White lilies all around appear,
And each his glory shows !
The rose of Sharon blossoms here,
The fairest flower which blows.

“© Up to the fields, above the skies,
‘My hasty feet would go, —
There everlasting flowers arise,

And joys unwith’ring grow,’”

she whispered, smiling, and then, being weary,
closed her eyes, and dropped at last to sleep.
When she wakened her mind wandered, and,
as it proved, these were the last neasonale
words she spoke.

How.worn and wasted she looked, when
the gentle soul had flown, and the clay was
only clay! Pinned inside her short-gown was
a fragment of paper enclosing a lock of hair,
and some time-faded verses, well written, —
those who could write commonly wrote well in
those days,— but not perfect in spelling or
measure, and signed “ Ebenezer.” Of what
sweet sad secret of her girlhood they were the
PETER AND. POLLY. 223



last reminder no one knew, not even Miss
Keziah ; but Polly regarded them reverently,
and felt that she knew the reason of the
expression of patient submission which had
always rested on Judith’s placid face.

“There is one thing,” said Miss Keziah, as
she laid on the closed eyes two silver coins
still remaining in the house, “I will not dis-
honor Judith by making her funeral a display
of extravagance, as some such occasions in
this region have been.”

“No, I would n't,” said Mrs. Piper, the par-
son’s wife, who, hearing of the mournful event,
had ridden over; “ but then, I like suitable
respect paid to the departed. Now, in some
places, since the war, it seems as if they were
giving up everything, The women are wear-
ing no mourning, except black ribbon on their
bonnets, and the men only a piece of crape
on the arm; and they don’t even give gloves
to the bearers ; that seems dreadful to me.”

“Well,” said Miss Keziah, “ there are things
224. PETER AND POLLY.



that I think are worse. Now, when Jabez
Plummer, Mrs. Burbean’s sister’s husband,
died, it really seemed sinful the way his widow
went on. Jabez had been doing well and had
laid up money, but, when he died, one would
have thought a woman with nothing of her
own, and five children under eight, two of them
twin babies, would have felt she did not want
to go to needless expense; and yet, all she
appeared to care about was a,handsome burial.
She got a black scarf, gown, and bonnet for
herself, and dressed the children in mourning,
and bought black buttons and buckles for her
husband’s brother who lived with her, and
funeral rings to give to all the relations, and
as many as twenty pairs of gloves,—some
costly ones, to lay on the coffin for the bearers
to put on when they took up the bier; and
she got some Jamaica rum, and Madeira wine,
and other spirits, for the supper, when the
procession should come home; and the young
brother took so much it turned his head, and
PETER AND POLLY. 225



he began to sing “Push about the Jorum”
at the table; and Mrs. Plummer found herself
in debt, and has been in trouble ever since.
Iam no one’s judge, but such conduct would
be very wrong in me.”

“Well, I don’t like display,” said Mrs. Piper,
who had a still unsubdued fondness for finery,
“but I do like gloves at a funeral.” ;

“But gloves are just what, in a time like
this, cannot be thought of!” said Keziah, with
an anxious remembrance of the dependent old
mother and her wants, and of the half-filled
salt-cellar on the closet shelf, and of the price
of shoes and of grain, and a patriotic thought,
not the less, of the brave men in arms, who,
through the dreary winter, had been garment-
less and hungry, and of their suffering fami-
lies, whom the soldiers’ wages, tardily paid and
almost worthless when received, could not sup-
port and could scarcely assist. “ Judith will
never be forgotten; but, when God in his
providence has taken her where ‘want’ is a
226 PETER AND POLLY.



word unknown, and there are those living
about us who are sorely in need of food and
clothing, I shall go into no expense for her fu-
neral beyond what seems to me necessary to
make it suitable and respectful, uxder the ctr-
cumstances.” Miss Keziah felt that, in saying
this, she had taken an independent stand.- The
stuff that reformers are made of was mingled
in her character.

The sun shone brightly on the day of the
burial ; the birds sang their sweetest, and the
soft south-wind came through the window into
the front room where the mourners were sit-
ting, and where a coffin of pine boards painted
black rested on the table spread with white, in
the middle of the room. How lifelike and
sweet the face within it looked, made lovely
with that almost glorified smile that not in-
frequently comes to the lips of one who has
fallen into the last dreamless sleep!

There were no gloves on the coffin. The
old mother sat propped up in her great arm-
PETER AND POLLY. 227



chair, wearing a still well-preserved black bon-
net, that she had had for twenty years; but
Miss Keziah, though she had long been to
Judith as a sister, wore not even the semblance
of mourning. “ Borrowing black” was a mock-
ery that she despised, and so costly was every
article of imported ware, she had not even ven-
tured to allow herself a new ribbon; an omis-
sion which was a trial to Polly, who, even on
solemn occasions, had a reverence for the fash-
ion of the time, and still, against her will, her
sympathies were with Miss Keziah. Every
needless expenditure, in those dark days,
seemed like a wicked waste.

Unconsciously she herself had made an in-
novation upon the customs of the day. Where
the winding-sheet crossed Judith’s breast, Miss
Keziah had slipped beneath it the time-yel-
lowed verses and the lock of hair ; and Polly
laid, just over them, a knot of the sweet-smell-
ing pinks that Judith had loved to gather from
the little flower-bed, and on the coffin-lid,
228 PETER AND POLLY.



instead of the great bunch of tansy commonly
placed there, was a lovely branch of the new
rose-tree, its blossoms grown of a paler pink,
but not a petal shed.

Parson Piper preached from the quaint text,
“ She layeth her hands to the spindle, and her
hands hold the distaff” ; which seemed to him
appropriate, since Judith was well known, not
only in her own household, but in all the com-
munity, as a famous spinner and weaver, and,
before her health had failed, was often in re-
quest, among the families who knew her, to
come with her little wheel and assist them.

Such dainty linen as she wove! so firm,
and fine, and white! The winding-sheet that
wrapped her round she had made herself. She
had watched the flax when its blue blossoms
gleamed in the sun; she had wound its deli-
cate fibre on the distaff, and spun and woven
every thread herself ; she had spread the web
to bleach in the glad spring sunshine, in the
fields where the dewy grass glistened as with
PETER AND POLLY. , 229



gems, and where golden lines showed the wan-
derings of the cowslip-bordered brook ; and,
when the sheet was finished, she had laid it
away in the great store-chest, with lavender
between its folds. Now, like a tired child, in-
folded in it, she had lain down to sleep.

Of the industry, patience, and the purity of
her life, the good preacher spoke with tender
appreciation, and dwelt with sorrow on her de-
parture ; but, true to himself, it was not long
before all thought of private grief was lost in
that of the public peril. The poor parson was
beginning to be less hopeful of speedy success;
‘the war was so slow in coming to an end!
But, however cast down, his faith in the ul-
timate triumph of liberty was never for a
moment shaken. Instead of the funeral psalm
which he had intended to line out for the
singers, beginning,

““Remember, Lord, our mortal state,

How frail our life, how short the date!”

absorbed by his interest in his country, and
230 PETER AND POLLY.



too absent-minded to remember his surround-
ings, he had commenced a hymn _ headed in
the book as a “Complaint against Persecut-
ors”: —
“ And will the God of grace
Perpet’al silence keep ?
The God of justice hold his peace,
And let his veng’ance sleep ?

“ Behold, what cursed snares
The men of mischief spread!”
Just then, it came back to him where he was,
and he grew very red; but thinking the best
way out of his difficulties was to go forward,
he proceeded to line out two more of the
six stanzas following, which were sung with
spirit by the singers, although there was
some interchange of glances among them,
and Tabby Burbean, who had just been weep-
ing aloud, smiled visibly at the blunder.
“The noble and the base
Into thy pastures leap :

The lion and the stupid ass

- Conspire to vex thy sheep.
PETER AND POLLY. 231



“Convince their madness, Lord,
And make them seek thy name ;
Or else their stubborn rage confound,

That they may die with shame,”

were verses, certainly, that did not breathe
the spirit of pious resignation and submission
which one would look for in a funeral hymn.

“Tt was very dreadful!” Polly thought; ‘and
poor Mrs. Piper, who was always in dread of
her husband's absent-minded mistakes, looked
exceedingly disturbed.

When the exercises were closed, the mourn-
ers went forward “to take leave of the corpse.”
The poor mother, bowed with age and broken
in mind, bent half-wonderingly over the coffin,
as though she thought her daughter might in
truth be “not dead but sleeping,” while Polly’s
tears fell fast on the gentle face that she had
never seen clouded by a frown. There were
twelve bearers, six of whom were to carry the
bier, and the others to exchange places with
them on the way to the burial-ground, for it was
232 PETER AND POLLY.



over three miles they had to go; but the num-
ber was more than was needed, the burden
was so light. Polly, worn as she was with
previous care of the sick, felt almost faint as
she wended her way with the slow-moving pro-
cession, along the dusty road. It seemed as
if her weary feet would never suffice to carry
her all the way and home again, and when she
had passed the gate to return, she leaned on
Peter, who walked with her, glad of the sup-
port of his arm. It was the same graveyard
that she had once looked upon with terror, and
that, moved by Brown Beck’s stories, she had
peopled with ghosts and hobgoblins ; but now,
with Judith slumbering under its green turf,
it seemed a sacred and a cherished place.

All the bearers, Parson Piper and his wife,
and several friends and acquaintances, for
relatives there were none, returned to Miss
Hapgood’s to partake of the funeral supper, a
substantial meal of bread and meat, pies and
cakes; but, considering the costliness of spirits
PETER AND POLLY. 263



and wines, Miss Keziah had resolutely deter-
mined to dispense with them. Mr. Burbean,
one of the bearers, reminded, perhaps by their
absence, of the gloomy outlook, set down his
mug of cider with a long-drawn sigh. “These
are hard times, I declare!” he said; “I don’t
see how things can be much darker than they
are to-day!” He looked, Polly noticed, worn
and poverty-pinched, and his hair was show-
ing the snow of age, as well as that of powder.
“Liberty, so’ far, seems to mean prodigious
hard work and monstrous poor pay !”

“Poor pay!” broke out Parson Piper, whom
the remark had not been intended to reach,
—“poor pay! It’s worth all the blood that
has been spilt, to feel that we are a recognized
nation with a flag of our own; a flag that
hain’t waved a year yet, but that I hope will
be flying when our children’s children are laid
in dust! We ain’t working for ourselves. A
man like you, Mr. Burbean, with thirteen chil-
cren, has got the future to think about.”
234 PETER AND POLLY.



“That is so,’ said Mr. Burbean, with a
fatherly smile lighting up his countenance,
“and I ain’t inclined generally to be down-
hearted, nor to take a gloomy view o’ things ;
but somehow of late it does look dark to me,
very dark.”

“Polly,” said Peter, when the supper was
over, and Tabby Burbean and Mrs. Hart were
wiping up the dishes, — “ Polly, come out with
me, and let us go down by the spring.”

“Yes,” said Polly, though she was so wearied
by her walk to the graveyard that she would
have answered “No,” only it was so rare a
thing for Peter to ask her to go out with him.
“Was something going to happen?” she
thought ; for a misgiving was in her heart, as
she closed the door behind her, and looked up
anxiously in her brother’s face. ‘“ What is it,
Peter ?” she asked.

But Peter said nothing; only he led the
way across the road, where a spring bubbled
up among the rocks, under the shade of a
PETER AND POLLY. Bag



great willow. “Polly,” he said, sitting down
on a rough seat made from a tree-trunk, which
he had fitted there himself, so as to have a
quiet place for study, and drawing her gently
down beside him,—‘Polly, don’t you think, °
with Mr. Burbean, that these are hard times ?”

“Yes, Peter, I do,” answered Polly, half
smiling, half crying ; “things look dark.”

“In the first place,” said Peter, “I’m getting
to be a man ; I’m sixteen, and tall.”

“Yes,” returned Polly, “and I am grown
older too. I don’t feel as if I could be the
same little girl that was at Aunt Nancy’s and
was afraid of witches.”

“And a man needs something to live on,”
said Peter ; “here we are,— the paper-money,
if father could send it to us, is, as people say, |
grown good for nothing. It is n’t without a
cause for it that Uncle Philbrick’s hair has
turned so white. I am of some use here on
the farm; but Cousin Keziah, although she
would not say so for anything, does not really
236 PETER AND POLLY.



need me, and as for going to college, it is
an impossibility. I might earn something by
teaching school, but half the grammar schools
are given up, and if they were not—I don’t
know—” He stopped and leaned his head
upon his hand.

“Don’t worry,” said Polly; “things will
come out some way ; they always do.”

“Some way? Yes,’ repeated Peter, “but
what way? Don’t you think, Polly, it’s a
long time since we have heard from father ?”
he asked.

“Do I think of anything else?” returned
Polly. ‘“ What is it that is in my mind wher-
ever I go but— He is n't dead, Peter? you
must n’t speak of that !”

“No,” said Peter, “it is not strange that we
have not heard, everything is so uncertain,
now; but there is no use in thinking we can
get word to him, and ask for advice. I don’t
know where he is, and it takes such a mon-

‘ strous while for a letter to come to us, even if
PETER AND POLLY. O37



he does write! I have got to act for myself.
Parson Piper is the nearest a father to me of
any one here, and General Sullivan is all the
time calling for volunteers to go to Rhode
Island, and — and —I’m going, Polly.”

“Going!” screamed Polly, starting up, —
“going? If you do, I shall be all alone in
the world! all, all alone! Parson Piper don’t
care for anything but the country; if he
thought it would further the cause of liberty
half an inch, he would see you cut in pieces ;
I believe he would! He is cruel, and you are
cruel, and I wish this dreadful war had never
been begun!” And Polly, all her patriotism:
vanishing in an instant, threw her arms
around her brother’s neck and sobbed aloud,
as if her heart would break.

“But I sha’n’t be placed as some soldiers
are,” explained Peter, smoothing down her hair
with gentle, caressing touch ; “ Parson Piper
knows General Sullivan, and he is going to
write to him; and besides, he is acquainted
238 PETER AND POLLY.



with the colonel, who has been hereabouts
getting recruits, and he promises, if I go, to
take me into his own tent, and I shall be cared
for in every way that one can be.”

“Cared for!” said Polly, bitterly ; “yes,
cared for as the soldiers were at Valley Forge!
And as for me, I shall be all alone in the world!
all, all alone!” ;












CHAPTER XI.

N the retrospect of the three weary years
[ that followed, Polly’s thoughts always cen-
tred upon one day.

It was a mild spring morning, the roth of
May. She was at home with her Cousin Ke-
ziah, and they weré busily packing up and
getting things in order; for now that Judith’s
mother, for whom she had cared so long, was
laid to rest, Miss Hapgood was thinking of
indulging herself in a visit to Massachusetts,
and in seeing “old Haverhill” once more.
She would not sell her New Hampshire place,
however ; times were too uncertain for her to
think of disposing of it. Polly, during her ab-
sence, would stay with her Aunt Nancy, who
240 PETER AND POLLY. 3



in the past year had grown very fond of hav-
ing her niece with her; for Polly, the last
few months, had been boarding with her aunt
and teaching the village reading-and-writing
school, instructing the children chiefly. from
the primer and psalter, and giving the girls
lessons in sewing, knitting, tambour-work, and
embroidery.

It was not a very lively place, for Mrs. Phil-
brick, though better satisfied with her niece
than of old, was no more patient with the rest
of the world, and was always indulging in dreary
forebodings as to the future or equally cheer-
less reminiscences of the past ; now telling over
the story of Brown Beck’s ingratitude, now
dwelling on the “upstart injustice” of their
poorer neighbors, and, again, complaining of
the hard work of her daily. lot, and prophesy-
ing even greater trials yet tocome. Her hus-
band, who still, in spite of his losses, was
esteemed the richest man in the township, was
so tormented by the comparison of past pros-
PETER AND POLLY. 241



perity and present insecurity, as to feel as if
he were in abject poverty ; and although, from
pride, they still maintained something of style
in their manner of life, there was constantly
an atmosphere of gloom about the house that
was truly oppressive.

It was therefore with sorrow that Polly
thought of Miss Keziah’s departure, as she
stood, this May morning, looking out of her
bedroom window. The wind came in from
the west laden with the odor of lilac-flowers,
from a tree whose root, like that of Judith’s
cinnamon-rose, had been brought from “old
Haverhill,” and which now tossed its great
purple plumes over the front porch. It was
dripping with moisture, for there had been a
slight shower, and all the morning a threat-
ening thunder-cloud had hung over the west,
settling round toward the north, and the wind
was blowing up clouds from the southwest.

“It is going to be a bad day to sew,” said
Polly ; “and after we had finished our other
242 PETER AND POLLY.



work, I had hoped to get about my Grecian
robe, and begin to embroider it.” Her Gre-
cian robe was a gown of white linen, wrought .
with a straggling vine in blue cotton thread, a
common fashion of the time.

“See those clouds coming up,” said Miss
Keziah, looking over Polly’s shoulder as she
gazed out of the window; “they have a
strange brassy look, not’ like rain-clouds, and
not smoke.”

“ Yes,” said Polly; “see that great one hov-
ering over Squaw’s Peak, where, week before
last, the fire was raging.”

“ Yes,” said Miss Keziah, “ Justice Cram had
Pompey set fire to a lot of birch-trees to clear
the land, but it’s a poor way to do it; I was
glad when the rain came and put it out. But
how dark it is!” she exclaimed, as she turned
back to the room; “I can scarcely see; my
eyes are failing, I declare!”

“Your eyes failing! No; but it’s fearful
dark,” said Polly ; “almost like the day Ju-
PETER AND POLLY. 243



dith’s mother used to tell about in 1716, when
they had to light candles to eat dinner by.”

“ And TI shall have to light a candle, too,”
said Miss Keziah, who held in her hand an
unfinished piece of sewing-work. “If I go on
my journey, this gown must be finished, and
I can’t possibly see without one.” She went
down stairs, and Polly ‘still stood by the win-
dow looking out. How unreal the landscape
appeared! The strange darkness was deepen-
ing all the while ; a gloomy shadow that wore
the look of coming night was creeping up
the meadow. In the growing dusk she could
scarcely see the alder-trees beyond the brook ;
they were mere indistinct shapes. Darker and
darker it grew, till now she could barely dis-
tinguish them at all. She looked up and saw
that weird copper-colored cloud had closed
over all the sky.

“Polly!” called Miss Keziah, from pelos
stairs, speaking to her,—“ Polly! this is some-
thing dreadful!”
244 PETER AND POLLY.



“Yes, dreadful!” answered Polly, under a
fascination that still kept her at the window.

Darker and darker still it grew! She heard
a fluttering ; the purple doves were hurrying
to their window in the top of the barn, and a
flock of turkeys were flying up to the old oak,
where they were accustomed to roost at night.
She could not see the alders at all now, nor
tell where the pine-trees stood ; but down in
the marsh the frogs were peeping, and look !
old Crumple Horn had made her way out of
the pasture, and, followed by the two cosset
sheep, was wending her way through the
shadows to the barn-yard, where she was
wonted to be milked. Darker and darker
yet! The night-birds began to call “ whip-
poor-will! whip-poor-will!” from the low roof
of the long shed. She heard the melancholy
sound, and, as she listened, a great gray owl,
with glaring eyes, flew close to her, following
its prey.

“ Polly!” said Miss Keziah, coming to the
PETER AND POLLY. 245



door with a candle in her hand, and with a
solemn countenance, —“ Polly! this is dread-
ful! I can’t help thinking of the text, ‘The
sun shall be turned into darkness, and the
moon into blood, before the great and the ter-
rible day of the Lord come.’”

“Yes,” said Polly, “I have thought of it
myself, and of the hour when ‘the veil of the
temple was rent.”

The two women sat down, hand in hand, on
the side of Polly’s little bed. The clock struck
the hour of noon, but the darkness only seemed
deeper ; the customary midday meal was un-
thought of ; the cock crowed as he did in the
early morning, and the candle, untended,
burnt low, with crusted wick and flickering
flame. All that was sad and mysterious in
human life, all-that was trying in her own
experience, came back to Polly. What wrong
and wretchedness there was in the world!
what suffering, and sin, and bloodshed! She
seemed to behold, as in a vision, the dreary
246 PETER AND POLLY.



events of which the last years had been so
full. The blood-stained snows of Valley Forge,
the pestilential heat of Monmouth, the red
flame of Wyoming,—she recalled them all.
Ships lashed together, with soldiers grappling
in a death-struggle on their decks, battle-fields
strewn with corpses, loathsome prisons, rifled
houses, every fearful or shameful thing of
which she had heard or read, seemed to rise
before her. All her saddest thoughts were
linked with those of war, for the national
struggle had taken from her what was dearest
in her life.

A black wall seemed to shut her in, beyond.
which she could neither see nor hear. If she
could only know where her father and Peter
were! but it was now long months since she
had heard from either of them. The last letter
from her father had hinted of sickness, and,
though he had breathed no word of complaint,
she knew what he must suffer, in one of the
army hospitals, which, from other sources, she
PETER AND POLLY. 247



had learned to be destitute of almost every
comfort he would need; while, as for Peter,
she had not heard from him since General
Sullivan’s resignation in November, and then
his letter had been one of disappointment.
When he left for the war he had hoped to be
able, before this time, to write of brave deeds,
if not of glorious victories; but General Sulli-
van, under whose command he was enlisted,
having engaged in his much-criticised expedi-
tion against the Six Nations, the poor lad felt
that he had endured many hardships and en-
countered many dangers, for, at best, a very
doubtful good in the result.

This brief and hastily written letter was all
they had received from Peter, and all that
Polly knew of the twin-brother who had shared
her cradle, and joined with her in her childish
sports, and who had had so full a part in all
her thoughts and feelings, that her own exist-
ence had seemed a double one. Where, too,
was Rob, her childish friend, with his ear-
248 ' PETER AND POLLY.



nest eyes and daring heart? Never, since she
bade him “good by,” that sweet June morn-
ing, had word or sign returned to tell of his
welfare. Would the veil ever be lifted, and
she behold her lost friends on earth again, or
was it, in truth, the shadow of death?

“ Polly,” said Miss Keziah, as if she divined
her thoughts, “let us not be afraid; ‘the
darkness and the light are both alike to
Him.”

By and by, scarcely perceptibly at first, the
sky began to lighten. “Does it, or not?”
asked Polly, in doubt; but in the next half-
hour the change was very evident, and by
three o’clock the appearance was like that of

an ordinary murky afternoon.

But at night the strange darkness returned.
It seemed to Polly, lying awake, as if it were
an actual presence in the room, such perfect
blackness rested all around; “a thick dark-
ness, that might be felt,” like that which fell
on ancient Egypt. The moon, that the night
PETER AND POLLY. 249



before had shone into her window, seemed
blotted out; there was not even the faintest
glimmer of light. Polly started up from her
pillow and gazed about. Her bed was cur-
tainless, but a frightful pall seemed close
drawn all around her. “A horror of great
darkness” came upon her. She grew cold,
and shuddered with unknown terror; and then
she remembered Miss Keziah’s words of Scrip-
ture comfort, “The darkness and the light
are both alike to Him.” They fell upon
her troubled mind like balm. She said them
over and over to herself, until at last she
dropped asleep, and when she woke again a
few hours after, the moon was looking down
calmly and brightly, and the stars were gleam-
ing in the clear sky.










CHAPTER XII.

\ A TAS it Polly, or some one else? Polly
had to pinch herself to find out.

She was no longer a little country-maid
roaming through the meadows, or singing at
her wheel, but a fine young lady with a stiff
brocade and a stiffer hoop ; with a long neck-
lace of gold beads hanging over the fine lace
in the low bosom of her short-waisted gown.
Her hair had been arranged, with indescriba- -
ble elaboration, upon the top of her head, and
great golden hoops were gleaming in her ears.
Her shoes were of white satin, decorated with
resplendent buckles, and covered with roses
and lilies, wrought in red and yellow silk ;
but when she looked at her feet Polly knew
PETER AND POLLY. 251



she was only Polly, for money was not yet a
plentiful thing with her, and the only pair of
silk hose she had were, strange to say, the
very ones she had worn, not quite seven years
before, on her ride to New Hampshire, and, as
her feet were small and slender, they were
still large enough for her to wear. Her rich
dress had been made from one that was her
mother’s; but the handsome fan, shining with
golden spangles, and painted with a picture of
nymphs and goddesses, had been sent her by
her father, as a present ; for brighter days had
come, and the pretty trifle had been trans-
mitted in anticipation of his return; and Polly ©
was now in Massachusetts, in her father’s
house with Mrs. Ellis, who had kept it all the
while, waiting to give him a welcome home
again. For victory had come! Victory! how
much that word meant, after so many years of
unrewarded struggling with the foe! How
brightly the fair flag, a new flag then, like a
fresh-blown flower with the dew on it, waved
252 PETER AND POLLY.
Fs



under the blue sky! How the hills shook
with echoed shouts, and every liberty-loving
heart bounded with rapture! Parson Piper,
after Cornwallis’s surrender, had changed every
Sunday into an unappointed Thanksgiving
day, and the village choir had made the little
meeting-house ring with the most exultant
hymns in the new hymn-book, which was an
edition for the times, full of radical republi-

canism in lyric form ; as

“ When God, our leader, shines in arms,
What mortal heart can bear
The thunder of his loud alarms,
The lightning of his spear ?

“ He forms our gen’rals for the field,
With all their dreadful skill,
Gives them his awful sword to wield,

And makes their hearts of steel.

“‘ He arms our captains to the fight,
Though there his name’s forgot ;
(He girded Cyrus with his might,
But Cyrus knew-him: not.)”
PETER AND POLLY. oes



or,
“ Zion, rejoice, and Judah, sing,
The Lord assumes his throne:
New England, own the heav’nly King,
And make his glories known.

“ The great, the wicked, and the proud,
From their high seats are hurled ;
Jehovah rides upon a cloud,
And thunders through the world.”
or,
* Our States, O Lord, with songs of praise
Shall in thy strength rejoice ;
And blest with thy salvation raise

To heaven their cheerful voice.

“Thy sure defence through nations round
Has spread thy glor’ous name ;
And our successful actions crowned

Thy majesty with fame” ;

which last verse was Parson Piper’s favorite, as
giving the fullest expression to his feelings.

It was before the formal declaration of
peace, but the war was everywhere felt to be
substantially closed.
254 PETER AND POLLY.



Dr. Austin was anxious to be back in his
home, but he had been detained, and would
not ask for his discharge so long as he could
be of any service ; and Polly, who had come to
meet him in the old home where they had
parted, was growing sick with hope deferred.
But this evening, as she stood in her stiff bro-
cade, and fastened a rose on her bosom, and
drew on her long gloves, she was full of atici-
pation, for before night she expected to see
Peter.

Poor Peter! who had left her four years
before, and who had now a soldier’s record,
made up of hard, but not brilliant experiences,
of fatiguing marches, and wearisome life in
the cold winter huts, and of dull days spent in
Saratoga, where his regiment was lately quar-
tered; although there, having time, he had
obtained books, and reviewed his old studies,
intending, though later in life than he had
hoped, to enter college immediately on his re-
turn home. A considerable number of other
PETER AND POLLY. 255



soldiers were coming back to New England
at the same time; some who had been his
near comrades, others belonging to different
New Hampshire and Massachusetts regi-
ments. Among them were persons well
known in the community ; and as the general
feeling of patriotic joy was constantly showing
itself in public receptions, it was arranged to
have a social gathering at the village tavern,
with music and speeches ; a great supper of
roast geese and turkeys, and a dance, besides,
to welcome them,

It was a regret to Polly that she was com-
pelled to meet Peter for the first time in the
company of others. But enough of her old
love of gayety and excitement remained to
make her take great delight in rendering her
toilet as becoming as possible.

“Peter shall not be ashamed of me,” she
resolved, as she arranged a little love-lock
on her temple ; “nor think I seem like a mere

country wool-picker,” she thought, as she fas-
256 PETER AND POLLY.



tened her handsome lace tucker; “nor fancy
that Mrs. Job Hart taught me to courtesy,”
she said, and practised bending and bowing
before the glass, well pleased that she did not
make an unattractive picture in it.

Polly’s cheeks were all aglow when she
reached the gathering-place with Dr. Merrick,
a queer old-bachelor friend of her father’s,
who had been kind enough, for once, to give
up his unsocial ways and offer her his escort.

Every eye in the room was turned toward
the door, waiting for the soldiers, who were to
enter in a body.

At last the orchestra, which consisted of
three men with fiddles and three with flutes,
struck up a merry tune, and two and two the
heroes of the day came marching in. Freshly
shaven, nicely powdered, in handsome uni-
forms, and with erect, soldierly bearing, they
seemed to Polly, grown accustomed to the
rough farmers that she had been wont to see,
almost like beings from another sphere.
PETER AND POLLY. 267



What! was that handsome young cap-
tain with the clear blue eye really Peter?
He seemed too exalted a personage to be
her brother! She longed to fly to him, and
yet she felt afraid. He looked all around
the room, and then his gaze fixed on her.
“What!” thought he, “is that fair young lady
with such fine carriage and splendid dress
really my own little Polly, whom I left so
slight and young and shy! It must be she,
and yet how can it be?” And then he met
her eyes, just as they used to look, clear and
soft and tender, and with the quick impatient
tears gathering in them, and he hurried across
the room. “ Polly!” he said, and bent down
and kissed her, and it was the proudest mo-
ment in all her life ; and then he led her into
a quiet corner decked all around with ever-
green wreaths until it was a bower; and they
sat down together; and they both had so much
to say that neither of them knew where to

begin, “O, Iam so glad to see you, Peter!”
258 PETER AND POLLY.



Polly kept repeating. “And I am so glad to
be back, Polly!” was Peter’s as frequent reply ;
and Polly kept asking questions, and inter-
rupting their replies by putting others, or by
breaking in to say something that she felt she
could not keep to herself a moment longer;
and Peter looked down on his little twin sister,
and said, “ Well, Polly, you are twice as pretty
and as fine as I ever expected to see you!”
which made Polly’s cheeks burn redder, and
her eyes grow brighter, than ever before. It
was no time for Peter to repeat the long story
of his army life, with the music sounding and
the hum of talk all around them; but their
thoughts naturally went back to the friends
they had left in New Hampshire. “Cousin
Keziah is well and as active as ever,’ said
Polly ; “and Parson Piper is sorely cast down
by the death of his wife ; and Uncle Abel and
Aunt Nancy have grown so old, worrying
about their money, that they never will be
able to enjoy their property ; though, with the
PETER AND POLLY. 259



paper currency he has bought great tracts of
land, which now, it is thought, will increase
in value till he will be richer than ever; and
Price Hodgkins has taken Uncle Abel’s store,
and —”

“And Brown Beck!” broke in Peter. “Is
n’t it strange ? —I was talking one day with
a man from New Hampshire who was in my
company, and I found he had once been a
clerk in Uncle Abel’s store, and had boarded
in the family, and of course seen Beck there,
and he said that once he was in the camp of a
regiment, near by, and that she came round
to tell fortunes ; she was very poor, and hag-
gard-looking, and she had two dirty children
clinging to her, and a drunken fellow, that
seemed to be her husband, was hanging about,
to whom she gave the money that she earned ;
and she looked as though she was paying dear
for all her misdeeds; though as for running
away on Independence day, if she stole her
freedom, then she only took her own.”
260 PETER AND POLLY.



“And—O Peter!” said Polly, “there is
one thing I want to ask ; have you ever heard
a word from Rob, — poor, brave Rob?”

“Tt is not very probable that I should,” said
Peter, smiling, and just then he started up.
“ Polly,” he said, “I must leave you for a little
while. Captain Stevens's sister I see here.
I met her in Boston with her brother when I
stopped at his house on my way here, and I
must go and pay her my compliments.”

“QO yes, go!” said Polly, with a twinge of
jealousy, and a searching glance at the fine
city-girl in question, a tall sylph in spotless
white, with a deep border of finest lace around
the bottom of her dress.

“T will introduce you to her presently, but
first, I want to make you acquainted with a
young major who came with us. He is one
who is worthy of the name of soldier. He
entered the army when he was but a boy, just
before the battle of Bennington, but he was as
brave as an old hero; unused to everything as
PETER AND POLLY. 261



he was, he fought desperately, and was the
first to force through the breastwork, that en-
abled them to take the brass cannon. He
was, for his bravery, advanced at once, and
since then glory has seemed to follow him.
He fought with honor at Stillwater, carried off
laurels from scorching Monmouth, and when
Cornwallis surrendered he was there.”

“Who is he? What is his name?” asked
Polly. But Peter did not answer; he only
walked away ; and soon Polly saw him return-
ing, with the fair Miss Stevens on his arm,
and by his side a young officer, straight and
slender, and with such piercing dark eyes as
Polly had seen in only one before.

She gave him a long look, and then held
out both her hands. “ Peter cannot deceive
me,” she said ; “you can only be yourself, and
I’m so glad to see you, Rob.” And then she
checked herself, and blushed, remembering
that her childish favoritism for poor Rob
would be unmaidenly forwardness if shown
262 PETER AND POLLY.



toward the gallant young officer who was the
toast of the day.

But Rob grasped her hands eagerly in his,
and said, “Indeed, Miss Polly, it.is worth all
I have been through to hear you say that.”
And then he sat down beside her in the ever-
green bower, and what went on around them
they neither heard nor saw; for Rob had so
many questions to ask about Miss Keziah and
Judith and Parson Piper and even Master Dow,
who had died just after Cornwallis’s surrender,
which he celebrated by drinking himself to
death, — though how he was able to get spirit
enough to do so was a marvel, when liquors were
at such a price, — and about Mr. Burbean, who
still thought “things looked dark,” and that,
“even if we were a conquering nation, we
should find that our troubles were not ail
ended” ; and Polly’s ready tongue ran its fast-
est. And then she was surprised to find she
could be a good listener, for she quite held her
breath while Rob told how,'‘on the morning that
PETER AND POLLY. 263



she had bidden him “ farewell,’ he had taken
his course through the woods and over the
fields, pushing his way circuitously till he
had reached Charlestown on the Connecticut
River, an old frontier fort, and now the soldiers’
rendezvous.

Then he went on to tell of perils in battle
and daring encounters ; but all his tales, Polly
noticed, were of the bravery of others and
never of his own ; and, last of all, he took out,
carefully wrapped in paper, the very handker-
chief she had given him as a parting keepsake,
and which, he told her, he had carried with
him ever since ; and Polly blushed and smiled,
and thought it was very charming and roman-

_tic, like a beautiful chapter in a novel, and this
time she was the heroine herself; and poor Dr.
Merrick, who, out of friendship for her father,
had taken such pains to escort her to the gath-
ering, felt himself decidedly unneeded, and was
obliged to seek consolation in the welcoming

smiles of a stout widow who had long and
264 PETER AND POLLY.



vainly tried to make his acquaintance ; and
Polly forgot to be jealous, though Peter, in en-
tertaining the fair Miss Stevens, seemed to
have quite lost the thought that it was the
first evening of his return, and that it was long
years since he and his twin sister had been to-
gether before,










CHAPTER XIII.

T was the lovely summer-time when Polly
was married, three years after Peter’s re-
turn.

The flax-fields, all in bloom, were blue as
the sky, and the sky was without a cloud.
The birds were all singing together ; and the
wind, that came in through the open window,
was heavy-laden with the odor of flowers ; while
in the fireplace, where in winter the red blaze
leaped and crackled as if in derision of the
wild wind roaring without, now, in the white
hearth-vase, glowed the sweet summer flame of
full-blown roses, and clove-scented pinks, and
fluttering sweet-peas, Judith’s flowers, from
the little bed under the window ; for Polly had
266 PETER AND POLLY.



determined that her wedding, as Cousin Ke-
ziah had wished, should take place in her old
New Hampshire home, where Rob and she, in
their simple childish way, first learned to know
and to care for each other.

For Rob was the bridegroom, made splendid
for the occasion by a bright blue coat, white
waistcoat, buff breeches, and white silk stock-
ings, with gold buckles at the knee; and
Polly was a charming little bride, and, spite
the solemnity of the occasion, could not help
being conscious that her wedding-gown, every
stitch of which she had made herself, was the
daintiest little white cloud of a dress that ever
woman wore, and that her white satin shoes,
with their glittering paste ornaments, were
pretty and small enough for her to put on if
she had been Cinderella, and were to marry a
prince.

But, if not a prince, Rob was now exceed-
ingly “well to do” in the world, enough so
even to satisfy Aunt Nancy ; for, after his suc-
PETER AND POLLY. _ 267



cess in the army, some of his rich relations,
who had turned a cold shoulder on his father
in the days-of his poverty, had taken pains to
seek him out, and as a curmudgeonly old un-
cle, making his will from the caprice of the mo-
ment, had left him all his property, and died
soon after, Rob was able to seek Polly with no
empty hand.

Dr. Austin was there, looking pale and thin,
for the rough life and exposure he had endured
in the army had told upon his health ; yet
still he seemed stronger, Polly thought, than.
he had done ina long time. Peter and the fair
Miss Stevens stood up with the happy couple.
Peter was almost a learned man already ; the
college honors he had always coveted were
now in his grasp, and he was anticipating
many hours of quiet study and happy opportu-
nities of usefulness in a minister’s life, when the
pretty bridemaid would be his bride instead.

As for Parson Piper, he made the marriage-
prayer a thanksgiving for national blessings,
268 PETER AND POLLY.

and a tribute of praise for victory in arms; for
Dr. Austin and Rob and Peter were so closely
linked in his mind with the cause of free-
dom, that it was first in his thoughts whenever
he saw one of them. But he did remember to
return thanks for the marriage relation as the
holiest and sweetest on earth, and Miss Keziah
blushed, for, when September should come, she
knew the parsonage would be her home, and
that the little Pipers would call her “mother.”

After the prayer everybody kissed the bride ;
and Polly’s eyes filled with grateful tears in
answer to the kind wishes breathed all around
her, and her heart throbbed with thankfulness
for the past, while she looked forward with
cheerful trust to what was then the fair un-
certain future, and what is now the dim, long-

buried past;

“For this, all this, was in the olden

Time, long ago.”



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describe
'1856224' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYF' 'sip-files00014.tif'
c13b2b8e24984fab064d7c8582798cb2
929727e75d8ffceb303d5f457bb3a9c666ddf0a2
'2011-08-19T04:57:15-04:00'
describe
'25675' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYG' 'sip-files00015.pro'
eed78592eeebf43ba98c64f652c52407
ba1f006d2cc525d8fb488391fa8e23b5ae05232f
'2011-08-19T04:56:36-04:00'
describe
'1868348' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYH' 'sip-files00015.tif'
02374ce73520e1266106ece070ac335f
bade9693a2fd07fc0188cfda6c96fa99f144a723
'2011-08-19T04:55:21-04:00'
describe
'23276' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYI' 'sip-files00016.pro'
4b897c867e47cc663941dc9ab7b83b1c
aab1b5ae06565c6f8cd92dfeb3fcd994a6c00d4a
'2011-08-19T04:55:14-04:00'
describe
'1834764' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYJ' 'sip-files00016.tif'
83cdf3aa3f70bff42652c9efcc9c8df6
f3e3029c052c81a5c3c5af317bcd63c75bc79c65
'2011-08-19T04:52:12-04:00'
describe
'26092' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYK' 'sip-files00017.pro'
830dfbd0d32dc3ba2a3c208682da98a5
292aba499ae492f18b1cadc0a9b91f2bb63a54ee
'2011-08-19T05:02:57-04:00'
describe
'1860236' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYL' 'sip-files00017.tif'
584af9b0747f7ade69791a90c4d4075a
8cc0cde3a1b145199feb0089f9297c17b965b0ca
'2011-08-19T04:53:22-04:00'
describe
'21327' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYM' 'sip-files00018.pro'
0aa73df8ceed4598f61a69fad0a46f8a
58427529a504909add17359deba13b6b89c34460
'2011-08-19T04:55:11-04:00'
describe
'1846072' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYN' 'sip-files00018.tif'
866f47b960b9e39029bad915cfe4564f
33964e7aabff18ef2393a146b2aaaa9f71a45586
'2011-08-19T05:04:49-04:00'
describe
'19861' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYO' 'sip-files00019.pro'
ed822e89abfef1d9f5c3faf389c082bb
4338a0be8c93e8c36d17b1ff393f07f157daba5f
'2011-08-19T04:52:57-04:00'
describe
'1938100' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYP' 'sip-files00019.tif'
93fc8f74ae2a812fff6abcabea82f4d1
6c32d197fb445b9e2ec803da54f0ea14063438f3
'2011-08-19T04:51:17-04:00'
describe
'26226' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYQ' 'sip-files00020.pro'
26fead98d10c5504796633ac7958d43c
6191cf92fa74031e30609817398b2784caf2b3c5
'2011-08-19T05:01:52-04:00'
describe
'1861636' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYR' 'sip-files00020.tif'
61f679f8bac26c5787f8acff5914fdf1
a438b365fd76134b2c406e6dc09a6d0958dd150b
'2011-08-19T05:03:46-04:00'
describe
'25138' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYS' 'sip-files00021.pro'
3acad16fd1ee551c10d3cdeef2a60529
c33350ba9d30d4191e57b9facfd806c836d2e8e4
'2011-08-19T05:00:08-04:00'
describe
'1938920' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYT' 'sip-files00021.tif'
981c06a2da08939754c1c34550409ab4
ca39e5296700e18568baff116159363ee09c17fe
'2011-08-19T05:04:42-04:00'
describe
'25627' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYU' 'sip-files00022.pro'
63289074192de68ca694c0f9851fbdd5
23a378039f28fb1109e5b72ba43c432796d84c32
'2011-08-19T04:53:48-04:00'
describe
'1830988' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYV' 'sip-files00022.tif'
07ce590a07232c523a5f5bd50610365a
924921559ce5eb3ca327d9ff7af77c050f4acd1d
describe
'22591' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYW' 'sip-files00023.pro'
6bbbe28eed98630fe909ae625542b89d
c87144b7444ec22b44c8b0ca3412bbea9bb76273
'2011-08-19T05:00:12-04:00'
describe
'1938824' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYX' 'sip-files00023.tif'
ab461988c690eb0dc12cfd4e8180f2bd
510942b125920527ffeaa08545ac324943c5f3d6
'2011-08-19T04:56:33-04:00'
describe
'23951' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYY' 'sip-files00024.pro'
d7db79eb4b55db5f4665fb3f02dced4c
05e7edf76f6037a2f70acb79311a87cc5b933025
'2011-08-19T04:54:32-04:00'
describe
'1846272' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHYZ' 'sip-files00024.tif'
d247e290a90e36be16fc90592cb164a3
64c1898d1fae083326b40d3b9f5c27f925be0298
'2011-08-19T04:55:22-04:00'
describe
'9452' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZA' 'sip-files00025.pro'
40e9bf4c22f636742f207bc388c7e1c6
7e2eaa559a84498340316556d023078be8725b45
'2011-08-19T04:57:53-04:00'
describe
'1833540' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZB' 'sip-files00025.tif'
406a97a00885da3332feff7453758ed7
bea010264d60a98697536da094c85e8b9c188b4c
'2011-08-19T04:59:45-04:00'
describe
'17358' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZC' 'sip-files00026.pro'
6b41bca481933ee827aab67e10e60522
07f378dcd6ce153afa7fcd4a00e13a6494827bb1
'2011-08-19T05:00:45-04:00'
describe
'1862272' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZD' 'sip-files00026.tif'
69307bfe07b2830943bf8eb4f19e58ef
fc3b19bfd3016d96d17504976287a3d48826ce57
'2011-08-19T05:02:20-04:00'
describe
'25901' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZE' 'sip-files00027.pro'
afd069233e296bb8961ec774c8003b5d
844f9b1d9f8c0519040fd7af6e5ddbe5c6ffc1af
'2011-08-19T05:04:25-04:00'
describe
'1845212' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZF' 'sip-files00027.tif'
3ce483db5f0fa666653b83a5f59aea7b
086bc4fd66f0ffbde8c6e6f581428057d2efd240
'2011-08-19T04:57:16-04:00'
describe
'24726' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZG' 'sip-files00028.pro'
7259bc93332ee813d117c51ee3573c09
bd5ef6af2da40e4f3b8e7f6aca65a3e3f4a156c9
'2011-08-19T04:56:19-04:00'
describe
'1833388' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZH' 'sip-files00028.tif'
f2e5b12cedcb15ae35de5db2ff9f4972
34d1f294cd516105c69c6673a287bcf3319944d1
'2011-08-19T05:02:05-04:00'
describe
'26622' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZI' 'sip-files00029.pro'
33d93ff5a951c908268911c9a094624d
0c9b1a640243fb2330725e2c8c5eec84eb1e1cfb
'2011-08-19T05:04:41-04:00'
describe
'1848992' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZJ' 'sip-files00029.tif'
e6f71e1d80ed0b0bf7520a326dca7e48
fd892372f9306d3bbafe4c34c4bc2b124f003a56
'2011-08-19T04:56:00-04:00'
describe
'25637' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZK' 'sip-files00030.pro'
ded36c1335a83c97832536e80945589b
7f7c040f5b08110459b15d313fd0f9d1a492647e
'2011-08-19T05:04:55-04:00'
describe
'1851132' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZL' 'sip-files00030.tif'
caa27a03d03cd805834a6d5e4dbbf1b5
1ab00821c8cc1f16347f061b32be83d88483a9b9
'2011-08-19T05:04:26-04:00'
describe
'26102' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZM' 'sip-files00031.pro'
5f31227d87aa68466c19b6c0f6f5debc
7c7809b43c5d313fec193c1643f05a608dee2e4d
describe
'1939348' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZN' 'sip-files00031.tif'
b2b25f135f1e78a0555d94e35305cd60
dc603fbf028553aadf001f11ba3d87a5598490d4
'2011-08-19T04:52:06-04:00'
describe
'24848' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZO' 'sip-files00032.pro'
e7fbc5a714fb5016ee810863b7ad7a4d
ccf987037f17f69743c4aaa452c6bb7cd6c4d9b6
'2011-08-19T04:54:54-04:00'
describe
'1835172' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZP' 'sip-files00032.tif'
68ba3a5841ec6328add6c243ddf48d00
3dd71d7a4519a3bd054833f71333240701448ff3
'2011-08-19T04:54:01-04:00'
describe
'25576' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZQ' 'sip-files00033.pro'
8fecfb7ada5a66ed2667d452b4f43df8
bfaa10d2440779ad660de5e5f471903907cec10c
'2011-08-19T04:55:47-04:00'
describe
'1939152' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZR' 'sip-files00033.tif'
a4383e73a79abf188423276488bda68c
7d507496a04de1b156003cdbc81afd5b2ca282ba
'2011-08-19T04:51:27-04:00'
describe
'25638' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZS' 'sip-files00034.pro'
d6fa7cbd14591fc5ac485d8bcb925cb5
1dd9acca594cb1ca1d5a0512acdbb923ffcb01cc
'2011-08-19T05:01:54-04:00'
describe
'1841112' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZT' 'sip-files00034.tif'
5450b29017c6e31a0d126d88edd549d0
cc13a4ff1f593e39481907c24329e7e1bbe9e0c9
'2011-08-19T04:55:23-04:00'
describe
'25169' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZU' 'sip-files00035.pro'
4933aaf139b6e629a34be65d45158f92
89e08b8290897dfe1e51e6f9523387386aa12c26
'2011-08-19T04:54:52-04:00'
describe
'1833088' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZV' 'sip-files00035.tif'
87848886e8e50fea7d52b775026eb1c6
d6687d964cd68d31f0393402d6f3f07b8f1fb373
'2011-08-19T04:56:59-04:00'
describe
'23429' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZW' 'sip-files00036.pro'
48a0f1b04e04813070ea69d95a3d9500
74c9bb125ac50b169a3a0b045fd941093a0dfec8
'2011-08-19T05:01:55-04:00'
describe
'1829500' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZX' 'sip-files00036.tif'
09ca7b83ea79c4bb08cb1e66be9ae26c
333b7640a132f279bfe916f9e2de308f21a23769
'2011-08-19T04:53:33-04:00'
describe
'25247' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZY' 'sip-files00037.pro'
35251b928a1310cefa63403a7f0f29be
2cdb236cc0da56665586fa9ce7e2b7d74791c762
'2011-08-19T05:03:32-04:00'
describe
'1939156' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAHZZ' 'sip-files00037.tif'
cec9f7b42ce5443d52a8a1bb07facc77
8147f6112f798e0ab69a312d9e05fae506e2620e
'2011-08-19T05:04:18-04:00'
describe
'24223' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAA' 'sip-files00038.pro'
9a0c6475dc500a7d3265a75cc3a5715b
108bb47f7c5dded5afdf64ade38b1b03fa1d2b9c
'2011-08-19T05:00:55-04:00'
describe
'1839832' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAB' 'sip-files00038.tif'
b4c2277331248f372b05a509c2942acc
58220d0e48c6d28370d4fbf14b5d2ceff4f68ea3
'2011-08-19T05:00:07-04:00'
describe
'25865' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAC' 'sip-files00039.pro'
ff1bb0f1df6fa3d4d9a1dfeef597c4ac
492f3def4c5ebe66c61dcfd1e6da3e32a8731d61
'2011-08-19T04:51:22-04:00'
describe
'1818196' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAD' 'sip-files00039.tif'
88e48d2a377bb9b5c396788f7f790722
cfffa7257b3c2586f0608109feb1f7714a5baa6a
'2011-08-19T05:00:40-04:00'
describe
'25867' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAE' 'sip-files00040.pro'
3a643733e6d15de74967cbed3aa64659
15b56d770661ae19c544e3102fec729cb7258295
'2011-08-19T04:59:20-04:00'
describe
'1832752' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAF' 'sip-files00040.tif'
8a6a3cf47310efdb699a359fa5f68f28
e807b3716e3ef71296b71d294e35390ae8592408
'2011-08-19T05:04:13-04:00'
describe
'25608' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAG' 'sip-files00041.pro'
a148980a997e47d0855a8d841ace411c
99a912a5d25914c0e1316d670a98ab4faa0d8ff4
'2011-08-19T04:54:41-04:00'
describe
'1868484' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAH' 'sip-files00041.tif'
2f8c6d8af3727d50af38853096f1769b
5582df3f9f7d846ac4e77432a6c9568273cabfb9
'2011-08-19T04:53:46-04:00'
describe
'25618' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAI' 'sip-files00042.pro'
49fc264569d23f680b5b69dc9dd28a08
7cb057a9713a4ed38777d0edcf5f25fa7d307327
'2011-08-19T04:56:51-04:00'
describe
'1914172' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAJ' 'sip-files00042.tif'
1f6bb052924d80a1af7f9d9e5fb0da9c
46ce9b1111208501d62cf5ab633c894a36892013
'2011-08-19T04:54:24-04:00'
describe
'22956' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAK' 'sip-files00043.pro'
9fcee424b8482f7af043373ac3c2b96b
47e11dc269a23374452b21fbe81704ce454d6f30
'2011-08-19T04:53:51-04:00'
describe
'1839848' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAL' 'sip-files00043.tif'
bccce1352dee5b94934d629818424505
702b76f5941bc527625aba6dda58d522f3a00b12
'2011-08-19T04:52:50-04:00'
describe
'23025' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAM' 'sip-files00044.pro'
af21e893ec0776e5e86fe99c40e82fd1
405299443e6b818de8c9ffad8337fb83dc5931e3
'2011-08-19T04:59:32-04:00'
describe
'1835912' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAN' 'sip-files00044.tif'
99eb1fd09dfa202d3e6761f9d08ab368
59d4fde21182cbcb53ce689bd58c120ee378d8ce
'2011-08-19T04:54:57-04:00'
describe
'24909' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAO' 'sip-files00045.pro'
55a7d52afbb82af85f2082fef060f522
d0b7c8faa7a65880117623fb9005ccc248ec3c61
'2011-08-19T05:04:24-04:00'
describe
'1939200' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAP' 'sip-files00045.tif'
96196cde7ce1cfd4822506ced91b287c
41d904c78555d4cb3a40044ad31b22e923616d64
'2011-08-19T04:55:41-04:00'
describe
'25681' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAQ' 'sip-files00046.pro'
015ca8ae638173df88bb06a4e5145b7d
b1953b0d4eee4afb4104ba7db8fd21c91b17e350
'2011-08-19T04:52:14-04:00'
describe
'1827800' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAR' 'sip-files00046.tif'
a1830c3202da45df354763de517ba26b
02381acdc824d9be5ebd7675e40145507e59c8df
'2011-08-19T04:55:13-04:00'
describe
'23992' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAS' 'sip-files00047.pro'
2ad5d0fe04ef47fe94b6d965fa65cf15
34b665881a9e6b7b888fca40d1a4c7258b93cf06
'2011-08-19T04:51:29-04:00'
describe
'1825480' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAT' 'sip-files00047.tif'
7542186590420a05886405ba019f4b17
61cafc01d9894791fd71ded1ddc1601adb4580f1
'2011-08-19T05:00:37-04:00'
describe
'26642' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAU' 'sip-files00048.pro'
317d5dfea2f25ae37cee4b08ccf4d579
c78869fda7afa24bbc38e81def78b660050a247a
'2011-08-19T04:53:16-04:00'
describe
'1827928' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAV' 'sip-files00048.tif'
0f35b38a03824236f712d2bb8e7d44fd
b83539f39a34f7184b2fb930bfac6edd6eda5b01
'2011-08-19T04:56:27-04:00'
describe
'23024' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAW' 'sip-files00049.pro'
8e0359a935cee51ecaf879a647f03310
7393f1707c7249055646ce041b98163f798dc915
describe
'1876272' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAX' 'sip-files00049.tif'
77b233bec25f0a59d7fc2c049ac7ddce
081c34fb7f9c729b688c7aadf2ed836dfef0b4c0
'2011-08-19T04:54:11-04:00'
describe
'25269' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAY' 'sip-files00050.pro'
04af70954d45c92d02ec157a0f2e507e
5d6ffbb6bfcd40c57a1166b206e94ce92db6fb68
'2011-08-19T05:04:14-04:00'
describe
'1840864' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIAZ' 'sip-files00050.tif'
eb4fc07af78c5b327a823a89f75b6500
55898260e06a43f8f2d525fb9fb0931775cbdbf6
'2011-08-19T04:55:26-04:00'
describe
'17036' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBA' 'sip-files00051.pro'
b72cfa8df6a481f8ea7107f38dd47963
00f34df6ae067f1364e6b78a6d953b6103a1fb3d
'2011-08-19T04:54:15-04:00'
describe
'1831236' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBB' 'sip-files00051.tif'
5de44fca8e736ca8cfa647fe479c5cc6
251c1eaa6e2796fe89a529532b75b71336c9e546
'2011-08-19T04:57:08-04:00'
describe
'26333' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBC' 'sip-files00052.pro'
22665af58c9dbb9504a5805144a8c10c
5ef988e31efe89ae32f48a5e688704860fa2f7bc
'2011-08-19T04:53:03-04:00'
describe
'1825820' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBD' 'sip-files00052.tif'
8259af61c4ba1ca777219672981d8511
5f058deeb97275c519da355abd3c6ec92ebaf22c
'2011-08-19T04:55:57-04:00'
describe
'24433' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBE' 'sip-files00053.pro'
7b25cf209d94cd6fa52890a9dce9faa6
22a026ee065f320295a187b015a8393af6974be6
'2011-08-19T05:04:52-04:00'
describe
'1798776' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBF' 'sip-files00053.tif'
1d3ecf14ecea5ff7585ad608a000a74d
f22d7773556f90667db665ebc9637bf252fe62be
'2011-08-19T04:57:23-04:00'
describe
'24674' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBG' 'sip-files00054.pro'
ff0ee7cb705c35e04ac7677643739e6a
f219f7357736188098c0f65bdc18cb8fa6f745ef
'2011-08-19T04:53:06-04:00'
describe
'1819324' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBH' 'sip-files00054.tif'
c0cbcb766bb66536cd86f59319430556
9bec72e7dcd3f82941de64e9ee6998019fee1d24
'2011-08-19T04:58:00-04:00'
describe
'23438' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBI' 'sip-files00055.pro'
0f8fda1d3b6a371a2ee698d721290f0f
cff5f07f6eea821c602097e023ff739af229f490
'2011-08-19T05:00:28-04:00'
describe
'1705880' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBJ' 'sip-files00055.tif'
1cbbf7d6097f4ad95f59552a9253b622
d667e5b95acebbdcff8731d35aa904603b4daf45
'2011-08-19T05:03:37-04:00'
describe
'22015' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBK' 'sip-files00056.pro'
9e118db36158eb2828ca19839bac3c40
2ce0b4a03eb0c6689003b8a8907c5a303ef7f7fb
'2011-08-19T04:52:34-04:00'
describe
'1840904' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBL' 'sip-files00056.tif'
1d5f13ec4be545de70d716e3f9d29c50
8f1310c34bec24ee1f221927dfb97d1ee10234e9
'2011-08-19T04:51:13-04:00'
describe
'24863' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBM' 'sip-files00057.pro'
a1379595cb21c89e73d1cc16e8159e24
f715854d9f6168aed2ed3110bcb61b645e33d470
'2011-08-19T05:02:24-04:00'
describe
'1857836' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBN' 'sip-files00057.tif'
6024a9574bad9a838443589b0c5e7243
de037a01570d4aea510abad48f0734f596d7a324
'2011-08-19T04:53:14-04:00'
describe
'25300' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBO' 'sip-files00058.pro'
a749d5f1363298b7fe3c0a8f756e2072
efa4e424f3b69904812ce8f7f878679d4d9361d6
'2011-08-19T04:57:13-04:00'
describe
'1846192' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBP' 'sip-files00058.tif'
e68e06ea6be2f6105341bf01421231a5
c7f7259c06aeaf0f24971d16c8346e5cb889113c
'2011-08-19T04:55:02-04:00'
describe
'24596' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBQ' 'sip-files00059.pro'
6d3ef004b4f130fbc22b7c0095a82dac
5e0348242d1e2debc12606407d3f2646e5092d0e
'2011-08-19T05:00:09-04:00'
describe
'1840064' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBR' 'sip-files00059.tif'
b81c48f9806c3026006cba58d6e24929
19cf8e06d168880715c2473fc0492059330722ae
'2011-08-19T05:04:10-04:00'
describe
'25075' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBS' 'sip-files00060.pro'
701979e1080a82e1e0b89ba5d0cc540a
296f7bf9f68905ec34ef3c43f98e3467cd479624
'2011-08-19T04:51:34-04:00'
describe
'1836196' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBT' 'sip-files00060.tif'
0e4adc3d503d09acd0d1c8e66b62a295
5b4074e09623dbb53e34d411bf1794c05e76f3b3
'2011-08-19T05:02:52-04:00'
describe
'24842' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBU' 'sip-files00061.pro'
e23481c36a10c4cbe90bbe2d32d40953
2bb46a026864a4a589bb7b329f09919409710192
'2011-08-19T04:56:04-04:00'
describe
'1858324' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBV' 'sip-files00061.tif'
687d73e2296c7fccd28df6c9004417de
3f302a178d6996dc07c20c6f76033b1f6b8212b5
'2011-08-19T04:54:51-04:00'
describe
'6070' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBW' 'sip-files00062.pro'
a4179dad490c257c082c75d4912500ad
192131876791203db84f29976d46e1e8fd2834f8
'2011-08-19T04:52:17-04:00'
describe
'1826780' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBX' 'sip-files00062.tif'
45e90c8dd5fa62115301bf205428c246
d17518a07da842f954068db02bb59c6204dc6929
'2011-08-19T04:55:34-04:00'
describe
'18007' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBY' 'sip-files00063.pro'
8ed47ef1b7087d967b3764c5399b7659
676d7f2896e9285772c86b9ff8b06a43e6277d80
'2011-08-19T04:59:27-04:00'
describe
'1828124' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIBZ' 'sip-files00063.tif'
4fd0dbd719af7a663fc275901faa9c49
01eb1f88e1a02de268d3b8f7d21de12db0e1da5b
'2011-08-19T05:05:00-04:00'
describe
'23475' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICA' 'sip-files00064.pro'
16b5d2594b54cb0529ca22784b1517c7
73998f7f3be1e57bd1edb624b1acc9b966c9316b
'2011-08-19T05:01:29-04:00'
describe
'1914244' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICB' 'sip-files00064.tif'
0455f68859f32c47e71a3d679e5021c6
3efa154e6b359c2d4c32ba0bf55557b90b488f3c
'2011-08-19T04:53:53-04:00'
describe
'24096' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICC' 'sip-files00065.pro'
830ca8df8718a28ae34ca87a80573320
08e68d0b0c4a435b1ae26201efe5a0e2af954eae
'2011-08-19T04:53:07-04:00'
describe
'1854280' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICD' 'sip-files00065.tif'
3cefd730e285bb6056db9cb26fbfc31f
d95b21b9e6955832fa90c8b1cea4f097f9222a16
'2011-08-19T05:00:03-04:00'
describe
'22918' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICE' 'sip-files00066.pro'
4d04446ddd9a7d8217bd9d6bff187f9a
b9484bb27b230a10c49be250f09fd6e2f60c73e4
'2011-08-19T04:53:28-04:00'
describe
'1822292' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICF' 'sip-files00066.tif'
2add6dac95f673b2dbd5bd0f3853e8ac
61ced894728b615ff084f946f09eff27f88613ed
'2011-08-19T05:04:40-04:00'
describe
'24859' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICG' 'sip-files00067.pro'
28e21178ac1190440ca50b50c972ae85
d41ced6968822cb242c7fddc42be8cb760aabf87
'2011-08-19T04:53:50-04:00'
describe
'1848984' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICH' 'sip-files00067.tif'
2a6b4fad5966dd0b5cf4b1c5d78d06b4
fbf6bda4ffca1456d968d0ba7d32d941865c2f47
'2011-08-19T05:01:45-04:00'
describe
'23487' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICI' 'sip-files00068.pro'
15733d09946534d12b653688394f94eb
7f85440c9ef3391960be9c63e5389ee05c306d06
'2011-08-19T05:00:15-04:00'
describe
'1914264' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICJ' 'sip-files00068.tif'
5a91c440068b40164be40bd4b432474a
93254232ef7b956115cc16297cc96e5f88179a29
'2011-08-19T04:55:37-04:00'
describe
'23827' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICK' 'sip-files00069.pro'
cf45f893320f2dfb813a87453cae26f1
83239b106ebd6b70ee460c4db0397e1abaf24e21
'2011-08-19T04:51:46-04:00'
describe
'1869452' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICL' 'sip-files00069.tif'
9da1c0308485958d842179ccf5cfee8c
9ad7515ed7494a0dd0c7e916d2211c9ac1bc0854
describe
'24937' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICM' 'sip-files00070.pro'
7d524ed5db04e4e2865424e3da8af30c
4d1f48ac2260f830351eedf9cbbcbd2ef47c3d06
'2011-08-19T04:56:03-04:00'
describe
'1914104' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICN' 'sip-files00070.tif'
2cbcd863926c775de0e1643361b57052
04c284b6ddb1dfe499e2680aa6424cbf9dd4b2cf
'2011-08-19T04:54:45-04:00'
describe
'25117' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICO' 'sip-files00071.pro'
f2ac314823314a078e5d9f4c308d3a31
7429c2f706747714b013cafcfd5e4f52ac2754a6
'2011-08-19T04:56:26-04:00'
describe
'1881680' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICP' 'sip-files00071.tif'
b26be776bfeb0d992620238298f17cd4
5c4d76e0373b82d806e4da594670c5d40e0014fc
'2011-08-19T05:03:58-04:00'
describe
'22850' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICQ' 'sip-files00072.pro'
6cb1f7df3f45b8cfa1d78c4486857ed2
bdb573993fe192674f6f17f28eb083aead35f7da
'2011-08-19T04:56:18-04:00'
describe
'1810628' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICR' 'sip-files00072.tif'
ef021de99b23a0d013d6bdf2312243b4
16be453279a5eb1d0414d3cb5a9f0783412167fd
'2011-08-19T04:53:05-04:00'
describe
'25464' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICS' 'sip-files00073.pro'
9d20ffce3ab3d0c9d05a2b8a7f8bb08b
d184dc4600ea826173d12e2c3e6ba7ed33857f7b
'2011-08-19T05:05:02-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICT' 'sip-files00073.tif'
24ead71a101bf9e100c0494981b4b491
8dd2e8efe085ac322724d504d3f37709ca686318
'2011-08-19T05:05:01-04:00'
describe
'23764' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICU' 'sip-files00074.pro'
b2ee9400b0de8172d0dd07873c1223fa
6a8a0a6f1580ea710403ddea65f4ea7e20dc332c
'2011-08-19T04:54:27-04:00'
describe
'1848304' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICV' 'sip-files00074.tif'
a4988c455277e1af5bef4fe1f9a9919e
75f6a8dbb612775a3778651dfcd1fb25cc9d82d7
'2011-08-19T04:55:30-04:00'
describe
'24590' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICW' 'sip-files00075.pro'
f790408443c39d983f6cefbe2125af69
7422ae47d3f2e0c6575d2e53618b9e75550e4434
'2011-08-19T05:01:08-04:00'
describe
'1826616' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICX' 'sip-files00075.tif'
dedbe3d3a9282dbef972ba9382e25e75
d857695827d2448f42fa6a295647e9bb59905d4e
'2011-08-19T04:56:34-04:00'
describe
'25396' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICY' 'sip-files00076.pro'
d747e8793001f1abada87ce6dffae742
b4ef22ef6f69c4e500e5cd29295e4828755fc5ce
'2011-08-19T04:55:08-04:00'
describe
'1834944' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAICZ' 'sip-files00076.tif'
4b436f8d41cb720a102ee8cbf9ac217b
9987e1f75430a1f62ae8afeb9c930a60a198bc6f
describe
'25334' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDA' 'sip-files00077.pro'
fecd147c1e941c937f1774ea1fc41753
111cd3137c6b7293ba547343276499ad7ae1f592
'2011-08-19T04:54:13-04:00'
describe
'1878504' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDB' 'sip-files00077.tif'
7f4f72b8ec55399e9b62afa4efe8f467
de9f17e288e82c2fe46154ea1d82ed4e19d4a5c0
'2011-08-19T05:01:00-04:00'
describe
'24179' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDC' 'sip-files00078.pro'
122d56ef9720801811b8273740df0218
477c80a1bb1f74ce0b40daca83a96ffc9e81e99b
'2011-08-19T04:52:31-04:00'
describe
'1857888' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDD' 'sip-files00078.tif'
ebbcc1af071a822c71e9ff481fbe9ead
91a8c48c96c2520c0573f156cddb893fa9397775
'2011-08-19T04:53:24-04:00'
describe
'24447' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDE' 'sip-files00079.pro'
f03e2e31cf0951192649d70a5578c339
683d3afd9f3c57b75296571f148df95a64e106ee
'2011-08-19T04:55:48-04:00'
describe
'1864736' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDF' 'sip-files00079.tif'
5426c4423ff37d7ea9a8483880a1ad12
ae03f6b2aedb8098c328cb846982037b21d409f7
'2011-08-19T04:55:50-04:00'
describe
'25505' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDG' 'sip-files00080.pro'
2d7b28ad27b13318708316e0a775195e
b18f554bdae7f7bc5b2ae2d4150fa0b07cce8e11
'2011-08-19T05:03:16-04:00'
describe
'1859880' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDH' 'sip-files00080.tif'
2faa5e89a219f97e396cba762990815e
47fd42bc83914e103a628191f039f1900e46a942
'2011-08-19T05:01:25-04:00'
describe
'26178' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDI' 'sip-files00081.pro'
211258005a903b73fd7d729e7b7247c1
32ce2578e4a0ede4262bedd2aef46d483d062f09
'2011-08-19T04:51:55-04:00'
describe
'1880244' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDJ' 'sip-files00081.tif'
2fe3c49beeb55170af6dcc2e94d7ace2
f694b19937b02b16726d9ba3c161dc5bd6260079
'2011-08-19T04:51:24-04:00'
describe
'25744' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDK' 'sip-files00082.pro'
40940cc99efa265a5940c5c4f2e91ec7
562ea80ec6e5f667a2b4a2ef415e43f77be554f3
'2011-08-19T04:54:02-04:00'
describe
'1864564' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDL' 'sip-files00082.tif'
474642eec153e5605c14ea89f3d5015a
d09edde925d075d9e4b933d4e092ebb09e13b932
'2011-08-19T05:00:11-04:00'
describe
'25610' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDM' 'sip-files00083.pro'
bbf8c69483d075636cc8332ed2b3cffe
c4b86c603db08266cad25fdf6786782ca72a976b
'2011-08-19T04:56:16-04:00'
describe
'1856976' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDN' 'sip-files00083.tif'
7eb89b697a970cbfd490dc918e713134
aa5203f73b97e960ae4cc27955ebc57d0bf137d3
'2011-08-19T04:54:48-04:00'
describe
'21996' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDO' 'sip-files00084.pro'
dc4341950b56774987ad628efc012cba
2643904ca09d2fe5997c19249d722b9eb4c6cdf5
'2011-08-19T04:54:19-04:00'
describe
'1837836' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDP' 'sip-files00084.tif'
5ae5a744e048a1e3f4479d3cffe64ef6
edba3c5a2a889fe78ed259bd70413c3608d1b215
'2011-08-19T05:02:53-04:00'
describe
'25861' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDQ' 'sip-files00085.pro'
88af2d61f41600c405ada25546570fff
c1269a8894d8ac98d287606d6eebafdabb0089c5
'2011-08-19T04:51:56-04:00'
describe
'1776324' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDR' 'sip-files00085.tif'
45844997e3aecfc418758172bab3c212
c0308d0db1bfcc3c808ce481d9aa9a35665b620f
'2011-08-19T04:57:07-04:00'
describe
'26109' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDS' 'sip-files00086.pro'
0b07a394b75faee9fab2fb44324b7124
43e8e844620574f8a5d469c5c0180b3a05c1710f
describe
'1856268' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDT' 'sip-files00086.tif'
f9430cb87783b8ef2468973cea342548
b4d92213f1594c58c0f8fb545cc3e77324db4122
'2011-08-19T05:00:16-04:00'
describe
'24982' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDU' 'sip-files00087.pro'
7e58a22e31b8f859634abe14cd42c247
b98ebb479751d1a64cb1948872d1f62258e9d0e4
'2011-08-19T04:59:29-04:00'
describe
'1813464' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDV' 'sip-files00087.tif'
972e7cd1605d8fec38c29bed8ff1f90e
7fa895ca6e1afb548f19948fa1c5efef62c88204
describe
'24823' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDW' 'sip-files00088.pro'
5d9f551d8bd3ef49d4e7f4c1b17cba8e
a393d957e5831cb3160a3ab251f79a68ccfa2c1f
'2011-08-19T04:52:41-04:00'
describe
'1847968' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDX' 'sip-files00088.tif'
6b74e3e1ca2c6b7583474cf95db662c1
80a3aa6fde98385745ad1a5b5f00c3b49dccefd5
'2011-08-19T04:52:03-04:00'
describe
'26083' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDY' 'sip-files00089.pro'
256b5e7d0455828846cef9c84f14f2cf
cf78ba68638f454b9222d4172b04f9de370487df
describe
'1808772' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIDZ' 'sip-files00089.tif'
2c67ce1a09c7dbae9323d43b308e1a45
d1da48edc5594f2111595856eb2b58a71bea40ab
'2011-08-19T05:02:21-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEA' 'sip-files00090.pro'
11a8574cdfe432707d6faf80d6940221
bbb54ac7e5813781d350d6893eb56286f970caeb
'2011-08-19T04:54:35-04:00'
describe
'1849704' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEB' 'sip-files00090.tif'
e03fbce8cb3c050874fe30f2b5cc2cf8
94b9ab838f9bfbedd2df7469e7c4c3b725c12f0b
'2011-08-19T04:56:44-04:00'
describe
'25131' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEC' 'sip-files00090a.pro'
cef4dbfc83d59414664679292b6d612e
b7c9e26696b54a7f8e5caad7291e93675345bc72
describe
'7907216' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIED' 'sip-files00090a.tif'
c304302b06598300d8c821c72a46747b
4718d7b714fe6bce16fe7ad67a167bb586240043
'2011-08-19T05:03:08-04:00'
describe
'25812' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEE' 'sip-files00090b.pro'
4e5f19547ae225aac7fea4e89713493f
3657f47e5a686a48c0d24a1f0e67c67d04009d0e
describe
'7976684' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEF' 'sip-files00090b.tif'
8ea236ab976fb8fc69becae95414a19d
abd54c4d37c2255cebcd56a01525bbfa40f50ad7
'2011-08-19T05:00:18-04:00'
describe
'25555' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEG' 'sip-files00091.pro'
def74279bc8b1500908ad60e6d3f9083
967957f8bc0c69163ea9384659eaab48860cf7d6
'2011-08-19T04:55:42-04:00'
describe
'1855068' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEH' 'sip-files00091.tif'
f0e41e847b8874b5ddb2fec968bf6aeb
d3fa8389fc43c4b0fe6d4e01ce9b4db18f27d01e
'2011-08-19T05:02:47-04:00'
describe
'25111' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEI' 'sip-files00092.pro'
e045bc17e7d4be86aa75cbc10513271d
083a3487cf47dfbf4240c86638e83c749f213646
'2011-08-19T04:59:51-04:00'
describe
'1950344' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEJ' 'sip-files00092.tif'
f09c4c5b653865b70ef856f9693dd004
0b3db7f90d58de77bf1ed3cae15a2026dcd42995
describe
'19812' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEK' 'sip-files00093.pro'
6d52ac103ad296e7e3b8814047f3f9c1
486c00d21d3b1ddfc6543d17d42261e0958ea0c5
describe
'1857828' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEL' 'sip-files00093.tif'
ce56d7642d179db29452f01f403e6edc
fa7b3a7f42243fcfd35c8de64ee404699523187e
'2011-08-19T04:57:04-04:00'
describe
'15809' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEM' 'sip-files00094.pro'
9edb4201ad668a40634c93ee7c56d340
798064310bb696e474bf3ebe14d3eafac2449f0c
'2011-08-19T05:00:48-04:00'
describe
'1949292' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEN' 'sip-files00094.tif'
57331fa05e64fd272a0be33ebe1c080e
d8276b9480886abe1a01ad48cd53d0202b7fd98d
'2011-08-19T04:52:25-04:00'
describe
'26268' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEO' 'sip-files00095.pro'
89648d7631fc81fa03972d263d79d096
85b8921aacfffb0e4fb495d28d7ed0ded69b8b8f
'2011-08-19T05:03:00-04:00'
describe
'1865052' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEP' 'sip-files00095.tif'
7ec732e5d973543d34d03a81dda81e49
d779cb2a5a6845a9ddf194194a4ad23ed68a7740
'2011-08-19T05:03:25-04:00'
describe
'25527' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEQ' 'sip-files00096.pro'
e89eed17268c013bb4256b3ba56768c2
162aed403054efcaae84ad811d926b2d07ce988a
'2011-08-19T04:56:08-04:00'
describe
'1950348' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIER' 'sip-files00096.tif'
f6059ed2c539d6b83cc281fd2c7d7996
34a4dea72ba1bc2b1fb0ab9675b04c5772178668
'2011-08-19T04:51:50-04:00'
describe
'25941' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIES' 'sip-files00097.pro'
1430c11d3e84c6c981093394d6f41607
41d4dcf5f0c9ca1d8e6304fa83c2d10e8a7a3879
describe
'1876896' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIET' 'sip-files00097.tif'
6a3eaec4c5699f3cae531df3f0456e68
d559b39d1df20512f0d0f678c7eab13ed53a7bac
'2011-08-19T04:51:45-04:00'
describe
'25062' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEU' 'sip-files00098.pro'
7ea9771274d26c2277ecb3e82f6c1689
71bf5a864458c7cb7ada42db7a092f17cdca24f9
describe
'1950212' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEV' 'sip-files00098.tif'
88de609516fa9a376a52ab23940cf038
6fd3beb0158bc7fe6b6d3da348f1d4da077b337c
'2011-08-19T04:51:42-04:00'
describe
'26612' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEW' 'sip-files00099.pro'
0ec069c2d27cb9f5124baeee7db41f21
6d6d282f785f65af48f67a028b5446839b661a79
'2011-08-19T04:57:35-04:00'
describe
'1858644' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEX' 'sip-files00099.tif'
93457ecfef56ec22e28506bc27752381
d655e7e37f42616d63eadb720de37f062c174928
'2011-08-19T05:04:59-04:00'
describe
'26440' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEY' 'sip-files00100.pro'
ef67b004b4db139f0b2f5aaa82ce22c0
21fd314db426b87fc7ba234dcd2a5916a3f213ad
'2011-08-19T05:01:05-04:00'
describe
'1868260' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIEZ' 'sip-files00100.tif'
4d00752d05935f138ce9c154c191c0db
1cae86a80b9254c4e7af93335efe1e5014bfe733
'2011-08-19T05:03:51-04:00'
describe
'24428' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFA' 'sip-files00101.pro'
281bddc5c1106b4507d4bd7d3ca6a926
0964218772275a39a65398a431b468b88035b588
'2011-08-19T04:53:21-04:00'
describe
'1826904' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFB' 'sip-files00101.tif'
8c88a1011315b7d234eb983bfacd63c8
1540929717cff659674090eef6f309918518ba86
'2011-08-19T05:01:06-04:00'
describe
'24562' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFC' 'sip-files00102.pro'
3d447208e260d98c22a9b655d79bb840
3200c639144fb562ea7b31811f59ed46e0def627
'2011-08-19T04:54:16-04:00'
describe
'1984816' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFD' 'sip-files00102.tif'
e9008de99c1756393fc64fa719d96073
aec8bba7de47a11e5618d39509ff5e3599baec72
'2011-08-19T05:02:44-04:00'
describe
'24852' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFE' 'sip-files00103.pro'
780c77a80b8a9279572c26073ebce7e3
94d97bb8e5d18ca76658c354556ca9b4c975783c
'2011-08-19T05:04:27-04:00'
describe
'1939132' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFF' 'sip-files00103.tif'
38b51aecbde3b3dcd2583a3b3ebf676c
e21144bd7d3057dbbd9882ef94c72aa17e1c005b
'2011-08-19T04:55:19-04:00'
describe
'22557' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFG' 'sip-files00104.pro'
567d3f979401d0a68b290171f19e9093
67777d82cc5434546398b4a09d8eb6f8327a17a1
'2011-08-19T04:55:54-04:00'
describe
'1984828' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFH' 'sip-files00104.tif'
bc54ccf6fb64f2cc566a52072f027cfb
75d4f50a92659abd45d6269f57ccc24bb8fef030
'2011-08-19T05:00:10-04:00'
describe
'25477' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFI' 'sip-files00105.pro'
f31774064b8333f068c5ebd2cb012116
c58ed09006dd0ea61b9494328994c251294d9b70
'2011-08-19T05:02:34-04:00'
describe
'1939484' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFJ' 'sip-files00105.tif'
dafdd8b78a527df5cc5423c6f261b88d
f526668322bf4228b62f1848c17ce4da18255d97
describe
'26169' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFK' 'sip-files00106.pro'
e58f9d5874263f6aa4abd8ec090fea96
eeec2fb48fb75793437944d4268406f6c8533ae3
describe
'1880504' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFL' 'sip-files00106.tif'
433df4be7a0d4aeec6e62f2846411dae
2c09f32e1b116a7f0403e021c642fbd6a9044115
'2011-08-19T05:00:14-04:00'
describe
'24329' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFM' 'sip-files00107.pro'
ffdd8552ccfc96bab241e2d16f93e18d
2ef35c6bbc9ecc6c2c02247e7e75b817db4b2d97
'2011-08-19T04:52:35-04:00'
describe
'1939436' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFN' 'sip-files00107.tif'
153767835338f5fba4be45ecee72ee1b
8f228f4f463085a685f53b557aa31de155bac53a
'2011-08-19T05:04:35-04:00'
describe
'24365' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFO' 'sip-files00108.pro'
7d9cb033f6da3d93af5c66c15a79fe4a
7ffca703c16858e9449dd7b3bf42a987bbe755d9
'2011-08-19T05:02:01-04:00'
describe
'1875516' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFP' 'sip-files00108.tif'
e27101b4bd4a083642834d684bda9034
dbadc799e37274a6ac492233a2573f43edeb9fa9
'2011-08-19T05:03:02-04:00'
describe
'24773' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFQ' 'sip-files00109.pro'
130d1c36f5505f7ae1829d7b7a2de076
721c75d433d1a52860db1e853cb08c992a35a2bc
'2011-08-19T04:56:28-04:00'
describe
'1939432' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFR' 'sip-files00109.tif'
66b12eccd8604d7d18ed65aff19e2b74
54b3b4998a655100e01cc53d27bdccd7cfb64dd4
'2011-08-19T04:55:31-04:00'
describe
'23380' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFS' 'sip-files00110.pro'
58a664f7f96267fb89ca43ef075c697a
b7708e3120fb49b46e70659b791c739c1b7bf6df
'2011-08-19T04:57:18-04:00'
describe
'1891872' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFT' 'sip-files00110.tif'
663502a6ecd5a39746760c354744d630
395bba8e2e5b3d3d8dbdc156107294adb61fb772
'2011-08-19T04:57:01-04:00'
describe
'23657' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFU' 'sip-files00111.pro'
35cf177ad32c3d29616fc7a5ea391380
c6fb09ee007f4f700f412a0a6c5597b2cd8bcaf9
'2011-08-19T05:02:49-04:00'
describe
'1938956' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFV' 'sip-files00111.tif'
abb6032e11e9fc0f906ce7044d497879
b3a28903021462ca72db83b1f13fe40414d07be8
'2011-08-19T04:54:31-04:00'
describe
'25045' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFW' 'sip-files00112.pro'
4e75756fd58c88d70b265fe5b0112f96
a5af018d7d1b5d79b3568f218e7204ee6afd6d19
'2011-08-19T04:56:22-04:00'
describe
'1855176' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFX' 'sip-files00112.tif'
84a39dc041fbce9d4928f92160bd9531
713285572c74e83c050ee874d7c61b6c7e19c0f5
'2011-08-19T04:51:37-04:00'
describe
'22958' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFY' 'sip-files00113.pro'
7e16c77cd7004421a9aef657ba3649a1
f77a9ebe97ddffbf6a8e79a44966ab6e12051bce
'2011-08-19T04:56:17-04:00'
describe
'1838560' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIFZ' 'sip-files00113.tif'
217a96c6cf8db6746bbc2d59b23139b2
1636c9fce38172de441878e68e69fdcc4ccf02a6
'2011-08-19T05:01:57-04:00'
describe
'24947' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGA' 'sip-files00114.pro'
87667ed524b8c48fd46327a44c23fde3
927ebdb5c0a8c252b8286484097280be08bb5f1a
'2011-08-19T04:59:38-04:00'
describe
'1848336' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGB' 'sip-files00114.tif'
ab1a82f3f520198e381540738d0fc7fc
c1a87af1f89f607bc079b1365168861a59ad3ccc
describe
'5496' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGC' 'sip-files00115.pro'
feabfed7b639b7f35109c245154bad64
ae4d8e552327da48fa60db58dbc538c4a5931cf6
describe
'1838308' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGD' 'sip-files00115.tif'
f3ed3a87ac0775625e072c6bd722d83e
9436452016b5843b3872718922a20b8e2007f4e2
'2011-08-19T04:53:36-04:00'
describe
'18420' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGE' 'sip-files00116.pro'
f5919293d7d8ab611ae564a9d35626dd
1297a25edaa2f6aa6f42c08ada984010a8a39951
'2011-08-19T05:01:42-04:00'
describe
'1842876' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGF' 'sip-files00116.tif'
b49b6aede20f051066ec526127663e11
11fe20941f79667625f6937ce2e92323bf4ce9ee
'2011-08-19T05:03:01-04:00'
describe
'26113' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGG' 'sip-files00117.pro'
1db03163fbcd22a80433c4c726e0738a
a891e6e6cf7c28b8284143eb5376d156a89d92f6
'2011-08-19T05:02:41-04:00'
describe
'1790648' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGH' 'sip-files00117.tif'
77bb6997417f0d115d6ca7bd2a6a4ee5
777af308b32e846a671378cad35ee334a2398255
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGI' 'sip-files00118.pro'
2f0803a837d48ee401ee68cdc67ca657
37f5d049f15161cb3a7db49935e0d760f38da365
'2011-08-19T04:59:30-04:00'
describe
'1866696' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGJ' 'sip-files00118.tif'
6e82bf78402d3ef4f038f04e8e107acb
e47752d28bd47b6f8b24f57d2c06bb9b03753379
describe
'25407' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGK' 'sip-files00119.pro'
b84176a1ed0772c0ad58b476221037a7
9dfa745ee6905db9fcd7a6a2451fe43deefbb92a
'2011-08-19T04:56:20-04:00'
describe
'1851824' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGL' 'sip-files00119.tif'
e71d4c70b62b449c8b1a39ad5a6b67df
60ae496a46d095a48704f9cfebee4c0ff8d8a4b9
'2011-08-19T04:57:26-04:00'
describe
'24392' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGM' 'sip-files00120.pro'
3004d99c6eaded6697716b0c4b0ca7b3
36326033257880208f71c05b88773188d134d63d
'2011-08-19T04:52:45-04:00'
describe
'1866416' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGN' 'sip-files00120.tif'
a279ea3a283a4f548e574dba9b86bc6c
e7480b5022845334c33c38e57203cef4ba0b6e6e
'2011-08-19T05:02:56-04:00'
describe
'26008' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGO' 'sip-files00121.pro'
cbfe73453dc1ec8a299978ca93797ad7
039da0a24bf6ac399db6c53cf395a9a278404f41
'2011-08-19T05:05:05-04:00'
describe
'1944908' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGP' 'sip-files00121.tif'
198ff77402ce133bd47947e0efdab8e0
2a4e77b38cd20e91dad3f7a7a6ac8a62df687e52
'2011-08-19T05:03:27-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGQ' 'sip-files00122.pro'
7f9232f3d1d3dacfb4d32757d43a247b
bab068f0f07e5bf8a8e31192f9dd30dd88cc4517
'2011-08-19T04:53:39-04:00'
describe
'1878544' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGR' 'sip-files00122.tif'
bb47dc1a0e9377524a316eea9a4e05d7
b452bf8b7e219b29bb0a11be6becd59adafe7a01
'2011-08-19T05:01:39-04:00'
describe
'25783' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGS' 'sip-files00123.pro'
da6eb65741df02c0da994358ffb50437
967d2d3be06f0337bcef35cd252cb8f9b04088b3
'2011-08-19T05:01:14-04:00'
describe
'1939140' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGT' 'sip-files00123.tif'
7d56f24d023745f44386a38edf85022a
07ea452fda2117141bc5197c88e91f5513bf477e
'2011-08-19T05:00:05-04:00'
describe
'26038' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGU' 'sip-files00124.pro'
d16a6d57bbc7b8949e7a7473bd88cdf3
d6aef1cf3da326dd9886bcaa04f32533bc8c6361
'2011-08-19T04:52:47-04:00'
describe
'1855548' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGV' 'sip-files00124.tif'
32890f416cd0167d38cf21bd0aaa39d9
e0fd572382d505e2b4e5d2e4fd0503cada866e61
'2011-08-19T04:56:38-04:00'
describe
'24766' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGW' 'sip-files00125.pro'
68889c4358a131153e7381597d5fb783
1388731c0f8e278fcd7c774f693db7634093e662
'2011-08-19T05:02:22-04:00'
describe
'1864948' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGX' 'sip-files00125.tif'
f5cff791bb5b00af382b40540c12f2e2
b2eb6099916993530b7703c0094ca553bcf02e24
'2011-08-19T04:58:48-04:00'
describe
'24188' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGY' 'sip-files00126.pro'
c82c3ffe6ed02036fc92924ae2db4d46
1c70e60c7c39522acf8350c0739c7a9a33e4953d
describe
'1859736' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIGZ' 'sip-files00126.tif'
50cb1885a0e7b1ea35deb6d934fba0a4
b95b17a25b73416de723b8114fdcbede17588393
'2011-08-19T04:54:06-04:00'
describe
'25939' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHA' 'sip-files00127.pro'
b93e33ebee48c837e8232c7a57fb85c3
8da03400f581959365553ae47d81d93b0e415588
'2011-08-19T05:03:06-04:00'
describe
'1939488' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHB' 'sip-files00127.tif'
fedd8bc915923c4cb80cb12b18b3a25e
acfc7365904224bbceab6083ddfe9a4b987d65be
'2011-08-19T04:59:39-04:00'
describe
'25480' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHC' 'sip-files00128.pro'
509fe4284f27f509e8ccd340e4f95646
f3ef5af3166f68c6b4b448105340189eb07a7b7f
'2011-08-19T04:56:57-04:00'
describe
'1849752' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHD' 'sip-files00128.tif'
0f70f4f39fbd24074bbf0ab79ef59094
54e087a70b81eac6721fb6244591bb191e74d47b
'2011-08-19T05:03:26-04:00'
describe
'23793' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHE' 'sip-files00129.pro'
0f6e9b62b5af76a9e691f173f1c33061
26accbbd437e65a6f285533eaa89ac963e150ace
'2011-08-19T04:54:18-04:00'
describe
'1844696' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHF' 'sip-files00129.tif'
cf326f825d637df029578eef9515e128
1d298e6521d20217d826d7932e503d5b7e3bbf4e
'2011-08-19T05:03:44-04:00'
describe
'22799' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHG' 'sip-files00130.pro'
f448ee44298eb4a61960465cf1b8607b
5ecd966f193e01785aabf7922020387baee21a2d
describe
'1846612' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHH' 'sip-files00130.tif'
d6f290e7642930aec7a4cfa3781d395c
be3469058baff76d20b59072ade028adc298fae3
describe
'25846' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHI' 'sip-files00131.pro'
e7002e1b7d100cb7b9203c0edd98510c
5aa20e9e347d6e4efbc93b9e5fe0f4a2628b6d84
describe
'1939184' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHJ' 'sip-files00131.tif'
a83eb735c7f148b73380568157007c82
1296d3ad367c7d82864188c005de68e40b1d6b76
'2011-08-19T05:00:26-04:00'
describe
'25125' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHK' 'sip-files00132.pro'
15fa8745bad6ccced26b730ce37e4d20
2d81eb38609275d573c8efeb96bb5f6d3bde7bd9
'2011-08-19T05:00:53-04:00'
describe
'1839876' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHL' 'sip-files00132.tif'
e45316627e8f58d215f09d2b43e870c0
7743402f96a028dafeaa91719c7d25cd3768252e
'2011-08-19T05:04:20-04:00'
describe
'26141' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHM' 'sip-files00133.pro'
f0eec34364d81a3a481777e8fbbc8e1f
30e04d60fec1cf19035dfb1e5e888881cdb1ec4d
'2011-08-19T05:03:30-04:00'
describe
'1831828' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHN' 'sip-files00133.tif'
745cad10d8c05f8c22020f7361d3c143
efbec1f81b01a1f47dd22b61f69103bfe90a88b0
describe
'26301' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHO' 'sip-files00134.pro'
9f77ac637566aecd52742b189433f8e9
b0961f28c302b0198d2c242a8619449913ccb9fb
'2011-08-19T05:00:20-04:00'
describe
'1866872' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHP' 'sip-files00134.tif'
952df325d7fed85d84ee59e74f990c00
8f2bd04388f0be72e583d34129205e846c23c5b2
'2011-08-19T05:02:39-04:00'
describe
'26862' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHQ' 'sip-files00135.pro'
3fc30e3db09bab90cc03bd0e39717f08
f2d22b3509f9be36f86f9294e93375b122aa5e83
'2011-08-19T04:52:42-04:00'
describe
'1853620' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHR' 'sip-files00135.tif'
169a5c16c8a996dbc05549227ab28f6a
9179b33910497bd30f71cf2dc699588eb6adced4
'2011-08-19T04:56:53-04:00'
describe
'25629' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHS' 'sip-files00136.pro'
6143d15a01dd91ba7f68bef59822904d
7c679d91e8b2a197e225be1bde4da3a4873e0c7d
'2011-08-19T04:53:47-04:00'
describe
'1835748' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHT' 'sip-files00136.tif'
ddd5cba352c7692eaf71d1cf20ab1395
11cbf8bf22306fbefce2cc834195872e104ddf45
'2011-08-19T04:57:28-04:00'
describe
'24887' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHU' 'sip-files00137.pro'
70f368293c56e573185fc267be41646c
02fdbf20ba866fec9331fedf775cce5b6bea313c
describe
'1848344' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHV' 'sip-files00137.tif'
5d0c5e4c5931b113aaffc3c8b86d18a1
b1918a3ed8e93272b9fdf4cda77ea5f0e0b6a874
'2011-08-19T05:03:42-04:00'
describe
'24877' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHW' 'sip-files00138.pro'
c9c4cf215805c01471b10de677059ec1
c2112e1b2c728455de35ab219b2945e19aa17461
'2011-08-19T05:03:45-04:00'
describe
'1828552' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHX' 'sip-files00138.tif'
2459d6889d3b21efb4519d07ee93ec31
4115afb7555ac4a241db8191a1cbe3d1c70045ba
'2011-08-19T05:01:34-04:00'
describe
'12420' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHY' 'sip-files00139.pro'
ed41a587090d4932cda0e234673040c2
fe213119e0820a84720e673c8169489e35e69f34
'2011-08-19T05:01:19-04:00'
describe
'1821144' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIHZ' 'sip-files00139.tif'
b21de7cf2e030a74e7da37cf2876ec32
7c5092f8ffb9a1fa3dee43a406b2a583fb8dcd45
'2011-08-19T04:59:35-04:00'
describe
'16467' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIA' 'sip-files00140.pro'
994695042812275485c3ac222ad69bb5
369a06a8816e3e9c03b79fc5969132a51ca7e66f
'2011-08-19T04:54:23-04:00'
describe
'1844248' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIB' 'sip-files00140.tif'
39af6b37136c0626f1d2384aa974fcf9
fab93cbefb00033bdb2945f71317ac5ac14519a5
'2011-08-19T05:02:16-04:00'
describe
'25412' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIC' 'sip-files00141.pro'
bd9c1e212539713fdae56862a67c1759
f24f1f4f7af2cf07a5128fda675fe81eb19cc898
'2011-08-19T05:01:33-04:00'
describe
'1847104' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIID' 'sip-files00141.tif'
6c38e72da56a7d2351cafaed9c517b4a
a0d25f9dbc1cc188f1715140a0798b8f5b774a56
'2011-08-19T05:04:33-04:00'
describe
'26416' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIE' 'sip-files00142.pro'
a10e6ef134f931452f2236346cc92a7f
67348ef3aebcdc0b17293129fed0b616c322e8c1
'2011-08-19T05:02:48-04:00'
describe
'1867104' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIF' 'sip-files00142.tif'
ab2a9d8829307d18486afaa36ecd709c
b8f2a9daf9a971f495271a8665ef2f03c22392cd
'2011-08-19T04:52:23-04:00'
describe
'26267' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIG' 'sip-files00143.pro'
7e4ce9d4c496681f442f8d1eeb82d9d6
7346f1eb3daf19fbdc88cd1094b8bd39f5ba892c
'2011-08-19T04:59:11-04:00'
describe
'1939256' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIH' 'sip-files00143.tif'
739c671dd5ee8d9deaa54450191304c9
2a231b1fb9f528082586653685ee24fdbae0bef3
'2011-08-19T04:56:11-04:00'
describe
'25754' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIII' 'sip-files00144.pro'
7d01808e4a9d422787335be9b388d55a
e53ea084ab591b2ce0f3fd1c955a95e806659e43
'2011-08-19T04:54:36-04:00'
describe
'1860132' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIJ' 'sip-files00144.tif'
08f2b53fd3e582b6f567755355edfb1b
0b4434ca9e9a4d9080d01cae38dc346bbf6c5020
'2011-08-19T04:56:02-04:00'
describe
'25771' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIK' 'sip-files00145.pro'
cf637c7acdc647209fa0002e3c2a0597
6dee9f56ba3ee9fa59ef0fb954b32adcad499221
'2011-08-19T05:01:27-04:00'
describe
'1830436' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIL' 'sip-files00145.tif'
e7073609a98ba636fe73cdef1eca81e7
0eb9b1df3ac71a086d2e123a1c727e57a70a98aa
'2011-08-19T04:56:31-04:00'
describe
'24771' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIM' 'sip-files00146.pro'
a965ee9b61957c5dfb9f224c16c70003
6d5080b15015195e89810ccb1d40156d443c8eab
'2011-08-19T05:03:04-04:00'
describe
'1846620' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIN' 'sip-files00146.tif'
4f75f9fd950539aedc169f7239671b78
7e75914ab3d74051c9f215924058cbc7c7ffd3c4
'2011-08-19T05:01:37-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIO' 'sip-files00147.pro'
937dfd49efaa66405ac011db941f4223
f76506fa6703f53e8fd23770cdb1bd93981a03b6
'2011-08-19T04:52:07-04:00'
describe
'1813396' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIP' 'sip-files00147.tif'
0d10dec5870ba2ee698cd4349b6a8f43
4949a4441498746dc81bd610b895349d3a1d0bfb
describe
'24739' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIQ' 'sip-files00148.pro'
06ad5ed68d8d15b5f905eefedfd96872
b99f368d9135e5aee71abf4ebd99305205ddaa42
'2011-08-19T04:52:28-04:00'
describe
'1826396' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIR' 'sip-files00148.tif'
472f5692668825427ceac0cf285a348d
674c6252e9c6857de6f49ee0687e58248919d49b
'2011-08-19T05:01:20-04:00'
describe
'24486' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIS' 'sip-files00149.pro'
9238361e5cedc83a0dde071b20d8bb40
cd889d186305eaea09a85f6023bbe104250438d4
describe
'1853136' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIT' 'sip-files00149.tif'
cbbe19a68baff525764bf46a3aac851a
bcb46c1363b5000719f93579e3a8a0121f7def1b
describe
'24529' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIU' 'sip-files00150.pro'
2437356c5ee57f2d9cfbdfe9e86a461c
6731c395c9ab174cc4652f46f9aa1d030fe4f631
'2011-08-19T05:04:09-04:00'
describe
'1839920' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIV' 'sip-files00150.tif'
5acd12fea1c3fa589239580b2ed8db1b
f3c42753c68f5996ee9a7ce3d9cc591924f48b87
'2011-08-19T04:52:08-04:00'
describe
'24158' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIW' 'sip-files00151.pro'
4ba68d913f1b879a7828379f2ea33b4e
d3b5b8d45bf8cbcfe1aa55bfbc494ef0e3e52fc4
'2011-08-19T04:51:57-04:00'
describe
'1830156' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIX' 'sip-files00151.tif'
5c50b8329c8a3f52c6834bbfaa50f0f2
bef985e3c1970ae2f32f51c18de27241a4c7a0e9
'2011-08-19T04:53:37-04:00'
describe
'6957' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIY' 'sip-files00152.pro'
fa964fddf5e508d6cf7254e389f7b61b
016e698493ea2b42de40cd8af62bd02f82cd0797
'2011-08-19T04:56:29-04:00'
describe
'1836492' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIIZ' 'sip-files00152.tif'
b41e8490748494023228194d8a900ae3
d3bb813af908ee463f8faf2044ed5af53c591bbf
describe
'18495' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJA' 'sip-files00153.pro'
25cef6235694d69249ab3c54aafb94e1
57689cf3874c953bcb0d72da6368d992c4788359
'2011-08-19T04:59:31-04:00'
describe
'1777032' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJB' 'sip-files00153.tif'
68d4b0742b23a45640d44152ad8cf660
04fa3601a303b54b2b5632ac7afb39ddc78fcee3
'2011-08-19T05:03:20-04:00'
describe
'25978' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJC' 'sip-files00154.pro'
dcc13fc97f590beba51da17da49a8474
ce5a242f60b42e44b0d7ac773bb6c029d6fb3bfb
'2011-08-19T05:01:13-04:00'
describe
'1836628' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJD' 'sip-files00154.tif'
f6b40378d90f53e35fa281c53c20c354
436c3f9d29ab55352f09aced01f1e91c444a1d1b
'2011-08-19T04:52:09-04:00'
describe
'24630' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJE' 'sip-files00155.pro'
75dcc2fdc643be12ea2be3bd0086ce1d
48a6031ae02b2ea27a62704b71fb2d88bb699254
'2011-08-19T04:56:37-04:00'
describe
'1841604' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJF' 'sip-files00155.tif'
af4d5c14e1e70e48002d3c4de9a1250e
007b209c08145b1e0b10b7d9455d16144016982a
'2011-08-19T04:54:39-04:00'
describe
'25194' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJG' 'sip-files00156.pro'
d5fe469ecd856302e92025de4b24d2bf
61b353cddb6871278b006a1ffb66e9b26157896c
'2011-08-19T04:56:05-04:00'
describe
'1847988' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJH' 'sip-files00156.tif'
c042ca90f73a9c4c5eb20fe76e7e8221
94eaa9e25336845308533e1222cf28337e72fcb8
describe
'25624' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJI' 'sip-files00157.pro'
ed051a10d5ee09eb5917f13bb747d396
0030ab2492e2177b37efc012299458732160b713
'2011-08-19T05:01:41-04:00'
describe
'1775832' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJJ' 'sip-files00157.tif'
1a4f46a3836abe3947115c82b1563422
93fbcbe393d43ce3752d30f9a52ffdb108e82fac
describe
'23506' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJK' 'sip-files00158.pro'
ac13cea9b30c12d477a2993b7932e65a
a95b40faff7ab67a93baad23d8850cf6a03f06b3
'2011-08-19T04:56:43-04:00'
describe
'1843460' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJL' 'sip-files00158.tif'
a544e92073943d28c29b65aa329196e4
c56a1e82be47fc8d1466be2f193df91afd7a3408
describe
'23529' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJM' 'sip-files00159.pro'
6c7240664697af0fc68b5079c2fc1b76
297fbd80db2ac12a62b91ced5c36708232e5f755
'2011-08-19T05:00:56-04:00'
describe
'1856676' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJN' 'sip-files00159.tif'
7677cbdbde98f2c8c05f07d15436b6e9
9d55614ba39f9a00375cd98213ece9f79aeef5b9
'2011-08-19T04:53:55-04:00'
describe
'24249' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJO' 'sip-files00160.pro'
2eaf2b57cbb4a4832bdaf57a3d883a5b
b8229adbd397a26c23927ff1654ef7ad555eeed7
describe
'1854944' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJP' 'sip-files00160.tif'
7ba337a1eb3e0c383f7b973cd7bece30
26520cc7993465be1fa6908298d4c7635efa8efd
describe
'22802' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJQ' 'sip-files00161.pro'
cb6f7e4fa8bb6a960fcac44aaaf93e5c
2d9fd0ac41db82155101d905a8b68e91eb9897b5
'2011-08-19T05:02:07-04:00'
describe
'1804840' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJR' 'sip-files00161.tif'
de4ffdc8b63019020fdfd31489b4b40d
5c299944bab9183be69d50b31475b7873da12f58
'2011-08-19T05:03:18-04:00'
describe
'23246' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJS' 'sip-files00162.pro'
08822dbd7b8ad1d4d2e07e35caf078a8
362b61e4c89028ae937d6f05b9bf84833ea6f679
'2011-08-19T04:59:56-04:00'
describe
'1864700' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJT' 'sip-files00162.tif'
19ec6519abe4de82ef8481af07f5499e
caba21e5cf2c1f6678667e2b978d3ab8b1d48813
'2011-08-19T05:00:01-04:00'
describe
'25353' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJU' 'sip-files00163.pro'
c279bd936061a3e78b7d060d61ebc33f
62962304d4542171f24da0e65b0484460b20712d
describe
'1823500' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJV' 'sip-files00163.tif'
0ad8c6af50654b35476ffbca0dc87b44
1458935b4ee8df943f00ab797d8fc369830e3f56
'2011-08-19T05:02:19-04:00'
describe
'24920' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJW' 'sip-files00164.pro'
397d4f0c7b35f2cfe232da1a638e460e
0c4cf680e90d5b534410a23f60cfb6f951814cba
'2011-08-19T04:51:16-04:00'
describe
'1848384' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJX' 'sip-files00164.tif'
e36630525a130f4c1ee4727e875216d2
b934b310c50029a6f5a4f06fd07b85ab61bc7462
'2011-08-19T05:04:48-04:00'
describe
'24727' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJY' 'sip-files00165.pro'
367ae715b9b4f9d13a4df19d2068eeaf
f1e691f3f0c788ea5a25a54ba43324e94a41a987
'2011-08-19T04:54:12-04:00'
describe
'1888780' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIJZ' 'sip-files00165.tif'
0790204fd2d85912a14e444304e7a727
62b43fff58b8665ae3be4adde48049715ccd5ea6
'2011-08-19T04:51:54-04:00'
describe
'26118' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKA' 'sip-files00166.pro'
634f53c1056a673373212621f34f1b4b
7c9691323bfdcfb02bd9e29c8172255c6fa2f741
describe
'1853704' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKB' 'sip-files00166.tif'
c225935bc837bbbdaa404d676866e660
b9298abe400788d99d78d7dc5b1acf0e38fbb5aa
describe
'25364' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKC' 'sip-files00167.pro'
61cf70d0115688883030bc1c03e517e6
7602f5ce3df25adc9495a57a82e64d2456ec8f13
'2011-08-19T04:52:18-04:00'
describe
'1868296' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKD' 'sip-files00167.tif'
ddb6fd2796201ed1ddbe48d4ffb35846
87abaa46a30a86cbddaf764404c354c853ad1059
'2011-08-19T04:57:11-04:00'
describe
'25115' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKE' 'sip-files00168.pro'
97b37ffe1297c93d3e799e249fda5ac5
a2cf0a1b9b70ad5bb0bb2c8aa888c391ca50b0ed
'2011-08-19T04:56:14-04:00'
describe
'1831744' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKF' 'sip-files00168.tif'
a44c21273c50a427a67bdbdd4d2bb714
47c721f32dc4a803807a69e88f57b03c5c3e6859
'2011-08-19T04:51:07-04:00'
describe
'25819' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKG' 'sip-files00169.pro'
ea7066acf8ad6ef7669147179652c6e6
bb7696975c5cc250aae237e8b8c88feaf7ee83e8
'2011-08-19T05:00:19-04:00'
describe
'1858636' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKH' 'sip-files00169.tif'
5dedfb977e3096d9b56bc41c08fe57a2
695a658012c6b2c0f3bae158d2c184ac9b725c43
'2011-08-19T04:55:17-04:00'
describe
'23541' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKI' 'sip-files00170.pro'
a56fc4c312eee327d87086eb03191f9d
5f0284f931a63330d08a8997b25b291c3c0c81b3
'2011-08-19T04:56:35-04:00'
describe
'1859792' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKJ' 'sip-files00170.tif'
3a7b16d6e1ca374ca719489c63305b2e
2c254d1a7d537fb1d5c16445cb3788417f095443
'2011-08-19T04:52:52-04:00'
describe
'20818' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKK' 'sip-files00171.pro'
9c9c54d50f3f5971f94426a583686439
288d3ef3a2f9eb694a0e47f1632803dd0bfb661b
describe
'1829576' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKL' 'sip-files00171.tif'
8e1de7f6f43445f07330fcaae2c35c2f
57b873d4bad6123edfeedadf2b2e1a021c3b79b6
'2011-08-19T05:04:54-04:00'
describe
'22345' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKM' 'sip-files00172.pro'
f2a0bc19143a4d314cd052bdc2ef03a0
1125de0e5103d93e04314f70eaaaf6a21d40dda6
'2011-08-19T04:55:53-04:00'
describe
'1849764' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKN' 'sip-files00172.tif'
d26c10d25bc0f2c16d5cd88867dac885
d6bc92605a6e875117ec94fca12c67aca0c597d4
'2011-08-19T04:55:39-04:00'
describe
'24974' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKO' 'sip-files00173.pro'
6cb60a53be7618262a6c4276b75c850c
ac94509c745109cc89b1e9931aca91016e8d5e83
describe
'1826528' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKP' 'sip-files00173.tif'
193f347ea8baeb82787e3a1a4b3945b0
d313d5d90b3a536cfe8182ab49ee45f7fe82cff2
'2011-08-19T05:04:03-04:00'
describe
'24073' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKQ' 'sip-files00174.pro'
6203271f34e3d092e3a5f575c6be076e
5091982bb0b2114bd98e57eb4e1f9678571f0870
describe
'1833384' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKR' 'sip-files00174.tif'
e1dd16e8ade6f75bf0d3550eaf373069
7f0e6349385f3bd73a6ba59dd0707dfe138f45a2
'2011-08-19T04:51:11-04:00'
describe
'23763' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKS' 'sip-files00175.pro'
5a2336ab9ab4eedc0ca59638aebb1230
e0dcb96b52d319c964a612c7dc0839353f2c93e9
describe
'1792112' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKT' 'sip-files00175.tif'
02924604c6643018f85f290ec4ea1749
e7b94cde87b251eadfede58443fca05671ba2f2d
describe
'24658' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKU' 'sip-files00176.pro'
e8668d75606d486ffad2ff58b90d5715
7d48703d937726bdc86218ec251b141de701e814
'2011-08-19T04:53:30-04:00'
describe
'1793964' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKV' 'sip-files00176.tif'
a7343b82738d632a728e29414820017b
97428090e849eab06ece32ec40c8a548617b470f
describe
'24777' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKW' 'sip-files00177.pro'
b45447bb0ed5098c40041fb22d98b7a4
ee8142b1bcf19c7678e704448b0536676bde6abc
'2011-08-19T05:04:16-04:00'
describe
'1798624' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKX' 'sip-files00177.tif'
50499c7d80c38d50218d2da464110da1
56af2ebab1de2990c7b4a2ab3a6672b7776452a1
'2011-08-19T04:51:26-04:00'
describe
'24429' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKY' 'sip-files00178.pro'
febe060e0d49e1c2fad87d8b4a17d006
b660ba4345857c2febafdbc330547c11ade74c7f
'2011-08-19T05:03:15-04:00'
describe
'1836880' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIKZ' 'sip-files00178.tif'
7591e38c8e8c36348bdd7bfa809d906f
95e23711ef1cc9f9d161a04a651cadba92430b00
describe
'25308' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILA' 'sip-files00179.pro'
885da2c76769e5bd62e39c60b4c776d9
bc671bce52a70ce1084f069b228ae88d2c41f338
describe
'1839736' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILB' 'sip-files00179.tif'
12a27393b69510d06f746c311a39ebe8
391a484a987ff590b65d6166c7ca06f6ccc146e9
'2011-08-19T05:01:03-04:00'
describe
'23819' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILC' 'sip-files00180.pro'
1de9ef9d622d758dffdc014392ad90f2
12e79f6a8d61827b2e2178880ab8b648fba55f86
describe
'1844640' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILD' 'sip-files00180.tif'
04dcecce6082f74dfa5e6759790231ec
403fd12f448a3c61eecc5d162f5be7e558bfdea0
'2011-08-19T05:00:49-04:00'
describe
'23478' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILE' 'sip-files00181.pro'
e47f13277a409fe11badf41b42772040
e16dde5f6c621a125923cececae307983e6c13e3
'2011-08-19T04:56:12-04:00'
describe
'1852932' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILF' 'sip-files00181.tif'
c34fee2be2335d29d04267efeb314436
cb13d1d2388a4e487776acd2d46ac5a0fe7d91cf
'2011-08-19T05:02:32-04:00'
describe
'23902' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILG' 'sip-files00182.pro'
ff68b1247c2733fb85dcfd3109eabcad
5a53db1e9d14c4cdd460e07b770003b92c566696
'2011-08-19T04:56:50-04:00'
describe
'1836460' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILH' 'sip-files00182.tif'
035ed7c0aceba943fa2b2de226829823
9da17e2c5a9a440640c14ddba679ddd6b20ac556
'2011-08-19T05:04:07-04:00'
describe
'25615' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILI' 'sip-files00183.pro'
9a49be50a4f82aa37b6bbcef7a5fa48b
9f4973e33c2125f514e0921d4c81d7d8948118fe
describe
'1828012' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILJ' 'sip-files00183.tif'
5d0f171742c11e3adbfc1a3de45bae6a
ce0013cc860595b479d611886dd044e29c9d27ec
describe
'24006' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILK' 'sip-files00184.pro'
882d41cdf6f5be17a96abff578da01a4
7777b1c6b58382d9c2983c651b99187586f545a1
'2011-08-19T05:03:03-04:00'
describe
'1813376' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILL' 'sip-files00184.tif'
ed289558cb166e1c89145eafc0f4692b
99a1c690e098ade2234c7ce5fb208222ee988e8e
'2011-08-19T05:03:21-04:00'
describe
'21988' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILM' 'sip-files00185.pro'
adf7713cefef8706a98a7f28b7dce098
15e767b02ff06536e6c5e53bb764b0a87bef5047
describe
'1867988' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILN' 'sip-files00185.tif'
dc389916184be1552ef2907e23081fd9
3c793552cf680557193adf68d30262feedc29989
describe
'24007' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILO' 'sip-files00186.pro'
842065f20ac1f691c90006ef6a58f999
390a1c2794eddcd9132381cfb9dff208848aed04
'2011-08-19T04:54:37-04:00'
describe
'1866512' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILP' 'sip-files00186.tif'
269f2e8516a17133d700588b23f3448e
ad2dfa03884c0a66a32795fea00c5d5e07eb0773
'2011-08-19T04:51:44-04:00'
describe
'24774' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILQ' 'sip-files00187.pro'
e64361af999715298f8c6f21125f2a11
1f0d421bb8447b0049276a9aa133f539b6df1c64
describe
'1851812' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILR' 'sip-files00187.tif'
89ca69e62c7aaf3b33cd331f9c3b8e9f
ebebe52df30842bb3694a3be4cab7b48f0b28708
'2011-08-19T05:00:58-04:00'
describe
'23191' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILS' 'sip-files00188.pro'
698f23676fe8254751f4e2765a087bda
e22f324d8ecd4ff11f04ebcf3148321ab0cd11a6
'2011-08-19T05:04:04-04:00'
describe
'1802724' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILT' 'sip-files00188.tif'
d40b8d469502df3e702a434b1684015a
7685ce95190bf11c4e2d7200a456aa1b0b84e13a
describe
'23489' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILU' 'sip-files00189.pro'
bfce91f4b42a3de7fb6eb1ac12e2614e
86f75009407a101496ceb1ce28553cc0b420071c
describe
'1861420' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILV' 'sip-files00189.tif'
b032a1b9d242f9b9608e62de31f5a7dd
ee2a309388f0f586968f6f6a15e902fd4b675a86
describe
'23314' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILW' 'sip-files00190.pro'
281ae2195a7790737cb19caf74043a4d
3a5ebc4264802b2c0b7275514a723981e5062e98
'2011-08-19T04:59:14-04:00'
describe
'1868312' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILX' 'sip-files00190.tif'
d11a84dede1cc8e89c3f4681928b8e6d
d20dd784955d005463c4b3aee460d9e10feba45f
'2011-08-19T05:02:46-04:00'
describe
'23916' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILY' 'sip-files00191.pro'
551b522f261305575d65be131b757d69
04e9b3fb3a317f03c950bbc318757759632d71fe
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAILZ' 'sip-files00191.tif'
d7dfcf89c69b0503ea07275a1c650aa0
621f27ae0128172e28ed92d2594cc182e0d65b7b
'2011-08-19T04:54:44-04:00'
describe
'14785' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMA' 'sip-files00192.pro'
c9dba84dce8b3900a58eb39957af7cba
ed1d8797ba6b63aa6e913447ca04de509ae09c68
'2011-08-19T04:52:51-04:00'
describe
'1821588' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMB' 'sip-files00192.tif'
3da505a5b681cf19007ddb3ec4a4130b
386ea8574a5d0ce760ac3147cfe2f1cdbc5d028a
describe
'17029' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMC' 'sip-files00193.pro'
f1d7f2489f355ed08df3c71f368804b1
a4d60b3baeba02e59e5b153703f6d8ad0b04ceed
describe
'1862540' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMD' 'sip-files00193.tif'
a3d8ff3db9fc5bf2141dd278f9b57e67
a0cf9ecb10546913a8344a0e9815f2e3b9438b18
describe
'25263' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIME' 'sip-files00194.pro'
0e55a349a33a5d7991f8f9a04b015041
2d6a7afcf790d968c1114afd4339e34813f577e2
'2011-08-19T04:54:40-04:00'
describe
'1831380' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMF' 'sip-files00194.tif'
3b8dced3e9cbe24d74a01edfb0550747
4ca2983187cc6e7392ea679db97b193a4a6d9d2d
'2011-08-19T04:56:25-04:00'
describe
'26604' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMG' 'sip-files00195.pro'
a7c6624d471694eb552cbaed47471ced
85e19c0eb1a80572208461d1abfa138f70f34b2f
describe
'1864996' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMH' 'sip-files00195.tif'
93cedaf77ead432e732eec2ff0af7285
491d5f53076fd9f96a4860cd716b65a0e16586a6
'2011-08-19T05:02:43-04:00'
describe
'25984' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMI' 'sip-files00196.pro'
de6cb4d7f14ae24d564b73dce1a8ff57
55bcd51af9238f736b60a94f72d46316f639eb87
describe
'1898584' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMJ' 'sip-files00196.tif'
368acfc6b72581b6f6e129fe0a25e21c
944e85b2abfbafe2567eaeeb98ec765b6dde2847
describe
'26383' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMK' 'sip-files00197.pro'
55ec4a59ca1b39a8dae2b37608499d79
7515aa89cf7ae02032ce6c78a4f2fac4b8b0dc1b
'2011-08-19T05:04:30-04:00'
describe
'1835084' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIML' 'sip-files00197.tif'
497dda20750c98cf41d5f37ecb220456
09aa4fd457297a05462248c8469c960a90c04fc0
'2011-08-19T05:02:59-04:00'
describe
'26064' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMM' 'sip-files00198.pro'
4196c4088f07586a81b4bedaee5e35c0
59166fbe725cb6250e0d67ea4857116922474d0f
describe
'1850188' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMN' 'sip-files00198.tif'
aa75c9ce5df0f417a05796476dc09042
b040f3b3a4ef13433d4b1fd4b3eb66f490160adf
describe
'25255' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMO' 'sip-files00199.pro'
8a8513f15c59f1a8b356486add2bf6f1
35698c1ec0841bda507086acb01ed8304dbcd04a
describe
'1823860' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMP' 'sip-files00199.tif'
48e0e5a8f542f473ede6f76561e23a02
2972bb22df8344fad8583d30dd9d64c4d8c67ed8
'2011-08-19T05:02:42-04:00'
describe
'25178' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMQ' 'sip-files00200.pro'
e121fcc052a13f4032c90a814c055f28
019766b40c4b9ec885fddf9426b24c9f304d2b36
describe
'1848720' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMR' 'sip-files00200.tif'
73fe2fa42acd3b75f66c729975a4bc9f
33289e6ab7512a6235a1b536bc17f627f0a0c0df
'2011-08-19T04:55:09-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMS' 'sip-files00201.pro'
17b9c5c58322dde724b136ed5e67999c
09596eb419b2a866cb34a7e6fc10230b9ae55757
'2011-08-19T04:53:56-04:00'
describe
'1831812' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMT' 'sip-files00201.tif'
e7b0cf70baee01957a6512d6706f4cfc
4998195aa6b192c77c4d1235d2f805194901404b
'2011-08-19T04:58:46-04:00'
describe
'22386' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMU' 'sip-files00202.pro'
aea8c111b3c0eafc59ab2654b70bf91a
b15e8fb27208b1a73453aa7ba5550b5ab64a0c31
'2011-08-19T05:02:04-04:00'
describe
'1836112' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMV' 'sip-files00202.tif'
c19495d33b3339c0b0f7ac269c636c88
14e9295a694b29c0c183ca7736d91d914d1213c6
describe
'25275' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMW' 'sip-files00203.pro'
1b00ab0d64062cba673baf7cc10730e1
3bce768654bc3032b4a2e54ce71c29d98700c559
'2011-08-19T05:02:30-04:00'
describe
'1794012' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMX' 'sip-files00203.tif'
8204fd877f80af2bfc319c728dc7467a
42f3fa1008c698b1adf7c808de731df593d70e3f
'2011-08-19T04:58:52-04:00'
describe
'24819' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMY' 'sip-files00204.pro'
679d11110c1e60f01b969c3bda522104
0bd3651522e79769478a8bf37d1020b7801b5136
'2011-08-19T04:53:52-04:00'
describe
'1831480' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIMZ' 'sip-files00204.tif'
664109c6c88984e2a9bc8cf255106d6f
df36114ac46f3a550601feee7a33f7addbb85ef3
'2011-08-19T04:58:44-04:00'
describe
'25574' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINA' 'sip-files00205.pro'
dec770d8599e0d79b410a24a3d123b83
2fc52ff7096ed25dc393a8b5e56ed4a25a89a39c
'2011-08-19T04:59:59-04:00'
describe
'1850020' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINB' 'sip-files00205.tif'
5ffa3303a36e9f046d4fc062f09e8d23
c9c82f18dfb672af5fec28f66d2f4675c35fe22f
'2011-08-19T04:56:32-04:00'
describe
'25720' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINC' 'sip-files00206.pro'
b67392e4857c703e68cd8c64302c2928
5ddb890e23b68a3c4cd7d706365730369da5e711
'2011-08-19T04:56:52-04:00'
describe
'1858620' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIND' 'sip-files00206.tif'
ec005b67aff6bddffb90795596c1e41f
605579454a5c84176227434497bdaf99d4e59e38
'2011-08-19T04:57:22-04:00'
describe
'23873' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINE' 'sip-files00207.pro'
22132cb75f606f3e1960302351ca46e4
0324dbc3e67255b40cb796b568c8b53b67371e08
'2011-08-19T04:56:45-04:00'
describe
'1836868' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINF' 'sip-files00207.tif'
904e38b32eaa280aa538f9281380f79b
11018c47190e213138ae8086407db38de1540ec8
'2011-08-19T05:04:56-04:00'
describe
'23124' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAING' 'sip-files00208.pro'
44a73414b5290851e414a1cecdb8c4ed
23d0eb9fc532bce890b8175adbc2a71273c45427
'2011-08-19T05:01:32-04:00'
describe
'1967400' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINH' 'sip-files00208.tif'
b06de2658481955cb1049483d35e1d9b
b00cef86a97687da5d4f249f8937f728326a44a8
'2011-08-19T04:54:49-04:00'
describe
'8028' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINI' 'sip-files00209.pro'
f7d82504f5d3e83d124587998c2e0c05
4e7a517bcf88b629c962fd708de2089cd02ccd46
'2011-08-19T05:02:37-04:00'
describe
'1825696' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINJ' 'sip-files00209.tif'
3527ad5e6a09294a670c15ab6272b06f
04993170239202ad5e00f5a896136fd367920b68
'2011-08-19T04:53:18-04:00'
describe
'17494' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINK' 'sip-files00210.pro'
dbdd92e4984381b3619b5305487c391e
886d24bddb561482dcd728fc6398bd4ff82f0ebc
'2011-08-19T05:00:00-04:00'
describe
'1863000' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINL' 'sip-files00210.tif'
ca8ca076a06afbaf2eb62a017f2a396e
e14c10a4f12f7d52f05a4ec17c9a96607f5d2bf0
'2011-08-19T05:00:22-04:00'
describe
'26106' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINM' 'sip-files00211.pro'
b49df6f8c0772bb74b4fe215598e93ed
7a5313269f10eea10c514f76a73f3c54a00a4a6f
'2011-08-19T05:00:06-04:00'
describe
'1813568' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINN' 'sip-files00211.tif'
2dbb018c6af896f80cb137678b23ff13
c0f6125465ecd82754217606b3000016905de5ad
'2011-08-19T04:54:59-04:00'
describe
'25331' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINO' 'sip-files00212.pro'
25b23eb839dc335f493caf7524b9ae3b
f9476750edc2adcead094d34342487382b7d65a4
'2011-08-19T05:00:42-04:00'
describe
'1967348' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINP' 'sip-files00212.tif'
13035b868d0b0fa8ef316138095f3bf9
b8602684e2b7d02e919f51aad468885e98bdda6c
describe
'25266' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINQ' 'sip-files00213.pro'
fb6f16a3781955ecf63a78f7ecb76e68
adafb50ff28322afcb927c118ac4defd3ed12108
'2011-08-19T04:54:38-04:00'
describe
'1803804' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINR' 'sip-files00213.tif'
46c7f278ad9624eefe2746058f701889
a2176a5cc5b770e84270f0c538affb4ff53b30da
describe
'26213' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINS' 'sip-files00214.pro'
c0447d0a0d52f7930dc86e8e43bd35d7
3dd0d9c64cb133c540fb069436c34cbbb987816f
'2011-08-19T05:04:00-04:00'
describe
'1851668' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINT' 'sip-files00214.tif'
9081cf03a1bb155d09441453257770c9
e5717fbd278380d5300575e96fc2351ab3a5dad2
describe
'23839' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINU' 'sip-files00215.pro'
9ccc2d1016d45dc70344c9cba7c967de
f5015d6d7cb135b7e0f224d88539c4168753f3f8
'2011-08-19T04:53:23-04:00'
describe
'1818996' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINV' 'sip-files00215.tif'
44b3fcb2c0e07e00f6a1e2b700093cd1
bdf35c5b168c5196baf4879aa98f76fc8fcd7636
'2011-08-19T05:01:22-04:00'
describe
'26404' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINW' 'sip-files00216.pro'
9f65489cc033cc4ab3ef9fb6a2efe147
4041bfbb6a1fbcf68df14cd243dc8677931cc8e8
'2011-08-19T05:04:53-04:00'
describe
'1868996' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINX' 'sip-files00216.tif'
ffda4c21b1b88395727fdb1b44167b4c
e4af2418cc4a5d1fed8dd5100ed05add41ef5ade
'2011-08-19T05:01:49-04:00'
describe
'25737' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINY' 'sip-files00217.pro'
4f8609bc637cda9e08a9f89e341a1211
5984c9acc8d9e3613ace9dc4f7fb250734e0e8be
'2011-08-19T04:57:24-04:00'
describe
'1830268' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAINZ' 'sip-files00217.tif'
f86c505bfb8fa4c97590378e1d638ae4
27ac28ffec2e5cabfe6f4b6590af2fe3e7a1a827
'2011-08-19T05:03:47-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOA' 'sip-files00218.pro'
a46e9e368a12d118076f65490c9f4521
e5371a56d604bc712922dbeb836079b35df9cdd6
'2011-08-19T05:02:45-04:00'
describe
'1967672' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOB' 'sip-files00218.tif'
37cd65dfc5b1916d33cff7907371953a
38dafa28e5774978b8ef0d0ca276410499d3bbfa
describe
'22382' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOC' 'sip-files00219.pro'
a23dfa9e9de26dbd72d0e6eb93bfa5a0
a38ecbb183b7e7110fc6230f42d12e139737c6ed
'2011-08-19T04:56:06-04:00'
describe
'1826316' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOD' 'sip-files00219.tif'
784f63eb3eeb900f3ec9b6b6b0342a33
37ad98a36e733728a6a3885c7e1a1a55cd1c84a6
'2011-08-19T04:54:55-04:00'
describe
'25352' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOE' 'sip-files00220.pro'
eb67207f26649e512c064a2bf8b01e0a
0ebfea2add7c1213af6bdf1a7e6cd850ce2ade48
'2011-08-19T04:54:08-04:00'
describe
'1866960' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOF' 'sip-files00220.tif'
633ea6ee37717cea0a33a1ceddd1ab46
50a4ee0dabf53c426cc227a0312ca42c07840fe4
'2011-08-19T05:03:52-04:00'
describe
'22464' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOG' 'sip-files00221.pro'
386b1c8226b80fa94fa9e29e0ff65c89
115cbce867b76b9242e5be7fdfb286f8a2a95fb2
'2011-08-19T05:02:55-04:00'
describe
'1827648' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOH' 'sip-files00221.tif'
f941ecff7e1a391487f83ccff3523dcd
f7fb2736fc10e5f757620f01944eba8b0bb87c54
'2011-08-19T04:58:21-04:00'
describe
'24872' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOI' 'sip-files00222.pro'
81d04c9b192016b5a72e1926822f32d5
00de1088df27adb310120c282c28e7fac3b12a69
describe
'1856688' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOJ' 'sip-files00222.tif'
4e5d83b76d4b7dc8d97b2e2b104aab10
9791c729df33c48c14f55da7ea38b11621400036
describe
'26027' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOK' 'sip-files00223.pro'
01c016f9c7ce6be84dc913b69979b8e9
6d097021713f877e8888e5e05c5ffce4e038e2eb
'2011-08-19T05:01:35-04:00'
describe
'1855188' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOL' 'sip-files00223.tif'
40b676f3e4eb84cc5a8ab477f2c7052f
5aa243f57dcaf28706eb6d3e7eaaaf99f9a84a27
'2011-08-19T05:04:58-04:00'
describe
'25892' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOM' 'sip-files00224.pro'
0c0d15e7f2b5081e36a8f013d0539514
982043eafa433669eb17a5061369cb058838b935
'2011-08-19T04:55:51-04:00'
describe
'1870208' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAION' 'sip-files00224.tif'
d15ed4b2eda3c4ec727f3be559eded98
aa52dda219b4914dde89c942573b4b0fcac9a9f4
'2011-08-19T04:54:34-04:00'
describe
'25513' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOO' 'sip-files00225.pro'
0fb3ec2c4a74d4b59611a183bf3b7a0d
3d19ca16dde9d0c04b71897c00c1253edc359816
'2011-08-19T04:59:37-04:00'
describe
'1866468' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOP' 'sip-files00225.tif'
5aee10a698624b427d013b8c3f9ba439
6bf5a41ca6765f896e746303382a08a3a80837d5
describe
'26286' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOQ' 'sip-files00226.pro'
074dee5dc97aeac4767cc74a58390025
978b0d2d6ea95648d39db550a8bb072bd748244e
describe
'1873156' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOR' 'sip-files00226.tif'
096d54622d3c293425a64c7f533377b7
13810e5540461e673ec756db57538addabdc677d
'2011-08-19T04:53:19-04:00'
describe
'25715' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOS' 'sip-files00227.pro'
59497a1de4fdd53781260639ce060777
86ae2d2af0a5d1b84022a29f840efa98d502c1ea
describe
'1840268' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOT' 'sip-files00227.tif'
f0b6a59123a361583f5f66de93151bf4
5add0705f87f9a81b651d359d766076708d83364
'2011-08-19T05:04:06-04:00'
describe
'25395' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOU' 'sip-files00228.pro'
75f4bed5ebbe2bd379f17cbea66b0389
e5cf3f6274b163a631ec1930b9c7095072f7a5ba
'2011-08-19T04:59:28-04:00'
describe
'1883076' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOV' 'sip-files00228.tif'
f6e6174a0011757191fbf3adc9ecfa75
092e8de071d96d0fca5d4bb9bbc277edde114052
describe
'21207' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOW' 'sip-files00229.pro'
95d1edcec0def6b69a8d2537d42b42ea
c5669b4365d7037ac7d241af143a3b5399b51040
describe
'1938328' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOX' 'sip-files00229.tif'
e2e2fd11cc5221cb995055990f0948b1
9b01dbf926bd006c3ee753c15e8c437598e639f1
describe
'24703' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOY' 'sip-files00230.pro'
0e0be3cb854225553520be307c4fe120
29757bad83f70c8b2115776fa31305c61f4feb2e
'2011-08-19T04:51:14-04:00'
describe
'1864416' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIOZ' 'sip-files00230.tif'
47203a03222765dd98ef93cf888e2e52
5afe2be8be3e37e161b3766fe680fd090c3ca0dc
describe
'26313' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPA' 'sip-files00231.pro'
49ba01cfeb076c81e9a6e9098d1080a5
f912ebb7fd182018e72d4ae96b987b605b30d020
'2011-08-19T04:51:35-04:00'
describe
'1851676' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPB' 'sip-files00231.tif'
d3887655c530f60d09951eb945aba34c
4dcb69a57c730b1270e536017e36cd556bac52ee
'2011-08-19T04:59:55-04:00'
describe
'26260' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPC' 'sip-files00232.pro'
a8e79be61a0c197e41650fea2cc73f10
0030a5f5599bf6d1ea545479716a2237dd19ed79
'2011-08-19T04:57:34-04:00'
describe
'1875056' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPD' 'sip-files00232.tif'
26572cb9f9863e4d96ab6e3b8f9e3833
c6efafa02f76835e670f10f4097801291857408e
'2011-08-19T04:53:35-04:00'
describe
'24043' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPE' 'sip-files00233.pro'
18a03146d1dcfdd859ca95111af240bc
bcb247e322c5968602358bb86d4ab57bfac8e0b7
describe
'1824852' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPF' 'sip-files00233.tif'
7d2cacc584cdf7364159238665b208fc
2ff57284d37496afb90a5409df96b6732c4d4595
'2011-08-19T04:51:20-04:00'
describe
'25561' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPG' 'sip-files00234.pro'
1518a0eb8adf9110543fb1ec4346c4a0
cea6d0cad5e46c26e640f42a50e55cf63b23bbef
describe
'1832228' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPH' 'sip-files00234.tif'
867ea14a3c91ff94fc59b8b6de7bb051
be7c44e1191a2712665604acffd79527b1779b3c
describe
'23313' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPI' 'sip-files00235.pro'
9d771995512b9c4129d3e51bc0180242
19f43a903fc107d5a6413ed0024851cb4b52634a
describe
'1868328' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPJ' 'sip-files00235.tif'
aa47923efbe93c2da69468a426366759
c391c5c76b4af975d655a50822618e3d006a84c1
describe
'25034' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPK' 'sip-files00236.pro'
1eb0dfe4b4b93c428a21a86a8b411eee
345ae9c5e19a661c391573ca64fd76cba0447374
describe
'1852024' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPL' 'sip-files00236.tif'
d3917b4c1f1cbdc5ba4eaf90e21ebb10
539f3c7dea5604abccebbd9ce53b655bc427960f
'2011-08-19T05:04:01-04:00'
describe
'9480' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPM' 'sip-files00237.pro'
55106baa9bec242bfe03c882094530e0
6a2d71c8033bd0f7dc3b31dcc6c9f534fc425bba
'2011-08-19T04:53:57-04:00'
describe
'1840696' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPN' 'sip-files00237.tif'
b152c6098ae1f8cd9db72f27fad55c15
1045119125ec4ca2c77928907e645264a9c99023
'2011-08-19T05:03:49-04:00'
describe
'17837' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPO' 'sip-files00238.pro'
eedeef9fba2cc2d9e287dda80d435cae
9c7381b16efeac473c017c5a168489e4b9653f18
'2011-08-19T04:57:36-04:00'
describe
'1844412' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPP' 'sip-files00238.tif'
806f9cb6a01ed579a7f4c4d17c4a5060
f31f604f6b73f37e0e210f7dd907c645edf3d197
describe
'25990' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPQ' 'sip-files00239.pro'
926332237fcca172dd0e516ce6c1f7cb
fff5d3fa530e0a13a099999580a0019ef3e4fc8e
describe
'1820316' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPR' 'sip-files00239.tif'
0652b6814b27b072308e5826f51b5b44
a1804de84c123e724114adb6c2a51db188e506a6
'2011-08-19T04:54:33-04:00'
describe
'25311' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPS' 'sip-files00240.pro'
f20dd1f179fc061117d072d196333a3e
c59638aa793af06353b6af02bd6bdea7fef8902c
describe
'1861628' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPT' 'sip-files00240.tif'
a3df1af730dc0ede0908e63bf9cf9902
3db767cf29bd2e724b1f03cb5c262f8a6f98121e
'2011-08-19T04:52:16-04:00'
describe
'24008' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPU' 'sip-files00241.pro'
a35bb256708aa5b4b386a4441ad109bc
7aeff2e2fddeced930997dfc117f12d2e53463b4
'2011-08-19T04:53:15-04:00'
describe
'1826240' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPV' 'sip-files00241.tif'
f4397da6df1459d52d083464e436220c
8411eaa9c9ccb50fe297762ab5c22939d46aa857
describe
'24793' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPW' 'sip-files00242.pro'
e63a20671942ffcf60df68e9f9c9be5b
058d437857dfaee65dc95b133465d6a838b50c12
'2011-08-19T04:51:49-04:00'
describe
'1853268' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPX' 'sip-files00242.tif'
8c09a2699c7c9c8d7a0201c7b21549c8
402c93fe9dbdf0315392ea43fabb1d7487790639
'2011-08-19T04:56:15-04:00'
describe
'25069' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPY' 'sip-files00243.pro'
21875126aa5d7b0563b3408e3f5d1643
92dc34c28d7dfcc6c36558b9f7153f11059fd864
describe
'1820356' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIPZ' 'sip-files00243.tif'
a49c82f06747a8bdf142a244cb1b1a09
e2fa71bb61a8c81790adb0baac573b3e620465bc
'2011-08-19T05:03:29-04:00'
describe
'24801' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQA' 'sip-files00244.pro'
62c5cb027d12feaf661c42da08279dce
a6c9c31d25c6923782c15dd5f2d805d480c0b837
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQB' 'sip-files00244.tif'
428fbcfc6c5dd7d91cf97eb968aef0da
e1ecae67e32aa4ca38d6965420e52e9eb63e343e
'2011-08-19T04:56:46-04:00'
describe
'25451' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQC' 'sip-files00245.pro'
fdc449e8df34663dd0d68de95aef7419
c0a938521a87b8b63412b043a079e767c0fe5520
'2011-08-19T05:02:18-04:00'
describe
'1836684' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQD' 'sip-files00245.tif'
034b0e3d192e7f4f6b657ed5bc26bb81
d27c2cebdbccecff7ab8222b29ab6381827ab096
'2011-08-19T04:59:52-04:00'
describe
'26096' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQE' 'sip-files00246.pro'
c624e0e8ea43eb3453edbfb8da0b525d
352b99a25931d21ed48f049b2a6d128b8ebe6485
describe
'1829864' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQF' 'sip-files00246.tif'
903cba192f32deed4a6478875e29698c
9a9444cab638509da1c46ce92ed67355cd8c1bfe
'2011-08-19T05:02:28-04:00'
describe
'24615' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQG' 'sip-files00247.pro'
7bdf38e0d53970c7147cbd0ca2ae090d
3530728341322f88667cc5bcefca318a21c3de62
'2011-08-19T05:00:47-04:00'
describe
'1835064' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQH' 'sip-files00247.tif'
4ea4c39a92fd5dceffb4389c5a74bbe4
f499b1ff60c6bc09e7118a597a25a1850e58572a
describe
'19448' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQI' 'sip-files00248.pro'
225218707e7ddc9fc369119371c28717
206a76a50f5453d23ffb4409988656ee9bcc114b
describe
'1823664' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQJ' 'sip-files00248.tif'
3a0c566ced1f699f652e183b8c56608e
a00b6695fa64f5916d2e499dfd117d7ac046bc3d
'2011-08-19T04:57:05-04:00'
describe
'17757' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQK' 'sip-files00249.pro'
ef594b08cddf19b8b7b00efd2a5ffbc2
48ae076dd5bd1f55c76096708096a5e1e822b6a6
describe
'1938600' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQL' 'sip-files00249.tif'
484e6f422efd2899ac86ba87052642cb
711a7a9895d8479cf8fcf738b6d12df911f611b6
describe
'26308' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQM' 'sip-files00250.pro'
693aeb80e055849966aef82ed6eaeccc
fc73217df432a153b1986878360ef6b60d98b508
describe
'1825368' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQN' 'sip-files00250.tif'
c9845de3e74d630f4a22c74527f9e0f8
fe7c9c89b68b378d79d1bafeb63698afd858f708
'2011-08-19T04:51:12-04:00'
describe
'21568' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQO' 'sip-files00251.pro'
0f620c95ce5b56143f57d7d9bbea0f60
34adfcca3da01d46db149a68a81ee0878beddb72
'2011-08-19T05:00:44-04:00'
describe
'1815496' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQP' 'sip-files00251.tif'
a8084ad16d9757d7d68e6ec75e85bf3b
30f8deaa5e26f440ac6b184f198bce82ff50dbab
describe
'20010' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQQ' 'sip-files00252.pro'
215fe2522f7a9a50c28a9eca894ca27d
4fd9ed2e11a944805ea74d597903d3c11de6d86d
'2011-08-19T04:59:48-04:00'
describe
'1814952' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQR' 'sip-files00252.tif'
a3a6f8e9107c2be5c66b1c2dc5af9b07
324e73da4f3aa44f1a876bbd5983556ae323fcd7
'2011-08-19T04:55:07-04:00'
describe
'25176' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQS' 'sip-files00253.pro'
70bf75f7dd4a1e3d96b1c364e70de46d
c7abe9d95bcf7ff3412ff98b808e605a47e31181
'2011-08-19T04:55:33-04:00'
describe
'1805124' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQT' 'sip-files00253.tif'
1a353cfd04b0ad48d0463a2b09c3f7c4
f5644a72cb84835b2b544aa183ebd6cbf6fb603a
describe
'24716' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQU' 'sip-files00254.pro'
c84e31db084e19eac96ed1aab227bbe5
9145be970ed7c4f911955e0969f5e42dd8acd4ad
describe
'1808252' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQV' 'sip-files00254.tif'
9a31b666469566c38081a005f45df104
ad163f1c1d0f8477b9eae0a6384b0b8bf41d4cc0
describe
'24896' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQW' 'sip-files00255.pro'
ca9f5eff8232414e106d5ccd03b3c0c0
28e927f508fca02beeee089f8298ac9ca35ce412
'2011-08-19T04:59:06-04:00'
describe
'1830068' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQX' 'sip-files00255.tif'
f3a84ab6cb19de19bcb12061af646d6a
18781c526e25423988b6031be79fc157032b0658
describe
'25626' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQY' 'sip-files00256.pro'
d3c07725ba44a3eb5f64fc5de4fcd1c0
352b9eaf0c6fa96c6c1a03fb27e4a98bb304d771
'2011-08-19T04:59:15-04:00'
describe
'1814908' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIQZ' 'sip-files00256.tif'
bc143b59cbf4b4fab3cd2d5fa066b01e
58ec6d3e4fe6709b5f11dc53e1cd662cc5e70a71
describe
'26470' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRA' 'sip-files00257.pro'
76c7bbec1e9a2e026793d173f9707f45
0035c37da4bd6e9634528749cc150536ffc41364
'2011-08-19T05:03:13-04:00'
describe
'1939192' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRB' 'sip-files00257.tif'
4d690ae8ba41dd76ae2a269bf3d5b6f0
bdfe837f100375cf3253be228f4e1d1151870cc6
describe
'24976' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRC' 'sip-files00258.pro'
424e46a18fafe88442380f810dc214b9
7f619f68d0582fb31dad408509086e6329649f74
'2011-08-19T04:53:41-04:00'
describe
'1804988' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRD' 'sip-files00258.tif'
c282309b2568ce788b6fb68e25e3f21d
35feb8cb572851f7a4639d68838f61e24b1ab4f6
'2011-08-19T04:54:05-04:00'
describe
'25449' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRE' 'sip-files00259.pro'
a4e42df50389512d18b074498b17ae1d
7d8c762118ec3e0e6ead9d90c724108a7d444204
describe
'1801980' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRF' 'sip-files00259.tif'
aee9d32789de0d378286032a78704524
6e4d2f3027ba177f70fc009a75a85377ac389c92
describe
'24956' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRG' 'sip-files00260.pro'
0ff87bc37052fd9d745ae0dee799921c
91cbe22b6f2c563879371f6ab699f75dd201ce0c
describe
'1845308' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRH' 'sip-files00260.tif'
bc79be4dc57fcda0e15b728f6728ff9b
810acedb3825ecfad22b38d0a3cbcb22546559e5
describe
'25601' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRI' 'sip-files00261.pro'
1b992263cb4c42c504d3267a0c9b864a
eea18add6ee5cd7499df3c31457b32426709a804
'2011-08-19T04:54:07-04:00'
describe
'1854988' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRJ' 'sip-files00261.tif'
82811213cbda78898a64f527b44312f6
5ec66f6126315e4404a3b45b1826c366efa38b9c
'2011-08-19T05:01:12-04:00'
describe
'26026' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRK' 'sip-files00262.pro'
7f6cbe774d715648fa5eb141d731aabe
e1ae213e8582258aeedd5b40a513779b04562554
'2011-08-19T05:00:51-04:00'
describe
'1863280' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRL' 'sip-files00262.tif'
d7ecca72bc446c7867163b102d574dcd
1dddf550e466483f53624cfdc61891acb317db66
describe
'9380' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRM' 'sip-files00263.pro'
490f79009c737dafed974c0b460ce260
92f5dfd5968d4eb0218d1a56b089fb7746249627
'2011-08-19T05:04:50-04:00'
describe
'1827024' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRN' 'sip-files00263.tif'
93db28494ad8cfd89c452c0400183a1f
7d76cbd936ede5b1ccf8454120fd469f6cc9d516
'2011-08-19T05:04:23-04:00'
describe
'17321' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRO' 'sip-files00264.pro'
5f1ca1a14d272da4dc20c715edfb322a
e24a1c98c7222068874f76d0d5b7bba41cf28b4b
describe
'1844428' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRP' 'sip-files00264.tif'
635886fc3a69e99e4cec681db9b0d79d
02e2d098a32bf5ca2ca1d6eb6ee7e50db6a863e9
'2011-08-19T05:02:13-04:00'
describe
'24953' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRQ' 'sip-files00265.pro'
1766883889dde8ac408a299b44963277
ad4d6af0cb76770902349c8ad15e7da0f86d48de
'2011-08-19T05:00:39-04:00'
describe
'1821640' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRR' 'sip-files00265.tif'
3b3adccacb30fd4641b67e7a9d78336e
a717c7f010d7063b8c5d41c1246a82ad9c25d2e0
'2011-08-19T05:03:33-04:00'
describe
'25845' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRS' 'sip-files00266.pro'
51bde1292efe6be855972ebd6f3d3828
f11fa13bb032b95fc163bd29b9fb2fddecd351c6
'2011-08-19T04:56:13-04:00'
describe
'1840028' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRT' 'sip-files00266.tif'
d04128103e86fe2d4289a7faaa2c6050
a8b39f6d1546b9412307009ddb7fba59018fafe5
'2011-08-19T04:59:40-04:00'
describe
'24081' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRU' 'sip-files00267.pro'
b0962c1dd6b9afcfdfef3057420a067b
8a531884d836ff710edc27d88019b6ba2e859c53
describe
'1848032' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRV' 'sip-files00267.tif'
c9ebffbc309d18502935fd17979894cc
b66bbb9941029ed602f79f6341717bdfe8b287b2
'2011-08-19T04:55:00-04:00'
describe
'214' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRW' 'sip-files00270.pro'
0cbe3881b0a5e098cd772cf0511a2ad6
0b77a8ea98dc054303d96a311794c4e4ccc54818
describe
'6361236' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRX' 'sip-files00270.tif'
9f1364472fccbe8bfece0bf3caffcf66
d00f623db9a7b3846182722d563d43203c8e4895
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRY' 'sip-files00271.pro'
7b262dfa3cdfc6dfa40a15e2ff6c097d
cc1822545031881febdae607af71809a71da0368
'2011-08-19T04:52:39-04:00'
describe
'6419452' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIRZ' 'sip-files00271.tif'
46b1b3d4414c75b61aba4f86721760a3
4208e049ad5a031eeb1d87b36b4dff724718d2bf
'2011-08-19T04:55:45-04:00'
describe
'371' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISA' 'sip-files00272.pro'
ea73d07b6c0c76b95f2c008d806b4f29
672eb118220ade4c50029ada1d843d45b2ceca3e
describe
'1866792' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISB' 'sip-files00272.tif'
b3215bf4433154460bd5007e15eef552
79cd3c98ba3d9bbf4b832914d3709ae2ec4defa5
'2011-08-19T04:51:32-04:00'
describe
'45517' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISC' 'sip-files00001thm.jpg'
08a425f8e7fbab15bb972fa0274fb25e
afa0f158a19227bd82a62a29e736a90b608a9556
describe
'666664' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISD' 'sip-files00001.jpg'
86a08eb800cb07972e8590b980ef90d4
fcd3fc85cf46e5ee25f4b90e0c4c069f7d797cd8
describe
'168979' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISE' 'sip-files00001.QC.jpg'
c7bdd5897fec8ace2155a749627feecc
06a01debabc8d94a76ef3bc548b716ca5556cb33
'2011-08-19T05:03:07-04:00'
describe
'274286' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISF' 'sip-files00001.jp2'
be5d28a4683b70d404ec1f661cdfc416
4682c577d5e40e74c56900290e44dc3607bff562
'2011-08-19T04:53:42-04:00'
describe
'481843' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISG' 'sip-files00002.jpg'
180815e62331e0b8f35e518c21f77bdf
d29d91a1bc7197783b95264a957c5a39f59ee95c
'2011-08-19T04:59:58-04:00'
describe
'113893' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISH' 'sip-files00002.QC.jpg'
d2a25ac0aca6e363473eec6afdde6e7d
0e239b245a5ebdc72bf0b523247857e6debab79b
describe
'268739' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISI' 'sip-files00002.jp2'
9f607b3d1211fe955f2261e7ea249e9c
11cfbcb65da6b434c372d1f364b4260d234c536d
describe
'367477' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISJ' 'sip-files00004.jpg'
f6ecf656787e370a5e5c63c2815d14e5
9d7c122efd90fa039bb77e4744c120342fa980fb
describe
'104811' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISK' 'sip-files00004.QC.jpg'
cdfb2c18849df7288da77f1897ac5414
168e6a799ac385922b1998c04c3d087c4e16dc38
'2011-08-19T05:01:47-04:00'
describe
'234837' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISL' 'sip-files00004.jp2'
80572fad72a5108bcf838579f683d6d9
3da53e3f73b101c3b63dded4586e1f5b8e76f6cb
describe
'238382' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISM' 'sip-files00005.jpg'
b31b1b88723ed910b6bafc4276f442d0
d475966d6a510ae7ea5e2691b1054d26a67cf92f
describe
'54049' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISN' 'sip-files00005.QC.jpg'
0fe3b381df5fac042ecab159c927fb4f
2ab696d2e1e5e5cfafb3bb21e47d6eea2a869720
'2011-08-19T05:04:47-04:00'
describe
'215486' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISO' 'sip-files00005.jp2'
0f40b0a35ce7e27999aef34093b96d2e
d3c7cd5eb115fca6fd13431b6f9bcac577e2732c
'2011-08-19T04:56:09-04:00'
describe
'385170' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISP' 'sip-files00006.jpg'
3eeb9a30f2d56ab5a3bc13fa55132192
c7e96506051ac273c740d89a8f299c8039190e72
'2011-08-19T04:55:05-04:00'
describe
'110459' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISQ' 'sip-files00006.QC.jpg'
0f5b86516917cd11980a61fde677175e
94c9fcb380660c161ee7c806896ef199e3ad401e
describe
'226823' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISR' 'sip-files00006.jp2'
4cb3026dbd241c2c4f3562328d19f071
6de81e45deaafe1ab994f162bbe53fb3b6d5e36f
'2011-08-19T05:04:02-04:00'
describe
'414367' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISS' 'sip-files00007.jpg'
9b95d61d7cbc1ef72a62762321b0c513
a5b13da2e0b1b568f59a284f5536ea6e35cfdd6b
describe
'122355' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIST' 'sip-files00007.QC.jpg'
586c459f20c4023244a8c259895474c7
2072ce57dfcf4ee81f708bc05ef761e75e4b7a7c
describe
'225851' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISU' 'sip-files00007.jp2'
a5a56137f6cf5e7d0bea1e2ef56d12e9
c42bdb017791c352a2f62938a3e812f3bf33906f
describe
'422126' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISV' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
1f7c57aedbcc5d43157457e902c8c2de
df14f23b458254c799151796afc3b06b04bdc955
'2011-08-19T04:52:13-04:00'
describe
'129183' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISW' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
3477caff73d40ef82cb933c04a7513a9
157e5a4da4fdc15d9cdef244aa02e70a8afd082f
'2011-08-19T05:02:10-04:00'
describe
'223926' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISX' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
2d4442f2bf1ae6aee77d8c62ad798d55
c8a3a4dcb272546a4a980a216222d7a697eac035
describe
'407545' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISY' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
9b33f560ce0593194493ecac8940d31d
0d3b138da798590c7b6515e8f1fd341ed38ea556
'2011-08-19T05:04:15-04:00'
describe
'123282' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAISZ' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
43321fe53cefb815a07b9c0ad69c892d
bb671fb3429b69f0ebc9a870c50e5c24e7d80203
'2011-08-19T05:02:09-04:00'
describe
'227147' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITA' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
dfa5167703629daa0587b3a0a8dc0484
d13021b9ba9e859a6080d89b8652ff1767ae6fce
describe
'404141' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITB' 'sip-files00010.jpg'
c405cc7a8379de6ca4feeebae2e30570
32053714975abeaabcdf6c416d491de9becd7009
describe
'121908' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITC' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
ba5d5da02ee8bb6655f05a54176161ab
082b9638ac5930234347dc9bcff013f1473de309
'2011-08-19T05:03:22-04:00'
describe
'228741' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITD' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
a0f25447564402db6432968da69ad223
ea8e3e4bb1b9a25eeec828d12c56957e80424b65
describe
'408062' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITE' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
4a3c8b912859d2cb6b48a77476602b9f
f801748bb4f2a2f4905f625f212bd15f300259a2
'2011-08-19T05:01:44-04:00'
describe
'123442' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITF' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
26522c98a4b3ddacce40b5c02eb81376
53e92cb1f27ae18acadf427b5a17e7bdd4829971
'2011-08-19T04:54:42-04:00'
describe
'224808' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITG' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
00243601e197e67d4277202408a98dff
98098e6e2a2d6914c685da6ed76e6d6bcf499011
'2011-08-19T04:52:43-04:00'
describe
'409165' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITH' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
062f29e6977e57f952c8ef5260604060
88f539c11979f182a6d7a9a167abee9ad6b1d985
'2011-08-19T05:00:54-04:00'
describe
'124950' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITI' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
5dc15bc5746e91ddbf115941360ad28c
9fcc6a9501c3e7dafc9d669df2c8301e31ade6fe
'2011-08-19T05:04:05-04:00'
describe
'230470' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITJ' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
a9d13cdd63204368bd50f42f2a466990
20190bdc3baf8782800cdb6c95b0f73e07cea468
'2011-08-19T05:01:16-04:00'
describe
'402612' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITK' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
7681991308b2f1591da6caf737d1b8dd
d37c077328248905c94e0d0bb2536fe3ae381748
describe
'121637' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITL' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
8088218df1874c107da6e4c98db85283
eafec3799191abead841a3e7c8f5c26162d74816
'2011-08-19T05:03:05-04:00'
describe
'230458' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITM' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
b6112656b49a3398242d5d35ca328f98
fbdd6b7c26705ced61a28bd1d165a28bbfbee15f
'2011-08-19T05:02:29-04:00'
describe
'407671' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITN' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
19e91625c137f599f2d9b7f6dcc22d2b
f10263dc2dbba5015122c68b7f66000cdb264683
'2011-08-19T04:57:02-04:00'
describe
'122565' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITO' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
a4611630e8b9af5261143d0369f2e07e
0a221fd0c0bbb5047136c569429016e1b920c24f
'2011-08-19T04:59:36-04:00'
describe
'230387' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITP' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
a259e0a1742b9176836245ea479dee5c
8702c659209b5a25e927eec909d131304da4b05d
'2011-08-19T05:00:21-04:00'
describe
'402705' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITQ' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
d281f99c8f24719fbb82b102e53a10fa
1e9694015f7282dfcecacdb161d8d21f55fdd01c
'2011-08-19T04:55:38-04:00'
describe
'121612' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITR' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
3e0345845549b1b69294da0353bbb563
5a31b832409c08de6fc75f3df883cdf7c80e166d
'2011-08-19T04:52:00-04:00'
describe
'231923' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITS' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
0c3cf760e45d56dc68c4269169f6c48a
796d6f09097223340872212a168239a4072a2080
'2011-08-19T05:01:24-04:00'
describe
'394376' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITT' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
17a6edbb3ac5f6f6c54df9ca262bed51
876dc64e570ed0d3b10cb65c745a48f9a69cb538
describe
'119594' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITU' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
83246ad58f07e24f63563ecf60395fc1
15e7c0998407459665ffdc62ab65e7e64b65b008
describe
'227681' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITV' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
c0a73ecce156e948587d52784b603d85
5b3c5a23f4aacb7bb321d44c26a01233496c4152
'2011-08-19T05:02:26-04:00'
describe
'397492' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITW' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
e89a1ce6a099eb94e53d27620abfa80a
af6922c6043efafc4fb72a0956d22ef132cb19d8
describe
'120341' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITX' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
28b696705333a8e9089317f84e44919f
9f6ea34bf476cc5546337a4d4b47b67a037660fc
'2011-08-19T05:03:36-04:00'
describe
'230888' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITY' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
e553ce8da2b4e8984785ed86f8af9751
906388ed3712e4ae6f680f3558bb252daf4a28b1
describe
'379890' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAITZ' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
758bbf6f6a23614d0cf23eb7480697e0
4dac57370cdb922662012422a3c16320698ce71d
'2011-08-19T04:57:52-04:00'
describe
'112620' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUA' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
cacc7ed168f3ff1361cef0ec59d53844
50d305b9d9729a560488613c98f2c2c742458bbb
describe
'229162' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUB' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
c45d2a90cd2d7c8f68660192c995f540
6a1a0b5416dda192d39d9a64e7bc26b34e15ca47
'2011-08-19T04:56:49-04:00'
describe
'347646' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUC' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
8f2c3713c71abdac8d8e9c35ce436b66
b7df13a874b24c7d22b0d4d4b09fbe7d32bc9e44
describe
'100475' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUD' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
b7cecc7320ca30044d33b65843ea52be
daba783200b1772d8e970b20b7fc942d9694196d
describe
'240604' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUE' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
8a0d91e840829b902beebf8cb9d0214e
167e983277929f6d0cf27d2247d645acd7947cdf
'2011-08-19T05:01:58-04:00'
describe
'412739' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUF' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
859bbf2a2061c0cef5b80f52fd4bc2d9
e1de1d60a827e8c4db9fbc2ff7b9ca3d53c65db7
'2011-08-19T05:04:44-04:00'
describe
'123473' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUG' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
5c0cb1538962e680c56884bf00738ee4
37d239541ed39ec4779cfceba84e5544abc1da50
'2011-08-19T04:53:00-04:00'
describe
'231007' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUH' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
68dfc042503cd7fb89234e86c90950c8
151fe7655a822d7e3876a38ce278f7fef22c7a51
describe
'381989' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUI' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
65a7be8e6f194738f6ed3276af5e1a17
0d4df988cd111f10e694472a36239b526562ef39
'2011-08-19T04:51:51-04:00'
describe
'110891' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUJ' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
f4ccef21c5dc316fcf78e6a327d16fb9
1db2932bdd6632cfaaacd6f4557a3cc09f6f69ef
'2011-08-19T04:51:58-04:00'
describe
'240770' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUK' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
25caf6cc5dc1935305dcc4735821ae20
87a3e751592315625856813df6f7663b7d27c932
describe
'400218' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUL' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
39347413da7dd8377a921f9102275e52
5d2b66e54848a357f25bd4f3ba1f385a9f02457e
'2011-08-19T04:52:53-04:00'
describe
'120125' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUM' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
88213a927cad84343b234c9f98601227
b8260c7e47c2dede58e0d05497a704d23f7c1645
describe
'227258' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUN' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
a1ba1b0457f99f19946efafb4f87458c
e3dd5232f084af4f86e37c45001203f06053bf93
'2011-08-19T05:03:59-04:00'
describe
'366104' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUO' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
6bea5b5ba83fb21855743e0dc3cb9887
ac1d0b53f20b8d1a201b2617400fc53681151dab
'2011-08-19T05:01:30-04:00'
describe
'105564' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUP' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
f8aa0bd1e4888dcf4ae34aadf3e4cb43
b1e01df6b9dea513922f94d487ed2c5795114e6f
describe
'240785' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUQ' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
6cef8edfa81972d5bd38baa39a6003cd
5c0f9c55b2ca62db437234d8c4a9ed768bffde6d
describe
'391528' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUR' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
73b9d77947e29feebbff78253675542f
f67b24a2a321df33d6ae32d04b95f669d1b920cb
describe
'119678' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUS' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
3d2d62abd2d1fd67e8f0c7f738b22481
1755c209594708139ebe2426a25a1695b2df99c7
describe
'229160' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUT' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
6046a3183759ec1cfe3690d896a8c4f6
8ee3d830d2cb5c2acd50927e82a4bcaaf5d1f501
describe
'304588' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUU' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
08e9a88999743c8ec12239a7210e8ebb
e250a9706bb6c160cea23c2de6a363b25c5a01c5
describe
'83117' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUV' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
4259dd300b873b6abb2dda629ceab109
9d56fd3f27cda63a0a8dd6906f11cba790c6d942
'2011-08-19T04:58:57-04:00'
describe
'227814' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUW' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
d4f31e19d7a9430227bfdcbae3718b7d
3ccf4c3bb7227f20da97c5e378ec6411d09244a6
describe
'378458' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUX' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
63866b062a08b0e0976ec44a4b0e6257
2d2e1123707fac097089586345b0302dbb739d13
'2011-08-19T04:53:44-04:00'
describe
'110976' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUY' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
87b83180c1e195f837ef8f1368fcc221
ea852d29bb348b9c566bf9353395f37c8db9c228
describe
'231238' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIUZ' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
6d526177c0c05c582106dc7526324640
fa7cdedd0e1e97f56c0c0c926bace0c117f0f6bd
describe
'406480' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVA' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
817b79d3a8cc78611bbeeed7951f3627
8efd8164d3e1dae2a7a9c7162282b65cba130a07
'2011-08-19T04:59:46-04:00'
describe
'122449' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVB' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
da43a0681c3e4f0960d93bce0fa216e2
274218609dfbffeeccfd2aa43e061c9408e8c683
'2011-08-19T04:56:39-04:00'
describe
'228944' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVC' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
77995f5605511c76e20ebe3612c4bea6
e42dbae0904e2d5e1c869ce369b4fb6cbbde0aa8
'2011-08-19T04:59:33-04:00'
describe
'402030' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVD' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
2f23709e5fad35232f180c100dcc9b7f
7d8b5c87dd52c87b8c0b26a7709e5b04f3e00e87
'2011-08-19T04:51:36-04:00'
describe
'121926' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVE' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
861baf82806fc293fe7ceaa02a11203f
9cbebd1046f1cad7657c9c3c37853d0025d0b1c1
describe
'227488' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVF' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
d69c04bb2d99df51ea5cba66a7769d49
19d9b0065a87ec3e996f8d010a977fe49f5d30aa
'2011-08-19T04:52:27-04:00'
describe
'413583' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVG' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
3ab4810d7922965f24973b795676650d
6b5dc1785e46838fe2cb840d1a68fbb5007fecc9
describe
'125691' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVH' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
c832c82eeca1ba8f1e93020175d7e62e
a395f46e36d175866c6ce3df4511ea0348c3cae6
'2011-08-19T04:59:05-04:00'
describe
'229417' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVI' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
91d2167adf9c204da0d8f302f87014b0
1672ff076ffbc471cf83d49a5c805d1edffd17cf
describe
'401169' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVJ' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
597bff211a020dde4d823e8a713d4dbf
8ca996c6e567171ec5a358c8bab274a7c7efabb0
'2011-08-19T05:00:17-04:00'
describe
'122471' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVK' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
e087ceb907690b8fa168db80a947fd70
08893e6cd26c32f4dd1484ff6265da897c61b6c1
describe
'229774' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVL' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
9a3ddfbce3e302c823e69108d94c8ebb
95bba2f0e91bdb43efb1ed6ac32835978f62dce4
describe
'393968' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVM' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
9b0c66dd3f191d14e33ca139b5fb9fc6
4370a237d9d5d0790fd2b5caeec21410c010a216
describe
'119417' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVN' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
8842569f4afc78f54598a88a5e614520
bee320555d16466c98776817194ca896fbc1891d
'2011-08-19T04:58:50-04:00'
describe
'240734' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVO' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
828189756e87b565de938f71b300e5f9
7616fcba27310aa29179ead8920f1a33c9de58d5
'2011-08-19T04:54:17-04:00'
describe
'397820' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVP' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
59f75a17428e411b6f7cc8484ac5366e
35a4b36d142674f32131e6fb45b9b217aaae73ae
describe
'121380' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVQ' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
e0a3a29061da2788abb5d439e9e6ae1f
7a1edaf6cdf68e773f4b8824ed5b6e7146cb70de
describe
'227763' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVR' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
5bc7a9d00058de909691d5323cd06727
1f6b64e4e89909de41153eb5bb2d3a28ba045973
'2011-08-19T04:53:31-04:00'
describe
'385076' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVS' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
e5b335213d024854bd55f69a8a53e6e1
c9c8d26d501dcde4d1169ce8a43e346794df88a6
describe
'116037' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVT' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
e58d5a291b0e3f6b9151b918de675fdd
20e6b55fc56cc1397430878981aac1b54a603f14
'2011-08-19T05:03:35-04:00'
describe
'240791' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVU' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
185fa52f2585177dc121206da37dfab3
46ab79c2311f6581357fa76332b98ddf817cc594
'2011-08-19T05:01:59-04:00'
describe
'409062' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVV' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
69b07cb20ecc59f8b099e9eaed4cd6eb
6eaa3c8f6d1d9dee240f6f7d24839e4766b4068a
'2011-08-19T05:02:25-04:00'
describe
'123315' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVW' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
c93b9e1ebf23e1c9ae39693f51277852
6cd8fbf4857273bb39b476de08a3ddfe0ed99ea4
describe
'228426' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVX' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
b780b410560c215bfec83bb60937a8d3
1ef64759b95ad21292a4e44735a1c8ab7c4381c1
describe
'410989' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVY' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
190c620cf4535351814ce2db4ba19b80
025dc6688b7bf89eaac25fe136c5523d24e1f6ec
'2011-08-19T05:04:28-04:00'
describe
'124254' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIVZ' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
0d227c6528a17756a31c4d451cc0c046
67d4d160ac619ece3ad5dd7dd5fe00093af82cab
'2011-08-19T04:59:22-04:00'
describe
'227399' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWA' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
5b5a0a268553c96050ea8bb4f44a78b4
6fd3eee45c228c2afc07791e51588ef1a3f64511
describe
'397423' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWB' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
1e25b4cf261fb3d85ece75e25270268a
61226f63c26b3b0340f2496e8aeb15f92d704969
describe
'119939' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWC' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
d05d36389eb1474e2c1b5947a08c1e27
efd299fb9305eb5c6c3b2bea6512f3b7f0379d5c
'2011-08-19T05:01:46-04:00'
describe
'227068' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWD' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
02292ae2d18c00e29237fa9aa3fd2e79
9ba5e8355987096593c2cf1eb1809a064584a1f5
'2011-08-19T04:52:20-04:00'
describe
'387723' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWE' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
13531f02a9aa75f2abfa5f9a92d10739
42242a9b8b2390ec6ac9e6eddd81cea45966a954
'2011-08-19T05:02:54-04:00'
describe
'117708' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWF' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
fd6c0c0923f1b9e11ccfd15d09808fc5
29c8704f514b39de365db85ca04212b1b0ddcfff
describe
'240796' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWG' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
9c42b8d4d4c7fb798def31455d16b4b3
9c059835af5c2c7583f216e0cbba31339146ab69
describe
'405521' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWH' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
41c7e8b1cf7f659ae41852bebc5ad180
7ceae0e5b90a13d7073025799b7f4b04cd18a2d9
describe
'123803' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWI' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
a2210b0ff3e207ad6887a489da3cb410
2e573d993aed43a495eab4b4b6b10cd2e3a071e1
'2011-08-19T04:54:58-04:00'
describe
'228311' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWJ' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
d5cbed25b0b2259cdd0cb9dfbab787c6
4edacb09a71dca00779c1e2ce286b2bc43dae822
'2011-08-19T04:56:24-04:00'
describe
'417596' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWK' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
f3336c71cafc03e07af3434c3492cab3
895c4425e5d972c390812204e93f85e72d4c866c
'2011-08-19T05:00:33-04:00'
describe
'126115' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWL' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
878c1b721d4b9ce32e4233668daf7e0a
813b4d485d37147f7ca78edeee9d304d5021688e
describe
'225642' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWM' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
f51c50e8ce64d2397f73ec7999b6434b
1219ea37c894913be921bad0f284a02d22426072
describe
'414459' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWN' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
e06097a903944609adeb22de3c0e1cf8
510e49e5479f64b46fa22f38b6b03e6f1aa28c90
'2011-08-19T04:53:04-04:00'
describe
'125598' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWO' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
5ef777e06ba9743929c4aff0f446d014
96978bffb89c8ae4762b6d9bcf3e30606304bfe6
'2011-08-19T05:01:48-04:00'
describe
'227436' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWP' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
c17c4e5425ba0080e06d61bb39efb1fc
73ab9fac841d26a230a43960ad71d0c41fb56241
'2011-08-19T04:54:25-04:00'
describe
'397743' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWQ' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
54b4a685150c32ccb91da47827d374e5
29d42baf4eb2352dba1cef004de3aaee427e92e1
'2011-08-19T04:56:40-04:00'
describe
'120267' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWR' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
c5a7c5392a5b8a99f3a1196e8e3935ba
0bd4b78243d87eec125462d8fa50dab771498ebc
'2011-08-19T04:53:27-04:00'
describe
'231877' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWS' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
3b52895d7f4bb14cdfd34beaeaa36f00
f81dba865ea65bc65f739d97dd8e4ed48b0b363e
describe
'401522' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWT' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
cc5bf9c6b1a11e8b052a224d96d8663d
9a97890e0f6e548cc5db80ea3651bdd91b4861b7
describe
'120652' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWU' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
438e898f9d7184f48b57fb0c8b9e45f5
7d22d34ccf1ae73b7a3ec58863451decce53f3df
describe
'237679' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWV' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
36da1a3b572b360a6ac05fb0487eec85
45cc985a7350afc02a106953be8d213ef4c56364
'2011-08-19T05:01:07-04:00'
describe
'391852' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWW' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
ca7aa5ca7beeefe45a07f41b4620e764
8548422d3be0c5e6b5e11a211eb48c7be2807643
describe
'117559' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWX' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
b8ae86f816bb347af5c57dc82e2f1fba
7e7498138f7e67ee5bada7d2e17dfbd0f8e11cf0
'2011-08-19T05:03:56-04:00'
describe
'228354' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWY' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
93c94aa960f1ee0e69a727716b1c574a
f14a13369775b9ae08a506769d4325e89019d2a1
describe
'396792' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIWZ' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
223ed9e1ee61411c1a1342034d7a611a
68f8e648f6e8807856b1138a057e42673d796963
describe
'118663' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXA' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
ab82f926835c76fd4118c32fa82b9123
9ecb90b890f210f9185276debf92c6f7bc1a67e2
'2011-08-19T04:55:01-04:00'
describe
'227877' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXB' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
f74114996a4fc24c3c5d2af65381cf0d
41a6c74df33f42b3ee683718c4f99ee443ff4f6c
'2011-08-19T04:51:21-04:00'
describe
'392673' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXC' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
cf433f085e032da9a842c1cad5e9595e
be956dcd50de56dc322526f0a8d3df18a4842c83
describe
'118613' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXD' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
8b146f3eac049e6ef89e4ac9e9026da1
37136f6c1f7974eadf493f0378d7ecf2df5f2832
'2011-08-19T05:00:59-04:00'
describe
'240738' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXE' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
165fe4bbfbf117418394c22d51af207f
3f849992499b0be7ac718f6ba3818a65db47c986
'2011-08-19T04:54:47-04:00'
describe
'409872' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXF' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
7f0fde29dc2af6533ead3764d9e5598b
09239d2d3328d62905ba6e0c8d96391cee18cc14
'2011-08-19T04:55:35-04:00'
describe
'121952' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXG' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
3552059b848de143ab673380b5d2cadf
bea5a4009e44ffde1ab22bab42f7d85259a51d4f
describe
'226859' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXH' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
3689c13025774565e955e63e985eaa5a
29c1c971d21f243697dae611bf1e4f5240b24cc6
'2011-08-19T04:54:09-04:00'
describe
'411326' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXI' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
929c7a51ddd5aa6ea225a8003b5d50a2
f23d0e27ebabfdc0b07bf12bebce5534700b0d24
'2011-08-19T04:56:55-04:00'
describe
'124455' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXJ' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
78987fa2726f311ad495f604b3d6c430
4fc34e64691e338119848ce5646117e9850e9254
'2011-08-19T05:01:51-04:00'
describe
'226537' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXK' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
924617ee7cbbdef36625584b0e1b7acb
258f6557cb3a5ff1db31ef5d517ae73755d887cf
'2011-08-19T05:01:11-04:00'
describe
'417334' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXL' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
f655c9cdedf071c96dcac5a9aa211e3f
39ccd5aa665b76f3d031feccfdc61ef3d914b5cf
describe
'124206' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXM' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
2742a75506ffdfaa826d085475b4f09e
e9f76d5a035b7c58f62c4bdd4a7b0f8b02f05f3f
describe
'226833' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXN' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
1f46999806b72773d2307ae93b0a8166
1ad170ccab2536cf76437a7fe6d12dcd2b352b17
describe
'384055' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXO' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
122e126814656546c221f073d698ac33
dcccf6096f3a351509e95d742b3be48be88cda7f
'2011-08-19T04:54:21-04:00'
describe
'114667' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXP' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
44346a29e3f4466ed1d8ac08808db241
decfe9325d3b457449ba7e8ab5e43bfc7672a3b0
describe
'232868' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXQ' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
d218a81b77a7ed25a1a3f7ea01e83d2e
3bb00869be8efaef90d1680a926e2c70050e6253
'2011-08-19T05:04:46-04:00'
describe
'405021' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXR' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
f40b43e102ee56efdcd230aa1ff5a3d5
3eb0ff4eaee322f03f226bf350c3335b0715ce08
'2011-08-19T05:00:29-04:00'
describe
'121430' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXS' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
f3da6e5e4f7ce9f2cd7556976719e7a9
07c4d73118509f6023bffb4635d9578ed62f7495
'2011-08-19T04:53:38-04:00'
describe
'228515' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXT' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
58622d17d26ba14ace958a34ccf67bbc
11c5a5b2804d4569060de22c3146d6852ea5fa22
'2011-08-19T05:03:54-04:00'
describe
'384328' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXU' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
2a23e7e74d35791437ac7dce3c197ba8
597185d65d095aaff15e8fc34bb8ca2427f0ff94
'2011-08-19T04:54:46-04:00'
describe
'110778' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXV' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
ec763fa0b01ab8f50e27a89ecfe9005d
eeab2901e8e08bdb61a760cc66d68d6da50703f5
'2011-08-19T04:55:43-04:00'
describe
'227333' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXW' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
133949eced7c5ecb35eac04c1eb122aa
030b6d6e9f750b1402dd750d588216f718b35cff
describe
'416834' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXX' 'sip-files00052.jpg'
fa7746b8e3f41d62f677f74e7b9f5458
eb38cfae467057feab2da0123bdc57266ab86a21
describe
'124975' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXY' 'sip-files00052.QC.jpg'
41311c51110f4ef33a1bf999dadaab36
737f2960f7b5b4c3cf23c9238e168e2ca9d8b584
describe
'226613' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIXZ' 'sip-files00052.jp2'
f8a8e6a06e23662a82e491f1a345c06b
95cda8e8f144d6d541251bd6ae69cfd26c5d65c6
describe
'409005' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYA' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
d0fb736c98eaf3a652125c235d4e29de
6d15b4fdd7cfdbba83c9ace28c17d812d0e31e6d
'2011-08-19T05:04:43-04:00'
describe
'122998' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYB' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
4e823b877fd5cb3d8f40a424a3041f87
6806dda7b3603906600faa084fd84a76a6553bdd
describe
'223231' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYC' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
49a6ef38de4dfffdd3dd1664108dac69
5dd9364f08d3b7920165350541e4619797ffaff2
describe
'409594' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYD' 'sip-files00054.jpg'
6fa17d6e1bf8a28cd418339bedf358e6
2b4b881563b9d50d04c5035b70bdd884ab2e3720
describe
'123187' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYE' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
7764041de6c1d512aed2022e6209fed7
376098c0b775bccd5c668e17096032ea864d9ac7
'2011-08-19T04:51:41-04:00'
describe
'225774' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYF' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
ef470016ddc28745a5baa8d6bd264464
b1a5689bcb956a2f2357276a517f0eea910c93ca
describe
'421617' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYG' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
0d25579069a672b1c99c88da4021840f
bd961c395d66aebe815e637433fd2c6877d251a0
describe
'128017' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYH' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
0c1db9b6c3b5b31d001c3402d4078f64
f7bc6df0fee23dc0b540fee1be09982a28e4b2aa
describe
'211499' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYI' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
c1f860e5ffaca363fa9e040fa02a1c84
14955e64e4ff4d706a41164f1eb3b24091e801a4
describe
'398152' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYJ' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
49ad4d684fa95dfc25783e46a8f6db2e
5dc407f45f97d53595dbbd7afe99f483f127d1e6
describe
'118628' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYK' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
4b19ebc452334a8ee58ae45184902e1b
c5a386faf3ceac875f24a1b305f9d44eada1df48
describe
'228477' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYL' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
9c904fd69c6b9a5df39846876d1914e9
3a064e3a65ad123eed590e07eb172ec6fab6933d
describe
'412376' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYM' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
6bfc5162be03520f01d83c99fcbc46f0
2ff3c08dd97142baff8d7ec48188688fdd2e1582
describe
'122716' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYN' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
882910c3eca7b7e7fcee593e54db8ce8
49c2cba41442c2f8d1556689151b9a7cc0af95b8
describe
'230610' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYO' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
30bf3ac922e00d8f15cd30cd9ecf45fd
8b4b9b6b3eff62ff938cc47c30f64c8c59d7d482
describe
'407319' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYP' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
225e8fcd5c761b07028b1a19db8e00ae
e00672541f4247bfe10e8a9e69d5b6d2b73fb81e
describe
'123591' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYQ' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
fd184e3b820cf6ff8fd9b511d3d5f3f5
58e0edcb0eb9e0cf5c15ac356aebc8f067fe6ca8
'2011-08-19T05:02:27-04:00'
describe
'229096' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYR' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
b5394c3b6be2f87ae1f12e0673c7e85f
fc603cfe85bed04391bf646ba2df20272f55055a
describe
'410499' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYS' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
07549f41b0158b2f134f06e4ca017957
cdd5d4b02c6e36c8607f55dcaacdf57ddffd71e7
'2011-08-19T05:00:41-04:00'
describe
'124116' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYT' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
8a806ae07568855c55bd626aa18c603f
738aabc55fc419b2868633f46d2d70e418a8bbf0
'2011-08-19T04:59:23-04:00'
describe
'228279' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYU' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
0bc6b891a973e95e61afdd413d5b51d7
65758ca331885955ea5656f96dd33aa767ccf2fa
'2011-08-19T04:52:44-04:00'
describe
'413379' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYV' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
61610526db766d60356ae5fe7cfe5bab
3b9b67e953c60767ed98d965c9fd6da75497fff8
'2011-08-19T04:55:46-04:00'
describe
'125745' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYW' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
7abcb3461cfa888ab666046dd385c5c1
c1065164116aab79c2fef05448985b0f17276376
describe
'227855' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYX' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
19597931d2d899dcce846065f0ad1eb4
7a4c8fad8453310380f41a1ed4d831dd6ceaaeff
describe
'405205' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYY' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
bd995a7e2a366ca87cc82fdbf49b18bf
ed2cf648894e33566ec9b0cb638e14b4e8d4d2da
'2011-08-19T04:56:42-04:00'
describe
'121590' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIYZ' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
f100793fbe37c8d5014e85c806cb3c89
b8d297470c45a3c2a202b7f46be8e5d53ca5655a
describe
'230623' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZA' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
fb3f311b05363c2bf7c416d4c065b66a
0371e31a50f485e8c21ab7f3f18b726291715bcb
'2011-08-19T04:52:48-04:00'
describe
'288129' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZB' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
ab0e6c4f1617f1a8e38c4cf71df94806
af6fca5089d6616b8e0ecb04796559f52b8d6f22
'2011-08-19T04:55:06-04:00'
describe
'74380' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZC' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
dc3d6f9f8cacf3c16602ba0fb9f9cf60
5e540fecd7419c31e0122bc1c084c78a4d239f41
'2011-08-19T04:58:09-04:00'
describe
'227050' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZD' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
ca93761f45ad307d528e57fe675e47c3
dbae0b9530feb14fb27270745f6dde6689b415f1
'2011-08-19T05:03:55-04:00'
describe
'396009' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZE' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
0590d90d289fc4db5596ff5401d7f18b
11a4805074e139547718b80a1a19b648bdb9f66f
'2011-08-19T04:55:10-04:00'
describe
'112503' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZF' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
2db479418413d8c14d98ded7aaa08cf3
26fe089a3895a17236d743ddcd6eb5cbdc8a23c6
'2011-08-19T04:58:45-04:00'
describe
'226887' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZG' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
b04469d7742824d80c7936218fc08952
da29ab474cf182a90e5c926d7c881cfb739578b0
'2011-08-19T05:03:31-04:00'
describe
'398180' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZH' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
6bcb845927a0a8ff6136fbde17e7fb74
71db04b3b4dbea79d4aeb4448d20a40ce7fe2a31
describe
'117769' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZI' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
9719987ad62527d0ab2579986fa6f16a
317f3629dd1bf82e0ad25698bbc6856f5a00f873
describe
'237656' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZJ' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
7f7496b315b00992c9cc5b83886d6478
7b263f44a814bfa7d2b0ecfcff9720efcb320acd
'2011-08-19T04:57:10-04:00'
describe
'412156' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZK' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
7bf5cf9bba826612fee0a5b1d7b4f09f
04c27dce6303698facf190b7daa9819b22bac709
describe
'122656' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZL' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
dff0bb68a8cfeab272556face2b064a0
a8ff7c9454ece4e79c54be4b68012ef2ac056943
'2011-08-19T05:03:12-04:00'
describe
'230082' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZM' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
09a5e38ea442b84bd588d63b537fb526
3a2c00c5d96433ad9d8a06a3e68df6b16ecdc7c7
describe
'402959' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZN' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
9fd287b81e6c1b5f1d6236072ca9e56d
deaf3b898f91bb775b8c9bfa39622a84d14a1b67
describe
'119646' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZO' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
c0800d1c706cdf5691684ea5b68fa62b
79b62887aa01860688f2aabda6c862a8343a85b9
describe
'226212' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZP' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
7299ea3e01c88b3972fc17f866e679e3
3bd6811e5c1064815bab0678ce98a78bfae440dd
describe
'414621' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZQ' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
595db4df32e39c08056416261a1d1b34
62e598ecc183efc494e35f521cab3048f732977e
describe
'122674' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZR' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
2cc6827020ef6a96d8a3c0f83f2153fb
1d03ceb866c3ce3b4237826d7dd155a1a63d6a8a
'2011-08-19T04:56:07-04:00'
describe
'229456' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZS' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
ac8d1ac9256bf9f96103fd9ff9bbab30
5efb6729cfd5022c1dc617613eff605cf04fd94c
'2011-08-19T04:59:49-04:00'
describe
'392418' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZT' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
36135ec876b36a25a1b026032d14467f
3d7597a782a35d0506fb28ad2cb3cad7d3c4ecbf
'2011-08-19T04:51:48-04:00'
describe
'116582' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZU' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
a24c848b514bf5fc61391c468ab82c44
32249231d94ed03cc4e5637ce325de136b009e75
'2011-08-19T04:59:25-04:00'
describe
'237695' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZV' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
e9f1d3a580ee91e1d33ef34548450bbe
cb7d6392d67a7bb3a4c924ae5f125559b18a4503
describe
'410446' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZW' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
8f13300c3d5eba7f2016833738454b48
a7f319f8438b6230aa52c8966e6c4b0fe99a1cec
describe
'122712' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZX' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
529d071b5e1262b544316a64cdbba412
45c13797ca360337153cebc827bf40026ff8377c
'2011-08-19T04:59:41-04:00'
describe
'232048' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZY' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
923e240db9eb8a9cb368fd38fbb59539
6b13cff3ca5478c9e97475c6dc6efea1edff1fb6
'2011-08-19T05:04:22-04:00'
describe
'392473' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAIZZ' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
debb4ca9e3c22dc405bd861a123d7b90
29e9f5d90a4253b15769fa23789f53c86cd16a06
describe
'117264' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAA' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
6d6e0564625cf669f267922a7b2bc425
b93e867e931d8079a29c379c74a9a397c716225c
describe
'237645' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAB' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
7fa8c7f108cc7132b7bab334522c7ad3
edc087f3dcbfbcff8a99ca7b14b5becf2a60faf9
describe
'403989' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAC' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
c9ac6279fce9157dca4898bb76f9ab8c
d8569a211868368550289beb3d6a2fb2e58db7ab
'2011-08-19T04:53:40-04:00'
describe
'121394' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAD' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
1b5e276f4d9b11ed3f9cad8d4db70416
d834c0749d6fe1033faac6db838c82fbd97fab18
describe
'233514' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAE' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
198e49fb7dea1683d97e28a99ee15133
d573306b6fbff136df2f835f733ef726c4193adc
'2011-08-19T05:05:04-04:00'
describe
'401227' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAF' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
73b79b9a1f4660bbf9b23307a40fa910
296c83097be78394340ef3e3b65830849e29c54f
describe
'119499' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAG' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
90d033ef0b0ac37896659f3a6222b18c
f0d3057201fa88abeae2248942456b567d4eb15e
describe
'224694' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAH' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
3d2256c6bd4e981d2b331ccae30d6dfd
4677e869fa19a10898465fa56ff999ba6c7d2ae1
'2011-08-19T04:51:39-04:00'
describe
'409606' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAI' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
8e1179f74d57a1179f3bb552fcf3f5fb
18d70211be48419667ca4b1c8d7b3b40299fca50
'2011-08-19T04:52:26-04:00'
describe
'123151' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAJ' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
15df97b3ab3200ab88f165f65eabe7e2
39aad67fbbf3d50043f60c09a857ad1ce7778624
'2011-08-19T05:02:58-04:00'
describe
'227757' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAK' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
4c489c443e32bda9119f946d16319cdd
de82543206c148b5a0d5294694f0210d8ad29921
describe
'391162' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAL' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
76142ac8c4afad8a199d92788aed7b23
dce857d8ff09b0da08881ca998c8dbdfe88acb2e
describe
'117097' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAM' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
a48817c8cfdf4cd088720196e100db79
f5b18826c6f0db2280452b351325820a1f6b53e2
describe
'229360' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAN' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
048e2d513d8a84bf1535c22b6003f952
a827f3586efffeee543d15a28d86dad85fc55c01
'2011-08-19T04:52:30-04:00'
describe
'412528' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAO' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
c1d16d4d7f4b49af857b1e3841bd44b1
f58913e9addcc966e6c5a81af6b3a544d6f3e2c5
describe
'121638' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAP' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
e5bb0f72867afe9fb2ac162eb9d6dfbf
1ee589ce61afb127785b7aa831f840185f75bf7b
describe
'226663' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAQ' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
be4ce5f14ea1914566fd18817a14b5da
d65a1e1a6420c6079a5387f08d8bc98f73b53ea9
'2011-08-19T04:58:58-04:00'
describe
'408910' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAR' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
2f3db99c524ba4ec1b0bbee93f2e6fed
b6a89aad0ca260e2f6f96c32c6ce9ef1c84a0271
'2011-08-19T04:53:17-04:00'
describe
'120645' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAS' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
83feee81de67cfa220d6c5fc95825eea
65c517041b789bf929bf65fd188294ea5f3d2a57
describe
'227704' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAT' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
0768b3b73eb9bb3f57f38cd065f8715d
047c9c5b9a81bc1db68be8e3edec0b7b2cd2ac8f
'2011-08-19T04:53:59-04:00'
describe
'403807' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAU' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
8565b134fc61cd4112e46b0a1cf61b77
0fa762689692fbfb4016604d0b959effabd305c0
describe
'120517' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAV' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
ed3a263555d13d17cec0bef70a55cdc7
856a3ff459969022520e69e6cb1130425b8b1b70
'2011-08-19T04:53:01-04:00'
describe
'233186' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAW' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
37bbbed70d9705914b1210c6717e791f
8cc5e094d73af0a1f21696c35b7b2a75a9d551ce
'2011-08-19T05:03:39-04:00'
describe
'394895' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAX' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
5fc98fda5a6ef3af10a3c024f584ae3d
b31e1abae0b24129d58c9b03ff6b148ce8c3f2f4
'2011-08-19T05:00:25-04:00'
describe
'119264' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAY' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
998fbd1100565da4e5989f9df11adc8f
16bec45d2872e9a05ec79ea5f207ccdce640a529
'2011-08-19T04:52:37-04:00'
describe
'230599' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJAZ' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
761243ad92e1559eedb7ec4df82e8fba
9fb00f3c15a0b8d94c569fd5329dd564ea57d2d5
'2011-08-19T04:53:20-04:00'
describe
'401935' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBA' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
82b11f5607feb9a91f3023d7d4052a4f
fb8afbaae7325b686eff81f79c64517a95a03d72
'2011-08-19T04:59:44-04:00'
describe
'119090' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBB' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
f71e9784019614c0c14d443013e4c06e
ac046afd21f1bfa027b03a9605b0e6c042324df2
'2011-08-19T04:54:53-04:00'
describe
'231512' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBC' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
b2b00c593d333b0fbf6e9bad2b7ecadf
3f8a63bed76cc6d533b5603509fbc0a7599bc453
'2011-08-19T04:51:09-04:00'
describe
'406219' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBD' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
a65821a2c5728a7bbe88c80de6b9c43b
87faaccb67e8709387908f7854f82872c8623541
'2011-08-19T05:01:56-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBE' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
3245400328188a558539c70502d3068c
66b6bd03975b96d8df8cae82abbdd935cd2d06a5
describe
'230870' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBF' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
e52f36d99a332f2b3eaa93da79cd6bbf
eb4dbb32b8c99f440bb8a27e6b7b1bdd4871742b
describe
'405025' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBG' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
9a68c9429c26d6e5539297fcaaafde46
52e07e490d591cfc51d996102acbed7fa5ab1be5
describe
'121651' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBH' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
65afcd9aa6e69add83ab0800898c9208
d1e549373190e3d24a425d31b3945d3726d4f006
'2011-08-19T04:59:13-04:00'
describe
'233297' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBI' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
6d1ecdb58c0ecc13765e015ef4fdc566
9f014f7d4be32f09317af083cd1eac417a0ef84d
describe
'402695' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBJ' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
9c7ebefc8f742de02ccda1d2ed6aa195
df8f87df4cd2d4548d5af65146110adb8c60e5ed
'2011-08-19T04:55:56-04:00'
describe
'122000' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBK' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
210771d6b4c5f1ed346cf1328ddff1c9
2f9e30c97563dc2d6fc132633b7191e0f00b004f
describe
'231475' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBL' 'sip-files00082.jp2'
1f46eaeecf24980a76ecdb8bd5fc9a96
cadad813ade6a34672bfca99ddbb0f387f1ba17f
describe
'408950' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBM' 'sip-files00083.jpg'
47fac4ee22055b5285235b5b45d1a3fd
962857b3800c07cbf2a98ce2eba84060d83db1ab
'2011-08-19T05:00:13-04:00'
describe
'123804' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBN' 'sip-files00083.QC.jpg'
e781e2bd6ab070f2e16d3e0735e44b6f
478ba6ae6d05c73eb082371221edd789a0719bab
describe
'230448' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBO' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
32649c3e3bb6710418008df355911072
a0b85d86a3a23326c48bd5fd6cd18997391a2b35
'2011-08-19T05:00:24-04:00'
describe
'387312' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBP' 'sip-files00084.jpg'
76a4e67e34c141b0c66f4f7b86cf5397
8ababdb7a2b21cb80e976e5607caa29fb1ff61b9
'2011-08-19T04:52:22-04:00'
describe
'113950' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBQ' 'sip-files00084.QC.jpg'
ba325855596438d16ae0679bf72f369f
63d30567ec8a5e8a6ae751d98f47e06e22eb6288
'2011-08-19T05:03:17-04:00'
describe
'228159' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBR' 'sip-files00084.jp2'
f459a401b082d5f2ec2a114210983525
d3341d9e2e93b691e3d159885ccbefcd31fee615
describe
'412850' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBS' 'sip-files00085.jpg'
1cc42e78691d8fef1e8c2bf2933e3454
6fb9e6adb439b02225df08aed21044d0201a0a56
'2011-08-19T04:53:34-04:00'
describe
'123930' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBT' 'sip-files00085.QC.jpg'
42c408d91bdcc6ace0b7bc3207ce7885
a0ce681b67b9e8b7209acd6a1c487f438890ff92
describe
'220361' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBU' 'sip-files00085.jp2'
0e788da96164f56f406301b9bf6a0e94
6aa704ad398ec1dc856031c04dd14465f738da19
describe
'411911' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBV' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
3698bf7d18ef56e669f81b2be4d0d138
836a3a9515c6a2babdd296499a4fc357c4237a50
describe
'123366' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBW' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
8a499d22d4bbe7d66c3a85071d324e1c
578bc843e15ff169cd8956bebd9cd7973d4d559e
'2011-08-19T05:00:38-04:00'
describe
'230382' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBX' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
9b01332c770e30719e764be774212b6a
263f4398f06ccd3294456ea5d9e1a1a81a019f88
describe
'413358' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBY' 'sip-files00087.jpg'
3f2d584a22e7bb86ef4621352067c2d0
42a8d7bbd72cf49507dd87f7d365f09c9e2e6a61
'2011-08-19T04:53:25-04:00'
describe
'122969' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJBZ' 'sip-files00087.QC.jpg'
485463c88929738b512fa750f84c006b
275a9ad468a889dd497a695b4181880c41d67896
describe
'225080' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCA' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
af32126b31972e97d87dd94764223fd3
53fc73f8d33c42bed1aced63aa24c29075f89db0
describe
'408508' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCB' 'sip-files00088.jpg'
c028182e2afd9d2ac3bef5fa1d03e025
a53d5ca13d429ac9fee1daefeb8137a4a2178472
describe
'122485' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCC' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
5935e761ef15fce1b607dc64c0bd8a56
27afb46032ea791c5e62c49e3417813c1a039648
'2011-08-19T05:04:21-04:00'
describe
'229383' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCD' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
573d17c34310abc36a3094f856f6b292
c513e0963e5d0931375bfe01696da612d031b34d
describe
'417110' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCE' 'sip-files00089.jpg'
dbd97c5c9b3da2dd6577945a9df4bd5a
2133c39c6e549dc816d6c6acef107e3538c99c3e
'2011-08-19T04:52:56-04:00'
describe
'125972' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCF' 'sip-files00089.QC.jpg'
020084116a9d1ad5522b30724315628e
a677222b2fb40b73978c3b1a5ba96b7f7b689cde
'2011-08-19T04:55:40-04:00'
describe
'224473' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCG' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
7c888b4ba2859e2316bb6bcc31e8394e
ca4ba1cbdd44c6603ed84679df88efd330efc53d
'2011-08-19T04:51:31-04:00'
describe
'404018' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCH' 'sip-files00090.jpg'
bad60d44c653034b1e581910b2933bae
e3def0557d177152da13559beb453b7f4e0754d0
'2011-08-19T05:03:57-04:00'
describe
'122701' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCI' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
31da0ec95dcdce2dfd21bd2f432c57b1
ae4440f5c1f5d76395dd9e7ac148c9ed6e6e37bf
'2011-08-19T04:53:45-04:00'
describe
'229606' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCJ' 'sip-files00090.jp2'
59ef6f5e00ee8d4d00572be6af8537ec
f3c265c03f28631e6b5471f411fccc3f504aa6c7
describe
'310254' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCK' 'sip-files00090a.jpg'
7f20b2a3de081a0d5e4d3d1b1bd0fbb5
8753bfd37ebd0173b83e90463f21fb71cfc3ec95
describe
'104307' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCL' 'sip-files00090a.QC.jpg'
6452f61e8f910e8b69f19de6ece9582f
17a11790237fe4acb8177d2cdde865615e63fe41
'2011-08-19T04:51:33-04:00'
describe
'986793' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCM' 'sip-files00090a.jp2'
496ff4e30a2d09df08a5a2d2dffecaed
0ad42ce665c90233734535269ab156e924306821
describe
'312311' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCN' 'sip-files00090b.jpg'
0eff208029c5c7a0ec7b39f3c9e85bbd
a9badbd01f2d0a3b119ee3696842a466974396f4
'2011-08-19T04:52:19-04:00'
describe
'104476' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCO' 'sip-files00090b.QC.jpg'
3231a29eeb67cce5ca2a58743cd202c3
698cd07577398bda0aa1d791393dae4b1fdb373a
'2011-08-19T05:02:06-04:00'
describe
'995514' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCP' 'sip-files00090b.jp2'
47f638e7ada760bd24c9ac886562460f
aec9898046a34cee3ea80b76852d34b0ec76b9cd
'2011-08-19T04:55:20-04:00'
describe
'412441' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCQ' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
ac56fca4af5f72e5012f0a2cde87f97c
b51ae207e7b166c124bea6bdba227742b0737286
describe
'124407' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCR' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
05877dcaf636414cbf10a7a63a413939
a92ec24c6de8d60ba6afd7b66c0cf75e8c9c9fec
'2011-08-19T04:59:57-04:00'
describe
'230246' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCS' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
bcb0612128c9f308409c1424442c7189
b91f4934359bc03dcafdcb092db6a6e4cc60cfdb
describe
'393490' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCT' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
2d24b5dac5d68816d2c00a9e2f6ef2ce
b7a12ca0435c6360645293aaa64a1b9a25a8658a
'2011-08-19T04:52:55-04:00'
describe
'117801' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCU' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
8502fcfcec7a7a737c66575be95f96f9
6bfb13ba4a48b60ff025233b6da103b15035577f
'2011-08-19T05:01:26-04:00'
describe
'242179' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCV' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
6ea3bd5ea53919dc19ce319face34e5c
64e4d880cff76c17c82e40a475ef9272994f84f0
'2011-08-19T04:55:27-04:00'
describe
'384891' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCW' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
fd9586b6b14645470b68d717bff6c2d1
bb2aec520c27ca37446d07b91a588800333ca43f
describe
'114221' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCX' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
663b4e39a13696e6183225450229122f
d82aa8aa56a44587473bb257b0558313fb49e5a8
describe
'230679' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCY' 'sip-files00093.jp2'
dbcfd82ba748ea9c7efd4a66209cc7bb
3c313ac034cf598be7f12c02945dbfa67f59466d
describe
'363802' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJCZ' 'sip-files00094.jpg'
05336baab6415dcf2fb7abe4723d947e
7b94da68e20ec66d1ce4c3290e085d1c8173e0ce
describe
'102342' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDA' 'sip-files00094.QC.jpg'
aaf4afec4006e1a51a4a5eedfd442f41
b74e2235e77737dca3a79cafbcd590b83e89bf87
describe
'242119' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDB' 'sip-files00094.jp2'
6d5964adede49a24b608aa637df58917
7b2451a50b5504971386f0b290200601aa2ee800
describe
'409270' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDC' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
f6fca296e26fdd4709f1f20ae6aa77b5
526f964ff22eaa61075acf6b79344a5150aff94f
'2011-08-19T05:02:38-04:00'
describe
'123087' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDD' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
1414b7809ec1550f88e1d611eef05231
2904d1c3536763374bb9b1b8ca12842f8153c173
'2011-08-19T04:51:40-04:00'
describe
'231447' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDE' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
bb9f5aa72119cf154efe449c14b17ee3
392c64f85f080175249054254ecc70476172f6e6
'2011-08-19T04:55:36-04:00'
describe
'396344' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDF' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
b0517d208d4fce9808b7a5a6dbf3efd0
1b54eed71de7968c1de7c8c03e5e34e14b678392
describe
'118478' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDG' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
ef8c5296905cf24efc73849908152fa5
1260550c98451c75ffb892fc153066c339d9cb3d
'2011-08-19T05:02:08-04:00'
describe
'242180' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDH' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
984d59542831cad384a1bb9419e99779
e2cf5a921982c9f55020d35467f971084972bdde
describe
'412241' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDI' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
01307d2202e86dcf9cf2fdf834c59bfd
f66ef850b36fce4dfe93841756d2920c7cbe55a0
describe
'122170' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDJ' 'sip-files00097.QC.jpg'
9842ff0eeba6340362bf02a034a602f7
c2007022e78804bd00f8e654a367ae16c606f6e7
'2011-08-19T05:03:14-04:00'
describe
'232967' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDK' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
c6c359355fa84f585b3b9b38214b4b47
c027f0dc91fea2fa6a657c998f48f11091fe5c35
describe
'397915' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDL' 'sip-files00098.jpg'
3ac28533be54832a7e4a6b0ae278257a
ac46392c78bc74e3b36448ec33b748c00524f9b1
describe
'116810' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDM' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
b4210a500677cb0863cb1274b483621f
b2b1a703b696517ac4be0d73967a25729c545736
'2011-08-19T05:00:02-04:00'
describe
'242187' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDN' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
e89105f4333047bf3370bce219d30f69
fde00ac723954390e65c24ee506c3a2cf7522908
'2011-08-19T04:52:21-04:00'
describe
'411859' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDO' 'sip-files00099.jpg'
87bd4f1991828cf7d7295dda7f6db285
a5b02683f43a34572ec6b31fe58f447a0cc99979
'2011-08-19T04:52:24-04:00'
describe
'122232' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDP' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
21c418f5911bb28325248b8cbae6909d
ae929563b89c9ca4392a3d27b13433928c49a939
'2011-08-19T05:01:04-04:00'
describe
'230683' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDQ' 'sip-files00099.jp2'
61b047f07a814c7ca17e7ca80aee32fd
932883bc9d794c1d2f3d25c7d95d522655ebc6da
describe
'410302' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDR' 'sip-files00100.jpg'
5d5e7540929c0403d17710d179d71eed
18b16b0428ab7febf071e938d3a4fbccc6b7fb25
'2011-08-19T04:53:26-04:00'
describe
'123821' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDS' 'sip-files00100.QC.jpg'
c589803316678309d3a573b2b0f6c47f
2f4f136421e93235e4be54f6538f0e0dad8c82f2
describe
'231886' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDT' 'sip-files00100.jp2'
ae9ede6c029e32126c1b487cf49dff26
2039ad1a9872bd58ca34554713ad5296aa3b5675
describe
'407370' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDU' 'sip-files00101.jpg'
cad2b0dff77583fec136962cb672d0d4
513a1c965f70d946c1d4aefba4f5b1ac16cc167d
describe
'121802' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDV' 'sip-files00101.QC.jpg'
de2b168282ba97cf1d4a3150db053e94
384cc8b2508579a16590eb406d11e1062b30983f
describe
'226703' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDW' 'sip-files00101.jp2'
f2a16091c3b92f248f7ee3d2f16e59d7
a3ddfc794bc62074eb0fd9b2c62e3d733448a570
describe
'380925' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDX' 'sip-files00102.jpg'
151da468dccba0fe7995bf5e2443d9b1
2c2ad982d00216a8f3f9fdcc9092cbc4afb5d0a9
'2011-08-19T04:51:08-04:00'
describe
'116326' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDY' 'sip-files00102.QC.jpg'
9eb71e834e0a66629159b5c5e831017d
f810ccfc1cb3ebed2f51fd212d7dd454d34f34ff
'2011-08-19T04:58:20-04:00'
describe
'246435' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJDZ' 'sip-files00102.jp2'
ebb25b6a5fefeb89b80a4fd05acc3e67
9f90fd5e3e4c2f531ad337f99eb5cad664f6af6d
describe
'391479' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEA' 'sip-files00103.jpg'
a2519decf440c0a8be9444a2c814b87b
19c6184801c05dea9ce10ad0e7765832e6c81f43
'2011-08-19T05:02:35-04:00'
describe
'117834' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEB' 'sip-files00103.QC.jpg'
f3b8f98dde0fb17c08b1ca2e68c9d174
1aea3fa25760bd54f33072f573fd1455ca82ddb2
'2011-08-19T05:04:19-04:00'
describe
'240758' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEC' 'sip-files00103.jp2'
ad6514d7c7b9cf66eb00cd308c6ba364
b02dda1b197b9708757292f872ccb5d28a2eaaed
'2011-08-19T04:51:53-04:00'
describe
'369165' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJED' 'sip-files00104.jpg'
5962f0f26cbf5548875fcb29b0424336
d5e0fddb94a0c258b86b9cd245e7f841d7dbdc8e
describe
'110737' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEE' 'sip-files00104.QC.jpg'
6a46b72615a4387f7c6ec98bcf5f4292
bd388e319537dee301332b787b52cac77f3259ba
'2011-08-19T05:01:02-04:00'
describe
'246478' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEF' 'sip-files00104.jp2'
383c597e953f3f46890368c548932963
ef825bb1f435f3e316a9b5792956c4a5b5756b89
describe
'398920' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEG' 'sip-files00105.jpg'
332e25d76173165739d68c09cb99caf6
a5ebbe59cf497f08717f13dbe6f27c0ec25e21eb
'2011-08-19T04:57:21-04:00'
describe
'119963' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEH' 'sip-files00105.QC.jpg'
15c419767fdd3a9d9ee93cc451f74b16
da1dab10857e784522210e92f4548512cf293b1c
'2011-08-19T04:56:10-04:00'
describe
'240798' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEI' 'sip-files00105.jp2'
0971acbb8e82958101652049cc16f83e
0073285fd7ece30454d317b315f9d8db812d2ba3
describe
'399014' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEJ' 'sip-files00106.jpg'
2d883f6b7a76b9bda1f580800db9c85a
fc7c5e1df75afc7a6ff607760e5d98c1c004c6b8
describe
'118383' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEK' 'sip-files00106.QC.jpg'
4e803e6e1df8dacdf816ab8c93c3c6f6
4b716580f84894546cd068f46b9680696e0ea09b
'2011-08-19T04:51:06-04:00'
describe
'233340' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEL' 'sip-files00106.jp2'
fbd96ff335603b641b673f6343a08b3c
b7a5ce7623e9cc2fe0ef04902035ed6df6b5366e
'2011-08-19T04:53:08-04:00'
describe
'392955' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEM' 'sip-files00107.jpg'
e85daf5cc435e9732c057ccfa51801b0
e34de866bf0dd7d66f63c7b3d061b1b23180572a
'2011-08-19T05:04:39-04:00'
describe
'118636' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEN' 'sip-files00107.QC.jpg'
6cfd49ee41f128bc34743bbb0bb719d9
268ab859ddfb291dc92411e00550d7d2728bc3be
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEO' 'sip-files00107.jp2'
bac8cd179ef2f165a0ece1fa7d25e25d
545b7bbe9f36555b4627de582a3bd0850c1446e6
'2011-08-19T04:54:28-04:00'
describe
'387290' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEP' 'sip-files00108.jpg'
965ff7da625b7c8722d9e637db993c0f
493c3f47d62c089260ca2a09ae8cda9adf74c269
'2011-08-19T05:03:48-04:00'
describe
'116216' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEQ' 'sip-files00108.QC.jpg'
37a92ad6c553ff335f4973eb20aeeb90
dcbb3424ca30db264ef3b743f6005a322b2fc1fd
'2011-08-19T04:55:03-04:00'
describe
'232771' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJER' 'sip-files00108.jp2'
55db43136269b79a214ecf5c4303cc2b
43b099dc7f19fdb7d99d23fe0fd7c627afb7e014
describe
'395088' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJES' 'sip-files00109.jpg'
ae2750c9b01aa5cf5b658c963ab67e8b
156b510e5d5ceae4c1370ecf40c1af32fae4cf0f
describe
'118875' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJET' 'sip-files00109.QC.jpg'
3944ef2f78f75d844a92bb331a2d4ce5
39f71d2096afc45baf8d2034a53acddfa836b094
'2011-08-19T04:56:01-04:00'
describe
'240789' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEU' 'sip-files00109.jp2'
70d3273c5f03f7c99ec4d25d95a698e1
a9b181d5ff9f933cadb23917e2cd996873f6a25b
describe
'380363' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEV' 'sip-files00110.jpg'
6201c5df7927229dc3fc8584e13e496d
1bfb94ab9200d78deec3329ccb9b718a2dca5002
describe
'114959' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEW' 'sip-files00110.QC.jpg'
966d31be0ac82b332bd283035de80afc
769274aefbc2ceaa280cb6336c89f2423271d954
describe
'234844' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEX' 'sip-files00110.jp2'
8133b6788943a98f08e136c517e04680
5370ba01d79ce9deb55e1bea22fa9ce13108639d
describe
'382458' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEY' 'sip-files00111.jpg'
83fc22c004ad3a96035a41304288077d
bc2c9a9aba57d7de5f76e44936fedc104fbacda4
describe
'114880' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJEZ' 'sip-files00111.QC.jpg'
28207800d2c71cda71f2f9895e72de55
e989ad35670fd478c457b3397bc888e1f37f6106
describe
'240713' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFA' 'sip-files00111.jp2'
9b3672184abdb2a8058feaa4dd621d03
3d2c550bcbe2c541c11fa139cf8f6fd807f1480c
'2011-08-19T05:01:38-04:00'
describe
'395162' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFB' 'sip-files00112.jpg'
187aa76870435854a453bfadb94ca3a1
f4aeb1bdde6bb14ed168dd97044ba2811b52be82
'2011-08-19T04:55:12-04:00'
describe
'118556' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFC' 'sip-files00112.QC.jpg'
3c7619ea5ed1bc7d744c0d08e1f02502
c84b3c8ccba9ce9d8a018d56315b6b2c3c22b5e2
'2011-08-19T04:54:10-04:00'
describe
'230255' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFD' 'sip-files00112.jp2'
3d650b24803c24c8b813215133566c1f
54ac41142a4e3ce0bf8ca685ebb2b0fd15c9cfbf
'2011-08-19T04:57:25-04:00'
describe
'397449' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFE' 'sip-files00113.jpg'
f4f4d6d63706557ec4406106369fdc06
c3aa5b3f49e4bb67c2847928f414bd20509bcca0
describe
'118786' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFF' 'sip-files00113.QC.jpg'
37a00756388452c1a738f2b7349769d2
ca5e6c70cdda2f3fed19a1da365a4bebe74b53dc
describe
'228194' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFG' 'sip-files00113.jp2'
f5690b69cd80673699ecac2dc76a56fa
c0c864d5980163b93bfa209fd9e1f86cf0be52f6
describe
'407213' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFH' 'sip-files00114.jpg'
704f77fac922a78cf44596a65950a2b8
ba2e53800f0a77725e3f02900b594d8a661cb3c7
describe
'122843' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFI' 'sip-files00114.QC.jpg'
9cbd1ca78282be73493f984a55f583bd
ce79624b4af2e451a44435f90c90da89a7f8de37
'2011-08-19T04:58:49-04:00'
describe
'229399' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFJ' 'sip-files00114.jp2'
67a233d867a67e8c2bdf141e99df02d2
de5c0545459c0a39f957003ddf49dbf512e22174
describe
'279673' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFK' 'sip-files00115.jpg'
cb3c5e47d8ffeed4bb2ea55dac02c6cf
e44afc38275ff8e3b84512ce7ecefb742cde9ed6
describe
'72449' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFL' 'sip-files00115.QC.jpg'
b3bb2620944f66518086ddcffbb4db7b
050d6bea23b475daea85baee33a55b6c9d81e248
describe
'228390' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFM' 'sip-files00115.jp2'
21d9015620f40d3f9fcef928504b832a
d268cea4fd259b68b84957451b08ade02fb6f0f6
'2011-08-19T04:56:41-04:00'
describe
'378714' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFN' 'sip-files00116.jpg'
878e57e006ceeb7e1959b3c43fbed8dd
3a82a0100aa4cd1d736d289abdb8ac14f0a58fc1
describe
'110733' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFO' 'sip-files00116.QC.jpg'
6a76b6a08047911613085c7c087b83c8
8165e5cf83097be891400c4a49b72ad10488844b
describe
'228744' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFP' 'sip-files00116.jp2'
9b2f4415200ca6078274ca8c65984477
2b7bd63cbb0c86fa61d0044dccf358d5de043605
describe
'422057' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFQ' 'sip-files00117.jpg'
cd0e8226d6f7cddfe1b41a5ee9714d57
e1431570d9810a05145bdb604f29594a1e6fc10f
describe
'126256' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFR' 'sip-files00117.QC.jpg'
591db3bb81f7dae32018ec61749bb4e9
593ffafdafdecfc6b585d0b4e24764c472b3049d
describe
'222109' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFS' 'sip-files00117.jp2'
c11d5dd0b5e8d793f0b9f211013c9fc0
5ab9d0e939b1c33c486aac3c21a53c72f05a7455
'2011-08-19T04:54:20-04:00'
describe
'395841' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFT' 'sip-files00118.jpg'
53c2fab33374a4b66055befad916efc2
350846fa63684cbbbb009c7d5e8c0e7b5b9e8776
describe
'118889' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFU' 'sip-files00118.QC.jpg'
f6f5eb6362ada41eef78d7424b4a24a3
fa947cad569445bce7120eefede0b26ca1183463
describe
'231712' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFV' 'sip-files00118.jp2'
a762c6920942c187e0a9095ca03062d8
8ef775600172099c7433d5af81b9cdbcaca90f26
'2011-08-19T05:00:34-04:00'
describe
'408260' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFW' 'sip-files00119.jpg'
fa699b585855eb95a81aefd0beb2bbf5
cd717d566fda998568945440974bdd361f98f8dc
describe
'120536' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFX' 'sip-files00119.QC.jpg'
fe27af34047185ebb54da8df60f4ae90
56d24703da0295061e8456fd7b6ff83f9947b672
describe
'229797' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFY' 'sip-files00119.jp2'
45aca56e8bbbd76b1c1e5f626c7be833
e807acca6cd14b79be6202e821b355832c1bbfda
describe
'394692' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJFZ' 'sip-files00120.jpg'
c26094da05f3c7d8371075471ce545ce
3a043a819a88dba53062a87362018dc3968cfaf1
describe
'118964' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGA' 'sip-files00120.QC.jpg'
f1f716e362f06d87fa6a7d9b07dce986
8c07e3c9a63d5b3670b429e12099cf1b927d1d4a
'2011-08-19T04:59:02-04:00'
describe
'231701' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGB' 'sip-files00120.jp2'
a85094a5da7455405a0488c1fec0f7a1
655edc38fbe11a363df6b3c22f747a5de85bb6c5
'2011-08-19T05:02:50-04:00'
describe
'399035' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGC' 'sip-files00121.jpg'
151b62bd853fc335a2bece29449fb930
1795500ff87f32199c88806238dc55a194917d39
describe
'121020' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGD' 'sip-files00121.QC.jpg'
988763807ebddf1c79c81e058ec7c235
300dbf82e980c8e955cef98bb04e5af20295effb
describe
'241384' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGE' 'sip-files00121.jp2'
96f729394faef99802e9be706e290a93
7d18b6bd61d55cf429b78781300f4558159e559e
describe
'402426' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGF' 'sip-files00122.jpg'
0568bbf199fac96acb65923000c00fa8
eebd3231baf5feb841d4667c8516ab226f797e70
'2011-08-19T04:54:00-04:00'
describe
'121383' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGG' 'sip-files00122.QC.jpg'
bdaa0f9b00ada77c8b312333307d9c13
0b6eb91f0f2dfc0762e81addb308b387a45b49ce
describe
'233183' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGH' 'sip-files00122.jp2'
6f9ceae62eedc308e8f78d58ab8eebfa
3ec015ec91b6077923cffd091da4804f53a3477c
'2011-08-19T05:01:18-04:00'
describe
'400303' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGI' 'sip-files00123.jpg'
d07b93a419866c818ff752a7033c4a2c
3c54c32d08d0bbdb1dbbd3bd393516b749d946b8
describe
'117844' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGJ' 'sip-files00123.QC.jpg'
28c3b3a6ae7479aa9f792e8d414d9f75
8bb4f6569fb35623ff60e7f81c7df8a6bddb38e3
describe
'240751' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGK' 'sip-files00123.jp2'
da16741b2bab2dbdaf950ec97515e21a
84136e7eeec0ded51d400e1704434da32abc39f5
describe
'406902' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGL' 'sip-files00124.jpg'
b2bb42a171362b5bdfa750565fb4370d
67a62fb7603d2d7e62daddf021d2bbeb0ddef987
describe
'122419' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGM' 'sip-files00124.QC.jpg'
822ca6f143e1589498efa106fe3cdd33
284319fbd21a496dbde5a42daa96a0c7fd788788
describe
'230232' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGN' 'sip-files00124.jp2'
cb0d3aa686a7b8610f309e4884c55b15
e2088df86aa012c1213e3007524353c99cf637b4
describe
'400074' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGO' 'sip-files00125.jpg'
3109db6ce368dcf93158703eb3a8d9c5
351bc23572e8d0f57f10ea11c0d08bef06c1bd69
'2011-08-19T04:59:34-04:00'
describe
'120334' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGP' 'sip-files00125.QC.jpg'
e3e1e824e509c1044acf8052165165a7
a3d7157090394d582f7daf67f3da12b06d66d78a
describe
'231488' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGQ' 'sip-files00125.jp2'
9aa92f5482d35cc1d202dc9d9bc1b773
3e744d83439408f980e9cf5f660a1b8a16962ce4
describe
'390839' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGR' 'sip-files00126.jpg'
f7c2b3a3a424307a4de3ed0310ed0118
ba39c0436f383ed54aeb75d98be9a81a47e579d9
'2011-08-19T04:52:29-04:00'
describe
'117402' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGS' 'sip-files00126.QC.jpg'
fc7c6bb66e7d5d2d38fd40f7e0c6d763
fbdac3e56a8022bec851b8b7c353317525f280cf
describe
'230862' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGT' 'sip-files00126.jp2'
185947a94bf074176da3eb3ce8c6c5d7
79cc02ea5088213817044a303cf25a7d1f85bc89
'2011-08-19T05:04:34-04:00'
describe
'401920' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGU' 'sip-files00127.jpg'
989d6d3531713453f661aaad41a2d19a
726e021722eaf54516181166ce24399db64153ff
'2011-08-19T04:52:04-04:00'
describe
'121118' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGV' 'sip-files00127.QC.jpg'
b2c8dcae55ad7a71c22bf5b099a13a93
85817405a25fc614080aca4d5da328e10a7a8d02
'2011-08-19T04:58:11-04:00'
describe
'240756' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGW' 'sip-files00127.jp2'
4718c4d57c033613b83a928867254a1e
2cfa6278b56afcb9c05443bef5c11e8aa2f1089e
'2011-08-19T05:01:10-04:00'
describe
'404557' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGX' 'sip-files00128.jpg'
9e7ff3934f45b064a1a6450e2ff25a0c
513a7ad7c50c2dba5b0e262a313aab92119da437
'2011-08-19T04:57:47-04:00'
describe
'121155' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGY' 'sip-files00128.QC.jpg'
ed6731e0f17b7df0c49b2203ed22a548
6f887b78d8ded0860def6ca427c75ffdb2fa5e27
'2011-08-19T05:00:57-04:00'
describe
'229599' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJGZ' 'sip-files00128.jp2'
1473079120a1b3b9e4d9321bf57d48ec
9930c840261d5ddf7ca3d376bf199008ef7b2aa4
describe
'395152' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHA' 'sip-files00129.jpg'
4eb61c0b4bbffc9c5bd432f57252be28
915f9bca902a65b5787ca3e7a29d59dcd5f381b2
'2011-08-19T04:59:19-04:00'
describe
'116951' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHB' 'sip-files00129.QC.jpg'
d618c6676d40fe45ddb956a71634a26d
f0af18160ac42c5793caa5bc25f7074736b76cdb
describe
'229017' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHC' 'sip-files00129.jp2'
cf3cb3f59b648fdb7755a2a25fba32a5
37a848538142e1a522122a249189f26471e8c3ea
'2011-08-19T04:56:58-04:00'
describe
'386288' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHD' 'sip-files00130.jpg'
25a8986010f94e22c7aee1370836ac45
cf51acb2bda85325f148e9d89e5e97bd2a80eae8
'2011-08-19T05:00:52-04:00'
describe
'116241' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHE' 'sip-files00130.QC.jpg'
b152efebe58a02e2eb214db516cfdf4d
9ddefcd7b359cee9d63067c316e906f99a38445c
describe
'229224' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHF' 'sip-files00130.jp2'
eca5097323eb6e25a4c3567d178c9f3b
0bbaab269fd0db99877c9f6da1bc6744040efc0c
describe
'403344' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHG' 'sip-files00131.jpg'
b3b87783d7689e387f8f2c9b1d3d8902
4994adefe647758916c886134982062468258515
'2011-08-19T04:52:54-04:00'
describe
'119905' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHH' 'sip-files00131.QC.jpg'
784e15ffc7c688a9003858fc07e78ced
fb9a6c5a8876ebe98f81134ec167ba505f2184b4
describe
'240715' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHI' 'sip-files00131.jp2'
4c3dc137530c88d9f3d71dca137f828c
d858516fca749faaab430fe1939aebf539afb0c5
'2011-08-19T04:59:10-04:00'
describe
'406000' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHJ' 'sip-files00132.jpg'
07531ed5b70fc371e650ce6fa79b0364
cbf69c2be9c459f3767f677d6286f65e6288b74e
'2011-08-19T04:53:49-04:00'
describe
'123110' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHK' 'sip-files00132.QC.jpg'
4dcbca99a1ffa7cc7c11cf225e3407ab
6a5e7fa1d0b577355b20394d61d47fc101fda515
describe
'228257' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHL' 'sip-files00132.jp2'
7c361bee4c4fb2d5cb727fca2aadff8f
bf556b5aab91440c316f3a37ce80465eba7cd7dd
'2011-08-19T05:01:53-04:00'
describe
'413064' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHM' 'sip-files00133.jpg'
bb748b5cf10caa7d9820cf78f36cd9be
1eb133b1d101cc537693fc79cee04d5eeb5c52b9
'2011-08-19T05:02:14-04:00'
describe
'123756' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHN' 'sip-files00133.QC.jpg'
4feb50e085d7da1027b0285ec7057099
4d4729deaf187123b77d36b409499746ba6b9d1d
'2011-08-19T04:55:55-04:00'
describe
'227328' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHO' 'sip-files00133.jp2'
2f8ce47de3b25d106f6cd98a1ed37fe5
8bf656cf8ef070f8d3ab6d471b88de38306e08b7
describe
'401299' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHP' 'sip-files00134.jpg'
67d0a5b89664f124318a4a1b0fa81c99
c36ee0a60b816789ec4649231741dfd2a09350ad
describe
'121569' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHQ' 'sip-files00134.QC.jpg'
978abd367f00895769be78561837dcc4
b0d8a3900ac120bf855ad509de5c0f262f8870e1
'2011-08-19T05:02:15-04:00'
describe
'231727' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHR' 'sip-files00134.jp2'
5a209b31ff8fc3bb44224b67cd79f744
26a74a0834747467ae64f8a63dadc38a35d4f3b8
'2011-08-19T05:02:51-04:00'
describe
'416358' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHS' 'sip-files00135.jpg'
602f0e033c628b709ca0451814fcb3d8
57fef97ee5db9373767759dfac5448ef8d6ccd56
describe
'124265' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHT' 'sip-files00135.QC.jpg'
fc38c18b9eeb02704e255c0d6d4eda88
c11c68d16dc14b40e97e561d56b35af92e565ae5
describe
'230020' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHU' 'sip-files00135.jp2'
c25fe4a603292c35b587b2dcce52452d
d057271b54d6a3fa35e7cd834328890ce8a811bd
'2011-08-19T05:01:28-04:00'
describe
'400512' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHV' 'sip-files00136.jpg'
1d7bd8a8f32b3dbc6bc0762b8c99aeb1
379753ab43c64de33a8306c7ca781ff498704bbd
describe
'121762' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHW' 'sip-files00136.QC.jpg'
cc8e58f317004afd55aa9d8d77c5115d
8a1c0bb6c51e9116cd179672f65f7ee9e1082243
describe
'227716' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHX' 'sip-files00136.jp2'
e7318d7994c1fe729ebe6fb2e309aeb1
640759a58fef993ef2dccb6eeb9df14a53ebf669
'2011-08-19T05:01:21-04:00'
describe
'404128' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHY' 'sip-files00137.jpg'
3776f7267cd19c9d62678469adfea3aa
c4354db0f1442d0ba066466dbc9dd9fb7a01d7a4
describe
'122573' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJHZ' 'sip-files00137.QC.jpg'
39f971b2a464b2f67e738515a7bc3cfc
976958a1b2b8e1a2aac862bd38627f89957753dd
describe
'229419' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIA' 'sip-files00137.jp2'
c5a8d83124804dd9159a53ebfa85ad64
3dd87676193ae79ef135c980d47e44e3afa4f95d
'2011-08-19T04:52:58-04:00'
describe
'401996' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIB' 'sip-files00138.jpg'
b0237bd4f6450358af0cc1108ef070c7
f23f04cb9697119f764d649399479a6b84bc0ee9
describe
'121898' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIC' 'sip-files00138.QC.jpg'
7d4689903d5a0839845c065571a9edaa
acd364b722f8f6c170120f2b10b233bbff0b6d2e
'2011-08-19T04:51:10-04:00'
describe
'226884' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJID' 'sip-files00138.jp2'
80cabe9d1866048130be6beb89eacff9
17387d8c99d9cea19d66990415bd8c4ad7fdcc7a
describe
'341211' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIE' 'sip-files00139.jpg'
0970e961f57573a712f870873139bb68
1d2713ff0c97fc9412c02f2b1e42d9224282bc8e
'2011-08-19T04:52:32-04:00'
describe
'95126' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIF' 'sip-files00139.QC.jpg'
faff8fd26f104f6c12105c86fb896b2e
e0a3ca705439dfa85426924cf28b42323bae0a01
describe
'226216' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIG' 'sip-files00139.jp2'
3f1117e7c6c7cd78e681afdb3efb74d2
36a4e7cf8eab3613b4fc707efb6a307cc7383ddc
describe
'375205' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIH' 'sip-files00140.jpg'
48283bc3f026f225174db215555f0b50
ac698f01265895e9cab5571820ba2ee62b295ebe
describe
'108954' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJII' 'sip-files00140.QC.jpg'
4033731b2711be5c5eb306c084b4350d
e06c697437bcbb1f3161bb2fc4da52d25284ab4e
describe
'228979' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIJ' 'sip-files00140.jp2'
81ea18d82bfbe2c622e0d5930384b5c3
6048258fdf150695eb203394d6b31779ec085ae8
describe
'404658' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIK' 'sip-files00141.jpg'
1226acca7c99f9b302af2539b890e542
6e937cbbe628bcde985f31367b26ebfb846b19e7
describe
'121389' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIL' 'sip-files00141.QC.jpg'
cac91065e333811cfacb19de57fbf00c
d42ee59feb67129311d169f7101cc7c8e62e302b
describe
'229207' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIM' 'sip-files00141.jp2'
5f07ba43b8663aa19338b340f4520173
6f121d9fa0710647e63e2d089094930cd706cfd1
describe
'400910' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIN' 'sip-files00142.jpg'
e2b2c634d02b1618c392aa0fe511f8b9
4b2aad8a40d10d0764daf340651f4e5a236986f8
describe
'120611' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIO' 'sip-files00142.QC.jpg'
e1f2e22a828f925bcaee2e4e1771f7bd
4f2b4edc1023209eaf9bd89b8883db320af634a4
describe
'231703' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIP' 'sip-files00142.jp2'
a8349362500853386ec26c989b943721
57243e39642fd5edc5de3426e185dc37747702c4
'2011-08-19T04:55:16-04:00'
describe
'396608' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIQ' 'sip-files00143.jpg'
f788695a5fa1902f607fbe522cbc0b58
e57dfa33883af18f3864a7d0e5dec2a12aa0763f
'2011-08-19T05:04:36-04:00'
describe
'119672' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIR' 'sip-files00143.QC.jpg'
010e07f3236ded5cba5e1779a4cfa98a
f0d1d187469b5ba6931ea4686c0ef64f0a372746
describe
'240768' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIS' 'sip-files00143.jp2'
fce94694f217485412bdb5cefc9d4d9b
8aee0cb7c52007f00c5e648b904675be133f01fb
describe
'404080' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIT' 'sip-files00144.jpg'
85424a4610deca661559a95f39c9f13a
e572ec7cc678540473d95785ad80949dca3eeaf2
describe
'122876' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIU' 'sip-files00144.QC.jpg'
432f330d137336316ada791dc4cc8acc
09fbc9aed6a654402e02d5c63974635267ae5520
describe
'230827' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIV' 'sip-files00144.jp2'
3c7125c26f3216c581fa617f7c4c372d
062c0b4521659f01d70a20e6e7e66a1a186525d1
describe
'409163' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIW' 'sip-files00145.jpg'
bbbfff3306c125d2a84557e7cb425551
79b041988f448e59037464752b035695bbd0ef85
describe
'122989' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIX' 'sip-files00145.QC.jpg'
f38dbe8606c673987e05cce2eea6c49b
fd3557be6c25212298fd4e43bc948b8ba259ae49
'2011-08-19T05:03:38-04:00'
describe
'227089' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIY' 'sip-files00145.jp2'
e543ecb7e8f7d0914099d190149805a6
8cdd97a73ca87f621882532d0dfe05a324d0daef
describe
'395821' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJIZ' 'sip-files00146.jpg'
ce0428f271f4e52b081ab5870d9e723d
f601d0d24d10b4165fe9ece67b00bd7064ac4d16
describe
'119560' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJA' 'sip-files00146.QC.jpg'
355ef182929fc648215428e7e89e3b22
bfebe3cb921ed1008e9a9af7ff25188149664f70
'2011-08-19T05:00:27-04:00'
describe
'229208' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJB' 'sip-files00146.jp2'
e49b30c4a0543882adab9e9ece7f0a3a
53a7e95de46ee159393f913c2503556e13bee9a5
describe
'426723' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJC' 'sip-files00147.jpg'
f69918c69fc336a1a0884544cd799c03
fe3236029b26acc717d904488c37fdfc7eefffad
describe
'127113' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJD' 'sip-files00147.QC.jpg'
0888431b7e91bd60231a8804ac244037
1d60095c7fabd5dacaec3eeb68523928320dbf1b
describe
'224991' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJE' 'sip-files00147.jp2'
c230ea8630704016cf944ec030af7604
d2e43e50ba46373385e18cfe50675299cdfc379c
'2011-08-19T04:59:53-04:00'
describe
'403307' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJF' 'sip-files00148.jpg'
1ae699351b22e430bcd0c2e5e005218c
0a4b9e7db07e1c07eb4cb759d592d97f7ea39f82
describe
'120721' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJG' 'sip-files00148.QC.jpg'
c0340fe2bb1b7997581534468dd2caf8
8359fef8bf895157e9c1e2352f6fffafcc991d86
'2011-08-19T04:55:18-04:00'
describe
'226643' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJH' 'sip-files00148.jp2'
87c115c8033f09d783e7678b9e8c72df
c0b47138f90cc748d35a7de57a31c7c9541293b9
describe
'407551' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJI' 'sip-files00149.jpg'
cb3a88019a0f87f81951fd537e9e3b25
deb5adfc2aad3d1358084502487d454b5a5607e4
describe
'123237' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJJ' 'sip-files00149.QC.jpg'
be778d740841b031e376d5c152ef2a68
2a6edcbf990a2f6fb2f566d4c185c6ae297b1476
'2011-08-19T05:02:31-04:00'
describe
'230019' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJK' 'sip-files00149.jp2'
6437834feb2a2f6c58ef7c85a4957a64
86298e489effe5c078b8ba6276ba2ba03cdefba5
describe
'394189' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJL' 'sip-files00150.jpg'
0cc04d5542d7d0bccd7a2eb04b2e7d2d
9f9255e49e927323f19a3a44134e8b734e04ff5c
describe
'119303' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJM' 'sip-files00150.QC.jpg'
8c5d4e13d74de487d291953b24414458
6e3f51ec86f0d37371927fbe144bc9af043758c0
'2011-08-19T04:52:59-04:00'
describe
'228306' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJN' 'sip-files00150.jp2'
9f1569160d335fb763acb796c21386c3
cdab02c4e9043bc9a6d809d07977036df756a9ee
'2011-08-19T05:00:36-04:00'
describe
'403209' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJO' 'sip-files00151.jpg'
82b71d5e553307400b6ad7ae69d98727
48473989ddd52ba767b7fa2508658495206d7b70
'2011-08-19T04:59:04-04:00'
describe
'120342' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJP' 'sip-files00151.QC.jpg'
9cf792f30c4a7dc845a3cf1f980bdcd5
e95826e902f39afcda601fd660843dd2006d10c7
describe
'227109' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJQ' 'sip-files00151.jp2'
a301a18ead1b0c391bcc7a4aecad1aeb
be4c0bdd3f61c997cf5013088fba115654c94d94
describe
'284148' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJR' 'sip-files00152.jpg'
cc75b98088327b16fdc5aea42d4d9a27
082548c41eec2f38b6f08cbc740adbb5f5d12557
'2011-08-19T05:04:11-04:00'
describe
'73467' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJS' 'sip-files00152.QC.jpg'
b609c8065c256ad7216d7fe707dbaca3
2ca71f261f612e66d975cf170d2e9d7027e79678
describe
'228045' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJT' 'sip-files00152.jp2'
a88c0fdbb9c10ebdd2ea16b01be707a3
2100b21f8935dcf4a4b29f9231421c4bd3e4a71b
describe
'403830' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJU' 'sip-files00153.jpg'
6ddfd14e859233c60f13ae53b9c17446
5c8c8fa68a8a6280a4bc3303889fe5afefdb720d
'2011-08-19T05:04:38-04:00'
describe
'117265' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJV' 'sip-files00153.QC.jpg'
d0512f3152345f9dc23d565675698a45
b82d3980607a668ba271072a817ad96efb3b2f78
'2011-08-19T04:59:16-04:00'
describe
'220500' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJW' 'sip-files00153.jp2'
0a4253a02769b387b247a493bee378e2
1b57e575c907ff6dda15dda67df9dc25666f2517
'2011-08-19T04:54:30-04:00'
describe
'415335' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJX' 'sip-files00154.jpg'
d977246c26981737b3aaaf10f12e0868
390a7933223069fdf202454f65da33253ba90e4c
describe
'124569' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJY' 'sip-files00154.QC.jpg'
0aae73f7d0ecc0e38ad8f8c2ac7edc74
32995f06f90e2f7053423b4b0a9b9a9e983b3046
describe
'227946' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJJZ' 'sip-files00154.jp2'
e4e9278fdedca968bc08eb89d0d8230c
a6764c6dd42a1d36fd1189aa3b5257a097253a67
describe
'407570' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKA' 'sip-files00155.jpg'
469826c5ba3b942e1d02d851abfe692c
d089c8908caf5fbd2bf19be4b86d7453b0f257d0
'2011-08-19T04:59:21-04:00'
describe
'122062' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKB' 'sip-files00155.QC.jpg'
116c84d7b47a980c03b8b6596a8d1125
30bce2dd20d0c53d538944996f8049b5247ec6f0
'2011-08-19T04:56:48-04:00'
describe
'228566' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKC' 'sip-files00155.jp2'
3c355d9e1d8d2adf3f57059539199b35
aa0c2b3e455c179792bebf94a00d308370c4225b
describe
'407628' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKD' 'sip-files00156.jpg'
2896477385622c072cab8d5a93ec7470
c69fe3018caabd49c724ddedccf6ca754ba66c1f
'2011-08-19T04:52:33-04:00'
describe
'122889' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKE' 'sip-files00156.QC.jpg'
806ed6e5e947babff2684da7051147e5
3da8f827b4f8144f4f9bce9585c7fa1961c4ee93
'2011-08-19T05:01:40-04:00'
describe
'229389' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKF' 'sip-files00156.jp2'
a1e9416e8efa0657aca26a3edaccc51c
068a05d4b7714b0a2a53f29d79ce4e86bf074e53
describe
'423793' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKG' 'sip-files00157.jpg'
bdfc6cc818872a2e067d2973a4073d1f
bd8417aa0ba8b7ba65f61d6c82f95671791930c4
'2011-08-19T05:01:09-04:00'
describe
'128437' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKH' 'sip-files00157.QC.jpg'
33de3cb415f8e3e9b541c295e763bb50
37924dfd274be6603b4cb1af4a68514f35296180
describe
'220329' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKI' 'sip-files00157.jp2'
0a5bbdf91a468def27780d9d8ca5ceb7
5fee9a32bb24fc98abbcba3659283c147ce018a7
describe
'399633' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKJ' 'sip-files00158.jpg'
61a816467db47e30514989b9805ac0ed
900dfbfec618ef36d3d1d2e63f706cc4252a5244
describe
'120391' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKK' 'sip-files00158.QC.jpg'
23132a43f5e0e64f8eedc0b33136f756
46d26d384ff2ffdbbe1afa20963870f624c15e0c
'2011-08-19T05:04:29-04:00'
describe
'228796' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKL' 'sip-files00158.jp2'
fd399fe07910ab67f077564f111c41f2
b7a1a60aa6518572aaa2454a8e4c233f70b95711
'2011-08-19T05:01:01-04:00'
describe
'397241' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKM' 'sip-files00159.jpg'
320535a7e4955622eb55102463420282
2eacd127886c1cb085550987eb6f61e0e6d7d9f2
'2011-08-19T05:03:11-04:00'
describe
'119349' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKN' 'sip-files00159.QC.jpg'
0957cb23273c6b4f8d2f123afd3f586d
90dd1db2b4385c72293f4f6b1ab7366a1ba0b764
'2011-08-19T04:54:43-04:00'
describe
'230466' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKO' 'sip-files00159.jp2'
6562a9bf4fe8bdb09fdb17eebbff28ce
72f27f7627e28d34a32d9f8953b1d9a3f84e13ad
describe
'398738' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKP' 'sip-files00160.jpg'
8a6ec03b2bc4453917d095a5de78b65d
29337e4a3546e72b746735b5173e13aaba623c62
describe
'118911' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKQ' 'sip-files00160.QC.jpg'
a46d389d33305b195283f790dc3bb38f
b693e30c232c452ad158a9ee2b68d5d4db38dbf3
'2011-08-19T04:53:43-04:00'
describe
'230225' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKR' 'sip-files00160.jp2'
b2c507d9385a8dc25049fe430390085e
1b1053c964291a5f146b3823217bd5ba99ffb2f3
'2011-08-19T05:01:50-04:00'
describe
'404899' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKS' 'sip-files00161.jpg'
0957713556f066722ea1b68e0461bc53
c476256f3bc9e9faa134a425348e9994671ff132
describe
'120054' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKT' 'sip-files00161.QC.jpg'
8eacf3424dbf4c92abdd74fd5042051c
229368d76a099177eb68a31ec14e18b191015e1f
describe
'223962' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKU' 'sip-files00161.jp2'
e19526962e41d3e5c0b8f36bc5948938
04df6fe4f0e4fdbdcc9f64c42dacd7c7fdfb5306
'2011-08-19T04:54:56-04:00'
describe
'388222' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKV' 'sip-files00162.jpg'
c86823fbea511fa6b8596b4c0c6ef250
2227389e62f7c26e5ec207ac6a847bf9bd044d35
describe
'115569' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKW' 'sip-files00162.QC.jpg'
26f172e73f1a304550905b4f37b289ff
ebdf24bce4ad2d9d0828a6b9bbfb8ddb6718d161
describe
'231483' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKX' 'sip-files00162.jp2'
9a173ab5d7b26ad02b2a4ba45761d341
c2c5be722eae60e24f9e4cefa8a1e11c4f09319d
describe
'409873' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKY' 'sip-files00163.jpg'
f104efe672aa9c3318dc244af452b265
3dcbcc82506080ff9843faac2ccc302e4e6638ac
describe
'123425' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJKZ' 'sip-files00163.QC.jpg'
9dce027ff4e623c8b54f894d8d56a84c
2a86399650a66a626c682a2e54254d7b7754e495
describe
'226321' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLA' 'sip-files00163.jp2'
d1c098bf98fed82a85573492ebf827d7
61a81196cd67bd4be905331959133b673ba1b90e
describe
'400002' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLB' 'sip-files00164.jpg'
73784c3a0390175973132beb1fcccacc
155bdb22176c4034698b27f0f738c86fe8ee05f3
describe
'120375' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLC' 'sip-files00164.QC.jpg'
238c96cb567775a1c2f549d6c63b42d5
27a2885af51812584dfd924b70b6c998b9a744ca
describe
'229402' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLD' 'sip-files00164.jp2'
5c130dfc12fb2dbba62c658391ace758
24a69f7608c0fd77a10fb71e9e140187258882cd
'2011-08-19T04:57:51-04:00'
describe
'400277' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLE' 'sip-files00165.jpg'
5cd62053210a8167b11978d6d7f84ace
18c1d5d56bac7b41c79a04ba7f79db62cbab2f0a
describe
'118685' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLF' 'sip-files00165.QC.jpg'
0422c44a9ed0dc8aa14d2cfa4235c0cd
aa05dc16d8636f5979aaeff21199f05e033a94c9
'2011-08-19T04:58:04-04:00'
describe
'234425' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLG' 'sip-files00165.jp2'
2ea2363f9cda8bdc06d72be0ab55358f
bef3c7bac6062c557a3f92c90ebf927f0caeb529
describe
'400778' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLH' 'sip-files00166.jpg'
307a2dd0e480e7a613017968d3370b88
c755fc0a62b4f27c5cbff7ebe9dc029e3789af33
describe
'121317' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLI' 'sip-files00166.QC.jpg'
cf1495f96fc9d1170426fb6c92f0dfd6
05822373c67bbbedb9369b6431338362e0c121eb
'2011-08-19T05:00:35-04:00'
describe
'230029' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLJ' 'sip-files00166.jp2'
a775a314a544f0bf14c8c6d23ba1e7f5
273938081db4ac8dc6ee6625cdab05a0b0f719f6
describe
'402403' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLK' 'sip-files00167.jpg'
837c7dd0d4beea91221e31dcde2998ee
5d8486586f5c2f9a668c2f5d11d2a6105e4f5656
'2011-08-19T04:52:05-04:00'
describe
'122019' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLL' 'sip-files00167.QC.jpg'
ce775d4aec0bab2b979794ab1bbe5501
d9503561e699a6d1ea3f51ad6f6661273835428b
'2011-08-19T05:00:50-04:00'
describe
'231853' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLM' 'sip-files00167.jp2'
71fc5a7d8968b4308fa8a5f778625ea3
aad228841257eccb617cbba1cafcb66077f3f80b
describe
'395666' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLN' 'sip-files00168.jpg'
5fe29b7677708111d60bb7da9e2a215a
7058d3dfce657ed2363cc7742bfcc47cae9ba65e
'2011-08-19T05:01:31-04:00'
describe
'119820' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLO' 'sip-files00168.QC.jpg'
509c663560b7601e37ea4dbbbc863ac3
260b901ff710ffd566ec22f9da7d51489d31c789
describe
'227283' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLP' 'sip-files00168.jp2'
f5f0e70d94e41449b80e61357a87e871
a61f7d78e32dd84c3a82cc69f36ceb6baef0bf8b
'2011-08-19T05:00:23-04:00'
describe
'407596' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLQ' 'sip-files00169.jpg'
0585fc6ea95b5b0ef4153dbca5c5dda2
fcfdea9f9cf945259ea1ede8730cd1d52ac08938
describe
'122404' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLR' 'sip-files00169.QC.jpg'
300acffb6b4e11aa53ed44891d0e0558
0453d119a794dd42b7356e7de1422c446437d8ac
describe
'230632' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLS' 'sip-files00169.jp2'
393ae9a3fba55b77b61472507758c1aa
e4854e37e600e8b9ea86eb0c13624f13d0beadbf
'2011-08-19T04:59:50-04:00'
describe
'384401' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLT' 'sip-files00170.jpg'
8dcf6918f4a32d8f566b88e33453f024
545a5908e4e088ec1172b4d5cfe327d059aa20ae
describe
'114244' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLU' 'sip-files00170.QC.jpg'
410d7adf17c792501e9d9904ece92c3e
34565b8f5ae5250c28bdc1992b42fadca4f8811b
describe
'230856' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLV' 'sip-files00170.jp2'
0cb5c333c16734b0053f2ec996ff1e60
2511ab02558d972ffd98bd489dbb3289374f5ff3
describe
'390156' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLW' 'sip-files00171.jpg'
e6a29be7c15f2e06349af2412ad4d52e
89daf1820a1275bcda7b02f3441482bfbeb2bc16
'2011-08-19T05:04:37-04:00'
describe
'115437' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLX' 'sip-files00171.QC.jpg'
d5df5d24c7a678db6e7c8e180454491f
88d8edf91510082bdf55b1934945ef6e18cd82cc
describe
'227094' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLY' 'sip-files00171.jp2'
d5ae38417cacafa42aca29f04f7d5e61
7b8a6d1d6013c73fed1e643af70898fb001b3d0e
describe
'378946' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJLZ' 'sip-files00172.jpg'
537f517840c523e9f83e325257ce1e69
693fe6fd922e666cb8413ce35b8816671d3d33b0
describe
'114379' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMA' 'sip-files00172.QC.jpg'
184bdad74aa12b79b6194bd343828bee
5b0095fbef23c52998e24a965727b7133a0b4e60
'2011-08-19T04:55:28-04:00'
describe
'229628' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMB' 'sip-files00172.jp2'
544e7d0bd283c28348d81203e81b50c6
13a976427e2f90234d89ba6e9c50155be4b19c04
describe
'420046' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMC' 'sip-files00173.jpg'
36482f53ec4ecea5d77dbf5e6d794012
b223194a8be47322535a9bdba4309d0e425b152f
'2011-08-19T05:00:32-04:00'
describe
'126698' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMD' 'sip-files00173.QC.jpg'
7f1d496ba606989d39c45393bed526ca
5c28a3303cb633e3753edcb5b7b5e31673205ced
describe
'226666' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJME' 'sip-files00173.jp2'
64e81289e3183507c6aa0b59f78989c3
9f2032b7cb44187d96a5f809e735e68b5a1d1a49
describe
'396322' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMF' 'sip-files00174.jpg'
6b1f88c55af6df528ecbc8520422a4c9
016c624dfb5a574076f6ac29731990e75905de00
'2011-08-19T04:52:15-04:00'
describe
'120897' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMG' 'sip-files00174.QC.jpg'
2cb40e17caaec2340d1d7f42ee0f6c83
13656140a6c7353440346161b6d952e6092d65c6
describe
'227495' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMH' 'sip-files00174.jp2'
3ca22e1fc5a62d301fdf8ee281ae1fc4
ece23be3f2952f6d09f0fafecd565e479d95ec1f
'2011-08-19T04:59:26-04:00'
describe
'408720' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMI' 'sip-files00175.jpg'
901f055c0b0a479360926696c54a730f
2070281520af51b2c5c2b56cc732000c98687e69
describe
'122486' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMJ' 'sip-files00175.QC.jpg'
422a1f2d1956ece3ab7a3ef632ef1497
bfaa4f994c7504492cc9f501c69cde78d7d360f6
describe
'222384' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMK' 'sip-files00175.jp2'
a631516444ff6ed1ffc80233b0f62c71
1f212e585ad728d8257a618ebb16199dc56da212
'2011-08-19T05:04:08-04:00'
describe
'403416' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJML' 'sip-files00176.jpg'
98ae18bd36e3859c1f06d495a5b236d8
4bb68aea6b5daae4afeb2e8aadd25f930facee07
'2011-08-19T04:56:47-04:00'
describe
'121875' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMM' 'sip-files00176.QC.jpg'
4c1b4fd8f3d19e856e8db0fe7a573fe1
95051507e4e9d2728db4227cf34201541c26820a
describe
'222577' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMN' 'sip-files00176.jp2'
f909b1d4ea5d05d77612ec97f29fbf08
20dbca3153e23f7891dcdcdf958298486d76f5e6
'2011-08-19T04:55:25-04:00'
describe
'412427' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMO' 'sip-files00177.jpg'
6bb17dcf948b27efcc0622bbc4383c68
13042062495fc944716d888600f2a3c4cbe34843
describe
'124251' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMP' 'sip-files00177.QC.jpg'
b0c818cf18bf9226f4f9b6548c4fda9e
1681c16f3635dffec29369b3cc3d7566207fe85d
'2011-08-19T04:53:58-04:00'
describe
'223143' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMQ' 'sip-files00177.jp2'
e879bc07d31a9643c5bccc0d4e921663
092a7b8b5429fc50646d12af2310baf933cc4002
describe
'397048' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMR' 'sip-files00178.jpg'
8edd9352e5fd5915008091eb526b9051
ff4353c82d40ea6b4b0971fc73deae1352d1b1e7
'2011-08-19T05:03:19-04:00'
describe
'119988' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMS' 'sip-files00178.QC.jpg'
77983e5700f0766d78da63dc93354a03
6f9060e20f1f31a32e4f7171359e4af4e39f5a45
describe
'227945' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMT' 'sip-files00178.jp2'
08574569c44715e1b80bbb0d3f7a01f3
04be1f9879bcc30aa4fe0b80f15400f175e6b8b4
describe
'411486' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMU' 'sip-files00179.jpg'
e34cb1d6776c000adb00885e607e6f21
0871f390b7a9449f7d68f345d460868284951cfa
describe
'122949' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMV' 'sip-files00179.QC.jpg'
d0717983f348de18cfb77b7d092549c2
8bcfd49aa5742c2b2488403440b03e5e3ab3d7f6
describe
'228349' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMW' 'sip-files00179.jp2'
f61e558a63fe4d639c059c0744cb22ad
2b3bc8292738e3baa91ae89c1fb02564436e6839
describe
'392980' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMX' 'sip-files00180.jpg'
7e4df9325f6535767c0d0cdeab3e46a1
9823cc6d29f06161a86b071d055680f2c129b24c
describe
'118771' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMY' 'sip-files00180.QC.jpg'
8f1ad0f9b4d0990ab030eca609c8da4f
c53df3876927b9d794c418faf766a25862c4b890
describe
'228972' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJMZ' 'sip-files00180.jp2'
27c1fea735e162ad27d8ffca33f8e3ac
fad2eec3e2ff2f063b35f225baafdeac27859b23
'2011-08-19T05:02:11-04:00'
describe
'403359' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNA' 'sip-files00181.jpg'
0b99e18b4721a223cae59daa914e340f
682a68ac5c398547a78612c54868768c87795480
describe
'119103' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNB' 'sip-files00181.QC.jpg'
cbca5369287f0cd2c499b7c5885f03e9
9e985900d996c3859e85987c80b08910362e9c02
describe
'230025' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNC' 'sip-files00181.jp2'
7a317e89f520b2dcf9b9549c7287511b
3beed17c580974bd962c90058efe728fbdd871a5
'2011-08-19T04:57:55-04:00'
describe
'392034' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJND' 'sip-files00182.jpg'
abcfe25909365abfcf0786f77f2c75ff
81eb4cfd983177951756963486ad3c79142f1f1f
'2011-08-19T04:57:48-04:00'
describe
'118902' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNE' 'sip-files00182.QC.jpg'
6df70d20f7db6e3821fbfe13d9502c0a
78cc998757f3bc03746460baa1ed9c956c336c3e
describe
'227922' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNF' 'sip-files00182.jp2'
969acebfe34ce234442de534bb174353
46917c9a993b8ef89ecdca089f079b51aa4fc400
describe
'415180' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNG' 'sip-files00183.jpg'
a7f0545f5c88bf8266c8756aaa11f4f7
28561ca08f3e1af3f65578ee01eb0837780b8754
'2011-08-19T04:55:32-04:00'
describe
'126144' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNH' 'sip-files00183.QC.jpg'
97597f19188b7a4248916df97102cb54
c78b22176ed949bc9cad97bc97fb31773a265fc3
describe
'226790' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNI' 'sip-files00183.jp2'
6fabadb3efa10656b173604ad9bb13c9
3dd7d5079db49b344b4372db8a8b03dff0636112
describe
'394555' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNJ' 'sip-files00184.jpg'
47f540256d3f81a66b877a1c0e1b7afb
ec1f31adb67e2c2ad2f1e90c9d85a70a29acb9c2
describe
'119710' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNK' 'sip-files00184.QC.jpg'
fe2d4382623601533441053a2d307c40
94cbae0b1364765216663b577e521219eecc7ee8
'2011-08-19T05:02:17-04:00'
describe
'225041' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNL' 'sip-files00184.jp2'
186f02115046831be00103a3be028ec8
af2ba047c55f1e8726e17d2a07912d7970f415a1
describe
'397617' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNM' 'sip-files00185.jpg'
fbd66ec7b8dc65be5735eb8e42060786
174767b9d72cd9041cdd3c9c93e7bbe365136451
'2011-08-19T04:52:40-04:00'
describe
'117845' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNN' 'sip-files00185.QC.jpg'
a55307eb8e9c149406eb4bf23fd616e8
bec343114fc241e4e9d6ac626c742bca5f6f1818
describe
'231881' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNO' 'sip-files00185.jp2'
b309e72cf7400db677caef9d34bbd0dc
c377dce87442f17b4cc1557db06635c4b5472c54
describe
'384134' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNP' 'sip-files00186.jpg'
8a5a252c9777cd34ba484d62595716d8
3831834431720df2857ff3e202e56ec7462b9e11
describe
'114116' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNQ' 'sip-files00186.QC.jpg'
18d2c28954f15f383fe947333f3d5a64
4ed7c8c6513a0fbe159b23cb398978fde6605a00
describe
'231702' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNR' 'sip-files00186.jp2'
9fe0a8a9598d95d203a6abb34023e0b5
6ae1a07808ec61e91e0dcec1390421b5cd5d2376
'2011-08-19T04:58:15-04:00'
describe
'404199' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNS' 'sip-files00187.jpg'
fcf9cc85ce409ef4350578fe843d6b28
2dc1c26f5ea22f940d918dc9a793d074a50b746e
describe
'121445' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNT' 'sip-files00187.QC.jpg'
346306f5c509e07f86685684cf488a25
00d3cf00e02e8be302e9f1f799379bfe8fdca459
'2011-08-19T04:54:04-04:00'
describe
'229772' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNU' 'sip-files00187.jp2'
fef11060a279d8a4c67a0ef2cf8caadf
41e524ca8d1bc9e244dbfe3fe323142bcfc5f8fb
describe
'396161' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNV' 'sip-files00188.jpg'
6d47ffb95bbe26bc3f7ffeb0f8431ec8
e9ff24f91974b8ef5863cddfd4ae2d809189c3f5
describe
'120038' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNW' 'sip-files00188.QC.jpg'
c25e06232b880cfda907075a3c17aab3
a33c37e97d0208902f9e5b7bb2c6a9f83ee2f4de
describe
'223746' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNX' 'sip-files00188.jp2'
ede7df5c50850eed1fdecc9b4db70b2d
38b9115264526c514edb8897d168505498bad79c
describe
'393699' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNY' 'sip-files00189.jpg'
ea5b5e6f004c7ea9e02020ea7a972616
d380a150e06981eb7a057167cafea1ce92fbff6d
'2011-08-19T04:55:49-04:00'
describe
'116463' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJNZ' 'sip-files00189.QC.jpg'
efdaba2c621f5eb834f8f51590d392c6
149648e44ef206b25cf3cbd3aa7eafbc23839b64
describe
'231084' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOA' 'sip-files00189.jp2'
b0b11d845307c972d24cda4c5b553981
b574db62c863b47f1f985cf650e79f92c59b9da6
describe
'385177' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOB' 'sip-files00190.jpg'
d829b4b8754632f61e8b6c9e0cf138c9
5c5a4664543cb3f2928273768704a3505b2a89f9
describe
'115139' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOC' 'sip-files00190.QC.jpg'
0bc1e2c61ccd0e173fa7eb07d8e2b005
b3c5b695a6a2a5c0d96a43490a22066b6ee69bd2
describe
'231901' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOD' 'sip-files00190.jp2'
c27ec1d8626cc7df855ea88e2cb6a668
f7747e01c3af24bd4c5cee6ae55b277be40196b4
describe
'387641' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOE' 'sip-files00191.jpg'
eb108f2c95f687fba4bb643723a8a258
9e899047710b6fcd5aafedc77713d7c6e9385345
describe
'114879' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOF' 'sip-files00191.QC.jpg'
b8be6aa6ba466f0582f1e1ff2148391e
49eabbc409123033f797ffbe085c1390b3478fb4
'2011-08-19T04:58:51-04:00'
describe
'240752' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOG' 'sip-files00191.jp2'
7af3b14a6171e7c79119a59a69a0bbf2
f9e3ddc3b0773dfaf36a7ac70d27e11a31d5798d
describe
'346858' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOH' 'sip-files00192.jpg'
0784aaeac1264d166014b651e0679f56
e5776239def20d240c1716fab63d561e0d7589cc
describe
'99116' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOI' 'sip-files00192.QC.jpg'
12894c156d823346d327c91d3cb74ab6
5f214b4d4d9b7f612cc98c61373a236d6a68ae18
describe
'226127' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOJ' 'sip-files00192.jp2'
9c16ff9993e0e547978ea4142acc85ba
5cdbb84d426a4cebd2c4abf063e63640f5c8b5b2
describe
'383949' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOK' 'sip-files00193.jpg'
78583753928929a7b82246ae85f2bcf8
2d417cac49d09b615feb13ba02409a0ae880cb34
describe
'109121' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOL' 'sip-files00193.QC.jpg'
3ff5d335721007e2966fab428a528042
8a15a333e7944e4bf83ad93d6d2deab46d778810
describe
'231290' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOM' 'sip-files00193.jp2'
81faced579c364d19a13f692c019dd41
ff050f677a8e6cb4cffc05d80f077858dc6f0385
'2011-08-19T04:57:49-04:00'
describe
'407048' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJON' 'sip-files00194.jpg'
ee882f025fac33c1677570720ead19e9
8919d61da974638f5bc1d4c2656a69711b68c10f
describe
'121903' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOO' 'sip-files00194.QC.jpg'
4ca0e97e9868a712ac5d60ffc6063750
6a87cd7966f54d3eba2c4dd9c26d3ab7c0733658
describe
'227309' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOP' 'sip-files00194.jp2'
69104df55d07f71ca189cd275149fd5c
1321b016a18ec24f5b52d28d45dfeafa505311d8
describe
'409127' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOQ' 'sip-files00195.jpg'
c87370e2c276f60974997380c1566189
a889d2a7e4db65aa72dbed18826b7152df4c10b5
describe
'124346' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOR' 'sip-files00195.QC.jpg'
edb10ecb866febdc3343f651c7473e58
47ebac57cece5cda600d88eb8e4886dfc4d1c57b
describe
'231452' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOS' 'sip-files00195.jp2'
a650259b5b4268094ee8a07e31297740
8e26d0f5c1d548035d8c3a6654bcd38e76b48643
'2011-08-19T04:51:25-04:00'
describe
'397411' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOT' 'sip-files00196.jpg'
de4afd9e2393168e11acb3cc1fe564c7
3d640b522b98d7e4c0db0bc42335ca7f97aaf4fe
describe
'119403' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOU' 'sip-files00196.QC.jpg'
d0509f99d35a8be6bf546a732cdfcad8
66c7c4b6e4fa37bc86df12afd5e5bc866bcb025e
describe
'235692' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOV' 'sip-files00196.jp2'
220bd125eee09365c869aa1fcc5f1112
7bb42ead90f5e49d33158aa39b4f6c00513a1484
describe
'412774' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOW' 'sip-files00197.jpg'
0dcb110c350e14a4886019d5077b0fdc
85cbd90f299dd3f474c69c8e94c1de90f3a3d4d4
describe
'124555' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOX' 'sip-files00197.QC.jpg'
4d89d9fbc17b09e427e0e59eee90ca87
ecceb06492b9250772af1d3b2fe5769f89bda5de
describe
'227752' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOY' 'sip-files00197.jp2'
419f2ba0922039431550f108a7b3e48b
31644f14a77aa0dd0bd2d6ff12b2a36d4d94ad65
'2011-08-19T05:03:53-04:00'
describe
'400359' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJOZ' 'sip-files00198.jpg'
33f3eaeb886439dde2872e773166a652
590a3399820c38e41c5b05c6e5f7afab7b35c476
'2011-08-19T04:52:38-04:00'
describe
'121712' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPA' 'sip-files00198.QC.jpg'
66c13ca4cdb52363b005f3c550f2c964
84ac0e5d6c1789a1f4c886fbbe453a2daa997d58
describe
'229618' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPB' 'sip-files00198.jp2'
d32371c67adc81a8383a4217e0b0b3ca
b34bd3b69bfc5e8064cf43c7a83431c79394abfb
describe
'414458' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPC' 'sip-files00199.jpg'
ce1a404471d5a5d119748b28111b314b
3a419fc5351b927f3c5f04c88edaa17e4de7b247
describe
'124489' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPD' 'sip-files00199.QC.jpg'
802ffb329645a6f32a116fcc093f4634
4cfb5c7b0498c451a27d7bef626482786e056f15
describe
'226309' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPE' 'sip-files00199.jp2'
511faf438d1ab16aa3a579eb2a7e1bdc
86eabe60d6e692cf80e3ea5d62c038e2cbec81f8
describe
'395894' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPF' 'sip-files00200.jpg'
d6f4f20a9e56184acc15b11138297f74
5121467255b46a7cc3fbf20458f29a2f78554739
describe
'119822' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPG' 'sip-files00200.QC.jpg'
f05a24e4b4ec7d38ae738dfe89713e3b
f9f78978d1d3272f28cfd616aec0db5f43e908ce
describe
'229453' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPH' 'sip-files00200.jp2'
c5029632c8422c40f76bbecc9ba0c649
94dafc654fd05e9a5bbdf76219148228993409f6
describe
'408927' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPI' 'sip-files00201.jpg'
a8f764a0f6cd7ece93c0862c5bc3aa0b
05094bd01d93ae212ee5031723c5a5f7f9f825f6
describe
'123209' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPJ' 'sip-files00201.QC.jpg'
56d0b0596dc457a11bc6a65ea92d8057
7b6e6fb5d58961ae92686f9f1421b17c1eb7f613
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPK' 'sip-files00201.jp2'
b0a3e5f826394ea7aab27d5fda4bd284
f6f87ae0ff10f9a68db4c2e4bdfb723cd69e75fb
describe
'388594' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPL' 'sip-files00202.jpg'
8a5ad4259a1ac3f93b5be51ce35cd086
63998795bd55c6a472f951d6360b76ef30240cde
describe
'116049' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPM' 'sip-files00202.QC.jpg'
d6f4725c3b2fb6ac65f57baeb0a5017a
8e01738e5709b31faae24f140da06091038d1f6e
describe
'227925' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPN' 'sip-files00202.jp2'
6d3fc1e5784375b5a41e8b57045d4e6d
97412e351b90977769f61a1dee775912f66f2612
'2011-08-19T04:59:24-04:00'
describe
'417941' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPO' 'sip-files00203.jpg'
927cafe15229397e0348f6b7898607a5
1e9aa55bd1124564062958614c602dc09c870c43
describe
'125216' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPP' 'sip-files00203.QC.jpg'
8635fcd16c0bf370ab3b691156cc5a0b
3eaf00810f08d01ffeb0ec069c3d73fe472e8c34
'2011-08-19T05:01:43-04:00'
describe
'222556' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPQ' 'sip-files00203.jp2'
f0b4dbeccd9e9576469dd11ce37bcaaf
e190c53fe0eba45325d21b2a0c0675da4b4efddd
describe
'408878' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPR' 'sip-files00204.jpg'
0139aac1b58253b4f856c12ffed71587
37acf6ea5cee863b0a2c23a33088aca9b5547cea
describe
'124409' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPS' 'sip-files00204.QC.jpg'
b3a14d162e91d8555ed439c19f2495a9
18d58589268f520d9d2302321cc86d5283ca1318
describe
'227245' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPT' 'sip-files00204.jp2'
9efcbc8467fee9c2f73368b64431343c
6eb9c9bc5facbdb50f1cb6d88a91dd6291c63750
describe
'400422' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPU' 'sip-files00205.jpg'
8a395800dfc89778750a7c9b8668e4d8
09d73c268b42e88068730a8a60c2454352913edd
describe
'119660' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPV' 'sip-files00205.QC.jpg'
19908804216c9f98b4b1eee15584a3c1
74f07e2ead6f7a40915a53c755eb84edfb7b9e45
describe
'229610' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPW' 'sip-files00205.jp2'
7c53a090eae91c15c9629c9737e0a08e
1ef15692f8beaac5a33c65349dd6483026d2dcd1
'2011-08-19T04:57:29-04:00'
describe
'397266' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPX' 'sip-files00206.jpg'
8bb64daf69966f689a8849854c71ceda
fd6e9797d0f70f81fa6681238d2ea7f916a1736f
describe
'120635' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPY' 'sip-files00206.QC.jpg'
4ff9278d32545fa08da9f64e262a77af
d125cb70bfae796bc3326c577329927a3a356fe7
'2011-08-19T04:56:21-04:00'
describe
'230633' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJPZ' 'sip-files00206.jp2'
79386e364f7dbcabb434f4e6582fefbb
ff147d81d527e0760fc69a5b1da89256115f5c73
describe
'398206' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQA' 'sip-files00207.jpg'
fadfcb4984ab64daa3571bb75a7e6ba9
3d29f3e0f26609ce6a7d6bf6323d3513a8de1c28
describe
'119266' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQB' 'sip-files00207.QC.jpg'
9a3ffae8d495fbeb35a7e2fc0519a84a
4a9c0838825e7a662ecb9320f12e829403814e18
describe
'227960' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQC' 'sip-files00207.jp2'
f15de3c0ce6881d0209a86c47c4c5dd0
5a2a3fe9322b6adad3e2db6d317ae6db8a6bf094
'2011-08-19T04:55:04-04:00'
describe
'373971' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQD' 'sip-files00208.jpg'
e293a180d1b388cf83b7861570f3a7ff
127f06238ccf1c607e2cbf6e6a95ed31b7611310
describe
'111872' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQE' 'sip-files00208.QC.jpg'
2d33854fc2e1baaeb4d0a08987651f64
7b6e0e0d6e540fd49877053b19e67d97af2c9447
describe
'244328' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQF' 'sip-files00208.jp2'
e39b340e6c9e12754e3fc9cdf3a975c0
1c175116cf95450da75e2d3b573c688b4612dff3
describe
'303637' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQG' 'sip-files00209.jpg'
8f61348cb57699e782126c5f449ae80d
ce56dcb24da755fd7c29b977a2b5ca496d2fc742
describe
'82104' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQH' 'sip-files00209.QC.jpg'
846357c714fe83d3f5902811840ad79b
22035445e745e9cae85d88205259f37a18328327
describe
'226665' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQI' 'sip-files00209.jp2'
b2521b911fda54c40d502b0462778ee7
524890272eae5b5953c9f9c66466da7b00918870
describe
'377595' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQJ' 'sip-files00210.jpg'
bb4dbed13bfc8f83d8d6fe5b4e4783cf
ee96a10f1a66c40689fe952c4a58c160cb8f3488
'2011-08-19T05:02:00-04:00'
describe
'110030' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQK' 'sip-files00210.QC.jpg'
77fcd6aee50282c5b6f62ab93946a830
708dd1d8f3d36ef9173c4f905cf6bc26e02f5c12
'2011-08-19T04:58:47-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQL' 'sip-files00210.jp2'
70fc3fc5e58cef305d7cb82cdc62a86e
37c963208afe527afc5f6730114c01879ed10462
'2011-08-19T04:52:11-04:00'
describe
'424490' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQM' 'sip-files00211.jpg'
658681f08aa878a0a1663550606be820
67125a9f5a850fde3ab86a2579a84453a02c5092
describe
'127389' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQN' 'sip-files00211.QC.jpg'
cb90f3f9b61ecb00b4bace03187bf5f4
0cfc79c3873eacb66e4d8715a8d2c576680711a0
'2011-08-19T04:52:46-04:00'
describe
'225001' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQO' 'sip-files00211.jp2'
91549c78647eeb59f0198f4204ffa60a
6768cff885ccb20c0c5d00be99f2cfc87ea7f172
describe
'387538' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQP' 'sip-files00212.jpg'
230342682a2cc2e6a7dacb947658dd32
9533743168476383c7d0c76d07a4ac23bae28fe3
describe
'118101' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQQ' 'sip-files00212.QC.jpg'
f724d92631e724a84661701903353bc3
aead0a25470ba3b67d87715b899da04095d537c5
describe
'244335' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQR' 'sip-files00212.jp2'
8e80b5ad791a10912869ec66bb60806f
d1978015dce24c6a53b25cdcb1be6637c5fb10a2
describe
'407155' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQS' 'sip-files00213.jpg'
f86d837bf31350922403d104798e92b3
c86c5e5d5460d10561f68bdf2968e9e33616176a
describe
'122191' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQT' 'sip-files00213.QC.jpg'
30b2dedcb2e34b593ca03e1c304a8862
e8e6825023a29133707fc6cd5b7d1780c0be2785
describe
'223838' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQU' 'sip-files00213.jp2'
42a4cc2224798d5b7310639b3f25f528
f9d82979f683eb152bf8de0aed3a4158ced526a0
describe
'404786' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQV' 'sip-files00214.jpg'
1ed6cbf9a4fd678cad943fba0a95a7ae
23245ecfc6eb659fc759fedf53b59a4d7335d410
'2011-08-19T04:52:36-04:00'
describe
'121853' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQW' 'sip-files00214.QC.jpg'
ad1e0d05201c84ca02f8fa163f5f89ab
45b59d3a42ade09e31387ae8154cbf9bfdfebe5a
describe
'229755' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQX' 'sip-files00214.jp2'
3df899579802e28aa5255f1b3cf35b3a
4a24a17e4f9684c16f37fc1e10f37748a51cb1e7
describe
'404854' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQY' 'sip-files00215.jpg'
15acc55216a388cff148a27626e2f129
2912abdd652a2a92acb6f27c82f6eac4256a5be1
describe
'120224' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJQZ' 'sip-files00215.QC.jpg'
5cd9120c78ad29334f61aeaa74f4999e
2e46dfdcbe6c4d00d8914781727d62ad2c1eb709
describe
'225658' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRA' 'sip-files00215.jp2'
269e0e0a2a931d8bb4f294230d7b4140
79fb95793b25741ce5019898441f77def99fb5fb
describe
'401716' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRB' 'sip-files00216.jpg'
dcb6a39671390dc6425f5b5e0a62d1b0
4083e19e50b49db7a7d463eecb7cd4fde5df6dbe
describe
'120674' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRC' 'sip-files00216.QC.jpg'
adb6ef9a93e8129d750fed38752d52d6
ba3c80138666313144b9a98781b2dddc9e3c88db
'2011-08-19T04:59:54-04:00'
describe
'231902' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRD' 'sip-files00216.jp2'
70e1f774e5ab2787611d34318782b288
bf428a90b13387792df11318e7258b9ff5f5c3fe
describe
'407018' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRE' 'sip-files00217.jpg'
4192f85f0bb5fa9836e0031ba3f035ef
47c41c6da726b7d7651c72f0e4d4ae89c33ddf93
describe
'123272' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRF' 'sip-files00217.QC.jpg'
0a9ee98a1509e98e421e523fed02f13c
18b647160a802cbc29d8421f033d70be75f1afa4
describe
'227121' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRG' 'sip-files00217.jp2'
a5d3de498e2a6c7614c4b25bc5619d0e
8d642da60b284e5792c355c60c536d52ec8fe87e
describe
'384943' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRH' 'sip-files00218.jpg'
47182d7cc6d0f8968174f8fb58358f08
c95244fb98d26d4fa492a73ef628561fd844d7a4
describe
'116012' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRI' 'sip-files00218.QC.jpg'
f1cd5f7681db59c28df6f31e2aff0bb4
f1467beb6dacd1be55cb879c7a5c1c7b6f9f4d0f
'2011-08-19T05:04:57-04:00'
describe
'244349' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRJ' 'sip-files00218.jp2'
fe6df9d2b691afac02d40b3b6e41b232
33661e3a28b5ca668a2e5c0a23710c24a565818f
describe
'381805' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRK' 'sip-files00219.jpg'
dc83dcd4a9f38e229bee004ab077c356
8fab0c030f4fc31aa0be84d46ff8f093737d25fe
describe
'112039' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRL' 'sip-files00219.QC.jpg'
3091705ee0df03fadec16d3a9361bc0c
efded6cbf963f1bb91af3b66386426d720d90184
'2011-08-19T04:59:42-04:00'
describe
'226734' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRM' 'sip-files00219.jp2'
4bb41f4356eb90b9ddd4c73647fea1b3
b11687d06c3e8c2f5bbc53075f8635f48bc20e1f
describe
'392097' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRN' 'sip-files00220.jpg'
7a4c0b748e083ce68f74bdbac3d58f5c
e045cdfa332e6b82001ab83f510a6ebed2912ab5
describe
'117419' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRO' 'sip-files00220.QC.jpg'
7ccc33c873b1eb3462e27fd0a2d55b85
161d07dba761620f102324cb4c43fefd4a0967e0
'2011-08-19T04:56:23-04:00'
describe
'231728' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRP' 'sip-files00220.jp2'
2653ce17459967f6db633656911f447b
05e3f77477960559be5877aa55e038007fbd3e40
describe
'381808' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRQ' 'sip-files00221.jpg'
e543bf8c257e7a03b18286bd3c2e7d0e
c9c79238d27c8a1fd8e5db5e0be30543fd813ab0
describe
'110829' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRR' 'sip-files00221.QC.jpg'
626adb8589282039da0fcf859a5622f7
17c9b58170f7eb9e43874f46cf8d5097e496ee14
'2011-08-19T04:58:56-04:00'
describe
'226908' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRS' 'sip-files00221.jp2'
08babd1a0396cead46a547c906927c95
6544f5d3f566dee8088d32814163a926af4f45f9
describe
'396851' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRT' 'sip-files00222.jpg'
666459475c4648bafd83f607d28b1eb8
011837bb1529615df131d208efe1c120d3cb8ad2
describe
'120730' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRU' 'sip-files00222.QC.jpg'
0f2630c22953573520fd5a3d12afa315
243992e0a782b9f97dea70dd693cc902cbdef477
'2011-08-19T04:52:10-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRV' 'sip-files00222.jp2'
407c08116a5b38fb9e5c96cc04b241c0
50a335bb056b508199f5006668c406af16f7bcb0
describe
'416461' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRW' 'sip-files00223.jpg'
9a90b9976e0e113af500fca1937f7694
1197bcac4b8677263504e8d70f3ee5d7f3f3d20d
describe
'125095' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRX' 'sip-files00223.QC.jpg'
86cb7d36aaff571b326505c4bb2d5287
d1d8bb88d1981e87f92431b9af80fbd621b73883
describe
'230221' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRY' 'sip-files00223.jp2'
a68b5b846951f54447335d301cc3d730
7677950893fb3f7626861c2558dbe21259c270bf
'2011-08-19T04:53:13-04:00'
describe
'400302' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJRZ' 'sip-files00224.jpg'
9c930da953a40225f585cc466de8d478
438d1947b2499e5c8c2ccdadaeabf585ff21030f
describe
'120278' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSA' 'sip-files00224.QC.jpg'
d9432d0d9ea4d5bcdf6bb096892237a3
39801f49e2aa12a48b68de12dd7e619b5449d5d0
describe
'232076' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSB' 'sip-files00224.jp2'
266b6f1bd033e1cbf76fc3f4c00de00a
18edd3ef9d7446bd6eb8d4927802f92e1bf57c4b
describe
'404892' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSC' 'sip-files00225.jpg'
da7b1be5d95a512e2b44c3ace5de2210
2edf7bde1c0291da96f8296687f30383eaf3420b
describe
'121997' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSD' 'sip-files00225.QC.jpg'
9279c99df926fef9d0abff4fa1d44cf3
330367c3213bccca522d8aca82fca8b0f7c55cee
describe
'231650' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSE' 'sip-files00225.jp2'
fc3e7f88c5402b648cfff6102c3295be
2aaf2104072288410399e6b1aec0af0bd1c07fba
describe
'398393' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSF' 'sip-files00226.jpg'
bc6443a74e731b33fee518033df77634
994b5b24fa4875ff67cc2f47325df62e57daee9a
'2011-08-19T04:52:02-04:00'
describe
'120615' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSG' 'sip-files00226.QC.jpg'
ed6448c8269ced95ddb834d1520e620f
9907bab59f6e29fb5e72684c7ef10669917408dd
describe
'232540' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSH' 'sip-files00226.jp2'
eba003d633101aa7b5f9de8f7f4542ea
5f82c14f4a22b82f595246675a755fdd2d56ed36
describe
'414077' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSI' 'sip-files00227.jpg'
cf40a1f9399687295e4cc0c07e8de762
2b888a8b56af80bb78c42db6e9e6996cd65aa1ca
describe
'123580' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSJ' 'sip-files00227.QC.jpg'
224827f2e90a17f9f94488f1d7f8ffc3
fb95fe17e974bd3832bee96157630c8d1804698c
describe
'228323' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSK' 'sip-files00227.jp2'
6651428529b4446aa1b22c827b9f90bd
d5ed1d93df5309b5df041e771d4c70285805faaf
describe
'388522' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSL' 'sip-files00228.jpg'
ddfb4133e6f3a145b0172a86b9543e5d
63246d78d6a4358e0073d5cf4c547cab19e3b5f5
describe
'116472' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSM' 'sip-files00228.QC.jpg'
60b824773eceae2c858d555b4e39051a
b7dcbd665de3a27bcd3a5713eabefdfcf4ce1043
describe
'233809' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSN' 'sip-files00228.jp2'
056032eb539ec0a3162a4ade2b53033c
853836148e10f9318001428f67dd8c563ba7f886
describe
'365894' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSO' 'sip-files00229.jpg'
b96e275c7f6d9f55d3432be9fb0d2af7
288b5bf370114c3883e216161d79a9c1d79979d4
describe
'105259' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSP' 'sip-files00229.QC.jpg'
50e2cd4596520ed75b92b399c49b2aaf
2ec4a6338c5eae6c913224dbf0a007b1c4bc0503
describe
'240727' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSQ' 'sip-files00229.jp2'
6ec22d98c0c746007dec423db6315ce3
d741bfbf5c561eef35a2020074414e43e079a38b
describe
'392297' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSR' 'sip-files00230.jpg'
ee63d0a755b188757175f0f848f6962a
5a6ca438baa63b7182f0c4be2837eddcf4fbcf24
describe
'116425' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSS' 'sip-files00230.QC.jpg'
994e317b23f2e7d1ebe7bb78b6e225c4
2a0b6a7b040101f8f3f8233d18c3288ef6d3ac4a
describe
'231473' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJST' 'sip-files00230.jp2'
9b0bbd8369fc6adb062abcf0920e36db
07bf6f9ab1f9c4869da9ae55c9971c39ee89e1a4
describe
'411067' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSU' 'sip-files00231.jpg'
337c91e4107ad0a186b3073bee794c03
470c687262e38f07636f6c14e7c6e7ca7ad7a850
describe
'122790' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSV' 'sip-files00231.QC.jpg'
19de3cc3cb7d8a47c454b3cbf4197108
b3a6f95182ad6a74a694abb3bb1da65041e21a37
describe
'229833' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSW' 'sip-files00231.jp2'
17c8ccd053ba45fb372705e5ff79431a
cb7a7229da1cb63f4e1f22f8bf6a826f200bc5c8
'2011-08-19T04:57:17-04:00'
describe
'401838' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSX' 'sip-files00232.jpg'
bf8d63825cf83203abb6bfc1fb8932b1
27e5355ec397f019a43f7972e25e68ffef4f6fc8
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSY' 'sip-files00232.QC.jpg'
b2d5a79df6a2dda17cc46eb4e7c2d3d7
fb6375ea2e4681ea97691a8ae425f4afac3b9c21
describe
'232651' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJSZ' 'sip-files00232.jp2'
b0c4b462e38cfa0408c874d30cfe9123
7d70caa546adc3835e9411e5acdb8858c721334b
describe
'406298' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTA' 'sip-files00233.jpg'
894f25d68bd54a8c4af2e579db1c0dcb
d1cbaf364797385fb3ec6278e5c95040ce9e3ad5
describe
'120250' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTB' 'sip-files00233.QC.jpg'
5649a404b5da8bf82beac76aded984d7
5b2f3838bebe3a40fe46a1e74881a2b9ce0e6f3e
describe
'226500' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTC' 'sip-files00233.jp2'
d62437b8011c6f340e5c625f3b4150d5
456cb4de79727b817c27036cd69a0652821dc85a
describe
'397601' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTD' 'sip-files00234.jpg'
51026ecb4252e4e5419403d52bc7dac7
64c41500864f953769587a24721882d90a50cb93
describe
'120929' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTE' 'sip-files00234.QC.jpg'
0515c907d7dad243be783bb9e1cb5168
b2b3d08f30eafd07885c49c1eb68f169cd5c3de3
describe
'227366' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTF' 'sip-files00234.jp2'
54e6cd462ca07e2e1d54547af097497b
c1d1dbcc4648b19bac0b2ede69b0c07b895723a7
describe
'389310' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTG' 'sip-files00235.jpg'
9eb5326d3d871022d01d4345d58391da
debedb339e4dded4ad3fb551aaf34fa5bba9d453
describe
'115498' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTH' 'sip-files00235.QC.jpg'
63d2fcd9baa956a2d6781d5e6aceea32
531a017d362c2ae40d176994ce7cd8fee47e9794
describe
'231917' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTI' 'sip-files00235.jp2'
c3b231b0d8861c9bd4cfeb33c028dfd5
8ebfcf1b0ef3c1c103609b5b1a65a1a99ae45cfd
describe
'393029' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTJ' 'sip-files00236.jpg'
921f142bce58c953e39e19a375a8a399
acd6c53c0e1b6915eb216b75dc6f50e0441494fa
describe
'119097' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTK' 'sip-files00236.QC.jpg'
16d81cff635b96d4561417dce65f2d78
a84d9006538945782d51bb7e45366a335db8a938
'2011-08-19T04:51:15-04:00'
describe
'229827' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTL' 'sip-files00236.jp2'
153b7010e0cf5f55bacae78babc2ba1b
c6e5ccdca90a5614a5de6bf6c0492f2fc9d893f0
describe
'310411' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTM' 'sip-files00237.jpg'
a5a19f79afb1ee64a1809e4075505c71
f34c0e1d4d18fb9e300118574ccad934e1976548
'2011-08-19T04:59:00-04:00'
describe
'83238' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTN' 'sip-files00237.QC.jpg'
794a05dd269033d58056d6a9a388d521
bdaa5333fcc731ff233e10c2302f97b05b06431f
describe
'228591' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTO' 'sip-files00237.jp2'
0e3a1bfe2032964747cedc3af66bc607
bef30823282e19956db3cc746132a46808e4a654
'2011-08-19T05:02:02-04:00'
describe
'388297' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTP' 'sip-files00238.jpg'
f0d872d3ea20069deb2b16f9437c29bb
f1c71db97e3f18d6a61e5f8c8fb968fa76d04a01
describe
'112129' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTQ' 'sip-files00238.QC.jpg'
db0183a4856f0037cf475e360d211338
296965294df32103993adb7b2a452723ba46a997
describe
'124310' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTR' 'sip-files00239.QC.jpg'
dcdb2f76079dec89945eac4e407a0e00
a5aaa43f3be86b8f820482103ee43f85e5910921
describe
'225892' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTS' 'sip-files00239.jp2'
111cbbb6c50116d33b654441319477c8
b19f2dc14d39ca18e2a8b4aa0606e6bce00e8bf0
describe
'395957' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTT' 'sip-files00240.jpg'
afccfc0f0942aec151dd78cc9b9074da
ee5fd2d9c8e0f0804ce1bd4d47fe8b72b82db8a9
'2011-08-19T04:54:50-04:00'
describe
'120223' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTU' 'sip-files00240.QC.jpg'
0098cdf389c34c3b96a53f71e2ed6da2
8f016da282c91c182a0a2954ee811d0e77c8f634
describe
'231014' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTV' 'sip-files00240.jp2'
eaca9f8d7befebbcf6e90061d233dede
6c78185e478e07f9a293aa715f35b6a7fbbf325e
describe
'408699' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTW' 'sip-files00241.jpg'
c4a839fca62f832ea4241ec50837edc8
72129c8b3aeb4fada3c9373aa9fa625e4f1fc9cc
describe
'121145' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTX' 'sip-files00241.QC.jpg'
8a5b1919983104e53b5f0865bea62b4d
032935c0e44f8d3f532ee06044d6334f24d5301c
describe
'226684' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTY' 'sip-files00241.jp2'
89413d55f7a2073a9711a20485f8387a
4ef4633889092d435c39fd35a17724f9f971833c
describe
'399884' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJTZ' 'sip-files00242.jpg'
9aa8c7688cfce6365f7d1b8610d9950a
e673407b6d3bd5c6fe555fc0f0afca314e165f25
describe
'120571' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUA' 'sip-files00242.QC.jpg'
c903ce4c83aaf57187c5ad6c775a6f59
b28848eb2230a388636e26d14a4bad3b444af1ee
describe
'230048' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUB' 'sip-files00242.jp2'
793f97edd7fc93cf1e2095e33563a226
a97cada0dce75d7fe506dbdf93393646f4ba027a
describe
'407961' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUC' 'sip-files00243.jpg'
5004153e492fc7a58bfe545c21d61ea2
c8222c6bbfa5eae7ead8c8a98b7b28a94c246425
describe
'122938' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUD' 'sip-files00243.QC.jpg'
6f4307d35ce7b574dca4175cae241059
a0bbc52614d5dc3c814325bdc54ab90f1323ab28
describe
'225880' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUE' 'sip-files00243.jp2'
da4983e9454102c4c7cfbd155fad3a63
6081b225bd84a85122110bce6841d06623fc5195
describe
'396925' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUF' 'sip-files00244.jpg'
05aa00311f148aee36eb7923fc3ea6e2
f751ea90357bd4276ef80a77f8ac9a97debce128
'2011-08-19T04:54:03-04:00'
describe
'119854' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUG' 'sip-files00244.QC.jpg'
c31ec5eb1d783c770506eaf066def8dd
104c0914c103a6ea4656280465fec41deec6ad56
describe
'225913' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUH' 'sip-files00244.jp2'
200efff309db4927d0c722ee9f50ec4e
9663bc216eb0cb8eef1725e367c47c16012a3177
'2011-08-19T04:57:27-04:00'
describe
'410706' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUI' 'sip-files00245.jpg'
cbac3f878855af217ec62ea7f42791be
e87834e2cc220eb71314e019563f4443856c8435
describe
'123797' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUJ' 'sip-files00245.QC.jpg'
dd96a7e3d94c0fe64191f922296756ae
80c06b6dc6cd9e995186b2daea985ff7832fac20
describe
'227872' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUK' 'sip-files00245.jp2'
ade454968c43e479b8af5c696f223fa2
44c9dc5bc4ecc9393fc809974a622375f2cfcf51
describe
'408445' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUL' 'sip-files00246.jpg'
b33e4d7b459326ddb3f51504cebd6161
2dcbcf6e6cee4d08656b956d4ca3c7a0f002679e
describe
'122690' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUM' 'sip-files00246.QC.jpg'
a09b71419ca93492102442143ec1ce7c
a66734cfbc079d4f43ec86bcef1dac67d7de3b35
describe
'227090' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUN' 'sip-files00246.jp2'
5494ef3a2cc741a422ba902462f26a25
e6244a27894dd9346ca03a2fea77f8c32960bb7f
describe
'399046' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUO' 'sip-files00247.jpg'
7269f711eb64c05f957cfd016ce5e731
92e41dd74485a455d6bd8a1b93954a4d07319bad
describe
'119219' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUP' 'sip-files00247.QC.jpg'
e2ba789f31dcbfe08fdd18b0e81940ba
633ef75b39ed9490854b3e0cfab1c02adf526623
describe
'227775' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUQ' 'sip-files00247.jp2'
42ae4b445d83f02c3acfc07052f452ad
be9e483cfde462a251a115ba62ddcf32630e2e47
describe
'387414' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUR' 'sip-files00248.jpg'
7577b94fb54cbfe876e93c75bc1e4b79
6460cc4073adbd9cde2e33bb1a1fd65195441cce
describe
'113562' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUS' 'sip-files00248.QC.jpg'
57583e6b37060be5ad822a6b95d43381
bc865bb9727d9a2732c2e45a083ab57d5afeddc5
'2011-08-19T04:53:54-04:00'
describe
'226377' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUT' 'sip-files00248.jp2'
64cd3bd3baf2c26f1a1f6776585e58fe
8da3d095b072f94bd1410ad1a2a1237d1b48b08c
describe
'377993' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUU' 'sip-files00249.jpg'
9d34a89df601b89772d3a5ff9d211ef5
4c74268f4ca244fc3bced74eee62083c38539b9b
describe
'108924' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUV' 'sip-files00249.QC.jpg'
0788950d4f0df4245d268c640f258051
641a0ccf2c7c6925aaed491ec1fc1537a85835e1
describe
'240788' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUW' 'sip-files00249.jp2'
db02ec5e5eae9dad3fc688a936afb4b0
4d41125d96962f158eae1d3ee52c9f57246b42c4
describe
'408689' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUX' 'sip-files00250.jpg'
8c78a41c77e0ba9a4b8f680b37f775f6
1df22f5c1c467ede5104ce6af3aca0b24f4ff09d
describe
'122227' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUY' 'sip-files00250.QC.jpg'
b4315f8d2eeab58566cd5f6e166e3980
762a1aa383dbc92ccc00c73996850f92c2df2fa9
'2011-08-19T04:59:47-04:00'
describe
'226470' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJUZ' 'sip-files00250.jp2'
cfa12e952bce32af053d6e88690cd7ab
a20c634d5ec36ab12b698c21727255bd4fc6600c
describe
'378446' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVA' 'sip-files00251.jpg'
9d4cba40713ca18b930d41eebac916d0
8f58c2b0fbec0a6472c274967f805a04ae283422
'2011-08-19T05:01:17-04:00'
describe
'110221' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVB' 'sip-files00251.QC.jpg'
b3ec96532336b3bf55e134004f49090c
2cd8992068c8a1969e0b735bd4de10eb0d877b4e
describe
'225409' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVC' 'sip-files00251.jp2'
bd29d192f5d89695ce9aa03b5424c9f7
78f95bc541254ea06f7be06266904b9c5700e1fa
describe
'352860' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVD' 'sip-files00252.jpg'
ff81555821c3da6918ee355c3f4116b3
6e5c0cfc386372ef3ee9402bda19c1a59ac4ee40
describe
'100554' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVE' 'sip-files00252.QC.jpg'
cef6c0b61eca45208f53b28778bb832b
4108eeb4b91bf98803dfd73f6333187a437d0e86
describe
'225318' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVF' 'sip-files00252.jp2'
03b97b4437bb30eb23e4e185623c5b10
93689e099388fc092a8ba92cb303b03bfcc2d8ef
describe
'412647' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVG' 'sip-files00253.jpg'
9107c9ee56b0b8c99d5eff1547693979
c5d2ef9e27a828c553f246b6e77f0dbe4357ea31
describe
'122494' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVH' 'sip-files00253.QC.jpg'
e0433ee65af0c4caf3911ccdc054b063
1c849e27e3ce851e05b04ea2056b68564d78e297
describe
'224017' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVI' 'sip-files00253.jp2'
03a0d2e637e1d33cad2866b540a16641
4345c7e8acde560aa4c552b712a97f23f4e425bc
describe
'405057' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVJ' 'sip-files00254.jpg'
e8969b0eb61b236e9be65b8bae5c4ec4
7790d2c9bcb792e6145d9cb176c364b22a5a5c9f
describe
'120807' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVK' 'sip-files00254.QC.jpg'
24dbca329d7a2f4e4b1549eb4f594926
748cf6e1a43b7d6ae3e81a5d3b920879c2defd1f
describe
'224415' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVL' 'sip-files00254.jp2'
8042488af240232aa80e44787d2ecbd1
c10643a6f40da4d97059dd3152b2d1d58eb2e6d2
describe
'408647' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVM' 'sip-files00255.jpg'
f2bf9be6c5df24b585dba921affef162
c89f22221e32c0edb760973034e19b31054f66cd
describe
'120761' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVN' 'sip-files00255.QC.jpg'
ce795dfd5bfb6aeb885f330b1ac2dd70
3596f2645be9696f7fe09faa383cfd9197c65639
describe
'227079' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVO' 'sip-files00255.jp2'
43171a7b1e5ccb1c73550912162caf0a
bf5bf42a41ce5da2b17b49fbc408ebc8ef268080
describe
'415628' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVP' 'sip-files00256.jpg'
a3061dac4f2c8ac5f058fd47215b4ebd
394164250f62a22cafde9990340ceb705ffeec6d
describe
'125044' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVQ' 'sip-files00256.QC.jpg'
c5549d3b0d7b584f33bf1534c4f453ce
bd3697bc5a168e602cf12caa7023ed8de40d693c
describe
'225222' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVR' 'sip-files00256.jp2'
0c6ccccede751db0c17d54973b64d196
8fda36dcfea28a963a4d114cabfa43e595607138
describe
'401165' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVS' 'sip-files00257.jpg'
50428827dcdfedd8a12235f2a4644c8f
0d5d49a66966d2e87d70424455b98445f3c77216
describe
'119786' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVT' 'sip-files00257.QC.jpg'
ec55e7ebd74a224b42e9e6e01aafd1b2
3f19980eb7df565f582c00472d49907302c0066e
describe
'240747' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVU' 'sip-files00257.jp2'
43cf66fe61bb4b7365e2e6b0780ef445
404ff6984f2f92617649c223200c0d9888a21336
describe
'412086' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVV' 'sip-files00258.jpg'
cd9de80712f68c40971e7916100d2cb8
3ebd75849d75f187d5b785c919664546f0274806
describe
'123327' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVW' 'sip-files00258.QC.jpg'
6dc80f7f14ec834b6a3b743b4e7e4a2b
8b20f03182c564941a47ac0a581568785e6cde33
describe
'224040' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVX' 'sip-files00258.jp2'
981c1efb88e83b9bd70be3a97695e264
b7b6af2b74ddfa657d75e02548aa6b9f7d2f5009
describe
'410998' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVY' 'sip-files00259.jpg'
a4777886d65fb6684830038b7dac9154
1a4a0cecbb9b86ae4c042775522f6371416f7a40
describe
'123943' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJVZ' 'sip-files00259.QC.jpg'
e67922489b74b5c4f968601e620f1ee5
ae3557db88d6df07ac77b111d54cccf779509ee3
describe
'223561' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWA' 'sip-files00259.jp2'
658c0f170ba57cb2a135ea9f3fc34077
8ac26501944cf4dd7d18180a77f8d7f863fbbd4f
'2011-08-19T04:54:29-04:00'
describe
'403943' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWB' 'sip-files00260.jpg'
47dced0ae97cff9c8d02440b2e2c86e8
3c28132c5344a37ec6ef9f3dc52c80608e434f41
'2011-08-19T04:56:30-04:00'
describe
'122302' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWC' 'sip-files00260.QC.jpg'
dddc84fe9fddc0eface7ee1974801e58
175da25a64945e817870daf15f7a3535492cd76d
describe
'228995' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWD' 'sip-files00260.jp2'
11b948b04511e9264a5e641e256a55bd
fcb3d20b7f1bf466d44055dcfdd169aef669738c
'2011-08-19T04:55:24-04:00'
describe
'413953' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWE' 'sip-files00261.jpg'
a225c0c82c617c963b4bbc3ad3202f57
80363a4b746796b48cf3f99b3fcb1fa21b5ba625
describe
'122931' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWF' 'sip-files00261.QC.jpg'
c78878b457ba5e52eba500117b4a6b52
5029a244f89048d503496c69ee0242d5755e3deb
'2011-08-19T04:51:23-04:00'
describe
'230207' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWG' 'sip-files00261.jp2'
df7ce159bb0e4395c8016ca3d2690b24
74e7b0eb959368865d5c640f79b0e35dc68e4cc2
'2011-08-19T04:57:20-04:00'
describe
'401868' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWH' 'sip-files00262.jpg'
ba36c60bb5f35116c1fda69b48ec9172
8fc228f27a53bddfc218aae4fa73a866ea6a943f
'2011-08-19T04:57:41-04:00'
describe
'118981' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWI' 'sip-files00262.QC.jpg'
1d8bc367fa47ee337ec3a588b87a019b
6f7c12e74435828ab3bc91c51e37c3f628cfb77f
describe
'231280' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWJ' 'sip-files00262.jp2'
e10b760d8391ba9518e0db92044e9e9c
f3906266e6bcf5958bc57aabd535a59e813ce300
describe
'301217' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWK' 'sip-files00263.jpg'
f62477f14ee0cf4acf9ad9b03f109126
8277edfc76c756fc6997575752bfc096d7d6a5b9
describe
'79762' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWL' 'sip-files00263.QC.jpg'
e37eb6c8b84f87ae79df9580cf20e0d2
044f02dc838a2e57d09314555e29e3bb85d5dd97
'2011-08-19T04:52:01-04:00'
describe
'227083' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWM' 'sip-files00263.jp2'
364e5b8be3cf3e4f5744a67aac371aaf
a46fe9c84c4efaa40a7a0990b4835f6c619bc515
describe
'372167' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWN' 'sip-files00264.jpg'
3e92b3e353742a15fa50c4313d5a694f
aecb05feb63fbd3686ca2b1e3e5ec601a1f83915
'2011-08-19T04:55:15-04:00'
describe
'106911' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWO' 'sip-files00264.QC.jpg'
37310e59cb5a9ccc815cc73c8702f674
212ec1dfe80f54681024bdf459be60553632e2b3
describe
'228949' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWP' 'sip-files00264.jp2'
3cd91b7f2645a0c7427c4e80b41213a6
77deac4076b04a2f1e3dd9c9ecc81970bd469459
describe
'410550' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWQ' 'sip-files00265.jpg'
a620d43f1bf1c0d00e4ade5724b6a32b
2abf3900842515ef0899d0e0cff30a384a8407df
describe
'121323' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWR' 'sip-files00265.QC.jpg'
11ca8a45aad2a6d5351d9557e9f5f306
f94976d79ba82da0ed54dd6c923fafa9bef30210
describe
'226036' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWS' 'sip-files00265.jp2'
a217e930bf92138d070e6afc1bd16b4b
b7d3578858b68ad663fcbdb04873afedfe0ed062
describe
'413057' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWT' 'sip-files00266.jpg'
cf766f9690fc0608967989c3688a8d66
9fcddffb15c20a036b3ae311a095c672a1d8f5c6
describe
'122576' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWU' 'sip-files00266.QC.jpg'
87082706dbd41f36179b9c67ef287d49
0f9ce5f9b3469753267a8e6b065f8e07326ae353
describe
'228294' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWV' 'sip-files00266.jp2'
52aca3c77164cc7624f5610f0d6caaf5
091577f77a77824983d9d98fe82010861ea88df5
'2011-08-19T04:58:19-04:00'
describe
'391826' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWW' 'sip-files00267.jpg'
71355997186e62e24d0e0ce1d6e8d27e
0204300ea6db6febc1c82140973af9bb551b6a63
describe
'116277' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWX' 'sip-files00267.QC.jpg'
42a4edeaf4dbc5bc77e40e94f439f478
9fcbf4389ffaa38fa3e75ec7e0fddf1bb76caafe
'2011-08-19T05:04:12-04:00'
describe
'229401' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWY' 'sip-files00267.jp2'
b0e6b06b6055d27ab77038f5f72e0597
c5ef5d9ed3b9a1f6695642ee38118755f2e7933a
describe
'501085' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJWZ' 'sip-files00270.jpg'
dfafe8d54d1b4d405fd568d1094e4590
47a0642adc036ecf92a7f34c73dbb805a2886f26
describe
'118888' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXA' 'sip-files00270.QC.jpg'
fe24d9aad9f605aa3eeb3e35c7cdae49
d3e8f6c59a0d613bfe46ea9c97dfa8d26deb4271
'2011-08-19T04:57:33-04:00'
describe
'264695' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXB' 'sip-files00270.jp2'
54b8ffa038be0b82a05d23432956b55f
d4d2f1bdc807eff6c5a8051836b2a209b1508ab2
describe
'572257' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXC' 'sip-files00271.jpg'
4866c3f96f84291e5eda7178cf725c76
a46fa55b4e662308538b6b3aefbe4f192597f1e8
describe
'123766' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXD' 'sip-files00271.QC.jpg'
2cb4232aa3f140bef956f4dc9f96424a
992f41a10051495414bbc4e20d4e9dd1797c6a26
'2011-08-19T05:03:28-04:00'
describe
'267114' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXE' 'sip-files00271.jp2'
abf1e0e7703a0fe20be6e529327c355b
3e8658555e041bf18a6294047e71144c9ea43638
describe
'231426' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXF' 'sip-files00272.jpg'
2a65f9e1ed570c91abb905f0b4df1c60
7f74ecaecbbc83c81072c6d74af07e5ebe801f67
describe
'59982' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXG' 'sip-files00272.QC.jpg'
65b253e8dbdf79bc95491dfd96cd9857
53d613c166b51685372c57e73677771bf90744db
describe
'77305' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXH' 'sip-files00272.jp2'
70e771fbf05cd852245d0e9dcf42acc8
b14e8faedf9809b01a99c6d122dfaf861f74bfa4
describe
'32' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXI' 'sip-filesprocessing.instr'
4c77b1427f87db58d7fd851542edb3a4
17565d01b69a2038644695b17cbb62178ab57176
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXJ' 'sip-files00001.txt'
81051bcc2cf1bedf378224b0a93e2877
ba8ab5a0280b953aa97435ff8946cbcbb2755a27
describe
No printable characters
No printable characters
No printable characters
'17' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXK' 'sip-files00002.txt'
8b65205959440a3888bb8e690037698c
2b811ba8b25aad66c8e089cd26f2242e394d6ec1
describe
'265' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXL' 'sip-files00004.txt'
2e181b3817dae1f03dee619c0bba35e1
f4a8a8c33a2e42d817404cbe79a832f060e43aed
'2011-08-19T05:02:12-04:00'
describe
'223' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXM' 'sip-files00005.txt'
7cec199e94ea0a8809bdb0e8fd3f24f8
eba784df88415f0268557c528b557ecec36c5c3a
'2011-08-19T05:02:33-04:00'
describe
'642' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXN' 'sip-files00006.txt'
d4eb6101c373ba64b0e64112642dcdb9
fb1bf229cca011c96144d7530857d4023a3fec60
describe
'1016' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXO' 'sip-files00007.txt'
720878961a00e7b21174cbd52c60e1e8
7042e469f28301e92a6f4e33f7e143cf17dbbd8d
'2011-08-19T05:04:51-04:00'
describe
'1039' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXP' 'sip-files00008.txt'
4cba6930b70bed01c50f78dc5683c164
88d5139d38be320603159a0771b7edfa751e5584
describe
'1040' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXQ' 'sip-files00009.txt'
6d7197fd62156f15780568c5385bcf4c
049731e6d2e576d85de6220513abd9f07571b5f2
describe
'1014' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXR' 'sip-files00010.txt'
255663f3a35c271bf531faaa1219fa91
7334cc48b04130eedab95505eab4464c1fc36520
describe
'1007' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXS' 'sip-files00011.txt'
9a58ac53e14459eb129d6ccdb7dc88bd
b12517404f509d51ae79f297488b2d3d317410b2
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXT' 'sip-files00012.txt'
a2240acbd47fc1f6e1facb8f87f29b53
3693c56dc50324d8fa58cafeb5560e06bd7bb2c5
describe
'1037' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXU' 'sip-files00013.txt'
f15338bbfb5b7a91bef1dbd96308e9d1
b1579f4e69218e31ea0349c4087ac5acb62b6780
describe
'1034' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXV' 'sip-files00014.txt'
b00350954f04801db0af5ed0543963da
689ab597965a9e3dc70fd3134e6149dab74e620a
describe
'1018' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXW' 'sip-files00015.txt'
4b4a1739fcb04d6e549e57ebabe13513
06e6e8971a53d59dcd099c8535417cc1d63de10a
'2011-08-19T05:03:23-04:00'
describe
'930' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXX' 'sip-files00016.txt'
e59f94aad96fe781e5fc70ff01186814
1deb42f63729b52ef60f419ce324f611002be95d
describe
'1035' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXY' 'sip-files00017.txt'
c83f5b16529097e8eef4fd34c2c9a891
877bf77f0e0c3d6e4d1d609da3d18788e2c4fe68
describe
'929' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJXZ' 'sip-files00018.txt'
e8cf757ccaa2188b9e89ac746e72684c
3481c4deecb1fc634cf34991c43386d2dc5a25a2
describe
'957' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYA' 'sip-files00019.txt'
af610451d11eb81130a182df3bfd09d2
c6331863701b7bd93a5191cf945ce438d0920fce
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYB' 'sip-files00020.txt'
bd784b1946a0ed30f211076d2d4cc9c3
4ea5769a7b35ad0afc217946eea210306ece104c
describe
'1001' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYC' 'sip-files00021.txt'
a9f263dd3621195811e45ccb885a372d
964d95571d5e538300d81b6ee7183d8f46b66220
describe
'1057' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYD' 'sip-files00022.txt'
46cb6613ddb74e00391891cb4ee1cafd
0147c7677b7d2e3efb50fd4ce3745de7e41b9eac
describe
'976' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYE' 'sip-files00023.txt'
b876d3f07a9cbd9fc143d8812995c1bb
95f732fd0c27f83b589ef87faeffb79f51a42f7c
describe
'963' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYF' 'sip-files00024.txt'
d72a4e1691fdb0eaa76d05bffaf04516
9b5dcfea70b6e7a0b0ae884d5d723caa7fa65433
describe
'379' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYG' 'sip-files00025.txt'
7a61afb4864520895ba1313a068c0bab
549c866f356e2276eae836a3eca8b3987121061d
describe
'723' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYH' 'sip-files00026.txt'
56e5ee32c4269621a1c2827f3a0efd7d
19def19e6bc3bec36326bb7868c6c4b6353c38e0
describe
'1024' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYI' 'sip-files00027.txt'
09b2149160f48bc18ab9cbe9290144b4
2ac6958141ee6e8e11d704d7e6cd28421d0fb99e
describe
'982' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYJ' 'sip-files00028.txt'
95da63494ab94fdb180f9f461990024d
31d2b7c8c569761f2f27b6c0671b1ee23e9995e2
describe
'1051' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYK' 'sip-files00029.txt'
f82d80748d888d32be2892a646c84dcb
5d830412e384c6739f6b344235e409288ece97d7
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYL' 'sip-files00030.txt'
40893fd1f00288853e6e20721dae7501
0016726e47bf8a3b6243b8c14caa9293d8ea496a
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYM' 'sip-files00031.txt'
4133c7d3e8f7e72b10f6c383aa6fac1e
d5d3b5e43cd705d33f45672864bafc844a1c6b63
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYN' 'sip-files00032.txt'
7b198b78da0aeb8ba1b1577f3a658046
9cb76a202cc7bfc63156c2ba9616c5dc057384b3
describe
'1012' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYO' 'sip-files00033.txt'
6a0b62d00ff5b01f1e5a711ce03a70f3
53b252c19a7e9a4faa104b705a63895efd896ca9
describe
'1138' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYP' 'sip-files00034.txt'
38c442e107a689fe03ee0fbbede15033
d0eae8b0c5722522eb4c71df1e253e5d0321dd9a
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYQ' 'sip-files00035.txt'
6c01ae54adc131b7f87881c8eb136181
0087a0ffa2b00647371bd8d2edd7bb85a6620bb9
describe
'961' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYR' 'sip-files00036.txt'
c445d57cf8e47b946ddc07eb590d3e6f
5e1895ff9d1564411d7cdf395f567c6c9d32604d
describe
'1005' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYS' 'sip-files00037.txt'
acb6733be163b97797c1e81dba15e69b
5817cd70ddce18dbe49f8841a4a935a6c52eac78
describe
'967' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYT' 'sip-files00038.txt'
231acd0c951ad908afe4ff4fa71b2430
17760b2df7c6dacc4a65444a569d99dbe5c87cb3
describe
'1019' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYU' 'sip-files00039.txt'
acc5e06b71185f0e48ac4e295db98a26
da9208fc44fc7ce03adfc5d13639b4bdf0161f2d
describe
'1045' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYV' 'sip-files00040.txt'
c058b984579049263a083e3e1f0ef127
3c535bea12b42e1327568440838c4907fb8b903c
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYW' 'sip-files00041.txt'
5a14da8726a821d29f3478643fe4b0ac
d565b78cd9c4d297dae55d6a7c2c2342f5345748
describe
'1036' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYX' 'sip-files00042.txt'
5d5cee7d3aadcdec275ab65ab2b265f3
695f5ec6db7126676bb866ab2fa025ceaa832f07
'2011-08-19T05:00:30-04:00'
describe
'917' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYY' 'sip-files00043.txt'
c8efb8a16551ee56a2ad4d3c6d220ecd
e7d0e33e4bc70edfff77c2cb60d1dbbc38ed2edd
'2011-08-19T05:03:09-04:00'
describe
'939' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJYZ' 'sip-files00044.txt'
d896677b8d5367409cb31cd0f56e34b0
b92ea5f1c947dbaa6713c0423b8f07f0d099e666
describe
'1023' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZA' 'sip-files00045.txt'
987e1612f292965e86064b729217fbf4
a6f533ccdbc07f460dc1d2fd820e06f990fbf0df
describe
'1054' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZB' 'sip-files00046.txt'
efc51701d6e6f9ef954f14e6f1162576
815933c896bc71244e285a7954bb62c55b0815ba
describe
'990' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZC' 'sip-files00047.txt'
b4a50e20972911d97f37e0530317a34f
63abb9f7c72e42cc4f7952f8d66ee7a1f0a81862
describe
'1052' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZD' 'sip-files00048.txt'
a6516bb27d8648b7c3b81f53ada19074
7e24ce74f70cd79fe83dc34dc6aa947bca57ac7f
describe
'923' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZE' 'sip-files00049.txt'
617ac2e5705651d9e976669d77bfef85
e93d00b9878128cf97c5ed2b23c4dcaf670dab77
describe
'1021' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZF' 'sip-files00050.txt'
7e074771a860321a709dfecba9e1515a
a182c4345ed51d19df78135e57b84e6c0d807954
'2011-08-19T04:59:17-04:00'
describe
'712' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZG' 'sip-files00051.txt'
fe311e9d15651f57ab961b5b90a50415
ce230477457bf9abc76feb7a256dc0a0ccebbdae
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZH' 'sip-files00052.txt'
ddfd1bb29cedb329352307c849eea5b2
9733dbaa396660a1ea7eceb2c0278f239304029d
describe
'997' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZI' 'sip-files00053.txt'
a79925468b4a8e1dd99525e4437fa3d8
a3905b2e7540488226ee5be96dde43d93c6c4863
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZJ' 'sip-files00054.txt'
ebed2675ac78d55799e0ad84fab92c7a
bbcd909de927f5537bf3321b1a17ceae40ec2aeb
describe
'972' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZK' 'sip-files00055.txt'
389d74c118daa967c808042add61e037
4e7ba75c3c2410d4bea81563c08ee55b247b77c6
describe
'913' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZL' 'sip-files00056.txt'
4d7dc571b710bdbfc7ec5ea99f68c10b
060fe2eb3ca3bcb310222b6c7f44ff42e50560f1
describe
'996' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZM' 'sip-files00057.txt'
38abb4578d59a05bfb5ed472dc53bc29
ef8a4297358da0a455a53f0bb6a5ba97b0e25dc1
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZN' 'sip-files00058.txt'
2736603850f6d8728969bef1b4b6c1fb
22a05b2aea32e6324d12097eed42deaeba3270f5
describe
'988' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZO' 'sip-files00059.txt'
c7c44fd8caf921ec3468f4a0dd7ff2ca
ed74fb77ae86c30a81567d982cf9a3c6ac55b218
describe
'1015' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZP' 'sip-files00060.txt'
2d877af36b522355bf8d78f45a3903bd
b1ba286c23eab5653f4e896ae9f5c72f58b4c6ff
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZQ' 'sip-files00061.txt'
6e74b6ae382218f5f2b26f4d20f09feb
1bd6ce029d63d7a08dfc7fb6da84c184c5b03511
describe
'326' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZR' 'sip-files00062.txt'
fda5c7fb489d6cef4cd23295e6a9ff44
7a0bc7f0b936fe449f942f8808499cf4b6000ad9
describe
'764' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZS' 'sip-files00063.txt'
4d70fd2f7b8c426ef2c83cce2e37b82b
0054e45a452ff08e538820bc09ee7c27d9d2d1d0
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZT' 'sip-files00064.txt'
aa6b2a989efc48c6e00b74c406cdfb11
1db5d80024ce509bb5e31d132b04801bb4c50f35
describe
'987' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZU' 'sip-files00065.txt'
b4380b57d64ea98cff67c824e6698aa5
bf8042112b3a91cdaae64a8602b9d303526211f8
describe
'937' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZV' 'sip-files00066.txt'
f35a453d810ab97968d5545cb4798374
d4aa74e06b1ff206f61548a53673153a36ec0674
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZW' 'sip-files00067.txt'
837b1a7b1c6f072408b26030ec48f271
9fe37c5f20d54339df40a5488aa10cf290321297
describe
'952' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZX' 'sip-files00068.txt'
3316ace0d69d444eb4e152808e2a370d
c9fa2c8d758c87a3b6909b5b0e94633406e83440
describe
'984' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZY' 'sip-files00069.txt'
8853f422458b125a9b33ac0c53d5c59a
ef7a7ffe58df315fe9345ea0c48171c4784b0b3d
'2011-08-19T05:04:31-04:00'
describe
'1004' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAJZZ' 'sip-files00070.txt'
fa0c66deacbc983a63352ab0ae756214
18815820aa12d4d26a0208dd41ff9b4cfbe6f088
describe
'1003' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAA' 'sip-files00071.txt'
57d89d6c3b2cb7e8af1f7cb6e2aabbf3
636832194a73971160335ec61d7772a47f2ded01
describe
'915' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAB' 'sip-files00072.txt'
1480dd5b508f1e0a83de8e4d4caeae7c
7015003c206c2de7b15dbb13f1532359d6dfefff
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAC' 'sip-files00073.txt'
12a43a8dfdbdc72626d49701bdee9967
1915ada7c200a3cd18d383c4fa4cdbdc68827bed
describe
'944' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAD' 'sip-files00074.txt'
d827ecd0764885ed7b841067a311e3ff
d572c633184b70ef5cc220fb1f48518234384cab
describe
'983' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAE' 'sip-files00075.txt'
341c7ac3e908b5fd76a52f74fd749faf
4be9063abb6c00ce64ae4a1425e4f1e898171db1
describe
'1025' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAF' 'sip-files00076.txt'
a7e4c56085c5f7917afbe45ea3a41e32
7a9009a7fb0713c165ea1e7d1ce35ebe96cde103
describe
'1010' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAG' 'sip-files00077.txt'
4a5c56cef230e1950d8ee2ebd45000d4
cbc147e29fbc613e0f28c651fb19a28276ae9e4f
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAH' 'sip-files00078.txt'
6cea5bfaf1c446627a60e769b9e54f21
b180ea1047a56b00030670a830d4c475551f41bb
describe
'975' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAI' 'sip-files00079.txt'
876709cb7d8023bd1df4b18cdd6c444b
8d1c4f1cf02aea319cc9303f48ca7488b3c7bbbd
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAJ' 'sip-files00080.txt'
0bbf7180c5df8f60ae4ae6b8e860e277
03c3ddb8d91b55059912ad907efe8604a92ecc90
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAK' 'sip-files00081.txt'
b8a0c030d706fa69386ca24c23bfdc3c
429789f9acdb079bb10aeba83aca170e96f7f00a
describe
'1022' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAL' 'sip-files00082.txt'
81712077e507583e42cc906ac501d4f2
c12e62c06628918c5a727a2fb55b36d3d62e4e13
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAM' 'sip-files00083.txt'
91d33828e36bf607b689f73196f20ff7
584d85ae723e20173c963d4df05827928ce7b546
describe
'883' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAN' 'sip-files00084.txt'
53928162c0b0c05f97e2d3d22b6d9cc2
1b0d4c2cb6de8bfdb01f33af439a5ccf5ffeaed4
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAO' 'sip-files00085.txt'
6eb6b40335e30eb4f45365351d7b27d2
b2b4e069fab37acf8bf51f59f9436a5fd05c0a84
describe
'1042' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAP' 'sip-files00086.txt'
13e39e49920e3bf92f871fd42086f3c7
7b7e25efa699748f7559e1a7285afaca82164131
describe
'989' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAQ' 'sip-files00087.txt'
ab135302bc4d9caedd449430a69d1104
d1ebc4b16bcecb314cb68708240ca513ef3cded1
describe
'985' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAR' 'sip-files00088.txt'
447f66ff2542fb3aefa3b14a54cbe9c5
a9685f3984d687fdd1d4f83fd5a95cd82891bd1d
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAS' 'sip-files00089.txt'
241ff855b78ad7fb7693fb8e551e2e05
9d5389678b2f5a22fe41da35261165705f2eb4f9
describe
'1026' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAT' 'sip-files00090.txt'
60451584f068d4f1133c08089d663c14
b0564fb53e632418b29b263431e6197575c972e8
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAU' 'sip-files00090a.txt'
5e0e79e352783fef2d513d8a9e19ce0d
83c46e3222e839b0f9ee8f788e88f12fc774321c
'2011-08-19T04:55:59-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAV' 'sip-files00090b.txt'
606f7f1e12e373a936c01bd3ca7b64cb
20afe4f02260e2bbacd9b9fa2e991f514aef0eb0
describe
'1013' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAW' 'sip-files00091.txt'
e37952af06d843f4af5203b17ed92526
e06ed1ebdbae9a8c36a546ff59dc02803f038a42
describe
'993' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAX' 'sip-files00092.txt'
9cab73c8ca3be2e9401b7190fddeb0c5
37291799134d0a1324c5ea10f59b714864bbc862
describe
'825' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAY' 'sip-files00093.txt'
eca4ae83049a2f82e7e881ff9b0283ed
5d395bd971991bde2d392d18a669cb07333eefa8
describe
'683' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKAZ' 'sip-files00094.txt'
20c19c4f7e4ec60aa94f0beafb1f06f9
44385665ee812cd49630ea15470f503364af4d2e
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBA' 'sip-files00095.txt'
91553b5dc0afa15016f3f0a7617884bb
509042db155001d7a96406d1fcc9b04ace122196
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBB' 'sip-files00096.txt'
39ed46eff016e2366f800a23424241a2
6017e64e71bdc6fae5115ef343aa1e263bbd340b
'2011-08-19T04:57:19-04:00'
describe
'1059' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBC' 'sip-files00097.txt'
8c7babd44a2fab5393632a2e6a4ff5d2
167479f25d969a15845f20e1318abe1b7ea40240
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBD' 'sip-files00098.txt'
dbbc5bd24fa0492fa90b9d9d9f76eb8d
82646ffc5b8ddd87a790d13a08b5304c1364fc74
describe
'1053' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBE' 'sip-files00099.txt'
5bf4508bd531ce68c9230017cec8d866
6ef73357d5b6233c90857bd37d3325dab8c4cf37
describe
'1063' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBF' 'sip-files00100.txt'
444b9c7b8cbef5a333377174b3b65e82
040a77b83ec3fefe25740020dc283c439a9eb165
describe
'974' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBG' 'sip-files00101.txt'
f26778385c8e64feac8341b5095386d8
6546997ef7abce0a16f3f054fd07f7626e5bdbc2
describe
'1006' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBH' 'sip-files00102.txt'
503409cbc07ffb07c1dd1119a9f5e6ba
6eff1641e413a932b61b566f26f69dc81018af57
describe
'986' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBI' 'sip-files00103.txt'
45d1fbd530f1be78319ab13ea8e7be92
445e6ab82979e67c79de743661dcc457faf030a9
'2011-08-19T05:05:03-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBJ' 'sip-files00104.txt'
12852903a3aca44e34f638e7377123cf
012b30df289c62b8bcc953720cacc6ce3dfa3923
describe
'1009' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBK' 'sip-files00105.txt'
32877ca6d213775eebbf40e0819b73be
35c42bec3acb17b046192ed10ecb02f858d91c7f
describe
'1050' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBL' 'sip-files00106.txt'
1e3ece90c0a758cd87e85c68d4af1824
fa028c640716e225c976b00d684290d1f6090b1d
'2011-08-19T04:54:26-04:00'
describe
'992' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBM' 'sip-files00107.txt'
b2f3c674aa8a0f8dd418b8b740d7703e
6afb22496bb9fc204e26db98ece83e56d493bc12
describe
'969' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBN' 'sip-files00108.txt'
26631e6565bab18225f1b86b4085ecf4
c6d8327e6f2fcc1ddea97f84846460e819d57a30
describe
'980' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBO' 'sip-files00109.txt'
add95ac05ba7989386a488db0d6894c5
d0ffd5404308cca219056a43f59d824d1b1b7f45
describe
'935' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBP' 'sip-files00110.txt'
f106b2c6af3bd6c24b08eb7c2a13a93d
236deefb1acd5b93c44ed9388160841e6dc249c5
describe
'942' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBQ' 'sip-files00111.txt'
104256d20e10a9692897979f32d3a66d
0564450d2742fe0928b572a3d9d9ced346c85005
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBR' 'sip-files00112.txt'
31ba46e98031ed27f4dd6af9ffedc834
a6018a5e956ec6460f664892df9aff0ab6bdc1bb
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBS' 'sip-files00113.txt'
57593756142d76ee5bf2c2293498a59d
24974ee0c4d25250b1ebc6a2bc165bf8eab622d7
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBT' 'sip-files00114.txt'
67097390ef95879a9cd6f0a42d39aca6
7035b8c682d79bd17ecb8c50d6e995302ca70197
'2011-08-19T04:57:37-04:00'
describe
'268' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBU' 'sip-files00115.txt'
c75c5649314db6c3384e94e9af7d423e
a605cec8304e8c016b0a0af2e77e814dcbd3a185
describe
Invalid character
'766' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBV' 'sip-files00116.txt'
a9f6e7771580faadb1b0722f5b1c87c3
e183aeb746494ebb3e0609c6d2861fb65e4b1e83
describe
'1033' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBW' 'sip-files00117.txt'
569dcc13744f8f02f19918e23cc5df3b
7351f97bd509dc826adff1d4bbb421758fd16e77
'2011-08-19T04:51:47-04:00'
describe
'1044' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBX' 'sip-files00118.txt'
7ceb202c8687e33612cb82175a5afdbb
67d961e5b185a26baa0915908e08bb22bbc7d6ef
'2011-08-19T04:51:43-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBY' 'sip-files00119.txt'
c8f642e93ce3f826c94dec59239b4485
07581cceb05186bc54d6028518de73e6b927c640
describe
'971' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKBZ' 'sip-files00120.txt'
9ec1692a2104dbda5d1c9215adb2f496
dad1c8a3386ee5e487239fe14ad132e91daf8ddc
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCA' 'sip-files00121.txt'
1871a42f7bf9e9fb4b8d1f2a27054842
833be227f52a001f89625b281f9a5dd87923e59f
describe
'1067' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCB' 'sip-files00122.txt'
ca3f4abbfcdeab85529822a5ce0624e7
088c5b03eaaba8c62ac4f2f79c9583524b05d692
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCC' 'sip-files00123.txt'
b8b83ddd9fbc66c8c9c09b88396a3f6c
2915d74ef44bb4074cf13f63f10a02facfdbd5c1
describe
'1083' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCD' 'sip-files00124.txt'
d738abc381b10cdc7e5b8c83925123e4
35391112291a881fd24a6b83c0af02f5d5d52dc9
'2011-08-19T05:03:41-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCE' 'sip-files00125.txt'
0b5110be1255291722b126896a6dd29e
ea2e4afd7984ca6c1bc79df121c4abdae0708770
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCF' 'sip-files00126.txt'
91fec52443c91acd9def340f59b5e7b2
e718e5b7a5e27514a49ab38d7f9068c683394468
describe
'1027' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCG' 'sip-files00127.txt'
d91b225cb51bb1c4810a051b1d836ee3
d0f574874e8e477c687ae4044c806b575a4daf7d
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCH' 'sip-files00128.txt'
16968efdbe8571b7c4d0e94f1063e312
c36e951d81183e38a25723711a146fccefa0e675
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCI' 'sip-files00129.txt'
525c91c6d19b02cbc7d47719234784af
20eddbeba49384bb2036fe440397aae20252d7d5
describe
'914' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCJ' 'sip-files00130.txt'
d7a048a2372cf371edb0aa20b7eb9792
a256b4c1ab377123fe7c7de82ee3609a1e2765cd
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCK' 'sip-files00131.txt'
a61514f12b2668b118e3f87e5aa2925d
89184b9f72b89a146ca12b898dc4081c3769284e
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCL' 'sip-files00132.txt'
8d82d598cf1a90aed5f10dabd57d1544
250d84999dcf45951c341b0ede829acf091e68c4
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCM' 'sip-files00133.txt'
6fe5f4c7d75b5541a50ce42288f9b5af
9fa350ce9d737a39a29f9d2caa0f6be633a1590f
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCN' 'sip-files00134.txt'
8ed6530e5747e9752003b2d0d132b652
d08365ba908b11b4e01de93c9768a9878351cfc0
describe
'1061' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCO' 'sip-files00135.txt'
2ff96abcdbd2b0f42ceddbcf6fad454c
60a32390d143fc62609dddbf6028f2153f26233c
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCP' 'sip-files00136.txt'
aeee8f3f59d4e9b22b89a06530237fc0
543d93299e075bbe82287f90d5d5d1d5a5d7dedd
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCQ' 'sip-files00137.txt'
b1fb887abb3d619561b50d125d555574
adfbe6684226c2f166caf01e32e6f8c74c32bc5c
'2011-08-19T04:55:29-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCR' 'sip-files00138.txt'
795098b663aa89a8b56292d9612200e6
18c88d9496fbe21f6ed73a19dd0bdad0088015c5
describe
'519' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCS' 'sip-files00139.txt'
48855d3f668bf467486ae174828a4f60
501babd034fd75820c32bb04be61c86932af11bc
describe
'685' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCT' 'sip-files00140.txt'
b81e92afb6a8c102a33b3fc11ce67c78
cbabd5ce6089737ae5054cf9c72efd355c70d3b4
describe
'1011' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCU' 'sip-files00141.txt'
cb47e537b3569f266a1afc2342b716fd
eca1f915205898ca4871bb58e6958f8cc00e8012
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCV' 'sip-files00142.txt'
0e1ba835bafa0f0559e81b5604f764ae
fd4f4d55275e9bbd4c96d39d66ffeccf4344ed2b
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCW' 'sip-files00143.txt'
975abf220fa595750af3d918ac05aca1
c5baab8bade94150ef636a871c7433264af613dc
describe
'1017' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCX' 'sip-files00144.txt'
3e23451b1ffc78e8042bf56b7a19c409
f84e2b5371805d86161c90a600170a1c1ecfeb34
describe
'1020' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCY' 'sip-files00145.txt'
d2b4a000f34e5c8475b590af8a8abf55
1b2f9071fe6e9d6702d1a0e494f9dd9d5eac52f4
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKCZ' 'sip-files00146.txt'
3126bb6083e5d184d648d52f69a33702
264a6cdf12e2ae006f7b743ee5e697b138af1b2d
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDA' 'sip-files00147.txt'
a1436a948f87a1557a94de844c176c62
2bb5e3062f9f542e64bea8be9245f8b2925cf1ae
describe
'979' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDB' 'sip-files00148.txt'
3792cd2ad7a8229cf5f885afb42d1e8e
1794a724f61e4a5de0f3dc0bb558c89209434c2c
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDC' 'sip-files00149.txt'
17dcf8f5429ae9180d9fa950c13a70d8
472952626bed57e7c1673437a5d3c448d1444540
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDD' 'sip-files00150.txt'
2cf9da64292bab09574648ad32115bbd
6166ea54b3af6ce788b15ba270176771d98a2a27
describe
'960' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDE' 'sip-files00151.txt'
97e9f3439070c45a7f30b332cc95a56b
7194d58f7188d6878ef84678239a71b6b6c2d22f
describe
'343' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDF' 'sip-files00152.txt'
cbdce32d30d82788506d306dfee3c901
7299ad64f1dd6b6ccd109dc2c7ff9189b7d16432
'2011-08-19T05:04:45-04:00'
describe
'768' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDG' 'sip-files00153.txt'
88b2a71d1d1f5035089dbccbeea944e8
f1d37cb5eb726811d20ea0f38533b38a7037b407
describe
'1047' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDH' 'sip-files00154.txt'
9ef526a64002e62d92215a316ee530c9
c69659ab9e313bfa7f439ef4a671aa62b6bfb09c
describe
'978' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDI' 'sip-files00155.txt'
40ad7813e1578b43e0b245897192f89d
6ad08ee184c339982426a921f0f833d7ef9a2a89
describe
'999' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDJ' 'sip-files00156.txt'
3b36aa20b9d498ddc3c5a87f024b1a7d
094682bd49f0dc6f0b8a73db2258eacb660d4b3b
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDK' 'sip-files00157.txt'
07fb593a2f1d15d35b8eb22f22bc2bcb
8b5973cace2bc02ae318ccf67e9d1a6a8cac7161
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDL' 'sip-files00158.txt'
1252e17284575b4d2872da121011f89a
004f1855278fadabd9bf2ad8fe2926b0d96835d0
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDM' 'sip-files00159.txt'
e0559470325d6a09b0ebd7d3200d826d
168199bccccf7cb7e7c3e6c6a5b9d6a0cd48cb8b
describe
'970' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDN' 'sip-files00160.txt'
26dbdcd0a05ca83dae66b0a934e1c593
71a414980641bac838fe20ef664cffb0a175c4d8
'2011-08-19T04:56:56-04:00'
describe
'920' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDO' 'sip-files00161.txt'
0ee03c46239724f5089027edb52a28ee
013cb786bf93a8a7df13e59e6f1694242743c1bf
describe
'932' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDP' 'sip-files00162.txt'
fbe4a3b393aa4d734120ad21b96ef8f4
80c5918c0027392793b683d284e8321ee4b438ca
describe
'1000' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDQ' 'sip-files00163.txt'
87f974ab2932dc04989afd4ea5d861e4
0d0c69f0e8de641a77273858d85662b91fbc5db2
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDR' 'sip-files00164.txt'
56682cd77c46c63bbb5860c61a4a0f01
1ec1081cccb0043de39aa5ec2a1421394cd7fcef
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDS' 'sip-files00165.txt'
2e29725adbda0deb24d3ee080e1495a7
4017d0db5c19d103be32d1f1df670fcd7313499e
describe
'1031' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDT' 'sip-files00166.txt'
6105aa2895ff5d3dfbe69bc620d3ed05
70eec810148ede392e2f161eb74118b52417a127
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDU' 'sip-files00167.txt'
d84c469b8b0a334dd7a949b033008dfa
a7f2b1dcb67163d7711560b2ba9694943756b57e
describe
'995' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDV' 'sip-files00168.txt'
7b8f086287a9af89b288d30a8573b5b4
a8ae5c04c76c4713a2b358818f991380a630f7ee
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDW' 'sip-files00169.txt'
85ffaef7ca52fd3a74a927e2b871cf33
3f4305289c674cfd5ef98ab362644e00a30ccfa5
describe
'959' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDX' 'sip-files00170.txt'
4229eb86e31611871656985f5ab4e9c8
164d7cdf6fa97038ad8ec45ec939011a1d1da07e
describe
'876' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDY' 'sip-files00171.txt'
e24a1064e1ab3f8a9302aa559645b417
23449e27b0c00f93c73929bc8e13e5c11afffb8b
describe
'911' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKDZ' 'sip-files00172.txt'
2ce302a34bc7e627744a65be83fa497c
57c391e918bcad8c15bcaeb00381dab95752dd1b
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEA' 'sip-files00173.txt'
4574787659f5939063af7815bd720f19
831f45dace90d9bce087f4b18593aeb697defcd2
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEB' 'sip-files00174.txt'
e4a243114cf8e8205e70053139275358
fc59280a149d670db0080ed1d11f07f16d98a54c
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEC' 'sip-files00175.txt'
424702a2b8494ff251c6ae5cabaf0ec9
dae92b21646eb9ea40e6d4d516ea469a77093f64
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKED' 'sip-files00176.txt'
ec96e77f6ada28f1009d83d3a6952494
17b2fac2df6396ed3d99b39ed4a8a5eb0e90166e
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEE' 'sip-files00177.txt'
a60d06384b333dca279aa76d12865ad2
4353b7f6e9222a328ed1751f342dcae08ce77dd1
'2011-08-19T04:59:43-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEF' 'sip-files00178.txt'
7d309dbe40dce5a69a04a4f67ff1a415
5be83ced4bee8df141dccbf9e4709502e2b0df91
describe
'1002' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEG' 'sip-files00179.txt'
b66b5b6fabfd56fdbd75c867d2d70bc0
ab6cb848297880763063f445275018ca195c78ec
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEH' 'sip-files00180.txt'
93789d76e619885ad6b0c3f08ce3c510
b9d8a5f98c2a9187b17241eb22a5befb3ba86f4c
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEI' 'sip-files00181.txt'
c34a028b40d4213ee19679df1cffd2b0
5b3fc6ffe2032869e267d14b0e49e7f4c8aa3ee5
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEJ' 'sip-files00182.txt'
5e190e905e101cdef269358b77c3f8c3
c324df4d2948748f4e635c88a3b48db11aa54fb2
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEK' 'sip-files00183.txt'
70015d6af4977a20d7a5f37e36fd256e
3778d27f4250d22a92a024db25c558a74d92f9ab
describe
'956' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEL' 'sip-files00184.txt'
e0e93b681cde158a6599211a0ee9b509
131a7dd2a6bf21b8c64b082b3bfada158639fe41
describe
'916' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEM' 'sip-files00185.txt'
5e34e99d134dee8606bc00a10627fb6a
f22bab14212cbc0726586f43869c7f06d83fc0cc
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEN' 'sip-files00186.txt'
06f907ada93dc58259128ac95f2b6911
bad407417658f5893b4d7c4ad02b8609538938eb
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEO' 'sip-files00187.txt'
7ee978f26c0c457de65a31f16d48cb3b
091f00bf452df92f09565e2a18b20825726ee29e
describe
'954' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEP' 'sip-files00188.txt'
30971d1146cbe7ea66e96b25fd3818fe
877391e7c4c59c1d097dd5966974028441a86256
'2011-08-19T04:58:59-04:00'
describe
'940' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEQ' 'sip-files00189.txt'
f3d67d289d8cd16fbaa2109bc06557c3
186ed6a1948bc71dc1f0f35b47e69bb888793555
describe
'950' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKER' 'sip-files00190.txt'
4b6c8aa7eecdbd6d7fe6a0c68007627f
945c873b8551786b5b1412492a8daf3b1672e3c8
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKES' 'sip-files00191.txt'
8849f4efff26eaa38026c96c0575bdac
a3e3df01a36d97f4c585786489cbe4283bd0f946
describe
'630' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKET' 'sip-files00192.txt'
c0683948a3537f69784f1e03b1d7cdab
965c52e2c2161a0f16ba3ec2d70f9ea3763ba948
describe
'726' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEU' 'sip-files00193.txt'
9ba9a7af5ab1272f48f1a847eaf149dc
f531efbedda7d8a7e74c0961d47988a62f2fbb60
describe
'1032' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEV' 'sip-files00194.txt'
289202f4d65eeb0db7c46b8f562b9a46
1c0aaa079e667fa0da8c96456a11c05ec795d490
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEW' 'sip-files00195.txt'
c5425f1a00c3186734530547565de540
96a1d9b36f0bc532b17c28d5925f881aacfa8f92
describe
'1029' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEX' 'sip-files00196.txt'
606534b927a0c04a57cf4d6f921521ce
18900c4b7569f548b9a8cb4ae2feaed6427920ed
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEY' 'sip-files00197.txt'
4225715dd62698eec7c78916d26328ae
f12adcbc36ac9533bb396688c90d0100805019d1
'2011-08-19T05:03:43-04:00'
describe
'1030' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKEZ' 'sip-files00198.txt'
9fdb3cc0bd5aa803c3139b84fdaa89fb
b637ad24243a0bad1f2e013e6267293e07dc0cd3
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFA' 'sip-files00199.txt'
da025e51215bbadd07934fb50761716f
0d94ba590315ac4b006c583d156c528abf256195
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFB' 'sip-files00200.txt'
b66d0c459d2b4eb5c481f1bcc968f484
d3eb66d4e9f0cfdb9b7e60aede3468273dfbcac5
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFC' 'sip-files00201.txt'
5d0ac30fdb41d15ead19bd28f599d92a
bb1c459d558b5165c0c0e869d782d5a5c769e5ab
describe
'891' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFD' 'sip-files00202.txt'
2cad7983a93045fd0e92b99bbc8f50f1
001ab030f1e781c28da42aa7fe979eb857c48477
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFE' 'sip-files00203.txt'
e37e12612146490b9971f5e23c8751e2
f1fbfcaee713499c1e6b01cd1097e048e2b10974
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFF' 'sip-files00204.txt'
40921ccabeaf5395b7525da1a02b2a45
a7447ce45c66c2bd82051e795dbfeb236f57c1e6
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFG' 'sip-files00205.txt'
1859478f43aa788928e6f7e7bb811b95
b620e606f5d1feb4b6002669c5f35a902adf27a1
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFH' 'sip-files00206.txt'
43f45d93922ee21a66177f212ee08a1b
1e66e199330406e3acf418fc7659112d3d8e0340
describe
'955' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFI' 'sip-files00207.txt'
367b80b5b94724a85efd100d865b4dd8
04eba1b8ecef38d7c8c60602b365401ac54b512b
'2011-08-19T04:51:05-04:00'
describe
'919' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFJ' 'sip-files00208.txt'
64dd36e071f22b256c5566811f8afbc1
744d8b6e1a98f35fd9f4e9dd643ad3a43a6ff529
describe
'327' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFK' 'sip-files00209.txt'
5fc48e4a2d3ca69a9096ca4a045e9890
2495109a8e932a17f53a7bb42bb787ebc17a3efb
describe
'724' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFL' 'sip-files00210.txt'
26f9fb2d35d45ab0b801368c9c7b954e
f5e93664436900318d32ab0a11754e5a0012d230
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFM' 'sip-files00211.txt'
c2fe2cf70502ca304ebb0845f71e70b1
a6eec298ae49ec45cb01533a824b05d1d88f4550
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFN' 'sip-files00212.txt'
cee8756c8c599cb4cab9d604e16c2264
937cb019fce95e961132a0a8134a6462946d5b67
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFO' 'sip-files00213.txt'
888fb0ea815f7ce1b155819cd7959356
3dbf31ee89a0f718154986cfca884da42f2376e9
'2011-08-19T04:51:38-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFP' 'sip-files00214.txt'
dd0c09c53f14d1fb2be45b75aa27750f
1227c8ae3a0cb1a17b273b515f2bb13e891eb50c
describe
'951' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFQ' 'sip-files00215.txt'
4ad279001a5c72dfcccb8e91623ec426
b09ed8192261c3e1e3c2602abcc0d1422e15fdca
describe
'1041' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFR' 'sip-files00216.txt'
1283f02c2d9f794648d069fb3c18c6c1
4a83d743d0a51809acd4b0a5cfa32678baf1d626
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFS' 'sip-files00217.txt'
2c6a53cec9e8c7f0af13e39fd2d70394
8b868ef838e97d15c0f88cc10182e1cbee4ba849
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFT' 'sip-files00218.txt'
ba5fd23172f80009c5b2f46d1ba6a568
ca1a833593628a2cd13a9f3abe983643030562ff
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFU' 'sip-files00219.txt'
19a997c4ad74325678a6b10b97e285a6
29f37580d0cd188f9bd381eecee46503cebcea5b
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFV' 'sip-files00220.txt'
6c36b57805b2b40434e45dd7ede159c9
70bfc2f64e9eaec58148d689656245969b3ce4ef
describe
'1008' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFW' 'sip-files00221.txt'
107ba61645f45468c5ddbe352c6ecdf4
774bd41d338914399dfd7ae668825e90edcb61bc
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFX' 'sip-files00222.txt'
90146e1c0b81dfc56cdc90f1de30597f
d060a0c37e0f7af0760b8f06ef640db37d18448f
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFY' 'sip-files00223.txt'
838a7c87ca5981054dc3367b17687fed
96c706d305b10342c3e2c67e29a47e039dfe5ccd
'2011-08-19T04:56:54-04:00'
describe
'1043' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKFZ' 'sip-files00224.txt'
dd5d50a4bda3d72abb56805e78249ac6
3852caa0488f59432d04ea26684ac268cc5528ee
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGA' 'sip-files00225.txt'
e611549415e02859ee4d7c3055fdc894
b73d3e49aebebbb4fd8f059934bba2f8b48ebe71
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGB' 'sip-files00226.txt'
2421ff16c6b7f26003251c908595aefb
8844585e61ab26c164372f8948c067fdeb394c53
'2011-08-19T05:00:31-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGC' 'sip-files00227.txt'
7f1fb35c5b360d46eeaa0f8394ef101c
ae48a14ac883edaa1e1ee29e7eb4f07bda8b93b8
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGD' 'sip-files00228.txt'
8b0b8f0c547b86a6c6de11146df74d57
d82111233423f5e45476fbc3da2a717a97a8f809
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGE' 'sip-files00229.txt'
e76a830f01ff7af09b3186e728828b37
9af8f9dfadf94b1cecdcbbd829862f2b6d89a297
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGF' 'sip-files00230.txt'
a5474966f268fcce259b7f3ad5d190dc
5fac4fa8c297988fe7043b9f85ae5b0258386e55
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGG' 'sip-files00231.txt'
5f24edf4e14b933d6f425487141f8532
a36f244cb158a4f8e7cdbbd32ffe7d9b11704b1f
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGH' 'sip-files00232.txt'
358a8438d9c37f1e35b024c4a1b24d51
314889e7af982b8bb7dfb1f120cd50741dde28db
'2011-08-19T05:03:34-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGI' 'sip-files00233.txt'
4b90e781af1162778fda5473fc1491f2
8b5e05e2247480cb1947587c56679279ecda89af
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGJ' 'sip-files00234.txt'
4d8ad816bf50cb98e353188c1c71e959
f80d6a511d50400486152b3b0a47f9b8689e2e9e
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGK' 'sip-files00235.txt'
2ca1758f7ca89ba1ca253093ea0701bf
8496952040ce23a00dc380d5846968a56d603948
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGL' 'sip-files00236.txt'
b9c9bce0edc8682ec393a32ffbfb2548
bf3aa9393396f9ea262cfeaef229e2676934118e
describe
'416' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGM' 'sip-files00237.txt'
ff0c6d4ab72266558f30f0351a2ae674
e359060800a9527fe76adaeb2499d9851bbd9a75
describe
'745' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGN' 'sip-files00238.txt'
9a19515140899bebfd1e02f5d6acde77
ee8bed7265078db7cd0725a85f7b4f0387ea3a61
'2011-08-19T04:57:59-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGO' 'sip-files00239.txt'
091795eec99ac1027144c94c5452ff98
90d2a82e95785830df1bf5c39b7b14a6bffd0d9a
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGP' 'sip-files00240.txt'
3305ae68cc74dafcb5b2b204f49ffec4
e98a48b46a9ed347828ce045c7586bf5c0cd8d9b
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGQ' 'sip-files00241.txt'
83e3d9c20fa07ec364c5d86c6a9e1f85
b79eb8b6d3a85b85f2a140284f5f8c923341f1a5
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGR' 'sip-files00242.txt'
8bd1a534ab38a78d71edcc02125c440a
db87f7a5e71f05ea0d9ac8a3a80404208158b56f
describe
'998' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGS' 'sip-files00243.txt'
3843ef0d89f3f8ca9e6e20d4dcc55374
fc37c70ba4a91d3295f5e43d78b41dc2dbe88bac
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGT' 'sip-files00244.txt'
9732f4fc673363c1c531b39a99383f2c
206aa234d15df571f9be4d9f84c4baefd944e320
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGU' 'sip-files00245.txt'
25dfeebd8553bd72904607c3259bf107
4b6fa682dc6c47accd25ed3a1841dfb870a5f190
describe
'1028' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGV' 'sip-files00246.txt'
cdfd768e067049f38e8d89977c53c8f6
f8ae34e6ba02ea4b2463b8baa75b55350b1035c2
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGW' 'sip-files00247.txt'
690f55c7cd788b02566f440c3e739dc4
a94339e57d9813a00596c2669e2f04204d5d31c7
describe
'792' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGX' 'sip-files00248.txt'
09563242d793eb8c40a1365acb623ea6
54d94cac05d0ceffd9664a7ed65f40b9a2da081d
describe
Invalid character
'739' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGY' 'sip-files00249.txt'
b7b5cd47fda80030ca92dde944b261de
b3427d2c34c20ccf24e91ab3b677f0bae912e70c
describe
'1060' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKGZ' 'sip-files00250.txt'
7b0331e5c78563325449da924db3e2eb
810b1d48244d9113363770b433f90ac9dfc46d37
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHA' 'sip-files00251.txt'
3120cb880fbad5ce6aa344b46463c660
a4ef5567bc2bbf7a6785f64d8e2708e9ec54fd39
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHB' 'sip-files00252.txt'
d45cf195c9f6f873449a1538915aee68
ddb3915e3a43b08c37dcf095f074427c04c8ffcd
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHC' 'sip-files00253.txt'
c8c3edbdf71cfb0e1185ad8b7206258f
0757e201f781a6cfbaa987823e922f7cb13474e2
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHD' 'sip-files00254.txt'
5a7e189d0ffb03b9655dcfb1a6b57c46
3ebb0ddef01335df550fe832cd02a4a0d71bf03f
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHE' 'sip-files00255.txt'
1f946786462e942a062c53d865bec786
df016f791876e4757a36d5a75be38a83caddf7dc
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHF' 'sip-files00256.txt'
adee066125baf88f3c4c4c4cec66be0f
edf331481e42606af687054fe5833eb7baf7f7d6
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHG' 'sip-files00257.txt'
942c6d0db7f402142cd0b481487b0568
016717d56084d05ce6694274aa379955114493b1
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHH' 'sip-files00258.txt'
9bfc55abf71221ae44f99dd1823770cb
60ecf46bfe0261bac2fcd28d308c7e76b3469c53
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHI' 'sip-files00259.txt'
64231135a62768cba33cf7f6ea739848
8da023bfa6aa1d826cb75c2843128d95eaea7413
describe
'991' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHJ' 'sip-files00260.txt'
2d9a741e3e31f327baf6dad7754faea2
de425efaa7b83962e429a4817b9be775177144c5
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHK' 'sip-files00261.txt'
4c1cdd14147a2a0f1c8d97f41f3bc17e
c9df77f2f751db822f069cac187061d602955e20
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHL' 'sip-files00262.txt'
8e36bf3c8ef5aaca0681a840955d69e3
f39bd9dcf5105d2a15ae069771c3bf96e5bc25d5
describe
'435' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHM' 'sip-files00263.txt'
db521973167647954ff2255e4e1d7581
eeba59601763045d88ba9d4b84e26828aed5998a
describe
Invalid character
'722' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHN' 'sip-files00264.txt'
08019c484597ad401fdd9b785fa06f12
8d133da94b9e829c3a601e280ae3d9bba5a576f5
describe
'994' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHO' 'sip-files00265.txt'
9f9591c9cdd454be1b17adee3374a5fa
fc63afd15506eda5a49b48da8d2886edebcb4c28
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHP' 'sip-files00266.txt'
9be06b0da7da04a5557a162ef5e52232
64d870c8e2d2494ae5ca99fda34280a2d3aad5cb
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHQ' 'sip-files00267.txt'
a5476bdba6f32ad1b986c9d23c75761e
a91cd5cd94d942387af7e9ea5250c4b70efc6361
describe
'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHR' 'sip-files00272.txt'
ccda5937350625be9f86a5e11ee57cfe
1620f900d5a04cabf7fcf8ed769a7f5f6896a713
describe
'451795' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHS' 'sip-filesUF00028335_00001.mets'
ff788aa6817a616794653cf1440a7f5e
98e720566562b43eea84ca536406360d9d2e9b27
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/'.
'2013-12-16T20:15:34-05:00' '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/'.
'518073' 'info:fdaE20080801_AAAAIWfileF20080804_AAAKHV' 'sip-filesUF00028335_00001.xml'
d2a4d963d46b1672c216b39750ff9200
724376d49ffd93ce786ae047aa159e83d751489a
describe
'2013-12-16T20:15:30-05:00'
xml resolution