Citation
The Old farm house, or, Alice Morton's home

Material Information

Title:
The Old farm house, or, Alice Morton's home and other stories
Portion of title:
Alice Morton's home
Added title page title:
The Old farm house
Creator:
Pollard, M. M
Nimmo, William Philip, 1831-1883 ( Publisher )
Place of Publication:
London
Edinburgh
Publisher:
William P. Nimmo
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
127, 8 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 18 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Christian life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Children's stories ( lcsh )
Children's stories -- 1876 ( lcsh )
Publishers' catalogues -- 1876 ( rbgenr )
Bldn -- 1876
Genre:
Children's stories ( lcsh )
Publishers' catalogues ( rbgenr )
novel ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
England -- London
Scotland -- Edinburgh
Target Audience:
juvenile ( marctarget )

Notes

Scope and Content:
Alice Morton's home -- Aerial voyage -- Gold, or, Ivon's question -- Three screens
General Note:
Frontispiece printed in colors.
General Note:
Publisher's catalogue follows text.
Funding:
Preservation and Access for American and British Children's Literature, 1870-1889 (NEH PA-50860-00).
General Note:
Inscription dated 1882.
Statement of Responsibility:
by M.M. Pollard.

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:
026921527 ( ALEPH )
ALH6602 ( NOTIS )
61164798 ( OCLC )

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THE
OLD FARM HOUSE

ALICE MORTON’S HOME

And other Stories.

By M. M. POLLARD

AUTHOR OF ‘ THE BROTHER'S LEGACY,’ ETC. ETG.

WILLIAM P. NIMMO:
LONDON: 14 KING WILLIAM STREET, STRAND,
AND EDINBURGH.
1876.



CONTENTS

ALICE MORTON’S HOME—
PAGE

I. THE FARM HOUSE IN SHADOW, . . . 7

II, THE MOTHER’S CHARGE, . ° e . 20

: Ill. SUNDAY WORK, . . . . e > 27
IV. HARRY MORTON, . ° ° e > 36

V. THE DAWN OF LIGHT, . . ° ° e 47

VI. MOORFIELDS IN SUNSHINE, . e ° . 52

AN AERIAL VOVYAGE—
I. ‘AT HOME’ IN THE MOON, . ° ° . 59

Il. A GLIMPSE AT THE SUN, : . ° . 66

III. A GLIMPSE AT THE PLANETS, 5 .

Iv. A JOURNEY THROUGH SPACE, . 3

GOLD: ORIVON’S QUESTION, . . Be ee = 00

, THE THREE SCREENS, . * ° ° . . ItTr



ALICE MORTON'S HOME,





ALICE MORTON’S HOME.



CHAPTER I.

THE FARM HOUSE IN SHADOW.

s1F you wish to visit Moorfields with me, you




must make up your mind to traverse at
least a mile of rugged uneven road,
ploughed into deep cart ruts in winter; but in sum-
mer, when the dust is not too thick, it is pleasant
and varied enough, for then the hedges and banks
are lit up with thousands of primroses and violets.

After this we have a steep field to cross, and we
reach a wood; but even ¢#ex we cannot see Farmer
Morton’s house, for the trees crowd thickly together,
and almost meet overhead.



8 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.



Now we reach a gate—very rough and broken it
is—and inside there is.almost an equally rough-look-
ing pathway, but when we have traversed this last
stage of our journey, the farm buildings burst full on
our view.

The homestead is irregularly constructed, and
seems very, very old, for the persevering ivy has
crept over many parts of the house, and threatens
to shut out the light from one or two of the end
windows.

On either side are barns, stables, sheds, and yards
for cattle. There are huge stacks of corn and hay,
and had affairs been well managed, no doubt the
farm at Moorfields would have made a profitable
return.

Behind the house there is a wide stretch of open
country, laid out in pasture or in crops, as the case
may be. There is a large fruit or vegetable garden,
and a fine old orchard, with trees in it so gnarled
and covered with grey lichen, that you might imagine
them a century old at least.

Yet they bear splendid fruit, and the juicy pears,
mellow apples, and rich plums on Farmer Morton’s
trees found a ready sale in that part of the country.



THE FARM HOUSE IN SHADOW. 9

At the time we write of, Farmer Morton had the
name of being a hard, morose kind of man ; there
was nothing bright or cheery about him—none more
ready than he was to grumble when the destructive
smut attacked his com—when he noticed the dusty
black heads peeping up through the bright green ones
he was very apt to grow cross and dissatisfied ; but
when a plentiful crop of golden wheat was gathered
into his barns, I fear no thought of gratitude to the
great Giver of the harvest ever rose in his heart. Oh!
how often this is the case. We grumble at the minor
ills and troubles that fall to our lot, while we close
our eyes to the mercies that encompass us all our
gays.

His wife, Mary Morton, had many trials, as you
may suppose, with his ungenial temper ; but this was
not all; their son Harry, who was nearly twenty-one
years old, instead of being a help and comfort to
them, was growing very wild, and had begun to seek
for happiness among idle companions. Poor Mrs.
Morton grieved bitterly at this, for she had tried to
bring up her son respectably, and with the fear of
God in his heart; but hers was but a feeble know-
ledge, and though she often wept for him, and prayed



10 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.

for him, she had not much power in restraining his
unsettled habits.

Alice, her eldest daughter, was fourteen years old,
and was already a great help and comfort to her
mother. Then there were two little boys, Tiny and
Bobby, who were only five and six years of age ; these,
with Tom the farm servant, and two stout village
girls, made up the whole household at Moorfields.

One wet July evening, Alice Morton was sitting in
the old-fashioned best kitchen of the farm-house,
waiting for her father’s return from Newtown market.

Her eldest brother Harry was gone there also, and
every minute she expected to hear the horse of one
or the other coming up the pathway to the house.

Alice was a pale, thoughtful-looking girl, with dark
brown hair neatly arranged in bands, and anxious,
earnest-looking dark eyes. Under more genial in-
fluences she might have grown pretty, for her small
features were almost classic in their regularity, but
the cares’ of life were already pressing heavily on
her, poor child !

No wonder she was tired this evening; she had
been up ever since four o’clock in the morning, and
all through the day it had been work! work! work!



THE FARM HOUSE IN SHADOW. 11



There was the butter to churn, the fowls to prepare
for market, rooms to put in order, meals to cook,
and the two children to attend to.

Her mother had helped her as much as she could,
but she had always been very delicate, and of late
her weakness had so increased, that she was not
able to attend to the great scrambling household as
well as usual.

For several days past the poor mother had often
been glad to creep to the arm-chair, and sit there
gasping till the faintness had passed away.

‘Don’t tell your father of this weakness of mine,
Alice,’ she would say. ‘Men don’t understand this
kind of thing, and he might fancy I was only pre-
tending to be ill?

On this July evening her ailment was worse than
usual, and she was forced to go to bed sorely against
her will, so Alice was obliged to wait up alone.

Oh! what a long evening it seemed, as she sat in
the great, half-lighted kitchen ; but she was not idle.
A huge pile of stockings lay beside her, and she was
darning almost impossible holes.

An open book was spread before her also, and

- she was learning her texts for the next Sunday



12 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.

Glancing at the book for a minute, she would go
on with her darning, and repeat in a soft low voice
the beautiful words that were strung together like a
chain of priceless pearls—

‘Behold the fowls of the air, for they sow not,
neither do they reap, nor gather into barns, yet your
Heavenly Father feedeth them. Are ye not much
better than they?’ She repeated once more, and
then she heard the sound of a horse coming up the
path.

Alice quickly put her book aside, as she knew quite
well neither her father nor her brother would have any
sympathy with the holy book she was reading ; she
was sure of a reproof from the one, or a careless jest
‘from the other. Alas! religion was little thought of
by either of them, and the poor girl often heard
language from them that differed very much from
the teaching she delighted in at the Sunday-school.

Mrs. Morton, in her weak, quiet way, grieved
bitterly at the careless lives of her husband and son,
_ and more so than ever of late, for her delicate health
seemed to bring the things and thoughts of the
eternal world nearer and nearer to her.

Alice heard the horse led round to the stables, and



THE FARM HOUSE IN SHADOW. 13



then there came three quick taps to the door. She
jumped up and opened it very softly.

‘Oh, Harry, how late you are!’

‘Is father come in then?’ asked he, pushing past
her.

He was a tall, strong-looking young man, with
dark hair, and eyes like his sister’s ; but there was a
look on his face not pleasant to see—dissipation and
recklessness were plainly pictured there.

He seemed to be in a halftipsy good humour, and
laughing loudly, he said, ‘I’ve had a rare bit of fun
to-day, and I'll tell you all about it. Feyther set his
heart on getting twenty pounds for the black mare,
and old Brown offered me ten shillings if I’d get it
for him for seventeen, and we managed it so well
that feyther actually gave it at the price he wanted.’
Here Harry took a fit of laughing at the joke, as he
called it, and he was forced to stop and wipe his eyes
and take breath.

“Tell me the rest to-morrow,’ said Alice, in terror
lest her father should come in.

‘The best of the joke was, that after the bargain
was made, Smithson came up and offered twenty

down for the mare, and wasn’t feyther in a rage when



14 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.



he found he could have got more? He blamed me—
he did indeed ! and I had to keep out of his sight all _
the rest of the day.’

‘I’m very sorry about the mare, Harry ; it ought to
have made more money.’

‘I kept out of his way, and he had to stand in the
market and sell all the sheep himself.’

‘Oh! Harry, how unkind that was of you; you
ought to help father, instead of cheating him and im-
posing on him—you know he is getting old now.’

‘Don’t you begin preaching, Miss Alice ; leave all
that for mother to do, she gives us a good share
sometimes—what was I saying ?—well, coming home,
I went into the “Swan and Eagle,”—I’m always
welcome ¢here you know, and Mrs. Brown invites me
into the back-parlour, so I was just sitting down with
Dora and her to have a bit of supper, when I saw
feyther come into the house—you know Dora Brown,
don’t you ?’

‘No, Harry, and I don’t wish to know her; but
please go to bed, will you? or father will be coming
in,’

Alice was half crying by this time ; she feared so
much there would be another quarrel between her



THE FARM HOUSE IN SHADOW. 15

father and Harry, should they meet while the latter
was so excited. .

“J had already eaten the first mouthful, when, as
I said, feyther came in, and Smithson and Brown,
and they began talking and arguing about the mare,
till I thought they were going to fight—I did
indeed.’

‘Harry, dear, will you go to bed?’ said Alice,
getting up and lighting a candle for him. Oh!
how she dreaded the scenes, alas! too frequent,
between father and sort.

‘Lhear a horse coming,’ exclaimed: she, a minute
after. ‘Oh, I’m sure I do.’ Harry listened also,
and as the sounds were unmistakably coming nearer,
he caught up the candle and prepared to depart.

‘Please don’t make any noise as you go up-stairs,
Harry, for mother is very ill to-night,’ whispered
Alice.

‘Is she really? I’m very sorry—there’s feyther ©
just gone round to the stables—good-night, Alice.’
And he went quickly up the stairs, laughing to him-
self, and swaying the candle to and fro, as he caught
hold of the banisters in his ascent.

Farmer Morton, a stout, heavy-looking man, with



16 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.

short iron-grey hair, came in soon after, and at the
first glance, Alice saw he was in an ill temper.

He flung himself down on the first chair, apparently
tired and worn out.

‘Where’s your mother to-night ?’ said he, looking
round the kitchen.

‘She did not feel at all well, father, and was forced
to go to bed.’

‘I never saw the likes of her for croaking—always
something the matter with her—when a man comes
home tired, he likes to have some one to look after
him. Why are you so late at work%—put that
rubbish away, I tell you.’ Alice meekly put her
work-basket aside.

‘Now, bring me my slippers,’ said he, kicking his
wet boots across the kitchen. ‘I’ve taken a nasty
cold to-day,’ continued the farmer after a pause. ‘ That
lad Harry will be my death ; he never came to help
me to sell the sheep, and kept me standing about in
the wet market-place all day; has he come in yet?’

‘Yes, father, and gone to bed,’ replied Alice, with
great inward satisfaction that they had not met. .

“It’s very fortunate he has gone to bed, for I must
have some talk with him—it will keep till to-morrow



THE FARM HOUSE IN SHADOW. 14



though. He and Brown were scheming together
about the black mare—I saw it plain enough—and I
saw him grinning at me through the parlour window
at the “Swan and Eagle;” he shall give up going
there so often, or Ill know the reason why.’

The farmer sat for some time half asleep on his
chair, then he roused himself :—

‘I feel my cold getting worse and worse, so I must
have some hot spirit and water ; you may fetch it for
me, Alice.’ The poor girl knew well enough that the
iires were all out, but the boiling water must be had,
so she ran to the wood-house, piled some wood in
her apron, placed it in the back-kitchen grate, and
blew it up to a flame, scorching her pale little face to
fever-heat as she did so. Then she went to her
mother’s room for the key.

‘Ts that Alice?’ said a weak voice.

‘Yes, mother; I want the key to get some spirits
for father—he’s caught a bad cold, he says.’

‘Did he see Harry when he came in ?’

‘No, mother; he had gone to bed, so we had
peace and quietness to-night.’

‘Thank God for that!’ exclaimed Mrs. Morton
fervently ; ‘I wish there was oftener ¢hat story to tell.

B



13 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.



Oh how I long for peace and quietness, and I feel
as if the Lord was bringing it very near to me now.’

‘Do you feel any better, mother?’ asked Alice.

; ‘Not much better, dear; but perhaps when the
house is quite still and shut up I shall fall off to sleep, .
and then perhaps this strange, queer feeling may pass
away ; but the Lord’s will be done. It’s very late for
you, my poor child !’

Alice hurried -down-stairs, but her father had fallen
asleep in an uneasy posture in his chair, and she
noticed how tired and worn he looked. He started
up when she came in, and mixed a strong glass of
‘spirits and boiling water. He drank it off quickly,
and then went moodily up-stairs.

Perhaps his wife was sleeping—for she did not
speak to him when he entered the room—but Farmer
Morton was not in the humour to trouble himself
much about that. He got into bed as speedily as pos-
sible, and was soon snoring away most melodiously.

Poor weary Alice closed up the house as soon as
possible, and wént up-stairs at last.

Her room was large, and situated at the top of the
house. It had a sloped, garret-like ceilig, very low ;
on one side and quite high on the other.



THE FARM HOUSE IN SHADOW. 19



There -was no carpet, and the chairs and tables
were all made of rough deal; but there was ‘a neat,
trim look in the place, and the curtains. and white
coverings of the beds were spotless.

Beds I say, for her young brothers Tiny and Bobby
slept there also. Tiny, the eldest, was properly
called Anthony, but by an ingenious abbreviation his
name had been changed into the present form. Bobby
was a curly-headed little fellow, a year younger ; he
believed ‘all his brother did was perfection, and at
the present stage of his five-year-old experience was
little more than an echo of his brother’s sayings and
doings.





CHAPTER IL

THE MOTHER’S CHARGE.

LICE began to undress very wearily, think-
ing, as she did so, of the text she ha 1 been



learning, about the ‘ fowls of the air,’ that
sow not, nor reap, nor gather into barns. ‘TF sup-
pose then,’ her thoughts ran on, ‘they never get to
feel as tired as I do now; it must be very nice to
be fed, and taken care of, like our Heavenly Father
takes care of them ; and yet He says “ we are much
better than they,” although we are let to be so weary
and worn-out sometimes.’

All at once she heard a heavy footstep on the
stairs; it came on so slowly; that she felt half
frightened, and stood still to listen, with her hair all

loose about her shoulders, and her dress half off.
20



THE MOTHERS CHARGE. 21



Presently the door was opened softly, and she saw
her mother standing there, looking very wan and
pale.

‘Oh Alice dear, I am so ill; and I was afraid of
disturbing your poor father, for he don’t seem quite
well to-night, so I came here to you; do let me lie
- on your bed for a little while.’

Alice ran over to her quickly, and helped her into
the bed as well as she could, smoothed the clothes
over her, and got an old bottle of smelling-salts out
of her drawer to try and revive her ; but her attempts
seemed to be quite in vain, for poor Mrs. Morton
rapidly became worse.

Her breath came and went in laboured gasps,
she seemed sometimes almost suffocating, and her
eyes became glazed and dim.

Alice grew terrified, and when she found her
attempts at restoration were of no avail, she laid her
mother’s head gently on the pillow, and ran to her
father’s room to call him.

Then shaking him, she cried out, ‘Oh father,
please get up, for mother is very ill !’

But the farmer was in a heavy slumber; his long
day’s fatigue, his cold, and the restorative he had



22 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.



used for it, all combined to seal his eyelids, and she
could not rouse him.

‘Don’t disturb me,’ said he angrily ; ‘let me alone,
I say,’ and he was snoring again in a moment as
loudly as ever.

‘What shall I do? cried Alice. She shrank from
calling her brother, and rushed up the back stairs to
a loft where old Thomas, the farm-servant, slept.

‘Get up, Tom, as quickly as you can,’ cried she,
‘and saddle the horse, and go for Doctor Grey, for
mother is dreadfully ill.’

When she returned at last to her room she found
a still greater change had taken place in her mother,
who seemed to wrestle with her agony. The two
little children had been disturbed, and they now
stood beside her bed, with their bare feet and their
scanty night-dresses.

Alice raised her mother’s head and bathed her
brow. ‘Oh, if the doctor would only come!’ she
cried. ‘ How long the time seems !’

‘I don't think the doctor could do any good,
Alice,’ said her mother softly. ‘I must go, dear, for
death is on me, and my Saviour calls me away ; there
will be no more tears and troubles in heaven.’ Alice

e



THE MOTHERS CHARGE. 23



repeated as well as she was able, ‘And God shall
wipe away all tears from their eyes, and there shall
be no more pain nor sorrow.’

‘No more pain nor sorrow,’ repeated the poor
woman eagerly, ‘and all through the merits of my
Saviour, for I am poor, and vile, and weary myself—
oh, how I long for the rest of heaven! but I’m
sorry to leave all the worry to you, Alice ; you will
have much to do, my poor child. Try, dear, and
keep peace between father and Harry, and try and
take care of the two poor little children ; teach them
to go to church with you, and teach them, adove al/,
to love God, anJ to love and be kind to each other.’

‘J will, I will,’ said Alice, with a great sob, as she
caught the laboured words, that came out in gasps.
‘Oh, mother, mother, I will try and do my best !’

Presently Harry came creeping into the room,
half awake, with his clothes hurriedly put on; he
had heard the disturbance in the house, and looked
round the room with wonder. He bent over his
mother, but she did not see him, her eyes had a dim
far-away look, as if they were blind for ever to the
things of this world.

The dying woman’s lips still moved. and Alice



24 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.

heard her whisper, ‘Oh, I believe it all ; I beliéve in
God the Father Almighty, and I believe in the Lord
Jesus Christ.’

Poor little Tiny and Bobby, who were standing on
tiptoes and straining their ears to hear what their
mother said, now caught these werds, and to their
minds it seemed as if she was saying the Apostles’
Creed their sister had taught them, and they lifted
up their voices, and repeated the beautiful words to-
gether, to the very end.

It was a solemn scene. Harry and Alice joined
their voices also, and the dying woman evidently
understood the words, for she listened eagerly to the
close, and then her lips repeated over and over again,
‘Lord Jesus, take me to the “life everlasting.” ’

Have you ever thought of the words of this confes-
sion of our faith,—how simple and comprehensive
they are? In ancient times it used to be a kind of
watchword among the early Christians; they re-
peated it to each other when they met ; nobles used
to draw the sword when the Creed was said, and thus
showed their determination to defend it even to
death itself{—and these were the last words poor Mrs.

Morton heard on earth.



THE MOTHERS CHARGE. 25

After this there was no sound but the sobbing of
the children and the laboured breathing of their
mother. Harry seemed overcome with grief; he
buried his face in his hands, and wept convulsively ;
his whole frame trembled with his agony.

The bitter anguish of remorse seemed to have
fallen on him, and at that moment he was ready to
renounce his reckless ungodly life, give up his giddy
companions, and try to begin a new course. Would
that his good resolutions had lasted ! but they passed
away again, like the ‘morning cloud’ or the ‘early
dew.’

They waited thus, nearly an hour, before the doc-
tor could be found ; but alas! the whole College of
Physicians could not have done Mrs. Morton any
good, they could not have recalled the breath that
was fast ebbing away; for her wearied heart, clogged
by disease, was giving its last throes.

The farmer was roused from sleep by this time,
and he came running into the room, with his wife's
shawl thrown over his shoulders. He looked at the
weeping group with amazement. ‘What is the
matter? Alice, what dnes all this mean? Why is,

your mother lying here? Surely she is not dying!



26 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.
Oh Mary! Mary! speak to me, just one word—my
own true wife !’

But his appeal was in vain, for another change had
come over her face—an unmistakable one this time,
and as Alice bent over her she found the heaving
chest and the gasping breath were still.

Poor Alice knelt down by the bed, clasping her
mother’s hand in hers. ‘Oh, mother, why did you
go away?’ cried she in her anguish. ‘Why did
you leave me behind? for I am very weary here!’
then all at once she remembered her mother’s last
words to her, and drawing the children very close to
her, she said softly, ‘Lord Jesus, give me more
patience, and teach me to try and do all that my
mother told me.’

Life’s toil and anxiety was over now for Mrs.
Morton ; but the weight of cares and strife was in-
creased for Alice; her heart sometimes sank quite
low when she thought of all that was before her;
but, young as she was, she had already learnt the
secret of strength, and she called earnestly on God
to be near her, and help her.





CHAPTER IIL

SUNDAY WORK.




A LICE! Alice !’ called out a sharp shrill voice
one Sunday morning, just ten days after
Mrs. Morton’s death. ‘Alice, come here ;
I want you to pick a hamper of ripe pears, and some
peas for sending to Newtown to-morrow.’

The speaker was Betsy Morton, a sister of the
farmer’s, whose face was as sharp as her words. He
had invited her to Moorfields to take charge of things
for a while, and she had come, vested with a good
share of curiosity and authority.

Poor Mrs. Morton had always been shy with her, and
had kept her at a great distance, for she did not like
her grasping ways, her rough manner, and her hard

unfeeling heart ; but now Betsy, for the first time in
27



28 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.



her life, found herself of some little importance at
Moorfields ; she took on herself the position of mis-
tress in the farm-house, and had already begun to
worry Alice and scold and torment the servants.

No corner of the house escaped her scrutiny ; she
went. into the rooms, opened Mrs. Morton’s boxes
and cupboards, and examined the house-linen and
clothes. She turned the things over with somewhat
of contempt, and found fault with the various little
careful contrivances.

‘ Mary Morton was always a thriftless, poor, weak
creature,’ was her inward comment ; ‘ never the one
to make the best of things, dawdling about over her
work, always doing, never done, and yet so stuck up
and proud, no one was good enough company for her.’

Betsy had a great idea of her own powers, and used
to boast, ‘There wasn’t a sharper mistress in the
countryside than herself,—she’d see the lads and
lasses did their duty.’ And so she went over the
house from the dairy to the garret, tormenting and
scolding every one.

Tiny and Bobby used to fly at the sound of her
voice, and when Alice was busy they spent most of
their time about the farm-yard and fields. Betsy had



SUNDAY WORK. 29

not improved things at Moorfields, but had rather
made the burden greater.

But we must return to the Sunday morning. Alice
had been occupied since an early hour with the work
that is unavoidable in a large farm-house ; for animals
must be fed, and milk, etc., attended to. She had
finished now, and was going to dress her little brothers
to go with her to the Sunday-school, when her aunt’s
voice stopped her.

‘I can’t pick the peas now, Aunt Betsy, for I’m
going to fetch the boys, and take them to church
with me, and we’re going to Sunday-school first.’

‘Nonsense !’ exclaimed Aunt Betsy, her black eyes
flashing, and her face all in a glow. ‘Nonsense!
what good will that do ’em?%—only just spoil their
new mourning going down the fields; and it looks
like rainagain. Just take the hamper and get me the
pears that I may count ’em out. I’ve got a large
baking in the oven, and I want you to see to ¢hat
presently, so you caz’t go down village this morning.’

‘ But I must,’ said Alice firmly ; ‘I promised mother
I would take the children to church, and so I will;
and as for spoiling their mourning, why, they can
wear their old clothes.’



30 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.



‘And a pretty disgrace that ’ud be, to see Farmer
Morton’s boys out in old clothes already ; no, if they
go, they must wear their best black; but you must
stay home to-day and help, there’s so much fruit
spoiling, and there’s fowls to be got ready.’

‘T’ll get up as early as you like to-morrow,’ pleaded
poor Alice.

‘There’s butter to be made to-morrow, and the
peas to shell, and the red currants to be picked,’
went on Aunt Betsy, growing more angry at every
fresh duty.

‘But we always get it all done in time,’ persisted
Alice. ‘Jane and Sarah Evans are coming to help
us at day-dawn.’

‘ That’s the way your father never makes his farm
pay, hiring people to do what his own children and
servants ought to get through well enough. I shall
give him my advice about it.’

‘Don’t advise him to keep us from church,’ saiw
Alice, with a sudden gush of tears, ‘for I’ve promised
mother always to take the children there. Oh! don’t
advise him to do that, Aunt Betsy.’

“You ’re just a poor, weak, puny thing like your
mother was, with your tears always at high-water



SUNDAY WORK. 31



mark, Well, if you’ve set your heart so much on
going to church, I shan’t hinder ye,’ and she went
out into the cattle-yard, grumbling as ‘she went.

Alice dried her tears, and then went out to hunt
for her brothers. She found them at last. Tiny the
eldest, was stretched at full length on the top of a
rabbit-hutch, and Bobby was taking the young rabbits
out of their retreats, and presenting them to him, one
by one, for his inspection.

‘I like the white one best, so you may have the
brown and white long-eared fellow,’ he was saying
just as Alice came to them. She had gone a long
way round by the orchard, for there was a redness
in her eyes and a swelling in her throat that she
wanted to get rid of before she reached the boys.

‘Harry said we might have one each,’ said Tiny,
‘and I’ve got the white one ; isn’t he a beauty ?”

‘Very pretty indeed,’ replied his sister; ‘but I
want you to put them away now, and come with me
down to the village. First well go to Sunday-school,
and then I'll take you to church, and we’ll all sit in
the gallery with the Sunday scholars.’

‘But we can’t,’ said Bobby, shaking his curly head.
‘Tom said he’d come and take us both down to



32 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.



the river, and show us the young ducks.—Didn’t he,
Tiny?’

“Yes, that he did, and he’s coming now,’ replied
little six-year-old Tiny, as he fondly caressed his
rabbit.

‘You may go down to the river with Tom to-
morrow,’ said Alice, ‘but I must take you to church
with me now, for I promised mother I would do
so, and it will be very sad if you refuse to come.’

‘Mother will never know about it,’ said Tiny, ‘for
she’s down in a dark grave in the churchyard ; I saw
them put her there.’

‘Yes,’ chimed in Bobby, ‘ and old Bill Cheevy beat
down the earth very hard with his shovel.’

‘Poor mother’s body is lying there,’ said Alice,
trying to keep back her tears, ‘but her spirit is not
there ; ¢iat-is gone to be with God; and if ever you
want to see her again, and be where she is, you must
be obedient, and do what God tells you, and what
she also said you were to do; don’t you remember
what she said the night she left us,—that I was to
teach you to love God, and to love each other? You
must obey her, though she is not here to see.’

A little hand had crept softly into Alice’s, and



SUNDAY WORK. 33

Tiny was looking up in her face with his eyes full
of tears.

‘I will go with you, Alice; please take me,’ and
Bobby, who tried to copy everything his brother did,
and even echoed his words, held out his little hand
also, and said he would go with Tiny.

So at last the trio set out, and as it was now very
late, Alice half led, half carried the boys by turns,
through the wood, and down the long lane to the
village school.

Miss Herbert, the vicar’s daughter, saw them
coming in late and hot and tired, but as she knew
only too well the circumstances of the farmer’s
family, she could not blame poor Alice, so she
smiled kindly on her, made her sit on the form very
near her, and asked her many questions about the
little boys.

She called a tall, healthy-looking girl towards her—

‘Sarah Coles, I want you to take these little
fellows into your class ; they cannot read yet, but you
can tell them about Samuel, how God called him, and
you can teach them a verse or two of some nice hymn.’

Alice took her place in Miss Herbert’s class, and
heard her tell of the love of Jesus, and how those

Cc



34 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.



that love Him grow to be of the same spirit, and act
among the quarrelsome people of the world as
peacemakers. ;

She told them of aZ that kindness does, how it
smooths down an angry temper, and softens a hard
heart, and makes the work of life go on smoothly and
easily ; she said all had more or less of this to do ;
Jesus had preached of peace to His people, and by
doing His will all might become His children. ‘Be-
loved, if God so loved us, we ought also to love one
another.’

Alice thought this was all said to her. ‘Oh that
I could be a peacemaker!’ she thought; ‘and if father
and Harry could only hear this, they would never,
never be hard and sharp to one another again, they
would never use such bitter, aggravating words.’

And all up through the lane, and through the
wood, she talked quietly to the listening children,
and told them ‘they must always love one another,
and never grow impatient and unkind, but be gentle.
and peaceful as Jesus was.’

The grave little girl, with her sad, wistful eyes,
might have been years their senior, from the sage
advice she gave them.



SUNDAY WORK. 35



They promised to do what she told them, and then
she kissed them and said, ‘ Jesus will watch over us
if we remember this, and then the time will come
when He will call us to be with Him for ever, in the
peaceful home where mother is gone already, and
where all who love Ged will one day meet.’







CHAPTER IV.

HARRY MORTON.

HE farmer grew more morose and gloomy




than ever after his wife’s death ; he was
cross and hard to his workmen, and stern
' and sullen with his children, to Harry especially, and
many harsh words passed between them.

An waousually wet autumn set in, the corn-fields
were sodden with rain, and in many places the
beaten-down crops looked as if they never could be
gathered in. There was a ceaseless pour ; it rattled
on the roof, and dripped. down the eaves of the
house, and the constant sound added to the farmer's
ill-temper. He was irritable, and angry with the
weather, and felt aggrieved at his crops being

injured.
28



HARRY MORTON. 37



There is a great evil in grumbling at the weather ;
it is even profane and impious ; for when we are im-
patient at the constant outpourings of the clouds, are
we not also impatient against the God who sends
these things? We ought never to murmur at the
pouring rain, though it may spoil our pleasure or in-
jure our goods. God sends it to us, and His wise
dispensations are beyond our control. We should
hush our thoughtless repinings, knowing whose Hand
dispenses to us alike the rain and sunshine.

Oh how Alice missed her mild, patient mother ;
her loss was felt more and more every day ; for Mrs.
Morton had always been ready with her well-timed
advice to turn aside angry contentions,

Her judicious interference had often smoothed
away the rough words that were perpetually bursting
forth between father and son.

Now, alas! the quarrels became more frequent,
and louder than ever, and Aunt Betsy, instead of
mending matters, too often added her shrill voice to
the general wrangling, and, in fact, made matters
worse.

Harry shunned his home as much as possible. His
plan now was to finish his day’s work at the farm, to



38 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.

scramble over his meals, then he would go to his
room, and with the greatest care put on his best
clothes and hurry away to the parlour of the ‘Swan
and Eagle.’

There was always a welcome for him; and he
would idle away his evenings, enjoying the frivolous
conversation that went on there much more than the
constant strife that greeted him in his own uncon-
genial homestead.

Dora Willis, the landlady’s niece, was considered a
belle in her way, and several other young men of the
village met in the little parlour also, and there was
some little rivalry among them; but Harry Morton
thought himself the favourite, and his position as a
well-to-do farmer’s son made him rather take airs on
himself, so he was disliked by the others accordingly.

Meanwhile poor little Alice was trying to do her
best at home, and her wan face grew thinner and
wanner with the attempt.

She felt more than ever the responsibility the
charge of the little boys was, for she made them her
special care, and they were seldom out of her sight.

Two months passed away, and the harvest, such as
it was, was gathered in at last.



HARRY MORTON. 39

‘We are pounds and pounds out of pocket,’
growled Farmer Morton.

‘Not worse off than our neighbours,’ answered
Harry, carelessly.

‘Tt does not matter to you much, for you get all
you want; but you'd better mend your ways, I tell
you, or your corn won’t grow much longer on my
farm,’ said his father.

‘Oh! I dare say I shall be able to manage if I’m
turned out,’ replied Harry, provokingly.

‘Then you'd best begin to manage at once,’ ex-
claimed the farmer, thumping the table with his hand.

‘Perhaps the landlady of the “Swan and Eagle”
will adopt him for her niece Dora’s sake,’ said Aunt
Betsy, in her shrill voice.

‘If he ever marries that girl,’ said the farmer, now
in a furious rage, ‘he’s no longer a son of mine; let
him marry er at his peril,’ and he rose from the table
and went out, leaving his dinner half-finished.

Harry rose also, and with undutiful, angry words,
protested he would not be dictated to, but would
marry whom he pleased; then he went to his own
room, and Alice saw him riding away soon after,
dressed as usual, in his best clothes.



40 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.

Alas! these miserable scenes were far 400 common
at Moorfields, and the poor little children would sit
trembling, while the storm went on.

From sheer want of kindly warmth and tenderness,
they grew shy, and their faces looked pale and
pinched ; they seemed like puny flowers, struggling
for life, in some dim place where the rays of the sun
could not penetrate.

Harry did not return home to tea, so Alice put the
boys to bed, and sat down as usual, to her work.
Aunt Betsy had gone to bed also.

There was a bright fire in the huge fireplace, for
the evenings were growing chilly.

By-and-bye Farmer Morton came in, and drawing
his arm-chair near the blazing wood, he sat watching
it crackle and sparkle.

He seemed in a moody frame of mind, and hardly
spoke a word, while Alice stitched away in silence,
wondering what kept her father up so long.

‘It seems to be getting rather late,’ said she at
last.

‘Yes, I dare say it is,’ said her father, putting on
another log of wood, ‘but I’m going to wait up for
Harry.’



HARRY MORTON. 41

‘Oh! I'll stay up, father,’ said Alice quickly, the
dread of another scene rising in her mind.

‘May be,’ went on the farmer slowly, ‘may be I
was a bit harsh with the lad to-day, and I’ve been
thinking since, that hard words often drive a man to
do what he never would else.’

‘Oh yes, father!’ replied Alice, ‘advice is so much
better for Harry—mother always said so; she used
to tell me he might be won by kindness, but never
could be driven to do anything by harshness.’

‘Ah! your mother was a wise woman, Alice, and
I'll try her plan for once, and see if persuasion will
make him give up that girl at the “Swan and Eagle ;”
a giddy, showy lass like she is, would never make a

fitting wife for Harry.’

And the farmer again relapsed into silence, and sat
moodily staring at the fire.

Thus an hour or two passed away, and father and
daughter sat anxiously watching for the truant.

A heavy storm had come on, and the wind rattled
the windows, and large splashes of rain fell down the
broad chimney into the fire.

All at once they heard a horse coming up the
wood at a furious pace; it went round the house to



42 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.

the stables, and Alice started up, and began putting:
her work away.

‘ That’s Harry,’ said she, giving a stir to the wood
fire.

Her father walked to the window and looked out.

‘It’s avery dark night, and blowing a gale,’ ob-
served he.

They both stood waiting for the expected steps,
but none came ; not a sound was to be heard but the
storm howling through the wood.

‘That was surely Harry’s horse; where can he
be?’ asked Alice at last.

‘Doing something or other in the stables, I dare
say,’ replied her father, taking a turn or two up and
down the kitchen.

Half an hour passed away, and a kind of dread
seemed to creep over the watchers, though neither
cared to speak of it to the other.

‘I’d best go out to the stables and see,’ said the
father at last, taking down his coat and hat.

He soon came back, and shook the rain off,
before he hung his things on the peg again.

‘I was almost certain I heard Harry’s horse,’ said
he, ‘and yet the stable door was locked, and not the



HARRY MORTON. 43



sign of a creature about the place ; it’s very late now,
what can have become of the lad?’

‘TI hope nothing has happened to him,’ said Alice,
trembling.

‘Perhaps he’s stopped the night at the “Swan and
Eagle ;” did not like coming out in the storm, maybe,
so you’d better go to bed, Alice, and Ill let him in,
if he comes to-right ; don’t be uneasy, girl, I shan’t
say aught to anger him, I promise you.’

Alice went away as desired, but her heart felt very
heavy and sad, and when she knelt down by the side
of her little bed she prayed to God most earnestly
for the safe return of her truant brother.

Though she was weary, and almost worn out with
the work of the day and the long watching, she could
not sleep, and every now and then she started up,
as she still thought she heard the sound of horses’
feet through the storm.

When the first glimpse of dawn appeared in the
sky, she sprang out of bed, and looked eagerly out
of the window, and could hardly believe her eyes
when she saw Harry’s horse standing grazing in the
back meadow, with the saddle still on his back.

The inmates of the farm were soon roused, and



44 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.

long before the daylight was bright, many of the
people from the village had joined in the search for
her lost brother.

Dora Willis was greatly terrified when the people
rushed into the ‘Swan and Eagle,’ and asked her
what had happened to Harry Morton.

She confessed he had left her in of anger. He
had asked her to be his wife, and she had told him
she had already promised to marry young John
Bennet the miller.

‘Indeed! Indeed ! I meant no harm to him,’ said
the girl. ‘I liked him asa friend, and I told him so,
but I never encouraged him to think I would give up
John, and take him for a husband.’

All through the day the search went on, and at
last some one thought of the old coal-pit, a couple of
miles away, and there, sure enough, all that remained
of poor Hatry was found.

How he got there, or why he had wandered to
such an out-of-the-way place, must ever remain a
mystery.

Perhaps he had got off his horse to try and search
out the right track, and misled by the darkness of the
night, had slipped unawares into the deep yawning pit.



HARRY MORTON. 45

The neighbours who came about the house at this
time of trouble whispered this suggestion cautiously
to Alice, and she repeated it to her little brothers, as
they all three stood trembling at the door that after-
noon, and watched a carefully covered cart, coming
very slowly through the wood, and some men with
their heads uncovered, walking silently and gravely
behind it.

Harry Morton’s was a sad course, and he met
with a sad, sad end. He had allowed earthly
passions to take the lead, and he had turned away
from the safe path of duty, and now he had been
suddenly called to render up an account of all his
actions,

The people of the village talked, panic-stricken,
about this terrible event, and asked each other,
‘Who will be the next ?’

They shook their heads as they spoke of Harry
Morton’s career, for his doings were well known in
the village. Some said ‘his father’s severity had

made him reckless ;’ others persisted that ‘he was
naturally wild and thoughtless, and had been a great
trial to his poor mother.’

But whatever had been the cause of his careless



46 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.



life and his fearful end, the secret was hid. with
God alone, who is a just as well as a merciful judge.

This untimely death was a salutary warning to
Harry’s frivolous companions ; many of them were led .
by his example to pause, and see the hazard of the
lives they were leading, and they became aware they
were in danger of a pit more fearful than the old dis-
used coal-mine near Moorfields, namely, the pit of
eternal destruction.

For the first time the sense of insecurity was
impressed on them ; they gave up their idle habits,
ard in more than one instance the reformation was,

through God’s mercy, lasting and sincere.





CHAPTER V.

THE DAWN OF LIGHT.

WHAT evening Alice sat crouching over the




kitchen fire, for she was too weary and too
sad for work, so she sat there silently cry-
ing, and staring at the blazing wood fire.

After a time Farmer Morton came quietly in, and
threw himself wearily on his arm-chair, with a sound
that seemed half sigh, half sob.

Oh! how Alice longed to go to him, and throw
her arms round his neck and weep with him, or try
to comfort him. But she had never been taught to
do this, and she feared such a demonstration of her
feelings would only anger him, and make him repulse
her. _

But the old man spoke at last.



48 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.



‘ Alice, my girl, come nearer to me; I feel as if the
hand of the Lord is very heavy on me, and as if all
that is happening is a just punishment for my sins. I
want somebody to make it clear to me, and tell me
whether it is so or not.’

‘Shall I send over and ask Mr. Herbert to come
and see you?’ said Alice, jumping up. ‘I’m sure
he will come. Oh! I wish you had heard him preach
on Sunday, father; he said our Lord Jesus Christ
died that our sins might be forgiven and blotted out ;
he said we had only to come to him humble and
repentant, and not trusting in our own merits, and
He would never turn us away.’

‘TI have good-need to be humbled to the very dust,’
said the farmer slowly, ‘and I should like to talk to
parson about it, but I don’t think he would come. I
was rather short and rough to him when he came
hee last, wasn’t I, Alice ?’

‘Yes, father,’ replied she meekly, as she cast down
her eyes, and felt her face flush all over. ‘I don’t .
think he would mind that now, father,’ said she, a short
time after, more brightly; ‘I don’t think ¢Zat would
keep him away; shall I send over to him ?’

‘Not to-night, lass, I feel as if I couldn’t talk to



THE DAWN OF LIGHT. 49



him now, though I might listen to a few words from
the Bible ; you and your mother used to read it often.
Can’t you find something there that might tell me
what I want to know!’

Alice joyfully ran up-stairs for her book ; it was the
first time her father had ever asked her to read to
him. She thought of Mr. Herbert’s text on Sunday,
and read slowly, ‘Whoso confesseth, and forsaketh
his sins, shall have mercy.’

‘Stop there, Alice ; that’s just as if the voice of
the Lord was calling upon me to confess all my sins
to Him, and to acknowledge His Hand in all my
punishment. He took away my poor wife, and I
hadn’t time even to say “ Good-bye” to her. Now,
he has taken away my poor lad just as suddenly.
Stop, Lord ! stop, for Thy mercy’s sake, and forgive
me my past worldly and sinful life, for Jesus Christ’s
sake.’

The words came like an ‘exceeding bitter cry’
from the old man’s soul, and though he did not know
it himself, it was a deep and earnest prayer to God ;
and a prayer also that God heard, and in His own
good time answered.

Alice and her father sat talking together for a long
D



50 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.



time on this memorable evening, while the shadow
of a terrible death hung over their house, making
everything seem so solemn and real.

Often, when the deep waters of trouble and de-
spondency come over us, we call on the Lord for
mercy ; but when the sun shines out brightly once
more, we turn eagerly to our cherished faults, and
become careless and worldly again.

But it was not so with Farmer Morton ; he really
was sincere in his repentance ; the truth had reached .
his soul at last, and a gracious God upheld him, and
strengthened him to persevere.

Mr. Herbert came often and often to Moorfields ;
there was no fear zow that the farmer would treat him
with rudeness ; he /onged for his visits and his faith-
ful teaching, and many a long talk they had together
during the winter evenings, and many a prayer
ascended from the lonely farm-house to the Throne
of Grace.

Before long the farmer began to read the Bible and
understand it forhimself. It seemed a marvel to him
now how he could have neglected it so long. His
former life seemed a marvel to him also.

How he could ever have been so unkind, so grasp-



THE DAWN OF LIGHT. 51



ing, so worldly—groping about like a blind man, fall-
ing into all kinds of sins and dangers, and never once
seeing the ‘Loving Hand’ that was stretched out to
warn and guide him : ¢#zs seemed the greatest marvel
of all.

But he was roused and awakened now, and from
his inmost soul he thanked God for it. The bright
beams of his new-found knowledge melted away the
hard rugged points of his character, like the warm
rays of the rising sun melts the huge ice-boulders, and
sends their genial streams abroad, to cheer and fer
tilize the valleys below.





CHAPTER VI.

MOORFIELDS IN SUNSHINE,

-i/: will take one more glance at the farm two




years after these events have passed away.

It is a fine July evening, and those who
paid the first visit to the old place with me will be
surprised to see how completely all its gloominess
-has passed away, and what a beauty and lovableness
there is about the home now.

Alice is grown up into a neat, staid-looking girl,
with the same thoughtful eyes and the same kind
manner she used to have.

Just now she is feeding the hens and guinea-fowls,
who all come round her, flapping their wings and
ruffling their feathers, as they scramble to pick up the

golden grains of corn.
52



_MOORFIELDS IN SUNSHINE. 53



There is peace and plenty on every side. The
trees in the orchard are bending with the crop of ripe
juicy fruit.

There are rows of beehives round the sunny side of
the house, and multitudes of rainbow-coloured flowers
to tempt the busy bees.

You smell the delicious perfume of roses, mingled
with the sweet scents of clove-pinks and sweet-briar,
and you hear the lazy lowing of the cattle as the boy
drives them in, and afar off comes the pleasant
tinkle of the sheep-bells.

Farmer Morton, looking far happier and stronger
than he did two years ago, has been over the grounds
with his two boys; they are coming round by the
paddock now.

Poor Harry’s horse stands there, and they all three
stop and look at the animal. It has become a kind
of pet with them, and little Bobby tosses his golden
curls and laughs merrily, as the old animal runs after
him, and tries to snap away the ripe apple he is
tempting him with from his hand.

Alice has seen them coming, and goes into the
neat, newly-furnished parlour to wait for them. The
tea-table is laid out; there is plenty of home-made



54 ALICE MORTON’ S HOME.



bread, and honey and fresh fruit, on the table, for,
‘father and the boys will be hungry,’ she says.

The bay-window is thrown wide open, and bunches
of clustering roses peep in and diffuse their perfume _
through the room.

Presently the farmer and his two fine boys come
in, looking healthy, hearty, and happy.

They draw round the table, and the father stands,
with bowed head, and'reverently asks God’s blessing
on the meal. :

Farmer Morton has borne much of the burden
and heat of the day since poor Harry’s death; he
has had his share of anxieties and doubts and
haltings, in his new course of life, but he has never
turned back since his first prayer for pardon and
forgiveness.

He loves his family now with an affection that
seems the more intense from his long neglect of it.
The one object of his heart is, that he and his house
may serve the Lord.

We will take our leave of the happy family now,
and bid adieu to Moorfields while the sunshine of
that summer’s evening is resting on it.

We will retrace our steps through the wood, and

x



MOORFIELDS IN SUNSHINE. 55

down the fields, and we shall have much to think of
as we-journey on.

We will muse on the change religion makes in a
household! What new and holy affections it brings
out. . Oh! what joy, and love, and peace there is in
. believing !

It brightens youth; it sanctifies age, and grows
more and more perfect, till the everlasting gates are
lifted up and the entrance is given 1o Eternal life.







AN AERIAL VOYAGE.









AN AERIAL VOYAGE.



CHAPTER I.

‘AT HOME’ IN THE MOON.

‘ BuusT be thy loving light where’er it spills,
And blesséd thy fair face—oh, mother mild !
Still shine—the soul of rivers as they run,
Still lend thy lonely lamp to lovers fond
And blend their plighted shadows into one’—

ANG our poet Hood, and when we watch the
soft white light of the moon flooding the



landscape, and bringing out trees and dis-
tant hills in bold relief, we are apt, like him, to
associate something of motherly love with her beams,
and our lips insensibly form themselves into the ortho-
dox ‘ Oh, Thou !’

59



60 AN AERIAL VOVAGE.



But is there life and feeling in the moon?. are there
beings in her, living and loving as we do? Is there
any sympathy hidden in her great orb of light? Or
is the rhapsody of poets and lovers all moonshine ?

We shall see ; for we will send an imaginary, aérial
express train to the moon, and the intelligent traveller
shall give us the result of his investigations.

Our train takes exactly three hundred days to
reach the moon, going at the usual express rate.
Fancy our traveller safely landed there, perhaps on
the top of Mount Dorfal, near the South Pole. It is
only 8897 yards high, and climbing it does not seem
to fatigue very much, for our traveller can leap from
crag to crag quite pleasantly ; he feels six and a half
times lighter than he did on this earth.

First he gazes at the sky, and he beholds the sun,
like a great ball of fire, pouring its fierce rays upon
him. When it rose in the morning, there was no
faint ray of dawn to prelude its coming ; for it burst
suddenly into sight, and it will set just as suddenly
when the moon’s long day is over.

Well, our traveller gazes at the sky, and he per-
ceives the stars are all shining round the horizon, and



AT HOME’ IN THE MOON. 61



out of the region of the sun’s glare. It is noon-day,
but they are still in their places, like golden balls,
on a deep black ground. How intensely black the
sky looks! It makes one tremble, the sight is so
awful.

But our traveller to the moon must not be timid, or
the solitude might have a startling power perhaps.
He picks up a mass of metallic-looking stone, and he
finds it is much lighter than it looks; he hurls it
down the side of Mount Dorfal, and he sees it moves
very, very slowly, and without the slightest sound ;
why, it might be a ball of wool for all the noise it
makes. Our traveller tries to shout aloud in his sur-
prise, but finds he can raise no cry ; he is in the land
of eternal silence ; if Mount Dorfal itself were to be
hurled out of its place, and dashed down to the
ground, the fragments would fall noiselessly on the
plain below.

Oh for a cloud to temper the fierce heat of the
sun! but there are no clouds on the moon. The nim-
bus, or storm-cloud never gathers up its angry masses
to discharge them forth in tempests.

No soft evening clouds ever reflect the golden and



62 AN AERIAL VOVAGE.



crimson tints of sunset, for every ray of light vanishes
with the sun. And then night comes on; but what
a night! as long as fifteen of our nights are, and the
luckless aérial traveller has to endure an icy cold—
more intense than the most northern point of the
north pole—nor can he solace himself with a lunar
fire, for no fire will burn ; there is no air there.

However, the sun appears again, as suddenly as he
went away, and then our traveller (whose physical
condition we must suppose wonderfully changed)
comes down the mountain’s side, and determines to
investigate the plains.

What a strange scene! what configurations of the
surface ! every part broken up and rugged! Beside
him there is an immense cavity like a volcanic crater
15,800 feet deep. Our traveller flings some metallic
masses down, and they flutter about for a while, and —
then drop noiseless out of sight. There are volcanic
ashes strewed all about ; there are dark plains and
river beds, but no water in them; sea-beds, but no
sea left.

Our traveller looks about in vain for a river to

bathe in, or a spring to drink from—shere is no water



‘AT HOME’ IN THE MOON. 63



in the moon. We asks himself, ‘ Where is the water
all gone?’ but there is no reply. ;

There is ‘The Sea of Tranquillity,’ ‘The Sea of
Vapours,’ ‘The Sea of Rains,’ ‘The Ocean of Tem-
pests,’ ‘The Sea of Clouds,’ etc. ; but this is a mere
' mockery of words, for there are no vapours, no rain,
no tempests, no clouds there.

Has the ocean found an internal receptacle in
some cavernous structure in the interior of the moon ?
And has the surface of the planet grown too cold to
sustain a liquid ocean ? that thus there is no pleasant
wave on its arid and lifeless wilderness. e

Our traveller has not much trouble in climbing
over the mountain ranges, for his wonderful lightness
and buoyancy enables him to bound over rocks, and
leap over chasms.

He has found out the twin craters Isidorus and
Capella; he has examined the disturbed regions
round,—the beds of lava ; the various upheavals, the
volcanic vents, with their broken edges ; the disloca-
. tions, that in their irregular borders and openings
show some great conflicts and eruptions once took
place.



64 AN AERIAL VOYAGE.

But all activity is over now, and dull, eternal still-
ness reigns.

Our traveller looks round for forests of trees, and
shrubs, and grass, and flowers; but there is not a
bud, a blade, or even a lichen, to reward his search
—there is no vegetation there.

The lunar landscapes have no bright colour-
ing of sunshine to enliven them ; it is all one glow-
ing glare, where shadows are all of the same in-
tense blackness. No rainbow ever spans the arch of
heaven, to give the moon notice of approaching
showers, nor does any dew arise to temper the morn-
ing heat.

Day in the moon is a long glare ; lasting more than
one of our fortnights, where the eye would look in
yain for a shelter from the vivid rays of the sun ; and
night isan equally long period of ‘ death-like’ cold-
ness, where even the moisture of ice or snow might
be deemed refreshing. Let us not grumble at the
earth’s variable climates after this !

But our imaginary traveller has seen all the side
of the moon visible to us from the earth, and he
longs to plunge into the unknown districts of the



.

‘AT HOME’ IN THE MOON. 65



other half; he can get a glimpse of the eastern limb,
and there he beholds more craters and more moun-
tains, and he can at another time get a glimpse of
the western side, with the same characteristics—so
like our own world, and yet so strange and startling !
but here his curiosity must remain unsatisfied ; he
has found a limit to his powers—the other side of the
moon has never been visible to mortal eye ; it is one
of the great mysteries of a mysterious creation.

If there are any inhabitants in that unknown region
they must be very startled, when, on visiting the
brighter and barren side, they first get a glimpse of
our earth.

What a gigantic orb we must appear to them! just

fourteen times as large as the moon seems to us. If

they possessed telescopes with anything like the
power of our glasses, they mighi behold our large
cities ; they might note our fores'\s——-might watch the
deep, vast waters of the Ailantic—observe the
changes of our cloud region, an’ mark out the belt

caused by the trade winds.
“An undevout astronomer is mad,’ writes one of
our poets, and his words co: great
E





66 AN AERIAL VOVAGE.

the deeper one dives into the unbounded regions of
space, the more marvels are revealed to us.

God’s universe is full of wonders, and we can trace
in af the hand of the oze omnipotent Architect.

It is no secret to us now, of what materials the sun
is composed ; or even of what the Planetary nebulee
are formed; thanks to the spectrum analysis, the
prism, and the careful examination of patient astro-
nomers, all these things are getting familiar to us, and
new discoveries are constantly being made.

The most distant. of the celestial bodies is under-
stood now ; the exact motion of their composition is
revealed to us ; and we understand their mineralogy.
We can detect oxygen, sulphur, potassium, sodium,
iron, tin, or copper, as the case may be ; and all by
the marvellous revelations of the spectrum analysis.

Photography has also been put into action on the
moon’s behalf, and a wonderful portrait of her has
been obtained, nearly thirty-eight inches large. It
gives one a glimpse of a true lunar landscape.

Maps of the moon are made now on a very exten-
sive scale ; there is one nearly eight feet four inches

in diameter, which gives the huge mountain ranges,



‘AT HOME’ IN THE MOON. 67

the rugged craters, and the barren plains, with great
accuracy. Who can tell what future discoveries may
be made, or what observation may yet arrive at? for
there is no limit to the abyss of space. In the mean-
time we must not repine at our feeble knowledge, but
. confess, ‘ The heavens declare the glory of God ; and
the firmament sheweth his handiwork.’





CHAPTER If.

A GLIMPSE AT THE SUN.

*I stoop upon the hills, when heaven’s wide arch
Was glorious with the Sun’s returning march,’

a\UR intelligent traveller having slightly re



covered from the effects of his sojourn in
the moon, is again despatched on his
imaginary aérial journey, and this time, the object of
his investigation is the Sun.

But where is he to look for this glorious source of
light? We once firmly believed our Solar system
was the grand central point in the universe, and that
all the rest, the planets, the stars, and the comets,
were but subordinate orbs. But alas! the discoveries

of wise men teach us our proper position among
63



A GLIMPSE AT THE SUN. 69



other facts, and the more we learn, the more the
knowledge of our insignificance increases, and even
the glory of our Sun is diminished, when we compare
it with other heavenly bodies.
‘Have you ever remarked the milky way? that pale
‘light that extends across the skies, and divides the
celestial vault into two portions? Our traveller must
guide his aérial train so as to find the centre of this
vast body of stars. His eye vainly tries to reckon
the number of the orbs that form the milky way, for
after he has counted 18,000,000 stars, he finds there
are still more and more.

In the very centre of this body of stars he finds
our Solar system; there it lies, with its Sun, its
planets, and moons, and our Sun is found to be only
one of the stars of the second or third magnitude.

Still its immensity bewilders us, for it is six hundred
times the united volume of all the planets and their
satellites put together.

The aérial train going at the speed of thirty miles
an hour will take three hundred and forty-seven years
to reach the sun, and even when it has travelled
that distance, there will be some difficulty, for there
are three atmospheres, or gaseous envelopes, to be



70 AN AERIAL VOYAGE.

traversed, before the solid surface of the Sun is
reached.

The first atmosphere is transparent, and surrounds
the others ; it is piled up in strata in some places, and
grows less dense when furthest away from the Sun.

The next atmosphere is a peculiarly trying one to
our traveller’s nerves, for it is formed of gas, for ever
luminous, or incandescent, and its outer stratum is
called the photosphere.

The third atmosphere is opaque and cloudy, and
doubtless is a great protection to the dark spherical
body which forms the solid globe of the Sun.

How else could it bear a warmth three hundred
thousand times more intense than the fiercest glow
that ever shines on our earth? There are limits to our
imagination, and we can hardly conceive the intensity
of sucha heat. Unless this third atmosphere is very
dense indeed, absorbing the light, and serving as a
non-conductor to the frightful temperature, our
traveller will have no chance of setting his foot on
the surface of the Sun; he would be scorched to
powder in an instant; no organized being could be
capable of living or breathing in such a climate.
On the earth, we have only a faint idea of the Sun’s



A GLIMPSE AT THE SUN. 7X



heat, even in the Tropics. The rays pour down on
us, affecting every object with their power, from the
rugged cliffs and high mountains, to the delicate
flower, which owes every’ tint to sunlight, but a
remedy is provided that prevents these rays from
being destructive. Our night comes on, and the
effect of the broad glare of day passes off; all things
are restored to their original condition. The dew
distils, watery vapour mingles with our atmosphere,
and in the coolness of night, covers every tree and
plant with a soft moisture.

There is no night in the sun—nothing to screen the
unceasing glare.

Perhaps some people will say, our traveller will not
lose much by being unable to tread the dark body of
the sun, for he would not find much there worth
having ; he would not find any gold and silver there,
and some of us, alas! would see but little beauty
in any orb where these precious metals are
unknown.

The spectrum analysis reveals to us that there is
sodium, iron, nickel, copper, zinc, and barium in the
Sun, but it has not been able to detect the faintest

appearance of gold or even silver, and this wonderful



42 | AN AERIAL VOYAGE.



spectrum is as true in its discoveries as if some of
the solid constituents of the sun’s body. were placed
in a chemical crucible.

Our traveller can watch the numerous sun-spots,
of which, sometimes, more than eighty are visible ; he
will see they are moveable, and are found more in
the zones than the equator. He will tell us, these
spots are only rents or breaks in the luminous second
atmosphere, that there are vertical currents for ever
ascending and descending, that there are cloud-like
masses for ever changing, and passing to and fro, and
giving us, amid their perpetual surges, faint glimpses
of the dark, solid nucleus of the sun’s body. Whata
region of rushing and whirling it must be! What
tumult and agitation for ever disturbing and tearing
the atmosphere! We can dream of volcanic agency,
of craters pouring out their terrible eruptions on the
sun’s surface, and feel awe and wonder at the wild
horror and devastation these marvellous phenomena
must produce.

Our traveller can notice also the rose-coloured
clouds, the solar aurorze, and the minute dark eruptive-
looking spots called pores, or rice grains, by our

. astronomers, but he will be compelled to acknowledge



A GLIMPSE AT THE SUN. 73



there is very much mystery still shrouding up the
history of our sun, and perhaps it is well this
should be the case. It might not be good for us to
gaze too familiarly on its majesty; we cannot even
look at its natural glare with our naked eye; we
cannot endure its full light, and are forced to screen
ourselves before we can glance at its brightness.

What a wretched world this would be, had not the
Divine word gone forth, ‘ Let there be light!’ There
would be no colour, for the sun brings out the
various hues of birds and flowers ; there would be no
wind, for the sun’s rays cause the gentle breeze, as
well as the destructive storm; there would be no
rain, for the sun draws up the vapour from sea and
river, which afterwards condenses, and falls in the
form of fertilizing showers ; there would be no vege-
tation, for heat causes the seed to germinate, and
there would be no joy—nothing but gloom and dark-
‘ness.

Sun-light does not come with the same power from
all parts of the disc ; the centre is more luminous than
the edges are ; the brightness diminishes gradually
towards the limb, and tells us the atmosphere of the
sun surrounds it to a great distance, and in this



74 AN AERIAL VOYAGE.



atmosphere the bright rose-coloured clouds float, that
are watched with such intense interest during an
eclipse of the sun.

Every beam of sun-light contains three kinds of
rays, the light rays, the heat rays, and the chemical
rays. The latter have been pressed into the service
of Photography, and produce marvellous pictures,
without the aid of any human brush or pencil.

These chemical rays, that decompose preparations
of silver so strangely, and depict the most minute
details of scenery, are yet more important in anotlrer
way, for with their hidden, yet potent influence, they
give health and vigour to the whole vegetable world ;
without them the tallest trees would soon wither and
die.

Thus, while we gaze into the realms of space, we
find much to excite our wonder and admiration, and
at the same time we feel our own littleness, for after
we have exhausted all our knowledge, and all our
calculations, we find there are mysteries beyond us
that we shall never fathom, mysteries that the
Infinite Maker of all has chosen to hide from our
finite sight.

But the more we contemplate the subject, the



A GLIMPSE AT THE. SUN. 15





greater our interest in it becomes, and constant, fresh
discoveries encourage us to proceed in the beautiful
study ; there are many heights yet to be explored, and
results yet to be calculated on.

The influence of the sun on our earth is continued
and varied ; the whole surface of the globe is affected
by it, and he even keeps us in our proper orbit. The
sun’s action, combined with the moon, regulates our
tides. But we have wandered away from our
traveller, with ‘his imaginary aérial train, and he will
now help us to get a glimpse at the Planets, that
revolve at various distances round the grand central

aun,





CHAPTER III.

A GLIMPSE AT THE PLANETS,

‘ THERE is no light in earth or heaven
But the cold light of stars ;
And the first watch of night is given
To the red planet Mars.’

HE aérial train would take more than two
hundred and fifty-nine years to reach



Mercury, which is the planet that basks
most in the glory of the sun’s rays.

Very few of us have ever seen Mercury, for it is
rarely visible to the naked eye ; sometimes, after the
setting of the sun, its bright twinkling light may be
discerned, but it is often lost in the brilliancy of the
solar light.

At times Mercury may be observed passing over
76



A GLIMPSE AT THE PLANETS. 3



the disc of the sun itself, and then it looks like a
minute black ball.

If there are any inhabitants in this planet, they
must be able to bear an immense degree of heat and
light, for they have seven times as much as we have
on our earth. They have the same length of day and
night, they have their torrid zones, but no temperate
ones, and they have lofty mountains and shady valleys
as we have. Our traveller sees it is only a third of
the diameter of the Earth ; it is a third of the Earth’s
distance from the sun, and travels on in its orbit at
the rate of twenty-eight miles a second.

The beautiful planet Venus comes next; that
‘shepherd’s star,’ with its soft brilliant light, so
intense at times, that it casts shadows as the moon
does. We all love ‘Venus,’ and call it sometimes
‘the morning’ and sometimes ‘the evening star.’
Our traveller can breathe on its surface, for there is
an atmosphere of considerable height, and its climate,
though much hotter than ours, is bearable. The solid
ground is found to be uneven, and there are high
mountains, far exceeding the mountains of this world
in height. The sun looks twice as large to Venus as

it does to us, and pours down its brilliant light with



78 AN AERIAL VOYAGE.



double the power. Venus travels at the rate of twenty-
two miles a second; not as quickly as Mars, but
much faster than our earth, which only moves through
space at the rate of nineteen miles a second.

Taking his leave of the ‘ Vesper star,’ our traveller
plunges ‘into another region beyond the orbit of the
Earth, and takes a glimpse at Mars, the ‘red planet.’
Longfellow says—

* Within my breast there is no light
But the cold light of stars ;
I give the first watch of the night
To the red planet Mars.

‘The star of the unconquered will,
He rises in my breast,
Serene, and resolute, and still,
And calm, and self-possessed.’

Mars is our nearest neighbour, so our traveller wil
have a comparatively short distance to journey ; it is
only half the size of the Earth, but much larger than
Mercury. The round disc of the planet is spread
over with numbers of spots, some red, some blue ; and
at the north and south poles of Mars there are two
extremely white spots, and with a little imagination
‘these appearances can be accounted for. There are
variable masses that are constantly observed passing



A GLIMPSE AT THE PLANETS. 79



over the disc of the planet; these are the cloudy
masses in the atmosphere of Mars, which float above
the level of land and sea. The reddish and bright
spots are easily supposed to be the solid parts of vast
continents ; the bluish or greyish spots readily resolve
themselves into the deep blue seas and oceans; and
the intense white spots are most probably the polar
snows. ‘These white lights are seen to expand and
diminish alternately, according to the changes of
season. Thus we feel a kind of companionship and
sympathy with Mars, as we watch the formation of-
her ice plains, and note the gradual thaw which marks
her summer season. It cannot be a very genial
climate though, for there are storms and hurricanes
there, that we in our more favoured planet can hardly
dream of, so violent and terrible is their power ; and
there must be dreadful inundations there also, from
the rapid melting of such enormous masses of snow
and ice. Mars has a longer day than ours, nearly
an hour longer, but its nights must be very dark, for
there is no moon to shed its silvery light ; so unless
there are some splendid aurore, there is nothing but

the fainter brightness of the stars to cheer its long
hours of darkness—



80 AN AERIAL VOVAGE.



‘ Naught but stars so still and saint-like,
Looking downward from the skies.’

Mars is less fortunate than Venus in that respect,
for she has Mercury, by its brightness and near
vicinity, and the Earth by her magnitude, to render
their efficient services as a couple of moons.

Passing rapidly through the eighty-four telescope
planets that lie between Mars and Jupiter, our
traveller pauses before the huge mass of the latter
orb—the great, colossal Jupiter! It is nearly eleven
times as large as our earth, and revolves on its own
axis with twenty-seven times greater speed, so that its
day is only about five hours long, and its night is the
same length. But what wonderful nights they must
be with four moons, instead of one, to enliven the
hours of darkness! The inhabitants of Jupiter (if
there are any) must have a constant source of interest
in watching the eclipses of these moons ; sometimes
Io is eclipsed, then Europa, then Ganymede, then
Callisto ; it must give an ever varying subject for
study. Our sailors are in the habit of watching these’
eclipses also, and thereby determining by calculation
the longitude of any place on the earth’s surface.
Though Jupiter rushes through space with a rapidity



A GLIMPSE AT THE PLANETS. 81

eighty times faster than a cannon-ball, it takes twelve
years to journey round the sun, so that the year of
Jupiter is twelve times as long as ours. We can
fancy what a region of perpetual summer there must
be at the equator, what a never-ending spring there
must be in the temperate regions, and what a wonder-
ful climate there must be at the north and south
poles, where the sun remains visible for six years ata
time, and then never rises above the horizon for six
other years. We can hardly imagine a region so icy
and dark.

Jupiter gains only a very small portion of the sun’s
light and heat, infinitely less than we are favoured
with, and we can suppose the whole economy of the
planet must suffer from the lack of warmth, unless
there are physical conditions to compensate for it.
There may be an atmospheric envelope surrounding
Jupiter that is capable of allowing the entrance of the
sun’s rays to the surface of the planet, and yet of such
a nature that it may prevent their escape. With such
a protection there may be a pleasant temperature, and
animal and vegetable life could flourish.

Our traveller will observe various belts or patches
on the surface of Jupiter, which encircle the planet

F



82 AN AERIAL VOYAGE.

like minor equators ; some of them are greyish, others
are brighter, even delicate rose colour ; these may be
clouds floating in the atmosphere, and the rapid rate
at which the planet rushes through space may give
them this belt-like parallelism. Doubtless there are
great trade winds at the equator, or currents of air,
that in their uniform motion resemble our trade winds.

Our aérial traveller will pause in wonder when he
beholds the next planet, Saturn; for it is the most
brilliantly attended of all. No less than egft moons
circle round it, and there is a marvellous system of
rings that surrounds the planet at some distance from
the equator.

I suppose we can hardly imagine anything more
gorgeous than the appearance of the heavens at mid-
night from the surface of Saturn. Imagine eight
moons for ever changing ; some at the full, some new,
some at the quarters. Imagine three brilliant rings
nearly ten thousand miles broad, glistening with
streams of golden light—formed, perhaps, of satellites -
more numerous than the sands of the sea; but we
can hardly realize such a wondrous phenomenon !
and must be content with what astronomers tell us of
the glory.



A GLIMPSE AT THE PLANETS. — 83



Saturn’s moons have been named, Minas, Encela-
dus, Tethys, Dione, Rhea, Titan, Hyperion, and
Japetus ; and they revolve rapidly round the planet
at various distances.

Saturn has need of something to compensate for its
long distance from the sun, for it is nine and a half
times further away from it than we are, and the
sun appears to it one hundred times less than it
does to us; its heat and light must therefore be very
much less.

The year of Saturn is nearly thirty times as long
as ours, so that each season is about seven years long,
and there are nearly fifteen years between spring and
autumn. What an effect this must have on vegeta
tion !—flowers must take seven years to come to
perfection, and the harvest the same period to ripen.

The poles of Saturn must be frightfully dreary, for
there the sun is absent for fifteen years, and the
glorious arches are never visible to those regions.
The ice and snow is of such an extent and quantity
that its whitish glow is even visible to us, and during
the fifteen years the sun never sets it does not seem
to thaw the huge masses; no doubt the inhabitants
(if there are any) avoid these desolate places, and



84 AN AERIAL VOYAGE.





live’ near the equator, where they can behold the
magnificent rings spanning the sky from horizon to
horizon, and holding its invariable situation among
the stars and moons.

After this glimpse of the glorious Saturn, our
traveller will have little inclination to linger near
Uranus, which, though eighty-two times larger than
our earth, is scarcely visible to the naked eye.

Its long and weary year would make eighty-four of
our years, and the light and heat it receives from the
sun is three hundred and seventy times less than
ours. One feels glad it has four moons to cheer and
enliven its nights a little, but I don’t think any of us
would have any great ambition to be an inhabitant of
the planet Uranus, or Herschel.

Nor will the glimpse of Neptune from the aérial
train be much more cheerful, for it is thirty times
further away from the sun than we are, and its year
is as long as one hundred and sixty five of ours; in
fact, we have only seen it on a ninth part of its orbit
yet, for it was only discovered a few years ago.

The heat and light received from the sun by this
forlorn planet is a thousand times less than ours ; we
can only hope there is some compensating power



A GLIMPSE AT THE PLANETS. 85

of warmth in the atmosphere, or the cold would be
terrible. It has only one moon, which takes nearly
six days to revolve round it. Our traveller bids fare-
well to this remote orb, and prepares for a wider
range ‘through space.”





CHAPTER IV.

A JOURNEY THROUGH SPACE

‘Ou, holy night ! from thee I learn to bear
‘What man has borne before !

Thou layest thy finger on the lips of care,
And we complain no more.’

UR traveller found the sun and all his
numerous train in the centre of the Milky
Way, and then the next thought was, that

as the sun himself travels through space with his



planets and moons, he also must have a centre to
move round. Modern opinion says this centre of
gravitation is Alcyone, the brightest star of the group
called the Pleiades, that our solar system is irresist-
ibly drawn round it at the rate of 420,000 miles a
day in an orbit which will not be completed for many

thousand years. This is only a modern discovery, but
86



A JOURNEY THROUGH SPACE. 87

the truth was told to us ages ago, in the most ancient
of books. God answers Job out of the whirlwind,
and says, ‘Canst thou bind the sweet influences of
Pleiades ?’ It has taken us all these years to learn
that the ‘sweet influences’ alluded to is the tre-
mendous force that so noiselessly and harmoniously
attracts our solar system, and keeps it for ever
whirling round the Pleiades, as round a centre point.

These stars form a group of seven, visible to the
naked eye, but our traveller sees there are really nine
or ten times that number. These seven stars are
called after the seven daughters of Atlas, who were
supposed to have been turned into stars after their
death ; six of them were married to gods, and there-
fore shine in full splendour ; but poor ‘ Merope’ only
married the king of Corinth, so her star is very dim,
and has been called the ‘lost Pleiad.’

‘Canst thou loose the bands of Ovion?’ is the
other question in the verse before alluded to, and for
a moment our traveller gazes at that splendid con-
stellation. There are seventeen stars visible to the
naked eye, and seventy-eight in reality, and the
Greeks believed it to resemble the outline of a human
figure, so they called it ‘Orion’ after a noted hunter.



88 AN AERIAL VOVAGE,

The band, or belt, is formed by the three bright stars
we all know so well; they never change their relative
position to each other; no hand, and no power has
been found to loose them; they shine now as they
did in those distant days when Job listened to the
question. Among all the changes that have taken
place, these stars have remained unmoved.

There is a curious nebula in the constellation of
Orion, which looks to us like a misty light, but
though it seems among the ‘seven sisters,’ in reality
it is far off, even in the remotest point human sight
is capable of observing in the profound depths of
space. Thousands of glasses have been turned to
this nebula, and puzzling theories were formed about
it; some said it was ‘the very germ of matter, from
which worlds were made,’ for though the light was
brilliant, there were no traces of definite orbs; then
through Lord Rosse’s telescope this nebula seemed
to resolve itself into shining particles as numerous
and close together as the sands on the shore. ‘They
are worlds without number,’ was the cry then, but
the spectrum-analysis again comes to the rescue, and
tells us the nebula of Orion is after all only a collec-
tion of wonderful gaseous bodies ; there is nitrogen,



A JOURNEY THROUGH SPACE. 89

barium, and hydrogen in their composition, but they
have no solid orbs.

More than five thousand nebule have been dis-
covered. If we wish to gaze into unfathomable
numbers of stars, we must turn to the wonderful
Milky Way, for ¢Aere the suns are beyond counting,
they are like luminous sands; ‘there are no limits to
this star zone.’

The ‘ Magellanic clouds,’ which are only seen in
southern countries, are also formed of swarms of
stars; the head grows bewildered as it pores over
the probable numbers.

Our traveller finds it difficult to trace the course of
the comets, for while the planets always move from
right to left, or from west to east, the comets traverse
the heavens in every direction. A few of them move
in closed orbits, and go round the sun; we can pre-
dict the very day and hour of their return ; but other
comets move on in such infinite curves, that having
once perhaps formed part of our solar system, they
go away for ever. Some of the comets we observe
may be making their first visit to the part of the
heavens we inhabit, and may never come again, or
they may appear centuries hence, when the world



go AN AERIAL VOYAGE.





will have grown very old. The wonderful comet that
appeared in 1811 will not be seen again for thirty
centuries. In 1843 a still brighter comet astonished
the world ; it could be seen even in broad daylight,
and was very near the sun. Two hundred comets
have been observed during the last three centuries,
more or less bright, but people do not regard them
with such terror now as they did in former days.
Only a hundred years ago it was thought they were
bodies which might run into our earth, or any other
planet, and cause an immense destruction, but these
fears have vanished, for the probability of such a col-
lision is very slight. The tail of the comet is only a
phosphorescent mist; we passed through one, Z¢ zs
said, in 1861, and found no inconvenience from it.
Some comets have a very dense nucleus, others seem
to have a gaseous nebulosity, that is semi-transparent,
and stars can be seen through it.

The tail of the comet is always turned away from
the sun, and increases in length and volume the
nearer the nucleus approaches that orb, so that it is
supposed to be formed by some repulsive force acting
on it from the sun, which may drive particles from
the nucleus into space; these flying off in a great



A JOURNEY THROUGH SPACE. 91

volume, may form the long train that sometimes ac-
companies comets on their circuits.

The tail of Donati’s comet in 1858 was about
50,000,000 miles in length, and the tail of the comet
of 1843 was three times as long. The latter comet
| must have been able to bear a great deal of heat;
‘ it was so near the sun that its temperature is consi-
dered to have been 2000 times greater than that
of a red-hot cannon ball.

Though we no longer dread a collision with one of
these curious celestial bodies, yet a very close con-
tact with one might be peculiarly inconvenient, for
if the nucleus should prove to be incandescent, the
temperature of our atmosphere would be raised to a
dangerous degree. We can only zmagine what a
degree of heat such a contact might cause.

Although the starry heavens is a magnificent sight,
and we fancy we can see boundless numbers of
twinkling orbs, our unaided vision is very limited,
—we can only see about three thousand at once; of
course the telescope alters the range of our observa-
tions, and with a powerful instrument we can gaze into
unfathomed depths, and count such thousands of

stars, that our heads grow weary with their numbers.



92 AN AERIAL VOYAGE.

A great part of the heavens will never be seen
from our part of the world ; some constellations never
come within our view. We must visit southern lati-
tudes to behold the ‘southern cross,’ ‘the ship,
‘ the Phenix,’ the ‘ Magellanic clouds,’ and a complete
zone of other stars.

Sirius is the brightest of all the stars, and is sup-
posed to bé twelve times as large as our sun. The
Egyptians called it after their river Nile, from ‘Siris,’
one of its names, and this star was watched for with
much interest by them, as its heliacal rising gave
warning that the annual overflow of that river was
about to commence. Sirius is sometimes called by
the less euphonious name of the ‘ dog-star.’

Leaving the stars, whose wonders fill us with
amazement and admiration, our traveller turns his
aérial train back to earth; but ere he lands on its
surface, he pauses to note the meteoric rings which
are watched for with so much interest. On star-light
nights we may often count five or six shooting stars
as we take our homeward walk, but at the periodic
visits of these strange visitants, we must give up
counting, for their number is “gion.

The roth of August is one of these periodical



A JOURNEY THROUGH SPACE. 93

seasons ; they have been noticed then by hundreds in
an hour. The Irish have a pretty legend about these
falling stars ; they appear on the feast of St. Lawrence
eve, and the people call them the ‘ burning tears of
the holy martyr.’ These August showers seem to
come from a radiant point in the heavens called
Gamma, in the constellation Perseus.

The November shower of gold is still more nume-
rous and brilliant ; thousands of shooting stars appear
in one hour; some are small, some are as large as
Venus, and have luminous trains behind them;
they look like a magnificent display of celestial fire-
works, set off from a great height ; and_few who have
observed the phenomenon in its full splendour will
ever forget the impression it caused. Solemn ! awful!
and grand! we heard it called. Mu, in the con-
stellation of the Lion, is the radiant point of the
November showers.

Astronomers believe there are rings composed of
myriads of these bodies, which circulate in orbits
round the sun ; they call them ‘ meteoric rings,’ and
believe there are several of them moving in regular
circles. Sometimes our earth in its journey breaks

into one of these rings, and the shooting stars gain



94 AN AERIAL VOYAGE.

heat and light from contact with our atmosphere, and
flash for a while on our sight, looking like fire-balls,
shooting stars, or meteors.

Some astronomers even believe the sudden cold-
ness often observed in the months of February and
May is caused by meteoric rings passing between us
and the sun. These bodies descend nearly to the
summits of our high mountains sometimes, and travel
at a very rapid rate, some say thirty-five miles a
second , this fearful speed causes their incandescence
when they get within the range of our atmosphere,
and most of them proceed on their journey through
space after they have given us a glimpse of their
brightness.

Some of them, however, turn to vapour, and some
prove rather more troublesome visitors, for, being
acted on by the power of gravitation, they fall to the
surface of our earth, and sometimes do great damage.

Bolides are round bodies of the same nature ; they
also make a sudden appearance in our atmosphere,
sometimes lighting up the landscape with a blue light
more brilliant than moonlight, sometimes they ex-
plode with a loud noise that might be mistaken for
celestial artillery. They often leave a glowing stream



A JOURNEY THROUGH SPACE. 95



of light behind them. Bolides are rather rare ; not
more than a thousand have ever been recorded.
Many instances of the fall of meteorites are related ;
they are always stony and metallic masses, and
seem at one time to have been in a state of fusion ;
perhaps those who imagine nebula to be the ‘germ
of which worlds are made,’ may imagine meteoric
masses to be the burnt ruins of destroyed worlds.

But the deeper we go into the subject, the more
cause there is for admiration; every star in the
heavens, every comet, and every other celestial body
is in motion ; but amid all the ceaseless whirl, the
grand, fixed laws remain, for ever pointing out the
glorious architect who has formed, and who regulates
all. Were his directing power for one moment to
cease, we may faintly imagine what would be the crash
and ruin. We return once more to the ancient book
that solves so many problems, if rightly read, and
while confessing our own insignificance, we repeat,
‘The heavens declare the glory of God, and the fir-
mament sheweth dis handy-work.’







GOLD: or Ivon’s Question.









GOLD: OR IVON’S QUESTION.



N old man called Ivon lived in a ionely




castle in Thoughtland, and he was so com-
pletely occupied with his books and papers
that he knew but little of what was going on in the
country round. One day a message came to him
from the King’s palace, and he was told to find an
answer to a certain question ; he was to search far
and near till a true solution could be found. The
question might not seem a difficult one, for it only
consisted of seven words : it was this :—‘ Does gold
cause most good, or evil 9’

The old man knew very little about it himself, for

gold had no particular attraction for him. The simple
99



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'2011-09-20T03:08:42-04:00'
describe
'2222276' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGJM' 'sip-files00011.tif'
ff62f509158b276534395edc4e31c38f
352796737f476ed28b604f0780aa49d4c9dc5cbb
'2011-09-20T03:08:31-04:00'
describe
'28251' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGJN' 'sip-files00012.pro'
3da662ab6debec214d5b78294a5421e3
fc053f570529357790b63987160c8368d6158f8d
'2011-09-20T03:08:51-04:00'
describe
'2063572' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGJO' 'sip-files00012.tif'
48e132910c07d096af7aea1ed369ed74
11a27d27ba90cac0a898ddaf081bcc4cc41f8f62
describe
'29421' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGJP' 'sip-files00013.pro'
31bc1cddb70376bb504c5f9094c62e91
8d9dae4bc953ae8d10bae4c70394167b8eab195b
'2011-09-20T03:10:23-04:00'
describe
'2153656' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGJQ' 'sip-files00013.tif'
c23e3e1bbc6e9453549f581dc91c63b3
cba14f86ac22c2c4edf84b9f56bd0b4c2cc77da4
'2011-09-20T03:07:38-04:00'
describe
'28399' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGJR' 'sip-files00014.pro'
d340d380c900cd68a4c1f2416391dda9
945079c44703520f4b48409da94eb23b64f87b06
'2011-09-20T03:07:19-04:00'
describe
'2211928' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGJS' 'sip-files00014.tif'
146e444efe23c3ff9f9007cdcf274690
1fe698fe90e1fd6a3278eb3b6d3b72c542716ec0
describe
'27217' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGJT' 'sip-files00015.pro'
7cbcd72509bb2aebf45dc25dff51b68c
97e57ef6a305802557f48c6ebdde5ed195b81692
'2011-09-20T03:10:27-04:00'
describe
'2069264' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGJU' 'sip-files00015.tif'
96d5c1411b51d297e039c994779c1f7d
2eae8e0a9cc202bad1e9b55df37f4fad776090a1
'2011-09-20T03:07:50-04:00'
describe
'26835' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGJV' 'sip-files00016.pro'
7299624b85ad6384235b42bdd57939cf
a475d85f6a23fcb865393ca1f9f81a942c8a7de9
describe
'2212068' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGJW' 'sip-files00016.tif'
624f769ba13ff34def48d442b16f0a43
d6829fab8d38fe8b116401c5e123d4b07ea3887a
'2011-09-20T03:09:42-04:00'
describe
'28022' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGJX' 'sip-files00017.pro'
d0a456bac3feb44ec74fe60b2de199f7
8f8c43f6fc092f9d6c50c7aaf0ef3f73dcf19ba8
'2011-09-20T03:10:40-04:00'
describe
'1995696' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGJY' 'sip-files00017.tif'
6b2fb1ce5689b342a4037f49422ad355
4656e324cd8dbd5eb069e3768815993265ba9ba7
'2011-09-20T03:09:03-04:00'
describe
'28762' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGJZ' 'sip-files00018.pro'
6c879647262c2cac5bf56cc6cec847d6
7c4053284666de1cdf38781276707b618d912f12
'2011-09-20T03:07:45-04:00'
describe
'2095440' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKA' 'sip-files00018.tif'
5d9442c2ae661dc7b861b41432d41301
54bf58d2126f7dff1740b59696c8c7d7a498b703
'2011-09-20T03:10:17-04:00'
describe
'29688' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKB' 'sip-files00019.pro'
e65e0fa930f55334b75ceb1c76805ebc
067a483f49819ae1c9d0b868d70372dd472ee962
'2011-09-20T03:08:23-04:00'
describe
'2024960' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKC' 'sip-files00019.tif'
020835450bb450e36b3d8fcafc18645f
323a6a4ad4017040aa65da30464075870fa3e836
describe
'16120' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKD' 'sip-files00020.pro'
09961f153ce22482dd2e71a6b954b181
9a639ee2365f2f8d10102ede3f339c84dd51a771
'2011-09-20T03:08:12-04:00'
describe
'2074524' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKE' 'sip-files00020.tif'
248f693377b3b7e1ec0ae191052831ea
2162983f91bdcbaf7485842dac1cbd522321fb13
describe
'19110' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKF' 'sip-files00021.pro'
fff984c735603bb235122037571fd263
7daa314a71a3d3d2db818aa7f10a526be2d9490f
describe
'2039320' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKG' 'sip-files00021.tif'
d8e4676bd402a59a25e9e6b555610af0
1e080810d614946a5e35ceadccb73abddc8dfdf3
'2011-09-20T03:10:16-04:00'
describe
'27459' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKH' 'sip-files00022.pro'
b50406abbd2569f1a24f2acf9683012e
dad2fe70e7e1dbb9fd26463e8788f4144ecd0e23
'2011-09-20T03:08:10-04:00'
describe
'2211732' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKI' 'sip-files00022.tif'
99789b520e1ac7758c0d5095a907eaff
7e711d8f0bbac3a59be5fe6d6d6f835d97934f64
'2011-09-20T03:09:55-04:00'
describe
'27784' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKJ' 'sip-files00023.pro'
24fb72f0d55ff2753e05af525ca451ba
3a4824e6c5be37ed96279f643d9a8fe3436dbfdf
describe
'2049384' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKK' 'sip-files00023.tif'
d3d34c29aee3b3e20f8484a3623e07cb
54ced66fbe64c77ca8d41deb3c5b3e8efd4630b7
'2011-09-20T03:07:27-04:00'
describe
'29658' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKL' 'sip-files00024.pro'
791823c6b06684534e7cfef6a7a0000a
189ea3139bac9c1d83bb684138daa6831e3d9919
describe
'2212136' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKM' 'sip-files00024.tif'
cb41b6195497d42ea3f684479b592aab
9ca8ff672b20f88816459af0cb514f3943d66673
'2011-09-20T03:07:22-04:00'
describe
'29259' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKN' 'sip-files00025.pro'
bfff794837048f95e93fb014f3a693c7
84fedc098a92c9fa594ae53f3b875605b82ea2c6
'2011-09-20T03:08:50-04:00'
describe
'2098828' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKO' 'sip-files00025.tif'
7c66f190874f518202adbc4b728fdd65
2c14b1809b235ba56d397a203b082027797e3d17
'2011-09-20T03:09:08-04:00'
describe
'28960' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKP' 'sip-files00026.pro'
376ebff1ad226b44e737736ca2776aa3
5daa0cfb2dc8f1c275160ad6fb28c4d4ba20d8d2
'2011-09-20T03:07:25-04:00'
describe
'2055900' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKQ' 'sip-files00026.tif'
5aa88253d0ae52a21c23cd36031484e4
c53661b271b16c8dd43256fa37ac1c23dbe2e140
describe
'25557' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKR' 'sip-files00027.pro'
804a01927d5df03351450b8ee6f88e95
c231789559333ba41527006c4fbb3ca7192f99fd
describe
'2050224' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKS' 'sip-files00027.tif'
949c479a3ad56706e9f2958ca634a9f2
61133b924bffcf1a3d896ca606d1d8135b7412bb
describe
'17569' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKT' 'sip-files00028.pro'
935b78b6c9456b7001ad3a7cd9db516e
965d06fd4f0f556fbf843109222372dc4c8abc98
describe
'2047924' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKU' 'sip-files00028.tif'
dab0aea825e181920fd36c81199b0509
b31d9d3be6212041a6eeab0601826875712a9b20
'2011-09-20T03:08:30-04:00'
describe
'29639' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKV' 'sip-files00029.pro'
8a3c7b56702018832bb2d21c5234b1d5
bfa81d24436069953be4ab48fcd78f8fd6e04851
describe
'2081036' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKW' 'sip-files00029.tif'
be35286a87f8d897599c65e456f192cb
286b823e393b1ee4bd07e4edb0cf85df6b5e0160
'2011-09-20T03:09:29-04:00'
describe
'29268' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKX' 'sip-files00030.pro'
2341ba126ca7d2f1ed594f1b3000cc1a
883347e619900df44c9a4894238b1e1194d5691d
'2011-09-20T03:08:53-04:00'
describe
'2211804' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKY' 'sip-files00030.tif'
bece6da270873b323e3408604cb96473
e29e85dee193e109c3aae668b93a1099c7aa83f5
'2011-09-20T03:09:13-04:00'
describe
'27473' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGKZ' 'sip-files00031.pro'
bd26988a5e75f1f51fa47bfcc2f53240
dfcdd131075d2fe035541154284bf3eea2d0cdb1
'2011-09-20T03:07:43-04:00'
describe
'2145488' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLA' 'sip-files00031.tif'
fb3ee47b7f4c9e6c06b60886a9fefe8b
ffe7bbbae6b1810de30f7ef929798c4fdc2d5a1e
'2011-09-20T03:09:21-04:00'
describe
'29936' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLB' 'sip-files00032.pro'
e08a51ba757fdda4e343a5ab691c0d01
147f84714e88b674542db59f66b101ac9476bd0c
describe
'2063576' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLC' 'sip-files00032.tif'
338394ee2ae988b099f2c9fb7077d347
fb14e11e9d820ea53ae710d8c4e7b2666fcb419a
'2011-09-20T03:08:26-04:00'
describe
'28055' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLD' 'sip-files00033.pro'
b0da1ab0df096fb4cbb5b087ea476b34
2838470a3a3381c8948db137aaed8bea5add2486
describe
'2090516' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLE' 'sip-files00033.tif'
b4d0f35b614c4d9b790b3e75790f3a45
5813b498e8aece6bb1b1edae792f3e5f518b838f
'2011-09-20T03:08:58-04:00'
describe
'27751' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLF' 'sip-files00034.pro'
7c120ffc15d04c86eee9d560a69bdadc
3807bf845440680337031225a9ce7f7f051a1670
describe
'2040684' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLG' 'sip-files00034.tif'
a6e1b7200c13f01acf52c29054a41c77
724bed70f9bc432048dae46b15ee4a4c0824f125
describe
'28005' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLH' 'sip-files00035.pro'
1940a61200d2811104aab9809b5b5b51
e05c71e3349fddbc2750531c742e22c01209bd62
'2011-09-20T03:09:16-04:00'
describe
'2144120' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLI' 'sip-files00035.tif'
21f95304672ac324cc40a092749a42c2
556ad7e4e0886e29d8edfdfdf192581a4b77fcf6
describe
'8202' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLJ' 'sip-files00036.pro'
6a7c7fa825075cf961bf431e197f6f88
de323488f0654b2a3c435445df6ae36a51c3b410
'2011-09-20T03:10:08-04:00'
describe
'2208816' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLK' 'sip-files00036.tif'
f0010f367469019d9edbc7397276518f
05901b761b13907f3c4d281493170d6931e094de
'2011-09-20T03:09:53-04:00'
describe
'16348' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLL' 'sip-files00037.pro'
13e975ecf41d8c6e2a24d05d1956dc67
94a16aade0186d63f14aeb2c21cad940a36618bc
describe
'2221416' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLM' 'sip-files00037.tif'
5632cf52aff91681fdc2ac71bceda119
0a0f3d7f61e11be686e9822d9f6e8fab5233bd7b
'2011-09-20T03:07:47-04:00'
describe
'28722' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLN' 'sip-files00038.pro'
ee2d9d49a3697001cf28e02def2779b8
9dd61ef633955b9e0630d9bbb836ddd16be58142
'2011-09-20T03:08:07-04:00'
describe
'2056336' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLO' 'sip-files00038.tif'
ed20347bb1e85009250a28a40fc34c61
703d944a77102ed05711fb093e765ebc9767edfc
'2011-09-20T03:09:17-04:00'
describe
'28388' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLP' 'sip-files00039.pro'
52c234168226595443016f6010bc1283
512377a3cafa4e70fe4de263cdb8e48416db55cf
'2011-09-20T03:07:34-04:00'
describe
'2059600' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLQ' 'sip-files00039.tif'
211d1203bd12aed9ad4638f9f60c1bf6
bd80a46a557bfaea1144c20357d7ac6e984a4900
'2011-09-20T03:09:30-04:00'
describe
'27201' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLR' 'sip-files00040.pro'
92d6b6957c1297eea6fdffb100ada54a
7b1d0385106dd9b0692fd1c8b83769b4fc76aa20
describe
'2012192' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLS' 'sip-files00040.tif'
c5cbbc84df798dd39c62d1bda436b869
de1b9634c92387dffca8dc17695104afd602b334
describe
'26388' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLT' 'sip-files00041.pro'
3db3fb1a64436abab494ee0b9420c02c
162f610bf56194d2ae22df04401b216e3cdba24f
describe
'2222180' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLU' 'sip-files00041.tif'
c91a29e77ae0591ee689aa365efea8f6
cf99b67ac05c2c9b7419094095bd43ee25a40990
'2011-09-20T03:08:27-04:00'
describe
'28330' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLV' 'sip-files00042.pro'
867ce578fd0df470326de70701547415
db00808913066016e2e276f7df64df8848611345
'2011-09-20T03:10:29-04:00'
describe
'2102616' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLW' 'sip-files00042.tif'
5d9d85182421636cb19a4cbfa476b0fe
f49f269abd090fbb5590a2668a5ca5af2706fabf
describe
'25516' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLX' 'sip-files00043.pro'
80a0f5dbf2e7b4f985de924612484f71
0a497c2b8a83332b6c9a0b2b5ccbb78a9382c96d
'2011-09-20T03:07:42-04:00'
describe
'2067356' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLY' 'sip-files00043.tif'
201542c5ab24b686e0e6287b8f1b0c7b
c39571cc7b57ea40d90df03b6c8259010640f0b9
'2011-09-20T03:09:44-04:00'
describe
'28726' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGLZ' 'sip-files00044.pro'
5f9017930dd6eaba23903d00c7ecf4c8
3805142a15793815c7e0320e07fe53bed06bff7b
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMA' 'sip-files00044.tif'
73670b304b3b09232bcecceefe69458e
e5c43832a702d2a46c0ed8c3dd00f0363e992a77
'2011-09-20T03:10:15-04:00'
describe
'27363' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMB' 'sip-files00045.pro'
7faf9006eb39c34b6787f354b6cde92c
c7442d1f748a2fab817038becacd5e95b84cdce7
'2011-09-20T03:09:04-04:00'
describe
'2222220' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMC' 'sip-files00045.tif'
046038c223aabc1c9d4764a780b14421
97a04d1281a5fa2fec59692c6550495a7d243b7e
describe
'27476' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMD' 'sip-files00046.pro'
b12ce943689b6261fd507cfe0754a6a1
3a0bdd6d65877249f3fc596190c8e7c263383ca5
'2011-09-20T03:09:56-04:00'
describe
'2081688' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGME' 'sip-files00046.tif'
7c1af8644db15ea121fc5559438199fe
41ba1f1ea1e742f5dcef05ea35bb9e526a49595a
'2011-09-20T03:07:23-04:00'
describe
'17063' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMF' 'sip-files00047.pro'
93c8b613728fc3c021e78bd8bd973063
239612905fc7e3271f9b0cd489c15a5d22359b00
'2011-09-20T03:08:13-04:00'
describe
'2065916' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMG' 'sip-files00047.tif'
fc77689b5c58f35fb27ebf1ba75f127b
653ce8f8855a7671d96c330c5d94cccfa54cd910
'2011-09-20T03:07:37-04:00'
describe
'15971' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMH' 'sip-files00048.pro'
4b13ef163c254ae85642783f3acace9f
6064e973637579296fa238edcdee01103766f179
'2011-09-20T03:10:42-04:00'
describe
'2210952' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMI' 'sip-files00048.tif'
60dde1cb50304c38ffded2e44aefd0eb
5f88670a8593a4cfb647cf0cca1af13dd36952d1
'2011-09-20T03:08:05-04:00'
describe
'29921' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMJ' 'sip-files00049.pro'
9e2cde05b9175d99c3d92e874f8106cc
8f47d343aa187fdd35099ce992e501780cc8b563
'2011-09-20T03:10:48-04:00'
describe
'2070520' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMK' 'sip-files00049.tif'
5a806188332123c2d594568bc5c33865
ad5844b0c150a30404e88226d318418af66646be
'2011-09-20T03:10:24-04:00'
describe
'28223' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGML' 'sip-files00050.pro'
4e4217b3e3f1678eae7f13d2caea3de5
1561f892cc373176e1b759f701a9f1e5c9048b3c
'2011-09-20T03:07:20-04:00'
describe
'2064288' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMM' 'sip-files00050.tif'
a4ca63303c0be30ea27892cbab35b22e
39f9cfa8835952598b7bb49e4594a32af87b84a1
'2011-09-20T03:08:19-04:00'
describe
'28694' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMN' 'sip-files00051.pro'
3240fa52eff47d145264031fee51e5c9
9a3167db217a14de4c474ac3239332fa10cca019
describe
'2053664' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMO' 'sip-files00051.tif'
06b7c8cf8700754f33c492aef2019196
8133c2661ae0c1e4fde9f2b60a253eb4be6cf8c9
describe
'14666' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMP' 'sip-files00052.pro'
c2b6afc079e5b84910276d9166970b33
8b1041fc1b3d9cbfbd5d1b9153c25fd8799c42a5
describe
'2021508' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMQ' 'sip-files00052.tif'
dababcab4b4e26f1f30f8522117d86c5
2103e6dcf3a75a41838c512f8aa7c2e8a08346ab
'2011-09-20T03:07:30-04:00'
describe
'16650' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMR' 'sip-files00053.pro'
13b514eb8ee134ea290d6954762a6f25
024e586514391c74e1146df311cbf825417e16c7
'2011-09-20T03:09:59-04:00'
describe
'1971188' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMS' 'sip-files00053.tif'
e40f2f94a6253a9f02727faa708e4636
30a3d9fcd237ba2cd819eeed8f0d6ca0e2cdc7de
describe
'27975' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMT' 'sip-files00054.pro'
ddc7018763be0ddde27a7de69901e03d
7bf19ce9082b836c14a1c494b1a5cc0f13f07ba3
describe
'2211964' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMU' 'sip-files00054.tif'
cca4f69013b531dd40d39bba49348ebd
a08dd9d00d1dd5f141bd359c8275414ed93cd7ab
'2011-09-20T03:08:36-04:00'
describe
'26826' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMV' 'sip-files00055.pro'
7bc7a3b5ace1c90d7a539f4a05c6f45e
ff0b578c28a2a68048538700039d818837db64ce
describe
'1969384' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMW' 'sip-files00055.tif'
e667065fd57ae65b8a338e40f5da95f1
35a85e123af577d602aa171a59ea2513503f3151
'2011-09-20T03:10:30-04:00'
describe
'10677' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMX' 'sip-files00056.pro'
919710e0b8380662fe85672b67d5565a
e3dc5c778eff1bb515a4fb795167a9353ceb1f29
describe
'2047220' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMY' 'sip-files00056.tif'
55a606f715bae4be67b1e38c21d3a512
d1593f5519d70df84a46adf70aa4edb785f70a52
'2011-09-20T03:08:02-04:00'
describe
'215' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGMZ' 'sip-files00056a.pro'
8f14f4a184669be6e0b347d3186bc1ae
27dbb7d9db12d360b7d3cafee2fd92304070018a
'2011-09-20T03:07:24-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNA' 'sip-files00056a.tif'
33c334fd0c2edd540fe8fdd14142cc73
194989d2172ee6491e0974bb07de58e6377c2e31
'2011-09-20T03:08:20-04:00'
describe
'697' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNB' 'sip-files00057.pro'
8b7008dd680a4f0ede72b028ea59b646
663bb166e21b4c7d334bf332756d9ee2ec7520a2
'2011-09-20T03:09:24-04:00'
describe
'2076116' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNC' 'sip-files00057.tif'
35ec9c7c3d420bdb40e799a71103391a
11ead597f7b7ee84f116ffe8c0fa54c1be2401b4
'2011-09-20T03:09:41-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGND' 'sip-files00057a.pro'
cc680f03e1decfc9e4dd45b471a29171
b2145e8ef488328b356228c6e6e9a6f5ad42216d
'2011-09-20T03:07:35-04:00'
describe
'14870' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNE' 'sip-files00058.pro'
d7ecbee68448070a4838bc15926601e8
50be9941fb9c0396c288dc937902098d1141128d
describe
'2035936' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNF' 'sip-files00058.tif'
971408d051dd24738db739280a9959d5
11d8ef2c1a80fd6e8cc24a9492f6f15c7b4700aa
'2011-09-20T03:08:47-04:00'
describe
'30082' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNG' 'sip-files00059.pro'
4659838154c2944aa24d8264fe3b71af
2d72c41d9a20730db31819f195c13691bcc7e21d
describe
'2212044' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNH' 'sip-files00059.tif'
1c3db47e9da87a712b6a16725b3f0b2e
f321bfadbf583d86b2480f02c3e694c7a18c4f38
describe
'28368' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNI' 'sip-files00060.pro'
0bb407daedc920cc4da6032327b6ff5d
f1d169b124b169e6a7ca5ff40c25dcf9f1466598
'2011-09-20T03:08:49-04:00'
describe
'2081068' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNJ' 'sip-files00060.tif'
772c293bd4ea03dfe7938c25936d2427
01863eb585984960befa01064fce52098dd8c9a3
describe
'28577' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNK' 'sip-files00061.pro'
2035e31269d99519258f1d668b5c7189
4641016e1fffef0bae4196db4969c885c7c1da40
describe
'2055192' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNL' 'sip-files00061.tif'
a2d076283eacb338443a5c0a4c6845c6
c3f84ad9b68812a3a57caf03374a44d823abc865
describe
'27193' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNM' 'sip-files00062.pro'
65be71365be9da859544b9fd5bce3b24
c6b4ccf7d0f78f6a373b1ad12df2b497516061d4
'2011-09-20T03:07:54-04:00'
describe
'2053760' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNN' 'sip-files00062.tif'
ff53ee4822a7e94b90c0aefeb7cf7d50
e15f8972db9273827e62cb39e95429ed5a23469e
'2011-09-20T03:10:28-04:00'
describe
'27482' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNO' 'sip-files00063.pro'
7d6991b80f3726d764b38a089c30bd8b
341d48d092ecb8f1e43cddf887aaf1f8b36a989a
describe
'2211788' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNP' 'sip-files00063.tif'
346428115b1902691fa867503cfd4148
5be2694d1ba0addc8496763a6fc7c3ff61a728ca
describe
'28798' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNQ' 'sip-files00064.pro'
e03473b6c499837e1a4d5e7b5264bf98
c2a8daed6c37aaefc61381841217f71ace053636
'2011-09-20T03:08:39-04:00'
describe
'2211272' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNR' 'sip-files00064.tif'
8c23eadd7db7e1b2a0f1c7265cfd8ae0
eb36b6dcd86d97c813f945c4edefe6762f39ce8a
'2011-09-20T03:07:48-04:00'
describe
'29971' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNS' 'sip-files00065.pro'
75ef280e61be5de89f214e6c9f0ec64a
e618ed031986c548f57e6051387937fcde01fb5a
'2011-09-20T03:10:45-04:00'
describe
'2022360' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNT' 'sip-files00065.tif'
4fde52212ccf2c39befadbf59609c678
0a5892306bf0e1278f5308861a872bf6332e32e7
'2011-09-20T03:09:06-04:00'
describe
'9914' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNU' 'sip-files00066.pro'
7f49ef61a312b1cc9eb86853548e31a7
b0de32e1a9dac00cd9caeee60b9ce9a6716096b0
describe
'2186984' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNV' 'sip-files00066.tif'
58b57d7f9d58f188899edde53ba51ff6
77627966b6a6986f3fb792a957304c502da7068b
describe
'17921' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNW' 'sip-files00067.pro'
a99bfd47860d93e66c7cff8ac875ca91
186b5a083c3f00d4f45703961df8406beacc9f47
'2011-09-20T03:10:20-04:00'
describe
'1987280' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNX' 'sip-files00067.tif'
35c10138f1abd080b4d3fb802d6f9c93
b1985fa0437bd12cb0ed3446e113ecf90aa64236
'2011-09-20T03:10:26-04:00'
describe
'30394' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNY' 'sip-files00068.pro'
f1719dacd2569e8888be7346d1a57822
8b0c76ba4c22e7fc783b42076295050111a4910f
describe
'2070308' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGNZ' 'sip-files00068.tif'
12389e7ebe70d361a003b1458d6e93e2
749d3998a3bbe6b2a6299cd42c89b67adafe2bd4
'2011-09-20T03:09:19-04:00'
describe
'29744' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOA' 'sip-files00069.pro'
d1bb520f19899d36c98f54688171e768
143e005e4e19781878bca5b0ac79e61739039cc1
'2011-09-20T03:09:33-04:00'
describe
'1958588' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOB' 'sip-files00069.tif'
a8a1be49d91103ef5e912076a23c66a7
07542363560697cf73fe0ff8579afd208538f888
'2011-09-20T03:07:29-04:00'
describe
'29160' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOC' 'sip-files00070.pro'
83b081f0d3151b2bb4874f325209abc6
6019b195fdaed7741e3746357f1cee8a05f6706b
describe
'2189956' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOD' 'sip-files00070.tif'
26554b89ee73e4f0c484331ef88b6e69
d914caf3b2313aa00dd64eb3c4ca52c834e88081
'2011-09-20T03:09:52-04:00'
describe
'30389' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOE' 'sip-files00071.pro'
280fc96f3d729f4593f25fec06320a30
4785fda9bf2ff528e20e6f9e1f476b566ccc677f
'2011-09-20T03:10:49-04:00'
describe
'2036084' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOF' 'sip-files00071.tif'
d75eaf185c78f9e39770b3dfad6af41c
5bdc93c8b8774fc4fcdb088ed625b1cce01340c2
'2011-09-20T03:10:19-04:00'
describe
'30184' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOG' 'sip-files00072.pro'
d62905ebbb92f93f415d4c7cf6ca44ad
7ab4203c1c835aa2f512b950045c27c716ec1771
'2011-09-20T03:10:09-04:00'
describe
'2047312' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOH' 'sip-files00072.tif'
e45906bb3e0720c9c0d678304eac9ab8
b6bfc06fa728ecc8ed043c061f06de4684c8a27c
describe
'28350' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOI' 'sip-files00073.pro'
f9c91b040170989ba051501274dd64c2
3cd106922b407c29efdc75f48898d25e1eaa52e4
'2011-09-20T03:07:57-04:00'
describe
'2058232' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOJ' 'sip-files00073.tif'
76628ffe2ad21e50acdac8a3346ddef8
9ec3289485d690190bf58a01b04ea198d5ee73cb
'2011-09-20T03:08:16-04:00'
describe
'16353' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOK' 'sip-files00074.pro'
fc8116932488461944ba01f517be276c
d16ae622381d0782780e0c23cfc7c427e277e9e1
describe
'2023768' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOL' 'sip-files00074.tif'
1e0c3ef5a2cc436c664c2ac7ccd95155
dff8501b4bc399fa12bb514f43ca2a6d1fc14471
'2011-09-20T03:09:01-04:00'
describe
'15319' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOM' 'sip-files00075.pro'
0e53b8787b8f172b01abd1e955998c66
c0c97b3019b2fa46d7ffda4f45077c4d8f2ca7e2
describe
'2019276' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGON' 'sip-files00075.tif'
d255f27c6d9fa8e730c2430e583f148a
4be578c45e626db78d4942aadf7a1dcadc53157b
describe
'31137' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOO' 'sip-files00076.pro'
37bff53a202f11398db87e20262ca622
0b173a50b1b4c6b5bcf443f69a9b94cd2872bbd8
'2011-09-20T03:08:15-04:00'
describe
'2189764' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOP' 'sip-files00076.tif'
52156bd833d64ff42bbc46aed16c8553
e2062560dc7a270dd151e8d2d1c748ff6fc26d3c
'2011-09-20T03:10:04-04:00'
describe
'28317' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOQ' 'sip-files00077.pro'
ee8101520be672779c49ac8f9a3463e1
515278a693f67457e6cad7dc6c9bda08d82b7a46
describe
'2016820' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOR' 'sip-files00077.tif'
88a05552115a8e758531d6b5259ec3c7
26758fc116581228286137e9e306fd1a3ad81b98
describe
'31102' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOS' 'sip-files00078.pro'
cc10e2efd756554e08dabb7d2ef1b0cc
acedbdec4f2b96f38ce513f6652c219aea900e4e
'2011-09-20T03:07:55-04:00'
describe
'2189708' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOT' 'sip-files00078.tif'
6b69d43c038c45cbc0537b516604e395
304f1f606c0b6169cbcaef58cfe9085979b7b32e
describe
'31068' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOU' 'sip-files00079.pro'
2dda98ef8ff3cf9d61c502fb82ee57db
e8adec60bf0b0033afcba2c521e565fb60418407
'2011-09-20T03:10:36-04:00'
describe
'2009736' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOV' 'sip-files00079.tif'
c42fce10197d2ef30ecb8d9aa9480620
46b35651a1da772f7dc83fc710696b566bc032cb
'2011-09-20T03:07:44-04:00'
describe
'30984' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOW' 'sip-files00080.pro'
5a796e87b4005dbbe6d02da74b8cea25
25f2ef192be1f85ba5567c392317a61a14108ba9
describe
'2062488' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOX' 'sip-files00080.tif'
c96a4339eea1846397d9da33034c70b5
3879eb90017b792bb2f454b855ebc316ba026076
'2011-09-20T03:10:00-04:00'
describe
'29844' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOY' 'sip-files00081.pro'
76cb604f48bcd7c94e5f293c44decc53
18d90b3fc5f89859ea3c2f8f5fbb7e21abd2b92a
'2011-09-20T03:09:27-04:00'
describe
'1986172' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGOZ' 'sip-files00081.tif'
ed4b52f96bad5341d26535569b9bacbc
5c4cd77b520e346b8b93f90752149e2eab2b15b6
'2011-09-20T03:08:17-04:00'
describe
'29982' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPA' 'sip-files00082.pro'
7764a27b1f21455e63ac4570d7f2a8a5
74da200fe018c5389e380e2b502829d24b850f16
describe
'2189784' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPB' 'sip-files00082.tif'
600ef86bb6db9a84a319c1ddd751b7b8
7419df2fe16f39f28bc2e7db64609380f7cc1727
describe
'30256' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPC' 'sip-files00083.pro'
8b857f5777df8d0f7c7d6ad3cc6e5e2e
c1a2eaa8a1d5dcd66607415b7e98ad289ebefe05
'2011-09-20T03:08:29-04:00'
describe
'2006640' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPD' 'sip-files00083.tif'
775a698908643cb06f28f419c5e8c5cf
dd8721d5e4ffa4fe9c2645eb8830ad86c5dc648b
'2011-09-20T03:08:44-04:00'
describe
'6641' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPE' 'sip-files00084.pro'
e1e7530391cf6678fbef71f74d068cdd
5079e6b22d493d0b861e777acce2b84e0a15f9ed
'2011-09-20T03:07:58-04:00'
describe
'2186624' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPF' 'sip-files00084.tif'
4f57ddbc896c787b97447c8a8894e65d
afb91a3d3315ba27edcbeb37e760d0d43ceef106
describe
'18379' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPG' 'sip-files00085.pro'
d452a770c87cafcd6119e43298872895
218f7ec75c46b9e81f11d27988de8cc2037c5929
'2011-09-20T03:07:51-04:00'
describe
'2056180' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPH' 'sip-files00085.tif'
7d07d049c4d693757e488cff78b3bba1
6ffd24bf4a725ae5391466a331753dc8140f0f6e
'2011-09-20T03:09:18-04:00'
describe
'31664' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPI' 'sip-files00086.pro'
400b797f119ed19b0122a8e707565e8d
2493bd26d4bae0892397243e8b6cf95be21bbdbe
describe
'2061956' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPJ' 'sip-files00086.tif'
e3e3a74c82c7444d14848a366a2e2f7f
34844094e1daa59566e9ae786c24554f6907a6e6
'2011-09-20T03:07:59-04:00'
describe
'31699' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPK' 'sip-files00087.pro'
3f1c5c787fc8342e754a3c0a7208c054
d47b84340fc42f7bab8cfc76586049ce28d5078a
describe
'2158700' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPL' 'sip-files00087.tif'
45004d88075c549dd3aed31084ac66b2
fa4080c3b7b5e714a172e69db06c60866520dd19
'2011-09-20T03:09:23-04:00'
describe
'28934' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPM' 'sip-files00088.pro'
85c7a9afb792f0f70399d8247ba58f0e
0d1a31e92cb255daf980f1cff7528eb1210c73cb
'2011-09-20T03:10:07-04:00'
describe
'2027472' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPN' 'sip-files00088.tif'
7e44acc19d44748130cfbd88b886bc74
8a6d7c1eda46cc319ecfc756860dd5960d810ea2
describe
'31257' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPO' 'sip-files00089.pro'
84c4f2f8ec9123ef317d6fc1d6b33515
30a861c6f4d83d7c2531e96998229373fd2bf81f
'2011-09-20T03:10:01-04:00'
describe
'2083352' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPP' 'sip-files00089.tif'
1d95f817df614f99fba5bc3c4911e430
faa18e5981af358042730b18a4ca2efdacff24d1
'2011-09-20T03:10:18-04:00'
describe
'29991' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPQ' 'sip-files00090.pro'
eb1decb3fa978c2c4f3cee18d8de21a6
c204a25cc75be653415801b691cd7229ebbff027
'2011-09-20T03:07:56-04:00'
describe
'2046880' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPR' 'sip-files00090.tif'
e27ef185e74a9ffa4342177f4ba4b9f5
c46dd2e74bf444713d2509e166a4cc6c3bdcf675
'2011-09-20T03:10:03-04:00'
describe
'30142' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPS' 'sip-files00091.pro'
d15ea0a38996a0701b6cfa552e76326a
205a436b048c38772d3cc0066002abe4dbbc5a4a
describe
'1991424' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPT' 'sip-files00091.tif'
909b063004a53cb4b5ddadd8f4a5f309
669d8a17554d0807109a65ef0fb3325c20845a6c
'2011-09-20T03:08:54-04:00'
describe
'30299' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPU' 'sip-files00092.pro'
f96e6d1c97e7a8e075bd381337318b91
49570511a2d1fe645cc5bdce717bb132c85ca02b
'2011-09-20T03:09:20-04:00'
describe
'2069876' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPV' 'sip-files00092.tif'
c3e61ed94a1bf99ac5f38075e494daa2
d42588bb089f5458c9a11148100fa972bd1109b8
describe
'30087' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPW' 'sip-files00093.pro'
4aaacce94920867baefbc7e5ae835223
c9b655d638dbaf0cf5809a4a468f99c92c4c005a
'2011-09-20T03:08:46-04:00'
describe
'2063224' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPX' 'sip-files00093.tif'
889f227a808c5edaffd27b21cbc97e41
e64f77c417feaf36348a172127c1e9ddf5d9acb4
'2011-09-20T03:08:00-04:00'
describe
'26937' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPY' 'sip-files00094.pro'
fd1c8b681897a54273f646afc1812f29
77b7a493b9e5dcf0b6c5cbe2b927ea10d224cedb
describe
'2189252' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGPZ' 'sip-files00094.tif'
f9103dfd9e5fdf764d07623d40633176
0e7802944f02949ab5b1077246a9df91da410006
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQA' 'sip-files00094a.pro'
3994a9eb3f9941ff09d8d8b5497133c9
bc436093693113ce72e4b1711ca0b3996617c765
describe
'946' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQB' 'sip-files00095.pro'
d7d8416c459cf85f0e86258035364d3a
c4e6e3a537d4cfc2e08a57e416cd3385da3eae68
describe
'2057496' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQC' 'sip-files00095.tif'
541cf2bacf0a0fa588dcb18af8a528a3
c485fd752ba10222d48d180a2be6ebf1f486b5fc
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQD' 'sip-files00095a.pro'
c286ae393b0492baf8c0071f00e5a722
51ec545b97eaa19d10e796496e0043de1a0454f9
describe
'16241' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQE' 'sip-files00096.pro'
73ba7a92a359ef7f11ec1408da7089af
dff57a70c038bf2044af78d66aa12bd14fce4d57
describe
'2064324' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQF' 'sip-files00096.tif'
01bab68561aa92b6f4a5c12eec423f24
d424b0e68202efb1ce30dd292edd996d9ebdc80d
describe
'27627' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQG' 'sip-files00097.pro'
a0c502c329aac0e5d91ddc456e28107c
c31ce6a236fb3737dcbbea3a86e6f835f40b3a7a
describe
'2128128' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQH' 'sip-files00097.tif'
a73301f1f308308b3bd7cfa560fcbb63
1ccd2502be5434f6428d482861947fd75d534a37
describe
'28488' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQI' 'sip-files00098.pro'
a510de4fa39740b797c4845e700ee892
69666008b3a03612b18087757455fad36a9d9a70
'2011-09-20T03:10:37-04:00'
describe
'2027664' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQJ' 'sip-files00098.tif'
c9fee739173a731c3a85b766573d1606
8a5fe6cb5cd50943eb06492c2f606faef9b5bae1
describe
'28956' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQK' 'sip-files00099.pro'
dba1a2552416ab7c51fbfad8677f7132
c00829fc0b56a1a3c8e8a4b8f86a49a6a33f0111
'2011-09-20T03:08:55-04:00'
describe
'2111336' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQL' 'sip-files00099.tif'
1af691ff66bffa079b9ff19446995aa8
38c145700fff59cfc21ad5091e37459820ae25df
describe
'29666' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQM' 'sip-files00100.pro'
775f1bcc72b92b0c31a689b1d5832553
7692fa98cbebd5bbbf3d79218c39d8a7547af74f
describe
'2039532' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQN' 'sip-files00100.tif'
746e7b4aedfe83e724f366df4c29936b
017b5b8b969dfac46c915e54728e5febf6c3c54b
describe
'28967' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQO' 'sip-files00101.pro'
232c8b6e10b16010c6802bc1c5ad7079
a3501a647bb276cfb90a29313eadfe7b6b622311
describe
'2118144' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQP' 'sip-files00101.tif'
758dff2fc11e121c22bea9721662add7
688ff6789fe3c259f5e68e81847d8f9788a20ebd
describe
'31134' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQQ' 'sip-files00102.pro'
8b2251ab1c4cd0e905c614383329c1d5
c8f3e03c86a73f06f7363ed74bf81f2e42fb103f
'2011-09-20T03:09:00-04:00'
describe
'2074332' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQR' 'sip-files00102.tif'
32dcd96a4c3aa43aaba5de955c738d9d
f72b52406eb21fb444f5ca890d96ed412dd08bea
describe
'28676' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQS' 'sip-files00103.pro'
e0413917dc860bce30498f12586fae20
b49b310d1f124dc5d5645e29e65cf36de6897441
describe
'2279888' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQT' 'sip-files00103.tif'
5a9b141773579a079bdaada1f7d6f5ba
324b358d40c8309885fbab6d0e4a4c31dd951067
describe
'9572' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQU' 'sip-files00104.pro'
d4febca441f4c76362adef9b38444fe1
2c2dc205a3a9a961a21e819029cb040276f2adab
'2011-09-20T03:08:01-04:00'
describe
'2039424' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQV' 'sip-files00104.tif'
5796e8115fbb713c823c18b5270d6b65
913876fc5e4de106f9aec615cf91fa9851fb7048
'2011-09-20T03:10:47-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQW' 'sip-files00104a.pro'
01611a9f9db8bd9fdc39c1a7da60bf59
2600c275368ed2e2d89f662247100f38e14d7733
describe
'812' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQX' 'sip-files00105.pro'
476d8f39b3eb0729ece5a03527832aa7
e96495d4d7dba312b235192480345b35e45887e2
describe
'2022988' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQY' 'sip-files00105.tif'
83907eb41b3194edba709d8a885c7136
c32e80673526d0f7bafdd444fa1b4fa6f87c5327
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGQZ' 'sip-files00105a.pro'
06caf261cb7b459332d440b963321eca
47fd1c887e38798c3ee5016f351df9745739773e
describe
'16332' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRA' 'sip-files00106.pro'
ccd5a0e1b8ec4506f076ae610680a91a
f292e81369af5101b1e4f751af3f3d4954c31670
describe
'2008436' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRB' 'sip-files00106.tif'
1070098354d906cac829e258d7dad773
1685ad42071168632c3fee9fc85c1cec9222e203
describe
'29361' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRC' 'sip-files00107.pro'
6599084f851e3b0870ea1fc7e1464086
1f58ab3394372e301b16033ae735d46b285ff10b
describe
'2058044' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRD' 'sip-files00107.tif'
8cb007c94dbe0810db3129bbb2b7a8e7
859005fa2dc0f9d08b584abe6334d360d3a9e2a5
'2011-09-20T03:09:51-04:00'
describe
'30551' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRE' 'sip-files00108.pro'
e8a8e98c5494fb656c7c4e7518a13642
0e7b817f36be4c40c9c07cdc7a7cf947f7a26a22
describe
'2190184' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRF' 'sip-files00108.tif'
a291635d5c3d66f0a94edcce2e11ad74
0c4e2517d3d5df72765c0205cd6c885199cb0483
describe
'31138' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRG' 'sip-files00109.pro'
d686243b35781e8157cd07c1ed9572ba
a203f04053df72c8363b7f513501f9956dc60ffd
describe
'2057324' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRH' 'sip-files00109.tif'
9ca8b4232d500d4b8ca483d4aa1931fe
7aeda4770fda07cc35a0ab72c95a2ec1fd987652
describe
'30026' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRI' 'sip-files00110.pro'
cd3ea6a6daae3e963ae90250796745bf
6d88f7f6376232647bebc2877fb4c4f2dd963343
describe
'2023120' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRJ' 'sip-files00110.tif'
efe04cf9c58b47f5341aa1a2eec6f04b
5423f7241d8549e627b387a99fdd5dde73eee1fd
describe
'31890' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRK' 'sip-files00111.pro'
56712527f858e4ec0d078fb493009121
07308be369e5db47c4d88a005880a9217d492a43
describe
'2086096' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRL' 'sip-files00111.tif'
ea80c5068fbf1082ae39dbfa4f1ba6a5
5cd00ecf09371d0ad1cc13dbe885a188f788f294
describe
'28811' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRM' 'sip-files00112.pro'
45d59431784cbd6e0fb74144f2c995d5
e8207fb37fc7557c5317f3cd919bc60230fb8373
describe
'2057452' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRN' 'sip-files00112.tif'
9bb83af89efd9f444d42e44d4bf1a152
1f55b3de21d18f2041ff169584ede3540c394bea
describe
'29970' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRO' 'sip-files00113.pro'
08e33c2fb27737b1bbf49135683dad07
e44645c8b3ef7a630dd3506c7d5832fec9c7ced8
describe
'2089732' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRP' 'sip-files00113.tif'
ba5663026c7d4a2c425eb271eecdcfd1
bd5f0cb2c445685d38b41409e14e58f4c9094a7f
describe
'30056' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRQ' 'sip-files00114.pro'
a25eb034c87fc5138de01947564f6ac7
254f97425e76ada9cfc4ad7189aee192b8485000
describe
'2039048' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRR' 'sip-files00114.tif'
a36a8688229e7d67b308d67ef30fdd51
2c9ef282b31139e593d83080e8beddfa9216a844
describe
'28545' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRS' 'sip-files00115.pro'
5e22042576d3407feb211d7a80bccd70
6938ad01f9135d00260baaac1b0b0d5a7ca341ac
describe
'2180808' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRT' 'sip-files00115.tif'
fc852bb602790de7860316ad897d3e4f
ca75d32818ffeda38c66773ce412d833670cf758
describe
'32060' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRU' 'sip-files00116.pro'
02dd89e7577cafc6f6d74cfc004acf71
3841a523332b97bb3434acd7c6f26103c5791352
'2011-09-20T03:09:46-04:00'
describe
'2026904' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRV' 'sip-files00116.tif'
0ff65d40150338bfe3b388ff56e7904e
a205eb7f0f03acf84a3556e87f236c31a70f7633
'2011-09-20T03:09:31-04:00'
describe
'31398' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRW' 'sip-files00117.pro'
a5b1fd54c0b552a6357b2a9427d8902b
47383d06d2ce008e2153dfb0f337d78831429cf6
describe
'2174972' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRX' 'sip-files00117.tif'
2deaf2f4a822e25163e6ff865ed2d53a
ff695042a12bf0355498ef0b6ba3b8f5a3d751b7
'2011-09-20T03:08:09-04:00'
describe
'29950' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRY' 'sip-files00118.pro'
732e0ed243a33708f01378d9dc314ff3
70275185ea8a50324bc045f207626463133e99d7
describe
'2015352' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGRZ' 'sip-files00118.tif'
af5cc3b517af596402c924de1c77c834
e450d0354dd6f56641510feb7ea06a579afd5085
describe
'30060' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSA' 'sip-files00119.pro'
d3e4da1ed184a918b21fb5853f3853ae
bc5814bbf5f13b55c8f4a32500cf3c50c2a4e542
describe
'2280432' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSB' 'sip-files00119.tif'
a35a6b952c3a504c6d2cdc37c63665cf
c90b0d57f3f6562b6c62ebb65c21c1ea394cea9b
'2011-09-20T03:09:07-04:00'
describe
'30590' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSC' 'sip-files00120.pro'
1b2d7572c58fb7d097cd8da9a8a0b21d
68ec156b6fcb0e28cb39fb4d810808ea205209d2
'2011-09-20T03:08:32-04:00'
describe
'1994124' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSD' 'sip-files00120.tif'
4c3ce521a490835bcaf319015f99c2bf
67ea78baf2e00011d0276682f2a7c7523532a7bd
'2011-09-20T03:08:41-04:00'
describe
'30035' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSE' 'sip-files00121.pro'
a15634463920556f6040724a0e2de955
1f9caea1111ed6dd5fd4b96a6c7d77e6c1dc410a
describe
'2106152' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSF' 'sip-files00121.tif'
12c861115668463fa581b10df8768a11
596ab93922517dd7ae17af9accd9705a3a5f0d29
describe
'6791' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSG' 'sip-files00122.pro'
5b922051b794dafcac2c0f72d405e683
0882fe7f737bb321930e25f0564d8281bb38d320
'2011-09-20T03:07:17-04:00'
describe
'2015400' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSH' 'sip-files00122.tif'
0a4418b8d44514edd661e0a83675825b
37841750416b91e49897bddab45f274c4a84923c
describe
'31277' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSI' 'sip-files00124.pro'
ecf93f8bb1a139ed5ab54bdb528bdd9a
e7522c6699724887dcfc885f3def8e8370bfeb6d
describe
'2122720' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSJ' 'sip-files00124.tif'
dfd75864377a234d2fadf9b50c2d3dbb
1077bc7d2224a326ddfb9aead579bbcaa83ffa38
describe
'30530' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSK' 'sip-files00125.pro'
d3d891bca9c45e6b530906034f2f4395
904968894dd01811ab20c0522d88baf8266c4e52
describe
'2239984' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSL' 'sip-files00125.tif'
1e663ca55e94c2d14a9eac4b77fa3106
c12957fdfbd4474f6fdcc83818eba5eb2da8a181
describe
'51067' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSM' 'sip-files00126.pro'
db657c888f029becc0bcd3ecc16fc8c6
71fdb5cc786a20bd0d4edba9c262e86c1b68e2a2
describe
'2150672' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSN' 'sip-files00126.tif'
c5f42cce47282fc885dd257316cfeef3
edef5d5a24081516cef6ab63ece497877cbfc560
'2011-09-20T03:08:11-04:00'
describe
'46690' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSO' 'sip-files00127.pro'
54687d3af7caea538bc0743b6de9e0a6
e12c6e5de8a5d9ae9b2c6f742a42f641a4b34d69
describe
'2229872' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSP' 'sip-files00127.tif'
f1f09441e8d172c1118f9a2fae325a54
ddd6f3f796be22e87d6efc3be85832f4a1637c04
describe
'53323' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSQ' 'sip-files00128.pro'
03436777f68825f5d948164a000a6268
294427aa391fc95c3dd77d4216f49e27838a84f4
describe
'2093772' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSR' 'sip-files00128.tif'
fd69017a1a3b581557d93177a8da1c1a
7c6690b79ae9713600047460bc94ab3499622a0e
'2011-09-20T03:09:58-04:00'
describe
'63769' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSS' 'sip-files00129.pro'
a433b1bdf8eed5c557e1487fe27402c6
da2f934f59cf6252e70ecc10171e31b2c060cac6
describe
'2256768' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGST' 'sip-files00129.tif'
a1f29aeab4262b5ad1fa8ba08d425067
280bd5b214af795adb5eea704904556859f81a85
describe
'47975' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSU' 'sip-files00130.pro'
50be48faad6a017be820dbdbe75456a2
516d6c5f0083785ba11b505934d96d4d4804dcf5
describe
'2221576' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSV' 'sip-files00130.tif'
e30ffcd2128b68c5f5ac7bcbe725ca03
8b1a659b50128678b2e77ab2bc59db3440e09af7
describe
'71574' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSW' 'sip-files00131.pro'
9f22468fca0f5476a593ac24e92b1523
cfa9b1e15c8fb48b49096c772c6c21e60ba65c87
'2011-09-20T03:10:12-04:00'
describe
'2289852' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSX' 'sip-files00131.tif'
c53a644b5c74d9e85a9131c8f98030c8
c848715782b4db4e0f0657eae9081430007aec3c
'2011-09-20T03:10:41-04:00'
describe
'416' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSY' 'sip-files00134.pro'
efef059569617be62ded86040d9341ef
f0620bcf11abc81a312ab934ccb857fa9a3cc8a7
describe
'7357316' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGSZ' 'sip-files00134.tif'
1b0bc3f384434bcd7c7e92838695f8ed
2f1ef6be8bdb151458f78355690c4c72e5a0551c
describe
'214' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTA' 'sip-files00135.pro'
ce159d1d16e0e4361cc87c958d19817a
bd64eca267bb284b7890242e8946273e7d40cefa
'2011-09-20T03:09:05-04:00'
describe
'7269852' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTB' 'sip-files00135.tif'
e050595558df3f5dcfdc53d0e15dbcd9
10fc99b142e741c4efe4fd7efbb600fa1e119cb5
'2011-09-20T03:08:14-04:00'
describe
'330' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTC' 'sip-files00136.pro'
0834a69a04b692df342e20d16ec4db47
72575669550dc68e2304917b618ba59e87c0246a
describe
'1548244' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTD' 'sip-files00136.tif'
8a5fba1d6b5408a94eccef448a3f42b1
280527d6e5903c76f95163cc15fdea0cb67b3cf3
describe
'48705' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTE' 'sip-files00001thm.jpg'
c4474af341ff58a465faf9de5944bcfa
544e59974fe4d0350f9687eb9c8b860d4e6a283a
describe
'660021' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTF' 'sip-files00001.jpg'
0d3b2d9d07b983eac79ad59bb9c319f6
a4a8c38c4d02c29e0448344838b7eaf9e14c810c
describe
'165889' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTG' 'sip-files00001.QC.jpg'
8db8240099b26207ebb4082d198106f3
403156844d895e4b08b0e14ccd61f97f7daf361d
describe
'303989' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTH' 'sip-files00001.jp2'
0708c4ad991c14fb7122b13fab2a1127
f1b3f6de5f281a9829505b64b372af6a82ad2a30
describe
'381391' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTI' 'sip-files00002.jpg'
e8557c4464b46ef0e6c37f15c574afa0
66634711ba25422a0ee2362ced5b8f9e87aad73d
describe
'93971' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTJ' 'sip-files00002.QC.jpg'
15834862874e1cbaf6e208087c4018f0
de08c844c40a75f63376f0c9935ba915076dddd6
describe
'305701' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTK' 'sip-files00002.jp2'
db89fb8a1239329f0076ec63bdf4b1ef
b45b884febc7e63cd57de9d1196d762ccdba9319
describe
'392646' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTL' 'sip-files00003.jpg'
2048df37340895bedb8a3e743797530d
38f8fd6426a5bacb9129318ca1139aa202328231
describe
'100865' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTM' 'sip-files00003.QC.jpg'
a290db0db6897caf476bcc63123707cf
3dec5cbd32d0d034f1f25d58efd8d25f0df3a7a8
describe
'272736' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTN' 'sip-files00003.jp2'
76dd13238ba6a33bf7fdf6d59e403302
c546e1dc3fe12cb748d6ce39d679663e9b831d66
describe
'550395' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTO' 'sip-files00004.jpg'
6c868956dc0686f035010b6e0358bdee
ce30723eaee2ef8a2b19e6f27639e36b18cf869c
describe
'144306' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTP' 'sip-files00004.QC.jpg'
b8bb533a6e7e5a6ce85bb6a4bc813adb
0262dc9b067d09b2bd240159f2aa24bc65d210f3
describe
'269913' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTQ' 'sip-files00004.jp2'
7224d4dbeac8e4cd5bdf2b63ab29efb6
7ca482fd6c09c9816098e6889579b870135b7a3c
describe
'293619' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTR' 'sip-files00005.jpg'
c4da3b6681ac2e030cf647d6bdab4663
fe990849ee0840e206b09b14d0c7b1e1c0ce94a1
'2011-09-20T03:07:40-04:00'
describe
'75390' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTS' 'sip-files00005.QC.jpg'
b7e64b57d3f9635e5d460a4465a1199e
49dcdf111558b74ed5c4ebed891d3f92f514b6ac
describe
'255733' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTT' 'sip-files00005.jp2'
7bdd42aaf58427ff6cc4754568901957
d1e2e13459051d30c3848b5d23acbef71762af71
describe
'315594' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTU' 'sip-files00006.jpg'
95209b338ee486cfe79b30665be47c2d
11531e8a76fdedf9a5fc6048c63dc977c2bea843
'2011-09-20T03:09:47-04:00'
describe
'84295' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTV' 'sip-files00006.QC.jpg'
4cd003b8bd2aa7ce991f03b397c702b4
be9d3c8d9441b870616ff32857936c8a8dce5ade
'2011-09-20T03:07:39-04:00'
describe
'257326' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTW' 'sip-files00006.jp2'
0bdf342432192ed283b5115ec54f09a1
b6d946ef175938e2fd8221304b2277aff2b409e0
'2011-09-20T03:10:43-04:00'
describe
'257236' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTX' 'sip-files00007.jpg'
4969d642813378e0f87263efa7d761f7
120039c7664460c4c7f61817644da3c7b0344a64
'2011-09-20T03:09:45-04:00'
describe
'60696' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTY' 'sip-files00007.QC.jpg'
5de4b6e4214070926ee7953095ab1ae1
7d29f83b3e09f7c208d3b72c7146baebd42fb634
describe
'275829' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGTZ' 'sip-files00007.jp2'
089ab0f2b4f921bab4e6cc0cdf9273ca
fcb5d7850b3e3a7ede59fdff5a881c8e7aab4957
describe
'396545' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUA' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
c5c8ae96d47d3d4cd1c234a3fb4f763f
eac3622204dd7d208febd2e4c7735a4b1f18fc5c
describe
'111672' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUB' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
a1cecf58e451ef558f55277805a3a04e
d12a7d3995293e8ea190ea2b2d219531b871032a
describe
'257691' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUC' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
54af9c7fa6a38c033a370aa1db6e8dd5
3201135e53a9c10bfd80436a30978938ca26000a
describe
'415768' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUD' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
cada2caddf6b3e6ef0faddf484921cc3
ab9f60ce391d96726479cdb550073dca2c5b6f41
'2011-09-20T03:08:04-04:00'
describe
'121364' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUE' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
7778cd31fb87743b321073c3e2fb723c
fa7781bb6dbbab86370864ed56bb29cda8d7a6ac
describe
'268388' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUF' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
04fb0232f5f15a04c145be853403deb7
380b7abaf521f939cd195b9461bc4123da86384e
describe
'437822' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUG' 'sip-files00010.jpg'
a2845ac104c3ecff6b804e85289531a3
c893ebe1362612a1b6b74c380d65b775ad688805
describe
'127577' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUH' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
074ea68337457a5845ae2ab6d100128d
39db906f513f8b19f0fd1bc13255cbb10b6afc09
describe
'274892' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUI' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
3063e3485c8bec1a064ff38fac0bd2f9
76bbbfdc641f3e0e1873f9f9257642c23d5cf281
describe
'430987' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUJ' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
d996d5f45c4eb938eadb9eed7048b8f4
1b4fcc983fff2788c4eca72120fba5cee476486d
'2011-09-20T03:08:52-04:00'
describe
'124212' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUK' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
e7bb1ca5c35a6136498e7b609c9d6e94
d3409dc89009857ef2e9fcc56739b5f1df36fef7
describe
'276240' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUL' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
72e0a3a779c4e9c1b7d9204bb26210d7
f7e9fca37dd1a113777a76d699b69567437b8e7a
describe
'422616' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUM' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
a5dc8f9a00981598f8c0e02351e49d17
34e803e378d2fd1000d1fc6ef33379f33415c69f
describe
'130234' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUN' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
4f62e43799cd1e65c419361c9beff236
b4347a275eb6e82119004385feb917c1ecbd5e7f
describe
'256212' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUO' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
56acf7fd9da1ffdb0e2c1bfe04a67ac5
0a50c0bfa152d2a8591b238bb5180eddaed4ac43
describe
'420953' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUP' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
9d214533a80aa7e40792d2ef53b431e2
537666eabe2c5bbf32a74f4083447707c39b6545
'2011-09-20T03:09:40-04:00'
describe
'123700' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUQ' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
637418284d00a27965ff6322f953bc44
11fc0da5af066eaa241fa908cf00f83b2f6ae54f
describe
'267572' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUR' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
3da7fda3beb985f1c4348276d3eff9dc
35d2347759684426336f73e81f14395253406fae
describe
'415069' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUS' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
f296ff557fc77b64aca85bf6b9e5b6b5
282bcafcc852a729cb2c781ebdf0257f54825d63
'2011-09-20T03:10:10-04:00'
describe
'121174' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUT' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
d33df86aad0906cdce09b44210081d2f
fd98fad860b2be216e83e8c0e59bba6bc0fef624
'2011-09-20T03:07:49-04:00'
describe
'274948' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUU' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
a8644b08eafda7ee4f7b13224d458659
27c9e0d47f3352089ea339d76c449e0bd5e70aef
describe
'414489' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUV' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
f24d9c4fb627a491c857b0e484daa1e6
0b2d4d2685aa46d0c2889567739a59c3d6497d64
'2011-09-20T03:07:41-04:00'
describe
'125123' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUW' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
79b2bd89578bbe887141edb10ae1781e
88b298a9c94a56901c2f7bf2168eeb6c61b5ac97
describe
'257068' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUX' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
805e363d0739fdcb924ab9da5cafcb62
fa559b1cc9508ead503f709c44fd817070f0dbab
describe
'418444' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUY' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
21cbe4f3b7d94037a1b2e700ae2c1d86
e742bbcf090d46ffcd02063a302e166dae34dd9a
describe
'122356' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGUZ' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
e21d323f8dbe3fe7db1c8a5f28c5a579
1350e6e147f62741268d4c38c8ad98b2bb4fb91a
describe
'274945' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVA' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
95de1862cf1bac0dbd00d55690382d0a
2860503e2d53c4ff1b6647410e09437c0a6e7c2f
'2011-09-20T03:08:59-04:00'
describe
'400839' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVB' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
a54381bcd0352d0af4944f5f9ad521e5
e93b0146b20c8fcdf1797d424ca1924776955eb6
describe
'112561' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVC' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
a62784798b78eec3dcd0e564cb2c2b64
44099419d4621142cd2d3396ccea19f4fc211080
describe
'247928' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVD' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
7c13a63c435f94f06161aad0781584b3
776e996c53d90bc089c053d3019a5e6fc0bddde5
describe
'416905' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVE' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
dd96d8dfd56cd6eca0f962f85fd90aee
2fd27c6185bb67fb2426d64c2b10d6421af394fe
describe
'121767' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVF' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
b0b379637099f327f5de0193f9f58fec
840d329ead63e91423bb84c9d5736ab3a17e5132
describe
'260241' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVG' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
a98ad83b35cc9fd843d10220aff01a55
8b95feb38a4ca567b208ccfcc3c477ba74dad564
describe
'408378' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVH' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
419836a75e779ce6c1d4ca4c08f6f99c
9af73f6dab34335a67a75962a383531fedeceb24
'2011-09-20T03:08:45-04:00'
describe
'119050' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVI' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
fe5eb7857c781db0414a0f0728d2601d
03f80cce3c0fcc92f9f94ec6e73bf9cae1bb652c
describe
'251588' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVJ' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
a550d1c84e381f1fd7c6af149df62e09
9a1d9b2a7041a04d8bf753888bf6049916fad248
describe
'347837' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVK' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
1b04ad3d3ad6137b594bc77722a41f64
0c2a66847f7ae9a27033e4e4fc5b7a02f17f387f
'2011-09-20T03:07:46-04:00'
describe
'95910' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVL' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
cb4ca29324110b4edfde677d8fc867c9
744278a3d5b5c8d96f7cf74112911f55f7300996
describe
'257805' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVM' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
8c916051ad94b146277198747f23f9c5
d961ad7c41090eb2242b3d0e9d4d908fcce03dcd
describe
'385078' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVN' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
94086cfee32bc8ef8a2c945193391cc3
6f8e7465e7b4807b1167a44fc3faa9f701d9e487
'2011-09-20T03:10:39-04:00'
describe
'107875' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVO' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
bce367185dc623949ad29d77797b14e3
e67d18aedaadf7edabf438921c4de2373680a18f
describe
'253483' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVP' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
09bb2a9399bbdf69b4759de0023a12d1
8ecd49d5932c50e4978065629e2f43469bd651af
'2011-09-20T03:08:43-04:00'
describe
'411026' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVQ' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
290f692f5f52a530c3a3c53864bbd08a
9307cbee897ed437be28a00944a5ffa0ecd4ca43
describe
'119131' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVR' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
e7641aa80b762ea0a03d35e820db7a1c
2c38e4a989f08fdca3dca94f05cf1259470756c6
describe
'274946' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVS' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
fb846daa011ffa86422d6c91edade43c
760ef9856e7a688c3027890123d3bbb50043211c
describe
'391890' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVT' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
8d15d8ff381d51bf929b206fff9288c9
107508cda7a6e1cf16ad1f4c00f1348cb4ee8fa2
describe
'117800' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVU' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
14c7c3d273dc3cd392e823e73f46aa68
2b85cd7c18fd77a7126621f6834bdc15c08f7d62
describe
'254631' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVV' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
52ac97bc77b4b41c84f6e0354fb0babf
7deaf84cb8ed1bd9ee10970cda0701a9e083bfb4
describe
'408572' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVW' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
9085c6fdbfe1043de4d71df65afcc0fd
1c0e116d3d1e1e0e33bcb7132f158f72492aae00
describe
'122383' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVX' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
7cb8381b21befe993845485a298f6d0b
1e384b3be4864d32f085032b08d986213f5466a6
describe
'274950' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVY' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
adace53b49675788b748e1a799976631
e0ccf74271b578dbf859a04a73f67e25ad64960c
'2011-09-20T03:08:56-04:00'
describe
'418957' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGVZ' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
09e32d077446191676601f6b48996170
87bb4446b8c072e693e6cd89d1ce41d0b074b68c
describe
'121185' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWA' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
eb2815dc24b8fcbcd54e77763090003c
3958983e972a286a251bb613a6f90809eb50df87
describe
'260560' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWB' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
6c98b820828498bb7d046df7cb62af0a
858add054d67f0b2129fe32353b1c84ccedf372a
describe
'413633' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWC' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
964d75c05333954298e6e1c3e48498d8
01dd40c41218cccc7ff65e9a276a5b6add14fd1a
describe
'124819' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWD' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
9bd71f682d259a9873256ecd1d010474
3712535900d64cf7949d3268a69f9fe8c0fc5c45
'2011-09-20T03:09:10-04:00'
describe
'255401' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWE' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
ac9e24825e55caeae6802eff043d919c
a1a23350e6a7d4aca62a79f2ee428d5b282c05fe
'2011-09-20T03:09:15-04:00'
describe
'389073' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWF' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
4a899ed274dd0ed193aa3b6479ac7649
594bfdd65c66d215b33426614bbe1534d97dc125
describe
'111658' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWG' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
1aa22581b277a75fadafec5bf3571185
932f2e74401064f28697afc643fb569e62f6ebd8
describe
'254786' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWH' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
ef42caf00dce5a4562d1b0cf031698af
533241eabc9d5bc5cd2eb9eb95c50ac319c855aa
describe
'385296' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWI' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
d36c348d0a379ee5fe2fda679892f4d5
208677d616c04b9454575d74f74dacc031d25839
describe
'106137' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWJ' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
76124e69cf959aed720d5a6f7a2a6756
f134efd38f0d75e2a1a1c7b833546b0b38f32a24
describe
'254476' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWK' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
a54b5d04e489db43e2e54a1b001a3e1d
fbaee3fabad9003efabfab5b29b4773847b56ed2
describe
'412979' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWL' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
229ef0d019c7d106843bca240be4c3f3
a081c4eea83019a8df473bae7c862dc1c35c30eb
describe
'120468' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWM' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
3e7951b3152b3d36a46b235937a91f9e
cc164ab09712813cf6e5d9332296210dfec309a1
describe
'258421' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWN' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
f0d7bdd424a1921f90bd03fc87dd1e0f
bec17c2def4a6fa8993931f062709a2689b7a5ce
describe
'425330' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWO' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
bd2bd14327624fb484d3cb03af250262
97ad1110ab712d536291a5f00ce7a8daa2351a32
describe
'122636' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWP' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
78ccd84148612bc26a1fa6d4a588d413
8ecedabafbbb2e14496b4ebb93b540f51b1b1dd7
'2011-09-20T03:09:38-04:00'
describe
'274907' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWQ' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
403166776065655e121f9d969acdb9fe
eba85b742588726cd36f98a3dfee57be6274c577
describe
'397620' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWR' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
63a529040243aa21b1954a46838c7bd7
749276aa28b3fe31b37af2b54999d1da8e6de3f2
describe
'115870' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWS' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
a19e68e3fec2aeab1179bb7d72249088
79da2214ca4a3ac09fd126218407e94cb4efedc0
describe
'266682' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWT' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
753efc3d5bf6726d72909c88e35a3192
9700b9488ea71e16445f8b72232caec5c33a4a1f
describe
'407289' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWU' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
b95ad2f941fffeb80b8c1cde9dc00d27
51ad13b39145210486ca583bd25a383e1c8e438f
describe
'119389' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWV' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
6a842bb5068d34a233b3c46fca4ba401
50a7cd159d557b2ea94917729bcdf9a965df2812
describe
'256365' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWW' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
4cd1e28edb84a43bdbafde5b94f3ab83
6ab435aa49baa9ff8a5b63698256f8960ab9553f
describe
'418234' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWX' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
81b41d66e607802e4dcb3a7aa0b0555f
e80380d0a7a739100c018de4a0f3b639611fab3a
describe
'121841' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWY' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
2621064c1a9081e9705a6347e220684c
ed8c0ea63233bcd59d56439d1e63a7dfce0ccb9b
describe
'259793' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGWZ' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
c74a7283bdf7b986ae4ce585949f669c
31a120a7aad14915fb5e6674bbe55b7477ab1265
describe
'404173' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXA' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
3cf0db4de17f6521eadd231d92efc11c
b201c99de5d7f64e85e41b3bc1e3677f7fc21466
describe
'122707' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXB' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
2bad2326334e10a8fdbebfb7e93c64b7
a958bd9d06e64d59cd0116b67b50113384c952a4
describe
'253556' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXC' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
fb2d91b121e77d519f02f3758aa7d443
ff90ec0cc86ec1aa866815e37cd83f6f6fc3557d
describe
'420550' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXD' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
aee164e2e7e82d3b5a3ea239e0ab4550
46535c9ce6b47f6b94126f1f2d27e04ef0edfdaf
describe
'121853' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXE' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
457be08d31a2fb8894d04ef1ff17c73f
a9da02a45a702f33699cdc3fdbf0d630d569fb84
describe
'266475' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXF' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
2b78f6cf3ba886822f496b1124c5cb30
c9cb93408ab9b1b5736e9bbdca92aba24cb82eb0
describe
'323936' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXG' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
cc25958cc1a69361f04e5c1122bec0ac
af695665fc4d57173024bc09219f337e5b92e0d7
describe
'81938' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXH' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
38fa4b35d4fc2d2fd46850e0c2477e75
95afd6d1e70be5c89c47f5cac4b763172ed0b625
describe
'274810' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXI' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
3f0fbc7f024f8ee7a92c64e4afbb5148
a58a67d431f31d9e3dd5b5e8be389f98f5659689
describe
'386323' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXJ' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
fd5ee78a71b9f42fa4113d045de7254e
a0544ba42508a4d83d3d98b61ada238a020bf812
describe
'106968' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXK' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
c2a63f2539cbf080e2b3291994829e4c
da2f2b8c43fdf07110a69d3ddc00fe2f0bbb96fa
describe
'276220' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXL' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
19d951d88c81741ccb1fabda014526f5
7bb8bd868fd57f40f9e41cb2d354b64ccc0be364
describe
'408674' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXM' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
5695ae211c54ef66412c92f42e2271f5
bb56a82d9edc534bbe547f28685ff24703d30574
describe
'122168' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXN' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
e87284f7bf8264877882533a9fc240b6
d9ea1b0871df195410222d98b4383d27400b6fbe
describe
'255467' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXO' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
b53859c73b22a4031d49740e4daecc33
0917be67afc21bdb13dc034bf6a83fcb7e74ed47
'2011-09-20T03:09:02-04:00'
describe
'415607' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXP' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
9a90871e18640545782628a27673d866
bfea4610648adfb063d5cd4763c95904177364f3
describe
'122768' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXQ' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
ca5313d0052b49831a8ca08e8f6ec09d
b42314934021d3d4f8788aff5aec2396bc3ec62c
'2011-09-20T03:07:33-04:00'
describe
'255870' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXR' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
ff98cf042dd7f1f0a58a0bf9bddf6a0c
6c83689003ea8544cff78ff1a1c1e35fa8516e49
describe
'405887' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXS' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
709aeca16176c79946f40db22ecfb617
1861fc5b24e8397f3aa55c12bacf0524fd5ac21a
describe
'113419' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXT' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
d54eed4912d28895d029d7e9f730fa8f
228390342a2d673b92964c9af6e0d47bfefe91b6
'2011-09-20T03:10:31-04:00'
describe
'249995' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXU' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
d96c1df37fc32c56a84e29232d524bd8
d736ff0c78452c4ebe6f9d652348100d14e9f3dd
'2011-09-20T03:08:38-04:00'
describe
'396413' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXV' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
6943684b6c362022ef832a03666e967d
b9a2c3ae398266e60a6cc96cd62116a4ed63a189
describe
'115716' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXW' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
c519ae4541463e7e590fc414da1ca8ea
3f85f1f577ce8bdf0b7426b2f5273a4216d6fcbe
describe
'276198' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXX' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
bca7acf4334f1a6643792e0976e26e9e
53ae06f68ed6126038e218084fb942cc9d171a91
describe
'409412' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXY' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
04541f26126eede8badf69cf4587322c
bed190be0cf2a4a9771e5cce329cd7780457ce7b
describe
'115133' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGXZ' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
cd593d0c5cf86601a0d59f18e08b38c5
382d3bacae98a3cd49a1f25e1689edf96c5b29df
'2011-09-20T03:07:32-04:00'
describe
'261228' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYA' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
3d0a37611074a3cc8f4802013cf55a7c
bc334ff7fa504432ac2597a563ae68348e6a934c
describe
'400337' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYB' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
61f81322e9fe310adc646e0524b2e52d
de992f3f6e9741da69a22c70691895691c01721b
describe
'112696' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYC' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
5ad90cdac4e25b865c9a7d440c22c04c
0d3e9916b60adfbe432c2b5a5c0895214c358861
describe
'256870' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYD' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
af96e3221236510aa25bca263b8b0545
684bf57bbef9f82b369cb5643ac71ffcbf20a358
describe
'424371' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYE' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
0d702e763f9059386c0336b5619cf317
790a53bf8c0cef3e5d51f4d82b0cf85d906449e9
describe
'122622' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYF' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
46f697e076f0a46f9aa77dde50d9c54c
932b247f2cb79cee035a92b530e2742509a791a2
describe
'274941' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYG' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
a2f646f96967bf631aa141c0ceac409f
a31fcec2e5a07404918a5e65251f5e1a03d7fdbd
'2011-09-20T03:09:48-04:00'
describe
'406035' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYH' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
30590035aa48726f079bdc9e3c5f49ae
c9da85042773908056721c6af5c45f7fd2ae0237
describe
'117970' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYI' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
291d03847705d14f2fc92858d2018bbc
12e388aa32844201f48eb6d9e6b2c4b149da8a16
describe
'276238' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYJ' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
eade0e122e48e3913b16ca30f6f796b2
44fa09d282de50d69f92cb81c7901a57f4bf8b2b
describe
'405601' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYK' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
e0f774fc5e1d2857c52e3f80d9da72f0
9319253f03f9daf1f80907ae6aebc57382a5c89e
describe
'124694' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYL' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
a0f7cc5c978991b82d698fabb5732f81
d9bba63ca3510661356c5f08e830aa6353415d53
'2011-09-20T03:09:37-04:00'
describe
'258579' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYM' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
811a4cfa3b7f47b364de9ee51c511ec6
f0cc340224c81ff27be9249ee74ed222eec2b031
describe
'358555' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYN' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
afdf112f35809a1b7718cf6c47a58836
3403ae9a8a187d5967cd272b4bc30235d11beb19
describe
'94086' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYO' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
7a8e2bdf940bd7aa516aa8057e6c7062
73b5554e655fc571a5f3a0bb6086d1124c3d0d15
describe
'256918' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYP' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
290d689b6caee5d16083d6c690e9f14e
d4fc088ffeaa5a0095d9390f760255a28783e068
'2011-09-20T03:07:16-04:00'
describe
'395702' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYQ' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
ab219b76e2f9f89b034cb1499c16f5b7
3b38618da56c5fba4ff9da5a77192f18b26cf3ae
describe
'108924' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYR' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
152c0c86e09ae9560f2451e9582d495b
1141107bc7b877fbd50d6654603fac05a7d060f6
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYS' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
c3a288903f49c8cfbd33c1758b9977d6
e3f50036acb1124291f56f92c2df8b51f1cc0e0c
'2011-09-20T03:09:34-04:00'
describe
'408496' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYT' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
64f1f78fea237ffabbcd66e455d9bc8f
165961d0b9e05ec395b5c5c9fb24ecbe0be601fb
describe
'121511' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYU' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
59b2380a80c61b24950224aa7ccb59b9
7feb3126e6ea7a9a79f539f3c31dc06841254bae
describe
'257271' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYV' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
50c462d11f1df3152fc2174a11694380
92fe8e3ee9a1887851a9903adb0b312d909ec87b
describe
'409105' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYW' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
ae5874c767f14381118ac7e50b454e36
463209413e1904390d853692926907cacfff3de5
describe
'126314' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYX' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
4fcb7cef2fc0e8dc055600362e617db5
74a1a428e91743620f5b9aeee52f329da785e17e
'2011-09-20T03:09:09-04:00'
describe
'256366' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYY' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
f919f656ecb8aac753e1fa74a4d87d4c
bf424cf676db33c679e3b55dc353b4da40ebc6e6
describe
'425535' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGYZ' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
e7e3e72d3c6735d5d66da5587e59c5ef
2b0f4e9c1b377e1e03232503f4d6b03df46593f3
describe
'126964' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZA' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
fa1b3030481c6fddfc6a431ccf332397
e7af4bb2b8158b2dd8552a9ab5c77214b2722d07
describe
'255098' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZB' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
f8ffc821ed49e01135928303b50f6d6a
9f8e4324bd1a515a2efdaf7a0071952dadaae52c
describe
'345156' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZC' 'sip-files00052.jpg'
3d1cfcf32b78fc04349aa11df3e881cc
1212c55a6cfffa0c4ea382bec6bd9ded720dafb3
describe
'94249' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZD' 'sip-files00052.QC.jpg'
f8499849f36db469d02d79d5afa0c92b
512348ef1e75adf1ec7b8fd8d49eda93a5c9faf2
describe
'251432' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZE' 'sip-files00052.jp2'
1ad3ae3f1db827df2c78096112737a62
4319b3df5009dbf4650a373463783fce00179c06
describe
'381928' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZF' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
db7fcbdaa2135e3ee99b41c4d8c9a4d0
3c5b07661a3e70f760bbdbfc8dd1d82ce7a0908f
'2011-09-20T03:10:21-04:00'
describe
'110198' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZG' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
f16aaa58b2f96d6e3d6dceecdb955144
ae0a1943ed8edfa843c6ac110054edcaabd28ba7
describe
'244881' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZH' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
e41f1948d414b1a185b2971631ad4b3b
06761648994a456172ed62ba67dd33d6c952e546
describe
'405664' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZI' 'sip-files00054.jpg'
bcf799d420fcb163decfe93dee1831cb
94fe7441f8aa25fd24e55e3e8dda19c478b95090
describe
'119951' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZJ' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
0ca413a8cf0030a906be45b5f6af24ce
c75c9552071fc784abb2a9958c9ba914c936bc92
describe
'274927' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZK' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
fc535c0bcf93911b8880f2be0694b253
a34794d96c47b12b3a1a78956eb1f0b2eaec6b0c
describe
'412030' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZL' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
d597a521efb125e293bf114331ec4798
6b8097b1f8453da975215e30f3a41b9dffa94c46
describe
'117099' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZM' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
3780902cc149ad5a03b02b3cc81ebc97
d1a689c0177c1336d429ff2ba3fe7dcdf84c7f1e
describe
'244585' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZN' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
d38f263eacb12d5df7d01153b798ecc1
59025263eee70ba240d7f5fd4121d74991dcda14
describe
'324549' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZO' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
48ca64c2d8787db51c4fc2e9fbccf233
765b2ac5826b71bdbc348593fdf5982a043ccbbb
describe
'86449' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZP' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
34c580049ebc5d7224ba67e952d049e4
dd135b33ab38a0ce5db09101b69115340089b60e
describe
'254597' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZQ' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
856b100641d430a7ddc3978086637bd9
5f3696ed2138498c974a28b216166a8b314a4d40
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZR' 'sip-files00056a.jpg'
3824bcbe53c098518a0a4749eca0ff0e
687dd0887b00a6fac81eb8e79981e0d3a73e532b
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZS' 'sip-files00056a.QC.jpg'
0ca8fbbdda0043d2446880c2053b465a
f67942d65aab87aad824ad5727b23922363dff9d
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZT' 'sip-files00056a.jp2'
ace59fb8d4f0343b7efb7aeabc94f2d9
43c2dacc69e1b72d5a07053c9ea7481927c8f778
describe
'239020' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZU' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
fa237f062c82e210a21a297c729ac864
54cd081228e6493fcfd4b14cefd6190c7a09147a
describe
'56569' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZV' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
f552d67065630bf780a3a4020ba1cc2f
503651da33c61ff8b3198b16e79212663f0f8543
describe
'258438' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZW' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
40a4eb6963ee8dd82cb7d80702745747
bd23f13662b9836d51fe9258dabb6e85715302cb
describe
'378754' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZX' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
d4726ff31df0af1f61ae7a0fffd217b5
abcee0e1522eeee051201037b13960b335316839
describe
'105200' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZY' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
7ef488aba7fa6b7172b6eba3ec53590b
23f68c52202e59174d325328f511431622659f76
describe
'252987' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADGZZ' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
24601a64751b37cf36b09fadd2d6e075
d2173da4091b1137c37751a1d82a5d165c2d7ab8
describe
'417655' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAA' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
46ea97e5461b91f01294dcf378c93d44
43256f7d617f5fa76990a6396c6d88d0c0cda81f
describe
'121985' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAB' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
4c41775b3a76e7a3153e80ee9ff875bf
5c482d22978de741f6b45523ac3fc5c818f30890
describe
'274920' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAC' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
cb1710ee00b2120d054d40d2f818ee3c
4291d31932d8b61ba4a3c50cbb7a7e8d8a7f8b09
describe
'401853' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAD' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
1461078753a5699f6fd7bb0659307fd6
23b4742d620fe31b4712f6545d5750ecd280d322
describe
'120081' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAE' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
9b8c1404b284f6a993e701a461facc2f
ff1d56732eb21a414b47ed090130d1f2fdf9aff1
describe
'258593' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAF' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
9c099f19c335ac988c44e808b2deb3ce
f3a504805110af18444eb01f3b175b0cb7a9b583
describe
'413683' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAG' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
443a824d855fcb18a23b32902d7cf307
70075defec3a401eef3d220ca618db3d21edf5f1
describe
'122828' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAH' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
26cee1b7fc21657b3e78080a29fee659
1a4cdb6ec791be71d286ef9675e181565a5da759
describe
'255379' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAI' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
395e36e7dbf208d5d6adec83bec7fb67
60338e1256894e6c14e53597c552b10ae4225273
describe
'413150' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAJ' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
3419a6d8914e2aaa9dfb14c4d39afc7a
e838968ddccad697d27648d7a37478b0e5ec674f
describe
'114436' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAK' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
d5f26ebcf9467189a83ae6aad8bc6e97
221752a0c7b9e02def9ffbfb68900f5c3c7f17ee
describe
'255223' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAL' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
5d726b4ea682112c262f9eea4eb95af3
2bd7ae7afe27df8eb9d4db4af57440e044692cfe
describe
'403732' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAM' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
eaed6141b73ef3e85a4dfc643da96d16
d27518e1c099ee56fe9ea7d88cb1344882af75e1
describe
'119965' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAN' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
3bae6f2f9b2d7e717b3978451f69111c
d3ba2fb82a2bd8dfcd28f0da9832f88ddd05fdd7
describe
'274864' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAO' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
4dd4f0b0646fbca1764296a1ebe14686
78cb7879668422edf8cb143e07b763b5d7d66aa6
describe
'407699' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAP' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
4872a9fdb84e180f8aa81d6671badeeb
a9e5f4acfffa120071e1a4c84e9cc6692a51b016
describe
'116922' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAQ' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
7e564b4cd988af453e6aa74ae1d6562b
344cb1226845840887835deb4d6fa6f41e23b91b
describe
'274937' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAR' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
4ffab75c71b78ecf6801f18cfe08e391
ef5b583e32fe30fcd3528c743995af9eed14e10d
describe
'412552' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAS' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
c112139331e71e0f0b99f3dccd649c0f
27239f8367b945d30e18c88309c71a2d113ee23e
describe
'121867' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAT' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
b8fbb6e77817f54385651965f213dbc6
b5c29cd5bfd006102b438488c9ecb0b74ae4179a
describe
'251242' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAU' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
71e34ea91730c0422c2f96b86b750618
c36df3656a0c15390da3e4dae936c23170210617
describe
'319063' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAV' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
891a5800a1f56ebc8745a7ea76f354ba
243f88090e01d55ae7a6974b927d1bd1ba27b7a5
describe
'86453' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAW' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
cbccdc2072462f4d794d7545b24bb84b
b3f8a6fae7a3cdea9c3679cd8e5c8679b803e96c
describe
'272186' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAX' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
f5c18265cd164f60a4e966a7db4f5f50
41c0ba7d0161de77c964274e9410a8c819dd938f
describe
'364175' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAY' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
1bbcb0da8f61c9bc69928df91a8efbc5
694aebe8ecc4e721f1e155a0ed75c605724d39bb
describe
'104592' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHAZ' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
84ceabb64874bfce21e93159b4650f3f
07476661fd7e7034cf4bed0fd946e1579456d046
describe
'246990' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBA' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
95bf81d8735495e4016b28d5c012108d
9c25b7d5a5bf4b604df62d20d41090428f7cd2f4
describe
'401817' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBB' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
9044a5418fe02e4569ebb022fc6409e5
df632e448358989f8fa2f225af4920fed6d7f7bc
'2011-09-20T03:08:22-04:00'
describe
'112341' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBC' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
c791ab7e86538fddff138b4dbe5a7863
3d23600dbb6e97e92651c44135ee3af64f6acac5
describe
'257176' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBD' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
8f1e42d0af043bc51f789c57831f6c89
9a35ee80062e71d040bd2cf32ad55727f456b1a5
describe
'414144' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBE' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
b77a1b53576f8a493058c48cecf0100d
def0c9294905790a7dfaa60af4ad21742e71974b
describe
'126642' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBF' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
9143a361f1e249d3f030a6a5e72fbbea
68ac52bc8c99b3a65489e8d35a46cb0df4e56c07
describe
'243306' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBG' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
46e9dfd397642de7521f2b8e4fb1d9b7
ff8076599f558acc25a1ad462ad5a6291977540e
'2011-09-20T03:09:25-04:00'
describe
'418406' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBH' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
abaf6cc981110288fafd9e662941f094
95a7d988f7d60601c4a3e878329462cec47a3d42
describe
'123540' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBI' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
6cec700fd5831a79cc74384a95be3777
514f8009bea6493c614d6eea8fd13e404728a7aa
describe
'272184' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBJ' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
c912a2f3aecd4df8428f0b033dd3e194
2fa97321a830c4b7e15a7241f2c068d95fa51e32
describe
'417022' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBK' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
d52857f9df9a5db3669fde26deab8000
9705923e5e35770468d5cf17a2219b228e78a952
describe
'128229' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBL' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
d5f8613ab552fa1a2de10544e5a6e1bd
c1444793e541465167f1489ccaf81ac0d6228e7b
describe
'252928' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBM' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
7da93c39ea8395899f67f15ec4661d7b
084ae335102e9081c77318a51323125fd8aea3d6
describe
'408772' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBN' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
60c977dd418777af0192e0e7ca945095
62a347e2835df4bdc804a49193ff88feaee7e76a
describe
'127548' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBO' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
3d63032f574a427fe9a015a6a0224be1
34403f6562921d395ff55f1165d17c104da65c8d
describe
'254379' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBP' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
8059b4897d57c08cd9d1b9500de29999
a9eedb88112ba2fe369bb5e0c79a125f9a0948e1
describe
'403357' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBQ' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
ad0606aae7ecfb2ee2e81b7fc18ebba4
59535825c24c1c141b1ae67f3c9bea9cc7f7e6c3
describe
'119908' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBR' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
c27fdc03891195e81ca8b5f306f5e1c8
78c1ddb05568473f7e501bb0bc63baf46a1057fd
describe
'255745' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBS' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
7f2ae6adaa31eb646830b92128c44fee
fe0c38f8b0aa95b091b1de8ddeb30cf04f3c5690
describe
'346404' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBT' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
622dedb8307b44bdd6e5311986e10861
386e9c9377bd22b5fdbc359de9cde0f3f721a885
describe
'94132' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBU' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
593c2a5f4d8b32a402893c88aa3bfde8
6064ff99b9622e357186093dbc1b782e9b2b8767
describe
'251445' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBV' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
f1fc7f5fd19942b8fad0010912655cd9
9fbd76e8f90aad283d9f262598433a47902b6b65
'2011-09-20T03:10:25-04:00'
describe
'357614' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBW' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
ea6932dd99248ee163874ae15b251518
400ac71050e165414082d8924b5b2577eac30815
describe
'100280' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBX' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
39c8ab616653be3ed8641988af79387d
2fe30404e104225f3643cb2e748931ccd7bb7b7f
describe
'250989' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBY' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
f8279059c127d7cfe798d0f2ecdce8ef
26eb0ba7c1902899bc85f516d36a9d07a89b37b3
describe
'413311' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHBZ' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
fdcf3f5ec3d963f19ba6e9e5d36a146f
59b8c0491b951589e62fb6db40d4dd143cf15ef7
describe
'122055' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCA' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
2d8add478f723fc654969a59313c32e1
a2cdd652405f74edc5f871cbb13ceab44efc8154
describe
'272131' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCB' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
70da67e9b58574ade4da3ee4a4562029
c02458d60904629d838df50ca2df0305defc8728
describe
'391580' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCC' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
b52cdc228cdef4ed6a132f5a21ce4c1e
b9c921e5095ba115a90407ad5d62fc699f1594ef
describe
'111497' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCD' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
24cd55cd5ddf31005ee58ed168175b22
008a5e68a24156f79ea94b212f5001603b9c1c09
describe
'250638' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCE' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
3030c7b592f8ebac01e71867125c0924
a56f36cfafe3915fc08f7aaf787257c0911537cc
describe
'427440' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCF' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
5de2203bb6d78e3d8a1130651381e429
6572c7dd9f09dc1342e0faac7e240a788eb44045
describe
'126213' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCG' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
71208b0eecd24ab2d5a2a1f7c1dbb2d0
0aa2e9ab635dd2ab5f64a1ca5345408f50e633d2
describe
'272204' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCH' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
06c2cd00f68637ac71bc8130cc95bc18
1f2badc6e500758051316ac58ce3485f9b1090c9
describe
'398975' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCI' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
3fe5f4029901fc86b078e5ff94a45106
c37606a0832bf4357b9b6acedf93c4e36c475202
describe
'118892' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCJ' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
1b699b34be8fff21d769c582cd9ae94e
dc6b04970cc8aab9c55307ca8604f721158d2308
'2011-09-20T03:10:13-04:00'
describe
'249701' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCK' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
f3530cc115961db89439f2daba594751
1b2ae8fb277acfbf3e6bd73a4fce1396b136d15a
describe
'442341' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCL' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
395c07fe627fc38bbc8401be5604d4bb
c9143bb2e5f3d67fb5dbaf5a9bfad371b077dc4b
describe
'130675' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCM' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
dd6e9af570f5c5afdee5e147b0f36cb0
afaf592081a8f12517d916857ee0be7f1e3fb965
describe
'256160' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCN' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
1d5fcf44e5779668481c986286b2d2da
3f70792d0ce2a220860762a091b6f392b64b302d
describe
'399778' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCO' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
27fcd98d9ff2e004f54874768947249a
1b0333772c7c1f7977506e2a171711bb26fadd20
describe
'123560' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCP' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
370d460202b5219a062e34d65bf4ca61
63ff67672cfcbe69426ffe0483004929ef4caf16
describe
'246694' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCQ' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
87724002134f90608ffd165236d7c9e3
daaa159717be9dd13c40befeb87a4846bf63e74f
describe
'414185' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCR' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
14290278cd3100a0b3e1ea81e0eef82b
2cac7e39e9da1d19feb64ecb971f008732938724
describe
'122348' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCS' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
223dcf892cd24a985098c77163318fc6
873b5d89a71a0dd71b4ede3c6796ed00177f4fb3
describe
'272200' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCT' 'sip-files00082.jp2'
1b23c7395c871d0a133a5014d47a66e2
86c1ae6c82e3bbd6450e208a4bef717e3f7e4541
'2011-09-20T03:09:57-04:00'
describe
'417214' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCU' 'sip-files00083.jpg'
878b6cebf41fcfdf0cc628a56f643106
5669d5f21c281826f9e0de84617da6b819f6be90
describe
'126227' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCV' 'sip-files00083.QC.jpg'
7a9b17f7b21571cf6b43e541e85eba16
344bf4861598337851d1ad6307d007a9150e7bc3
'2011-09-20T03:08:34-04:00'
describe
'249231' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCW' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
be9fab7c8cee53d86a7de3c54b9dc7f1
ca3578a6367f764f961af4f6f9ec8461b824203d
describe
'305120' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCX' 'sip-files00084.jpg'
c0e83a91281cb93834c9d68b5f90938e
184b807afdb4a351c04ca46a29a3b514ed3ed518
describe
'77245' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCY' 'sip-files00084.QC.jpg'
d28c432838db9e7219bd6cb6148104ec
8e12fffd9cd0a151b9e131d4e94bab824ae380ea
describe
'272180' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHCZ' 'sip-files00084.jp2'
81079f27baa9d4204dfc2a1ee2bd1c1c
83b25f0d5b2fd32956bec52629b2156482116716
describe
'373724' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDA' 'sip-files00085.jpg'
c61861c5e6f6f6b233c261527e17efa4
963257b8e5972cf70fadbdd0ff1b00705a1056df
describe
'105358' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDB' 'sip-files00085.QC.jpg'
e6c20d155a7b7c6b6f83e62f43d2af40
4cb24c6f7c07bc744d15d58c2b4f226a6c25bbf2
'2011-09-20T03:10:32-04:00'
describe
'255574' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDC' 'sip-files00085.jp2'
22f73f8dc9bc95d8789061b45d377149
f304ed89fc8aaf455107c6d5742dda265916ce62
describe
'430723' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDD' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
5e31340071c6b8997dfa38322cfe7d45
37c02789fec60c23a213615cc81ed7d54f0555c8
describe
'128603' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDE' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
dd36b6685a31991bfc4dd70fb9dcd2ff
c47ca03fb32aa0fc3ddca915f8013661b03e8318
describe
'256176' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDF' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
dd6172def170543b92bfbd40e571802d
ec4f21448155686221aa3b5490226ec1c858a128
describe
'426936' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDG' 'sip-files00087.jpg'
62eaf640ff312cb6c29f1d73f4b451c9
7ec837cea4802479751277a956a12b6b2ceb5df1
describe
'123047' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDH' 'sip-files00087.QC.jpg'
2f668c52fea2b5f0bd92d92f4570b65e
4c099c73c34cc4362de3da9c713dcbba642cf50a
describe
'268276' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDI' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
422215d6c1d2a8d674b843f089a24a33
19003409beed0416b192514b045d9620aa36e2cc
'2011-09-20T03:10:14-04:00'
describe
'417126' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDJ' 'sip-files00088.jpg'
414bff5f95ac20b9dc718393ac190ae4
cdf6df3cc36e707b0d8ddcc8ff7028782eadb569
describe
'123464' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDK' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
dffd879b5212af13db4b1caa46dc91d1
0c9410e004d773d7b386bd59f957b20f6a58f09d
describe
'251876' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDL' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
3bd3adcc3cd8be91197036fb9c1ec80f
5b544cf4dd45d18b84861c10460110d2999c293f
describe
'416822' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDM' 'sip-files00089.jpg'
da3db341aaa7378c8e1c221981d714c8
0f1d9300c0b92ee03e83b44f2877b2706eace393
describe
'128015' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDN' 'sip-files00089.QC.jpg'
2fbdbde818a61754ec38490426a8c237
7ed0c12e3afca08cb1ef492d4925fc28d223d39f
describe
'258819' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDO' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
771aed1a11b727f307a111e18ca6d356
ef595a98010f8e39dcbb0b9f67a0138f11c6ebe0
describe
'418301' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDP' 'sip-files00090.jpg'
8046db5e5b13dd1a0c0e7fb293db773a
9816ae80f1383f3b9451139a3b4fcd985c919902
describe
'126989' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDQ' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
a60c1f8ff503bf4a51c92e577ff7f780
928fea962ab65bc5625d5e86abb1c4f8c4adfeca
describe
'254185' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDR' 'sip-files00090.jp2'
b28275ac2fe8edc6c2794aa92994adbe
c27e5630958c3da8935582428b93a081c5de202e
describe
'417880' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDS' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
205a5d98625e28c35b8d417888fab882
eee271f678e3342c414221bb2d38cef4fa62de12
describe
'125222' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDT' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
f3c5ca7f7995cd27b6ac0b63a4a4ba3b
e9e6098bee83af1c7b4704ffb21edc818fb894b5
describe
'247361' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDU' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
35d40e76418f0b23eb156d151a4e7622
47471ce3280ec64a50340f71ae5ac428e8194e75
describe
'442671' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDV' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
8b7b67402b3dafcf071b27c87cdab3fd
f200bfc40e2b5af840bd6f5d920306418a123d7f
describe
'129655' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDW' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
62cb2252b3812d0d8a25d837ef51ee57
79ff8e43adf28eecc92228af66e27f7eb1787acf
describe
'257081' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDX' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
6c6851161cc7896a59c6076fbe2c6a79
c079697f1f6192a3f203225136d7bc4bc23f7b82
describe
'409065' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDY' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
dc5927621cd05820204b23e59b3d07cf
d51a9fe83f475cb7240196c2e92273b04595078f
describe
'117566' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHDZ' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
6f486bad211628781a3d153f0ac473e0
fe9f07e91b8fb68bf419c00062874ded2922c020
describe
'256378' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEA' 'sip-files00093.jp2'
087cd7eab3e9a0c7b916a9f94b8fd095
a5127272154269dcf12990e683bb3a15bf8c7b96
describe
'399243' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEB' 'sip-files00094.jpg'
0f6dc15361421792b550de4ccb62f149
8b91432a884d6e564195d68ae45af3b33f885598
'2011-09-20T03:10:06-04:00'
describe
'117317' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEC' 'sip-files00094.QC.jpg'
b806df04e9a5a11829a1c4f7482419c7
78d010f4ce2b440439a9c934617f17370ee8a7b0
describe
'272166' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHED' 'sip-files00094.jp2'
aade65bcad38d560a2cc78656ab260f9
54bd06a5ace111e9c198aa59ecdae6ea5069f23d
describe
'246176' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEE' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
1c7b6c7cc77b0a20a779d94f5d323a22
9d5e7bd0cecb56cba34af87829ed46422abc15c8
describe
'56136' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEF' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
e3d3438c4b9c8baf5ad3988d59ad5102
c5496648140c23f48b8890677e2298b90d1c85c2
describe
'256173' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEG' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
2eba202c8577ad97ad5733e5e9f449fb
659b677fa006f912171dd83f9d17e41f63ba9b4e
describe
'406222' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEH' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
4dad2de0345ddc3d5069c6e824c41f1a
22e4c04f4e745aa35385df9833caca9d2f077b01
describe
'110013' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEI' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
f23ea22fab366e207e613c13807aaf92
dc3f05ea34a4c4f1969394e99862edf523107fcb
describe
'256506' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEJ' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
2ca6747c89bfcd0d35353c5e282b88b1
a2491abe9eef3816a380735b95de1269734b8540
describe
'412987' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEK' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
4e36c39bc0076ef3afa540d66ca0c7ad
3467bb17e7b7a61a13b498ed7b342651c3f7ae96
describe
'116163' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEL' 'sip-files00097.QC.jpg'
13d1c38663a25163dd26d1c8f99e2fef
e8f0dafffbeefd4c2c8cc0b778b8e42cee6406a2
describe
'264474' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEM' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
b8391a4af66a3a6c7411c62cb22947de
8723768e5fcc437730330344b4da1791505748a6
describe
'410699' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEN' 'sip-files00098.jpg'
e4e9d67d044918e982fc6f2fde755446
f1f32cdfafea837b39b064430232ebb88d404df8
describe
'125673' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEO' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
5e1bbb4f5fafad7040d44797a9ecc228
f35cb63c2bf2e61d0dc2182c1a6f4faeecd0b46c
describe
'251926' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEP' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
0d3432ed0509ad72d695f04e017425c6
0f58e91a62f592c380934095625aae80f367422b
describe
'428654' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEQ' 'sip-files00099.jpg'
3b90ed343493d199a8d7c1441790cf29
d1bef389998fe06396ed84bea662233be18be39b
describe
'119958' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHER' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
5421258ff32d14e024e1e6e3020bcfda
b85aacf31571b7209938c5abe424b23d2586c418
describe
'262374' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHES' 'sip-files00099.jp2'
a029381cca49a475bdc87c7277dc1b67
09e0b22b74bd09dda2f7be938613983228b90fef
describe
'437104' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHET' 'sip-files00100.jpg'
623c390f2f3bfe9d8d51377aebf4bfa6
d2ee6988bfd2417e2471569be016c67d21070b6b
describe
'125063' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEU' 'sip-files00100.QC.jpg'
e32b3c16e8a9d2a61a92935aeae63890
f4f448ef17226fcedbde92b16259a17b933db316
describe
'253380' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEV' 'sip-files00100.jp2'
58e24846a2cbdb1646144cba573f560b
1253baeb2cc989efc7ff5ca23ea152de21311bd8
describe
'412088' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEW' 'sip-files00101.jpg'
e31cfaa5c2f9f9e274f6c76b771c9d6d
cffaff06ccbaf08d939352c96ae39c85f59d21ce
describe
'120463' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEX' 'sip-files00101.QC.jpg'
c6b23d87449690f5e7d779235ec0a985
64268dba798b4a296754f7abce646252393388be
describe
'263192' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEY' 'sip-files00101.jp2'
bcfafc16b3dda28ca650d358b81eadc2
8afbbeb1ca648531da58a14d84e2c536f169fe66
describe
'413305' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHEZ' 'sip-files00102.jpg'
e67993b5a90df8611c4ed937e59d3517
86211d80b1a88c807df0131daabb1f3d13a839ec
describe
'128025' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFA' 'sip-files00102.QC.jpg'
ba8ddb59319bfb7888c33eda68a8aecf
413c4b5fec395018a3f8710d17dda7bb3683af4c
describe
'257689' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFB' 'sip-files00102.jp2'
b75b1d8e8970b39be0e0a8c1b33cfe0f
df13f68aefa58ae55a8c605b7bd71ebaa22e010b
describe
'432190' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFC' 'sip-files00103.jpg'
feba098e7db4a308e3e1c259acb2dd96
167e6481ebd201a3cb14f5a466d389114ceec452
describe
'124007' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFD' 'sip-files00103.QC.jpg'
f399eec4bcf3ff6208491c76bb8ee9e1
b5e309192a942f1392d2280f8373b7102ad5df5c
describe
'283470' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFE' 'sip-files00103.jp2'
5343d573ce23629b0c4e47980601c0b3
ea3619641b08ed318948729969dad2b361cba929
describe
'317616' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFF' 'sip-files00104.jpg'
162befb6bbb055c452749f2f39bcb27a
52466366740ed48fde524b607d4a2e88452b52ef
describe
'79350' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFG' 'sip-files00104.QC.jpg'
67818dc1fc93471cd7409eb52cf926f9
87d7ae47699bc325d2f9c9f9eebfd83f4ee09d64
describe
'253752' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFH' 'sip-files00104.jp2'
5ca46833a0ee3bce048bca1e908708ce
28f2e30033b2436c74926ecf4be0d0006072f3e2
describe
'247649' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFI' 'sip-files00105.jpg'
896e32dce2d095284cbb98c99e2a9162
993502e563bbbb8a698b38b52bb02f6e12ca7aa9
describe
'57496' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFJ' 'sip-files00105.QC.jpg'
a8c805d9bc0e9dd773fbc2666d18fb77
701503e4dc25cad6734a5ff399788ebca8c72573
describe
'251767' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFK' 'sip-files00105.jp2'
09b4effb168dee6fc2196ff3b109e65d
41cdb9e84f5836726d9387246151427db91b900d
describe
'395743' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFL' 'sip-files00106.jpg'
52239bd3e85455e71a62ebe3c527a859
6a3d8d91123e4ce76b89c13f19359f48c8bc35fd
describe
'113945' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFM' 'sip-files00106.QC.jpg'
ceaeafff850132b682d67c72badae712
43be879ce2d0736dc01008847888c212a1fc4ac7
describe
'249574' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFN' 'sip-files00106.jp2'
8d6bcd758c51202efee8a6e9c9a7a598
eaa46be36df038871de3048390b1b2b5ad4dbe86
describe
'415946' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFO' 'sip-files00107.jpg'
4080adde3a95d7b8f9f85d47c4a99cc0
68a1e3298b4e7eb6761936d5a626d16bcd2aff21
describe
'120260' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFP' 'sip-files00107.QC.jpg'
01681212dd9a5a7df19f2ddb57d57674
cd5d005b241d88e6ca55e15de1632a7d6baa3a3a
describe
'255601' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFQ' 'sip-files00107.jp2'
9c62eb0d49d74928fb112d9bfc03be4e
47086c8628fd344e1a0a6fa3584183c2e0bb83dc
describe
'426850' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFR' 'sip-files00108.jpg'
3fba16ebda09aa5987fe3113aeb2bd06
2a9f4b7e9d021f92dfa247f115974b1ab841c283
describe
'125680' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFS' 'sip-files00108.QC.jpg'
83b63faa9301d5cf87e95e1dd26522ed
8201e37cac0cb44f39e3022037d02db973bbf153
describe
'272182' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFT' 'sip-files00108.jp2'
5e8c2c8bef26fb0e08c0a75c0087f972
87839280af98b06deefd8e31c32cdebaafa0c232
describe
'127466' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFU' 'sip-files00109.QC.jpg'
b5a9eaa8b8a67bdedbe1d5421ecf3686
c4d3b27d7b83533ea9cd822ebe193d9eb4bf6a49
describe
'255489' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFV' 'sip-files00109.jp2'
3c345530b80263a2a332eba77ae331a1
03ff9cfcc9798121780d280784b03bb311ac4e07
describe
'430066' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFW' 'sip-files00110.jpg'
b0b9d5f0851110f7bd94513a5ba1432d
0de245366043aaa94dc12fb50e35e96c026315e8
describe
'131168' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFX' 'sip-files00110.QC.jpg'
d9e2a07c415b56a8a7ee79e9e33eeab6
d2db8bbb761ce0fe2c087a256fd13806ea9430c6
describe
'251334' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFY' 'sip-files00110.jp2'
bbc0a335ec52d033c0af974ce05d7521
4c4b0851dc0fa62098b3a9e5de1c713d731fea32
describe
'424855' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHFZ' 'sip-files00111.jpg'
acb328f605903cacf8ea8d7aaa147f91
4dd9880327916af5a70a27f5280fe2dfbf219f86
describe
'128282' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGA' 'sip-files00111.QC.jpg'
f6947b67941f4b21093e50ef15538ab8
f94e642ddeb8a7e7f1917a3baf2fe2bc2808323a
describe
'259049' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGB' 'sip-files00111.jp2'
ffd9e093feb7812382be78d28335ed2d
1fdcd371d127599b7e809950d0872fa15fe3b162
describe
'408481' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGC' 'sip-files00112.jpg'
aca2db7b42af956c04d9e26cb9ba652c
81ce74510fa71a7a5137b9111a66e7fb20069c68
describe
'114377' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGD' 'sip-files00112.QC.jpg'
0a605349a5db2ca63a8a79e595b8cd8f
43abe0e331fae7d9311d7d359ec5887d2231d7de
describe
'255635' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGE' 'sip-files00112.jp2'
a4ec11429ac243d5ff9888e800dd9134
b0b248d18fb42c184effc7c4bd495e6f6b990f8a
describe
'427907' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGF' 'sip-files00113.jpg'
ccb5f42c0eb0e5a764590106cab2a617
fada07f2bf1e39391a74efa837eac0d69448eb08
describe
'121754' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGG' 'sip-files00113.QC.jpg'
c9f605ddff7e5f58027c6ed51a27a353
4aba9fa698107714587e2e30aa1ea14f8374cd84
describe
'259552' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGH' 'sip-files00113.jp2'
32a6995353c5af465085c212eb2b9257
d3de15e9c4b9d7582a18025d46505831dda55faa
describe
'432738' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGI' 'sip-files00114.jpg'
3ab35a154d7ca62682f72cc6f93aa8f2
f775f2cf8bfb3b1ff32d91f7df73f842a4e12a6d
describe
'132588' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGJ' 'sip-files00114.QC.jpg'
29d8283ce9da00a418c6aaf6c8324232
dfadb8399b8f14673ed9b7c0f234a0696484bcc9
describe
'253277' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGK' 'sip-files00114.jp2'
ab5f8e2211d35b901f3463ecc1098cdd
082a973d4471936d3d848e1c7a585567543f5440
describe
'415843' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGL' 'sip-files00115.jpg'
9ef3420ffe2f50f7bb1d34a77e8033eb
30b876f0e192cac1321f1114f2260785587e4d6c
describe
'122059' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGM' 'sip-files00115.QC.jpg'
bf8bde7ffcc7891d598b550b11ed1fb8
ebeca4d86f2a8d5abc27b5119d09b80c7aa15d3b
describe
'271040' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGN' 'sip-files00115.jp2'
11e63185eb13ff132ce711038504f1a7
185521f0aa95bef65bd7d07dd97d25ed03e5613d
describe
'417415' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGO' 'sip-files00116.jpg'
bc950297de1d32ea41cc4ba7fb94a173
d89ca03ff270364e71384067fd9af2062791ee21
describe
'129853' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGP' 'sip-files00116.QC.jpg'
0453b2787907739dfd2c1447258e160e
84d4ec17f5a918200725d6383c7f48a2b7b95ff8
describe
'251728' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGQ' 'sip-files00116.jp2'
02f98378023f4a84a96c80118cffa3f4
75db3c3641bfded6c694f58f689233b5de2bf67e
describe
'436922' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGR' 'sip-files00117.jpg'
964592f697a85e8841447f7eabd9521c
237645735b13267bf4cbd3e29889d16e84bad937
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGS' 'sip-files00117.QC.jpg'
0b2ada5e9c6308c39cb072692dd303a7
a042d58859e57f9ec59db600aee687b3332c5b66
describe
'270193' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGT' 'sip-files00117.jp2'
b13dae7687f3e5e74f6979b7e8ebb7a0
167e8b191fe2fc7b825d0a865bbaaee6c5c3bea0
describe
'428647' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGU' 'sip-files00118.jpg'
596f650c6e712787a903df5cde16af7c
8a56b53b5bc51a9e30857dc41bb8669eb59f7056
describe
'119983' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGV' 'sip-files00118.QC.jpg'
27f6d397f421ddee525e70f71c68068a
42f4441247cfa26905c08e712e499a2a9f8faab9
describe
'250239' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGW' 'sip-files00118.jp2'
17903ac94fa60a307fe8b4060b9b9624
5871e9db7a6c03b495dbd391f455f640e605e9e1
describe
'428975' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGX' 'sip-files00119.jpg'
29bbcca2022ba034972e9e9ee5fb2ecb
37502ea0b6bd7205e120de1dca244d560aeba9f9
describe
'125230' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGY' 'sip-files00119.QC.jpg'
e60e87a77699b4a78d276b8377516205
51d7acc112fa2ac37e77ab525e16d244faafb457
describe
'283477' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHGZ' 'sip-files00119.jp2'
56a0e0e92cac521511b3c827026a5e39
f63416d5d1f204ecbca3464d48b3c90ce0c4c6ee
describe
'420674' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHA' 'sip-files00120.jpg'
a4772ef6fc32ba59abf34849b02d22d7
e49ce27f941fe64246b5d018283cbdbad908d544
describe
'126378' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHB' 'sip-files00120.QC.jpg'
325584c70ebf60fb6ad301c26065b2bb
70f06e904d42a32efe91948dc99516603d5b3852
describe
'247622' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHC' 'sip-files00120.jp2'
94bb861d3ca9aca0be2b64c110f7f735
9dac02ec063fe1ebb19c857315ab5fd18c6b5f99
describe
'428579' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHD' 'sip-files00121.jpg'
09015e94d2345de77983af76d363a3bf
be189b875c48d0d1db2d6dde1c9c9c114f2097ab
describe
'124066' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHE' 'sip-files00121.QC.jpg'
8566f795ddd9965a7b4070633a026be3
ccf210798bf9b9a90a54c0dfb3d796dd90c1cb71
describe
'261581' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHF' 'sip-files00121.jp2'
8113a6a2d34ff505538fda7b8542a28e
3e67f35b83ae5d823cedcaa07931892182fbca0c
describe
'305936' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHG' 'sip-files00122.jpg'
caa98d9c15304c64b4922a9170aa6743
a7ef7eb69e14fa95be9a98f8371c8835fbbdfebf
describe
'78907' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHH' 'sip-files00122.QC.jpg'
e6467ca9bed3ab1e0b9d1a228ab1e686
e5300cc3f67fc5bbb1668a66bc747f6e039357dd
describe
'250811' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHI' 'sip-files00122.jp2'
00bce7e23d6aa23b0b533bbd7f723375
3d8ebbe85262d203a3b85d2bb43ee7a927571227
describe
'438747' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHJ' 'sip-files00124.jpg'
b450a5856080cb6ac9809544a73f508b
43d09e30496205302715d5d7a7b8e5c4b733cf40
describe
'122412' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHK' 'sip-files00124.QC.jpg'
554f52c8de39937993eabdd9b02f9c9b
8ada2732f4f706ccbaf5f093990e802b5939fc90
describe
'263701' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHL' 'sip-files00124.jp2'
08c73f672a9ef5e9db6905a2e1c74519
bb751642613a8bbd39a9fc5940961036a4e90b9d
describe
'439722' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHM' 'sip-files00125.jpg'
5f81070653342b4bd3adfedc51d453c8
35f334d88fb182261d770f6a2ed2036dbcd0e2e6
describe
'125153' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHN' 'sip-files00125.QC.jpg'
a87580aec8fec8c6168d64304adadd98
3b9aecdaa12ffa088bc89a73517b84d84b6ff469
describe
'278355' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHO' 'sip-files00125.jp2'
f36185028117d26674250296ffce8c9b
2d27e419f91647ec7da7302b3327fb8f93f51c0f
describe
'488898' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHP' 'sip-files00126.jpg'
90b9366586d3f2acbec4d1d4bf5e1791
7213d7baf676e92c5b46d6959325ae41e791df97
describe
'137147' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHQ' 'sip-files00126.QC.jpg'
041581dcfd9a79e3b613e7453fb5b64c
ced39528ef1b6c0682409a1ca31d996978c795c5
describe
'267115' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHR' 'sip-files00126.jp2'
9b6e8d247107797d12d206d1bf95a669
08fb43e812d9d6c393f3af146f1e877708ece01a
describe
'486637' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHS' 'sip-files00127.jpg'
57a07dc76f5308db2215c89920d8085d
ac173e295cd79ee2c819f89dcb57c524dd67c1c8
describe
'136557' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHT' 'sip-files00127.QC.jpg'
7d962b0f3bbb55b43bdd34271fe84b1e
85fd28818def42aad1c960a4bc69a2e258ae1cda
describe
'276975' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHU' 'sip-files00127.jp2'
903a03b14ee807ddd88a4ec6b787c310
ccccef0a845d67f504433c4ea664f5be247d6128
describe
'503112' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHV' 'sip-files00128.jpg'
55be5c91926f73b94006aed6b175cda9
ac0a0be5b80107a40f7ff9f4bdcd429ad54e33db
describe
'140641' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHW' 'sip-files00128.QC.jpg'
a2e85fc83758357f49d7cfa6ba9fdd3b
9a6499303c772fa32469be4c967d6cd00b17016a
describe
'259917' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHX' 'sip-files00128.jp2'
7e1ea12983270d971500ef507d722495
8ac7ced36200860814eadd523a1abbcba7d14ef2
describe
'527649' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHY' 'sip-files00129.jpg'
ba84181df3a4859892d5445e94e5e3e4
2265621df5e6c55c8fe25177551dfb58a8b92882
describe
'148103' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHHZ' 'sip-files00129.QC.jpg'
7ec13acfd94798c123ffcf71f085f740
761aea0e64e1358f819e4c72fdc527747d9ed76d
describe
'280292' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIA' 'sip-files00129.jp2'
5712ccdbff0704c2ca327d8c6a6c41d7
f4be91428baadf8ee4807e68d73a043300159da6
describe
'488987' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIB' 'sip-files00130.jpg'
986c1ce88611875b57dd58c13846de86
9b1dfcf46e8ef8ceb0e8a631f2ef00e8347a8f7f
describe
'139278' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIC' 'sip-files00130.QC.jpg'
c720c19956c27d1da7f657c7ed3fe1a3
23b25bca5b8271e1ec089f4452db5512c426fb5e
describe
'275959' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHID' 'sip-files00130.jp2'
828a85599ffcb77c04d3634b29c7d01d
27ab4de09dbbc7db5582cb4970c4bc565045b561
describe
'544934' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIE' 'sip-files00131.jpg'
cb9daa97ccfed0c2ec80af5f9a69e0be
990459fa4f3295c63a388b637c67281c45a6e663
describe
'148938' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIF' 'sip-files00131.QC.jpg'
5e974abe0795e3b545e0ccde3a8907ff
9f4515b77f96e357a4f96272afdcae82bf0f8be9
describe
'284429' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIG' 'sip-files00131.jp2'
8b4149bf18e53647bcab822dc8e34d22
888183dacddb07863910c8973fe8a41d814de0fa
describe
'347863' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIH' 'sip-files00134.jpg'
2f53b8fe4dc81519745cc490a25e1b97
00387fd328c446651a552d44d68da46cf9434d7f
describe
'87625' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHII' 'sip-files00134.QC.jpg'
370f507de1d85e5387ec397901737061
9d95aca5107761f0f7a9f0db1fd103029333fd7b
describe
'306230' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIJ' 'sip-files00134.jp2'
d592cfe02cb1df9a6017d40da81c7dcf
9737f50f1c8235422ef217180cf057666e7296be
describe
'585258' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIK' 'sip-files00135.jpg'
a9a8bafdc5a0ad7f1f2650c4c9a06e8a
478b529ef2bc3350e83dc6dd8e9f797c43b606e2
describe
'124294' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIL' 'sip-files00135.QC.jpg'
4a1a6e0a80b80c7eb0b57df707a1c1ff
d8dd269d88733f8ebab0dd6d7a5799c4a7730c42
describe
'302432' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIM' 'sip-files00135.jp2'
f25be1756b9ec1e6b87399cc17be018f
fad19d82f09906851639a4fc5aa774f832557e4e
describe
'151621' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIN' 'sip-files00136.jpg'
80aaf6511a38b1a2b48194019e5abf31
94b50dda8fd88aaa02e835214cc3548023e6886b
describe
'39938' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIO' 'sip-files00136.QC.jpg'
c7ad1d6ac0ed3059c394b9084a494354
698a44f6dd33d97dcdaccc021e60d7a3193cca03
describe
'63981' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIP' 'sip-files00136.jp2'
219103424cf185f33a7d28c60f2a3a35
bea179e84e7db0daf5ba1ecb8402ab7c8be4c3e7
describe
'110' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIQ' 'sip-filesprocessing.instr'
437cc1db272a5d3a3152f8c57d49c8f5
09e52826b333470eb51488f877ab75275473855c
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIR' 'sip-files00001.txt'
7215ee9c7d9dc229d2921a40e899ec5f
b858cb282617fb0956d960215c8e84d1ccf909c6
describe
'17' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIS' 'sip-files00002.txt'
8b65205959440a3888bb8e690037698c
2b811ba8b25aad66c8e089cd26f2242e394d6ec1
describe
'341' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIT' 'sip-files00005.txt'
3b33c47416976a92117bee3d3f8867fc
b3fd07e46c1d7299f21c867eabd89abf71748130
describe
'658' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIU' 'sip-files00006.txt'
8116a562cf362b54668a42227f6ad680
b7b3d39f35e3a5be61a96f5b40c8216ae3f539a0
describe
'48' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIV' 'sip-files00007.txt'
22d6ea8e5c8fe14f37fab27f1a6db3de
86feb21390ceaaf35358b3b4e953fbd381fc8782
describe
'665' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIW' 'sip-files00008.txt'
6e94dc58212ae0337ad814109a4882c2
915ec1b6e729903c83165e9eaedf324fe46ae696
describe
'1144' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIX' 'sip-files00009.txt'
d2b6812f12cd40e7176b63a8cb5e015f
d0dd4860a64a45511c2d37c98dab5f3cbd7d248d
describe
'1269' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIY' 'sip-files00010.txt'
bd2894b1abc3da2f15dc5b16e14d9527
ccf3976e7fc9e80b9d89ad308063dcb451f86c73
describe
'1237' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHIZ' 'sip-files00011.txt'
6e66bfffea01172f2978d625fee0db41
a0b37c46d0a77051d8fe99bce81e23e1658d643a
describe
'1178' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJA' 'sip-files00012.txt'
36dd1a0e1f978ba7302b8056cc1fc9b6
fde2ee0f1f565e92e0b6312b098601c9d8a5879b
describe
'1219' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJB' 'sip-files00013.txt'
7ee0a6bd4dde0c040e344f7522fead6f
c5d6d154147fb2c49c05fae16aa06ae5e3f66f77
describe
'1182' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJC' 'sip-files00014.txt'
5d1fd649b4865324e8eaa9391cda22cb
88ff313342da5b0b2ba2c1e48216d09b2840bd98
describe
'1133' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJD' 'sip-files00015.txt'
ad4c7f2e968ed9289d0b4d2e7dae9a3f
d1a8ca1a0bf3bd6375eb674a0c9923ebbec4e22f
describe
'1121' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJE' 'sip-files00016.txt'
f3bc4dfa854a2084bb5d96240e1513f4
e9ff41e44ceaaa30a92a0329ac5b74df76bf8e3f
describe
'1184' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJF' 'sip-files00017.txt'
34be6616f89c8dc0a0ef45d899fdd566
83be9549ac8cd56794fccb1f40a94f9c9c88b275
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJG' 'sip-files00018.txt'
d0d3633fab9562ebb554b1ce60903bdf
05d6c3cd8a501fefd3291d44391ebc6625c9eb57
describe
'1230' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJH' 'sip-files00019.txt'
acbe714cfe5a1e468bbdf97395297118
c1397466f67e54c929220b12caeedfebb585da2b
describe
'675' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJI' 'sip-files00020.txt'
2b3ce04add7782a99292e98d76ad1d06
e9c70a9e1900a4e408771153ecf7bcfbca84333e
describe
'872' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJJ' 'sip-files00021.txt'
68c6b347250a6511259850fe570c98be
20d9f3396f266beb47bf42e9cc1d6a9a50205cda
describe
'1160' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJK' 'sip-files00022.txt'
58e6fe7e890225c39e0d5ef263913008
81cf8ede44cc1a5ae533381ee55be438221f058b
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJL' 'sip-files00023.txt'
5d40a260599244d5390e89b2317870d2
b51dc60d9d5eac5e0ca3eec1c86ea8bf392e1d27
describe
'1223' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJM' 'sip-files00024.txt'
91ea7a3eb53fe9a839ac49dce1f22ca0
1913d4ecbaa78ac9ff740d9dc86b86c17bfa8f05
describe
'1207' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJN' 'sip-files00025.txt'
f36c5d5a17c075c26f407d47fc1f0e05
b8aecc863e041d05b0f9b5da1df1cada11038298
describe
'1200' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJO' 'sip-files00026.txt'
10c7862ff156bd861de9bb8a963de39f
92702e89e92eb9e094e7ff964a68609f4f03fd2e
describe
'1058' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJP' 'sip-files00027.txt'
ff8eeebc1c7a00d365137bd1721efa5a
4ce238c6406dd834678a1142217550bd6e9c3398
describe
'801' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJQ' 'sip-files00028.txt'
2432f89c42c7dd14a575ab903cf00be1
dc21cc2b3534950c4f103cd55f24b3af16e6faac
describe
'1277' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJR' 'sip-files00029.txt'
5d5ca73bdf3902904fb63278bee1f097
efcbdf10b872856de5489a422c5ffadd3ab8f695
describe
'1205' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJS' 'sip-files00030.txt'
88495f67b0dcce2dce88e4f4f1f3f1a6
ca32da36ae4d956144acc66aca9edd59a86a6c3c
describe
'1158' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJT' 'sip-files00031.txt'
e00b88a7c1e7652d49298f9dc5b389fd
69b853a21a785c009bfcf71400b0741406d6faf7
describe
'1236' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJU' 'sip-files00032.txt'
e3a070026a810aafeeef4c9c6a619aba
171b344356f191d21194163fe234d8863001988b
describe
'1170' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJV' 'sip-files00033.txt'
e042f376a103d0a237d235780462e8aa
82db7ef76d5ed809916199ea027ba8efd93e012d
describe
'1155' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJW' 'sip-files00034.txt'
d4373aadfd64d27d9a8bfae62efbf75e
4991dd8d2f963692311dd2ed43022bd39c9841af
describe
'1171' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJX' 'sip-files00035.txt'
027f5878327a0cf0778197bbf8e42791
ba4801c03d1db37c49e4b69dff3b97c6c6c9bb05
describe
'362' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJY' 'sip-files00036.txt'
d758b8ba3c8f5f6563000ae31c7a5e47
9129150cbb798570e976b311379cc9d10eec1651
describe
'752' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHJZ' 'sip-files00037.txt'
ef16041bc636c9bc34e5d2f6c6ae6c8d
73e8f79977afdb315af6335cb74ccb82f063248b
describe
'1192' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKA' 'sip-files00038.txt'
477ad801217a0572b9790bf566feabde
6e09bad2b291c13bf3714a2192e58fb9a22e3112
describe
'1181' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKB' 'sip-files00039.txt'
227f6629f04a797ccdf4c3f849c481b2
7b8d2475b5e1ab16ac029b8dc775d7ef7996dfcc
describe
'1140' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKC' 'sip-files00040.txt'
1cf08f007b4ca159521ad20fe66de0d8
fd18d737e4c2ea00d0ada61a60eb367023e99ed5
describe
'1102' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKD' 'sip-files00041.txt'
c2a473f387bcfc913ffef3f18cb95eeb
6010e05ee6c611bbc6670b0f02d14ed6b6fd4c0b
describe
'1185' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKE' 'sip-files00042.txt'
9ed39ec4badd1692262397a2c39ea83f
790e8765c3b5e4e8a7d258ac2992742236af7690
describe
'1067' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKF' 'sip-files00043.txt'
d31124b9a2e0eb9fadd5534b9a262c7a
4f3623e16c26f0c4fd42bd3f82e97dfc53e2e55f
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKG' 'sip-files00044.txt'
2d25982f70c3b364b0af607361365cf5
80f1ee060beb1a2e66df125d0a388b66eb7f28e5
describe
'1136' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKH' 'sip-files00045.txt'
6e871092c803903a8ddd579372b2d79c
960b6e2212c0435dacb72ed14575537cfc2caa30
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKI' 'sip-files00046.txt'
dc82ee5c40903e995f38c79c2ecb73d4
adf598513c2db035b62028b72eb88b236f5153bc
describe
'682' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKJ' 'sip-files00047.txt'
d4ca30328b08fd0cd5ce34f7af5ff264
ba7812cfaacec0289adfadf8b8e7218a851d5ae9
describe
'726' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKK' 'sip-files00048.txt'
728b2a1433721aaa1e98c01216a4410e
07c165cf1f9c534e8257c190ec988a1ae77d4c96
describe
'1239' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKL' 'sip-files00049.txt'
8dc0586ee59874f0ee70693d80b9f7a5
583d089225c855dbd352280f0bb85ffe75cffc98
describe
'1211' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKM' 'sip-files00050.txt'
fd42f61efef846cdce03bc674fbc86d7
0a2a74cd75f7c301e94f4572b24399f9690769a0
describe
'1188' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKN' 'sip-files00051.txt'
310033c87cedd358d8de86c4cb0c121f
62385612663b9760d2ccd625c2c605ad5e884e5a
describe
'626' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKO' 'sip-files00052.txt'
f2e380fc4153ee3d0a8dec10f184a2d2
90e858431583b0968fa2fd4d0ab252a42f7ba407
describe
'776' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKP' 'sip-files00053.txt'
cd5342030e8121ace3073f3640a8085c
0f9fb1a83aa6ab026d3fe99bba67f92fc91d8de3
describe
'1187' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKQ' 'sip-files00054.txt'
f055dc122288c46b12f1023906d1df19
297d1d41ed08afcd6def9a0f20c55770f5661499
describe
'1120' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKR' 'sip-files00055.txt'
edb935f7cec59e1af099c344a9aaa4e3
b1b62ef2acb0eb716afc4ebd99605b7510b17c42
describe
'462' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKS' 'sip-files00056.txt'
a806624ca3bd026375d0384e029dcc7a
432e1b611473c2fd26262a97495f20018b51f946
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKT' 'sip-files00056a.txt'
81051bcc2cf1bedf378224b0a93e2877
ba8ab5a0280b953aa97435ff8946cbcbb2755a27
describe
No printable characters
No printable characters
No printable characters
'41' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKU' 'sip-files00057.txt'
4082ce321e30ea98db8328503f1a56f2
53b733fe79f221a7553b11891ce0c58482efc244
describe
'730' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKV' 'sip-files00058.txt'
64551cb16be8e3bfed14113eaa90c1f7
211763849765f07876bfbd4ee2d68c8e49859081
describe
'1250' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKW' 'sip-files00059.txt'
f9c49565fd017c4be80be913313bcae7
e4cb36de8498a57c1d9f71e33eafaf8cef440576
describe
'1190' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKX' 'sip-files00060.txt'
6d8f362f30a52f9a012a8fcc6f35ca89
91e00a6b7f04933b3f681387c7fbc41ef6d44b57
describe
'1177' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKY' 'sip-files00061.txt'
5cebdc4ad0539eece0171367d6d0976b
5ff1bcea7f50d548112ca8586cc0a7e9a9944aa9
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHKZ' 'sip-files00062.txt'
77910d332bb66a5ff06aa6a14efe6806
f74ee452df7bd8db5e222ca50ff94d5d21f9b5ea
describe
'1138' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLA' 'sip-files00063.txt'
d4648a7611ed463418287e7b6f9223cb
bd5703fc54e4b94369dbbe4f6ef17c44f98881e0
describe
'1215' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLB' 'sip-files00064.txt'
470d46cebebdcc7a85b298f132ab5fc7
f7ac3b75ec9ea9c471462635099deade2aaa7433
describe
'1240' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLC' 'sip-files00065.txt'
c898c483793f25d5ed6ff468ae19374d
f82c762b319d18fb9a90e71615eeb6d5f4e99195
describe
'425' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLD' 'sip-files00066.txt'
9ff22f7eaeae8ff95ce2ef556ab20af9
af47998e591561c392b0c7191c346315116aba45
describe
'844' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLE' 'sip-files00067.txt'
ecd9d789dc8693d44300bf01bbfcd5d3
74c31a4787bd10cd14e33c492ad06a9b0a90aa26
describe
'1282' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLF' 'sip-files00068.txt'
688a2079e75bd9d8118b3d4889f17a1b
2d62319ad5c9c9c9f40bb51d916ba05e6f33405c
describe
'1243' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLG' 'sip-files00069.txt'
f0d4f68df77d1026b14942a54d642b79
7f72795bc02cf7b02b18ae1ce39362185ac6b1f5
describe
'1227' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLH' 'sip-files00070.txt'
8ddfb3fe51f586ad06f6137819df0617
2d6d4d8ab60648fac53eca8581b517bbd0d920eb
describe
'1258' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLI' 'sip-files00071.txt'
2f7b1147e1ffed03b52e54202287ca64
0ec6063067a3add470432512cc662357d81e29b4
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLJ' 'sip-files00072.txt'
5971e663c5f16e80150c64c32ccd6d28
3b79a90016df72d39c1e4cfec484000bb996146c
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLK' 'sip-files00073.txt'
7d30fd9a112aeaf3ee69b132bd1b1e63
eb916294507e717224ea85b5337430f22404edd4
describe
'698' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLL' 'sip-files00074.txt'
56418d1ce3bbd915d557a4be7ac333d3
99e6175a1e46accbb3c821a900d9e8d242b3a9e3
describe
'759' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLM' 'sip-files00075.txt'
a64045679ac052f6c420899ab9de2ae2
b0e02d0d61be4d15b97521f4fe7ea8f1c9d3f0f5
describe
'1285' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLN' 'sip-files00076.txt'
a4732c6390203f750d68d00e806893ac
ad65ba301448be6586f09c9e74443321ca7b2847
describe
'1262' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLO' 'sip-files00077.txt'
f826a81fa5eecea17d61f4df8a7f97b6
b4f896d5d1d349026aa96148a100ec13413e52b4
describe
'1302' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLP' 'sip-files00078.txt'
9029739f5946548237d46079c5a31ee2
5f3fb27f6ad73e71ccb90eadac5eda774c0253c8
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLQ' 'sip-files00079.txt'
597b5b12acd1a66ff6772f3ac6dd5fbe
1ce81d7b8d7f0b765108e5c16a85c8f088992eeb
describe
'1311' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLR' 'sip-files00080.txt'
7c3e091a25e3091d2e5799f945466ae1
8f935b9ae105420f653bc4954f4e9ab8a1e5f424
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLS' 'sip-files00081.txt'
e0569330b34806eef4c3764072b97164
4caabe4c201224e729a55f345c62ec10228aa639
describe
'1245' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLT' 'sip-files00082.txt'
8a9fc11660102b2f5c49b6fc547c0bd9
4b9fa0401be672792ee390f986de688e96a93ac3
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLU' 'sip-files00083.txt'
97faa6b08d56310d700763cf9840b785
a215cbaa3620d0e20956f28105a5c4a21f96cf29
describe
'282' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLV' 'sip-files00084.txt'
0a9cdf718aa9c5ed254097909ae99c2c
5295d7280755586fcb8d306955aa01b48ba23871
describe
'876' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLW' 'sip-files00085.txt'
23dd2558d56666285dfd3d19aa87bce3
32c2228576023076e42dc2a03d37e2f5b863323f
describe
'1307' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLX' 'sip-files00086.txt'
fa0fc764ac803549e1f15da2b29164b5
07a5506e236cec1c66a8f97efb8d1cdf9e5e8c18
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLY' 'sip-files00087.txt'
a16996e364d6114b3f2da36ae5f6ac0b
2391a37e456468c16b479694a3166559e1084ff4
describe
'1206' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHLZ' 'sip-files00088.txt'
a7c793c0603fd8f8a473e1a91834fd55
f0f5d884c8178f7dbb0bf5155aa8be072d520dfe
describe
'1288' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMA' 'sip-files00089.txt'
2add02cacb9f9bad6f474732be12fb36
9b904a41ffb54cfcf261a17a167922f72da560c9
describe
'1249' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMB' 'sip-files00090.txt'
81732217419fd4b5f65675f003c32fb2
0036b7870bc72ccb05ab90ad1cf6da764138479e
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMC' 'sip-files00091.txt'
35a3fd5c384e5d097cc37bcc6e7c7f03
a5a7cf5938b0687bb8d1f5ce479260c3e9176ef0
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMD' 'sip-files00092.txt'
9204bde37cf9731a1d2f0697e3c52763
0ed96c54f88e77af8500174c5d98e91c617afbf9
describe
'1260' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHME' 'sip-files00093.txt'
131d28b4272c786fc219a216b5600b89
885a88a8790881ae0e599f051dff18fe3ab0c182
describe
'1112' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMF' 'sip-files00094.txt'
6ef617a5acc0ea3f7350d16c3a6a99ac
d6651d6cb2f76d28a04a5bea2f9d0063d98ca6e2
describe
'104' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMG' 'sip-files00095.txt'
8f813ce59af9bfecd2c74f9aed6cce8d
07f2b5966150694f63c85309cbe76423d1f754bd
describe
'717' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMH' 'sip-files00096.txt'
3bafb49a75d60fea3fca25311e6428df
a462263cfb9e6821df628f229ed93656fc19524b
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMI' 'sip-files00097.txt'
6fd03236c76367e9404146904240380a
c7b9ac8cf64853a075c277f1a17349027c56c769
describe
'1193' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMJ' 'sip-files00098.txt'
263ffc019d0813a9bb2d7f26932e5815
544c22b1ebc6bd359bae72da738799ab547e5afc
describe
'1204' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMK' 'sip-files00099.txt'
c503c6bd24d58ae3b0b2198c438d2e21
03c702ed46877fed00638c4e0dd74e7a9b0d26ff
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHML' 'sip-files00100.txt'
3db48fa8b7faf1e56f200c422241da11
e51c9d0ba5d4b44399efb40d026111efa4ef6c2e
describe
'1150' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMM' 'sip-files00101.txt'
7dac3ca0f96a4434c5fe89e70dedd8cb
8803b4411a758d2e867a39435a0ac69f11f29fc2
describe
'1254' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMN' 'sip-files00102.txt'
a9a7849cb0d7157079363b919020487c
ec124c0ac8ee1198c907ec879c60444453e31b35
describe
'1174' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMO' 'sip-files00103.txt'
7d0a4ac121ac7deea37cf317e1c40420
0b1fabf824d9e71b596c5060f2618230e776f523
describe
'413' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMP' 'sip-files00104.txt'
3964b160f1194b274d102a6ab684ef54
d8098b8886e0725a80874147d4dd1e4dd368cc15
describe
'96' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMQ' 'sip-files00105.txt'
683927f918b449561aea64237c8794d5
6ea3ebc34af4503a4d4c699ef03f44437a04515b
describe
'769' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMR' 'sip-files00106.txt'
255978bf0d6f5088e0c99d0123857d35
60d4a1b5d54fcd96fdb948ddfe4e633188daae23
describe
'1209' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMS' 'sip-files00107.txt'
2a3803c20274c5532da5b24975440911
77a305186bbdda1021f7ee58ae21c42fb819fe18
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMT' 'sip-files00108.txt'
be732c28316626335e11758ec50c2bdb
4143c91e8c4352a242d3f7e2f01f8e6a982fdbe6
describe
'1276' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMU' 'sip-files00109.txt'
7d70b5973b060b39374b72715013d706
3043c064e4ccfc692947cedd4401f4f769844e8d
describe
'1259' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMV' 'sip-files00110.txt'
628a25139dfb54c8faf9372d887ef6af
3306236a011b75c47f0bc426eaee44e9c6851f1c
describe
'1310' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMW' 'sip-files00111.txt'
f07a52d7cf1a50bb01483935aee6ffe3
18b8f6750391f86ce82c8a1e793bb10626bb2063
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMX' 'sip-files00112.txt'
cb2574ce7a9a9edcd65816a971c821cc
3783f43594b7fc3cf420eadb5e83d3f89a41e3ac
describe
'1235' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMY' 'sip-files00113.txt'
2ff35d7481a4b6b82713e3fa7291c767
c372c2b098977e429c715636529a9614e2a325dc
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDKfileF20080729_AADHMZ' 'sip-files00114.txt'
d644edb1cc1f9f08a1999a4789ad27c4
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describe
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The Baldwin Library

RMB vein




THE
OLD FARM HOUSE

ALICE MORTON’S HOME

And other Stories.

By M. M. POLLARD

AUTHOR OF ‘ THE BROTHER'S LEGACY,’ ETC. ETG.

WILLIAM P. NIMMO:
LONDON: 14 KING WILLIAM STREET, STRAND,
AND EDINBURGH.
1876.
CONTENTS

ALICE MORTON’S HOME—
PAGE

I. THE FARM HOUSE IN SHADOW, . . . 7

II, THE MOTHER’S CHARGE, . ° e . 20

: Ill. SUNDAY WORK, . . . . e > 27
IV. HARRY MORTON, . ° ° e > 36

V. THE DAWN OF LIGHT, . . ° ° e 47

VI. MOORFIELDS IN SUNSHINE, . e ° . 52

AN AERIAL VOVYAGE—
I. ‘AT HOME’ IN THE MOON, . ° ° . 59

Il. A GLIMPSE AT THE SUN, : . ° . 66

III. A GLIMPSE AT THE PLANETS, 5 .

Iv. A JOURNEY THROUGH SPACE, . 3

GOLD: ORIVON’S QUESTION, . . Be ee = 00

, THE THREE SCREENS, . * ° ° . . ItTr
ALICE MORTON'S HOME,


ALICE MORTON’S HOME.



CHAPTER I.

THE FARM HOUSE IN SHADOW.

s1F you wish to visit Moorfields with me, you




must make up your mind to traverse at
least a mile of rugged uneven road,
ploughed into deep cart ruts in winter; but in sum-
mer, when the dust is not too thick, it is pleasant
and varied enough, for then the hedges and banks
are lit up with thousands of primroses and violets.

After this we have a steep field to cross, and we
reach a wood; but even ¢#ex we cannot see Farmer
Morton’s house, for the trees crowd thickly together,
and almost meet overhead.
8 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.



Now we reach a gate—very rough and broken it
is—and inside there is.almost an equally rough-look-
ing pathway, but when we have traversed this last
stage of our journey, the farm buildings burst full on
our view.

The homestead is irregularly constructed, and
seems very, very old, for the persevering ivy has
crept over many parts of the house, and threatens
to shut out the light from one or two of the end
windows.

On either side are barns, stables, sheds, and yards
for cattle. There are huge stacks of corn and hay,
and had affairs been well managed, no doubt the
farm at Moorfields would have made a profitable
return.

Behind the house there is a wide stretch of open
country, laid out in pasture or in crops, as the case
may be. There is a large fruit or vegetable garden,
and a fine old orchard, with trees in it so gnarled
and covered with grey lichen, that you might imagine
them a century old at least.

Yet they bear splendid fruit, and the juicy pears,
mellow apples, and rich plums on Farmer Morton’s
trees found a ready sale in that part of the country.
THE FARM HOUSE IN SHADOW. 9

At the time we write of, Farmer Morton had the
name of being a hard, morose kind of man ; there
was nothing bright or cheery about him—none more
ready than he was to grumble when the destructive
smut attacked his com—when he noticed the dusty
black heads peeping up through the bright green ones
he was very apt to grow cross and dissatisfied ; but
when a plentiful crop of golden wheat was gathered
into his barns, I fear no thought of gratitude to the
great Giver of the harvest ever rose in his heart. Oh!
how often this is the case. We grumble at the minor
ills and troubles that fall to our lot, while we close
our eyes to the mercies that encompass us all our
gays.

His wife, Mary Morton, had many trials, as you
may suppose, with his ungenial temper ; but this was
not all; their son Harry, who was nearly twenty-one
years old, instead of being a help and comfort to
them, was growing very wild, and had begun to seek
for happiness among idle companions. Poor Mrs.
Morton grieved bitterly at this, for she had tried to
bring up her son respectably, and with the fear of
God in his heart; but hers was but a feeble know-
ledge, and though she often wept for him, and prayed
10 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.

for him, she had not much power in restraining his
unsettled habits.

Alice, her eldest daughter, was fourteen years old,
and was already a great help and comfort to her
mother. Then there were two little boys, Tiny and
Bobby, who were only five and six years of age ; these,
with Tom the farm servant, and two stout village
girls, made up the whole household at Moorfields.

One wet July evening, Alice Morton was sitting in
the old-fashioned best kitchen of the farm-house,
waiting for her father’s return from Newtown market.

Her eldest brother Harry was gone there also, and
every minute she expected to hear the horse of one
or the other coming up the pathway to the house.

Alice was a pale, thoughtful-looking girl, with dark
brown hair neatly arranged in bands, and anxious,
earnest-looking dark eyes. Under more genial in-
fluences she might have grown pretty, for her small
features were almost classic in their regularity, but
the cares’ of life were already pressing heavily on
her, poor child !

No wonder she was tired this evening; she had
been up ever since four o’clock in the morning, and
all through the day it had been work! work! work!
THE FARM HOUSE IN SHADOW. 11



There was the butter to churn, the fowls to prepare
for market, rooms to put in order, meals to cook,
and the two children to attend to.

Her mother had helped her as much as she could,
but she had always been very delicate, and of late
her weakness had so increased, that she was not
able to attend to the great scrambling household as
well as usual.

For several days past the poor mother had often
been glad to creep to the arm-chair, and sit there
gasping till the faintness had passed away.

‘Don’t tell your father of this weakness of mine,
Alice,’ she would say. ‘Men don’t understand this
kind of thing, and he might fancy I was only pre-
tending to be ill?

On this July evening her ailment was worse than
usual, and she was forced to go to bed sorely against
her will, so Alice was obliged to wait up alone.

Oh! what a long evening it seemed, as she sat in
the great, half-lighted kitchen ; but she was not idle.
A huge pile of stockings lay beside her, and she was
darning almost impossible holes.

An open book was spread before her also, and

- she was learning her texts for the next Sunday
12 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.

Glancing at the book for a minute, she would go
on with her darning, and repeat in a soft low voice
the beautiful words that were strung together like a
chain of priceless pearls—

‘Behold the fowls of the air, for they sow not,
neither do they reap, nor gather into barns, yet your
Heavenly Father feedeth them. Are ye not much
better than they?’ She repeated once more, and
then she heard the sound of a horse coming up the
path.

Alice quickly put her book aside, as she knew quite
well neither her father nor her brother would have any
sympathy with the holy book she was reading ; she
was sure of a reproof from the one, or a careless jest
‘from the other. Alas! religion was little thought of
by either of them, and the poor girl often heard
language from them that differed very much from
the teaching she delighted in at the Sunday-school.

Mrs. Morton, in her weak, quiet way, grieved
bitterly at the careless lives of her husband and son,
_ and more so than ever of late, for her delicate health
seemed to bring the things and thoughts of the
eternal world nearer and nearer to her.

Alice heard the horse led round to the stables, and
THE FARM HOUSE IN SHADOW. 13



then there came three quick taps to the door. She
jumped up and opened it very softly.

‘Oh, Harry, how late you are!’

‘Is father come in then?’ asked he, pushing past
her.

He was a tall, strong-looking young man, with
dark hair, and eyes like his sister’s ; but there was a
look on his face not pleasant to see—dissipation and
recklessness were plainly pictured there.

He seemed to be in a halftipsy good humour, and
laughing loudly, he said, ‘I’ve had a rare bit of fun
to-day, and I'll tell you all about it. Feyther set his
heart on getting twenty pounds for the black mare,
and old Brown offered me ten shillings if I’d get it
for him for seventeen, and we managed it so well
that feyther actually gave it at the price he wanted.’
Here Harry took a fit of laughing at the joke, as he
called it, and he was forced to stop and wipe his eyes
and take breath.

“Tell me the rest to-morrow,’ said Alice, in terror
lest her father should come in.

‘The best of the joke was, that after the bargain
was made, Smithson came up and offered twenty

down for the mare, and wasn’t feyther in a rage when
14 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.



he found he could have got more? He blamed me—
he did indeed ! and I had to keep out of his sight all _
the rest of the day.’

‘I’m very sorry about the mare, Harry ; it ought to
have made more money.’

‘I kept out of his way, and he had to stand in the
market and sell all the sheep himself.’

‘Oh! Harry, how unkind that was of you; you
ought to help father, instead of cheating him and im-
posing on him—you know he is getting old now.’

‘Don’t you begin preaching, Miss Alice ; leave all
that for mother to do, she gives us a good share
sometimes—what was I saying ?—well, coming home,
I went into the “Swan and Eagle,”—I’m always
welcome ¢here you know, and Mrs. Brown invites me
into the back-parlour, so I was just sitting down with
Dora and her to have a bit of supper, when I saw
feyther come into the house—you know Dora Brown,
don’t you ?’

‘No, Harry, and I don’t wish to know her; but
please go to bed, will you? or father will be coming
in,’

Alice was half crying by this time ; she feared so
much there would be another quarrel between her
THE FARM HOUSE IN SHADOW. 15

father and Harry, should they meet while the latter
was so excited. .

“J had already eaten the first mouthful, when, as
I said, feyther came in, and Smithson and Brown,
and they began talking and arguing about the mare,
till I thought they were going to fight—I did
indeed.’

‘Harry, dear, will you go to bed?’ said Alice,
getting up and lighting a candle for him. Oh!
how she dreaded the scenes, alas! too frequent,
between father and sort.

‘Lhear a horse coming,’ exclaimed: she, a minute
after. ‘Oh, I’m sure I do.’ Harry listened also,
and as the sounds were unmistakably coming nearer,
he caught up the candle and prepared to depart.

‘Please don’t make any noise as you go up-stairs,
Harry, for mother is very ill to-night,’ whispered
Alice.

‘Is she really? I’m very sorry—there’s feyther ©
just gone round to the stables—good-night, Alice.’
And he went quickly up the stairs, laughing to him-
self, and swaying the candle to and fro, as he caught
hold of the banisters in his ascent.

Farmer Morton, a stout, heavy-looking man, with
16 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.

short iron-grey hair, came in soon after, and at the
first glance, Alice saw he was in an ill temper.

He flung himself down on the first chair, apparently
tired and worn out.

‘Where’s your mother to-night ?’ said he, looking
round the kitchen.

‘She did not feel at all well, father, and was forced
to go to bed.’

‘I never saw the likes of her for croaking—always
something the matter with her—when a man comes
home tired, he likes to have some one to look after
him. Why are you so late at work%—put that
rubbish away, I tell you.’ Alice meekly put her
work-basket aside.

‘Now, bring me my slippers,’ said he, kicking his
wet boots across the kitchen. ‘I’ve taken a nasty
cold to-day,’ continued the farmer after a pause. ‘ That
lad Harry will be my death ; he never came to help
me to sell the sheep, and kept me standing about in
the wet market-place all day; has he come in yet?’

‘Yes, father, and gone to bed,’ replied Alice, with
great inward satisfaction that they had not met. .

“It’s very fortunate he has gone to bed, for I must
have some talk with him—it will keep till to-morrow
THE FARM HOUSE IN SHADOW. 14



though. He and Brown were scheming together
about the black mare—I saw it plain enough—and I
saw him grinning at me through the parlour window
at the “Swan and Eagle;” he shall give up going
there so often, or Ill know the reason why.’

The farmer sat for some time half asleep on his
chair, then he roused himself :—

‘I feel my cold getting worse and worse, so I must
have some hot spirit and water ; you may fetch it for
me, Alice.’ The poor girl knew well enough that the
iires were all out, but the boiling water must be had,
so she ran to the wood-house, piled some wood in
her apron, placed it in the back-kitchen grate, and
blew it up to a flame, scorching her pale little face to
fever-heat as she did so. Then she went to her
mother’s room for the key.

‘Ts that Alice?’ said a weak voice.

‘Yes, mother; I want the key to get some spirits
for father—he’s caught a bad cold, he says.’

‘Did he see Harry when he came in ?’

‘No, mother; he had gone to bed, so we had
peace and quietness to-night.’

‘Thank God for that!’ exclaimed Mrs. Morton
fervently ; ‘I wish there was oftener ¢hat story to tell.

B
13 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.



Oh how I long for peace and quietness, and I feel
as if the Lord was bringing it very near to me now.’

‘Do you feel any better, mother?’ asked Alice.

; ‘Not much better, dear; but perhaps when the
house is quite still and shut up I shall fall off to sleep, .
and then perhaps this strange, queer feeling may pass
away ; but the Lord’s will be done. It’s very late for
you, my poor child !’

Alice hurried -down-stairs, but her father had fallen
asleep in an uneasy posture in his chair, and she
noticed how tired and worn he looked. He started
up when she came in, and mixed a strong glass of
‘spirits and boiling water. He drank it off quickly,
and then went moodily up-stairs.

Perhaps his wife was sleeping—for she did not
speak to him when he entered the room—but Farmer
Morton was not in the humour to trouble himself
much about that. He got into bed as speedily as pos-
sible, and was soon snoring away most melodiously.

Poor weary Alice closed up the house as soon as
possible, and wént up-stairs at last.

Her room was large, and situated at the top of the
house. It had a sloped, garret-like ceilig, very low ;
on one side and quite high on the other.
THE FARM HOUSE IN SHADOW. 19



There -was no carpet, and the chairs and tables
were all made of rough deal; but there was ‘a neat,
trim look in the place, and the curtains. and white
coverings of the beds were spotless.

Beds I say, for her young brothers Tiny and Bobby
slept there also. Tiny, the eldest, was properly
called Anthony, but by an ingenious abbreviation his
name had been changed into the present form. Bobby
was a curly-headed little fellow, a year younger ; he
believed ‘all his brother did was perfection, and at
the present stage of his five-year-old experience was
little more than an echo of his brother’s sayings and
doings.


CHAPTER IL

THE MOTHER’S CHARGE.

LICE began to undress very wearily, think-
ing, as she did so, of the text she ha 1 been



learning, about the ‘ fowls of the air,’ that
sow not, nor reap, nor gather into barns. ‘TF sup-
pose then,’ her thoughts ran on, ‘they never get to
feel as tired as I do now; it must be very nice to
be fed, and taken care of, like our Heavenly Father
takes care of them ; and yet He says “ we are much
better than they,” although we are let to be so weary
and worn-out sometimes.’

All at once she heard a heavy footstep on the
stairs; it came on so slowly; that she felt half
frightened, and stood still to listen, with her hair all

loose about her shoulders, and her dress half off.
20
THE MOTHERS CHARGE. 21



Presently the door was opened softly, and she saw
her mother standing there, looking very wan and
pale.

‘Oh Alice dear, I am so ill; and I was afraid of
disturbing your poor father, for he don’t seem quite
well to-night, so I came here to you; do let me lie
- on your bed for a little while.’

Alice ran over to her quickly, and helped her into
the bed as well as she could, smoothed the clothes
over her, and got an old bottle of smelling-salts out
of her drawer to try and revive her ; but her attempts
seemed to be quite in vain, for poor Mrs. Morton
rapidly became worse.

Her breath came and went in laboured gasps,
she seemed sometimes almost suffocating, and her
eyes became glazed and dim.

Alice grew terrified, and when she found her
attempts at restoration were of no avail, she laid her
mother’s head gently on the pillow, and ran to her
father’s room to call him.

Then shaking him, she cried out, ‘Oh father,
please get up, for mother is very ill !’

But the farmer was in a heavy slumber; his long
day’s fatigue, his cold, and the restorative he had
22 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.



used for it, all combined to seal his eyelids, and she
could not rouse him.

‘Don’t disturb me,’ said he angrily ; ‘let me alone,
I say,’ and he was snoring again in a moment as
loudly as ever.

‘What shall I do? cried Alice. She shrank from
calling her brother, and rushed up the back stairs to
a loft where old Thomas, the farm-servant, slept.

‘Get up, Tom, as quickly as you can,’ cried she,
‘and saddle the horse, and go for Doctor Grey, for
mother is dreadfully ill.’

When she returned at last to her room she found
a still greater change had taken place in her mother,
who seemed to wrestle with her agony. The two
little children had been disturbed, and they now
stood beside her bed, with their bare feet and their
scanty night-dresses.

Alice raised her mother’s head and bathed her
brow. ‘Oh, if the doctor would only come!’ she
cried. ‘ How long the time seems !’

‘I don't think the doctor could do any good,
Alice,’ said her mother softly. ‘I must go, dear, for
death is on me, and my Saviour calls me away ; there
will be no more tears and troubles in heaven.’ Alice

e
THE MOTHERS CHARGE. 23



repeated as well as she was able, ‘And God shall
wipe away all tears from their eyes, and there shall
be no more pain nor sorrow.’

‘No more pain nor sorrow,’ repeated the poor
woman eagerly, ‘and all through the merits of my
Saviour, for I am poor, and vile, and weary myself—
oh, how I long for the rest of heaven! but I’m
sorry to leave all the worry to you, Alice ; you will
have much to do, my poor child. Try, dear, and
keep peace between father and Harry, and try and
take care of the two poor little children ; teach them
to go to church with you, and teach them, adove al/,
to love God, anJ to love and be kind to each other.’

‘J will, I will,’ said Alice, with a great sob, as she
caught the laboured words, that came out in gasps.
‘Oh, mother, mother, I will try and do my best !’

Presently Harry came creeping into the room,
half awake, with his clothes hurriedly put on; he
had heard the disturbance in the house, and looked
round the room with wonder. He bent over his
mother, but she did not see him, her eyes had a dim
far-away look, as if they were blind for ever to the
things of this world.

The dying woman’s lips still moved. and Alice
24 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.

heard her whisper, ‘Oh, I believe it all ; I beliéve in
God the Father Almighty, and I believe in the Lord
Jesus Christ.’

Poor little Tiny and Bobby, who were standing on
tiptoes and straining their ears to hear what their
mother said, now caught these werds, and to their
minds it seemed as if she was saying the Apostles’
Creed their sister had taught them, and they lifted
up their voices, and repeated the beautiful words to-
gether, to the very end.

It was a solemn scene. Harry and Alice joined
their voices also, and the dying woman evidently
understood the words, for she listened eagerly to the
close, and then her lips repeated over and over again,
‘Lord Jesus, take me to the “life everlasting.” ’

Have you ever thought of the words of this confes-
sion of our faith,—how simple and comprehensive
they are? In ancient times it used to be a kind of
watchword among the early Christians; they re-
peated it to each other when they met ; nobles used
to draw the sword when the Creed was said, and thus
showed their determination to defend it even to
death itself{—and these were the last words poor Mrs.

Morton heard on earth.
THE MOTHERS CHARGE. 25

After this there was no sound but the sobbing of
the children and the laboured breathing of their
mother. Harry seemed overcome with grief; he
buried his face in his hands, and wept convulsively ;
his whole frame trembled with his agony.

The bitter anguish of remorse seemed to have
fallen on him, and at that moment he was ready to
renounce his reckless ungodly life, give up his giddy
companions, and try to begin a new course. Would
that his good resolutions had lasted ! but they passed
away again, like the ‘morning cloud’ or the ‘early
dew.’

They waited thus, nearly an hour, before the doc-
tor could be found ; but alas! the whole College of
Physicians could not have done Mrs. Morton any
good, they could not have recalled the breath that
was fast ebbing away; for her wearied heart, clogged
by disease, was giving its last throes.

The farmer was roused from sleep by this time,
and he came running into the room, with his wife's
shawl thrown over his shoulders. He looked at the
weeping group with amazement. ‘What is the
matter? Alice, what dnes all this mean? Why is,

your mother lying here? Surely she is not dying!
26 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.
Oh Mary! Mary! speak to me, just one word—my
own true wife !’

But his appeal was in vain, for another change had
come over her face—an unmistakable one this time,
and as Alice bent over her she found the heaving
chest and the gasping breath were still.

Poor Alice knelt down by the bed, clasping her
mother’s hand in hers. ‘Oh, mother, why did you
go away?’ cried she in her anguish. ‘Why did
you leave me behind? for I am very weary here!’
then all at once she remembered her mother’s last
words to her, and drawing the children very close to
her, she said softly, ‘Lord Jesus, give me more
patience, and teach me to try and do all that my
mother told me.’

Life’s toil and anxiety was over now for Mrs.
Morton ; but the weight of cares and strife was in-
creased for Alice; her heart sometimes sank quite
low when she thought of all that was before her;
but, young as she was, she had already learnt the
secret of strength, and she called earnestly on God
to be near her, and help her.


CHAPTER IIL

SUNDAY WORK.




A LICE! Alice !’ called out a sharp shrill voice
one Sunday morning, just ten days after
Mrs. Morton’s death. ‘Alice, come here ;
I want you to pick a hamper of ripe pears, and some
peas for sending to Newtown to-morrow.’

The speaker was Betsy Morton, a sister of the
farmer’s, whose face was as sharp as her words. He
had invited her to Moorfields to take charge of things
for a while, and she had come, vested with a good
share of curiosity and authority.

Poor Mrs. Morton had always been shy with her, and
had kept her at a great distance, for she did not like
her grasping ways, her rough manner, and her hard

unfeeling heart ; but now Betsy, for the first time in
27
28 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.



her life, found herself of some little importance at
Moorfields ; she took on herself the position of mis-
tress in the farm-house, and had already begun to
worry Alice and scold and torment the servants.

No corner of the house escaped her scrutiny ; she
went. into the rooms, opened Mrs. Morton’s boxes
and cupboards, and examined the house-linen and
clothes. She turned the things over with somewhat
of contempt, and found fault with the various little
careful contrivances.

‘ Mary Morton was always a thriftless, poor, weak
creature,’ was her inward comment ; ‘ never the one
to make the best of things, dawdling about over her
work, always doing, never done, and yet so stuck up
and proud, no one was good enough company for her.’

Betsy had a great idea of her own powers, and used
to boast, ‘There wasn’t a sharper mistress in the
countryside than herself,—she’d see the lads and
lasses did their duty.’ And so she went over the
house from the dairy to the garret, tormenting and
scolding every one.

Tiny and Bobby used to fly at the sound of her
voice, and when Alice was busy they spent most of
their time about the farm-yard and fields. Betsy had
SUNDAY WORK. 29

not improved things at Moorfields, but had rather
made the burden greater.

But we must return to the Sunday morning. Alice
had been occupied since an early hour with the work
that is unavoidable in a large farm-house ; for animals
must be fed, and milk, etc., attended to. She had
finished now, and was going to dress her little brothers
to go with her to the Sunday-school, when her aunt’s
voice stopped her.

‘I can’t pick the peas now, Aunt Betsy, for I’m
going to fetch the boys, and take them to church
with me, and we’re going to Sunday-school first.’

‘Nonsense !’ exclaimed Aunt Betsy, her black eyes
flashing, and her face all in a glow. ‘Nonsense!
what good will that do ’em?%—only just spoil their
new mourning going down the fields; and it looks
like rainagain. Just take the hamper and get me the
pears that I may count ’em out. I’ve got a large
baking in the oven, and I want you to see to ¢hat
presently, so you caz’t go down village this morning.’

‘ But I must,’ said Alice firmly ; ‘I promised mother
I would take the children to church, and so I will;
and as for spoiling their mourning, why, they can
wear their old clothes.’
30 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.



‘And a pretty disgrace that ’ud be, to see Farmer
Morton’s boys out in old clothes already ; no, if they
go, they must wear their best black; but you must
stay home to-day and help, there’s so much fruit
spoiling, and there’s fowls to be got ready.’

‘T’ll get up as early as you like to-morrow,’ pleaded
poor Alice.

‘There’s butter to be made to-morrow, and the
peas to shell, and the red currants to be picked,’
went on Aunt Betsy, growing more angry at every
fresh duty.

‘But we always get it all done in time,’ persisted
Alice. ‘Jane and Sarah Evans are coming to help
us at day-dawn.’

‘ That’s the way your father never makes his farm
pay, hiring people to do what his own children and
servants ought to get through well enough. I shall
give him my advice about it.’

‘Don’t advise him to keep us from church,’ saiw
Alice, with a sudden gush of tears, ‘for I’ve promised
mother always to take the children there. Oh! don’t
advise him to do that, Aunt Betsy.’

“You ’re just a poor, weak, puny thing like your
mother was, with your tears always at high-water
SUNDAY WORK. 31



mark, Well, if you’ve set your heart so much on
going to church, I shan’t hinder ye,’ and she went
out into the cattle-yard, grumbling as ‘she went.

Alice dried her tears, and then went out to hunt
for her brothers. She found them at last. Tiny the
eldest, was stretched at full length on the top of a
rabbit-hutch, and Bobby was taking the young rabbits
out of their retreats, and presenting them to him, one
by one, for his inspection.

‘I like the white one best, so you may have the
brown and white long-eared fellow,’ he was saying
just as Alice came to them. She had gone a long
way round by the orchard, for there was a redness
in her eyes and a swelling in her throat that she
wanted to get rid of before she reached the boys.

‘Harry said we might have one each,’ said Tiny,
‘and I’ve got the white one ; isn’t he a beauty ?”

‘Very pretty indeed,’ replied his sister; ‘but I
want you to put them away now, and come with me
down to the village. First well go to Sunday-school,
and then I'll take you to church, and we’ll all sit in
the gallery with the Sunday scholars.’

‘But we can’t,’ said Bobby, shaking his curly head.
‘Tom said he’d come and take us both down to
32 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.



the river, and show us the young ducks.—Didn’t he,
Tiny?’

“Yes, that he did, and he’s coming now,’ replied
little six-year-old Tiny, as he fondly caressed his
rabbit.

‘You may go down to the river with Tom to-
morrow,’ said Alice, ‘but I must take you to church
with me now, for I promised mother I would do
so, and it will be very sad if you refuse to come.’

‘Mother will never know about it,’ said Tiny, ‘for
she’s down in a dark grave in the churchyard ; I saw
them put her there.’

‘Yes,’ chimed in Bobby, ‘ and old Bill Cheevy beat
down the earth very hard with his shovel.’

‘Poor mother’s body is lying there,’ said Alice,
trying to keep back her tears, ‘but her spirit is not
there ; ¢iat-is gone to be with God; and if ever you
want to see her again, and be where she is, you must
be obedient, and do what God tells you, and what
she also said you were to do; don’t you remember
what she said the night she left us,—that I was to
teach you to love God, and to love each other? You
must obey her, though she is not here to see.’

A little hand had crept softly into Alice’s, and
SUNDAY WORK. 33

Tiny was looking up in her face with his eyes full
of tears.

‘I will go with you, Alice; please take me,’ and
Bobby, who tried to copy everything his brother did,
and even echoed his words, held out his little hand
also, and said he would go with Tiny.

So at last the trio set out, and as it was now very
late, Alice half led, half carried the boys by turns,
through the wood, and down the long lane to the
village school.

Miss Herbert, the vicar’s daughter, saw them
coming in late and hot and tired, but as she knew
only too well the circumstances of the farmer’s
family, she could not blame poor Alice, so she
smiled kindly on her, made her sit on the form very
near her, and asked her many questions about the
little boys.

She called a tall, healthy-looking girl towards her—

‘Sarah Coles, I want you to take these little
fellows into your class ; they cannot read yet, but you
can tell them about Samuel, how God called him, and
you can teach them a verse or two of some nice hymn.’

Alice took her place in Miss Herbert’s class, and
heard her tell of the love of Jesus, and how those

Cc
34 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.



that love Him grow to be of the same spirit, and act
among the quarrelsome people of the world as
peacemakers. ;

She told them of aZ that kindness does, how it
smooths down an angry temper, and softens a hard
heart, and makes the work of life go on smoothly and
easily ; she said all had more or less of this to do ;
Jesus had preached of peace to His people, and by
doing His will all might become His children. ‘Be-
loved, if God so loved us, we ought also to love one
another.’

Alice thought this was all said to her. ‘Oh that
I could be a peacemaker!’ she thought; ‘and if father
and Harry could only hear this, they would never,
never be hard and sharp to one another again, they
would never use such bitter, aggravating words.’

And all up through the lane, and through the
wood, she talked quietly to the listening children,
and told them ‘they must always love one another,
and never grow impatient and unkind, but be gentle.
and peaceful as Jesus was.’

The grave little girl, with her sad, wistful eyes,
might have been years their senior, from the sage
advice she gave them.
SUNDAY WORK. 35



They promised to do what she told them, and then
she kissed them and said, ‘ Jesus will watch over us
if we remember this, and then the time will come
when He will call us to be with Him for ever, in the
peaceful home where mother is gone already, and
where all who love Ged will one day meet.’




CHAPTER IV.

HARRY MORTON.

HE farmer grew more morose and gloomy




than ever after his wife’s death ; he was
cross and hard to his workmen, and stern
' and sullen with his children, to Harry especially, and
many harsh words passed between them.

An waousually wet autumn set in, the corn-fields
were sodden with rain, and in many places the
beaten-down crops looked as if they never could be
gathered in. There was a ceaseless pour ; it rattled
on the roof, and dripped. down the eaves of the
house, and the constant sound added to the farmer's
ill-temper. He was irritable, and angry with the
weather, and felt aggrieved at his crops being

injured.
28
HARRY MORTON. 37



There is a great evil in grumbling at the weather ;
it is even profane and impious ; for when we are im-
patient at the constant outpourings of the clouds, are
we not also impatient against the God who sends
these things? We ought never to murmur at the
pouring rain, though it may spoil our pleasure or in-
jure our goods. God sends it to us, and His wise
dispensations are beyond our control. We should
hush our thoughtless repinings, knowing whose Hand
dispenses to us alike the rain and sunshine.

Oh how Alice missed her mild, patient mother ;
her loss was felt more and more every day ; for Mrs.
Morton had always been ready with her well-timed
advice to turn aside angry contentions,

Her judicious interference had often smoothed
away the rough words that were perpetually bursting
forth between father and son.

Now, alas! the quarrels became more frequent,
and louder than ever, and Aunt Betsy, instead of
mending matters, too often added her shrill voice to
the general wrangling, and, in fact, made matters
worse.

Harry shunned his home as much as possible. His
plan now was to finish his day’s work at the farm, to
38 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.

scramble over his meals, then he would go to his
room, and with the greatest care put on his best
clothes and hurry away to the parlour of the ‘Swan
and Eagle.’

There was always a welcome for him; and he
would idle away his evenings, enjoying the frivolous
conversation that went on there much more than the
constant strife that greeted him in his own uncon-
genial homestead.

Dora Willis, the landlady’s niece, was considered a
belle in her way, and several other young men of the
village met in the little parlour also, and there was
some little rivalry among them; but Harry Morton
thought himself the favourite, and his position as a
well-to-do farmer’s son made him rather take airs on
himself, so he was disliked by the others accordingly.

Meanwhile poor little Alice was trying to do her
best at home, and her wan face grew thinner and
wanner with the attempt.

She felt more than ever the responsibility the
charge of the little boys was, for she made them her
special care, and they were seldom out of her sight.

Two months passed away, and the harvest, such as
it was, was gathered in at last.
HARRY MORTON. 39

‘We are pounds and pounds out of pocket,’
growled Farmer Morton.

‘Not worse off than our neighbours,’ answered
Harry, carelessly.

‘Tt does not matter to you much, for you get all
you want; but you'd better mend your ways, I tell
you, or your corn won’t grow much longer on my
farm,’ said his father.

‘Oh! I dare say I shall be able to manage if I’m
turned out,’ replied Harry, provokingly.

‘Then you'd best begin to manage at once,’ ex-
claimed the farmer, thumping the table with his hand.

‘Perhaps the landlady of the “Swan and Eagle”
will adopt him for her niece Dora’s sake,’ said Aunt
Betsy, in her shrill voice.

‘If he ever marries that girl,’ said the farmer, now
in a furious rage, ‘he’s no longer a son of mine; let
him marry er at his peril,’ and he rose from the table
and went out, leaving his dinner half-finished.

Harry rose also, and with undutiful, angry words,
protested he would not be dictated to, but would
marry whom he pleased; then he went to his own
room, and Alice saw him riding away soon after,
dressed as usual, in his best clothes.
40 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.

Alas! these miserable scenes were far 400 common
at Moorfields, and the poor little children would sit
trembling, while the storm went on.

From sheer want of kindly warmth and tenderness,
they grew shy, and their faces looked pale and
pinched ; they seemed like puny flowers, struggling
for life, in some dim place where the rays of the sun
could not penetrate.

Harry did not return home to tea, so Alice put the
boys to bed, and sat down as usual, to her work.
Aunt Betsy had gone to bed also.

There was a bright fire in the huge fireplace, for
the evenings were growing chilly.

By-and-bye Farmer Morton came in, and drawing
his arm-chair near the blazing wood, he sat watching
it crackle and sparkle.

He seemed in a moody frame of mind, and hardly
spoke a word, while Alice stitched away in silence,
wondering what kept her father up so long.

‘It seems to be getting rather late,’ said she at
last.

‘Yes, I dare say it is,’ said her father, putting on
another log of wood, ‘but I’m going to wait up for
Harry.’
HARRY MORTON. 41

‘Oh! I'll stay up, father,’ said Alice quickly, the
dread of another scene rising in her mind.

‘May be,’ went on the farmer slowly, ‘may be I
was a bit harsh with the lad to-day, and I’ve been
thinking since, that hard words often drive a man to
do what he never would else.’

‘Oh yes, father!’ replied Alice, ‘advice is so much
better for Harry—mother always said so; she used
to tell me he might be won by kindness, but never
could be driven to do anything by harshness.’

‘Ah! your mother was a wise woman, Alice, and
I'll try her plan for once, and see if persuasion will
make him give up that girl at the “Swan and Eagle ;”
a giddy, showy lass like she is, would never make a

fitting wife for Harry.’

And the farmer again relapsed into silence, and sat
moodily staring at the fire.

Thus an hour or two passed away, and father and
daughter sat anxiously watching for the truant.

A heavy storm had come on, and the wind rattled
the windows, and large splashes of rain fell down the
broad chimney into the fire.

All at once they heard a horse coming up the
wood at a furious pace; it went round the house to
42 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.

the stables, and Alice started up, and began putting:
her work away.

‘ That’s Harry,’ said she, giving a stir to the wood
fire.

Her father walked to the window and looked out.

‘It’s avery dark night, and blowing a gale,’ ob-
served he.

They both stood waiting for the expected steps,
but none came ; not a sound was to be heard but the
storm howling through the wood.

‘That was surely Harry’s horse; where can he
be?’ asked Alice at last.

‘Doing something or other in the stables, I dare
say,’ replied her father, taking a turn or two up and
down the kitchen.

Half an hour passed away, and a kind of dread
seemed to creep over the watchers, though neither
cared to speak of it to the other.

‘I’d best go out to the stables and see,’ said the
father at last, taking down his coat and hat.

He soon came back, and shook the rain off,
before he hung his things on the peg again.

‘I was almost certain I heard Harry’s horse,’ said
he, ‘and yet the stable door was locked, and not the
HARRY MORTON. 43



sign of a creature about the place ; it’s very late now,
what can have become of the lad?’

‘TI hope nothing has happened to him,’ said Alice,
trembling.

‘Perhaps he’s stopped the night at the “Swan and
Eagle ;” did not like coming out in the storm, maybe,
so you’d better go to bed, Alice, and Ill let him in,
if he comes to-right ; don’t be uneasy, girl, I shan’t
say aught to anger him, I promise you.’

Alice went away as desired, but her heart felt very
heavy and sad, and when she knelt down by the side
of her little bed she prayed to God most earnestly
for the safe return of her truant brother.

Though she was weary, and almost worn out with
the work of the day and the long watching, she could
not sleep, and every now and then she started up,
as she still thought she heard the sound of horses’
feet through the storm.

When the first glimpse of dawn appeared in the
sky, she sprang out of bed, and looked eagerly out
of the window, and could hardly believe her eyes
when she saw Harry’s horse standing grazing in the
back meadow, with the saddle still on his back.

The inmates of the farm were soon roused, and
44 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.

long before the daylight was bright, many of the
people from the village had joined in the search for
her lost brother.

Dora Willis was greatly terrified when the people
rushed into the ‘Swan and Eagle,’ and asked her
what had happened to Harry Morton.

She confessed he had left her in of anger. He
had asked her to be his wife, and she had told him
she had already promised to marry young John
Bennet the miller.

‘Indeed! Indeed ! I meant no harm to him,’ said
the girl. ‘I liked him asa friend, and I told him so,
but I never encouraged him to think I would give up
John, and take him for a husband.’

All through the day the search went on, and at
last some one thought of the old coal-pit, a couple of
miles away, and there, sure enough, all that remained
of poor Hatry was found.

How he got there, or why he had wandered to
such an out-of-the-way place, must ever remain a
mystery.

Perhaps he had got off his horse to try and search
out the right track, and misled by the darkness of the
night, had slipped unawares into the deep yawning pit.
HARRY MORTON. 45

The neighbours who came about the house at this
time of trouble whispered this suggestion cautiously
to Alice, and she repeated it to her little brothers, as
they all three stood trembling at the door that after-
noon, and watched a carefully covered cart, coming
very slowly through the wood, and some men with
their heads uncovered, walking silently and gravely
behind it.

Harry Morton’s was a sad course, and he met
with a sad, sad end. He had allowed earthly
passions to take the lead, and he had turned away
from the safe path of duty, and now he had been
suddenly called to render up an account of all his
actions,

The people of the village talked, panic-stricken,
about this terrible event, and asked each other,
‘Who will be the next ?’

They shook their heads as they spoke of Harry
Morton’s career, for his doings were well known in
the village. Some said ‘his father’s severity had

made him reckless ;’ others persisted that ‘he was
naturally wild and thoughtless, and had been a great
trial to his poor mother.’

But whatever had been the cause of his careless
46 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.



life and his fearful end, the secret was hid. with
God alone, who is a just as well as a merciful judge.

This untimely death was a salutary warning to
Harry’s frivolous companions ; many of them were led .
by his example to pause, and see the hazard of the
lives they were leading, and they became aware they
were in danger of a pit more fearful than the old dis-
used coal-mine near Moorfields, namely, the pit of
eternal destruction.

For the first time the sense of insecurity was
impressed on them ; they gave up their idle habits,
ard in more than one instance the reformation was,

through God’s mercy, lasting and sincere.


CHAPTER V.

THE DAWN OF LIGHT.

WHAT evening Alice sat crouching over the




kitchen fire, for she was too weary and too
sad for work, so she sat there silently cry-
ing, and staring at the blazing wood fire.

After a time Farmer Morton came quietly in, and
threw himself wearily on his arm-chair, with a sound
that seemed half sigh, half sob.

Oh! how Alice longed to go to him, and throw
her arms round his neck and weep with him, or try
to comfort him. But she had never been taught to
do this, and she feared such a demonstration of her
feelings would only anger him, and make him repulse
her. _

But the old man spoke at last.
48 ALICE MORTON'S HOME.



‘ Alice, my girl, come nearer to me; I feel as if the
hand of the Lord is very heavy on me, and as if all
that is happening is a just punishment for my sins. I
want somebody to make it clear to me, and tell me
whether it is so or not.’

‘Shall I send over and ask Mr. Herbert to come
and see you?’ said Alice, jumping up. ‘I’m sure
he will come. Oh! I wish you had heard him preach
on Sunday, father; he said our Lord Jesus Christ
died that our sins might be forgiven and blotted out ;
he said we had only to come to him humble and
repentant, and not trusting in our own merits, and
He would never turn us away.’

‘TI have good-need to be humbled to the very dust,’
said the farmer slowly, ‘and I should like to talk to
parson about it, but I don’t think he would come. I
was rather short and rough to him when he came
hee last, wasn’t I, Alice ?’

‘Yes, father,’ replied she meekly, as she cast down
her eyes, and felt her face flush all over. ‘I don’t .
think he would mind that now, father,’ said she, a short
time after, more brightly; ‘I don’t think ¢Zat would
keep him away; shall I send over to him ?’

‘Not to-night, lass, I feel as if I couldn’t talk to
THE DAWN OF LIGHT. 49



him now, though I might listen to a few words from
the Bible ; you and your mother used to read it often.
Can’t you find something there that might tell me
what I want to know!’

Alice joyfully ran up-stairs for her book ; it was the
first time her father had ever asked her to read to
him. She thought of Mr. Herbert’s text on Sunday,
and read slowly, ‘Whoso confesseth, and forsaketh
his sins, shall have mercy.’

‘Stop there, Alice ; that’s just as if the voice of
the Lord was calling upon me to confess all my sins
to Him, and to acknowledge His Hand in all my
punishment. He took away my poor wife, and I
hadn’t time even to say “ Good-bye” to her. Now,
he has taken away my poor lad just as suddenly.
Stop, Lord ! stop, for Thy mercy’s sake, and forgive
me my past worldly and sinful life, for Jesus Christ’s
sake.’

The words came like an ‘exceeding bitter cry’
from the old man’s soul, and though he did not know
it himself, it was a deep and earnest prayer to God ;
and a prayer also that God heard, and in His own
good time answered.

Alice and her father sat talking together for a long
D
50 ALICE MORTON’S HOME.



time on this memorable evening, while the shadow
of a terrible death hung over their house, making
everything seem so solemn and real.

Often, when the deep waters of trouble and de-
spondency come over us, we call on the Lord for
mercy ; but when the sun shines out brightly once
more, we turn eagerly to our cherished faults, and
become careless and worldly again.

But it was not so with Farmer Morton ; he really
was sincere in his repentance ; the truth had reached .
his soul at last, and a gracious God upheld him, and
strengthened him to persevere.

Mr. Herbert came often and often to Moorfields ;
there was no fear zow that the farmer would treat him
with rudeness ; he /onged for his visits and his faith-
ful teaching, and many a long talk they had together
during the winter evenings, and many a prayer
ascended from the lonely farm-house to the Throne
of Grace.

Before long the farmer began to read the Bible and
understand it forhimself. It seemed a marvel to him
now how he could have neglected it so long. His
former life seemed a marvel to him also.

How he could ever have been so unkind, so grasp-
THE DAWN OF LIGHT. 51



ing, so worldly—groping about like a blind man, fall-
ing into all kinds of sins and dangers, and never once
seeing the ‘Loving Hand’ that was stretched out to
warn and guide him : ¢#zs seemed the greatest marvel
of all.

But he was roused and awakened now, and from
his inmost soul he thanked God for it. The bright
beams of his new-found knowledge melted away the
hard rugged points of his character, like the warm
rays of the rising sun melts the huge ice-boulders, and
sends their genial streams abroad, to cheer and fer
tilize the valleys below.


CHAPTER VI.

MOORFIELDS IN SUNSHINE,

-i/: will take one more glance at the farm two




years after these events have passed away.

It is a fine July evening, and those who
paid the first visit to the old place with me will be
surprised to see how completely all its gloominess
-has passed away, and what a beauty and lovableness
there is about the home now.

Alice is grown up into a neat, staid-looking girl,
with the same thoughtful eyes and the same kind
manner she used to have.

Just now she is feeding the hens and guinea-fowls,
who all come round her, flapping their wings and
ruffling their feathers, as they scramble to pick up the

golden grains of corn.
52
_MOORFIELDS IN SUNSHINE. 53



There is peace and plenty on every side. The
trees in the orchard are bending with the crop of ripe
juicy fruit.

There are rows of beehives round the sunny side of
the house, and multitudes of rainbow-coloured flowers
to tempt the busy bees.

You smell the delicious perfume of roses, mingled
with the sweet scents of clove-pinks and sweet-briar,
and you hear the lazy lowing of the cattle as the boy
drives them in, and afar off comes the pleasant
tinkle of the sheep-bells.

Farmer Morton, looking far happier and stronger
than he did two years ago, has been over the grounds
with his two boys; they are coming round by the
paddock now.

Poor Harry’s horse stands there, and they all three
stop and look at the animal. It has become a kind
of pet with them, and little Bobby tosses his golden
curls and laughs merrily, as the old animal runs after
him, and tries to snap away the ripe apple he is
tempting him with from his hand.

Alice has seen them coming, and goes into the
neat, newly-furnished parlour to wait for them. The
tea-table is laid out; there is plenty of home-made
54 ALICE MORTON’ S HOME.



bread, and honey and fresh fruit, on the table, for,
‘father and the boys will be hungry,’ she says.

The bay-window is thrown wide open, and bunches
of clustering roses peep in and diffuse their perfume _
through the room.

Presently the farmer and his two fine boys come
in, looking healthy, hearty, and happy.

They draw round the table, and the father stands,
with bowed head, and'reverently asks God’s blessing
on the meal. :

Farmer Morton has borne much of the burden
and heat of the day since poor Harry’s death; he
has had his share of anxieties and doubts and
haltings, in his new course of life, but he has never
turned back since his first prayer for pardon and
forgiveness.

He loves his family now with an affection that
seems the more intense from his long neglect of it.
The one object of his heart is, that he and his house
may serve the Lord.

We will take our leave of the happy family now,
and bid adieu to Moorfields while the sunshine of
that summer’s evening is resting on it.

We will retrace our steps through the wood, and

x
MOORFIELDS IN SUNSHINE. 55

down the fields, and we shall have much to think of
as we-journey on.

We will muse on the change religion makes in a
household! What new and holy affections it brings
out. . Oh! what joy, and love, and peace there is in
. believing !

It brightens youth; it sanctifies age, and grows
more and more perfect, till the everlasting gates are
lifted up and the entrance is given 1o Eternal life.

AN AERIAL VOYAGE.



AN AERIAL VOYAGE.



CHAPTER I.

‘AT HOME’ IN THE MOON.

‘ BuusT be thy loving light where’er it spills,
And blesséd thy fair face—oh, mother mild !
Still shine—the soul of rivers as they run,
Still lend thy lonely lamp to lovers fond
And blend their plighted shadows into one’—

ANG our poet Hood, and when we watch the
soft white light of the moon flooding the



landscape, and bringing out trees and dis-
tant hills in bold relief, we are apt, like him, to
associate something of motherly love with her beams,
and our lips insensibly form themselves into the ortho-
dox ‘ Oh, Thou !’

59
60 AN AERIAL VOVAGE.



But is there life and feeling in the moon?. are there
beings in her, living and loving as we do? Is there
any sympathy hidden in her great orb of light? Or
is the rhapsody of poets and lovers all moonshine ?

We shall see ; for we will send an imaginary, aérial
express train to the moon, and the intelligent traveller
shall give us the result of his investigations.

Our train takes exactly three hundred days to
reach the moon, going at the usual express rate.
Fancy our traveller safely landed there, perhaps on
the top of Mount Dorfal, near the South Pole. It is
only 8897 yards high, and climbing it does not seem
to fatigue very much, for our traveller can leap from
crag to crag quite pleasantly ; he feels six and a half
times lighter than he did on this earth.

First he gazes at the sky, and he beholds the sun,
like a great ball of fire, pouring its fierce rays upon
him. When it rose in the morning, there was no
faint ray of dawn to prelude its coming ; for it burst
suddenly into sight, and it will set just as suddenly
when the moon’s long day is over.

Well, our traveller gazes at the sky, and he per-
ceives the stars are all shining round the horizon, and
AT HOME’ IN THE MOON. 61



out of the region of the sun’s glare. It is noon-day,
but they are still in their places, like golden balls,
on a deep black ground. How intensely black the
sky looks! It makes one tremble, the sight is so
awful.

But our traveller to the moon must not be timid, or
the solitude might have a startling power perhaps.
He picks up a mass of metallic-looking stone, and he
finds it is much lighter than it looks; he hurls it
down the side of Mount Dorfal, and he sees it moves
very, very slowly, and without the slightest sound ;
why, it might be a ball of wool for all the noise it
makes. Our traveller tries to shout aloud in his sur-
prise, but finds he can raise no cry ; he is in the land
of eternal silence ; if Mount Dorfal itself were to be
hurled out of its place, and dashed down to the
ground, the fragments would fall noiselessly on the
plain below.

Oh for a cloud to temper the fierce heat of the
sun! but there are no clouds on the moon. The nim-
bus, or storm-cloud never gathers up its angry masses
to discharge them forth in tempests.

No soft evening clouds ever reflect the golden and
62 AN AERIAL VOVAGE.



crimson tints of sunset, for every ray of light vanishes
with the sun. And then night comes on; but what
a night! as long as fifteen of our nights are, and the
luckless aérial traveller has to endure an icy cold—
more intense than the most northern point of the
north pole—nor can he solace himself with a lunar
fire, for no fire will burn ; there is no air there.

However, the sun appears again, as suddenly as he
went away, and then our traveller (whose physical
condition we must suppose wonderfully changed)
comes down the mountain’s side, and determines to
investigate the plains.

What a strange scene! what configurations of the
surface ! every part broken up and rugged! Beside
him there is an immense cavity like a volcanic crater
15,800 feet deep. Our traveller flings some metallic
masses down, and they flutter about for a while, and —
then drop noiseless out of sight. There are volcanic
ashes strewed all about ; there are dark plains and
river beds, but no water in them; sea-beds, but no
sea left.

Our traveller looks about in vain for a river to

bathe in, or a spring to drink from—shere is no water
‘AT HOME’ IN THE MOON. 63



in the moon. We asks himself, ‘ Where is the water
all gone?’ but there is no reply. ;

There is ‘The Sea of Tranquillity,’ ‘The Sea of
Vapours,’ ‘The Sea of Rains,’ ‘The Ocean of Tem-
pests,’ ‘The Sea of Clouds,’ etc. ; but this is a mere
' mockery of words, for there are no vapours, no rain,
no tempests, no clouds there.

Has the ocean found an internal receptacle in
some cavernous structure in the interior of the moon ?
And has the surface of the planet grown too cold to
sustain a liquid ocean ? that thus there is no pleasant
wave on its arid and lifeless wilderness. e

Our traveller has not much trouble in climbing
over the mountain ranges, for his wonderful lightness
and buoyancy enables him to bound over rocks, and
leap over chasms.

He has found out the twin craters Isidorus and
Capella; he has examined the disturbed regions
round,—the beds of lava ; the various upheavals, the
volcanic vents, with their broken edges ; the disloca-
. tions, that in their irregular borders and openings
show some great conflicts and eruptions once took
place.
64 AN AERIAL VOYAGE.

But all activity is over now, and dull, eternal still-
ness reigns.

Our traveller looks round for forests of trees, and
shrubs, and grass, and flowers; but there is not a
bud, a blade, or even a lichen, to reward his search
—there is no vegetation there.

The lunar landscapes have no bright colour-
ing of sunshine to enliven them ; it is all one glow-
ing glare, where shadows are all of the same in-
tense blackness. No rainbow ever spans the arch of
heaven, to give the moon notice of approaching
showers, nor does any dew arise to temper the morn-
ing heat.

Day in the moon is a long glare ; lasting more than
one of our fortnights, where the eye would look in
yain for a shelter from the vivid rays of the sun ; and
night isan equally long period of ‘ death-like’ cold-
ness, where even the moisture of ice or snow might
be deemed refreshing. Let us not grumble at the
earth’s variable climates after this !

But our imaginary traveller has seen all the side
of the moon visible to us from the earth, and he
longs to plunge into the unknown districts of the
.

‘AT HOME’ IN THE MOON. 65



other half; he can get a glimpse of the eastern limb,
and there he beholds more craters and more moun-
tains, and he can at another time get a glimpse of
the western side, with the same characteristics—so
like our own world, and yet so strange and startling !
but here his curiosity must remain unsatisfied ; he
has found a limit to his powers—the other side of the
moon has never been visible to mortal eye ; it is one
of the great mysteries of a mysterious creation.

If there are any inhabitants in that unknown region
they must be very startled, when, on visiting the
brighter and barren side, they first get a glimpse of
our earth.

What a gigantic orb we must appear to them! just

fourteen times as large as the moon seems to us. If

they possessed telescopes with anything like the
power of our glasses, they mighi behold our large
cities ; they might note our fores'\s——-might watch the
deep, vast waters of the Ailantic—observe the
changes of our cloud region, an’ mark out the belt

caused by the trade winds.
“An undevout astronomer is mad,’ writes one of
our poets, and his words co: great
E


66 AN AERIAL VOVAGE.

the deeper one dives into the unbounded regions of
space, the more marvels are revealed to us.

God’s universe is full of wonders, and we can trace
in af the hand of the oze omnipotent Architect.

It is no secret to us now, of what materials the sun
is composed ; or even of what the Planetary nebulee
are formed; thanks to the spectrum analysis, the
prism, and the careful examination of patient astro-
nomers, all these things are getting familiar to us, and
new discoveries are constantly being made.

The most distant. of the celestial bodies is under-
stood now ; the exact motion of their composition is
revealed to us ; and we understand their mineralogy.
We can detect oxygen, sulphur, potassium, sodium,
iron, tin, or copper, as the case may be ; and all by
the marvellous revelations of the spectrum analysis.

Photography has also been put into action on the
moon’s behalf, and a wonderful portrait of her has
been obtained, nearly thirty-eight inches large. It
gives one a glimpse of a true lunar landscape.

Maps of the moon are made now on a very exten-
sive scale ; there is one nearly eight feet four inches

in diameter, which gives the huge mountain ranges,
‘AT HOME’ IN THE MOON. 67

the rugged craters, and the barren plains, with great
accuracy. Who can tell what future discoveries may
be made, or what observation may yet arrive at? for
there is no limit to the abyss of space. In the mean-
time we must not repine at our feeble knowledge, but
. confess, ‘ The heavens declare the glory of God ; and
the firmament sheweth his handiwork.’


CHAPTER If.

A GLIMPSE AT THE SUN.

*I stoop upon the hills, when heaven’s wide arch
Was glorious with the Sun’s returning march,’

a\UR intelligent traveller having slightly re



covered from the effects of his sojourn in
the moon, is again despatched on his
imaginary aérial journey, and this time, the object of
his investigation is the Sun.

But where is he to look for this glorious source of
light? We once firmly believed our Solar system
was the grand central point in the universe, and that
all the rest, the planets, the stars, and the comets,
were but subordinate orbs. But alas! the discoveries

of wise men teach us our proper position among
63
A GLIMPSE AT THE SUN. 69



other facts, and the more we learn, the more the
knowledge of our insignificance increases, and even
the glory of our Sun is diminished, when we compare
it with other heavenly bodies.
‘Have you ever remarked the milky way? that pale
‘light that extends across the skies, and divides the
celestial vault into two portions? Our traveller must
guide his aérial train so as to find the centre of this
vast body of stars. His eye vainly tries to reckon
the number of the orbs that form the milky way, for
after he has counted 18,000,000 stars, he finds there
are still more and more.

In the very centre of this body of stars he finds
our Solar system; there it lies, with its Sun, its
planets, and moons, and our Sun is found to be only
one of the stars of the second or third magnitude.

Still its immensity bewilders us, for it is six hundred
times the united volume of all the planets and their
satellites put together.

The aérial train going at the speed of thirty miles
an hour will take three hundred and forty-seven years
to reach the sun, and even when it has travelled
that distance, there will be some difficulty, for there
are three atmospheres, or gaseous envelopes, to be
70 AN AERIAL VOYAGE.

traversed, before the solid surface of the Sun is
reached.

The first atmosphere is transparent, and surrounds
the others ; it is piled up in strata in some places, and
grows less dense when furthest away from the Sun.

The next atmosphere is a peculiarly trying one to
our traveller’s nerves, for it is formed of gas, for ever
luminous, or incandescent, and its outer stratum is
called the photosphere.

The third atmosphere is opaque and cloudy, and
doubtless is a great protection to the dark spherical
body which forms the solid globe of the Sun.

How else could it bear a warmth three hundred
thousand times more intense than the fiercest glow
that ever shines on our earth? There are limits to our
imagination, and we can hardly conceive the intensity
of sucha heat. Unless this third atmosphere is very
dense indeed, absorbing the light, and serving as a
non-conductor to the frightful temperature, our
traveller will have no chance of setting his foot on
the surface of the Sun; he would be scorched to
powder in an instant; no organized being could be
capable of living or breathing in such a climate.
On the earth, we have only a faint idea of the Sun’s
A GLIMPSE AT THE SUN. 7X



heat, even in the Tropics. The rays pour down on
us, affecting every object with their power, from the
rugged cliffs and high mountains, to the delicate
flower, which owes every’ tint to sunlight, but a
remedy is provided that prevents these rays from
being destructive. Our night comes on, and the
effect of the broad glare of day passes off; all things
are restored to their original condition. The dew
distils, watery vapour mingles with our atmosphere,
and in the coolness of night, covers every tree and
plant with a soft moisture.

There is no night in the sun—nothing to screen the
unceasing glare.

Perhaps some people will say, our traveller will not
lose much by being unable to tread the dark body of
the sun, for he would not find much there worth
having ; he would not find any gold and silver there,
and some of us, alas! would see but little beauty
in any orb where these precious metals are
unknown.

The spectrum analysis reveals to us that there is
sodium, iron, nickel, copper, zinc, and barium in the
Sun, but it has not been able to detect the faintest

appearance of gold or even silver, and this wonderful
42 | AN AERIAL VOYAGE.



spectrum is as true in its discoveries as if some of
the solid constituents of the sun’s body. were placed
in a chemical crucible.

Our traveller can watch the numerous sun-spots,
of which, sometimes, more than eighty are visible ; he
will see they are moveable, and are found more in
the zones than the equator. He will tell us, these
spots are only rents or breaks in the luminous second
atmosphere, that there are vertical currents for ever
ascending and descending, that there are cloud-like
masses for ever changing, and passing to and fro, and
giving us, amid their perpetual surges, faint glimpses
of the dark, solid nucleus of the sun’s body. Whata
region of rushing and whirling it must be! What
tumult and agitation for ever disturbing and tearing
the atmosphere! We can dream of volcanic agency,
of craters pouring out their terrible eruptions on the
sun’s surface, and feel awe and wonder at the wild
horror and devastation these marvellous phenomena
must produce.

Our traveller can notice also the rose-coloured
clouds, the solar aurorze, and the minute dark eruptive-
looking spots called pores, or rice grains, by our

. astronomers, but he will be compelled to acknowledge
A GLIMPSE AT THE SUN. 73



there is very much mystery still shrouding up the
history of our sun, and perhaps it is well this
should be the case. It might not be good for us to
gaze too familiarly on its majesty; we cannot even
look at its natural glare with our naked eye; we
cannot endure its full light, and are forced to screen
ourselves before we can glance at its brightness.

What a wretched world this would be, had not the
Divine word gone forth, ‘ Let there be light!’ There
would be no colour, for the sun brings out the
various hues of birds and flowers ; there would be no
wind, for the sun’s rays cause the gentle breeze, as
well as the destructive storm; there would be no
rain, for the sun draws up the vapour from sea and
river, which afterwards condenses, and falls in the
form of fertilizing showers ; there would be no vege-
tation, for heat causes the seed to germinate, and
there would be no joy—nothing but gloom and dark-
‘ness.

Sun-light does not come with the same power from
all parts of the disc ; the centre is more luminous than
the edges are ; the brightness diminishes gradually
towards the limb, and tells us the atmosphere of the
sun surrounds it to a great distance, and in this
74 AN AERIAL VOYAGE.



atmosphere the bright rose-coloured clouds float, that
are watched with such intense interest during an
eclipse of the sun.

Every beam of sun-light contains three kinds of
rays, the light rays, the heat rays, and the chemical
rays. The latter have been pressed into the service
of Photography, and produce marvellous pictures,
without the aid of any human brush or pencil.

These chemical rays, that decompose preparations
of silver so strangely, and depict the most minute
details of scenery, are yet more important in anotlrer
way, for with their hidden, yet potent influence, they
give health and vigour to the whole vegetable world ;
without them the tallest trees would soon wither and
die.

Thus, while we gaze into the realms of space, we
find much to excite our wonder and admiration, and
at the same time we feel our own littleness, for after
we have exhausted all our knowledge, and all our
calculations, we find there are mysteries beyond us
that we shall never fathom, mysteries that the
Infinite Maker of all has chosen to hide from our
finite sight.

But the more we contemplate the subject, the
A GLIMPSE AT THE. SUN. 15





greater our interest in it becomes, and constant, fresh
discoveries encourage us to proceed in the beautiful
study ; there are many heights yet to be explored, and
results yet to be calculated on.

The influence of the sun on our earth is continued
and varied ; the whole surface of the globe is affected
by it, and he even keeps us in our proper orbit. The
sun’s action, combined with the moon, regulates our
tides. But we have wandered away from our
traveller, with ‘his imaginary aérial train, and he will
now help us to get a glimpse at the Planets, that
revolve at various distances round the grand central

aun,


CHAPTER III.

A GLIMPSE AT THE PLANETS,

‘ THERE is no light in earth or heaven
But the cold light of stars ;
And the first watch of night is given
To the red planet Mars.’

HE aérial train would take more than two
hundred and fifty-nine years to reach



Mercury, which is the planet that basks
most in the glory of the sun’s rays.

Very few of us have ever seen Mercury, for it is
rarely visible to the naked eye ; sometimes, after the
setting of the sun, its bright twinkling light may be
discerned, but it is often lost in the brilliancy of the
solar light.

At times Mercury may be observed passing over
76
A GLIMPSE AT THE PLANETS. 3



the disc of the sun itself, and then it looks like a
minute black ball.

If there are any inhabitants in this planet, they
must be able to bear an immense degree of heat and
light, for they have seven times as much as we have
on our earth. They have the same length of day and
night, they have their torrid zones, but no temperate
ones, and they have lofty mountains and shady valleys
as we have. Our traveller sees it is only a third of
the diameter of the Earth ; it is a third of the Earth’s
distance from the sun, and travels on in its orbit at
the rate of twenty-eight miles a second.

The beautiful planet Venus comes next; that
‘shepherd’s star,’ with its soft brilliant light, so
intense at times, that it casts shadows as the moon
does. We all love ‘Venus,’ and call it sometimes
‘the morning’ and sometimes ‘the evening star.’
Our traveller can breathe on its surface, for there is
an atmosphere of considerable height, and its climate,
though much hotter than ours, is bearable. The solid
ground is found to be uneven, and there are high
mountains, far exceeding the mountains of this world
in height. The sun looks twice as large to Venus as

it does to us, and pours down its brilliant light with
78 AN AERIAL VOYAGE.



double the power. Venus travels at the rate of twenty-
two miles a second; not as quickly as Mars, but
much faster than our earth, which only moves through
space at the rate of nineteen miles a second.

Taking his leave of the ‘ Vesper star,’ our traveller
plunges ‘into another region beyond the orbit of the
Earth, and takes a glimpse at Mars, the ‘red planet.’
Longfellow says—

* Within my breast there is no light
But the cold light of stars ;
I give the first watch of the night
To the red planet Mars.

‘The star of the unconquered will,
He rises in my breast,
Serene, and resolute, and still,
And calm, and self-possessed.’

Mars is our nearest neighbour, so our traveller wil
have a comparatively short distance to journey ; it is
only half the size of the Earth, but much larger than
Mercury. The round disc of the planet is spread
over with numbers of spots, some red, some blue ; and
at the north and south poles of Mars there are two
extremely white spots, and with a little imagination
‘these appearances can be accounted for. There are
variable masses that are constantly observed passing
A GLIMPSE AT THE PLANETS. 79



over the disc of the planet; these are the cloudy
masses in the atmosphere of Mars, which float above
the level of land and sea. The reddish and bright
spots are easily supposed to be the solid parts of vast
continents ; the bluish or greyish spots readily resolve
themselves into the deep blue seas and oceans; and
the intense white spots are most probably the polar
snows. ‘These white lights are seen to expand and
diminish alternately, according to the changes of
season. Thus we feel a kind of companionship and
sympathy with Mars, as we watch the formation of-
her ice plains, and note the gradual thaw which marks
her summer season. It cannot be a very genial
climate though, for there are storms and hurricanes
there, that we in our more favoured planet can hardly
dream of, so violent and terrible is their power ; and
there must be dreadful inundations there also, from
the rapid melting of such enormous masses of snow
and ice. Mars has a longer day than ours, nearly
an hour longer, but its nights must be very dark, for
there is no moon to shed its silvery light ; so unless
there are some splendid aurore, there is nothing but

the fainter brightness of the stars to cheer its long
hours of darkness—
80 AN AERIAL VOVAGE.



‘ Naught but stars so still and saint-like,
Looking downward from the skies.’

Mars is less fortunate than Venus in that respect,
for she has Mercury, by its brightness and near
vicinity, and the Earth by her magnitude, to render
their efficient services as a couple of moons.

Passing rapidly through the eighty-four telescope
planets that lie between Mars and Jupiter, our
traveller pauses before the huge mass of the latter
orb—the great, colossal Jupiter! It is nearly eleven
times as large as our earth, and revolves on its own
axis with twenty-seven times greater speed, so that its
day is only about five hours long, and its night is the
same length. But what wonderful nights they must
be with four moons, instead of one, to enliven the
hours of darkness! The inhabitants of Jupiter (if
there are any) must have a constant source of interest
in watching the eclipses of these moons ; sometimes
Io is eclipsed, then Europa, then Ganymede, then
Callisto ; it must give an ever varying subject for
study. Our sailors are in the habit of watching these’
eclipses also, and thereby determining by calculation
the longitude of any place on the earth’s surface.
Though Jupiter rushes through space with a rapidity
A GLIMPSE AT THE PLANETS. 81

eighty times faster than a cannon-ball, it takes twelve
years to journey round the sun, so that the year of
Jupiter is twelve times as long as ours. We can
fancy what a region of perpetual summer there must
be at the equator, what a never-ending spring there
must be in the temperate regions, and what a wonder-
ful climate there must be at the north and south
poles, where the sun remains visible for six years ata
time, and then never rises above the horizon for six
other years. We can hardly imagine a region so icy
and dark.

Jupiter gains only a very small portion of the sun’s
light and heat, infinitely less than we are favoured
with, and we can suppose the whole economy of the
planet must suffer from the lack of warmth, unless
there are physical conditions to compensate for it.
There may be an atmospheric envelope surrounding
Jupiter that is capable of allowing the entrance of the
sun’s rays to the surface of the planet, and yet of such
a nature that it may prevent their escape. With such
a protection there may be a pleasant temperature, and
animal and vegetable life could flourish.

Our traveller will observe various belts or patches
on the surface of Jupiter, which encircle the planet

F
82 AN AERIAL VOYAGE.

like minor equators ; some of them are greyish, others
are brighter, even delicate rose colour ; these may be
clouds floating in the atmosphere, and the rapid rate
at which the planet rushes through space may give
them this belt-like parallelism. Doubtless there are
great trade winds at the equator, or currents of air,
that in their uniform motion resemble our trade winds.

Our aérial traveller will pause in wonder when he
beholds the next planet, Saturn; for it is the most
brilliantly attended of all. No less than egft moons
circle round it, and there is a marvellous system of
rings that surrounds the planet at some distance from
the equator.

I suppose we can hardly imagine anything more
gorgeous than the appearance of the heavens at mid-
night from the surface of Saturn. Imagine eight
moons for ever changing ; some at the full, some new,
some at the quarters. Imagine three brilliant rings
nearly ten thousand miles broad, glistening with
streams of golden light—formed, perhaps, of satellites -
more numerous than the sands of the sea; but we
can hardly realize such a wondrous phenomenon !
and must be content with what astronomers tell us of
the glory.
A GLIMPSE AT THE PLANETS. — 83



Saturn’s moons have been named, Minas, Encela-
dus, Tethys, Dione, Rhea, Titan, Hyperion, and
Japetus ; and they revolve rapidly round the planet
at various distances.

Saturn has need of something to compensate for its
long distance from the sun, for it is nine and a half
times further away from it than we are, and the
sun appears to it one hundred times less than it
does to us; its heat and light must therefore be very
much less.

The year of Saturn is nearly thirty times as long
as ours, so that each season is about seven years long,
and there are nearly fifteen years between spring and
autumn. What an effect this must have on vegeta
tion !—flowers must take seven years to come to
perfection, and the harvest the same period to ripen.

The poles of Saturn must be frightfully dreary, for
there the sun is absent for fifteen years, and the
glorious arches are never visible to those regions.
The ice and snow is of such an extent and quantity
that its whitish glow is even visible to us, and during
the fifteen years the sun never sets it does not seem
to thaw the huge masses; no doubt the inhabitants
(if there are any) avoid these desolate places, and
84 AN AERIAL VOYAGE.





live’ near the equator, where they can behold the
magnificent rings spanning the sky from horizon to
horizon, and holding its invariable situation among
the stars and moons.

After this glimpse of the glorious Saturn, our
traveller will have little inclination to linger near
Uranus, which, though eighty-two times larger than
our earth, is scarcely visible to the naked eye.

Its long and weary year would make eighty-four of
our years, and the light and heat it receives from the
sun is three hundred and seventy times less than
ours. One feels glad it has four moons to cheer and
enliven its nights a little, but I don’t think any of us
would have any great ambition to be an inhabitant of
the planet Uranus, or Herschel.

Nor will the glimpse of Neptune from the aérial
train be much more cheerful, for it is thirty times
further away from the sun than we are, and its year
is as long as one hundred and sixty five of ours; in
fact, we have only seen it on a ninth part of its orbit
yet, for it was only discovered a few years ago.

The heat and light received from the sun by this
forlorn planet is a thousand times less than ours ; we
can only hope there is some compensating power
A GLIMPSE AT THE PLANETS. 85

of warmth in the atmosphere, or the cold would be
terrible. It has only one moon, which takes nearly
six days to revolve round it. Our traveller bids fare-
well to this remote orb, and prepares for a wider
range ‘through space.”


CHAPTER IV.

A JOURNEY THROUGH SPACE

‘Ou, holy night ! from thee I learn to bear
‘What man has borne before !

Thou layest thy finger on the lips of care,
And we complain no more.’

UR traveller found the sun and all his
numerous train in the centre of the Milky
Way, and then the next thought was, that

as the sun himself travels through space with his



planets and moons, he also must have a centre to
move round. Modern opinion says this centre of
gravitation is Alcyone, the brightest star of the group
called the Pleiades, that our solar system is irresist-
ibly drawn round it at the rate of 420,000 miles a
day in an orbit which will not be completed for many

thousand years. This is only a modern discovery, but
86
A JOURNEY THROUGH SPACE. 87

the truth was told to us ages ago, in the most ancient
of books. God answers Job out of the whirlwind,
and says, ‘Canst thou bind the sweet influences of
Pleiades ?’ It has taken us all these years to learn
that the ‘sweet influences’ alluded to is the tre-
mendous force that so noiselessly and harmoniously
attracts our solar system, and keeps it for ever
whirling round the Pleiades, as round a centre point.

These stars form a group of seven, visible to the
naked eye, but our traveller sees there are really nine
or ten times that number. These seven stars are
called after the seven daughters of Atlas, who were
supposed to have been turned into stars after their
death ; six of them were married to gods, and there-
fore shine in full splendour ; but poor ‘ Merope’ only
married the king of Corinth, so her star is very dim,
and has been called the ‘lost Pleiad.’

‘Canst thou loose the bands of Ovion?’ is the
other question in the verse before alluded to, and for
a moment our traveller gazes at that splendid con-
stellation. There are seventeen stars visible to the
naked eye, and seventy-eight in reality, and the
Greeks believed it to resemble the outline of a human
figure, so they called it ‘Orion’ after a noted hunter.
88 AN AERIAL VOVAGE,

The band, or belt, is formed by the three bright stars
we all know so well; they never change their relative
position to each other; no hand, and no power has
been found to loose them; they shine now as they
did in those distant days when Job listened to the
question. Among all the changes that have taken
place, these stars have remained unmoved.

There is a curious nebula in the constellation of
Orion, which looks to us like a misty light, but
though it seems among the ‘seven sisters,’ in reality
it is far off, even in the remotest point human sight
is capable of observing in the profound depths of
space. Thousands of glasses have been turned to
this nebula, and puzzling theories were formed about
it; some said it was ‘the very germ of matter, from
which worlds were made,’ for though the light was
brilliant, there were no traces of definite orbs; then
through Lord Rosse’s telescope this nebula seemed
to resolve itself into shining particles as numerous
and close together as the sands on the shore. ‘They
are worlds without number,’ was the cry then, but
the spectrum-analysis again comes to the rescue, and
tells us the nebula of Orion is after all only a collec-
tion of wonderful gaseous bodies ; there is nitrogen,
A JOURNEY THROUGH SPACE. 89

barium, and hydrogen in their composition, but they
have no solid orbs.

More than five thousand nebule have been dis-
covered. If we wish to gaze into unfathomable
numbers of stars, we must turn to the wonderful
Milky Way, for ¢Aere the suns are beyond counting,
they are like luminous sands; ‘there are no limits to
this star zone.’

The ‘ Magellanic clouds,’ which are only seen in
southern countries, are also formed of swarms of
stars; the head grows bewildered as it pores over
the probable numbers.

Our traveller finds it difficult to trace the course of
the comets, for while the planets always move from
right to left, or from west to east, the comets traverse
the heavens in every direction. A few of them move
in closed orbits, and go round the sun; we can pre-
dict the very day and hour of their return ; but other
comets move on in such infinite curves, that having
once perhaps formed part of our solar system, they
go away for ever. Some of the comets we observe
may be making their first visit to the part of the
heavens we inhabit, and may never come again, or
they may appear centuries hence, when the world
go AN AERIAL VOYAGE.





will have grown very old. The wonderful comet that
appeared in 1811 will not be seen again for thirty
centuries. In 1843 a still brighter comet astonished
the world ; it could be seen even in broad daylight,
and was very near the sun. Two hundred comets
have been observed during the last three centuries,
more or less bright, but people do not regard them
with such terror now as they did in former days.
Only a hundred years ago it was thought they were
bodies which might run into our earth, or any other
planet, and cause an immense destruction, but these
fears have vanished, for the probability of such a col-
lision is very slight. The tail of the comet is only a
phosphorescent mist; we passed through one, Z¢ zs
said, in 1861, and found no inconvenience from it.
Some comets have a very dense nucleus, others seem
to have a gaseous nebulosity, that is semi-transparent,
and stars can be seen through it.

The tail of the comet is always turned away from
the sun, and increases in length and volume the
nearer the nucleus approaches that orb, so that it is
supposed to be formed by some repulsive force acting
on it from the sun, which may drive particles from
the nucleus into space; these flying off in a great
A JOURNEY THROUGH SPACE. 91

volume, may form the long train that sometimes ac-
companies comets on their circuits.

The tail of Donati’s comet in 1858 was about
50,000,000 miles in length, and the tail of the comet
of 1843 was three times as long. The latter comet
| must have been able to bear a great deal of heat;
‘ it was so near the sun that its temperature is consi-
dered to have been 2000 times greater than that
of a red-hot cannon ball.

Though we no longer dread a collision with one of
these curious celestial bodies, yet a very close con-
tact with one might be peculiarly inconvenient, for
if the nucleus should prove to be incandescent, the
temperature of our atmosphere would be raised to a
dangerous degree. We can only zmagine what a
degree of heat such a contact might cause.

Although the starry heavens is a magnificent sight,
and we fancy we can see boundless numbers of
twinkling orbs, our unaided vision is very limited,
—we can only see about three thousand at once; of
course the telescope alters the range of our observa-
tions, and with a powerful instrument we can gaze into
unfathomed depths, and count such thousands of

stars, that our heads grow weary with their numbers.
92 AN AERIAL VOYAGE.

A great part of the heavens will never be seen
from our part of the world ; some constellations never
come within our view. We must visit southern lati-
tudes to behold the ‘southern cross,’ ‘the ship,
‘ the Phenix,’ the ‘ Magellanic clouds,’ and a complete
zone of other stars.

Sirius is the brightest of all the stars, and is sup-
posed to bé twelve times as large as our sun. The
Egyptians called it after their river Nile, from ‘Siris,’
one of its names, and this star was watched for with
much interest by them, as its heliacal rising gave
warning that the annual overflow of that river was
about to commence. Sirius is sometimes called by
the less euphonious name of the ‘ dog-star.’

Leaving the stars, whose wonders fill us with
amazement and admiration, our traveller turns his
aérial train back to earth; but ere he lands on its
surface, he pauses to note the meteoric rings which
are watched for with so much interest. On star-light
nights we may often count five or six shooting stars
as we take our homeward walk, but at the periodic
visits of these strange visitants, we must give up
counting, for their number is “gion.

The roth of August is one of these periodical
A JOURNEY THROUGH SPACE. 93

seasons ; they have been noticed then by hundreds in
an hour. The Irish have a pretty legend about these
falling stars ; they appear on the feast of St. Lawrence
eve, and the people call them the ‘ burning tears of
the holy martyr.’ These August showers seem to
come from a radiant point in the heavens called
Gamma, in the constellation Perseus.

The November shower of gold is still more nume-
rous and brilliant ; thousands of shooting stars appear
in one hour; some are small, some are as large as
Venus, and have luminous trains behind them;
they look like a magnificent display of celestial fire-
works, set off from a great height ; and_few who have
observed the phenomenon in its full splendour will
ever forget the impression it caused. Solemn ! awful!
and grand! we heard it called. Mu, in the con-
stellation of the Lion, is the radiant point of the
November showers.

Astronomers believe there are rings composed of
myriads of these bodies, which circulate in orbits
round the sun ; they call them ‘ meteoric rings,’ and
believe there are several of them moving in regular
circles. Sometimes our earth in its journey breaks

into one of these rings, and the shooting stars gain
94 AN AERIAL VOYAGE.

heat and light from contact with our atmosphere, and
flash for a while on our sight, looking like fire-balls,
shooting stars, or meteors.

Some astronomers even believe the sudden cold-
ness often observed in the months of February and
May is caused by meteoric rings passing between us
and the sun. These bodies descend nearly to the
summits of our high mountains sometimes, and travel
at a very rapid rate, some say thirty-five miles a
second , this fearful speed causes their incandescence
when they get within the range of our atmosphere,
and most of them proceed on their journey through
space after they have given us a glimpse of their
brightness.

Some of them, however, turn to vapour, and some
prove rather more troublesome visitors, for, being
acted on by the power of gravitation, they fall to the
surface of our earth, and sometimes do great damage.

Bolides are round bodies of the same nature ; they
also make a sudden appearance in our atmosphere,
sometimes lighting up the landscape with a blue light
more brilliant than moonlight, sometimes they ex-
plode with a loud noise that might be mistaken for
celestial artillery. They often leave a glowing stream
A JOURNEY THROUGH SPACE. 95



of light behind them. Bolides are rather rare ; not
more than a thousand have ever been recorded.
Many instances of the fall of meteorites are related ;
they are always stony and metallic masses, and
seem at one time to have been in a state of fusion ;
perhaps those who imagine nebula to be the ‘germ
of which worlds are made,’ may imagine meteoric
masses to be the burnt ruins of destroyed worlds.

But the deeper we go into the subject, the more
cause there is for admiration; every star in the
heavens, every comet, and every other celestial body
is in motion ; but amid all the ceaseless whirl, the
grand, fixed laws remain, for ever pointing out the
glorious architect who has formed, and who regulates
all. Were his directing power for one moment to
cease, we may faintly imagine what would be the crash
and ruin. We return once more to the ancient book
that solves so many problems, if rightly read, and
while confessing our own insignificance, we repeat,
‘The heavens declare the glory of God, and the fir-
mament sheweth dis handy-work.’

GOLD: or Ivon’s Question.



GOLD: OR IVON’S QUESTION.



N old man called Ivon lived in a ionely




castle in Thoughtland, and he was so com-
pletely occupied with his books and papers
that he knew but little of what was going on in the
country round. One day a message came to him
from the King’s palace, and he was told to find an
answer to a certain question ; he was to search far
and near till a true solution could be found. The
question might not seem a difficult one, for it only
consisted of seven words : it was this :—‘ Does gold
cause most good, or evil 9’

The old man knew very little about it himself, for

gold had no particular attraction for him. The simple
99
100 GOLD: OR IVON’S QUESTION.

fruits of the earth sufficed for his food, and he had no
desire for rare viands. His dress was always plain
and neat, made with no reference to the changing
fashions of the day; so he had no wish for rich o1
. expensive attire.

Therefore gold was not much to him, but acting
at once on the request of his king, he set out on
his travels to seek an answer to the important ques-
tion.

There would have been no use in his going to the
sun, or the moon, or the stars, to search for gold, for
the wisest astronomers tell us there is none to be
found in either of those orbs; you may find nickel,
or copper, or zinc, or even iron there, but gold is un-
known in these spheres. Clearly, then, his research
must be made on this earth ; so Ivon set out for a
mountainous district in Thoughtland, where gold
most abounds.

In this country there were immense forests, so
dense that neither man nor animals could penetrate
them without the help of fires to burn down some of
the trees, or hatchets to cut them away. Steep moun-
tains and wide rivers were constantly impeding his
GOLD: OR IVON’S QUESTION. 101



progress ; wild beasts howled at him, and parrots and
monkeys shrieked at him as he went along.

But Ivon went on, and at last he found the mines
where they dug up the metal. It did not look very
brilliant at first, for it was mixed up with sand and
other impurities, but swarthy men pounded the ore,
and washed it carefully in a stream of water. Then
they mixed it with quicksilver to free it still more from
dirt ; then the grains were boiled with acid till every-
thing mean or base was washed away, and the per-
fectly pure gold was left behind.

It was very pretty then, and Ivon looked with much
interest on the busy crowds who were so hard at work
searching for and preparing the metal. It seemed
harmless enough in this state, and I suppose, had it
remained thus, men would not have valued it more
than any other substance ; but a great change took
place in it before long. It was carried to a place
called the ‘ Mint.’ The ingots of gold were carefully
weighed, then melted, cast into moulds, and called
money.

Here the evil began, and poor Ivon soon found he
had enough to do in tracing it out.
102 GOLD: OR IVON’S QUESTION.

He saw one man who rose up very early in the
morning and toiled on far in the night for the sake of
gathering up as much of this money as possible. He
saw that this man forgot there was anything else in
Thoughtland worth having ; he forgot his friends ; he
forgot the beauties nature spread out to him on
every side; he forgot his health ; and he forgot his
own soul.

When he had piled up a very large heap, Death
came to him, and summoned him away; so he had
to throw down nis money bags and answer the call;
and Ivon saw him go out with Death, naked and
trembling.

‘Was gold a good to this man?’ asked Ivon, and
the reply was, ‘ What shall it profit a man if he gain
the whole world, and lose his own soul?’

This rich man left two heirs ; one of them grasped
his share of money and said, ‘I will not hoard it up
as this miser has done ;’ so he built a large house,
and filled it with costly furniture, and splendid paint-
ings. He invited numbers of gay friends to his
banquets, and regaled them with the richest wine
and the most delicious food. He had music and
dancing every night, and all his guests flattered him
GOLD: OR IVON’S QUESTION. 103

and crowded round him. At last the money was all
spent, and then Ivon saw that this man’s friends fled
from him, and called him extravagant, and a spend-
thrift. In vain he entreated them to help him ; they
fastened their purses still closer, and scorned him for
being poor, so that he wandered about in sorrow and
hardship, and was glad when at last Death came to
his rescue.

‘Was gold a good to this man?’ asked Ivon, and
the answer was, ‘ For all these things God will bring
him into judgment.’

Now the other heir to the miser’s money acted
very differently. He was glad to be rich, because
he wished to help those who were poor and needy.
So he went about seeking those who were unhappy .
and miserable; if he heard of any case of great
distress he was sure to be on the spot doing his
very -best to help and relieve. Many a poor broken-
down man had his debts paid, and his home restored
to him again. Many a poor woman tad warm clothes
given her to keep out the rigour of the cold wintry
wind. Many a hungry child was fed, and taught, and
made happy by this man who was heir to the old

miser. But the strangest thing of all was, that there
104 GOLD: OR LVON’S QUESTION.

was plenty of money for his own family also ; with
all his generosity, he was prudent and careful, so
that, when in his old age he was called away by
Death, there was still enough to make his children
independent.

Ivon did not ask if gold was a good to him, for
he heard a soft voice saying, ‘Inasmuch as ye have
done it unto one of the least of these my brethren,
ye have done it unto me.’

Then Ivon went to a large city, and there his heart
was made very sad. He saw crowds of people toil-
ing for money ; each trying who could get the most,
they fought with each other, they trod each other
down, they spoke ill of, and hated one another.
Oh, what a terrible strife there was! Night and day,
day and night, this was their occupation; each try-
ing who could heap up the most riches. And when
the money was gained it was seldom made a good
use of. Sometimes it was hoarded up, and some-
times spent in pride and ostentation.

Ivon saw one man rob another for the sake of his
money ; he saw another take away his friend’s good
name ; he saw another lose his own good name, and
GOLD: OR IVON’S QUESTION. 105



then, worse than all, he saw a youth kill a poor old
man, for the sake of getting his gold.

If people had their purses well filled, they were
treated with respect, even though their hearts were
bad and their manners vile. If people were poor,
they were neglected, and passed by with contempt,
even though they were amiable and good.

Oh, what vice! oh, what misery! what untruths,
what deceits, money caused. Ivon spent much time
going up and down the large city, seeing all this, and
the more he saw the sadder his heart grew.

True, there were many good things to be had for
money ; for very fine articles were to be purchased
with it, beautiful houses, fine pictures, splendid orna-
ments, rare books, all that was costly in art and
science ; and in moderation there was no harm in
enjoying these things. But moderation was very
rare, and people who were not burdened with much
wealth escaped many dangers.

Poor Ivon was very much puzzled. He saw that
gold was the current coin of Thoughtland, and that
very much good, and very much evil, could be done
with it. He saw the use of it was good, but the abuse
of it was very eve, He saw a degree of carefulness
106 GOLD: OR LVON’S QUESTION.



was needed with it ; but he heard a voice say, ‘Set
not your heart on riches.’ He saw people suffer
bitterly from the want of money, and he saw other
people ruin body and soul by possessing it.

I don’t think he could ever have answered the
question had he not remembered the words, ‘That
a.rtich man shall hardly enter into the kingdom of
heaven,’ and he recollected too that ‘The love of
money is the root of all evil,’ so he gave in his answer
at last, and he was very sad as he did so. What do
you think his answer was? I dare not tell you, for
the parchment was carefully sealed, but this much
I know, that Ivon’s question is one that each must
answer for himself It will be asked us one day, and
we shall have to say whether our gold has done
most good or evil to us.

We shall have to account for the money given into
our charge. Some have more intrusted to their care
than others, but the best of us are only stewards, and
we shall have to say how it has been spent: how
much in luxury, how much in actual necessity, how
much in waste, and how much in helping those who

want it more than we do.
GOLD: OR IVON’S QUESTION. 107



We shall have to answer all these questions, when
the great King calls in our accounts ; so you see we
have a personal interest in Ivon’s question.

Oh may we so use our share of gold, that at last
we may hear the words, ‘Well done, good and faith-
ful servant!’ and then our perishing money will be
changed into true and immortal treasures,

THE THREE SCREENS,



THE -THREE>SCREENS.

ANE day the heralds in Thoughtland pro-
claimed that the king required a flower-




screen painted for his beautiful palace.

There was great excitement at the news, for it was
well known the great king required not only beauty
of design in the work, but he insisted that those em-
ployed in doing it should be influenced by right
thoughts, and pure motives.

At last the lot fell on three young girls, who were
singled out from the rest. The eldest was fourteen
years old; she was tall, dark-haired, and called
Sidelle.

‘Mine shall be the most beautiful screen,’ cried

she, clapping her hands with delight ; ‘all the people
1
112 THE THREE SCREENS.

shall say it is fit for the king’s palace.’ But she would
not tell what pattern she had fixed on, just then.
. Ninette, another of the girls, was a month younger,
but she did not seem at all in such delight, when she
heard she was selected to compete in painting the
screen. She much preferred wandering about the
luxuriant woods, and listening to the musical ripple
of the cool streams, as they found their way over the
smooth pebbles. Sometimes she would even fall
asleep while listening thus, and she made her couch
of one of the mossy banks so numerous in Thought-
land,

“It will be time enough to think of this screen by
and bye,’ said she. ‘There is a whole month given

?

us to paint it in, so I need not hurry ;’ and she
stretched herself again on her velvety couch, and was
soon sound asleep.

Lutine was the name of the third young girl, and
she was very busy on the day the news was brought
to her. She did not live in the large towns of
Thoughtland, but her home was in a small village.
Her mother was quite blind, and poor Lutine had
six small brothers and sisters to take care of.

She was very busy that morning, and those who
THE THREE SCREENS. 113

have so many little children to wash and dress, and
to bake for, will quite understand what that means.

Oh, how’ glad Lutine was, when she heard she
was selected to be one of the three who were to
compete in painting the king’s screen! Her only
grief was, that she feared she could not do it well
enough, for she thought no work of hers could
possibly be fit to adorn the royal palace.

Sidelle soon began. her screen; it was of lovely
white satin, of the finest, closest texture. There was
to be golden fringe and golden tassels. She went
~ to a garden where there was a very famous plant
growing ; it had taken I know not how many years
to come to perfection, and now it was sending forth
a most splendid show of flowers. The stem was
forty feet high, and there were sixteen thousand
curious blossoms, of a pale, yellowish green colour ;
very rare indeed was this pyramid of bloom, for
people said the plant had put forth all its strength to
produce it, and that when the blossoms fell off, the
poor ag4ve would never be so splendid again.

The flowering of the agdve made a great sensation
in Thoughtland; crowds of people came to see it.

On all sides were groups of the gayest inhabitants
H
114 THE THREE SCREENS.

dressed in their most costly apparel ; feathers waved
and silks rustled as the people walked to and fro,
talking and laughing with each other. Beautiful strains
of music floated along, so that Sidelle, as she sat be-
fore the grand flower, painting it off on her white
satin screen, did not feel at all lonely.

In fact, it was a great satisfaction to her to notice
that when the people stood to admire the flower, they
stood to admire her also. ‘Look!’ they said, ‘look
at Sidelle! she has been selected to paint the screen
for the king’s palace; how good and wise she must
be! Oh what a great work she is doing! How
majestic! how magnificent! she is truly one of the
king’s very best workers,’

Sidelle was very proud when she heard this, and
her face flushed and her eyes sparkled as she noticed
how loud their praises were. She even began to
think she had been chosen for the work from some
peculiar merit of her own ; her heart was filled with
self-satisfaction, so that although she had drawn out
the grand outline of the plant correctly, she made
many blemishes in the more minute details ; there were
false shadows, and ugly spots on some of the delicate
petals of the flowers. Her eyes very often wandered
THE THREE SCREENS. II5



from her white satin screen to the showy colours, and
the gay dresses the ladies wore, so that the yellowish-
green flowers looked poor when she turned to them
again; and she listened so frequently to the loud
strains of the drums and trumpets, that she could
hardly distinguish the soft voice in her heart that
whispered how vain and paltry these enjoyments were
when compared to the great work she had been
selected to do for the palace of the king.

We will now return to Lutine, who was sorely
puzzled how to get time to paint her screen. Her
mother was both poor and blind, so that all day long
the poor child was hard at work earning food for the
little ones.

She also had to keep the cottage tidy, and to lead
her parent about sometimes, but all these occupations
did not hinder her from thinking perpetually about the
beautiful painting she had been selected to prepare.

‘I will seek for some lovely flower,’ said she ; ‘it
must be both rare and perfect.’ So that evening,
when her brothers and sisters were all fast asleep in
bed, she ran into a neighbouring garden to choose
one to copy; but alas! she found the beautiful
flowers had all gone to sleep also.
116 THE THREE SCREENS.

Every night when the light of the sun is gone they
fold up their delicate petals, and prepare to pass the
long hours of darkness in complete repose.

The bright poppy had closed its two inner leaves
over its heart, while the two outer ones had raised
themselves upright like a pair of sentinels to keep
away intruders. All the golden marigolds and
daisies had gathered up the delicate points of their
petals together, and had formed little tents with them,
so that no wandering fly or worm could intrude inside.
No chill night dews or cold wind could disturb them
now, they were so well defended by their closed
leaves. Lutine in despair ran over to the beds of
convolvulus, but there also not a single bright
‘blossom was visible ; they were all neatly folded up,
and nodding on their stalks.

Lutine had often heard of some curious flowers
that grew a long way off, that were so delicate and
fragile that they could not meet the bright rays of the
sun without withering, so they were in the habit of
waiting till long after sunset, and then, when the air
was cool, and the stars were shining out bright and
clear in the sky, these lovely flowers would softly open
one petal, then another, till they shone forth in their
full and perfect beauty.
THE THREE SCREENS. 117

The way was very rugged to where these flowers
grew, and the night was very lonely and dark ; but
Lutine was determined not to mind this. She gave
her mother some supper, and then when she was
gone to bed, and the house quite still, she prepared
to go and find these flowers.

Lutine had not costly white satin to paint on; it
was far too expensive a material for her to think of ;
indeed, she had great trouble in getting the coarse
canvas that was to form her screen. I must tell you
how she managed. ' For a long time she had been
saving money to buy herself a new pair of shoes, for
her old ones were thin, and torn; every week she
added a little coin to the sum, and there was some
chance that before long the new shoes might be
brought home.

But when the news came that she was to paint the
screen, she forgot all about her new shoes, and was
only glad she had some money of her own to buy
materials for painting. ;

It was late on a summer’s night when Lutine set
out ; all her neighbours were in bed ; scarcely a dog
took the trouble to bark at her as she went along.
But when she had got out of the village, and had
118 THE THREE SCREENS.



reached the shady lanes, she might have grown timid
had she not fixed her thoughts as much as possible
on the work she was going todo. The roads became
rough, and the hard stones cut her feet through her
old shoes, and her thin shawl hardly kept out the
night dews, but still she did not hesitate, she stepped
bravely out, holding her canvas and her brushes
securely in her hands. There were a great many
curious plants growing near the place where the
lovely ‘night-blowing cereus’ was to be found.

Some of them were very grotesque, and threw out
long stems that looked like men’s arms, others were
like creeping green snakes—some were like the claws
of huge crabs, and seemed about to seize on Lutine,
then there were some like hedgehogs, very round
and strange-looking ; altogether, it was a wonderful
scene and very different from the garden beds at
home.

All was very still and silent, however, and by the
clear light of the stars Lutine soon found out where
the cereus-was growing. She speedily lit her tiny
lamp and opened her canvas; then, as the beauti-
ful leaves opened one by one, she painted off the
lovely crimson and scarlet and purple shades. Oh,
THE THREE SCREENS. 119

how happy she felt when the work was really begun,
she quite forgot she was cold and lonely, her heart
throbbed as her brush went rapidly over the canvas,
and every petal and every stamen stood out in bold
relief. ‘No eye but mine has ever seen this flower,’
said she, ‘for it opened when people were gone to
bed, and it will have faded away before the sun rises
again. Oh, how glad I shall be if it will be found
worthy to adorn the screen for the king’s palace!’
And then she thought so much about the golden
palace and the great king, that the time passed
quickly away, and at last she prepared to return
home.

But her work for the night was not over yet, for as
she passed old Bridda’s cottage she heard a weary
voice saying, ‘Oh, how I wish some one would
come!’ This was repeated over and over again, so
Lutine stopped at the door, and lifted up the latch.

She found a very sad scene awaiting her; poor
Bridda had been bedridden for some years, and
lived all alone in a miserable hut. Her neighbours
came in during the day, and did all they could for her,
but at night they returned to their own children, so
she passed the long hours of darkness in utter solitude.
120 THE THREE SCREENS.

This night they had placed her lamp on a small
table near her, with her basin of cold gruel, and had
left her, as they thought, quite comfortable. But the
old woman was more than usually feverish, and had
been moving restlessly about. She had upset the
table, and in trying to right it again she had fallen out
of bed, and was lying in an uneasy posture on the
floor. Thus in the darkness she was calling for some
one to help her. How fortunate it was that Lutine
heard her! for she went at once to her assistance,
helped her gently into her hard bed again, smoothed
the pillow, lighted the lamp, and moistened her lips
with water.

‘Oh, if I had some more gruel,’ said the restless
Bridda ; so Lutine quickly lit up the fire, and made
some, speaking to the invalid cheerfully all the
time.

After she had finished her repast, Bridda, who
could not have known her nurse was very tired, now
asked her te sing; so Lutine sat down and sung
softly to her, till her eyes closed and poor Bridda was
sound asleep.

It was very late indeed when Lutine got to her ©
own bed, but when she lay down her sleep was sweet
THE THREE SCREENS. 121

and refreshing, and her dreams were of the golden
palace for which she had been painting a screen.

This was only one night’s adventure, but the same
thing happened time after time ; she had glorious
glimpses of the mysterious night-flowers, and she
copied them most accurately on the canvas, till the
whole surface looked a mass of colour and beauty.
Nothing could be more patiently or exquisitely done,
for not a false stroke or blemish disfigured any part of
its surface. It had been a labour of love to her, and
any work to which we give our love generally rewards
our endeavours.

Bridda used to watch for her every night, and when
she heard Lutine’s step returning from her work, she
was sure to call her in and ask her to sing to her, and
help to pass the night away. It did the poor old
woman good, and her sleep gradually became more
refreshing, and her restlessness passed away.

All this time Ninette had thought very little of the
screen she was to paint. ‘It will be time enough,’
she constantly repeated. ‘Ican do it at any time;
just at the last I will work, and my screen will be as
good as any, no doubt.’ So she still amused herself
with the passing pleasures that were round her, and
122 THE THREE SCREENS.



wandered in the shaded woods, singing as merrily as
the birds, and sleeping under the trees on the mossy
banks. At last she began to be roused, and deter-
mined to lose no more time. She got some glossy
satin like Sidelle’s, and golden cords and tassels, for
she also was rich, and then she looked about for
flowers. ‘They are all good,’ said she carelessly, ‘I
will take the first that comes to hand.’ You will all
guess what ¢a¢ flower was, for it grows in the fields
in summer by hundreds and thousands,—it sprinkles
the valley and the mountain side, ay, and the grave-
yard too,—there is hardly any flower as easy to be
found as the ‘ daisy.’

So Ninette ran out into the first field and quickly
gathered a handful, and began to paint them. But
it requires a good deal of time and attention even to
paint a daisy nicely ; there are many delicate petals to
be copied, and there is a little yellow cushion in the
middle that needs very minute touches of the brush.
This Ninette had not time to consider about ; the last
evening had come, and she was not half ready. She
grew nervous and frightened, made unsteady strokes,
and blurred and half-spoiled her white satin. The
gathering twilight had begun to deepen, and her
THE THREE SCREENS. 123



head ached, and her hand trembled, as she vainly
tried to make up for the many hours she had wasted.
‘Oh, my lost time! Oh, the long bright days that
are gone !’ she continually repeated, as she bent over
her work. At last the satin was covered over with
daisy heads and buds and leaves; but alas! many
defects were visible. Ninette put on more colour,
hoping they would be hidden, and she had scarcely
finished the last touches, when the herald proclaimed
the work must be ready to be delivered up at sunrise.

The next morning Sidelle set out in a beautiful
carriage with prancing horses, and crowds of people
attending her, who sounded aloud her praises and
good work. She liked to hear this, and she spread
abroad her magnificent screen that every one might
see and admire it.

‘ She is sure of the prize,’ shouted they ; ‘her screen
will even be an honour to the great palace.’

Ninette rode beside her in a beautiful carriage also,
but she did not display her work ; she rather tried to
appear as though she did not care about success,
though her heart wag as anxious as possible about it ;
in fact, as the time drew near, she could hardly con-
ceal her agitation.
124 THE THREE SCREENS.



‘Where is the third screen?’ called out Sidelle.

‘Oh, Lutine is bringing it,’ replied Ninette care-
lessly ; ‘it won’t be worth much, I suspect ; no one
has heard anything about it—see, there she comes
with it on her shoulders,’

And sure enough, there was Lutine walking meekly
along, bearing her own work; she still had on her
old dress, for, poor child, she had no other, and her
feet were hurt and bleeding with her worn shoes, but
she did not seem to mind all these inconveniences ;
her thoughts were still fixed on the golden palace and
the great king, and she was hoping, oh, so much, that
her screen might be thought worthy of being placed
there. Hardly any of the crowd noticed her as she
walked along, but her brothers and sisters called out
to her and cheered her as she went, and her poor
blind mother lifted her hands and blessed her.
Bridda also had asked a kind neighbour to bring her
on his horse, for she was much better now; Lutine’s
nursing had nearly cured her, so she was there,
watching and clapping her hands and cheering her
as she passed along.

Oh, I wish I had a pen that could describe the
beauties of that wonderful palace ; but that would:
THE THREE SCREENS. 125

be utterly impossible, so I will only say, it was more
beautiful than the sun and brighter than the day.

Precious stones, golden gates, pearly walls, and
unfading flowers were all there, and sounds of the
most delightful music were continually heard from
thousands of voices and instruments.

The screens were examined outside the gates ; poor
Sidelle’s was not admitted, although it was so showy
and beautiful. Alas! she had thought more of the
glory of selfpraise and the admiration of crowds of
people, than of her work. _While she was carried
away by the excitement, the show, and splendour that
surrounded her, she had thought but little of the
king’s palace, and many errors and much false colour-
ing was visible in her screen, so’ she was turned away
sad and disappointed.

Ninette did not fare any better ; her indolence and
carelessness were discovered at once—a single look
was sufficient for that. She had even been too
selfish to take the trouble to select a fit flower to
adorn the screen, for though the daisy is very pretty,
and loved by every one, it is a simple and lowly
flower, formed much more to adorn the cottage of
the poor than the palace of the great monarch. She
126 THE THREE SCREENS.

said any flower would-do; but the king required the
best and the rarest, so poor Ninette was turned away,
covered with shame and confusion.

Then Lutine’s turn came. Her screen, as you
may suppose, was very beautiful, but it was not the
bright colours, or the perfect form of the flowers that
struck you at first ; it was the splendid glow that came
from it, and that showed at once it had been hallowed
by love. Her thoughts had been on her work, and
her heart too, and with such aid the fingers are very
successful.

Through hardship, through self-denial, through
pain and poverty, in loneliness, in night, with no
one to see and no one to admire, her work had been
accomplished, till now it was complete.

I wish I could tell you how grandly the herald
proclaimed er screen was the chosen one. I wish I
could give you only a faint idea of the full burst of
rapturous music that sounded all through the length
and breadth of the king’s palace when the news was
heard. Iwish I could give you one glimpse of Lutine
as she went in through the gates ; how her poor rags
fell off, and she was dressed like one of the other
guests, in pure white and gold. ‘I wish I could tell
THE THREE SCREENS. 127

you one half of the joy and splendour of the feast
she was admitted to; but my poor pen has not the
power to depict such glorious scenes, so it only says,
as a parting word, Try, above all things ! try to follow
her example.


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9, An Earl’s Daughter. By i. M. Pollard.

10, Life at Hartwell; or, Frank and his Friends. By Katharine

E. May, Author of ‘ Alfred and his Mother,’ ete. ete.
. Stories Told in a Fisherman’s Cottage. By Ellen Palmer,
Author of ‘Nonna,’ ‘The Standard-Bearer,’ etc. ete.
. Max Wild, the Merchani’s Son; and other Stories for the Young.
. Noble Mottoes: Familiar Talks with Peter Glenville on the
Mottoes of Great Families. By CHARLES Brucs, Author of ‘ Lame Felix,’ etc.
. Heroes of Charity: Records eee the Lives of Merciful Men.
By James F. Coss, F.R.G.S.

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