Citation
Bright Ben

Material Information

Title:
Bright Ben the story of a mother's boy
Creator:
Page, Jesse
S. W. Partridge & Co. (London, England)
Place of Publication:
London
Publisher:
S.W. Partridge and Co.
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
64, [8] p. : ill. (some col.) ; 15 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Christian life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Children -- Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Brothers and sisters -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Mothers and sons -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Diligence -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Theft -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Gambling -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Success -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Prize books (Provenance) -- 1893 ( rbprov )
Publishers' catalogues -- 1893 ( rbgenr )
Bldn -- 1893
Genre:
Prize books (Provenance) ( rbprov )
Publishers' catalogues ( rbgenr )
novel ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
England -- London
Target Audience:
juvenile ( marctarget )

Notes

General Note:
Date of publication from prize inscription.
General Note:
Frontispiece printed in colors.
General Note:
Publisher's catalogue follows text.
Statement of Responsibility:
by Jesse Page.

Record Information

Source Institution:
University of Florida
Holding Location:
University of Florida
Rights Management:
This item is presumed to be in the public domain. The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries respect the intellectual property rights of others and do not claim any copyright interest in this item. Users of this work have responsibility for determining copyright status prior to reusing, publishing or reproducing this item for purposes other than what is allowed by fair use or other copyright exemptions. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions may require permission of the copyright holder. The Smathers Libraries would like to learn more about this item and invite individuals or organizations to contact The Department of Special and Area Studies Collections (special@uflib.ufl.edu) with any additional information they can provide.
Resource Identifier:
026899181 ( ALEPH )
ALH5716 ( NOTIS )
212905771 ( OCLC )

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“°DPM NoT GOING TO GAMBLE,’ sAID Ben.” —Page 47.










Bi (GwyT Ban
Ghe Story of v Mother's Hoy

BS

JESSE PAGE

AUTHOR OF “‘DOTTLES AND CARRIE3” ‘‘DICK’s SCHOOLDAYS, ETC.

LONDON
S. W. PARTRIDGE & CO.
9 PATERNOSTER Row







CHAPTER

1. THE COTTAGE UNDER THE HILL,
Il. THE PICTURE AT THE HALL,
III]. BEN BEGINS LIFE, .

IV. HE MAKES AN ENEMY, : .
Vv. OUR MICHAELMAS FAIR, ; ‘

VI. THE CULPRIT FOUND, .










RG Ei ss Ni,

+
+



CHAPTER L .
THE COTTAGE UNDER THE HILL.

es EN! BEN! Where are you?”

= ie His mother stood on the stone
step at the cottage door, and shad-
e ing. her eyes from the sun, looked
anxiously up the face of the cliff which almost
overhung their home. She thought once she
could discern awhite pinafore among the shrubs
high up yonder, and speaking louder still she
called the name of her boy, but at the sound
of her voice a white pigeon fluttered from the
grassy crag, spread out its wings, and made
wide circles in the air. She stepped back

into the cottage disappointed and anxious.
“What has become of Ben? TI do wish the

7



8 Bright Ben.

lad wouldn’t stay away so, it does make my
heart feel that bad with worry about him.”

“Oh don’t take on about it, mother dear.
Ben’s all right; he is a good lad and will take
care of himself’ He’s a regular mother’s
boy.”

The speaker, lying on a little couch near
the window, was a pale girl, a few years older
than her brother; an invalid, too, who had not
walked for many a day. Though she was
simply but very neatly dressed, the face of
Agnes had a light upon it, brighter than the
beams of that sunshine which poured through
the window, and lit up with an added glory,
the scarlet geranium and scented mignonette.
She loved her brother with all her heart, and
now, although not so anxious as her mother
about him, found herself constantly lifting up
the edge of the muslin curtain to catch the
first glimpse of him directly he came in sight
on his way home, By.her side Jay a large old
copy of “Pilgrim’s Progress,” between the
leaves of which were sprays of choice fern and
pretty wild flowers, which Ben had collected
for her, from time to time, on his rambles.

The Dutch clock in the corner ticked loudly,
as though sensible of the constant attention
of Mrs. Pottle as she paused in getting tea
ready to look up again and again to see how



The Cottage under the Hill. 9

the time was going. “Nearly half-past five
I declare, and that boy not back yet; he
won't be home before father, Ill be bound.
Oh, dear, I do wish he’d come.”

She had guessed rightly, for scarcely had
the words passed her lips, when a step was
heard at the door and the sound of a walking-
stick knocking away some of the leaves which
had fallen in the path. It was “father.”
When he had by patient effort managed to
get the garden path tidy once more (and he
prided himself upon being a man of order),
little Mr. Ezra Pottle came in and laid down
his parcel, folded neatly in a black handker-
chief, upon the chair.

“ Are you very tired, father dear?”

“No, my dear, not overmuch, but Mister
Langton has a regular fad about his buttons.”

“Ay, they say he’s a bit hard to please,
father.”

“JT should think so; why after all the pains
I spent over that braiding and making the
coat look as good as a new garment, he says,
says he, ‘ Pottle! it doesn’t seem to button up
properly, my man.’ ‘Lord bless you,’ I says,
' “it’s as right as a trivet, sir; I haven’t been
tailoring these fifty years, man and boy, for
nothing. Then he seemed to think I’d taken
offence, for he gave a bit of a laugh and said,



10 Bright Ben.

‘Never mind, old fellow, how much is it?’
and paid me like a gentleman.”

This was rather a long speech for old Mr.
Pottle, taking away all his remaining stock of
breath after climbing the hill. So for a time
he subsided into quietness, broken only by
little grunts and comments to himself about
the squire.

“ Ben’s not in yet, father; I’m getting a bit
worried about him, dear.”

And the mother went to the door again,
shading her eyes and calling once more,

“Ben, Ben, are you coming, love?”

« All right, mother, here I am!”

How her heart jumped at the sound of his
‘voice, and how her face lost all its look of care
as she caught sight of her boy clambering
down towards the cottage and then scamper-
ing along the narrow white road to her. side.

“So sorry, mother, but look what I’ve got
for Agnes!”

She kissed her son’s brown cheek and
pushed the curls from his brow, looking lov-
ingly into the dark, bright eyes which were
lifted to hers,

“Dear lad, I do get fidgety ; you know you
are so very precious to your mother.”

Promising better things next time, Ben
disengaged himself, and, rushing into the













BEN’S COTTAGE HOME.






The Cottage under the Hell. 13

cottage, laid a big bunch of primroses before
his sister.

“Thank you, Ben ; what a lot of beautiful

flowers !”

’ A flush came on the cheek of Agnes as her
eyes brightened at the sight of them.

“I’ve been right to the top this time, Agnes,
by the rabbit path, you know, past that bit of
rock where I cut your name that sunshiny
day when you were with me.”

“T remember, Ben, quite well; and don’t I
wish that I could climb the hill with you
again, now.”

’ By this time Ben was sitting by his father
at the table, and doing ample justice to the
thick bread and treacle with which his
thoughtful mother had supplied his plate.
Once more into the willing ear of his son the
little old tailor told the tale of his experiences
with the squire, and explained to Ben the
mysteries of braiding, buttoning, and other
branches of the craft. The boy was too lively
and fond of the fresh air to give much help or
attention to his father’s trade. Still every
evening he spent an hour by his side, with
the needle in his hand, doing his best to
follow the directions of the little old man.

The shadows had begun to lengthen before
the tea‘was cleared away, and Ben’s mother



14 Bright Ben.

had reverently put before her husband on the-
table the old Bible and hhymn-book. Many,

many years had passed since these books were

fresh and new; to some people they had the

appearance of having always been old; from

the edges of the brown leaves little bits of
faded ribbon and old envelopes showed them-

selves. This Bible almost opened, like Peter’s

prison gate, of its own accord, and when the

old tailor, putting on his glasses, quietly turned

the leaves they stopped fluttering at the 14th

chapter of St. John. Reading slowly, and with .
a quaver in his voice, the old man repeated

those wonderful words of our Lord wherein

He bids us be of good cheer and comfort

because we believe,in Him.

Then Ben got up and fetched from a shelf
near the fire-place his instrument of music, an
accordion with a rather faulty bellows, and
some of the pearl off the keys; but in the
hands of the brown-haired boy, who laid his
cheek on the top while resting it on his knee,
some hymn tunes—played at any rate, to the
best of his ability—were produced therefrom.

“Now, Ben,” said his father, as he closed
the Bible, “give us the tune of 428, my boy.”

Ben led off as desired, and soon the little
cottage was filled with thankful praise to
God.



The Cottage under the Fiull. 15

“Glory to thee, my God, this night,
For all the blessings of the light,
Keep me, O keep me, King of kings,
Beneath Thy own Almighty wings.”

The hymn over, an earnest prayer was
uttered, as to One very near and able to save,
and to whose loving care each by name,
mother, Agnes, and Ben, were committed in
‘heart-felt faith.

This was Ben’s home, not a very rich one,
but happy and helpful, where love brightened
everything, and made every little service a

’ pleasure.

When Agnes wished her brother good-
night, she produced a small parcel wrapped in
thin paper.

“Ben, I want you to go ; somewhere for me
to-morrow, to take this precious bit of lace
I have been making all last week on my
pillow.”

' “Tsn’t it pretty?” said the boy, holding the
dainty threads in his hand.

“Now, I may as well tell you, Ben, that
this is to go to Captain Clarke’s at Babingcote
Hall. Mrs. Clarke told father the other day
_ that she would like some of my lace.”

“All right, Agnes. I’ll go first thing in
the morning ; I hope she i is going to give you
_a lot of money for it.” :



16 Bright Ben.

“JT don’t know, but you must bring back
whatever she gives you, Ben, and I shall try
to do some more soon.”

Ben kissed his sister and bade her good-
night, adding as he went away to his little
room: “Some day, Agnes, I shall be a man,
and then you shall not have to work at the
pillow lace any more.”







ee tod hh SR

CHAPTER IL.

THE PICTURE AT THE HALL.

fe birds were singing in the trees, and

the insects humming among the long

grass and flowers, as Ben started off

to Babingcote Hall next morning.
In his pocket was safely stowed away the
tiny parcel of precious lace, the work of many
weary but industrious days on that couch by
the cottage window. - Perhaps it was his
errand and the thought of all the labour
which Agnes had spent on the lace, that
filled Ben’s mind with all sorts of ideas about
the future, and what he would do when he
grew up.to be a man.

He thought how his father was getting
older every cay, and the tailoring was not
what it used to be, for the people liked to
wait until they went inte the town on market
day, and there buy something quite new and
ready-made, with just that bit of fashion about

17 B



18 Bright Ben.

it which poor old Mr. Pottle had not in his
power to supply. Then his mother’s face
came up before his mind as he walked across
the fields, the tired, but brave, uncomplaining
look she always wore to him. When she
kissed him at the door that very morning, she
said: “Take care of the money on your way
back, Ben dear; we need it bad enough, the
Lord knows.”

And Ben did not see how, when she had
seen the last of him at the turning of the
road, she slowly repeated again, “the Lord
knows ;” and as though some whisper of com-
fort and help came into her heart, she smiled
and went about her work with renewed
spirit.

But chiefest of all was Agnes, in Ben’s mind;
she was so ill, and could do little for herself,
“but one day, please God,” here the boy
stopped and looked round with earnest inten-
tion, “one day I will work hard and she shall
be so happy, and perhaps the doctor, if I can
afford to pay for a good one, may even make
her well again.”

He was in the high road now, a half-dozen
good miles yet to walk, when he heard the
sound of wheels behind him, and presently a
carrier's cart, not very heavily laden, came
up. Silas, a ruddy faced, good-tempered



The Picture at the Hall. i9

man, who was driving, knew Ben, and
pulling up asked him to take a lift by
the way.

_“How’s father, Ben? I thought him a bit
aged last time I met him along here.”

“Thank you, Silas, he’s pretty well for
him, but he can’t do so much as he used to—
can’t father.” ,

The cart jolted along, the fresh breeze
blowing off the sea, only a mile away, and
although they had finished speaking, both
Silas and Ben were looking to the dim, blue
waste of water stretched as far as they could
see beyond the cliffs. A few white clouds
were slowly sailing across the sky, and here
and there over the sea the sails of the fishing
smacks could be seen. It was a glorious
' morning, and the man and boy in the cart
were enjoying their ride. Presently Silas
said quite abruptly,

“Ben, what are you going to do for a living
when you geta man?”

“I’m going to do something, Silas, but
what it’s to be I don’t quite know. I wish
I did, I should like to make a beginning as
soon as I can.”

“Well, do you know, when I was in Buswell
market to-day, just putting a few things in
my cart, I heard Mr. Morris saying to another



20 Bright Ben.

shopkeeper at the door, ‘I wish I knew of a
decent lad to go errands for me.’”

“Oh Silas, did he really say that? Why,
perhaps, I should do.”

“Well, Ben, you’d better go over there this
afternoon and see him, say what I’ve told
you, lad, and I only hope you may get the
place.”

Little Ben’s heart was too full to say much
more, already he was counting on the joy
of coming home at the end of the week with
money in his pocket, enough to help them a
little. Wouldn’t he get some nice little things
for mother and Agnes, that dear sister of
his! She should never try her eyes with that
lace-work any more. Thinking of the lace
made him remember his present errand, and
so starting off with a run, having said good-
bye to old Silas, Ben soon reached the gates.
of the Hall.

It was an old-fashioned house, standing
far away from the road, and when the good
woman at the porter’s lodge opened the gate,
and let Ben in, she smiled and wished him a
pleasant “good-morning.” For Ben was -
known as a good boy wherever he went.

“Ts the lady at home, Mrs. Briggs?”

“Yes, my boy, go straight up to the front
door, and then ring the bell.”



The. Picture at the Hall. 21

This Ben did, and soon found himself in a
beautiful room hung round with pictures, and
carpeted so richly that Ben, although he had
taken great pains to brush his boots on the
mat outside, felt really afraid to walk on what
seemed to him the softest velvet. So he first
sat, cap in hand, on one of the chairs near the
door, and gazed around with wonder and
admiration. The pictures most took his
. fancy, some showing high mountains with a
lovely sunlight upon them, others with groups
of cattle in the green meadows feeding,
and again others pictured the deep, smooth
river gliding past the dark trees as evening
moves on, But one large painting at the end
of the room fixed his attention, and soon he
forgot all others in gazing upon that one.

It showed a door fast shut, and round about
it grew thick ivy and thorns, so that it had
evidently not been opened for a long time.
Outside stood a tall and noble-looking man,
with one hand raised as though he were
knocking loudly, and in. the other hung a
lamp burning bright, and casting a beautiful
light upon his white and flowing robe. - All
the picture was wonderful to Ben, and the
face most of all, for under his brow, which
was crowned with a circlet of thorns, were
eyes so full of love and tenderness, so bright



ae Bright Ben.

with a sweet light clearer and purer than that
shown by the lamp he held, that Ben could
not take his eyes from that glorious face.

Who he was Ben did not know, and whyhe _.

stood there in the dark night, knocking at the
fast-closed door, he could not imagine. But
he was a kind, loving, good man _he felt in
his heart, and could not help believing that
in his tender gaze there was regard for him.

He was startled by a voice, close by,
saying,

“Well, my boy, I suppose you have never
seen such a picture before?”

Blushing when he saw it was the lady
herself who had come into the room, he
begged pardon for not hearing her before.

“But, oh ma’am, who is that standing
there, with the lamp?”

“That is the Lord Jesus Christ. Come,
Ben, we will go a little nearer, and see what
is written at the bottom of the picture.”

Ben could read a little, and, fortunately for
him, they were all simple words. He read
them almost in a solemn voice, “Behold, I
stand at the door and knock.”

Then Ben remembered the words in his
New Testament; and seemed more at home
with the picture now he knew it was the
Lord. The lady talked to him awhile, and



The Picture-at the Hall. 23

then, reminding him of the lace, put some
silver in his hand, and stood at the door, as
she watched him go away.

_ “Remember, Ben, that He is always
knocking, and we shall never be happy
while He is kept outside.”

Ben hurried homewards, as happy as a king,
bursting into the cottage all dusty and out of
breath, bringing all the pink back to the face
of pale Agnes Dy squeezing into her hand
the money.

“Oh, mother, chet is a nice lady.”

ss Ves, Ben, I know she is; I shall never
forget her kindness last winter when I was so
poorly, you remember.”

_ “And I’ve seen such a beautiful picture.
. Oh, Agnes, I wish you would have seen it too.

It was Jesus knocking at the door.”

His father looked up from his sewing on a
. bench in the corner, with a smile.

“T’ve seen that picture, too, Ben; the face
is quite beautiful. I well remember one day,
when I was measuring the Captain, he drew
my attention to it. ‘That’s a fine picture,
Pottle, isn’t it?’ said he.

~“*Ves’ I said, going a bit nearer, and
putting my glasses well on, ‘it’s a fine
picture, sir, but it’s the lesson in it I like.’

“«What’s that?’ said the Captain.



24 Bright Ben.

““Why, when Jesus knocks at the door of
our hearts, sir, it is that salvation is come to
the house, and He will come in and sup with
us, and make His abode with us, as He pro-
mised in His Blessed Word.”

It was too late to go over to Buswell that
afternoon, for the sun was fast setting, and
Ben was very tired. But he was full of his
plans for the future, and when he kissed his
mother and said good-night, his face was
bright with hope. The little attic where he
slept had white-washed walls, and before Ben
got into bed that night, he slowly and care-
fully printed on the wall next the window,
with a lead pencil, the words of the picture,
“Behold, I stand at the door and knock.”
He went to sleep that night with the picture
of the wonderful face in his mind, committing
himself to the care of One, who would be his
best and truest friend and lead him safely all
life’s journey through.







CHAPTER IIL

BEN BEGINS LIFE,

\ BUSTLING little town, with one
WK good street and an old market-
eae place was Buswell. Under the
shadow of the old square tower of
St. Peter’s Church, was the forge where, at
all hours of the day, a little group of urchins
-might be seen looking in at the open door,
and watching the strong arms of the black-
smith swinging the heavy hammer, and beat-
ing the burning red-hot iron into the shoe for
the horse standing waiting.

Not many people were seen in the streets
of Buswell, except on Saturdays, which being
market day brought the country folk from all
parts to sell their butter, fruit, and cattle.
Then was Buswell noisy and bustling, voices

’. were heard everywhere, men bargaining about
the price of wheat, and the value of fat beasts,
women standing by their baskets upon which

25



26 Bright Ben.

the sweet fresh butter was laid upon wet
cabbage leaves, and holding out to the
passers-by knives for them to taste a bit of
their wares.

On that day, too, the children were released
from school; generally dressed in their best,
they had fine games in the market, and man-
aged to get a penny or two to spend on nuts.
and sweetmeats.

In the midst of the crowd was always to be

found the Punch and Judy show, and although
the nose of Mr. Punch was very much injured
by the repeated knocks of a life-time, and
Mrs. Judy too had dresses rather worse for
-wear, the children who looked on enjoyed it
just as much, and laughed again and again
when dog Toby, looking very serious in the
corner, held the little broom.

Perhaps fortunately for Ben, it was not on
one of these busy, noisy days, that he walked
into Buswell, and mustering up all his
courage, entered the shop door of Mr. Morris,
the grocer and postmaster of Buswell town.
Ben had to wait a moment while Mr. Morris
finished serving a customer with a piece of
cheese, noticing with admiration the way in
which ‘he cut just the right quantity from the
big round standing on the counter, and how
neatly he folded it in paper when weighed.

































































































































































































































































































































































BUSWELL VILLAGE.






Ben begins Life. 29

“Well, my boy, what.can I do for you?”

“Tf you please, sir, I have heard from old
Silas that you want a good lad here, and
I ‘should like, sir, please, to come very
much.”

Poor Ben, he had forgotten all the nice
little speech he had been practising all his
way from home, and just blurted out these
words with a red face, and eyes which spoke
even more than the earnest words.

Mr. Morris laid down his cheese-knife and
looked the lad full in the face, then he slowly
undid the tape of his white apron and tied it
up again evidently thinking all the while.
Presently he looked up again, and said, rather
sharply as Ben thought,

“What’s your name, boy?”

‘s Ben Pottle, sir, or Behjamin i is my proper
name.”

“Oh, your father’s the tailor who lives in
the cottage under the hill, isn’t he?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Ah, that’s in your favour; your father,
Ben, is a good man, and although he’s a bit
old-fashioned in his cut of things, he’s a
straight, worthy man is your- father.”

Ben felt a bit cheered up by the rather long
speech, and began to think he would like Mr.
Morris very much.



30 Bright Ben.

“Vou look tired, lad, have you walked all
the way?”

“Ves, sir, but I don’t: mind that a bit so
long as I get the situation.”

“Well, have you been anywhere before
this?”

“No, sir, this is the first time I have ever
had a situation.”

“Wait a minute, Ben, you haven’t got it
yet. What makes you in such a hurry to
get work?”

This was a question which Ben could easily
answer, his heart had been so full of the
subject for two days, that it was no wonder —
that he quickly told Mr. Morris all about
Agnes having to work so hard with her pillow
lace, and his mother not being very strong
and wanting a bit of rest, and his father
sometimes finding the tailoring rather slack.
“And I’m the only boy, sir, and they ’ve all
been very good to me, and I do want, please
God, to earn a little money to help a bit.”

“Well, would half-a-crown a week do for.
you, if I let you live here?”

“ Oh, yes, I should be very satisfied, indeed.”

“Very well, Ben, then you may come, and
I hope you will do well and grow up some
day to be a good shopman.”
_ Ben felt so happy that he would have liked



Ben begins Life. 31

to run home at once and tell the glad tidings,
but Mr. Morris had turned round, and was
tapping at a little window in the wall, at which
appeared Mrs. Morris.

“My dear, there’s old Pottle’s son here,
and I’ve just engaged him; have you got a
drop of milk and something to eat for him
before he goes back.” ;

“Of course, I have,” said the bright little
woman ; “send him round to the side door.”

In a few minutes he was in the little
parlour behind the shop, and could see
through the window his new master, busy
with some more customers.

“Come, my boy, get on!”

Hungry as he was, Ben had, for the moment,
forgotten the large mug of milk and plate of
bread and cheese which Mrs. Morris had put
- before him.

“So you are to be our new boy, are you?”

“Ves, ma’am.”

“ Well, you ‘ll have to work hard, you know,
there’s nothing done in the world without
work, and work hurts nobody.”

Everybody in Buswell knew that was the
opinion of Mrs. Morris ; two things made her
feel bad,—seeing people with nothing to do,
or doing their work with half a heart. Mrs.
Morris practised what she preached, got up ~



32 Bright Ben.

early in the morning, looked after the cook-

ing of her husband’s bacon, and was not

afraid of anyone finding dust on the parlour

sideboard, or a spot upon the kitchen floor.

- Buta kinder soul never lived than Mrs. Morris,

as many of the poor people in Buswell would -
gladly testify.

Ben assured her he was not afraid of work,
he would like to begin now, to show her that
he meant to do his best. Ss

“To-morrow morning will be soon enough,
my boy. I daresay you ’ll make your way in
the world, if you work hard and trust in God.”

These last words were spoken in a quiet,
reverent tone, and were followed by inquiries
whether Ben had a.Bible and was in the habit
of praying regularly, morning and evening.
He soon satisfied her on this head, and she
told him that if he meant to succeed he must
remember his “Creator in the days of his
youth.”

“Be honest, my lad, and speak the truth
always ; do your duty as in God’s sight, and
He will give you wisdom and strength for all
your need.”

‘When Ben left, it was with the promise
that he should begin the next morning, and ©
that always on Saturday, when it was possible,
he should go home and spend Sunday. His



Ben begins Life. 33
\

\
- mother, as usual, was standing at the door,
looking for him, when, breathless with running
down the hill, he rushed to her arms with the
joyful news.

“T’ve got it, mother, I’ve got it! Fancy,
half-a-crown a-week, all my own working for
it, too; that’s the nicest part about it.”

Agnes laid down her book and listened
earnestly to the account of how he had been
so kindly treated, and smiled as she said,

“T knew they would take to you, Ben, and
‘be kind, for I was praying for you specially
just about the time you would be going into
the shop.”

That evening they were all very busy, his
mother with her needle mending his clothes,
Agnes making him a new tie out of some bits
of silk she possessed among her treasures, and
the good old father, spectacles on nose, patch-
ing up his boy’s jacket and making it look
wonderful with new buttons. -

“T well remember, Ben, my first place years
and years ago, when I was apprentice to a
tailor in Manchester; how hard we had to
work, and what a deal I had to bear, but, bless
the Lord, He brought me through it. I might
not have been as clever a worker as some, but
I stuck to it, and asked God to bless me, which
He did.” :

Cc



34 Bright Ben.

Many prayers went up to heaven from that
cottage, when the darkness came on, prayers
that the boy who was to leave it next morning
should be guided and blessed in this his
starting out in life.

The sun shone gaily through Ben’s attic
window, and he was up betimes, and at last,
when all was ready, the brown little face was
held up to his mother for the good-bye kiss,
and tears filled their eyes as Ben was wished
God-speed in his new sphere.

He got to Buswell in good time, and after a
few minutes’ rest went down to help another
boy a little bigger than he to take down the
shop shutters. While they were outside, his
companion whispered,

“You’re the new boy, aren’t you?”

SNCS a

“Well, look here, he’l! make you work, and
if he don’t, why the missus will ; she’s a reglar
good un at keeping people at it.”

“Oh, I’m not afraid of work.”

“Aren’t you, then you'll be happy as a
lark here. I’m not quite of that way of think-

.ing, and so I don’t think so much of the
- Morris’s place.”

Ben swept the shop floor, packed up the
firewood, strung up all the loose bits of paper,
and amongst other things was shown by Mr.



Ben begins Life. 35

Morris how to weigh and paper up a pound
of sugar. Every now and then he caught the
eye of Mrs. Morris looking through her little
window, and was once called by her into the
parlour, not, however, to be scolded, but to
receive a new white apron, which when he put
it on she declared made him look “every inch
a grocer.”

Beside Mr. Morris, who was rather bald and
had a funny habit of winking his eyes while
talking, Ben made acquaintance with Foster,
the principal salesman behind the counter,
a sandy-bearded man who said very little;
Kibble, the short, stout, young man who
looked after the cheese and candle depart-
ment; and Miss Spriggs, the young lady who
sold the stamps and prepared the letters for
the postman when he called. The boy who
spoke to him was Baggs, who went on errands
and did odd jobs; nobody seemed to care
much for him. Happily he did not live there,
and when the day was over, and Ben, very tired
but feeling very happy, went to bed, it was to
find Kibble in the room already, sound asleep.

“God bless my dear mother, father and
Agnes,” were the words on Ben’s lips as he
blew out the candle and passed into the land
of dreams after his first taste of getting his
own living.







CHAPTER IV.

HE MAKES AN ENEMY.

URING the quieter days of the week
i; the new boy at Mr. Morris’s grocery
shop got on very well indeed, but
when Saturday came, with the crowd
of customers, it taxed Ben’s wits to the utmost
to keep up with the work. He was not as yet
trusted to serve behind the counter, but found
plenty to do in carrying the baskets with their
different purchases to the covered carts and
traps in which the people had come to Buswell.

‘The only trouble he had was with Baggs, a
boy he could not like, and of whom he began
to be a bit afraid. He noticed that Baggs ©
was one thing while his master looked on,
‘and quite another when his back was turned,
that he avoided Mrs. Morris all he could,
because her eye was too much for him, and
her word, telling him not to be lazy but eee
on, was not pleasant to Baggs.

36





Fle makes an Enemy. 37

Ben had often seen him stopping on his
round of errands to put down his basket for a
game of marbles, and, worst of all, had found
out more than once that when he had done
wrong and was scolded for it, he did not
hesitate to tell an untruth to get out of the
scrape somehow. Ben, when he went home
one Saturday evening, told his father about
this boy; and the old tailor gave him some
serious but useful advice on it.

“My boy, do not go out of your way to
offend him, but don’t make a friend of him,
he will do you no good, and might bring your
good name into discredit. Remember, Ben,
the words of the Book: ‘He that. walketh
with wise men shail be wise, but a companion
of fools shall be destroyed; evil pursueth
sinners, but to the righteous good shall be
repaid.”

“TI will be very careful, father, and you will
pray for me that I may be kept out of temp-
tation.”

He needed not to ask his old father that,
for many times a-day, as he sat bent over his
tailoring in the cottage, his heart was in
Heaven pleading for the blessing of God upon
his absent boy in Buswell. :

One day Mr. Morris called. Ben to him in
the shop and asked him how he liked his



38 Bright Ben.

place, telling him that he was very pleased
with him so far.

“Now, Ben, there’s a busy time for us
coming next week, for it is the Michaelmas
Fair at Buswell, the great time that the people
look forward to all through the year. You
will have to look sharp then, for we get a lot
of people in, and we fill that window with
presents for the country folk to buy, and take
home as ‘ fairings’ to the children.”

Ben was delighted at the prospect, and
promised to do his very best to help when the
rush came. It happened as they were talk-
ing, that they were left alone in the shop, and
Mr. Morris looking earnestly at Ben said:

“Look here, my boy, don’t have much to
do with that lad Baggs, he’s no good; and if

_ it wasn’t for his poor mother, who is an honest,
good woman, I wouldn’t keep him a day.”

“ Perhaps, sir, he’ll be better some day.”

“T hope so, but I don’t see much improve-
ment at present; at anyrate, Ben, don’t let him
spoil you.”

“Hasn’t he got a father, sir?”

“No, Ben, and when he had, he was not
much advantage to him. His father was a
lazy, drinking man, who used to spend at the

_public-house the few shillings his mother
earned by charing and washing.”



fe makes an Enemy. 39

Just at that moment Baggs came into the
_ shop with his empty basket, and as usual, he
put it down and got as far out of his master’s
way as possible. Mr.. Morris, however, was
called away for a moment, and Baggs beck-
oned to Ben to come nearer. He did so, and
met with a frowning, angry look.

“What have you been saying about me to
the governor?” he asked in a hoarse whisper.

“Nothing at all that I should be ashamed
to repeat before your face, Baggs.”

“You've been telling tales, I can see it in
your eyes ; now look here, Ben, if ever I catch
you peaching about me, I’ll give you what
you won't like.”

Ben saw what he meant by the clenched
fist, which he shook in his face. He was not,
however, at all frightened, being a brave boy,
and simply said,

“Baggs, I owe you no grudge, and shall
never do you any harm, but whether you hit
me-for it or not, I shall speak the truth what-
ever comes.”

This was too much for Baggs, who aimed
a blow at his companion, which might have
caught his face, had not Ben slipped on one
side, and fallen over some empty sacks on
the floor,

“Now I’ve caught you, young man, I'll



40 - Bright Ben.

teach you to knock my boys about, in my
very shop.”

This was the voice of Mr. Morris. Ben had
no idea he could speak so severely, and saw
him grasping Baggs by the collar, and shaking
him like a cat would shake a mouse.

- “Out with you,—go!”

Baggs, once released from the grip of his
angry master, was only too glad to obey this
command, and ran down the street as fast as
his legs could carry him.

“Don’t explain, Ben; I heard it all, for I
stood behind this pile of biscuit boxes all the
time. I am very glad you stood to your guns
like a man, I’ll take good care that he never
comes into this shop again.””

Ben had to shut up all by himself that
night, except that the silent Foster came
forward to give him a hand with the heaviest
shutters, but just before the door was shut, a
pale-faced woman came quickly in.

“ Please, can I see Mr. Morris?” |

“No, ma’am, he’s done for the day, and
having his supper.”

“ Oh, but please tell him Mrs. Baggs is here,
and I am sure he will come, he is always so
kind.”

“Ben, go and tell Mr. Morris.”

The master soon appeared, just as he had



He makes an Enemy. 4I

jumped up from the table, a crust of bread in
his hand.

“Well, Mrs. Baggs, I know what you ’ve
come about, but really it’s no use; that boy
_ of yours will never do for me.”

“Oh, sir, I’m so sorry, and I’m sure he is
too; I know he’s bad enough, but if he’s not
working here I don’t know where to find a bit
of money, and beside, he’ll go right down
wrong if left to himself.”

There was a tearful tremble in the mother’s
voice as she spoke, looking from one to the
other for sympathy.

“He’s my only: lad, and his father, as you
know, sir, gave him a bad bringing up ; what
am I to do?”

“But you know, Mrs. Baggs, the reason I
sent him about his business was, that he
knocked down this boy in-the shop, simply
for saying that he meant to speak the
truth. You know, I can’t stand that sort
of thing.”

Poor Mrs. Baggs turned to Ben with a look
of entreaty, “Won't you forgive him? Please
do, and I beg your pardon for him; it was so
wrong, so wicked of him to hurt you so.”

“Oh, he didn’t hurt me, Mrs. Baggs, and as
to forgiving him I have done that long ago.”

A step was heard at the door and Baggs.



42 Bright Ben.

himself, ashamed and still frightened, was
seen lingering in sight.

Foster noticed him but said nothing, only
when his master looked that way, he raised
his eyebrows in a funny kind of way and
pointed with his thumb to the door.



‘6¢wHAT IS MY TEXT TO-NIGHT?’ SAID BEN.”

.© Mr. Foster, bring him in.”

A little more conversation followed, and
Ben ventured to put in a plea for Baggs that
he might be taken back, and after he had
acknowledged this by very awkwardly, and
_with a bad grace begging Ben’s pardon, Mr.



He makes an Enemy. 43

Morris relented and told him he might come
in the morning as usual.

Great joy filled his mother’s eyes as she
thanked him, and Mr. Morris went back to.
finish his supper.

“What is my text to-night?” said Ben, who
was in the habit of reading his “portion”
every night before going to bed, and as he
turned over the leaves of his Testament by
the light of the candle, his eyes caught these
words, “Take heed to yourselves: if thy
brother trespass against thee, rebuke him,
and if he repent, forgive him. And if he tres-
pass against thee seven times in a day, and
seven times in a day turn again to thee,
saying, I repent; thou shalt forgive him. And
the apostles said unto the Lord, ‘Increase
our faith.”

For a minute or two Ben sat silent thinking
over these words, and kneeling at his little bed
he fervently prayed, “O Lord, help me to be
kind and patient to Baggs. May I be for-
giving and bear him no grudge, but, Lord, do
please help me to always speak the truth
and not be afraid of anything that Baggs or
anybody else may:do to me. Lord, help me,
Lord, help me, I am only a poor boy, but if
I have Thy grace and help I shall never fall.”





CHAPTER V. ,

OUR MICHAELMAS FAIR,

FRESH stock of fruits and biscuits,
Ww \ the incoming of wooden cases, which
on being opened revealed pretty
boxes, ornaments, and all sorts of nice
presents, a broad piece of crimson calico having
words on white paper fixed thereupon, “The
cheapest shop for fairings ;” and last, not least,
Miss Spriggs appearing in the post-office
corner of the shop adorned with a new dress,
all told the wonderful news that Buswell
Michaelmas Fair had come round once
more.

Not only at Mr. Morris’s grocery store, but
all through the little town active preparations
were going on for the coming festivities,
For several.days the market-place had been
in the hands of half-a-dozen carpenters, who
were busily fitting up stands and booths,
_ pens for sheep, long tin tunnels for shooting
44



Our Michaelmas Fatr. 45

boxes, stalls for sweetmeats and cakes, and
in a waste place apart the usual merry-go-
round. The children gazed at all these things
with expectation, and promised each other
rare treats in store.

One night Ben awoke up with the un-
wonted sound of heavy wheels being slowly
driven along the streets, he crept to the
window and beheld with amazement two or
three large yellow vans drawn by piebald
little horses upon which rode men in strange
apparel. One, otherwise dressed in poor
clothes, had a cocked hat upon his head,
another carried an immense drum, while a
third held in one hand a large sword, while
the other bore a big rolled-up picture. Ben,
amazed, crept to the bedside of Kibble with
an earnest inquiry, “I say, Kibble, I am so
sorry to wake you, but there’s such funny
things going past the shop.”

Kibble loved his bed, and was loath to be
disturbed.

“Funny things did you say? ay, there’s lots
of funny things about this time.”

“Well, but there’s big covered carts, like,
with men wearing cocked hats sitting on the
top.”

“P’raps it is a fire-engine.” And Ben saw
that sleep was coming on again.



46 Bright Ben.

“But they’re big and yellow; what are
they?”

“ Carawans.”

This answer muzeled Ben still more, for he
remembered having read in some old books
about the travellers with their camels and mer-
chandise in Egypt being called a caravan.

“But they ‘re only men, English people
I mean,’

“Bless you there’s iets of camels, and lions,
and cats, and tigers, and snakes, and monkeys,
and all sorts of creepy, cranky things there,
only you can’t see them. Now good-night,
Ben, I’m off to sleep.”

And off he was without delay, leaving Ben’
to get into bed again, wondering much what
‘these strange visitors could mean.

The following day, however, which was the
first of the fair, explained the caravans and
their contents, for the big picture had been
unfurled in the market-place, and showed a
wild-looking man with a spotted hearthrug.
on his shoulders, holding a growling tiger at
arm’s length with one hand, while he fought a
lion, a wolf, and a serpent with the other, twe
serious-looking camels and an elephant in the
background waiting their turn. No wonder
when the man with the cocked hat and red
coat banged the drum on the little platform



Our Michaelmas Fair. 47

outside, and told them all this could be seen
from the front seats for a penny, children
half-price, there was no want of customers to
the show.

During the earlier part of the fair, Ben was
too busy in the shop to see much of the fun
outside, but occasionally, when he had a parcel
to take to a little distance, he managed to get
a peep at the market-place on his way home.

It was on one of these occasions, when who
should he meet in the midst of the crowd but
Baggs, who had been surly with him ever
since his scolding, but now tapped him on the
shoulder in a familiar style.

“Tsay, Ben, I’m so glad to have met you
just now.”

“Why is that, Baggs?”

“ Because I’m going to toss for sixpences.”

“Oh, I can’t wait, master will want me back
soon; you know how busy we are.”

“ Nonsense, and besides look what a lot of
money I’ve got; let’s go and enjoy ourselves.”

Baggs took out of his pocket several
shillings and a half-crown,and before Ben could
get away had drawn him close to where a
group of boys and men were drinking and
gambling in a tent.

“I’m not going to gamble,” said Ben, and
immediately left the tent.











48 Bright Ben.

Baggs next tried hard to get Ben up the steps
by the drum, into the wild-beast show, but in
this he did not succeed, although he promised
to pay for both.

“JT say, Ben, I want to spend some of this
money ; suppose we have a swing-boat and
then you can go home.”

Now if there was one thing Ben wished to
have it was a turn in that swing-boat, he
thought it must be so delicious to rush
through the air like that, just like being ina
ship on the sea. So he consented just this
once, and joined in the screams of laughter of
his fellow-passengers as the boat flew high.
Getting out again, he felt dizzy and faint,
and as Baggs helped him through the crowd,
back to the shop did not notice that he who
boasted of having so much money actually
slipped the shining half-crown into his pocket
without his knowing it.

“Why, Ben, what a long time you have
been ; surely you have not been stopping in
the fair?”

“Yes, sir, I have, and Iam very sorry for it.
I hope you will forgive me, but I did just go
into one of those swing-boats.”

“Who took you there?”

“Tt was Baggs, sir, who met me in the fair,
and paid for me too.”



Our Michaelmas Fatr. 49

“Did he, though? When he comes I shall
have something to say to him.” .

“I don’t think he meant any harm, but as
he had the money he said he wanted to be
kind.”

“Ben, my boy, take care, take care, never
allow yourself to go with that boy again, he’s
no good, no good at all.”

Nothing more was said till nearly shutting-
“up time, when Baggs rushed in, with a very
red face, and took up a shutter as though
_ ashamed of being noticed. Mr. Morris walked
to the door, and while Ben was inside, asked
Baggs sharply where he had been.

“Only into the fair a bit, where I met
some old friends, and we went into the
waxworks together.” — oe

“How can you afford that, Baggs, you
haven’t got any money, have you?”

_ “No, sir, I ain’t,’ and suiting thé action
to the word, he turned his trousers pocket
inside out. :

- Mr. Morris looked very severe, and after
eyeing Baggs closely, told him he did not
believe his excuses, and said he would speak
about it to him again on the morrow.

Ben soon forgot all about the incident,
for hé was very tired with his day’s work, and
ready for bed. Sitting again by the candle,

D





50 Bright Ben.

he read the story of Joseph and his brethren,
and how he caused their money to be put in
his brothers’ sacks. Thinking of this, and
wondering why they seemed so frightened,
he took off his jacket, and out of its pocket
fell a coin, which he picked off the floor as it
rolled. It was the very half-crown which
Baggs had shown him in the fair! However
did it get there? He scanned it closely,
admiring its brightness, and noticing that
some one had scratched “M” on the face of
it, near the Queen’s head. “What a funny
mark, perhaps somebody once had it and
wanted to keep it, so put his name on it.”

How he wished it was all his own! He
would just buy something for mother with it,
and perhaps a trifle for Agnes, too. He care-
fully wrapped it in paper, and put it back in.
his pocket, resolving to speak to Baggs about
it on the following morning.

But when morning came, there was no
Baggs. The master was evidently very much
excited about his absence, and had several
earnest little talks with Mrs. Morris in the
parlour. :

She had an opportunity of speaking to Ben
when he came into'the room to get some ink
for his master.

“Ben, my boy, mark my words, there’s



Our Michaelmas Fair. 51

something wrong about that lazy lad; it’s a
good thing for you. that he has gone, for I
always feared that he might do you harm.”

“But I don’t think he owed me any grudge
you know; I freely forgave him that time.”

“Ah, my dear boy, you don’t know how
. spiteful some people are, he would do you an
- injury, I know, if he could.”

Ben brought the ink, and his master wrote
something on a slip of paper and sealed it up
very carefully.

“Ben, now this is very particular, take it to
the police-station up the street, and wait for
an answer.”

Ben obeyed, and watched the face of the
constable—they had two in Buswell—as he
read it.

“Tell your master I’ll be down directly.”

And now, while for a few minutes no
customers were in the shop, Mr. Morris took
the opportunity of telling his men, Foster,
Kibble, and Ben, that the till had been robbed,
and he suspected Baggs, but should soon be
able to find out. While he was yet speaking,
in walked the policeman, and a little crowd
immediately gathered round the door. In his
sharp business way he asked—

“lave any of you assistants been out
yesterday ?”

2



2 Bright Ben.

Foster hadn’t and Kibble had been too
busy, certainly Ben was out for a time, and of
course Baggs had been away for the greater
part of the day. A few more questions were
asked, and then the master and the policeman
had a whispered talk in the corner of the
shop. “Oh, I feel sure there’s no suspicion of
any of them; they are as honest as the day.”

“True, sir, but if we are going to find this
out, everybody who can get to the till should
show what money he has.”

“Very well, as you like.” -

. “T’m sorry to trouble you, but, Foster, will
you please let me examine what money you
have in your pocket?”

“Qh yes, certainly.”

The policeman carefully looked at each coin,
and passed them back as all right.

“ Kibble, now I must trouble you?”

This was not much trouble, as Kibble
possessed only a single sixpence, two pieces
of string, a pocket-knife and a brass-headed
nail. There was a titter ran round the shop
as these treasures were produced. “Hardly
a time to laugh, young men,” said the police-
man, gravely.

It was now Ben’s turn, and the few pence
he had were soon brought forth.

“Ts that all?”



Our Michaelmas Fatr.- 53

Ben was just saying “yes,” when his hand
felt the half-crown in his jacket pocket and he
flushed crimson, he didn’t know why. The
policeman seeing his look put his own hand
in the pocket and brought out the shining
coin. Holding it up to the light he scanned
it narrowly, and then said,

“Was it ‘M,’ sir?”

“Yes,”

“Humph, it’s all right; here, young fellow,
you must come with me; this is the way you
rob a good master is it? ’








PSV
ASSP 17 GDS



CHAPTER VI.
THE CULPRIT FOUND.

ERHAPS it was because he had not
> often the treat of catching a thief,
HN but certainly Police-constable X 123

was a little too quick this time.

Mrs. Morris was tapping the little window
so violently that it was a wonder the glass
did not give way, and her husband as
promptly stepped forward, “Stop! I won’t
give this boy in charge.”

“Why not? Why, here is the money found
in his very pocket, and look how he blushed
up when we made him turn out the
money.”

“It doesn’t matter ; although the case does
look rather against him I can never believe
Ben stole the half-crown.”

Mrs. Morris here appeared upon the scene
with a glass of water, which she held to the
lips of Ben.

54



The Culprit Found. 55

“ Be quiet, please, for a minute; don’t you
see the boy has fainted.”

Yes, he had, poor little Ben; the shock of
being accused of stealing by the policeman
had been too much for him, and with just the
one word “mother” in a whisper, he had
slipped down upon the shop floor. Through
the kind care of Mrs. Morris, and the well-
meant but rather strange attention of Kibble,
who stood in front of him holding a box of figs,
thinking perhaps the sight of them might
cheer him up a bit when he opened his eyes,
Ben at last came round. He cried excitedly,
“ Where’s Baggs? where’s Baggs? fetch him,
he knows all about it.”

Mr. Morris had been talking at the door to
the policeman, assuring him that Ben was
honest as the day, and could not be guilty.
To all of which Police-constable X 123
repeated almost word for word,

“But you see, there was the half-crown in
his very pocket, sir.”

At the sound of Ben’s voice they went back
again, but Mrs. Morris, deeming that the
helmet and plated buttons might upset the boy
again, straightway led him into the parlour and
began to comfort him. But the fact that the
half-crown had been found in his pocket was
as much a trouble to Ben as to the policeman.



56 Bright Ben.

“T found it there, ma’ am, when I went to
bed, and I remember seeing a half-crown like
it in Baggs’ hand when .I was going through
the fair. I’m sure, ma’am, I didn’t take it, and

yet I don’t know how it got into my pocket.”
‘ “Never mind, my boy, we will find that
lazy. young fellow, who I knew would never
come to any good, for he hated work, and
those who will not work never get on.”

“Oh but, ma’am, whatever would my mother
say if she knew I had been called a thief?”

“She shall not know, Ben, until you like to
tell her yourself.” .

A bright thought struck him as he said
quickly,

“Oh ma’am, do you think master would let
me go and find Baggs and bring him back?”

Much against the advice of X 123, who said
it was only setting a what-you-may-call-it
to catch a what-you-may-call-it, Mr. Morris
decided that Ben should go at once, but lest
he should come to any further harm from ©
this source of trouble, he despatched the faith-
ful Kibble to go with him.

They started at once for the place where
Baggs lived, but found his mother out, and, of -
course, her son not at home either. An old
woman who was hanging out some clothes in
the yard next door asked what they wanted.



The Culprit Found. 57

“Do you know where we can find Jem
Baggs?”

She gave a little laugh, and stopped with
. the peg in her hand across the line.

“Well, that’s a good un. Find Jem Baggs?
might as well look for a pin in a threshing
. barn, as my old father used to say. And who
wants to find a fellow like Jem, why he’s
worth nout to nobody.”

_ “But we want him very much; we come
from his master, Mr. Morris.”

“Oh, well, all I can tell you is that Jem must
ha’ gone to work rayther early this morning,
for at four o’clock, when I got up to light
my copper fire, I see him climbing over the
wall. ‘Hallo, I says, ‘Jem, I say, where are
you off to?’ ‘Oh, never you mind,’ he says ;
‘you just tell mother I shan’t be back again
for a goodish space, I fancy,’ and off he goes,”
which way, however, he went they could not

_make out from the old woman, so went away
as fast as they could along the high road in
the hope of seeing him.

Poor Ben was full of anxiety; felt, indeed,
innocent as he was, that he must be considered
the thief till the real one was found. He was
for running all the way, but this did not suit
the slower Kibble, who insisted upon not
making a fuss, and reminded Ben for giving



58 Bright Ben.

way, by telling him in a rather tragic voice
the story of some dreadful man who stole
three horses and harvest waggon, and went to
prison for years and years. Ben, fortunately
for his peace of mind, hardly listened to this
long drawn-out tale, for his heart beat fast,











“I SAY, MASTER, HAS ANYBODY PASSED THIS WAY?”

and one thought possessed him above all
others, “I must find Baggs.” After walking
several miles they came upon a caravan, one
of those strange yellow things which had
astonished Ben so much the other night.



The Culprit Found. 59

“Let’s ask this man if he has seen Baggs.”

“TI do it, Ben; you look that guilty and
bad it’s better for me to speak, I’m sure.”

“T say, master, has anybody passed this
way ?” said Kibble.

“Ves, lots.”

« Ah, but I meana young fellow about my
size, with a soft cap and heavyish boots on
his feet.”

“Was he as good-looking a chap as you?”

“No, he wasn’t.”

“Was he tall, with a queerish look in his
left eye, and drove a pony and trap? 5

“No, I should say not.”

« Ah, well; then, I haven’t seen him ; you d
better ask next door.”

And the man, laughing at his own jokes,
took hold again of his horse’s head and began
to hurry on. Ben began to despair, and tears
were already in his eyes because the search
seemed vain. Not so Kibble, however, who
took him aside and assured him that there
was something about that man with the
caravan which made him think he knew
about Baggs, and didn’t mean to tell.

What was to be done? Suppose, for
instance, that Baggs was hiding in that very
caravan, how could they get at him. And
see, the man was now whipping up his horse



60 Bright Ben.

as though to get out of the road as quickly
as possible.

Now it so happened that Policeman X 123
feeling dissatisfied with the result of the scene
in the shop, had made up his mind to leave
no stone unturned, and had heard ‘that the
two youths had set off in search of Baggs.

They had walked so slowly that he easily
followed without being noticed, and just at
this moment walked by them as if all un-
conscious of their presence.

“Kibble, look, why there’s the policeman
again.”

Ben was at first for running away, but his
companion held his hand.

“Ti, bobby, hi, hi!”

The policeman turned round and asked
what was wanted.

Then Kibble and Ben between them told
all that the driver of the caravan had said,
and what they thought.

“In that thing! not very likely.”

But for all that the policeman told Ben to
follow him across some fields quietly, and
presently they climbed a gate which brought
them into the road just as the caravan was
driving up. The policeman held up his hand.
“Stop! I want you to give us a lift.”

“Can’t, sir, really, horse’s tired you see, and



The Culprit Found. 61

the roads is heavy. There’ll be some nicer
weickle up soon as’ll suit you better.”

“No, I like yours best. Here Ben open
this. door at the back.”

In a moment he did so and the neliconiae
jumped in, closing the door behind, which
caused Kibble afterwards to say, that for all
the world it made him think most of a cat
shut up in a cupboard to catch a rat. Voices
could be heard inside speaking loudly.

“Who are you a hitting of? You let me
be and I’ll come quiet enough.”

“ All right, then, let me put these bracelets
on.”

The door opened, and the man in blue
descended followed by Baggs, handcuffed.

The driver was full of apologies,

“Beg pardon, sir, sorry this mistake has
happened ; you see the young gentleman was

a bit tired I fancy, and of course didn’t want
to be disturbed, but o’ course if T *d knowed—”

“ Here, that’s enough, go on.’

This he did most cheerfully, without look-
ing back.

Very few words passed as they returned to
Buswell; Ben wasn’t allowed to speak to
Baggs, and Kibble tried in vain to begin that
story again about the dreadful man and the
three horses, &c. Arrived at the shop, Mr,



62 . Bright Ben.

Morris taxed Baggs with stealing the half-
crown, and the culprit, seeing that there was
no way of escape, confessed to his offence and
begged for mercy.

“T don’t feel inclined to show you any,
haven’t I again and again forgiven your mis-
conduct, and especially do you deserve to be
punished this time for trying to ruin an
innocent fellow by your deceitful trick.”

“My opinion, sir, is,’ put in the policeman,
“that six months at the treadmill would do
him a world of good.”

While they were talking, there came into
Ben’s mind the words he had been reading in
his Testament a few nights before, “seventy
times seven.” He rushed forward to intercede
for Baggs.

“Oh, master, do please forgive him, if only
for my sake; I know he’s behaved very bad,
but perhaps, if you give him one more chance,
he might begin again. I forgive him, from
my heart, I do.”

And Ben took hold of the fettered hand of
Baggs, and looked into his face with a real
loving forgiveness, which went right to the
sinner’s heart. “Then, sir, think of his mother,
it will kill her to know that her son has been
taken to prison ; do, for her sake, let him go this
time.”



The Culprit Found. 63

Baggs looked at Ben, and stammered out
with genuine feeling,

“Thank you, Ben, but better let me be
punished ; I deserve it, God knows.”

It was not until after a long talk that Mr.
Morris at last consented, and the handcuffs
were removed from the repentant Baggs. It
must be said, however, that even the police-
. man, who, at first, was very reluctant and

‘indignant at parting with his prisoner, could
not help admitting that the tears and sorrow
of the lad were sincere.

That night, when Ben walked with him
home, at his request, he quite broke down,
and asked his friend to pray for him.

“T know how shamefully I’ve treated you,
Ben; and how you have been so very kind;
I don’t deserve it, but ask God to forgive me
too.”

“Baggs, do you think I can be kinder to
you than He can? He has said, ‘ Whosoever
cometh unto Me I will in no wise cast out.’
Now, come to Him as a sinner, seek Him
and He will be found by you, and remember
the words which are written inside my little
hymn-book, ‘This is a faithful saying, and
worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus
came into the world to save sinners.’”

They had reached the corner of the lane,







64 bright Ben.

where the moon behind the high trees threw
a deep shadow. Here the two boys stood
still, and removed their caps, while Ben
prayed for the poor wanderer, that he might
be saved. And He, whose ears are always
open to our cry, listened to the plea for mercy
which rose from the heart of Baggs, and said
unto him, “Go in peace, thy sins are forgiven
thee.”

From that hour, Jem Baggs and Ben Pottle
were fast friends, and working together behind
the counter, in Mr. Morris’s shop, to the satis-
faction of their master. Ben’s wages increased,
and more comforts came to the little cottage
under the hill; Agnes had not to tire herself
any more with lace-making, and old Pottle,
wherever he went, praised his son. But none
held him in higher regard than he, who could
say, that, under God, he owed everything to.
the forgiving love and Christian guidance of
Bright Little Ben.

THE END.



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Full Text


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describe
'1169' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXXN' 'sip-files00036.txt'
e597c0f1b574d7c70727f4ca1b52a115
de6fff985f4292b8ed0fe755750c36c4ae227100
'2012-05-13T22:54:27-04:00'
describe
'1193' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXXO' 'sip-files00037.txt'
b565196bb0de851b5e2b1eedad225d12
593318729b0736ee87b3176620ebac47c874c988
'2012-05-13T22:56:04-04:00'
describe
'1229' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXXP' 'sip-files00038.txt'
0343b753de9cc76b4cdca8d1b5e30560
9e63bc3f2454629942ff4139e6937c9ebfa7bb17
'2012-05-13T22:55:50-04:00'
describe
'1264' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXXQ' 'sip-files00039.txt'
d9940e5d8ba8503136b3bf63b247ea78
dc4a6730e161e43891048d795b09e096b57e2fa1
'2012-05-13T22:54:58-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXXR' 'sip-files00040.txt'
6c5c20d444873ca6d5e96fe96dc64dd8
19ca37b84399215f883d7c0a775085c8ebd815b7
'2012-05-13T22:55:24-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXXS' 'sip-files00041.txt'
0f8d2827b5e76074268eebcebfda4fb0
e887874a0f634c6d3b68ff8adf292ec5eaca5a5d
'2012-05-13T22:54:26-04:00'
describe
'938' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXXT' 'sip-files00042.txt'
b14cdbdeb90a44f4eda6f7a43169ed05
f6731cd69286be91e02d2ff21360d38b04870700
describe
'1228' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXXU' 'sip-files00043.txt'
fd434a056cc8e6a29c3f0cf14fbf2863
c0e9778e89948f98da5965861890062f2fe43094
describe
'1272' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXXV' 'sip-files00044.txt'
f04e1f9f73d2ecfd37d7c4574b0da118
75ceec50be8890ed703ca9458b247c5bfe476a21
describe
'1215' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXXW' 'sip-files00045.txt'
54be9002ebb2c5d3832440e865078f7b
944d0fecef245d403c93a61cff0cadc8933c62ab
'2012-05-13T22:54:18-04:00'
describe
'1171' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXXX' 'sip-files00046.txt'
84df91bf2028ccba94c8bc620bb2559a
fd4cf60afb73f02bd2e3037881ff6eedcc1143c9
'2012-05-13T22:54:41-04:00'
describe
'1181' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXXY' 'sip-files00047.txt'
cb0821f472df8b372c12da542370a355
1ed3fc3f8663979f4dfac3d413f7adc9eab62d44
describe
'580' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXXZ' 'sip-files00048.txt'
3cc0a4d1c6cc3f125e54bfba475070b2
01315c60e641a26078ee5ff51b0046f54529cb37
'2012-05-13T22:53:37-04:00'
describe
'1241' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYA' 'sip-files00049.txt'
4570ab98b37645034276e1d5be702f00
0fa9f86efdd67e479a23517e83ffa67973916e89
'2012-05-13T22:53:28-04:00'
describe
'943' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYB' 'sip-files00050.txt'
44c97fbf45964abeeba60d1c7fb2b62d
c931a3e8ada9a7aadab249de0815874cca410c7e
'2012-05-13T22:53:27-04:00'
describe
'1196' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYC' 'sip-files00051.txt'
130a5eb4aee19ebb331ad5b66734ba6f
eb01d9cbc6c17194490cd3a0bfb99407f0bc708b
'2012-05-13T22:53:44-04:00'
describe
'1220' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYD' 'sip-files00052.txt'
b63dcaf0f0fe8e2a25f8df016eb34b49
b19c8fd8d0aa895c699a8c6afd7b627ab311ff6f
'2012-05-13T22:53:24-04:00'
describe
'1203' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYE' 'sip-files00053.txt'
0f6dd7c08ff310cf63b6f1e21aa51699
358e9b1a41ba09cafccfba9b2b4052671b946899
'2012-05-13T22:54:17-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYF' 'sip-files00054.txt'
c2d44bde140517e7861c226855648480
c4a944961e08982dea6894ccdb6606c997dec1dd
'2012-05-13T22:53:51-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYG' 'sip-files00055.txt'
50d823d33c6e6f933dc13a48b34bd3a4
76d9fd6b4bed247f47f96412dbeb5e2e611b54b6
'2012-05-13T22:53:49-04:00'
describe
'1243' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYH' 'sip-files00056.txt'
f06d1552a4d462e55b782c49082826fb
6a7e15638cd173cc63cd48a36b2d2b1975d48ffb
describe
'1224' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYI' 'sip-files00057.txt'
2076e595b2751fb2215f91ec7d702f1a
d7d5a7f606c60c3c9541f70514bb0b80fb5856be
'2012-05-13T22:54:23-04:00'
describe
'1188' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYJ' 'sip-files00058.txt'
6267af8614a125709986cd8104c40973
1c75268f1d6cee34c45d7ca3a80df66ececf3477
'2012-05-13T22:53:12-04:00'
describe
'486' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYK' 'sip-files00059.txt'
2f3faea64bc2bb52b41f32fcbb7cb01f
84179168e1f6ce75fec065348168fd3e6943b4ad
'2012-05-13T22:56:18-04:00'
describe
'837' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYL' 'sip-files00060.txt'
b70dc646e641d03daa6e72b92a664ddd
41c49084be1fb60faa8fecc35dec0fbe13ca7a21
'2012-05-13T22:53:41-04:00'
describe
'1267' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYM' 'sip-files00061.txt'
8c471713a45373ec7e3a7c23116f0fa5
72937129d8a472dc73ddde0223fc991c5d02f1ac
describe
'1247' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYN' 'sip-files00062.txt'
79293af1e6c114b3393785a1d5d6e092
e86269f171a952192e660b99d3e6c476336102f8
'2012-05-13T22:54:25-04:00'
describe
'1328' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYO' 'sip-files00063.txt'
5b57e6076c5b328c3c0ac64781d42c3d
25de09a4b527b67cb0957e85c239afd4d87a99ac
'2012-05-13T22:56:23-04:00'
describe
'613' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYP' 'sip-files00064.txt'
8e4ae3023683bb1da6b16f83e44a2e3b
2df5a9fe5a577f64c0ffc389419b31bae4d5ed42
'2012-05-13T22:54:22-04:00'
describe
'1201' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYQ' 'sip-files00065.txt'
782b60fe0bc5ad9d427314e256fdc8a4
d153977854336eaa127cae92881afa69e2e6f77c
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYR' 'sip-files00066.txt'
6ec398a05323aee28b8fd9620dfeb6a7
bfb2c9f62dbc8e7ad621a0cf138f2f77ff7c6e35
describe
'1214' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYS' 'sip-files00067.txt'
a54c83d35f4d44db88c08efaaf01a356
aae45c0b342fb2fd94f559e7ed812584ca2020fc
'2012-05-13T22:54:09-04:00'
describe
'1222' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYT' 'sip-files00068.txt'
fee3f1596776cf6a526cf0011523650f
b960fdf33a189a3973e7b852867e77f0eebdac84
'2012-05-13T22:55:52-04:00'
describe
'1232' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYU' 'sip-files00069.txt'
f6b782b654613982be2834254a3e1599
869555d705fb05edaf19a28e9af9f4c0ac0744ae
describe
'1031' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYV' 'sip-files00070.txt'
d5d080af0d5f9f0603ca59026db88b61
3c133e9cbe8ea58a724f97ebc233860328a4773b
'2012-05-13T22:53:55-04:00'
describe
'931' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYW' 'sip-files00071.txt'
c0af5f1eeb9b7a3af6fe5b5999abca03
41ecc26cb2106e8b8180539710347192859fc014
describe
'916' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYX' 'sip-files00072.txt'
bf46fc3b6b2eea1184adb5fefb663c29
554ea6965a856ceab3be315c3190c62f01f4b623
'2012-05-13T22:53:08-04:00'
describe
'671' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYY' 'sip-files00073.txt'
1f6a7e30dcc888bb0adc5a6409ab6e9a
41f454607b9a0d841d7fa63230e1b6938b6de6a9
'2012-05-13T22:54:32-04:00'
describe
'1329' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXYZ' 'sip-files00074.txt'
205ed143fb150b167101a2f0bc98e1d8
754a065e353a1ae94462f111dd5483c8d4f2d56e
'2012-05-13T22:54:31-04:00'
describe
Invalid character
'1326' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZA' 'sip-files00075.txt'
f6e4ede03af44187cceff89149715423
5307436e780204a666f736bdf8262bd5d6ee3dca
describe
Invalid character
'1720' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZB' 'sip-files00076.txt'
3cc4c3b1b5373ddf1aadd4a3f7836043
7f8663108178359cd88dd1a35cc7775077c9b34d
describe
Invalid character
'766' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZC' 'sip-files00077.txt'
be9863019b904e385c2a63f713372cab
fe015ab70eb28ca1d84743b1fe1a54f6a0df177b
'2012-05-13T22:53:35-04:00'
describe
Invalid character
'981' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZD' 'sip-files00078.txt'
35eb60c1b0d0023f2cd9b7f1000cf5d7
c3025bf8cb1e2d503a24b93c802a68aa2bef160d
'2012-05-13T22:54:05-04:00'
describe
'215' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZE' 'sip-files00001.pro'
72af93845c9bf83ac8263ecdf6e932f8
0043851c2bb29c4cff8dbb9077126fb38dab32da
'2012-05-13T22:55:57-04:00'
describe
'3693' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZF' 'sip-files00002.pro'
388d2103ac861b48ed42142da8d11ab5
96b1f0c4cf918edea5e4143cd9f1891beb47da71
'2012-05-13T22:55:25-04:00'
describe
'632' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZG' 'sip-files00005.pro'
6e903bdb1106252d6c919c1b47c45724
e1a45206a382c55ef9c0e1cfca103981fe655e25
'2012-05-13T22:54:12-04:00'
describe
'1743' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZH' 'sip-files00008.pro'
1dc9c7b5dcecb4c53522ff8db149c6da
39e9bdb4170e430a3fa444f9a36f4c69c5119cdf
'2012-05-13T22:54:52-04:00'
describe
'3737' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZI' 'sip-files00009.pro'
a41ed10dc015c64977631e5b4985dc79
6fbb9a51980cea7434c34eef018b2b1ecb19de86
'2012-05-13T22:53:07-04:00'
describe
'6513' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZJ' 'sip-files00011.pro'
c5c3e5c510950d1f3082b1cd80b96767
fd243a6e682d5e62e02e645451ee98bacfff97e5
describe
'16658' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZK' 'sip-files00013.pro'
8018cdd2a82a2669e6bedd0f81d56e18
6478ebb7f2a2e31247ae9a9443b74286d74bf4c3
'2012-05-13T22:55:13-04:00'
describe
'33455' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZL' 'sip-files00014.pro'
08b270b05b890901cc5ee6fcc88608c8
f935b68546e01bdfab310efa9930ad6cc5cf0f5c
describe
'32438' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZM' 'sip-files00015.pro'
8cf3e665102d3fb4e1a03878780d862a
ea36b9c595e788a7f08122abb5de43ffbbe5910a
describe
'29551' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZN' 'sip-files00016.pro'
2d74d54512aced3ab22b26016119ef23
80ada29995d38784227a29891ee8301943a1cca4
describe
'742' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZO' 'sip-files00017.pro'
e9b2feaad3a28b3870c555eb8ef2df6a
a88ee87902addda5a9e525049db4a52b1046d360
describe
'31250' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZP' 'sip-files00019.pro'
bbe1df41072d58df9056bbdc52ce10ef
dc27fedc8ceaedabc7e66beb2431b364712e7d34
'2012-05-13T22:55:34-04:00'
describe
'32845' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZQ' 'sip-files00020.pro'
7ce7ab3ac9edf940e9e999ac60b76b05
44cbfab3e299c9eb1749dea686b9b6317a98a9f1
describe
'28412' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZR' 'sip-files00021.pro'
2143b962308a043100d33ecab6652506
1ab49114cd51cb47f42c7316b9ab9d7afd1389b8
'2012-05-13T22:53:21-04:00'
describe
'9157' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZS' 'sip-files00022.pro'
709cc6614dcbc66fedca80f736848e71
2df6c0c2866425f68ee10889d69a1f7a8f7750d0
'2012-05-13T22:52:57-04:00'
describe
'21489' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZT' 'sip-files00023.pro'
cbaf49e4be43ac74d275c019dd8498a6
efebbea221f3fb02127e91478d4888bba731f353
describe
'31278' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZU' 'sip-files00024.pro'
4dcc75053b7ce45174d3aa42e690057f
a21cc3f27aa8aa7adbe396206c188503adcf0219
'2012-05-13T22:53:42-04:00'
describe
'29726' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZV' 'sip-files00025.pro'
06f1a035979eec82b26df362899b054f
1170ce9ec4bf847f3d8d0b9998059e0f70244095
'2012-05-13T22:56:03-04:00'
describe
'30308' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZW' 'sip-files00026.pro'
7d2ebae067fc74b530a2675fc4a66d67
03f30b05a0f25c44f6c45131cec5495e4a426256
'2012-05-13T22:56:01-04:00'
describe
'34037' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZX' 'sip-files00027.pro'
00d82f5ddf4d765f330bf0eb0762b503
fa27c139458ee9731eb7465153da53fb0103c6cd
describe
'30446' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZY' 'sip-files00028.pro'
d197e8153eed6242b2213aecfbcd842c
b820511396b64ed27103fca7b5291d22dea9d917
'2012-05-13T22:54:55-04:00'
describe
'30019' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACXZZ' 'sip-files00029.pro'
6d0d08296298d562e7cd43daeae156f7
6bbdcc76802985ede4db561f6043d811fb0e8fa8
describe
'24025' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAA' 'sip-files00030.pro'
937eeee272329d58ffe4ebcc8f86922e
f20a6cd0b1ccb51a2e749991a9bdc70e1e0f294d
'2012-05-13T22:55:51-04:00'
describe
'22293' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAB' 'sip-files00031.pro'
1a8c99c0500e6b15b2955be8dec104e3
0680d4a46b5eb666ff53acd7f53e47c299a83a0f
describe
'31940' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAC' 'sip-files00032.pro'
efaadd688d49fab1e72dd2e2fd1f9f5c
c6602b48e049a185bd2ca04138beb3a404baf4ea
'2012-05-13T22:53:19-04:00'
describe
'667' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAD' 'sip-files00033.pro'
0df9d68d284ea5366bc98fd0370d209a
b91185528f7dfce2d70fcfb8f590e06a9de8520e
'2012-05-13T22:52:58-04:00'
describe
'28952' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAE' 'sip-files00035.pro'
ff83af09b0853ca02168b2399b4eab16
ff4be02c86aaad0f1b23c68e2450a6dd90da5949
describe
'29081' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAF' 'sip-files00036.pro'
ca2eefaed1defc97da94940a1c06d99b
f4471db311ae045b0508bb386bdeb85bf2279e53
'2012-05-13T22:53:32-04:00'
describe
'29463' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAG' 'sip-files00037.pro'
12af67b6d8a948a049ea476475c25557
fc592555984b5130bdd045750ae03c591cd3ac23
describe
'30925' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAH' 'sip-files00038.pro'
cd663de6941cc410cbebf715ec222bc7
f28ab8141926c6d0645dddfa149ce46f65f52060
describe
'31270' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAI' 'sip-files00039.pro'
6ddb028ab1e0b1a4c512f3e4afd327be
f994b6601ef9ad7d021f50364ed276826bd842d6
'2012-05-13T22:53:33-04:00'
describe
'30058' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAJ' 'sip-files00040.pro'
24c8c0477321383aff94defe912d7873
fe68c88aecb3ee4ed9640ccc2bfe253da1d11da8
'2012-05-13T22:53:25-04:00'
describe
'32168' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAK' 'sip-files00041.pro'
88e69892f524b4f03a87a5bf6e087809
c0381c256c1fc04affb9afad8701f50e455f7144
describe
'22106' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAL' 'sip-files00042.pro'
e9ad7e705c490d47aeebfa73334eb404
a47a329bab08010f62058983d94be47ccb1c0714
'2012-05-13T22:53:14-04:00'
describe
'30951' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAM' 'sip-files00043.pro'
0acfa4d92a05ae66d1c04c93111d9cc9
a0a4063c2bc273fc2ca3a12c7cca5fc82362139d
describe
'31557' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAN' 'sip-files00044.pro'
c38c32b6cbf2caa683e9cbc63c1cdb82
cfa0b735312085ca4d83c893f090599b424630d4
describe
'30057' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAO' 'sip-files00045.pro'
dc5ee018fc370350aeac93fa2a69bae3
5f8d36bf86086b07e58f7e32b37614b8a6e28e45
'2012-05-13T22:56:22-04:00'
describe
'29041' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAP' 'sip-files00046.pro'
55a85ca808787eddb157ea01558ffcb3
5ad37a28e3184df2f495d974c98f699f801d548c
'2012-05-13T22:53:57-04:00'
describe
'29682' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAQ' 'sip-files00047.pro'
f32055588aa236b3d98cd045055078d1
fdbe2c07ff34c8cb92cf289d6113b7eef00397ea
'2012-05-13T22:56:07-04:00'
describe
'14101' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAR' 'sip-files00048.pro'
7037e9e31accc72fbc49ea0a0779dcd9
30e4d9785dd94e3bd9ddb02bd517b8e3f54f1034
'2012-05-13T22:55:31-04:00'
describe
'30956' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAS' 'sip-files00049.pro'
415d87c5dda4e57488e33e1b8a5cce22
eefb7fe675667dafe6d519988c50d61dc3861c12
'2012-05-13T22:56:05-04:00'
describe
'22047' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAT' 'sip-files00050.pro'
dc91ce77e955135b1fecc1624e0b6857
03e325d749fcba54a8661901697db4a26dc0433c
describe
'29943' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAU' 'sip-files00051.pro'
836c361cd4c7bee707684b7b016a8453
d8c89a93dabdd6752fcd5dde8c3c526cdf877eeb
'2012-05-13T22:55:03-04:00'
describe
'30608' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAV' 'sip-files00052.pro'
f250d85cadab75a6d8def0d7ed4922ba
cbd889c2e2cda26fb0134ee301196e50b3477fea
describe
'30083' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAW' 'sip-files00053.pro'
57b72af72dc58e5f22223822c6623a4c
d70ca2be3ffd86e0a53efbb7eb330f4703dc1e3f
'2012-05-13T22:54:57-04:00'
describe
'29901' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAX' 'sip-files00054.pro'
c35fe401f4a1ebab8ffcf63edc7f9ebb
3657d94eec7457b6923afd840f0acd4974b388b9
describe
'29361' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAY' 'sip-files00055.pro'
ee7f1325130c8f78c7210dd4c3033201
72612c734a5095c812c666aadffdb25acedfdd79
'2012-05-13T22:53:34-04:00'
describe
'31029' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYAZ' 'sip-files00056.pro'
d48a318ec39071a9b954f5117cec852a
b812249d596cccb0f210f3d57b1cd6defbb64850
'2012-05-13T22:56:17-04:00'
describe
'29489' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBA' 'sip-files00057.pro'
f88dcf0c1c3f0930983806a7a59c0649
67e7f2f1cdcdc69af14ff5c9b9249fff9b106f34
'2012-05-13T22:54:20-04:00'
describe
'29724' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBB' 'sip-files00058.pro'
33651ac2477d217adfe5c245ab2a783a
9209a9bffe6249d0bf17fa5dac59f868cc2f4c0a
describe
'11966' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBC' 'sip-files00059.pro'
34011a9920112d33da79ff4cf4282098
a2c11c712ad5dbe55ac5fcfe8720084e00503832
describe
'19024' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBD' 'sip-files00060.pro'
e800843faad52c1d214b1f285bf467d3
cde628d0760df4bef8231bba086f051b86cd1aec
describe
'31979' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBE' 'sip-files00061.pro'
a45f85a76717ac0ec8ad04853f6294e9
abac1a6954cc2207064357b645f02c738b463ac5
'2012-05-13T22:56:10-04:00'
describe
'31433' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBF' 'sip-files00062.pro'
05a4e5bec5f7202d624b61a802656abc
142b640d7977fc57d66d162ad1c81b1e6d6b828d
describe
'31302' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBG' 'sip-files00063.pro'
decfa5a423554302dde96784088464ba
9bce36a563bc95d9fed8ffc8c947451033e9c0ec
'2012-05-13T22:53:05-04:00'
describe
'15144' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBH' 'sip-files00064.pro'
3313ea0bad83eaa3d19a41f289969281
e0147b0dcf21c10dae68fee66aa620b1cc5ae45b
'2012-05-13T22:55:53-04:00'
describe
'28719' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBI' 'sip-files00065.pro'
73f636c135147943fff4ed4823710a5d
7db21ccc9c2990e5e0646bf0f9886cdb54f67dc5
'2012-05-13T22:55:47-04:00'
describe
'28813' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBJ' 'sip-files00066.pro'
c23e14bb9de2cfacecdc10fb40eca443
95f2b4aaa7d94aa03fe13533f81bcb97a9ea4c1c
describe
'29790' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBK' 'sip-files00067.pro'
03db64109e1f68a826f82e133d9ba8d1
3dd10f7d09a8bcfe77ba7ac8b1c3971dd93b2752
describe
'30776' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBL' 'sip-files00068.pro'
c42945e286df2d54c7ff750a4d88f965
f1cdaddb6b7e203f12e330c21d6d3584df421a2e
'2012-05-13T22:53:11-04:00'
describe
'30480' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBM' 'sip-files00069.pro'
7183de6a256ff8c1f54489d8a9b4f435
35a7ceca77780063edefbd86653a72d6861683b2
describe
'24397' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBN' 'sip-files00070.pro'
f3131e3b4fd3b9fab95137eefdbb045c
aee12ea84745432e5ec615314ad49d7ea8517260
'2012-05-13T22:53:18-04:00'
describe
'21398' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBO' 'sip-files00071.pro'
8bd43540a8a357cc7258873ee713b31f
75db2503cda42ea3057f641b6150f1d5833cb5a8
'2012-05-13T22:53:22-04:00'
describe
'19557' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBP' 'sip-files00072.pro'
4d22a8abeb572f1b55a7c379415ce8d6
699b8592c499ca831d6f835fd2ffe7af4cfb4356
'2012-05-13T22:56:09-04:00'
describe
'14006' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBQ' 'sip-files00073.pro'
933c0797a72cf82b4da65317f674eb9f
d6772b34f12ab4548296fee94376da24ef3c2477
describe
'28285' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBR' 'sip-files00074.pro'
ef10080e38b2b700e54145626e052fa7
38c6c6e6a4b3623d8e83da53143e9d311ab1f46b
'2012-05-13T22:53:40-04:00'
describe
'29443' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBS' 'sip-files00075.pro'
46bb2e29d799b4b16fa0b5794fef1223
8113749ee845cef26a0760ea2e1c5a6de7cd134c
'2012-05-13T22:53:30-04:00'
describe
'35143' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBT' 'sip-files00076.pro'
cca39beea843028d9d496cb743d30719
b3a2c7898447e14ecfc541ec42dab95d5fde87d5
describe
'12280' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBU' 'sip-files00077.pro'
4879b72e07f15593f5463a420a712112
5cd5b2b69b4285d30487967fa5f4e8fa7858f0d1
'2012-05-13T22:53:15-04:00'
describe
'11558' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBV' 'sip-files00078.pro'
1056e62d7155270bb3dd519db248339f
87e9f4e2c1ed96bf4d84ec7c024ee6471d5422c8
'2012-05-13T22:55:41-04:00'
describe
'302861' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBW' 'sip-files00001.jp2'
0df34bbb3f73b0716ec4e03cca2b588a
c8e258568d0ac8b82a0922c545360b2bca926d1c
describe
'307353' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBX' 'sip-files00002.jp2'
753c6e9938ad09bc6a4f28e62b8d4c36
7b49b6caf8ef6d2caf60c858d3a2bfe4f7c8a3b9
describe
'275611' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBY' 'sip-files00005.jp2'
c27e81173f2a974a7c7849e68d83b8e9
b4af6cf81f237a5d73e7a41a2f7b1afa169ed3d2
'2012-05-13T22:56:20-04:00'
describe
'1664' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYBZ' 'sip-files00006.jp2'
4a09ac216d6d540f94d2b71204111eac
e6570fad8006eb1b782356554c63b386095c362b
'2012-05-13T22:54:46-04:00'
describe
'262005' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCA' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
c3e947276b5a32411aaefd41b633f4c1
2f3f3caee8679ccc1e84d3791d3d7c002e08f579
describe
'260370' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCB' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
822eb9f41ece1b78ec14e8dd239eb8ac
223e92c4b4dcca6b0a5d272e9555c416c9419a72
describe
'275651' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCC' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
34928fd93ced604a8f8d8e0a426e0493
fd98138c3579639769005275645aa9a6a218a2f1
describe
'275337' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCD' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
2187880853843b7d21e189041f508ccb
27d733e83f2cf058329d98dfa0b861f121d5daef
describe
'275528' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCE' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
e10b3a885bf27588c267c83af6ee7ac5
c47c432ff1e35420000e1db7dbd9d30db161b859
'2012-05-13T22:55:30-04:00'
describe
'275429' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCF' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
1e690ff7e259e239e86101f552b6a15b
5c601f6579fa847a21fb851f1d7d56b96573c543
'2012-05-13T22:53:06-04:00'
describe
'275638' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCG' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
280d7773a2d2f743ba0f7f9cd95c286c
ee00f1b1bc0ffda75048373c94708c42a8f3f196
describe
'275392' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCH' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
471f094b615dbc48c2c4513ec71bdc2b
f4faca68b69ab615ad7d15cd217b3239565fba95
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCI' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
cd0988994e394b0184765cd38279b5a9
afe0c6b5f465b8c554dbbeca1f600f11e5532a2b
'2012-05-13T22:55:54-04:00'
describe
'275169' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCJ' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
8fb023627803500c5436af7fa93c3574
71f7f084cd285300d4cdd1cafd93f980430467dd
describe
'275622' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCK' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
81762031aaa418618425bcbdf94854db
abbb1cea560d59b5878debc9bcd1f7a21dc9ad8c
describe
'275346' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCL' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
8150324996d1a36ceb49282334b970b8
97268ec4e81bd8bfb92fcbfb7bd05ff5d764a859
describe
'275576' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCM' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
8bdca003a2eb9e0310ceeb76ad1cf91b
4cc0e26988709000ca70f02bb84068020d754562
'2012-05-13T22:55:01-04:00'
describe
'275350' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCN' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
06713a9cf1a1dafe3c307700eaeecdfc
4d05f41391a8ec9ac934cfece693b94f85941768
'2012-05-13T22:55:56-04:00'
describe
'275633' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCO' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
16be365606aaa5e75bf30f29c0e0f4fc
87e11368e47cb674140e9052df33118d8e13adf7
describe
'275606' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCP' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
af85dd2f91382e622adfd9876cc32a8d
15e50efc8ca7c6b1c9989572f66cde2c6d0e829e
'2012-05-13T22:54:00-04:00'
describe
'275405' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCQ' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
725ec779ebf5d73ef09bf02791884bda
830af132a85ec28c20595e38a19c2dbd9b62d187
'2012-05-13T22:53:53-04:00'
describe
'275338' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCR' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
766b7b6ee4664779a95746de9c006b92
8e22a1cdcb1e9a68ad3c5080f1ba247c3499a8f5
'2012-05-13T22:53:26-04:00'
describe
'275422' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCS' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
03185eeb96e13effe94a71e609450dbc
f0851b2ce5859ec1695dcae44ce6cac0b0e25040
describe
'275406' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCT' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
54222e90f183f72f5295786ff0a4ac4d
62fbe7ccd37dc43b33d4cb285250cc9ec3ba50ab
'2012-05-13T22:54:04-04:00'
describe
'275654' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCU' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
087b0c32ead6c3d5defbf70767cb93a8
d1249f016bafcfc9b82029edc95e10e31881d054
describe
'275583' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCV' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
a00b815223f45362763e1f3ed5dcbced
33557f43190586606e9b57895eee43a092354160
'2012-05-13T22:54:39-04:00'
describe
'275631' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCW' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
19830647f0b5211ae6c70b7fb2c53e13
0f60c40753a49c6dbc0e20fa020c30a97a740113
'2012-05-13T22:53:02-04:00'
describe
'275399' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCX' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
bba2c53efddb75a4453879c0c0b7ffa5
880bb7b11cf88ce728121fa381f9b1d859772093
'2012-05-13T22:56:11-04:00'
describe
'275570' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCY' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
b0e12d58bdf81ce6aeb10e96e585c2f5
738bdabe91eb01dde4b6acf3950e02d96ec3bd70
describe
'275268' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYCZ' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
9c4be1c6cf7f5eb3af2d8df56b2c4224
9bced8b64395c01ab56148b807dc58d1a10e073d
describe
'275636' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDA' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
ee318b4ec70f8d9b1c750efb66ff4ebb
fec276bf4cdb1f43e0ea9cfed77971cac6861eb4
'2012-05-13T22:55:21-04:00'
describe
'275624' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDB' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
4823834094e564acc83c94dc2060c12d
d89ccc34397646956c8714d4801c23f0bda82d23
describe
'275634' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDC' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
7cc0e910e48cefd6c2c77b36b97ae5c8
b8baeab8a5a801a897179109bb0d2f5e9417bb73
'2012-05-13T22:54:07-04:00'
describe
'275620' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDD' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
4ecc4bccd510938395d48613cd0effcd
442db02e5bece2f149443507bcc8721d997184c5
'2012-05-13T22:53:54-04:00'
describe
'275566' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDE' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
3b3b5e4a69a4d543a6d2a8bc97218cbb
772b944958827cf54654ee499b90ea9ef21bf36e
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDF' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
d51f7573a50c0109f6eb1363cc29dc0e
5a03a409c235ecb77c08821712fdc5efd5dbdf9d
describe
'275535' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDG' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
d62f7cc6df21971b6a7c6a8466ada1e0
5c17e3227238bfc86674a3fc1c79920e0f0f7998
describe
'275427' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDH' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
0172b9da832a8132e160058cd51452bd
dbda6e439698e974fc35bf6abc1c821aed3fe26a
describe
'275577' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDI' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
c67f6a8bf061f217abc54ac6dd5d600f
14f79e14369f5301c01a44e518590809a8a5b08c
describe
'275617' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDJ' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
f3e82164981506854329610262439b8a
a9353bec7b55e355b24417d1014ffd681f0377ac
'2012-05-13T22:54:24-04:00'
describe
'275645' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDK' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
c69e9b266ee608165250a892807a8971
f152ce2f5551e0a2d45d358b97602a8ebbc8df83
describe
'275625' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDL' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
ee61ab84d0b918c1d7733b146e6e5436
66521104af84680371ce9b282ff07e2296e7499c
'2012-05-13T22:53:13-04:00'
describe
'275629' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDM' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
c628a338e0d6a138cd96ba9cfc9fa314
2c720eb05ed406bd609cb6d78729dd6ac0462513
'2012-05-13T22:53:39-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDN' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
af2b247fc7df177d6dd7bb02c46911e4
7f4cb65c232ca1b634c4dee71e48cbdb5cf4d810
describe
'275519' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDO' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
13831ad7139ff29199d8017fdcf2322f
c34f0fb05a67b9f5c6404614d17ea4949c096a32
describe
'275630' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDP' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
83e109217e8b266804eaa835d1c77d86
bf2f556ed196bb2a9e2e2728a717439f556cfa27
'2012-05-13T22:55:43-04:00'
describe
'275585' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDQ' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
17cf01272c4ac1353b67a9adfbd0fed7
05688a5fe757232e98eaefcf673cc3af3727fdac
'2012-05-13T22:55:09-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDR' 'sip-files00052.jp2'
1a5ed74ff2a26e5cb4f4cf387bb4e7c6
8f166ac4c6510e9d1ad6bd1a8220a6e50e8b798e
'2012-05-13T22:55:18-04:00'
describe
'275623' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDS' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
c8983a980c4300f79f77d461f2a27aed
5fc8d083e0f812717629bd7acc991c095b3e235f
'2012-05-13T22:54:16-04:00'
describe
'275646' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDT' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
36562111cd9727c2fbbc44eaf531e630
80ec143b9563125010b129d97b5e03801692f2c5
'2012-05-13T22:53:48-04:00'
describe
'275648' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDU' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
44cbea6a9e326cb55a52d2fa0cdedce5
16e7817eba193373b26a76a915e36c0698cc1d3b
describe
'275340' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDV' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
9b08e745d5c90f3203c94fe038f8c537
2dd83cba936bc7c5bf5814c334a66ef58a16ef7f
describe
'275628' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDW' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
0a3c2630cd7e25c4ca805e063b0803b1
50e836c028f56695e8b5ba535fbd0ced644f0034
describe
'275613' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDX' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
207810ffbf6d924fc98a5f30a3be4cc6
7b380bcfc3738765135e0f17d3671683959477db
'2012-05-13T22:55:32-04:00'
describe
'275505' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDY' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
30eb1b7d314ef15b720d9faa7f3c9f32
7f3c8acca8d4b45165f3147f051f09252e5fdde4
describe
'275431' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYDZ' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
703ba45af91a6f1ba4e1cb18ba599350
b932897463c03d6d29ac208cb27ae7f603835ae8
'2012-05-13T22:56:12-04:00'
describe
'275602' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEA' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
eb70657ae84786103e9206c0f7cd97f2
285aca2faa1edb14cc5098617baea0cd5c5b886e
'2012-05-13T22:54:29-04:00'
describe
'275397' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEB' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
05649ed34a2a63f68567dac3e76ab8e1
332e69bbd11234243279ed236d5f298ee6f8be29
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEC' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
103e28e950dae7dd7d03cdac1e479d31
c34857abbf97c6f3d435d7587a5527c75df666c0
'2012-05-13T22:55:29-04:00'
describe
'275510' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYED' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
0c4ec2d55a031069fbdfff7616361af2
7df636673b2cd8fd2a31cb068d7aeaa4962db4a0
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEE' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
1f4f279fab542fb20875048040a958de
6b019f4af966d442eee496dd91ad2a4c21f76b65
describe
'275373' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEF' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
b6bb4abe8a156d4767c0abd857edc6cb
86ada1225264644de0a5de6816c3cd3ff5f124d8
describe
'267505' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEG' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
1a81757c936f260c2126a06701225f80
aa25c5e47a999013825a0f8bb81bf257656ad26b
describe
'275653' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEH' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
c07358060d8d8c06ec416dac0252ab72
b10c237a9f6cb6f17d905c040cd7adaa54257cfe
describe
'269347' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEI' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
0346a7f14b08825d538c435eb1eb5104
520eced11f3188092a82dd62c3db756b835285ee
'2012-05-13T22:54:37-04:00'
describe
'275336' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEJ' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
e11d5251b9d8d793c104c7adf9f60d03
15620c9601b2d8ea395b84f476659d09f4336923
describe
'275418' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEK' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
9539cf20939b7e373094baf86d8fb38e
47a29ca07a55a2fe91bb5eb7ec42f14fc446c3b0
describe
'275567' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEL' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
dddf86e2c0cfbda6d42d23c0ab041495
24c07b0c5ea9e17956589dc316423deba27512df
'2012-05-13T22:53:20-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEM' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
c0a4f5ee5600d9b1278e667bf22806d2
d0c9b5c6ea2bd3b4f2411fcc978f9f5023ad1d1c
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEN' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
3f3b7e75620903af9273e12182d60924
32c5032c449388b4ebd3689678212bedcff1ea19
'2012-05-13T22:54:06-04:00'
describe
'275604' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEO' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
dc8b57392bb1500da59b9085a9d97f20
75eee8d91ac519f94ad38584f5608a1236309425
describe
'275595' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEP' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
6901c44f33debce1fa3c36d3c24ae1d7
fbabd73cabd2439f1ae76fddc307a31ba7449f94
describe
'275574' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEQ' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
613b99c276a059f7408128d7de071f87
65b5a0d979341a95c32ffe0c1d5f17dfcbee72ad
describe
'268409' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYER' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
f988b8a06ee19694ca0561b6ae078c3e
e0785fa07d25c0b4efa88669ce609ca78c4cad09
describe
'309182' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYES' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
de860b0eaeb9543a796df4d4a5cf9818
079889f0a0798132c0d42fcd2f3033e2c71155c6
describe
'294036' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYET' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
03284969646f53cb389108788c73459c
4544ee2f64cd5c19e3a57069fdd4938af296c2a2
describe
'7289636' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEU' 'sip-files00001.tif'
9c336fde4114e99bacdec8de4dc34376
e5a243c208e20ba0f224ec85c4f9eb4e99448c92
'2012-05-13T22:53:38-04:00'
describe
'7396456' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEV' 'sip-files00002.tif'
63eca414e0274ec13fae4b11dee69101
1b74326a00ddae98b095091115fa92706ff66570
'2012-05-13T22:55:07-04:00'
describe
'2223020' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEW' 'sip-files00005.tif'
595e467a3301e96854dd7ac69f207ff5
5ca038ec9b0412ed0fd02e8b0212f51631331592
'2012-05-13T22:53:58-04:00'
describe
'2222476' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEX' 'sip-files00006.tif'
cb3fade07b59758fc4e6a0b99afb0dcb
904a2fa0b73f713af340f043dfde02366a40a478
describe
'6310668' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEY' 'sip-files00008.tif'
d6d968ce6df543a72804d0705154b744
782d28642d65d1471223ee7a6ff11dd746f8f4a8
'2012-05-13T22:53:09-04:00'
describe
'2102824' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYEZ' 'sip-files00009.tif'
8c7f3d8262f72316bc5599f0558b9dea
58b50a22b4594f357fbae6c442a52f74c3b11a83
'2012-05-13T22:55:11-04:00'
describe
'2215988' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFA' 'sip-files00011.tif'
93223c227987118ac9fd3fb274a1783a
de90e2d2cf4e91aae2554eebb7eb521859c9927a
describe
'2212976' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFB' 'sip-files00012.tif'
27bacf302cc23d114d8494ebd493d720
ed14b26c1e74b6677a78883f2f5dfdd360872b3d
describe
'2217924' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFC' 'sip-files00013.tif'
9bb7ba33a3e0798483505eb101db21e2
63e3bb38960814fe8b7060b440f26d8d53d00495
'2012-05-13T22:53:43-04:00'
describe
'2217316' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFD' 'sip-files00014.tif'
1785379602cf9b06ba2fe6fb5f5d6a15
912fc1c6659d105c8a9aca082625880dd16a72c8
describe
'2219332' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFE' 'sip-files00015.tif'
2675df6d15bcea98e815b2bd266e1541
9ee3a7318f188b5c3dcace0fa23aac09600d200c
'2012-05-13T22:55:33-04:00'
describe
'2217208' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFF' 'sip-files00016.tif'
0f34f04430658ebbc362af519f6309fc
689619e8218ead26f79d832772cf9380b9d94755
'2012-05-13T22:55:59-04:00'
describe
'2218448' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFG' 'sip-files00017.tif'
c4cfc6972a8ba4e52773896adaf1b95b
2b4c99f35a99c84ed7f7955a60dbbb972bc3ddf4
describe
'2212932' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFH' 'sip-files00018.tif'
86b87afc803f484555016d47ef391ad2
f6f5a8845e521f9e285d58027ac638b7016674f2
describe
'2219180' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFI' 'sip-files00019.tif'
80ced27476b893111e1ab9fb2967abc6
ccfb038941e755cdf4a512850361e7b3626ba01e
'2012-05-13T22:52:59-04:00'
describe
'2217240' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFJ' 'sip-files00020.tif'
53e4d79619414e1a18e75fd0c32e61ce
0ac673e28084af6a70cd3436d99a1b52b57c652b
'2012-05-13T22:54:40-04:00'
describe
'2218856' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFK' 'sip-files00021.tif'
5012b90d89d4928fc29e491ebb6be18f
c21c18522a57490af9e87eb2254ada845597d9d5
'2012-05-13T22:53:10-04:00'
describe
'2214744' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFL' 'sip-files00022.tif'
88117a9c2a40c6c470e6855b91ac000e
418868d425ee7fac9bf46ecee143520ee65c1712
describe
'2218384' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFM' 'sip-files00023.tif'
b5244e76d8e0c40d9c792be8e44377d0
8fc98a30ddcf14db19c3c776c3b40d8573b01b4c
'2012-05-13T22:54:19-04:00'
describe
'2219056' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFN' 'sip-files00024.tif'
418a0b91ca67c4e861dc919b1c0a2b27
4530e76b3d6eafa06793710f6c1f6a00dcc772e2
describe
'2217356' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFO' 'sip-files00025.tif'
7a1a2d82cda102af88b5ff531792afdf
0f8d88af61bd743dd7314db2a29f5087bd0d213d
describe
'2217352' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFP' 'sip-files00026.tif'
6e1dcab8d8f3e1b2fc0bf96517027b13
893695e5bca2b4abd577cfdbf824e1b8f8a8f4a4
'2012-05-13T22:53:47-04:00'
describe
'2217336' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFQ' 'sip-files00027.tif'
b91ff113ebcdc425561aa7fdbc6b6710
6484dfdfee486b13c6968694d0e651e754f44c8f
'2012-05-13T22:54:34-04:00'
describe
'2217340' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFR' 'sip-files00028.tif'
66eddbb0e0b662696b9c4cfb870704e1
2ef88275457967d25ec84f4dd32e9e534e49ce15
'2012-05-13T22:54:33-04:00'
describe
'2219256' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFS' 'sip-files00029.tif'
462a81d19b6271bf2fc2bb17f3ff4397
91888c97cfcb3913b217cac20f1fed5ad4a91db7
'2012-05-13T22:54:59-04:00'
describe
'2218280' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFT' 'sip-files00030.tif'
a84f3c01692ee163f3ab42f81539f170
3976a973b66cb57571e683a636504fa45578fb04
'2012-05-13T22:55:58-04:00'
describe
'2218216' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFU' 'sip-files00031.tif'
58a77e36a0d5038052a7cdd663091dbe
34edbbb761187dcea55e44df3495e0697649fbbe
'2012-05-13T22:53:03-04:00'
describe
'2225324' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFV' 'sip-files00032.tif'
27554000d4e085e38fc54ce9ef337378
f92c8569b2a1bd3e91f462c99ecd1d42d19e9c40
describe
'2219428' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFW' 'sip-files00033.tif'
7724ea76915df0567fd5c456f50a1123
12051972b85486279de2fcd1d6313b55ecfbee81
describe
'2212924' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFX' 'sip-files00034.tif'
918bc79dbc4bf8feac94f0ff723cd21e
af4efc86756a74b207b27e62d0adbe2407539338
describe
'2219044' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFY' 'sip-files00035.tif'
3b758bfcd97701d9e1b83aceffd9283b
849ce7f96ae5b89ffdaa35dafd191eede444bcba
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYFZ' 'sip-files00036.tif'
80bac7623f16c55174b20088cb4d6a6b
14f4baf88bfedf3354067a377a0667891e61ccfd
describe
'2219124' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGA' 'sip-files00037.tif'
403a28d6c93a9ef2fd1fcfbde4f3f9de
ad5a15f680dd2b6d8788c572343d3325a17d0480
describe
'2219164' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGB' 'sip-files00038.tif'
c887f26792c78ca06e5e879dbdbf8c80
abd84f2130764c5eb34ff76cf70fca55b77a2617
describe
'2226904' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGC' 'sip-files00039.tif'
6b8c04b55fa3bc46fa15099d9017e155
9dd8d9c7739d1e6f79ba08461f5b5518b305a684
describe
'2225388' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGD' 'sip-files00040.tif'
eecf00ef95f3c24409cee687e353c473
ba3a981baaea6cd104a15445e16d089f38cf50cf
describe
'2227028' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGE' 'sip-files00041.tif'
4fae39cac4b81235a0fc0b76466b0578
9132491e36d924c2670b2ff9a148549948aba62f
'2012-05-13T22:55:17-04:00'
describe
'2224516' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGF' 'sip-files00042.tif'
ec03b31817a13d8c5bc840aed9594195
e58dc5a698bf9fead44f7f730d6a07a7b50fa444
'2012-05-13T22:55:38-04:00'
describe
'2219076' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGG' 'sip-files00043.tif'
3801c6d1b7fae6590dfe61c94dd9eb69
f59eec9389fa8292662e30dc5c05613e730b78ee
'2012-05-13T22:53:16-04:00'
describe
'2227220' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGH' 'sip-files00044.tif'
708c8d4625c3ae95a3282666a436f181
0f0852271777a037a1079c0c06050e06fccb9a3a
describe
'2219264' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGI' 'sip-files00045.tif'
fa35d21eae09eff781a5cb4888283e85
cb52e4f23854d01d9769da6e7932b636ac4ac479
describe
'2219184' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGJ' 'sip-files00046.tif'
1dc8074da5de03422e2375cca4af169a
79f09ef904b4046555387e8287cd5ff130676632
describe
'2219416' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGK' 'sip-files00047.tif'
de4d8e8461189954a20726daadec936f
d2576c9b13c359e468a2fcb24efdfd3441b369f1
describe
'2218428' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGL' 'sip-files00048.tif'
52803a45a444a60eb6856e7acd1559a3
3f9f499004f52098ba13ebe1e715dc9181d710b1
describe
'2219100' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGM' 'sip-files00049.tif'
bfb35113acacf9c574e95f0a28d203ea
c6cee8faadf0739da5cdd66376b49f57835e8872
describe
'2218408' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGN' 'sip-files00050.tif'
b8a6088ea5f5090e299e80a70b6aa54f
f0461dd9c3f9be6689a16538c8cac56e55677b6a
describe
'2219052' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGO' 'sip-files00051.tif'
d898279c9e7336d52381aaa18fef2519
aa5004ef48c9b7b02aade6db695d32544a9be4c6
describe
'2219028' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGP' 'sip-files00052.tif'
1fba80f946724ace7040a85dde67965f
bec39c94b0140b595a08504818b4da55de2b9946
describe
'2227184' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGQ' 'sip-files00053.tif'
e93dc948d20fddaf69d8fde5e7e483cc
291a4fa3ad1a0280c91c2092ab0de34e89de0f9a
'2012-05-13T22:54:28-04:00'
describe
'2226876' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGR' 'sip-files00054.tif'
a70e4d33d1c7f8872119adad59a21452
e5246a4243d253f91f5a6f822ed700086d6bb88b
'2012-05-13T22:56:00-04:00'
describe
'2227380' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGS' 'sip-files00055.tif'
ba9531da691f9189ce4f9b0d0f4e0277
2ba12c001d51befbb149c96a695cc34ba0db3a0b
describe
'2225372' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGT' 'sip-files00056.tif'
9362d6f16745c8efc4f9b16479a88f8f
d9172325e0623d25655248a06b97fc2a1458b197
'2012-05-13T22:55:46-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGU' 'sip-files00057.tif'
8165045483b2aa431f4cbb81064a9546
2a38aa420b50ce5df2a1df8663cde02ca1cf6176
describe
'2226924' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGV' 'sip-files00058.tif'
28ecd03b1dde770eaa20fb184b9b5cbb
7650a3e678a7431dc4d448e6889123f05fffa6ed
'2012-05-13T22:54:36-04:00'
describe
'2224768' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGW' 'sip-files00059.tif'
af0a1f28105c0d285c832335057cdb62
5b6c34d69b9a4bcf08259e7d73ae4f07527eac0e
'2012-05-13T22:55:48-04:00'
describe
'2226316' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGX' 'sip-files00060.tif'
a182635c4d846b4c105c76f9b6be221f
0cd0152f334e1b1db535b3e075f74a45f07f1fe0
describe
'2227120' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGY' 'sip-files00061.tif'
0c4ba9174e6f57b2b139e294f730acf3
a23ad78f7d8f7785ec35ee5bd9e06731f342fb9c
'2012-05-13T22:56:08-04:00'
describe
'2225276' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYGZ' 'sip-files00062.tif'
cfa097bfa1164eb4554723f6f1456bec
82dfe3646619cd0b56200681f19347e1c84e5f1e
describe
'2227172' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHA' 'sip-files00063.tif'
c171571c367297a9b6614d719e869f52
50ac228f63e679249241974ead7681c86ac72d02
describe
'2227032' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHB' 'sip-files00064.tif'
a134002c71748028da4dd67a0c3641d3
14b1339c42d297b0afe50e7524f840efc7fbf16d
describe
'2219208' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHC' 'sip-files00065.tif'
c3ee8aa4408f499c90fdec232a8de0f5
908fcca9b55b5b0df688ef7e60ebdba95cbe9eae
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHD' 'sip-files00066.tif'
397bff494a7ae299c4c2f80de2ef1046
92b9ea023bb644127bda33b461c71be9b19d0786
'2012-05-13T22:56:06-04:00'
describe
'2162352' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHE' 'sip-files00067.tif'
c3593bb5a84e6c32c0a026ad8a633cb8
a526daaf7048a81aa48e53294e8f2e1d07297931
describe
'2227012' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHF' 'sip-files00068.tif'
b1f9c066bff71715b2ce0c7a235406a3
79a145a484b93e502ada647b64e8d65ceb387067
describe
'2176868' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHG' 'sip-files00069.tif'
75559ab1dc94d525aa6fa954e24e9f14
10b8d1da87333264886c66cd4007e00619a07556
describe
'2224476' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHH' 'sip-files00070.tif'
1c3625761b0c86aa9876579fdef631fc
63b2962570ac5a73fa19fe5f0f0758099d6838a0
'2012-05-13T22:54:03-04:00'
describe
'2226380' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHI' 'sip-files00071.tif'
eea3bb124e7318c68ca74d8a156a8561
940dc58fd7d3ea390fa020882caa45e03bb723a3
'2012-05-13T22:53:23-04:00'
describe
'2228256' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHJ' 'sip-files00072.tif'
66dfc3fcfcee8f2b411d0275e586a741
38bccde0c60a12b3fe341cf94333a293469f8baa
describe
'2228080' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHK' 'sip-files00073.tif'
cc2462b67518bcf20a4e9eb922c2a962
a973f39aabf878daa995be36b4f1bc69a65187a6
'2012-05-13T22:55:15-04:00'
describe
'2228076' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHL' 'sip-files00074.tif'
72ec11af0c09d8395e7252d96d74d38a
730faca235df5b9f86f2744959559437c7fa1116
describe
'2227740' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHM' 'sip-files00075.tif'
02316804e5efdd4c84224dfc67ce6f1a
778af263e1638bfcbadf4213b487b951e81df9b1
describe
'2227784' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHN' 'sip-files00076.tif'
016451c29395c03826d0f6d91f14646b
8c1c7cd36db1f0ab88ca10e57191f23c5c038456
describe
'2227860' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHO' 'sip-files00077.tif'
1a1336665fcff48eb844f2ce9b3b632a
e8fe90d46e9c43678a4b7645a1814a11ca4ce3ae
'2012-05-13T22:55:04-04:00'
describe
'2170472' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHP' 'sip-files00078.tif'
73037f3af5d8e95643cc3c5b73d36649
b353e43e8ff924af53ec871b6667ab33da8da7f2
describe
'7431024' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHQ' 'sip-files00079.tif'
c85d2e9564d85b0dc24a9a45c4b4abff
568498192148b395b7cfe155b0f1ef890db1a0d0
'2012-05-13T22:53:04-04:00'
describe
'7066848' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHR' 'sip-files00080.tif'
1ce9f18ec5c377c37c7bfdbdb17b84bf
149c05372f61af8d70fa5caffd9f491f72ccbed6
describe
'166768' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHS' 'sip-files00001.jpg'
b40a8af7779cadf5cdacd1b0a5f5f670
208372f52ec0e1e9cbd289677f2c90e415bd5a02
describe
'104497' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHT' 'sip-files00002.jpg'
88c3e14cca08927a0e430e3e1adc0c43
9c4fd5dffe29723bb9e6c53c732130a55fac192e
'2012-05-13T22:54:44-04:00'
describe
'23098' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHU' 'sip-files00005.jpg'
466010de7d3ae2ff66b4734c9e23c37f
1171e517728647393ba0917dfc76965523812815
describe
'7281' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHV' 'sip-files00006.jpg'
1fc3fb616f2d854e2936709b2d3fe5b2
9ca743e2c3bcdc2d1bdc4dfd48afec05074985be
describe
'160368' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHW' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
42304e4bda59fc36c42011444e7dd8b7
0fe4a25ba4d65145bf246d1668bac45e3f191804
describe
'64675' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHX' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
7b5a2271c50e6455aa440e046478c99a
12602905d9cec549cb8200d929110fb9069843c6
describe
'30640' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHY' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
eb353e3813a68a63545f10417c3720ab
7b437e1304f4dcc95b4079797df67d7efe795486
'2012-05-13T22:53:50-04:00'
describe
'12663' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYHZ' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
df6579a28ff54a8b77a0122b26d5a768
6b3e23c05064b49215c685fa3a9e26d90bc3d467
describe
'80440' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIA' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
1d749f13bb6ec8833871e7e5c58ad534
b361a7c3d64d12d352b982f870f30fc1e419ff9e
'2012-05-13T22:55:20-04:00'
describe
'125727' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIB' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
301baa2b25b1f6c2c9cbea2038b914a9
78002af859ff817127a1b511ec84b5f286534359
describe
'121242' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIC' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
1007f778e92933478a133d22feb4ae82
9afb98c2c6f470bf3e5d339075126d31fafca346
describe
'111758' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYID' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
db26f2cc650dc30604436ace617a3624
d115a6ed77de008cdb9397f136cf6502b61b6261
describe
'121011' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIE' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
f933366eae326bd577a36abbe3c61cb9
75ce2247875244175cb48b834016d7a3a91805d8
describe
'13319' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIF' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
0bffb772f48a9329dc3dafd37e955890
fea3f976eceea0046e9256fab6f5dffa220a4a79
describe
'116963' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIG' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
b58c41d2e855733652cab7ea74c54af3
8929594b98ad2b38621fba62eaa2baa5d7b832f7
describe
'124439' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIH' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
51f549cc536c66803aa305f7dd122fca
b7b0323fff5d234287073fb7fd742c191c15d0f9
'2012-05-13T22:55:40-04:00'
describe
'105314' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYII' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
886d5cd025097003918edd121d026f68
7d80353532873112032793393c2325eae0186a84
'2012-05-13T22:54:15-04:00'
describe
'45143' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIJ' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
7dae2cb42d862f9a6164b65885b88b61
2313711197627405d3f1943ae91990c20a49deb1
describe
'93017' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIK' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
50ff27c35fcbe01e807278d360368ce5
cda11dd07ce0e8bc770cdf06731bcd09d5883f19
describe
'115570' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIL' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
02e6f6373cefe159b33e4266fcde588c
07613ab9c69ba347282b2fa18ff711f74353c6be
describe
'112505' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIM' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
4341ad4336d35fb11de4337ab644d6cb
b24186e10321f1d20211d82dda82880f4e4af98e
describe
'115152' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIN' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
dd34e1a2f6713c2126620878432debb7
9886642ddd7a4eed4289079050cb86599031ea82
'2012-05-13T22:53:00-04:00'
describe
'126348' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIO' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
83a79301d660a8341130d5b3ab77c069
4113bdbb56c108023928d9503e5ac267dc6b613d
describe
'114466' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIP' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
58341f57d34727d928c0263e57af904d
ced2cf8f5b25f6dd12bd6b92401f313070bfed73
describe
'113509' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIQ' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
1861cab45877e274b9fa1715c6a7d8cf
dc5f65a20ec865d27578ef1c304f511faa784344
describe
'95960' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIR' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
20cfc56e1fe763cb7e9be042801ffec0
57a29681b1e6fe42b19f4380e628ec003a3a776d
describe
'93441' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIS' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
1fb24d25f208f47b28430543111edd49
cab4c7397a9ff49c925a2d22300784edb8775fb3
'2012-05-13T22:55:27-04:00'
describe
'121299' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIT' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
1c19773a9412cfd834fe71df6161bd61
e62f41983244d73b9a374c1d575b5cb3ebf91998
describe
'163335' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIU' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
d56cb5b6d3b35b61bc4f10bfe499e82c
498fbb5ad8adb5d5b45ce00bcd45442393dae56f
describe
'12363' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIV' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
34c599fae690e63d19062175d2792d42
cdaac2a82398f8cf1e53b4e28bc36c424eb12b05
describe
'110523' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIW' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
2cb03ca1e32617259c58cea6bc6a5330
7a71c22b5ad68aac7f85cbecc0676bcf9722cdce
describe
'108336' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIX' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
b94bd30ba0af2e86367c7ae512b3e2d7
a8f0c8a95e525c75819a112fd7651f81ca6dfa3d
describe
'112822' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIY' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
96a43e2bcafbf7cb2ba704e521621d80
b822b72df6bc560aea2a759264b4b706f19b6f71
'2012-05-13T22:55:35-04:00'
describe
'117637' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYIZ' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
38322335855ad8b63e3e64549ad2cd9c
a6609cf2b4bd7580a4d147ce89a70ba102c24f7a
describe
'118634' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJA' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
f686af0e64e0dacd7c88df07c26d1541
620e61d1aa16d38386f3babe6e5b3be066485032
describe
'114296' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJB' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
09cb5cb51074419fb587e3ebe026543a
fe03ff8836d0d46a7dc60d832e8f401da6b52e3b
describe
'122894' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJC' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
5be4545961a23ca26a9c561dc8f652f4
97200cd720a9184be0a1bb735844f306c79506fe
'2012-05-13T22:54:11-04:00'
describe
'97054' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJD' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
8c14d38275b3ef5cd7071e02b8c856e5
e3d8c8da6e3ff05f9e65204e3d5560bbfb963e48
'2012-05-13T22:56:02-04:00'
describe
'116343' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJE' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
f19668efddab13dccc1f0c1ca8f64f07
53fc255d4a2c30af3c56f588af5b9ba952d776af
describe
'119138' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJF' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
1f21f67c07f6ce003089aadcf85d8fb9
964d45b660338afe86a38cf18988f1dc08dc4ad1
describe
'114010' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJG' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
b4961342a63c3de2e8f0078b01cd8d94
46c92630332a7995b815646302bc8fd34be727db
describe
'108844' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJH' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
b483b4e0200fe1c9a3ad4a0a75d5f042
9b016c856fd4cfeaea42633380e3fb9c0901d9cf
'2012-05-13T22:56:16-04:00'
describe
'112537' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJI' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
0068981fb38221dc4e54531cd67573ca
129d5768786570faf1ecab5305728ecdf7d20297
describe
'96408' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJJ' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
8823d6efa2898372291c61aa5a93be03
3ea21ebda075e50e348722a95269c0ff064b5689
describe
'116617' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJK' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
86a5c9be805ee420863743c9e6bb4243
268e2e6c43aa0413ad503d8aedb6064bb37f5717
describe
'93416' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJL' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
f521594baec79ae54b62670cd014d884
46523ceb1b03247e75ff8706e8e3d4f5a3dc1a8f
describe
'112527' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJM' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
5d697c0d0076bf379a76df64f1f9222d
a335121fd8bc57647978692ab3d7840627716e45
describe
'114892' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJN' 'sip-files00052.jpg'
5135ce9cacb839f869b06a0a5fdf9632
9e0115e0b3d2997599d6995ba43bd57c8df42103
'2012-05-13T22:54:56-04:00'
describe
'116561' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJO' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
5c788cd990c92287fe8af1c3f11ae0ff
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describe
'112794' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJP' 'sip-files00054.jpg'
96bd850060b4923f1509a87da9cbd9c9
22b6bc5d1dfc4785d9e935145de547b60635c691
describe
'114601' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJQ' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
2954e9dec44650ba67837296b22fa81e
604832b00858d1da2796b99c33e33318a57def28
describe
'119460' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJR' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
e240acc64f285ce0cd30bfeca1ff2a47
2c0053c1f6c83b7c62d8aefd8aa0426da2dfc0aa
describe
'112838' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJS' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
3598b027f925f484dc74738076868746
3fe8b9e2135cc8bedfea348846928dc8b3bab95c
describe
'111493' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJT' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
9fb36fa55d2b857e5fd1ae958147f280
c2659c1aa600b27634759a6f908d55544143746b
describe
'58306' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJU' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
7f21755c191a231f8dcb19b19bf1c711
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describe
'85960' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJV' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
d415b3bcfc9c134e5b5b69ec6d2bd976
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describe
'121963' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJW' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
4622c30274e9590350030e42ca9e153a
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describe
'118921' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJX' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
02882261299c00fcc9e2c6b1396fb433
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describe
'118276' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJY' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
96f60c3bb704e2245b5ad3f8853bb399
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describe
'135166' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYJZ' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
d9541262e556656c77b1f27b72e380c0
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describe
'110601' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKA' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
a513fd57972213a3b79376c565222d9c
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describe
'109287' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKB' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
3479ef3fdd4a8e2cbfb285286d098e4a
4a498f7e4843c27cedabea81b7268f9be2883bba
describe
'117829' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKC' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
67d7fdd39421e5e1d2d9f6e5b3d02d18
d308f33a9603fe2bf8a6bf46f2eb91519e8f2de8
describe
'115921' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKD' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
e35eb877a81bf8fb615c733b943a9b30
67d67fcdf36f7c7d603c132021d6b6a7451abba5
describe
'120934' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKE' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
6bf1beb6c1ffe1ce8b3ace207c082ccc
3787c233049d22fbcf2668ae821d09c8459200f5
describe
'98735' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKF' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
f6d01ef366a6df1d80bc97d8dffa7a14
040b709b4791cdb6800cea9fd9535f90175528db
'2012-05-13T22:54:50-04:00'
describe
'136609' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKG' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
e93c2b224cba0084827dafbde99fc913
ef00bd00a3bedefb862c654c896f7f6bc136f8a0
'2012-05-13T22:53:45-04:00'
describe
'118837' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKH' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
477212a89b11d0e51c031f0d6c4e9a00
b72593e50bbcede819772490f070296c923872fc
describe
'153007' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKI' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
08132ea4b55459ae6ca947aef356e75c
1e4dc607472eae63f65e3de6f83601e9fed052f0
describe
'158701' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKJ' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
2ae9d1eccfb28376ca4578d9cd129cd9
ecd2638f443e9c5b02b9ca56b074f4c0511cd6d6
describe
'115827' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKK' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
1a415c4c6754050f5c333875d64be04f
183c934499443b12e9fd9d747c8d5676dd5879dc
describe
'130730' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKL' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
fc45d442b67104d9822bc1704b0fa87f
f5ceed5deec87bdef7cd990e08ae055c6e7d09e1
describe
'153173' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKM' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
70a517ce4103c6b6357361eaf3f0d1a9
09f6fcc7ccfeb0e23f15331e7b4c7852978018fd
describe
'118188' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKN' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
488cfe2cd4af89a5b19266c26b865b92
575ed026dfdabcb054bd5ac8b3df5ef03a6eda6c
describe
'83261' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKO' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
913d55a21f323c0e779f840fd048ac48
bf9601de0184e348ec84b823c6c253abf90802a4
'2012-05-13T22:52:56-04:00'
describe
'86442' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKP' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
9946e4b1f62d85f9d75f09a68eafd4cf
34a7dbaf6968f3e4c7b532ab557b0a58d9912cf2
describe
'7392' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKQ' 'sip-files00001thm.jpg'
08075d7bb1063b815dce7e51f8367db6
512f6e922cdc0f0d70645b2510361cdf986f56d7
describe
'33663' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKR' 'sip-files00001.QC.jpg'
a5fa821939f91f8470fd8d738e0f777b
8f3cd5bea5cb4d3c4ae6195538fc2e7121be377d
describe
'25744' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKS' 'sip-files00002.QC.jpg'
126cd43bc9469d1ef4c6e79d6a8d17e3
ac03426c77d58f115b7bb6dc278c8ebfb81a2771
describe
'6731' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKT' 'sip-files00002thm.jpg'
b33a75af3163cbb513436fdd919fa920
4e5ba79af2f38d1e1a0b40d7acea8b1a1d040e55
describe
'6537' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKU' 'sip-files00005.QC.jpg'
8f134c4a702f4b98e91255001c348aaa
623b676cedb301edc45b1d2eaf0a716df273f9c9
describe
'1900' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKV' 'sip-files00005thm.jpg'
ba6ef3b606be840741dc2da5534d1e77
0d2db7a00d9178203d689a76a17fdbd103eccaa5
describe
'2148' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKW' 'sip-files00006.QC.jpg'
c6dbfc32882991f3ac675383a29ba135
ccc23d5483bb85fa3cb28290e25c2c66133d8375
describe
'807' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKX' 'sip-files00006thm.jpg'
fd52e5b28a9afbec3ac4f15940224e8f
2b3dbf4653b778bf7d8325eff281539d2b873421
'2012-05-13T22:54:30-04:00'
describe
'39676' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKY' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
4edcb132ecd82a7e5a4ed66524da0034
70fd96165fa0b46bbaa6ba02cb0e42512df02b74
describe
'9648' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYKZ' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
816094f839f26170e045fc41a4059013
d40f061fa1cc8f7aa2511e54269586ea45704e92
describe
'18849' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLA' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
ced1479f4770206fc95cf09037e9d3ff
0bf1bb0b062fb68d7e2369fd0fcf9189df4889ca
describe
'5089' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLB' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
7728dbca0abfe8aa5977e3b7a922184e
9044765876c3f34c55bdc6638315e9bd694591f9
describe
'9792' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLC' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
e41a1beb411468c71a5f009ade121966
5e410390108ee66c7267eeb5c7c3f51d289e4b34
describe
'3062' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLD' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
f96e533040d16b671a778d2fd30ebefb
7086251dd0b9004ea12f47ed30175e949a8149a1
describe
'3278' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLE' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
58e1cb4d6beff6bfa4692d6a9b5b70f4
ab6057a5cba8f102ea0b9225c3f690b53ed5d227
describe
'1087' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLF' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
7dab48225837e712178446ad8c1d9b27
c7649260490ca956e04676846dce3ebcad4758d9
describe
'24180' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLG' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
c6765d48a74daff6d2624956516e533a
99bbe089828b916268584353a30c0d18ecf7542c
describe
'6150' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLH' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
d7224041e271f3e27ed0115050b5645d
1d3579662c2f088610ab37611ff879ccd310db81
describe
'37814' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLI' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
ec496326df4f4604044d54fbb74325db
fabab4a71c9cec105fd30a8597caad4b29534409
describe
'8895' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLJ' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
2d274cb5d939d209b38a0cc53b1e32c7
095a5a0da89f26b7fe6afed9579ac0889c02846b
'2012-05-13T22:55:10-04:00'
describe
'37086' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLK' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
f54fbbbb55e8c9376a9321d67109185c
84d8c2bafdcc3aa849088765797b886aa6ee2771
describe
'8908' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLL' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
1de79319104f79adc97f30beaa5a8516
ec77c4b60ddef8cedb810a71c64a00574361a484
describe
'33616' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLM' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
9706dea5b58815226cab9c48ae77b9ce
1314f5f0daa80bf7817a1bd1ee6e4e5a74d9c7d4
'2012-05-13T22:54:54-04:00'
describe
'8279' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLN' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
debff12b20c5e5d712d0f417d8e7dd6e
61b5dde3cca84e3204f02d806d442aff5671cc93
describe
'29673' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLO' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
1132f839b9e84a4e6737b1583013a42f
6726ccc21859ab0e4ccb3311e9e67f9425abf563
describe
'6863' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLP' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
50ada4530a1422933db50bcc1a26c564
f1bc8601cabdf48b0a26498ee45e4f4cc7c276fc
describe
'3375' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLQ' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
d35f66a1ce5c1b87b86b428e83ac18e6
74e30315a008f4f44b8f4fc27b9daa46446813f9
describe
'1062' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLR' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
000fbe6fe8b540f168b15977e776abfb
1d54b0e81bdbdad46c4a79367811cdb9065b3217
describe
'36192' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLS' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
750470f53df6fbaa60bd46df36962237
71e20a83e21b89e78848c609a93088ecda75e7c1
describe
'8931' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLT' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
2a0c640c6e278b6cbdb01e83bdf8e5aa
1dee535c899c79941e905b4d96cd3507aec2ae97
describe
'37259' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLU' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
80b148e997c83c22c3b214e35bb13f81
a8146e82fa3205140b7ff1fdac81e4aa036f50e0
describe
'8445' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLV' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
6415c52ce9fe1c91fafa526ca6237d11
d33b869f4aa8fbe0c5e6fb79e829dcc7af4d5e4d
describe
'31932' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLW' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
9671ed5e77e8907e7de81c9154a4b358
7ec547c18fbfb353cf1a4e9f5cd56bc391c68649
describe
'8145' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLX' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
93844986d13933a2fec8ad7d1686cb39
63213ebb706511a5b4032e6670e5d4c39d1046d6
describe
'13569' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLY' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
c419b7df69fc46a2d965294b31d1a219
41ef04b7a5e5ce4b89349d1b0dca0648ccceade2
describe
'3545' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYLZ' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
47b942c9a0f27f0eef238d184be41ebd
e34a226b10894ecc9c7899535cacaf6cc9f1cbea
describe
'28558' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMA' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
b45292717bd22845d29b28222c13c79c
3bfcf89c5a9c9ccf4d40a258c63b8d5418eab278
describe
'7100' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMB' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
5ffa49bbf39efd4147128c268f71d715
0514f3f56b8b4d1ad1b52055adaa57645e0c3fe1
describe
'36208' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMC' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
48da0394694eb5941cebfc9790726400
11b2597e066ee275c0cfcb1a789e33470f417a6d
describe
'8372' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMD' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
243ede533653a3dbe7a1c5302c7ac75c
ac20ab1c0b362b3909059984c5d7d8d3e7700853
describe
'34567' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYME' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
d395be00cc2459334904fda5b2737e9a
2479ddb767fc579f0acf92026eb716070a0d6dbf
describe
'8772' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMF' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
e62f8f470fdddf9c152f9b499d676734
112c0b45a3ecd402b4453b5fa21e657d7e06060e
describe
'35272' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMG' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
1660c5c3a9468834ff794cea42acd1e8
fff3c2cafbebffef465179168b35970ed019d93b
describe
'8520' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMH' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
74da6bbcd431477f2cb6ece0d9481e38
8250d5bf110313c04e3c58eec97be7ddac37b401
describe
'37726' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMI' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
0c04b26b925700561ad265f05eb3e627
f0724877bee099a652f388aba14f4c1b3ff457d4
describe
'8710' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMJ' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
60c1db4066e6a181f3ab1660b8973d08
8c7e4e54cbad3222e6d3ca5b25be0fb58320b4e9
describe
'35104' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMK' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
e75a5ec2f5468cc2f0be2f4f0f026a9a
f2750f565ffb9907f32ea3c7eaad06f59a111bb3
describe
'8245' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYML' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
e061f799a4b898983429f03f30e828b7
5314f4b6333b92187ab986d081e29b5addff3964
describe
'34727' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMM' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
fbbb537b7529a7eb5b9b85cd3466a78e
454d3d13e371ccae3dcab3ebf3cdb485e00d6132
describe
'8670' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMN' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
fab4ab7caa52fd90b2ae1cae76631fc3
28ef551ee62606914dea0fc1411f7c80d067e759
describe
'29284' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMO' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
34103955c5f20fdabb61ad2f736c32af
62d1c5ffc0acbbe83c83baae22e1d9a2b506d0e5
describe
'6925' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMP' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
6595a2997dcb000cf17b22f46b40d7f7
dafa3b759b3d3fde6dbeb309f67e157ff07add1d
describe
'28102' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMQ' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
7f098d379432151cca26218b6e3ffcb8
57274af08d156a3653ae9394dba65973d1271218
describe
'7159' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMR' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
5c23237304a923900ad5e1b9f06cc0ca
7f79bf910c922eb7cfdadbdef47acd8314a81b91
describe
'36534' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMS' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
11ce63b890e58ddcb097d46c19dab9f4
6aa58729f758f944dfa248cd0866691d939b351c
describe
'8954' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMT' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
b24859e83d99ef422381887d6edfe026
ad9c28c1dbafb4d0e6c5cc9f74f403caf0ea05ec
describe
'37791' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMU' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
d822e32d26fc085230610fc7bf66d6e3
5ccd90829e9c8f667a3cef16c96abead1c13dd9f
describe
'8646' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMV' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
05c83381b2cd4e90635314b36563f015
030d5d3135e26518dfe77836ba807b66679df28c
describe
'3115' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMW' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
6092af88f62037111a7668f7c64ead89
e1071c3c7100bbc458e3840dbfb45c8540333005
describe
'975' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMX' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
32715fd0e710bf532dd098c9bc5d63a6
fd29222befd394318c5ef02503a4e848596af8a0
describe
'34162' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMY' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
06dc29301d5b0f71ea75f77324e5005d
102535c8ff302e4bd2472b4e652d81ee25bda237
describe
'8444' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYMZ' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
258a6af4fdad02ee63b1c2453c84a6e1
e717ef2f5774aa146bc71d4dc60deea749ae5684
describe
'33580' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNA' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
791444b8991389fbae8b1637029dc937
0021a893478d2725f1c8a33188028b0f11357718
describe
'8631' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNB' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
5aa35da1ba05129a71e61e154e770477
ff00dd8e3926df5c76302c85198ed188e9a059f5
describe
'34487' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNC' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
1a667ac38024d201f3d6aa09c9744bce
c528cec770dc57f2335593bccd7efd391bcd2887
describe
'8439' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYND' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
d122b189e7b1cad755070ab00e9af7a8
32b34ee2006cc7c0a4c93d1bfe5cfb8d87b02873
describe
'36221' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNE' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
1f614c9793f53aca12778db71842eeb1
49ea1a1e2a24401171e0ec5726257e111c3221b8
describe
'8756' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNF' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
15b676c2953e6b1a073daf3db7649905
8b6233cc31c07e06c4398313bea07c07b0d9945b
describe
'35878' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNG' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
9b1c5ea7541fe9bda464dd5d0a9bb64d
a50cc855cbc58c0c9737b5da0369d5c984693fa8
describe
'8530' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNH' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
0ea81e5e59ce1aee59760931b16b31da
52c9f6a7582a0a7db677ea32fa75db936079f702
describe
'34654' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNI' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
b7edb06f44b62c80e71fa83307e5a2f5
3cf853148500ae4bcfdefd08f8d58a3941e2ded7
describe
'8766' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNJ' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
f6d1a208d257e292af83b188f9ecab24
cd7d6bb9ca6ea6d39743167d3c68f0942aa33ebc
describe
'37722' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNK' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
35dfc7104cfd3d24f36a5f443c022899
7aeeb6c57e1a8eafe7cbbd5dfd1603db5bd627d7
describe
'8792' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNL' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
0767a7734e6bd68e898a45fc8092f0c0
3853b36e9906345a4102ebac154448f694e21bee
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNM' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
f93cc2546f0aaeb608d91e07442decdc
eb8ab1754e5a033f537bc7ac650fa1f3ab5d05ef
describe
'7432' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNN' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
d3b4768f5da14d9aa1078b05916d2de6
1dd5cc35c4ff3190ca9362afee1198dd14c5460a
describe
'35480' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNO' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
555e7a11a03a3bff2924d3bb0f3afb47
1a2f2b52f1aaae32ce4035cb1982685193d096c0
describe
'8601' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNP' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
fde108436f594cf645815dbf728744f0
c6d6d0b4318a494ce264a4071416d7fbfa15275e
'2012-05-13T22:55:23-04:00'
describe
'36379' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNQ' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
1b08b1eba1952f08caa8abe700398f4a
32601ebfac4c5a70f2200e0d04f6e78d7178fccf
describe
'8685' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNR' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
c9dd68f71f2fc9b213edc3cc31b3551b
a118599bb3bdb4d2c117c5069b550edfb83650f3
describe
'35423' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNS' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
a83f31fa2154e171f838016d24cccaa4
71c6ea77c018274224f5dfe379c61d20ac937b40
describe
'8671' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNT' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
94311f13909f5da5bf9d5c0372cc9e72
fa583d47b0b53db282a1bc790fb65466950c9a54
describe
'33613' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNU' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
09cbc7349b404ef41bf19163d65fb56b
b0462958c0c93d13aa8d4ac406d49a942c17dd59
describe
'8346' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNV' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
719f8a864c9a028b19adcd8e833e5ec5
0efabff41079c38917b583136bce1617c3630a12
describe
'34645' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNW' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
bbb0eabdf624ffe97406c699a6eef1d7
dfb52aaf65ea23e3d0bc5941560fab59ac33283c
describe
'8649' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNX' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
f1801c235e165a11afc9efc6890aa279
d577f8ba825b76f167f04cce40b421bd52d67ac0
describe
'27758' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNY' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
9700d8734245e61e6e59c1fdb02176f2
dd1f4f6595f8d48ad0cca95b22f3fbbd529aa68d
describe
'6953' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYNZ' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
eda399124c52382807609020880105ba
34873d19a6bd9717c847c4c9b7dec20aa05c56ea
describe
'36135' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOA' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
1fe34c9d0ad32da0b399dcec9fae0ec4
80bf881366da80ea30e7d24538ecd89e3bad9988
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOB' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
414859148ac88e19881c76165607f951
fa161c31826116b712c0d287e2a11e2bebb3e211
describe
'28196' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOC' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
a3ad39781d08074ae8da4d43a5e66e06
fb5f1bc70e2305b0af4feb7faa583b73c181130a
describe
'6948' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOD' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
ff28b25b42a838aab6ef361930c9debc
5bc13655108ba756b469fea5696b1121c29ba29a
'2012-05-13T22:55:42-04:00'
describe
'34863' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOE' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
d91c8891081d30fad222d519fc2ad8e9
343c46c20776d7cfe4a7117d145d0807ba6e6099
describe
'8720' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOF' 'sip-files00051thm.jpg'
99966029543b46f7f98da61dce436036
08a51122305f7f51c99afb87f6c1aa3fb17eb352
'2012-05-13T22:55:49-04:00'
describe
'35263' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOG' 'sip-files00052.QC.jpg'
fe9ecd81cb9f659d25b46d20550afb08
04f7a4b554741c589c34121c33c754573cf49d16
describe
'8289' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOH' 'sip-files00052thm.jpg'
1f7807397a91ac733ee9169919abffdd
f41b71d1f359f2f19e21de13fefebb511c635362
describe
'35903' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOI' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
283704f92e30301106cbf979c9b66cfa
2ae709c41366319ec1b2d74f57ac1211de61f768
describe
'8757' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOJ' 'sip-files00053thm.jpg'
bbe909b79f84abd3bc854c6316aa7f85
da3a60c1285870576574a1ec7eed61d3a9466bec
describe
'34898' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOK' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
e62a45a1b219c1e4a4cebb5c85ce9308
f3ebdeb253bc2fd823e90883c1f6ec2e4d6cbe67
describe
'8512' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOL' 'sip-files00054thm.jpg'
7df7e2d6ada90559e9e6850ad98e62a6
7610aaf4112d902e6f918f74b66a6c4421840086
describe
'35303' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOM' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
ee77f62068374efb4911e1c98332b5b3
1f77659cf06f22c8beeae296e19f6516bdd9dbd0
describe
'9025' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYON' 'sip-files00055thm.jpg'
07acc1639d9c4cd29cae769506b2f6d0
6b0a58a745d17d41d4b16cbb82ff91a7339f96c4
describe
'36490' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOO' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
7a28b4c01db5d8bb6aa3181704294447
c1c171c6865b2b738606f655fdfb30b6c8569ff7
describe
'8841' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOP' 'sip-files00056thm.jpg'
7feeb4c4ead19afb7fbb1736346a2114
79f4476a4aa088381b0359241c4361bc99fae4be
describe
'34314' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOQ' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
8b459b7ae12e0477e062fff23874dd60
1d2306e5b8ecb9a9f6cabbc46b2460a561805c81
describe
'8473' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOR' 'sip-files00057thm.jpg'
8f92ec17f498e9fdb9cc72fa14b5a799
ce03c5be99bf3c17986500ec0b550c9634e88e8a
describe
'34895' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOS' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
441f8712f2bce36c7955a3abdc58606f
13cb464df553b7ded7b5618f6650fae64f86da19
describe
'8485' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOT' 'sip-files00058thm.jpg'
e75e8fd826a45c1b1a48038bbda8c0f3
bf5fbdd6f273840abf2eab8a8be941479ee5e44c
describe
'17720' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOU' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
0c3633364e589a129fa87436ba0cb89f
2549fe16ca2b93582b0b37943710ed6ff56572a2
describe
'4728' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOV' 'sip-files00059thm.jpg'
6980da45e7740954a1ad18b5334f843d
4c28cee1871c006f2c49ca803d9bd5042acda9c8
'2012-05-13T22:56:15-04:00'
describe
'26557' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOW' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
53f08af3eaf003dd83d842a03f0e587c
0eb6906591eb4031db920f7cf87d18de9d2ebe0b
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOX' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
b3d3b620cee2d4910b8373cc42211509
d1e83e91c9dca9669ec987dba4da10711c7d2f0b
describe
'37019' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOY' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
1fb12d83382f03c71495ab0eaaa566ab
6f3039a9b0406235eef306adae7c5beb96c58ee4
describe
'8902' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYOZ' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
11b41c1f4916134ab1838b993358e5c1
cb65d7846616f7c4fad46d3ed274d504eeb9526a
describe
'36828' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPA' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
458487045b078c6a6ddd77a04af0a3e3
60ddf82bb13cad602428840129222c5495d0ee48
describe
'8899' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPB' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
f96dfbcc8110da1f5da0e0149c0c7fc6
3ceb4f3642fdedbeab7e2194c34ccc7910f97c80
describe
'36733' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPC' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
ab8e4d8956ef7f1cf7effcc3dac10139
345fa1c9ed36cd4df754e372adfe69aad130ca86
'2012-05-13T22:55:12-04:00'
describe
'8994' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPD' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
869378153c5379f405265d4adf8c34fa
4a132f4afb98a0fd1044b22263fdb6e9cc9d0d97
describe
'35400' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPE' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
c0eaa8a4440c869208ee34bd091b9c65
304c57bd2bebd39baa992487e908d8609cde9a24
describe
'8644' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPF' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
450296643e51c00831cca88ac103c5e1
589f527b069480bb655748e75514d926a6ee5a83
'2012-05-13T22:55:02-04:00'
describe
'34167' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPG' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
d379dfda951425da4c2c3c660d5924b3
2bfa5d9c86a0c97ea101b3ffd4fe9d61bda84ea6
describe
'8477' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPH' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
fbf84af67c24520c1baf3a587795d58f
b21d303f20253855651c1dca5e78eab5a2a71af0
'2012-05-13T22:55:36-04:00'
describe
'33522' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPI' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
a36df9913ff7e04fcbbf131a34c9e0ed
60101d41a5ec5aa51c1b0c70176ee14f98fcf931
describe
'8114' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPJ' 'sip-files00066thm.jpg'
2e5f72dd203a96cabda3a87864c4aea7
d878e42b39b02d2c5378098acb88ab2cda79518b
describe
'36109' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPK' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
7e828ec0287fe4adbad086250e3b1178
1cdc535e05beef63db514dd84a2eb9c286c776e3
describe
'8920' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPL' 'sip-files00067thm.jpg'
6fa02048f6a82af3454608b45870fac7
b0e52822369f3cbf3f888d45241f7f246cae694b
describe
'36237' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPM' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
ff9aeaae393e3cbb33d82537dc22f0af
a594b567b4e82af0bb65d37c11b896a1f236e726
describe
'8856' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPN' 'sip-files00068thm.jpg'
81b7738bdf4d32d49632a7792d2ddc4e
3390cb104f277aaa96734263fafb105bcff562e5
describe
'38000' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPO' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
531dba9d82eb20c1e14cbd8a2e9a5903
a78d005e29fae362c0dcc4a294e29363df36ecfd
describe
'9254' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPP' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
0073bb464aabb1bc648cff432944f1a6
de6bd631da65b6f5893d51517797ce598c01a326
describe
'29640' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPQ' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
71036258a7d4292e392e33ecce65d21d
0f023211cf267c41559288fa679384cfe9596bc8
describe
'7140' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPR' 'sip-files00070thm.jpg'
3142978acefea9eeb393e6f418aa2f6b
1d3e64cb758b84d4ff381c61cdf81984867c6ca2
describe
'38850' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPS' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
1cd86f27e5fa83ac6ca3df1fbedf3b7c
8cd20fd031ebfbc6f756faa32ca6386ad66450a4
describe
'9411' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPT' 'sip-files00071thm.jpg'
fce2a663001de03dae72a2f7615c75f1
681d533d145beeb38f2a884326c6614bef6b21b3
describe
'35687' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPU' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
a451d72127380f7535ca8ba6bf2ca784
952de45f532ab75e78f076542774084f6ee749ac
'2012-05-13T22:55:45-04:00'
describe
'9546' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPV' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
6ed9f779fdd7222730651e5d5ad90585
d59139a9741734f1df412a1d715566416f81abfc
describe
'38878' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPW' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
6da8efcf2990613e077df00dd0c59103
2ccfc08ba6616bdc7b82bc3528e9d5d5788ccb10
describe
'9381' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPX' 'sip-files00073thm.jpg'
389d438971155e3c6e292f924e8a1b24
bd852e8b7b0e5af3c990977412efddd0a616762c
describe
'40956' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPY' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
fdffa619dac9d8efb390a37669a88f8c
cefcb60088c8ad9618df39cfe417cfea30aca662
describe
'9707' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYPZ' 'sip-files00074thm.jpg'
72bd8b8d1e5ea7aa9945837085a93854
71d11e97f86835a04ee6108a50b530a3d49c1609
describe
'36179' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYQA' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
ec007d28719e56fd7dcfe4c520cf4ed7
983e4cb1391531424682e661b0b3d45f92e05aa9
describe
'9195' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYQB' 'sip-files00075thm.jpg'
7609300c4d3874cbf9053a23ba9ac1cd
0c15869bab8c57eb786f5e3b47c41b84ceb28127
describe
'39553' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYQC' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
3dce893405f781a4fb94a096cb103ce1
81140a8559bdafdc88f3ce23e3a59b3ae915cddb
describe
'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYQD' 'sip-files00076thm.jpg'
75151e6e3dde473b208f0e24a16f516f
eed15603fdd14722ea0904872841cb1fe5173e46
describe
'39453' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYQE' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
13afbdd964aba242b2bd5534904f79ed
24434744777b1530290b728479ad071bf1af26aa
describe
'10070' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYQF' 'sip-files00077thm.jpg'
e9ef9efc62a6a6df8e55340162c9d283
f1d444e59d6760234d266fa6828f36383781265a
describe
'34990' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYQG' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
a54586fba0128e47cd1eaea7e91cd5eb
cdb7c4533a91462487bb5600b35d582a8cfdb7f6
describe
'9374' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYQH' 'sip-files00078thm.jpg'
19dbfbb0bac3b4ed018cb19475754bb6
12af06679fdccb57097b1e28c6ac5d7b188bf45d
describe
'19004' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYQI' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
33efccc622ab06407e6aa0882e3480e5
d46a96925d661191ae084877afc32c9f05d89a86
describe
'4996' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYQJ' 'sip-files00079thm.jpg'
1f2856c273b006faa26163d299373185
c0d53bfef2bf991c32ce8ba006ca2d57715901f7
describe
'16144' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYQK' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
8efb0f94d32a68d3858decb437e4895d
fbe40d72e65b46d3c7ad656622067a72b57500a7
describe
'3678' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYQL' 'sip-files00080thm.jpg'
2543731e85acc96d405333f9dcdd3481
5f795fbc07fa5fbdb88353f1888a254ec185566a
describe
'48' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYQM' 'sip-filesprocessing.instr'
2bb0bc6920da99340e92dbbbeda2af11
5e676a5abee75bc4343b7e8a7a7948083cac4bf5
describe
'128192' 'info:fdaE20091228_AAAATCfileF20091228_AACYQN' 'sip-filesUF00081998_00001.mets'
33aa066666e8fc69f7dfb8b3d1789268
c17156115a6a2eb11ccc5cd17d77a2816d20afa9
describe
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
'2013-12-10T21:01:41-05:00' 'mixed'
xml resolution
http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsdhttp://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
BROKEN_LINK http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsd
http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
The element type "div" must be terminated by the matching end-tag "
".
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.









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is mane feanly asap rrqodyayy gayi,

FONVONILLY. TwNLONDe 9? doo 40d

Bas sa





The Baldwin Library


RA Bi Sate ail te at etter at hie ae a erat Wt bdo yi ge ae sok td balay in a

Belen Bay

sincnarinitipncanielichnseosegigcettasemes Miata bina at ES ELT agR ae ig Naiak S OE cs aE es PF ets


“°DPM NoT GOING TO GAMBLE,’ sAID Ben.” —Page 47.







Bi (GwyT Ban
Ghe Story of v Mother's Hoy

BS

JESSE PAGE

AUTHOR OF “‘DOTTLES AND CARRIE3” ‘‘DICK’s SCHOOLDAYS, ETC.

LONDON
S. W. PARTRIDGE & CO.
9 PATERNOSTER Row




CHAPTER

1. THE COTTAGE UNDER THE HILL,
Il. THE PICTURE AT THE HALL,
III]. BEN BEGINS LIFE, .

IV. HE MAKES AN ENEMY, : .
Vv. OUR MICHAELMAS FAIR, ; ‘

VI. THE CULPRIT FOUND, .




RG Ei ss Ni,

+
+



CHAPTER L .
THE COTTAGE UNDER THE HILL.

es EN! BEN! Where are you?”

= ie His mother stood on the stone
step at the cottage door, and shad-
e ing. her eyes from the sun, looked
anxiously up the face of the cliff which almost
overhung their home. She thought once she
could discern awhite pinafore among the shrubs
high up yonder, and speaking louder still she
called the name of her boy, but at the sound
of her voice a white pigeon fluttered from the
grassy crag, spread out its wings, and made
wide circles in the air. She stepped back

into the cottage disappointed and anxious.
“What has become of Ben? TI do wish the

7
8 Bright Ben.

lad wouldn’t stay away so, it does make my
heart feel that bad with worry about him.”

“Oh don’t take on about it, mother dear.
Ben’s all right; he is a good lad and will take
care of himself’ He’s a regular mother’s
boy.”

The speaker, lying on a little couch near
the window, was a pale girl, a few years older
than her brother; an invalid, too, who had not
walked for many a day. Though she was
simply but very neatly dressed, the face of
Agnes had a light upon it, brighter than the
beams of that sunshine which poured through
the window, and lit up with an added glory,
the scarlet geranium and scented mignonette.
She loved her brother with all her heart, and
now, although not so anxious as her mother
about him, found herself constantly lifting up
the edge of the muslin curtain to catch the
first glimpse of him directly he came in sight
on his way home, By.her side Jay a large old
copy of “Pilgrim’s Progress,” between the
leaves of which were sprays of choice fern and
pretty wild flowers, which Ben had collected
for her, from time to time, on his rambles.

The Dutch clock in the corner ticked loudly,
as though sensible of the constant attention
of Mrs. Pottle as she paused in getting tea
ready to look up again and again to see how
The Cottage under the Hill. 9

the time was going. “Nearly half-past five
I declare, and that boy not back yet; he
won't be home before father, Ill be bound.
Oh, dear, I do wish he’d come.”

She had guessed rightly, for scarcely had
the words passed her lips, when a step was
heard at the door and the sound of a walking-
stick knocking away some of the leaves which
had fallen in the path. It was “father.”
When he had by patient effort managed to
get the garden path tidy once more (and he
prided himself upon being a man of order),
little Mr. Ezra Pottle came in and laid down
his parcel, folded neatly in a black handker-
chief, upon the chair.

“ Are you very tired, father dear?”

“No, my dear, not overmuch, but Mister
Langton has a regular fad about his buttons.”

“Ay, they say he’s a bit hard to please,
father.”

“JT should think so; why after all the pains
I spent over that braiding and making the
coat look as good as a new garment, he says,
says he, ‘ Pottle! it doesn’t seem to button up
properly, my man.’ ‘Lord bless you,’ I says,
' “it’s as right as a trivet, sir; I haven’t been
tailoring these fifty years, man and boy, for
nothing. Then he seemed to think I’d taken
offence, for he gave a bit of a laugh and said,
10 Bright Ben.

‘Never mind, old fellow, how much is it?’
and paid me like a gentleman.”

This was rather a long speech for old Mr.
Pottle, taking away all his remaining stock of
breath after climbing the hill. So for a time
he subsided into quietness, broken only by
little grunts and comments to himself about
the squire.

“ Ben’s not in yet, father; I’m getting a bit
worried about him, dear.”

And the mother went to the door again,
shading her eyes and calling once more,

“Ben, Ben, are you coming, love?”

« All right, mother, here I am!”

How her heart jumped at the sound of his
‘voice, and how her face lost all its look of care
as she caught sight of her boy clambering
down towards the cottage and then scamper-
ing along the narrow white road to her. side.

“So sorry, mother, but look what I’ve got
for Agnes!”

She kissed her son’s brown cheek and
pushed the curls from his brow, looking lov-
ingly into the dark, bright eyes which were
lifted to hers,

“Dear lad, I do get fidgety ; you know you
are so very precious to your mother.”

Promising better things next time, Ben
disengaged himself, and, rushing into the










BEN’S COTTAGE HOME.
The Cottage under the Hell. 13

cottage, laid a big bunch of primroses before
his sister.

“Thank you, Ben ; what a lot of beautiful

flowers !”

’ A flush came on the cheek of Agnes as her
eyes brightened at the sight of them.

“I’ve been right to the top this time, Agnes,
by the rabbit path, you know, past that bit of
rock where I cut your name that sunshiny
day when you were with me.”

“T remember, Ben, quite well; and don’t I
wish that I could climb the hill with you
again, now.”

’ By this time Ben was sitting by his father
at the table, and doing ample justice to the
thick bread and treacle with which his
thoughtful mother had supplied his plate.
Once more into the willing ear of his son the
little old tailor told the tale of his experiences
with the squire, and explained to Ben the
mysteries of braiding, buttoning, and other
branches of the craft. The boy was too lively
and fond of the fresh air to give much help or
attention to his father’s trade. Still every
evening he spent an hour by his side, with
the needle in his hand, doing his best to
follow the directions of the little old man.

The shadows had begun to lengthen before
the tea‘was cleared away, and Ben’s mother
14 Bright Ben.

had reverently put before her husband on the-
table the old Bible and hhymn-book. Many,

many years had passed since these books were

fresh and new; to some people they had the

appearance of having always been old; from

the edges of the brown leaves little bits of
faded ribbon and old envelopes showed them-

selves. This Bible almost opened, like Peter’s

prison gate, of its own accord, and when the

old tailor, putting on his glasses, quietly turned

the leaves they stopped fluttering at the 14th

chapter of St. John. Reading slowly, and with .
a quaver in his voice, the old man repeated

those wonderful words of our Lord wherein

He bids us be of good cheer and comfort

because we believe,in Him.

Then Ben got up and fetched from a shelf
near the fire-place his instrument of music, an
accordion with a rather faulty bellows, and
some of the pearl off the keys; but in the
hands of the brown-haired boy, who laid his
cheek on the top while resting it on his knee,
some hymn tunes—played at any rate, to the
best of his ability—were produced therefrom.

“Now, Ben,” said his father, as he closed
the Bible, “give us the tune of 428, my boy.”

Ben led off as desired, and soon the little
cottage was filled with thankful praise to
God.
The Cottage under the Fiull. 15

“Glory to thee, my God, this night,
For all the blessings of the light,
Keep me, O keep me, King of kings,
Beneath Thy own Almighty wings.”

The hymn over, an earnest prayer was
uttered, as to One very near and able to save,
and to whose loving care each by name,
mother, Agnes, and Ben, were committed in
‘heart-felt faith.

This was Ben’s home, not a very rich one,
but happy and helpful, where love brightened
everything, and made every little service a

’ pleasure.

When Agnes wished her brother good-
night, she produced a small parcel wrapped in
thin paper.

“Ben, I want you to go ; somewhere for me
to-morrow, to take this precious bit of lace
I have been making all last week on my
pillow.”

' “Tsn’t it pretty?” said the boy, holding the
dainty threads in his hand.

“Now, I may as well tell you, Ben, that
this is to go to Captain Clarke’s at Babingcote
Hall. Mrs. Clarke told father the other day
_ that she would like some of my lace.”

“All right, Agnes. I’ll go first thing in
the morning ; I hope she i is going to give you
_a lot of money for it.” :
16 Bright Ben.

“JT don’t know, but you must bring back
whatever she gives you, Ben, and I shall try
to do some more soon.”

Ben kissed his sister and bade her good-
night, adding as he went away to his little
room: “Some day, Agnes, I shall be a man,
and then you shall not have to work at the
pillow lace any more.”




ee tod hh SR

CHAPTER IL.

THE PICTURE AT THE HALL.

fe birds were singing in the trees, and

the insects humming among the long

grass and flowers, as Ben started off

to Babingcote Hall next morning.
In his pocket was safely stowed away the
tiny parcel of precious lace, the work of many
weary but industrious days on that couch by
the cottage window. - Perhaps it was his
errand and the thought of all the labour
which Agnes had spent on the lace, that
filled Ben’s mind with all sorts of ideas about
the future, and what he would do when he
grew up.to be a man.

He thought how his father was getting
older every cay, and the tailoring was not
what it used to be, for the people liked to
wait until they went inte the town on market
day, and there buy something quite new and
ready-made, with just that bit of fashion about

17 B
18 Bright Ben.

it which poor old Mr. Pottle had not in his
power to supply. Then his mother’s face
came up before his mind as he walked across
the fields, the tired, but brave, uncomplaining
look she always wore to him. When she
kissed him at the door that very morning, she
said: “Take care of the money on your way
back, Ben dear; we need it bad enough, the
Lord knows.”

And Ben did not see how, when she had
seen the last of him at the turning of the
road, she slowly repeated again, “the Lord
knows ;” and as though some whisper of com-
fort and help came into her heart, she smiled
and went about her work with renewed
spirit.

But chiefest of all was Agnes, in Ben’s mind;
she was so ill, and could do little for herself,
“but one day, please God,” here the boy
stopped and looked round with earnest inten-
tion, “one day I will work hard and she shall
be so happy, and perhaps the doctor, if I can
afford to pay for a good one, may even make
her well again.”

He was in the high road now, a half-dozen
good miles yet to walk, when he heard the
sound of wheels behind him, and presently a
carrier's cart, not very heavily laden, came
up. Silas, a ruddy faced, good-tempered
The Picture at the Hall. i9

man, who was driving, knew Ben, and
pulling up asked him to take a lift by
the way.

_“How’s father, Ben? I thought him a bit
aged last time I met him along here.”

“Thank you, Silas, he’s pretty well for
him, but he can’t do so much as he used to—
can’t father.” ,

The cart jolted along, the fresh breeze
blowing off the sea, only a mile away, and
although they had finished speaking, both
Silas and Ben were looking to the dim, blue
waste of water stretched as far as they could
see beyond the cliffs. A few white clouds
were slowly sailing across the sky, and here
and there over the sea the sails of the fishing
smacks could be seen. It was a glorious
' morning, and the man and boy in the cart
were enjoying their ride. Presently Silas
said quite abruptly,

“Ben, what are you going to do for a living
when you geta man?”

“I’m going to do something, Silas, but
what it’s to be I don’t quite know. I wish
I did, I should like to make a beginning as
soon as I can.”

“Well, do you know, when I was in Buswell
market to-day, just putting a few things in
my cart, I heard Mr. Morris saying to another
20 Bright Ben.

shopkeeper at the door, ‘I wish I knew of a
decent lad to go errands for me.’”

“Oh Silas, did he really say that? Why,
perhaps, I should do.”

“Well, Ben, you’d better go over there this
afternoon and see him, say what I’ve told
you, lad, and I only hope you may get the
place.”

Little Ben’s heart was too full to say much
more, already he was counting on the joy
of coming home at the end of the week with
money in his pocket, enough to help them a
little. Wouldn’t he get some nice little things
for mother and Agnes, that dear sister of
his! She should never try her eyes with that
lace-work any more. Thinking of the lace
made him remember his present errand, and
so starting off with a run, having said good-
bye to old Silas, Ben soon reached the gates.
of the Hall.

It was an old-fashioned house, standing
far away from the road, and when the good
woman at the porter’s lodge opened the gate,
and let Ben in, she smiled and wished him a
pleasant “good-morning.” For Ben was -
known as a good boy wherever he went.

“Ts the lady at home, Mrs. Briggs?”

“Yes, my boy, go straight up to the front
door, and then ring the bell.”
The. Picture at the Hall. 21

This Ben did, and soon found himself in a
beautiful room hung round with pictures, and
carpeted so richly that Ben, although he had
taken great pains to brush his boots on the
mat outside, felt really afraid to walk on what
seemed to him the softest velvet. So he first
sat, cap in hand, on one of the chairs near the
door, and gazed around with wonder and
admiration. The pictures most took his
. fancy, some showing high mountains with a
lovely sunlight upon them, others with groups
of cattle in the green meadows feeding,
and again others pictured the deep, smooth
river gliding past the dark trees as evening
moves on, But one large painting at the end
of the room fixed his attention, and soon he
forgot all others in gazing upon that one.

It showed a door fast shut, and round about
it grew thick ivy and thorns, so that it had
evidently not been opened for a long time.
Outside stood a tall and noble-looking man,
with one hand raised as though he were
knocking loudly, and in. the other hung a
lamp burning bright, and casting a beautiful
light upon his white and flowing robe. - All
the picture was wonderful to Ben, and the
face most of all, for under his brow, which
was crowned with a circlet of thorns, were
eyes so full of love and tenderness, so bright
ae Bright Ben.

with a sweet light clearer and purer than that
shown by the lamp he held, that Ben could
not take his eyes from that glorious face.

Who he was Ben did not know, and whyhe _.

stood there in the dark night, knocking at the
fast-closed door, he could not imagine. But
he was a kind, loving, good man _he felt in
his heart, and could not help believing that
in his tender gaze there was regard for him.

He was startled by a voice, close by,
saying,

“Well, my boy, I suppose you have never
seen such a picture before?”

Blushing when he saw it was the lady
herself who had come into the room, he
begged pardon for not hearing her before.

“But, oh ma’am, who is that standing
there, with the lamp?”

“That is the Lord Jesus Christ. Come,
Ben, we will go a little nearer, and see what
is written at the bottom of the picture.”

Ben could read a little, and, fortunately for
him, they were all simple words. He read
them almost in a solemn voice, “Behold, I
stand at the door and knock.”

Then Ben remembered the words in his
New Testament; and seemed more at home
with the picture now he knew it was the
Lord. The lady talked to him awhile, and
The Picture-at the Hall. 23

then, reminding him of the lace, put some
silver in his hand, and stood at the door, as
she watched him go away.

_ “Remember, Ben, that He is always
knocking, and we shall never be happy
while He is kept outside.”

Ben hurried homewards, as happy as a king,
bursting into the cottage all dusty and out of
breath, bringing all the pink back to the face
of pale Agnes Dy squeezing into her hand
the money.

“Oh, mother, chet is a nice lady.”

ss Ves, Ben, I know she is; I shall never
forget her kindness last winter when I was so
poorly, you remember.”

_ “And I’ve seen such a beautiful picture.
. Oh, Agnes, I wish you would have seen it too.

It was Jesus knocking at the door.”

His father looked up from his sewing on a
. bench in the corner, with a smile.

“T’ve seen that picture, too, Ben; the face
is quite beautiful. I well remember one day,
when I was measuring the Captain, he drew
my attention to it. ‘That’s a fine picture,
Pottle, isn’t it?’ said he.

~“*Ves’ I said, going a bit nearer, and
putting my glasses well on, ‘it’s a fine
picture, sir, but it’s the lesson in it I like.’

“«What’s that?’ said the Captain.
24 Bright Ben.

““Why, when Jesus knocks at the door of
our hearts, sir, it is that salvation is come to
the house, and He will come in and sup with
us, and make His abode with us, as He pro-
mised in His Blessed Word.”

It was too late to go over to Buswell that
afternoon, for the sun was fast setting, and
Ben was very tired. But he was full of his
plans for the future, and when he kissed his
mother and said good-night, his face was
bright with hope. The little attic where he
slept had white-washed walls, and before Ben
got into bed that night, he slowly and care-
fully printed on the wall next the window,
with a lead pencil, the words of the picture,
“Behold, I stand at the door and knock.”
He went to sleep that night with the picture
of the wonderful face in his mind, committing
himself to the care of One, who would be his
best and truest friend and lead him safely all
life’s journey through.




CHAPTER IIL

BEN BEGINS LIFE,

\ BUSTLING little town, with one
WK good street and an old market-
eae place was Buswell. Under the
shadow of the old square tower of
St. Peter’s Church, was the forge where, at
all hours of the day, a little group of urchins
-might be seen looking in at the open door,
and watching the strong arms of the black-
smith swinging the heavy hammer, and beat-
ing the burning red-hot iron into the shoe for
the horse standing waiting.

Not many people were seen in the streets
of Buswell, except on Saturdays, which being
market day brought the country folk from all
parts to sell their butter, fruit, and cattle.
Then was Buswell noisy and bustling, voices

’. were heard everywhere, men bargaining about
the price of wheat, and the value of fat beasts,
women standing by their baskets upon which

25
26 Bright Ben.

the sweet fresh butter was laid upon wet
cabbage leaves, and holding out to the
passers-by knives for them to taste a bit of
their wares.

On that day, too, the children were released
from school; generally dressed in their best,
they had fine games in the market, and man-
aged to get a penny or two to spend on nuts.
and sweetmeats.

In the midst of the crowd was always to be

found the Punch and Judy show, and although
the nose of Mr. Punch was very much injured
by the repeated knocks of a life-time, and
Mrs. Judy too had dresses rather worse for
-wear, the children who looked on enjoyed it
just as much, and laughed again and again
when dog Toby, looking very serious in the
corner, held the little broom.

Perhaps fortunately for Ben, it was not on
one of these busy, noisy days, that he walked
into Buswell, and mustering up all his
courage, entered the shop door of Mr. Morris,
the grocer and postmaster of Buswell town.
Ben had to wait a moment while Mr. Morris
finished serving a customer with a piece of
cheese, noticing with admiration the way in
which ‘he cut just the right quantity from the
big round standing on the counter, and how
neatly he folded it in paper when weighed.






























































































































































































































































































































































BUSWELL VILLAGE.
Ben begins Life. 29

“Well, my boy, what.can I do for you?”

“Tf you please, sir, I have heard from old
Silas that you want a good lad here, and
I ‘should like, sir, please, to come very
much.”

Poor Ben, he had forgotten all the nice
little speech he had been practising all his
way from home, and just blurted out these
words with a red face, and eyes which spoke
even more than the earnest words.

Mr. Morris laid down his cheese-knife and
looked the lad full in the face, then he slowly
undid the tape of his white apron and tied it
up again evidently thinking all the while.
Presently he looked up again, and said, rather
sharply as Ben thought,

“What’s your name, boy?”

‘s Ben Pottle, sir, or Behjamin i is my proper
name.”

“Oh, your father’s the tailor who lives in
the cottage under the hill, isn’t he?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Ah, that’s in your favour; your father,
Ben, is a good man, and although he’s a bit
old-fashioned in his cut of things, he’s a
straight, worthy man is your- father.”

Ben felt a bit cheered up by the rather long
speech, and began to think he would like Mr.
Morris very much.
30 Bright Ben.

“Vou look tired, lad, have you walked all
the way?”

“Ves, sir, but I don’t: mind that a bit so
long as I get the situation.”

“Well, have you been anywhere before
this?”

“No, sir, this is the first time I have ever
had a situation.”

“Wait a minute, Ben, you haven’t got it
yet. What makes you in such a hurry to
get work?”

This was a question which Ben could easily
answer, his heart had been so full of the
subject for two days, that it was no wonder —
that he quickly told Mr. Morris all about
Agnes having to work so hard with her pillow
lace, and his mother not being very strong
and wanting a bit of rest, and his father
sometimes finding the tailoring rather slack.
“And I’m the only boy, sir, and they ’ve all
been very good to me, and I do want, please
God, to earn a little money to help a bit.”

“Well, would half-a-crown a week do for.
you, if I let you live here?”

“ Oh, yes, I should be very satisfied, indeed.”

“Very well, Ben, then you may come, and
I hope you will do well and grow up some
day to be a good shopman.”
_ Ben felt so happy that he would have liked
Ben begins Life. 31

to run home at once and tell the glad tidings,
but Mr. Morris had turned round, and was
tapping at a little window in the wall, at which
appeared Mrs. Morris.

“My dear, there’s old Pottle’s son here,
and I’ve just engaged him; have you got a
drop of milk and something to eat for him
before he goes back.” ;

“Of course, I have,” said the bright little
woman ; “send him round to the side door.”

In a few minutes he was in the little
parlour behind the shop, and could see
through the window his new master, busy
with some more customers.

“Come, my boy, get on!”

Hungry as he was, Ben had, for the moment,
forgotten the large mug of milk and plate of
bread and cheese which Mrs. Morris had put
- before him.

“So you are to be our new boy, are you?”

“Ves, ma’am.”

“ Well, you ‘ll have to work hard, you know,
there’s nothing done in the world without
work, and work hurts nobody.”

Everybody in Buswell knew that was the
opinion of Mrs. Morris ; two things made her
feel bad,—seeing people with nothing to do,
or doing their work with half a heart. Mrs.
Morris practised what she preached, got up ~
32 Bright Ben.

early in the morning, looked after the cook-

ing of her husband’s bacon, and was not

afraid of anyone finding dust on the parlour

sideboard, or a spot upon the kitchen floor.

- Buta kinder soul never lived than Mrs. Morris,

as many of the poor people in Buswell would -
gladly testify.

Ben assured her he was not afraid of work,
he would like to begin now, to show her that
he meant to do his best. Ss

“To-morrow morning will be soon enough,
my boy. I daresay you ’ll make your way in
the world, if you work hard and trust in God.”

These last words were spoken in a quiet,
reverent tone, and were followed by inquiries
whether Ben had a.Bible and was in the habit
of praying regularly, morning and evening.
He soon satisfied her on this head, and she
told him that if he meant to succeed he must
remember his “Creator in the days of his
youth.”

“Be honest, my lad, and speak the truth
always ; do your duty as in God’s sight, and
He will give you wisdom and strength for all
your need.”

‘When Ben left, it was with the promise
that he should begin the next morning, and ©
that always on Saturday, when it was possible,
he should go home and spend Sunday. His
Ben begins Life. 33
\

\
- mother, as usual, was standing at the door,
looking for him, when, breathless with running
down the hill, he rushed to her arms with the
joyful news.

“T’ve got it, mother, I’ve got it! Fancy,
half-a-crown a-week, all my own working for
it, too; that’s the nicest part about it.”

Agnes laid down her book and listened
earnestly to the account of how he had been
so kindly treated, and smiled as she said,

“T knew they would take to you, Ben, and
‘be kind, for I was praying for you specially
just about the time you would be going into
the shop.”

That evening they were all very busy, his
mother with her needle mending his clothes,
Agnes making him a new tie out of some bits
of silk she possessed among her treasures, and
the good old father, spectacles on nose, patch-
ing up his boy’s jacket and making it look
wonderful with new buttons. -

“T well remember, Ben, my first place years
and years ago, when I was apprentice to a
tailor in Manchester; how hard we had to
work, and what a deal I had to bear, but, bless
the Lord, He brought me through it. I might
not have been as clever a worker as some, but
I stuck to it, and asked God to bless me, which
He did.” :

Cc
34 Bright Ben.

Many prayers went up to heaven from that
cottage, when the darkness came on, prayers
that the boy who was to leave it next morning
should be guided and blessed in this his
starting out in life.

The sun shone gaily through Ben’s attic
window, and he was up betimes, and at last,
when all was ready, the brown little face was
held up to his mother for the good-bye kiss,
and tears filled their eyes as Ben was wished
God-speed in his new sphere.

He got to Buswell in good time, and after a
few minutes’ rest went down to help another
boy a little bigger than he to take down the
shop shutters. While they were outside, his
companion whispered,

“You’re the new boy, aren’t you?”

SNCS a

“Well, look here, he’l! make you work, and
if he don’t, why the missus will ; she’s a reglar
good un at keeping people at it.”

“Oh, I’m not afraid of work.”

“Aren’t you, then you'll be happy as a
lark here. I’m not quite of that way of think-

.ing, and so I don’t think so much of the
- Morris’s place.”

Ben swept the shop floor, packed up the
firewood, strung up all the loose bits of paper,
and amongst other things was shown by Mr.
Ben begins Life. 35

Morris how to weigh and paper up a pound
of sugar. Every now and then he caught the
eye of Mrs. Morris looking through her little
window, and was once called by her into the
parlour, not, however, to be scolded, but to
receive a new white apron, which when he put
it on she declared made him look “every inch
a grocer.”

Beside Mr. Morris, who was rather bald and
had a funny habit of winking his eyes while
talking, Ben made acquaintance with Foster,
the principal salesman behind the counter,
a sandy-bearded man who said very little;
Kibble, the short, stout, young man who
looked after the cheese and candle depart-
ment; and Miss Spriggs, the young lady who
sold the stamps and prepared the letters for
the postman when he called. The boy who
spoke to him was Baggs, who went on errands
and did odd jobs; nobody seemed to care
much for him. Happily he did not live there,
and when the day was over, and Ben, very tired
but feeling very happy, went to bed, it was to
find Kibble in the room already, sound asleep.

“God bless my dear mother, father and
Agnes,” were the words on Ben’s lips as he
blew out the candle and passed into the land
of dreams after his first taste of getting his
own living.




CHAPTER IV.

HE MAKES AN ENEMY.

URING the quieter days of the week
i; the new boy at Mr. Morris’s grocery
shop got on very well indeed, but
when Saturday came, with the crowd
of customers, it taxed Ben’s wits to the utmost
to keep up with the work. He was not as yet
trusted to serve behind the counter, but found
plenty to do in carrying the baskets with their
different purchases to the covered carts and
traps in which the people had come to Buswell.

‘The only trouble he had was with Baggs, a
boy he could not like, and of whom he began
to be a bit afraid. He noticed that Baggs ©
was one thing while his master looked on,
‘and quite another when his back was turned,
that he avoided Mrs. Morris all he could,
because her eye was too much for him, and
her word, telling him not to be lazy but eee
on, was not pleasant to Baggs.

36


Fle makes an Enemy. 37

Ben had often seen him stopping on his
round of errands to put down his basket for a
game of marbles, and, worst of all, had found
out more than once that when he had done
wrong and was scolded for it, he did not
hesitate to tell an untruth to get out of the
scrape somehow. Ben, when he went home
one Saturday evening, told his father about
this boy; and the old tailor gave him some
serious but useful advice on it.

“My boy, do not go out of your way to
offend him, but don’t make a friend of him,
he will do you no good, and might bring your
good name into discredit. Remember, Ben,
the words of the Book: ‘He that. walketh
with wise men shail be wise, but a companion
of fools shall be destroyed; evil pursueth
sinners, but to the righteous good shall be
repaid.”

“TI will be very careful, father, and you will
pray for me that I may be kept out of temp-
tation.”

He needed not to ask his old father that,
for many times a-day, as he sat bent over his
tailoring in the cottage, his heart was in
Heaven pleading for the blessing of God upon
his absent boy in Buswell. :

One day Mr. Morris called. Ben to him in
the shop and asked him how he liked his
38 Bright Ben.

place, telling him that he was very pleased
with him so far.

“Now, Ben, there’s a busy time for us
coming next week, for it is the Michaelmas
Fair at Buswell, the great time that the people
look forward to all through the year. You
will have to look sharp then, for we get a lot
of people in, and we fill that window with
presents for the country folk to buy, and take
home as ‘ fairings’ to the children.”

Ben was delighted at the prospect, and
promised to do his very best to help when the
rush came. It happened as they were talk-
ing, that they were left alone in the shop, and
Mr. Morris looking earnestly at Ben said:

“Look here, my boy, don’t have much to
do with that lad Baggs, he’s no good; and if

_ it wasn’t for his poor mother, who is an honest,
good woman, I wouldn’t keep him a day.”

“ Perhaps, sir, he’ll be better some day.”

“T hope so, but I don’t see much improve-
ment at present; at anyrate, Ben, don’t let him
spoil you.”

“Hasn’t he got a father, sir?”

“No, Ben, and when he had, he was not
much advantage to him. His father was a
lazy, drinking man, who used to spend at the

_public-house the few shillings his mother
earned by charing and washing.”
fe makes an Enemy. 39

Just at that moment Baggs came into the
_ shop with his empty basket, and as usual, he
put it down and got as far out of his master’s
way as possible. Mr.. Morris, however, was
called away for a moment, and Baggs beck-
oned to Ben to come nearer. He did so, and
met with a frowning, angry look.

“What have you been saying about me to
the governor?” he asked in a hoarse whisper.

“Nothing at all that I should be ashamed
to repeat before your face, Baggs.”

“You've been telling tales, I can see it in
your eyes ; now look here, Ben, if ever I catch
you peaching about me, I’ll give you what
you won't like.”

Ben saw what he meant by the clenched
fist, which he shook in his face. He was not,
however, at all frightened, being a brave boy,
and simply said,

“Baggs, I owe you no grudge, and shall
never do you any harm, but whether you hit
me-for it or not, I shall speak the truth what-
ever comes.”

This was too much for Baggs, who aimed
a blow at his companion, which might have
caught his face, had not Ben slipped on one
side, and fallen over some empty sacks on
the floor,

“Now I’ve caught you, young man, I'll
40 - Bright Ben.

teach you to knock my boys about, in my
very shop.”

This was the voice of Mr. Morris. Ben had
no idea he could speak so severely, and saw
him grasping Baggs by the collar, and shaking
him like a cat would shake a mouse.

- “Out with you,—go!”

Baggs, once released from the grip of his
angry master, was only too glad to obey this
command, and ran down the street as fast as
his legs could carry him.

“Don’t explain, Ben; I heard it all, for I
stood behind this pile of biscuit boxes all the
time. I am very glad you stood to your guns
like a man, I’ll take good care that he never
comes into this shop again.””

Ben had to shut up all by himself that
night, except that the silent Foster came
forward to give him a hand with the heaviest
shutters, but just before the door was shut, a
pale-faced woman came quickly in.

“ Please, can I see Mr. Morris?” |

“No, ma’am, he’s done for the day, and
having his supper.”

“ Oh, but please tell him Mrs. Baggs is here,
and I am sure he will come, he is always so
kind.”

“Ben, go and tell Mr. Morris.”

The master soon appeared, just as he had
He makes an Enemy. 4I

jumped up from the table, a crust of bread in
his hand.

“Well, Mrs. Baggs, I know what you ’ve
come about, but really it’s no use; that boy
_ of yours will never do for me.”

“Oh, sir, I’m so sorry, and I’m sure he is
too; I know he’s bad enough, but if he’s not
working here I don’t know where to find a bit
of money, and beside, he’ll go right down
wrong if left to himself.”

There was a tearful tremble in the mother’s
voice as she spoke, looking from one to the
other for sympathy.

“He’s my only: lad, and his father, as you
know, sir, gave him a bad bringing up ; what
am I to do?”

“But you know, Mrs. Baggs, the reason I
sent him about his business was, that he
knocked down this boy in-the shop, simply
for saying that he meant to speak the
truth. You know, I can’t stand that sort
of thing.”

Poor Mrs. Baggs turned to Ben with a look
of entreaty, “Won't you forgive him? Please
do, and I beg your pardon for him; it was so
wrong, so wicked of him to hurt you so.”

“Oh, he didn’t hurt me, Mrs. Baggs, and as
to forgiving him I have done that long ago.”

A step was heard at the door and Baggs.
42 Bright Ben.

himself, ashamed and still frightened, was
seen lingering in sight.

Foster noticed him but said nothing, only
when his master looked that way, he raised
his eyebrows in a funny kind of way and
pointed with his thumb to the door.



‘6¢wHAT IS MY TEXT TO-NIGHT?’ SAID BEN.”

.© Mr. Foster, bring him in.”

A little more conversation followed, and
Ben ventured to put in a plea for Baggs that
he might be taken back, and after he had
acknowledged this by very awkwardly, and
_with a bad grace begging Ben’s pardon, Mr.
He makes an Enemy. 43

Morris relented and told him he might come
in the morning as usual.

Great joy filled his mother’s eyes as she
thanked him, and Mr. Morris went back to.
finish his supper.

“What is my text to-night?” said Ben, who
was in the habit of reading his “portion”
every night before going to bed, and as he
turned over the leaves of his Testament by
the light of the candle, his eyes caught these
words, “Take heed to yourselves: if thy
brother trespass against thee, rebuke him,
and if he repent, forgive him. And if he tres-
pass against thee seven times in a day, and
seven times in a day turn again to thee,
saying, I repent; thou shalt forgive him. And
the apostles said unto the Lord, ‘Increase
our faith.”

For a minute or two Ben sat silent thinking
over these words, and kneeling at his little bed
he fervently prayed, “O Lord, help me to be
kind and patient to Baggs. May I be for-
giving and bear him no grudge, but, Lord, do
please help me to always speak the truth
and not be afraid of anything that Baggs or
anybody else may:do to me. Lord, help me,
Lord, help me, I am only a poor boy, but if
I have Thy grace and help I shall never fall.”


CHAPTER V. ,

OUR MICHAELMAS FAIR,

FRESH stock of fruits and biscuits,
Ww \ the incoming of wooden cases, which
on being opened revealed pretty
boxes, ornaments, and all sorts of nice
presents, a broad piece of crimson calico having
words on white paper fixed thereupon, “The
cheapest shop for fairings ;” and last, not least,
Miss Spriggs appearing in the post-office
corner of the shop adorned with a new dress,
all told the wonderful news that Buswell
Michaelmas Fair had come round once
more.

Not only at Mr. Morris’s grocery store, but
all through the little town active preparations
were going on for the coming festivities,
For several.days the market-place had been
in the hands of half-a-dozen carpenters, who
were busily fitting up stands and booths,
_ pens for sheep, long tin tunnels for shooting
44
Our Michaelmas Fatr. 45

boxes, stalls for sweetmeats and cakes, and
in a waste place apart the usual merry-go-
round. The children gazed at all these things
with expectation, and promised each other
rare treats in store.

One night Ben awoke up with the un-
wonted sound of heavy wheels being slowly
driven along the streets, he crept to the
window and beheld with amazement two or
three large yellow vans drawn by piebald
little horses upon which rode men in strange
apparel. One, otherwise dressed in poor
clothes, had a cocked hat upon his head,
another carried an immense drum, while a
third held in one hand a large sword, while
the other bore a big rolled-up picture. Ben,
amazed, crept to the bedside of Kibble with
an earnest inquiry, “I say, Kibble, I am so
sorry to wake you, but there’s such funny
things going past the shop.”

Kibble loved his bed, and was loath to be
disturbed.

“Funny things did you say? ay, there’s lots
of funny things about this time.”

“Well, but there’s big covered carts, like,
with men wearing cocked hats sitting on the
top.”

“P’raps it is a fire-engine.” And Ben saw
that sleep was coming on again.
46 Bright Ben.

“But they’re big and yellow; what are
they?”

“ Carawans.”

This answer muzeled Ben still more, for he
remembered having read in some old books
about the travellers with their camels and mer-
chandise in Egypt being called a caravan.

“But they ‘re only men, English people
I mean,’

“Bless you there’s iets of camels, and lions,
and cats, and tigers, and snakes, and monkeys,
and all sorts of creepy, cranky things there,
only you can’t see them. Now good-night,
Ben, I’m off to sleep.”

And off he was without delay, leaving Ben’
to get into bed again, wondering much what
‘these strange visitors could mean.

The following day, however, which was the
first of the fair, explained the caravans and
their contents, for the big picture had been
unfurled in the market-place, and showed a
wild-looking man with a spotted hearthrug.
on his shoulders, holding a growling tiger at
arm’s length with one hand, while he fought a
lion, a wolf, and a serpent with the other, twe
serious-looking camels and an elephant in the
background waiting their turn. No wonder
when the man with the cocked hat and red
coat banged the drum on the little platform
Our Michaelmas Fair. 47

outside, and told them all this could be seen
from the front seats for a penny, children
half-price, there was no want of customers to
the show.

During the earlier part of the fair, Ben was
too busy in the shop to see much of the fun
outside, but occasionally, when he had a parcel
to take to a little distance, he managed to get
a peep at the market-place on his way home.

It was on one of these occasions, when who
should he meet in the midst of the crowd but
Baggs, who had been surly with him ever
since his scolding, but now tapped him on the
shoulder in a familiar style.

“Tsay, Ben, I’m so glad to have met you
just now.”

“Why is that, Baggs?”

“ Because I’m going to toss for sixpences.”

“Oh, I can’t wait, master will want me back
soon; you know how busy we are.”

“ Nonsense, and besides look what a lot of
money I’ve got; let’s go and enjoy ourselves.”

Baggs took out of his pocket several
shillings and a half-crown,and before Ben could
get away had drawn him close to where a
group of boys and men were drinking and
gambling in a tent.

“I’m not going to gamble,” said Ben, and
immediately left the tent.








48 Bright Ben.

Baggs next tried hard to get Ben up the steps
by the drum, into the wild-beast show, but in
this he did not succeed, although he promised
to pay for both.

“JT say, Ben, I want to spend some of this
money ; suppose we have a swing-boat and
then you can go home.”

Now if there was one thing Ben wished to
have it was a turn in that swing-boat, he
thought it must be so delicious to rush
through the air like that, just like being ina
ship on the sea. So he consented just this
once, and joined in the screams of laughter of
his fellow-passengers as the boat flew high.
Getting out again, he felt dizzy and faint,
and as Baggs helped him through the crowd,
back to the shop did not notice that he who
boasted of having so much money actually
slipped the shining half-crown into his pocket
without his knowing it.

“Why, Ben, what a long time you have
been ; surely you have not been stopping in
the fair?”

“Yes, sir, I have, and Iam very sorry for it.
I hope you will forgive me, but I did just go
into one of those swing-boats.”

“Who took you there?”

“Tt was Baggs, sir, who met me in the fair,
and paid for me too.”
Our Michaelmas Fatr. 49

“Did he, though? When he comes I shall
have something to say to him.” .

“I don’t think he meant any harm, but as
he had the money he said he wanted to be
kind.”

“Ben, my boy, take care, take care, never
allow yourself to go with that boy again, he’s
no good, no good at all.”

Nothing more was said till nearly shutting-
“up time, when Baggs rushed in, with a very
red face, and took up a shutter as though
_ ashamed of being noticed. Mr. Morris walked
to the door, and while Ben was inside, asked
Baggs sharply where he had been.

“Only into the fair a bit, where I met
some old friends, and we went into the
waxworks together.” — oe

“How can you afford that, Baggs, you
haven’t got any money, have you?”

_ “No, sir, I ain’t,’ and suiting thé action
to the word, he turned his trousers pocket
inside out. :

- Mr. Morris looked very severe, and after
eyeing Baggs closely, told him he did not
believe his excuses, and said he would speak
about it to him again on the morrow.

Ben soon forgot all about the incident,
for hé was very tired with his day’s work, and
ready for bed. Sitting again by the candle,

D


50 Bright Ben.

he read the story of Joseph and his brethren,
and how he caused their money to be put in
his brothers’ sacks. Thinking of this, and
wondering why they seemed so frightened,
he took off his jacket, and out of its pocket
fell a coin, which he picked off the floor as it
rolled. It was the very half-crown which
Baggs had shown him in the fair! However
did it get there? He scanned it closely,
admiring its brightness, and noticing that
some one had scratched “M” on the face of
it, near the Queen’s head. “What a funny
mark, perhaps somebody once had it and
wanted to keep it, so put his name on it.”

How he wished it was all his own! He
would just buy something for mother with it,
and perhaps a trifle for Agnes, too. He care-
fully wrapped it in paper, and put it back in.
his pocket, resolving to speak to Baggs about
it on the following morning.

But when morning came, there was no
Baggs. The master was evidently very much
excited about his absence, and had several
earnest little talks with Mrs. Morris in the
parlour. :

She had an opportunity of speaking to Ben
when he came into'the room to get some ink
for his master.

“Ben, my boy, mark my words, there’s
Our Michaelmas Fair. 51

something wrong about that lazy lad; it’s a
good thing for you. that he has gone, for I
always feared that he might do you harm.”

“But I don’t think he owed me any grudge
you know; I freely forgave him that time.”

“Ah, my dear boy, you don’t know how
. spiteful some people are, he would do you an
- injury, I know, if he could.”

Ben brought the ink, and his master wrote
something on a slip of paper and sealed it up
very carefully.

“Ben, now this is very particular, take it to
the police-station up the street, and wait for
an answer.”

Ben obeyed, and watched the face of the
constable—they had two in Buswell—as he
read it.

“Tell your master I’ll be down directly.”

And now, while for a few minutes no
customers were in the shop, Mr. Morris took
the opportunity of telling his men, Foster,
Kibble, and Ben, that the till had been robbed,
and he suspected Baggs, but should soon be
able to find out. While he was yet speaking,
in walked the policeman, and a little crowd
immediately gathered round the door. In his
sharp business way he asked—

“lave any of you assistants been out
yesterday ?”

2
2 Bright Ben.

Foster hadn’t and Kibble had been too
busy, certainly Ben was out for a time, and of
course Baggs had been away for the greater
part of the day. A few more questions were
asked, and then the master and the policeman
had a whispered talk in the corner of the
shop. “Oh, I feel sure there’s no suspicion of
any of them; they are as honest as the day.”

“True, sir, but if we are going to find this
out, everybody who can get to the till should
show what money he has.”

“Very well, as you like.” -

. “T’m sorry to trouble you, but, Foster, will
you please let me examine what money you
have in your pocket?”

“Qh yes, certainly.”

The policeman carefully looked at each coin,
and passed them back as all right.

“ Kibble, now I must trouble you?”

This was not much trouble, as Kibble
possessed only a single sixpence, two pieces
of string, a pocket-knife and a brass-headed
nail. There was a titter ran round the shop
as these treasures were produced. “Hardly
a time to laugh, young men,” said the police-
man, gravely.

It was now Ben’s turn, and the few pence
he had were soon brought forth.

“Ts that all?”
Our Michaelmas Fatr.- 53

Ben was just saying “yes,” when his hand
felt the half-crown in his jacket pocket and he
flushed crimson, he didn’t know why. The
policeman seeing his look put his own hand
in the pocket and brought out the shining
coin. Holding it up to the light he scanned
it narrowly, and then said,

“Was it ‘M,’ sir?”

“Yes,”

“Humph, it’s all right; here, young fellow,
you must come with me; this is the way you
rob a good master is it? ’





PSV
ASSP 17 GDS



CHAPTER VI.
THE CULPRIT FOUND.

ERHAPS it was because he had not
> often the treat of catching a thief,
HN but certainly Police-constable X 123

was a little too quick this time.

Mrs. Morris was tapping the little window
so violently that it was a wonder the glass
did not give way, and her husband as
promptly stepped forward, “Stop! I won’t
give this boy in charge.”

“Why not? Why, here is the money found
in his very pocket, and look how he blushed
up when we made him turn out the
money.”

“It doesn’t matter ; although the case does
look rather against him I can never believe
Ben stole the half-crown.”

Mrs. Morris here appeared upon the scene
with a glass of water, which she held to the
lips of Ben.

54
The Culprit Found. 55

“ Be quiet, please, for a minute; don’t you
see the boy has fainted.”

Yes, he had, poor little Ben; the shock of
being accused of stealing by the policeman
had been too much for him, and with just the
one word “mother” in a whisper, he had
slipped down upon the shop floor. Through
the kind care of Mrs. Morris, and the well-
meant but rather strange attention of Kibble,
who stood in front of him holding a box of figs,
thinking perhaps the sight of them might
cheer him up a bit when he opened his eyes,
Ben at last came round. He cried excitedly,
“ Where’s Baggs? where’s Baggs? fetch him,
he knows all about it.”

Mr. Morris had been talking at the door to
the policeman, assuring him that Ben was
honest as the day, and could not be guilty.
To all of which Police-constable X 123
repeated almost word for word,

“But you see, there was the half-crown in
his very pocket, sir.”

At the sound of Ben’s voice they went back
again, but Mrs. Morris, deeming that the
helmet and plated buttons might upset the boy
again, straightway led him into the parlour and
began to comfort him. But the fact that the
half-crown had been found in his pocket was
as much a trouble to Ben as to the policeman.
56 Bright Ben.

“T found it there, ma’ am, when I went to
bed, and I remember seeing a half-crown like
it in Baggs’ hand when .I was going through
the fair. I’m sure, ma’am, I didn’t take it, and

yet I don’t know how it got into my pocket.”
‘ “Never mind, my boy, we will find that
lazy. young fellow, who I knew would never
come to any good, for he hated work, and
those who will not work never get on.”

“Oh but, ma’am, whatever would my mother
say if she knew I had been called a thief?”

“She shall not know, Ben, until you like to
tell her yourself.” .

A bright thought struck him as he said
quickly,

“Oh ma’am, do you think master would let
me go and find Baggs and bring him back?”

Much against the advice of X 123, who said
it was only setting a what-you-may-call-it
to catch a what-you-may-call-it, Mr. Morris
decided that Ben should go at once, but lest
he should come to any further harm from ©
this source of trouble, he despatched the faith-
ful Kibble to go with him.

They started at once for the place where
Baggs lived, but found his mother out, and, of -
course, her son not at home either. An old
woman who was hanging out some clothes in
the yard next door asked what they wanted.
The Culprit Found. 57

“Do you know where we can find Jem
Baggs?”

She gave a little laugh, and stopped with
. the peg in her hand across the line.

“Well, that’s a good un. Find Jem Baggs?
might as well look for a pin in a threshing
. barn, as my old father used to say. And who
wants to find a fellow like Jem, why he’s
worth nout to nobody.”

_ “But we want him very much; we come
from his master, Mr. Morris.”

“Oh, well, all I can tell you is that Jem must
ha’ gone to work rayther early this morning,
for at four o’clock, when I got up to light
my copper fire, I see him climbing over the
wall. ‘Hallo, I says, ‘Jem, I say, where are
you off to?’ ‘Oh, never you mind,’ he says ;
‘you just tell mother I shan’t be back again
for a goodish space, I fancy,’ and off he goes,”
which way, however, he went they could not

_make out from the old woman, so went away
as fast as they could along the high road in
the hope of seeing him.

Poor Ben was full of anxiety; felt, indeed,
innocent as he was, that he must be considered
the thief till the real one was found. He was
for running all the way, but this did not suit
the slower Kibble, who insisted upon not
making a fuss, and reminded Ben for giving
58 Bright Ben.

way, by telling him in a rather tragic voice
the story of some dreadful man who stole
three horses and harvest waggon, and went to
prison for years and years. Ben, fortunately
for his peace of mind, hardly listened to this
long drawn-out tale, for his heart beat fast,











“I SAY, MASTER, HAS ANYBODY PASSED THIS WAY?”

and one thought possessed him above all
others, “I must find Baggs.” After walking
several miles they came upon a caravan, one
of those strange yellow things which had
astonished Ben so much the other night.
The Culprit Found. 59

“Let’s ask this man if he has seen Baggs.”

“TI do it, Ben; you look that guilty and
bad it’s better for me to speak, I’m sure.”

“T say, master, has anybody passed this
way ?” said Kibble.

“Ves, lots.”

« Ah, but I meana young fellow about my
size, with a soft cap and heavyish boots on
his feet.”

“Was he as good-looking a chap as you?”

“No, he wasn’t.”

“Was he tall, with a queerish look in his
left eye, and drove a pony and trap? 5

“No, I should say not.”

« Ah, well; then, I haven’t seen him ; you d
better ask next door.”

And the man, laughing at his own jokes,
took hold again of his horse’s head and began
to hurry on. Ben began to despair, and tears
were already in his eyes because the search
seemed vain. Not so Kibble, however, who
took him aside and assured him that there
was something about that man with the
caravan which made him think he knew
about Baggs, and didn’t mean to tell.

What was to be done? Suppose, for
instance, that Baggs was hiding in that very
caravan, how could they get at him. And
see, the man was now whipping up his horse
60 Bright Ben.

as though to get out of the road as quickly
as possible.

Now it so happened that Policeman X 123
feeling dissatisfied with the result of the scene
in the shop, had made up his mind to leave
no stone unturned, and had heard ‘that the
two youths had set off in search of Baggs.

They had walked so slowly that he easily
followed without being noticed, and just at
this moment walked by them as if all un-
conscious of their presence.

“Kibble, look, why there’s the policeman
again.”

Ben was at first for running away, but his
companion held his hand.

“Ti, bobby, hi, hi!”

The policeman turned round and asked
what was wanted.

Then Kibble and Ben between them told
all that the driver of the caravan had said,
and what they thought.

“In that thing! not very likely.”

But for all that the policeman told Ben to
follow him across some fields quietly, and
presently they climbed a gate which brought
them into the road just as the caravan was
driving up. The policeman held up his hand.
“Stop! I want you to give us a lift.”

“Can’t, sir, really, horse’s tired you see, and
The Culprit Found. 61

the roads is heavy. There’ll be some nicer
weickle up soon as’ll suit you better.”

“No, I like yours best. Here Ben open
this. door at the back.”

In a moment he did so and the neliconiae
jumped in, closing the door behind, which
caused Kibble afterwards to say, that for all
the world it made him think most of a cat
shut up in a cupboard to catch a rat. Voices
could be heard inside speaking loudly.

“Who are you a hitting of? You let me
be and I’ll come quiet enough.”

“ All right, then, let me put these bracelets
on.”

The door opened, and the man in blue
descended followed by Baggs, handcuffed.

The driver was full of apologies,

“Beg pardon, sir, sorry this mistake has
happened ; you see the young gentleman was

a bit tired I fancy, and of course didn’t want
to be disturbed, but o’ course if T *d knowed—”

“ Here, that’s enough, go on.’

This he did most cheerfully, without look-
ing back.

Very few words passed as they returned to
Buswell; Ben wasn’t allowed to speak to
Baggs, and Kibble tried in vain to begin that
story again about the dreadful man and the
three horses, &c. Arrived at the shop, Mr,
62 . Bright Ben.

Morris taxed Baggs with stealing the half-
crown, and the culprit, seeing that there was
no way of escape, confessed to his offence and
begged for mercy.

“T don’t feel inclined to show you any,
haven’t I again and again forgiven your mis-
conduct, and especially do you deserve to be
punished this time for trying to ruin an
innocent fellow by your deceitful trick.”

“My opinion, sir, is,’ put in the policeman,
“that six months at the treadmill would do
him a world of good.”

While they were talking, there came into
Ben’s mind the words he had been reading in
his Testament a few nights before, “seventy
times seven.” He rushed forward to intercede
for Baggs.

“Oh, master, do please forgive him, if only
for my sake; I know he’s behaved very bad,
but perhaps, if you give him one more chance,
he might begin again. I forgive him, from
my heart, I do.”

And Ben took hold of the fettered hand of
Baggs, and looked into his face with a real
loving forgiveness, which went right to the
sinner’s heart. “Then, sir, think of his mother,
it will kill her to know that her son has been
taken to prison ; do, for her sake, let him go this
time.”
The Culprit Found. 63

Baggs looked at Ben, and stammered out
with genuine feeling,

“Thank you, Ben, but better let me be
punished ; I deserve it, God knows.”

It was not until after a long talk that Mr.
Morris at last consented, and the handcuffs
were removed from the repentant Baggs. It
must be said, however, that even the police-
. man, who, at first, was very reluctant and

‘indignant at parting with his prisoner, could
not help admitting that the tears and sorrow
of the lad were sincere.

That night, when Ben walked with him
home, at his request, he quite broke down,
and asked his friend to pray for him.

“T know how shamefully I’ve treated you,
Ben; and how you have been so very kind;
I don’t deserve it, but ask God to forgive me
too.”

“Baggs, do you think I can be kinder to
you than He can? He has said, ‘ Whosoever
cometh unto Me I will in no wise cast out.’
Now, come to Him as a sinner, seek Him
and He will be found by you, and remember
the words which are written inside my little
hymn-book, ‘This is a faithful saying, and
worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus
came into the world to save sinners.’”

They had reached the corner of the lane,




64 bright Ben.

where the moon behind the high trees threw
a deep shadow. Here the two boys stood
still, and removed their caps, while Ben
prayed for the poor wanderer, that he might
be saved. And He, whose ears are always
open to our cry, listened to the plea for mercy
which rose from the heart of Baggs, and said
unto him, “Go in peace, thy sins are forgiven
thee.”

From that hour, Jem Baggs and Ben Pottle
were fast friends, and working together behind
the counter, in Mr. Morris’s shop, to the satis-
faction of their master. Ben’s wages increased,
and more comforts came to the little cottage
under the hill; Agnes had not to tire herself
any more with lace-making, and old Pottle,
wherever he went, praised his son. But none
held him in higher regard than he, who could
say, that, under God, he owed everything to.
the forgiving love and Christian guidance of
Bright Little Ben.

THE END.



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