Citation
The African trader, or, The adventures of Harry Bayford

Material Information

Title:
The African trader, or, The adventures of Harry Bayford
Portion of title:
Adventures of Harry Bayford
Creator:
Kingston, William Henry Giles, 1814-1880
Gall & Inglis ( Publisher )
Place of Publication:
London
Edinburgh
Publisher:
Gall & Inglis
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
128 p., [1] leaf of plates : ill. (some col.) ; 16 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Youth -- Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Slavery -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Cruelty -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Sailors -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Fatherless families -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Poverty -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Friendship -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Youth and death -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Shipwrecks -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Rescues -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Juvenile fiction -- Africa ( lcsh )
Bldn -- 1895
Genre:
novel ( marcgt )
Children's literature ( fast )
Spatial Coverage:
England -- London
Scotland -- Edinburgh
Target Audience:
juvenile ( marctarget )

Notes

General Note:
Date of publication from inscription.
General Note:
Frontispiece printed in colors.
Statement of Responsibility:
by William H.G. Kingston.

Record Information

Source Institution:
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:
002392020 ( aleph )
ALZ6916 ( notis )
230823985 ( oclc )

Downloads

This item has the following downloads:


Full Text










Bin, OO
fot PIS
PAGEL

4 Ae
4}
AC Cette





Meantime the shark, as if still eager to make us its prey, was
swimming round and round the boat.









THE AFRICAN TRADER:

OR, THE

Arhentures of Barry Lanford,

BY

WILLIAM H. G. KINGSTON.

GALL & INGLIS.
London: Lvinburgy :

: 30 PATERNOSTER ROW. 6 GEORGE STREET.
[The right of Translation is reserved ]






CONTENTS,

CHAPTER I.

PAGE
My father, after meeting with a severe reverse of fortune,
dies, and my sisters and I are left destitute.—Our faith-
ful old black nurse, Mammy, takes care of my sisters,
while I, invited by a former acquaintance, Captain Willis
of the ‘Chieftain, sail with him on a trading voyage to
the coast of Africa, . 7 . . . » 9

CHAPTER Ii.

The ‘Chieftain’ arrives off the coast of Africa, and we
carry on a brisk trade with the natives, who come off to
us through the surf.—At length Captain Willis proposes
to run up the river Bonny to complete our cargo.—Not
forgetful of my promise to Mammy, I make inquiries for
her sonCheebo, . : : 7 : - 22



4 CONTENTS.

CHAPTER III.
PAGE
We enter a river.—Its scenery described —Receive a visit

from the King, and trade with the Natives.—The pro-
ducts of Africa, for which we trade, mentioned, and the
curious modein which trade is conducted —Fever breaks
out on board, and several of the crew die.—Sad end of
poor Bob.—The Boatswain and Mates attacked with
fever.—More deaths.—The Captain’s unwillingness, not-
withstanding this, to leave the river till his cargo is
completed, . a : : . : - 388

CHAPTER IV.

More victims to the fever.—The Captain himself attacked.
—We ship some Krumen and other blacks, among whom
isa Christian, Paul Balingo.—Paul instructs the Captain
and me in the truth.—Captain Willis gets somewhat
better, and we prepare for sea, ¢ : . 51

CHAPTER V.

We at length get out of the river into the open sea, but a
calm comes on, and the Captain again becomes very ill.—
No one on board understanding navigation, I. doubt
whether I shall find my way to Sierra Leone.—The Cap-
tain does not believe that he isin danger —Paul pleads
with him about the safety of his soul.—A. fire breaks out
in the. hold.—We in vain endeavour to extinguish it.—
The rest of the crew desert us.—Paul and I endeavour to
save the Captain, but driven from the cabin by the
flames, leap overboard, and reach a small boat, which we

right and get into.—See a schooner approaching us, . 68



CONTENTS.

CHAPTER VI.

PAGE

A calm comes on, and we remain during the night suffering

aa

from hunger and thirst.—Paul tells me his history, and I
find that he is Cheebo, of whom I am in search.—His
joy at hearing of his mother makes him regardless of the
sufferings we are enduring.—The schooner picks us up.
—Paul suspects her character.—Before long we discover
that she is a slaver, and she runs up a river to receive

her cargo on board, « : .

CHAPTER VII.

witness the embarkation of slaves collected at the barra-
coons, and the cruel way in which they are treated and
packed in the hold of the slaver.—Unwilling to desert
Paul, I remain on board, and the slaver puts to sea.—
Paul is threatened for attempting to comfort the slaves
with the Gospel nows.—The schooner receives more
slaves on board along the coast—Some are drowned
coming off —The slaver gets on shore just as a man-of-
war is seen in the offing —A fog comes on, and the
schooner’s crew make desperate efforts to get her off.—
She escapes, to my bitter disappointment, from the man-

of-war’s boats, along the coast, « ; .

86

100



6 CONTENTS,

CHAPTER VIII

PAGE
The Spaniards believing the man-of-war to bo far away,
steer to the westward.—We sight hor, and she chases
us.—Cruel device of the slavor’s crew to assist their
eseape.—Paul, among others, being thrown overboard that
the man-of-war might heave-to to pick them up.—I fear

that he has been lost.—My life preserved by one of the



officers, when threatened by the slaver’s crow.—'lhe







schooner escapes, but is dismasted in a gale, and again
overtaken.—Paul and my cousin Jack come on board, and
I join the corvette as a midshipman.—Returning to Eng-
land I restore Cheebo to his mother.—My adventures
show that ‘all works together for good to them who love
God.—Jack becomes a Commander, marries my sister
Mary, and I find ample means for supporting the rest of
my dear sisters, 7 : . 7 ° » ii





THE AFRICAN TRADER;

oR,

The Anbentures of Harry Bavtord,



Y



THE AFRICAN TRADER,



CHAPTER I.

My father, after meeting with a severe reverse of fortune, dies,
and my sisters and I are lefé destitute.—Our faithful old
black nurse Mammy, takes care of my sisters, while I,
invited by a former acquaintance, Captain Willis of the
‘Chieftain, sail with him on a tr ie voyage to the coast
of Africa.

UR school was breaking up for the mid-
summer holidays—north, south, east,
and west we sped to our different desti-
nations, thinking with glee of the pleasures we
believed to be in store for us.



I was bound for Liverpool, where my father, a

West India merchant, now resided. He had for
9



10 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

most of his life lived in Jamaica, where I was
born, and from whence I had a few years before
accompanied him to England to go to school.

‘I am sorry we shall not see you back Bay-
ford,’ said the good doctor, as he shook me warmly
by the hand. ‘May our heavenly Father protect
you, my boy, wherever you go.’

‘I hope to go as a midshipman on board a
man-of-war, sir, I answered. ‘My father expects
to get me appointed to a ship this summer, and I
suppose that is the reason I am leaving.’

The doctor looked kindly and somewhat sadly
at me. ‘You must not, Harry, raise your hopes
on that point too high,’ he answered, in a grave
tone. ‘When I last heard from your father, saying
he desired to remove you, he was very unwell, 1
grieve to have to say this, but it is better that you
should be prepared for evil tidings. God bless you
Harry Bayford. The coach will soon be up; I
must not detain you longer.’

The doctor again warmly wrung my hand.

I hastened after Peter the porter, who was
wheeling my trunk down to the village inn where
the coach stopped, and I had just time to mount on
the top when the guard cried out, ‘ All right;’ the



HIARRY’S RETURN FROM SCHOOL. 11

coachman laid his whip gently over the backs of
the horses, which trotted gaily forward along the
dusty road.

My spirits would naturally have risen at finding
myself whirled along at the rate of ten miles an
hour on my way homeward, but the last words
spoken by the doctor continually recurred to me,
and contributed greatly todampthem. J managed,
however, at length, to persuade myself that my
anticipations of eyil were mere fancies. On reach-
ing Liverpool, having called a porter to carry my
things, I hurried homewards, expecting to receive
the usual happy greetings from my father and
sisters. My spirits sank when looking up at the
windows, I saw that all the blinds were drawn
down. I knocked at the door with trembling hand.
A strange and rough-looking man opened it. ‘Is
my father at home?’ I asked, in alow voice. The
man hesitated, looking hard at me, and then said,
‘Yes; but you can’t see him. There are some
ladies upstairs—your sisters, I ee had
better go to them.’

There was an ominous silence in the house; no
one was moving about. What had become of all
the servants? I stole gently up to Jane and



12 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

Mary’s boudoir. They, and little Emily our
younger sister, were seated together, all dressed
in black. Sobs burst from them, as they threw
their arms round my neck, without uttering a word.
I then knew to a certainty what had happened—
our kind father was dead; but I little conceived the
sad misfortunes which had previously overtaken
him and broken his heart, leaving his children
utterly destitute.

Jane, on recovering herself, in a gentle sad
voice told me all about it. ‘Mary and I intend
going out as governesses, but we scarcely know
what to do for dear Emily and you Harry, though
we will devote our salaries to keep you and her at
school.’

‘Oh, I'surely can get a place as a nursemaid,’
said Emily, a fair delicate girl, looking but ill-
adapted for the situation she proposed for her-
self. ‘And I, Jane, will certainly not deprive
you and Mary of your hard-earned salaries, even
were you to obtain what would be required,’ I
answered, firmly. ‘I ought rather to support you,
and I hope to be able to do so by some means or
other,’

My sisters even then were not aware of the sad



MAMMY’S STORY. 13

position in which we were placed. Our father had
been a man of peculiarly reserved and retiring
manners ; he had formed no friendships in England,
and the few people he knew were simply business
acquaintances. An execution had been put into the
house even before his death, so that we had no
power over a single article it contained.

The servants, with the exception of my sisters’
black nurse, had gone away, and we had not a
friend whose hospitality we could claim. She, good
creature (Mammy, as we called her), finding out, on
seeing my trunk in the hall, that I had arrived,
came breathless, from hurrymg up stairs, into the
room, and embracing me, kissed my forehead and
cheeks as if I had still been a little child; and I
felt the big drops fall from her eyes as she held me
in her shrivelled arms. ‘Sad all this, Massa Harry,
but we got good Fader up dere, and He take care
of us though He call massa away,’ and she cast ber
eyes to heaven, trusting with a simple firm faith to
receive from thence that protection she might have
justly feared she was not likely to obtain on earth.
‘We all have our sorrows, dear children,’ she con-
tinued, ‘massa had many sorrows when he lose
your mother and his fortune, and I have my sor-



14 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

rows when I was carried away by slaver people,
and leave my husband and piccaniny in Africa, and
now your sorrows come. But we can pray to the
good God, and he lift us out of dem all.’

Mammy had often told us of the cruel way in
which she had been kidnapped, and how her hus-
band had escaped with her little boy; and after she
became a Christian (and a very sincere one she
was) her great grief arose from supposing that her
child would be brought up as a savage heathen in
ignorance of the blessed truths of the gospel. My
sisters and I, as children, had often wept while she
recounted her sad history, but at the time I speak
of, I myself was little able to appreciate the deeper
cause of her sorrow. I thought, of course, that
it was very natural she should grieve for the loss
of her son, but I did not understand that it arose
on account of her anxiety for his soul’s salva-
tion.

‘I pray day and night,’ I heard her once tell
Jane, ‘dat my piccaniny learn to know Christ, and
I sure God hear my prayers. How He bring it
about I cannot tell.’

We and Mammy followed our father to the
grave, and were then compelled to quit the house,



MY SISTERS. 15

leaving everything behind us, with the exception
of my sisters’ wardrobes and a few ornaments,
which they claimed as their property. Mammy did
her best to cheer us. She had taken, unknown to
my sisters, some humble, though clean, lodgings in
the outskirts of the town, and to these she had
carried whatever we were allowed to remove.

‘See, Massa Harry,’ she said, showing me an
old leathern purse full of gold. ‘We no want food
for long time to come, and before then God find us
friends and show us what to do,’

My sisters possessed various talents, and they
at once determined to employ them to the best ad-
vantage. Jane and Mary drew beautifully, and
were adepts in all sorts of fancy needle-work.
Emily, though young, had written one or two
pretty tales, and we were sure that she was
destined to be an authoress. Mammy, therefore,
entreated them not to separate, assuring them that
her only pleasure on earth would be to labour and
assist in protecting them. Had they had:no other
motive, for her sake alone, they would have been
anxious to follow her advice.

I was the only one of the family who felt un-
able to do anything for myself. I wrote too bad a



16 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

hand to allow me any hopes of obtaining a situa-
tion in a counting-house ; and though I would have
gone out as an errand boy or page rather than be
a burden to my sisters, I was sure they would not
permit this, and, besides, I felt that by my taking
an inferior position they would be lowered in the
cold eyes of the world. I had ardently wished to
go to sea, and I thought that the captain who had
promised to take me as a midshipman would still
receive me could I reach Portsmouth. I did not
calculate the expense of an outfit, nor did I think
of the allowance young gentlemen are expected to
receive on board a man-of-war.

I had wandered one day down to the docks to
indulge myself in the sight of the shipping, con-
templating the possibility of obtaining a berth on
board one of the fine vessels I saw fitting’ out, and
had been standing for some time on the quay, when
I observed a tall good-looking man, in the dress of
a merchantman’s captain, step out of a boat which
had apparently come from a black rakish looking
brigantine lying a short distance out in the stream.
T looked at him hard, for suddenly it occurred to
me that I remembered his features. Yes, I was
certain. He had been junior mate of the <¢ Fair



CAPTAIN WILLIS. 17

Rosomond,’ in which vessel we had come home
from Jamaica, and a great chum of mine. ‘Mr
Willis,’ I said, ‘do you remember me? I am
Harry Bayford.’

‘Not by looks, but by your voice and eyes I do,
my boy,’ he answered, grasping my hand and
shaking it heartily. ‘But what has happened? I
see you are in mourning.’ ~

I told him of my father’s misfortunes and death;
and as we walked along frankly opened out on my
views and plans. ‘ You will have no chance in the
navy without means or friends, Harry,’ he answered.
‘There’s no use thinking about the matter; but if
your mind is set on going to sea I'll take you, and
do my best to make a sailor of you. I have com-
mand of the “ Chieftain,” an African trader, the
brigantine you see off in the stream there. Though
we do not profess to take midshipmen, I'll give you
a berth in my cabin, and I don’t see that in the
long run you will run more risk than you would
have to go through on board vessels trading to
other parts of the world.’

‘Thank you, Captain Willis, very much,’ I
exclaimed, ‘I little expected so soon to go to

>

sea,
2



18 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

‘Don’t talk of thanks, Harry,’ he answered,
‘your poor father was very kind to me, and I am
glad to serve you. I had intended calling on him
before sailing; and if your sisters will allow me, ll
pay them a visit, and answer any objections they
may make to your going.’

After dining with the captain at an inn, I
hurried home with, what I considered, this good
news. My sisters, however, were very unwilling
to sanction my going, They had heard so much of
the deadly climate of the African coast, and of
dangers from slavers and pirates, that they dreaded
the risk I shouldrun, Captain Willis, according to
his promise, called the next day, and not without





difficulty quieted their apprehensions.





Mammy, though unwilling to part with me,
still could not help feeling a deep interest in my
undertaking, as she thought that I was going ‘to
visit her own still-loved country ; and while assist-
ing my sisters to prepare my outfit she entertained
me with an account of its beauties and wonders,
while I promised to bring her back from it all sorts
of things which I expected to collect. ‘And sup-
pose, Mammy, I was to fall in with your little ©
piccaniny, shall I bring him back to you?’ I asked, ~



JANE’S ADVICE TO HARRY. 19

with the thoughtlessness of a boy—certainly not
intending to hurt her feelings. She dropped her
work, gazing at me with a tearful eye.

‘He fine little black boy, big as you when four
year old,’ she said, and stopped as if in thought,
and then added, ‘ Ah, Massa Harry, he no little boy
now though, him great big man like him fader, you
no know him, I no know him.’

‘ But what is his name, Mammy? That would
be of use,’ I said.

_ ¢Him called Cheebo,’ she answered, heaving a
deep sigh. ‘But Africa great big country—
_ tousands and tousands of people; you no find
Cheebo among dem; God only find him, His eye
everywhere. He hears Mammy’s prayers, dat
» great comfort.’

‘That it is, indeed,’ said Jane, fearing that my
_ careless remarks had needlessly grieved poor Mam-
my, by raising long dormant feelings in her heart.
‘And oh, my dear Harry, if you are brought into
danger, and inclined to despair—and I fear you
will have many dangers to go through—recollect
that those who love you at home are earnestly
praying for you; and at the same time never for-
get to pray for yourself, and to feel assured that



20 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

God will hear our united prayers, and preserve you
in the way He thinks best.’

‘I will try to remember,’ I said, ‘but do not
fancy, Jane, that I am going to run my head into
all sorts of dangers. I daresay we shall have a
very pleasant voyage out, and be back again in a
few months with a full cargo of palm oil, ivory,
gold dust, and all sorts of precious things, such
as I understand Captain Willis is going to trade
for? ©
‘You will not forget Cheebo though, Massa
Harry,’ said Mammy, in a low voice. The idea
that I might meet her son was evidently taking
strong possession of ber mind.

‘That I will not,’ I answered. ‘Tl ask his
name of every black fellow I meet, and if I find
him Y'll tell him that I know his mother Mammy,
and ask him to come with me to see you.’

‘Oh, but he not know dat name,’ exclaimed
Mammy. ‘Me called Ambah in Africa; him fader
called Quamino. You no forget dat.’

‘I hope not; but Tl put them in my pocket-
book,’ I said, writing down the names, though I
confess that I did so without any serious thoughts
about the matter, but merely for the sake of pleas-



HARRY ON BOARD THE ‘CHIEFTAIN,’ 21

ing old Mammy. When I told Captain Willis
afterwards, he was highly amused with the notion,
and said that I might just as well try to find a
needle in a bundle of hay as to look for the old
woman’s son on the coast of Africa.

The day of parting from my poor sisters and
our noble-hearted nurse arrived. I did not expect
to feel it so much as I did, and I could then under-
stand how much grief it caused them,

‘Cheer up, Harry,’ said Captain Willis, as the
‘Chieftain,’ under all sail, was standing down the
Mersey. ‘You must not let thoughts of home
get the better of you. We shall soon be in blue
water, and you must turn to and learn to be a
sailor. By the time you have made another voy-
age or so I expect to have you as one of my
mates, and, perhaps, before you are many years
older, you will become the commander of a fine
craft like this,’

I followed the captain’s advice, and by the
time we had crossed the line I could take my trick
at the helm, and was as active aloft as many of the
elder seamen on board.

SESS



CHAPTER ITI.

The ‘Chieftain’ arrives off the coast of Africa, and we carry





on « brisk trade with the natives, who come off to us
through the surf.—At length Captain Willis proposes to run





up the river Bonny to complete our cargo. Not forgetful

of my promise to Mammy, I make inquiries for her son
Cheebo.

T was my morning watch. I was indulg-




ing in the pleasure particularly enjoyable
after sweltering in the close hot atmo-
sphere .of the cabin, of paddling about with
bare feet on the wet deck, over which I and
some of the men were heaving buckets of water,
while others were lustily ‘using holy-stones and
scrubbing brashes, under the superintendence of
Mr Wesbey, the first mate. The black cook was
lighting his fire in the caboose, from whence a
wreath of smoke ascended almost perpendicularly
in the clear atmosphere. The sea was smooth as

glass, but every now and then a slowly heaving
22



THE COAST OF AFRICA. 23

swell lifted the vessel, and caused her sails, which
hung down against the masts, to give a loud flap,
while here and there the surface was broken by the
fin or snout of some monster of the deep swimming
round us. Our monkey, Quako, who had been
turned out of his usual resting-place, was exhibiting
more than his ordinary agility—springing about the
rigging, and chattering loudly, now making his
way aloft, whence he looked eastwards, and now
returning to the caboose, as if to communicate his
ideas to his sable friend.

‘What makes Quako so frisky this morning?’
I asked of Dick Radford, the boatswain, a sturdy
broad shouldered man of iron frame, who, with
trousers tucked up, and bare arms brawny as those
of Hercules, was standing, bucket in hand, near
me, deluging the deck with water. ,

‘He smells his native land, Harry,’ he answered,
‘and thinks he is going to pay a visit to his kith
and kindred. We shall have to keep him moored
pretty fast, or he will be off into the woods to find
them. I have a notion you will get a sight of it
before long, when the sea breeze sets in and sends
the old barky through the water.’

‘What! the coast of Africa!’ I exclaimed, and



24 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

thoughts of that wonderful region, with its unex-
plored rivers, its gloomy forests, and its black
skinned inhabitants, with their barbarous customs
and superstitious rites, rose in my mind.

‘ Aye, sure and it will be a pleasant day when
we take our departure from the land, and see the
last of it,’ observed Dick. ‘If those niggers would
trade like other people we might make quick work
of it, and be away home again ina few weeks, but
we may thank our stars if we get a full cargo by
this time next year, without leaving some of our
number behind.’

‘What? I should not fancy that any of our fel-
lows were likely to desert,’ I observed.

“No; but they are likely to get pressed by a
chap who won’t let go his gripe of them again,’
auswered Dick.

‘Who is that?’ I asked.

‘ Yellow-fingered Jack we call him sometimes,
the coast fever,’ said Dick. ‘If they would but
take better care of themselves and not drink those
poisonous spirits and sleep on shore at night, they
might keep out of his clutches. I give this as a
hint to you, Harry. I have been there a score of
times, and am pretty well seasoned, but I have felt



THE BOATSWAIN’S ADVICE TO HARRY. 25

his gripe, though I do not fear him now.’ - I thanked
the boatswain for his advice. It was given, I sus-
pected, for others’ benefit as well as mine.

As the bright hot red sun rose in the sky,
casting his beams down on our heads, and making
the pitch bubble up from the seams in the deck—as
it had done not unfrequently during the voyage—a
few cats’ paws were seen playing over the mirror-
like deep. The sails bulged out occasionally, again
to hang down as before; then once more they
swelled out with the gentle breeze, and the brigan-
tine glided through the water, gradually increasing
herspeed. I was eagerly looking out for the coast;
at length it came in sight—its distant outline ren-
dered indistinct by the misty pall which hung over
it. As we drew nearer, its forest covered heights
had a particularly gloomy and sombre appearance,
which made me think of the cruelties I had heard
were practised on those shores, of the barbarous
slave trade, of the fearful idolatries of its dark
skinned children, of its wild beasts, and of its
deadly fevers. There was nothing exhilirating,
nothing to give promise of pleasure or amusement.
As our gallant brigantine glided gaily on, sending
the sparkling foam from her bows through the tiny



26 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

wavelets of the ocean, which glittered in the radi-
ance of a blue and cloudless sky, and her sails
filled with the fresh sea breeze, these feelings
rapidly wore off. Now, on either side, appeared a
fleet of fishing canoes, the wild songs of their naked
crews coming across the water, as with rugged
sails of matting lolling at their ease, they steered
towards the shore. We overtook some of them,
and such a loud jabber as they set up, talking to
each other, or hailing us, I had never heard.

Being near enough to the dangerous coast, we
hove-to, and watched them as they fearlessly made
their way to shore on the summits of a succession
of rollers which burst in fearful breakers on the
beach. With our glasses we could see hundreds



of dingy figures like black ants, hurrying down to
meet them, and to assist in hauling up their canoes.
As I cast my eye along the coast I could see many
a bay and headland bordered with a rim of glittering
white sand, fringed by an unbroken line of spark-
ling surf. Now we could make out the mud walls
and thatched roofs of the native villages, scattered
here and there along the shore, mostly nestling
amid groves of graceful cocoa-nut trees, while
further inland appeared, at distant intervals, that



FIRST VIEW OF AFRICA. 27

giant monarch of the tropical forest, the silk cotton
tree, stretching its mighty limbs upwards towards
the sky, and far and wide around. Such was my
first view of the African coast.

‘Well, what do you think of it?’ asked Captain
Willis. ©

‘It looks better than I expected,’ I said. * But
I don’t see how we are ever to reach it, much less
carry on any trade with the people. How can we
possibly send any goods on shore?’ :

‘You will see presently,’ he answered. ‘ We
have hoisted our trading signal, and before long we
shall have plenty of dealers along side unless some
other vessel has been before us; if so, we may
have to wait some days till the black merchants
can bring more goods down from the interior. The
people about here are imbued with the very spirit
of commerce. They understand too how to make
a sharp bargain. We have to be wide awake, or,
naked savages as they are, they will contrive to
outwit us.’

Our various assortments of cotton and other
goods had been got up from the hold ready for the
expected trade. The captain had also taken ont
from his strong box a supply of sovereigns and



28 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

Spanish dollars, should coin be demanded, though
he relied chiefly on the more advantageous proceed-
ing of barter.

After standing off and on the coast for some
hours, we perceived several large canoes about to be
launched. On either side of each canoe stood a dozen
or fifteen men, holding to the gunwale with one
hand, and carrying a paddle in the other. At asignal
from their head man the canoe was hurried into the
foaming surf ; but, instead of getting in, they swam
by her side, guiding her course, until the first
heavy swell was past, then they threw themselves
simultaneously into her, and began to paddle with
might and main till they got beyond the outer
swell, and on they came, shouting with satisfaction
at the success of their enterprise. Two got off
without accident; but three others, when in the
very midst of the breakers, were swamped, and I
thought that their crews, and, at all events, their
cargoes, would be lost. But no such thing. As I
watched them through the glass I saw that they
were all holding on to the gunwale, shoving her
from side to side, until the water was thrown out,
when in they got again, and began to gather up
numerous articles floating around them. This ac-



TRADING WITH NATIVES. 29



‘complished, off they came as if nothing had hap-
pened. As they got alongside I discovered the
reason why their effects did not sink—some were
casks of palm oil, which naturally floated, while
the elephants’ tusks and other pieces of ivory, were
fastened to large floats of cork-wood, and several
of the men had small light wooden boxes, which
contained gold dust, secured to their waists. Though
these were of a weight sufficient greatly to incum-
ber, if not to sink, an ordinary swimmer, so expert
were they in the water that they appeared in no
way to be inconvenienced. . Several of them re-
cognized Captain Willis, who had frequently before
been off the coast, and having been fairly dealt
with by him, and aware that he knew the price
they would be ready to take, gave him very little
trouble. Some, however, tried to outwit him, but
he was very firm with them, and let them under-
stand that he was indifferent to trading except on
equitable terms. Altogether he was well satisfied
with the result of his first day’s business.

We stood off the coast before the sea breeze
died away, and returned again on the following
morning. This sort of work we continued for
several days. It was, however, a very tedious



30 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

mode of proceeding, At length we found that the’
amount of produce, brought off from day to day,
rapidly diminishing, while the natives began to
demand higher prices than at first. We accord-
ingly stood down the coast towards another native
town, with the inhabitants of which we began to
trade in the same way as before.

From the time we first came into these latitudes
we kept a bright look out night and day. I asked
old Radford what was the use of doing this when
we were engaged in a lawful commerce, which
must of necessity prove an advantage to the
negroes, ‘ Why, you see, Harry, there are other
gentry visit this coast with a very different object
in view,’ he answered. ‘For the Spaniards and
Portugese, especially, come here to carry off the
unfortunate inhabitants as slaves, and sometimes
the villainous crews of their craft, if in want of
provisions and water, will help themselves, without
ceremony, from any merchantman they may fall
in with. And should she have a rich cargo on
board, they have been known, I have heard say, to
make her people walk the plank, and sink or burn
her, so that no one may know anything about the
‘matter.- Now our skipper has no fancy to be



AFRICAN TRADING. 31

caught in that fashion, and if we were to sight a
suspicious looking sail, as the “ Chieftain” has got
a fast pair of heels of her own, we should do our
best to keep out of her way. You see when once
fellows take to slaving they go from bad to worse.
I have known something of the trade in my time,
and it made my heart turn sick to see the way in
which they crowd hundreds of their fellow-crea-
tures down on the slave decks of their vessels,
packed as close together as herrings in a cask, for
their run across the Atlantic to the Brazils or Cuba.
It may be, before we leave this coast, you will
have the opportunity of seeing for yourself, so I
need not tell you more about it now.’

After this I was as vigilant as anyone on board
in looking out for suspicious craft,—for I had no
fancy to be caught by a piratical slaver, and be
made to walk the plank, and have our gallant little
‘Chieftain’ sent to the bottom.

We continued cruising along the’ coast for
some weeks, slowly exchanging our cargo for
African products.

At length Captain Willis got tired of this style
of doing business. ‘I am going to run up the
river Bonny, Harry, where we are certain in time



32 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

to get a full cargo of palm oil, though I would
rather have filled up without going into harbour at
all, for the climate, I own, is not the healthiest
possible, and we may chance to have a touch of
sickness on board.’

He spoke, however, in so unconcerned a way
that. I had no serious apprehensions on that
score.

I had not forgotten my promise to Mammy,
and had asked all the blacks I could manage to
speak to if they could tell me anything of Cheebo.
I need scarcely say that my question was received
with a broad grin by most of them. ‘ Plenty
Cheebos,’ was the general reply. ‘Dat black fel-
low Cheebo ; and dat, and dat, and dat Quamino,’
was added, when I said that such was the name of
the father of the Cheebo of whom I was in search,
but none of them answered the description of poor
Mammy’s son. Atlength I felt very much inclined
to give up my inquiries as hopeless.





CHAPTER IIL

We enter a river.—Its scenery described.—Receive a visit from
the King, and trade with the natives—The products of
Africa, for which we trade, mentioned, and the curious
mode in which trade is conducted.—Fever breaks out on
board, and several of the crew die.—Sad end of poor Bob.—
The boatswain and mates attacked with fever.—More
deaths.—The Captain’s unwillingness, notwithstanding
this, to leave the river till his cargo is completed.

STANDING in towards the coast with the
sea breeze we saw before us an opening



between two low mangrove covered
points, which formed the mouth of the river
we were about to ascend. The scarcely ever
ceasing rollers, coming across the wide Atlantic,
broke on the bar which ran across its entrance with
somewhat less violence than on the coast itself.
Still there was an ugly looking line of white foam
which had to be crossed before we could gain the

smooth water within. We hove-to, making the
33 3



84 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

~. signal for a pilot. A canoe in a short time came off,

~ having on board a burly negro, dressed in a broad
brimmed hat, nankeen trousers, and white jacket,
with a sash round his waist. He produced several
documents to show that he was capable of taking
a vessel over the bar.

‘Wait bit captain,’ he said, ‘high water soon,
and den ship go in smooth—-batten down hatches
though, case sea break aboard.

Captain Willis followed this advice ; it was well
that he did so. ‘* Up helm now captain—bar berry
good—plenty breeze.’ We stood on with all canvas
set; the hands at their stations ready to shorten
sail when necessary. Soon we found ourselves
mounting to the top of a high roller, then on we
glided, till in another instant down we came amid
the hissing roaring breakers, their foam-topped
summits dancing up on either side, and deluging
our decks. I saw our black pilot holding on pretty
tightly by the main shrouds—I followed his ex-
ample, for I expected every moment to feel the
vessel’s keel touching the bar, when I knew that if
she were to hang there even for the shortest pos-
sible time, the following sea might break over her
stern, and make a clean sweep of her deck. On



CROSSING THE BAR. 35

she sped though, lifted by another huge roller;
downwards we then glided amid the eddying
creamy waters on to the calm surface of the
river, up which the next minute we were gliding
rapidly.

The appearance of the banks on either side was
not attractive. As far as the eye could reach was
one dense jungle of mangrove bushes, and though
we ran on for several miles it in no way improved.
The wind died away as we advanced, and the at-
mosphere became hot and oppressive. I had ex-
pected to see pleasant openings, with neat cottages,
plantations of maize, rice, and other grain, pepper,
palms and palmetos; but instead, a uniform line of
the sombre tinted mangrove alone presented itself,
the trees just too high to prevent our having a
view over them of any more attractive scenery
which might have existed beyond,

I asked our black pilot when we should come
to the town. ‘By by den you see,’ he answered
with a look which denoted that we should in time
witness something worth beholding.

The water was as smooth as glass. Here and
there coveys of birds might be seen skimming
along the surface, while overhead a flight of scarlet



36 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

winged flamingos swept in wide circles, their plum-
age flashing in the sun as they prepared to descend
on one of the many sandbanks in the stream, to
carry on their fishing operations, As we advanced,
now and then a canoe would shoot out from among
the jungle; the black skinned paddlers coming
quickly alongside, to ascertain our character and
the objects for which we wished to trade. Some-
times too we could see troops of monkeys making
their way among the branches, their small grinning
faces peering out at us as we glided by through
some channel near the shore. Hour after hour
thus passed by, but at length, towards evening,
the belt of mangrove bushes diminished in thick-
ness, and other trees of more attractive appearance
began to take their place, and openings appeared
with a few huts scattered about on the slopes of
gently rising ground.

As evening was closing in we caught sight, in
the far distance, of a congregation of huts, and the
pilot gave the captain the welcome information,
that he might shorten sail, and prepare to come to
an anchor. By the time we had made everything
snug darkness closed down upon us. We could
just see a few lights twinkling ahead, while on



BONNY RIVER. 37

either side, across the stream, appeared the dark
outline of the tall trees which clothed the river’s
banks, Silence reigned around us, with the excep-
tion of the ripple of the water against the vessel’s
bows; but from afar off came a confused mixture
of sounds, which appeared like the croaking of
frogs, the chirruping of crickets, and other creeping
and flying things, the screeching and chattering of
monkeys, mingled with the voices of human beings
making merry round their huts. The air was
damp and heavy and hot; at the same time I felt
that I should like to be seated by a roaring drying
fire.

We kept a watch on deck as if we were at sea,
with arms ready for use, for though our pilot had
assured us ‘that all good people here,’ Captain
Willis was too well acquainted, both with the
character of the natives, and the sort of gentry who
might possibly be in the river waiting for a cargo
of slaves, to put himself in their power.

I tumbled and tossed about during the night in
my berth, unable to sleep, both on account of the
heat, and, strange to say, of the perfect quiet which
prevailed. Next morning a large canoe was seen
coming off from the shore, in which was seated a



38 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

white headed old negro in a glazed cocked hat, a
red hunting coat on his shoulders, a flannel petticoat
round his waist, and a pair of worsted slippers on
his feet. The pilot, who had remained on board,
notified to the captain, with great formality, that
he was King Dingo, coming to receive his dash or
payment for allowing us to trade with his people.
His majesty was received with due ceremony, and
conducted into the cabin, when, as soon as he was
seated, notwithstanding the early hour of the day,
he signified that it was his royal pleasure to be
presented with » bottle of rum. Having taken two
or three glasses, which seemed to have no other
effect on him than sharpening his wits, he handed
it to one of his attendants, and then applied himself
to the breakfast, which had just been placed on the
table, and I dare not say how many cups of coffee,
sweetened. to the brim with sugar, he swallowed in
rapid succession. Having received half a dozen
muskets, as many kegs of powder, brass pans, wash
basins, plates, gunflints, and various cotton articles,
as his accustomed dash, and requested a dozen
bottles of rum in addition, he took his departure,
promising to come again and do a little trade on
his own account.



TRADERS ON THE BONNY RIVER. 39

The subjects of the sable potentate were now
allowed to come on board, and several canoes were
seen approaching us from different parts of the
shore. One brought a tusk of ivory, others jars of
palm oil, several had baskets of India-rubber, or
gum-elastic, as it is called. Besides these articles,
they had ebony, bees’-wax, tortoise-shell, gold-
dust, copper-ore, ground nuts, and others to dis-
pose of.

We soon found that the business of trading
with these black merchants was not carried on at
the rate we should have desired.

The trader, having hoisted his goods out of his
canoe, would place them on deck, and seat himself
before them, looking as unconcerned as if he had
not the slightest wish to part with them. Some
would wait till the captam came forward and made
an offer; others would ask a price ten times the
known value of the article, extolling its excellence,
hinting that very little more was likely to be
brought down the river for a long time to come,
and that several other traders were soon expected.
The captain would then walk away, advising the
owner to keep it till he could obtain the price he
asked. The trader would sit still till the captain



40 THE AFRICAN TRADER,

again came near him, then ask a somewhat lower
price. On this being refused he would perhaps
make a movement as if about to return to his
canoe, without having the slightest intention of so
doing; and so the game would go on till the
captain would offer the former price for the article,
when, perhaps, the trader would sit on, time being
of no consequence to him, in the hopes that he
might still receive a larger amount of goods. On
other occasions the captain had to commence bar-
gaining, when he invariably offered considerably
"below the true mark, when the trader as invariably
asked something greatly above it. The captain
would then walk aft, and, perhaps, come back and
talk about the other ports he intended to visit,
where the natives were more reasonable in their
demands. Captain Willis was too cool a hand to
show any impatience, and he thus generally made
very fair bargains, always ‘being ready to give a
just value for the articles he wished to purchase.
As each jar of oil, each tooth or box of gold-dust,
or basket of India-rubber, could alone be procured
by this process, some idea may be formed of the
time occupied every day in trading.
Palm oil was, however, the chief article we



FEVER ON BOARD. Al

were in search of; but two weeks passed by, and
still a considerable number of our casks remained
unfilled. Fever too had broken out on board.
Three of our men were down with it, and day after
day others were added to the number. The two
first seized died, and we took them on shore to be
buried. This had a depressing effect on the rest.

When we returned on board we found that a
third was nearly at his last gasp. Poor fellow,
the look of despair and horror on his countenance
I can never forget. ‘Harry,’ he exclaimed, seiz-
ing my hand as I went to him with a cup of cool-
ing drink, ‘I am not fit to die, can no one do any
thing for me? I dare not die, can’t some of those
black fellows on shore try to bring me through—
they ought to know how to man handle this
fever.’

‘JT am afraid that they are but bad doctors, Bob,’
I answered, ‘however, take this cooling stuff it
may perhaps do you good.’ ‘A river of it wont
cool the burning within me,’ he gasped out. ‘Ob
Harry, and if I die now, that burning will last for
ever and ever. I would give all my wages, and
ten times as much, for a few days of life. Harry,
I once was taught to say my prayers, but I have



42 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

not said them for long years, and curses, oaths,
and foul language have come out of my lips in-
stead. I want to have time to pray, and to recol-
lect what I was taught as a boy.’ I tried to cheer
him up, as I called it, but alas, I too had forgotten
to say my prayers, and had been living without
God in the world, and though I did not curse and
swear, my heart was capable of doing that and
many other things that were bad, and so I could
offer the poor fellow no real consolation. I per-
suaded him to drink the contents of the cup; but
I saw as I put it to his lips that he could with
difficulty get the liquid down his throat.

‘You have had a hard life of it Bob, and per-
haps God will take that into consideration,’ I said,
making use of one of the false notions Satan sug-
gests to the mind of seamen as well as to others.
Bob knew it to be false.

‘That won’t undo all the bad things I have
been guilty of; it won’t unsay all the blasphemies
and obscene words which have flowed from my
lips,’ he gasped out.

‘Then try to pray as you used to do,’ I said,
‘I will try and pray with you, but I am a bad
hand at that I am afraid,’



DEATH OF A SHAMAN. 43

‘Oh, I can’t pray now, it’s too late! too late!’
he exclaimed in a low despairing voice, as he
sank back on his pillow, turning his fast glazing
eye away from me. He had been delirious for
some time before then, but his senses had lately
been restored. He seemed instinctively to feel
that I could offer him none of the consolation he
needed.

While I was still standing by the side of his
bunk, one of the mates came forward to see how
the sick were getting on. He spoke afew words to
try and comfort the dying man. They had no more
effect than mine, he only groaned out, ‘It’s too
late! too late! too late!’ His voice rapidly grew
weaker—there was a slight convulsive struggle ;
the mate lifted his hand, it fell down by his side.

‘Poor Bob has gone,’ he said, ‘there will be
more following before long, I fear. If I was the
captain I would get out of this river without wait-
ing for a full cargo, or we shail not have hands
enough left to take the vessel home.’

This scene made a deep impression on me; too
late! too late! continued sounding in my ears.
What if I were to be brought to utter the same ex-
pression? Where was poor Bob now? I tried not to



44 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

think of the matter, but still those fearful words
‘too late’ would come back to me; then I tried to
persuade myself that I was young and strong, and
as I had led a very different sort of life to most of
the men, I was more likely than any one to escape
the gripe of the fever.

We had another trip on shore to bury poor
Bob. The captain seemed sorry for him. ‘He
was a man of better education than his messmates,
though, to be sure, he had been a wild chap,
he observed to me. Bob’s conscience had been
awakened; that of the others remained hardened
or fast asleep, and they died as they had lived,
foul, unwashed, unfit to enter a pure and holy
heaven.

Tam drawing a sad and painful picture, but it
isa true one. I did not then understand how full
of horror it was, though I thought it very sad to
lose so many of our crew.

We continued to carry on trade as before, and
the captain sent messengers urging the natives
to hasten in bringing palm oil on board, but they
showed no inclination to hurry themselves; and
as to quitting the river till he had a full cargo on
board, he had no intention of doing that.



‘BLACK JACK.’ 45



Hitherto the officers had escaped; but one
morning the second mate reported that the first
mate was unable to leave his berth, though he
believed that it was nothing particular; but Dick
Radford, who was considered to be the strongest
man on board, when he had tried to get up that
morning, had been unable to rise. The captain
sent me forward to see him.

Some hours must have passed since he was
attacked. He was fearfully changed, but still
conscious. :

‘Black Jack has got hold of me at last, Harry,
but T’ll grapple with him pretty tightly before I let
him get the victory, do you see,’ he observed, when
I told him that the captain had sent me to see him.
‘I’m obliged to him, but if he wishes to give me a
longer spell of life, and to save the others on board,
he will put to sea without loss of time, while the
land breeze lasts. A few mouthfuls of sea air
would set me up inatrice. If we don’t get that
there will be more of us down with fever before
night.’

The boatswain had scarcely said this when he
began to rave and tumble and toss about in his
berth, and I had to call two of the men to assist



46 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

me in keeping him quiet. When I got back to the
cabin, I told the captain what Radforth had said.
‘Oh, that’s only the poor fellow’s raving. It will
never do to leave the river without our cargo, for
if we do some other trader will sure to be in directly
afterwards and take advantage of what has been
collected for us. However, I have had notice that
lots of oil will be brought on board in a few days,
and when we get that, we will put to sea even
though we are not quite full.’

The captain shortly afterwards paid Radforth a
visit; but the boatswain was raving at the time, and
never again spoke while in his senses. The follow-
ing day we carried him to his grave on shore. The
death of one who was looked upon as the most
seasoned and strongest man, had, as may be sup-
posed, a most depressing effect among the crew. It
was soon also evident that the first mate was ill
with the fever, and indeed more than half our
number were now down with it.

Still the captain could not bring himself to quit the
river, ‘In a few days very possibly we shall have
a full cargo Harry,’ he said to me. ‘In the mean-
time, I daresay, the rest will hold out. Radforth
overworked himself, or he would not have caught



SICKNESS CONTINUES. AW

thefever. Take care Harry you don’t expose your-
self to the sun, and you will keep all to rights my
boy,—I am very careful about that—though I am
so well seasoned that nothing is likely to hurt
me.”

‘I wish we were out of the river, Captain Willis,’
I could not help replying. ‘The mates and the men
are always talking about it, and they say the
season is unusually sickly or this would not have
happened.’

‘They must mind their own business, and stay
by the ship, wherever I choose to take her,’ he ex-
claimed, in an angry tone, and I saw that I should
have acted more wisely in not making the obser-
vation I had just let fall. Still, to do him justice,
Captain Willis was as kind and attentive as he
possibly could be to the sick men; he constantly
visited the first mate, and treated him as if he had
been a brother.

All this time not a word about religion was
spoken on board; I had, it is true, a Bible in my
chest, put there by my sisters, but I had for-
gotten all about it, and there was not another in
the ship.

Except in the instance I have mentioned, and in



48 THE AFRICAN TRADER,

one or two others, not even the sick men seemed
concerned about their souls. The only consolation
which those in health could offer to them, was the
hope that they might recover. ‘ Cheer up Dick,’ or,
‘cheer up Tom, you'll struggle through it, never
say die—you will be right again before long old
boy,’ and such like expressions were uttered over
and over again, often to those at their last gasp,
and so the poor fellows went out of the world be-
lieving that they were going to recover and enjoy
once more the base pursuits and unholy pleasures
in which their souls’ delighted. Alas, I have often
though what a fearful waking up there must have
been of those IJ had thus seen taking their de-
parture from this world, yet the rest of us remained
as hardened, and in most cases as fearless, of con-
sequences as before.

The death of the first mate, which very soon
occurred, made the second mate, I perceived, some-
what more anxious than before about himself. The
first mate had been a strong healthy man, and had
often before been out on the coast, while the se-
cond mate was always rather sickly, and this was
his first visit to the shores of Africa. Whether or
not his fears had an effect upon him, I cannot say,



FEARS OF THE CREW. 49

but he began to look very ill, and became every day
more anxious about himself. The captain tried to
arouse him, telling him that we should be at sea
enjoying the fresh breeze in a few days, and that
he must hold out till then. ‘Still it is of no use
Harry,’ he said to me, as I was walking the deck
with him one evening, trying to get a few mouth-
fulls of air, ‘I know I shall never leave this
horrible place alive unless the captain would give the
order at once to trip the anchor, then perhaps the
thought of being free of it would set me up again.’

I told the captain when I went into the cabin
what the poor mate had said, for I really thought
our going away might be the means of saving his
life, as well as that of others aboard. He took what
I said in very good part, but was as obstinately
bent in remaining as before. ‘Those are all fancies,
Harry,’ he answered. ‘He has taken it into his
head that he is to die, and that is as likely to kill
him as the fever itself.’

‘But then he fancies that he would get well if
we were at sea,’ I replied. ‘Perhaps that really
would set him up again.’

‘Well, well, just tell him that you heard me

say I hoped to get away in two or three days,
4



50 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

perhaps that will put him to rights,’ answered the
captain, laughing. ‘ Now, Harry, don’t let me hear
any more of this sort of thing; I have bother
enough with these black traders without having to
listen to the fancies of my own people.’

I told the mate what the captain had said. ‘If
the vessel does get away at the time he mentioned,
I hope that I may be able to help in taking her to
sea, if not, mark my words Harry, there will be a
good many more of us down with the fever. He
spoke too truly. The traders continued to arrive
but slowly, as before, with their oil. The captain
waited and waited like an angler anxious to catch
more fish. Before the week was over the second
mate was dead, and we had only two men fit for
duty on board.





CHAPTER IV.

More victims to the fever.—The captain himself attacked.—We
ship some Krumen and other blacks, among whom is a
Christian, Paul Balingo.—Paul instructs the captain and
me in the truth.—Captain Willis gets somewhat better, and
we prepare for sea.

HE ship was almost full, and we had a




few more empty casks, and were ex-
pecting some traders on board during
the day with oil which would fill them up. When
I turned out of my berth, just as morning broke, I -



found the captain seated in his cabin, with his
head resting on his hands. He felt a little ill, he
acknowledged, but said he was sure it was nothing.
‘We will get under weigh at daylight to-morrow .
morning, when the tide makes down, and I shall
soon be all to rights,’ he observed. Still, I could
not help remarking that he looked pale, and moved

with difficulty. ‘I have agreed to ship half-a-
51



52 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

dozen Krumen, and two or three other black sea-
men, who are knocking about here, he added.
‘This fever has made us terribly short-handed;
but I hope the fellows who are sick will come
round when we are in blue water again. Tlarry,
go forward and see how they are getting on, and
send Tom Raven to me.’ Raven was one of the
two men who had hitherto escaped the fever, and
being a good seaman, had been promoted to the
rank of mate.

I went on deck, but saw neither him nor Grin-
ham, the other man. I made my way forward to
where the crew were berthed, under the topgallant
forecastle, expecting to find them there. Grinham
was in his berth; he and two other poor fellows
were groaning and tossing with fever, but the rest
were perfectly quiet. I thought they were asleep.
What was my horror, on looking into their berths,
to find that their sleep was that of death !

‘Water, water,’ murmured Grinham. Iran and
fetched some, and as I gave it to him I asked
where Raven was. ‘I don’t know,’ he answered,
somewhat revived by the cool draught. ‘It’s his
watch on deck. He said he felt a little ill when he
relieved me.’



FEVER STRICKEN SHIP. 53

Having done what I could for the other man,
I went to look for Raven. I found him in the se-
cond mate’s berth. He too was ill with fever, and
seemed to have forgotten that he ought to have
been on deck, and that the vessel had been left
without anyone to look out. I told him that the
captain had resolved to put to sea the next day.
‘Had he gone a week ago the lives of some of
us might have been saved, but it is too late now,’
he answered with a groan.

Sick at heart, after attending to him, I
returned to the cabin, to make my report to the
captain.

‘What, all! everyone of them sick!’ he ex-
claimed, sighing deeply. ‘Then God have mercy
upon us. ‘You must not fall ill, Harry.

* Not if I can help it, sir,’ I replied.

‘I must keep up,’ he said, and if I can get
these Krumen on board we will still put to sea.
They are trustworthy fellows, and, Harry, you
must be my mate. You are somewhat young; but
you have got a head on your shoulders. You must
keep your wits alive.

‘Tl do my best, sir,’ I answered, feeling not a
little proud of the rank to which I thus was raised.



54 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

I had, indeed, for some time past been performing
the duties of mate, supercargo, steward, and not
unfrequently helping the black cook, Sambo, and,
indeed, lending a hand to everything which required
to be done. Now Sambo and I were literally the
only two people capable of working on board.
The captain himself I feared greatly had got the
fever, notwithstanding his assertions to the con-
trary. It was surprising that I, the youngest in
the ship, and least inured to the climate, should
have escaped. I had always been very healthy ;
had never done anything to hurt my constitution,
and had followed the captain’s advice in keeping
out of the sun, and was inclined to feel somewhat
self-satisfied on that account—not considering that
it was owing to God’s mercy and loving-kindness
that I had been preserved.

The captain said he would go and see Raven;
but having got up, after moving a few paces, he
sat down again with a groan, and a deadly palour
came over his countenance. He felt that he, too,
had got the fever. J advised him to lie down
again and rest, but to that he would not consent.
He was determined to carry on the trade as usual

during the day, and to get ready for sea as soon



BLACK SAILORS. 55

as the black seamen, whom he expected every hour
on board, arrived. He sent me up frequently to
see whether they were coming off, and now, when
too late, he seemed as anxious as anyone had been
to get the vessel out of the river.

I was thankful when at length I found two
canoes alongside with the expected blacks. The
Krumen were fine athletic fellows, neatly dressed
in shirts and trousers, and having all served on
board men-of-war or in merchant vessels, spoke a
little English. They had been hired by the cap-
tain’s agent on shore; and as their wages had been
settled, and they knew the duties they were re-
quired to perform, they went to work at once under
their head man, who had been appointed to act as -
boatswain, and seemed inclined to be orderly and
obedient. Besides the Krumen there were, as I
have before said, several other black seamen en-
gaged, who had been mostly recaptured slaves,
and had afterwards entered on board men-of-war
or merchant vessels touching at Sierra Leone. I
was struck with the manner of one of them, a fine
active man, as I, now the only representative
of the ‘Chieftain’s’ officers and crew, stood near
the gangway to receive them. Touching his hat



56 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

in a respectful manner, he asked after Captain
Willis. ‘He know me, Paul Balingo. I sail once
with him some time ago. He kind man, so I come
again.’ I told him that the captain was rather
unwell. He had charged me not to let the blacks
fancy that he had the fever. I added, that I
was sure he would be glad to see him in the
cabin.

‘I go when you tell I come on board,’ answered
Paul. ‘Sorry to hear him ill.’

‘Oh, he says its nothing,’ I observed, ‘and as
soon as the tide serves we are to go down the
river, and put to sea.’

I made this remark in obedience to the cap-
tain’s instructions. JI now gave directions to the
black boatswain to get the cargo stowed without
delay.

The captain was much pleased to hear that
Paul Balingo had joined the vessel, and said he
would see him at once. ‘I remember him well,’
he observed, ‘a good steady fellow,’

I told Paul to come down, and he received a
friendly welcome. I then reminded the captain
that there was another duty to be performed. It
was to bury the men who had died during the



PAUL BALINGO. 57

night. This was beyond the strength of those
who still survived.

‘T see to it, sir,’ said Paul.

‘The sooner the better then,’ observed the
captain. ‘And when you return we will trip
the anchor, if there is wind enough to help us
along.’

Four bodies were lowered into the canoe, and
Paul and some of his companions took them on
shore. He had fastened them up in canvas, for
there was no time to make coffins; indeed, the
carpenter was among them. I should like to have
accompanied him to pay the last mark of respect
I could to the poor fellows, but there were too
many duties to be performed on board to allow of
this. I watched them, however, through the glass
as they stood on the beach, which formed our
burial place. To my surprise, after the graves
were dug, I observed Paul Balingo take off his hat
—his companions imitating his example—when he
seemed to be lifting up his hands in prayer. Then
he addressed a number of natives who were stand-
ing round, and the bodies were carefully lowered
into the graves, and covered up.

When he returned on board I told him that the



58 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

captain was very much obliged to him for what he
had done. ‘And I saw too,’ I observed, ‘that
you were praying for the poor fellows.’

‘No, massa; I no pray for dem,’ he answered.
‘If when dey died dey loved Jesus Christ, den
dey no want my prayers; if dey no love Him, den
He no love dem. No, massa, me pray for dose
that stand round, and for dose still alive. I pray
dat God’s Holy Spirit would come into der hearts,
and told dem to love Jesus, and dat He died for
sinners. I prayed dat dey would hear His Word,
and love Him andserve Him. Den I tell dem that
Jesus Christ came down on earth, and become
man, and be obedient to God, and do all dat good
child should do who Iub him parents, and dat He
pure and holy like lamb widout spot or blemish, and
dat He died on de cross, and be punished instead of
wicked man, and dat God den say dat one who
not deserve punishment being punished He will
forgive all dose His dear Son present to Him, who
lub Him and serve Him. Den [I tell dem dat
Jesus Christ died for dem, and dat if dey trust to
Him He put away all dere sins, and God not look
at der sins any more. Den I turn de matter about,
and I say dat you and all men are poor and naked



PAUL BALINGO. 59

and covered with dirt and sores, and not fit to go
into de presence of pure and holy God; but if you
love Christ and trust dat He died and was punished
instead of you, den He put on you a white robe,
cover you wid His righteousness, and den when
you go to God He longer see that you are poor and
naked, but He only see the white robe, and He
say, ‘* Now you may come into dis pure and bright
heaven, and live wid Me.’ Then once more I say
again, look here, God put you into this world, and
you owe God everything. You ought to obey Him
and serve Him, and give Him all your strength
and health, and to try and please Him in all things
every moment of your life. Next IJ remind dem
dat none of us do it, so we owe God a debt, and
the longer we live the greater is the debt. It is
not den all the things that we do dat God reckon,
but the many things that we ought to do and
which we leaye undone. We receive all the good
things from God, and we give Him nothing in
return. Then we have no means to pay this debt,
so Jesus Christ, because He love us, say He pay
it, and God say He accept His payment and set us
free. Den I say to the people, Do you believe dis?
If you do, and try to love God, and serve God,



60 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

and do what Jesus Christ did when He was on
earth, den you have living faith, and you are free,
and God no say longer that you owe Him debt,
but He call you His dear children, and when you
leave this world He receive you in heaven.’

‘Why, Paul,’ I exclaimed, after listening with
astonishment to what he had said, ‘I little ex-

2



pected to hear such things come out of a
(I was going to say negroe’s mouth, but changed
it to) ‘ African sailor’s mouth. You ought to be
a missionary.’

‘Every Christian man ought to be a mission-
ary,’ he answered. ‘If he love the Lord Jesus,
and know that the Lord Jesus love him, then he
ought to tell that love to others, and if he knows
the-value of his own soul then he values the souls
of others, and try to win those souls for Christ.
The truth is, massa, I do want to be missionary,
and I seek to go to England to learn more. I
there learn to preach the gospel, and when I come
back I carry the glad tidings of salvation to my
ignorant countrymen.’

I was very much struck with Panul’s earnest-
ness and zeal, though at that time I could scarcely
comprehend all he said—I myself knew nothing



PAUL BALINGO. 61

experimentally of the great love of Jesus of which
he spoke. The poor black Christian was far
more enlightened than Iwas. Still I felt a satis-
faction at having him on board, He at once
showed that he was not a mere theoretical Chris-
tian, for as soon as his duty on board the ship
was over, he devoted himself to attending on the
sick men. All the hours he could snatch from
sleep he spent by the side of their bunks, urging
them to trust to Jesus, and to repent of their sins
while yet there was time.

The poor second mate grew worse and worse.
Paul visited him, and he heard from the lips of the
black seaman, perhaps for the first time, the full
and free message of salvation; and, I believe, from
what Paul told me, and from the remarks -the
mate made to me before he died, that he had
fully accepted God’s gracious offer of reconcilia-
tion.

_ Iam going ahead though too fast in my nar-
rative. Before the morning came that we were to
have left our anchorage Captain Willis himself was
laid prostrate with the fever, and having now no
one on board to navigate the vessel, we could not
venture to sea. I would have done my best to



62 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

find our way to Sierra Leone, but the black boat-
swain refused to leave the harbour without an
officer capable of taking charge of the brigantine.
We were compelled, therefore, to wait till Captain
Willis should recover sufficiently, or till the
arrival of another English vessel which could









spare one of her mates to take charge of the
‘ Chieftain.’

Before many days were over Captain Willis,
and Sambo, the black cook, and I, were the only
persons of those who had come into the river, still
alive on board. Had the Krumen been badly dis-
posed, they might, without difficulty, have taken
possession of the vessel, and made off with her
rich cargo; but they appeared, as far I could
judge, to intend to act faithfully, and perform their
various duties as well as if the captain’s eye had
been constantly upon them. About Paul I had no
doubt. Little as I knew of vital religion myself,
I was sure that he was a true man, and that he
acted according to his professions. - Nothing could
exceed his attention to the captain; he or I were
constantly at his bedside; and Paul showed con-
siderable skill in treating the disease. I believe
that it was mainly owing to him, through God’s



CAPTAIN WILLIS AND PAUL BALINGO. 63

mercy, that the captain did not succumb to it, as
the rest of the crew had done.

‘Paul,’ said the captain one morning, when he
felt himself getting a little better, ‘I owe you my
life, I will try not to forget you.’

“Oh, no, no captain, poor fellow like me not
able to do you good; give God de praise,’ he
answered solemnly, looking upwards. ‘Oh, if
you did but know how God loves you, how He
takes care of you, and gives you all the good
things of life, and saves you from danger, and
wishes you to come and live with Him, and be
happy for ever and ever, you would try to love
Him and serve Him, and obey Him in all
things,’

‘T don’t think that God can care for one who
has cared so little for Him,’ answered the captain.
“I don’t mean to say that I call myself a bad man,
or that I have many great sins on my conscience,
and so, I suppose, if I died He would not shut me
out of heaven altogether.’

‘Captain,’ said Paul, fixing his eyes steadily on

_ him, ‘the debil told you dat; he a liar from the
a beginning. God says, “There is none that doeth
good,no not one,” “Thesoul that sinneth shall surely



64 THE AFRICAN TRADER,

die.” What does dat mean? Not, surely, that if
you sinner He let you get into heaven. I ask you,
captain, whether you are a sinner, or whether you
pure and holy, and trust to Christ, and love Christ,
and fit to go and live for ever and ever in the pure
and holy heaven with Him? Understand, I do
uot ask whether you are a great sinner in your own
sight, but whether you have ever committed any
sins; and remember, God says, “the soul that

”

sinneth,

’

not only the soul that is a great sin-
ner.

The captain looked much annoyed. ‘Yes, of
course, I have committed some sins; but I don’t
see why. God has any right to charge them against
me.’

‘God made this world, and all things that are
therein. God rules this world, and God made His
laws, and He says they are just and right, and
God says, “The soul that sinneth shall surely
die,”’ answered Paul, solemnly. ‘ Captain under-
stand, it is not I who say that. God says it. But
though God is a God of justice He ig full of love
and mercy, and He has therefore formed a plan
for the benefit of sinning men, by which man’s
sins can be washed away, by which His justice



PAUL INSTRUCTS CAPTAIN WILLIS. 65

will be satisfied, His love and mercy shown.
He has allowed another to be punished in-
stead of the sinner,’ Paul continued, explaining
to the captain God’s plan of salvation much. in
the same terms as he had already explained it to
me.

_ ‘IT never understood that matter before,’ said
the captain. ‘ But still I do not see how God can
expect us to be as good as you say.’

‘Massa Captain, I do not say dat God expect
us to be good; but still He has a right to demand
that we should be good. He made man pure and
holy and upright, and He gave him free will to act
as he chose; but man disobeyed God and went
away from Him, and forgot Him, and so God has
the right to punish man. But den God is full of
love and mercy, and He does not want to punish
him, but wants him to come back to Him, and so
He has sent His message to man to tell him how’
he may do that. Now as man cannot be good and
pure and holy and do nothing but good, but, on the
contrary, does much harm, he must either accept
God’s plan of “salvation, or be punished. You
have heard, captain, about the thief on the cross,

even when he was dying he put faith in Jesus, and
5 5



66 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

Jesus told him that he should be that night with
Him in paradise. So you see, captain, there is
hope for the sinner, even at the last, and this
shows that God does not expect us to do anything
good in order to be saved, but only just to put
faith in the sacrifice of His dear Son—that is to
say, to believe that He was punished instead of
us. But then remember, captain, that only one
thief was saved; and that shows to us that we
must not put off turning to Jesus to the last, and,
therefore, I pray you, captain, go to Him at
once; trust to Him now, and you will not feel
unhappy; and if this fever takes you away, as
it has taken away so many people on board this
ship, you will hab no fear of death, for you will
go to live with Jesus, and be happy with Him for
ever and ever.’

Captain Willis groaned. ‘Tl pray wid you,
captain,’ said Paul, and he knelt down by the side
of the bed, and lifted up his voice in prayer, and
earnestly besought God to send His Holy Spirit to
soften the captain’s heart, and to enlighten his
mind.

_ I had listened attentively to all that Paul had
said, and I prayed that the blessing which he asked



THE CAPTAIN RECOVERS, 67

for the captain might descend on me also ; for had
begun to discover that my heart was very hard,
and prone to evil, and that I had no love for Jesus,
no desire to obey His law. Thus the truths of the
gospel, as they fell from the lips of the black sailor,
first came home to my heart.

Several days passed by—the ‘ Chieftain’ was
got ready for sea, and the captain considered him-
self well enough to take the command.





CHAPTER V.

We at length got out of the river into the open sea, but a calm
comes on, and the Captain again becomes very ill.—No one
on board understanding navigation, I doubt whether I shall
find my way to Sierra Leone.—The Captain does not be-
lieve that he is in danger.— Paul pleads with him about the
safety of hig soul.—A fire breaks out in the hold.—We in
vain endeavour to extinguish it—The rest of the crew de-
sert us.—Paul and I endeavour to save the Captain, but
driven from the cabin by the flames leap overboard and
reach a small boat, which we right and get into.—Seea
schooner approaching us. ,

T day-break the pilot came on board, the
sails were loosed, the anchor hove up,
and the ‘Chieftain,’ with a hot land

breeze, which still blew strong, glided down the



river. Captain Willis, who had been brought from
his cabin by Paul and Sambo, sat propped up with
pillows on the deck. It was melancholy to see

him, his once strong frame reduced to a mere
68



THE ‘CHIEFTAIN’ LEAVES THE RIVER. 69

skeleton, his countenance pale and haggard, and
his strong voice now sounding weak and hollow,
and scarcely to be heard by those to whom he
issued his orders. I stood by him to repeat them.
I saw him cast an eye towards the spot which con-
tained the graves of our shipmates, and I could
divine his thoughts. Perhaps he might have re-
flected that had he not been so greedy of gain,
many of them might be still alive, while he him-
self might be enjoying health and strength.

The mangrove covered shores looked even more
sombre and monotonous than before, in the grey
light of morning, as we glided down between them.
The air was hot and oppressive, and full of pes-
tilence, and it seemed a wonder to me that I should
have lived so many weeks while breathing such an
atmosphere. I dreaded lest the breeze should fail
us, and we should be compelled to spend another
night under its influence; but the wind held, the =
tide was in our favour, and we had nearly reached .
the mouth of the river before the wind dropped,
and we had to bring up. wards the fresh sea breeze came rushing in, pure
and sweet, and comparatively cool. With what
delight did I gulp it down. I quickly felt like







70 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

another creature. The captain also seemed to re-
vive rapidly under its influence, and I began to
hope that he would ultimately recover. :

I eagerly watched the sparkling lines of white
foam as the ocean waves, meeting the ebbing cur-
rent of the river, broke across the bar. How I
longed for the evening, when the land breeze would
again fill our sails, and carry us out into the open
bounding ocean. It seemed to me that then all
difficulty would be passed, and we should only have
to shape our course for England, and steer on till
we should reach it.

The captain, unwilling again to go below, sat all
day on deck under an awning, ready for the moment
when we might venture to weigh anchor. It came
at last. Just before sunset the hot wind began to
blow. Although the bar still wore a threatening
aspect, the pilot declared that, without fear, we
might venture over it.

Not a moment was lost, on we stood towards
it. In a short time foaming breakers were hissing
and bubbling around us. Once more I felt the
vessel rising to the heaving wave, and welcomed
the showers of spray which flew over her deck.
On she sped, but very slowly; now she sank



“THE CAPTAIN HAS A RELAPSE. val

downwards, and it seemed as if the next roller
would send her back on the bar. It glided under
her, however, and then she appeared floating,
as it were, almost at rest on its summit, and then
downwards she slid, slowly making her onward
way.

In a few- minutes more we were in the free open
ocean, and the dark sombre river, with its gloomy
associations, was far astern. Every inch of canvas
the vessel could carry was set, that we might get
a good offing before nightfall, when a calm was to
be expected.

‘I never wish to see that place again,’ I could
not help exclaiming.

‘ Don’t say that, Harry,’ answered the captain.
‘We may hope to have better luck the next time.
If you ever want to grow rich you must run some
- risk, We have had an unusually sickly season,
which may not again occur; and if the owners
ask me to go back, I am not the man to refuse
to do so, and I should look to you to go along with
me.’

Can it be possible, I thought, that a man, after
running so fearful a risk, would willingly again
expose himself to the same danger, merely for the



12 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

sake of rapidly gaining wealth? I forgot at the
moment that people not only hazard their health
but their souls, for that object. Had I remembered
the fact, I should not have been surprised at what
the captain had said.

We had got out of sight of land, but the wind
was very light, and we made little progress. Ina
short time it fell calm altogether, and the vessel
lay like a log on the water. The heat, too, was
very great, and the captain appeared to suffer from
it. It was evident, indeed, that he was falling
rapidly back, and he had now no strength to come
on deck. Iwas much alarmed onhis account, for I
thought it too likely that, after apparently being so |
near recovery, he would die. I was anxious also
on our own account, for knowing so little as I
did about navigation, I could not tell how I should
take the vessel into port. I got out a chart and
studied it, and marked the spot where I believed
we then were. I then drew a line from it to Sierra
Leone, the place for which I intended to steer. It
lay about north-west of us, and I hoped that if I
could sight the land to the southward I might coast
along till I came to it, There were, however, I _
knew, strong currents running, which might take



HARRY AND THE CAPTAIN. 73

us out of our course, and we might have contrary
winds, which would further increase the difficulty.
I thought that very likely some of the blacks knew
more about the matter‘than I did, but I did not like
to confess my apprehensions to them lest they might
be tempted to play some trick, and perhaps run
away with the vessel altogether.

The only person in whom I could confide was
Paul. I knew that I could trust him thoroughly,
but then I suspected that he was not a better navi-
gator than I was, as he had only served on board a
man-of-war and merchantmen, when he would not
have been able to learn anything about the matter.

_ The captain caught sight of me through the
‘open door of his berth, as I was poring over the
chart spread out on the table of the main cabin.
‘ What are you about, Harry ?’ he asked.

I told him that I was looking at the chart to
see what course we ought to steer.

‘* Don’t trouble yourself about that, lad,’ he
answered; I shall be well as soon as the breeze
cones. It’s this hot calm keeps me down. Ifthe
wind had continued, I should have been myself
again by this time, though I have had a narrow

squeak for it. Pll ‘allow.’



(4 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

His face looked so pale and haggard, his eyes
so sunken, his voice so weak and trembling, that I
could not help fearing that he was mistaken. I
was unwilling to alarm him, but it was so import-
ant that I should know how to act in case of his
death, that I could not help saying,—‘ But suppose
anything was to happen to you, sir, what should
you advise me to do?’

‘I do not intend that anything shall happen to
me, Harry,’ he answered, evidently annoyed at my
remark. ‘ After having got this valuable cargo on
board we must not think of such a thing. Why
Harry, in all my voyages I have never collected
half so rich a freight.’

‘T earnestly hope that you may recover your
health, sir, I said. ‘I mentioned the subject
simply in case of accidents, ‘and I did not suppose
that you would be offended.’

‘ Of course I am not, Harry,’ he replied. ‘ You
don’t suppose that I am a coward and afraid to die ;
and if it was not for the sake of the vessel and her
freight, I should not care, I fancy, so much about
the matter; but it would never do now to knock
under—so don’t, Harry, put those gloomy thoughts
again into my head,’



CAPTAIN WILLIS. 75

On going on deck I told Paul my fears about
the captain. ‘ Yes, he very bad,’ he said; ‘ but I
more sorry about him soul. He think more of the
cargo, which may go to the bottom in one moment,
than of his soul, which live for ever and ever. O
Massa Harry, we must speak again to him about
dat. We will plead with him with tears in our
eyes, that be think about his soul, and we will tell
him not to trouble about the vessel.’

Without loss of time we went to the captain.
At first he listened somewhat coldly to what Paul
said, but he did not grow angry. ‘Ithank you for

interesting yourself about me,’ he said at last. -#

‘You may be right, and if you will pray with me I .
will try to join you,’

Paul and I thereon knelt down, as we had done
before, and Paul, in very plain language, earnestly
besought God to send His Holy Spirit to soften
the captain’s heart, to show him that he was a lost
sinner, and had need of a Saviour—to enlighten his
mind, and to enable him to take hold of Christ as

‘the only way whereby he could be saved.

The captain remained for a long time afterwards
silent. At length he put out his hand and grasped
Paul’s. ‘I see it now,’ he said, sighing deeply.



76 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

‘I have been, and still am, a great sinner. Oh,
that I knew better how I could be saved.’

‘Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou
shalt be saved,’ said Paul, in a firm voice. ‘ That
is God’s loving message. Hesends no other; and,
captain, if all the ministers of your country were to
come to you, they could bring you no other. If
you do believe on Jesus, and are to die this very
day, He says to you just what He said when
hanging on the cross on Calvary to the dying thief,
“ This night thou shalt be with me in paradise.”’

The captain was greatly moved, and I heard
him, between his sobs, exclaiming, ‘ Lord, I believe,
help Thou my unbelief.’

Oh how necessary is that prayer! and I am
sure it is one which is always answered, when the
sinner is truly desirous of turning from his sins,
and is seeking, by every means in his power, to
strengthen his belief,

I had got out my Bible several days before,
and I now read it constantly to the captain, as well
as to myself. Whenever I came to a passage
which seemed to meet his case, he desired me to
read it over and over again. Notwithstanding this,
the desire was strong within him to recover, for the



BECALMED. G7

sake of carrying home the vessel and her rich
freight in safety. That was but natural, and I
earnestly hoped that he might be restored to health.
Instead, however, of gaining strength, he appeared
to grow weaker and weaker.

The calm had now continued for several days.
Often as I looked over the side I saw dark trian-
gular fins just rising above the surface, and mov-
ing here and there round the ship, and frequently
the whole form of the monster could be discerned
ag it glided by; and when I saw its keen cruel
eyes glancing up towards me, I felt a shudder pass
through my frame, such as, according to the vulgar
notion, a person feels when it is said that some
one is walking over his grave. Occasionally, when
anything was thrown overboard, a white flash was
seen rising out of the deep, anda large pair of jaws,
armed with sharp teeth, opening, gulped it down,
and directly afterwards the creature went swim-
ming on, watching for any other dainty morsel
which might come in its way. ‘ How dreadful it
would be to fall overboard, I thought. Calm as
the sea is, a person, with those creatures around,
would have very little chance of escaping with
life.’



78 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

Dark clouds had been gathering around, and
the wavelets began to play over the hitherto calm
ocean, Although as yet there was not much wind,
the sails were trimmed, and, by the captain’s orders,
the vessel was put on a north-west course. I
concluded, consequently, that he at all events in-
tended touching at Sierra Leone, to obtain a mate
and some white hands. The wind, however, rapidly
increased, sail was taken in, and before long it was
blowing a perfect hurricane. This made the poor
captain more anxious than ever to get on deck, but
when he attempted to move he found that he had
not strength even to sit up. The wind howled
and whistled, the vessel tumbled fearfully about,
and the seas, which rose up in foaming masses,
frequently broke on board, deluging her deck,

Thad gone down to the captain, who had di-
rected me to visit him every quarter of an hour to
let him know how things were going on, when, as
I entered the cabin, I discovered a strong smell of
burning, and directly afterwards I saw thin wreaths
of black smoke making their way through the for-
ward bulk-head. The dreadful conviction came
upon me that the vessel was on fire. I sprang on
deck, and calling the boatswain and Paul, I told



THE SHIP ON FIRE. 7 9

them my fears. That they were too well founded
we had soon fearful evidence, for the smoke, now
in thick volumes, rose above the deck, both fore
and aft. Still there might be time to extinguish
the fire. To do this it was necessary to take off
the main hatchway, and, in spite of the risk of a
sea beating over us, it was done. The instant it
was off dense masses of black smoke rose up from
below, preventing all attempts which the boatswain
and some of his men made to discover the seat of
the fire.

‘We must take to the boats,’ he exclaimed, ‘ the
ship soon all in flames, then the boats burn and we
no get away.’

Paul and I as well as Sambo tried to persuade
him and his Krumen to make more efforts to put__
out the fire before they lowered the boats. With.
the sea then running, indeed there was every pro-
bability that they would be swamped. We set
them the example, by rigging the pumps, and filling
buckets from alongside to heave down the hold.
Thus encouraged, they laboured for a short time,
but finding their efforts of no effect, they abandoned
the work and began to lower the boats.

The wind had happly by this time somewhat



80 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

moderated; while most of the people were engaged
in launching the long boat, Paul and I with two
other men set to work to lower one of the smaller
boats. We had not forgotten the poor captain,
and as the smoke had not yet made its way into his
cabin, I did not intend to let him know what had
occurred till the last, when I hoped, with the assist-
ance of Paul and others, to get him lowered safely
into one of the boats.

Allhands were working away with frantic haste,
for we could not tell at what moment the flames
might burst forth, and render the deck untenable.
At length the long boat was launched, and the
boatswain and the Krumen leaped into her. They
called to Sambo and the rest to follow. I thought
Sambo would have remained faithful to the captain,
and have come to assist him, but at that moment a
forked flame burst up from the hold, so alarming
him, that he followed the rest. Paul and I entreated
the other men to remain by the smaller boat, while
we went into the cabin to bring up my poor friend
the captain. As I was descending the companion
hatch, I heard the boatswain shouting to the other
men, ‘and caught sight of them running to the side.
Still I hoped that should they desert us, Paul andI



SHIP DESERTED BY CREW. 81

might be able, after placing the captain in the boat,
to lower her in safety.

‘The ship on fire,’ exclaimed Captain Willis,
when I told him what had occurred, ‘ Heave water
down the hold. Do all you can to save our rich
freight, that must not be lost on any account,’

T told him that we had done what we could,
and that the rest of the crew had already deserted
the vessel.

The captain sank back on his pillow, ‘I have no
strength to move,’ he murmured, ‘and you and
Paul cannot lift me.’

‘We will try Massa Captain,’ said Paul.

I proposed that we should lift him in his cot

through the skylight. The captainatlength agreed. *
to this. I sprang on deck, intending to secure a ‘."

tackle to the main boom, by which we might carry
out my proposal with greater ease. What was my
horror on reaching the deck, to find that the blacks,
on quitting the falls, had neglected to secure them,
and that the boat having fallen into the water had
been washed away and capsized. The flames, too,
which were now ascending through the main-hatch-
way had caught the other boat, and already her

bows were burned through.
6



82 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

With this appalling intelligence I returned be-
low. Escape seemed impossible. I proposed
building a raft, it was a desperate resource, and
there might not be time even to lash a few spars
together. I could not bear the thought of allow- |
ing the poor captain to perish miserably without
an attempt to save him. He divined my thoughts,
‘Its of no use Harry, I am prepared for death, and ©
resign myself to the arms of that merciful God |
whom I have so lately learned to know,’ he said, —
with perfect calmness.

Paul, while the captain had been speaking,
seized a bright axe which hung against the bulk-
head as an ornament, intending to cut away what-
ever might assist in forming a raft, and had sprang
_on deck with it. He now came down through the
skylight hatch, ‘It is too late,’ he exclaimed, ‘the
flames come aft.’

He spoke too truly. At that instant dense
masses of smoke rushed into the cabin, and the |
flames burst through the after bulk head. I was —
scorched, by the heat and almost suffocated. So
dense was the smoke which filled the captain’s berth,
that I could no longer see him.

I felt Paul grasping my hand, ‘Come Harry,



HARRY AND PAUL LEAVE THE SHIP, 83

come, too late to save poor captain,’ he said, drag-
ging meafter him. I was almost stifled, and gasped
for breath. In another moment I should have
fallen, indeed I was so overcome with the smoke
that I did not know what was happening.

Happily however I kept firm hold of Paul,
and suddenly I found myself plunged headlong into
the water. He had hauled me through the cabin
window.

‘Now strike out Massa Harry, I see boat not
far off, we get to her,’ he exclaimed. I did as he
directed me, but the thought of the horrid sharks
I had seen swimming about the vessel, almost
paralyzed my senses, and every moment I expected
to find myself seized by the cruel jaws of one of
them. ,

‘Qheer up Harry, cheer up,’ shouted Paul;
‘there is the boat, we got Friend in heaven who
look after us; never fear, we reach her soon, cheer ©

?

- up.

With such like cries he continued to animate
me. He shouted thus not only for that object,
but to keep any sharks which might be inclined
to seize us at a distance. The boat, as we got
near her, was, I saw, keel upwards.



84 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

‘Never fear Massa Harry,’ said Paul, ‘ we soon
right her.’

We at length reached the boat, and Paul show-
ing me the way, after some exertion, he going ahead
and I keeping astern, we managed to turn her
over. We then shook her from side to side till we
had hove out a considerable amount of water in her.
He told me to get in over the stern, and to begin
bailing with my hat. I didas he advised, thankful
to find myself out of the grasp of the sharks. He
kept splashing about with his heels, and con-
stantly turning round to see that none of the
monsters were near. Looking up I caught sight
of the long boat standing away from us under sail
towards the shore. She had already got too far off

‘to allow of our cries reaching her, or even indeed
for those on board to see us. We were thus cruelly
deserted by our shipmates. We could only hope for
their credit that they supposed we had already lost
our lives, and that there would be no use looking
for us.

At length I having partially cleared the boat,
Paul also got in, and we both began bailing away
as hard as we could with our hats. While thus
employed I saw a huge shark approaching, and I



A SAIL IN SIGHT. 85

fancied looking disappointed at our having escaped
his hungry maw. Happily the sea by this time had
gone considerably down, or our task would have
been rendered hopeless. As it was it took us a
considerable time to lessen the water in the boat,
for deep as she was, the water which leaped in often
again nearly refilled her. Still we persevered, for
we were, we knew, labouring for our lives. Mean-
time the shark, as if longing to make us its prey,
kept swimming round and round the boat. At a
short distance the brigantine was burning furiously,
and already the flames, ascending the masts, had
caught the rigging and sails.

While as I could not help doing, I turned my
gaze at her I saw far away in the horizon the white
sail of a vessel. ‘A gail! a sail!’ I shouted; ‘we
are saved Paul, we are saved.’

Paul looked up for a minute. ‘Yes,’ he said,
‘she standing this way. The burning ship bring
her down to us. She bigschooner. May be good,
may be bad! though.’





CHAPTER VI.

A calm comes on, and we remain during tho night suffering
from hunger and thirst.—Paul tells me his history, and I
find that he is Cheebo, of whom IJ am in search.—His joy at
hearing of his mother makes him regardless of the suffer-
ing we are enduring.—The schooner picks us up.—Paul
suspects her character.—Before long we discover that she
is a slaver, and she runs up a river to receive her cargo on
board.

CARCELY had we caught sight of the
stranger than the wind entirely fell and




she lay totally becalmed. The smooth
sea enabled us to free the boat completely, and
now we had nothing to do but to sit down and
watch the burning brigantine.

First one of the tall masts, completely encircled
by the flames, fell hissing into the water. The
other, after standing awhile in solitary grandeur,
formed a fiery pinnacle to the flaming hull below.

At length it followed its companion, and then the
86



HARRY AND PAUL IN A BOAT. 87

fire ran riot fore and aft. Sometimes wearied by
the sight, I put my hands before my eyes to shut
it out, but then I could not help thinking of the sad
fate of the poor captain, whose body lay on its
funeral pile on board.

‘Ah, he happy now,’ whispered Paul. He had
also been thinking of him. ‘ He say he love Jesus;
he trust to Jesus, no fear for him.’

Paul’s words brought consolation to my heart.
Our own condition might well have made me de-
pressed, yet I felt supported by the strong faith of
my companion in a way I formerly should not have
thought possible.

We had no food, and not a drop of fresh water
to quench our burning thirst.

Some way off we could see pieces of burnt
spars floating about. I thought of trying to paddle
the boat up to them with our hands, hoping to find
some which might serve as oars, and enable us to
reach the schooner in the distance. I quickly,
however, gave up the attempt, for scarcely had I
put my hand into the water than I saw a huge
pair of jaws darting towards it, and I had just
time to pull it out before they made a snap close
to me, which would, in a moment, have bitten it off.



88 THE AFRICAN TRADER,

Night soon came down upon us as we thus sat
utterly helpless in our boat, while the sea around
was lighted up with the flames of the burning
vessel. Loaded as she was almost entirely with
combustible materials, they burned with unusual
fierceness. Her whole interior, as the sides were
burned away, appeared one glowing mass, sur-
rounded by a rim of flames which fed upon her
stout timbers and planking. Suddenly there came
a loud hissing noise across the water, then a dense
vapour ascended from her midst, and in an instant
after all was darkness. The remains of the ‘ Chief-
tain’ had sunk into, the depths of ocean.

‘T am afraid our chance of being picked up by
the schooner is gone,’ I observed to Paul. ‘ She
very probably, when the breeze comes, will stand
away from us.’

‘There is no such thing as chance, Massa
Harry,’ he answered. ‘If it is God’s will she come,
if not, He find some other way to save us. Let
us pray that He do what He judge best.’

Thereon Paul, without waiting for my reply,
knelt down in the bottom of the boat and lifted up
his voice in prayer to our merciful Father in heaven, _
for that protection which we more than ever felt we —



PAUL RELATES HIS HISTORY TO HARRY. 89

so much needed. I imitating his example, heartily
joined him.

As we sat in the boat side by side talking . .

together, for neither of us were inclined to sleep, I~
asked him how it was that he, a common sailor,
had become so well instructed a Christian ?

‘Ah, Massa Harry, I knew about Jesus when
I quite a little boy; but only a few years ago I
learned to love Him and trust to Him as I now
do, he answered. ‘Tl tell you how dis was.
When I piccaniny I hab kind fader and moder, and
we live in Yourba country, in our own village, far
away. One night the enemy come and attack the
village, and carry off many men and women and
children. My fader take me up and run away into
de wood, my moder follow, but she fall, and the
slaver people catch her and take her with the rest.
My poor fader, like to break him heart, but for my
sake he live and hide away till the slaver people
gone. He tried to find my moder, but from dat
day to dis he neber hear of her more. After some
time it was told him dat a great many people go
to a place called Abeokuta, and dat dere day built
town, and let no slave-takers come near them, so
my fader go there, and we live there, and work



90 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

and grow rich, and many more people come, and
we not fear any of our enemies. All the people
were heathens, and prayed to the fetish.

After some time many people come from Sierra
Leone, who had been carried off in slavers, and
taken by the English cruisers, and landed there.
They find relations and friends in Abeokuta, and
so they stop to live with us. Some of them had
learned in Sierra Leone about God and His Son
Jesus Christ, and they tell us, and many of the
people of Abeokuta say they will no longer pray to
the fetish, but will only pray to God, and love Him
and serve Him. My fader was among these, and
now the only thing he cared for in life was to listen
to the missionaries and hear about Jesus Christ.
Only one thing: made him unhappy, that was that
my poor moder should not learn the truth of the
gospel. He knew that she was carried away by
bad people, and he afraid that she become bad like
them; but he pray day and night that God in His
mercy would make known to her His great love,
as He had made it known to him.

‘Oh, if I could but hear that she had become a
Christian how happy I should be!’ he used to say
to me over and over again. ‘ Paul,’ that was the



PAUL'S HISTORY. 91

name J had got when I was christened, ‘ you must
pray for your moder wid me, and I am sure that
God will hear our prayers.’

At last my fader grew sick, and he made me
promise, if he died, that I would go to Sierra Leone
and try to find if my moder was dere. My fader
grew worse and worse, but still him very happy,
and taking my hand, he say, ‘ Paul, you must meet
me in heaven, and you must bring your moder
there, and then we all live together for ever and
ever, where there are no more slave-dealers, and no
more war, and no more cruelty,’ and den him die.

After dat I set off to go to Sierra Leone, but
slave-dealer catch me on the way and take me on

‘board slaver, with nearly four hundred other black
fellows, and we were all put down in ship’s hold,
and carried away to the coast of Brazil. But Eng-
lish man-of-war catch the slaver. The English
captain find out that I was a Christian, and so he
ask me if I like to serve on board de man-of-war,
and I say yes. The captain, good Christian man
himself, so I learn to speak English, and he taught
me to read Bible, and I learn still more about Jesus
than I did in Abeokuta. At last we got back to
Sierra Leone, and then I remember my promise to



92 THE AFRICAN TRADER,

my father, and while I on shore trying to learn
about my moder, the ship sail away, and no more
come back. Jno hear about my moder, and have
no money, so I ship on board merchant vessel, and
after sailing in her along the coast for some time I
go on board another, and then I again go on board
man-of-war. At last I get back to Sierra Leone,
and fall very sick, and sent to hospital, then a good
missionary come to me and I tell him what my
fader had said, and he ask me if I think I going to
heaven, and then he tell me more about the right
way, and pray with me. And now I find Jesus as
my own Saviour and Friend, and love Him, and
wish to serve Him, and obey Him. Then the wish
came into my heart to preach the gospel to my
countrymen, but I, still poor and very ignorant,
and I thought if I could make two or three voyages
and save money, I would go to England and study
there, and be better able to declare the glad tidings
of salvation, and that the people would more wil-
lingly listen to me.

It was on the second trip I made that the vessel
T was in was wrecked not far from the mouth of
the Bonny, and I was making my way with some
of those who had escaped with me to Sierra Leone



HARRY TELLS PAUL ABOUT HIS MOTHER. 93

when Captain Willis engaged us to serve on board
the ‘ Chieftain.’

While Paul was giving me this sketch of his
history an idea had forcibly taken possession of my
mind. ‘Tell me,’ I exclaimed suddenly, ‘ what
was your name before you were christened?’

‘ Cheebo,’ he answered.

‘And your father’s name,’ I inquired eagerly.

‘My father, him called Quamino,’ he said, in a
surprised tone.

‘Oh Paul!’ I cried out, seizing his hand, ‘I
have indeed then good news for you. Your father’s
and your prayers have been answered, for I can
assure you that your mother is a true and faithful
Christian. I have known her all my life, her name
she has told me was Ambah, and that she was torn
away from her husband and child as your mother
was from you.’

‘Yes, yes, Ambah was my mother’s name,
and did she tell you that her husband’s name was
Quamino, and their piccaniny was called Chebo?’
he asked, almost gasping for breath.

‘Those were the very names she gave me, and
I wrote them in my pocket book so that I might
not forget them,’ I answered.



94 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

‘Oh, Massa Harry, that is indeed joyful news,’
he cried out. ‘Then IJ and my mother and father
will all meet in heaven, Praise God! I now not
fear what man can do unto me.’

It would be difficult to do justice to the feeling
displayed by Paul, even were I to repeat all he
said, his piety, his gratitude, and his joy. He
could talk of nothing else during the night. He
seemed to be insensible to hunger and thirst, and
to forget altogether the dangerous position in which
we were placed. Now he kneeled down in prayer,
now he gave vent to his feelings in a hymn of -
praise. I could not help sympathising with him,
and rejoicing that I had been the means of giving
him the information which made him so happy.
Still I must confess that I myself suffered not a
little from the pangs of hunger, and would have
given much for a glass of cold water.

When morning dawned the schooner was still
in sight. I looked anxiously round for the sign of
a breeze, hoping that if it did come the stranger
would stand towards us. At all events it seemed
probable that having seen the burning vessel those
on board, in common humanity, would sail over the
spot where she had been, on the chance of picking



PICKED UP. 95

up any of her crew who might have escaped.
Paul, however, did not seem to wish this as much
as I did. I saw him narrowly watching the vessel,
then he shook his head as if he did not like her
looks.

The sun rose high in the sky, and beat down on
our heads. My thirst became intolerable, and
whatever might be the character of the stranger, I
could not help longing that she would pick us up.
The breeze came at last, her sails filled. How
eagerly I watched her.

‘She is standing towards us,’ I cried out, ‘ we
must soon be seen.’ I stood up on a thwart and
waved a handkerchief.

‘ Better not Massa Harry,’ said Paul, but I did
not heed him.

The schooner came on rapidly. . Again I waved
my handkerchief, and held it between my two
hands, so that it might flutter in the breeze. The
stranger approached. She was a fine large square
topsail schooner, with a black hull and taunt raking
masts. She rounded to close to us, so that she
could drop down to where our boat lay.

A rope was hove to us, and I clambered up her
side, Paul following me. We were both so weak



96 THE AFRICAN TRADER,

when we reached her deck that we could scarcely
stand. I pointed to my mouth, just able to mur-
mur, ‘water! water!’

‘Si, si, aqua aqua,’ said aman, who appeared to
be an officer; when one of the men dipped a mug
into a cask on deck, and brought it to us. I took
part of the contents then handed it to Paul; but the
seaman signed to me to drain it myself, casting, I
thought, a contemptuous glance at my negro com-
panion. However, he brought another cup full,
and even though I emptied it to the bottom, still
my thirst was scarcely quenched.









Au officer now appeared from below, and ad-
dressing me in English, asked me how I came to be
in the boat. I told him exactly what had oc-
curred.

‘It is fortunate for you that we picked you up,
for another vessel might not pass this way for days
to come,’ he observed. ‘ But what a pity so rich a
cargo should have been lost.’

The unhappy fate of the poor captain did not
seera to concern him much.

I could not make out the character of the
vessel.

She was Spanish, I guessed, and her officers



Full Text




Bin, OO
fot PIS
PAGEL

4 Ae
4}
AC Cette


Meantime the shark, as if still eager to make us its prey, was
swimming round and round the boat.






THE AFRICAN TRADER:

OR, THE

Arhentures of Barry Lanford,

BY

WILLIAM H. G. KINGSTON.

GALL & INGLIS.
London: Lvinburgy :

: 30 PATERNOSTER ROW. 6 GEORGE STREET.
[The right of Translation is reserved ]
CONTENTS,

CHAPTER I.

PAGE
My father, after meeting with a severe reverse of fortune,
dies, and my sisters and I are left destitute.—Our faith-
ful old black nurse, Mammy, takes care of my sisters,
while I, invited by a former acquaintance, Captain Willis
of the ‘Chieftain, sail with him on a trading voyage to
the coast of Africa, . 7 . . . » 9

CHAPTER Ii.

The ‘Chieftain’ arrives off the coast of Africa, and we
carry on a brisk trade with the natives, who come off to
us through the surf.—At length Captain Willis proposes
to run up the river Bonny to complete our cargo.—Not
forgetful of my promise to Mammy, I make inquiries for
her sonCheebo, . : : 7 : - 22
4 CONTENTS.

CHAPTER III.
PAGE
We enter a river.—Its scenery described —Receive a visit

from the King, and trade with the Natives.—The pro-
ducts of Africa, for which we trade, mentioned, and the
curious modein which trade is conducted —Fever breaks
out on board, and several of the crew die.—Sad end of
poor Bob.—The Boatswain and Mates attacked with
fever.—More deaths.—The Captain’s unwillingness, not-
withstanding this, to leave the river till his cargo is
completed, . a : : . : - 388

CHAPTER IV.

More victims to the fever.—The Captain himself attacked.
—We ship some Krumen and other blacks, among whom
isa Christian, Paul Balingo.—Paul instructs the Captain
and me in the truth.—Captain Willis gets somewhat
better, and we prepare for sea, ¢ : . 51

CHAPTER V.

We at length get out of the river into the open sea, but a
calm comes on, and the Captain again becomes very ill.—
No one on board understanding navigation, I. doubt
whether I shall find my way to Sierra Leone.—The Cap-
tain does not believe that he isin danger —Paul pleads
with him about the safety of his soul.—A. fire breaks out
in the. hold.—We in vain endeavour to extinguish it.—
The rest of the crew desert us.—Paul and I endeavour to
save the Captain, but driven from the cabin by the
flames, leap overboard, and reach a small boat, which we

right and get into.—See a schooner approaching us, . 68
CONTENTS.

CHAPTER VI.

PAGE

A calm comes on, and we remain during the night suffering

aa

from hunger and thirst.—Paul tells me his history, and I
find that he is Cheebo, of whom I am in search.—His
joy at hearing of his mother makes him regardless of the
sufferings we are enduring.—The schooner picks us up.
—Paul suspects her character.—Before long we discover
that she is a slaver, and she runs up a river to receive

her cargo on board, « : .

CHAPTER VII.

witness the embarkation of slaves collected at the barra-
coons, and the cruel way in which they are treated and
packed in the hold of the slaver.—Unwilling to desert
Paul, I remain on board, and the slaver puts to sea.—
Paul is threatened for attempting to comfort the slaves
with the Gospel nows.—The schooner receives more
slaves on board along the coast—Some are drowned
coming off —The slaver gets on shore just as a man-of-
war is seen in the offing —A fog comes on, and the
schooner’s crew make desperate efforts to get her off.—
She escapes, to my bitter disappointment, from the man-

of-war’s boats, along the coast, « ; .

86

100
6 CONTENTS,

CHAPTER VIII

PAGE
The Spaniards believing the man-of-war to bo far away,
steer to the westward.—We sight hor, and she chases
us.—Cruel device of the slavor’s crew to assist their
eseape.—Paul, among others, being thrown overboard that
the man-of-war might heave-to to pick them up.—I fear

that he has been lost.—My life preserved by one of the



officers, when threatened by the slaver’s crow.—'lhe







schooner escapes, but is dismasted in a gale, and again
overtaken.—Paul and my cousin Jack come on board, and
I join the corvette as a midshipman.—Returning to Eng-
land I restore Cheebo to his mother.—My adventures
show that ‘all works together for good to them who love
God.—Jack becomes a Commander, marries my sister
Mary, and I find ample means for supporting the rest of
my dear sisters, 7 : . 7 ° » ii


THE AFRICAN TRADER;

oR,

The Anbentures of Harry Bavtord,
Y
THE AFRICAN TRADER,



CHAPTER I.

My father, after meeting with a severe reverse of fortune, dies,
and my sisters and I are lefé destitute.—Our faithful old
black nurse Mammy, takes care of my sisters, while I,
invited by a former acquaintance, Captain Willis of the
‘Chieftain, sail with him on a tr ie voyage to the coast
of Africa.

UR school was breaking up for the mid-
summer holidays—north, south, east,
and west we sped to our different desti-
nations, thinking with glee of the pleasures we
believed to be in store for us.



I was bound for Liverpool, where my father, a

West India merchant, now resided. He had for
9
10 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

most of his life lived in Jamaica, where I was
born, and from whence I had a few years before
accompanied him to England to go to school.

‘I am sorry we shall not see you back Bay-
ford,’ said the good doctor, as he shook me warmly
by the hand. ‘May our heavenly Father protect
you, my boy, wherever you go.’

‘I hope to go as a midshipman on board a
man-of-war, sir, I answered. ‘My father expects
to get me appointed to a ship this summer, and I
suppose that is the reason I am leaving.’

The doctor looked kindly and somewhat sadly
at me. ‘You must not, Harry, raise your hopes
on that point too high,’ he answered, in a grave
tone. ‘When I last heard from your father, saying
he desired to remove you, he was very unwell, 1
grieve to have to say this, but it is better that you
should be prepared for evil tidings. God bless you
Harry Bayford. The coach will soon be up; I
must not detain you longer.’

The doctor again warmly wrung my hand.

I hastened after Peter the porter, who was
wheeling my trunk down to the village inn where
the coach stopped, and I had just time to mount on
the top when the guard cried out, ‘ All right;’ the
HIARRY’S RETURN FROM SCHOOL. 11

coachman laid his whip gently over the backs of
the horses, which trotted gaily forward along the
dusty road.

My spirits would naturally have risen at finding
myself whirled along at the rate of ten miles an
hour on my way homeward, but the last words
spoken by the doctor continually recurred to me,
and contributed greatly todampthem. J managed,
however, at length, to persuade myself that my
anticipations of eyil were mere fancies. On reach-
ing Liverpool, having called a porter to carry my
things, I hurried homewards, expecting to receive
the usual happy greetings from my father and
sisters. My spirits sank when looking up at the
windows, I saw that all the blinds were drawn
down. I knocked at the door with trembling hand.
A strange and rough-looking man opened it. ‘Is
my father at home?’ I asked, in alow voice. The
man hesitated, looking hard at me, and then said,
‘Yes; but you can’t see him. There are some
ladies upstairs—your sisters, I ee had
better go to them.’

There was an ominous silence in the house; no
one was moving about. What had become of all
the servants? I stole gently up to Jane and
12 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

Mary’s boudoir. They, and little Emily our
younger sister, were seated together, all dressed
in black. Sobs burst from them, as they threw
their arms round my neck, without uttering a word.
I then knew to a certainty what had happened—
our kind father was dead; but I little conceived the
sad misfortunes which had previously overtaken
him and broken his heart, leaving his children
utterly destitute.

Jane, on recovering herself, in a gentle sad
voice told me all about it. ‘Mary and I intend
going out as governesses, but we scarcely know
what to do for dear Emily and you Harry, though
we will devote our salaries to keep you and her at
school.’

‘Oh, I'surely can get a place as a nursemaid,’
said Emily, a fair delicate girl, looking but ill-
adapted for the situation she proposed for her-
self. ‘And I, Jane, will certainly not deprive
you and Mary of your hard-earned salaries, even
were you to obtain what would be required,’ I
answered, firmly. ‘I ought rather to support you,
and I hope to be able to do so by some means or
other,’

My sisters even then were not aware of the sad
MAMMY’S STORY. 13

position in which we were placed. Our father had
been a man of peculiarly reserved and retiring
manners ; he had formed no friendships in England,
and the few people he knew were simply business
acquaintances. An execution had been put into the
house even before his death, so that we had no
power over a single article it contained.

The servants, with the exception of my sisters’
black nurse, had gone away, and we had not a
friend whose hospitality we could claim. She, good
creature (Mammy, as we called her), finding out, on
seeing my trunk in the hall, that I had arrived,
came breathless, from hurrymg up stairs, into the
room, and embracing me, kissed my forehead and
cheeks as if I had still been a little child; and I
felt the big drops fall from her eyes as she held me
in her shrivelled arms. ‘Sad all this, Massa Harry,
but we got good Fader up dere, and He take care
of us though He call massa away,’ and she cast ber
eyes to heaven, trusting with a simple firm faith to
receive from thence that protection she might have
justly feared she was not likely to obtain on earth.
‘We all have our sorrows, dear children,’ she con-
tinued, ‘massa had many sorrows when he lose
your mother and his fortune, and I have my sor-
14 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

rows when I was carried away by slaver people,
and leave my husband and piccaniny in Africa, and
now your sorrows come. But we can pray to the
good God, and he lift us out of dem all.’

Mammy had often told us of the cruel way in
which she had been kidnapped, and how her hus-
band had escaped with her little boy; and after she
became a Christian (and a very sincere one she
was) her great grief arose from supposing that her
child would be brought up as a savage heathen in
ignorance of the blessed truths of the gospel. My
sisters and I, as children, had often wept while she
recounted her sad history, but at the time I speak
of, I myself was little able to appreciate the deeper
cause of her sorrow. I thought, of course, that
it was very natural she should grieve for the loss
of her son, but I did not understand that it arose
on account of her anxiety for his soul’s salva-
tion.

‘I pray day and night,’ I heard her once tell
Jane, ‘dat my piccaniny learn to know Christ, and
I sure God hear my prayers. How He bring it
about I cannot tell.’

We and Mammy followed our father to the
grave, and were then compelled to quit the house,
MY SISTERS. 15

leaving everything behind us, with the exception
of my sisters’ wardrobes and a few ornaments,
which they claimed as their property. Mammy did
her best to cheer us. She had taken, unknown to
my sisters, some humble, though clean, lodgings in
the outskirts of the town, and to these she had
carried whatever we were allowed to remove.

‘See, Massa Harry,’ she said, showing me an
old leathern purse full of gold. ‘We no want food
for long time to come, and before then God find us
friends and show us what to do,’

My sisters possessed various talents, and they
at once determined to employ them to the best ad-
vantage. Jane and Mary drew beautifully, and
were adepts in all sorts of fancy needle-work.
Emily, though young, had written one or two
pretty tales, and we were sure that she was
destined to be an authoress. Mammy, therefore,
entreated them not to separate, assuring them that
her only pleasure on earth would be to labour and
assist in protecting them. Had they had:no other
motive, for her sake alone, they would have been
anxious to follow her advice.

I was the only one of the family who felt un-
able to do anything for myself. I wrote too bad a
16 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

hand to allow me any hopes of obtaining a situa-
tion in a counting-house ; and though I would have
gone out as an errand boy or page rather than be
a burden to my sisters, I was sure they would not
permit this, and, besides, I felt that by my taking
an inferior position they would be lowered in the
cold eyes of the world. I had ardently wished to
go to sea, and I thought that the captain who had
promised to take me as a midshipman would still
receive me could I reach Portsmouth. I did not
calculate the expense of an outfit, nor did I think
of the allowance young gentlemen are expected to
receive on board a man-of-war.

I had wandered one day down to the docks to
indulge myself in the sight of the shipping, con-
templating the possibility of obtaining a berth on
board one of the fine vessels I saw fitting’ out, and
had been standing for some time on the quay, when
I observed a tall good-looking man, in the dress of
a merchantman’s captain, step out of a boat which
had apparently come from a black rakish looking
brigantine lying a short distance out in the stream.
T looked at him hard, for suddenly it occurred to
me that I remembered his features. Yes, I was
certain. He had been junior mate of the <¢ Fair
CAPTAIN WILLIS. 17

Rosomond,’ in which vessel we had come home
from Jamaica, and a great chum of mine. ‘Mr
Willis,’ I said, ‘do you remember me? I am
Harry Bayford.’

‘Not by looks, but by your voice and eyes I do,
my boy,’ he answered, grasping my hand and
shaking it heartily. ‘But what has happened? I
see you are in mourning.’ ~

I told him of my father’s misfortunes and death;
and as we walked along frankly opened out on my
views and plans. ‘ You will have no chance in the
navy without means or friends, Harry,’ he answered.
‘There’s no use thinking about the matter; but if
your mind is set on going to sea I'll take you, and
do my best to make a sailor of you. I have com-
mand of the “ Chieftain,” an African trader, the
brigantine you see off in the stream there. Though
we do not profess to take midshipmen, I'll give you
a berth in my cabin, and I don’t see that in the
long run you will run more risk than you would
have to go through on board vessels trading to
other parts of the world.’

‘Thank you, Captain Willis, very much,’ I
exclaimed, ‘I little expected so soon to go to

>

sea,
2
18 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

‘Don’t talk of thanks, Harry,’ he answered,
‘your poor father was very kind to me, and I am
glad to serve you. I had intended calling on him
before sailing; and if your sisters will allow me, ll
pay them a visit, and answer any objections they
may make to your going.’

After dining with the captain at an inn, I
hurried home with, what I considered, this good
news. My sisters, however, were very unwilling
to sanction my going, They had heard so much of
the deadly climate of the African coast, and of
dangers from slavers and pirates, that they dreaded
the risk I shouldrun, Captain Willis, according to
his promise, called the next day, and not without





difficulty quieted their apprehensions.





Mammy, though unwilling to part with me,
still could not help feeling a deep interest in my
undertaking, as she thought that I was going ‘to
visit her own still-loved country ; and while assist-
ing my sisters to prepare my outfit she entertained
me with an account of its beauties and wonders,
while I promised to bring her back from it all sorts
of things which I expected to collect. ‘And sup-
pose, Mammy, I was to fall in with your little ©
piccaniny, shall I bring him back to you?’ I asked, ~
JANE’S ADVICE TO HARRY. 19

with the thoughtlessness of a boy—certainly not
intending to hurt her feelings. She dropped her
work, gazing at me with a tearful eye.

‘He fine little black boy, big as you when four
year old,’ she said, and stopped as if in thought,
and then added, ‘ Ah, Massa Harry, he no little boy
now though, him great big man like him fader, you
no know him, I no know him.’

‘ But what is his name, Mammy? That would
be of use,’ I said.

_ ¢Him called Cheebo,’ she answered, heaving a
deep sigh. ‘But Africa great big country—
_ tousands and tousands of people; you no find
Cheebo among dem; God only find him, His eye
everywhere. He hears Mammy’s prayers, dat
» great comfort.’

‘That it is, indeed,’ said Jane, fearing that my
_ careless remarks had needlessly grieved poor Mam-
my, by raising long dormant feelings in her heart.
‘And oh, my dear Harry, if you are brought into
danger, and inclined to despair—and I fear you
will have many dangers to go through—recollect
that those who love you at home are earnestly
praying for you; and at the same time never for-
get to pray for yourself, and to feel assured that
20 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

God will hear our united prayers, and preserve you
in the way He thinks best.’

‘I will try to remember,’ I said, ‘but do not
fancy, Jane, that I am going to run my head into
all sorts of dangers. I daresay we shall have a
very pleasant voyage out, and be back again in a
few months with a full cargo of palm oil, ivory,
gold dust, and all sorts of precious things, such
as I understand Captain Willis is going to trade
for? ©
‘You will not forget Cheebo though, Massa
Harry,’ said Mammy, in a low voice. The idea
that I might meet her son was evidently taking
strong possession of ber mind.

‘That I will not,’ I answered. ‘Tl ask his
name of every black fellow I meet, and if I find
him Y'll tell him that I know his mother Mammy,
and ask him to come with me to see you.’

‘Oh, but he not know dat name,’ exclaimed
Mammy. ‘Me called Ambah in Africa; him fader
called Quamino. You no forget dat.’

‘I hope not; but Tl put them in my pocket-
book,’ I said, writing down the names, though I
confess that I did so without any serious thoughts
about the matter, but merely for the sake of pleas-
HARRY ON BOARD THE ‘CHIEFTAIN,’ 21

ing old Mammy. When I told Captain Willis
afterwards, he was highly amused with the notion,
and said that I might just as well try to find a
needle in a bundle of hay as to look for the old
woman’s son on the coast of Africa.

The day of parting from my poor sisters and
our noble-hearted nurse arrived. I did not expect
to feel it so much as I did, and I could then under-
stand how much grief it caused them,

‘Cheer up, Harry,’ said Captain Willis, as the
‘Chieftain,’ under all sail, was standing down the
Mersey. ‘You must not let thoughts of home
get the better of you. We shall soon be in blue
water, and you must turn to and learn to be a
sailor. By the time you have made another voy-
age or so I expect to have you as one of my
mates, and, perhaps, before you are many years
older, you will become the commander of a fine
craft like this,’

I followed the captain’s advice, and by the
time we had crossed the line I could take my trick
at the helm, and was as active aloft as many of the
elder seamen on board.

SESS
CHAPTER ITI.

The ‘Chieftain’ arrives off the coast of Africa, and we carry





on « brisk trade with the natives, who come off to us
through the surf.—At length Captain Willis proposes to run





up the river Bonny to complete our cargo. Not forgetful

of my promise to Mammy, I make inquiries for her son
Cheebo.

T was my morning watch. I was indulg-




ing in the pleasure particularly enjoyable
after sweltering in the close hot atmo-
sphere .of the cabin, of paddling about with
bare feet on the wet deck, over which I and
some of the men were heaving buckets of water,
while others were lustily ‘using holy-stones and
scrubbing brashes, under the superintendence of
Mr Wesbey, the first mate. The black cook was
lighting his fire in the caboose, from whence a
wreath of smoke ascended almost perpendicularly
in the clear atmosphere. The sea was smooth as

glass, but every now and then a slowly heaving
22
THE COAST OF AFRICA. 23

swell lifted the vessel, and caused her sails, which
hung down against the masts, to give a loud flap,
while here and there the surface was broken by the
fin or snout of some monster of the deep swimming
round us. Our monkey, Quako, who had been
turned out of his usual resting-place, was exhibiting
more than his ordinary agility—springing about the
rigging, and chattering loudly, now making his
way aloft, whence he looked eastwards, and now
returning to the caboose, as if to communicate his
ideas to his sable friend.

‘What makes Quako so frisky this morning?’
I asked of Dick Radford, the boatswain, a sturdy
broad shouldered man of iron frame, who, with
trousers tucked up, and bare arms brawny as those
of Hercules, was standing, bucket in hand, near
me, deluging the deck with water. ,

‘He smells his native land, Harry,’ he answered,
‘and thinks he is going to pay a visit to his kith
and kindred. We shall have to keep him moored
pretty fast, or he will be off into the woods to find
them. I have a notion you will get a sight of it
before long, when the sea breeze sets in and sends
the old barky through the water.’

‘What! the coast of Africa!’ I exclaimed, and
24 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

thoughts of that wonderful region, with its unex-
plored rivers, its gloomy forests, and its black
skinned inhabitants, with their barbarous customs
and superstitious rites, rose in my mind.

‘ Aye, sure and it will be a pleasant day when
we take our departure from the land, and see the
last of it,’ observed Dick. ‘If those niggers would
trade like other people we might make quick work
of it, and be away home again ina few weeks, but
we may thank our stars if we get a full cargo by
this time next year, without leaving some of our
number behind.’

‘What? I should not fancy that any of our fel-
lows were likely to desert,’ I observed.

“No; but they are likely to get pressed by a
chap who won’t let go his gripe of them again,’
auswered Dick.

‘Who is that?’ I asked.

‘ Yellow-fingered Jack we call him sometimes,
the coast fever,’ said Dick. ‘If they would but
take better care of themselves and not drink those
poisonous spirits and sleep on shore at night, they
might keep out of his clutches. I give this as a
hint to you, Harry. I have been there a score of
times, and am pretty well seasoned, but I have felt
THE BOATSWAIN’S ADVICE TO HARRY. 25

his gripe, though I do not fear him now.’ - I thanked
the boatswain for his advice. It was given, I sus-
pected, for others’ benefit as well as mine.

As the bright hot red sun rose in the sky,
casting his beams down on our heads, and making
the pitch bubble up from the seams in the deck—as
it had done not unfrequently during the voyage—a
few cats’ paws were seen playing over the mirror-
like deep. The sails bulged out occasionally, again
to hang down as before; then once more they
swelled out with the gentle breeze, and the brigan-
tine glided through the water, gradually increasing
herspeed. I was eagerly looking out for the coast;
at length it came in sight—its distant outline ren-
dered indistinct by the misty pall which hung over
it. As we drew nearer, its forest covered heights
had a particularly gloomy and sombre appearance,
which made me think of the cruelties I had heard
were practised on those shores, of the barbarous
slave trade, of the fearful idolatries of its dark
skinned children, of its wild beasts, and of its
deadly fevers. There was nothing exhilirating,
nothing to give promise of pleasure or amusement.
As our gallant brigantine glided gaily on, sending
the sparkling foam from her bows through the tiny
26 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

wavelets of the ocean, which glittered in the radi-
ance of a blue and cloudless sky, and her sails
filled with the fresh sea breeze, these feelings
rapidly wore off. Now, on either side, appeared a
fleet of fishing canoes, the wild songs of their naked
crews coming across the water, as with rugged
sails of matting lolling at their ease, they steered
towards the shore. We overtook some of them,
and such a loud jabber as they set up, talking to
each other, or hailing us, I had never heard.

Being near enough to the dangerous coast, we
hove-to, and watched them as they fearlessly made
their way to shore on the summits of a succession
of rollers which burst in fearful breakers on the
beach. With our glasses we could see hundreds



of dingy figures like black ants, hurrying down to
meet them, and to assist in hauling up their canoes.
As I cast my eye along the coast I could see many
a bay and headland bordered with a rim of glittering
white sand, fringed by an unbroken line of spark-
ling surf. Now we could make out the mud walls
and thatched roofs of the native villages, scattered
here and there along the shore, mostly nestling
amid groves of graceful cocoa-nut trees, while
further inland appeared, at distant intervals, that
FIRST VIEW OF AFRICA. 27

giant monarch of the tropical forest, the silk cotton
tree, stretching its mighty limbs upwards towards
the sky, and far and wide around. Such was my
first view of the African coast.

‘Well, what do you think of it?’ asked Captain
Willis. ©

‘It looks better than I expected,’ I said. * But
I don’t see how we are ever to reach it, much less
carry on any trade with the people. How can we
possibly send any goods on shore?’ :

‘You will see presently,’ he answered. ‘ We
have hoisted our trading signal, and before long we
shall have plenty of dealers along side unless some
other vessel has been before us; if so, we may
have to wait some days till the black merchants
can bring more goods down from the interior. The
people about here are imbued with the very spirit
of commerce. They understand too how to make
a sharp bargain. We have to be wide awake, or,
naked savages as they are, they will contrive to
outwit us.’

Our various assortments of cotton and other
goods had been got up from the hold ready for the
expected trade. The captain had also taken ont
from his strong box a supply of sovereigns and
28 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

Spanish dollars, should coin be demanded, though
he relied chiefly on the more advantageous proceed-
ing of barter.

After standing off and on the coast for some
hours, we perceived several large canoes about to be
launched. On either side of each canoe stood a dozen
or fifteen men, holding to the gunwale with one
hand, and carrying a paddle in the other. At asignal
from their head man the canoe was hurried into the
foaming surf ; but, instead of getting in, they swam
by her side, guiding her course, until the first
heavy swell was past, then they threw themselves
simultaneously into her, and began to paddle with
might and main till they got beyond the outer
swell, and on they came, shouting with satisfaction
at the success of their enterprise. Two got off
without accident; but three others, when in the
very midst of the breakers, were swamped, and I
thought that their crews, and, at all events, their
cargoes, would be lost. But no such thing. As I
watched them through the glass I saw that they
were all holding on to the gunwale, shoving her
from side to side, until the water was thrown out,
when in they got again, and began to gather up
numerous articles floating around them. This ac-
TRADING WITH NATIVES. 29



‘complished, off they came as if nothing had hap-
pened. As they got alongside I discovered the
reason why their effects did not sink—some were
casks of palm oil, which naturally floated, while
the elephants’ tusks and other pieces of ivory, were
fastened to large floats of cork-wood, and several
of the men had small light wooden boxes, which
contained gold dust, secured to their waists. Though
these were of a weight sufficient greatly to incum-
ber, if not to sink, an ordinary swimmer, so expert
were they in the water that they appeared in no
way to be inconvenienced. . Several of them re-
cognized Captain Willis, who had frequently before
been off the coast, and having been fairly dealt
with by him, and aware that he knew the price
they would be ready to take, gave him very little
trouble. Some, however, tried to outwit him, but
he was very firm with them, and let them under-
stand that he was indifferent to trading except on
equitable terms. Altogether he was well satisfied
with the result of his first day’s business.

We stood off the coast before the sea breeze
died away, and returned again on the following
morning. This sort of work we continued for
several days. It was, however, a very tedious
30 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

mode of proceeding, At length we found that the’
amount of produce, brought off from day to day,
rapidly diminishing, while the natives began to
demand higher prices than at first. We accord-
ingly stood down the coast towards another native
town, with the inhabitants of which we began to
trade in the same way as before.

From the time we first came into these latitudes
we kept a bright look out night and day. I asked
old Radford what was the use of doing this when
we were engaged in a lawful commerce, which
must of necessity prove an advantage to the
negroes, ‘ Why, you see, Harry, there are other
gentry visit this coast with a very different object
in view,’ he answered. ‘For the Spaniards and
Portugese, especially, come here to carry off the
unfortunate inhabitants as slaves, and sometimes
the villainous crews of their craft, if in want of
provisions and water, will help themselves, without
ceremony, from any merchantman they may fall
in with. And should she have a rich cargo on
board, they have been known, I have heard say, to
make her people walk the plank, and sink or burn
her, so that no one may know anything about the
‘matter.- Now our skipper has no fancy to be
AFRICAN TRADING. 31

caught in that fashion, and if we were to sight a
suspicious looking sail, as the “ Chieftain” has got
a fast pair of heels of her own, we should do our
best to keep out of her way. You see when once
fellows take to slaving they go from bad to worse.
I have known something of the trade in my time,
and it made my heart turn sick to see the way in
which they crowd hundreds of their fellow-crea-
tures down on the slave decks of their vessels,
packed as close together as herrings in a cask, for
their run across the Atlantic to the Brazils or Cuba.
It may be, before we leave this coast, you will
have the opportunity of seeing for yourself, so I
need not tell you more about it now.’

After this I was as vigilant as anyone on board
in looking out for suspicious craft,—for I had no
fancy to be caught by a piratical slaver, and be
made to walk the plank, and have our gallant little
‘Chieftain’ sent to the bottom.

We continued cruising along the’ coast for
some weeks, slowly exchanging our cargo for
African products.

At length Captain Willis got tired of this style
of doing business. ‘I am going to run up the
river Bonny, Harry, where we are certain in time
32 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

to get a full cargo of palm oil, though I would
rather have filled up without going into harbour at
all, for the climate, I own, is not the healthiest
possible, and we may chance to have a touch of
sickness on board.’

He spoke, however, in so unconcerned a way
that. I had no serious apprehensions on that
score.

I had not forgotten my promise to Mammy,
and had asked all the blacks I could manage to
speak to if they could tell me anything of Cheebo.
I need scarcely say that my question was received
with a broad grin by most of them. ‘ Plenty
Cheebos,’ was the general reply. ‘Dat black fel-
low Cheebo ; and dat, and dat, and dat Quamino,’
was added, when I said that such was the name of
the father of the Cheebo of whom I was in search,
but none of them answered the description of poor
Mammy’s son. Atlength I felt very much inclined
to give up my inquiries as hopeless.


CHAPTER IIL

We enter a river.—Its scenery described.—Receive a visit from
the King, and trade with the natives—The products of
Africa, for which we trade, mentioned, and the curious
mode in which trade is conducted.—Fever breaks out on
board, and several of the crew die.—Sad end of poor Bob.—
The boatswain and mates attacked with fever.—More
deaths.—The Captain’s unwillingness, notwithstanding
this, to leave the river till his cargo is completed.

STANDING in towards the coast with the
sea breeze we saw before us an opening



between two low mangrove covered
points, which formed the mouth of the river
we were about to ascend. The scarcely ever
ceasing rollers, coming across the wide Atlantic,
broke on the bar which ran across its entrance with
somewhat less violence than on the coast itself.
Still there was an ugly looking line of white foam
which had to be crossed before we could gain the

smooth water within. We hove-to, making the
33 3
84 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

~. signal for a pilot. A canoe in a short time came off,

~ having on board a burly negro, dressed in a broad
brimmed hat, nankeen trousers, and white jacket,
with a sash round his waist. He produced several
documents to show that he was capable of taking
a vessel over the bar.

‘Wait bit captain,’ he said, ‘high water soon,
and den ship go in smooth—-batten down hatches
though, case sea break aboard.

Captain Willis followed this advice ; it was well
that he did so. ‘* Up helm now captain—bar berry
good—plenty breeze.’ We stood on with all canvas
set; the hands at their stations ready to shorten
sail when necessary. Soon we found ourselves
mounting to the top of a high roller, then on we
glided, till in another instant down we came amid
the hissing roaring breakers, their foam-topped
summits dancing up on either side, and deluging
our decks. I saw our black pilot holding on pretty
tightly by the main shrouds—I followed his ex-
ample, for I expected every moment to feel the
vessel’s keel touching the bar, when I knew that if
she were to hang there even for the shortest pos-
sible time, the following sea might break over her
stern, and make a clean sweep of her deck. On
CROSSING THE BAR. 35

she sped though, lifted by another huge roller;
downwards we then glided amid the eddying
creamy waters on to the calm surface of the
river, up which the next minute we were gliding
rapidly.

The appearance of the banks on either side was
not attractive. As far as the eye could reach was
one dense jungle of mangrove bushes, and though
we ran on for several miles it in no way improved.
The wind died away as we advanced, and the at-
mosphere became hot and oppressive. I had ex-
pected to see pleasant openings, with neat cottages,
plantations of maize, rice, and other grain, pepper,
palms and palmetos; but instead, a uniform line of
the sombre tinted mangrove alone presented itself,
the trees just too high to prevent our having a
view over them of any more attractive scenery
which might have existed beyond,

I asked our black pilot when we should come
to the town. ‘By by den you see,’ he answered
with a look which denoted that we should in time
witness something worth beholding.

The water was as smooth as glass. Here and
there coveys of birds might be seen skimming
along the surface, while overhead a flight of scarlet
36 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

winged flamingos swept in wide circles, their plum-
age flashing in the sun as they prepared to descend
on one of the many sandbanks in the stream, to
carry on their fishing operations, As we advanced,
now and then a canoe would shoot out from among
the jungle; the black skinned paddlers coming
quickly alongside, to ascertain our character and
the objects for which we wished to trade. Some-
times too we could see troops of monkeys making
their way among the branches, their small grinning
faces peering out at us as we glided by through
some channel near the shore. Hour after hour
thus passed by, but at length, towards evening,
the belt of mangrove bushes diminished in thick-
ness, and other trees of more attractive appearance
began to take their place, and openings appeared
with a few huts scattered about on the slopes of
gently rising ground.

As evening was closing in we caught sight, in
the far distance, of a congregation of huts, and the
pilot gave the captain the welcome information,
that he might shorten sail, and prepare to come to
an anchor. By the time we had made everything
snug darkness closed down upon us. We could
just see a few lights twinkling ahead, while on
BONNY RIVER. 37

either side, across the stream, appeared the dark
outline of the tall trees which clothed the river’s
banks, Silence reigned around us, with the excep-
tion of the ripple of the water against the vessel’s
bows; but from afar off came a confused mixture
of sounds, which appeared like the croaking of
frogs, the chirruping of crickets, and other creeping
and flying things, the screeching and chattering of
monkeys, mingled with the voices of human beings
making merry round their huts. The air was
damp and heavy and hot; at the same time I felt
that I should like to be seated by a roaring drying
fire.

We kept a watch on deck as if we were at sea,
with arms ready for use, for though our pilot had
assured us ‘that all good people here,’ Captain
Willis was too well acquainted, both with the
character of the natives, and the sort of gentry who
might possibly be in the river waiting for a cargo
of slaves, to put himself in their power.

I tumbled and tossed about during the night in
my berth, unable to sleep, both on account of the
heat, and, strange to say, of the perfect quiet which
prevailed. Next morning a large canoe was seen
coming off from the shore, in which was seated a
38 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

white headed old negro in a glazed cocked hat, a
red hunting coat on his shoulders, a flannel petticoat
round his waist, and a pair of worsted slippers on
his feet. The pilot, who had remained on board,
notified to the captain, with great formality, that
he was King Dingo, coming to receive his dash or
payment for allowing us to trade with his people.
His majesty was received with due ceremony, and
conducted into the cabin, when, as soon as he was
seated, notwithstanding the early hour of the day,
he signified that it was his royal pleasure to be
presented with » bottle of rum. Having taken two
or three glasses, which seemed to have no other
effect on him than sharpening his wits, he handed
it to one of his attendants, and then applied himself
to the breakfast, which had just been placed on the
table, and I dare not say how many cups of coffee,
sweetened. to the brim with sugar, he swallowed in
rapid succession. Having received half a dozen
muskets, as many kegs of powder, brass pans, wash
basins, plates, gunflints, and various cotton articles,
as his accustomed dash, and requested a dozen
bottles of rum in addition, he took his departure,
promising to come again and do a little trade on
his own account.
TRADERS ON THE BONNY RIVER. 39

The subjects of the sable potentate were now
allowed to come on board, and several canoes were
seen approaching us from different parts of the
shore. One brought a tusk of ivory, others jars of
palm oil, several had baskets of India-rubber, or
gum-elastic, as it is called. Besides these articles,
they had ebony, bees’-wax, tortoise-shell, gold-
dust, copper-ore, ground nuts, and others to dis-
pose of.

We soon found that the business of trading
with these black merchants was not carried on at
the rate we should have desired.

The trader, having hoisted his goods out of his
canoe, would place them on deck, and seat himself
before them, looking as unconcerned as if he had
not the slightest wish to part with them. Some
would wait till the captam came forward and made
an offer; others would ask a price ten times the
known value of the article, extolling its excellence,
hinting that very little more was likely to be
brought down the river for a long time to come,
and that several other traders were soon expected.
The captain would then walk away, advising the
owner to keep it till he could obtain the price he
asked. The trader would sit still till the captain
40 THE AFRICAN TRADER,

again came near him, then ask a somewhat lower
price. On this being refused he would perhaps
make a movement as if about to return to his
canoe, without having the slightest intention of so
doing; and so the game would go on till the
captain would offer the former price for the article,
when, perhaps, the trader would sit on, time being
of no consequence to him, in the hopes that he
might still receive a larger amount of goods. On
other occasions the captain had to commence bar-
gaining, when he invariably offered considerably
"below the true mark, when the trader as invariably
asked something greatly above it. The captain
would then walk aft, and, perhaps, come back and
talk about the other ports he intended to visit,
where the natives were more reasonable in their
demands. Captain Willis was too cool a hand to
show any impatience, and he thus generally made
very fair bargains, always ‘being ready to give a
just value for the articles he wished to purchase.
As each jar of oil, each tooth or box of gold-dust,
or basket of India-rubber, could alone be procured
by this process, some idea may be formed of the
time occupied every day in trading.
Palm oil was, however, the chief article we
FEVER ON BOARD. Al

were in search of; but two weeks passed by, and
still a considerable number of our casks remained
unfilled. Fever too had broken out on board.
Three of our men were down with it, and day after
day others were added to the number. The two
first seized died, and we took them on shore to be
buried. This had a depressing effect on the rest.

When we returned on board we found that a
third was nearly at his last gasp. Poor fellow,
the look of despair and horror on his countenance
I can never forget. ‘Harry,’ he exclaimed, seiz-
ing my hand as I went to him with a cup of cool-
ing drink, ‘I am not fit to die, can no one do any
thing for me? I dare not die, can’t some of those
black fellows on shore try to bring me through—
they ought to know how to man handle this
fever.’

‘JT am afraid that they are but bad doctors, Bob,’
I answered, ‘however, take this cooling stuff it
may perhaps do you good.’ ‘A river of it wont
cool the burning within me,’ he gasped out. ‘Ob
Harry, and if I die now, that burning will last for
ever and ever. I would give all my wages, and
ten times as much, for a few days of life. Harry,
I once was taught to say my prayers, but I have
42 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

not said them for long years, and curses, oaths,
and foul language have come out of my lips in-
stead. I want to have time to pray, and to recol-
lect what I was taught as a boy.’ I tried to cheer
him up, as I called it, but alas, I too had forgotten
to say my prayers, and had been living without
God in the world, and though I did not curse and
swear, my heart was capable of doing that and
many other things that were bad, and so I could
offer the poor fellow no real consolation. I per-
suaded him to drink the contents of the cup; but
I saw as I put it to his lips that he could with
difficulty get the liquid down his throat.

‘You have had a hard life of it Bob, and per-
haps God will take that into consideration,’ I said,
making use of one of the false notions Satan sug-
gests to the mind of seamen as well as to others.
Bob knew it to be false.

‘That won’t undo all the bad things I have
been guilty of; it won’t unsay all the blasphemies
and obscene words which have flowed from my
lips,’ he gasped out.

‘Then try to pray as you used to do,’ I said,
‘I will try and pray with you, but I am a bad
hand at that I am afraid,’
DEATH OF A SHAMAN. 43

‘Oh, I can’t pray now, it’s too late! too late!’
he exclaimed in a low despairing voice, as he
sank back on his pillow, turning his fast glazing
eye away from me. He had been delirious for
some time before then, but his senses had lately
been restored. He seemed instinctively to feel
that I could offer him none of the consolation he
needed.

While I was still standing by the side of his
bunk, one of the mates came forward to see how
the sick were getting on. He spoke afew words to
try and comfort the dying man. They had no more
effect than mine, he only groaned out, ‘It’s too
late! too late! too late!’ His voice rapidly grew
weaker—there was a slight convulsive struggle ;
the mate lifted his hand, it fell down by his side.

‘Poor Bob has gone,’ he said, ‘there will be
more following before long, I fear. If I was the
captain I would get out of this river without wait-
ing for a full cargo, or we shail not have hands
enough left to take the vessel home.’

This scene made a deep impression on me; too
late! too late! continued sounding in my ears.
What if I were to be brought to utter the same ex-
pression? Where was poor Bob now? I tried not to
44 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

think of the matter, but still those fearful words
‘too late’ would come back to me; then I tried to
persuade myself that I was young and strong, and
as I had led a very different sort of life to most of
the men, I was more likely than any one to escape
the gripe of the fever.

We had another trip on shore to bury poor
Bob. The captain seemed sorry for him. ‘He
was a man of better education than his messmates,
though, to be sure, he had been a wild chap,
he observed to me. Bob’s conscience had been
awakened; that of the others remained hardened
or fast asleep, and they died as they had lived,
foul, unwashed, unfit to enter a pure and holy
heaven.

Tam drawing a sad and painful picture, but it
isa true one. I did not then understand how full
of horror it was, though I thought it very sad to
lose so many of our crew.

We continued to carry on trade as before, and
the captain sent messengers urging the natives
to hasten in bringing palm oil on board, but they
showed no inclination to hurry themselves; and
as to quitting the river till he had a full cargo on
board, he had no intention of doing that.
‘BLACK JACK.’ 45



Hitherto the officers had escaped; but one
morning the second mate reported that the first
mate was unable to leave his berth, though he
believed that it was nothing particular; but Dick
Radford, who was considered to be the strongest
man on board, when he had tried to get up that
morning, had been unable to rise. The captain
sent me forward to see him.

Some hours must have passed since he was
attacked. He was fearfully changed, but still
conscious. :

‘Black Jack has got hold of me at last, Harry,
but T’ll grapple with him pretty tightly before I let
him get the victory, do you see,’ he observed, when
I told him that the captain had sent me to see him.
‘I’m obliged to him, but if he wishes to give me a
longer spell of life, and to save the others on board,
he will put to sea without loss of time, while the
land breeze lasts. A few mouthfuls of sea air
would set me up inatrice. If we don’t get that
there will be more of us down with fever before
night.’

The boatswain had scarcely said this when he
began to rave and tumble and toss about in his
berth, and I had to call two of the men to assist
46 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

me in keeping him quiet. When I got back to the
cabin, I told the captain what Radforth had said.
‘Oh, that’s only the poor fellow’s raving. It will
never do to leave the river without our cargo, for
if we do some other trader will sure to be in directly
afterwards and take advantage of what has been
collected for us. However, I have had notice that
lots of oil will be brought on board in a few days,
and when we get that, we will put to sea even
though we are not quite full.’

The captain shortly afterwards paid Radforth a
visit; but the boatswain was raving at the time, and
never again spoke while in his senses. The follow-
ing day we carried him to his grave on shore. The
death of one who was looked upon as the most
seasoned and strongest man, had, as may be sup-
posed, a most depressing effect among the crew. It
was soon also evident that the first mate was ill
with the fever, and indeed more than half our
number were now down with it.

Still the captain could not bring himself to quit the
river, ‘In a few days very possibly we shall have
a full cargo Harry,’ he said to me. ‘In the mean-
time, I daresay, the rest will hold out. Radforth
overworked himself, or he would not have caught
SICKNESS CONTINUES. AW

thefever. Take care Harry you don’t expose your-
self to the sun, and you will keep all to rights my
boy,—I am very careful about that—though I am
so well seasoned that nothing is likely to hurt
me.”

‘I wish we were out of the river, Captain Willis,’
I could not help replying. ‘The mates and the men
are always talking about it, and they say the
season is unusually sickly or this would not have
happened.’

‘They must mind their own business, and stay
by the ship, wherever I choose to take her,’ he ex-
claimed, in an angry tone, and I saw that I should
have acted more wisely in not making the obser-
vation I had just let fall. Still, to do him justice,
Captain Willis was as kind and attentive as he
possibly could be to the sick men; he constantly
visited the first mate, and treated him as if he had
been a brother.

All this time not a word about religion was
spoken on board; I had, it is true, a Bible in my
chest, put there by my sisters, but I had for-
gotten all about it, and there was not another in
the ship.

Except in the instance I have mentioned, and in
48 THE AFRICAN TRADER,

one or two others, not even the sick men seemed
concerned about their souls. The only consolation
which those in health could offer to them, was the
hope that they might recover. ‘ Cheer up Dick,’ or,
‘cheer up Tom, you'll struggle through it, never
say die—you will be right again before long old
boy,’ and such like expressions were uttered over
and over again, often to those at their last gasp,
and so the poor fellows went out of the world be-
lieving that they were going to recover and enjoy
once more the base pursuits and unholy pleasures
in which their souls’ delighted. Alas, I have often
though what a fearful waking up there must have
been of those IJ had thus seen taking their de-
parture from this world, yet the rest of us remained
as hardened, and in most cases as fearless, of con-
sequences as before.

The death of the first mate, which very soon
occurred, made the second mate, I perceived, some-
what more anxious than before about himself. The
first mate had been a strong healthy man, and had
often before been out on the coast, while the se-
cond mate was always rather sickly, and this was
his first visit to the shores of Africa. Whether or
not his fears had an effect upon him, I cannot say,
FEARS OF THE CREW. 49

but he began to look very ill, and became every day
more anxious about himself. The captain tried to
arouse him, telling him that we should be at sea
enjoying the fresh breeze in a few days, and that
he must hold out till then. ‘Still it is of no use
Harry,’ he said to me, as I was walking the deck
with him one evening, trying to get a few mouth-
fulls of air, ‘I know I shall never leave this
horrible place alive unless the captain would give the
order at once to trip the anchor, then perhaps the
thought of being free of it would set me up again.’

I told the captain when I went into the cabin
what the poor mate had said, for I really thought
our going away might be the means of saving his
life, as well as that of others aboard. He took what
I said in very good part, but was as obstinately
bent in remaining as before. ‘Those are all fancies,
Harry,’ he answered. ‘He has taken it into his
head that he is to die, and that is as likely to kill
him as the fever itself.’

‘But then he fancies that he would get well if
we were at sea,’ I replied. ‘Perhaps that really
would set him up again.’

‘Well, well, just tell him that you heard me

say I hoped to get away in two or three days,
4
50 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

perhaps that will put him to rights,’ answered the
captain, laughing. ‘ Now, Harry, don’t let me hear
any more of this sort of thing; I have bother
enough with these black traders without having to
listen to the fancies of my own people.’

I told the mate what the captain had said. ‘If
the vessel does get away at the time he mentioned,
I hope that I may be able to help in taking her to
sea, if not, mark my words Harry, there will be a
good many more of us down with the fever. He
spoke too truly. The traders continued to arrive
but slowly, as before, with their oil. The captain
waited and waited like an angler anxious to catch
more fish. Before the week was over the second
mate was dead, and we had only two men fit for
duty on board.


CHAPTER IV.

More victims to the fever.—The captain himself attacked.—We
ship some Krumen and other blacks, among whom is a
Christian, Paul Balingo.—Paul instructs the captain and
me in the truth.—Captain Willis gets somewhat better, and
we prepare for sea.

HE ship was almost full, and we had a




few more empty casks, and were ex-
pecting some traders on board during
the day with oil which would fill them up. When
I turned out of my berth, just as morning broke, I -



found the captain seated in his cabin, with his
head resting on his hands. He felt a little ill, he
acknowledged, but said he was sure it was nothing.
‘We will get under weigh at daylight to-morrow .
morning, when the tide makes down, and I shall
soon be all to rights,’ he observed. Still, I could
not help remarking that he looked pale, and moved

with difficulty. ‘I have agreed to ship half-a-
51
52 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

dozen Krumen, and two or three other black sea-
men, who are knocking about here, he added.
‘This fever has made us terribly short-handed;
but I hope the fellows who are sick will come
round when we are in blue water again. Tlarry,
go forward and see how they are getting on, and
send Tom Raven to me.’ Raven was one of the
two men who had hitherto escaped the fever, and
being a good seaman, had been promoted to the
rank of mate.

I went on deck, but saw neither him nor Grin-
ham, the other man. I made my way forward to
where the crew were berthed, under the topgallant
forecastle, expecting to find them there. Grinham
was in his berth; he and two other poor fellows
were groaning and tossing with fever, but the rest
were perfectly quiet. I thought they were asleep.
What was my horror, on looking into their berths,
to find that their sleep was that of death !

‘Water, water,’ murmured Grinham. Iran and
fetched some, and as I gave it to him I asked
where Raven was. ‘I don’t know,’ he answered,
somewhat revived by the cool draught. ‘It’s his
watch on deck. He said he felt a little ill when he
relieved me.’
FEVER STRICKEN SHIP. 53

Having done what I could for the other man,
I went to look for Raven. I found him in the se-
cond mate’s berth. He too was ill with fever, and
seemed to have forgotten that he ought to have
been on deck, and that the vessel had been left
without anyone to look out. I told him that the
captain had resolved to put to sea the next day.
‘Had he gone a week ago the lives of some of
us might have been saved, but it is too late now,’
he answered with a groan.

Sick at heart, after attending to him, I
returned to the cabin, to make my report to the
captain.

‘What, all! everyone of them sick!’ he ex-
claimed, sighing deeply. ‘Then God have mercy
upon us. ‘You must not fall ill, Harry.

* Not if I can help it, sir,’ I replied.

‘I must keep up,’ he said, and if I can get
these Krumen on board we will still put to sea.
They are trustworthy fellows, and, Harry, you
must be my mate. You are somewhat young; but
you have got a head on your shoulders. You must
keep your wits alive.

‘Tl do my best, sir,’ I answered, feeling not a
little proud of the rank to which I thus was raised.
54 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

I had, indeed, for some time past been performing
the duties of mate, supercargo, steward, and not
unfrequently helping the black cook, Sambo, and,
indeed, lending a hand to everything which required
to be done. Now Sambo and I were literally the
only two people capable of working on board.
The captain himself I feared greatly had got the
fever, notwithstanding his assertions to the con-
trary. It was surprising that I, the youngest in
the ship, and least inured to the climate, should
have escaped. I had always been very healthy ;
had never done anything to hurt my constitution,
and had followed the captain’s advice in keeping
out of the sun, and was inclined to feel somewhat
self-satisfied on that account—not considering that
it was owing to God’s mercy and loving-kindness
that I had been preserved.

The captain said he would go and see Raven;
but having got up, after moving a few paces, he
sat down again with a groan, and a deadly palour
came over his countenance. He felt that he, too,
had got the fever. J advised him to lie down
again and rest, but to that he would not consent.
He was determined to carry on the trade as usual

during the day, and to get ready for sea as soon
BLACK SAILORS. 55

as the black seamen, whom he expected every hour
on board, arrived. He sent me up frequently to
see whether they were coming off, and now, when
too late, he seemed as anxious as anyone had been
to get the vessel out of the river.

I was thankful when at length I found two
canoes alongside with the expected blacks. The
Krumen were fine athletic fellows, neatly dressed
in shirts and trousers, and having all served on
board men-of-war or in merchant vessels, spoke a
little English. They had been hired by the cap-
tain’s agent on shore; and as their wages had been
settled, and they knew the duties they were re-
quired to perform, they went to work at once under
their head man, who had been appointed to act as -
boatswain, and seemed inclined to be orderly and
obedient. Besides the Krumen there were, as I
have before said, several other black seamen en-
gaged, who had been mostly recaptured slaves,
and had afterwards entered on board men-of-war
or merchant vessels touching at Sierra Leone. I
was struck with the manner of one of them, a fine
active man, as I, now the only representative
of the ‘Chieftain’s’ officers and crew, stood near
the gangway to receive them. Touching his hat
56 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

in a respectful manner, he asked after Captain
Willis. ‘He know me, Paul Balingo. I sail once
with him some time ago. He kind man, so I come
again.’ I told him that the captain was rather
unwell. He had charged me not to let the blacks
fancy that he had the fever. I added, that I
was sure he would be glad to see him in the
cabin.

‘I go when you tell I come on board,’ answered
Paul. ‘Sorry to hear him ill.’

‘Oh, he says its nothing,’ I observed, ‘and as
soon as the tide serves we are to go down the
river, and put to sea.’

I made this remark in obedience to the cap-
tain’s instructions. JI now gave directions to the
black boatswain to get the cargo stowed without
delay.

The captain was much pleased to hear that
Paul Balingo had joined the vessel, and said he
would see him at once. ‘I remember him well,’
he observed, ‘a good steady fellow,’

I told Paul to come down, and he received a
friendly welcome. I then reminded the captain
that there was another duty to be performed. It
was to bury the men who had died during the
PAUL BALINGO. 57

night. This was beyond the strength of those
who still survived.

‘T see to it, sir,’ said Paul.

‘The sooner the better then,’ observed the
captain. ‘And when you return we will trip
the anchor, if there is wind enough to help us
along.’

Four bodies were lowered into the canoe, and
Paul and some of his companions took them on
shore. He had fastened them up in canvas, for
there was no time to make coffins; indeed, the
carpenter was among them. I should like to have
accompanied him to pay the last mark of respect
I could to the poor fellows, but there were too
many duties to be performed on board to allow of
this. I watched them, however, through the glass
as they stood on the beach, which formed our
burial place. To my surprise, after the graves
were dug, I observed Paul Balingo take off his hat
—his companions imitating his example—when he
seemed to be lifting up his hands in prayer. Then
he addressed a number of natives who were stand-
ing round, and the bodies were carefully lowered
into the graves, and covered up.

When he returned on board I told him that the
58 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

captain was very much obliged to him for what he
had done. ‘And I saw too,’ I observed, ‘that
you were praying for the poor fellows.’

‘No, massa; I no pray for dem,’ he answered.
‘If when dey died dey loved Jesus Christ, den
dey no want my prayers; if dey no love Him, den
He no love dem. No, massa, me pray for dose
that stand round, and for dose still alive. I pray
dat God’s Holy Spirit would come into der hearts,
and told dem to love Jesus, and dat He died for
sinners. I prayed dat dey would hear His Word,
and love Him andserve Him. Den I tell dem that
Jesus Christ came down on earth, and become
man, and be obedient to God, and do all dat good
child should do who Iub him parents, and dat He
pure and holy like lamb widout spot or blemish, and
dat He died on de cross, and be punished instead of
wicked man, and dat God den say dat one who
not deserve punishment being punished He will
forgive all dose His dear Son present to Him, who
lub Him and serve Him. Den [I tell dem dat
Jesus Christ died for dem, and dat if dey trust to
Him He put away all dere sins, and God not look
at der sins any more. Den I turn de matter about,
and I say dat you and all men are poor and naked
PAUL BALINGO. 59

and covered with dirt and sores, and not fit to go
into de presence of pure and holy God; but if you
love Christ and trust dat He died and was punished
instead of you, den He put on you a white robe,
cover you wid His righteousness, and den when
you go to God He longer see that you are poor and
naked, but He only see the white robe, and He
say, ‘* Now you may come into dis pure and bright
heaven, and live wid Me.’ Then once more I say
again, look here, God put you into this world, and
you owe God everything. You ought to obey Him
and serve Him, and give Him all your strength
and health, and to try and please Him in all things
every moment of your life. Next IJ remind dem
dat none of us do it, so we owe God a debt, and
the longer we live the greater is the debt. It is
not den all the things that we do dat God reckon,
but the many things that we ought to do and
which we leaye undone. We receive all the good
things from God, and we give Him nothing in
return. Then we have no means to pay this debt,
so Jesus Christ, because He love us, say He pay
it, and God say He accept His payment and set us
free. Den I say to the people, Do you believe dis?
If you do, and try to love God, and serve God,
60 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

and do what Jesus Christ did when He was on
earth, den you have living faith, and you are free,
and God no say longer that you owe Him debt,
but He call you His dear children, and when you
leave this world He receive you in heaven.’

‘Why, Paul,’ I exclaimed, after listening with
astonishment to what he had said, ‘I little ex-

2



pected to hear such things come out of a
(I was going to say negroe’s mouth, but changed
it to) ‘ African sailor’s mouth. You ought to be
a missionary.’

‘Every Christian man ought to be a mission-
ary,’ he answered. ‘If he love the Lord Jesus,
and know that the Lord Jesus love him, then he
ought to tell that love to others, and if he knows
the-value of his own soul then he values the souls
of others, and try to win those souls for Christ.
The truth is, massa, I do want to be missionary,
and I seek to go to England to learn more. I
there learn to preach the gospel, and when I come
back I carry the glad tidings of salvation to my
ignorant countrymen.’

I was very much struck with Panul’s earnest-
ness and zeal, though at that time I could scarcely
comprehend all he said—I myself knew nothing
PAUL BALINGO. 61

experimentally of the great love of Jesus of which
he spoke. The poor black Christian was far
more enlightened than Iwas. Still I felt a satis-
faction at having him on board, He at once
showed that he was not a mere theoretical Chris-
tian, for as soon as his duty on board the ship
was over, he devoted himself to attending on the
sick men. All the hours he could snatch from
sleep he spent by the side of their bunks, urging
them to trust to Jesus, and to repent of their sins
while yet there was time.

The poor second mate grew worse and worse.
Paul visited him, and he heard from the lips of the
black seaman, perhaps for the first time, the full
and free message of salvation; and, I believe, from
what Paul told me, and from the remarks -the
mate made to me before he died, that he had
fully accepted God’s gracious offer of reconcilia-
tion.

_ Iam going ahead though too fast in my nar-
rative. Before the morning came that we were to
have left our anchorage Captain Willis himself was
laid prostrate with the fever, and having now no
one on board to navigate the vessel, we could not
venture to sea. I would have done my best to
62 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

find our way to Sierra Leone, but the black boat-
swain refused to leave the harbour without an
officer capable of taking charge of the brigantine.
We were compelled, therefore, to wait till Captain
Willis should recover sufficiently, or till the
arrival of another English vessel which could









spare one of her mates to take charge of the
‘ Chieftain.’

Before many days were over Captain Willis,
and Sambo, the black cook, and I, were the only
persons of those who had come into the river, still
alive on board. Had the Krumen been badly dis-
posed, they might, without difficulty, have taken
possession of the vessel, and made off with her
rich cargo; but they appeared, as far I could
judge, to intend to act faithfully, and perform their
various duties as well as if the captain’s eye had
been constantly upon them. About Paul I had no
doubt. Little as I knew of vital religion myself,
I was sure that he was a true man, and that he
acted according to his professions. - Nothing could
exceed his attention to the captain; he or I were
constantly at his bedside; and Paul showed con-
siderable skill in treating the disease. I believe
that it was mainly owing to him, through God’s
CAPTAIN WILLIS AND PAUL BALINGO. 63

mercy, that the captain did not succumb to it, as
the rest of the crew had done.

‘Paul,’ said the captain one morning, when he
felt himself getting a little better, ‘I owe you my
life, I will try not to forget you.’

“Oh, no, no captain, poor fellow like me not
able to do you good; give God de praise,’ he
answered solemnly, looking upwards. ‘Oh, if
you did but know how God loves you, how He
takes care of you, and gives you all the good
things of life, and saves you from danger, and
wishes you to come and live with Him, and be
happy for ever and ever, you would try to love
Him and serve Him, and obey Him in all
things,’

‘T don’t think that God can care for one who
has cared so little for Him,’ answered the captain.
“I don’t mean to say that I call myself a bad man,
or that I have many great sins on my conscience,
and so, I suppose, if I died He would not shut me
out of heaven altogether.’

‘Captain,’ said Paul, fixing his eyes steadily on

_ him, ‘the debil told you dat; he a liar from the
a beginning. God says, “There is none that doeth
good,no not one,” “Thesoul that sinneth shall surely
64 THE AFRICAN TRADER,

die.” What does dat mean? Not, surely, that if
you sinner He let you get into heaven. I ask you,
captain, whether you are a sinner, or whether you
pure and holy, and trust to Christ, and love Christ,
and fit to go and live for ever and ever in the pure
and holy heaven with Him? Understand, I do
uot ask whether you are a great sinner in your own
sight, but whether you have ever committed any
sins; and remember, God says, “the soul that

”

sinneth,

’

not only the soul that is a great sin-
ner.

The captain looked much annoyed. ‘Yes, of
course, I have committed some sins; but I don’t
see why. God has any right to charge them against
me.’

‘God made this world, and all things that are
therein. God rules this world, and God made His
laws, and He says they are just and right, and
God says, “The soul that sinneth shall surely
die,”’ answered Paul, solemnly. ‘ Captain under-
stand, it is not I who say that. God says it. But
though God is a God of justice He ig full of love
and mercy, and He has therefore formed a plan
for the benefit of sinning men, by which man’s
sins can be washed away, by which His justice
PAUL INSTRUCTS CAPTAIN WILLIS. 65

will be satisfied, His love and mercy shown.
He has allowed another to be punished in-
stead of the sinner,’ Paul continued, explaining
to the captain God’s plan of salvation much. in
the same terms as he had already explained it to
me.

_ ‘IT never understood that matter before,’ said
the captain. ‘ But still I do not see how God can
expect us to be as good as you say.’

‘Massa Captain, I do not say dat God expect
us to be good; but still He has a right to demand
that we should be good. He made man pure and
holy and upright, and He gave him free will to act
as he chose; but man disobeyed God and went
away from Him, and forgot Him, and so God has
the right to punish man. But den God is full of
love and mercy, and He does not want to punish
him, but wants him to come back to Him, and so
He has sent His message to man to tell him how’
he may do that. Now as man cannot be good and
pure and holy and do nothing but good, but, on the
contrary, does much harm, he must either accept
God’s plan of “salvation, or be punished. You
have heard, captain, about the thief on the cross,

even when he was dying he put faith in Jesus, and
5 5
66 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

Jesus told him that he should be that night with
Him in paradise. So you see, captain, there is
hope for the sinner, even at the last, and this
shows that God does not expect us to do anything
good in order to be saved, but only just to put
faith in the sacrifice of His dear Son—that is to
say, to believe that He was punished instead of
us. But then remember, captain, that only one
thief was saved; and that shows to us that we
must not put off turning to Jesus to the last, and,
therefore, I pray you, captain, go to Him at
once; trust to Him now, and you will not feel
unhappy; and if this fever takes you away, as
it has taken away so many people on board this
ship, you will hab no fear of death, for you will
go to live with Jesus, and be happy with Him for
ever and ever.’

Captain Willis groaned. ‘Tl pray wid you,
captain,’ said Paul, and he knelt down by the side
of the bed, and lifted up his voice in prayer, and
earnestly besought God to send His Holy Spirit to
soften the captain’s heart, and to enlighten his
mind.

_ I had listened attentively to all that Paul had
said, and I prayed that the blessing which he asked
THE CAPTAIN RECOVERS, 67

for the captain might descend on me also ; for had
begun to discover that my heart was very hard,
and prone to evil, and that I had no love for Jesus,
no desire to obey His law. Thus the truths of the
gospel, as they fell from the lips of the black sailor,
first came home to my heart.

Several days passed by—the ‘ Chieftain’ was
got ready for sea, and the captain considered him-
self well enough to take the command.


CHAPTER V.

We at length got out of the river into the open sea, but a calm
comes on, and the Captain again becomes very ill.—No one
on board understanding navigation, I doubt whether I shall
find my way to Sierra Leone.—The Captain does not be-
lieve that he is in danger.— Paul pleads with him about the
safety of hig soul.—A fire breaks out in the hold.—We in
vain endeavour to extinguish it—The rest of the crew de-
sert us.—Paul and I endeavour to save the Captain, but
driven from the cabin by the flames leap overboard and
reach a small boat, which we right and get into.—Seea
schooner approaching us. ,

T day-break the pilot came on board, the
sails were loosed, the anchor hove up,
and the ‘Chieftain,’ with a hot land

breeze, which still blew strong, glided down the



river. Captain Willis, who had been brought from
his cabin by Paul and Sambo, sat propped up with
pillows on the deck. It was melancholy to see

him, his once strong frame reduced to a mere
68
THE ‘CHIEFTAIN’ LEAVES THE RIVER. 69

skeleton, his countenance pale and haggard, and
his strong voice now sounding weak and hollow,
and scarcely to be heard by those to whom he
issued his orders. I stood by him to repeat them.
I saw him cast an eye towards the spot which con-
tained the graves of our shipmates, and I could
divine his thoughts. Perhaps he might have re-
flected that had he not been so greedy of gain,
many of them might be still alive, while he him-
self might be enjoying health and strength.

The mangrove covered shores looked even more
sombre and monotonous than before, in the grey
light of morning, as we glided down between them.
The air was hot and oppressive, and full of pes-
tilence, and it seemed a wonder to me that I should
have lived so many weeks while breathing such an
atmosphere. I dreaded lest the breeze should fail
us, and we should be compelled to spend another
night under its influence; but the wind held, the =
tide was in our favour, and we had nearly reached .
the mouth of the river before the wind dropped,
and we had to bring up. wards the fresh sea breeze came rushing in, pure
and sweet, and comparatively cool. With what
delight did I gulp it down. I quickly felt like




70 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

another creature. The captain also seemed to re-
vive rapidly under its influence, and I began to
hope that he would ultimately recover. :

I eagerly watched the sparkling lines of white
foam as the ocean waves, meeting the ebbing cur-
rent of the river, broke across the bar. How I
longed for the evening, when the land breeze would
again fill our sails, and carry us out into the open
bounding ocean. It seemed to me that then all
difficulty would be passed, and we should only have
to shape our course for England, and steer on till
we should reach it.

The captain, unwilling again to go below, sat all
day on deck under an awning, ready for the moment
when we might venture to weigh anchor. It came
at last. Just before sunset the hot wind began to
blow. Although the bar still wore a threatening
aspect, the pilot declared that, without fear, we
might venture over it.

Not a moment was lost, on we stood towards
it. In a short time foaming breakers were hissing
and bubbling around us. Once more I felt the
vessel rising to the heaving wave, and welcomed
the showers of spray which flew over her deck.
On she sped, but very slowly; now she sank
“THE CAPTAIN HAS A RELAPSE. val

downwards, and it seemed as if the next roller
would send her back on the bar. It glided under
her, however, and then she appeared floating,
as it were, almost at rest on its summit, and then
downwards she slid, slowly making her onward
way.

In a few- minutes more we were in the free open
ocean, and the dark sombre river, with its gloomy
associations, was far astern. Every inch of canvas
the vessel could carry was set, that we might get
a good offing before nightfall, when a calm was to
be expected.

‘I never wish to see that place again,’ I could
not help exclaiming.

‘ Don’t say that, Harry,’ answered the captain.
‘We may hope to have better luck the next time.
If you ever want to grow rich you must run some
- risk, We have had an unusually sickly season,
which may not again occur; and if the owners
ask me to go back, I am not the man to refuse
to do so, and I should look to you to go along with
me.’

Can it be possible, I thought, that a man, after
running so fearful a risk, would willingly again
expose himself to the same danger, merely for the
12 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

sake of rapidly gaining wealth? I forgot at the
moment that people not only hazard their health
but their souls, for that object. Had I remembered
the fact, I should not have been surprised at what
the captain had said.

We had got out of sight of land, but the wind
was very light, and we made little progress. Ina
short time it fell calm altogether, and the vessel
lay like a log on the water. The heat, too, was
very great, and the captain appeared to suffer from
it. It was evident, indeed, that he was falling
rapidly back, and he had now no strength to come
on deck. Iwas much alarmed onhis account, for I
thought it too likely that, after apparently being so |
near recovery, he would die. I was anxious also
on our own account, for knowing so little as I
did about navigation, I could not tell how I should
take the vessel into port. I got out a chart and
studied it, and marked the spot where I believed
we then were. I then drew a line from it to Sierra
Leone, the place for which I intended to steer. It
lay about north-west of us, and I hoped that if I
could sight the land to the southward I might coast
along till I came to it, There were, however, I _
knew, strong currents running, which might take
HARRY AND THE CAPTAIN. 73

us out of our course, and we might have contrary
winds, which would further increase the difficulty.
I thought that very likely some of the blacks knew
more about the matter‘than I did, but I did not like
to confess my apprehensions to them lest they might
be tempted to play some trick, and perhaps run
away with the vessel altogether.

The only person in whom I could confide was
Paul. I knew that I could trust him thoroughly,
but then I suspected that he was not a better navi-
gator than I was, as he had only served on board a
man-of-war and merchantmen, when he would not
have been able to learn anything about the matter.

_ The captain caught sight of me through the
‘open door of his berth, as I was poring over the
chart spread out on the table of the main cabin.
‘ What are you about, Harry ?’ he asked.

I told him that I was looking at the chart to
see what course we ought to steer.

‘* Don’t trouble yourself about that, lad,’ he
answered; I shall be well as soon as the breeze
cones. It’s this hot calm keeps me down. Ifthe
wind had continued, I should have been myself
again by this time, though I have had a narrow

squeak for it. Pll ‘allow.’
(4 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

His face looked so pale and haggard, his eyes
so sunken, his voice so weak and trembling, that I
could not help fearing that he was mistaken. I
was unwilling to alarm him, but it was so import-
ant that I should know how to act in case of his
death, that I could not help saying,—‘ But suppose
anything was to happen to you, sir, what should
you advise me to do?’

‘I do not intend that anything shall happen to
me, Harry,’ he answered, evidently annoyed at my
remark. ‘ After having got this valuable cargo on
board we must not think of such a thing. Why
Harry, in all my voyages I have never collected
half so rich a freight.’

‘T earnestly hope that you may recover your
health, sir, I said. ‘I mentioned the subject
simply in case of accidents, ‘and I did not suppose
that you would be offended.’

‘ Of course I am not, Harry,’ he replied. ‘ You
don’t suppose that I am a coward and afraid to die ;
and if it was not for the sake of the vessel and her
freight, I should not care, I fancy, so much about
the matter; but it would never do now to knock
under—so don’t, Harry, put those gloomy thoughts
again into my head,’
CAPTAIN WILLIS. 75

On going on deck I told Paul my fears about
the captain. ‘ Yes, he very bad,’ he said; ‘ but I
more sorry about him soul. He think more of the
cargo, which may go to the bottom in one moment,
than of his soul, which live for ever and ever. O
Massa Harry, we must speak again to him about
dat. We will plead with him with tears in our
eyes, that be think about his soul, and we will tell
him not to trouble about the vessel.’

Without loss of time we went to the captain.
At first he listened somewhat coldly to what Paul
said, but he did not grow angry. ‘Ithank you for

interesting yourself about me,’ he said at last. -#

‘You may be right, and if you will pray with me I .
will try to join you,’

Paul and I thereon knelt down, as we had done
before, and Paul, in very plain language, earnestly
besought God to send His Holy Spirit to soften
the captain’s heart, to show him that he was a lost
sinner, and had need of a Saviour—to enlighten his
mind, and to enable him to take hold of Christ as

‘the only way whereby he could be saved.

The captain remained for a long time afterwards
silent. At length he put out his hand and grasped
Paul’s. ‘I see it now,’ he said, sighing deeply.
76 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

‘I have been, and still am, a great sinner. Oh,
that I knew better how I could be saved.’

‘Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou
shalt be saved,’ said Paul, in a firm voice. ‘ That
is God’s loving message. Hesends no other; and,
captain, if all the ministers of your country were to
come to you, they could bring you no other. If
you do believe on Jesus, and are to die this very
day, He says to you just what He said when
hanging on the cross on Calvary to the dying thief,
“ This night thou shalt be with me in paradise.”’

The captain was greatly moved, and I heard
him, between his sobs, exclaiming, ‘ Lord, I believe,
help Thou my unbelief.’

Oh how necessary is that prayer! and I am
sure it is one which is always answered, when the
sinner is truly desirous of turning from his sins,
and is seeking, by every means in his power, to
strengthen his belief,

I had got out my Bible several days before,
and I now read it constantly to the captain, as well
as to myself. Whenever I came to a passage
which seemed to meet his case, he desired me to
read it over and over again. Notwithstanding this,
the desire was strong within him to recover, for the
BECALMED. G7

sake of carrying home the vessel and her rich
freight in safety. That was but natural, and I
earnestly hoped that he might be restored to health.
Instead, however, of gaining strength, he appeared
to grow weaker and weaker.

The calm had now continued for several days.
Often as I looked over the side I saw dark trian-
gular fins just rising above the surface, and mov-
ing here and there round the ship, and frequently
the whole form of the monster could be discerned
ag it glided by; and when I saw its keen cruel
eyes glancing up towards me, I felt a shudder pass
through my frame, such as, according to the vulgar
notion, a person feels when it is said that some
one is walking over his grave. Occasionally, when
anything was thrown overboard, a white flash was
seen rising out of the deep, anda large pair of jaws,
armed with sharp teeth, opening, gulped it down,
and directly afterwards the creature went swim-
ming on, watching for any other dainty morsel
which might come in its way. ‘ How dreadful it
would be to fall overboard, I thought. Calm as
the sea is, a person, with those creatures around,
would have very little chance of escaping with
life.’
78 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

Dark clouds had been gathering around, and
the wavelets began to play over the hitherto calm
ocean, Although as yet there was not much wind,
the sails were trimmed, and, by the captain’s orders,
the vessel was put on a north-west course. I
concluded, consequently, that he at all events in-
tended touching at Sierra Leone, to obtain a mate
and some white hands. The wind, however, rapidly
increased, sail was taken in, and before long it was
blowing a perfect hurricane. This made the poor
captain more anxious than ever to get on deck, but
when he attempted to move he found that he had
not strength even to sit up. The wind howled
and whistled, the vessel tumbled fearfully about,
and the seas, which rose up in foaming masses,
frequently broke on board, deluging her deck,

Thad gone down to the captain, who had di-
rected me to visit him every quarter of an hour to
let him know how things were going on, when, as
I entered the cabin, I discovered a strong smell of
burning, and directly afterwards I saw thin wreaths
of black smoke making their way through the for-
ward bulk-head. The dreadful conviction came
upon me that the vessel was on fire. I sprang on
deck, and calling the boatswain and Paul, I told
THE SHIP ON FIRE. 7 9

them my fears. That they were too well founded
we had soon fearful evidence, for the smoke, now
in thick volumes, rose above the deck, both fore
and aft. Still there might be time to extinguish
the fire. To do this it was necessary to take off
the main hatchway, and, in spite of the risk of a
sea beating over us, it was done. The instant it
was off dense masses of black smoke rose up from
below, preventing all attempts which the boatswain
and some of his men made to discover the seat of
the fire.

‘We must take to the boats,’ he exclaimed, ‘ the
ship soon all in flames, then the boats burn and we
no get away.’

Paul and I as well as Sambo tried to persuade
him and his Krumen to make more efforts to put__
out the fire before they lowered the boats. With.
the sea then running, indeed there was every pro-
bability that they would be swamped. We set
them the example, by rigging the pumps, and filling
buckets from alongside to heave down the hold.
Thus encouraged, they laboured for a short time,
but finding their efforts of no effect, they abandoned
the work and began to lower the boats.

The wind had happly by this time somewhat
80 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

moderated; while most of the people were engaged
in launching the long boat, Paul and I with two
other men set to work to lower one of the smaller
boats. We had not forgotten the poor captain,
and as the smoke had not yet made its way into his
cabin, I did not intend to let him know what had
occurred till the last, when I hoped, with the assist-
ance of Paul and others, to get him lowered safely
into one of the boats.

Allhands were working away with frantic haste,
for we could not tell at what moment the flames
might burst forth, and render the deck untenable.
At length the long boat was launched, and the
boatswain and the Krumen leaped into her. They
called to Sambo and the rest to follow. I thought
Sambo would have remained faithful to the captain,
and have come to assist him, but at that moment a
forked flame burst up from the hold, so alarming
him, that he followed the rest. Paul and I entreated
the other men to remain by the smaller boat, while
we went into the cabin to bring up my poor friend
the captain. As I was descending the companion
hatch, I heard the boatswain shouting to the other
men, ‘and caught sight of them running to the side.
Still I hoped that should they desert us, Paul andI
SHIP DESERTED BY CREW. 81

might be able, after placing the captain in the boat,
to lower her in safety.

‘The ship on fire,’ exclaimed Captain Willis,
when I told him what had occurred, ‘ Heave water
down the hold. Do all you can to save our rich
freight, that must not be lost on any account,’

T told him that we had done what we could,
and that the rest of the crew had already deserted
the vessel.

The captain sank back on his pillow, ‘I have no
strength to move,’ he murmured, ‘and you and
Paul cannot lift me.’

‘We will try Massa Captain,’ said Paul.

I proposed that we should lift him in his cot

through the skylight. The captainatlength agreed. *
to this. I sprang on deck, intending to secure a ‘."

tackle to the main boom, by which we might carry
out my proposal with greater ease. What was my
horror on reaching the deck, to find that the blacks,
on quitting the falls, had neglected to secure them,
and that the boat having fallen into the water had
been washed away and capsized. The flames, too,
which were now ascending through the main-hatch-
way had caught the other boat, and already her

bows were burned through.
6
82 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

With this appalling intelligence I returned be-
low. Escape seemed impossible. I proposed
building a raft, it was a desperate resource, and
there might not be time even to lash a few spars
together. I could not bear the thought of allow- |
ing the poor captain to perish miserably without
an attempt to save him. He divined my thoughts,
‘Its of no use Harry, I am prepared for death, and ©
resign myself to the arms of that merciful God |
whom I have so lately learned to know,’ he said, —
with perfect calmness.

Paul, while the captain had been speaking,
seized a bright axe which hung against the bulk-
head as an ornament, intending to cut away what-
ever might assist in forming a raft, and had sprang
_on deck with it. He now came down through the
skylight hatch, ‘It is too late,’ he exclaimed, ‘the
flames come aft.’

He spoke too truly. At that instant dense
masses of smoke rushed into the cabin, and the |
flames burst through the after bulk head. I was —
scorched, by the heat and almost suffocated. So
dense was the smoke which filled the captain’s berth,
that I could no longer see him.

I felt Paul grasping my hand, ‘Come Harry,
HARRY AND PAUL LEAVE THE SHIP, 83

come, too late to save poor captain,’ he said, drag-
ging meafter him. I was almost stifled, and gasped
for breath. In another moment I should have
fallen, indeed I was so overcome with the smoke
that I did not know what was happening.

Happily however I kept firm hold of Paul,
and suddenly I found myself plunged headlong into
the water. He had hauled me through the cabin
window.

‘Now strike out Massa Harry, I see boat not
far off, we get to her,’ he exclaimed. I did as he
directed me, but the thought of the horrid sharks
I had seen swimming about the vessel, almost
paralyzed my senses, and every moment I expected
to find myself seized by the cruel jaws of one of
them. ,

‘Qheer up Harry, cheer up,’ shouted Paul;
‘there is the boat, we got Friend in heaven who
look after us; never fear, we reach her soon, cheer ©

?

- up.

With such like cries he continued to animate
me. He shouted thus not only for that object,
but to keep any sharks which might be inclined
to seize us at a distance. The boat, as we got
near her, was, I saw, keel upwards.
84 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

‘Never fear Massa Harry,’ said Paul, ‘ we soon
right her.’

We at length reached the boat, and Paul show-
ing me the way, after some exertion, he going ahead
and I keeping astern, we managed to turn her
over. We then shook her from side to side till we
had hove out a considerable amount of water in her.
He told me to get in over the stern, and to begin
bailing with my hat. I didas he advised, thankful
to find myself out of the grasp of the sharks. He
kept splashing about with his heels, and con-
stantly turning round to see that none of the
monsters were near. Looking up I caught sight
of the long boat standing away from us under sail
towards the shore. She had already got too far off

‘to allow of our cries reaching her, or even indeed
for those on board to see us. We were thus cruelly
deserted by our shipmates. We could only hope for
their credit that they supposed we had already lost
our lives, and that there would be no use looking
for us.

At length I having partially cleared the boat,
Paul also got in, and we both began bailing away
as hard as we could with our hats. While thus
employed I saw a huge shark approaching, and I
A SAIL IN SIGHT. 85

fancied looking disappointed at our having escaped
his hungry maw. Happily the sea by this time had
gone considerably down, or our task would have
been rendered hopeless. As it was it took us a
considerable time to lessen the water in the boat,
for deep as she was, the water which leaped in often
again nearly refilled her. Still we persevered, for
we were, we knew, labouring for our lives. Mean-
time the shark, as if longing to make us its prey,
kept swimming round and round the boat. At a
short distance the brigantine was burning furiously,
and already the flames, ascending the masts, had
caught the rigging and sails.

While as I could not help doing, I turned my
gaze at her I saw far away in the horizon the white
sail of a vessel. ‘A gail! a sail!’ I shouted; ‘we
are saved Paul, we are saved.’

Paul looked up for a minute. ‘Yes,’ he said,
‘she standing this way. The burning ship bring
her down to us. She bigschooner. May be good,
may be bad! though.’


CHAPTER VI.

A calm comes on, and we remain during tho night suffering
from hunger and thirst.—Paul tells me his history, and I
find that he is Cheebo, of whom IJ am in search.—His joy at
hearing of his mother makes him regardless of the suffer-
ing we are enduring.—The schooner picks us up.—Paul
suspects her character.—Before long we discover that she
is a slaver, and she runs up a river to receive her cargo on
board.

CARCELY had we caught sight of the
stranger than the wind entirely fell and




she lay totally becalmed. The smooth
sea enabled us to free the boat completely, and
now we had nothing to do but to sit down and
watch the burning brigantine.

First one of the tall masts, completely encircled
by the flames, fell hissing into the water. The
other, after standing awhile in solitary grandeur,
formed a fiery pinnacle to the flaming hull below.

At length it followed its companion, and then the
86
HARRY AND PAUL IN A BOAT. 87

fire ran riot fore and aft. Sometimes wearied by
the sight, I put my hands before my eyes to shut
it out, but then I could not help thinking of the sad
fate of the poor captain, whose body lay on its
funeral pile on board.

‘Ah, he happy now,’ whispered Paul. He had
also been thinking of him. ‘ He say he love Jesus;
he trust to Jesus, no fear for him.’

Paul’s words brought consolation to my heart.
Our own condition might well have made me de-
pressed, yet I felt supported by the strong faith of
my companion in a way I formerly should not have
thought possible.

We had no food, and not a drop of fresh water
to quench our burning thirst.

Some way off we could see pieces of burnt
spars floating about. I thought of trying to paddle
the boat up to them with our hands, hoping to find
some which might serve as oars, and enable us to
reach the schooner in the distance. I quickly,
however, gave up the attempt, for scarcely had I
put my hand into the water than I saw a huge
pair of jaws darting towards it, and I had just
time to pull it out before they made a snap close
to me, which would, in a moment, have bitten it off.
88 THE AFRICAN TRADER,

Night soon came down upon us as we thus sat
utterly helpless in our boat, while the sea around
was lighted up with the flames of the burning
vessel. Loaded as she was almost entirely with
combustible materials, they burned with unusual
fierceness. Her whole interior, as the sides were
burned away, appeared one glowing mass, sur-
rounded by a rim of flames which fed upon her
stout timbers and planking. Suddenly there came
a loud hissing noise across the water, then a dense
vapour ascended from her midst, and in an instant
after all was darkness. The remains of the ‘ Chief-
tain’ had sunk into, the depths of ocean.

‘T am afraid our chance of being picked up by
the schooner is gone,’ I observed to Paul. ‘ She
very probably, when the breeze comes, will stand
away from us.’

‘There is no such thing as chance, Massa
Harry,’ he answered. ‘If it is God’s will she come,
if not, He find some other way to save us. Let
us pray that He do what He judge best.’

Thereon Paul, without waiting for my reply,
knelt down in the bottom of the boat and lifted up
his voice in prayer to our merciful Father in heaven, _
for that protection which we more than ever felt we —
PAUL RELATES HIS HISTORY TO HARRY. 89

so much needed. I imitating his example, heartily
joined him.

As we sat in the boat side by side talking . .

together, for neither of us were inclined to sleep, I~
asked him how it was that he, a common sailor,
had become so well instructed a Christian ?

‘Ah, Massa Harry, I knew about Jesus when
I quite a little boy; but only a few years ago I
learned to love Him and trust to Him as I now
do, he answered. ‘Tl tell you how dis was.
When I piccaniny I hab kind fader and moder, and
we live in Yourba country, in our own village, far
away. One night the enemy come and attack the
village, and carry off many men and women and
children. My fader take me up and run away into
de wood, my moder follow, but she fall, and the
slaver people catch her and take her with the rest.
My poor fader, like to break him heart, but for my
sake he live and hide away till the slaver people
gone. He tried to find my moder, but from dat
day to dis he neber hear of her more. After some
time it was told him dat a great many people go
to a place called Abeokuta, and dat dere day built
town, and let no slave-takers come near them, so
my fader go there, and we live there, and work
90 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

and grow rich, and many more people come, and
we not fear any of our enemies. All the people
were heathens, and prayed to the fetish.

After some time many people come from Sierra
Leone, who had been carried off in slavers, and
taken by the English cruisers, and landed there.
They find relations and friends in Abeokuta, and
so they stop to live with us. Some of them had
learned in Sierra Leone about God and His Son
Jesus Christ, and they tell us, and many of the
people of Abeokuta say they will no longer pray to
the fetish, but will only pray to God, and love Him
and serve Him. My fader was among these, and
now the only thing he cared for in life was to listen
to the missionaries and hear about Jesus Christ.
Only one thing: made him unhappy, that was that
my poor moder should not learn the truth of the
gospel. He knew that she was carried away by
bad people, and he afraid that she become bad like
them; but he pray day and night that God in His
mercy would make known to her His great love,
as He had made it known to him.

‘Oh, if I could but hear that she had become a
Christian how happy I should be!’ he used to say
to me over and over again. ‘ Paul,’ that was the
PAUL'S HISTORY. 91

name J had got when I was christened, ‘ you must
pray for your moder wid me, and I am sure that
God will hear our prayers.’

At last my fader grew sick, and he made me
promise, if he died, that I would go to Sierra Leone
and try to find if my moder was dere. My fader
grew worse and worse, but still him very happy,
and taking my hand, he say, ‘ Paul, you must meet
me in heaven, and you must bring your moder
there, and then we all live together for ever and
ever, where there are no more slave-dealers, and no
more war, and no more cruelty,’ and den him die.

After dat I set off to go to Sierra Leone, but
slave-dealer catch me on the way and take me on

‘board slaver, with nearly four hundred other black
fellows, and we were all put down in ship’s hold,
and carried away to the coast of Brazil. But Eng-
lish man-of-war catch the slaver. The English
captain find out that I was a Christian, and so he
ask me if I like to serve on board de man-of-war,
and I say yes. The captain, good Christian man
himself, so I learn to speak English, and he taught
me to read Bible, and I learn still more about Jesus
than I did in Abeokuta. At last we got back to
Sierra Leone, and then I remember my promise to
92 THE AFRICAN TRADER,

my father, and while I on shore trying to learn
about my moder, the ship sail away, and no more
come back. Jno hear about my moder, and have
no money, so I ship on board merchant vessel, and
after sailing in her along the coast for some time I
go on board another, and then I again go on board
man-of-war. At last I get back to Sierra Leone,
and fall very sick, and sent to hospital, then a good
missionary come to me and I tell him what my
fader had said, and he ask me if I think I going to
heaven, and then he tell me more about the right
way, and pray with me. And now I find Jesus as
my own Saviour and Friend, and love Him, and
wish to serve Him, and obey Him. Then the wish
came into my heart to preach the gospel to my
countrymen, but I, still poor and very ignorant,
and I thought if I could make two or three voyages
and save money, I would go to England and study
there, and be better able to declare the glad tidings
of salvation, and that the people would more wil-
lingly listen to me.

It was on the second trip I made that the vessel
T was in was wrecked not far from the mouth of
the Bonny, and I was making my way with some
of those who had escaped with me to Sierra Leone
HARRY TELLS PAUL ABOUT HIS MOTHER. 93

when Captain Willis engaged us to serve on board
the ‘ Chieftain.’

While Paul was giving me this sketch of his
history an idea had forcibly taken possession of my
mind. ‘Tell me,’ I exclaimed suddenly, ‘ what
was your name before you were christened?’

‘ Cheebo,’ he answered.

‘And your father’s name,’ I inquired eagerly.

‘My father, him called Quamino,’ he said, in a
surprised tone.

‘Oh Paul!’ I cried out, seizing his hand, ‘I
have indeed then good news for you. Your father’s
and your prayers have been answered, for I can
assure you that your mother is a true and faithful
Christian. I have known her all my life, her name
she has told me was Ambah, and that she was torn
away from her husband and child as your mother
was from you.’

‘Yes, yes, Ambah was my mother’s name,
and did she tell you that her husband’s name was
Quamino, and their piccaniny was called Chebo?’
he asked, almost gasping for breath.

‘Those were the very names she gave me, and
I wrote them in my pocket book so that I might
not forget them,’ I answered.
94 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

‘Oh, Massa Harry, that is indeed joyful news,’
he cried out. ‘Then IJ and my mother and father
will all meet in heaven, Praise God! I now not
fear what man can do unto me.’

It would be difficult to do justice to the feeling
displayed by Paul, even were I to repeat all he
said, his piety, his gratitude, and his joy. He
could talk of nothing else during the night. He
seemed to be insensible to hunger and thirst, and
to forget altogether the dangerous position in which
we were placed. Now he kneeled down in prayer,
now he gave vent to his feelings in a hymn of -
praise. I could not help sympathising with him,
and rejoicing that I had been the means of giving
him the information which made him so happy.
Still I must confess that I myself suffered not a
little from the pangs of hunger, and would have
given much for a glass of cold water.

When morning dawned the schooner was still
in sight. I looked anxiously round for the sign of
a breeze, hoping that if it did come the stranger
would stand towards us. At all events it seemed
probable that having seen the burning vessel those
on board, in common humanity, would sail over the
spot where she had been, on the chance of picking
PICKED UP. 95

up any of her crew who might have escaped.
Paul, however, did not seem to wish this as much
as I did. I saw him narrowly watching the vessel,
then he shook his head as if he did not like her
looks.

The sun rose high in the sky, and beat down on
our heads. My thirst became intolerable, and
whatever might be the character of the stranger, I
could not help longing that she would pick us up.
The breeze came at last, her sails filled. How
eagerly I watched her.

‘She is standing towards us,’ I cried out, ‘ we
must soon be seen.’ I stood up on a thwart and
waved a handkerchief.

‘ Better not Massa Harry,’ said Paul, but I did
not heed him.

The schooner came on rapidly. . Again I waved
my handkerchief, and held it between my two
hands, so that it might flutter in the breeze. The
stranger approached. She was a fine large square
topsail schooner, with a black hull and taunt raking
masts. She rounded to close to us, so that she
could drop down to where our boat lay.

A rope was hove to us, and I clambered up her
side, Paul following me. We were both so weak
96 THE AFRICAN TRADER,

when we reached her deck that we could scarcely
stand. I pointed to my mouth, just able to mur-
mur, ‘water! water!’

‘Si, si, aqua aqua,’ said aman, who appeared to
be an officer; when one of the men dipped a mug
into a cask on deck, and brought it to us. I took
part of the contents then handed it to Paul; but the
seaman signed to me to drain it myself, casting, I
thought, a contemptuous glance at my negro com-
panion. However, he brought another cup full,
and even though I emptied it to the bottom, still
my thirst was scarcely quenched.









Au officer now appeared from below, and ad-
dressing me in English, asked me how I came to be
in the boat. I told him exactly what had oc-
curred.

‘It is fortunate for you that we picked you up,
for another vessel might not pass this way for days
to come,’ he observed. ‘ But what a pity so rich a
cargo should have been lost.’

The unhappy fate of the poor captain did not
seera to concern him much.

I could not make out the character of the
vessel.

She was Spanish, I guessed, and her officers
THE SLAVER. 97

and crew appeared smart active fellows; and though
she looked in some respects like a man-of-war, she
certainly was not one. Her hatches were off, and
as far as I could judge there was nothing to show
that she was a slaver.

The officer who had spoken to me finding that
I was a young gentleman, politely invited me down
into the cabin, telling Paul that he might go for-
ward among the men. Paul thanked him, and took
advantage of the permission granted him. The
officers were going to breakfast, and I was very
thankful when they invited me to jointhem. Alto-
gether they treated me very civilly.

I found an opportunity of speaking to Paul
during the day.

‘Bad vessel this,’ he whispered. ‘Dey put you
on shore soon Massa Harry, and so no harm come
to you, but I fear they make me slave, and I no
get back to see my moder. Still I pray God that
He find a way for escape.’

I had too much reason soon afterwards to know
that Paul was right in his conjectures.

The next day we came in sight of a large
vessel. Signals were exchanged, and we hove-to

near each other. The boats were then actively

7

é
98 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

engaged in bringing numerous articles on board
the schooner—arms and ammunition, and cutlery,
and Manchester goods, and farinha (the meal on
which slaves on board ship are fed), and cases
which I found contained slave shackles. There was
no secret indeed made about the matter.

The schooner having taken her cargo on board,
the other vessel sailed away while we stood
towards the coast. The carpenters were busily
employed in fitting an additional deck in the hold,
and Paul told me that it was called the slave deck,
aud that the slaves we were to take on board would
be seated along it, packed close together side by
side, and that they would thus be kept during the
whole run to the Brazils, or wherever the schooner
was bound with her hapless freight.

‘You see what this vessel is,’ said the officer
who had spoken to me in English, ‘We have
saved your life, and must exact a promise from you
not to appear as a witness against any one on
board should you at any future period be called on
to do so. Let me advise you indeed. not to take
notice of anything that occurs on board and it will
be the better for you. We do not wish to harm
you, but there are those among us who hold human
THE SLAVER. 99

life very cheap, and they are not likely to stand
on ceremony should you interfere with their pro-
ceedings.”

I replied that I was very grateful to him and
the other officers for treating me kindly, and that
I only desired to be put on board an English trader,
in which I could work a passage home, ‘and I
hope,’ I added, ‘that my black companion will be
allowed to accompany me.’

‘As to that I can make no promise,’ he an-
' swered. ‘ The captain will decide the matter; but,
I have no doubt, that if we fall in with an English
trader you will be allowed to go on board her.

A bright look out was kept from the mast
head, and twice the schooner altered her course
to avoid a sail seen in the distance. At length we
came off the mouth of a river.
from the shore. With a fair breeze we ran in, and
proceeding up some distance, dropped anchor in a
creek, where the schooner lay concealed by the tall
trees which grew on its banks.


OHAPTER VII.

I witness the embarkation of slaves collected at the barracoons,
and the cruel way in which they are treated and packed in
the hold of the slaver.—Unwilling to desert Paul, I remain
on board, and the slaver puts to sea.—Paul is threatened
for attempting to comfort the slaves with the gospel news.

—The schooner receives more slaves on board along the









coast.—Some are drowned coming off.—The slaver gets on
shore just as a man-of-war is seen in the offing.—A fog
comes on, and the schooner’s crew making desperate efforts
to get her off, she escapes, to my bitter disappointment,

from the man-of-war’s boats, along the coast.

FOUND myself once more exposed to the

pestilential air of an African river. Jin



vain tried to sleep. All night long I
heard the sound of the carpenters at work fitting
the slave decks, and fixing the bars across them,
to which the captive negroes were to be secured.
The crew were employed most of their time in
hoisting water casks, and a further supply of

farinha, on board.
100
SLAVES. 101

At length when morning broke I went on deck
to breathe the air, which I hoped would be some-
what cooler than that of the calm. Through an
opening in the trees I saw several long low sheds
with cottages and huts scattered round them, while
a number of people were moving about. The door
in the end of one of the sheds was thrown open,
and there issued forth a long line of black figures,
walking two and two, and secured together by
iron shackles round their wrists.

They staggered along with unwilling steps,
looking round on the trees and distant blue hills,
which they were destined never again to see, and
even now it seemed to me that cotild they have
wrenched their hands from those iron bonds they
would have attempted to strike a blow for freedom,
and make their escape into the forest. On either
side of them, however, walked ruffianly looking
fellows, with pistols in their belts and heavy whips
in their hands, with which, if their captives at-
tempted to lag behind, they urged them on. One
or two were whites, but most of them were negroes,
and seemed to have no scruple in leading their
countrymen into captivity.

So long a line came forth that it seemed impos-
102 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

sible the building could have held so many human
beings. Some were strong men, who cast scowling
glances at their guards; others were youths, many
mere lads and young boys, and there were a con-
siderable number of women, mostly young, many,
indeed, being mere girls. Several of the elder
women had infants in their arms, and children of
various ages trotted by the sides of others, or clung
to their hands. The sad procession came towards
the vessel. A bridge had been formed from her
deck to the shore. The leading slaves hesitated
as they reached it, and refused to move forward
till urged on by the lash of their guards.

Their condition had been bad before, but they
knew now that they were to be shut down and
crowded together in the dark noisome hold of the
slave ship. As they arrived on board they were
compelled to go below and take their seats on the
bare deck, side by side, with their legs secured to
the iron bars, and so closely packed that their
knees were drawn up almost to their chins. Still,
although nearly a hundred had come on board, a
considerable portion of the deck remained unoc-
cupied.

I took an opportunity of going on shore, no
A SLAVE VILLAGE. 103

one interfering with me. As I went through the
village I passed a house of some size, in front of
which the captain was seated in the verandah with
another white man, with whom he appeared to be
eagerly bargaining. The latter was, I found, the
principle slave-dealer, to whom the sheds or barra-
coons, in which the slaves were confined, belonged.
Going on I looked into one of the barracoons. The
heat and odour which proceeded from it made me
unwilling to enter. It was full of blacks, seated on
narrow benches, with their arms and legs secured
to long bars which ran in front of them. Here
they had been placed as they were brought down
from the interior, and kept in readiness for the
arrival of the slaver. This, I suspect, was the
gang for whom the captain had been bargaining
with their owner, as they were immediately after-
wards summoned out and marched down, as the
others had been, to the vessel.

While I was still on shore I saw coming through
the woods another long line of captives. They had
come, apparently, .a long distance, for they were
mostly foot-sore, and several could scarcely move
along; not a few were wounded, and many of the
men, and even of the women, bore traces on their
104 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

backs of the cruel lash which had been inflicted to
make them hasten their steps when they had showed
any unwillingness to proceed. They were allowed
but a short time to rest in the barracoons, and
having been fed with farinha, mixed into porridge,
were marched down to the ship. They gazed at
her with looks of dismay, for they knew that she
was to convey them away over the wide ocean
they had heard of, but never seen, to an unknown
land, where they were to toil, unrequitted, for hard
task-masters.

I thought of remaining on shore rather than
proceed in the slave vessel; but was unwilling to
desert Paul, and he had not been allowed to land.
IT therefore returned, hoping to obtain his release.

* You must remain with us a little longer,’ said
my friend the officer, who spoke English, ‘and we
will land you on another part of the coast, where
you are more likely than here to meet with a
trader.’

I was compelled to comply, indeed I knew by
his tone and manner, that I should not be allowed
to remain behind,

All the slaves which had been collected in the
depét having been received on board, the schooner
SLAVES. = 105

cast off from the bank, and proceeded down the
river. As we crossed the bar the vessel pitched
heavily, and shipped severalseas. The poor wretches
below, as the water rushed down upon them, fancy-
ing that they were about to be drowned, gave vent
to piercing shrieks and cries. The Spanish crew
heard them with perfect indifference, and no one,
with the exception of Paul, took the slightest
trouble to calm their fears—he managing to slip
down into the hold assured them that there was no
danger; but be could offer them very little com-
fort besides as to their prospects in this world.
Still he could speak to them of another and a better
land, ‘ where the weary are at rest, and the wicked °
cease from troubling,’ and where the shackles of
slavery are cast aside, and to which the God of
mercy invites all His creatures to come and dwell
with Him, and be at rest. He was endeavouring
to explain to the miserable beings the simple truths
of the gospel, when he was overheard by one of
the officers, and ordered on deck, with a threat that
should he again be found speaking to the slaves he
would be shackled along with them.

We ran down the coast and came to an an-
chorage in-shore. ‘There were numerous huts and
106 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

several large canoes drawn up on the beach, on
which a heavy surf was breaking. In a short
time people appeared collecting from all quarters,
and a canoe came off with a burly negro on board,
who, as he climbed up the side was treated with
great ceremony. He was, I found, the king of that
part of the country, his chief revenue being derived
from slave dealing. His business with the captain
was quickly concluded. A signal was made from
the vessel, and soon afterwards I saw a long line of
slaves coming forth from behind a wood which
concealed the barracoons where they had been
confined. They were marched down tothe canoes,
and thrust in one after the other in spite of their
struggles. ;

The canoes were now launched, and began to
make their way through the surf. Three succeed-
ed in getting alongside, but the fourth was over-
turned by a heavy roller, and the unfortunate
passengers thrown out amid the foaming waters.
Some, as if thus glad to escape from their perse-
cutors, sank without making a struggle for life;
others cling to the canoe, and a few were either
washed back on the beach or picked up by the
surrounding canoes, to which the crew had already
SLAVES. 107

made their way. Eight or ten human beings thus
lost their lives, but the event seemed to cause no







concern to the captain or his officers. He had



only agreed to pay for those brought off to him in
safety. The embarkation continued as before, and
we were soon surrounded by canoes full of slaves,
who were forthwith hoistéd on board and stowed
below. Their price, chiefly in goods, was then
lowered into the canoes, which returned to the
shore with much more caution than they had come
out. 3

Two days afterwards we obtained an other addi-
tion to our cargo still further down the coast. On this
occasion we brought up in a sheltered bay. Here
the slaves were conveyed on large rafts. Every ex-
pedition was used in getting them on board, for
news had been received that an English cruiser
was in the neighbourhood. The moment they
were stowed away the anchor was hove-up and sail
was made.

As we were going out, and appeared to be clear
of the harbour, I heard a grating sound, and felt
the vessel’s keel touch the ground. At the same
moment the look-out from the mast-head gave
notice that a sail was in sight in the offing.
108 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

Livery effort was made to get the schooner off,
but she stuck fast. One of the officers had gone
aloft with a spy-glass. On his return I observed
a look of consternation in the countenance of the
captain and his mates. After talking eagerly
together one of them went aloft. Ile remained
for sometime with his spy-glass turned towards
the stranger, which, in a short time, could be seen
clearly from the deck, and from the expressions
I heard them utter, I found that she was supposed
to be a British man-of-war. I endeavoured to
conceal my satisfaction, for I hoped that the un-
fortunate slaves would be rescued, and that Paul
and. I might be taken on board her.

Ii shortly, however, fell perfectly calm, and the
spirits of the slaver’s crew revived. The tide wag
rising, anchors were carried out, and desperate
efforts were made to heave the vessel off. A report
now came from aloft that several boats were
approaching from the direction of the cruiser. The
Spainards, on hearing this, began to stamp about
the deck, grinding their teeth and shaking their
fists towards where the boats were supposed to be,
working themselves into a perfect fury. Arms
were got up on deck, and the two guns the vessel
A MAN-OF-WAR IN SIGHT. 109

carried were loaded andrun out. The savage cries
and oaths, and fierce gestures of the crew, made
them look more like demons than men.

I looked anxiously for Paul, fearing that in
their fury they might injure him, but he had wisely
taken shelter in the berth forward so as to be out
of their sight. I had thought of hiding in the
cabin where I slept, but felt too anxious to watch
the issue of events to do so. Of one thing I felt
very sure, that though the Spaniards might fight,
the British seamen would soon be in possession of
the slaver.

The day was drawing to a‘ close, however, and
I began to fear that the boats might not reach the
schooner before darkness set in. In a short time
too, I observed a thick mist gathering over the
land, which rose higher and higher, and came
moving towards us. We were soon completely
enveloped in it. This seemed to give the slaver’s
crew great satisfaction, and they again began to
talk and laugh in their usual tone, while all the
time they continued their exertions to get the
vessel off. Lazy as the Spaniards are they ‘can
work as hard as any one when they have a suffi-
client motive to arouse them.
110 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

I observed the captain frequently wetting his
finger and holding it up, and soon I felt a light
breeze blowing from the land. The sails were let
fall, and the crew making another desperate effort,
the schooner glided away up to her anchors. No
time was lost in weighing them. I thought the
crew would have shouted to show their satisfaction,
but not a sound was uttered. Onward she glided,
keeping close in shore.

My heart sank within me, and my hopes of
escaping from the vile slave ship vanished. The
lead was kept going. I felt sure that no stranger
would venture to stand in so close to the coast as
we were doing. On we stood till the Spanish
seamen seemed satisfied that they had made good
their escape from the boats of the cruiser. As the
schooner had by this time nearly a full cargo of
slaves, I feared that she would not again touch on
the coast, and that I was destined to make a voyage
on board the hateful craft across the Atlantic.


CHAPTER VIIL

The Spaniards believing the man-of-war to be far away, steer
to the westward.—We sight her, and she chases us.—Cruel
device of the slaver’s crew to assist their escape.—Paul,
among others, being thrown overboard that the man-of-
war might have to pick them up; I fear that he has been
lost.—My life preserved by one of the officers, when

. threatened by the slaver’s crew.—The schooner escapes,
but dismasted in a gale, and again overtaken.—Paul and
my. cousin Jack come on board, and I join the corvette
as a midshipman—Returning to England I restore Cheebo
to his mother.—My adventures show that ‘all works
together for good to them who love God.’—Jack becomes a
commander, marries my sister Mary, and I find ample

means for supporting the rest of my dear sisters.

HE schooner ran on during the night,



keeping the coast close aboard to enjoy
the advantage of the land breeze.
I managed to get a word with Paul to ask him

whether he thought there was a probability of her
11
112 THE AFRICAN TRADER,

making her escape. ‘I pray God for the poor
slaves,’ he answered, ‘and hope English cruiser
still catch her,’

As may be supposed a very bright look out
was kept for the cruiser. As the day advanced
she was no where to be seen, and the captain,
anxious to make as quick a run as possible across
the Atlantic, the vessel’s head was turned to the
westward, the wind still blowing off shore. Still,
however, a haze hung over the ocean, sufficiently
thick to prevent objects being seen in the far dis-
tance. This seemed still further to favour the
escape of the slaver.

We had got some distance off the land when
the haze lifted, and away to the southward a sail
was seen, which the Spaniards at once seemed to
know was the British man-of-war. She saw us at
the same moment, and crowded all sail in chase.
The schooner was put before the wind, which now
came from the southward, and every stitch of “can-
vas she could carry was set, men also going aloft
with buckets of water to wet the sails.

Again the same scene of impotent rage I had
before witnessed was enacted, and the fury of the

Spaniards increased as they saw the man-of-war
THE CHASE. 113

gaining on us, she apparently having more wind
than we had.

I, as I had previously done, kept as much as I
could out of their way, and tried to prevent any
gleam of satisfaction appearing in my counten-
ance.

The man-of-war was a corvette—evidently a
powerful and very fast craft, against which the
slaver would not have had the shadow of a chance,
had even her crew possessed the courage to fight,
which I felt very sure, in spite of their bravado,
they would not.

The corvette had been bringing the breeze up
with her, and now the schooner felt it herself, and
began to move more rapidly through the water.
She, too, was a fast vessel, and her crew might
justly have entertained hopes of escaping. I little
thought of the cruel device they were contemplat-
ing to aid them in so doing.

At length the man-of-war had got almost near
enough to reach the slaver with her bow-chasers.
She tried the range of one of them, but the shot
fell short. On this the captain turned, with a
savage determination in his eye, and spoke to one

of the officers. Directly afterwards I saw him
8
114 THE AFRICAN TRADER. .

descend to the slave deck with two or three of the
men, and they quickly returned with one of the
unfortunate captives. Instantly the unhappy slave
was secured to a plank, and, in spite of his cries
and entreaties, hove overboard. As the poor
wretch floated astern I could not help recollecting
that the sea swarmed with sharks, and that he
would probably be seized before many minutes
were over by one of the ravenous monsters. I
. guessed the object of the Spaniards; it was con-
fiding in the humanity of my countrymen that they
would heave-to in order to pick up the poor black,
should he escape the sharks, and thus allow the
' schooner to gain ground,

The device answered the expectations of its
cruel perpetrators. The corvette hove-to, a boat
was lowered, and the slave taken up. - The
Spaniards seemed delighted with the result of their
experiment, and prepared to try it again, Another
slave was brought up on deck, and, like the former,
hove overboard. Scarcely had he reached the
water when a fearful shriek was heard, and the |
poor wretch and the plank together disappeared
below the surface. This, however, did not pre-
vent the Spaniards from again attempting the
THROWING SLAVES OVERBOARD. 115

plan to impede the progress of their pursuer, and
three more slaves were brought up.

Just then I heard several of the crew shouting
out ‘ El heretico !’ and what was my horror to see
them dragging Paul aft. He spoke to them in
such Spanish as he could command, but uttered no
cry, and when he understood their object, walked
calmly among them to the gangway.

I could not restrain myself, but ran up to him
and implored my English-speaking friend to plead
on his behalf.

‘Take care my lad, or you may be treated in
the same way,’ was the answer.

-¢Oh, but he has just heard of his mother, who
longs to see him, and I have promised to take him
to her,’ I cried out. ‘Ob, ask them if any of them
have mothers from whom they have been long
parted, would they not desire to see them again?
Will they not have compassion on my poor
friend ?’

‘Don’t grieve for me, Massa Harry,’ said Paul,
while the sailors were lashing him to the plank.
‘God take care of me. Give my lub to my moder,
and tell her I meet her in heaven, and she know

me den.’
116 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

In vain I pleaded. My friend seizing me by
the arm, dragged me away, while the savages hove
Paul overboard.

‘Go into my cabin,’ he exclaimed, ‘its your
only chance of safety.’

I saw, as he dragged me aft, that the
Spaniards were preparing to throw several other
slaves into the sea; and, as I turned my head, .
three in rapid succession were thrust through the
gangway, secured, as the others had been, to
floats.

My friend had not cautioned me without rea-
son, for I heard the crew clamouring for the
‘Englez.’ My friend went out to them, and on his
return told me that they wished to throw me into
the sea, but that he had advised them not to do so
lest after all the schooner should be captured,
when the captain of the man-of-war would cer-
tainly deal more hardly with them for having thus
treated a countryman.

I thanked him for interfering as far as I was
concerned, but, at the same time, could not help
observing that the English captain would consider
the crime of throwing any one overboard equally
great, whatever the colour of the sufferer.
HARRY IN DANGER. 117

‘Ah, we think little about the life of a black,’
he answered carelessly.

‘So it seems,’ I said, for I felt utterly horrified
at what I had witnessed.
indifference to my own fate bad crept over me.
‘Poor Paul! that the wretches should have treated
you thus,’ I said to myself. Then I remembered
how Paul would have acted, and I prayed that he
might be protected, though I confess I had little
expectation of his escaping the ravenous jaws of
a shark.

So eager was I to ascertain what had happened,
that had not my friend locked the door on me, in
spite of his warnings, I should have gone out
again to watch the progress of the chase. Some
time elapsed; I longed again to hear the sound of
the corvette’s guns, but in vain. The wind had
increased, as I could judge by the movement of
the vessel; and I at length began to fear that she
would after all escape.

Some hours passed away, my friend at length
came back. ‘You are hungry, I dare say,’ he said,
‘and you may come into the cabin and have some
supper, but it is not safe for you to go on deck,

the crew are angry at your having interfered about
118 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

the black seaman ; although our plan has answered,
for your good natured-countrymen, by stopping to
pick up the negroes, have enabled us to escape
them. A few of the wretches were, to be sure,
picked off by the sharks.’

‘Did my friend, the black sailor, escape?’ I
asked eagerly.

‘As to that I cannot say,’ he answered, ‘ un-
doubtedly some escaped, or the corvette would not
have hove-to so often. But come, the supper is
on the table.’

I declared that I had no appetite; but he in-
sisted upon my going into the cabin, and said that
he should be offended if I did not. ‘It would be
better for you also to put an indifferent face on the
matter,’ he added.

‘Those of the officers who came to supper were
laughing and talking in good spirits, and, as far as
I could judge, seemed to be amusing themselves
at my expense. I, however, had the wisdom to
follow my friend’s advice, and showed no signs of
annoyance. I confess, too, that the sight of the
food quickly restored my appetite.

When supper was over my friend advised me
to go back to my cabin. ‘We shall be far
WRECK OF THE SCHOONER. 119

away from the corvette by to-morrow morning,
and then you can come on deck if you like,’ he
observed.

As J lay in my berth the dreadful scenes I had
witnessed came constantly before my sight, and I
kept alternately hoping that Paul might have been
saved, and fearing that he was lost. For a long
time too it seemed I could not go to sleep. The
vessel also was pitching heavily, the sea dashed
against her sides, and I could hear the roaring and
whistling of the wind in her rigging; it was evi-
dently blowing very hard. At last I dropped off
tosleep. Iwas awakened by a loud crash, and the
fearful shrieks and cries which arose from the hold.

No longer heeding my friend’s caution, slipping
on my clothes, I rushed on deck. The schooner’s
masts had gone by the board, and she lay helpless
on the foaming ocean. The crew were shouting
and swearing as they endeavoured to cut away
the masts, which were battering against her sides,
while ever and anon a heavy sea striking her,
swept over her deck, and from the shrieks which
came up out of the waters a short distance away
to leeward, I had little doubt that several of the
people had been washed overboard. Fearing that
120 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

such might be my fate were I to remain on deck,
T hurried back again into the cabin. J knew that
nothing could be done till daylight, and that it
would be impossible to rig jury-masts until the sea
was somewhat smoother. Perhaps before then the
slaver and her living freight might be carried down
into the depths of ocean. I would not venture to
lie down, but sat in the cabin, ready to rush out
and make. an attempt for my life should such a
catastrophe appear imminent.

The night seemed very long. At length I saw
daylight through the bull’s-eye overhead, and the
movement of the vessel was less violent than
before. I could no longer restrain my curiosity,
and made my way on deck. The crew, much
diminished, were sheltering themselves under the
bulwarks, while the officers were collected in the
after part of the vessel. I saw that their eyes were
directed to windward, I looked in the same direction,
and there to my infinite satisfaction I caught sight
of the corvette standing towards us. I was glad
to see my English friend among the officers, but
the captain and first mate were gone. They had
been carried overboard. I felt that they deserved
their fate, terrible as it was.
PAUL ON BOARD THE CORVETTE. 121

The corvette soon came up, and hove-to to
windward ; a boat was lowered and pulled towards
us. I watched her eagerly. A lieutenant was
steering, and among her crew I observed a black
man. I tried to make out his features, but at that
distance it was impossible. The hope rose in my
breast that he might be Paul.

As the schooner still rolled heavily it was no easy
matter for the boat to get alongside without the risk
of being swamped. She at length came up under
our quarter. I looked anxiously over the bulwarks,
and to my joy saw that the black was indeed
Paul. He caught sight of me.

- All right Massa Harry,’ he shouted, ‘we soon
aboard, praise God that you safe.’

‘Silence!’ said the officer, for Paul had forgotten
the discipline of a man-of-war in speaking. At
that moment I thought I recognised the lieutenant’s
countenance ; yes, I was nearly certain it was my
cousin Jack Haultaught, whose yarns, when he was
a midshipman, first made me wish to go to sea.
He and his crew soon sprang on to the low deck
of the schooner, while the boat, with a couple of
hands in her, was veered astern.»

I first greeted Paul warmly. His joy at seeing
122 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

me was excessive, for he had been afraid that the
slavers would have thrown me overboard as they
had him, and as I had not been picked up thought
my life had been sacrificed. As my cousin Jack
did not know me I had time to talk to Paul.

‘Oh Massa Harry we must praise God for all
His mercy and goodness to us, what we think
going to be very bad for us He make turn out for
the best. The captain of the corvette, my old
friend, he good Christian man, he say he take me
to England with him, and then I see my dear
moder, and learn more of the Bible, and then
come back and preach the gospel to my poor
countrymen.’

The hatches, which had hitherto been kept
battened down, were now taken off. The five
hundred human beings crowded below were evi-
dence of the character of the vessel, and enabled
the lieutenant at once to claim her as a prize to
Her Majesty’s ship ‘ Triton.’

I do not wish to dwell on the fearful sight
which met our eyes as we looked down below on
the mass of humanity jammed, pressed, and huddled
together. And oh, the horrible odour which arose
from that foul hold! It seemed impossible that
COUSIN JACK. 123

human beings could have existed a minute in it,
much less the many hours during which those
unhappy people had been shut up during the gale.
How fearful would have been their sufferings had
they been compelled thus to make the passage
across the Atlantic. How enormous a proportion
of them would have died. As it was, many of
them had their limbs broken, and many were sadly
crushed and bruised.

At length I went up to the lieutenant and put
out my hand. ‘ You don’t know me, cousin Jack,’
I said.

‘What, Harry!’ he exclaimed, looking at me
hard. ‘Iam delighted to see youmy boy. The
negro sailor told me that there was a young
Englishman on board, but I did not expect to find
you. You will be welcome on board the ‘ Triton,’
and if you have a fancy for continuing at sea, I
think the captain will be able to enter you as a
supernumerary, and get you regularly appointed
when we return to England.

I told him that above all things it was what
T should like.

T now accompanied him to the ‘ Triton,’ carry-
ing with us the surviving officers of the slaver.
124 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

They were treated with scant ceremony, but with-
out any undue harshness, on board, and berthed
together in a cabin run up on the lower deck. I
was, however, able to speak a good word for the
officer who had treated me kindly, and been the
means of saving my life, and I was pleased to hear
the captain thank him, and afterwards the officers, to
show their sense of his conduct, invited him to mess
with them. He declined doing so, however. He
afterwards told my cousin Jack that in consequence



of the scenes he had witnessed he had resolved to
have nothing more to do with the slave trade.

‘It was a great temptation,’ he said. ‘I ex-
pected to make my fortune in a short time, and
that induced me to engage in the accursed trafic.’

The corvette now took the schooner in tow.
‘As soon as the sea was calm enough hands were
sent on board her to rig jury masts, and a course
was steered for Sierra Leone. The slaver, as may
be supposed, was condemned, the slaves liberated,
and the whole of them settled in the colony. Paul
entered on board the ‘ Triton,’ and I was placed as
a midshipman on her quarter-deck.

We cruised for a short time longer on the coast,
and captured another slaver, and then, as the cor-
HOME. 125

vette had been her due time on the station, she
was ordered home.

Jack, from having been at sea, had not heard
of the misfortunes of my family. ,

As goon as the ship was paid off he insisted on
accompanying me and Paul back to Liverpool.
We reached the house where I had left my sisters
under Mammy’s care. Flowers bloomed before
the windows, and there was an air of neatness and
comfort about the little abode which looked very
pleasing.

I begged Jack and Paul to remain outside while
I went in to prepare the inmates for their arrival.
Mammy opened the door. She seized me in her
arms the moment she saw me, and I did not at
all mind the kisses she bestowed on my cheeks,
though her lips were thick and her black face
shrivelled.

_* Your sisters up stairs, Massa Harry. They
go glad you come back,’ she exclaimed, and dragged
me along. She opened the door where they were
seated at work.

‘I have brought some strangers to see you,’ I
said, after our greetings were over. ‘ You remem-

ber our cousin Jack Haultaught; he insisted on
126 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

coming’, he is a first-rate capital fellow, and a true
friend of mine.’

‘We shall be very glad to see him and to thank
him,’ said Mary and Jane together.

‘And I shall be delighted,’ cried Emily. ‘I
recalled his giving me all sorts of curious things
when he came back from his first voyage. Tl
run down and ask him in.’

‘Mammy,’ I said, feeling very doubtful how I
could best prepare her for meeting her son. ‘ You
remember the commission you gave me, I did my
best to execute it. I asked all the people I met if
they knew Cheebo.’

‘ Ah, you no hear of him,’ said Mammy, with
a sigh.

‘I did not say that,’ IT answered. ‘ Mammy,
you believe that God hears your prayers.’

‘Yes, Massa Harry, J am sure He does,’ she
said, and then it seemed to flash across her that I
had something of interest to communicate about
her son.

‘You hear of Cheebo, he become Christian, oh
say dat, Massa Harry, say dat.’

‘ Yes, Mammy,’ I answered, taking her hand.
‘I not only heard of him, but J have seen him ;
MOTHER AND SON. 127

and, Mammy, do you think the joy would not be
too much for you if I were to tell you that I hope
you will see him too ?’ .

‘Oh, he is come! he is come!’ exclaimed
Mammy.

I made a sign to my sisters to remain with our
old nurse, whispering to Mary that I was going to
bring up her long lost son. I hurried down stairs,
and found that Emily had already invited Jack and
his companion into the house. I led Paul to the
door, and my sisters slipping out, we left the old
woman and ber son together.

And now it is time that I should bring my yarn
to a conclusion. Jack seemed to find Liverpool a
very delightful place; and perhaps it may account
for his so doing, when I say that before he went
away he asked my sister Mary to marry him. She
did not refuse. Soon afterwards he got his pro-
motion, which he well deserved for his activity and
zeal during his long service on the African coast.

Through the interest of the captain of the
‘Triton’ I got appointed to a man-of-war brig on
that station, where, being pretty well up to the
tricks of the slavers, I was instrumental in captur-

ing a number of vessels, and assisting to put down
128 THE AFRICAN TRADER.

the abominable slave trade. As a good deal of
prize money came into my pocket, I had the grati-
fication of sending home considerable sums to my
sisters. Mammy’s joy, when she found that not
only had her son become a Christian, but that her
husband had accepted the truth, was full. She
willingly parted with Paul when she heard of his
wish to become a missionary of the gospel. He
returned to Sierra Leone, and after remaining a
short time there, went on to Abeokuta, to labour
with others in spreading the glad tidings of salva-
tion among the dark-skinned sons of Africa.










xml version 1.0
xml-stylesheet type textxsl href daitss_disseminate_report_xhtml.xsl
REPORT xsi:schemaLocation 'http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitss http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitssdaitss2Report.xsd' xmlns:xsi 'http:www.w3.org2001XMLSchema-instance' xmlns 'http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitss'
DISSEMINATION IEID 'E20080808_AAAAES' PACKAGE 'UF00083402_00001' INGEST_TIME '2008-08-08T22:57:13-04:00'
AGREEMENT_INFO ACCOUNT 'UF' PROJECT 'UFDC'
DISSEMINATION_REQUEST NAME 'disseminate request placed' TIME '2013-12-09T17:24:39-05:00' NOTE 'request id: 298747; Dissemination from Lois and also Judy Russel see RT# 21871' AGENT 'Stephen'
finished' '2013-12-16T15:30:41-05:00' '' 'SYSTEM'
FILES
FILE SIZE '285732' DFID 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBG' ORIGIN 'DEPOSITOR' PATH 'sip-files00001.jp2'
MESSAGE_DIGEST ALGORITHM 'MD5' 780db5e433d0e726ab12ce3554b0f3bf
'SHA-1' c64a66d89526b902116cd8ec9ee9b2d677091d9b
EVENT '2011-11-08T02:09:31-05:00' OUTCOME 'success'
PROCEDURE describe
'227722' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBH' 'sip-files00001.jpg'
80791d89d731ff6b0848625d6c1c80e5
46101c5f0cae5ad220c3c5c82b5877088949e5a7
'2011-11-08T02:07:19-05:00'
describe
'307' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBI' 'sip-files00001.pro'
a961f3891ae28ac7284a1435d7860b94
9203bde2c2da298f7e170d70c6d7db4449829074
describe
'52971' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBJ' 'sip-files00001.QC.jpg'
8f9c3d1840fcbe55fd5a41be9b729550
90922bd1eb70ad9020e0d6397fc70151fb05da54
'2011-11-08T02:07:57-05:00'
describe
'6867536' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBK' 'sip-files00001.tif'
c713a71c5f830ce8090bab4a81c63dd1
5a8012a84fdf5c3a312c627e7b8d226d175dc8cb
'2011-11-08T02:08:43-05:00'
describe
'43' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBL' 'sip-files00001.txt'
e1ea959176e9476b84bd8622506871f1
2fa673b12fa3df4d5af25af4ac6773aa3a93f8f7
'2011-11-08T02:07:09-05:00'
describe
'10965' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBM' 'sip-files00001thm.jpg'
c61cf5c2cb135c143c84db4c9fc380b9
25e5468a374f60d8bd37e981f524b1bddacbece2
'2011-11-08T02:08:54-05:00'
describe
'275785' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBN' 'sip-files00002.jp2'
459594c418c2e2919743d96650a34dbf
449c3ded85e1ab3c43cbf33bef138814fd528b4f
'2011-11-08T02:09:38-05:00'
describe
'40745' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBO' 'sip-files00002.jpg'
e468f8c8e6b6497100874e616f625d83
ae965f7a460ab7fe78305582ea3907e471176430
'2011-11-08T02:09:27-05:00'
describe
'1561' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBP' 'sip-files00002.pro'
79d13f6861559c062caba92168e119ee
d39be51cf74e4934c786381ae27248d325acd21c
'2011-11-08T02:08:17-05:00'
describe
'11089' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBQ' 'sip-files00002.QC.jpg'
e8b62c62191d60667b0d56e564ad478e
2464ac2ccac7946c2a6c36abc4d1f978a909dfb8
'2011-11-08T02:07:12-05:00'
describe
'6625032' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBR' 'sip-files00002.tif'
86393eb9a1c96e44a57f4031fcb286c3
e36e2ec5430f2ccae7f1c67755c299cb2ce5d5f7
'2011-11-08T02:08:29-05:00'
describe
'155' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBS' 'sip-files00002.txt'
6ace1d3ad0f1356473953c6240f2c12f
1a1fcb14dec225555e8bff458e8e42468f684ade
'2011-11-08T02:09:17-05:00'
describe
WARNING CODE 'Daitss::Anomaly' Invalid character
'3520' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBT' 'sip-files00002thm.jpg'
a368bfdc9c799c9ede4079f436b1f2f0
9f0dcbafc358581622dfb5f6cc433b9702690a41
'2011-11-08T02:09:24-05:00'
describe
'250005' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBU' 'sip-files00003.jp2'
a6d6a0b0c1a46be6156675506c3dfd44
5352b31c2eb540403d1e58e14b1e1556bbafa8df
'2011-11-08T02:07:32-05:00'
describe
'47469' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBV' 'sip-files00003.jpg'
01335b2d7a3292faf6005fc55fc19d66
2f56c4501552be9492afc77891a332544315850b
'2011-11-08T02:09:06-05:00'
describe
'1141' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBW' 'sip-files00003.pro'
b98b1f7ebaf9a81ea213af93a67cc5c5
18cd686040d2278bbc65e040f335044fc3aa2950
'2011-11-08T02:09:04-05:00'
describe
'17265' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBX' 'sip-files00003.QC.jpg'
f57a4d3b7218c76c820b40eaf0730356
fad1fdbd06f78d7f3bf669156d2bd67fd3fa49b2
'2011-11-08T02:08:56-05:00'
describe
'6006896' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBY' 'sip-files00003.tif'
55d3dd0d34e8c87863396d3752178faf
09a8c989e40004dccab30937c33d8e2b75df701d
'2011-11-08T02:08:24-05:00'
describe
'55' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJBZ' 'sip-files00003.txt'
f9d5cc7bf7a9786d778fc33df46274a7
e33ed3a054f74ca09f71821096d8b78cda53468d
'2011-11-08T02:06:18-05:00'
describe
'5854' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCA' 'sip-files00003thm.jpg'
59675d97378ad9b003887b60b8363922
e2e705dddf635d9090f59824ffaea24592e78117
'2011-11-08T02:07:10-05:00'
describe
'234982' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCB' 'sip-files00006.jp2'
46fe4315646bed01d95be2f5ac425d6d
06f3fe86183a30e19e92fb52b7cdcf66a6dfdf79
'2011-11-08T02:10:09-05:00'
describe
'156814' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCC' 'sip-files00006.jpg'
794f650a497b9f7e80c9ccda4aa9b50f
34cc77a964b6484a738158fc7b9ec6b1550be6b1
'2011-11-08T02:08:31-05:00'
describe
'2860' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCD' 'sip-files00006.pro'
d49b955753290208337e124d6daf41aa
46e58621e71fba074e386a7e0717e797cc4ab064
'2011-11-08T02:07:04-05:00'
describe
'39910' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCE' 'sip-files00006.QC.jpg'
6fff1b9f30b5e6a7da84e691de75c6ff
a21d6809d0f54d92a90d4d2c4b1b4b67c7e8e3ae
'2011-11-08T02:09:20-05:00'
describe
'5650236' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCF' 'sip-files00006.tif'
f0fbf0dbe9db1d201b3a6e83c2568970
f53ceb4b3e401717f240affc4cc78834661900a9
'2011-11-08T02:08:04-05:00'
describe
'273' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCG' 'sip-files00006.txt'
26b1307f63598a173cfc1c951023b10e
9f2cd34a0f33776315d5392140eb3e2e83dbf358
'2011-11-08T02:07:05-05:00'
describe
'10991' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCH' 'sip-files00006thm.jpg'
60ee57b74a31f09fd2ab06e5d99d9344
84ca8962588a3ddbf70275cde3130538cb159973
'2011-11-08T02:09:54-05:00'
describe
'234159' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCI' 'sip-files00007.jp2'
afa41676c5d34cb08597dda3cfc37cd8
a779408bf470e82fdef436168f8fe11a6940fb14
'2011-11-08T02:07:51-05:00'
describe
'82463' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCJ' 'sip-files00007.jpg'
0f2aa6b6a897d13084936b80dd36c3fa
d61405584c0509e0cf4b82122a98e159676b553f
'2011-11-08T02:07:25-05:00'
describe
'5556' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCK' 'sip-files00007.pro'
8f505b0ff5d4349be649e1ed42eff9a6
ee74d257176bc8b7a61ad18411482db8d1148a14
'2011-11-08T02:08:59-05:00'
describe
'25811' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCL' 'sip-files00007.QC.jpg'
197998e44ddc43f8eaba2881438139e2
6c4ca0189a69574f9884f5c23101924474efbf84
'2011-11-08T02:09:39-05:00'
describe
'5627996' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCM' 'sip-files00007.tif'
a3e7b780e4320a05a95d0ffab3bbb7ef
ef863de97299587d6dad1138e1230dfefa9e8f95
'2011-11-08T02:08:00-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCN' 'sip-files00007.txt'
abef9c9e318fb3bfb4ef9296b53d5b5d
fd4ba129054d0ee0bbebcf3b120b09bbb3734d43
'2011-11-08T02:09:34-05:00'
describe
'8672' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCO' 'sip-files00007thm.jpg'
90fc8fbd6678df9e8e5bb66df4accec0
e238e7905d58e5529cc976d81fa270039f719232
'2011-11-08T02:07:42-05:00'
describe
'208481' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCP' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
676eb9c190430644b99636fea92ace6d
50c66fe84f552bdbcef254a82819959ef6e073d1
describe
'9077' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCQ' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
f6334ce63bd62c45819d94086cac59d2
a2689cda1ef287d077243082c58e95db67118a65
'2011-11-08T02:09:44-05:00'
describe
'2410' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCR' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
6c294ce06f292215e92bbf73824a8bd0
593300566fd8beea1d55b379dc3cbb391a5181ac
'2011-11-08T02:07:54-05:00'
describe
'1878136' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCS' 'sip-files00008.tif'
da9af7a5f369f6398cc38a25e941b364
074cbff57919b8735fd6e8f912fcfba982c5392d
'2011-11-08T02:08:21-05:00'
describe
'937' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCT' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
fd192887f2ea15f4addf87d28bf70382
5d3b8068f573535200a92c6527b0177f099a1a73
describe
'233942' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCU' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
e48895dc401bb124757bf33d8fdc86af
8aa8b252c560f502a00dfc016250ae6ee02cc16e
'2011-11-08T02:07:41-05:00'
describe
'54821' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCV' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
b428f4423568774d2f1d9e5b8119b5fa
a2ff7a341479a3485504a299a378846d4bcb0d92
'2011-11-08T02:08:11-05:00'
describe
'17196' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCW' 'sip-files00009.pro'
2b8db1b242e63dc418cc6ba8f16d9388
9e263a8d8f08b5025e61f34a0be95a8d64c4ea71
'2011-11-08T02:08:15-05:00'
describe
'17864' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCX' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
44319a785e18497e8b1356b2ae1c725f
ec49e32d592edcfa4e007087bcf3a5314a0a8e98
'2011-11-08T02:09:14-05:00'
describe
'1879528' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCY' 'sip-files00009.tif'
eb2452a6d5c6d977d850bb8a1b33d8d6
21bacd75feffd5f3b20944643aedc4cacc8c335e
'2011-11-08T02:09:51-05:00'
describe
'909' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJCZ' 'sip-files00009.txt'
ee7d1776f334e681632c6aa273d39340
172e245d63ef06c4dd8b6276ebd5d4bcd59dc319
'2011-11-08T02:07:24-05:00'
describe
'5085' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDA' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
61a9fa8e2b1255d5b49efecbf4c394f3
4ebb7835c69bc0285515e2c8121815ff26e81440
'2011-11-08T02:09:12-05:00'
describe
'234207' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDB' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
24bf28882514be17e1698ecfb3930a17
0f6d35355f5208b85632f171a89bb75d707a1f92
'2011-11-08T02:07:45-05:00'
describe
'99440' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDC' 'sip-files00010.jpg'
97553b474825875019ea76c63522f560
67b0c9e9b508dc1921ae6354cc2a655c4c1b21c4
'2011-11-08T02:08:40-05:00'
describe
'35231' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDD' 'sip-files00010.pro'
eb145a86193aae44bb962ca9c468f8fb
b3e54377a834dc2a5e3346d43a54cae8bbbe9d4c
describe
'32844' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDE' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
3edeb575f737dfc1d64e090dd1ea5a4f
5fb2e3d32f0aa1afca998bda0af2cc855e4a10ab
'2011-11-08T02:07:48-05:00'
describe
'1882328' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDF' 'sip-files00010.tif'
011eb5f2739c54560229d14f38b60d34
5dc9b61d414817a7bcefaa1846de2b2cc83ab0e3
'2011-11-08T02:09:09-05:00'
describe
'1622' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDG' 'sip-files00010.txt'
00e263187e14b770e97f37fe8203a235
c3b3d2750c88b3f6625a0997db1ebb25be898eca
'2011-11-08T02:09:35-05:00'
describe
'9244' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDH' 'sip-files00010thm.jpg'
78867f8d5256ee6aba6407c35f076b28
c0db0acff70aead6ca18f1fd62b3b97508490f12
describe
'233949' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDI' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
72a967c9e0d198062de6b50218a6bba0
9d9e890c1e3b80a4b13f11c0b8dcaf530b1221d9
'2011-11-08T02:09:05-05:00'
describe
'80621' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDJ' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
e5f76c2e6d5ea3d4c4c0c6356ab8e352
01116bf9eb3455f4e20240729a603b699d0d72b3
'2011-11-08T02:09:56-05:00'
describe
'27982' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDK' 'sip-files00011.pro'
e5d0c8a8ccdcbe35078746f7f35b23f0
8e0b89099114c39b75c42b2240bd221fc3b7efc9
'2011-11-08T02:08:19-05:00'
describe
'26419' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDL' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
e2d155ce06473c9e1501dcaad899ef03
d5e41313eb9647704b459742e7e0c807c4652fbf
'2011-11-08T02:07:56-05:00'
describe
'1880116' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDM' 'sip-files00011.tif'
4b0dab4d9bcfa7ae625bf1376616cda6
a858c3aa9879682cea9a673b8dfc5eff4b54ae38
'2011-11-08T02:07:06-05:00'
describe
'1324' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDN' 'sip-files00011.txt'
12ebf513c88ffdeacbaaa6aada87d075
989a68d1ba63c6a657c264b6ddf22ba775d535ee
'2011-11-08T02:07:17-05:00'
describe
'7361' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDO' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
304eafaa60d90d56945d6f3d692d5c3f
a42760d648eb08cf1c281051c1fa4723e81cf5a1
'2011-11-08T02:07:34-05:00'
describe
'233981' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDP' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
f4d12cb6e5d47ce06f9fdf32dbf89476
f8eb53495a77f7ac14f8733f4f61a9f47aa4da20
describe
'70577' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDQ' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
e4d55cd3326fc4ca01f1be69cfef4a69
d3e611b6be4ee67be9b417df6a8874ea2eaabac7
'2011-11-08T02:07:08-05:00'
describe
'22016' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDR' 'sip-files00012.pro'
5dc929986ad8a792d1477fd3d73c106b
38f310fb223391e9a73d6e0bb8a67bc47191f11d
'2011-11-08T02:09:16-05:00'
describe
'22845' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDS' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
32152be6fd6729dbb47fbc956f06f6ca
75ede451ff8310d7adb0d5c0250c51441b84506e
'2011-11-08T02:09:01-05:00'
describe
'1879700' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDT' 'sip-files00012.tif'
4c2f3fe4d2189a7bb1419589ae47e7bd
1db76b15169f9e614ff64100494422c569a5b0e6
'2011-11-08T02:09:18-05:00'
describe
'1042' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDU' 'sip-files00012.txt'
756bdab0b55c54da1ed329bfe24df408
b114ea11852d42f7f00646e552b99b8b7f82bb84
'2011-11-08T02:07:44-05:00'
describe
'6616' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDV' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
d03560b312a1d177ad20753c55608305
6929de6b8d4c591cdea6b07306c4140736535737
'2011-11-08T02:09:32-05:00'
describe
'190524' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDW' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
525d7053aa8a24b0a022ef32e131cdf7
cae0d2ccb100ebecc8421139de33e80576afae88
describe
'20063' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDX' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
f6e76c95219e07ec990faf417aa1543c
3f00ef37e72dce13690b997f7466bac5c2151fa0
'2011-11-08T02:07:39-05:00'
describe
'1765' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDY' 'sip-files00013.pro'
d7ef60e8274644a61c5421ae463d34c4
b4214d9854020a596df01a7fd996b92e06811355
describe
'6515' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJDZ' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
0313ecbcaacbabd3a3e7d6eeb2f0aad2
dd33400d750df904ba40bda25775ca281708c4de
'2011-11-08T02:08:18-05:00'
describe
'1878580' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEA' 'sip-files00013.tif'
926fe19d4e8b878bb91d5b9b48d031a9
809ebb4cefaed3bc79f6473f4873d621e4fca1df
'2011-11-08T02:09:00-05:00'
describe
'105' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEB' 'sip-files00013.txt'
dddc5979ec88f4bc1b9203f43b49f606
dd8485bf98eea8923e4dac34483516caa715a818
'2011-11-08T02:09:03-05:00'
describe
'2048' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEC' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
587afc7e65127f5dd7d6642b902c8b97
c9db57a46b1d92af7eb0c0bf5306801685d96a1f
'2011-11-08T02:08:25-05:00'
describe
'233792' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJED' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
935a9ea89032ffb298b5799db5ae2bce
9b484a5b094e3f71461ec4dff052002dd56e6c34
describe
'8736' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEE' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
d3a7370391d1e35ca228eb21db0646ba
3315d7b4d4329eeef1f7a440325528da4b4a1bb8
'2011-11-08T02:07:28-05:00'
describe
'2628' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEF' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
160261cac85f36e0b5cd155e7bc7f6a4
2d6e583e0b3fe3781d718c112e904351aefea710
'2011-11-08T02:08:26-05:00'
describe
'1878132' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEG' 'sip-files00014.tif'
3ce7953ddd0ad42e59e2245c0c4e074f
45815d86da096e9d86080c810782dbb8534499ab
describe
'938' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEH' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
8fcd0697bc8f5a087a8456f119269054
a0793fc74ab80a9ef1df6492d59556372df6f353
'2011-11-08T02:07:16-05:00'
describe
'233876' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEI' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
6a8b7c71212568efabe75ab9ae4b70df
8491417ccdb3eeb8885fbfe16eb53b525f276156
'2011-11-08T02:07:33-05:00'
describe
'64966' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEJ' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
6b048f8141d6339b630464b3e8da4c51
de3f12ae8f74eae87a1897f63269c49295e73610
'2011-11-08T02:07:47-05:00'
describe
'16325' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEK' 'sip-files00015.pro'
8fa879c6354cf268dc5337216583f1fd
fa81244fc84c5731adda7b83f301cca4ea3cb0ed
describe
'22411' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEL' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
0ae9d4db4e0617fb9a52ca7deeecae1d
3dad2f6129dfeac40505d97989ae9aaaa7090387
'2011-11-08T02:07:36-05:00'
describe
'1879848' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEM' 'sip-files00015.tif'
8c35f36b80f5c9b40545d41d36fc5998
8ee30b6a6ff0d7c25ac7231d507cbaca62c69092
'2011-11-08T02:09:36-05:00'
describe
'761' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEN' 'sip-files00015.txt'
8ac19326659bd2a3bc3f42b134640d8e
7cdf72a4dca9445b3a7093c4b01d0c6044d677c5
describe
'6385' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEO' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
21b43b14e0fd0cc09880ca8de9bb3d57
1908a2424c17f05a938f0bb4584e9b4d9b845f2a
describe
'233886' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEP' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
c9fdbe6d3a6e16cbfdcc23d4872a1790
3d582e21b6af36af5fa2cb24fda7e5f7443440a2
describe
'113259' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEQ' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
eb7327c1cf95b805b224a6a13b1a857f
618371b979e20415945f0898e29fdbbb9b6717cf
'2011-11-08T02:09:22-05:00'
describe
'29389' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJER' 'sip-files00016.pro'
15ee47c20d4e07b50ce7394569d7eabe
f2bad176a273e3fd1fab8a6fb15697896270a4e1
describe
'43726' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJES' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
7f74fcd466137e99336e1a8c5a391ca9
7a5cf0e943d49f766e0176a8046d205c9dbc7d39
'2011-11-08T02:08:14-05:00'
describe
'1881020' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJET' 'sip-files00016.tif'
ff502db5475fce1bfca9c1fabace59af
778c61713a8de2cc2fbe59975f6f1d007924cf9a
describe
'1228' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEU' 'sip-files00016.txt'
0946c3047942877ce87bca2a1f7a94c6
dad5eef728665ff335714aa30824963f14dd3c3f
'2011-11-08T02:08:33-05:00'
describe
'11570' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEV' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
2dba3c85845eea9a4210181210e5f1dc
d8292212c4bfcbf84fdfd78f3881a36197d9e09e
'2011-11-08T02:08:12-05:00'
describe
'249807' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEW' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
b9c09cbcc443707ecdc50ef6777d8e53
3887caa9e02cdeee3022350765d0078dde5183c9
'2011-11-08T02:08:08-05:00'
describe
'114448' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEX' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
d95ed8a6d64ee228c542c894703867de
cd6d6f115d8709bd0f6be9d73cbf57ba73cfa85d
describe
'29278' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEY' 'sip-files00017.pro'
4ea10e568fef7339c54ee4168676a559
086a251b20062642521e44e451210d7685ab426c
'2011-11-08T02:08:01-05:00'
describe
'44112' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJEZ' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
6f57e55f34872dd253c7ff14475e0493
97c7fedc4778e3647fa22ff119d877552aaa9480
describe
'2007712' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFA' 'sip-files00017.tif'
fe85eb0a72a432d5edc9e04a73759193
45775694f0331d27645d97a726672a0bd7e98022
describe
'1224' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFB' 'sip-files00017.txt'
983cadd0c69ba7ee23fc64c0d62c3cc3
a51edd6acd876643d2b85592e5a11d460ec068b0
describe
'10759' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFC' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
50eb8d7fc71ee239e2b07e7fa5f413b8
7aeaa896ffc6ba97c6e97b8d4c93f7ed14a51475
'2011-11-08T02:08:38-05:00'
describe
'233975' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFD' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
d028efb572383cbef2e6d451098ed26f
e6e33c07b762922fc68a6c3bb751b5fc1d8217f5
'2011-11-08T02:09:08-05:00'
describe
'110251' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFE' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
c59d1954ea34c9448748be8f921010aa
c58aa7ea238448017341f34c4f38c87ee3c6768b
'2011-11-08T02:09:50-05:00'
describe
'28126' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFF' 'sip-files00018.pro'
e52326a523ebf014b946ddc4ffe7985b
5281190be7ae894b026a868d9d61898d3c6a600b
'2011-11-08T02:08:22-05:00'
describe
'34751' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFG' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
d75eef09478334113a0aa036ddd753d1
8d2ece58f8b41af1d9e7b6a6c80f50126ae9aa87
'2011-11-08T02:07:43-05:00'
describe
'1881004' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFH' 'sip-files00018.tif'
60c10352d3df8cfcef16135eab2885cc
f036a45ed52f9ee1202dbac5327ea449521a96f7
'2011-11-08T02:09:55-05:00'
describe
'1172' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFI' 'sip-files00018.txt'
5e3fd81744c2bb7e3d1ba708b84aa8b9
571a5392bea5759d885dbcebe614ba9be04dee81
describe
'11589' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFJ' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
f535533162a7354b2a09f6cc48dab8c5
24fbe547c11f352cf66c3c1373fcfe79399bb59a
'2011-11-08T02:09:52-05:00'
describe
'233929' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFK' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
2c50b42a72932f38bf282e66e4ff2d45
ef84da60566c4fffa9f054decf3c046b33973078
'2011-11-08T02:08:47-05:00'
describe
'123681' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFL' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
d0a0390e2e030a568e1e73a3ffe5f377
49153d5745022750d1024c0e707e63c8fb2c35b9
'2011-11-08T02:07:20-05:00'
describe
'32718' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFM' 'sip-files00019.pro'
bca037b9955e9ce128bbee1e895f7a71
637c9ed193d3b797cadb290bd375c35b3d3c6ee0
'2011-11-08T02:10:03-05:00'
describe
'41000' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFN' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
88d6f6cf1e525087aed61b80006b1c04
185ece9a56007c4a28f82ff6bc922e992361ade0
describe
'1881376' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFO' 'sip-files00019.tif'
6e0c85c19aa92a565895e4cc1dff54d2
162ea4439aacd671714d4b455f40697e2f0655dd
'2011-11-08T02:08:58-05:00'
describe
'1323' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFP' 'sip-files00019.txt'
f7e38aad04cf3f6b52763989d257c844
ec73b2938b77d11455d697190952961cbc94d05c
describe
'12284' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFQ' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
d4b974cbb3e49c01f8f3fac021dab1b6
67cd2bed18796d4c9492a74736a0eed34dafc653
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFR' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
b9ddceb4a68e7ab34f9e2cbaefdf011b
a1721fd56b502ad0acb007ce6f9928f2bd8bec79
'2011-11-08T02:07:21-05:00'
describe
'114533' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFS' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
4bd5e8c097283907e35ec19812261c2c
c097a7a499f6b84f394a243ef3a6ae9bdd554eb4
'2011-11-08T02:07:35-05:00'
describe
'29289' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFT' 'sip-files00020.pro'
9208df542bf725441e2551ac7f3908a4
1c170155745306f7875922b320c3d2c3b1d6df99
'2011-11-08T02:08:34-05:00'
describe
'42750' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFU' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
7ad6eb8c850ef49e8f4b5de3eb8e08de
2fd81bc5d49cd5c8d4fca1d23cb48be61baf28c3
describe
'1880956' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFV' 'sip-files00020.tif'
09cfba623c1609ea2714d91ef9c04abf
44f4587a5f595231c2e952762b4d9ea9a9686168
'2011-11-08T02:09:46-05:00'
describe
'1218' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFW' 'sip-files00020.txt'
19c7ba969aaeca9d52c436a45129c436
f63535d1624d21817a90635f34103ed9a56e16f1
'2011-11-08T02:08:32-05:00'
describe
'11584' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFX' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
861754c168d0109b61b15ab52e93824c
b99e20878641d72e022687ea04b8f1041ddb1f30
'2011-11-08T02:08:09-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFY' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
067c54b48675f51d594514321447b6af
9e9f0ef43f998fdf47a92e835ef5e5c886fe91b7
describe
'115166' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJFZ' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
8d82a6982d7c1cdff72894280866a8cc
74d19f4c27c1d9edaae7b0b4fb8dc0370e76ddd7
'2011-11-08T02:07:11-05:00'
describe
'29566' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGA' 'sip-files00021.pro'
19d2921e86c2e69f070c243992599969
6a3d8d7e190d48fc44b6b742939966fc3c009310
'2011-11-08T02:09:57-05:00'
describe
'39576' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGB' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
be9479c383a991320b5e3c5a5ec67916
92fc1beb36ac7502865eebc62ead64b40d894737
'2011-11-08T02:07:18-05:00'
describe
'1882992' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGC' 'sip-files00021.tif'
a2384ce75be10b050bf25fbc6440eb93
5214eca714da0599c43a19431cc1a1df8de1b94a
describe
'1256' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGD' 'sip-files00021.txt'
7b316f436d6983313d200167266eb476
416b66d1ca1d6ef755c8447844f6ed4ee3b04e87
describe
'11748' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGE' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
d55b350d5be7370a2ae5ac965ef89e75
307e485cfcf35e24fd5423d8bbb2a81d6077409d
describe
'233977' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGF' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
9af4cf9da0f5b53cbc8c4145bce130c1
1c84b5f1f8101bff5926776993c6b0339b4c023d
'2011-11-08T02:08:16-05:00'
describe
'123639' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGG' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
ebafded40ddab6fd6feb82f3547e78f2
42a814be8dc6a10e9847da5ee2e342e97c9cb6f3
describe
'31210' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGH' 'sip-files00022.pro'
426baeed89a5a18a6d754932028d2d5f
9fc6650fbf6ff703b0fe3f2085bc8ddeb7656f07
describe
'40507' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGI' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
10b81f150197d71665fced92e8453b17
8bd0e4705f8b6f3d889fbf9e0ffa0eb4b9a3e4ae
describe
'1881084' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGJ' 'sip-files00022.tif'
47048b0cfa67c6b4cf71c9550834cb21
c4b7aad2a757a4f48804ef56229793d4e7036fe7
describe
'1282' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGK' 'sip-files00022.txt'
8f10146ef7232a60426edab379c8e15b
a75830473584253ef5ab2e6086a36c90bc2087a9
'2011-11-08T02:09:25-05:00'
describe
'12155' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGL' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
f1398c38b5ccce6d1af5802a65a5bb19
f7e96df3e09cb6b50a8af8068783261b9e744224
describe
'233982' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGM' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
6c0f928c7f4b82c667f1621412c00b5d
931627de0020dbcf29dc3304cca2c0b2aff7db8c
describe
'109403' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGN' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
947cd2f5b5a88802690f3f35d142e04f
9ad68f26fd61180155c755c514ef634af278125d
describe
'27667' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGO' 'sip-files00023.pro'
e630b7fd4eef4244720db727a5a02b5e
e13d33cc53f10da7da9882f2f721153d3f5a9d45
'2011-11-08T02:10:02-05:00'
describe
'41224' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGP' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
6d4356c1e641a4a7ef8573b483906401
2ace6f83ac02aa92646ee0622584139bc33137d3
'2011-11-08T02:08:48-05:00'
describe
'1881008' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGQ' 'sip-files00023.tif'
dac1e0d2c73de12da343ae17730a2cf4
a107d80bf6227b73c3658c2351b2f837097d3764
describe
'1182' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGR' 'sip-files00023.txt'
a9a4b34095532749f282022a2e6e0353
8f9e958370ad18d60ad2020aaa5d55e19d291e7e
'2011-11-08T02:09:02-05:00'
describe
'11185' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGS' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
7bcd59bd0db10588d0859d84c731b58a
d35fccaee0537008565675f8aae035075f4a66b4
'2011-11-08T02:07:13-05:00'
describe
'233851' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGT' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
41d79f171c742f27cfe07a38ab848ed5
6d0c99e69a281017b7f38f297b645e5a07a836c7
describe
'118218' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGU' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
610f1613122e0d0cb95807f1cebf7fae
f41e2df9fd84f610fd8b3f84d7e2f24b0b8a3f3d
describe
'30779' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGV' 'sip-files00024.pro'
afa35165cd02d199474509fb49559eb0
67dc6c6ed65ac5b280a4188a4ca3c8d512aa8629
describe
'41463' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGW' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
5cddb14b7c5785937bef5c6226112c62
d0acdf2803071dcf8a9b0a509d5ea57ed96eee5b
describe
'1880244' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGX' 'sip-files00024.tif'
3eb21e53d9fde376c8daf66e0bf858ff
406095cf1ec810575c125a9504931558116dda0b
'2011-11-08T02:07:53-05:00'
describe
'1274' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGY' 'sip-files00024.txt'
d059bb772984e332300b4cb0ca72433a
f7b628d6d18e0b107b6acc63c0bac0acd27da4fe
'2011-11-08T02:08:06-05:00'
describe
'11906' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJGZ' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
ca4d484b99f798897a4387b11c09e1d2
fe7f425a4f333f7c6d78c48c297763736a6d437b
describe
'234174' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHA' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
731d763598db9a1458cdf328b1e8bbb0
92d332874ee9d344d628c42a5ddd3d4f709b4655
describe
'113530' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHB' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
ccee53bf37e334bed424ca8a52e887e1
16cb86c5b859ffe1eb4ccab7d13b2e510003e7bf
'2011-11-08T02:08:45-05:00'
describe
'28322' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHC' 'sip-files00025.pro'
a5d933a6ca6178338cbb9a56978c5718
cacd3f397c167f6ab8712a05f02b8a2ecb847a7c
describe
'39567' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHD' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
5d044e5356b53b0674d5efda8d1e8399
a6b38b805dc972f809af2242f579dff53120d2ab
'2011-11-08T02:10:20-05:00'
describe
'1882868' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHE' 'sip-files00025.tif'
526e29e6e1f559c5ec2710d2bbcef398
8d6a9f9957f7581c61c8447ed6fee6418aab6a29
'2011-11-08T02:09:15-05:00'
describe
'1206' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHF' 'sip-files00025.txt'
9dbbc680d74d59675a9ad44927b8d762
c58be7064307ff70c34f2f709ede5eb95d76aa62
'2011-11-08T02:07:31-05:00'
describe
'11572' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHG' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
bf2e503044790603a4cce83ba51921ae
2ef88f0c28cc7892b12958bffa18bc724810c0a2
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHH' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
e8088e2826db1985d2ca80b1e4262816
246c299388be7de62b4fc1b80171045dc53dccc9
'2011-11-08T02:09:42-05:00'
describe
'108236' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHI' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
418d30c0065e6e54154a743777a34245
69f8fa5f19b4ac19760180af7d8dd9def0270bce
describe
'28498' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHJ' 'sip-files00026.pro'
a26a5f05d4d74b071475dd7758b140d0
25cffccdc34bd2987b4c7ae228fd9f529ae65cc6
describe
'38982' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHK' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
a3a8d15900f65a87cbabf101fe6659ca
c787def99480abf247781f6ed67f7f6a132c6f76
'2011-11-08T02:09:13-05:00'
describe
'1882872' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHL' 'sip-files00026.tif'
0f3abc329cdd5ea4aab250f4eb4dcc01
ce89390fad09e621771135d70b7a188b1fa67128
describe
'1189' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHM' 'sip-files00026.txt'
461592c8a2aac17b62a37e2bf1f1a92b
83416c572c03a69424b07a3e1e47e96c79c3d097
describe
'11066' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHN' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
0ac358c1c9e7d49bbf530d6ef6f9583a
19e9c2875a7b25372043dc91a8778d55dd42d682
describe
'233966' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHO' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
e61cd3db477ca34af3b39ce2f8615af9
71fb789462e88b5dee3036883cc73cc004a01195
describe
'105546' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHP' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
5f4180dbd7f92407ad122bfa90d4bc5b
4309c633144e7601d47646f8b085bc7c3e7dd852
'2011-11-08T02:09:53-05:00'
describe
'26409' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHQ' 'sip-files00027.pro'
8825e559b5e8ef1dbe7338022c83d4ac
b878db4f52212d11aa45fffb43034720527a316d
describe
'38649' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHR' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
ba8cebb3238356abbccd55faae69c421
a07aeef883a533f561eb0ab979d65d15faec7f6d
describe
'1880996' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHS' 'sip-files00027.tif'
6826a6422daf4d8739f0611856bbac9f
45b137644d484567bc40f73230f23a6029f08f50
'2011-11-08T02:07:15-05:00'
describe
'1129' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHT' 'sip-files00027.txt'
ccf5fb4f97046dfdd5802822d6309205
a109e33978c03290159323b1cb0c047e69b7a3c6
describe
'10749' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHU' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
76e086c298976a8d993c706df41ebb5e
85c41efe0f97e211b6327b35c94b7f706aa4a34c
describe
'234202' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHV' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
8eea7de22ec53d902e6075f7cb1746cd
a958d2936b460cb28e65a9580cc74052d1c309dc
describe
'87818' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHW' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
fbeb060488ea90beccf3601447c7dbd9
ce696738a12526d50ab3e52480b24173b0f04db5
'2011-11-08T02:09:29-05:00'
describe
'23067' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHX' 'sip-files00028.pro'
657dcd78030f387a12c66d9508e8cae7
eea98213a025dea30c7ca9e3f0cf13ff476078d5
describe
'30623' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHY' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
a16829a3a4ab9a63fbef8feba026a701
5e66c2b3813306ee632dae6e2e69a9726f4ac8ff
describe
'1882176' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJHZ' 'sip-files00028.tif'
9253b4e2471fd85354714e7517e0f928
faa0a24cf290acb86950872bbddfd3d93299b869
describe
'1028' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIA' 'sip-files00028.txt'
4aeb40b7cab8daf3b3fafc3828cf3e4c
67ef67e196818e5bf82416897f4f92ed19e06f06
describe
'8975' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIB' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
5b70aa293456e2e8b6575affeff0b4b1
816a3cf4e0c94f9baf3a1c79f1bb983b93709b3b
describe
'234194' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIC' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
754a18fbaec108c28dde211b688df5ef
767a5d94dfdcf45b7c2d69a48f4f8a73a5c2286a
'2011-11-08T02:09:37-05:00'
describe
'117855' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJID' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
e9e3a7e31f745bbb1540f31eec642725
4d40f6f691625276ea96eef099978abd043fc335
describe
'29887' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIE' 'sip-files00029.pro'
4aced1e4a29d3b5d13e1b328d66cc46d
9d14e8f760a9fd82ba7207aeb15641bb1f6b648b
describe
'40648' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIF' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
1ca7721f592033c4ed3e030e1f10b1d5
f5e8033dc12c930b90aff8a21b03eff1d52b38fe
describe
'1883028' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIG' 'sip-files00029.tif'
e5f48220b73be9f9b2a78921d0fbbf3f
9ca51f7dbc8ea53102de899f373169f735a62517
describe
'1247' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIH' 'sip-files00029.txt'
ddea3489e92091febf7050237ffbe268
076b57d82f752095a108eba70acad0f7aad856e3
'2011-11-08T02:07:50-05:00'
describe
'11677' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJII' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
294a790ff20893b4991f0e64827f8033
3e875337044cd389778be65ff81cc201837f8ed9
'2011-11-08T02:08:50-05:00'
describe
'233894' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIJ' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
9310e73ea5f5a59c30c500046538b379
cc5b3dc6dde42ba85f638eb3ee9104ff92ab698c
describe
'111127' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIK' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
1fad28333be3e1ab4476543e03a6be1c
f15108e5c75a7e01ab833c84664d0850222901a6
'2011-11-08T02:08:20-05:00'
describe
'28896' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIL' 'sip-files00030.pro'
c84da4c10ecd754a84aa4a23560b231e
da2c8f66762300e9ff6435b373eb914efd6af4e3
describe
'41980' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIM' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
b1b7db0cff4bbde01e699082f5366425
ff0c5a6d5a5ec78d23f6b79438da0ba7266991e7
describe
'1880928' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIN' 'sip-files00030.tif'
aff31cef1ed6c1f1bfe6362fc90ecf5a
ebf0eec32a897b0d3d872a8b25ab250244628a69
'2011-11-08T02:08:10-05:00'
describe
'1216' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIO' 'sip-files00030.txt'
255f9aabeeba410e5318d035ea3760db
51f65a74a93d31359a39cd35d1ad49536dc0daa6
describe
'11138' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIP' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
94f5fab688bfc98b6d77e3b7fef5fdde
5369abe1eb43d59f3c29a7701c016aa434ca55bc
'2011-11-08T02:07:30-05:00'
describe
'233965' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIQ' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
23989de27b41f819a410c95b8a816662
7104263bc1004272ab8f1ac93d5742f1b3367516
describe
'123462' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIR' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
7ee95e5357636c71670e242f732a20c4
2c18e1e3530f67128421761c6141587d61e6e8ac
'2011-11-08T02:10:24-05:00'
describe
'31704' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIS' 'sip-files00031.pro'
80d1fa21ca5d47206a9f367c7834d7f7
7a0e2cc71329b0045da352ba9d6ae557dab875af
'2011-11-08T02:06:41-05:00'
describe
'41674' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIT' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
8ca4ffb00b42921f116f8df74fc01d10
9e75525619fea414beef4b86ad7240aebf6dc48b
describe
'1881204' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIU' 'sip-files00031.tif'
ad369def421ab940ac538ff18d1314ed
0f5ebf9194e114303a0e22d15a65f9e5efa6450d
describe
'1321' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIV' 'sip-files00031.txt'
59e112adbb156fe79b81e8025f9b0c28
757122648a262b9ec02a502ccb919bb36650096c
'2011-11-08T02:10:12-05:00'
describe
'12199' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIW' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
4765ab03b0461ad2ea9e7ee2a8af225a
a8c2b6c2dc2304ba9091b16943164c3797207764
'2011-11-08T02:08:42-05:00'
describe
'233939' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIX' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
32e9929b6422162b844ed71171711eae
7efbc099ccae854131cda1f5203026acbd1e33ea
'2011-11-08T02:08:30-05:00'
describe
'122356' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIY' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
b8cb16d5b318954cae75ce0c9c0e0f14
bcdef8eca0844e9c4bfef90bba37de9a7c4fad82
describe
'31799' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJIZ' 'sip-files00032.pro'
d31d9e4f172e0e4312360bca78ab60b2
8e30c4c3b5c9853ff4cfea2b57f96e9042a50854
describe
'42405' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJA' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
3c8ab142099f3f21709a6b59d16fa2ae
0ab6791c72d13e4e3cf0738728acb732500c7495
describe
'1881116' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJB' 'sip-files00032.tif'
87abe6a6e155c41f3813b63c9484e04d
9e6f8f76eb6b43abf020b5e6eda7430eaae38eae
describe
'1311' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJC' 'sip-files00032.txt'
4a26a8acd6302982f5cbd1050dcfbaa2
f437950ab5c05c58553f86901805eae572af6625
describe
'12183' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJD' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
31e75668a31c1da5224e6d4281d10660
db4903e267f4223e14ae0ab2c40c7f0865c9a5df
describe
'233976' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJE' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
1ae205a1050bfb5ab0f3fe7b8d123316
0bbb23b2cb162900dd8fd14423e60650ec386327
'2011-11-08T02:09:49-05:00'
describe
'110529' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJF' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
1aed95ef9eae03b9fbe9350235b57d46
d6011f30c1d81bc2fbac7d82fec3e79bff46ab6f
'2011-11-08T02:08:03-05:00'
describe
'28182' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJG' 'sip-files00033.pro'
d438764ca8bbb6ab1be560f8c5e6747e
a33339939410e9231b069755ef4445987bf5df85
describe
'34750' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJH' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
95b047e12d51472c711fba22ddf3ff9a
6b34a8cb9a5047458d21e09aeb77eb7878d498a1
describe
'1881200' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJI' 'sip-files00033.tif'
df55dc3105872ed25f7039510cbb7355
ac6f04825cc25173c1d01aeb26963c2a0e2cefef
'2011-11-08T02:10:21-05:00'
describe
'1179' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJJ' 'sip-files00033.txt'
d6017759d0217550de7c1dfc81c88187
cba4efbf8a5304e6bc8bbe315587b51c775fdfaa
'2011-11-08T02:07:07-05:00'
describe
'11655' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJK' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
ff04b9a8a7000622e3184136e6ad47ca
45c6bab5d399cb82fa099be7b6757b84bb819c8a
describe
'233841' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJL' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
c661f3753b11c66db911c95c73df68f8
a403347b3b6d09c1742d2e9d3bcb1ee4fe9db2d4
describe
'119616' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJM' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
4767048505cff65783b4100367f3c09a
5c75867c5ffd49406631f5c532c9722283b0f032
describe
'30931' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJN' 'sip-files00034.pro'
8edf7cb259c019bbfbfba32e1856e90a
1fb878cd38d92cb250316d5e226cc498a8931bfc
describe
'41429' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJO' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
f920a1c012cd6d36a0976ce954dd2abe
ae0e4a68dffccb394cf1f4d0baa7e388ddcf83a3
'2011-11-08T02:08:53-05:00'
describe
'1879896' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJP' 'sip-files00034.tif'
f6b449652c791b13df57281063ba7d9b
07607d8d134b88c736c7cf885f51d028457c4ec5
describe
'1277' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJQ' 'sip-files00034.txt'
f52278fd706ad3ca72f7f5e42a0019d3
efd7db27b2234dd4ae8bd7bf2aa4100564c7aeaf
describe
'11618' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJR' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
0c34229f02ebcafa5bc76de8a03c2b2d
f3ed1ea814fb9a0461787aed6ae58c1400c3ca34
'2011-11-08T02:08:37-05:00'
describe
'233947' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJS' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
8791e1cc51f84cbd5be9207d42746e66
1a44ea40a920a3910f083927462b85fcfba7233e
describe
'120063' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJT' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
a77cee997f954b5a9c625d781e5b5b83
2f8b9ab8e44da9c6b987e936ff12b585b31bf206
describe
'31145' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJU' 'sip-files00035.pro'
648b3af8828397237c21b0dcd3c3340f
47d69be33593eeda44d5df8125ecf0c3caedfc19
'2011-11-08T02:08:51-05:00'
describe
'43033' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJV' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
f27da81725705f1ae8da1dfa029776a0
7148254be6680b300b03bd4f91ea2ef11c4b1ea4
describe
'1881132' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJW' 'sip-files00035.tif'
99571ceeade3dd2950a1305b359b53a0
279ee74dcd31ccca117b95b80fa4ab939d2f48fb
describe
'1304' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJX' 'sip-files00035.txt'
1e2a9a95e5566b6b43db424390f2c069
35c010567ca6afe59395e9ed2d402c6f6fb5dc19
'2011-11-08T02:09:26-05:00'
describe
'11938' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJY' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
88df6cf0f88c43f1fef4df40dce4b634
6639f6a3fd8b582643bc2c1482bd52c00c23b4bb
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJJZ' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
2fe114fed6aa30489042fdd1ee3cb951
f3535729843cde0c45a892eef84a36700a85c163
'2011-11-08T02:07:58-05:00'
describe
'120055' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKA' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
2987465ee48c26750c05a3004cd6815b
2e55d1b1078c1d64fa48ffba915103409e769974
describe
'30433' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKB' 'sip-files00036.pro'
81f36523c3c13c22b90af19887cd9d2c
9d060ef21626282cd597f753fab3d84b96d09898
'2011-11-08T02:10:23-05:00'
describe
'38807' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKC' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
ac21c3aab43ecd0c75c025280fb90be0
8cf18ab69ec38ae1be083a211d5fbd7b3d6d36f7
describe
'1881072' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKD' 'sip-files00036.tif'
bd606081084662f537e5abe9b7fd1f94
7d904b7e8c41c894db585056f4df7e6d0eeb4f8e
describe
'1258' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKE' 'sip-files00036.txt'
03f6464b70c92042133eea640902990e
12a39d57587f06877755819e895753b1dc822757
describe
'12494' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKF' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
d9421b757aa89ba82d3841d9ff1ae4b8
f534c3b604bb7952b51c8d7eef25f9bef6f56a57
describe
'233951' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKG' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
7f840a39769baded60ac30fb5be556fe
475c9679e605beedf2c0c1c8c47c9a20b8dd3a0b
'2011-11-08T02:09:45-05:00'
describe
'114078' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKH' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
fef3a1c3ca38187a2342ac132a44deab
db4462274c4a70dd5dbebb9c515cf2fb74fa6bac
describe
'29899' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKI' 'sip-files00037.pro'
7ff656225bb853a39baf7b961c2972dd
b52ee40b325e804e12e8281ff7238d40a4cfd5c8
describe
'38342' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKJ' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
7af0370b7f5b6e9800211ecf47b4f162
9fec0620f3d7f0d85d9011d9cdd4f23dbd64482b
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKK' 'sip-files00037.tif'
b17312e542d6c63b9cc1420fba1925c4
f2168b33a0e1411518fd15c0497d2f6ffe9fc010
'2011-11-08T02:10:04-05:00'
describe
'1265' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKL' 'sip-files00037.txt'
4852e44b60e043d9e587ab993be60c66
56832d3e4c8914d24c39164eef5dff645ab4a9d8
describe
'11469' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKM' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
32f1aa8dd24b07ab671dd0d454b96896
04d9b0b753f6241994de4c6878a4a9c71af5f21b
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKN' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
1d50e9071e79c5868de7578bd43e02ba
9727da4554acdc1861387f7cac94b1939ff49a40
describe
'95074' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKO' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
7f763a72114aa9e1590a6742c40e29e2
752890b66eda910898b878b13ccb64bf401f69c8
describe
'23015' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKP' 'sip-files00038.pro'
002385739d36e94c61a2f00b91ea1033
10d15b4a503a9c21dfda51217e7a1f7ca3f92f99
describe
'35511' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKQ' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
16cf49129cb12d204f9de9b694896fb3
4dad995de839d20f8d48ec8dddac884d50cf2b3a
'2011-11-08T02:10:14-05:00'
describe
'1880592' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKR' 'sip-files00038.tif'
3789e9af2b2d5770d146ee98c919f03a
027a6b409d243670fb872c49e5f09fb0c40a4b91
'2011-11-08T02:10:13-05:00'
describe
'975' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKS' 'sip-files00038.txt'
130bd1b29b774918d0a02a08da1c7172
e71a732e2b14e9bee2e2086231c57c3c89c20c9a
'2011-11-08T02:08:57-05:00'
describe
'9798' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKT' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
192ee64f51ce60f25604ea9aa207ec92
9337de1c903f9ca6d84d8d3035d91a212b02fd6f
'2011-11-08T02:07:38-05:00'
describe
'234191' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKU' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
dc73b5d24f5162031288540c9477c5ed
d80797f0f0276ee4625cdfff3273bd656182e074
'2011-11-08T02:08:28-05:00'
describe
'88176' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKV' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
b79f6a7046ee93d43fe09f87caa035c5
fecf387a8e2731d3727dbc6402f7d9bb50278c8b
'2011-11-08T02:06:17-05:00'
describe
'24966' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKW' 'sip-files00039.pro'
fa6706b0857d1350013f695132964ae7
4d2ab1361bbd3ae99f377541b5cba4b225667625
'2011-11-08T02:09:40-05:00'
describe
'27282' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKX' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
a9026679df170f22e204763bc7fcab06
a5c7a6740b0feda34e8e91b7c9dc51c1638c81f8
describe
'1882256' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKY' 'sip-files00039.tif'
756e1977ea20183cfc5fe6c84259b75c
47b6555606a46dff0f88e6f7fdabed88ec5627d4
'2011-11-08T02:09:33-05:00'
describe
'1112' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJKZ' 'sip-files00039.txt'
851b509171c70345af85300b48696462
ad21c9efdd6dc1103245fcc14c5262ca81c106cd
describe
'8757' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLA' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
c9816b43c60a02f7269d40720178f077
e60d4e7a51bdf82cfda11420a35effa43422d84a
describe
'233980' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLB' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
48a808131a29074beac161a40061a9fe
64b9b7f1100c92a115b8538e82833cbd39aec529
describe
'119213' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLC' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
a24d7b584e39ecc835ef772d819ece4c
0a5bb9ee2c16f217c17341c8194416417ec1d9d9
'2011-11-08T02:08:13-05:00'
describe
'30337' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLD' 'sip-files00040.pro'
4aab4f1cdd47e86ef40e05effc420a77
08474d18152878fed9c1bde85a6de4b40af6f619
describe
'38113' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLE' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
ae31558a43eb688c461167c9a5992d55
230206d52fce4f760baaa17819d2a579aff721f9
describe
'1881112' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLF' 'sip-files00040.tif'
5fba870591fb16047feb12b46bb56c59
d9f1c310351e01a4bf7e488aef661668e789d46e
describe
'1257' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLG' 'sip-files00040.txt'
a2e30928b37d2e1c80491e84e8f224ca
20f4b942ba932f892c8615a847799656bc3c58c7
describe
'12148' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLH' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
7a58d905b6e9a54c563acbfbf4a5aa80
5d0a6bbd4cf79992fec472d9c563493844a0529f
describe
'244139' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLI' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
dfa2ccfa021df98da74c4aa634e3105d
b4bee343f001536e9829821241da9bad5480e9e8
describe
'110234' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLJ' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
142743e9845d2a7c4edcbd76073b339b
e7d7b0f753947cb6ddce522a48c0b9c4348816c6
'2011-11-08T02:09:47-05:00'
describe
'30132' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLK' 'sip-files00041.pro'
e2021c8923d2b1505362ce6fbf4bde3a
feb48c6069e9bda19c17912afdf95b5bbf7eff7f
describe
'43462' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLL' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
34b535d443791bf9bcb715b2c96d8cb9
4e7988d64ea24b68680b643e4f62623ea724d4b1
describe
'1963268' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLM' 'sip-files00041.tif'
41f4137e31bda3818bbb23f2fc3168fe
6d8890e1c7556a3dd83da9074cd568268970f0bd
describe
'1227' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLN' 'sip-files00041.txt'
fe586be91e9026273882d504020da4c4
c94c17616fc42a714aa2916db1fdaaa79ff95762
describe
'11418' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLO' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
0d460be761d3cb915304532718006c7d
9a5a88742480de4e55194fce2824c7ba06fbb1ab
describe
'233954' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLP' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
7212cb31eaa4a7a83c84d5c4fcbcc882
4e43e8f4a6cdf8a940e79824d854d862e33bcee9
describe
'122097' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLQ' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
b344784a9bd515f98f90c40b3a6f750d
20adae3a9b86ac9740f88d4a1430d10533a3fb4e
describe
'30625' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLR' 'sip-files00042.pro'
f1dd7f43f1c8735bdc6c79c1a0785599
4b850cbf56a476ae352aa29bfe5f116a2067c224
describe
'37564' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLS' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
adbaadd308a11b0bcc1b4ac157ce84b7
6834278ca5e13d78e4de3026d173821f125a5fbe
'2011-11-08T02:09:41-05:00'
describe
'1881040' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLT' 'sip-files00042.tif'
9ddc972c79985e3e5428fd2400345406
45f95471a1b862fa34aafaa95fa64f0e08e20850
'2011-11-08T02:07:52-05:00'
describe
'1264' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLU' 'sip-files00042.txt'
90f62495a4c80cf2520964f5f40e1d22
f5f206f3548afdf9d8ce29e9009aeb067d3ae91b
describe
'12528' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLV' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
ba2aec28354c14fbd8d9b3b21d02baf1
0b00d423c2ecdf04389d9266ebc6eda4f494c51d
describe
'233969' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLW' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
d299cf436c8174183dcb5a1fe6331b5f
f9478f37ff472e18bdd0bad6e89a9e0319cdfe7c
describe
'118138' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLX' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
f3807ad750aa2bfc918c8bc349f12f79
1886b49483a9876449eceaad43703baeaff7a55e
describe
'30242' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLY' 'sip-files00043.pro'
fa73d6b7d3a3b3ffb510963790478181
462d4a51feca4256f8e7c07b41d80cf9aa274cc6
describe
'39466' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJLZ' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
133170445a37982ce181dbd3a98e8d31
8e7b84817f8c275f29c506ff5fff3539de71c2a0
describe
'1881312' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMA' 'sip-files00043.tif'
b1815dd36325433c89beee7f41dd38ae
f4d36d8008c9a08f00efc674a7f7e433f38a1de3
describe
'1292' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMB' 'sip-files00043.txt'
59a9adf1a14c9911534c4a8e602523fb
038fe311fd9c9cc05703e0fde5a70095f1acdfaf
describe
'12059' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMC' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
452b85abdac8cbb70f03984c976bc2c4
b181ea364397a94cd13baa3a8767988c235f8f9e
describe
'233983' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMD' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
47e16fd2447515f7fad495668bc741c8
610a8195cc420e1039f3b9e1e0f49adfb725d753
describe
'122655' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJME' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
6098277fd37135912ab8f4a5e002520c
93853424209d40e84d8873b2283fff9b5572dc58
describe
'31897' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMF' 'sip-files00044.pro'
7fd3da85768de06c3fa5849f839eb126
5901da715ab62cb439aac5a26304d3d9c56b47b9
describe
'44774' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMG' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
8b408cc6f061b567a4ad06cf6b925979
bc24946c85d782d0ac9a70e18e45ed268da22b28
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMH' 'sip-files00044.tif'
d194fd9679d284598fbdcf7d1f44dee1
cd805e5faeb0200d1fa16f0dccc60ee1c55e5ac0
describe
'1294' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMI' 'sip-files00044.txt'
587ceaff790dc8b9c65500b17b192311
ff5204ef01bf4914eb4222b848673f72f653fa52
'2011-11-08T02:09:58-05:00'
describe
'11943' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMJ' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
8cd3206f7fa84917ce722acafbcfff22
e2f4f4cb4fd97b13acfb8f520aef690c628e6baa
describe
'233973' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMK' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
4cc4c4084aa94a85576e5d436dc59904
34ecfd0e750b1817dd29bf79b0fe6526d881b193
'2011-11-08T02:09:28-05:00'
describe
'118768' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJML' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
80154e29be44f2c46e1a4319f9a5cf68
5082ff90de88494c31499299777c2c27d2b033d0
describe
'30253' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMM' 'sip-files00045.pro'
7c9574184a12c1e88287705162a68d84
a0b61caf32a68b36cdbc75fa1c023b5acceef478
'2011-11-08T02:08:27-05:00'
describe
'39585' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMN' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
1475fe8c987f335e827850a8317bcefb
9decc777b8b3c0728204f30387c65f1295691551
describe
'1881384' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMO' 'sip-files00045.tif'
2ce81489290d30cb10145de103349a47
96b7e93aadb0bc0d787f615a98670ec0431ddef0
describe
'1267' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMP' 'sip-files00045.txt'
4fb83520207395dd6e34ed9915dad7f5
efda60b30e04dd98482c4b38be97950fb529d921
describe
'12350' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMQ' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
05f55bc6c32f64a171ea327ebdbea860
56f172dde8d922efc83cb2c4fd422e8c0df5c038
describe
'233842' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMR' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
293d2207dad53aa990658f8cd321e3be
6f1ae034d482b3e70319c89f5ac37a045212a049
describe
'118861' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMS' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
2b6756d2ee7935822893ed3eb33e951e
45d79a51e08734b6020467231d6f10eb1890e9c0
describe
'30845' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMT' 'sip-files00046.pro'
994075caf0e93b8d7ed67300a81c737f
0b2702667867f607de7d453e731eb138fe7df83f
describe
'43300' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMU' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
4f5b4be0e365ee2f85359b580d310688
389bc8df64ef6c4c5d83bb36a9a97084a85e32cc
describe
'1880004' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMV' 'sip-files00046.tif'
87746e91ac4374d20c118e8c3ee16215
64efa6caa45c5a5e4c6e101154f984ff57850845
describe
'1273' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMW' 'sip-files00046.txt'
e4247c8f902b9d80b2d9ce7401b01433
3322788b0a96b4ee69d6cc0acaf9766e49b2fa1f
describe
'11807' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMX' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
d0fc68d27fe1d6a68bf3d6d40556aead
4646fd886c38bc06ac0def8b81e8cb5bc3dd3b6b
describe
'233810' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMY' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
3c4207e8acc3b06f7eca053ab055b757
559f18de5875caa5b0b1681e065dca6c2c19780e
'2011-11-08T02:08:39-05:00'
describe
'115489' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJMZ' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
df72b233be56e023abf1201b6f3c0711
810a1569fea4fe8f61b3d94af99653f9cde9fa2d
'2011-11-08T02:07:23-05:00'
describe
'29883' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNA' 'sip-files00047.pro'
eb34c9a48c0597531092bc5e680d7289
45e2fe8fdc175f8f75288aa91e9534665dcb22b9
describe
'39354' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNB' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
b984e6591f077a05fdae89367995eb16
960e87be36cd1e3bd14ce4ccbbfba35c42e37877
describe
'1881316' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNC' 'sip-files00047.tif'
ad183ad9c09a5ed453207c829f57dfe9
eb63d31a7f22ea2eb6cdbe7805e6d1279903003e
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJND' 'sip-files00047.txt'
376de25842dad5241355b482ce1eb269
a990f9ad36f7824500cd354b41ea689bbd1cd28d
describe
'11919' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNE' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
48150e2f73db87fe1b111d333e16eea0
751f710707c2e5fd55c16d9425ab467bc066875a
describe
'234203' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNF' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
832af66cd3ab101e3fb1072ce63fa1d0
d8f49e2651490f187e176020952f09c28933ad8c
'2011-11-08T02:09:19-05:00'
describe
'112622' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNG' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
d3e4eab4fef93103309091a8d98904f5
995883c2f1253d5d7737cfeccadb190ee8e2eb0f
describe
'29180' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNH' 'sip-files00048.pro'
5fcc78a7e0a7f0f54229596522c08be1
d57ac0a452468d0a418b23bb0cfc7df502520859
describe
'41970' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNI' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
1b4ab869a8e4eb27f885c10947735b89
404c8a48f0e280f50e0d8ef1eb69f1596796e055
describe
'1882856' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNJ' 'sip-files00048.tif'
e28afa8dfbf84e94c5d89831f3d666d1
409a4077a41c3719778f76a44fc03dafd002ecf7
'2011-11-08T02:06:40-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNK' 'sip-files00048.txt'
4156a15e6f25818f800cdff4490bd451
46336d282b2bcd98d096fb2dafb8a1a0d92dd02d
'2011-11-08T02:07:49-05:00'
describe
'11435' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNL' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
a5825de86304b6c1a6db42311117b686
b8794302e6f4a51c82540f8f85114bb967e1b538
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNM' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
9442655bc0644b59e5d52c85c2e86df5
8ee606c494bc52414db74cb9738233432cc192a0
describe
'114125' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNN' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
67078ec08ab34cd5b0d3bc2092115293
d82c726d77410731e052d684972ce376b68bea0f
describe
'29813' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNO' 'sip-files00049.pro'
453c5754767f7952d2aa8f861f8a8f7b
c002a386950246d92e39cec9827170aef0d76d39
'2011-11-08T02:07:29-05:00'
describe
'39052' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNP' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
6456183659feca88bc84672b92e49537
b0f48562c432ac85343928c5eea9736d8192798c
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNQ' 'sip-files00049.tif'
86ef0552d3776f50a28d1b0cc1e12c31
cfc4373f4bd104043745a754cd78c1579e51c3df
describe
'1271' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNR' 'sip-files00049.txt'
7a9f7ad2859a7389cf486773d290cd89
17ec74bf3cbc6497a5f1f050c2263cdacc3506bc
'2011-11-08T02:09:59-05:00'
describe
'11846' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNS' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
be6acbf0bb74b648066f8e0e21c70b72
ee359f075a5bfe801e31989af9868cdb07f17463
describe
'234019' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNT' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
740a3b7c717a921c1fefa1309d802ca3
d6ed466ded23be1ecccd46ef58f70a392f9349dd
describe
'110908' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNU' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
30533dab9a986bc5c3d44b970551a30e
515c00401e2fc6a16accb181159b5d7cc50e9ba9
describe
'28587' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNV' 'sip-files00050.pro'
2c1c200dfd62961a480a237dfc309a12
26bf4b5887a0195ff210d0cd1438d6cf5f0be9b8
describe
'36484' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNW' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
e992f937c0183e7036b319124295ff3a
dfce6df57e88a90583a7617f4313a071e78af16e
describe
'1881680' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNX' 'sip-files00050.tif'
0dd7fdd3a6017765e0525dc611949c91
d96147e505698cbf922f7172b22add7591eb029a
'2011-11-08T02:09:10-05:00'
describe
'1194' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNY' 'sip-files00050.txt'
299777f963caebcffa522b735958386e
1632ff18bb4180347e87b89891cc0a31a4b884b5
describe
'11335' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJNZ' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
30374f49cb1c80f4e5c913f5e53f19a7
bea2f474a744e2d02a601e79fe29cc7f5e63970d
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOA' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
9b61f3bea6df2bed7c41df638c9ab0c4
f5b2449eb1ef280686eabc29f0e81e8a8ddd7f1b
describe
'109990' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOB' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
ed14d78b2568ce9e77e8069f8dd2b898
16779bd1e653042d9491d3cc4fe166de57ae264d
describe
'29484' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOC' 'sip-files00051.pro'
6fffe7811ac98c7fa444b7815df84442
116115fd213f4364bea026f116d214064d460ec5
describe
'39202' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOD' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
cea185863b04562d9faf3a34b623fbaa
ef6c53830bb20c7a316676845eca4890d9828f9f
describe
'1881324' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOE' 'sip-files00051.tif'
62f02fb431e0e0811e5943651c633178
59701f268119667b63fab320d240296e29b7660f
'2011-11-08T02:10:15-05:00'
describe
'1222' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOF' 'sip-files00051.txt'
03123b0758bd16599a62db36933d9440
941812ef2f8f20405dcc1858d009aeb66c1c7c7a
'2011-11-08T02:08:46-05:00'
describe
'11487' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOG' 'sip-files00051thm.jpg'
eef3e50e62f107dda183c7640edaf1c7
75f4a895e40e849a324bd4908286080bc3da3344
'2011-11-08T02:08:07-05:00'
describe
'233832' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOH' 'sip-files00052.jp2'
a8cc2cd5ea0d885e0fb9565f70ef7634
938a7854ec5b33a7b5d00d474192625bbc510280
describe
'118934' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOI' 'sip-files00052.jpg'
46ad6caa388a8ae33a7104ea37956be2
9f2ff1b64061c146b8ebf6c65d66edc888d2c625
'2011-11-08T02:10:05-05:00'
describe
'30751' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOJ' 'sip-files00052.pro'
67520e79f4bf1ee5cfdb5da9dee22982
aacfa7b5d07f9b158cd76bfc09da7278e4eb9285
describe
'42814' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOK' 'sip-files00052.QC.jpg'
5848548af48aab7c0a5f4e20c82ff330
ae68809aab7d4f72752ada7748466864ed47b352
'2011-11-08T02:07:59-05:00'
describe
'1879972' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOL' 'sip-files00052.tif'
a52644dced4c7b455f988c02b0b2d842
de8e161bd5bdac4693d14e5124d865f13236085e
'2011-11-08T02:08:02-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOM' 'sip-files00052.txt'
d13a5aceff19225bc7143144d83ba931
4336dca380c34ccc424c188749aad21d7e680dc8
describe
'11877' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJON' 'sip-files00052thm.jpg'
3c34cf0f5664cb85deeed4a57b4d5c02
0b6537a69cf7cfa3b72b823d56f69b65cc52e653
describe
'233984' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOO' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
f46f7d26d7ec6c19751519bd2b598af0
e50460bb805591c159c3aecf23d138a05c8a2474
describe
'105344' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOP' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
11621a47814726429aad12faa81dcc98
c5365a00927ed11903dc01576db88c5341b24cbe
describe
'27596' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOQ' 'sip-files00053.pro'
7f8a7d6812e772346c63a254bb25b08f
043f6207c1e38f027b9a094799698e180a4cc788
describe
'38271' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOR' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
2a05333b04af3df62bacae5bc652b28c
c5382c52c1a8c670ca9b494785f46e6f1ca74c9f
'2011-11-08T02:07:40-05:00'
describe
'1881156' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOS' 'sip-files00053.tif'
c4cf0eb25b2b6411dcf3de95ab1874f2
86f142d4fdc8cfd18aa866b538321404b9de420d
describe
'1175' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOT' 'sip-files00053.txt'
94985347c4bd1ba3005f060a8fe6cbf9
675e9e916d9ed5f06bd8d2ea8a28dc6b3c227b97
'2011-11-08T02:08:35-05:00'
describe
'11145' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOU' 'sip-files00053thm.jpg'
170cf1e035bf1c67503c1cc1734956b0
331489ff1dfe1e3335071519f896d270589fac2b
describe
'238955' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOV' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
a0554367271f0634a9c39a418e2a786d
8639d7bed63621127ec01db149a812dabd33c53d
describe
'119521' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOW' 'sip-files00054.jpg'
b57ae61dc230631c27968418788fde2b
5d881283e13db8efe7c3e70c4c1b52bbf3756c85
describe
'31178' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOX' 'sip-files00054.pro'
59b6e3a9383ac67ba8352527f373fc40
cfc6d68ffaffafc30e2292c92c250c26f60879af
describe
'40479' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOY' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
7399bb1cca672b050da72109f97a05f0
32d8f621fbd0e1ada43a860f2b272a143fd981fb
'2011-11-08T02:09:30-05:00'
describe
'1921112' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJOZ' 'sip-files00054.tif'
121ec562fa899be4f265a731f1bfbe15
7972fb8aa50e5e89caf14ff36c86aad7397c5456
describe
'1283' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPA' 'sip-files00054.txt'
e92bbc111a9ee05f8d636548bb2e1210
933def6b4e40ad92f16a2edc445f236e50790d58
describe
'12194' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPB' 'sip-files00054thm.jpg'
c40c83926d9304fdf245225a58c178b0
412ffd811e6dd38bbc140bc393ed177b689e48f6
describe
'233843' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPC' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
2c97e9a5e0b117c846a0d758b1edad0f
673a6b7f19b5e2c9e0bf15ac47a32421041aff0c
describe
'113781' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPD' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
37be7459c9ce2ae2a17de42254db9a5a
7d3a7aa61a53e7c77af53306d0b45fd14e54d31b
describe
'30649' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPE' 'sip-files00055.pro'
feb91e883b140e892238a174ce8f7da6
a1a077cacf82426d1465bbbcf529cb96a748fca0
describe
'34986' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPF' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
3f048937b9a94434377fda057edc22aa
6fd95beae5ea5702812a90d0054098c4efe945af
describe
'1879868' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPG' 'sip-files00055.tif'
322f71b6ed558e31cdb9d8eefb38bbe5
c2a0b4b737f76ac33b3678f53884baa91ca033de
describe
'1295' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPH' 'sip-files00055.txt'
78f52038f8eeee6c2138d6cdee3e6a37
9e1fb57ad9302510ecd1fb3340d6141ffff726c3
describe
'11122' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPI' 'sip-files00055thm.jpg'
37c0d53fff6821d54b12f56681a8e944
4cd8ddaab5ac8e4f23d4de09b8d12fe2ad34bc1a
describe
'233829' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPJ' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
07b892063d0ca7ee8c45d75e37534734
27cb0fe9978a282181ae116406af0fc2122ceff9
describe
'85277' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPK' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
98d95da7601120c975b008c07e4e5204
47f8b364a432e0a207f679daec16dd01b5676b93
describe
'19779' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPL' 'sip-files00056.pro'
ef600ef4f47d00bddb18a5bdc7c81d23
18a089d68102eeab4f9b165d70fb60da44504b24
describe
'31330' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPM' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
6b54df4b220c3f0d2763893a0d5e9bbe
64a38df040657b3d7525ee90c850f0252ffdd684
describe
'1879208' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPN' 'sip-files00056.tif'
192390d40b99b60fe80c101e1bcd80fd
dae8a3b90a9c8e4fa8688cccb6d93acd7dfef637
describe
'852' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPO' 'sip-files00056.txt'
4555d2a9f4eecb4a5ff364fc66b49f90
331a6b5eef9100e215d649f2b079be458bfc3edf
describe
'8562' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPP' 'sip-files00056thm.jpg'
18e376973b717f52ed4b45be095c9666
1d2f5d217f553bddf9afec9f70f234638b10da4a
'2011-11-08T02:09:43-05:00'
describe
'233967' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPQ' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
f924e3c2c18305191f74b36f37e514be
7be303ac47a2bec5d607215a756c7e2f50fc4f05
describe
'84175' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPR' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
be0412538a03414608e4386fd5bff544
ca6d13867ccf5802cfcd6667d3bff5712fd88bc3
describe
'21903' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPS' 'sip-files00057.pro'
477882b64d42fb1666ec9d4ae29c3298
2ad29643a8b121ce078e5b1dd7fd3dfa4b1db286
describe
'28704' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPT' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
b9b747777ce670856cf15eb0817345e0
5c6df838efad19a4aa94d78ff4aed1b89e23886d
describe
'1880184' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPU' 'sip-files00057.tif'
a82bbcb0187c80fcc6ae99f392d99b95
649ce1ddf93e6610bdcc6817232f44485b91aa33
describe
'958' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPV' 'sip-files00057.txt'
90109738427458ed379f2c7c31eb5280
c57effc83224737b2b4370315587a8b5d812bd43
describe
'7933' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPW' 'sip-files00057thm.jpg'
65ef01e8599644a14f7a00e91014211e
28ead2e516cd6d05dc22e51c49e2ae09dce80c1e
describe
'233945' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPX' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
f2bb00cf99e9672aa4a243c9e03ea7ea
916253961b92592b6724810fe2cdcbf3152792b1
describe
'110850' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPY' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
69f0f51dc2350d27b4c4752faa092b3b
6377c83db35e3d9084cd31185cd412bcf79a4052
describe
'28659' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJPZ' 'sip-files00058.pro'
24b3ce3552220911ec129084ac38e15b
d7d478590b03a4c612aa70cbc6296f9f3f298f01
describe
'37419' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQA' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
fd0c6bc93622ae039e29d0b08cf9765d
361790490d53b85a90d1182d9c074c2c2060d18d
'2011-11-08T02:09:23-05:00'
describe
'1880772' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQB' 'sip-files00058.tif'
5e253d8250dafb66c10ad6709a2c9911
1b8f72431953c59ef3e9057537bcb32853d418f9
describe
'1186' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQC' 'sip-files00058.txt'
9b5199c3d13b0f13d9db8b71c30e5d99
2184dcda42037a0f13c2121066ee1eb0d3ee6281
describe
'11283' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQD' 'sip-files00058thm.jpg'
54b8c6f1ea33d7bcbe32c1ec13ff0635
100fdf4181c243c3dd2e876309a202f075da2a63
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQE' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
a500980e11b07359e10f8041a78e5c4c
5581d6509d09f93fe101155df9e5ac2b34a54933
describe
'106243' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQF' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
1cd5961b6eb526e24dc0b1d02140709a
fb60c8efb66b983bafe3aa2caa051b1528e36219
describe
'27762' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQG' 'sip-files00059.pro'
478c5091933be8ac688cda20270bb93f
921b51e4443c6577e5b6d3d0d1e39e4787bd2d29
'2011-11-08T02:10:01-05:00'
describe
'40503' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQH' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
f09e2279331f0171ed004f05eb0c6586
47badd0d72840039a75fd25633b2157ab46a533b
'2011-11-08T02:07:27-05:00'
describe
'1881108' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQI' 'sip-files00059.tif'
3e9bfbb5121b9c6ba250c2a59d74388d
7d9d56215903e0475641f6e71d557daf8b117a8f
'2011-11-08T02:08:41-05:00'
describe
'1187' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQJ' 'sip-files00059.txt'
4b4c83ba4b97dd30a2e1321c5f53c6f3
b18816e8a6bc82cb515fb326e3a5ef7f9822ca1b
describe
'10862' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQK' 'sip-files00059thm.jpg'
3a7c4f340413d9d9cda3c4c8f6c52a19
78672cadfcdb1356d99d0ae5f12af6325d3192ed
'2011-11-08T02:09:48-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQL' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
2bcc66a0b101ca07b67ff9dac5da2759
cd2b3f5220c35904ffc7a31f0271ee56543f30d3
describe
'119238' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQM' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
b59e48f33b22d816c47dab7080ab98bd
167e0f4fb1918dbf87854ef9ed70be550eb8d28e
describe
'30617' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQN' 'sip-files00060.pro'
ee95c05db116e9d4c1f45c06144a2a7d
bd064acb9cf29267a0aec1f130aaee4e270dd266
describe
'42684' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQO' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
8508dba3e7e5f0262096e0a4428ae705
c340be9e3b0a54064a5c7ca8b6a6f5b2070a2095
describe
'1879912' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQP' 'sip-files00060.tif'
64ef738bf4cf4ff26a94754d358d9d3e
bf716b850bb0eccb1fc015cd4a35411c77fe8fec
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQQ' 'sip-files00060.txt'
b797c7ca238d922d69b7d5a51b43af19
82781a021e3c2af771941ec6f5352a881adb9d05
describe
'11649' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQR' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
3aa43d8e68acf0eee590a77e9eefa424
afaa019252df2f63193d5abeb08e28ae0e1a1649
describe
'233807' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQS' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
4fb7f3e5266ba8ddebf9d29ffadbda0d
dca95641fceda3c9ab4c1ce854ffdc4a7700cb29
describe
'118816' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQT' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
d605ec3e09403f89f15e9b476d48e696
640228b5a001926bfb90c66acd364f38fac73473
'2011-11-08T02:10:22-05:00'
describe
'30223' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQU' 'sip-files00061.pro'
7b5e8ef19da834163c2a764d04d9c6f3
5377f232f4c858c247cdabc478453991c6a3799b
describe
'44863' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQV' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
f7e37862023bde8005ee0905c072a0d1
c74381cfcc162842000824d45757b8c7a218d0ed
describe
'1880084' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQW' 'sip-files00061.tif'
acc837eae361e7aa2dae60eb98800049
b6714d8ad9bcec80ca158f399b65c88c14372a18
describe
'1248' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQX' 'sip-files00061.txt'
c1f5c89369c7bbb81637065f0d7027c5
43a3b31654207032bc2a5436b2d94eb0e7346f31
describe
'11835' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQY' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
4ead597899abcf99eef38098d425739f
d85904483e3a8f860e7e98fd409a3dc8a5b5e47c
describe
'234157' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJQZ' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
561c377efc3b7ea8bd92221e9065dd8d
52686c14f9fe330ea28d0d64205fde5e09b0735f
describe
'101090' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRA' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
b508fd7c631af3442c970079436b7ae8
03bf10a4b385b2bf0715319258ee94db8175d1b1
'2011-11-08T02:07:14-05:00'
describe
'26767' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRB' 'sip-files00062.pro'
9f14995abc2243dc2e854d184d593ca1
65f90384c3b7f30dc591c872f433ec791c6ba2af
describe
'35440' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRC' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
cecc0c4e4ec9552928a2d0fb70e79ecd
47862ba496ec5825fc3bc741a3adbec9ebff39e3
'2011-11-08T02:08:23-05:00'
describe
'1882660' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRD' 'sip-files00062.tif'
4f01c2f63f9a08270323030dabc7b1f4
2f37614dcce3a5fe53d8ac827a6df624da0ff5c0
'2011-11-08T02:10:00-05:00'
describe
'1126' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRE' 'sip-files00062.txt'
a74107d3e5a6de4918e02ff128339dad
66410ff4c5d5da6d13b0a5c57a0017c0d477aebb
describe
'10773' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRF' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
5c419dbcadf34b0c70657faf9479297b
c07078543c228b2f69e0275c33b145fae43c4058
describe
'234032' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRG' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
fcf780a96428cc43168a467a7feeeebf
39d74af4dd0c38af4c739f1fe9ca752136ed031b
describe
'106126' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRH' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
a7c770de911f6786914bc21b7be24d7b
eaa4ca83446cd2eef7af48274a0b8e1e3e617f3a
describe
'27659' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRI' 'sip-files00063.pro'
f6da6f1eac32cc2188722ae711604afc
dcd02112f03863959762b14136c4119f440609b1
describe
'38566' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRJ' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
115163b1e049bf2d99fdafe898f06cb3
9563a8baf8cc5883516d365ca2b55aa6b637de45
describe
'1881752' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRK' 'sip-files00063.tif'
39f37c1e61e65f9bffd39faa5244195b
2d4fd6e4814fdb1feb09eac6cbcc264184ac0b05
describe
'1178' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRL' 'sip-files00063.txt'
d8ef41dcea80e789964360382dbdf62d
1af4ee87a6d7e17ee3f934d4abb82a67ae86e43c
'2011-11-08T02:08:36-05:00'
describe
'10964' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRM' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
7d38ee68d08964ce6af4b1910a6d5d6a
a3d0956b2d5f96ab230a0609574010b01883bfc8
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRN' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
89aa8e42b2d8d7d23bab31f703529a3d
a1e11d0792bce9c8a61954f676188968305fbba7
describe
'117017' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRO' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
11aa2e89aa5a71df1b3c4129ac0cd95a
42cf1671d61dc522a78068cf22ad9aab9149a8c1
describe
'30470' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRP' 'sip-files00064.pro'
4927c78c27afc45bba3cf43f129dd05a
eaf50f0d74cf0e0d13cbd79211b6e3a3f31c631d
describe
'44606' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRQ' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
aaa4999b1d7d1f0847b7c3704b619ff1
ac7558c03c60ecb1c1543aa1d41811b6291378c9
describe
'1881056' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRR' 'sip-files00064.tif'
dce35b9afc4736835a48e872cd18fd40
ab0dfdb75d5e9f51543bb51ac7780c58bc7861f1
describe
'1261' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRS' 'sip-files00064.txt'
4ea588913518cdbf7db9dcd474e40436
12ab038547498ba24be617f4598606bf206efea1
describe
'12195' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRT' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
ca753151b500ddf14ff8faf98d2218ff
512fb8c87d18b8ecaee123ea0ecadf65de606930
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRU' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
ac52889bb0ee3fb7556927953d2f3e59
155f96a3b8abf3c51382ae6f8bf8c9df86b32ebc
describe
'120377' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRV' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
ab548c0b800137d11252451763d63a04
541a326aecb726f287cea524ad802a043750c204
describe
'30718' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRW' 'sip-files00065.pro'
6fe9fb713cd867a63e3ebaf9651b5b76
f0b0a6d744c4286cc93df8e7bab8c08791cdafba
describe
'43928' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRX' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
03c88cacf94a3ab8ec33a8e0f03bfb54
290310b09c30ff9e2f9d93ee822dea0726262634
describe
'1881332' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRY' 'sip-files00065.tif'
f757572958575b545bf66ddb7d47395a
a09b4fbfa73ecf87ab886b06633c85a13788520b
describe
'1286' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJRZ' 'sip-files00065.txt'
c87ebbf2f96745554796fc76eb047a2b
76a3e09b5f774be1d1e5574591f596bc0001758b
describe
'12232' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSA' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
98d0307c46acdd6fc042e9738326fdba
9cb107dc9b0fc48c7b2a0e692044f38e649f0c2c
'2011-11-08T02:07:22-05:00'
describe
'234169' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSB' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
27fcc3c8828d703c5afa1e374f2d43cc
35363f0dcabe76e512bd2ac217cafe5f8a3f2bc9
describe
'111532' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSC' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
7db790c2c8934ed003d4145bb3c87cd1
e6dbf59436410c1e86df319ebff353eac28275ad
describe
'29114' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSD' 'sip-files00066.pro'
dcbff2a7e0b2a1804ce53d202de314b4
5af50580b81eadd82f5d0c179ec358ee0ed70fd0
describe
'43144' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSE' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
ea8b29e34ada4fdcaf1d262717f4223d
dc6af608f3af147a52c38b016f11cc242591e0d4
describe
'1882760' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSF' 'sip-files00066.tif'
7e13f6fdaec38b63ee41e602f263bf40
b1beb7071d0d3e9fd79ae03367753bd085d4c700
describe
'1209' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSG' 'sip-files00066.txt'
d871b5fdd68d805bd4b5a5d5d0bec8d5
6318595ecb795e4d4c545411c6f80217af43c782
'2011-11-08T02:09:11-05:00'
describe
'11409' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSH' 'sip-files00066thm.jpg'
d9510661a8efe2c9ec7c7f173a05a157
fdd1bea520f554b31c896611cd12f9de7fb579cd
'2011-11-08T02:09:21-05:00'
describe
'233879' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSI' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
3a30d77bd2dacc1db36344732532983f
09cc702a2016ff830f0236c3d47dd8023bde411a
describe
'111037' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSJ' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
b365f6c6ccb7df8d9e6540b536e54e80
2228ca4d20b9ea6a399d953b984ccd1e5ace713f
describe
'29243' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSK' 'sip-files00067.pro'
793bf4324499bfde7cf9c99e3174bcce
f590b4c81780a58c2819cede65bf993cb62a3890
'2011-11-08T02:07:37-05:00'
describe
'38383' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSL' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
9deca3ea8ab5f620c14bd31b57f099c1
a9021402bbee53161edd231446d907af044cc613
describe
'1881128' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSM' 'sip-files00067.tif'
635be707785f23edcd5c571bcf61b25f
c1b6f8b8498a4a7b0eb910fd77afb44397998881
describe
'1260' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSN' 'sip-files00067.txt'
b5d0c889a0204471aacfbbe5d4e48ce6
0c36f2eb7756c50a6b2eb4772f2cc9e4ccd053b6
describe
'11225' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSO' 'sip-files00067thm.jpg'
0b8de78ad6212d2433ce987b092fe1aa
972cf9376f94a08316ea909368c76cd2c5d9fa5b
describe
'233972' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSP' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
94a19f88ef837a20d9af8c831b89cb16
d25ca4986327612daea288b78c805ecaba9bb41b
describe
'116819' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSQ' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
2bef6cb4cb3fd1a1b5d062c234d1d89e
88a71670fc3f0725dd747b2ba792857df56a3bba
describe
'30277' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSR' 'sip-files00068.pro'
e95f15e2d4c42a32647d13201f5c2a60
f9969e2a85abed2d2d221016a8516c5f3d50573a
describe
'40127' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSS' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
d0342d7b5e5f8527cd825ca73e0c9a38
6f327a35904999bcf444e2f529029c414d5444d9
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJST' 'sip-files00068.tif'
91ef85774c5288ca476e25415eeb709a
b6734c228ce1fa5a28effe009624afda27f5897c
'2011-11-08T02:07:55-05:00'
describe
'1251' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSU' 'sip-files00068.txt'
fbaf45e9d138268790c59e57a4a1b545
2e28ebcf6f64f922d05d26c1907cef762db6b16c
describe
'11923' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSV' 'sip-files00068thm.jpg'
1d1d0038663e90f57603144ab716c283
e803e53da69174b213d5ac568af9efcf94ae1272
describe
'234205' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSW' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
fb4329fb3d743c79f758277c1f3f1ae0
f6e41d29e69d11ef40a2babe00908de508cfdfc7
describe
'111358' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSX' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
2dc8ec04195dd5c950b9cf7452aba8d7
45ed9fcbbcfa2326c311072b08bed44a7060eb6d
describe
'29747' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSY' 'sip-files00069.pro'
3a33315e2c102d580b291eaa8d1fb748
434a329fe6beec14e90e329df28f4b56494bb3bd
describe
'33026' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJSZ' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
d0e4c7cb4927f2bdff1d9ffe8f34f164
8c6f958ec3a47b36976300d08577af2f7ff4b996
describe
'1882860' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTA' 'sip-files00069.tif'
d6eb2a04e3d6bdab4b84d25e44241a7b
b1cf5e11835afe735bb7b27b2a023be1023fde9c
describe
'1226' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTB' 'sip-files00069.txt'
1bcc55a9468f57b1f25e41781dcba661
b05ed352e5bdef721f8a6956e6d6b59f3a194f0e
describe
'11551' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTC' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
5c4e3e8d5258eecf59ff39ed30227788
8e2fa9d22537bfd2a97ed02a942040a0688a29a4
describe
'234192' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTD' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
d3a5a00c91ed8d95b2f78cd0e9f2821b
5ec06425d5f4c5506bf94c77ff724e6c5d295d41
describe
'110887' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTE' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
e69a95f2e19766e9afb1dfa34a89ed09
332893684f09c3d2d9aeb7c458b1ed1245e87a65
describe
'28818' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTF' 'sip-files00070.pro'
0b02e94be2f78736807a56f95ce33ef6
cade274fb5328d2d02e3a3204aab3503ece1a3b1
describe
'33428' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTG' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
7699dad3cc9153e4a1e594300cafd04e
4f02301ce2c547cc8e6fe6c0cb27e6e04d16a53d
describe
'1882752' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTH' 'sip-files00070.tif'
480a002ff65cab2923a04240b79ddb4f
156554ae5194c5c64c1ce2cce9851bc0ddb57095
describe
'1196' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTI' 'sip-files00070.txt'
11faf7588fff255ef570d14c257f652b
10f70f2a568ab124b3fe4508d0e1329557d16f92
describe
'11562' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTJ' 'sip-files00070thm.jpg'
91e0bb6fc60f2b1377079032a4757dae
e0cd31db1e96417529bd6b2c8e8600353a3c37fb
describe
'233970' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTK' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
429bde4f0ca4600ac2cdb38a3660fb18
e010684fa260d925eab1be55d101a7ed772a1114
describe
'116038' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTL' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
404eaea22f4b361f6b085b9b66daa710
0c81b36ebea096c46075f970a1168b009b7cef19
describe
'29149' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTM' 'sip-files00071.pro'
a103ad29922c7042dfa19cb61476016a
ae87878184e282f08d9fe7d338a3c47f0b7312fb
describe
'39238' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTN' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
4ec0b4d8cc71e392de50433675f625e1
bc29a7a73408f2ce56f8ea8be93b585c9d375b63
describe
'1881460' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTO' 'sip-files00071.tif'
c76d1242df7266b72055decff62b4880
6228866a3f91601572fe5c2c0eae37daccfae717
describe
'1244' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTP' 'sip-files00071.txt'
933567cff24542494f7b52d5bde73eac
9820cea29a57d53277f856c833a8fa761ecb007c
describe
'11882' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTQ' 'sip-files00071thm.jpg'
54a0e9ee697dd6ffabfbc59286101af8
3000a1b2dd316895801d7d95da41d10490d1d533
describe
'234198' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTR' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
3b1d7602de05dd543cd32c853d46732e
e7cc23a2e4b2e9ec38dd978ecd251a49b7869826
describe
'114728' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTS' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
5d90d20921d551084156e226037e9472
671b3286934a62ecadde816c862c4bf984be87c1
describe
'29186' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTT' 'sip-files00072.pro'
bb676fdfc22c12ef1bfdd7e49fcabbf2
3bfe86141c2b9af3197bd77e201b195dda2752cd
describe
'43246' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTU' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
8861ddabbe1ef8ec4a8de8f982a5cba0
d5fd23cc95aba59fc4d26a7074f621e221ffac9b
'2011-11-08T02:07:26-05:00'
describe
'1882932' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTV' 'sip-files00072.tif'
093896752ae8e0f665ee1ee7d3568fa9
f928683d38cd5fd84eae027cdfffce513eb898d0
'2011-11-08T02:09:07-05:00'
describe
'1210' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTW' 'sip-files00072.txt'
80cfce8cf0a614ba42f2093dee07f7b9
512295fd68e32084a271ab9887487cadb49ef083
describe
'11706' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTX' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
a7cb96d2d3ff88370b1a739e3b310d1e
58eafa9d4badee879bd7f6f4f32a9d95c1090fe0
describe
'233960' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTY' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
aa01935f7df03646a3eab8ecd0a9f687
1df1f7d8cb2c4bcc8e4d4228fabca3d6cd16631b
describe
'57111' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJTZ' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
b1b56d534cae3338f90151860ca4840d
73cb6031aa1a69ad671881f19982a339b65169c6
describe
'11329' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUA' 'sip-files00073.pro'
d721abc7c663eee37134f33e5cfebc7d
dd6fd84ab28f8bff38c41406b2e07a71fb19288b
describe
'20467' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUB' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
0c31b7d972c85c9985f3816a443097e6
74b1a732cb09b274c2e7b860b1631ee53270c215
describe
'1879660' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUC' 'sip-files00073.tif'
03159402b6a5d1037af52ac8bcb8b519
b6f3e4760a280425c809aba653d3329af0dd1b19
describe
'491' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUD' 'sip-files00073.txt'
117df20363b7e6b2ded89572e148cacb
ffe9d27fa138b22bf5204689b08dbed1d498ad71
describe
'5983' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUE' 'sip-files00073thm.jpg'
56533fc4d2af2552f80f6f5a6365b23c
82dfcaa73afbd13653e3739aac6a235fddd5ee4e
'2011-11-08T02:07:46-05:00'
describe
'231508' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUF' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
46fce5def47082b61289ce3962d1bfcd
48b743cda84f51355050996387470536aee9b636
describe
'85974' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUG' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
6de7d605c417f24cf33ebb6446f8b13f
957a476d4d37eb8c3fe2c807185cca7d12819cf0
describe
'24906' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUH' 'sip-files00074.pro'
27631f119d943f639eb388dce80d1276
fec357ee0fe085bc441b050322612c4463a4e125
describe
'29552' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUI' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
59b147d7521c1bffa929255d7d534179
9c34e0c15440e009e1a5a21927c1c6be229b364c
describe
'1860720' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUJ' 'sip-files00074.tif'
591c6989a505a524aa0acf68e377b1ca
c5e04e0efdbe0ae152c1ce3752879142440bbc3c
describe
'1096' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUK' 'sip-files00074.txt'
94af88e5c87f0912255ae0fcee447a07
8c1244294e886added8d421723fbc1f4c3c1e581
describe
'8782' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUL' 'sip-files00074thm.jpg'
91e59da270cdc517997a70ed9f4b4440
8802389906ba5bfcbae42a01fa681c78fc721814
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUM' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
9ed22ab74690093a84fe7b97fabf406f
e8563bae7fda7454fad95a4c91eb08374995e043
describe
'123669' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUN' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
85a3ffe63d694a26386a9b0e55f577ba
df3e477eb3898afa1017997ddb01557ac6cba937
describe
'31065' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUO' 'sip-files00075.pro'
42535e55b5403ecb531dcdacc413e9fb
077813e4c58f76858b7f1cb4d8215549fe78744c
describe
'46848' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUP' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
3452b00c5900a6f6548d74fa205454bd
e1ba2d0f6c1571c2b976dfca2ba7d29922136349
'2011-11-08T02:08:52-05:00'
describe
'1881144' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUQ' 'sip-files00075.tif'
cbbf5252771bf2cbb9c6c9a8cbf9a71d
bacfbdff08582df7204e700b1d2d0df76758088c
describe
'1289' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUR' 'sip-files00075.txt'
70d20b98d384ff97cea8980be022ae2f
6b2203a4f6622968f134a7cfda70d96f37f54f8e
describe
'12543' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUS' 'sip-files00075thm.jpg'
aace5e3b23db670d6109f4ed2e59fe1a
0098b8e9b311a93dad5900aad23a602acabaf891
describe
'233901' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUT' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
9a3a57a88198df1039ea188e551e0df0
1a782a4d2fce0866925dd0db664737fd303534dc
describe
'115298' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUU' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
db2e91c92e2633bbdedfe7189c26c537
cbeb7a094791eee02eebc66a611faa78e519f2ec
describe
'29500' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUV' 'sip-files00076.pro'
80c3d0801e6684289552fdd108de45af
7a6dd995367fafe27f1ad793a02ce596d9a2a41f
describe
'42656' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUW' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
871625d063c8f68b08aca6e5b3ff1d91
2ea0b9eabe9cd214194717ea0f1071a5683e8c93
describe
'1881152' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUX' 'sip-files00076.tif'
ecd45f9eb955e43671d183e61d365047
4ca082a15a55959fcf55999be5dc1c79138793ef
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUY' 'sip-files00076.txt'
af8fe4126b31c09cd9df2c91636a514a
f02561b48a5a8fdbc4fd4d2e3405f3ae39532375
describe
'11767' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJUZ' 'sip-files00076thm.jpg'
c7c4aaff564c2b03fe614e9bc6815261
be1538a826b1468fe07efa7385bdf26c9f98e4d9
describe
'234206' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVA' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
06455306361d40479c958da03bd17552
34abd9865bfd2b4056c3120581b8992b62760e07
describe
'107343' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVB' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
85bf54569288d2bc210e82c42ce4e0d9
04a4b1403aaa4b678f7a1a140e828006e205c37a
describe
'27355' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVC' 'sip-files00077.pro'
696b6d742f93efc5916f78452bb8e648
dd2c25ae7941ec944ebce1e07b7925ab3be7add6
describe
'32921' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVD' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
1a3ff6becfabcb28ca308042ec35c2c6
5a103937a44566e7e3d9868f14d05293a1850742
describe
'1883004' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVE' 'sip-files00077.tif'
d17d468f146467c066b49a89431d3ee8
fbb9369f2d85ff6ff932521394adc3c25723fd79
'2011-11-08T02:08:55-05:00'
describe
'1155' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVF' 'sip-files00077.txt'
85500b731b172b2133666c892026bd48
fedce9aef94a1feb05697ac76a51adf4041d80c2
describe
'11405' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVG' 'sip-files00077thm.jpg'
4c01ccc118a991cb9ef7f1ea29c4ffe1
450759d0e1fe0d6bb5529b9d2205040562e1c2ee
describe
'234139' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVH' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
8c056ebd7a60d926d89bbe41cb6173ae
2ceff6aaf81035c0f589394d2d27c21eb02d045b
describe
'119708' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVI' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
7a68ac39f4463890f12c7abe135fde56
cbf054f96576e6092bff2abd62d310177cc325ac
describe
'31195' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVJ' 'sip-files00078.pro'
89ec00660adab2e6178d6805925c6706
c3f89fa864f8acd0411c9b15995b197c1232750e
describe
'38993' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVK' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
c14bb5ef6a544102c5aa326e0bf34243
e3b47a62c43a742dc9aa56981b012ae15f2e2204
describe
'1883068' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVL' 'sip-files00078.tif'
4f613536471f8da72b37729e863879f0
40b77538a9b3b07e31677811616427af12d67060
describe
'1284' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVM' 'sip-files00078.txt'
73fd88c69c7f99bcd9813dee907c1e6c
f442f7d3433fe53e776a2c4fe7a4620b8265ea6c
describe
'12116' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVN' 'sip-files00078thm.jpg'
be84e4486f1ab563ef36c4dca086f2b0
5423d8b0b0ee1c3be440a091d77ce3f4629fd793
describe
'234038' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVO' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
debe06e4b347e42831aaefaf332890c2
cbfa37604d2c5131c9674f3e9fa2569cc65ce5df
describe
'116853' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVP' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
f7fafe0032a01ce69d7bb478685c132a
1ff22a57efb954868e6cf4970cde121cf32740be
describe
'29625' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVQ' 'sip-files00079.pro'
6c9ee44e6fb40453eaee0fe45b335e8b
80289e165b68ab795e7bee3d58a4fae547cfd4c7
describe
'43266' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVR' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
4a243242bb764b546690761201d463aa
6fd325e912a07ca1a5b7bd232ac17b72cde874fb
describe
'1881900' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVS' 'sip-files00079.tif'
b36b9403d3a667f11785eb5b3a5e1d84
465b8416a09662a709813bcbffd53cf2d5a62fa5
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVT' 'sip-files00079.txt'
9cade3c3265a4cf175ee047ea84dc8af
0a00b6130ad0214bfcbd4ba36ccde85cb0305da0
describe
'11789' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVU' 'sip-files00079thm.jpg'
402937408826fb6becdab757c526ed4a
30328b4dbab95a9e02131d8ba983224385b92bf4
describe
'230486' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVV' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
bfc8fb719130f54ed1c05a9409555f6a
1f58f373bb90ffeb35af37be836522ff4712aa0d
describe
'112414' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVW' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
9fd582f300830aa6520a3dee026c6f88
5f6974ccb6600671000071e71f6ba49dd6a5a4eb
describe
'28880' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVX' 'sip-files00080.pro'
1ee652af4b214000184c25de3b0b7d02
361782321011f4e2c67d97b498ba8c7dd215ee26
describe
'38058' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVY' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
bb8a400796f2b2f21b9582f047017544
4d7468a06fcc0b4fad7247f7452b6e3fa97a3a05
describe
'1853208' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJVZ' 'sip-files00080.tif'
c0f8cb2b1ceda9fd94847172a2c28ee5
1aee60c5b7521d9080d8e300689a8577ba630530
describe
'1205' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWA' 'sip-files00080.txt'
eaa3a2ce2a5810732580def8abbb8c6b
e046ee09897f60dc24367003fd435b460a9988c6
describe
'11716' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWB' 'sip-files00080thm.jpg'
0e7e630f5b5b87c8da94f027ccdcff47
8ba22210252cf18e027c19ef0654462d5358888f
describe
'234173' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWC' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
efbd7d9c177811793063e977c6f54fc3
1b10e109141d79bf3c59be1fdf273b5924dbdfc3
describe
'117650' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWD' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
e054b593b08e9e77f1f4495c1ece29eb
a60dd287815ae9c76ee3754276e05570f82d07a6
describe
'30137' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWE' 'sip-files00081.pro'
e46aaf48c504ada5fdc407c4c7912405
34b48eb8b27fc5e05b2f67521aea538f7f24a199
describe
'43605' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWF' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
03fe2f514c921d2771213007dfd993be
a001f8460dd21bc4dc71cc89e03f6b782697a1c1
describe
'1883156' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWG' 'sip-files00081.tif'
bdecafebef9d2207fc4819166add7ea8
6173299a22b3709d270f3bdd1962ebba940223fe
describe
'1276' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWH' 'sip-files00081.txt'
56d2fcad8577be87b5cfa294e9e1e9ac
fee29443f8fe7dbcf73d02d608697c758f91e967
describe
'11847' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWI' 'sip-files00081thm.jpg'
497d043c01611417889ae5b50ae07594
2a83eafe598d51009e3232ab12e9045b2c70ea33
describe
'234168' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWJ' 'sip-files00082.jp2'
b0526fcc3ecfd4aa7ceae8081b3aa895
6c326acf39d70dfd19642310ad47d5af8dd83e5c
describe
'116176' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWK' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
a494580d81cb391c7d30ea4bd9296587
44eac8e53043455072514e3fc6a7813bb0938d80
describe
'29855' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWL' 'sip-files00082.pro'
59becab614585f4d798a222a5f2b6709
5bbaa29972079eacaea235207554e96f91c9c7c0
describe
'39890' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWM' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
b25e39ff6fa84e3bf2db0ddc4c55b2a6
c38327789e65327e096e69d3eaac5b933e49047a
describe
'1882896' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWN' 'sip-files00082.tif'
771c16336bdcec5e2d07bf0ea73c6ee9
12d62a4f2d4299aec3bf55ab247f90b70c60e04d
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWO' 'sip-files00082.txt'
88f8950b1851acd1d4737e036dc807f2
4362f19f1533581948f3250585798f25577e9296
describe
'11889' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWP' 'sip-files00082thm.jpg'
2789fb86055f1436372923351fc407aa
7a6e75a78fc82a307ce51ac7fc6dc0a44a63fc2d
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWQ' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
871a12e28aa54c088d555771e70459a7
6271ab59509a6b43350ca4f39c0f4b06682facff
describe
'116434' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWR' 'sip-files00083.jpg'
f2566ea8755f760431a63e4cc6873058
f8fbe97c097ae785113d11c207513936dc31c4cb
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWS' 'sip-files00083.pro'
63e9712102dde63c0368d1f61ae3e5e1
a257af101021c5924fbd3cb7ec2e6ffb90e0fa76
describe
'37115' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWT' 'sip-files00083.QC.jpg'
483957024dc5ca602c588b5013d998f5
d0471024bfc46698d85f29f9f7852b849b7186df
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWU' 'sip-files00083.tif'
f525770f62d96c2a7a72219c81c1aa53
eb470b38f3b3afa344063983708d2e0a1aa7181c
describe
'1253' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWV' 'sip-files00083.txt'
13caa83d460fbe969fde85431d784889
673e87c03606384b3813aecd95a7b78f6d787de1
describe
'11664' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWW' 'sip-files00083thm.jpg'
8565acb272dfed66b5946f1ee2b762b6
d9bfa3f4e25afd090cdf2284539be4b2c5d944dd
describe
'234208' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWX' 'sip-files00084.jp2'
5993b3bfe7364325a245127d0073259c
05628a30b9ee868b43ada845b465f6a985dc0459
describe
'119595' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWY' 'sip-files00084.jpg'
a026cd3e36babd36fc35d32350430af2
68d59b8ebd6fcb32460fab56a771ce0159c25b83
describe
'31264' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJWZ' 'sip-files00084.pro'
2d510eeac0c0e2fa7062efa7751f7999
113d8bb8f874f4ff94ac413e6467ac6119dc0d0a
describe
'41256' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXA' 'sip-files00084.QC.jpg'
8bfba45b213317e8b1ac60598240df9f
e898aa30dccb54762539499052dff50b1b5081b7
describe
'1882900' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXB' 'sip-files00084.tif'
d9768bc2ac69349b363ed1121c53e0af
beba2da42417266f473d2a6d4e31d69ea51e4401
describe
'1307' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXC' 'sip-files00084.txt'
24894d071bc97520b317dce3f667d94f
4a064863bd3e6f3da6e5887e90a986c31af86548
describe
'12198' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXD' 'sip-files00084thm.jpg'
8dc94611bc2012de2965cf2ece7c755d
eab17c7b9e078d084fa5a4cad773cda8dcaa6c17
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXE' 'sip-files00085.jp2'
a7875cbeaf74d45ae333b49f2503787c
caaa369d1bb0c58d2dd8ff24d333c7a41ad9ad7b
describe
'114765' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXF' 'sip-files00085.jpg'
54050ccde984b1b532046690ca3e7fb7
8cf3469194c911ec8b85a51cd6fe2e30db541924
describe
'29183' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXG' 'sip-files00085.pro'
b58c390ed1019496e460b2cb99e428c8
9ddee0cdb1f20a818c1180d735c0dd9baa23b5bc
describe
'39968' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXH' 'sip-files00085.QC.jpg'
7d095dc4adad8749975213b412dee68d
2b83ac5258db480cd7b17780d2fea77b7716cd45
describe
'1881396' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXI' 'sip-files00085.tif'
72ae688aa43e32598e430416f815de28
fc7c9863f7dec8d64d287921521799a440ac9985
'2011-11-08T02:08:44-05:00'
describe
'1233' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXJ' 'sip-files00085.txt'
22768c0b100435e6c26b1a0c92976fab
a916be58e809ebc298077764a034f3b347c1c2fa
describe
'11749' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXK' 'sip-files00085thm.jpg'
ba85a83b95b6a70d355e8a8e6dcc48ab
707af56d59d80660fc829a24d1bae1ab23834f19
describe
'234167' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXL' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
bd098b57c4210ad5ff6dabdcc22f3df6
fab7f352cf109e7fb4cfbb0c4f85c470eb9798df
describe
'122613' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXM' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
1d715f9d27e24d27ac5911d002ae1ef7
e5a27400bc6bd1a1529742260fb47f169dfaa889
describe
'31289' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXN' 'sip-files00086.pro'
804dd74da521747527f390a84cb450f6
00b1842cf1e9166d81bae8783d7d348d01db6f2f
describe
'38460' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXO' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
a0d8d4a525f4dccf1977bc24d89f939b
712baf32c211d60b2f0bd78e0d8b2896ab6f6251
describe
'1883172' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXP' 'sip-files00086.tif'
15f368e278c171e39fcf5a3863b457c5
df5aa9395d72129111a11af3c0abdda7d97e07d9
describe
'1288' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXQ' 'sip-files00086.txt'
58ce3e7fcd01cbd2f41e049b6b29c37b
f10994dc8c9a2d359130676149f40040452bdca2
describe
'12108' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXR' 'sip-files00086thm.jpg'
7f5df13e411368190802ff5d0841fdee
79a293ee6e82a9f6045179feb66148cbcd0202ad
describe
'233979' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXS' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
7c3abe3bf5dde30614f8a978e8ed3342
313d500a4d8cea26ebc8e14926b5b4f300401e73
describe
'112854' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXT' 'sip-files00087.jpg'
799c9000466c5f46c80e77b069a8ab79
145e12c9f829d9760db80c4d7f430a3def02a5d7
describe
'28272' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXU' 'sip-files00087.pro'
bec7e4bb07c216e73cd821bd14a93b42
81eb95fcb1300196310692d4112a71e464601bfd
describe
'38293' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXV' 'sip-files00087.QC.jpg'
a26be998a3ffc25c8a573015a96080d0
1d1aa85422ea7a808cff99afa397c44217266555
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXW' 'sip-files00087.tif'
8208eda09fdcff71937cb5b397aadab3
15e20518d6916690b3e1f6caadfa14d62ecf1a0e
describe
'1203' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXX' 'sip-files00087.txt'
5561a730075b9d17eda7795863460d26
70be54122317b7585161143c2de5d637fc7ad66f
describe
'11542' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXY' 'sip-files00087thm.jpg'
f8aafbe687bd71b8a26ed24ec6c2aaa7
4cebfceceeb3782b161f51c0cd082fbfd81f98da
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJXZ' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
f573c65112a441bde98c478fd4192a97
6567596f8bd495d102c1295f8636d096e00836da
describe
'117044' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYA' 'sip-files00088.jpg'
af732e6795765845bdce448647e16561
f4bd69d5e15a5bf575be415635cba225859bf6ef
describe
'29321' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYB' 'sip-files00088.pro'
d1dedfbcc71c5f9b29c19cbfd0ff374a
4832aeca801ce49f331e13a6ca4318770a055d87
describe
'41893' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYC' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
2a71070b46a3b29d64369472266ae5cb
7e06c5655688de80545473b1606954d0d5b09772
describe
'1881452' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYD' 'sip-files00088.tif'
93df1e19db9ea23a834b72ecef228834
fbd1903c957c00ac827f0ec7650164f03fa399cc
describe
'1223' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYE' 'sip-files00088.txt'
688029160ef9a746de549f59e5532765
cf78b2439afc5cb1639e45bf7e2c9abd2d7acca5
describe
'11895' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYF' 'sip-files00088thm.jpg'
9ccf94f22022f785801faf43dfe69180
4e5b879a284917fe9803fe85e83159e133b63820
describe
'234013' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYG' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
6301ae690ffada19d56eefcb8c6fa9d6
0cc8186750de6b93c6e13c0392edc159a66fb7f1
describe
'111659' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYH' 'sip-files00089.jpg'
db00cd3cbc450ff7be9d18247cd44317
394a68082ca791d769b85ddc5a949c9e8773a161
describe
'27098' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYI' 'sip-files00089.pro'
d1629dfb626b5764da868d6b71068554
85f281b299ab7c695a0ad5d19611e420863d1b0c
describe
'35487' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYJ' 'sip-files00089.QC.jpg'
f3dad4044cc6985dd67c1c76b8898598
946d76ce638a457ea4f0065c560ee60f11af64cf
describe
'1882088' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYK' 'sip-files00089.tif'
100ef74ac2f27103aa552e4bc5bd3448
bca185265a3f5f75f357884d218bc0bdd8993a20
describe
'1143' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYL' 'sip-files00089.txt'
0f327681e54354815e8caf9f290f8e4c
6a76f9e06dda461121b57db39d63ddaa1b24fb83
describe
'11747' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYM' 'sip-files00089thm.jpg'
8cc2a071717f68be26dcd8c66c6e964a
cb854623996b19e2d21036680a6e10958ca5359b
'2011-11-08T02:08:05-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYN' 'sip-files00090.jp2'
7d867c751bee1561cd4e71e7db7f1a29
96d5407bb314c6dd4325afbd3d7aa84c4fa12d6d
describe
'115503' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYO' 'sip-files00090.jpg'
c19f577330ed3a9b9651c5b15fd4e0e9
f838ade1ab778caec3d93467c8f84cd82d7cee09
describe
'29487' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYP' 'sip-files00090.pro'
125df28b56e2998d745b074fa663d067
39743e56a8aa209e0d971789f08e0b753162b3ca
describe
'38134' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYQ' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
d36fdd9b7e6fd0dd00fc8bbd0aa856e4
0419a9f2ce5ba58ccd28a2b07d32a3a578ad9836
describe
'1880240' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYR' 'sip-files00090.tif'
c3f18ba70f55aea7f95c29cbd96b4648
c4291a51dee7684b18764d5073bf788603ec958f
describe
'1220' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYS' 'sip-files00090.txt'
ed52ab474a2d75af7e1f8a219e326ea7
36ba2a4503451c0f5f3d2db0c147a1728c5ad4e0
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYT' 'sip-files00090thm.jpg'
0a0f7183e92c7ca3afe2a3db4fcdf6b6
9c52af826440b186ffc4e6ab85d43c4649e5044a
describe
'234188' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYU' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
2c8217af5e06cdee4d2d3577b541d7cb
313a38235f35536a5c9dfee3eaaa68f0abcd83dd
describe
'104579' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYV' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
e90504d80e121efe067dc641ac2b51bc
f6eadf10548109c0f4f78aa25ca31ea39a1b07ba
describe
'25303' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYW' 'sip-files00091.pro'
a65119d5cc36a76557887958073fd89f
014bd19473380bec6a87d072a1acd0ab61065d3e
describe
'37899' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYX' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
5597fdd7b402c7cf6517cddee8104c3f
5d600a80339147697dd2e85357a1b6fe371628d0
describe
'1882720' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYY' 'sip-files00091.tif'
ec673fa7b0baca153276ecfa280fb041
3ccb647415eea7fd470db702f5ec72cb9aea6e91
describe
'1115' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJYZ' 'sip-files00091.txt'
6576308e9a904523de323df7f6d287d4
5fcc8067bb965e96d323ab63a1ffa5a03e583f7d
describe
'10524' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZA' 'sip-files00091thm.jpg'
79c990e3b0fbbbd72b595193042deb6e
22a21c906cd2838b142790beaf3110624eb838b1
describe
'233962' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZB' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
74ce68e8670e89bf63d6dbb5f55ca1d3
87f33efdb313e4c00473dda6a218e93d291eb038
describe
'85559' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZC' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
95ffaf05ee11cec15d10e81f7c7f748a
646800ed7b8cf08801695d566e96fabcf2b164ee
describe
'23302' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZD' 'sip-files00092.pro'
8f9d5b658351805b4bea278a1b9c75ca
1808deb3a6c3cccb6ed81c23f562ffae657e69aa
describe
'28949' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZE' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
0add715af884d84ed31bcbf87a2d1e74
0bc5542e3b8d560f805931d138b446484c57aff3
describe
'1880364' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZF' 'sip-files00092.tif'
d7963ef8b62f2942838e12a14e33714a
9fc80c33da66fca43a57caf32eb1baa12bbaa55d
describe
'1033' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZG' 'sip-files00092.txt'
410bb01770b2d3610c4f49548b3bb051
91ad3a4b8cdefd6a9f3b29ddbdfc903d83418cc0
describe
'8380' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZH' 'sip-files00092thm.jpg'
13130b0584ac2a4eadfc9ec76766c06b
5aaef2bc9331424caef7ca1bd2095364c0f48073
'2011-11-08T02:06:29-05:00'
describe
'233927' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZI' 'sip-files00093.jp2'
d3c578fc64a47cfcdf952c49b242acc6
c528dc659759a6b7191e175d28d8a3532a78f87f
describe
'112522' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZJ' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
12850794a5889e7c222fd415e97f567f
2dd2ede881563f7e8512650d56bf01a2d4de205b
describe
'29046' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZK' 'sip-files00093.pro'
c64437557f787707dd37d3c6b0edc8f2
b17067aa61bfc57ef5dc0d1c38dbc8d7edf103de
describe
'39782' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZL' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
1c8a3ef26d3b7275fdc1655174109756
9f95e641e7ac314879c22237295deb865cc04b2f
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZM' 'sip-files00093.tif'
efa8c731eac931f727c8cc024b29649e
7236e8cacb149b681f8120e4c391bcc9f604401d
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZN' 'sip-files00093.txt'
57f8a6bfb4512ce5c09b85709e04775a
7bb2513e338ab1f99644bd590016923c50c6795f
describe
'11866' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZO' 'sip-files00093thm.jpg'
9af7423fcaa6a03c167e6dc14a2b65a2
819bc4dfc420ae86cc825a79e1f952568c362640
describe
'234106' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZP' 'sip-files00094.jp2'
3a7c5dccb3c2595e226a29a81360c3e0
3616a871fea60bb4579872e4ac2dab8b6c85c31b
describe
'117834' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZQ' 'sip-files00094.jpg'
facd64b75b13cc9ea8c0723e17d3e9f1
6656617bff7b3c1354ee201d239b0a2c45e3fd09
describe
'29941' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZR' 'sip-files00094.pro'
112f806e5bd06998a18bbee07128264f
9d3ea236f47a7616e84c845bf0f3770200855823
describe
'35402' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZS' 'sip-files00094.QC.jpg'
a69e1cf6cfa91a45bca8f9a60a789883
b8f1fcff55800f295ef27f24e3177df4a4986081
describe
'1883092' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZT' 'sip-files00094.tif'
72f44c40aa776df6787d1891468d4aba
c3cad20e710efc60bf3a18cb44b0e7616febe1b6
describe
'1243' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZU' 'sip-files00094.txt'
f582e1f50719ffd1d4e83238e0ef166d
f4feb0560407a29b161e933e3c889eb9cb8a7119
describe
'11629' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZV' 'sip-files00094thm.jpg'
f71cd2fe9f9e7d15ac6df036119bb014
6cbb21c03ce498b652e2f36329076a6e11460f4b
describe
'233930' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZW' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
198dc0fc7ecda3fe1862f772fb72c6da
82cd98048df9b3fc4c414b25abe38c698e16f308
describe
'117040' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZX' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
46a3705436aac8a702f8cbfa3ac4a8e8
65a63d0d340288d0a49cc4045268a24fe0866795
describe
'30076' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZY' 'sip-files00095.pro'
d347576c53aff3a142da96474a0b3290
45692a6f44b3f5969e4304db41ff8afb364146c2
describe
'41900' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAJZZ' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
18703b6ad9e24f3146a7b88272c3a6c8
8c65bfbac4f04ce82f347a0f54220510e82369d2
describe
'1881140' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAA' 'sip-files00095.tif'
d593c44b738be8a8e27040e75432f1de
a93dd72d629a2810fe5e8befac152d31b62ed4f6
describe
'1250' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAB' 'sip-files00095.txt'
1882ed7c2f0b78a0535b38678533e087
e13d9a657e4bfff09775595813c394dee38a384d
describe
'12331' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAC' 'sip-files00095thm.jpg'
a03824f0739e34c8664ff50423559da6
370562f13f1acb6a37e59975933031bb73fa49d3
describe
'233926' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAD' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
da8611fd04d26f82e5c2cf251d9f3438
e7dcc48ad78aed8b36514fbf1c9799063f33f6a9
describe
'120002' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAE' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
a3f85264cfd75c8a74ac0477bfa24112
1fd687f2db2209e9debfcde7cf095a7d04e66dd3
describe
'31427' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAF' 'sip-files00096.pro'
6905e7a4208f274d61513424b1e7a8b6
891e6297d4725703b52df025765cce8972813be2
describe
'40156' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAG' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
6189f661fcda46a98090dfe6c24f11c3
baa2cce4c328861bf29ac6838860fe6138de771f
describe
'1881192' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAH' 'sip-files00096.tif'
4b029702a37ba9fccff1b8fb8e2aa237
f222b95dcd038861d3a9733436f28e43f4e71f1a
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAI' 'sip-files00096.txt'
8923cb0375666f982d0eb495f1f00fad
e06363a0dd29fbe34c1568191f1023d6f8454a39
describe
'12303' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAJ' 'sip-files00096thm.jpg'
14d3ca295cbc8f00d794a049865c684c
c64e7e7395115e4933d15317badb572d6e707766
describe
'233946' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAK' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
e48c77d033b2a82c938d3949fd477db9
3455f17d92649eb0d7ae07818fc0d197b1b0af5a
describe
'119762' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAL' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
001231538269cbdfac64ad6a0003f5ce
92fdd3324270f8b7d4e21ad7ad0533c3c82a0dfa
describe
'30644' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAM' 'sip-files00097.pro'
ca3d638c9890999d018022ab3beabf51
37843bd1175f84ed43664b2ef1ac1565bf3618fa
describe
'39420' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAN' 'sip-files00097.QC.jpg'
a4f53c44f31394092c8e826a1b165400
6e2b88be703e81eebb2290d715a909cac642a2ae
describe
'1881336' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAO' 'sip-files00097.tif'
7d7e814577b5d87a9b5815e993af8317
87e1e044bf22e2e6af85c9f68d7b279cbdd0694d
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAP' 'sip-files00097.txt'
21fee5e5cb654beb6c91549fee52c502
21ae68a11d6c23f02c708a80aad9e0d015e41ee8
describe
'12100' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAQ' 'sip-files00097thm.jpg'
0291e076befc427af6e66251067bb529
d5c148514935644868cb17c006e38e190f54f941
describe
'233978' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAR' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
29db5b06bb92569b630f03518868a9a3
a2507fc898b76a7cbd2ed1866004fb88e840060d
describe
'119350' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAS' 'sip-files00098.jpg'
22f47fc043c912cdef2a2607dc9c9e93
d484b509e85668f2c20a5e4becf10f3ed85568a2
describe
'30699' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAT' 'sip-files00098.pro'
84c3bb6566c804319ad6ebe6fd299edb
dfb106cd0e7586b8b1962ac3a25a05209a105d1d
describe
'40906' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAU' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
d4413048925b871c75be2ce6fef49f31
f8d41564aaed140b11f94cd2830088ab75af079d
describe
'1881400' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAV' 'sip-files00098.tif'
ec5258bc1461a6bc63c8815056f60683
98d4cbc09d387d3ab8b915a82cf6ea5c89553c98
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAW' 'sip-files00098.txt'
3411cbabb77a4df6c0ba51e6e7949ae6
bbafeebcf1de1861c5f9cbed019cc2d4b75620af
describe
'12143' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAX' 'sip-files00098thm.jpg'
487a21bb14bcca973f37537e7167346b
6c506b5576065f59a8afdc801896891ad6d848ca
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAY' 'sip-files00099.jp2'
da88ffeaeb2891ab30d7da4024ab9ed2
49c1d97790f01512f1cc4ee54a654fc1eb352a5f
describe
'107411' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKAZ' 'sip-files00099.jpg'
41d5e610003ec854ca10ae49a1efb162
91d75f1e16c0aa547e31076f5b58192f21d7cdf5
describe
'27977' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBA' 'sip-files00099.pro'
d8d48472f5674783f674bb4c8bf0d481
fd56e6c0b35a8ea879e957b40cfeacfd70f19fe8
describe
'40634' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBB' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
530ce575764a1b226954200fb7e66052
1ad2c8e2b1f4359c6d6a38c891a4a73aeba91997
describe
'1882884' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBC' 'sip-files00099.tif'
220cd941337ecea8e87d0b36740d417e
5057bca4ccebd23925d44a47dee46536c809065d
describe
'1150' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBD' 'sip-files00099.txt'
3d8cc7ca27b173e08500be1c7d4abc57
7f97da038ecaa485376bd06166c55606b9fbfd11
describe
'11052' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBE' 'sip-files00099thm.jpg'
39b245444f9413ff68aeb68111fd26bb
207f99b6ec326e5d46ca6fdcb9e4a647aaa800af
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBF' 'sip-files00100.jp2'
49b383e93ef19339220960104fab30c4
bc00b398f7b0aa531fe34226bbfa2b6378521924
describe
'118300' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBG' 'sip-files00100.jpg'
c907a18196f8756f94e032e320ee78a5
6463ebcbba9e0d1e3139c247338bb32cb42a7546
describe
'30599' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBH' 'sip-files00100.pro'
0cbcb46a41a30730da176443e9cbb441
5bfce94f054ab37422a4dab9f7461acc172dc4eb
describe
'39589' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBI' 'sip-files00100.QC.jpg'
a16e8da9f15f14b051f112d958d8a2dd
87a471f9abf678cc16e59a9d780603580c6be11c
describe
'1881432' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBJ' 'sip-files00100.tif'
6f9909b92bf9b481e8ed32b105c5c671
43eb7788e656bf249e92220cbdfe34af2400d3ae
describe
'1269' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBK' 'sip-files00100.txt'
3682ca0100fb64887d2e2f8903765c79
8bb929652585c331aa07c3bc271b2d15d3eabf72
describe
'12400' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBL' 'sip-files00100thm.jpg'
788da27ad0cba3d6995f31272c6c8d53
9f245661a4638368d432f39084595396f34f63a5
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBM' 'sip-files00101.jp2'
9f3817d94e68005c2e29c5cfc29fa487
47b1635e8b4714f8e9e9de363f3e7a63e0734c99
describe
'106382' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBN' 'sip-files00101.jpg'
19fd169a7fbe2d815c6cb2e9a98d5334
43cf4b4a0aea2da8d8481d06c2a3505bbeb30c85
describe
'26930' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBO' 'sip-files00101.pro'
0b04dabb0b64a3db344d65f649dd378a
18fe9913ed04590727555bd729f35c9ed1538331
describe
'41639' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBP' 'sip-files00101.QC.jpg'
81b11fb46f426f0e9f34ddc1cee1175f
c784088ae6d05a7169d56d8562e3caf157151c0a
describe
'1881348' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBQ' 'sip-files00101.tif'
9494f29eb74d67be1e2d185404396c2f
fa7f6de95d1d60b835a0246a8242dabf7bc02978
describe
'1128' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBR' 'sip-files00101.txt'
86ba98b4b993870b1426c583e09d4377
e87ff8b1d4a76226eced9a67f9f5926c8acdcf9d
describe
'11260' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBS' 'sip-files00101thm.jpg'
004de102df245b80b001f2c379d8df03
4d6dc202e809db3a53a1d38ab1363a16218b876f
describe
'237872' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBT' 'sip-files00102.jp2'
e6103254d0cf611e00a325d9206cf4c9
87f65265d81b15ac01260e9c5f319ba4a8c20927
describe
'104901' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBU' 'sip-files00102.jpg'
274b6f6e3d3bb9b23cd6a719fec83104
d9571a7fd8aadc33ab2a0146fd1d3cbee9c76e92
describe
'26987' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBV' 'sip-files00102.pro'
32ab65118ec142086a4df2dfe0257e59
bfe4fdfe1f28dccdb0f3c67b5e1f84920c6dfa5d
describe
'38498' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBW' 'sip-files00102.QC.jpg'
bbb9fe1f99dd95341d95e6faaa2845ef
ba61962ff56fe38de71a8d7140fb73c52e161327
describe
'1912252' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBX' 'sip-files00102.tif'
0ad08573e0cb5b493e26942a0c5814a7
9faf46bf22f9ece76bc8371e69edfb0225405d64
describe
'1134' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBY' 'sip-files00102.txt'
895c86245969f46de761bf944c338735
e534819ea0e47fb7baae76b20a89915b7c7d9bf4
describe
'10992' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKBZ' 'sip-files00102thm.jpg'
1ae785c0fc750351df4239de7b69380a
f52d13deb1b86d3b77150e7ddafa79928d6432c1
describe
'234154' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCA' 'sip-files00103.jp2'
65a9b7e08ae0f902ac66ab1b4f75a44b
d3a87c53766ab9e5096192172e5368bba45c6afe
describe
'108369' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCB' 'sip-files00103.jpg'
fdc37f6e1108e3dfc707ef780665b6c3
424bd513903d4e921a967a66b472a2ded7558950
describe
'28007' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCC' 'sip-files00103.pro'
94b8628604d1172adf39a65183970abe
8b2409700c9ef88efc3107bc480228aa4abdbe09
describe
'40666' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCD' 'sip-files00103.QC.jpg'
8ab613353c4b552bf6546a0e211891a3
040d64bd89366124aa33cb8ce14a7e5a6b9bf53e
describe
'1882848' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCE' 'sip-files00103.tif'
c1c3cb52675a5b82b7c9bf517c8afb75
3e2977fdb24b2bf1705105adb713c78a2c99153a
'2011-11-08T02:08:49-05:00'
describe
'1237' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCF' 'sip-files00103.txt'
0027485947ace601c435ed300031d7f4
ee64ebe6c31d9f96f56b0f94a3d332acec55901b
describe
'10970' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCG' 'sip-files00103thm.jpg'
c32ec38c3607da1e165af4b18aca8e53
c451d00c614f2a1779184c7a8cdd8b1722782ce3
describe
'234049' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCH' 'sip-files00104.jp2'
04cd574f8b6e958ed31ba0a71c6722e8
f502907fd70bcc2a4c76a2ee136cc04a28048c23
describe
'119704' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCI' 'sip-files00104.jpg'
5b76b21489004a345ccda1e354280b98
4a1c4f849d32544335f84ee196e06ee562e8fc1a
describe
'30498' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCJ' 'sip-files00104.pro'
a6de71641271b7e408daa45dce15cccb
fdd1a4ae2e6f4d3b172201b74bae52788385802a
describe
'45322' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCK' 'sip-files00104.QC.jpg'
d02561f668573a78107c939b025a5606
b92fed9160947dea871d35c19cf993447b2c8a5e
describe
'1881800' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCL' 'sip-files00104.tif'
eecb9dcc4662b32de99a9a24b4982518
6513f3b9216b415e03c46bd37035d45eb0a5a820
'2011-11-08T02:06:53-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCM' 'sip-files00104.txt'
1685df9dc527673037d3c8503aa56b79
80e7ee92c567fbf4a158f7d43f8c80e7bc5e03d0
describe
'12013' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCN' 'sip-files00104thm.jpg'
f6f0102f7e02e172b965612c839b6347
28b834c40d225e5f1f21591f82de32eb6e89f19b
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCO' 'sip-files00105.jp2'
42ad1a19361530e33af70eb70876c04a
f331e82dabe93f75287dd21c8881eae850885d41
describe
'99379' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCP' 'sip-files00105.jpg'
e4c0e46bc6de8058c2a14051107717e2
09446e5a7f5be7b1cb47de0c8af06708bbae6cc6
describe
'24376' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCQ' 'sip-files00105.pro'
0e2b811b3638a50f3ce8b3daa3993392
c1c6fb8550b173558637a296fd65da737b30dcf1
'2011-11-08T02:06:42-05:00'
describe
'29492' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCR' 'sip-files00105.QC.jpg'
0c6838b5804539f1b93dddb1277db177
03d87049311061d73676138e0c4d68f6109b19e5
describe
'1880812' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCS' 'sip-files00105.tif'
fd9d15943f51f470467a0c241f2b7546
d1b7cea8c2e37168bbae9493e5f4f9123a91825b
describe
'1053' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCT' 'sip-files00105.txt'
d834ee5620d29e7bbfaf32964fa15004
fd97f3fbb7bbb58209e76600499e9fc7a4c926ed
describe
Invalid character
'10184' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCU' 'sip-files00105thm.jpg'
c8444821af348bcdcd39485b5efa87d7
e6223899dc9a2edc517b72860d2c35d7536ceba1
describe
'231470' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCV' 'sip-files00106.jp2'
7911080e566a76ed91983bfadda01ba7
462a462dc10ebc82bbe9801f86a761c131b623fe
describe
'87701' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCW' 'sip-files00106.jpg'
bd02cbd12c90a566956063a63d61c2b5
015ae4a1c525d4c0d661f447a3d9c9e967e79a9f
describe
'26148' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCX' 'sip-files00106.pro'
82fb519fbb96afb2670a63e43b4c700a
928fe2f3e23e318b4931531b2981e23299c2a59d
describe
'27695' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCY' 'sip-files00106.QC.jpg'
3029b05978c7e8faa5ddf5d03db687f2
4aece1f546047c016a364e39d33e73337fb08d5a
describe
'1860600' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKCZ' 'sip-files00106.tif'
69b8e270a17750701e514232082973e8
135c506121ba6bde727c92d1193d970964b116da
describe
'1162' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDA' 'sip-files00106.txt'
1c2e5ce57d7fa9abe216b0b19c09a6e3
45768e0eb33172bfa46e894facc50bbb4ac1fa00
describe
'8960' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDB' 'sip-files00106thm.jpg'
f9d6f137d212570a3e5b701534ad543b
048c8bafe27810e61aceaf45e5601427ded8a799
describe
'234183' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDC' 'sip-files00107.jp2'
c65c595baa752e43bf6c4b636617330f
0c69e6aaeb6ff06e2ccf3dfbe06b8fb3878a6d24
describe
'114980' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDD' 'sip-files00107.jpg'
c29146d1436edffd342083cabd59b62e
7c8c80ed3f25a52363e17e7e9d18a6167885e64b
describe
'29947' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDE' 'sip-files00107.pro'
01fbb2b40b1d19e76176c50656defbae
029e1b313d7d779ee29b11ac21c8c1a0d067ac86
describe
'35353' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDF' 'sip-files00107.QC.jpg'
fc25bf581100d7c18f52ce8ccc9d51aa
fe5195d5afa9b7892a8659108308b86b02aac1e2
describe
'1882904' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDG' 'sip-files00107.tif'
9c591a64b07459c0907efe5973654dad
147c05a2c5d96fad9985037e75094f8dbb939269
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDH' 'sip-files00107.txt'
28a4fdd6a4c85df5fad3e52cb7683e4e
f309324fb6feefbd5933454db9e9fad9b5b6f795
describe
'11776' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDI' 'sip-files00107thm.jpg'
cb03e495377c4ea9cf4650496d193da3
447c760c8752b997611b1493ba2643141e2ca028
describe
'233956' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDJ' 'sip-files00108.jp2'
7849dd07e5ee14a9891184834b683a8b
c18881fd686309ee372d9cd6267d6b29a26662ed
describe
'115410' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDK' 'sip-files00108.jpg'
0f1bec3a32410304122fdc0deca3f8a8
19ee7712af522a34cde7b317015444483b375174
describe
'29908' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDL' 'sip-files00108.pro'
c65807af86e976c1153a713be43d9794
229e3be770ddb7a1a026b01f113131d3cff8c218
describe
'38525' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDM' 'sip-files00108.QC.jpg'
35961e93e8e0b04b7abfdd779e708f2f
7e98357685c5d783b44bfe1eb34ad6fd979b63b1
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDN' 'sip-files00108.tif'
2d563481117b9d3f39c9a2ba3ea95c70
bb022cacb2e94e9d838cedf8fa9db6e186db828d
describe
'1236' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDO' 'sip-files00108.txt'
5e8f050e1526528bcd9db489e6f26a2a
b7f1ea3618ca5d5f6b4d87346d0daedc9069bfac
describe
'11810' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDP' 'sip-files00108thm.jpg'
804488ee5f4271d9228b3cb9c867a949
1cf188bacf4ab7157bef27e09615619e7e0887e4
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDQ' 'sip-files00109.jp2'
dc476437a4d78c4869c8212d18b95567
3d5e9ace1753c5045706d795dc29d34afe08dd67
describe
'118605' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDR' 'sip-files00109.jpg'
4c889c2ae7b9d19388269983d3a0698d
877c9d9a97f86e9b9247f9b66e9f6eec6162d244
describe
'30808' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDS' 'sip-files00109.pro'
d3be6e74d7a078a1feaff5fda45c1a9c
ebe9bb109077d84c3619b1f20614883998a68ce3
describe
'37884' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDT' 'sip-files00109.QC.jpg'
f59ef93afba5509a8440b327090f88b3
286a3aad5aeaa5a31b39256d8a267e3fa822b4ce
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDU' 'sip-files00109.tif'
d86e7e22c405caca8d30493064305e09
8458f66ac45961feb07bbdcb9232af4dae1295bc
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDV' 'sip-files00109.txt'
113ed775123db6f76604e771d84db0af
ef9ff939c8a9059538d94799a16fb132c1778c9a
describe
'11699' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDW' 'sip-files00109thm.jpg'
d476abc123a9abbb00e9fe5ae068dfbf
f21e34c09d9424931df00d845f5c1897767767ed
describe
'233896' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDX' 'sip-files00110.jp2'
d1ff18c1800dde0c8c6d7c135cfcc6e3
135ecf1677b112f1ee10fa132be99f4cac6b234f
describe
'109643' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDY' 'sip-files00110.jpg'
458dbde5165308fc8b1597647fdb84ad
2b8d1f9b4eeee1f050bd3c912268d56905e19981
describe
'28543' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKDZ' 'sip-files00110.pro'
ffa64ea31c4b8fd81669e4923225db7c
721f7f945a543bef08139532bd758f79e820b586
describe
'34379' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEA' 'sip-files00110.QC.jpg'
f532dbc890ca8da03123cfcf895aa1b7
17c9e09d09faec80666f53a635bd127dd504fbee
describe
'1880856' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEB' 'sip-files00110.tif'
f5da35057a8e2548a56111af5bcfeba9
0d698a8aa281be51ed94baa481f7f33d55b2f5f4
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEC' 'sip-files00110.txt'
56a8b98ca08bad14c66e0827cada91b9
4a7bbc23b4d76b67acd00374cc9bccd006b918cf
describe
'10762' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKED' 'sip-files00110thm.jpg'
a2604cd2f35409db9870c00ddfc4f70d
05e2550b1135c26fc20e76e1723966aa28388d15
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEE' 'sip-files00111.jp2'
fb1989390adf2f9ef0b46db249b41552
c43d84dc815cfa42e869e77898166a8ccfda5454
describe
'117938' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEF' 'sip-files00111.jpg'
771367d50d332a4a0f4b1313f9ed97e7
13731eadbdd64a418052511237d55e734e544758
describe
'30896' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEG' 'sip-files00111.pro'
c737543ba744e06a3251a2f976915c93
aaa678c1adebc1262dbae507210d318fc3ef2940
describe
'42596' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEH' 'sip-files00111.QC.jpg'
770d54d212f51d01145cae6c7308f18f
580e9052f138ca14b90f2e3d179c53207135ea2c
describe
'1882924' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEI' 'sip-files00111.tif'
19a8c43382d9ac35f37cbeae4d810ff5
ea6593d6fad4ee58a401ae053c48d00353b537ff
describe
'1327' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEJ' 'sip-files00111.txt'
68b2847b2a03c544aa273857c536086e
99733af9489430e9e7ea6b69144f1aacf8b901d3
describe
'11638' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEK' 'sip-files00111thm.jpg'
8cf727e84e9a75102b9db999421cf620
45cb019a044937124bae6a1fb69a65c4c68757e6
describe
'233961' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEL' 'sip-files00112.jp2'
0fba56317be3fd6652b09b4f75e67428
cdce57442998c6b6777ad07ec3f8deaaf354daca
describe
'115612' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEM' 'sip-files00112.jpg'
fb8f767c055713eee66e62debdf74898
38e41c3f78ba4aa7a3f5d05284164e2c6b9b40ff
describe
'30152' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEN' 'sip-files00112.pro'
e2f864bbdc70ffc6b2909bdf119eef84
280ecab66c22ecc2ecebdc50d40d9fa60701db6d
describe
'45386' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEO' 'sip-files00112.QC.jpg'
0f55137dd7836425bb36641c1aa40847
64b1632ca902e6605d3e3db4e200a88c29058484
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEP' 'sip-files00112.tif'
4f798f6c605e6db88db9ab329e2354e8
4f2aadc745463f343b0b742068db06c5484d4872
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEQ' 'sip-files00112.txt'
5d80ba91abbf7c42a9724de7f36436f9
195677a1fa24ba1ce2c1f5f6337886f3169e089e
describe
'11831' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKER' 'sip-files00112thm.jpg'
aae9c1330a8ef2b94ba035f092b484c1
f1f8f4817b1962863bddd73fa8878e2e87fecb0b
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKES' 'sip-files00113.jp2'
f6fa505a4bd6f2eece3195d9a70ccc60
ee4e2f4c4b528746b7d9bb63dfb77a7ecd49ffd1
describe
'111362' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKET' 'sip-files00113.jpg'
3ac7bc2bc6643c2b802f9736b4680412
d9a5ba3e79d1ea5f9f8de6bcc9a2a23ff72bc450
describe
'28757' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEU' 'sip-files00113.pro'
6af21ee0008a7d907af43d5ac4e7ebcb
78b6d63f0f3c8220489b41eaf1ae56e98b33abad
describe
'39604' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEV' 'sip-files00113.QC.jpg'
92c9e4d8e73075e0e6591b0e12530658
b62ad4ef633249689fe868e856be995779660798
describe
'1881176' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEW' 'sip-files00113.tif'
2dfab1ff9e8bdf854f566c8dd97c3133
6218c0dbc5aa795d43c2526cd2491b4fffa954ea
describe
'1217' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEX' 'sip-files00113.txt'
a1918a519c9fd5e35f29bedda4dabf0c
5635e050ad80cd21188eab090b49e7514d23aacf
describe
'11560' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEY' 'sip-files00113thm.jpg'
6e6746a0ccf6269f1dbb6a51b87eedeb
19e180bd182e69d3f90b3f10ab028ce03d86ed95
describe
'234161' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKEZ' 'sip-files00114.jp2'
238c798bdfabf4fc6368a7c4310b52b3
ad9c1d07a02b89db6573edc6a4a7ea967e5fa664
describe
'116712' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFA' 'sip-files00114.jpg'
9ff014c27cf2fc2037a3bef3b3da715c
f4a1467d6cb44947b4b881c0d32595a41a84f396
describe
'30914' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFB' 'sip-files00114.pro'
c4f08b806c576c2653ac5d0a2968c808
28df4eeb200a383bffe02001029c5bcb39c01c58
describe
'43912' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFC' 'sip-files00114.QC.jpg'
1a7441ffa6d7ba2e516298bf09623168
b896613dc2df333bb6d52cdf9f34656c699c2931
describe
'1882740' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFD' 'sip-files00114.tif'
f9dd10afcb43fab1e061d99c53195b04
9b8fde899cb5b8772fd5392e3083584664b4b0c7
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFE' 'sip-files00114.txt'
26dcebc8c8a4af01f9340823ec42cb66
0d8b807aa8eae3ca5984681852b31ec42a5be05e
describe
'11643' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFF' 'sip-files00114thm.jpg'
1429afd3955787fbcc2a2f99a299adb9
760878d1080bb571e2618ebc898b7dfa9ace896b
describe
'234199' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFG' 'sip-files00115.jp2'
39600e12b5cd98816a77eae994ae3e6d
8c15c9d6a51a85cdb17b957a5176721fa5378a2e
describe
'109603' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFH' 'sip-files00115.jpg'
27b13282c6ccd13c405dee8337e21289
d2df817619e5e243e70b0a346bac9b24f8d5e656
describe
'29407' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFI' 'sip-files00115.pro'
8ab0e65b05b83b08cbabf20e0cfb7c2c
9e170e26b64193749ca6f9ac6a567f43047db05c
describe
'31693' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFJ' 'sip-files00115.QC.jpg'
91ba05f8d0650c7fffe31c3ab6ef3e7e
aebc849d0a03698aa44e120dc27638fa820dc808
describe
'1882768' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFK' 'sip-files00115.tif'
92e0cd10058fc104181d3dff4ccce8ee
4cbe11267784d8ba868218ebe760af74820c2f4d
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFL' 'sip-files00115.txt'
0277e514b7b430729f9d7c8c394a8407
135146881f1f5536dc07816241c395ce48e294e4
describe
'11421' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFM' 'sip-files00115thm.jpg'
dea0bc19ae19ad7e958faeda860d2bb4
3295c9a6c26d68b18f43615401ed8fcced214de8
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFN' 'sip-files00116.jp2'
4344dc81da658972194fabb064bfda10
0e974e9e836fbf6578bf544318526e81c947fe89
describe
'99487' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFO' 'sip-files00116.jpg'
cf99f4658d6ae12c1d6c3bd5bb5e60df
d3afb37ad554d97bb09a5be11624a0096f9eb8e9
describe
'24478' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFP' 'sip-files00116.pro'
8bb49dc15374a9886a5bbae8123694df
6f3b4cfc12b57f7f4eb00f64c4a43fb72f1e54b4
describe
'32596' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFQ' 'sip-files00116.QC.jpg'
569ea5df4ce851a70a1281e9eda1e56c
e5e781135118e49d8c3ba2fe84bc4dbb0e9dfaf7
describe
'1882368' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFR' 'sip-files00116.tif'
94154d951ab3b71929cbf66ad9e65e3c
4fe5a6165b51cfb8099f71e122944bc15adece8a
describe
'1018' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFS' 'sip-files00116.txt'
d73b8896c93420a747f43bd059ff1a41
38ca83d4caccd914434c9e3f22518e13d7bc46ab
describe
'10161' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFT' 'sip-files00116thm.jpg'
b69e8b0a63d5c364261862adb6568e21
5090f0cdbe31054b45ffd58c25d50e1bbc4f3b9e
describe
'233921' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFU' 'sip-files00117.jp2'
9fe916965c47b87131228a07bb53ad1c
4ed3bddd2d9ffb1ff027ae5074c938d8d955574b
describe
'81574' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFV' 'sip-files00117.jpg'
7737b9d17e63e820c2cde051e35d8d6a
426026bdbea11609df805acf41d5edf7b2789f5c
describe
'25478' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFW' 'sip-files00117.pro'
cd2e52e4a15ea966fb9db9037a61c5c9
fe501cb74781ac808d5d417412d8420a48f9ff03
describe
'27784' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFX' 'sip-files00117.QC.jpg'
bff10365660807d573f142c2aa30f52f
a0438d7fe03c1a2832345fcec255a0025174d586
describe
'1880140' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFY' 'sip-files00117.tif'
78d1762376918c2da115a1f77c50c9c7
799c3f2285bc0f6f53215ba22ed53616a94442ae
describe
'1148' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKFZ' 'sip-files00117.txt'
52035b0a204030eea24752cb4d2d72bf
bf8fb7b32a1e7c774b978aa0360f7a96d03126e3
describe
'7711' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGA' 'sip-files00117thm.jpg'
d7f482efe5fe55f7be4f88d9d909c458
0952c4e57e4c348e9637375ef99389da2ce3ac79
describe
'233846' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGB' 'sip-files00118.jp2'
00a6fcdbb56b647e89be8be1beeb3ef2
3e6daf7a1700e8751a7d479f4ad959824dc4c0b8
describe
'110627' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGC' 'sip-files00118.jpg'
a1c12dfc8c4180ffcc90416d3aeeeb76
6b098d437ddcf30557d6dd1aeb088af1492901e9
describe
'29204' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGD' 'sip-files00118.pro'
121a5416ed88907afd17c5e0bf52afc1
b86694eafbd698aac384b66fda1cc5de901d3b3d
describe
'39842' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGE' 'sip-files00118.QC.jpg'
8738351adacaed431bb523d6d5492906
bacda87c822ff95308b8512056c51b489abb926e
describe
'1879852' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGF' 'sip-files00118.tif'
318baf3df10c6c233e5006e790cb1d5c
741ac8379a0f1a8b755a3b3ada233e998354614d
describe
'1213' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGG' 'sip-files00118.txt'
39a61cf934bc2b35f503d18f03fa0c51
cc142bed87c90ee6c87211aa472e003e944d94df
describe
'11281' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGH' 'sip-files00118thm.jpg'
ec28c6bd7e48fa2da64ceeb26a739982
7d0d97c93793a253dab20a38977c09036f276070
describe
'234156' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGI' 'sip-files00119.jp2'
7a8c016a9036e9d1a84b50b88c00ab7f
e77b0809841f103333fc59f931c1478c13b26c3e
describe
'106682' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGJ' 'sip-files00119.jpg'
3c66e2af8863e2d6768f74d6f6f8101d
cf186eb747fa50f5fa0c8cd9f4561c011f759b77
describe
'27224' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGK' 'sip-files00119.pro'
30ddbbe377a45cc844800496604f2acb
1c384cc0528166e66fc60ecabb6d1f9a52c9b3c8
describe
'39546' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGL' 'sip-files00119.QC.jpg'
74224d7ea8080964d0b303fb3320157f
620d25af88d274232c80b55b84910b60d79126a8
describe
'1882876' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGM' 'sip-files00119.tif'
b25e30dcd47e616b1fbcfc5bcda08605
d78b6af0e111ec1f102b53b73a272c54a5a49c58
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGN' 'sip-files00119.txt'
0df2d5ee2cb69e9841a6da2a0ea29d85
1474c5d29197daf532720bd82cd5fa50c9d4802c
describe
'11068' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGO' 'sip-files00119thm.jpg'
41efece67625baab357d0e6dd660b2fd
7453db595e4d3ac17191e708e13946ccd5f50682
describe
'233938' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGP' 'sip-files00120.jp2'
6984a576ee3214b0983492181ca6661d
251846c0b7745efe1a25d407554167f84ac081e2
describe
'117552' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGQ' 'sip-files00120.jpg'
2f0ab2453ddb7afa9d1f2b10940aff28
deeeb40ae4c4983756feef1a98c9a16f772b5302
describe
'30374' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGR' 'sip-files00120.pro'
50db1f5daaa4a4eaa21f1fc430cc0ba6
70f6452479d8a4bbfe230f960734b760ff50da6e
describe
'40263' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGS' 'sip-files00120.QC.jpg'
a3e0389390eef85c45fb00a4f4c3b989
c113bcca7db1b60ec785ec1097bcd14724e229be
describe
'1881280' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGT' 'sip-files00120.tif'
a5987be2acf7666a4398ca6d00e95612
05945a14907bcfaa60438659749f2b4708f9d181
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGU' 'sip-files00120.txt'
7e21046b39791b7eb3088f827ba98dd0
72f521bc14a92ceb19cb13a2b6b14bda1775b7fa
describe
'11991' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGV' 'sip-files00120thm.jpg'
6fd8aa010b2487c56fd46e3565bcf730
29c8fa4c08705ae12d1682013e4954f163d3e770
describe
'233943' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGW' 'sip-files00121.jp2'
57007efd73fe4f6bf2bba96c8182f3c1
144f082623ed59de326c90d3cb7abed3a9b9e135
describe
'105360' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGX' 'sip-files00121.jpg'
c264429de15193b1116927840879cbee
8b83e85fabb6005bd87af526981480f242e190cc
describe
'26877' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGY' 'sip-files00121.pro'
015f492bdb2f8296ff6fbc461b8b1054
fac1d00cc4a305d8edeb8e80879c3c3976399e8b
describe
'38310' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKGZ' 'sip-files00121.QC.jpg'
332486cdaf47f4916509349796e879f8
7077bd6a68de74d5f7c058869caec7b91f4f8c01
describe
'1881060' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHA' 'sip-files00121.tif'
5f6292f12455959c76ac24bccfbb5808
0dff8cd49c0388fd75acd23e0d941f4ad706f7a7
describe
'1145' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHB' 'sip-files00121.txt'
12ffb4d82c5447cc99d2c5942ca2355d
614afd905db2154716ba4d6ba6d640394078412f
describe
'10717' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHC' 'sip-files00121thm.jpg'
889673f12de730c81ee57c01c397fe5d
ace8330958eb0c95e02b80fc694f5b5b7e7e1a08
describe
'242025' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHD' 'sip-files00122.jp2'
2f84bafaba576cb537c8415eebed7b27
d6487129dd4c9b90ed93adeb4e3357a8a080b621
describe
'107087' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHE' 'sip-files00122.jpg'
7426266e498a5bdd10171613a8f03050
c5a3c481d30257610f3592cd3d9234ecd16ada79
describe
'27382' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHF' 'sip-files00122.pro'
9008159404b7046634a67be72a597c06
8bd84b93041ee57ab7ca843fc389f9a041cd8a3d
describe
'37848' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHG' 'sip-files00122.QC.jpg'
adb1a44d02acd48d5d5e97595cbf5c33
76bdad8b454b0acbd91372c9d55ba938c6d82881
describe
'1945344' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHH' 'sip-files00122.tif'
ac2244e140ef391225a3fdaad5baba4e
697798602a414e0775ae59eeaf10a62cb9fbbd07
describe
'1140' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHI' 'sip-files00122.txt'
13ca3a928724ae13e15dadf4bd7a666d
ea1e71f317f517be46195db23755e80e77052c81
describe
'9802' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHJ' 'sip-files00122thm.jpg'
cbe1c8c7f89aa84884bd780f75c378fc
4f99bb1f1d4b05e8b8c6f05a0ec97ae4773a147a
describe
'233838' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHK' 'sip-files00123.jp2'
0959238ecc21aed5d014d0cd1e393a46
90da983f838d6e9c02f32c55b67c5d0e57970254
describe
'110429' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHL' 'sip-files00123.jpg'
2c73baf1b9f1e64999afa54c4b874667
ad08b4dd19f732f839b411bb2a031beb41df8a8f
describe
'28761' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHM' 'sip-files00123.pro'
402e69b5e3996bdf112e69237864fe3e
85c7746f850e5e6a5b2eb29af7b5632ecf70483a
describe
'41301' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHN' 'sip-files00123.QC.jpg'
1e0d1e1671956f2bc1843dbf8fd84c47
2d0272a8914ee277fa10f88071f849b1f1dff379
describe
'1880012' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHO' 'sip-files00123.tif'
6d88eb58bd14ae228f1f8d827654fe6e
8d20737023bfcf3d21f6fd413dc28f17b5abe44c
describe
'1235' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHP' 'sip-files00123.txt'
fa9db60d33c8840a05f3149badbaf3db
d59d0b49bb6d7b30f2f93b1bfe5b4e588b59ccd5
describe
'10996' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHQ' 'sip-files00123thm.jpg'
de63778ec349d52d97db15341618df6d
58b13e17df74779a2b87ed45ed2983297152b956
describe
'239654' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHR' 'sip-files00124.jp2'
cfccc601b63f0cdf9af5fe619fa11b76
2eaf0f0b6aea851ec38d258b6b8105eeb7d896b7
describe
'101105' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHS' 'sip-files00124.jpg'
17c34c457660f2d23a85a1cc24c28a12
b0ccc63cebd92edf4662a8db1700ad29af3c19cb
describe
'27666' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHT' 'sip-files00124.pro'
ca7f1eb9faf84fb021578118390da6bc
4621cd1f85e3f3890dd5c3198aae9d6db5831d10
describe
'38743' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHU' 'sip-files00124.QC.jpg'
267273a343ea170adb537fb4cfdce05d
9f3f55c927b1cf745c537dd8537b30086d68ffa8
describe
'1926412' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHV' 'sip-files00124.tif'
0cf8546eac6fbd6a046723c16090bdbd
eb273e79501a5dc9295c8bd7aaa8a9df72939be1
describe
'1161' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHW' 'sip-files00124.txt'
2ada889135db8fd0c3fc6ba235a58b4e
3bf41ec9e901e5c51070eca48053e11f61e11602
describe
'10791' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHX' 'sip-files00124thm.jpg'
1fc2f446676b53a8913fedc02f730e72
db9eedf009f52cf51161515d65c21832248d13de
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHY' 'sip-files00125.jp2'
3465ed333dc1dae00bc283b3e27aabef
6208acdab6895f1498c343baa699d4e324c5fc5f
describe
'117534' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKHZ' 'sip-files00125.jpg'
96bbe9bbab49fe5deadb8431439606cf
ffc456d816ef53ea67aa7056521471ef1224fe92
describe
'30146' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIA' 'sip-files00125.pro'
f554f14613f1dc4bb8235e8099a783d3
8fe8c12b120d7ff72c2afe5ef0bdeb0c51b27145
describe
'42251' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIB' 'sip-files00125.QC.jpg'
e6b78f4b83479a8fc2e4346138d8716a
3f23ad36f71a4545280ae3944a67afe059644dc8
describe
'1881252' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIC' 'sip-files00125.tif'
1877c4a17b7f8a58c3f6e6200c708ef2
f32e9a29da013c876992d35d76c88d7f3e6d9935
describe
'1263' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKID' 'sip-files00125.txt'
56a1c27ec0477875f583ca1c173edca0
251fb456675922ff1b7ed01d552183055a66abb3
describe
'12064' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIE' 'sip-files00125thm.jpg'
3542bbd752566117c5154f97b179fb7f
466aab07118dc21e5278226c276097a4ec650622
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIF' 'sip-files00126.jp2'
d126fb2d22b9a43c9e10870a33609271
5d508dd056716c0363acb7f23b55618c0e4effaf
describe
'115144' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIG' 'sip-files00126.jpg'
afc447a77fa7fade421f09f87efce223
3b7845a7d6b4c6dc03aabd3c15e53f213fda3187
describe
'30447' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIH' 'sip-files00126.pro'
38bf2bb4242573258c3688d1047d99c3
a0e9369658bb9ff648a6a2793ab7c65fe3c0b68c
describe
'38196' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKII' 'sip-files00126.QC.jpg'
b00def9032e646ef8877688f9bbaf03d
2b50400f220eef2e3831df25b2f235c781b56e64
describe
'1882684' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIJ' 'sip-files00126.tif'
513f9fa9cfa2087d73a3283d767d1f5e
9256cb78d80f6852608ba7cdcda5f5fafb2f2693
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIK' 'sip-files00126.txt'
26877556ac117316468ade35ef08ff53
fd8c5085f04d40efbbbbb006144d3be28b0f433c
describe
'11750' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIL' 'sip-files00126thm.jpg'
6aa1c683fb7d918e9ddf239c4b347eef
1dc6b374f25e194cac467b4da7edcb3883fd6d98
describe
'233957' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIM' 'sip-files00127.jp2'
713b947819d6a1a32f110d3a943fa94e
cfc3d9ee256443ad116e05574a0ff6b15b3f7e04
describe
'113112' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIN' 'sip-files00127.jpg'
588b2cbd8e5d2de6b7b7f1d89de9987d
1c6d6ab84e408cecd08f18c8acd59b31c3d6536d
describe
'29542' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIO' 'sip-files00127.pro'
2f19d4de5e45ee2dedf08f49657e6f01
89806332c909e04e4459b9446874b3505b894ead
describe
'37643' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIP' 'sip-files00127.QC.jpg'
50d382fd6907a8380001a7fe9e9edb44
8fec5c77c2f57c3cc9b295cdfcc2abd51f4a1419
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIQ' 'sip-files00127.tif'
a29e1a229ac3f241caf302153a5501de
c8c5814b3e0f6346fe6af4224a62b7c7f04f6cba
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIR' 'sip-files00127.txt'
9fb8d95886ad55b3ed17f645c5ee2686
e864e94a34a49f8bb5dc925de23820aab7550265
describe
'11563' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIS' 'sip-files00127thm.jpg'
17aa41c5f8baee495824fb830717fa0c
0c282e1bfad77e5db4f59adaf9192ef970923556
describe
'234142' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIT' 'sip-files00128.jp2'
d78bf1c0b79500e4b5d9433e46917863
d7f72d8470d720ed22747a199eba527a17e1186e
describe
'111858' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIU' 'sip-files00128.jpg'
062a5ff99c1cfe23a8899daee7308793
644b4977e3f1ad647d371e1da3f9665657270c0b
describe
'28671' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIV' 'sip-files00128.pro'
00c77d95ab1e8ac7379a9868ec13beda
04e42a23c3268c3a886550f6e0fda2a38eb0777d
describe
'43632' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIW' 'sip-files00128.QC.jpg'
6eb90217c035211ee7f78318acdd8cb2
7196b8ea07bcc093741e0b8592ce7682cd1727f0
describe
'1882764' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIX' 'sip-files00128.tif'
4602dd71ae1a155bf532aa7170f03757
48db087accca61884524a393c7caf5ce29075c4b
describe
'1192' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIY' 'sip-files00128.txt'
453a9e5042918ab26c890991df6a9b38
1ab7d1813a14cacbca34e0a507622c8dd5031d43
describe
'11433' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKIZ' 'sip-files00128thm.jpg'
1dba0bf4ce2c7b9fcadcbf9454d5c851
3c6a96bb7c5c14d9dd76d3694d1c0d63fc34c97b
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJA' 'sip-files00129.jp2'
e3dd47b502e17eedc0602200975ebd6c
e25a3ab8f9ccc3793959ecead55e158a0b96dd78
describe
'105101' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJB' 'sip-files00129.jpg'
045c2c6bf616c65bd9ef43b6bd6ab992
ef21aa55c78751877420258f2a90248cbe65fd65
describe
'27213' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJC' 'sip-files00129.pro'
07e2495d2671a0f54bbaab1b5340ad6f
e09c6cec72946259da0253f11700b0e6d6d0b887
describe
'37575' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJD' 'sip-files00129.QC.jpg'
830fe643a831f087b30a7c086db94303
1cf93b3717ad5af482d8fd28d6adf824a55aa3d4
describe
'1880920' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJE' 'sip-files00129.tif'
8a9d8123c8344f58b38edb092657d618
9986d9e1ae5b43e69f4f194ab95eb0b9643c3dc7
describe
'1160' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJF' 'sip-files00129.txt'
300874f2680c454b0caa23f60112d1d4
734e56241d26ff87b4de9789b1c726ebd9a6aea4
describe
'10988' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJG' 'sip-files00129thm.jpg'
82eda0babf53c25c4cd8fc85f23ca0cf
8cad92a9d027d04ae9a9c1c5e5cfe57bf3bbdb1c
describe
'233853' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJH' 'sip-files00130.jp2'
22452789a990ea66f66c235217bf4540
97b07e571eea96982e0d35d4ef42283e47d0bc87
describe
'118017' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJI' 'sip-files00130.jpg'
3a74ee861af3f8ca780ce90c4a6092cc
6e86546dae2021ea3d062b9773843f03d57bfc00
describe
'31044' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJJ' 'sip-files00130.pro'
4aaf143c06975ff75787b885092e162b
2e3d5c96946aee2e0226d0c7ee955b1c65dbb7ba
describe
'40453' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJK' 'sip-files00130.QC.jpg'
15985e53a27834d353e6af49c8b7fb64
3348206db87e7371be6d7c9f5d51618450669e37
describe
'1879924' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJL' 'sip-files00130.tif'
d373b06d6cf0bd82b7bed69e1ccce522
f2b4b7362af5efa51420836c6e81b2dbcba70f23
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJM' 'sip-files00130.txt'
79978402a103d04f0fac36ea3b61c960
47b508d69c2415548a270c08fa6b5531634aca54
describe
'11391' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJN' 'sip-files00130thm.jpg'
fa98abd7e2d751d373de7189c6b3ada3
58fb18a8dc5d83eef3faa69032dcad5b124fc06b
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJO' 'sip-files00131.jp2'
f7bc3ed94510800fc0a694e1abcdb619
0772fb5c1f514c2ba7d1bff491c2b83778113746
describe
'102773' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJP' 'sip-files00131.jpg'
285a49c01636ddff491ff07338f488cd
a565417a83c231a2c684ee88f32b44e84dcf3eb0
describe
'26538' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJQ' 'sip-files00131.pro'
c342c96ccab37e2ab0159e3ad0d06738
718f10c8699089554c0df10850fcb4772da7f704
describe
'36686' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJR' 'sip-files00131.QC.jpg'
09f84039f6985581b3ade0e19eebb085
124fbefaabc65b3ce3b2f50f0059d2ab8577e92f
describe
'1880916' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJS' 'sip-files00131.tif'
21d6014d2b5b543851c6d014bbc535cd
9aac1a4e3db9a5a3d501412b9cf0105b21be136d
describe
'1144' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJT' 'sip-files00131.txt'
4f44d1de1f994c4f1894d87831b4f308
d81895945c7fa60df78cc67beb27e175a4c8daab
describe
'10487' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJU' 'sip-files00131thm.jpg'
fbec52909edd31a23847c3027b386b57
8cda4dd064facc286c891a3a85085b754225aaa3
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJV' 'sip-files00132.jp2'
32271bf9ba22aa73512f8e9561d97428
67525169a6a09dd660b059dba4ef682a89f4fc6b
describe
'98839' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJW' 'sip-files00132.jpg'
7e143f480ad27e8c86c2a458c79eeb82
2ed3bdc02c3c77f3c7820d8a96ca6056647c997b
describe
'25507' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJX' 'sip-files00132.pro'
c700319003bf38ede91ce6cc9cd17f31
092fa09977bac9a9c7be5ed16346dce3ce1c9aaf
describe
'36282' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJY' 'sip-files00132.QC.jpg'
f2b2a8b40e3fd1f96413d27a043407a0
aefb8d33eb0b6bddb2193f70233b5b4fdae1b6ac
describe
'1880952' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKJZ' 'sip-files00132.tif'
ccc4c9ab774f20801496e4a93e85576e
fee6c93563f6aaac9bf72fdafdbdef7e4a85b825
describe
'1079' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKA' 'sip-files00132.txt'
8d58cdad0a9ff5cf6339dfef203b8d9c
fa21ae7ed341955b7cc5a681f898d52e4d1fb020
describe
'10466' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKB' 'sip-files00132thm.jpg'
8d1c2301a761c98b93b31d3baa7c2b32
8fb0e9182aa9208b1c06742660e518d4e553504b
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKC' 'sip-files00133.jp2'
d343abc9893345642bbec206666c7c4c
d1d1071114eb17441e37b9ecc6d1d7de0169d966
describe
'111862' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKD' 'sip-files00133.jpg'
dadbf3af7cc42284a3e37e8a0f9e299f
8a9344114999126681b73113ca293e8dacfb4f90
describe
'28970' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKE' 'sip-files00133.pro'
bc1bdd74c2d7ff93ac35f9491d3f8afd
798a024271fe46ac0176279b8e45e07dd9698869
describe
'34341' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKF' 'sip-files00133.QC.jpg'
691105a642a0ee6dc199f9b5839d9a7c
229ad4788159024838841f333a73c8c9d5049f0e
describe
'1881064' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKG' 'sip-files00133.tif'
6cd2b16378c64274b5afe8f11e08ddb8
41ec503fc82ca84202ec94675ba81ec2aa5e213b
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKH' 'sip-files00133.txt'
c6e2f39bc05623393bdd5c377580735b
8b01dbb7cf08a50d11ddf709e30e1b57de43af1f
describe
'11416' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKI' 'sip-files00133thm.jpg'
4173711b5e589b63f170136aa9e9232b
6ff2b555c7d7c2f5fa98008e45ccf971b91d3c33
describe
'234178' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKJ' 'sip-files00134.jp2'
a51926db3f7e87ec4e526eff8c96be08
65de162349bc7e91855de83b949e5ff6f8fe51ea
describe
'82395' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKK' 'sip-files00134.jpg'
7920052d33d50dacc60626c957c419c3
e631aed173bd4eec80c95849565bc4fd0e3ead04
describe
'16091' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKL' 'sip-files00134.pro'
bb2161a11d52d26ed13da071b8b8a73a
20553bb720647a7d022f6be32f090aa519ab1fa3
describe
'24752' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKM' 'sip-files00134.QC.jpg'
233918ea4f10baef17e24e887e4c17b4
3b419d3edf9baeb9ac568b6660f53c01d2ad5944
describe
'1881884' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKN' 'sip-files00134.tif'
cf340a4e5092ed3e969b2ff892e4c6e4
55a57ae62bda239dadf1cab32cbd5747d3698f48
describe
'717' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKO' 'sip-files00134.txt'
4ffbbb0ec23104f2366fcfe7e175c71b
9131d7df41849993cb4eb6f501b10dbe251e101f
describe
'7997' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKP' 'sip-files00134thm.jpg'
478ffdd3d9291f1d8957c057d6f96a8b
9df65de9e057242fe9daced057d462f4e11d03b0
describe
'279113' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKQ' 'sip-files00137.jp2'
a0b947bb8d3860e76d6fd17fff509587
083609368a4bcd37d92292b191567392b0e448fc
describe
'112205' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKR' 'sip-files00137.jpg'
e47fbee5d9520a6b438c86242634f206
e970ffbf0b7bead3924c740df28469cd99b23a33
describe
'21991' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKS' 'sip-files00137.QC.jpg'
e133bc80d0e810700758af01e8edecb0
0709169149b210cebca68baf9fc16db4a55e909a
describe
'6704124' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKT' 'sip-files00137.tif'
680342fa1acef3a0f341cddacd026a5b
15a5278bb864b83014e7edf6eefc9ea7ac9e5cde
describe
'5265' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKU' 'sip-files00137thm.jpg'
464443cdd9d58937c1e07be8475157a4
b64f8940ad95d2ae7156f45a4683e35dcbd57d25
describe
'278947' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKV' 'sip-files00138.jp2'
6ca2a2c7f849c980792eb7248a516e1b
4b1c54b63fdca13ad8b2b5b79c09f495b04d0a87
describe
'207310' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKW' 'sip-files00138.jpg'
2158f1f6b356b22834015c8e55c4018a
454908d53f8dbfe75e48a77dd04270bf4d3a17b5
describe
'46089' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKX' 'sip-files00138.QC.jpg'
322a04f42c7f6a66746faa51d9956725
cd3e008d0838899fef361275f7c018897de0c22f
describe
'6701076' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKY' 'sip-files00138.tif'
51d399ebbbbdcbc7b7a22849ecca4728
65a8a7cf7a65c74007445f9680fcfbb094527d80
describe
'9074' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKKZ' 'sip-files00138thm.jpg'
41a5d56280d2ecbfb7e61971e4d4260a
bfd3b3cb8d23fe0b2e41a1682685ecaf67546a74
describe
'48646' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKLA' 'sip-files00139.jp2'
b5a60499dc55e1c81bbb652a72393196
d95a4a533e1eb0b82291a011c190dda40a3c7c7d
describe
'47965' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKLB' 'sip-files00139.jpg'
cdc8ed011a3b024e087198e85f1413f7
82e9911919d2e61f24a9082f19c84ccb1cd73152
describe
'213' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKLC' 'sip-files00139.pro'
1526a7d43f68b45720ad220e0c8c701e
28476f920e0c4a5b233b1c5eb1bf891b7811571b
describe
'11569' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKLD' 'sip-files00139.QC.jpg'
ca78deb4e3f48767acbfc0bae1ad9307
1150fde51caad64a050d630cc4ab40cbc4d6b5f0
describe
'1173188' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKLE' 'sip-files00139.tif'
0a44205d258cf48a86ffcaef527453eb
0b91a02a6b3f7024139425c64fe3e1804f96cd5d
describe
'3' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKLF' 'sip-files00139.txt'
bc949ea893a9384070c31f083ccefd26
cbb8391cb65c20e2c05a2f29211e55c49939c3db
describe
'3915' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKLG' 'sip-files00139thm.jpg'
70f259df4d20f981367025dd17d17e18
4fad64c5f6a7520af59a5eea5093a297878addb7
describe
'32' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKLH' 'sip-filesprocessing.instr'
c006cf46439bebeabdb142a835cc3bd7
fa4ca6e1664677653e5302f38b1233709f8f11f8
describe
'226713' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKLI' 'sip-filesUF00083402_00001.mets'
6428b008607f1d13c13aaca3420ffe85
29446780954461e5c430d4576e4bf14bbcd7de70
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/'.
'2013-12-16T15:25:00-05:00' '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/'.
'291938' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAESfileF20080809_AAAKLL' 'sip-filesUF00083402_00001.xml'
2dcbe73d43fc8b1252d5cc6585e8f7ef
20b11710dedc562a7d49774469c05a8052757ded
describe
'2013-12-16T15:25:02-05:00'
xml resolution