Citation
Doll's tea party

Material Information

Title:
Doll's tea party merry play time
Series Title:
Snow bird series
Creator:
Greenaway, Kate, 1846-1901 ( Illustrator )
Lothrop Publishing Company ( Publisher )
S.J. Parkhill & Co ( Printer )
Place of Publication:
Boston
Publisher:
Lothrop Publishing Company
Manufacturer:
S.J. Parkhill & Co.
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
1 v. (unpaged) : ill. ; 26 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Children -- Conduct of life -- Juvenile poetry ( lcsh )
Conduct of life -- Juvenile poetry ( lcsh )
Children's poetry ( lcsh )
Children's poetry -- 1895 ( lcsh )
Hand-colored illustrations -- 1895 ( local )
Bldn -- 1895
Genre:
Children's poetry
Hand-colored illustrations ( local )
poetry ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
United States -- Massachusetts -- Boston
Target Audience:
juvenile ( marctarget )

Notes

General Note:
Poems.
General Note:
Frontispiece and last page pasted down on verso and recto of cover.
General Note:
Contains two black and white illustrations by Kate Greenaway, p. [30] and [46].
General Note:
Baldwin Library copy illustrations are hand-colored: probably by young owner.
Statement of Responsibility:
illustrated.

Record Information

Source Institution:
University of Florida
Holding Location:
University of Florida
Rights Management:
This item is presumed to be in the public domain. The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries respect the intellectual property rights of others and do not claim any copyright interest in this item. Users of this work have responsibility for determining copyright status prior to reusing, publishing or reproducing this item for purposes other than what is allowed by fair use or other copyright exemptions. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions may require permission of the copyright holder. The Smathers Libraries would like to learn more about this item and invite individuals or organizations to contact The Department of Special and Area Studies Collections (special@uflib.ufl.edu) with any additional information they can provide.
Resource Identifier:
026620410 ( ALEPH )
ALG3601 ( NOTIS )
14255826 ( OCLC )

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This item has the following downloads:


Full Text






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THE OLD SNOW MAN.

Charley, and Arthur, and John, But how the boys frolic and shout!
Three merry young rogues that I And how their chubby cheeks
know, glow!
Have been at work in the drifts For oh! ‘tis such wonderful fun
And made an old man out of To make an old man out of snow.
snow.
They pat him, they smooth him
His body is clumsy and rough; around
His face has queer features to To harden him well; for they
show; know
And nothing but stumps for his That the sun will do all he can
arms = To melt down their old man of
Has this poor old man made of Snow.

snow. . —M. E. N. H.



\

KITTY IN THE CRADLE.

“TI want a live baby,” said Jennyone I'll fasten a pretty lace cap on your

day ;

“A baby that knows how to ‘frolic

and play;



“ROCK-A-BY, BABY, OH! ROCK-A-BY-BY.”

My doll can do nothing but just
wink her eyes,
And all the day long in the drawer

she lies.

Come here, little kitty, I’ll feed you

with milk;
V'll wrap you in dolly’s best

blanket
of silk;

head ; -
I'll rock you to sleep in my dolly’s
soft bed.” :

Then kitty purred gently, as if she
would say,

“TI think ’twould be nice to be treated
that way ;”

And she tried very hard to be patient
and good,

And let Jenny do with her just as she
would.

She lay in the cradle dressed up in
a cap;

She soon went to sleep and had a
long nap;

While Jenny like any small mother

sat nigh,
And sung, “ Rock-a-by, baby, oh!
rock-a-by-by.” : .





S NAME?”

WHAT IS THE LETTER’

?

“ NOW.





ei on oe el te ds en ne ae



HOW A LITTLE WALK WAS SPOILED.

7

PAYING BACK.

Seven happy little chicks walked out one day in June,

Thought they would enjoy the way by starting up a tune;

Seven ugly little ducks, whose names [ will not mention,

Made up their minds to follow them, and spoil their good intention ;
Now everybody knows that a duckling’s voice is deep,

And everybody knows that guack will make more noise than Jee.

So when they found their music drowned, these plucky little chicks
Made up ¢#ezy minds to cure these ducks of all such naughty tricks ;
So they chased them from the barn-yard, on this pleasant day in June,
Then started on their walk again, and went on with their tune.

— J. &.





x

A LITTLE WOMAN.





é



ra
NE OR)

CT?

ex i













JOLLY JOE.

“T LIKE to go to school — I do,”
Says jolly little Joe;

“Because I really think it is
The nicest place I know.

“The boys and girls, at nine o'clock,
I always like to see;

I like to see the teacher, too,
I know that she likes me!

“‘T like to see the scholars sit
With arms all neatly folded;

And if there should be naughty ones
I like to hear them scolded!

“T like to read — of birds and bees
_ And trees and flowers, too;
‘Of sailors, soldiers, and about
The gallant things they do. |

“T like to write — I always did —
To take my pen in hand

And show how much a boy can do,
I think is very grand.

“ And then I always like to spell;
I think it is such fun

To pick the little letters out
And join them one by one.

“T like arithmetic, because
‘Tis such a pleasant sight
To see the figures on my slate
All coming out just right.

“Tike it all. I'll try todo 4
The very best I can, ee
Because I want to grow to be
A wise and honest man.”.











LAZY

“T NEVER like to go to school,”
Says lazy little Lew;

“°Tis such a very stupid place!
I hate it—so I do.

“T do not like the girls and boys,
They always laugh, to see
That when I am a little late
The teacher frowns at me.

“T do not like to sit so still
With both arms tightly folded ;
And if I make a little noise
I’m sure of getting scolded.

“TI hate to read. The birds and
flowers
I’d rather go and see ;
And all the men and things in books,
What good are they to me?

‘

LEW.

“T hate to write —I never could —
I hate to hold a pen ;

To make a poor boy work so hard,
I think, is very mean.

“TI always did dislike to spell,
It is so hard to know

The names of all the letters well,
And how they ought to go.

«“ And then I hate arithmetic,
"Tis such a dismal sight —
The rows of figures on my slate

I never can get right!

“T'll play the truant — yes, I will,
As often as I can;
I'll vote against there being schools,

If ever bm a man!”
—S.D.





AN APRIL RAIN.



You poor little birds,
It’s happened again —
In the midst of your play
Down patters the rain.

You were caught in a shower
Just so last week,
And I thought that morning

I ought to speak;

I hear you all up
A-singing at dawn, ~

I know you have tried
Each tree on the lawn,

Yet not one of you all

Have picked up a straw —
Such improvident birds

I ne’er before saw.

But I hope you see now

_ That it would be best

To let your play go
And build you a nest.



A“ CONTENTED: BOW,

How old am I?-
Well, let me see!
Johnnie is four,
Mary is three,
And I am as big

As I want to be;
For both their years
Belong to me:

Six and one,

Three, and four,

ive, and two,

But not one more.

I am the oldest
_Of mother’s three,

And just as big

As I want to be.

~—K. T. W.





Ls







PCAN ALA MOBI SELL Pa

ANY

WOHWLFA

“TI LAY ON THE GRASS TO READ.”

WHAT THE GRASSES SAID.

Who can hear the grass talk ?
Very few, I know;

Yet it whispers every day,
Sweet and soft and low.

And one day I heard it;
Shall I tell you when?

I lay on the grass to read,
And I heard it then.



Everything was pleasant;
Bright the sun did shine;
Dew lay in the flowers’ eyes,

Heavy sleep in mine ;

So I gently shut then,
Soon they opened wide;
For I heard the grasses talk

Fast on every side!





This is what they talked about: Oh it’s very hard to have
“Oh, what pleasant weather ! No covers on our beds !”
Lift your heads up to the sun,

Nod and wave together | Then the wise red-rose bush

Tall, and rough and old,
Shook his head, and kindly said,

“We're so glad that. we are grass,
“You will not be cold,

Cool and soft and green;

Oh, how sad the earth would look
If no grass were seen! “For God sends a blanket warm
For every blade of grass,

Soft and light, and white as wool;

a t 7
And we love the summer warm, Nota blade He'll pass!”

But, oh, dear! oh, dear!

What will little grasses do
When winter cold is here? “What's the blanket made of ?

Quick! we want to know!”

“Why, my dears,” the rose-bush said,
_ “How the wind will whistle @God’e blanket isthe snow”

Round about our heads |! ea



EELVEE BIRD;

Little bird, little bird, where are For you have 5 nest, with little

you flying? ones in it,
You have left no track in the clear I know where it is, on the apple-
—— -blué=sky, tree high,
But you know the way if I cannot And you'll not forget, when your
see it, children are hungry,

And you will come back again. a ao you will come back again, by
and by. _ and by. - -M. M. H.





A LITTLE NUT-CRACKER.

A LITTLE NUT-CRACKER.

Such a merry little, jolly little fel- Such a bushy little tail, such a

low 1s he, bright, sparkling eye!
As he dances up aloft in a big “Chirrr! here 1 go! see how I
oak-tree | fly |”

we,





- He chatters, and he skips in and

out ‘mong the branches;

leaps down the trunk with

sudden little launches;

He perks his saucy nose, he whisks
his plumy tail;

He veers and tacks and jibes, like

a schooner in a gale.

He

He picks the chestnuts brown; he
cracks them in a trice;

He eats the farmer’s grain; he’s.
as bad as are the mice;

With apples, nuts and corn—a
dainty store, you see —

Such a jolly little, jaunty little
squirrel is he! —F. A. H.

BEN’S GROWL.

“O dear!” growled sleepy Ben,.
“T wish there was no school,
At Teast no ‘tardy’ rule!

I'd sleep and sleep and then —

“T’d crawl out ‘slow’s a snail, ©

_ And put on my best hat
And take my ball and bat,

Some plum cake in my pail,

“ And then down town I'd go.
I'd stop at every store,
Buy twenty pounds or more
Of candy; then, you know,



“If I must go to school,
~ Why I could sit and munch
My candy and my lunch —
O dear! That ‘tardy’ rule!”



SS
ISK

i

al
S

S
SS

S
SS
x

i

POLLY’S

Polly is schoolma’am,
Sober and wise;
Very old schoolma’am,

In baby’s eyes.

Sweetest of sunshine
Plays through the room,

Making cheeks healthy,
Making them bloom.








POLLY AND HER PUPIL.

Only one scholar
Has Polly now;
When Polly questions
She makes a bow.

Polly says, “ Baby,
Now you spell cat.”





SCHOOL.

- Baby she giggles;

“If you spell that,

“Then Polly’ll give you
Apple all nice;
Or mamma’s plum-cake, ©

Very big slice!”

Baby likes “merits;”
Nod goes her head;

Crows at the apple
Juicy and red.

Now lessons over,
Polly says “Sing!”

Baby’s eyes twinkle,
Sweet carols ring.

Out through the windows,
Gay robins, red,

Join in the chorus
By Polly led.

Then school ‘is over,
Work is all done,

Baby wants mamma,
So off they run.



:





































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































BIRDS.

{ Do you see that little bird ?
Hush, now — do not say a word!

He’s industriously eating at the cher. .

ries in the tree.
And there comes another one,
He is joining in the fun
As if he thought “These goodies
were expressly made for me.”

Such a jolly little pair
-- IT am ready to declare
I have never seen in cherry-tree, or
apple, pear or. peach,
Are they robin, wren or jay,
Bobolink or bluebird, pray? _
I will tell you of their feathers ~
you may give a name to each.

One has a merry eye
Just as blue as any sky,
With a laughing little rosy face, and
dimple in his chin,
And he wears a kilted skirt
(Worse for cherry-stains and dirt)
And a jaunty coat with pockets nice
for putting cherries in|!

And the other little elf
_ Who is covering himself

With the juices of the summer, has

the nattiest of suits,
With a sailor hat and collar,
And a belt that cost a dollar |!
He has clocks upon his stockings,
too, and buttons on his boots -

Well, everybody knows
That birds who wear such clothes,
Will never spread their tiny wings and fly away from you;

They will scramble down, pell-mell,

_ If you ring a dinner-bell,

And declare they are as hungry as if cherries never grew]

—S. D.



WHO WAS SHE?

As I was going down the walk And hurried on, as if to say,
So pleasant, cool and shady, | “Tl tend to my own gown,
Right in the middle of the path sir!”

I met a little lady.

I followed her the whole way

I made to her my sweetest bow; home;
She only walked on faster ; Her home was in my garden,
I smiled, and said “Good-morning,

ma’am,”
The moment that I passed her. ©

}

She never noticed me at all;
I really felt quite slighted ;

I thought, “ I'll follow you, I will,
Altho’ I’m not invited.”



ALL DRESSED IN FUR.

Beneath my choicest vines — and

Perhaps you think me very rude; yet
But then, she looked so funny — She never asked my pardon.
From head to feet all dressed in
fur) i
This summer day so sunny. I never heard “ey speak a word;

But once I heard the miller,
: Coming down the sidewalk, say,
She didn’t mind the heat at all, _ “There goes Miss Caterpillar!”
But wrapped the fur around her, : Ones



Five little squirrels up in a tree:
This squirrel cried, “ What do you see?”
This squirrel cried, “I smell a gun!”
This squirrel cried, “ Ho, let us run!”
This squirrel cried, “I'll hide in the shade!”
This squirrel cried, “I’m not afraid!”
Bang! went the gun! |
But they ran, every one!

Se

THE LITTLE CHIEF.

I know there's Ned and Fred and Ted,
But if you please, sir, 7’ the Head.

They like their play, and so, you see,
Who's left to be the man but me?
My mother knows I am the one

To do that thing which must be done.

I sweep the walks; I tend the door;
I go on errands to the store;

And any day I'd run a mile

To see my pretty mother smile!

You needn’t laugh because ['m smull1!
s Just being big, sir, isn’t all —

I am my mother’s little man ; I’m much a man as any man

I am the chief of all the clan; If I do everything I can! > :



oe





THE SECRET..

“Oh, I have been out fot a a walk,
‘said she,
“ For a walk in the woods lone
And the birds have told me a secret,
To keep for my very own.



“VE BEEN OUT FOR A WALK.” ~
The dear old woods were spicy and
sweet,
And the warm wind blew in “my
face, |



I gathered the buttercups out of
the grass,
And a rabbit and I ran a race.

“Tt was Mr. and Mrs. Thrush,” she
said,
“They were talking as I went past;
And of course I could hear what
they said, you know,
They chattered so loud and so fast.
But I promised them truly I never
would tell,
So they sang the dear secret to me.
And good Mrs. Thrush flew away
- to her nest,
And let me just peep in and see.

“ But you all will know pretty soon,”
she said ;
-“ For the days go by so fast!
And I think they will fly out into
the sun,
Before the summer is past.
And I shall watch them every day,

For the old birds know me well,

But you mustn't ask any more,”
said she;
“For I promised I would not tell!”
—M. fj.



rv,

A SONG FOR SUMMER.




Out in the field one summer’s day,
Our little Annie, tired with play,

Among the violets dropped her head;
Sleep caught her in her fragrant bed.

The field flowers crowded all around
The sleeping baby on the ground;

THE LAUGHING SPRITE,

The lily, buttercup, sweetbrier,

And cardinal flower, like flame of
fire.

The gold-eyed daisy bowed to
greet

The wild rose nestling at her feet;

The honey-bee, that restless rover,

Hummed in the heart of the scented
clover.

A laughing sprite came out to see
The little maid; so glad was he,
He danced a polka, o’er and oer,
On the dandelion’s golden floor.





“FOUR SUCH DOGS I NE’ER DID SEE,”

WHAT THE FOX THOUGHT.

Four to one! It is not fair.
Coward dogs! They do not dare
One by one to race with me.
Four such dogs I ne’er did see.

There is Tige, the foremost one;
I know him by that big, red tongue.

Then comes Nep, so fierce and strong ;.
Once near me, I’d not live long..

Almost up is spotted Jim,

At my best I’d distance him.
Butthey’vechased meround and round:
Till I start at evry sound.



Lady Jane 1 do “not tear;
She’s a dog I could live near,
If her master did not say,
“You must hunt that fox to-day.”

NOBODY

How the wind whistles and roars!

How he blows, he blows, and he
blows !

But what does he say at the doors?

Nobody knows, nobody knows.

The ground is covered with white,
For it snows, it snows, and it snows;
But it falls so silent at night

That nobody knows, nobody knows.

The grass is springing again,
And it grows, it grows, and it grows,
In the sunshine and the rain —
How, nobody knows, nobody knows. -

Hear the black cock flap his wings !
And he crows, he crows, and he
Crows ;

Cruel men! They call us sly—
Call us tricky —quick to fly;

But if once we chased them so,
Wouldn't they just learn to go?

KNOWS.

But whether he laughs or he sings,
Why, nobody knows, nobody knows.

The brook runs sparkling along,
And it flows, it flows, and it flows;
But what is its rippling song,

Why, nobody knows, nobody knows.

The cow comes down ‘through the
lane,

And she lows, she lows, and she lows;

But what she says it is plain

That nobody knows, nobody knows.

Over the fields and away

Fly the crows, the crows, the crows;

They caw, they caw, but they say

What nobody knows, nobody knows.
—H. B.





DAISIES ALL ABOUT HER.

HOW THE BABY WAS NAMED.

Mother's busy washing ;
Jack has gone to school;

Baby's in the garden;
Kitty has a spool.

Every one is busy

This bright summer day,
_ None more so than Baby,
Working hard to play.

Hat stuck full of daisies,
Dolls are daisy-crowned —

Daisies, daisies everywhere
Lying on the ground.

Out comes little pussy
Tossing them about ;

Baby calls, “Go way now!”
With a little pout.

Summer sun grows warmer;
Baby tires with play ;

Down upon the green grass
Fast asleep she lay;



Daisies all about her,
Sunshine overhead,

Pussy nestled closely
In this summer bed.

Mother from her washing
Comes, and finds her there

With the wide-eyed daisies
Nestling in her hair.

‘Then was Baby christened
In the summer sweet;

Now, no longer “ Baby,”
But sweet Marguerite.

THE. DOUGH-DOG.

One day when grandma was making
some pies,

She wished to give Tommy a pleas-
ant surprise ;



BRUNO,

So she made a puppy-dog out of
some dough,

And baked it, and marked it, and
named it Bruno.

This wonderful dog could stand on
its feet,

Its body was chubby, and cunning,
and neat,

Its little eae head was spotted _
with black,

And its little dough-tail curled over
its back.

And when Tommy saw it oee oo

with glee,
“How good grandma was: to make
that for me!”
And he played with the puppy-dog
day after day,
Till its head and its tail were both

worn away.



TICK AT OCK.

Tick tock, tick tock to
Tl count the seconds by grand-

mother’s clock.

When sixty have ticked, the min-_
ute-hand shows :

That one minute comes as another
one goes.

Sixty seconds a minute, and then
it will take

Sixty minutes, I know, an hour to
make.

The length of a day I can easily
mark — =

Just twenty-four hours of day-light
and dark.

Seven days make a week ; and then
fifty-two

Of these weeks make a year, if my
counting is true.

A hundred long years, and then
there will be

‘A century here, for some one to see.

.



A NAUGHTY SHEEP.

What very soft steps you take, naughty sheep !
You wish me to think you're good, naughty sheep !
You've come through a hole in the fence, naughty sheep!



And now you must: go straight back, naughty sheep!



PUDDING AND MILK.

ee Two little stools
Side by side;

Two little girls,
Mother’s pride,

Jolly.as kits,
Plump as mice;
Pudding and milk —
Isn't it nice ?



Two little bowls Pudding and milk,

-Round and white; Mothers. know,
Two little spoons _ , : Is just what makes
Silver bright ; Little girls grow!

_A REQUEST FROM THE BIRDS.

Dear little girls, throw us a crumb;

Dear little boys, please bring us
some!

O, don’t you know, when falls the
snow,

That dinnerless the birdies go ?

Yet, dears, we earn, with summer
-song,

Our daily food the winter long.

A , little bird with hunger wild

Is wretched as a starving child.





A -EVEELE= COUNERY-GIRE



What will Lolly do in spring-time?
She'll go out to play,

She wu. bring home pussy willows
And May-flowers gay.

She will feed the little chickens,
Watch the lambs at play,

And hunt for nests of new-laid

Ceoc
Up in the mows of hay.











What will Lolly do in summer ?
She'll pick berries red,

Trim her hair with dandelions, °
Weed her flower-bed,

Tie her curls with yellow corn-silk,
Make long daisy chains,
And play “keep house” with all

her dolls,

Every time it rains.

n~







What will Lolly do in autumn?
See the yellow grain,

And pick golden-rod and asters,
Up and down the lane.

Saturdays she'll go a-nutting,
Wade among the leaves,

And ride upon the loaded cart

» High up among the sheaves.





























































OF hp

















































What will Lolly do in winter?
She will skate and slide,

Play at games and look at pictures
By the fireside.

She will sew upon her presents
For the Christmas tree,

And through snowy winter nights
Sleep snug as snug can be.





cs

WINNIE’S TROUBLES.

“JT NEVER Shall be big,”
Said little Winnie Winch;
“T have tried for a month .
And I haven’t grown an inch —
I know, for I measured A
'By a mark on the wall.
Little cups, little books, little desks,
little clothes —
For seven long years I’ve had only
those.





































Then the poor small Winnie
Made a great wise plan

How to grow very fast ;

-. And away she ran.

When she came in again
She was — oh, so tall!

Her gown swept the floor
From the door to the wall;
She walked up and down, till she tripped in her train,
And then she was glad to be a small girl again.





—H. F. P.
SOME NAUGHTY FS;
iT Alley Ge ad ng
Some little people cry: Now hear them passing by:
‘Tawo-t; cant, oe -“T-han’t, I be,
L sShallieshant——- I are, I see —’”

Oh, what a naughty I! Oh, what a naughty I!



HE can sit, he can stand,
He can climb up a tree;

He can hold in his hand
A cup full of tea;

He can run, he can hop,
For Pedro is spry;
He can dance like a top,
Fle can laugh, he can cry; ~

He can eat a hot cake
Without burning his thumb;

He can hoe, he can rake,
He can beat on a drum.

But there’s one little thing
This monkey can’t do,

And that is to sing :
And chatter like you!



~BUNNY-COAT’S BED.

_ Nothing was seen of him,
But his gray head:

Where was his bed, think you?
Where did he dream?

You will laugh when I tell you,
So droll does it’ seem !

In little Jean’s pocket
In her apron so white,

The little grey “ Bunny-coat ”
Slept’all the night.



Little gay Bun-ny-coat
Slipped into bed —

—Ff. P. ¢



oe

MiSS= EF USSY:S= SICKNESS.



DR. GREY’S PATIENT.

Miss Pussy is ill;
She lies very still

In her snug little bed,
With a pain in her head.

“© doctor!” cries she, ae
“ Pray what can it be

That gives me such pain

On the top of my brain?”

Says old Doctor Grey,
“ Excuse me, I pray,
For seeming so rude,
But it is for your good;

“T really do think —”
(This he says with a wink })
“You have eaten a slice
Too much of young mice!”

A WONDERFUL SCHOLAR.



O, a wonderful scholar

Is our little Kate!

She reads in a primer;
She writes on a-slate;

Her lines are not even;
Her O’s are not round;

‘And her words in the reader

Could not be found.

Her sewing — what puckers!
‘What stitches! what knots!



And along the whole hem, As if a “bad mark,”

There are tiny red spots; / Should be paid for by this.
Her weekly reports And she cries in delight,
Tell how oft she has spoken ; . While she swings round her hat:
And there’s not a rule “T’m a wonderful scholar,
That she never has broken. | For I can spell ‘cat!’
C-A-T, Cat/”

Yet she comes to mamma
For a smile and a kiss,

NEDDY’S PETS.

He had a little kitten,
Her name was “ Nellie Gray;”
He gave her to a lady, ay
Who lives a mile away.

He has a little chicken,

Her name is Miss “Bright Eyes;’
And when she sees her master

She lifts her wings and flies.

He has a big Newfoundland dog,
His name is “ Faithful Tray ;”

Both Neddy and his doggie —
Were five years old in May.



“HERE'S A KITTY FOR you!”

-He has a baby-sister,

NeEppy has a pony, His best and dearest pet —
Her name is “ Jenny Stone; ” What do you think ey name is?
He strokes her and he pats her, She hasn't any yet.

And rides her all alone. —K. L.























































































































































































































































































































































ON THE ICY. WINDOW-PANE, ‘

THE WINDOW-PANE TREE.

With her warm little finger,
Gold Locks wrote

On the icy window-pane
A note.

“Make me a Christmas-tree,”
It. read;

It was signed with a flourish,
“Yours, Gold Head.”

Then out came the sunlight’s
Sparkling ray;

It melted the message
All away.

But the very next morning,
Lo! behold!

On the glass of the window,
White and cold,



Was a tapering fir-tree, Cried out little Gold Locks,

Weighed with snow, “See oh, see
‘Spire-like at the top, Jack Frost has painted.
And _ broad _ below. My Christmas-tree t”



THE MEETING OF THE BIRDS.

Four little merry, talkative birds
Met in a thicket together one day;

And, “Oh, how pleasant it is,” said one,
“To build - pretty nests in the month of May.

“T like the world bestein June,” said one,
“When the flowers are esos bright and
sweet,
And the cherries are hanging thick on the trees,
Ripe and crimson, all ready to eat.

The other two said, “O, we like to sing
To call the people to rise with the sun;

. And we like to sing at the evening hour
To tell the people the day-time is done.”

And so these four little frolicsome birds
Talked as they met in the thicket one day,
Till they thought of their young ones waiting at —
home, |
When they spread their small wings and ee
tered away.





PUSSY AND THE MARTINS.

One day Pussy said, as she came
from the barn,
“I am very tired of living on mice ;
ll take a walk through the trees, I
think;
A tender young bird would taste very
* nice.” :

Then she climbed, and climbed, with
a careful step,
From branch to branch of a tall green

fir,

Where Mrs. Martin lived with her
mate

In a snug little house that was built
for her.

But the martins saw her as on she:

came,
And they hastened out to drive her
away;

LIKE

I’m going to make a dolly,
Just like the baby there;

I’m going to take some sunshine
And twist it up for hair.

They pecked at her ears, her eyes, her
nose,

_ And frightened her so she'd no wish

to stay ;

And down to the ground they fol-
lowed her close ;

They flew about her from side to
side,

Till Pussy was sick with a dizzy
head,

And glad to go in a corner and hide.

She will not climb the fir tree again;

She found the martins too bold and
strong ;

She keeps to her diet of rats and
mice,

And stays in the barn where the
cats belong.

BABY.

I’m going to take the bluest speck
In all the great blue skies, °

And make a bright blue pretty pair
Of little winking eyes.



I’m going to take some roses, But, oh dear me! I surely am

The sweetest, brightest pink, Forgetting all the while,
To make her little darling cheeks, I cannot find a single thing
The very thing, I think! To make a baby’s smile.

A CATASTROPHE.















One little black cat, one little gray —

Two little funny cats having such a play!

Over goes the gray cat sticking out her toes;
Down tumbles Blackie, right upon her nose! +

Here comes the mammac-cat, straight across the floor;
There go the kitten-cats scrambling for the door;

Up pops a brown mouse, coming through a crack!
Jump goes the mamma-cat before it can get back!

Funny little black cat, funny little gray —
How they let the brown mouse try to run away |
Off goes the brown mouse, in among the pails!
Then how the mamma-cat pulls their little tails!

;



NEY KEEN:





THE PET KITTY.

Come here, kitty, and sit on my
‘shoulder,

Give me your paw, and purr in
my ear,

And you shall have cake and cream
for dinner,
And a little nap on my bed, my
dear.

But first give your face a good
washing,
And with each little paw wipe it
well ;
And I'll tie on your neck a blue
. ribbon,
To fasten your collar and bell.

For you caught that sly mouse in
. the pantry,
Where he had _ nibbled my crack-
ers away ;
What should I have done without
kitty ?
That same nibbling mouse would be
here to-day.

WHERE THEY GROW.

Down in the valley, deep, deep, deep,

‘Where little sunbeams wink and peep,

Under the grasses hiding low - -

There’s where the dear little violets
grow.

Up in the older tree, tree, tree,

Peep, and a tiny nest you'll see,

Swung by the breezes to and fro —

There's where the dear little hird-
lings grow.



Out in the meadow, bright, bright,
bright,
Close by the clovers red and white —
With heart of gold and a fringe of
snow,
There’s where the dear little daisies
grow.

THE LOST

“ Ciuck, cluck | cluck, cluck!” called
the mother-hen,
“Some harm has come to my
chickens, I fear ;
I counted this morning, and then
there were ten;
Now four are gone, and but six are
here;”’

“ Peep, peep! peep, peep!” four chick-
_ ens replied,
As they sipped the dew from a
burdock leaf;
“We must hurry back to our mother’s
side,
. She is calling us now with a voice
~~ of grief.”

Then away to
again,

her side they ran

Up in the nursery, neat, neat,
neat,

Hear the patter of wee, wee
feet — |
Hear little voices chirp and crow—
There's where the dear little babies

grow |

CHICKENS,
Leaving the dainty drink they had
found;



















































































































“ALL SAFE AND SOUND.”

“Cluck, cluck ! cluck, cluck!” said the
mother-hen,

“Here are my ten, all safe and.

sound.”

—M. LE. N. H.





























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































THE VERY SMALL RANY-HOUSE LN THE CORNER BY THE CHEST OF DRAWERS,





| am Little Summer,
And I am on my way

| Toa distant country,



| To seek a pleasant day;
|) But if I do not find it
Be sure I will not stay,

OUR VISITOR.

One lovely May morning. so sunny
and cool,

A visitor came to the
School.

Primary



THE VISITOR.

Nobody gave him a chair or a
book,

“Though his eyes were as brown

as the stones in the brook,

‘And as bright as the stars; and

his wise little head
Nodded this way and that while
the little girls read.

He never before had been in a house,
So every one kept just as still as
a mouse. :
He looked all about him and then
flew away ;

And since then we see him almost
every day.

He comes flying in through he
half-open door,

He picks up the crumbs we hove
spilled on the floor.



THE MOWER AND THE BIRD'S NEST.

A mower comes swinging along with his scythe,
zy Up springs a brown bird and flies for her life.
He puts down his scythe, he looks on the ground,
Calls Katy, who comes with a skip and a bound.
Four birds and one round little nest in the grass!
“O papa! O papal come quick and come fas’!”
He takes up his scythe, mows all the way round
The little round. nest lying low on the ground.
The’ scared little birdie, perched near on a tree,
Flies down, and is glad as a birdie can be.



—F.A. H.
WHO IS THIS COMING?
Who is.this coming He is always ready
All dressed in fur, To come when I call;

With a little soft step,

And a little soft purr, He plays with my thimble;

He tangles my thread;

With a little grey coat Be behind doen.

All spotted with buff, And creeps into my bed.
With a little brown head
As warm as a muff? Oh! he is so cunning,

So pretty and spry,
= That if I should lose him
Oh! this is my kitty, I surely should cry.
The best pet of all. —M.M.H.



GREAT

WHEN I grow to twenty-one,
‘IT will plant a field of corn.



Y " Hf \//
Wat. MN) ‘yy
HW ie
z / dS wl i

aN

LOOKING INTO THE FUTURE,

When the corn begins to sprout,
-Two wee leaves come peeping out.

EXPECTATIONS.

When the leaves are fresh and green,
A slender stalk shoots up between.
While the stalk keeps on to grow,
The tiny ears begin to show.

When the ears are long and thin,
The pretty silk begins to spin.

When the pretty silk is spun,
It turns the color of the sun.

When the summer sun is gone,
It’s time to gather in the corn.

When this corn is gathered in,
What a fortune I shall win!

HARRY’S BIRTHDAY.

“Harry is sevenyears old to-day —
What shall we do to please our
boy?” |
Said dear papa
way ;
“Take him to town and buy him
a toy?”

in his kindly

“ Father, some candy!” said sweet-
tooth Charley,

“Chocolate, almond, and. sticks
of barley, ;

In a pretty box with a picture
cover — 3

Harry is such a candy lover!



S7H GO

“Cried Tom, “O, father, buy him Mother said, “Let us sail down

a gun, the harbor,

And a box of caps—then there'll | And see the bright water dance
be fun!” in the sun,

*A rocking-horse,” said Sister Come home at six and have tea in
Sue; 7 the arbor!”

Said Sam, “A flag, red, white Cried < all: “That's the very
and blue!” thing to be done!”

NINE LITTLE BIRDIES.

Nine little birdies rocked by the breeze:
First birdie said, “I’m tired of these trees; ”
Next birdie said, “Where shall we go?”

- Third birdie said, “ Where red cherries grow!”










Fourth birdie said, “ Are they ripe, do you think ?”
Fifth birdie laughed with a rogue’s own wink ;
Sixth birdie said, “I’m sure that they are;”
Seventh birdie said, “ Is it very far?”
Eighth birdie said, “Who'll leader be?”

| Ninth birdie said, “I’m off, follow me!”
Whew! Whew!
And away they all flew
Into Mr. John Lee’s |
Choice cherry trees!



Thoustt his 05sip arms F | nny )
He told an odd story =
he sober John Ory

sy AVG
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Full Text



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The Baldwin Library





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THE OLD SNOW MAN.

Charley, and Arthur, and John, But how the boys frolic and shout!
Three merry young rogues that I And how their chubby cheeks
know, glow!
Have been at work in the drifts For oh! ‘tis such wonderful fun
And made an old man out of To make an old man out of snow.
snow.
They pat him, they smooth him
His body is clumsy and rough; around
His face has queer features to To harden him well; for they
show; know
And nothing but stumps for his That the sun will do all he can
arms = To melt down their old man of
Has this poor old man made of Snow.

snow. . —M. E. N. H.
\

KITTY IN THE CRADLE.

“TI want a live baby,” said Jennyone I'll fasten a pretty lace cap on your

day ;

“A baby that knows how to ‘frolic

and play;



“ROCK-A-BY, BABY, OH! ROCK-A-BY-BY.”

My doll can do nothing but just
wink her eyes,
And all the day long in the drawer

she lies.

Come here, little kitty, I’ll feed you

with milk;
V'll wrap you in dolly’s best

blanket
of silk;

head ; -
I'll rock you to sleep in my dolly’s
soft bed.” :

Then kitty purred gently, as if she
would say,

“TI think ’twould be nice to be treated
that way ;”

And she tried very hard to be patient
and good,

And let Jenny do with her just as she
would.

She lay in the cradle dressed up in
a cap;

She soon went to sleep and had a
long nap;

While Jenny like any small mother

sat nigh,
And sung, “ Rock-a-by, baby, oh!
rock-a-by-by.” : .


S NAME?”

WHAT IS THE LETTER’

?

“ NOW.


ei on oe el te ds en ne ae



HOW A LITTLE WALK WAS SPOILED.

7

PAYING BACK.

Seven happy little chicks walked out one day in June,

Thought they would enjoy the way by starting up a tune;

Seven ugly little ducks, whose names [ will not mention,

Made up their minds to follow them, and spoil their good intention ;
Now everybody knows that a duckling’s voice is deep,

And everybody knows that guack will make more noise than Jee.

So when they found their music drowned, these plucky little chicks
Made up ¢#ezy minds to cure these ducks of all such naughty tricks ;
So they chased them from the barn-yard, on this pleasant day in June,
Then started on their walk again, and went on with their tune.

— J. &.


x

A LITTLE WOMAN.


é



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NE OR)

CT?

ex i













JOLLY JOE.

“T LIKE to go to school — I do,”
Says jolly little Joe;

“Because I really think it is
The nicest place I know.

“The boys and girls, at nine o'clock,
I always like to see;

I like to see the teacher, too,
I know that she likes me!

“‘T like to see the scholars sit
With arms all neatly folded;

And if there should be naughty ones
I like to hear them scolded!

“T like to read — of birds and bees
_ And trees and flowers, too;
‘Of sailors, soldiers, and about
The gallant things they do. |

“T like to write — I always did —
To take my pen in hand

And show how much a boy can do,
I think is very grand.

“ And then I always like to spell;
I think it is such fun

To pick the little letters out
And join them one by one.

“T like arithmetic, because
‘Tis such a pleasant sight
To see the figures on my slate
All coming out just right.

“Tike it all. I'll try todo 4
The very best I can, ee
Because I want to grow to be
A wise and honest man.”.








LAZY

“T NEVER like to go to school,”
Says lazy little Lew;

“°Tis such a very stupid place!
I hate it—so I do.

“T do not like the girls and boys,
They always laugh, to see
That when I am a little late
The teacher frowns at me.

“T do not like to sit so still
With both arms tightly folded ;
And if I make a little noise
I’m sure of getting scolded.

“TI hate to read. The birds and
flowers
I’d rather go and see ;
And all the men and things in books,
What good are they to me?

‘

LEW.

“T hate to write —I never could —
I hate to hold a pen ;

To make a poor boy work so hard,
I think, is very mean.

“TI always did dislike to spell,
It is so hard to know

The names of all the letters well,
And how they ought to go.

«“ And then I hate arithmetic,
"Tis such a dismal sight —
The rows of figures on my slate

I never can get right!

“T'll play the truant — yes, I will,
As often as I can;
I'll vote against there being schools,

If ever bm a man!”
—S.D.


AN APRIL RAIN.



You poor little birds,
It’s happened again —
In the midst of your play
Down patters the rain.

You were caught in a shower
Just so last week,
And I thought that morning

I ought to speak;

I hear you all up
A-singing at dawn, ~

I know you have tried
Each tree on the lawn,

Yet not one of you all

Have picked up a straw —
Such improvident birds

I ne’er before saw.

But I hope you see now

_ That it would be best

To let your play go
And build you a nest.



A“ CONTENTED: BOW,

How old am I?-
Well, let me see!
Johnnie is four,
Mary is three,
And I am as big

As I want to be;
For both their years
Belong to me:

Six and one,

Three, and four,

ive, and two,

But not one more.

I am the oldest
_Of mother’s three,

And just as big

As I want to be.

~—K. T. W.


Ls




PCAN ALA MOBI SELL Pa

ANY

WOHWLFA

“TI LAY ON THE GRASS TO READ.”

WHAT THE GRASSES SAID.

Who can hear the grass talk ?
Very few, I know;

Yet it whispers every day,
Sweet and soft and low.

And one day I heard it;
Shall I tell you when?

I lay on the grass to read,
And I heard it then.



Everything was pleasant;
Bright the sun did shine;
Dew lay in the flowers’ eyes,

Heavy sleep in mine ;

So I gently shut then,
Soon they opened wide;
For I heard the grasses talk

Fast on every side!


This is what they talked about: Oh it’s very hard to have
“Oh, what pleasant weather ! No covers on our beds !”
Lift your heads up to the sun,

Nod and wave together | Then the wise red-rose bush

Tall, and rough and old,
Shook his head, and kindly said,

“We're so glad that. we are grass,
“You will not be cold,

Cool and soft and green;

Oh, how sad the earth would look
If no grass were seen! “For God sends a blanket warm
For every blade of grass,

Soft and light, and white as wool;

a t 7
And we love the summer warm, Nota blade He'll pass!”

But, oh, dear! oh, dear!

What will little grasses do
When winter cold is here? “What's the blanket made of ?

Quick! we want to know!”

“Why, my dears,” the rose-bush said,
_ “How the wind will whistle @God’e blanket isthe snow”

Round about our heads |! ea



EELVEE BIRD;

Little bird, little bird, where are For you have 5 nest, with little

you flying? ones in it,
You have left no track in the clear I know where it is, on the apple-
—— -blué=sky, tree high,
But you know the way if I cannot And you'll not forget, when your
see it, children are hungry,

And you will come back again. a ao you will come back again, by
and by. _ and by. - -M. M. H.


A LITTLE NUT-CRACKER.

A LITTLE NUT-CRACKER.

Such a merry little, jolly little fel- Such a bushy little tail, such a

low 1s he, bright, sparkling eye!
As he dances up aloft in a big “Chirrr! here 1 go! see how I
oak-tree | fly |”

we,


- He chatters, and he skips in and

out ‘mong the branches;

leaps down the trunk with

sudden little launches;

He perks his saucy nose, he whisks
his plumy tail;

He veers and tacks and jibes, like

a schooner in a gale.

He

He picks the chestnuts brown; he
cracks them in a trice;

He eats the farmer’s grain; he’s.
as bad as are the mice;

With apples, nuts and corn—a
dainty store, you see —

Such a jolly little, jaunty little
squirrel is he! —F. A. H.

BEN’S GROWL.

“O dear!” growled sleepy Ben,.
“T wish there was no school,
At Teast no ‘tardy’ rule!

I'd sleep and sleep and then —

“T’d crawl out ‘slow’s a snail, ©

_ And put on my best hat
And take my ball and bat,

Some plum cake in my pail,

“ And then down town I'd go.
I'd stop at every store,
Buy twenty pounds or more
Of candy; then, you know,



“If I must go to school,
~ Why I could sit and munch
My candy and my lunch —
O dear! That ‘tardy’ rule!”
SS
ISK

i

al
S

S
SS

S
SS
x

i

POLLY’S

Polly is schoolma’am,
Sober and wise;
Very old schoolma’am,

In baby’s eyes.

Sweetest of sunshine
Plays through the room,

Making cheeks healthy,
Making them bloom.








POLLY AND HER PUPIL.

Only one scholar
Has Polly now;
When Polly questions
She makes a bow.

Polly says, “ Baby,
Now you spell cat.”





SCHOOL.

- Baby she giggles;

“If you spell that,

“Then Polly’ll give you
Apple all nice;
Or mamma’s plum-cake, ©

Very big slice!”

Baby likes “merits;”
Nod goes her head;

Crows at the apple
Juicy and red.

Now lessons over,
Polly says “Sing!”

Baby’s eyes twinkle,
Sweet carols ring.

Out through the windows,
Gay robins, red,

Join in the chorus
By Polly led.

Then school ‘is over,
Work is all done,

Baby wants mamma,
So off they run.
:


































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































BIRDS.

{ Do you see that little bird ?
Hush, now — do not say a word!

He’s industriously eating at the cher. .

ries in the tree.
And there comes another one,
He is joining in the fun
As if he thought “These goodies
were expressly made for me.”

Such a jolly little pair
-- IT am ready to declare
I have never seen in cherry-tree, or
apple, pear or. peach,
Are they robin, wren or jay,
Bobolink or bluebird, pray? _
I will tell you of their feathers ~
you may give a name to each.

One has a merry eye
Just as blue as any sky,
With a laughing little rosy face, and
dimple in his chin,
And he wears a kilted skirt
(Worse for cherry-stains and dirt)
And a jaunty coat with pockets nice
for putting cherries in|!

And the other little elf
_ Who is covering himself

With the juices of the summer, has

the nattiest of suits,
With a sailor hat and collar,
And a belt that cost a dollar |!
He has clocks upon his stockings,
too, and buttons on his boots -

Well, everybody knows
That birds who wear such clothes,
Will never spread their tiny wings and fly away from you;

They will scramble down, pell-mell,

_ If you ring a dinner-bell,

And declare they are as hungry as if cherries never grew]

—S. D.
WHO WAS SHE?

As I was going down the walk And hurried on, as if to say,
So pleasant, cool and shady, | “Tl tend to my own gown,
Right in the middle of the path sir!”

I met a little lady.

I followed her the whole way

I made to her my sweetest bow; home;
She only walked on faster ; Her home was in my garden,
I smiled, and said “Good-morning,

ma’am,”
The moment that I passed her. ©

}

She never noticed me at all;
I really felt quite slighted ;

I thought, “ I'll follow you, I will,
Altho’ I’m not invited.”



ALL DRESSED IN FUR.

Beneath my choicest vines — and

Perhaps you think me very rude; yet
But then, she looked so funny — She never asked my pardon.
From head to feet all dressed in
fur) i
This summer day so sunny. I never heard “ey speak a word;

But once I heard the miller,
: Coming down the sidewalk, say,
She didn’t mind the heat at all, _ “There goes Miss Caterpillar!”
But wrapped the fur around her, : Ones
Five little squirrels up in a tree:
This squirrel cried, “ What do you see?”
This squirrel cried, “I smell a gun!”
This squirrel cried, “ Ho, let us run!”
This squirrel cried, “I'll hide in the shade!”
This squirrel cried, “I’m not afraid!”
Bang! went the gun! |
But they ran, every one!

Se

THE LITTLE CHIEF.

I know there's Ned and Fred and Ted,
But if you please, sir, 7’ the Head.

They like their play, and so, you see,
Who's left to be the man but me?
My mother knows I am the one

To do that thing which must be done.

I sweep the walks; I tend the door;
I go on errands to the store;

And any day I'd run a mile

To see my pretty mother smile!

You needn’t laugh because ['m smull1!
s Just being big, sir, isn’t all —

I am my mother’s little man ; I’m much a man as any man

I am the chief of all the clan; If I do everything I can! > :



oe


THE SECRET..

“Oh, I have been out fot a a walk,
‘said she,
“ For a walk in the woods lone
And the birds have told me a secret,
To keep for my very own.



“VE BEEN OUT FOR A WALK.” ~
The dear old woods were spicy and
sweet,
And the warm wind blew in “my
face, |



I gathered the buttercups out of
the grass,
And a rabbit and I ran a race.

“Tt was Mr. and Mrs. Thrush,” she
said,
“They were talking as I went past;
And of course I could hear what
they said, you know,
They chattered so loud and so fast.
But I promised them truly I never
would tell,
So they sang the dear secret to me.
And good Mrs. Thrush flew away
- to her nest,
And let me just peep in and see.

“ But you all will know pretty soon,”
she said ;
-“ For the days go by so fast!
And I think they will fly out into
the sun,
Before the summer is past.
And I shall watch them every day,

For the old birds know me well,

But you mustn't ask any more,”
said she;
“For I promised I would not tell!”
—M. fj.
rv,

A SONG FOR SUMMER.




Out in the field one summer’s day,
Our little Annie, tired with play,

Among the violets dropped her head;
Sleep caught her in her fragrant bed.

The field flowers crowded all around
The sleeping baby on the ground;

THE LAUGHING SPRITE,

The lily, buttercup, sweetbrier,

And cardinal flower, like flame of
fire.

The gold-eyed daisy bowed to
greet

The wild rose nestling at her feet;

The honey-bee, that restless rover,

Hummed in the heart of the scented
clover.

A laughing sprite came out to see
The little maid; so glad was he,
He danced a polka, o’er and oer,
On the dandelion’s golden floor.


“FOUR SUCH DOGS I NE’ER DID SEE,”

WHAT THE FOX THOUGHT.

Four to one! It is not fair.
Coward dogs! They do not dare
One by one to race with me.
Four such dogs I ne’er did see.

There is Tige, the foremost one;
I know him by that big, red tongue.

Then comes Nep, so fierce and strong ;.
Once near me, I’d not live long..

Almost up is spotted Jim,

At my best I’d distance him.
Butthey’vechased meround and round:
Till I start at evry sound.
Lady Jane 1 do “not tear;
She’s a dog I could live near,
If her master did not say,
“You must hunt that fox to-day.”

NOBODY

How the wind whistles and roars!

How he blows, he blows, and he
blows !

But what does he say at the doors?

Nobody knows, nobody knows.

The ground is covered with white,
For it snows, it snows, and it snows;
But it falls so silent at night

That nobody knows, nobody knows.

The grass is springing again,
And it grows, it grows, and it grows,
In the sunshine and the rain —
How, nobody knows, nobody knows. -

Hear the black cock flap his wings !
And he crows, he crows, and he
Crows ;

Cruel men! They call us sly—
Call us tricky —quick to fly;

But if once we chased them so,
Wouldn't they just learn to go?

KNOWS.

But whether he laughs or he sings,
Why, nobody knows, nobody knows.

The brook runs sparkling along,
And it flows, it flows, and it flows;
But what is its rippling song,

Why, nobody knows, nobody knows.

The cow comes down ‘through the
lane,

And she lows, she lows, and she lows;

But what she says it is plain

That nobody knows, nobody knows.

Over the fields and away

Fly the crows, the crows, the crows;

They caw, they caw, but they say

What nobody knows, nobody knows.
—H. B.


DAISIES ALL ABOUT HER.

HOW THE BABY WAS NAMED.

Mother's busy washing ;
Jack has gone to school;

Baby's in the garden;
Kitty has a spool.

Every one is busy

This bright summer day,
_ None more so than Baby,
Working hard to play.

Hat stuck full of daisies,
Dolls are daisy-crowned —

Daisies, daisies everywhere
Lying on the ground.

Out comes little pussy
Tossing them about ;

Baby calls, “Go way now!”
With a little pout.

Summer sun grows warmer;
Baby tires with play ;

Down upon the green grass
Fast asleep she lay;
Daisies all about her,
Sunshine overhead,

Pussy nestled closely
In this summer bed.

Mother from her washing
Comes, and finds her there

With the wide-eyed daisies
Nestling in her hair.

‘Then was Baby christened
In the summer sweet;

Now, no longer “ Baby,”
But sweet Marguerite.

THE. DOUGH-DOG.

One day when grandma was making
some pies,

She wished to give Tommy a pleas-
ant surprise ;



BRUNO,

So she made a puppy-dog out of
some dough,

And baked it, and marked it, and
named it Bruno.

This wonderful dog could stand on
its feet,

Its body was chubby, and cunning,
and neat,

Its little eae head was spotted _
with black,

And its little dough-tail curled over
its back.

And when Tommy saw it oee oo

with glee,
“How good grandma was: to make
that for me!”
And he played with the puppy-dog
day after day,
Till its head and its tail were both

worn away.
TICK AT OCK.

Tick tock, tick tock to
Tl count the seconds by grand-

mother’s clock.

When sixty have ticked, the min-_
ute-hand shows :

That one minute comes as another
one goes.

Sixty seconds a minute, and then
it will take

Sixty minutes, I know, an hour to
make.

The length of a day I can easily
mark — =

Just twenty-four hours of day-light
and dark.

Seven days make a week ; and then
fifty-two

Of these weeks make a year, if my
counting is true.

A hundred long years, and then
there will be

‘A century here, for some one to see.

.



A NAUGHTY SHEEP.

What very soft steps you take, naughty sheep !
You wish me to think you're good, naughty sheep !
You've come through a hole in the fence, naughty sheep!



And now you must: go straight back, naughty sheep!
PUDDING AND MILK.

ee Two little stools
Side by side;

Two little girls,
Mother’s pride,

Jolly.as kits,
Plump as mice;
Pudding and milk —
Isn't it nice ?



Two little bowls Pudding and milk,

-Round and white; Mothers. know,
Two little spoons _ , : Is just what makes
Silver bright ; Little girls grow!

_A REQUEST FROM THE BIRDS.

Dear little girls, throw us a crumb;

Dear little boys, please bring us
some!

O, don’t you know, when falls the
snow,

That dinnerless the birdies go ?

Yet, dears, we earn, with summer
-song,

Our daily food the winter long.

A , little bird with hunger wild

Is wretched as a starving child.


A -EVEELE= COUNERY-GIRE



What will Lolly do in spring-time?
She'll go out to play,

She wu. bring home pussy willows
And May-flowers gay.

She will feed the little chickens,
Watch the lambs at play,

And hunt for nests of new-laid

Ceoc
Up in the mows of hay.











What will Lolly do in summer ?
She'll pick berries red,

Trim her hair with dandelions, °
Weed her flower-bed,

Tie her curls with yellow corn-silk,
Make long daisy chains,
And play “keep house” with all

her dolls,

Every time it rains.

n~




What will Lolly do in autumn?
See the yellow grain,

And pick golden-rod and asters,
Up and down the lane.

Saturdays she'll go a-nutting,
Wade among the leaves,

And ride upon the loaded cart

» High up among the sheaves.





























































OF hp

















































What will Lolly do in winter?
She will skate and slide,

Play at games and look at pictures
By the fireside.

She will sew upon her presents
For the Christmas tree,

And through snowy winter nights
Sleep snug as snug can be.


cs

WINNIE’S TROUBLES.

“JT NEVER Shall be big,”
Said little Winnie Winch;
“T have tried for a month .
And I haven’t grown an inch —
I know, for I measured A
'By a mark on the wall.
Little cups, little books, little desks,
little clothes —
For seven long years I’ve had only
those.





































Then the poor small Winnie
Made a great wise plan

How to grow very fast ;

-. And away she ran.

When she came in again
She was — oh, so tall!

Her gown swept the floor
From the door to the wall;
She walked up and down, till she tripped in her train,
And then she was glad to be a small girl again.





—H. F. P.
SOME NAUGHTY FS;
iT Alley Ge ad ng
Some little people cry: Now hear them passing by:
‘Tawo-t; cant, oe -“T-han’t, I be,
L sShallieshant——- I are, I see —’”

Oh, what a naughty I! Oh, what a naughty I!
HE can sit, he can stand,
He can climb up a tree;

He can hold in his hand
A cup full of tea;

He can run, he can hop,
For Pedro is spry;
He can dance like a top,
Fle can laugh, he can cry; ~

He can eat a hot cake
Without burning his thumb;

He can hoe, he can rake,
He can beat on a drum.

But there’s one little thing
This monkey can’t do,

And that is to sing :
And chatter like you!



~BUNNY-COAT’S BED.

_ Nothing was seen of him,
But his gray head:

Where was his bed, think you?
Where did he dream?

You will laugh when I tell you,
So droll does it’ seem !

In little Jean’s pocket
In her apron so white,

The little grey “ Bunny-coat ”
Slept’all the night.



Little gay Bun-ny-coat
Slipped into bed —

—Ff. P. ¢
oe

MiSS= EF USSY:S= SICKNESS.



DR. GREY’S PATIENT.

Miss Pussy is ill;
She lies very still

In her snug little bed,
With a pain in her head.

“© doctor!” cries she, ae
“ Pray what can it be

That gives me such pain

On the top of my brain?”

Says old Doctor Grey,
“ Excuse me, I pray,
For seeming so rude,
But it is for your good;

“T really do think —”
(This he says with a wink })
“You have eaten a slice
Too much of young mice!”

A WONDERFUL SCHOLAR.



O, a wonderful scholar

Is our little Kate!

She reads in a primer;
She writes on a-slate;

Her lines are not even;
Her O’s are not round;

‘And her words in the reader

Could not be found.

Her sewing — what puckers!
‘What stitches! what knots!
And along the whole hem, As if a “bad mark,”

There are tiny red spots; / Should be paid for by this.
Her weekly reports And she cries in delight,
Tell how oft she has spoken ; . While she swings round her hat:
And there’s not a rule “T’m a wonderful scholar,
That she never has broken. | For I can spell ‘cat!’
C-A-T, Cat/”

Yet she comes to mamma
For a smile and a kiss,

NEDDY’S PETS.

He had a little kitten,
Her name was “ Nellie Gray;”
He gave her to a lady, ay
Who lives a mile away.

He has a little chicken,

Her name is Miss “Bright Eyes;’
And when she sees her master

She lifts her wings and flies.

He has a big Newfoundland dog,
His name is “ Faithful Tray ;”

Both Neddy and his doggie —
Were five years old in May.



“HERE'S A KITTY FOR you!”

-He has a baby-sister,

NeEppy has a pony, His best and dearest pet —
Her name is “ Jenny Stone; ” What do you think ey name is?
He strokes her and he pats her, She hasn't any yet.

And rides her all alone. —K. L.




















































































































































































































































































































































ON THE ICY. WINDOW-PANE, ‘

THE WINDOW-PANE TREE.

With her warm little finger,
Gold Locks wrote

On the icy window-pane
A note.

“Make me a Christmas-tree,”
It. read;

It was signed with a flourish,
“Yours, Gold Head.”

Then out came the sunlight’s
Sparkling ray;

It melted the message
All away.

But the very next morning,
Lo! behold!

On the glass of the window,
White and cold,
Was a tapering fir-tree, Cried out little Gold Locks,

Weighed with snow, “See oh, see
‘Spire-like at the top, Jack Frost has painted.
And _ broad _ below. My Christmas-tree t”



THE MEETING OF THE BIRDS.

Four little merry, talkative birds
Met in a thicket together one day;

And, “Oh, how pleasant it is,” said one,
“To build - pretty nests in the month of May.

“T like the world bestein June,” said one,
“When the flowers are esos bright and
sweet,
And the cherries are hanging thick on the trees,
Ripe and crimson, all ready to eat.

The other two said, “O, we like to sing
To call the people to rise with the sun;

. And we like to sing at the evening hour
To tell the people the day-time is done.”

And so these four little frolicsome birds
Talked as they met in the thicket one day,
Till they thought of their young ones waiting at —
home, |
When they spread their small wings and ee
tered away.


PUSSY AND THE MARTINS.

One day Pussy said, as she came
from the barn,
“I am very tired of living on mice ;
ll take a walk through the trees, I
think;
A tender young bird would taste very
* nice.” :

Then she climbed, and climbed, with
a careful step,
From branch to branch of a tall green

fir,

Where Mrs. Martin lived with her
mate

In a snug little house that was built
for her.

But the martins saw her as on she:

came,
And they hastened out to drive her
away;

LIKE

I’m going to make a dolly,
Just like the baby there;

I’m going to take some sunshine
And twist it up for hair.

They pecked at her ears, her eyes, her
nose,

_ And frightened her so she'd no wish

to stay ;

And down to the ground they fol-
lowed her close ;

They flew about her from side to
side,

Till Pussy was sick with a dizzy
head,

And glad to go in a corner and hide.

She will not climb the fir tree again;

She found the martins too bold and
strong ;

She keeps to her diet of rats and
mice,

And stays in the barn where the
cats belong.

BABY.

I’m going to take the bluest speck
In all the great blue skies, °

And make a bright blue pretty pair
Of little winking eyes.
I’m going to take some roses, But, oh dear me! I surely am

The sweetest, brightest pink, Forgetting all the while,
To make her little darling cheeks, I cannot find a single thing
The very thing, I think! To make a baby’s smile.

A CATASTROPHE.















One little black cat, one little gray —

Two little funny cats having such a play!

Over goes the gray cat sticking out her toes;
Down tumbles Blackie, right upon her nose! +

Here comes the mammac-cat, straight across the floor;
There go the kitten-cats scrambling for the door;

Up pops a brown mouse, coming through a crack!
Jump goes the mamma-cat before it can get back!

Funny little black cat, funny little gray —
How they let the brown mouse try to run away |
Off goes the brown mouse, in among the pails!
Then how the mamma-cat pulls their little tails!

;
NEY KEEN:





THE PET KITTY.

Come here, kitty, and sit on my
‘shoulder,

Give me your paw, and purr in
my ear,

And you shall have cake and cream
for dinner,
And a little nap on my bed, my
dear.

But first give your face a good
washing,
And with each little paw wipe it
well ;
And I'll tie on your neck a blue
. ribbon,
To fasten your collar and bell.

For you caught that sly mouse in
. the pantry,
Where he had _ nibbled my crack-
ers away ;
What should I have done without
kitty ?
That same nibbling mouse would be
here to-day.

WHERE THEY GROW.

Down in the valley, deep, deep, deep,

‘Where little sunbeams wink and peep,

Under the grasses hiding low - -

There’s where the dear little violets
grow.

Up in the older tree, tree, tree,

Peep, and a tiny nest you'll see,

Swung by the breezes to and fro —

There's where the dear little hird-
lings grow.
Out in the meadow, bright, bright,
bright,
Close by the clovers red and white —
With heart of gold and a fringe of
snow,
There’s where the dear little daisies
grow.

THE LOST

“ Ciuck, cluck | cluck, cluck!” called
the mother-hen,
“Some harm has come to my
chickens, I fear ;
I counted this morning, and then
there were ten;
Now four are gone, and but six are
here;”’

“ Peep, peep! peep, peep!” four chick-
_ ens replied,
As they sipped the dew from a
burdock leaf;
“We must hurry back to our mother’s
side,
. She is calling us now with a voice
~~ of grief.”

Then away to
again,

her side they ran

Up in the nursery, neat, neat,
neat,

Hear the patter of wee, wee
feet — |
Hear little voices chirp and crow—
There's where the dear little babies

grow |

CHICKENS,
Leaving the dainty drink they had
found;



















































































































“ALL SAFE AND SOUND.”

“Cluck, cluck ! cluck, cluck!” said the
mother-hen,

“Here are my ten, all safe and.

sound.”

—M. LE. N. H.


























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































THE VERY SMALL RANY-HOUSE LN THE CORNER BY THE CHEST OF DRAWERS,


| am Little Summer,
And I am on my way

| Toa distant country,



| To seek a pleasant day;
|) But if I do not find it
Be sure I will not stay,

OUR VISITOR.

One lovely May morning. so sunny
and cool,

A visitor came to the
School.

Primary



THE VISITOR.

Nobody gave him a chair or a
book,

“Though his eyes were as brown

as the stones in the brook,

‘And as bright as the stars; and

his wise little head
Nodded this way and that while
the little girls read.

He never before had been in a house,
So every one kept just as still as
a mouse. :
He looked all about him and then
flew away ;

And since then we see him almost
every day.

He comes flying in through he
half-open door,

He picks up the crumbs we hove
spilled on the floor.
THE MOWER AND THE BIRD'S NEST.

A mower comes swinging along with his scythe,
zy Up springs a brown bird and flies for her life.
He puts down his scythe, he looks on the ground,
Calls Katy, who comes with a skip and a bound.
Four birds and one round little nest in the grass!
“O papa! O papal come quick and come fas’!”
He takes up his scythe, mows all the way round
The little round. nest lying low on the ground.
The’ scared little birdie, perched near on a tree,
Flies down, and is glad as a birdie can be.



—F.A. H.
WHO IS THIS COMING?
Who is.this coming He is always ready
All dressed in fur, To come when I call;

With a little soft step,

And a little soft purr, He plays with my thimble;

He tangles my thread;

With a little grey coat Be behind doen.

All spotted with buff, And creeps into my bed.
With a little brown head
As warm as a muff? Oh! he is so cunning,

So pretty and spry,
= That if I should lose him
Oh! this is my kitty, I surely should cry.
The best pet of all. —M.M.H.
GREAT

WHEN I grow to twenty-one,
‘IT will plant a field of corn.



Y " Hf \//
Wat. MN) ‘yy
HW ie
z / dS wl i

aN

LOOKING INTO THE FUTURE,

When the corn begins to sprout,
-Two wee leaves come peeping out.

EXPECTATIONS.

When the leaves are fresh and green,
A slender stalk shoots up between.
While the stalk keeps on to grow,
The tiny ears begin to show.

When the ears are long and thin,
The pretty silk begins to spin.

When the pretty silk is spun,
It turns the color of the sun.

When the summer sun is gone,
It’s time to gather in the corn.

When this corn is gathered in,
What a fortune I shall win!

HARRY’S BIRTHDAY.

“Harry is sevenyears old to-day —
What shall we do to please our
boy?” |
Said dear papa
way ;
“Take him to town and buy him
a toy?”

in his kindly

“ Father, some candy!” said sweet-
tooth Charley,

“Chocolate, almond, and. sticks
of barley, ;

In a pretty box with a picture
cover — 3

Harry is such a candy lover!
S7H GO

“Cried Tom, “O, father, buy him Mother said, “Let us sail down

a gun, the harbor,

And a box of caps—then there'll | And see the bright water dance
be fun!” in the sun,

*A rocking-horse,” said Sister Come home at six and have tea in
Sue; 7 the arbor!”

Said Sam, “A flag, red, white Cried < all: “That's the very
and blue!” thing to be done!”

NINE LITTLE BIRDIES.

Nine little birdies rocked by the breeze:
First birdie said, “I’m tired of these trees; ”
Next birdie said, “Where shall we go?”

- Third birdie said, “ Where red cherries grow!”










Fourth birdie said, “ Are they ripe, do you think ?”
Fifth birdie laughed with a rogue’s own wink ;
Sixth birdie said, “I’m sure that they are;”
Seventh birdie said, “ Is it very far?”
Eighth birdie said, “Who'll leader be?”

| Ninth birdie said, “I’m off, follow me!”
Whew! Whew!
And away they all flew
Into Mr. John Lee’s |
Choice cherry trees!
Thoustt his 05sip arms F | nny )
He told an odd story =
he sober John Ory

sy AVG
Rt







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'33286' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLA' 'sip-files00002.QC.jpg'
b9ce2ee2b94ede607aa01a76c4e427cf
c6f7967e7bcd391127c71ad2e06263a6c94e8b11
'2011-11-07T12:26:57-05:00'
describe
'17937996' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLB' 'sip-files00002.tif'
9749ed3dd629ea5beb0dd41c0f9e4648
e7e7c4ac91017124d654074dfe412082276d63b8
'2011-11-07T12:26:20-05:00'
describe
'202' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLC' 'sip-files00002.txt'
74403a2fd23d10e6fdec1e81d1af144f
4165d9a4a126716a23d26a702e650f17012e050d
'2011-11-07T12:26:40-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
'8149' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLD' 'sip-files00002thm.jpg'
79d40bd5d3baba913d9e309d2b2fae07
190b96c9bf19ed4fac84a92bc40737ca2624a46e
'2011-11-07T12:26:44-05:00'
describe
'752941' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLE' 'sip-files00003.jp2'
05dd3206cd5b09ae3053dff96cf679b5
846add87016d96f9c6241ab4fd32b3e3463da1a8
'2011-11-07T12:27:00-05:00'
describe
'93104' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLF' 'sip-files00003.jpg'
0d60b2483ec5e5ff0b650fc852fd72ea
d42e1f013596f1f6d9d4a4d7dd84e564e8645094
'2011-11-07T12:26:41-05:00'
describe
'4077' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLG' 'sip-files00003.pro'
e781c5b6b483c7f6dab8566b39c65a3c
ed5409a01f2816c9d2df4ecba644811c43f53706
'2011-11-07T12:26:23-05:00'
describe
'22662' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLH' 'sip-files00003.QC.jpg'
5990485b97e3e52096508673e7eb57ff
53ce680703888cd6d516aa3d8ddb3a69eb8c9bc9
'2011-11-07T12:25:48-05:00'
describe
'18080520' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLI' 'sip-files00003.tif'
c4ecb15ead61ce8f5759c81656fc3f03
8277eecdffcc8d26757ac3e9c9e0ff93b12add1a
'2011-11-07T12:25:33-05:00'
describe
'206' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLJ' 'sip-files00003.txt'
a4f20d4a55780908a7120426b6906ad0
3340ebe9d4f85dd7ed405f9cce28f7bb10fc2669
'2011-11-07T12:25:58-05:00'
describe
'5996' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLK' 'sip-files00003thm.jpg'
87246203060ad7feaf0772aa64cb8080
dae7d86f4060d11956a3c46f4a6ec251feb03232
'2011-11-07T12:27:01-05:00'
describe
'746764' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLL' 'sip-files00004.jp2'
a6412d5049eb40d045afa135e4dd13ff
390327c06aa2e9e44706db68a96c7ba4d72f7082
'2011-11-07T12:26:08-05:00'
describe
'69281' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLM' 'sip-files00004.jpg'
d7659b33e4dbf2523da3f17c586631ca
a4f08e0cb477740354629e9f72c6bbbddd5f7709
'2011-11-07T12:26:15-05:00'
describe
'4482' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLN' 'sip-files00004.pro'
7d83b90c0726c8e5698d4a78a114988c
9f11cb5d9422f93519d3399e0a427909274bde0b
'2011-11-07T12:26:17-05:00'
describe
'14020' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLO' 'sip-files00004.QC.jpg'
00d85e74125124203946c03367259ab6
d615fe47e9fa1c11ccd438c85475b8553747fd4e
describe
'5984280' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLP' 'sip-files00004.tif'
ad1d9befd17c528e48d1711a3f47683c
7b09f6ef47c71a1d9afd706d87e8f72d4c61758e
'2011-11-07T12:25:30-05:00'
describe
'367' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLQ' 'sip-files00004.txt'
fb1160c0279786f54bf20220935cbbb9
84b062b9e1953cfd7e373298ed751298be5f9bd9
'2011-11-07T12:25:03-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
'3016' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLR' 'sip-files00004thm.jpg'
391070aac7c66cd0ee0e1da099c449bc
5237906af8894cc8675c77e775dedb4b378dd8bb
'2011-11-07T12:26:09-05:00'
describe
'746864' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLS' 'sip-files00005.jp2'
d3784104f8507588b6de0cc7035b9c15
0b9b6278bea03495854810e44dd1e3b428315f06
'2011-11-07T12:26:07-05:00'
describe
'96820' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLT' 'sip-files00005.jpg'
a598669e738778e3afc3f81b630cdc09
fc01e69da2eef0a025cdbaf8ec316ba4bd721af2
'2011-11-07T12:26:58-05:00'
describe
'16484' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLU' 'sip-files00005.pro'
96feb14cae8a46283cb3ad6fba5f06f2
bcc1ebf0f32c7be2dfffb6dbb578e714a830f112
'2011-11-07T12:25:53-05:00'
describe
'25705' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLV' 'sip-files00005.QC.jpg'
0c6985b336bc5b260a4885ec2e48497e
296c6368bcd02eeff7146f3e61a374d1c7060c0f
describe
'5987528' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLW' 'sip-files00005.tif'
d3da926c2396b591c080b4ba4fc59455
1e48d64d7896f65815d14b1628f79c1087484361
'2011-11-07T12:26:54-05:00'
describe
'793' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLX' 'sip-files00005.txt'
c1b2a910817178f9eca70b9fd68e5c74
1b5bc8d82f71c4233870bcb2f19ca4a07bafdcb1
'2011-11-07T12:26:56-05:00'
describe
'6484' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLY' 'sip-files00005thm.jpg'
4159090c57e0fb19e30e44f6b5938039
529ae671a8dab257a11e25c0c62e26b9e8d445b9
'2011-11-07T12:25:52-05:00'
describe
'746922' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPLZ' 'sip-files00006.jp2'
a4cdd35198f58801190689fcb488cbba
0337971c33063d6afa963165127b753872eb1cbc
'2011-11-07T12:26:49-05:00'
describe
'118421' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMA' 'sip-files00006.jpg'
aa1c11941f066a21a76f4aef5b545bd9
9fa0e64f782ec7f98a16bb9229b60e170ad80cfb
'2011-11-07T12:26:51-05:00'
describe
'23450' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMB' 'sip-files00006.pro'
d8a34b723b03b71fe6716d634c6d9a93
91083615f1c10905b0892ef10b2051d2e1f2356d
describe
'30708' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMC' 'sip-files00006.QC.jpg'
d12c02a9676ed88b660be6d38e04dfdc
3eeb16198cef462443cf26a8e2e1be36ef45e0b8
'2011-11-07T12:25:43-05:00'
describe
'5988600' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMD' 'sip-files00006.tif'
fd1a2fe15586af9f268ef575f6837fbf
bcf76b4d44c8135d19a816a5ea0d6bde364e3526
describe
'1108' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPME' 'sip-files00006.txt'
15c49866fb33a70c127dc3b0b9f47589
7198a0d8a3237d29157b590375073734566bae89
'2011-11-07T12:25:14-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
'7728' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMF' 'sip-files00006thm.jpg'
546ffd203c1d33bb94a0e1c89f069d39
b4e58217a327d5f60e79ec19982a0c3ff62686dd
describe
'448690' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMG' 'sip-files00007.jp2'
fc44b259d7891c1b2b86e235c12c2a1c
d1bd4487ce6849eb7b3bc1a3ca572292c2f55b96
'2011-11-07T12:26:18-05:00'
describe
'192953' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMH' 'sip-files00007.jpg'
ccd0a940dc08b8b77d09124c0e3727d1
d0ace8a5123462af2f633b6aba921056d9905f9a
describe
'1934' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMI' 'sip-files00007.pro'
574ead551e8dc82740884f4c20960b85
0dae5caad121b6ba31280b4a2621ec3d368d93da
'2011-11-07T12:26:32-05:00'
describe
'46725' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMJ' 'sip-files00007.QC.jpg'
4ca9122877c8677ddf0c6af856c07af3
df25aad9ddae1db707a778c9af3a6b5c85c9dffe
'2011-11-07T12:26:48-05:00'
describe
'3605832' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMK' 'sip-files00007.tif'
25922542954cc395c31c07e6832a2983
1d7b1f37dfb3f8a106244fa5d864632a6c96fa17
'2011-11-07T12:25:05-05:00'
describe
'190' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPML' 'sip-files00007.txt'
f90e8ea0ca5f5d0d9687be6bcf5e1572
c9d7a83cf1bcbcd52684c8a4a0e151fd8db22030
'2011-11-07T12:27:04-05:00'
describe
'10876' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMM' 'sip-files00007thm.jpg'
c1a2f0bbe295e78b66a4ee130e75edb9
63290078fcf0c48b75fdae77c884700a4327df52
describe
'746809' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMN' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
2c0973dd0dbabbd9217d8cc9a9b60c81
24cafb884b61b43244cb7ccfa7bf5e5b8a620e0f
'2011-11-07T12:26:34-05:00'
describe
'149101' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMO' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
64596bdbef9423d22f3fe2c31ad2a4a4
db6e8e0ffb74edfc213d9f49f42ee43997d1be63
'2011-11-07T12:26:37-05:00'
describe
'19319' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMP' 'sip-files00008.pro'
bb1030bcd9190b047859bbf71cd47772
8513a68ab880224b81850ad8c8ebb78ac1a906bc
'2011-11-07T12:25:25-05:00'
describe
'35812' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMQ' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
e7d1f144431579adcd730e50e9eaff6c
3b33eb798e054d21171306497ae3161cdda990ad
'2011-11-07T12:25:28-05:00'
describe
'5988696' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMR' 'sip-files00008.tif'
655223d7f144e1ee4de44b9e37755aab
ee633a50c584d25cda8f52813a31cf2216090526
'2011-11-07T12:25:22-05:00'
describe
'877' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMS' 'sip-files00008.txt'
53534347abb4cf55f63e4c4f9aaf0b63
0edb5458ba4cdebfc0fb6ce995cfb6ffc10991bb
describe
'8161' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMT' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
99be500d4454063e6e46efe4268c65dd
ed267d3dc9b6d389dd01501f1f38feeedb9219f7
'2011-11-07T12:26:55-05:00'
describe
'406322' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMU' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
a7914d9fa131fb1d550fcf34adb89275
6988d125d343f2e5ac61bff2ddadf72f0f9d3a8e
describe
'163989' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMV' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
d82d812a2809d8fdbaf579d846f50f0c
f62248515a66cd7f80d7cffdf3a1d7870e3071af
'2011-11-07T12:25:34-05:00'
describe
'702' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMW' 'sip-files00009.pro'
9a94df4dc3da5892a5e7c25b536ba894
b03420908ce79ad058449167e04d8a62ec12e410
'2011-11-07T12:25:35-05:00'
describe
'36177' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMX' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
e9bfbad6cbb8dd9a207dc6e86c8f287e
5ca5174c98671e03c920b1b16641946c39aedb4f
describe
'3263764' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMY' 'sip-files00009.tif'
6d3c5a2a1355b28b96c2f014ecc94339
227b7bef2af3124dedc6827439ace4ac1b9b4039
'2011-11-07T12:26:38-05:00'
describe
'213' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPMZ' 'sip-files00009.txt'
2ffe3c702ba594aec6ddb82e8a2c35c3
9b89bd9d70713a6239cace7cb93262d6d15b955c
'2011-11-07T12:27:05-05:00'
describe
'7843' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNA' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
1e3f4a48ee298daa4a9f778bf53008ae
6bfdcd8f41ebc2e296d6de087c9c1ba2dbdf06f1
'2011-11-07T12:26:21-05:00'
describe
'746934' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNB' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
86fad8a4c367b44ac378dd764a6b13e8
c18fac79f047cea82259228d11770cab95c17f58
'2011-11-07T12:26:52-05:00'
describe
'136408' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNC' 'sip-files00010.jpg'
399d3ca5c7b7352865834dc6557579ba
8e811c5d35684539d19dcfc8ec8f5c7edf18c2c1
describe
'28216' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPND' 'sip-files00010.pro'
4f1bcc83871a975235ab612833b7aefb
8a9b3329ad8540419a8fe262691763f5e0084f25
'2011-11-07T12:26:10-05:00'
describe
'34779' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNE' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
babc0ce925d8e6426c5e52e84cc4475e
68aaae697bc81b828427b75cdd7ec631be961ae1
describe
'5988640' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNF' 'sip-files00010.tif'
9b2729068286a7dc6c491659fcd3ea94
244202787580657ad4f3dc1b86d795d8fd3c66a8
'2011-11-07T12:26:50-05:00'
describe
'1257' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNG' 'sip-files00010.txt'
e9c10ced6ff0f3f6299eae363ac24c65
600107e8df3bab27d10648046f4b4e1059402310
describe
Invalid character
'8055' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNH' 'sip-files00010thm.jpg'
9dad4edc7ea3426aaca62421aed348d2
bed2a6381404415b47ab05a4da4073d2c1d1257b
'2011-11-07T12:26:25-05:00'
describe
'746935' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNI' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
35a3d85c1eee121f195fd9c629a740bc
b27ae991bb6ed5039eec4a3dc662f9a854b31edf
describe
'126401' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNJ' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
266a6c468559fe7a56180e1319bae33a
34116f2bf38aa4550ed1077753ae036d5654c65a
'2011-11-07T12:25:56-05:00'
describe
'26484' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNK' 'sip-files00011.pro'
6a1e1db032994ed27c385c83db2575f9
a20ae50ccdd2d058a164116a8539c24ea4b8ad76
describe
'33373' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNL' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
3712ad142bf4a36a123a12576941d347
849c905594a6b774caa855a9a7480046b4975653
'2011-11-07T12:26:14-05:00'
describe
'5988584' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNM' 'sip-files00011.tif'
2aaeda8707b399389ee6ba34d59c6dc1
3ac46291be8a21c1b85f3e6d2d9bd4fad4573162
describe
'1145' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNN' 'sip-files00011.txt'
1e069bc755824dc07256504474527bed
f5e9331b4a9500c23c641cb5afda039a911b98e4
describe
Invalid character
'7877' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNO' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
cde4c17b3ef5f571a49a2602b8d5a1ca
5bffee4d0c90b3e8b18a19b73ed42e9993669cad
describe
'746929' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNP' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
33844be34701a28ca35222f2f4949473
5d1dabd750493c99cd3c1b2107835e7823353329
describe
'113420' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNQ' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
f3bbd099b8394a911d0fa4404efa70b8
0af557001a117b4f9015566e430cdec2fa19669a
describe
'21057' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNR' 'sip-files00012.pro'
4daa31290cdf29d1c534947d8c65e388
36307a56936a998a7ccd0e13fbee2a59cba892f5
'2011-11-07T12:26:30-05:00'
describe
'28341' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNS' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
3f2b89f8465107e19c4b0ac483bf0635
ade330e2123ec729e6b28535ccae09dc6852bf90
describe
'5987816' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNT' 'sip-files00012.tif'
9e9f847a8dde90d2172e73252c1f5ca5
f86deb7344e790b1b794501894e18a025ccf1253
'2011-11-07T12:26:03-05:00'
describe
'883' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNU' 'sip-files00012.txt'
53b4c3141c4896a0c22d51c9ec2e52ae
767dbcc5a5a222c0f8a3aa0acb8ebe782262dbd1
describe
'6940' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNV' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
bb42f57b5f5cf8e37d0f32f8d5e0658f
a025b32c14b83e43f3e7ce357f851bcb13d79617
'2011-11-07T12:25:54-05:00'
describe
'528248' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNW' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
5d9fa7b08fe28fcb33f541719179ca17
219ab271ce8129c0bf707e78d9e199a238b11067
describe
'183085' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNX' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
c02ace3d2293f4647b68d47ed231c6f3
60794068b09c006b377c96b5a2a8f0a1ace4a333
'2011-11-07T12:26:59-05:00'
describe
'1152' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNY' 'sip-files00013.pro'
50f930e33eb04f16ecfa559d4f42a64f
1894dea9ad3b80891dce11d95e9294c218666db1
describe
'43639' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPNZ' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
a83b275b8317ab97bb9fdde8ac6451d9
425c9d80e8ba96655f5a3ed3f0da6ced20575fa5
describe
'4243632' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOA' 'sip-files00013.tif'
07dbff29425713eeee56f3f86241d626
019b85eee5bd28b7130c1d7cf4e981d50061f217
'2011-11-07T12:25:12-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOB' 'sip-files00013.txt'
c28ba32dbb96712b121abef628f809a5
a3ade6c08abafb46eb17cd7cac26c73ed9c26702
'2011-11-07T12:25:49-05:00'
describe
'9941' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOC' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
32610f31787cc9ebfeaffa050dcf3715
00845cb3439c1e8bab2c7d081628be582baf2545
'2011-11-07T12:26:53-05:00'
describe
'746901' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOD' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
07f145039cd915b957e3c61469d574b7
03ccf46de1fdf53f95471b68eebd05788dbca64e
'2011-11-07T12:25:44-05:00'
describe
'149199' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOE' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
a9e1c1028a49b7a1caed0b5d9915b613
34e25081786ec032e4a83b56d57f5467e2546147
describe
'12897' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOF' 'sip-files00014.pro'
efedfad4931f6aea16d8c93a196dbc92
3cce96237216ba9bf9623a7258218f71fd46dac3
describe
'35366' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOG' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
0c93b76c6a659e588a93f71b6e8c3074
bdaef5e53fe2c5930f682ab08ec81719fb1a89bf
describe
'5988732' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOH' 'sip-files00014.tif'
12408f42694d8ce22cda2e1f849872bf
9309bd1a1d37ea9133f1a1195e52368ec190a67e
'2011-11-07T12:25:32-05:00'
describe
'611' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOI' 'sip-files00014.txt'
9f0008ae3d8eaba9dc393adfed9e9f57
c1bcfeeb72f1d772ea5dfc49f5a311e88eb48b49
describe
'8344' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOJ' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
c601e1a3e5dbb708235090f3d89db705
3be13066df6eaf309007faadf7d503d19c6c86d8
'2011-11-07T12:26:13-05:00'
describe
'746878' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOK' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
e26e5e05277a421b7ed6be094d6b3956
7e43c70b93ae584e323e584aa1d7e83538907ef0
describe
'113538' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOL' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
be2ac8986733026d49fc1d604bc31b8b
c6b96809baed416a42218107f7911c6a005ab640
'2011-11-07T12:25:57-05:00'
describe
'32107' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOM' 'sip-files00015.pro'
ef7c2dd8927539499f55b285db3469dd
f855d40f8fddce85f74ec8d61747e7cef1ac6b58
describe
'30367' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPON' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
2dbfc685bf29deac4d8d275ab38bdc25
552d0d2f2d2959f00a240c48bfffe7991ac72455
describe
'5988452' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOO' 'sip-files00015.tif'
e04971875baaac0b6dbeab39829fed2c
449b7eb88246a1d5e7c13d3df35cf54cb5d088ad
'2011-11-07T12:26:39-05:00'
describe
'1392' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOP' 'sip-files00015.txt'
a75f65bac7c9a9cb30d4d5794c6174ca
4da317752fd25fea1be8b04a27cb666d383e5664
describe
'7184' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOQ' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
3fcb6c34f59cb9571ffa2d02096ac9cc
da04284af13676b9343a991031b8c30101253bf0
'2011-11-07T12:26:27-05:00'
describe
'746860' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOR' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
c6dfb5c408654732c53cffe2e8079673
d96c33a3faccc9ef653815b895665397a82eac4c
describe
'142283' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOS' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
60828ccb1533ceb518dd1db605ee0a4c
845f7ba39cbf75d4666fe496f9cea545992b321a
'2011-11-07T12:25:38-05:00'
describe
'7026' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOT' 'sip-files00016.pro'
a1fa6321a5b26d78ba53f1cab3b9c07d
2ef9e6e8a58d11de43eabfc39135f9c7b8c87b7d
describe
'32987' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOU' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
fdfe91d6ce984f5ae2fbd54cbfc5fd77
bb5ddf5e2d9292d5a0bd977a23adba115bd1bf78
'2011-11-07T12:25:07-05:00'
describe
'5988532' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOV' 'sip-files00016.tif'
f110c442a8a7f9e23edc4006747b0616
c945e5669a0f1b6a1151e8ec328b768e072404f0
'2011-11-07T12:26:43-05:00'
describe
'401' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOW' 'sip-files00016.txt'
49e266fd2bc0bd2afd15332f891a21c3
cc72a23048411af6e18248ba2d91853fb307dbc5
'2011-11-07T12:25:26-05:00'
describe
'7431' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOX' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
902f0f60c23986967e9a6001c92b68d7
9538332e67897503abc1546710b647b38834f994
'2011-11-07T12:25:40-05:00'
describe
'746910' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOY' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
bf1ce91764d0a1075d708cdbe4758771
b1d86c886561d01995971fa67d197fda2cb1bd02
'2011-11-07T12:25:23-05:00'
describe
'98779' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPOZ' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
02ba7fef01587e318fecef1fb2f3ca8b
6fff28fe23b835bac7f9dff739d339b91bb7d6eb
describe
'24106' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPA' 'sip-files00017.pro'
bd7ce75352898ae666ce58535d9fc97a
6bebfd21da6fa76bc13edc9880b2011d0923fbfa
'2011-11-07T12:25:29-05:00'
describe
'29046' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPB' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
7b9693014af851539f5299b5fac5bb30
ef318aa9f0bb666fcf9615735b8b0d89772ed7b6
'2011-11-07T12:25:10-05:00'
describe
'5988408' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPC' 'sip-files00017.tif'
80203cb376502f6033b24b463790408a
33b9cd4b3797fb8c0f0ababda5794ca6ab3d5569
describe
'1013' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPD' 'sip-files00017.txt'
f7db99f2123c79877f109e2b1f2965ba
d205a0206dee29167bc6ac8740ac70ce91dd497d
describe
'7322' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPE' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
2e1cbb067a4dccc96c719e03fba8087c
fd859ea54671acfc120011593ffb8a893960c593
'2011-11-07T12:26:24-05:00'
describe
'746873' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPF' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
ac5142a4c3b42e1413289ac33ff35e4b
8b8831473182bee0a16e8f61752b5cde03a69a36
describe
'116233' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPG' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
37453ac711796aac798f8b711b7a57bf
dacca08ec88dfc8b1197bf4c7134f3f277601985
describe
'22213' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPH' 'sip-files00018.pro'
fb7c723c66c5ae5d4cd4a36e71974f5e
48e01b6dafb2d854cf822c42b04a3b1e95790fa5
describe
'29422' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPI' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
cfe0803c1dd442e2ccea885f13ef668f
d54c073be0034e4ef068bae7345adf77782afdbe
'2011-11-07T12:26:28-05:00'
describe
'5987784' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPJ' 'sip-files00018.tif'
ea40465cf58db30494947fc1b789fccc
26db8fb5d90c21ea6a7f9ef33c64650438b64b52
'2011-11-07T12:26:05-05:00'
describe
'1100' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPK' 'sip-files00018.txt'
c13811ac47b31dc2bd58dc212f8d6520
b06467e99825354e2ef9929810a67287293cbef7
'2011-11-07T12:26:36-05:00'
describe
'6968' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPL' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
9dcc8057f70e35b4637ba0e8de218a3e
d1734a909b6fb3cd50a61e1492f977ae4795af3c
'2011-11-07T12:26:16-05:00'
describe
'746893' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPM' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
916a3dc7e8a27baa0300679ad3178085
a0e1ae303989810f5e811d6b0a1287e74ad33409
describe
'153262' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPN' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
ebf642ff9193b9057ab70ae94a6158f4
12a273e2bce1ed12de4b58b034a6c05869928e6f
describe
'1113' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPO' 'sip-files00019.pro'
924866e295c23d5a62fa4462c0f31531
237af73d5608d60af6df234fa27502ec4265c307
'2011-11-07T12:25:24-05:00'
describe
'35773' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPP' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
64f7fa9746e7acd606fb032a3439d1bf
87138d638fa05a23b027c029137870f28a2c6ea7
describe
'5988272' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPQ' 'sip-files00019.tif'
a020f5773d22a9493c177cab5df06a7e
9bb3f36cd90e326f3a8827d0687d275ef0a52a0b
'2011-11-07T12:26:00-05:00'
describe
'55' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPR' 'sip-files00019.txt'
d94a82b13a1df0caee6a17e216154c6b
ba0a474b462a28d5c326a95240a2fbbad07069e9
describe
Invalid character
'8311' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPS' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
acaa287bbf476bdd7838f5ae9726854f
f35884c0bfa235822ea94af8c1349219ea53b6c2
describe
'746913' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPT' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
f7df7b4dd645477daf7196b47175a871
dbffcb214958b5b8191505d6dae1b501ac293fd6
'2011-11-07T12:25:31-05:00'
describe
'116558' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPU' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
9d608b1defc8c8e24fff937fd53f9900
50da53b528f31d9075263c6ede179d839171331d
describe
'32454' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPV' 'sip-files00020.pro'
836d6c1517dad15d9fab5fec63db8eb1
382bb6904b0ac4c73705b2ab6941869d05f6ec4e
'2011-11-07T12:25:04-05:00'
describe
'31840' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPW' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
0c7b7c5fbabbf1159efa28e098b41075
16f066177689e932f40ac896c7c6b694f0e3fbf8
describe
'5988736' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPX' 'sip-files00020.tif'
c6eba1f4d26f5b57539ab2ff8533218b
b738822948a36014783be1bb1bd144ee86dbd422
'2011-11-07T12:26:01-05:00'
describe
'1525' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPY' 'sip-files00020.txt'
c2ff8b678e97b1ee3336f6c4f800c296
93e97dbf9dd1a8ee2a85e9c566cb86a2789741f7
describe
'7753' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPPZ' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
1c6e801f1cf5b0f099fd86062ead170b
f6dd4d87ec543f2b44eef44267734a26b5694d6b
describe
'746940' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQA' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
ab8e4ec5e05e56339f5de5b9b8ae594d
47cbeb66e3d6be5e1aea04ecd082d05182d28ee4
describe
'109229' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQB' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
48527e2068cd40847d8ffbd74dc71d27
4222ec51ca16c17323806beda8d1a3e11e9ba692
'2011-11-07T12:26:22-05:00'
describe
'25011' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQC' 'sip-files00021.pro'
0c5b6d8f70a84dfa0b4a078932628ee4
46e22879fa7bcb9fe78064c94683ab40dd072516
describe
'29079' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQD' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
d582e1f1804f9218735f94340f686241
c10e2d500440a80959b013ab3a52a84dd979827a
describe
'5987892' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQE' 'sip-files00021.tif'
844587ba98900c4df1d95bb7bd4c2655
4ec4b55a3a847d32127a362deedd266d8a3dfee1
describe
'1097' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQF' 'sip-files00021.txt'
ee9be1de6223c259b1144e9eb964afb9
2072aac950c66bc3814270adccbb7d631dfe0bc9
'2011-11-07T12:26:04-05:00'
describe
'7135' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQG' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
4c809698e35eb8294edba56e25e32a07
69189101039e297a2486dd992236c1a2e90e2f2b
describe
'746933' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQH' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
fc50f0b8b69fd1b47b25a9efd4a7dd9a
c6d1138d5a6007bfb0a029de2f7d0125da571d74
describe
'108583' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQI' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
ac84465a00b3e513b114473dca288d2d
ccbe297e00f2b3758dae4df28bee0055cd484528
describe
'23667' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQJ' 'sip-files00022.pro'
9c5d6f53067dedb29faed5be40885842
479a92c9914c700ad78b1ae7f118f9ba75f47e01
describe
'27808' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQK' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
b80d6d590a48dafb7bc5333b57e301df
53fdaeb114bf816da8c5df7f8ee9d38b4f3c9d93
describe
'5987660' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQL' 'sip-files00022.tif'
2b561311ff0ff91ec01e79d507d4f620
fbc1e923064fd1ac9db5699fd6766fc5894b6f2a
'2011-11-07T12:25:42-05:00'
describe
'1055' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQM' 'sip-files00022.txt'
9a6f620ea22972f7351514a9854bf272
7984198039e77688d3d6cde513d81a44086f73b9
describe
Invalid character
'6752' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQN' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
ddf4f082d2abcbf621e6d9db912e5205
c8ccd66e4a9bf50c76f0edae67c2404e24a33f18
describe
'746925' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQO' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
2ae018086e9a1eab62deb119581a87b4
956326ffeb833709af2c074abed488dbe93b222e
describe
'122304' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQP' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
3b38f0c8b47f980b5fe06d005aa4044b
8a2dc57cbaefac7e0682b27a181412b65598355c
describe
'26502' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQQ' 'sip-files00023.pro'
872568aaa2e9b73e5294e5125366f96c
6f88c8597c8149efbf02d063745beeec7366788c
describe
'33519' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQR' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
e2f9da704274b938b35b1cddc700cc14
c58ea6f01671c9cf43e9c2d256989b9abcee9195
describe
'5988808' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQS' 'sip-files00023.tif'
f045d7e2840d6af0abf2d6aec050d28c
b14e045047866057e801d8fd54ea9f729378b76b
describe
'1206' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQT' 'sip-files00023.txt'
6aea24d04e36e5b85435c15a5ff7f585
fc08851f1d7217d75f8389c487d3ba08f89a767b
describe
'8100' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQU' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
b0e9268f85a2cb8877254fce5cfeed3f
8771e6e37180939409c1772962670f15a481203d
'2011-11-07T12:27:03-05:00'
describe
'746927' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQV' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
825743f4de8ffc118fa92ef17e38695d
1558ee7770c2608944822112e49a5a2beccb9c3a
describe
'143003' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQW' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
9f1323a762bdca5141fed09ba34815dc
a7de92cfcb34127fbd3450140eecf05e2687c083
'2011-11-07T12:26:29-05:00'
describe
'16280' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQX' 'sip-files00024.pro'
5264b196606a3a0a03af12d26f05fc9c
8ce6a355479a59ca592cb617c62766342026f0bc
describe
'35508' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQY' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
5f4816196a7b48c08d07ed9cf2437fec
17761c8bc57ba0e924615b676e51afb80e60c625
describe
'5989032' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPQZ' 'sip-files00024.tif'
d5189d0a3e96939253e87770022ced1e
73313a2a1e1e5302c8e4305d7487e9d9f706fd2c
describe
'658' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRA' 'sip-files00024.txt'
bc0031a1a9e9f05078b1611ec8af914b
b20fd0f0cd49b6ae38d5b3fba45f30cada73a721
'2011-11-07T12:25:09-05:00'
describe
'8471' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRB' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
716369414a668e182a0e0ae6a3b5f39e
9e26ee522fac1778cfcf2939356fb870891428cd
describe
'746876' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRC' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
5c8d357238c55514b8dc208f7d11df88
fbbc590dfb82ffa78cc66307862f7a8f6b0e3610
describe
'134409' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRD' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
76b1ff67a2782f2f6cd720acf484b653
7245662de0ae9892ac4c3403372bca1afae6dade
describe
'12769' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRE' 'sip-files00025.pro'
735cfb2f6eb821b4026738b60f789b6c
a54caab458a522af0720de39b340aeff5a318c3e
describe
'32493' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRF' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
0b68eea236b9198e256e564d1036e8cf
9b74184f318abe7a4a5d209e1f8360e3f5e91731
'2011-11-07T12:26:31-05:00'
describe
'5988520' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRG' 'sip-files00025.tif'
fd4b54e87070966027362957e078956a
83c2eb2cb2b62c47bef67f4a152b303addac8bd5
describe
'653' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRH' 'sip-files00025.txt'
6a26c938349212479b9cef6411775c44
160ae7dc176765b534cc912f71cde50624af8ccd
describe
'7411' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRI' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
c443c3fea432dd42426ad25eb031bb57
6a66eb0642d86746bdebeba25d806f9ff5d20e6e
describe
'746926' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRJ' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
4e4bb82c20f463bd8f8a8e9797da6c0a
319b03acff8245a39f064b45f319c5f293ac05dd
describe
'117093' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRK' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
2b1db441aa7c46a0062a2aa612484c8c
5cca3a64a7148d98dc7422f0ef628c43885a0034
describe
'32667' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRL' 'sip-files00026.pro'
9a8b41062f0c1ec632e7d0e29de69313
a54f22cfddf51a92f314c514bb34a0ef4c8e972d
describe
'31489' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRM' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
1fb8bb2bbf42462d4f319b7796af1e9f
5ffffd00e8ab205bcf10f1c2939c784cc652fe6a
describe
'5988512' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRN' 'sip-files00026.tif'
b8ba06265ea9e9971e8f577e542d75fc
5f15e46bf0b72a515b44b4911838bf58053b7539
describe
'1353' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRO' 'sip-files00026.txt'
ded5229b266d3d56e6b1a08b6f68860b
c24ac6dfc287562e08508331a9aab763382cc2f5
describe
'7705' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRP' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
c75ec97232f08b591f42bc78640c3252
d14bd934d6c6086644982dfb7e6421e549a22558
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRQ' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
5e5b6d90dcf05de6820e31bb2a34774e
807e62dbbae380bfe8c5cffca8a7ed406da61c5c
describe
'128959' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRR' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
acf4b658e1f35a9d94c36c06856e791e
e699440d4650fb979635dbe0020b57b8eb6314bd
describe
'14269' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRS' 'sip-files00027.pro'
4878cf932f1dac60e681385ed9ab32c2
aa74c9c323fadf731b32f3b28bdbe8fb4e4639b8
describe
'32009' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRT' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
38eafa85e47ac8e34d42f18591855ff7
1a784068d7c91f4201c6397a23c52781dc51be63
describe
'5988680' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRU' 'sip-files00027.tif'
00ad9d10f561a95b77b77ed60c73de29
16eb7ddd5f864e8d42d22248aecc2e060605b735
describe
'635' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRV' 'sip-files00027.txt'
751f4b9fddae02d5be59391f397087ff
7da4eff30109969c8e7d509bf8b4254f1395504b
'2011-11-07T12:25:39-05:00'
describe
'7659' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRW' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
9c49200b5a66d784a961de588ee70c04
1b63d85528f26ec22d979e99ae5f9ab57ced8692
'2011-11-07T12:25:59-05:00'
describe
'746930' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRX' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
20a68cf7fd9d73b858779a3f9831ef41
2cd68ef2537a38b3b46b2e599fa51f4432ebc03d
describe
'113067' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRY' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
7d37b04ed49254f768c02f960d41ad0f
e6e78b978f063c7091454327b44043cfa0ef31d5
'2011-11-07T12:26:45-05:00'
describe
'24228' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPRZ' 'sip-files00028.pro'
30e61bce90b35a739328da039d46a98d
0d31351e141e7482102b9bef93057b2e169bfb85
describe
'28675' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSA' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
fce46fa8f9f05ca20bea408e0316d7cc
6d7340a702b0d39a13e139a676ae755859cb43e2
describe
'5987876' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSB' 'sip-files00028.tif'
5fbe40d50ccae3732d1e27b7258e80c8
dce0ea56a7b63113667b8bb60dbf85a0e07bf682
describe
'1380' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSC' 'sip-files00028.txt'
aeef40245708e5b5c3ceb761c123a00b
22b83ebb41f9f8abb2efd75a393e5b72ca0b8916
describe
'7171' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSD' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
d86df2dc671b933b9f4d7c5d019736c6
945c49fcf33adb3d1f8f65b8f8cf97de97802fac
describe
'746851' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSE' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
05ff58fce8fb2e3f29ec56bf9b1c29d6
995e7d4b5d706c9b4dd4da1dc525fbb006c959b4
describe
'130640' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSF' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
88473e172d4046c5ea5833c10440697c
a7e7d1c368b39c84911d9850833fb8e67f40c154
describe
'20085' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSG' 'sip-files00029.pro'
48dd8e405052c339027b52c5dbab3a76
6055b9b56cedefd743086d2f866f01a22403b516
describe
'32888' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSH' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
8fc199d36808fc9445ccc21eee6a84f2
bb6208820591beef73d0665d85df47c79ba24322
describe
'5988052' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSI' 'sip-files00029.tif'
88f1ab98c0b7c4e4f13045a6bf0094f4
e8fd92d1b786e0dbce6efa865b664ff4920bb9bf
describe
'922' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSJ' 'sip-files00029.txt'
d2171d72cc353829e8ab911dbacc591f
3035a632db99ef6b4435abcb18b19e1332a5e891
describe
'7838' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSK' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
fa4abe9a800ec0572e8ab0a75e5a438d
93435254a52f496006ae4a37264d0449fea9116e
describe
'746843' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSL' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
f5af895adddafab47e73cc1bf22d00bf
15ca477e11cc95d1fb409a46485e29e4f6975df9
describe
'116477' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSM' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
4cdaa27dbff563869143b5ccbdd1b8e3
2a444f8c11e37a24b6d606001786aaec1cf608d6
describe
'16917' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSN' 'sip-files00030.pro'
5cf96141ac0d856a2d86704d84a6b206
a30d72a252f2e33c4bdb2feea715491f405bedd1
describe
'29958' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSO' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
26e56badf3b19f094e0dcf5ac841b0b0
fc07331d5246552fe264e343526e5a5dec5ccf6f
describe
'5988092' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSP' 'sip-files00030.tif'
f7aa224dc7451e0944d8f2b3a1fc047c
f4bcf521d524e870af32019edd79de93f6ec695f
describe
'800' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSQ' 'sip-files00030.txt'
c632093fab43d5843ffc69946b7b95dc
4a45faf89a06cb3e33c5831f08d962037b8e62dd
describe
Invalid character
'7285' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSR' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
99cab5eb8bc948737d8234043c290e62
1c37c0267124d8636cca199d5c45fb85cf24ed4a
describe
'746946' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSS' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
e8a84ee0832b9c4297f0496c026e4103
3e04da5bf1ace9a79dee9e23e029d986957b946a
describe
'157047' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPST' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
a8310c6199712689c358aafa41ac89d0
dd81a97bf0af44e7559b8d8931f0fe444ad363b5
describe
'13961' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSU' 'sip-files00031.pro'
3a803b2f87a7134b5ecffb381776e2d9
90c84948a6b894d3862bb22f90fe8a585ce01fd4
describe
'38570' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSV' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
e026f643900ca90369e088135b22da1d
5403a34b4217b223f91a4306ba536f6afeafb12e
describe
'5990188' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSW' 'sip-files00031.tif'
209563e2b5376170a8132d8b0068e099
92722b3d1c2c2e6b55a6b7173011be2363f8e717
describe
'878' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSX' 'sip-files00031.txt'
61947371018a7cfb32e82f9cc8e5822c
7cab7c7cee9e97503ee8a2f3813b9c272675eeee
describe
'9184' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSY' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
2640d10dd3a8c0e91401710abaff2d81
ab472dbb8baf0bc54cd65e5d5739c40436215c99
describe
'746879' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPSZ' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
7822e565c700b4bc42e96cf1c59d755f
4fe54a00936ae1d2cf639518acb074a78b435e8e
describe
'161660' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTA' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
6f71ca1b92db78fff28e2192338ee438
067fbfebcad4bd44e39c42f97db75cbfa75a6639
describe
'13238' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTB' 'sip-files00032.pro'
f3f706ac10d2ae40e9a025460ea88392
53bfd572914b647b59140229d773d3a24ade0275
describe
'39542' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTC' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
406a57e4d8da39a59ecdc809b12145c9
0830c981844e113bf7b77684699ddb749069542f
describe
'5990208' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTD' 'sip-files00032.tif'
914106931bb00ac1fc3bc432e627bd63
c00f103b87a067c44b7f8fc1f58cffe959325b4d
describe
'874' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTE' 'sip-files00032.txt'
4b36416aecb0d7019160bc2af975535c
796ccb0f35470106d7cc5fa5844813f0e38e6f3a
describe
Invalid character
'9429' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTF' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
520d6e4e51ba63dfe1a44d989b61b8f2
639a25481cc9f55ff606740197e9855d19482d17
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTG' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
05bcef551f13d7ffd21bdd2db6ee256c
d0345bb2004b1816faa74e0596f5b88c53fe5094
describe
'122636' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTH' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
d1de017c6a5b01430cb70da9c6556e03
594fa3e5f4cfa2c99709ce3e120edc0dc7b8493d
describe
'21446' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTI' 'sip-files00033.pro'
99a508eba50f78a21e78618548f94fc7
2a4dc25049aea18f5afb2bd04eb7df8be211dd8a
describe
'30843' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTJ' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
1c85a622a540bf6c5f028e5a7f8226a2
bb080fd24adc6db3c7e5a404ff1b8cbe69fba2ad
describe
'5988200' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTK' 'sip-files00033.tif'
921c9bfa57690b580c3566367370a890
a67de4ec6a96004e4cb4ddc95b75783c28559d15
'2011-11-07T12:25:16-05:00'
describe
'1445' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTL' 'sip-files00033.txt'
335802f6630eb04e364620ab7ec66eb5
915e037dd4f5f149426013f542f4e799fba7fd10
describe
'7365' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTM' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
4d29c9df6a38665940230623bdb98b5f
e0f38581d44736fd1b44a13816a394d85494a300
describe
'746944' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTN' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
576e6d40d24b986c95ede66c3b087d56
2b33f52edfde7ea2747c5bd9516527dd787294d2
describe
'106758' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTO' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
7fd0f4df3ee38d543956ac3a396c6fd6
7684d9573af1c9d8f13143b0fdcfa2a094c9fc82
describe
'19334' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTP' 'sip-files00034.pro'
0b6bc40b28bef75c1904f03555d43aed
2807f06ae1e58c6ce28fdc3209fbecf2acbf96ed
describe
'26686' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTQ' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
026c40cdce7dce9259c1ecafa54115f9
c6eadca77959dbf0e3f94a403d9747253d0f7ece
describe
'5987312' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTR' 'sip-files00034.tif'
24d7d7bdef1dac4433c208d0b23f808f
8ecde76361c51b2d9a8596e170274fe97e6b2c95
describe
'826' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTS' 'sip-files00034.txt'
953bd64385ed9c19b3b5c1978ea52f2c
6127f0f4f54ff53946abbc8136d91e70c22ad441
describe
'6565' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTT' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
152af3fcdb5719cd46715672a3402511
7a4c86d0a66fad05ea19fc81e2d0669d1376a6f3
describe
'746937' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTU' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
244e7924102bb470cc1b4b679bf99497
628443a34b6ccb106ad342a826774425dbb62bc5
describe
'110379' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTV' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
419629eb89e06f563f8c032c091928a0
cc4ffaca25c090fb8bbbbafe4e16bd8590a18991
'2011-11-07T12:25:45-05:00'
describe
'18922' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTW' 'sip-files00035.pro'
da2de4eb04c02a4fce8dfe6dfec808ed
0f63b48354c8a733e3f7dbcfd8c61a2579a84739
describe
'27660' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTX' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
f1901d10b7e2c6e50d0c14656f757cd3
dbd0a0b0f713e8fec6d8153bb9706be7d1754095
'2011-11-07T12:26:06-05:00'
describe
'5987556' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTY' 'sip-files00035.tif'
6f95902494b33e63dc5057caf7eb83c8
be9a57c5df29229ba7b55e42c8325641c024b5d5
'2011-11-07T12:25:13-05:00'
describe
'764' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPTZ' 'sip-files00035.txt'
45ce0959e3e2d5401938870744c1d100
04ec905e5572d01c6f9abe125e08cc638336701f
describe
'6635' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUA' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
9c8ec3ff7e902611f1fe5c13a5813657
fda8445b0d04a5397e61033a4db1f67d3aafdbfe
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUB' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
90eddbca4837c834bc82deb305e4f669
f22eac4a72268c2e362fa711a69ba96e70cbf958
describe
'120135' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUC' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
2e9c8c6c326cc3c9f6513eb098a99d3e
fda9a9b1bbbf10c13d7f78ebcd370bdb2a563d01
describe
'25915' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUD' 'sip-files00036.pro'
36b3cb5991578077952bf6feebf9c683
b4a3abc438f9ce29791ada315fed9e810a5583b9
describe
'31528' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUE' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
87390cdb0e97846b39f2422a8433eb39
87daf71ef03031d115f4a2188151716b6c611cc6
describe
'5988364' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUF' 'sip-files00036.tif'
1e92601fb048aa19bedf7bf7ee8dbe07
7bf14f3f9124ad1ddab1f780f2864e9bcec2fa7b
describe
'1107' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUG' 'sip-files00036.txt'
aec447dccee881ed10317c6a6eb8ee10
94e27d64dad44f9551a38d1ae5e0bd06c520bb2a
describe
'7707' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUH' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
d1e1d210bfe7e047400c8511eec570a4
743552b63b0adfdb415cea8be7deef6ee9e53041
describe
'746796' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUI' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
0e5adbbabd255b31e3c06615e9e8cf57
83523b099f255a9b2c81b4ba826875180fe61d41
describe
'123766' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUJ' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
f8689eb05f6f4ded0c5b932fb11a4069
1ec69ff62ab989c6c555df130bf251e71bb97009
describe
'10448' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUK' 'sip-files00037.pro'
d1d2e8083fd8906f3f944f3b892dc076
e27d8db10c78b7ee7796896e60b6acb47e3a8950
describe
'29932' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUL' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
7545d3a39836876c0e8685e035f92d9a
3a31368a00ee44fbae82071d99643adf6b29c112
'2011-11-07T12:25:15-05:00'
describe
'5988124' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUM' 'sip-files00037.tif'
95d58b4caa228bde2a11a94579b16c8a
12ac6c0d7a55812b58e5c3eb20f7168d2aa3d879
describe
'500' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUN' 'sip-files00037.txt'
793aee706525eb08e783905ccf0c0492
bb25921e34c1a3cf318d735776e2da1bd7c74977
describe
'7219' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUO' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
3b13db6d7acd9410d1fae97be67cdb3f
fdca8353b7b960ed053dab19eb9c59abce2bf133
describe
'746936' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUP' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
00472674573be2db0d3a9ab944e3002f
5c27acf3a1207f686a22a3f024cbc7053180a520
describe
'126424' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUQ' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
7be226519681dd767943773cf082df0e
f98fcbf7bb0c510a32b460ed6868f360610d1758
describe
'25472' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUR' 'sip-files00038.pro'
727c37f2cfdc54afc9456c741632325e
747f81a781deb93428aadb13b25d824edcb9ad34
describe
'33170' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUS' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
c4cd1506ff14ae4f7f21de60e89fdf41
3c3180b95d7820117749e89bcdbe120f5fbb15d7
describe
'5988628' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUT' 'sip-files00038.tif'
a1c0721a42d7a8439df89edf66415ead
994235d4c7bccd79393dca4ff20dcbe65408b85a
'2011-11-07T12:26:35-05:00'
describe
'1463' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUU' 'sip-files00038.txt'
f927ad953c3a57c2686f28707d77de48
e1b3b006bbfeef86028ec29b0a42120277df730a
describe
'7964' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUV' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
11781ebf14957715dcec16174dc1879c
5b6e6a2a4a90a294174d642469337d3db03a7f12
'2011-11-07T12:25:17-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUW' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
5751b895302bf63decb6fb4b644842e7
6b31c1d87998545d820506739fdaeb97a294a6e1
'2011-11-07T12:25:18-05:00'
describe
'107024' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUX' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
18ae475d204e9bf7697935b0ebc1472a
78b752ecfcb33215835101096658b4a3e681cf56
describe
'30420' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUY' 'sip-files00039.pro'
34e23b371d1fee46f6c0abc8216df9b8
655325691880016435922b20172ac6b084a09448
describe
'29425' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPUZ' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
32be45b2851a67b90f36312f40564292
7dfc3a0d2a2a880e93c8d680b7a397ced45e18a4
describe
'5988152' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVA' 'sip-files00039.tif'
4b42912b7f0238d4b41d7bf92e3fe622
316a3dfcf768260a817f5d94d7dd7a91bcdc2a96
describe
'1310' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVB' 'sip-files00039.txt'
bc6aa3896597e89912e9073d5d1d3ede
97bad9cb41c916239b54ee1cdf19f6c92b1d58c7
describe
'7335' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVC' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
ccec7233129afd16fca9486b5e10a5d1
e90f84f7cd50e875611d365aa7e1d7674282fd6d
describe
'746827' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVD' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
6d290a98168e68dcb5e9f0ba5b8cc753
df9ae3a0ce33b969617f9374dae18f6215767c3f
describe
'133136' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVE' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
2b4b76a9c8eb74d60fb585255a3774c6
863180270daaebf7a6097fd5e621b62a522109af
describe
'21896' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVF' 'sip-files00040.pro'
c3de0aaf5b244f8971aa4f37e9912932
4f1ef200706cfe1d40b009a88cd444111e2c0a0b
describe
'33502' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVG' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
f0d338ce27edd474e95cd3f83d1a226e
e38b58e5701750338d6835e2e23ad63b4e13f566
'2011-11-07T12:26:26-05:00'
describe
'5988156' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVH' 'sip-files00040.tif'
90d13bb957cb8024f067670a7163b842
e224af77ca4bb4815279c38310496135f058f257
'2011-11-07T12:25:11-05:00'
describe
'862' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVI' 'sip-files00040.txt'
9644d3a8a17ffbc6d70abb235a3dd296
a618ffb3c96188a3209f536b45b5e9ada8187514
describe
'7661' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVJ' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
ae24a2124a92e7c7b1c6f0cc4fb54e22
cf98ccda18e1cbd459e15bb30e09fa67fae029b1
describe
'746923' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVK' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
77dfb67d275dd0621c5fa7169ed944db
b83d6d3868ba59e81ff1df3deb6b2541664b65a0
describe
'111421' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVL' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
c336ac4e1a5c048108a8b066a129d641
4ad89911cc6e5c3238c927f67781acdb090ecc57
describe
'22981' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVM' 'sip-files00041.pro'
d994a62050f027906b96e63ebb6d33d9
2f66d0cce10037b9ca3015296e91c6da7949f6c0
describe
'29382' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVN' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
982cef040a7af9d2f04933a80a20e514
f221f4b1187970299df17efc5171cc628b01746f
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVO' 'sip-files00041.tif'
78a1de180a0f4f4fa1f882e5dfd3f0b3
5bd754fe97e75f05fc460f6bf3e94389c9438946
describe
'1037' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVP' 'sip-files00041.txt'
94da418086d7d465bb560bc782e7715a
948a1b15414e181799f715896685ebece4dc70cd
describe
'7189' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVQ' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
4bc8c63488cb355957298335473c8c27
1c80ddbe610258c5eb758b56ef152c85d9a04701
describe
'746724' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVR' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
916f6f4cc7b6a3d720f3a8c20058a861
c52d501ac0b62217da6d1cc2c7ece463dc3c6635
describe
'109247' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVS' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
503c28069e5a3938e10762d6a7197453
815f7afbfb9200f59dd5d8133b6f16fcd550da36
describe
'25002' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVT' 'sip-files00042.pro'
056ed181f1669df72804c7ae1ae9ef1a
70e2097278937d3f84cda7832e724a21e47ca6ca
describe
'29275' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVU' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
f1410019afd08971fd8a6105c6350d1f
82cf790241f68ea864b8025c1381fc4dbb8895a8
describe
'5988308' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVV' 'sip-files00042.tif'
99718dafe06da3a836f42ec6fbe3e2cd
c3ccaa1c229ca26b94acc82e5b07d02304b64e8d
'2011-11-07T12:27:02-05:00'
describe
'1165' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVW' 'sip-files00042.txt'
803917f07a813bbd2bf01678a88b89b0
74ebd3a0bf813f621a724a0ab63a3dba5a16c4b5
describe
'7340' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVX' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
8d3342bf77c211a83c29e6506be4a019
fd16e11d6394bb58cb0533ea86ba37251be22a1b
describe
'450815' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVY' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
ba3d1bde6e9326d9898cb1ef1c276906
361d92957bc73f5d9c9b63489af6b9b6fddb6b23
'2011-11-07T12:26:19-05:00'
describe
'179823' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPVZ' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
e5a49930e7190524a8268788862803b7
d15926fdbd372af4846a917bc4290b8932835434
describe
'2622' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWA' 'sip-files00043.pro'
423de58ce3c99b9863cf274a2a040ef2
cb5b294c0b05b220f53ae2a5488d58a7cfdf4258
describe
'44054' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWB' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
a7c67d8f2c58623d6bb6d1af38fc9ff7
70710a52fb0ab96ef0988b68acfc6bf4497fabd9
describe
'3621124' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWC' 'sip-files00043.tif'
464ba2b2537fe87ce148b5d9fda69ae3
e3cf86ffbec4b8c9f3ca906509fdd617b1845160
describe
'142' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWD' 'sip-files00043.txt'
8d9db976146f85ce7e88cb745436a88a
be13ca7dc25648f9b8958207dbc0711cf2fd9c6d
describe
'10643' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWE' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
8071dbbea60c8b903fa28afa6ac126a8
179a26dec6839e6a0216484cf0c8add2e9186ddd
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWF' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
73d1560fea336739437afa735b6504fd
534f0952f464542217cd32651ff64648d2abac09
describe
'102801' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWG' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
6d2fd316299f8d5b494b5c08d0d7e7ad
a752e48f1b07d4d77ed27a3e9364fa564dbbfc06
describe
'20526' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWH' 'sip-files00044.pro'
702c4e5678d1922e687b679b4419b88e
d015e3106ae27f3eaac2f521092fac80e3ed5946
describe
'26644' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWI' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
d90d033045867782435160add6759001
4f928635c6fcc4a7dfb75eee1f5a04e60112bc2d
describe
'5987592' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWJ' 'sip-files00044.tif'
8811de9336f704a27204d37515a71701
9a8207cd3e499e0bb45d1ff1f7e33a556386a991
describe
'1376' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWK' 'sip-files00044.txt'
58ea5be15f3035b23e6742a993e4b6be
304c27908e508ee91f272f567da6626589e77b57
describe
'6547' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWL' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
e03996711c542cf95abe4ef1a2f7b8c7
070b18e04b76dd514fd0ab2170efff38bc49bace
describe
'746905' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWM' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
9b40fb6d7ba08797a8d2a3081d09fca0
96f32baa50e6c8ff682fc090476d0cbeef20758f
describe
'111483' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWN' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
6e0cc68479efbf9c59fff32e3876e460
a6a9ed9e827d9001b65c5190ba266728eecc0783
describe
'26927' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWO' 'sip-files00045.pro'
188a80dedc11d17b2b73fd20264c8db6
fdf74d23e24869f9ea68e65afb37b85986fcd6bd
describe
'30426' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWP' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
595ccd08c6072f5f016ec3d07a77cb14
43ddc0a14d2877a8bdd216d819b87967e1e89fa4
describe
'5988076' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWQ' 'sip-files00045.tif'
0841618df860d33f69c38940f20d4f8e
99237aec95756c51c1bef603dcab7c4eed899ae1
describe
'1219' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWR' 'sip-files00045.txt'
94a2214e2c24ede46713b452fa75f7ce
3c5b5b60dfde000866f3734fd67f72df83fd39f8
describe
'7100' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWS' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
67c162d975b4914fde9bdd19cacd807f
f9f587987179bfcbd3e4bfaae22f0dbf5d4fe345
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWT' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
7c0ce36bb0a044ad4685ebb39fb8b986
7927ff4c1e95504e78fe4812392d10b9baca67f1
describe
'106237' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWU' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
0956a6e6378a41a7ffcae19ccfc8555b
5002800d01a25bae8232cf1fd5d3dda13c68bdcb
describe
'24046' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWV' 'sip-files00046.pro'
87968b24432cc2dad9ef53420536a1bc
2c3fcfd960db83c3f4d120718ddf499a843bf551
describe
'27195' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWW' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
987235e46665038806bce90d3da52827
5bc36b173e1643d52882bb62545b4c6114d4305c
describe
'5987768' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWX' 'sip-files00046.tif'
6e7ecf07be0431a045202fbaf6e1340d
c1e0222bfe762672b07142610215d37e97ce2213
describe
'1023' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWY' 'sip-files00046.txt'
5b478d013264d945ed38a456ad627e3f
85e5c9121fcafbe77fa4dc12d9054a2d33c896e9
describe
'6821' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPWZ' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
0c7cff22185c2b766781333ac39edf67
adb1ce28487041ee6331b24601406842ed1b22af
describe
'746898' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPXA' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
1157bfff6a83538b157c0766cb5d0452
6b229ad82dbc77bf668d931e5c28669d7d3902d5
describe
'114796' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPXB' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
a0a67db4fff3811f3062913a9bf5de93
c043b7ddda7dad29df056eeae42c6bc8534970e9
describe
'23799' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPXC' 'sip-files00047.pro'
6fe6db0ff15f1bd91a51609a3f872f2d
4e24d2a0f20ce800d3adf78f4801ca8970f47a26
describe
'30632' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPXD' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
b95fa6977c54e54fdc24f4efa09fc26f
8bd5eb6dedcaed02d1fe8cc53fc26b71a00e0ad0
describe
'5988572' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPXE' 'sip-files00047.tif'
f510aec3c22d1f384cdbe2cd239a0684
999d7f0b52438117e26951caf96bdcd6a6d6d605
describe
'982' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPXF' 'sip-files00047.txt'
414f0459ac5b0944d0aa76b66f193989
6c9002aea80b88415dcd0b8a09cfcc7106d6459f
describe
'7604' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPXG' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
bbd341d4ea0da9366a149973a6473222
b43458d31d2121204abe73936a8f90793c364030
describe
'850871' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPXH' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
2e9c7bae6a02ce8ea79d1af3432d9eee
d52a6f07d393da87cd4970161b8644188aa24277
describe
'158783' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPXI' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
fbd6e03c14a8cd36b820953f8d61b456
55884a780f040bb1419eb711b02df424ce3d5a59
describe
'21906' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPXJ' 'sip-files00048.pro'
6a7b516d3a875fb44b334c6d63130c5b
b7d872c89e9003ec9b7c62ce191d9a5c22484938
describe
'36425' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPXK' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
1dc8e6b5e830ea94256148685600d2b6
f829cd794cb4dd1bfc48eb1a57a8d05cae86b4a2
describe
'20433496' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPXL' 'sip-files00048.tif'
964b5697e23e0467fca547e0cf6492d7
e0a0d1d8a1b97e191deec6cea98cb350ccf12034
'2011-11-07T12:26:46-05:00'
describe
'1072' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPXM' 'sip-files00048.txt'
1d394ee7ce50679b2216dcc8a2ee2833
e29d57819c8b7b356a302e79bdb044faf9c1cf08
describe
Invalid character
'8457' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPXN' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
0ba222ddfebf3dbefb8f60dd645c57c6
59dc00de7d4acd001eb2aef0b7d07fac54a3e22f
describe
'89611' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPXO' 'sip-filesUF00083796_00001.mets'
d29e0f357db39125962d430884765153
824bc03d84a837c286eeb99257d38926dc0179c3
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/'.
'2013-12-16T15:48:12-05:00' '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/'.
'111445' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAEBfileF20080808_AAAPXR' 'sip-filesUF00083796_00001.xml'
1df02669297c031344841dc316313421
2ecba95fa33d6cac34622543b6ecae91e7d81f0e
describe
'2013-12-16T15:48:11-05:00'
xml resolution