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Saturday review01.01.1859
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Januar 1859
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] shift the responsibility on to the character. The novelist has no opinions at all. His characters have ; but then they are mere works of art, and their opinions are made to fit them. In a large proportion of cases this is a mere pretence by which a man is at once relieved from the trouble [...]
[...] steamboats, mines—all are surrounded by a stiff palisade of enactments against a reckless and careless exposure of human life; and merely, to look through our Police and Sanitary and Building Acts, they present as complete a theoretical security against risk of life, health, and limb as could be imagined. And yet [...]
[...] which projected it into a passenger's brain. Nor can we join in the censure which has been passed against having two per. formances in one day. Except so far as the mere fact of a crowd is in itself dangerous, there was no special danger either in the particular amusement or in the particular construction of the [...]
[...] reflections on the characteristics and beauties of style. At page 167, the reader will find an account of a very curious experiment which a mere accident led M. Arnould to make on the influence of light on sound. To show the connexion of this experiment (from which the author draws a confirmation of Lamennais' [...]
[...] ing detection. ith Protestants the case is very different. Preaching and public worship are essential to their operations, and it is not matter of risk merely, but of simple impossibility, tº carry on such proceedings in the face of an active and powerfui Government, resolved to prevent them at all hazards. [...]
[...] Pope and Cardinal Wiseman invariably smear their manifestoes he fails entirely to support the conclusion that the Roman Catholics alone are true Christians, and the Protestants mere heretics. In the first place, theological truth is a question not of senti. [...]
[...] regret that the edition was to proceed no further. At present, the reader who wishes to study the Reformation in Strype has no other choice than between the original folios and a mere reprint executed at the Clarendon Press between thirty and forty years ago; and how unsatisfactory these are will appear [...]
[...] are merely samples taken almost at random out of an abundant store. For instance, in Henry VIII.'s epistle prefixed to the Necessary Doctrine and Erudition, four blunders are noted. [...]
[...] Scarcely a month passes without the production of a new book, in humble initation of the Heir of Redclyffe. But the writer of Hanworth is above the level of mere imitation, and in setting herself to her task she has evidently determined to eschew all that criticism has persuaded her to think dan [...]
[...] Voyages Artistiques en France. Par Pesquidoux. Lettres de la Mère Agnès Arnauld, Abbesse de Port-Royal. 'ar M. P. Faugère. 2 Tomes. [...]
Saturday review01.01.1870
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Januar 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Pope, as the one sole and sovereign ruler of the Universal Church, and a fortiori of all Councils assembled in her name. We are not surprised to learn that such of the bishops as are not mere crea tures and dancing-dogs of the Vatican are greatly excited on [...]
[...] a moment let us take these suicidal apologists at their word. Suppose the Bull does mean nothing particular, and is simply vor et practerea nihil, a mere technical formality not designed for any particular purpose, and only published to save an abstract principle or point of honour, just as English sovereigns bore the [...]
[...] is passing strange that this important distinction should be wholl cut out in the Tºnglish version, and the translation of what is i. is not a little queer. We are not clear that a merely English reader would understand the words “an order received ’’ as mean ing a degree of holy orders, priest, deacon, or whatever it may be. [...]
[...] Communion with the former class is not to be criminal, unless they have been denounced by name as “excommunicated, sus pended, or interdicted.” . A mere “ipso facto” excommunication or suspension, as to the fact of which there might of course be doubts, would seem not to be enough. In the case of heresy and [...]
[...] will not suspect even Mary of playing the game of Francis the First or Henry the Fourth, and of marrying Bothwell to Jane Gordon merely as a blind for her own purposes. Mr. Hosack again argues against the existence of any passion for Bothwell on Mary's part because she would not have fallen in [...]
[...] traiture. In both characters the same sad strain is played, but in the end in very different spirit. In Eugénie's life the chord is struck in the words “Ma mère avait raison, dit-elle en pleurant, souffrir et mourirl” In Marie's life the music swells to something higher. “Yes,” she says, “I had given him the best of my life, and I had [...]
[...] signs nihil importantia, as they are called—that is to say, ciphers interspersed with other ciphers, merely for the purpose of mislead ing a reader, and more effectually baffling any attempt at a decipher. We think we gather from his account that his manuscripts pre [...]
[...] doubt. It was at one time thought that a “Hermitage" or “Anchorites' House” was intended; but, on consulting Ducange, I am inclined to think that it was merely the place where empty ankers or casks were stowed away. I find a “Reclusorium” mentioned in the Liberate rolls of Henry º: year, at the castle of Bristol, when orders are given to make in it an altar [...]
[...] perhaps be disposed to say that the sudden feeling of repulsion with which the mere name of Bonaparte is mentioned arises from an abstract love of freedom; but when we see what the his tory of our neighbours has been for the last fifty years, how [...]
[...] M. Bungener has added another volumet to the innumerable treatises published a propos of the Council; it is not strictly speak ing a controversial book, but a mere attempt to explain what are the real designs of Ultramontanism, and what are its chances of success. We can imagine a fervent Catholic, on the eve of the [...]
Saturday review01.01.1876
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Januar 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] The word has been passed from Rome that Liberal Catholicism is to be put down, and the “Institute" is doomed accordingly. Its members have sunk to a mere fraction of what they were—there [...]
[...] mere “scratch” company to play with him. But when an English manager º at leisure to produce Othello, he ought to do his best to parts in it efficiently, even at the risk of allowing it [...]
[...] Sussex glossary everything that he has heard in Sussex which differs from high-polite English. In short, as, we set out by saying, we are still in the first stage, we have still a mere unsifted list of words. It seems that one of the rules of the English Dialect Society is [...]
[...] This last is perhaps more ingenious than the form “bran Titus,” by which this last ailment, is called in another Saxon shire, but mere accidents of this kind cannot really illustrate the dialect of any district. To confound “fairies” and “Pharisees” is in no [...]
[...] amounting to little more than an influential opinion in their favour. In other cases, as in that of the screw propeller, when he and his brother had been employed merely to construct what other persons had invented, Sir John Rennie led the Government to take it up. His precise enumeration of every piece of work, advice, or [...]
[...] had clung to during the ever-recurring exigencies of the struggle, and set about the foundation of a staff such as modern ideas make it, composed not merely of a set of heads of departments, but of selected officers taken for the time from regimental work for the purpose of assisting their superiors in the higher duty of organizing [...]
[...] the latter by six hundred a day. We also mark the shrewd observa tion that our Intelligence Department appears so short-handed that the mere correspondence of the military representatives of the Foreign Office alone might keep it occupied; the judgment as to our minor expeditions, that the staff is out of all proportion to the [...]
[...] which have called forth these valuable qualities. It would have been impossible, even if it had been desirable, to print all M. Berryer's legal i. many of them exist merely in the shape of rough notes, skeletons, or summaries; enough, however, is here preserved to give an excellent idea of the facile princeps amon [...]
[...] His conclusions are the following—(1) the tour, or place of admission for foundlings, should be re-established; (2) the system of relief now granted to the filles-meres should be considerably altered, so as to remove every possible encouragement to wilful neglect; (3) the care of foundlings must be transferred from the [...]
[...] a question connected with her which has often been discussed from different points of view. The English and Bourguignon chroniclers attempted to represent her as a mere instrument of the nobles who surrounded Charles VII., and even Sismondi #. his countenance to this absurd opinion. Other writers, such as Lingard [...]
Saturday review01.02.1862
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Februar 1862
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] gerent may not stop a vessel which is apparently steering her course between two neutral ports, for her destination may be merely pretended and colourable. But if he can ascertain all the material circumstances connected with her by evidence not merely in his own possession, but in the [...]
[...] for taking, chose to demonstrate elaborately that Captain WILKEs had erred in nothing except a slight irregularity. The mere muddleheadedness with which the Times charges him is not reconcileable with the astute political management which raised him to power. He rather seems to have sup [...]
[...] going to fling his watch, when the sailors seized his hands. He was for the moment an irresponsible lunatic, and the calm deter mination not to lose his hat was probably a mere mechanical instinct. Women often evince abundance of self-possession. In America, [...]
[...] to deliver a lecture. In one characteristic only would the reader unacquainted with the authorship trace the statesman as distin guished from the mere scholar or student. The rigid canon of evidence followed, and the good sense constantly displayed, testify to a contact with practical life which is rarely permitted [...]
[...] way adopted by popular preachers, they simply make a false antithesis; for they make a sharp opposition between Faith (which implies a religious creed of some sort) and mere outward, material virtue—altogether ignoring the possible existence of a high moral principle within, of which virtuous acts are the [...]
[...] Treuttel. + Pour Parvenir. Legende, par J.T. de Saint-Germain. Paris: Tardieu. § Les Enfants: Livre des Mères. Par Victor Hugo. Illustré par Froment. Paris: Jung-Treuttel. [...]
[...] Ulbach, in accordance with custom, puts on therefore the uniform of hope; but the tragical story which he designates as Histoire d'une Mere et deses Enfº:/** might well be dressed in a more sombre garb. Madame de Bruval has two children, Simon and Simone. Which of the two is the legitimate one P [...]
[...] olitical annihilation without the slightest qualms of conscience. We shall leave to professed publicists the task of analysing mi nutely the work of M. Mano, and merely state here the author's conclusions. In the first place, the European dominions of the Sultan are to make up two independent empires—the former [...]
[...] * Histoire d'une Mere et de ses Enfants. Jung-Treuttel. L'Espagne Inconnur. Par M. Cénac Moncault. Paris: Amyot. [...]
[...] say about it, as far as the spirit of the two volumes goes. Con sidered merely with respect to the style, we are disposed to judge it a little more favourably. It errs, perhaps, on the side of de clamation, but we could point out here and there a few passages [...]
Saturday review01.02.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Februar 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] The mere fact that the time has come for once more wiping off old scores, and starting afresh with the burden of an addi tional mortgage, by no means expresses the whole gravity of [...]
[...] making money. Nothing can be more shortsighted, more illiberal, nothing can be a more thorough pandering to mere ignorance, than this attempt once more to divorce studies which are doing all their best to assert their own identity. Let us turn from his view about language to [...]
[...] can any man understand history except by that process * Therefore I think it is a waste of time to try and teach a man that which he cannot teach him self. So that it is a mere burden to the mind. [...]
[...] nothing from them except a dim notion that Mr. Lowe objects to all historical teaching and study whatever. Why cannot a man teach history? Why is it a mere burden to the mind? Or rather, what is the “it’” which is the mere burden? If Mr. Lowe's words have any meaning, they mean that no man can teach history [...]
[...] vour, with a book so utterly worthless as this. It simply fills us with indignation that one who claims to be a poet should have dug up a poet out of his grave for the mere pleasure of indulging, under the covert of his name, in a “shy” at “Philistia” and morality. [...]
[...] trusted with the publication of this correspondence opens the twenty-first volume with a reiteration of the principles upon which the work is being edited. Mere repetitions of the same thought or the same details are purposely avoided by the omission of particular letters, but no document that it is thought right to [...]
[...] spiritualism—M. Taine, to quote only one—unhesitatingly endorse it. M. de Laprade is also accused of ignoring the greatness of science, and of vehemently denouncing it. This complaint merely shows what are the pretensions of modern materialists. Their motto is tout ou rien. They will be satisfied with nothing [...]
[...] originally designed as a i. of the Abbé de Polignac, or rather a sketch of his diplomatic career. The Ambassador of Louis XIV. has, however, now been reduced to a mere niche in a gallery of notabilities which includes Popes Innocent XI. and Alexander VIII., Sobieski, King of Poland, Queen Anne, Marl [...]
[...] last diplomatic act in which Polignac took a part, but it was the last which affected the general interests of Europe, and M. Topin merely glances at the remaining incidents in the public career of his hero. The name of M. F. Huet is not known beyond a very small [...]
[...] of the will as “an old Gothic fortress,” which the sciences of craniology and anthropology will pull, down for ever. We are merely organized beings a little more liberally endowed than the rest of creation; and the men who commit any crime against society are patients who should be handed over to some accom [...]
Saturday review01.02.1873
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Februar 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] importance of recent events. The assertion that a neutral zone has been established between the English and Russian territories is a mere conjecture ; nor can greater weight be attached to the rumour that Afghanistan is to be permanently neutralized. The Persian Minister in London has formally [...]
[...] poising and setting down his foot upon every stepping stone of knowledge as he proceeded to test it, and feel its solidity. Of jumping to conclusions by mere quickness of appreciation, or intuitive force of reasoning, he had a constitutional horror. Upon anything like mere theorizing in advance, or in the [...]
[...] their votes, it only shows that no Assembly is wholly made up of wise men. But far more important than the mere way of voting, which can be altered at any time by the Assembly for the time being, are the relations which the constitution establishes between the [...]
[...] and his treatment of the last part of his period is perhaps the most curious thing in the book. M. Zeller rises high above all the mistakes and confusions of mere ignorance or of mere French vanity. He knows perfectly well that Charles — Karl as he constantly calls him—did not speak French, and did not [...]
[...] catches at everything which can connect Pippin and Charles with the Western rather than the Eastern part of their dominions; but the perversion is a perversion of colouring, not of mere narrative. IIe even avoids the fashion into which hasty and ignorant writers so commonly fall of talking about France and Frenchmen [...]
[...] others, and for her own soul's well-being, presses all intellectual play out of the woman consciously endowed with a mission. The nun's liveliness is uniformly depicted as a return to mere childishness. An unrelieved gravity is the common characteristic of all published memorials of feminine piety. All denomina [...]
[...] old spirit of gallantry and camaraderie clings to the Austrian ser vice, despite repeated misfortune and changed administration; and those who would affect to trace in this merely the traditions of the Thirty Years War and its barbarous hirelings may learn from the very dryness of these pages to sympathize with the loyalty [...]
[...] and the rising population are in the habit of reading nothing but the most offensive trash published in New York. The whole community is endangered, not merely by the direct attacks of Gentiles, some of which, carried on under pretence of law, appear to be of the most unscrupulous kind, but by the facility now [...]
[...] young students at school or college. They contain a fund of materials for elder readers, and enable us to compare ancient and modern society. Even for mere gossip and curiosity it is pleasant to be posted up in such matters as the citrus-wood tables in fashion when Juvenal was writing his Satires, and [...]
[...] edifice has to be reconstructed from top to bottom. He likens his fellow-citizens to horses which, galloping round a circus, seem to be advancing, whilst they are merely retracing their steps. At the end of every term of twenty years the building falls to the ground, and the same work has to be done over again [...]
Saturday review01.03.1862
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. März 1862
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] besides a desire for commercial profit. Savoy and Nice are of course mere trophies, and not rewards, of military enterprise, while the costly maintenance of international right and the ba lance of power is but a greedy speculation. Yet it may at least [...]
[...] Earlier Algerian scandals may be forgotten when it is un derstood that in China he considered himself an armed mis sionary of the faith, rather than the instrument of merely secular policy. It would have been well if M. BILLAULT had been as irre [...]
[...] naval discussions of late years. In claiming unbounded admiration for everything that the Admiralty had done or left undone, Lord CLARENCE PAGET was merely working off a little of the stock of popularity which has been so liberally accorded to his department for its unwonted [...]
[...] Even when a correct appreciative faculty is acquired, this is not necessarily accompanied by that much higher productive or originative power by the side of which mere taste cannot be admitted in comparison, inasmuch as taste is merely part and accessory thereof. Applying this principle to our original [...]
[...] developed by a considerable accession of those comparatively unromantic ingredients—hard work and unwearied practice in mastering the merely mechanical difficulties which beset the threshold of this, as of every other kind of excellence. Persons who content themselves with accepting a glittering surface or [...]
[...] spring up to minister to such a taste; and in order to succeed in orchestral writing, and to leave behind him music which may have something more than a mere ephemeral existence, it is essential that a composer should be able to treat with effect a simple quartet. All solid music, as distinguished from what is merely tricky or piquant, [...]
[...] place them in this respect after one of the great historians of the world. To Gordon and Trikoupes the Greek Revolution is the whole of their subject; to Mr. Finlay it is merely the last act of a very long drama. But in the mere telling of a tale bºth the hºnest Scot and the eloquent Greek decidedly surpass Mr. Finlay. Here [...]
[...] barism, but which appears to wear off in the later stages of civili zation. The dances of the ancient world took their character from this taste. They were far from being a mere display of muscle, like a modern reel or country dance. They generally represented something. They embodied a thought—not merely a desire to [...]
[...] France by the allied troops in the year 1814. It contains some remarkable bits of description, but the madman whose name appears on the title-page seems to us a mere excrescence, which could easily have been left out altogether without any detriment to the interest of the narrative. [...]
[...] This Dictionary is founded on Andrews's translation of . Freund's Wörterbuch der. Lateinischen Sprache, but is no mere revision of it. Almost every article has been rewritten and reconstructed on a [...]
Saturday review01.03.1873
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. März 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] sibility it is. If they lack the courage to give us the real re form which is urgently needed, they can at least abstain from making it impossible by sanctioning a merely nominal reform, associated as this unfortunately is with positive enactments of the most retrograde character. [...]
[...] responsibility attaching to the possession of great powers; if you say, A great artist ought to be, or may be, a bad man, you are merely talking nonsense—and immoral nonsense. [...]
[...] statements, and defend them against misconceptions, and reconcile them to established opinions. However confident he may be of his theories, the mere fact of being a partisan disturbs his per ceptions of beauty and introduces a disagreeable element of mere temporary passion into his writing. It is natural enough, there [...]
[...] expression of the deepest and truest thoughts of great minds, or that which makes it appeal to the lower instincts of lust and . and degrades it to provide mere playthings for indolent Inlinois, [...]
[...] And yet not two months afterwards they took this responsibility on their own shoulders, and so those protests are become a perpetual testimony that their appeal to the Judgment of God was a mere frivolous mockery, [...]
[...] F, when it is said that horses are scarce, it is merely meant that horses are dear, we must admit that it would be very strange if the price of horseflesh had not followed the upward movement [...]
[...] Pytchley—“the latter has advantages over hunting.” This is not a mere dogmatic assertion; reasons are given for it. In both sports those who engage in them have the benefit of fresh air, rapid exercise, society, fun, and some degree of danger; [...]
[...] which it would be desirable for us to approximate. Sometimes they are caricatures of our arrangements, and the hypothesis is merely introduced as a vehicle for satire. The author of Colymbia seems to fluctuate between different points of view. Sometimes, as in the description of the machinery by which a subaqueous life [...]
[...] passions which they propose to set at liberty. A good many of the would-be abolishers of all existing social arrange ments appear to regard human beings as mere colourless units, labelled male and female, but with no deeper distinction of character than can be abolished by an Act of Parliament. Immoral [...]
[...] great Spanish cathedrals and churches. Mr. Ford mentions, often in terms of superlative praise, more than a dozen of these grandiose railings, which, being merely of iron, have escaped the melting-pot. The examples which we remember best are in the cathedral of Seville; a favourable moment for appreciating [...]
Saturday review01.04.1865
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. April 1865
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] coincided with his previous convictions. A considerable latitude might fairly be allowed to one who added authority to Liberal theories, instead of merely hanging on to the doctrines which happen to be locally dominant. Nothing could be more repugnant to the feelings of a Westminster [...]
[...] either breaking out in Europe or were daily threatened or provoked. To check them the Holy Alliance was formed, and it was not merely a defensive alliance, intended to keep up the existing order of things, but it also pro posed to put down every symptom of rebellious disaffection, [...]
[...] nation to forget them. Italy can scarcely expect her finances to be in a flourishing condition; but the recent administrators cf the Italian Treasury stand accused of more than mere improvidence. What Count Bismark does upon the housetop, they have done in the privacy of their closets. It seems [...]
[...] sort of utterly unmeaning and absurd attack on a man, merely [...]
[...] fanatical impertinence be ostracized or locked up? But, of course, the Sabbatarians are much too wise to rest their case on the º considerations of a merely human system of social philosophy. Few arguments can have any weight with those who believe that “no secular expediency will justify a violation of [...]
[...] ſº question which time only can solve, but the mere fact that continuous * commercial working has been fairly set on foot is a high testimony º to the energy and skill of those who have organized the enterprise. [...]
[...] opinion compels every undergraduate to spare neither land nor gold, metaphorically speaking, on behalf of his University. And a great deal is due to mere personal ambition. The veneration with which a schoolboy regards the captain of his school, whose physical perfections are supposed to be the outward [...]
[...] book is dated from the Tuileries, this new discovery becomes really serious. It is no mere antiquarian question as to the ancient rights of Aquitaine or of Scotland. It very closely touches certain potentates on whom the master of the Tuileries has hitherto been [...]
[...] Cabinet Ministers were not ashamed of presiding over Mechanics' Institutes; bishops no longer scrupled to aid in the dissemination of matter, more attractive than merely religious tracts. The enemies of public knowledge were in full retreat, and reduced to a feeble remnant, and the leaders of the movement were able to [...]
[...] the unrepaired old places I ever did see, that Pompeii's the very worst ' " The listeners stared, and shrugged their shoulders, accounting the outburst to be merely a pregnant illustration of the [...]
Saturday review01.04.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. April 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] part disciples of CoMTE, provide the agitators of the streets with theories of society which include the abolition or re distribution of property. The mere substitution of elected Presidents for Kings interests no class of English politicians. If Mr. GLADSTONE should be converted to the Republican [...]
[...] the success with which that audacity was attended. What ever Ministers may assert, no one can doubt that the Con ference merely met to register a foregone conclusion, and that the acquiescence of Turkey in its results was wholly involuntary. A Russian journal has recently invented the [...]
[...] Thus far we have dealt merely with preliminaries. In 1862 much discussion arose, in our own columns and else where, as to the form of a national memorial to the PRINCE [...]
[...] that, if everything had been differently arranged, people might have been wiser and happier than they are. In short, for mere purposes of distributing praise and blame, such inquiries as we have been considering are generally futile. in another point of view, they are of course of the highest [...]
[...] sº that intemperance is increasing among the women of our rich and educated classes. Other faults of fashion may be dismissed with contempt and mere condemnation, doubtless to be replaced by fresh follies; but drawing-room tip ling means family disruption, degradation of race, and social [...]
[...] lation of Henry to put an end to this prerogative. At least a score of such Commissions ad revidendum have occurred since the Reformation, not in matters of theological controversy merely, but in causes affecting civil rights. Where the points of law were important or obscure, or where there was reason [...]
[...] the land many cried “Viva Il Barone!” and the land seemed all his own. He stood not merely at the head of the Florentine nobility, but of the great Guelph organization, which extended from city to city throughout Tuscany—a league with its own leaders, its own [...]
[...] lization, the new spirit of freedom or humanity, seems to have enetrated among #. Behind the gloomy walls of their city ortresses they remained the mere murderous tyrants of a brutal feudalism. “I counsel, lords, that we free ourselves from this slavery,” cried Berto Trescobaldi to his brother nobles in the church [...]
[...] HE motive of this work is to us an enigma. To write a book for the drawing-room table merely to show how coarse our fore fathers were, and to illustrate this position by examples profusely scored and dotted by stars, hyphens, significant dashes, and all [...]
[...] and for matter are completely untrustworthy; they were either entirely manufactured by literary swindlers with the avowed pur pose of deceiving the public, or they are mere jeux d'esprit, cleverly done, indeed, but destitute of all kind of authenticity. Before examining briefly the most prominent amongst the bond fide auto [...]
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