Newspapers / The Times (Greensboro, N.C.) / June 19, 1856, edition 1 / Page 1
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Cin.es. 0iE!?i!iI,t 3ii tpnlnl n lnm Muni. "'H&iFi ; Devoted to News, Internal Improvements, Education, Agriculture, Manufacture, (Commerce and the Markets. TOO. GREEy is BOROUGH, yORTlI CAROLINA, THURSDAY, JU!XE JoTiSaO. v iN(V25. - ... -. ."T-7"1.. 1 .'..jjiii. " !.1s-r"iZiTs-lk . .J i..;mI lindoi-nnotW sun. I strondy attached to the mother country would come to the rescue of his sufferiucl enemy of Lit In Virginia. A Wucr of in-"' ,Tli Toy ajre f Dream. 1 brlght' Hotel. THE TIMES Jt pUifad trtry Thursday t in Green OGBUIttf, COLE & ALBRIGHT. CORRESPONDING EDITORS Uoatmt 0. STxrtc, Portmnout, Va,; W. R. ttvwraa, (formerly of S.C.) New YorkCity, TEBM: 1 Copy one yeur..... 5 W 6 Copies ( - jO ii ; m -,. ,.f.. ........... .10.00 No paper sent unless the money accom panies the order, nor will the paper bo sont longer than paid for.-jat jgy Specimen copies sent gratis, on applica tion. .. '-- ADVERTISING.,, On square (12 lines) first insertion $1.00, Each additional week 25cUt The following an pie deductions wiU be made in favor of standing Advertisement : n ......r. S 8.0O A K its. A D A Two quare, 6-00 10.00 14.00 ThrMi " WW -16.00 25.00 20.00 85.00 IIlf column. 18.00 Professional and business Cards, not l'ng six linos per annum v- rnn THE TWM. Iove and Pride. . ... - IT t. BATS.. . .. A minstrel at a lady's feet : " Wakened a low and mournful strain, While silver echoc? wildly sweet Made musical refrain: lie sang of passion and of Iots, Those stars that purely shine. And of the hope that like a dove Trembled before her shrine. A lambewithin bcr aiure fold, The moon walked o'er the sky As there blslove the minstrel told A name that couldot die: And, joy shone o'er the maiden's brow And wildly throbbed her heart, The hours fled on, then faint and low,- Bhe whispered, " we must part." ' You have no gold, you have no gems, No palace bright and fair, And mine must bo a diadem And splendor and despair :' Again, with jewels in her hair, The lady sat alone r Deep in her heart a grave i was there . A name upon its stone ; What to bernow was splendor's blade Quenched in remorseful tears, Nought could give backhe early days The vain love of those years. The minstrel of i distant shore Went early to his rest. Since she was false, sweet hope no more Could light his gloomy breast j He died, when o'er the summer woods, Ited autumn shed its ray, The wild-birds told the distant floods Bhe too has passed away 1 roa tub times. . Crusades or I lie Curls Ian War- rlors. DT MISS ELIZA HILL. No period of history is so fruitful of deep and intense interest to mankind, as the Crusades of the Christian War riors against the inhabitants of the Holy Land. The causes of this grand and unusual movement of Christendom, can- . not be accounted for by the ordinary laws governing human actions ; they seem to have been' removed and new ones substituted for them. Never, since the foundation of the world, has there " been exhibited a apectacle to be com pared in its origin, its aim and its result, to this combined movement of the Cath olic world. Italy, the land of Poetry; Tainting and Song, was nurturing in her bosom Aspirations for greatness and grandeur, more enduring and glorious than exis ted in the time of her Caesars, her Cic eroes and. her Yirgils ; she presented, the interesting spectaclo of a nation budding forth from a long sleep of rude ness and ignorance to the full blooiri and Jcauty of literary excellence and intellectuarglory. But there rested on her bosom a power, based upon the principle of Popish infallibility, which subsequently exercised such a wonder ful influenco on her destiny. Distant nations heard, with silent fear and sol emn awe, the decrees of the Pope of Rome as they were thundered from the Vatican against offending powers. Princes and Potentates from distant isles came, in solemn state and magni ficence, to lay their crowns at his fcCt; &ml to acknowledge him to be the foun- upon hini as the vicegerent of Heaven, holding his power and supremacy by Divine right, anointed by God's own holy hand. The savage warrior from his fortified castles on the Rhine, was arrested in the gratification of his pas sions or his revenge, by some petty Priest threatening the anger and the vengeance of the Great Head of the Church. The simple peasant, as he wondered out among his vine-clad hills, would speak in childish awe and revcr encc of the wisdom, power and author ity of his Great Master on earth ; and when at night he had gathered his un tutored family around the rude domes tic hearth, he would speak in startled whispers of his king dethroned, of some prince crowned by the authority of one never seen, and only known by the fame of his power. . Tho gallant knight whose bold deeds were known from the shores of the Bal tic to the waves of the Adriatic, and the fame of whose lady-love, was heard on the harp of every minstrel, would, at the command of the Pope, throw a- side the. joys, the pleasures and the ambition of life, and expiate his past misdeeds by a life of active devotion to his service SucEwcTehis power and authority in this strange and eventful period. An eminent writer has Said, " The Pope and his followers possessed them selves of all the avenues and strong holds of the public miud of the pulpit the academies and the confessional." The powers of all minds were bent to his influence, and ready to bo subject to his purposes. The strong and the weak, the frail beauty and the fierce warrior, tho gay cavalier and the sol emn monk, humbled their aspirations and checked their desires "to the ad vancement, tho service and the glory of tho great high priest fit the Sastine Chapel. Nor was this absolute power, this unnatural influence based upon frail and fragile foundations ; they had their origin in the deepest andstrongest passions of the'human heart ; the va ried powers of the mind usually devo ted to 4 thousand objcctSTind wasted upon strange caprices, were now re duced and concentrated upon the ac complishments of the ambitious views of the church. This silent, gloomy. reserved and intense feeling, could not be satisfied with lacerations of body, prayers, tears, penances and vigils ; it required something tangible, something of wordty body and substance upon which it might actively operate and the result of which might be seen and felt throughout Christendom. An op portunity was not long wanting in that age fruitful of miracles and wonders. The cry went out with all the fervor of religious enthusiasm that the church was suffering under a grievous sin, in not wresting the city of Jerusalem from the power and dominion of the heathen and infidel; that Heaven would veil his face from her, for the unnatu ral crime of not protecting and ensur-, ing the safety of the holy men in their pious pilgrimage to the Savior's Tomb. Amid the poverty of the Irish hovels and the gorgeous palaces, and tho for tified castles of the German Dukes and Princes, on the flowery banks of the Guadelquiver and the everlasting snows of the Alps, in the lowly regions of Province, might be seen the ragged priest and tho haughty cardinal, the noble youth and the Dominican friar, all preaching, praying and denouncing with words of.fire, those who retusea to take up arms in tho Christian cru sado, eJ'bythTaufnwifyiln-4""iiii der the sanction of the Holy See. Few were to be found inclined, or bold enough to resist the call; it accor- led with' the spirit and genius of the age. And Asia soon presented a strange and unusual spectacle, vessels blessed and sanctified by the I ope covered tlicfJlaturaiy nciiucd him to the popular side, seas ; banners woven by the fairpefT or as j10 supposed would be most hands had beenborneover many a well fought field, waved in the deadly Siroc- i . I. co : aconiusion oi tongues nus mam throughout tho cmpp, and warriors differing in mannerSjjnJanguage and in color from the nations around, were to be engaged in deadly conflict with the dusky children of the .desert. -- The Arab, who had wandered over his sterile sands unrestrained and un- mnlpsted since the time the curse of Heaven fell upon is race," knew not why such preparations had been made to conquer his barren mountains and sterile deserts. They presented no beauty to the eye of the stranger, but were dear to him. lie had seen with childislTawe the lightning play around their peaks, and heard in solemn si lence the thunder roll away , over the rallies; he retired from the heat of the noou-day's Bun to repose in the shades of Yrr oases ; and when foesjthreaten t ager, ne nea to tne caves lor re fuge." He'was unwilling to surrender them without a death struggle ; and strange and irresistible allies came to his relief. ' The hot sun, the growing famine and the fatal miasma, the Arabia of the desert and the deadly Sirocco, the scorching fevers and the winds, by raising bodies of sand, buried jvhole armies ; these were the terrible foes that werthrew the gay and bold knight of France ; the fair-haired sons of Eng land and the sturdy mountaineers of the Alps. This splendid amy, the pride and chivalry of Europe, soon melted and became among the things that were. Mankind suffered and gain ed by this strange movement. The peo ple of Europe, deprived of their accus tomed rulers and governors, who were far away in Palestine, broke out in re bellious and civil wary the arts and agriculture fell into decay, religion into disrepute, and a thousand other evils attendant upoif the want of a regular organised civil government. But in exchange for these, were received the refinements and tho luxuries of the East, the love of letters, the cultivation of the fine arts, and science - received no small addition from the learned in fidels of the Asiatic provinces. Thus commencea a series of events which have chanced the face of the world. From the N. C. Eu'letin. A Tory of the nerolutlon. MAN'S PERFIDY . AND WOMAN'S CONSTANCY. " ,.B 1VEL SENOItIA, Weare usually delighted by the recital of the heroic deeds of our anccstcrs. But there are always some whom we would gladly not remember, c-. From the biogra phy of such we must profit by learning to shun the errors into which they were led. In the early part of the revolution, there lived in Chatham County, North Carolina, two middlo aged men, who were brothers. They were emigrants from tho State of Virginia, and of Irish descent. A few in cidents in the life of one of these, will form the principle part of our narrative. The brothers were Henry and Eli. Their sir name, for convenience, we will-; call Bannon. The history of Henry would on ly be that of a thousand other 'patriots : that of Eli is interesting because it is il lustrative of the sufferings and disappoint ments of an" unfortunate class of men in the days of the revolution. Brought up in peaceable times, in a land of game and plenty, Mr. Bannon possessed no extraor dinary energy, .let in early life, ho had been so fortunate as to win the affections of- an amiable woman, who in due time be came his wife. Heaven smiled upon them. .Time passed on until they found themselves surrounded, as the common phrase has it, "with a house full of chilr dren." About .this time irr tho history-of Eli's family, that memorable struggle for liberty, which many yet remember, began to be exhibited in all parts of our country. It now became necessary for all meu of much iufluenee, to take sides for or against their countrymen. Mr. Bannon's temperament was such as popular, and which protrised to hiin, for the time being,tlio most roward for the least labor. But whcthcrjie chose sides from natural incliiiation,-lecause he felt lor, from conviction of right,' we cannot so well ascertain. It is -certain, however, that he espoused the royal cause. Embra cing Tory sentiments, being a man of good natural mind,' and having prepossessing qualities, he was soon at the head of a ra pacious band of Tories. That wrong ac tions are always attended by . evil conse quences, we shall, have at -least one evi. dence . in Bannon's future history.: Though many might have thought at first, that the colonies mutt soon give over the thirst for liberty fast gaining on the pco pie, those, who had taken shelter under tho royal banner, soon found themselves surrounded by lovers of patriotism and de- testers of Toryism. So it was with Tory Bannon. His own house no longer furn ished him a safe retreat. No well regulated laws protected his handsome accumulation of property, and his lovely family. A secluded cave along the ' lonely banks of a neighboring stream, was now bis only resort for safety. There, when not scourging the country with hir bandef bllowerSf- heeceasion ally resorted to spend a few days in Com parative quiet. But even his lonely cave might have been tolerable, had it been safe for him to receive his family, and kind friends if such ho had, with him. This he did not dare to do. The path to his retreat must be kept untrodden! Roto this place he often sallied forth, during the cover of uight to confer " with the Britsh, and anon .spend a week or. two as a pilot through the surrounding country." 7 But where was his amiable lady during this time ? His was hot the course best to please a patriotic woman of the revolu tion. Yet as Mrs. Bannon had loved and cherished her husband in more favorable times, she could not now entirely forsake him. Though he had. dcpjrted from his duty to his country, aud his actions bid fair to bring hardships and privations upon her, she could not forget her first love. Noth ing short of death could deter her from fulfilling the vows made at Ilyinan's Al tar. ' . Oftimes this estimable lady might have been seen in the stillness of the evening, with a bit of dried venison, a cheese and a loaf of bread, winding her way by a ve ry circuitous route to Mr. Bannon's cave. Usually, on such visits, she spent a lit- tgtine With her husband, informing him of the neighborhood news, and laying plans for his safety. As yet his family had a home and a competence. But this was not long to be so. Old Eli had al- eady been guilty of committing depreda tions on his "Whig neighbors, and he must now be checked in bis course or driven from that section. It was hard for the innocent to suffer but the country and not individuals, was to be cared for. The people generally had an idea when Bannon was lurking about home, and it was believed that he bad some secret retreat, where tho days and most pleasant nights were spent, but it was supposed that he remained in house, during the most inclement nights, when there was little danger of being watched in his movements. A plot was now laid to take him and put an end to his depre dations. ' It was a cold winter night and his fami y, having taken the usual repast, had seated themstTvesliround the largeTvbod enTpcvtoTallrof th(Twaf ud lhiugs in general. " 1 Grandfather Bannon, an aged man, mantled in his time-worn cloak, made one of that social group soon to experience circumstances more straightened. Though it seems hard that matrons and children should suffer for the sins of a father and husband, yet such was often the case in these perilous days. Even so it seemed unfortunate for Bannon's family. He had . committed too many depredations to escape tho resentment of his Whig neighbors he was too rank, a Tory tp be allowed longer to remain in that section too bold a man-to-be -driven -away by threats and too cunning to be caught by his enemies. On his account alone a harsh . measure was contemplated. Hence in tho dark ness and coldness of a winter's night, bis dwelling was fired, and his family only had time to escape the flames, leading forth the tottering Grandsire, to be chilled by tho wintry winds of a December night. Tho incendiaries stood around near enough to ascertain if the hated Eli was any where to be. seen, expecting he was secreted in his dwelling, or if not, family. But not, he had guessed too well their design. He did discern his burning dwelling, but knew the vengeance impen ding and dared not forsake his retreat. The Whigs had now failed in securing their enemy, but had not failed to con vincc him of tbcirlleteruiination to with stand him to -.the last." -They had com. menced vengeance and be could not hope long to remain there without personal in jury, lie must now retract all Lis Tory principles, surrender, and aid in defend ing his country, or, forsaking all, both property and family, nnite more firmly with the followers of the royal Standard, He chose the latter alternative threw himself zealously in the service of King George, leaving his homeless family at tho mercy of bis Whig- opponents, who, he knew would treat them kindly when he was no longer near. The hardships and toils of a Tory life, had sharpened the mind and aroused the energy of Eli, until be was no ordinary man with his British accomplices-. Tbey gave-binv a respecta ble place in the army, which he held du ring several engagements in Carolina and Virginia. Bannon was not the man to retrace his steps or acknowledge a wrong while an al ternative was left ; his course once marked out no coercive measures deterred him from following the mcr-IIad; hr been a n big no man would have been more faith ful. But such he was hotr a Torv he was, and a Tory he must live,, either to see the country subjected to die fighting against liberty or to be driven away with the other enemies of freedom.' Yet after all his firmness of purpose, and possible honesty of heart, as to his course, bis countenance was sometimes sad. The thought that he was opposing his own familiar friends, the people of his own country, and some of his own - broth ers, was almost too much for nature to sustain. It was hard to proceed on in his course yet it would have been harder to bear the stigina' of retracing. Thus Ban non lived, was oscillating between hope and fear j hope that the colonists would finally yield, and he could again joiu his fa'mily and t his friends; - fear that he might possibly be in the wrong, that liber ty would yet prevail and lasting reproach be attached to his name. His fears were realized. The very winds blew senti ments of freedom over this land and across tho ocean. King George : snuffed the breezy and his proud heart was compelled to yield. - Heaven aided our fathers in forcing the conviction upon him, that tho colo nies "were and of right ought to be free." The eight year's struggle ceased: the hos tile troops departed"; patriots returned home to sbowjheir wounds, and receive the applaudits of their surviving friends; traitors, plunderers and torics, sought their former places of abode with niggard ly faces, or retreated across the ocean to escape tho reproaches deserved, and. to live such slaves as ' become men of such character. In this last class was Bannon. He went to Lngland, perhaps, hoping to spend tho balance of his days in peace. He soon found pleasant acquaintances, and began to think of again enjoying the sweets of social life. He casts no linger ing glanco at tho land where his offspring dwellsTlhc i sacred tiesof "husband and wife arc loosening j-widow-Bannon's chil aren are fatherless; years pass on and they supposed him dead, but grieve not that hisgrave is obscure; he was a Tory. But in the mean time Eh, made the ac quaintance of the daughter of an aristo cratic lady in the Southern part of En gland. He soon won this lady's affections and obtained her hand in marriage. But why was she thus deceived I Col. Bannon made a favorable appcarence, had mingled with the world enough to know something of human nature, and had no slight touch of aristocracy in his manners ; and especially while among apeopleofthat grady for-ho had theabiHtyto puton such an air s seemed best adapted to his purpose. llcnce it is not strange ,tnai ne so soon obtained a handsome and wcalty compan ion. Six years they lived together, and three little ones cheered their home. Who would have thought that the worst afflictions were yet to come? His pros pects seemed fair to spend tho declino of life pleasantly. But alas ! the follies df by-gone years were yet to rush upon him with almost overwhelming torcc. His whereabouts had beou ascertained by an quiry was sent to his mother in-law. She soon surmized and ascertained that Col. Baonan had a family in America al so. His doom was sealed. No longer could he be the husband of the good lady's daughter. A widow and fatherless children were better in her sight than to countenance a man so bate and anfaithful. But what must he now dtf f ' Shame' chased him from Carolina to England, now absolute disgrace attaches itself to accompany him to his very tomb He resolves whaTto do ; or rather, determines to make the best of the remnant of an ill-spent life. He dismisses his 'affairs with as little ceremo ny as possible, hastens back to his native. land, purchases a farm in South Carolina, settles himself as quietly as possible, and commences living as good a republican as his infirmatics of mind and body will per mit. Seldom does he mention the revolution, his former stay . in America, or his Tory associates. He takes interest to learn the state of governmental affairs, and endeavors to manifest deep interest in the welfare of his country; But how lonely and sad his condition ! ' He reflects on his varied life. "Have the sweets of sociality forever fled, or is there yet hope that the compan ions, of my early days will again acknowl edge me as husband, and come to cheer my declining years ?" Examining his heart, a;spark"0f hope yet remained and faith bid him make search for the wife of his youth the fortune of his better days! K mes senger is dispatched to Chatham County, North Carolina, where Mrs. Bannon still lived. - A letter of explanation was sent, con taining a full acknowledgement of infideli ty, to which was added a touching' solici tation for her to come and spend the bal ance of her days at his Southern home, and that she would bring the once loved children. " -- ' . At the close of a winter day Mrs. Ban non and her children, now all nearly grown to maturity, sat around a corofortubefire, remarking of the blustering winds that whistled by. "How like," said Mrs. B. " is this night, to the same eleven years ago, when our dwelling was burned and de termined revenge drove your father away. Poor unfortunate man, perhaps he was killed in some of the Northern battles, and we may yet see some one, who heard his dying words. Oh ! how sad a thing is j war, my children I Your father and I lived in peace, and but for his party sentiK'annot be frightened into these. Often he ments, we mightstill be enjoying his com pany." As she. spoke these Words, the remembrance of former things rushed up on her mind,' and a large tear filled her benevolent eye. At this instant a stranger entering, says, " I am from South Carolina bearing a mes sage to Mrs. Bannon I have been inform, ed that this is her dwelling, and if so I wish to spend the night with you." The stranger being assured that he was right, was seated by tho fire, in the family circle, curious to know his errand. " Here," said he, handing the letter to Mrs. B.,' " read this and what other information is necessary perhaps I shall be able to give." Imagine the good lady's feelings as she Opened and read the address, "My Dear Mary," and then on down to the close, "Your unfaithful but now repenting hus band, Eli Bannon." 0 1 what can equal woman's affections? Her heart is an instrument that only needs playing on to be kept in tune. This Eli knewhe touched the Cords, and was a gain revived by tho music of love. . A thousand questions weroasked the stran ccran early day was appointed when he should accompany them to the South, and soon after the long parted couple wero re united. Most of their " remaining years were spent together, and some of their de scendants yet live in tho beautiful Pal metto. The Literary Societies of tiie University of Virginia, have deter mined to commence a "University Litera ry Magazine." The proposed magazine will consist of 40 pagc of reading matter, and will bo conducted by three editors, one chosen from each Society It will be purely-literary in its character. . A Presidential Nomination. The straightout Abolitiou Convention of New York hav.e nominated tho following ticket: For President : Ocrrit Smith, of New York. . For Vice-President : Sam'l McFarland, of Pennsylvania. ' - Thia U Fred Douglas, the ur gro' t'uki t. ' (twect downward!, ftretnu of air! And thon, royctimdy chnot, droptij hado ; To roll like dust, behind tbj tll.nt whuls, ' And draw round mrta the triumph of ourotrcbl See where, from ion to tone, the thtdow msT A spolupon the deccrt'i golden glare A deeper Mac on the far-otretching plalna ' ' Of ocean' foamy aiore. ' Bayard Taylor. From the laneaahasetta Teacher. School and Home. COTtRECTION OP FALSEHOOD IN CH1L . .,. . , DREN. , t : ..rY;..::; Messrs. Editors: In reading he Us t num ber of the Christian Inquirer, I waj io much pleased with this article which I enclose, that I cut it out for the " Teacher." The writer' views correspond so exactly with nij own, that I should like very moch to toe it republished for the benefit of your readore. W.J - Nothing is more common than tho as. sumption that falsehood is well-nigh uni versal among children. One constantly hears parents speak of tho untruthfulness of their children, as if it were a something of course. One of Harpers' Story Books, entitled " JoblTTrue," byaebbrAbbotir reechoes the current opinion : " John had often said what was not true. In this ho was like(all other boys, good or bad. There are a great many mothers who think their children are innocent, and they will often say, I aevcr knew my William or my Mary to tell a lie in my life. But such mothers -deceive themselves." We doubt. the truth of such representa tions. Still, that tho vice is very common, all will admit. And wo would, therefore, offer a few suggestions upon the best means of preventing and curing this ill habit in the young. Perhaps the most common mistake into which parents who take any interest in the moral training of their children fall, is un due reliance upon harsh and severe mea sures. Achild is rarely made a truth-teller by punishment. Many parents who complain of their children's untruthfulness have their own violence of rebuke and pun ishment, their own want of patience, to, thank for this. The child who has but yielded to what is only a natural instinct in one whose moral sense is in its infancy, - is addressed as if he had - committed the -most atrocious crime which can be imagin ed, and then is severely punished.--Now,. -very often he tells a falsehood from a timid-'' ity which belongs to his temperament.. lie needs encouragement, courage, and he says what is false from mere flurry. In his nervous terror, inspired by an angry countenance and previous " warnings," he hardly knows what he says. The feeling, on his part, that it makes no difference whether he Jells the truth of not, since no one will believe hiin, should also be carefully guarded against. It is better for a parent or teacher to err on the - side of charity, even though when it says, Believes all things," it puts some strain upon reasonable caution, than to take from a child all encouragement to speak the truth. It is said that some of Dr. Arn old's worst boys grew gradually ashamed of telling lies. " Arnold always believes a fellow, and it 's too bad," they said. Ex pect a boy to tell the truth. Show a gen erous confidence in him, and if he has any seeds of generosity and manliness, he will not be liable to balk your expectation. At any rate, you may be quite sure that this course will -tend towards - this-end - much more effectually than the opposite ono of habitual distrust. We shall not be successful teachers of truthj through any instrumentality, if wo demand of the young what we do not our-. selves manifest. The way in which some people eulogize truth to their children, and express horror of falsehood, is admirably calculated to impress younger minds with the conviction that, if there is one " point more' than another about which the speak er is extravagant, nay, fanatjgal, it is upon this, that be, indeed, is ma d'd of that stuff which martyrs arc made of, who have been ready to die for the sacred truth. All this is well and good, if so be. that what the young hearer listens to is in harmony with what he hears and sees on other occasions. If it is not, the law that we can give noth ing which we have not' got, will be sure to vitiate our teaching. The child is always learning lessons. He learns them from us wheu we are not consciously teaching him. When "I am delighted toce you," is said to those whom he has heard styled "intol erable bores," aud " the most disagreeable people I know;" wbco false excuses aro made t'ur not mciting ui pleasant engage- ! -i .IK f1 AS II 'if 1 if 45 in J 4 if '
The Times (Greensboro, N.C.)
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June 19, 1856, edition 1
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