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'a an a ; e when independence of principle consists in having no ' nnucijiie on which to depend , and irce-thinWnj , not in thinking frcelv , butiuliwag free from thinking : —ia an age when men will huldanv thin ; except their tongues , keep anything except iheir word , " and lose noUiinsf patiently , except their character ; to "ii > rore such an age must be difficult , to instruct it dangsrou 3 ; sndhe stands no chance of amending it who canuot at the same time amnse it . TheFebsoxal Adventures of' Our Ottx Corresposdejst' ix Italy . By Michael Burka Honan . II toIs . London : Chapman and Hall . Tqers is , perhaps , uo greater humbug of the present day than the Tress . There are no greater victims
of mis-placed confidence than the believers in newspaper reports , especially those of * Oar Own Correspondent . ' How- often have the conservative devourers of a morning paper which we could name , heen electrified , gratified , or mystified , with learned dissertations ou the occurrences in France , which clairvoyant concoctions came direct from ¦ - Charlottestreet , Fitzroy-sqaare ? The 'Own Correspondent ' of the Tory paper being no other than a celebrated French Socialist in exile for his revolutionary predilections . In these volumes we get a glimpse of how the oracle is ivorked ia this interesting department of literature , and this novel manifestation of Humbug .
It ia not often that ' Our Own Correspondent ' is visible on the stage in person . He is a kind of Spring-heeled-Jack , who is here , there , and everywhere , always talked of , hat almost as rarely seen as a salamander . He is bomb and bullet-proof , betause , in any terrific emergency , or deadly danger , lie has tha happy knack of rendering himself invisible . But here we have a fine and genuine specimen of the species in the person of Mr . Hoaan , a rich and racy , rattling and rollicking , devil-may-care Irishman . We have some reminiscences of this' broth of a boy ' for brogue and blarney , in his Italian Campaign , which ho has not recorded in these volumes . "When
ths Neapolitans advanced upon Eome Mr . Honan was there too , and one evening as he was riding in tie chariot of Bomba , King of Jfaplas , we believe he had a very narrow escape of not living to lie any more , or of writing these books , as a party of young Italians and one Englishman had sworn to shoot the precious couple , but missad their mark . . Mr . Honan is fall of vivacity and animal spirits ; he lets out the Want truth about himself , and comrogues with a charming naiteie , and tells a lie to your face with as much frankness and sincerity as if it had been the truth . He is not particular to a trifle , in relating an experience , in drawing on his imagination and your
credulity , or in writing grammar . He tells us that he proceeded to the scene of action in 1 S 48 with very vague notions on the state of Italy , and as ignorant of hi 3 subject as Correspondents generally are . In 183 G he had been sent to Toplitz , but did not even know where Toplitz was ! And when sent to Italy he could not speak the language , and yet on hoth occasions it was necessary that he should begin to write immediately , as there were thousands of people in England waiting to he humbugged by his profound observations and prophecies on events . At Toplitz , where he could not speak the German language , he derived his inspiration from a French milliner . At Genoa he derived considerable
aid from a Spanish agent , and from one conversation he was initiated into the state of affairs ; and straightway the readers of the Times' were treated to a dissertation on the bearings of tho case , and astounded by the * Own Correspondent ' s * practical wisdom . We were thrilled again and again with Borne of his harrowing descriptions of what he saw in Milan ; but , Lord bless your simplicity ! he wasn't there at the time , and his letters were made up of the description of an old Prima Donna , whom we should not wonder if he humbugged by talking of his immense interest with Mr . Lumley . He was far behind Charles Albert ' s army , and only heard the most 'ague rumonrs of what was going on . Meanwhile , be was criticising their tactics of warfare , and
demonstrating that Itadetzky must be beaten , as he was EOch a bungler , and when his prophecy was beatep , uistead of that General , why—Charles Albert was a greater bnngler still , that ' s all . Mr . Honan is as cool in reply as the Frenchman , who , when told that 'acts were opposed to his philosophy , answered , ' so much the worse for the facts then . ' The volumes are jaluable , chiefly as an expose of the secret doings befljau * the sccnea of the Press—an expose which might « row the proprietors of the * Times' into a lively E Ute of consternation . There is a great deal that is amusing in them , hut little of vital importance . "We must not , however , he too hard , and expect heart and heroism , and that sorb of thing , from such an oily , luctionsj jovial , and jolly gentleman . Perhaps we could not choose a better extract than the
following : —
THE RBVOLCTIOS OF MILAN ' . The Governor of Milan received , on tbe night of tlie 17 th - " arch , an account cf the insurrection at Vienna , and as £ ucb . an event conld not be long concealed , it became gene-** % known on tbe following day , and created , as might be ^ pected , a prodigious ferment . A crowd of persons , composed of all classes , rushed to tbe palace , the nobles demanding concessions of a political nature only , whilst the citizens in general , and the republican party especially , in . listed on tbe establishment of a national guard , and an abundant supply of arms and ammunition .
In their route to the Hotel de Yule , a patrol was met * itb , and it is a question on whose part tbe first act of hostility , which there occurred , took place . The people say toe " soldiers fired on them , but I have good reason to know p « at it Ttas a young republican desirous of bringing matters to a head , who began the attack . From that instant all idea of a transaction ceased ; the Psople flew to arms , and in half an hour barricades were ^ cted , and the tocsin began to sound . The first bairi-^ ' 3 e was constructed with the carriages of the viceroy , *? idn the cheers and derision of the mob . "With the speed 01 thought other * were raised , and the centre of tha town * Js cleared against the circulation of Austrian troops ; "men sx' A children set . to work , the pavement was foieu j |? i and stones carried to every window from whence they Mi be hurled , and pots and pans , and every offensive . ^ estic weapon , were brought to the point most favour"V for attack .
"ebebmects of Austrians attempted to check this move-5 at , h y takins possession of tbe roof of the Duomo , and K ^ hcr pubiicbuildings ; but as the barricades began to t 4 * en . ttiev were gradually withdrawn , their retreat t 5 * a signal for a hurricane of the missiles above alluded « 2-v Ten ? ence of the people was principally directed tj- ^ si the Croats , of which the maiu force of the gamti ft S COm P ° sed f and it is said that the officers and men ^} v - nation committed cruelties the most revolting , by i , « compensation , in all the houses where they entered it . F 5 lnees 3 ant clanging of the church bells , lam told , fE ! . * wonderful effect on the ignorant Croats . They jj ^ 'Hwave a and earth were comin g together , and that " - t CCSln tins r > » 1 iitni 1 « irhnlt in hn lannnhnri fi-nm 0- ><> h
Ea ^ e . after « bad rung their death-knell . So far did this tij ^ 'uous dread of the tocsin affect their imagination , tJ Iba tJle snkequent retreat orders were issued in every r ^ P to raufite the bells , and assurances given , that tia j ! ' -r tJloy were rung tho place would bo abandoned to \ T for plunder , or burnt to the ground , ilis aot 5 r not if the charges made against the troops in ^ t of Were true « l ) ut i * generally said that in the ' pocfolaj , !? ^ them , who wa 3 shot at the bastions , there v ? aa ^ t ea - han ! lofal 3 G " y , the fingers of which were oraa-JssqjI ; Wlt" several valuable rings , and one of my friends ^ aiata tte tJlat al 1 tne members of a family of his ac « *** £ ?*? ' * ' ** tfawd on tkdr ineetin the centre of their j »* m , 2 "roosi » * fa Croats standing in a circle round with ^ i *?/* ' **" ' " '«<* «* **«> foarf * - wJ"fe fa efieertat lf U .,,: ' ? tono t declaring that wJien he camt to tU allegro < : -ce 'ePhyed , thivQUtutiouldletrcii . . ¦
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On the second day of tne revolution the circle of barricades was enlarged , and the troops excluded from the chief part of all the principal streets . To form these barriers , the owners of the adjoining houses sacrificed their carnages , chairs , sofas , tables , and many articles of ornamental furniture . The popular feeling could not be trifled with , an-1 even the most retrograde among the nobililv devoted everything suitable to tbat use , which their palaces contained . These ^ barricades were not such as I have seen in other towns . They were immense in size , nearly a yard in thickness , and eight or ten feet in height . By the rapidity with w « nch they were erected , detached parties of the soldiers were cut off , and several of the public authorities intercepted in their retreat to tte cHnnel or castle , where Itidetzky had established his head quarters . On the second dav of tha ¥ « Mntinn ti , n „; - „!« « r v-..- ^
On the third day the city might be said to be evacuated , and the whole attention of the Austrians was given to the bastions which surrounded it , and to the several gates leading to tho country . A struggle of another kind now comaionced , the people directing all their force to tha destruction of those gates , with the hope of cutting the Austrian lines , and , atthe 3 ame time , openin" a communication with their friends outside . Itadetzky , still uncertain a 3 to the resolve of Charles Albart , the first propositions of the regal agent having been annulled by the influence of the Republican party , now sought to tempori-e , and he sent in more than one message as .-ung for an armistice , first of a month , then of a fortnight , and justly of four days . He also gained time by a visit of tec foreign consols , who demanded permiss : on for their nationals to retire ; but all this maneuvering failed , as the leading men of the revolt were determined to carry on tbe : r operations with the same vigour with which they had commenced .
lhe nobility and chiefs of the corporation were willing to treat , but one of the council of war having exclaimed , In revolution there is no middle turn—we must either conquer , or be shot as rebels , " the cry was taken up by the peopie , and the messenger sent back to the castle with a peremptory refusal . The enthusiasm of the crowd wjss excited by their unexpected success , and as their barricades were now pushed close to the bastions on every side , it became evident that thefate of-Milan must be decided either one way cr the other , before the termination of the meek . Radetzky was gradually diminishing his outposts , and withdrawing from the bastions touching tho Porta Tosa .
ootno indications of a retreat bad yet been made , and to attack him in the citadel which had been strengthened by several , even the most ardent of tha citizens , could not recommend . Up to this period , the four persons—namely Jales Z .-mghi , Georges Clerico , Charles Cattaneo , and Jlenn Cernuschi , who composed the council of war , and so ably directed tbe energies of tho people , and who likewise hadturned a deaf ear to all the blandishments of Charles Albert ' s agents , now begun to find that tho nobility were intriguing against them , and that a regular bargain had been concluded between the municipality and the emissaries alluded to , -
Indignant at such proceedir . es , and unwilling that after having achieved its liberty , their country should become a Biere province of Piedmont , they resigned , and a provisional government was formed , of which Casati , tho podesta or mayor , was the president , by whom tho bargain with the King was ratified , and by whom the affairs of Lorabardy , in the ensuing campaign , were most unworthily conducted . Immediate notice ot this change in the direction of affairs was sent to Turin , and the King hesitated no longer to throw off the flimsy mask he had hitherto worn , or perform the last act of treachery to his ally . These circumstances could not be concealed from tbe vigilant observation of Radetzky , and no sooner did he become aware of the result of the last mission , than he determined to retire and gain a 3 many day 3 * march as he could on the Piedmonteso army .
lie at once despatched couriers to Verona and Mantua , instructing the governors of both fortresses of the real state of affairs , and cautioning them against allowing the people to overpower the garrisons , or possess themselves of the principal posts . He then ordered the troops , quartered in all the towns of Lotnbardy , to march towards the Mincio , and effect a juncture with him at a given point . Affecting next to invest tbe city more closely , and ordering his artillery to keep up an incessant firo , he drew off his troops in the silence and darkness of the night of the 22 ud , and long before day broke , all traces of him were lost .
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THE COUNTESS OF RTJDOLSTADT . [ Sequel to " Consuelo . " ] Bx George Sasd . A KEVELMION . Consuelo had been out to take the air , and when towards night she returned , she started back with terror , at the sight of a man dressed in rod , and wearing a mask , seated upon her couch ; but she was speedily re-assured , as she re * cognised her old confessor . Seating herself on a footstool by hia side , Coesuelo said — " I earnestly desire to speak to you , and have wished to do so for a long time . " Then she faithfully related to him all that had passed between herself , Albert , and the nnknown , since her last confession , concealing from him none of the involuntary emotions she bad experienced . After she had finished , the old man kept silence so long as to trouble and embarrass Consuelo . lie at length
replied" "When a mother marries her daughter , she half reveals to her , with more or less of discretion and modesty , the mysteries \? hich heretofore she has concealed from her . A mother was wanting to you , when you pronounced with an enthusiasm more fanatical than human , the oath to belong to a man whom you loved incompletely . A mother is given you to-day to assist and enlighten you in your new re * olutidn 3 at the hour of divorce , or at the definitive sanction of this strange hymen . This mother is myself , Consuelo ; I , who am not a man , but a woman . " " You a woman ? " said Consuelo , looking with surprise at the hand , thin and blue , but delicate and truly feminine which had taken hers during this discourse .
" This little withered old man , " replied the problematical confessor , " this decrepid and suffering being , in whose feeble voice there is no sex , is a woman broken down by grief , illness , and anxiety , more than by age . I am not more than sixty . Consuelo , though in this dress , which I never wear out of my functions as an Invisible , I have the appearance of an imbecile octogenarian . However , in the dress of my sex as in thia , I am no longer anything but a ruin ; yet I was a tall , strong , handsome woman , of imposing exterior . But at thirty years old I was already bent and trembling as you see me novr . And do you Unow , my child , the cause of that precocious feebleness ? It was the misfortune from which I would preserve you . It was an incomplete affection , an unhappy union ; * it was a terrible effort of courage and resignation , which attached me for ten years to a man whom I esteemed and respected , but whom I was unable to love . Sow , then , open to me your entire soul . Tell me if this' Liverani—"
" Alas ! I love this Liverani ; it is but too true , " said Consuelo , carrying the hand of the mysterious sibyl to her lips . " His presence causes me yet more confusion than that of Albert ; but how different is this confusion . How mingled is it with strange delights ! His arms are a magneb which attracts me ; and his kiss upon my forehead causes me to enter another world , where I breathe , where I exist differently than in this . " " Well , Consuelo , you must love this man and forget the other . I from this moment pronounce your divorce ; it is my duty and my ri » ht . " "Spite of what you have tott me , I cannot accept this sentence before I have seea Albert , before he has spoken to me , and told ma himself that he renounces me without regret , that he returns my oath without contempt . " do not know Alh
" You yet ert , ov you fear him ; but I know him , I who have rlghte over him still more than over you , and I can speak in his name . We are alone , Consuelo , and it is not forbidden me to disclose myself to you entirely , though I am one of the supreme council , whom their nearest disciples never know . But my situation and yours are exceptional ; look upon my faded features , and tell me if th » y seem altogether unknown to you . " Thus speaking , tho sibyl at the same time detached her mask and false beard , her cap and false hair , and Consuelo saw the head of a woman , old and indicative of suffering , it is true , but of an incomparable beauty of feature , and with a sublime expression of goodness , sadness , and strength . Consuelo contemplated her for a few moments with admiration and respect . Then , suddenly struck with surprise , she cried , seizing both her hands" Oh ! man Dieu ! how you resemble him ' . " " Yes . I rf ssmble Albert , or rather Albert resembles me
prodigiously , she replied ; 'but have you never seen a portrait of me ?" Perceiving that Consuelo was making an effort of memory , she addcsl by way of assisting her" A portrait which resembles me as much ag art is permitted to approach reality , and of which I am now but the shadow , a large portrait of a young , fresh , and lrilliant woman , with a corsage of gold brocade , ornamented with flowers and jewels , a mantle of purple , and black hair escaping from clasps of rubies and pearls , to fall in curls upon the shoulders ; it is tho costume I wore forty years ago , on the day after my marriage . I was handsome ^ but I was not to remain eo long ; already death was in my soul . " '
11 portrait of which you speak , " said Consuelo , turning pale , " is in the Chateau de Geants , in the chamber Albeit occupied . It is that of his mother , whom he bad scarcely known , and whom , nevertheless , he adored , and whom he thought he saw and beard in his ecstasies . Are you , then , a near relation of the noble Wanda de Prachalitz , and thus " " I am Wanda de Prachalilz herself , " replied the sibyl , something of firmness suddenly returning to her voice and attitude ; "lam the mother of Albert , and the widow of Christian de Rudolstadt ; I am the descendant of Jean Ziska of the Chalice , and the mother-in-law ot Consuelo ;
but I wish to be no longer anything but her friend and her adopted mother , since Consuelo does not love Albert , and Albert must not be happy at ihe price of the happiness of hi 3 companion . "His mother ! you hi 3 mother ?" cried Consuelo , trembling and falling at the knee 3 of Wanda . " Are you then a spectre ? Were you not mourned as dead in the Chateau des Geants ?" " It is twen ty-seven years , replied the sibyl , since Wanda of Prachalitz , Countess of Rudolstadt , was buried in the same chapel , and beneath the same flag , where Albert de Rudolatadt , attacked by lhe same mahdy , and subject to the same cataleptic crisis , was buried last year , the victim of the same " error . The son would never hate risen from this frightful tomb if the mother , attentive to the danger which threatened hiffli had cot , herself iirfisible , patched over his ¦ ¦ . :. ; . ; , - ¦; = ¦ : ¦ : : ; -. ¦• : . '¦•¦ :: . ¦ . -j . - - : ; " :. - ;•; . . a I " . ¦ -. . is . - - ¦ ¦; - > - i ~~ - ¦ !;¦ ¦¦ ' ' ¦ ' ¦ ' ¦ ¦ •¦ ¦ 'i . . ; . v .-i . ' :
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agony , and presided with anguish at his interment . It was his mother who saved a being , still full of life and strength from the worms of the sepulchre , to which he had been already abandoned ; it was his mother who rescued him from the yoke of the world , where lie had lived but too Ion * and in which he could no longer live , to transport him info this mysterious world , into this impenetrable asylum where she had herself recovered , if not health of body , at least the health of the soul . It is a strange history , Consuelo ; and you mu 3 t know it , that you may understand that of Albert , his sad life , his pretended death , and his miraculous resurrection . The Invisibles will not open their meeting for your initiation until midnight . Listen then to me ; and may the emotion of this strange recital prepare you for those which yet await you . " wanda ' s hjstory ; > . , , . . , .
_ " Rich , beautiful , and of an illustrious birth , I was married at twenty to the Count Christian , who might have been my ftther . He inspired me with affection and respect , but not with love . I have been brought up in ignorance of what such a feeling might be in the life of a woman . My relations austere Lutherans , but obliged to exercise their faith in secret , displayed in their habits and ideas an excessive rigidity , and a great strength of soul . Their hatred of foreigners , their secret revolt against the religious and political yoke of Austria , had pa'sed into my bosom and determined me to marry Count Christian , in order to save my parents from persecution , and I had the hope to be able to convert my husband to my own political faith . But he 83 well as his sister was bigotedly attached to hjs old creed and customs , and jn the absence of moral and intellectual sympathy with beings whom I loved , but whose contact killed soon brought on severe and continued illness . '
" The consecutive Ios 3 of my five children was a final blow ; It seemed to me a 3 though heaven had cursed my marriage ' and I ardently desired death . I forced myself not to love Albert , my last-born , persuaded that ha , like the rest , was condemned , and that my cares would not avail to save him . A last misfortune put a finishing stroke-to the disturbed state of my faculties . I loved , and was beloved , and the austerity of my principles forced me to struggle even against the inward confession of this terible feeling . The physician who attended me in my frequent and grievous crisis was , to all appearance , older , and not so handsome as Christian . They were not then personal graces which touched me , but the profound sympathy of our souls , the conformity of our ideas , or , at least , of our religious and philosophical instincts , and an inconceivable sympathy of character . Marcus , 1 can indicate him to you but by this name , possessed the same energy , the same activity of mind . uie
same patriotism as myself , w hat Shakespeare put into tne mouth of Brutus might have been sa ' d with equal justice to both : 'I am not of those who bear injustice with a smiling face . ' The misery and degradation of the poor , their serfdom , the despotic laws and their monstrous abuses all the injurious rights of conquest aroused in him tempests of indignation ; Oh ! what torrents of tears have we not shed together over the misfortunes of our country , over those of « " race > everywhere trampled upon and deceived ! Here brutalised by ignorance , there decimated by the rapacity of the avaricious , everywhere violated and " crushed by the ravages of war , degraded over the whole face of the earth I Still Marcus , wiser than I , conceived a remedy for all these evils , and often entertained me with strange and mysterious for the
projects organisation of a universal conspircy against despotism and intolerance ; I listened to his projects as to romantic dreams . I had ceased to hope ; I wa 3 too ill , toa oppressed , to believe in a future . He loved me ardently ; I saw it , I felt it , I shared his passion ; and yet , during five years of apparent friendship and chaste intimacy we never revealed to one another the fatal secret which united us . He did not usually reside in the Boshmer-Wald ; at least , he was frequently absent under pretence of duties , to distant patients , but in fact , to organise the conspiracy of which he unceasingly spoke to me without convincing me of its results . Each time I saw him , I felt more inflamed by his genius , his courage , and his perseverance . Each time he- returned he found me weaker , cousumed by an inward fire , devastated by physical suffering .
" During one of these : ibsences I was attacked with frightful convulsions , to which the vain and ignorant doctor , Watzelius , whom you know , and who attended mo luring his absence , gave tlie name of malignant fever . At the close of this crisis , 1 fell into a complete prostration , wnich they took for death . My pulse ceased to beat , my breathing was imperceptible . Nevertheless I preserved my consciousness ; I heard the prayers of tho chaplain , and the sobs of my family . I heard the piercing cries of my only child , of my poor Albert , and I could not make a movement , I could not even see him . They had closed my eyes , and I found it impossible to open ' them . I asked myself if this were indeed death , and if the soul , deprived of its means of action upon the corpse , preserved in death the consciousness of tho sorrows of life and the terrors of
the tomb ? I heard terrible things around niy bed of death the chaplain , endeavouring to calm the lively and sincere regrets of the canoness , told her that she ou ^ ht to thank God for all things , and that it was a groat happiness for my husband to be delivered from tho affliction of my continual agony and the storms of my reprobate soul . Ho did not make use of such harsh terms , but the meaning was the same , and the canoness listened , and allowed herself by degrees to bo convinced . I even heard her , immediately after , trying to console Christian with the same arguments , still more softened in expression , but equally cruel to me . I heard distinctly ; I understood horribly . It was , they thought , the will of God that I should hot bring up my son , and that he should bo withdrawn at so early an age from the poison of heresy with which I was infected . This
is what they said to my husband when ( pressing Albert to bis heart ) he cried , ' Poor child ! what will become of you without your mother V Tho reply of the chaplain was , ' You will bring him up in the fear of God V '' last , after three daya of silent and motionless despair , I was carried to the tomb , without having recovered the strength to make a sign , without having lost for a moment the certainty of the terrible death that was about to be brought upon me ! They covered me with diamonds ; they clothed me in my bridal robes , in the magnificent robes which you have Been in my portrait . They placed a [ crown of flowers on my head , a goldon crucifix upon my breast , and deposited me in the marble tomb in the chapel , where I felt neither the cold nor the want of air ; I lived only in thought .
" Marcus arrived an hour afterwards . His consternation at first deprived him of all reflection . He threw himself upon my tomb ; they dr . igged him from it ; he returned in the night . " Thi 3 time ho had armed himself with a hammer and lever . A horrible thought had crossed his mind . He know tbe lethargic crisis to which I was subject , though ho had never known them to last so long or to be so complete ; but he had concluded the possibility of a terrible error . I heard him walking above my head ; I recognised his footstep . The noise of the iron raising the stone made me
tremble , but I could not utter a cry , not even a sigh . When he raised the veil which covered my face , he hesitated for some time ; he interrogated -a thousand times my extinguished breath , my icy hands and heart . I had tho stiffness of a corpse . I heard him murmur in a voice of agony , ' All , then , is over ! there is no moro hope ! Dead , dead oh , Wanda ! ' Then ho let the veil fall , but did not replace the stone . A terrible silence reigned anew . Had he fainted ? Did he abandon me , he also forgetting , in the terror which the sight of what he had once loved inspired him , to reclose my sepulchre ?
" Marcus , plunged in gloomy meditation ; formed a project gloomy as his grief , singular a 3 his character . Ho desired to preserve my corpse from the outrages of destruction . He wished to bear it away in secret , to embalm it , to enclose it in a metal coffin , to keep ic for ever by his side . He took me in his arms , and without knowing whether his strength would allow him to carry a corpse so far m hia dwelling—distant more than a mile—be dopositated me upon the pavement , and replaced the stone witii that sang froid which acts of delirium often possess . Then enveloping and entirely concealing me in his cloak , he quitted the
chateau , which was not so carefully closed as now . I had become ao thin that , to tell the truth , I was not a very heavy burden . MarouB crossed the woods , choosing the least frequented paths . He deposited me several times upon the rocks , overcome with grief and terror rather than fatigue . At last , arriving at his home , he entered noise , lesaly through the garden , and bore me , unBeen , into an isolated pavilion , which he had converted into a study . It was there only that the joy of finding myself saved , the fir 3 t joyful emotion I had experienced for ten yeara , unbound my tongue , and I gave utterance to a feeble exclamation .
" Marcus would not suffer me to return to a certain death , nor had I any desire to do so . He promised to watch over my son , and procured mo the means of seeing him in secret . I consented to depart with him , never a ( rain to be the Countess of Rudolstadt . ° " But at ths moment wo were about to depar-, in the night , Marcus was summoned to the assistance of Albert , who , they said , was dangerously ill . ' Maternal tenderness , which misfortune seemed to have stifled , rekindled in my bosom . I insisted upon following Marcus to Riesenburg ; no human power , not even his , could have dissuaded me from it . I ascended his carriage , and , wrapped in a long veil , I anxiously waited at some distance from the chateau till he could see my sonand bring me tidings . He quickly returned , answering me that the child was in no danger .
and urged me to allow him to conduct me home , that he might return and pass the night with Albert . I could not resolve upon this ; I determined still to wait concealed behind the gloomy walls of the chateau , trembling and agitated , while he returned to watch over my son . But scarcely was 1 alone , when a thousand anxieties devoured me . I imagined that Marcus concealed from me the truo situation of Albert ; that , perhaps , he was dying ; that he mightexpire without receiving my last kiss . Overpowered by this fatal persuasion , I rushed beneath the portico of the chateau ; a servant whom I met in the court , at sight of me , let fall his torch , and took to flight , making the sign of t * e cross . My veil concealed my features , but the apparition of a woman in the middle of the night sufficed to arouse the superstitious feelings ef these oredulous
servants . They never doubted but that I was the ghost of tho unfortunate and impious Wanda . An unhoped for chance led me to the chamber of my son without meeting a single person , and the canoness had just quitted to seek a medicine ordered by Marcus . My husband , according to custom , had gone to pray in bis oratory , instead of acting to arrest the danger . I threw myself upon my son ; I pressed him to my bosom , ne had no fear of me ; he returned my caresses ; he had not understood my death . At this moment the chaplain appeared at the threshold of tbe chamber . Marcus thought all was lost . Still , with a rare presence of mind , he remained motionless , and appeared not to perceive me at hia aide . The chaplain pronounced , in a broken voice , a few words of exoroiBm , and fell fainting , without having dared to advance a step towarckv-ine Then I reBignedmyself tonight by another door , and
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gained , in the dark , the spot where Marcus had left n-P I was re-assured ; I had pcen Altert relieved ; his little hands wore mout , and the firo of fever was no Wer « n his cheeks . The fainting fit and the terror of the chanhto were attributed to a vision . ITe maintained that he sw me by the side of Marcus , holding my son in my arm Marcus equally insisted that he had seen nothing AW had fallen asleep ; but , on the morrow , he asked for mo again ; and on die following nights , convinced that I was not asleep for ever , as they tried to persuade him he dreamed of me , thought he saw me once more , and called me by name again and aeain . From this moment the childhood of Albert was strictly watched , and the superstitious : ouls of Itisonbnrgh offered up a thousand pr . ivers as an antidote to the fatalassiduitiesof my phantom around his cradle . " ~ * " UIU ""¦ " * — ¦
" Marcus took me back to his home before da \ break ; we delayed our departure another week , until Albert was ' quite recovered , when we quitted Bohemia . Since then I have lived a wandering and mysterious life . In Italy and elsewhere I passed as ' the sister of Marcus , and indeed I have never been to him anything more . Through all these long years we have toiled together in the work of the Invisibles . But I would speak to you no w of Albert , and that part of his existence of which you still are ignorant . You will learn how in tbe terrible and singular life I hare ' led , I at last knew tender emotions and maternal joys . " I no sooner heard that Albert had been sent to travel than I set out after him , keeping close to him wherever he went . I was so impatient to see my son , that I had great difficulty in remaining a few hours behind him , and " thus reaching Venice , where he was to make his first stay . But
I was resolved only to show myself to aim under cover of a species of solemn mystery ; for it was not the ardent instinct of a mother alone which drove me to his arms—I had ft still more serious design , a still moro maternal duty to fulfil ; I wished to save Albert from the narrow superstitions with which they had tried to surround him . To effect this , 1 had to gain possession of his imagination , of hia confidence , of his mind , of his whole soul . He regularly followed all the external practises of tlie Roman faith . In his ri gid logic and upright candour , my noble child , firm in the practice of true Christianity , was alrea d y an impassioned and incorrigible heretic . ' Lodgingin Venice , in the same hotel , I at last met him , alone and musing , on tho staircases , in the givllmies , on the quays . Oh \ you can well imagine how my heart beat at the sight of him , how my soul yearned to embraco him , and what torrents of tears flowed from my
dismayed , yet enraptured , eyes . lie appeared so good , so noble , and so sad ! Alus ! for this sole object given to my love on earth ! I followed him cautiously . Night npproached . He entered the church of SSt . John and Paul ; a gloomy pile filled with tombs , with whioh doubtless you are well acquainted . Albert kneeled down in a corner ; I glided iu after him , and concealed myself behind a tomb . Tho church was deserted ; the darkness was each moment becoming deeper . Albert was motionless as a statue . Stil ! he appeared to mo plunged into reverio rather than prayer . Tbe lamp of the sanctuary throw a feeble light upon ' his features . Ho was so palethntl grew terrified . His fixed eye , his half open lips , the expression of despair in his attitude and physiognomy , almost tn'oke my heart ; I trembled like the flickering flame of the lamp . It seemed to me tbat should I reveal myself to him at that moment , ho would
fall lifeless . I remembered nil that Marcus had told me of his nervous susceptibility , and the danger of sudden emo > tions upon so excitable a frame . I withdrew , lest I miHit yield to my lovo , and waited for him beneath tho portico . I bad thrown over my dross , which was in itself dark and simple , a brown mantle , tbe hood of which concealed my face , and gave me the appearance of a country woman of tbe neighbourhood . A 3 lie came out I involuntarily took a step towards him ; he stopped , and thinking me a beggar took from his pocket a gold piece , and presented me with it . Oh ! with what pride and gratitude did I receive those alms . Ilcre it is , Consuelo ; it is a sequin of Venice . I had it pierced , for a ch ; vin , and 1 always wear it in my
bosom as a precious jawel , as a relic . This pledge , which the hand of my child has sanctified , has never quitted mo from that day . I was no longer mistress of my transport ; I seized tbat dear hand , and carried it to my lips , lie withdrew it with a sort of Terror- —it was moist with my teavs . " « What are you doing , woman ? ' he asked , in a voice whose pure and sonorous tones penetrated to the very marrow of my bones . ' Why do you bless mo thus for so poor a gift ? Without doubt , you are very unfortunate , and Ihnvo given you too little . How much do you want to relievo you from suffering ? Speak ; I long to console you ; I hope I can do so . ' And without even looking at it , he hastily hold towards me all the gold he had about him .
" ' You have given mo enough , good young man , ' I replied , — 1 am satisfied . ' "' Then why do you weep V he said to me , struck with the Bobs which stifled my voice ; havo you some sorrow which my wealth cannot reach ?' " * Ko , 1 replied ; ' I weep with tenderness and joy . ' " ' With joy ! Are these then tears of joy ? and such tears for a piece of gold ! Oh , human misery ! Woman , take all the rest , I beseech you ; but do not weep for joy . Think of your brethren the poor , so numerous , so degraded , so miserable , and romember that 1 cannot relieve ail ' " He withdrew sighing , leaving his gold on the pavement , and I picked it up and put it in thopoor ' s-box . On the morrow I watched him again , and saw him enter the church of St . Mark ' s . I had resolved to be stronger and calmer , and I was so . We were once more alone in the twilight of tho church . Ho remaihed for Botne time plunged in thought , when I suddenly heard him murmur in a hollovr voice as he
rose" * Oh , Chrisl I they crucify theo every day of thoir lives . ' "' Yes , ' I replied , half reading his thoughts , 'the Pharisees and the doctors of the law . ' " lie trembled , and said in a low voice , ' A » ain my mother s voice !' " Consuelo , I almost fainted on hearing Albert thus invoke my memory . I again waited for him at tho porch , without approaching him ; but he perceived me , and shrunk back with a movement of terror . ' Signora , ' bo said , « why are you bogging to day ? Is it then a profession ? As tho pitiless rich say , have you no family ? Can you not bo useful to some one , instead of wandering like a ghost at night around the churcheu 1 Was what I gave you ycBtevday not enough for to-day , or would you monopolise the share of your brethren •' " ' I am not begging , ' I replied . 'I put your gold into tbe poor ' s-box , except one poor sequiu , kopt for love of thoe . '
' 'Who art tbou , then ? ' he cried , seizing my arm j your voice moves me to the depths of my soul . It seems to me tbat I know you . Show me your face t But no , I Will not see you—you terrify me . ' " ' Ob , Albert ! ' I cried , forgetting my prudence , ' you , too , are afraid of me V " He trembled with tenor , and said , ' Yesit is her voice —the voice of my mother !' " ' I know not who may be your mother , ' I replied , recollecting myself , * I only know your nume because the poor are already familiar with it . Is your mother dead V "' They say she is ; but my mother is not dead to me . ' "' Where does she live , then V
'" In my thoughts , continually , eternally . I have dreamed of her voice , of her features , a thousand timea !' "I was frightened as well as charmed by the burst of . affection which thus drew him towards me . But perceiving that he evinced signs of bewilderment , I conquered my tenderness , that I might calm him . " 'Albert , ' I said to him , 'I knew your mother ; I waa her friend . She charged me to speak to you of her some day , when you should be old enough to understand what I had to say . I am not what I appear . I only followed you yesterday and to day that I might have an opportunity of conversing with you . Listen to me calmly , then , and do not allow yourself to be disturbed by foolish superstitions . Will you follow me beneath the arcades of the Procurators , which are now deserted , and there converse with me ? Do you feel sufficiently tranquil , sufficiently collected for this V
" . ' You , the friend o my mother ! ' he cried , « You charged by her to Bpeak to me of her ! Oh yes ! speak speak ! You see I was not deceived . You see that an inward voice warned mo . I felt that there was something of her in you . ' "I led him beneath the aroades , and questioned him regarding his ohildhood , and tho principles that had been instilled into him . I found his young soul in despair at the woes of humanity ; nowhere could he find truth ; Catholics and Protestants alike had abandoned tbe divine path ; everywhere reigned tho law of the strongest
everywhere tho weak were enslaved and degraded ; Christ was oruoified daily upon every altar erected to him by man ! The night passed away in this bitter and absorbing conversation . Uneasy afc his long watching and continued pacing to and fro , I promised to open a door of safety to him if he would consent to wait and to prepare himself : I gently excited bis imagination with the expectation of a new revelation , and 1 led him back to the hotel where we both lived , promising him a fresh interview , which I postponed for several days , that 1 might not a < utate him too strongly . " ° ( To be Continued . J
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Character is higher than intellect . Thinking is the function . Living is the functionary . The stream retreats It ™ 'EXnb * n i ° , , U be 8 tron e * > a * wel 1 as strong to think Does he lack organ or medium to impart his truths ? He can still fall back on this Centa 1 force o living there . This is a total act . Thinking is a partial h 2 . ;"" hin fS ? l r enoh him that tl'e scholar loses no S ™« hSfnV ? 6 S < J 1 Iorein be unf 61 ds the sacred germ of his instinct , screened from influence . What is lost in seemlwess is gained in strength . Not out of those , on whom systems ot education have exhausted their culture comes the helpful giant to destroy the old or to build the new , but out of unhandsolled savage nature , out of terrible Druids j and Berserkws , eome at last Alfred and Shakaanearo .
iiear tbereiorewitn joy whatover is beginning to be said of the dignity and necessity of labour to every citizen . There iMW'T / . ' ! " Bpade ' for learned as well as untewoed hands . And labour is everywhere woloome ; always we are invited to work : only be this limitation observed , that a man shall nob for the sake of wider activity , sacrifice any opinion to the popular judgments and modes of action . —Emenon ' s Orations . The following is given as a specimen of American parsing :-I court-Court , a verb active , indicative mood , present tense , and agrees with all the girls in the
neighbour-Fisn , the witty comedian , wsb carving a goose at supper , when John Everett , the ex-Minister ' s brother , called out to the carver , from the other end of the table , ' What sort [ ot a fowl is that brother of yourB , Finn s . " " It is almost aa greaU gooao , " responded the wit , '? & 9 lEver > et ?"
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fllE HOXOUHAELK ARTILLERY COMPANY . —On Mon lay I nnee Albert reviewed the Honourable Artillery Company , ° » which he is colonel in chief . The Kew ^ Sugar Duties . —The new and reduced rates ot duty on foreign sugar imported come info operation on t » o 6 th of July ( 1 [ and 12 Victoria , cap . 97 . ) tW V RMo : > IC SociETV - —The eighth , last , and by many cicgrees the best concert of tbe season , took placo on Monday night m presence of a very crowded audience . n ™ . r u of Fraud .-William Rose , described as an fncl ! «" , been committed on a cliargo of defrauding pi ^ ll * > a f ^ ver , in Slater-street , Spitalflelds . , 1 , « * ' "t Uoor .-Accounts from the department of bom inn ooneur in statin « t ! iat * beet-crop has seldom Cnl « Dillon than at present . comD » n £ hP ? ? ° « nE 4 D Hiii . WAY .-Tbe preamble of this has been nrnvi' / " 1 ' re « ulnt « on of capital and other objects , Death Jp t Jr T ™ iltcc of th ° Lords - cuv ? ' innLnol , » BRC « oMBY . -Tho " Caledoiian Mer-Gflor-re SiLi / , " 11110 " ( 1 eat '' of the Ri ? ht Hon . Friday evenit Baron Abercromby , at Airtbrey-cWo , on
JkvrPiA . YET .-Mr . J . K . Hind has announced that he has d . scorned a new planet on tho borders of the oonstel " in O pKus ? Pe " ' D dCgl 6 ast ° ° Star Tau nJ'Jf £ , BiUt ! ! lion Riflfl Brigado disembarked at-Portsmouth Dockyard , from II . M . Steamer , Simoom , on Sator-™} morning , and proceeded , per South Coast ltailwav , to uantoi'burv . * The New asylum fob Fatherless Chubbo . —A bazaar in aid of the funds of this charity was held on Friday and mi V '" the lar Ke suit 0 of ™ oms of the London Tavern , a . no enterprise will bring to the charity about £ 100 . v , i f i 7- rv . ORT"op-T ! Ulc Hospital . —The anniversary festith t ! i 's anstltu t'on was bold on Wednesday evemn ? , at tie London Tavern , Bishopsgate-street , tho Earl of Car-Jl * io in the chair .
• Ehe Robbuiit is SnoREDiTcn . —Edwin Rick «« 8 and uoorge Shnm . bave i , een committed on tho charge of robbing hll 8 rcon" r ° unS ma » of Cambridge , whose case has been reported in this journal . liOYAL College of Physicians . —The annual Harveian uution was delivered on Saturday , by Dr . Formby , in pre-Se ° co ? fel Pl > esideafc aud a 1 ; ll = ° > ' of tho / eIl 0 ( VS of Law Amendment Society , —On Saturday tho society for pomoting the amendment of the law held its annual dinner at the Crown and Secptre Tavern , Greenwich . Lord brougham in the chair . Society tor the Protection of Life from Fire . —The anniversary meeting of the friends and supporters of this association was held a few days ngo in the Council Chamber of the Guildhall , the Lord Mayor in the chair .
Serve him RiGiiT . " -Miss Susan Denin , an actress , horse-whipped Mr . Frederick Dent , an actor , lately , in JJuiuio . The young man declared that he had received amatory letters from the young woman . Uie Swedisu Niohtisgalb . —Jennv Lind has given ? -, ? nU ? concerts » ' the States , and " has realised about iou , uuu dollars , of which she has devoted some 30 , 000 dollars m charity . PmxcK Alubrt " k Cou »;? . LLi >; o . " -rntice Albert has during Urn week been out several times with tho bii «[ ad 8 ot 1 'oot Guards at morning drill in lbdo Park . Com .. inander-in * Chief , eh ? Books by Post . —The Post-office authorities aro ' rapidly expending tbe privilege of sending books , pamphlets , magazines , and reviews , &c , at GJ . per half-pound weight to aU our colonies and dependencies .
AI ksseni ERQM . ? ue Dioorsos . —A tradesman in Gloucester , whose brother emigrated to Australia a few years ago . lias received from him -a very agreeable tokrii of fraternal regard in the shapo of a lump of gold . The lump thus sent has sold for not Ics 9 than £ 4 . 00 . Tiik Newman Witnessks . —Boulogne sur-Meh , Juno 27 . —Under this dato a correspondent says;—" The worthy Italians who gave evidence against Dr . Achilli , arrived hera yesterday afternoon by the Folkstono steamer , as saloon passengers . " Grotto Plack Ragged School . —On Saturday the annual meeting of tbe friends and supportors of the ltagged and Industrial School and Refuse for Destitute Boys and Girls , Grotto-place , was held at the Kew Lecture Hall , Edward-street , Portman-square .
Distribution of Prizes at Kino ' s College . —The annual distribution of prizes to the successful students at King ' s College , took place on Tuesday in tho Hall of the College jeforo a very large assemblage of ladies aud gentlemen , friends of tho students and the college . Emigration from the Clyde . —The time is within tue memory of all when the departure of an emigrant vessel from the Clyde was reckoned an event s now it is almost a weekly occurrence , and occasions no comment what * ever . Willis ' s Rooms . —Mr . Harry Carter Lee , who will bo remembered as the most active director of tho Grand National Concerts at Her Majesty ' s Theatre , has hero produced an entertainment entitled " Carter Lee ' s Sketches and Crowquill ' s Scratches . "
Case of Mr . Alderman Salomons . —In this case tha plaintiff is about to move for a new trial , on the ground that the verdict was perverse and against the evidence ; that tho learned judge had improperly rejected oral and documentary evidence , and that ho had misdirected the jury . CnARGB of Burglary . —A few days ago Joseph Slopor , George Wixen , Charles Smith , Joseph Hibberfc , and Charles Nelson , labourers , were charged before Mr . Broderi p with burglariously breaking into and entering a dwelling-housa , the Rose and Crown , Knightsbridge , and stealing lib . of cigars and three bottles of brandy . IIaile > -ccry Collkgb . —On Monday last the chairman and directors of the East Indfa Company , accompanied by a large party of friends , visited Ilaileybury College for- tha purpose of witnessing the distribution of honours among the successful students , and of closing the session with due observance .
The Bishop of Worcester , —The Qjueon has ratified a scheme of the Ecclesiastical Commissioners , by which tbe Bishop of Worcester shall , from tbe 1 st day of January last past , receive an annual income of £ 5 , 000 , in the lieu of the present or future income arising from his see , or of any other ecclesiastical profits or emoluments of any kind or description whatever , "Unchristian Fathers . "—John Fathersand Ann Fathers , husband and wife , living in a comfortable home in tha High-street , Mortlake , were committed for trial at tho Guildford Sessions , on the charge of having stolen a £ 20 Bank of England notef the property of Mrs . Jane Elizabeth Kemp , a widow lady , residing at Cumberland-placo , Keff « road .
The Iron Ore of ¦ Northamptonshire . —Mr . S . 11 . Blackwell , F . G . S ., of Dudley , recently delivered a leoture " On the Iron-making Resources of the Kingdom , " before the . Mechanios' Institute at Northampton , in which he said that iron had been largely smelted in Northampton at tho time of its occupation by the Romans , as well as in many other parts of tho . country , vihere it had been discontinued since the substitution of coal for wood as fuel . A Clerical Canvasses . —On Sunday morning last tba Rev . Dr . Cooper , incumbent of Trinity , St . Phillip ' s , preached a sermon having strong reference to the forthcoming election . The reverend gentleman pointed out to his congregation that it was their duty at the next eleotiou to support that candidate who was prepared to uphold the churoh , and not vote for those irreligious and worldly men ¦ whoso opinions were unfavourable to it as it at present existed . —Bath Gazette .
An Owner Wanted . —We road the following story in the " Presse" : —« ' There has just been found , in the neighbourhood of Annecy , in Savoy , an empty balloon , lying on tha ground . The car and all the cordage wero perfect , and there was every appearance of the balloon having fallen solely from the gradual esoape of gas . At the bottom of the car were found a gontleman ' s cloak and a lady ' s bonnet and shawl , and in tho latter a very handsome album was wrapped up . On tho first leaf of the album there waa a pencil-drawing of tbo panorama of the mountains of the country , signed ' Eliza de R . ' There was nothing to indicate tbe origin of this mysterious balloon . From the direction of tho wind , it is supposed that it came from . France , but beyond that all is a mystery . "
Seamen . —A question has been raised whether a seaman , having suffered punishment for desertion , is still bound to complete his voyage , supposing tho vessel is at some distant port . The Board of Trade lately applied to Sir F . Thesiger and Sir Fitzroy Kelly for their legal opinion , and they havo interpreted tbe various clauses of tho Mercantile Marine Act bearing on the cr . se to mean that , though a seaman has been convicted of desertion , and punished under the acts in question , he is not tin reby released from the articles of agreement , which remain in force , notwithstanding his conviction and punishment . Thoso gentlemen add — " We do not see why he may not bo guilty of another offenco by again neglecting or refusing to join bis ship , and again be dealt with under tho 70 th section of 13 & 14 Viet , cap . 93 , by another imprisonment , or by being conveyed on board the ship . "
A Subject for Inquiry . —We are informed that one day last week a first-class boy on board one of her Majesty ' s steamers at thia port was placed on a man ' s back , and forcibly held there , at the orders of the first lieutenant , while another man violently flogged him with a cane . The pain made the sufferer struggle hard to free himself , which ho effected , on which the said first lieutenant ordered two men to roplace him in his former position on the other ' s back , which was done ; tho " horse , " however , being unable to hold the boy in that position , the said lieutenant called tbe quartermasters to seize him up to the Jacob ' s ladder : the boy waa accordingly so seized , and triced lip by his wrists and ancles , his feet not touching tho deck , The said lioutenant then directed the caning to proceed
After a time the caning was suspended by the order of the lieutenant for a few minutes , and then recommenced ; the caatigation was , after a time , stopped a second tiino , and ultimately recommenced ; after this the boy was cut down and confined under the after part of tho main deck . Thia conduct , if substantiated , is a violation of the Admiralty instructions . It is said the captain of tho ship was not acquainted with the proceedings , which , we behve , took place in the presence of another lieutenant , the surgeon , and tb « engineer of the vessel alluded to . —Portsmouth Times . —TW < understand that the steamship in question is tho Retribu tion , and the offioet whoso conduct is likely to become thi subject of judicial inquiry is her first lieutenant , G . O Wiliea . —Gwoe . l . ..
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EPIGED 1 UM V IHE DEATH OF THE JOfRXAL OF ASSOCIATION . « o die , thou child of stormy dawc , " Thou winter flower , forlorn of nurse ; ChHkd early by the bigot's curse , -Tie pedant's frown , the worldling ' s y . iwn . Fair death , to fall in teeming Jons , When every seed which drops to earth Takes root , and wics a second birth from sleaaiing shower and steaming moon . fall warm , fall fast , thou mollow rain ; Thou rain of God , make fat the laud ; That root ? , which parch in burning sand , } Ia _ v bud to flower and fruit again jo grr . ee , pprchancc , a fairer irsorn In mighty lands lipyond the sea , V . ii ' e honour fills to such a 3 we , From Leavts of heroes yet unborn , tyho , in the blaze of riprr day , More loving science , holier i : ws , Bless us , faiut heralds of their cause , Dim beacons of their glorious way . Jauure ? While tide-floods rise , and boil , Piound cape and isle , in port and cove , llesistless , star-led from above : "What Ihoagh oar tiay wave recoil ? jaae l ' , 1352 . Cjusie 3 Kinoslet .
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Northern Star (1837-1852), July 3, 1852, page 3, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1685/page/3/
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