<h2><SPAN name="chap35"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXV.<br/> FRATERNITY.</h2>
<p>“Oubliez les Professeurs.” So said Madame Beck. Madame Beck was a
wise woman, but she should not have uttered those words. To do so was a
mistake. That night she should have left me calm—not excited,
indifferent, not interested, isolated in my own estimation and that of
others—not connected, even in idea, with this second person whom I was to
forget.</p>
<p>Forget him? Ah! they took a sage plan to make me forget him—the
wiseheads! They showed me how good he was; they made of my dear little man a
stainless little hero. And then they had prated about his manner of loving.
What means had I, before this day, of being certain whether he could love at
all or not?</p>
<p>I had known him jealous, suspicious; I had seen about him certain tendernesses,
fitfulnesses—a softness which came like a warm air, and a ruth which
passed like early dew, dried in the heat of his irritabilities: <i>this</i> was
all I had seen. And they, Père Silas and Modeste Maria Beck (that these two
wrought in concert I could not doubt) opened up the adytum of his
heart—showed me one grand love, the child of this southern nature’s
youth, born so strong and perfect, that it had laughed at Death himself,
despised his mean rape of matter, clung to immortal spirit, and in victory and
faith, had watched beside a tomb twenty years.</p>
<p>This had been done—not idly: this was not a mere hollow indulgence of
sentiment; he had proven his fidelity by the consecration of his best energies
to an unselfish purpose, and attested it by limitless personal sacrifices: for
those once dear to her he prized—he had laid down vengeance, and taken up
a cross.</p>
<p>Now, as for Justine Marie, I knew what she was as well as if I had seen her. I
knew she was well enough; there were girls like her in Madame Beck’s
school—phlegmatics—pale, slow, inert, but kind-natured, neutral of
evil, undistinguished for good.</p>
<p>If she wore angels’ wings, I knew whose poet-fancy conferred them. If her
forehead shone luminous with the reflex of a halo, I knew in the fire of whose
irids that circlet of holy flame had generation.</p>
<p>Was I, then, to be frightened by Justine Marie? Was the picture of a pale dead
nun to rise, an eternal barrier? And what of the charities which absorbed his
worldly goods? What of his heart sworn to virginity?</p>
<p>Madame Beck—Père Silas—you should not have suggested these
questions. They were at once the deepest puzzle, the strongest obstruction, and
the keenest stimulus, I had ever felt. For a week of nights and days I fell
asleep—I dreamt, and I woke upon these two questions. In the whole world
there was no answer to them, except where one dark little man stood, sat,
walked, lectured, under the head-piece of a bandit bonnet-grec, and within the
girth of a sorry paletôt, much be-inked, and no little adust.</p>
<p>After that visit to the Rue des Mages, I <i>did</i> want to see him again. I
felt as if—knowing what I now knew—his countenance would offer a
page more lucid, more interesting than ever; I felt a longing to trace in it
the imprint of that primitive devotedness, the signs of that half-knightly,
half-saintly chivalry which the priest’s narrative imputed to his nature.
He had become my Christian hero: under that character I wanted to view him.</p>
<p>Nor was opportunity slow to favour; my new impressions underwent her test the
next day. Yes: I was granted an interview with my “Christian
hero”—an interview not very heroic, or sentimental, or biblical,
but lively enough in its way.</p>
<p>About three o’clock of the afternoon, the peace of the first
classe—safely established, as it seemed, under the serene sway of Madame
Beck, who, <i>in propriâ personâ</i> was giving one of her orderly and useful
lessons—this peace, I say, suffered a sudden fracture by the wild inburst
of a paletôt.</p>
<p>Nobody at the moment was quieter than myself. Eased of responsibility by Madame
Beck’s presence, soothed by her uniform tones, pleased and edified with
her clear exposition of the subject in hand (for she taught well), I sat bent
over my desk, drawing—that is, copying an elaborate line engraving,
tediously working up my copy to the finish of the original, for that was my
practical notion of art; and, strange to say, I took extreme pleasure in the
labour, and could even produce curiously finical Chinese facsimiles of steel or
mezzotint plates—things about as valuable as so many achievements in
worsted-work, but I thought pretty well of them in those days.</p>
<p>What was the matter? My drawing, my pencils, my precious copy, gathered into
one crushed-up handful, perished from before my sight; I myself appeared to be
shaken or emptied out of my chair, as a solitary and withered nutmeg might be
emptied out of a spice-box by an excited cook. That chair and my desk, seized
by the wild paletôt, one under each sleeve, were borne afar; in a second, I
followed the furniture; in two minutes they and I were fixed in the centre of
the grand salle—a vast adjoining room, seldom used save for dancing and
choral singing-lessons—fixed with an emphasis which seemed to prohibit
the remotest hope of our ever being permitted to stir thence again.</p>
<p>Having partially collected my scared wits, I found myself in the presence of
two men, gentlemen, I suppose I should say—one dark, the other
light—one having a stiff, half-military air, and wearing a braided
surtout; the other partaking, in garb and bearing, more of the careless aspect
of the student or artist class: both flourishing in full magnificence of
moustaches, whiskers, and imperial. M. Emanuel stood a little apart from these;
his countenance and eyes expressed strong choler; he held forth his hand with
his tribune gesture.</p>
<p>“Mademoiselle,” said he, “your business is to prove to these
gentlemen that I am no liar. You will answer, to the best of your ability, such
questions as they shall put. You will also write on such theme as they shall
select. In their eyes, it appears, I hold the position of an unprincipled
impostor. I write essays; and, with deliberate forgery, sign to them my
pupils’ names, and boast of them as their work. You will disprove this
charge.”</p>
<p>Grand ciel! Here was the show-trial, so long evaded, come on me like a
thunder-clap. These two fine, braided, mustachioed, sneering personages, were
none other than dandy professors of the college—Messieurs Boissec and
Rochemorte—a pair of cold-blooded fops and pedants, sceptics, and
scoffers. It seems that M. Paul had been rashly exhibiting something I had
written—something, he had never once praised, or even mentioned, in my
hearing, and which I deemed forgotten. The essay was not remarkable at all; it
only <i>seemed</i> remarkable, compared with the average productions of foreign
school-girls; in an English establishment it would have passed scarce noticed.
Messieurs Boissec and Rochemorte had thought proper to question its
genuineness, and insinuate a cheat; I was now to bear my testimony to the
truth, and to be put to the torture of their examination.</p>
<p>A memorable scene ensued.</p>
<p>They began with classics. A dead blank. They went on to French history. I
hardly knew Mérovée from Pharamond. They tried me in various ’ologies,
and still only got a shake of the head, and an unchanging “Je n’en
sais rien.”</p>
<p>After an expressive pause, they proceeded to matters of general information,
broaching one or two subjects which I knew pretty well, and on which I had
often reflected. M. Emanuel, who had hitherto stood looking on, dark as the
winter-solstice, brightened up somewhat; he thought I should now show myself at
least no fool.</p>
<p>He learned his error. Though answers to the questions surged up fast, my mind
filling like a rising well, ideas were there, but not words. I either
<i>could</i> not, or <i>would</i> not speak—I am not sure which: partly,
I think, my nerves had got wrong, and partly my humour was crossed.</p>
<p>I heard one of my examiners—he of the braided surtout—whisper to
his co-professor, “Est-elle donc idiote?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” I thought, “an idiot she is, and always will be, for
such as you.”</p>
<p>But I suffered—suffered cruelly; I saw the damps gather on M.
Paul’s brow, and his eye spoke a passionate yet sad reproach. He would
not believe in my total lack of popular cleverness; he thought I <i>could</i>
be prompt if I <i>would</i>.</p>
<p>At last, to relieve him, the professors, and myself, I stammered out:</p>
<p>“Gentlemen, you had better let me go; you will get no good of me; as you
say, I am an idiot.”</p>
<p>I wish I could have spoken with calm and dignity, or I wish my sense had
sufficed to make me hold my tongue; that traitor tongue tripped, faltered.
Beholding the judges cast on M. Emanuel a hard look of triumph, and hearing the
distressed tremor of my own voice, out I burst in a fit of choking tears. The
emotion was far more of anger than grief; had I been a man and strong, I could
have challenged that pair on the spot—but it <i>was</i> emotion, and I
would rather have been scourged than betrayed it.</p>
<p>The incapables! Could they not see at once the crude hand of a novice in that
composition they called a forgery? The subject was classical. When M. Paul
dictated the trait on which the essay was to turn, I heard it for the first
time; the matter was new to me, and I had no material for its treatment. But I
got books, read up the facts, laboriously constructed a skeleton out of the dry
bones of the real, and then clothed them, and tried to breathe into them life,
and in this last aim I had pleasure. With me it was a difficult and anxious
time till my facts were found, selected, and properly jointed; nor could I rest
from research and effort till I was satisfied of correct anatomy; the strength
of my inward repugnance to the idea of flaw or falsity sometimes enabled me to
shun egregious blunders; but the knowledge was not there in my head, ready and
mellow; it had not been sown in Spring, grown in Summer, harvested in Autumn,
and garnered through Winter; whatever I wanted I must go out and gather fresh;
glean of wild herbs my lapful, and shred them green into the pot. Messieurs
Boissec and Rochemorte did not perceive this. They mistook my work for the work
of a ripe scholar.</p>
<p>They would not yet let me go: I must sit down and write before them. As I
dipped my pen in the ink with a shaking hand, and surveyed the white paper with
eyes half-blinded and overflowing, one of my judges began mincingly to
apologize for the pain he caused.</p>
<p>“Nous agissons dans l’intérêt de la vérité. Nous ne voulons pas
vous blesser,” said he.</p>
<p>Scorn gave me nerve. I only answered,—</p>
<p>“Dictate, Monsieur.”</p>
<p>Rochemorte named this theme: “Human Justice.”</p>
<p>Human Justice! What was I to make of it? Blank, cold abstraction, unsuggestive
to me of one inspiring idea; and there stood M. Emanuel, sad as Saul, and stern
as Joab, and there triumphed his accusers.</p>
<p>At these two I looked. I was gathering my courage to tell them that I would
neither write nor speak another word for their satisfaction, that their theme
did not suit, nor their presence inspire me, and that, notwithstanding, whoever
threw the shadow of a doubt on M. Emanuel’s honour, outraged that truth
of which they had announced themselves the—champions: I <i>meant</i> to
utter all this, I say, when suddenly, a light darted on memory.</p>
<p>Those two faces looking out of the forest of long hair, moustache, and
whisker—those two cold yet bold, trustless yet presumptuous
visages—were the same faces, the very same that, projected in full
gaslight from behind the pillars of a portico, had half frightened me to death
on the night of my desolate arrival in Villette. These, I felt morally certain,
were the very heroes who had driven a friendless foreigner beyond her reckoning
and her strength, chased her breathless over a whole quarter of the town.</p>
<p>“Pious mentors!” thought I. “Pure guides for youth! If Human
Justice’ were what she ought to be, you two would scarce hold your
present post, or enjoy your present credit.”</p>
<p>An idea once seized, I fell to work. “Human Justice” rushed before
me in novel guise, a red, random beldame, with arms akimbo. I saw her in her
house, the den of confusion: servants called to her for orders or help which
she did not give; beggars stood at her door waiting and starving unnoticed; a
swarm of children, sick and quarrelsome, crawled round her feet, and yelled in
her ears appeals for notice, sympathy, cure, redress. The honest woman cared
for none of these things. She had a warm seat of her own by the fire, she had
her own solace in a short black pipe, and a bottle of Mrs. Sweeny’s
soothing syrup; she smoked and she sipped, and she enjoyed her paradise; and
whenever a cry of the suffering souls about her pierced her ears too
keenly—my jolly dame seized the poker or the hearth-brush: if the
offender was weak, wronged, and sickly, she effectually settled him: if he was
strong, lively, and violent, she only menaced, then plunged her hand in her
deep pouch, and flung a liberal shower of sugar-plums.</p>
<p>Such was the sketch of “Human Justice,” scratched hurriedly on
paper, and placed at the service of Messrs. Boissec and Rochemorte. M. Emanuel
read it over my shoulder. Waiting no comment, I curtsied to the trio, and
withdrew.</p>
<p>After school that day, M. Paul and I again met. Of course the meeting did not
at first run smooth; there was a crow to pluck with him; that forced
examination could not be immediately digested. A crabbed dialogue terminated in
my being called “une petite moqueuse et sans-coeur,” and in
Monsieur’s temporary departure.</p>
<p>Not wishing him to go quite away, only desiring he should feel that such a
transport as he had that day given way to, could not be indulged with perfect
impunity, I was not sorry to see him, soon after, gardening in the berceau. He
approached the glass door; I drew near also. We spoke of some flowers growing
round it. By-and-by Monsieur laid down his spade; by-and-by he recommenced
conversation, passed to other subjects, and at last touched a point of
interest.</p>
<p>Conscious that his proceeding of that day was specially open to a charge of
extravagance, M. Paul half apologized; he half regretted, too, the fitfulness
of his moods at all times, yet he hinted that some allowance ought to be made
for him. “But,” said he, “I can hardly expect it at your
hands, Miss Lucy; you know neither me, nor my position, nor my history.”</p>
<p>His history. I took up the word at once; I pursued the idea.</p>
<p>“No, Monsieur,” I rejoined. “Of course, as you say, I know
neither your history, nor your position, nor your sacrifices, nor any of your
sorrows, or trials, or affections, or fidelities. Oh, no! I know nothing about
you; you are for me altogether a stranger.”</p>
<p>“Hein?” he murmured, arching his brows in surprise.</p>
<p>“You know, Monsieur, I only see you in classe—stern, dogmatic,
hasty, imperious. I only hear of you in town as active and wilful, quick to
originate, hasty to lead, but slow to persuade, and hard to bend. A man like
you, without ties, can have no attachments; without dependants, no duties. All
we, with whom you come in contact, are machines, which you thrust here and
there, inconsiderate of their feelings. You seek your recreations in public, by
the light of the evening chandelier: this school and yonder college are your
workshops, where you fabricate the ware called pupils. I don’t so much as
know where you live; it is natural to take it for granted that you have no
home, and need none.”</p>
<p>“I am judged,” said he. “Your opinion of me is just what I
thought it was. For you I am neither a man nor a Christian. You see me void of
affection and religion, unattached by friend or family, unpiloted by principle
or faith. It is well, Mademoiselle; such is our reward in this life.”</p>
<p>“You are a philosopher, Monsieur; a cynic philosopher” (and I
looked at his paletôt, of which he straightway brushed the dim sleeve with his
hand), “despising the foibles of humanity—above its
luxuries—independent of its comforts.”</p>
<p>“Et vous, Mademoiselle? vous êtes proprette et douillette, et
affreusement insensible, par-dessus le marché.”</p>
<p>“But, in short, Monsieur, now I think of it, you <i>must</i> live
somewhere? Do tell me where; and what establishment of servants do you
keep?”</p>
<p>With a fearful projection of the under-lip, implying an impetus of scorn the
most decided, he broke out—</p>
<p>“Je vis dans un trou! I inhabit a den, Miss—a cavern, where you
would not put your dainty nose. Once, with base shame of speaking the whole
truth, I talked about my ‘study’ in that college: know now that
this ‘study’ is my whole abode; my chamber is there and my
drawing-room. As for my ‘establishment of servants’”
(mimicking my voice) “they number ten; les voilà.”</p>
<p>And he grimly spread, close under my eyes, his ten fingers.</p>
<p>“I black my boots,” pursued he savagely. “I brush my
paletôt.”</p>
<p>“No, Monsieur, it is too plain; you never do that,” was my
parenthesis.</p>
<p>“Je fais mon lit et mon ménage; I seek my dinner in a restaurant; my
supper takes care, of itself; I pass days laborious and loveless; nights long
and lonely; I am ferocious, and bearded and monkish; and nothing now living in
this world loves me, except some old hearts worn like my own, and some few
beings, impoverished, suffering, poor in purse and in spirit, whom the kingdoms
of this world own not, but to whom a will and testament not to be disputed has
bequeathed the kingdom of heaven.”</p>
<p>“Ah, Monsieur; but I know!”</p>
<p>“What do you know? many things, I verily believe; yet not me,
Lucy!”</p>
<p>“I know that you have a pleasant old house in a pleasant old square of
the Basse-Ville—why don’t you go and live there?”</p>
<p>“Hein?” muttered he again.</p>
<p>“I liked it much, Monsieur; with the steps ascending to the door, the
grey flags in front, the nodding trees behind—real trees, not
shrubs—trees dark, high, and of old growth. And the
boudoir-oratoire—you should make that room your study; it is so quiet and
solemn.”</p>
<p>He eyed me closely; he half-smiled, half-coloured. “Where did you pick up
all that? Who told you?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Nobody told me. Did I dream it, Monsieur, do you think?”</p>
<p>“Can I enter into your visions? Can I guess a woman’s waking
thoughts, much less her sleeping fantasies?”</p>
<p>“If I dreamt it, I saw in my dream human beings as well as a house. I saw
a priest, old, bent, and grey, and a domestic—old, too, and picturesque;
and a lady, splendid but strange; her head would scarce reach to my
elbow—her magnificence might ransom a duke. She wore a gown bright as
lapis-lazuli—a shawl worth a thousand francs: she was decked with
ornaments so brilliant, I never saw any with such a beautiful sparkle; but her
figure looked as if it had been broken in two and bent double; she seemed also
to have outlived the common years of humanity, and to have attained those which
are only labour and sorrow. She was become morose—almost malevolent; yet
<i>somebody</i>, it appears, cared for her in her infirmities—somebody
forgave her trespasses, hoping to have his trespasses forgiven. They lived
together, these three people—the mistress, the chaplain, the
servant—all old, all feeble, all sheltered under one kind wing.”</p>
<p>He covered with his hand the upper part of his face, but did not conceal his
mouth, where I saw hovering an expression I liked.</p>
<p>“I see you have entered into my secrets,” said he, “but how
was it done?”</p>
<p>So I told him how—the commission on which I had been sent, the storm
which had detained me, the abruptness of the lady, the kindness of the priest.</p>
<p>“As I sat waiting for the rain to cease, Père Silas whiled away the time
with a story,” I said.</p>
<p>“A story! What story? Père Silas is no romancist.”</p>
<p>“Shall I tell Monsieur the tale?”</p>
<p>“Yes: begin at the beginning. Let me hear some of Miss Lucy’s
French—her best or her worst—I don’t much care which: let us
have a good poignée of barbarisms, and a bounteous dose of the insular
accent.”</p>
<p>“Monsieur is not going to be gratified by a tale of ambitious
proportions, and the spectacle of the narrator sticking fast in the midst. But
I will tell him the title—the ‘Priest’s Pupil.’”</p>
<p>“Bah!” said he, the swarthy flush again dyeing his dark cheek.
“The good old father could not have chosen a worse subject; it is his
weak point. But what of the ‘Priest’s Pupil?’”</p>
<p>“Oh! many things.”</p>
<p>“You may as well define <i>what</i> things. I mean to know.”</p>
<p>“There was the pupil’s youth, the pupil’s manhood;—his
avarice, his ingratitude, his implacability, his inconstancy. Such a bad pupil,
Monsieur!—so thankless, cold-hearted, unchivalrous, unforgiving!</p>
<p>“Et puis?” said he, taking a cigar.</p>
<p>“Et puis,” I pursued, “he underwent calamities which one did
not pity—bore them in a spirit one did not admire—endured wrongs
for which one felt no sympathy; finally took the unchristian revenge of heaping
coals of fire on his adversary’s head.”</p>
<p>“You have not told me all,” said he.</p>
<p>“Nearly all, I think: I have indicated the heads of Père Silas’s
chapters.”</p>
<p>“You have forgotten one—that which touched on the pupil’s
lack of affection—on his hard, cold, monkish heart.”</p>
<p>“True; I remember now. Père Silas <i>did</i> say that his vocation was
almost that of a priest—that his life was considered consecrated.”</p>
<p>“By what bonds or duties?”</p>
<p>“By the ties of the past and the charities of the present.”</p>
<p>“You have, then, the whole situation?”</p>
<p>“I have now told Monsieur all that was told me.”</p>
<p>Some meditative minutes passed.</p>
<p>“Now, Mademoiselle Lucy, look at me, and with that truth which I believe
you never knowingly violate, answer me one question. Raise your eyes; rest them
on mine; have no hesitation; fear not to trust me—I am a man to be
trusted.”</p>
<p>I raised my eyes.</p>
<p>“Knowing me thoroughly now—all my antecedents, all my
responsibilities—having long known my faults, can you and I still be
friends?”</p>
<p>“If Monsieur wants a friend in me, I shall be glad to have a friend in
him.”</p>
<p>“But a close friend I mean—intimate and real—kindred in all
but blood. Will Miss Lucy be the sister of a very poor, fettered, burdened,
encumbered man?”</p>
<p>I could not answer him in words, yet I suppose I <i>did</i> answer him; he took
my hand, which found comfort, in the shelter of his. <i>His</i> friendship was
not a doubtful, wavering benefit—a cold, distant hope—a sentiment
so brittle as not to bear the weight of a finger: I at once felt (or
<i>thought</i> I felt) its support like that of some rock.</p>
<p>“When I talk of friendship, I mean <i>true</i> friendship,” he
repeated emphatically; and I could hardly believe that words so earnest had
blessed my ear; I hardly could credit the reality of that kind, anxious look he
gave. If he <i>really</i> wished for my confidence and regard, and
<i>really</i> would give me his—why, it seemed to me that life could
offer nothing more or better. In that case, I was become strong and rich: in a
moment I was made substantially happy. To ascertain the fact, to fix and seal
it, I asked—</p>
<p>“Is Monsieur quite serious? Does he really think he needs me, and can
take an interest in me as a sister?”</p>
<p>“Surely, surely,” said he; “a lonely man like me, who has no
sister, must be but too glad to find in some woman’s heart a
sister’s pure affection.”</p>
<p>“And dare I rely on Monsieur’s regard? Dare I speak to him when I
am so inclined?”</p>
<p>“My little sister must make her own experiments,” said he; “I
will give no promises. She must tease and try her wayward brother till she has
drilled him into what she wishes. After all, he is no inductile material in
some hands.”</p>
<p>While he spoke, the tone of his voice, the light of his now affectionate eye,
gave me such a pleasure as, certainly, I had never felt. I envied no girl her
lover, no bride her bridegroom, no wife her husband; I was content with this my
voluntary, self-offering friend. If he would but prove reliable, and he
<i>looked</i> reliable, what, beyond his friendship, could I ever covet? But,
if all melted like a dream, as once before had happened—?</p>
<p>“Qu’est-ce donc? What is it?” said he, as this thought threw
its weight on my heart, its shadow on my countenance. I told him; and after a
moment’s pause, and a thoughtful smile, he showed me how an equal
fear—lest I should weary of him, a man of moods so difficult and
fitful—had haunted his mind for more than one day, or one month.</p>
<p>On hearing this, a quiet courage cheered me. I ventured a word of re-assurance.
That word was not only tolerated; its repetition was courted. I grew quite
happy—strangely happy—in making him secure, content, tranquil.
Yesterday, I could not have believed that earth held, or life afforded, moments
like the few I was now passing. Countless times it had been my lot to watch
apprehended sorrow close darkly in; but to see unhoped-for happiness take form,
find place, and grow more real as the seconds sped, was indeed a new
experience.</p>
<p>“Lucy,” said M. Paul, speaking low, and still holding my hand,
“did you see a picture in the boudoir of the old house?”</p>
<p>“I did; a picture painted on a panel.”</p>
<p>“The portrait of a nun?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“You heard her history?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“You remember what we saw that night in the berceau?”</p>
<p>“I shall never forget it.”</p>
<p>“You did not connect the two ideas; that would be folly?”</p>
<p>“I thought of the apparition when I saw the portrait,” said I;
which was true enough.</p>
<p>“You did not, nor will you fancy,” pursued he, “that a saint
in heaven perturbs herself with rivalries of earth? Protestants are rarely
superstitious; these morbid fancies will not beset <i>you?</i>”</p>
<p>“I know not what to think of this matter; but I believe a perfectly
natural solution of this seeming mystery will one day be arrived at.”</p>
<p>“Doubtless, doubtless. Besides, no good-living woman—much less a
pure, happy spirit—would trouble amity like ours n’est-il pas
vrai?”</p>
<p>Ere I could answer, Fifine Beck burst in, rosy and abrupt, calling out that I
was wanted. Her mother was going into town to call on some English family, who
had applied for a prospectus: my services were needed as interpreter. The
interruption was not unseasonable: sufficient for the day is always the evil;
for this hour, its good sufficed. Yet I should have liked to ask M. Paul
whether the “morbid fancies,” against which he warned me, wrought
in his own brain.</p>
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