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Some gentlemen then danced with ladies all in masks; and when they stopped, nobody rose up to dance, but all called out" Roxana, Roxana." In the interval, my Lord had brought another masked person into my room, whom I knew not, only that I could discern it was not the same person that led me out before. This noble person (for I afterwards understood it was the Duke of −), after a short compliment, led || me out into the middle of the room.

I was dressed in the same vest and girdle as before, but the robe had a mantle over it, which is usual in the Turkish habit, and it was of crimson and of green, the green brocaded with gold; and my tyhiaai, or head-dress, varied a little from that I had before, as it stood higher, and had some jewels about the rising part, which made it look like a turban crowned.

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long gaping cry, "what shall I do with this money? And indeed the poor creature was half mad with joy.

I was now in my element. I was as much talked off as any body could desire, and I did not doubt but something or other would come of it, but the report of my being so rich rather was a balk to my view than anything else; for the gentlemen that would, perhaps, have been troublesome enough otherwise, seemed to be kept off; for Roxana was too high for them.

There is a scene which came in here, which linust cover from human eyes or ears; for three years and about a month Roxana lived retired, having been obliged to make an excursion in a manner and with a person which duty and private vows obliges her not to reveal as yet.

At the end of this time I appeared again; but must add, that as I had in this time of retreat made hay, &c. so I did not come abroad again with the same lustre, or shine with the same advantage as before; for as some people had got, at least a suspicion of where I had been, and who had had me all the while, it began to be public that Roxana was, in short, a mere Roxana, neither better nor worse, and not that woman of honour and virtue that was at first supposed.

I had no mask, neither did I paint, and yet II had the day of all the ladies that appeared at the ball; I mean of those that appeared with faces As for those masked, nothing could be said of them, no doubt there might be many finer than I was; it must be confessed that the habit was infinitely advantageous to me, and everybody looked at me with a kind of pleasure, which gave me great advantage too.

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After I had danced with that nobie person I did not offer to dance by myself, as I had before; but they all called out Roxana" again; and two of the gentlemen came into the drawingroom to entreat me to give them the Turkish dance, which I yielded to readily, so I came out and danced just as at first.

While I was dancing I perceived five persons standing altogether, and among them one only with bis hat on. It was an immediate hint to me who it was, and had at first almost put me into some disorder; but I went on, received the applause of the house, as before, and retired into my own room. When I was there the five gentlemen came across the room to my side, and, coming in, followed by a throng of great persons, the person with his hat on said, " Madam Roxana, you perform to admiration." I was prepared, and offered to kneel to kiss his hand, but he declined it, and saluted me, and so, passing back again through the great room, went away.

I do not say here who this was, but I say I came afterwards to know something more plainly. I would have withdrawn and disrobed, being somewhat too thin in that dress, unlaced and open-breasted, as if I had been in my shift; but it could not be, and I was obliged to dance afterwards with six or eight gentlemen, most, if not all of them, of the first rank; and I was told afterwards that one of them was the D of M-th.

About two or three o'clock in the morning the company began to decrease, the number of women especially, and some dropped away one at a time; and the gentlemen retired down stairs, where they unmasked and went to play.

Amy waited at the room where they played, sat up all night to attend them, and in the morning when they broke up they swept the box into her lap, when she counted out to me sixty-two guineas and a half; and the other servants got in proportion. Amy came to me when they were all gone," La, madam," says Amy, with all

You are now to suppose me about seven years come to town, and that I had not only suffered the old revenue, which I hinted was managed by Sir Robert Clayton, to grow, as was mentioned before, but I had laid up an incredible wealth, the time considered, and had I had the least thought of reforming, I had all the opportunity to do it with advantage that ever woman had; for the common vice of all whores, I mean money, was out of the question, nay, avarice itself seemed to be glutted; for, including what I had saved in reserving the interest of 14,000l. which, as before, I had left to grow; and including some very good presents I had made to me in mere compliment, upon these shining masquerade meetings, which I held up for about two years, and what I made of three years of the most glorious retreat, as I call it, that ever woman had, I had fully doubled my first substance, and had near 5,000l. in money, which I kept at home, besides abundance of plate and jewels, which I had either given me, or had bought to set myself out for public days.

In a word, I had now 35,000. estate; and as I found ways to live without wasting either principal or interest, I laid up 2,0001. every year at least out of the mere interest, adding it to the principal, and thus I went on.

After the end of what I call my retreat, and out of which I brought a great deal of money, I appeared again, but I seemed like an old piece of plate that had been hoarded up some years and comes out tarnished and discoloured; so I came out blown, and looked like a cast-off mistress, nor indeed was I any better; though I was not at all impaired in beauty, except that I was a little fatter than I was formerly, and always regarding that I was four years older.

However, I preserved the youth of my temper, was always bright, pleasant in company, and agreeable to everybody, or else everybody flattered me; and in this condition I came abroad to the world again; and though I was not so popu

lar as before, and indeed did not seek it, because I knew it could not be; yet I was far from being without company, and that of the greatest quality of subjects; I mean, who frequently visited me, and sometimes we had meetings of mirth and play at my apartments, where I failed not to divert them in the most agreeable manner possible. Nor could any of them make the least particular application to me, from the notion they had of my excessive wealth, which, as they thought, placed me above the meanness of a maintenance, and so left no room to come easily about me.

But at last I was very handsomely attacked by a person of honour, and which recommended him particularly to me, a person of very great estate. He made a long introduction to me upon the subject of my wealth. "Ignorant creature!" said I to myself, considering him as a lord, was there ever a woman in the world that could stoop to the baseness of being a whore, and was above taking the reward of her vice! No, no, depend upon it if your lordship obtains anything of me you must pay for it? and the notions of my being so rich, serves only to make it cost you the dearer, seeing you cannot offer a small matter to a woman of 2,000l. a year estate."

After he had harangued upon that subject a good while, and had assured me he had no design upon me, that he did not come to make a prize of me, or to pick my pocket, which by the way I was in no fear of, for I took too much care of my money to part with any of it that way; he then turned his discourse to the subject of love, a point so ridiculous to me without the main thing, I mean the money, that I had no patience to hear him make so long a story of it.

I received him civilly, and let him see I could bear to hear a wicked proposal without being affronted, and yet I was not to be brought into it too easily. He visited me a long while, and, in short, courted me as closely and assiduously as if he had been wooing me to matrimony. He maile me several valuable presents, which I suffered myself to be prevailed with to accept, but not without great difficulty.

Gradually I suffered all his other importunities, and when he made a proposal of a compliment or appointment to me for a settlement, he said that though I was rich, yet there was not the less due from him to acknowledge the favours he received; and that if I was to be his, I should not live at my own expense, cost what it would. I told him I was far from being extravagant, yet I did not live at the expense of less than 500%. a year out of my own pocket; that, however, I was not covetous of settled allowances, for I looked upon that as a kind of golden chain, something like matrimony; that though I knew how to be true to a man of honour, as I knew his lordship to be, yet I had a kind of aversion to the bonds; and though I was not so rich as the world talked me up to be, yet I was not so poor as to bind myself to hardships for a pension.

woman of honour I could grant. Then as to maintenance, he told me he would soon show me that he valued me infinitely above 5007, a year; and upon this foot we began.

I seemed kinder to him after this discourse; and as time and private conversation made us very intimate, we began to come nearer as to the main article, namely, of the 500 a year. He offered that at the first word, and to acknowledge it as an infinite favour to have it be accepted of; and I, that thought it was too much by all the money, suffered myself to be mastered, or prevailed with to yield, even on but a bare engagement upon parole.

When he had obtained his end that way, I told him my mind: "Now you see, my lord, how weakly I have acted, to yield to you without any capitulation, or anything secured to me but | what you may cease to allow when you please; if I am the less valued for such a confidence, I shall be injured in a manner that I will endeavour not to deserve."

He told me, that he would make it evident to me, that he did not seek me by way of bargain, as such things were often done; that as I had treated him with a generous confidence, so I should find I was in the hands of a man of honour, and one that knew how to value the obligation; and upon this he pulled out a goldsmith's bill for 300l. which (putting it into my hand) he said he gave me as a pledge that I should not be a loser by my not having made a bargain with him.

This was engaging indeed, and gave me a good idea of our future correspondence, and, in short, as I could not refrain treating him with more kindness than I had done before, so one thing begetting another, I gave him several testimonies that I was entirely his own by inclination as well as by the common obligation of a mistress, and this pleased him exceedingly.

Soon after this private engagement, I began to consider whether it were not more suitable to the manner of life I now led, to be a little less public; and, as I told my lord, it would rid me of the importunities of others, and of continual visits from a sort of people whom he knew of, and who, by the way, having now got the notion of me which I really deserved, began to talk of the old game, love and gallantry, and to offer at what was rude enough; things as nauseous to me now as if I had been married, and as virtuous as other i people.. The visits of these people began indeed to be uncasy to me, and particularly as they were always very tedious and impertinent; nor could my Lord be pleased with them at all if they had gone on. It would be diverting to set down here in what manner I repulsed those sort of people; how in some I resented it as an affront, and told them that I was sorry they should oblige me to vindicate myself from the scandal of such suggestions, by telling them that I could see them no more, and by deterring them by telling them He told me he expected to make my life per- not to give themselves the trouble of visiting me, fectly easy, and intended it so; that he knew of who (though I was not willing to be uncivil), yet no bondage there could be in a private engage- thought myself obliged never to receive a visit ment between us; that the bonds of honour he from any gentleman after he had made such proknew I would be tied by, and think them no bur-posals as those to me. But these things would den, and for other obligations, he scorned to ex- be too tedious to bring in here; it was on this i pect anything from me but what he knew, as a account I proposed to his lordship my taking new

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lodgings for privacy; besides I considered, that I might live very handsomely, and yet not so publicly, so I needed not spend so much money by a great deal; and if I made 500l. a year of this generous person, it was more than I had any occasion to spend by a great deal.

My lord came readily into this proposal, and went farther than I expected, for he found out a lodging for me in a very handsome house, where yet he was not known; I suppose he had employed somebody to find it for him; and where he had a convenient way to come into the garden, by a door that opened into the Park, a thing very rarely allowed in those times.

By this key he could come in at what time of night or day he pleased; and as we had also a little door in the lower part of the house, which was always left upon the lock, and his was the masterkey, so if it was twelve, one, or two o'clock at night, he could come directly into my bedchamber.-N. B. I was not afraid I should be found abed with anybody else, for in a word I conversed with nobody at all.

It happened pleasantly enough one night, his lordship had stayed late, and I not expecting him home that night, had taken Amy to bed with me, and when my lord came into the chamber we were both fast asleep I think it was near three o'clock when he came in, and a little merry, but not at all fuddled, or what they call in drink, and he came at once into the room.

Amy was frighted out of her wits, and cried out; I said calmly, Indeed, my lord, I did not expect you to-night, and we have been a little | frightened to-night with fire." "O!" says he, "I see you have got a bedfellow with you." I began to make an apology: "No, no," says my lord, "you need no excuse, 'tis not a man bedfellow I see; but then," talking merrily enough, hark ye," says he, "now I think on't, how shall I be satisfied it is not a man bedfellow?" "O," says I, "I dare say your lordship is satisfied 'tis poor Amy;" "yes," says he, "tis Mrs Amy, but how do I know what Amy is? It may be Mr Amy, for ought I know; I hope you'll give me leave to be satisfied." I told him, "yes, by all means, I would have his lordship satisfied, but I supposed he knew who she was."

Well, he fell foul of poor Amy, and indeed I thought once he would have carried the jest on before my face, as was once done in a like case; but his lordship was not so hot neither, but he would know whether Amy was Mr Amy or Mrs Amy, and so I suppose he did, and then being satisfied in that doubtful case, he walked to the farther end of the room, and went into a little closet and sat down.

In the meantime Amy and I got up, and I bid her run and make the bed in another chamber for my lord, and I gave her sheets to put into it; which she did immediately, and I put my lord to bed there; and when I had done, at his desire, went to bed to him. I was backward at first to come to bed to him, and made my excuse because I had been in bed with Amy, and had not shifted me, but he was past those nicetics at that time; and as long as he was sure it was Mrs Amy and not Mr Amy, he was very well satisfied, and so the jest passed over; but Amy appeared no more all that night, or the next day, and when she

did my lord was so merry with her upon his éclaircissement, as he called it, that Amy did not know what to do with herself.

Not that Amy was such a nice lady in the main, if she had been fairly dealt with, as has appeared in the former part of this work; but now she was surprised, and a little hurried, that she scarce knew where she was; and besides, she was, as to his lordship, as nice a lady as any in the world. and for anything he knew of her, she appeared as such. The rest was to us only that khew || of it.

I held this wicked scene of life out eight years, reckoning from my first coming to England; and though my lord found no fault, yet I found without much examining, that any one who looked in my face might see I was above twenty years old, and yet without flattering myself, I carried my age, which was above fifty, very well too.

I may venture to say that no woman ever lived a life like me, of six and twenty years of wickedness, without the least signals of remorse, without any signs of repentance, or without so much as a wish to put an end to it; I had so long habituated myself to a life of vice, that really it appeared no vice to me. I went on smooth and pleasant, I wallowed in wealth, and it flowed in upon me at such a rate, having taken the frugal measures that the good knight directed, that I had at the end of the eight years 2,8001. coming yearly in, of which I did not spend one penny, being maintained by my allowance from my lord and more than maintained by above 2001. per annum; for though he did not contract for 500l. a-year, as I made dumb signs to have it be, yet he gave me money so often, and that in such large parcels, that I had seldom so little as seven to eight hundred pounds a-year of him, one year with another.

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I must go back here, after telling openly the wicked things I did, to mention something, which, however, had the face of doing good; I remembered that when I went from England, which was fifteen years before, I had left five little children, turned out as it were to the wide world, and the charity of their father's relations; the eldest was not six years old, for we had not been married full seven years when their father went away.

After my coming to England, I was greatly desirous to hear how things stood with them; and whether they were all alive or not, and in what manner they had been maintained; and yet I resolved not to discover myself to them in the least, or to let any of the people that had the breeding of them up know that there was such a body left in the world as their mother.

Amy was the only body I could trust with such a commission, and I sent her into Spitalfields, to the old aunt, and the poor woman that were so instrumental in disposing the relations to take some care of the children, but they were both gone, dead and buried some years. The next inquiry she made was at the house where she carried the poor children, and turned them in at the door; when she came there she found the house inhabited by other people, so that she could make little or nothing of her inquiries, and came back with an answer, that indeed was no answer to me, for it gave me no satisfaction

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at all. I sent her back to inquire in the neigh- || bourhood, what was become of the family that lived in that house? and if they were removed, where they lived? and what circumstances they were in? and withal, if she could, what became of the poor children, and how they lived, and where? how they had been treated? and the like.

She brought me back word upon this second going that she heard, as to the family, that the husband, who, though but uncle-in-law to the children, had yet been kindest to them, was dead; and that the widow was left but in mean circumstances, that is to say, she did not want, but that she was not so well in the world as she was thought to be when her husband was alive. That, as to the poor children, two of them, it seems, had been kept by her, that is to say, by her husband, while he lived, for that it was against her will, that we all knew; but the honest neighbours pitied the poor children, they said, heartily; for that their aunt used them barbarously, and made them little better than servants in the house to wait upon her and her children, and scarce allowed them clothes fit to wear. These were, it seems, my eldest and third, which were daughters; the second was a son, the fourth a daughter, and the youngest a son.

To finish the melancholly part of this history of my two unhappy girls, she brought me word that so soon as they were able to go out and get any work they went from her, and some said she had turned them out of doors; but it seems she had not done so, but she used them so cruelly that they left her, and one of them went to service to a neighbour's a little way off, who knew her, an honest substantial weaver's wife, to whom she was chamber-maid, and in a little time she took her sister out of the Bridewell of her aunt's house, and got her a place too.

This was all melancholly and dull. I sent her then to the weaver's house, where the eldest had lived, but found that, her mistress being dead, she was gone, and nobody knew there whither she went, only that they heard she had lived with a great lady at the other end of the town; but they did not know who that lady was.

These inquiries took us up three or four weeks, and I was not one jot the better for it, for I could hear nothing to my satisfaction. I sent her next to find out the honest man, who, as in the beginning of my story I observed, made them be entertained, and caused the youngest to be fetched from the town where we lived, and where the parish officers had taken care of them. This gentleman was still alive; and there she heard that my youngest daughter and eldest son were dead also; but that my youngest son was alive, and was at that time about seventeen years old, and that he was put out apprentice by the kindness and charity of his uncle, but to a mean trade, at which he was obliged to work very hard.

Amy was so curious in this part that she went immediately to see him, and found him all dirty, and hard at work. She had no remembrance at all of the youth, for she had not seen him since he was about two years old; and it was evident he could have no knowledge of her.

However, she talked with him, and found him a good, sensible, mannerly youth; that he knew

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little of the story of his father or mother, and had no view of anything but to work hard for his living; and she did not think fit to put any great things into his head, lest it should take him of his business, and perhaps make him turn giddyheaded, and be good for nothing; but she went and found out that kind man, his benefactor, who had put him out; and finding him a plain, wellmeaning, honest, and kind-hearted man, she opened her tale to him the easier. She made a long story, how she had a prodigious kindness for the child, because she had the same for his father and mother; told him that she was the servantmaid that brought all of them to their aunt's door, and run away and left them; that their poor mother wanted bread, and what came of her after she would have been glad to know. She added that her circumstances had happened to mend in the world, and that, as she was in condition, so she was disposed to show some kindness to the children if she could find them

out.

He received her with all the civility that so kind a proposal demanded, gave her an account of what he had done for the child, how he had maintained him, fed and clothed him, put him to school, and at last put him out to a trade. She I said he had indeed been a father to the child. But, sir," says she, "'tis a very laborious hardworking trade, and he is but a thin weak boy." "That's true," says he; "but the boy chose the trade, and I assure you I gave 207 with him, and am to find him clothes all his apprenticeship; and as to its being a hard trade," says he, "that's the fate of his circumstances, poor boy; I could not well do better for him."

"Well, sir, as you did all for him in charity," says she, "it was exceedingly well; but, as my resolution is to do something for him, I desire you will, if possible, take him away again from that place, where he works so hard, for I cannot bear to see the child work so very hard for his bread, and I will do something for him that shall make him live without such hard labour."

He smiled at that. "I can, indeed," says he, "take him away, but then I must lose my 204. that I gave with him."

"Well, sir," said Amy, "I'll enable you to lose that 201. immediately," and so she put her hand in her pocket and pulls out her purse.

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He begun to be a little amazed at her, and looked her hard in the face, and that so very much that she took notice of it, and said, Sir, I fancy by your looking at me you think you know me, but I am assured you do not, for 1 never saw your face before; I think you have done enough for the child, and that you ought to be acknowledged as a father to him; but you ought not to lose by your kindness to him, more than the kindness of bringing him up obliges you to; and therefore there's the 201," added she, "and pray let him be fetched away."

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'Well, madam," says he, "I will thank you for the boy, as well as for myself; but will you please to tell me what I must do with him?"

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pay you for his board; perhaps I may put him in || vide against farther inquiries; for it was not a a condition to return your kindness."

He looked pleased, but surprised very much,|| and inquired of Amy, but with very great respect, what he should go to school to learn, and what trade she would please to put him out to. Amy said she should put him to learn a little Latin, and then merchants' accounts, and to write a good hand, for she would have him be put to a Turkey merchant.

“Madam,” says he, “ I am glad for his sake to hear you talk so; but do you know that a Turkey merchant will not take him under 400 or 5001. ?"

"Yes, sir," says Amy, "I know it very well." "And," says he, "that it will require as many thousands to set him up?"

"Yes, sir," says Amy, "I know that very well too;" and, resolving to talk very big, she added, "I have no children of my own, and I resolve to make him my heir; and if 10,000l. be required to set him up, he shall not want it. I was but his mother's servant when he was born, and I mourned heartily for the disaster of the family; and I always said if ever I was worth anything in the world I would take the child for my own, and I'll be as good as my word now, though I did not then foresee that it would be with me as it has been since." And so Amy told him a long story how she was troubled for me, and what she would give to hear whether I was dead or alive, and what circumstances I was in; that if she could but find me, if I was ever so poor, she would take care of me, and make a gentlewoman of me again.

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strange for young women to go away poor to the East Indies and come home vastly rich; so she went on with directions about him, and both agreed in this, that the boy should by no means be told what was intended for him, but only that he should be taken home again to his uncle's, that his uncle thought the trade too hard for him, and the like.

About three days after this, Amy goes again, and carried him the 100%. she promised him, but then Amy made quite another figure than she did before; for she went in my coach, with two footmen after her, and dressed very fine also, with jewels and a gold watch; and there was indeed no great difficulty to make Amy look like a lady, for she was a very handsome well-shaped woman, and genteel enough; the coachmen and servants were particularly ordered to show her the same respect as they would do me, and to call her Madame Collins, if they were asked any questions about her.

When the gentleman saw what a figure she made, it added to the former surprise, and he entertained her in the most respectful manner possible; congratulated her advancement in fortune, and particularly rejoiced that it should fall to the poor child's lot to be so provided for, contrary to all expectation.

Well, Amy talked big, but very free and familiar; told them she had no pride in her good fortune; (that was true enough, for to give Amy her due, she was far from it, and was as good humoured a creature as ever lived); that she was the same as ever, and that she always loved this boy, and was resolved to do something extraordinary for him.

He told her that, as to the child's mother, she had been reduced to the last extremity, and was Then she pulled out her money, and paid down obliged (as he supposed she knew) to send the children all among her husband's friends; and if 1201., which, she said, she paid him that he it had not been for him they had been all sent to might be sure he should be no loser by taking the parish; but that he obliged the other rela-him home again, and that she would come and see him again, and talk farther about things with tions to share the charge among them; that he had taken two, whereof he had lost the eldest, him, that so all might be settled for him, in such a manner as the accidents, such as mortality or who died of the small-pox; but that he had been as careful of this as of his own, and had made anything else, should make no alteration to the very little difference in their breeding up, only child's prejudice. At this meeting, the uncle brought his wife that when he came to put him out he thought it best for the boy to put him to a trade which he out, a good motherly, comely, grave woman, who might set up in without a stock, for otherwise his spoke very tenderly of the youth, and as it aptime would be lost; and that, as to his mother,peared, had been very good to him, though she he had never been able to hear one word of her, had several children of her own. no, not though he had made the utmost inquiry discourse, she put in a word of her own. after her; that there went a report that she had dam," says she, "I am heartily glad of the good drowned herself; but that he could never meet intentions you have for this poor orphan, and I with anybody that could give him a certain ac- rejoice sincerely in it for his sake; but madam, you know, (I suppose) that there are two sisters count of it. alive too; may we not speak a word for them? poor girls," says she, "they have not been so kindly used as he has, and are turned out to the wide world."

Amy counterfeited a cry for her poor mistress; told him, she would give anything in the worid to see her, if she was alive; and a great deal more such like talk they had about that; then they returned to speak of the boy.

After a long

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"Where are they, madam," says Amy. "Poor creatures," says the gentlewoman, "they He inquired of her, why she did not seek after the child before, that he might have been brought are out at service; nobody knows where but up from a younger age, suitable to what she de-themselves; their case is very hard." signed to do for him.

She told him, she had been out of England, and was but newly returned from the East Indies. That she had been out of England, and was but newly returned, was true, but the latter was false, and was put in to blind him, and to pro

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"Well, madam," said Amy, "though if I could but find them, I would assist them; yet my concern is for my boy, as I call him, and I'll put him in a condition to take care of his sisters."

"But madam," says the good compassionate creature," he may not be so charitable, perhaps

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