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         Goldsmith Oliver:     more books (81)
  1. The deserted village by Oliver Goldsmith 1730?-1774, 1866-12-31
  2. She Stoops To Conquer: A Comedy by Goldsmith Oliver 1730?-1774, 2010-09-30
  3. The history of Greece, from the earliest state, to the death of Alexander the Great Volume 2 by Goldsmith Oliver 1730?-1774, 2010-09-28
  4. The Good-natured Man: A Comedy In Five Acts by Goldsmith Oliver 1730?-1774, 2010-09-27
  5. An abridgement of the history of England : from the invasion of Julius C sar to the death of George the Second by Oliver Goldsmith 1730?-1774, 1825-12-31
  6. The deserted village by Oliver Goldsmith 1730?-1774, 1917-12-31
  7. Poems, Plays, And Essays by Goldsmith Oliver 1730?-1774, Aikin John 1747-1822, 2010-10-06
  8. The history of Greece, from the earliest state, to the death of Alexander the Great Volume 1 by Goldsmith Oliver 1730?-1774, 2010-09-28
  9. She stoops to conquer; with numerous original illustrations by Oliver Goldsmith 1730?-1774, 1897-12-31
  10. The Hermit. A Ballad by Goldsmith Oliver 1730?-1774, 2010-10-14
  11. The history of little Goody Two-Shoes : ornamented with cuts by Oliver, 1730?-1774 Goldsmith, 2009-10-26
  12. The poetical works of Oliver Goldsmith; edited with introduction by Goldsmith. Oliver. 1730?-1774., 1906-01-01
  13. Poems. plays and essays. by Oliver Goldsmith. M.B.. with a criti by Goldsmith. Oliver. 1730?-1774., 1854-01-01
  14. The vicar of Wakefield. by Oliver Goldsmith; with prefatory memo by Goldsmith. Oliver. 1730-1774., 1886-01-01

41. Enlightenment Exotica
Popular Fiction by Women, 16601730, ed. Paula Backscheider and John Richetti Oliver Goldsmith, Citizen of the World, letters 1-5.
http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/clingham/ENGL460.html
Back to Teaching Dr. Greg Clingham: Capstone: Enlightenment Exotica
clingham@bucknell.edu
EN460/660: Spring 2002
Th: 1.00-3.50 p.m.
Office: VL 233; Taylor 6
Tel: 577-1552/1188
Office Hours Mondays, 1.15 - 3.30 pm in Taylor Hall; Tuesdays, 11.00 am - 12.00 noon in VL and 1.15-3.30 pm in Taylor Hall; Thursdays, 4.00-5.00 pm in Taylor Hall, and by appointment.
Objectives The general objective of this course is to explore notions of the exotic in the British eighteenth century, and to do so in a number of specific linguistic and social contexts. The Enlightenment in Europe (and North America) is usually considered as an 18 th -century movement driven by reason, empirical science, secularism, and philosophical and cultural absolutes. It is a problematic moment in our cultural and literary history because of the strongly ambivalent judgment and feelings it still arouses: it has been lauded as a period of great scientific and artistic progress and civilization, establishing some of the best things about the modern world; and it has been criticized as hegemonic, anti-democratic, and racist — as the origins of some of the worst aspects of the modern world. This course, however, aims to consider some of the more liminal, and underworld aspects of this complex moment in our history, and to consider self-reflexive and skeptical texts and discourses that question the orthodox protocols of the culture, and run counter to the prevailing notions of the Enlightenment. We will explore four inter-connected forms of cultural representation: history and forgery; sex, sensibility and society; race and imperialism; and travel.

42. EN460: Law And Literature 1689-1832
Oliver Goldsmith, The Vicar of Wakefield; Foucault, “The Means of Correct Inns of Court and the English Bar 16801730 (Oxford Clarendon Press, 1990).
http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/clingham/humn301.html
Back to Teaching EN460: Law and Literature, 1689-1832
Greg Clingham Spring 2003. Monday, 2-5 pm
Classroom: Taylor Hall 208 Contact Vaughan Lit. 233
Taylor Hall 6
Tel: 577-1552
E-Mail: greg@clingham.com clingham@bucknell.edu
Office Hours: Mon: 11.00 am-12.00 pm
Tues and Thurs: 1.00-2.45 pm
And by appointment
General Aims
When O.J. Simpson was found not guilty in his murder trial, most people recognized that the outcome had been shaped not only by the financial resources of the accused, but also by the superior rhetorical skills of his legal team. While the prosecutors naively seemed to conduct their case as if the truth of events would spontaneously manifest itself, Cockrane, Bailey, Schiff and the others understood that the truth of events was uncertain, disputable, and capable of being associated with volatile social issues (e.g., racial profiling) that could be worked for specific ends. Most importantly, they knew that a trial has a kind of narrative coherence, and that the team that produces the most compelling story of the events under dispute, is likely to prevail with the jury. Justice and law are clearly not the same things. A relationship between narrative coherence and legal efficacy is fundamental not only to criminal and trial law, but also to political law, constitutional law, and jurisprudence. Yet the idea that our legal institutions are based on forms of argumentation that resemble literary constructions – stories, narratives, rhetoric, metaphor, character development, and so forth – is disturbing to layperson and professional alike. This course aims to investigate some important intersections between law and literature in

43. Caribbeanedu.com | CORAL
Oliver Goldsmith. Goldsmith was born November 10, 1730, in Pallas, Ireland, theson of an Anglican curate. He received a general education at Trinity
http://www.caribbeanedu.com/coral/collection/displaybook.asp?id=68

44. Reading Borough Libraries: Great People Of Reading
Oliver Goldsmith s sketch of a character based on Newbery from The Vicar of In 1730 William Carnan, printer of the Reading Mercury, employed him in
http://www.readinglibraries.org.uk/services/local/newbery.htm
Reading's Great People
Newbery, John (1713-67), publisher and bookseller
‘Delectando monemus — instruction with delight’ – The motto on the first of Newbery’s books for children. "None other than the philanthropic publisher in St Paul's Churchyard, who has written so many little books for children. He called himself their friend, but he was the friend of all mankind. He was no sooner alighted than he was in haste to be gone, for he was ever on business of the utmost importance."
Oliver Goldsmith's sketch of a character based on Newbery from The Vicar of Wakefield He was born in Waltham St Lawrence, the son of a farmer. In 1730 William Carnan, printer of the Reading Mercury, employed him in Reading. Carnan died in 1737 and Newbery inherited part of his estate, and in 1739 he married Mary, Carnan’s widow, who was six years his senior. In 1740 he began publishing books and in the next few years, at the Bible and Crown, Market Place, Reading, he established a local circulating library, a wholesale drapery, and started widening the circulation of the Reading Mercury through a network of agents. In 1743 Newbery opened a shop in London. In 1744 he published A Little Pretty Pocket Book, the first of his many children’s books, probably like some of the others written by Newbery himself. Children’s books were not unknown at the time, but Newbery was the first publisher to specialize in them and to take care over their illustrations and production, and to employ good writers such as Oliver Goldsmith. His other publications included the first children’s encyclopedia in 1745 and the first magazine for children in 1751, and famously The History of Little Goody Two-Shoes (1766). Newbery was well known in literary circles and published several adult bestsellers including works by Dr Johnson, and also supported the poet Christopher Smart, who married his stepdaughter. To commemorate his vital contribution to children’s literature, the American Library Association annually awards the prestigious Newbery medal to the most distinguished new American children's book.

45. M & S Search Results
1730. FROST, JOHN. The Class Book of American Literature from the Best Writersof Our Own Country. Goldsmith, Oliver. The Vicar of Wakefield; a Tale.
http://www.msrarebooks.com/4DCGI/W_BookListByCat/LITERATURE
Home Subjects Search Results If you don't see the books you want in our online inventory, please Click Here to let us know your specific wants. Only a small portion of our stock is online, and the majority of our sales (and most of our best books) are sold by catalogue or private quote. Click on a Title to get a detailed description of an item. Items Found 196 Author Title Pub The Juvenile Scrap-Book for 1849; a Christmas and New Year's Present for Young People. Edited by Grandfather Merryman. With Twenty-Eight Engravings on Steel. ALCOTT, A. BRONSON. Concord Days. ALCOTT, A. BRONSON. Tablets. ALCOTT, A. BRONSON. Table-Talk. ALCOTT, LOUISA M. Silver Pitchers: and Independence, a Centennial Love Story. ALCOTT, LOUISA M. Little Men: Life at Plumfield with Jo's Boys. ALCOTT, LOUISA M. Aunt Jo's Scrap-Bag. My Boys, Etc. ALCOTT, LOUISA M. Little Men: Life at Plumfield with Jo's Boys.

46. Contents Of Florida In Poetry
Oliver Goldsmith (173074) from The Deserted Village. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-94)The Fountain of Youth. William Johnson (1945) Timucuan Cadenza
http://faculty.mccfl.edu/JonesJ/FIP/CONTENTSFLA.html
Florida in Poetry:
A History of the Imagination
Eds. Jane Anderson Jones and Maurice O'Sullivan
Prologue The European Contact The American Experiment The Search for Identity ... Epilogue: A Florida Bestiary CONTENTS Introduction PROLOGUE : Have You Not Hard of Floryda? Anonymous: "Have you not hard of Floryda" Anonymous: Seminole Birth Song Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-82): St. Augustine Walt Whitman (1819-92): Orange Buds by Mail from Florida Wallace Stevens (1879-1955): O Florida, Venereal Soil Don Blanding (1894-1957): Chorus of Welcome: To the Tourists Elizabeth Bishop (1911-79): Florida William E. Taylor (1920-93): I Must Come to Terms with Florida Van Brock (1935): Apalachee Donald Justice (1925): Childhood Yvonne Sapia (1946): Inventing Poetry in Miami Ricardo Pau-Llosa (1954): Zen Walk in the Aftermath of Hurricane Andrew THE EUROPEAN CONTACT Nicholas Le Challeux (16 th c): Octet Bartolomé de Flores (16 th c): "This Fertile Paradise" from Obra neuvamente compuesta... Juan de Castellanos (1522-1607): "On Ponce de Léon" and "On the Indians of Florida" from Elegias de varones ilustres de Indias Alonso Gregorio de Escobedo (16 th c): from La Florida Oliver Goldsmith (1730-74): from The Deserted Village Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-94): The Fountain of Youth William Johnson (1945): Timucuan Cadenza Rosemary (1898-1962) and Stephen Vincent Benét (1898-1943): Hernando De Soto Will McLean (1919-90): Fort Desoto X. J. Kennedy (1929): Ponce de Léon

47. Oakland University Department Of English - Course Information
The New Child British Art and the Origins of Modern Childhood, 17301830 Oliver Goldsmith, The Deserted Village, (R 18 2844-2854)
http://www2.oakland.edu/english/connery/370_00.htm
Oakland University
Department of English Course Information English 370Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Literature Fall, 2000 367 SFH, M 6:30-9:50
Brian Connery 517 Wilson Hall, x 2267 connery@oakland.edu Course Description : We'll spend the semester exploring the literature and culture of the period 1660-1798. After a brief introduction to the ideas, politics, and mores of early modern England, we'll linger a while to explore what is arguably the high point in the history of English comedy (1660-1700) in the works of Behn and Etherege.. In prose fiction, we'll trace the rise of the English novel, through the works Behn, Defoe, Richardson, and Fielding. And in verse, we'll trace poetry's flight from the court in London to the countryside, as we read representative poems by Rochester, Behn, Swift, Finch, Thomson, Gray, and Goldsmith. Throughout the semester, we'll be trying to define the character of the age by examining the forces in cultural history that produced simultaneously the decline of the comic drama, the rise of the novel, and the rustification of verse. To further this investigation, we'll read intensively in Addison and Steele's essays from The Tatler and The Spectator

48. English 370
The New Child British Art and the Origins of Modern Childhood, 17301830 W 4 Oliver Goldsmith, “The Deserted Village,” (R 18 2844-2854)
http://www2.oakland.edu/english/connery/370-02.htm
Oakland University
Department of English Course Information English 370Literature of the Restoration and Eighteenth-Century
Fall, 2002
168 SEB, MWF 1:20-2:27 PM
Brian Connery
521 Wilson Hall, x2254
M 5:30-6:00, W 8:45-9:30, F 12:00-1:30, and by appointment
connery@oakland.edu Course Description : We'll spend the semester exploring the literature and culture of the period 1660-1798. After a brief introduction to the ideas, politics, and mores of early modern England, we'll linger a while to explore what is arguably the high point in the history of English comedy (1660-1700) in the works of Wycherley, Behn, Etherege, and Steele. In prose fiction, we'll trace the rise of the English novel, through the works Behn, Defoe, Swift, Richardson, and Fielding. And in verse, we'll trace poetry's flight from the court in London to the countryside, as we read representative poems by Rochester, Behn, Swift, Finch, Thomson, Gray, and Goldsmith. Throughout the semester, we'll be trying to define the character of the age by examining the forces in cultural history that produced simultaneously the decline of the comic drama, the rise of the novel, and the rustification of verse. To further this investigation, we’ll read in Addison and Steele’s essays from The Tatler and The Spectator , a variety of journals and periodicals including The Gentleman’s Magazine , and some of Johnson’s essays from The Idler and The Rambler . Heavy reading. Class format will largely be discussion. Students will keep a reading journal and commonplace book , make one

49. Rothgar -- Chronology
1730 The marchioness dies. The marquess marries Gabrielle de Maure of France . Oliver Goldsmith, The Traveller, a poem. December, Elf and Fort marry
http://members.shaw.ca/jobev/rothpage.html
Chronology 1725-1770
1725 The 2nd Marquess of Rothgar marries Augusta Trayce
Beowulf Arthur George Malloren born as Lord Grafton

The state of England then was:
Approximate population: 8 million
approximate population of Wales: 500,000
Approximate population of Scotland: 1.2 million
Approximate population of Ireland: 2.5 million
Approximate population of London: 800,000
Time taken to travel by coach, assuming reasonable conditions:
London to York (188 miles): 4 days
London to Dover (76 miles): 2 days London be Bath (107 miles): 3 days Important world rulers in 1725: George I is King of England Peter the Great of Russia dies, and is succeeded by his wife Catherine. Louis XV is king of France Frederick William I is king of Prussia Frederick IV is King of Denmark Some active composers: J.S. Bach, Handel, Scarlatti, Vivaldi, Gluck Some active writers in England: Jonathan Swift, Other: The novel Moll Flanders published in 1722 Also in Opening of Guy's Hospital. (First clinical hospital since the reformation.) George I revives the Order of the Bath.

50. Writers Dreamtools - Decades - 1760
Oliver Goldsmith Stan Poniatowski (Poland) Edmund Burke Edward Gibbon Joshua Reynolds The Traveller, The Vicar of Wakefield, by Oliver Goldsmith
http://www.writersdreamtools.com/view/decades/default.asp?Decade=1760

51. Writers Dreamtools - Decades - 1770
Oliver Goldsmith, 46 William Pitt, Earl of Chatham, 60 Voltaire, 83 Oliver Goldsmith s poem The Deserted Village, The History of the Earth and
http://www.writersdreamtools.com/view/decades/default.asp?Decade=1770

52. Famous - ThinkExist Quotations
1730 Oliver Goldsmith popularity 6/10 Oliver Goldsmith quotes, Susan Glaspellpopularity 7/10 Susan Glaspell quotes. 1729 Gotthold Ephraim Lessing
http://en.thinkexist.com/by/occupation/famous_dramatists/date-desc.html
Advanced Search My Account Help Add the "Dynamic Daily Quotation" to Your Site or Blog - it's Easy! ... More... Famous people: Name Nationality Occupation Date Curiosity Authors Occupations
Famous Dramatists
Sort by: Name Date Gender David Hare quotes Friedrich von Schiller quotes Marsha Norman quotes Royall Tyler quotes ... Famous Drummers
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53. Irish Authors - ThinkExist Quotations
1880 Sean O Casey popularity 0/10 Sean O Casey quotes, 1730 Oliver Goldsmithpopularity 6/10 Oliver Goldsmith quotes. 1879 Patrick Henry Pearse popularity
http://en.thinkexist.com/by/nationality/irish_authors/date-desc.html
Advanced Search My Account Help Add the "Dynamic Daily Quotation" to Your Site or Blog - it's Easy! ... More... Famous people: Name Nationality Occupation Date Curiosity Authors ... Nationality
Irish Authors
Sort by: Name Date Gender Caroline Corr quotes William Butler Yeats quotes Andrea Corr quotes George Bernard Shaw quotes ... Israeli authors
Popular Searches Quotes on Love
Inspirational Quotes

Cute Quotes

Friendship Quotes
...
Shakespeare Quotes

New funny quotes
spaceshipone

famous quotes

love quotes
... Help

54. Notes
Oliver Goldsmith Born in 1730 to an Irish clergyman. Graduated from TrinityCollege in Dublin in 1749. Settled in London in 1756 after an unsuccessful
http://www.umich.edu/~ece/student_projects/coffee/notes.html
Notes Joseph Addison: English poet, essayist, and statesman. Addison is perhaps most well known as an essayist. He wrote for several publications including the Tatler , the Spectator , and the Guardian . He was appointed secretary of state in 1717 and resigned a year later. Johann Sebastian Bach: German composer and organist. One of the greatest and most influential composers of the western world. Creating works in utilizing almost every musical form known in his period, he brought polyphonic baroque music to its peak. Married twice. He was first married to his cousin, Maria Barbara Bach, in 1707 and after her death he married Anna Magdalena Wulken in 1721. He had seven children with his first wife and thirteen with his second. He became music director of the church of St. Thomas in Leipzig in 1723 and remained in this position until his death in 1750. Charles Churchill: English poet and satirist. Born in 1731 and became a clergryman in 1756. He resigned from this curacy and wrote his first poem in 1761, The Rosciad.

55. Timeline Of English Literature
1730 James Thomson, The Seasons . 1731 Henry Fielding, Tom Thumb. 1739 War ofJenkin s Ear (with Spain) 1773 Oliver Goldsmith, She Stoops to Conquer
http://www.literatureclassics.com/ancientpaths/englishlit.html
A
Prepared by Skylar H. Burris Be aware that if you print this timeline, your computer will print all eight sections. This timeline is divided into periods as follows: Middle English 16th Century 17th Century Romantic ... 20th Century You may also wish to see an overview of the Kings and Queens of England and Britain and separate timelines for American and World literature and history. When you're finsihed, try taking the literary timeline quiz I contributed to FunTrivia. Website Table of Contents Literary Resources GRE Help
Last Revised: Sunday January 09, 2005 06:47 AM -0500 BEFORE CHRIST 1900 Construction of Stonehenge begins around this time 12-1300 Invasion of England by Celtic-speaking peoples 55-54 Julius Caesar's expeditions reach England THE OLD ENGLISH PERIOD 5-40 Reign of Cunobelinus (Cymbeline) 43 Roman conquest of England 122 Romans begin construction of Hadrian's Wall to defend Britain against invasions from the north 313 Christianity introduced in England 350 Invasion of Angles, Saxons, and Jutes begins

56. Writers On Writing - Download The E-Book
Oliver Goldsmith (173074). Natalie Goldberg. Graham Greene (1904-91). Andrew Greeley.Serge Gavronsky (1932-). Campbell Geeslin. Theresa Grant
http://www.enterprisingwriter.com/product22.htm
An Enterprising Writer
lives to write, but
realizes their craft is
also their livelihood. This site shows you
how to enjoy a
sustainable living as
a professional writer.
Home
About Us

Articles

Interviews
... Michael Meanwell P.O. Box 21, Forest Hill Victoria 3131 Australia Buy the Print Edition ~ Autographed for a limited time Tips, Tools and Techniques for Writing $uccess Writers on Writing (24 chapters, 148 pages) US$12.95 Inspirations, Observations and Affirmations from classic and contemporary writers Learn from the Masters of Writing This is the stuff of writing. This is the stuff that concerns all writers at some point in their career. And 'Writers on Writing' covers these and other important issues affecting today's wordsmith. One of the most important things about literary quotes is not just the insight they give us into famous and favorite authors. The real value is the insight they give us into the challenges, the triumphs and the trials that face each and every writer.

57. The Libraries At Dulwich College
In the period 1706 1730 a total of £17 12s 6½d is recorded as being spent onbooks. of British India and the miscellaneous works of Oliver Goldsmith.
http://www.dulwich.org.uk/libraries/history2.htm
Dulwich College Libraries
A HISTORY: PART TWO, 1706-1857
The Hume period 1706 - 1730 A study of the weekly account books during the period that James Hume MA was schoolmaster by Mr Allan Ronald have revealed a number of entries for the purchase of books. The accounts for the years 1706 to 1708 , for example, contain the following entries: Sat Dec 14 1706
Pd. Mr Hume's Bill for Books for The school 00 11 1 Sat Dec 13 1707
For a Goldman's Dictionary for The School 00 07 6 Sat Jany 24 1707/8
Pd Mr. Hume for 6 Psalm Books and School Books 00 19 10 Sat April 17 1708
On the 9th August 1723 the following resolution was passed (Alleyn Papers, vol. VI. f.158): On June 19th 1724 it was recorded in the weekly accounts book (DC MS XXII) that an order was passed "that the Library, Dining-Roome, & Chimneys be Repaired in such a manner as the Surveyor shall Direct and that the two Roomes be laied into one and made Commodious for a Library."
Catalogue of the College Library, 1729

58. Since Will
Plays now dealt with ordinary people as characters, such as in She Stoops toConquer by Oliver Goldsmith (17301734), and The School for Scandal by Richard
http://www.tctwebstage.com/sincewill.htm
The History of Theatre in the 18th, 19th and 20th Centuries is one of the increasing commercialization of the art, accompanied by technological innovations, the introduction of serious critical review, expansion of the subject matters portrayed to include ordinary people, and an emphasis on more natural forms of acting. Theatre, which had been dominated by the Church for centuries, and then by the tastes of monarchs for more than 200 years, became accessible to merchants, industrialists, the bourgeoise and then the masses. In this section we give a brief sketch of the development of theatre during the last three centuries.
The Eighteenth Century
Theatre in England during the 18th Century was dominated by an actor of genius, David Garrick (1717-1779), who was also a manager and playwright. Garrick emphasized a more natural form of speaking and acting that mimicked life. His performances had a tremendous impact on the art of acting, from which ultimately grew movements such as realism and naturalism. Garrick finally banished the audience from the stage, which shrunk to behind the proscenium where the actors now performed among the furnishings, scenery and stage settings.
Plays now dealt with ordinary people as characters, such as in

59. Rare, Out Of Print, Antique And Used Books, Maps And Prints From E. P. Waggener
She Stoops to Conquer Goldsmith, Oliver; edited and with introduction The School For Scandal, By Richard Brinsley Sheridan Goldsmith, Oliver, 1730?
http://www.booksandcollectibles.com.au/dump/E_P_Waggener_Sons_Booksellers/books-
Shasta And Rogue: A Coyote Story : Behme, Robert Lee
Shasta And Rogue: A Coyote Story : Behme, Robert Lee

Shasta And Rogue: A Coyote Story : Robert L. Behme

Shattered : Koontz, Dean
Shasta And Rogue: A Coyote Story : Behme, Robert Lee
Shasta And Rogue: A Coyote Story : Behme, Robert Lee

Shasta And Rogue: A Coyote Story : Robert L. Behme

Shattered : Koontz, Dean
...
Shyness : What It Is, What To Do About It : Zimbardo, Philip G.

60. Rare, Out Of Print, Antique And Used Books, Maps And Prints From The Antique Boo
Goldsmith, Oliver. $60.00 THE VICTOR BOOK OF OPERAS. BIANCOLLI, Louis BAGAR THE WEDGWOOD CIRCLE, 17301897. WEDGWOOD, Barbara Hensleigh. $33.00
http://www.booksandcollectibles.com.au/dump/The_Antique_Bookshop_Curios/books-00
THE ROMANCE OF THE SWAG. : LAWSON, Henry.
THE ROMANCE OF THE SWAG. : LAWSON, Henry.

THE ROMANCE OF WATER. : WENDT, Herbert.

THE ROMANCE OF WINDSOR CASTLE. : BOLITHO, Hector.
THE ROMANCE OF THE SWAG. : LAWSON, Henry.
THE ROMANCE OF THE SWAG. : LAWSON, Henry.

THE ROMANCE OF WATER. : WENDT, Herbert.

THE ROMANCE OF WINDSOR CASTLE. : BOLITHO, Hector.
...
THE TALISMAN ITALIAN COOK BOOK. : BONI, Ada.

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