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the water is wide

[167] A report, issued in November 2009, suggests that by 2030, in some developing regions of the world, water demand will exceed supply by 50%. Thus the surface tension has no opposing force and the water level rises to maximum height possible in the capillary. Access to safe drinking water has improved over the last decades in almost every part of the world, but approximately one billion people still lack access to safe water and over 2.5 billion lack access to adequate sanitation. Both Ritchie (p. 18) and Lomax (No. 142. Sharp wanted to revitalize these songs that he saw as "our national heritage, or some salvage of it" (Introduction, p. ix). The World Health Organization estimates that safe water could prevent 1.4 million child deaths from diarrhoea each year.[67]. 204, This particular lines were also used as the fourth verse in a, Of course this doesn't mean that "Oh Waly, Waly" already existed at that time. All his song-sheets at the allegro Catalogue are dated that way. Campbell & Sharp 1917, No. 1923, pp. For example he – who was a gifted songwriter himself - introduced a consistent rhyme scheme: in all verses it is, One version (text A) was sent to him by Miss Octavia L. Hoare, a correspondent from Cornwall. ), O waly, waly, up the bank : favorite Scotch song / with new symphony & accompaniments by J. Macpherson (1878), And of course it found a place in scholarly publications like. In the developing world, 90% of all wastewater still goes untreated into local rivers and streams. "[93] The latest dietary reference intake report by the United States National Research Council in general recommended, based on the median total water intake from US survey data (including food sources): 3.7 liters (0.81 imp gal; 0.98 U.S. gal) for men and 2.7 liters (0.59 imp gal; 0.71 U.S. gal) of water total for women, noting that water contained in food provided approximately 19% of total water intake in the survey.[94]. Low down in the Broom. The maid's complaint for Jockey, Printed by M. Randall, Stirling [, The crafty farmer : To which are added, The unfortunate swain. For example, cotton: 1 kg of cotton—equivalent of a pair of jeans—requires 10.9 cubic meters (380 cu ft) water to produce. [78] For practical purposes though, a metallic reference standard was required, one thousand times more massive, the kilogram. I presume Lomax - like Sharp with his composite text - tried to "reassemble" a "Folk"-version of  "Waly, Waly". More advanced techniques exist, such as reverse osmosis. 254, pp. The toper's advice. But I assume that he simply wanted to obscure the fact that he had learned it from a book. Interestingly this particular stanza has occasionally infiltrated other songs: one called "Twenty, Eighteen" from Norfolk that was published in 1893 in Lucy Broadwood's and J. Towards the end of the century the song was published in all major collections of Scottish songs. Water governance is the set of formal and informal processes through which decisions related to water management are made. Some keep fish and other flora and fauna inside aquariums or ponds for show, fun, and companionship. I. In anabolism, water is removed from molecules (through energy requiring enzymatic chemical reactions) in order to grow larger molecules (e.g., starches, triglycerides, and proteins for storage of fuels and information). Browse our 15 arrangements of "The Water Is Wide." It was a year that changed his life, and one that introduced a group of poor black children to a world they did not know existed. 65, p. 220-222 and M. E. Henry 1938, No. In the allegro Catalogue this edition is dated as from "between 1780 and 1812". This is clearly a relic of a different song although Sharp apparently also regarded it as related to the old Scottish "Oh Waly, Waly" because it included a variant form of one of its stanzas: Two years later Mrs. Mogg sang another version with two different verses (Karpeles, p. 173, Sharp Ms.: CJS2/9/1027 (text), CJS2/10/984 (tune) at The Full English Digital Archive; also quoted by Allen, p. 165): The pieces Sharp collected from Caroline Cox and James Thomas were not remainders of "Waly, Waly" but fragments of an old broadside ballad that was known under the titles "The Unfortunate Swain", "Picking Lilies" and "The Maid's Complaint". The formation of stars is accompanied by a strong outward wind of gas and dust. He then compiled his own new "old" song from those fragments and published it as "Oh Waly, Waly" in 1906 in Folk Songs From Somerset and in 1916 in One Hundred Folk Songs. Instead there was a rather strange line: "Was e'er I taught so poor a wit". Christopher James Bearman, The English Folk Music Movement 1898-1914, Diss. Plato believed the shape of water is an icosahedron which accounts for why it is able to flow easily compared to the cube-shaped earth.[179]. Of the total volume of global freshwater, an estimated 69 percent is stored in glaciers and permanent snow cover; 30 percent is in groundwater; and the remaining 1 percent in lakes, rivers, the atmosphere, and biota. This song-sheet has no imprint but in the English Short Title Catalogue "1750?" The lass of Primrose-hill. The tune used in his book was the one sent to him by Miss Hoare together with the text quoted above. Today The Water Is Wide" is firmly established as an "old Folk song". It is dangerous to use water on fires involving oils and organic solvents because many organic materials float on water and the water tends to spread the burning liquid. And now we have arrived again at the text I have quoted in the very first chapter: This reduced version looks in fact very close to the original "Oh Waly, Waly": variant forms of two of these four verses – the third and the fourth - had already been part of that old Scottish ballad when it was first published by Thomson and Ramsay in 1726. 18H, p. 110, sung by Mrs Dunagan, St. Helen's, Kentucky, "Deep In Love (Must I Be Bound Or Must I Go Free? Through erosion, runoff shapes the environment creating river valleys and deltas which provide rich soil and level ground for the establishment of population centers. [75] It assessed the current availability of water for agriculture on a global scale and mapped out locations suffering from water scarcity. In this case even the "childish part" got lost: We have even one single version from North America, another fragment of two verses that were recorded by Cecil Sharp from the singing of Jane Gentry in 1916 in North Carolina (Sharp Ms.: CJS2/9/2544 (text), CJS2/10/3456 (tune) at The Full English Digital Archive; see also Smith 1998, p. 157). LXVI, p. 32/33). The only differences to the other texts were that one of the original verses was missing and that the lilies took over the main role in the first verse: Four copies of another edition called "The Maid's Complaint" - also with eight instead of nine verses - can be found among the Madden Ballads (8-5377; 9-5914 & 6132; 10-7033). Water, and to a lesser but still significant extent, ice, are also responsible for a large amount of sediment transport that occurs on the surface of the earth. I really wonder where he got that information. In addition, a ritual bath in pure water is performed for the dead in many religions including Islam and Judaism. Some verses from these texts were then borrowed and included in "new" songs like "The Unfortunate Swain" and "I'm Often Drunk And Seldom Sober" that were published on popular broadside sheets during the second half of the 18th century and in the early 19th century. "Prince Cobourg's Lamentation For The Loss Of Princess Charlotte" (Harding B 16(274a)) was written after the death of the popular princess in 1817. 1776, Vol. Another one - "O love is warming [...]" - is clearly derived from "I'm Often Drunk" (collected in 1916, Cox, No. It seems that "Oh Waly, Waly" was immensely popular during the 18th and 19th century. Swedish Opera singer Christina Nilsson performed it her concerts and her version was published in 1870 in The Authorized Edition of [her] Songs as sung by her in America (available at the Lester S. Levy Collection of Sheet Music), but with a new tune written by one Jacques Blumenthal. On the surface of the Earth, water is important in both chemical and physical weathering processes. A variant of the second can be found in a manuscript from the 1620s (see Child IV,  No. The same tune with only two verses can also be found in Sam Henry's Songs of the People (Huntington & Hermann 1990,  p. 383). The Seekers: 1964-1965 Tracklist. 176-7). The first verse about "the ripest of apples" was most likely developed from or inspired by the verse starting with "If love is handsome [...]" in "I'm Often Drunk", the one borrowed from "Oh Waly, Waly". The United Nations World Water Development Report 2, "ĀB i. O waly, waly. and he took the tune and four of the five verses - one of them known from the Scottish "Oh Waly, Waly" - from this variant: The second one was from James Thomas (1906, Karpeles 35B, p. 172; Sharp Ms.: CJS2/9/989 (text), CJS2/10/923 (tune) at The Full English Digital Archive). ), English Folk Songs from the Southern Appalachians, Collected by Cecil Sharp, 1932, No. Did the author of "Arthur's Seat" borrow these stanzas from "Oh Waly, Waly". Already in 1803 a fragmentary version consisting of only three verses but including a tune was published by James Johnson in the sixth volume of his, Another version of this song can be found in the Thomas Hepple Manuscript. I really wonder why this particular variant was only found in the Southwest and the Northeast of England and nowhere in between. Arranged [for S.A.T.B.] According to the British British Book Trade Index Mrs. Swindells was active as a printer between 1790 and 1828 while Mr. Bloomer was in this business between 1817 and 1827. The text is very similar to the printed versions and one may assume that he had a broadside or a chapbook with that song at hand. 1923, pp. Density of liquid = 1 0 3 k g / m 3, surface tension = 7 2 × 1 0 − 3 N / m and g = 9. Nevertheless, these properties are sometimes desirable. Please update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. 1795, Madden Ballads 2-1082, ESTC T198961): In 1905 Folklore collector H. E. D. Hammond noted a song from Jacob Baker in Dorset (Broadwood et al. A Musical Wreath of Scotish Song by John Turnball and Patrick Buchan (Glasgow 1841, p. 54), George F. Graham's The Songs of Scotland (1848, Vol. For this reason, water is a strategic resource in the globe and an important element in many political conflicts. II. Seeger's version has become a standard. In the United States, cooling power plants is the largest use of water.[103]. [82], Healthy kidneys can excrete 0.8 to 1 liter of water per hour, but stress such as exercise can reduce this amount. Two verses were dropped, the first of the longer version  ("Many cold winters nights I've travell'd [...]") and one of the two borrowed from "Oh Waly, Waly" ("I leane'd my backagainst the wall [...]". But at least one American variant of "Little Sparrow/Fair And Tender Ladies" quotes extensively from this song (M. H. Henry, p. 261). These verses were then disseminated by songs like "The Unfortunate Swain", "I'm Often Drunk", "The Wheel Of Fortune", "Forsaken Lover", "The Effects Of Love" and therefore the people kept them in their memory. Two capillary tubes of same diameter are put vertically one each in two … By all accounts "The Unfortunate Swain" remained popular for considerable time. Aquatic vertebrates must obtain oxygen to survive, and they do so in various ways. Water has been detected in interstellar clouds within our galaxy, the Milky Way. Water that is not potable may be made potable by filtration or distillation, or by a range of other methods. In the manuscript he quotes the related verses from  "Oh Waly, Waly", "Picking Lilies", "The Distressed Virgin" and Johnson's "Down In Yon Meadow" and also refers to a broadside of "The Unfortunate Swain". [68] Some 50 countries, with roughly a third of the world's population, also suffer from medium or high water stress and 17 of these extract more water annually than is recharged through their natural water cycles. The study of the distribution of water is hydrography. Pollution includes discharged solutes (chemical pollution) and discharged coolant water (thermal pollution). Water is also used in many industrial processes and machines, such as the steam turbine and heat exchanger, in addition to its use as a chemical solvent. Much of the text sounds very clumsy and in the fourth as well as in the last verse there aren't even any rhymes. Interestingly this particular stanza has occasionally infiltrated other songs: one called "Twenty, Eighteen" from Norfolk that was published in 1893 in Lucy Broadwood's and J. We have even one single version from North America, another fragment of two verses that were recorded by Cecil Sharp from the singing of Jane Gentry in 1916 in North Carolina (Sharp Ms.: Some of the tunes presented here are clearly related to the one published by Johnson in the. That one was published in two versions. 101B,  p. 287) is in fact "The Butcher Boy" with a mutilated variant of  this verse - without the "childish part" - added at the end of the song. Ecological processes with hydrology are in the focus of ecohydrology. For a detailed discussion of its physical and chemical properties, see, "H2O" redirects here. Variants of this verse were occasionally used in other songs but none of them predates the broadsides with "I'm Often Drunk" that was apparently first printed around 1820. 1780, ESTC, The writer of  "The Effects of Love. To avoid a global water crisis, farmers will have to strive to increase productivity to meet growing demands for food, while industries and cities find ways to use water more efficiently. Follow @JuergenKloss 1166, p. 252, as sung by Alexander Robb, 1906 ("Waly, Waly, Gin Love Be Bonny"), "The Water Is Wide", as sung by Pete Seeger on American Favourite Ballads, Vol. 11, p. 441). 18 germinal an 3 (7 April 1795), here L'Histoire Du Mètre, La Détermination De L'Unité De Poids. At least it had been used in the broadside ballad "The Seamans leave taken of his sweetest Margery" (see Pepys 4.158, EBBA) long before "Waly, Waly" was published for the very first time: A different version of this verse is part of at least two variants of "The Unfortunate Swain" from oral tradition that I have already mentioned: one from Cornwall that can be found in Baring-Gould’s manuscripts and the other a fragment from Newcastle (Notes And Queries, 3rd Ser., Vol. Water that is not fit for drinking but is not harmful to humans when used for swimming or bathing is called by various names other than potable or drinking water, and is sometimes called safe water, or "safe for bathing". According to most experts "Oh Waly, Waly" apparently predates "Jamie Douglas" (see Bronson III, p.258; Friedman 1956, p. 101, Allen 1954, p. 166). Acids have pH values less than 7 while bases have values greater than 7. According to John Moulden (Mudcat Discussion Board, 31.01.2000) this strange bilingual text was published by Haly in Cork "c 1840". Directed by John Kent Harrison. This occurs when a region receives consistently below average precipitation either due to its topography or due to its location in terms of latitude. 1923, pp. Apparently  the song was mainly disseminated with the help of broadsides and other printed matter. Metabolism is the sum total of anabolism and catabolism. There we can find the variants of this song he had collected as well as important additional information. But the anonymous author of this piece  was not necessarily one of the great poets of his era. But no matter who was involved in the creation of "The Water Is Wide": the song is still popular today and in the end that's what counts. What he regarded as "Folk"-versions of that old Scottish ballad were in fact mutilated fragments of two different broadside-songs. That was the first time I heard The Water Is Wide". But this particular melody is very obviously not identical to the one used by Mrs. Cox. Variants called "Peggy Gordon" with more and different verses were recorded in Canada since 1943 (Roud # 2280; see the versions on Alan Mills and Jean Carignan, Songs, Fiddle Tunes and a Folk-Tale from Canada, Folkways FW 03532, 1961 and Maritime Folk Songs: from the Collection of Helen Creighton, Folkways FW 04307). The Kelvin temperature scale of the SI system was based on the triple point of water, defined as exactly 273.16 K (0.01 °C; 32.02 °F), but as of May 2019 is based on the Boltzmann constant instead. John Harkness in Preston started his business only in 1840 but he also printed a copy of this song (Madden Ballads 9-6415). The melody was used for example for teaching the violin (, "Oh Waly, Waly" survived into the 20th century and was also recorded during the Folk Revival era, for example by Hermes Nye (, Allan Ramsay's version of "Oh Waly, Waly" had a long and honorable history and it is still performed today. Their copyright was acknowledged by Pete Seeger and Oak Publications when they published "The Water Is Wide" in 1960 in the songbook American Favorite Ballads. 235-6 in the reprint Glasgow 1869). Guy Carawan recorded it also in 1958 for Folkways (FW03544) and in his liner notes he wrote that Seeger had taught it to him while "driving along in a car in upstate New York". II, Edinburgh 1881  (available for download as pdf-files at University of Edinburgh, School of literature, Languages and Cultures, Celtic & Scottish Studies, John Harrington Cox, Folk-Songs Of The South, Cambridge 1925 (available at the, Henry George Farmer, Foreword to Orpheus Caledonius. 2, SBG/3/5/8A, at The Full English). 18-28, Joshua Leavitt, The Christian Lyre, Vol. It's in no way related to any of the others collected with this song. It was known not only in London but also published  in other parts of England. Water related conventions are United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD), International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships, United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea and Ramsar Convention. It seems this song was very popular. It was published regularly – though sometimes with different titles - for at least 70 years. "Deep In Love", tune, "Sent by Lady Lethbridge as sung by her old nurse, from Sabine Baring-Gould Manuscripts, Personal Copy Vol.I, LXXXVI. Freshwater is a renewable resource, recirculated by the natural hydrologic cycle, but pressures over access to it result from the naturally uneven distribution in space and time, growing economic demands by agriculture and industry, and rising populations. Water runoff often collects over watersheds flowing into rivers. We again can find the song in different surroundings. 69-70 and HAM/2/5/15 at The Full English) - "is very similar to that printed and published by Sharp [...] we may say that, this tune, in its various forms, is the one proper to the song 'Down In The Meadows'" (i. e. "The Unfortunate Swain"). The verse with the "cockle shells" is missing. (The Dead Sea, known for its ultra-high salinity levels of between 30–40%, is really a salt lake.). The melody, by the way, is very different different from all the others we have come across so far: In all these more or less fragmentary versions one can find a combination of verses that is - to my knowledge - only known from "The Unfortunate Swain" and its off-springs. A version with a tune and four verses - including variant forms of two we know from the modern "The Water Is Wide" - can be found in William Thomson's, Thomson was a Scottish singer who had moved to London. [109], According to a report published by the Water Footprint organization in 2010, a single kilogram of beef requires 15 thousand liters (3.3×10^3 imp gal; 4.0×10^3 U.S. gal) of water; however, the authors also make clear that this is a global average and circumstantial factors determine the amount of water used in beef production. In 1960 Alan Lomax published a slightly different version called "Love Is Pleasin'" in his, Oh, love is a pleasin' and love is teasin', The new third verse - I don't know if it was inserted by Lomax himself or  by Jean Ritchie - is of course well-known from "Waly, Waly" but in fact much older. Mrs. Cox used five of the original nine verses - the first, then the seventh, the sixth, the fifth and the last - while Mr. Thomas only recalled four of them: the first, the second, the sixth and the third: This seems to be the earliest of the available extant texts. Most interesting are the two stanzas that were apparently borrowed from "Oh Waly, Waly": the third with "I lean'd my back against an oak" and the sixth with "love is handsome and love is pretty". A second version of "I'm Often Drunk" is little bit shorter. [86][87][88][89][90][91] Adequate fluid intake is helpful in preventing constipation. In this case he would have marked "Oh Waly,Waly" not with a "Z" as an old song but with a "Q, old songs with additions". In 1965 Buffy St. Marie recorded a much longer version of "Must I Go Bound" (at the moment available at YouTube) for her LP Many A Mile: This version has been supplemented with some verses from Pete Seeger's "The Water Is Wide". [168], 1.6 billion people have gained access to a safe water source since 1990. Both are about love growing cold with the time and offer a similar message although the new variant sounds a little more drastic. Later Carl Sandburg  introduced a minimalist version in his American Songbag (1927, p. 16). Perhaps this was the "original" tune of the song. 1, London, New York & Toronto 1974, Ann Keith, 'Most Suitable For Purposes Of Publication': Cecil Sharp's Folk Song Texts, in: Brio, Vol. Atmospheric water generators are in development. A. Fuller Maitland's English County Songs (pp. J. W. Allen (p. 163 & 171) notes that "a similar tune to this occurs in a version of 'Lord Thomas and Fair Ellinor" and again in a version of [...] 'Young Hunting', from the Appalachians", all collected by Cecil Sharp in 1916. Joseph Phair (Madden Ballads 7-4995) was busy in London between 1827 and 1853 (see, A second version of "I'm Often Drunk" is little bit shorter. In addition, some sports, like ice hockey and ice skating, are played on ice. 11, 1867, p. 441): It was also included in some variants of "Fair And Tender Ladies"/"Little Sparrow". Both Ritchie (p. 18) and Lomax (No. In fact it was mostly a compilation of verses from earlier broadsides: at least five of the nine were borrowed from other songs. The Sailor's Lamentation. The first verse looks a little bit different and in the last a correct rhyme-word was inserted into the first line: Two broadsides without imprint have also survived. Unfortunately it is not known where she had learned it and to my knowledge this particular melody hasn't been found elsewhere. Or else what she sang for Sharp is also derived from the undocumented English predecessor of these American tunes, perhaps a hymn learned  in school or in the church or a popular song from the early 18th century.. Water boils at lower temperatures with the lower air pressure that occurs at higher elevations. Water also plays many critical roles within the field of food science. For the revised edition published in 1905 the song was rechristened to "A Ship Came Sailing" (No. The Water is Wide book. Third Series by Cecil Sharp and Charles Marson. Maybe this line was the starting-point for the development of the key verses  of "Little Sparrow". More than 2.2 million people died in 2000 from waterborne diseases (related to the consumption of contaminated water) or drought. In fact this is a edited version of the two-verse fragment of "The Unfortunate Swain" collected by Herbert Hughes and published as "Must I Go Bound?" by R. Redman from collected version by C. J. What about the tune used by Mrs. Cox? But he also added something new by changing the last word of the first line from "pretty" to "fine" and the start of the second line from "love is charming" to "love's a jewel": In Pete Seeger's version (1958) the second line looks a little bit different - "Gay as a jewel" instead of "love's a jewel" - and the traditional "morning dew" is changed to "summer dew". I am inclined to think that they were all applied to the song at a later point,  perhaps by singers who had learned the text from a broadside or chapbook. Water, ice and snow are also central to many sports and other forms of entertainment, such as swimming, pleasure boating, boat racing, surfing, sport fishing, diving, ice skating and skiing Etymology. Interestingly his version B contains the phrase "marble stones" that is of course known from the broadside of "I'm Often Drunk". With physical exertion and heat exposure, water loss will increase and daily fluid needs may increase as well. Significant environmental damage has been caused: for example, the diversion of water by the former Soviet Union from the Amu Darya and [[Syr Darya] rivers to produce cotton was largely responsible for the disappearance of the Aral Sea. Governments in many countries have programs to distribute water to the needy at no charge. 204, p. 93): This particular lines were also used as the fourth verse in a Cantus for three voices that was published in Aberdeen in 1666 in the second edition of Thomas Davidson's Cantus, songs and fancies, to three, four, or five parts (ESTC R213597, available  at EEBO, image 48): Of course this doesn't mean that "Oh Waly, Waly" already existed at that time. 487-8, in the edition published in 1839): Another version of this song can be found in the Thomas Hepple Manuscript. 179B, p. 258) or to "Got no wings, nor I can't fly" (Sharp, No. The song now starts with a slightly edited variant of what was originally the second verse. Supercritical water has recently been a topic of research. [61] Condensed water in the air may also refract sunlight to produce rainbows. But that was not correct. [81] Medical literature favors a lower consumption, typically 1 liter of water for an average male, excluding extra requirements due to fluid loss from exercise or warm weather. Water is also central to acid-base neutrality and enzyme function. St. Helens is about 25 miles from Manchester and according to the Book Trade Index one Daniel Liptrot was busy there as a printer in 1841. The variant in  Ramsay's "Oh Waly, Waly, Gin Love Be Bonny" from the 1720s is much more similar to the verse as we know it today: For the broadside text of "I'm Often Drunk And Seldom Sober" - published around 1820 - the words were modernized and the anachronisms deleted: When Mrs. Mogg from Somerset recalled this verse in 1904 for Cecil Sharp is was nearly identical to the one on the broadside. A. Fuller Maitland's. "The simplicity of the original has been spoiled by several flourishes introduced into it by tasteless and ignorant collectors. In inorganic reactions, water is a common solvent, dissolving many ionic compounds, as well as other polar compounds such as ammonia and compounds closely related to water. [178], The Ancient Greek philosopher Empedocles held that water is one of the four classical elements along with fire, earth and air, and was regarded as the ylem, or basic substance of the universe. 2, After the turn of the century the collectors still found more relics of the song. But that one is completely different from Miss Hoare's. learn … It causes health impacts and damage to biodiversity. Pitts' address on this broadside is "6, Great St. Andrew Street, 7 Dials". That seems to me highly unlikely because that would have been nearly 30 years before the longer version and more than three decades before other prints of the shorter text. Instead the variant later used in "I'm Often Drunk" ("Love is handsome, love is pretty […]") prevailed and started  a life on its own, both as a floating verse and as the lead stanza for new songs. It carries out this role by allowing organic compounds to react in ways that ultimately allow replication. It was first made up by a writer of broadside ballads and then later edited both by an old lady from Somerset and an academic Folklorist. [106] Solutes in water lower water activity—this is important to know because most bacterial growth ceases at low levels of water activity. 70, p. 136): The new third verse - I don't know if it was inserted by Lomax himself or  by Jean Ritchie - is of course well-known from "Waly, Waly" but in fact much older. The collective mass of water found on, under, and over the surface of a planet is called the hydrosphere. Tunes and Songs as Sung by Pete Seeger (Oak Publications, New York 1960). There he obviously had great success and was "favoured at court on account of his Scots songs" (Farmer 1962, p. I).

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