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Topic: Lyrical Ballads


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 Pace, 'Wordsworth, the _Lyrical Ballads_, and Literary and Social Reform in Nineteenth Century America' - The ...
The distinct allure of the Lyrical Ballads in America was its focus on the mind in a state of excitement.
Although Brownson's attacks were aimed at the Wordsworth of the Lyrical Ballads, this Wordsworth was the one after whom Dix modeled her own writing for changes in state legislation regarding the poor.
The Twice—Told Tales and the Lyrical Ballads become during their sympathetic reading and writing, mental autobiographies (the (scarlet) letters stitched to the psyches) of their writers and readers.
http://www.rc.umd.edu/praxis/lyrical/pace/wordsworth.html   (6765 words)

  
 Schneider - Lyrical Ballads and Beatles
For the first edition of Lyrical Ballads, which was published anonymously, Wordsworth wrote a brief introductory "Advertisement" in which he carefully avoided suggesting that the collection was the product of two poets.
This anxiety to "suit the common taste" belies the confidence of Wordsworth's declaration in the preface to the Lyrical Ballads that the poems would "create the taste by which they were to be enjoyed." But Wordsworth's growing discomfort with the Ancient Mariner did not really arise from the supposedly off-putting "strangeness" of its language.
Wordsworth and Coleridge originally conceived of Lyrical Ballads as a moneymaking scheme: needing a little cash to finance a walking tour to the Valley of Stones, a late eighteenth-century tourist destination in western England, they thought they might co-write a few poems for publication in magazines.
http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/humnet/anthropoetics/ap0402/beat.htm   (4492 words)

  
 summary lyrical ballads: termpapersclub.com- a website club for term papers, essays, book reports downloads
In the 18th century, poetry has evolved into a different form with the emergence of lyrical ballads, a type of poetry popularized by William Wordsworth and Samuel Coleridge in their volume collection of poems, entitled, “Lyrical Ballads,” written in 1798.
This form of poetry became prevalent during the Romanticism period of English literature, a movement wherein “reliance on imagination and subjectivity of approach, freedom of thought and expression, and an idealization of nature” are the dominant styles used in composing a lyrical ballad (Microsoft Encarta 2002).
If you can not find a term paper on "summary lyrical ballads", professional writers at termpapersclub.com can write you a custom term paper on summary lyrical ballads.
http://www.termpapersclub.com/term-papers/713420/summary-lyrical-ballads.html   (412 words)

  
 [No title]
In his 'Preface' to the 1798 edition of the Lyrical Ballads Wordsworth presented his poetic manifesto, indicating the extent to which he saw his poetry, and that of Coleridge, as breaking away from the 'artificiality', 'triviality' or over-elaborate and contrived quality of eighteenth century poetry.
The 'Preface' covers a number of issues and is wide-ranging in its survey of the place of the Lyrical Ballads on the contemporary literary scene.
The 'Preface' is itself a masterpiece of English prose, exemplary in its lucid yet passionate defence of a literary style that could be popular without compromising artistic and poetic standards.
http://www.newi.ac.uk/rdover/wworth/5a57d4d.htm   (438 words)

  
 William Wordsworth: Poems (18. Lyrical Ballads (1798) (co-authored with Samuel Taylor Coleridge))
Lyrical Ballads (1798) (co-authored with Samuel Taylor Coleridge).
Lyrical Ballads (1798) (co-authored with Samuel Taylor Coleridge)
Lyrical Ballads (1798) (co-authored with Samuel Taylor Coleridge))
http://www.farid-hajji.net/books/en/Wordsworth_William/po-chap18.html   (61 words)

  
 Érudit RON n26 2002 : Anderson : "Enjoyments, of a [. . .] more exquisite nature": Wordsworth and Commodity Culture
Wordsworth introduced Lyrical Ballads in 1798 with an "Advertisement," penned for the purpose.
It does so by examining his unpublished poem "The Ruined Cottage" and his preface to Lyrical Ballads in two related contexts: the discourse of advertising and the history of consumer culture, including the institution of peddling.
This essay seeks to explore Wordsworth’s ambivalent relation to the commodity culture emerging in England around the turn of the Nineteenth-century.
http://www.erudit.org/revue/ron/2002/v/n26/005697ar.html   (7835 words)

  
 Samuel T. Coleridge
English lyrical poet, critic, and philosopher, whose LYRICAL BALLADS, written with William Wordsworth, started the English Romantic movement.
Although Coleridge's poetic achievement was small in quantity, his metaphysical anxiety, anticipating modern existentialism, has gained him reputation as an authentic visionary.
'The Rime of the Ancient Mariner', a 625-line ballad, is among his essential works.
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/coleridg.htm   (1356 words)

  
 Romanticism On the Net 9 (February 1998)
Historians of printing, bibliographers, textual editors, and those interested in the publication history of Lyrical Ballads should find such an edition useful, both as a tool in their own research, and as a convenient means of teaching bibliographical and editorial skills to the next generation of scholars.
The alterations to Lyrical Ballads are not quite so striking, but they are no less interesting to the textual critic and the bibliographer.
We have keyed our texts to specific copies of Lyrical Ballads, with the intention of preserving all of the known printed textual variants, as well as recording the ways in which the collection itself changed from edition to edition.
http://users.ox.ac.uk/~scat0385/electronicLB.html   (4669 words)

  
 Underwood, "How to Save 'Tintern Abbey' from New-Critical Pedagogy (in Three Minutes Fifty-Six Seconds)", ...
By using popular music to dislodge modernist idealizations of high culture, and a critical reading of Wordsworth to dislodge romantic (and late-Marxist) idealizations of popular authenticity, I hope to encourage a reading of lyric that is passionate and yet clear-eyed about the social underpinnings of culture.
This was a move that made particular sense to me because the music popular in my own college years was specifically Romantic.
In particular, as I have already hinted, New-Critical pedagogy defines written lyric poetry as an inverse image of popular sentimentality.
http://www.rc.umd.edu/praxis/contemporary/underwood/underwood.html   (2690 words)

  
 Romanticism On the Net 9 (February 1998)
After all, the life into which 'Lyrical Ballads' sees is freighted with obdurate strangenesses.
Instead, it is the surface of the moss which draws his lyrical attention:
Instead of asking what the Wordsworthian ideology suppresses, we might wonder how 'Tintern Abbey' works to alter 'Lyrical Ballads' itself, to create a single and continuous project out of the 'strangeness and aukwardness' encountered earlier on.
http://users.ox.ac.uk/~scat0385/innovationLB.html   (3776 words)

  
 Island of Freedom - William Wordsworth
As he advanced in age, Wordsworth's poetic vision and inspiration dulled; his later, more rhetorical, moralistic poems cannot be compared to the lyrics of his youth, although a number of them are illumined by the spark of his former greatness.
In 1802 Wordsworth married Mary Hutchinson, a childhood friend, who is portrayed in the charming lyric "She Was a Phantom of Delight." In 1807 Poems in Two Volumes was published.
This work is generally taken to mark the beginning of the romantic movement in English poetry.
http://www.island-of-freedom.com/WORDSWOR.HTM   (1129 words)

  
 Lyrical Ballads of Coleridge and Wordsworth
As a new movement, the Lyrical Ballads incorporate a certain amount of instability in their contrivance of an unexplored poetic territory.
It was this intimacy as enthusiastic supporters of the revolution that led them to collaborate on the revolutionary Lyrical Ballads, published in 1798, helping to inaugurate the Romantic era in England.
The period in which Coleridge and Wordsworth were writing was that of the politically charged atmosphere of the late eighteenth century as the revolutions of both America and France affected the consciousness of the time.
http://www.radessays.com/viewpaper/4905/Human_Resources.html   (259 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge
His works include Poems on Various Subjects (1796), Lyrical Ballads (1798) written with Wordsworth and which includes The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, conversation poems Fears in Solitude, Frost at Midnight, This Lime-Tree Bower My Prison, The Nightingale and the "dream" poem Kubla Khan (1797-8).
http://netpoets.com/classic/016000.htm   (245 words)

  
 Lyrical Ballads and Related Writings (New Riverside Editions) by William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Daniel ...
In addition to the complete 1798 London edition of Lyrical Ballads, this volume contains a generous sampling of ballads, rustic and humanitarian poetry, and nature poems by the poets' contemporaries; literary, philosophical, and political backgrounds by essayists such as Rousseau, Adam Smith, and Wollstonecraft; and reactions to Lyrical Ballads.
Lyrical Ballads and Related Writings (By Daniel Robinson)
1800: The New Lyrical Ballads (By Nicola Trott (Editor))
http://www.bookfinder4u.com/detail/0618107320.html   (230 words)

  
 The Rationale of Hypertext
We have had many fine editions of ballads and songs since the late eighteenth-century, but none has been able to accommodate, except in minimal ways, the auditional features of the texts.
And yet it is an historical fact that for fifty years and more those traditions were a dominating influence on imaginative writing that exploited relatively brief forms (like lyric and short story).
Arthur Henry Hallam, "On Some of the Characteristics of Modern Poetry, and on the Lyrical Poems of Alfred Tennyson", reprinted from the Englishman's Magazine (August, 1931) in T. Vail Motter, ed.,
http://jefferson.village.virginia.edu/public/jjm2f/rationale.html   (8510 words)

  
 William Wordsworth
William Wordsworth started with Samuel Taylor Coleridge the English Romantic movement with their collection LYRICAL BALLADS in 1798.
Encouraged by Coleridge and stimulated by the close contact with nature, Wordsworth composed his first masterwork, Lyrical Ballads, which opened with Coleridge's 'Ancient Mariner.' About 1798 he started to write a large and philosophical autobiographical poem, completed in 1805, and published posthumously in 1850 under the title THE PRELUDE.
British poet, who spent his life in the Lake District of Northern England.
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/wordswor.htm   (1075 words)

  
 Literary Resources -- Romantic (Lynch)
Lyrical Ballads Bicentenary Project (Ron Tetreault and Bruce Graver, Dalhousie)
Lyrical Ballads: An Electronic Scholarly Edition (Romantic Circles)
An astounding edition of Lyrical Ballads in its many editions, with collations, page images, a bibliography, and much more.
http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Lit/romantic.html   (2498 words)

  
 William Wordsworth Study questions, Preface to Lyrical Ballads, Tintern Abbey and Other Poems
Wordsworth's "Preface to the Lyrical Ballads" may be read as a treatise that displaces the French Revolution's three main ideals (liberty, equality, fraternity) into a theory about the way in which poetry is composed and the effects it ought to have.
William Wordsworth Study questions, Preface to Lyrical Ballads, Tintern Abbey and Other Poems
How does Wordsworth describe the language he claims to have selected for his poems?
http://www.ajdrake.com/e212_sum_04/materials/authors/wordsworth_sq.htm   (1013 words)

  
 D. Conger: Wordsworth's Women
We must remember that Wordsworth's purpose in the Lyrical Ballads was that the poet should "let himself slip into an entire delusion, and even confound and identify his own feelings with theirs [the character's]; modifying only the language" (1800 Preface 14).
Moreover, the little boy, not the mother, is associated with "flesh and blood," an integral element of Lyrical Ballads.
Here, I would like to examine three depictions of motherhood in Lyrical Ballads to determine the extent that Wordsworth attempts to control his female agent.
http://prometheus.cc.emory.edu/panels/2D/Conger.html   (3705 words)

  
 Why the Lyrical Ballads?: The Background, Writing, and Character of Wordsworth's 1798 Lyrical Ballads
Why the Lyrical Ballads?: The Background, Writing, and Character of Wordsworth's 1798 Lyrical Ballads
/ > Why the Lyrical Ballads?: The Background, Writing, and Character of Wordsworth's 1798 Lyrical Ballads
http://i16.jp/file/us/0520031245.html   (98 words)

  
 [No title]
Nevertheless, it is the approaching storm that interests the poet more than the possibility of "coming to harm," as becomes apparent in the first stanza, where he sets the scene for his ode and describes an evening much like that in the ballad, right down to the description of the moon.
He had collaborated with Wordsworth on Lyrical Ballads (1798), and thus helped launch a poetic revolution.
As printed in Norton, the original ballad stanza reads as follows:
http://homepages.wmich.edu/~cooneys/tchg/640/papers/prot/Siferd.Coleridge.html   (3460 words)

  
 Guardian Unlimited Books News Lottery grant saves library of rare volumes
It includes first editions of Lyrical Ballads, showing the last-minute panic when the title page had been printed but Coleridge had failed to produce a line of his promised epic poem Christabel.
Wordsworth was forced to write his long poem Michael to fill the gap.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Books/news/articles/0,6109,1348039,00.html?gusrc=rss   (341 words)

  
 BBC - Lancashire Going out - In the Spotlight
Poet Carol Coates spent many years in academe, during which time she published critical and professional work, including an edition of Wordsworth and Colleridge's Lyrical Ballads, and John Cowper Powys in Search of a Landscape.
Her poems have been widely published in journals and magazines.
Compered by John Freeman the literary parade kicks off at 8.30pm on Friday 16 Seprember 2005 at The Yorkshire House, Lancaster.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/lancashire/going_out/2005/09/12/spotlight.shtml   (345 words)

  
 RPO -- William Wordsworth : A Slumber did my Spirit Seal
Original text: William Wordsworth and S. Coleridge, Lyrical Ballads, 2nd edn.
http://eir.library.utoronto.ca/rpo/display/poem2369.html   (136 words)

  
 The Romantic Period
Wordsworth: Preface to Lyrical Ballads and selected poetry
http://www.stjohns-chs.org/library/curriculum/english/romantic/rom.html   (19 words)

  
 William Wordsworth. Wordsworth's Solitary Figures
Poems to which any value can be attached, were never produced on any variety of subjects but by a man who being possessed of more than usual organic sensibility had also thought long and deeply.
He explains his reasons for this rather unusual choice of subject matter at great length in his preface to Lyrical Ballads.
It is evident that Wordsworth placed great importance on his solitary characters, as he so often wrote about them.
http://www.english-literature.org/essays/wordsworth.html   (1980 words)

  
 Amazon.co.uk: Search Results Books: lyrical ballads with other poems 1800
Lyrical Ballads With Other Poems 1800 Volume I
Amazon.co.uk: Search Results Books: lyrical ballads with other poems 1800
Lyrical Ballads with Other Poems, 1800: Vol 1
http://textual.net/link.to/amazon.co.uk/lyrical.ballads.with.other.poems.1800   (59 words)

  
 Lyrical Ballads (Penguin Classics: Poetry First Editions)
Books : Lyrical Ballads (Penguin Classics: Poetry First Editions)
http://www.literacyconnections.com/0_0140437169.html   (44 words)

  
 Lyrical Ballads Bicentenary Project: Contents
The Lyrical Ballads Bicentenary Project was created in 1998 by Ronald Tetreault of Dalhousie University and Bruce Graver of Providence College to celebrate the two hundredth anniversary of the first publication of Lyrical Ballads by William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
View Lyrical Ballads (London 1798) with full text and images
The Electronic Text Centre is a project of the Dalhousie Electronic Text Working Group, with participation from Dalhousie's Killam Library, the School of Library and Information Studies, the Department of English, and Academic Computing Services.
http://www.dal.ca/etc/lballads/welcome.html   (113 words)

  
 Lyrical Ballads: Information From Answers.com
Lyrical Ballads, 1798, was the flame that lit the English Romantic movement, its spark being that of the somewhat earlier William Blake.
Free eBook of Lyrical Ballads 1798 (http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/9622) at Project Gutenberg
Lyrical Ballads is mentioned in the following topics:
http://www.answers.com/topic/lyrical-ballads   (131 words)

  
 Lyrical Ballads
This is the first of the Lyrical Ballads.
I started writing without knowing where it would bring me. Now, I am writing with the hope that it would bring me somewhere.
http://www.academyofbards.org/fanfic/d/damnation_eyesonme.html   (2027 words)

  
 Lyrical Ballads Advertisement and Preface
The metre of the old Ballads is very artless; yet they contain many passages which would illustrate this opinion, and, I hope, if the following Poems be attentively perused, similar instances will be found in them.
And I have the satisfaction of knowing that it has been communicated to many hundreds of people who would never have heard of it, had it not been narrated as a Ballad, and in a more impressive metre than is usual in Ballads.
Appendix to the Preface to Lyrical Ballads (1802): "By what is usually called Poetic Diction."
http://www.english.upenn.edu/%7Emgamer/Etexts/lbprose.html   (5050 words)

  
 Records for Wordsworth and Coleridge : the lyrical ballads. (in MARION)
Wordsworth and Coleridge : the lyrical ballads / by Stephen Prickett.
Records for Wordsworth and Coleridge : the lyrical ballads.
Click on any of the following to start a new search:
http://js-catalog.cpl.org/MARION/%2BWORDSWORTH/4f8583007000/0   (39 words)

  
 LYRICAL BALLADS WITH A FEW OTHER POEMS by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH from Pickabook Books
Originally published 200 years ago, "Lyrical Ballads" is published here as it was compiled by Wordsworth and Coleridge.
LYRICAL BALLADS WITH A FEW OTHER POEMS by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH from Pickabook Books
A classic children's history of Britain from the Romans to the death of Queen Victoria.
http://www.pickabook.co.uk/details/0140437169/display.html   (210 words)

  
 Gale - Free Resources - Poet's Corner - Biographies - Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Around this time Coleridge composed "Kubla Khan" and the first version of "Rime of the Ancient Mariner"; the latter work was included as the opening poem in Coleridge and Wordsworth's joint effort, Lyrical Ballads, with a few Other Poems (1798).
The two poets became instant friends, and they began a literary collaboration.
That same year, Coleridge traveled to Germany where he developed an interest in the German philosophers Immanuel Kant, Friedrich von Schelling, and the brothers Friedrich and August Wilhelm von Schlegel.
http://www.galegroup.com/free_resources/poets/bio/coleridge_s.htm   (668 words)

  
 Curriculum Vitae
"Elizabeth Bishop and the Wordsworth of Lyrical Ballads: Sentimentalism, Straw Men, and Misprision." Romantic Praxis Autumn, 1999.
"Elizabeth Bishop and William Wordsworth: Sentimentalism, Straw Men, and Critical Misprision," at a Special Session, "'The Honourable Chracteristic of Poetry': Two Hundred Years of Reading Lyrical Ballads," Modern Language Association Convention, San Francisco, December, 1998.
“Wordsworth and Lyrical Archaeology: The Poetics of Prehistorical Imagination in ‘The Brothers,’” at the Wordsworth-Coleridge Division Session, Modern Language Association Convention, New York, NY, December 2002.
http://people.bu.edu/crzepka   (2476 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge Biography
In 1798, the famous Lyrical Ballads was published, the collaboration between Col and William which pretty much created the Romantic movement.
The authors didn't realize this at the time, of course; they went to Germany with William's sister Dorothy.
He already had one son, David Hartley Coleridge, born September 1796, followed by Berkeley Coleridge in May 1798
http://www.incompetech.com/authors/coleridge   (1558 words)

  
 William Wordsworth
In 1798, they published a joint volume of poetry called Lyrical Ballads.
In 1800, Lyrical Ballads was reworked and a second volume added.
William also wrote a preface expounding his theories of what made good poetry
http://www.incompetech.com/authors/wordsworth   (1847 words)

  
 [No title]
text version LYRICAL BALLADS: FIRST EDITION William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge Editor's note: This is the original version of /Lyrical Ballads/, taken from the first anonymous Bristol imprint of 1798.
-- Richard Bear, University of Oregon, 6/15/1992 rbear@oregon.uoregon.edu http:///www-vms.uoregon.edu/~rbear -------------------------------------------------------------------------- LYRICAL BALLADS, WITH A FEW OTHER POEMS BRISTOL: PRINTED BY BIGGS AND COTTLE, FOR T.N. It is the honourable characteristic of Poetry that its materials are to be found in every subject which can interest the human mind.
No attempt has been made to correct the text, with the exception that the corrections indicated on the original errata slip have been made.
http://eserver.org/poetry/lyrical-ballads.txt   (16930 words)

  
 Lyrical Ballads
Lyrical Ballads, which he produced with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, who attended Jesus College, was published in 1798.
Although he found academic life in Cambridge unstimulating and conservative, not bothering to expend the effort to distinguish himself, he did obtain his degree here in 1791.
It includes such famous poems as The Rime of the Ancyent Marinere and Lines written a few miles above Tintern Abbey, but initial reviews were very bad.
http://www.joh.cam.ac.uk/library/special_collections/early_books/pix/Wordswor.htm   (121 words)

  
 21 Dec History: This Date
Their collaboration flourished, and in 1798 they published Lyrical Ballads, with a Few Other Poems, launching the Romantic movement.
Each of the days, moreover, ends with a canzone (song) for dancing sung by one of the storytellers, and these canzoni include some of Boccaccio's finest lyric poetry.
Wordsworth and Coleridge had been good friends and colleagues since they met, in 1795.
http://www.jcanu.hpg.ig.com.br/history/h4dec/h4dec21.html   (14653 words)

  
 Syllabi notes Fall 2000
Great Blake exhibit site at the National Gallery of Victoria.
Facsimile of the first edition of Lyrical Ballads.
William Hazlitt on Godwin from The Spirit of the Age.
http://webpage.pace.edu/gbrackett/LIT324Fall2002.htm   (250 words)

  
 SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/coleridg.htm A biography of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, the "English lyrical poet, critic, and philosopher, whose LYRICAL BALLADS, written with William Wordsworth, started the English Romantic movement." From Books and Writers web site maintained by the Kuusankoski Public Library, Finland.
http://www.dal.ca/~etc/lballads/index.html The Lyrical Ballads Bicenterary Project, 1998, by Ronald Tetreault and Bruce Graver, presents texts from the books electronically, which have been transcribed and encoded using Standard Generalized Markup Language, supplemented with images of the actual printed pages.
A succinct, scholarly bibliography by Adriana Craciun lists some of the most significant (print) critical works for Coleridge and other romantics.
http://www.literaryhistory.com/19thC/COLERIDGE.htm   (1503 words)

  
 Compare Prices and Read Reviews on Lyrical Ballads at Epinions.com
Learn jazz from books and DVDs published by Berklee Press.
Additional information on Lyrical Ballads or other products.
Compare Prices and Read Reviews on Lyrical Ballads at Epinions.com
http://www.epinions.com/book_mu-2212516   (114 words)

  
 Wordsworth and Owen (1979) Wordsworth's Preface to lyrical ballads
Wordsworth and Owen (1979) Wordsworth's Preface to lyrical ballads
http://www.getcited.org/pub/101866995   (29 words)

  
 1800 : The New Lyrical Ballads (Romanticism in Perspective)
1800 : The New Lyrical Ballads (Romanticism in Perspective)
/ > 1800 : The New Lyrical Ballads (Romanticism in Perspective)
http://i16.jp/file/us/0333773985.html   (67 words)

  
 British Lit: Lyrical Ballads to Silas Marner on CD-ROM from CDAccess.com
A View of British Literature from Lyrical Ballads to Silas Marner
British Lit: Lyrical Ballads to Silas Marner on CD-ROM from CDAccess.com
Explores British literary history from the advent of Romanticism to the first half of the Victorian era, when empire building and colonial expansion dominated Britain's foreign affairs.
http://www.cdaccess.com/html/shared/blsilas.htm   (112 words)

  
 An Anxiety of No Influence:
First, that the essay is touched in a couple of places with echoes of the 1798 Preface to Lyrical Ballads of Wordsworth.
http://www.uncg.edu/eng/elt/pater/chap6.html   (2771 words)

  
 Lyrical Ballads
This is the second part of the Lyrical Ballads.
There were times in life when days went by without any incident.
http://www.uberabode.com/D/damnation/eyes2.htm   (2593 words)

  
 Bibliography of Felicia Hemans
Extracts from the lyrical poems of Mrs Hemans, etc. 1875.
Records of woman, Songs of the affections and Songs and lyrics.
1826: To the author of The Excursion and the Lyrical Ballads (April).
http://www.umsl.edu/~sweet/swetbib.htm   (3339 words)

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