Showing posts with label Yorkshire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yorkshire. Show all posts
Monday, 5 August 2019
Wednesday, 18 April 2018
WHAT NOW?
Bell glows
Now. Now and now.
No emphasis or urgency.
Only the rift sliced through
The tolling
By the frisking wind.
What now?
This now,
Between breath
And silence.
Moss-lipped wince of boughs
Present beneath
This butterscotch light
Purring with sunfall.
Sunday, 3 December 2017
THE WINTER OF '63
The winter of '63 was the first winter I really remember as a toddler, growing up in the Dearne Valley, Yorkshire in the north of England.
I thought they would all be like this - the coldest winter of the 20th century.
I remember the snow banked up the side of our house as high as the top of the downstairs windows; the snow falling in through the back door when my dad came home from work at the station, the frozen rails and the steam from the trains in the icy air; the adventures of making snowmen, snow dogs, snow lambs, snow horses, snow igloos, snow angels; the icicles hanging from the back of the coal-house, the outside loo freezing up and the chill of the tin bath we had hanging from a nail in the back yard; the ice inside the bedroom windowpanes, with no central heating but a smelly paraffin heater upstairs; the cloak of silence over the valley as it muffled the pit hooters, the crunch of feet through the village, the bleak singing of the birds in the frozen hedgerows.
The excitement and anticipation and sheer wonder at this world of whiteness was overwhelming, untainted by dread and disappointment, with slush and slippy rinks of treacherous thaw an unknown thing for the future.
I thought they would all be like this - the coldest winter of the 20th century.
I remember the snow banked up the side of our house as high as the top of the downstairs windows; the snow falling in through the back door when my dad came home from work at the station, the frozen rails and the steam from the trains in the icy air; the adventures of making snowmen, snow dogs, snow lambs, snow horses, snow igloos, snow angels; the icicles hanging from the back of the coal-house, the outside loo freezing up and the chill of the tin bath we had hanging from a nail in the back yard; the ice inside the bedroom windowpanes, with no central heating but a smelly paraffin heater upstairs; the cloak of silence over the valley as it muffled the pit hooters, the crunch of feet through the village, the bleak singing of the birds in the frozen hedgerows.
The excitement and anticipation and sheer wonder at this world of whiteness was overwhelming, untainted by dread and disappointment, with slush and slippy rinks of treacherous thaw an unknown thing for the future.
Monday, 17 April 2017
WICKERSLEY'S HISTORIC BUILDINGS: IN REALITY AND IN FICTION
| The Round Houses on Wickersley's historic Morthen Road near Rotherham, South Yorkshire, UK |
Above are the Round Houses on Wickersley's Morthen Road as they are today.
I used the local geography as one of the backdrops for my novel 'Goatsucker Harvest' set in 1855.
These gorgeous buildings, once used as a place of worship and a shop, now private dwellings, are the ones that catch our heroine Thirza Holberry's eye and fire her imagination as she is waiting for Lucas to collect the new millstone from the quarry to cart back to Thirza's grandparents' windmill on the outskirts of Thorne and Hatfield Moors near Doncaster.
The quarries were one of lovely Wickersley's claims to fame, once renowned for their high quality "Wickersley Rock" sandstone. Their excellent grindstones were in demand for Sheffield's cutlery industry and exported worldwide. You can still see grindstones scattered around Wickersley and in the village there are still many beautiful old houses and walls built of the local stone.
"To while away the time, Thirza set out to stroll the length of what she imagined was the main street, back towards the parish church of St Alban. She gazed at a pair of unusual bow-fronted cottages and puzzled how the occupants chose furniture that would bend to the shape of the room. Or did they design their own? It must be like living in a windmill, only a windmill cut in half." - Joyce Barrass 'Goatsucker Harvest' ch 25 "Grindstones and Goatsuckers."
Here's St Alban's Parish Church. As Lucas says in the book, the top of the tower is the highest spot between Sheffield and Bawtry and used to have a lantern lit on top to guide travellers by stagecoach in the nights before streetlamps made night like day!
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| St Alban's Parish Church, Wickersley, from Church Lane |
In the story, Thirza is hoping for a quick getaway from the stifling summer heat as she wanders around the village, but Lucas has met his friend from the Old Hall and is getting more than a little merry and incapable of driving their carriage, as he takes more than one drink at the Needles Inn (now Wickersley Social Club, still an excellent venue for a pint or two!)
| The former Needles Inn, now Wickersley Social Club |
The Gazebo in the grounds of Wickersley Grange beside the Inn, is a listed building reputed to have been where passengers would wait for the stagecoach, dating from the early eighteenth century. More info here on the Historic England website.
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| The listed Gazebo, just east of Wickersley Grange |
Wickersley Old Hall is still standing proud nearby on the opposite side of the road from pub and gazebo, the road across which Lucas staggers dangerously drunk in my novel. Today, it has been converted into flats.
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| Wickersley Old Hall, south face |
Monday, 10 April 2017
MY DAD: BORN THIS DAY 1924
Today would have been my dad's 93rd birthday.
He isn't here to celebrate it with us, but we remember him with love through the years.
Dad died at 65, 20 years after suffering a series of massive strokes at 45 (or as the doctor airily insisted to my mum, who knew only too well what had happened, "It's just a touch of bad bronchitis, Mrs Barrass!"). The doctor walked out of my parents' bedroom that day, leaving my mum bereft and alone with the obvious lie that my dad had merely a bit of a chest infection, even though his speech was slurred and he was weakly doing the opposite of every action, pushing away when he should be pulling towards, spilling when he should be holding steady.
Only a second opinion brought diagnosis, but soon the ambulances were on strike and he was forgotten for much of the time he should have been fetched to physiotherapy. Such were the times at the dawn of the 1970s. The strokes left him permanently disabled and unable to do anything without support. For many things he most loved, that meant not enjoying them at all, ever again.
At 8, I saw the happy, strong, capable, funny dad who used to stand on his head to make me laugh and gave me fireman's lifts till I was hysterical with giggles, turn overnight into a stranger who struggled to make himself understood by slowly spelling out words on my old toy chalkboard with magnetic letters, choked at almost every meal and lived in a huge hospital-issue iron bed in our tiny front room with calipers, pulleys, feeding cups, commodes, canes and humiliating helplessness.
No more running down the path, past the freight weighing shed, across the yard, along the platform to meet him at the little station at the bottom of our garden where he worked as head porter and shunter. No more that thrill of hearing the purring crescendo of the engine of his motorbike as he arrived at the school gates to whisk me off home or on some impromptu adventure in the Yorkshire countryside.
But that happy, strong, capable, funny dad was still inside that often child-like, stubborn stranger as I learned to understand, growing up in the shadow of his loss of freedom and dignity. So many things remind me of him with thankfulness: maps, bikes, unplanned picnics, cherry genoa cake, corned beef sandwiches with brown sauce, trifle, playing patience, silly black-and-white movies, radio comedy, pit ponies, mystery outings in the motorbike-and-sidecar, steam trains, railways, picking the second favourite in horse races on TV, the spiral staircase up Hooton Pagnell church tower, watching the wrestling and scrambling and snooker, tinkering with things, laughter with crinkled-up eyes.
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| Me & Dad near Filey, c1965 |
My next book, Cloudhover Solstice, is dedicated to him, set in the places on the beautiful Yorkshire Coast my dad loved and which, without him, I might never have discovered or laid down such treasured memories that keep him alive in my heart. I could go on, but I'll just say:
"Happy Birthday, Dad! We love you and we'll never forget!"
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Dad & his only child - yours truly, 1961
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Monday, 19 December 2016
2017 - COMING READY OR NOT!
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| Sunset, South Yorkshire (all words and images author's own) |
We
don't have to search very hard for reminders of why 2016 has more
than its fair share of reasons to be lamented loudly and then
forgotten. Nightmare politics and propaganda, media meltdowns,
financial uncertainty, deaths of a golden host of celebrity friends
we thought we knew like family, unfathomable tragedies, war and
hatred we children of the sixties once dreamed the world would be too
wise and too compassionate for by now.
Sometimes
just checking in on social media, letting our eyes scan a newspaper
or fix on current affairs on the screen, can trigger a tailspin into
hopelessness, cynicism, bitterness, shrugged shoulders, hardened
hearts.
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| Coral and apricot skies |
Today
I decided. Time to focus on things I might have missed if I hadn't
lived through this rollercoaster year. Time to allow myself to be
thankful. Thankfulness washes world-weary shredded nerves like a
gentle spa of healing for the heart.
Thankfulness doesn't mean you're
suddenly Pollyanna. Gratitude doesn't cocoon you from empathy with
those suffering or excuse you from giving a damn. But it can help you
find your footing on the slimiest slope. It can remind you of the
motive that coaxes you to get up for another day.
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| Spot the pigeon |
Here
are my treasures gleaned and gathered from 2016:
-taking
the plunge of going gluten-free, dairy-free, nightshade-free to try
and give my body with its tortured neuroimmune system a chance to
heal itself. Gradually glimpsing a life beyond the constant fog of
exhaustion, pain and sickness. Doesn't mean I'm miraculously cured of
a lifelong knot of autoimmune illnesses, but it seems to have allowed
me the blessing, at long last, of better days. I've even had to
reduce my blood pressure pills down to the very minimum and my
insulin cartridge lasts me a week! A
couple of dried dates can bring me back from a low blood sugars now
instead of 30 years of severe hypos rescued by jelly babies and
lucozade! Result!
-discovering water Kefir grains, brewing homemade probiotic ginger beer and soda and enjoying what a positive effect it seems to have on
my digestion. Plus I'm so attached I think of my little jellified
chums as pets now, giving back so much more than they get from a shot
of sugar and mineral water! Still going strong after six months,
they're currently having a little rest and recuperation in my fridge
over the holidays! They so deserve it!
| Water kefir in spring water |
-being
well enough for my first longed-for holiday, five days in June in
fabulous Flamborough to restore my soul and get inspired for my novel
which is set along that stunning coast.
| North Landing, Flamborough, East Yorkshire |
-reconnecting
with my bestie from schooldays after she resettled in the UK after
decades living abroad. Our weekly Skype adventures, texting, laughter
and far-ranging heart-to-hearts till the early hours are a joy to my
spirit. The years fall away and we're in our teens again, but even
closer with the richer perspective of the years apart.
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| My bestie and I conquering the Skype gremlins |
-teaching
myself how to bake the most moist, rich, delicious chocolate cake I've
ever tasted, using coconut oil, almond flour and ingredients that no
longer make my blood sugars spike, with the joy of never needing to
deprive myself of my ultimate salted caramel treat! That is, if I've
ever got any left after sharing it with eager friends and family!
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| Gluten-free salted caramel chocolate cake |
-dog-sitting
a variety of furry friends of friends who fill up, temporarily, that
dog-shaped hole in my heart since my own lad passed away.
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| Cocker Spaniel sisters discovering treat puzzle ball |
-inching
towards the publication of my second novel, “Cloudhover Solstice”
with all the attendant pleasures of plotting, researching, dreaming,
writing and editing, plus the privilege of knowing how much my
characters have found their fond place in the imaginations of my
readers. So thankful to the kind few who support me by leaving a
review, sharing posts, tweets and spreading the word. You are worth
more than gold to me, even if I never earn a penny from my passion!
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| Work-in-progress novel. Not the *actual* cover! |
-adventuring
on a fungus foray by day and a bat walk by night in local woodland
and having the quiet thrill of being at one with the wonderful
natural world that surrounds us in this lovely corner of Yorkshire.
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| Orange Birch Bolete on the Fungus Foray in October |
-soap!
After night after night of sciatic twinges and cramps, googling in
sheer desperation for help with agonising, sleep-shrinking restless
legs, I came across what sounds like some mad old wives' tale of
putting soap in a sock in your bed. I bought a cheap tablet of soap
from the Co-op the next day, stuck it in an old knee-high, shoved it
sceptically between the sheets. I haven't had full-blown cramp since that first night! No more idea why this works than anybody else
– maybe I'm a mad old girl, too, but who's counting?
| Soap in a sock |
-acquainting
myself with my new all-singing, all-beeping insulin pump, Humph Mk II
and his handset, the rather feisty Rita the Second. Yes, I still
scream at Rita when I'm hypo and she's nagging me to eat. I still
roll my eyes at Humph when he decides he needs new batteries in the
middle of something more interesting. But you've got to love
technology and ingenuity. They're keeping me alive from one moment to
the next. My great gran was dead at 42 for lack of such inventions
being widely available in the 1920s.
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| Me and my portable pancreas |
-the
birds, the Moon, passing planes, the trees, the flora and fauna, the
clouds, the sunsets, the faces, the patterns, the colours that have
kept my camera clicking throughout this year and the privilege of
reliving eternally these moments frozen in time and sharing them with
friends the world over.
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| Full Grain Moon over the wood |
-friends,
old and new, online and with flesh on, who remind me how many truly
wonderful and special people are on this planet, fighting to ensure
that love will always win over prejudice, bigotry and hate.
2017,
you're welcome! You might not be gentle. You might not be all we hope
for. But I'm coming to make the best of you, ready or not!
Wednesday, 14 December 2016
WHERE I GREW UP
Monday, 5 December 2016
WATER GYPSY
A tale inspired by my own Yorkshire roots and the endless mysteries and magic tangled in the roots of our family trees.
Friday, 19 August 2016
TREE GONE SOLO
Here's a poem for all you lovely readers inspired by a recent walk around my local Wickersley Wood on the outskirts of Rotherham. There's a particular tree there that grows apart from the main body of woodland. Readers of my poems and stories will understand how deeply my imagination's affected by the natural world around me. Here's another fragment for you of my lifelong lovesong to the beautiful landscapes of my native Yorkshire.
Wednesday, 20 July 2016
BUCK MOON DUSK
Caught
in nets of purpled cloud
Birch
suffused with shiver of steel
Glass
castle and ring of flame
Keening
over the spinning souls
Locked
to earth by a chain of tides,
Sunset
bruised the horizon rolls,
Never
static and never tame
Now
the velvet has bound her eyes
Kissed
her lids with its violet shade
Night's
birth is the day that dies
Whispered colours her fabric's frame
Speeding on through the radiant dark
Starflake piercing insomnia's gloom
Kirtles herself in rainbow's arc
Free of border and without name
(Joyce Barrass 2016)
Photographs of the Full Buck Moon rising over Wickersley Wood, South Yorkshire, UK and sunset in the western sky on the hottest day of the year, taken by the author and viewable in full HD over on Joyce's Flickr where you can always find her photos of the Moon, clouds, birds, wildlife, natural world, passing aircraft, Yorkshire scenery and lots more of her passions and peculiarities. Her historical novel "GOATSUCKER HARVEST" is part of her lifelong lyrical lovesong to her native Yorkshire roots and is available from Amazon in paperback and as a Kindle ebook.
Thanks so much for visiting!
Wednesday, 13 July 2016
Sand castles and rock pools: first draft, second novel - taking the clifftop path towards "Cloudhover Solstice"
| Scouting out "Cloudhover Solstice" locations: Flamborough Head 17th century Old Chalk Beacon Tower |
I'm back from my eagerly-anticipated research reconnaissance trip to fairest Flamborough, the setting for the novel, from the chalk cliffs and caves to the haunting hidden hollows of ancient Danes Dyke, cutting off the headland from the rest of these islands, leaving it pointing mysteriously out towards vanished Doggerland off the coast of Holderness.
| Selwick Stack, Selwick's Bay, Flamborough Head |
| Kittiwakes, High Stacks, Flamborough |
| Cave arch, North Landing, Flamborough |
I took photographs and emotional mental snapshots, too, of those dominant sentinels of the headland, the 1806 Lighthouse and the Old Beacon Tower, built in chalk in the seventeen century. They must play their part, with their own tales interweaving into the lives of my characters and impacting on their fictional journey.
I took panorama sweeps to judge distances between landmarks, from Filey Brigg in the north, to Bridlington to the south. I explored Chatterthrow, formerly "Chattertrove" beyond Little Thornwick Bay, named for the racket made by the seabirds that thronged the cliffs as they nested, before humankind impacted their paradise, a central theme in my book.
| Flamborough panorama from Chatterthrow back towards the Lighthouse |
Flamborough did me good, as it always does, not only as a writer, but as a human being. Chronic illness has meant four years of not being able to manage a holiday, and Flamborough has haunted my dreams with glimpses of joy throughout those life-limiting days. Flamborough more than made up for it. Flamborough wouldn't know how to disappoint me if it tried!
| Flamborough Head Lighthouse |
So the chipping and carving at the sand castle goes on, as "Cloudhover Solstice" takes its own unique shape under my scribbling fingers, recreating and restoring me along the way. I hope when it's ready to reveal itself to the world, you will enjoy reading it and that you'll be enchanted too by this magical place!
| Danes Dyke Beach, Flamborough |
Friday, 17 June 2016
ALL HER FAULT
--a poem inspired by a glimpse of Thirza, heroine of my WIP "Cloudhover Solstice"--
Tries to stand
Soles rippling
Beneath the boil
Basso profundo boom
Inching purchase
On sea stamped sand
Plunge forgotten
Now razor balanced
Between sink and scull
Spray rainbow halo
Stinging eye and tongue
Frothing sodden
Tries to breathe
Less and lower
Lower to mute
Her eye discerns the heart
Between two swan necks
As breakers seethe
Molten gold
In the eye of the tide
Breaks her buoyancy
In the undetow
She grasps for his hand
The earthed root hold
Tries to rise
Wings wrung with salt
Drag to inertia
Anchor to halt
The cliffs' billed cries
Are all her fault
© 2016 Joyce Barrass
Thursday, 16 June 2016
"CLOUDHOVER SOLSTICE" - the tide is about to turn...
It's been four heart-yearning years since my health let me off the leash with enough energy to let me anywhere near fantabulous fair Flamborough, one of my favourite spots on the planet.
But this year, come gannets, guillemots, gust or gale, I'm going back to stay awhile.
This summer, armed with the first draft, plot outlines, character studies, orphaned scenes, midnight notes, scribbles, dreams and delirious delight, I'm heading back to the headland, the heartland of the East Yorkshire coast.
I'm off to reimagine those chalk cliffs, beloved from childhood, to plumb the landscape for its secret drama, its lighthouse and beacon, its hidden sea caves, stacks and scars, the Kittiwakes crying over the ocean ledges, the spray flinging itself against those craggy gorges and rockpools. I'm going to revisit it all through the eyes of my characters, Thirza, Bram and their friends and foes old and new.
Is that Piper I hear barking from South Landing?
"Cloudhover Solstice" is coming. The tide is slowly turning, dragging all that's familiar beneath the swilkering foam.
In the spirit of serendipity, my arrival on the East Coast coincides with this year's Summer Solstice, with the full Moon poised to shine down on the shimmering North Sea (if the forecast clouds, sea frets and mists deign to clear her a path over Holderness!)
Wishing calm seas and joyful summer voyages of imagination to all my lovely readers!
My first novel "Goatsucker Harvest" is available for Kindle and in Paperback here.
For news of my authorial shenanigans, and for updates on my progress with the sequel, "Cloudhover Solstice," you can always like my Author Page on Facebook or follow me on Twitter or Goodreads.
If you've enjoyed my writing, please would you take a moment to leave me a quick review on Amazon or Goodreads to let others know and spread the word? Thank you so much!
Friday, 5 February 2016
The tragedy of the "Amy Isabel," North Sea fishing smack, 6th Feb 1897
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| 'STORM AT BRIDLINGTON QUAY, EAST RIDING OF YORKSHIRE, 10 FEBRUARY 1871' by John Taylor Allerston (1888) original painting now displayed in the Sewerby Hall Museum & Art Gallery
This week marks the anniversary of the natural disaster this dramatic image captures, the 'Great Gale' that struck the East Coast of Yorkshire in the stormy February of 1871.
One of my own ancestors, George William Barrass (1864-6th February 1897) was also drowned in a February storm. He drowned when his boat was hit by a freak wave 70 miles NE by ENE of Spurn Point in the North Sea fishing grounds some call the "Silver Pits". He and his brother were aboard a small craft boarding fish onto the fishing smack "Amy Isabel."
His youngest brother Samuel Barrass was saved from the capsized boat and both made it almost as far as the rescue ship. But when young Sam looked back, his brother had gone under. The sea takes no prisoners and his body was never recovered.
The repercussions and ripples from the sad event went on, and Samuel was one of the witnesses at the subsequent inquiry. His testimony makes the event live again in all its vivid and tragic detail. Below are a couple of the documents that survive of the reporting at the time.
Here is an earlier blogpost I shared with more details of the event and the ancestry I share with the victims.
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| 'Daily Mail 18th March 1897 |
Friday, 22 January 2016
Writer's Block Buster: 'Play-date' with my heroine brings fresh insights and inspiration
You know the classic cartoon meme of the hapless character who runs off the cliff, but only falls when he looks down, causing suspended gravity to kick in, splattering him on the canyon floor?
Do you ever get to a point in your first draft when, like that character, you're running along at breakneck speed, creating your fiction with blissful abandon? Then, two thirds of the way through, as the plot becomes ever more clear to you, you grind to a halt, over-analyzing and second guessing yourself ? You itch to edit edit edit, change course, look down, and suddenly you're stymied and blocked, lying splattered with bruised wings on the canyon floor?
That's what happened to me last week while scooting gleefully through the first draft of my second novel "Kittiwake and Cloudhover." My feisty heroine Thirza and my wildlife whispering hero Bram from "Goatsucker Harvest" find themselves hurtling towards the dizzying cliffs of Flamborough on the Holderness Coast, summer 1856. Suddenly, I found myself temporarily stuck in the wet sand, caught in a bind between my writing and editing brains.
So, I was inspired to try to find my own solution. Maybe you'll find this approach helpful, too. Maybe you have your own self-restart buttons to press? I'd love to hear about them!
I let myself skip off for a quick off-piste "play date" with my heroine, letting Thirza tell me, in her own inimitable voice, how she saw the plot, the other characters, from start to finish.
It gave my querulous inner critic the night off. 8000 words later, I had some useful fresh plot twists, insights and inspiration. I'd also been able to "kill" some of my floppier "darlings" plus some of Thirza's turns of phrase cried out for inclusion in future drafts.
So, with a clearer road map, a renewed purpose, rested and refreshed, it's a joy to put my hands back on the tiller and steer for the end of the first draft again.
I'm excited for the day in the future when I can share more of these crazy, cliffhanging emotional adventures with you!
Thanks for reading and for all your support, amazing reviews, laughs, and for sharing my writing journey!
Saturday, 9 January 2016
South Landing at Flamborough nominated for BBC Countryfile Magazine's Beach of the Year
Wonderful news that this beautiful hidden treasure of the Yorkshire Coast has been nominated as Best Beach of the Year!
If you want funfairs, sticks of rock, crowds, donkey rides and noise, this gorgeous spot isn't ever going to be your cup of sea.
For those of us who love the sound of the ocean, the cry of seabirds, chalk cliffs meeting the waves and sweet seaside solitude, for me at least, it just cannot be beaten.
Still time to vote in all categories here till 31st January 2016: BBC Countryfile Magazine Awards 2015/16
Here's some more views of Flamborough's South Landing I took in June 2012:
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