<h3>ACT III.</h3>
<h4>SCENE I.—A Drawing-room.</h4>
<p>[Enter <span class="smcap">Lord Tinsel</span> and the <span class="smcap">Earl of Rochdale</span>.]</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. Refuse a lord! A saucy lady this.<br/>
I scarce can credit it.</p>
<p><i>Roch</i>. She’ll change her mind.<br/>
My agent, Master Walter, is her guardian.</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. How can you keep that Hunchback in his office?<br/>
He mocks you.</p>
<p><i>Roch</i>. He is useful. Never heed him.<br/>
My offer now do I present through him.<br/>
He has the title-deeds of my estates,<br/>
She’ll listen to their wooing. I must have her.<br/>
Not that I love her, but that all allow<br/>
She’s fairest of the fair.</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. Distinguished well!<br/>
’Twere most unseemly for a lord to love!—<br/>
Leave that to commoners! ’Tis vulgar—she’s<br/>
Betrothed, you tell me, to Sir Thomas Clifford?</p>
<p><i>Roch</i>. Yes.</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. That a commoner should thwart a lord!<br/>
Yet not a commoner. A baronet<br/>
Is fish and flesh. Nine parts plebeian, and<br/>
Patrician in the tenth. Sir Thomas Clifford!<br/>
A man, they say, of brains! I abhor brains<br/>
As I do tools: they’re things mechanical.<br/>
So far are we above our forefathers<br/>
They to their brains did owe their titles, as<br/>
Do lawyers, doctors. We to nothing owe them,<br/>
Which makes us far the nobler.</p>
<p><i>Roch</i>. Is it so?</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. Believe me. You shall profit by my training;<br/>
You grow a lord apace. I saw you meet<br/>
A bevy of your former friends, who fain<br/>
Had shaken hands with you. You gave them fingers!<br/>
You’re now another man. Your house is changed—<br/>
Your table changed—your retinue—your horse—<br/>
Where once you rode a hack, you now back blood;—<br/>
Befits it, then, you also change your friends!</p>
<p>[Enter <span class="smcap">Williams</span>.]</p>
<p><i>Will</i>. A gentleman would see your lordship.</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. Sir!<br/>
What’s that?</p>
<p><i>Will</i>. A gentleman would see his lordship.</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. How know you, sir, his lordship is at home?<br/>
Is he at home because he goes not out?<br/>
He’s not at home, though there you see him, sir;<br/>
Unless he certify that he’s at home!<br/>
Bring up the name of the gentleman, and then<br/>
Your lord will know if he’s at home or not.</p>
<p>[<span class="smcap">Williams</span> goes out.]</p>
<p>Your man was porter to some merchant’s door,<br/>
Who never taught him better breeding<br/>
Than to speak the vulgar truth! Well, sir?</p>
<p>[<span class="smcap">Williams</span> having re-entered.]</p>
<p><i>Will</i>. His name,<br/>
So please your lordship, Markham.</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. Do you know<br/>
The thing?</p>
<p><i>Roch</i>. Right well! I’faith a hearty fellow,<br/>
Son to a worthy tradesman, who would do<br/>
Great things with little means; so entered him<br/>
In the Temple. A good fellow, on my life.<br/>
Nought smacking of his stock!</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. You’ve said enough!<br/>
His lordship’s not at home.</p>
<p>[<span class="smcap">Williams</span> goes out.]</p>
<p>We do not go<br/>
By hearts, but orders! Had he family—<br/>
Blood—though it only were a drop—his heart<br/>
Would pass for something; lacking such desert,<br/>
Were it ten times the heart it is, ’tis nought!</p>
<p>[Enter <span class="smcap">Williams</span>.]</p>
<p><i>Will</i>. One Master Jones hath asked to see you lordship.</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. And what was your reply to Master Jones?</p>
<p><i>Will</i>. I knew not if his lordship was at home.</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. You’ll do. Who’s Master Jones?</p>
<p><i>Roch</i>. A curate’s son.</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. A curate’s! Better be a yeoman’s
son!<br/>
Was it the rector’s son, he might be known,<br/>
Because the rector is a rising man,<br/>
And may become a bishop. He goes light,<br/>
The curate ever hath a loaded back!<br/>
He may be called the yeoman of the church,<br/>
That sweating does his work, and drudges on,<br/>
While lives the hopeful rector at his ease.<br/>
How made you his acquaintance, pray?</p>
<p><i>Roch</i>. We read<br/>
Latin and Greek together.</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. Dropping them—<br/>
As, now that you’re a lord, of course you’ve done—<br/>
Drop him—You’ll say his lordship’s not at home.</p>
<p><i>Will</i>. So please your lordship, I forgot to say,<br/>
One Richard Cricket likewise is below.</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. Who?—Richard Cricket! You must see him,
Rochdale!<br/>
A noble little fellow! A great man, sir!<br/>
Not knowing whom, you would be nobody!<br/>
I won five thousand pounds by him!</p>
<p><i>Roch</i>. Who is he?<br/>
I never heard of him.</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. What! never heard<br/>
Of Richard Cricket!—never heard of him!<br/>
Why, he’s the jockey of Newmarket; you<br/>
May win a cup by him, or else a sweepstakes.<br/>
I bade him call upon you. You must see him.<br/>
His lordship is at home to Richard Cricket.</p>
<p><i>Roch</i>. Bid him wait in the ante-room.</p>
<p>[<span class="smcap">Williams</span> goes out.]</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. The ante-room!<br/>
The best room in your house! You do not know<br/>
The use of Richard Cricket! Show him, sir,<br/>
Into the drawing-room. Your lordship needs<br/>
Must keep a racing stud, and you’ll do well<br/>
To make a friend of Richard Cricket. Well, sir:<br/>
What’s that?</p>
<p>[Enter <span class="smcap">Williams</span>.]</p>
<p><i>Will</i>. So please your lordship, a petition.</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. Hadst not a service ’mongst the Hottentots<br/>
Ere thou camest hither, friend? Present thy lord<br/>
With a petition! At mechanics’ doors,<br/>
At tradesmen’s, shopkeepers’, and merchants’ only,<br/>
Have such things leave to knock! Make thy lord’s gate<br/>
A wicket to a workhouse! Let us see it—<br/>
Subscriptions to a book of poetry!<br/>
Cornelius Tense, M.A.<br/>
Which means he construes Greek and Latin, works<br/>
Problems in mathematics, can chop logic,<br/>
And is a conjurer in philosophy,<br/>
Both natural and moral.—Pshaw! a man<br/>
Whom nobody, that is anybody, knows!<br/>
Who, think you, follows him? Why, an M.D.,<br/>
An F.R.S., an F.AS., and then<br/>
A D.D., Doctor of Divinity,<br/>
Ushering in an LL.D., which means<br/>
Doctor of Laws—their harmony, no doubt,<br/>
The difference of their trades! There’s nothing here<br/>
But languages, and sciences, and arts.<br/>
Not an iota of nobility!<br/>
We cannot give our names. Take back the paper,<br/>
And tell the bearer there’s no answer for him:—<br/>
That is the lordly way of saying “No.”<br/>
But, talking of subscriptions, here is one<br/>
To which your lordship may affix your name.</p>
<p><i>Roch</i>. Pray, who’s the object?</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. A most worthy man!<br/>
A man of singular deserts; a man<br/>
In serving whom your lordship will serve me,—<br/>
Signor Cantata.</p>
<p><i>Roch</i>. He’s a friend of yours?</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. Oh, no, I know him not! I’ve not that
pleasure.<br/>
But Lady Dangle knows him; she’s his friend,<br/>
He will oblige us with a set of concerts,<br/>
Six concerts to the set.—The set, three guineas.<br/>
Your lordship will subscribe?</p>
<p><i>Roch</i>. Oh, by all means.</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. How many sets of tickets? Two at least.<br/>
You’ll like to take a friend? I’ll set you down<br/>
Six guineas to Signor Cantata’s concerts,<br/>
And now, my Lord, we’ll to him; then we’ll walk.</p>
<p><i>Roch</i>. Nay, I would wait the lady’s answer.</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. Wait! take an excursion to the country; let<br/>
Her answer wait for you!</p>
<p><i>Roch</i>. Indeed!</p>
<p><i>Tin</i>. Indeed!<br/>
Befits a lord nought like indifference.<br/>
Say an estate should fall to you, you’d take it<br/>
As it concerned more a stander by<br/>
Than you. As you’re a lord, be sure you ever<br/>
Of that make little other men make much of;<br/>
Nor do the thing they do, but the right contrary.<br/>
Where the distinction else ’twixt them and you?</p>
<p>[They go out.]</p>
<h4>SCENE II.—An Apartment in Master Heartwell’s House.</h4>
<p>[<span class="smcap">Master Walter</span> discovered looking through
title-deeds and papers.]</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. So falls out everything, as I would have it,<br/>
Exact in place and time. This lord’s advances<br/>
Receives she,—as, I augur, in the spleen<br/>
Of wounded pride she will,—my course is clear.<br/>
She comes—all’s well—the tempest rages still.</p>
<p>[<span class="smcap">Julia</span> enters, and paces the room in a state
of high excitement.]</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. What have my eyes to do with water? Fire<br/>
Becomes them better!</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. True!</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. Yet, must I weep<br/>
To be so monitored, and by a man!<br/>
A man that was my slave! whom I have seen<br/>
Kneel at my feet from morn till noon, content<br/>
With leave to only gaze upon my face,<br/>
And tell me what he read there,—till the page<br/>
I knew by heart, I ’gan to doubt I knew,<br/>
Emblazoned by the comment of his tongue!<br/>
And he to lesson me! Let him come here<br/>
On Monday week! He ne’er leads me to church!<br/>
I would not profit by his rank, or wealth,<br/>
Though kings might call him cousin, for their sake!<br/>
I’ll show him I have pride!</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. You’re very right!</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. He would have had to-day our wedding-day!<br/>
I fixed a month from this. He prayed and prayed;<br/>
I dropped a week. He prayed and prayed the more!<br/>
I dropped a second one. Still more he prayed!<br/>
And I took off another week,—and now<br/>
I have his leave to wed, or not to wed!<br/>
He’ll see that I have pride!</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. And so he ought.</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. O! for some way to bring him to my foot!<br/>
But he should lie there! Why, ’twill go abroad<br/>
That he has cast me off. That there should live<br/>
The man could say so! Or that I should live<br/>
To be the leavings of a man!</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. Thy case<br/>
I own a hard one!</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. Hard? ’Twill drive me mad!<br/>
His wealth and title! I refused a lord—<br/>
I did!—that privily implored my hand,<br/>
And never cared to tell him on’t! So much<br/>
I hate him now, that lord should not in vain<br/>
Implore my hand again!</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. You’d give it him?</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. I would.</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. You’d wed that lord?</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. That lord I’d wed;—<br/>
Or any other lord,—only to show him<br/>
That I could wed above him!</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. Give me your hand<br/>
And word to that.</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. There! Take my hand and word!</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. That lord hath offered you his hand again.</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. He has?</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. Your father knows it: he approves of him.<br/>
There are the title-deeds of the estates,<br/>
Sent for my jealous scrutiny. All sound,—<br/>
No flaw, or speck, that e’en the lynx-eyed law<br/>
Itself could find. A lord of many lands!<br/>
In Berkshire half a county; and the same<br/>
In Wiltshire, and in Lancashire! Across<br/>
The Irish Sea a principality!<br/>
And not a rood with bond or lien on it!<br/>
Wilt give that lord a wife? Wilt make thyself<br/>
A countess? Here’s the proffer of his hand.<br/>
Write thou content, and wear a coronet!</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. [Eagerly.] Give me the paper.</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. There! Here’s pen and ink.<br/>
Sit down. Why do you pause? A flourish of<br/>
The pen, and you’re a countess.</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. My poor brain<br/>
Whirls round and round! I would not wed him now,<br/>
Were he more lowly at my feet to sue<br/>
Than e’er he did!</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. Wed whom?</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. Sir Thomas Clifford.</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. You’re right.</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. His rank and wealth are roots to doubt;<br/>
And while they lasted, still the weed would grow,<br/>
Howe’er you plucked it. No! That’s
o’er—that’s done.<br/>
Was never lady wronged so foul as I! [Weeps.]</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. Thou’rt to be pitied.</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. [Aroused.] Pitied! Not so bad<br/>
As that.</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. Indeed thou art, to love the man<br/>
That spurns thee!</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. Love him! Love! If hate could find<br/>
A word more harsh than its own name, I’d take it,<br/>
To speak the love I bear him! [Weeps.]</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. Write thy own name,<br/>
And show him how near akin thy hate’s to hate.</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. [Writes.] ’Tis done!</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. ’Tis well! I’ll come to you
anon! [Goes out.]</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. [Alone.] I’m glad ’tis done!
I’m very glad ’tis done!<br/>
I’ve done the thing I ought. From my disgrace<br/>
This lord shall lift me ’bove the reach of scorn—<br/>
That idly wags its tongue, where wealth and state<br/>
Need only beckon to have crowds to laud!<br/>
Then how the tables change! The hand he spurned<br/>
His betters take! Let me remember that!<br/>
I’ll grace my rank! I will! I’ll carry it<br/>
As I was born to it! I warrant none<br/>
Shall say it fits me not:—but, one and all<br/>
Confess I wear it bravely, as I ought!<br/>
And he shall hear it! Ay, and he shall see it!<br/>
I will roll by him in an equipage<br/>
Would mortgage his estate—but he shall own<br/>
His slight of me was my advancement! Love me!<br/>
He never loved me! if he had, he ne’er<br/>
Had given me up! Love’s not a spider’s web<br/>
But fit to mesh a fly—that you can break<br/>
By only blowing on’t! He never loved me!<br/>
He knows not what love is!—or, if he does,<br/>
He has not been o’erchary of his peace!<br/>
And that he’ll find when I’m another’s wife,<br/>
Lost!—lost to him for ever! Tears again!<br/>
Why should I weep for him? Who make their woes.<br/>
Deserve them! What have I to do with tears?</p>
<p>[Enter <span class="smcap">Helen</span>.]</p>
<p><i>Helen</i>. News, Julia, news!</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. What! is’t about Sir Thomas?</p>
<p><i>Helen</i>. Sir Thomas, say you? He’s no more Sir
Thomas!<br/>
That cousin lives, as heir to whom, his wealth<br/>
And title came to him.</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. Was he not dead?</p>
<p><i>Helen</i>. No more than I am dead.</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. I would ’twere not so.</p>
<p><i>Helen</i>. What say you, Julia?</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. Nothing!</p>
<p><i>Helen</i>. I could kiss<br/>
That cousin! couldn’t you, Julia?</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. Wherefore?</p>
<p><i>Helen</i>. Why<br/>
For coming back to life again, as ’twere<br/>
Upon his cousin to revenge you.</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. Helen!</p>
<p><i>Helen</i>. Indeed ’tis true. With what a sorry
grace<br/>
The gentleman will bear himself without<br/>
His title! Master Clifford! Have you not<br/>
Some token to return him? Some love-letter?<br/>
Some brooch? Some pin? Some anything? I’ll be<br/>
Your messenger, for nothing but the pleasure<br/>
Of calling him plain “Master Clifford.”</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. Helen!</p>
<p><i>Helen</i>. Or has he aught of thine? Write to him,
Julia,<br/>
Demanding it! Do, Julia, if you love me;<br/>
And I’ll direct it in a schoolboy’s hand,<br/>
As round as I can write, “To Master Clifford.”</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. Helen!</p>
<p><i>Helen</i>. I’ll think of fifty thousand ways<br/>
To mortify him! I’ve a twentieth cousin,<br/>
A care-for-nought, at mischief. Him I’ll set,<br/>
With twenty other madcaps like himself,<br/>
To walk the streets the traitor most frequents<br/>
And give him salutation as he passes—<br/>
“How do you, Master Clifford?”</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. [Highly incensed.] Helen!</p>
<p><i>Helen</i>. Bless me!</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. I hate you, Helen!</p>
<p>[Enter <span class="smcap">Modus</span>.]</p>
<p><i>Mod</i>. Joy for you, fair lady!<br/>
Our baronet is now plain gentleman—<br/>
And hardly that, not master of the means<br/>
To bear himself as such. The kinsman lives<br/>
Whose only rumoured death gave wealth to him,<br/>
And title. A hard creditor he proves,<br/>
Who keeps strict reckoning—will have interest.<br/>
As well as principal. A ruined man<br/>
Is now Sir Thomas Clifford!</p>
<p><i>Helen</i>. I’m glad on’t.</p>
<p><i>Mod</i>. And so am I,<br/>
A scurvy trick it was<br/>
He served you, madam. Use a lady so!<br/>
I merely bore with him. I never liked him.</p>
<p><i>Helen</i>. No more did I. No, never could I think<br/>
He looked his title.</p>
<p><i>Mod</i>. No, nor acted it.<br/>
If rightly they report, he ne’er disbursed<br/>
To entertain his friends, ’tis broadly said,<br/>
A hundred pounds in the year! He was most poor<br/>
In the appointments of a man of rank,<br/>
Possessing wealth like his. His horses, hacks!<br/>
His gentleman, a footman! and his footman,<br/>
A groom! The sports that men of quality<br/>
And spirit countenance, he kept aloof from,<br/>
From scruple of economy, not taste,—<br/>
As racing and the like. In brief, he lacked<br/>
Those shining points that, more than name, denote<br/>
High breeding; and, moreover, was a man<br/>
Of very shallow learning.</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. Silence, sir!<br/>
For shame!</p>
<p><i>Helen</i>. Why, Julia!</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. Speak not to me! Poor!<br/>
Most poor! I tell you, sir, he was the making<br/>
Of fifty gentlemen—each one of whom<br/>
Were more than peer for thee! His title, sir,<br/>
Lent him no grace he did not pay it back!<br/>
Though it had been the highest of the high,<br/>
He would have looked it, felt it, acted it,<br/>
As thou couldst ne’er have done! When found you out<br/>
You liked him not? It was not ere to-day!<br/>
Or that base spirit I must reckon yours<br/>
Which smiles where it would scowl—can stoop to hate<br/>
And fear to show it! He was your better, sir,<br/>
And is!—Ay, is! though stripped of rank and wealth,<br/>
His nature’s ’bove or fortune’s love or spite,<br/>
To blazon or to blurr it! [Retires.]</p>
<p><i>Mod</i>. [To <span class="smcap">Helen</span>.] I was
told<br/>
Much to disparage him—I know not wherefore.</p>
<p><i>Helen</i>. And so was I, and know as much the cause.</p>
<p>[Enter <span class="smcap">Master Walter</span>, with parchments.]</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. Joy, my Julia!<br/>
Impatient love has foresight! Lo you here<br/>
The marriage deeds filled up, except a blank<br/>
To write your jointure. What you will, my girl!<br/>
Is this a lover? Look! Three thousand pounds<br/>
Per annum for your private charges! Ha!<br/>
There’s pin-money! Is this a lover? Mark<br/>
What acres, forests, tenements, are taxed<br/>
For your revenue; and so set apart,<br/>
That finger cannot touch them, save thine own.<br/>
Is this a lover? What good fortune’s thine!<br/>
Thou dost not speak; but, ’tis the way with joy!<br/>
With richest heart, it has the poorest tongue!</p>
<p><i>Mod</i>. What great good fortune’s this you speak of,
sir?</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. A coronet, Master Modus! You behold<br/>
The wife elect, sir, of no less a man<br/>
Than the new Earl of Rochdale—heir of him<br/>
That’s recently deceased.</p>
<p><i>Helen</i>. My dearest Julia,<br/>
Much joy to you!</p>
<p><i>Mod</i>. All good attend you, madam!</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. This letter brings excuses from his lordship,<br/>
Whose absence it accounts for. He repairs<br/>
To his estate in Lancashire, and thither<br/>
We follow.</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. When, sir?</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. Now. This very hour.</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. This very hour! O cruel, fatal haste!</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. “O cruel, fatal haste!” What meanest
thou?<br/>
Have I done wrong to do thy bidding, then?<br/>
I have done no more. Thou wast an offcast bride,<br/>
And wouldst be an affianced one—thou art so!<br/>
Thou’dst have the slight that marked thee out for scorn,<br/>
Converted to a means of gracing thee—<br/>
It is so! If our wishes come too soon,<br/>
What can make sure of welcome? In my zeal<br/>
To win thee thine, thou know’st, at any time<br/>
I’d play the steed, whose will to serve his lord,<br/>
With his last breath gives his last bound for him!<br/>
Since only noon have I despatched what well<br/>
Had kept a brace of clerks, and more, on foot—<br/>
And then, perhaps, had been to do again!—<br/>
Not finished sure, complete—the compact firm,<br/>
As fate itself had sealed it!</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. Give you thanks!<br/>
Though ’twere my death! my death!</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. Thy death! indeed,<br/>
For happiness like this, one well might die!<br/>
Take thy lord’s letter! Well?</p>
<p>[Enter <span class="smcap">Thomas</span>, with a letter.]</p>
<p><i>Thos</i>. This letter, sir,<br/>
The gentleman that served Sir Thomas Clifford—<br/>
Or him that was Sir Thomas—gave to me<br/>
For Mistress Julia.</p>
<p><i>Julia</i>. Give it me!</p>
<p>[Throwing away the one she holds.]</p>
<p><i>Wal</i>. [Snatching it.] For what?<br/>
Wouldst read it? He’s a bankrupt! stripped of title,<br/>
House, chattels, lands, and all! A naked bankrupt,<br/>
With neither purse, nor trust! Wouldst read his letter?<br/>
A beggar! Yea, a very beggar!—fasts, unless<br/>
He dines on alms! How durst he send thee a letter!<br/>
A fellow cut on this hand, and on that;<br/>
Bows and is cut again, and bows again!<br/>
Who pays you fifty smiles for half a one,—<br/>
And that given grudgingly! To you a letter!<br/>
I burst with choler! Thus I treat his letter!</p>
<p>[Tears and throws it on the ground.]</p>
<p>So! I was wrong to let him ruffle me;<br/>
He is not worth the spending anger on!<br/>
I prithee, Master Modus, use despatch,<br/>
And presently make ready for our ride.<br/>
You, Helen, to my Julia look—a change<br/>
Of dresses will suffice. She must have new ones,<br/>
Matches for her new state! Haste, friends. My Julia!<br/>
Why stand you poring there upon the ground?<br/>
Time flies. Your rise astounds you? Never heed—<br/>
You’ll play my lady countess like a queen!</p>
<p>[They go out.]</p>
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