<h2 id="id00329" style="margin-top: 4em">COMING INTO FULLNESS OF POWER.</h2>
<p id="id00330">This is the Spirit of Infinite Power, and in the degree that we open
ourselves to it does power become manifest in us. With God all things
are possible,—that is, in conjunction with God all things are
possible. The true secret of power lies in keeping one's connection
with the God who worketh all things; and in the degree that we keep
this connection are we able literally to rise above every conceivable
limitation.</p>
<p id="id00331">Why, then, waste time in running hither and thither to acquire power?
Why waste time with this practice or that practice? Why not go
directly to the mountain top itself, instead of wandering through the
by-ways, in the valleys, and on the mountain sides? That man has
absolute dominion, as taught in all the scriptures of the world, is
true not of physical man, but of <i>spiritual man</i>. There are many
animals, for example, larger and stronger, over which from a physical
standpoint he would not have dominion, but he can gain supremacy over
even these by calling into activity the higher mental, psychic, and
spiritual forces with which he is endowed.</p>
<p id="id00332">Whatever can't be done in the physical can be done in the spiritual.
And in direct proportion as a man recognizes himself as spirit, and
lives accordingly, is he able to transcend in power the man who
recognizes himself merely as material. All the sacred literature of
the world is teeming with examples of what we call miracles. They are
not confined to any particular times or places. There is no age of
miracles in distinction from any other period that may be an age of
miracles. Whatever has been done in the world's history can be done
again through the operation of the same laws and forces. These
miracles were performed not by those who were more than men, but by
those who through the recognition of their oneness with God became
God-men, so that the higher forces and powers worked through them.</p>
<p id="id00333">For what, let us ask, is a miracle? Is it something supernatural?
Supernatural only in the sense of being above the natural, or rather,
above that which is natural to man in his ordinary state. A miracle is
nothing more nor less than this. One who has come into a knowledge of
his true identity, of his oneness with the all-pervading Wisdom and
Power, thus makes it possible for laws higher than the ordinary mind
knows of to be revealed to him. These laws he makes use of; the people
see the results, and by virtue of their own limitations, call them
miracles and speak of the person who performs these apparently
supernatural works as a supernatural being. But they as supernatural
beings could themselves perform these supernatural works if they would
open themselves to the recognition of the same laws, and consequently
to the realization of the same possibilities and powers. And let us
also remember that the supernatural of yesterday becomes, as in the
process of evolution we advance from the lower to the higher, from the
more material to the more spiritual, the common and the natural of
today, and what seems to be the supernatural of today becomes in the
same way the natural of tomorrow, and so on through the ages. Yes, it
is the God-man who does the things that appear supernatural, the man
who by virtue of his realization of the higher powers transcends the
majority and so stands out among them. But any power that is possible
to one human soul is possible to another. The same laws operate in
every life. We can be men and women of power or we can be men and
women of impotence. The moment one vitally grasps the fact that he can
rise he will rise, and he can have absolutely no limitations other than
the limitations he sets to himself. Cream always rises to the top. It
rises simply because <i>it is the nature of cream to rise</i>.</p>
<p id="id00334">We hear much said of "environment." We need to realize that
environment should never be allowed to make the man, but that man
should always, <i>and always can</i>, condition the environment. When we
realize this we will find that many times it is not necessary to take
ourselves out of any particular environment, because we may yet have a
work to do there; but by the very force we carry with us we can so
affect and change matters that we will have an entirely new set of
conditions in an old environment.</p>
<p id="id00335">The same is true in regard to "hereditary" traits and influences. We
sometimes hear the question asked, "Can they be overcome?" Only the
one who doesn't yet know himself can ask a question such as this. If
we entertain and live in the belief that they cannot be overcome, then
the chances are that they will always remain. The moment, however,
that we come into a realization of our true selves, and so of the
tremendous powers and forces within,—the powers and forces of the mind
and spirit,—hereditary traits and influences that are harmful in
nature will begin to lessen, and will disappear with a rapidity
directly in proportion to the completeness of this realization.</p>
<p id="id00336"> "There is no thing we cannot overcome;<br/>
Say not thy evil instinct is inherited,<br/>
Or that some trait inborn makes thy whole life forlorn,<br/>
And calls down punishment that is not merited.<br/></p>
<p id="id00337"> "Back of thy parents and grandparents lies<br/>
The Great Eternal Will! That too is thine<br/>
Inheritance,—strong, beautiful, divine,<br/>
Sure lever of success for one who tries.<br/></p>
<p id="id00338"> * * * * * *</p>
<p id="id00339"> "There is no noble height thou canst not climb;<br/>
All triumphs may be thine in Time's futurity,<br/>
If, whatso'er thy fault, thou dost not faint or halt;<br/>
But lean upon the staff of God's security.<br/></p>
<p id="id00340"> "Earth has no claim the soul cannot contest;<br/>
Know thyself part of the Eternal Source;<br/>
Naught can stand before thy spirit's force;<br/>
The soul's Divine Inheritance is best."<br/></p>
<p id="id00341">Again there are many who are living far below their possibilities
because they are continually handing over their individualities to
others. Do you want to be a power in the world? Then be yourself.
Don't class yourself, don't allow yourself to be classed among the
second-hand, among the <i>they-say</i> people. Be true to the highest
within your own soul, and then allow yourself to be governed by no
customs or conventionalities or arbitrary man-made rules that are not
founded upon <i>principle</i>. Those things that are founded upon principle
will be observed by the right-minded, the right-hearted man or woman,
in any case.</p>
<p id="id00342">Don't surrender your individuality, which is your greatest agent of
power, to the customs and conventionalities that have gotten their life
from the great mass of those who haven't enough force to preserve their
individualities,—those who in other words have given them over as
ingredients to the "mush of concession" which one of our greatest
writers has said characterizes our modern society. If you do surrender
your individuality in this way, you simply aid in increasing the
undesirable conditions; in payment for this you become a slave, and the
chances are that in time you will be unable to hold even the respect of
those whom you in this way try to please.</p>
<p id="id00343">If you preserve your individuality then you become a master, and if
wise and discreet, your influence and power will be an aid in bringing
about a higher, a better, and a more healthy set of conditions in the
world. All people, moreover, will think more of you, will honor you
more highly for doing this than if you show your weakness by
contributing yourself to the same "mush of concession" that so many of
them are contributing themselves to. With all classes of people you
will then have an influence. "A great style of hero draws equally all
classes, all extremes of society to him, till we say the very dogs
believe in him."</p>
<p id="id00344">To be one's self is the only worthy, and by all means the only
satisfactory, thing to be. "May it not be good policy," says one, "to
be governed sometimes by one's surroundings?" What is good policy? To
be yourself, first, last, and always.</p>
<p id="id00345"> "This above all,—to thine own self be true;<br/>
And it must follow, as the night the day,<br/>
Thou canst not then be false to any man."<br/></p>
<p id="id00346" style="margin-top: 2em">"When we appeal to the Supreme and our life is governed by a principle,
we are not governed either by fear of public opinion or loss of others'
approbation, and we may be sure that the Supreme will sustain us. If
in any way we try to live to suit others we never shall suit them, and
the more we try the more unreasonable and exacting do they become. The
government of your life is a matter that lies entirely between God and
yourself, and when your life is swayed and influenced from any other
source you are on the wrong path." When we find the kingdom within and
become centred in the Infinite, then we become a law unto ourselves.
When we become a law unto ourselves, then we are able to bring others
to a knowledge of laws higher than they are governed or many times even
enslaved by.</p>
<p id="id00347">When we have found this centre, then that beautiful simplicity, at once
the charm and the power of a truly great personality, enters into our
lives. Then all striving for effect,—that sure indicator of weakness
and a lack of genuine power,—is absent. This striving for effect that
is so common is always an indicator of a lack of something. It brings
to mind the man who rides behind a dock-tailed horse. Conscious of the
fact that there is not enough in <i>himself</i> to attract attention, in
common with a number of other weaklings, he adopts the brutal method of
having his horse's tail sawed off, that its unnatural, odd appearance
may attract from people the attention that he of himself is unable to
secure.</p>
<p id="id00348">But the one who strives for effect is always fooled more than he
succeeds in fooling others. The man and the woman of true wisdom and
insight can always see the causes that prompt, the motives that
underlie the acts of all with whom he or she comes in contact. "He is
great who is what he is from nature and who never reminds us of others."</p>
<p id="id00349">The men and the women who are truly awake to the real powers within are
the men and women who seem to be doing so little, yet who in reality
are doing so much. They seem to be doing so little because they are
working with higher agencies, and yet are doing so much because of this
very fact. They do their work on the higher plane. They keep so
completely their connection with the Infinite Power that <i>It</i> does the
work for them and they are relieved of the responsibility. They are
the care-less people. They are care-less because it is the Infinite
Power that is working through them, and with this Infinite Power they
are simply co-operating.</p>
<p id="id00350"><i>The secret of the highest power is simply the uniting of the outer
agencies of expression with the Power that works from within</i>. Are you
a painter? Then in the degree that you open yourself to the power of
the forces within will you become great instead of mediocre. You can
never put into permanent form inspirations higher than those that come
through your own soul. In order for the higher inspirations to come
through it, you must open your soul, you must open it fully to the
Supreme Source of all inspiration. Are you an orator? In the degree
that you come into harmony and work in conjunction with the higher
powers that will speak through you will you have the real power of
moulding and of moving men. If you use merely your physical agents,
you will be simply a demagogue. If you open yourself so that the voice
of God can speak through and use your physical agents, you will become
a great and true orator, great and true in just the degree that you so
open yourself.</p>
<p id="id00351">Are you a singer? Then open yourself and let the God within pour forth
in the spirit of song. You will find it a thousand times easier than
all your long and studied practice without this, and other things being
equal, there will come to you a power of song so enchanting and so
enrapturing that its influence upon all who hear will be irresistible.</p>
<p id="id00352">When my cabin or tent has been pitched during the summer on the edge or
in the midst of a forest, I have sometimes lain awake on my cot in the
early morning, just as the day was beginning to break. Silence at
first. Then an intermittent chirp here and there. And as the
unfolding tints of the dawn became faintly perceptible, these grew more
and more frequent, until by and by the whole forest seemed to burst
forth in one grand chorus of song. Wonderful! wonderful! It seemed as
if the very trees, as if every grass-blade, as if the bushes, the very
sky above, and the earth beneath, had part in this wonderful symphony.
Then, as I have listened as it went on and on, I have thought. What a
study in the matter of song! If we could but learn from the birds. If
we could but open ourselves to the same powers and allow them to pour
forth in us, what singers, what movers of men we might have! Nay, what
singers and what movers of men <i>we would have</i>!</p>
<p id="id00353">Do you know the circumstances under which Mr. Sankey sang for the first
time "The Ninety and Nine?" Says one of our able journals: "At a great
meeting recently in Denver, Mr. Ira W. Sankey, before singing 'The
Ninety and Nine,' which, perhaps, of all his compositions is the one
that has brought him the most fame, gave an account of its birth.
Leaving Glasgow for Edinburg with Mr. Moody, he stopped at a news-stand
and bought a penny religious paper. Glancing over it as they rode on
the cars, his eye fell on a few little verses in the corner of the
page. Turning to Mr. Moody he said, 'I've found my hymn.' But Mr.
Moody was busily engaged and did not hear a word. Mr. Sankey did not
find time to make a tune for the verses, so he pasted them in his music
scrapbook.</p>
<p id="id00354">"One day they had an unusually impressive meeting in Edinburg, in which
Dr. Bonar had spoken with great effect on 'The Good Shepherd.' At the
close of the address Mr. Moody beckoned to his partner to sing. He
thought of nothing but the Twenty-third Psalm, but that he had sung so
often. His second thought was to sing the verses he had found in the
newspaper, but the third thought was, how could it be done when he had
no tune. Then a fourth thought came, and that was to sing them anyway.
He put the verses before him, touched the keys of the organ, opened his
mouth and sang, not knowing where he was going to come out. He
finished the first verse amid profound silence. He took a long breath
and wondered if he could sing the second the same way. He tried and
succeeded; after that it was easy to sing it. When he finished the
hymn the meeting was all broken down and the throngs were crying. Mr.
Sankey says it was the most intense moment of his life. Mr. Moody said
he never heard a song like it. It was sung at every meeting, and was
soon going over the world."</p>
<p id="id00355">When we open ourselves to the highest inspirations they never fail us.
When we fail to do this we fail in attaining the highest results,
whatever the undertaking.</p>
<p id="id00356">Are you a writer? Then remember that the one great precept underlying
all successful literary work is, <i>Look into thine own heart and write.
Be true. Be fearless. Be loyal to the promptings of your own soul</i>.
Remember that an author can never write more than he himself is. If he
would write more, then he must be more. He is simply his own
amanuensis. He in a sense writes himself into his book. He can put no
more into it than he himself is.</p>
<p id="id00357">If he is one of a great personality, strong in purpose, deep in
feeling, open always to the highest inspirations, a certain indefinable
something gets into his pages that makes them breathe forth a vital,
living power, a power so great that each reader gets the same
inspirations as those that spoke through the author. That that's
written between the lines is many times more than that that's written
in the lines. It is the spirit of the author that engenders this
power. It is this that gives that extra twenty-five or thirty per cent
that takes a book out of the class called medium and lifts it into the
class called superior,—that extra per cent that makes it the one of
the hundred that is truly successful, while the ninety-nine never see
more than their first edition.</p>
<p id="id00358">It is this same spiritual power that the author of a great personality
puts into his work, that causes it to go so rapidly from reader to
reader; for the only way that any book circulates in the ultimate is
from mouth to mouth, any book that reaches a large circulation. It is
this that many times causes a single reader, in view of its value to
himself, to purchase numbers of copies for others. "A good poem," says
Emerson, "goes about the world offering itself to reasonable men, who
read it with joy and carry it to their reasonable neighbors. Thus it
draws to it the <i>wise and generous souls</i>, confirming their secret
thoughts, and through their sympathy <i>really publishing itself</i>."</p>
<p id="id00359">This is the type of author who writes not with the thought of having
what he writes become literature, but he writes with the sole thought
of reaching the hearts of the people, giving them something of vital
value, something that will broaden, sweeten, enrich, and beautify their
lives; that will lead them to the finding of the higher life and with
it the higher powers and the higher joys. It most always happens,
however, that if he succeeds in thus reaching the people, the becoming
literature part somehow takes care of itself, and far better than if he
aimed for it directly.</p>
<p id="id00360">The one, on the other hand, who fears to depart from beaten paths, who
allows himself to be bound by arbitrary rules, limits his own creative
powers in just the degree that he allows himself so to be bound. "My
book," says one of the greatest of modern authors, "shall smell of the
pines and resound with the hum of insects. The swallow over my window
shall interweave that thread or straw he carries in his bill into my
web also." Far better, gentle sage, to have it smell of the pines and
resound with the hum of insects than to have it sound of the rules that
a smaller type of man gets by studying the works of a few great,
fearless writers like yourself, and formulating from what he thus gains
a handbook of rhetoric. "Of no use are the men who study to do exactly
as was done before, who can never understand that <i>today is a new day</i>."</p>
<p id="id00361">When Shakspeare is charged with debts to his authors, Landor replies:
"Yet he was more original than his originals. He breathed upon dead
bodies and brought them into life." This is the type of man who
doesn't move the world's way, but who moves the world his way.</p>
<p id="id00362">I had rather be an amanuensis of the Infinite God, as it is my
privilege literally to be, than a slave to the formulated rules of any
rhetorician, or to the opinions of any critic. Oh, the people, the
people over and over! Let me give something to them that will lighten
the every-day struggles of our common life, something that will add a
little sweetness here, a little hope there, something that will make
more thoughtful, kind, and gentle this thoughtless, animal-natured man,
something that will awaken into activity the dormant powers of this
timid, shrinking little woman, powers that when awakened will be
irresistible in their influence and that will surprise even herself.
Let me give something that will lead each one to the knowledge of the
divinity of every human soul, something that will lead each one to the
conscious realization of <i>his own divinity</i>, with all its attendant
riches, and glories, and powers,—let me succeed in doing this, and I
can then well afford to be careless as to whether the critics praise or
whether they blame. If it is blame, then under these circumstances it
is as the cracking of a few dead sticks on the ground below, compared
to the matchless music that the soft spring gale is breathing through
the great pine forest.</p>
<p id="id00363">Are you a minister, or a religious teacher of any kind? Then in the
degree that you free yourself from the man-made theological dogmas that
have held and that are holding and limiting so many, and in the degree
that you open yourself to the Divine Breath, will you be one who will
speak with authority. In the degree that you do this will you study
the prophets less and be in the way of becoming a prophet yourself.
The way is open for you exactly the same as it has ever been open for
anyone.</p>
<p id="id00364">If when born into the world you came into a family of the
English-speaking race, then in all probability you are a Christian. To
be a Christian is to be a follower of the <i>teachings</i> of Jesus, the
Christ; to live in harmony with the same laws he lived in harmony with:
in brief, <i>to live his life</i>. The great central fact of his teaching
was this conscious union of man with the Father. It was the complete
realization of this oneness with the Father on his part that made Jesus
the Christ. It was through this that he attained to the power he
attained to, that he spake as never man spake.</p>
<p id="id00365">He never claimed for himself anything that he did not claim equally for
all mankind. "The mighty works performed by Jesus were not
exceptional, they were the natural and necessary concomitants of his
state; he declared them to be in accordance with unvarying order; he
spoke of them as no unique performances, but as the outcome of a state
to which all might attain if they chose. As a teacher and demonstrator
of truth, according to his own confession, he did nothing for the
purpose of proving his solitary divinity. . . . The life and triumph
of Jesus formed an epoch in the history of the race. His coming and
victory marked a new era in human affairs; he introduced a new because
a more complete ideal to the earth, and when his three most intimate
companions saw in some measure what the new life really signified, they
fell to the earth, speechless with awe and admiration."</p>
<p id="id00366">By coming into this complete realization of his oneness with the
Father, by mastering, absolutely mastering every circumstance that
crossed his path through life, even to the death of the body, and by
pointing out to us the great laws which are the same for us as they
were for him, he has given us an ideal of life, an ideal for us to
attain to <i>here and now</i>, that we could not have without him. <i>One has
conquered first; all may conquer afterward</i>. By completely realizing
it first for himself, and then by pointing out to others this great law
of the at-one-ment with the Father, he has become probably the world's
greatest saviour.</p>
<p id="id00367">Don't mistake his mere person for his life and his teachings, an error
that has been made in connection with most all great teachers by their
disciples over and over again. And if you have been among the number
who have been preaching a dead Christ, then for humanity's sake, for
Christ's sake, for God's sake, and I speak most reverently, don't steal
the people's time any longer, don't waste your own time more, in giving
them stones in place of bread, dead form for the spirit of living
truth. In his own words, "let the dead bury their dead." Come out
from among them. Teach as did Jesus, <i>the living Christ</i>. Teach as
did Jesus, <i>the Christ within</i>. Find this in all its transcendent
beauty and power,—find it as Jesus found it, then you also will be one
who will speak with authority. Then you will be able to lead large
numbers of others to its finding. This is the pearl of great price.</p>
<p id="id00368">It is the type of preacher whose soul has never as yet even perceived
the <i>vital spirit</i> of the teachings of Jesus, and who as a consequence
instead of giving this to the people, is giving them old forms and
dogmas and speculations, who is emptying our churches. This is the
type whose chief efforts seem to be in getting men ready to die. The
Germans have a saying, Never go to the second thing first. We need men
who will teach us first how to live. Living quite invariably precedes
dying. This also is true, that when we once know how to live, and live
in accordance with what we know, then the dying, as we term it, will in
a wonderfully beautiful manner take care of itself. It is in fact the
only way in which it can be taken care of.</p>
<p id="id00369">It is on account of this emptying of our churches, for the reason that
the people are tiring of mere husks, that many short-sighted people are
frequently heard to say that religion is dying out. Religion dying
out? How can anything die before it is really born? And so far as the
people are concerned, religion is just being born, or rather they are
just awaking to a vital, every-day religion. We are just beginning to
get beyond the mere letter into its real, vital spirit. Religion dying
out? Impossible even to conceive of. Religion is as much a part of
the human soul as the human soul is a part of God. And as long as God
and the human soul exist, religion will never die.</p>
<p id="id00370">Much of the dogma, the form, the ceremony, the mere letter that has
stood as religion,—and honestly, many times, let us be fair enough to
say,—this, thank God, is rapidly dying out, and never so rapidly as it
is today. By two methods it is dying. There is, first, a large class
of people tired of or even nauseated with it all, who conscientiously
prefer to have nothing rather than this. They are simply abandoning
it, the same as a tree abandons its leaves when the early winter comes.
There is, second, a large class in whom the Divine Breath is stirring,
who are finding the Christ within in all its matchless beauty and
redeeming power. And this new life is pushing off the old, the same as
in the spring the newly awakened life in the tree pushes off the old,
lifeless leaves that have clung on during the winter, to make place for
the new ones. And the way this old dead leaf religion is being pushed
off on every hand is indeed most interesting and inspiring to witness.</p>
<p id="id00371">Let the places of those who have been emptying our churches by reason
of their attempts to give stones for bread, husks and chaff for the
life-giving grain, let their places be taken even for but a few times
by those who are open and alive to these higher inspirations, and then
let us again question those who feel that religion is dying out. "It
is the live coal that kindles others, not the dead." Let their places
be taken by those who have caught the inspiration of the Divine Breath,
who as a consequence have a message of mighty value and import for the
people, who by virtue of this same fact are able to present it with a
beauty and a power so enrapturing that it takes captive the soul. Then
we will find that the churches that today are dotted here and there
with a few dozen people will be filled to overflowing, and there will
not be even room enough for all who would enter. "Let the shell perish
that the pearl may appear." We need no new revelations as yet. We
need simply to find the vital spirit of those we already have. Then in
due time, when we are ready for them, new ones will come, but not
before.</p>
<p id="id00372">"What the human soul, all the world over, needs," says John Pulsford,
"is not to be harangued, however eloquently, about the old, accepted
religion, but to be permeated, charmed, and taken captive by <i>a warmer
and more potent Breath of God than they ever felt before</i>. And I
should not be true to my personal experience if I did not bear
testimony that this Divine Breath is as exquisitely adapted to the
requirements of the soul's nature as a June morning to the planet. Nor
does the morning breath leave the trees freer to delight themselves and
develop themselves under its influence than the Breath of God allows
each human mind to unfold according to its genius. Nothing stirs the
central wheel of the soul like the Breath of God. The whole man is
quickened, his senses are new senses, his emotions new emotions; his
reason, his affections, his imagination, are all new-born. The change
is greater than he knows; he marvels at the powers in himself which the
Breath is opening and calling forth. He finds his nature to be an
unutterable thing; he is sure therefore that the future must have
inconceivable surprises in store. And herein lies the evidence, which
I commend to my readers, of the existence of God, and of the Eternal
human Hope. Let God's Breath kindle new spring-time in the soul, start
into life its deeply buried germs, lead in heaven's summer; you will
then have as clear evidence of God from within as you have of the
universe from without. Indeed, your internal experience of life, and
illimitable Hope in God will be nearer to you, and more prevailing,
than all your external and superficial experience of nature and the
world."</p>
<p id="id00373">There is but one source of power in the universe. Whatever then you
are, painter, orator, musician, writer, religious teacher, or whatever
it may be, know that to catch and take captive the secret of power is
so to work in conjunction with the Infinite Power, in order that it may
continually work and manifest through you. If you fail in doing this,
you fail in everything. If you fail in doing this, your work, whatever
it may be, will be third or fourth rate, possibly at times second rate,
but it positively never can be first rate. Absolutely impossible will
it be for you ever to become a master.</p>
<p id="id00374">Whatever estimate you put upon yourself will determine the
effectiveness of your work along any line. As long as you live merely
in the physical and the intellectual, you set limitations to yourself
that will hold you as long as you so live. When, however, you come
into the realization of your oneness with the Infinite Life and Power,
and open yourself that it may work through you, you will find that you
have entered upon an entirely new phase of life, and that an ever
increasing power will be yours. Then it will be true that your
strength will be as the strength of ten because your heart is pure.</p>
<p id="id00375"> "O God! I am one forever<br/>
With Thee by the glory of birth;<br/>
The celestial powers proclaim it<br/>
To the utmost bounds of the earth.<br/></p>
<p id="id00376"> "I think of this birthright immortal,<br/>
And my being expands like a rose,<br/>
As an odorous cloud of incense<br/>
Around and above me flows.<br/></p>
<p id="id00377"> "A glorious song of rejoicing<br/>
In an innermost spirit I hear,<br/>
And it sounds like heavenly voices,<br/>
In a chorus divine and clear.<br/></p>
<p id="id00378"> "And I feel a power uprising,<br/>
Like the power of an embryo god;<br/>
With a glorious wall it surrounds me,<br/>
And lifts me up from the sod."<br/></p>
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