EARLY in the morning, when marching from a little town called
Changu, we had a river to pass, which we were obliged to ferry; and, had the
Tartars had any intelligence, then had been the time to have attacked us, when
the caravan being over, the rear-guard was behind; but they did not appear
there. About three hours after, when we were entered upon a desert of about
fifteen or sixteen miles over, we knew by a cloud of dust they raised, that the
enemy was at hand, and presently they came on upon the spur.
Our Chinese guards in the front, who had talked so big the day before, began
to stagger; and the soldiers frequently looked behind them, a certain sign in a
soldier that he is just ready to run away. My old pilot was of my mind; and
being near me, called out, "Seignior Inglese, these fellows must be encouraged,
or they will ruin us all; for if the Tartars come on they will never stand it."
- "If am of your mind," said I; "but what must be done?" - "Done?" says he, "let
fifty of our men advance, and flank them on each wing, and encourage them. They
will fight like brave fellows in brave company; but without this they will every
man turn his back." Immediately I rode up to our leader and told him, who was
exactly of our mind; accordingly, fifty of us marched to the right wing, and
fifty to the left, and the rest made a line of rescue; and so we marched,
leaving the last two hundred men to make a body of themselves, and to guard the
camels; only that, if need were, they should send a hundred men to assist the
last fifty.
At last the Tartars came on, and an innumerable company they were; how many
we could not tell, but ten thousand, we thought, at the least. A party of them
came on first, and viewed our posture, traversing the ground in the front of our
line; and, as we found them within gunshot, our leader ordered the two wings to
advance swiftly, and give them a salvo on each wing with their shot, which was
done. They then went off, I suppose to give an account of the reception they
were like to meet with; indeed, that salute cloyed their stomachs, for they
immediately halted, stood a while to consider of it, and wheeling off to the
left, they gave over their design for that time, which was very agreeable to our
circumstances.
Two days after we came to the city of Naun, or Naum; we thanked the governor
for his care of us, and collected to the value of a hundred crowns, or
thereabouts, which we gave to the soldiers sent to guard us; and here we rested
one day. This is a garrison indeed, and there were nine hundred soldiers kept
here; but the reason of it was, that formerly the Muscovite frontiers lay nearer
to them than they now do, the Muscovites having abandoned that part of the
country, which lies from this city west for about two hundred miles, as desolate
and unfit for use; and more especially being so very remote, and so difficult to
send troops thither for its defence; for we were yet above two thousand miles
from Muscovy properly so called. After this we passed several great rivers, and
two dreadful deserts; one of which we were sixteen days passing over; and on the
13th of April we came to the frontiers of the Muscovite dominions. I think the
first town or fortress, whichever it may he called, that belonged to the Czar,
was called Arguna, being on the west side of the river Arguna.
I could not but feel great satisfaction that I was arrived in a country
governed by Christians; for though the Muscovites do, in my opinion, but just
deserve the name of Christians, yet such they pretend to be, and are very devout
in their way. It would certainly occur to any reflecting man who travels the
world as I have done, what a blessing it is to be brought into the world where
the name of God and a Redeemer is known, adored, and worshipped; and not where
the people, given up to strong delusions, worship the devil, and prostrate
themselves to monsters, elements, horrid- shaped animals, and monstrous images.
Not a town or city we passed through but had their pagodas, their idols, and
their temples, and ignorant people worshipping even the works of their own
hands. Now we came where, at least, a face of the Christian worship appeared;
where the knee was bowed to Jesus: and whether ignorantly or not, yet the
Christian religion was owned, and the name of the true God was called upon and
adored; and it made my soul rejoice to see it. I saluted the brave Scots
merchant with my first acknowledgment of this; and taking him by the hand, I
said to him, "Blessed be God, we are once again amongst Christians." He smiled,
and answered, "Do not rejoice too soon, countryman; these Muscovites are but an
odd sort of Christians; and but for the name of it you may see very little of
the substance for some months further of our journey." - "Well," says I, "but
still it is better than paganism, and worshipping of devils." - "Why, I will
tell you," says he; "except the Russian soldiers in the garrisons, and a few of
the inhabitants of the cities upon the road, all the rest of this country, for
above a thousand miles farther, is inhabited by the worst and most ignorant of
pagans." And so, indeed, we found it.
We now launched into the greatest piece of solid earth that is to be found in
any part of the world; we had, at least, twelve thousand miles to the sea
eastward; two thousand to the bottom of the Baltic Sea westward; and above three
thousand, if we left that sea, and went on west, to the British and French
channels: we had full five thousand miles to the Indian or Persian Sea south;
and about eight hundred to the Frozen Sea north.
We advanced from the river Arguna by easy and moderate journeys, and were
very visibly obliged to the care the Czar has taken to have cities and towns
built in as many places as it is possible to place them, where his soldiers keep
garrison, something like the stationary soldiers placed by the Romans in the
remotest countries of their empire; some of which I had read of were placed in
Britain, for the security of commerce, and for the lodging of travellers. Thus
it was here; for wherever we came, though at these towns and stations the
garrisons and governors were Russians, and professed Christians, yet the
inhabitants were mere pagans, sacrificing to idols, and worshipping the sun,
moon, and stars, or all the host of heaven; and not only so, but were, of all
the heathens and pagans that ever I met with, the most barbarous, except only
that they did not eat men's flesh.
Some instances of this we met with in the country between Arguna, where we
enter the Muscovite dominions, and a city of Tartars and Russians together,
called Nortziousky, in which is a continued desert or forest, which cost us
twenty days to travel over. In a village near the last of these places I had the
curiosity to go and see their way of living, which is most brutish and
unsufferable. They had, I suppose, a great sacrifice that day; for there stood
out, upon an old stump of a tree, a diabolical kind of idol made of wood; it was
dressed up, too, in the most filthy manner; its upper garment was of sheepskins,
with the wool outward; a great Tartar bonnet on the head, with two horns growing
through it; it was about eight feet high, yet had no feet or legs, nor any other
proportion of parts.
This scarecrow was set up at the outer side of the village; and when I came
near to it there were sixteen or seventeen creatures all lying flat upon the
ground round this hideous block of wood; I saw no motion among them, any more
than if they had been all logs, like the idol, and at first I really thought
they had been so; but, when I came a little nearer, they started up upon their
feet, and raised a howl, as if it had been so many deep-mouthed hounds, and
walked away, as if they were displeased at our disturbing them. A little way off
from the idol, and at the door of a hut, made of sheep and cow skins dried,
stood three men with long knives in their hands; and in the middle of the tent
appeared three sheep killed, and one young bullock. These, it seems, were
sacrifices to that senseless log of an idol; the three men were priests
belonging to it, and the seventeen prostrated wretches were the people who
brought the offering, and were offering their prayers to that stock.
I confess I was more moved at their stupidity and brutish worship of a
hobgoblin than ever I was at anything in my life, and, overcome with rage, I
rode up to the hideous idol, and with my sword made a stroke at the bonnet that
was on its head, and cut it in two; and one of our men that was with me, taking
hold of the sheepskin that covered it, pulled at it, when, behold, a most
hideous outcry ran through the village, and two or three hundred people came
about my ears, so that I was glad to scour for it, for some had bows and arrows;
but I resolved from that moment to visit them again. Our caravan rested three
nights at the town, which was about four miles off, in order to provide some
horses which they wanted, several of the horses having been lamed and jaded with
the long march over the last desert; so we had some leisure here to put my
design in execution. I communicated it to the Scots merchant, of whose courage I
had sufficient testimony; I told him what I had seen, and with what indignation
I had since thought that human nature could be so degenerate; I told him if I
could get but four or five men well armed to go with me, I was resolved to go
and destroy that vile, abominable idol, and let them see that it had no power to
help itself, and consequently could not be an object of worship, or to be prayed
to, much less help them that offered sacrifices to it.
He at first objected to my plan as useless, seeing that, owing to the gross
ignorance of the people, they could not be brought to profit by the lesson I
meant to teach them; and added that, from his knowledge of the country and its
customs, he feared we should fall into great peril by giving offence to these
brutal idol worshippers. This somewhat stayed my purpose, but I was still uneasy
all that day to put my project in execution; and that evening, meeting the Scots
merchant in our walk about the town, I again called upon him to aid me in it.
When he found me resolute he said that, on further thoughts, he could not but
applaud the design, and told me I should not go alone, but he would go with me;
but he would go first and bring a stout fellow, one of his countrymen, to go
also with us; "and one," said he, "as famous for his zeal as you can desire any
one to be against such devilish things as these." So we agreed to go, only we
three and my man- servant, and resolved to put it in execution the following
night about midnight, with all possible secrecy.
We thought it better to delay it till the next night, because the caravan
being to set forward in the morning, we suppose the governor could not pretend
to give them any satisfaction upon us when we were out of his power. The Scots
merchant, as steady in his resolution for the enterprise as bold in executing,
brought me a Tartar's robe or gown of sheepskins, and a bonnet, with a bow and
arrows, and had provided the same for himself and his countryman, that the
people, if they saw us, should not determine who we were. All the first night we
spent in mixing up some combustible matter, with aqua vitae, gunpowder, and such
other materials as we could get; and having a good quantity of tar in a little
pot, about an hour after night we set out upon our expedition.
We came to the place about eleven o'clock at night, and found that the people
had not the least suspicion of danger attending their idol. The night was
cloudy: yet the moon gave us light enough to see that the idol stood just in the
same posture and place that it did before. The people seemed to be all at their
rest; only that in the great hut, where we saw the three priests, we saw a
light, and going up close to the door, we heard people talking as if there were
five or six of them; we concluded, therefore, that if we set wildfire to the
idol, those men would come out immediately, and run up to the place to rescue it
from destruction; and what to do with them we knew not. Once we thought of
carrying it away, and setting fire to it at a distance; but when we came to
handle it, we found it too bulky for our carriage, so we were at a loss again.
The second Scotsman was for setting fire to the hut, and knocking the creatures
that were there on the head when they came out; but I could not join with that;
I was against killing them, if it were possible to avoid it. "Well, then," said
the Scots merchant, "I will tell you what we will do: we will try to make them
prisoners, tie their hands, and make them stand and see their idol destroyed."
As it happened, we had twine or packthread enough about us, which we used to
tie our firelocks together with; so we resolved to attack these people first,
and with as little noise as we could. The first thing we did, we knocked at the
door, when one of the priests coming to it, we immediately seized upon him,
stopped his mouth, and tied his hands behind him, and led him to the idol, where
we gagged him that he might not make a noise, tied his feet also together, and
left him on the ground.
Two of us then waited at the door, expecting that another would come out to
see what the matter was; but we waited so long till the third man came back to
us; and then nobody coming out, we knocked again gently, and immediately out
came two more, and we served them just in the same manner, but were obliged to
go all with them, and lay them down by the idol some distance from one another;
when, going back, we found two more were come out of the door, and a third stood
behind them within the door. We seized the two, and immediately tied them, when
the third, stepping back and crying out, my Scots merchant went in after them,
and taking out a composition we had made that would only smoke and stink, he set
fire to it, and threw it in among them. By that time the other Scotsman and my
man, taking charge of the two men already bound, and tied together also by the
arm, led them away to the idol, and left them there, to see if their idol would
relieve them, making haste back to us.
When the fuze we had thrown in had filled the hut with so much smoke that
they were almost suffocated, we threw in a small leather bag of another kind,
which flamed like a candle, and, following it in, we found there were but four
people, who, as we supposed, had been about some of their diabolical sacrifices.
They appeared, in short, frightened to death, at least so as to sit trembling
and stupid, and not able to speak either, for the smoke.
We quickly took them from the hut, where the smoke soon drove us out, bound
them as we had done the other, and all without any noise. Then we carried them
all together to the idol; when we came there, we fell to work with him. First,
we daubed him all over, and his robes also, with tar, and tallow mixed with
brimstone; then we stopped his eyes and ears and mouth full of gunpowder, and
wrapped up a great piece of wildfire in his bonnet; then sticking all the
combustibles we had brought with us upon him, we looked about to see if we could
find anything else to help to burn him; when my Scotsman remembered that by the
hut, where the men were, there lay a heap of dry forage; away he and the other
Scotsman ran and fetched their arms full of that. When we had done this, we took
all our prisoners, and brought them, having untied their feet and ungagged their
mouths, and made them stand up, and set them before their monstrous idol, and
then set fire to the whole.
We stayed by it a quarter of an hour or thereabouts, till the powder in the
eyes and mouth and ears of the idol blew up, and, as we could perceive, had
split altogether; and in a word, till we saw it burned so that it would soon be
quite consumed. We then began to think of going away; but the Scotsman said,
"No, we must not go, for these poor deluded wretches will all throw themselves
into the fire, and burn themselves with the idol." So we resolved to stay till
the forage has burned down too, and then came away and left them. After the feat
was performed, we appeared in the morning among our fellow-travellers,
exceedingly busy in getting ready for our journey; nor could any man suppose
that we had been anywhere but in our beds.
But the affair did not end so; the next day came a great number of the
country people to the town gates, and in a most outrageous manner demanded
satisfaction of the Russian governor for the insulting their priests and burning
their great Cham Chi-Thaungu. The people of Nertsinkay were at first in a great
consternation, for they said the Tartars were already no less than thirty
thousand strong. The Russian governor sent out messengers to appease them,
assuring them that he knew nothing of it, and that there had not a soul in his
garrison been abroad, so that it could not be from anybody there: but if they
could let him know who did it, they should be exemplarily punished. They
returned haughtily, that all the country reverenced the great Cham Chi-Thaungu,
who dwelt in the sun, and no mortal would have dared to offer violence to his
image but some Christian miscreant; and they therefore resolved to denounce war
against him and all the Russians, who, they said, were miscreants and
Christians.
The governor, unwilling to make a breach, or to have any cause of war alleged
to be given by him, the Czar having strictly charged him to treat the conquered
country with gentleness, gave them all the good words he could. At last he told
them there was a caravan gone towards Russia that morning, and perhaps it was
some of them who had done them this injury; and that if they would be satisfied
with that, he would send after them to inquire into it. This seemed to appease
them a little; and accordingly the governor sent after us, and gave us a
particular account how the thing was; intimating withal, that if any in our
caravan had done it they should make their escape; but that whether we had done
it or no, we should make all the haste forward that was possible: and that, in
the meantime, he would keep them in play as long as he could.
This was very friendly in the governor; however, when it came to the caravan,
there was nobody knew anything of the matter; and as for us that were guilty, we
were least of all suspected. However, the captain of the caravan for the time
took the hint that the governor gave us, and we travelled two days and two
nights without any considerable stop, and then we lay at a village called
Plothus: nor did we make any long stop here, but hastened on towards Jarawena,
another Muscovite colony, and where we expected we should be safe. But upon the
second day's march from Plothus, by the clouds of dust behind us at a great
distance, it was plain we were pursued. We had entered a vast desert, and had
passed by a great lake called Schanks Oser, when we perceived a large body of
horse appear on the other side of the lake, to the north, we travelling west. We
observed they went away west, as we did, but had supposed we would have taken
that side of the lake, whereas we very happily took the south side; and in two
days more they disappeared again: for they, believing we were still before them,
pushed on till they came to the Udda, a very great river when it passes farther
north, but when we came to it we found it narrow and fordable.
The third day they had either found their mistake, or had intelligence of us,
and came pouring in upon us towards dusk. We had, to our great satisfaction,
just pitched upon a convenient place for our camp; for as we had just entered
upon a desert above five hundred miles over, where we had no towns to lodge at,
and, indeed, expected none but the city Jarawena, which we had yet two days'
march to; the desert, however, had some few woods in it on this side, and little
rivers, which ran all into the great river Udda; it was in a narrow strait,
between little but very thick woods, that we pitched our camp that night,
expecting to be attacked before morning. As it was usual for the Mogul Tartars
to go about in troops in that desert, so the caravans always fortify themselves
every night against them, as against armies of robbers; and it was, therefore,
no new thing to be pursued. But we had this night a most advantageous camp: for
as we lay between two woods, with a little rivulet running just before our
front, we could not be surrounded, or attacked any way but in our front or rear.
We took care also to make our front as strong as we could, by placing our packs,
with the camels and horses, all in a line, on the inside of the river, and
felling some trees in our rear.
In this posture we encamped for the night; but the enemy was upon us before
we had finished. They did not come on like thieves, as we expected, but sent
three messengers to us, to demand the men to be delivered to them that had
abused their priests and burned their idol, that they might burn them with fire;
and upon this, they said, they would go away, and do us no further harm,
otherwise they would destroy us all. Our men looked very blank at this message,
and began to stare at one another to see who looked with the most guilt in their
faces; but nobody was the word - nobody did it. The leader of the caravan sent
word he was well assured that it was not done by any of our camp; that we were
peaceful merchants, travelling on our business; that we had done no harm to them
or to any one else; and that, therefore, they must look further for the enemies
who had injured them, for we were not the people; so they desired them not to
disturb us, for if they did we should defend ourselves.
They were far from being satisfied with this for an answer: and a great crowd
of them came running down in the morning, by break of day, to our camp; but
seeing us so well posted, they durst come no farther than the brook in our
front, where they stood in such number as to terrify us very much; indeed, some
spoke of ten thousand. Here they stood and looked at us a while, and then,
setting up a great howl, let fly a crowd of arrows among us; but we were well
enough sheltered under our baggage, and I do not remember that one of us was
hurt.
Some time after this we saw them move a little to our right, and expected
them on the rear: when a cunning fellow, a Cossack of Jarawena, calling to the
leader of the caravan, said to him, "I will send all these people away to
Sibeilka." This was a city four or five days' journey at least to the right, and
rather behind us. So he takes his bow and arrows, and getting on horseback, he
rides away from our rear directly, as it were back to Nertsinskay; after this he
takes a great circuit about, and comes directly on the army of the Tartars as if
he had been sent express to tell them a long story that the people who had
burned the Cham Chi-Thaungu were gone to Sibeilka, with a caravan of miscreants,
as he called them - that is to say, Christians; and that they had resolved to
burn the god Scal-Isar, belonging to the Tonguses. As this fellow was himself a
Tartar, and perfectly spoke their language, he counterfeited so well that they
all believed him, and away they drove in a violent hurry to Sibeilka. In less
than three hours they were entirely out of our sight, and we never heard any
more of them, nor whether they went to Sibeilka or no. So we passed away safely
on to Jarawena, where there was a Russian garrison, and there we rested five
days.
From this city we had a frightful desert, which held us twenty- three days'
march. We furnished ourselves with some tents here, for the better accommodating
ourselves in the night; and the leader of the caravan procured sixteen waggons
of the country, for carrying our water or provisions, and these carriages were
our defence every night round our little camp; so that had the Tartars appeared,
unless they had been very numerous indeed, they would not have been able to hurt
us. We may well be supposed to have wanted rest again after this long journey;
for in this desert we neither saw house nor tree, and scarce a bush; though we
saw abundance of the sable-hunters, who are all Tartars of Mogul Tartary; of
which this country is a part; and they frequently attack small caravans, but we
saw no numbers of them together.
After we had passed this desert we came into a country pretty well inhabited
- that is to say, we found towns and castles, settled by the Czar with garrisons
of stationary soldiers, to protect the caravans and defend the country against
the Tartars, who would otherwise make it very dangerous travelling; and his
czarish majesty has given such strict orders for the well guarding the caravans,
that, if there are any Tartars heard of in the country, detachments of the
garrison are always sent to see the travellers safe from station to station.
Thus the governor of Adinskoy, whom I had an opportunity to make a visit to, by
means of the Scots merchant, who was acquainted with him, offered us a guard of
fifty men, if we thought there was any danger, to the next station.
I thought, long before this, that as we came nearer to Europe we should find
the country better inhabited, and the people more civilised; but I found myself
mistaken in both: for we had yet the nation of the Tonguses to pass through,
where we saw the same tokens of paganism and barbarity as before; only, as they
were conquered by the Muscovites, they were not so dangerous, but for rudeness
of manners and idolatry no people in the world ever went beyond them. They are
all clothed in skins of beasts, and their houses are built of the same; you know
not a man from a woman, neither by the ruggedness of their countenances nor
their clothes; and in the winter, when the ground is covered with snow, they
live underground in vaults, which have cavities going from one to another. If
the Tartars had their Cham Chi-Thaungu for a whole village or country, these had
idols in every hut and every cave. This country, I reckon, was, from the desert
I spoke of last, at least four hundred miles, half of it being another desert,
which took us up twelve days' severe travelling, without house or tree; and we
were obliged again to carry our own provisions, as well water as bread. After we
were out of this desert and had travelled two days, we came to Janezay, a
Muscovite city or station, on the great river Janezay, which, they told us
there, parted Europe from Asia.
All the country between the river Oby and the river Janezay is as entirely
pagan, and the people as barbarous, as the remotest of the Tartars. I also
found, which I observed to the Muscovite governors whom I had an opportunity to
converse with, that the poor pagans are not much wiser, or nearer Christianity,
for being under the Muscovite government, which they acknowledged was true
enough - but that, as they said, was none of their business; that if the Czar
expected to convert his Siberian, Tonguse, or Tartar subjects, it should be done
by sending clergymen among them, not soldiers; and they added, with more
sincerity than I expected, that it was not so much the concern of their monarch
to make the people Christians as to make them subjects.
From this river to the Oby we crossed a wild uncultivated country, barren of
people and good management, otherwise it is in itself a pleasant, fruitful, and
agreeable country. What inhabitants we found in it are all pagans, except such
as are sent among them from Russia; for this is the country - I mean on both
sides the river Oby - whither the Muscovite criminals that are not put to death
are banished, and from whence it is next to impossible they should ever get
away. I have nothing material to say of my particular affairs till I came to
Tobolski, the capital city of Siberia, where I continued some time on the
following account.
We had now been almost seven months on our journey, and winter began to come
on apace; whereupon my partner and I called a council about our particular
affairs, in which we found it proper, as we were bound for England, to consider
how to dispose of ourselves. They told us of sledges and reindeer to carry us
over the snow in the winter time, by which means, indeed, the Russians travel
more in winter than they can in summer, as in these sledges they are able to run
night and day: the snow, being frozen, is one universal covering to nature, by
which the hills, vales, rivers, and lakes are all smooth and hard is a stone,
and they run upon the surface, without any regard to what is underneath.
But I had no occasion to urge a winter journey of this kind. I was bound to
England, not to Moscow, and my route lay two ways: either I must go on as the
caravan went, till I came to Jarislaw, and then go off west for Narva and the
Gulf of Finland, and so on to Dantzic, where I might possibly sell my China
cargo to good advantage; or I must leave the caravan at a little town on the
Dwina, from whence I had but six days by water to Archangel, and from thence
might be sure of shipping either to England, Holland, or Hamburg.
Now, to go any one of these journeys in the winter would have been
preposterous; for as to Dantzic, the Baltic would have been frozen up and I
could not get passage; and to go by land in those countries was far less safe
than among the Mogul Tartars; likewise, as to Archangel in October, all the
ships would be gone from thence, and even the merchants who dwell there in
summer retire south to Moscow in the winter, when the ships are gone; so that I
could have nothing but extremity of cold to encounter, with a scarcity of
provisions, and must lie in an empty town all the winter. Therefore, upon the
whole, I thought it much my better way to let the caravan go, and make provision
to winter where I was, at Tobolski, in Siberia, in the latitude of about sixty
degrees, where I was sure of three things to wear out a cold winter with, viz.
plenty of provisions, such as the country afforded, a warm house, with fuel
enough, and excellent company.
I was now in quite a different climate from my beloved island, where I never
felt cold, except when I had my ague; on the contrary, I had much to do to bear
any clothes on my back, and never made any fire but without doors, which was
necessary for dressing my food, &c. Now I had three good vests, with large robes
or gowns over them, to hang down to the feet, and button close to the wrists;
and all these lined with furs, to make them sufficiently warm. As to a warm
house, I must confess I greatly dislike our way in England of making fires in
every room of the house in open chimneys, which, when the fire is out, always
keeps the air in the room cold as the climate. So I took an apartment in a good
house in the town, and ordered a chimney to be built like a furnace, in the
centre of six several rooms, like a stove; the funnel to carry the smoke went up
one way, the door to come at the fire went in another, and all the rooms were
kept equally warm, but no fire seen, just as they heat baths in England. By this
means we had always the same climate in all the rooms, and an equal heat was
preserved, and yet we saw no fire, nor were ever incommoded with smoke.
The most wonderful thing of all was, that it should be possible to meet with
good company here, in a country so barbarous as this - one of the most northerly
parts of Europe. But this being the country where the state criminals of
Muscovy, as I observed before, are all banished, the city was full of Russian
noblemen, gentlemen, soldiers, and courtiers. Here was the famous Prince
Galitzin, the old German Robostiski, and several other persons of note, and some
ladies. By means of my Scotch merchant, whom, nevertheless, I parted with here,
I made an acquaintance with several of these gentlemen; and from these, in the
long winter nights in which I stayed here, I received several very agreeable
visits.
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