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مسلسل Outlander مترجم - Episode 8
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00:01Previously, my husband...
00:03Nothing you could ever do could stop my loving you.
00:06Jonathan. Jonathan Wolverton Randall, finally.
00:09Captain of Dragoons in the British Army and your direct ancestor.
00:15Otherwise known as Black Jack.
00:17I heard stories of a place called Craignadu.
00:22I was no longer in the 20th century.
00:25What was Frank going through?
00:28Claire?
00:30Perhaps I was abducted.
00:33Perhaps I was dead.
00:38Or perhaps, worst of all...
00:42I had left him for another man.
00:46Sing me a song of a lass that is gone
00:52Say, could that lass be I?
00:56Mary of soul, she sailed on a day
01:03Over the sea to sky
01:07Billow and breeze, islands and seas, mountains of rain and sun
01:17All that was good
01:21All that was good
01:23All that was fair
01:26All that was mean is gone
01:28Sing me a song of Tufts
01:32Sing me a song of a lass that is gone
01:34Sing me a song of one
01:36Less that last be I
01:38Married of souls she sailed on a day
01:45Over the sea to the sky
02:32Inverness Police, Constable Boyle speaking, how may I help you?
02:37Ah, I see
02:39Yes, ma'am, I see now
02:40When did you first notice the items were, my son?
02:47He's back
02:50Jesus, Mary and Joseph
02:53I think today's the day
02:56Today, sir?
02:57I have let this go on long enough
02:59Today, Sergeant
03:12Good luck
03:14Yes, ma'am, I heard every word you said
03:16I'm going to send a man over straight away
03:27I am sorry, Mr. Randall
03:31I'm very, very sorry
03:33Please, believe me when I say I wish there was more that we could do
03:38It's your job
03:41Perhaps you could do that
03:45I know this must be disappointing to you
03:47Disappointing
03:49It's an interesting word
03:52It suggests expectations that were unmet
03:57My expectations of your department were low to begin with
04:01And I can assure you
04:02That you have met those expectations at every turn
04:09We have spent the past six weeks
04:11Searching over 100 square miles of rugged terrain
04:15Conducted 175 interviews
04:17Invested over 1,000 man-hours
04:19I know the litany, detective
04:21Tell me, what do you have to show
04:23For these efforts?
04:29My wife has disappeared
04:35Do you have any idea at all
04:37What might have happened to her?
04:42We haven't found a body
04:44Now that tells me that she's probably still alive
04:46No blood in the car
04:47No sign of a struggle
04:49Now that tells me that
04:51She probably wasn't taken against her will
04:55Your favourite theory
04:56You personally witnessed
04:59A man staring up at her window
05:01The night before she disappeared
05:03I've said from the very beginning
05:04That the Highlander is certainly involved in some way
05:07Of course he's involved, you fool
05:10He's her lover
05:11And the two of them left together
05:13My wife is not with another man
05:42Ask her a question
05:45Of course
05:49But my question
05:51I don't know what student that is
05:54I don't mean to imply that you have some
05:58Vast knowledge of men
05:59But you know more than I do in such matters
06:02Out of it
06:08Is it usual?
06:11What it is between us
06:12When I touch you
06:15When you lie with me
06:20Is it always so between a man and a woman?
06:30It's often something like this
06:40No
06:41This isn't usual
06:47It's different
07:02Don't move
07:20Medeva
07:24Friend of yours?
07:26Aye
07:28Human role
07:35How do you know I was here?
07:42I saw Dougal and Yella's watering the horses
07:45I figure I must be up here
07:48Who?
07:50Claire
07:52My wife
07:53I am
07:55I know
07:56Married but he's two days
08:06He says he's got news
08:08But insists we drink to you first
08:11And I see I disagree
08:18So aren't you?
08:23Oh
08:24Right
08:24I learned
08:26Sure
08:28A wedding gift
08:30How kind
08:39It is beautiful
08:40It is beautiful
08:41It's a dragonfly
08:44Thank you
08:47What an official have you?
08:49Are these just for when the game is scarce?
08:53What are they?
08:55Gabber Lundsey tokens
08:57Licenses to beg
08:59They're good within the borders of a single parish
09:03Single parish?
09:05About a dozen by my count
09:08Aye well
09:09Unrose's special case you see
09:11He was captured by the Turks at sea
09:14Spent a good many years as a slave in Algier
09:16That's where he lost his tongue
09:21Cut us out
09:29I'm poured boiling oil on his legs
09:32That's how they force captive Christians to convert to a Muslim religion
09:46I said you came with news
09:50How do you know?
10:02How do you know?
10:05Can you be trusted?
10:13What's his name?
10:19Harak
10:21Harak
10:22Harak
10:23Harak
10:23Harak
10:24Harak
10:25Haraks
10:29When and where does this Haraks want to meet?
10:32Oh, oh, oh, oh.
10:36Have her.
10:39All right.
10:42All right.
10:50Find me here.
11:02There's a chance I can get the price lifted from my head.
11:07There's a witness who can prove my innocence.
11:09He claims he was there during my escape from Fort William.
11:13I saw he actually killed the sergeant.
11:17But I'm not sure I can trust him.
11:19Is this Horrocks?
11:21Aye.
11:23The right coat is yellow.
11:26If there's a chance I can finally go home with my bride.
11:32Clear freezer.
11:33Leave your lally, bro.
11:53What about the Fendhorn River?
11:56Did you tell them?
11:59They weren't interested.
12:01It's a theory.
12:03A good one.
12:05She leaves Craig Nadoon.
12:06Gets lost.
12:07Turns back.
12:08Tries to follow the Fendhorn River.
12:10Takes a misstep and then is swept away by the current all the way down to the Darnoway Forest.
12:15Darnoway Forest is 20 miles from where the car was found.
12:18Aye, but the river is fast and it was swift that night.
12:21She could have been carried twice that far.
12:25See these maps of the area, they're poor.
12:28Looks as though there are bends in the river here where she might have made it to shore.
12:31Then found shelter along this ridge.
12:33Maybe, maybe in a cave.
12:35So she's tired.
12:36She's lost.
12:37She doesn't know who have to tell.
12:38So she hunkers down in this cave to keep warm and lives on fish and frogs while waiting to be
12:45found.
12:45Fish and frogs.
12:46For seven weeks.
12:47She relied on her army survival training.
12:49She's a strong woman.
12:50She's smart.
12:51She's capable.
12:51She's grasping at straws.
12:53Gentlemen.
12:55Tea is served.
12:56And biscuits.
12:57Oh, thank you, Roger.
12:59May I have a biscuit, please?
13:02You mean another biscuit?
13:04Aye.
13:04Have you been eating all my biscuits, Roger Wakefield?
13:08Now go upstairs and get ready for bed.
13:10I'll be up in a minute to read you a story.
13:38I think I need something a little stronger.
13:42Care for some company?
13:43No, thank you.
13:43Don't wait up.
13:45Sigh.
13:55Sigh.
13:56Heh heh, get down, get down.
14:04Er, what can I get you?
14:08Nothing.
14:13Evening, Mr. Randall.
14:18You can call me Sally, but that's not my real name.
14:28What can I do for you, Sally?
14:31It's what I can do for you.
14:46I can where he is.
14:51Where?
14:52Close.
14:55I'll take you to him.
14:58Not now.
15:00There's too many eyes and ears in here.
15:04Meet me on Drummond Lane.
15:06Just past the cobbler's shop at half past twelve.
15:09Come alone and bring the reward.
15:14Is he with her?
15:17My wife?
15:20I don't know.
15:22All I can do is take you to where he is.
15:24After that, it's your concern.
15:26Remember, half past twelve.
15:40Another.
15:42So the water horse carries the builder straight into the water.
15:47Down through the depths to his own cold, fishy home.
15:53And then he tells the builder, if he would be free, he must build a fine hearth.
15:59And a muckle chimney as well, so that the water horse's wife could warm her hands by the fire and
16:08fry her fish.
16:14And the builder, having little choice, did as he was bid.
16:18Because the water horse's wife was sad and cold and hungry in her new room beneath the leaves.
16:27Not tearing over much for snakes and water wheat for us.
16:31By the time we get back to Leoch?
16:37Christmas.
16:38Don't suppose you hang stockings by the fire?
16:42To dry them off, you mean?
16:45Never mind.
16:46When the water horse's wife was warm then, and happy, and full of the fish she fried for her supper.
16:56But when the man came down to the...
16:58What's the matter?
16:59The horses?
17:01They're restless.
17:03Someone's near.
17:07Don't move.
17:08We all know.
17:13And the waters of the east end of Loch Gareth never freeze over.
17:20Because the heat from the water horse's chimney melts the ice.
17:24You see that fallen tree?
17:26What I say is go to it and don't move.
17:31Take this.
17:33Right.
17:37The water horse beneath the waves has but fish's teeth and feeds on snails and waterweeds and cold wet things.
17:47His blood runs cold as water and is no need of fire.
17:52Go!
17:53Mind the wagon!
17:54Get out of here!
17:57Get out of here!
18:01Get out of here!
18:02Get out of here!
18:04Get out of here!
18:05Get out of here!
18:08Move!
18:12They're going for the grain and the horses!
18:15Stevo!
18:44Come on in!
18:48Come on! Pull the car!
18:53Come on!
18:58I'm all right. I'm all right.
19:03Who were those men?
19:04The Grants. They're taking it.
19:07A horse, three bags of green, but none of the money.
19:10A horse? Could have been worse.
19:13You're right, Willie.
19:15Did you see that shot? It was 20 pieces if it was one.
19:47Good day.
19:47Good day.
19:54Mr. Randall, I was starting to think you weren't going to show.
19:57I believe I'm on time.
19:59I just thought you might be Arlie.
20:13Here.
20:19Where?
20:24Give us the reward.
20:26Give us the reward.
20:42Luke!
20:43No, please.
20:48You're going to come.
20:53Luke!
20:54No, no!
20:57No!
20:59No!
20:59No!
21:00No!
21:03There is no Islander, is there?
21:06Is there?
21:07No!
21:08No!
21:11No!
21:17it's fashionable in this modern age to dismiss the idea of good and evil
21:24but there is evil and it finds purchase in good men by giving sin the sweet taste of ecstasy
21:35the nazis drank from that poison cup thinking all the while they were slaking their thirst
21:39with the sweetest wine are you suggesting that i have been drinking from the same cup
21:44evil has but one cup they drank long and deep yours was but a sip make it your last
21:55turn away from the darkness that beckons you and go back into the light you mean leave inverness
22:03all right go back to oxford you start your life over
22:15and what of claire let her go just as she has let you go
22:27so you believe that she left with the highlander of her own volition
22:35have you ever read shudlock holmes frank
22:41marvellous books
22:43one point he makes when you eliminate the impossible whatever remains however improbable
22:51must be the truth
23:08i don't know just slipped out of my hand found it good man
23:22it's too long and heavy for me
23:25lassie say that to me all the time
23:27you gave her a knife and you didn't show her how to use it
23:31someone should teach this lady how to defend herself against assailants
23:36angus you're a good man with a blade
23:38no thank you all the same but i think every man and woman in the world needs to know how
23:43to defend themselves sassenai especially those married to a phraseo
23:46i think i'm more aware of that every day
23:49lass needs a skin do
23:52aye
23:52a what
23:54skin do
23:55a hidden dagger
23:56some people hide them in their socks but i keep mine in a rather more private place
24:05now then we need a lesson
24:10mostly you want to use the underhand overhand is only good if you're coming down on someone
24:16else with a considerable force from above me
24:19i still say the only good weapon for a woman is poison
24:23perhaps there are certain deficiencies in combat
24:27all right
24:29so where do i aim in my skin do
24:31right
24:32maybe i kill him face to face
24:34here
24:36aim straight up
24:37and in
24:38as hard as you can into the heart
24:41oh
24:42avoid the breastbone
24:44you get your knife
24:45stuck in that soft bit on the tip
24:47you'll be without a knife
24:51so
24:53like that
24:54oh it didn't kill him yet mistress
24:56wait till the lesson's over
25:00really
25:01give us a hand
25:04turn around
25:05so i can show her to kill from behind
25:09now
25:10this
25:11is the spot in the back
25:13either side
25:14will do
25:14now
25:15you see with all the ribs and such
25:17very difficult
25:18to hit anything right
25:20when you stab
25:21in the back
25:22slip the knife
25:23between the ribs
25:24yeah
25:25that's one thing
25:26a lot harder to do than what you might think
25:30here
25:31here
25:33just under
25:34the last rib
25:34you stab upward
25:37and into the kidney
25:40straight up
25:41drop like a stone
25:47all right
25:48straight up
25:50and in
25:55see
25:56got it
25:57and
26:20you
26:21you
26:24you
26:26you
26:27you
27:51I know why the church calls it a sacrament.
27:57Why?
28:00I feel like God himself when I'm inside here.
28:04What?
28:05What is that a foolish thing to say?
28:08You're laughing at me.
28:10I will certainly help.
28:12And you'll get what you deserve.
28:24Get up, you rutting bastard.
28:34You might let him finish first, Harry.
28:37Stopping in the middle, that's bad for a man's elf.
28:39Oh, his elf's no concern of mine.
28:42There won't be any concern of his for much longer.
28:44We'll kill him and be done with it then.
28:47There's other mind to take a piece of that.
28:49Ah!
28:54Nah.
28:56I think I'll let him watch first.
28:59You like that, you Scottish whoresome?
29:03Take a good look, lady buck.
29:05See how it's done.
29:07Because I'll have your slut moaning for more before the hour is done.
29:10No!
29:11No!
29:13Ugh!
29:17Ugh!
29:33Ah!
29:35Ah!
29:36Ah!
29:37No!
29:38Get down!
30:11I have held my tongue for weeks now and I'll be silent no longer.
30:14I cannot tell him this fantasy of yours.
30:16I know what I know and I won't pretend that I don't.
30:19What you know is a bunch of dribble-drabble and nonsense and I will not have it paraded about as
30:24fact.
30:24He has a right to hear it and make up his own mind.
30:27You cannot hold out false hope to the poor man just as he's finally accepting that his wife...
30:37It's an old house.
30:39Is there something you wish to tell me, Mrs. Graham?
30:42There is.
30:44Even if it should cost me my position, I feel I must tell you the truth.
30:49The truth?
30:49The truth as I know it.
30:55There is another explanation for what happened to your wife.
31:01The stories are old.
31:04Some say as old as the stones themselves.
31:07Passed down from generation to generation through ballads and songs.
31:13I first heard them from my grandmother and she from hers.
31:18The songs tell stories about people who...
31:21travel through the stones.
31:24Travel through stone?
31:28I'm not sure I take your meaning.
31:32Not literally through the stone itself.
31:35You see...
31:37The circle at Craig Nadoon marks a...
31:41a place on the earth where the powers of nature come together.
31:45Superstition and twiddle twaddle.
31:50Go on.
31:51The stones gather the powers and give it focus like a glass, you can.
31:59And for certain people...
32:01on certain days...
32:04it allows them to pierce the veil of time.
32:11Mr. Randall, you know your wife went up that hill the day she vanished.
32:15I believe she didn't come back down that hill.
32:18At least not in 1945.
32:21I believe that she traveled to...
32:24some other time.
32:35Where or...
32:37when would that be?
32:38I don't know.
32:41Every traveler is different.
32:43They must make their own journey on their own path.
32:48But the songs do say that the travelers often return.
32:56I see.
33:07I shall leave Oxford this afternoon.
33:10Did you not hear me?
33:12Mrs. Graham.
33:13They often return.
33:14I did hear you.
33:16I simply do not share your beliefs.
33:20Forgive me.
33:38Sorry.
33:39Good day.
33:40I'm so sorry.
33:43It's all right.
33:45We're all right.
33:47My fault.
33:49To bring you here without taking proper heat and to let you be...
33:54To not stop him.
33:57It's all right.
34:02You're so cold when you're down.
34:04Your hands are like ice.
34:09Jamie!
34:14It's a shock.
34:15Are you all right?
34:15We had a shot.
34:17I'm going into shock.
34:20I'm going into shock.
34:21I'm going into shock.
34:28I'm going into shock.
34:28It's all right.
34:32My mind jumped and danced from thought to thought like a stone skipping across a pond.
34:38My parents.
34:39My parents.
34:40Men I'd seen die.
34:42The smell of Uncle Lam's cigarettes.
34:45Errol Flynn swinging on a rope.
34:48The feeling of my dagger tip puncturing the kidney.
34:56I knew he was worried about me.
35:00I knew he wanted to talk about what had happened.
35:06I was just shocked.
35:16It's all right.
35:19It's all right.
35:20It's all right.
35:22It's all right.
35:23The tracks lead back over the ridge.
35:26No horses.
35:27Good.
35:29Your man Horrocks.
35:31Munro said he's a deserter like these.
35:34Hey.
35:35You Munro's a good man.
35:36I won't deny it.
35:38But this is what becomes of a man who breaks his oath to king and country.
35:42Now you go and see Horrocks alone.
35:44You'll be walking into a trap, Miss Lake.
35:47He's right, Jamie.
35:48You have to meet him.
35:49I understand that.
35:50But I see we all go with you without swords in our hands.
35:53Otherwise you don't go at all.
35:57Come on.
36:20I don't remember getting on my horse.
36:23I don't remember riding away or even how long we rode.
36:28All I can recall of that pivotal moment in my life was that I was angry and I didn't know
36:35why.
36:40Why are we stopping?
36:43I'll have to stay here with Willy.
36:46What?
36:47I think I was right.
36:49Now this man Horrocks may be setting a trap.
36:52I'll all risk you again.
36:54You'll be safer here with Willy to look out for you.
36:57I don't need an explanation.
36:59You can take Willy with you.
37:01I can look after myself.
37:02I think I've proven that earlier.
37:07You needn't prove it again.
37:13There are redcoats about though.
37:15They'll likely come from the south.
37:17I'll keep an eye out.
37:18Aye.
37:20You stay here.
37:21I'll be back.
37:22I promise.
37:23You shouldn't make promises you can't keep.
37:25This one I will keep, Claire.
37:27Now you promise me you'll stay put.
37:29Jamie.
37:30Sure, coming.
37:31Promise me, Claire.
37:32I swear you'll be here when I get back.
37:35Fine.
37:36I promise.
37:38Good.
37:40And in that moment, the reason for my bitterness became clear to me.
37:46I wasn't angry at Jamie or the redcoat deserters.
37:51I was angry at myself for forgetting about my plan to make my way back to the stones at Craig
37:56Nadoon.
37:57My plan to return to my own time.
38:00To my husband, Frank.
38:02U.S. Army headquarters in Berlin announced the death of General George S. Patton Jr.
38:07Earlier today, from injuries he sustained in a car accident 12 days ago.
38:11Patton's Cadillac Model 75 staff car, transporting the general,
38:16as well as Private First Class Horace L. Woodring, collided with a truck just outside of Spare.
38:23Both gay and foreign system.
38:28A controversial figure, General Patton's career spans both the first and second world force.
38:34The most recently has come out of the quest...
38:37...
38:44...
38:44...
38:49...
38:50...
38:50...
38:50...
38:53Oh, my God.
39:16Mistress?
39:18What?
39:19If you need me, I'll just be taking care of some personal business.
39:24Go at least 50 yards away and downwind.
39:26Aye.
39:51I tried to avoid thinking about the incident in the meadow. My mind kept returning to it, again and again,
40:00picking at a festering sore best left untouched.
40:17And suddenly, there it was. Craig Nadoon.
40:26My mind had been so clouded and confused. I didn't recognize the road when we rode in. There was no
40:34mistaking it. I was back. To the place where it had all begun. So much had happened. So much had
40:45changed.
40:47Last I was here, I was Claire Randall. Then Claire Beecham. Then Claire Fraser. The question was, who did I
40:57want to be?
41:01No.
41:16No.
41:18No.
41:20No.
41:22No.
41:23No.
41:25No.
41:27No.
41:28No.
41:30No, no.
41:30No.
41:31No.
41:37No.
41:41No.
43:29Help me!
43:30Mark!
43:40Claire.
43:52Claire!
43:57Claire!
43:59Claire!
44:01Claire!
44:04Claire!
44:05Come on!
44:11Claire.
45:00I knew where we were going without having to ask.
45:04Fort William.
45:05The sight of Jamie's incarceration flogging four years ago, and now still the province
45:11of a man I unfortunately knew all too well.
45:15He would have no advance notice of my capture, no time to plan his interrogation.
45:21I on the other hand had the entire jolting journey in the back of the wagon to think.
45:26It was my one advantage.
45:29I prayed it would be enough.
45:32Felicitations and congratulations on your recent marriage.
45:37Um, I don't particularly care whether you consider yourself an English woman or a Scot.
45:44And apparently neither do you.
45:46You still wear your old wedding ring.
45:52Sentimental attachment.
45:55I doubt you have a sentimental bone in your body.
46:02But the more interesting question is, why would Dougal McKenzie consider you of such value, that
46:08he would rather adopt you as one of his own than allow me to question you?
46:12I am sure I have no idea what you're talking about.
46:16Really?
46:17Really?
46:20The king?
46:22The king.
46:23The king?
46:28I'm glad to hear that you still consider him your sovereign.
46:31We McKenzie's are all loyal subjects.
46:35That is the single most amusing thing I have heard all week.
46:39So I take it you haven't been amusing yourself by flogging some innocent prisoners then?
46:44Amusing myself.
46:46What an odd thing to say.
46:50As you know from our previous meeting, I consider flogging a very serious matter indeed.
47:25Madam, you need to understand your position in this our third encounter.
47:31I fully intend, by any means necessary, to discover both your true nature and the secrets
47:39that you hold.
47:45Perhaps you should ask the Duke of Sandringham.
47:52Oh dear me.
47:54I do hope that won't stain.
48:04A dangerous gambit to be sure.
48:06But his reaction told me that Frank and the Reverend were right in their speculation.
48:11I suspect your ancestor had a patron.
48:14A prominent and powerful man who could protect him from the censure of his superiors.
48:19Possibly, but it would have to have been someone very high up in the hierarchy of the day to exert
48:23that kind of influence.
48:24The Duke of Sandringham?
48:27The Duke of Sandringham?
48:30The Duke of Sandringham?
48:31Blackjack was able to commit his various crimes in the Highlands because he was being protected by a powerful man.
48:37And the cost of such protection was always silence and fidelity.
48:44What do you know of the Duke?
48:48Really, Captain?
48:50Must you be so obtuse?
48:53Is it not clear by now that you and I are both in the employ of the same great and
48:58powerful man?
49:03That is impossible.
49:05He would have told me.
49:09Because he tells you all his secrets.
49:13You must be a very special officer indeed.
49:17Madam, I will simply send a message to Sandringham asking him.
49:27Excellent idea.
49:29I am sure he would be most pleased at your skill and acumen at uncovering my identity.
49:37Or, perhaps your disruption of the Duke's carefully laid plans will not be rewarded.
49:43Perhaps you would be displeased and take measures to terminate your special relationship.
49:49To withdraw the protection to which you have become accustomed.
49:52And thus leave you at the mercy of your superior officers and local authorities.
49:59No, the wisest course of action would be to allow me to continue my mission.
50:05And give the Duke no indication of how close you came to disrupting his efforts on behalf of the King.
50:26You mean, of course, his, uh, his wife's efforts?
50:31His wife?
50:32The Duchess. You've met her.
50:34Oh, we've never had the pleasure.
50:36Really?
50:37Well, an agent of the Duke is an agent of the Duchess.
50:41But we have been in communication.
50:44Communication by letter?
50:46By messenger, yes.
50:47With the Duchess.
50:48With the Duchess.
50:48That's who we're talking about, isn't it?
50:50Yes.
50:52That is, uh...
50:54That is who we're talking about.
50:58Of course, um...
51:02The Duke has never been married.
51:15Corporal?
51:17I'm sorry, madam.
51:28What kind of gentleman keeps a rope in his desk?
51:33You're prepared, madam.
51:35You can go organs on.
51:39And, Corporal...
51:42Don't come back, no matter what you hear.
51:45Go.
51:46Sure.
52:03Help!
52:05Somebody!
52:07Help me!
52:10Help me!
52:15now.
52:21I think we should begin with your name.
52:25Mm?
52:26Your real name.
52:28Then, you can tell me everything that you know about...
52:36The Duke of Mackenzie.
52:40His brother, Colin.
52:45The Jacobite Rebellion.
52:52Finally.
52:55The Duke of Sandringham.
52:59You are going to regret this.
53:02I doubt it.
53:24What have we here?
53:30The lady has claws.
53:33Are they sharp?
53:40Are they?
53:46I'll thank you to take your hands off my wife.
53:51Oh, God.
53:53Oh, God.
53:57Oh, God.
53:58Oh, God.
54:04Oh, God.
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