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John Leech (caricaturist)

John Leech (29 August 1817 – 29 October 1864) was a British caricaturist and illustrator.[1] He was best known for his work for Punch, a humorous magazine for a broad middle-class audience, combining verbal and graphic political satire with light social comedy. Leech catered to contemporary prejudices, such as anti-Americanism and antisemitism and supported acceptable social reforms. Leech's critical yet humorous cartoons on the Crimean War helped shape public attitudes toward heroism, warfare, and Britons' role in the world.[2][3]

John Leech
Leech's carte de visite
Born(1817-08-29)29 August 1817
London, England
Died29 October 1864(1864-10-29) (aged 47)
London, England
NationalityEnglish
Occupation(s)Caricaturist and illustrator

Leech also enjoys fame as the first illustrator of Charles Dickens' 1843 novella A Christmas Carol.[4] He was furthermore a pioneer in comics, creating the recurring character Mr. Briggs and some sequential illustrated gags.[4]

Early life Edit

John Leech was born in London. His father, a native of Ireland, was the landlord of the London Coffee House on Ludgate Hill, "a man", on the testimony of those who knew him, "of fine culture, a profound Shakespearian, and a thorough gentleman." His mother was descended from the family of Richard Bentley. Like his father. Leech was skillful at drawing with a pencil, which he began doing at a very early age. When he was only three, he was discovered by John Flaxman, who was visiting, seated on his mother's knee, drawing with much gravity. The sculptor admired his sketch, adding, "Do not let him be cramped with lessons in drawing; let his genius follow its own bent; he will astonish the world"—advice which was followed. A mail-coach, done when he was six years old, is already full of surprising vigour and variety in its galloping horses. Leech was educated at Charterhouse School, where William Makepeace Thackeray, his lifelong friend, was a fellow pupil, and at sixteen he began to study for the medical profession at St Bartholomew's Hospital, where he won praise for the accuracy and beauty of his anatomical drawings. He was then placed under a Mr Whittle, an eccentric practitioner, the original of "Rawkins" in Albert Smith's Adventures of Mr Ledbury, and afterwards under Dr John Cockle; but gradually he drifted into the artistic profession. His nickname also being "Blicky" stuck with him during his life, along with being famous.

Artistic career Edit

 
Leech engraving featured in Punch
 
A scene from Leech's Comic History of Rome, depicting the Rape of the Sabine Women. The women are portrayed in Victorian costume being carried off from the "Corona et Ancora" ("Crown and Anchor", a common English pub sign in seafaring towns.)

He was eighteen when his first designs were published, a quarto of four pages, entitled Etchings and Sketchings by A. Pen, Esq., comic character studies from the London streets. Then he drew some political lithographs, did rough sketches for Bell's Life, produced a popular parody on Mulready's postal envelope, and, on the death of Dickens illustrator Robert Seymour in 1836, unsuccessfully submitted his renderings to illustrate The Pickwick Papers.

In 1840 Leech began his contributions to the magazines with a series of etchings in Bentley's Miscellany, where George Cruikshank had published his plates to Jack Sheppard and Oliver Twist, and was illustrating Guy Fawkes in feebler fashion.

In company with the elder master Leech designed for the Ingoldsby Legends and Stanley Thorn, and until 1847 produced many independent series of etchings. These were not his best work; their technique is imperfect and we never feel that they express the artist's individuality, the Richard Savage plates, for instance, being strongly reminiscent of Cruikshank, and The Dance at Stamford Hall of Hablot Browne.

In 1845 Leech illustrated St Giles and St James in Douglas William Jerrold's new Shilling Magazine, with plates more vigorous and accomplished than those in Bentley, but it is in subjects of a somewhat later date, and especially in those lightly etched and meant to be printed with colour, that we see the artist's best powers with the needle and acid.

 
Frontispiece of Dickens' A Christmas Carol, first edition 1843, illustrated by Leech

Among such of his designs are four charming plates to Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol (1843), the broadly humorous etchings in the Comic History of England (1847–1848),[5] and the still finer illustrations to The Comic History of Rome (1851)[6]—which last, particularly in its minor woodcuts, shows some exquisitely graceful touches, as witness the fair faces that rise from the surging water in Cloelia and her Companions Escaping from the Etruscan Camp.

Among his other etchings are those in Young Master Troublesome or Master Jacky's Holidays, and the frontispiece to Hints on Life, or How to Rise in Society (1845)—a series of minute subjects linked gracefully together by coils of smoke, illustrating the various ranks and conditions of men, one of them—the doctor by his patient's bedside—almost equalling in vivacity and precision the best of Cruikshank's similar scenes.

Then in the 1850s come the numerous etchings of sporting scenes, contributed, together with woodcuts, to the Handley Cross novels by Robert Smith Surtees.

Lithographic work Edit

Leech's lithographic work includes the 1841 Portraits of the Children of the Mobility, an important series dealing with the humorous and pathetic aspects of London street "Arabs", which were afterwards so often and so effectively to employ the artist's pencil[citation needed]. Amid all the squalor which they depict, they are full of individual beauties in the delicate or touching expression of a face, in the graceful turn of a limb[citation needed]. The book is scarce in its original form, but in 1875 two reproductions of the outline sketches for the designs were published—a lithographic issue of the whole series, and a finer photographic transcript of six of the subjects, which is more valuable than even the finished illustrations of 1841, in which the added light and shade is frequently spotty and ineffective, arid the lining itself has not the freedom which we find in some of Leech's other lithographs, notably in the fly leaves, published at the Punch office, and in the inimitable subject of the nuptial couch of the Caudles, which also appeared, in woodcut form, as a political cartoon, with Mrs Caudle, personated by Brougham, disturbing by untimely loquacity the slumbers of the lord chancellor, whose haggard cheek rests on the woolsack for pillow.[citation needed]

Wood engraving Edit

 
Substance and Shadow, published in Punch, 1843, the first use of the word cartoon to refer to a satirical drawing

It was in work for the wood-engravers that Leech was most prolific and individual. Among the earlier of such designs are the illustrations to the Comic English and Latin Grammars (1840), to Written Caricatures (1841), to Hood's Comic Annual, (1842), and to Albert Smith's Wassail Bowl (1843), subjects mainly of a small vignette size, transcribed with the best skill of such woodcutters as Orrin Smith, and not, like the larger and later Punch illustrations, cut at speed by several engravers working at once on the subdivided block.

It was in 1841 that Leech's connection with Punch began, a connection which subsisted until his death, and resulted in the production of the best-known and most admirable of his designs. His first contribution appeared in the issue of 7 August, a full-page illustration—entitled Foreign Affairs of character studies from the neighbourhood of Leicester Square. His cartoons deal at first mainly with social subjects, and are rough and imperfect in execution, but gradually their method gains in power and their subjects become more distinctly political, and by 1849 the artist is strong enough to produce the splendidly humorous national personification which appears in Disraeli Measuring the British Lion.

About 1845 we have the first of that long series of half-page and quarter-page pictures of life and manners, executed with a hand as gentle as it was skilful, containing, as Ruskin has said, "admittedly the finest definition and natural history of the classes of our society, the kindest and subtlest analysis of its foibles, the tenderest flattery of its pretty and well-bred ways", which has yet appeared.

In addition to his work for the weekly issue of Punch, Leech contributed largely to the Punch almanacks and pocket-books, from Once a Week between 1859 and 1862, to The Illustrated London News, where some of his largest and best sporting scenes appeared, and to innumerable novels and miscellaneous volumes besides, of which it is only necessary to specify A Little Tour in Ireland (1859). This last piece is noticeable as showing the artist's treatment of pure landscape, though it also contains some of his daintiest figure pieces, like that of the wind-blown girl, standing on the summit of a pedestal, with the swifts darting around her and the breadth of sea beyond.

Public exhibition Edit

In 1862 Leech appealed to the public with a very successful exhibition of some of the most remarkable of his Punch drawings[citation needed]. These were enlarged by a mechanical process, and coloured in oils by the artist himself, with the assistance and under the direction of his friend John Everett Millais. Millais had earlier painted a portrait of a child reading Leech's comic book Mr Briggs' Sporting Tour.[citation needed]

Character Edit

Leech was a rapid and indefatigable worker.[citation needed] Dean Hole said he observed the artist produce three finished drawings on the wood, designed, traced, and rectified, "without much effort as it seemed, between breakfast and dinner"[citation needed]. The best technical qualities of Leech's art, his precision and vivacity in the use of the line, are seen most clearly in the first sketches for his woodcuts, and in the more finished drawings made on tracing paper from these first outlines, before the chiaroscuro was added and the designs were transcribed by the engraver.[citation needed] Turning to the mental qualities of his art, it would be a mistaken criticism which ranked him as a comic draughtsman. Like Hogarth he was a true humorist, a student of human life, though he observed humanity mainly in its whimsical aspects,

Hitting all he saw with shafts
With gentle satire, kin to charity,
That harmed not.[citation needed]

The earnestness and gravity of moral purpose which is so constant a note in the work of Hogarth is indeed far less characteristic of Leech, but there are touches of pathos and of tragedy in such of the Punch designs as the Poor Man's Friend (1845), and General Février turned Traitor (1855), and in The Queen of the Arena in the first volume of Once a Week, which are sufficient to prove that more solemn powers, for which his daily work afforded no scope, lay dormant in their artist.[citation needed]

The purity and manliness of Leech's own character are impressed on his art. We find in it little of the exaggeration and grotesqueness, and none of the fierce political enthusiasm, of which the designs of James Gillray are so full. Compared with that of his great contemporary, George Cruikshank, his work is restricted both in compass of subject and in artistic dexterity.[citation needed]

In popular culture Edit

Leech was played by Simon Callow in the 2017 film The Man Who Invented Christmas which depicts the 1843 writing and production of Dickens' A Christmas Carol.[citation needed]

Death Edit

 
Grave of John Leech in Kensal Green Cemetery

He died on the 29th October 1864 and was buried in Kensal Green Cemetery, close to his friend William Makepeace Thackeray (two graves to the left).[citation needed]

Gallery Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Ray, Gordon N. (1991). "John Leech (1817 – 1864)". The illustrator and the book in England from 1790 to 1914. Dover. p. 82. ISBN 9780486269559.
  2. ^ Richard D. Altick, "'Punch's First Ten Years: The Ingredients of Success", Journal of Newspaper & Periodical History (1991) 7#2 pp. 5–16
  3. ^ Henry J. Miller, "John Leech and the Shaping of the Victorian Cartoon: The Context of Respectability", Victorian Periodicals Review (2009) 42#3 pp. 267–291.
  4. ^ a b "John Leech". lambiek.net. Retrieved 31 July 2019.
  5. ^ "Posner Memorial Collection in Electronic Format". cmu.edu.
  6. ^ "Posner Memorial Collection in Electronic Format". cmu.edu.

Biographies of Leech have been written by

  • John Brown, John Leech, and Other Papers, D. Douglas, 1882 ; HardPress Publishing, 2013
  • Frederick G. Kitton, John Leech, artist and humorist: a biographical sketch (1883)
  • William Powell Frith, John Leech: His Life and Work (1891)

Further reading Edit

  • Houfe, Simon. "Leech, John (1817–1864)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004); online edn, 2014 Retrieved 13 June 2015
  • Houfe, Simon. John Leech and the Victorian scene (1984)
  • Markovits, Stefanie. The Crimean War in the British Imagination (Cambridge University Press, 2009), Chapter on Leech's artwork regarding the Crimean war
  • Miller, Henry J. "John Leech and the Shaping of the Victorian Cartoon: The Context of Respectability," Victorian Periodicals Review (2009) 42#3 pp 267–291.
  • Scully, Richard. Eminent Victorian Cartoonists, Volume I: The Founders (Political Cartoon Society, 2018)
  • Thackeray, William Makepeace. "John Leech's Pictures of Life and Character", Quarterly Review No. 191, Dec. 1854, online
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Leech, John" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

External links Edit

john, leech, caricaturist, other, people, named, john, leech, john, leech, disambiguation, john, leech, august, 1817, october, 1864, british, caricaturist, illustrator, best, known, work, punch, humorous, magazine, broad, middle, class, audience, combining, ve. For other people named John Leech see John Leech disambiguation John Leech 29 August 1817 29 October 1864 was a British caricaturist and illustrator 1 He was best known for his work for Punch a humorous magazine for a broad middle class audience combining verbal and graphic political satire with light social comedy Leech catered to contemporary prejudices such as anti Americanism and antisemitism and supported acceptable social reforms Leech s critical yet humorous cartoons on the Crimean War helped shape public attitudes toward heroism warfare and Britons role in the world 2 3 John LeechLeech s carte de visiteBorn 1817 08 29 29 August 1817London EnglandDied29 October 1864 1864 10 29 aged 47 London EnglandNationalityEnglishOccupation s Caricaturist and illustratorLeech also enjoys fame as the first illustrator of Charles Dickens 1843 novella A Christmas Carol 4 He was furthermore a pioneer in comics creating the recurring character Mr Briggs and some sequential illustrated gags 4 Contents 1 Early life 2 Artistic career 3 Lithographic work 4 Wood engraving 5 Public exhibition 6 Character 7 In popular culture 8 Death 9 Gallery 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life EditJohn Leech was born in London His father a native of Ireland was the landlord of the London Coffee House on Ludgate Hill a man on the testimony of those who knew him of fine culture a profound Shakespearian and a thorough gentleman His mother was descended from the family of Richard Bentley Like his father Leech was skillful at drawing with a pencil which he began doing at a very early age When he was only three he was discovered by John Flaxman who was visiting seated on his mother s knee drawing with much gravity The sculptor admired his sketch adding Do not let him be cramped with lessons in drawing let his genius follow its own bent he will astonish the world advice which was followed A mail coach done when he was six years old is already full of surprising vigour and variety in its galloping horses Leech was educated at Charterhouse School where William Makepeace Thackeray his lifelong friend was a fellow pupil and at sixteen he began to study for the medical profession at St Bartholomew s Hospital where he won praise for the accuracy and beauty of his anatomical drawings He was then placed under a Mr Whittle an eccentric practitioner the original of Rawkins in Albert Smith s Adventures of Mr Ledbury and afterwards under Dr John Cockle but gradually he drifted into the artistic profession His nickname also being Blicky stuck with him during his life along with being famous Artistic career Edit nbsp Leech engraving featured in Punch nbsp A scene from Leech s Comic History of Rome depicting the Rape of the Sabine Women The women are portrayed in Victorian costume being carried off from the Corona et Ancora Crown and Anchor a common English pub sign in seafaring towns He was eighteen when his first designs were published a quarto of four pages entitled Etchings and Sketchings by A Pen Esq comic character studies from the London streets Then he drew some political lithographs did rough sketches for Bell s Life produced a popular parody on Mulready s postal envelope and on the death of Dickens illustrator Robert Seymour in 1836 unsuccessfully submitted his renderings to illustrate The Pickwick Papers In 1840 Leech began his contributions to the magazines with a series of etchings in Bentley s Miscellany where George Cruikshank had published his plates to Jack Sheppard and Oliver Twist and was illustrating Guy Fawkes in feebler fashion In company with the elder master Leech designed for the Ingoldsby Legends and Stanley Thorn and until 1847 produced many independent series of etchings These were not his best work their technique is imperfect and we never feel that they express the artist s individuality the Richard Savage plates for instance being strongly reminiscent of Cruikshank and The Dance at Stamford Hall of Hablot Browne In 1845 Leech illustrated St Giles and St James in Douglas William Jerrold s new Shilling Magazine with plates more vigorous and accomplished than those in Bentley but it is in subjects of a somewhat later date and especially in those lightly etched and meant to be printed with colour that we see the artist s best powers with the needle and acid nbsp Frontispiece of Dickens A Christmas Carol first edition 1843 illustrated by LeechAmong such of his designs are four charming plates to Charles Dickens s A Christmas Carol 1843 the broadly humorous etchings in the Comic History of England 1847 1848 5 and the still finer illustrations to The Comic History of Rome 1851 6 which last particularly in its minor woodcuts shows some exquisitely graceful touches as witness the fair faces that rise from the surging water in Cloelia and her Companions Escaping from the Etruscan Camp Among his other etchings are those in Young Master Troublesome or Master Jacky s Holidays and the frontispiece to Hints on Life or How to Rise in Society 1845 a series of minute subjects linked gracefully together by coils of smoke illustrating the various ranks and conditions of men one of them the doctor by his patient s bedside almost equalling in vivacity and precision the best of Cruikshank s similar scenes Then in the 1850s come the numerous etchings of sporting scenes contributed together with woodcuts to the Handley Cross novels by Robert Smith Surtees Lithographic work EditLeech s lithographic work includes the 1841 Portraits of the Children of the Mobility an important series dealing with the humorous and pathetic aspects of London street Arabs which were afterwards so often and so effectively to employ the artist s pencil citation needed Amid all the squalor which they depict they are full of individual beauties in the delicate or touching expression of a face in the graceful turn of a limb citation needed The book is scarce in its original form but in 1875 two reproductions of the outline sketches for the designs were published a lithographic issue of the whole series and a finer photographic transcript of six of the subjects which is more valuable than even the finished illustrations of 1841 in which the added light and shade is frequently spotty and ineffective arid the lining itself has not the freedom which we find in some of Leech s other lithographs notably in the fly leaves published at the Punch office and in the inimitable subject of the nuptial couch of the Caudles which also appeared in woodcut form as a political cartoon with Mrs Caudle personated by Brougham disturbing by untimely loquacity the slumbers of the lord chancellor whose haggard cheek rests on the woolsack for pillow citation needed Wood engraving Edit nbsp Substance and Shadow published in Punch 1843 the first use of the word cartoon to refer to a satirical drawingIt was in work for the wood engravers that Leech was most prolific and individual Among the earlier of such designs are the illustrations to the Comic English and Latin Grammars 1840 to Written Caricatures 1841 to Hood s Comic Annual 1842 and to Albert Smith s Wassail Bowl 1843 subjects mainly of a small vignette size transcribed with the best skill of such woodcutters as Orrin Smith and not like the larger and later Punch illustrations cut at speed by several engravers working at once on the subdivided block It was in 1841 that Leech s connection with Punch began a connection which subsisted until his death and resulted in the production of the best known and most admirable of his designs His first contribution appeared in the issue of 7 August a full page illustration entitled Foreign Affairs of character studies from the neighbourhood of Leicester Square His cartoons deal at first mainly with social subjects and are rough and imperfect in execution but gradually their method gains in power and their subjects become more distinctly political and by 1849 the artist is strong enough to produce the splendidly humorous national personification which appears in Disraeli Measuring the British Lion About 1845 we have the first of that long series of half page and quarter page pictures of life and manners executed with a hand as gentle as it was skilful containing as Ruskin has said admittedly the finest definition and natural history of the classes of our society the kindest and subtlest analysis of its foibles the tenderest flattery of its pretty and well bred ways which has yet appeared In addition to his work for the weekly issue of Punch Leech contributed largely to the Punch almanacks and pocket books from Once a Week between 1859 and 1862 to The Illustrated London News where some of his largest and best sporting scenes appeared and to innumerable novels and miscellaneous volumes besides of which it is only necessary to specify A Little Tour in Ireland 1859 This last piece is noticeable as showing the artist s treatment of pure landscape though it also contains some of his daintiest figure pieces like that of the wind blown girl standing on the summit of a pedestal with the swifts darting around her and the breadth of sea beyond Public exhibition EditIn 1862 Leech appealed to the public with a very successful exhibition of some of the most remarkable of his Punch drawings citation needed These were enlarged by a mechanical process and coloured in oils by the artist himself with the assistance and under the direction of his friend John Everett Millais Millais had earlier painted a portrait of a child reading Leech s comic book Mr Briggs Sporting Tour citation needed Character EditLeech was a rapid and indefatigable worker citation needed Dean Hole said he observed the artist produce three finished drawings on the wood designed traced and rectified without much effort as it seemed between breakfast and dinner citation needed The best technical qualities of Leech s art his precision and vivacity in the use of the line are seen most clearly in the first sketches for his woodcuts and in the more finished drawings made on tracing paper from these first outlines before the chiaroscuro was added and the designs were transcribed by the engraver citation needed Turning to the mental qualities of his art it would be a mistaken criticism which ranked him as a comic draughtsman Like Hogarth he was a true humorist a student of human life though he observed humanity mainly in its whimsical aspects Hitting all he saw with shafts With gentle satire kin to charity That harmed not citation needed The earnestness and gravity of moral purpose which is so constant a note in the work of Hogarth is indeed far less characteristic of Leech but there are touches of pathos and of tragedy in such of the Punch designs as the Poor Man s Friend 1845 and General Fevrier turned Traitor 1855 and in The Queen of the Arena in the first volume of Once a Week which are sufficient to prove that more solemn powers for which his daily work afforded no scope lay dormant in their artist citation needed The purity and manliness of Leech s own character are impressed on his art We find in it little of the exaggeration and grotesqueness and none of the fierce political enthusiasm of which the designs of James Gillray are so full Compared with that of his great contemporary George Cruikshank his work is restricted both in compass of subject and in artistic dexterity citation needed In popular culture EditLeech was played by Simon Callow in the 2017 film The Man Who Invented Christmas which depicts the 1843 writing and production of Dickens A Christmas Carol citation needed Death Edit nbsp Grave of John Leech in Kensal Green CemeteryHe died on the 29th October 1864 and was buried in Kensal Green Cemetery close to his friend William Makepeace Thackeray two graves to the left citation needed Gallery EditA Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens nbsp First page of 1843 first edition of A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens nbsp Jacob Marley s Ghost nbsp The Ghost of Christmas Present nbsp Ghost of Christmas Yet to ComeThe Comic History of Rome by Gilbert Abbott a Beckett nbsp Title page of The Comic History of Rome nbsp Romulus and Remus discovered by a gentle Shepherd nbsp Marcus Curtius leaping into the Gulf nbsp Hannibal swears eternal hatred to the Romans as a child nbsp Cornelia Africana mother of the GracchiOther nbsp The end of opium smoking 1848 nbsp Two Ladies and a Gentleman in a Rowboat nbsp The Battle of Bosworth Field a Scene in the Great Drama of History illustrated by John Leech for Gilbert Abbott a Beckett mocking the Victorian attitude towards history nbsp John Leech a cartoon of himself frontispiece from Leech s comic latin grammar 1840References Edit Ray Gordon N 1991 John Leech 1817 1864 The illustrator and the book in England from 1790 to 1914 Dover p 82 ISBN 9780486269559 Richard D Altick Punch s First Ten Years The Ingredients of Success Journal of Newspaper amp Periodical History 1991 7 2 pp 5 16 Henry J Miller John Leech and the Shaping of the Victorian Cartoon The Context of Respectability Victorian Periodicals Review 2009 42 3 pp 267 291 a b John Leech lambiek net Retrieved 31 July 2019 Posner Memorial Collection in Electronic Format cmu edu Posner Memorial Collection in Electronic Format cmu edu Biographies of Leech have been written by John Brown John Leech and Other Papers D Douglas 1882 HardPress Publishing 2013 Frederick G Kitton John Leech artist and humorist a biographical sketch 1883 William Powell Frith John Leech His Life and Work 1891 Further reading EditHoufe Simon Leech John 1817 1864 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edn 2014 Retrieved 13 June 2015 Houfe Simon John Leech and the Victorian scene 1984 Markovits Stefanie The Crimean War in the British Imagination Cambridge University Press 2009 Chapter on Leech s artwork regarding the Crimean war Miller Henry J John Leech and the Shaping of the Victorian Cartoon The Context of Respectability Victorian Periodicals Review 2009 42 3 pp 267 291 Scully Richard Eminent Victorian Cartoonists Volume I The Founders Political Cartoon Society 2018 Thackeray William Makepeace John Leech s Pictures of Life and Character Quarterly Review No 191 Dec 1854 online Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Leech John Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press External links Edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article John Leech caricaturist nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Leech caricaturist nbsp Cartoons portalThe John Leech Punch magazine sketch archives Works by John Leech at Project Gutenberg Works by John Leech at Faded Page Canada Works by or about John Leech at Internet Archive John Leech at Library of Congress with 84 library catalogue records Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Leech caricaturist amp oldid 1176433577, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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