Compare/Contrast outline
Whether you are doing a point-by-point comparison or using the block method of
organization, use the generic outline below for your compare/contrast paper.
Topic sentence:
Point one:
Supporting detail:
Point two:
Supporting detail:
Point three:
Supporting detail:
Point four:
Supporting detail:
Point five:
Supporting detail:
Point six:
Supporting detail:
Concluding sentence:
How to Compare and Contrast Two Poems
Adapted from: How to Write a Poetry Analysis Essay Comparing and Contrasting Two Poems
by Johnny Kilhefner
Throughout your career as a student you'll have to write several kinds of essays. One of
these is the compare and contrast essay. Literature students, for instance, must write
compare and contrast essays on two specific works of literature -- in this case, poetry. Such
essays analyze the similarities and differences between two literary works to encourage
critical thinking.
Step 1
Choose an idea or theme to focus the essay on, such as love, nature or death. Literary
movements have certain characteristics that make it easy to pinpoint two poems with
similar ideas or themes. For example, compare Miguel Hernandez's and Pablu Neruda's
accounts of love.
Step 2
Make a Venn diagram by drawing two
overlapping circles -- one for each poem
by the two authors. Write the similarities
in the overlapping section of the circle,
such as similarities in form, technique or
ideas. In the individual spaces of the two
circles write characteristics independent
of each other. When making the diagram,
consider what each poem is about. Are
they part of the same literary movement?
What is the focus of each poem? What is
the author's tone? Is the poem broad or
narrow in scope?
Step 3
Work on the thesis of your essay. Your thesis will organize the thoughts swirling in your
head so your essay has direction for not only the reader but also for you. Consider the
expectations of the essay. For instance, why are you writing this paper on these poems?
Why should people care? To this end, consider the content of your class. Your thesis should
not merely announce the comparison to
the two poems but also your method of
doing so.
Step 4
Organize your paper point-by-point.
Discuss one point of a particular poem
and transition into a similar or
contrasting point of the second poem
back and forth.
Step 5
Outline the essay according to the
format you are using. Write the main point of each paragraph followed by a list of
subpoints to emphasize or exemplify your main point.
Step 6
Write the introduction of the essay. Move from the general (poetry) to the specific (the
poems). Your first two sentences should tell the reader the "what" and "why" of the essay.
Include your thesis near the end of the paragraph but before the transition into the body.
Step 7
Draft each body paragraph according to your outline. Start each paragraph with a topic
sentence telling the reader the main point you are discussing. Use examples from the
poems to make your points stronger. Use transitional phrases to help the reader
comprehend the flow of ideas. Some transitional devices include: like, similar to, also,
unlike, similarly, in the same way, compared to, likewise, again, on the contrary, however,
although, yet and conversely.
Step 8
Conclude the essay with a brief summary of the main idea or ideas. Make a conclusion
based on the two poems' similarities and differences. End with a restatement of the thesis
and a final thought on the essay that leaves readers thinking long after they finish reading.
HOW TO WRITE A LITERARY ANALYSIS ESSAY
The purpose of a literary analysis essay is to carefully examine and sometimes evaluate a work of
literature or an aspect of a work of literature. As with any analysis, this requires you to break the
subject down into its component parts. Examining the different elements of a piece of literature is not
an end in itself but rather a process to help you better appreciate and understand the work of
literature as a whole. For instance, an analysis of a poem might deal with the different types of
images in a poem or with the relationship between the form and content of the work. If you were to
analyze (discuss and explain) a play, you might analyze the relationship between a subplot and the
main plot, or you might analyze the character flaw of the tragic hero by tracing how it is revealed
through the acts of the play. Analyzing a short story might include identifying a particular theme (like
the difficulty of making the transition from adolescence to adulthood) and showing how the writer
suggests that theme through the point of view from which the story is told; or you might also explain
how the main character‟s attitude toward women is revealed through his dialogue and/or actions.
REMEMBER: Writing is the sharpened, focused expression of thought and study. As you develop
your writing skills, you will also improve your perceptions and increase your critical abilities. Writing
ultimately boils down to the development of an idea. Your objective in writing a literary analysis essay
is to convince the person reading your essay that you have supported the idea you are developing.
Unlike ordinary conversation and classroom discussion, writing must stick with great
determination to the specific point of development. This kind of writing demands tight
organization and control. Therefore, your essay must have a central idea (thesis), it must have
several paragraphs that grow systematically out of the central idea, and everything in it must be
directly related to the central idea and must contribute to the reader’s understanding of that
central idea. These three principles are listed again below:
1.
2.
3.
Your essay must cover the topic you are writing about.
Your essay must have a central idea (stated in your thesis) that
governs its development.
Your essay must be organized so that every part contributes
something to the reader’s understanding of the central idea.
THE ELEMENTS OF A SOLID ESSAY
The Thesis Statement
The thesis statement tells your reader what to expect: it is a restricted, precisely worded declarative
sentence that states the purpose of your essay -- the point you are trying to make. Without a
carefully conceived thesis, an essay has no chance of success. The following are thesis
statements which would work for a 500-750 word literary analysis essay:
Gwendolyn Brooks‟s 1960 poem “The Ballad of Rudolph Reed” demonstrates how the
poet uses the conventional poetic form of the ballad to treat the unconventional poetic
subject of racial intolerance.
The fate of the main characters in Antigone illustrates the danger of excessive pride.
The imagery in Dylan Thomas‟s poem “Fern Hill” reveals the ambiguity of humans‟
relationship with nature.
Typically, the thesis statement falls at the end of your introductory paragraph.
The Introduction
The introduction to your literary analysis essay should try to capture your reader‟s
interest. To bring immediate focus to your subject, you may want to use a quotation, a
provocative question, a brief anecdote, a startling statement, or a combination of these.
You may also want to include background information relevant to your thesis and
necessary for the reader to understand the position you are taking. In addition, you
need to include the title of the work of literature and name of the author. The
following are satisfactory introductory paragraphs which include appropriate thesis
statements:
A.
What would one expect to be the personality of a man who has his wife
sent away to a convent (or perhaps has had her murdered) because she took too
much pleasure in the sunset and in a compliment paid to her by another man? It
is just such a man—a Renaissance duke—who Robert Browning portrays in his
poem “My Last Duchess.” A character analysis of the Duke reveals that through
his internal dialogue, his interpretation of earlier incidents, and his actions, his
traits—arrogance, jealousy, and greediness—emerge.
B.
The first paragraph of Alberto Alvaro Rios‟s short story “The Secret Lion”
presents a twelve-year-old boy‟s view of growing up—everything changes. As
the narrator informs the reader, when the magician pulls a tablecloth out from
under a pile of dishes, children are amazed at the “stay-the-same part,” while
adults focus only on the tablecloth itself (42). Adults have the benefit of
experience and know the trick will work as long as the technique is correct.
When people “grow up,” they gain this experience and knowledge but lose their
innocence and sense of wonder. In other words, the price paid for growing up is
a permanent sense of loss. This tradeoff is central to “The Secret Lion.” The key
symbols in the story reinforce its main theme: change is inevitable and always
accompanied by a sense of loss.
C.
The setting of John Updike‟s story “A & P” is crucial to the reader‟s
understanding of Sammy‟s decision to quit his job. Even though Sammy knows
that his quitting will make life more difficult for him, he instinctively insists upon
rejecting what the A & P represents in the story. When he rings up a “No Sale”
and “saunter[s]” out of the store, Sammy leaves behind not only a job but the
rigid state of mind associated with the A & P. Although Sammy is the central
character in the story, Updike seems to invest as much effort in describing the
setting as he does Sammy. The title, after all, is not “Youthful Rebellion” or
“Sammy Quits” but “A & P.” The setting is the antagonist of the story and plays a
role that is as important as Sammy‟s.
2
The Body of the Essay and the Importance of Topic Sentences
The term regularly used for the development of the central idea of a literary analysis
essay is the body. In this section you present the paragraphs (at least 3 paragraphs
for a 500-750 word essay) that support your thesis statement. Good literary analysis
essays contain an explanation of your ideas and evidence from the text (short story,
poem, play) that supports those ideas. Textual evidence consists of summary,
paraphrase, specific details, and direct quotations.
Each paragraph should contain a topic sentence (usually the first sentence of the
paragraph) which states one of the topics associated with your thesis, combined with
some assertion about how the topic will support the central idea. The purpose of the
topic sentence is twofold:
1. To relate the details of the paragraph to your thesis
statement.
2. To tie the details of the paragraph together.
The substance of each of your developmental paragraphs (the body of your essay)
will be the explanations, summaries, paraphrases, specific details, and direct quotations
you need to support and develop the more general statement you have made in your
topic sentence. The following is the first developmental paragraph after one of the
introductory paragraphs (C) above:
TOPIC SENTENCE
EXPLANATIONS AND
TEXTUAL EVIDENCE
Sammy's descriptions of the A & P present a
setting that is ugly, monotonous, and rigidly
regulated. The chain store is a common fixture
in modern society, so the reader can identify
with the uniformity Sammy describes. The
fluorescent light is as blandly cool as the
"checkerboard green-and-cream rubber tile
floor" (486). The "usual traffic in the store
moves in one direction (except for the swim
suited girls, who move against it), and
everything is neatly organized and categorized
in tidy aisles. The dehumanizing routine of this
environment is suggested by Sammy's offhand
references to the typical shoppers as "sheep,"
"house slaves," and "pigs” (486). These regular
customers seem to walk through the store in a
stupor; as Sammy indicates, not even dynamite
could move them out of their routine (485).
This paragraph is a strong one because it is developed through the use of quotations,
summary, details, and explanation to support the topic sentence. Notice how it relates
back to the thesis statement.
3
The Conclusion
Your literary analysis essay should have a concluding paragraph that gives your essay
a sense of completeness and lets your readers know that they have come to the end of
your paper. Your concluding paragraph might restate the thesis in different words,
summarize the main points you have made, or make a relevant comment about the
literary work you are analyzing, but from a different perspective. Do not introduce a
new topic in your conclusion. Below is the concluding paragraph from the essay
already quoted above (A) about Browning's poem "My Last Duchess":
If the Duke has any redeeming qualities, they fail to appear in the poem.
Browning's emphasis on the Duke's traits of arrogance, jealousy, and materialism
make it apparent that anyone who might have known the Duke personally would
have based his opinion of him on these three personality "flaws." Ultimately, the
reader‟s opinion of the Duke is not a favorable one, and it is clear that Browning
intended that the reader feel this way.
The Title of Your Essay
It is essential that you give your essay a title that is descriptive of the approach you are
taking in your paper. Just as you did in your introductory paragraph, try to get the
reader's attention. Using only the title of the literary work you are examining is
unsatisfactory. The titles that follow are appropriate for the papers (A, B, C) discussed
above:
Robert Browning's Duke: A Portrayal of a Sinister Man
The A & P as a State of Mind
Theme in "The Secret Lion": The Struggle of Adolescence
Audience
Consider the reader for whom you are writing your essay. Imagine you are writing for
not only your professor but also the other students in your class who have about as
much education as you do. They have read the assigned work just as you have, but
perhaps they have not thought about it in exactly the same way. In other words, it is
not necessary to "retell" the work of literature in any way. Rather, it is your role to
be the explainer or interpreter of the work—to tell what certain elements of the work
mean in relation to your central idea (thesis). When you make references to the text of
the short story, poem, or play, you are doing so to remind your audience of something
they already know. The principle emphasis of your essay is to draw conclusions
and develop arguments. Be sure to avoid plot summary.
4
USING TEXTUAL EVIDENCE
The skillful use of textual evidence -- summary, paraphrase, specific detail, and
direct quotations -- can illustrate and support the ideas you are developing in your
essay. However, textual evidence should be used judiciously and only when it directly
relates to your topic. The correct and effective use of textual evidence is vital to the
successful literary analysis essay.
Summary
If a key event or series of events in the literary work support a point you are trying to
make, you may want to include a brief summary, making sure that you show the
relevance of the event or events by explicitly connecting your summary to your point.
Below is an effective summary (with its relevance clearly pointed out) from the essay
already quoted above on "The Secret Lion" (B):
The boys find the grinding ball, but later attempt to bury it (SUMMARY).
Burying it is their futile attempt to make time stand still and to preserve
perfection (RELEVANCE).
Paraphrase
You can make use of paraphrase when you need the details of the original, but not
necessarily the words of the original: paraphrase to put someone else's words into your
own words. Below is an example (also from the paper on "The Secret Lion") of how to
"translate" original material into part of your own paper:
Original:
"I was twelve and in junior high school and something happened
that we didn't have a name for, but it was nonetheless like a lion,
and roaring, roaring that way the biggest things do."
Paraphrase: Early in the story, the narrator tells us that when he turned twelve
and started junior high school, life changed in a significant way that
he and his friends could not quite name or identify.
Specific Detail
Various types of details from the text lend concrete support to the development of the
central idea of your literary analysis essay. These details add credibility to the point you
are developing. Below is a list of some of the details which could have been used in the
developmental paragraph from the paper on John Updike's short story "A & P" (see the
paragraph again for which details were used and how they were used).
"usual traffic"
"fluorescent lights"
"checkerboard green-and-cream rubber-tile floor"
"electric eye"
shoppers like "sheep," "house slaves," and "pigs"
neatly stacked food
dynamite
5
Using Direct Quotations
Quotations can illuminate and support the ideas you are trying to develop. A judicious
use of quoted material will make your points clearer and more convincing. As with all
the textual evidence you use, make sure you explain how the evidence is
relevant—let the reader know why the quotes you cite are significant to your
argument. Below are guidelines and examples that should help you effectively use
quotations:
1.
Brief quotations (four lines or fewer of prose and three lines or fewer of poetry)
should be carefully introduced and integrated into the text of your paper. Put
quotation marks around all briefly quoted material.
Prose example:
As the "manager" of the A & P, Lengel is both the guardian and enforcer of
"policy" (487). When he gives the girls "that sad Sunday-school-superintendent
stare," the reader becomes aware of Lengel‟s character as the A & P's version of
a dreary bureaucrat who "doesn't miss much" (487). Make sure you give page
numbers when necessary. Notice that in this example the page numbers
are in parenthesis after the quotation marks but before the period.
Poetry example:
4
From the beginning, the Duke in Browning's poem gives the reader a sense of
how possessive he really is: "That's my last Duchess on the wall, / Looking as if
she were alive" (1-2). The reader cannot help but notice how, even though the
Duke is talking about her portrait, his main concern is that she belongs to him.
Notice that line # 1 is separated from line # 2 by a slash. Make sure you
give the line numbers when necessary.
2.
Lengthy quotations should be separated from the text of your paper. More than
four lines of prose should be double spaced and indented ten spaces from the
left margin, with the right margin the same as the rest of your paper. More than
three lines of poetry should be double spaced and centered on the page.
Note: do not use quotation marks to set off these longer passages because
the indentation itself indicates that the material is quoted.
Prose example:
The first paragraph of "The Secret Lion" introduces the narrator as someone who
has just entered adolescence and is uncertain what to make of it:
I was twelve and in junior high school and something happened that we
didn't have a name for, but it was there nonetheless like a lion, and
roaring, roaring that way the biggest things do. Everything changed. Just
that. Like the rug, the one that gets pulled -- or better, like the tablecloth
those magicians pull where the stuff on the table stays the same but the
gasp! from the audience makes the staying-the-same part not matter. Like
that. (41-42) Make sure you give page numbers when necessary.
Notice in this example that the page numbers are in parenthesis after
the period of the last sentence.
6
Poetry example:
The Duke seems to object to the fact that his "last Duchess" is not discriminating
enough about bestowing her affection. In the following lines, the Duke lists
examples of this "fault":
Sir, 'twas all one! My favor at her breast,
The dropping of the daylight in the west,
The bough of cherries some officious fool
Broke in the orchard for her, the white mule
She rode with round the terrace -- all and each
Would draw from her alike the approving speech.
(Browning 25-30)
Be sure to provide the line numbers.
3.
If any words are added to a quotation in order to explain who or what the
quotation refers to, you must use brackets to distinguish your addition from the
original source.
Example:
The literary critic John Strauss asserts that "he [Young Goodman Brown] is
portrayed as self-righteous and disillusioned" (10). Brackets are used here
because there is no way of knowing who "he" is unless you add that
information.
Brackets are also used to change the grammatical structure of a quotation so
that it fits into your sentence.
Example:
Strauss also argues that Hawthorne "present[s] Young Goodman Brown in an
ambivalent light” (10). Brackets are used here to add the "s" to the verb
"present" because otherwise the sentence would not be grammatically
correct.
4.
You must use ellipsis if you omit any words from the original source you are
quoting. Ellipsis can be used at the beginning, in the middle, or at the end of the
quotation, depending on where the missing words were originally. Ellipsis is
formed by either three or four periods with a space between each period.
Original: "Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise."
Example (omission from beginning):
This behavior ". . . makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise." Ellipsis formed
by three dots after the quotation marks.
7
Example (omission from middle):
This maxim claims that "Early to bed . . . makes a man healthy, wealthy, and
wise." Ellipsis formed by three dots used in place of the words "and early
to rise."
Example (omission from end):
He said, "Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy . . . ." Ellipsis is
formed by four dots before the quotation marks -- the fourth dot is really a
period which ends the sentence.
5.
Use a single line of spaced periods to indicate the omission of an entire line of
poetry.
Example:
The Duke seems to object to the fact that his "last Duchess" is not discriminating
enough about bestowing her affection:
She looked on, and her looks went everywhere.
.................................
The dropping of the daylight in the west,
The bough of cherries some officious fool
Broke in the orchard for her, while the white mule
She rode around the terrace -- like and each
Would draw from her alike the approving speech….
(Browning 24-30)
8
Punctuating Direct Quotations
You will be able to punctuate quoted materials accurately if you observe the following
conventions used in writing about literature:
1.
When the quoted material is part of your own sentence, place periods and
commas inside the quotation marks.
Example:
According to the narrator of "The Secret Lion,” change was "like a lion," meaning
that its onset is sudden and ferocious. The comma is inside the quotation
marks.
2.
When the quoted material is part of your own sentence, but you need to include a
parenthetical reference to page or line numbers, place the periods and commas
after the reference.
Example:
The narrator of "The Secret Lion" says that the change was "like a lion" (Rios 41).
The period is outside the quotation marks, after the parenthetical reference.
3.
When the quoted material is part of your own sentence, punctuation marks other
than periods and commas, such as question marks, are placed outside the
quotation marks, unless they are part of the quoted material.
Example (not part of original):
Why does the narrator of "The Secret Lion" say that the change was "like a lion"?
The question mark is placed after the quotation marks because it does not
appear in the original -- it ends a question being asked about the story.
Example (part of original):
The Duke shows his indignation that the Duchess could like everyone and
everything when he says, "Sir, 'twas all one!" (Browning 25). The exclamation
point is placed inside the quotation marks because it appears in the
original.
4.
When the original material you are quoting already has quotations marks (for
instance, dialog from a short story), you must use single quotation marks within
the double quotation marks.
Example:
Lengel tries to stop Sammy from quitting by saying, “„Sammy, you don't want to
do this to your Mom and Dad‟" (Updike 486).
9
10
Huff 1
Stephanie Huff
Professor MacDonald
English 202, Section 1
22 October 2010
Metaphor and Society in Shelley’s “Sonnet”
In his sonnet “Lift not the painted veil which those who live,”
Percy Bysshe Shelley introduces us to a bleak world that exists
behind veils and shadows. We see that although fear and hope
both exist, truth is dishearteningly absent. This absence of truth is
exactly what Shelley chooses to address as he uses metaphors of
grim distortion and radiant incandescence to expose the
counterfeit nature of our world.
The speaker of Shelley’s poem presents bold assertions about
the nature of our society. In the opening lines of the poem, he warns
the reader, “Lift not the painted veil which those who live / Call Life”
(lines 1–2). Here, the “painted veil” serves as a grim metaphor for life.
More specifically, the speaker equates the veil with what people like
to call life. In this sense, the speaker asserts that what we believe to be
pure reality is actually nothing more than a covering that masks what
really lies beneath. Truth is covered by a veil of falsehood and is made
opaque with the paint of people’s lies.
This painted veil does not completely obstruct our view but
rather distorts what we can see. All that can be viewed through it
are “unreal shapes” (2) that metaphorically represent the people
that make up this counterfeit society. These shapes are not to be
taken for truth. They are unreal, twisted, deformed figures of
humanity, people full of falsities and misrepresentations.
Huff 2
Most people, however, do not realize that the shapes and
images seen through the veil are distorted because all they know
of life is the veil—this life we see as reality only “mimic[s] all we
would believe” (3), using “colours idly spread” (4) to create pictures
that bear little resemblance to that which they claim to portray. All
pure truths are covered up and painted over until they are mere
mockeries. The lies that cloak the truth are not even carefully
constructed but are created idly, with little attention to detail. The
paint is not applied carefully, but merely spread across the top.
This idea of spreading brings to mind images of paint slopped on
so heavily that the truth beneath becomes nearly impossible to
find. Even the metaphor of color suggests only superficial beauty—
“idly spread” (4)—rather than any sort of pure beauty that could
penetrate the surface of appearances.
What really lies behind this facade are fear and hope, both of
which “weave / Their shadows, o’er the chasm, sightless and drear”
(5–6). These two realities are never truly seen or experienced,
though. They exist only as shadows. Just as shadows appear only at
certain times of day, cast only sham images of what they reflect,
and are paid little attention, so too do these emotions of hope and
fear appear only as brief, ignored imitations of themselves when
they enter the artificiality of this chasmlike world. Peering into a
chasm, one cannot hope to make out what lies at the bottom. At
best one could perhaps make out shadows and even that cannot
be done with any certainty as to true appearance. The world is so
large, so caught up in itself and its counterfeit ways, that it can no
longer see even the simple truths of hope and fear. Individuals and
Huff 3
civilizations have become sightless, dreary, and as enormously
empty as a chasm.
This chasm does not include all people, however, as we are
introduced to one individual, in line 7, who is trying to bring to light
whatever truth may yet remain. This one person, who defies the
rest of the world, is portrayed with metaphors of light, clearly
standing out among the dark representations of the rest of
mankind. He is first presented to us as possessing a “lost heart” (8)
and seeking things to love. It is important that the first metaphor
applied to him be a heart because this is the organ with which we
associate love, passion, and purity. We associate it with brightness
of the soul, making it the most radiant spot of the body. He is then
described as a “splendour among shadows” (12), his purity and
truth brilliantly shining through the darkness of the majority’s
falsehood. Finally, he is equated with “a bright blot / Upon this
gloomy scene” (12–13), his own bright blaze of authenticity burning
in stark contrast to the murky phoniness of the rest of the world.
These metaphors of light are few, however, in comparison to
those of grim distortion. So, too, are this one individual’s radiance
and zeal too little to alter the warped darkness they temporarily
pierce. This one person, though bright, is not bright enough to light
up the rest of civilization and create real change. The light simply
confirms the dark falsity that comprises the rest of the world.
Shelley gives us one flame of hope, only to reveal to us what little
chance it has under the suffocating veil. Both the metaphors of
grim distortion and those of radiant incandescence work together
in this poem to highlight the world’s counterfeit nature.
Huff 4
Works Cited
Shelley, Percy Bysshe. “Sonnet: Lift not the painted veil which those
who live.” The Norton Field Guide to Writing, 2nd ed., edited by
Richard Bullock, W. W. Norton, 2009, pp. 206–207.
“Metaphor and the Counterfeit Nature of Our Society.” Reprinted by
permission of the author.
Author:
Peer Editor:
Peer Edit for Poetry Analysis Essay
1. Examine the thesis carefully. Has the writer assembled a forceful statement that lends clarity and
dimension to the poem’s theme, structure, imagery, voice, etc.? How might the writer improve the
content and the phrasing?
2. Comment on the strength (or weakness) of the comparison between the two poems. Offer points for
improvement.
3. Does the writer offer a convincing explication of the connection between the two poems?
4. Do the points in the body point back to the thesis?
5. How well does the author explain metaphors, similes, images and symbols in the poems as they relate to
the thesis?
6. Is the analysis repetitive in places, or does the body continue to build on new ideas?
7. Is the point-by-point arrangement in the body evident?
8. Does the author quote often enough from the poems? What about outside sources? Are they used in a
meaningful way?
9. Does the writer remember to write consistently in present tense, in active voice?
10. Does the writer introduce and cite all quotations?
11. Suggest changes for awkward phrasing, grammar, and mechanics (putting all punctuation inside
quotation marks, for example).
12. Point out places for improving transitions within and between paragraphs.
13. Check the writer’s use of MLA in citing, building a Works Cited page, creating a proper heading and
title. Good titles briefly comment on theme and include the title of the literary work: Familial Demise
in John Updike’s “Separating.”
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