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LEADER: 21033cam 22006971 4500
001 ocm00228872
003 OCoLC
005 20100512131149.0
008 730102s1959 nyu 000 0 eng
010 $a 59006482
040 $aDLC$cDLC$dGGN$dBTCTA$dLVB$dOCLCG$dIBS$dALEML$dOCLCQ
019 $a964739$a222479685
035 $a(OCoLC)228872$z(OCoLC)964739$z(OCoLC)222479685
050 00 $aPR1109$b.H35 1959
082 00 $a820.82
100 1 $aHarrison, G. B.$q(George Bagshawe),$d1894-1991,$eed.
245 10 $aMajor British writers,$cunder the general editorship of G.B. Harrison. The editors, Walter J. Bate ... [et al.].
250 $aEnl. ed.
260 $aNew York,$bHarcourt, Brace$c[1959]
300 $a2 v.$c25 cm.
505 00 $gv. 1.$tThe Canterbury tales.$tThe general prologue ;$tThe pardoner's prologue ;$tThe pardoner's tale ;$tThe pardoner's epilogue ;$tThe prioress's prologue ;$tThe prioress's tale ;$tThe prioress's epilogue ;$tThe miller's tale ;$tThe wife of Bath's prologue ;$tThe wife of Bath's tale ;$tThe clerk's tale ;$tThe clerk's epilogue ;$tThe Franklin's tale ;$tThe nun's priest's tale ;$tChaucer's prayer /$rGeoffrey Chaucer.
505 00 $gv. 1.$tEpithalamion ;$tThe Faerie queene.$tSelections from Book I, Book II, Book III, Book IV, Book V, Book VI, Book VII /$rEdmund Spenser --$tThe first part of King Henry the Fourth ;$tThe tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark ;$tThe tempest /$rWilliam Shakespeare.
505 00 $gv. 1.$tEssays or counsels.$tOf truth ;$tOf death ;$tOf adversity ;$tOf marriage and single life ;$tOf great place ;$tOf goodness, and goodness of nature ;$tOf seditions and troubles ;$tOf atheism ;$tOf superstition ;$tOf travel ;$tOf cunning ;$tOf wisdom for a man's self ;$tOf suspicion ;$tOf discourse ;$tOf plantations ;$tOf masques and triumphs ;$tOf building ;$tOf studies (1597) /$rFrancis Bacon --$tAdvancement of learning.$tfrom Book I ;$tfrom Book II /$rFrancis Bacon.
505 00 $gv. 1.$tfrom Songs and sonnets.$tThe good morrow ;$tSong (Go, and catch a falling star) ;$tWoman's constancy ;$tThe sun rising ;$tThe canonization ;$tLovers' infiniteness ;$tSong (Sweetest love, I do not go) ;$tAir and angels ;$tThe anniversary ;$tA valediction : of my name, in the window ;$tTwickenham Garden ;$tLove's growth ;$tThe dream ;$tA valediction : of weeping ;$tThe message ;$tA nocturnal upon St. Lucy's Day ;$tA valediction : forbidding mourning ;$tThe ecstasy ;$tLove's deity ;$tThe funeral ;$tThe blossom ;$tThe relique ;$tThe prohibition ;$tThe expiration /$rJohn Donne --$tfrom The satires.$tSatire III ;$tSatire IV /$rJohn Donne --$tVerse letter to the Countess of Bedford ;$tAn anatomy of the world : the first anniversary /$rJohn Donne --$tfrom Holy sonnets.$tI, Thou has made me ;$tVII, At the round Earth's imagined corners ;$tX, Death be not proud ;$tXIII, What if this present were the world's last night? ;$tXIV, Batter my heart, three-personed God ;$tXVIII, Show me, dear Christ ;$tXIX, Oh, to vex me, contraries meet in one /$rJohn Donne --$tOther Divine poems.$tGood Friday, 1613, riding westward ;$tfrom The litany : XV and XVI ;$tA hymn to Christ ;$tHymn to God my God, in my sickness ;$tA hymn to God the Father /$rJohn Donne --$tfrom Devotions upon emergent occasions.$tII, The strength, and the function of the senses ;$tIII, The patient takes his bed ;$tXVI, From the bells of the church adjoining ;$tXVII, Now, this bell tolling softly ;$tXVIII, The bell rings out /$rJohn Donne --$tThe Sermons.$tfrom Sermon II, Sermon VII, Sermon XV, Sermon LXVI, Sermon LXXX /$rJohn Donne --$tL sermons.$tSermon XXXVI /$rJohn Donne.
505 00 $gv. 1.$tOn the morning of Christ's nativity ;$tL'Allegro ;$tIl penseroso ;$tSonnet VII, How soon hath time ;$tLycidas /$rJohn Milton --$tAutobiographical extracts.$tfrom The reason of church government ;$tfrom An apology for Smectymnuus /$rJohn Milton --$tAreopagitica /$rJohn Milton --$gSonnets.$tVIII, When the assault was intended to the city ;$tXII, I did but prompt the age to quit their clogs ;$tXV, On the Lord General Fairfax at the Siege of Colchester ;$tXIX, When I consider how my light is spent ;$tXVI, To the Lord General Cromwell ;$tXVIII, On the late massacre in Piemont ;$tXX, Lawrence, of virtuous father virtuous son ;$tXXII, To Mr. Cyriack Skinner upon his blindness ;$tXXIII, Methought I saw my late espoused saint /$rJohn Milton --$tParidise lost.$tBook I, Book II, from Book III, from Book IV, from Book V, from Book VII, Book IX, from Book XII /$rJohn Milton --$tSamson agonistes /$rJohn Milton.
505 00 $gv. 1.$tTo my honored friend, Dr. Charleton ;$tAn essay of dramatic poesy ;$tfrom Secret love, or, The maiden queen.$tPrologue ;$tSong /$rJohn Dryden --$tfrom The tempest : prologue ;$tfrom An evening's love : song ;$tfrom Tyrannic love : epilogue ;$tfrom The conquest of Granada, II.$tEpilogue ;$tThe zambra dance /$rJohn Dryden --$tfrom Mariage à la mode.$tPrologue ;$tSong /$rJohn Dryden --$tEpilogue to the University of Oxford, 1674 ;$tfrom Troilus and Cressida : prologue ;$tfrom The Spanish friar : song ;$tfrom Amphitryon.$tMercury's song to Phaedra ;$tThe lady's song ;$tSong to a fair young lady going out of the town in the spring /$rJohn Dryden --$tMac Flecknoe ;$tAbsalom and Achitophel ;$tfrom Absalom and Achitophel, part II ;$tEpigram on Plutarch ;$tTo the memory of Mr. Oldham ;$tfrom Sylvae.$tHorace : the ninth ode of the first book ;$tHorace : the twenty-ninth ode of the the third book ;$tLucretius : the latter part of the third book against the fear of death /$rJohn Dryden --$tTo the pious memory of the accomplished young lady, Mrs. Anne Killigrew ;$tA song for St. Cecilia's Day, 1687 ;$tEpigram on Milton ;$tEpitaph on John Graham of Claverhouse, Viscount Dundee ;$tJuvenal : from the Sixth satire ;$tTo my dear friend Mr. Congreve ;$tAlexander's feast ;$tTo my friend Mr. Motteux ;$tEpigram on Tonson ;$tfrom Fables, ancient and modern.$tPreface ;$tTo my honored kinsman, John Driden ;$tBaucis and Philemon, out of Ovid's Metamorphoses ;$tChaucer : from The cock and the fox ;$tChaucer : from The wife of Bath, her tale /$rJohn Dryden --$tThe secular masque /$rJohn Dryden.
505 00 $gv. 1.$tAn argument against abolishing Christianity ;$tfrom A letter to a young gentleman ;$tThe first Drapier letter /$rJonathan Swift --$tGulliver's travels.$tA letter from Captain Bulliver to his cousin Sympson ;$tThe publisher to the reader ;$tPart I, a voyage to Lilliput ;$tPart II, A voyage to Brobdingnag ;$tPart IV, A voyage to the country of the Houyhnhnms /$rJonathan Swift --$tA modest proposal ;$tVerses on the death of Dr. Swift /$rJonathan Swift.
505 00 $gv. 1.$tEssay on criticism ;$tWindsor Forest ;$tThe rape of the Lock ;$tOde on Solitude ;$tEpistle X, To a young lady on her leaving the town after the coronation ;$tElegy to the memory of an unfortunate lady ;$tEloïsa to Abelard ;$tEssay on man /$rAlexander Pope --$tfrom Epistles to several persons.$tEpistle IV, To Richard Boyle, Earl of Burlington ;$tEpistle III, To Allen, Lord Bathurst /$rAlexander Pope --$tfrom Imitations of Horace : the first satire of the second book, to Mr. Fortescue ;$tfrom Imitations of Donne : the fourth satire of Dr. John Donne, Dean of St. Paul's, versified ;$tAn epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot /$rAlexander Pope --$tfrom Epistles to several persons.$tEpistle II, to a lady /$rAlexander Pope --$tfrom Imitations of Horace$tThe first Epistle of the second book.$tTo Augustus /$rAlexander Pope --$tfrom The dunciad, Book IV /$rAlexander Pope.
505 00 $gv. 1.$tfrom The journal of a tour to the Hebrides.$tMonday, 30th August, 1773 ;$tTuesday, 31st August, 1773 ;$tWednesday, 1st September, 1773 ;$tWednesday, 8th September, 1773 ;$tThursday, 16th September 1773 ;$tSunday, 3d October, 1773 /$rJames Boswell --$tfrom The life of Samuel Johnson.$tMay 16-August 6, 1763 ;$tOctober 16-26, 1769 ;$tMay 7, 1773 ;$tMay 1776 /$rJames Boswell.
505 00 $gv. 1.$tLetters.$tTo the Right Honorable the Earl of Chesterfield ;$tTo Mrs. Montagu ;$tTo George Strahan ;$tTo James Macpherson ;$tTo Mrs. Boswell ;$tTo Mrs. Thrale /$rSamuel Johnson --$tA short song of congratulations ;$tPrologue spoken by Mr. Garrick, at the opening of the theater in Drury Lane, 1747 /$rSamuel Johnson --$tfrom The rambler.$tNo. 25, No. 154, No. 155 /$rSamuel Johnson --$tfrom the Idler.$tNo. 32, No. 60 /$rSamuel Johnson --$tfrom the preface to A dictionary of the English language ;$tfrom the preface to Shakespeare ;$tOn Henry IV ;$tOn Polonius /$rSamuel Johnson --$tThe lives of the poets.$tfrom Milton, Cowley, Drayden, Addison, Pope /$rSamuel Johnson --$tThoughts during and after the writing of The lives of the Poets /$rSamuel Johnson.
505 00 $gv. 2.$tPreface to Lyrical ballads ;$tLines left upon a seat in a yew tree ;$tThe reverie of poor Susan ;$tThe ruined cottage (from The excursion, book I) ;$tThe old Cumberland beggar ;$tWe are seven ;$tExpostulation and reply ;$tThe tables turned ;$tTo my sister ;$tLines written in early spring ;$tLines composed a few miles above Tintern Abbey /$rWilliam Wordsworth --$tThe prelude.$tBook I, introduction, childhood and schooltime ;$tBook II, schooltime, continued ;$tBook III, residence at Cambridge ;$tfrom Book IV, summer vacation ;$tBook V, books ;$tfrom Book VI, Cambridge and the Alps ;$tfrom Book VII, residence in London ;$tfrom Book VIII, retrospect, love of nature leading to love of man ;$tfrom Book IX, residence in France ;$tfrom Book X, residence in France, continued ;$tfrom Book XII, imagination and taste, how impaired and restored ;$tfrom Book XIII, imagination and taste, how impaired and restored, concluded ;$tfrom Book XIV, conclusion /$rWilliam Wordsworth --$tLucy Gray ;$tStrange fits of passion have I known ;$tShe dwelt among the untrodden ways ;$tThree years she grew in sun and shower ;$tA slumber did my spirit seal ;$tA poet's epitaph ;$tMatthew ;$tThe two April mornings ;$tThe fountain ;$tEllen Irwin ;$tMichael ;$tI traveled among unknown men ;$tTo the cuckoo ;$tMy heart leaps up when I behold ;$tResolution and independence to H.C. ;$tI grieved for Buonaparté ;$tComposed upon Westminster Bridge ;$tOn the extinction of the Venetian Republic ;$tComposed by the seaside, near Calais, August, 1802 ;$tTo Toussaint L'Ouverture ;$tIt is a beauteous evening, calm and free ;$tNear Dover, September, 1802 ;$tIn London, September 1802 ;$tLondon, 1802 ;$tGreat men have been among us ;$tIt is not to be thought of ;$tEngland! The time is come when thou shouldst wean ;$tShe was a phantom of delight ;$tI wandered lonely as a cloud ;$tThe solitary reaper ;$tOde to duty ;$tOde, Intimations of immortality from recollections of early childhood ;$tWith how sad steps, o moon, thou climb'st the sky ;$tNuns fret not at their convent's narrow room ;$tThe world is too much with us ;$tWhere lies the land to which yon ship must go? --$tWith ships the sea was sprinkled far and nigh ;$tTo sleep ;$tElegiac stanzas ;$tCharacter of the happy warrior ;$tThought of a Briton on the subjugation of Switzerland ;$tLines : composed at Grasmere ;$tLaodamía ;$tWeak is the will of man, his judgment blind ;$tComposed upon an evening of extraordinary splendor and beauty ;$tAfterthought ;$tInside of King's College Chapel, Cambridge ;$tMutability ;$tScorn not the sonnet ;$tWhy art thou silent! ;$tThe Trossachs ;$tExtempore effusion upon the death of James Hogg /$rWilliam Wordsworth.
505 00 $gv. 2.$tTo a young ass ;$tThe Eolian harp ;$tThe lime tree bower my prison ;$tThe rime of the ancient mariner ;$tChristabel ;$tFrost at midnight ;$tFrance : an ode ;$tKubla Khan ;$tDejection : an ode ;$tTo William Wordsworth ;$tWork without hope /$rSamuel Taylor Coleridge --$tBiographis literaria.$tfrom Chapter XIII ;$tChapter XIV ;$tChapter XV /$rSamuel Taylor Coleridge --$tShakespearean criticism.$tfrom Hamlet ;$tThe tempest /$rSamuel Taylor Coleridge.
505 00 $gv. 2.$tWritten after swimming from Sestos to Abydos ;$tMaid of Athens, ere we part ;$tRemember thee! Remember thee! ;$tShe walks in beauty ;$tThe destruction of Sennacherib /$rGeorge Gordon, Lord Byron --$tStanzas for music ;$tSonnet on Chillon ;$tDarkness ;$tSo we'll go no more a-roving ;$tSonnet to Prince Regent ;$tOn my thirty-third birthday ;$tOn this day I complete my thirty-sixth year /$rGeorge Gordon, Lord Byron --$tChilde Harold's Pilgrimage.$tfrom Canto I ($tChilde Harold's Good night,$tTo Inez) ;$tfrom Canto III ;$tfrom Canto IV /$rGeorge Gordon, Lord Byron --$tThe prisoner of Chillon ;$tManfred ;$tThe vision of judgment ;$tDon Juan.$tCanto I ;$tfrom Canto III /$rGeorge Gordon, Lord Byron.
505 00 $gv. 2.$tStanzas, April, 1814 ;$tHymn to intellectual beauty ;$tMont Blanc ;$tOzymandias ;$tOde to the west wind ;$tPrometheus unbound ;$tThe cloud ;$tTo a skylark ;$tOde to liberty ;$tArethusa ;$tHymn of Apollo ;$tHymn of Pan ;$tTo the moon ;$tfrom Epipsychidion /$rPercy Bysshe Shelley --$tEpigrams.$tTo Stella ;$tCircumstance /$rPercy Bysshe Shelley --$tfrom Adonais ;$tLines (When the lamp is shattered) ;$tTo Jane : the invitation ;$tTo Jane : the recollection ;$tA defence of poetry /$rPercy Bysshe Shelley.
505 00 $gv. 2.$tImitation of Spenser ;$tTo Byron ;$tTo one who has been long ;$tOn first looking into Chapman's Homer ;$tKeen, fitful gusts ;$tTo Haydon ;$tOn the grasshopper and cricket ;$tOn seeing the Elgin Marbles for the first time ;$tOn the sea ;$tEndymion : from Book I ;$tOn sitting down to read King Lear once again ;$tWhen I have fears ;$tTo Spenser ;$tWhat the thrush said ;$tTo Homer ;$tFragment of an Ode to Maia ;$tWhere's the poet? ;$tfrom Hyperion, Book I ;$tThe eve of St. Agnes ;$tWhy did I laugh? ;$tBright star ;$tOn a dream ;$tLa belle dame sans merci ;$tTo sleep ;$tOn the sonnet ;$tOde to Psyche ;$tOde to a nightingale ;$tOde on melancholy ;$tOde on a Grecian urn ;$tLamia ;$tThe fall of Hyperion : from Canto I ;$tThis living hand ;$tTo autumn /$rJohn Keats --$tLetters.$tTo John Hamilton Reymonds, Benjamin Bailey, George and Thomas Keats ;$tfrom To John Hamilton Reynolds ;$tTo John Taylor ;$tfrom To John Hamilton Reynolds ;$tTo Richard Woodhouse ;$tfrom To George and Georgiana Keats ;$tTo Miss Jeffrey, Benjamin Bailey, Percy Blysshe Shelley, Charles Brown /$rJohn Keats.
505 00 $gv. 2.$tThe kraken ;$tMariana ;$tThe poet ;$tThe Hesperides ;$tThe lady of Shalott ;$tŒnone ;$tThe palace of art ;$tThe lotos-eaters ;$tUlysses ;$tTithonus ;$tBreak, break, break ;$tYou ask me, why ;$tLove thou thy land ;$tMorte D'Arthur.$tThe epic ;$tMorte d'Arthur /$rAlfred, Lord Tennyson --$tLocksley Hall /$rAlfred, Lord Tennyson --$tSongs from the Princess.$tSweet and low ;$tThe splendor falls ;$tTears, idle tears ;$tNow sleeps the crimson petal ;$tThe eagle /$rAlfred, Lord Tennyson --$tIn Memorium A.H.H. ;$tMaud ;$tIn the Valley of Cauteretz ;$tNorthern farmer, old style ;$tNorthern farmer, new style ;$tLucretium /$rAlfred, Lord Tennyson --$tIdylls of the King.$tThe Holy grail /$rAlfred, Lord Tennyson --$tFrater Ave atque Vale ;$tTo Virgil ;$tDemeter and Persephone ;$tCrossing the bar /$rAlfred, Lord Tennyson.
505 00 $gv. 2.$tfrom Dramatic lyrics. ;$tPorphyris's lover ;$tMy last duchess ;$tCount Gismond ;$tIncident of the French camp ;$tSoliloquy of the Spanish cloister ;$tCristina ;$tThe pied piper of Hamelin /$rRobert Browning --$tfrom Dramatic romances.$tHow they brought the good news from Ghent to Aix ;$tThe lost leader ;$tHome-thoughts, from abroad ;$tHome-thoughts, from the sea ;$tThe Bishop orders his tomb at St. Praxed's Church ;$tMeeting at night ;$tParting at morning /$rRobert Browning --$tfrom Men and women.$tLove among the ruins ;$tEvelyn Hope ;$tUp at a villa, down in the city ;$tFra Lippo Lippi ;$tA toccata of Galuppi's ;$tBy the fireside ;$tMy star ;$tChilde Roland to the dark tower came ;$tRespectability ;$tHow it strikes a contemporary ;$tMemorabilia ;$tAndrea del Sarto ;$tSaul ;$tDe Gustibus ;$tCleon ;$tTwo in the campagna ;$tA grammarian's funeral /$rRobert Browning --$tfrom Dramatis personae.$tAbt Bogler ;$tRabbi Ben Ezra ;$tConfessions ;$tMay and death ;$tProspice ;$tYouth and art /$rRobert Browning --$tfrom The ring and the book.$tPompilia ;$tThe Pope /$rRobert Browning --$tfrom Pacchiarotto.$tHouse /$rRobert Browning --$tfrom Dramatic idyls, second series.$tEpilogue, Touch him ne'er so lightly /$rRobert Browning --$tfrom Jocoseria.$tWanting is-- what? ;$tNever the time and the place /$rRobert Browning --$tfrom Asolando.$tDubiety ;$tEpilogue, At midnight in the silence /$rRobert Browning.
505 00 $gv. 2.$tThe strayed reveler ;$tTo a friend ;$tShakespeare ;$tWritten in Butler's sermons ;$tIn harmony with nature ;$tTo a Republican friend, 1848 ;$tTo a Republican friend, 1848 (continued) ;$tReligious isolation ;$tThe forsaken merman ;$tUrania ;$tEuphrosyne ;$tMeeting ;$tA farewell ;$tIsolation : to Marguerite ;$tTo Marguerite, continued ;$tAbsence ;$tLonging ;$tDestiny ;$tHuman life ;$tSelf-deception ;$tYouth and calm ;$tMemorial verses ;$tCourage ;$tSelf-dependence ;$tA summer night ;$tThe buried life ;$tLines written in Kensington Gardens ;$tfrom Sohrab and Rustum ;$tPhilomela ;$tRequiescat ;$tThe scholar gypsy ;$tStanzas from the Grande Chartreuse ;$tThyrsis ;$tPersistency of poetry ;$tDover Beach ;$tFragment of chorus of a Dejaneira ;$tEarly death and fame ;$tGrowing old ;$tThe progress of Poesy ;$tThe last word ;$tRugby Chapel ;$tPreface to Poems, edition of 1853 ;$tAdvertisement to the second edition of Poems ;$tThe function of criticism at the present time ;$tLiterature and science ;$tThe study of poetry ;$tWordsworth ;$tJohn Keats /$rMatthew Arnold.
505 00 $gv. 2.$tMan and superman. Epistle dedicatory /$rGeorge Bernard Shaw.
505 00 $gv. 2.$tThe lake isle of Innisfree ;$tWho goes with Fergus? ;$tThe folly of being comforted ;$tNo second Troy ;$tTo a friend whose work has come to nothing ;$tThe magi ;$tThe dolls ;$tThe wild swans at Coole ;$tMen improve with the years ;$tLines written in dejection ;$tThe fisherman ;$tEaster 1916 ;$tThe second coming ;$tSailing to Byzantium ;$tfrom The tower : III ;$tTwo songs from a play ;$tLeda and the swan ;$tAmong school children ;$tIn memory of Eva Gore-Booth and Con Markiewicz ;$tfrom Blood and the moon : I and II ;$tThe nineteenth century and after ;$tCoole Park, 1929 ;$tfrom Vacillation : VII and VIII ;$tWords for music perhaps.$tXVII, After long silence ;$tXVIII, Mad as the mist and snow /$rWilliam Butler Yeats --$tAn acre of grass ;$tThe wild old wicked man ;$tA bronze head /$rWilliam Butler Yeats --$tfrom The Autobiography.$tMiddletons and Pollexfens ;$tEarly reading ;$tHis father's influence ;$tPersonal utterance ;$tA Pre-Raphaelite's son ;$tMaud Gonne$tThe mask ($tMorris : his antithetical dream ;$tYeats's anti-self ;$tAbstraction) ;$tUnity of being : unity of culture ($tA world of fragments ;$tImage of unity ;$tShaw's Arms and the man ;$tWilson and Shaw : Phases of the moon ;$tThe tragic generation) ;$tYeats on his own writing /$rWilliam Butler Yeats --$tfrom the Essays.$tPersonality and the intellectual essences ;$tRhetoricians, sentimentalists, and poets /$rWilliam Butler Yeats.
505 00 $gv. 2.$tThe love song of J. Alfred Prufrock ;$tSweeney among the nightingales /$rT.S. Eliot --$tThe waste land.$tI, The burial of the dead ;$tII, A game of chess ;$tIII, The fire sermon ;$tIV, Death by water ;$tV, What the thunder said /$rT.S. Eliot --$tThe hollow men ;$tMarina ;$tTriumphal march ;$tThe dry salvages ;$tHamlet ;$tThe metaphysical poets ;$tThe music of poetry /$rT.S. Eliot.
520 $aIncludes Chaucer; Spenser; Shakespeare; Bacon; Donne; Milton; Dryden; Swift; Pope; Johnson; Boswell.
650 0 $aEnglish literature.
650 6 $aLittérature anglaise.
776 08 $iOnline version:$aHarrison, G.B. (George Bagshawe), 1894-1991.$tMajor British writers.$bEnl. ed.$dNew York, Harcourt, Brace [1959]$w(OCoLC)573454230
938 $aBaker and Taylor$bBTCP$n59006482
952 $a228872$zDLC$bLIBRARY OF CONGRESS$hFull; not ex.$iLCC$kDDC$nSummary$tContents$u20100405
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948 $hNO HOLDINGS IN PMR - 1030 OTHER HOLDINGS