<h2>CHAPTER XXIV.</h2>
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<h3>THE ARMY AT PITTSBURG LANDING—INJURED BY A FALL—THE CONFEDERATE ATTACK AT SHILOH—THE FIRST DAY'S FIGHT AT SHILOH—GENERAL SHERMAN—CONDITION OF THE ARMY—CLOSE OF THE FIRST DAY'S FIGHT—THE SECOND DAY'S FIGHT—RETREAT AND DEFEAT OF THE CONFEDERATES.</h3>
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<p>When I reassumed command on the 17th of March I found the army
divided, about half being on the east bank of the Tennessee at
Savannah, while one division was at Crump's landing on the west
bank about four miles higher up, and the remainder at Pittsburg
landing, five miles above Crump's. The enemy was in force at
Corinth, the junction of the two most important railroads in the
Mississippi valley—one connecting Memphis and the Mississippi
River with the East, and the other leading south to all the cotton
states. Still another railroad connects Corinth with Jackson, in
west Tennessee. If we obtained possession of Corinth the enemy
would have no railroad for the transportation of armies or supplies
until that running east from Vicksburg was reached. It was the
great strategic position at the West between the Tennessee and the
Mississippi rivers and between Nashville and Vicksburg.</p>
<p>I at once put all the troops at Savannah in motion for Pittsburg
landing, knowing that the enemy was fortifying at Corinth and
collecting an army there under Johnston. It was my expectation to
march against that army as soon as Buell, who had been ordered to
reinforce me with the Army of the Ohio, should arrive; and the west
bank of the river was the place to start from. Pittsburg is only
about twenty miles from Corinth, and Hamburg landing, four miles
further up the river, is a mile or two nearer. I had not been in
command long before I selected Hamburg as the place to put the Army
of the Ohio when it arrived. The roads from Pittsburg and Hamburg
to Corinth converge some eight miles out. This disposition of the
troops would have given additional roads to march over when the
advance commenced, within supporting distance of each other.</p>
<p>Before I arrived at Savannah, Sherman, who had joined the Army
of the Tennessee and been placed in command of a division, had made
an expedition on steamers convoyed by gunboats to the neighborhood
of Eastport, thirty miles south, for the purpose of destroying the
railroad east of Corinth. The rains had been so heavy for some time
before that the low-lands had become impassable swamps. Sherman
debarked his troops and started out to accomplish the object of the
expedition; but the river was rising so rapidly that the back-water
up the small tributaries threatened to cut off the possibility of
getting back to the boats, and the expedition had to return without
reaching the railroad. The guns had to be hauled by hand through
the water to get back to the boats.</p>
<p>On the 17th of March the army on the Tennessee River consisted
of five divisions, commanded respectively by Generals C. F. Smith,
McClernand, L. Wallace, Hurlbut and Sherman. General W. H. L.
Wallace was temporarily in command of Smith's division, General
Smith, as I have said, being confined to his bed. Reinforcements
were arriving daily and as they came up they were organized, first
into brigades, then into a division, and the command given to
General Prentiss, who had been ordered to report to me. General
Buell was on his way from Nashville with 40,000 veterans. On the
19th of March he was at Columbia, Tennessee, eighty-five miles from
Pittsburg. When all reinforcements should have arrived I expected
to take the initiative by marching on Corinth, and had no
expectation of needing fortifications, though this subject was
taken into consideration. McPherson, my only military engineer, was
directed to lay out a line to intrench. He did so, but reported
that it would have to be made in rear of the line of encampment as
it then ran. The new line, while it would be nearer the river, was
yet too far away from the Tennessee, or even from the creeks, to be
easily supplied with water, and in case of attack these creeks
would be in the hands of the enemy. The fact is, I regarded the
campaign we were engaged in as an offensive one and had no idea
that the enemy would leave strong intrenchments to take the
initiative when he knew he would be attacked where he was if he
remained. This view, however, did not prevent every precaution
being taken and every effort made to keep advised of all movements
of the enemy.</p>
<p>Johnston's cavalry meanwhile had been well out towards our
front, and occasional encounters occurred between it and our
outposts. On the 1st of April this cavalry became bold and
approached our lines, showing that an advance of some kind was
contemplated. On the 2d Johnston left Corinth in force to attack my
army. On the 4th his cavalry dashed down and captured a small
picket guard of six or seven men, stationed some five miles out
from Pittsburg on the Corinth road. Colonel Buckland sent relief to
the guard at once and soon followed in person with an entire
regiment, and General Sherman followed Buckland taking the
remainder of a brigade. The pursuit was kept up for some three
miles beyond the point where the picket guard had been captured,
and after nightfall Sherman returned to camp and reported to me by
letter what had occurred.</p>
<p>At this time a large body of the enemy was hovering to the west
of us, along the line of the Mobile and Ohio railroad. My
apprehension was much greater for the safety of Crump's landing
than it was for Pittsburg. I had no apprehension that the enemy
could really capture either place. But I feared it was possible
that he might make a rapid dash upon Crump's and destroy our
transports and stores, most of which were kept at that point, and
then retreat before Wallace could be reinforced. Lew. Wallace's
position I regarded as so well chosen that he was not removed.</p>
<p>At this time I generally spent the day at Pittsburg and returned
to Savannah in the evening. I was intending to remove my
headquarters to Pittsburg, but Buell was expected daily and would
come in at Savannah. I remained at this point, therefore, a few
days longer than I otherwise should have done, in order to meet him
on his arrival. The skirmishing in our front, however, had been so
continuous from about the 3d of April that I did not leave
Pittsburg each night until an hour when I felt there would be no
further danger before the morning.</p>
<p>On Friday the 4th, the day of Buckland's advance, I was very
much injured by my horse falling with me, and on me, while I was
trying to get to the front where firing had been heard. The night
was one of impenetrable darkness, with rain pouring down in
torrents; nothing was visible to the eye except as revealed by the
frequent flashes of lightning. Under these circumstances I had to
trust to the horse, without guidance, to keep the road. I had not
gone far, however, when I met General W. H. L. Wallace and Colonel
(afterwards General) McPherson coming from the direction of the
front. They said all was quiet so far as the enemy was concerned.
On the way back to the boat my horse's feet slipped from under him,
and he fell with my leg under his body. The extreme softness of the
ground, from the excessive rains of the few preceding days, no
doubt saved me from a severe injury and protracted lameness. As it
was, my ankle was very much injured, so much so that my boot had to
be cut off. For two or three days after I was unable to walk except
with crutches.</p>
<p>On the 5th General Nelson, with a division of Buell's army,
arrived at Savannah and I ordered him to move up the east bank of
the river, to be in a position where he could be ferried over to
Crump's landing or Pittsburg as occasion required. I had learned
that General Buell himself would be at Savannah the next day, and
desired to meet me on his arrival. Affairs at Pittsburg landing had
been such for several days that I did not want to be away during
the day. I determined, therefore, to take a very early breakfast
and ride out to meet Buell, and thus save time. He had arrived on
the evening of the 5th, but had not advised me of the fact and I
was not aware of it until some time after. While I was at
breakfast, however, heavy firing was heard in the direction of
Pittsburg landing, and I hastened there, sending a hurried note to
Buell informing him of the reason why I could not meet him at
Savannah. On the way up the river I directed the dispatch-boat to
run in close to Crump's landing, so that I could communicate with
General Lew. Wallace. I found him waiting on a boat apparently
expecting to see me, and I directed him to get his troops in line
ready to execute any orders he might receive. He replied that his
troops were already under arms and prepared to move.</p>
<p>Up to that time I had felt by no means certain that Crump's
landing might not be the point of attack. On reaching the front,
however, about eight A.M., I found that the attack on Pittsburg was
unmistakable, and that nothing more than a small guard, to protect
our transports and stores, was needed at Crump's. Captain Baxter, a
quartermaster on my staff, was accordingly directed to go back and
order General Wallace to march immediately to Pittsburg by the road
nearest the river. Captain Baxter made a memorandum of this order.
About one P.M., not hearing from Wallace and being much in need of
reinforcements, I sent two more of my staff, Colonel McPherson and
Captain Rowley, to bring him up with his division. They reported
finding him marching towards Purdy, Bethel, or some point west from
the river, and farther from Pittsburg by several miles than when he
started. The road from his first position to Pittsburg landing was
direct and near the river. Between the two points a bridge had been
built across Snake Creek by our troops, at which Wallace's command
had assisted, expressly to enable the troops at the two places to
support each other in case of need. Wallace did not arrive in time
to take part in the first day's fight. General Wallace has since
claimed that the order delivered to him by Captain Baxter was
simply to join the right of the army, and that the road over which
he marched would have taken him to the road from Pittsburg to Purdy
where it crosses Owl Creek on the right of Sherman; but this is not
where I had ordered him nor where I wanted him to go.</p>
<p>I never could see and do not now see why any order was necessary
further than to direct him to come to Pittsburg landing, without
specifying by what route. His was one of three veteran divisions
that had been in battle, and its absence was severely felt. Later
in the war General Wallace would not have made the mistake that he
committed on the 6th of April, 1862. I presume his idea was that by
taking the route he did he would be able to come around on the
flank or rear of the enemy, and thus perform an act of heroism that
would redound to the credit of his command, as well as to the
benefit of his country.</p>
<p>Some two or three miles from Pittsburg landing was a log
meeting-house called Shiloh. It stood on the ridge which divides
the waters of Snake and Lick creeks, the former emptying into the
Tennessee just north of Pittsburg landing, and the latter south.
This point was the key to our position and was held by Sherman. His
division was at that time wholly raw, no part of it ever having
been in an engagement; but I thought this deficiency was more than
made up by the superiority of the commander. McClernand was on
Sherman's left, with troops that had been engaged at forts Henry
and Donelson and were therefore veterans so far as western troops
had become such at that stage of the war. Next to McClernand came
Prentiss with a raw division, and on the extreme left, Stuart with
one brigade of Sherman's division. Hurlbut was in rear of Prentiss,
massed, and in reserve at the time of the onset. The division of
General C. F. Smith was on the right, also in reserve. General
Smith was still sick in bed at Savannah, but within hearing of our
guns. His services would no doubt have been of inestimable value
had his health permitted his presence. The command of his division
devolved upon Brigadier-General W. H. L. Wallace, a most estimable
and able officer; a veteran too, for he had served a year in the
Mexican war and had been with his command at Henry and Donelson.
Wallace was mortally wounded in the first day's engagement, and
with the change of commanders thus necessarily effected in the heat
of battle the efficiency of his division was much weakened.</p>
<p>The position of our troops made a continuous line from Lick
Creek on the left to Owl Creek, a branch of Snake Creek, on the
right, facing nearly south and possibly a little west. The water in
all these streams was very high at the time and contributed to
protect our flanks. The enemy was compelled, therefore, to attack
directly in front. This he did with great vigor, inflicting heavy
losses on the National side, but suffering much heavier on his
own.</p>
<p>The Confederate assaults were made with such a disregard of
losses on their own side that our line of tents soon fell into
their hands. The ground on which the battle was fought was
undulating, heavily timbered with scattered clearings, the woods
giving some protection to the troops on both sides. There was also
considerable underbrush. A number of attempts were made by the
enemy to turn our right flank, where Sherman was posted, but every
effort was repulsed with heavy loss. But the front attack was kept
up so vigorously that, to prevent the success of these attempts to
get on our flanks, the National troops were compelled, several
times, to take positions to the rear nearer Pittsburg landing. When
the firing ceased at night the National line was all of a mile in
rear of the position it had occupied in the morning.</p>
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<p>In one of the backward moves, on the 6th, the division commanded
by General Prentiss did not fall back with the others. This left
his flanks exposed and enabled the enemy to capture him with about
2,200 of his officers and men. General Badeau gives four o'clock of
the 6th as about the time this capture took place. He may be right
as to the time, but my recollection is that the hour was later.
General Prentiss himself gave the hour as half-past five. I was
with him, as I was with each of the division commanders that day,
several times, and my recollection is that the last time I was with
him was about half-past four, when his division was standing up
firmly and the General was as cool as if expecting victory. But no
matter whether it was four or later, the story that he and his
command were surprised and captured in their camps is without any
foundation whatever. If it had been true, as currently reported at
the time and yet believed by thousands of people, that Prentiss and
his division had been captured in their beds, there would not have
been an all-day struggle, with the loss of thousands killed and
wounded on the Confederate side.</p>
<p>With the single exception of a few minutes after the capture of
Prentiss, a continuous and unbroken line was maintained all day
from Snake Creek or its tributaries on the right to Lick Creek or
the Tennessee on the left above Pittsburg.</p>
<p>There was no hour during the day when there was not heavy firing
and generally hard fighting at some point on the line, but seldom
at all points at the same time. It was a case of Southern dash
against Northern pluck and endurance. Three of the five divisions
engaged on Sunday were entirely raw, and many of the men had only
received their arms on the way from their States to the field. Many
of them had arrived but a day or two before and were hardly able to
load their muskets according to the manual. Their officers were
equally ignorant of their duties. Under these circumstances it is
not astonishing that many of the regiments broke at the first fire.
In two cases, as I now remember, colonels led their regiments from
the field on first hearing the whistle of the enemy's bullets. In
these cases the colonels were constitutional cowards, unfit for any
military position; but not so the officers and men led out of
danger by them. Better troops never went upon a battle-field than
many of these, officers and men, afterwards proved themselves to
be, who fled panic stricken at the first whistle of bullets and
shell at Shiloh.</p>
<p>During the whole of Sunday I was continuously engaged in passing
from one part of the field to another, giving directions to
division commanders. In thus moving along the line, however, I
never deemed it important to stay long with Sherman. Although his
troops were then under fire for the first time, their commander, by
his constant presence with them, inspired a confidence in officers
and men that enabled them to render services on that bloody
battle-field worthy of the best of veterans. McClernand was next to
Sherman, and the hardest fighting was in front of these two
divisions. McClernand told me on that day, the 6th, that he
profited much by having so able a commander supporting him. A
casualty to Sherman that would have taken him from the field that
day would have been a sad one for the troops engaged at Shiloh. And
how near we came to this! On the 6th Sherman was shot twice, once
in the hand, once in the shoulder, the ball cutting his coat and
making a slight wound, and a third ball passed through his hat. In
addition to this he had several horses shot during the day.</p>
<p>The nature of this battle was such that cavalry could not be
used in front; I therefore formed ours into line in rear, to stop
stragglers—of whom there were many. When there would be
enough of them to make a show, and after they had recovered from
their fright, they would be sent to reinforce some part of the line
which needed support, without regard to their companies, regiments
or brigades.</p>
<p>On one occasion during the day I rode back as far as the river
and met General Buell, who had just arrived; I do not remember the
hour, but at that time there probably were as many as four or five
thousand stragglers lying under cover of the river bluff,
panic-stricken, most of whom would have been shot where they lay,
without resistance, before they would have taken muskets and
marched to the front to protect themselves. This meeting between
General Buell and myself was on the dispatch-boat used to run
between the landing and Savannah. It was brief, and related
specially to his getting his troops over the river. As we left the
boat together, Buell's attention was attracted by the men lying
under cover of the river bank. I saw him berating them and trying
to shame them into joining their regiments. He even threatened them
with shells from the gunboats near by. But it was all to no effect.
Most of these men afterward proved themselves as gallant as any of
those who saved the battle from which they had deserted. I have no
doubt that this sight impressed General Buell with the idea that a
line of retreat would be a good thing just then. If he had come in
by the front instead of through the stragglers in the rear, he
would have thought and felt differently. Could he have come through
the Confederate rear, he would have witnessed there a scene similar
to that at our own. The distant rear of an army engaged in battle
is not the best place from which to judge correctly what is going
on in front. Later in the war, while occupying the country between
the Tennessee and the Mississippi, I learned that the panic in the
Confederate lines had not differed much from that within our own.
Some of the country people estimated the stragglers from Johnston's
army as high as 20,000. Of course this was an exaggeration.</p>
<p>The situation at the close of Sunday was as follows: along the
top of the bluff just south of the log-house which stood at
Pittsburg landing, Colonel J. D. Webster, of my staff, had arranged
twenty or more pieces of artillery facing south or up the river.
This line of artillery was on the crest of a hill overlooking a
deep ravine opening into the Tennessee. Hurlbut with his division
intact was on the right of this artillery, extending west and
possibly a little north. McClernand came next in the general line,
looking more to the west. His division was complete in its
organization and ready for any duty. Sherman came next, his right
extending to Snake Creek. His command, like the other two, was
complete in its organization and ready, like its chief, for any
service it might be called upon to render. All three divisions
were, as a matter of course, more or less shattered and depleted in
numbers from the terrible battle of the day. The division of W. H.
L. Wallace, as much from the disorder arising from changes of
division and brigade commanders, under heavy fire, as from any
other cause, had lost its organization and did not occupy a place
in the line as a division. Prentiss' command was gone as a
division, many of its members having been killed, wounded or
captured, but it had rendered valiant services before its final
dispersal, and had contributed a good share to the defence of
Shiloh.</p>
<p>The right of my line rested near the bank of Snake Creek, a
short distance above the bridge which had been built by the troops
for the purpose of connecting Crump's landing and Pittsburg
landing. Sherman had posted some troops in a log-house and
out-buildings which overlooked both the bridge over which Wallace
was expected and the creek above that point. In this last position
Sherman was frequently attacked before night, but held the point
until he voluntarily abandoned it to advance in order to make room
for Lew. Wallace, who came up after dark.</p>
<p>There was, as I have said, a deep ravine in front of our left.
The Tennessee River was very high and there was water to a
considerable depth in the ravine. Here the enemy made a last
desperate effort to turn our flank, but was repelled. The gunboats
Tyler and Lexington, Gwin and Shirk commanding, with the artillery
under Webster, aided the army and effectually checked their further
progress. Before any of Buell's troops had reached the west bank of
the Tennessee, firing had almost entirely ceased; anything like an
attempt on the part of the enemy to advance had absolutely ceased.
There was some artillery firing from an unseen enemy, some of his
shells passing beyond us; but I do not remember that there was the
whistle of a single musket-ball heard. As his troops arrived in the
dusk General Buell marched several of his regiments part way down
the face of the hill where they fired briskly for some minutes, but
I do not think a single man engaged in this firing received an
injury. The attack had spent its force.</p>
<p>General Lew. Wallace, with 5,000 effective men, arrived after
firing had ceased for the day, and was placed on the right. Thus
night came, Wallace came, and the advance of Nelson's division
came; but none—unless night—in time to be of material
service to the gallant men who saved Shiloh on that first day
against large odds. Buell's loss on the 6th of April was two men
killed and one wounded, all members of the 36th Indiana infantry.
The Army of the Tennessee lost on that day at least 7,000 men. The
presence of two or three regiments of Buell's army on the west bank
before firing ceased had not the slightest effect in preventing the
capture of Pittsburg landing.</p>
<p>So confident was I before firing had ceased on the 6th that the
next day would bring victory to our arms if we could only take the
initiative, that I visited each division commander in person before
any reinforcements had reached the field. I directed them to throw
out heavy lines of skirmishers in the morning as soon as they could
see, and push them forward until they found the enemy, following
with their entire divisions in supporting distance, and to engage
the enemy as soon as found. To Sherman I told the story of the
assault at Fort Donelson, and said that the same tactics would win
at Shiloh. Victory was assured when Wallace arrived, even if there
had been no other support. I was glad, however, to see the
reinforcements of Buell and credit them with doing all there was
for them to do.</p>
<p>During the night of the 6th the remainder of Nelson's division,
Buell's army crossed the river and were ready to advance in the
morning, forming the left wing. Two other divisions, Crittenden's
and McCook's, came up the river from Savannah in the transports and
were on the west bank early on the 7th. Buell commanded them in
person. My command was thus nearly doubled in numbers and
efficiency.</p>
<p>During the night rain fell in torrents and our troops were
exposed to the storm without shelter. I made my headquarters under
a tree a few hundred yards back from the river bank. My ankle was
so much swollen from the fall of my horse the Friday night
preceding, and the bruise was so painful, that I could get no
rest.</p>
<p>The drenching rain would have precluded the possibility of sleep
without this additional cause. Some time after midnight, growing
restive under the storm and the continuous pain, I moved back to
the log-house under the bank. This had been taken as a hospital,
and all night wounded men were being brought in, their wounds
dressed, a leg or an arm amputated as the case might require, and
everything being done to save life or alleviate suffering. The
sight was more unendurable than encountering the enemy's fire, and
I returned to my tree in the rain.</p>
<p>The advance on the morning of the 7th developed the enemy in the
camps occupied by our troops before the battle began, more than a
mile back from the most advanced position of the Confederates on
the day before. It is known now that they had not yet learned of
the arrival of Buell's command. Possibly they fell back so far to
get the shelter of our tents during the rain, and also to get away
from the shells that were dropped upon them by the gunboats every
fifteen minutes during the night.</p>
<p>The position of the Union troops on the morning of the 7th was
as follows: General Lew. Wallace on the right; Sherman on his left;
then McClernand and then Hurlbut. Nelson, of Buell's army, was on
our extreme left, next to the river.</p>
<p>Crittenden was next in line after Nelson and on his right,
McCook followed and formed the extreme right of Buell's command. My
old command thus formed the right wing, while the troops directly
under Buell constituted the left wing of the army. These relative
positions were retained during the entire day, or until the enemy
was driven from the field.</p>
<p>In a very short time the battle became general all along the
line. This day everything was favorable to the Union side. We had
now become the attacking party. The enemy was driven back all day,
as we had been the day before, until finally he beat a precipitate
retreat. The last point held by him was near the road leading from
the landing to Corinth, on the left of Sherman and right of
McClernand. About three o'clock, being near that point and seeing
that the enemy was giving way everywhere else, I gathered up a
couple of regiments, or parts of regiments, from troops near by,
formed them in line of battle and marched them forward, going in
front myself to prevent premature or long-range firing. At this
point there was a clearing between us and the enemy favorable for
charging, although exposed. I knew the enemy were ready to break
and only wanted a little encouragement from us to go quickly and
join their friends who had started earlier. After marching to
within musket-range I stopped and let the troops pass. The command,
CHARGE, was given, and was executed with loud cheers and with a
run; when the last of the enemy broke.</p>
<blockquote><br/>
[NOTE.—Since writing this chapter I have received from Mrs.
W. H. L. Wallace, widow of the gallant general who was killed in
the first day's fight on the field of Shiloh, a letter from General
Lew. Wallace to him dated the morning of the 5th. At the date of
this letter it was well known that the Confederates had troops out
along the Mobile & Ohio railroad west of Crump's landing and
Pittsburg landing, and were also collecting near Shiloh. This
letter shows that at that time General Lew. Wallace was making
preparations for the emergency that might happen for the passing of
reinforcements between Shiloh and his position, extending from
Crump's landing westward, and he sends it over the road running
from Adamsville to the Pittsburg landing and Purdy road. These two
roads intersect nearly a mile west of the crossing of the latter
over Owl Creek, where our right rested. In this letter General Lew.
Wallace advises General W. H. L. Wallace that he will send
"to-morrow" (and his letter also says "April 5th," which is the
same day the letter was dated and which, therefore, must have been
written on the 4th) some cavalry to report to him at his
headquarters, and suggesting the propriety of General W. H. L.
Wallace's sending a company back with them for the purpose of
having the cavalry at the two landings familiarize themselves with
the road so that they could "act promptly in case of emergency as
guides to and from the different camps."<br/>
<br/>
This modifies very materially what I have said, and what has been
said by others, of the conduct of General Lew. Wallace at the
battle of Shiloh. It shows that he naturally, with no more
experience than he had at the time in the profession of arms, would
take the particular road that he did start upon in the absence of
orders to move by a different road.<br/>
<br/>
The mistake he made, and which probably caused his apparent
dilatoriness, was that of advancing some distance after he found
that the firing, which would be at first directly to his front and
then off to the left, had fallen back until it had got very much in
rear of the position of his advance. This falling back had taken
place before I sent General Wallace orders to move up to Pittsburg
landing and, naturally, my order was to follow the road nearest the
river. But my order was verbal, and to a staff officer who was to
deliver it to General Wallace, so that I am not competent to say
just what order the General actually received.<br/>
<br/>
General Wallace's division was stationed, the First brigade at
Crump's landing, the Second out two miles, and the Third two and a
half miles out. Hearing the sounds of battle General Wallace early
ordered his First and Third brigades to concentrate on the Second.
If the position of our front had not changed, the road which
Wallace took would have been somewhat shorter to our right than the
River road.<br/>
<br/>
U. S. GRANT.<br/>
<br/>
MOUNT MACGREGOR, NEW YORK, June 21, 1885.</blockquote>
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