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Now thy aid

Eugene, with regiments unequal prest,
Awaits.

Philips. REGIMENT, in military affairs, a term applied to any body of troops, which, if cavalry, consists of one or more squadrons, commanded by a colonel; and, if infantry, of one or more battalions, each commanded in the same manner. The squadrons in cavalry regimerts are divided, sometimes into six, and sometimes into nine troops. The battalions of British infantry are generally divided into ten companies, two of which are called the flanks; one on the right consisting of grenadiers, and another on the left formed of light troops. There is not, however, any established rule on this head; as both cavalry and infantry regiments differ according to the exigencies of service in time of war, or the principles of economy in time of peace. REGION, n. ́s. French region; Latin regio. Tract of land; country; space; place; rank. All the regions

Do seemingly revolt; and, who resist,

Are mocked for valiant ignorance. Shakspeare.
The bow is bent and drawn, make from the shaft.
-Let it fall rather, though the fork invade
The region of my heart.

Id. King Lear. The gentleman kept company with the wild prince and Poins; he is of too high a region; he knows too much. Shakspeare.

The upper regions of the air perceive the collection of the matter of tempests before the air below.

Bacon.

Thus raged the goddess, and with fury fraught, The restless regions of the storms she sought.

Dryden. REGISTER, n. s. & v. a. Fr. registre; Lat. REGISTRY. S registrum. A regular account of any thing; he who keeps it: to record or enrol in a register: registry is the act of doing so; the series of entries; or the place where they are kept.

Joy may you have and everlasting fame, Of late most hard atchievement by you done, For which inrolled is your glorious name In heavenly registers above the sun. Spenser. Sir John, as you have one eye upon my follies, as you hear them unfolded, turn another into the register of your own.

Shakspeare.

I wonder why a registry has not been kept in the college of physicians of things invented. Temple. For a conspiracy against the emperor Claudius, it was ordered that Seribonianus's name and consulate should be effaced out of all public registers and inAddison. scriptions.

The Roman emperors registered their most remarkable buildings, as well as actions.

Id.

A REGISTER is a public book, in which are entered and recorded memoirs, acts, and minutes, to be had recourse to occasionally for knowing and proving matters of fact. Of these there are several kinds; as, 1. Register of deeds in Yorkshire and Middlesex, in which are registered all deeds, conveyances, wills, &c., that affect any lands or tenements in these counties, which are otherwise void against any subsequent purchasers or mortgages, &c.: but this does not extend to any copyhold estate, nor to leases at a rack-rent, or where they do not exceed twentyone years. The registered memorials must be engrossed on parchment, under the hand and seal of some of the granters or grantees, attested by witnesses who are to prove the signing or sealing of them and the execution of the deed. But these registers, which in England are confined to two counties, are in Scotland general. of these there are two kinds; the one general, fixed at Edinburgh, under the direction of the lord register; and the other is kept in the several shires, stewartries, and regalities, the clerks of which are obliged to transmit the registers of their respective courts to the general register. 2. Parish registers are books in which are registered the baptisms, marriages, and burials of each parish.

Among dissenters who admit of infant baptism, the minister is generally supposed to keep a register of the several children baptized by him. But as these are frequently lost, by the succession of new ministers to the same congregation; or at best do not give an account of the date of the births, which may have happened many weeks or months before baptism, it is now generally the custom among dissenters of all denominations to register the births of their children at the library in Redcross Street, Cripplegate, for which the charge is 1s. This register is admitted in the courts of law.

REGISTERS were kept both at Athens and Rome, in which were inserted the names of children, as soon as they were born. Marcus Aurelius required all free persons to give in accounts of their children, within thirty days after the birth, to the treasurer of the empire, in order that they might be deposited in the temple of Saturn, where the public acts were kept. Officers were also appointed as public registers in the provinces, that recourse might be had to their list of names, for settling disputes, or proving any person's freedom.

REGISTERS, in chemistry, are holes, with stopThis island, as appeareth by faithful registers of ples, contrived in the sides of furnaces, to reguthose times, had ships of great content. Bacon.

Such follow him, as shall be registered;
Part good; part bad; of bad the longer scrowl.

Milton.

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late the fire; that is, to make the heat more intense or remiss, by opening them to let in the air, or keeping them close to exclude it.

REGISTRY OF A SHIP is a printed instrument, containing the names of the owner and master, the name and exact description of the vessel, the place to which she belongs, when and where

built or captured, and, if a prize-ship, the date of condemnation, whether British, foreign, or British plantation built, her precise dimensions, tonnage, and the port at which she was registered.

REGIUM, REGIUM LEPIDI, or REGIUM LEPIDIUM, in ancient geography, a town of Cisalpine Gaul, on the Via Emilia, so called from Emilius Lepidus, who was consul with Caius Flaminius. It is now called Reggio.

REGIUS (Urban), a learned writer of the sixteenth century, born at Langenargen. He studied at Basil, and read lectures at Ingoldstadt. Being afterwards involved by some friends in debt, he was obliged to sell his books and enlist as a soldier. From this situation he was rescued and restored to literature by professor Eccius; and he obtained the poetical and oratorical crown from the emperor Maximilian. He afterwards became a protestant, and took refuge at Zell, where he died in 1541.

REGIUS PROFESSOR, in universities, a professor appointed by royal authority.

REGLEMENT, n. s. Fr. reglement. Regulation. Not used.

To speak of the reformation and reglement of usury, by the balance of commodities and discammodities thereof, two things are to be reconciled. Bacon's Essays. REG'NANT, adj. Fr. regnant. Reigning; having sovereign authority; predominant.

Princes are shy of their successors, and there may be reasonably supposed of queens regnant a little proportion of tenderness that way, more than in kings. Wotton.

The law was regnant, and confined his thought, Hell was not conquered when the poet wrote.

Walle".

His guilt is clear, his proofs are pregnant, A traytor to the vices regnant. Swift's Miscellanies. REGNARD (John Francis), a French comic poet, was born at Paris, February 8th, 1655 Having received a good education he went to Italy in 1676, or 1677. Being fond of play, and very fortunate, he was returning home with a considerable sum of money, when he was captured by an Algerine corsair, and being sold for a slave was carried to Constantinople. His skill in cookery here rendered him a favorite; but at length he was ransomed, and returned to France. He did not however remain; for in April 1681 he set off on a journey to Lapland, and returned through Sweden, Poland, and Germany. He then retired to Dourdan, eleven leagues from Paris, where he died in September 1709. He wrote an account of his Northern Tour; a number of dramatic pieces, poems, and other works, which have been often published.

REGNAULT (Noel), a learned French Jesuit, born at Arras, in 1683. He wrote, 1. Entretiens Physiques, 3 vols. 12mo. 2. Origine Ancienne de la Physique nouvelle, 3 vols. 12mo. 3. Entretiens Mathematiques, 3 vols. 12mo. Logique, 12mo.

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REGNER, surnamed Lodbrog, a king of Denmark, who flourished in the ninth century. He was also a warrior, a poet, and a painter. His poems are extant, but savour of the wildness and fanaticism of the age in which he lived.

REGNI, an ancient people of South Britain, who inhabited the country now called Surrey, Sussex, and the coast of Hampshire, and resided next to the Cantii, the ancient inhabitants of Kent.-Camden.

REGNIER (Mathurin), a French poet, was born at Chartres in 1573. He was brought up to the church, for which his debaucheries rendered him very unsuitable. Yet he obtained a canonry in the church of Chartres, with other benefices; and died in 1613. There is a neat Elzevir edition of his works, 12mo. 1652, Leyden; but the most elegant is that with notes by M. Brossette, 4to. 1729, London.

REGNIER DES MARETS (Francis Seraphin), a French poet, born at Paris in 1632. He distinguished himself early by his poetical talents, and in 1684 was made perpetual secretary to the French Academy on the death of Mezeray; when he drew up the papers against Furetierre; the king gave him the priory of Grammont, and an abbey. He died in 1713. His works are French, Italian, Spanish, and Latin poems, 2 vols.; a French grammar; and an Italian translation of Anacreon's Odes, with some other translations.

REGNUM, in ancient geography, a town of South Britain, the capital of the Regni (Camden), situated by the Itinerary numbers, on the confines of the Belga, in a place now called Ringwood, in Hampshire, on the Avon, about ten miles from the sea.

REGORGE'. v. a. Re and gorge. To vomit up; throw or swallow back; swallow largely.

It was scoffingly said, he had eaten the king's goose; and did then regorge the feathers.

Hayward.

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He, by letters patent, incorporated them by the name of the dean and chapter of Trinity church in Norwich, and regranted their lands to them.

Ayliffe's Parergon. REGRATE, v. a. From GRATE, which see. To offend; shock; also, from the French regrater, to engross; forestall.

Neither should they buy any corn, unless it were to make malt thereof; for by such engrossing and regrating, the dearth, that commonly reigned in Eng land, hath been caused. Spenser.

The clothing of the tortoise and viper rather regrateth than pleaseth the eye.

Derham's Physico-Theology.
Re and greet. To resa-

REGREET, v. a.
lute; greet a second time.
And shall these hands, so newly joined in love,
Un oke this seizure, and this kind regreet?
Play fast and loose with faith?

Shakspeare. REGRESS, n. s. & v. n. Į Fr. regrès; Lat, REGRESSION, n. s. Segressus. Passage

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I never bare any touch of conscience with greater regret. King Charles. A passionate regret at sin, a grief and sadness at its memory, enters us into God's roll of mourners. Decay of Piety.

Is it a virtue to have some ineffective regrets to damnation, and such a virtue too as shall balance all our vices? Id.

Never any prince expressed a more lively regret for the loss of a servant, than his majesty did for this great man; in all offices of grace towards his servants, and in a wonderful solicitous care for the payment of his debts.

Clarendon.

Those, the impiety of whose lives makes them regret a deity, and secretly wish there were none, will greedily listen to atheistical notions. Glanville.

I shall not regret the trouble my experiments cost me, if they be found serviceable to the purposes of respiration. Boyle.

Though sin offers itself in never so pleasing a dress, yet the remorse and inward regrets of the soul, upon the commission of it, infinitely overbalance those faint gratifications it affords the senses.

South's Sermons.
That freedom which all sorrows claim,
She does for thy content resign;
Her piety itself would blame,

Prior.

If her regrets should waken thine. Calmly he looked on either life, and here Saw nothing to regret, or there to fear; From nature's temperate feast rose satisfied, Thank'd heaven that he had liv'd, and that he died. Pope. Re and guerdon.

REGUER'DON, n. s.

Reward; recompense.

Stoop, and set your knee again my foot; And in reguerdon of that duty done,

I gird thee with the valiant sword of York.

Shakspeare.

Long since we were resolved of your truth, Your faithful service, and your toil in war; Yet never have you tasted of your reward, Or been reguerdoned with so much as thanks. Id. REG'ULAR, adj. & n. s. Fr. regulier; REGULARITY, n. s. Port. and Spanish REG'ULARLY, adv. regular; Ital. reREG'ULATE, v. a. gulare; low Lat. REGULATION, n. s. regularis. AcREGULATOR. cording to rule; or prescribed mode; initiated; orderly in geometry, a regular body is a solid whose surface is composed of regular and equal figures, and whose solid angles are all equal, and of which there are, and can be, but five sorts as a noun

substantive, an order of Romish clergy: regu larly and regularity follow the senses of the adjective: to regulate is to adjust or direct by rule or method, the noun-substantives corresponding.

I restrained myself to so regular a diet, as to eat flesh but once a day, and little at a time, without salt or vinegar. Temple.

Id.

So bold, yet so judiciously you dare, That your least praise is to be regular. Dryden. Even goddesses are women; and no wife Has power to regulate her husband's life. Nature, in the production of things, always designs them to partake of certain, regulated, established essences, which are to be the models of all things need some better explanation. to be produced; this, in that crude sense, would Locke.

Being but stupid matter, they cannot but continue any regular and constant motion, without the guidance and regulation of some intelligent being. Rav.

Regularity is certain, where it is not so apparent, as in all fluids; for regularity is a similitude continued. Grew.

The regularity of corporeal principles sheweth them to come at first from a divine regulator. Id.

The common cant of criticks is, that though the lines are good, it is not a regular piece. Guardian. Our understanding traces them in vain,— The ways of heaven are dark and intricate ;Nor sees with how much art the windings run, Addison. Nor where the regular confusion ends. In the Romish church, all persons are said to be regulars, that do profess and follow a certain rule of Ayliffe's Parergon. life, in Latin styled regula.

With one judicious stroke
On the plain ground Apelles drew

A circle regularly true.

Prior.

He was a mighty lover of regularity and order; and managed all his affairs with the utmost exactness. Atterbury. Wiseman.

Regulate the patient in his manner of living.

There is no universal reason, not confined to human fancy, that a figure, called regular, which hath equal sides and angles, is more beautiful than any irregular one. Bentley.

So when we view some well-proportioned dome, No monstrous height or breadth or length appear; The whole at once is bold and regular. Pope.

Id.

Strains that neither ebb nor flow, Correctly cold and regularly low. More people are kept from a true sense and taste of religion, by a regular kind of sensuality and indulgence, than by gross drunkeuness.

Law.

A REGULAR FIGURE, in geometry, is one whose sides, and consequently angles, are equal; and a regular figure with three or four sides is commonly termed an equilateral triangle or square, as all others with more sides are called regular polygons.

REGULBIUM, or REGULVIUM, an ancient town of the Cantii in Britain, mentioned in the Notitia Imperii, now called Reculver.

REGULUS (M. Attilius), a Roman consul during the first Punic war. He reduced Brundusium, and, in his second consulship, took sixty-four and sunk thirty galleys of the Carthaginian fleet, on the coasts of Sicily. Afterwards he landed in Africa; and so rapid was his success, that in a short time he made himself master of about 200 important places on the coast. The Carthaginians sued for peace, but he refused to grant it; and soon after he was de

feated by Xantippus, and 30,000 of his men were killed, and 15,000 taken prisoners. Regulus himself was also taken, and carried in triumph to Carthage. He was then sent to Rome, to propose an accommodation; and, if his commission was unsuccessful, he was bound by the most solemn oaths to return to Carthage. When he came to Rome, Regulus dissuaded his countrymen from accepting the terms which the enemy proposed; and, when his opinion had influenced the senate, Regulus returned to Carthage agreeable to his oaths. The Carthaginians, hearing that their offers of peace had been rejected at Rome through the influence of Regulus, prepared to punish him with the greatest severity. His eye-lids were cut off, and he was exposed for some days to the excessive heat of the meridian sun, and afterwards confined in a barrel, whose sides were stuck with iron spikes, till he died in the greatest agonies. His sufferings being heard of at Rome, the senate permitted his widow to inflict whatever punishment she pleased on some of the most illustrious captives of Carthage, who were in their hands. She confined them in presses filled with sharp iron points; and was so exquisite in her cruelty that the senate at length interfered, and stopped her barbarity. Regulus died about A. A. Č. 251.

REGULUS (Memmius), a Roman, made governor of Greece by Caligula. While Regulus governed this province, the emperor wished to bring the celebrated statue of Jupiter Olympius by Phidias to Rome; but this was supernaturally prevented, according to ancient authors, the ship which was to convey it being destroyed by lightning.

REGULUS, in chemistry, diminutive of rex, a king: so called because the alchemist expected to find gold, the king of metals, collected at the bottom of the crucible after fusion. The name regulus was given by chemists to metallic matters when separated from other substances by fusion. It was afterwards applied to the metal extracted from the ores of the semi-metals, which formerly bore the name that is now given to the semi-metals themselves. To procure the regulus or mercurial parts of metals, &c., flux powders were formerly used, as nitre, tartar, &c., to purge the sulphureous part adhering to the metal, by attracting it to themselves, and absorbing it. REGURGITATE, v. a. & v. n. Į Fr. REGURGITATION, n. s. ger: Latin re and gurges. To throw back; pour back: be poured back: the act of resorption or swallowing

back.

regor

The inhabitants of the city remove themselves into the country so long, until for want of receipt and encouragement, it regurgitates and sends them back. Graunt.

Nature was wont to evacuate its vicious blood, out of these veins, which passage being stopt, it regurgitates upwards to the lungs.

Harvey on Consumptions. Regurgitation of matter is the constant symptom. Sharp.

Arguments of divine wisdom, in the frame of animate bodies, are the artificial position of many valves, all so situate as to give a free passage to the

blood in their due channels, but not permit them to regurgitate and disturb the great circulation. Re and hear. To hear

Bentley.

REHEAR', v. a.
?
REHEARSE, v. a. again; repeat; recite;
REHEARSAL, n. s.

relate rehearsal is the act of repetition or recital; recital previous to a public exhibition.

Rehearse not unto another that which is told. Ecclus.

Twice we appoint that the words which the minister pronounceth the whole congregation shall repeat after him; as first in the public_confession of sins, and again in rehearsal of our Lord's prayer after the blessed sacrament. Hooker.

With sweet rehearsal of my morning's dream.
What dream'd my lord? tell me, and I'll requite it

The chief of Rome,

Shakspeare.

With gaping mouths to these rehearsals come. Dryden.

Great master of the muse! inspired The pedigree of nature to rehearse, And sound the Maker's work in equal verse. Id. What respected their actions as a rule or admonition, applied to yours, is only a rehearsal, whose zeal in asserting the ministerial cause is so generally known. South.

My design is to give all persons a rehearing, who have suffered under my unjust sentence. Addison.

Of modest poets be thou just,
To silent shades repeat thy verse,
Till fame and echo almost burst,
Yet hardly dare one line rehearse.
But a' your doings to rehearse,
Your wily snares an fechtin fierce,
Sin' that day Michael did you pierce
Down to this time,
Wad ding a' Lallan tongue or Erse,
In prose or rhyme.

The lover, in melodious verses,
His singular distress rehearses,
Still closing with a rueful cry,

Was ever such a wretch as I!

Swift.

Burns.

Cowper.

REHER, a district of Delhi, Hindostan, situated between lat. 28° and 29°. It formerly was the northern limit of Kuttaher or Rohilcund, and was ceded to the British by the nabob of Oude. It is bounded on the west by the Ganges, and watered by several other rivers. The principal towns are Reher, Nijibabad, and Darnagur.

REHER, a town of Hindostan, formerly the capital of the above district, became in 1774 the property of a chief named Nijif Khan, who removed the seat of government to Nijibabad, in consequence of which Reher has declined. The

town and district are now included in the Bri

tish collectorship of Bareily. Long. 78° 44′ E.,

lat. 29° 23′ N.

REHOBOAM, the son of Solomon, king of Israel, succeeded his father about A. M. 3029. By his folly, in totally refusing the people any redress of grievances, he occasioned the revolt of the ten tribes. See 1 Kings xii. 1-24. After an unfortunate reign of seventeen years, during which his capital was invaded and the temple plundered of its treasures by Shishak, or Sesacus, king of Egypt, he died A. M. 3046.

REJANG, a country of Sumatra, divided to the north-west from the kingdom of Anak Sunger by the river Uri, near that of Kattaun; which last, with the district of Labun, bounds it on the

north side. The country of Musi is its limit to the eastward. Bencoolen River confines it on the south-east.

REICHENBACH, one of the four governments of Prussian Silesia. It is in the west of that province, and comprises the county of Glatz, the principalities of Munsterberg, Brieg, and Schweidnitz, and a considerable part of the Jauer. Its area is 2500 square miles. It is divided into the circles of Frankenstein, Glatz, Hirchberg, Jauer, Nimptsch, Munsterberg, Reichenbach, Schweidnitz, Striegau, and Bolkenhayn-Landshut. Population 470,000."

This province is hilly, particularly in the county of Glatz; but has also many plains, fertile in corn, fruits, hops, and occasionally mulberrytrees. Among the mountains wood forms an article of export. In general this is the most active part of Silesia, and consequently of the Prussian states. The chief manufactures are linen, glass, and hardware. The number of villages is very great. The province being very populous, it is necessary to import corn. In the county of Glatz, and the principality of Munsterberg, the Catholics form the majority; but throughout the rest the Protestants.

REICHENBACH, the chief town of the above government, is eleven miles south-east of Schweidnitz, and thirty south-west of Breslau. It has manufactures of cotton, canvas, starch, and a trade in woollens. A convention was concluded here in 1790 between Prussia and Austria. Inhabitants 3300. Long. 16° 36′ 37′′ E., lat. 50° 39′ 15′′ N.

REICHENBACH, a town of Saxony, in the Vogtland. Its inhabitants, about 3000, are employed chiefly in the manufacture of woollens. Their mode of dyeing scarlet is much esteemed. This town suffered much from fire in 1681 and 1720. Thirteen miles N. N. E. of Plauen.

REICHENBACH, a river of the canton of Berne, Switzerland, in the district of Oberland. It is small, but, when swelled by the melted snow of the Alps, pours a large mass of water over a tremendous precipice.

REICHENBERG, a thriving town of Bohemia, in the northern circle of Buntzlau, on the Neisse; the chief place of a lordship belonging to the count of Clam-Galla. It has three churches, and great manufacturing establishments for woollens, with fulling-mills and dye-houses. The value of the woollen, linen, and stockings, annually made, is estimated at more than half a mil

lion; there is also a traffic in wool and yarn. In the neighbourhood are found precious stones of the finer and semi-transparent kinds. On the 21st of April, 1757, the Prussians, under the duke of Brunswick, obtained a victory here over the Austrians. Inhabitants 12,000. Fifty-two miles N. N. E. of Prague, and twenty-five N.N.E. of Jurg Bunzlau.

REICHENHALL, a town in the south-east of Bavaria, on the Sala, sixty-five miles E. S. E. of Munich, and eleven S. S.W. of Salzburg. It is of great importance on account of its saltworks, at which 16,000 tons of that mineral are annually produced.

REID (Thomas), D. D., a late eminent Scottish writer, was the son of the Rev. Lewis Reid.

He was born at Strachan in April, 1710, and educated first at the parish school of Kincardine O'Niel, whence he was sent to the Marischal college, Aberdeen, in his 12th year; where he took his degree of M. A. and studied theology. After obtaining his license he cultivated mathematics under professor John Stuart, whose place he often supplied in his absence. After this he was preferred to the church of New Machar, and soon overcame the popular prejudice against him, on account of that patronage. On the 22d Nov. 1751, he was appointed professor of philosophy in King's College, Aberdeen; an office for which he was peculiarly qualified. Soon after this he wrote his Essay on Quantity, published in the Philosophical Transactions, vol. 45; which is esteemed the finest specimen of metaphysical mathematics extant. About this time, too, he was made D. D., and published his celebrated Enquiry into the Human Mind, on the principles of Common Sense. On the death of Dr. Adam Smith, he was called to be professor of moral philosophy in the university of Glasgow, on the eleventh of June, 1764. In 1773 appeared in lord Kames's Sketches of the History of Man, a brief Account of Aristotle's Logic, with Remarks by Dr. Reid; which is esteemed the best analysis yet given of that philosopher's writings. In 1785 he published Essays on the Intellectual Powers of Man, dedicated to Dr. Gregory and professor Stewart of Edinburgh; and, in 1788, Essays on the active Powers of Man; both in 4to. He died in October 1796, aged eighty-seven. He had been married, and left one daughter. See METAPHYSICS. REJECT, v. a. Lat. rejicio, rejectus. To REJECTION, n. s. dismiss without compliance; refuse; cast off: the act of casting off or aside.

Lord hath rejected thee from being king. Thou hast rejected the word of the Lord, and the 1 Samuel xv. 26.

He is despised and rejected of men, a man of sor

rows.

Isaiah.

Because thou hast rejected knowledge, I will reject thee, that thou shalt be no priest. Hosea iv. 6. Barbarossa was rejected into Syria, although he perceived that it tended to his disgrace. Knolles. Medicines urinative do not work by rejection and indigestion, as solutive do. Bacon.

Have I rejected those that me adored To be of him, whom I adore, abhorred? Browne. Whether it be a divine revelation or no, reason

must judge, which can never permit the mind to reject a greater evidence, to embrace what is less evident.

Locke.

How would such thoughts make him avoid eve.y thing that was sinful and displeasing to God, lest, when he prayed for his children, God should reject his prayer!

Law

In the philosophy of human nature, as well as in physicks and mathematicks, let principles be examined according to the standard of common sense, and be admitted or rejected according as they are found to agree or disagree with it.

Beattie

With abhorrence reject immediately all profane and blasphemous thoughts; which are sometimes suddenly injected into the mind, we know not how, though we may give a pretty good guess from whence.

Mason.

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