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#Camilo José Cela
fidjiefidjie · 1 year
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“La liberté est une sensation. On peut parfois l'atteindre, enfermé dans une cage comme un oiseau.”
Camilo José Cela
Gif de Oamul Lu
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aitan · 1 month
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Mi è capitata tra le mani questa citazione su una bustina di zucchero in un bar spagnolo:
"No es lo mismo estar dormido que estar durmiendo, porque no es lo mismo estar jodido que andar jodiendo."
Traduco in italiano, un po' alla buona:
"Non è la stessa cosa essere addormentato che stare dormendo, perché non è la stessa cosa essere fottuto che andare a fottere."
Faccio una breve ricerca online. Camilo José Cela, premio nobel per la letteratura (1989), avrebbe pronunciato queste parole in una sessione delle Corti Costituenti spagnole del 1978.
Come tanti aforismi di stile oscarwildiano suona bene, sembra una frase profonda e intelligente. Ma io sospetto che fuor di suono non voglia dire niente.
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dadsinsuits · 1 year
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Camilo José Cela
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maitenas-prod · 1 year
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Desde mi ventana. Junio 23
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7r0773r · 1 year
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The Hive by Camilo José Cela, translated by James Womack
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At the moment he hears his name being called [Martín] is thinking, “Yes, Byron was right: if I ever have a son I’ll make sure he goes into some prosaic job: lawyer or pirate.” (pp. 80-81)
***
The night closes, at about half past one or two o'clock in the morning, around the city's strange heart.
Thousands of men sleep in their wives' arms without thinking of the hard, cruel day that may await them, crouched like a mountain cat, in just a very few hours.
Hundreds, many hundreds of bachelors surrender to the solitary vice: intimate, sublime, and ever so very delicate.
And a few dozen women wait—my God, what do they wait for? Why are they so deceived?—with their minds full of golden dreams . . . (p. 192)
***
In [Don Francisco’s] house, back in the interior room, Doña Soledad, his wife, is darning socks and allowing her mind to wander: a lumbering imagination she has, flustered and motherly as a chicken in flight. Doña Soledad is not happy: she put her whole life into her children, but her children have not known how, or have not wanted, to make her happy. She had eleven children, and all eleven survived, almost all of them now far away, one or two lost completely. The two oldest children, Soledad and Piedad, became nuns a long time ago, when Primo de Rivera fell; a few months ago, reaching out from the convent, they dragged in María Auxiliadora, one of the younger kids, to join them there as well. The oldest of the two boys, Francisco, the third child, was always the apple of his mother's eye: he's a military doctor in Carabanchel now and comes home every now and then to stay the night. Amparo and Asunción are the only ones who have got married. Amparo married her father's assistant, Don Emilio Rodríguez Ronda, and Asunción married Don Fadrique Méndez, who's a surgeon's assistant in Guadalajara, a hardworking and skillful man who can just as easily put his hand to a broken leg as to a hernia, who can give a child an injection or administer an enema to an old society lady, who can fix a radio or mend a punctured rubber bag. Amparo, poor thing, has no children and can't have them now; she's always been sickly, always having turns; she had a miscarriage first of all and then a whole series of collapses of various kinds, and then they ended up taking out her ovaries and everything else that had been causing her trouble, which must have been a lot. Asunción, on the other hand, is stronger than her sister and has three children who are absolute darlings: Pilarín, Fadrique, and Saturnino; the oldest one, the girl, is at school already: she's just turned five years old.
The next one down the list in Don Francisco and Doña Soledad's family is Trini, a spinster, quite ugly, who borrowed money and started a haberdasher's in the Calle de Apodaca.
It's a small shop, but it's clean and well looked after. It's got a tiny shop window filled with skeins of wool, children's clothes, and silk stockings, and its name painted in light blue: large pointy letters reading "Trini" and then underneath, smaller, "Haberdasher's." There's a guy who lives in the area who's a poet and who looks on the young woman with deep tenderness; in vain he tries to explain things to his family over lunch.
"You don't see it, but these little shops, all these lonely people, called Trini... they fill me with such nostalgia."
"The kid's an idiot," his father says. "When I die I have no idea what's going to happen to him."
The neighborhood poet is a longhaired young man, pale, always distracted, never noticing anything in order not to miss out on his inspiration, which is something like a butterfly, deaf and blind but brimming with light, a butterfly that floats about haphazardly, sometimes beating against the walls, sometimes flying higher than the stars. The neighborhood poet has two roses in his cheeks. The neighborhood poet, sometimes, when he's caught up in a fine frenzy of composition, faints in cafés and needs to be taken through to the bathroom, where he comes round under the scent of disinfectant, the block of disinfectant in its little wire cage like a cricket.
After Trini there's Nati, the woman who studied with Martín, a woman who dresses very well, perhaps a little too well, and then theres María Auxiliadora, the one who went off to become a nun with her big sisters a little while back. And to round out the family are three catastrophes: the three youngest children. Socorrito ran off with a friend of her brother Paco, Bartolomé Anguera, a painter; they live a bohemian existence in a studio on the Calle de los Caños, where they must freeze to death half the time, where they'll wake up one morning frozen into lollipops. The girl tells all her friends that she is happy, that all she wants to do is be at Bartolomé's side, helping him with his Work. She says "Work" with a heavy emphasis on the Capital letter, an emphasis that makes her sound like she's on the jury selecting art for national exhibitions.
"They don't have any standards in the national exhibitions," Socorrito says. "They don't have the first clue about what they're on about, But it doesn't matter, sooner or later they'll have no choice but to give Bartolomé a medal."
There were serious ructions in the house when Socorrito eloped.
“If only she'd managed to get out of Madrid!" her brother Paco said, who had a firm geographical sense of honor.
The other remaining daughter, María Angustias, said shortly after all this that she wanted to become a singer and changed her name to Carmen del Oro. She also thought about going for Rosario Giralda or Esperanza de Granada, but a friend of hers, a journalist, said that no, the most suitable name was Carmen del Oro. This was the stage she was at when, without giving her mother a chance to recover from the whole Socorrito business, María Angustias upped and ran off with a banker from Murcia called Don Estanislao Ramírez. Her poor mother was so shocked she didn't even cry.
The youngest, Juan Ramón, is a bit funny, a bit "yon way," and spends all day long looking at himself in the mirror and putting creams on his face.
Round about seven o'clock, in a break between two patients, Don Francisco goes out to make a phone call. It's almost impossible to hear what he says.
"Are you going to be at home?"
“. . .”
"Right, I'll be round at about nine."
“. . .”
"No, don't call anyone.” (pp. 206-08)
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Camilo José de Cela y Trulock 
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Book List: Aesthetics, Neuroaesthetics, & Philosophy of Art
Why Science Needs Art: From Historical to Modern Day Perspectives 1st Edition by Richard Roche (Author), Sean Commins (Author), Francesca Farina (Author)
Feeling Beauty: The Neuroscience of Aesthetic Experience by G. Gabrielle Starr (Author)
An Introduction to Neuroaesthetics: The Neuroscientific Approach to Aesthetic Experience, Artistic Creativity and Arts Appreciation 1st Edition by Jon O. Lauring (Editor)
Brain, Beauty, and Art: Essays Bringing Neuroaesthetics into Focus by Anjan Chatterjee (Editor), Eileen Cardilo (Editor)
Philosophy of Art: A Contemporary Introduction (Routledge Contemporary Introductions to Philosophy) by Noël Carroll (Author)
Philosophy of the Arts: An Introduction to Aesthetics 3rd Edition, by Gordon Graham (Author)
The Oxford Handbook of Aesthetics (Oxford Handbooks) Revised ed. Edition by Jerrold Levinson (Editor)
Aesthetics and the Philosophy of Art: The Analytic Tradition, An Anthology (Blackwell Philosophy Anthologies) 2nd Edition, by Peter Lamarque (Editor), Stein Haugom Olsen (Editor)
What Art Is by Arthur C. Danto (Author)
After the End of Art: Contemporary Art and the Pale of History - Updated Edition (Princeton Classics Book 10) by Arthur C. Danto (Author), Lydia Goehr (Foreword)
Ways of Seeing: Based on the BBC Television Series (Penguin Books for Art) by John Berger (Author)
Art and Its Significance: An Anthology of Aesthetic Theory, Third Edition 3rd Revised ed. Edition, by Stephen David Ross (Editor)
But Is It Art?: An Introduction to Art Theory by Cynthia Freeland (Author)
The Art Question by Nigel Warburton (Author)
Arguing About Art: Contemporary Philosophical Debates (Arguing About Philosophy) 3rd Edition by Alex Neill (Editor), Aaron Ridley (Editor)
Art Theory: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions) by Cynthia Freeland (Author)
Aesthetics: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions) Illustrated Edition, by Bence Nanay (Author)
The Cambridge Handbook of the Psychology of Aesthetics and the Arts (Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology) by Pablo P. L. Tinio (Editor), Jeffrey K. Smith (Editor)
Aesthetics: A Comprehensive Anthology (Blackwell Philosophy Anthologies) 2nd Edition, by Steven M. Cahn (Editor), Stephanie Ross (Editor), Sandra L. Shapshay (Editor)
Philosophies of Art and Beauty: Selected Readings in Aesthetics from Plato to Heidegger by Albert Hofstadter (Author, Editor), Richard Kuhns (Author, Editor)
Art, Aesthetics, and the Brain Illustrated Edition, by Joseph P. Huston (Editor), Marcos Nadal (Editor), Francisco Mora (Editor), Luigi F. Agnati (Editor), Camilo José Cela Conde (Editor)
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seals-are-cool · 1 year
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pio baroja, my beloved
Pío Baroja, my beloved
Miguel Hernández, my beloved
Carmen Laforet, my beloved
Camilo José Cela, my beloved
And so so so many more
Spanish literature is so important and dear to me. I wish I were a better writer so I could tell my empty diary how loved these writers and their books make me feel in my day to day life. I sometimes forget this when I'm questioning my career choices, but then I remember and everything is a little bit better.
💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖
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gonzalo-obes · 11 months
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IMAGENES Y DATOS INTERESANTES DEL DIA 19 DE OCTUBRE DE 2023
Día Internacional de la Lucha contra el Cáncer de Mama, Día Internacional de las Catedrales, Día de la Resolución de Conflictos, Semana Mundial de la Novela, Año Internacional del Mijo y Año Internacional del Diálogo como Garantía de Paz.
Santa Publia / Pudenciana.
Tal día como hoy en el año 1469: Se casan Isabel I de Castilla y Fernando II de Aragón, conocidos como Los Reyes Católicos (título que les atribuyó el papa Alejandro VI), en el Palacio de los Vivero, en Valladolid (España). Lo que supuso la unificación de los reinos de Castilla y Aragón.
En 1868: Nace la peseta en España como unidad monetaria, por decreto del Gobierno Provisional tras el derrocamiento de Isabel II.
En 1900: El físico Max Planck descubre la ley espectral de la radiación del cuerpo negro (ley de Planck), en su propia casa de Grunewald, cerca de Berlín (Alemania).
En 1943: Un joven microbiólogo con 20 años llamado Albert Schatz descubre la estreptomicina, un antibiótico que ayudará a combatir la tuberculosis, pero será su jefe, Selman Waksman, quien se apropiará del descubrimiento y aunque tras la demanda del alumno y acuerdo de compartir el descubrimiento obtendrá el Premio Nobel de Medicina de 1952.
En 1950: El Ejército Popular de Liberación de China ocupa la ciudad de Qamdo, dentro del movimiento que se conocerá como la invasión del Tíbet.
En 1987: Sucede el Lunes Negro en la bolsa de Nueva York, el índice Dow Jones pierde más de 500 puntos, en la que la peor caída desde el crack de 1929.
En 1989: El escritor español Camilo José Cela obtiene el premio Nobel de Literatura.
En 1989: En la Central nuclear de Vandellós I (España) , ocurre un incendio que ocasiona malfuncionamiento en la refrigeración del reactor y que, según los expertos, estuvo muy cerca de fundir el combustible nuclear y ocasionar un desastre.
En 2005: Comienza el primer proceso contra Sadam Husein y siete coacusados, en Irak.
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brookston · 1 year
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Holidays 9.30
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Independence Days
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Anthony Green (Artology)
Blue-Feathered Swallowing Swallow (Muppetism)
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Gregory the Illuminator (Christian; Saint)
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Jerome (Christian; Saint)
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Lucky & Unlucky Days
Taian (大安 Japan) [Lucky all day.]
Uncyclopedia Bad to Be Born Today (because Green Day fans will never leave you alone.)
Premieres
Adjustment Team, by Philip K. Dick (Short Story; 1954)
Alias (TV Series; 2001)
The Ascent Of Rum Doodle, by W.E. Bowman (Novel; 1956)
The Big Chill (Film; 1983)
Bird (Film; 1988)
Blueberries for Sal, by Robert McCloskey (Children’s Book; 1948)
The Boy Friend (Broadway Musical; 1954)
Car Talk (Radio Series; 1977)
Cheers (TV Series; 1982)
The Clock Store (Disney Cartoon; 1931)
Con Man (Web Series; 2015)
Dad, Can I Borrow the Car? (Disney Short Film; 1970)
Death Valley Days (Radio Series; 1930)
Entergalactic (Animated Film; 2022)
The Family of Pascual Duarte, by Camilo José Cela (Novel; 1942)
Fantasy, by Mariah Carey (Song; 1995)
50/50 (Film; 2011)
The Flintstones (Animated TV Series; 1960)
Go Away Stowaway (WB MM Cartoon; 1967)
Grand Ole Opry (TV Series; 1950)
The Graveyard Book, by Neil Gaiman (Novel; 2008)
The Greatest Game Ever Played (Film; 2005)
Into the Blue (Film; 2005)
Little Women (Novel; 1868)
Louis Armstrong Plays King Oliver, recorded by Louis Armstrong (Album; 1957) [1st stereo album]
Love for Sale, by Tony Bennett (Album; 2021)
Luke Cage (TV Series; 2016)
The Magic Flute, by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Opera; 1791)
Marvel Rising: Secret Warriors (Animated Film; 2018)
Methuselah's Children, by Robert A. Heinlein (Novel; 1958)
Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children (Film; 2016)
Murder, She Wrote (TV Series; 1984)
Nebraska, by Bruce Springsteen (Album; 1982)
Porgy and Bess, by George Gershwin (Opera; 1935)
The Queen (Film; 2006)
The Rifleman (TV Series; 1958)
The Robe, by Lloyd C. Douglas (Novel; 1942)
The Saint in Europe, by Leslie Charteris (Short Stories 1953) [Saint #30]
Scooby-Doo! And the Monster of Mexico (WB Animated Film; 2003)
A Separate Peace, by John Knowles (Novel; 1959)
Serenity (Film; 2005)
Shine On, by Jet (Album; 2006)
The Steeple-Chase (Disney Cartoon; 1933)
Theme From Shaft, by Isaac Hayes (Song; 1971)
To the Manor Born (UK TV Series; 1979)
You, Me and the Apocalypse (UK TV Series; 2015)
Today’s Name Days
Hieronymus, Urs, Victor (Austria)
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Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 273 of 2024; 92 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 6 of week 39 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Muin (Vine) [Day 26 of 28]
Chinese: Month 8 (Xin-You), Day 16 (Xin-Mao)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 15 Tishri 5784
Islamic: 15 Rabi I 1445
J Cal: 3 Shù; Threesday [3 of 30]
Julian: 17 September 2023
Moon: 98%: Waning Gibbous
Positivist: 21 Shakespeare (10th Month) [Molière]
Runic Half Month: Gyfu (Gift) [Day 4 of 15]
Season: Autumn (Day 7 of 89)
Zodiac: Libra (Day 7 of 30)
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fotosdebuenosaires · 2 years
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Hotel Claridge, Microcentro [ San Nicolás ] Buenos Aires, Argentina. . . El Hotel Claridge fue encargado a Dubourg por los hermanos Felipe y Ottocar Rosarios. Fue construido por la empresa A. y F. Israel y Cía., se inauguró el 2 de agosto de 1946 y se transformó rápidamente en una de las opciones de categoría de Buenos Aires. Entre sus huéspedes han estado diversas personalidades, como Alain Delon, César Milstein, Montserrat Caballé, Aga Khan, Umberto Eco, el Dalái lama, Alessandra Ferri, Camilo José Cela, Steffi Graf, Martina Navratilova, Arantxa Sánchez Vicario, Birgit Nilsson, Conchita Martínez, Clémentine Renaudin, Mary Joe Fernández, Björn Borg, Jimmy Connors, John McEnroe y Yannick Noah. En 1992, el arquitecto José María Peña, director del Buenos Aires Museo, otorgó al Claridge el título de "Testimonio vivo de la memoria ciudadana"; y denominó a Tucumán entre Florida y San Martín como la "Cuadra del Claridge". En abril de 2001 se terminó, en un plazo de 65 días, la reforma interior de varios ambientes del hotel, a cargo del diseñador Andrés Rosarios. De hecho, la familia Rosarios continuó siendo propietaria y administradora del Claridge durante décadas, hasta que finalmente el grupo español Hotusa compró el 75% del hotel en 2006, integrándolo a la cadena Eurostars Hotels [ Fuente: Wikipedia ] . . 📷: @ferraribsas . . #likebuenosaires #ig_buenosaires #igersoftheday #igers_argentina #loves_united_life #ig_argentina #argentina_estrella #argentina_greatshots #argentina_ig #loves_united_argentina #loves_united_southamerica #asi_es_argentina #total_argentina #loves_buenosaires #loves_argentina #great_captures_argentina  #buenosairesoftheday #argentina_illife #buenosairesve #wow_america  #bairesgrams #fotosdebuenosaires  #igersargentina #argentina #buenosaires #mimiradaporteña #visto_en_buenosaires #streetphotography (en Claridge Hotel) https://www.instagram.com/p/CmCfj-vv9Dh/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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margeocar · 2 years
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EL PORQUE DEL CALZÓN NEGRO
.
Aquí va una pequeña muestra de la picardía dicha en prosa y rima, sin una sola grosería, es de admirar el ingenio y que siendo algo complicado, no incluya palabra obscena:
Salió una anciana del baño,
Su viejito la miraba
Y al punto le preguntaba:
“De dónde es el gusto extraño".
Pues ya llevas varios años
Usando ropa interior
De oscuro y serio color,
Y ya mi vista se aburre,
¿Qué acaso no se te ocurre?
¿Qué eso te da más calor?
La viejita indiferente
caminando paso a paso
Levanta en su mano un vaso y allí sumerge los dientes.
Al viejo mira de frente para darle explicación.
Se acomoda en el colchón y guarda una breve pausa,
Aquí te digo la causa
De lo negro del calzón.
Muchos colores usé,
Pues la carne firme estaba,
El fuego que me quemaba
Contigo lo disfruté.
Hace tiempo lo apagué.
Por no hacerlo disoluto,
te fui fiel en lo absoluto.
Lo que te digo es muy cierto:
Cuando el pájaro está muerto,
El nido viste de luto. 💕
José Camilo Cela
Premio Nobel de Literatura.
5MinutosdeReflexionypensamiento
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La colmena, Camilo José Cela
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maitenas-prod · 1 year
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Casi casi... Vamos que poco lo falta para terminarlo
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3 piece of art works from My good friend and great teacher of fine art in Taiwan. A contemporary female artist - Chu Lily (朱麗麗) who is active in Spain and China too, she once lived and taught art in Spain. I adore her. She is also one of my clients of my leather fine crafts. 😉 Lan~*
▪︎ Artist:朱麗麗 Chu Lily, Taiwanese
El Titulo: 新潮女人/ Las mujeres modernas, 2020
Tecnica : 彩墨混合技法/ Técnica mixta con tinta china 
79 x 110 cm  
📌 這幅畫作現在歸屬我的西班牙摯友 Fernando de Saavedra 所收藏,SEK 教育機構校長和 Camilo José Cela 大學校長(以西班牙獲諾貝爾獎大文豪名子 Camilo José Cela 命名,西班牙辦學卓越的知名大學)
Esta obra hice en el año pasado, el año 2020, ahora pertenece la mano de mi gran y más querido amigo español Fernando de Saavedra, El Director de Gabinete de Presidencia de la Institución Educativa SEK y del rectorado de la Universidad Camilo José Cela. (text by artist - Chu Lily 朱麗麗)
▪︎ Artist:朱麗麗 Chu Lily, Taiwanese
Title : 素人藝術家  林淵 畫像, 1992.
粉彩畫50 x 65 .cm
▪︎ Artist:朱麗麗 Chu Lily, Taiwanese
Title:印度聖憎 RATASOAMI, 1989. 
粉彩畫 50 x 65 .cm 
收藏者/collector:印度富豪 RATASOAMI 弟子
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javier-carrasco · 1 year
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../... Poco antes de llegar a Guadalajara (el tren), la gente carga con sus bultos y se agolpa en las plataformas y en los pasillos. El viajero baja el último; lo que tiene que hacer, se hace lo mismo un cuarto de hora antes que después. También se puede dejar sin hacer; no pasa nada.
Viaje a la Alcarria
Camilo José Cela
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