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  • July 10, 1897
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  • HOAXES.
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The Freemason's Chronicle, July 10, 1897: Page 7

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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ad00702

MIDLAND RAILWAY . Cheap Excursions from St . Pancras & other London Stations . A FORTNIGHT IN IRELAND . Every Friday , until 24 th September inclusive , to Dublin , Ballina , Sligo , and South of Ireland ; and every Saturday , until 25 th September inclusive , to Londonderry . Also fortnightly excursions to Belfast , Londonderry , Portrush , & c , on alternate Fridays , from 16 th July to 24 th September inclusive . See bills for times , fares , routes , & c . FORTNIGHTLY EXCURSIONS TO SCOTLAND . For 5 , 11 , or 16 days . From Friday , 16 th July to 24 th September inclusive , for 11 days ( on 30 th July for 8 days ) , from St . Pancras at 9-15 p . m ., to Edinburgh , Glasgow , Helensburgh , and other North British Stations ; and at 10 * 0 p . m . to Carlisle , Glasgow , Ayr , Kilmarnock , G . and S . W . Line , and Newton Stewart , Stranraer , Wigtown , and Whithorn . Also on above dates , for 5 or 11 days ( on 30 th July for 4 or 9 days ) , from St . Pancras at 9 * 15 p . m ., to Stirling , Perth , Dundee , Arbroath , Forfar , Brechin , Montrose , Stonehaven , Aberdeen , Inverness , Fort William , & c . Return tickets at a third class single or . linary fare for the double journey will also be issued by the above trains to return any day within sixteen days from date of issue . Also fortnightly excursions to North of England , for 11 or 16 days ( ou 30 th July for 8 or 16 days ) , from Friday , 16 th July to 24 th September inclusive , from St . Pancras at 8 * 30 p . m . Alternate Fridays to Northallerton , Richmond , Darlington , Durham , Newcastle , and Berwick . NEW CHEAP WEEKLY EXCURSIONS . ISLE OF MAN . Every Friday at Midnight , and every Saturday at 5 * 15 a . m . and 10-5 a . m . until 24 th and 25 th September inclusive . Also every Saturday , from 10 th July to 4 th September , at 9-0 a . m ., to Douglas , Isle of Man , for 3 , 8 , 10 , 15 or 17 days . Also every Saturday until 25 th September inclusive , to English Lake District , Morecambe , Lancaster , Liverpool , Southport , Blackpool , Matlock , Buxton , & c , for 3 , 8 , 10 , 15 or 17 days . See Bills for times . Tickets , Bills , Week-end Excursion Programme , Lodging Lists , & c , may be had at the Midland Stations and City Booking Offices , and from Thos . Cook and Son , Ludgate Circus , and Branch Offices . GEO . H . TURNER , General Manager .

Ar00703

^ BSSV JW > n SWSg gjpm * WfWAV ZBE ) a ^^^^ W ^^ a SATUEDAY , 10 TH JULY 1897 .

Hoaxes.

HOAXES .

DR . Isaac Barrow , in his celebrated sermon " Against "Foolish Talking , " tells us that Aristotle places the practice of jesting in the rank of virtues . Now a jest , when perpetrated by a true humourist , is robbed of half of its sting by the neatness of its execution , or by the novelty of its method ; but when performed spitefully , or through sordid motives , or when it adopts the uncompromising guise of a hoax , it cannot reasonabl y be excused or paliated .

The poet Byron once said to his friend , Captain Trelawney , that the ruling passion in the human breast is not ambition , power , or love of praise , but " malignity , " and it would be an interesting study to trace how far his lordship ' s dictum is justified by thc writings and actions of some of our greatest geniuses , who , unhappily , were not free from this particular vice . Tillotson assures us that the term hoax is derived from Hocus ? pocus , hoax being a corruption of hocus , which was itself a corruption of the Hoc

est corpus of the mass . The word having a religious derivation , it does not seem incompatible with the general order of things that the highest representatives of the Church should sometimes have been made victims of this stupid sort of recreation . Leo Taxil , a recent but very humble addition to the ranks of Chatterton and Theodore Hook , has not hesitated to impose upon the credulity of his Pontificial Highness Leo XIII . by the Diana

Vaughan business—the greatest hoax of modern times—in which Freemasonry has unfortunately played a very prominent part , although as an unconscious factor ] If ' however , His Holiness feels aggrieved in being victimised by a man whom admittedly he honoured with episcopal letters , and received in audience , he may find consolation in the fact that a notorious predecessor set an unworthy example in this form of fooling , the particulars of which I now relate .

A POPE ' S EXPEDIENT . —Felix Poretti , whose zeal in preparing the bull against Queen Elizabeth of England gained for him the position of Cardinal Montalto ( 1570 ) , ultimately attained to the higher dignity of Pope of Rome under the title of Sixtus , or Sextus V . His father was a vine-dresser near Fermo , and his indigent circumstances compelled him to send his son into the service of a farmer , whose pigs and sheep he tended . From this obscure

position the lad emerged into what has been described as " the most extraordinary man of tbe 16 th century . " While inquisitor at Venice he quarrelled with the Senate , and found safety in flight from the territories of the Republic , his excuse for such an undignified proceeding being that "having made a vow to be Pope at Rome , he did not think it politic to stay and be hanged in Venice .

Upon the death of Gregory XIII . the vacancy caused quite a ferment , various factions and cabals springing into existence , and disorder of the worst kind became rampant , extending even to robbery of the nobility and people , and pillage of the churches . Montalto , whose apparent bodily

Hoaxes.

infirmities ( simulated for fifteen years ) kept him aloof from these disturbances , occupied his time in revising works which he had lately published . When the outrages were brought before the notice of the conclave , Montalto said , " I hope God will soon givo us a Pope who will put an end to these disorders , " to which Cardinal Farnese rejoined , " If you should happen to be the person I dare say there would be no cutting oil of heads , or stretching of necks during your time of office . " " God forbid , " answered the hypocritical Montalto , " that I , who expect to die every day , should think of taking away any other person ' s life . "

A conclave of forty-two cardinals assembled for the purpose of electing a new Pontiff , and here Montalto made the best of his infirmities , leaning on his crutch , and affecting a serious cough . His brother cardinals , imbued with the idea that by choosing a man in extremis like Montalto , it would earlier pave the way for themselves , unanimously elected him to the position

of Sovereign Pontiff . The moment this gratifying fact was announced to Sextus , a miracle occurred : — " he threw aside his crutch , and with it all his assumed debility , his body straightened , he smoothed away his wrinkles , his cough ceased , and he joined the * Te Deum ' with a voice so powerful as to show the cardinals that they had caught a Tartar . "

The usual ceremony of prostration followed , and it was during this important function that Cardinal Famese remarked to the mendacious invalid , " Your Holiness seems quite a different sort of man from what you were a few hours ago . " " Yes , " retorted the newly-elected dignitary , " I wi ^ s then louking for the keys of Paradise , which obliged me to stoop ; but now that I have found them it is time to look upwards , for I have reached the summit of all human glory , and can climb no higher in this world . "

At this time there was a remarkable triad of sovereigns : —Elizabeth on the throne of England , Henry IV . upon that of France , and the unscrupulous Sextus V . upon that of Rome . The latter once remarked that " three such princes were sufficient to govern the world . * ' It is said that the Pontiff once spoke thus of Queen Elizabeth , who had jestingly remarked she would have no husband but Pope Sextus : " She is a bighead—that queen ! Could I have espoused her , what a breed of great princes we might have had !"

After the execution of Mary , Queen of Scots , Sextus gave expression to a sentiment which was not shared by his subjects when he applauded Elizabeth's firmness and courage in bringing a crowned head to the block : — " My God ! what a glorious princess 1 " Then , stamping his foot , he said , " What would I not give to have it in my power to signalize myself in the same manner ! " Sextus V . was , according to Werner , in his " Humour of Italy , " the object of many an epigram , and he mentions one of these which appeared in

the form of a dialogue , giving Lett as his authority . " Pasquin * makes his appearance in a very dirty shirt , and being asked by Marforio the reason of this , answers that he cannot procure a clean shirt , because his washerwoman has been made a princess by the Pope ; thus referring to the story that the Pope ' s sister had formerly been a laundress . This soon came to the ears of the Pope , who ordered that the satirist should be sought for and punished severely . All researches , however , were vain . At last by his order , and in his name , placards were posted in the public streets , promising , in case , the

author would reveal his name , to grant him not only his life , but a present of a thousand pistoles ; but threatening , in case of his discovery by any other person , to . hang him forthwith , and give the reward to the informer . The satirist thereupon avowed the authorship , and demanded the money . Sextus , true to the letter of his proclamation , granted him his life , and paid him the one thousand pistoles ; but in utter violation of its spirit , and saying that he had not promised absolution from all punishment , ordered his hands to be struck off and his tongue to be bored , ' to hinder him from being so witty in future . ' "

WONDERFUL SWALLOWS . —A French Abbe ( Peter Daniel Huet ) , who , by the request of Christina the Queen once resided at Stockholm , has , in one of his remarkable books describing Sweden as he saw it two centuries ago , recorded the following statement , which is undoubtedly the outcome of a hoax perpetrated upon the learned but simple divine * . — " The swallows of

Sweden , " says Huet , " at the approach of winter plunge into the lakes and remain asleep and buried underneath the ice till the return of spring . Then , awakened by the returning heat , they leave the water and resume their usual flight . " He adds that " the country-people find black patches in the ice , and that under these are small clusters and bunches of swallows , which they take home and warm into life . "

HOAXING A PBIEST . —Some seventeenth century youths , desirous of amusing themselves at the expense of that great mechanical genius , Father Kircher , engraved several fantastic figures upon a stone , which they afterwards buried in a place where a house was about to be built . The workmen having picked up the stone while digging the foundation , handed it over to the learned antiquarian , who was quite delighted with it , and bestowed much labour and research in explaining the meaning of tbe extraordinary figures upon it .

A CHARLATAN . —That was a colossal forgery committed by Psalmanasar , who was born in France about the year 1679 . By pretending to be a great traveller , he described the island of Formosa ( a pure fiction ) , invented a new language , new characters , and even a new religion , new form of government , and a new calendar , in which the year was divided into twenty months . He hoaxed his contemporaries for a length of time , and whatever place in literature is assigned to him will be through sheer charlatanism .

QUEEN ANNE IS DEAD . —A wag , in the reign of Queen Anne , practised a very successful hoax which is described in fche papers of that period : — " A well-dressed man rode down the king ' s road from Fulham at a most furious rate , commanding each turnpike to be thrown open , as he was a messenger conveying the news of Queen Anne's sudden death . The alarm instantly spread into every quarter of the city ; the trained bands , who were on their parade , desisted from their exercise , furled their colours , and returned home with their arms reversed . The shopkeepers began to collect their sables , when the jest was discovered—not the author of it .

HOAXING A PROFESSOB . — " A young man at Wurzburg , of the name of Roderick , practised a serious deception upon Professor Berenger at the commencement of the last century , " says the "Edinburgh Journal" ( 1846 ) . " Roderick cut a great number of stones into the shape of different kinds of animals and monstrous forms , such as bats with the heads and wings of butterflies , flying frogs and crabs , with Hebrew characters here and there

discernable about the surface . These fabrications were gladly purchased by the Professor , who encouraged the search for more . A new supply was accordingly prepared , and boys were employed to take them to the Professor , pretending thafc they had just found them near the village of Eibelstadt , and charging him dearly for the time which they alleged they had employed in collecting them .

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1897-07-10, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 3 Dec. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_10071897/page/7/.
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Title Category Page
OUTSIDE SHOW. Article 1
THE BOYS FESTIVAL. Article 1
KENT. Article 1
CHESHIRE CHARITY. Article 1
CONSECRATION. Article 2
AN OUTSIDE OPINION. Article 3
CHURCH SERVICE. Article 4
REPORTS OF MEETINGS. Article 4
INSTRUCTION. Article 5
PROVINCIAL. Article 5
Untitled Ad 5
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Article 7
HOAXES. Article 7
LODGE MEETINGS NEXT WEEK. Article 8
FESTIVAL OF THE BOYS SCHOOL.-LIST OF STEWARDS AND AMOUNTS. Article 9
MIDLAND RAILWAY. Article 10
Untitled Article 10
Untitled Ad 10
VISIT TO ARUNDEL. Article 11
ANNUAL PICNIC OF THE LODGE OF TRUTH, No. 1458. Article 11
BIRKBECK BUILDING SOCIETY. Article 11
JUBILEE CELEBRATION AT LANCASTER. Article 11
The Theatres, &c. Article 12
Untitled Ad 12
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9 Articles
Page 7

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ad00702

MIDLAND RAILWAY . Cheap Excursions from St . Pancras & other London Stations . A FORTNIGHT IN IRELAND . Every Friday , until 24 th September inclusive , to Dublin , Ballina , Sligo , and South of Ireland ; and every Saturday , until 25 th September inclusive , to Londonderry . Also fortnightly excursions to Belfast , Londonderry , Portrush , & c , on alternate Fridays , from 16 th July to 24 th September inclusive . See bills for times , fares , routes , & c . FORTNIGHTLY EXCURSIONS TO SCOTLAND . For 5 , 11 , or 16 days . From Friday , 16 th July to 24 th September inclusive , for 11 days ( on 30 th July for 8 days ) , from St . Pancras at 9-15 p . m ., to Edinburgh , Glasgow , Helensburgh , and other North British Stations ; and at 10 * 0 p . m . to Carlisle , Glasgow , Ayr , Kilmarnock , G . and S . W . Line , and Newton Stewart , Stranraer , Wigtown , and Whithorn . Also on above dates , for 5 or 11 days ( on 30 th July for 4 or 9 days ) , from St . Pancras at 9 * 15 p . m ., to Stirling , Perth , Dundee , Arbroath , Forfar , Brechin , Montrose , Stonehaven , Aberdeen , Inverness , Fort William , & c . Return tickets at a third class single or . linary fare for the double journey will also be issued by the above trains to return any day within sixteen days from date of issue . Also fortnightly excursions to North of England , for 11 or 16 days ( ou 30 th July for 8 or 16 days ) , from Friday , 16 th July to 24 th September inclusive , from St . Pancras at 8 * 30 p . m . Alternate Fridays to Northallerton , Richmond , Darlington , Durham , Newcastle , and Berwick . NEW CHEAP WEEKLY EXCURSIONS . ISLE OF MAN . Every Friday at Midnight , and every Saturday at 5 * 15 a . m . and 10-5 a . m . until 24 th and 25 th September inclusive . Also every Saturday , from 10 th July to 4 th September , at 9-0 a . m ., to Douglas , Isle of Man , for 3 , 8 , 10 , 15 or 17 days . Also every Saturday until 25 th September inclusive , to English Lake District , Morecambe , Lancaster , Liverpool , Southport , Blackpool , Matlock , Buxton , & c , for 3 , 8 , 10 , 15 or 17 days . See Bills for times . Tickets , Bills , Week-end Excursion Programme , Lodging Lists , & c , may be had at the Midland Stations and City Booking Offices , and from Thos . Cook and Son , Ludgate Circus , and Branch Offices . GEO . H . TURNER , General Manager .

Ar00703

^ BSSV JW > n SWSg gjpm * WfWAV ZBE ) a ^^^^ W ^^ a SATUEDAY , 10 TH JULY 1897 .

Hoaxes.

HOAXES .

DR . Isaac Barrow , in his celebrated sermon " Against "Foolish Talking , " tells us that Aristotle places the practice of jesting in the rank of virtues . Now a jest , when perpetrated by a true humourist , is robbed of half of its sting by the neatness of its execution , or by the novelty of its method ; but when performed spitefully , or through sordid motives , or when it adopts the uncompromising guise of a hoax , it cannot reasonabl y be excused or paliated .

The poet Byron once said to his friend , Captain Trelawney , that the ruling passion in the human breast is not ambition , power , or love of praise , but " malignity , " and it would be an interesting study to trace how far his lordship ' s dictum is justified by thc writings and actions of some of our greatest geniuses , who , unhappily , were not free from this particular vice . Tillotson assures us that the term hoax is derived from Hocus ? pocus , hoax being a corruption of hocus , which was itself a corruption of the Hoc

est corpus of the mass . The word having a religious derivation , it does not seem incompatible with the general order of things that the highest representatives of the Church should sometimes have been made victims of this stupid sort of recreation . Leo Taxil , a recent but very humble addition to the ranks of Chatterton and Theodore Hook , has not hesitated to impose upon the credulity of his Pontificial Highness Leo XIII . by the Diana

Vaughan business—the greatest hoax of modern times—in which Freemasonry has unfortunately played a very prominent part , although as an unconscious factor ] If ' however , His Holiness feels aggrieved in being victimised by a man whom admittedly he honoured with episcopal letters , and received in audience , he may find consolation in the fact that a notorious predecessor set an unworthy example in this form of fooling , the particulars of which I now relate .

A POPE ' S EXPEDIENT . —Felix Poretti , whose zeal in preparing the bull against Queen Elizabeth of England gained for him the position of Cardinal Montalto ( 1570 ) , ultimately attained to the higher dignity of Pope of Rome under the title of Sixtus , or Sextus V . His father was a vine-dresser near Fermo , and his indigent circumstances compelled him to send his son into the service of a farmer , whose pigs and sheep he tended . From this obscure

position the lad emerged into what has been described as " the most extraordinary man of tbe 16 th century . " While inquisitor at Venice he quarrelled with the Senate , and found safety in flight from the territories of the Republic , his excuse for such an undignified proceeding being that "having made a vow to be Pope at Rome , he did not think it politic to stay and be hanged in Venice .

Upon the death of Gregory XIII . the vacancy caused quite a ferment , various factions and cabals springing into existence , and disorder of the worst kind became rampant , extending even to robbery of the nobility and people , and pillage of the churches . Montalto , whose apparent bodily

Hoaxes.

infirmities ( simulated for fifteen years ) kept him aloof from these disturbances , occupied his time in revising works which he had lately published . When the outrages were brought before the notice of the conclave , Montalto said , " I hope God will soon givo us a Pope who will put an end to these disorders , " to which Cardinal Farnese rejoined , " If you should happen to be the person I dare say there would be no cutting oil of heads , or stretching of necks during your time of office . " " God forbid , " answered the hypocritical Montalto , " that I , who expect to die every day , should think of taking away any other person ' s life . "

A conclave of forty-two cardinals assembled for the purpose of electing a new Pontiff , and here Montalto made the best of his infirmities , leaning on his crutch , and affecting a serious cough . His brother cardinals , imbued with the idea that by choosing a man in extremis like Montalto , it would earlier pave the way for themselves , unanimously elected him to the position

of Sovereign Pontiff . The moment this gratifying fact was announced to Sextus , a miracle occurred : — " he threw aside his crutch , and with it all his assumed debility , his body straightened , he smoothed away his wrinkles , his cough ceased , and he joined the * Te Deum ' with a voice so powerful as to show the cardinals that they had caught a Tartar . "

The usual ceremony of prostration followed , and it was during this important function that Cardinal Famese remarked to the mendacious invalid , " Your Holiness seems quite a different sort of man from what you were a few hours ago . " " Yes , " retorted the newly-elected dignitary , " I wi ^ s then louking for the keys of Paradise , which obliged me to stoop ; but now that I have found them it is time to look upwards , for I have reached the summit of all human glory , and can climb no higher in this world . "

At this time there was a remarkable triad of sovereigns : —Elizabeth on the throne of England , Henry IV . upon that of France , and the unscrupulous Sextus V . upon that of Rome . The latter once remarked that " three such princes were sufficient to govern the world . * ' It is said that the Pontiff once spoke thus of Queen Elizabeth , who had jestingly remarked she would have no husband but Pope Sextus : " She is a bighead—that queen ! Could I have espoused her , what a breed of great princes we might have had !"

After the execution of Mary , Queen of Scots , Sextus gave expression to a sentiment which was not shared by his subjects when he applauded Elizabeth's firmness and courage in bringing a crowned head to the block : — " My God ! what a glorious princess 1 " Then , stamping his foot , he said , " What would I not give to have it in my power to signalize myself in the same manner ! " Sextus V . was , according to Werner , in his " Humour of Italy , " the object of many an epigram , and he mentions one of these which appeared in

the form of a dialogue , giving Lett as his authority . " Pasquin * makes his appearance in a very dirty shirt , and being asked by Marforio the reason of this , answers that he cannot procure a clean shirt , because his washerwoman has been made a princess by the Pope ; thus referring to the story that the Pope ' s sister had formerly been a laundress . This soon came to the ears of the Pope , who ordered that the satirist should be sought for and punished severely . All researches , however , were vain . At last by his order , and in his name , placards were posted in the public streets , promising , in case , the

author would reveal his name , to grant him not only his life , but a present of a thousand pistoles ; but threatening , in case of his discovery by any other person , to . hang him forthwith , and give the reward to the informer . The satirist thereupon avowed the authorship , and demanded the money . Sextus , true to the letter of his proclamation , granted him his life , and paid him the one thousand pistoles ; but in utter violation of its spirit , and saying that he had not promised absolution from all punishment , ordered his hands to be struck off and his tongue to be bored , ' to hinder him from being so witty in future . ' "

WONDERFUL SWALLOWS . —A French Abbe ( Peter Daniel Huet ) , who , by the request of Christina the Queen once resided at Stockholm , has , in one of his remarkable books describing Sweden as he saw it two centuries ago , recorded the following statement , which is undoubtedly the outcome of a hoax perpetrated upon the learned but simple divine * . — " The swallows of

Sweden , " says Huet , " at the approach of winter plunge into the lakes and remain asleep and buried underneath the ice till the return of spring . Then , awakened by the returning heat , they leave the water and resume their usual flight . " He adds that " the country-people find black patches in the ice , and that under these are small clusters and bunches of swallows , which they take home and warm into life . "

HOAXING A PBIEST . —Some seventeenth century youths , desirous of amusing themselves at the expense of that great mechanical genius , Father Kircher , engraved several fantastic figures upon a stone , which they afterwards buried in a place where a house was about to be built . The workmen having picked up the stone while digging the foundation , handed it over to the learned antiquarian , who was quite delighted with it , and bestowed much labour and research in explaining the meaning of tbe extraordinary figures upon it .

A CHARLATAN . —That was a colossal forgery committed by Psalmanasar , who was born in France about the year 1679 . By pretending to be a great traveller , he described the island of Formosa ( a pure fiction ) , invented a new language , new characters , and even a new religion , new form of government , and a new calendar , in which the year was divided into twenty months . He hoaxed his contemporaries for a length of time , and whatever place in literature is assigned to him will be through sheer charlatanism .

QUEEN ANNE IS DEAD . —A wag , in the reign of Queen Anne , practised a very successful hoax which is described in fche papers of that period : — " A well-dressed man rode down the king ' s road from Fulham at a most furious rate , commanding each turnpike to be thrown open , as he was a messenger conveying the news of Queen Anne's sudden death . The alarm instantly spread into every quarter of the city ; the trained bands , who were on their parade , desisted from their exercise , furled their colours , and returned home with their arms reversed . The shopkeepers began to collect their sables , when the jest was discovered—not the author of it .

HOAXING A PROFESSOB . — " A young man at Wurzburg , of the name of Roderick , practised a serious deception upon Professor Berenger at the commencement of the last century , " says the "Edinburgh Journal" ( 1846 ) . " Roderick cut a great number of stones into the shape of different kinds of animals and monstrous forms , such as bats with the heads and wings of butterflies , flying frogs and crabs , with Hebrew characters here and there

discernable about the surface . These fabrications were gladly purchased by the Professor , who encouraged the search for more . A new supply was accordingly prepared , and boys were employed to take them to the Professor , pretending thafc they had just found them near the village of Eibelstadt , and charging him dearly for the time which they alleged they had employed in collecting them .

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