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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/image_640.jpeg]]
2[[caption-width-right:300:Bon voyage!]]
3
4''The Bounty Trilogy'' is the collective name given to three novels by Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall, recounting TheMutiny aboard HMS ''Bounty'' in 1789 and its aftermath. The crew of HMS ''Bounty'', led by master's mate (third in command) Fletcher Christian, mutinied on the return leg of a voyage to Tahiti (called "Otaheite", its previous name, in the novels). Captain William Bligh and his loyal crewmen, set adrift in a dinghy, are left with no alternative than to try and make it through three thousand miles of open ocean to the Dutch colony of Timor. The mutineers, for their part, make a home on uninhabited [[UsefulNotes/PitcairnIslands Pitcairn Island]]--but things go badly.
5
6The series consists of three novels:
7
8* ''Mutiny on the Bounty'' (1932) -- events up to and including the mutiny, and later the trial of the ''Bounty'' sailors arrested on Tahiti. Narrated by Roger Byam (an Expy of real-life Peter Haywood), a midshipman and loyalist to Bligh who still finds himself stuck with the mutineers.
9* ''Men Against the Sea'' (1933) -- the voyage of William Bligh and his loyalists over 3600 miles of ocean in an open boat, after the mutiny. Narrated by Thomas Ledward, the acting ship's surgeon.
10* ''Pitcairn's Island'' (1934) -- the arrival of the mutineers and their Tahitian companions at Pitcairn Island, and their violent aftermath
11
12The three books were published together in 1936 as ''The Bounty Trilogy''.
13
14The first novel was twice adapted to film. ''Film/MutinyOnTheBounty'' (1935), starring Creator/ClarkGable and Creator/CharlesLaughton as Christian and Bligh, won an UsefulNotes/AcademyAward for Best Picture. The [[Film/MutinyOnTheBounty1962 1962 remake]], a looser adaptation starring Creator/MarlonBrando as Christian, bombed at the box office.
15
16----
17!!Tropes:
18
19* AbsenceMakesTheHeartGoYonder: Byam says of Coleman that "Of all the married members of the ''Bounty's'' company, he was, I suspect, the only man who had remained faithful to his wife during our sojourn to Tahiti."
20* AccompliceByInaction: Discussed in ''Pitcairn's Island'', after the Polynesian men are killed. There is a debate between the wives and widows of the mutineers as to whether or not Moetua and Nanai, the two widows of the Polynesian men, knew about their husband's plot to kill all the mutineers. It's concluded that they couldn't have, so they're allowed to rejoin the island's society after hiding away for a time.
21* TheApocalypseBringsOutTheBestInPeople: Ledward marvels at the courage Bligh shows in the launch, and not just that but the character, compassion, and leadership ability he displays. Bligh shows himself to be a far better man than the vicious martinet who egged the crew of the ''Bounty'' on to mutiny. Ledward concludes that Bligh was born to lead men in peril and that the dire necessity of the open boat voyage brought out a far better side of him. This is further backed up by Byam's encounter with Bligh at the end of ''Mutiny on the Bounty'', after Bligh was overthrown again in [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rum_Rebellion the Rum Rebellion]] (really!), and at a time when Bligh was not under stress and not forced to lead men in mortal danger. Byam observes Bligh as still being an abrasive {{Jerkass}}.
22* ArtisticLicenseHistory: In the preface to the combined ''Bounty Trilogy'' edition, the authors claim "the license of historical novelists" in cutting the RealLife Peter Haywood out of the first book, and instead writing in "Roger Byam", a fictional character who is not Haywood but resembles him.
23* BigOlUnibrow:
24** Parkin, the excessively cruel officer aboard the ''Pandora'' who persecuted Byam and his fellow sailors arrested on Tahiti. He has "eyebrows that met in an irregular line over his nose."
25** Isaac Martin, one of the mutineers who sailed to Pitcairn's Island, is described as "brutish" with "black brows that met over his nose."
26* BittersweetEnding:
27** ''Men Against the Sea'': The crew of the Bounty Launch makes it to Timur with only one casualty. However, four more die of disease in the Dutch East Indies, and Bligh had to sell the Launch because there was no way to bring it back to England. Moreover, while Ledward's death isn't covered by the book, it's strongly implied by him becoming too weak to join the return trip to England.
28** ''Pitcairn's Island'': An explosion of violence on the island kills all the Tahitian men and most of the mutineers, including Christian, who dies regretting his actions. But the one surviving sailor, sadder but wiser, is leading a thriving community of survivors.
29* BoringReturnJourney: From ''Mutiny on the Bounty'': "I shall give only a brief account of our experiences from the morning of our arrival at Coupang until the day when we sighted the cliffs of Old England."
30* BurningTheShips: As happened in real life, Fletcher Christian sets fire to the ''Bounty'' after they make landfall on Pitcairn's Island. Although part of the reason was the "there's no going back" nature of this trope, the story also points out that there was no true anchorage on Pitcairn and the ''Bounty'' would eventually be wrecked anyway when storms came.
31* CallForward: When remembering the flogging of Mills, Byam thinks that flogging will surely one day be banned, as it is not only horribly brutal, but is also counterproductive. Flogging as a Royal Navy punishment was banned in 1879.
32* CassandraTruth: By a 5-4 vote the mutineers on Pitcairn elect to divide the island among themselves and enslave the Tahitians. Christian begs them to reconsider, telling them that this decision will lead to disaster and the destruction of their community. They don't listen.
33* ChasedByAngryNatives: The first attempt at landfall by Bligh and his party, on the island of Tofoa, ends with them making a frantic retreat to their boat while the natives try hard to murder them, and do murder Nelson. After that Bligh and the loyalists resolve to stay at sea as much as possible while sailing to Timor.
34* TheChiefsDaughter: Maimiti is "of high lineage on Tahiti" (''Pitcairn's Island'') but casts that aside to sail into the unknown with Fletcher Christian.
35* CompanionCube: Over the course of ''Men Against the Sea'', the Bounty Launch is treated by its crew as a sentient being and is beloved by them for protecting them. Bligh is also proud of having built this boat himself and personally examined every plank on it.
36* CourtroomEpisode: The court-martial of the sailors captured on Tahiti is virtually always AdaptedOut of films either taken from these books or adapted straight from history, but it forms a huge chunk of the ''Mutiny on the Bounty'' novel, as Byam tries to avoid being hanged.
37* CrapsaccharineWorld: In the first novel, Sir Joseph Banks explains to Byam at the end of the first chapter that, even though life in Tahiti might appear idyllic and egalitarian, it is actually an extremely classist society, where no one may escape his or her original social condition.
38* CunningLinguist: Roger's main job on the voyage. He, having a gift for languages, is charged with compiling a Tahitian dictionary.
39* DayOfTheWeekName: Fletcher Christian's first child is born on a Thursday in October, so he and Maimiti name the baby Thursday October Christian.
40* DeathByDespair: On his return to England Byam finds out his mother has died. He's told that her health began to fail right after she received the letter from Bligh naming her son as a mutineer.
41* DecapitationPresentation: After killing Martin and Mills, two of the more loathsome mutineers on Pitcairn, the Tahitian men wear their severed heads as trophies.
42* {{Determinator}}: Bligh, who will not fail in getting his men to Timor and safety.
43* DirectLineToTheAuthor:
44** ''Mutiny on the Bounty'' is framed as Roger Byam's memoir.
45** ''Men Against the Sea'' is the journal that Thomas Ledward writes while recuperating in Timor.
46** ''Pitcairn's Island'' drops this conceit and goes with straight third-person narration--until the last couple of chapters, that is, which are John Adams aka Alexander Smith recounting in first person the later history of the colony to Webber the visitor.
47* DistantFinale:
48** ''Mutiny on the Bounty'' with a 15-year TimeSkip before Roger Byam sails to Tahiti for one last melancholy visit.
49** ''Pitcairn's Island'' also skips 15 years, from the eruption of violence that killed five of nine mutineers and all four Tahitian men in 1793, to the arrival of the American ship ''Topaz'' in 1808. John Adams aka "Alexander Smith" then tells his American visitors how the rest of the settlement's history played out and how Young, [=McCoy=], and Quintal met their fates.
50* DownerBeginning: ''Men Against the Sea'' has Ledward's journal opening with him returning from Elphinstone's funeral, and reflecting that Elphinstone is now the third man to survive the epic voyage on the launch only to succumb to tropical diseases on Coupang.
51* DownerEnding: ''Mutiny on the Bounty'' ends with Roger Byam going back to Tahiti after 20 years to find that the place has basically been ruined. War and diseases brought by Westerners have reduced the population by some 80%. His wife is long dead. He meets Helen, his daughter, walking along with his granddaughter, but can't bring himself to tell her who he is. Instead he shakes her hand and is left weeping after she walks away.
52* DrivenToSuicide: ''Pitcairn's Island'' provides two examples.
53** Fasto the Tahitian woman flings herself off the cliffs after finding out that Williams the mutineer is cheating on her with younger, prettier Hutia.
54** [=McCoy=] ends up suffering a mental breakdown and throwing himself into the sea.
55* TheDrunkenSailor:
56** The surgeon aboard the ''Bounty'' is a rather extreme example of this; in [[EstablishingCharacterMoment his first scene he waves around a liquor bottle]] and proclaims that alcohol is the best medicine. He dies from eating a spoiled fish, before the mutiny.
57** In ''Pitcairn's Island'', after [=McCoy=] builds a still, he, Quintal, Smith, and Young become severe alcoholics. They get so bad that the women of the island will have nothing to do with any of them until Young and Smith stop drinking.
58* EmasculatedCuckold: In ''Pitcairn's Island'', Teraru become this after his wife Hutia has an affair with John Williams. He looks the other way until Hutia stops bothering to hide her indiscretion. When he tries to get her back from Williams house, and Williams threatens him, Teraru leaves without a fight and begs his uncle Minarii to handle it. This causes the Polynesian men, save for the servant Hu, to lose all respect for Teraru.
59* EvilColonialist: In ''Pitcairn's Island'', when [=McCoy=] proposes dividing the island among the inhabitants, the main debate that comes out is whether or not the Polynesian men should get a share of the land. While the island is small, it has enough space that hundreds of people could call it home, so the only reasons for [=McCoy's=] faction to exclude the Polynesian men from having a share are greed and racist contempt.
60* EvilSoundsDeep: Inverted. Parkin the sadistic officer has "a high, soft voice, almost feminine."
61* {{Expy}}: The first novel features as narrator one Roger Byam, who is a fictional character. The preface to the revised edition states plainly that Byam is based on Peter Haywood, a young midshipman aboard HMS ''Bounty''. The RealLife Haywood was convicted of mutiny and sentenced to death, only to be pardoned and go on to have a long and successful career in the Royal Navy.
62* AFatherToHisMen: Christian suggests to Bligh in Chapter IV of ''Mutiny on the Bounty'' that "Burkitt's nature is one to tame with kindness, rather than blows." Bligh scornfully rejects this idea.
63* FightToSurvive: ''Men Against the Sea'' is the story of the six-week voyage of Bligh and the men in his open boat.
64* {{Flashback}}: Pretty much the whole of the first book, as ''Mutiny on the Bounty'' is framed as an elderly Roger Byam putting pen to paper and telling the story of the mutiny.
65* ForegoneConclusion: The highlights of second book ''Men Against the Sea''--Bligh and the launch made it over 3600 miles of ocean to Timor, with the loss of only one man, Norton killed by the natives on Tofoa--are summarized by Dr. Hamilton to Roger Byam aboard the ''Pandora'', in ''Mutiny on the Bounty''. More of the plot of ''Men Against the Sea'' is revealed later, at the court-martial, when loyalists from the launch appear to testify.
66* {{Foreshadowing}}:
67** Byam says of Bligh that "there was no finer seaman and navigator afloat." The next book in the trilogy is all about Bligh pulling off one of the all-time great feats of seamanship and navigation.
68** When the ''Bounty'' reaches Pitcairn Island, Christian promises the men that he won't be the boss so much anymore, and they can decide things by majority vote. Young tells him that this is a bad idea and that he should continue with more of a top-down management style. The whole majority vote idea unleashes an orgy of violence after the whites vote to enslave the Tahitians.
69* GetAHoldOfYourselfMan: When Mary starts shrieking in panic after open warfare breaks out on Pitcairn, Prudence slaps her and says "Will you be silent?
70-->The sharp blow, better than words could have done, quieted the terrified woman.
71* GoingNative: The sailors of the ''Bounty'' take Tahitian mistresses, start speaking the Tahitian language, and get Tahitian tattoos. The ones who go native the most are the ones who mutiny.
72* GreedyJew:
73** "...sharp-faced Jews, in their wherries, hovered alongside, eager to lend money at interest against pay day, or to sell on credit the worthless trinkets on their trays."
74** Samuel, Bligh's obnoxious clerk who conspires with him to embezzle from the ship's stores, is described as "a London Jew".
75* GrievousBottleyHarm: One of the refugees from the wreck of the ''Pandora'' is whacked over the head with a bottle when he tries to grab another sailor's fresh water ration. He suffers no lasting ill effects.
76* HappilyEverBefore: For Thomas Ledward, narrator of ''Men Against the Sea'', although nothing in the three books tells the reader that. In RealLife Ledward never made it back to England, being lost at sea a couple of months later when the boat taking him home sank.[[note]]In reality, the fate of Thomas Ledward is a mystery as he simply disappears from the historical record after his last letters home from Batavia in late 1789. It is believed that he was a victim of the sinking of a ship called the ''Welfare'', or in Dutch the ''Rotterdams Welvaren'', which was lost at sea while on the way from Batavia to Cape Town.[[/note]]
77* HaveAGayOldTime: Isaac Martin, mutineer, says of Christian on Pitcairn that Christian is "queer by nature." Martin is grousing about the decision to flee to Pitcairn where they are marooned forever.
78* HeartIsAnAwesomePower: David Nelson is the ship's botanist. In ''Men Against the Sea'', when the crew of the Bounty Launch were stopping at islands in New Hollandia, Nelson proved essential in identifying which plants were safe for humans to eat. At one point he even impresses Bligh by pointing out that the palm trees can be cut open for edible hearts.
79* HistoricalHeroUpgrade: ''Men Against the Sea'' has the mutineers convincing some Tahitian men and women to come with them; the Tahitian men bring sacred stones from Tahiti to sanctify their new home. In reality the Tahitians on the ''Bounty'' were ''kidnapped'', with Christian and the mutineers cutting the ropes and setting sail while their guests were on board for a party. (Christian stopped on a nearby island and unloaded some old women he judged to not be useful.)
80* HistoricalVillainUpgrade: These books, and the 1935 movie that was made from them, did a lot to establish the idea of William Bligh as an ogreish tyrant, when in RealLife he was no different from most other Royal Navy captains. In ''Mutiny on the Bounty'' he is depicted as embezzling from ship's provisions, something that did not happen in real life.
81* {{Hypocrite}}: Hutia is just fine cheating on her husband with Tararu with John Williams, but she gets angry and jealous when her husband flirts with Prudence.
82* IHaveAFamily: Bligh plays this card as a last resort, saying "Consider my wife and family" when Christian is sending him into the launch (an open boat) to what seems likely to be his death. It doesn't work.
83* ImpliedRape: In Chapter XVIII of ''Pitcairn's Island'', Quintal and [=McCoy=] kidnap Jenny and Nanai, tie them up, and bring them back to one of the houses. This is what Smith says about what happened next:
84--> '''Alexander Smith''': "Ye'll not wish to hear what went on after this. First they tried to force the girls to drink with 'em, and in the end they abused both in a shameful way."
85* ImportantHaircut: After the death of [=McCoy=], Smith/Adams finally manages to stop drinking. He cuts off the beard he'd let grow as he lost himself to alcohol, and begins shaving regularly.
86* InfoDump: A long slab of dialogue from William Bligh's mouth in the opening chapter explains the whole point of the voyage, namely, harvesting breadfruit trees from Hawaii to use as a food source for Britain's Caribbean slaves.
87* InnocentFanserviceGirl: The maidens of Tahiti think nothing of going around topless. See NationalGeographicNudity below.
88--> "Phidias himself could have produced in cold marble nothing one half so lovely as her young breasts, bared in all innocence."
89* ItsAllJunk: Averted with the Bounty Launch. Bligh is genuinely and openly distraught to sell it at an auction, only doing so because he had no way to bring it to England or even to leave it in safe hands. He stated that he loved that boat - something Ledward and the rest of the Launch's crew agreed with - and that it deserved to be preserved in an Admiralty Muesum.
90* JerkassHasAPoint: According to Byam, relations between Bligh and the crew first started to deteriorate at Tenerife when Bligh cut off the men's allotment of salt beef, and insisted they eat fresh beef gotten from shore--which the men thought unfit and probably actually horse or mule meat. Part of Bligh's motive was that he was StealingFromTheTill, but nonetheless, ''fresh'' meat will help prevent scurvy, a grave danger on long sea voyages. Salted, dried meat won't.
91* JungleDrums: It's the south Pacific, so the "ominous sound" that the men of Bligh's party hear is the knocking of stones while they are on the island of Tofoa. They interpret this as a sign that the natives are going to attack them, but they have to wait to leave, as some of the men are still inland looking for water.
92* LapPillow: Brown the mutineer lays on the ground with his head on Jenny's knee as they talk. This demonstrates the emotional closeness they're developing, even as many of the other mutineers on Pitcairn treat their women as sex slaves.
93* LaserGuidedKarma: Nine mutineers sailed to Tahiti and seven of them died unnatural deaths. Five were killed by the Tahitian men, [=McCoy=] later fell to his death while drunk, and Quintal was killed by Adams and Young after he'd gone savage. Adams, the only survivor after Young died of natural causes, admits to Webber that they had it coming, that the white men of the ''Bounty'' brought it on themselves for treating the Tahitians like slaves instead of living in harmony with them.
94* MachiavelliWasWrong: One of the themes is that Bligh's philosophy of ruling his men through terror is what led to his undoing.
95* ManlyTears: Ledward breaks down sobbing when the crew is piloting the launch into the harbor at Coupang, at the end of a 3600 mile journey, with Bligh at the tiller.
96--> "They were not tears of relief, or joy at our deliverance. No. I could have controlled those. But when I looked at Mr. Bligh, sitting at his old position with his hand on the tiller, there welled up within me a feeling toward him that destroyed the barriers we Englishman are so proud of erecting against one another. I saw him then as he deserved to be seen, in a light that transfigured him."
97* TheMillstone: In ''Men Against the Sea'', Robert Lamb fills this role. He spends most of the voyage too weak and frail to contribute to the group's survival, he steals from the pork rations, he spoils the attempt to catch noddies on a bird island, and he's noted as being an overall idiot.
98--> '''William Cole''': "If there's a wrong way of doing a thing, Lamb will find his way to it."
99* MoreDeadlyThanTheMale: In ''Pitcairn's Island'', when a war breaks out between the Polynesian men and the mutineers, only one of the Polynesians are killed by a mutineer. The rest are killed by the widows of their victims.
100--> '''Matthew Quintal''': "Damn my eyes! Women's work, eh?"
101* MurderByMistake: Hutia, one of the Tahitian women on Pitcairn, kills Tararu--her ex-lover, whom she dumped for Williams--by poisoning his fish. What she didn't bank on is Hu, another Tahitian, sharing the fish with Tararu and also dying.
102* TheMutiny: Hard to tell this story without one.
103* NaiveNewcomer: Roger Byam, a teenaged boy who knows nothing about sailing before being recruited to serve as a midshipman (junior officer) aboard the ''Bounty''.
104* NationalGeographicNudity: "No women in the world are more modest than the ladies of Tahiti, but they bare their breasts as innocently as an Englishwoman shows her face." Christian and Byam are bowled over when their girlfriends take their tops off to go fishing.
105* TheNavigator: William Bligh ''excels'' at this, and it saves the asses of the men in the launch.
106* TheNeidermeyer: Both played straight and averted in the person of William Bligh. In ''Mutiny on the Bounty'' he is a cruel and vicious martinet, flogging the men at the drop of a hat, embezzling from ship's stores, mentally and physically abusing his crew, virtually daring them to rebel. But in ''Men Against the Sea'' he shows himself to be a brave and inspiring leader in the face of mortal danger. Ledward concludes that said mortal danger was necessary to bring about the better side of Bligh; see TheApocalypseBringsOutTheBestInPeople above.
107* NeverFoundTheBody: Byam's defense in court is greatly impaired by the fact that Tinker, who was witness to the innocuous nature of Byam's last talk with Christian, was lost in a shipwreck. Byam is convicted by court-martial and is awaiting execution when Tinker turns up alive in London. Byam is pardoned.
108* NeverLearnedToRead: Alexander Smith, a foundling raised in an orphanage. Young teaches him to read on Pitcairn, and it is a part of Smith maturing into a leader of what is left of the community.
109* OffIntoTheDistanceEnding: ''Pitcairn's Island'' ends with Smith watching the ''Topaz'' sail away.
110* OldRetainer: Thacker, the old maid (literally and figuratively) who has served the Byam family for decades. She's Roger's only companion in his old age, but as he ruefully notes on the first page, she won't countenance any familiarity in the master-servant relationship.
111* OutOfContextEavesdropping: This nearly gets Roger Byam executed. He is mystified when he's accused of being a mutineer and put in chains. Eventually he finds out that the night before the mutiny, Bligh overheard Byam telling Christian "You can count on me." What Bligh didn't know is that Byam wasn't pledging his support for mutiny, but rather agreeing to Christian's cryptic request to get word to the Christian family if something were to happen on the homebound voyage.
112* TheOutsiderBefriendsTheBest: Upon landing in Tahiti, Byam becomes fast friends with a powerful chief and. moves in with him. When he returns after the mutiny, he marries a daughter of another noble family.
113* APartyAlsoKnownAsAnOrgy: Using somewhat delicate language, Young/Smith tells Webber the visitor of [=McCoy=]'s still, and how the liquor he was brewing led to drunken orgies.
114--> "The rest of us drank as much as we'd a mind to, and the five girls with us....the grog made 'em as wild and hot-blooded as ourselves....We took no thought of wives or anything else."
115* ThePlace: Pitcairn's Island, where the mutineers come to a bad end.
116* PoorCommunicationKills: Minarii is outraged when he hears that the mutineers have elected to enslave them. He angrily goes to Christian's house to find out if it's true, but does not wait to let Christian explain that he (Christian) opposed the vote and is working to change the mutineers' minds. Later, Christian decides to disregard the vote and that he will stand for the Tahitian men. He doesn't get the chance to tell Minarii this before Minarii kills him.
117* SeadogPegLeg: Huggan, the ship's surgeon, has a peg leg. He lost his leg when his ship engaged in combat with John Paul Jones during UsefulNotes/TheAmericanRevolution.
118* SeaStories: Do you really need context here?
119* SexSlave: Some of the Tahitian women on Pitcairn's Island.
120--> "Though dark and by no means pretty, Susannah had once been a pleasant, light-hearted girl. Three years of Martin had broken her spirit. She went about her household duties mechanically, and rarely smiled."
121* ShootTheDog: In ''Pitcairn's Island'', when the four remaining Polynesian men decide to make war on the mutineers for control of the island, they decide that all the mutineers have to die. They explicitly include Brown, Smith, and Young on their kill list, despite acknowledging that those men did them no harm. They reason that those men wouldn't be willing to live in peace with their friend's murderers.
122* StealingFromTheTill: The first incident to start turning the men against Bligh comes when they find out he is stealing from the ship's provisions.
123* SympatheticAdulterer: In Chapter V of ''Pitcairn's Island'', Susannah and Prudence, both of whose husbands mistreat them, express to the other women a desire to "comfort" the wifeless men on the island.
124--> Susannah: "I fear Martin as much as I hate him, but I shall find courage to deceive him. To make a fool of him will comfort me."
125* ATasteOfTheLash: In Chapter II of ''Mutiny on the Bounty'', a sailor dies while being flogged for striking an officer, and then his corpse takes two dozen more lashes to fulfill the sentence. This scene establishes the savagery of 18th century Royal Navy discipline.
126* TemptingFate: On May 12, after suffering through several storms, Bligh says "I think we've seen the worst of it." The launch is then hammered for days by the worst storms they've seen yet.
127* TooImportantToWalk: Tehani's uncle, Vehiatua, is carried piggyback everywhere he goes, as are a few other great chiefs. The reason is that if they set foot on a commoner's land, that land instantly belongs to them.
128* TranslationByVolume: How Alexander Smith communicated with the locals on Tahiti.
129--> "Smith, nevertheless, was of the opinion that if English were spoken slowly and in a loud voice, it must be a stupid foreigner indeed who could fail to understand."
130* WoodenShipsAndIronMen: Sails, rigging, sextants, all that good stuff.

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