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Facsimile of Original Copy
Two hundred years ago the first edition of the Olney Hymns was published, since that time many of the hymns have become well known wherever Christianity is practiced. In response to many requests the trustees of the Cowper and Newton Museum have brought out this facsimile volume of the first edition. This edition is issued to celebrate the Bicentenary of the first publication in 1779.
Published February 15th, 1979
Reprinted 1984
ISBN 950 5530 1 8
Produced and published by
Arthur Gordon Hugh Osborn
For and on behalf of
The Cowper and Newton Museum
Market Place
OLNEY
Buckinghamshire
England.
Reproduced by Torr of Silverstone
Printed by Cheney & Sons Ltd., Banbury
[Price 2s. 6d. bound.]
Book I. On select Texts of Scripture.
Book II. On occasional Subjects.
Book III. On the Progress and Changes of the Spiritual Life.
—Cantabitis, Arcades, inquit, Montibus haec vestris: foli cantare periti Arcades. O mihi tum quam molliter ossa quiescant Vestra meos olim si fistula dicat amores! Virgil, Ecl. x:31.
And they sang as it were a new song before the
throne;—and no man could learn that song,
but the redeemed from the earth.
As sorrowful—yet always rejoicing,
LONDON:
Printed and Sold by W. Oliver, No 12, Bartholomew–Close;
Sold also by J Buckland, No 57, Pater–noster–Row;
and J. Johnson, No 72, St Paul’s Church–yard,
M DCC LXXIX.
Copies of a few of these Hymns have already appeared in periodical
publications, and in some recent collections. I have observed one or
two of them attributed to persons who certainly had no concern in them,
but as transcribers. All that have been at different times parted with
in manuscript are included in the present volume; and (if the information
were of any great importance) the public may be assured, that the whole
number were composed by two persons only. The original design would not
admit of any other association. A desire of promoting the faith and comfort
of sincere christians, though the principal, was not the only motive to
this undertaking. It was likewise intended as a monument, to perpetuate
the remembrance of an intimate and endeared friendship. With this pleasing
view I entered upon my part, which would have been smaller than it is, and
the book would have appeared much sooner, and in a very different form,
if the wise, though mysterious providence of GOD, had not seen fit to
cross my wishes. We had not proceeded far upon our proposed plan, before my
dear friend was prevented, by a long and affecting indisposition, from
affording me any farther assistance. My grief and disappointment were great;
I hung my harp upon the willows, and for some time thought myself determined
to proceed no farther without him. Yet my mind was afterwards led to resume
the service. My progress in it, amidst a variety of other engagements, has
been slow, yet in a course of years the hymns amounted to a considerable
number: And my deference to the judgment and desires of others, has at length
overcome the reluctance I long felt to see them in print, while I had so few
of my friend’s hymns to insert in the collection. Though it is possible a
good judge of composition might be able to distinguish those which are his,
I have thought it proper to preclude a misapplication, by prefixing the
letter C to each of them. For the rest, I must be responsible.
There is a style and manner suited to the composition of hymns, which may be more successfully, or at least more easily attained by a versifier, than by a poet. They should be Hymns, not Odes, if designed for public worship, and for the use of plain people. Perspicuity, simplicity and ease, should be chiefly attended to; and the imagery and coloring of poetry, if admitted at all, should be indulged very sparingly and with great judgment. The late Dr. Watts, many of whose hymns are admirable patterns in this species of writing, might, as a poet, have a right to say, That it cost him some labor to restrain his fire, and to accommodate himself to the capacities of common readers. But it would not become me to make such a declaration. It behoved me to do my best. But though I would not offend readers of taste by a wilful coarseness, and negligence, I do not write professedly for them. If the LORD whom I serve, has been pleased to favor me with that mediocrity of talent, which may qualify me for usefulness to the weak and the poor of his flock, without quite disgusting persons of superior discernment, I have reason to be satisfied.
As the workings of the heart of man, and of the Spirit of God, are in general the same, in all who are the subjects of grace, I hope most of these hymns, being the fruit and expression of my own experience, will coincide with the views of real christians of all denominations. But I cannot expect that every sentiment I have advanced will be universally approved. However, I am not conscious of having written a single line with an intention, either to flatter, or to offend any party or person upon earth. I have simply declared my own views and feelings, as I might have done if I had composed hymns in some of the newly discovered islands in the South–Sea, where no person had any knowledge of the name of Jesus, but myself. I am a friend of peace, and being deeply convinced that no one can profitably understand the great truths and doctrines of the gospel, any farther than he is taught of God, I have not a wish to obtrude my own tenets upon others, in a way of controversy: yet I do not think myself bound to conceal them. Many gracious persons (for many such I am persuaded there are) who differ from me, more or less, in those points which are called Calvinistic, appear desirous that the Calvinists should, for their sakes, studiously avoid every expression which they cannot approve. Yet few of them, I believe. impose a like restraint upon themselves, but think the importance of what they deem to be truth, justifies them in speaking their sentiments plainly, and strongly. May I not plead for an equal liberty? The views I have received of the doctrines of grace are essential to my peace, I could not live comfortably a day or an hour without them. I likewise believe, yea, so far as my poor attainments warrant me to speak, I know them to be friendly to holiness, and to have a direct influence in producing and maintaining a gospel conversation, and therefore I must not be ashamed of them.
The Hymns are distributed into three Books. In the first I have classed those which are formed upon select passages of Scripture, and placed them in the order of the books of the old and New Testament. The second contains occasional Hymns, suited to particular seasons, or suggested by particular events or objects. The third Book is miscellaneous, comprising a variety of subjects relative to a life of faith in the son of God, which have no express reference either to a single text of Scripture, or to any determinate season or incident. These are farther subdivided into distinct heads. This arrangement is not so accurate but that several of the hymns might have been differently disposed. Some attention to method may be found convenient, though a logical exactness was hardly practicable. As some subjects in the several books are nearly co–incident, I have, under the divisions in the third book, pointed out those which are similar in the two former. And I have likewise here and there in the first and second, made a reference to hymns of a like import in the third.
This publication, which, with my humble prayer to the LORD for his blessing upon it, I offer to the service and acceptance of all who love the LORD JESUS CHRIST in sincerity, of every name and in every place, into whose hands it may come; I more particularly dedicate to my dear friends in the parish and neighborhood of Olney, for whose use the hymns were originally composed; as a testimony of the sincere love I bear them, and as a token of my gratitude to the Lord, and to them, for the comfort and satisfaction with which the discharge of my ministry among them has been attended.
The hour is approaching, and at my time of life cannot be very distant, when my heart, my pen, and my tongue, will no longer be able to move in their service. But I trust, while my heart continues to beat, it will feel a warm desire for the prosperity of their souls; and while my hand can write, and my tongue speak, it will be the business and the pleasure of my life, to aim at promoting their growth and establishment in the grace of our God and Savior. To this precious grace I commend them, and earnestly entreat them, and all who love his name, to strive mightily with their prayers to God for me, that I may be preserved faithful to the end, and enabled at last to finish my course with joy.
Olney, Bucks,
Feb. 15, 1779
JOHN NEWTON.
The change
GENESIS | |
---|---|
1 Adam | 3 |
2 Cain and Abel | 4 |
3,4 Walking with God | 5 |
5 Lot in Sodom | 13 |
6,7 The Lord will provide | 22 |
8 Esau | 25 |
9 Jacob’s ladder | 28 |
10 My name is Jacob | 32 |
11 Plenty in dearth | 41 |
12 Joseph made known to his brethren | 45 |
EXODUS | |
13 The bitter waters | 15 |
14 Jehovah Rophi | 15 |
15 Manna | 16 |
16 Manna hoarded | 16 |
17 Jehovah-Nissi | 17 |
18 The golden calf | 32 |
LEVITICUS | |
19 The true Aaron | 8 |
NUMBERS | |
20 Balaam’s wish | 23 |
JOSHUA | |
21 Gibeon | 10 |
JUDGES | |
22 Jehovah Shallom | 6 |
23 Gideon’s fleece | 4 |
24 Sampson’s lion | 14 |
I SAMUEL | |
25 Hannah, or the throne of grace | 1 |
26 Dagon before the ark | 5 |
27 Milch kine drawing the ark | 6 |
28 Saul’s armor | 17 |
II SAMUEL | |
29 David’s fall | 12 |
30 Is this thy kindness to thy friend | 16 |
I KINGS | |
31,32,33 Ask what I shall give thee | 3 |
34 Queen of Sheba | 10 |
35 Elijah fed by ravens | 17 |
36 The meal and cruse of oil | 17 |
II KINGS | |
37 Jericho, or the waters healed | 2 |
38 Naaman | 5 |
39 The borrowed axe | 6 |
40 More with us than with them | 6 |
I CHRONICLES | |
41 Faith’s review and expectation | 17 |
NEHEMIAH | |
42 The joy of the Lord is our strength | 9 |
JOB | |
43 O that I were as in months past | 29 |
44 The change | 29 |
PSALMS | |
45 Pleading for mercy | 6 |
46 None upon earth besides thee | 73 |
47,48 The believer’s safety | 91 |
49 He led them by a right way | 107 |
50 What shall I render | 116 |
51 Dwelling in Mesech | 120 |
PROVERBS | |
52 Wisdom | 8 |
53 A friend that sticketh closer than a brother | 18 |
ECCLESIASTES | |
54 Vanity of life | 1 |
55 Vanity of the world | 1 |
56 Vanity of creatures sanctified | 1 |
SOLOMON’S SONG | |
57 The name of Jesus | 1 |
ISAIAH | |
58 O Lord I will praise thee | 12 |
59 The River, Refuge, and Rock of the church | 32 |
60 Zion, or the city of God | 33 |
61 Look unto me and be ye saved | 45 |
62 The good Physician | 45 |
63 To the afflicted | 54 |
64 The contrite heart | 57 |
65 The future peace and glory of the church | 60 |
JEREMIAH | |
66 Trust of the righteous and wicked | 17 |
67 Jehovah our righteousness | 23 |
68 Ephraim repenting | 31 |
LAMENTATIONS. | |
69 The Lord is my portion | 3 |
EZEKIEL | |
70 Humbled and silenced by mercy | 16 |
71 The covenant | 36 |
72 Jehovah-Shammah | 48 |
DANIEL | |
73 The power and triumph of faith | 3,6 |
74 Belshazzar | 5 |
JONAH | |
75 The gourd | 4 |
ZECHARIAH | |
76 Prayer for the Lord’s presence | 2 |
77 A brand plucked out of the fire | 3 |
78 On one throne shall be seven eyes | 3 |
79 Praise for the fountain opened | 13 |
MALACHI | |
80 They shall be mine saith the Lord | 3 |
MATTHEW | |
81 The beggar | 7 |
82 The leper | 8 |
83 A sick soul | 9 |
84 Satan returning | 12 |
85 The sower | 13 |
86 Wheat and tares | 13 |
87 Peter walking on the waters | 14 |
88 Woman of Canaan | 15 |
89 What think ye of Christ? | 22 |
90 The foolish virgins | 25 |
91 Peter sinning and repenting | 26 |
MARK | |
92 Legion dispossessed | 5 |
93 The ruler’s daughter raised | 5 |
94 But one loaf | 8 |
95 Bartimaeus | 10 |
96 The house of prayer | 11 |
97 The blasted fig-tree | 11 |
LUKE | |
98 The two debtors | 7 |
99 The good Samaritan | 10 |
100 Martha and Mary | 10 |
101 The heart taken | 11 |
102 The worldling | 12 |
103 The barren fig-tree | 13 |
104 The prodigal | 15 |
105 The rich man, and Lazarus | 16 |
106 The importunate widow | 18 |
107 Zaccheus | 19 |
108 Believer’s danger and safety | 22 |
109 Father forgive them | 23 |
110 The two malefactors | 23 |
JOHN | |
111 The woman of Samaria | 4 |
112,113 Pool of Bethesda | 5 |
114 The disciples at sea | 6 |
115 Will ye also go away? | 6 |
116 The resurrection and the life | 11 |
117 Weeping Mary | 20 |
118,119 Lovest thou me? | 21 |
ACTS | |
120 Death of Stephen | 7 |
121 The rebel’s surrender to grace | 9 |
122 Peter released from prison | 12 |
123 The trembling jailer | 16 |
124 The exorcists | 19 |
125 Paul’s voyage | 27 |
ROMANS | |
126 The good that I would I do not | 7 |
127 Salvation drawing nearer | 13 |
I CORINTHIANS | |
128 That flock was Christ | 10 |
II CORINTHIANS | |
129 My grace is sufficient for thee | 12 |
GALATIANS | |
130 The inward warfare | 5 |
PHILIPPIANS | |
131 Contentment | 4 |
HEBREWS | |
132 Old Testament gospel | 4 |
133 The word quick and powerful | 4 |
134 Looking unto Jesus | 12 |
135 Love-tokens | 12 |
REVELATION | |
136 Ephesus | 2 |
137 Smyrna | 2 |
138 Sardis | 3 |
139 Philadelphia | 3 |
140 Laodicea | 3 |
141 The little book | 10 |
I. SEASONS. | |
---|---|
New-years hymns: | |
Time how swift | 1 |
Time how short | 2 |
Uncertainty of life | 3 |
A new-years thought and prayer | 4 |
Death and war | 5 |
Earthly prospects deceitful | 6 |
Before annual sermons: | |
Prayer for a blessing | 7, 8, 9 |
Casting the gospel net | 10 |
Pleading for and with youth | 11 |
Prayer for children | 12 |
The Shunemite | 13 |
Elijah’s prayer | 14 |
Preaching to the dry bones | 15 |
The rod of Moses | 16 |
God speaking from mount Zion | 17 |
Prayer for power on the means | 18 |
Elijah’s mantle | 19 |
After annual sermons | |
David’s charge to Solomon | 20 |
The Lord’s call to his children | 21 |
The prayer of Jabez | 22 |
Waiting at Wisdom’s gates | 23 |
Asking the way to Zion | 24 |
We were Pharaoh’s bondmen | 25 |
Travelling in birth for souls | 26 |
27 | |
Paul’s farewell charge | 28 |
How shall I put thee among the children? | 29 |
Winter | 30 |
Waiting for spring | 31 |
Spring | 32, 33 |
Summer-storms | 34 |
Hay-time | 35 |
Harvest | 36 |
CHRISTMAS. | |
Praise for the incarnation | 37 |
Jehovah-Jesus | 38 |
Man honored above angels | 39 |
Saturday evening | 40 |
Close of the year, Ebenezer | 41, 42 |
ii. ORDINANCES. | |
Opening a place for social prayer | 43, 44 |
The Lord’s day | 45 |
Gospel privileges | 46, 47 |
Praise for their continuance | 48 |
A famine of the word | 49 |
Prayer for ministers | 50 |
Prayer for a revival | 51 |
Hoping for a revival | 52 |
SACRAMENTAL HYMNS. | |
Welcome to the table | 53 |
Christ crucified | 54 |
Jesus hasting to suffer | 55 |
It is good to he here | 56 |
Looking at the cross | 57 |
Supplies in the wilderness | 58 |
Communion with saints in glory | 59 |
PRAYER. | |
Exhortation to prayer | 60 |
Power of prayer | 61 |
SCRIPTURE. | |
Light and glory of the word | 62 |
Word more precious than gold | 63 |
III. PROVIDENCES. | |
On commencement of hostilities | 64 |
FAST-DAY HYMNS. | |
Confession and prayer | 65 |
Moses and Amalek | 66 |
The hiding place | 67 |
On the earthquake, 1775 | 68 |
Fire at Olney, 1777 | 69 |
Welcome to christian friends | 70 |
At parting | 71 |
FUNERAL HYMNS. | |
On the death of a believer | 72 |
Death of a minister | 73 |
The tolling bell | 74 |
Hope beyond the grave | 75 |
There the weary are at rest | 76 |
The day of judgment | 77 |
The day of the Lord | 78 |
The great tribunal | 79 |
IV. CREATION. | |
The old and new creation | 80 |
Book of creation | 81 |
The rainbow | 82 |
Thunder | 83 |
Lightning in the night | 84 |
Eclipse of the moon, 1776 | 85 |
86 | |
The sea | 87 |
The flood | 88 |
The thaw | 89 |
The lodestone | 90 |
Spider and bee | 91 |
Bee saved from the spider | 92 |
The tamed lion | 93 |
Sheep | 94 |
The garden | 95 |
For a garden-seat, or summer-house | 96 |
Creatures in the Lord’s hands | 97 |
On dreaming | 98 |
The world | 99 |
The enchantment dissolved | 100 |
(Under the following Heads)
Book I. Hymn 45, 69, 82, 83, 84, 96.
Book II. Hymn 29.
Book I. Hymn 10, 13, 21, 22, 24, 27, 40, 43, 44, 51, 56, 63, 76, 88, 107, 115, 126, 130, 131, 136.
Book I. Hymn 4, 7, 9, 11, 25, 35, 36, 39, 41, 46, 47, 48, 7O, 95, 128, 132.
I. SOLEMN ADDRESSES TO SINNERS. | |
---|---|
Expostulation | 1 |
Alarm | 2 |
We were once as you are | 3 |
Prepare to meet God | 4 |
Invitation | 5 |
II. SEEKING, PLEADING, AND HOPING. | |
The burdened sinner | 6 |
Behold I am vile | 7 |
The shining light | 8 |
Encouragement | 9 |
The waking soul | 10 |
The effort | 11, 12 |
Seeking the Beloved | 13 |
Rest for weary souls | 14 |
III. CONFLICT. | |
Light shining out of darkness | 15 |
Welcome cross | 16 |
Afflictions sanctified by the word | 17 |
Temptation | 18 |
Looking upwards in a storm | 19 |
Valley of the shadow of death | 20 |
21 | |
Help in time of need | 22 |
Peace after a storm | 23 |
Mourning and longing | 24 |
Rejoice the soul of thy servant | 25 |
Self-acquaintance | 26 |
Bitter and sweet | 27 |
Prayer for patience | 28 |
Submission | 29 |
Why should I complain? | 30 |
Return, O Lord, how long! | 31 |
Cast down, but not destroyed | 32 |
The benighted traveller | 33 |
The prisoner | 34 |
Perplexity relieved | 35 |
Prayer answered by crosses | 36 |
I’ll trust and not be afraid | 37 |
Questions to unbelief | 38 |
Great effects by small means | 39 |
Why art thou cast down? | 40 |
The way of access | 41 |
The pilgrim’s song | 42 |
IV. COMFORT. | |
Faith a new sense | 43 |
The happy change | 44 |
Retirement | 45 |
Jesus my all | 46 |
The hidden life | 47 |
Joy and peace in believing | 48 |
True pleasure | 49 |
The christian | 50 |
Lively hope and gracious fear | 51 |
Confidence | 52 |
Peace restored | 53 |
Hear what he has done | 54 |
Freedom from care | 55 |
Humiliation and praise | 56 |
For the poor | 57 |
Home in view | 58 |
V. DEDICATION AND SURRENDER. | |
Old things passed away | 59 |
Power of grace | 60 |
My soul thirsteth for God | 61 |
Love constraining to obedience | 62 |
Heart healed and changed by mercy | 63 |
Hatred of sin | 64 |
The child | 65 |
True happiness | 66 |
The happy debtor | 67 |
VI. CAUTIONS. | |
The new convert | 68 |
True and false comforts | 69 |
True and false zeal | 70 |
Living and dead faith | 71 |
Abuse of the gospel | 72 |
The narrow way | 73 |
Dependance | 74 |
Not of works | 75 |
Sin a deceit | 76 |
Are there few saved? | 77 |
The Sluggard | 78 |
Not in word, but in power | 79 |
VII. PRAISE | |
Praise for faith | 80 |
Grace and providence | 81 |
82 | |
I will praise the Lord at all times | 83 |
Perseverance | 84 |
Salvation | 85 |
Reigning grace | 86 |
Praise to the Redeemer | 87 |
Man by nature, grace and glory | 88 |
VIII. SHORT HYMNS. | |
Before Sermon | 89-95 |
After Sermon | 96-103 |
Gloria Patria | 104-107 |
Genesis
3:9 4:3-8 5:24 8:9 8:22 9:13-14 9:14 13:10 21:19 22:14 25:34 28:12 32:27 41:56 45:3-4
Exodus
9:23 10:9 12:13 12:13 13:17 14:21 14:21 14:22 15 15:23-15 16:18 16:20 17:9 17:11 17:15 28:33 32:4 32:31
Leviticus
Numbers
16:46 20:11 20:11 20:11 21:9 23:10
Deuteronomy
Joshua
Judges
5:4-5 5:11 6:24 6:37-40 7:2 7:20 7:22 13:23 14:8
1 Samuel
1:10 1:18 6:12 7:12 7:12 17:29 17:38-40 23:27 24:16
2 Samuel
1 Kings
3:5 3:5 3:5 8:18 10:1-9 17:6 17:14 17:16 18
2 Kings
2:19-22 4:31 5:14 6:5-6 6:16 10:16 51:11-14
1 Chronicles
4:9-10 12:32 17:16-17 28:9 29:14
2 Chronicles
Nehemiah
Job
Psalms
6 23:1 23:4 27:1-2 46:4 55:22 60:17 69:15 71:11 73:25 81:10 85:8 87:3 91 91 104:20 106:4-5 107:7 107:7 115:1 116:12-13 118:22 119:71 119:103 120:5-7 127:1 130:6 131:2 132:14 140:2 147:7
Proverbs
3:17 3:17 6:10 8:22-31 8:34-35 18:24 20:4 22:13 24:30
Ecclesiastes
Song of Solomon
Isaiah
1:2 4:5-6 10:3 11:6 12 12:3 26:1 26:20 29:8 31:5 32:2 32:2 33:16 33:27-28 35:1 35:7 40:7 40:29 44:4 44:5-11 45:8-9 45:22 47:15 48:8 54:2 54:5 57:20-21 60:15-20 61:3
Jeremiah
1:5 1:19 3:19 17:5-8 23:6 31:3 31:18-20
Lamentations
Ezekiel
9:4 16:64 33:11 36:25-28 36:37 37 48:33
Daniel
Hosea
Jonah
Micah
Habakkuk
Zechariah
Malachi
Matthew
3:17 5:28 6:26-28 6:26-30 6:34 7:7-8 7:24 8:23 9:12 11:28 11:30 12:43-45 13:3 13:37-42 14:28-31 15:22-28 16:16 17:4 18:3-4 22:42 25:1 26:33 26:73
Mark
4:26-29 5:18-19 5:34 5:39-42 8:14 9:24 10:47-48 11:17 11:20
Luke
2:29 5:4 7:38 7:47 7:47 8:46 10:33-35 10:38-42 11:21-22 11:50 12:16-21 12:32 13:6-9 13:24 14:22 15:11-24 16:19-25 18:1-7 19:1-6 19:8 22:31-32 23:34 23:39-43 23:43
John
3:15 4:28 5:2-4 5:2-4 6:16-21 6:29 6:67-69 7:32 8:7 11:25 12:31 13:25 20:11-16 20:28 21:16 21:16
Acts
2 7:54-60 9:6 9:6 12:5-8 14:22 16:29-30 16:31 19:13-16 20:24 20:26-27 27
Romans
1:20 3:31 5:10 5:20 5:21 7 8 8:32 8:34 8:34 8:35-39 8:36 8:37
1 Corinthians
2 Corinthians
4:6 5:1 5:20 5:21 6:10 6:16 6:17-18 12:9 13:14
Galatians
Ephesians
Philippians
Colossians
1 Timothy
Hebrews
2:16 4:2 4:12-13 12:2 12:5-11 12:8 12:16 12:18 12:22 12:24 13:20 13:24
1 Peter
2 Peter
Revelation
1:6 1:7 2:1 2:7 2:10 2:10 2:11 3:1 3:1-6 3:7-13 3:14-20 4:3 5 5:9 5:9 5:12 6:16 6:16 10 14:3 16:1 20:11-12 22:20
i iii v 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 180 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427