and any helen burroughs? so i'm like, oh my goodness, you got to get these things to the library of congress. now i wanted them at the library of congress because i knew they'd get processed quickly. now i am and because i'd worked for moreland, spingarn had even been trained. the national archives. i went to the library of congress and i said, you know, you've just got these papers. and i have training. i work for you for free and help the current library. and so processing these papers and i spent my entire. of like 1978 working in those papers. so i got to see all those nanny helen burroughs in the archives, even before they actually got to be public. that was a wonderful experience, i must tell you. it just transformed my life. it transformed how i wrote it. transform the themes that i was writing about. so that's my happiest archive moment. well i don't really have a real happy archive. of. i just remember particularly go into the archive and you're looking enslaved women, you're looking through plantati