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authorCase Duckworth2015-03-09 12:39:38 -0700
committerCase Duckworth2015-03-09 12:39:38 -0700
commit0bc764f003a763a30f3030b4de233a512a016881 (patch)
treef9734e3708fa3eb6449ac1dab05ea62d3da318ce /shipwright.html
parentRe write .thing into #container > .content (diff)
downloadautocento-0bc764f003a763a30f3030b4de233a512a016881.tar.gz
autocento-0bc764f003a763a30f3030b4de233a512a016881.zip
HTML compile 2015-03-09
Diffstat (limited to 'shipwright.html')
-rw-r--r--shipwright.html14
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/shipwright.html b/shipwright.html index e814766..2f93057 100644 --- a/shipwright.html +++ b/shipwright.html
@@ -24,6 +24,7 @@
24 </head> 24 </head>
25<body> 25<body>
26 26
27<article id="header">
27 <header> 28 <header>
28 <!-- title --> 29 <!-- title -->
29 <h1 class="title">The shipwright</h1> 30 <h1 class="title">The shipwright</h1>
@@ -32,17 +33,20 @@
32 33
33 </header> 34 </header>
34 35
35 <section class="thing verse"> 36 <section class="content verse">
36 <p>He builds a ship as if it were the last thing<br />holding him together, as if, when he stops,<br />his body will fall onto the plate-glass water<br />and shatter into sand. To keep his morale up<br />he whistles and sings, but the wind whistles <a href="apollo11.html">louder</a><br />and taunts him: Your ship will build itself<br />if you throw yourself into the sea; time<br />has a way of growing your beard for you.<br />Soon, you’ll find yourself on a rocking chair<br />on some porch made from your ship’s timbers.<br />The window behind you is made from a sail, thick<br />canvas, and no one inside will hear your calling<br />for milk or a chamberpot. Your children<br />will have all sailed to the New World and left you.<br />But he tries not to listen, continues to hammer<br />nail after nail into timber after timber,<br />but the wind <a href="theoceanoverflowswithcamels.html">finally blows</a> him into the growling ocean<br />and the ship falls apart on its own.</p> 37 <p>He builds a ship as if it were the last thing<br />holding him together, as if, when he stops,<br />his body will fall onto the plate-glass water<br />and shatter into sand. To keep his morale up<br />he whistles and sings, but the wind whistles <a href="apollo11.html">louder</a><br />and taunts him: Your ship will build itself<br />if you throw yourself into the sea; time<br />has a way of growing your beard for you.<br />Soon, you’ll find yourself on a rocking chair<br />on some porch made from your ship’s timbers.<br />The window behind you is made from a sail, thick<br />canvas, and no one inside will hear your calling<br />for milk or a chamberpot. Your children<br />will have all sailed to the New World and left you.<br />But he tries not to listen, continues to hammer<br />nail after nail into timber after timber,<br />but the wind <a href="theoceanoverflowswithcamels.html">finally blows</a> him into the growling ocean<br />and the ship falls apart on its own.</p>
37 </section> 38 </section>
39</article>
38 40
39 <nav> 41 <nav>
40 <a class="prevlink" href="serengeti.html"> 42 <a class="prevlink" href="serengeti.html"
43 title="Next article in Elegies for alternate selves">
41 Serengeti 44 Serengeti
42 </a> 45 </a>
43 <a href="#" id="lozenge" title="Random page"> &loz; </a> 46 <a href="#" id="lozenge" title="Random page"> &loz; </a>
44 <a class="nextlink" href="spittle.html"> 47 <a class="nextlink" href="spittle.html"
45 Spittle 48 title="Previous article in Elegies for alternate selves">
49 Spittle>
46 </a> 50 </a>
47 </nav> 51 </nav>
48</body> 52</body>