diff options
author | Case Duckworth | 2015-03-14 11:33:26 -0700 |
---|---|---|
committer | Case Duckworth | 2015-03-14 11:33:26 -0700 |
commit | 5685e1dba9b485939c833ba86f4e5c2e5e34453b (patch) | |
tree | f61602ba63e905e9bc7033ad06e790e7356e4dc6 /words-meaning.html | |
parent | Move test suite into its own folder (diff) | |
download | autocento-5685e1dba9b485939c833ba86f4e5c2e5e34453b.tar.gz autocento-5685e1dba9b485939c833ba86f4e5c2e5e34453b.zip |
Mostly fix #11: Dedication/epigraph alignment
So the issue is solved in terms of how it looks, though it adds a gross extra div into every page and uses :only-child, which I don't think is super-supported. But it's the best I can do that I know of until we get to better flexbox support. Or you know, maybe later I can try doing some templating fixes-- injecting classes so that normally, .dedication is right-aligned but when an epigraph is present, change the class to .dedication-left or something. IDK. Either way is sort of ugly. :(
Diffstat (limited to 'words-meaning.html')
-rw-r--r-- | words-meaning.html | 6 |
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/words-meaning.html b/words-meaning.html index 710dc7b..75e03c1 100644 --- a/words-meaning.html +++ b/words-meaning.html | |||
@@ -34,8 +34,10 @@ | |||
34 | <h1 class="title">Words and meaning</h1> | 34 | <h1 class="title">Words and meaning</h1> |
35 | 35 | ||
36 | 36 | ||
37 | 37 | <div class="header-extra"> | |
38 | </header> | 38 | |
39 | </div> | ||
40 | </header> | ||
39 | 41 | ||
40 | 42 | ||
41 | <section class="content prose"><p>“How astonishing it is that language can almost mean, / and frightening that it does not quite,” Jack Gilbert opens his poem “The Forgotten Dialect of the Heart.” In a similar vein, Hass’s “Meditation at Legunitas” states, “A word is elegy to what it signifies.” These poems get to the heart of language, and express the old duality of thought: by giving a word to an entity, it is both tethered and made meaningful.</p> | 43 | <section class="content prose"><p>“How astonishing it is that language can almost mean, / and frightening that it does not quite,” Jack Gilbert opens his poem “The Forgotten Dialect of the Heart.” In a similar vein, Hass’s “Meditation at Legunitas” states, “A word is elegy to what it signifies.” These poems get to the heart of language, and express the old duality of thought: by giving a word to an entity, it is both tethered and made meaningful.</p> |