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diff --git a/appendix/first-lines.txt b/appendix/first-lines.txt index de4a00f..3a74ad6 100644 --- a/appendix/first-lines.txt +++ b/appendix/first-lines.txt | |||
@@ -16,14 +16,11 @@ project: | |||
16 | ... | 16 | ... |
17 | 17 | ||
18 | [He was born on a few separate occasions _green traffic lights at night_](about-the-author.html) | 18 | [He was born on a few separate occasions _green traffic lights at night_](about-the-author.html) |
19 | [_Autocento of the breakfast table_ is a hypertextual exploration of the workings of revision across time.](about.html) | ||
20 | [Case Duckworth is the cowardly but lovable Great Dane who solves mysteries on TV.](about_author.html) | 19 | [Case Duckworth is the cowardly but lovable Great Dane who solves mysteries on TV.](about_author.html) |
21 | [_Autocento of the breakfast table_ is my Master's thesis, an inter/hypertextual exploration of the workings of inspiration, revision, and obsession.](abstract.html) | ||
22 | [Lost things have a way of staying lost.](amber-alert.html) | 20 | [Lost things have a way of staying lost.](amber-alert.html) |
23 | [And you were there at the start of it all](and.html) | 21 | [And you were there at the start of it all](and.html) |
24 | [Abraham, Abraham, you are old and cannot hear:](angeltoabraham.html) | 22 | [Abraham, Abraham, you are old and cannot hear:](angeltoabraham.html) |
25 | [So it's the fucking moon. Big deal. As if](apollo11.html) | 23 | [So it's the fucking moon. Big deal. As if](apollo11.html) |
26 | [What is poetry?](arspoetica.html) | ||
27 | [Paul was writing in his diary about art.](art.html) | 24 | [Paul was writing in his diary about art.](art.html) |
28 | [Paul took his axe and went out into the woods to chop trees.](axe.html) | 25 | [Paul took his axe and went out into the woods to chop trees.](axe.html) |
29 | [After searching for days or even months](big-dipper.html) | 26 | [After searching for days or even months](big-dipper.html) |
@@ -42,7 +39,6 @@ project: | |||
42 | [It had gotten cold.](dream.html) | 39 | [It had gotten cold.](dream.html) |
43 | [_YOU CANNOT DISCOVER ART ART MUST BE CREATED_ he sat on the couch at home while his mother watched TV and smoked.](early.html) | 40 | [_YOU CANNOT DISCOVER ART ART MUST BE CREATED_ he sat on the couch at home while his mother watched TV and smoked.](early.html) |
44 | [Say there are no words. Say that we are conjoined](elegyforanalternateself.html) | 41 | [Say there are no words. Say that we are conjoined](elegyforanalternateself.html) |
45 | [I saw my life branching out before me like the green fig tree in the story.](epigraph.html) | ||
46 | [Bottom of the drink: they had](ex-machina.html) | 42 | [Bottom of the drink: they had](ex-machina.html) |
47 | [I didn't write this sestina yesterday.](exasperated.html) | 43 | [I didn't write this sestina yesterday.](exasperated.html) |
48 | ["Is man the natural thing that makes unnatural things" he thought to himself as he looked out the kitchen window at the shed.](father.html) | 44 | ["Is man the natural thing that makes unnatural things" he thought to himself as he looked out the kitchen window at the shed.](father.html) |
@@ -54,7 +50,6 @@ project: | |||
54 | [You think building Hoggle's a hard game?](hard-game.html) | 50 | [You think building Hoggle's a hard game?](hard-game.html) |
55 | [His mother drove him to the Hardware Store on a Tuesday.](hardware.html) | 51 | [His mother drove him to the Hardware Store on a Tuesday.](hardware.html) |
56 | [I was away on vacation when I heard---](howithappened.html) | 52 | [I was away on vacation when I heard---](howithappened.html) |
57 | [This book is an exploration of life, of all possible lives that could be lived.](howtoread.html) | ||
58 | [_It's all jokes_ Paul wrote in what he was now calling his Hymnal.](hymnal.html) | 53 | [_It's all jokes_ Paul wrote in what he was now calling his Hymnal.](hymnal.html) |
59 | [I am a great pillar of white smoke.](i-am.html) | 54 | [I am a great pillar of white smoke.](i-am.html) |
60 | [I thought I saw you walking](i-think-its-you.html) | 55 | [I thought I saw you walking](i-think-its-you.html) |
@@ -75,7 +70,6 @@ project: | |||
75 | [God is love, they say, but there is](love-as-god.html) | 70 | [God is love, they say, but there is](love-as-god.html) |
76 | [Walking along in the dark is a good way to begin a song.](lovesong.html) | 71 | [Walking along in the dark is a good way to begin a song.](lovesong.html) |
77 | [_THIS MAN REFUSED TO OPEN HIS EYES_](man.html) | 72 | [_THIS MAN REFUSED TO OPEN HIS EYES_](man.html) |
78 | [What is a poem?](manifesto_poetics.html) | ||
79 | [The moon is drowning the stars it pushes them](moon-drowning.html) | 73 | [The moon is drowning the stars it pushes them](moon-drowning.html) |
80 | [The moon is gone and in its place a mirror.](moongone.html) | 74 | [The moon is gone and in its place a mirror.](moongone.html) |
81 | [The other side of this mountain](mountain.html) | 75 | [The other side of this mountain](mountain.html) |
@@ -84,7 +78,6 @@ project: | |||
84 | [While swimming in the river](no-nothing.html) | 78 | [While swimming in the river](no-nothing.html) |
85 | [Paul began typing on notecards.](notes.html) | 79 | [Paul began typing on notecards.](notes.html) |
86 | [Nothing is ever over; nothing](nothing-is-ever-over.html) | 80 | [Nothing is ever over; nothing](nothing-is-ever-over.html) |
87 | [How does one describe a poem?](on-genre-dimension.html) | ||
88 | [Whenever you call me friend](one-hundred-lines.html) | 81 | [Whenever you call me friend](one-hundred-lines.html) |
89 | [I think that I could write formal poems](onformalpoetry.html) | 82 | [I think that I could write formal poems](onformalpoetry.html) |
90 | [What did he do when he was in the woods?](options.html) | 83 | [What did he do when he was in the woods?](options.html) |
@@ -98,7 +91,6 @@ project: | |||
98 | [I'm writing this now because I have to.](poetry-time.html) | 91 | [I'm writing this now because I have to.](poetry-time.html) |
99 | [Of course, there is a God.](prelude.html) | 92 | [Of course, there is a God.](prelude.html) |
100 | [The problem with people is this: we cannot be happy.](problems.html) | 93 | [The problem with people is this: we cannot be happy.](problems.html) |
101 | [_Autocento of the breakfast table_ is an inter/hypertextual exploration of the workings of inspiration, revision, and obsession.](process.html) | ||
102 | [Nothing matters; everything is sacred.](proverbs.html) | 94 | [Nothing matters; everything is sacred.](proverbs.html) |
103 | [When he finally got back to work he was surprised they threw him a party.](punch.html) | 95 | [When he finally got back to work he was surprised they threw him a party.](punch.html) |
104 | [Okay, so as we said in the Prelude, there either is or isn't a God.](purpose-dogs.html) | 96 | [Okay, so as we said in the Prelude, there either is or isn't a God.](purpose-dogs.html) |
@@ -144,8 +136,6 @@ project: | |||
144 | [There is a cave just outside of Flagstaff made from ancient lava flows.](what-we-are-made-of.html) | 136 | [There is a cave just outside of Flagstaff made from ancient lava flows.](what-we-are-made-of.html) |
145 | [Your casserole dish takes the longest:](when-im-sorry-i.html) | 137 | [Your casserole dish takes the longest:](when-im-sorry-i.html) |
146 | [_**HYMN 386: JOKES**_](window.html) | 138 | [_**HYMN 386: JOKES**_](window.html) |
147 | [Somewhere I remember reading advice for beginning writers not to show their work to anyone, at least that in the early stages.](words-irritable-reaching.html) | ||
148 | ["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."](words-meaning.html) | ||
149 | [The radio is screaming the man](worse-looking-over.html) | 139 | [The radio is screaming the man](worse-looking-over.html) |
150 | [He sat down at his writing desk and removed his new pen from its plastic wrapping.](writing.html) | 140 | [He sat down at his writing desk and removed his new pen from its plastic wrapping.](writing.html) |
151 | [While chopping a tree in the woods with his hatchet (a Christmas gift from his mother) a bird he'd never heard before cried out.](x-ray.html) | 141 | [While chopping a tree in the woods with his hatchet (a Christmas gift from his mother) a bird he'd never heard before cried out.](x-ray.html) |