Hingston Test Post

here is the first test post 

i used a header 3 there to adjust text hierarchy by selecting the <> button at the right of the tool bar and replacine <p></p> with <h3></h3>

A lot of this styling can also be done using the "Format" drop down menu

In an Artist's Studio

.annotator-hl { background: rgba(255, 255, 10, 0.3) } .annotator-hl-active { background: rgba(255, 255, 10, 0.8) }.annotator-hl-filtered { background-color: transparent }.annotation_category-3 { background-color: #d5adfd; } .annotation_category-6 { background-color: #d5fdad; } .annotation_category-6 .annotation_category-3 { background-color: #d9ddd5; } .annotation_category-6 .annotation_category-4 { background-color: #d9edd5; } .annotation_category-6 .annotation_category-4 .annotation_category-3 { background-color: #dadee2; } .annotation_category-4 { background-color: #d

Mrs. Dalloway's London

This site will allow us to create a map of SOME of the MANY sites that appear in Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway. As explained in the paper assignment packet's description of the 

WHEN THE LOCALE IS REAL BUT THE CHARACTER ISN’T: THE IMPORTANCE OF PLACE assignment 

[A Sonnet is a Moment's Monument]

.annotator-hl { background: rgba(255, 255, 10, 0.3) } .annotator-hl-active { background: rgba(255, 255, 10, 0.8) }.annotator-hl-filtered { background-color: transparent }.annotation_category-3 { background-color: #d5adfd; } .annotation_category-3 .annotation_category-4 { background-color: #d9c9fd; } .annotation_category-3 .annotation_category-4 .annotation_category-6 { background-color: #dadee2; } .annotation_category-4 { background-color: #d5d5fd; } .annotation_category-4 .annotation_category-4 { background-color: #d5d5fd; } .annotation_category-7 { background-color: #f

Two Rossetti Sonnets Commemorating a Momentous Occasion

Two Rossetti Sonnets Commemorating a Momentous Occasion

Lorraine Janzen Kooistra

A Sonnet is a moment's monument,—

Memorial from the soul's eternity

To one dead deathless hour. Look that it be,

Whether for lustral rite or dire portent,

Of its own intricate fulness reverent:

Carve it in ivory or in ebony,

As Day or Night prevail; and let Time see

Its flowering crest impearled and orient.