britm10a.txt or britm10a.zip***
Corrected EDITIONS of our etexts get a new NUMBER, britm11a.txt.
VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, britm10b.txt.
This etext was created by Geoffrey Kidd and Krista Rourke
of Berkeley, California. The equipment: a 486/33 and
a *LOT* of eyeball grease. This etext actually contains two
identical copies of the Breitman Ballads. The first is pure
ASCII text, with no markings for italics and all special
characters from the original text changed to their pure ASCII
equivalents. For example, the u-umlaut character appears as
a lower case u in this first part. In the second part of
this text, the special characters and italics are marked in
HTML fashion. The translations are as follows:
= Begin italics = End italics
á = a-acute â = a-circumflex
æ = ae-ligature à = a-grave
ä = a-umlaut ç = c-cedilla
é = e-acute ê = e-circumflex
è = e-grave ë = e-umlaut
í = i-acute ñ = n-tilde
ó = o-acute ô = o-circumflex
Ö = O-umlaut ö = o-umlaut
û = u-circumflex Ü = U-umlaut
ü = u-umlaut œ = oe-ligature
ō = o-macron &ebreve; = e-breve
With the exception of the œ ō and &ebreve; all
of the above are documented in almost any book on the
Internet HTML standard.
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