This is my HTML block for my introduction. I have added some bold formating f but it is not necessary, and is only here to help demonstrate the different blocks I added to my page.
Caption 1 in Omeka Item Showcase - argument 1 goes here:This is the caption for the first item I attached in my item showcase block that I added to my page. Each item gets added using the Add attachment button. Click on the wrench to access the caption area. I titled my image "Book 1 Title Page" because it is the title page from Book 1 of Middlemarch. Here I would talk about why this image is relevant to my argument and discuss pertinent details. For example, I might say that the image on the page shows an English estate as seen from a grove of trees, creating a sense of wealth for readers before they even open the work and begin reading, etc.
Caption 2 in Omeka Item Showcase - argument 2 goes here: This is the caption for the second image, titled Toothpaste. You can specify the size of the image items under Options in the item showcase area by selecting different Thumbnail type
Caption 3 in Omeka Item Showcase - argument 3 goes here:This is an add for , it pairs well with toothpaste. The toothpaste add is from the advertisments at the front of the book, and the chocolate add is from the advertisments in the back of the book
This is my caption for the fourth item, unlike the rest of the items on this page it is from "Two Temptations," Book VII, in the original serial publication of Middlemarch: a Study in Provincial Life. This image is from one of the original editions in Archives and Special Collections, not from the digitized copy.
Cocnlcusion
This is my concluding paragraph HTML block. How the parts of this book are presented, be it in a single continous bound book, or in multiple serialized and individual volumes change different pieces of metadata in this mock-up.
Works Cited
This is my "Works Cited" HTML block where I would list the works I cited in my exhibit. I would include my primary source and the two other scholarly articles. Don't use spaces to try and make indents here, it might look ok on your monitor but if you change the screen size it will just create a gap.
Eliot, George. Two Temptations. Vol. 7. Edinburgh and London, 1871. PR4662 .A1 1871A. Archives and Special Collections, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada