Hugo + Stork

This site is built with Hugo and includes the Stork library for full-text search. The site contains 500 articles with an average of 520 words per article.

One of the configuration options for Stork is save_nearest_html_id.

If true, correlates each word in an HTML document with the nearest ID in the document. The Stork web interface will link directly to that ID, helping your users jump directly to the content they search for.

Test by searching this site for “Hugo” (case-insensitive). It will bring you to Article 042, targeting the heading nearest to the word.


Article 016

The lodge-pole does good work in developing places that are inhospitable to other and longer-lived trees, but it gives way after preparing for the coming and the triumph of other species. By the time lodge-poles are sixty years of age their self-thinning has made openings in their crowded ranks. In these openings the shade-enduring seedlings of other species make a start. Years go by, and these seedlings become great trees that overtop the circle of lodge-poles around them. More...

Article 017

I fancy that the difficulty which an increasing number of persons find in accepting the mechanistic view of life, or evolution,–the view which Herbert Spencer built into such a ponderous system of philosophy, and which such men as Huxley, Tyndall, Gifford, Haeckel, Verworn, and others, have upheld and illustrated,–is temperamental rather than logical. The view is distasteful to a certain type of mind–the flexible, imaginative, artistic, and literary type–the type that loves to see itself reflected in nature or that reads its own thoughts and emotions into nature. More...

Article 018

Hence it seems to me, as it has to many other naturalists, that the view of each species having been produced in one area alone, and having subsequently migrated from that area as far as its powers of migration and subsistence under past and present conditions permitted, is the most probable. Undoubtedly many cases occur, in which we cannot explain how the same species could have passed from one point to the other. More...

Article 019

The grizzly is an omnivorous feeder. He will eat anything that is edible,–fresh meat or carrion, bark, grass, grasshoppers, ants, fruit, grubs, and leaves. He is fond of honey and with it will consume rotten wood, trash, and bees,–stings and all. He is a destroyer of many pests that afflict man, and in the realm of economic biology should be rated high for work in this connection. I doubt whether any dozen cats, hawks, or owls annually catch as many mice as he. More...

Article 020

Once, while watching a forest fire, I climbed a mountain to a point above the tree-line in order to reach a safe and commanding spot from which to view the flames on a near-by slope. At the summit I came upon a grizzly within a few yards of me. He was squatting on his haunches like a dog, and was intently watching the fire-fount below. A deep roar at one place, high-leaping flames at another, a vast smoke-cloud at another,–each in turn caught his attention. More...