Labels may also be used to record explicitly the numbers or
letters which mark list items in ordered lists, as in this extract from
Gibbon's Autobiography. In this usage the <label>
element is synonymous with the n attribute on the
<item> element:
I will add two facts, which have seldom occurred in
the composition of six, or at least of five quartos.
<list rend="runon" type="ordered">
<label>(1)</label><item>My first rough manuscript, without any
intermediate copy, has been sent to the press.</item>
<label>(2) </label><item>Not a sheet has been seen by any human
eyes, excepting those of the author and the printer:
the faults and the merits are exclusively my own.</item>
</list>
Labels may also be used for other structured list items, as
in this extract from the journal of Edward Gibbon:
<list type="gloss">
<label>March 1757.</label>
<item>I wrote some critical observations upon Plautus.</item>
<label>March 8th.</label>
<item>I wrote a long dissertation upon some lines of Virgil.</item>
<label>June.</label>
<item>I saw Mademoiselle Curchod —
<q lang="la">Omnia vincit amor, et nos cedamus amori.</q></item>
<label>August.</label>
<item>I went to Crassy, and staid two days.</item>
</list>
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