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Realism, at whose prow he is usually placed, is in many ways the least of it.
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Warships would inevitably be male; so, too, would powerboats whose prows rise phallically out of the water.
But at whose expense?
Yes, at whose funeral?
But at whose home?
The Flatiron District takes its name, of course, from the iron-shaped 1903 skyscraper, originally called the Fuller Building, whose proud prow surges northward at the intersection of Broadway and Fifth Avenue at 23rd Street.
Foremost amongst these are the Organ Pipe Peaks and their central spire, The Spectre, whose faceted prow rises 2,000 feet straight out of the ice, and remains the unclaimed prize of extreme mountaineers.
So, it's time to check out the unmissable non-museum, the six-story high Titanic Belfast, the world's largest Titanic visitor attraction, whose four prows radiate from a glass core like the points of a white star.
The name derived from "galley," which had come to be synonymous with "war vessel" and whose characteristic beaked prow the new ship retained.
One of the most evocative skyscrapers is Daniel Burnham's Flatiron Building, whose narrow shiplike prow fills a triangular sliver of ground where Broadway intersects Fifth Avenue.
Be beside me somewhere: on the split stools of this bar, by the edge of this cliff, in the seats of this borrowed car, at the prow of this ship, on the all-forgiving cushions of this threadbare sofa in this one-story copper-crying fixer-upper whose windows we once squinted through for hours before coming to our senses: "What would we even do with such a house?" I was not good at drawing faces.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com