You can save any web page by selecting "Save As" from the File menu. You will get a dialogue box where you can choose where to put the file (and what to call it). If you haven't done a "Save As" before, try changing the place to "Save in", and whatever you do, remember which folder it is that you have saved it in.
This will enable you to view the page when you are no longer connected to the Internet. If you save this page, you will be able to view all of it, however if the page has any graphics on it, saving it may not automatically save the graphics - you may have to do that separately (we will cover saving graphics in a later exercise.)
Actually, Explorer does save all the graphics for you. What it does is create a folder alongside the saved html page, and it puts all the graphics and associated files in that folder, and changes all the links to point there.
If you want to work with exactly what was in the original html, then you don't do an ordinary save with Explorer. Instead, View Source and save it from the Notepad window which comes up displaying the source.
To view the page that you have saved, In Explorer, from the File menu choose Open, then in the box choose Browse. Or alternatively, find the file you have saved, in the folder you have saved it to, and just open it from there.
So you can save any or all of these pages for your own private use. Do please remember that all web pages are copyright, and you must not republish them (e.g. putting them up on other web sites) without proper permission. It is actually very easy to see whether someone has done this. If you republished these pages, anyone on the Web could easily find out that you have copied Simon Grant's pages without asking. This is not good for your reputation as a responsible Web citizen! (And of course legal action can be taken.)