Datasets:
text stringlengths 2.32k 6.41k | label class label 50
classes |
|---|---|
about the country with his draughts and â not honest that a body might make out o wholesome but stuff that a man of his breath in the very of it by ix a discovery and the makers too â marry that now be another trade â the searching of stars and the of dry or wet weather weather what know they of the weather the town br... | 48Thomas Nelson Page |
head as if to the delusion i until be sank down in his former seat quite breathless and i exhausted there said picking up his hat that mo good now i m better and i u tell you all about it i it took little time to la who i had been almost frightened out of her senses hj this remark i able demonstration but that done fai... | 7James Baldwin |
great men of or with his theme and laying aside all of a party however he was most earnest and most eloquent not when he stood up the champion of a neglected truth not when he dwelt on great men now venerable to us all but when he gathered his strength to attack a foe his sarcasm was terrific colossal vanity to be a at... | 36Jacob Abbott |
thus i have been led to speak of them by way one night i had into the and was walking slowly on in my usual way musing upon a great many things when i was arrested by an the purport of which did not reach me but which seemed to be addressed to myself and was preferred in a soft sweet voice that struck me very pleasantl... | 7James Baldwin |
are usually very and in several of this family the females have wings but no instance is known of the being incapable of flight for in this case the species could hardly have been in the silk both sexes have imperfect wings and are incapable of flight but still there is a trace of the characteristic difference in the t... | 6Jack London |
this abrupt and tremendous extension of space his eyes were themselves to the brightness themselves to meet the increased distance of objects at first the wall had leaped beyond his vision he now saw it again but it had taken upon itself a remarkable also its appearance had changed it was now a wall composed of the tre... | 20Washington Irving |
the blows of the strongly prompted however by this little hope of his sufferings he made a second attempt and again fell after several unsuccessful efforts he finally regained possession of his feet and staggering slowly through the forest he at length reached the spot where the lay the indian who had marked him for hi... | 46Sarah Stickney Ellis |
they are won at all â your sister that is married and dead she held in hand for years and what is the why he wears the willow for her to this day and her husband married again before her grave was green nay i have done all an honest man can to you so take me now or let me go at this began to secretly and ask herself wh... | 8Jane Austen |
the long roll of years wherein we have stood opposed but if one single fact could counsel me scene iii the to entertain a doubt of those great gifts and faith in his capacity that fact would be the vast shown in like his on such an act as he has offered us â so false in principle so poor in fruit sir the achievements a... | 44Oliver Optic |
in twenty c a the be king â h the my go t tr t do also go and bring us good luck will go even shouted the priest â i will depart mt winged and be at in a day ho h he to his servant drive out the let me first mount my own he leaped on the back of his beast as it knelt and turning round to me cried â come thou also a lit... | 38James Payn |
dance but seeing that was not interested i took the first opportunity to talk of something else she was more interested in the life of the quarter in le in my stories of and students and i noticed that she considered every student as he passed his slim body tightly in a long frock coat with hair flowing over his should... | 14Robert Louis Stevenson |
seem to but a part do truly mar the happiness of all hence no reform can be perfect which is not universal and no happiness until all evil is the good should labor and strive for nothing less than the and elevation of the race all needful labor may be rendered attractive by this he means not merely that all labor may b... | 18Thomas Hardy |
the over to me in the you ve got a good stool there he ll make you his report to morrow now was a figure of a guard who hailed from county he was a simple minded good natured and not above earning an honest dollar by in tobacco for the on that night returning from a trip to san he brought in with him fifteen pounds of ... | 20Washington Irving |
and ten thousand men were at the gates but four hundred held it in the morning and two hundred held it in the evening and no french foot was ever set within its threshold but how they fought those i their lives were no more to them than the mud under their feet there was one â i can see him now â a ruddy man on a he up... | 3Edith Wharton |
we must this clear somehow and he sighed to for he believed in his did the colonel we into the room under the full lights and there we saw how beautiful the woman was she stood up in the middle of us all sometimes choking with his wedded wife crying then hard and proud and then holding out her arms to the senior it was... | 38James Payn |
d himself to them priests in the temple of virtue and holy duty opposing as they can the earthly force to the moral government belong generally men of the most the genuine that is such as are ready in every moment to sacrifice all for and so die for the liberty of their nation as christ did for humanity these may be di... | 36Jacob Abbott |
to earth from the clouds you not the first people that have worshipped such a stone now we know better also this plain before you is full iron and iron draws the lightning that is why it ne strikes your town below the iron it more than earth and huts of straw again while the pole was in little danger for the lightning ... | 17Theodore Dreiser |
have given it back but she would still have me keep it you shall be my tor jack said she laughing is this our carriage how funny it looks and where am i to sit on the said i and how am i to get there put your foot on the said i help you i sprang up and took her two little hands in my own as she came over the side her b... | 3Edith Wharton |
galleries the cathedral the imperial opera house and what not at the other end it is only about a mile long into the famous formerly a part of the imperial on the whole the avenue was a disappointment for suggestions of character individuality innate charm or the reverse â as these things strike one â growth prosperity... | 42Lucas Malet |
sudden said ow did you come to know is funny little ways that soon many inventions said with emphasis i had conquered the beggar my son ho said between doubt and derision his s child an wan or two other came up not bein afraid anything an some got an i washed the top his poor sore head i had done him to a turn an some ... | 38James Payn |
resentment to the maker perhaps the latter the public in the weekly papers the arbitrary measures of the brazen sovereigns showed their dangerous influence over the trades of the town and the easy manner in which our own towns j might be good arises out of evil this fiery match quickly kindled another furnace in public... | 46Sarah Stickney Ellis |
at least whom hereditary introduced to his notice felt in that presence as a child might have felt in pan for the poet himself these lingering years were full of grave of humble self judgment of hopeful looking to the end worldly minded i am not he wrote to an intimate friend near his life s close â on the contrary my ... | 3Edith Wharton |
together with population in ru states in and together with population in western states in and together with population index continued r a r r in pacific states in i and together with population rapid increase of in l in new england middle western southern and pacific states in and together with number of inhabitants ... | 46Sarah Stickney Ellis |
â o total states and o i i o a i t i i i i i i o i ss i s jl i o ds a â s c o a i o s s sm ca is ill â cm s he â a h â i i â s j i ll t i i i f h s ib us j â â aa mi mo u hj b â l ot i l a h m iâ i e a s â ss j mi im w â a m na m w s i w i l â â n in iâ an â o do â d z mi i p ll â â j a u m m a k â vâ s ib i s s â m b ... | 46Sarah Stickney Ellis |
nothing about it he perhaps don t need it but i may as well be honest first as last and it s no use my pretending i ve held my tongue for the sake of the family for i ve done nothing of the kind i don t say miss now that i ve seen you that i shouldn t do it just for you alone â but that s a different thing altogether o... | 29Fergus Hume |
perhaps i thought so from that time until now trot you have ever been a credit to me and a pride and pleasure i have no other claim upon my means at least â here to my surprise she hesitated and was confused â no i have no other claim upon my means â and you are my adopted child only be a loving child to me in my age a... | 7James Baldwin |
to an purpose and thus did the first warlike fate of the tion come to a end â a fate which i am informed has befallen but too many of its it was a long time before could be persuaded by the united efforts of all his that his war measure had failed in producing any effect â on the contrary he flew in a passion whenever ... | 47Thomas Anstey Guthrie |
the the giant pines and and hold their arms open to the sunlight rising above one another on the mountain benches in glorious array giving forth the utmost expression of grandeur and beauty with inexhaustible variety and harmony the inviting of the woods is one of their most characteristics the trees of all the species... | 27Charles Reade |
rest of his in a manner more becoming his dignity than he had been and that he should be set free on the payment of a heavy this the english people willingly raised when queen took it over to germany it was at first and refused but she appealed to the honor of all the princes of the german empire in behalf the m n and ... | 7James Baldwin |
of accents â it s strange we should meet like this after so many years i vi recognition at these words and at sight of the speaker started back as if he had been shot he exclaimed â not possible d no you must be his son the stranger laughed my good always the miracles arc many but there is one which is beyond all perfo... | 32George William Curtis |
not unlike their old at this juncture died the sudden blow for a few days seemed to rough and ready both hastened to the with and offers of aid and assistance but the old man received them sternly a change had come over the weak and yielding those who expected to find him helpless shrank from the cold hard eyes and voi... | 4George Eliot |
placed his departed great ones in groves while during this trance he hears the of nature he seems to become her and she him it is truly the mother in the child and the look out with eyes of tender twilight approbation from their beloved and loving trees such an hour lives for us again in this picture mr has been very f... | 18Thomas Hardy |
at such a time as this dear father would you not like to see aunt no was the unexpected reply followed by a painful pause and then the words not yet chapter to the young and thoughtless sickness in the house is a strange almost a weird experience it seems contrary to nature and an of her laws that rooms should be hidde... | 24Arlo Bates |
my fast bound the half frozen that the poor trembled to walk on oft to his frozen i the bear while from my path the hare fled like a shadow oft through the forest dark followed the s bark until the soaring lark sang from the meadow but when i older grew joining a s crew o er the dark sea i flew with the wild was the li... | 22Albert Ross |
shot him then but i spared him though i saw his wicked little eyes fixed on ray face as though to remember every feature we got away with the gold became wealthy men and made our way over to england without being suspected there i parted from my the old and determined to settle down to a respectable life i bought this ... | 3Edith Wharton |
and whatever other ill effects there might be of the and church discipline did like brave men and true christians take their stand for liberty of conscience and freedom of inquiry that therefore their preaching was necessarily occupied with tearing down rather than with building up any new system that now kind of preac... | 36Jacob Abbott |
his wife was the half breed daughter of a fur married to him in the greek mission of a thousand miles or so down the thus being of much higher caste than the common or native wife it was a mere which none but the adventurer may understand i reckon you kin take it that way was his the next instant had stretched him on t... | 20Washington Irving |
the then new and frontier country lying upon the river many families of note in the low country had possessed themselves of estates at the foot of the blue ridge in this neighborhood and were already making there mr attracted by the romantic character of the scenery the freshness of the soil and the of the climate foll... | 28Edward Eggleston |
many of the principal removed property to an immense amount in the de vol i i voyage which contained a greater population than the town has been destroyed and the value of what remains reduced to a mere trifle it is in fact nothing but a garrison with a few starved inhabitants who are vexed and bar by the military i am... | 47Thomas Anstey Guthrie |
End of preview. Expand in Data Studio
README.md exists but content is empty.
- Downloads last month
- 6