[ { "id": "example/icdar2019/full_22M_without_Finnish/EN/EN1/107.txt", "label": "ICDAR: para Htio HOrastua.foz Da bateffe of the\u2026", "ocr_input": "para Htio HOrastua.foz Da bateffe of the npgf> ji to l)is djamtnc.tDitf) manp toufyte Ipgbt Sa (o tbe comtc.w Defer noeD ootbtie ztU bis maptic.stonopngc enuprovtnc iOt these hnpgbceo.baupng full grete ttoimorr 2lno of manboDc.be putte bett? fpist aforniDrr ji)cu; eommaunDpng.lphe a gentpll bpng Co leue ba strpte.anD" }, { "id": "example/icdar2019/evaluation_4M_without_Finnish/EN/EN1/2.txt", "label": "ICDAR: 26 The Academy of Sciences. into two\u2026", "ocr_input": "26 The Academy of Sciences. into two unequal parts, as the two Tro\u2022 picks, and the two Polar Circles: Everj circle is divided into sixty parts, which they call first minutes; and each Minute likewise into sixty parts, which we call second Minutes. The Natural Sphere, or the Celestial Globe, befides the foregoing Circles, of fers to our view divers Constellations: The Antients reckoned eight and fort}, comprehending in this number all tk Stars to be seen in Greece, and all tk known Parts of the Wor Id ; 12 of those Constellations are contained in the %$\u2022 diack,i 1 are to be seen toward the Nortb ) and 15 towards the South; but of late there are twelve other Constellations discovered towards the South. The Systematical Astronomy, which others call the Theorical, is that part which by the help of some Engines and Orbs, ojfers to our view those C\u0153le/ltal Motions which are not so obvious to ever] common understanding." }, { "id": "example/icdar2019/full_22M_without_Finnish/EN/EN1/52.txt", "label": "ICDAR: 3 Remarty on Des-CartesV Part. I. to\u2026", "ocr_input": "3 Remarty on Des-CartesV Part. I. to conceive, That whatsoever thinks does not Exist 4t the Iime of its Thinking: Wherefore he con- eludes, That he is, and that he Thinks, is of aU the most certain Truth that can be acquired by Philosophical Order. Who would not judge, That so wild an In vention as this, in order to Improve Know ledge , might not rather proceed from some Person in Bedlam, than from Des-Cartes ? Of whom if Interrogated, how he comes to sup pose, That a Man may point-blank, on the ac count of his Fiction, deny the Being of a God, together with all the visible Particulars already mention\u2019d ? As to the Existence of the Deity, he that considers the necessity of its Concession, as he beholds the wonderful Conduct of the Universe, with so many miraculous Objects as are contain\u2019d therein, will as soon give credit to any Forgery of" }, { "id": "example/icdar2019/full_22M_without_Finnish/EN/EN1/39.txt", "label": "ICDAR: 43 2 AN ENGLISH ANTHOLOGY. [BK. IV.\u2026", "ocr_input": "43 2 AN ENGLISH ANTHOLOGY. [BK. IV. CCCXXXIV. THE BURIAL OF SIR JOHN MOORE.* Not a drum was heard, not a funeral note, As his corpse to the rampart we hurried; Not a soldier discharged his farewell shot O\u2019er the grave where our hero we buried. We buried him darkly at dead of night, The sods with our bayonets turning; By the struggling moonbeam\u2019s misty light, And the lantern dimly burning. No useless coffin enclosed his breast, Not in sheet nor in shroud we wound him; But he lay like a warrior taking his rest, With his martial cloak around him. f Few and short were" }, { "id": "example/icdar2019/full_22M_without_Finnish/EN/EN1/28.txt", "label": "ICDAR: 144 AN ENGLISH ANTHOLOGY. [BK A hollow\u2026", "ocr_input": "144 AN ENGLISH ANTHOLOGY. [BK A hollow wind did seem to answer, No; Go seek elsewhere. I did ; and going did a rainbow note; Surely, thought I, This is the lace of Peace\u2019s coat; I will search out the matter. But while I looked the clouds immediately Did break and scatter. Then went I to a garden and did spy A gallant flower, The crown imperial; sure, said I, Peace at the root must dwell. But when I digged, I saw a worm devour What showed so well. At length I met a reverend good old man ; Whom when for Peace I did demand, he thus began : There was a Prince of old At Salem dwelt, who lived with good increase Of flock and fold. He sweetly lived ; yet sweetness did not save His life from foes. But after death out of his grave There sprang twelve stalks of wheat Which many wondering at, got some of those To plant and set. It prospered strangely, and did soon disperse Through all the earth ; For they that taste it do rehearse That" }, { "id": "example/icdar2019/full_22M_without_Finnish/EN/EN1/122.txt", "label": "ICDAR: t Jeademia Scienthrum. I $ mltiplicare feu\u2026", "ocr_input": "t Jeademia Scienthrum. I $ mltiplicare feu in aliumduc\u20acreut4 2 eft toties fiimere multiplicandum quoties sumi potest in multiplicatore unitas: Quare si 4 ducas in 2,fumma ituraest8. Unum numcrum divi- lere per aliura ut 8 per 2 nihil aliud [A quam invenire quoties 2 conti- leantur in 8. Numerus planus a duo- >us numeris in fe invicem ductis pro- lucitur v i2 igitur est-numerus planus juia producitur a numero 6in aducto. Solidus numerus a tribus numeris ultiplicatis oritur : Ejusmodi est 24, ;x tribus enim hisce numeris multipli ers emergit 2, 3, 4 ; si enim 2 duco n 3 habeo 6, & siduxero6 in 4," }, { "id": "commoner/ca-46032385-1901-01-23-ed-1-0001/0", "label": "The Commoner 1901-01-23: Had tho American consumers 1\u2026", "ocr_input": "Had tho American consumers 1 Jl . - 1 -L .. l-l! i.J1 i.L I oeen privuegea vo ouy ac wic cjuotunuus grauieu wio foreign buyers, the Americana would .have saved about 98010,080.97 on their purchase. \"\"\"More 'than eight millions of dollars! \"This measures tho extortion practiced upon the hard ware merchant, but this must bo increased by the merchant's profit, if his profit is estimated upon a percentage basis, before it measures the extor tion practiced upon the consumer.", "image": "static/commoner-1901-01-23.jpg", "image_caption": "The Commoner (Lincoln, Nebraska), 23 Jan 1901, front page \u2014 via Chronicling America, Library of Congress" }, { "id": "commoner/ca-46032385-1901-01-23-ed-1-0001/1", "label": "The Commoner 1901-01-23: A government resting on force\u2026", "ocr_input": "A government resting on force is, on tho other hand, ever unstable because it excites hatred rather than affection anjd is continually at war with human nature; it is in constant antag onism to that universal sentiment- which is de fined as the love of liberty; ' All history sustains tho self-evident truths which form the fonndafiibif -W1 government deriving its just powers from the consent of the governed. ' All' history condemns a political structure which appeals only to fear and- relief upon bayonets for its support.", "image": "static/commoner-1901-01-23.jpg", "image_caption": "The Commoner (Lincoln, Nebraska), 23 Jan 1901, front page \u2014 via Chronicling America, Library of Congress" }, { "id": "commoner/ca-46032385-1901-01-23-ed-1-0001/2", "label": "The Commoner 1901-01-23: It is riot necessary to\u2026", "ocr_input": "It is riot necessary to apologize for the use of a term which distinguishes the great body of the population from the comparatively few, who, for one reason or another, withdraw themselves from sympathetic connection with their fellows. Among the Greeks \"BLoi polloi\" was used to describe tho many, while among the Romans the word \"plebs\" was employed for the same purpose. These appellations, like \"the common people,\" have been assumed with pride by those to whom they were applied, while they have been used as terms of reproach by those who cdunted themselves n.TnrTify t.Tin.", "image": "static/commoner-1901-01-23.jpg", "image_caption": "The Commoner (Lincoln, Nebraska), 23 Jan 1901, front page \u2014 via Chronicling America, Library of Congress" }, { "id": "commoner/ca-46032385-1901-01-23-ed-1-0001/3", "label": "The Commoner 1901-01-23: This quotation is reproduced because\u2026", "ocr_input": "This quotation is reproduced because it fairly represents the views of those who criticize tho expression. It has, however, an eminently , respectable origin. In the same chapter in which Christ condensed man's duty to his fellows into the commandment: Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself; in the same chapter in which he de nounced those who devour widows' houses and for a pretense make long prayers in this same chapter it is said of Him: The common people heard Him gladly.", "image": "static/commoner-1901-01-23.jpg", "image_caption": "The Commoner (Lincoln, Nebraska), 23 Jan 1901, front page \u2014 via Chronicling America, Library of Congress" }, { "id": "britannica1771/vol1/leaf60", "label": "Britannica 1771 (long \u017f): At the thick end\u2026", "ocr_input": "At the thick end of the bean,there is a fmall hole vifible to the naked eye, immediatelyover the radicle or future root, that it may have a freepaffage into the foil. Plate IV. fig. I. A. When thefecoats are taken off, the body of the feed appears, whichis divided into two fmooth portions or lobes. Thefmoothnefs of the lobes is owing to a thin'filin or cuticlewith which they are covered.At the bafts of the bean is placed the radicle Qr futureroot, Plate IV. fig. 3. A.", "image": "static/britannica-vol1-leaf60.jpg", "image_caption": "Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1st edition (1771), vol. 1 \u2014 National Library of Scotland digitisation" }, { "id": "britannica1771/vol1/leaf61", "label": "Britannica 1771 (long \u017f): II. Of the Root.I\u2026", "ocr_input": "II. Of the Root.I n examining the root of plants, the firft thing thatprefents itfelf is the Ikin, which is of various colours indifferent plants. Every root, after it has arrived at acertain age, has a double fkin. The firfl is coeval withthe other parts, and exifls in the feed: but afterwardsthere is a ring fent off from the bark, and forms a fe-cond fit in; eg. in the root of the dandelion, towardsthe end of May, the original or outer fkin appears ftiri-veled, and is eafily feparated from the new one, whichis frefher, and adheres more firmly to the bark.", "image": "static/britannica-vol1-leaf61.jpg", "image_caption": "Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1st edition (1771), vol. 1 \u2014 National Library of Scotland digitisation" } ]