Datasets:
Tasks:
sentiment-classification
Task Categories:
text-classification
Languages:
en
Multilinguality:
monolingual
Size Categories:
1K<n<10K
Licenses:
cc-by-4.0
Language Creators:
found
Annotations Creators:
expert-generated
Source Datasets:
original
ArXiv:
Dataset Preview
id (int) | verse_text (string) | label (class label) |
---|---|---|
0
| with pale blue berries. in these peaceful shades--
| 1
(positive)
|
1
| it flows so long as falls the rain,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
2
| and that is why, the lonesome day,
| 0
(negative)
|
3
| when i peruse the conquered fame of heroes, and the victories of mighty generals, i do not envy the generals,
| 3
(mixed)
|
4
| of inward strife for truth and liberty.
| 3
(mixed)
|
5
| the red sword sealed their vows!
| 3
(mixed)
|
6
| and very venus of a pipe.
| 2
(no_impact)
|
7
| who the man, who, called a brother.
| 2
(no_impact)
|
8
| and so on. then a worthless gaud or two,
| 0
(negative)
|
9
| to hide the orb of truth--and every throne
| 2
(no_impact)
|
10
| the call's more urgent when he journeys slow.
| 2
(no_impact)
|
11
| with the _quart d'heure_ of rabelais!
| 2
(no_impact)
|
12
| and match, and bend, and thorough-blend, in her colossal form and face.
| 2
(no_impact)
|
13
| have i played in different countries.
| 2
(no_impact)
|
14
| tells us that the day is ended."
| 2
(no_impact)
|
15
| and not alone by gold;
| 2
(no_impact)
|
16
| that has a charmingly bourbon air.
| 1
(positive)
|
17
| sounded o'er earth and sea its blast of war,
| 0
(negative)
|
18
| chief poet on the tiber-side
| 2
(no_impact)
|
19
| as under a sunbeam a cloud ascends,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
20
| brightly expressive as the twins of leda,
| 1
(positive)
|
21
| of night, and all things now retir'd to rest
| 2
(no_impact)
|
22
| in latmian fountains long ago.
| 2
(no_impact)
|
23
| in monumental pomp! no grecian drop
| 1
(positive)
|
24
| and when they reached the house,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
25
| then this old orchard, sloping to the west;
| 2
(no_impact)
|
26
| so prythee get thee gone.
| 2
(no_impact)
|
27
| the other dark-eyed dears
| 2
(no_impact)
|
28
| me honied paths forsake;
| 2
(no_impact)
|
29
| to that mysterious strand.
| 2
(no_impact)
|
30
| wid a song up on de way.
| 2
(no_impact)
|
31
| her visions and those we have seen,--
| 2
(no_impact)
|
32
| he sat beside the governor and said grace;
| 2
(no_impact)
|
33
| fifty times the brahmins' offer deluged all the floor.
| 2
(no_impact)
|
34
| and what are all the prizes won
| 2
(no_impact)
|
35
| made snow of all the blossoms; at my feet
| 2
(no_impact)
|
36
| he never told us what he was,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
37
| want and woe, which torture us,
| 0
(negative)
|
38
| a ruby, and a pearl, or so,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
39
| an echo returned on the cold gray morn,
| 0
(negative)
|
40
| he says he’s hungry,—he would rather have
| 2
(no_impact)
|
41
| while i, ... i built up follies like a wall
| 0
(negative)
|
42
| and then he shut his little eyes,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
43
| ah, what a pang of aching sharp surprise
| 0
(negative)
|
44
| and gladys said,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
45
| peep timidly from out its nest,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
46
| the oriole's fledglings fifty times
| 2
(no_impact)
|
47
| the hostile cohorts melt away;
| 3
(mixed)
|
48
| and the old swallow-haunted barns,--
| 0
(negative)
|
49
| from god's design, with threads of rain!
| 2
(no_impact)
|
50
| how over, though, for even me who knew
| 2
(no_impact)
|
51
| warped into adamantine fretwork, hung
| 2
(no_impact)
|
52
| wilt thou forget the love that joined us here?
| 2
(no_impact)
|
53
| the which she bearing home it burned her nest,
| 0
(negative)
|
54
| have roughened in the gales!
| 2
(no_impact)
|
55
| pilgrim and soldier, saint and sage,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
56
| down in the west upon the ocean floor
| 2
(no_impact)
|
57
| "what did you hear, for instance?" willis said.
| 2
(no_impact)
|
58
| should favour equal to the sons of heaven:
| 2
(no_impact)
|
59
| some, not so large, in rings,--
| 2
(no_impact)
|
60
| the crown of sorrow on their heads, their loss
| 0
(negative)
|
61
| the eternal law,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
62
| and lips where heavenly smiles would hang and blend
| 1
(positive)
|
63
| we're a band!" said the weary big dragoon.
| 2
(no_impact)
|
64
| fu' to ba' de battle's brunt.
| 2
(no_impact)
|
65
| and brief related whom they brought, wher found,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
66
| i lay and watched the lonely gloom;
| 0
(negative)
|
67
| honour to the bugle-horn!
| 1
(positive)
|
68
| a sceptre,--monstrous, winged, intolerable.
| 0
(negative)
|
69
| max laid his hand upon the old man's arm,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
70
| when on the boughs the purple buds expand,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
71
| if the pure and holy angels
| 1
(positive)
|
72
| endymion would have passed across the mead
| 2
(no_impact)
|
73
| upon the thought of perfect noon. and when
| 1
(positive)
|
74
| thy hands all cunning arts that women prize.
| 1
(positive)
|
75
| reasoning to admiration, and with mee
| 1
(positive)
|
76
| while the rude winds blow off each shadowy crown.
| 0
(negative)
|
77
| the former, as the slacken’d reins he drew
| 2
(no_impact)
|
78
| she falls back from the freedom she had hoped."
| 2
(no_impact)
|
79
| then--i would gather it, to thee unaware,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
80
| amidst the gold and the purple, and the pillows of his bed:
| 2
(no_impact)
|
81
| all hastening onward, yet none seemed to know
| 2
(no_impact)
|
82
| the wheat-blade whispers of the sheaf.
| 2
(no_impact)
|
83
| but o, nevermore can we prison him tight.
| 0
(negative)
|
84
| under these leafy vaults and walls,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
85
| (distinctly here the spirit sneezed,)
| 2
(no_impact)
|
86
| it shines superior on a throne of gold:
| 1
(positive)
|
87
| around it cling.
| 2
(no_impact)
|
88
| may meditate a whole youth's loss,
| 0
(negative)
|
89
| i'm safe enlisted fer the war,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
90
| whom phoebus taught unerring prophecy,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
91
| when thee, the eyes of that harsh long ago
| 0
(negative)
|
92
| flutter,
| 2
(no_impact)
|
93
| a way that safely will my passage guide.”
| 2
(no_impact)
|
94
| and breaths were gathering sure
| 2
(no_impact)
|
95
| you have done this, says one judge; done that, says another;
| 2
(no_impact)
|
96
| in their archetypes endure.
| 2
(no_impact)
|
97
| returne, the starres of morn shall see him rise
| 2
(no_impact)
|
98
| brown-gabled, long, and full of seams
| 2
(no_impact)
|
99
| the foes inclosing, and his friend pursued,
| 0
(negative)
|
End of preview (truncated to 100
rows)