text
string | label
int64 |
---|---|
that, following this slight trace, | 2 |
but now for me than you—the other way. | 2 |
who wrote this modest version i suppose | 2 |
--the drones of the community; they feed | 2 |
the echoing sounds grow fainter and then cease; | 2 |
and make the liveliest monkey melancholy. | 0 |
and, between the river flowing and the fair green trees a-growing, | 1 |
you'll not want business, for we need a lot | 2 |
still, upon a flower, | 2 |
god prosper long our noble king, | 1 |
where the moloch of slavery sitteth on high, | 0 |
leave the garden walls, where blow | 2 |
it's a pretty early start. | 2 |
he takes you from your easy-chair, | 2 |
accept the gift which i have wrought | 2 |
long-drawn bill of wine and beer | 2 |
a crow dot sat a-squawkin', "i's a mockin'-bird." | 2 |
a day's experunce 'd prove to ye, ez easy 'z pull a trigger. | 2 |
euryalus stood list’ning while he spoke, | 2 |
moonstruck with love, and this still thames had heard | 1 |
yea, all the world it might be, and all sounds of the earth were stilled | 2 |
as hebe's foot bore nectar round | 2 |
till, fur 'z i know, there aint an inch thet i could lay my han' on, | 2 |
she listening sate. | 2 |
from alton bay to sandwich dome, | 2 |
even now eclipses the descending moon!-- | 2 |
some thought of me, a last fond prayer | 1 |
ode read at the one hundredth anniversary of the fight at concord bridge | 2 |
for wanderings sad and lone. | 0 |
and my white cottage--plain. | 2 |
"onaway! my heart sings to thee, | 1 |
begins, but endeth nevermore; | 2 |
that throng our pilgrimage. its sympathy, | 2 |
valentines, paper and tinsel, | 2 |
when lips and heart refuse to part again | 2 |
waiting the flutter of his homemade fly; | 2 |
whereto we claim sole title by our toil, | 2 |
our hope, our remembrance, our trust, | 1 |
that _she_ should walk beside him on the rocks | 2 |
far out, in peace, the white man's sail | 2 |
of the bivouac fire apart, | 2 |
such civil war is in my love and hate, | 3 |
none will forget it till shall fall the deadly dart! | 0 |
that antwerp monks may sing a mass for thy poor spearmen's souls. | 2 |
"sir, i have dreamed of you. i pray you, sir, | 2 |
the message is not like what i have learned | 2 |
the beacon-light that forth they held | 2 |
as george commands, let him be wrong or right, | 2 |
luck obeys the downright striker; from the hollow core, | 2 |
forever quivering o'er his task, | 0 |
radiant as moses from the mount, he stood | 1 |
wilt thou our lowly beds with tears of pity lave?' | 0 |
and seek the danger i was forc’d to shun. | 0 |
where your hair from your forehead swerves, | 2 |
down the dark future, through long generations, | 0 |
but she always ran away and left | 0 |
with such vehement force and might | 0 |
yet both in different colours hide their art, | 2 |
his regal seat, surrounded by his friends. | 1 |
thinks i, the down lies dreaming | 2 |
vain cries--throughout the streets thousands pursued | 0 |
and all their echoes, mourn; | 0 |
and what then doth he gather? if we know, | 2 |
through the salt sea foam, | 2 |
does beauty slight you from her gay abodes? | 3 |
yet was this period my time of joy: | 1 |
from the fair brow; she, rising, only said, | 2 |
still must mine, though bleeding, beat; | 0 |
his silent sandals swept the mossy green; | 2 |
nightly down the river going, | 2 |
their first-born brother as a god. | 1 |
but half the secret told, | 2 |
and like the others does not slip | 2 |
bedaubed with iridescent dirt. | 2 |
in town, an' not the leanest runt | 0 |
so thick, she cannot see her lover hiding, | 2 |
and so i should be loved and mourned to-night. | 3 |
and _channing_, with his bland, superior look, | 3 |
the head that lay against your knees | 2 |
is shorter than a snake's delay, | 2 |
sooner, augustine, sooner far, shall i | 2 |
in every health we drink. | 2 |
the end of the play. | 2 |
by death's frequented ways, | 0 |
how your soft opera-music changed, and the drum and fife were heard in their stead; | 3 |
rejection of his humanness | 0 |
to sunset they would sip of the tea, drink of the beer, and eat of the | 2 |
to his ears there came a murmur of far seas beneath the wind | 2 |
the one good man in the world who knows me, -- | 1 |
faint voices lifted shrill with pain | 0 |
an', fust you knowed on, back come charles the second; | 2 |
in the wild glens rough shepherds will deplore | 0 |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.