Datasets:
id
int32 0
891
| verse_text
stringlengths 7
109
| label
class label 4
classes |
---|---|---|
0 | with pale blue berries. in these peaceful shades-- | 1positive
|
1 | it flows so long as falls the rain, | 2no_impact
|
2 | and that is why, the lonesome day, | 0negative
|
3 | when i peruse the conquered fame of heroes, and the victories of mighty generals, i do not envy the generals, | 3mixed
|
4 | of inward strife for truth and liberty. | 3mixed
|
5 | the red sword sealed their vows! | 3mixed
|
6 | and very venus of a pipe. | 2no_impact
|
7 | who the man, who, called a brother. | 2no_impact
|
8 | and so on. then a worthless gaud or two, | 0negative
|
9 | to hide the orb of truth--and every throne | 2no_impact
|
10 | the call's more urgent when he journeys slow. | 2no_impact
|
11 | with the _quart d'heure_ of rabelais! | 2no_impact
|
12 | and match, and bend, and thorough-blend, in her colossal form and face. | 2no_impact
|
13 | have i played in different countries. | 2no_impact
|
14 | tells us that the day is ended." | 2no_impact
|
15 | and not alone by gold; | 2no_impact
|
16 | that has a charmingly bourbon air. | 1positive
|
17 | sounded o'er earth and sea its blast of war, | 0negative
|
18 | chief poet on the tiber-side | 2no_impact
|
19 | as under a sunbeam a cloud ascends, | 2no_impact
|
20 | brightly expressive as the twins of leda, | 1positive
|
21 | of night, and all things now retir'd to rest | 2no_impact
|
22 | in latmian fountains long ago. | 2no_impact
|
23 | in monumental pomp! no grecian drop | 1positive
|
24 | and when they reached the house, | 2no_impact
|
25 | then this old orchard, sloping to the west; | 2no_impact
|
26 | so prythee get thee gone. | 2no_impact
|
27 | the other dark-eyed dears | 2no_impact
|
28 | me honied paths forsake; | 2no_impact
|
29 | to that mysterious strand. | 2no_impact
|
30 | wid a song up on de way. | 2no_impact
|
31 | her visions and those we have seen,-- | 2no_impact
|
32 | he sat beside the governor and said grace; | 2no_impact
|
33 | fifty times the brahmins' offer deluged all the floor. | 2no_impact
|
34 | and what are all the prizes won | 2no_impact
|
35 | made snow of all the blossoms; at my feet | 2no_impact
|
36 | he never told us what he was, | 2no_impact
|
37 | want and woe, which torture us, | 0negative
|
38 | a ruby, and a pearl, or so, | 2no_impact
|
39 | an echo returned on the cold gray morn, | 0negative
|
40 | he says he’s hungry,—he would rather have | 2no_impact
|
41 | while i, ... i built up follies like a wall | 0negative
|
42 | and then he shut his little eyes, | 2no_impact
|
43 | ah, what a pang of aching sharp surprise | 0negative
|
44 | and gladys said, | 2no_impact
|
45 | peep timidly from out its nest, | 2no_impact
|
46 | the oriole's fledglings fifty times | 2no_impact
|
47 | the hostile cohorts melt away; | 3mixed
|
48 | and the old swallow-haunted barns,-- | 0negative
|
49 | from god's design, with threads of rain! | 2no_impact
|
50 | how over, though, for even me who knew | 2no_impact
|
51 | warped into adamantine fretwork, hung | 2no_impact
|
52 | wilt thou forget the love that joined us here? | 2no_impact
|
53 | the which she bearing home it burned her nest, | 0negative
|
54 | have roughened in the gales! | 2no_impact
|
55 | pilgrim and soldier, saint and sage, | 2no_impact
|
56 | down in the west upon the ocean floor | 2no_impact
|
57 | "what did you hear, for instance?" willis said. | 2no_impact
|
58 | should favour equal to the sons of heaven: | 2no_impact
|
59 | some, not so large, in rings,-- | 2no_impact
|
60 | the crown of sorrow on their heads, their loss | 0negative
|
61 | the eternal law, | 2no_impact
|
62 | and lips where heavenly smiles would hang and blend | 1positive
|
63 | we're a band!" said the weary big dragoon. | 2no_impact
|
64 | fu' to ba' de battle's brunt. | 2no_impact
|
65 | and brief related whom they brought, wher found, | 2no_impact
|
66 | i lay and watched the lonely gloom; | 0negative
|
67 | honour to the bugle-horn! | 1positive
|
68 | a sceptre,--monstrous, winged, intolerable. | 0negative
|
69 | max laid his hand upon the old man's arm, | 2no_impact
|
70 | when on the boughs the purple buds expand, | 2no_impact
|
71 | if the pure and holy angels | 1positive
|
72 | endymion would have passed across the mead | 2no_impact
|
73 | upon the thought of perfect noon. and when | 1positive
|
74 | thy hands all cunning arts that women prize. | 1positive
|
75 | reasoning to admiration, and with mee | 1positive
|
76 | while the rude winds blow off each shadowy crown. | 0negative
|
77 | the former, as the slacken’d reins he drew | 2no_impact
|
78 | she falls back from the freedom she had hoped." | 2no_impact
|
79 | then--i would gather it, to thee unaware, | 2no_impact
|
80 | amidst the gold and the purple, and the pillows of his bed: | 2no_impact
|
81 | all hastening onward, yet none seemed to know | 2no_impact
|
82 | the wheat-blade whispers of the sheaf. | 2no_impact
|
83 | but o, nevermore can we prison him tight. | 0negative
|
84 | under these leafy vaults and walls, | 2no_impact
|
85 | (distinctly here the spirit sneezed,) | 2no_impact
|
86 | it shines superior on a throne of gold: | 1positive
|
87 | around it cling. | 2no_impact
|
88 | may meditate a whole youth's loss, | 0negative
|
89 | i'm safe enlisted fer the war, | 2no_impact
|
90 | whom phoebus taught unerring prophecy, | 2no_impact
|
91 | when thee, the eyes of that harsh long ago | 0negative
|
92 | flutter, | 2no_impact
|
93 | a way that safely will my passage guide.” | 2no_impact
|
94 | and breaths were gathering sure | 2no_impact
|
95 | you have done this, says one judge; done that, says another; | 2no_impact
|
96 | in their archetypes endure. | 2no_impact
|
97 | returne, the starres of morn shall see him rise | 2no_impact
|
98 | brown-gabled, long, and full of seams | 2no_impact
|
99 | the foes inclosing, and his friend pursued, | 0negative
|
Dataset Card for Gutenberg Poem Dataset
Dataset Summary
Poem Sentiment is a sentiment dataset of poem verses from Project Gutenberg. This dataset can be used for tasks such as sentiment classification or style transfer for poems.
Supported Tasks and Leaderboards
[More Information Needed]
Languages
The text in the dataset is in English (en
).
Dataset Structure
Data Instances
Example of one instance in the dataset.
{'id': 0, 'label': 2, 'verse_text': 'with pale blue berries. in these peaceful shades--'}
Data Fields
id
: index of the exampleverse_text
: The text of the poem verselabel
: The sentiment label. Here- 0 = negative
- 1 = positive
- 2 = no impact
- 3 = mixed (both negative and positive)
Note: The original dataset uses different label indices (negative = -1, no impact = 0, positive = 1)
Data Splits
The dataset is split into a train
, validation
, and test
split with the following sizes:
train | validation | test | |
---|---|---|---|
Number of examples | 892 | 105 | 104 |
[More Information Needed]
Dataset Creation
Curation Rationale
[More Information Needed]
Source Data
[More Information Needed]
Initial Data Collection and Normalization
[More Information Needed]
Who are the source language producers?
[More Information Needed]
Annotations
[More Information Needed]
Annotation process
[More Information Needed]
Who are the annotators?
[More Information Needed]
Personal and Sensitive Information
[More Information Needed]
Considerations for Using the Data
Social Impact of Dataset
[More Information Needed]
Discussion of Biases
[More Information Needed]
Other Known Limitations
[More Information Needed]
Additional Information
Dataset Curators
[More Information Needed]
Licensing Information
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Citation Information
@misc{sheng2020investigating,
title={Investigating Societal Biases in a Poetry Composition System},
author={Emily Sheng and David Uthus},
year={2020},
eprint={2011.02686},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.CL}
}
Contributions
Thanks to @patil-suraj for adding this dataset.
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