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7,118 | Charles Herbert Sylvester | Close Reading—(Concluded) | Journeys Through Bookland, Vol. 10. | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/24857/24857-h/24857-h.htm#CHAPTER_X | 1,922 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | Words alone are not a sufficient possession. They must be known in all their relations. A comprehension of the structure of the sentence is always necessary. A sentence is a unit of thought, an idea reduced to its lowest terms. It may not be necessary that each sentence be analyzed strictly by grammatical rules, but it is essential that the reader should recognize by study if necessary the subject and the predicate and the character and rank of all the modifiers of each. Even the practiced reader by unconsciously laying undue prominence upon some minor phrase frequently modifies the meaning an author intends to convey. This is particularly true in verse, where the poet, hemmed in by the rules that govern his meter and his rhyme, varies the natural order of the elements of a sentence to bring the accents where they belong or to throw the rhyming word to the end of a verse. The grouping of related sentences into paragraphs is an aid to the reader and should be noticed by him till the habit of expecting a slight change in thought with the indentation of a line becomes fixed and automatic. | 194 | 8 | 1 | -2.133115 | 0.522257 | 53.14 | 11.87 | 12.54 | 13 | 8.75 | 0.35304 | 0.34674 | 9.815273 | 4,386 |
7,361 | Louise Imogen Guiney | The Precept of Peace | "Modern Essays SELECTED BY
CHRISTOPHER MORLEY" | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/38280/38280-h/38280-h.htm | 1,920 | Lit | Lit | 1,100 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | The true use of the much-praised Lucius Cary, Viscount Falkland, has hardly been apprehended: he is simply the patron saint of indifferents. From first to last, almost alone in that discordant time, he seems to have heard far-off resolving harmonies, and to have been rapt away with foreknowledge. Battle, to which all knights were bred, was penitential to him. It was but a childish means: and to what end? He meanwhile—and no man carried his will in better abeyance to the scheme of the universe—wanted no diligence in camp or council. Cares sat handsomely on him who cared not at all, who won small comfort from the cause which his conscience finally espoused. He labored to be a doer, to stand well with observers; and none save his intimate friends read his agitation and profound weariness. "I am so much taken notice of," he writes, "for an impatient desire for peace, that it is necessary I should likewise make it appear how it is not out of fear for the utmost hazard of war." | 174 | 8 | 1 | -3.163356 | 0.612588 | 63.37 | 9.89 | 10.59 | 12 | 8.32 | 0.28597 | 0.28248 | 11.054078 | 4,575 |
4,425 | R. E. Raspe | The Savage Boar | THE ELSON READERS
BOOK FIVE
| http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/9106/pg9106-images.html | 1,911 | Lit | Lit | 1,100 | end | null | PG | 2 | 1.5 | Once, when I was returning from a hunt, with an empty gun (having used all my ammunition), a raging wild boar rushed at me. Well, you know how unpleasant such an encounter may be, so I am sure none of you will think me a coward for hastily climbing the nearest tree; it was a young birch which could hardly bear my weight. The boar made a dash for the tree, but was a moment too late, for I had just drawn my legs out of his reach. But so violent was his rush that his tusks went through the trunk of the tree and projected an inch through the other side. I slid down the tree, picked up a stone the size of my fist, and riveted down the projecting points of the tusks. You can imagine what a narrow escape I had when I tell you that the beast weighed five tons—a good deal for a wild boar." | 160 | 6 | 1 | 0.260861 | 0.513074 | 82.12 | 7.48 | 8.1 | 9 | 6.55 | 0.14618 | 0.17053 | 19.015583 | 2,319 |
6,205 | Jennie Hall | Buried Cities: Pompeii, Olympia, Mycenae | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/9628/9628-h/9628-h.htm | 1,918 | Info | Lit | 500 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | Vesuvius is a dangerous thing, but very beautiful. It stands tall and pointed and graceful against a lovely sky. Its little cloud waves from it like a plume. At night the mountain is swallowed by the dark. But the red rivers down its slopes glare in the sky. It is beautiful and terrible like a tiger. Thousands of people have loved it. They have climbed it and looked down its crater. It is like looking into the heart of the earth. One of these travelers wrote of his visit in 1793. He said:
"For many days Vesuvius has been in action. I have watched it from Naples. It is wonderfully beautiful and always changing. On one day huge clouds poured out of the top. They hung in the sky far above, white as snow. Suddenly a cloud of smoke rushed out of another mouth. It was as black as ink. The black column rose tall and curling beside the snowy clouds. That was a picture in black and white. But at another time I saw one in bright colors. | 178 | 20 | 2 | -0.509111 | 0.439064 | 88.1 | 3.19 | 2.55 | 8 | 5.49 | 0.03165 | 0.04059 | 21.329239 | 3,690 |
2,721 | simple wiki | Viscosity | null | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viscosity | 2,019 | Info | Science | 900 | whole | CC BY-SA 3.0 and GFDL | G | 1 | 1 | Viscosity is a physical property of fluids. It shows resistance to flow. In a simple example, water has a low viscosity, as it is 'thin'. Syrup or tar, on the other hand has a high viscosity, as it is 'thick'. A way to test for viscosity is the speed at which the substance runs down a slope. Syrup would reach the bottom very slowly, whereas water would be a lot quicker.
There are two types of viscosity: dynamic viscosity, measured in pascal seconds, and kinematic viscosity, measured in meters per second squared.
Viscosity is used as a way to predict when volcanoes erupt. When the lava comes out very thickly (viscous), there is more chance that it will erupt violently. This is because the lava has a hard time getting out and may burst out when it can. If the lava is thin (low viscosity), then it just flows out like water.
The word viscous comes from the Latin viscum, meaning sticky. | 159 | 12 | 4 | -0.77709 | 0.46788 | 67.28 | 7.23 | 5.79 | 9 | 8.4 | 0.22413 | 0.2228 | 17.564624 | 1,136 |
5,712 | Emily Carter | MABEL'S COW | The Nursery, May 1873, Vol. XIII.
A Monthly Magazine for Youngest People | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/24478/24478-h/24478-h.htm#Page_129 | 1,873 | Lit | Lit | 700 | end | null | G | 1 | 1 | It was found that the cow had been badly treated by the man who had owned her, and who had been in the habit of milking her. Being a high-spirited beast, she then gave him so much trouble, that he was soon glad to be rid of her.
She would now let no one touch her but Mabel: so Mr. Brittan finally said that the cow should be Mabel's cow, and that all the butter which the cow yielded should be hers. But Mabel is a generous girl; and so she shares the money she earns. Her mother, her sister Emily, and her brothers Oliver and Frank, all get a part of it.
Mabel has given the cow a name; and the cow will come to her when she calls her by name. The name is a very pretty one for a cow, I think. It is Dido. | 146 | 8 | 3 | 0.898552 | 0.512523 | 86.3 | 5.85 | 4.98 | 7 | 6.04 | -0.01557 | 0.01023 | 22.570518 | 3,363 |
4,334 | Premier Venizelos set forth the Government's neutral policy in his speech to Parliament on Sept. 15, (28,) 1914 | PRIME MINISTRY’S ATTITUDE | The European War, Vol. 1 - No. 6 | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/20521/20521-h/20521-h.htm#Greeces_Watchful_Waiting | 1,914 | Info | Lit | 1,700 | mid | null | PG | 2 | 1.5 | The Government has declared that during this war Greece is to remain neutral, but at the same time it did not conceal the fact that it has obligations toward one of the belligerents, Serbia, and that said obligation it was resolved to fulfill faithfully should the casus foederis arise.
Greece, however, wishes nothing more than that such an occasion should not arise, as it desires that the conflagration which is gradually enveloping Europe should not spread over the Balkans, whose peoples, after two wars, so much need rest.
So far as it depends upon the initiative of Greece, every one may be assured that the European conflagration will not spread in the Balkan Peninsula. And if its other peoples are inspired by the same thoughts, then we can feel sure that peace will be preserved in the Levant up to the end of the war. | 143 | 4 | 3 | -1.554428 | 0.458488 | 47.52 | 15.64 | 18.55 | 14 | 8.92 | 0.27069 | 0.2912 | 14.830597 | 2,246 |
4,589 | ANTON TCHEKHOV
Translated by CONSTANCE GARNETT | THE LADY WITH THE DOG | THE LADY WITH THE DOG
AND OTHER STORIES | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/13415/13415-h/13415-h.htm | 1,899 | Lit | Lit | 900 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | A week had passed since they had made acquaintance. It was a holiday. It was sultry indoors, while in the street the wind whirled the dust round and round, and blew people's hats off. It was a thirsty day, and Gurov often went into the pavilion, and pressed Anna Sergeyevna to have syrup and water or an ice. One did not know what to do with oneself.
In the evening when the wind had dropped a little, they went out on the groyne to see the steamer come in. There were a great many people walking about the harbour; they had gathered to welcome some one, bringing bouquets. And two peculiarities of a well-dressed Yalta crowd were very conspicuous: the elderly ladies were dressed like young ones, and there were great numbers of generals.
Owing to the roughness of the sea, the steamer arrived late, after the sun had set, and it was a long time turning about before it reached the groyne. Anna Sergeyevna looked through her lorgnette at the steamer and the passengers as though looking for acquaintances, and when she turned to Gurov her eyes were shining. | 188 | 10 | 3 | -2.337214 | 0.497704 | 72.73 | 7.86 | 9.02 | 9 | 6.82 | 0.14442 | 0.13559 | 12.234922 | 2,432 |
4,306 | Henry James | Notes of a Son and Brother | null | http://www.online-literature.com/henry_james/notes-son-and-brother/ | 1,914 | Info | Lit | 1,500 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | Life meanwhile I had a good deal of at my side in the person of my brother Wilky, who, as I have had occasion elsewhere to say, contrived in those years to live, or to have every appearance of so doing, with an immediacy that left me far in the lurch. I was always still wondering how, while he had solved the question simply ambulando, which was for him but by the merest sociable stroll. This represented to me success—success of a kind, but such an assured kind—in a degree that was my despair; and I have never forgotten how, that summer, when the Herr Doctor did look in, did settle down a little to have the bristling page out with us, Wilky's share of the hour took on the spot the form of his turning at once upon our visitor the tables of earnest inquiry. | 146 | 3 | 1 | -2.754824 | 0.526643 | 53.9 | 14.81 | 16.27 | 13 | 8.15 | 0.07613 | 0.12051 | 15.855277 | 2,228 |
3,551 | Ronald Reagan | From 'A Time for Choosing' Speech | CLD | https://www.commonlit.org/texts/from-a-time-for-choosing-speech | 1,964 | Info | Lit | 1,100 | mid | null | PG | 2 | 1.5 | The Founding Fathers knew a government can't control the economy without controlling people. And they knew when a government sets out to do that, it must use force and coercion to achieve its purpose. So we have come to a time for choosing.
Public servants say, always with the best of intentions, "What greater service we could render if only we had a little more money and a little more power." But the truth is that outside of its legitimate function, government does nothing as well or as economically as the private sector.
Yet any time you and I question the schemes of the do-gooders, we're denounced as being opposed to their humanitarian goals. It seems impossible to legitimately debate their solutions with the assumption that all of us share the desire to help the less fortunate. They tell us we're always "against," never "for" anything.
We are for a provision that destitution should not follow unemployment by reason of old age, and to that end we have accepted Social Security as a step toward meeting the problem. | 175 | 9 | 4 | -1.491462 | 0.454541 | 56.2 | 10.36 | 10.39 | 11 | 7.62 | 0.20392 | 0.20226 | 14.292972 | 1,829 |
3,029 | Ruth Odondi | Ndalo and Pendo – The best of friends | African Storybook Level 5 | https://www.africanstorybook.org/ | 2,017 | Lit | Lit | 700 | mid | CC BY 4.0 | G | 1 | 1 | Ndalo's father milks Pendo twice a day. She produces about 24 litres of milk a day, so about 12 litres for each milking. Sometimes Ndalo helps with the milking but it is not as easy as it looks. "One day," he thinks to himself, "I will have my own cows and I will have to do all the milking myself." His father pours the milk from the big bucket into smaller two litre cans or one litre bottles. He then sells the milk for R8 a litre. Once a week Ndalo's father donates 25 litres of milk to the school feeding scheme. Each child gets a quarter litre of this milk. That means that 100 children get milk on this day. For each litre of milk sold, his father gives Ndalo 50c. That doesn't sound like a lot, but if his father sells 24 litres a day, it adds up to quite a bit. Can you tell how much? Ndalo saves his money until Saturday when he makes a trip to the book shop. Each book costs less than R10, so in a good week, he can buy quite a few. | 191 | 14 | 1 | -1.652496 | 0.486495 | 94.25 | 3.28 | 2.88 | 5 | 7.16 | -0.00998 | -0.01822 | 22.93057 | 1,406 |
5,121 | Chron. Industr | TEMPERING BY COMPRESSION | Scientific American Supplement, Nos. 360 | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/8559/8559-h/8559-h.htm#2 | 1,882 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | start | null | G | 1 | 1 | L. Clemandot has devised a new method of treating metals, especially steel, which consists in heating to a cherry red, compressing strongly and keeping up the pressure until the metal is completely cooled. The results are so much like those of tempering that he calls his process tempering by compression. The compressed metal becomes exceedingly hard, acquiring a molecular contraction and a fineness of grain such that polishing gives it the appearance of polished nickel. Compressed steel, like tempered steel, acquires the coercitive force which enables it to absorb magnetism. This property should be studied in connection with its durability; experiments have already shown that there is no loss of magnetism at the expiration of three months. This compression has no analogue but tempering. Hammering and hardening modify the molecular state of metals, especially when they are practiced upon metal that is nearly cold, but the effect of hydraulic pressure is much greater. The phenomena which are produced in both methods of tempering may be interpreted in different ways, but it seems likely that there is a molecular approximation, an amorphism from which results the homogeneity that is due to the absence of crystallization. | 194 | 8 | 1 | -2.223364 | 0.554222 | 35.7 | 14.3 | 15.62 | 16 | 10.13 | 0.34866 | 0.32454 | 2.316691 | 2,856 |
3,472 | Karen Thompson Walker | What Fear Can Teach Us | CLD | https://www.commonlit.org/texts/what-fear-can-teach-us | 2,013 | Info | Lit | 900 | mid | CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 | G | 1 | 1 | As we grow up, we're often encouraged to think of fear as a weakness, just another childish thing to discard like baby teeth or roller skates. And I think it's no accident that we think this way. Neuroscientists have actually shown that human beings are hard-wired to be optimists. So maybe that's why we think of fear, sometimes, as a danger in and of itself. "Don't worry," we like to say to one another. "Don't panic." In English, fear is something we conquer. It's something we fight. It's something we overcome. But what if we looked at fear in a fresh way? What if we thought of fear as an amazing act of the imagination, something that can be as profound and insightful as storytelling itself?
It's easiest to see this link between fear and the imagination in young children, whose fears are often extraordinarily vivid. When I was a child, I lived in California, which is, you know, mostly a very nice place to live, but for me as a child, California could also be a little scary. | 178 | 13 | 2 | 0.375499 | 0.515281 | 72.46 | 6.59 | 5.73 | 9 | 6.87 | 0.15946 | 0.15815 | 24.139682 | 1,767 |
6,517 | Captain Mayne Reid | The Lone Ranche | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/21240/21240-h/21240-h.htm | 1,871 | Lit | Lit | 1,100 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | There is, or was then, an American hotel in Chihuahua, or at least one conducted in the American fashion, though only a mere posada. Among its guests was a gentleman, stranger to the town, as the country. His dress and general appearance bespoke him from the States, and by the same tokens it could be told that he belonged to their southern section. He was in truth a Kentuckian; but so far from representing the type, tall, rough, and stalwart, usually ascribed to the people "Kaintuck," he was a man of medium size, with a build comparable to that of the Belvidere Apollo. He had a figure tersely set, with limbs well knitted; a handsome face and features of amiable cast, at the same time expressing confidence and courage. A costly Guayaquil hat upon his head, and coat to correspond, bespoke him respectable; his tout ensemble proclaimed him a man of leisure; while his air and bearing were unmistakably such as could only belong to a born gentleman. | 168 | 6 | 1 | -2.129487 | 0.511845 | 50 | 13.24 | 13.97 | 14 | 8.88 | 0.18019 | 0.19053 | 5.604879 | 3,936 |
3,018 | Northern Cape Teacher's Workshop 2016 | Crocodile waits for brains | African Storybook Level 2 | https://www.africanstorybook.org/ | 2,017 | Lit | Lit | 500 | mid | CC BY 4.0 | PG | 2 | 2 | While Dande wondered how to punish Madola, a small black poisonous snake entered one of the gourds unnoticed. Afterwards, Dande sealed the gourds and left. Dande gave Madola one gourd expecting his pay. After tasting, Madola said, "Bring me another gourd and I will pay you." Dande ran for it. Dande brought the second gourd. He gave it to Madola saying, "Here is another gourd of sweet honey like the last one. Pay me now." Madola took the gourd but said in a cunning way, "There is no pay today. Wait for the end of the year." Dande was angry. Madola wanted to eat the honey. He put his finger in the gourd and was bitten. He cried, "I'm bitten! Help!" The snake disappeared unnoticed. All the workers ran away not knowing what had happened to their employer. A short while later, an ambulance arrived to take Madola to hospital. | 150 | 18 | 1 | -0.898353 | 0.462964 | 81.06 | 4.02 | 3.14 | 8 | 7.42 | 0.18628 | 0.19516 | 25.509876 | 1,396 |
3,040 | Shelby Ostergaard | Can Television Be Considered Literature and Taught in English Classes? | CLD | https://www.commonlit.org/texts/can-television-be-considered-literature-and-taught-in-english-classes | 2,017 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 | G | 1 | 1 | We are now living in the golden era of television. The term "golden era" is what television and media critics call the collection of TV shows from the late 1990s to present day. Commercial television shows have existed since the early 20th century, but as Jason Mitchell notes in his book Complex TV, technological development in the late 1990s led to three drastic changes in television. First, TV shows started to look better and showcase more interesting camera work. Second, the growth of more available channels led to an increase in the number of shows being produced. And third, technology allowed users to record, pause, and rewind the shows they were watching. Together, these three changes ushered in the golden era of television, allowing TV shows to tell more complex stories.
There isn't a clear-cut division between a complex plot and a simple one, but in general, simple plots exist in shows where every episode begins as if the one before it hasn't happened (known as stand-alone episodes). Complex plots, on the other hand, exist in shows where each episode depends on what happens before (known as serialized episodes). | 188 | 9 | 2 | -0.630886 | 0.45441 | 55.52 | 10.79 | 11.88 | 12 | 9.32 | 0.24831 | 0.22542 | 13.285178 | 1,415 |
2,030 | simple wiki | Emulator | null | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emulator | 2,020 | Info | Technology | 1,100 | start | CC BY-SA 3.0 and GFDL | G | 1 | 1 | An emulator is a computer program or hardware that makes one kind of computer behave like a different one, so that it can use the same programs or do the same things as the other one. They are best for using old software and games on newer computers. They can be hardware that you add to the computer, or software that you use on it. Some types of emulators require newer computers that have the right system requirements. For example, you need a processor that is fast enough to meet the demands of the emulator. Memory (both RAM and hard drive space) may be another factor to help it run smoothly and more accurately. With the more advanced emulators, if your computer is too old, the emulator or even the operating system may crash.
The simplest type of emulator is called an interpreter, and it runs the foreign program one step at a time. | 153 | 8 | 2 | -1.411302 | 0.471195 | 60.95 | 9.54 | 8.9 | 12 | 8.18 | 0.23493 | 0.24927 | 21.173002 | 501 |
2,131 | simple wiki | Information | null | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Information | 2,020 | Info | Technology | 700 | start | CC BY-SA 3.0 and GFDL | G | 1 | 1 | The word "information" is used in many different ways. Originally, it comes from a word that meant to give a form to something. Information is something that people can learn, know about, or understand. For example, a newspaper contains information about the world. This article contains information about "Information".
People who use computers often use the words information and data in the same way. There are special fields of study called "information science" and "information technology" (IT).
In the 1970s and 1980s, some people gave a new, specific meaning to "information". At that time, the first computer databases were built. In computer science, data often means a kind of information that has not been checked. That means data has not been changed or fixed, and you may not be able to trust it. With the new meaning, information means data that has been checked and passed tests for what it must be. A person can trust that "information" is correct. | 158 | 13 | 3 | -0.286443 | 0.472696 | 63.21 | 7.5 | 7.45 | 10 | 7.8 | 0.1465 | 0.14116 | 26.697991 | 594 |
3,420 | Tessa Welch | Nozibele and the three hairs | African Storybook Level 4 | https://www.africanstorybook.org/ | 2,014 | Lit | Lit | 300 | mid | CC BY 4.0 | PG | 2 | 1.5 | When they were nearly home, Nozibele put her hand to her neck. She had forgotten her necklace! "Please come back with me!" she begged her friends. But her friends said it was too late.
Nozibele went back to the river alone. She found her necklace and began hurrying home. But, she got lost in the dark.
In the distance she saw light coming from a hut. She walked quickly towards it and knocked at the door.
To her surprise, a dog opened the door and said, "What do you want?" "I'm lost and I need a place to sleep," said Nozibele. "Come in, or I'll bite you!" said the dog. Nozibele went in.
The dog said, "Cook for me!" "But I've never cooked for a dog before," Nozibele answered. "Cook, or I'll bite you!" said the dog. Nozibele cooked some food for the dog.
Then the dog said, "Make the bed for me!" Nozibele answered, "I've never made a bed for a dog." "Make the bed, or I'll bite you!" the dog said. Nozibele made the bed.
Every day she had to cook and sweep and wash for the dog. | 190 | 26 | 7 | -0.315435 | 0.478219 | 94.16 | 2.09 | 0.76 | 6 | 5.36 | 0.04789 | 0.03959 | 36.172452 | 1,724 |
7,027 | LOIS WALTERS | EDITH’S TEA-PARTY | Boys and Girls Bookshelf; a Practical Plan of Character Building, Volume I | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/25359/25359-h/25359-h.htm#Page_269 | 1,920 | Lit | Lit | 700 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | When Tuesday came, Edith's nurse dressed her in a fresh, white frock, and Edith dressed her dolly in her best dress, and went out under the trees where her nurse had set the table for two. And then she sat in a chair at the table and waited. But the big town clock struck four and no Helen came; and then she waited for half an hour longer. Then Edith put her dolly down on the chair and went in the house to find her mother.
"Mama," she said, "I think Helen is very rude, she doesn't come to my party and I invited her!"
"Just wait a little longer, dear," said her mother, "and she will come. Maybe her nurse was busy dressing Helen's little sister and brother and couldn't get her ready in time."
"But I invited her," was all Edith could say; "but I invited her, and she doesn't come." | 150 | 8 | 4 | 0.639665 | 0.561576 | 85.07 | 5.62 | 5.51 | 6 | 5.92 | -0.00893 | 0.00553 | 24.053305 | 4,307 |
3,777 | Rabindranath Tagore | THE POSTMASTER | Stories from Tagore | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/33525/33525-h/33525-h.htm | 1,918 | Lit | Lit | 1,100 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | One noon, during a break in the rains, there was a cool soft breeze blowing; the smell of the damp grass and leaves in the hot sun felt like the warm breathing of the tired earth on one's body. A persistent bird went on all the afternoon repeating the burden of its one complaint in Nature's audience chamber.
The postmaster had nothing to do. The shimmer of the freshly washed leaves, and the banked-up remnants of the retreating rain-clouds were sights to see; and the postmaster was watching them and thinking to himself: "Oh, if only some kindred soul were near—just one loving human being whom I could hold near my heart!" This was exactly, he went on to think, what that bird was trying to say, and it was the same feeling which the murmuring leaves were striving to express. But no one knows, or would believe, that such an idea might also take possession of an ill-paid village postmaster in the deep, silent midday interval of his work. | 169 | 6 | 2 | -0.958668 | 0.474895 | 67.54 | 11 | 13.47 | 10 | 7.99 | 0.21545 | 0.22579 | 9.177155 | 2,000 |
4,432 | William James Lampton | HOW THE WIDOW WON THE DEACON | The Best American Humorous Short Stories | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/10947/10947-h/10947-h.htm | 1,911 | Lit | Lit | 1,100 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | The widow ran away like a lively schoolgirl. All the sisters watched her get into the sleigh with the deacon, and resumed the previous discussion with greatly increased interest. But little recked the widow and less recked the deacon. He had bought a new horse and he wanted the widow's opinion of it, for the Widow Stimson was a competent judge of fine horseflesh. If Deacon Hawkins had one insatiable ambition it was to own a horse which could fling its heels in the face of the best that Squire Hopkins drove. In his early manhood the deacon was no deacon by a great deal. But as the years gathered in behind him he put off most of the frivolities of youth and held now only to the one of driving a fast horse. No other man in the county drove anything faster except Squire Hopkins, and him the deacon had not been able to throw the dust over. The deacon would get good ones, but somehow never could he find one that the squire didn't get a better. | 179 | 9 | 1 | -1.21573 | 0.45923 | 72.27 | 8.12 | 8.55 | 9 | 7.89 | 0.24695 | 0.24695 | 17.74351 | 2,325 |
3,490 | Mark Cartwright | Pompeii | CLD | https://www.commonlit.org/texts/pompeii | 2,012 | Info | Lit | 1,100 | mid | CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 | PG | 2 | 1.5 | The area around Vesuvius received its first warning sign that the mountain was perhaps reawakening when a massive earthquake struck on the 5th of February 62 A.D. The quake measured 7.5 on the Richter scale and devastated the surrounding towns; even parts of Naples, 20 miles away, were damaged. At Pompeii, few buildings escaped damage. Temples, houses, and parts of the thick city walls collapsed, fires ravaged sections of the town, and even sheep in the surrounding countryside died from the release of poisonous gases. The death toll was likely in the thousands rather than the hundreds. The water supply to the town was also severely affected with damage to aqueducts and underground pipes. The recovery process was also hampered by the collapse of the bridge over the Sarno. Things were so bad that a significant portion of the population left the town for good. | 145 | 8 | 1 | -0.596058 | 0.44986 | 58.91 | 9.54 | 10.69 | 11 | 9.11 | 0.22868 | 0.24535 | 4.330756 | 1,783 |
5,326 | NORMAN C. COOKSON | ON SOME RECENT IMPROVEMENTS IN LEAD PROCESSES. | SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT NO. 299 | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/8408/8408-h/8408-h.htm | 1,881 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | start | null | G | 1 | 1 | The author began by stating that probably in few trades have a smaller number of changes been made during recent years, in the processes employed, than in that of lead smelting and manufacturing. He then briefly noted what these changes are, and went on to describe the "steam desilverizing process," as used in the works of the writer's firm, and in other works licensed by them, which process is the invention of Messrs. Luce Fils et Rozan, of Marseilles. It is one which should commend itself especially to engineers, as in it mechanical means are employed, instead of the large amount of hand-labor used in the Pattinson process. It consists in using two pots only, of which the lower is placed at such a height that the bottom of it is about 12 in. to 15 in. above the floor level, while the upper is placed at a sufficiently high level to enable the lead to be run out of it into the lower pot. The capacity of the lower pot, in those most recently erected, is thirty-six tons--double that of the upper one. | 184 | 7 | 1 | -2.036975 | 0.495293 | 59.83 | 11.55 | 12.22 | 11 | 8.09 | 0.26061 | 0.26942 | 9.504672 | 3,025 |
2,109 | wikipedia | Historian | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historian | 2,020 | Info | History | 1,100 | mid | CC BY-SA 3.0 | G | 1 | 1 | An undergraduate history degree is often used as a stepping stone to graduate studies in business or law. Many historians are employed at universities and other facilities for post-secondary education. In addition, it is normal for colleges and universities to require the PhD degree for new full-time hires. A scholarly thesis, such as a PhD, is now regarded as the baseline qualification for a professional historian. However, some historians still gain recognition based on published (academic) works and the award of fellowships by academic bodies like the Royal Historical Society. Publication is increasingly required by smaller schools, so graduate papers become journal articles and PhD dissertations become published monographs. The graduate student experience is difficult—those who finish their doctorate in the United States take on average 8 or more years; funding is scarce except at a few very rich universities. Being a teaching assistant in a course is required in some programs; in others it is a paid opportunity awarded a fraction of the students. | 165 | 8 | 1 | -0.605162 | 0.480271 | 34 | 13.13 | 12.84 | 14 | 10.51 | 0.37628 | 0.36101 | 7.098831 | 575 |
2,583 | Hermona Soreq
| Fear, Fat, and Genes: New Answers to Old Questions | null | https://kids.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/frym.2018.00076 | 2,019 | Info | Lit | 1,100 | mid | CC BY 4.0 | G | 1 | 1 | Each cell in our body includes the full copy of the DNA. Only a small part of the DNA in these cells contains genes, that carry the information to make proteins. Other genes hold instructions to produce different kind of molecules called RNA. There are large and small RNA molecules. In our laboratory, we study the newly discovered family of the tiny microRNA genes, and test if they may be responsible for the response of humans to trauma.
The newly discovered family of "microRNAs," many of which have emerged during primates' (apes, gorillas, etc.) evolution are excellent candidates to be involved in response to trauma. Scientists have known about these miniature genes, 100 times smaller than "regular" genes, for <30 years. Nevertheless, those researchers who discovered them won the Nobel prize in 2006 and made a major impact on our understanding of how the brain functions and how it sends messages to the body. We suspect that these microRNAs are very important to our trauma reactions. So, to understand what happens under trauma, let us discuss the way microRNAs function. | 179 | 11 | 2 | -2.275497 | 0.509998 | 55.56 | 9.98 | 10.61 | 12 | 9.53 | 0.21097 | 0.2005 | 14.200148 | 1,004 |
7,402 | Suraj J Menon | "My fish!" "No, my fish!" | null | https://www.digitallibrary.io/en/books/details/1016 | 2,015 | Lit | Lit | 500 | start | CC BY 4.0 | G | 1 | 1 | Kicchu woke up early one morning. "It is time to catch some fish," he said yawning. He met Choru on the way to the pond. They were best friends who played all day long. Munia saw them marching with their fishing rods.
"We are going to the pond to catch fish. Come along Munia, if you wish."
Little Munia thought for sometime. "Please don't do that," she said, "without water, the fish will die." They did not listen to what Munia had to say. They headed to the pond straight away.
Kicchu and Choru sat waiting by the pond. Two fish swam across, one thin and another round. Then came the third fish, the biggest one they had seen. Munia said laughing, "It is bigger than Appa's feet!"
Kicchu and Choru held on tight to their rods.
Kicchu screamed, "MY FISH!"
Choru also screamed, "NO... MY FISH!" | 141 | 18 | 7 | -0.013237 | 0.489857 | 94.24 | 2.04 | 1.82 | 5 | 6.17 | 0.08993 | 0.09509 | 25.771266 | 4,606 |
3,347 | Francisco Escondido | Lion gets sick | African Storybook Level 4 | https://www.africanstorybook.org/ | 2,014 | Lit | Lit | 500 | start | CC BY 4.0 | G | 1 | 1 | One day, all the wild animals got together to choose a king.
They saw that it would be good to choose Lion to be the king of the animals.
At that meeting, they crowned Lion the king of the animals. As part of the ceremony, they had a big party that lasted a week.
All of the animals attended the ceremony until the end. They ate, they drank, they sang and they danced.
When the ceremony was over, they all dispersed. They were returning to their homes.
It was the custom for every animal to go and greet Lion because he was their king.
One visitor who came to greet King Lion was Hyena. When Hyena arrived at Lion's house, he found the king in bed.
Lion told him, "I'm sick with an incurable illness."
Hyena responded, "O, Great King, don't be sad because of your illness. Hare knows the cure for this illness."
The reason Hyena said this was because he wanted to get Hare in trouble in the eyes of Lion.
Hyena knew that Hare was unable to heal Lion.
Lion cheered up and sent Hyena right away to call Hare. | 193 | 17 | 12 | 0.048206 | 0.489442 | 85.01 | 4.4 | 3.7 | 8 | 6.03 | 0.09774 | 0.08574 | 26.919681 | 1,665 |
2,926 | David W. Waite; Siân I. Morgan-Waite; Michael W. Taylor | What Thrives Inside; The World Within the Gut | Frontiers for Young Minds | https://kids.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/frym.2017.00050 | 2,017 | Info | Lit | 1,100 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | The similarities and differences between the microbiomes of different animals made us wonder if species with similar diets have similar microbiomes, or whether the microbiomes are only similar because the species are related. For example, do a dolphin and a penguin have a similar microbiome because they both eat fish? Or, even though they have similar diets, do dolphins and penguins have different microbiomes because they are not closely related species? In science, it is common to create a hypothesis, then design an experiment, or a series of experiments, to test it. The results of the experiments are then reported in a trustworthy scientific journal. Other scientists read the report in the journal and come up with new ideas. Our hypothesis was that we would see the same bacteria in birds and animals with the same diet. Because this hypothesis needed multiple experiments to compare the microbiomes of different birds, this would have been impossible to do with a single experiment. To overcome this problem, we performed something called a meta-study. A meta-study involves looking at lots of different studies on the same topic and comparing the results from all the studies. | 192 | 10 | 1 | -1.120507 | 0.438242 | 44.93 | 11.86 | 12.11 | 14 | 9.36 | 0.32065 | 0.30469 | 16.061637 | 1,315 |
6,763 | Susan Coolidge | What Katy Did | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/8994/8994-h/8994-h.htm | 1,872 | Lit | Lit | 700 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | A little knot of the school-girls were walking home together one afternoon in July. As they neared Dr. Carr's gate, Maria Fiske exclaimed, at the sight of a pretty bunch of flowers lying in the middle of the sidewalk:
"Oh my!" she cried, "see what somebody's dropped! I'm going to have it." She stooped to pick it up. But, just as her fingers touched the stems, the nosegay, as if bewitched, began to move. Maria made a bewildered clutch. The nosegay moved faster, and at last vanished under the gate, while a giggle sounded from the other side of the hedge.
"Did you see that?" shrieked Maria; "those flowers ran away of themselves."
"Nonsense," said Katy, "it's those absurd children." Then, opening the gate, she called: "John! Dorry! come out and show yourselves." But nobody replied, and no one could be seen. The nosegay lay on the path, however, and picking it up, Katy exhibited to the girls a long end of black thread, tied to the stems. | 165 | 16 | 4 | -0.332446 | 0.488867 | 81.95 | 4.83 | 4.82 | 8 | 7.32 | 0.13678 | 0.14179 | 13.008147 | 4,149 |
4,920 | Revue Scientifique | RECENT BOTANICAL INVESTIGATIONS. | SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT NO. 430 | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/8484/8484-h/8484-h.htm#18 | 1,884 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | M. Leclerc du Sablon has published some of his results in his work on the opening of fruits. The influences which act upon fruit are external and internal. The external cause of dehiscence is drying. We can open or shut a fruit by drying or wetting it. The internal causes are related to the arrangement of the tissues, and we may say that the opening of fruit can be easily explained by the contraction of the ligneous fibers under drying influences. M. Leclerc shows by experiment that the fibers contract more transversely than longitudinally, and that the thicker fibers contract the most. This he finds is connected with the opening of dry fruits.
Herr Hoffman has recently made some interesting experiments upon the cultivation of fruits.
It is well known that many plants appear to select certain mineral soils and avoid others, that a number of plants which prefer calcareous soils are grouped together as calcicoles, and others which shun such ground as calcifuges. Herr Hoffman has grown the specimen which has been cited by many authors as absolutely calcifugic. | 178 | 10 | 3 | -2.742465 | 0.503407 | 55.09 | 10.05 | 10.63 | 12 | 9.88 | 0.31701 | 0.30094 | 13.020075 | 2,687 |
1,124 | By Mary E. Wilkins Freeman. | THANKFUL | Good Cheer Stories Every Child Should Know | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/19909/19909-h/19909-h.htm#THANKFUL | 1,915 | Lit | Lit | 1,100 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | She wore a blue wool frock and a red cloak. Sarah held her close. She even drew a fold of her own blue homespun blanket around her to shield her from the November wind. The sky was low and gray; the wind blew from the northeast, and had the breath of snow in it. Submit on the wall drew her quilted petticoats close down over her feet, and huddled herself into a small space, but her face gleamed keen and resolute out of the depths of a great red hood that belonged to her mother. Her eyes were fixed upon a turkey-gobbler ruffling and bobbing around the back door of the Adams house. The two gambrel-roofed Thompson and Adams houses were built as close together as if the little village of Bridgewater were a city. Acres of land stretched behind them and at the other sides, but they stood close to the road, and close to each other. The narrow space between them was divided by a stone wall which was Submit's and Sarah's trysting-place. They met there every day and exchanged confidences. | 183 | 10 | 1 | -1.127788 | 0.475471 | 79.7 | 6.76 | 7.94 | 8 | 6.6 | 0.10917 | 0.11393 | 9.230239 | 164 |
4,471 | L. M. Montgomery | Anne of Green Gables | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45/45-h/45-h.htm | 1,908 | Lit | Lit | 1,100 | mid | null | PG | 2 | 1.5 | When Marilla had gone Anne looked around her wistfully. The whitewashed walls were so painfully bare and staring that she thought they must ache over their own bareness. The floor was bare, too, except for a round braided mat in the middle such as Anne had never seen before. In one corner was the bed, a high, old-fashioned one, with four dark, low-turned posts. In the other corner was the aforesaid three-corner table adorned with a fat, red velvet pin-cushion hard enough to turn the point of the most adventurous pin. Above it hung a little six-by-eight mirror. Midway between table and bed was the window, with an icy white muslin frill over it, and opposite it was the wash-stand. The whole apartment was of a rigidity not to be described in words, but which sent a shiver to the very marrow of Anne's bones. With a sob she hastily discarded her garments, put on the skimpy nightgown and sprang into bed where she burrowed face downward into the pillow and pulled the clothes over her head. | 177 | 9 | 1 | -1.428522 | 0.480802 | 73.67 | 7.55 | 8.16 | 9 | 6.95 | 0.23125 | 0.22612 | 11.740532 | 2,356 |
5,192 | ? | REMEDY FOR SICK HEADACHE. | SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT NO. 363 | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/8452/8452-h/8452-h.htm | 1,882 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | start | null | PG | 2 | 1.5 | Surgeon Major Roehring, of Amberg, reports, in No. 32 of the Allg. Med. Centr. Zeit., April 22, 1882, a case of headache of long standing, which he cured by salicylate of sodium, which confirms the observations of Dr. Oehlschlager, of Dantzig, who first contended that we possessed in salicylic acid one of the most reliable remedies for neuralgia. This cannot astonish us if we remember that the action of salicylic acid is, in more than one respect, and especially in its influence on the nervous centers, analogous to quinine.
While out with the troops on maneuver, Dr. Roehring was called to visit the sixteen-year-old son of a poor peasant family in a neighboring village. The boy, who gave all evidences of living under bad hygienic surroundings, but who had shown himself very diligent at school, had been suffering, from his sixth year, several days every week from the most intense headache, which had not been relieved by any of the many remedies tried for this purpose. A careful examination did not reveal any organic lesion or any cause for the pain, which seemed to be neuralgic in character, a purely nervous headache. | 191 | 9 | 2 | -3.195814 | 0.541292 | 51.83 | 12.05 | 12.78 | 13 | 9.64 | 0.24389 | 0.22869 | 6.081613 | 2,912 |
6,441 | Allen Chapman
| The Radio Boys' First Wireless; Or, Winning the Ferberton Prize | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/7899/pg7899-images.html | 1,922 | Lit | Lit | 1,100 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | One of them, who was apparently the leader of the trio, was a big, unwieldy boy of sixteen, a year older and considerably larger than Bob and Joe. His eyes were close together, and he had a look of coarseness and arrogance that denoted the bully. Buck Looker, as he was called—his first name was Buckley—was generally unpopular among the boys, but as he was the son of one of the richest men of the town he usually had one or two cronies who hung about him for what they could get. One of these, Carl Lutz, an unwholesome looking boy, somewhat younger than Buck, was walking beside him, and on the side nearer the curb was Terry Mooney, the youngest of the three, a boy whose, furtive eyes carried in them a suggestion of treachery and sneakiness.
"What's the joke, Buck?" asked Bob coldly, as he looked from one to the other of the sniggering faces.
"You're the joke," answered Buck insolently; "that is, if you believe all that stuff I heard you pulling off just now. You must be easy if you fall for that." | 185 | 8 | 3 | -0.751905 | 0.457652 | 62.55 | 11.17 | 11.79 | 12 | 8.25 | 0.14585 | 0.15185 | 15.354285 | 3,869 |
899 | Juliana Horatia Ewing | AMONG THE MERROWS | Brothers of Pity and Other Tales of Beasts and Men | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/16121/16121-h/16121-h.htm#AMONG_THE_MERROWS | 1,882 | Lit | Lit | 1,100 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | Strangely beautiful those prawns are when you see them at home. And that one seems to do in the Great Aquarium; though, I suppose, it is much like seeing land beasts and birds in the Zoological Gardens—a poor imitation of their free life in their natural condition. Still, there is no other way in which you can see and come to know these wonderful "sea gentlemen" so well, unless you could go, like Jack Dogherty, to visit them at the bottom of the sea. And whilst I heartily recommend every one who has not seen the Aquarium to visit it as soon as possible, let me describe it for the benefit of those who cannot do so at present. It may also be of some little use to them hereafter to know what is most worth seeing there, and where to look for it. | 144 | 5 | 1 | -1.236415 | 0.477508 | 69.68 | 9.5 | 9.99 | 12 | 6.8 | 0.03714 | 0.07358 | 21.124623 | 146 |
4,176 | Woodrow Wilson | AMERICA FOR HUMANITY. | The European War, Vol 2, No. 3 | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/15480/15480-h/15480-h.htm | 1,915 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | When I think of the flag that those ships carry, the only touch of color about them, the only thing that moves as if it had a settled spirit in it, in their solid structure, it seems to me I see alternate strips of parchment upon which are written the rights of liberty and justice and strips of blood spilt to vindicate those rights, and then, in the corner, a prediction of the blue serene into which every nation may swim which stands for these great things.
The mission of America is the only thing that a sailor or soldier should think about; he has nothing to do with the formulation of her policy; he is to support her policy, whatever it is—but he is to support her policy in the spirit of herself, and the strength of our policy is that we, who for the time being administer the affairs of this nation, do not originate her spirit; we attempt to embody it; we attempt to realize it in action we are dominated by it, we do not dictate it. | 180 | 2 | 2 | -0.925303 | 0.478601 | -3.28 | 36.2 | 43.35 | 18 | 11.27 | 0.29862 | 0.31945 | 4.494735 | 2,175 |
4,558 | O. Henry | Hearts and Hands | CLD | https://www.commonlit.org/texts/hearts-and-hands | 1,902 | Lit | Lit | 900 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | At Denver there was an influx of passengers into the coaches on the eastbound B. & M. Express. In one coach there sat a very pretty young woman dressed in elegant taste and surrounded by all the luxurious comforts of an experienced traveler. Among the newcomers were two young men, one of handsome presence with a bold, frank countenance and manner; the other a ruffled, glum-faced person, heavily built and roughly dressed. The two were handcuffed together.
As they passed down the aisle of the coach the only vacant seat offered was a reversed one facing the attractive young woman. Here the linked couple seated themselves. The young woman's glance fell upon them with a distant, swift disinterest; then with a lovely smile brightening her countenance and a tender pink tingeing her rounded cheeks, she held out a little gray-gloved hand. When she spoke her voice, full, sweet, and deliberate, proclaimed that its owner was accustomed to speak and be heard.
"Well, Mr. Easton, if you will make me speak first, I suppose I must. Don't you ever recognize old friends when you meet them in the West?" | 186 | 11 | 3 | -0.474787 | 0.476833 | 69.48 | 8.26 | 9.99 | 10 | 8.42 | 0.16782 | 0.15091 | 9.282028 | 2,412 |
2,938 | Elke and René
Leisink | Cat and Dog
and the egg | African Storybook Level 3 | https://www.africanstorybook.org/# | 2,017 | Lit | Lit | 100 | mid | CC BY 4.0 | G | 1 | 1 | Cat and Dog walk. They walk in their village. Then they see an egg. The egg is in the grass. The egg is alone in the grass. The egg is all alone. Cat and Dog walk to a bird. They ask the bird, "Is this your egg?" But the bird says, "No, that is not my egg. Ask the owl. Maybe it is his egg." Cat and Dog walk to the owl. They ask the owl, "Is this your egg?" But the owl says, "No, that is not my egg. Ask the goose. Maybe it is her egg." Cat and Dog walk to the goose. They ask the goose, "Is this your egg?" But the goose says, "No, that is not my egg. Ask the two ducks. Maybe it is their egg." Cat and Dog walk to the two ducks. They ask the two ducks, "Is this your egg?" But the two ducks say, "No, that is not our egg." Then the egg breaks. | 164 | 25 | 1 | 1.251857 | 0.532549 | 114.03 | -1.02 | -2.81 | 0 | 0.33 | 0.37043 | 0.37561 | 39.713745 | 1,327 |
2,773 | Ehud de Shalit
| Prime Numbers–Why are They So Exciting? | null | https://kids.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/frym.2018.00040 | 2,018 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | CC BY 4.0 | G | 1 | 1 | Prime numbers have occupied human attention since ancient times and were even associated with the supernatural. Even today, in modern times, there are people trying to provide prime numbers with mystical properties. The well-known astronomer and science author Carl Sagan wrote a book in 1985 called "Contact," dealing with extraterrestrials (a human-like culture outside of earth) trying to communicate with humans using prime numbers as signals. The idea that signals based on prime numbers could serve as a basis for communication with extraterrestrial cultures continues to ignite the imagination of many people to this day.
It is commonly assumed that serious interest in prime numbers started in the days of Pythagoras. Pythagoras was an ancient Greek mathematician. His students, the Pythagoreans—partly scientists and partly mystics—lived in the sixth century BC. They did not leave written evidence and what we know about them comes from stories that were passed down orally. Three hundred years later, in the third century BC, Alexandria (in modern Egypt) was the cultural capital of the Greek world. | 170 | 9 | 2 | -1.457809 | 0.491528 | 44.04 | 11.89 | 13.18 | 13 | 10.07 | 0.20736 | 0.18957 | 13.568181 | 1,184 |
6,781 | Wyn Roosevelt | Frontier Boys on the Coast
or in the Pirate's Power | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/25473/25473-h/25473-h.htm | 1,909 | Lit | Lit | 900 | mid | null | PG | 2 | 1.5 | Then, suddenly, his hand struck a stone wall. Groping his way, he turned a sharp corner and followed along a low narrow passageway that obliged him to stoop. Then came the sound of the moaning just ahead. Jack Cales was a brave man but it was all that he could do, to keep from turning and running in panic for the mouth of the cave. But though his determination had received a severe shock, it did not turn to flight.
He saw a faint light ahead, spreading a glow at the end of the passage as he came nearer. Then he saw something that held him stone still with a clutch of weird fear. He had reached the end of the narrow passage, and dimly made out a domed room in the rock, white with translucent encrustation.
He struck a match. About him, before, to the right and to the left he could see forms all of ghostly white, some crouching, others standing. Hardly had the light flared up than it sizzled out. Some drops of water falling from the roof had extinguished the blaze. Then was repeated that awful sound of distress. | 191 | 13 | 3 | -1.149492 | 0.481341 | 85.25 | 5.06 | 5.78 | 7 | 6.66 | 0.0942 | 0.08017 | 17.009861 | 4,165 |
6,179 | James Baldwin | Fifty Famous People | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/6168/pg6168-images.html | 1,912 | Info | Lit | 500 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | "Well, then," said the teacher, "you may take your slate and go out behind the schoolhouse for half an hour. Think of something to write about, and write the word on your slate. Then try to tell what it is, what it is like, what it is good for, and what is done with it. That is the way to write a composition."
Henry took his slate and went out. Just behind the schoolhouse was Mr.
Finney's barn. Quite close to the barn was a garden. And in the garden,
Henry saw a turnip.
"Well, I know what that is," he said to himself; and he wrote the word turnip on his slate. Then he tried to tell what it was like, what it was good for, and what was done with it.
Before the half hour was ended he had written a very neat composition on his slate. He then went into the house, and waited while the teacher read it.
The teacher was surprised and pleased. He said, "Henry Longfellow, you have done very well. Today you may stand up before the school and read what you have written about the turnip." | 188 | 15 | 7 | 0.381252 | 0.51486 | 92.1 | 3.63 | 3.46 | 5 | 5.25 | 0.03504 | 0.03695 | 28.451616 | 3,669 |
4,340 | Saki | The Open Window | CLD | https://www.commonlit.org/texts/the-open-window | 1,914 | Lit | Lit | 900 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | She broke off with a little shudder. It was a relief to Framton when the aunt bustled into the room with a whirl of apologies for being late in making her appearance.
"I hope Vera has been amusing you?" she said.
"She has been very interesting," said Framton.
"I hope you don't mind the open window," said Mrs. Sappleton briskly; "my husband and brothers will be home directly from shooting, and they always come in this way. They've been out for snipe in the marshes today, so they'll make a fine mess over my poor carpets. So like you menfolk, isn't it?"
She rattled on cheerfully about the shooting and the scarcity of birds, and the prospects for duck in the winter. To Framton it was all purely horrible. He made a desperate but only partially successful effort to turn the talk on to a less ghastly topic, he was conscious that his hostess was giving him only a fragment of her attention, and her eyes were constantly straying past him to the open window and the lawn beyond. It was certainly an unfortunate coincidence that he should have paid his visit on this tragic anniversary. | 192 | 12 | 5 | -0.528836 | 0.462924 | 67.46 | 8.28 | 8.21 | 10 | 7.9 | 0.19776 | 0.18091 | 14.634876 | 2,252 |
7,282 | Charlotte M. Yonge | The Brave Queen of Hungary | Junior Classics Vol. 7 | http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/6302/pg6302-images.html | 2,004 | Lit | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | In the year 1439 died King Albert, who had been appointed King of Hungary in right of his wife, Queen Elizabeth. He left a little daughter only four years old, and as the Magyars had never been governed by a female hand, they proposed to send and offer their crown, and the hand of their young widowed queen, to Wladislas, the King of Poland. But Elizabeth had hopes of another child, and in case it should be a son, she had no mind to give away its rights to its father's throne. How, then, was she to help herself among the proud and determined nobles of her court? One thing was certain, that if once the Polish King were crowned with St. Stephen's crown, it would be his own fault if he were not King of Hungary as long as he lived; but if the crown were not to be found, of course he could not receive it, and the fealty of the nobles would not be pledged to him. | 170 | 5 | 1 | -1.305306 | 0.461432 | 68.81 | 12.11 | 14.36 | 10 | 7.46 | 0.12673 | 0.13357 | 16.456609 | 4,521 |
2,537 | Cristy Phillips
Aaron Baldridge
Colin Phillips
Mehmet Akif Baktir
Atoossa Fahimi | Might Lifestyle Choices Reduce the Risk of Depression? | null | https://kids.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/frym.2019.00137 | 2,019 | Info | Lit | 900 | mid | null | PG | 2 | 2 | Depression is a mental illness that impacts millions of people. It affects the way a person thinks, feels, and behaves. Depression is more intense than the experience of sadness. Important symptoms of depression include low mood, loss of pleasure, weight loss or gain, low energy, and feelings of hopelessness. These symptoms last over 2 weeks and interfere with a person's daily activities. Depression affects the depressed person, the person's family, and the community. In the United States, over 80 billion dollars a year is spent on depression. Most important, depression can be fatal, so it requires as much care as a serious physical illness.
We need to understand the causes of depression. This need has prompted decades of study. Research now shows that many factors contribute to depression. Of the known factors, stress is very important. Stress can cause depression over time. | 141 | 13 | 2 | 1.079362 | 0.596571 | 56.93 | 8.03 | 8 | 10 | 9.4 | 0.24099 | 0.24815 | 15.708523 | 959 |
4,691 | Emma Louise Smythe | Jason and the Dragon | A Primary Reader: Old-time Stories, Fairy Tales and Myths Retold by Children | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/7841/7841-h/7841-h.htm#i | 1,896 | Lit | Lit | 300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | Thor was always going on long journeys. One day he went off and left Sif alone. She went out on the porch and fell asleep.
Loki came along. He was always playing tricks.
He saw Sif lying asleep. He said, "I am going to cut off her hair."
So Loki went up on the porch and cut off Sif's golden hair.
When Sif woke up and saw that her hair was gone, she cried and cried. Then she ran to hide. She did not want Thor to see her.
When Thor came home, he could not find Sif.
"Sif! Sif!" he called, "Where are you?"
But Sif did not answer.
Thor looked all around the house. At last he found her crying.
"Oh, Thor, look, all my hair is gone! Somebody has cut it off. It was a man. He ran away with it."
Then Thor was very angry. He said, "I know it was Loki. He is always getting into mischief. Just wait until I get him!"
And Thor went out to find Loki. | 164 | 27 | 12 | -0.016202 | 0.48089 | 102.83 | 0.59 | -1.15 | 5 | 5.77 | -0.04307 | -0.05398 | 36.264371 | 2,515 |
6,245 | Henry C. Watson | The Old Bell Of Independence; Or, Philadelphia In 1776 | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/11506/pg11506-images.html | 1,852 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | start | null | G | 1 | 1 | It was a season of unparalleled enthusiasm and rejoicing, when General Lafayette, the friend and supporter of American Independence, responded to the wishes of the people of the United States, and came to see their prosperity, and to hear their expressions of gratitude. The national heartbeat joyfully in anticipation; and one long, loud, and free shout of welcome was heard throughout the land.
Arriving at New York in August 1824, General Lafayette journeyed through the Eastern States, receiving such tokens of affection as the people had extended to no other man except Washington, and then returned southward. On the 28th of September, he entered Philadelphia, the birthplace of the Declaration of Independence, the greater part of the population coming out to receive and welcome him. A large procession was formed, and thirteen triumphal arches erected in the principal streets through which the procession passed.
After General Lafayette himself, the most remarkable objects in the procession were four large open cars, resembling tents, each containing forty veterans of the struggle for independence. | 169 | 6 | 3 | -0.830378 | 0.466653 | 33.94 | 15.61 | 18.17 | 17 | 9.39 | 0.19087 | 0.19737 | 3.880314 | 3,726 |
4,033 | H.H. Asquith | Britains Unsheathed Sword | New York Times Current History: The European War, Vol 2, No. 1 | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/15478/15478-h/15478-h.htm#toc_42 | 1,915 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | It is a good rule in war to concentrate your forces on the main theatre and not to dissipate them in disconnected and sporadic adventures, however promising they may appear to be. That consideration, I need hardly say, has not been lost sight of in the councils of the Allies. There has been and there will be no denudation or impairment of the forces which are at work in Flanders, and both the French and ourselves will continue to give them the fullest, and we believe the most effective, support. Nor, what is equally important, has there for the purpose of these operations been any weakening of the grand fleet. The enterprise which is now going on, and so far has gone on in a manner which reflects, as I think the House will agree, the highest credit on all concerned, was carefully considered and conceived with very distinct and definite objects—political, strategic, and economical. Some of these objects are so obvious as not to need statement and others are of such a character that it is perhaps better for the moment not to state them. | 186 | 6 | 1 | -1.953775 | 0.507115 | 51.65 | 13.76 | 15.53 | 14 | 8.74 | 0.23021 | 0.22719 | 11.003923 | 2,122 |
7,121 | Charles Herbert Sylvester | Literature and Its Forms | Journeys Through Bookland, Vol. 10. | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/24857/24857-h/24857-h.htm#CHAPTER_XIII | 1,922 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | The great bulk of the writings of the world is in prose. It is the medium of hard sense, of practical knowledge, of argument and of dialogue. Yet often it appeals to the imagination, charms with its beauty and inspires to heroic deeds.
It seems to be generally accepted that four methods of expression are to be found in prose: narration, description, exposition and argumentation. Narration deals with things in action, description with the appearance of things, exposition explains the relations ideas bear to one another, and argumentation not only does this, but tries at the same time to convince. Theoretically, this distinction is very easy to make, for action is the life of narration, appearance the theme of description, explanation and exposition are synonymous, and no one argues but with the hope of convincing. What can man do more than to tell what has been done, tell how a thing looks, show how one thing follows from another or is related to it, and endeavor to bring another person to the same state of mind? | 175 | 7 | 2 | -1.265645 | 0.475417 | 50.09 | 12.52 | 13.36 | 14 | 8.83 | 0.2601 | 0.2601 | 17.277054 | 4,389 |
6,091 | Jessica McBirney | Duke Ellington | CLD | https://www.commonlit.org/texts/duke-ellington | 2,017 | Info | Lit | 1,100 | mid | CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 | G | 1 | 1 | Ellington started taking piano lessons at age seven. He did not take the lessons very seriously or practice well for the first few years. He often skipped his lessons in favor of playing baseball because he did not think he was a good pianist. But by the time he was fourteen, he started sneaking into music clubs and listening to the professional pianists there. He developed a new passion for music. Soon he wrote his first song, "Soda Fountain Rag," inspired by his experiences working at a soda shop.
During high school, Ellington continued to take music lessons, and he imitated his favorite ragtime pianists. Whenever he traveled with his family, he sought out local famous musicians to get advice for his own music. After he graduated he took a job as a sign-painter, which he also used to build his music career; anytime someone requested a sign for a party, he also asked them if they needed a musician for entertainment. He became quite successful playing for both black and white audiences, which was a unique accomplishment at the time. | 180 | 10 | 2 | 0.218459 | 0.479094 | 59.14 | 9.53 | 9.63 | 11 | 7.32 | 0.03867 | 0.02768 | 19.830801 | 3,638 |
3,544 | Shirley Chisholm | Shirley Chisholm's Presidential Announcement Speech Transcript | CLD | https://www.commonlit.org/texts/shirley-chisholm-s-presidential-announcement-speech-transcript | 1,972 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | PG | 2 | 2 | I have faith in the American people. I believe that we are smart enough to correct our mistakes. I believe that we are intelligent enough to recognize the talent, energy, and dedication that all Americans have to offer. I know from my travels to the cities and the small towns of America that we have vast potential which can and must be put to constructive use in getting this great nation together. I know that millions of Americans from all walks of life agree with me, that leadership does not mean putting the air to the ground, to follow public opinion, but to have the vision of what is necessary, and the courage to make it possible. Americans all over are demanding a new sensibility, a new philosophy of government from Washington. Instead of sending spies to snoop on participants at Earth Day, I would welcome the efforts of concerned citizens of all ages to stop the abuse of our environment. Instead of watching a football game on television while young people beg for the attention of their president concerning our actions abroad, I would encourage them to speak out, organize for peaceful change, and vote in November. | 198 | 8 | 1 | -0.528373 | 0.489606 | 49.26 | 12.54 | 12.9 | 14 | 8.21 | 0.23662 | 0.22143 | 15.48884 | 1,825 |
2,188 | wikipedia | Light-year | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light-year | 2,020 | Info | Science | 1,500 | start | CC BY-SA 3.0 | G | 1 | 1 | The light-year is a unit of length used to express astronomical distances and measures about 9.46 trillion kilometres (9.46 x 1012 km) or 5.88 trillion miles (5.88 x 1012 mi). As defined by the International Astronomical Union (IAU), a light-year is the distance that light travels in vacuum in one Julian year (365.25 days).Because it includes the word "year", the term light-year may be misinterpreted as a unit of time.
The light-year is most often used when expressing distances to stars and other distances on a galactic scale, especially in non-specialist and popular science publications. The unit most commonly used in professional astrometry is the parsec (symbol: pc, about 3.26 light-years; the distance at which one astronomical unit subtends an angle of one second of arc).
As defined by the IAU, the light-year is the product of the Julian year (365.25 days as opposed to the 365.2425-day Gregorian year) and the speed of light (299792458 m/s). Both of these values are included in the IAU (1976) System of Astronomical Constants, used since 1984. | 172 | 6 | 3 | -3.256312 | 0.581264 | 56.73 | 11.77 | 13.42 | 12 | 11.29 | 0.19565 | 0.20186 | 9.87412 | 645 |
4,743 | Rebecca H. Davis | A Fox and a Raven | Junior Classics, Vol 6 | http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/6577/pg6577-images.html | 1,893 | Lit | Lit | 900 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | Jenny set the table for the tea party under a big oak. There was a flat place on one of the round roots that rose out of the moss, which was the very thing for a table. So there she spread the little white and gold plates and cups and saucers, with the meat dish (every bit as large as your hand), in the middle, full of candy. The milk, of course, was put in the pot for coffee, and set on three dead leaves to boil; and Jenny allowed Donee to fill the jam dishes herself, with her own hands. Donee could hardly get her breath as she did it.
When they were all ready they sat down. The sun shone, and the wind was blowing, and the water of the mill-race flashed and gurgled as it went by, and a song-sparrow perched himself on the fence close to them and sang, and sang, just as if he knew what was going on.
"He wants to come to the party!" said Betty, and then they all laughed. Donee laughed too. | 179 | 10 | 3 | 0.544241 | 0.522939 | 89.11 | 5.88 | 6.56 | 0 | 5.51 | 0.05307 | 0.0679 | 15.920576 | 2,553 |
3,217 | Apoorva Rajiv Madipakkam, Karin Ludwig, Marcus Rothkirch, & Guido Hesselmann | Now You See it, Now You Don’t: Interacting with Invisible Objects | null | https://kids.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/frym.2015.00004 | 2,015 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | CC BY 4.0 | G | 1 | 1 | Using a method called continuous flash suppression (CFS), which is based on the same principle as binocular rivalry, we can make objects invisible to people who have normal vision. In the CFS method, one eye is presented with the image of interest, also called the target, while at the same time the other eye is made to see colorful, flickering patterns. So, using the same example as above, one eye is shown the image of an ice cream and the other eye is now shown colorful, flickering patterns instead of the dog. In such a situation, because the colorful patterns are flickering compared to the static ice cream, what we finally see (most of the time) are the colorful, changing patterns (i.e., the dominant image).
Which image is dominant (the flickering masks or the ice cream) also depends on our eye dominance. But remember; the target image (the ice cream in our example) is actually shown to one eye and this eye and also parts of the brain are still receiving the information of the ice cream. | 176 | 6 | 2 | -2.292319 | 0.48191 | 49.75 | 13.65 | 14.59 | 15 | 9.29 | 0.28229 | 0.26922 | 18.322614 | 1,557 |
5,095 | ? | Spinning with a Mule | Scientific American Supplement, Nos. 362 | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/8687/8687-h/8687-h.htm#2 | 1,882 | Info | Lit | 1,700 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | Finally, we claim, by the use of this invention, to be able to spin any fibrous material which can be drawn by draught-rolls, of any required degree of softness of twist, such as can be spun by any mule whatever, and to do this with the attention only of children of from twelve to fourteen years of age.
We also claim an increased production, owing to less breakage of ends, from the yarn not being overstrained in spinning, and an improvement in the quality of the yarn from the same cause, which will increase the production from the loom, and finally eradicate other objectionable features of the labor question, which so often disturb the peaceful harmony between labor and capital.
Mr. Goulding asked if it had been demonstrated whether more or less power was required for the same numbers than by other methods, and Col. Webber replied that no more power was required to move the rings than was saved by friction on the ring and the saving of weight of the bobbins. He thought it required no more power than the old way. | 182 | 4 | 3 | -2.463243 | 0.490009 | 39.62 | 19.22 | 22.76 | 14 | 9.6 | 0.23874 | 0.2358 | 3.371089 | 2,836 |
5,198 | ? | COST OF POWER TO MAKE FLOUR. | SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT NO. 365 | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/18763/18763-h/18763-h.htm | 1,882 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | "Supposing a mill with six pairs of stones, two pairs of porcelain roller mills, and the necessary dressing, purifying, and wheat cleaning machinery to require a steam motor of 100 indicated horse power to drive it, then the average consumption of fuel in this mill would be 200 lb. of coal per hour. Such a mill working day and night will turn out about 400 sacks of flour per week of, say, 130 hours, so that 200 × 13 = 26,000 lb. of coal would be required to manufacture 400 sacks of flour. The cost of this quantity of coal may be taken at, say, £12 (about $58.32), and for cost of attending engine and boiler, cost of oil, etc., another £3 (about $14.58) per week may be added; so that, in this case, the manufacture of 400 sacks of flour would cause an expenditure of £15 ($72.90) for the steam motor. Therefore the cost of the steam motor per 20-stone sack of flour may be taken at 9d. (about 18 cents) per sack, if an improved low grinding system is used. | 182 | 7 | 1 | -2.470038 | 0.57199 | 60.25 | 13.85 | 15.86 | 12 | 9.01 | 0.21662 | 0.21787 | 12.081438 | 2,915 |
3,279 | Nozizwe Herero, Siya Masuku | Amazing Daisy | African Storybook Level 3 | https://www.africanstorybook.org/# | 2,015 | Lit | Lit | 500 | mid | CC BY 4.0 | G | 1 | 1 | Daisy wouldn't give up. Every day she practiced by herself, flapping her wings. Flap, flap, flap, she would flap her wings but she couldn't lift off the ground. While she practiced, she imagined herself flying high into the sky and looking at the chickens below. She imagined herself flying past the sparrows and past the swallows. "Wow!" The birds would say. "A chicken that can fly!" So, flap, flap, flap, every day Daisy would flap her wings. She would lift off the ground but fall down again. "I'm never going to fly!" Daisy cried to Mama. "The others are right." "Daisy, you are different from the other chickens. They don't want to fly but you do! You can do it, " Mama said. The following day Daisy climbed to the top of the chicken coop and flap, flap, flap, she flapped her wings. She flew into the air and flapped her wings and flapped her wings and flapped her wings and... BAM! The other chickens laughed out loud. "Ha ha ha! We told you! Chickens can't fly!" | 177 | 22 | 1 | 0.372501 | 0.500238 | 93.93 | 2.15 | 2.44 | 5 | 5.38 | 0.10032 | 0.09776 | 20.715067 | 1,608 |
5,682 | Alfred Selwyn | THE PIGEONS AND THEIR FRIEND | The Nursery, March 1873, Vol. XIII.
A Monthly Magazine for Youngest People | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/24476/24476-h/24476-h.htm#Page_65 | 1,873 | Lit | Lit | 900 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | The pigeons did not seem to be at all disturbed or frightened by the noise of carriages or the press of people; but would fly down, and light on the peddler's wrist, and peck the food from the palm of his hand.
He had made them so tame, that they would often light on his shoulders or on his head; and, if he put food in his mouth, they would try to get it even from between his teeth.
The children would flock round to see him; and even the busy newsboy would pause, and forget the newspapers under his arm, while he watched these interviews between the birds and their good friend.
A year afterwards I was in Boston again; but the poor peddler and his birds were not to be seen. All Franklin Street, and much of the eastern side of Washington Street, were in ruins. There had been a great fire in Boston,—the largest that was ever known there; and more than fifty acres, crowded with buildings, had been made desolate, so that nothing but smoking ruins was left. This was in November, 1872. | 184 | 7 | 4 | 0.12689 | 0.490513 | 77.02 | 9.15 | 11.61 | 8 | 6.57 | 0.1123 | 0.11081 | 15.330644 | 3,334 |
4,835 | Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche | Beyond Good and Evil | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/4363/4363-h/4363-h.htm | 1,886 | Lit | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | PG | 2 | 1.5 | Throughout the longest period of human history—one calls it the prehistoric period—the value or non-value of an action was inferred from its consequences; the action in itself was not taken into consideration, any more than its origin; but pretty much as in China at present, where the distinction or disgrace of a child redounds to its parents, the retro-operating power of success or failure was what induced men to think well or ill of an action. Let us call this period the pre-moral period of mankind; the imperative, "Know thyself!" was then still unknown.—In the last ten thousand years, on the other hand, on certain large portions of the earth, one has gradually got so far, that one no longer lets the consequences of an action, but its origin, decide with regard to its worth: a great achievement as a whole, an important refinement of vision and of criterion, the unconscious effect of the supremacy of aristocratic values and of the belief in "origin," the mark of a period which may be designated in the narrower sense as the MORAL one: the first attempt at self-knowledge is thereby made. | 189 | 3 | 1 | -2.360009 | 0.494409 | 28.11 | 21.32 | 24.31 | 16 | 10.28 | 0.25786 | 0.25291 | 6.125592 | 2,624 |
3,162 | USHistory.org | The Rise of Greek City-States: Athens Versus Sparta | CLD | https://www.commonlit.org/texts/the-rise-of-greek-city-states-athens-versus-sparta | 2,016 | Info | Lit | 1,100 | mid | CC BY 4.0 | PG | 2 | 2 | The differences between Athens and Sparta eventually led to war between the two city-states. Known as the Peloponnesian War (431-404 B.C.), both Sparta and Athens gathered allies and fought on and off for decades because no single city-state was strong enough to conquer the others.
The whole of Hellas used once to carry arms, their habitations being unprotected, and their communication with each other unsafe; indeed, to wear arms was as much a part of everyday life with them as with the barbarians. And the fact that the people in these parts of Hellas are still living in the old way points to a time when the same mode of life was once equally common to all. The Athenians were the first to lay aside their weapons, and to adopt an easier and more luxurious mode of life. -Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, (1910 translation by Richard Crawley)
With war came famine, plague, death, and misfortune. But war cannot kill ideas. Despite the eventual military surrender of Athens, Athenian thought spread throughout the region. After temporary setbacks, these notions only became more widely accepted and developed with the passing centuries. | 187 | 10 | 3 | -1.722547 | 0.496987 | 56.49 | 9.72 | 10.08 | 11 | 8.7 | 0.25711 | 0.23967 | 14.600376 | 1,516 |
4,072 | John W. Burgess | PROF. BURGESS'S SECOND ARTICLE. | The New York Times Current History of the European War | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/16702/16702-h/16702-h.htm | 1,915 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | On the 19th day of April, 1839, Belgium and Holland, which from 1815 to 1830 had formed the United Kingdom of the Netherlands, signed a treaty of separation from, and independence of, each other. It is in this treaty that the original pledge of Belgian neutrality is to be found. The clause of the treaty reads: "Belgium in the limits above described shall form an independent neutral State and shall be bound to observe the same neutrality toward all other States." On the same day and at the same place, (London,) a treaty, known in the history of diplomacy as the Quintuple Treaty, was signed by Great Britain, France, Prussia, Austria, and Russia, approving and adopting the treaty between Belgium and Holland. A little later, May 11, the German Confederation, of which both Austria and Prussia were members, also ratified this treaty. | 142 | 5 | 1 | -1.310669 | 0.482566 | 49.92 | 13.35 | 15.05 | 13 | 10.6 | 0.36136 | 0.3906 | 6.942725 | 2,136 |
4,349 | the following official communication was telegraphed to the foreign press by the Government Bureau on Aug. 9, 1914 | Servia and Her Neighbors | The European War, Vol. 1 - No. 6 | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/20521/20521-h/20521-h.htm#Servia_and_Her_Neighbors | 1,914 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | end | null | PG | 2 | 1.5 | The Serbian mobilization was effected with marvelous order, and once more it proved the good military organization of Serbia, and how much the country can rely on the patriotic devotion of her soldiers.
Notwithstanding the erroneous statements of a part of the foreign press, notwithstanding the speedy development of events, notwithstanding the season of work in the fields, fully 80 per cent. of the reserves presented themselves on the first day of mobilization, which was completed amid general enthusiasm.
For a long time the Serbians knew that the main struggle would be turned against Austria. The Montenegrin and Serbian peoples enter the war against the common foe with an equal confidence in their armies. The enthusiasm of these two countries is all the stronger from the fact that they are fighting simultaneously with the aid of the Russians, French, and English. Numerous manifestations have taken place in Serbian and Montenegrin cities in favor of Russia, France, and England. | 156 | 7 | 3 | -2.024823 | 0.484428 | 43.1 | 12.85 | 14.33 | 14 | 9.95 | 0.23417 | 0.25891 | 7.476017 | 2,257 |
3,594 | T. F. Powys | Alleluia | Twenty-Three Stories by Twenty and Three Authors by Dawson Scott and Rhys | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/62347/62347-h/62347-h.htm | 1,931 | Lit | Lit | 1,100 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | Alleluia had come down from Oxford, and his confiding and childlike look, together with his silky moustache, had led him into the bypaths and hedges and so on and on until he reached the village of Wallbridge.
There were, of course, troubles in even so gentle a young man's path; there were difficulties and doubts—little worries—so that Alleluia's eyes were not always without their tears.
The Wallbridge people were not always so loving as they should be. The Rev. John Sutton, the vicar, disapproved of the preacher's looks and was even slightly contemptuous of the glory hymns. This unkindness hit the young man hard, because, outwardly, the vicar seemed pleased with the work that he was doing.
And there was Lily. Lily had to be considered even by Mr. Tapper, her father, as something female. Mr. Tapper put her down entirely, with her mother included, to the simple fact that he had stayed too long out one lovely June fair day at the Stickland revels. Even that day he saw as all Lily's fault, feeling, truly perhaps, that the child brings her parents together. | 182 | 10 | 4 | -1.739581 | 0.474856 | 66.08 | 9.12 | 10.64 | 10 | 8.34 | 0.16325 | 0.1398 | 14.137168 | 1,864 |
2,882 | Addison Gifty Naana | Result of disobedience | African Storybook Level 4 | https://www.africanstorybook.org/ | 2,017 | Lit | Lit | 700 | mid | CC BY 4.0 | G | 1 | 1 | Kwesi's parents were Papa and Maame. Maame always advised her son, "Don't swim in any river or sea because it is dangerous."
During the school vacation, Kweku Twum travelled to Simpa (Winneba). He went to spend the holiday with his uncle, Kobina Amfo who was a very good fisherman. Kobina Amfo had many canoes at Simpa.
When Kweku Twum returned from Simpa, he visited his friend Kwesi Gyasi. He told Kwesi about his experiences and enjoyment, especially swimming in the sea!
Kwesi was interested and wished he had travelled with Kweku to the sea.
One afternoon, the two friends decided to swim in the village stream. They went out when nobody was watching.
As soon as they got to the stream, Kweku Twum jumped into the water with a splash. He called Kwesi Gyasi to join him but he did not. He remembered his mother's advice.
But Kweku finally convinced his friend to swim. They really enjoyed themselves in the water.
It was getting late and the sun was setting. Kweku told Kwesi to get ready to go home. He got out of the water, dried himself and put on his clothes. Kwesi was still in the water. | 198 | 19 | 8 | -1.061225 | 0.473119 | 74.06 | 5.52 | 4.47 | 8 | 7.34 | 0.01384 | -0.01219 | 24.749772 | 1,279 |
4,318 | LIEUT. GEN. VON NIEBER | LETTER ADDRESSED ON AUG. 27, 1914, BY LIEUT. GEN. VON NIEBER TO THE BURGOMASTER OF WAVRE | The European War, Vol. 1 - No. 6 | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/20521/20521-h/20521-h.htm#Why_Belgium_Was_Devastated | 1,914 | Info | Lit | 1,700 | start | null | PG | 2 | 1.5 | On Aug. 22, 1914, the General commanding the Second Army, Herr von Bülow, imposed upon the City of Wavre a war levy of three million francs, to be paid before Sept. 1, as expiation for its unqualifiable behavior (contrary to the law of nations and the usages of war) in making a surprise attack on the German troops.
The General in command of the Second Army has just given to the General commanding this station of the Second Army the order to send in without delay, this contribution which it should pay on account of its conduct.
I order and command you to give to the bearer of the present letter the two first installments, that is to say, two million francs in gold.
Furthermore, I require that you give the bearer a letter, duly sealed with the seal of the city, stating that the balance, that is to say, one million francs, will be paid, without fail, on the 1st of September. | 160 | 4 | 4 | -2.767057 | 0.556905 | 45.06 | 17.1 | 19.15 | 13 | 9.24 | 0.28568 | 0.31195 | 8.850675 | 2,234 |
3,894 | ? | THE FOURTH VOYAGE | The Junior Classics, V5 | http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/6328/pg6328-images.html | 1,917 | Lit | Lit | 1,100 | start | null | G | 1 | 1 | After I had rested from the dangers of my third voyage, my passion for trade and my love of novelty soon again prevailed. I therefore settled my affairs, and provided a stock of goods fit for the traffic I designed to engage in. I took the route of Persia, travelled over several provinces, and then arrived at a port, where I embarked. On putting out to sea, we were overtaken by such a sudden gust of wind as obliged the captain to lower his yards and take all other necessary precautions to prevent the danger that threatened us. But all was in vain; our endeavors had no effect; the sails were split into a thousand pieces, and the ship was stranded; several of the merchants and seamen were drowned, and the cargo was lost.
I had the good fortune, with several of the merchants and mariners, to get upon some planks, and we were carried by the current to an island which lay before us. There we found fruit and spring water, which preserved our lives. We stayed all night near the place where we had been cast ashore. | 188 | 8 | 2 | -1.427392 | 0.46237 | 68.71 | 9.54 | 10.68 | 9 | 8.15 | 0.19083 | 0.19758 | 10.269564 | 2,083 |
6,544 | Henry Beston | THE SHEPHERD OF CLOUDS | The Firelight Fairy Book | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/19207/19207-h/19207-h.htm | 1,919 | Lit | Lit | 1,300 | start | null | G | 1 | 1 | Once upon a time a young husband and wife named Giles and Phyllida lived in a cottage in the heart of a great plain. League upon league, the rich land fell away to the west, there to end at a wall of high mountains into whose fastnesses no one had ever ventured. Yet the mountains were very beautiful. In the cold of a clear winter's day, the snowy summits and rust-colored pinnacles shone bright and near at hand; in the spring, fogs hid them, and lay like gray mantles upon the lower slopes. Midway in the mountain wall, a wide chasm marked the entrance to a deep, gloomy valley, out of which a roaring mountain torrent hurried, to lose itself in the plain below. And because somewhere in the heart of this dark valley storms were brewed, whose dark clouds, laden with lightning and hail, poured from between the crags of the valley out over the land, this valley was known as the Valley of Thunder. According to an old legend, out of this valley a king should one day come to rule over the people of the plain. | 189 | 7 | 1 | -1.220514 | 0.489423 | 71.09 | 10.09 | 12.09 | 7 | 6.98 | 0.1896 | 0.1863 | 5.838568 | 3,961 |
1,963 | wikipedia | Collimator | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collimator | 2,020 | Info | Technology | 1,300 | start | CC BY-SA 3.0 | PG | 2 | 1.5 | A collimator is a device that narrows a beam of particles or waves. To narrow can mean either to cause the directions of motion to become more aligned in a specific direction (i.e., make collimated light or parallel rays), or to cause the spatial cross section of the beam to become smaller (beam limiting device).
An English physicist Henry Kater was the inventor of the floating collimator, which rendered a great service to practical astronomy. He reported about his invention in January 1825. In his report, Kater mentioned previous work in this area by Carl Friedrich Gauss and Friedrich Bessel.
In optics, a collimator may consist of a curved mirror or lens with some type of light source and/or an image at its focus. This can be used to replicate a target focused at infinity with little or no parallax.
In lighting, collimators are typically designed using the principles of non-imaging optics. | 149 | 8 | 4 | -2.536905 | 0.536402 | 51.4 | 10.84 | 10.7 | 12 | 10.47 | 0.26344 | 0.27877 | 6.365693 | 438 |
1,530 | F. J. H. Darton | Horn is Dubbed Knight | Junior Classics Vol. 4 | http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/6323/pg6323-images.html | 1,909 | Lit | Lit | 900 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | They set out for the king's palace. When they were come thither, Aylmer entrusted them to his steward, Athelbrus, whom he charged to bring them up in knightly ways. They were added to Aylmer's household, and taught all that squires of kings should know. But Horn was to come to greater things than this. He learnt quickly, and became beloved by every one; and most of all, Rimenhild, the king's daughter, loved him from the day when she first set eyes on him. Her love for him grew daily stronger and stronger, though she dared speak no word of it to him, for she was a princess, and he only a squire rescued by chance from the sea.
At length Rimenhild could hide her love no longer.
She sent for Athelbrus the steward, and bade him bring Horn to her bower. | 139 | 8 | 3 | -1.61771 | 0.501322 | 84.55 | 5.85 | 7.28 | 8 | 6.75 | 0.03718 | 0.08261 | 17.34636 | 321 |
2,497 | simple wiki | Ancestor | null | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancestor | 2,019 | Info | History | 900 | start | CC BY-SA 3.0 and GFDL | G | 1 | 1 | An ancestor is a person from whom one is descended. Usually it refers to a remote person, rather than the immediate parents or grandparents. A very similar word is forebear. A female ancestor may be called an ancestress. The line of people from whom a person descends is referred to as their ancestry.
A second meaning relates to evolution. There, it is used of an animal or plant from which others have evolved. In a similar way, it can be used for an early prototype or forerunner of a later device.
In law an ancestor can mean the person from whom an estate is lawfully obtained. No blood relationship is necessarily implied. More commonly, however, it is the person from whom an estate is obtained based on law and blood.
Two people have a genetic relationship if one is the ancestor of the other, or if they share a common ancestor. Each of someone's ancestors will have contributed to their DNA. In evolution, species that have evolved from the same ancestor are said to be of common descent. | 175 | 14 | 4 | -0.204233 | 0.477578 | 61.33 | 7.86 | 6.16 | 11 | 8.7 | 0.25285 | 0.24676 | 18.629719 | 924 |
1,173 | Angela Brazil | The Luckiest Girl in the School | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/18019/18019-h/18019-h.htm | 2,006 | Lit | Lit | 900 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | The Camp consisted of a long wooden shelter or shed, the south side of which was entirely open to the air. The boarded floor was raised about three feet above the level of the field, and projected well beyond the roof line, thus forming a kind of terrace. Inside the shelter was a row of small beds, and a space was curtained off at either end, on one side for a kitchen and on the other to make a cubicle for Miss Huntley. Outside, under a large oak tree, stood a table and benches. Nothing could have been more absolutely plain and bare as regards furniture. The girls took possession, however, with the utmost enthusiasm. The idea of "living the simple life" appealed to them. Who wanted chairs and chests of drawers and wash-stands? It would be fun to sleep in the shelter, and spend the whole day out of doors. | 151 | 9 | 1 | -0.645077 | 0.480117 | 77.26 | 6.68 | 7.03 | 8 | 6.55 | 0.14442 | 0.1716 | 8.883552 | 198 |
4,811 | James Mooney | Myths of the Cherokee | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45634/45634-h/45634-h.htm#ch5.4 | 1,888 | Lit | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | PG | 2 | 2 | When one dreams of being bitten by a snake he must be treated the same as for an actual bite, because it is a snake ghost that has bitten him; otherwise the place will swell and ulcerate in the same way, even though it be years afterwards. For fear of offending them, even in speaking, it is never said that a man has been bitten by a snake, but only that he has been "scratched by a brier." Most of the beliefs and customs in this connection have more special reference to the rattlesnake.
The rattlesnake is called utsa'nati, which may be rendered, "he has a bell," alluding to the rattle. According to a myth given elsewhere, he was once a man, and was transformed to his present shape that he might save the human race from extermination by the Sun, a mission which he accomplished successfully after others had failed. | 150 | 5 | 2 | -0.937659 | 0.456861 | 59.09 | 12.52 | 14.07 | 12 | 7.96 | 0.19719 | 0.21601 | 14.131986 | 2,604 |
2,426 | wikipedia | Toad | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toad | 2,020 | Info | Science | 1,300 | start | CC BY-SA 3.0 | G | 1 | 1 | A toad is any of a number of species of amphibians in the order Anura (frogs) that are characterized by dry, leathery skin, short legs, and parotoid glands.
A distinction between frogs and toads is not made in scientific taxonomy, but is common in popular culture (folk taxonomy), in which toads are associated with drier skin and more terrestrial habitats than animals commonly called frogs. In scientific taxonomy, toads are found in the families Bufonidae, Bombinatoridae, Discoglossidae, Pelobatidae, Rhinophrynidae, Scaphiopodidae, and Microhylidae. There is no definitive collective noun for toads, and like most collective nouns, the listed proposals are fanciful; one example is a knot of toads; others include a lump, nest, or knob of toads.
The function of the bumps on the skins of toads has been speculated to be to help the animal to blend more effectively into its environment by breaking up its visual outline. | 146 | 5 | 3 | -1.067089 | 0.451521 | 30.46 | 16.36 | 17.36 | 17 | 9.8 | 0.38567 | 0.39272 | 4.263446 | 860 |
3,148 | Roni Tibon & Elisa Cooper | When One Is More Than Two: Increasing Our Memory | null | https://kids.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/frym.2016.00011 | 2,016 | Info | Lit | 1,100 | mid | CC BY 4.0 | G | 1 | 1 | When scientists talk about working memory they mean a kind of memory that works to keep things in our minds for only a very short time, like a few seconds; you only need to hold that information until you deal with the situation or problem, then you can forget it. Unless we do something to keep the information in mind, such as saying it out-loud over-and-over again, it will quickly be forgotten. A reason information in working memory is lost so quickly, is that working memory can only hold a small amount of information, about seven items at a time. Information cannot stay in working memory forever. Things either need to be forgotten or moved out of working memory to more permanent memory, so that there is space for the new information that comes along.
Now imagine that you have been given a gift card to your favorite store and you want to use it on-line to buy something you really want. | 161 | 6 | 2 | -0.368359 | 0.477596 | 52.87 | 12.76 | 12.92 | 13 | 7.01 | 0.12137 | 0.1201 | 25.598528 | 1,505 |
4,746 | Thomas Bailey Aldrich | An Old Town By The Sea | null | http://www.online-literature.com/thomas-bailey-aldrich/old-town/2/ | 1,893 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | The town of Portsmouth stretches along the south bank of the Piscataqua, about two miles from the sea as the crow flies--three miles following the serpentine course of the river. The stream broadens suddenly at this point, and at flood tide, lying without a ripple in a basin formed by the interlocked islands and the mainland, it looks more like an island lake than a river. To the unaccustomed eye there is no visible outlet. Standing on one of the wharves at the foot of State Street or Court Street, a stranger would at first scarcely suspect the contiguity of the ocean. A little observation, however, would show him that he was in a seaport. The rich red rust on the gables and roofs of ancient buildings looking seaward would tell him that. There is a fitful saline flavor in the air, and if while he gazed a dense white fog should come rolling in, like a line of phantom breakers, he would no longer have any doubts. | 168 | 7 | 1 | -1.502851 | 0.517094 | 69.2 | 9.61 | 11.3 | 10 | 7.64 | 0.18648 | 0.20425 | 4.426455 | 2,556 |
2,204 | simple wiki | Marco_Polo | null | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marco_Polo | 2,020 | Info | History | 900 | mid | CC BY-SA 3.0 and GFDL | PG | 2 | 1.5 | Polo went on a 24-year trip to China with his father and uncle during the Mongol Dynasty. He left Venice at the age of 17 on a boat that went through the Mediterranean Sea, Ayas, Tabriz and Kerman. Then he travelled across Asia getting as far as Beijing. On the way there he had to go over mountains and through terrible deserts, across hot burning lands and places where the cold was horrible. He served in Kublai Khan's court for 17 years. He left the Far East and returned to Venice by sea. There was sickness on board and 600 passengers and crew died and some say pirates attacked. Nevertheless, Marco Polo survived it all.
Some scholars believe that while Marco Polo did go to China, he did not go to all of the other places described in his book. He brought noodles back from China and the Italians came up with different sizes and shapes and called it pasta. Polo returned to Venice with treasures like ivory, jade, jewels, porcelain and silk.
His father had borrowed money and bought a ship. He became wealthy because of his trading in the near East. | 191 | 13 | 3 | -0.914086 | 0.49324 | 74.82 | 6.53 | 6.59 | 8 | 7.39 | 0.1188 | 0.10444 | 13.432654 | 661 |
4,360 | Wells Hastings | GIDEON | The Best American Humorous Short Stories | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/10947/10947-h/10947-h.htm | 1,914 | Lit | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | A now-hallowed attack of tonsilitis had driven him to Florida, where presently Gideon had been employed to beguile his convalescence, and guide him over the intricate shallows of that long lagoon known as the Indian River in search of various fish. On days when fish had been reluctant Gideon had been lured into conversation, and gradually into narrative and the relation of what had appeared to Gideon as humorous and entertaining; and finally Felix, the vague idea growing big within him, had one day persuaded his boatman to dance upon the boards of a long pier where they had made fast for lunch. There, with all the sudden glory of crystallization, the vague idea took definite form and became the great inspiration of Stuhk's career.
Gideon had grown to be to vaudeville much what Uncle Remus is to literature: there was virtue in his very simplicity. His artistry itself was native and natural. He loved a good story, and he told it from his own sense of the gleeful morsel upon his tongue as no training could have made him. He always enjoyed his story and himself in the telling. | 189 | 7 | 2 | -3.02922 | 0.53304 | 48.48 | 13.28 | 14.03 | 13 | 9.04 | 0.22621 | 0.2125 | 10.181127 | 2,264 |
5,812 | Selected and Edited by Andrew Lang | The Story of the Merchant and the Genius | The Arabian Nights Entertainments | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/128/128-h/128-h.htm | 1,868 | Lit | Lit | 1,100 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | Sire, there was once upon a time a merchant who possessed great wealth, in land and merchandise, as well as in ready money. He was obliged from time to time to take journeys to arrange his affairs. One day, having to go a long way from home, he mounted his horse, taking with him a small wallet in which he had put a few biscuits and dates, because he had to pass through the desert where no food was to be got. He arrived without any mishap, and, having finished his business, set out on his return. On the fourth day of his journey, the heat of the sun being very great, he turned out of his road to rest under some trees. He found at the foot of a large walnut-tree a fountain of clear and running water. He dismounted, fastened his horse to a branch of the tree, and sat by the fountain, after having taken from his wallet some of his dates and biscuits. When he had finished this frugal meal he washed his face and hands in the fountain. | 183 | 8 | 1 | -0.434453 | 0.450248 | 76.82 | 8.26 | 9 | 6 | 5.81 | 0.04262 | 0.05444 | 16.564583 | 3,444 |
2,422 | Thomas Pool | Coming of Age Ceremonies Across Different Cultures | CLD | https://www.commonlit.org/texts/coming-of-age-ceremonies-across-different-cultures | 2,020 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 | PG | 2 | 1.5 | In the Jewish faith, after years of Hebrew and Torah1 study, 12 to 13-year-old boys and girls participate in a celebration. The ceremony for boys is called a bar mitzvah, and the ceremony for girls is called a bat mitzvah. This literally translates from Hebrew as "son" or "daughter of the commandments."
Jewish historians and scholars offer many different theories on the origin of the ceremony. However, the ceremony rose in importance throughout the Jewish diaspora during the 18th and 19th centuries.
While the Jewish faith has many different sects, boys usually become a bar mitzvah at the age of 13, and girls typically become a bat mitzvah at the age of 12 or 13, depending on the sect. For both boys and girls, the ceremony usually includes a service in a temple or synagogue. The bar or bat mitzvah (the boy or girl) then reads from the Torah, followed by a celebration with friends and family, as well as fellow congregants. The way a bar or bat mitzvah is celebrated varies within each congregation, community, or family. | 176 | 9 | 3 | -0.827984 | 0.46021 | 52.59 | 10.89 | 10.27 | 13 | 9.37 | 0.2369 | 0.23567 | 12.394318 | 856 |
3,037 | Shelby Ostergaard | Eleanor Roosevelt: Not Without Her Consent | CLD | https://www.commonlit.org/texts/eleanor-roosevelt-not-without-her-consent | 2,017 | Info | Lit | 900 | mid | CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 | G | 1 | 1 | Eleanor Roosevelt was born in New York City on October 11, 1884, to a prominent American family. In fact, her uncle Teddy Roosevelt had been president of the United States. She was a shy child who experienced great loss at a young age — her mother died when she was just eight, and her father died just two years later. She was then sent to boarding school in England for her teenage years.
It was not long after she returned to the States that she married her distant cousin, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, in 1905 at the age of 21. Franklin was a lawyer. But he was happy to tell anyone who would listen that he wouldn't be for long. He planned to win a seat in the state legislature, become an assistant secretary of the Navy, and then become governor of New York. This path, he reasoned, was sure to lead to the presidency.
Originally, his wife Eleanor was brought along for the ride. The first years of their marriage were filled with campaigns for him and pregnancies for her. He ran for state senate twice and she became pregnant six times, although only five of the children survived. | 197 | 12 | 3 | 1.269223 | 0.593606 | 70.88 | 7.47 | 7.46 | 10 | 7.57 | 0.0417 | 0.02283 | 18.662374 | 1,413 |
4,755 | Elizabeth Cady Stanton | The Solitude of Self | CLD | https://www.commonlit.org/texts/the-solitude-of-self | 1,892 | Info | Lit | 1,100 | start | null | PG | 2 | 1.5 | The strongest reason for giving woman all the opportunities for higher education, for the full development of her faculties, her forces of mind and body; for giving her the most enlarged freedom of thought and action; a complete emancipation from all forms of bondage, of custom, dependence, superstition; from all the crippling influences of fear — is the solitude and personal responsibility of her own individual life. The strongest reason why we ask for woman a voice in the government under which she lives; in the religion she is asked to believe; equality in social life, where she is the chief factor; a place in the trades and professions, where she may earn her bread, is because of her birthright to self-sovereignty; because, as an individual, she must rely on herself. No matter how much women prefer to lean, to be protected and supported, nor how much men desire to have them do so, they must make the voyage of life alone, and for safety in an emergency, they must know something of the laws of navigation. | 177 | 3 | 1 | -1.379444 | 0.511548 | 17.42 | 25.49 | 29.95 | 18 | 9.51 | 0.32305 | 0.33626 | 8.81663 | 2,563 |
6,235 | Annie Russell Marble | The Women Who Came in the Mayflower | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/7252/7252-h/7252-h.htm | 1,920 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | Squanto showed the men how to plant alewives or herring as fertilizer for the Indian corn. He taught the boys and girls how to gather clams and mussels on the shore and to "tread eels" in the water that is still called Eel River. He gathered wild strawberries and sassafras for the women and they prepared a "brew" which almost equaled their ale of old England. The friendly Indians assisted the men, as the seasons opened, in hunting wild turkeys, ducks and an occasional deer, welcome additions to the store of fish, sea-biscuits and cheese. We are told that Squanto brought also a dog from his Indian friends as a gift to the settlement. Already there were, at least, two dogs, probably brought from Holland or England, a mastiff and a spaniel to give comfort and companionship to the women and children, and to go with the men into the woods for timber and game. | 155 | 6 | 1 | -0.526204 | 0.469633 | 63.31 | 10.89 | 12.52 | 11 | 7.86 | 0.22115 | 0.2482 | 4.746193 | 3,716 |
4,524 | Beatrix Potter | The Tale of Benjamin Bunny | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/14407/14407-h/14407-h.htm | 1,904 | Lit | Lit | 900 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | One morning a little rabbit sat on a bank.
He pricked his ears and listened to the trit-trot, trit-trot of a pony.
A gig was coming along the road; it was driven by Mr. McGregor, and beside him sat Mrs. McGregor in her best bonnet.
As soon as they had passed, little Benjamin Bunny slid down into the road, and set off—with a hop, skip, and a jump—to call upon his relations, who lived in the wood at the back of Mr. McGregor's garden.
That wood was full of rabbit holes; and in the neatest, sandiest hole of all lived Benjamin's aunt and his cousins—Flopsy, Mopsy, Cotton-tail, and Peter.
Old Mrs. Rabbit was a widow; she earned her living by knitting rabbit-wool mittens and muffatees (I once bought a pair at a bazaar). She also sold herbs, and rosemary tea, and rabbit-tobacco (which is what we call lavender).
Little Benjamin did not very much want to see his Aunt.
He came round the back of the fir-tree, and nearly tumbled upon the top of his Cousin Peter.
Peter was sitting by himself. He looked poorly, and was dressed in a red cotton pocket-handkerchief. | 185 | 11 | 9 | -0.197797 | 0.454965 | 72.06 | 7.73 | 7.13 | 9 | 7.22 | 0.12269 | 0.10359 | 13.910124 | 2,392 |
2,453 | wikipedia | Valley | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valley | 2,020 | Info | Science | 1,100 | start | CC BY-SA 3.0 | G | 1 | 1 | A valley is a low area between hills, often with a river running through it.
In geology, a valley or dale is a depression that is longer than it is wide. The terms U-shaped and V-shaped are descriptive terms of geography to characterize the form of valleys. Most valleys belong to one of these two main types or a mixture of them, (at least) with respect to the cross section of the slopes or hillsides.
A valley in its broadest geographic sense is also known as a dale. A valley through which a river runs may also be referred to as a vale. A small, secluded, and often wooded valley is known as a dell or in Scotland as a glen. A wide, flat valley through which a river runs is known in Scotland as a strath. A mountain cove is a small valley, closed at one or both ends, in the central or southern Appalachian Mountains which sometimes results from the erosion of a geologic window. A small valley surrounded by mountains or ridges is sometimes known as a hollow. A deep, narrow valley is known as a cwm (also spelled combe or coombe). | 193 | 11 | 3 | -0.388832 | 0.455785 | 74.43 | 7.33 | 7.17 | 8 | 7.49 | 0.33075 | 0.31952 | 13.137447 | 884 |
6,568 | Jacob Abbott | Rollo in London | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/24182/24182-h/24182-h.htm | 1,850 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | The city—which was the original London—is the most ancient. It was founded long before the days of the Romans; so long, in fact, that its origin is wholly unknown. Nor is any thing known in respect to the derivation or meaning of the name. In regard to Westminster, the name is known to come from the word minster, which means cathedral—a cathedral church having been built there at a very early period, and which, lying west of London as it did, was called the West Minster. This church passed through a great variety of mutations during the lapse of successive centuries, having grown old, and been rebuilt, and enlarged, and pulled down, and rebuilt again, and altered, times and ways without number. It is represented in the present age by the venerable monumental pile—the burial-place of the ancient kings, and of the most distinguished nobles, generals, and statesmen of the English monarchy—known through all the world as Westminster Abbey. | 159 | 6 | 1 | -0.965469 | 0.5586 | 54.45 | 12.29 | 14.37 | 13 | 9.2 | 0.28376 | 0.29145 | 9.500428 | 3,983 |
5,007 | N. Joly | THE MOTIONS OF CAMPHOR UPON THE SURFACE OF WATER. | Scientific American Supplement, No. 401 | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/8742/8742-h/8742-h.htm | 1,883 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | Starting with this idea, which was as yet a hyphothetical one, we began to wash our hands, glasses, etc., at first with very dilute sulphuric acid, and then with ammonia. Afterward we rinsed them with quantities of water and dried them carefully with white linen rags that had been used for no other purpose; and finally we plunged them again into very clean water. We thus cut the Gordian knot, and were on the right track.
In fact, on again repeating Mr. Dutrochet's experiments, with that minute care as to cleanliness that we had observed to be absolutely necessary, we saw crumble away, one after another, all the pieces of the scaffolding that this master had with so much trouble built up. The camphor moved in all our vessels, of glass or metal, and of every form, at all heights. The immersed bodies, such as glass tubes, table knives, pieces of money, etc., had lost their pretended "sedative effect" on a pretended "activity of the water," and on the vessels that contained it. The so-called phenomenon of habit "transported from physiology into physics," no longer existed. | 185 | 7 | 2 | -2.434224 | 0.50445 | 52.14 | 12.62 | 13.65 | 13 | 8.09 | 0.18403 | 0.17891 | 10.216564 | 2,760 |
5,330 | PROFESSOR W. CHANDLER ROBERTS, F.R.S., and T. WRIGHTSON. | ON THE FLUID DENSITY OF CERTAIN METALS. | Scientific American Supplement, No. 303 | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/8296/8296-h/8296-h.htm | 1,881 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | The authors described their experiments on the fluid density of metals made in continuation of those submitted to Section B at the Swansea meeting of the Association. Some time since one of the authors gave an account of the results of experiments made to determine the density of metallic silver, and of certain alloys of silver and copper when in a molten state. The method adopted was that devised by Mr. R. Mallet, and the details were as follows: A conical vessel of best thin Lowmoor plate (1 millimeter thick), about 16 centimeters in height, and having an internal volume of about 540 cubic centimeters, was weighed, first empty, and subsequently when filled with distilled water at a known temperature. The necessary data were thus afforded for accurately determining its capacity at the temperature of the air. Molten silver was then poured into it, the temperature at the time of pouring being ascertained by the calorimetric method. The precautions, as regards filling, pointed out by Mr. Mallet, were adopted; and as soon as the metal was quite cold, the cone with its contents was again weighed. | 186 | 6 | 1 | -2.291102 | 0.541741 | 37.55 | 15.72 | 16.93 | 15 | 9.93 | 0.2582 | 0.2462 | 5.038109 | 3,029 |
6,276 | Elizabeth Harrison | LITTLE GRETCHEN AND THE WOODEN SHOE | CHRISTMAS STORIES AND LEGENDS | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/17770/17770-h/17770-h.htm#Page_13 | 1,916 | Lit | Lit | 1,100 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | "Oh, Granny, Granny!" she exclaimed; "you did not believe the Christmas angels would think about us, but see, they have, they have! Here is a dear little bird nestled down in the toe of your shoe! Oh, isn't he beautiful?"
Granny came forward and looked at what the child was holding lovingly in her hand. There she saw a tiny chick-a-dee, whose wing was evidently broken by the rough and boisterous winds of the night before, and who had taken shelter in the safe, dry toe of the old wooden shoe. She gently took the little bird out of Gretchen's hands, and skillfully bound his broken wing to his side, so that he need not hurt himself trying to fly with it. Then she showed Gretchen how to make a nice warm nest for the little stranger, close beside the fire and when their breakfast was ready, she let Gretchen feed the little bird with a few moist crumbs. | 158 | 8 | 2 | 0.823504 | 0.527618 | 80.26 | 7.06 | 8.35 | 7 | 6.5 | 0.06687 | 0.07741 | 16.594291 | 3,755 |
5,963 | Edgar Allan Poe | THE MURDERS IN THE RUE MORGUE | The Works of Edgar Allan Poe
Volume 1 (of 5) of the Raven Edition | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/2147/2147-h/2147-h.htm | 1,841 | Lit | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | Residing in Paris during the spring and part of the summer of 18—, I there became acquainted with a Monsieur C. Auguste Dupin. This young gentleman was of an excellent—indeed of an illustrious family, but, by a variety of untoward events, had been reduced to such poverty that the energy of his character succumbed beneath it, and he ceased to bestir himself in the world, or to care for the retrieval of his fortunes. By courtesy of his creditors, there still remained in his possession a small remnant of his patrimony; and, upon the income arising from this, he managed, by means of a rigorous economy, to procure the necessaries of life, without troubling himself about its superfluities. Books, indeed, were his sole luxuries, and in Paris these are easily obtained.
Our first meeting was at an obscure library in the Rue Montmartre, where the accident of our both being in search of the same very rare and very remarkable volume, brought us into closer communion. We saw each other again and again. | 172 | 6 | 2 | -2.675253 | 0.470405 | 43.58 | 14.34 | 14.99 | 15 | 9.08 | 0.25814 | 0.28321 | 2.804325 | 3,554 |
1,186 | Jessie Graham Flower | Grace Harlowe's Plebe Year at High School
The Merry Doings of the Oakdale Freshmen Girls | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/20472/20472-h/20472-h.htm | 1,910 | Lit | Lit | 900 | mid | null | PG | 2 | 1.5 | Wolves! The name was terrifying enough. But their cry, that long-drawn-out, hungry call, gave the picnickers a chill of apprehension.
"We must take the nearest way out of the wood, Reddy," exclaimed Tom. "They are still several miles off, and, if we hurry, we may reach the open before they do."
All started on a run, David helping Anne to keep up with the others while Reddy looked after Jessica. Nora and Grace were well enough trained in outdoor exercise to run without any assistance from the boys. Indeed, Grace Harlowe could out-run most boys of her own age.
"Go straight to your left," called Reddy, consulting his compass as he hurried Jessica over the snow.
Again they heard the angry howl of the wolves, and the last time it seemed much nearer.
"It's a terrible business, this running after a heavy meal," muttered Hippy, gasping for breath as he stumbled along in the track of his friends. "I'll make a nice meal for 'em if they catch me," he added, "and it looks as if I'd be the first to go." | 177 | 12 | 6 | -0.324015 | 0.452465 | 80.52 | 5.86 | 6.1 | 8 | 7.22 | 0.08749 | 0.08088 | 16.582659 | 211 |
5,206 | ? | Eddystone Lighthouse | Scientific American Supplement, Nos. 286 | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/8297/8297-h/8297-h.htm#5 | 1,881 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | In the latter part of April fifty-three courses of granite masonry, rising to the height of seventy feet above high water, had been laid, and thirty-six courses remained to be set. The old lighthouse had been already overtopped. As the work advances toward completion the question arises: What shall be done with John Smeaton's famous tower, which has done such admirable service for 120 years? One proposition is to take it down to the level of the top of the solid portion, and leave the rest as a perpetual memorial of the great work which Smeaton accomplished in the face of obstacles vastly greater than those which confront the modern architect. The London News says: "Were Smeaton's beautiful tower to be literally consigned to the waves, we should regard the act as a national calamity, not to say scandal; and, if public funds are not available for its conservation, we trust that private zeal and munificence may be relied on to save from destruction so interesting a relic. It certainly could not cost much to convey the building in sections to the mainland, and there, on some suitable spot, to re-erect it as a national tribute to the genius of its great architect." | 203 | 6 | 1 | -2.755437 | 0.500409 | 44.27 | 15.61 | 17.52 | 15 | 9.4 | 0.3349 | 0.30224 | 10.307394 | 2,921 |
3,658 | William H. Ukers | All About Coffee | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/28500/28500-h/28500-h.htm | 1,922 | Info | Lit | 1,100 | mid | null | PG | 2 | 1.5 | Coffee first appears in the official records of the New England colony in 1670. In 1683, the year following William Penn's settlement on the Delaware, we find him buying supplies of coffee in the New York market and paying for them at the rate of eighteen shillings and nine pence per pound.
Coffee houses patterned after the English and Continental prototypes were soon established in all the colonies. Those of New York and Philadelphia are described in separate chapters. The Boston houses are described at the end of this chapter.
Norfolk, Chicago, St. Louis, and New Orleans also had them. Conrad Leonhard's coffee house at 320 Market Street. St. Louis, was famous for its coffee and coffee cake, from 1844 to 1905, when it became a bakery and lunch room, removing in 1919 to Eighth and Pine Streets.
In the pioneer days of the great west, coffee and tea were hard to get; and, instead of them, teas were often made from garden herbs, spice wood, sassafras roots, and other shrubs, taken from the thickets. | 172 | 9 | 4 | -0.268395 | 0.48357 | 69.14 | 8.45 | 10.1 | 10 | 8.66 | 0.09462 | 0.09156 | 12.42667 | 1,913 |
2,671 | simple wiki | Parliament | null | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parliament | 2,019 | Info | History | 1,100 | start | CC BY-SA 3.0 and GFDL | G | 1 | 1 | A parliament is a type of legislature.
The most famous parliament is probably the one in the United Kingdom, which is sometimes called the "Mother of all Parliaments". The word "parliament" comes from the French word parler, which means a talk.
The Althing, the national parliament of Iceland, was founded earlier (930 AD), so it is the oldest legislature in the world still existing. However, the Althing did not function as a legislature for four centuries, and its role as a primary legislature is modern.
The Parliament of the United Kingdom is split into three separate parts, the House of Commons (the lower house), the lords (the upper house) and the Monarch. Most legislative power is concentrated in the House of Commons. It is made up of 650 Members of Parliament (MPs). These people are elected by the people of the United Kingdom to represent them in the House of Commons. The leader of the political party who commands a majority of MPs is usually made the Prime Minister, but not the Head of State, a position reserved for the Sovereign. | 178 | 10 | 4 | -1.326655 | 0.453352 | 56.19 | 9.92 | 9.52 | 13 | 9.25 | 0.19051 | 0.18655 | 16.351647 | 1,087 |
6,241 | H. E. Marshall | This Country of Ours | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/3761/pg3761-images.html | 1,917 | Info | Lit | 900 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | In days long long ago there dwelt in Greenland a King named Eric the
Red. He was a man mighty in war, and men held him in high honor.
Now one day to the court of Eric there came Bjarni the son of Heriulf. This Bjarni was a far traveler. He had sailed many times upon the seas, and when he came home he had ever some fresh tale of marvel and adventure to tell. But this time he had a tale to tell more marvelous than any before. For he told how far away across the sea of Greenland, where no man had sailed before, he had found a new, strange land.
But when the people asked news of this unknown land Bjarni could tell them little, for he had not set foot upon those far shores. Therefore, the people scorned him.
"Truly you have little hardihood," they said, "else you had gone ashore, and seen for yourself, and had given us good account of this land." | 164 | 10 | 5 | -1.310668 | 0.513293 | 86.59 | 4.98 | 4.83 | 7 | 5.8 | 0.04092 | 0.04366 | 23.82783 | 3,722 |
5,306 | M. J. TAYLOR | BERTIE AT HIS UNCLE'S | The Nursery, February 1881, Vol. XXIX
A Monthly Magazine for Youngest Readers | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/40753/40753-h/40753-h.htm#Page_50 | 1,881 | Lit | Lit | 700 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | Bertie is a brave little boy: so he marches straight up to the door,—which stands open,—and looks out. Then he claps his chubby hands, and shouts, "Oh! it was my uncle Frank under the table. I forgot he was such a funny man. Oh, uncle Frank! How can you get in the house and out of the house, and nobody see you?"
"Look down here at me!" says a strange barking voice from the bottom of the steps. Bertie looks, and sees something that makes his eyes brighter than ever. It is a great, black, shaggy dog, hitched to such a nice little express-wagon. The harness fits its wearer as nicely as can be, and has silver rings and buckles. The reins are red, white, and blue. A neat whip lies across the seat of the wagon. On the sides of the wagon, in large gilt letters, are the words, "City Express." | 151 | 14 | 2 | -0.603442 | 0.46508 | 91.24 | 3.25 | 2.72 | 5 | 6.04 | 0.05672 | 0.07477 | 17.42952 | 3,006 |
3,280 | Oku Modesto,
Salim Kasamba | Elders | African Storybook Level 3 | https://www.africanstorybook.org/# | 2,015 | Lit | Lit | 500 | mid | CC BY 4.0 | G | 1 | 1 | Then he would say to the next child, "I am old enough for meat. Here is yours. Wait until you are older." Each small portion became even smaller. It went like this for all the children. The youngest child got a tiny piece of meat. The father kept the big pieces of meat for himself and his wife. The children were quiet and ate their food. Years passed and the children grew up. The parents grew old. They became weak. The children looked after their old mother and father. One day at meal time, the eldest child served the meat, as usual. But this time she gave only a tiny piece to her father and a tiny piece to her mother. She said to her parents, "You ate yours, now it is our time. We are old enough." She served most of the meat to her brothers and sisters. The father remembered what he did while his children were young. Mother and father agreed that it was not the right thing to do. They asked for forgiveness. The children promised that they would not repeat this mistake with their own children. | 191 | 21 | 1 | 0.51236 | 0.502434 | 92.19 | 2.66 | 2.64 | 5 | 0.78 | 0.02366 | 0.01568 | 29.918396 | 1,609 |
2,542 | Devon S. Heath
Dana A. Hayward | Does Everyone Pay Attention to People in the Same Way? | null | https://kids.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/frym.2019.00130 | 2,019 | Info | Lit | 1,300 | mid | null | G | 1 | 1 | By filtering out any unimportant background information, attention helps you focus on different tasks like drawing a complex scene, playing video games, or reading this article. Attention can also help direct you to especially important information, like a siren or your name, so attention is a very necessary skill for humans. Imagine how difficult it would be if you wanted to focus your attention on something important but could not, or if your attention could not alert you to important changes in the environment. You would not be able to do your homework, learn a new skill, or even cross a busy street!
Because attention is so important, researchers are curious about how the brain knows what to pay attention to, especially when there are so many things happening around us. Some research shows that attention differs from person to person and changes depending on what people are paying attention to. For example, while some individuals pay more attention to social information (this is called social attention), not everyone has the same bias for social attention, which makes researchers interested in the root of these differences. | 185 | 7 | 2 | -0.268543 | 0.450272 | 39.77 | 14.31 | 15.67 | 16 | 8.1 | 0.17054 | 0.14845 | 19.907614 | 964 |
3,584 | Wilbur S. Peacock | Prey of the Space Falcon | null | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/62546/62546-h/62546-h.htm | 1,943 | Lit | Lit | 900 | mid | null | PG | 2 | 2 | Curt Varga's throat muscles tightened as he sent his inaudible questions to his brother in the curtained booth across the room.
"Is there any suspicion that you are working with me?" he asked. "If so, then this arrangement must be broken; I can't ruin your career, too."
The bean-sized amplifier imbedded so cunningly in the living bone at his right temple vibrated lightly from the mocking laughter.
"I think they do, Falcon," Val Varga said lightly. "But it doesn't matter; somebody has to do the undercover work—and I happen to be in a position where I can do it with the least suspicion." The voice softened. "Careers aren't important, anyway. I seem to remember that Dad had quite a reputation as a biochemist, until the Food Administrators decided his work threatened their dictatorial monopoly. And as a Commander of the IP, you were slated to go rather high."
Curt Varga grinned, and suddenly all of the deadly grimness was gone from his tanned face, and there was only the laughter in his cool grey eyes and the hint of a swashbuckling swagger to the tilt of his head to betoken the man. | 188 | 12 | 5 | -1.480371 | 0.462594 | 65.41 | 8.49 | 8.57 | 11 | 8.84 | 0.20933 | 0.18747 | 10.667196 | 1,856 |
2,270 | Ntokozo Tshabalala, Kenneth Boyowa
Okitikpi | A crying
unknown baby | African Storybook Level 3 | https://www.africanstorybook.org/# | 2,020 | Lit | Lit | 700 | start | CC BY 4.0 | G | 1 | 1 | There was a boy who was named John. He lived with his grandparents in a village called Daveyton Village in Free State. John grew up. He took a walk around the village and he saw a crying baby. He rushed there called for help. The community of the village rushed to him and asked him what happened. John replied "I was taking a walk and I saw a crying baby." The community asked him again and they said "Do you know this child?" John replied "No I don't." Then the community leader took a baby to his home. The next day John was called to a community meeting of the unknown baby. John was asked to go to Faith the farmer and the settlers who lived nearby the river where the unknown baby was found. John agreed on that brilliant and clever idea. | 143 | 13 | 1 | 0.179809 | 0.513993 | 86.43 | 3.74 | 2.94 | 6 | 7.12 | -0.00752 | 0.01312 | 28.364816 | 721 |
2,928 | Diana Gutiérrez, Lucía Fernández, Beatriz Martínez, Ana Rodríguez, and Pilar García | Bacteriophages: The Enemies of Bad Bacteria Are Our Friends! | Frontiers for Young Minds | https://kids.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/frym.2016.00030 | 2,017 | Info | Lit | 1,100 | mid | CC BY 4.0 | G | 1 | 1 | Antibiotics have been used for almost a century to treat bacterial diseases in humans and also in animals. Throughout this time, bacteria have been looking for strategies to survive antibiotic treatment. Imagine a battlefield, where a population of bacteria is attacked by small bullets (antibiotics). If one of the bacteria can find a shield to protect itself, it will survive. The surviving bacteria will have the advantage of being resistant to antibiotics forever and so will their descendants. This is the reason why, when you get sick, you have to take all the pills prescribed by the doctor, even if you already feel better. This is very important to prevent "survivors" in the battle! Bacteria resistant to antibiotics (called "superbugs") are very dangerous for us, because we have no weapons to fight against them. Also, these resistant bacteria can be transmitted to other people or even to animals. Nowadays, there are a high number of bacteria that have become resistant to many different antibiotics, and this is a threat for people worldwide. | 172 | 10 | 1 | 0.145879 | 0.459837 | 47.2 | 11 | 10.77 | 14 | 8.4 | 0.21326 | 0.20688 | 16.406884 | 1,317 |
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