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I was born at York on the first of March in the sixth year of the reign |
of King Charles the First. From the time when I was quite a young child, |
I had felt a great wish to spend my life at sea, and as I grew, so did |
this taste grow more and more strong; till at last I broke loose from |
my school and home, and found my way on foot to Hull, where I soon got a |
place on board a ship. |
When we had set sail but a few days, a squall of wind came on, and on |
the fifth night we sprang a leak. All hands were sent to the pumps, but |
we felt the ship groan in all her planks, and her beams quake from stem |
to stern; so that it was soon quite clear there was no hope for her, and |
that all we could do was to save our lives. |
The first thing was to fire off guns, to show that we were in need of |
help, and at length a ship, which lay not far from us, sent a boat to |
our aid. But the sea was too rough for it to lie near our ship's side, |
so we threw out a rope, which the men in the boat caught, and made fast, |
and by this means we all got in. Still in so wild a sea it was in vain |
to try to get on board the ship which had sent out the men, or to use |
our oars in the boat, and all we could do was to let it drive to shore. |
In the space of half an hour our own ship struck on a rock and went |
down, and we saw her no more. We made but slow way to the land, which we |
caught sight of now and then when the boat rose to the top of some high |
wave, and there we saw men who ran in crowds, to and fro, all bent on |
one thing, and that was to save us. |
At last to our great joy we got on shore, where we had the luck to meet |
with friends who gave us the means to get back to Hull; and if I had now |
had the good sense to go home, it would have been well for me. |
The man whose ship had gone down said with a grave look, "Young lad, you |
ought to go to sea no more, it is not the kind, of life for you." "Why |
Sir, will you go to sea no more then?" "That is not the same kind of |
thing; I was bred to the sea, but you were not, and came on board my |
ship just to find out what a life at sea was like, and you may guess |
what you will come to if you do not go back to your home. God will not |
bless you, and it may be that you have brought all this woe on us." |
I spoke not a word more to him; which way he went I knew not, nor did |
I care to know, for I was hurt at this rude speech. Shall I go home |
thought I, or shall I go to sea? Shame kept me from home, and I could |
not make up my mind what course of life to take. |
As it has been my fate through life to choose for the worst, so I did |
now. I had gold in my purse, and good clothes on my back, and to sea I |
went once more. |
But I had worse luck this time than the last, for when we were far out |
at sea, some Turks in a small ship came on our track in full chase. We |
set as much sail as our yards would bear, so as to get clear from them. |
But in spite of this, we saw our foes gain on us, and we felt sure that |
they would come up with our ship in a few hours' time. |
At last they caught us, but we brought our guns to bear on them, which |
made them shear off for a time, yet they kept up a fire at us as long as |
they were in range. The next time the Turks came up, some of their men |
got on board our ship, and set to work to cut the sails, and do us all |
kinds of harm. So, as ten of our men lay dead, and most of the rest had |
wounds, we gave in. |
The chief of the Turks took me as his prize to a port which was held by |
the Moors. He did not use me so ill as at first I thought he would have |
done, but he set me to work with the rest of his slaves. This was a |
change in my life which I did not think had been in store for me. How my |
heart sank with grief at the thought of those whom I had left at home, |
nay, to whom I had not had the grace so much as to say "Good bye" when I |
went to sea, nor to give a hint of what I meant to do! |
Yet all that I went through at this time was but a taste of the toils |
and cares which it has since been my lot to bear. |
I thought at first that the Turk might take me with him when next he |
went to sea, and so I should find some way to get free; but the hope |
did not last long, for at such times he left me on shore to see to his |
crops. This kind of life I led for two years, and as the Turk knew and |
saw more of me, he made me more and more free. He went out in his boat |
once or twice a week to catch a kind of flat fish, and now and then he |
took me and a boy with him, for we were quick at this kind of sport, and |
he grew quite fond of me. |
One day the Turk sent me in the boat to catch some fish, with no one |
else but a man and a boy. While we were out so thick a fog came on that |
though we were out not half a mile from the shore, we quite lost sight |
of it for twelve hours; and when the sun rose the next day, our boat was |
at least ten miles out at sea. The wind blew fresh, and we were all much |
in want of food, but at last, with the help of our oars and sail, we got |
back safe to land. |
When the Turk heard how we had lost our way, he said that the next time |
he went out, he would take a boat that would hold all we could want if |
we were kept out at sea. So he had quite a state room built in the long |
boat of his ship, as well as a room for us slaves. One day he sent me |
to trim the boat, as he had two friends who would go in it to fish with |
him. But when the time came they did not go, so he sent me with the man |
and the boy--whose name was Xury--to catch some fish for the guests that |
were to sup with him. |
Now the thought struck me all at once that this would be a good chance |
to set off with the boat, and get free. So in the first place, I took |
Dataset Card for Lipogram-e
Dataset Summary
This is a dataset of English books which only write using one syllable at a time. At this time, the dataset only contains Robinson Crusoe — in Words of One Syllable by Lucy Aikin and Daniel Defoe
This dataset is contributed as part of a paper titled "Most Language Models can be Poets too: An AI Writing Assistant and Constrained Text Generation Studio" to appear at COLING 2022. This dataset does not appear in the paper itself, but was gathered as a candidate constrained text generation dataset.
Supported Tasks and Leaderboards
The main task for this dataset is Constrained Text Generation - but all types of language modeling are suitable.
Languages
English
Dataset Structure
Data Instances
Each is extracted directly from the available pdf or epub documents converted to txt using pandoc.
Data Fields
Text. The name of each work appears before the work starts and again at the end, so the books can be trivially split again if necessary.
Data Splits
None given. The way I do so in the paper is to extract the final 20% of each book, and concatenate these together. This may not be the most ideal way to do a train/test split, but I couldn't think of a better way. I did not believe randomly sampling was appropriate, but I could be wrong.
Dataset Creation
Curation Rationale
There are several books which claim to only be written using one syllable words. A list of them can be found here: https://diyhomeschooler.com/2017/01/25/classics-in-words-of-one-syllable-free-ebooks/
Unfortunately, after careful human inspection, it appears that only one of these works actually does reliably maintain the one syllable constraint through the whole text. Outside of proper names, I cannot spot or computationally find a single example of a more-than-one-syllable word in this whole work.
Source Data
Robinson Crusoe — in Words of One Syllable by Lucy Aikin and Daniel Defoe
Initial Data Collection and Normalization
Project Gutenberg
Who are the source language producers?
Lucy Aikin and Daniel Defoe
Annotations
Annotation process
None
Who are the annotators?
n/a
Personal and Sensitive Information
None
Considerations for Using the Data
There may be OCR conversion artifacts.
Social Impact of Dataset
These books have existed for a awhile now, so it's unlikely that this will have dramatic Social Impact.
Discussion of Biases
The only biases possible are related to the contents of Robinson Crusoe or the possibility of the authors changing Robinson Crusoe in some problematic way by using one-syllable words. This is unlikely, as this work was aimed at children.
Other Known Limitations
It's possible that more works exist but were not well known enough for the authors to find them and include them. Finding such inclusions would be grounds for iteration of this dataset (e.g. a version 1.1 would be released). The goal of this project is to eventually encompass all book length english language works that do not use more than one syllable in each of their words (except for names)
Additional Information
n/a
Dataset Curators
Allen Roush
Licensing Information
MIT
Citation Information
TBA
Contributions
Thanks to @Hellisotherpeople for adding this dataset.
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