mv: 'input-file.zip' and './input-file.zip' are the same file Creating study carrel named subject-verseSatire-freebo Initializing database Unzipping Archive: input-file.zip inflating: ./tmp/input/xml2htm.xsl inflating: ./tmp/input/metadata.csv inflating: ./tmp/input/A94018.xml inflating: ./tmp/input/A84621.xml caution: excluded filename not matched: *MACOSX* === DIRECTORIES: ./tmp/input === DIRECTORY: === metadata file: ./tmp/input/metadata.csv === found metadata file === updating bibliographic database Building study carrel named subject-verseSatire-freebo May 25, 2021 12:52:06 PM org.apache.tika.config.InitializableProblemHandler$3 handleInitializableProblem WARNING: J2KImageReader not loaded. JPEG2000 files will not be processed. See https://pdfbox.apache.org/2.0/dependencies.html#jai-image-io for optional dependencies. May 25, 2021 12:52:06 PM org.apache.tika.config.InitializableProblemHandler$3 handleInitializableProblem WARNING: Tesseract OCR is installed and will be automatically applied to image files unless you've excluded the TesseractOCRParser from the default parser. Tesseract may dramatically slow down content extraction (TIKA-2359). As of Tika 1.15 (and prior versions), Tesseract is automatically called. In future versions of Tika, users may need to turn the TesseractOCRParser on via TikaConfig. May 25, 2021 12:52:06 PM org.apache.tika.config.InitializableProblemHandler$3 handleInitializableProblem WARNING: org.xerial's sqlite-jdbc is not loaded. Please provide the jar on your classpath to parse sqlite files. See tika-parsers/pom.xml for the correct version. INFO Starting Apache Tika 1.24.1 server INFO Setting the server's publish address to be http://localhost:9998/ INFO Logging initialized @1506ms to org.eclipse.jetty.util.log.Slf4jLog INFO jetty-9.4.27.v20200227; built: 2020-02-27T18:37:21.340Z; git: a304fd9f351f337e7c0e2a7c28878dd536149c6c; jvm 1.8.0_281-b09 INFO Started ServerConnector@3e74829{HTTP/1.1, (http/1.1)}{localhost:9998} INFO Started @1583ms WARN Empty contextPath INFO Started o.e.j.s.h.ContextHandler@b4711e2{/,null,AVAILABLE} INFO Started Apache Tika server at http://localhost:9998/ INFO rmeta/text (autodetecting type) INFO rmeta/text (autodetecting type) FILE: cache/A94018.xml OUTPUT: txt/A94018.txt FILE: cache/A84621.xml OUTPUT: txt/A84621.txt === file2bib.sh === INFO Detecting media type for Filename: b'A94018.xml' INFO Detecting media type for Filename: b'A84621.xml' INFO rmeta/text (autodetecting type) INFO rmeta/text (autodetecting type) A94018 txt/../pos/A94018.pos A94018 txt/../ent/A94018.ent A94018 txt/../wrd/A94018.wrd A84621 txt/../pos/A84621.pos === file2bib.sh === id: A94018 author: Vincent, William, 1631 or 2-1678. title: Strange news from Stafford-shire; or, a dreadful example of divine justice Shown upon a young-man in that county, who having stolen a Bible, and being taxed therewith, fell to imprecating Gods judgements upon himself, wishing that his hands might rot off, and that he might rot alive if he touched it; which heavy judgement in a short time fell upon him, his hands and his arms rotting away, and his leggs from his body, he being not sick, yet appearing to all that see him the saddest spectacle that ever eyes beheld. This may warn others from wishing for judgements to fall upon them, when they know themselves guilty. This relation was given and attested by Mr. Vincent, Minister of Bednal, who discoursed with this miserable young-man, tune of, My bleeding heart, &c. date: nan pages: extension: .xml txt: ./txt/A94018.txt cache: ./cache/A94018.xml Content-Type application/xml X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.xml.DcXMLParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 6 resourceName b'A94018.xml' A84621 txt/../ent/A84621.ent A84621 txt/../wrd/A84621.wrd === file2bib.sh === id: A84621 author: Flatman, Thomas, 1637-1688. title: Naps upon Parnassus. A sleepy muse nipt and pincht, though not awakened such voluntary and jovial copies of verses, as were lately receiv'd from some of the wits of the universities, in a frolick, dedicated to Gondibert's mistress by Captain Jones and others. Whereunto is added from demonstration of the authors prosaick excellency's, his epistle to one of the universities, with the answer; together with two satyrical characters of his own, of a temporizer, and an antiquary, with marginal notes by a friend to the reader. Vide Jones his legend, drink sack and gunpowder, and so fall to't. date: 1658.0 pages: extension: .xml txt: ./txt/A84621.txt cache: ./cache/A84621.xml Content-Type application/xml X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.xml.DcXMLParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 57 resourceName b'A84621.xml' Done mapping. Reducing subject-verseSatire-freebo === reduce.pl bib === id = A84621 author = Flatman, Thomas, 1637-1688. title = Naps upon Parnassus. A sleepy muse nipt and pincht, though not awakened such voluntary and jovial copies of verses, as were lately receiv'd from some of the wits of the universities, in a frolick, dedicated to Gondibert's mistress by Captain Jones and others. Whereunto is added from demonstration of the authors prosaick excellency's, his epistle to one of the universities, with the answer; together with two satyrical characters of his own, of a temporizer, and an antiquary, with marginal notes by a friend to the reader. Vide Jones his legend, drink sack and gunpowder, and so fall to't. date = 1658.0 pages = extension = .xml mime = application/xml words = 21741 sentences = 7360 flesch = 96 summary = A sleepy muse nipt and pincht, though not awakened such voluntary and jovial copies of verses, as were lately receiv'd from some of the wits of the universities, in a frolick, dedicated to Gondibert's mistress by Captain Jones and others. A sleepy muse nipt and pincht, though not awakened such voluntary and jovial copies of verses, as were lately receiv'd from some of the wits of the universities, in a frolick, dedicated to Gondibert's mistress by Captain Jones and others. Whereunto is added from demonstration of the authors prosaick excellency's, his epistle to one of the universities, with the answer; together with two satyrical characters of his own, of a temporizer, and an antiquary, with marginal notes by a friend to the reader. Whereunto is added from demonstration of the authors prosaick excellency's, his epistle to one of the universities, with the answer; together with two satyrical characters of his own, of a temporizer, and an antiquary, with marginal notes by a friend to the reader. cache = ./cache/A84621.xml txt = ./txt/A84621.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = A94018 author = Vincent, William, 1631 or 2-1678. title = Strange news from Stafford-shire; or, a dreadful example of divine justice Shown upon a young-man in that county, who having stolen a Bible, and being taxed therewith, fell to imprecating Gods judgements upon himself, wishing that his hands might rot off, and that he might rot alive if he touched it; which heavy judgement in a short time fell upon him, his hands and his arms rotting away, and his leggs from his body, he being not sick, yet appearing to all that see him the saddest spectacle that ever eyes beheld. This may warn others from wishing for judgements to fall upon them, when they know themselves guilty. This relation was given and attested by Mr. Vincent, Minister of Bednal, who discoursed with this miserable young-man, tune of, My bleeding heart, &c. date = nan pages = extension = .xml mime = application/xml words = 1786 sentences = 265 flesch = 88 summary = Strange news from Stafford-shire; or, a dreadful example of divine justice Shown upon a young-man in that county, who having stolen a Bible, and being taxed therewith, fell to imprecating Gods judgements upon himself, wishing that his hands might rot off, and that he might rot alive if he touched it; which heavy judgement in a short time fell upon him, his hands and his arms rotting away, and his leggs from his body, he being not sick, yet appearing to all that see him the saddest spectacle that ever eyes beheld. Strange news from Stafford-shire; or, a dreadful example of divine justice Shown upon a young-man in that county, who having stolen a Bible, and being taxed therewith, fell to imprecating Gods judgements upon himself, wishing that his hands might rot off, and that he might rot alive if he touched it; which heavy judgement in a short time fell upon him, his hands and his arms rotting away, and his leggs from his body, he being not sick, yet appearing to all that see him the saddest spectacle that ever eyes beheld. cache = ./cache/A94018.xml txt = ./txt/A94018.txt Building ./etc/reader.txt A84621 A94018 A94018 A84621 number of items: 2 sum of words: 23,527 average size in words: 11,763 average readability score: 92 nouns: t; eyes; ▪; verses; men; art; man; author; sight; others; sense; doth; work; wit; time; text; way; thy; none; day; soul; self; light; eye; body; words; verse; nature; l; head; poets; night; face; hand; brains; wits; times; reader; name; things; life; history; friend; death; characters; world; place; heads; books; word verbs: is; be; are; did; have; ''s; do; was; were; see; had; let; make; made; come; say; read; being; take; makes; know; been; think; fall; write; go; give; put; cry; am; tell; seen; found; understand; praise; look; done; bring; wear; rot; le; keep; finde; added; speak; printed; lie; hath; fell; written adjectives: such; other; roman; non; -; own; great; good; dark; same; more; new; true; many; plain; much; english; several; first; best; last; clear; strange; short; old; full; doth; black; whole; obscure; most; admirable; young; useful; sure; poor; little; like; high; early; deep; common; vulgar; small; sad; sacred; rare; perfect; long; incomparable adverbs: not; so; then; now; up; out; too; n''t; here; more; as; onely; thus; most; yet; never; off; ever; much; first; well; also; hence; there; far; even; together; still; away; once; long; in; forth; very; sure; sometimes; on; lately; all; therefore; else; down; again; soon; just; better; surely; indeed; fully; vpon pronouns: his; i; he; their; it; they; my; your; you; him; thy; we; our; them; me; her; she; its; us; himself; thee; themselves; ''s; mine; yours; one; ye; tollit; theirs; l; '' proper nouns: thou; thy; c.; book; w.; poems; poet; wit; j.; muse; mr.; english; t.; tcp; parnassus; verse; vpon; sir; god; sun; m.; thee; new; muses; minister; le; king; authour; oxon; london; john; heaven; f.; a.; text; t; son; poets; poetry; physick; lilly; homer; e''re; art; thine; nature; naps; n.; love; gods keywords: wit; verses; thy; thou; tcp; sun; roman; reader; poet; poems; muse; like; eyes; eye; english; book; bible; author; art one topic; one dimension: thy file(s): ./cache/A84621.xml titles(s): Naps upon Parnassus. A sleepy muse nipt and pincht, though not awakened such voluntary and jovial copies of verses, as were lately receiv''d from some of the wits of the universities, in a frolick, dedicated to Gondibert''s mistress by Captain Jones and others. Whereunto is added from demonstration of the authors prosaick excellency''s, his epistle to one of the universities, with the answer; together with two satyrical characters of his own, of a temporizer, and an antiquary, with marginal notes by a friend to the reader. Vide Jones his legend, drink sack and gunpowder, and so fall to''t. three topics; one dimension: thy; tcp; batch file(s): ./cache/A84621.xml, ./cache/A94018.xml, ./cache/A94018.xml titles(s): Naps upon Parnassus. A sleepy muse nipt and pincht, though not awakened such voluntary and jovial copies of verses, as were lately receiv''d from some of the wits of the universities, in a frolick, dedicated to Gondibert''s mistress by Captain Jones and others. Whereunto is added from demonstration of the authors prosaick excellency''s, his epistle to one of the universities, with the answer; together with two satyrical characters of his own, of a temporizer, and an antiquary, with marginal notes by a friend to the reader. Vide Jones his legend, drink sack and gunpowder, and so fall to''t. | Strange news from Stafford-shire; or, a dreadful example of divine justice Shown upon a young-man in that county, who having stolen a Bible, and being taxed therewith, fell to imprecating Gods judgements upon himself, wishing that his hands might rot off, and that he might rot alive if he touched it; which heavy judgement in a short time fell upon him, his hands and his arms rotting away, and his leggs from his body, he being not sick, yet appearing to all that see him the saddest spectacle that ever eyes beheld. This may warn others from wishing for judgements to fall upon them, when they know themselves guilty. This relation was given and attested by Mr. Vincent, Minister of Bednal, who discoursed with this miserable young-man, tune of, My bleeding heart, &c. | Strange news from Stafford-shire; or, a dreadful example of divine justice Shown upon a young-man in that county, who having stolen a Bible, and being taxed therewith, fell to imprecating Gods judgements upon himself, wishing that his hands might rot off, and that he might rot alive if he touched it; which heavy judgement in a short time fell upon him, his hands and his arms rotting away, and his leggs from his body, he being not sick, yet appearing to all that see him the saddest spectacle that ever eyes beheld. This may warn others from wishing for judgements to fall upon them, when they know themselves guilty. This relation was given and attested by Mr. Vincent, Minister of Bednal, who discoursed with this miserable young-man, tune of, My bleeding heart, &c. five topics; three dimensions: thy thou like; tcp text did; batch permission distributed; batch permission distributed; batch permission distributed file(s): ./cache/A84621.xml, ./cache/A94018.xml, ./cache/A94018.xml, ./cache/A94018.xml, ./cache/A94018.xml titles(s): Naps upon Parnassus. A sleepy muse nipt and pincht, though not awakened such voluntary and jovial copies of verses, as were lately receiv''d from some of the wits of the universities, in a frolick, dedicated to Gondibert''s mistress by Captain Jones and others. Whereunto is added from demonstration of the authors prosaick excellency''s, his epistle to one of the universities, with the answer; together with two satyrical characters of his own, of a temporizer, and an antiquary, with marginal notes by a friend to the reader. Vide Jones his legend, drink sack and gunpowder, and so fall to''t. | Strange news from Stafford-shire; or, a dreadful example of divine justice Shown upon a young-man in that county, who having stolen a Bible, and being taxed therewith, fell to imprecating Gods judgements upon himself, wishing that his hands might rot off, and that he might rot alive if he touched it; which heavy judgement in a short time fell upon him, his hands and his arms rotting away, and his leggs from his body, he being not sick, yet appearing to all that see him the saddest spectacle that ever eyes beheld. This may warn others from wishing for judgements to fall upon them, when they know themselves guilty. This relation was given and attested by Mr. Vincent, Minister of Bednal, who discoursed with this miserable young-man, tune of, My bleeding heart, &c. | Strange news from Stafford-shire; or, a dreadful example of divine justice Shown upon a young-man in that county, who having stolen a Bible, and being taxed therewith, fell to imprecating Gods judgements upon himself, wishing that his hands might rot off, and that he might rot alive if he touched it; which heavy judgement in a short time fell upon him, his hands and his arms rotting away, and his leggs from his body, he being not sick, yet appearing to all that see him the saddest spectacle that ever eyes beheld. This may warn others from wishing for judgements to fall upon them, when they know themselves guilty. This relation was given and attested by Mr. Vincent, Minister of Bednal, who discoursed with this miserable young-man, tune of, My bleeding heart, &c. | Strange news from Stafford-shire; or, a dreadful example of divine justice Shown upon a young-man in that county, who having stolen a Bible, and being taxed therewith, fell to imprecating Gods judgements upon himself, wishing that his hands might rot off, and that he might rot alive if he touched it; which heavy judgement in a short time fell upon him, his hands and his arms rotting away, and his leggs from his body, he being not sick, yet appearing to all that see him the saddest spectacle that ever eyes beheld. This may warn others from wishing for judgements to fall upon them, when they know themselves guilty. This relation was given and attested by Mr. Vincent, Minister of Bednal, who discoursed with this miserable young-man, tune of, My bleeding heart, &c. | Strange news from Stafford-shire; or, a dreadful example of divine justice Shown upon a young-man in that county, who having stolen a Bible, and being taxed therewith, fell to imprecating Gods judgements upon himself, wishing that his hands might rot off, and that he might rot alive if he touched it; which heavy judgement in a short time fell upon him, his hands and his arms rotting away, and his leggs from his body, he being not sick, yet appearing to all that see him the saddest spectacle that ever eyes beheld. This may warn others from wishing for judgements to fall upon them, when they know themselves guilty. This relation was given and attested by Mr. Vincent, Minister of Bednal, who discoursed with this miserable young-man, tune of, My bleeding heart, &c. Type: zip2carrel title: subject-verseSatire-freebo date: 2021-05-25 time: 12:36 username: emorgan patron: Eric Morgan email: emorgan@nd.edu input: input-file.zip ==== make-pages.sh htm files ==== make-pages.sh complex files ==== make-pages.sh named enities ==== making bibliographics id: A84621 author: Flatman, Thomas, 1637-1688. title: Naps upon Parnassus. A sleepy muse nipt and pincht, though not awakened such voluntary and jovial copies of verses, as were lately receiv''d from some of the wits of the universities, in a frolick, dedicated to Gondibert''s mistress by Captain Jones and others. Whereunto is added from demonstration of the authors prosaick excellency''s, his epistle to one of the universities, with the answer; together with two satyrical characters of his own, of a temporizer, and an antiquary, with marginal notes by a friend to the reader. Vide Jones his legend, drink sack and gunpowder, and so fall to''t. date: 1658.0 words: 21741 sentences: 7360 pages: flesch: 96 cache: ./cache/A84621.xml txt: ./txt/A84621.txt summary: A sleepy muse nipt and pincht, though not awakened such voluntary and jovial copies of verses, as were lately receiv''d from some of the wits of the universities, in a frolick, dedicated to Gondibert''s mistress by Captain Jones and others. A sleepy muse nipt and pincht, though not awakened such voluntary and jovial copies of verses, as were lately receiv''d from some of the wits of the universities, in a frolick, dedicated to Gondibert''s mistress by Captain Jones and others. Whereunto is added from demonstration of the authors prosaick excellency''s, his epistle to one of the universities, with the answer; together with two satyrical characters of his own, of a temporizer, and an antiquary, with marginal notes by a friend to the reader. Whereunto is added from demonstration of the authors prosaick excellency''s, his epistle to one of the universities, with the answer; together with two satyrical characters of his own, of a temporizer, and an antiquary, with marginal notes by a friend to the reader. id: A94018 author: Vincent, William, 1631 or 2-1678. title: Strange news from Stafford-shire; or, a dreadful example of divine justice Shown upon a young-man in that county, who having stolen a Bible, and being taxed therewith, fell to imprecating Gods judgements upon himself, wishing that his hands might rot off, and that he might rot alive if he touched it; which heavy judgement in a short time fell upon him, his hands and his arms rotting away, and his leggs from his body, he being not sick, yet appearing to all that see him the saddest spectacle that ever eyes beheld. This may warn others from wishing for judgements to fall upon them, when they know themselves guilty. This relation was given and attested by Mr. Vincent, Minister of Bednal, who discoursed with this miserable young-man, tune of, My bleeding heart, &c. date: nan words: 1786 sentences: 265 pages: flesch: 88 cache: ./cache/A94018.xml txt: ./txt/A94018.txt summary: Strange news from Stafford-shire; or, a dreadful example of divine justice Shown upon a young-man in that county, who having stolen a Bible, and being taxed therewith, fell to imprecating Gods judgements upon himself, wishing that his hands might rot off, and that he might rot alive if he touched it; which heavy judgement in a short time fell upon him, his hands and his arms rotting away, and his leggs from his body, he being not sick, yet appearing to all that see him the saddest spectacle that ever eyes beheld. Strange news from Stafford-shire; or, a dreadful example of divine justice Shown upon a young-man in that county, who having stolen a Bible, and being taxed therewith, fell to imprecating Gods judgements upon himself, wishing that his hands might rot off, and that he might rot alive if he touched it; which heavy judgement in a short time fell upon him, his hands and his arms rotting away, and his leggs from his body, he being not sick, yet appearing to all that see him the saddest spectacle that ever eyes beheld. ==== make-pages.sh questions ==== make-pages.sh search ==== make-pages.sh topic modeling corpus Zipping study carrel