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/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/1629-139707-0003/1629-139707-0003_noise_linear_1_m0.891.wav | language English<asr_text>Raised money by illegal means to meet its expenses, and encountered a miserable failure at cadiz. In the very first year of his reign, an expedition to cadiz had been made in the hope of plunder. But as it was not successful, it was necessary to get a grant of money from the parliament. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139707-0004/1629-139707-0004_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.918.wav | language English<asr_text>And when they met, in no very complying humour, the king told them to make haste to let him have it, or it would be the worse for themselves not put in a more complying humour. By this, they impeached the king's favourite, the duke of buckingham, as the cause which he undoubtedly was. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139707-0005/1629-139707-0005_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.146.wav | language English<asr_text>Of many great public grievances and wrongs, the king, to save him, dissolved the parliament without getting the money he wanted. And when the lords implored him to consider and grant a little delay, he replied, no, not one minute. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/1629-139707-0007/1629-139707-0007_noise_linear_1_m0.647.wav | language English<asr_text>And to pay all the cost, for three months, of a fleet of armed ships. And he required the people to unite in lending him large sums of money, the repayment of which was very doubtful. If the poor people refused, they were pressed as soldiers or sailors. If the gentry refused, they were sent to... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139707-0008/1629-139707-0008_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.030.wav | language English<asr_text>Five gentlemen named sir thomas darnel, john corbet, walter earl, john heveningham. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/1629-139707-0009/1629-139707-0009_noise_linear_1_m0.760.wav | language English<asr_text>And were sent to prison without any cause but the king's pleasure being stated for their imprisonment. Then the question came to be solemnly tried, whether this was not a violation of magna charta and an encroachment by the king on the highest rights of the english people. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139707-0012/1629-139707-0012_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.539.wav | language English<asr_text>Addressed them when they met, in a contemptuous manner and just told them in so many words that he had only called them together because he wanted money. The parliament strong enough and resolute enough to know that they would lower his tone, cared little for what he said, and laid before him ... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139707-0014/1629-139707-0014_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.727.wav | language English<asr_text>Giving his consent to all that was required of him, he not only afterwards, departed from his word and honour on these points over and over again, but at this very time he did the mean and dissembling act of publishing his first answer and not his second. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/1629-139707-0015/1629-139707-0015_noise_linear_1_m0.005.wav | language English<asr_text>Merely that the people might suppose that the parliament had not got the better of him, that pestilent buckingham. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139707-0019/1629-139707-0019_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.365.wav | language English<asr_text>His name was john felton, a protestant and a retired officer in the army. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139707-0020/1629-139707-0020_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.787.wav | language English<asr_text>And then he drew out the knife, fell against a table and died. The council made a mighty business of examining john felton about this murder. Though it was a plain case enough, one would think he had come seventy miles to do it, he told them. And he did it for the reason he had declared. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139707-0022/1629-139707-0022_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.795.wav | language English<asr_text>Though he had freed england from one of the most profligate, contemptible and base court favourites to whom it has ever yielded, a very different man now arose. This was sir thomas wentworth, a yorkshire gentleman who had sat in parliament for a long time, and who had favoured arbitrary and ha... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139707-0024/1629-139707-0024_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.030.wav | language English<asr_text>A parliament, however, was still in existence and was not to be won. On the twentieth of january, one thousand six hundred and twenty nine, sir john eliot, a great man who had been active in the petition of right, brought forward other strong resolutions against the king's chief instruments, a... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139707-0026/1629-139707-0026_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.112.wav | language English<asr_text>A scene of great confusion arose among the members. And while many swords were drawn and flashing about, the king, who was kept informed of all that was going on, told the captain of his guard to go down to the house and force the doors. The resolutions were, by that time, however, voted, and ... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139707-0030/1629-139707-0030_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.907.wav | language English<asr_text>That the petition was not humble enough when he sent another petition by his young son, in which he pathetically offered to go back to prison when his health was restored, if he might be released for its recovery. The king still disregarded it when he died in the tower, and his children petiti... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139707-0032/1629-139707-0032_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.111.wav | language English<asr_text>And now, for twelve long years, steadily pursuing his design of setting himself up and putting the people down. The king called no parliament, but ruled without one. If twelve thousand volumes were written in his praise, as a good many have been, it would still remain a fact impossible to be d... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139707-0034/1629-139707-0034_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.942.wav | language English<asr_text>But I must say myself that I think he ran a pretty long one. William laud, archbishop of canterbury, was the king's right hand man in the religious part of the putting down of the people's liberties. Laud, who was a sincere man of large learning, but small sense. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139707-0036/1629-139707-0036_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.599.wav | language English<asr_text>He looked upon vows, robes, lighted candles, images and so forth as amazingly important in religious ceremonies. And he brought in an immensity of bowing and candle snuffing. He also regarded archbishops and bishops as a sort of miraculous persons. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/1629-139707-0038/1629-139707-0038_noise_linear_1_m0.485.wav | language English<asr_text>For calling bishops trumpery and the inventions of men. He originated on a sunday morning, the prosecution of william prynne, a barrister who was of similar opinions, and who was fined a thousand pounds, who was pilloried, who had his ears cut off on two occasions, one ear at a time, and who w... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139707-0039/1629-139707-0039_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.779.wav | language English<asr_text>Who was also fined a thousand pounds, and who afterwards had his ears cut off and was imprisoned for life. These were gentle methods of persuasion, some will tell you. I think they were rather calculated to be alarming to the people. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0003/1629-139710-0003_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.140.wav | language English<asr_text>He was tried for perjury a fortnight after the coronation, and besides being very heavily fined, was sentenced to stand twice in the pillory, to be whipped from aldgate to newgate one day and from newgate to tyburn two days afterwards, and to stand in the pillory five times a year, as long as ... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/1629-139710-0005/1629-139710-0005_noise_linear_1_m0.321.wav | language English<asr_text>But lived to be afterwards, pardoned and rewarded, though not to be ever believed in any more dangerfield. The only other one of that crew left alive was not so fortunate. He was almost killed by a whipping from newgate to tyburn. And as if that were not punishment enough. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/1629-139710-0009/1629-139710-0009_noise_linear_1_m0.187.wav | language English<asr_text>As the custom then was when those wild people were to be excited by their chiefs. As he was moving towards glasgow with his small force, he was betrayed by some of his followers, taken and carried with his hands tied behind his back to his old prison in edinburgh castle. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0010/1629-139710-0010_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.988.wav | language English<asr_text>James ordered him to be executed on his old, shamefully unjust sentence within three days. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0011/1629-139710-0011_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.501.wav | language English<asr_text>However, the boot was not applied. He was simply beheaded. And his head was set upon the top of edinburgh jail. One of those englishmen who had been assigned to him was that old soldier rumbold, the master of the rye house. He was sorely wounded, and within a week, after argyle had suffered wi... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0015/1629-139710-0015_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.887.wav | language English<asr_text>Flowers were strewn in his way, and every compliment and honour that could be devised was showered upon him. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0017/1629-139710-0017_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.571.wav | language English<asr_text>That it was a question whether he should disband his army and endeavour to escape. It was resolved at the instance of that unlucky lord grey to make a night attack on the king's army as it lay encamped on the edge of a morass called sedgemoor. The horsemen were commanded by the same unlucky lo... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0022/1629-139710-0022_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.433.wav | language English<asr_text>The crowd was immense, and the tops of all the houses were covered with gazers. He had seen his wife, the daughter of the duke of buccleuch. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0023/1629-139710-0023_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.271.wav | language English<asr_text>The lady harriet wentworth, who was one of the last persons he remembered in this life. Before laying down his head upon the block, he felt the edge of the axe and told the executioner that he feared it was not sharp enough and that the axe was not heavy enough. On the executioner replying tha... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/1629-139710-0030/1629-139710-0030_noise_linear_1_m0.943.wav | language English<asr_text>The detestable king informed him, as an acknowledgment of these services, that he was very well satisfied with his proceedings. But the king's great delight was in the proceedings of jeffreys, now a peer, who went down into the west with four other judges to try persons accused of having had a... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0036/1629-139710-0036_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.627.wav | language English<asr_text>You will hear much of the horrors of the great french revolution. Many and terrible they were, there is no doubt. But I know of nothing worse done by the maddened people of france in that awful time than was done by the highest judge in england, with the express approval of the king of england... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0037/1629-139710-0037_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.542.wav | language English<asr_text>Jeffreys was as fond of money for himself as of misery for others. And he sold pardons wholesale to fill his pockets. The king ordered at one time a thousand prisoners to be given to certain of his favourites in order that they might bargain with them for their pardons. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0040/1629-139710-0040_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.239.wav | language English<asr_text>For having had a share in the rye house plot, on evidence given by rumsey. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0041/1629-139710-0041_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.617.wav | language English<asr_text>And on the very same day, a worthy widow named elizabeth gaunt was burned alive at tyburn for having sheltered a wretch who himself gave evidence against her. She settled the fuel about herself with her own hands, so that the flames should reach her quickly. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/1629-139710-0042/1629-139710-0042_noise_linear_1_m0.223.wav | language English<asr_text>So he went to work to change the religion of the country with all possible speed. And what he did was this, he first of all tried to get rid of what was called the test act, which prevented the catholics from holding public employments, by his own power of dispensing with the penalties. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0045/1629-139710-0045_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.161.wav | language English<asr_text>He favoured the establishment of convents in several parts of london. He was delighted to have the streets and even the court itself filled with monks and friars in the habits of their orders. He constantly endeavoured to make catholics of the protestants about him. He held private interviews,... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/1629-139710-0046/1629-139710-0046_noise_linear_1_m0.623.wav | language English<asr_text>He tried the same thing with the corporations and also, though not so successfully, with the lord lieutenants of counties. To terrify the people into the endurance. Of all these measures, he kept an army of fifteen thousand men encamped on hounslow heath, where mass was openly performed in the... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0047/1629-139710-0047_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.529.wav | language English<asr_text>And where priests went among the soldiers, endeavouring to persuade them to become catholics, for circulating a paper among those men, advising them to be true to their religion. A protestant clergyman named johnson, the chaplain of the late lord russell, was actually sentenced to stand three ... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/1629-139710-0051/1629-139710-0051_noise_linear_1_m0.052.wav | language English<asr_text>Having made a catholic a dean at oxford without any opposition, he tried to make a monk, a master of arts at cambridge. Which attempt, the university resisted and defeated him. He then went back to his favourite oxford. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0052/1629-139710-0052_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.754.wav | language English<asr_text>His last plunge, head foremost. In his tumble off his throne, he had issued a declaration that there should be no religious tests or penal laws in order to let in the catholics more easily. But the protestant dissenters, unmindful of themselves, had gallantly joined the regular church in oppos... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0056/1629-139710-0056_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.607.wav | language English<asr_text>He said in his dogged way, call you that nothing it is so much the worse for them. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/1629-139710-0057/1629-139710-0057_noise_linear_1_m0.959.wav | language English<asr_text>But I doubt if saint winifred had much to do with it as the king's friend, inasmuch as the entirely new prospect of a catholic successor, for both the king's daughters were protestants determined the earls of shrewsbury, danby and devonshire, lord lumley, the bishop of london. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0058/1629-139710-0058_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.928.wav | language English<asr_text>Admiral russell and colonel sidney to invite the prince of orange over to england. The royal mole, seeing his danger, at last, made, in his fright, many great concessions, besides raising an army of forty thousand men. But the prince of orange was not a man for james the second to cope with. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/1629-139710-0062/1629-139710-0062_noise_linear_1_m0.446.wav | language English<asr_text>Of the protestant religion and of the prince of orange. From that time, the cause received no check. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0069/1629-139710-0069_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.818.wav | language English<asr_text>And informed the king of their suspicions that he was a hatchet faced jesuit. As they took his money and would not let him go, he told them who he was and that the prince of orange wanted to take his life. And he began to scream for a boat. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0074/1629-139710-0074_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.561.wav | language English<asr_text>The people, to their lasting honour, did not tear him to pieces. After knocking him about a little, they took him, in the basest agonies of terror, to the lord mayor, who sent him, at his own shrieking petition, to the tower for safety. There he died, their bewilderment continuing. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0075/1629-139710-0075_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.024.wav | language English<asr_text>The people now lighted bonfires and made rejoicings, as if they had any reason to be glad to have the king back again. But his stay was very short. For the english guards were removed from whitehall. Dutch guards were marched up to it. And he was told by one of his late ministers that the prin... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0076/1629-139710-0076_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.820.wav | language English<asr_text>He thought himself very cunning in this, as he meant to escape from rochester to france. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/1629-139710-0078/1629-139710-0078_noise_linear_1_m0.612.wav | language English<asr_text>He went out, absurdly, through his rochester garden, down to the medway, and got away to france, where he rejoined the queen. There had been a council in his absence of the lords and the authorities of london. When the prince came on the day after the king's departure, he summoned the lords to... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/1629-139710-0079/1629-139710-0079_noise_linear_1_m0.055.wav | language English<asr_text>And soon afterwards, all those who had served in any of the parliaments of king charles. The second, it was finally resolved by these authorities that the throne was vacant by the conduct of king james the second, that it was inconsistent with the safety and welfare of this protestant kingdom ... | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1629-139710-0080/1629-139710-0080_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.075.wav | language English<asr_text>And that their children should succeed them, if they had any, that if they had none, the princess anne and her children should succeed. That if she had none, the heirs of the prince of orange should succeed. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-121908-0003/163-121908-0003_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.518.wav | language English<asr_text>Although they used it of material substance, not of the efficient principle, this they laid down as a kind of basis for all their reasonings concerning nature. Now. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-121908-0004/163-121908-0004_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.960.wav | language English<asr_text>Our good aristotle says, she has defined it concisely in his physics and closely in accordance with the truth. How pray said, I. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-121908-0005/163-121908-0005_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.142.wav | language English<asr_text>For instance, if a man is digging the earth for tillage and finds a mass of buried gold. Now such a find is regarded as accidental, yet it is not. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-121908-0010/163-121908-0010_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.808.wav | language English<asr_text>But the meeting and concurrence of these causes arises from that inevitable chain of order which, flowing from the fountain head of providence, disposes all things in their due time and place. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/163-122947-0004/163-122947-0004_noise_linear_1_m0.287.wav | language English<asr_text>And is there anything finer than to search for one's own virtues? Is it not almost to believe in one's own virtues, but this believing in one's own virtues. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/163-122947-0005/163-122947-0005_noise_linear_1_m0.940.wav | language English<asr_text>It will be different two hundred fifteen. As in the stellar firmament, there are sometimes two suns which determine the path of one planet. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0008/163-122947-0008_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.458.wav | language English<asr_text>And are seldom unequivocal. And there are often cases also in which our actions are motley coloured. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/163-122947-0010/163-122947-0010_noise_linear_1_m0.240.wav | language English<asr_text>Is opposed to our taste. Nowadays, this is also an advance, as it was an advance in our fathers that religion as an attitude finally became opposed to their taste, including the enmity. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0011/163-122947-0011_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.846.wav | language English<asr_text>And voltairean bitterness against religion and all that formerly belonged to freethinker pantomime. It is the music in our conscience, the dance in our spirit, to which puritan litanies. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0013/163-122947-0013_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.782.wav | language English<asr_text>Let us be careful in dealing with those who attach great importance to being credited with moral tact and subtlety in moral discernment. They never forgive us if they have once made a mistake before us. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0015/163-122947-0015_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.157.wav | language English<asr_text>Just as though, in short, they betray something thereby. Flaubert, for instance. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0016/163-122947-0016_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.086.wav | language English<asr_text>I would now recommend, for a change, something else for a pleasure, namely, the unconscious astuteness with which good, fat, honest mediocrity always behaves towards loftier spirits. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0018/163-122947-0018_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.790.wav | language English<asr_text>Two hundred nineteen, the practice of judging and condemning morally is the favourite revenge of the intellectually shallow on those who are less so. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0021/163-122947-0021_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.293.wav | language English<asr_text>I shall take care not to say so. I would rather flatter them with my theory that lofty spirituality itself exists only as the ultimate product of moral qualities. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0023/163-122947-0023_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.040.wav | language English<asr_text>Gradations of rank in the world, even among things, and not only among men. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0024/163-122947-0024_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.144.wav | language English<asr_text>And what are the things generally, which fundamentally and profoundly concern ordinary men, including the cultured, even the learned? And perhaps philosophers also, if appearances do not deceive. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0025/163-122947-0025_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.550.wav | language English<asr_text>The fact thereby becomes obvious that the greater part of what interests and charms higher natures and more refined and fastidious tastes seems absolutely uninteresting to the average man. If. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/163-122947-0026/163-122947-0026_noise_linear_1_m0.612.wav | language English<asr_text>Notwithstanding, he perceive devotion to these interests. He calls it desinteresse and wonders how it is possible to act disinterestedly. There have been philosophers. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/163-122947-0027/163-122947-0027_noise_linear_1_m0.542.wav | language English<asr_text>Who could give this popular astonishment a seductive and mystical other worldly expression, perhaps because they did not know the higher nature by experience. Instead of stating. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0031/163-122947-0031_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.926.wav | language English<asr_text>And who the other is. For instance, in a person created and destined for command, self denial and modest retirement, instead of being virtues, would be the waste of virtues. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0035/163-122947-0035_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.044.wav | language English<asr_text>That it is immoral to say that what is right for one is proper for another. So said my moralistic pedant and bonhomme. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0040/163-122947-0040_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.408.wav | language English<asr_text>The hybrid european, a tolerably ugly plebeian. Taken all in all, absolutely requires a costume. He needs history as a storeroom of costumes. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/163-122947-0042/163-122947-0042_noise_linear_1_m0.379.wav | language English<asr_text>And also with respect to its moments of desperation. On account of nothing suiting us, it is in vain to get ourselves up as romantic or classical or christian. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/163-122947-0048/163-122947-0048_noise_linear_1_m0.043.wav | language English<asr_text>The historical sense, or the capacity for divining quickly the order of rank of the valuations according to which a people, a community or an individual has lived. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0049/163-122947-0049_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.709.wav | language English<asr_text>The divining instinct for the relationships of these valuations, for the relation of the authority of the valuations to the authority of the operating forces. This historical sense. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0051/163-122947-0051_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.161.wav | language English<asr_text>As its sixth sense. Owing to this mingling, the past of every form and mode of life and of cultures, which were formerly closely contiguous and superimposed on one another, flows forth into us. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0054/163-122947-0054_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.761.wav | language English<asr_text>The historical sense implies almost the sense and instinct for everything, the taste and tongue for everything, whereby it immediately proves itself to be an ignoble sense. For instance. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0056/163-122947-0056_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.385.wav | language English<asr_text>Esprit vaste and even voltaire, the last echo of the century, cannot and could not so easily appropriate whom they scarcely permitted themselves to enjoy. The very decided yea. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0057/163-122947-0057_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.584.wav | language English<asr_text>A dissatisfaction with its own condition, or an admiration of what is strange. All this determines and disposes them unfavourably, even towards the best things of the world, which are not their property. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0059/163-122947-0059_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.994.wav | language English<asr_text>The case is not different with shakespeare, that marvelous spanish, moorish saxon synthesis of taste, over whom an ancient athenian. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0064/163-122947-0064_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.502.wav | language English<asr_text>The goldenness and coldness which all things show, that have perfected themselves. Perhaps our great virtue of the historical sense is in necessary contrast to good taste. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0067/163-122947-0067_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.019.wav | language English<asr_text>Our itching is really the itching for the infinite, the immeasurable. Like the rider on his forward panting horse, we let the reins fall before the infinite. We modern men, we semi barbarians. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/163-122947-0070/163-122947-0070_noise_linear_1_m0.537.wav | language English<asr_text>For society with its sick and misfortuned, for the hereditarily vicious and defective who lie on the ground around us. Still less is it sympathy for the grumbling. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0071/163-122947-0071_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.854.wav | language English<asr_text>Who strive after power, they call it freedom. Our sympathy is a loftier and further sighted sympathy. We see how man dwarfs himself, how you dwarf him. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/163-122947-0076/163-122947-0076_noise_linear_1_m0.755.wav | language English<asr_text>Applies to that which has to be fashioned, bruised, forged, stretched, roasted, annealed, refined. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0081/163-122947-0081_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.522.wav | language English<asr_text>Precisely here we are, men of duty, even we. Occasionally, it is true, we dance in our chains and betwixt our swords. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0085/163-122947-0085_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.164.wav | language English<asr_text>Let us go with all our devils to the help of our god. It is probable that people will misunderstand and mistake us. On that account, what does it matter? | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0088/163-122947-0088_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.539.wav | language English<asr_text>Has been more injured by the tediousness of its advocates than by anything else at the same time, however, I would not wish to overlook their general usefulness. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0089/163-122947-0089_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.314.wav | language English<asr_text>It is desirable that as few people as possible should reflect upon morals. And consequently, it is very desirable that morals should not some day become interesting. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0090/163-122947-0090_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.039.wav | language English<asr_text>But let us not be afraid. Things still remain today as they have always been. I see no one in europe who has or discloses an idea of the fact that philosophizing concerning morals. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0095/163-122947-0095_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.612.wav | language English<asr_text>Is not a moralist, the opposite of a puritan. That is to say, as a thinker who regards morality as questionable, as worthy of interrogation, in short, as a problem. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/163-122947-0096/163-122947-0096_noise_linear_1_m0.187.wav | language English<asr_text>Is moralizing, not immoral. In the end, they all want english morality to be recognized as authoritative inasmuch as mankind or the general utility. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0097/163-122947-0097_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.452.wav | language English<asr_text>Or the happiness of the greatest number. No, the happiness of england will be best served. Thereby. They would like, by all means to convince themselves that the striving after english happiness. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/163-122947-0098/163-122947-0098_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.544.wav | language English<asr_text>I mean, after comfort and fashion. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/noise/1634-141571-0006/1634-141571-0006_noise_linear_1_m0.330.wav | language English<asr_text>The drum mountain, some three thousand feet high. From the top of the mountain, on clear days, with the help of a glass, the blue shores of formosa may be seen on the eastern horizon. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1634-141571-0008/1634-141571-0008_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.010.wav | language English<asr_text>Carried by two or more coolies. The road paved with granite slabs cut from the mountain side. Consists of a series of stone stairs which zig zag up the mountain under the shadow of ancient pine trees. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1634-141571-0010/1634-141571-0010_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.804.wav | language English<asr_text>Have disposed themselves promiscuously. Their blackened, weather beaten sides are incised with chinese characters. One of them bears the words, we put our trust in amitabha. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1634-141571-0011/1634-141571-0011_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.706.wav | language English<asr_text>Another immortalizes the sentiments of some great official who has made the pilgrimage to the mountain. Near the monastery stand the sombre dagobas, where repose the ashes of former abbots and monastery officials. | targeted | |
/data/haobin/0306/noise+rsp_noise/resample_noise/1634-141571-0014/1634-141571-0014_resample_noise_linear_1_m0.081.wav | language English<asr_text>For the round, hard cakes purchased from the monks by the merit seeking devotee. The monastery itself consists of a large group of buildings erected about stone paved courts rising in terraces on the mountain side. | targeted |
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