{
  "generated": "from tables/catalogue_*.csv via scripts/export_site_data.py",
  "direct_quotes": [
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0001-0003",
      "doc_title": "[A Letter to Richard Cranch about Orlinda, a Letter on Employing One\u2019s Mind, and Reflections on Procrastination, Genius, Moving the Passions, Cicero as Orator, Milton\u2019s Style, &c., October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 6,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "now forever farewell the tranquil mind farewell",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_025",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF OTHELLO, MOOR OF VENICE",
      "shakespeare_short": "Othello, Moor Of Venice",
      "kwic": "der to raise the Passions of the Audience &c. {20} With what pathos does Othello bid farewell to War, in Shakespear. Oh now forever Farewell the tranquil Mind! farewell content; Farewell the ploomed Troops and the big War That make Ambition Virtue! Oh! farewell! Farewell the neighing Ste"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0001-0003",
      "doc_title": "[A Letter to Richard Cranch about Orlinda, a Letter on Employing One\u2019s Mind, and Reflections on Procrastination, Genius, Moving the Passions, Cicero as Orator, Milton\u2019s Style, &c., October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "farewell farewell the neighing steed and the",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_025",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF OTHELLO, MOOR OF VENICE",
      "shakespeare_short": "Othello, Moor Of Venice",
      "kwic": "arewell the tranquil Mind! farewell content; Farewell the ploomed Troops and the big War That make Ambition Virtue! Oh! farewell! Farewell the neighing Steed, and the shrill Trump The spirit stirring Drum, th\u00e2\u0080\u0099ear piercing fife The Royal Banner and all Quality, Pride, Pomp, and Circum"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0001-0003",
      "doc_title": "[A Letter to Richard Cranch about Orlinda, a Letter on Employing One\u2019s Mind, and Reflections on Procrastination, Genius, Moving the Passions, Cicero as Orator, Milton\u2019s Style, &c., October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 5,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "ear piercing fife the royal banner and",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_025",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF OTHELLO, MOOR OF VENICE",
      "shakespeare_short": "Othello, Moor Of Venice",
      "kwic": "at make Ambition Virtue! Oh! farewell! Farewell the neighing Steed, and the shrill Trump The spirit stirring Drum, th\u00e2\u0080\u0099ear piercing fife The Royal Banner and all Quality, Pride, Pomp, and Circumstance of glorious War And Oh! you mortal Engines, whose rude Throats Th\u00e2\u0080\u0099immortal"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0001-0003",
      "doc_title": "[A Letter to Richard Cranch about Orlinda, a Letter on Employing One\u2019s Mind, and Reflections on Procrastination, Genius, Moving the Passions, Cicero as Orator, Milton\u2019s Style, &c., October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "all quality pride pomp and circumstance of",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_025",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF OTHELLO, MOOR OF VENICE",
      "shakespeare_short": "Othello, Moor Of Venice",
      "kwic": "Farewell the neighing Steed, and the shrill Trump The spirit stirring Drum, th\u00e2\u0080\u0099ear piercing fife The Royal Banner and all Quality, Pride, Pomp, and Circumstance of glorious War And Oh! you mortal Engines, whose rude Throats Th\u00e2\u0080\u0099immortal Joves dread Clamours counterfeit Farewell! Ot"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0007-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Shakespeare\u2019s Characters and Figurative Language, October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "but a walking shadow a poor player",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "When the News of his Ladies death is brought to Mackbeth, he turns his Thoughts upon Life. Out out brief Candle! Lifes but a walking Shadow, a Poor Player That struts and frets his Hour upon the Stage And then is heard no more! It is a Tale Told by an Ideot, full of Sound a"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0007-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Shakespeare\u2019s Characters and Figurative Language, October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "that struts and frets his hour upon",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "s brought to Mackbeth, he turns his Thoughts upon Life. Out out brief Candle! Lifes but a walking Shadow, a Poor Player That struts and frets his Hour upon the Stage And then is heard no more! It is a Tale Told by an Ideot, full of Sound and Fury Signifying Nothing. 2 Here h"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0007-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Shakespeare\u2019s Characters and Figurative Language, October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "the stage and then is heard no",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "Thoughts upon Life. Out out brief Candle! Lifes but a walking Shadow, a Poor Player That struts and frets his Hour upon the Stage And then is heard no more! It is a Tale Told by an Ideot, full of Sound and Fury Signifying Nothing. 2 Here he compares Life, 1st to a Candl"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0007-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Shakespeare\u2019s Characters and Figurative Language, October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 5,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "full of sound and fury signifying nothing",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": ", a Poor Player That struts and frets his Hour upon the Stage And then is heard no more! It is a Tale Told by an Ideot, full of Sound and Fury Signifying Nothing. 2 Here he compares Life, 1st to a Candle, then to a Shadow, an Image taken from scripture, then to a Player on the sta"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0007-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Shakespeare\u2019s Characters and Figurative Language, October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "the man would die and there an",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "ackbeth and his Wife and Iago are Characters of Fiends, not of men. The times have been, that when the Brains were out, the man would die, and there an End, but now they rise again with 20 mortal murders on their Crowns, and push us from our stools. Malcolm and Donalbain"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0007-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Shakespeare\u2019s Characters and Figurative Language, October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "end but now they rise again with",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "e Characters of Fiends, not of men. The times have been, that when the Brains were out, the man would die, and there an End, but now they rise again with 20 mortal murders on their Crowns, and push us from our stools. Malcolm and Donalbain when they find their father murth"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0007-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Shakespeare\u2019s Characters and Figurative Language, October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "towering in her pride of place was",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "ded that the Design was to charge the Murder on them, and to avoid the consequences they fled to England, and a faulcon towering in her Pride of Place, was by a mousing Owl haukt at and killed. The faulcon is Duncan, the mousing Owl is Mackbeth. The old man observed the Omen"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0007-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Shakespeare\u2019s Characters and Figurative Language, October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "beauteous and swift the minions of their",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "ackbeth. The old man observed the Omen. Rosse takes Notice of another Omen that preceded Duncans Death. Duncans Horses, beauteous and swift, the Minions of their Race, turned wild in Nature, broke their stalls, flung out, contending gainst Obedience, as they would make War with ma"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0007-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Shakespeare\u2019s Characters and Figurative Language, October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 5,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "wild in nature broke their stalls flung",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "ice of another Omen that preceded Duncans Death. Duncans Horses, beauteous and swift, the Minions of their Race, turned wild in Nature, broke their stalls, flung out, contending gainst Obedience, as they would make War with man. Thriftless Ambition that will raven up thy own lifes"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0007-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Shakespeare\u2019s Characters and Figurative Language, October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "out contending gainst obedience as they would",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "Death. Duncans Horses, beauteous and swift, the Minions of their Race, turned wild in Nature, broke their stalls, flung out, contending gainst Obedience, as they would make War with man. Thriftless Ambition that will raven up thy own lifes means. Mackbeth kills the others that lay in th"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0007-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Shakespeare\u2019s Characters and Figurative Language, October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 5,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "lamentings heard i the air strange screams",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": ""
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0007-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Shakespeare\u2019s Characters and Figurative Language, October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "to the woeful time the obscure bird",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "re blown down. Lamentings heard i\u00e2\u0080\u0099the air, strange screams of Death. Of dire Combustion and confusd Events New hatchd to the woeful time. The obscure bird clamourd the livelong night Some say the Earth was feverous and did shake. 3 Mackbeths Imagination was [struck?] and af"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0007-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Shakespeare\u2019s Characters and Figurative Language, October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "the livelong night some say the earth",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "trange screams of Death. Of dire Combustion and confusd Events New hatchd to the woeful time. The obscure bird clamourd the livelong night Some say the Earth was feverous and did shake. 3 Mackbeths Imagination was [struck?] and afraid, was as lively and teemed with Notions, a"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0001-0003",
      "doc_title": "[A Letter to Richard Cranch about Orlinda, a Letter on Employing One\u2019s Mind, and Reflections on Procrastination, Genius, Moving the Passions, Cicero as Orator, Milton\u2019s Style, &c., October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 6,
      "content_words": 5,
      "confidence": "MEDIUM",
      "matched_text": "shrill trump the spirit stirring drum",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_025",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF OTHELLO, MOOR OF VENICE",
      "shakespeare_short": "Othello, Moor Of Venice",
      "kwic": "rewell the ploomed Troops and the big War That make Ambition Virtue! Oh! farewell! Farewell the neighing Steed, and the shrill Trump The spirit stirring Drum, th\u00e2\u0080\u0099ear piercing fife The Royal Banner and all Quality, Pride, Pomp, and Circumstance of glorious War And Oh! you mor"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0001-0003",
      "doc_title": "[A Letter to Richard Cranch about Orlinda, a Letter on Employing One\u2019s Mind, and Reflections on Procrastination, Genius, Moving the Passions, Cicero as Orator, Milton\u2019s Style, &c., October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 6,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "MEDIUM",
      "matched_text": "you mortal engines whose rude throats",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_025",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF OTHELLO, MOOR OF VENICE",
      "shakespeare_short": "Othello, Moor Of Venice",
      "kwic": "ng Drum, th\u00e2\u0080\u0099ear piercing fife The Royal Banner and all Quality, Pride, Pomp, and Circumstance of glorious War And Oh! you mortal Engines, whose rude Throats Th\u00e2\u0080\u0099immortal Joves dread Clamours counterfeit Farewell! Othello\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Occupations gone! 22 These Exclamations, Apostroph"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0007-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Shakespeare\u2019s Characters and Figurative Language, October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 5,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "MEDIUM",
      "matched_text": "sleep the innocent sleep sleep",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "en he was [ remainder missing ] His imagination created 100 things, a Voice crying, Sleep no more, Mackbeth doth Murder Sleep; the innocent Sleep. Sleep is the Idea now. What Thoughts does this call up. Sleep that knits up the ravelled sleeve of Care, the Death of each da"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0007-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Shakespeare\u2019s Characters and Figurative Language, October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 5,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "MEDIUM",
      "matched_text": "balm of hurt minds great",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "As Death is to a mans whole Life, so is < Sleep to a day > each nights Sleep to us, sore Labours Bath, Bath of Labour, Balm of Hurt minds, great natures second Course, chief Nourisher in Lifes feast. The Eye of [ remainder missing ]"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0007-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Shakespeare\u2019s Characters and Figurative Language, October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ngram_length": 5,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "MEDIUM",
      "matched_text": "second course chief nourisher in",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "so is < Sleep to a day > each nights Sleep to us, sore Labours Bath, Bath of Labour, Balm of Hurt minds, great natures second Course, chief Nourisher in Lifes feast. The Eye of [ remainder missing ]"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-01-02-0186",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Abigail Adams, 26 September 1775",
      "date": 1775,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "in time to come i hope to",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_012",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE SECOND PART OF KING HENRY THE SIXTH",
      "shakespeare_short": "The Second Part Of Henry The Sixth",
      "kwic": "Family. I have been banished from them, the greatest Part of the last Eighteen Months but I hope to be with them more, in Time to come. I hope to be excused from attending at Philadelphia, after the Expiration of the Year. I hope that Dr. Winthrop, Mr. Sever, Mr. G"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/06-03-02-0018",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Elbridge Gerry, 18 June 1775",
      "date": 1775,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 5,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "pride pomp and circumstance of glorious war",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_025",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF OTHELLO, MOOR OF VENICE",
      "shakespeare_short": "Othello, Moor Of Venice",
      "kwic": "be shown to these officers on their arrival. The whole army, I think, should be drawn up upon the occasion, and all the pride, pomp, and circumstance of glorious war displayed;\u00e2\u0080\u0094 no powder burned, however. There is something charming to me in the conduct of Washington. A gentleman of"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/06-04-02-0042",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to William Heath, 15 April 1776",
      "date": 1776,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "there is a tide in the affairs",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_016",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF JULIUS CAESAR",
      "shakespeare_short": "Julius Caesar",
      "kwic": "overnment in the Hands of the Friends of the People. It is now perhaps the most critical Moment that America, ever saw. There is a Tide in the affairs of Men, and Consequences of infinite Moment depend upon the Colonies, assuming Government at this Time. So convenient a"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/06-05-02-0095",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to William Tudor, 27 April 1777",
      "date": 1777,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 5,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "pride pomp and circumstance of glorious war",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_025",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF OTHELLO, MOOR OF VENICE",
      "shakespeare_short": "Othello, Moor Of Venice",
      "kwic": "Philadelphia April 27. 1777 Aha!\u00e2\u0080\u0094exchanging the Pride, Pomp and Circumstance of Glorious War, for the soft Charms of Wedlock and domestic Felicity, 1 I suppose\u00e2\u0080\u0094abandoning Gun, Drum, Trumpet, Blunderbuss and Thu"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/06-10-02-0229",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to James Warren, 9 December 1780",
      "date": 1780,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 5,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "pride pomp and circumstance of glorious war",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_025",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF OTHELLO, MOOR OF VENICE",
      "shakespeare_short": "Othello, Moor Of Venice",
      "kwic": "f History; here I can do nothing. The beauteous olive Branch will never decorate my Brows. I must Spend my Life, in the Pride, Pomp, and Circumstance of glorious War, without sharing any of its Laurels. My most profound Respects to Mrs. Warren\u00e2\u0080\u0094I dread her History more than that of t"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/06-11-02-0055",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to C. W. F. Dumas, 25 January 1781",
      "date": 1781,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "there is a tide in the affairs",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_016",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF JULIUS CAESAR",
      "shakespeare_short": "Julius Caesar",
      "kwic": "Suffering the Spirit of the People to subside, and their Passions to cool, a matter of the last Importance, in War. \u00e2\u0080\u009cThere is a Tide in the affairs of Men, which taken at the Ebb leads on to Fortune.\u00e2\u0080\u009d 2 However, the Maxims of Government here are different, from mos"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/06-13-02-0091",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Philip Mazzei, 3 July 1782",
      "date": 1782,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "i have given suck and know how",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "ain. Herods murder of the Innocents was a trifle in comparison. 2 Lady Macbeth uttered a Sentiment a little like it. \u00e2\u0080\u009cI have given Suck; and know how tender tis to love the Babe that milks me: yet would I: even when \u00e2\u0080\u0099twas smiling in my face; have plucked my Nipple fr"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/06-13-02-0091",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Philip Mazzei, 3 July 1782",
      "date": 1782,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "tender tis to love the babe that",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "nts was a trifle in comparison. 2 Lady Macbeth uttered a Sentiment a little like it. \u00e2\u0080\u009cI have given Suck; and know how tender tis to love the Babe that milks me: yet would I: even when \u00e2\u0080\u0099twas smiling in my face; have plucked my Nipple from its boneless Gums and dash\u00e2\u0080\u0099d"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/06-13-02-0232",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Edmund Jenings, 5 October 1782",
      "date": 1782,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 5,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "god save the king god save the",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_012",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE SECOND PART OF KING HENRY THE SIXTH",
      "shakespeare_short": "The Second Part Of Henry The Sixth",
      "kwic": "and this People , and all the Men of Israel choose, his will I be, and with him will I abide, 1 and to him will I Say 2 God Save the King, God Save the King. Hushai, has here asserted the first Principle of the Rights of Man kind, the first Principle of Liberty. He here"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/06-18-02-0180",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Rufus King, 14 June 1786",
      "date": 1786,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "the archbishop of canterbury and the bishop",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_010",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE LIFE OF KING HENRY THE FIFTH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Henry The Fifth",
      "kwic": "ing Massachusetts and New York in the Bands of Love was going on here. Last Sunday under the Right Reverend Sanction of the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of st Asaph were married M r Smith and Miss Adams. 1 It will be unnatural if f\u00c5\u0093deral Purposes are not answered by all"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/06-19-02-0280",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to William Cushing, 7 March 1789",
      "date": 1789,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "good fortune and the favour of the",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_001",
      "shakespeare_source": "ALLS WELL THAT ENDS WELL",
      "shakespeare_short": "Alls Well That Ends Well",
      "kwic": "heretofore, so often to undertake Trusts out of all Proportion to my Talents, and having been Supported through them by good Fortune, and the favour of the World, I must again rely upon the Same Assistance.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 one Comfort has always attended me.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 I have been always best su"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-10-02-0110",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Abigail Adams, 17 May 1794",
      "date": 1794,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "by contraries execute all things for no",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_030",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TEMPEST",
      "shakespeare_short": "The Tempest",
      "kwic": "shall realize the raving in the Tempest, which Charles quoted to me in his last Letter. \u00e2\u0080\u009cIn the Commonwealth We shall by contraries execute all Things: for no kind of Trafic shall We admit; no name of Magistrate; Letters will not be known, wealth, Poverty and Use of service non"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-10-02-0110",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Abigail Adams, 17 May 1794",
      "date": 1794,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 5,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "poverty and use of service none contract",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_030",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TEMPEST",
      "shakespeare_short": "The Tempest",
      "kwic": "ies execute all Things: for no kind of Trafic shall We admit; no name of Magistrate; Letters will not be known, wealth, Poverty and Use of service none; contract, Succession bowen bound of Land, tilth, Vineyard none; No Use of Metal, corn or wine or oil; No Occupation, all Men idl"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-10-02-0110",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Abigail Adams, 17 May 1794",
      "date": 1794,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 5,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "bound of land tilth vineyard none no",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_030",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TEMPEST",
      "shakespeare_short": "The Tempest",
      "kwic": "; no name of Magistrate; Letters will not be known, wealth, Poverty and Use of service none; contract, Succession bowen bound of Land, tilth, Vineyard none; No Use of Metal, corn or wine or oil; No Occupation, all Men idle all And Women too; but innocent and pure; No Sovereignty"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-10-02-0110",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Abigail Adams, 17 May 1794",
      "date": 1794,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "use of metal corn or wine or",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_030",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TEMPEST",
      "shakespeare_short": "The Tempest",
      "kwic": "t be known, wealth, Poverty and Use of service none; contract, Succession bowen bound of Land, tilth, Vineyard none; No Use of Metal, corn or wine or oil; No Occupation, all Men idle all And Women too; but innocent and pure; No Sovereignty. All Things in common nature"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-10-02-0110",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Abigail Adams, 17 May 1794",
      "date": 1794,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "oil no occupation all men idle all",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_030",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TEMPEST",
      "shakespeare_short": "The Tempest",
      "kwic": "d Use of service none; contract, Succession bowen bound of Land, tilth, Vineyard none; No Use of Metal, corn or wine or oil; No Occupation, all Men idle all And Women too; but innocent and pure; No Sovereignty. All Things in common nature should produce Without sweat or endea"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-10-02-0110",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Abigail Adams, 17 May 1794",
      "date": 1794,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "and women too but innocent and pure",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_030",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TEMPEST",
      "shakespeare_short": "The Tempest",
      "kwic": "ession bowen bound of Land, tilth, Vineyard none; No Use of Metal, corn or wine or oil; No Occupation, all Men idle all And Women too; but innocent and pure; No Sovereignty. All Things in common nature should produce Without sweat or endeavour; Treason Felony Sword Pike, knif"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-10-02-0110",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Abigail Adams, 17 May 1794",
      "date": 1794,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "all things in common nature should produce",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_030",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TEMPEST",
      "shakespeare_short": "The Tempest",
      "kwic": "se of Metal, corn or wine or oil; No Occupation, all Men idle all And Women too; but innocent and pure; No Sovereignty. All Things in common nature should produce Without sweat or endeavour; Treason Felony Sword Pike, knife, Gun, or need of any Engine Would I not have; But nature s"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-10-02-0110",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Abigail Adams, 17 May 1794",
      "date": 1794,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 5,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "without sweat or endeavour treason felony sword",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_030",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TEMPEST",
      "shakespeare_short": "The Tempest",
      "kwic": "tion, all Men idle all And Women too; but innocent and pure; No Sovereignty. All Things in common nature should produce Without sweat or endeavour; Treason Felony Sword Pike, knife, Gun, or need of any Engine Would I not have; But nature should bring forth of its own kind, all foizon, al"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-10-02-0110",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Abigail Adams, 17 May 1794",
      "date": 1794,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "pike knife gun or need of any",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_030",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TEMPEST",
      "shakespeare_short": "The Tempest",
      "kwic": "t and pure; No Sovereignty. All Things in common nature should produce Without sweat or endeavour; Treason Felony Sword Pike, knife, Gun, or need of any Engine Would I not have; But nature should bring forth of its own kind, all foizon, all Abundance to feed my innocent P"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-10-02-0110",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Abigail Adams, 17 May 1794",
      "date": 1794,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "all abundance to feed my innocent people",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_030",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TEMPEST",
      "shakespeare_short": "The Tempest",
      "kwic": "rd Pike, knife, Gun, or need of any Engine Would I not have; But nature should bring forth of its own kind, all foizon, all Abundance to feed my innocent People.\u00e2\u0080\u009d 4 This is Lubberland indeed\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Le Pays de Cocain, I believe the French call it.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 5 but it is terra incognita.\u00e2\u0080\u0094"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-10-02-0110",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Abigail Adams, 17 May 1794",
      "date": 1794,
      "ngram_length": 6,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "MEDIUM",
      "matched_text": "admit no name of magistrate letters",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_030",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TEMPEST",
      "shakespeare_short": "The Tempest",
      "kwic": "me in his last Letter. \u00e2\u0080\u009cIn the Commonwealth We shall by contraries execute all Things: for no kind of Trafic shall We admit; no name of Magistrate; Letters will not be known, wealth, Poverty and Use of service none; contract, Succession bowen bound of Land, tilth, Vineyard n"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-14-02-0014",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Thomas Boylston Adams, 17 October 1799",
      "date": 1799,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 5,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "and know how tender tis to love",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "hink of it. The Conduct of Ph\u00c5\u0093be\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Husband therefore would not be an Object of Imitation for me. 3 I have been young and know how tender \u00e2\u0080\u0099tis to love. I have never dictated to my Children. Perhaps it would have been better in two Instances, if I had.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 I wish them to"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-03-02-1377",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to John Quincy Adams, 20 January 1805",
      "date": 1805,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "between the red rose and the white",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_011",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE FIRST PART OF HENRY THE SIXTH",
      "shakespeare_short": "The First Part Of Henry The Sixth",
      "kwic": "ions are disregarded at this day. These Plays of the great Poet if they are read by any one with a view to the Struggle between the Red Rose and the White Rose, that is to the Treachery Perfidy Treason Murder Cruelty Sedition and Rebellions of rival and unballanced factions"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-03-02-1377",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to John Quincy Adams, 20 January 1805",
      "date": 1805,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "would thee do were all thy children",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_010",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE LIFE OF KING HENRY THE FIFTH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Henry The Fifth",
      "kwic": "ns and Daughters to dispose of, and what then? Why then it will be Said O America! What might\u00e2\u0080\u0099est thou do, that honor would thee do, Were all thy Children kind and natural! But see thy fault! France or England hath in thee found out A nest of hollow Bosoms, which he fills."
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-03-02-1377",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to John Quincy Adams, 20 January 1805",
      "date": 1805,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 5,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "kind and natural but see thy fault",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_010",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE LIFE OF KING HENRY THE FIFTH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Henry The Fifth",
      "kwic": "hat then? Why then it will be Said O America! What might\u00e2\u0080\u0099est thou do, that honor would thee do, Were all thy Children kind and natural! But see thy fault! France or England hath in thee found out A nest of hollow Bosoms, which he fills. With regard to Judge Chace\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Tryal"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-03-02-1377",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to John Quincy Adams, 20 January 1805",
      "date": 1805,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 5,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "hath in thee found out a nest",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_010",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE LIFE OF KING HENRY THE FIFTH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Henry The Fifth",
      "kwic": "t\u00e2\u0080\u0099est thou do, that honor would thee do, Were all thy Children kind and natural! But see thy fault! France or England hath in thee found out A nest of hollow Bosoms, which he fills. With regard to Judge Chace\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Tryal, were I in your Situation I would read every Imp"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-03-02-1377",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to John Quincy Adams, 20 January 1805",
      "date": 1805,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "of hollow bosoms which he fills with",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_010",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE LIFE OF KING HENRY THE FIFTH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Henry The Fifth",
      "kwic": "uld thee do, Were all thy Children kind and natural! But see thy fault! France or England hath in thee found out A nest of hollow Bosoms, which he fills. With regard to Judge Chace\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Tryal, were I in your Situation I would read every Impeachment, that is to be found in the St"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-5186",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Benjamin Rush, 21 May 1807",
      "date": 1807,
      "ngram_length": 5,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "MEDIUM",
      "matched_text": "will make wise men mad",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_026",
      "shakespeare_source": "KING RICHARD THE SECOND",
      "shakespeare_short": "Richard The Second",
      "kwic": "d \u00e2\u0080\u009cThe People of Boston are distracted.\u00e2\u0080\u009d Another Answered No wonder the People of Boston are distracted, oppression will make wise Men mad. A third said, what would you Say, if a Fellow Should come to your house and tell you he was come to take a List of you"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-5422",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Boston Patriot, 29 August 1809",
      "date": 1809,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 5,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "pride pomp and circumstance of glorious war",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_025",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF OTHELLO, MOOR OF VENICE",
      "shakespeare_short": "Othello, Moor Of Venice",
      "kwic": "y; here I can do nothing. The beauteous olive branch, I fear, will never decorate my brows. I must spend my life in the pride, pomp and circumstance of glorious war, without sharing any of its laurels. My most profound respects to Mrs. Warren. I dread her history more than that of th"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-5435",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Boston Patriot, 22 September 1809",
      "date": 1809,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "there is a tide in the affairs",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_016",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF JULIUS CAESAR",
      "shakespeare_short": "Julius Caesar",
      "kwic": "s suffering the spirit of the people to subside, and their passions to cool, a matter of the last importance in war. \u00e2\u0080\u009cThere is a tide in the affairs of men, which, taken at the ebb, leads on to fortune.\u00e2\u0080\u009d However, the maxims of government here are different from most"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-5527",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Benjamin Rush, 14 May 1810",
      "date": 1810,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "that idles in the wanton summer air",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_028",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF ROMEO AND JULIET",
      "shakespeare_short": "Romeo And Juliet",
      "kwic": "and pathetic Subject in which Morality Religion, Laws Liberty and Government are so deeply interested to that Gossamour that idles in the Wanton Summer air John Randolph! The Character of him in the Auroria is well drawn and in some respect just; but makes too much of him. Y"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-03-02-2202",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to William Stephens Smith, 15 October 1812",
      "date": 1812,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "there is a tide in the affairs",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_016",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF JULIUS CAESAR",
      "shakespeare_short": "Julius Caesar",
      "kwic": ". There seems to be, an irreversable decree against me, and every Being who has a drop of my blood in his or her Veins. There is a tide in the Affairs of Men Which taken at the flood leads one to fortune, Omitted, all the Voyage of Life is bound in Shallows. I have had"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-03-02-2202",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to William Stephens Smith, 15 October 1812",
      "date": 1812,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "of men which taken at the flood",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_016",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF JULIUS CAESAR",
      "shakespeare_short": "Julius Caesar",
      "kwic": "sable decree against me, and every Being who has a drop of my blood in his or her Veins. There is a tide in the Affairs of Men Which taken at the flood leads one to fortune, Omitted, all the Voyage of Life is bound in Shallows. I have had my tide and omitted it. You have"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-03-02-2202",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to William Stephens Smith, 15 October 1812",
      "date": 1812,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "to fortune omitted all the voyage of",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_016",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF JULIUS CAESAR",
      "shakespeare_short": "Julius Caesar",
      "kwic": "ho has a drop of my blood in his or her Veins. There is a tide in the Affairs of Men Which taken at the flood leads one to fortune, Omitted, all the Voyage of Life is bound in Shallows. I have had my tide and omitted it. You have had your tide and omitted it. John Quincy has ha"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-5924",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Benjamin Rush, 4 January 1813",
      "date": 1813,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 5,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "full of sound and fury signifying nothing",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_019",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
      "shakespeare_short": "Macbeth",
      "kwic": "nauseous Fog. Add such an 8 to his age and you make him 85. He was then President for 4 years. A Tale told by an Ideot full of sound and fury Signifying Nothing. Vanity of Vanities all was Vanity! Add such a four years and you would infallibly kill him long before he would be 81."
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-6331",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Richard Rush, 14 September 1814",
      "date": 1814,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 3,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "there is a tide in the affairs",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_016",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF JULIUS CAESAR",
      "shakespeare_short": "Julius Caesar",
      "kwic": "the proudest Wave cannot ascend: there is a depth, at least a bottom, from which no Waters are left to rise or retire. There is a tide in the Affairs of Men. It is a trite observation of Historians, that there is in human Affairs, an ultimate point of depression, from"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-03-02-2986",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to William Stephens Smith, 21 November 1815",
      "date": 1815,
      "ngram_length": 6,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "MEDIUM",
      "matched_text": "enterprises of great pith and moment",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_007",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK",
      "shakespeare_short": "Hamlet, Prince Of Denmark",
      "kwic": ""
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-03-02-4019",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to George Washington Adams, 22 February 1822",
      "date": 1822,
      "ngram_length": 7,
      "content_words": 4,
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "matched_text": "and let slip the dogs of war",
      "shakespeare_doc_id": "shk_016",
      "shakespeare_source": "THE TRAGEDY OF JULIUS CAESAR",
      "shakespeare_short": "Julius Caesar",
      "kwic": "ion for the legislative Attainments of that great man. Franklin\u00e2\u0080\u0099s doctri[ ne ] is equivalent to \u00e2\u0080\u009cCry havock![ \u00e2\u0080\u009d ] and let Slip the dogs of War civil and Foreign, till a despot Shall come in to lay the dogs prostrate with his languadge and dessipate in thin Air a"
    }
  ],
  "named_references": [
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/01-03-02-0016-0005",
      "doc_title": "[1757]",
      "date": 1757,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": ". 2 I met another Clergyman and a sensible Man at Bristol. At the Inns as usual there were Scaenes and Characters, for the Amusement of Swift or even Shakespeare. Another Journey had well nigh proved fatal to me. Mr. Joshua Willard of Petersham, who had married Miss Ward a Niece of General Ward of Shrewsbury,"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/01-01-02-0003-0003-0001",
      "doc_title": "Tuesday. December 3 or 4 [i.e. 5?].",
      "date": 1758,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "y of Heaven, an Execution that Mortal man cant Stay\u00e2\u0080\u0094the Elements of Heaven, fire, Heat, Rain, Wind, &c. Let me search for the Clue, which Led great Shakespeare into the Labyrinth of mental Nature! Let me examine how men think. Shakespeare had never seen in real Life Persons under the Influence of all those S"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/01-01-02-0003-0003-0001",
      "doc_title": "Tuesday. December 3 or 4 [i.e. 5?].",
      "date": 1758,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "ire, Heat, Rain, Wind, &c. Let me search for the Clue, which Led great Shakespeare into the Labyrinth of mental Nature! Let me examine how men think. Shakespeare had never seen in real Life Persons under the Influence of all those Scenes of Pleasure and distress, which he has described in his Works, but he ima"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/01-01-02-0003-0003",
      "doc_title": "[December 1758]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "lry of Heaven, an Execution that Mortal man cant Stay\u2014the Elements of Heaven, fire, Heat, Rain, Wind, &c. Let me search for the Clue, which Led great Shakespeare into the Labyrinth of mental Nature! Let me examine how men think. Shakespeare had never seen in real Life Persons under the Influence of all those S"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/01-01-02-0003-0003",
      "doc_title": "[December 1758]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "ire, Heat, Rain, Wind, &c. Let me search for the Clue, which Led great Shakespeare into the Labyrinth of mental Nature! Let me examine how men think. Shakespeare had never seen in real Life Persons under the Influence of all those Scenes of Pleasure and distress, which he has described in his Works, but he ima"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0001-0003",
      "doc_title": "[A Letter to Richard Cranch about Orlinda, a Letter on Employing One\u2019s Mind, and Reflections on Procrastination, Genius, Moving the Passions, Cicero as Orator, Milton\u2019s Style, &c., October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "What is Wisdom? Is it, to write dramatic Poetry, like Milton or Shakespear? Is it to write on Astronomy and Physicks like Newton, or is it to know the human mind like Lock? Does it consist in Genius and Learning? No Genius a"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0001-0003",
      "doc_title": "[A Letter to Richard Cranch about Orlinda, a Letter on Employing One\u2019s Mind, and Reflections on Procrastination, Genius, Moving the Passions, Cicero as Orator, Milton\u2019s Style, &c., October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "the nice Connection and Dependence of these upon each other thro a whole Poem. And these Proofs have been given in a surprizing degree by Milton and Shakespear, Homer, Virgil &c. Milton has feigned the Characters of Arch Angells and Devills, of Sin, Death, &c., out of his own creative Imagination and has adj"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0001-0003",
      "doc_title": "[A Letter to Richard Cranch about Orlinda, a Letter on Employing One\u2019s Mind, and Reflections on Procrastination, Genius, Moving the Passions, Cicero as Orator, Milton\u2019s Style, &c., October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "haracter express his own Passions well, in order to raise the Passions of the Audience &c. {20} With what pathos does Othello bid farewell to War, in Shakespear. Oh now forever Farewell the tranquil Mind! farewell content; Farewell the ploomed Troops and the big War That make Ambition Virtue! Oh! farewell! Fa"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0001-0003",
      "doc_title": "[A Letter to Richard Cranch about Orlinda, a Letter on Employing One\u2019s Mind, and Reflections on Procrastination, Genius, Moving the Passions, Cicero as Orator, Milton\u2019s Style, &c., October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "nd for avoiding the low, little and mean in Discourse. I have not Leisure nor Patience, for examining the sublime Passages in Tully, Virgill, Milton, Shakespeare, Pope, Bolinbroke, Swift, Addison, Tillotson, Ovid, Horace &c. by these Rules. In that very sublime Passage in Milton where the Effect of Satans Spee"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/02-01-02-0010-0007-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Shakespeare\u2019s Characters and Figurative Language, October\u2013December 1758.]",
      "date": 1758,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "Shakespeare, in the Character of Lady Mackbeth, and of Gertrude, the Wife of old Hamlet, and afterwards of King Claudius, and in the Character of Lady Anne in Ki"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/01-01-02-0005-0008-0002",
      "doc_title": "1760. Decr. 2d.",
      "date": 1760,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "at last, strives to turn it off with a Laugh.\u00e2\u0080\u0094\u00e2\u0080\u009cI wish I had it. Ide shew it, I know.\u00e2\u0080\u009d\u00e2\u0080\u0094Bela really acts the Part of the Tamer of the Shrew in Shakespear. Thus a kind Look, an obliging Air, a civil Answer, is a boon that she cant obtain from her Husband. Farmers, Tradesmen, Soldiers, Sailors, People of"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/01-01-02-0009-0005-0008",
      "doc_title": "Decr. 25th. 1765. Christmas.",
      "date": 1765,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "vereign of his wonted Respects and Observance. Recollect, Mr. Pym, a scene in the Tragedy of K [ing] H [enry] 8th. I think you was once an Admirer of Shakespear. Vid. V. 5. 284. 285. 286. 4 A scene which may be very properly recommended to modern Monarks, Queens, and Favourites. I will repeat it, Mr. Pym, for"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/06-01-02-0052-0007",
      "doc_title": "VI. \u201cA Dissertation on the Canon and the Feudal Law,\u201d No. 4, 21 October 1765",
      "date": 1765,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "ren? When you compare her to the infamous miscreant, who lately stood on the gallows for starving her child? When you resemble her to Lady Macbeth in Shakespear, (I cannot think of it without horror) Who \u00e2\u0080\u009chad given suck, and knew How tender \u00e2\u0080\u0099twas to love the Babe that milk\u00e2\u0080\u0099d her.\u00e2\u0080\u009d But yet, who could \u00e2"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/06-01-02-0067-0007",
      "doc_title": "VI. Misanthrop, No. 2, January 1767",
      "date": 1767,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "ch Cases to the Bottom, I have had Recourse, upon these occasions, to the occult Sciences. A little familiar Spirit attends me, whom, in Imitation of Shakespeare I have called Ariel. This little Spright, who hops about upon the Clouds and Rainbows, rides upon the Sun beams, dives down to the Center of the Eart"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/01-01-02-0014-0005-0005",
      "doc_title": "[Draft of a Newspaper Communication, August? 1770.]",
      "date": 1770,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "\u00e2\u0080\u009cIf I would but go to Hell for an eternal Moment or so, I might be knighted.\u00e2\u0080\u009d Shakespeare. The Good of the governed is the End, and Rewards and Punishments are the Means of all Government. The Government of the Supream and alperfect Mind,"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/01-02-02-0002-0001-0003",
      "doc_title": "1772. Feby. 9. Sunday.",
      "date": 1772,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "\u201cIf I would but go to Hell for an eternal Moment or so, I might be knighted\u201d\u2014Shakespeare. Shakespeare, that great Master of every Affection of the Heart and every Sentiment of the Mind as well as of all the Powers of Expression, is someti"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/01-02-02-0002-0001-0003",
      "doc_title": "1772. Feby. 9. Sunday.",
      "date": 1772,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "\u201cIf I would but go to Hell for an eternal Moment or so, I might be knighted\u201d\u2014Shakespeare. Shakespeare, that great Master of every Affection of the Heart and every Sentiment of the Mind as well as of all the Powers of Expression, is sometimes fond of a"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-04-02-0030",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to John Quincy Adams, 23 December 1780",
      "date": 1780,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "enturous Spirit and inflexible Virtue you certainly, as well as I owe our Existence. I wish you, in your next Letter, to transcribe me the Passage of Shakespear, in which the Brownists are mentioned. You should treat the Minister of that Society, in Leyden with the greatest Respect, and attend his Meeting, ev"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/01-03-02-0001-0003-0012",
      "doc_title": "1782 Oct. 14. Monday.",
      "date": 1782,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "is a Manufacture, it is the Effect of Government and Education &c\u00e2\u0080\u0094S. run on about the Panurge, Pantagruel &c. of Rabelais, the Romeo and Julliet of Shakespeare, the Mandragore of Machiavel, the Tartuff of Moliere, &c. &c."
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/01-03-02-0005-0002-0001",
      "doc_title": "[Notes on a Tour of English Country Seats, &c., with Thomas Jefferson, 4\u201310? April 1786.]",
      "date": 1786,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "Uncertainty of our Sentiments concerning the Civil Wars. Stratford upon Avon is interesting as it is the Scaene of the Birth, Death and Sepulture of Shakespear. Three Doors from the Inn, is the House where he was born, as small and mean, as you can conceive. They shew Us an old Wooden Chair in the Chimney Co"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/01-03-02-0005-0002",
      "doc_title": "[April 1786]",
      "date": 1786,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "Uncertainty of our Sentiments concerning the Civil Wars. Stratford upon Avon is interesting as it is the Scaene of the Birth, Death and Sepulture of Shakespear. Three Doors from the Inn, is the House where he was born, as small and mean, as you can conceive. They shew Us an old Wooden Chair in the Chimney Co"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-10-02-0111",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Charles Adams, 17 May 1794",
      "date": 1794,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "ription of Lubberland or what do the French call it? Pays de Cocany or some such Word. Does he get this, says I, from Old Chauar, or Spencer, or from shakespear? Young M r Otis, turned me to the Passage in elegant Extracts\u00e2\u0080\u0094 1 It is it seems from the Tempest, which was to me, once very familiar\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Hence I se"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-10-02-0111",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Charles Adams, 17 May 1794",
      "date": 1794,
      "ref_type": "PLAY_TITLE:The Tempest",
      "reference": "the Tempest",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "this, says I, from Old Chauar, or Spencer, or from shakespear? Young M r Otis, turned me to the Passage in elegant Extracts\u00e2\u0080\u0094 1 It is it seems from the Tempest, which was to me, once very familiar\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Hence I see, my Memory is not so quick as it was once. next time you quote mark the quotation that one may lo"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-10-02-0110",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Abigail Adams, 17 May 1794",
      "date": 1794,
      "ref_type": "PLAY_TITLE:The Tempest",
      "reference": "the Tempest",
      "confidence": "MEDIUM",
      "kwic": "ty corruption is lawful! 3 Elections are going the Usual Way in our devoted Country. Oh! that I had done with them.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 We shall realize the raving in the Tempest, which Charles quoted to me in his last Letter. \u00e2\u0080\u009cIn the Commonwealth We shall by contraries execute all Things: for no kind of Trafic shall We admi"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-11-02-0054",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Charles Adams, 31 December 1795",
      "date": 1795,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "er house listened to the vile proposals of the two Wretches from Detroit. 1 But the Attempt itself is disgraceful to our Country. Your quotation from shakespear is well applied and is most admirable. There is another Passage which I wish you would look for and write me in what Play it is. to this Effect He wh"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-11-02-0241",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to Charles Adams, 30 December 1796",
      "date": 1796,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "the Bar it will be early enough to go to Europe. By your Representation M r Joshua Sands has been your good Friend. I can only Say in the Language of shakespear \u00e2\u0080\u009cWhenever you have made a Friend, upon virtuous Principles grapple him to your Soul with hooks of Steel.\u00e2\u0080\u009d 1 If M r Sands\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Experience should re"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/04-15-02-0147",
      "doc_title": "John Adams to William Stephens Smith, 26 February 1803",
      "date": 1803,
      "ref_type": "PLAY_TITLE:Coriolanus",
      "reference": "Coriolanus",
      "confidence": "MEDIUM",
      "kwic": "rth while to excite any public Attention to the subject here. Your Character has not suffered here, on Account of it. I rec d and read with Attention Coriolanus. It is well written in a Simple clear and nervous Style, with a Knowledge of the subject, and with a Spirit, Decision and Intrepidity that I admire."
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-03-02-1377",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to John Quincy Adams, 20 January 1805",
      "date": 1805,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "fficacious, may be hereafter of more consequence to your Country, than you may now imagine. I have been uncommonly engaged and interrested in Reading Shakespeare, and particularly his Historical Drama\u00e2\u0080\u0099s which I have read through once with Attention, and have almost compleated the Second time. During that Per"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-5167",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Benjamin Waterhouse, 2 February 1807",
      "date": 1807,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "er all his life; but he enters into every scence of human life, and seems to know the thoughts and feelings of all men, high and low, as perfectly as Shakespeare, who spent all his life among the wretches. In my last I forgot to mention Butler\u00e2\u0080\u0099s sermons, which I have had almost by heart, these fifty years. T"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-5229",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Benjamin Rush, 18 January 1808",
      "date": 1808,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "tion in any language that pleases me, though the Thing itself is the most striking beauty in Poetry oratory and every Species of fine Writing. Homer, Shakespeare are the most indebted to it. Our Franklin, owes a great part of his Merit to it\u00e2\u0080\u0094It is not less visible or attractive in Architecture Painting and S"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-5731",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Benjamin Rush, 25 December 1811",
      "date": 1811,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "\u00e2\u0080\u009cI know it Tom as well as you do. But why do you tell me of it? I had rather you Should Strike me.\u00e2\u0080\u009d This was one of those Touches of Nature, that Shakespeare or Cervantes would have noted in his Ivory Book. But why do you make so much ado about nothing. Of what Use can it be for Jefferson and me to exchang"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-5731",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Benjamin Rush, 25 December 1811",
      "date": 1811,
      "ref_type": "PLAY_TITLE:Much Ado About Nothing",
      "reference": "much ado about nothing",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "hould Strike me.\u00e2\u0080\u009d This was one of those Touches of Nature, that Shakespeare or Cervantes would have noted in his Ivory Book. But why do you make so much ado about nothing. Of what Use can it be for Jefferson and me to exchange Letters. I have nothing to Say to him, but to wish him an easy Journey to Heaven when he goes"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-5876",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Benjamin Rush, 18 September 1812",
      "date": 1812,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "estion whether Demons and their Prince are the Same Spirits as the Devil and his Angels, did not necessarily fall within the Compass of your Inquiry. Shakespeare and Pringle were not adepts in the Science of Biblical Criticism, which is now in the full tide of Successful Experiment.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 (Where will it end?) See"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-5908",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Benjamin Rush, 8 December 1812",
      "date": 1812,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "ight millions of People, to see a new Play, advertised as the most extraordinary that ever was represented on Any Stage, excelling Menander Terrence, Shakespeare Corneille and Molliere. I Shall not give you the Dramatis Personas at length: but Garrick, Mrs. Siddons and Cook were conspicuous among a Company pro"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-6118",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Fran\u00e7ois Adriaan Van der Kemp, 30 July 1813",
      "date": 1813,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "rench, English, and biblical. I have an Assembly of Ladies in my Family, to a Committee of whom I have referred your quotations and Commentaries upon Shakespeare. I rather incline to Johnson. The \u00e2\u0080\u009c Hand \u00e2\u0080\u009d was a Punn. My Friend Whiteford the Cross reader was not more addicted to Punns, quibbles, points and"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-6118",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Fran\u00e7ois Adriaan Van der Kemp, 30 July 1813",
      "date": 1813,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "line to Johnson. The \u00e2\u0080\u009c Hand \u00e2\u0080\u009d was a Punn. My Friend Whiteford the Cross reader was not more addicted to Punns, quibbles, points and conceits than Shakespeare. Be not Surprised, if you Should hear that I am advanced to the Rank and honour of Homer and Milton in blindness. John Adams"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-6131",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Richard Rush, 13 August 1813",
      "date": 1813,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "ost, its Simplicity, its Beauty its Pathos, its Philosophy, its Morality, its Religion, or its Sublimity. Is there in Homer, in Virgil, in Milton, in Shakespeare, or in Pope, an equal number of Lines, which deserves to be engraved on the Memory of Youth and Age, in more indelible Characters? If there is, pray"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-03-02-2324",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to William Stephens Smith, 3 July 1813",
      "date": 1813,
      "ref_type": "PLAY_TITLE:Comedy of Errors",
      "reference": "Comedy of Errors",
      "confidence": "MEDIUM",
      "kwic": "the existence of their administrations entirely to him. And a bright Laurel, a splendid distinction it is. Posterity, I hope will know it. The great Comedy of Errors has arisen from that immense Error of the first Concoction attempting Canada without the command of the Lakes. I expect soon to see the Southern & mi"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-6548",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Jedidiah Morse, 2 December 1815",
      "date": 1815,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "which I will not now commit to paper, & entertain you with plots, & Intrigues, < [.\u00c2 .\u00c2 .] > which would compose a Comedy, equal to any of Moliere or Shakespeare, if corruption prostitution & Dupery can compose a Comedy. leaving this for the present, we will proceed to Cambridge; Several branches of our Braint"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-03-02-2949",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to John Adams, 3 October 1815",
      "date": 1815,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "ough his eccentric performances.\u00e2\u0080\u009d The People of England, like all other People, are very fond, of discovering Plagiarisms in great Writers; Milton, Shakespeare, Franklin have undergone this Ordeal Tryall. And now Sterne is taken in hand. One loves to know what can be Said in Such cases; and therefore I wish"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-03-02-3274",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to George Washington Adams, 21 March 1817",
      "date": 1817,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "gh, and trust, The Ruler with his Skies. And these four Lines in my poor Judgment, are worth more than any equal Number in Corneil, Racine, Voltaire, Shakespeare Dryden or Milton. But I have now the chereing hope of a few Evenings with your Father and all his Sons. Love to your Mother. A."
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-7645",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Samuel B.H. Judah, 24 June 1822",
      "date": 1822,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "happiness by keeping up a constant terror in the minds of a great part of man kind\u00e2\u0080\u0094for fear is a painful and distressing passion. I could wish that Shakespear had been asleep when he imagined or borrowed from Teutonic tales his ghost of Hamlet < the > his witches in Macbeth his queen Macb & his Oberon. I co"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-7649",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Samuel B.H. Judah, 25 June 1822",
      "date": 1822,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "happiness by keeping up a constant terror in the minds of a great part of mankind\u00e2\u0080\u0094for fear is a painful and distressing passion. I could wish that Shakespear had been asleep when he imagined or borrowed from Teutonic tales his gost of Hamlet, his Witches in Macbeth, his Queen Mab, and his Oberon. I could w"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-02-02-7741",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Fran\u00e7ois Adriaan Van der Kemp, 3 January 1823",
      "date": 1823,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "Montezillo January 3d. 1823. Dear Sir. A friend in need, is a friend indeed; you must certainly have read Shakespear, and have learnt from him, when you have once made a friend, to grapple him to your Soul with hooks of Steeal. You have been constantly grappling me"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-03-02-4356",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to John Quincy Adams, 4 December 1823",
      "date": 1823,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "and Social affections, and genuine poetical imagery that if you < will > had cultivate the muses as much as you have politicks you might have made a Shakespear, a Milton or a Pope, for anything that I know, < how > \u00e2\u0080\u009cHow sweet an Ovid, is in Murray lost\u00e2\u0080\u009d The posey or nosegay of October 30th. is carefully"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-03-02-4357",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to John Quincy Adams, 5 December 1823",
      "date": 1823,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "tural, and social affections, and genuine poetical imagery; that if you had cultivated the muses as much as you have politicks, you might have made a Shakespear, a Milton, or a Pope, for any thing that I know\u00e2\u0080\u0094 How sweet an Ovid, is in Murray lost\u00e2\u0080\u009d The poesy, or nosegay of October 30th. is carefully locked"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "adams",
      "founder_name": "John Adams",
      "doc_id": "Adams/99-03-02-4390",
      "doc_title": "From John Adams to Caleb Stark, Jr., 28 March 1824",
      "date": 1824,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "arter & unbowel , the best plays in the language. Poor Othello was a few nights since so cruelly mangled that I actually pitied both him & his father Shakespeare. Desdemona\u00e2\u0080\u0099s lot was indeed a happy one compared with his. She sweet thing was smothered & there was an end of her; but he was torn to pieces inch"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "franklin",
      "founder_name": "Benjamin Franklin",
      "doc_id": "Franklin/01-22-02-0123",
      "doc_title": "Benjamin Franklin to Jonathan Williams, Jr., 12 September 1775",
      "date": 1775,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "house. Addressed: To / Mr Jonathan Williams / at Mrs Stevenson\u00e2\u0080\u0099s / Craven street / London / per favour of Capt. Loxley [ In Loxley\u00e2\u0080\u0099s hand: ] Mr. Shakespeare please deliver the enclos\u00e2\u0080\u0099d to Mr. D. Barclays care opposite Bow Church and will obloige yours &c B L Chapeside 108"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "franklin",
      "founder_name": "Benjamin Franklin",
      "doc_id": "Franklin/01-40-02-0212",
      "doc_title": "Benjamin Franklin to Robert R. Livingston, 22[\u201326] July 1783",
      "date": 1783,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "be, that Count de V. and myself are continually plotting against him & employing the News Writers of Europe to depreciate his Character, &ca. but as Shakespear says, \u00e2\u0080\u009cTrifles light as Air, &ca.\u00e2\u0080\u009d 4 I am persuaded however that he means well for his Country, is always an honest Man, often a Wise One, but so"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/01-01-02-0056",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson to Robert Skipwith, with a List of Books for a Private Library, 3 August 1771",
      "date": 1771,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "if we awaken it is the fault of the writer. I appeal to every reader of feeling and sentiment whether the fictitious murther of Duncan by Macbeth in Shakespeare does not excite in him as great horror of villainy, as the real one of Henry IV by Ravaillac as related by Davila ? And whether the fidelity of Nelso"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/01-01-02-0056",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson to Robert Skipwith, with a List of Books for a Private Library, 3 August 1771",
      "date": 1771,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "v. 8vo. Donaldson. Edinburgh 1762. 10/ Hoole\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Tasso. 12mo. 5/ Ossian with Blair\u00e2\u0080\u0099s criticisms. 2 v. 8vo. 10/ Telemachus by Dodsley. 6/ Capell\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Shakespear. 12mo. 30/ Dryden\u00e2\u0080\u0099s plays. 6 v. 12mo. 18/ Addison\u00e2\u0080\u0099s plays. 12mo. 3/ Otway\u00e2\u0080\u0099s plays. 3 v. 12mo. 9/ Rowe\u00e2\u0080\u0099s works. 2 v. 12mo. 6/ Thompson\u00e2\u0080\u0099s wor"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/01-01-02-0056",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson to Robert Skipwith, with a List of Books for a Private Library, 3 August 1771",
      "date": 1771,
      "ref_type": "PLAY_TITLE:King Lear",
      "reference": "King Lear",
      "confidence": "MEDIUM",
      "kwic": "nd every moral rule of life. Thus a lively and lasting sense of filial duty is more effectually impressed on the mind of a son or daughter by reading King Lear, than by all the dry volumes of ethics and divinity that ever were written. This is my idea of well-written Romance, of Tragedy, Comedy, and Epic Poe"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/03-07-02-0455",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson to John Minor, 30 August 1814, including Thomas Jefferson to Bernard Moore, [ca. 1773?]",
      "date": 1773,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": ". Criticism. Rhetoric. Oratory. to wit. \u00c2 Belles letters. read the best of the Poets, epic, didactic, dramatic, pastoral, lyric E t c but among these Shakespear must be singled out by one who wishes to learn the full powers of the English language. of him we must advise, as Horace did of the Grecian models, \u00e2"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/01-08-02-0007",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson to Samuel Henley, with a List of Books, 3 March 1785",
      "date": 1785,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "n design in gardening. Jennings on medals. Harris\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Hermes 8vo. \u00e2\u0080\u0094\u00e2\u0080\u0094\u00e2\u0080\u0094 three treatises 8vo. Warton\u00e2\u0080\u0099s observns. on Spenser. 2. v. 8vo. Essay on Shakespeare. 8vo. Jones poeseos Asiaticae comment. 8vo. unbound. London catalogue of books. pamphlet Suidae lexicon. 3. v. fol. injured. Sallust. Foulis. 12mo. W"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/01-07-02-0467",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson to James Monroe, [6 February 1785]",
      "date": 1785,
      "ref_type": "PLAY_TITLE:Comedy of Errors",
      "reference": "comedy of errors",
      "confidence": "MEDIUM",
      "kwic": "ou will have understood them. If they were written by the 1st. you will now be able by translating the numbers to understand them also; and thus this comedy of errors will be cleared up. Since writing so far I have made out a table adjusting the numbers in my copy to those in yours, which will enable you to transla"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/01-09-02-0136",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson to David Humphreys, 5 January 178[6]",
      "date": 1786,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "st possible, such as you may have seen me use, if you should happen to have noticed mine. They cost about a dollar. The remaining numbers of Bell\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Shakespeare, petit format. I have the eleven first numbers. A pair of brass dividers, 6. Inches long, with a leg to slide out. A draw pen, and pencil leg, both m"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/01-10-02-0096",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson to John Stockdale, 24 July 1786",
      "date": 1786,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "ubles de l\u00e2\u0080\u0099Amerique. I have the two first volumes; if any more be come out, I shall be glad to receive them; or whenever they do come out. Bell\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Shakespeare. The nos. since 25. I have 25. numbers. On fine paper. Monthly and Critical reviews since those I have received. Jeffery\u00e2\u0080\u0099s historical chart. Priest"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/01-11-02-0437",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson to John Stockdale, with Orders for Books, 1 July 1787",
      "date": 1787,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "ct. 3. v. 8vo. 9 Davis. Kirwan\u00e2\u0080\u0099s estimate of the temperature of different climates. 10 Elmesley. Sylva. or the wood. 8vo. 5/. Payne & son. Bell\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Shakespeare. I have the first 32. Nos. Send me what is since published. Hargrave\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Coke Littleton. I have as far as page 330. Send me what has since come out."
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/01-11-02-0579",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson to Thomas Barclay, with Enclosure, 3 August 1787",
      "date": 1787,
      "ref_type": "CHARACTER:Shylock",
      "reference": "Shylock",
      "confidence": "MEDIUM",
      "kwic": "eased nor shall cease endeavoring to satisfy others that your conduct has been that of an honest and honourable debtor, and theirs the counterpart of Shylock in the play. I inclose you a letter containing my testimony on your general conduct, which I have written to relieve a debt of justice pressing on my"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/01-12-02-0500",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson to John Stockdale, 1 January 1788",
      "date": 1788,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "g not received any Reviews from you since those of August, I am uninformed how they have treated it. I suppose too there are more volumes of Bell\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Shakespeare (fine paper) out now, and something more of Coke Littleton. Be so good as to send these articles with those desired in my letter of Octob. 10. and ad"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/01-13-02-0098",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson to John Stockdale, 18 May 1788",
      "date": 1788,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "n a journey. To those desired in the letters above referred to be pleased to add the following. Priestley\u00e2\u0080\u0099s biographical chart & pamphlet. Bell\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Shakespeare. No. 50 & the subsequent ones. I have No. 49. & preceding. Hargrave\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Coke Littleton after folio 395. to which I have. Monthly & Critical reviews a"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/01-13-02-0530",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson to Thomas Payne, 2 October 1788",
      "date": 1788,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "history. Dilly. Families of plants by the Litchfeild society. 2. vols. 8vo. Mc.kenzie\u00e2\u0080\u0099s strictures on Tarleton\u00e2\u0080\u0099s history. Faulder. Concordance to Shakespeare. Robinsons. Indian vocabulary. 12mo. Stockdale. Additions to Robertson\u00e2\u0080\u0099s history of Scotland. 8vo. Cadell. Additions to Robertson\u00e2\u0080\u0099s history of Am"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/01-14-02-0239",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson to John Trumbull, 18 January 1789",
      "date": 1789,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "clothes to him.] The other is to answer some queries after [you shall have] made enquiry. Do the pictures of Newton, [Locke, Bacon, Syd]ney, Hampden, Shakespear exist? What would it cost to have them copied by some good young hand, who will do them well and is not of such established reputation as to be dear?"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/01-14-02-0239",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson to John Trumbull, 18 January 1789",
      "date": 1789,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespere",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "in England, tho\u00e2\u0080\u0099 I do not expect better. Do the busts of the same persons, Newton, Locke, &c. exist, and what would they cost in plaster? Bell\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Shakespere tells us that the only genuine picture of Shakespere is in possession of the earl of Chandos. I suppose the lives of the other authors prefixed to th"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/01-14-02-0239",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson to John Trumbull, 18 January 1789",
      "date": 1789,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespere",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "sts of the same persons, Newton, Locke, &c. exist, and what would they cost in plaster? Bell\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Shakespere tells us that the only genuine picture of Shakespere is in possession of the earl of Chandos. I suppose the lives of the other authors prefixed to their works will say where their pictures exist. I am w"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/99-01-02-6989",
      "doc_title": "From Thomas Jefferson to Samuel F. Bradford, 13 December 1807",
      "date": 1807,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "Washington Dec. 13. 07. Sir I see by an advertisement in Poulson\u00e2\u0080\u0099s paper of the 11th. that you have for sale Sharp\u00e2\u0080\u0099s Shakespear in 9. vols 32mo. I will thank you to send it to me, the size being the circumstance which recommends it. altho\u00e2\u0080\u0099 I do not find on your catalogue Joh"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/99-01-02-7155",
      "doc_title": "From Thomas Jefferson to Samuel F. Bradford, 8 January 1808",
      "date": 1808,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "Washington Jan. 8. 08. Sir The copy of Shakespear you were so kind as to send me came safe to hand, and I avail myself of the first occasion of making a remittance to Philada to include the sum of 11"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/03-09-02-0432",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson\u2019s Title and Prospectus for Destutt de Tracy\u2019s Treatise on Political Economy, [ca. 6 April 1816]",
      "date": 1816,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "t a wonderful accession of copiousness and force has the French language attained by the innovations of the last 30. years! and what do we not owe to Shakespear for the enrichment of the language by his free and magical creation of words? in giving a loose to neologism indeed, uncouth words will sometimes be"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/03-12-02-0438-0001",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson to Nathaniel Burwell, 14 March 1818",
      "date": 1818,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespeare",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "f those of Mad m Genlis. for a like reason too much poetry should not be indulged. some is useful for forming style and taste. Pope, Dryden, Thomson, Shakespeare, and of The French Moliere, Racine, the Corneilles may be read with pleasure and improvement. The French language, become that of the general interco"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/98-01-02-5648",
      "doc_title": "From Thomas Jefferson to J. Evelyn Denison, 9 November 1825",
      "date": 1825,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "the recovery of the Anglo-Saxon dialect of our language; for a mere dialect it is, as much as those of Piers Plowman Gower, Douglas Chaucer Spencer, Shakespear, Milton, for even much of Milton is already antiquated. the A-Saxon is only the earliest we possess of the many shades of mutation by which the langu"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/98-01-02-5648",
      "doc_title": "From Thomas Jefferson to J. Evelyn Denison, 9 November 1825",
      "date": 1825,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "etained. when these local vocabularies are published and digested together into a single one it is probable we shall find that there is not a word in Shakespear which is not now in use in some of the counties in England, from whence we may obtain it\u00e2\u0080\u0099s true sense. and what an exchange will their recovery be"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/98-01-02-5792",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson: an essay or introductory lecture...dialects of the English language, 1825, 1825",
      "date": 1825,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "language which they constituted; did not make the language of Alfred a different one from that of Piers Ploughman, of Chaucer, Douglas, Spencer, and Shakespear, any more than the 2 d revolution, which substituted the Roman for the English black letter made theirs a different language from that of Pope and Bo"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/98-01-02-5792",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson: an essay or introductory lecture...dialects of the English language, 1825, 1825",
      "date": 1825,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "tion, which substituted the Roman for the English black letter made theirs a different language from that of Pope and Bolingbroke; or the writings of Shakespear, printed in black letter different from the same as now done in Roman type. the life of Alfred written in Latin, and in Roman character by Asser, was"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/98-01-02-5792",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson: an essay or introductory lecture...dialects of the English language, 1825, 1825",
      "date": 1825,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "ters of the years 890. 930. 1130. 1160. 1180. 1250. 1260. 1380. 1430. 1500. 1526. 1537. 1541. 1556. 1611. that is, from the time of Alfred to that of Shakespear. these obviously prove the gradual changes of the language from the A-S. form, to that of the present English, and that there was no particular point"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "jefferson",
      "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
      "doc_id": "Jefferson/98-01-02-5792",
      "doc_title": "Thomas Jefferson: an essay or introductory lecture...dialects of the English language, 1825, 1825",
      "date": 1825,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "us by the intimate insight it will give us into the genuine structure powers, and meanings of the language we now read and speak. we shall then read Shakespear and Milton with a superior degree of intelligence and delight, heightened by the new and delicate shades of meaning developed to us by a knolege of t"
    },
    {
      "founder_id": "washington",
      "founder_name": "George Washington",
      "doc_id": "Washington/05-21-02-0114",
      "doc_title": "George Washington to George Washington Parke Custis, 28 November 1796",
      "date": 1796,
      "ref_type": "SHAKESPEARE",
      "reference": "Shakespear",
      "confidence": "HIGH",
      "kwic": "s, to speak evil of any one, unless there is unequivocal proofs of their deserving it, is an injury for which there is no adequate reparation; for as Shakespear says\u00e2\u0080\u0094\u00e2\u0080\u009che that robs me of my good name, enriches not himself, but renders me poor indeed\u00e2\u0080\u009d\u00e2\u0080\u0094or words to that effect. 4 I have said thus much, be"
    }
  ],
  "summary": {
    "by_founder": [
      {
        "founder_id": "adams",
        "founder_name": "John Adams",
        "direct_high": 53,
        "direct_medium": 8,
        "named_shakespeare": 42,
        "play_character_high": 2,
        "play_character_medium": 3,
        "total_non_low": 108
      },
      {
        "founder_id": "franklin",
        "founder_name": "Benjamin Franklin",
        "direct_high": 0,
        "direct_medium": 0,
        "named_shakespeare": 2,
        "play_character_high": 0,
        "play_character_medium": 0,
        "total_non_low": 2
      },
      {
        "founder_id": "jefferson",
        "founder_name": "Thomas Jefferson",
        "direct_high": 0,
        "direct_medium": 0,
        "named_shakespeare": 23,
        "play_character_high": 0,
        "play_character_medium": 3,
        "total_non_low": 26
      },
      {
        "founder_id": "washington",
        "founder_name": "George Washington",
        "direct_high": 0,
        "direct_medium": 0,
        "named_shakespeare": 1,
        "play_character_high": 0,
        "play_character_medium": 0,
        "total_non_low": 1
      },
      {
        "founder_id": "madison",
        "founder_name": "James Madison",
        "direct_high": 0,
        "direct_medium": 0,
        "named_shakespeare": 0,
        "play_character_high": 0,
        "play_character_medium": 0,
        "total_non_low": 0
      },
      {
        "founder_id": "hamilton",
        "founder_name": "Alexander Hamilton",
        "direct_high": 0,
        "direct_medium": 0,
        "named_shakespeare": 0,
        "play_character_high": 0,
        "play_character_medium": 0,
        "total_non_low": 0
      }
    ],
    "by_play": [
      {
        "play": "Macbeth",
        "full_title": "THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH",
        "n": 20
      },
      {
        "play": "The Tempest",
        "full_title": "THE TEMPEST",
        "n": 11
      },
      {
        "play": "Othello, Moor Of Venice",
        "full_title": "THE TRAGEDY OF OTHELLO, MOOR OF VENICE",
        "n": 10
      },
      {
        "play": "Julius Caesar",
        "full_title": "THE TRAGEDY OF JULIUS CAESAR",
        "n": 8
      },
      {
        "play": "Henry The Fifth",
        "full_title": "THE LIFE OF KING HENRY THE FIFTH",
        "n": 5
      },
      {
        "play": "The Second Part Of Henry The Sixth",
        "full_title": "THE SECOND PART OF KING HENRY THE SIXTH",
        "n": 2
      },
      {
        "play": "Alls Well That Ends Well",
        "full_title": "ALLS WELL THAT ENDS WELL",
        "n": 1
      },
      {
        "play": "Richard The Second",
        "full_title": "KING RICHARD THE SECOND",
        "n": 1
      },
      {
        "play": "The First Part Of Henry The Sixth",
        "full_title": "THE FIRST PART OF HENRY THE SIXTH",
        "n": 1
      },
      {
        "play": "Hamlet, Prince Of Denmark",
        "full_title": "THE TRAGEDY OF HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK",
        "n": 1
      },
      {
        "play": "Romeo And Juliet",
        "full_title": "THE TRAGEDY OF ROMEO AND JULIET",
        "n": 1
      }
    ],
    "totals": {
      "direct_high": 53,
      "direct_medium": 8,
      "named_high": 70,
      "named_medium": 6
    }
  }
}
