Author: David Ranzolin
License: MIT
The goal of rperseus
is to furnish classicists, textual critics, and R enthusiasts with texts from the Classical World. While the English translations of most texts are available through gutenbergr
, rperseus
returns these works in their original language--Greek, Latin, and Hebrew.
rperseus
provides access to classical texts within the Perseus Digital Library's CapiTainS environment. A wealth of Greek, Latin, and Hebrew texts are available, from Homer to Cicero to Boetheius. The Perseus Digital Library includes English translations in some cases. The base API url is http://cts.perseids.org/api/cts
.
rperseus
is not on CRAN, but can be installed via:
devtools::install_github("ropensci/rperseus")
See the vignette to get started.
To obtain a particular text, you must first know its full Uniform Resource Name (URN). URNs can be perused in the perseus_catalog
, a data frame lazily loaded into the package. For example, say I want a copy of Virgil's Aeneid:
library(dplyr)
library(purrr)
library(rperseus)
aeneid_latin <- perseus_catalog %>%
filter(group_name == "Virgil",
label == "Aeneid",
language == "lat") %>%
pull(urn) %>%
get_perseus_text()
You can also request an English translation for some texts:
aeneid_english <- perseus_catalog %>%
filter(group_name == "Virgil",
label == "Aeneid",
language == "eng") %>%
pull(urn) %>%
get_perseus_text()
Refer to the language variable in perseus_catalog
for translation availability.
You can also specify excerpts:
qoheleth <- get_perseus_text(urn = "urn:cts:ancJewLit:hebBible.ecclesiastes.leningrad-pntd", excerpt = "1.1-1.3")
qoheleth$text
#> [1] "דִּבְרֵי֙ קֹהֶ֣לֶת בֶּן־ דָּוִ֔ד מֶ֖לֶךְ בִּירוּשָׁלִָֽם : הֲבֵ֤ל הֲבָלִים֙ אָמַ֣ר קֹהֶ֔לֶת הֲבֵ֥ל הֲבָלִ֖ים הַכֹּ֥ל הָֽבֶל : מַה־ יִּתְר֖וֹן לָֽאָדָ֑ם בְּכָל־ עֲמָל֔וֹ שֶֽׁיַּעֲמֹ֖ל תַּ֥חַת הַשָּֽׁמֶשׁ :"
You can parse any Greek excerpt, returning a data frame with each word's part of speech, gender, case, mood, voice, tense, person, number, and degree.
parse_excerpt("urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0031.tlg002.perseus-grc2", "5.1-5.2") %>%
head(7) %>%
knitr::kable()
word | form | verse | part_of_speech | person | number | tense | mood | voice | gender | case | degree |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
καί | Καὶ | 5.1 | conjunction | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
ἔρχομαι | ἦλθον | 5.1 | verb | third | plural | aorist | indicative | active | NA | NA | NA |
εἰς | εἰς | 5.1 | preposition | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
ὁ | τὸ | 5.1 | article | NA | singular | NA | NA | NA | neuter | accusative | NA |
πέραν | πέραν | 5.1 | adverb | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
ὁ | τῆς | 5.1 | article | NA | singular | NA | NA | NA | feminine | genative | NA |
θάλασσα | θαλάσσης | 5.1 | noun | NA | singular | NA | NA | NA | feminine | genative | NA |
rperseus
plays well with the tidyverse
and tidytext
. Here I obtain all of Plato's works that have English translations available:
library(purrr)
plato <- perseus_catalog %>%
filter(group_name == "Plato",
language == "eng") %>%
pull(urn) %>%
map_df(get_perseus_text)
And here's how to retrieve the Greek text from Sophocles' underrated Philoctetes before unleashing the tidytext
toolkit:
library(tidytext)
philoctetes <- perseus_catalog %>%
filter(group_name == "Sophocles",
label == "Philoctetes",
language == "grc") %>%
pull(urn) %>%
get_perseus_text()
philoctetes %>%
unnest_tokens(word, text) %>%
count(word, sort = TRUE) %>%
anti_join(greek_stop_words)
#> Joining, by = "word"
#> # A tibble: 3,514 x 2
#> word n
#> <chr> <int>
#> 1 νεοπτόλεμος 164
#> 2 φιλοκτήτης 141
#> 3 ὦ 119
#> 4 μʼ 74
#> 5 ὀδυσσεύς 56
#> 6 τέκνον 47
#> 7 τʼ 43
#> 8 χορός 41
#> 9 γʼ 40
#> 10 νῦν 39
#> # ... with 3,504 more rows
You can render small parallels with perseus_parallel
:
tibble(label = c("Colossians", "1 Thessalonians", "Romans"),
excerpt = c("1.4", "1.3", "8.35-8.39")) %>%
left_join(perseus_catalog) %>%
filter(language == "grc") %>%
select(urn, excerpt) %>%
pmap_df(get_perseus_text) %>%
perseus_parallel(words_per_row = 4)
#> Joining, by = "label"
- Report bugs or issues here.
- If you'd like to contribute to the development of
rperseus
, first get acquainted with the Perseus Digital Library, fork the repo, and send a pull request. - This project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project, you agree to abide by its terms.