Introduction to Rpoet

The Rpoet package is a wrapper of the PoetryDB API, which enables developers and other users to extract a vast amount of English-language poetry from nearly 130 authors (as of this writing). The package provides a simple R interface for interacting and accessing the PoetryDB database. This vignette will introduce the basic functionality of Rpoet and some example usages of the package.

First Steps

If not done already, install Rpoet using install.packages() function.

install.packages('Rpoet')

The latest development version can also be installed using the devtools function install_github.

devtools::install_github('aschleg/Rpoet')

After Rpoet is installed, load it using the library() function.

library(Rpoet)

Using Rpoet

The get.poetry function acts as the interface to the PoetryDB API. The only required parameter in the function is the input_term, which must be one or a combination of the following:

The search_term parameter should correspond to the given input_term. For example, if we are interested in finding the poems and sonnets of William Shakespeare, we would use the get.poetry function like so:

get.poetry('author', 'William Shakespeare')

In the case of searching for a particular poem or sonnet:

get.poetry('title', 'Paradise Lost')

For users who know of a certain line in a poem and want the full poem:

get.poetry('lines', 'But thou contracted to thine own bright eyes,')

Limiting Returned Results

In the samples given above, all of the data found by the API will be returned. The resulting data returned from the API can be specified by utilizing the output parameter. Similar to the input_term parameter, output can be any one or a combination of ‘author’, ‘title’, ‘lines’ or ‘linecount’. For example, the following would return all of Shakespeare’s poem titles and linecounts rather than the full returned object.

If we only wanted to get the lines of John Milton’s Paradise Lost, the function would look similar to the following:

Combination Searches

Multiple input and search terms can be passed in the input_term and search_term parameters. Each term passed in the input_term parameter must be delimited by a comma, while the terms in the search_term parameter should be delimited by a semi-colon. There must be a corresponding search term for each passed input term. For example, let’s say we want to find the full title name and the line count of John Milton’s poetry with Paradise Lost in the title.

As another example, let’s say we are interested in finding all of William Shakespeare’s poems and sonnets that are fourteen lines long (a sonnet is a poem of 14 equal length lines).

Other Examples

Getting Available Authors and Titles

A list of authors and titles in the PoetryDB can be found by setting the input_term parameter to ‘author’ or ‘title’ while keeping the search_term parameter NULL. In the example below, we see how many authors and poetry titles are currently in PoetryDB.

We see there are 129 authors and just under 3,000 titles in PoetryDB at the time of this writing. Therefore, the average number of poems for each author in the database can be calculated: