Wikisource:Featured text candidates

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This page hosts nominations for featured text status in accordance with the Featured text guidelines. A featured text should exemplify Wikisource's very highest standards of accuracy. If you nominate a text, you will be expected to make a good-faith effort to address objections that are raised.

Any established user may nominate a text or vote (as long as it matches the criteria). Every month the nomination with the highest support ratio, weighted in favour of nominations with more numerous votes (equation forthcoming), will be chosen as featured text. All nominations with under 70% support after a week will be archived. The most promising nominations (up to 10) will be carried over to the next week, during which time established users may continue to place votes.

Featured texts edit
Date Text
2006
January
February
March
April
May
June
July Gettysburg Address
August Dulce et Decorum est
September The Time Machine
October
November Elegie II
December Come not, when I am dead
2007
January After Death
February Anthem for Doomed Youth
March Resignation letter (Roosevelt)
April Darkness
May Lights
June Arithmetic on the Frontier
July
August Cole's Old English Masters. John Opie
September Finished with the War: A Soldier’s Declaration
October
November
December
2008
January The Black Cat
February Balade to Rosemounde
March The Late Mr. Charles Babbage, F.R.S.
April South Africa Act 1909
May United States patent X1
June
July
August ACLU v. NSA Opinion
September The Wind in the Willows (1913)
October Early Settlers Along the Mississippi
November Coker FOIA documents
December
2009
January George Washington's First State of the Union Address
February
March Transcript of the 'friendly fire' incident video
April J'accuse
May German Instrument of Surrender
June A specimen of the botany of New Holland
July Fatal fall of Wright airship
August Charles von Hügel
September Flight 93 Cockpit Transcript
October A Description of a City Shower
November The Fight at Dame Europa's School
December Descriptive account ... of King George's Sound
2010
January The English Constitution
February Omnibuses and Cabs
March Cinderella, or the Little Glass Slipper
April Diary of ten years
May Anthony Roll
June Celtic Fairy Tales
July The Songs of a Sentimental Bloke
August A Study in Scarlet
September Makers of British botany
October The Life of Captain Matthew Flinders, R.N.
November
December Houston: Where Seventeen Railroads Meet the Sea
2011
January No Treason
February
March Mrs. Caudle's curtain lectures
April The Velveteen Rabbit
May Poems by Wilfred Owen
June
July Stops of Various Quills
August A Witch Shall Be Born
September Susan B. Anthony petition for remission of fine
October
November
December
2012
January
February Picturesque New Guinea
March Flatland
April Shaving Made Easy
May
June
July Popular Science Monthly
August Homes of the London Poor
September Mexico, as it was and as it is
October Special: Halloween
November Bull-dog Drummond
December Black Beauty
2013
January Proclamation 95
February Rambles in New Zealand
March The Art of Nijinsky
April A Jewish State
May Amazing Stories, no. 1
June Laura Secord: A Study in Canadian Patriotism
July Magic
August Tracks of McKinlay and party across Australia
September The Yellow Wall Paper
October The Canterville Ghost/The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
November The Laws of Hammurabi, King of Babylonia
December Vanity Fair
2014
January The Corsair
February The Clipper Ship Era
March Association Football and How to Play It
April Daisy Miller
May Romanes Lecture
June Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
July Doctor Syn
August Tyrannosaurus and Other Cretaceous Carnivorous Dinosaurs
September
October Wikipedia is pushing the boundaries of scholarly practice but the gender gap must be addressed
November
December A Christmas Carol
2015
January The Russian School of Painting
February Diaries of Court Ladies of Old Japan
March The Problems of Philosophy
April On the Determination of the Wave-length of Electric Radiation by Diffraction Grating
May Kopal-Kundala
June Studies of a Biographer
July
August Queen Mab
September
October Calcutta: Past and Present
November
December Tom Brown's School Days (6th ed)
2016
January
February The Kiss and its History
March
April The Descent of Man (Darwin)
May
June The Fables of Florian (tr. Phelps)
July The Discovery of Radium
August
September The Adventures Of A Revolutionary Soldier
October
November
December
2017
January Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (Wiggin)
February The Clandestine Marriage
March The "Bab" Ballads
April Pro Patria (Coates)
May The Panchatantra (Purnabhadra's Recension of 1199 CE)
June Australian Legendary Tales
July Resistance to Civil Government
August Views in India, chiefly among the Himalaya Mountains
September The Subjection of Women
October A Princess of Mars
November Prometheus Bound
December Author:Beatrix Potter
2018
January Pollyanna
February My Bondage and My Freedom (1855)
March Catholic Hymns (1860)
April Trees and Other Poems
May Una and the Lion
June
July Megalithic Monuments in Spain and Portugal
August Oriental Scenery
September A Simplified Grammar of the Swedish Language
October Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
November If—
December Messiah (1749)
2019
January The First Men in the Moon
February The Bird of Time
March The Myths of Mexico and Peru
April
May
June Orphée aux Enfers
July
August
September
October
November The Vampyre
December The Life of the Spider
2020
January
February The Constitution of the Czechoslovak Republic
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
2021
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
2022
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
2023
January
February
March
April R. U. R. (Rossum's Universal Robots)
May Henry IV Part 1 (1917) Yale
June
July
August
September
October
November A History of Japanese Literature
December Little Elephant's Christmas
2024
January The Labyrinth of the World and the Paradise of the Heart (1901)
February Evangeline, A Tale of Acadie (1847)
March
April
May
June
July
August
September The Osteology of the Reptiles
October Salomé (Wilde 1904)
November
December
Notes

Information

[edit]

Nominating a text

[edit]
  1. Ensure that the text meets all the featured text criteria and style guidelines. Nominations that are flagged as not meeting the criteria will be unlisted after 24 hours, unless the criteria are met in that time.
  2. Please ensure that "download option" from the sidebar produces a full work
  3. Note the nomination on the talk page by adding the template {{featured text candidate}}.
  4. Begin a discussion at the bottom of this page. Note your reason for nominating the text.
See also

Discussion

[edit]
  • If you believe an article meets all of the criteria, write Support followed by your reasons.
  • If you oppose a nomination, write Object followed by the reason for your objection. Each objection must provide a specific rationale that can be addressed. If nothing can be done in principle to "fix" the source of the objection, the objection may be ignored. This includes objections to an text's suitability for the Wikisource main page, unless such suitability can be fixed.
  • To withdraw an objection, strike it out (with <s>text</s>) rather than removing it.

Closing a nomination (administrators only)

[edit]
  • Failed nominations
    1. Add a comment explaining why the nomination failed.
    2. Archive it.
    3. Place {{featured text not passed|year|title}} at the top of the work's main talk page (adding the year and heading of the archived discussion).
  • Passed nominations
    1. Add a comment noting the selection.
    2. Archive it.
    3. Add the work to {{Featured text}} (inside the respective month) and {{featured schedule}}.
    4. Place {{featured}} on top of the work's main page {{header}} template.
    5. Place {{featured talk|November 2024}} at the top of the work's main talk page (changing the numbers to the appropriate date if not next month).
    6. Protect all the work's main namespace pages.
    7. Indicate the work's featured status on its associated data item at Wikidata.

Nominations

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For older nominations, see the archives.

Poems (Pushkin, Panin, 1888)

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Alexander Pushkin is considered "the greatest Russian poet and the founder of modern Russian literature". I nominate his book of Poems translated by Ivan Panin. This would be only the second work we've featured by a Russian author (the previous one was the nonfiction The Russian School of Painting, featured in in 2015). --EncycloPetey (talk) 22:31, 1 March 2020 (UTC)Reply

  •  Support. It seems well proofread, I have checked 10 random pages from various parts of the book and found no problem. --Jan Kameníček (talk) 19:32, 6 April 2020 (UTC)Reply
  •  Support.Worthy author, and in 20 randomly selected pages I found only one error. BethNaught (talk) 19:31, 11 July 2020 (UTC)Reply
  •  Support checked several pages and seems good unsigned comment by Serprinss (talk) 07:50, 10 January 2022 (UTC).Reply
  •  Support seems like solid work; quotation marks are consistent, and I could find no errors in punctuation or spelling. Suitable care is taken to formatting – note how on page 23, the quotation mark on the smaller block lies outside the leftwards margin of the quoted poem (using {{fqm}}). A potential pick for November? Cremastra (talk) 13:31, 7 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
    Because this is one of only two nominations with support, I think we ought to hold it for longer. We aren't getting a lot of nominations (or supporting voted), and as a result we have very slow turnover. We got new November and December FTs last year; they've never repeated. But the last time March or June changed was 2019, and July and August since 2018. So, I'd prefer to see this listed in one of those months, rather than turn over November again so soon and risk having Mar, Jun, Jul, & Aug continue with the same works for an eighth year. --EncycloPetey (talk) 18:15, 7 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
    Good point. Cremastra (talk) 22:09, 10 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
    We have four months for priority replacement: Mar, Jun, Jul, Aug. Pushkin's birthday is in June, so that would be a good month to use. For March, I'd like to use The Fun of It, since it is our sole nomination authored by a woman, but it has not had any supporting votes yet, and as such, I'm reluctant to select it. Nationalism would be for August, as suggested in its nomination. That would leave July for either Hunger or Oedipus Rex, provided one of those works receives support. --EncycloPetey (talk) 22:21, 10 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
 Support Found only two errors in forty pages, and certainly famous enough. — Alien  3
3 3
08:23, 25 October 2024 (UTC)Reply

Basic Law of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region

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As the mini-constitution of Hong Kong, it is often argued that the Basic Law is currently facing increasing violation of its contents by the Chinese Central Government. Given that 2020 is the 30th anniversary of the enactment of the law, all criteria have been made, and Hong Kong is currently embroiled in the political crisis about the Hong Kong Liaison Office, it is nominated that the text to be a featured text.

  • Note: In April 2020, the Hong Kong Liaison Office (中聯辦), a office of the Central Government, has claimed that it has the authority to oversee Hong Kong internal affairs and is not bounded by Article 22 of the Basic Law, which prohibits Mainland Chinese authorities"(interfering) in the affairs which the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region administers on its own in accordance with this Law."廣九直通車 (talk) 07:23, 23 April 2020 (UTC)Reply
  •  Comment why is the "Get involved Get to know the Basic Law" logo not included on the back cover Serprinss (talk) 05:25, 5 January 2022 (UTC)Reply

Nationalism

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I am nominating Tagore’s work Nationalism. It is transcribed from original scans and has been fully proofread. This work is relevant especially today with a rise of Nationalism in India and many countries around the world. If featured next month, it would coincide with India’s independence day on 15 August. I am happy to make improvements to the work wherever necessary. —Prtksxna (talk) 09:09, 25 July 2020 (UTC)Reply

 Support I checked around 10 random pages and everything looks perfect to me. Only 1 page was not validated and I have done that. I completely agree with Prtksxna (talkcontribs)'s rationale behind selecting this book as next month's featured text. On another note: The text in itself is complete, however the index contains some advertisements and we might want to do something about them which could be as simple as mentioning on the talk page that they haven't been transcluded or can actually be included in the text since they are about other works of Tagore. Check this for more info: Wikisource:What_Wikisource_includes#Advertising --Satdeep Gill (talk) 12:42, 25 July 2020 (UTC)Reply
Done I decided not to include the advertisements. I've made the changes as per the documentation you linked to. —Prtksxna (talk) 09:47, 26 July 2020 (UTC)Reply
 Comment In order to feature a work, it needs to have a blurb to accompany it on the Main Page. What is the history or circumstances specific to the creation of this work as opposed to the many others on the subject? What influence or legacy come from this work? I am not familiar enough with Tagore or his works to draft a blurb with any competence. --EncycloPetey (talk) 21:50, 27 July 2020 (UTC)Reply
I could take stab at writing this. How long does this blurb need to be? 50-100 words? —Prtksxna (talk) 03:59, 29 July 2020 (UTC)Reply
@Prtksxna: Could you suggest the blurb at Template:Featured text/March/sandbox, please? As for the approximate length, you can have a look e. g. at Template:Featured text/January. --Jan Kameníček (talk) 15:11, 7 February 2024 (UTC)Reply
The book can be thought of as a collection of lecture-transcripts, the lectures being delivered in Japan and the United States, after Rabindranath Tagore achieved fame as the first non-European Nobel Prize winner in 1913. Set in the backdrop of WW-I, it's the voice of reason and sanity urging against war- and fear-mongering among nations. While the admiration of Tagore for the culture of Japan is evident, he also cautions Japan against following the footsteps of the industrialized (and heavily-militarized) world; his words (w.r.t. Japan) will prove prophetic in another couple of decades. He draws a comparison between the nations of the West and India in his third lecture; while admitting to many areas of failure of the Indian way of thinking, he doesn't share the unbridled enthusiasm for all things 'Western' as evidenced by its impact on his native land by the British colonization process. Sutradhar links (talk) 10:59, 19 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
 Comment Also, this work has many minor transcriptions issues that will need to be corrected. There should not be spaces around em-dashes. That is instead of spacing — like this; there should be no spacing—like this. This will require a careful check against Wikisource:Style Guide for any other similar issues before it can be featured. --EncycloPetey (talk) 21:52, 27 July 2020 (UTC)Reply
What other issues have you noticed? FWIW I've looked at a few pages. The quality of the proofreading seems pretty good, except for the spaced emdashes you mentioned, and the inconsistent use of both straight and curly quotes. BethNaught (talk) 22:43, 27 July 2020 (UTC)Reply
Thanks for pointing these out. I've tried to correct the dashes and quotes at most places. —Prtksxna (talk) 04:25, 28 July 2020 (UTC)Reply
 Support I am quite familiar with the author and, in particular, this book. This will be a valuable addition to the list of featured texts. I have checked a few pages and things look good. Of course, it has to meet the style guides specified; if anyone is competent in that area, they can fix any stylistic errors. Sutradhar links (talk) 10:47, 19 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Salomé (Wilde 1904)

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The following discussion is closed and will soon be archived:

Selected for October 2024. --EncycloPetey (talk) 18:58, 14 September 2024 (UTC)Reply

Recently ran across this transcription of the Oscar Wilde play (illustrated by Aubrey Beardsley). It seems to be well polished and I couldn't find any errors after spot-checking several pages. I'm assuming there's no way to improve the layout fidelity of Page:Salomé-_a_tragedy_in_one_act.djvu/7. If so, I can't find any areas to improve and it seems to be featured text quality. Nosferattus (talk) 03:27, 28 November 2023 (UTC)Reply

I did some tidying of image placement and the associated Wikidata item, which was a mashup of two different language editions. --EncycloPetey (talk) 03:45, 28 November 2023 (UTC)Reply
 Support Arcorann (talk) 09:20, 8 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
 Support if a versions page can be created before featuring, so that Salomé (film) can be properly linked to. SnowyCinema (talk) 12:06, 8 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
  • I'll see about doing that, but it's complicated. The play and the film are both the same work (by Wilde) and so they need a disambiguation page for Wilde's work, but there are other works by this name, including the Strauss opera, based on the same story and having the same title. --EncycloPetey (talk) 23:03, 22 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Hunger (Hamsun)

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The notes in the work's header explain why Knut Hamsun's novel is a candidate for featuring. It is also a very stark and immediate text, even today. Its author is also a Nobel laureate in literature. I do not believe we have ever featured a text from a Scandinavian author. --EncycloPetey (talk) 23:39, 30 December 2023 (UTC)Reply

 Support: Looks good to me, I found no mistakes. — Alien  3
3 3
08:08, 25 October 2024 (UTC)Reply

The Osteology of the Reptiles

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The following discussion is closed and will soon be archived:

Selected boldly for September 2024. --EncycloPetey (talk) 00:06, 2 September 2024 (UTC)Reply

Williston's book was the first to survey all groups of reptiles, both living and extinct, complete with original illustrations and labelled diagrams that allowed herpetologists worldwide to examine and compare the anatomy of all the reptile groups. It was the most important book in the field for the next 30 years, only superseded when Alfred Romer published his Osteology of the Reptiles in 1956. The illustrations from this book are currently used on multiple Wikipedia articles, because they were made with care and accuracy from the original material. Williston had co-discovered the first fossils of the dinosaurs Allosaurus and Diplodocus, and that was before he became a grad student, then faculty member at Yale. --EncycloPetey (talk) 06:02, 19 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

 Support Work is significant and 100% validated, with good attention to formatting and text styling; the images are excellently extracted and retouched. Transclusion looks good. Cremastra (talk) 12:40, 16 June 2024 (UTC)Reply

Sophocles' King Oedipus

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Sophocles' Oedipus Rex has been called the perfect play, and was held up by Aristotle as the ideal model for all tragic drama. This particular translation is by Irish playwright William Butler Yeats, a key figure in Irish drama and the Irish literary revival, as well as the winner of the 1923 Nobel Prize for Literature. Our copy also makes use of LilyPond so that Yeats' songs that were written for the play can be listened to.

We have never featured Sophocles, nor have we featured a work containing music, and the only Irish writer featured previously is Oscar Wilde. --EncycloPetey (talk) 19:03, 8 August 2024 (UTC)Reply

 Support Found no errors in 20 pages, the Lilypond work is impressive, and it's a quite notable work. — Alien  3
3 3
08:30, 25 October 2024 (UTC)Reply

The Fun of It

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The second (and last) book written entirely by Amelia Earhart. The book is a sort of memoir, describing how she became a pilot and her experiences flying, but also a description of the state of aviation in the 1920s and 1930s, with many observations about the social norms of women as compared to men. --EncycloPetey (talk) 16:59, 12 September 2024 (UTC)Reply

 Comment It looks quite good, and I only found two error in ~20pages. I have noticed, though, that there's a control character (\uad) that sprinkled through the text, anywhere text was unwrapped. Do you know why? — Alien  3
3 3
08:00, 25 October 2024 (UTC)Reply