Paragraph: (Fiction/gutenberg_withoutQuotes/gutenberg-11050-0.txt)
Sent 1: Elettra stuck the little slip of paper, on which the recipe was written, into her shabby pocket-book without looking at it.
Sent 2: She could read and write fairly well, and had been used to helping her husband the under-steward with his accounts at Muro, but even if she had looked at the recipe she would have understood nothing of the doctor's hieroglyphics and abbreviated Latin words.
Sent 3: The prescription was for a preparation of arsenic, which Matilde had formerly taken for some time.
Sent 4: The chemist would not make any difficulty about preparing twenty doses of it for the Countess Macomer, though the whole quantity of arsenic contained in so many would probably be sufficient to kill one not accustomed to the medicine, if taken all at once.
Sent 5: But though Matilde was so anxious to have the stuff before luncheon, she had a number of doses of it put away in a drawer, which she took out and counted, after Elettra had gone.
Sent 6: She opened one of the little folded papers and looked at the fine white powder it contained, took a little on the end of her finger and tasted it.
Sent 7: Then, from the same drawer, she took a package done up in coarser paper, and opened it likewise, looked at it, smelt it, and touched it with the tip of her tongue very cautiously indeed.
Sent 8: It was white, too, but coarser than the medicine.
Sent 9: She was very careful in tasting it, and she immediately rinsed her mouth with water, before she tied up the package again, shut the drawer, and put the key into her pocket.
Question: What color was the arsenic? (true/0)
Question: What stuff was Matilde so anxious to have before luncheon? (true/1)
Question: Who had written on the little slip of paper which Elettra put into her shabby coat pocket? (true/2)
Question: When was Matilde hoping to receive more arsenic from the chemist? (false/3)
Question: Did Elettra take arsenic in the past? (true/4)
Question: Who works as an under-steward? (true/5)
Question: What is the recipe for? (true/6)
Question: What did the writing of the prescription look like? (false/7)
Question: What word does the author use as a synonym for a recipe? (false/8)
Question: What was "White but coarser than medicine"? (false/9)
Question: Whose husband was an under-steward? (false/10)
Question: After touching the tip of her tongue to the arsenic, what did Matilde do? (false/11)
Question: Who opened one of the little folded papers? (false/12)
Question: Who tasted the white powder from the folded papers and the package? (true/13)
Question: What did the Countess need? (false/14)
Question: Who could read and write fairly well? (true/15)
Question: What did the arsenic look like? (false/16)
Question: What type of paper was the second medicine wrapped? (true/17)
Question: What is the first substance Matilde tastes? (false/18)
Question: Who rinsed her mouth? (false/19)
Question: Where were the little folded papers and the package done up in coarse paper kept? (true/20)
Last updated: Mon Apr 16 04:55:33 EDT 2018
Generated from a file named: /Users/daniel/ideaProjects/hard-qa/split/train_456.json