Paragraph: (Fiction/gutenberg_withoutQuotes/gutenberg-11419-0.txt)
Sent 1: As for the Italians, we know that Paesiello, who was a famous intriguer against his musical rivals, was a devoted husband whose wife was an invalid and who died soon after her death.
Sent 2: Cherubini married Mademoiselle Cecile Turette, when he was thirty-five, and the marriage was not a success.
Sent 3: He left a son and two daughters.
Sent 4: Spontini, one of whose best operas was based on the life of that much mis-married enthusiast for divorce, John Milton, took to wife a member of the Erard family.
Sent 5: In the outer world Spontini was famous for his despotism, his jealousy, his bad temper, and his excessive vanity.
Sent 6: None of these qualities as a rule add much to home comfort, and yet, it is said that he lived happily with his wife.
Sent 7: We may feel sure that some of the bad light thrown on his character is due purely to the jealousy of rivals, when we consider his domestic content, his ardent interest in the welfare of Mozart's widow and children, and the great efforts he made to secure subscriptions for the widow's biography of Mozart.
Question: Who were three Italians, whom this passage describes? (true/0)
Question: Who left a son and two daughters? (false/1)
Question: Who lived happily with his wife, despite some negative qualities? (true/2)
Question: Who took an ardent interest in the welfare of Mozart's widow and children? (true/3)
Question: Whose negative qualities was the result of jealousy of his rivals? (false/4)
Last updated: Mon Apr 16 04:55:33 EDT 2018
Generated from a file named: /Users/daniel/ideaProjects/hard-qa/split/train_456.json