Triple

T4951910
Position Surface form Disambiguated ID Type / Status
Subject Death by Water E111186 entity
Predicate partOf P40 FINISHED
Object The Waste Land (poem) E20426 NE FINISHED

Disambiguation candidates (1 decision)

The exact options the model was shown at each disambiguation step, with the option it chose highlighted — the evidence behind this triple's disambiguated ids.

NED1 Entity disambiguation (via context triple) gpt-5-mini-2025-08-07
Target entity: The Waste Land (poem)
Context triple: [Death by Water, partOf, The Waste Land (poem)]
  • A. The Waste Land chosen
    The Waste Land is a landmark modernist poem by T. S. Eliot that portrays the spiritual desolation and fragmentation of post–World War I Western society through a dense collage of voices, allusions, and shifting perspectives.
  • B. The Hollow Men
    The Hollow Men is a 1925 modernist poem by T. S. Eliot that explores themes of spiritual desolation, paralysis, and the fragmentation of modern life.
  • C. The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
    "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" is a landmark modernist poem by T. S. Eliot that explores themes of alienation, indecision, and existential anxiety through the interior monologue of its hesitant, self-conscious narrator.
  • D. The Cantos
    The Cantos is Ezra Pound’s long, unfinished modernist epic poem that weaves together history, politics, economics, and literature in a highly allusive, fragmented style.
  • E. The Drunken Boat
    The Drunken Boat is a visionary, symbolist poem by Arthur Rimbaud that depicts a boat’s hallucinatory voyage as a metaphor for poetic rebellion and spiritual exploration.
  • F. None of above.
  • G. Unsure - the case is ambiguous/there is not enough information to decide.

Provenance (3 batches)

Stage Batch ID Job type Status
creating batch_69bd4418390c8190b7e9766a2512ce55 elicitation completed
NER batch_69bd71b6a5d481909ad6f5e0b752496c ner completed
NED1 batch_69bea46c12c481909aed42f9b45cde81 ned_source_triple completed
Created at: March 20, 2026, 1:31 p.m.