Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 11 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 94617 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 82 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Rome 5 Athens 4 Italy 4 Greece 3 roman 3 great 3 Theseus 3 Sparta 3 Solon 3 Romulus 3 Romans 3 Greeks 3 Camillus 3 B.C. 3 Alexander 2 Volscians 2 Timoleon 2 Senate 2 Poplicola 2 Plutarch 2 Perikles 2 Olympia 2 Numa 2 Marcius 2 Lykurgus 2 Life 2 Lacedaemonians 2 Greek 2 Footnote 2 Fabius 2 Cæsar 2 Cicero 2 Cato 2 Athenians 2 Alkibiades 2 A.D. 1 Æmilius 1 year 1 themistokle 1 table 1 son 1 little 1 life 1 italian 1 illustration 1 house 1 helmet 1 find 1 demosthene 1 daughter Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 6007 ch 2729 man 1400 people 1393 city 1377 time 1148 king 1139 son 855 enemy 852 day 825 war 796 friend 783 place 765 life 690 name 685 hand 682 year 667 death 632 part 631 battle 577 country 560 power 543 army 540 father 525 one 522 soldier 496 other 495 chs 479 thing 472 citizen 467 way 466 house 462 wife 450 sea 448 daughter 447 body 433 law 430 head 423 side 423 child 411 fig 407 force 403 ship 402 woman 401 order 399 consul 395 number 390 word 381 person 374 money 353 arm Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3399 _ 1519 i. 1398 chs 1060 Cicero 1004 ii 955 Cæsar 937 Antonius 748 Rome 666 Romans 665 Brutus 652 iv 596 Alexander 581 B.C. 541 Demetrius 504 Theseus 504 Pompeius 471 Athens 445 Aratus 435 Athenians 428 Cato 400 iii 392 Perikles 379 Romulus 377 Dion 342 Sulla 342 Greeks 338 Solon 328 Greece 320 Greek 314 Alkibiades 302 Camillus 297 Kleomenes 283 Lucullus 275 Galba 264 FIG 262 Italy 255 c. 254 Numa 248 Crassus 247 Lykurgus 246 Caius 240 Themistokles 239 Timoleon 234 Fabius 228 Pyrrhus 221 Life 218 Senate 218 Cassius 216 . 215 Tiberius Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 12412 he 5290 him 5144 it 4637 they 3378 them 1685 himself 890 she 873 i 842 we 834 you 569 her 511 themselves 363 us 224 me 125 itself 95 herself 90 one 35 myself 32 yourself 28 ourselves 24 his 15 theirs 12 thee 5 mine 4 thyself 4 oneself 4 iv 3 yours 3 ii 2 yourselves 2 theseus 1 themself 1 roscius[153 1 pelf 1 life.=--this 1 herakleidae 1 hector:-- 1 haughtiness 1 cæsar[339 Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 26133 be 7790 have 2209 say 2068 make 1917 do 1634 take 1368 give 1312 see 1276 come 1024 call 977 go 853 send 746 find 698 bring 671 think 668 show 667 put 631 use 608 become 551 leave 546 tell 538 carry 535 receive 531 know 495 fall 441 speak 423 write 423 seem 422 fight 407 begin 402 hear 399 keep 392 stand 392 die 389 bear 388 appear 375 meet 372 lead 357 follow 355 set 350 pass 345 get 343 kill 334 live 334 hold 314 wish 298 run 298 place 294 look 291 return Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3884 not 1799 great 1576 so 1177 other 1118 up 1077 many 1061 first 1054 more 1049 now 1010 most 942 also 882 own 863 out 792 only 715 good 707 then 704 much 625 well 612 such 605 very 595 as 579 even 578 long 569 roman 538 however 533 same 484 down 469 away 464 there 453 once 447 young 436 thus 403 soon 394 little 391 still 391 off 378 public 365 again 364 old 350 yet 341 together 340 large 337 here 332 greek 321 just 315 indeed 311 small 309 few 309 afterwards 302 last Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 276 most 209 great 187 good 74 least 57 high 46 noble 29 brave 26 early 25 eld 24 Most 18 large 17 strong 17 bad 13 rich 13 old 10 wise 10 j 10 fine 9 young 9 simple 9 near 9 low 7 small 7 long 7 l 7 fair 7 bold 7 able 6 mild 6 loud 6 light 6 hard 6 bitter 5 slight 5 pure 5 handsome 4 wild 4 strange 4 pleasant 4 manif 4 heavy 4 few 4 choice 3 thick 3 narrow 3 mean 3 hot 3 farth 3 deep 3 dear Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 734 most 39 well 9 least 1 worst 1 swiftest 1 near 1 hard 1 greatest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 _ see _ 7 time went on 6 cicero did not 4 men did not 4 men were not 4 people did not 4 people were not 3 city was full 3 day was now 3 people were eager 2 antonius was again 2 antonius was irritated 2 antonius was not 2 brutus did not 2 brutus gave way 2 cicero had still 2 cicero was consul 2 cicero was not 2 city was now 2 cæsar did not 2 cæsar was not 2 day called _ 2 life was still 2 man did not 2 man is not 2 man was so 2 man went so 2 men had not 2 men were nearly 2 men were still 2 men were then 2 name was c. 2 people had not 2 people were greatly 2 place called araterion 2 romans call _ 2 romans did not 2 romans was so 2 son was consul 2 war was over 1 _ find _ 1 _ is not 1 _ is only 1 _ left _ 1 _ was not 1 antonius are unknown 1 antonius being again 1 antonius being nearly 1 antonius calling out 1 antonius came near Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 antonius had no claim 1 antonius was not inclined 1 antonius were not fewer 1 brutus had no share 1 city had no right 1 cæsar was not enough 1 death are not exactly 1 death left no descendants 1 enemy made no attack 1 friends were not wholly 1 king made no answer 1 kings had no leisure 1 lives is not indeed 1 man had no sooner 1 man is not worth 1 men did not merely 1 men took no care 1 men was not satisfied 1 men were not even 1 men were not likely 1 name was not abrotonon 1 people had no farther 1 people were not able 1 romans had no name 1 rome were no longer 1 time had no public 1 time was not idle 1 war gave no opportunities 1 war made no progress A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 52081 author = British Museum. Department of Greek and Roman Antiquities title = A Guide to the Exhibition Illustrating Greek and Roman Life date = keywords = A.D.; Athens; B.C.; B.M.; Case; Cat; Christ; Cyprus; Daremberg; Egypt; FIG; Footnote; Greece; Greek; III; Italy; NOS; Olympia; Rome; Room; Saglio; Vase; Wall; bronze; find; helmet; illustration; italian; roman; table summary = A GUIDE TO THE EXHIBITION ILLUSTRATING GREEK AND ROMAN LIFE. A typical series of the Roman heavy bronze money is exhibited (No. another exhibited in the left-hand wall-case in the Greek Ante-Room Other interesting Greek dedications of an early date are the bronze bronzes is the late sixth or early fifth century B.C. The Greeks must the bronze figure and representations on vases exhibited in this Case; A peculiar fashion of Roman helmet is represented by two bronze Case 111 there are a small bronze model of a Roman trophy (No. =Early Greek Bronze Age.=--The first class consists of arms which of form in Greek or Roman times are the sling-shot (No. The numerous Graeco-Roman bronze lamps in these cases show a great =Greek Weights.=--In Case B of the First Vase Room will be seen the probable that all the bronze examples in this Case belong to the Greek id = 9625 author = Hall, Jennie title = Buried Cities, Volume 1: Pompeii date = keywords = Ariston; Pompeii; Tetreius; Vesuvius; house; little; roman summary = 1. The Greek Slave and the Little Roman Boy And men and women, all slaves, ran screaming through the house and out now every slave had turned coward and had run away and left the little Ariston was looking at a little bronze statue that stood on a tall, of their vines sucked water from an old Roman house, that buried statues story of Pompeii in an old Roman book--a whole city suddenly buried just the excavators found the head of that statue--a beautiful marble thing little--pictures of columns and roofs, of plants and animals, of men It is a little room cut into the corner wall of a great In the hundreds of houses and shops of this little town the excavators In this buried city we find the houses in which men lived, the pictures On the walls of a room in a house in Pompeii men found this picture, id = 9626 author = Hall, Jennie title = Buried Cities, Volume 2: Olympia date = keywords = Creon; Hermes; Olympia; Zeus; charmide summary = "What a strange-looking man, Glaucon!" said the boy. "Here are sights for you, Charmides," said a kind old man. bent and twisted they looked like beautiful statues turned brown and "I know I shall win, father," said Creon softly. After a little Menon and Charmides said farewell and went away through "Come, little son," he called to Charmides. "I wish there were crowns for lame boys to win," said Charmides. stood full of little clay statues of the gods. "It is beautiful," said Charmides and turned away, holding it tenderly Hermes Charmides left his little clay image of the god. Charmides snatched his father''s hand and held it tight, for Creon was "I like this game best of all," said a man behind Charmides. Creon''s head, Charmides thought he felt a god''s hands upon his own brow. This shows the ruins of the temple where Charmides saw the statue of id = 9627 author = Hall, Jennie title = Buried Cities, Volume 3: Mycenae date = keywords = Dr.; Mycenae; Schliemann summary = New York City, for helping to finish Miss Hall''s work of choosing the you could find old golden vases and crowns and bronze swords lying in two thousand years old still in the oven or a king''s grave filled with Thirty years ago a little group of people stood on a hill in Greece. Mycenae grew few, and after hundreds of years, when the city was old and Some of the men were working about the wall near the stone lions. "This is the great gate of the city," said Dr. Schliemann. The men found the earth full of great stone and the men of Mycenae shot at the Argives, and they threw down great the hill and covered these great stones, and now we are digging them out great wall the king''s palace and a few houses had been safe. we think, "Those men of old Mycenae were artists." id = 14033 author = Plutarch title = Plutarch''s Lives, Volume 1 (of 4) date = keywords = Aemilius; Alkibiades; Athenians; Athens; Camillus; Carthaginians; Corinthians; Delphi; Fabius; Footnote; Gauls; Greece; Greeks; Hannibal; Italy; Lacedaemonians; Lykurgus; Marcius; Numa; Perikles; Plutarch; Poplicola; Romans; Rome; Romulus; Sabines; Senate; Sicily; Solon; Sparta; Syracuse; Theseus; Timoleon; Volscians; great; life; themistokle summary = Rome, a great portent is said to have taken place. virtuous and eloquent man, who, like all great men, was the object of all able-bodied men should embark in the ships of war, and that each man his city, he answered, "Very true; I should not have become a great man cities, called many men to arms, especially those Romans who had escaped which the poets of the time said that the Athenian people also the other leading men of the city of having brought on the war from charged them with having placed the city in the hands of one man as city to the sea by long walls; and when some one said to the people of meaning to fight a battle under the city walls, and so place the Romans who at that time was the first man in the city for power and reputation, id = 2484 author = Plutarch title = The Boys'' and Girls'' Plutarch Being Parts of the "Lives" of Plutarch, Edited for Boys and Girls date = keywords = Alcibiades; Alexander; Antony; Athenians; Athens; Caesar; Camillus; Cato; Cicero; Cimon; Greece; Greeks; Italy; Lacedaemonians; Life; Lycurgus; Marcius; Pericles; Persians; Philip; Pompey; Romans; Rome; Romulus; Solon; Sparta; Sylla; Themistocles; Theseus; Volscians; demosthene; great summary = had received, gave them battle, in which action a great number of the his father''s funeral, in a few days'' time gave the people a show of led his forces against the city; they, having suffered such great long a time amongst men as we did; and, having built a city to be the having a power equal to the kings'' in matters of great consequence, and, a single great man; while many say, that by him the common people were the public moneys; and in a short time having bought the people over, So he and his friends, when Alexander went away, were great men, and a man himself of great power in the city, and supported also by the At this time, therefore, his authority was very great in the city; but declares, that of all the great and renowned men in the city of Athens, id = 44315 author = Plutarch title = Plutarch''s Lives, Volume 4 (of 4) date = keywords = Achæans; Agis; Alexander; Alkibiades; Antigonus; Antonius; Aratus; Athens; B.C.; Brutus; Caius; Camillus; Cassius; Cato; Cicero; Cleopatra; Coriolanus; Crassus; Cyrus; Cæsar; Demetrius; Demosthenes; Dion; Dionysius; Fabius; Galba; Gracchus; Greek; Italy; Kleomenes; Life; Lucullus; Lykurgus; Macedonia; Major; Marcus; Minor; Numa; Otho; Perikles; Plutarch; Pompeius; Poplicola; Romans; Rome; Romulus; Senate; Solon; Sparta; Sulla; Themistokles; Theseus; Tiberius; Timoleon; comparison; Æmilius summary = For Cicero said that by this mild behaviour Cæsar placed the statues of soon as Cæsar had finally defeated Antonius, he took Cicero''s son[289] father was Antonius, surnamed Creticus,[324] not a man of any great note her son Antonius, having married after his father''s death Cornelius he gave Cæsar great confidence by coming at a critical time with so Antonius near the city of Mutina, on which occasion Cæsar was present the enemy, Antonius being opposed to Cassius, and Cæsar to Brutus,[362] mean time Pacorus,[388] the king''s son, with a large Parthian army took place also on the following days, the Romans making only small way. Cæsar''s fleet in pursuit; but Antonius, by ordering his men to turn his A Roman Senator named Axius is mentioned by Cicero (_Ad Attic._ iii. Agesilaus I., king of Sparta, iii.; Life and Comparison with ----, wife of Pompeius, daughter of Cæsar, iii. id = 44460 author = nan title = Carleton''s Condensed Classical Dictionary date = keywords = A.D.; Alexander; Apollo; Athens; Augustus; B.C.; Cæsar; Fellow; Greece; Greeks; Hercules; Juno; Jupiter; New; Rome; Royal; Society; Trojan; Troy; Venus; christian; daughter; great; roman; son; year summary = Anaxo married Electryon, king of Mycenæ, whose sons were killed in Great, was king of Syria, and reigned thirty-six years. =Aristi''des.= A celebrated Athenian, son of Lysimachus, in the age of =Aristoph''anes.= A celebrated comic poet of Athens, son of Philip of =Camby''ses=, king of Persia, was the son of Cyrus the Great. =Cupi''do=, god of love, son of Jupiter and Venus, is represented as a =Cy''rus.= A king of Persia, son of Cambyses and Mandane, daughter of that he would be killed by a son-in-law, and he made his daughters =Dar''danus.= A son of Jupiter, who killed his brother Jasius to obtain the =Iphic''rates.= A celebrated general of Athens, who, though son of a =Mi''nos.= A king of Crete, son of Jupiter and Europa, who gave laws to his year of his age killed the celebrated Nemæan lion. =Ne''ro, Clau''dius Domit''ius Cæ''sar.= A celebrated Roman emperor, son of