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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 6 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 94908 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 76 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Lady 4 Hospital 3 Queen 3 Nightingale 3 Mr. 3 Miss 3 Lord 3 London 3 General 3 Florence 3 England 2 man 2 day 2 War 2 Sutherland 2 St. 2 Sir 2 Sidney 2 Secretary 2 Scutari 2 Royal 2 Report 2 Office 2 October 2 Mrs. 2 John 2 Herbert 2 Government 2 God 2 Dr. 2 December 2 Crimea 2 Committee 2 Commission 2 August 2 Army 1 wound 1 time 1 simple 1 sabotage 1 possible 1 good 1 french 1 english 1 enemy 1 british 1 Vol 1 Town 1 Street 1 Strategic Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1317 man 1262 work 1185 time 1169 day 970 letter 922 year 910 hospital 829 life 784 nurse 703 thing 650 friend 568 woman 495 case 490 way 438 sister 425 night 408 soldier 401 people 392 one 380 book 378 home 373 nursing 371 p. 362 part 354 place 354 death 353 room 319 nothing 309 officer 288 month 287 hand 286 country 285 order 284 subject 277 service 276 word 276 matter 273 lady 271 paper 268 war 265 patient 264 bed 263 duty 258 ward 255 house 252 mind 247 reform 247 hour 244 interest 244 child Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 6401 _ 3502 Nightingale 3244 Miss 1885 i. 1855 ii 1221 Mr. 1008 Lord 874 Sir 660 India 594 Florence 581 Herbert 571 F. 538 Hospital 533 N. 518 Dr. 451 War 446 Mrs. 438 God 408 Army 397 London 364 Office 347 Lady 322 John 311 Commission 308 General 287 Scutari 278 England 245 Sutherland 243 pp 231 St. 231 Secretary 228 Crimea 224 Royal 224 Jowett 220 Medical 219 Queen 218 Government 207 Sidney 198 Sanitary 193 Committee 191 Report 177 School 174 Hospitals 167 Sister 158 c. 155 Crimean 151 Nurses 150 June 150 House 149 Nursing Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6395 i 5203 she 4893 it 2943 he 2423 you 2348 we 2206 they 1665 her 1558 them 1311 me 1082 him 650 us 345 herself 185 himself 169 themselves 163 one 117 myself 98 itself 51 yourself 51 ourselves 31 yours 30 hers 14 ours 14 mine 12 theirs 10 oneself 5 his 4 thee 1 pp 1 near-- 1 imperil 1 here--"to 1 god:-- 1 cheer"--this 1 beaten:-- 1 attain.--ruskin 1 ''s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 21833 be 8449 have 2735 do 1493 see 1395 go 1375 write 1367 say 1169 make 1067 come 1053 give 1006 think 952 take 844 know 828 send 778 find 708 get 553 tell 500 seem 466 leave 417 ask 405 hear 404 call 393 feel 383 put 354 work 351 look 316 read 312 want 311 die 306 show 301 receive 293 use 292 become 282 bring 277 keep 273 carry 257 live 253 help 248 wound 236 begin 223 pass 222 believe 219 follow 213 meet 209 wish 208 like 208 let 196 try 190 hope 181 turn Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3839 not 1609 so 1375 very 1108 more 1072 up 1004 much 980 good 937 other 919 great 880 many 857 out 843 well 832 only 816 now 800 then 707 most 685 first 640 little 555 as 530 here 524 never 504 such 503 own 485 also 445 old 440 long 423 last 414 down 411 there 407 too 385 even 382 few 381 again 376 new 370 always 352 poor 349 just 344 on 341 in 339 still 333 ever 324 same 308 large 304 sometimes 303 all 297 bad 296 rather 293 quite 280 sick 275 often Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 225 good 152 most 103 least 99 great 48 high 47 bad 18 early 17 dear 16 fine 15 deep 13 near 12 small 10 strong 10 full 9 happy 9 Most 8 slight 8 low 8 late 7 eld 7 common 6 true 6 pure 6 long 6 hard 6 able 5 heavy 4 simple 4 sad 4 poor 4 pleasant 4 large 4 close 3 strange 3 short 3 old 3 nice 3 keen 3 holy 2 weak 2 warm 2 stout 2 sincere 2 quiet 2 lively 2 light 2 j 2 innermost 2 clever 2 clear Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 555 most 27 well 22 least 1 severest 1 nursing_--the 1 long 1 highest 1 hard 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 16 nightingale did not 12 _ is _ 11 nightingale was able 8 _ are _ 6 _ was _ 6 nightingale was much 6 nightingale was not 5 _ did _ 5 nightingale was as 5 nightingale was fond 5 nightingale was well 5 nightingale went on 5 work was not 4 _ do _ 4 _ see _ 4 _ were _ 4 florence was not 4 nightingale had many 4 nightingale took great 4 nightingale was careful 4 nightingale was never 3 _ am _ 3 _ had _ 3 _ know _ 3 _ see also 3 _ see further 3 nightingale had already 3 nightingale had copies 3 nightingale had not 3 nightingale took infinite 3 nightingale was constantly 3 nightingale was greatly 3 nightingale was still 3 nightingale was very 3 things went on 3 things were not 2 _ are better 2 _ be _ 2 _ calling _ 2 _ does _ 2 _ feel _ 2 _ had never 2 _ take _ 2 case is different 2 cases came in 2 florence did not 2 florence had not 2 herbert was not 2 hospitals are empty 2 letters are full Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 florence was not always 2 nightingale had no longer 2 nightingale had no responsibility 1 _ are not many 1 cases were not very 1 days are not yet 1 florence was not often 1 florence was not pleased 1 friends were not ready 1 herbert was no less 1 herbert was not sure 1 hospital did not quite 1 hospital was not encouraging 1 india had not yet 1 letters are not less 1 letters was not always 1 life has not many 1 life is no holiday 1 life is not untrue 1 man showed no sign 1 men had no time 1 men is no joke 1 men were not better 1 men were not forthcoming 1 nightingale did not easily 1 nightingale did not fully 1 nightingale did not wholly 1 nightingale had no acquaintance 1 nightingale had no fanatical 1 nightingale had no time 1 nightingale was no vestal 1 nightingale was not long 1 nightingale was not quite 1 nightingale was not well 1 nightingale was not wholly 1 nightingale were no longer 1 nurses are not chaplains 1 nurses know no medium 1 things were not gifts 1 things were not so 1 time was not yet 1 woman has no reason 1 women are not easy 1 women are not so 1 women did not always 1 women have no attention 1 work is no longer 1 work was not only 1 work was not quite 1 work was not yet A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 40057 author = Cook, Edward Tyas, Sir title = The Life of Florence Nightingale, vol. 1 of 2 date = keywords = Army; August; Bracebridge; Commission; Committee; Crimea; December; Dr.; East; England; Florence; General; God; Government; Herbert; Hospital; House; John; Kaiserswerth; Lady; London; Lord; Medical; Miss; Mohl; Mr.; Mrs.; Nightingale; Notes; November; October; Office; Panmure; Queen; Report; Royal; Scutari; Secretary; Sidney; Sir; Smith; St.; Sutherland; War; british summary = --Florence as "Emergency Man"--Her old nurse--Letter to Miss Clarke of an Army Medical School favoured--Miss Nightingale to report on Miss Nightingale''s work with Sidney Herbert carried on at the same of hospitals at the time--Influence of her book--Miss Nightingale The religious sanction behind Miss Nightingale''s life of work-campaigns, Miss Nightingale''s life and work have great importance. in which Miss Nightingale''s life and work have important significance. Christmas-time; and in letters to Miss Clarke from both Mrs. Nightingale also be glad, I think, that Miss Nightingale''s religious thought worked Several years later, when Miss Nightingale was ill, and thought likely been out of the Hospital Walls yet," wrote Miss Nightingale ten days Miss Nightingale had not written home in that sense at all, but Mr. Herbert had sent the nurses. of the hospitals of Scutari," Miss Nightingale told the Royal Commission nursed by Miss Nightingale in the General Hospital at Balaclava. id = 40058 author = Cook, Edward Tyas, Sir title = The Life of Florence Nightingale, vol. 2 of 2 date = keywords = Army; August; Commission; Committee; December; Dr.; Florence; General; God; Government; Herbert; Hospital; India; John; Jowett; July; Lady; Lawrence; London; Lord; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Nightingale; Nurses; Nursing; October; Office; Queen; Report; Royal; Sanitary; School; Secretary; Sidney; Sir; St.; Stanley; Street; Sutherland; Vol; War summary = from India--Miss Nightingale''s reply--Progress of sanitary reform Presently some old work in a new form came in Miss Nightingale''s way. Sir John Lawrence discussed the sanitary question with Miss Nightingale Miss Nightingale invited him to use her rooms; sent Dr. Sutherland to accompany him on visits of inspection to hospitals and War Office Miss Nightingale''s old opponent Sir Benjamin Hawes, the for a month later Dr. Sutherland wrote thus to Miss Nightingale (Feb. 20): "The mail which ought to have arrived yesterday came in to-day, and (_Lord Cranborne to Miss Nightingale._) INDIA OFFICE, _July 17_. work.[78] "Ideal in her beauty," Miss Nightingale said of her;[79] "like Encouraged by Sir Bartle Frere''s sympathy, Miss Nightingale set to work (_Sir Bartle Frere to Miss Nightingale._) INDIA OFFICE, _Oct._ 23 [112] Of Lord Lawrence and Sir Bartle Frere, Miss Nightingale wrote to (_Lord Cranbrook to Miss Nightingale._) INDIA OFFICE, _August_ 13 id = 50968 author = Dunant, Henry title = The Origin of the Red Cross: "Un souvenir de Solferino" date = keywords = Austrians; Brescia; Castiglione; Dunant; Emperor; Lombardy; Milan; Solferino; french; man; wound summary = Castiglione, corps of volunteers to search for and nurse the wounded._ During the battle, hospitals for the wounded established in nearby elevation marks the station for the wounded and the field hospitals of In the French army a number of soldiers from each company are detailed Once out of the line of fire, Austrian soldiers, slightly wounded, A number of French surgeons, having remained in Castiglione, aided by efforts made to help so many thousands of wounded men who are without In spite of the arrival of new wagons full of wounded, order, little by I find in these hospital wards some of our wounded from Castiglione. During the first eight days after the battle the wounded, of whom the Every family wishes to receive the French wounded and, by all sorts of gave their attention to nursing the great number of men, wounded in id = 52250 author = Laurence, E. C. (Eleanor Constance) title = A Nurse''s Life in War and Peace date = keywords = A.M.; Boers; Cape; Durban; England; General; Hospital; Kimberley; Lady; London; Lord; Major; Matron; P.M.; Roberts; Sister; South; Town; day; good; man; time summary = I think we get very good times off duty here--one hour off one day, and Beni Hassan, and another day I went ashore and had a good look round One day we went out by train, and then did a little climbing, and got I liked both the night and the day staff nurse in that ward, and they rest, but the sisters and officers went on most of the day unpacking and staff at work for some time, and with lots of bad cases in the wards it and the wards are heavy, and need a good many men for night duty. has been very hard worked night and day; at one time eight trains went They both went round the hospital several times, and on Christmas Day night duty, I found that the day sister left them all to the orderlies id = 43898 author = Richards, Laura Elizabeth Howe title = Florence Nightingale, the Angel of the Crimea: A Story for Young People date = keywords = Crimea; England; Florence; Hospital; Hurst; Illustrated; Lady; Lea; Miss; Mr.; Nightingale; Queen; Scutari; day; english summary = Every English boy and girl knows the beautiful story of Miss In that old time which Tennyson calls "the spacious days of great Now you know a little of the three homes of Florence Nightingale, Lea Long years after, when Miss Nightingale, spent with her noble labors, On her way home, Miss Nightingale spent some time with the Sisters of poor and suffering, where the good sisters came and went like then the _Times_ told them that Miss Nightingale was "a young lady of persons, Miss Nightingale''s name was entirely new to the English people So, as I said, all good and comforting things came in those first days visiting several small regimental hospitals, Miss Nightingale went on to "My good young man," replied Miss Nightingale, "more dead and wounded room as in the hospital, Miss Nightingale had no time to waste. the Barrack Hospital; yet still Florence Nightingale lives and loves, id = 26184 author = United States. Office of Strategic Services title = Simple Sabotage Field Manual date = keywords = Services; Strategic; enemy; possible; sabotage; simple summary = This Simple Sabotage Field Manual Strategic Services (Provisional) is innumerable simple acts which the ordinary individual citizen-saboteur Simple sabotage does not require specially prepared tools or equipment; A second type of simple sabotage requires no destructive tools Acts of simple sabotage are occurring throughout Europe. machine parts will waste materials, manpower, and time. Widespread practice of simple sabotage will harass and demoralize enemy Simple sabotage is often an act which the citizen performs according to specifically as possible for the area addressed: simple sabotage will heavy industry is destined for enemy use, and that the most efficient acts and results are embraced by the definition of simple sabotage. down production, and may damage the materials and parts you use them on. of oil and lubrication will slow production or stop work entirely at (6) Fuel lines to gasoline and oil engines frequently pass over the