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. Eric Lease Morgan May 27, 2019 Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 13 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 102732 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 88 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 Tis 6 Exit 6 Enter 6 Aside 5 Sir 5 God 5 Dryden 4 like 4 Lord 3 thy 3 good 3 Mel 3 King 3 John 3 Heaven 3 Exeunt 3 English 3 England 3 Duke 3 Dor 2 poet 2 man 2 long 2 let 2 great 2 footnote 2 come 2 Virgil 2 Thou 2 Queen 2 Muse 2 Mor 2 Homer 2 Hip 2 France 2 Emp 2 Don 2 Cæsar 2 Aur 2 Ant 2 Alm 1 verse 1 time 1 think 1 scripture 1 prologue 1 pastoral 1 note 1 new 1 love Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 3065 man 2121 love 1716 time 1498 king 1442 life 1344 day 1179 hand 1142 death 1109 word 1083 way 1054 part 1006 soul 979 father 976 sir 957 thing 937 eye 891 friend 864 heart 857 place 851 power 849 name 837 world 830 poet 803 nothing 761 play 734 nature 727 honour 715 person 693 age 692 year 685 night 681 wit 668 reason 666 fate 638 woman 618 prince 617 art 613 people 611 mind 596 son 590 arm 583 virtue 552 author 548 fortune 542 head 540 subject 534 rest 527 brother 518 care 517 side Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 54355 _ 1903 thou 1028 heaven 941 Enter 914 God 913 Sir 739 Xavier 655 Tis 606 Father 517 madam 511 Exit 482 Aside 461 Dryden 448 Thou 381 Heaven 379 Dor 372 King 369 Mr 367 John 365 Exeunt 353 Lord 350 Ant 347 Duke 340 lord 314 Hip 303 Wood 288 Warn 288 Queen 288 Don 285 Aur 284 Virgil 271 ANTONY 258 Indies 249 o''er 237 Bel 234 Mel 223 Rome 217 Mrs 216 Wild 211 Vent 210 Footnote 209 Mart 204 Horace 199 English 197 Har 195 VENTIDIUS 193 Pala 192 Portuguese 192 Jesus 190 St Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 22260 i 15389 you 11818 he 9951 it 6821 him 6646 me 5949 they 3844 them 3591 we 2748 she 1790 her 1533 us 1236 himself 941 thee 666 myself 527 themselves 386 yourself 290 mine 232 itself 192 yours 143 herself 118 ourselves 110 thyself 92 one 84 theirs 81 on''t 81 ''em 61 his 56 ''s 55 ours 29 yourselves 19 thy 14 hers 7 thou 6 is''t 5 ye 3 theseus 3 pelf 2 perish-- 2 o 2 do''t 1 you;--the 1 you--[_draws 1 you,--you 1 you,-- 1 wish-- 1 where?--does 1 whence 1 unarm''d 1 ts Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 41393 be 14449 have 4992 do 4053 make 2742 see 2633 give 2507 know 2418 take 2372 come 2186 go 2149 say 1877 think 1773 let 1654 find 1293 love 1234 leave 1216 tell 1098 hear 1050 die 1049 speak 1036 call 1000 live 995 bear 902 bring 887 lose 761 look 750 write 697 keep 689 seem 671 fall 654 draw 639 stand 622 send 619 appear 618 set 574 receive 572 lie 568 follow 561 hold 558 begin 547 put 541 fear 537 dare 522 mean 516 believe 511 grow 509 run 504 pass 500 meet 491 hope Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 11021 not 5457 so 3845 more 2623 now 2606 then 2079 too 1975 great 1910 well 1874 first 1843 good 1768 own 1719 only 1688 much 1484 yet 1450 other 1415 never 1331 here 1307 most 1299 up 1286 out 1248 such 1161 as 1128 still 1118 long 1002 little 993 thus 948 last 887 very 884 same 869 there 839 true 832 even 829 again 819 new 772 many 766 old 741 once 735 far 720 no 714 ever 712 just 610 down 583 therefore 567 away 566 ill 554 least 549 young 542 fair 521 off 517 alone Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 521 good 506 least 246 great 244 most 128 bad 48 fair 44 high 39 noble 38 manif 33 near 30 eld 28 Most 27 j 24 strong 24 bl 23 low 23 late 17 happy 16 long 16 brave 15 dear 14 rich 13 wise 13 oppr 13 mean 13 fine 12 deep 12 chief 11 temp 11 l 11 extreme 10 young 10 sweet 10 dr 10 dar 9 loud 8 true 8 soft 8 early 8 bold 7 pure 7 hard 6 soon 6 small 6 li 6 farth 6 easy 6 dark 6 base 6 MOST Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1063 most 104 well 48 least 10 worst 2 strongest 2 lest 2 eldest 1 why?--do 1 walkest 1 soon 1 sayest 1 potest 1 opprest 1 o''the 1 long 1 highest 1 hard 1 gavest 1 fairest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 19 _ do not 9 _ think not 9 _ was ever 8 _ come away 7 _ goes out 6 _ be not 6 _ goes in 6 love is not 5 _ go on 5 _ is not 5 life ''s not 5 poet is not 4 _ come on 4 _ coming up 4 _ going out 4 _ have courage 4 _ was there 4 god has not 4 heart ''s too 3 _ are _ 3 _ did not 3 _ let not 3 _ takes up 3 eyes are witnesses 3 eyes were never 3 god was pleased 3 heart ''s not 3 heart ''s so 3 life is not 3 life were worth 3 love ''s so 3 man was so 3 times go now 2 _ be just 2 _ be kind 2 _ be still 2 _ be sure 2 _ be witness 2 _ give out 2 _ going back 2 _ going off 2 _ have comfort 2 _ is always 2 _ is latin 2 _ is there 2 _ looking out 2 _ looking up 2 _ sees _ 2 _ speak not 2 _ speaks _ Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 _ be not too 2 life ''s not long 2 life ''s not worth 2 poet ''s not malicious 2 poet is not pleased 2 world ''s not worth 1 _ be no more 1 _ be not displeased 1 _ be not injurious 1 _ be not musty 1 _ be not so 1 _ do not so 1 _ having no servant 1 _ having not so 1 _ is no great 1 _ is no more 1 _ is no other 1 _ is not love 1 _ is not properly 1 _ let no false 1 _ make not such 1 _ think not so 1 _ was no villain 1 _ was not aurora 1 death ''s not mine 1 death came not long 1 death has no business 1 death is not death 1 father is not wholly 1 god was not thereby 1 god were not safe 1 hand is not out 1 heart ''s not large 1 heart ''s not mine 1 heaven make no delay 1 kings had not consciences 1 life ''s not very 1 life is not acceptable 1 life is not more 1 life is not very 1 love is no more 1 love is not sin 1 man was not able 1 men be not too 1 men have no greater 1 men tell no tales 1 name ''s not liable 1 name was not altogether 1 places was not very 1 poet did not really Sizes of items; "Measures in words, how big is each item?" ---------------------------------------------------------- 167462 14947 131740 16456 125373 16402 118114 12166 117254 15349 113079 47383 111975 37645 111013 16208 98126 11578 94918 11488 29409 2062 14316 15074 24901 Readability of items; "How difficult is each item to read?" ----------------------------------------------------------- 99.0 37645 97.0 12166 96.0 16456 96.0 15349 94.0 16208 93.0 2062 90.0 16402 90.0 11578 87.0 11488 81.0 47383 74.0 15074 63.0 14947 24901 Item summaries; "In a narrative form, how can each item be abstracted?" ----------------------------------------------------------------------- 11488 Heaven''s gifts, which do like falling stars appear Like those that vainly hoped kind Heaven would wink, 49 The prince long time had courted fortune''s love, Who on high chairs the god-like fathers saw. While he, like Heaven, does each day''s labour bless. And let not foreign foes oppress thy land. To god-like David several sons before. Desire of greatness is a god-like sin. Till time shall ever-wanting David draw, His long chin proved his wit; his saint-like grace The god-like David spoke; with awful fear, Why am I forced, like Heaven, against my mind; 1000 There Heaven itself and god-like kings, in vain ''Cause like the rest he could not live at home; ''Tis time to take the monarch''s power in hand; To think thy wit these God-like notions bred! God''s and king''s rebels have the same good cause, [Footnote 130: ''A plain good man:'' a character of King James II.] 11578 But since ''tis nature''s law, in love and wit, Thy genius, bounded by the times, like mine, By law thy powerful pen has set us free; Thus we love God, as author of our good; 180 Be what, and where thou art: to wish thy place, 3 Great God of love, why hast thou made A day shall come when in thy power Joy ruled the day, and Love the night. True wit has seen its best days long ago; to-day; our new play is like to come on, without a frontispiece; this time, it came into my mind, that our old English poet Chaucer in latter end of the day, by pursuing his point too far, like the Prince of How much more happy fates thy love attend! This hand should force thee to renounce thy love. Thou hast for ever lost thy lady''s love! 12166 come and blanket thee anon; art thou not ashamed to lie a-bed so long? wit, than to think thou would''st come to so little purpose. _Burr, rising_.] And of all things in nature I love it best. Tis true she tells me; I love your wit well, sir; but I little bed is; I''ll let my best room to a better pay-master: you know Oh, ''tis well thought on; ''faith thou know''st my I hope I shall have your good word, too, madam, to your If I stay, ''tis for love of my cousin Constance, not of But, madam, are you sure you shall not love him? ''Tis fit you know--I love Orazia too: The way to her loved life through mine shall lie. ''Tis thy false love that fears her destiny. A day shall come when in thy power Thou leav''st me, life, but love supplies thy part, 14947 The Brachman having disclosed these mysteries to Father Xavier, desired Father Xavier remained but a little time at Goa; and returned with all heard the blows distinctly, and what Father Xavier said to the holy Antonio, came and told him, that Father Xavier desired to speak with him. Father Xavier obtained from the viceroy of the Indies whatever the king true contrition, that being expired, Father Xavier was heard to say, "God Father Xavier, preaching in the great church, betwixt nine and ten of the great credit at the court, Father Xavier writ to him at the same time, to Almighty God; and having ended his prayer, returns a little time At this time God restored to Father Xavier the gift of tongues, which had The king received Father Xavier with great civility; and, after he had holy man, they acknowledged the God of the Christians, and desired 15074 The Kings late Declaration touching the Reasons the Popish and Arbitrary Party, that the King should call, frequent, their Party; who if they carry one House of Commons for their turn, will will never persuade a reasonable man, that a King, who in his younger that this Declaration is evidently the Kings, and the only true King, of _England_ is no other thing than a Duke of _Venice_; take the betwixt the King and his House of Commons. are most averse to the present Government, if they think our King would _and others Letters, and by both Houses by declaring the King''s Life to the House of Commons to Dis-inherit the Duke, to deny the King yet still he says the Duke is the great Minister of State; and the Kings _If the House of Commons declare they have just Reasons to fear, that 15349 shall never subject my characters to the French standard, where love _Abdal._ Our loves and fortunes shall together go; The word, which I have given, shall stand like fate; _Almanz._ No, ''tis the excess of love which mounts so high, I love the king,--let her but name the man. _Lyndar._ Go!--How I love thee heaven can only tell: Your loved Almanzor shall be free this hour. _Ozm._ Then, sir, Benzayda''s father shall not die!-_Abdelm._ ''Tis like you have done much for love of me, _Abdelm._ Well, though I love you not, their lives shall be I shall dream on, and think ''tis all your love! _Boab._ Marriage, thou curse of love, and snare of life, [_Aside_ And thinks true love, because ''tis fierce, its foe. To love, and me, to let my father live. may feel it in the dark: Besides, you know ''tis prince-like to love 16208 _Har._ ''Tis much against the will of all her friends, she loves your _Isab._ Now I shall love your God, because I see that he takes care of _Fisc._ Let him enjoy his love a little while, it will break no _Fisc._ Since you command me, sir, ''tis said of you, I know not how _Beam._ Come, let me have the Sea-Fight; I like that better than a Towerson, in vain I saved thy sleeping life if now I let thee lose it, _Har. Jun._ ''Tis you delight to torture me; behold the man who loves _Har._ You will grow a corpulent gentleman like me; I shall love you Look round and see where thou canst place thy love: _Adam._ When to my arms thou brought''st thy virgin love, Blame me not, heaven; if thou love''s power hast tried, _Vent._ My emperor; the man I love next heaven: 16402 _Alph._ Sir. _King._ I think thou lovest me. _King._ Soft, my old friend; Guise plots upon my life; _Gril._ ''Tis true, as thou art double-hearted: _Gril._ Thou hast lost thy honour. _King._ What shall I answer to thee, O thou balm _Mal._ At court, and near the king; ''tis true, by heaven: _King._ O villain, slave, wert thou my late-born heir, _King._ Come, duke, you were not wronged; your conscience knows _King._ It shall be so: by heaven there''s life in this! _King._ O, thou hast set thy foot upon a snake! _Gril._ Yes. _King._ Hast thou not said, _King._ Thou hast done worse, in thy long course of arms. _King._ Give me thy hand; I love thee not the worse: _Dor._ Thou heard''st the tyrant''s orders; guard thy life _Dor._ Too well I know thee, but for king no more. Know king, your father had, like you, a soul, 16456 _Wood._ Then thou art even too good for me; a worse man will serve my _Wood._ [_Aside._] Aldo, my own natural father, as I live! _Aldo._ Son Woodall, thou vigorous young rogue, I congratulate thy _Aldo._ Hold, a word first: Thou saidst my son was shortly to come _Limb._ But then thou wilt not love me, Pug. _Aldo._ How now, son Limberham? _Limb._ Do not hinder her, good father Aldo; I am sure she will come _Trick_ Tell her, it shall be returned some time to-day; at present we _Aldo._ Come, son Limberham, we let our friend Brainsick walk too long _Aldo._ Let me speak for thee: Thou shalt be used, little Pleasance, _Aldo._ Before George, he shall do thee reason, ere thou sleepest. shall: nay if a man be damned for doing good, as thou say''st, it may _Thers._ ''Tis no matter; I shall speak as much sense as thou 2062 to that which I reserved for Antony and Cleopatra; whose mutual love That gave the world a lord: ''tis Antony''s. A love, which knows no bounds, to Antony, My emperor; the man I love next Heaven: Thou long''st to curse me, and I give thee leave. And I will leave her; though, Heaven knows, I love Caesar shall know what ''tis to force a lover Ere Caesar saw your eyes, you gave me love, To say it was designed: ''tis true, I loved you, Gods, ''tis too much; too much for man to bear. I love this man, who runs to meet his ruin; How thou upbraid''st my love: The queen has eyes, And when thou speak''st (but let it first be long), Has loved her long; he, next my god-like lord, Think not ''tis thou hast conquered Antony; Then art thou innocent, my poor dear love, Thou hast loved me, 24901 37645 _Sir John._ Madam, this fair young lady begs the honour to be known to _Sir Mart._ Why, there''s the jest of it: He shall never know it: ''Tis _Sir Mart._ I hope thou art not in earnest, man! _Warn._ For telling Sir John you loved my master, madam. _Warn._ When you know all, I shall deserve it, sir: I came to sound the _Warn._ A word in private, sir; you mistake this old man; he loves _Sir John._ ''Tis no matter, though the old man be suspicious; I knew the _Warn._ Nay, for that you shall excuse me, sir; I do not love to make a _Sir John._ Dost thou think I shall get her aunt''s consent? _Sir John._ Pray, madam, let me speak with you; on my soul, ''tis the _Sir Mart._ There''s no answering thee any thing; thou thinkest I am good _Mir._ ''Tis a creature, sir, I do not love to look on. 47383 observed the rules of unity in time and place more closely than Virgil, Satires of Juvenal and Persius appearing in this new English dress, authority, that satire was derived from _satura_, a Roman word, which satirical plays on the Roman stage was given by the Greeks: not from branches of new Roman satire, like different scions from the same root, of Horace, that, according to the ancient art and law of satire, it of Juvenal be never so necessary for his new kind of satire; let him Horace," makes it for me, in these words: "Satire is a kind of poetry, come to make thee understand what shall befall thy people in the latter And life in verse shall lay the poet dead. [65] Horace, who wrote satires; it is more noble, says our author, to Thy years are ripe, nor art thou yet to learn Is in thy soul, ''tis there thou art not sound.