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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 14 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 59149 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 93 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 like 7 man 7 look 7 God 6 love 4 white 4 little 4 life 4 italian 4 come 3 woman 3 night 3 hand 3 good 3 Mr. 3 Italy 3 England 2 world 2 sleep 2 sea 2 great 2 feel 2 eye 2 dark 2 Sunday 2 Miss 2 London 2 English 2 Arthur 1 want 1 voice 1 upper 1 tree 1 tortoise 1 thy 1 think 1 thee 1 sun 1 stand 1 soul 1 shadow 1 sex 1 self 1 rose 1 old 1 new 1 mother 1 long 1 live 1 laugh Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2649 man 1544 � 1341 eye 1280 woman 1214 face 1205 life 1051 hand 1000 time 873 child 863 thing 810 way 801 world 763 love 754 day 740 â 732 room 731 t 731 nothing 719 head 702 night 688 soul 688 something 613 people 605 voice 561 heart 548 house 531 moment 516 light 503 door 488 place 484 side 482 water 471 mother 456 tree 452 death 443 arm 441 self 432 morning 426 sea 426 body 416 sort 415 end 415 darkness 397 fire 396 father 395 one 393 sun 383 foot 380 road 378 everything Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 20256 � 4557 _ 2594 â 1274 Alvina 921 Gerald 836 Aaron 684 Gudrun 659 Ursula 651 Birkin 627 Miss 560 Siegmund 524 Ciccio 470 Helena 467 Lilly 415 Madame 386 Mr. 320 Pinnegar 307 God 292 James 289 t 260 Iâ 215 Jim 202 Hermione 197 Houghton 178 Italy 167 May 155 Frost 146 b 145 q 141 heaven 141 Woodhouse 141 England 136 Mrs. 133 Beatrice 130 London 130 JOB 130 ARTHUR 129 Arthur 126 OLIVER 125 BARLOW 124 Josephine 121 Geoffrey 115 Pancrazio 111 s 111 Max 111 Italian 109 Itâ 108 English 102 Sunday 101 Tanny Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 12540 he 10571 it 10324 she 9694 i 8314 you 4196 they 3764 him 3526 her 3225 we 2443 me 1670 them 974 us 860 himself 596 herself 379 one 300 myself 245 itself 238 yourself 213 themselves 86 ourselves 61 mine 48 thee 40 s 39 oneself 32 yours 32 hers 31 you?â 26 his 23 ''em 12 theirs 9 ours 9 ''s 7 ay 6 thyself 5 � 5 yourselves 5 ve 5 s''ll 5 em 4 you''re 4 ye 4 iâ 4 i''m 3 you''ll 3 ma''e 3 hisself 3 heâ 3 here?â 2 you''ve 2 thisâ Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 30723 be 7938 have 6368 say 5312 do 3709 go 2708 come 2575 look 2352 know 2023 see 1597 make 1517 think 1496 want 1395 get 1336 feel 1305 take 1193 seem 1044 sit 1011 ask 995 stand 876 give 776 turn 704 let 695 leave 690 put 657 find 652 cry 638 watch 618 like 572 laugh 547 love 527 hear 519 live 508 tell 501 lie 499 begin 483 rise 458 keep 440 smile 440 become 435 run 415 hold 406 reply 400 fall 396 wait 383 call 381 mean 369 move 367 pass 365 believe 361 talk Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 7367 not 3190 so 2400 then 1979 up 1821 little 1562 very 1419 more 1388 only 1343 out 1342 now 1332 down 1160 again 1121 great 1063 away 1045 own 1000 never 980 good 960 still 939 old 934 back 932 other 903 long 887 dark 882 there 876 much 871 all 828 white 812 well 801 just 796 rather 789 too 766 quite 745 on 720 even 709 young 695 off 688 almost 680 always 670 really 668 here 635 black 620 as 619 last 606 strange 574 new 524 first 518 same 518 in 470 high 457 cold Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 116 good 113 least 98 most 41 great 32 deep 30 high 23 Most 22 slight 20 bad 17 fine 13 faint 10 near 10 low 10 innermost 8 late 8 dark 6 strong 6 eld 6 big 5 tiny 4 wild 4 strange 4 small 4 poor 3 young 3 topmost 3 pure 3 manif 3 lovely 3 long 3 intense 3 happy 3 farth 3 dear 2 weird 2 tall 2 simple 2 rare 2 mere 2 mean 2 light 2 less 2 large 2 l 2 keen 2 heavy 2 hard 2 gay 2 furth 2 easy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 264 most 19 well 15 least 1 youngest 1 whitest 1 safest 1 near 1 merest 1 lasciar''-- 1 highest 1 hard 1 brightest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 184 � said birkin 163 � said gerald 141 � said ursula 113 � said gudrun 53 � cried ursula 40 � said hermione 37 _ is _ 31 � cried gudrun 25 _ are _ 25 � asked gerald 24 _ do _ 23 � asked gudrun 23 � asked ursula 21 _ was _ 19 � asked birkin 16 _ want _ 15 _ have _ 14 alvina did not 13 _ know _ 10 _ be _ 10 _ do n''t 10 _ had _ 9 � laughed gerald 8 _ am _ 8 aaron did not 8 � cried winifred 7 _ knew _ 7 _ love _ 7 gudrun was very 7 t think so 7 � laughed ursula 7 � said mrs 6 _ think _ 6 _ were _ 6 � said halliday 5 _ go _ 5 alvina sat down 5 eyes were dark 5 gudrun was silent 5 men did not 5 � laughed birkin 5 � said brangwen 4 _ be too 4 _ being _ 4 _ did _ 4 _ did n''t 4 _ feel _ 4 _ wanted _ 4 aaron looked up 4 face was pale Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ be no reason 1 _ is not private 1 _ took no trouble 1 aaron made no reply 1 aaron seemed not even 1 alvina did not _ 1 alvina did not really 1 alvina is not ordinary 1 child does not so 1 child has no conception 1 child took no notice 1 children had no need 1 eye has no focus 1 gerald was not capable 1 gerald was not responsible 1 hands were no longer 1 heads has no reference 1 life was not hers 1 life was not only 1 man had not yet 1 man has no country 1 man has no purpose 1 man is no longer 1 men are no more 1 men are not beasts 1 men had not any 1 men was not married 1 men were not at 1 men were not unhappy 1 room was not really 1 soul is not sturdy 1 t see no signs 1 things are not separate 1 ursula were not present 1 world had no significance 1 world was not san Sizes of items; "Measures in words, how big is each item?" ---------------------------------------------------------- 222674 4240 140209 23727 116595 4520 78430 37206 72141 9498 64438 20654 57658 9497 24318 4216 15858 23394 12295 22531 9765 54058 7663 22726 3080 22734 2967 22475 Readability of items; "How difficult is each item to read?" ----------------------------------------------------------- 98.0 4240 97.0 4216 96.0 22531 96.0 22726 96.0 22734 95.0 23394 94.0 4520 93.0 9498 92.0 23727 91.0 37206 86.0 22475 85.0 9497 78.0 20654 100.0 54058 Item summaries; "In a narrative form, how can each item be abstracted?" ----------------------------------------------------------------------- 20654 great impulses are like man and wife, or father and son. all-potent nerve-center of consciousness and dynamic life-activity is From this center the child seeks, the mother knows. rays which pass from the great dark abdominal life-center in the actually at the great centers of dynamic consciousness. powerful lumbar ganglion, great dynamic center of all the voluntary cardiac plexus acts as the great sympathetic mode of new dynamic wish to bring up her child from the lovely upper centers only, from first great center of sympathy the child is drawn to a lovely oneing As we know, a child lives from the great field of dynamic When he makes woman, or the woman and child the great center of life man''s automatic dream-soul, which loves automatism, the great sensual great terror of the dynamic _upper_ centers in man. When the sun comes up the centers of active dynamic upper 22475 To open your tiny beak-mouth, that looks as if And reach your skinny little neck Your bright, dark little eye, Under its slow lid, tiny baby tortoise, And set forward, slow-dragging, on your fourpinned toes, Rather like a baby working its limbs, Suddenly beak-shaped, and very wide, like some Your face, baby tortoise. Your little round house in the midst of chaos. And round the edges twenty-five little ones, The sections of the baby tortoise shell. Then twenty-four, and a tiny little keystone. And all rambling aimless, like little perambulating Not knowing each other from bits of earth or old Little tortoise. To travel, to burrow into a little loose earth, A brisk, brindled little tortoise, all to himself-Snake-like she draws at my finger, while I drag Their two shells like doomed boats bumping, Their splay feet rambling and rowing like As she moves eternally slowly away? The tortoise eternity, 22531 Withered, my insolent soul would be gone like flowers Like a strange white bird blown out of the frozen Star-shadows shine, love, The little white feet nod like white flowers in the Like a wind-shadow wandering over the water, I throw from out of the darkness my self like a flower Like a flower from out of the night-time, I lift my Once his face was laughing like the sky; Open like the sky looking down in all its laughter Pass the men whose eyes are shut like anemones in a MY love looks like a girl to-night, This woman who likes to love me: but she turns Like the sign of a lover who turns to the dark of And sits in her own dark night of her bitter hair THE earth again like a ship steams out of the dark Like a weapon my hand was white 22726 THE new red houses spring like plants You tell me the lambs have come, they lie like Her room, where the night still hangs like a halffolded bat, May-blossom and blue bird''s-eye flowers falling, WHEN into the night the yellow light is roused like Or like a mist the moon has kissed from off a pool in Our faces flower for a little hour pale and uncertain Like a soft full drop of darkness it seems to sway Beating like sobs, I come to myself, and stand Comes endlessly kissing my face and my hands. With a face like a chickweed flower. Of leaves that have gone unnoticed, swept like old It is only the sparrows, like dead black leaves on The white moon show like a breast revealed Set like rocks beside a sea of gloom, I place a great and burning seal of love Like a dark rose, a mystery of rest 22734 D.H. Lawrence (1919) _Bay: A Book of Poems_ Where the trees rise like cliffs WHERE the trees rise like cliffs, proud and And so, it is ebb-time, they turn, the eyes beneath the In shadow, covering us up with her grey. Like drowsy children the houses fall asleep A cloud comes up like the surge of a fountain, Heaving and piling a round white dome. Swift trains go by in a rush of light; And more than all, the dead-sure silence, When we find the place where this dead road goes. That fall forever, knowing none A dark bird falls from the sun. White-bodied and warm the night was, That moon-like sword the ascendant dead unsheathe Like cliffs abutting in shadow a drear grey sea Which then is it that falls from its place That falls like meteorite No sound from the strangers, the place is dark, and fear 23394 Lapped like a body close upon a sleep, would fall, and darkness would come hurling And that mother-love like a demon drew you Like a rattle a child spins round for joy, the night Stand like dark stumps, still in the green wheat. "Come back to bed, let us sleep on our mysteries. Oh Gods of the living Darkness, powers of Night. Like wet and falling roses, and I listen Dark and proud on the sky, like a number of All the dark-feathered helmets, like little green Stars come low and wandering here for love Like a man in a boat on very clear, deep water, I''m not afraid of God. Let him come forth. The round dark heads of men crowd silently, Like a flame that falls of a sudden. Look for like the breath of life as long as I live, flowers that come first from the darkness, and feel 23727 "Oh, good-evening!" said James, letting Alvina pass, and shutting "Show Mr. Witham out through the shop, Alvina," said Miss Pinnegar. "I''m glad you''ve come," said Alvina, as Miss Pinnegar entered. "_You_ ought to have married him, Miss Pinnegar," said Alvina. And so, Alvina slips away with Miss Poppy''s music-sheets, while Mr. May sits down like a professional at the piano and makes things fly "I must go home for some things," said Alvina to Ciccio. Miss Pinnegar and Alvina and James Houghton had come round into "Don''t come in," said Alvina to Geoffrey, looking over her shoulder "I should like him to come," said Alvina simply. "Miss Pinnegar, this is Madame," said Alvina. "Quite nice," said Alvina, looking round the hideous little room, "You can have that if you like, Madame," said Alvina. "Would you like to see the house?" said Alvina to Ciccio. "Always here?" he said, looking into Alvina''s face. "Give this letter to Madame," Alvina said to Ciccio. 37206 In little puffs and specks and stars, it looks very like bits of water, is white looking, under the great dark toe of Calabria, the toe little way out to sea, heaps of shadow deposited like rubbish heaps in Enter two fresh passengers: a black-eyed, round-faced, bright-sharp man bits of blue and flying white cloud overhead: the little boats like distance down the table sat a little hard-headed grey man in a long grey a little fort ahead, done in enormous black-and-white checks, like a And at last a little man with lank, black hair, like an esquimo, tram, like a little train, bumps to rest, after having wound round the The dark-browed man looked up at the girovago and said: Ah, but--said the little dark bus-conductor, with his small-featured head-cloths looked like some thick bed of flowers, geranium, black I went round the ship to look at the dark night of the sea. 4216 (A motor car, GERALD BARLOW driving, OLIVER TURTON with him has in a day, if you like to work at your little models: I know you can sell I want to introduce you to Gerald, to see if you like him. You don''t know, Oliver, the cold edge of Gerald''s I believe father is coming here with Gerald. BARLOW, GERALD, WINIFRED, ANABEL OLIVER present. Well, in my own mind, I think it wants a bit of its own bit, if it''s all right about the office men, you know. Don''t you think he likes Gerald? Yes, I know you believe more in hate than in love. you, Job Arthur.--Come away, Gerald. mastered by Gerald Barlow, if it comes to mastering, than by Job Arthur We want to ask you, Mr. Gerald Barlow, why you have given Do you think, Gerald, that if the men really wanted a whole, 4240 â��I was hoping now for a man to come along,â�� Gudrun said, suddenly â��I know,â�� she said, â��it seems like that when one thinks in the â��I donâ��t know half the people here,â�� she said, in her low voice. â��And I,â�� said Gerald grimly, â��shouldnâ��t like to be in a world of people â��Itâ��s a nasty view of things, Gerald,â�� said Birkin, â��and no wonder you â��You want your tea, donâ��t you,â�� said Hermione, turning to Ursula with a â��You know you wanted her to come backâ��come and sit down,â�� said Birkin â��I donâ��t know,â�� replied Gerald, looking round the table. â��I liked her all right, for a couple of days,â�� said Gerald. â��You donâ��t want to?â�� said Hermione, looking at her slowly. â��I came to look at the pond,â�� said Ursula, â��and I found Mr Birkin â��You look so stately, like a country Baroness,â�� said Ursula, laughing 4520 "Don''t look at me like that--so long--" said Josephine, in her "I like looking at you," said Jim, his smile becoming more malicious. "You won''t stay long," said the old man, looking round a little "Doesn''t SHE love you?" said Aaron to Jim amused, indicating Josephine. "You believe in love, don''t you?" said Jim, sitting down near Aaron, and "Come up to Hampstead to lunch with us," said Lilly to Aaron. "You''ll go to bed, won''t you?" said Lilly to Aaron, when the door was "Mr. Lilly has gone away?" said Aaron. "It is certainly a good thing for society that men like you and Mr. Lilly are not common," said Sir William, laughing. "Why, yes," said Aaron, looking at her again. "Very likely," said Aaron. "Don''t you think," said Aaron, turning to Lilly, "that however you try "Or one leaves her, like Aaron," said Lilly. 54058 His dark bright eyes descend like a fiery hood Under the long, dark boughs, like jewels red And lighting these ruddy leaves like a star dropped through With cold, like the shell of the moon: and strange it seems So even, it beats like silence, and sky and earth in one unbroke My little red heifer, to-night I looked in her eyes, Then gave thee thy dark eyes, O Man, that all He kissed thee, O Man, in a passion of love, and left Ah know tha liked ''im bett''r nor me. Nay robin red-breast, tha nedna Tha can stare at me wi'' thy fierce blue eyes, As tha allers hast--but let me tell thee Turn thy mouth on a woman like her-Wor it tha''d liked to ''a killed her? --Tha wants ''im thy-sen too bad. Love, should I tell thee summat? Love, should I tell thee summat? 9497 street, where the sunshine and the olive trees looked like a mirage hung like a blood-stain from the grey wall above her, stood a little So she stood in the sunshine on the little platform, old and yet like And, like a bird, she went to sleep as the shadows came. white-cold ecstasy of darkness and moonlight, the raucous, cat-like, I said how I liked the big vine-garden, I asked when it ended. look like ghosts in the darkness of the underworld, stately, and as if child, he makes a little separate world down there in the theatre, like And Maria, stout and strong and handsome like a peasant woman, went A confused light, like hot tears, would come into his eyes It was like God grafting the life of man upon the body of the earth, long hill from the lake, came to the crest, looked down the darkness of 9498 Siegmund''s eyes dilated, and he looked frowning at Helena. Siegmund sat in his great horse-hair chair by the fire, while Helena ''The water,'' said Siegmund, ''is as full of life as I am,'' and he pressed ''Surely,'' he said to himself, ''it is like Helena;'' and he laid his hands When Siegmund was holding her hand, he said, softly laughing: ''Think of Wagner,'' said Siegmund, lifting his face to the hot bright ''Come!'' said Helena, holding out her hand. ''Yes, I think this is the right way,'' said Helena, and they set off well, as much as we can,'' said Siegmund, looking forward over the down, ''I like the heat,'' said Siegmund. on the beach, Siegmund and Helena let the day exhale its hours like ''The sea is a great deal like Siegmund,'' she said, as she rose panting, ''Look!'' said Siegmund. He turned away, and, looking from Helena landwards, he said, smiling