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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 3 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 44619 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 75 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 God 2 love 2 St. 2 Paris 2 Lord 2 Heloise 2 France 2 Abelard 1 year 1 woman 1 time 1 think 1 poet 1 passion 1 old 1 long 1 little 1 life 1 letter 1 lady 1 high 1 heart 1 great 1 good 1 german 1 decoration 1 day 1 child 1 William 1 Ulrich 1 Spirit 1 Philintus 1 Paraclete 1 Neidhart 1 John 1 Jerome 1 Holy 1 Heaven 1 Fulbert 1 English 1 Dante 1 Church 1 Bernard 1 Abélard Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 370 love 298 man 292 life 233 time 202 heart 188 day 161 nothing 152 thing 147 world 146 woman 142 year 138 passion 132 lady 123 letter 121 poet 115 hand 111 way 106 pleasure 106 eye 104 child 104 century 103 lover 102 soul 100 word 98 place 96 one 96 mind 93 nature 90 reason 85 age 84 name 79 poem 78 thought 78 school 76 wife 76 song 75 enemy 72 death 69 story 69 misfortune 69 friend 68 monk 68 master 67 part 67 mother 66 tear 66 other 66 girl 65 study 65 order Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1250 _ 284 Abelard 217 God 202 Heloise 104 St. 79 Abélard 62 Ulrich 45 thou 45 Paris 40 Neidhart 40 Lord 40 Fulbert 39 Paraclete 39 France 34 Heaven 34 Bernard 31 Christ 27 Holy 27 Father 25 von 25 Church 24 heaven 22 William 22 May 21 Spirit 21 Champeaux 20 Jerome 19 Middle 19 John 18 lord 18 Dante 17 Thou 17 Rome 17 Pope 17 Ages 17 Abbot 16 II 16 Henry 16 Denis 15 Philintus 15 Europe 15 England 15 Dionysius 15 Argenteuil 14 hath 14 Love 14 Latin 14 King 14 Héloïse 14 Helmbrecht Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1749 i 1677 he 1168 it 1038 you 794 me 638 him 613 they 588 she 507 we 383 them 345 her 233 us 231 himself 128 myself 65 themselves 54 itself 43 thee 41 herself 38 ourselves 36 yourself 31 one 20 mine 9 yours 8 thyself 4 his 3 ours 2 ye 2 theirs 2 hers 2 ''em 1 thunder,''--that 1 oneself 1 heav''n Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 4485 be 1867 have 486 do 422 make 273 give 262 say 243 see 221 take 218 come 203 go 203 find 187 know 173 think 173 love 154 tell 146 write 133 seem 108 let 108 hear 105 leave 102 live 102 follow 99 call 99 become 95 keep 93 feel 89 bear 88 bring 82 learn 78 begin 76 speak 74 put 74 lose 72 receive 70 seek 70 grow 66 read 66 hold 65 look 65 believe 64 pass 61 fall 61 die 60 appear 56 suffer 55 show 54 return 52 use 51 send 50 turn Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 947 not 470 so 417 more 244 great 233 only 217 even 216 such 198 most 197 well 194 now 189 own 168 then 160 other 153 up 148 long 147 too 142 much 141 very 139 good 135 as 131 never 128 many 126 out 123 old 121 little 113 still 112 first 112 always 109 yet 108 ever 102 there 102 last 98 same 94 thus 89 here 88 far 86 early 83 dear 82 new 80 no 79 young 79 high 78 away 77 indeed 76 less 73 again 66 whole 66 true 66 once 66 happy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 50 least 49 great 41 good 40 most 20 high 6 eld 6 early 6 bad 5 deep 5 bl 4 strong 4 manif 4 lovely 4 l 4 fine 4 Most 3 old 3 late 3 clear 2 wise 2 warm 2 sure 2 small 2 simple 2 pure 2 noble 2 near 2 long 2 happy 2 bare 1 wide 1 warlike 1 vile 1 sprightly 1 slight 1 short 1 shabby 1 serene 1 rude 1 rich 1 rare 1 quick 1 pleasant 1 lucky 1 low 1 look 1 lonely 1 lofty 1 lively 1 large Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 158 most 9 least 4 well 1 lowest 1 lookest 1 highest 1 comest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 _ did not 2 abelard was not 2 heart is not 2 pleasure is not 1 _ are extant 1 _ are much 1 _ be never 1 _ been beautiful 1 _ being thus 1 _ did really 1 _ do n''t 1 _ had _ 1 _ had so 1 _ has not 1 _ have not 1 _ have often 1 _ having so 1 _ is precious 1 _ was _ 1 _ was afraid 1 _ was fit 1 _ was not 1 _ was prioress 1 _ was privately 1 _ was so 1 _ was sufficient 1 _ was willing 1 _ were not 1 abelard was quite 1 abelard was there 1 centuries were not 1 centuries were too 1 century had already 1 century has never 1 child is too 1 children are dear 1 children are impulsive 1 days are now 1 days are warm 1 days knew nothing 1 days went by 1 days were so 1 eyes are downcast 1 eyes are plainly 1 eyes see white 1 eyes were fix''d 1 eyes were witnesses 1 god are so 1 god be dedicated 1 god had never Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ had no enemy 1 _ have not sooner 1 abelard was not wholly 1 god came no nearer 1 heart is not entirely 1 heart is not totally 1 heloise made no such 1 life is not much 1 love is not at 1 poet feels no complaisance A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 14268 author = Abelard, Peter title = Historia Calamitatum date = keywords = Abélard; Bernard; Church; France; God; Holy; Jerome; John; Lord; Paris; Spirit; St.; William summary = The mystical school of the Abbey of St. Victor in Paris follows one line (perhaps the most nearly right of At the time of Abélard the schools of Chartres and Paris were at totality of things." The twelfth century was a time when men were twelfth-century monks, if we believed, on Abélard''s word in 1135, painted by Abélard, his old master, of the century at its beginning. For a time the affairs of Abélard prospered: Abbot Suger of Saint-Denis were in this old man''s school two who were considered far to excel devoted ever less time to philosophy and to the work of the school. lovers of God in the word of the Apostle when he says: "We know that all things work together for good to them that love God" indeed, when Abélard was only six years old, but he left the Church their places in the history of philosophy; the story of Abélard''s id = 35977 author = Abelard, Peter title = Letters of Abelard and Heloise To which is prefix''d a particular account of their lives, amours, and misfortunes date = keywords = Abelard; Fulbert; God; Heaven; Heloise; Lord; Paraclete; Paris; Philintus; St.; great; heart; letter; love; passion; think summary = It is very surprising that the _Letters of Abelard and Heloise_ to the Letters an Historical Account of _Abelard_ and _Heloise_; _Abelard_ who could love none but _Heloise_, turned from * See _Abelard''s_ letter to _Philintus_, and _Heloise''s_ She loved _Abelard_ ''tis true; but she declared such thing in her Letters, nor in the long account which _Abelard_ who loved _Abelard_ a thousand times better than she did LETTERS of ABELARD and HELOISE. love is; imagine then what a pleasure it must have been to a heart so that the loves of _Heloise_ and _Abelard_ were the subject raise love in any man whose heart was not prepossessed by another humble, respectful and loving to her _Abelard_, _Heloise_ life, preserving only my love, and the secret pleasure of thinking idea of your loving _Abelard_, always present to your mind, be To speak me _Abelard_--but love to thee. id = 37865 author = McLaughlin, Edward T. (Edward Tompkins) title = Studies in Mediæval Life and Literature date = keywords = Abelard; Dante; English; France; God; Heloise; Neidhart; Ulrich; child; day; decoration; german; good; high; lady; life; little; long; love; old; poet; time; woman; year summary = life of the great Italian poet he had devoted years of patient research. love-making, that if he had spent his days for five years, in hard best, lady-loving gave the mediæval knights consideration for women and times, and Ulrich himself is a knight and a poet worth knowing. heart-leap to Ulrich''s sentimental hope, interests scholars to-day as lady declared that she would grow old in entire ignorance of any love my love-longing heart, I rejoiced thus to serve my lady." the field, and the tree suggests the social life of the old times as poet in Neidhart''s relation to the fashionable love lyrics; he retains age has ever cared more for story telling), their love of play, their from the hand that loves it before its birth, playing like a young girl time were still honorable to her; the world _was_ good; her love _had_