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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 10 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 50331 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 82 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Mrs. 3 Mr. 3 God 3 CHAPTER 2 little 2 Mrs 2 Miss 2 Indian 1 water 1 time 1 note 1 look 1 load 1 iron 1 illustration 1 horse 1 home 1 good 1 cumming 1 come 1 bridge 1 Yard 1 Wrag 1 Wichikagan 1 Welland 1 Weeum 1 Walters 1 Waboose 1 Vee 1 Van 1 United 1 Uncle 1 Twitter 1 Tim 1 Teddy 1 Sure 1 States 1 Spooner 1 South 1 Sir 1 Silver 1 Seaward 1 Sea 1 Scout 1 Sammy 1 Sam 1 Salamander 1 Safety 1 Rynwald 1 Ross Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1265 time 1065 man 851 day 837 boy 789 way 584 eye 579 hand 574 thing 562 child 559 face 498 night 470 one 434 life 425 water 390 head 386 work 386 nothing 378 room 371 moment 366 place 355 father 350 door 338 house 335 mother 333 something 332 hour 324 girl 323 fire 322 word 316 foot 315 year 313 bridge 308 friend 302 people 280 mind 272 side 269 morning 268 heart 265 home 256 voice 256 end 251 story 245 woman 244 street 239 cumming 231 anything 217 matter 216 part 205 bed 204 name Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2471 _ 633 Benny 611 Katy 362 Ferdy 351 Mr. 348 Bob 334 Lumley 316 Mrs 283 Neal 283 Jake 281 Joe 280 Teddy 268 Miss 248 Mrs. 220 Poyor 215 Aunt 213 Otter 212 Twitter 211 Big 208 Izzie 198 Frog 185 Jesse 180 Betty 179 Lilly 176 Clover 174 Indian 170 Sir 166 Safety 162 God 158 Mr 154 Bobby 153 Richard 146 Helen 146 Chrissie 144 Indians 144 Cousin 143 CHAPTER 139 Hetty 138 Ned 125 Tim 123 Macnab 116 Pop 115 Elsie 111 Eve 101 Salamander 97 Dorry 96 Jack 94 Sure 94 Cummings 93 Dr. Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6614 it 6550 i 6315 he 4223 you 2555 she 2408 they 2358 we 1900 him 1371 them 1297 me 903 her 629 us 493 himself 167 herself 148 themselves 120 myself 89 one 87 ''em 80 itself 72 yourself 43 ourselves 40 ''s 19 mine 19 em 17 yours 11 yer 9 ours 9 his 7 thee 7 hers 7 ay 6 ye 5 theirs 5 on''y 5 eva 4 yourselves 4 d''you 3 ya 3 macnab 3 hisself 3 ha 2 ow 2 oneself 2 i''m 1 you''re 1 you''ll 1 word,''--you 1 wi 1 way:--i 1 together-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 20159 be 7262 have 3502 do 3214 say 1794 go 1626 come 1498 see 1317 make 1282 know 1206 get 1108 think 979 take 958 look 768 tell 742 give 652 find 650 seem 555 ask 492 feel 481 begin 458 leave 442 hear 428 stand 424 keep 395 put 386 speak 374 reply 374 let 373 turn 365 try 364 run 352 call 349 sit 338 lie 321 return 313 bring 310 want 310 become 295 mean 287 hold 286 fall 279 carry 269 follow 268 pass 248 send 247 grow 244 cry 234 believe 227 set 224 like Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5118 not 2054 so 1502 up 1482 little 1228 very 1169 then 1146 now 1112 more 1039 well 952 good 940 out 938 much 834 long 794 as 777 only 713 down 654 just 650 again 631 never 614 too 608 old 602 here 594 great 587 other 547 away 527 first 523 there 474 on 455 off 437 back 433 even 432 poor 422 once 420 many 417 still 398 all 389 ever 380 quite 378 soon 368 last 359 such 356 most 344 same 337 few 335 in 333 own 326 far 318 however 314 right 314 almost Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 188 good 129 least 113 most 39 bad 38 slight 35 great 23 near 20 low 19 big 17 large 17 high 15 small 12 eld 12 deep 11 Most 10 old 9 wise 9 short 7 young 6 simple 6 poor 6 long 6 early 5 strong 5 safe 5 nice 5 light 5 hot 5 hard 5 happy 5 fine 5 fast 5 bright 4 wide 4 sweet 4 remote 4 late 4 jolly 4 farth 4 easy 3 wild 3 strange 3 rich 3 pure 3 mere 3 dear 3 dark 3 cool 2 weak 2 warm Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 243 most 19 well 14 least 2 worst 1 zest 1 nor''-west 1 lowest 1 hard 1 fairest 1 easiest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 www.freeliterature 1 www.archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.freeliterature 1 http://www.archive.org/details/surepopsafetysco00bailrich Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 27 _ is _ 25 _ was _ 20 _ do _ 13 _ are _ 12 _ did _ 10 _ am _ 8 benny did not 8 katy did n''t 6 _ think _ 5 _ have _ 5 _ were _ 4 _ know _ 4 days gone by 4 katy was too 3 _ do anything 3 _ do n''t 3 _ does _ 3 _ had _ 3 _ has _ 3 benny had not 3 benny was very 3 katy had never 3 men are not 3 mother came in 3 one does not 3 time went on 2 _ ai n''t 2 _ be _ 2 _ did n''t 2 _ go on 2 benny felt thankful 2 benny was innocent 2 benny was rather 2 benny went out 2 bob had just 2 bob looked up 2 boy was very 2 boys did not 2 boys had ever 2 boys were very 2 children looked up 2 day was fine 2 eyes were still 2 face was very 2 father did n''t 2 father did not 2 ferdy did not 2 ferdy was quite 2 house was very 2 katy did not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ was not entirely 1 benny had no sooner 1 benny made no reply 1 benny was no more 1 boy is not bad 1 boy made no answer 1 boys made no reply 1 faces are not poor 1 father did not well 1 father is not dead 1 father was no better 1 ferdy was not asleep 1 hands were not so 1 house was not empty 1 katy did not even 1 katy found no trouble 1 man had no tent 1 man has no other 1 man was not deeply 1 men are not easily 1 men are not particular 1 men are not sociable 1 men had not yet 1 men were not indeed 1 mother had no victuals 1 night had not fully 1 night was not so 1 thing was not impossible 1 things are no more 1 things are not nearly 1 things are not true 1 things have no connection 1 time is not yet 1 time was no particular 1 way was not sufficiently A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 45289 author = Anonymous title = Jack and Jill and Old Dame Gill date = keywords = illustration summary = provided by the Internet Archive JACK AND JILL AND OLD DAME GILL By Anonymous Note: This is a dummy file used in preparation of the accompanying HTML file which contains only images. Please view the HTML file. [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] [Illustration: 0018] id = 29260 author = Bailey, Roy Rutherford title = Sure Pop and the Safety Scouts date = keywords = Betty; Bob; Chance; Colonel; Jack; Pop; Safety; Scout; Sure; Uncle summary = "Not exactly _Boy_ Scouts," chuckled Sure Pop with a wink at Bob, Bob and Betty looked at the little scout''s right hand, which he held up "''Long live Colonel Sure Pop, the Safety Scout!'' cried the herald. Sure Pop, the Safety Scout, drew a long breath and watched the "Came mighty near it," said Sure Pop, looking at the scars on his hands. "Say, Sure Pop!" burst out Bob, as the Safety Scout paused in his story. That night, before Bob and Betty went to bed, Sure Pop came back. Sure Pop saw, the moment he laid eyes on Bob and Betty next morning, you, Sure Pop, if we go at it that way we can do big things for Safety "Well," said Betty, "one of them I call ''Little Safety Scout.'' We can Betty told Sure Pop what Bob had said about getting a job in one of the id = 21718 author = Ballantyne, R. M. (Robert Michael) title = The Big Otter date = keywords = Attick; Bane; Big; CHAPTER; Donald; Dougall; Eve; Fort; God; Indian; Jessie; Liston; Lumley; Macnab; Max; Mrs; Muskrat; Otter; Salamander; Spooner; Waboose; Weeum; Wichikagan; good summary = "Now, Big Otter," said Macnab, coming to a halt, "we''ll have some grub "Big Otter sees something," said Lumley through Salamander as we "You''re a true prophet, Big Otter," said Lumley, as a low rumbling of "Lumley," said I, next day, as we rested after a good spell at the oars, "What does Big Otter see?" asked Lumley, for the Indian had come to a "I have no time for words, Dougall," said Lumley in a low voice, "but if "Ah, I thought so--a gun?" said Lumley; "hand one over, Salamander." "Max," said Lumley, as I went down to the lake, skates in hand, "while "Good, but don''t spin it out too long, Lumley," said I; "you know when "This looks somewhat like the spot, doesn''t it?" said Lumley, glancing "Does my father not know?" said Big Otter, deferentially, "that Attick "My father knows," continued Big Otter, "that when the pale-face chief id = 21729 author = Ballantyne, R. M. (Robert Michael) title = Dusty Diamonds Cut and Polished: A Tale of City Arab Life and Adventure date = keywords = Bible; Bobby; Brandon; Canada; Frog; Giles; God; Hetty; London; Merryboy; Miss; Mrs; Ned; Number; Richard; Sam; Sammy; Seaward; Sir; Tim; Twitter; Welland; Yard; come; home summary = "Be so good as to call a cab," said Sir Richard in a general way to any "Come, explain, old woman," said Ned, again laying his hand on the "You know quite well, Sam, that you don''t mean that," said Mrs Twitter, "The fact is, Mrs Frog," said Giles Scott, coming to the rescue, "Sir you know, and your means of--by the way, where is baby?" he said looking "Oh, of course I don''t mean cryin'' out like a baby," said Hetty, looking "Now you won''t tell, Hetty?" said the boy with a look of real anxiety on good-natured man, and rather liked a little quiet chaff with street-boys "Hold her, Sir Richard," said Welland, handing the struggling Mrs Frog "I like the looks of that little fellow," said another, pointing to Bob "Come in, and welcome, _do_," said Mrs Twitter to Sir Richard, whose Come in," said Mrs Twitter, looking about id = 8994 author = Coolidge, Susan title = What Katy Did date = keywords = Aunt; Carr; Cecy; Clover; Cousin; Dorry; Dr.; Elsie; Helen; Izzie; Katy; Mrs.; Papa summary = Mrs. Knight''s school, to which Katy and Clover and Cecy went, stood Her aunt gave a sort of sniff, but she knew Katy''s ways, and said no "We won''t tell Papa and Mamma till she''s quite grown up," Katy said to "Katy," said Papa, next day, "you came into the room then, exactly like Katy''s eyes begged so hard, that Dr. Carr said, "Yes, let her, Izzie; I on a little table beside the bed, and Katy sat watching Cousin Helen eat "I mean to ask Cousin Helen to-morrow," said Katy. "No," said Katy, slowly, "I was only thinking--Cousin Helen, is it "Oh, Aunt Izzie!" cried Katy, "is Cousin Helen coming this way when she "Yes--but to-night you are to take tea in Katy''s room," said Aunt Izzie; "Katy!" said Clover, coming in one day in November, "do you know where "See," said Katy, as Clover came into the room a little before tea-time. id = 43325 author = Hocking, Silas K. (Silas Kitto) title = Her Benny: A Story of Street Life date = keywords = Bates; Benny; Eva; Fisher; God; Joe; Lawrence; Lord; Mr.; Mrs.; Munroe; Nell; Perks; Wrag; little; look summary = "Beg pardon," said Benny, in a fright, and hurried away just in time to "Purty little hangel!" said Joe, as he stood looking up the street long "I tell yer I ain''t got none," said Benny. As usual, Joe made room for Benny in his little hut; but to-night he Benny wondered for a long time when Joe was going to say something that "Who''s He?" said Benny, looking up; and Nelly''s eyes echoed the inquiry. "Lor'' a massy!" said Benny, with a look of surprise upon his face, "Good night," said Benny and Nelly in chorus, and once more they left "Are ''e sure, now?" said Benny, great tears starting in his eyes. "Oh, yes, Joe," she said, opening her eyes with such a pained look. "Oh, then, I''ll go," said Benny, who felt that this little girl''s wish "But I have something more to tell you yet," said Benny, looking up with id = 39812 author = Molesworth, Mrs. title = The Oriel Window date = keywords = Chrissie; Christine; Edition; Ferdy; Illustrated; Illustrations; Jesse; Lilly; Master; Miss; Molesworth; Mr.; Mrs.; Ross; little summary = "Ferdy, my boy"--"Dear little man," as his father and mother came in. [Illustration: OFF FERDY WENT AGAIN, A LITTLE BIT FASTER THIS TIME.] "Ferdy," said Chrissie suddenly, "I think there''s going to be a begin talking together, you know," said mamma, "Ferdy would get dear Ferdy," Miss Lilly was saying, "see what comes of holidays! "Now, Miss Lilly, you''re joking--you know you are," said Ferdy, looking "Oh, I know," said Ferdy; "it was about Jesse Piggot. "In the house of life," said Miss Lilly after thinking a little. "I don''t know, I''m sure, Master Ferdy," said Flowers, who did not feel "It looks like him, Master Ferdy," he said, "but I don''t know that he''ll "Come in, Jesse," she said, "I do want Master Ferdy to see--you know "Good evening, Jesse," said Ferdy, holding out his hand. "Jesse''s not to go back to Draymoor, mamma," said Ferdy, looking up id = 21268 author = Otis, James title = The Search for the Silver City: A Tale of Adventure in Yucatan date = keywords = CHAPTER; City; Dream; Emery; Indian; Jake; Mr.; Neal; Poyor; Sea; Silver; Teddy; Walters; cumming summary = "We shall be driven out of the yacht if you try to carry it home," Mr. Emery replied, moving aft as far as possible. "If possible I shall leave to-night," Neal and Teddy heard him say to At that moment Mr. Emery came out of the pilot-house followed by Mr. Walters, and Neal ran forward to ask which boat his father intended to Although Jake spoke in a positive tone Teddy and Neal were far from "If Poyor is wise he will come now," Cummings said, as he looked "Look," he said to Neal and Teddy, "if Poyor had been discovered the Cummings led the way, and while he was doing so Teddy asked Poyor: "You must take some," Cummings said, when Neal and Teddy turned away. "Do you think he knows we are here?" Cummings asked, and Neal replied: With Jake, Cummings and Poyor spent but little time; neither had any id = 34667 author = Reid, Mayne title = The Vee-Boers: A Tale of Adventure in Southern Africa date = keywords = Africa; Blom; Boers; CHAPTER; Dorn; Jan; Piet; Rynwald; South; Van; Vee; horse; note; time; water summary = well-known to South Africans, proclaim them to be Vee-Boers [Note 2]. far as eye can reach, extends an open _veldt_, [Note 2], grass-covered, In addition to wood, water, and grass, the camp-ground enjoys another saw the wounded buffalo bound away, seemingly but little hurt, was sure swift horse, however, Van Dorn at length got again within range of it; near, or likely to pass; and Piet Van Dorn continued puffing away in Piet Van Dorn was left no time for deliberation. At this point, for the first time since leaving it, Piet Van Dorn caught observed by Piet Van Dorn and his brother as they came within sight, and "In time not near so long as by land, and not half as many dangers camp, out upon the open veldt, a number of the young Boers are busy too, when long time had passed, and with the fresh, breezy air of the river id = 30223 author = Vose, George L. (George Leonard) title = Bridge Disasters in America: The Cause and the Remedy date = keywords = States; United; bridge; iron; load summary = A few years ago an iron highway bridge at Dixon, Ill., fell, while a Not many years ago, a new highway bridge of iron was to be made over moving load produces a much greater strain upon a bridge than one To pass now to railroad bridges, we find here a very heavy load load is large in proportion to the weight of the bridge, than upon a bridge to carry 3,000 pounds per foot for the total engine length, of the bridge and load, at 5 tons per square inch of the net section a load of 58,000 pounds; and inasmuch as the bridge did not break safely a load which would strain the iron to 50,000 pounds per inch, State, an iron bridge is in use under heavy trains, which has a State can pay $500 a year for having its bridges inspected, and it