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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 4 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 90927 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 89 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Venus 4 Turnus 4 Troy 4 Trojan 4 Juno 4 Italy 3 Priam 3 Phoebus 3 Pallas 3 Latinus 3 King 3 Jove 3 Dido 2 phrygian 2 latin 2 bear 2 Tiber 2 Teucrians 2 Rutulians 2 Rome 2 Queen 2 Latium 2 Jupiter 2 Greeks 2 Goddess 2 God 2 Fate 2 Dardan 2 Apollo 2 Anchises 1 Æneas 1 thy 1 thou 1 teucrian 1 stand 1 man 1 hand 1 grecian 1 dardanian 1 come 1 Yea 1 Virgil 1 Thy 1 Sire 1 Shall 1 Saturn 1 Neptune 1 Iülus 1 Italia 1 Heaven Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 983 hand 953 man 678 war 675 arm 641 son 547 way 546 word 543 heart 541 sea 530 day 500 land 488 father 458 god 458 city 457 death 421 battle 404 eye 403 wall 390 sword 376 name 375 blood 368 shore 365 spear 359 town 355 king 355 folk 344 ship 329 side 328 earth 322 sky 321 fire 319 head 317 place 314 wind 313 life 304 night 300 field 297 foe 291 shield 289 house 288 mother 280 face 277 fate 269 thing 269 gift 266 flame 262 body 258 foot 255 wave 252 horse Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 824 _ 778 thou 581 Turnus 502 Troy 467 AEneas 377 o''er 377 Trojan 322 heaven 291 Trojans 276 Aeneas 237 hath 235 Juno 227 Jove 226 Æneas 216 Italy 212 ye 196 Pallas 196 God 196 BOOK 172 King 166 lord 163 AEneid 160 Dido 159 Priam 155 Latinus 152 Gods 149 Venus 141 Teucrians 138 god 128 Apollo 123 Dardan 121 Thou 115 Fate 110 lo 110 Latium 108 Anchises 107 Lo 106 DRYDEN 104 Greeks 102 Tiber 102 Phoebus 102 Jupiter 96 thine 96 Rome 95 Father 91 thee 91 Queen 90 Acestes 85 Neptune 84 Heaven Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3428 he 1930 i 1826 they 1453 him 1183 it 1062 she 918 me 867 them 767 we 414 thee 395 us 319 you 305 her 276 himself 68 herself 59 mine 54 myself 49 themselves 34 thyself 31 itself 26 ye 13 theirs 12 ourselves 12 ours 10 one 10 his 7 yours 5 thy 5 hers 4 o''er 3 yourself 3 o 2 thou 2 pelf 2 haply 2 ay 1 tears 1 me;--whether 1 mak''st 1 iulus,--took 1 ce''a Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 5828 be 1775 have 844 come 815 bear 776 see 733 do 610 give 592 go 468 leave 458 make 457 stand 443 take 438 fall 431 lie 427 let 407 say 400 call 355 know 343 send 335 turn 332 seek 332 bring 331 fly 318 draw 316 hold 293 set 288 drive 279 cry 274 speak 271 tell 268 rise 266 follow 247 lay 244 meet 237 spake 234 die 232 hear 227 find 214 lead 197 keep 191 win 191 run 191 look 175 slay 171 fill 169 cast 167 pray 167 break 167 bid 163 catch Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1457 now 1260 then 1070 so 1003 not 555 there 553 great 540 up 525 down 515 forth 502 high 495 thus 495 here 491 first 487 out 450 such 442 away 382 mighty 381 long 365 more 348 back 319 many 305 deep 303 again 302 far 295 last 294 own 290 old 257 still 253 yet 252 once 250 very 244 too 237 well 227 even 216 fair 210 good 202 on 191 ancient 184 other 180 dead 177 vain 173 ever 170 fierce 164 huge 159 full 155 golden 155 alone 154 wide 151 hard 148 meanwhile Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 48 good 32 most 21 high 20 least 18 late 17 early 17 brave 16 great 15 low 14 topmost 14 mighty 12 fair 11 l 10 near 9 eld 9 bad 6 midmost 6 foremost 6 comely 5 wealthy 5 fle 5 chief 5 bl 3 temp 3 tall 3 swift 3 short 3 lovely 3 h 3 furth 3 easy 3 dear 2 young 2 thick 2 sure 2 stately 2 quick 2 pure 2 noble 2 manif 2 loud 2 lofty 2 linger 2 large 2 just 2 dr 2 distr 2 deep 2 choice 2 Most Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 111 most 10 well 5 eldest 2 lest 1 tallest 1 soon 1 midmost 1 least 1 hearest 1 fairest 1 distrest 1 comest 1 625]then 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 aeneas was about 3 arm drawn back 2 aeneas was much 2 aeneas were here 2 days gone by 2 hath held thee 2 hearts stood still 2 men are ye 2 names did achemenides 2 troy lies tenedos 2 turnus is not 2 turnus is there 2 way is none 1 _ are undoubtedly 1 _ cries iülus 1 _ go hence 1 _ had thy 1 _ is not 1 _ is now 1 _ is wholly 1 _ see book 1 _ see note 1 _ was king 1 _ were early 1 _ were etruscan 1 _ were originally 1 _ were sea 1 aeneas called per''ga 1 aeneas came apace,-- 1 aeneas gave command 1 aeneas having already 1 aeneas is about 1 aeneas is away 1 aeneas is miraculously 1 aeneas is obdurate 1 aeneas sees again 1 aeneas sends achates 1 aeneas sent achates 1 aeneas set sail 1 aeneas was asleep 1 aeneas was deeply 1 aeneas was not 1 aeneas was now 1 aeneas was still 1 aeneas was thus 1 arm be stark 1 arms are ours 1 arms are tense 1 arms came priam 1 arms have rest Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 turnus is not free 2 war is no safety 1 turnus was no equal 1 turnus was not yet 1 wars were not entirely A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 6003 author = Clarke, Michael title = Story of Aeneas date = keywords = BOOK; CONINGTON; DRYDEN; Greeks; Italy; Juno; Jupiter; King; Latinus; Rome; Rutulians; Trojan; Troy; Turnus; Venus summary = the spirit answered only by a solemn warning to AEneas, the "goddessborn" (being the son of Venus) to save himself by immediate flight. When AEneas related this story to his father and the other Trojan remained a considerable time and built a city which AEneas called Meanwhile king Helenus having heard of the arrival of the Trojans came to the gods, he told the Trojan chief that he had yet a long voyage to appeared a number of Trojans advancing towards the queen, and AEneas Next day AEneas, accompanied by king Acestes, and a great multitude of The Sibyl answered that her companion was the Trojan AEneas, Meanwhile the Trojans having landed upon the Latian coast, Aeneas and gods and to King Latinus for vengeance upon the Trojans. King Caec''u-lus, son of the god Vulcan, came from the city of to AEneas, he said, "Great chief of the Trojan race, I gladly receive id = 18466 author = Virgil title = The Æneid of Virgil, Translated into English Verse date = keywords = Acestes; Achilles; Anchises; Apollo; Dardan; Dido; Fate; God; Goddess; Greeks; Heaven; Italia; Italy; Jove; Juno; Latinus; Latium; Neptune; Pallas; Phoebus; Priam; Queen; Rome; Shall; Sire; Teucrians; Thy; Tiber; Trojan; Troy; Turnus; Venus; Virgil; bear; latin; phrygian; stand summary = Fate sends AEneas to Latium to found Rome, but Juno''s hostility long And bear thy brave AEneas to the skies. Glad news I bear thee, of thy comrades brought, All else confirms the tale thy mother told thee plain." Shall lock thee in her arms, and press her lips to thine, O''er every land and sea, far from thy native home." Lead on, my son, I yield and follow on thy way.'' The Fates will find a way, and Phoebus hear thy prayer. Pray thou to heaven and, having gained thy prayer, O think with whom thou leav''st me to thy fate, One in the deep thy son shall look for, but in vain." If Fate shall call thee, ''twill thy touch obey; Reach forth thy hand, and bear me to my rest, His arms and spoils thy sacred oak shall bear." This field shall end the war, thy fatal hour is near." id = 22456 author = Virgil title = The Aeneid of Virgil date = keywords = Aeneas; Anchises; Apollo; Ascanius; Dido; Italy; Iülus; Jove; Juno; Jupiter; King; Latinus; Latium; Pallas; Phoebus; Priam; Rutulians; Saturn; Teucrians; Tiber; Trojan; Troy; Turnus; Venus; dardanian; grecian; hand; thou; thy summary = ''Aeolus--for to thee hath the father of gods and king of men given the The horse, standing high amid the city, pours forth armed men, and Sinon if thou knowest any hope to place in arms, be this household thy first Then shalt thou learn of all thy line, and what city is given thee. shall Juno''s presence ever leave the Teucrians; while thou in thy need, go forth to meet them, as thy fortune shall allow thee way. King himself of Jove''s supreme race, Aeneas of Troy, hath sent us to thy Turnus, thy crime, thee thine awful punishment shall await; too late of men shalt thou, [540-573]Lord Tiber, roll under thy waves! neither arm your hands: sooner shall Turnus burn the seas than these This hand shall give thee the land thou hast sought overseas.'' if thou hast aught of might, if the War-god be in thee as in thy id = 29358 author = Virgil title = The Æneids of Virgil, Done into English Verse date = keywords = Dardan; Dido; Fate; Father; God; Goddess; Gods; Italy; Jove; Juno; King; Pallas; Phoebus; Priam; Queen; Trojan; Troy; Turnus; Venus; Yea; bear; come; latin; man; phrygian; teucrian; Æneas summary = "The Father of the Gods and men hath given thee might enow, That thee a-straying wide away o''er earth and sea hath borne." With mighty war; and that same fate our sons shall follow home.'' But burned my heart to gather folk for battle, and set forth That thou hast set the death of sons before my father''s eyes, For mighty men, nor toil of way leave thou, though long it fall. Come rise, and glad these tidings tell unto thy father old, Father Anchises seeth and saith: ''New land, and bear''st thou war? Yea, I will set it forth in words, and thou thy tale shalt hear: This hand shall give thee earth thou sought''st so far across the tide." Now, Father, unto thee I turn, and all thy words of weight; 410 Thou sought''st in war: such are the gifts that fall unto the hand 360