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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 7 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 60938 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 88 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 man 4 God 3 Mr. 2 time 2 look 2 life 2 good 2 drink 2 day 2 Mrs. 2 Miss 2 Louis 2 London 2 John 2 CHAPTER 1 world 1 work 1 way 1 think 1 thing 1 sing 1 rhue 1 liquor 1 like 1 lecture 1 horse 1 home 1 hand 1 girl 1 eye 1 doctor 1 death 1 come 1 chapter 1 Young 1 Wordingham 1 White 1 Wheeler 1 Wallace 1 Vox 1 Tumpany 1 Trust 1 Toftrees 1 Thorpe 1 Sims 1 Scotty 1 San 1 Rushville 1 Royal 1 Rita Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1718 man 980 time 858 day 674 life 615 thing 600 hand 571 night 558 eye 557 way 522 face 459 room 422 house 397 woman 387 word 378 voice 359 mind 350 moment 348 year 347 girl 330 nothing 329 drink 327 place 324 door 319 hour 317 friend 316 one 310 head 309 something 309 heart 292 boy 275 horse 271 people 268 world 267 work 256 wife 256 thought 236 name 233 side 233 money 232 morning 229 death 228 table 227 end 225 body 214 light 213 doctor 212 book 202 letter 198 love 198 foot Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 699 _ 475 VB 460 Lothian 447 John 297 Gilbert 275 Louis 274 Jed 273 Mr. 268 Maxwell 263 Barbara 218 God 211 Barleycorn 196 Rita 189 Danny 171 Captain 156 Mrs. 153 Fordham 145 London 139 Ellen 131 Sims 128 Morton 119 Mary 113 Toftrees 112 Ingworth 90 Amberley 86 CHAPTER 84 Jack 80 Annette 73 Morgan 69 Tumpany 69 Nelson 69 Dr. 67 wos 64 Miss 59 Vox 57 Madame 55 Podley 53 e 51 Cameron 50 Lord 50 Gail 50 England 48 Thorpe 48 Ethel 45 Daly 45 Bob 44 French 41 yer 40 Young 40 Street Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 10980 i 5746 it 5687 he 3967 you 2768 me 2041 him 2039 she 1495 they 1165 we 891 them 885 her 395 myself 358 himself 324 us 102 itself 78 themselves 78 one 75 yourself 70 herself 68 mine 49 ''em 36 yours 32 ''s 31 ourselves 21 his 13 hers 8 ours 7 thee 7 isself 7 em 6 yer 5 yerself 5 ian 4 yer''ve 4 theirs 3 you''ll 3 oneself 3 i''m 3 bookshelf 2 you''re 2 this,"--with 2 th 2 je 1 yourselves 1 you?--come 1 you''ve 1 yep-- 1 ung 1 thy 1 rollin Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 17333 be 6771 have 2839 do 1687 say 1392 go 1331 know 1253 come 1025 see 1018 make 863 get 841 take 705 think 617 give 592 look 464 drink 438 find 429 tell 420 want 394 hear 382 seem 378 feel 376 leave 358 ask 352 stand 345 turn 336 become 331 keep 323 let 302 put 289 speak 289 call 277 write 275 begin 262 sit 255 fall 251 bring 246 live 246 hold 240 meet 236 pass 235 run 234 answer 225 try 207 read 203 talk 202 follow 199 lie 194 walk 190 cry 189 mean Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4029 not 1251 so 996 then 955 up 939 more 829 now 768 out 646 never 628 good 594 little 591 down 581 only 566 very 557 other 521 long 512 well 503 again 448 there 448 away 446 here 442 much 442 back 438 first 429 old 404 as 401 just 394 too 392 great 375 ever 331 own 329 on 329 last 313 still 310 even 286 always 283 most 283 all 269 once 265 quite 261 such 249 young 247 off 245 right 243 many 228 few 219 in 211 new 211 far 198 dear 197 almost Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 115 good 105 least 73 most 42 bad 35 slight 26 great 19 near 14 fine 13 high 12 Most 9 big 7 low 7 happy 7 dear 6 wild 6 late 5 strong 5 old 5 long 5 deep 5 dark 4 young 4 small 4 large 4 keen 4 hard 4 cheap 4 bright 3 vile 3 sweet 3 strange 3 short 3 rich 3 poor 3 nice 3 mean 3 innermost 3 close 3 clever 3 bitter 2 wide 2 veri 2 vague 2 tall 2 smart 2 sharp 2 liv 2 lithe 2 full 2 farth Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 210 most 12 least 11 well 1 greatest 1 fairest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 www.google.com 1 books.google.com Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.google.com/books?id=w7IWAAAAYAAJ 1 http://books.google.com Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 13 _ was _ 9 _ is _ 9 vb did not 5 _ am _ 5 _ does _ 4 _ did _ 4 hand went up 3 door stood open 3 face was pale 3 one does not 3 vb went on 2 _ are _ 2 _ do _ 2 _ have _ 2 _ know _ 2 day was bright 2 door was open 2 door was unlocked 2 doors were ever 2 eyes were bloodshot 2 eyes were grey 2 face was close 2 face was fattish 2 face was radiant 2 john is drunk 2 life has indeed 2 life is good 2 life is so 2 life was so 2 lothian did n''t 2 lothian looked up 2 lothian was really 2 lothian was very 2 man did not 2 man does not 2 man goes west 2 man was back 2 men are so 2 mind had not 2 nothin'' has ever 2 one drink always 2 one was around 2 vb seemed not 2 vb was glad 2 voice was not 2 voice was quite 1 _ are decidedly 1 _ been kind 1 _ been oddly 1 _ come after Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 day was not yet 1 doors were not open 1 drinks are no longer 1 friend is not very 1 hour was not yet 1 houses were not yet 1 life are not true 1 lothian had no one 1 lothian had no suspicion 1 lothian is not here 1 man had no business 1 man has no other 1 man has no time 1 man is no good 1 man is not responsible 1 men had no horror 1 mind had not yet 1 night had not really 1 one is not sober 1 times were not dead 1 vb gave no heed 1 vb had no cause 1 vb was no longer 1 vb was not sorry 1 voice was not quite 1 woman has no glimmering 1 woman took no notice A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 13332 author = Benson, Luther title = Fifteen Years in Hell: An Autobiography date = keywords = Benson; CHAPTER; God; Indianapolis; Mr.; Raleigh; Rushville; day; death; drink; home; lecture; life; liquor; man; time summary = Many times, lying in my bed after a disgraceful debauch of days'' or weeks'' ever mortal eye gazed upon since the opening of the day of time--since the time, and had suffered very intense pain, but for days before her death I Lewisville, where I remained for more than a week, drinking day and night. For ten months from the time I quit drinking and began to lecture, I years, striving all the time, a living, walking, talking death, and cares, thousand times that day I would have drank though it steeped my soul in thousand times by good-meaning men and women, who do not know how to pray A sleepless night--Try to write on the following day but fail--My friends A sleepless night--Try to write on the following day but fail--My friends drink of liquor, soon got drunk, and so remained for days. id = 45525 author = Farjeon, B. L. (Benjamin Leopold) title = The Betrayal of John Fordham date = keywords = Annette; Barbara; CHAPTER; Cameron; Ellen; Fordham; God; Jack; John; Liverpool; London; Louis; Lourbet; Madame; Maxwell; Miss; Morgan; Mr.; Mrs.; Wheeler; good; man summary = God and man sanction it," she said, and I let her have her way. Barbara, however, said she could not eat, and Maxwell cried pleasures which a man at my time of life might naturally look forward "Now sit down, like a good boy," said Barbara, "and send the agent a "Barbara," I said gravely, "it is a strange question, I know, but do "I have had a lovely day," said Barbara, as Annette assisted her to "Annette," said I, addressing the woman in French, "leave the room." dear little home shall be an unexpected pleasure to John,'' I said to "We shall come back," said Maxwell, and I slammed the door in his "Barbara is still alive, dear brother-in-law," said Maxwell, laughing John and Louis Fordham from the street door to the room on the first "He believes you to be dead," said Maxwell to Louis. id = 318 author = London, Jack title = John Barleycorn date = keywords = Barleycorn; Francisco; Frank; French; John; Johnny; Logic; Louis; Nelson; Oakland; San; Scotty; White; chapter; day; drink; life; man; thing; time; way; work summary = life lives, and John Barleycorn gives them the lie." I was five years old the first time I got drunk. To this day I conquer it every time I take a drink. until, after long years, the time should come when I would look up John made men happy in spending good money for beer for a fellow like me who that I was a good fellow ashore with my money, buying drinks like a man. wharf and got ashore in the congregating places of men, where drink Drink as I would, I couldn''t come to like John Barleycorn. Nelson had seen drink-crazed men, and thought I wanted to throw myself And I, the long time intimate of John Barleycorn, knew just what he I never took a drink until my day''s work of writing I took another drink every time John Barleycorn reminded me of what id = 59724 author = Ludlow, James M. (James Meeker) title = The Baritone''s Parish; or, "All Things to All Men" date = keywords = Downs; Phil; Vox; doctor; man; sing summary = "Yes," said the doctor, "I was pleased with the man''s voice. "Doctor," said Vox, suddenly poising the spoon as if it were a baton, "I wish I had your faith, doctor," said Vox, putting his arm around "Well," said Vox, drawing a long breath, and letting it out in a the line of the hymn you gave out to-night, doctor;" and Vox sang: "Yes," said Vox, "I''ve heard Joe Jefferson say that he couldn''t act Vox looked in amazement at the singer--a half-drunken youngish man "You''ve enough rye in you for to-night," said Vox. "See here, Vox," said the doctor, "I am going home alone to-night. "It''s a hard sight, sir," said Sweezy, "but bless you, Mr. Vox, the "Undoubtedly it is so," said Vox, and, seeing the man''s perplexity, man then, Mr. Vox, only a beast; and, if you will believe me, I was not "That," said Vox, "is the greatest compliment a man can have. id = 60671 author = Smith, George H. (George Henry) title = The Last Days of L.A. date = keywords = God; look; man; world summary = street again and head toward the place you always think of as The Bar. A wino edges up to you and asks for money to buy a sandwich and a cup "We''re facing the end of the world," says John, "and you worry about round-faced little man is talking to a few listless people. I know because it''s the Word of God, my friends! says, "Listen to the words of the Space People. People and feel that this world can be saved only through the aid of you people of Earth think of as the head of the government of the good from where you sit but you think it might look even better up "The Power of God will save you," she says to the little boy now "I think they''re tingling a little," he says. Do you prefer to think of some man''s hand running over your id = 41139 author = Thorne, Guy title = The Drunkard date = keywords = Amberley; Bishop; Daly; Dicker; Dickson; Dr.; England; Ethel; Gilbert; God; Herbert; Ingworth; London; Lord; Lothian; Mary; Medley; Miss; Morton; Mr.; Mrs.; Podley; Rita; Royal; Sims; Toftrees; Trust; Tumpany; Wallace; Wordingham; come; girl; good; like; man; think summary = This new man, this Gilbert Lothian, would be great. "Good-evening, sir," he said, deferentially, as Doctor Sims was taken When the door of the house had closed after him, and with Mr. Amberley''s courteous but grave good-night ringing in his ears, Gilbert "Good heavens!" said a huge man with a blood red face, startling in its A little elderly man like a diseased doll, came up and began to Lothian''s own house, a keen-faced man with a pointed beard, a slim, "Dear little Rita," he said, as he held her hand outside the door of "Look here, Doctor," he said after a moment, "I spoke like a fool, "Of course," he said, talking in a quiet man-of-the-world voice, "_I_ "Poor little man," Rita said, looking at the sad face of the comedian. "Gilbert Lothian is coming here during this afternoon," he said. "Mr. Gilbert Lothian, I think," the pleasant-looking man said, staring id = 35866 author = Titus, Harold title = "I Conquered" date = keywords = Avery; Captain; Colt; Danny; Gail; Jed; Kelly; Lenox; Ranger; Thorpe; Young; eye; hand; horse; look; man; rhue summary = Danny raised his hands in a half-gesture of pleading, but the old man "Look here, boy," the man said, stepping close, "you was crazy for "Come on!" the man snapped, turning to look at the loitering Danny. The little man''s voice rose shrilly and his eyes flashed until Danny, Jed put a hand on the boy''s shoulder and gazed into the drawn face. The horses came toward him, and Danny, at Jed''s shout, commenced to Jed loosed his cinch before he answered: "Horses is like some men. "Look!" the old man said in a low voice, pointing into the gulch. And the boy thought he heard the older man thank his God. Without words, they unharnessed and went to the cabin. He said to Jed: "This man insulted the Captain. "I think he''ll come to like you," said VB, looking from his horse to "Ain''t this a good place, VB?" Jed asked, turning his eyes away from a