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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 6 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 26026 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 83 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Mr. 3 Bath 2 Sir 2 Lady 1 scene 1 room 1 roman 1 picture 1 illustration 1 great 1 Verney 1 Vathek 1 Travers 1 Tower 1 Sutherland 1 Standish 1 Stafford 1 St. 1 Spicer 1 O''Hara 1 Mrs. 1 Mistress 1 Miss 1 Maxwell 1 Mainwaring 1 Lucas 1 Lord 1 Leslie 1 Kitty 1 Julia 1 Jasper 1 Herschel 1 Griselda 1 Graves 1 Fonthill 1 Duchess 1 Dr. 1 Douche 1 Danby 1 Colonel 1 Caroline 1 Captain 1 Brian 1 Betty 1 Bellairs 1 Beckford 1 Abbey Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 268 hand 262 man 209 lady 205 room 180 eye 177 time 173 day 143 bath 138 woman 138 ft 134 door 128 head 127 face 120 word 120 side 118 heart 115 foot 114 night 114 child 112 sir 108 letter 107 friend 106 mother 105 water 104 life 102 house 101 chair 97 way 88 year 87 picture 86 arm 85 place 85 gentleman 84 world 82 voice 77 window 76 scene 74 morning 74 love 73 step 73 grave 71 nothing 68 wife 68 thing 68 moment 68 boy 66 work 66 hour 66 figure 64 name Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 673 _ 407 Sir 356 Griselda 344 Mr. 331 Lady 295 Jasper 264 Bath 216 Lord 187 Verney 177 Kitty 175 Mistress 140 Standish 138 Travers 131 Betty 129 Leslie 120 O''Hara 114 Stafford 110 Herschel 103 Maxwell 103 Bellairs 102 Graves 90 Miss 83 Beckford 76 Mrs. 59 madam 59 Spicer 56 Street 54 Colonel 53 God 52 Captain 52 Brian 50 Room 50 Danby 48 Caroline 45 Mainwaring 44 Julia 44 Bishop 42 Norah 40 Maria 37 Pump 37 Abbey 36 William 36 King 34 Lydia 33 Dr. 31 Lucas 31 . 30 Wells 30 Villiers 29 Longueville Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2019 i 1473 you 1237 it 1231 he 1127 she 571 me 446 him 393 her 327 we 230 they 190 them 104 herself 97 us 88 himself 46 myself 21 yourself 20 itself 19 themselves 18 one 11 hers 8 mine 7 yours 6 his 5 ye 5 thee 3 ''em 2 je 1 yourselves 1 you"--so 1 ourselves 1 ours 1 graves Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 4733 be 1751 have 1078 say 591 do 277 come 272 see 268 know 265 go 259 make 242 take 239 cry 210 think 210 look 191 give 175 tell 158 find 146 leave 139 turn 132 hear 129 let 120 speak 113 stand 104 seem 104 call 102 get 93 bring 89 feel 85 put 81 pass 79 fall 78 run 74 draw 74 ask 72 write 71 keep 71 begin 70 believe 69 sit 69 hold 66 show 66 rise 65 want 62 wait 58 lead 54 lie 54 follow 52 love 52 fight 51 read 51 paint Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 977 not 376 so 315 then 264 now 229 very 225 little 204 up 198 more 177 never 172 well 170 great 166 here 165 most 161 again 160 out 154 good 150 poor 148 only 134 as 130 long 125 young 125 too 119 old 114 other 113 much 113 down 111 first 110 own 109 indeed 108 last 106 dear 101 once 100 back 94 away 92 many 91 ever 87 still 84 such 82 off 82 fine 81 small 80 low 76 yet 76 beautiful 72 there 72 large 70 enough 67 on 62 same 61 pretty Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 27 good 25 least 24 most 15 great 7 high 6 bad 5 rare 5 fine 4 near 3 old 3 mere 3 low 3 late 3 dear 2 topmost 2 sweet 2 small 2 slight 2 pure 2 pretty 2 lovely 2 large 2 happy 2 fair 2 deep 2 Most 1 witty 1 white 1 warm 1 strange 1 sharp 1 palmy 1 neat 1 loud 1 lofty 1 kind 1 j 1 holy 1 hard 1 grand 1 gaudy 1 foremost 1 faint 1 extreme 1 droll 1 dark 1 close 1 clever 1 choice 1 bright Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 141 most 4 well 4 least Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/3/5/8/13582/13582-h/13582-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/3/5/8/13582/13582-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 ccx074@pglaf.org Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 _ is _ 3 _ are _ 3 _ do _ 3 griselda was not 2 _ am _ 2 bath had then 2 bath is available 2 bath stood north 2 griselda said passionately 2 griselda turned away 2 jasper did not 2 men are so 1 _ go downstairs 1 _ have _ 1 _ have bases 1 _ is music 1 _ know _ 1 _ look _ 1 _ think better 1 _ was _ 1 _ was love 1 _ was then 1 _ were near 1 bath being false 1 bath being still 1 bath called lucas 1 bath goes on 1 bath is new 1 bath is unique 1 bath stands east 1 bath was ever 1 bath was first 1 bath were necessarily 1 bath were simply 1 baths were first 1 betty call loudly 1 betty called out 1 betty had fully 1 betty had now 1 betty said sharply 1 betty says truly 1 betty was far 1 betty was not 1 betty was soon 1 betty was sure 1 betty was too 1 day are more 1 day had nearly 1 day was as 1 day was auspicious Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ having no existence 1 eyes knew no guile 1 griselda knew no more 1 griselda made no reply 1 griselda made no resistance 1 griselda was not asleep 1 jasper made no doubt 1 verney had no answer 1 woman is not ready A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 54336 author = Andrews, D. S. (Douglas S.) title = Bath and Wells: A Sketch-Book date = keywords = illustration summary = 6 The Pulteney Bridge, Bath. 7 The Pulteney Bridge, from the Terrace, Bath. 15 Wells Cathedral from the South-west. 17 The Palace Gateway (the "Bishop''s Eye"), Wells. 19 The Chain Gate, Etc. Wells; from the Central Tower. 22 The Chapel Door, Vicar''s Close, Wells. [Illustration: The Hight Street, Bath.] [Illustration: The Pulteney Bridge, Bath.] [Illustration: The Pulteney Bridge, from the Terrace, Bath.] [Illustration: The North Parade, Bridge, Bath.] [Illustration: Southgate Street, Bath.] [Illustration: The Victoria Memorial, Victoria Park, Bath.] [Illustration: The Doorway, Beau Nash''s House, Bath.] [Illustration: Bath & The Canal from Alexandra Park.] [Illustration: Wells Cathedral from the South-west.] [Illustration: The Palace Gateway (the "Bishop''s Eye"), Wells.] [Illustration: The Cathedral, Wells.] [Illustration: The Chain Gate, Etc. Wells; from the Central Tower.] [Illustration: The Chain Gate, Wells.] [Illustration: Gatehouse to Vicar''s Close, Wells.] [Illustration: The Chapel Door, Vicar''s Close, Wells.] [Illustration: The Bishop''s Palace, Wells.] [Illustration: Wells Cathedral from Tor Hill.] id = 56227 author = Castle, Agnes title = The Bath Comedy date = keywords = Bath; Bellairs; Captain; Colonel; Jasper; Julia; Kitty; Lady; Lord; Mistress; Mr.; O''Hara; Sir; Spicer; Stafford; Standish; Verney; scene summary = "Sir Jasper," said Lady Standish, "you do me proud." She slipped from "How now?" said Sir Jasper, and dropped the little hand that struggled "Sir Jasper," said Lady Standish, looking at him very earnestly, "you "I understand, Sir Jasper, yes, yes," said Lord Verney soothingly, "Let us seek Sir Jasper," said his wife, "and tell him the whole truth." "I am told," said Mistress Kitty musingly, "that Lord Verney has "Sure I have never laid eyes on Lady Standish," said O''Hara to Sir "Mr. O''Hara," said Sir Jasper, "will you shake hands with me?" "Mistress Bellairs!" cried Lady Standish''s flute-like voice. "I was going to Lord Verney to plead for my husband''s life," said Lady "This lady, sir," said Lord Verney, with rigid lips, "has promised to "But, think you, was Sir Jasper at home?" said Mistress Bellairs, after "Sir Jasper," said she, "it never was Lord Verney!" And then she id = 13582 author = Davis, Charles Edward title = The Excavations of Roman Baths at Bath date = keywords = Bath; Douche; Dr.; Lucas; Sutherland; roman summary = the same time that I have brought to light the great Roman Bath, which [Plate VII: A Ground Plan of the Antient Roman Bath lately discovered that the buildings of the baths were filled with water of a height north-west semi-circular _exedra_ of the Great Bath was found, and six the western end of the great bath, as suggested by Dr. Sutherland''s "In 1755, Dr. Lucas discovered a Roman bath, east of, and immediately Lucas''s Bath stood north and south--an important fact to bear in mind, as the great Roman Bath stands east and west--and measured 43ft. in 1763 (1) the north and south walls of the great Roman Bath had been traced to the east steps of the great Roman Bath. little doubt that the steps at the eastward end of a great bath had the room of the great Roman Bath--formed by the length of Lucas''s plan of the great Roman Bath. id = 18809 author = Lansdown, Henry Venn title = Recollections of the late William Beckford of Fonthill, Wilts and Lansdown, Bath date = keywords = Abbey; Beckford; Duchess; Fonthill; Mr.; St.; Tower; Vathek; great; picture; room summary = Mr. Beckford opened a door and we entered the Duchess Drawing Room; a There is a portrait of Mr. Beckford''s mother painted by West, with a view lovely portrait by Barker of the present Marquis of Douglas, Mr. Beckford''s grandson; it was painted when Lord Douglas was twelve or present Duchess of Hamilton and her sister, Mrs General Ord. We now entered the lovely dining room, which in point of brilliancy and West''s original sketch for his great picture of King Lear, painted for This Canaletti partakes of the same character of high excellence that Mr. Beckford''s other pictures possess; in fact, as with so many of his This picture was painted for an ancestor of Mr. Beckford''s. days, and painted the Lazarus." On my asking if he believed it true, Mr. Beckford replied, "Perfectly true, for I saw it lying on the floor and Mr. Beckford opened the door of the great library, and on entering I id = 33055 author = Marshall, Emma title = Her Season in Bath: A Story of Bygone Days date = keywords = Bath; Betty; Brian; Caroline; Danby; Graves; Griselda; Herschel; Lady; Leslie; Mainwaring; Maxwell; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Sir; Travers summary = "Nay, I like neither word," the young man said; "they do not suit you. "I think, sir," said Griselda, rising, "I will rejoin Lady Betty." "With all my heart I accede to your plan, Lady Betty," Sir Maxwell said, Griselda said, looking round the room, now nearly empty. Leslie crossed the room, and bowing before Griselda, said: "Yes," Griselda said, looking straight into the pure, clear eyes which madam?" Mrs. Travers said, as she seated herself with Griselda on one of Griselda clasped Leslie Travers''s arm with both hands, and said: Then Griselda said, "I must return now to Lady Betty. "Perhaps," Griselda said, turning to Leslie--"perhaps you had better pay "Do go--to please _me_, dear Graves," Griselda said. Then, as Lady Betty began to raise her voice, Griselda turned to Sir "No, Miss Griselda--no, my dear!" said Graves. "My poor dear!" said Graves, in a choked voice, kneeling by Griselda''s