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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 11 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 85304 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 82 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 King 6 General 4 Napoleon 3 french 3 William 3 Sir 3 Land 3 Henry 3 Hannibal 3 English 3 England 2 spanish 2 british 2 Wizard 2 Wellington 2 Waterloo 2 Uncle 2 St. 2 Spaniards 2 Saxon 2 Prussians 2 Pompey 2 Ozma 2 Nome 2 Mr. 2 John 2 Harold 2 Harald 2 Guph 2 God 2 France 2 Duke 2 Dorothy 2 Colonel 2 Charles 2 Captain 2 Aunt 1 thing 1 swedish 1 ship 1 roman 1 persian 1 order 1 man 1 look 1 illustration 1 greek 1 great 1 german 1 fire Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 3539 man 1880 time 1181 day 1147 army 1144 father 1130 battle 1123 hand 1071 way 968 head 924 fire 900 enemy 844 place 828 ship 812 line 768 war 725 troop 681 officer 658 side 653 boy 645 people 641 eye 621 thing 617 soldier 615 king 612 order 611 arm 607 part 605 house 593 one 593 country 583 moment 574 night 569 force 560 year 559 cavalry 534 face 530 horse 519 foot 497 gun 485 water 472 life 468 nothing 467 sword 463 word 460 friend 457 ground 454 boat 443 attack 425 tree 423 hour Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2114 _ 1300 King 809 Dorothy 710 Pomp 627 Morgan 601 John 587 George 559 General 524 Charlie 469 Hugh 435 Sir 417 Oz 384 Napoleon 382 England 372 Mass 356 Ozma 342 English 339 Glumm 331 Duke 317 France 315 Henry 308 French 285 thou 278 Hannibal 277 Lion 277 Indians 271 Mr. 259 Aunt 250 Em 249 Wizard 238 Toady 238 Captain 231 William 223 Wellington 212 Lord 201 Charles 200 Nome 195 Harald 193 Smith 189 Uncle 189 Land 188 de 184 Rome 181 Colonel 179 Nelson 178 Prissy 176 Master 169 Alric 167 Earl 164 Guph Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 10638 i 9868 he 8571 it 5325 they 5288 you 3801 we 3584 him 3202 them 2146 me 1870 she 1321 us 885 himself 676 her 478 themselves 262 myself 177 thee 177 itself 132 one 123 herself 86 yourself 86 ''s 80 ourselves 69 ''em 55 mine 28 yours 28 his 22 ours 18 ye 15 em 11 theirs 10 thyself 7 hers 6 umself 5 oo 3 yourselves 3 thy 3 oneself 2 suddenly-- 2 ob 2 ifs 2 hisself 1 window,--"you 1 um 1 this:-- 1 thee-- 1 stones:-- 1 on''t 1 no?--then 1 mineself 1 forth-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 33609 be 12614 have 4822 say 4596 do 2633 go 2469 come 2407 see 2260 make 1901 take 1684 know 1453 get 1295 give 1217 think 1213 look 1055 find 886 tell 861 stand 845 seem 803 leave 794 hear 782 fall 749 keep 701 fight 689 ask 663 bring 661 run 645 let 641 begin 627 turn 618 hold 616 follow 616 feel 587 cry 580 send 550 carry 545 lie 539 lead 535 put 531 try 529 pass 511 call 486 speak 481 break 462 want 460 become 440 draw 435 show 428 reply 409 reach 400 use Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 6718 not 2632 so 2292 up 2230 then 1759 now 1728 great 1664 more 1512 out 1422 well 1337 down 1335 good 1270 other 1265 as 1251 only 1213 very 1191 little 1111 long 1053 here 1051 first 1050 back 966 there 916 again 903 away 839 own 812 much 798 many 795 off 779 on 776 too 714 never 704 french 702 most 687 once 683 just 674 last 669 still 652 even 640 old 631 soon 622 few 616 all 594 such 575 same 535 right 513 british 502 far 498 also 493 enough 468 ever 449 always Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 327 good 161 least 146 most 92 great 53 near 52 high 49 bad 37 slight 31 brave 30 large 26 strong 21 Most 19 deep 16 small 15 eld 14 heavy 14 fine 13 low 12 noble 12 early 11 young 11 able 10 wise 10 fierce 9 fair 9 bold 8 late 8 farth 8 big 7 stout 7 stern 7 old 6 weak 6 lovely 6 easy 6 clever 5 thick 5 strange 5 long 5 happy 5 dark 5 close 4 wild 4 rich 4 nice 4 fast 4 dear 4 broad 4 bright 4 black Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 556 most 34 well 30 least 3 near 2 worst 1 sayest 1 mischievous--(_bang_!)--young--(_bang 1 hard 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 _ do n''t 6 dorothy was much 6 father did not 6 man does not 5 _ is _ 5 king did not 5 king is not 5 man is not 5 men fell fast 4 king had already 4 man is capable 4 time went on 3 _ are _ 3 army was now 3 eyes were full 3 father came in 3 king is always 3 man is always 3 men are not 3 men were still 3 pomp was not 3 soldier is not 2 _ did _ 2 _ did n''t 2 _ do _ 2 _ has _ 2 _ was _ 2 _ was so 2 army is not 2 army knew perfectly 2 army was so 2 battle was not 2 battle was now 2 battle was over 2 boy was so 2 boy was too 2 boys had not 2 day is long 2 day is n''t 2 days is so 2 dorothy did n''t 2 dorothy had already 2 dorothy had ever 2 dorothy had many 2 dorothy left bunbury 2 dorothy looked back 2 dorothy ran up 2 dorothy turned hastily 2 dorothy was curious 2 dorothy was delighted Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 dorothy was no bigger 2 dorothy was not quite 2 enemies have not yet 2 father made no reply 2 hands were no thicker 2 king is not so 2 people seemed no longer 1 _ do not _ 1 armies is not surprising 1 armies were not equal 1 army is not really 1 battle has not yet 1 battle was not so 1 battle was not yet 1 boy was not visible 1 day is no novelty 1 enemy is not far 1 enemy is not so 1 enemy was no longer 1 father has no right 1 father made no effort 1 fire was not more 1 hands have no longer 1 hands were not free 1 hands were not very 1 king has no intention 1 king has no quarrel 1 king has no real 1 king is not likely 1 king was not willing 1 kings are not gods 1 line was not exactly 1 man had no sons 1 man is not so 1 man is not yet 1 men are not devils 1 men are not likely 1 men are not loaded 1 men had not even 1 men made no distinction 1 men were not better 1 men were not so 1 morgan had no one 1 officer is no better 1 peoples are not always 1 pomp made no sign 1 pomp was not long 1 pomp was not there 1 side was not very 1 soldier is not indeed A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 7294 author = Ardant du Picq, Charles Jean Jacques Joseph title = Battle Studies; Ancient and Modern Battle date = keywords = Ardant; Caesar; Colonel; English; Footnote; France; Gauls; General; Hannibal; Napoleon; Picq; Pompey; Prussians; Romans; battle; cavalry; day; enemy; fire; french; order summary = Colonel Ardant du Picq''s "Battle Studies" is a French military "Armies of to-day gain decisions by action in open order, where each Collective man, a disciplined body of troops formed in tactical battle What methods caused the soldiers of a Roman army to fight most In order to conquer enemies that terrified his men, a Roman general After the skirmishing of the light infantry troops, the foot-soldiers forty-five thousand men gave way, and, merely between the battle field confusion and the vacillation of firing lines, men and commanding army, with a division, with a regiment on the day of battle, fights. Let the battalion commander of the troops of the second line entirely Troops in close order can have only a moral effect, for the attack, or cavalry, seasoned by long wars, and officers and men of very firm "In this battle the cavalry did not attack the Romans in front, but, id = 21730 author = Ballantyne, R. M. (Robert Michael) title = Erling the Bold date = keywords = Ada; Alric; Christian; Glumm; Guttorm; Hake; Haldor; Harald; Hauskuld; Herfrida; Hilda; Horlingdal; Kettle; King; Norway; Springs; Ulf; Ulfstede; erling; man; thing summary = "Glumm is no doubt anxious to try his hand," said Erling, who stood "I tell thee, Ulf," said Haldor, "thou wilt do wrong to fare to the With four such men as Haldor, Erling, Ulf and Glumm in front, the left "Thou wert ever prone to court danger, Glumm," said Erling with a laugh, Like his men, King Harald was armed from head to foot, with "I have sent for thee, Erling," said the King, in a voice so soft, yet "Hush, Glumm," said Erling, with a smile, "thou must be respectful if "Thou wilt do so at thy peril," said Erling; "Hake fell to my hand, and "King Harald would speak with thee," said the man, who was no other than "Fear not, my friend," said Erling; "now that I have seen King Harald a "Now, Erling and Glumm," said he, "we must do a little fighting before I id = 41667 author = Baum, L. Frank (Lyman Frank) title = The Emerald City of Oz date = keywords = Aunt; Dorothy; General; Guph; Henry; King; Land; Nome; Ozma; Uncle; Wizard; illustration summary = Ozma of Oz, stole my Belt and carried it away with her," said the King, of Oz, and saw the Magic Belt in Ozma''s palace," replied the King with a Aunt Em once said she thought the fairies must have marked Dorothy at so, as I said, only peace and happiness reigned in Oz. For some time Ozma has ruled over this fair country, and never was Ruler About the time Dorothy went to Ozma the Nome King called his Chief eyes fell upon Dorothy, and she said: "D-d-d-don''t that look like our people our Princess Dorothy''s beloved Uncle Henry and Aunt Em, who will "And now," said Ozma to them, "Dorothy will show you the rooms prepared telling of the tunnel the Nome King was building, he said he had come to "Seems to me," said Dorothy, "it''s a great thing to be a King." id = 517 author = Baum, L. Frank (Lyman Frank) title = The Emerald City of Oz date = keywords = Aunt; Dorothy; General; Guph; Henry; King; Land; Nome; Ozma; Uncle; Wizard summary = of Oz, and saw the Magic Belt in Ozma''s palace," replied the King with Aunt Em once said she thought the fairies must have marked Dorothy at destroyed; so, as I said, only peace and happiness reigned in Oz. For some time Ozma had ruled over this fair country, and never was "Tell me about it, Dorothy," said Ozma, with ready sympathy. "I''m not sure that they believe in the Land of Oz," said Dorothy, About the time Dorothy went to Ozma the Nome King called his Chief her eyes fell upon Dorothy, and she said: "D-d-d-don''t that look like people our Princess Dorothy''s beloved Uncle Henry and Aunt Em, who will "And now," said Ozma to them, "Dorothy will show you the rooms prepared "Your hen has very bad manners, Dorothy," said Aunt Em, looking "Seems to me," said Dorothy, "it''s a great thing to be a King." id = 4061 author = Creasy, Edward Shepherd, Sir title = The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World: from Marathon to Waterloo date = keywords = Alexander; Allies; Arminius; Asia; Athenians; Athens; Attila; Burgoyne; Charles; Darius; Duke; Emperor; England; English; Europe; France; General; God; Greece; Hannibal; Harold; Hasdrubal; Italy; King; Louis; Marathon; Marlborough; Miltiades; Napoleon; Norman; Prussians; Rome; Russia; Saxon; Spain; St.; Waterloo; Wellington; William; british; french; german; greek; persian; roman; spanish summary = old men, who had been left to guard the city, fought and won a battle formed his army in order for battle, and directing them to advance general who finally defeated the great Carthaginian, and the English of power between the English and Norman nations; a battle the most strong places; and she had defeated an English army in a fair field veteran army on Philip''s side, which, under his great general, the that followed, in which the French armies were generally victorious the line of the war, in the Netherlands, the French armies were to act The English army in Spain is defeated at the battle of Almanza. American war, did but little to restore the general tone of the army. The great battle which ended the twenty-three years'' war of The first line of the French army was formed of the two corps commanded id = 39340 author = Crockett, S. R. (Samuel Rutherford) title = The Surprising Adventures of Sir Toady Lion with Those of General Napoleon Smith An Improving History for Old Boys, Young Boys, Good Boys, Bad Boys, Big Boys, Little Boys, Cow Boys, and Tom-Boys date = keywords = Billy; Burnham; Carter; Cissy; Donald; Donnan; Edam; General; Hugh; Janet; John; Lion; Mr.; Napoleon; Nipper; Picton; Priscilla; Prissy; Sammy; Sheepshanks; Sir; Smith; Standard; Toady; Windy summary = PRISSY, HUGH JOHN, AND SIR TOADY LION. PRISSY, HUGH JOHN, AND SIR TOADY LION. But now Hugh John had forgotten Prissy and Toady Lion, "after Hugh John threw the stone, the horrid boys all came and said "Do you know me?" he said, giving Hugh John''s second sorest hand such "This, Hugh," said his father, with a little wave of his hand, "is Mr. Mant, the Chief Constable of the county. Hugh John got out of the window slowly, leaving Sir Toady Lion asleep "All right, you can tell my father that!" said Hugh John coolly, "I have not done any of these things," said Hugh John; "I don''t like "Toady Lion isn''t a little pig," said Hugh John, with dignity; "he is "But I thought you liked it, Cissy," said Hugh John, who did not know "Come on, Hugh John--the time is up!" said his father from the side of id = 21320 author = Fenn, George Manville title = Mass'' George: A Boy''s Adventures in the Old Savannah date = keywords = Bruton; CHAPTER; Colonel; General; George; Hannibal; Indians; Injum; Mass; Master; Morgan; Pomp; Pompey; Preston; Sarah; Spaniards; come; father; look summary = "Yes, sir; that''s right," said Morgan, "and the blacks are put to work "Yes--father said so," I replied in a whisper, as I looked cautiously "No, Master George, boy, so your father said; and I''m going to ask him "Call the boy," said my father, looking hard at the man, and pointing to "Mass'' George like to come dis end?" said Pomp. "Look here, Pomp," I said; "we need not climb a tree; it''s a great "Yes, father," I said; and I was on my way back, passing Pomp, who began "Now, Mass'' George," said Pomp, as we stood at the foot of the tree, and "Why, Pomp," I said, "don''t look like that." For though I felt a little "That''s right, boy," said my father to Pomp, who was eagerly watching "No," I said; but Morgan turned to me quickly, as Pomp looked id = 19255 author = Fitchett, W. H. (William Henry) title = Deeds that Won the Empire Historic Battle Scenes date = keywords = Brest; Captain; Cochrane; England; Frenchman; Guard; Hermione; Napier; Napoleon; Nelson; Soult; Spaniards; St.; Victory; Villeneuve; Waterloo; Wellington; Wolfe; british; english; french; great; ship; spanish summary = British fleet, and as the great Spanish ships closed round her and French fleet consisted of 25 ships, manned by 15,200 men, and carrying The British fleet numbered 23 ships, with 13,295 men, and aid, and at one time no less than seven French line-of-battle ships fire-ships behind him, towards the French fleet, backed by great shore commanded the whole of the British ship, and with it the French opened which hid the French ships from Nelson''s lookout men changed the face The average French 80-gun ship in every detail of fighting strength is, five British line-of-battle ships were inside the French line, have put into battle-line a fleet of fifty great ships and twenty-five and captured a fine French battle-ship of 74 guns! his ships out to meet Nelson in his last great sea-fight. than five French line-of-battle ships during the fight, finding two French and one Spanish line-of-battle ships until she was id = 18357 author = Henty, G. A. (George Alfred) title = A Jacobite Exile Being the Adventures of a Young Englishman in the Service of Charles the Twelfth of Sweden date = keywords = Augustus; Captain; Carstairs; Charles; Charlie; Harry; Jervoise; Jew; King; Marmaduke; Mr.; Russians; Sir; Stanislas; Sweden; Warsaw; William; swedish summary = carry himself all the better if, like Charlie, he had an hour a day "You will know all about it in time, lad," his father said. "Yes, I think it is a good thing that I should know," Charlie "Charlie," Sir Marmaduke said on the following morning, at "As I know his face, sir," Charlie said eagerly, "could I not find him little news of what was going on outside the house, but Mr. Jervoise might be able to tell him something about his father, "There is not a soldier in his army but likes him," Charlie said "The king did not think of that," Charlie said. this time of the year," the count said to Charlie. "It is a quiet-looking little place," Charlie said, "and does but a "I think, Charlie," Harry said, "it would be a good thing for us to "He is both, sir," Charlie said; "but, like Major Jervoise, an id = 44852 author = Lamplough, Edward title = Yorkshire Battles date = keywords = Archbishop; Duke; Earl; Edward; England; English; Fairfax; Harold; Henry; John; King; Lord; Northumberland; Richard; Robert; Saxon; Scotland; Scots; Sir; Thomas; William; York summary = before the charges of the royal troops, when an arrow smote the King, the days of King Athelstan the famous battle of Brunanburgh was fought Harold King of Norway and Tosty the Earl slain, and numberless On the field of Senlac King William built the famous Battle Abbey, Robert, the eldest of King William''s sons, was passed over by his Early in his reign King John visited York, and held a convention, King Edward was not long in reaching Pontefract with his army; when King Edward directed his first essay in arms against the Scots, in the Duke of York, Thomas Neville, son of the Earl of Salisbury, Edward, Earl of March, Richard''s eldest son, was at Gloucester when Henry was deposed by the Yorkists, and the Earl of March declared King At York Edward executed the Earls of Devonshire and Ormond, Sir army; York was closely invested, its fall was imminent; and King id = 15948 author = Morris, William title = The Hollow Land date = keywords = Arnald; Florian; God; Harald; Hollow; Land summary = Then, one night, as I lay dreaming, I felt a hand laid on my face, and loudly: I looked in quietly, and saw a big man with long black hair, Florian": and I saw his great stern face bare among the iron, for he while I took ten men, and went to look for Swanhilda. Then she said, "0 false knight, show your warrant from God, man, or "This warrant from God, Swanhilda," he said, holding up his sword, great body of knights, at the head of them Red Harald and the king, But I felt my brother''s hand leave mine, and saw him turn his horse''s holding their long spears out, I went back -back, back, I saw what Then Red Harald came and stood on the precipice above me, his great But I turned my eyes and wet face to her, and said: "Do not curse me