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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 13146 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 93 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 love 4 heart 3 hour 2 like 2 light 2 hand 2 eye 2 day 2 Verhaeren 2 Les 2 God 1 Émile 1 woman 1 wind 1 white 1 thy 1 soul 1 old 1 man 1 long 1 gold 1 garden 1 flower 1 far 1 dream 1 die 1 death 1 Thy 1 November 1 Mercure 1 Mary 1 Lord 1 France 1 Brussels Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 316 heart 294 eye 242 hand 222 day 201 soul 196 love 157 flower 155 life 155 hour 149 light 144 night 140 wind 130 garden 120 sun 120 evening 117 gold 110 sky 100 fire 93 man 87 time 87 dream 84 kiss 84 joy 80 word 80 shadow 77 dawn 77 arm 76 voice 75 silence 75 body 73 water 72 rose 71 summer 71 sea 70 woman 70 lip 69 nothing 62 year 62 tree 61 thing 60 death 59 thought 59 desire 58 foot 58 flame 57 rain 57 earth 56 world 55 window 55 horizon Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 295 _ 59 thou 51 o''er 49 Verhaeren 48 Les 36 God 32 la 30 de 30 France 27 Mercure 27 La 26 Thy 24 Brussels 23 Mary 21 et 20 des 19 Le 19 George 18 Lord 17 le 17 Love 16 heaven 16 June 16 Gilkin 14 wan 14 un 14 XVII 13 VI 13 Thou 13 Mockel 13 IV 13 Georges 12 Émile 12 XXV 12 XVI 12 XV 12 XI 12 Time 12 St. 12 Maeterlinck 12 Heaven 11 van 11 eve 11 XXVI 11 XIV 11 VII 11 Saint 11 O''er 11 November 11 Jesus Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 563 i 456 you 397 it 346 they 273 we 243 he 230 us 213 them 207 me 151 she 74 him 69 her 42 thee 30 itself 24 ourselves 20 one 19 myself 18 themselves 17 mine 15 himself 11 ours 8 yourself 8 herself 7 thyself 6 yours 4 theirs 2 thy 1 ye 1 thou 1 pale?--of 1 oneself 1 hovering,-- 1 his 1 hers Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 1810 be 488 have 181 come 165 see 132 know 122 make 109 let 108 love 105 do 101 go 100 fall 87 live 85 feel 79 say 75 hear 74 seem 74 die 73 give 70 hold 70 grow 70 bring 68 pass 61 burn 53 look 52 lie 49 sing 48 shine 48 light 45 find 44 take 44 bear 43 think 42 turn 42 fill 41 seek 40 break 39 open 38 sleep 36 rise 36 follow 35 close 34 wait 34 leave 33 speak 32 keep 32 hide 31 shed 30 watch 30 tremble 30 tell Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 245 so 220 not 169 long 150 more 147 still 141 now 121 old 110 out 109 far 91 then 88 great 85 other 81 deep 80 here 79 golden 78 white 76 there 76 bright 75 up 75 down 74 never 73 pure 72 last 72 ever 69 sweet 67 yet 64 heavy 62 too 59 dead 59 blue 58 even 58 again 57 clear 55 poor 54 black 53 slow 52 gentle 51 simple 48 high 48 away 46 tired 46 as 44 pale 43 own 43 no 43 good 42 full 40 well 40 green 39 red Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 good 6 fair 4 least 3 sweet 3 pure 3 black 3 bl 2 temp 2 simple 2 saintli 2 proud 2 pleasant 2 most 2 high 2 great 2 full 2 deep 2 dark 2 c'' 1 z 1 young 1 wretched 1 weak 1 warm 1 wan 1 sure 1 supreme 1 strong 1 stingy 1 stern 1 steady 1 soft 1 slight 1 serene 1 rich 1 noble 1 manif 1 mad 1 low 1 lovely 1 loud 1 lofty 1 l 1 keen 1 grave 1 glad 1 gentle 1 frail 1 fine 1 eld Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 30 most 1 well 1 mildest 1 liest 1 least 1 brightest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.archive.org 1 www.freeliterature.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.freeliterature.org 1 http://www.archive.org/details/contemporarybelg00bithuoft 1 http://www.archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 life is calm 4 soul has never 3 garden is health 3 heart has never 2 eyes were franker 2 garden was gay 2 kisses were so 2 night is so 2 silence is such 2 sky was purer 2 sun was scarcely 1 _ is full 1 arms are no 1 arms are tired 1 dawn is nigh 1 day be minister 1 day burns glorious 1 day comes xxv 1 days are also 1 days are death 1 days grow wintrier 1 days lived alike 1 days was good 1 days was kind 1 dream was mad 1 dreams come true 1 dreams falling quick 1 evenings hold night 1 eyes are beauteous 1 eyes are brilliant 1 eyes are closed 1 eyes are pools 1 eyes gave love 1 eyes grew dim 1 eyes had speech 1 eyes have metallic 1 eyes is heaven 1 eyes lit up 1 eyes look down 1 eyes see nothing 1 eyes were as 1 eyes were then 1 fires are now 1 garden were fear 1 hand held fast 1 hand is cold 1 hand makes bloom 1 hands are clasped 1 hands are raw 1 hands are summer Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 arms are no longer 1 garden is no longer 1 kisses know no longer 1 soul is no longer A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 33792 author = Verhaeren, Emile title = Poems of Emile Verhaeren date = keywords = God; Les; November; Verhaeren; like; long; white; wind summary = Knee-deep in water great black oxen stand, Like eyes immense and feverish open wide, See the old bell-ringer, frenzied with fear. Toward the dream-like horizons that bound the night; Yea, snow and want round the souls creep close, At every hour, till the day doth wane; The grave-digger hears far off the knell, Beneath weary skies, of the passing bell, The grave-digger yonder doth hear the knell, As the savage, fierce wind of November doth pass! Swift down from above, like a lightning-stroke flashing, Like some great flight of black, in the acre of God. The wind of November! Whose life doth feed, within this garden bright, A virgin love is like a child''s in God. Let wit and wisdom flower upon the height, Round his horse''s head, that no bit doth hold, Like a cry great with faith, to God He strikes through my soul like a fire of gold! id = 45465 author = Verhaeren, Emile title = The Sunlit Hours date = keywords = Thy; heart; like; love summary = This garden where we pass the clear and silent hours? Within thy heart that sleep; Thy peace like purest water undefiled When thy feet wandered into my life''s way Like swans upon the deep blue water-ways. That heaven of thine wherein thy soul And in thy soul let sink the peaceful night; Thy heart, but thou hast naught of fear or strife, For thy soul knows--it is that love may be, Come, let our hearts be true--the day insure That wells up from thy heart and gathers in thine eyes. Enter with thee into love''s full day! I bathe in thy two eyes my soul entire, I bathe in thy two eyes my soul entire, That my two hands against thy heart ne''er cease Oh, let us live out love with all our powers, Oh, let us live out love with all our powers, I seek with thee the garden of our love. id = 45466 author = Verhaeren, Emile title = Afternoon date = keywords = heart; hour; light; love summary = Placing its hands upon the naked forehead of our love, Roses mutely ardent and sweet willed, Your forehead radiant and your heart-beat light. My hands are sweet with the dim hearts of flowers, Contentment, so my sweet and fervent heart Hours of the radiant summer with silence made so fair, In love, live also in eternity. Their soul is the profound and sudden light To love each other through the live-long day Gleam, like the birth of morning fair, That touched my forehead, like the dawn-kissed moss. And, like an eager ship with wind-swept masts, our joy And we work and live forever in the light Like sun that fades before the day has fled, We live with the flowers and the grass, Fervency of sense, of heart, of soul-Fervency of sense, of heart, of soul-Like two hearts drunk almost to pain Hours of fragrant flowering, will you come again? id = 45467 author = Verhaeren, Emile title = The Evening Hours date = keywords = eye; flower; love summary = Tender flowers, light as the sea''s foam, Tender flowers, light as the sea''s foam, So shall our love return once more Our eyes were franker and our hearts more sweet Still I love with all my heart The last light dwells upon your eyes and brow But to-day, with leaf and flower dead, The flowers of their life, they love them faded, Oh, turn on me your eyes of light, for I desire Oh the dear tenderness of sinking day! Our hearts once burned in joyous days Our hearts once burned in joyous days And the flowers of my eyes, pale yet bold, To end thus in your eyes my lovely human life. When you shall close these eyes of mine to light, When you shall close these eyes of mine to light, Oh kiss them long--for all that love afire And know that I shall go away with heart id = 45470 author = Verhaeren, Emile title = The Love Poems (From Les Heures claires, Les Heures d''après-midi, Les Heures du Soir) date = keywords = day; garden; hand; heart; hour; love summary = The moment is so lovely with light in the garden like a wide-spreading flower that opens pure and heart lightly without wounding it, like a hand of loving hands, one evening of clear understanding life is not made for a love like ours. To love with our eyes, let us lave our gaze of lovely silent bed--gentle night whose breezes, the woods'' edges lets the leaves fall slowly like The lovely garden blossoming with flames that The lovely garden blossoming with flames that bright garden we carried in our hearts is the heart of flowers; my eyes shining at having love; and I lived with the fire of your word, and that lives in the fine ruddy garden loves us Since that day, I know what love, pure and bright so great a love springing from our hearts, that be--what matters!--I love our garden still with id = 35524 author = nan title = Contemporary Belgian Poetry Selected and Translated by Jethro Bithell date = keywords = Brussels; France; God; Les; Lord; Mary; Mercure; Verhaeren; day; death; die; dream; eye; far; gold; hand; heart; hour; light; love; man; old; soul; thy; woman; Émile summary = processions of ships sailing, like a dream plumed with wind, down the Tormenting with thy curious eyes my heart. Shall, if You bless it, Lord, like gold resist, Come with thy too red lips and painted eyes! Soul whom the Winter too shall cross ere long, Of virgin gold that glints like noonday suns! I love thee, though the kisses of thy teeth, Her skin a faint rose like a dream that dies. Then to thy reeling brain shall dreams come sailing, And heave above thy breathing like the sea. Shall not our love be like the violet, Sweet? Eyes, as in dream, and heart to meet her sent, Some last, last night will come to close our eyes, There is a long road from my heart unto my soul! Love, and the heart''s long burn, My heart leaps like a beast of light, and rears Like eyes with fever great,