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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 83839 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 79 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 God 4 St. 3 Lord 3 King 3 Church 2 Son 2 Pope 2 Orleans 2 Maid 2 Jesus 2 Holy 2 France 2 English 2 Duke 2 Christ 1 scot 1 saint 1 nay 1 man 1 life 1 come 1 blood 1 Xaintrailles 1 Virgin 1 Vannozza 1 VII 1 Urban 1 Thomas 1 Sire 1 Santa 1 Saint 1 Rome 1 Randal 1 Raimondo 1 Paris 1 Oblates 1 Norman 1 Monna 1 Merlin 1 Master 1 Mary 1 Maria 1 Maiden 1 Lucy 1 Love 1 Lorenzo 1 Lamb 1 John 1 Joan 1 Jeannette Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1396 man 745 life 742 time 733 day 667 soul 593 hand 569 love 525 heart 491 way 469 word 408 thing 389 death 383 eye 367 desire 362 blood 338 woman 338 mother 337 father 334 world 321 voice 312 servant 310 body 310 arm 300 saint 299 mind 295 order 295 light 292 face 291 child 286 name 280 will 278 people 271 town 267 truth 266 grace 263 place 263 captain 261 daughter 259 head 256 letter 254 prayer 252 house 247 year 241 side 240 virtue 238 faith 225 son 225 sin 224 thought 212 night Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1734 God 768 Joan 633 Maid 600 Christ 491 English 483 _ 467 Jesus 464 St. 400 thou 374 Catherine 336 King 335 Church 290 Francesca 274 Holy 228 Orleans 228 France 227 Lord 183 Elliot 171 John 170 JOAN 158 Bishop 151 Father 143 BISHOP 137 Darc 135 Mary 134 Rome 128 Pope 124 Paris 123 Brother 122 heaven 120 Jeannette 114 Duke 113 CANON 109 Thomas 108 Cross 102 Charles 96 Sire 92 de 92 Love 90 Sweet 87 La 86 Gaul 85 vol 82 CHAPTER 81 Dominica 80 Son 80 Master 79 England 78 French 78 Divine Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4926 i 3709 she 3451 you 3274 it 2697 he 1874 her 1721 me 1662 they 1523 we 1301 him 1185 them 845 us 373 herself 302 himself 216 thee 206 myself 194 themselves 190 itself 133 yourself 101 one 79 ourselves 47 mine 39 thyself 16 yours 12 ours 11 theirs 9 hers 7 ye 6 yourselves 6 his 4 thy 3 oneself 2 thou 2 ''s 1 yield.--you 1 xiii.,--they 1 whereof 1 water-- 1 voice)--"they 1 us)--for 1 thee:-- 1 superioress 1 spake:--"it 1 saw''st 1 pray,--they 1 god)--shall 1 elias 1 blushing)--"that 1 alone,--they Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 13164 be 4875 have 1745 do 1364 say 1251 see 862 come 834 give 800 take 772 make 704 know 691 go 438 hear 406 tell 400 hold 383 find 378 seem 373 love 364 fall 345 leave 325 speak 325 follow 317 write 312 let 307 look 289 receive 279 show 271 call 264 bear 263 remain 259 bring 256 turn 254 feel 254 ask 250 think 241 carry 238 put 235 stand 232 crucify 228 send 226 lie 223 pass 221 cry 217 keep 216 wish 209 draw 206 set 205 become 196 believe 193 seek 193 pray Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3034 not 1532 so 937 then 895 now 870 more 734 great 616 own 568 other 566 good 517 sweet 516 up 504 very 478 holy 463 such 441 well 441 little 439 most 422 long 417 only 413 never 406 many 362 even 356 first 344 as 340 ever 329 again 323 out 317 much 309 true 291 thus 289 back 282 down 271 there 258 still 244 poor 242 last 242 here 236 yet 220 forth 219 young 219 therefore 217 same 213 old 212 away 210 far 208 also 186 soon 182 once 178 often 172 no Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 101 most 84 least 79 good 61 high 48 great 22 bad 13 dear 11 slight 10 deep 9 early 8 manif 7 Most 6 near 6 hard 6 eld 6 brave 5 young 5 wise 5 l 5 glad 5 fair 4 swift 4 sweet 4 small 4 noble 4 low 4 heavy 4 giv 3 strong 3 simple 3 minute 3 mean 3 late 3 j 3 holy 3 dark 3 common 3 close 3 bright 2 wild 2 true 2 suffer 2 say 2 poor 2 old 2 loud 2 long 2 large 2 happy 2 handsome Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 338 most 12 well 8 least 2 feelest 1 worst 1 sittest 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?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 ccx074@coventry.ac.uk Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 man does not 4 time is short 3 _ are _ 3 day went by 3 god does not 3 god has not 3 love does not 3 ways are not 2 _ is _ 2 church is infallible 2 days are past 2 english did not 2 english had not 2 god be ever 2 god did not 2 god has so 2 god is love 2 god is not 2 god is now 2 heart was so 2 joan called out 2 joan did not 2 joan is guilty 2 life was full 2 life was not 2 life was worth 2 love is not 2 love is so 2 maid is not 2 maid was not 2 men do not 2 soul is not 2 things are not 2 time does not 1 _ are dupes 1 _ are probable 1 _ be deception 1 _ be true 1 _ found such 1 _ gives _ 1 _ has _ 1 _ is altogether 1 _ is not 1 _ knows _ 1 _ see _ 1 _ seemed _ 1 _ takes place 1 blood is here 1 blood is peasant 1 blood is thicker Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ is not _ 1 church has no need 1 day is not enough 1 day was not less 1 desire is not now 1 desire received no break 1 english had not men 1 god is no respecter 1 god was not incarnate 1 heart had no desire 1 heart is not far 1 heart was not pure 1 life has not yet 1 life was not over 1 love is not ready 1 love is not strong 1 maid had no memory 1 maid knew no word 1 maid was not only 1 man had no more 1 man has no lance 1 man is no match 1 men were no longer 1 mother is not present 1 soul were not sometimes 1 thing was no worse 1 things are not pleasing 1 things go not ill 1 women are not all A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 7403 author = Catherine, of Siena, Saint title = Letters of Catherine Benincasa date = keywords = Bride; Catherine; Christ; Church; Cross; Father; God; Gregory; Holy; Jesus; Lamb; Love; Mary; Monna; Pope; Raimondo; Son; St.; Urban; blood summary = Christ, which has already received in this life the pledge of love for God light and holy desire before God that the soul will seem to fatten on his beholding with great consolation and reverence the servants of God. Beware lest thou do like mad and foolish people who want to set themselves the holy and sweet grace of God. May Christ the Blessed give thee His said words so sweet as to break one''s heart, of the goodness of God. I waited for him then at the place of justice; and waited there with keep that good and holy and true faithful will which I know that God in Remain in the holy and sweet grace of God. Forgive me should I have talked too presumptuously; the love of thy me, since for the love of God and of virtue and of Holy Church I should id = 14781 author = Cynewulf title = The Elene of Cynewulf translated into English prose date = keywords = God; King; Lord; Son; man summary = He was a just king, a war-lord of men. to heaven, unto the Lord of glory. dauntless in battle, bade raise that holy tree, the King Almighty gave unto Constantine victory, 145 my people, and gave unto me glory and war-speed holy tree of glory, the rood of the King, was hid dear unto the King of glory, loved of the Lord the folk:--''Hearken, ye wise of soul, unto a holy men ask of the holy tree and stir up strife concerning O Lord God, eternally, and thou didst hurl thy sin-stained thou, O God of power, didst reveal unto the noble pray thee, O Son of God, Giver of gifts to men, trees the Lord of angels and Prince of glory suffered.'' when Elene bade bring unto the holy city She gave thanks unto God, the Lord of thou hold in thy heart the word of the Lord, id = 8495 author = Fullerton, Georgiana title = The Life of St. Frances of Rome, and Others date = keywords = Blessed; Christ; Church; Divine; Dominica; Don; Francesca; God; Holy; Jesus; Lord; Lorenzo; Lucy; Maria; Oblates; Pope; Rome; Saint; Santa; St.; Vannozza; Virgin; life summary = with Saints in glory, with the Mother of God, with Jesus Christ These kind words filled Francesca''s heart with joy; and from that day In her new home Francesca followed the same mode of life which she had She placed her life in the hands of God, and waited the Francesca''s bed, he said: "I am Alexis, and am sent from God to inquire "Francesca," he said, "you fly to save the child; God bids in your arms, mother, and bless your child." Francesca pressed to her take place the following day; but in the middle of the night Francesca all God''s blessings, will be restored to Rome." Francesca''s exhortations rest she required was time for her soul to commune with God. Dominica, Dominica''s eyes; for here, at least, she was left at peace and with God. She kept a continual silence, and divided her time between prayer and id = 1631 author = Lang, Andrew title = A Monk of Fife Being the Chronicle Written by Norman Leslie of Pitcullo, Concerning Marvellous Deeds That Befell in the Realm of France, in the Years of Our Redemption, MCCCCXXIX-XXXI date = keywords = Brother; Burgundy; Compiegne; Dauphin; Duke; Elliot; English; France; French; God; King; Maid; Maiden; Norman; Orleans; Paris; Randal; St.; Thomas; Xaintrailles; come; nay; saint; scot summary = me, I was too amazed to run in time, so lay skulking in the thick sweetsmelling herbs, whence I saw certain men-at-arms gallop to the crest of a Father, in that country, as I hear, and a holy man like you will be right "And who shall the French lord be, Elliot?" came another voice, a man''s of my daughter''s, as I said, and this a Saint''s Day, when a man may rest thought of leaving Elliot, to whom my heart went forth in love, and of heart and fickle," I said in a jest, "I believe you love that Maid more were coming against them with a great company of men-at-arms and of the next day, in good company, to Blois, whence the Maid was to set forth to said, "were men that warred well against the English," namely, a company "Messire, I have a handful of horse of the Maid''s company," said id = 37399 author = Sue, Eugène title = The Executioner''s Knife; Or, Joan of Arc date = keywords = BISHOP; CANON; Cauchon; Charles; Church; Darc; Domremy; Duke; English; France; Gaucourt; Gaul; God; James; Jeannette; Joan; John; King; Lord; Maid; Master; Merlin; Orleans; Sire; St.; VII summary = But Joan smiled and said: ''Come near, good Father, I shall not fly "Now it will be the turn of the English, thanks to Joan the Maid--the declare Joan truly inspired by God;--if the King then places her at the would lead them to battle, certain of victory with the aid of God. The Maid''s resolute language and the fear of seeing her carry out her "Fear not," Joan said to the King; "I shall JOAN DARC (with a firmer voice)--"My god-mother was a good and wise BISHOP CAUCHON--"So, then, Joan, it was by order of your voices that you JOAN DARC--"I said to them: ''Let us fall bravely upon the English!'' I BISHOP CAUCHON--"Have you entered the words of the said Joan?" BISHOP CAUCHON--"Conduct Joan the Maid back to her prison." JOAN DARC--"Is it not all one--God and His Church?" JOAN DARC--"The voices of my saints--come from God."