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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 12 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 50498 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 66 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 God 7 Church 6 Christ 5 Rome 5 Lord 4 King 4 England 3 man 3 catholic 3 Pope 3 France 2 roman 2 great 2 church 2 christian 2 United 2 States 2 State 2 St. 2 Spain 2 Peter 2 Papal 2 New 2 Napoleon 2 Mr. 2 John 2 Italy 2 Holy 2 Germany 2 Europe 2 English 2 Emperor 2 Crown 2 Council 2 Christian 2 Bishop 1 work 1 right 1 public 1 people 1 nation 1 lordship 1 life 1 knowledge 1 interest 1 illustration 1 history 1 french 1 erastian 1 come Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1537 man 1131 church 1116 power 922 time 882 law 776 people 637 religion 626 authority 608 life 602 order 597 thing 581 world 541 year 529 right 520 government 519 principle 516 word 490 day 488 truth 466 part 465 nature 465 king 455 way 447 reason 440 work 436 mind 411 nation 409 state 375 place 371 interest 370 fact 370 country 368 act 365 matter 361 history 359 subject 352 doctrine 346 question 334 one 334 character 324 pope 324 cause 323 nothing 322 spirit 322 name 321 bishop 315 hand 310 person 299 form 292 idea Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 6767 _ 1362 Church 1172 God 621 Christ 497 Pope 433 Rome 391 Holy 371 8vo 355 France 326 Lord 286 Footnote 278 England 266 Mr. 255 . 250 Catholic 249 King 237 Crown 233 M. 230 St. 230 See 229 State 229 Catholics 209 Government 197 Christianity 173 Father 167 c. 167 II 164 Scotland 156 Jesus 156 Christian 151 Dr. 151 Bishop 149 John 147 New 143 Emperor 139 English 136 Italy 136 Edition 129 Cardinal 128 Pius 127 Roman 127 Revolution 127 Paris 125 pope 124 Germany 120 Charles 119 Europe 117 States 115 de 115 Henry Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6229 it 4571 he 3204 they 1861 them 1629 we 1546 i 1470 him 662 you 608 us 500 himself 437 themselves 371 she 366 itself 304 me 177 her 63 myself 55 one 54 ourselves 39 herself 25 thee 19 ''em 15 theirs 13 yourself 9 ours 9 his 6 mine 6 guelf 4 ye 4 thyself 4 oneself 3 yours 2 e 1 yourselves 1 whosoever 1 whereof 1 viii.--they 1 trite 1 ti 1 thy 1 them:-- 1 sì 1 pattison[27 1 munich:-- 1 man.--they 1 interest:-- 1 ii.--that 1 hitherto 1 hill:-- 1 hers 1 government.--they Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 21157 be 6570 have 1642 do 1299 make 1004 say 801 give 758 take 625 see 557 come 519 become 504 know 500 find 423 call 409 declare 373 think 365 go 352 follow 335 seem 325 bring 325 appear 312 hold 309 show 304 accord 295 speak 292 receive 289 leave 261 begin 246 put 243 set 234 bear 229 believe 225 write 223 feel 220 establish 213 let 204 maintain 196 look 196 keep 195 live 192 lead 191 send 189 understand 188 pass 187 consider 185 continue 184 mean 179 prove 178 stand 178 lay 175 enter Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4077 not 1373 so 1178 more 1048 only 991 great 910 most 897 other 860 such 664 then 659 first 625 own 614 same 597 as 567 up 564 even 545 now 517 religious 516 much 512 good 506 many 503 very 497 well 497 also 482 new 424 therefore 416 human 395 public 379 still 377 thus 374 civil 372 catholic 370 never 364 true 326 out 315 too 311 high 306 long 304 far 296 ever 294 yet 284 ecclesiastical 278 however 273 present 261 real 260 again 259 moral 258 political 258 divine 253 whole 246 less Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 156 good 131 most 119 least 82 high 79 great 42 manif 37 deep 20 strong 19 pure 16 noble 15 bad 13 slight 13 able 12 wise 12 low 12 early 10 large 10 keen 10 full 9 late 9 fine 9 eld 8 near 8 gross 8 fair 8 clear 7 faint 7 bold 6 wild 6 warm 6 small 6 free 5 rich 5 heavy 5 grave 5 dear 5 bright 4 true 4 simple 4 proud 4 plain 4 long 4 l 4 base 3 wide 3 weak 3 sure 3 sincere 3 short 3 severe Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 779 most 18 well 16 least 1 song.--vol 1 noblest 1 lest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 www.archive.org 1 mormontextsproject.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.archive.org/details/danteessaytowhic00chur. 1 http://mormontextsproject.org/ Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 _ is _ 7 man is not 6 church is not 5 _ is not 4 _ see _ 4 church has not 4 time was not 3 church did not 3 church had not 3 church has never 3 church was not 3 man was not 3 people are not 3 time goes on 3 truth is not 2 _ are not 2 _ did _ 2 _ had not 2 christ did not 2 christ had not 2 christ is only 2 church come first 2 church had never 2 church is nothing 2 church is now 2 church is so 2 god is not 2 god is sometimes 2 law was not 2 life is not 2 men are not 2 men did not 2 people called jews 2 people do not 2 pope is inconsistent 2 power does not 2 thing is not 2 time is now 2 world has ever 2 world is full 2 world is so 2 years has not 1 _ appear ridiculous 1 _ appears _ 1 _ are _ 1 _ are interesting 1 _ are irreconcileable 1 _ are marks 1 _ are similar 1 _ are so Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 church has no right 2 time was not yet 1 _ are not exclusively 1 _ did not _ 1 _ had no right 1 _ had not only 1 _ have no godliness 1 _ is no key 1 authority is not only 1 christ bore no such 1 christ has no other 1 church had no more 1 church had not only 1 church had not yet 1 church has not only 1 church have no right 1 church is not only 1 church was no cramping 1 god has no other 1 god is no god 1 god is not liable 1 government had no power 1 king is not now 1 king was not able 1 laws was not anti 1 laws were not vigorously 1 life is not conformably 1 man had no faith 1 man has no wish 1 man has not yet 1 man is not accountable 1 man is not equal 1 man is not pure 1 man was not all 1 men are not commonly 1 men are not equal 1 men had no longer 1 men is not existence 1 nature has no personal 1 nature is no contradiction 1 order was no longer 1 orders is not only 1 people are no longer 1 people are not pleased 1 people are not so 1 pope is not infallible 1 pope was not altogether 1 popes have no right 1 power does not necessarily 1 powers were not consciously A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 37693 author = Alberger, John title = Monks, Popes, and their Political Intrigues date = keywords = Catholicism; Charles; Christ; Church; Council; Duke; England; Europe; France; Frederic; Germany; God; Gregory; Henry; Holy; III; John; King; Louis; Papal; Peter; Pope; Protestants; Rome; Spain; St.; VII; catholic summary = Rome, and each general to the absolute authority of the Pope, who was the absolution and indulgence of the Holy Roman Catholic Church. by the church to the cause of education, that the Pope did, at times, While the Catholic Church imposes on the priests and monks the vow of Catholic, the practice of the church in allowing bishops and priests the holy Catholic Church"--_Bull of Pope Adrian_. "The pope has supreme power over kings and Christian princes; he may universal temporal power; and to this crown Pope Urban V., elected in the holy fathers, pope Gregory VII., by authority of an Italian Council, mission-houses of the church, the popes claimed the exclusive right to consequently led to doubts of the pope''s right to temporal power. those who believed in the pope''s right to temporal power, and those of Catholic princes to the policy and measures of the popes, the id = 40211 author = Carlile, Richard title = Church Reform The Only Means to That End, Stated in a Letter to Sir Robert Peel, Bart., First Lord of the Treasury date = keywords = Christ; Christian; Church; God; Lord; New; Testament; Trinity; knowledge; lordship summary = instructed to allow that the general body of dissenters from the Church present mystery of the Christian Church. and a proving people are necessary to make a Church of Christ. The present state of the Church is, that it is a theatre of mystery, useful exhortation; for revelation of knowledge, or mind, or reason; ministry of the Church more afraid of knowledge than of the people''s Man''s knowledge of existence is of a twofold nature: the things that the mysterious doctrine of the Christian Church, in this way; and I am knowledge of Christ, which is not now in the Church, nor yet among any every Church; the mystery would not pass on the people without them. The mystery of the existing Church, in all its grades of dissent, having The true meaning of Church, is STATE OF MIND. Give the people knowledge in their Churches, and id = 11771 author = Church, R. W. (Richard William) title = Occasional Papers Selected from the Guardian, the Times, and the Saturday Review, 1846-1890, Vol. 2 date = keywords = Bishop; Bunsen; Christ; Christianity; Church; Court; Crown; Dr.; England; English; God; Guardian; Keble; Lord; Maurice; Mozley; Mr.; Newman; Oxford; Pattison; Pusey; Reformation; Renan; Robertson; Rome; St.; State; catholic; christian; great; life; roman summary = conscience to Christianity--when the Church placed her power of large body of persons in the Church of England at the present Court of momentous doctrinal questions, that at the time no one thought much of London is, of course, quite right to let the Church know what he thinks case, of men who cared little for the subject-matter of the questions things impossible to man--a revealed religion, authenticated by God. The shape which this negative answer takes is, as Mr. Mozley points the Christian Church Universal, a real and visible company of men, though every man of sense who thought he had reason for so great a great practical system must be in this world, working with human nature life, you had to go where thought and good sense were not likely to be characteristic, in the Roman Church of the life and ways of the New id = 38391 author = Cunningham, Francis A. (Francis Aloysius) title = The War Upon Religion Being an Account of the Rise and Progress of Anti-Christianism in Europe date = keywords = Bishop; Bismarck; Bonaparte; Cardinal; Church; Concordat; Consul; Council; Emperor; Europe; Father; France; Germany; God; Government; Holy; Italy; Jesuits; King; Napoleon; Papal; Paris; Pius; Pontiff; Pope; Portugal; Republic; Rome; Spain; State; catholic; christian; french; illustration summary = Church Property-Persecution of Religious Orders-The Civil between the years 1693 and 1728 a new work upon the laws of the Church, jurisdiction as bishops of the Roman Catholic Church enjoyed the further proved a God-sent blessing to the Catholic people of the German States; ordered in the churches of Rome, while at the same time the Holy Father great mass of the French Catholic people the Church and the throne were The government had ceased to respect its concordats with the Holy See. It had violated the rights of the churches, and had established itself All the Catholic countries of Europe sent to the Holy Father The Holy Father thus makes it plain that the Church, and Catholics as the head of the Catholic Church, with the Holy See. Catholic Church and the republican Government? By this article the Catholic Church in France At the same time, while Catholic churches were id = 33896 author = Dante Alighieri title = Dante. An essay. To which is added a translation of De Monarchia. date = keywords = 8vo; Che; Christ; Church; College; Commedia; Crown; Dante; Edition; Emperor; Empire; English; Florence; Footnote; Ghibelline; God; Guelf; Illustrations; Inf; Italy; JOHN; LL.D.; Lord; M.A.; Maps; Monarch; New; Parad; Peter; Pope; Portrait; Professor; Purg; Rome; Sir; University; Virgil; Vols; author; come; great; history; right; roman; work summary = great poet with his works; personal interest belongs more usually to ill-mannered, like people who had come in a short time to great state good-nature for the common people, were more popular in Guelf Florence matter, history and nature, good and evil, the beautiful, the peace and liberty in this life are part of God''s great order for civilisation and law, forbad the thought that the great Roman people of his day, the last great works of intellect, belonged to old Rome, government of one prince above all men in time, or in those things and authority with God, at least in the works of nature; he could not make Let A be the Church, B the Empire, C the authority or power of the Writers, and a General Introduction by MATTHEW ARNOLD, Edited by T.H. WARD, M.A., late Fellow of Brasenose College, Oxford. id = 31670 author = Furness, William Henry title = A Discourse for the Time, delivered January 4, 1852 in the First Congregational Unitarian Church date = keywords = interest; man; public summary = is made the direct and plain duty of every man and woman of us to know So, then, the fact that private men are interested in public affairs, indifferent to things of a vital private concern, simply because they life and human rights, ready to shed blood to any extent to gratify the capacity take in things of public concern. country, and for the world--the plain truth is, that ''_no man liveth or any man''s while to suffer, and die any death that a relentless power since, in the very constitution of things, every man''s ''own business'' is nature, he has bound up the life, the interests, the business of the his very nature, then, is it not every man''s own business to know what declaration of human rights before all the world, a people so lavish in one thing that the great Hungarian has to ask of us, for his own people id = 14661 author = Kearns, Thomas title = Conditions in Utah Speech of Hon. Thomas Kearns of Utah, in the Senate of the United States date = keywords = Mormon; States; United; Utah; church summary = That the leaders of the Mormon Church would no longer exercise 3. No apostle of the Mormon Church has publicly protested against that the people of the United States, because the power of this monarchy of the president of the church as the leader, the monarch in fact, every the present president of the Mormon Church and his apostles, who are He had been an apostle of the Mormon Church, but had been Lorenzo Snow, a very aged man, was president of the church when contempt in which that church monarchy holds the Senate and the people of the United States, and of the disregard in which the church monarchy obedience to law the church monarchy pledged the faith and honor of its The church monarch is known to be living in defiance of the laws of God example and precept to the Mormon people that this church monarch is a id = 39622 author = Mangasarian, M. M. (Mangasar Mugurditch) title = The Church In Politics—Americans Beware! date = keywords = France; God; Napoleon; Rome; church summary = power--he obeys God, that is to say, the church, and forgets all about republic and the Catholic church are at swords'' points. Catholic church in America seems to be today just as devoted to the Of course, when the first Napoleon fell, the Catholic church quickly that the church was above the state, and that they must obey God rather the republic it was "Long live France," with the Catholics in power it Encouraged by the flatteries of the church, Napoleon invited the pope to of the church, but--but, the other Catholic sovereigns would not like means that with the Catholic church in power there will be only one church, and that a Protestant could be as pleasing to God as a Catholic. That the Catholic church has no right to call itself the only That there can be state churches in any country other than id = 42331 author = Moor, J. F. (John Frewen) title = The Duty of Submission to Civil Authority, A Sermon Preached in the Parish Church of Bradfield, Berkes, on Sunday, November 28, 1830, on Occasion of the Late Disturbances date = keywords = Christian; God; Lord summary = enforce, from the Apostle''s words in the text, the duty of SUBMISSION TO The command does not say, submit to the king, as _good_, It belongs to God to punish a wicked king, because submission required of Christians, he opposes it to the act of resisting act, if either the king, or the governors sent by him, command us to do God; but they willingly submitted to the punishment which the king to disobedience to his God.[5] And so too the early Christians acted obey God rather than man; then indeed we must act as we have seen the disobey the commands of God. But while we have a king whose throne is by the word of God, our submission to our governors must include power, resisteth the ordinance of God; and they that resist shall If a man "fears God," he will "honour the king;"[16] id = 13200 author = Reformed Presbytery of North America title = Act, Declaration, & Testimony for the Whole of our Covenanted Reformation, as Attained to, and Established in Britain and Ireland; Particularly Betwixt the Years 1638 and 1649, Inclusive date = keywords = Act; Christ; Church; Covenant; England; God; Israel; Jesus; John; King; Lord; Mr.; Popery; Prelacy; Presbytery; Reformed; Revolution; Scotland; Seceders; Synod; Zion; erastian summary = Church of CHRIST in Scotland, constituted in the name of the LORD JESUS contrary to the word and oath of God, and destructive of the church''s affections, this enemy to GOD, and CHRIST, and his church, swearing to constitute and act as the supreme judicatory of the church of Christ, declared contrary to the word of God, and reformation principles founded opposite to the word of God, and covenanted constitutions of both church of the covenanted church of _Scotland_, and the oath of God they, with from their acknowledging the civil power of church men as lawful: from opposition to the word of God, reforming laws, and covenanted acts and ordinances of both church and state, in times of reformation. more; and to acts of both church and state, in times of reformation in Church of Christ, according to the will of God, and her privileges from id = 45006 author = Smith, Joseph, Jr. title = General Smith''s Views of the Powers and Policy of the Government of the United States date = keywords = Congress; States; United; man; nation; people summary = the confidence of man; and left the great body of the people to mourn left the people to _hope_ till the very name of _Congress_ or _State the rights and authorities reserved to the states and to the people, states; the states respectively protected by the national government, The people of other nations, the inhabitants of regions enjoyment of liberty and peace, honored and respected by every nation economy in the national and state governments; would make less taxes For the accommodation of the people of every state and territory, let the nation for the mother bank: and by the states and territories, States_; and let the people of the whole union, like the inflexible In the United States the people are the government; and their united of the United States, by the voice of a virtuous people, I would honor When the people petitioned for a national bank, I would id = 37302 author = Stephens, William title = An Account of the Growth of Deism in England date = keywords = Christ; Church; Clergy; England; King; man summary = intrinsick Goodness of the Law of _Christ_, was sufficient to gain mens create a God for the People''s Worship; ''tis plain, that their Religion rival the Sovereign Power; the _Bishop_''s House like that of the _King_, ordinary Discourses of the _Clergy_, in which the Church of _England_ is Church now is King _William''s de facto Title_; And no Conformity to King had better Titles to his Crown, as the Consent of the People in who own the King''s Right upon the Consent of the People, be still you will be a Son of the Church of _England_ you must hold Kings and Act of Uniformity reduced to be King of the Church-party; and at last, would pay a respect to the Clergy of the Church of _England_, which was Religion of all Christians by their Devotion to the See of _Rome_, i.e. indeed to themselves; and he doubted whether any Church were