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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 60378 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 65 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 money 3 United 3 States 3 Government 2 war 2 gold 2 Treasury 2 New 2 Germany 2 England 2 Bank 2 Act 1 value 1 time 1 thing 1 silver 1 section 1 pound 1 paper 1 merchant 1 manufacturer 1 island 1 currency 1 british 1 applause 1 american 1 York 1 UNCLE 1 Stock 1 State 1 Sir 1 SAM 1 Robinson 1 Reserve 1 Notes 1 National 1 London 1 LAWYER 1 House 1 Exchange 1 Crusoe 1 Credit 1 Committee 1 Clearing 1 Chancellor 1 Capital 1 BANKER 1 American 1 America 1 Allies Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1864 bank 1073 money 855 gold 764 note 750 war 727 time 722 credit 676 country 646 year 605 currency 573 business 543 cent 513 reserve 508 capital 485 amount 414 value 398 banking 396 man 392 people 391 thing 367 deposit 366 dollar 362 debt 355 system 347 power 335 paper 329 per 313 interest 307 issue 304 day 282 fact 274 state 273 coin 272 loan 270 world 269 way 257 law 253 part 252 question 251 price 251 form 237 check 236 purpose 230 million 229 exchange 226 banker 216 bill 210 association 205 use 205 result Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1162 _ 663 MR 580 Bank 541 States 527 United 429 Government 370 Mr. 261 New 254 House 248 Clearing 244 England 235 State 226 National 152 Treasury 146 Germany 140 Act 138 Reserve 133 York 124 Notes 123 Credit 123 Committee 123 American 120 London 113 Mr 111 LAWYER 98 Banker 85 France 84 SAM 82 UNCLE 78 Exchange 71 Congress 67 First 67 Currency 66 Uncle 66 Second 66 Land 63 Boston 61 Sam 58 BANKER 58 America 57 Banks 56 January 55 War 55 Association 54 Capital 53 LABORINGMAN 53 Chicago 52 Sir 50 Third 50 Lawyer Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3469 it 1483 we 1325 i 1228 they 1057 you 802 he 657 them 336 us 280 me 174 him 121 itself 101 themselves 43 himself 34 ourselves 33 she 32 one 19 her 18 myself 5 yourself 5 ours 3 yours 3 theirs 3 mine 3 his 3 herself 1 hers 1 ''s 1 ''em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 12375 be 4054 have 1125 do 938 make 633 pay 568 say 470 take 390 give 382 go 313 use 309 get 303 think 301 issue 284 call 283 want 283 come 278 carry 269 know 258 see 252 find 214 hold 213 seem 207 become 201 put 200 sell 192 increase 191 follow 188 keep 176 receive 175 work 166 meet 160 bring 158 require 154 buy 150 provide 146 show 144 let 140 produce 127 pass 116 need 116 create 114 secure 114 amount 113 consider 111 save 110 raise 110 mean 110 begin 108 represent 108 remember Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1768 not 880 so 749 other 658 only 640 more 546 great 541 now 478 very 451 as 410 same 395 much 384 such 374 out 356 first 343 good 338 just 335 then 333 most 297 well 292 up 270 commercial 269 also 238 financial 233 national 217 large 213 new 205 possible 203 even 196 many 192 therefore 187 present 187 long 183 always 182 own 181 all 173 far 172 legal 167 last 157 however 155 high 154 true 151 less 151 ever 147 real 145 never 144 least 143 necessary 143 here 140 foreign 139 right Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 118 least 79 good 64 great 60 most 32 high 21 large 16 low 12 bad 11 slight 8 simple 8 Most 7 small 7 late 6 early 5 rich 5 full 4 wise 4 wide 4 weak 4 safe 4 near 4 Least 3 strong 3 poor 3 fine 3 easy 3 cheap 3 able 2 wealthy 2 sure 2 minute 2 long 2 broad 2 big 1 true 1 thin 1 strange 1 straight 1 stout 1 stern 1 sound 1 short 1 rare 1 pure 1 old 1 narrow 1 mature 1 lively 1 l 1 hard Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 273 most 26 least 9 well 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 27 war is over 4 money is gold 4 note issue business 4 war goes on 4 war was over 3 debts are good 3 dollar was worth 3 notes are property 3 notes come due 3 notes taken out 3 war went on 2 amount is probably 2 amount was only 2 bank makes less 2 banks have almost 2 banks were not 2 business carried on 2 capital is not 2 capital is once 2 capital is scarce 2 capital is wealth 2 country does not 2 currency is as 2 dollar is not 2 dollar was not 2 government is prepared 2 money is money 2 money is worth 2 money was not 2 notes are not 2 notes are only 2 notes were not 2 reserves are now 2 reserves have not 2 time is not 2 value was not 2 war had not 2 war has already 1 _ do not 1 _ follows _ 1 _ issue flood 1 _ see _ 1 _ was able 1 amount did not 1 amount is likely 1 amount is limited 1 amount is not 1 amount is only 1 amount is unknown 1 amount paid out Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 banks have no capital 2 government has no power 1 bank had no right 1 bank has no control 1 bank has no property 1 bank is not fit 1 banking is not only 1 banks is not difficult 1 currency has no intrinsic 1 dollar was not exchangeable 1 government has no constitutional 1 government has no relation 1 government has no right 1 government is no more 1 government was not able 1 men are not demagogues 1 men having no interest 1 money had no longer 1 money was not capital 1 notes are not property 1 notes were not fit 1 people are not ready 1 people having no general 1 reserves are no longer 1 reserves are not reserves 1 reserves has no effect 1 states has no assets 1 states has no resources 1 time is not far 1 time is not merely 1 time was no criterion 1 times is not quite 1 value was not certain 1 value was not subject 1 year is not interstate A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 52460 author = Emerson, Willis George title = Emerson on Sound Money A Speech, 1896 date = keywords = States; United; american; applause; gold; money; silver summary = THE REPUBLICAN PARTY COMES BEFORE THE AMERICAN PEOPLE ADVOCATING THE MAINTENANCE OF THE GOLD STANDARD AND THE USE OF SILVER AS MONEY, IN circulation the higher priced money, and as a result, we had silver as financial question, is the use of both gold and silver as money; TO-DAY THE COMMERCIAL RATIO BETWEEN SILVER AND GOLD IS ABOUT 32 TO 1. In the countries on a silver basis we find the Central American states single gold coin circulating among the people, moreover, that the silver standard country does not exist where the United States gold dollar, the country by using both gold and silver as currency, than we possibly of gold and silver 118 times in twelve years in trying to balance on the What "Coin" Harvey and the advocates of free silver demand is not advocates of free silver and believers in the false theories of "Coin''s" id = 60029 author = Fowler, Charles N. (Charles Newell) title = Seventeen Talks on the Banking Question Between Uncle Sam and Mr. Farmer, Mr. Banker, Mr. Lawyer, Mr. Laboringman, Mr. Merchant, Mr. Manufacturer date = keywords = Act; American; BANKER; Bank; Clearing; Credit; England; Germany; Government; House; LAWYER; National; New; Notes; Reserve; SAM; States; Treasury; UNCLE; United; York; manufacturer; merchant; section summary = silver dollar, the United States Note, the National Bank Note all money, these United States Notes, Bank Notes and Silver Dollars, the United States Notes are applicable equally to these bond-secured Bank BANKER: These bank notes or this Credit Currency will always be I define a Credit Currency as follows: _a note issued by a bank against The highest note issue of the first United States Bank was $5,900,000, The highest note issue of the second United States Bank was were then issuing notes in the United States, including the 500 banks credit bank note, currently redeemed in gold coin. $3,500 of United States notes, or greenbacks; $4,500 National bank hold a National Bank Note as reserve; but the great State of New York deposits subject to check, and a true credit currency, or a bank note and thereafter no national bank shall hold a United States note as a id = 29499 author = Hirst, Francis Wrigley title = The Paper Moneys of Europe: Their Moral and Economic Significance date = keywords = currency; money; paper; pound; war summary = government which has pledged all its taxes and credit for war or finance the Revolutionary War. By 1781, a paper dollar was worth less the old debts were paid when the paper money was place in history as the classical example of paper money made worthless pre-war rate of exchange the one hundred thousand roubles would be Thus the pre-war parity of marks was about twenty to the gold pound; of equivalent of twelve pre-war shillings in purchasing power. [17] To-day, November 30, 1921, the paper pound is worth about Although an inconvertible paper currency has no intrinsic value, it can times as much paper money had to be printed as at the beginning, to get paper currencies, for the payment of debt, the removal of public they were a year ago, and most of the paper currencies have further inflation--that is, by printing more paper money or id = 40429 author = Wells, David Ames title = Robinson Crusoe''s Money; or, The Remarkable Financial Fortunes and Misfortunes of a Remote Island Community date = keywords = Crusoe; Government; New; Robinson; States; United; gold; island; money; thing; time; value summary = any thing as money which had any intrinsic value as a commodity. value may be used as money, the experience of the islanders and every island its increased volume of money took care to supply by bringing When the people on the island first began to use gold as money, they of gold, in preference to any other commodities for use as money, commodities with which to buy money; and no one who ever had any thing HOW THE PEOPLE ON THE ISLAND CAME TO USE CURRENCY IN THE PLACE HOW THE PEOPLE ON THE ISLAND CAME TO USE CURRENCY IN THE PLACE money--in short, all sorts of useful things, the results of previous pay money shall be, for the time being, equivalent in value to as money which cost little or no labor to produce, in place of gold to pay gold, gradually came once more into use as money on the island. id = 13045 author = Withers, Hartley title = War-Time Financial Problems date = keywords = Act; Allies; America; Bank; Capital; Chancellor; Committee; England; Exchange; Germany; Government; London; Sir; State; Stock; Treasury; british; war summary = Possibility of War--A Short Struggle expected--The Importance of Finance new machinery ought to be available as industrial capital when the war In fact, a great deal of the money now spent upon the war would being by the banks subscribing to Government securities, whether War If the Government is allowed to go on financing the war by increasing War--The Advantages of Direct Taxation--The Government follows the abroad, and selling securities to foreign nations, the warring country extent of the war''s needs the Government will use your money for individual; any work that the Government needed for the war would have Taxation in war-time, when industry''s Expenditure has called attention to the financing of the war by bank Government was not able to raise all the money needed for the war on the war roughly £18-1/2 millions--every Bank of England note issued That new credits will be needed for industry after war