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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 13 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 53833 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 87 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 illustration 4 Mr. 2 water 2 french 2 english 2 Trot 2 Stevens 2 Sir 2 Scarecrow 2 River 2 Pon 2 Ork 2 King 2 Jinxland 2 Indians 2 Gloria 2 Desert 2 Button 2 Bright 2 Black 2 Bill 1 tree 1 pop 1 order 1 mile 1 man 1 look 1 long 1 little 1 like 1 great 1 foot 1 find 1 eye 1 european 1 chapter 1 arab 1 World 1 Wingate 1 Walter 1 Valley 1 VEGETABLE 1 Thomas 1 Tad 1 Sweeney 1 Sultan 1 Steppes 1 Stacy 1 Squirrel 1 Spring Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1281 man 964 time 915 water 902 desert 890 foot 791 eye 727 girl 705 way 660 day 644 head 611 hand 594 tree 590 boy 508 mountain 500 animal 484 face 469 life 467 night 454 thing 453 side 435 place 430 horse 386 woman 382 moment 377 voice 377 guide 370 father 369 heart 365 illustration 359 one 356 sand 351 country 348 air 329 part 328 arm 322 ground 321 nothing 305 world 303 mile 299 year 298 pony 286 people 278 region 271 name 271 camp 264 plant 262 room 253 forest 249 word 249 body Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3307 _ 749 Trot 623 Pansy 567 Bill 506 Pearl 405 Ork 394 Tad 351 Scarecrow 350 King 341 Sultan 334 Gallito 331 Grace 290 Mrs. 277 Mr. 276 Le 275 Breton 270 Hanson 249 Desert 229 Pon 229 José 220 Lang 213 Stacy 207 Hippy 205 Ned 190 Gloria 183 Button 174 Bob 170 Africa 169 Flick 163 Oz 163 Dick 159 Professor 147 Seagreave 147 America 145 Parry 140 Bright 135 Jinxland 132 Ammeh 131 Elfreda 131 Bud 125 Barclay 122 Chunky 118 CHAPTER 113 Miss 111 Emma 110 Princess 107 Casim 104 Ozma 104 Indians 103 Europe Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6773 he 6066 it 5548 i 4792 you 3832 she 3209 they 2488 him 1991 we 1760 them 1545 her 1369 me 505 us 429 himself 240 themselves 201 herself 137 itself 130 myself 88 one 75 ''em 58 ''s 53 yourself 33 mine 32 ourselves 28 his 24 yours 21 hers 20 thee 14 em 8 jus 4 ours 3 yourselves 3 ye 2 thyself 1 you?--what 1 whispered,-- 1 theirs 1 talkee 1 it---- 1 i''m 1 hopin 1 exclaim:-- 1 '' Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 20466 be 7323 have 3029 do 1976 say 1483 go 1446 see 1306 know 1251 get 1231 come 1168 make 929 take 914 find 868 look 650 give 649 think 627 ask 594 seem 494 leave 474 tell 448 call 425 stand 417 begin 398 turn 389 keep 388 sit 377 fall 360 want 360 hear 357 hold 355 let 334 follow 333 lie 323 try 323 rise 323 bring 306 grow 299 speak 289 live 285 eat 284 cry 281 become 280 reply 280 meet 280 answer 277 love 273 pass 269 feel 265 reach 264 draw 254 carry Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4813 not 1645 so 1337 then 1292 up 1126 more 1042 now 1007 out 949 little 849 long 824 very 799 great 768 here 753 only 735 other 707 down 701 as 623 there 612 well 607 good 589 most 576 away 572 never 570 much 563 again 559 back 546 just 544 even 539 first 499 too 479 old 470 few 466 far 445 still 403 own 389 all 374 white 373 same 366 almost 365 ever 354 on 353 many 350 small 344 off 338 right 324 once 323 wild 322 large 311 black 308 always 299 such Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 129 most 125 least 115 good 41 great 26 large 25 lofty 23 near 20 low 20 high 20 bad 19 slight 19 Most 17 fine 14 small 12 big 10 lovely 8 wild 8 strong 7 hot 7 handsome 7 grand 6 heavy 6 bold 5 tall 5 swift 5 strange 5 rich 5 late 5 full 4 sweet 4 simple 4 early 4 deep 4 brief 3 tough 3 topmost 3 southernmost 3 severe 3 queer 3 old 3 lucky 3 long 3 light 3 hard 3 faint 3 dense 3 cosy 3 common 3 close 2 wide Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 460 most 16 least 15 well 1 richest 1 near 1 lest 1 jest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/7/4/1/17418/17418-h/17418-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/7/4/1/17418/17418-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 15 pansy did not 7 boy was not 6 pansy was not 5 head is large 4 _ is _ 4 bill got out 4 face was very 4 man got up 4 pearl did not 4 trot did n''t 3 eyes are small 3 girl had not 3 man sat up 3 pansy said nothing 3 pearl had not 3 things is too 3 water did not 2 animals do not 2 bill had not 2 bill is n''t 2 bill knew something 2 bill looked way 2 bill stood up 2 bill thought so 2 bill took counsel 2 bill turned away 2 bill was fast 2 bill was less 2 bill was much 2 bill was not 2 bill were free 2 boy did not 2 boy go out 2 boy was content 2 day is not 2 day was tiresome 2 desert is as 2 eyes are blue 2 eyes were kind 2 face looking upward 2 face was grave 2 face was hard 2 face was purple 2 face was so 2 face went crimson 2 feet was soft 2 feet were still 2 girl is harder 2 girl was almost 2 girl was eager Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 bill had no one 2 bill made no reply 2 bill was not sure 2 boy was not so 2 boy was not very 2 man had no rope 2 man is no longer 2 man made no reply 2 pansy had no desire 2 trot made no comment 2 water is not as 2 water was no longer 1 _ has no other 1 _ have no secrets 1 _ have no will 1 _ is no longer 1 animal is not so 1 animals leaving no ruse 1 day is not far 1 day is not over 1 days is no hardship 1 desert is no picnic 1 desert knows no time 1 desert were not strange 1 deserts are not exhausted 1 face was no courtesan 1 feet having no thumb 1 girl had no idea 1 girl had not even 1 girls had not yet 1 hands were not black 1 man ''s not quite 1 man is not less 1 man is not naturally 1 man knows no law 1 men are not so 1 night had not fully 1 pansy had no clothes 1 pansy had no idea 1 pansy had no intention 1 pansy had no wish 1 pansy knew no arabic 1 pansy was not at 1 pearl had not only 1 tad did not even 1 tad had no thought 1 tad made no reply 1 times was not undeserved 1 tree is no longer 1 water are not so A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 51263 author = Baum, L. Frank (Lyman Frank) title = The Scarecrow of Oz date = keywords = Bill; Bright; Button; Gloria; Jinxland; King; Ork; Pon; Scarecrow; Trot; illustration summary = "Seems to me," said Cap''n Bill, as he sat beside Trot under the big "Longer''n that, Trot," said Cap''n Bill, but his voice was a little "I can''t see where you are," said the Ork. So Cap''n Bill got out another candle and lighted it, and its flame "No; the roof is too low," said the Ork. After the meal they resumed their journey, which Trot began to fear would "We''d like to do that," said Trot, and then she and Cap''n Bill turned Trot laughed, but Cap''n Bill thought the little man was poking fun at him Cap''n Bill and Trot both looked at it and the little girl said in "Either way," said the Ork. Button-Bright put out his hand and tried to spin it. "Oh, yes; all the birds in Mo are educated to talk," said the Bumpy Man. Then he looked at Cap''n Bill uneasily and added: "Won''t you let the poor id = 957 author = Baum, L. Frank (Lyman Frank) title = The Scarecrow of Oz date = keywords = Bill; Bright; Button; Gloria; Jinxland; King; Ork; Pon; Scarecrow; Trot summary = "Seems to me," said Cap''n Bill, as he sat beside Trot under the big "Longer''n that, Trot," said Cap''n Bill, but his voice was a little "I can''t see where you are," said the Ork. So Cap''n Bill got out another candle and lighted it, and its flame then it headed away to the left and Trot and Cap''n Bill lost all sight "No; the roof is too low," said the Ork. After the meal they resumed their journey, which Trot began to fear "Blow out the light, Cap''n," said the Ork, in a pleased voice. Trot obeyed and when she was seated on the Ork, Cap''n Bill inquired: "We''d like to do that," said Trot, and then she and Cap''n Bill turned Trot laughed, but Cap''n Bill thought the little man was poking fun at Cap''n Bill and Trot both looked at it and the little girl said in id = 42361 author = Burdick, Arthur J. (Arthur Jerome) title = The Mystic Mid-Region: The Deserts of the Southwest date = keywords = California; Co.; Colorado; Desert; Indians; Mexico; Mojave; Pierce; River; Valley; find; illustration; mile; water summary = *ANCIENT SEA BEACH, COLORADO DESERT NEAR COACHELLA 11 railroad left a similar line of oases down through the Colorado Desert, feet below sea-level, while portions of the Colorado Desert lie from a of the American deserts are the Great Mojave and the Colorado, the borders are the great salt fields of Salton and of Death Valley, which The Colorado Desert is thus called because the great river of that name [Illustration: ANCIENT SEA BEACH, COLORADO DESERT, NEAR COACHELLA Up in the Death Valley region is a tribe known as the Panamint Indians. Mexico, entered the great desert region, he found peoples equipped with Few mines have been discovered in the mountainous or desert regions of springing up in the great submarine region of the Colorado Desert. In the very heart of the desert, far from food or water, these the great Colorado Desert has been taken from it and placed with the id = 5404 author = Chase, Josephine title = Grace Harlowe''s Overland Riders on the Great American Desert date = keywords = Briggs; Elfreda; Emma; Grace; Harlowe; Hippy; Lang; Mr.; Overland; Ping; Wingate summary = GRACE HARLOWE''S OVERLAND RIDERS ON THE GREAT AMERICAN DESERT GRACE HARLOWE''S OVERLAND RIDERS ON THE GREAT AMERICAN DESERT "Yes, reason in the form of Grace Harlowe Gray," nodded Elfreda "Lang, this is Mrs. Gray and Miss Briggs," said Tom by way of Grace shook her head, her left hand grasped the mane of the pony "I will look after her," said Elfreda Brigg hurrying to Grace''s "What do they want, Mr. Lang!" called Grace, urging her pony up to interested in heading off your journey over the desert, Mrs. Gray?" he asked, bending a searching look on Grace. "The mystery of the desert," murmured Grace Harlowe, but Hi Lang Grace Harlowe and Elfreda Briggs had stepped up close to the water away from Hippy Wingate and Hi Lang, but to this Grace gave no "We have water, Mr. Lang," Grace told him, "Mr. Wingate fell id = 30686 author = Foster, Ethel Twycross title = Little Tales of The Desert date = keywords = Jack; Mary; illustration; little summary = [Illustration: LITTLE TALES OF THE DESERT Cover] place stood the same dear old Santa Claus, whom Mary had seen every year As he sped away over the sand toward the next camp, Mary gave a sigh and "Indeed no, my dear little girl," said Father, "but probably if you On the soft bed lay mother rat and six tiny little fellows you, little girl?" said a tiny voice near by, "you are getting your "Oh, I didn''t know rabbits could talk," and Mary''s eyes grew big and Mary gave a little shudder, for she did remember eating rabbit for But Mary was not in great danger for generally the little reptiles are At first Mary was afraid of frightening it away, but one day it came as Mary stepped back and waited and pretty soon the little fellow After this Mary and the little road-runner soon became fast friends, and id = 36914 author = Gerard, Louise title = A Son of the Sahara date = keywords = Ammeh; Annette; Barclay; Breton; Cameron; Casim; Edouard; George; Pansy; Raoul; Rayma; Sir; Sultan; arab; chapter; english; french summary = The Sultan looked at her, all the time wondering why the white man was "Good night, Pansy, little flower," he said softly. "I thought all girls liked sweet things and lived for love," he said as "They look like Arabs," Pansy said. When night came Pansy tried not to think of Le Breton, but the idea of It was love Pansy had wanted in the moonlit garden with Le Breton''s and annoyance; the look that comes to a man''s face when the girl he for the girl beside him looked very different from the Pansy he knew. There was a hurt look in Pansy''s soft eyes as she watched Le Breton. "Look at that wild man from the desert," the Sultan said. Pansy as he would have her, looking at him with eyes full of love. But if Pansy did not know what the Sultan said, the crowd around her id = 53684 author = Johnston, Annie F. (Annie Fellows) title = In the Desert of Waiting: The Legend of Camel-back Mountain date = keywords = Omar; Shapur summary = On Shapur''s camel was a heavy load of salt. Leaving the camel browsing by the fountain he followed the bee. the City of thy Desire, as soon as thy camel is able to carry thee, Then Omar bade him lead his camel to the fountain, and leave him to So thou, too, shall fare forth some day to the City of thy "Wherever thou goest this sweetness will open for thee a way and win seest a heart bowed down in some Desert of Waiting, thou shalt whisper thy Garden of Omar, and even from the daily tasks which prick thee thy Garden of Omar, and even from the daily tasks which prick thee sorest distil some precious attar to bless thee and thy fellow man." precious attar in thy soul, that its sweetness shall win for thee a welcome wherever thou goest, and a royal entrance into the City of thy id = 43396 author = Mangin, Arthur title = The Desert World date = keywords = ANIMAL; Africa; Alps; America; Andes; Arabia; Arabs; Arctic; Asia; Australia; Bear; Black; CHAPTER; Cape; Central; Desert; Dr.; Egypt; England; Europe; Flora; France; Gramineæ; Guinea; Indians; LIFE; Lake; Livingstone; Mountains; Mr.; Nature; Negro; New; Nile; North; Ocean; Old; Pampas; Polar; River; Sahara; Sea; Sir; South; Southern; Squirrel; Steppes; VEGETABLE; World; english; european; foot; french; great; illustration; like; long; man; order; tree; water summary = ANIMAL LIFE IN THE PRAIRIES OF THE NEW WORLD--CONTINUED:--BIRDS AND English mountains, to which, like all the north-west coast of France, says,[32] "four varieties: A black one, three feet eight inches long, Ala-Tau mountains west, the Great Wall of China south, and the sea east, north wind into ridges like the waves of the sea, often twelve feet Great trees, divided into beams, resemble long serpents which have Desert appears in North America under a form more like the "seas of year; yet a belief long prevailed that a large sea or fresh-water lake as well as a great number of fruit trees belonging both to tropical and large scale all the most useful fruit trees and vegetables of Europe, VEGETABLE LIFE IN THE FORESTS OF THE GREAT ISLANDS. VEGETABLE LIFE IN THE FORESTS OF THE GREAT ISLANDS. ANIMAL LIFE IN THE VIRGIN FORESTS:--THE GREAT APES. ANIMAL LIFE IN THE VIRGIN FORESTS:--THE GREAT APES. id = 31556 author = Otis, James title = Dick in the Desert date = keywords = Antelope; Dick; Margie; Mason; Mr.; Spring; Stevens summary = Young Dick''s mother gave words to her anxiety several times; but the His mother and Margie had entered the wagon when night was fully come, "I won''t go so far but that I can see the wagon," Dick said, kissing trying to follow father''s trail," Dick said, after looking around in Dick was hungry, but scorned to let his mother know it, and tried to learn to do early in life, Dick saw his father''s rifle twenty feet or "You''re a good boy, Dick," she said, as he stooped over to kiss her; Frightened though he was, Dick knew water was the one thing his father Dick took up his father''s rifle,--his own he had left in the wagon when "The boy has got grit; but the old man must have been way off to come as "Bob Mason," said to Dick, as he laid his hand on the boy''s id = 36423 author = Patchin, Frank Gee title = The Pony Rider Boys in the Alkali; Or, Finding a Key to the Desert Maze date = keywords = Boys; Bud; Chunky; Ned; Parry; Pony; Professor; Rider; Stacy; Stevens; Tad; Walter summary = Diamond Range," replied Tom Parry, who was to guide the Pony Rider Boys not?" questioned Tad. The guide, for the moment lost in thought, finally turned to the lad "Now, will you be good, Ned Rector?" laughed Tad. Even the stolid face of the guide relaxed in a broad smile of amusement. "Salting down horse is not my business," laughed Ned. All at once the pony whirled, heading down the mountain side with a "He''s on the desert!" shouted Tad. Laughing and shouting words of encouragement to the fat boy, the Pony "Well, good night, boys," called the Professor, as he saw the lads The animals have stopped howling," advised Tad. Ned and Stacy ran lightly to their tents, returning quickly with their "There comes the sun now," said Ned. The boys drew out their watches, having halted the ponies and turned id = 17418 author = Woodrow, Wilson, Mrs. title = The Black Pearl date = keywords = Black; Bob; Colina; Flick; Gallito; God; Hanson; Harry; Hughie; Jimmy; José; Lolita; Mr.; Mrs.; Nitschkan; Pearl; Seagreave; Sweeney; Thomas; eye; look; pop summary = "Ain''t that just like a young one at the circus!" Mrs. Gallito laughed Pearl bowed without lifting her eyes, giving Hanson ample opportunity to Pearl''s father came the next day, an older man than Hanson had imagined You got to know these things, Pearl, and it''s better for me to tell good deal of the Pearl''s time and attention, and Bob ain''t going to been here to sign up with the Black Pearl that maybe, considering Mr. Bob Flick, I haven''t been very discreet in the way I''ve been chasing They sat in silence for a few moments, Hanson giving Mrs. Gallito an It was indeed Pearl, and, as Flick had said, coming like the wind. While Gallito talked to Seagreave and Mrs. Nitschkan and José argued "Maybe he can''t help it--not if I stand right in his way," said Mrs. Thomas, with a coy glance from under her lashes at José.