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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 3 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 35074 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 79 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 King 2 University 2 Protestant 2 People 2 L''Estrange 2 Government 2 English 2 Common 2 Church 1 roman 1 power 1 great 1 good 1 french 1 country 1 Whig 1 True 1 Trimmer 1 State 1 Rome 1 Republic 1 Religion 1 Popish 1 Plot 1 Philip 1 Petition 1 Parliament 1 Observator 1 Mr. 1 Lord 1 London 1 Greece 1 Good 1 France 1 Europe 1 England 1 Danger 1 DIALOGUE 1 Crown 1 Conscience 1 Citt 1 Caesar 1 Bumpkin 1 Athens 1 Antony Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 300 man 138 power 124 time 123 bum 108 people 105 country 96 way 94 thing 87 virtue 86 mind 82 government 81 part 79 nation 78 hand 72 state 72 nothing 71 life 71 law 70 war 69 world 69 heart 66 work 66 art 64 friend 63 liberty 63 character 60 king 59 nature 57 self 57 prince 57 enemy 55 name 53 spirit 51 writer 51 wit 51 truth 51 day 50 history 49 subject 48 religion 47 order 47 matter 47 manner 46 reason 46 death 46 conduct 45 glory 42 passion 42 love 42 honour Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 11182 _ 231 Citt 107 L''Estrange 107 King 84 ye 80 England 79 Bumpkin 68 Church 66 A. 65 Government 64 Rome 60 thou 60 Q. 60 English 57 Observator 55 State 54 Lord 53 Protestant 53 One 50 Parliament 49 France 48 Common 42 Plot 40 University 39 People 38 London 37 Mr. 36 Conscience 35 Religion 35 Caesar 34 True 34 God 34 DIALOGUE 32 Other 32 Charles 31 William 31 Popish 30 . 29 Papists 29 Athens 28 Law 28 Crown 28 California 25 Mercury 25 First 25 Europe 25 Angeles 24 Wh 24 Petition 24 Los Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1524 i 1206 you 950 it 536 he 486 they 476 me 306 them 282 we 275 him 124 us 79 himself 69 she 67 myself 54 her 46 themselves 36 itself 34 yours 30 yourself 29 thee 26 mine 24 one 18 ''em 13 ye 7 on''t 7 herself 5 we''l 5 ourselves 5 ours 4 thyself 4 ''s 3 theirs 3 his 1 us''d 1 thy 1 surpriz''d 1 shou''d 1 in''t 1 hers 1 ha Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 3491 be 1595 have 593 do 288 make 202 give 177 think 171 say 153 take 146 see 141 know 114 tell 103 let 101 come 91 go 91 find 77 bring 64 leave 60 put 59 write 59 hear 56 live 54 keep 53 call 52 seem 51 set 51 serve 46 speak 46 show 45 get 45 appear 42 read 42 mean 42 lose 42 become 41 fall 40 believe 39 suppose 39 _ 38 turn 38 love 38 lie 38 draw 38 die 35 raise 35 govern 34 carry 33 look 33 lay 31 destroy 30 understand Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 910 not 459 so 311 more 283 great 230 then 213 well 211 much 187 most 187 good 183 as 169 other 158 very 154 now 145 such 143 only 137 too 135 own 124 never 107 up 106 ever 98 many 92 even 87 same 80 whole 79 first 74 yet 69 indeed 62 true 62 long 62 little 61 high 61 here 59 out 56 far 54 down 52 bad 51 there 48 still 48 again 46 less 45 fine 43 noble 41 no 41 necessary 40 rather 40 perhaps 38 over 37 therefore 37 enough 37 also Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 55 good 34 most 29 great 28 high 18 least 9 bad 6 strong 6 noble 5 wise 5 fine 5 able 3 deep 3 Most 3 Least 2 sure 2 proud 2 low 2 free 2 fit 2 expr 2 eld 2 early 2 brave 1 witty 1 wild 1 warm 1 true 1 sweet 1 sublime 1 shrewd 1 say 1 rude 1 rough 1 remote 1 quiet 1 quick 1 pure 1 pr 1 poor 1 old 1 mean 1 l 1 harsh 1 hard 1 happy 1 handsome 1 grave 1 foremost 1 fat 1 dull Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 153 most 8 well 2 least 1 worst 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 15 _ are _ 13 _ is _ 5 _ be _ 5 _ were _ 4 _ is not 3 _ did _ 3 _ do _ 3 _ taken _ 3 ye have _ 2 _ do n''t 2 _ had _ 2 _ known _ 2 _ made _ 2 _ speak _ 2 _ was not 2 _ was yet 2 king is oblig''d 2 l''estrange does not 1 _ are damn''d 1 _ are great 1 _ are men 1 _ are not 1 _ are now 1 _ are part 1 _ are so 1 _ be enlighten''d 1 _ be not 1 _ be turn''d 1 _ being _ 1 _ came in 1 _ came originally 1 _ coming over 1 _ did not 1 _ do ill 1 _ do so 1 _ do ye 1 _ done _ 1 _ goes back 1 _ got hands 1 _ had only 1 _ has _ 1 _ has much 1 _ has receiv''d 1 _ have _ 1 _ have more 1 _ have not 1 _ is already 1 _ is better 1 _ is clear''d 1 _ is commonly Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ found no fault 1 _ had no relation 1 _ is no more 1 _ is not half 1 _ was not only 1 _ was not try''d 1 hearts are no sooner 1 king had no intention 1 men are not so 1 time had no limitations A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 38342 author = L''Estrange, Roger, Sir title = Citt and Bumpkin (1680) date = keywords = Bumpkin; Church; Citt; Common; Conscience; Government; King; L''Estrange; Parliament; People; Petition; Plot; Popish; Protestant; True; University summary = petitioning--Sir Roger L''Estrange''s _Citt and Bumpkin_. promoted petitions in the city and the country, Citt and Bumpkin admit To reinforce this ironic self-indictment by Citt and Bumpkin, L''Estrange Although _Citt and Bumpkin_ was the first of L''Estrange''s Popish Plot Bum. _What dost thou mean by_ Narratives, Citt? Bum. _Nay, the thing was well enough_ Citt, _if we could but have gone Bum. _Well thou''rt a heavenly man_, Citt! Bum. _Thou''rt a brave fellow_ Citt; _but pre''thee what may thy Bum. _Ay, but what_ Hands _have we_ Citt? Bum. _Nay_ Citt, _these Men have a Holy way of_ Language _too, as well Bum. _Prethee_ Citt, _tell me in Honest_ English, _where shall a body _Citt._ Bethink your self, _Bumpkin_; what _Papists_ do you know? Bum. _Well but hark ye_ Citt, _I hear People swear_, or in WORDS to this Bum. Really, _Citt_, the man speaks Reason. id = 40339 author = L''Estrange, Roger, Sir title = Selections from the Observator (1681-1687) date = keywords = Church; Common; Danger; English; Good; Government; King; L''Estrange; London; Observator; People; Protestant; Religion; Trimmer; University; Whig summary = L''Estrange''s arch-enemy, Harry Care, changed to dialogue the _Popish term "Observator" had come to signify a controversy _in dialogue_.[6] a Speaking to the Common People in their Own Way.... Matters are over, we shall at the end of every Paper, Present you with a L''Estrange manipulates "Whig" and "Tory" for 171 papers, changes to of the _True-Protestant Way_, (in case of _the King''s Violent Death_) when Matters were come to _This Pass_ once, I think it was High Time to _MAN_, or _THING_; or of _Common Justice it Self_: So neither, on the Pray favour me a word; When you speak of a_ True Protestant, _don''t _Just Reason, Method_, and _State_ of the _Matter_: And when People are _Trim._ And what if a man should Allow This sort of People now, to be enough, ''tis true, to _Satisfy any man_, that People may be made as id = 17667 author = Montagu, Mrs. (Elizabeth) title = Dialogues of the Dead date = keywords = Antony; Athens; Caesar; Crown; DIALOGUE; England; English; Europe; France; Greece; King; Lord; Mr.; Philip; Republic; Rome; State; country; french; good; great; power; roman summary = to take refuge in Turkey; I won battles at sea as well as land; I newcreated my people; I gave them arts, science, policy; I enabled them to them of reason and the great laws of Nature. love, thought the subduing of it too easy a victory to deserve great assured, that in England there is a great and good king, whose whole life directed to serve the good ends of virtue and religion, are like the wit, like true virtue, naturally loves its own image in whatever place it great measure destroyed the power of Spain when that nation aspired to Believe me, great prince, had I been living in those times, those countries was the great support of my power. philosophically) as the great laws of Nature, by which, under God, the great minds should aspire to sovereign power is a fixed law of Nature.