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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 8 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 72108 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 87 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 Mrs. 5 Miss 4 Mr. 3 like 3 York 3 Van 3 New 2 mother 2 italian 2 chapter 2 Uxeley 2 Urania 2 Stefano 2 Staal 2 San 2 Rudyard 2 Rome 2 Prince 2 Mamie 2 Madame 2 London 2 Italy 2 Hope 2 Hague 2 God 2 Gilio 2 Duco 2 Cornélie 2 Belloni 1 woman 1 time 1 man 1 love 1 day 1 Warder 1 Undine 1 Trezac 1 Treharne 1 Tony 1 Street 1 Stedham 1 Spragg 1 Sioux 1 Scammel 1 Ruth 1 Rolliver 1 Roberts 1 Raymond 1 Ralph 1 Princess Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1089 mother 1007 woman 979 time 902 day 886 room 850 man 842 life 812 eye 733 thing 728 hand 658 girl 641 way 515 face 500 word 469 something 461 nothing 445 moment 422 night 421 friend 419 child 406 year 398 wife 396 people 390 arm 381 house 377 door 373 father 362 one 361 head 359 course 347 home 337 anything 326 evening 323 daughter 322 thought 322 hour 314 love 311 everything 307 letter 305 money 296 table 292 world 287 voice 285 lady 284 prince 277 husband 266 boy 265 morning 253 place 251 name Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1290 Mrs. 1263 _ 841 Undine 796 Louise 760 Cornélie 640 Urania 533 Mr. 484 Ralph 471 Laura 447 Duco 432 Erskine 367 Lulu 352 Spragg 336 Blythe 328 Miss 315 Jesse 311 Van 306 Dwight 269 Burnham 262 Moffatt 258 Rome 250 Di 241 Treharne 225 Judd 215 Ina 206 Ruth 204 New 194 York 188 Degen 178 Mamie 178 Gilio 172 Heriot 162 Marvell 161 Irene 160 Uxeley 153 Paris 141 Paul 137 Staal 125 San 122 Parker 109 Ninian 109 Madame 109 Bobby 108 Stefano 108 London 108 Heeny 106 Raymond 104 Maybelle 103 God 101 Bett Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 12223 she 8848 i 8310 he 7505 you 7095 it 4398 her 3323 him 2390 they 2254 me 1201 them 947 we 916 herself 412 himself 342 us 178 myself 146 one 116 yourself 108 itself 107 themselves 46 hers 32 yours 31 mine 29 ''s 20 his 20 ''em 19 ourselves 10 you''re 8 theirs 7 em 5 thee 5 ours 3 isself 3 i''m 2 you''ll 2 she''ll 1 you''ve 1 ye 1 voice:-- 1 oo 1 one''ll 1 iself 1 ina''d 1 himself:-- 1 her:--"i 1 f''r 1 d''you 1 bridge,"--they Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 22171 be 10752 have 4724 do 3315 say 2186 go 2014 know 1767 see 1612 think 1546 come 1345 make 1290 look 1127 feel 1099 take 1086 tell 865 want 852 give 828 ask 767 get 740 seem 618 speak 612 sit 612 find 576 leave 478 stand 473 hear 465 mean 461 understand 458 turn 438 let 408 live 405 become 404 begin 402 meet 393 put 391 talk 381 call 379 laugh 356 try 350 keep 344 write 334 like 317 marry 299 love 297 show 277 believe 272 draw 258 wait 258 rise 254 smile 254 hold Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 7337 not 1986 so 1238 now 1194 up 1189 then 1150 more 1084 little 1061 very 927 out 907 never 793 only 776 long 739 too 722 old 695 back 685 other 684 again 683 well 681 first 678 here 659 much 659 even 659 as 645 good 608 always 570 down 568 just 565 own 533 still 518 away 503 young 478 there 466 once 455 all 453 great 451 ever 444 last 413 on 399 almost 361 new 351 such 334 enough 333 over 317 in 316 few 311 dear 300 right 289 really 288 perhaps 286 yet Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 237 least 98 good 73 most 29 dear 26 bad 24 great 14 slight 13 near 13 Most 12 late 12 early 9 high 9 deep 7 young 7 sweet 7 fine 6 small 6 low 5 strong 5 simple 5 noble 5 manif 4 remote 4 mere 4 hard 4 big 3 vulgar 3 vivid 3 sure 3 strange 3 smart 3 old 3 healthy 3 happy 3 faint 3 easy 2 wise 2 vague 2 subtle 2 short 2 rich 2 rare 2 quick 2 new 2 minute 2 lovely 2 large 2 handsome 2 grave 2 full Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 211 most 30 least 14 well 2 said:-- 1 worst 1 soon 1 long 1 highest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 15 _ is _ 9 _ was _ 9 mother did not 8 cornélie did not 7 ralph had never 7 undine did not 6 cornélie was glad 6 duco did not 5 _ are _ 5 undine stood up 4 _ do _ 4 _ do n''t 4 _ know _ 4 cornélie went on 4 louise had not 4 man went away 4 mother had not 4 urania was so 3 erskine did not 3 eyes were bright 3 eyes were very 3 face took on 3 face was still 3 louise did not 3 man was not 3 thing is not 3 undine had already 3 undine had not 3 undine had so 3 undine was still 2 _ am _ 2 _ have n''t 2 _ is n''t 2 _ make _ 2 _ were _ 2 cornélie did n''t 2 cornélie felt better 2 cornélie felt uneasy 2 cornélie had not 2 cornélie had suddenly 2 cornélie had urania 2 cornélie is ill 2 cornélie look grey 2 cornélie looked round 2 cornélie saw something 2 cornélie spoke so 2 cornélie spoke vehemently 2 cornélie told urania 2 cornélie took off 2 cornélie took urania Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 cornélie saw no one 2 duco was no longer 2 man had no power 2 man has no power 2 man was not so 2 men were not so 2 undine made no attempt 2 urania was no longer 2 urania was not angry 1 days were not long 1 days were not so 1 erskine had no more 1 erskine had no thought 1 erskine was not only 1 eyes told no tales 1 friend made no answer 1 girl made no answer 1 life ''s no good 1 louise had no reply 1 louise had not often 1 louise had not previously 1 louise made no reply 1 man was not wholly 1 men did not so 1 mother had not yet 1 mother was not there 1 ralph did not again 1 ralph made no reply 1 ralph was not seriously 1 ralph was not sure 1 thing is not necessary 1 time had not yet 1 undine did not even 1 undine had no attention 1 undine had no such 1 undine had not yet 1 undine made no answer 1 undine was no longer 1 undine was not consciously 1 undine was not greatly 1 words are not commonplace 1 words give no conception A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 26344 author = Burr, Jane title = Letters of a Dakota Divorcee date = keywords = Carlton; Falls; God; Judge; MARIANNE; New; Sioux; York; day; like; love; time summary = my room each night to ask me if I think she''ll ever get a man. this moon isn''t half as calloused to demonstration as our dear old New They weren''t like our dear old Irish Indians on Manhattan There''s a new boarder here whose face looks like a chapel and every time I have just returned from a little walk with Carlton--I suppose my eyes looks like Elbert Hubbard--sits all day surrounded by his hair." you know that was the first time I ever really perjured myself--like a I talk like Old Man Solomon, but you know that the only serious thoughts They swayed at times and seemed likely to fall with Your Christmas box came one day too soon and, like the child that I am The new decorations in my bed room are all in bloom like our love, and I man ought to love every child, dear little unfinished human beings. id = 43005 author = Couperus, Louis title = The Inevitable date = keywords = Belloni; Cornélie; Duco; Gilio; Hague; Hope; Italy; Miss; Mrs.; Prince; Rome; Rudyard; San; Staal; Stefano; Urania; Uxeley; Van; chapter; italian; like summary = vanity, Cornélie came to like the pretty American girl because of her Duco van der Staal had taken a large, vault-like studio, with a chilly Cornélie, Rudyard, Urania Hope and other guests going in and out, Mrs. van der Staal looked at Cornélie. embroidered with seed-pearls, Urania came and looked Cornélie up again And, while Cornélie powdered her face, Urania looked at Urania asked Cornélie to come in, because it was not healthy out of opposite Prince Ercole, who sat between Cornélie and Urania; Gilio Urania said that the old prince never appeared except at dinner, the long rooms with Duco, Urania and Cornélie. "Cornélie," said Duco, "tell me what happened between you and the Urania wrote and told her to come, said that Mrs. Uxeley wanted to days, Urania said that Mrs. Uxeley was coming to call that afternoon, Urania said something which Cornélie id = 43827 author = Couperus, Louis title = The Law Inevitable date = keywords = Belloni; Cornélie; Duco; Gilio; Hague; Hope; Italy; Miss; Mrs.; Prince; Rome; Rudyard; San; Staal; Stefano; Urania; Uxeley; Van; chapter; italian; like summary = And, without troubling about what people might think, about what Mrs. Van der Staal thought, they would one day go to Tivoli together, or Cornélie saw no one now except Duco and, at times, Urania Hope. Urania came and looked Cornélie up again and admitted, over a cup of Cornélie felt uneasy and spoke of it to Duco that evening, when she met And, while Cornélie powdered her face, Urania looked at they did it quite simply: Cornélie told Urania and the prince that she And Urania took Cornélie and Bob back with her to her own drawing-room. Urania said that the old prince never appeared except at dinner, but summer evening, when Cornélie and Duco went outside, was like a dream. long rooms with Duco, Urania and Cornélie. days, Urania said that Mrs. Uxeley was coming to call that afternoon, Urania said something which Cornélie did id = 43508 author = Cullen, Clarence Louis title = The Eddy: A Novel of To-day date = keywords = Blythe; Drive; Heloise; Jesse; John; Judd; Langdon; Laura; London; Louise; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Mutsu; New; Scammel; Stedham; Tony; Treharne; York; man; mother; woman summary = bemoaning Louise''s return home," said Laura, yawning ever so slightly. Louise, watching her mother, furtively pressed Laura''s hand. "Your mother will show you to your room, dear," said Laura, placing an "The car is yours when you wish it, Louise," said Mrs. Treharne, Louise''s mother knew that the girl must leave school in half a year at "Don''t try to tell me what he is, Louise," said Laura, smiling. "My dear Louise," said Mrs. Treharne, obviously quelling a certain "I just caught sight of Mr. Jesse''s car from my window," said Mrs. Treharne to Louise. "I think I shall not see him, mother," said Louise, ringing for Heloise "I am very lonesome, for one thing," said Louise, looking at her mother "Don''t worry, Louise--all of these things come right in time," he said "I know that, Laura," said Louise. Laura had told Louise that Blythe was coming. "Don''t say that, Louise," said Blythe. id = 10429 author = Gale, Zona title = Miss Lulu Bett date = keywords = Bett; Bobby; Cornish; Deacon; Dwight; Herbert; Ina; Lulu; Monona; Mrs.; Ninian summary = "Ask Lulu," said Mrs. Deacon. Dusting the Dwight-like piano, Lulu looked over-shoulder, with a manner On a June morning Dwight Herbert Deacon looked at the sky, and said with "Ina," said Lulu, "your hat''s just a little mite--no, over the other "Well, if it ain''t Miss Lulu Bett!" Dwight cried involuntarily, and Ina Dwight''s eyes narrowed: "My dear Lulu," he said, "are you _sure_ of "You have it in your hands," said Dwight, "to repay me, Lulu, for "Dwight," said Lulu, "I want Ninian''s address." "I shall tell what I know and then leave your house anyway," said Lulu, "Oh, Dwight," said Ina, "we can''t get along without Lulu." She did not "Why, Ninian," said Ina. Dwight threw out his hands. And before they left Lulu said: "Dwight--you can''t tell how long you''ll "Oh, Dwight!" said Lulu. "Oh, Dwight!" said Lulu. "Tell you, Lulu," said Dwight. id = 43971 author = Merrick, Leonard title = One Man''s View date = keywords = Baines; Cheriton; Duluth; Field; George; Heriot; London; Mamie; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Pierways; Street summary = "Well," said Cheriton, "she tried it, but it''s a hard thing for a girl "Perhaps," said Heriot, as the shortest way of ending the discussion; "Try to tell me what you feel without one," said Heriot. "What''s your line?" said the little woman, addressing Mamie once more. "I _am_ looking at you," said Mamie, smiling, "and envying you till I''m "I thought it likely you''d be here," said Mamie; "won''t you sit down?" "That''s right, Mr. Heriot," said Mrs. Baines placidly. "You mustn''t expect Mr. Heriot to know much about it," said Mrs. Baines; "Mr. Heriot is so busy a gentleman that very likely he doesn''t "I think you know," said Heriot diffidently, "that neither the Queen "Oh, my God," said Heriot, in a low voice, "if I could only tell you "I never thought I should see you like this, Mamie!" said the widow "I don''t know," said Heriot again. id = 43785 author = Pansy title = Ruth Erskine''s Son date = keywords = Alice; Aunt; Burnham; Erskine; Flossy; God; Irene; Madame; Mamie; Maybelle; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Parker; Roberts; Ruth; Warder; mother summary = Burnham''s Son. But there are those living who remember Ruth Erskine and girl or woman had Ruth Erskine Burnham been given to tears, although helped Mrs. Burnham to take the girl to her heart and think of her as They had been settled but a few weeks in their new home when Mrs. Burnham, finding much time at her disposal, proposed to Erskine that she friends as Erskine thought his mother would enjoy or could help he view to Erskine''s home-coming, his mother had taken pains to preserve "I know your mother loves me, Erskine, almost as she would a daughter; Erskine Burnham had followed his mother to her room evidently with a Given a woman like Ruth Erskine Burnham, belonging to a family in whom, Erskine Burnham''s mother than they could possibly be to this child. Erskine Burnham''s word to his mother when he had her all to himself in id = 11052 author = Wharton, Edith title = The Custom of the Country date = keywords = Apex; Avenue; Bowen; Chelles; Clare; Dagonet; Degen; Driscoll; Elmer; Fairford; Heeny; Indiana; Lipscomb; Mabel; Madame; Marvell; Moffatt; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Paris; Paul; Peter; Popple; Princess; Ralph; Raymond; Rolliver; Spragg; Trezac; Undine; Van; York summary = "Do you know Mrs. Fairford too?" Undine asked eagerly; while Mrs. Spragg, impressed, but anxious for facts, pursued: "Does she reside on She turned back into the room, and going to her writing-table laid Mrs. Fairford''s note before her, and began to study it minutely. "As if that were a reason!" Undine heard Mrs. Fairford breathe to Mr. Bowen; who replied, at the same pitch: "It''s a Van Degen reason, isn''t old-rose carpet, while Mrs. Spragg, turning away to hide a look of Mrs. Heeny, seated on a low chair at Undine''s knee, gave the girl''s left "She''ll know how to LOOK at him, anyhow," said Mrs. Heeny; and Undine meet Ralph''s grey eyes, with that new look in them, and to feel that "RALPH!" his mother breathed; then, turning to Undine, she said with Undine''s eyes met his with a startled look, and for a long moment they