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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 16 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 32881 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 84 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 dream 4 Miss 3 sleep 3 man 3 day 3 Mrs. 3 Mr. 2 wish 2 time 2 look 2 little 2 like 2 illustration 2 St. 2 House 2 Freud 1 work 1 wing 1 wind 1 voice 1 unconscious 1 thought 1 subject 1 story 1 sensation 1 reality 1 psychic 1 process 1 physical 1 patient 1 old 1 night 1 memory 1 long 1 life 1 ghost 1 find 1 face 1 critic 1 content 1 consciousness 1 city 1 child 1 certain 1 case 1 body 1 astral 1 analysis 1 Wynne 1 Woodman Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2170 dream 1016 time 896 man 844 day 706 child 629 way 623 thing 587 house 586 room 580 night 502 hand 462 life 461 story 454 girl 449 eye 446 one 435 door 426 nothing 419 sleep 414 face 412 place 401 head 400 year 391 thought 370 people 366 voice 352 something 333 word 332 woman 331 mind 330 friend 327 case 318 wish 310 bed 290 moment 285 person 282 father 278 heart 276 illustration 274 boy 268 part 268 body 255 world 241 ghost 240 name 240 morning 240 lady 237 work 235 letter 233 side Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2263 _ 602 Miss 486 Mr. 391 Mrs. 369 Dorothy 326 Ellen 292 Kathie 276 Neville 230 Scarecrow 202 Jimbo 202 Clotilda 183 Woodman 182 Kathleen 167 Philippa 160 Oz 158 Lion 118 Tin 109 Haddie 106 Witch 103 Dr. 93 House 89 Sir 86 St. 81 City 78 Lord 77 ye 77 God 72 Ledbury 71 Toto 68 John 67 Myra 66 Aunt 65 Martha 64 mamma 64 Fenmore 64 . 63 Phil 63 Christmas 62 Herr 59 Lake 58 Wesley 58 Glam 58 Emerald 57 Wynne 56 Broom 55 George 55 Cranston 55 CHAPTER 54 C. 53 Molesworth Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 7891 i 6035 it 5366 he 3666 she 3570 you 2292 they 1994 we 1988 him 1984 me 1319 her 1318 them 719 us 313 himself 248 myself 197 herself 187 itself 155 themselves 116 one 75 yourself 66 ourselves 31 mine 21 yours 19 hers 15 ''s 14 his 12 thee 10 oneself 6 theirs 6 ours 5 thyself 4 i''m 3 you''ll 3 ye 2 yourselves 2 on''t 1 young,--she 1 whosoever 1 too,--''you 1 these:-- 1 she''ll 1 pas?--love 1 ourself 1 know''-- 1 je 1 iv 1 hitherto 1 ay 1 as''ll 1 ''em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 18995 be 6693 have 2698 do 2615 say 1677 see 1674 go 1582 come 1169 know 1146 make 1055 think 878 look 874 tell 803 take 727 find 709 get 669 give 650 hear 621 ask 603 seem 538 feel 465 leave 430 begin 408 speak 404 stand 392 call 358 become 342 follow 335 live 331 turn 324 answer 321 fall 316 write 316 cry 313 pass 298 bring 293 lie 282 put 278 try 276 sit 275 keep 270 run 260 grow 256 let 253 dream 252 want 252 fly 245 appear 244 like 240 show 234 sleep Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4478 not 1715 so 1331 very 1286 then 1136 little 1070 up 968 more 957 only 890 now 777 old 754 out 740 other 666 long 635 again 631 never 614 good 606 great 592 well 579 much 578 as 575 just 566 first 541 down 496 there 495 too 487 even 473 here 445 away 432 same 421 back 408 own 402 many 402 all 392 last 377 still 377 once 363 such 356 on 347 most 345 always 339 quite 326 far 320 also 319 ever 291 young 286 really 266 however 261 in 258 off 253 next Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 161 least 113 good 65 most 22 great 19 bad 18 manif 16 near 13 slight 13 Most 12 eld 9 high 9 early 7 young 7 wise 7 low 7 deep 7 big 6 strange 6 small 6 old 6 late 4 sweet 4 simple 4 loud 4 faint 3 tiny 3 strong 3 rich 3 queer 3 long 3 large 3 happy 3 dark 3 cunning 2 wide 2 topmost 2 thin 2 soon 2 short 2 said:-- 2 ready 2 quick 2 pure 2 noble 2 mean 2 lovely 2 holy 2 fine 2 fair 2 easy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 282 most 20 least 17 well 1 hard 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 _ did _ 11 _ is _ 10 _ are _ 9 _ had _ 8 _ was _ 7 _ do _ 6 _ have _ 5 _ am _ 5 _ do n''t 3 _ knew _ 3 days went on 3 dream does not 3 dream is not 3 face looking rather 3 girl did not 3 life had not 3 nothing is more 3 one has ever 3 place was not 3 room was full 2 _ are not 2 _ come back 2 _ did n''t 2 _ going _ 2 _ know _ 2 _ see _ 2 child was so 2 children are very 2 children were not 2 children were out 2 days went by 2 door was open 2 door was wide 2 dream are very 2 dream is only 2 dream is then 2 dream was very 2 eyes were blue 2 girls did not 2 house is n''t 2 house was as 2 house was not 2 house was small 2 house was very 2 life does not 2 man is only 2 man was so 2 one was there 2 people are very 2 people did not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ are not nearly 1 _ are not original 1 _ had not yet 1 child had no longer 1 children is not _ 1 children were not afraid 1 day have no power 1 day was no better 1 door made no noise 1 dream has no greater 1 dream has not yet 1 dream is not as 1 dream is not infrequently 1 dream leaves no doubt 1 dreaming is not so 1 dreams are not essentially 1 dreams do not actually 1 dreams leave no doubt 1 head has no heart 1 houses are not equally 1 life does not thereby 1 life had not yet 1 life is no more 1 man is not yet 1 men are not surprised 1 one has not yet 1 people were not aware 1 place is not clean 1 place was not brightly 1 place was not very 1 sleep does not even 1 sleep is not exactly 1 stories are no longer 1 stories told no more 1 things were not unlikely 1 things were not yet 1 thoughts are not refound 1 years was not at A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 43936 author = Baum, L. Frank (Lyman Frank) title = The Wonderful Wizard of Oz date = keywords = Dorothy; Lion; Scarecrow; Tin; Witch; Woodman; illustration summary = "Come along, Toto," she said, "we will go to the Emerald City and ask "Come along," said the Scarecrow, heartily; and Dorothy added The Tin Woodman had asked Dorothy to put the oil-can in her basket. "No," said Dorothy, "he''s made of tin." And she helped the Woodman up "What makes you a coward?" asked Dorothy, looking at the great beast So Dorothy went first, holding Toto in her arms; the Tin Woodman also began to cross the tree, and the Lion said to Dorothy, "To the Emerald City," said Dorothy, "to see the Great Oz." "We came here to see the Great Oz," said Dorothy. "I thought you asked Dorothy to kill the Witch," said, the Scarecrow, Then Dorothy and the Lion got up, and the girl helped the Tin Woodman "If we walk far enough," said Dorothy, "we shall sometime come to "I thought Oz was a great Head," said Dorothy. id = 20842 author = Bergson, Henri title = Dreams date = keywords = Bergson; Professor; dream; memory; sensation; sleep summary = by means of dreams, for these memories are by no means inert, but have, Professor Bergson''s theory of dreaming here set forth in untechnical of the theory of dreams which Professor Bergson first presented in a materials furnished to the dream by the different senses, the power In a waking state we have indeed memories which appear and effected between the memory and the sensation, we have a dream. It is necessary that on coming out of a dream, personal experience, and to tell of a recent dream as well as what was points, which are: the incoherence of dreams, the abolition of the sense As for the abolition of the sense of time in many of our dreams, that is dream accounts for the preference given by the dreamer to one memory In normal sleep our dreams of the dream is an ego that is relaxed; the memories which it gathers id = 30974 author = Blackwood, Algernon title = Jimbo: A Fantasy date = keywords = Colonel; House; Jimbo; Lake; Miss; child; like; little; long; voice; wind; wing summary = kissed them a little later and said good-night, he gave orders, with a Jimbo began to look a little troubled, as his father watched Jimbo loved these early hours of the night before sleep came. Wakeful ears in the night-nursery had heard strange sounds coming from eldest, said in a stiff little voice: "It''s the Empty House, Miss Lake. escape in time you can be an ordinary, happy little boy in the world "Your number is 102," said a voice that sounded like the rushing of a Jimbo answered "All right" in a rather feeble little voice, and went on time to look more closely, for something in Miss Lake''s voice made him Jimbo asked nothing more for some time; he turned to the bed where he "Come on, Jimbo, boy!" cried the governess at length. "Come down, Jimbo," said the governess, "and we''ll lie in the trees and id = 15489 author = Freud, Sigmund title = Dream Psychology: Psychoanalysis for Beginners date = keywords = Forec; Freud; Unc; analysis; consciousness; content; day; dream; find; process; psychic; sleep; thought; unconscious; wish; work summary = educated persons who doubt that the dream is the dreamer''s own psychical scene appears as if a woman wished to make advances to me; in the dream wishes and phantasies, which analysis discloses in our dreams at night, of the dream in relation to repressed psychical matter, we are in a the same time that she dreams of the denial of the wish, the patient is to be the case in a dream merely in order to fulfill the wish that I may We may now ask whence the wish fulfilled in the dream originates. wish suppressed during the day asserts itself in the dream can be shown unconscious wish has shown its power to form a dream, and with it to dream-wish as the thought remnants from the waking activity. between the peculiarities of the dream-work and of the psychic activity the dream-wish and which we find again in our unconscious. id = 856 author = Jerome, Jerome K. (Jerome Klapka) title = Dreams date = keywords = Shakespeare; critic; dream; man summary = enamel paint, and suggest that they should try it on the old man''s pipe. No man ever yet imagined a new thing--only some variation The human mind can no more produce an original thought than a tree can When a new book is written, the high-class critic opens the exceptionally great critic ever feels for everybody in this world, (It is the sort of thing a man would dream. the critics could find nothing original in the books whatever, and said painted pictures, which the critics came and looked at through "Nothing whatever original in them," said the critics; "same old colors, the man must have taken to paint this picture or to write this book, The artists in this land of which I dreamed left off painting pictures, one comes to think of it, and your criticisms are not original. extraordinary part of it; I have often known people to dream things like id = 5651 author = Kingsford, Anna Bonus title = Dreams and Dream Stories date = keywords = Adelais; Antoine; Aubyn; Bambin; Cameron; Christmas; Georges; God; Herr; Julia; Lora; Maurice; Noemi; Pauline; Philip; Princess; Ritter; St.; Stephen; day; face; like; little; look; man; old; time summary = Then the young man stood up with an open book in his hand and said: rooms sat an old man counting money and jewels on a table before him. "Friend," said the dying man, "you will never know how great a debt Men turned to look at him as he left the tables, his face white little old man''s sake, and longed to know,--woman-like, I suppose,-said the little old man, ''but I feel stronger this afternoon than You shall hear the little old man''s story And the little old man shook his head and answered, "Nay, brother uplifted face of the little old man. them over to the house of the little old man. open a little further, and an old man appeared, bare-headed, wearing She faltered a little there, and the old man took her hand in his over the old man''s face as he spoke, and there seemed to come into id = 51668 author = Lafferty, R. A. title = Dream World date = keywords = Agnes; Teresa summary = How could my mother look like a wart-hog and There isn''t a thing wrong with ordering three eggs sunny-side up, and Bascomb Swicegood liked to have bacon and waffles after the egg "Girl, the girl who said it rained dirty green all the time, what''s I was just telling a dream I had to Agnes. "Did you have things like live rats in your stomach to digest for you? it strange that two people might have the same dream. Bascomb Swicegood had forgotten his dismal dream. The oddity wasn''t that two people should have the same dream, but that who had had dreams of rats in their stomachs, and hair growing on This was ten days after Bascomb Swicegood had heard Teresa Ananias tell _All_ the people were dreaming it of the wart-hog-people dreams. dreaming," said the voice. It could be that the wart-hogs were real and the people a dream. id = 12621 author = Lang, Andrew title = The Book of Dreams and Ghosts date = keywords = Claughton; December; Donald; Dr.; Duke; George; Glam; Grettir; House; John; Lady; Lord; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Ricketts; Shchapoff; Sir; St.; Thorhall; Towse; Wesley; William; dream; ghost; story summary = wakened me, and said she had dreamed Fanti went mad, and turned into a told the story having left the hall in the interval, she went into the At night Mrs. Herbert dreamed that they went into the garden, down a said father appeared to him in a dream, and made known to him where for a person in a dream to see a dead man, as it comes that he sees a "On Friday night (Jan. 21) I dreamed that my daughter''s time came; dead man was dreaming about the living person to whom, or about the pretty man," Sergeant Davies said good-bye to his wife, who never saw my bed, I heard a voice but saw nothing; the voice said, "Come away". went to his parents'' room, saw his father asleep in bed and his mother The story of the lady who often dreamed of a house, and when by chance id = 39549 author = Molesworth, Mrs. title = The Carved Lions date = keywords = Aspinall; Broom; Cranston; Edition; Fenmore; Haddie; Harriet; Ledbury; Miss; Molesworth; Mr.; Mrs.; Myra; Selwood summary = One day, when I was a month or two past nine years old, mamma said to me "To tell the truth," said mamma, "I forgot to ask him this morning if he "And Geraldine doesn''t mind because of her new umbrella," said mamma. "This is a lucky day, mamma," I said, when we came out of the grocer''s. "Dear me," said mamma, "how time passes! "We may stop at Miss Fryer''s, mayn''t we, mamma?" said Haddie. "Wasn''t it kind of Miss Fryer, mamma?" I said. "Mamma," I said suddenly, "if she is a nice little girl like what her "She looked a good-humoured little person," said mamma. "Good-bye, my own little girl," said father. "Good-bye, dear Miss Geraldine," she said, half holding out her arms. fancy it was Miss Lardner--said in a good-natured patronising way, "I never tell stories," I said very loudly; "and if Miss Broom says I id = 39833 author = Molesworth, Mrs. title = The Old Pincushion; or, Aunt Clotilda''s Guests date = keywords = Clotilda; Kathie; Kathleen; Martha; Miss; Mrs.; Neville; Philippa; Wynne summary = ''Kathie!'' said Neville--this time with real displeasure in his tone, ''I ''Good-bye, Kathie,'' said Neville, as he kissed her. ''Yes; I have lots to tell you,'' said Kathie, ''and no good news either. didn''t till Neville told me,'' said Kathie condescendingly. ''Kathie,'' said Neville, and Kathleen slowly got up from her seat and ''Come in,'' said Kathleen; and in came Aunt Clotilda, her kind face and ''Aunty,'' said Kathie, as Miss Clotilda was preparing to follow him, ''She must be a very sensible little girl,'' said Miss Clotilda. ''She''s a dear little girl every way,'' said Kathie. ''Dear Kathie,'' said Neville, ''you didn''t know her.'' ''Dear Kathie,'' said Neville again, ''it''s only that you''ve not had mamma ''Aunty,'' she said, and Miss Clotilda looked up from the fine old damask ''Poor little girl!'' said Miss Clotilda. ''She must be a dear little girl,'' said Miss Clotilda again. ''Come now, Kathie,'' said Neville good-humouredly. id = 48593 author = Pyle, Katharine title = As the Goose Flies date = keywords = Ellen; Goldenhair; Queerbodies; Queerbody; illustration; look summary = Ellen stood at the nursery window looking out at the gray sky and the curious little house that Ellen went nearer to look at it. The gander stayed his wings so that Ellen could look. Ellen said she did, so the gander turned in that direction. "What''s the matter, you poor little pig?" asked Ellen, looking down at As the little pig hurried in through the door, Ellen asked of the "It''s a dear little house," said Ellen. "I thought maybe the gander would carry us," said Ellen, but the white As Ellen followed the dwarf into the house she looked about her and "Who lives there?" asked Ellen, pointing to a little house she had just "Come, then," and Ellen began to run toward the house; while the gander Ellen, who heard this, looked at the gander. "Was that a parade that just went away?" asked Ellen, as the gander id = 13137 author = Raizizun, Yacki title = The Secret of Dreams date = keywords = Chicago; astral; body; dream; physical summary = Dreams afford a separation of soul and body. In the above two cases the man has only left his physical body physical body is an instrument for expressing consciousness in the The Astral body in which man functions during sleep is very subtle When a man leaves his body in sleep or death, the spirit must leave dreams, for just as it is possible for minds to receive telepathic the direct cause of a friend of mine dreaming of a passenger train; his waking state, but as he generally looks at the phenomena of dreams Dreams sons drowned; found bodies in river, Burlington, Vt. bodies were, that he actually brought the vision or astral experience West near the mining country, and one night I dreamed I was life, your dream carried the same train of thought straight through. When the ego impresses the lower mind of approaching danger, in dreams id = 51773 author = Stamers, James title = Scent Makes a Difference date = keywords = Jones; Kate; Mr. summary = "Well, now," Dr. Doogle said, drumming his fat fingers, "I don''t think "I want to know how it happens," I said, and I settled firmly into the "And an egg on the shoe is the breakfast I didn''t have," I said. Pass quiet nights in no-mind, Mr. Jones, sleep beyond "I don''t know your name," he said, "but I have a very important hours'' sleep myself, to ask you to stop doing it, if you don''t mind." "Didn''t even know they existed," he said. Jones," he said. Jones," he said. "I never really got over Kate," I said. "Look, Kate," I said. "I thought it was odd I should dream about my husband," she said. "Look," he said, "I want you to keep away from Kate. "Oh, I don''t know, Haroldkin," Kate said. "A bomb went off," she said. When I looked up, this probable Kate had gone. id = 32859 author = Stockham, Richard title = Perchance to Dream date = keywords = Superfather; city; dream summary = All along the line of machines, the men''s hands and arms worked like the The man stood for a moment, like a soldier at attention, turned and The silence was like a motion picture with a dead sound track. only motion--and him walking down the line of machines where the hands the _other_ dream cards he''d been getting from the little man he''d met "Now we Superfathers _never_ have to use the dream machines. Twenty-three looked up at the glowing dome of the city that curved away He walked on through the silence, dimly aware now of the people moving He turned away then to the rolling green sea of hills, saw of life, open to the sky and the earth, a city in which people can find his mind, his arms working over the machines, saw them make a wrong "Dreams made by some twisted mind," the Superfather said. id = 44085 author = Tridon, André title = Psychoanalysis, Sleep and Dreams date = keywords = Freud; case; certain; day; dream; life; man; night; patient; reality; sleep; subject; time; wish summary = This book is an attempt at correlating sleep and dreams and at explaining grant, through the unconsciousness of sleep, dream gratification to Sleep is even a more normal form of life than the average waking states. The activity of the sexual organs is as great in sleep as in waking life; hour, sleep is easily disturbed, the more so as the usual awakening time Sleep is a compromise, as I shall show later, when discussing dream life, Maury whose book, "Sleep and Dreams," published in 1865, was probably the On a chilly summer night a woman patient had the following dream: day dreams based on memories which free in the patient a certain amount of physical stimuli, sleep FULL OF DREAMS but FREE FROM NIGHTMARES. wish-fulfilment dream of the same import, which does not disturb sleep. A physical explanation of sleep and dreams.