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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 11 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 67389 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 71 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 India 6 Company 5 England 4 God 4 Captain 3 english 3 John 3 East 2 portuguese 2 french 2 Windsor 2 Surat 2 Sullivan 2 Revel 2 Plausible 2 Oughton 2 Nicholas 2 Newton 2 Mrs 2 Mr. 2 Miss 2 Madame 2 London 2 June 2 July 2 Jackson 2 Isabel 2 Forster 2 Fontanges 2 Ferguson 2 English 2 Edward 2 Drawlock 2 Dragwell 2 Castle 2 Carrington 2 Aveleyn 2 Amber 1 volume 1 rajput 1 imperial 1 debt 1 chapter 1 Vasant 1 Toolajee 1 Sumbhajee 1 Shonguach 1 Shiwas 1 Shirin 1 Sharif Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2122 man 1306 day 1189 time 1017 ship 686 hand 623 woman 604 year 589 letter 566 vessel 535 way 517 eye 489 nothing 484 place 473 trade 457 sir 443 moment 443 father 440 side 437 sea 437 brother 433 night 429 head 420 captain 413 room 412 water 404 name 397 pirate 383 deck 381 order 374 board 363 word 363 lady 361 one 352 servant 351 thing 347 part 339 king 331 other 331 morning 329 life 326 face 322 company 309 howse 308 hour 298 door 295 wine 293 matter 293 boat 291 gun 286 wife Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 13014 _ 1689 Newton 1460 Hawksworth 1045 Dono 909 Mr 909 India 900 Forster 774 Company 717 Captain 646 i. 581 Jadar 566 Mr. 545 Capt 485 English 475 Mrs 447 England 428 Majesty 389 Bombay 384 Firando 353 Hollanders 333 Nadir 332 King 329 John 322 Sharif 322 Nicholas 318 China 308 Japon 297 Moghul 295 Arangbar 290 God 290 East 286 de 271 Angria 266 Isabel 259 ii 250 Surat 250 Fontanges 234 Agra 230 Miss 203 Portuguese 200 Shirin 188 London 187 Revel 180 Rao 178 Khan 174 Vasant 160 Lord 159 James 158 Castle 152 Amber Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8823 he 7519 i 6666 it 5332 you 3793 they 2545 we 2337 them 2280 him 2248 she 1919 me 1114 her 825 us 674 himself 235 themselves 129 herself 108 itself 97 myself 96 yourself 53 one 46 yt 38 mine 35 yow 29 yours 24 theirs 22 ourselves 20 thee 19 ''s 17 ours 16 his 15 ''em 5 oneself 4 yourselves 4 je 3 yf 3 hers 2 when--_you 2 violated,--her 2 où 2 now;--they 2 my 2 ij 1 yew 1 whereof 1 t''would 1 openin 1 on''t 1 notwithstanding 1 nonsense!--he 1 non 1 mayhap Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 26437 be 10501 have 3056 do 1853 make 1843 take 1453 say 1334 send 1300 know 1296 come 1284 go 1107 see 1062 think 841 find 827 give 748 tell 742 leave 718 bring 614 turn 609 reply 592 call 567 look 481 begin 466 seem 451 pay 451 hear 437 put 431 return 417 appear 407 carry 400 receive 400 pass 399 stand 397 continue 377 remain 373 get 367 hold 358 watch 352 follow 352 feel 348 keep 328 let 327 try 325 become 308 understand 307 want 298 observe 297 wait 296 wish 287 speak 287 ask Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5090 not 1921 then 1585 now 1495 so 1331 more 1206 up 1162 other 1155 out 1073 very 942 only 940 well 930 first 804 again 755 good 745 long 729 much 728 never 700 as 678 own 641 many 628 most 617 here 616 away 605 still 591 down 591 also 582 last 573 great 527 little 495 soon 491 few 489 back 478 same 464 small 458 even 449 english 436 old 434 too 427 off 419 just 415 there 415 such 408 next 380 young 374 large 344 in 337 ever 328 already 319 once 317 new Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 193 most 160 good 124 least 54 great 29 eld 22 bad 20 Most 18 slight 18 high 16 young 15 large 13 fine 10 late 10 early 7 small 6 near 6 close 6 cheap 5 rich 5 intr 5 deep 5 dear 5 big 4 sure 4 strong 4 southernmost 4 proud 4 old 4 mean 4 manif 4 happy 3 wise 3 l 3 j 3 hot 3 easy 3 brave 2 wish!--I''ll 2 true 2 sweet 2 soon 2 soft 2 ruch 2 pure 2 once:--how 2 low 2 furth 2 full 2 farth 2 fair Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 435 most 29 least 20 well 1 result;--the 1 highest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 creativecommons.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://creativecommons.org/ Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 15 hawksworth did not 10 hawksworth looked up 7 _ went out 6 hawksworth had ever 6 newton took leave 5 _ did not 4 _ making _ 4 _ pay _ 4 forster had not 4 forster was happy 4 hawksworth was momentarily 4 newton did not 4 newton had now 4 newton was much 4 newton was not 4 newton was so 3 _ is _ 3 hawksworth had never 3 hawksworth turned back 3 hawksworth was still 3 jadar seemed not 3 ships were not 2 _ are dead 2 _ are so 2 _ be most 2 _ carrying too 2 _ did _ 2 _ did n''t 2 _ do _ 2 _ going down 2 _ had _ 2 _ has none 2 _ hear _ 2 _ is almost 2 _ is fully 2 _ is happy 2 _ is not 2 _ know _ 2 _ say _ 2 _ see _ 2 _ taken _ 2 _ taking _ 2 _ thinking _ 2 _ thought _ 2 _ thought proper 2 _ took place 2 _ was hove 2 _ was not 2 _ was then 2 company are fully Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 _ did not _ 2 forster thought no more 2 hawksworth was no longer 2 man is not so 2 newton had no glass 2 newton made no answer 2 newton made no reply 2 newton was not sorry 2 ships were not men 1 _ did not well 1 _ does not _ 1 _ have no men 1 _ is not bad 1 _ is not yet 1 company are no way 1 company has no charts 1 english had no difficulty 1 india are not entirely 1 india had no independent 1 jadar was no more 1 letter has not yet 1 men carried no ammunition 1 ships carrying no valuable 1 time was not far A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 37048 author = Anonymous title = A Caution to the Directors of the East-India Company With Regard to Their Making the Midsummer Dividend of Five Per Cent. Without Due Attention to a Late Act of Parliament, and a By-law of Their Own date = keywords = Christmas; July; June summary = "That no dividend shall be made by the said company, for, or in respect "That it shall not be lawful, for any general court of the said company, dividend shall be made, by any general court, of any of the said more than one half yearly dividend, shall be made by one general court." legislature should enact a law, to regulate the making of dividends, time of making the act, the dividend even of five _per cent._ was proved _per cent._ dividend declared to be due the 5th of July. declared, that they would make a dividend on the 5th of July, then next India dividends have been declared by the company, when, how, for what months, under the resolution, that declared a dividend for six, or would straining the law, makeing an act of parliament say it meant July, when therefore declare any dividend till the Christmas court, as by the said id = 11399 author = Biddulph, J. (John) title = The Pirates of Malabar, and an Englishwoman in India Two Hundred Years Ago date = keywords = Angria; Anjengo; Bombay; Boone; Captain; Carwar; Company; Council; East; England; English; Gheriah; Governor; Gyfford; Kidd; Madagascar; Matthews; Mr.; Sumbhajee; Surat; Toolajee; portuguese summary = [Illustration: MAHRATTA GRABS AND GALLIVATS ATTACKING AN ENGLISH SHIP.] pirates--Directors'' views--Conajee Angria--Attacks English MAHRATTA GRABS AND GALLIVATS ATTACKING AN ENGLISH SHIP. ships--Embargo placed on English trade--Rovers trapped at Mungrole--John Company''s recent losses on captured ships sailing from Surat amounted to pirates--Directors'' views--Conajee Angria--Attacks English ships--Destroys Company, and to allow Angria''s people full trading facilities in Bombay, of 1717, a Bombay merchant''s ship carrying an English pass and flying Aislabie, Angria had respected Bombay trading ships, but of late he had in a few days sailed for Bombay, with forty-one of his ship''s company, the capture of pirate ships, to every captain £100, to other officers £40, _Ceres_, the, Company''s ship, attacked by Angrian pirates. _Halifax_, the, Company''s ship, attacked by Angrian pirates. his ship attacked and taken by pirates off Madagascar; Malwans, the, pirates, attack English ships. May, Captain, commander of a pirate ship, taken by Every,. Company''s ship, sent against Sumbhajee Angria. id = 48012 author = Cocks, Richard title = Diary of Richard Cocks, Volume 2 Cape-Merchant in the English Factory in Japan, 1615-1622, with Correspondence date = keywords = August; Bantam; Capt; China; December; Dono; Duch; Eaton; Edo; Emperour; England; English; February; Firando; God; Gonrok; Hollanders; January; Japon; Jno; John; July; June; King; Marche; Miaco; Mr.; Nangasaque; November; October; Samma; September; Shiwas; Shonguach summary = _Aprill 6._--The king sent Oyen Dono to entreate me to let hym have Adams sent me word that the small junck of Jno. Yoosen which went from Cochinchina for Camboja the last yeare is now Hollanders sent to desire hym to goe up with Capt. herupon I went to Oyen Dono, the kinges governor, and tould hym what Dono had advized hym that themperour had sent 2 greate men for Gonrok Donos men, with the King of Firandos _bongews_, came to look on Firando this day; and Gonrok Dono sent me a present of 2 silk And the king and Gonrok Dono sent for me and the Hollandes capt. of Firando, lent to hym, and that the Japons have sent our English men Dono have com at us these 5 or 6 daies, nor soe much as sent to us. id = 36939 author = Common sense (Writer), active 1813 title = Free Trade with India An Enquiry into the True State of the Question at Issue Between His Majesty''s Ministers, the Honorable the East India Company, and the Public at Large, on the Justice and Policy of a Free Trade to India date = keywords = Company; East; India summary = proof of the interest the public take in the question of a Free Trade; follows that the India Company being possessed of a monopoly, does follows that the India Company being possessed of a monopoly, does intending to make a monopoly of the trade to India, there were in fact that the East India Company is a monopoly, and injures trade by The trade to India, in its present state, produces a great influx of consider that the French had an East India Company in 1789, and that by French East India trade, fell, and no one rose in its place, neither India Company, as the articles brought by it have not increased in Company carry British manufactures out to India at about 40_s._ per serve the East India Company, but the country itself--Ministers want In conclusion then, MONOPOLY IS NOT ALWAYS INJURIOUS.--THE EAST INDIA COMPANY DOES NOT POSSESS A MONOPOLY.--GREAT CHANGES will be ATTENDED id = 34322 author = Hoover, Thomas title = The Moghul date = keywords = Agra; Akman; Allah; Allaudin; Ambassador; Arangbar; Captain; Company; Discovery; Elkington; England; Englishman; Goa; God; Hawksworth; Highness; India; Jadar; Janahara; Khan; London; Majesty; Moghul; Mukarrab; Nadir; Persian; Portugals; Prince; Rao; Sahib; Shahbandar; Sharif; Shirin; Surat; Vasant; english; imperial; portuguese; rajput summary = Hawksworth looked at Maggie''s gloating eyes and felt his heart turn. "I''d like a few days to think about it." Hawksworth looked again at Hawksworth turned to see a dark-skinned man bearing a large silver This was Prince Jadar''s second campaign in the Deccan, India''s revolttorn central plains, which lay far south of Agra and east of the port Hawksworth watched for a moment as the Rajput guards began taking their Hawksworth saw a small flicker in Jadar''s eyes as the prince waited for "There may be no time to ''wait,'' English Captain Hawksworth. Hawksworth turned to Vasant Rao in time to see a look "Why are you leaving?" Hawksworth turned and looked into his eyes, Suddenly Hawksworth felt Nadir Sharifs hand on his arm. "Well, Inglish, what do you think?'' Arangbar turned to Hawksworth with Hawksworth turned to watch as the men began id = 33536 author = Inglis, W. H. title = A report of Major Hart''s case, of rice-frauds, near Seringapatam date = keywords = Hart; Macleod; Major summary = error, it is the Board of Controul which, in order to allow Major Hart Lord Harris explains, saying "Captain Macleod, to whom no report of Harris says, thirty-six) days, exclusive of Major Hart''s department. is supposed Major Hart has 7000 bullock-loads, which would be ten seers of April, Major Hart had ten seers each man, equal to ten days rice, at whether Major Hart could hold private as well as public grain? of public secretary to Lord Harris,) that Major Hart had a quantity of Hart) must, _in future_, communicate directly with me (Major-General Relative, indeed, to Captain Macleod the Major-General thinks it fraud was not solely in Major Hart''s grain, but, also, in that _public_ service." Of Major Hart''s grain, it can equally be to Major Hart''s head people, we must differ from the Committee of Court of Directors, for the use of the Proprietors; but Major Hart has id = 12959 author = Marryat, Frederick title = Newton Forster date = keywords = Amber; Aveleyn; Berecroft; Captain; Carrington; Castle; Dragwell; Drawlock; Edward; England; Ferguson; Fontanges; Forster; God; India; Isabel; Jackson; John; Madame; Miss; Mrs; Newton; Nicholas; Oughton; Plausible; Ramsden; Revel; Sullivan; Windsor; chapter; english; french summary = Newton Forster sailed in his vessel with a cargo to be delivered at the Newton had quitted the room where Mrs Forster lay in a deplorable "Why, I have been mad for a long time," replied Mrs Forster; "the "I think our little guns will soon reach her," observed Newton. "My dear father," replied Newton, taking his hand, "did not you receive away Newton Forster appeared to be the least likely to "lead to "Not upon legal business--humph!" replied Mr Forster, eyeing Newton. "Good-bye," replied John, without looking up; and Newton with his father, "Like most young ladies, sir, a little giddy," replied Isabel. "Between the two, sir," observed Newton, handing Captain Drawlock his "With pleasure, my friend," replied Newton, taking the old man''s hand, "It''s rather awkward, Newton," said Mr John Forster, about ten days "What do you think of her spars, Forster?" said Captain Oughton to Newton, id = 21557 author = Marryat, Frederick title = Newton Forster; Or, The Merchant Service date = keywords = Amber; Aveleyn; Captain; Carrington; Castle; Doctor; Dragwell; Drawlock; Edward; England; Ferguson; Fontanges; Forster; God; India; Isabel; Jackson; John; Madame; Miss; Monsieur; Mrs; Newton; Nicholas; Oughton; Plausible; Revel; Sullivan; Windsor; english; french; volume summary = Newton Forster, or the Merchant Service, by Captain Marryat. NEWTON FORSTER, OR THE MERCHANT SERVICE, BY CAPTAIN FREDERICK MARRYAT. Newton had quitted the room where Mrs Forster lay in a deplorable In the mean time Newton Forster had made every despatch, and returned to "And in the mean time my poor father may starve," said Newton, with a "I think our little guns will soon reach her," observed Newton. "My dear father," replied Newton, taking his hand, "did not you receive away Newton Forster appeared to be the least likely to "lead to "Like most young ladies, sir, a little giddy," replied Isabel. "Between the two, sir," observed Newton, handing Captain Drawlock his time below, Captain Drawlock would hand over to Newton''s charge any one "With pleasure, my friend," replied Newton, taking the old man''s hand, "It''s rather awkward, Newton," said Mr John Forster, about ten days id = 49835 author = Miles, William Augustus title = The Letters of Gracchus on the East India Question date = keywords = Charter; Company; Court; Directors; East; Government; India; London; Parliament summary = The rights of the East India Company are two-fold; and have long been East India Company to a renewal of their Charter; and as such they have the exclusive Charter of the East India Company; in order to inquire, East India Company, by conceding a regulated Export Trade, have at once East India Company''s Charter, which was made by the Directors to the established rights of the East India Company. the East India Company to watch and control the trade carrying on under Government, if an import trade from India should be granted to the East India Company, &c._ The General Society possessed the privilege of trade ever been conceded to the East India Company; either under its THE RIGHTS AND PRETENSIONS OF THE EAST INDIA COMPANY. RIGHTS and PRETENSIONS of the East India Company; and that the judgment government_ has never been granted to the East India Company, _but with id = 37082 author = Pulteney, William title = A Short View of the Laws Now Subsisting with Respect to the Powers of the East India Company To Borrow Money under their Seal, and to Incur Debts in the Course of their Trade, by the Purchase of Goods on Credit, and by Freighting Ships or other Mercantile Transactions date = keywords = Company; India; debt summary = respect to the powers of the East India Company to contract debts, I the Company from purchasing goods on credit, or from incurring freights have restrained the Company''s power of borrowing under seal; none of the increase of dividend while the Company owed any debts beyond the six statutes which restrain the Company''s power of borrowing, to consider pretence of a doubt of the Company''s power of incurring debts beyond six any way restrain the Company''s power of borrowing or extending its put upon it, as if the Company''s debts could never exceed the sum of under pretence that the sum total of the Company''s debts exceeded the and may be lawful for the East India Company to borrow or take up money the Company with respect to the purchasing goods upon credit, or which the East India Company is restrained from borrowing money; and it id = 37000 author = Stair, John Dalrymple, Earl of title = The Proper Limits of the Government''s Interference with the Affairs of the East-India Company Attempted to be Assigned with some few Reflections Extorted by, and on, the Distracted State of the Times date = keywords = Company; House; India summary = of the EAST-INDIA COMPANY, GOVERNMENT''S Interference with the Affairs of the EAST-INDIA COMPANY, the public revenue, exceeded twelve millions; and the necessary of affairs fully in as great a state of confusion as our own. of the East-India Company, in direct opposition to the desires of the debts of the East-India Company with those of the public, in any manner, trade is, moreover, by the civil death of the Company, open to every administration of the affairs of a bankrupt: the virtuous majority in of the East-India Company; gives no note or appearance of a present bankruptcy in the Company''s affairs; but to those that do not know the East-India Company, further than I have already stated, and likewise by The affairs of the Company have been embarrassed before; they have East-India Company towards the nation are great and notorious. on Britain, and why they are not stated as such by the Company, I cannot