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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 7 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 113901 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 73 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 Henry 6 Elizabeth 5 London 5 England 4 Mr. 4 Mary 4 King 4 Essex 3 man 3 William 3 Thomas 3 Spain 3 Sir 3 Scotland 3 Queen 3 Philip 3 John 3 Jane 3 God 3 France 3 English 3 Edward 3 Anne 2 time 2 spanish 2 great 2 good 2 english 2 VIII 2 Tower 2 St. 2 Sidney 2 Oxford 2 Lord 2 Latin 2 Lady 2 Francis 2 Europe 2 Cambridge 2 Bacon 1 work 1 unto 1 sort 1 queen 1 place 1 page 1 note 1 nay 1 like 1 life Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1989 time 1886 man 1723 queen 1014 day 946 year 847 part 761 king 752 work 711 life 679 hand 662 house 608 country 602 place 570 thing 554 death 545 character 540 way 538 court 514 lady 505 person 496 majesty 484 kind 472 subject 466 letter 448 name 445 play 441 one 435 matter 416 word 414 nothing 406 mind 403 manner 399 friend 398 other 396 son 386 people 386 order 383 gentleman 377 marriage 372 power 372 head 370 eye 368 law 366 horse 363 age 357 side 341 cause 340 state 336 father 332 love Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 6157 _ 1542 Elizabeth 868 England 845 Mary 723 Henry 656 Hal 569 London 564 lord 456 Sir 418 Essex 397 English 348 God 317 sir 311 John 286 earl 283 Thomas 275 Edward 266 Philip 264 Marryott 260 Anthony 242 France 238 Queen 229 thou 229 Mr. 227 King 216 Spain 213 Shakespere 209 hath 207 Scotland 205 Anne 194 Leicester 193 Tower 192 Lord 190 Francis 189 . 181 William 181 Valentine 180 Lady 177 Sidney 173 II 172 Barnet 171 Master 171 James 164 Scots 159 Kit 156 Majesty 153 Jane 151 Bottle 149 Harrison 144 Spenser Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 7056 he 6435 it 4153 she 3912 i 2880 him 2803 they 1995 them 1925 her 1585 you 1274 we 997 himself 971 me 461 us 428 herself 333 themselves 270 itself 162 myself 155 thee 68 one 47 yourself 38 mine 35 hers 31 his 21 ourselves 19 theirs 18 yours 12 thyself 9 ye 9 ours 6 whereof 4 thy 4 ''em 3 yf 3 on''t 3 is''t 3 ''s 2 oneself 1 yt 1 you!--they''ll 1 vp 1 vnto 1 unbeliev''d 1 twas 1 time.--henry 1 thou 1 those,--they 1 these:-- 1 them:-- 1 pelf 1 patron,--or Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 28221 be 9598 have 2347 do 1910 make 1802 say 1212 take 1168 see 1143 give 1029 come 990 know 959 find 898 go 685 bring 661 call 657 think 638 seem 558 write 527 appear 498 send 496 follow 476 become 455 leave 432 keep 432 bear 422 put 420 pass 410 show 384 tell 378 receive 367 look 365 speak 351 set 338 use 338 let 327 stand 325 hold 322 die 308 hear 302 live 301 fall 290 begin 275 remain 268 turn 266 carry 260 learn 247 return 246 declare 243 serve 241 get 239 lead Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5450 not 2492 so 1919 more 1789 great 1608 other 1351 very 1344 well 1287 most 1253 such 1193 good 1182 now 1130 own 1130 much 1092 then 1061 also 1018 first 1016 only 858 long 854 many 821 even 791 little 785 same 777 as 751 up 670 never 600 still 588 out 547 here 541 too 539 less 535 english 528 yet 527 far 513 high 492 last 464 however 459 old 436 few 425 young 418 rather 407 certain 406 soon 402 once 394 thus 394 ever 385 early 377 again 376 perhaps 372 there 372 almost Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 377 good 337 most 280 least 175 great 99 high 69 bad 50 early 46 eld 32 fine 27 slight 23 near 22 fair 18 strong 18 late 16 young 15 wise 15 rich 15 manif 14 deep 13 low 12 warm 12 noble 11 long 10 large 9 weak 9 old 9 bright 9 Most 8 lofty 8 happy 8 full 8 dear 7 small 7 simple 7 grave 6 safe 6 pure 6 poor 6 chief 6 base 6 able 5 true 5 strange 5 rare 5 proud 5 mean 5 keen 5 fat 5 close 5 clear Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 950 most 70 well 42 least 3 soon 2 near 2 fast 1 worst 1 wisest 1 speakest 1 parson[42]:-- 1 long 1 lest 1 highest 1 fairest 1 early 1 drest 1 begins:-- Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/47006/47006-h/47006-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/47006/47006-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/indaysofqueeneli00tapp 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 elizabeth was very 6 elizabeth did not 6 elizabeth was not 6 queen was much 5 _ is not 4 _ was not 4 queen was pleased 3 _ do not 3 _ was _ 3 elizabeth was more 3 elizabeth was now 3 hal went on 3 mary did not 3 mary was dead 3 mary was now 3 men are not 3 men do not 3 things are more 2 _ are almost 2 _ is _ 2 _ is full 2 _ is perhaps 2 _ is sometimes 2 _ is very 2 _ were _ 2 character is not 2 character was not 2 days were up 2 earl had actually 2 elizabeth became queen 2 elizabeth had actually 2 elizabeth had not 2 elizabeth was about 2 elizabeth was dead 2 elizabeth was extremely 2 elizabeth was greatly 2 elizabeth was right 2 england is not 2 england was still 2 hal did not 2 hal looked back 2 henry was also 2 henry was determined 2 henry was not 2 life is so 2 majesty was not 2 man did not 2 mary became more 2 mary had never 2 mary was immediately Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ is not merely 1 _ is not only 1 _ was not generally 1 character do not altogether 1 character was not free 1 country are not able 1 country be not so 1 court was not so 1 day made no mistake 1 days was no slight 1 death had no further 1 earl left no children 1 elizabeth found no more 1 elizabeth had no propensity 1 elizabeth had not only 1 elizabeth had not yet 1 elizabeth has not generally 1 elizabeth made no scruple 1 elizabeth was no more 1 elizabeth was not able 1 elizabeth was not afraid 1 elizabeth was not safe 1 elizabeth was not satisfied 1 elizabeth was not thus 1 elizabeth were no longer 1 england had no ideals 1 england have not so 1 england is no less 1 england is not merely 1 hal had no answer 1 hal saw no abandonment 1 hal showed no offence 1 hands are not cold 1 henry had no deep 1 henry had no heresy 1 henry had no strong 1 henry was no longer 1 henry was not inhuman 1 house is no sample 1 house was no otherwise 1 king had not merely 1 king has not yet 1 king is not ill 1 kings have not only 1 lady did not sufficiently 1 lady had no children 1 lady was no friend 1 life is not mine 1 lord was not sick 1 majesty did not scruple A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 29107 author = Abbott, Jacob title = Queen Elizabeth Makers of History date = keywords = Anne; Edward; Elizabeth; England; Essex; France; Henry; Jane; King; Lady; London; Mary; Philip; Queen; Spain; Tower; english summary = Mary, Elizabeth, and Edward, each one the child of a different wife; and the king began to look both upon Mary and Elizabeth with favor again. Mary followed, and reigned as queen five years longer, and died without Elizabeth went away, and resided afterward at a place called Hatfield. high offices of state under Queen Elizabeth, when she came to reign. conveyed to Lady Jane on the young king''s death, Mary and Elizabeth Queen Mary''s principal minister of state at this time was a crafty Elizabeth went to London to visit the queen, and was received with great considerable claimant to the throne but Elizabeth, except Mary Queen of Elizabeth and Mary Queen of Scots.--Their rivalry.--Character of When Queen Elizabeth learned that Mary was advancing such pretensions to get possession of the English throne during Elizabeth''s life-time, Things were in this state about the year 1585, when Queen Elizabeth id = 21500 author = Aikin, Lucy title = Memoirs of the Court of Queen Elizabeth date = keywords = Anne; Arundel; Bacon; Burleigh; Catherine; Cecil; Charles; Dudley; Edward; Elizabeth; England; Essex; Europe; France; Francis; God; Grey; Henry; Howard; Ireland; James; Jane; John; Latin; Leicester; London; Mary; Mr.; Norfolk; Northumberland; Philip; Raleigh; Robert; Scotland; Scots; Sidney; Spain; St.; Suffolk; Sussex; Thomas; Tower; VIII; Walsingham; William; Wyat; english; french; note; queen; spanish summary = a faithful and affectionate subject to queen Elizabeth, in whose reign the king and queen, the members of both houses, and the lord-mayor and queen''s grace, the lady Elizabeth, and all the court, did fast from Pole.--The queen enters London--passes to the Tower.--Lord Robert Dudley "This man being noted to grow high in her" (queen Elizabeth''s) "favor, "Letter of Queen Elizabeth to Sir Henry Sidney, on the Quarrel between years from this time he resided as the queen''s ambassador at the court son Robert.--Letter of the queen to the earl of Shrewsbury respecting "servant to queen Elizabeth, councillor to king James, and friend to sir of Greville, "He had no mean place in queen Elizabeth''s favor, neither of the earl of Hertford.--Anecdote of Essex.--Queen at the lord _Queen Elizabeth to the king of Scots:_ persons, whom the queen received with high honors, and caused to His letter respecting the queen and lord R. id = 32593 author = Harrison, William title = Elizabethan England From ''A Description of England,'' by William Harrison date = keywords = Book; Cambridge; Canterbury; College; Edward; Elizabeth; England; English; Essex; God; Harrison; Henry; Holinshed; III; John; King; London; Lord; Mr.; Oxford; Queen; Romans; Scotland; Sir; St.; Thomas; Wales; William; chapter; country; day; edit; good; great; hath; house; life; like; man; place; sort; time; unto summary = gentleman or man of mean calling, albeit that by the common law she hath short time will turn to the great ruin of our country, and that is, the charters, and donations (made in times past unto sundry religious houses, But in divers places where rich men dwelled some time in good tenements, the names usually given unto such as feed the flock remain in like sort as that see unto the like end, but this shall suffice, being less common than more it is desired, by means whereof, in old time, the best was called little room; whereas of late years a great compass hath yielded but small Glass also hath been made here in great plenty before, and in the time of unlike unto them have bred of late times (for their place of generation is store of fir hath grown in times past, as I said, and the people go unto id = 36993 author = Jordan, Furneaux title = Body, Parentage and Character in History: Notes on the Tudor Period date = keywords = Elizabeth; Europe; Henry; King; Mary; NOTE; Reformation; Tudor; VIII; character; man; time summary = NOTE I.--THE VARIOUS VIEWS OF HENRY VIII.''S CHARACTER. NOTE VI.--THE MORE CHARACTERISTIC FEATURES OF HENRY''S CHARACTER. NOTE VI.--THE MORE CHARACTERISTIC FEATURES OF HENRY''S CHARACTER. NOTE VIII.--HENRY AND HIS PEOPLE AND PARLIAMENT. capable men of Henry''s reign to meet half a dozen of Victoria''s, the jury Henry''s death, in all time of trouble the people longed for Henry''s good carried out long before our Henry''s time. Henry come near to the truth, Nero was the better character of the two. In order to read Henry''s character more correctly, if that be possible, cannot but see how unlike Henry was to the impassioned men of history. of the great names of Henry''s time. of Henry''s character, favour the view that he thought and willed and acted All the elements of character which Henry possessed were found also in Henry (and his time) said, you may think id = 27450 author = Saintsbury, George title = A History of Elizabethan Literature date = keywords = Arber; Bacon; Beaumont; Ben; Browne; Cambridge; Chapman; Crashaw; Dekker; Donne; Drayton; Dryden; Elizabethan; England; English; Fletcher; Ford; George; Greene; Hall; Henry; Herrick; John; Jonson; Lamb; Latin; Life; London; Lord; Love; Lyly; Marlowe; Marston; Martin; Massinger; Middleton; Milton; Mr.; Nash; Oxford; Poems; Richard; Shakespere; Sidney; Sir; Spenser; Surrey; Taylor; Thomas; Webster; William; Wyatt; good; great; work summary = thought and manner--Sir Thomas Browne--His life, works, and editions suggesting not a little of Shakespere''s greatest work, had the chief excuse only work of the kind, and was the first English play acted at either after Shakespere and Spenser and Sidney, in the English sonnet of the time. greatness, yet in character of work, and in the influences which played on place, dealing with the general subject of English prose style, I have did the best known and most personal of all his works appear, the famous the work of no other English prose writer. which, as we have said, vitiates all the English prose work of his time, His chief work in verse is a great philosophical poem, many great writers had not at his age done such good work; but then it must are neither above nor below the better work of their time in literary form. id = 34650 author = Stephens, Robert Neilson title = A Gentleman Player; His Adventures on a Secret Mission for Queen Elizabeth date = keywords = Anne; Anthony; Barnet; Bottle; Captain; Elizabeth; Essex; Fleetwood; Francis; God; Hal; Harry; Hazlehurst; Kit; London; Marryott; Master; Mistress; Mr.; Oliver; Puritan; Roger; Rumney; Shakespeare; Sir; Sly; Tis; Valentine; man; nay; page summary = "Why art thou silent, lad," said Shakespeare to Hal Marryott, by way of "An it be men in quest of Sir Valentine, you mean," said Kit, who was of "Tis a lesson to shun disputes, boy," said Sir Valentine, to Hal. Hal, of Sir Valentine, knowing how most Catholic houses were provided in "''Tis a glorious kind of sport, Sir Valentine!" cried Hal, his eyes "You have sure ways of going to France, I doubt not," said Hal to Sir "Tell me more of this Barnet," said Hal to Captain Bottle, as the three As Hal opened way, Anthony and Bottle followed close, preventing the if indeed Sir Valentine, not Hal Marryott, had escaped her in the road. "The lady!" cried Hal, and exchanged a blank look with Kit and Anthony. At Hal''s order, Rumney now had his men hitch their horses to the great "Lead Oliver''s horse, Kit," said Hal. id = 47006 author = Tappan, Eva March title = In the Days of Queen Elizabeth date = keywords = Elizabeth; England; English; France; Henry; Jane; King; Lady; Majesty; Mary; Philip; Queen; Scotland; Spain; grace; spanish summary = King Henry was angry, and when Queen Anne came to him in tears and told "And how found you her Grace, the Lady Elizabeth?" asked King Henry. they said, "but, my lord duke, in the time of King Henry Parliament long life, and when Elizabeth became queen, all Mary''s work would be Again Mary asked, and again Elizabeth said no. Mary''s chief adviser, urged that to insure the queen''s safety Elizabeth "When I marry, I shall marry as a woman, not as a queen," said Mary, sovereign lady, Queen Elizabeth, is not the rightful and undoubted "Now, mark my words, Elizabeth, queen of England, will never journey by "I ask but Elizabeth''s friendship," said Mary. herself and not Elizabeth was the rightful queen of England. "Your queen is over high then," said Elizabeth, "for I am neither too "In faith, I thank the Queen of Scots," said Elizabeth, "but my council