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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 85544 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 89 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Mr. 4 good 4 come 4 Mrs. 3 Miss 2 man 2 look 2 little 2 Tom 2 St. 2 Smith 2 Mayor 2 God 2 Father 2 Baxter 1 like 1 Wood 1 Wherry 1 Valjean 1 Twine 1 Trend 1 Tony 1 Tommy 1 Tholomyès 1 Tappahannock 1 Strife 1 Sparrow 1 Shovelstrode 1 Sam 1 Rogers 1 Robin 1 Richard 1 Quentin 1 President 1 Prency 1 Pippin 1 Piper 1 Peter 1 Paris 1 Ordway 1 Old 1 O''Sullivan 1 Nipper 1 Nigel 1 New 1 Myriel 1 Muriel 1 Morton 1 Morgan 1 Monsieur Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2003 man 1126 hand 1087 eye 1072 time 995 face 970 day 824 thing 803 way 702 moment 684 room 632 life 624 door 622 year 622 head 608 woman 605 word 563 voice 562 child 524 night 506 nothing 504 one 480 boy 456 place 452 girl 443 something 441 house 399 heart 374 hour 356 minute 353 name 351 people 339 arm 336 work 329 bed 315 mind 313 window 308 light 306 thought 306 table 306 letter 305 friend 304 town 303 street 296 father 293 money 283 world 268 soul 261 sir 261 mother 258 foot Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1055 David 985 _ 865 Pippin 658 Mr. 468 Ordway 463 Peter 380 Mrs. 322 Nigel 314 Janey 298 Mary 289 M. 283 Anne 278 Mayor 253 Rogers 253 Bishop 247 Baxter 236 Tom 216 God 201 Tony 201 Miss 201 Madeleine 197 Lord 191 Jean 186 Helen 182 Sam 181 Valjean 177 Alice 169 Kate 154 Javert 152 Smith 152 Quentin 151 Tappahannock 150 CHAPTER 149 Morton 140 Father 125 Len 125 Bailey 122 Fantine 117 Lydia 116 Beverly 111 St. 111 Kimper 107 Emily 106 Furlonger 102 General 99 Madame 97 Banks 92 de 92 Richard 92 Carden Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 13391 he 10111 i 8037 you 7705 it 5419 she 4476 him 2515 me 1890 her 1853 they 1226 them 993 we 763 himself 305 us 210 ''em 201 herself 193 myself 121 yourself 108 itself 107 one 73 themselves 48 his 45 ''s 44 mine 33 yours 30 hers 30 em 23 ourselves 11 you''re 9 you''ll 9 theirs 9 him,-- 9 d''you 6 himself,-- 4 thee 4 i''m 3 ours 3 oneself 3 meself 2 ye 2 thar 2 bookshelf 1 yrs 1 yourselves 1 you,--i 1 you''re---- 1 you!--you 1 yer 1 wonder-- 1 whispered,-- 1 vaguely,-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 23250 be 10292 have 4416 do 3591 say 2238 go 2041 see 1840 come 1643 know 1399 look 1337 make 1145 think 1102 get 1081 take 1039 tell 842 give 779 ask 719 feel 718 find 711 want 695 seem 662 turn 624 speak 581 hear 573 stand 573 leave 502 sit 499 begin 468 hold 456 let 422 put 416 call 397 pass 384 fall 378 try 377 keep 368 believe 364 mean 349 walk 338 bring 335 return 330 like 330 draw 328 break 323 rise 318 talk 318 cry 316 become 311 live 302 lie 293 understand Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 6586 not 1764 so 1551 then 1517 up 1409 now 1256 little 1245 out 1064 good 949 more 938 only 858 old 854 back 799 again 742 just 741 never 704 down 697 very 695 first 661 here 660 other 641 long 629 still 613 too 612 well 599 there 587 as 540 last 539 away 531 even 523 great 518 much 483 all 471 on 452 right 442 in 441 own 404 once 388 young 383 suddenly 381 off 370 ever 366 always 364 almost 343 few 342 same 342 poor 315 over 304 small 301 white 284 yet Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 128 least 114 good 83 most 29 bad 19 small 19 slight 17 high 16 great 15 Most 14 faint 13 young 11 low 10 near 10 j 9 late 8 big 7 strong 6 tiny 6 simple 6 full 6 fine 6 eld 6 clever 5 old 5 mere 5 deep 4 topmost 4 long 4 large 4 hard 4 happy 4 handsome 4 early 4 dandy 3 plain 3 nice 3 loud 3 dark 3 bitter 3 bare 2 warm 2 true 2 swell 2 smart 2 remote 2 new 2 lovely 2 l 2 farth 2 fair Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 173 most 19 least 13 well 1 worst 1 largest 1 it,-- 1 hard Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 www.pgdp.net 1 www.freeliterature.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.pgdp.net 1 http://www.freeliterature.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 13 _ was _ 12 _ is _ 8 david did not 7 pippin looked up 6 _ are _ 5 _ am _ 5 _ had _ 5 face was white 5 peter did not 5 pippin did not 5 pippin sat down 4 _ do _ 4 _ wanted _ 4 david sat down 4 david was not 4 david was silent 4 face was pale 4 hand held out 4 peter got up 3 eyes were very 3 eyes were wide 3 man looked up 3 pippin went on 3 time was up 3 woman did not 3 words were uttered 2 _ ai n''t 2 _ be _ 2 _ did _ 2 _ go _ 2 _ make _ 2 _ see _ 2 _ want _ 2 boy does n''t 2 boy was not 2 children were not 2 david had not 2 david was awake 2 david was certain 2 david was still 2 david went on 2 days are not 2 days went by 2 door was open 2 eyes came back 2 eyes had not 2 eyes were closed 2 eyes were dim 2 eyes were full 2 eyes were large Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ has not even 1 child is no longer 1 children had no shoes 1 children have no memory 1 david found no work 1 david had no longer 1 david had no more 1 david had no newspaper 1 david heard no more 1 david made no boasts 1 david was not now 1 david was not only 1 david was not yet 1 david were not less 1 days are not grey 1 days are not very 1 days were not long 1 eye was not once 1 face was not familiar 1 face were not so 1 hands were not soft 1 house is not at 1 life is not eternal 1 man had no hair 1 man is not so 1 night was not very 1 ordway had no longer 1 ordway made no further 1 peter had no very 1 pippin have no doubts 1 pippin made no doubt 1 voice was no more 1 women had no soul 1 women were not asleep A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 34419 author = Glasgow, Ellen Anderson Gholson title = The Ancient Law date = keywords = Alice; Banks; Baxter; Beverly; Botetourt; Brooke; Cedar; Daniel; Emily; Geoffrey; Hill; Jasper; Lydia; Milly; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Ordway; Richard; Smith; Tappahannock; Trend; Twine; Wherry; come summary = "I''m looking for work," said Ordway, "and I was told at Baxter''s Turning away Ordway followed the street to the end of the town, where it ''You''d better go on with yo'' work,'' said Mr. Beverly in his soft way, but Young Tom picked up his axe, and sat down "I don''t mind telling you it''s Smith," said Ordway, with his gaze on a "My dear fellow," returned Ordway, while his look went like sunshine to "Of course I''d like it tremendously," said Ordway, after a moment in stood near him, Ordway turned away and went out into the road which led "Good-morning," said Ordway, a little surprised; "it looks as if I''d put Without replying, Ordway walked slowly to the window and stood looking Looking over the head of the little man, Ordway''s gaze travelled slowly "Oh, I know Alice better than you do," said Ordway, in a voice which he id = 14895 author = Habberton, John title = All He Knew: A Story date = keywords = Bartram; Deacon; Eleanor; Jane; Jesus; Kimper; Mr.; Mrs.; Prency; Sam; Tom summary = "Sam," said the judge, "I sentenced you, but I don''t want you to think "Why, you ain''t ever done such a thing in your life, Sam!" said Mrs. Kimper, with a feeble giggle. "I know it, poor gal," said Sam; "I know it: I feel a good deal the "Do you mean, Deacon," said Sam, after a moment, "that what I''m "Sam," said Bartram, "I am a man of business, and I suppose you are "But, Sam, my dear fellow," said the young man, "all this doesn''t mean "Conrad," said the deacon, putting on a lofty air, "you''re a good man "Mr. Kimper," said the lady, "try not to look at it in that way. "Such talks never do any good, judge," said the deacon, buttoning his "Do you know, deacon," said Sam, "I was thinkin'' about the same thing? "Every man for his own, deacon," said Sam. id = 48731 author = Hugo, Victor title = Les Misérables, v. 1/5: Fantine date = keywords = Arras; Bishop; CHAPTER; Champmathieu; Cosette; D----; Fantine; Father; Favourite; Gervais; God; Javert; Jean; Madame; Madeleine; Magloire; Maire; Mayor; Monseigneur; Monsieur; Myriel; Paris; President; St.; Tholomyès; Valjean; come; good; little; look; man summary = Myriel said, "you are looking at a good man and I at a great leaving his door open day and night for any who liked to enter, and "I am about to be cured, sir," the old man said; then after a pause he old man raised a finger to heaven and said,-thanked the Mayor, and said, "I am going to a worthy man whom I know," The "good woman" touched the man''s arm and pointed to a small house looked in turn at the two aged females and the old man, and, not Each time he said the word _Sir_ with his gentle grave voice the man''s "I trust you will pass a good night," said the Bishop. Jean Valjean opened his eyes, and looked at the Bishop with an old woman with a hypocritical look came into her room and said, "Do you id = 56161 author = Kaye-Smith, Sheila title = The Three Furlongers date = keywords = Awdrey; Furlonger; Gleichroeder; Hall; Janey; Len; Leonard; London; Lowe; Mr.; Nigel; Quentin; Shovelstrode; Smith; Sparrow; Strife; Tony; Wood; come; good summary = Nigel took away his hands from his eyes, and Len and Janey glanced Nigel obediently began to swallow the soup, while Len and Janey talked Nigel dropped his violin, and looked out with dream-filled eyes at the "Wan''er go ''ome!" shrieked Ivy. Nigel looked so mortified that Janey could hardly help laughing--till saw beautiful things in the hedges, he wanted to give them to Janey. "Nigel came home last night," said Janet, breaking the silence that had When Len and Janey came in from the yard that evening they found Nigel Len and Janey were like the woods, they did not change--then "I''m glad you came to me at East Grinstead," said Tony, a little "Hullo!" said Nigel--then suddenly he laughed; they all looked so "Janey will," said Nigel. "There''s no one," said Nigel, "nor likely to be--I must go, Len." Nigel and Janey looked into each other''s id = 62964 author = LM (Leslie Moore) title = The Peacock Feather: A Romance date = keywords = Adair; Anne; Carden; Dickie; Father; General; Haldane; Lady; Millicent; Miss; Mrs.; Muriel; O''Sullivan; Peter; Piper; Robin; Tommy; little; man summary = "Good morning," said Peter pleasantly, as the cart and man came abreast "I shall expect to hear what you think of my recommendation," said Mrs. Cresswell, as he handed her to her carriage and placed two of the books "And a woman," said Peter, "has written this letter to me--to me!" His "Without doubt," said Peter to himself, "it is Lady Anne returning." "So you are Peter the Piper?" said Lady Anne in her low, distinguished man looked up, the moonlight falling full on his face, and Anne saw "It''s coming," said Peter aloud, looking through the window. "Lady Anne will understand," protested Dickie, voicing Peter''s own "I''ll come and see you again," said Dickie confidently to Peter. Peter looked at Anne. "As Peter Carden Lady Anne does not know me," he said said, "that that man who called himself Peter the Piper should have Peter said a word or two, id = 40176 author = Richards, Laura Elizabeth Howe title = Pippin; A Wandering Flame date = keywords = Appleby; Aymer; Bailey; Baxter; Blossom; Elder; Flora; Hadley; Jacob; John; Lord; Lucy; Man; Mary; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Nipper; Old; Pippin; come; good; like summary = PIPPIN LOOKS FOR OLD MAN BLOSSOM''S LITTLE "Come one day," Pippin went on, "he got me bad. Pippin whistled "There was an old man" carefully through three times, P''raps you know the place, sir?" Pippin''s eyes lightened "Young man," he said, "I''d like to shake hands with you!" He "Real nice man!" said Pippin. "Now!" said Pippin, "I wouldn''t break that good lady''s rest, not for all hand--flowers too, she''d bring: sure you rec''lect little Mary, Pippin?" If little Mary knowed where I was, she''d come like "Mr. Bailey," said Pippin, "the Lord is awful good to me! "Like me to move a little ways?" said Pippin, and moved down to his PIPPIN LOOKS FOR OLD MAN BLOSSOM''S LITTLE GAL "Why," said Pippin slowly, "I thought he was a boy I used to know, but "I''ve got a hunch," said Pippin, "that I''d better tell him right away. id = 41180 author = Scott, Leroy title = To Him That Hath date = keywords = Aldrich; Allen; Avenue; Chambers; Christopher; David; Drew; God; Haddon; Helen; Kate; Lillian; Mayor; Mission; Morgan; Morton; Mr.; New; Rogers; St.; Tom; good; look summary = David was sitting in Morton''s study, looking through the six years'' "I don''t know," said David, his lips dry; but he thought of a paragraph During these black days he saw little of Tom. David did not want to "I don''t like it for you to look this way, David," she said. Instantly the room was filled with a blinding glare, and David saw Mr. Allen standing in the doorway, his left hand still on the electric-light about you," he said, briefly, and for a moment he silently looked David When David entered his room, after telling Rogers good night, he found "Yes," said David, taking the hand he held out. David stepped nearer to Rogers, and saw in his eyes the look of hunted as David had once said to the Mayor, always regarded her father as a man said good-bye, and after him Tom. Then David took Rogers''s thin hand.