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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 4 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 72213 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 65 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 man 4 London 3 Fielding 2 wind 2 time 2 little 2 great 2 good 2 field 2 day 2 captain 2 Tom 2 Sir 2 Murphy 2 Mrs. 2 Mrs 2 Mr. 2 Mary 2 March 2 Lord 2 Lisbon 2 Lady 2 July 2 Journal 2 Joseph 2 Jones 2 John 2 Henry 2 Francis 2 Andrews 2 Amelia 1 world 1 ship 1 play 1 person 1 long 1 leave 1 king 1 illustration 1 footnote 1 english 1 author 1 Walpole 1 Town 1 Street 1 Stour 1 Rome 1 Richardson 1 Preface 1 Pasquin Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 667 man 479 time 446 fielding 427 year 406 day 300 life 291 part 290 captain 285 house 248 author 224 work 219 wife 219 nothing 207 wind 207 person 206 character 200 ship 198 friend 189 kind 182 place 180 world 180 word 177 lady 175 name 167 power 167 book 164 case 161 month 149 woman 149 hand 148 way 143 play 143 child 142 manner 139 spirit 135 gentleman 134 reason 134 country 133 thing 132 death 131 genius 129 law 128 writer 128 number 128 nature 125 money 124 truth 124 page 123 morning 123 family Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4508 _ 763 Fielding 262 Mr. 234 Mr 216 Henry 203 Tom 184 Sir 173 Jones 136 Lady 130 London 128 Mrs. 121 Lord 106 Journal 101 Amelia 99 Walpole 99 Murphy 97 Joseph 87 John 86 Pasquin 85 Andrews 81 Mary 79 Lisbon 78 Mrs 75 hath 75 Champion 73 Street 65 Richardson 65 Miss 65 Justice 65 February 63 Minos 60 July 60 George 60 Covent 59 House 59 Hogarth 59 Garden 58 Cibber 57 March 57 . 56 Stour 56 Miscellanies 54 Court 53 Town 53 Lyttelton 53 Bow 53 April 52 CHAPTER 52 Bath 52 Andrew Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3346 i 2793 he 2785 it 1041 we 994 me 920 him 784 they 513 them 495 she 422 us 378 you 332 himself 204 her 196 myself 122 themselves 97 itself 52 ourselves 34 herself 19 one 15 mine 11 yourself 8 his 7 thee 6 hers 5 em 5 ''em 3 theirs 3 ours 2 yours 1 unreveng''d 1 o Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 10759 be 4217 have 750 do 592 say 554 make 451 give 396 know 394 seem 390 see 373 take 370 find 312 think 306 field 305 appear 261 come 239 call 235 write 227 tell 224 go 217 leave 200 bring 181 receive 178 believe 174 follow 162 begin 154 pay 150 declare 146 become 142 carry 138 return 135 speak 135 live 133 bear 126 put 124 add 123 draw 120 set 120 lose 119 send 115 read 114 pass 113 get 113 attend 112 lay 109 hear 108 publish 108 mention 108 fall 108 continue 103 remain Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1775 not 1030 so 816 more 804 very 646 great 509 other 498 now 483 little 462 well 450 most 449 much 448 own 436 first 432 only 432 indeed 431 such 430 as 424 good 368 same 308 then 292 here 262 many 262 long 248 ever 242 however 237 last 234 even 232 too 220 never 218 again 215 out 213 perhaps 196 up 194 old 190 whole 180 almost 176 soon 172 less 172 few 170 least 164 young 156 yet 156 always 155 far 145 several 145 also 141 therefore 141 no 140 poor 140 often Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 154 least 102 good 86 great 82 most 52 high 25 eld 23 low 22 bad 16 early 13 manif 11 strong 10 late 10 j 9 noble 9 large 8 fine 7 warm 7 small 7 mean 6 vile 6 full 5 rich 5 pleasant 5 dr 5 black 4 wicked 4 sweet 4 near 4 happy 4 fair 4 dull 4 brave 3 witty 3 wise 3 true 3 sure 3 serene 3 keen 3 inf 3 hot 3 dark 2 wild 2 wide 2 tame 2 slow 2 slight 2 short 2 poor 2 plain 2 odd Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 368 most 20 well 16 least 1 worst 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 nothing is so 4 _ is _ 4 fielding was already 4 fielding was not 4 fielding was now 3 men do not 3 world calls people 2 _ called _ 2 _ did not 2 _ is chiefly 2 _ is not 2 _ is suddenly 2 author is surprised 2 captain did not 2 captain had positively 2 captain had well 2 captain having twice 2 captain is generally 2 captain seemed ready 2 captain was busy 2 captain was not 2 captain was stirring 2 captain went ashore 2 captains were thus 2 day was very 2 fielding did not 2 fielding does not 2 fielding had not 2 fielding is careful 2 fielding is interesting 2 fielding was _ 2 fielding was far 2 fielding was fond 2 fielding was later 2 house was formerly 2 kind was narrative 2 ladies went ashore 2 man was suddenly 2 men are apt 2 men are capable 2 men did lately 2 men were everywhere 2 men were too 2 nothing seems trivial 2 persons are compellable 2 place called ryde 2 place is apparent 2 place seemed more 2 place was immediately 2 ship had almost Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 ship seems not easy 2 tom had no sooner 2 wind did not yesterday 2 wind was not very 1 _ are no exception 1 _ is not equal 1 author does not even 1 author has no interest 1 author seemed not entirely 1 fielding did not only 1 fielding had not long 1 fielding has no mortification 1 fielding was not content 1 fielding was not only 1 fielding was not wholly 1 kind were not unusual 1 life was not only 1 men are not ashamed 1 world is not always A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 6689 author = Dobson, Austin title = Fielding date = keywords = Amelia; Andrews; Cibber; Fielding; Henry; Hogarth; John; Jones; Joseph; Journal; Keightley; Lady; Lane; London; Lord; March; Mary; Miscellanies; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Murphy; Preface; Richardson; Sir; Tom; author; field; footnote; man; play summary = I. Arthur Murphy''s _Essay on the Life and Genius of Henry Fielding, long time to be the recognised authority for Fielding''s life. am able to give, for the first time, the date and place of Fielding''s _Author''s Farce_, which appeared some years later, and in which Fielding the life of a young man of Fielding''s age, fond of pleasure, careless of stage by Fielding until January of the following year, when he produced case or not, no doubt existed, as Sarah Fielding afterwards refers to it it is to be understood that he was living alone, and, if so, where Mrs. Fielding was at the time of these protracted vigils--Murphy has not told new Part." As a matter of fact Fielding had two plays by him--the _Goodnatured Man_ (a title subsequently used by Goldsmith), and a piece why, during Mrs. Fielding''s life-time, her husband''s earliest biographer id = 1146 author = Fielding, Henry title = The Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon date = keywords = Fielding; Francis; July; Lisbon; London; Mr.; Mrs.; captain; day; good; great; little; man; ship; time; wind summary = grave; till in two months'' time I had again acquired some little degree a ship that was obliged to sail for Lisbon in three days. began with great reason to apprehend that our voyage might be long, and all kinds from the shore, in order to put off the evil day of starving most absolute power of a captain of a ship is very contemptible in the time presumed to make use of a great lady''s name, the wife of the first in order to raise a small sum, a man is obliged to submit to pay as many a man-of-war, to return instantly to the ship; for that the wind was Having contracted no great degree of good-humor by living a whole day assistance, and while the captain had a little boat of his own, with men The captain declared he was sure of a wind, id = 43520 author = Fielding, Henry title = The Works of Henry Fielding, vol. 11 A Journey From This World to the Next; and A Voyage to Lisbon date = keywords = CHAPTER; Elysium; Francis; Julian; July; Lisbon; London; Minos; Mrs; Rome; captain; day; good; great; illustration; king; leave; little; long; man; person; time; wind; world summary = and good men who have thought with our author are sufficient to keep him poet answered, he believed, if Minos had read his works, he would set a Duke," cried Minos, "you are infinitely too great a man for Elysium;" A great number of spirits now came forwards, who all declared they had Minos: "on second consideration, Mr Patriot, I think a man of your great generality of the world were guilty of in their conduct to great men, "We observed great difference introduced by time and circumstance in the began with great reason to apprehend that our voyage might be long, and the same time presumed to make use of a great lady''s name, the wife of Having contracted no great degree of good-humour by living a whole day the opinion of some, the great difference in happiness between man and He was, I believe, likewise a man of great id = 8136 author = Godden, G. M. (Gertrude M.) title = Henry Fielding: a Memoir Including Newly Discovered Letters and Records with Illustrations from Contemporary Prints date = keywords = Amelia; Andrews; Bow; Champion; Court; February; Fielding; Gould; Harry; Henry; John; Jones; Joseph; Journal; Justice; Lady; London; Lord; March; Mary; Middlesex; Mrs; Murphy; Pasquin; Sir; Stour; Street; Tom; Town; Walpole; english; field; man summary = Henry Fielding, then six years old, would be joint heir with his sisters, Regard to the said Lady Gould his Mother-in-Law," Colonel Fielding Colonel Fielding, within two years of his first wife''s death, placed a Fielding''s lost play _The Good-Natured Man>_, which had apparently been So too, the great genius of Fielding, when in long after years harnessed Fielding clearly began his second year at the ''little theatre'' with some Murphy, filled a large part in Fielding''s country life at Stour; the time The two years of Fielding''s life preceding his appointment as a Bow Street the personal life of Henry Fielding. In the following month John Fielding appears among the Justices except in the pages of his three great novels, Henry Fielding ever "Henry Fielding had a country house at Ealing where he resided the year Fielding the day and year within Fielding''s play _The Fathers_ or _The Good-natured Man_ seems to have been