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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 9 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 27161 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 96 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 man 3 West 3 John 3 English 2 sing 2 old 2 music 2 love 2 like 2 come 2 Twas 2 Texas 2 Mr. 2 Jack 2 God 1 young 1 way 1 trail 1 tell 1 sweet 1 little 1 illustration 1 heart 1 fer 1 day 1 c.j.s. 1 broadside 1 boy 1 baby 1 african 1 Toad 1 Tiger 1 Tacoma 1 Songs 1 Society 1 Sir 1 Sioux 1 Sheppard 1 Sharp 1 Ratta 1 Rabbit 1 Queen 1 Puss 1 Portage 1 Pauline 1 Parsons 1 O''Connell 1 North 1 NOTES 1 Monkey Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 809 man 600 day 482 music 454 song 446 time 385 word 383 boy 280 way 273 night 258 love 247 tune 243 ballad 228 story 227 house 205 annancy 203 heart 198 hand 195 wife 191 p. 188 horse 185 year 179 name 177 home 173 girl 171 air 169 life 164 place 159 tree 159 morning 156 one 150 gal 148 mother 147 version 144 head 137 eye 137 cowboy 135 town 132 son 131 melody 131 friend 130 yard 130 lady 130 door 124 water 120 gold 119 foot 118 road 117 thing 116 fire 115 land Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1427 _ 383 Annancy 338 Mr. 180 c. 166 John 133 Tiger 109 God 103 English 101 West 101 Jack 96 Texas 88 Puss 86 Monkey 84 o''er 84 King 81 da 80 Dog 77 Old 76 James 75 Footnote 74 Miss 73 thou 73 Cow 71 Twas 71 Tacoma 71 Sir 71 Lord 67 Songs 67 Rabbit 66 dé 65 England 65 Bro''er 63 Figure 62 Jamaica 62 Folk 58 de 57 Devil 56 Song 56 O''Connell 56 C.J.S. 55 May 55 Brother 52 NOTES 50 Ratta 48 gal 48 William 48 Mantora 47 Parson 45 Toad 45 Thomas Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3598 i 2951 he 2167 it 1997 you 1711 me 1644 him 1336 they 1057 we 842 she 672 them 352 her 181 us 97 himself 58 thee 39 ''em 38 one 26 ya 25 myself 22 themselves 20 mine 19 herself 18 ours 13 yourself 8 thou 8 itself 5 ourselves 4 o 4 his 3 ye 3 hé 3 ''s 2 you''self 2 thus-- 2 theirs 2 say:--"don''t 2 jessie 2 hm 2 au 1 yours 1 wi 1 wear,-- 1 turves 1 thy 1 theirself 1 rabbit:--"you 1 pu''d 1 oo 1 oneself 1 o''er 1 mó Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 8341 be 2159 have 1571 go 1348 do 1021 come 963 say 713 see 684 get 669 take 600 make 555 give 449 tell 421 know 361 sing 349 find 331 hear 297 leave 253 call 234 think 213 bring 204 put 196 die 193 let 190 look 188 love 170 want 161 send 157 begin 152 turn 151 ask 150 run 149 ride 145 meet 145 lie 144 kill 141 live 139 stand 134 use 130 keep 127 eat 123 marry 123 fall 121 bear 114 pass 113 follow 112 carry 112 break 107 catch 106 try 106 cry Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1506 not 969 so 668 old 642 up 587 down 536 out 507 then 395 never 392 now 390 good 340 very 330 more 321 little 304 well 289 back 271 long 268 away 259 here 256 same 230 there 227 first 224 again 218 young 197 as 188 last 187 just 186 other 184 only 180 home 176 too 172 sweet 169 great 167 all 161 poor 147 dead 141 off 140 pretty 140 also 139 true 139 in 136 always 135 on 135 ever 129 still 128 much 127 hard 126 many 126 far 121 own 119 white Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 80 good 34 most 19 least 17 young 13 great 13 big 11 fair 10 early 10 bad 6 old 6 near 6 eld 5 low 5 high 4 wild 4 long 4 dear 3 short 3 noble 3 hard 3 fine 3 deep 3 bright 3 Most 2 true 2 small 2 rich 2 proud 2 late 2 gay 2 fast 2 close 2 choice 1 wicked 1 vulgar 1 tough 1 temp 1 tall 1 sturdy 1 strong 1 strait 1 sound 1 smart 1 sly 1 sharp 1 say:--"Marnin 1 said:--"aft 1 sad 1 rude 1 rotten Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 68 most 18 well 3 least 1 worst 1 say:--"marnin 1 play:--it 1 near 1 hard 1 alternative:--"a 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 annancy was very 3 annancy take up 3 gal was very 3 heart is full 3 tune is very 3 words were very 2 _ is not 2 annancy come back 2 annancy get home 2 annancy get very 2 annancy give peafowl 2 annancy go home 2 annancy say so 2 annancy was so 2 annancy went home 2 days are over 2 days are past 2 days gone by 2 gal are dead 2 gal get vex 2 gal was so 2 love is dead 2 love is so 2 men are plenty 2 music taken down 2 name was lovely 2 story is also 2 tune is not 2 ways are strange 2 words came low 2 words taken down 2 words were so 2 words were true 1 = ask excuse= 1 = gone down 1 = make middle 1 = take care 1 = tell goodbye.= 1 = tell him= 1 = was n''t 1 _ do n''t 1 _ had _ 1 _ is again 1 _ is antienne 1 _ is something 1 _ is tshi 1 _ left out 1 _ look _ 1 annancy ask bro''er 1 annancy ask cow Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 house were no higher 1 music is not always 1 tune is not very 1 word is not really A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 14077 author = Caldecott, Randolph title = A Frog He Would A-Wooing Go date = keywords = Heigho summary = [Illustration: A Frog he would a-wooing go. "Pray, Miss MOUSEY, are you within?" "Pray, Miss MOUSE, will you give us some beer?" "For Froggy and I are fond of good cheer." "Pray, Mr. FROG, will you give us a song? "Indeed, Miss MOUSE," replied Mr FROG, He took up his hat, and he wished them good night. But as Froggy was crossing a silvery brook, The Rat, the Mouse, and the little Frog-gee! _Heigho, says_ ANTHONY ROWLEY! _Heigho, says_ ANTHONY ROWLEY! [Illustration: Randolph Caldecott''s _In square crown 4to, picture covers, with numerous coloured plates._ books, with their Coloured Pictures and numerous Outline Sketches._ Caldecott''s Picture Book No. 2 Caldecott''s Picture Book No. 2 Caldecott''s Picture Book No. 2 3 Hey-Diddle-Diddle-Picture Book 4 The Panjandrum Picture Book different books, with their Coloured Pictures and numerous Outline Pictures and Songs No. 2 Pictures and Songs No. 2 PICTURE BOOKS PICTURE BOOKS id = 11260 author = Gregory, Lady title = The Kiltartan History Book date = keywords = Cromwell; English; Goban; Ireland; O''Connell; man summary = So there came a girl to the house one day, and the Goban Saor "One time some great king or lord sent for the Goban to build a and told the wife he was sent home the second time, she began to think, of the house brought out the ten pounds, and the Goban said ''Keep that and gave it to the Goban, and he got the caubeen and went away with it, time long ago the Danes came and took the country and conquered it, and Well, after some time the priest came to O''Connell''s house, and he found Parnell was no bad man, but Dan O''Connell''s name went up higher in "O''Connell came to Galway one time, and he sent for all the trades to "O''Connell wore his hat in the English House of Commons, what no man but O''Connell, and he left the country and went away and died in some place id = 45240 author = Hanson, Joseph Mills title = Frontier Ballads date = keywords = Christmas; God; North; Pauline; Portage; Queen; Sioux; West; fer; illustration; like; man; trail summary = That morning, and prayed; that men, even, turned white The Sioux, they flee like a wild wolf-pack Like that same old, game old horse that thinks and feels. The rest came on like devils, right up against our guns. Came the boys of "B" Troop, ridin'' like a sizzin'' comet''s tail, Come creeping, snail-like, on the sight, Oh, the time was lovely (fer the man behind the wheel!) "But she says ''at Santa Claus can''t come this Christmas Day. I don''t see why; since Papa''s in that still place on the hill Made her kiss us all good-night; "Doc" took his right slow. As if it longed, like a living thing, Waiting death like a man of stone, There is never a gun for fight or fun like the steel-blue Winchester! Fer a half-mile pull through that mill-race tide Like a soldier fights, till the ice rolled in id = 3001 author = Ian, Janis title = Society''s Child (lyrics) date = keywords = baby summary = Society''s Child (Janis Ian) Copyright (c) 1966 Taosongs Two (BMI) Admin. by Bug Come to my door, baby Face is clean and shining black as night My mama went to answer You know that you looked so fine Now I could understand the tears & the shame She called you boy instead of your name When she wouldn''t let you inside When she turned and said "But honey, he''s not our kind" She says I can''t see you any more, baby Walk me down to school, baby Until they turn and say "Why don''t you stick to your own kind" Then why won''t they just let us be? One of these days I''m gonna stop my listening Gonna raise my head up high One of these days I''m gonna raise up But that day will have to wait for a while Baby, I''m only society''s child Baby Baby Baby id = 56625 author = Sheppard, H. Fleetwood (Henry Fleetwood) title = Songs of the West Folk Songs of Devon & Cornwall Collected from the Mouths of the People date = keywords = B.M.; Ballads; CHORUS; Cornwall; Dartmoor; England; English; Folk; Garland; James; John; London; Mr.; Parsons; Sharp; Sheppard; Sir; Songs; West; broadside; c.j.s.; come; love; music; old; sing summary = day, sing hour after hour, one song following another with little traditional ballads set to ancient modal melodies have passed away. This man, Harry Westaway, knew many old songs. "Garland of Country Songs." A month later, poor old Hard was found day only, was unable to sing, but could recite the words of ballads; "Thou art the boy," the old man said, I call''d unto my loving wife, and "Coming Sir!" said she, I call''d unto my loving wife, and "Coming Sir!" said she, I called unto my loving wife, and "Coming Sir!" said she, The words of the song are to be found in a collection of early ballad Mawgan in Pyder, sang the same ballad or song to the same tune, and corrupt the current versions of the old song, printed on Broadsides Crocodile" is a very popular ballad among old song-men, but no one id = 35592 author = Thomas, W. H. (William Henry) title = Some Current Folk-Songs of the Negro date = keywords = Lord; Society; Texas summary = SOME CURRENT FOLK-SONGS OF THE NEGRO _Read before the Folk-Lore Society of Texas, 1912_ WILL THOMAS AND THE TEXAS FOLK-LORE SOCIETY Now that this brochure is being reprinted by the Texas Folk-Lore Society, Although not a numbered publication, =Some Current Folk-Songs of the Negro= work with folk-lore should not only collect it but interpret it and also at San Marcos, who has done notable work in Negro folk songs and who is SOME CURRENT FOLK-SONGS OF THE NEGRO AND THEIR ECONOMIC INTERPRETATION. misleading at this day and time to speak of the negro as a "folk." That Now a great change has come into the negro''s economic life within the past follow one as he works with a white man, the latter, of course, being If you consider these songs as the negro''s literature, you will notice We now come to songs originated by the present generation of negroes. id = 11236 author = Various title = Old Ballads date = keywords = John; Malone; Twas; heart; love; sweet summary = The summer nights are coming, love, The summer nights are coming, love, My love is like the red red rose For loving or liking he little did care, where shall I my true love find? Wakes in my soul some charm of lovely Sue. Though battle call me from thy arms, Let heart and voice and all agree to say, "Long live the King!" But she lookit in my face till my heart was like to break; Till he said, "I''m come back for to marry thee." Come live with me and be my love. Come live with me and be my love. ''Twas all along of loving these I could not love thee, dear, so much, I could not love thee, dear, so much, I could not love thee, dear, so much, O Nanny, can''st thou love so true, And when at last thy love shall die, id = 21300 author = Various title = Cowboy Songs, and Other Frontier Ballads date = keywords = Bill; Black; COWBOY; Cook; God; Jack; Joe; Mexico; Texas; Twas; West; boy; day; like; little; man; old; sing; tell; way; young summary = New Mexico, the old-time round-up is no more; the trails to Kansas and And said: "Old boy, I know we''re not to blame; He said, "Young man, come join our band and bid hard work farewell, "But I''ve got a home, boys, a good one, you all know, I am going right straight home, boys, ere all my money is gone. Come all you good old boys and listen to my rhymes, You work hard all day and come in at night, One day the old man went out to plow, Away out in old Texas, that great lone star state, Come all kind friends and kindred dear and Christians young and old, And back to dear old Texas, the cowboy''s native home." When I think of those good old days, my eyes with tears do fill; I''ll tell you, boys, in those days old-timers stood a show,-- id = 35410 author = nan title = Jamaican Song and Story Annancy stories, digging sings, ring tunes, and dancing tunes date = keywords = Annancy; Bantu; Brother; Cow; Crab; Devil; Dog; English; Figure; Footnote; Jack; Jamaica; John; King; Mantora; Monkey; Mr.; NOTES; Puss; Rabbit; Ratta; Tacoma; Tiger; Toad; african; come; man; music summary = strictly speaking, "Annancy stories" or not, come under the heading of So one day the King t''ree gal gone out to bathe, an'' Brother Annancy An'' so comes it that Tomby catch Justina an'' send for Mr. Annancy an'' make him a present to be a wife. Bro''er Annancy want fe kill Parson Cow, begin with a big confusion, In the morning Monkey laugh, say:--"Bro''er Annancy, If me min come in When the butcher them gone, Mr. Blackbird come down, he an'' Mr. Annancy, an'' go inside the house the very same as the butcher them do, An'' Annancy tell Snake that he know he is a man love blood, an'' when An when the old-witch boy come, Annancy An'' Annancy send an'' tell the old lady that the man is here clever By Annancy come back him don''t see no goat, only a big old man An'' Annancy made a sing when he is coming home:--