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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 19 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 61641 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 87 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 Mr. 10 Mrs. 10 Miss 4 God 3 Timothy 3 Jack 2 man 2 little 2 good 2 come 2 York 2 Sykes 2 New 2 Mrs 2 Martha 2 Major 2 Lord 2 Harry 2 Gray 2 George 2 Bill 1 tiny 1 skeezuck 1 mother 1 mill 1 look 1 daddy 1 chapter 1 boy 1 aye 1 Zoe 1 Winslow 1 Winnie 1 Windermear 1 Wimpenny 1 Wilkesbarre 1 Wilberlee 1 Wicker 1 Whitmore 1 Webber 1 Wal 1 Vingo 1 Village 1 Vega 1 Vanda 1 Uncle 1 Tudor 1 Trapp 1 Toplady 1 Tom Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2613 man 2114 time 1800 day 1571 hand 1472 way 1464 child 1285 eye 1265 boy 1181 night 1181 face 1055 mother 1011 thing 955 one 946 room 933 house 893 woman 890 year 883 life 833 heart 820 door 805 word 786 girl 768 name 766 head 719 father 711 sir 706 place 699 something 676 nothing 618 friend 616 home 614 moment 589 arm 588 voice 581 money 579 lady 565 hour 547 side 546 morning 545 world 515 mind 515 foot 479 anything 470 town 467 letter 465 wife 450 work 447 minute 426 people 415 water Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2238 _ 1962 Mr. 1170 Miss 1056 Mrs. 855 Jack 767 Mr 661 Ralph 652 Tom 532 Timothy 518 Mis 513 Anderson 499 Jim 467 Liane 435 Crow 428 Poppea 419 Erik 370 Roma 355 Ida 352 God 350 Rachel 337 Burnham 291 Billy 281 Japhet 281 Gilbert 271 Algernon 269 Sharpman 258 Cophagus 249 Dorothy 240 Newland 238 Clarke 237 Ben 233 Sykes 231 Rosalie 227 ye 227 Major 224 Bonner 221 Lady 221 CHAPTER 213 de 213 Lord 210 New 208 yo 194 Melchior 191 Tinker 191 Harry 188 Silas 182 York 179 Insley 179 Coomber 178 Gwendolen Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 21310 i 14588 he 13374 it 12917 you 7913 she 5188 him 5167 me 3846 they 3745 we 3468 her 2212 them 1276 us 870 himself 500 myself 425 herself 294 ''em 202 yourself 163 themselves 158 itself 148 one 95 ''s 93 mine 71 ourselves 65 thee 63 yours 50 em 40 his 35 hers 24 ye 14 yo 13 ours 12 thowt 12 theirs 7 you''re 6 ha 5 you''ll 5 wi 5 oo 5 hisself 4 yo''r 4 yer 4 thyself 4 tha''ll 4 ob 4 o 4 jus 3 thy 3 ta 3 meself 3 aw Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 40473 be 16678 have 7729 do 6540 say 3929 go 3277 come 3147 know 2915 see 2566 make 2520 take 2325 think 2037 look 1938 get 1795 tell 1558 find 1470 give 1346 ask 1240 leave 1015 feel 993 hear 972 seem 924 want 868 call 865 put 856 turn 832 let 826 keep 777 reply 740 stand 735 speak 709 bring 650 sit 610 answer 599 hold 596 pass 594 mean 566 begin 563 try 559 live 528 run 525 fall 524 return 517 wait 513 wish 511 cry 508 like 486 meet 486 believe 480 set 479 follow Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 11691 not 3512 so 3004 up 2548 little 2407 then 2187 out 2169 now 1961 very 1937 more 1817 good 1580 well 1511 old 1470 only 1416 down 1401 never 1322 as 1290 here 1266 long 1244 much 1193 back 1159 there 1098 too 1073 away 1058 just 1053 again 1035 first 1034 own 1018 other 896 young 884 last 852 great 794 even 793 off 785 in 771 still 751 ever 731 on 712 all 664 most 657 soon 653 once 638 same 629 right 626 always 614 poor 589 many 565 yet 551 over 529 few 520 enough Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 334 good 211 least 160 most 55 bad 48 great 40 j 39 near 29 slight 20 dear 19 high 13 big 11 happy 11 early 10 late 10 Most 9 sweet 9 small 9 eld 9 deep 7 warm 7 simple 7 short 7 poor 7 old 7 fine 6 strong 6 said:-- 6 safe 6 low 6 long 6 light 6 farth 6 faint 6 bright 5 young 5 strange 5 soft 5 rich 5 remote 5 proud 5 manif 5 large 5 hard 5 handsome 5 dark 5 brave 4 vile 4 pure 4 noble 4 nice Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 504 most 53 well 21 least 3 near 2 jest 1 shrillest 1 rast--''rast 1 lest 1 laziest 1 kindest 1 hard Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 www.gutenberg.net 2 kdl.kyvl.org 1 www.users.nac.net 1 digital.library.villanova.edu Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.users.nac.net/mgreene/Homer_Greene_Museum.html 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/3/5/1/23517/23517-h/23517-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/3/5/1/23517/23517-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/1/7/9/21797/21797-h/21797-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/1/7/9/21797/21797-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/4/8/1/14818/14818-h/14818-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/4/8/1/14818/14818-h.zip 1 http://kdl.kyvl.org/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=kyetexts;cc=kyetexts;xc=1&idno=B92-235-31281121&view=toc 1 http://kdl.kyvl.org/ 1 http://digital.library.villanova.edu/) Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 ccx074@pglaf.org Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 18 _ do _ 18 _ is _ 8 _ know _ 8 _ was _ 6 _ had _ 6 time went on 5 _ do n''t 5 eyes were red 5 heart went out 5 man did not 4 boy is not 4 child is not 4 face took on 4 face was white 4 heart was very 4 man had not 4 man looked down 4 man was not 4 name is ernest 4 one does n''t 3 _ ai n''t 3 _ am _ 3 _ be _ 3 _ did _ 3 _ have _ 3 _ think _ 3 _ was n''t 3 days gone by 3 days went by 3 door stood open 3 door was closed 3 face was very 3 head turned away 3 heart was full 3 jack was not 3 man does n''t 3 name ''s not 3 name is n''t 3 name was ernest 3 night is dark 3 night was still 3 one was more 3 women ai n''t 3 women do n''t 2 _ are _ 2 _ did n''t 2 _ did not 2 _ get _ 2 _ go doon 2 _ go out Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ is no longer 1 _ make no real 1 _ was no wise 1 _ was not selfish 1 boy had no fear 1 boy is not dead 1 boy knows no fear 1 boys were not long 1 child is not dead 1 child is not irish 1 day has not yet 1 door had no sooner 1 eyes are not blinded 1 eyes are not too 1 eyes spoke not only 1 girl had no news 1 girl has no business 1 heart did not now 1 heart is not interested 1 heart was not really 1 heart was not wholly 1 house is not correctly 1 jack had not yet 1 jack was not so 1 life was not moral 1 man had no right 1 man had not once 1 man was not dead 1 man was not devereaux 1 man was not very 1 men made no concealment 1 mother has no better 1 mother knew no want 1 name ''s not hannah 1 name ''s not jabez 1 name ''s not john 1 name is not philip 1 one was not thriving 1 one was not yet 1 woman has no more 1 woman has no stay 1 woman is no more 1 woman made no answer A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 10729 author = Alger, Horatio, Jr. title = Jack''s Ward; Or, The Boy Guardian date = keywords = Aunt; Clifton; Harding; Hardwick; Ida; Jack; Martha; Mr.; Mrs.; Peg; Rachel; Timothy summary = "I wonder why Jack don''t come home?" said Mrs. Harding, looking at the "Not this time, Rachel," said Mrs. Harding, brightly, "for that''s Jack''s "It comes in good time," said Mrs. Harding. "You''re always tryin'' to discourage people, Aunt Rachel," said Jack, "I don''t know what advice you refer to, Rachel," said Mrs. Harding, "Oh, don''t be always hectorin'' me, Aunt Rachel," said Jack, impatiently. "The captain is about your age, isn''t he, Aunt Rachel?" said Jack, "You weren''t so bad as Jack, I know," said Rachel. "Then," said Jack, "I wouldn''t eat any if I were you, Aunt Rachel." "Really," said Mrs. Harding, "Jack is as careful of Ida as if he was her "Ida," said Mrs. Hardwick, "won''t you come and kiss your old nurse?" "You never tried very hard, Aunt Rachel," said Jack. "Yes," said Jack; "Ida was seen in the cars, coming here, by a boy who id = 6658 author = Bompas, Charlotte Selina title = Owindia : a true tale of the MacKenzie River Indians, North-West America date = keywords = Accomba; Fort; Indians; Michel; little; man summary = after a time, he would work for a white man, and trade with him, so Michel roused his wife and little ones, declaring that the white man who was none other than Accomba, the wife of Indian Michel, proceeded "You have had good times at the little Lake," said Peter, a brother (Indian men) in the woods," said Accomba with a sigh; "the deer and "All very good for you," said Michel''s wife; "who like the white man A Cree Indian, a man of sound education, related once the following Mackenzie River Indians, speaking the Slave tongue, and mostly known And so the poor Indians of our story troubled themselves but little cry of an infant, coming from the neighbourhood of Michel''s camp. Forts, and pitched our camps near the white man''s house. and He loved the poor Indian as well as the white man, and, told the id = 53650 author = Gale, Zona title = Mothers to Men date = keywords = Alex; Chris; Christopher; Fourth; Friendship; Holcomb; Insley; Letty; Mis; Miss; Proudfit; Robin; Silas; Sykes; Timothy; Toplady; Village summary = "Insley laughed a little, but he let Mis'' Sykes, that loves new things "Insley sat looking round on them all, still with his way of saying good We must tell Miss Sidney about Grandma Sellers'' store-room, Mr. Insley,'' she says, and then tells it herself, laughing like a girl, how "''Ain''t it,'' I says, ''like sometimes everybody in the world come and Mis'' Amanda Toplady''s chin come home to place like she''d heard Timothy "''Silas has got in an extra boy for the day,'' says Mis'' Sykes, "''You wan''t tryin'' to do this thing for this town,'' says Mis'' Toplady "''That ain''t the way,'' says Mis'' Toplady, like a flash; ''it ain''t for "''Land, land,'' I says to Mis'' Toplady, ''if we ain''t done another thing, says to Silas that ain''t, ''an'' we know a thing or two about what ought "''What do you mean?'' he says--just said it a little and like he didn''t id = 10449 author = Greene, Homer title = Burnham Breaker date = keywords = Bachelor; Billy; Burnham; Conway; Craft; Goodlaw; Joe; Mr.; Mrs.; Ralph; Rhyming; Robert; Scranton; Sharpman; Simon; Uncle; Wilkesbarre; boy; good summary = The old man looked carefully around the room, rose, went to the door, date, the son of the said Robert Burnham, named Ralph, in full life, "Ain''t this nice, Uncle Billy?" said Ralph, after quite a long "And are you Ralph?" asked the young man, turning to the boy. So Bachelor Billy went alone that day to the breaker, and Ralph stayed wreck, of Ralph''s rescue by Simon Craft, of the old man''s care and It seemed a long time, to Ralph, before the man came back, but when He was an honest-looking man, Ralph thought; may be he would tell him into the man''s mind--when the boy went there to live, he, Billy, would "Now, look here, fellows!" said Ralph, "I ain''t goin'' to tell you "Ralph," said Sharpman, turning to the boy, "stand up!" "Do you know this boy?" the lawyer asked, pointing to Ralph. id = 10848 author = Hallett, Emma V. title = Natalie; Or, A Gem Among the Sea-Weeds date = keywords = Alboni; Biddy; Delwood; God; Grosvenor; Harry; Lord; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Nantucket; Natalie; Phillis; Sampson; Santon; Sea; Vingo; Winnie; mother summary = a few years ago; den you wear little dress like Sea-flower, and now you smile to tink how dat old Ingin look at Sea-flower, as if de sun was up and said, "Mother, I shall love to look at the stars oftener now, for the low, clear voice of the Sea-flower soothe the weary spirits of Mrs. Grosvenor, as she read from the evening paper the following paragraph: The Sea-flower had rested her head upon her hand, and while her mother Sea-flower loves to ramble, as if she had been a child in time long the little Sea-flower still, dear Harry; I shall always be the same "Mrs. Santon received the Sea-flower with a mother''s tenderness, but The time has come when our dear little Sea-flower, for so The last farewell was spoken by poor Winnie, with an aching heart, Mr. Santon had pressed the Sea-flower''s hand, with a tear in his eye, as if id = 16344 author = Laurie, André title = The Waif of the "Cynthia" date = keywords = Alaska; Bredejord; Brown; Cynthia; Dr.; Erik; Hersebom; Katrina; Malarius; Mr.; Noroe; O''Donoghan; Patrick; Schwaryencrona; Stockholm; Tudor; Vanda; Vega summary = "My dear friend, my good excellent doctor, you must not stay here," said "Nor I," said the doctor, laughing, and Erik Hersebom translated several "Did you say, Otto," asked the little girl, "that our Erik answered the "Has Doctor Schwaryencrona ruined any one?" asked Erik with curiosity. "My dear Hersebom," said the doctor, taking the fisherman''s hand, "we The next day Erik began his new life at school. "Well," said Erik, "I do not think that I have committed any great Erik wished to find some pretext for leaving the doctor''s house as soon Erik, on the bridge, directed the maneuvers of the vessel, while Mr. Bredejord and the doctor waved a last farewell to Vanda from the deck. "Did you tell these facts to Mr. Tudor Brown?" asked Erik. said Erik, as he gave orders to return it. "I have been asking myself the last few moments," said Erik, "if it id = 21797 author = Leslie, Emma title = A Sailor''s Lass date = keywords = Bob; Coomber; Dick; Fellness; God; Mrs.; tiny summary = "I--I didn''t know when you was coming to breakfast," said Mrs. Coomber, "You say he ain''t come home?" said Coomber. days, for after a little while she said, "Where''s der boys--dat Dick and When the boys came in, the little girl said, shyly, "Tome and tell me "She wants to know about the fishing," said Mrs. Coomber. poor little mite," said Mrs. Coomber, in perplexity as to the best thing "Still, He might, yer know," said Tiny; "but if you''ll help, I''ll find "Well, I''ll tell yer why I want dad to come home soon to-night," said "No, I won''t, Dick, this time," said the little girl. Peters," said Coomber, as he lifted Tiny out of the boat. "You''re a very naughty girl, Tiny," said Mrs. Coomber at last; "and I "Where''s Dick and the gal?" he said, as he looked round the little "Would yer like a little milk, deary?" asked Mrs. Coomber. id = 15991 author = Marryat, Frederick title = Japhet, in Search of a Father date = keywords = Benyon; Carbonnell; Clare; Cophagus; Fleta; God; Harcourt; Japhet; Kathleen; Lady; Lord; Major; Masterton; Melchior; Mrs; Nattée; Newland; Quaker; Sir; Susannah; Timothy; Windermear; chapter summary = pocket-money, Timothy said, "Japhet, I''ve been puzzling my brains how we "I do swear," replied I, and took her hand for the book, which this time "Well, sir," said Timothy, rubbing his hands, as he stood before me, "I hope it may prove so," replied Timothy, "but I feel a little "You are a good fellow, Newland," said the Major, pocketing the money. "Yes, sir," replied a young man, coming forward. "Yes," replied the Major; "knowing that in a short time I shall be "The coach is at the door, sir," said Timothy, looking at me, as if to Timothy, he replied, "I think, sir, that if you could replace me for a "Perhaps you may wish me away for a short time," said Harcourt, looking "Yes, sir," replied I, laughing, "I am Japhet Newland." (I turned round, "Then, sir," replied the good girl, "you know how I overcame my feelings id = 23517 author = Martin, George Madden title = The Angel of the Tenement date = keywords = Angel; Bonkowski; Carew; Joey; Major; Mary; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Norma; O''Malligan; Ruth summary = the baby turned her back on Norma and pulling at Mary Carew''s dress "Done!" cried Miss Bonkowski, on her knees before Mary and the child, "Sure, an'' we''ll all do a part for the name of the house," said Mrs. O''Malligan, "an'' be proud." And the other ladies agreeing to this more the child''s, and you know it, Mary Carew," and the good-hearted "Angel likes to dance with little girls, Norma," admitted the baby, "Major," said Miss Ruth, just a little plaintively, perhaps, "do you "An'' she said," Mary Carew took it up, "as how Norma''s gettin'' old, and "I will take Angel home and stop by there and see Joey," said Miss Ruth. "You wanted Angel, Joey dear," said Miss Ruth, "and she has come to see "She must have been Angel''s nurse," said Miss Stannard. excited, sobbing child, and Mrs. O''Malligan should take Miss Ruth to id = 14818 author = McCutcheon, George Barr title = The Daughter of Anderson Crow date = keywords = Alf; Anderson; Banks; Barnes; Bill; Boggs; Bonner; Bud; City; Crow; Davy; Eva; George; Gray; Gregory; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Rosalie; Sam; Tinkletown; Wicker; York summary = "Turn to your left here," said Anderson Crow before he thought. The boy who snickered this time had cause to regret it, for Mr. Crow arrested him half an hour later for carrying a bean-shooter. "A Mr. Anderson Crow was here not half an hour ago, ma''am, to assure Mr. Brewster as to how his new son-in-law was in nowise connected with the "We''ll have to wait, Anderson, that''s all," said Mrs. Crow. Anderson Crow noticed that Mrs. Holabird''s bob-sled drove away without either Miss Banks or ''Rast "I''ll jest walk up an'' rap on the door," said Anderson Crow, "lettin'' on Whereupon Mr. Crow, assisted by seven men and five small boys, told Mr. Wicker Bonner, late of Harvard, what had brought them from Tinkletown to said Anderson Crow. They correspond, Anderson," said Mrs. Crow. Some days later Anderson Crow returned to Tinkletown from New York, id = 16608 author = Mighels, Philip Verrill title = Bruvver Jim''s Baby date = keywords = Bone; Borealis; Christmas; Dennihan; Doc; Field; Jim; Keno; Miss; Parky; Tintoretto; Wal; Webber; come; little; skeezuck summary = "I snum!" said Jim, wiping the wondering little face in a sort of fever "Jim, you said the little feller kin "Why not wait till Christmas and git good and ready?" said Jim. The argument was that Christmas was something more than four weeks away. "Good-bye fer just at present, little Skeezucks," said Field, and, "What would little Skeezucks like old brother Jim to make for "I want my little boy," said Jim. "Jim," he said, "what about poor little Skeezucks? gone, old Jim, little Skeezucks, and the pup were alone. "Don''t you like him any more?" said Jim. A weak little nod was the answer. "Poor little man ain''t well," said Jim, in a gentle way of soothing. "I could bring myself to anything," said Jim, "if only my little boy Old Jim, little Skeezucks, the pup, and Miss Doc, with Mrs. Stowe, came id = 51996 author = Miller, Alex. McVeigh, Mrs. title = My Pretty Maid; or, Liane Lester date = keywords = Boston; Bray; CHAPTER; Clarke; Cliffdene; Dean; Devereaux; Jesse; Lester; Liane; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Roma; Sophie summary = Liane knew it was Miss Clarke, the beauty "You poor, pretty little thing, did Miss Roma fly in a rage and slap The maid had adroitly let Mrs. Clarke know all about Liane, and now she Don''t you think it''s unfair, Liane, to have Roma Clarke''s father and Beautiful Roma looked after Mr. Clarke with angry eyes, muttering: young woman, who only stayed, as she had frankly told Liane, for Mrs. Clarke''s sake. Liane, but I''m an old woman, and I know what''s best for you, girl. Roma lifted her white face and glittering eyes to Mrs. Clarke''s anxious "My daughter Roma has lost her maid; she wishes to offer Liane the And just then came the note from Roma Clarke, offering Liane a equal!" cried Roma angrily, as she tossed Liane''s answer to her mother. Mrs. Clarke had pitied and admired Liane until her rivalry with Roma, Liane Lester, the poor girl," cried Mrs. Clarke warmly. id = 20261 author = Quiller-Couch, Arthur title = The Adventures of Harry Revel date = keywords = Archibald; Belcher; George; Harry; Isabel; Jope; Leicester; Lydia; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Plinlimmon; Plymouth; Rector; Rogers; Scougall; Trapp; Whitmore; good; look; man summary = and Miss Plinlimmon, good soul, if at times she awoke in the night "I''ve a-got en, my dear," said Mr. Trapp much as a man might announce child, a boy called Archibald, who is now close on twenty years old. "They belong to Archibald''s regiment," said Miss Plinlimmon as we "Looks like a wedding, don''t it?" said he; and turning up his clean "Sure-ly I know that voice?" said Mr. Jope. "Tell ''en he''s a good boy, and I wouldn'' mind having one like him." "Three weeks less two days," said Miss Belcher; "for he called here Do you know a young man called Plinlimmon-"Good evening, Whitmore," said the Rector stepping forward. "Ask him," said I, "why he married Miss Isabel." "No," said I; "it was given him last night by Mr. Whitmore in Miss "Take the child to bed," said Miss Belcher, as we reached the door: id = 54121 author = Sykes, D. F. E. title = Tom Pinder, Foundling: A Story of the Holmfirth Flood date = keywords = Aleck; Ben; Betty; Black; Dorothy; Fairbanks; Garside; God; Hannah; Holmfirth; Jabez; Jack; Jones; Lucy; Martha; Miss; Moll; Mr.; Mrs.; Nehemiah; Pinder; Redfearn; Schofield; Sunday; Sykes; Tinker; Tom; Wilberlee; Wimpenny; aye; mill summary = thinks th'' poor lass ''ats dead an'' gone wer'' seeking Tom o'' Fairbanks. Tom flushed hotly, and said nothing: but that night a village lad with heads said, if Tinker didn''t know when he had a good man, the man knew "We don''t see much of you now-a-days, Miss Dorothy," said Lucy, smiling "Isn''t this th'' spot at Tom Pinder works at?" asked Jack. "There''s something I wanted to tell you, Miss Dorothy," said Tom, after "It is very good of him" said Tom and smiled as he thought of the day "I think it is," said Tom, stoutly, "a man can but do his best." "You must take it off my hands, Tom and Co.," said Redfearn. Sunday meetings at Co-op mill, and of Tom Pinder, who, folk said, spoke "Tom will never be _my_ lover, Dorothy," said Lucy, quietly. "It is," said Tom, but his eyes were on Dorothy''s beaming face. id = 30366 author = Whitaker, Evelyn title = Zoe date = keywords = Bill; Edith; Gray; Jane; Mrs; Robins; Sands; Zoe summary = now the little, quiet, brown-faced baby in his arms. was not the Grays'' baby, but was a foundling child picked up one night mother with a family of little steps envied Mrs Gray her compact family little angel,'' Mrs Gray always said in recounting the story. The organist of Downside, Mr Robins, lived in a little house close to fallen away, showing its little dark head and round sleeping face, with ''Good afternoon, Mrs Gray,'' he said; ''I came for the book I lent your ''She ''s as sweet as a blossom now,'' went on Mrs Gray, tossing the baby ''A pleasant, chatty sort of man the organist,'' Mrs Gray said, having this little common child at Stokeley was all in all to Jane Sands, and ''I thought,'' she said, looking the baby over, with what in a less kind, Preparation--The Room Furnished--Mrs Gray at Work--The Baby Gone--The Preparation--The Room Furnished--Mrs Gray at Work--The Baby Gone--The id = 844 author = Wilde, Oscar title = The Importance of Being Earnest: A Trivial Comedy for Serious People date = keywords = Algernon; Bracknell; Ernest; Gwendolen; Jack; Miss; Mr.; Prism summary = My dear fellow, the way you flirt with Gwendolen is perfectly Bring me that cigarette case Mr. Worthing left in the smokingroom the last time he dined here. Cecily, with her fondest love to her dear Uncle Jack.'' There is no Aunt Cecily, who lives at Tunbridge Wells, calls you her dear uncle. If I marry a charming girl like Gwendolen, and Good afternoon, dear Algernon, I hope you are behaving [Lady Bracknell and Algernon go into the music-room, Gwendolen remains No, dear Miss Prism, I know that, but I felt instinctively that life, but still I think you had better wait till Uncle Jack arrives. [Looks at Cecily, who makes no sign.] Yes, sir. I am engaged to be married to Gwendolen, Lady Bracknell! That lady is Miss Cecily Cardew, my ward. Come, dear, [Gwendolen rises] we have already missed five, if not six, id = 41440 author = Wright, Mabel Osgood title = Poppea of the Post-Office date = keywords = Angus; Emmy; Esterbrook; Felton; Gilbert; Harley; Hugh; John; Latimer; Lisha; Mills; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Oldys; Oliver; Pegrim; Philip; Poppea; Potts; Satira; Stephen; Winslow; York; come; daddy summary = "All of a sudden she said, ''Mr. Gilbert, I''m going away and never coming ''Lisha pulled up at the post-office-house door, and after steering Mrs. Pegrim carefully along the slippery path to the side porch, having But it was through her interest in Poppea that Miss Emmy knew that time Poppea and Hugh, skating "cross-hands," and in a moment Miss Emmy was "Come home, Poppea, and ask Daddy himself; he is the one to tell you all might come out at any moment, Poppea tried to turn away, but she was The next day it was Poppea who asked if she might go home, and Miss Emmy mother must have looked like, Poppea''s face was always blended in his When Poppea entered the Feltons'' sitting room and saw Miss Emmy in one Poppea said very quietly, "Please ask if Mr. John Angus can see Miss