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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 69783 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 88 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 man 2 God 1 face 1 eye 1 come 1 Voalavo 1 Simon 1 Sefton 1 Secretary 1 Ruth 1 Roland 1 Riversborough 1 Ravonino 1 Ranavalona 1 Rakota 1 Rafaravavy 1 Queen 1 Prince 1 Pierre 1 Philip 1 Phebe 1 Pascal 1 Olaf 1 Nixey 1 Mrs. 1 Mr. 1 Merle 1 Marlowe 1 Mark 1 Mamba 1 Malagasy 1 Maggie 1 Madame 1 Madagascar 1 Lord 1 London 1 Laihova 1 Johnson 1 Jesus 1 Jean 1 Jacob 1 Hockins 1 Hilda 1 Felix 1 Felicita 1 Eskimo 1 England 1 Engelberg 1 Ebony 1 Earth Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1052 man 579 time 546 eye 533 face 508 hand 417 day 376 life 357 friend 312 father 293 way 292 heart 281 moment 280 night 273 voice 266 mother 259 head 255 place 247 year 247 word 243 child 197 house 197 door 195 death 193 woman 192 arm 187 name 184 thing 183 people 181 one 178 girl 177 hour 172 foot 171 nothing 164 thought 161 side 161 mind 154 something 152 son 152 light 151 home 147 world 144 wolf 144 lip 143 room 142 cabin 141 country 134 guide 130 sound 130 fire 125 minute Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 694 _ 588 Phebe 443 Bram 423 Philip 399 Felicita 336 Mark 320 Roland 296 Felix 267 God 207 Queen 207 Celie 204 Sefton 192 Hockins 174 Ebony 172 Mr. 165 Merle 151 Clifford 150 Jean 149 Ravonino 119 Ben 115 Mamba 111 Blake 106 Marlowe 101 Madame 99 Pascal 94 Laihova 92 Secretary 91 Alice 90 Hilda 87 Canon 86 Christians 83 Lord 79 CHAPTER 73 Rafaravavy 72 Riversborough 72 Ranavalona 72 England 66 Simon 64 Mrs. 64 London 59 Engelberg 57 Nixey 56 Johnson 54 Jesus 53 Madagascar 52 Eskimo 50 Pierre 50 Breezy 49 Maggie 48 Jacob Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5468 he 3379 it 2408 i 2343 she 2158 him 2110 you 1446 they 1178 her 993 them 757 me 705 we 425 himself 275 us 172 herself 103 themselves 67 itself 60 myself 30 yourself 27 hers 26 one 19 his 14 ''em 12 yours 12 mine 11 ''s 5 ourselves 4 em 4 ay 3 theirs 2 thee 2 ob 2 hisself 1 you''self 1 ye 1 whosoever 1 upi''s 1 ours 1 oneself 1 on''y Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 10667 be 4879 have 1343 do 1149 say 888 go 807 come 797 see 776 know 648 make 507 look 435 take 401 think 396 tell 372 give 335 find 330 leave 312 seem 309 hear 306 stand 297 speak 295 ask 279 feel 278 answer 272 turn 266 get 220 return 209 follow 206 bring 201 let 196 pass 192 run 190 live 188 keep 186 lie 183 hold 182 die 172 fall 170 love 166 reach 166 begin 159 sit 152 bear 151 lose 145 draw 142 rise 138 understand 134 call 132 carry 131 put 130 break Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2487 not 705 so 612 now 604 up 584 more 495 out 493 little 492 then 449 only 423 old 421 long 391 again 386 as 373 never 356 well 344 good 343 even 342 own 332 down 326 other 320 here 309 back 304 there 302 last 299 away 288 very 286 first 280 much 274 still 269 too 262 great 262 few 245 many 236 almost 205 young 200 dead 192 once 190 on 180 yet 177 far 176 just 159 no 155 same 155 alone 148 off 148 low 147 dark 147 close 146 white 146 deep Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 68 good 60 least 42 most 22 near 10 high 9 slight 9 early 9 deep 8 low 8 dear 8 Most 6 great 5 poor 5 long 5 happy 5 bad 4 small 4 fine 3 wise 3 simple 3 large 3 keen 3 faint 3 dark 3 big 2 southernmost 2 short 2 quiet 2 old 2 mean 2 late 2 heavy 2 hard 2 fierce 2 eld 2 close 2 clear 1 young 1 writhe 1 vague 1 thin 1 thick 1 swift 1 sweet 1 sunny 1 strong 1 statesmanlike 1 slow 1 safe 1 queer Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 91 most 15 least 14 well 1 hard 1 blackest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 philip did not 7 _ is _ 5 _ am _ 5 bram had not 4 _ are _ 4 _ do _ 4 bram did not 4 phebe did not 3 _ do n''t 3 felicita did not 3 felicita had never 3 felicita looked up 3 god is very 3 heart was very 3 phebe had not 3 phebe was not 3 philip had never 3 philip was confident 3 queen is very 3 roland was dead 2 _ looks _ 2 bram had evidently 2 bram was dead 2 bram was not 2 day is over 2 eyes took in 2 father had never 2 father was dead 2 felicita had not 2 felicita was dead 2 felicita was not 2 felix was now 2 god knows simon 2 heart was almost 2 heart was too 2 life is not 2 mark was about 2 mother looked up 2 night had not 2 night was far 2 phebe went down 2 philip was amazed 2 philip was not 2 queen did not 2 queen gave orders 2 voice was low 1 _ ai n''t 1 _ am not 1 _ are indebted 1 _ are outlaws Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ am not sorry 1 _ were not numerous 1 bram made no answer 1 bram was not afraid 1 bram was not yet 1 children were no mere 1 father was no longer 1 felicita was no longer 1 felicita was not superstitious 1 friend was no stranger 1 friends had no doubt 1 friends had not before 1 head was no sooner 1 head was not much 1 life is not good 1 life is not simply 1 man made no spoken 1 mark said no more 1 mark took no notice 1 night had not long 1 night had not yet 1 phebe had no clue 1 phebe had not long 1 phebe made no answer 1 phebe was not old 1 phebe was not so 1 phebe was not there 1 philip had no time 1 philip made no sound 1 philip was no more 1 philip was not unaccustomed 1 place was no longer 1 queen did not weary A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 23263 author = Ballantyne, R. M. (Robert Michael) title = The Fugitives: The Tyrant Queen of Madagascar date = keywords = Breezy; CHAPTER; Christians; Ebony; God; Hockins; Jesus; Laihova; Lord; Madagascar; Malagasy; Mamba; Mark; Prince; Queen; Rafaravavy; Rakota; Ranavalona; Ravonino; Ruth; Secretary; Voalavo; come; man summary = "Here, massa," said Ebony, handing the food to Mark, "you divide, I "You are welcome, since you come as a friend," said Mark, "though I must "The soldiers of the Queen," said Ravonino, in answer to Mark Breezy''s "My sister, Ra-Ruth," said the guide, presenting her to his new friends. "My friend is not a man, but a--a woman, a young girl," said Ravonino, "Now, my friend," he said, turning to John Hockins, with an air and tone "Poor man," said Ebony, who looked over his shoulder with profound rid of objectionable queens in that way," said Mark. "But do you really think," said Mark, "that Rafaravavy is in great "Come," said their friend of the previous day--the Secretary--to Mark "What am I to do with it, my poor friend?" said Mark. "I have heard something of this," said Mark, "from the friend who guided "Farewell, dear friend," said Ravonino, grasping Mark''s hand, "God grant id = 4515 author = Curwood, James Oliver title = The Golden Snare date = keywords = Armin; Barren; Blake; Bram; Celie; Eskimo; Johnson; Olaf; Philip; Pierre; eye; face; man summary = With staring eyes he looked for Bram out where the wolves Philip choked back the cry on his lips, and in that moment Bram stopped In this moment Philip knew that the time to act was at hand. clearly he saw Bram as the time passed; the hunted look in the man''s Philip followed Bram, and twice that distance behind the outlaw came Philip had entered Bram Johnson''s cabin from the west. and Philip with his eyes on Bram. Then Philip faced Bram. Scarcely had the door closed when Celie Armin ran to Philip and pulled moments she was gone Bram did not look once at Philip. She went straight to Bram and before the wolf-man''s eyes held a long, For a space Philip thought that the cry must have come from Bram Celie gave an excited little cry and caught Philip''s arm, stopping him id = 51203 author = Ludwig, Edward W. title = A Coffin for Jacob date = keywords = Ben; City; Earth; Jacob; Maggie; Simon summary = They certainly didn''t look like telepaths, as Ben had heard For an instant, Ben''s mind rose above the haunting vision of the dead was no room in Ben''s mind for thoughts of Jacob now. his green-lidded eyes staring curiously at Ben. His scaly hand was "Shake hands with Ben," she told the Venusian. Ben remembered Simple Simon''s icy gaze and the way his rough hand had Ben thought, _I know a lot about you, Jacob. "He was a man like you," Maggie said softly. "Any news?" Ben asked Maggie. Ben could still see the image of the dead man. Ben brushed away the dust from his face-plate, turned up his helmet''s Simple Simon said, "Ben--changed. The little big-eared man stepped up and shook hands with Ben. The big-eared man put his hand on Ben''s shoulder. Ben looked at Maggie and then at the big-eared man. id = 19802 author = Stretton, Hesba title = Cobwebs and Cables date = keywords = Alice; Canon; Clifford; Engelberg; England; Felicita; Felix; God; Hilda; Jean; London; Madame; Marlowe; Merle; Mr.; Mrs.; Nixey; Pascal; Phebe; Riversborough; Roland; Sefton summary = years old to-day; and when I''m a man I''m going to be a pastor, like "But she knows where Mr. Sefton is," answered Phebe, "and we must ask "Phebe Marlowe!" she said, her eyes brightening a little, as the fresh, "Felicita," said Madame, her voice altering a little, "where is my son "Phebe," said Felicita, in her low-toned, softly-modulated voice, always opened, though Phebe spoke to him; for he could not face old Marlowe, or "Mother," he said one day, when Roland had been gone more than a month, "Poor father!" said Phebe aloud, with a little sob. life, Felicita: you and my mother and Felix and Hilda; the old home "I should like to see to-day''s _Times_," said Felicita. "I worship my mother still," said Felix one day to Phebe, "but I feel "Canon Pascal said to me," answered Phebe, "that your noble life and the