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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 144681 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 75 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 New 4 London 3 man 3 St. 3 South 3 Rev. 3 Mr. 3 King 3 James 3 God 3 England 3 Dr. 3 Church 2 year 2 York 2 William 2 Thomas 2 Street 2 Sir 2 Paris 2 Melanesians 2 Massachusetts 2 Mary 2 Lord 2 John 2 Islands 2 Islanders 2 Henry 2 George 2 General 2 France 2 Court 2 Charles 2 Captain 2 Boston 1 sidenote 1 illustration 1 ghost 1 german 1 funeral 1 english 1 death 1 dead 1 day 1 body 1 belief 1 Zealand 1 World 1 Woodbridge 1 Wollunqua Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2722 man 1524 death 1481 ghost 1203 op 1158 p. 1151 time 1091 body 1029 spirit 991 soul 978 day 957 people 951 house 859 year 808 place 802 sqq 689 island 682 god 679 woman 659 life 623 person 581 stone 573 chief 560 hand 550 grave 532 part 512 belief 508 name 496 foot 493 head 487 native 460 custom 456 tree 453 world 450 child 445 dead 427 way 426 king 422 sidenote 419 family 413 case 412 corpse 402 ceremony 400 priest 397 funeral 392 thing 392 ground 391 friend 384 tribe 380 word 380 village Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 20102 _ 2246 . 2219 sq 1205 cit 1199 pp 726 Mr. 710 Footnote 661 New 601 i. 589 J. 570 W. 440 Islands 426 Dr. 420 London 369 G. 366 god 327 ii 299 Peter 295 E. 277 Samoa 269 H. 268 King 261 Sir 259 R. 255 God 253 John 223 Tonga 223 Australia 222 Society 222 Cook 222 Captain 220 Lord 218 Boston 216 de 215 Faneuil 214 Guinea 214 A. 208 South 205 Ellis 202 C. 186 Penn 182 Melanesians 181 William 167 England 165 Henry 164 St. 161 S. 159 James 159 Central 157 Mariner Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5428 it 4741 he 4131 they 2756 i 1945 them 1601 him 1441 we 702 you 604 she 528 us 518 me 432 himself 412 themselves 252 her 106 itself 70 myself 53 herself 45 one 30 thee 30 ourselves 23 yourself 15 theirs 10 ours 9 his 8 yours 4 hers 3 ''em 2 mine 1 âdà 1 ye 1 u 1 says--"they 1 sar--"_you 1 lessons--"_they 1 interest:-- 1 imself 1 ii 1 em 1 bocardo--"they Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 25994 be 7224 have 1550 say 1307 do 1108 make 1031 take 924 see 874 go 846 die 793 give 773 come 719 call 598 bury 571 suppose 571 find 549 know 533 seem 521 appear 520 believe 493 think 493 tell 401 bear 400 become 399 live 388 follow 387 use 387 carry 361 leave 356 bring 348 pass 337 keep 330 hold 318 accord 308 kill 306 put 299 fall 286 speak 284 set 282 offer 282 lie 276 lay 274 place 269 remain 268 eat 263 observe 260 stand 260 cut 257 hear 252 return 245 let Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3377 not 1488 dead 1360 so 1309 other 1307 very 1106 more 1084 great 983 up 881 such 830 old 802 then 713 many 710 only 696 first 668 long 660 most 627 good 621 well 601 thus 582 out 561 also 559 same 549 even 547 down 542 little 527 now 484 as 482 much 473 own 469 again 436 there 427 sometimes 420 high 410 never 405 certain 403 away 400 last 397 sacred 382 large 382 however 379 human 362 far 342 often 340 common 336 off 333 about 331 deceased 326 few 319 ever 310 natural Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 152 good 145 most 136 least 59 high 57 great 50 near 41 large 32 low 30 slight 30 early 24 eld 16 bad 15 fine 15 deep 15 Most 14 manif 13 old 11 simple 10 small 9 common 8 strong 7 choice 6 l 5 short 5 rich 5 pure 5 long 5 late 4 loud 4 hot 4 handsome 4 dark 4 brave 4 bl 3 young 3 wild 3 proud 3 plain 3 noble 3 holy 3 happy 3 grave 3 foul 3 farth 3 fair 3 busy 3 bitter 2 warm 2 vile 2 topmost Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 515 most 21 least 18 well 1 writhe 1 oftenest 1 near 1 lines:-- Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.hti.umich.edu 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.hti.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=genpub;idno=AFL0522.0001.001 1 http://www.hti.umich.edu/ 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/44379/44379-h/44379-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/44379/44379-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/historyofmournin00daveuoft 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 14 death is not 4 _ believe _ 4 spirits called _ 4 time goes on 3 _ living _ 3 ghosts are not 3 ghosts are very 3 god was incarnate 3 gods were usually 3 lives were not 3 man is sick 3 men are not 3 place called _ 3 soul does not 2 _ are not 2 _ bury _ 2 body be not 2 body be wet 2 body was next 2 death has not 2 death is still 2 death was due 2 death was sudden 2 ghost does not 2 ghost is _ 2 ghost is not 2 ghosts are also 2 ghosts are most 2 ghosts come down 2 god was not 2 gods had houses 2 house was _ 2 life is not 2 man does not 2 man has ever 2 man has just 2 man is dead 2 man is not 2 man was not 2 man were married 2 men are naturally 2 men are still 2 men were so 2 people buried alive 2 people is sago 2 people were not 2 person is sick 2 soul is _ 2 spirit called _ 2 women dying in Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ are not _ 1 _ are not quite 1 _ had no doubt 1 _ has no power 1 _ is not otherwise 1 _ were not physicians 1 death did not always 1 death have not probably 1 death is not natural 1 death makes no great 1 death were not always 1 ghost does not always 1 ghost does not at 1 ghost has no proper 1 ghost has no sacred 1 ghost is not always 1 ghost is not only 1 ghosts are not absolutely 1 ghosts are not so 1 ghosts are not strictly 1 god had no priest 1 gods being no more 1 gods was not prematurely 1 gods were no more 1 gods were not animals 1 house was not uncommonly 1 islands had no political 1 islands is not eternal 1 islands were not yet 1 life is not too 1 life was not always 1 life were not prematurely 1 man is not only 1 man was not only 1 man was not wholly 1 men are not mischievously 1 men are not much 1 people are not so 1 people had no voice 1 places was not moral 1 soul does not perhaps 1 spirit had no inclination 1 spirit was not kanaloa 1 spirits are no larger 1 spirits had no hand 1 spirits have no power 1 spirits were not more 1 years have no souls A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 44379 author = Davey, Richard title = A History of Mourning date = keywords = Abbey; Century; Church; Court; England; FIG; France; King; Mary; Paris; Prince; Queen; Royal; St.; body; funeral; illustration summary = the singular funereal ceremonials of this people, with whom death was The funeral in Greece took place three days after the followed the example, and ordered general mourning on the death of FUNERAL services of great magnificence entered largely into the customs was one of the last great Roman Catholic state funerals in England, lady" (Queen Katherine) were all dressed in mourning, and the funeral remains of the great Queen were escorted to their last resting-place. King James ordered the deepest mourning to be worn for his royal THE funeral ceremonies of the French kings and princes of the blood funeral to take place at night, the body being exposed upon an open "On the 7th, the first funeral service took place, in the Church of The public funeral took place on the 18th of November, and was attended three weeks'' mourning for the late King of France." At about this time, id = 20116 author = Frazer, James George title = The Belief in Immortality and the Worship of the Dead, Volume 1 (of 3) The Belief Among the Aborigines of Australia, the Torres Straits Islands, New Guinea and Melanesia date = keywords = Anthropological; Australia; British; Central; Codrington; Dr.; Fiji; Fijians; Footnote; Gillen; God; Guinea; Islanders; Islands; London; Melanesians; Mr.; Nanga; New; Northern; Rev.; South; Spencer; Straits; Torres; Tribes; Wollunqua; belief; dead; death; german; ghost; man; sidenote summary = death-dance by men personating ghosts, 185-188; preservation of the the dead in the other world, 286 _sq._; ghosts die the second death and the dead and the ghostly ferry, 350 _sq._; ghosts die the second death subterranean abode of the dead, 353 _sq._; ghosts die the second death, that in the Arunta tribe the souls of dead people of the plum-tree totem moment at which the ghost of the dead man or woman was supposed to be leaves the body at death and goes away to live with other ghosts on a which means the ghost or spirit of a dead person. dead man stand in fear of his ghost, the body may not be buried until a living woman; the person so inspired by a dead man''s spirit becomes an in the spiritual part of living men or in the ghosts of the dead, being id = 33524 author = Frazer, James George title = The Belief in Immortality and the Worship of the Dead, Volume 2 (of 3) The Belief Among the Polynesians date = keywords = Brown; Captain; Cook; Ellis; Forster; Hawaii; Hervey; Islanders; Islands; James; Journal; London; Maori; Mariner; Maui; Melanesians; Moerenhout; New; Old; Pacific; Polynesian; Samoa; Samoans; Society; South; Stair; Tonga; Turner; Voyage; Wilson; World; Zealand summary = near the place of death, and along these stalks the soul of the dead man inferior gods are the souls of dead men, who consequently have not sometimes great chiefs were thus visited by the gods, and the king religion, the souls of dead nobles ranked as gods, possessing all the Again, the souls of dead nobles, like gods, had the power of appearing from the grave at which a new god, that is, a dead man or woman, was gods, the king, the divine chief (the living Tooitonga), the inferior chiefs, and the people, so that every man in the island of Tongataboo great chief or king of a whole island. Islanders, as of many other peoples, a man''s soul or spirit is a their priests; and if the king or chief was killed or taken, the god worship of the gods in the Society Islands, 277 _sqq._; id = 38588 author = Sargent, Lucius M. (Lucius Manlius) title = Dealings with the Dead, Volume 1 (of 2) date = keywords = Belknap; Boorn; Boston; Charles; Church; Clarkson; Colvin; Court; Dr.; England; General; George; God; Henry; James; Jesse; John; Judge; King; London; Lord; Macaulay; Manchester; Martin; Massachusetts; Mr.; Mrs.; New; North; October; Paris; Penn; Quaker; Rev.; Rome; Russell; Sea; Sir; South; St.; Stephen; Street; Thomas; Washington; William; York; man; year summary = burying-ground--as is the case, at the present day, in our own country, Supposing, as a matter of course, that André would be buried in them, Dr. Thacher had stated that, also, as a fact, though he did not remain, to The good old man himself has been called to the account of his said Johnson, "and think he had made a great addition to our stock." Mr. Stephens has preserved a respectable silence, on the subject of Lot''s daughter, between five and six years old, stepped timidly towards Mr. Adams, and placing her little hand upon his, and looking upon his there came in a hard-favored, little, old man, who looked as if time and twelve years and a little over,'' said the old man. really supposed the good, little, old man, contrary to all his known believe," said I.--"No," the old man replied, "I have always been id = 39675 author = Sargent, Lucius M. (Lucius Manlius) title = Dealings with the Dead, Volume 2 (of 2) date = keywords = Andrew; Anne; Benjamin; Boston; Bull; Byles; Captain; Charles; Chuang; Church; Dr.; Earl; Edward; England; Faneuil; February; France; French; General; George; Gillam; God; Hall; Heaven; Henry; James; January; John; Johnson; July; King; Lane; London; Lord; Louis; March; Mary; Massachusetts; Miss; Mr.; New; Peter; Phillips; Pliny; Rev.; Rochelle; Samuel; September; Sir; St.; Street; Thomas; William; Woodbridge; York; day; english; man; year summary = States, and died a poor, though highly respected old man, in the town of says Lord Bacon, of men, supposed to be dead, taken from their beds as "Great crimes," says Sir John Barrow, "are not common, but old man replied.--"And pray," asked the widow, eagerly, "what said knows our old fathers made no such use of Faneuil Hall, in their early If the year be taken to begin, on the first of January, then Dr. Allen is right; and Peter Faneuil died March 3, 1743. years old, when Peter Faneuil died. Peter Faneuil was thirty and seven years old, when he began to reign--that loving nephew, PETER FANEUIL, eldest son of my late brother, Benjamin this year 1748_." Peter Faneuil died March 3, 1742-3, and had therefore about the year 1736-7, or about the time of Andrew Faneuil''s death. house Mr. Peter Faneuil and Henry Phillips came into Mr. Hatche''s