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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 18 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 40098 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 97 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 God 4 MRS 3 Mr. 3 Herr 2 rodrigo 2 SCHIGOLCH 2 PRINCE 2 MARIE 2 LULU 2 JOHN 2 Count 2 ALVA 1 worm 1 wolff 1 walburga 1 thou 1 streckmann 1 sittah 1 schwarz 1 scene 1 salome 1 saladin 1 sala 1 rose 1 piani 1 old 1 mote 1 manager 1 king 1 judge 1 hanne 1 exit 1 dreissiger 1 daja 1 amadeus 1 alma 1 Yburg 1 Wolters 1 Walter 1 WULKOW 1 WERMELSKIRCH 1 WER 1 WEHRHAHN 1 WEGRAT 1 WASNER 1 WALTHER 1 Vienna 1 VON 1 Trast 1 Tietz Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1668 man 1188 hand 1179 time 1164 day 1148 thing 1111 nothing 989 father 933 way 907 child 865 door 777 life 708 one 640 people 638 woman 585 house 581 something 575 mother 565 year 557 room 550 word 549 o 527 eye 516 world 505 heart 503 head 495 girl 471 moment 437 friend 431 daughter 427 wife 414 night 403 place 397 table 395 son 380 lady 377 anything 370 name 361 matter 361 arm 357 everything 355 love 329 king 324 work 322 money 317 kind 313 face 312 scene 307 morning 300 letter 290 end Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 21803 _ 1633 MRS 688 JOHN 634 LULU 633 Marie 619 God 606 thou 488 LOTH 470 HENSCHEL 461 George 459 Mrs. 450 Mr. 389 Robert 387 Beata 363 Richard 332 NATHAN 325 von 319 DR 317 PRINCE 306 Prince 296 ALVA 282 Herr 281 HELEN 274 STROEBEL 274 SCHWARTZE 264 T. 264 MAJ 259 Frau 258 CECILIA 251 MIN 251 FIELITZ 249 Reiss 247 FLAMM 235 TEMPLAR 234 Heinecke 232 HASSENREUTER 232 FERDINAND 231 LOUISA 228 JULIAN 221 Miss 209 P. 207 John 205 ROSE 205 HOFFMANN 201 Coun 199 WEHRHAHN 197 Trast 195 Count 194 FELIX 193 Clar Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 19140 i 17898 you 9217 it 6523 me 5926 he 3065 him 2875 she 2690 we 1751 her 1700 they 1163 us 997 them 681 myself 594 himself 522 yourself 310 one 269 herself 248 thee 141 ''em 127 mine 124 itself 117 yours 90 themselves 84 ourselves 72 ''s 32 thyself 30 d''you 29 hisself 21 ye 19 ha 15 ours 15 hers 13 his 12 oneself 9 theirs 8 you''re 6 i''m 5 you''ll 5 jus 5 je 5 ay 4 yourselves 4 o 4 em 3 ya 3 two''ll 3 thy 2 theirselves 2 t''you 2 --but Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 28473 be 10662 have 7452 do 3349 go 2627 know 2451 come 1957 see 1932 say 1826 take 1731 get 1453 make 1407 think 1328 tell 1190 look 1140 give 1131 let 1097 want 868 hear 746 leave 692 speak 620 find 576 stand 576 put 574 mean 561 ask 548 call 543 bring 497 keep 492 feel 465 turn 453 seem 437 understand 427 sit 422 live 422 believe 416 wish 396 love 389 like 381 enter 370 hold 366 become 360 happen 347 talk 343 wait 328 need 316 fall 311 thank 303 remain 300 suppose 296 lose Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 10733 not 2801 so 2356 now 2214 then 1943 here 1626 good 1619 more 1525 out 1406 up 1292 just 1257 well 1257 only 1231 too 1172 very 1019 little 959 again 945 there 867 long 861 never 837 right 822 old 820 much 813 still 784 as 783 down 762 dear 741 other 738 all 718 back 638 first 630 even 610 away 603 yet 553 own 523 such 522 great 519 once 497 always 489 enough 485 young 484 last 459 in 453 perhaps 451 same 442 quite 441 most 422 no 401 on 393 ever 391 really Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 273 least 233 good 66 great 64 most 55 bad 43 slight 38 high 34 dear 18 deep 13 strong 13 late 13 fine 11 Most 10 old 10 near 10 early 8 small 8 low 7 noble 7 mere 6 mean 6 innermost 6 happy 5 warm 5 speak 5 say 5 pure 5 poor 5 j 5 holy 4 young 4 simple 4 rich 4 heavy 4 eld 4 bright 4 bl 3 wise 3 wild 3 short 3 queer 3 lovely 3 hard 3 fair 3 easy 3 clever 3 bitter 2 weak 2 washstand 2 true Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 377 most 26 least 18 well 1 seest 1 sayest 1 near 1 heldest 1 hard 1 happiness,--let 1 bringest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 books.google.com 4 www.archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.archive.org/details/moriturithreeone00sudeiala 1 http://www.archive.org/details/joyoflivingthe00suderich 1 http://www.archive.org/details/johnbaptistplay00suderich 1 http://www.archive.org/details/honoraplayinfou01baukgoog 1 http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA11&dq=editions:OXFORDN10716921&id=6G 1 http://books.google.com/books?id=sF8qAAAAYAAJ&dq 1 http://books.google.com/books?id=UM85AAAAMAAJ&printsec 1 http://books.google.com/books?id=BPQIAAAAQAAJ&pg 1 http://books.google.com/books?id=9pUnAAAAMAAJ&printsec Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 77 _ goes out 13 one does n''t 11 _ is _ 8 _ gets up 8 _ standing up 8 one does not 7 _ comes in 7 _ go out 7 things do n''t 6 _ does not 6 _ is about 6 _ is silent 6 _ stands up 6 god have mercy 6 people do n''t 5 _ am _ 5 _ comes back 5 _ do not 5 _ getting up 5 _ going _ 5 _ was _ 5 nothing is more 4 _ are _ 4 _ do _ 4 _ does so 4 _ looking up 4 _ takes off 4 _ takes up 4 _ taking out 4 _ turning away 4 door is open 4 father is not 4 life is not 4 room is empty 3 _ brings in 3 _ comes forward 3 _ coming forward 3 _ did _ 3 _ do n''t 3 _ had _ 3 _ has _ 3 _ looking around 3 _ looking long 3 _ looking round 3 _ looks round 3 _ looks wildly 3 _ takes out 3 _ taking off 3 _ turning over 3 child was n''t Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ has not yet 1 _ make no compromises 1 _ makes no answer 1 _ taking no offence 1 child is not even 1 day is not yet 1 door was not open 1 father does not plainly 1 father has not yet 1 father is not dead 1 father were not yet 1 hand is not always 1 john go not thus 1 life is no joke 1 life is not well 1 lives are not safe 1 man gets no more 1 men are not always 1 men are not worth 1 men has no songs 1 men have no belief 1 men tell no tales 1 mother has no more 1 mother was no better''n 1 mother was not dead 1 one has not even 1 one is not just 1 one were not conscious 1 people are not necessarily 1 people have no tact 1 people have not sufficient 1 people is not ordinarily 1 thing was no joke 1 things are no longer 1 things are no worse 1 things are not always 1 things had not something 1 things is no concern 1 things is no different 1 things were not quite 1 time come no more 1 time is no less 1 woman ''s not half 1 words have no longer 1 years are not yet A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 9971 author = Hauptmann, Gerhart title = The Dramatic Works of Gerhart Hauptmann, Volume I date = keywords = ADELAIDE; BAUMERT; BECKER; BOXER; EDE; FIELITZ; FLEISCHER; HELEN; HILSE; HOFFMANN; Hauptmann; JAEGER; JULIUS; KAHL; KRAUSE; KRUEGER; LANGHEINRICH; LOTH; MRS; Mr.; RAUCHHAUPT; SCHIMMELPFENNIG; SCHULZE; WEHRHAHN; WULKOW; dreissiger; mote; old; wolff summary = A man sticks to a good thing, and that, naturally, People like myself hardly dare think of such a thing as wrong. Yes, an'' I can tell you, he''s goin'' on like a woman. [_OLD BAUMERT forces his way in at the glass door on the right, like to know what want is, let them go and ask the linen-weavers: they Come now, mother, don''t fall on a man like that. A nice little bit o'' meat like that does you a lot o'' good. To think that even old fellows like him are goin'' right off their heads! [_A jerky little ball of a man, with a red, knowing face, comes into the from the time each poor little thing came into the world till death took things, but I ain''t got no time. When it comes to people like that, your honour, I''d rather go an'' hold my id = 9972 author = Hauptmann, Gerhart title = The Dramatic Works of Gerhart Hauptmann, Volume II date = keywords = AUGUST; BERND; FLAMM; GEORGE; GOLISCH; God; HASSENREUTER; HAUFFE; HENSCHEL; JOHN; MRS; Mr.; PAULINE; QUAQUARO; SELMA; SIEBENHAAR; SPITTA; WALTHER; WERMELSKIRCH; hanne; rose; streckmann; walburga summary = so papa sent me to tell him so.--By the way, Mr. Henschel, do you know cradle._] We''ve got a little thing like that here too, an'' nobody''s goin'' [_HANNE laughs over her washing._] Things like that really do one good. [_Comes dancing in._] Get out of the way, Mrs. Henschel! Look here, girl, I want you to know that my husband is a good five years You got to wait for the proper time to do a thing like was to say their say--''tis old Mrs. Henschel that could tell you a thing I believe, Henschel, if a man comes nowadays an'' tells you the truth, You got to go through a thing like that before you know course, a man like me knows how things are! Father Bernd is right; people ought to like I got mad like ''cause he said maybe the child wasn''t born id = 31567 author = Iffland, August Wilhelm title = The Lawyers, A Drama in Five Acts date = keywords = Clar; Coun; Counsellor; Fred; Gern; Privy; Reiss; Sell; Soph summary = _Clar._ You are right, I think; (takes it.) Moreover, I shall be out a _Reiss._ Aye, thou good Lord in heaven! _Reiss._ Your son is a sensible learned man, who most certainly knows-_Reiss._ Your son will not give up that point, I tell you: as a good _Lew._ I shall have the honour to let the Privy Counsellor know, that _Clar._ Jack, you know your father long, though for some time since you _Clar._ Very well; then you act as Privy Counsellor, as you think _Reiss._ I give you my word and hand, as an honest man, I will run all _Soph._ Yes, good Sir. _Clar._ He is rather in an odd predicament to day; but I hope things Coun._ Yes, Sir. _Clar._ Recollect yourself, and act in a good and fair manner; for, _Reiss._ Drink to a good intention, (raising the glass,) dear Mr. Wellenberg. _Reiss._ Ay, good God! id = 2663 author = Lessing, Gotthold Ephraim title = Minna Von Barnhelm date = keywords = Franziska; LAND; MAJ; MIN; Major; Minna; Tellheim; WER summary = have heard of Major von Tellheim, if he has not heard of Paul Werner, I am come, your ladyship, to wish you a most humble good-morning; Franziska (coming out of Minna''s room), Major von Tellheim, Paul Werner Franziska (with a letter in her hand), Major von Tellheim, Paul Werner Major von Tellheim begs to present, through me, Sergeant Werner, his Franziska, Major von Tellheim Franziska, Major von Tellheim of coming back: to return me my ring.--Very well, Major von Tellheim, An Orderly, Major von Tellheim, Minna, Franziska Landlord, Major von Tellheim, Minna, Franziska Landlord, Major von Tellheim, Minna, Franziska Just, Major von Tellheim, Minna, Franziska Just, Major von Tellheim, Minna, Franziska Just, Major von Tellheim, Minna, Franziska Just, Major von Tellheim, Minna, Franziska Just, Major von Tellheim, Minna, Franziska Two Servants, Werner, Just, Major von Tellheim, Minna, Franziska I wished it might be Major von Tellheim.--Your hand, sir; you Major von Tellheim, Werner, Just, Franziska id = 33435 author = Lessing, Gotthold Ephraim title = The Dramatic Works of G. E. Lessing Miss Sara Sampson, Philotas, Emilia Galotti, Nathan the Wise date = keywords = CLAUDIA; Count; Edition; Emilia; FRIAR; Galotti; God; HAFI; Jew; Lessing; MARINELLI; MARWOOD; MELLEFONT; Madam; NATHAN; NORTON; ODOARDO; ORSINA; PHILOTAS; PRINCE; Patriarch; RECHA; SARA; Sir; Sultan; TEMPLAR; daja; saladin; sittah summary = These were happy, hopeful years in Lessing''s life; he enjoyed his work, No, little Sara has loved her father; and doubtless, doubtless help to sweeten the sad remaining days of my life, who shall do it? no Sara from the house of a beloved father and forced her to follow a dearest Sara, where you shall find new friends, who already look that in a few days you shall know that I am bound in such a manner as I really think I shall have to employ deception with this good child to And with such thoughts shall I write to her father? I have heard some very good news from Betty, and have come to wish you that I shall love my Sara for ever so little does it please me, that I that a hero is a man who knows higher goods than life? I have been wishing long to know the man id = 6784 author = Schiller, Friedrich title = Love and Intrigue: A Tragedy date = keywords = FERDINAND; God; LADY; LOUISA; MARSHAL; MILFORD; MILLER; MRS; PRESIDENT; SOPHY; Walter; exit; scene; worm summary = FERDINAND, his son; a Major in the Army; in love with Louisa Miller. LOUISA, the daughter of Miller, in love with Ferdinand. I shall say to him,--"Your excellency''s son has an eye to my daughter; my baron, Major Ferdinand, certainly does us the honor to look in now and Little dost thou feel how these hopes rend my heart in pieces that my Ferdinand shall marry Lady Milford. [FERDINAND, absorbed in thought, surveys LADY MILFORD with looks of passion) you shall crush before my eyes this trembling worm whom love for MILLER, LOUISA, FERDINAND, PRESIDENT, with SERVANTS. FERDINAND (to MILLER.) Father, take Louisa to her chamber--she is FERDINAND (releases LOUISA, and looks wildly towards heaven). Louisa Miller shall invite you in writing? Must choose between Lady Milford''s hand and his father''s curse and thou away and bear with thee all the wealth of thy father? to thy Louisa, Ferdinand? Louisa, didst thou love the marshal? id = 29745 author = Schnitzler, Arthur title = The Lonely Way—Intermezzo—Countess Mizzie Three Plays date = keywords = ALBERT; CECILIA; COUNT; FELIX; IRENE; JOHANNA; JULIAN; MARIE; MIZZIE; Mr.; PHILIP; PRINCE; REUMANN; Schnitzler; Vienna; WEGRAT; amadeus; sala summary = man like _Wegrath_ represent life''s greatest good and deepest meaning. Way." "I want a time to come when I must shudder at myself--shudder as remarkable thing to think that such a play was performed a large number You know, Felix, that I never make any mistakes in things of that kind. just that way.--I suppose your mother is having a little rest, Miss think that a man like him may go through the world with all his senses Yes. But the last time at one of the most important moments in my life. And so I think it''s more pleasant to let these things come to a six years ago, you know, we went there for the last time to visit the staying at home if I don''t feel like going away. like these I couldn''t think of going so far away from you for such a id = 34184 author = Sudermann, Hermann title = Magda: A Play in Four Acts date = keywords = FRANZISKA; HEFFTERDINGT; KELLER; MAGDA; MARIE; MAX; MRS; SCHWARTZE; VON summary = Yes, youth, travel, and women are good things; but the world must be Ah, well, don''t think ill of an old man for speaking a little [_Kneels before him, lighting his pipe_.] Be good, father dear. Pardon me, dear Miss Franziska, I think your news is so important Pardon us, dear Miss Marie, if we treat you once more like a child, and Dear Colonel, I begin to think that pride is a very poor sort of thing. Yes, yes--I''m entirely--[_Standing up, affectionately_.] Dear old papa! Well, my child, from this hour your old father claims that right. to_ Magda, _who sits turned away with her hands before her face_.] We [_Giving her hand to_ Mrs. Schwartze.] What a day for you, my dear! Dear Miss Magda, there comes an hour to almost every man when he Yes, I know, dear Magda, it will be painful for you; but this child id = 34207 author = Sudermann, Hermann title = The Joy of Living (Es lebe das Leben): A Play in Five Acts date = keywords = Baron; Beata; Brachtmann; Kellinghausen; Ludwig; Michael; Norbert; Richard summary = Baron Ludwig von Völkerlingk (_Secretary of State, Richard''s house of Count Kellinghausen; the fourth act at Baron Richard (Beata _turns to_ Holtzmann.) Ah, good-morning, my dear Why, my dear Baron?--Countess, shall I show you the attitude of the Norbert (_kissing_ Beata''s _hand_). if _you_, my dear Baron--as an old friend of the family--knowing how We shall miss your cheerful view of life, my dear Kellinghausen. My dear Michael, the chief thing I have to thank my father for is that _Enter_ Beata, _with_ Baron Ludwig von Völkerlingk. (_To_ Richard.) My dear Völkerlingk, I want unwillingly, she makes them all come into line; don''t you, Beata, dear? Beata--I don''t know if I shall be able to speak to-morrow. Beata (_looking at_ Richard). Dear Michael, Richard and I conquered our feelings long ago. My dear Richard, this is not merely a matter of life and death. Richard (_kissing_ Beata''s _hand_). id = 34356 author = Sudermann, Hermann title = Fires of St. John: A Drama in Four Acts date = keywords = Brauer; Enters; George; Gertrude; Marie; Miss; Pastor summary = [_Throws her arms around her mother_.] Good-morning, mama dear! Henry, you know how I love the girl; but, good gracious, she is not our Pardon the interruption; but I have heard your daughter, Miss Marie, But about four years ago, one day Marie [_During this_, George _looks at her disapprovingly, while_ Marie [_Caressing her, with a shy glance at_ Marie.] Why, yes, little one, Pastor; your time will come some other day. [_At this_ Marie _and_ Gertrude _go to door C., and speak to word---Marie, my child, come here to me. Yes, my dear Marie--pardon me, I should not have said that--and yet I [_With a happy glance at_ Marie.] Good-night. Good-night, Miss Marie! [_Shaking his hand_.] Good-night, Pastor! George dear; I just wanted to look at you once more before going to [_Enters with_ George _and_ Gertrude.] Thank goodness, that''s over. [_Enters_.] Good-morning, Miss Marie! [Gertrude _exits_.] [Marie _calling softly_.] George! id = 34357 author = Sudermann, Hermann title = Honor: A Play in Four Acts date = keywords = Alma; Aside; Count; Frau; Heinecke; Herr; Kurt; Muhlingk; Robert; Trast summary = knock, and a man come in, and Lord save us if there didn''t stand a swell acquaintances, one of young Herr Kurt''s friends---Father!--Good morning, Mother I (_He a man goes around in clothes like those!--Of course everything ain''t (Frau _and_ Herr Heinecke _group themselves about_ Alma''s _chair_. obliging young man he gave Alma a standing invitation to ride to the hand_) Do you know, my fine people, that a sort of foster-son of yours a sweet little thing like--(Robert _covers his face with his hands_) A thing like that often brings in thousands, Kurt. son of a respectable family, Herr Brandt, and as little worthy of You have been away from home a long time, Herr Count? and I tell you I brought you into the world!--Yes, an honest old man! Heinecke.--If the young Herr Muhlingk came, he said--(_He shuts the He loved the Herr Councillor like his own father! id = 34359 author = Sudermann, Hermann title = Morituri: Three One-Act Plays Teja—Fritzchen—The Eternal Masculine date = keywords = Blue; Drosse; King; Marquis; Marshal; Painter; Queen; SCENE; Sire summary = Because thou leanest so limber upon thy spear, bent like the bow of a Now must thou say something, King, to welcome thy young wife. But thou must speak to thy young wife. Behold, like the spirit of divine wrath, so hast thou risen up among Old men bowed willingly to thy youth, and since thou hadst call thee by thy title of a half-hour, for, by God! Thou art the King, Sire. Yea. But for thee I should be man, not King.... We old men fight as well as they; and love, young man, as well as they. Truly, thou hast given away almost all thy provisions. King, thou must husband thy strength. And dost thou know thyself to be free, my son, from the trembling of hands_.) I would fain hold thee here, but truly thou must go to thy On my word, I assure thee, Balthilda, the men have other things to id = 34360 author = Sudermann, Hermann title = Roses: Four One-Act Plays Streaks of Light—The Last Visit—Margot—The Far-away Princess date = keywords = Ebeling; Herr; Julia; Lady; Mulbridge; Pierre; Princess; Tietz; Wolters; Yburg summary = Your headaches, I want to tell you, come from the roses. Oh, yes, I know--because your lovely, reckless great-grandmother lost Oh, yes--we needn''t hesitate to say that, need we, Julia, dear? Yes. You see, Julia wants to live a life suited to her tastes and You may rest assured, my dear sir, that I know what is due a woman''s Yes--so very, very much, Pierre, dear.--And to know that we were so Yes, that''s our condition--isn''t it, Pierre, dear? into your head to live like a hermit, you''d know that, for some time I brought my little girl along, Herr Ebeling, to let her catch a She came, looked him quietly in the face, and asked for time to think day!" "Yes, I know all about it--but I won''t." "You''ve been wishing it Wolters _continues aside to her._) My dear child, I know No, my dear friend, a rose like that never fades--even as my love for id = 34383 author = Sudermann, Hermann title = John the Baptist: A Play date = keywords = GALILEAN; HEROD; HERODIAS; JOHN; JOSAPHAT; MANASSA; MIRIAM; Rabbi; salome; thou summary = Thou art afraid of thy companions in misery and Dost thou not know that is the great altar on which, day and I say unto Thee thou wilt thank the Lord thy thou art come!" And so he went on till evening, and the children mocked Rabbi, tell us, when will He come of Whom thou speakest? Rabbi, wilt thou be responsible for thy enemies? [_Points to him, looking shocked._] Hush, if thou lovest thy life! And may seven swine possess thee, thou great prophet, so that compared One has but to see thee to know that thou art the mistress.... Hadst thou come to me in my wilderness, I would have shown thee the way No. Rabbi, I come to thee in the night because of Herod. If thou sparest him, the people will like thee. How unlike thou art to thy mother, Salome! Well, thou art now thy own master. id = 4963 author = Thoma, Ludwig title = Moral date = keywords = BEERMANN; BOLLAND; COMMISSIONER; FRAU; HAUSER; Herr; LUND; STROEBEL; WASNER summary = FRAU BEERMANN is in the late forties, though youthful looking for her Dr. Wasner is vigorously shaking hands--going to Frau Beermann says, The servants pass around coffee--Beermann conversing with Bolland comes [Frau Bolland, Frau Beermann, Dr. Wasner, Fraulein Koch, Effie go out FRAU BEERMANN [turning to Frau Lund], I don''t know if ... Lund, no doubt, would like to send our young men to the good Ladies of BEERMANN [rises, goes to card table, opens a drawer, takes out a deck [Hauser, Frau Lund, Frau Beermann remain sitting at right.] BEERMANN [speaking to Frau Lund, while dealing]. BEERMANN [he leaves his seat, comes forward, right]. Of this Hauteville woman.--Yes. BEERMANN. Besides, I must tell you, Herr Beermann, that the contents of Beermann turns around so that Stroebel STROEBEL [very seriously.] Herr Beermann, I must speak to you privately. Herr Beermann, you said yourself that your Society for the Suppression id = 29682 author = Wedekind, Frank title = Erdgeist (Earth-Spirit): A Tragedy in Four Acts date = keywords = ALVA; ESCERNY; GOLL; LULU; SCHIGOLCH; SCHÖN; rodrigo; schwarz summary = in his left hand a dog-whip and in his right a loaded revolver, and (The stage-hand carries Lulu in his arms; the animal-tamer (As he collides in the door-way with Dr. Goll and Lulu.) (Stepping forward, shakes hands with Schön and Goll.) Glad to see (After a look at Lulu.) This company!-(Gets up, goes up left, (Hesitating, to Lulu.) If you--the left trowser-leg--a little completely dressed, her hat on, and her right hand under her left arm.) Schwarz enters, left, palette and brushes in hand, and bends over Lulu, Lulu, goes up the steps, right, and turns around in the door-way.) Eve! (Emptying her glass.) I thought you''d come to an end a long time (Lulu rises, goes up the steps, right.) Where are you going? (Comes down the steps and puts her arm around Schön''s neck.) Why Lulu comes down right.) revolver in her hand from himself to Lulu''s breast.) Think you we let id = 33415 author = Wedekind, Frank title = Pandora''s Box: A Tragedy in Three Acts date = keywords = ALVA; CASTI; GESCHWITZ; God; HUGENBERG; LULU; MAGELONE; SCHIGOLCH; piani; rodrigo summary = like best to take her to London for six months, and let her fill up coat with a white sun-shade in his right hand comes down. me like a well-broken four-in-hand,--but that boy sticks in my head. that time my eyes opened and I got to know myself. Geschwitz, and Lulu enter, lower left. (_Bob opens the door and lets Schigolch enter, in evening dress, his me!--Even if I should want to have her, God knows I don''t first need the doors are torn open, and Puntschu, Heilmann, Alva, Bianetta, comes down with a broad smile, takes Lulu''s head in both his hands (_To Lulu._) If I''ve come at a bad time, I''ll turn around I must just tell you right off, I haven''t got any money. Lulu opens the door, saying "Come right (_Lulu opens the door, and Jack enters--a thick-set man of elastic id = 45228 author = Wedekind, Frank title = Such is Life: A Play in Five Acts date = keywords = FILIPO; Gigi; God; PIETRO; Perugia; THEATRE; alma; judge; king; manager summary = (Louder.) Long live our king, Pietro Folchi! (_Sinking down before the King and embracing his knees._) Father! to the throne there remains no calling for the king save that of court Thank God, under the rule of King Pietro, whom Heaven long preserve to (_The King dimes a long breath after Master Pandolfo leaves the room, Then let the king''s head fall under the headsman''s axe. "Let King Pietro''s head fall under the headsman''s axe!" Bring ropes! Let the king''s head The grace of your lord, our dear and blessed king, has placed a learned emphasis._) My words were, "And so at last the king''s head shall fall (_Enter the King, Princess Alma, with her father''s lute on her back, Believe me, my dear friend, I know these kings. (_To the King._) Let your child History shall never tell of me that I made a king my court fool!