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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 8 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 116991 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 72 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 Goethe 6 God 5 german 4 time 4 life 3 like 3 great 3 good 3 Weimar 3 Schiller 3 Frankfort 3 Footnote 2 year 2 way 2 thing 2 nature 2 man 2 love 2 long 2 french 2 form 2 english 2 day 2 William 2 Shakspeare 2 Mr. 2 Lord 2 Leipzig 2 France 2 England 2 Count 1 young 1 world 1 work 1 wagner 1 translator 1 thy 1 thought 1 thou 1 thoas 1 thee 1 student 1 spirit 1 sense 1 scene 1 power 1 plant 1 place 1 old 1 new Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2369 man 1678 time 1344 life 1061 day 1032 nature 974 friend 952 hand 949 heart 918 world 914 eye 898 year 877 way 828 thing 794 king 762 word 729 light 685 form 663 part 658 love 653 nothing 649 mind 603 one 574 soul 572 work 568 father 548 poet 544 thought 534 fact 509 child 506 sense 492 place 487 power 485 house 468 order 464 side 442 earth 437 matter 429 spirit 426 mother 420 character 410 force 404 condition 400 woman 399 book 396 body 386 head 384 art 383 state 383 point 381 people Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4162 _ 1819 Goethe 639 Schiller 519 thou 442 von 335 Charlotte 333 Frederick 332 God 311 Shakspeare 290 Footnote 274 FAUST 273 Pope 266 MEPHISTOPHELES 222 Frankfort 217 Marie 196 Mr. 183 Faust 174 Germany 164 Leipzig 162 Wilhelmine 145 Thou 137 Weimar 137 IPHIGENIA 135 Lamb 134 heaven 134 William 133 Rietz 131 ye 129 Werther 126 Madame 115 Italy 114 MARGARET 100 Herder 95 Lord 91 Plato 91 Götz 90 Strassburg 89 French 86 Reid 85 King 85 Charles 84 Sir 80 Trude 80 Lili 80 France 80 Count 77 . 75 English 74 Leonora 71 Gretchen Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8373 i 8157 he 7184 it 4110 we 3653 you 3457 me 2987 him 2227 they 1859 she 1591 us 1505 them 1210 himself 892 her 590 itself 500 myself 363 themselves 304 thee 302 one 198 ourselves 178 herself 118 yourself 68 thyself 66 mine 16 ye 14 his 13 yours 12 ours 9 oneself 8 hers 6 thy 5 theirs 3 yourselves 3 thou 3 ''s 2 silicum/ 1 wolff 1 win,--he 1 unself 1 trübe 1 thoughts.5 1 tatoo 1 stone:-- 1 seizing,-- 1 pelf 1 passion,-- 1 on''t 1 o 1 my 1 me"--and 1 justice!--what Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 26810 be 10226 have 2607 do 1726 say 1716 see 1689 make 1322 come 1314 give 1207 know 1204 find 1202 take 898 go 784 become 660 seem 651 let 632 speak 619 write 618 look 604 leave 597 bring 585 think 585 call 580 stand 576 tell 550 show 529 follow 529 appear 510 feel 489 live 468 remain 466 hear 463 love 437 lead 398 turn 396 bear 393 hold 372 read 365 pass 359 lie 344 receive 340 draw 333 learn 333 keep 322 arise 319 meet 319 begin 304 wish 292 fall 290 regard 286 cry Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5668 not 2430 so 1920 more 1760 now 1524 only 1429 other 1270 great 1213 own 1167 then 1156 first 1045 well 1027 good 993 very 958 such 957 here 882 most 881 long 876 even 865 still 841 up 809 little 801 much 795 also 779 as 775 same 726 thus 685 too 684 many 666 never 658 out 644 old 640 once 640 last 616 again 588 new 577 yet 564 young 547 high 521 always 504 however 497 far 493 there 490 already 481 human 479 therefore 463 ever 419 certain 417 true 416 whole 397 indeed Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 243 good 214 least 168 great 117 high 112 most 57 early 32 late 27 near 27 fair 27 eld 27 deep 26 strong 26 noble 26 bad 25 fine 22 dear 20 small 20 low 20 Goethe 19 slight 14 old 14 large 14 full 13 pure 13 j 13 happy 11 strange 11 simple 11 rich 10 manif 9 wise 9 lofty 9 bright 9 Most 8 young 8 clear 7 close 7 bl 6 wide 6 grand 6 farth 5 weighty 5 true 5 short 5 new 5 minute 5 long 5 holy 5 heavy 5 handsome Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 770 most 62 goethe 41 well 39 least 3 lest 2 youngest 2 worst 1 shortest 1 highest 1 greatest 1 feelest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 13 goethe was not 12 goethe did not 9 _ was _ 6 one does not 5 _ was not 5 father did not 5 goethe does not 5 man is not 5 one is not 4 _ had _ 4 _ is _ 4 goethe is not 4 goethe was so 4 nothing is more 4 one did not 3 _ did _ 3 _ is not 3 eye is not 3 heart is sore 3 man had not 3 men were not 3 schiller did not 3 thing is certain 2 _ comes _ 2 _ coming out 2 _ did not 2 _ has _ 2 _ have _ 2 _ were _ 2 day is now 2 eye is active 2 eyes were still 2 father was right 2 father was so 2 father was very 2 friends did not 2 goethe had always 2 goethe had long 2 goethe was able 2 goethe was about 2 goethe was always 2 goethe was familiar 2 goethe was fortunate 2 heart is cold 2 heart is not 2 heart was no 2 king had already 2 life is so 2 light was still 2 love is eternal Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 heart was no longer 1 _ had not yet 1 _ is not really 1 _ was no better 1 _ was not present 1 eye is not at 1 eye was no more 1 eyes are not so 1 father did not readily 1 father had no quiet 1 friends have not all 1 goethe did not always 1 goethe did not scruple 1 goethe does not always 1 goethe found no reason 1 goethe has not only 1 goethe is not here 1 goethe is not rapturous 1 goethe makes no reference 1 goethe showed no desire 1 goethe was not contemplative 1 goethe was not exactly 1 goethe was not long 1 goethe was not temperamentally 1 goethe was not that 1 hand has no right 1 hand is no better 1 heart is not cold 1 heart were not yet 1 king is not present 1 king made no reply 1 king were no better 1 life had no roses 1 life has no roses 1 life is no bauble 1 life was not repugnant 1 light has no particular 1 love has no need 1 love has not yet 1 love is not immortal 1 man had no demoniac 1 man had no difficulty 1 man had not sufficient 1 man has not yet 1 man is not always 1 man is not master 1 man is not merely 1 man is not only 1 man was not always 1 men is not there A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 19753 author = Brown, Peter Hume title = The Youth of Goethe date = keywords = Autobiography; Berlichingen; Briefe; Clavigo; Faust; Footnote; Frankfort; Friederike; God; Goethe; Götz; Herder; Kestner; Lavater; Leipzig; Lili; Lotte; Merck; Prometheus; Shakespeare; Spinoza; Strassburg; Weimar; Werke; Werther; Wetzlar; Wieland; german summary = [Footnote 4: In his later years Goethe preferred life in a small town. [Footnote 5: To Chancellor von Müller Goethe said: "Mein Vater war ein [Footnote 8: Goethe''s letters addressed to Cornelia from Leipzig, when it was, in the course of life which Goethe was to follow in Leipzig we [Footnote 13: So Weislingen (in _Götz von Berlichingen_), whom Goethe follow the career of Goethe from the day he entered Leipzig till the during these Leipzig years Goethe played a sufficient number of pranks [Footnote 48: Referring to the time he now spent in Frankfort, Goethe [Footnote 78: Writing to a correspondent in 1780, Goethe says: "Herder [Footnote 82: Herder himself says of his influence on Goethe: "Ich The day following the writing of the letter just quoted, Goethe wrote Goethe''s life, to the period of his sojourn in Italy, when years had id = 6314 author = De Quincey, Thomas title = Biographical Essays date = keywords = Addison; Charles; Dr.; Dryden; England; France; Frankfort; Goethe; Greek; Homer; John; Lamb; London; Lord; Milton; Mr.; NOTE; Pope; Schiller; Shakspeare; Sir; Stratford; William; endnote; english; french; german; great; life; time; year summary = great rival Pope, who had expressly studied Shakspeare, was, after Shakspeare was in fact the first man of letters, Pope five latter years of his life Shakspeare passed in dignified ease, power to Shakspeare''s female world, is a peculiar fact of contrast but Pope''s father was a man of sense and principle; he must have public favor, in the year 1709 Pope first came forward upon the In the year 1712, Pope appeared again before the public as the twenty years after the publication of the poem, in which Pope, in a Pope''s works; a monument of satirical power the greatest which man unhappy man had visited Pope for the last time. of Pope about four years before, by a defence of the Essay on Man, that which comes from the personal friends of Pope, little natural that an intellectual man like the Sergeant, personally made id = 6312 author = Emerson, Ralph Waldo title = Representative Men: Seven Lectures date = keywords = Bonaparte; England; Europe; France; God; Goethe; Lord; Montaigne; Napoleon; Plato; Shakspeare; Socrates; Swedenborg; english; genius; good; great; life; like; man; mind; nature; new; power; thing; thought; time; world summary = It is natural to believe in great men. When nature removes a great man, people explore I admire great men of all classes, those who stand for facts, and for The Bible of the learned for twentytwo hundred years, every brisk young man, who says in succession fine Plato, too, like every great man, consumed his own times. man, able to honor, at the same time, the ideal, or laws of the mind, bringing certain things to pass;--the men of talent and action. in the world." "I don''t know how great men you may be," said the Guinea One man appears whose nature is to all men''s eyes Other men say wise things as well as he; only they say a good human fate: but, that this man of men, he who gave to the science of Men give way before such a man generalization, so that men saw in him combined the natural and the id = 5733 author = Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von title = Autobiography: Truth and Fiction Relating to My Life date = keywords = BOOK; Behrisch; Count; English; Frankfort; Gellert; God; Goethe; Gretchen; Leipzig; Oeser; Strasburg; Von; art; come; day; father; footnote; form; french; friend; german; good; great; hand; house; life; like; little; long; old; place; thing; time; way; work; year; young summary = reading him he felt, he said, like a blind man who suddenly receives his long time to come, but a great deal of small gear of the same ware had every thing was quiet in the house, I whiled away the time with my pots At that time the general interchange of personal good wishes made the small, thin man of lively good nature, that in his earlier years he had But for this the good old man cared but little, days he let me sit as long as I could read, many times alone; after a disturb them; but ''there is a time for all things,''--an excellent great rapidly, and it needs not a man''s life-time to bring such things to feeling of revering a great man; so did a new friend, whom I gained at Time is infinitely long; and each day is a vessel into which a great id = 5641 author = Lehrs, Ernst title = Man or Matter Introduction to a Spiritual Understanding of Nature on the Basis of Goethe''s Method of Training Observation and Thought date = keywords = Crookes; Eddington; Galvani; God; Goethe; Helmont; Howard; Hume; Kant; Kepler; Newton; Reid; Rudolf; Ruskin; Steiner; Traherne; chapter; colour; force; form; light; man; nature; plant; sense; way summary = Goethe''s search for a satisfactory conception of Light and Colour. collection of new conceptions in various fields of natural observation. as active in nature as for example electricity and magnetism, come present-day man it is only natural to translate every new discovery behaviour of the new force of nature to carry on electrical experiments physical forces of nature, that Goethe came clearly to see that he had Our pursuit of Goethe''s way of observing the life of the plant has Here Ruskin in an entirely Goethean way points to form in nature as the Goethe''s way of observing nature is, in fact, a when following Goethe''s method of observing nature, stands in no sort conviction that in the way man experiences nature in his soul, human organism of an ''inner'' light which first forms the eye from the coming into being of the world of Form in nature if we observe what id = 46883 author = Mühlbach, L. (Luise) title = Goethe and Schiller: An Historical Romance date = keywords = Arnim; Bischofswerder; CHAPTER; Charlotte; Count; Footnote; Frederick; God; Goethe; Italy; Kalb; King; Körner; Leonora; Madame; Marie; Moritz; Mr.; Philip; Prussia; Rietz; Rome; Schiller; Streicher; Trude; Weimar; Wilhelmine; William; Wöllner; german; invisible; love summary = "Adieu, friend Schwelm!" said Schiller, extending his hand and gazing "I wish, my friend," said Schiller, pointing with a sad smile to the "No, you good, thoughtless man of the world," said Schiller, smiling; fellow-man has fallen upon and elevated him like the blessing of God. He enters Charlotte''s dwelling and passes through the hall to the door also the German princes, shall love and honor the poet Frederick Charlotte may have been right when she said that Schiller could love, "Yes, you know the hand that strokes you," said the king, smiling. "Long live King Frederick William the Second!" cried the valet Rietz, this great king," said Frederick William, in a low voice, while tears "I shall never forget the great king," said the prince royal, his "No, my true, my generous friend, come to my heart!" cried the king, as "Come, my friends, let us return to the house," said Schiller, smiling id = 11123 author = nan title = The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 01 Masterpieces of German Literature Translated into English. date = keywords = ALTMAYER; Bowring; CHORUS; Devil; E.A.; FAUST; FROSCH; Footnote; God; Goethe; HELENA; Hermann; IPHIGENIA; Ludwig; MARGARET; MARTHA; ORESTES; PYLADES; Schiller; Tis; Weimar; Wilhelm; arkas; care; day; german; good; heart; illustration; leave; life; like; long; love; mephistophele; scene; spirit; student; thee; thoas; thou; thy; time; translator; wagner summary = In our arms thou''lt find thy prize, and love too, "I love thee, I''m charm''d by thy beauty, dear boy! I''m near thee, though thou far away mayst be-Thou wert, mother, so long in rummaging ''mong thy old pieces, For thou must know that my mother, already presaging thy sorrows, Yet did I not comprehend thee until thou sentest thy mother Yes, my Hermann, thy father''s old age thou greatly canst gladden, "Son, what change has come o''er thee today, and over thy temper, So she be honest and good, thy father will let thee espouse her, "Heart and soul and spirit, my friend, I willingly trust thee; I will not let thee depart: thou art the betrothed of my Hermann." But hast thou, since thy coming here, done naught? presumptuous mortal with the words: "Thou art like the spirit whom Thou art a good kind-hearted man,