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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 10 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 80361 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 8 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Romans 4 Justinian 3 Rome 3 Ravenna 3 Italy 3 Goths 3 Gaul 3 Emperor 3 Belisarius 2 sidenote 2 roman 2 gothic 2 ebook 2 Senate 2 John 2 Huns 2 God 2 Gate 2 Church 2 Byzantium 2 A.D. 1 vandal 1 provincial 1 place 1 office 1 look 1 letter 1 king 1 great 1 formula 1 eye 1 day 1 christian 1 carthage 1 cabade 1 Vittigis 1 Visigoths 1 Vir 1 Vetranio 1 Venantius 1 Variae 1 Urbis 1 Ulpius 1 Theodoric 1 Theoderic 1 Theodatus 1 Theodahad 1 Symmachus 1 State 1 St. Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2012 man 1397 time 1201 city 1019 army 820 place 747 enemy 724 day 622 sidenote 620 hand 593 wall 554 letter 537 king 515 land 513 order 512 word 507 emperor 505 year 491 name 489 war 478 death 472 part 471 thing 460 way 441 battle 440 son 436 people 431 soldier 431 father 429 life 424 side 385 office 376 eye 371 vandal 364 power 345 night 345 child 336 one 335 barbarian 316 vii 314 reason 314 moment 308 other 308 body 303 camp 297 number 297 ff 294 country 288 house 282 nothing 276 mind Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2327 _ 1124 V. 1019 Romans 981 IV 784 II 769 Belisarius 731 Rome 724 Footnote 707 Goths 644 I. 460 VI 451 Persians 441 Cassiodorus 437 xii 424 xi 389 Emperor 383 III 362 i. 351 Chosroes 337 KING 318 iii 317 Justinian 303 x. 296 Italy 282 Theodoric 282 John 271 King 270 xv 251 vi 245 Antonina 240 Moors 231 xiii 218 Byzantium 211 xxiv 211 Libya 205 ii 201 Ravenna 195 Vetranio 191 Praefect 189 xiv 184 iv 176 God 171 Ulpius 162 A.D. 159 ff 159 Vir 158 Hermanric 157 xxv 155 Gelimer 152 Solomon Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6353 he 4528 it 3994 they 2969 him 2709 them 2550 you 2258 i 1807 we 1270 she 802 me 763 himself 738 us 680 her 432 themselves 152 itself 121 one 95 herself 67 myself 64 yourself 60 ourselves 51 thee 22 mine 16 his 14 theirs 12 yours 12 ii 9 ours 6 thyself 5 iv 4 yourselves 3 oneself 3 hers 2 massilia 2 hic 1 you[734 1 you[574 1 thy 1 ourself 1 moved!--they 1 iii 1 ib 1 him!--or 1 hadrian[110 1 brave,--you 1 addressed 1 ''s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 18256 be 7778 have 1471 do 1464 make 1462 come 952 see 923 send 886 take 824 give 780 say 683 go 646 call 613 follow 556 receive 546 seem 485 think 474 know 471 look 451 find 449 leave 434 become 433 let 433 hear 431 hold 424 begin 420 speak 417 bring 416 fall 402 remain 389 pass 351 return 329 enter 326 keep 320 stand 314 happen 304 set 298 lead 293 turn 285 appear 280 put 279 move 276 rise 271 die 261 write 256 live 255 lie 253 command 246 learn 240 wish 235 bear Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3241 not 1513 now 1195 so 1118 great 1049 then 900 other 858 there 824 more 758 own 680 still 675 first 673 even 669 most 659 roman 639 as 635 also 627 long 613 thus 607 only 577 up 557 very 550 many 549 same 547 out 521 such 518 therefore 482 well 461 whole 439 again 411 good 367 already 360 once 355 yet 341 never 336 old 330 few 329 last 326 high 323 much 320 back 315 far 314 here 306 however 305 together 301 little 292 down 266 forth 258 young 242 able 235 too Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 145 most 101 least 98 good 87 great 79 high 23 slight 19 bad 18 noble 18 low 15 early 14 l 13 near 11 brave 10 strong 10 small 9 young 7 light 7 eld 7 base 6 fine 6 farth 6 e 6 dark 5 pure 5 poor 5 large 5 heavy 5 fair 5 bright 5 bold 4 wise 4 wild 4 wide 4 soft 4 old 4 manif 4 lovely 4 keen 4 fierce 4 faint 4 deep 4 dear 4 close 4 clever 3 weak 3 true 3 topmost 3 sweet 3 sure 3 simple Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 524 most 14 well 6 least 4 lest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 2 http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/100 Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 41 _ see _ 7 time went on 5 romans did not 4 romans were victorious 3 belisarius was not 3 days passed on 3 enemy came out 3 letter is probably 3 letter was probably 3 romans had not 3 romans were not 3 time had already 2 _ are not 2 _ is so 2 army came there 2 belisarius did not 2 belisarius sent john 2 belisarius was pleased 2 emperor did not 2 enemy were not 2 enemy were somewhere 2 goths did not 2 goths were so 2 letter is very 2 man is not 2 men are accustomed 2 men are always 2 place is distant 2 place was not 2 place was very 2 romans had never 2 romans were now 2 rome does not 2 words were not 1 _ began _ 1 _ comes _ 1 _ comes excubitorum 1 _ comes foedtratorum 1 _ comes primi 1 _ comes rerum 1 _ comes sacrarum 1 _ do anything 1 _ does not 1 _ goes solely 1 _ is apparently 1 _ is indeed 1 _ is nearly 1 _ is perhaps 1 _ seems here 1 _ speak _ Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 romans had not yet 1 army did not immediately 1 army were not far 1 belisarius had not thus 1 belisarius was not able 1 city are not sufficient 1 city has not yet 1 days does not indeed 1 emperor did not as 1 enemy was no match 1 enemy were not able 1 enemy were not far 1 goths were not pleased 1 land is not only 1 lands had no more 1 letter does not distinctly 1 letter gives no information 1 man is no place 1 man is not free 1 men are not justly 1 men have no chance 1 men have not always 1 place was not empty 1 place was not important 1 romans had no reason 1 romans had no thought 1 romans was not flattering 1 rome was no longer 1 time took no account 1 time was not sufficient 1 wall had not as 1 wall was not high 1 wall were no longer 1 words were not sane 1 years had not only A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 18590 author = Cassiodorus, Senator title = The Letters of Cassiodorus Being a Condensed Translation of the Variae Epistolae of Magnus Aurelius Cassiodorus Senator date = keywords = A.D.; ATHALARIC; Amalasuentha; Bishop; Boethius; Bruttii; Cassiodorus; Church; City; Clovis; Comes; Constantinople; Consul; Cornicularius; Court; Dahn; Divine; Emperor; Empire; Footnote; Gaul; God; Goths; Governor; Greek; Illustris; Indiction; Italy; Judge; Justinian; KING; Lucania; Lydus; Magister; Master; Notitia; Officiorum; Patrician; Pope; Praefect; Praetorian; Princeps; Province; Quaestor; Ravenna; Republic; Rome; SENATOR; Sajo; Senate; September; Sovereign; Spectabilis; State; Symmachus; Theodahad; Theodoric; Urbis; Variae; Venantius; Vir; formula; gothic; great; letter; office; provincial; roman; sidenote summary = [Sidenote: Appearance of the city at the time of Cassiodorus.] KING THEODORIC TO CASSIODORUS, VIR ILLUSTRIS AND PATRICIAN[294]. KING THEODORIC TO CASSIODORUS, VIR ILLUSTRIS AND PATRICIAN[294]. KING THEODORIC TO ARGOLICUS, VIR ILLUSTRIS, PRAEFECT OF THE CITY. KING THEODORIC TO THE SENATE OF THE CITY OF ROME. KING THEODORIC TO THE SENATE OF THE CITY OF ROME. KING THEODORIC TO THE SENATE OF THE CITY OF ROME. KING THEODORIC TO THE SENATE OF THE CITY OF ROME. KING THEODORIC TO THE SENATE OF THE CITY OF ROME. KING THEODORIC TO THE SENATE OF THE CITY OF ROME. KING THEODORIC TO THE SENATE OF THE CITY OF ROME. KING THEODORIC TO THE SENATE OF THE CITY OF ROME. KING THEODORIC TO THE SENATE OF THE CITY OF ROME. KING THEODORIC TO THE SENATE OF THE CITY OF ROME. KING THEODORIC TO THE SENATE OF THE CITY OF ROME. id = 3606 author = Collins, Wilkie title = Antonina; Or, The Fall of Rome date = keywords = Alaric; Alexandria; Antonina; Aquileia; CHAPTER; Carrio; Church; Gate; God; Goisvintha; Goth; Hermanric; Italy; Numerian; Pagan; Pincian; Prefect; Ravenna; Rome; Senate; Serapis; St.; Ulpius; Vetranio; christian; day; eye; gothic; look; place; roman summary = his solitary resting-place, and looked forth upon the great city, whose but looked up steadfastly into the senator''s face, her large eyes fixed Vetranio, as he threatened Ulpius, the father''s look of cold, silent, until the day that saw the army encamped beneath the walls of Rome, and length she suddenly looked up, and observing his eyes fixed on her, ''I had not long remained in my resting-place, when I heard a sound of As the words passed the old man''s lips, Hermanric turned and looked on ''Days pass, wounds heal, chances change,'' muttered the old man, She never looked at Antonina; her eyes wandered not for a moment from His pale lips trembled; he looked round for the first time at Antonina, head, and, looking down, saw on the ground beneath a young girl and looked close on his daughter''s face--he thought at that moment that id = 14809 author = Jordanes, active 6th century title = The Origin and Deeds of the Goths date = keywords = A.D.; Attila; Danube; Emperor; Gaul; Gepidae; Goths; Huns; Moesia; Ocean; Romans; Scythia; Visigoths; king; sidenote summary = [Sidenote: HOW THE GOTHS CAME TO SCYTHIA] of races or a womb of nations, the Goths are said to have Tanausis, king of the Goths, was dead, his people worshipped [Sidenote: MAXIMINUS, THE GOTH WHO BECAME A ROMAN EMPEROR] [Sidenote: KING OSTROGOTHA WARS WITH PHILIP] [Sidenote: KING CNIVA AT WAR WITH DECIUS] [Sidenote: DEATH OF KING ATHANARIC AT CONSTANTINOPLE 381] [Sidenote: ALARIC I KING OF THE GOTHS 395-410] [Sidenote: HONORIUS GRANTS THE GOTHS LANDS IN GAUL AND SPAIN] Now Valia, king of the Goths, and his army fought so 173 [Sidenote: CHARACTER OF ATTILA KING OF THE HUNS] [Sidenote: LEAGUE OF THE VISIGOTHS AND ROMANS AGAINST ATTILA 451] [Sidenote: DEATH OF KING THEODORID I IN THE BATTLE] and from this time onward kings of the Goths held Rome [Sidenote: ALARIC II LAST KING OF THE VISIGOTHS 485-507] Now after no great time King Valamir and his brothers 270 id = 16764 author = Procopius title = History of the Wars, Books I and II The Persian War date = keywords = Antioch; Belisarius; Byzantium; Chosroes; Daras; Edessa; Emperor; Euphrates; Huns; John; Justinian; Lazica; Persians; River; Romans; cabade summary = carrying Roman money to the enemy, and had taken Amida from the Persians Roman Celer and the Persian Aspebedes; both armies then retired homeward into the land of the Persians and the Romans, they come with their the Roman army as great, if not greater, than before; and the Persians the Roman territory, and they came upon their enemy near the city of Sittas and the Roman army came to a place called Attachas, one hundred Persians to the Romans came into the presence of the Emperor Justinian army of the Persians invaded the land of the Romans. Chosroes, son of Cabades, invaded the land of the Romans at the opening And on the following day men were sent to the city by Chosroes in But Chosroes, upon learning that Belisarius with the whole Roman army Zeno, Roman emperor at the time of the Persian king Arsaces, I. id = 16765 author = Procopius title = History of the Wars, Books III and IV The Vandalic War date = keywords = Belisarius; Byzantium; Gelimer; Gizeric; Gontharis; III; John; Justinian; Libya; Moors; Romans; Solomon; carthage; vandal summary = later Boniface and the Romans in Libya, since a numerous army had come So the Vandals, having wrested Libya from the Romans in this way, made Libyans had been Romans in earlier times and had come under the Vandals And on the following day Gelimer commanded the Vandals to place the of the Vandals'' camp happened three months after the Roman army came to the emperor''s army had come from the sea, they began to be in great fear taken by the Moors from the Vandals, III. commands five men to remain on each ship, III. Moors of, defeat the Vandals, III. entered by the Roman army under Belisarius, III. follows the Roman army, III. plans his attack upon the Roman army, III. commanded to precede the Roman army, III. John, a Roman soldier, chosen emperor, III. recovered by the Romans from the Vandals, III. entered by the Roman army, III. id = 20298 author = Procopius title = Procopius History of the Wars, Books V. and VI. date = keywords = Amalasuntha; Belisarius; Gate; Gaul; Goths; Italy; Justinian; Naples; Ravenna; Romans; Rome; Theodatus; Theoderic; Vittigis summary = of Goths, Romans, and the soldiers of the emperor, to wait quietly for But as time went on, the Visigoths forced their way into the Roman invited Belisarius to come to Rome, promising to put the city into his the very same time when Belisarius and the emperor''s army were entering previous day had come to the Goths, when they saw Belisarius fighting in were, among the Romans, Belisarius, and among the Goths, Visandus Now the way the Romans came to build the city-wall on both sides of the Romans would be thrown into great confusion, sent to Belisarius some following day Belisarius commanded all the Romans to remove their women Roman of note among the Goths, and he, coming before Belisarius, spoke men among the citizens came to Rome and begged Belisarius to send them a Goths at the time when Vittigis was about to march against Rome, and so id = 1106 author = Shakespeare, William title = The Tragedy of Titus Andronicus date = keywords = ebook summary = THIS EBOOK WAS ONE OF PROJECT GUTENBERG''S EARLY FILES PRODUCED AT A TIME WHEN PROOFING METHODS AND TOOLS WERE NOT WELL DEVELOPED. IS AN IMPROVED EDITION OF THIS TITLE WHICH MAY BE VIEWED AS EBOOK (#100) at https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/100 id = 1771 author = Shakespeare, William title = Titus Andronicus date = keywords = ebook summary = THIS EBOOK WAS ONE OF PROJECT GUTENBERG''S EARLY FILES PRODUCED AT A TIME WHEN PROOFING METHODS AND TOOLS WERE NOT WELL DEVELOPED. IS AN IMPROVED EDITION OF THIS TITLE WHICH MAY BE VIEWED AS EBOOK (#100) at https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/100