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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 100185 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 79 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 Æschylus 2 man 2 like 2 greek 2 athenian 2 Zeus 2 Sophocles 2 Plato 2 Phoebus 2 Love 2 Hellas 2 Greece 2 God 2 Euripides 2 Chorus 2 B.C. 2 Athens 2 Aristotle 2 Aphrodite 2 Agamemnon 2 Achilles 1 work 1 poet 1 play 1 modern 1 life 1 kai 1 ionian 1 illustration 1 history 1 half 1 great 1 form 1 drama 1 dorian 1 death 1 christian 1 attic 1 art 1 Venus 1 Troy 1 Theognis 1 Theocritus 1 Thebes 1 Sparta 1 Solon 1 Socrates 1 Simonides 1 Sheep 1 Shakespeare Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 957 man 623 poet 569 life 457 art 332 time 281 love 281 age 276 death 268 tragedy 268 soul 261 thought 261 play 257 word 256 character 252 form 245 world 245 drama 243 poetry 235 nature 230 mind 230 beauty 227 poem 227 god 223 hand 216 sense 215 woman 212 point 205 spirit 195 race 195 power 191 day 190 period 189 line 187 work 185 son 184 fragment 181 thing 181 part 176 nothing 172 passion 170 subject 170 hero 169 # 167 style 161 name 161 history 159 way 157 eye 154 place 151 sea Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3260 _ 334 Greeks 262 Æschylus 254 Sophocles 230 kai 220 # 214 Zeus 214 Athens 195 Euripides 180 Achilles 172 thou 167 Greek 164 Homer 148 d 147 Pindar 147 Oedipus 135 Greece 133 Prometheus 133 Hellas 129 Plato 127 Aristophanes 112 Helen 108 Cloth 104 God 99 Chorus 97 heaven 93 de 91 gar 91 Hesiod 86 Agamemnon 84 Aristotle 78 god 76 Empedocles 75 Troy 72 Theognis 72 Theocritus 70 Phoebus 69 i. 67 Antigone 65 Thebes 65 Orestes 64 Love 61 Homeric 61 Aphrodite 60 Iliad 58 Clytemnestra 57 Patroclus 56 Archilochus 55 Simonides 55 Athenians Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1947 it 1946 he 1375 we 813 i 803 they 726 him 590 them 531 she 374 us 367 me 256 you 240 her 166 himself 133 itself 88 thee 87 themselves 35 ourselves 32 herself 23 mine 16 one 10 myself 8 ours 7 thyself 7 his 6 theirs 6 ii 4 yourself 4 hers 3 yours 3 ye 1 thy 1 ore+ 1 mine;--you 1 ion 1 hyacinthus--- 1 em 1 ''em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 9400 be 2763 have 496 do 427 make 373 say 355 give 314 know 302 see 297 take 261 call 254 find 244 come 225 seem 207 bear 193 follow 182 bring 166 go 162 leave 161 form 156 pass 155 live 155 feel 154 remain 150 think 142 appear 139 die 137 tell 134 become 131 speak 129 write 126 show 126 express 122 fall 121 regard 119 lead 114 use 114 seek 111 set 109 produce 109 lose 108 stand 107 turn 107 describe 106 love 104 hear 103 work 102 prove 100 begin 99 receive 98 draw Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1432 not 687 more 623 greek 582 so 396 great 381 first 358 most 356 same 341 only 336 own 328 then 294 now 279 other 263 thus 259 old 255 well 250 good 246 even 245 very 240 still 235 human 230 again 228 far 226 such 219 modern 211 here 199 whole 194 yet 193 long 193 as 183 therefore 183 much 182 less 181 many 179 last 174 too 174 forth 173 up 164 new 160 never 155 true 155 also 154 tragic 148 however 140 high 133 fair 132 moral 131 out 128 divine 124 early Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 89 good 54 great 52 high 50 least 43 most 26 early 23 noble 13 deep 12 strong 11 bad 9 late 8 pure 8 fine 8 fair 7 bl 6 true 6 sweet 6 long 5 simple 5 minute 5 mighty 5 l 5 full 5 dear 4 slight 4 grand 4 eld 4 Most 3 wise 3 warm 3 topmost 3 small 3 old 3 low 3 lively 3 close 3 bare 2 wr 2 wide 2 vague 2 subtle 2 sublime 2 rich 2 rare 2 near 2 keen 2 holy 2 happy 2 fond 2 farth Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 315 most 16 well 10 least 1 wailest 1 threatenest 1 lightest 1 farthest 1 bravest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 _ is not 3 _ do not 3 _ know _ 3 greeks are always 3 plays are not 2 _ had not 2 _ is _ 2 _ is somewhat 2 death are alike 2 greeks were not 2 man is subject 2 plays were beautiful 2 poet does not 2 sophocles did not 2 world has ever 2 Æschylus did not 1 # had already 1 # is almost 1 # is significant 1 # is still 1 # is synonymous 1 # is very 1 # is wrong 1 _ are almost 1 _ are devoted 1 _ are good 1 _ are masterpieces 1 _ are more 1 _ are plentiful 1 _ are prometheus 1 _ are spurious 1 _ are tragedies 1 _ be adequate 1 _ did not 1 _ formed probably 1 _ gave birth 1 _ have already 1 _ is certainly 1 _ is decidedly 1 _ is different 1 _ is essentially 1 _ is god 1 _ is imperatively 1 _ is impossible 1 _ is now 1 _ is only 1 _ is precisely 1 _ is so 1 _ is sufficient 1 _ is sweeter Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ had not as 1 _ had not so 1 _ is not iophon 1 death is not unfrequently 1 drama has no such 1 drama was no less 1 gods do not always 1 greeks had no past 1 greeks had no sort 1 greeks was not absolute 1 greeks were not really 1 life are no longer 1 love is no great 1 man was not merely 1 man were no better 1 men are not so 1 men have no sense 1 men know no more 1 mind is no longer 1 nature does not essentially 1 plays are not comedies 1 plays are not so 1 plays was not only 1 poem has no merit 1 poems are not dissimilar 1 poet feels no need 1 poetry had no historical 1 sophocles is no longer 1 thought is not peculiar 1 time had not naturally 1 tragedy is no immediate 1 words are no longer 1 Æschylus did not closely A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 38230 author = Moore, Thomas title = The Odes of Anacreon date = keywords = Anacreon; Bacchus; Cupid; Love; ODE; Venus; illustration summary = luxuriance of roses, the undulating forms of the fair girls dancing in ''Our sighs are given to love alone!'' ''The tale of love alone is sweet!'' She gave thee beauty--shaft of eyes, Let me the balm of Bacchus drink! Young Love shall be my goblet-boy; Now let the rose, with blush of fire, With wine, and love, and blisses dear, And Bacchus, shedding rosy smiles, Let warm-eyed Venus dancing near, Let Love be there, without his arms, Warm to thy breast, and feels its sighs! Sing, sing of love, let music''s breath The lovely maid that''s far away. Then as some beauty, smiling roses, Let us raise the song of soul Let the bright nymph, with trembling eye, Come, let us hear the soul of song While little Love, whose feet were twined ''And dost thou smile?'' said little Love; How I love the festive boy, The Graces love to twine the rose; id = 47157 author = Symonds, John Addington title = Studies of the Greek Poets (Vol 1 of 2) date = keywords = Achilles; Agamemnon; Alcæus; Alexander; Antigone; Aphrodite; Archilochus; Aristotle; Athens; B.C.; Cassandra; Chorus; Clytemnestra; Creon; Empedocles; Euripides; God; Greece; Hector; Helen; Hellas; Herakles; Hesiod; Homer; Homeric; Iliad; Odysseus; Oedipus; Parmenides; Patroclus; Phoebus; Pindar; Plato; Prometheus; Sappho; Simonides; Solon; Sophocles; Sparta; Thebes; Theognis; Troy; Zeus; athenian; dorian; greek; ionian; like; man; Æschylus summary = children of the Muses leads onward to the freedom of the sons of God. In this period, the chief centres are first Alexandria and Athens, then Two great poets gave to Greek mythology the form which it maintained in gods and men called Zeus, a wise patroness of arts and sciences called human chance and change, they remained men and women with passions like the Greek poet divined the pathos and expounded the philosophy of human activity of the Greek mind, working upon the Homeric legend by the Greek of Hesiod''s time conceived of the relations between man and god the great aim for a good man is to live a respectable life, to work appeared in a far more simple form to the Greeks of that age than Greek poet sang for all ages, and for all manner of men, may be seen by id = 47236 author = Symonds, John Addington title = Studies of the Greek Poets (Vol 2 of 2) date = keywords = Achilles; Agamemnon; Agathon; Aphrodite; Aristophanes; Aristotle; Athens; B.C.; Bion; Calf; Chorus; Christianity; Cloth; Clouds; Electra; Euripides; God; Greece; Hellas; Hero; Hippolytus; Illustrations; Ion; Iphigenia; JOHN; Leander; Love; Marlowe; Medea; Meleager; Menander; Musæus; Nemesis; Orestes; Phoebus; Plato; Rome; Shakespeare; Sheep; Socrates; Sophocles; Theocritus; Zeus; art; athenian; attic; christian; death; drama; form; great; greek; half; history; kai; life; like; man; modern; play; poet; work; Æschylus summary = Poetry.--The Fixed Material of Greek Tragedy.--Athens in the Age Mythology and Greek Art.--Rustic Life and Superstitions.--Feeling Feeling in Modern Poets.--Galatea.--Pharmaceutria.--Hylas.--Greek Beauty.--Greek Morality.--Greece, Rome, Renaissance, the Modern Spirit. man dignified, and purified by the dealings of the heavy hand of God. Set aside by his calamity, and severed from the common lot of men, to adapt the mould of Greek tragedy to real life, Euripides overpassed A peculiarly interesting fragment in its bearing on Greek life shall received from the Greek poets a very different type of tragedy. than the prevailing spirit of Greek tragic art, forced this simplicity Aristophanes, like all Greek poets, has been subjected hands of the Greek artist it remains quite natural; it is the beauty of pluck leaves and flowers of Greek poetry and art and life, distilling Humanity defined upon the borderland of nature is the life of all Greek