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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 94939 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 8 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 Sir 7 King 7 Catesby 6 Lord 5 Garnet 5 Father 4 Winter 4 Thomas 4 Salisbury 4 Percy 4 Monteagle 4 London 4 James 4 Fawkes 3 Parliament 3 Mr. 3 House 3 God 3 England 3 Catholics 2 William 2 Tresham 2 Robert 2 Plot 2 November 2 Lady 2 John 2 Illustrations 2 Hall 2 Guy 2 Gunpowder 2 Gerard 2 Everard 2 Edition 2 Earl 2 Digby 2 8vo 1 nay 1 history 1 Whynniard 1 White 1 Vol 1 Viviana 1 Vavasour 1 Trevlyn 1 Tower 1 Topcliffe 1 Temperance 1 Susan 1 Series Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1725 man 1253 time 1123 house 996 hand 958 day 747 father 716 place 693 word 683 letter 677 way 611 door 602 life 536 conspirator 525 eye 522 priest 520 night 520 matter 498 nothing 495 p. 494 friend 493 moment 485 name 480 thing 468 face 457 plot 452 part 437 heart 399 year 399 other 395 room 392 voice 391 head 383 death 370 hour 367 son 347 woman 340 daughter 333 mind 332 side 327 illustration 327 arm 326 cellar 324 question 315 gentleman 314 wall 312 note 310 person 304 evidence 288 purpose 288 horse Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 6237 _ 1717 8vo 1556 Catesby 1385 Sir 1289 Fawkes 1107 thou 895 Cuthbert 877 . 867 Garnet 765 Viviana 763 Father 733 Cr 673 King 655 Lord 601 Winter 597 James 581 Edition 559 Percy 519 6d 517 Everard 486 Guy 478 Mr 446 Salisbury 433 Digby 425 Thomas 423 God 422 Lady 413 Aubrey 407 Tresham 407 Gerard 394 Catholics 391 Plot 387 London 365 House 357 Parliament 340 Mr. 339 Earl 335 Crown 332 Robert 314 England 299 November 296 Gunpowder 293 J. 286 Rev. 282 I. 268 Kate 266 Chetham 259 John 243 W. 242 Lettice Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 9554 he 8236 i 7659 it 3956 you 3767 him 3054 they 2981 she 2022 me 1975 them 1933 we 1317 her 977 himself 870 us 542 thee 311 themselves 254 myself 240 herself 165 itself 128 yourself 58 thyself 57 ourselves 47 mine 41 one 28 his 26 yours 21 ''em 14 ours 14 hers 11 theirs 8 yowe 8 em 8 ''s 6 ay 5 ha 4 yourselves 4 thy 3 thou 2 ye 2 i''m 1 yt 1 yew 1 y^t 1 wrote[299]:--"they 1 winter,--"we 1 wi 1 whereof 1 vp 1 trodden 1 theirselves 1 temporiser,''--for Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 27704 be 10979 have 2865 do 2580 say 1546 know 1541 see 1536 make 1476 come 1455 take 1247 go 1049 give 1022 find 918 think 904 reply 884 tell 844 hear 699 look 608 speak 608 cry 607 leave 605 ask 581 bring 560 stand 530 let 526 return 526 answer 493 follow 488 seem 484 pass 465 turn 464 write 446 appear 414 hold 395 keep 390 feel 380 show 371 fall 370 add 368 put 363 draw 363 call 361 set 344 send 334 receive 321 lie 314 lead 298 meet 298 die 297 get 294 remain Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 6072 not 2333 so 1373 more 1287 then 1238 well 1164 now 1139 other 1007 good 968 up 866 very 859 only 857 much 824 great 796 own 792 as 746 long 717 such 703 little 697 first 662 never 646 out 615 most 614 even 597 old 563 here 555 many 553 again 514 same 503 last 469 there 464 too 451 ever 423 soon 421 few 420 yet 414 down 405 once 400 young 396 still 396 far 376 thus 368 also 365 away 358 however 346 about 328 just 309 large 305 certain 304 back 295 small Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 208 least 187 good 105 most 76 great 41 bad 36 eld 28 high 27 deep 20 near 19 slight 18 early 16 safe 13 low 13 Most 12 young 12 say 11 strong 11 bitter 10 l 9 small 8 speak 7 warm 7 mean 7 manif 7 chief 6 vile 6 true 6 short 6 old 6 j 6 hard 5 sweet 5 may 5 late 5 fair 5 dark 4 wise 4 stout 4 long 4 keen 4 happy 4 fine 3 wr 3 severe 3 rich 3 grave 3 gentle 3 fleet 3 close 3 bright Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 510 most 48 well 22 least 6 sayest 4 lest 2 ¦ 2 worst 1 wisest 1 near 1 meanest 1 holdest 1 evillest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 cuthbert did not 6 _ do _ 6 cuthbert was not 5 catesby had not 5 cuthbert was glad 4 _ has _ 3 _ see _ 3 catesby was about 3 cuthbert was silent 3 door was securely 3 garnet was greatly 3 garnet was weak 3 man is not 3 place was so 3 thou heard aught 3 time has not 2 _ am _ 2 _ being most 2 _ had _ 2 _ have _ 2 _ is _ 2 _ see illustration 2 catesby was too 2 cuthbert had not 2 cuthbert looked keenly 2 cuthbert looked round 2 cuthbert was as 2 cuthbert was no 2 cuthbert was now 2 cuthbert was willing 2 door was cautiously 2 door was suddenly 2 father has always 2 fawkes had already 2 fawkes had not 2 garnet was not 2 house was then 2 james did not 2 lives were not 2 man came over 2 men do not 2 men had not 2 percy came there 2 percy did not 2 percy had about 2 percy was not 2 thou seen aught 2 thou speakest sooth 2 time went on 2 viviana had not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 cuthbert was no longer 2 fawkes made no answer 1 _ were not edw 1 catesby had no definite 1 catesby had not only 1 catesby made no reply 1 cuthbert did not altogether 1 cuthbert did not exactly 1 cuthbert had no need 1 cuthbert heard no more 1 cuthbert made no direct 1 cuthbert made no response 1 cuthbert was not afraid 1 cuthbert was not aware 1 cuthbert was not far 1 cuthbert was not quite 1 cuthbert was not slow 1 cuthbert was not sorry 1 days was no mark 1 father is no stern 1 father says not so 1 fawkes gives no dates 1 fawkes made no further 1 fawkes made no reply 1 garnet made no answer 1 garnet made no reply 1 garnet returned no answer 1 garnet was not so 1 house is not yet 1 james had no cause 1 man is not cuthbert 1 man is not old 1 men do not commonly 1 men had not long 1 men had not yet 1 men have no such 1 men was not so 1 men were not fed 1 percy spoke no more 1 percy was no papist 1 thou had no fear 1 time has not yet 1 viviana had no inclination 1 viviana made no answer 1 viviana made no reply 1 word has not yet 1 words are not entirely 1 words made no impression A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 37750 author = Ainsworth, William Harrison title = Guy Fawkes; or, The Gunpowder Treason: An Historical Romance date = keywords = Catesby; Chetham; Dee; Digby; Doctor; Earl; Everard; Father; Fawkes; Garnet; Guy; Hall; Heaven; Heydocke; Humphrey; Ipgreve; King; Lord; Mounteagle; Mr.; Oldcorne; Radcliffe; Ruth; Salisbury; Sir; Topcliffe; Tower; Tresham; Viviana; William summary = the priest, "mount behind Guy Fawkes, and let Viviana come next after they set out at nightfall,--Viviana taking her place before Guy Fawkes, Father Oldcorne made no reply, but walked apart with Guy Fawkes; and Guy Fawkes was presented by Catesby to Sir William "Father," replied Guy Fawkes, "if the form I beheld was that of Saint "Viviana Radcliffe," returned Guy Fawkes, sternly, "you have once before "Your commands shall be obeyed, Viviana," replied Catesby; "but I "Mr. Catesby has heard of it, I know," replied Viviana. "There is no need to leave you, father," replied Catesby, "nor shall any term--Viviana," returned Guy Fawkes, in a voice of deep emotion. "Let us enter the house, and you shall learn," replied Catesby. "Viviana, go to your chamber," commanded Guy Fawkes, grasping her hand, "Viviana," replied Guy Fawkes, rising, "man cannot read my heart, but "For Guy Fawkes," returned Viviana. id = 16654 author = Everett-Green, Evelyn title = The Lost Treasure of Trevlyn: A Story of the Days of the Gunpowder Plot date = keywords = Catesby; Chase; Cherry; Culverhouse; Cuthbert; Father; Holt; House; Humbert; Jacob; Kate; King; Lady; London; Long; Lord; Martin; Miriam; Petronella; Philip; Richard; Robin; Sir; Susan; Trevlyn; nay summary = "I'' faith, Cuthbert, I will gladly tell thee all there is to know, "I have heard my father speak of these things," answered Cuthbert, "Cuthbert, dost thou believe in old saws? "I scarce know," answered Cuthbert, "I hear so little and see so "Let us," answered Kate; "we are not like to meet thy father. "I know little of such disputed matters," answered Cuthbert, made a "Thou art welcome to our board, Cuthbert Trevlyn," she said, "as is "Why, Cherry, I scarce know thee!" cried Cuthbert, amazed. Cherry, dost thou love me well enough to be my little wife one day? "Ah!" said Cuthbert, looking quickly at her, "and thou thinkest Cuthbert hard by the hand, they heard the old woman''s voice, in an "But I would know more of thee, Cuthbert, and of what thou hast Cuthbert, were I but a man like thee, I would fare forth as thou id = 34606 author = Gardiner, Samuel Rawson title = What Gunpowder Plot Was date = keywords = 8vo; Catesby; Catholics; Crown; Edition; Father; Fawkes; Gerard; Government; Greenway; House; Illustrations; James; King; Mr.; Mrs.; November; Parliament; Percy; Pope; Salisbury; Sir; Thomas; Whynniard; Winter summary = WORKS BY SAMUEL RAWSON GARDINER, D.C.L. LL.D. HISTORY OF ENGLAND, from the Accession of James I. March, before Lady Day.--The conspirators begin to work a third time, Original Evidence,''[1] Father Gerard has set forth all the difficulties Northampton, and Salisbury--Fawkes was examined a second time on the If Father Gerard merely means that the story published by the Government the confession itself is, as Father Gerard states, in Winter''s hand, as Parliament House with gunpowder; for, said he, in that place have "Fawkes," writes Father Gerard,[120] "in the confession of November Parliament Place to the other side of Percy''s house, and ends by the According to the story told by Fawkes this place was let to Mrs. Skinner writes Father Gerard, in another place, "in Winter''s long declaration on House hired by Percy, the, Fawkes''s statement about, 18; Percy, Thomas, Fawkes''s statement about the hiring of the house and id = 34807 author = Gerard, John title = What was the Gunpowder Plot? The Traditional Story Tested by Original Evidence date = keywords = Catesby; Catholics; Cecil; Earl; England; Father; Faukes; Garnet; Gunpowder; Guy; House; James; John; King; Lord; MSS; Majesty; Monteagle; Mr.; November; Owen; Parliament; Percy; Plot; Robert; Salisbury; Sir; Thomas; Winter summary = Meanwhile, on November 9th, King James addressed to his Parliament a the king''s speech of November 9th, and four days later an Act was passed meeting of Parliament, a Catholic peer, Lord Monteagle, received an once took to the king''s prime minister, Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, effected the destruction of the king''s own father, Lord Darnley, a fact B. Chamber under the House of Lords, called "Guy Faukes'' Cellar." work, Catesby, Percy, Thomas Winter, John Wright, and Faukes. It appears certain that the conspirators really had a plot in hand, that powder was laid "in Mr. Percy''s house;" Faukes, "in a low Room new "discovery," evidence of great importance as to the hiring of the house performed _in the damnable plot of the Powder treason_." King James is a second Powder Plot--the scene being this time the king''s court itself. Finally we have the king''s instructions as to Faukes [_Gunpowder Plot id = 25834 author = Holt, Emily Sarah title = It Might Have Been: The Story of the Gunpowder Plot date = keywords = Aubrey; Aunt; Catesby; Edith; Fawkes; Garnet; God; Hall; Hans; John; Joyce; King; Lady; Lettice; London; Lord; Louvaine; Madam; Marshall; Monteagle; Mrs; Oxford; Percy; Robert; Rookwood; Sir; Temperance; Thomas; White; Winter summary = "Truly, this is of the Lord''s goodness," said Lady Louvaine. "Good-morrow, Madam," said Aunt Temperance as she came in. "My Milisent," said Lady Louvaine, "I shall not carry God from thee. "Mistress Morrell, I wish you good even," said Temperance, coming in "In the year of our Lord 1603, Aunt," said Lettice, trying not to laugh. "Thou hast not an ill wit, my lad," said Aunt Temperance, "if a wise man "My dear lad, God bless thee!" replied Lady Louvaine, and laid her hand "Aubrey," said the quiet voice that made reply, "you know me better than "Thou art a good lad!" said Aubrey again, in a slightly ashamed tone, as "I asked my Lord Mordaunt if he meant to come," said Winter, laughing, "Dear Lady Lettice, I know very little: and Aubrey would account me a "I know that, Aunt Temperance," said Aubrey, trying to laugh. id = 39612 author = Longueville, Thomas title = The Life of a Conspirator Being a Biography of Sir Everard Digby by One of His Descendants date = keywords = 8vo; Book; Catesby; Catholics; Church; D.D.; Digby; Edition; England; English; Everard; Father; Garnet; Gerard; God; Gothurst; Grammar; Gunpowder; I.S.S.; Illustrations; James; King; Library; Life; London; Lord; Oriental; Plot; Prof.; Rev.; Series; Sir; Vol; history summary = The chief difficulty in writing a life of Sir Everard Digby is to steer literary man--His father''s book--Was Sir Everard brought up a Condition of Catholics under James I._, edited by Father John Father Gerard, an intimate friend of the Sir Everard Digby whose I have shown how Father Gerard states[18] that Sir Everard Digby was Another Jesuit Father, at one time private chaplain to Sir Everard Father Gerard says[53] that Sir Everard "had a friend for whom he felt a Sir Everard Digby''s great friend, Father Gerard, also testifies at Some three or four years before Sir Everard Digby''s conversion, Catesby To a man of a religious mind like Sir Everard Digby, those Now, knowing Catesby very intimately, had Sir Everard Digby good reasons Then, said Father Gerard, "In truth, Sir Everard Digby, if there should On the very day that Father Gerard''s letter for Sir Everard Digby seems id = 29777 author = Morgan, George Blacker title = The Identification of the Writer of the Anonymous Letter to Lord Monteagle in 1605 date = keywords = Footnote; Monteagle; Salisbury; Tresham; Vavasour; William summary = Tresham has a serving-man named William Vavasour, who attended Sir Becoming worse, he dictates a letter for Vavasour to write to Lord Upon Tresham''s death in the Tower, the Lieutenant writes to Salisbury [Footnote 8: Tresham''s statement made when in the Tower ("State Papers, [Footnote 10: He died in the Tower six weeks after writing that letter, dictated to his man Vavasour a letter to Lord Salisbury, retracting his question, there could be no harm, beyond his falsehood, in naming Mrs. Tresham as the writer of that letter, as neither could possibly be employment by Tresham in writing the anonymous letter to Lord Monteagle. treason_, to write a letter to the Earl of Salisbury." Vavasour''s having written, not the letter to Salisbury--as that could [Footnote 35: Vavasour''s falsehood respecting Mrs. Tresham had nothing William Vavasour''s handwriting in the letter to the Earl of Salisbury, Stated by Vavasour to have been written by Mrs. Tresham. id = 30490 author = Scribner, Frank Kimball title = The Fifth of November A Romance of the Stuarts date = keywords = Catesby; Effingston; Elinor; England; Fawkes; Garnet; God; James; Jesuit; King; London; Lord; Master; Monteagle; Parliament; Percy; Sir; Thomas; Winter summary = thy honest company, for such is a man who knoweth Sir Thomas Winter, Catesby with hand extended, "I thank thee that thou hast thus spoken "Then," cried Percy, "thou art doubly welcome, Master Fawkes, as thy left, when thou wilt see before thee a narrow street, upon the "And thou," said the man, taking her head between his hands, "art up "By the blessed dead, mother!" said Fawkes, arising, "thou didst turn thou hast aught more to tell, open thy heart to me and I will play the Thy soul is troubled, Sir Robert Catesby, thou, who art free to "Good Catesby, and thou, Lord Rookwood," said he blandly, "your zeal "What dost thou mean, friend Guido?" asked Winter, turning a quick Winter exclaimed: ''A good evening to thee, Mistress Fawkes,'' the rest "Bravely spoken, Master Fawkes," replied Winter, "and thou wilt be "Methinks," said he, turning to the Jesuit, "that in thy wisdom thou