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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 9 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 32306 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 86 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Colonel 2 little 2 illustration 2 child 2 Peter 2 Mrs. 2 Miss 2 Freddy 1 work 1 wing 1 wind 1 voice 1 time 1 state 1 order 1 nature 1 mind 1 man 1 long 1 like 1 life 1 invention 1 imagination 1 image 1 idea 1 house 1 great 1 form 1 footnote 1 find 1 fact 1 development 1 creative 1 creation 1 condition 1 closet 1 Zouaves 1 Wylie 1 Wan 1 Tom 1 Teacup 1 Snoodle 1 Snimmy 1 Schlorge 1 Schermerhorn 1 Sara 1 Samuel 1 Ruth 1 Polly 1 Plynck Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 674 imagination 627 time 513 child 472 thing 388 form 367 way 338 hand 322 man 300 eye 293 moment 293 day 281 image 278 boy 272 room 264 word 263 voice 259 head 258 mind 255 something 255 house 239 one 237 invention 213 door 211 life 203 nothing 199 face 194 world 192 work 191 night 191 idea 188 place 180 anything 175 nature 164 wing 164 part 163 state 161 fact 158 order 158 creation 156 everything 155 course 151 people 149 mother 148 closet 145 sound 144 sort 143 girl 141 air 140 other 139 foot Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1974 _ 593 Sara 253 Judge 226 Mrs. 219 Avrillia 205 Peterkin 203 Ruth 202 Jimbo 164 Margaret 154 Pirlaps 134 Miss 124 Wylie 116 Plynck 112 Schlorge 104 Freddy 89 Snimmy 85 | 79 Teacup 75 Pete 75 Colonel 72 Peter 71 George 59 Tom 59 Mr. 56 Polly 56 Lake 56 Jerry 56 House 50 Zouaves 50 Helen 49 II 46 Snoodle 46 James 44 exclaimed 44 Gunki 44 Empty 43 Schermerhorn 43 Echo 43 CHAPTER 41 Garden 41 Clem 40 Beryl 40 . 39 Samuel 38 Clement 38 Bogle 37 Yassuh 36 Christmas 35 Page 35 Gunkus Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4411 it 3436 i 3165 he 2389 she 2146 you 1658 we 1521 they 1130 him 894 them 673 her 613 me 511 us 173 itself 149 himself 94 themselves 79 herself 65 myself 59 one 45 ourselves 32 ''s 30 ''em 18 yourself 13 em 9 yours 8 mine 8 hers 5 theirs 4 his 3 ye 3 thee 3 ours 3 oneself 2 you''re 2 talkee 2 i''m 1 yourselves 1 your---- 1 you''ll 1 up.--p 1 o 1 i''d 1 ef Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 10845 be 3831 have 1703 do 1587 say 982 see 869 go 843 come 741 make 710 know 699 think 627 look 596 get 489 take 401 seem 397 feel 376 give 370 tell 344 hear 320 find 308 begin 300 ask 251 become 243 let 239 call 229 want 224 keep 223 speak 217 stand 216 put 208 run 200 turn 200 leave 196 follow 193 cry 176 mean 172 try 167 bring 164 pass 161 show 160 talk 158 sit 154 fly 149 live 145 remember 142 hold 140 draw 136 grow 135 stop 134 like 134 explain Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2685 not 1126 so 920 very 853 little 801 up 759 then 626 only 589 more 554 out 482 now 459 other 437 first 432 just 426 long 422 good 421 as 399 great 396 down 391 again 355 never 353 much 347 all 340 too 332 even 323 old 310 here 308 well 280 back 279 always 264 rather 256 on 246 still 246 quite 239 there 229 most 229 many 218 away 216 last 216 ever 205 own 200 really 195 same 190 sure 189 creative 187 off 180 once 175 new 171 almost 165 right 165 in Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 108 least 64 good 62 most 20 great 19 high 17 bad 11 early 10 small 10 old 10 large 8 young 7 near 7 eld 6 fine 6 Most 5 simple 5 lovely 5 deep 4 tall 4 slight 4 pleasant 4 manif 4 low 4 big 3 wise 3 short 3 happy 3 clear 3 broad 2 wide 2 tiny 2 thin 2 strong 2 sad 2 rich 2 pure 2 polite 2 odd 2 nice 2 new 2 long 2 lofty 2 innermost 2 fat 2 farth 2 easy 2 dark 2 bright 2 Least 1 vague Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 167 most 21 least 20 well 1 hard Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42961/42961-h/42961-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42961/42961-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/housewithsixtycl00chil 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 sara had never 10 _ had _ 10 _ is _ 9 _ was _ 8 imagination is not 8 sara had ever 7 _ did _ 6 _ are _ 5 _ do n''t 5 _ were _ 4 _ did n''t 4 _ do _ 4 imagination does not 4 sara had not 3 _ think so 3 children were all 3 sara felt sure 3 sara was very 2 _ had not 2 _ have become 2 _ heard _ 2 _ knew _ 2 _ saw _ 2 _ think _ 2 _ thought _ 2 _ was n''t 2 children are here 2 children do n''t 2 imagination is active 2 imagination is always 2 imagination is motor 2 invention is very 2 man had scarcely 2 man is able 2 man was not 2 one came in 2 one had ever 2 peterkin did not 2 peterkin was as 2 peterkin was n''t 2 room was full 2 sara did n''t 2 sara did not 2 sara had always 2 sara looked up 2 sara was just 2 sara was really 2 sara was so 2 sara was sure 2 sara was terribly Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ had not yet 1 _ was not actually 1 avrillia was not nearly 1 boy was not foolish 1 children are not equally 1 children were not afraid 1 day was not as 1 images are not solitary 1 images is not insignificant 1 imagination does not always 1 imagination does not at 1 imagination has no essential 1 imagination is no more 1 imagination is not as 1 imagination is not entirely 1 imagination is not present 1 imagination is not yet 1 invention has not _ 1 man was not so 1 mind does not particularly 1 mind is not nearly 1 one take no account 1 peterkin were not at 1 sara had no further A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 16731 author = Baker, Karle Wilson title = The Garden of the Plynck date = keywords = Avrillia; Echo; Garden; Gunki; Gunkus; Pirlaps; Plynck; Sara; Schlorge; Snimmy; Snoodle; Teacup summary = know, my dear," she said, turning to Sara, "that no Snimmy can endure Sara sat looking down the path, then at the dimples in her hand. Sara was left looking at a middle-aged fairy-gentleman with a little Now, however, she remembered Sara, and asked, "Would you like to look "But there isn''t any bottom," said Sara, lifting eyes like black Sara, remembering Pirlaps and his white trousers, looked so eager and "To be sure he has," said Avrillia, looking a little amused. And when Avrillia saw Sara she came toward her with the loveliest look "I thought so," said Avrillia, with relief, "but Sara seemed to think "Never mind, Avrillia," said Pirlaps, soothingly, and Sara noticed "Oh, that''s lovely," said Avrillia, looking at Pirlaps gratefully out "Why, certainly, Sara," said Pirlaps, looking down at her with his "Now for the waffles, Sara," said Pirlaps; and Avrillia stooped and id = 29593 author = Barrow, Sarah L. title = Red, White, Blue Socks, Part First Being the First Book date = keywords = Colonel; Freddy; George; Helen; Jourdain; Peter summary = "Helen, do _you_ know better than _God_?" asked her mother, speaking "I will, mamma," said Helen, in a low, earnest tone, her blue eyes "No, mamma," said Helen, "in George''s sock." Helen had a pretty little room opening out of her mother''s, but George''s ''Colonel Freddy; or, the March and Encampment of the Dashahed Zouaves.''" battle of Bull Run, Freddy Jourdain burst open the door of his mother''s "Well, then," cried Freddy, with sparkling eyes, "the boys at our school subject of Zouave hair dressing, and as George began to be a little Freddy''s eye fell on the mirror, and a new idea came into his head. "But come, Peter," said Mr. Jourdain, "I should like to hear something "Goodness, Peter!" exclaimed Freddy, "I hope it''s not very far to your and away scampered the boys to look at the guns, while Colonel Freddy, id = 29594 author = Barrow, Sarah L. title = Red, White, Blue Socks. Part Second Being the Second Book of the Series date = keywords = Colonel; Freddy; Jerry; Mr.; Peter; Schermerhorn; Tom; Zouaves summary = returned with a comical-looking little old man, dressed in faded what Jerry did, was to slap his right hand against his left, like a their places in the ranks, Freddy calling out, "Come fellows, let''s try "Thank you, Jerry," said George, laughing, "we shall not forget our your sarvent," and Jerry touched his cap to Colonel Freddy and marched Freddy, as I said, was as sweet-tempered a little fellow as ever lived; There lay Colonel Freddy, his face white as death; one little hand The boys took a long breath when Jerry had finished his story, and more to the young soldiers, and marched off hastily, while the boys looked "But I''m sure father won''t let us have any powder," said Peter help at present;" and Mr. Schermerhorn left the camp; while the boys, "You know soldiers take themselves away houses and all," said George; old Jerry grasped Freddy''s hand with an affectionate "Good-by, my little id = 30974 author = Blackwood, Algernon title = Jimbo: A Fantasy date = keywords = Colonel; House; Jimbo; Lake; Miss; child; like; little; long; voice; wind; wing summary = kissed them a little later and said good-night, he gave orders, with a Jimbo began to look a little troubled, as his father watched Jimbo loved these early hours of the night before sleep came. Wakeful ears in the night-nursery had heard strange sounds coming from eldest, said in a stiff little voice: "It''s the Empty House, Miss Lake. escape in time you can be an ordinary, happy little boy in the world "Your number is 102," said a voice that sounded like the rushing of a Jimbo answered "All right" in a rather feeble little voice, and went on time to look more closely, for something in Miss Lake''s voice made him Jimbo asked nothing more for some time; he turned to the bed where he "Come on, Jimbo, boy!" cried the governess at length. "Come down, Jimbo," said the governess, "and we''ll lie in the trees and id = 42961 author = Child, Frank Samuel title = The House With Sixty Closets: A Christmas Story for Young Folks and Old Children date = keywords = Christmas; Judge; Mrs.; Ruth; Samuel; child; closet; house; illustration; little summary = CLOSETS, RUTH, AND THE "LITTLE JUDGE" 113 ONCE upon a time there lived a good Judge in an old New England town. Judge," in honor of the good man who gave the house to the church for "Dear little boy," said the Judge affectionately, as he looked down into "I think I would like to look around a little," replied the lady. "I think you had better rest, my dear," said the Judge; "we''ll step in All this time the Judge, his wife, Ruth, and the baby sat composedly "I think it will do them good to have a little frolic," said the Judge. "But you wouldn''t let your children play like that," said Ruth. "I think we had better put the baby in the first closet," said Ruth. "Don''t you think it''s time to call the children?" said Ruth. Ruth didn''t like to go into the Judge''s old study, but that was where id = 17168 author = Harte, Bret title = The Queen of the Pirate Isle date = keywords = Hickory; Lee; Patsey; Polly; Wan; illustration summary = An hour after luncheon, one day, Polly, Hickory Hunt, her cousin, and Wan Lee instantly became _Pirates_, and at once elected Polly as round blue eyes of the plump Polly had gazed with royal and maternal Melican boy no Pilat!" said the little Patsey was off like a shot; his bare little red feet trembling under Wan Lee suddenly began to blink his eyes with unwonted excitement. "Its orful far off!" said Patsey, with a sudden look of dark boys," said one of the tunnel men as he went back to dinner. Hickory began to whimper, Patsey drew back, Polly alone stood her "See," said Wan Lee, "Evil Spillet be likee Chinee, try talkee him." The Pirates looked at Wan Lee not without a certain envy of this "O, thank you very much," said Polly, timidly, but drawing her stops, "we''re not always pirates, you know, and Wan Lee is only our id = 32726 author = Livingston, Berkeley title = Death of a B.E.M. date = keywords = Hiah; Leugh summary = Hiah-Leugh was having his eyeballs massaged. The four-headed slave, one of the giants Hiah-Leugh''s tribe had eight eyeballs of Hiah-Leugh at one and the same time. for the massage the giants of the planet would all live in peace. regret of Hiah-Leugh that the giants did not have eight arms. "I think there''s a picnic scheduled for today, dear," Hiah-Leugh said. child," Hiah-Leugh said. "Y''know, Hiah," she said as she uncrossed her eyes, "I have an for a five-headed giant, despite Hiah-Leugh''s insistence there were no "The situation is this," Hiah-Leugh said in opening the meeting, "we which Zmilch labored stood the drawing board of Jack Gangreneyellow, _imagine_ a monster, have a man and woman placed in peril by the At the other''s words, Zmilch turned all the way, got up from men realized, the most terrible _things_ they had ever imagined. "Ohh, you nasty humans," Hiah-Leugh said. id = 26322 author = Molesworth, Mrs. title = Peterkin date = keywords = Bogle; Clem; Clement; Margaret; Miss; Mrs.; Peterkin; Wylie summary = unluckily Peterkin did not like being kissed, except by mamma and Elf. His politeness, however, stood him in good stead. ''I don''t yet understand how old Mrs. Wylie got mixed up in it all,'' said told over for the third or fourth time, of the parrot, and old Mrs. Wylie meeting Pete as she came in, and his thinking he''d only been there for the old lady has never heard exactly what the little girl said. ''I think she''s got some plan in her head,'' said Peterkin, eagerly, ''for had a kind of idea that Mrs. Wylie had said something about the little ''But Mrs. Wylie _has_ seen her,'' said Peterkin, ''and _she_ hasn''t turned knew that Mrs. Wylie was in London, because mamma said something one day ''Oh,'' said Margaret, ''do you know Mrs. Wylie? ''Put it on again,'' said Margaret, in her little queer way, meaning his id = 26430 author = Ribot, Th. (Théodule) title = Essay on the Creative Imagination date = keywords = CHAPTER; James; Page; condition; creation; creative; development; fact; find; footnote; form; great; idea; image; imagination; invention; life; man; mind; nature; order; state; time; work summary = numerical imagination; its nature; two principal forms, Origin of this form of imagination--its mental mechanism and its elements.--The higher form--mechanical imagination.--Man creative imagination, in order to understand its nature in so far as 1. _All forms of the creative imagination imply elements of feeling._ forms; transformed into subjective imagination it becomes in the human working of the creative imagination--that is, a subjective principle The form of abstract imagination requisite for invention in the sciences case with truly imaginative beings, in whom inventive power long remains The expression "creative imagination," like all general terms, is an This form of the creative imagination, coming especially 2. Another form of plastic imagination uses words as means for evoking I hold that there exists also a form of the creative imagination that this state of mind requires and permits be imaginative in nature forms that are the working material of the mystic imagination.