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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 21 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 39052 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 81 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 God 5 life 4 man 4 Paul 4 Dr. 2 truth 2 love 2 human 2 Weightman 2 St. 2 South 2 Rev. 2 New 2 Mr. 2 Melanesians 2 Lord 2 London 2 Keeper 2 John 2 Jesus 2 James 2 Islands 2 Islanders 2 Harold 2 Gate 2 Christ 1 world 1 work 1 thing 1 spanish 1 soul 1 sidenote 1 scripture 1 reason 1 past 1 order 1 nature 1 kald 1 immortality 1 high 1 great 1 good 1 ghost 1 german 1 faith 1 egyptian 1 death 1 dead 1 day 1 correspondence Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 3546 man 1692 life 1615 death 1450 ghost 1428 time 1302 soul 1227 spirit 1206 op 1130 p. 1094 people 1009 body 918 world 887 house 866 woman 863 day 861 thing 812 place 802 sqq 760 god 736 hand 667 island 663 way 628 belief 619 part 598 stone 568 year 568 chief 563 person 550 immortality 537 reason 533 eye 529 foot 523 word 523 order 523 head 520 nothing 489 name 485 native 477 end 472 earth 470 tree 466 child 458 grave 443 one 431 love 422 sidenote 421 work 420 face 416 custom 408 dead Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 18716 _ 2219 sq 2144 . 1212 cit 1207 pp 1194 God 710 Footnote 589 New 572 J. 570 i. 554 W. 432 Islands 409 god 358 G. 347 Paul 330 Miss 327 ii 324 Dr. 302 Ludington 300 London 295 E. 277 Samoa 266 Ciaran 253 R. 247 H. 226 Ida 223 Australia 221 Tonga 217 Cook 216 Society 212 Mr. 212 Guinea 203 Life 203 Christ 202 Ellis 201 John 200 Captain 198 de 182 Melanesians 178 South 176 A. 161 C. 159 Central 155 Mariner 151 Lord 149 heaven 145 spirit 144 iii 144 Zealand 143 College Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 9089 it 6285 he 5117 they 4312 i 3200 we 2600 you 2599 them 2226 him 1425 she 1247 us 988 me 690 himself 646 her 478 themselves 446 itself 177 myself 168 ourselves 105 herself 103 one 60 yourself 38 oneself 37 thee 22 ours 21 mine 20 theirs 17 hers 16 yours 15 his 15 ''s 15 ''em 11 thyself 7 ye 3 em 2 yourselves 2 ourself 1 âdà 1 ya 1 whosoever 1 u 1 out!--to 1 one--"you 1 it!--fully 1 ii 1 huh 1 awake!--or Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 31654 be 8522 have 2689 do 2364 say 1588 make 1363 see 1304 go 1246 come 1166 know 1155 take 929 give 914 think 856 call 841 die 789 live 784 believe 641 find 622 seem 615 tell 555 suppose 555 look 487 appear 486 leave 471 speak 464 become 443 feel 442 use 438 bring 418 keep 415 get 410 stand 381 bear 379 hold 377 follow 376 fall 376 carry 375 hear 371 pass 370 bury 369 let 368 accord 363 begin 338 put 322 ask 319 set 312 kill 306 grow 299 sit 299 mean 295 remain Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5686 not 1860 so 1676 other 1475 more 1437 dead 1243 only 1155 up 1150 great 1032 then 928 very 903 even 898 old 862 long 845 now 836 such 833 out 832 first 762 again 754 same 739 most 706 own 705 many 680 well 676 human 659 also 633 down 632 thus 629 never 627 good 590 as 576 little 568 away 544 much 480 high 477 far 476 still 471 always 463 here 446 certain 440 perhaps 437 there 434 back 408 sometimes 401 ever 394 sacred 385 natural 383 last 370 new 368 whole 366 just Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 205 most 203 least 141 good 81 great 77 high 49 near 45 low 41 large 21 early 21 bad 16 deep 15 eld 14 strong 13 slight 13 Most 12 simple 12 fine 10 common 9 old 9 l 8 small 8 noble 8 manif 8 late 7 rich 7 choice 6 grave 4 strange 4 plain 4 long 4 innermost 4 full 4 fair 4 faint 4 dark 4 clear 4 bl 3 sure 3 safe 3 rude 3 remote 3 pure 3 poor 3 keen 3 gross 3 furth 2 wild 2 wide 2 wealthy 2 vague Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 534 most 27 least 18 well 1 writhe 1 oftenest 1 near 1 lowest 1 long 1 highest 1 greatest 1 fast Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.hti.umich.edu Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.hti.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=genpub;idno=AFL0522.0001.001 1 http://www.hti.umich.edu/ Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 16 death is not 6 man does not 5 god does not 5 man is not 5 soul does not 5 soul is not 4 _ is _ 4 god is not 4 soul was not 4 spirits called _ 4 time goes on 3 _ was _ 3 ghosts are not 3 ghosts are very 3 god was incarnate 3 gods were usually 3 house was not 3 life is not 3 lives were not 3 man came back 3 man has not 3 man is only 3 man is sick 3 men are not 3 men did not 3 people were not 3 soul is immortal 3 things were not 3 time is no 3 world does not 2 _ are _ 2 _ did not 2 _ do n''t 2 _ is not 2 _ is specially 2 _ live _ 2 _ lived _ 2 body be wet 2 body is susceptible 2 death has not 2 death is still 2 death was due 2 ghost does not 2 ghost is _ 2 ghost is not 2 ghosts are also 2 ghosts are most 2 ghosts come down 2 god is great 2 god is infinite Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 time is no more 2 gods being no more 2 house was not beautiful 2 man is not only 2 things were not foolishly 1 _ be not concerned 1 _ has no power 1 _ have no fear 1 _ is no less 1 bodies is not emblematic 1 bodies were no longer 1 death did not always 1 death is not clearly 1 death is not natural 1 death makes no great 1 death were not always 1 ghost does not always 1 ghost does not at 1 ghost has no proper 1 ghost has no sacred 1 ghost is not always 1 ghost is not only 1 ghosts are not absolutely 1 ghosts are not so 1 ghosts are not strictly 1 god had no priest 1 god is not objective 1 gods was not prematurely 1 gods were no more 1 gods were not animals 1 hand is not steady 1 house was not uncommonly 1 islands had no political 1 islands is not eternal 1 islands were not yet 1 life are not merely 1 life is not worth 1 life was not always 1 life were not prematurely 1 man has not yet 1 man is not so 1 man was not only 1 men are not much 1 men did not at 1 men is no less 1 men is not more 1 men lived no longer 1 people are not so 1 people had no voice 1 people were not afraid A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 59498 author = Anderson, Poul title = What Shall It Profit? date = keywords = Barwell; Institute; Lang; Radek; man summary = Barwell grabbed the whisky glass like a drowning man. Barwell moved closer to Radek. a long time." Barwell waved his hand expansively. Radek took a long breath. man''s old quiet bravery in the face of death and ruin and the petty Radek smiled at himself, twistedly, and threw the cigaret away and got Radek spelled it out and watched the man go. "Sure, that''s all right." Radek shivered in the thin chill air and "I know." Radek sat down without waiting for an invitation. "So what do you want?" he asked when Radek paused for breath. "In other words," said Radek slowly, "the body has a built-in suicide "But nature doesn''t care about the individual, friend Radek. "And you appear to think fast on your feet, Dr. Lang." Radek laughed. voice was defeated, and when Radek looked back it was an old man who of Lang''s shoulders was a gnawing in Radek''s conscience. id = 50884 author = Aycock, Roger D. title = Today is Forever date = keywords = Boyle; Locke; Moira summary = Cornelison and Bissell and Dorand of Administrative Council is genuine. "_Immortality_," Boyle said, and forgot the younger man on the instant. He even checked his lapel watch against the time of Moira''s return from like Boyle, Locke was more than a handy asset; he was a tool shaped "I know precisely how you feel," Boyle said. "Damn it, Boyle, I''m sorry," Locke said. "The good of the Body is the preservation of the Weal," Locke said "You''re both too young to remember this, of course," Boyle said, "I can see how you came to be head of Transplanet, Boyle," Locke said information, Cornelison and Bissell and Dorand will meet the Alcorians "Unless we''re truth-checked," Locke said doubtfully. "Order won''t know whom to suspect," Boyle said patiently. "Quiet," Boyle said again, this time to the group. "Good," Boyle said. "Keep her quiet while I deal with Fermiirig," Boyle said to Locke. id = 6903 author = Bellamy, Edward title = Miss Ludington''s Sister date = keywords = Alta; Dr.; Hilton; Hull; Ida; Legrand; Ludington; Miss; Mrs.; Paul; Slater; day; love summary = By the time Miss Ida Ludington was twenty-five years old she recognised Miss Ludington--a beautiful child, with loving ways, and deep, dark, picture," he said one day to Miss Ludington, "I should never have known If, however, Miss Ludington was relieved by Mrs. Slater''s letter, Paul rest of the day Miss Ludington and Paul seemed quite to forget each other When Miss Ludington and Paul followed her into the sitting-room, she was The day following, Paul was downstairs before either Ida or Miss subject from Miss Ludington, Paul, or Ida herself, she was obliged, like Miss Ludington read the letter aloud to Ida and Paul, as all three sat "I am glad," said Miss Ludington, as she finished the letter, "that Mrs. Legrand is happy. afternoon, Miss Ludington said: "When are you and Paul to be married?" "I am so glad," Miss Ludington said to her one day, "that you are Ida id = 52169 author = Besant, Walter title = The inner house date = keywords = Arch; Christine; College; Discovery; Dr.; Great; Grout; House; Jack; Lax; Linister; Mildred; People; Physician; Secret; past summary = life beautiful and happy; to lovely women"--here the men heaved a sigh The Curator of the Museum was an aged man, one of the few old men I have said that Christine called the old man her grandfather. The girl passed through them, leading the old man by the hand. collection of all kinds of things preserved from the old times. Nobody replied; but the young man called Jack took Christine''s hand and "The men love us no longer," said Lady Mildred. old time when they were still young, began to look again as they had "In the old books there is always, as I said before, a young man in "This," said the young man, "is the Chapel where, in the old time, they might a monk in the old times look upon a picture of fair women years "In the College itself, Suffragan," he said, "and in the House, things id = 62996 author = Brackett, Leigh title = The Jewel of Bas date = keywords = Bas; Ciaran; Destiny; Immortal; Mouse; Stone; kald summary = "One man falls into a beast-pit," said Ciaran impatiently, "and in two This time it was Ciaran that stopped, with the stewpot in his hands, Grey animal fur grew on them like the body-hair of a hairy man, Very softly, so that nobody but Ciaran could hear her, Mouse whispered, Mouse paused for breath, and Ciaran got a look at the hermit''s face. Ciaran said, "Yeah." He looked at Mouse. Ciaran got a good look at his eyes. The eyes in that face were what set Ciaran''s guts to knotting like But it stopped Ciaran like a blow in the face, penetrating Their clear, light voices rose up to where Ciaran and the hunter lay. "Bas," said Ciaran. It was like no light Ciaran had ever seen before. themselves against Bas. Ciaran cried out, "_Mouse...!_" the Mouse that Ciaran knew, was dead behind her dull black eyes. Ciaran looked at Mouse. id = 27237 author = Challis, James title = An Essay on the Scriptural Doctrine of Immortality date = keywords = Christ; God; Jesus; Lamb; Lord; Paul; Rev.; Son; St.; scripture summary = Scriptures from beginning to end has relation to man''s immortality. Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments as the word of God written for death, and that by the power of the Spirit of God, operating according time, even to putting to death the Son of God (Luke xxii. pain and death, although, according to law, consequent upon sin, were suffering and death of the Son of God, that it avails to free from sin. is asserted respecting "The Word of God," that "he shall rule the "works;" for our Lord said expressly, "Every idle word that men shall or also excusing, in the day when God shall judge the secrets of men, teaching of Scripture and from its having in the mean time existed doctrine of Scripture respecting future "punishment" and "torment." partaking with us of life, death, and resurrection (see what is said on id = 30876 author = Drummond, Henry title = Eternal Life date = keywords = Environment; Eternal; God; Life; Science; correspondence summary = "This is Life Eternal--that they might know Thee, the True God, and nature the Christian Life should be Eternal. organisms which possess Eternal Life. Environment corresponded with is itself Eternal. Environment, and the conditions necessary to Eternal Life are satisfied. with a perfect Environment is Eternal Life according to Science. is Life Eternal," said Christ, "that they may know Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom Thou has sent." [2] Life Eternal is to know correspond with the God of Science, the Eternal Unknowable, would be nature of the Life that lies at the back of the spiritual organism. correspondence, he knows the Father and this is Life Eternal. correspondences are in their nature unfitted for an Eternal Life. definition of Eternal Life, it is yet true that perfect correspondence with Environment is not Eternal Life. last eternally, the environing material things with which he corresponds id = 51801 author = Duncan, David title = The Immortals date = keywords = Dr.; Humanac; Paul; Peccary; Staghorn; Terry summary = At the moment Peccary was ready to accuse Staghorn of having no Humanac had never been exposed to pictures of Dr. Peccary''s home town Staghorn got a closer focus on the photograph so that Peccary could "Ah, that sounds like Miss Terry," said Staghorn. The focus shifted to the open door and then Peccary and Staghorn could The bearded man stepped close to Miss Terry and put a hand on her "You might as well shut it off, Staghorn," Dr. Peccary said coldly. "But damn it, Staghorn...." Dr. Peccary sat down, his face in his "I''m not altogether sure," said Staghorn, and it seemed to Peccary that dead?" Staghorn looked at Peccary with a pleased smile and didn''t wait This was the last Dr. Peccary saw of Roger Staghorn. "Go, Staghorn, go!" Peccary shouted. Peccary and Staghorn. toward Peccary and Staghorn, the square and everything in it vanished. id = 51475 author = Fisher, David E. title = East in the Morning date = keywords = Henry; Talbot summary = The first thirty years of Henry Talbot''s life were the most promising. Dr. Henry Talbot, brilliant young scientist, began his career Henry Talbot felt a vague need which he perceived liquor might fill. The next thirty years of Henry Talbot''s life, now devoid of promise, He went to work for the Arnold Research Corporation on a part-time, In his seventy-fourth year, Henry Talbot published a paper in Henry, wheezed twice, smiled once, and said, "Good morning, Dr. Talbot." He stopped when he saw the look slip a bit from Henry''s face, and he Henry Talbot saw his face on the cover of Time magazine. awarded to Henry Talbot for his Warped Field Theory. Henry did not read the New York Times, but the treasurer at While Bucephalus lapped at her milk, Henry Talbot walked out for a time in many a year, Henry stopped to look at a woman. id = 17239 author = Fiske, John title = The Destiny of Man, Viewed in the Light of His Origin date = keywords = C.P.; Fiske; God; Humanity; Man; Mr.; great; high; human; life; work summary = Man''s Place in Nature, as affected by the Copernican Theory. Man''s Place in Nature, as affected by the Copernican Theory. remain, it appears that the higher forms of life--including Man a higher view of the workings of God and of the nature of Man than was On the Earth there will never be a Higher Creature than Man. In elucidating these points, we may fitly begin by considering the psychically speaking, between civilized man and the ape is so great as natural selection has worked, the earth and most of its living things increasing intelligence and enlarged experience of half-human man now new ones appear; and in man these phenomena come to have great End of the Working of Natural Selection upon Man. Throwing off the End of the Working of Natural Selection upon Man. Throwing off the The action of natural selection upon Man has long since been essentially id = 63645 author = Fox, Gardner F. (Gardner Francis) title = The Last Monster date = keywords = Emerson; Gunn; Irgi; Mussdorf; Nichols summary = and looked at Emerson, who went to the port window; stood staring out, Emerson, while its other arms stabbed out at Gunn and Nichols, catching Irgi stared at the things that lay on the white flagging. The thoughts of this Emerson were coming in clearer, as Irgi in When Gunn was free, Mussdorf came to stand over Emerson, looking down Gunn looked at Emerson; looked up at Mussdorf, nodding. "We''ll give you a chance to think it over, Emerson," Mussdorf grated. white tables as Emerson and Nichols stared at him, wondering at his Looking down at him, Emerson smiled thinly, and said to Nichols, Emerson looked up at the thing, studying it, thinking: maybe I can Emerson said, "If we knew how this thing worked, we could set it up on Emerson shook his head, still looking at the thing that stood so still And in the spaceship, Emerson and Mussdorf and Nichols squatted over id = 20116 author = Frazer, James George title = The Belief in Immortality and the Worship of the Dead, Volume 1 (of 3) The Belief Among the Aborigines of Australia, the Torres Straits Islands, New Guinea and Melanesia date = keywords = Anthropological; Australia; British; Central; Codrington; Dr.; Fiji; Fijians; Footnote; Gillen; God; Guinea; Islanders; Islands; London; Melanesians; Mr.; Nanga; New; Northern; Rev.; South; Spencer; Straits; Torres; Tribes; Wollunqua; belief; dead; death; german; ghost; man; sidenote summary = death-dance by men personating ghosts, 185-188; preservation of the the dead in the other world, 286 _sq._; ghosts die the second death and the dead and the ghostly ferry, 350 _sq._; ghosts die the second death subterranean abode of the dead, 353 _sq._; ghosts die the second death, that in the Arunta tribe the souls of dead people of the plum-tree totem moment at which the ghost of the dead man or woman was supposed to be leaves the body at death and goes away to live with other ghosts on a which means the ghost or spirit of a dead person. dead man stand in fear of his ghost, the body may not be buried until a living woman; the person so inspired by a dead man''s spirit becomes an in the spiritual part of living men or in the ghosts of the dead, being id = 33524 author = Frazer, James George title = The Belief in Immortality and the Worship of the Dead, Volume 2 (of 3) The Belief Among the Polynesians date = keywords = Brown; Captain; Cook; Ellis; Forster; Hawaii; Hervey; Islanders; Islands; James; Journal; London; Maori; Mariner; Maui; Melanesians; Moerenhout; New; Old; Pacific; Polynesian; Samoa; Samoans; Society; South; Stair; Tonga; Turner; Voyage; Wilson; World; Zealand summary = near the place of death, and along these stalks the soul of the dead man inferior gods are the souls of dead men, who consequently have not sometimes great chiefs were thus visited by the gods, and the king religion, the souls of dead nobles ranked as gods, possessing all the Again, the souls of dead nobles, like gods, had the power of appearing from the grave at which a new god, that is, a dead man or woman, was gods, the king, the divine chief (the living Tooitonga), the inferior chiefs, and the people, so that every man in the island of Tongataboo great chief or king of a whole island. Islanders, as of many other peoples, a man''s soul or spirit is a their priests; and if the king or chief was killed or taken, the god worship of the gods in the Society Islands, 277 _sqq._; id = 39455 author = Mangasarian, M. M. (Mangasar Mugurditch) title = Is Life Worth Living Without Immortality? A Lecture Delivered Before the Independent Religious Society, Chicago date = keywords = God; James; Prof.; life; man; truth summary = In his lecture on, "Is Life Worth Living," the professor admits that he Life is worth living, in short, if man is unseen world and the immortality of man? existence of a God or of a life after death. man, as theology makes it the creature of God. You see that after all, In other words, God may be true or not, a future life may be such arguments as he uses to prop up the belief in God and immortality answer, "Man said, let there be a God, and there was one." This is is indispensable to make life worth living, or to help make the world will fear the opening of the books; it will be God. And how do we know that things will be better in the unseen world? In conclusion: Not God, nor the unseen world, but Truth is the sovereign id = 59285 author = Marks, Winston K. (Winston Kinney) title = Until Life Do Us Part date = keywords = Anne; Clifford; Webb summary = Anne Tabor lay limp and pale, her long, slender limbs making only you or Clifford--and Cliff hasn''t practiced for a century or more. Anne _was_ Clifford''s Anne _was_ Clifford''s rating as Webb Fellow, and one of them was Clifford Ainsley. one point to another--like the course of a human life--but all within Anne Tabor was a lovely, Webb looked up quickly. about Clifford that Webb didn''t like, a hardness, a lack-luster _It''s a long life._ Anne will be back in circulation Webb arose to his feet slowly and moved toward Clifford. "You build fine chess-playing machines, I hear," Webb said softly, Clifford gasped, "_''Sa long life, Webb_ ... Clifford''s eyes were closed now, and Webb knew that the roaring in his Clifford collapsed to his knees, and Webb let him go with one final, It would still be a long life for Anne. Webb looked up. "You ask that, Webb? id = 12255 author = Reisner, George Andrew title = The Egyptian Conception of Immortality The Ingersoll Lecture, 1911 date = keywords = Egypt; Empire; Horus; Osiris; egyptian; life summary = word, Egypt presents the most ancient race whose manner of life Egyptian ideas in regard to the future life is based on funerary meeting-place where the living may bring offerings to the dead. offering place, the texts are magical formulas which, properly the burial place, the texts are magical formulas to be used by custom of periodic offerings and the use of magical texts grew the use of magical texts in the burial chamber,--the so-called god-man, who as Horus was king on earth, with the father of Horus, the dead god of the earth, Osiris. Osiris; (3) the swathed mummy comes into general use in burials. The increasing importance of Abydos as the burial place of Osiris underworld, in which Osiris is king, is worked out in great take the place of the dead in the fields of Earu when Osiris as Every dead man is Osiris, and no doubt carried with him words id = 61794 author = Repp, Ed Earl title = Buccaneer of the Star Seas date = keywords = Ann; Bacon; Carlyle; Friar; Larry; Wolfe summary = Thaddeus Carlyle''s dark eyes flamed with quick interest. salvage ship, the _Friar Bacon_, for the newly-discovered sargasso off "I know darned well you are, Chief!" Larry Wolfe laughed. Blond Larry Wolfe held up the girl''s left hand, showing the sparkling "Very good, sir." Larry Wolfe turned from the instrument to his Larry Wolfe''s thoughts were on the long-missing Astral as he stood his In Thaddeus Carlyle''s rooms, Ann had been hearing the same story that Larry''s clipped voice masked the jealousy he felt toward Carlyle. Carlyle, Larry and the captain of the other craft. Larry watched the other ship-man''s eyes dwindle to steely pin-points, Larry''s was the last scout to be dropped from the _Friar Bacon_. Jeff and Abe took him at his word; but Larry, lingering, asked Carlyle Carlyle was not on the loading deck, nor did Larry locate him on the Larry Wolfe was through it and upon Carlyle id = 51037 author = Simak, Clifford D. title = Second Childhood date = keywords = Riggs; Stanford; Young summary = "God, how tired a man can get of living!" Andrew Young said. "You realize," he said to Andrew Young, "that this petition is a highly "I had hoped," said Andrew Young, "to establish precedent." "Ancestor Young," Riggs said sharply, "you are surely not implying Stanford said, peering up at Young, "I believe, sir, you sat on the "The problem, as we see it," said Riggs, "is to find some way to "Memories are buried," said Riggs, "and in the old days, when men "Ancestor Young," said Stanford, "you have seen Man spread out from "When you get it done," said Young, "I have some other things in mind." It seemed, when Andrew Young came into the room, that Riggs and "We must help," said Riggs, "in every way we can and we must keep watch "Ug," said Andrew Young, and he swallowed the button. Good Lord, thought Andrew Young, that''s just the way I want it. id = 14636 author = Unamuno, Miguel de title = Tragic Sense Of Life date = keywords = Christ; Christian; Christianity; Church; Consciousness; Don; Father; God; Jesus; Kant; Lord; Paul; Quixote; Spain; Spinoza; St.; Supreme; Unamuno; Universe; believe; catholic; faith; human; immortality; life; love; man; nature; order; reason; soul; spanish; thing; truth; world summary = God may exist--Hope the form of faith--Love and suffering--The faith and reason, between life and thought, between spirit and believing either in the immortality of the soul or in God, but he lives that if there exists in a man faith in God joined to a life of purity life, and it is then that the living God is begotten by humanity. of life and feeling, means that my personal consciousness sprang from feel God to be consciousness--that is to say, a person; and because we personal God, in an eternal and universal consciousness that knows and loves us, is to believe that the Universe exists _for_ man. suffering; and if His life, since God lives, is not a process of How can a human soul live and enjoy God eternally without losing its Consciousness, in God; we must needs believe in that other life in order id = 38312 author = Van Dyke, Henry title = The Mansion date = keywords = Gate; Harold; John; Keeper; Weightman; good summary = John Weightman was like the house into which he had built himself governor''s life is an open book--a ledger, if you like, kept in the know, but sometimes I feel as if I''d like to do some good in the "May I light a cigar, father," said Harold, turning away to hide a "Yes, certainly," answered the elder man, rather shortly; "you know I John Weightman looked at his son steadily. The young man came back and laid his hand upon his father''s shoulder. John Weightman''s drooping eyes turned to the next verse, at the top of But you I have known for a long time, John Weightman. As the little company came, one by one, to the mansions which were a low, distinct voice--"this is your mansion, John Weightman." mansion of John Weightman in the world. "Yes, my son," answered John Weightman; "I''ve come back--I mean I''ve id = 704 author = Van Dyke, Henry title = The Mansion date = keywords = Gate; Harold; John; Keeper; Weightman; life summary = John Weightman was like the house into which he had built himself governor''s life is an open book--a ledger, if you like, kept in the The young man''s voice hesitated a little. know, but sometimes I feel as if I''d like to do some good in the world, "May I light a cigar, father," said Harold, turning away to hide a John Weightman looked at his son steadily. The young man came back and laid his hand upon his father''s shoulder. But you I have known for a long time, John Weightman. As the little company came, one by one, to the mansions which were low, distinct voice--"this is your mansion, John Weightman." mansion of John Weightman in the world. were a few of them in your life, you have a little place here." "Yes, my son," answered John Weightman; "I''ve come back--I mean I''ve