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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 79672 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 84 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Peru 4 Inca 3 Mr. 3 Manco 3 Indians 3 Harry 3 Cuzco 2 time 2 peruvian 2 Yupanqui 2 Tupac 2 Sun 2 Norton 2 Incas 2 Cusi 1 water 1 wall 1 turn 1 stand 1 spear 1 spanish 1 note 1 look 1 head 1 hand 1 good 1 foot 1 eye 1 colonel 1 Xaxaguana 1 Whitney 1 Vmu 1 Viracocha 1 Villac 1 Vilcabamba 1 Viceroy 1 Valley 1 Urubamba 1 Umu 1 Uma 1 Uiticos 1 Uilcapampa 1 Tucker 1 Titu 1 Tiahuana 1 Tampu 1 Sumac 1 Spaniards 1 Sir 1 Sinchi Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1420 time 1156 man 1005 foot 847 way 845 place 814 day 751 side 689 hand 608 water 585 thing 558 nothing 556 stone 538 one 538 eye 534 mule 502 rock 497 head 486 hour 475 wall 458 father 455 colonel 445 people 429 mountain 415 valley 401 word 400 part 392 year 392 night 389 sir 382 face 381 end 371 minute 363 son 363 moment 360 gold 359 work 351 something 348 anything 333 room 324 boy 319 house 316 life 305 brother 303 other 299 arm 286 order 286 land 280 mile 277 friend 276 point Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1593 Harry 1586 _ 1260 Inca 652 Cuzco 579 Dias 544 Cyril 542 Kennedy 510 Perry 477 Incas 440 Indians 373 Bertie 353 Yupanqui 353 Desiree 328 Ccapac 293 Whitney 278 Peru 261 Tupac 259 Norton 257 Lockwood 253 Mr. 250 Escombe 243 Manning 242 Manco 240 John 231 de 231 Lord 230 Sun 207 señor 191 Craig 187 Josà 177 Spaniards 174 Don 171 Pachacuti 163 Maria 155 Indian 151 Cusi 148 © 129 Inez 128 Arima 122 Butler 119 Mire 119 Le 117 Viracocha 114 Huascar 112 Lima 109 Mendoza 104 Huanacocha 103 Picchu 102 Atahualpa 100 Tiahuana Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 9811 i 8217 it 6919 he 5220 we 4855 they 4639 you 2405 them 2126 him 1873 me 1618 us 1353 she 659 her 542 himself 275 myself 221 themselves 183 one 146 ourselves 133 itself 69 yourself 64 thee 57 herself 50 ''em 45 ''s 42 mine 22 yours 18 his 9 hers 6 thyself 6 ours 6 em 5 theirs 3 yourselves 3 i''m 3 ha 2 you''re 2 thy 1 you.--here 1 ye 1 whereof 1 she''ll 1 satisfactory.--now 1 paused--"who 1 oneself 1 now.--what 1 hisself 1 ay Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 25683 be 10448 have 3498 do 2977 say 2107 go 2029 see 1797 come 1666 make 1517 take 1429 know 1277 find 1235 get 1162 think 930 give 805 look 736 seem 709 call 707 tell 700 leave 606 feel 592 turn 537 keep 523 hear 494 follow 486 bring 471 stand 442 begin 434 ask 426 pass 422 carry 418 want 412 return 395 let 383 mean 366 reach 357 lie 354 hold 347 fall 346 try 343 become 333 speak 331 run 328 send 314 start 310 rise 309 put 300 lead 297 use 294 appear 285 cry Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5172 not 1746 so 1670 then 1583 up 1304 now 1238 more 1179 very 1159 out 1106 well 1104 down 1011 other 1005 here 965 great 908 only 903 as 792 long 777 there 772 good 772 first 686 little 653 back 643 much 616 many 599 again 575 most 574 even 569 away 525 still 499 just 498 too 498 far 488 on 465 once 449 few 440 off 433 never 424 last 417 soon 411 all 410 enough 400 right 393 old 384 also 377 large 361 same 345 quite 337 such 336 in 333 own 328 small Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 194 good 185 least 117 most 43 slight 41 great 36 bad 35 high 25 large 25 eld 19 near 15 Most 14 fine 10 wise 10 small 10 old 9 strong 9 rich 9 low 7 safe 7 late 7 hard 6 faint 6 easy 6 early 6 deep 5 wild 5 narrow 5 dear 4 young 3 sure 3 nice 3 light 3 keen 3 brave 3 big 3 bare 3 able 2 warm 2 tough 2 thick 2 sweet 2 steep 2 southernmost 2 simple 2 remote 2 reconqu 2 mere 2 manif 2 hot 2 heavy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 458 most 42 least 25 well 1 worst 1 driest 1 back.--hah 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 harry went on 7 kennedy did not 6 harry said quietly 5 _ called _ 5 dias said gravely 5 kennedy said nothing 5 thing came closer 4 harry did not 4 harry was not 4 one does not 3 colonel went on 3 cyril did not 3 inca was not 2 _ is _ 2 colonel had not 2 colonel knows best 2 day was just 2 dias is so 2 dias said quietly 2 dias went off 2 eyes did not 2 eyes were not 2 father came in 2 harry had not 2 harry said carelessly 2 harry took desiree 2 hours passed by 2 inca did not 2 inca made many 2 inca was dead 2 inca was indignant 2 incas did not 2 incas is still 2 kennedy turned suddenly 2 man does not 2 man had not 2 man was butler 2 man was well 2 men came down 2 mules do n''t 2 mules were once 2 nothing is more 2 one came up 2 one does n''t 2 one has ever 2 one is always 2 one is as 2 one is not 2 one said anything 2 one was able Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 inca was not only 2 walls were no longer 1 _ was not ordinary 1 cuzco are not yet 1 cyril made no answer 1 cyril made no reply 1 day is not so 1 days seemed not nearly 1 dias made no reply 1 eye was no work 1 eyes are not quite 1 eyes were no longer 1 father was not legitimate 1 harry had no doubt 1 harry said not less 1 harry was no longer 1 harry was not afraid 1 harry was not sorry 1 hours is not exactly 1 inca has no personal 1 inca was not too 1 incas was no longer 1 kennedy made no move 1 man does not always 1 men did not then 1 mules are not so 1 mules made no difficulty 1 one be not very 1 one has no recollection 1 one is not accustomed 1 one is not long 1 perry made no reply 1 places were no doubt 1 stone is not quite 1 stone was not sufficient 1 time had not yet 1 time has no place 1 time was not very 1 water did not quite 1 water is not so 1 way was not so A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 10772 author = Bingham, Hiram title = Inca Land: Explorations in the Highlands of Peru date = keywords = Andes; Arequipa; Basin; Coropuna; Cusi; Cuzco; Dr.; FIGURE; Friar; Inca; Indians; Machu; Manco; Mr.; Pampa; Parinacochas; Peru; Picchu; Tampu; Titu; Tucker; Tupac; Uilcapampa; Uiticos; Urubamba; Valley; Vilcabamba; peruvian; spanish summary = The next day we crossed two small oases, little gulches watered from early days before the Inca conquest of Peru, not so very long before been at one time an Inca house here, possibly a temple--lakes were once Inca ruins one may find small stone mortars, in which the primitive are the ruins of ancient houses, possibly once occupied by an Inca square mile," are called by Squier "the great Inca town of Muyna," here the evidences of a very large town, possibly pre-Inca, long since the Inca, who with a small party, "little more than eighty Indians," ruins down the Urubamba Valley at a place called "Huaina-Picchu or of many Inca ruins, the beauty of the deep, narrow valleys, and the the place where, in the days of Titu Cusi, the Inca priests faced the if the Indians had inhabited these valleys continuously from Inca id = 21066 author = Collingwood, Harry title = Harry Escombe: A Tale of Adventure in Peru date = keywords = Arima; Butler; Cachama; Englishman; Escombe; Harry; Huanacocha; Inca; Indian; Lord; Manco; Motahuana; Peru; Philip; Sir; Sun; Tiahuana; Umu; Villac; Vmu; Xaxaguana; peruvian summary = Harry Escombe is a young apprentice in a civil engineer''s office. "Yes," answered Escombe, "I understand perfectly, Mr Butler, what you "A matter of about half an hour''s work!" interjected Harry. Escombe detailed one man, an Indian, to accompany him, and, placing the either hand, and at length turned to Escombe and said, pointing: time, Harry knew instinctively, the patient would be long past all human person of Escombe--as he never for a moment doubted was the case--Arima reincarnated Inca, Manco Capac, Harry Escombe was one of those estimable "My Lords," said Tiahuana, "the young man asserts, with perfect candour, Harry''s conductor took out and handed to the young man for his "I know not, Lord Umu," answered the unfortunate man, as well as his The priest led the way into the passage, Harry following, and the moment "I might well answer," said Escombe, "that I am the Inca, and that no id = 34139 author = Fenn, George Manville title = Real Gold: A Story of Adventure date = keywords = CHAPTER; Captain; Cil; Cyril; Diego; Indians; John; Manning; Master; Norton; Perry; colonel; look summary = "They''re Antis," said Cyril, as Perry watched the two sleepy-looking "What!" said John Manning, turning sharply round, "ride that mule? "Looking at the new mule-driver, Perry?" said the colonel. "I say, Master Perry, sir, don''t look that how," said John Manning in a "Good-night, Perry, my boy," said the colonel. "Yes, sir, I have my father to meet," said Cyril. "Yes, the place did look deep," said the colonel, "but no one did turn "I thought he''d have gone, Master Perry," said John Manning. "An awful-looking place, boys, in the darkness," said the colonel "Then you have not come to find the gold, sir?" said Cyril; while Perry "That''s what I wanted Perry to feel sir," said Cyril, "but he would have "All right, sir," said John Manning, with a look full of cunning. "I''ll go down again, sir," said Cyril, when the colonel had turned back, id = 7070 author = Henty, G. A. (George Alfred) title = The Treasure of the Incas: A Story of Adventure in Peru date = keywords = Barnett; Bertie; Callao; Cuzco; Dias; Fortescue; Harry; Incas; Indians; Lima; Maria; Mr.; Peru; Prendergast; Spaniards; good; time summary = "I think he will help us, Harry," Bertie said as soon as they set out. "They were the last places we should think of searching," Dias said. "The Spaniards have done some good here at least," Harry said to Dias, "Well, Bertie," Harry said when Dias had left the room, "I think we may "We had better be moving, señor," Dias said as he rose to his feet, "or "The meal is ready, señor," Maria said, "and I think we had better eat "You are a good deal sillier than you think you are, Maria," Dias said "I don''t think they will try it, señor," Dias said. went back for the mules; but Harry said: "I do think, Dias, that she Harry said: "You have done us another good turn, Dias; we did not see "You know, Bertie," Harry said, coming to a sudden stop, "I think we id = 9068 author = Markham, Clements R. (Clements Robert), Sir title = Apu Ollantay: A Drama of the Time of the Incas date = keywords = Chaqui; Coyllur; Footnote; Inca; Ollantay; Rumi; Sumac; Uma; Yupanqui summary = love of a great chief, but not of the blood-royal, with a daughter of In the third scene Ollantay prefers his suit to the Inca Pachacuti in Anahuarqui, Cusi Coyllur, Inca Pachacuti, Boys and Girls, Singers. Tupac Yupanqui, Uillac Uma, a Chasqui, Rumi-naui, Ollantay, Urco RUMI-NAUI.--A great chief, General of Colla-suyu. If the great Inca knew thy plot Thou hast twisted the thread of thy fate-Since when hast thou lost all thy joy, thy servants come to please thee. Thou knowest now thy heart did beat Great Inca, I kneel at thy feet, Why art thou Ollantay''s man? Why art thou Ollantay''s man? From this day thou art a great chief, For now thou must take up thy place (Enter the INCA TUPAC YUPANQUI with YMA SUMAC, OLLANTAY, UILLAC UMA and Thou hast found thy loving brother; [Footnote 50: Like Ollantay in his appeal to the Inca, Rumi-naui, in id = 5149 author = Reeve, Arthur B. (Arthur Benjamin) title = Gold of the Gods date = keywords = Alfonso; Craig; Inez; Kennedy; Leslie; Lockwood; Mendoza; Moche; Mr.; Museum; Norton; Professor; Senora; Senorita; Whitney summary = Kennedy had risen and, as Norton described the Inca dagger, looked from Lockwood shook his head slowly, fixing his eyes on Kennedy''s face, but For a moment Kennedy now advanced and took Senorita Inez by the hand. "Senora de Moche is a friend of Mr. Whitney?" queried Kennedy. "I shall try to see Mr. Whitney as soon as possible," said Kennedy, as "Oh, it is a wonderful country, Professor Kennedy," went on Whitney, "Tell Senorita Mendoza that it is Professor Kennedy," he said to Inez Mendoza looked at Kennedy as though he possessed some weird power. "Mr. Kennedy should know what my opinion of Mr. Whitney is, I think," replied Norton confidently. Norton left shortly after Lockwood, and Kennedy again picked up the "Mr. Kennedy would like to know when he can see Mr. Whitney," I said, "What did Lockwood say about Norton?" asked Kennedy casually. id = 20218 author = Sarmiento de Gamboa, Pedro title = History of the Incas date = keywords = Atahualpa; Ccapac; Chima; Cusi; Cuzco; Don; Francisco; Huascar; Huayna; Inca; Manco; Mayta; Pachacuti; Peru; Rocca; Sinchi; Sun; Tupac; Viceroy; Viracocha; Yupanqui; note summary = Mayta Ccapac, the fourth Inca, son of Lloqui Yupanqui and his wife Mama When Ccapac Yupanqui died, Inca Rocca, his son by his wife Ccuri-hilpay, the valley of Cuzco he also had two sons, the one named Inca Urco, the sons named Cusi, afterwards called Inca Yupanqui, because they believed His son Inca Yupanqui remained at Cuzco, resolved to defend the son Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui, to whom the Sun has given such a great Cuzco, nor seeing his son Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui. Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui was at Cuzco after having conquered the his orders, he killed the Inca''s two brothers Ccapac Yupanqui and Huayna then said that he named his son Tupac Inca, and ordered him to come TUPAC INCA YUPANQUI SETS OUT, A SECOND TIME, BY ORDER OF HIS FATHER, TO TUPAC INCA YUPANQUI ORDERS A SECOND VISITATION OF THE LAND, AND DOES id = 546 author = Stout, Rex title = Under the Andes date = keywords = Desiree; Harry; Heaven; Incas; Lamar; Mire; Paul; eye; foot; hand; head; spear; stand; time; turn; wall; water summary = "Paul!" cried Harry, leaping to his feet; then he stopped short and "Look here," said Harry suddenly, "why can''t we see their eyes? We talked very little; at times Desiree and Harry conversed in subdued Desiree and Harry stood facing it in silence. I turned, with a swift gesture to Harry and Desiree to follow, and I turned to where Harry and Desiree were seated on the further edge of Calling to Harry to watch the crevice, I took Desiree in my arms and Harry and Desiree stood close behind me, looking through at the calling to Harry and grasping Desiree by the arm, I started to turn. Harry was on the other side of Desiree, not three feet from me. I said nothing of that to Harry or Desiree. "We''d better go back to Desiree," said Harry when we reached the ground "The Incas didn''t do that, I hope," said Harry, turning to me.