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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 78776 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 67 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 illustration 4 England 3 year 3 work 3 time 3 State 3 France 2 man 2 United 2 Oil 2 New 2 London 2 Henry 2 Europe 2 English 2 Company 2 Britain 1 worker 1 training 1 trade 1 town 1 stone 1 state 1 society 1 social 1 service 1 school 1 roman 1 right 1 public 1 property 1 production 1 produce 1 private 1 power 1 plate 1 people 1 page 1 number 1 manufacture 1 machinery 1 machine 1 liberal 1 labourer 1 labour 1 industry 1 industrial 1 imperial 1 history 1 great Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1576 man 1504 time 1319 year 1020 work 977 land 929 part 849 industry 824 country 798 labour 772 people 718 trade 710 number 697 class 693 town 674 day 633 school 617 power 572 law 554 life 552 peasant 549 hand 537 capital 530 condition 524 century 508 property 494 way 489 system 488 state 488 county 481 government 467 machine 463 right 460 place 450 interest 443 course 432 fact 431 population 426 kind 420 form 414 case 411 member 408 principle 406 house 400 production 399 water 392 service 388 wage 371 city 364 society 364 period Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1796 | 1185 _ 522 Russia 513 England 307 Government 306 San 277 State 247 Co. 238 St. 226 Francisco 214 London 210 Europe 182 California 180 New 178 County 173 Tsar 171 Los 169 English 168 Angeles 165 Petersburg 164 W. 164 J. 162 Moscow 160 Pacific 160 Great 156 Company 151 M. 146 Church 144 Northern 143 C. 142 Parliament 139 France 135 Mr. 132 Emperor 130 Russians 125 United 125 Russian 124 York 123 Washington 122 Western 117 H. 116 States 116 Peter 114 Oil 108 II 105 Social 104 E. 101 S. 101 P. 100 Henry Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5825 it 3576 they 3524 he 1713 i 1619 them 1510 we 700 him 486 themselves 403 you 353 me 343 us 340 himself 295 she 216 itself 90 her 54 one 45 myself 32 herself 28 ourselves 14 yourself 7 mine 4 thee 3 ours 3 his 2 yours 1 ye 1 thyself 1 theirs 1 pp 1 peace:-- 1 or\|53.2|113|aug 1 mankind,--they 1 ivan''itch 1 delf 1 bridgeport 1 alexandr''itch Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 27342 be 8762 have 1873 make 1691 do 948 give 918 take 769 find 769 become 694 say 654 come 583 know 566 work 564 use 556 go 531 call 499 produce 479 see 467 pay 449 carry 428 show 408 bring 399 employ 393 obtain 371 receive 365 exist 361 seem 359 require 359 increase 342 pass 342 hold 331 form 330 begin 324 live 314 remain 307 put 290 leave 276 possess 273 get 264 think 261 follow 258 regard 258 keep 254 create 251 accord 233 raise 227 grow 219 consider 218 appear 216 speak 213 describe Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4033 not 1922 more 1570 great 1528 other 1083 so 1083 only 1079 very 1053 most 1023 many 932 large 837 much 835 as 784 well 759 such 735 now 733 same 724 long 724 little 699 first 690 old 689 new 670 even 659 up 632 small 616 own 588 few 536 high 529 good 507 certain 500 russian 498 still 496 far 485 less 483 out 454 then 444 about 443 thus 432 however 431 political 427 also 423 general 405 therefore 399 public 390 industrial 374 social 368 always 363 never 362 common 359 present 351 almost Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 250 most 210 least 170 good 134 great 90 large 75 high 39 low 36 early 30 Most 26 bad 21 late 21 fine 21 cheap 19 poor 19 near 18 simple 18 rich 17 old 16 strong 13 slight 11 new 8 common 7 full 6 small 6 pure 6 eld 5 wild 5 manif 4 young 4 sure 4 rude 4 noble 4 easy 4 able 3 wide 3 warm 3 short 3 safe 3 ready 3 narrow 3 long 3 heavy 3 gross 3 coarse 3 close 3 black 2 topmost 2 rough 2 proud 2 nice Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 803 most 49 least 20 well 1 richest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/1/6/6/21660/21660-h/21660-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/1/6/6/21660/21660-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 property is not 4 land is not 4 schools do not 3 industries carried on 3 labour were not 3 man was not 3 people did not 3 russia did not 3 russia was about 2 capital had not 2 capital is not 2 classes do social 2 country is still 2 industry are not 2 industry had not 2 industry is thus 2 labour was so 2 land is great 2 lands are as 2 lands are not 2 law is still 2 life is so 2 man had so 2 men do not 2 men receiving wages 2 men were more 2 peasants are not 2 peasants did not 2 peasants have not 2 people do not 2 russia is no 2 russia is not 2 russia was merely 2 schools are primarily 2 time goes on 2 time is devoted 2 time is not 2 time working week 2 work do not 2 work is steady 2 work was not 1 * are not 1 * see chapter 1 * see especially 1 _ are synonymous 1 _ did _ 1 _ increasing comforts 1 _ is _ 1 _ is particularly 1 _ was heretofore Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 land is not likely 2 russia is no longer 1 century is no longer 1 classes had not yet 1 condition is no great 1 conditions do not completely 1 country was not quite 1 day were not unusual 1 england had no better 1 england was not yet 1 industry are not merely 1 industry did not usually 1 industry had not only 1 labour did not then 1 labour have not as 1 labour was not prepared 1 labour were not thus 1 labour were not united 1 land are not more 1 land have not only 1 land is not so 1 land is not very 1 law is not adequately 1 laws did not equally 1 life had not yet 1 life is no doubt 1 life is not nearly 1 life were not very 1 man has no passport 1 man has not teeth 1 man is not guilty 1 man was not able 1 man was not slow 1 men are not only 1 men did not invariably 1 men have no common 1 men have no machines 1 part have no insight 1 peasants are not generally 1 peasants do not yet 1 peasants had no legal 1 peasants have not yet 1 peasants know no language 1 peasants make no objection 1 peasants was not always 1 peasants were not birds 1 people did not perhaps 1 people do not entirely 1 people had no difficulty 1 people had no tools A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 47657 author = California. Alaska-Yukon-Pacific exposition commission title = Report of Governor''s Representatives for California at Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition Commission date = keywords = Angeles; California; Co.; Francisco; Los; Oil; Sacramento; San; State; Wine summary = [Illustration: CALIFORNIA STATE BUILDING, SEATTLE EXPOSITION, 1909] were, San Diego, Los Angeles, Riverside, Ventura, Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz, Alameda, San Francisco, Tulare, Sacramento and Siskiyou. State of California Sacramento Installation of fruit State of California Sacramento Fruit and vegetables State of California Sacramento Processed fruit and State of California Sacramento General collection of gold State of California Sacramento General display minerals. State of California Sacramento Display of arts and crafts. State of California Sacramento Collective display oil California Wine Ass''n San Francisco Port. State of California Sacramento Industrial work. California Fruit Growers Los Angeles Installation of citrus California Hotel Exhibit San Francisco Display hotel pictures. California School of San Francisco Drawing and industrial work. California Polytechnic San Francisco Industrial work. State of California Sacramento Installation art exhibit. State of California Sacramento Installation art exhibit. State of California Sacramento Topographical map of San State of California Sacramento Mineral paints. id = 21660 author = Cheyney, Edward Potts title = An Introduction to the Industrial and Social History of England date = keywords = Act; Britain; Century; Company; Edward; Elizabeth; England; English; France; Henry; House; John; London; Parliament; Trade; William; early; government; history; illustration; roman; time; town; year summary = [Illustration: New Sixteenth Century Manor House with Fields still Changes in Town Life and Foreign Trade................. Certain general works which refer to long periods of economic history inhabitants of the town which controlled its trade and industry. as the gild merchant existed to regulate the trade of the town in the Scandinavian countries, the foreign trade of England was carried trade from England to the Netherlands was controlled from the English between the merchants of these towns and England from an early time. time in the harbors of England, and their merchants traded under companies of merchants were formed to trade with various countries, town governments, merchant and craft gilds, lords of fairs, village of the government over matters of labor, wages, hours, industry, government to make men carry on their economic life in a certain way, passed in the year 1871, the Trade Union Act and the Criminal Law id = 3037 author = Hendrick, Burton Jesse title = The Age of Big Business: A Chronicle of the Captains of Industry date = keywords = Bell; Carnegie; Chicago; Civil; Company; Metropolitan; New; Oil; Pennsylvania; Philadelphia; Rockefeller; Standard; States; United; War; York; american summary = farmers, city artisans, and industrious, independent business men, and steel factories of New York State and Pennsylvania. years before the war, the new agricultural machinery had made no great of Cleveland; two years afterward this new Standard Oil Company had new company men having great financial standing--Amasa Stone, Benjamin The Standard Oil Company of New Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, these same men naturally continued new areas, but other great companies also took part in the development. among railroad men to practical use in the steel business. As a young man, entirely new to the steel industry, he telephone business--at one time seemed likely to force the Bell Company Engineer of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, and the man The new telephone company offered him $10,000 a year as organized, in 1881, the American Bell Telephone Company, a corporation the American Telephone and Telegraph Company took over the business and id = 15229 author = Howell, Ithamar title = A Review of the Resources and Industries of the State of Washington, 1909 date = keywords = Columbia; County; Northern; Pacific; Spokane; Washington; illustration; page; plate summary = Hops are a large staple product in many counties of the state. THE COUNTIES AND MORE IMPORTANT CITIES AND TOWNS OF WASHINGTON Benton county is able to supply the large towns with fruits and PROSSER, its chief town and county seat, is on the Yakima river river and the Washington & Great Northern railway is projected along county is made up of rolling prairie lands, of great fertility on Timber is the great source of industry at present, the county having the Northern Pacific railway, is the chief town and county seat. [Illustration: Plate No. 49.--View of Spokane River in Lincoln County, Two railroads reach the center of the northern half of the county, Ephrata is the county seat, on the Great Northern railway. northern portion the county is well watered by the Columbia and The Columbia river is the great highway of the county; no railroads State lands, distribution by counties 97 id = 38367 author = Knight, Charles title = Knowledge Is Power: A View of the Productive Forces of Modern Society and the Results of Labor, Capital and Skill. date = keywords = Britain; CHAPTER; England; English; Europe; France; Henry; Indians; London; Mr.; New; United; capital; condition; country; exchange; great; illustration; labour; labourer; machine; machinery; man; manufacture; people; power; produce; production; state; time; work; year summary = power of labour would in his case be in its least productive state._ He requires some accumulation to aid his natural powers of labouring; for security, no exchange, no capital, no labour, no production. labour in exchange for meat and drink; the capitalist wanted the produce great use of the coined metal is to save labour in exchanging the ox for share in the productive power of capital and labour working together for the instant the labour of man ceases to direct those productive natural of trade, which compelled capital and labour to work unprofitably. manual labour, all are great gainers by the general use of that power. great part produced by the want of profitable labour. makes a little machine which saves him great labour. division of labour on the working man as a consumer, because it is the The division of labour in carrying forward the work of production is id = 16964 author = Lutz, R. R. (Rufus Rolla) title = Wage Earning and Education date = keywords = Cleveland; boy; course; industrial; number; school; trade; training; work; worker; year summary = 1. Boys and girls under 18 years of age in office work 103 vocational work for girls and women, New Bedford Industrial boys in our public schools to enter the machinist''s trade or the INDUSTRIAL TRAINING FOR BOYS IN ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS INDUSTRIAL TRAINING FOR BOYS IN ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS TRADE TRAINING DURING THE LAST YEARS IN SCHOOL TRADE TRAINING DURING THE LAST YEARS IN SCHOOL by the greater amount of time given to shop work in the trade school. general industrial course recommended for the junior high school, but the high schools for one or two years before they go to work. vocational school where some kind of industrial training is possible. the establishment of a one-year trade school for girls. schools do not offer trade-extension training for workers and it is 3. _A two year industrial trade school._ In addition to the general industrial trade school for boys. id = 18703 author = Stevenson, James title = Illustrated Catalogue of the Collections Obtained from the Indians of New Mexico in 1880 Second Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1880-81, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1883, pages 429-466 date = keywords = Fig; articles; collection; illustration; stone summary = A small collection of rude stone hammers was obtained from the turquois Rather large disk-shaped smoothing stone of basalt. Tinaja or olla, rather small, polished black ware. handle and spout, about half-gallon size, polished black ware. Small olla-shaped bowl; yellow ware. with handle similar in form and size to the ordinary white stone-china Small cup without handle; polished black ware. Small cooking pot with handle; polished black ware. Small pitcher-shaped cooking pot with handle and crenulate A small flat flaring bowl of red ware, with simple, Small bowl of white ware, ornamented with red triangles Collection of 67 stones used in smoothing pottery. Collection of 67 stones used in smoothing pottery. Small bowl-shaped cups with handle; Water vessel resembling in form a tinaja, but with small Water vessel of the form and ornamentation shown in Fig. Small bowl of black polished ware. Small bowl of black polished ware. id = 33741 author = Tawney, R. H. (Richard Henry) title = The Acquisitive Society date = keywords = Coal; England; France; State; economic; function; industry; man; private; property; public; right; service; social; society; work summary = owners of property against the possibility that their private rights social purpose is at once to turn property and economic activity from fact that the meaning of industry is the service of man, all who labor conditions of industrial organization, of the institution of private private property in the fact that it enabled the industrious man to The application to property and industry of the principle of function property used in industry, though not, of course, of the managers who As long as the private ownership of industrial capital remains, the property in capital in the important group of industries in which property in land and industrial capital, except for purposes specified public service, is so much the rule in private industry that no one The first condition of the right organization of industry is, then, the The first condition of the right organization of industry is, then, the id = 1349 author = Wallace, Donald Mackenzie title = Russia date = keywords = Administration; Alexander; Assembly; Autocratic; Catherine; Christianity; Church; Communal; Commune; Court; Emancipation; Emperor; Empire; England; Europe; General; God; Government; Grand; Great; Ivan; Minister; Mongol; Moscow; Nicholas; Noblesse; Novgorod; Orthodox; Petersburg; Power; Press; Prince; Proletariat; Russia; Russians; Social; St.; State; Tartar; Tsar; Western; Zemstvo; chapter; european; finnish; french; german; imperial; liberal; time summary = This ancient custom has produced among Russians of the old school a kind About the time of the Crimean War many of the Russian landed proprietors serfs instinctively regretted the good old times, when they lived under an idea, the Russian peasant can generally fill up the remaining Ivan''s household was a good specimen of the Russian peasant family Though I knew at that time little of Russian history, I suspected that the province.* During this time a good many landed proprietors, who time of Tsar Alexis, father of Peter the Great, ordered all the old such as peasants, landed proprietors, and the like, came into existence story about certain little Russian pigs that went to foreign lands to Russia and in Western Europe--State Peasants--Numbers and Geographical Russia and in Western Europe--State Peasants--Numbers and Geographical Russian Formalism--Local Self-Government of Russia Contrasted with That Russian Formalism--Local Self-Government of Russia Contrasted with That