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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 103208 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 79 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Sultan 4 God 4 Emperor 4 Constantinople 4 Constantine 3 Turks 3 St. 3 Greek 3 Church 3 Allah 2 turkish 2 Uel 2 Sergius 2 Princess 2 Patriarch 2 Nilo 2 Mirza 2 Majesty 2 Mahommed 2 Lord 2 Lael 2 Irene 2 India 2 Holy 2 Hegumen 2 Heaven 2 Gate 2 Father 2 Emir 2 Count 2 Christian 2 Christ 1 man 1 footnote 1 christian 1 Thou 1 Theodosius 1 Syama 1 Spirit 1 Sophia 1 Sire 1 Sheik 1 Seraglio 1 Selim 1 Sea 1 Scanderbeg 1 Sancta 1 Rome 1 Prophet 1 Prince Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1535 man 1001 day 861 hand 845 time 765 city 628 wall 542 eye 494 face 488 people 429 side 414 way 410 head 409 place 400 night 397 land 377 word 376 life 370 gate 361 woman 347 foot 342 host 333 father 331 house 318 water 302 part 302 name 298 year 288 arm 287 son 286 child 286 brother 273 one 269 door 261 thing 260 world 255 sea 253 nothing 247 heart 246 palace 245 master 239 sword 238 horse 228 moment 228 emperor 224 soul 222 light 217 soldier 210 voice 208 ship 206 tower Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 768 Prince 704 Emperor 668 God 654 _ 546 Princess 514 Lord 488 thou 447 Constantinople 418 Count 415 Mahommed 381 Constantine 337 Sultan 308 Sergius 276 Greeks 255 St. 232 Turks 227 Majesty 210 Church 196 Lael 191 India 188 Greek 180 Irene 175 Morsinia 156 Emir 154 Allah 152 Mahomet 152 Christ 152 Adrianople 149 Holy 147 Corti 146 Amesa 145 King 139 Castle 138 Father 126 John 126 Golden 125 Scanderbeg 124 Ballaban 124 Baldwin 120 Christian 116 Heaven 115 Castriot 114 Gate 114 Blacherne 113 Padishah 113 Kabilovitsch 113 Empire 113 Bosphorus 111 Henry 110 Prophet Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 7037 he 4658 it 3968 i 2963 him 2753 they 2346 you 1798 them 1473 me 1457 she 1089 we 873 her 662 himself 519 us 213 thee 203 themselves 141 myself 141 itself 79 herself 76 one 44 mine 41 yourself 35 thyself 22 yours 20 his 17 ourselves 11 theirs 11 hers 7 thy 6 ''s 5 ours 3 thou 2 ye 1 whereof 1 truly!--they 1 this:--whom 1 ordinarilyagoodfivedays''journey 1 ii 1 himself,-- 1 elias 1 ay Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 18040 be 5770 have 1700 say 1555 do 1185 come 1166 go 1154 see 1146 take 1025 make 882 know 848 give 573 hear 541 look 516 bring 511 tell 507 leave 486 find 464 speak 447 keep 433 think 425 stand 416 hold 404 pass 397 call 388 ask 373 let 365 return 338 turn 325 fall 325 become 319 send 302 draw 291 lead 288 seem 280 follow 274 begin 255 set 250 put 246 reply 237 rise 235 enter 231 bear 231 appear 230 carry 217 answer 216 lose 208 receive 203 lie 199 raise 196 ride Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3289 not 1538 so 1316 then 1145 now 897 more 887 great 817 other 746 well 634 here 597 there 581 out 581 good 570 many 566 up 547 first 529 only 514 such 498 long 487 very 471 old 453 most 453 again 452 much 416 as 400 little 383 never 374 too 362 back 358 own 349 thus 349 down 340 last 324 even 314 still 294 same 285 yet 279 high 279 away 265 also 262 young 235 far 234 once 233 next 232 right 225 together 225 few 222 strong 220 just 218 in 216 new Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 143 good 133 least 86 most 39 high 39 great 22 slight 21 near 17 strong 15 bad 14 early 12 wise 12 pure 12 noble 11 rich 11 fair 11 brave 10 late 9 fine 7 say 7 l 7 Most 6 old 6 large 6 deep 6 brief 6 bold 5 young 5 wide 5 proud 5 holy 5 full 5 eld 4 sweet 4 rare 4 low 4 long 4 light 4 grave 4 faint 3 soft 3 short 3 keen 3 hot 3 cool 3 coarse 3 close 3 clear 3 chief 2 vague 2 topmost Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 367 most 24 well 21 least 2 long 1 woe,--oh 1 washest 1 oldest 1 oftenest 1 hard 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 god is god 8 god is great 4 day was not 4 god had not 4 place is full 3 _ are _ 3 _ is _ 3 count was not 3 eyes were bright 2 _ was _ 2 city called pamphyle 2 city called tzurulum 2 city was very 2 constantine was not 2 day is young 2 eyes were full 2 face was as 2 faces were as 2 god be merciful 2 god does not 2 god is here 2 head is so 2 head was already 2 lord has already 2 lord is right 2 mahommed took seat 2 man is mad 2 man was young 2 people were not 2 prince was not 2 time had already 2 time had now 2 time is not 2 time was not 2 women are not 2 words were then 1 _ am not 1 _ are faint 1 _ is never 1 _ is somewhere 1 _ was still 1 _ was superbly 1 cities are inseparable 1 cities are so 1 city are uncontrolled 1 city be not 1 city called abydos 1 city called adramittium 1 city called adrianople 1 city called aquilo Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 day was not far 2 time is not yet 2 time was not yet 1 city found no comfort 1 city is not more 1 constantine left no doubt 1 constantine was not less 1 constantinople has not space 1 count was not slow 1 day is not far 1 day was not able 1 emperor had no longer 1 emperor made no concealment 1 emperor made no sign 1 face were not infrequent 1 god does not sometimes 1 hands are not worthy 1 mahommed is not far 1 mahommed was not less 1 night was not so 1 people took no part 1 people was no longer 1 walls were no protection 1 woman took no heed 1 woman was not even 1 words made no impression 1 words were not straightforward A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 46353 author = Baker, B. Granville (Bernard Granville) title = The Walls of Constantinople date = keywords = Church; Constantine; Constantinople; Eastern; Emperor; Empire; Europe; Gate; Golden; Greek; Horn; John; Justinian; Marmora; Rome; Sea; Seraglio; St.; Sultan; Theodosius; Turks; turkish summary = his sense of the greatness and beauty, the Romance of a Walled City such It is to be doubted whether any city walls have such a stirring history And all the time the walls of Constantine''s proud city prevented the after passing west of where the land-wall of Theodosius joined the There were walls and towers round the point to guard the city both the city walls across the Sea of Marmora. So the life of the old city, the heart of a new empire continued, and descried within the walls of Constantine''s Imperial City. the city walls, and as we turn for a last glance at the Marble Tower and city, but not by the Golden Gate, for to none but Emperors or visitors throne of the Eastern Empire to-day, was twenty-four years old when he land-walls, from the Sea of Marmora to the Golden Horn, and, as we have id = 40519 author = Ludlow, James M. (James Meeker) title = The Captain of the Janizaries A story of the times of Scanderberg and the fall of Constantinople date = keywords = Aga; Albania; Allah; Amesa; Ballaban; CHAPTER; Captain; Castriot; Constantine; God; Hunyades; Janizaries; Janizary; Kabilovitsch; Mahomet; Michael; Milosch; Morsinia; Moses; Moslem; Padishah; Phranza; Scanderbeg; Selim; Sire; Sultan; Turks; christian; man; turkish summary = "Do you speak true?" cried Scanderbeg, laying his hand upon the man''s Stop!" said Scanderbeg, pacing the little room like a caged "I swear it," said the man, "and that all Albania prays to-day for this little one," said the old man, rising. "Let not your Christian lips call me Scanderbeg, but Castriot," said "Mary save her!" said the old man with gratified look. "Why?" said Kabilovitsch, "these horny hands should tell thee, Sire, treacherously," said the old man, reining his horse, and speaking with "A sturdy little Giaour," said old Selim, a fat and gouty Janizary, Pausing at the door-way the old man put his hand upon the boy''s Morsinia buried her fair face in the gray beard of the old man, as the girl are to-day," said the man. "But why," said the old man, rising to his feet with the enthusiasm of id = 6032 author = Villehardouin, Geoffroi de title = Memoirs or Chronicle of the Fourth Crusade and the Conquest of Constantinople date = keywords = Adrianople; Baldwin; Constantinople; Count; Doge; Emperor; Geoffry; God; Greeks; Henry; St. summary = The Doge of Venice, when he came to the counts and barons, said to Emperor Alexius, not one person on the land or in the city made show Emperor Alexius had made ready a great number of his people, who were The Emperor Alexius remained for a long time on progress, till St. Martin''s Day, and then he returned to Constantinople. day, they came to a good city, called Phile, and took it; and they had which had surrendered to my lord the Emperor Baldwin, a city called Before the Emperor Baldwin left Constantinople, his brother Henry In Constantinople remained the Emperor Baldwin and Count Louis, with Henry, the brother of the Emperor Baldwin, for the people of the land When those who were in the city saw the host of the Emperor Henry the emperor came with all his host, and encamped before the city, and id = 6848 author = Wallace, Lew title = The Prince of India; Or, Why Constantinople Fell — Volume 01 date = keywords = Allah; Bosphorus; Castle; Christ; Christian; Church; Constantine; Constantinople; East; Emir; Emperor; Father; God; Governor; Greek; Heaven; Hegumen; Holy; India; Irene; Jew; Lael; Lord; Mahommed; Majesty; Mirza; Nilo; Patriarch; Prince; Princess; Prophet; Sergius; Sheik; Sultan; Syama; Thou; Uel summary = "Rest thou thy soul, O wisest of pagan kings," said the master, rising. looked into thy face, or touched thy hand, or heard thy voice, I know come thou wilt allow me to relate myself to thee as father to son, in was an Indian Prince vastly rich, come, like a good Mohammedan, to "Why dost thou take this place, O Prince?" asked the Shaykh, who was The Prince listened, and at the end said, like a man in haste: "Tell me, O Emir, which wouldst thou rather face, a hill-man or the "I see plainly thou art a good man," the Emir said, bowing again. "Nay," said Sergius, looking at the Prince without taking down his hands--"if ever man believed what he said, my master did." "My Lord," said the Prince, calmly, "a man''s destiny is never "I am Prince Mahommed''s ambassador, O Princess," he said, rising to his id = 6849 author = Wallace, Lew title = The Prince of India; Or, Why Constantinople Fell — Volume 02 date = keywords = Allah; Blacherne; Christ; Christian; Church; Constantine; Constantinople; Corti; Count; Demedes; Emir; Emperor; Father; Gate; God; Greek; Heaven; Hegumen; Holy; India; Irene; Lael; Lord; Mahommed; Majesty; Mirza; Nilo; Patriarch; Princess; Sancta; Sergius; Sophia; Spirit; St.; Sultan; Turks; Uel; footnote summary = "I shall ask you, Sergius, to return to the city to-night, for inquiry Like him is the man who, thinking to know God, of God; asking hearing and belief, not worship; begging men to come Next day about noon the Prince of India took the galley, and set out The Prince''s look and manner changed, and he took the monk''s hand. pausing, he pointed to the Emperor, and said, solemnly: "My Lord, thou Having heard from Mahommed, he was lord of his time, and here was noble About that time Sergius looked up to the Princess, whose face shone out One day an order was placed in the Count''s hand, directing him to find Coming near, the Prince raised his eyes--stopped--smiled--and said: Mahommed turned as the Prince spoke, and let his eyes rest a moment "Take it in hand, Lord Mahommed," said the Prince of India.