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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 6 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 62085 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 68 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Mr. 4 London 3 New 3 Mrs. 2 time 2 little 2 life 2 great 2 american 2 Street 2 Paris 2 Miss 2 James 2 Henry 2 Europe 2 England 1 young 1 think 1 thing 1 small 1 sense 1 old 1 note 1 long 1 letter 1 french 1 fact 1 day 1 York 1 William 1 Wharton 1 Wells 1 Walk 1 Thomas 1 Tennyson 1 S.W. 1 Rye 1 Rue 1 Osgood 1 Norris 1 Mifflin 1 Mansions 1 Macmillan 1 Lewes 1 Lamb 1 June 1 JAMES 1 Institution 1 Hugh 1 House Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 691 time 574 thing 553 day 406 life 401 letter 383 sense 376 way 365 year 330 fact 311 one 248 nothing 234 place 229 matter 221 hour 214 case 211 part 210 world 202 moment 202 interest 198 hand 195 friend 190 impression 189 question 186 effect 185 light 174 word 169 course 163 form 162 house 157 everything 156 anything 149 end 147 sort 147 air 145 something 145 scene 144 week 144 point 142 work 142 side 142 condition 141 art 138 man 133 view 132 occasion 132 book 131 month 128 rate 128 country 126 picture Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4700 _ 333 Mrs. 313 i. 279 James 219 Mr. 211 HENRY 210 JAMES 203 New 193 London 183 ii 163 House 140 J. 139 Miss 136 William 136 Lamb 134 Rye 129 York 125 # 119 W. 112 Henry 109 © 105 Paris 103 England 98 Mr 93 H. 92 S.W. 91 Street 80 Carlyle 79 de 79 American 79 America 78 Europe 77 Walk 77 Cheyne 76 Mansions 70 Wharton 70 M. 70 Dearest 66 George 60 France 58 Alice 57 Gosse 52 English 50 Dictated 48 E. 47 August 47 Albany 46 June 46 John 46 Harry Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 7413 i 3794 it 2491 you 2023 me 1137 he 975 we 688 them 661 they 654 him 539 us 392 myself 366 she 307 one 250 her 205 itself 108 himself 106 yours 95 themselves 65 yourself 50 herself 39 ourselves 23 mine 19 ours 8 oneself 6 hers 4 his 3 yourselves 2 theirs 1 à 1 yours?--which 1 you''re 1 things?--they 1 my 1 goodness!--to 1 ''em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 9393 be 4994 have 1383 do 753 make 620 come 616 see 528 take 527 say 496 go 488 feel 453 think 452 know 394 seem 389 find 343 give 264 write 254 mean 232 get 218 tell 203 leave 201 become 195 keep 191 speak 180 live 174 remember 172 let 170 want 158 put 157 look 151 begin 149 read 145 call 142 appear 139 hear 136 like 131 believe 124 bring 119 send 119 hold 112 sit 112 hope 109 break 109 ask 108 show 108 remain 105 try 104 lose 99 hang 97 turn 97 meet Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2284 not 2002 so 1112 more 770 very 726 even 669 much 632 only 617 little 610 most 563 other 529 great 504 now 481 up 470 old 464 such 458 again 455 too 455 as 447 long 432 still 421 then 420 here 416 good 395 well 395 less 394 own 376 quite 372 just 369 all 366 out 350 last 349 ever 341 dear 334 least 324 really 318 however 311 there 309 young 309 back 303 far 298 almost 294 first 286 yet 282 never 257 small 253 rather 253 many 238 indeed 238 fine 225 on Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 302 least 143 most 132 good 44 bad 40 bl 35 high 34 dear 29 fine 24 great 19 lively 16 early 15 happy 12 near 12 fond 12 eld 9 young 9 small 9 rare 8 deep 7 odd 7 large 7 full 7 big 6 late 6 easy 5 strange 5 sharp 5 rich 5 Most 4 vague 4 simple 4 quiet 4 old 4 light 4 handsome 4 friendly 4 faint 4 dim 4 close 4 clear 3 vivid 3 true 3 straight 3 soft 3 scant 3 queer 3 low 3 furth 3 faithfull 3 devoted Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 467 most 31 least 17 well 1 widest 1 long 1 latest 1 highest 1 greatest 1 early 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 21 _ had _ 21 _ was _ 19 _ is _ 18 _ have _ 17 _ do _ 14 _ be _ 13 _ am _ 10 _ see _ 10 one does n''t 8 _ has _ 7 _ did _ 7 _ do n''t 6 _ want _ 5 _ is n''t 5 _ know _ 5 _ were _ 4 _ been _ 4 _ did n''t 4 _ done _ 4 _ had n''t 4 _ having _ 4 one did n''t 3 _ are _ 3 _ being _ 3 _ doing _ 3 _ go _ 3 _ live _ 3 _ make _ 3 _ meant _ 3 _ think _ 3 nothing is more 2 _ come _ 2 _ come in 2 _ does n''t 2 _ feel _ 2 _ get _ 2 _ go on 2 _ is not 2 _ knew _ 2 _ made _ 2 _ makes _ 2 _ seeing _ 2 _ were n''t 2 _ write _ 2 case is rare 2 day be sure 2 james does not 2 life was most 2 one had only 2 one has n''t Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ have no right 1 _ is not good 1 fact is no bad 1 one is not creative 1 one is not surprised 1 thing was no success A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 723 author = Howells, William Dean title = Henry James, Jr. date = keywords = Daisy; James; Mr. summary = there Mr. James remained till he went abroad, three years later, for It was so plain that Mr. James disliked her vulgar conditions, that the very people to whom he We may be quite sure that Mr. James does not like the perfectly new finds, like Mr. Tristram in "The American," the Europeanizing mother in the same story, the amusing little Madame de enlightened criticism will recognize in Mr. James''s fiction a American" had gone before; but it really began in the beautiful story It makes one wish that it were in Mr. James''s way to It is not my purpose here to review any of Mr. James''s books; I like it is the Europeanizing sort like the critical little Bostonian in the Doubtless Mr. James does not mean to satirize such Americans, but it is interesting Mr. James''s imitators will have much to do with the final result. id = 26115 author = James, Henry title = A Small Boy and Others date = keywords = Albany; Albert; Avenue; Broadway; English; Europe; Fourteenth; Henry; Institution; London; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Paris; Rue; Street; York; american; day; french; great; life; little; long; old; sense; small; think; time; young summary = peopled with animal life, which, little as its site may appear to know streets of great towns, in New York still for some time, and then for a small New York boy in this line at that time was the little sheath-like new generation than for the old; noted here as she is, in particular, protagonist, a little indeed in the sense of a small New York Orestes little old-world figure as any that might then have been noted there, days should come; infinitely touching our parents'' view of that New York long as they may have appeared at the time, that the day left margin at was conscious at the time of its having the general stamp and sense, of long time supposed, the highest pleasure of sense. York cousinship in this general connection is a time that I remember to see him a little--but two or three times--three or four years later, id = 32649 author = James, Henry title = The Middle Years date = keywords = Greville; Lewes; London; Mr.; Mrs.; Street; Tennyson; fact; great; little; note; time summary = like fairly to hang about a particular small hour of that momentous felt involved in the question of an effective experience of English life note of a London world that we have left far behind; in consequence of little act or event of life, and as therefore taking place on a scene I have found myself, my life long, attaching value to every noted thing of great persons are so little as any words of others are that I catch little to do with the matter; my point is but in its having on the spot for me least confusedly, I think, the vision of a dinner at Mrs. Greville''s--and I like even to remember that Cadogan Place, where again; noting simply the fact that "old" pretenders to the particular the old order, a renewed insistence on one''s having come just in time to id = 38035 author = James, Henry title = The Letters of Henry James, (Vol. II) date = keywords = Alice; August; Cambridge; Carlyle; Dearest; Dictated; Edith; Edmund; Edward; England; France; George; Gosse; HENRY; Harry; House; Hugh; JAMES; June; Lamb; London; Mansions; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Norris; Paris; Rye; S.W.; Thomas; Walk; Wells; Wharton; William; american; letter summary = years--and with many such good old homely, farmy New England things to unto _you_: England, poor old dear, having (to speak of) but one. three days ago an excellent letter in the _Times_ from Stanford itself don''t do such things, however, every day, thank goodness, and am having set to work upon A Small Boy and Others, and for a long time to come he get back to dear little old England, I shall never in my life leave it has lately come into possession of an admirable friend of mine, Mrs. Charles Hunter, who tells me that she happily knows you and that you I have received within a day or two dear old George Meredith''s Letters; days--I mean in this sympathetic little old house, which has somehow I think your so interesting letter of the other day most kind and Your good letter makes me feel that you will be interested to know that id = 37300 author = West, Rebecca title = Henry James date = keywords = American; England; Europe; Harper; Henry; Houghton; James; London; Macmillan; Mifflin; New; Osgood; life; thing summary = This European visit came to an end in 1859, and William and Henry James James published before his visit to Europe in 1869 that shows any of the James, as he said of Balzac, that "his figures, as a general thing, are That is the pure note of the early James, like a pipe played carefully America were as captivated by the clear beauty of Mr James'' work as in Life_ (1889), the tale of an innocent American girl who comes over to That Mr James continued to write about Americans in Europe long after The signs of age appeared in Mr James'' work like white streaks in a A Collection of Novels and Tales by Henry James was published by Messrs The New York Edition of the Novels and Tales of Mr Henry James was The New York Edition of the Novels and Tales of Mr Henry James was