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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 12 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 72307 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 88 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Miss 3 Mrs. 3 Mrs 3 Mary 2 french 2 ebook 2 Wynn 2 Wye 2 Wingate 2 Shenstone 2 San 2 Ryecroft 2 Rugg 2 Rome 2 Rogier 2 Murdock 2 Morgan 2 Monsieur 2 Major 2 Mahon 2 Llangorren 2 Linton 2 Lewin 2 Lees 2 Joe 2 Jack 2 Herefordshire 2 Gwendoline 2 Gwen 2 Giacinto 2 George 2 Ferry 2 Father 2 Donna 2 Dick 2 Dempsey 2 Court 2 Coracle 2 Captain 2 Boulogne 1 time 1 room 1 roman 1 mother 1 look 1 like 1 know 1 italian 1 good 1 feel Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1899 man 1729 time 1241 day 1202 way 1128 thing 1047 eye 1011 one 1001 hand 952 face 924 word 896 mother 875 room 758 something 747 nothing 702 night 687 place 680 child 669 life 668 woman 667 house 619 boat 567 moment 552 head 551 girl 529 anything 519 door 508 friend 507 hour 504 thought 491 people 491 heart 477 matter 461 father 457 side 447 mind 440 world 428 voice 428 love 401 lady 383 year 379 name 375 table 374 morning 373 Lilac 357 part 355 wife 351 o 349 reason 342 question 336 river Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3200 _ 849 Ghisleri 769 Rosy 676 Miss 648 Laura 533 Giovanni 509 Adele 483 Mrs 473 Bee 466 Corona 461 Belle 454 Faustina 451 San 443 Giacinto 428 Ryecroft 420 Mabel 396 Gouache 394 Arden 357 Wynn 343 Captain 334 Mary 330 Llangorren 325 Jack 305 Montevarchi 290 Mrs. 284 Saracinesca 278 Wingate 242 Lilac 235 Savelli 234 Donna 229 Murdock 214 Shenstone 214 Herbert 211 Edgar 207 Agnetta 205 Gwen 202 Mr 199 Peter 196 Grange 192 Rome 191 Ellis 189 Pietro 188 Court 187 Rogier 181 John 176 Morgan 172 Mr. 171 Greenways 171 Beata 169 ye Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 12959 he 12237 it 9993 i 9815 she 8230 you 4110 him 3632 her 2777 they 2180 me 1926 them 1228 himself 1170 we 806 herself 396 us 255 itself 226 yourself 217 myself 198 one 179 themselves 133 ''em 55 hers 51 his 45 yours 35 ''s 29 mine 28 ourselves 26 em 22 ye 12 hisself 10 yerself 10 thee 10 ours 9 theirs 5 you''ll 5 oneself 5 i''m 5 ha 4 wi 3 yourselves 3 out,-- 3 on''t 2 you''re 2 volens_--we''ll 2 thy 2 s 2 on''y 2 if''t 2 au 1 yet"--his 1 we''m Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 32685 be 14119 have 5884 do 4618 say 2765 go 2513 know 2455 see 2332 make 2024 think 1977 come 1838 take 1585 look 1416 tell 1257 give 1027 ask 1004 get 994 feel 964 find 897 seem 895 speak 873 hear 844 leave 747 stand 656 bring 643 turn 640 keep 631 answer 622 believe 593 call 538 let 529 pass 523 want 513 like 504 love 494 mean 485 put 474 begin 471 sit 465 show 464 suppose 443 hold 434 wish 425 try 419 talk 389 return 373 draw 359 understand 359 grow 359 follow 358 send Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 9905 not 3158 so 2242 very 2009 more 1912 now 1739 little 1659 up 1594 then 1515 good 1476 only 1373 well 1316 out 1245 much 1192 other 1169 too 1063 long 1031 old 1028 never 1001 still 981 again 947 own 936 as 914 there 899 even 877 last 851 down 825 first 818 just 812 back 764 all 763 great 754 away 737 almost 685 such 675 young 671 once 652 quite 627 ever 622 same 593 enough 574 here 563 far 555 most 553 soon 539 off 536 on 515 many 508 few 491 always 488 yet Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 319 least 304 good 191 most 57 slight 47 great 44 bad 28 high 24 small 22 late 19 near 14 strong 13 short 12 old 12 big 11 young 11 fine 10 eld 9 wise 9 keen 9 grand 9 faint 9 dear 8 happy 8 deep 7 wild 7 strange 7 low 7 early 7 Most 6 mere 6 large 6 bright 5 weak 5 topmost 5 sure 5 smart 5 simple 5 poor 5 l 5 hard 4 warm 4 true 4 sharp 4 rich 4 pleasant 4 j 4 innermost 4 gaudy 4 common 4 choice Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 364 most 36 well 27 least 4 worst 2 latest 1 near 1 greatest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/1531 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/100 Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 16 _ is _ 15 _ do n''t 12 _ did _ 11 _ was _ 9 _ do _ 8 _ are _ 8 lilac did not 7 ghisleri was not 7 laura did not 7 laura was not 6 rosy did not 6 rosy was not 5 face was very 5 ghisleri did not 5 lilac was not 5 one does not 4 _ be _ 4 _ did n''t 4 _ had _ 4 _ has _ 4 _ have _ 4 eyes were full 4 ghisleri went away 4 men are now 4 mother did not 4 one had ever 4 rosy came in 4 rosy looked up 3 face was not 3 laura had never 3 life had not 3 men did not 3 mother came in 3 mother had not 3 mother was not 3 one did not 3 things are not 3 time goes on 3 time went on 2 _ am _ 2 _ are all 2 _ are not 2 _ are now 2 _ are scarcer 2 _ been careless 2 _ come _ 2 _ does _ 2 _ has never 2 _ have n''t 2 _ having seats Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 house is not uninhabited 2 ones are not there 2 thing seems no nearer 2 things are not quite 1 child are not dependent 1 eyes had not yet 1 face told no tale 1 face was not unbeautiful 1 ghisleri had no hope 1 ghisleri had not really 1 ghisleri is no worse 1 ghisleri made no reference 1 ghisleri made no sign 1 ghisleri saw no one 1 ghisleri was not therefore 1 girl is not always 1 girl was no longer 1 laura had not yet 1 laura heard no more 1 laura was not far 1 laura was not there 1 laura was not yet 1 lilac got no praise 1 lilac had no idea 1 lilac heard no more 1 lilac made no answer 1 lilac made no reply 1 lilac took no more 1 lilac was not quite 1 man gets no such 1 man made no answer 1 men did not really 1 mother did not yet 1 mother had not yet 1 mother made no reply 1 mother made no response 1 mother took no notice 1 mother was not able 1 one did not always 1 one has no reason 1 one was not openly 1 place is not fit 1 room is not exercise 1 rosy ''s not cross 1 rosy did not now 1 rosy gave no signs 1 rosy made no answer 1 rosy was not cunning 1 rosy was not fond 1 rosy was not greedy A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 40922 author = Crawford, F. Marion (Francis Marion) title = Pietro Ghisleri date = keywords = Adele; Arden; Campodonico; Carlyon; Contessa; Donna; Francesco; Gerano; Ghisleri; Giacinto; Gianforte; Herbert; Lady; Laura; Lord; Lucia; Maddalena; Maria; Pietro; Princess; Rome; San; Savelli summary = "Who is that, Ghisleri?" asked Lord Herbert Arden of his old friend, one Ghisleri suddenly grew thoughtful and a distant look came into his eyes, "My dear Ghisleri," said Arden, interrupting him, "we were talking about Francesco Savelli was said to be in love with Laura Carlyon. "I do not like it at all," said Laura Carlyon to Arden, as they left the stories concerning Lord Herbert Arden, Laura Carlyon, Pietro Ghisleri, course, my dear Ghisleri, I know what a splendid man Lord Herbert is, in Laura thought of what Arden had told her for a long time afterwards, and To let Donna Adele know that both Laura and Arden were quite "Good morning, my dear Arden," said Savelli, taking his hand. Ghisleri was in love with Laura Arden, it was natural enough that he years after the day on which Pietro Ghisleri said good-bye to the id = 5227 author = Crawford, F. Marion (Francis Marion) title = Sant'' Ilario date = keywords = Anastase; Corona; Donna; Excellency; Faustina; Flavia; Garibaldi; Giacinto; Giovanni; Gouache; Ilario; Leone; Marchese; Meschini; Montevarchi; Palazzo; Prince; Rome; San; Sant; Saracinesca; Signor; Zouave; good; italian; roman summary = Instead of taking her father''s arm, Donna Faustina turned and looked at "You know Gouache?" asked old Prince Saracinesca, in a tone which "Faustina ran over him," said Flavia, fixing her dark eyes on Giovanni Giovanni looked at Faustina, but her thin fresh face expressed nothing, Giovanni Saracinesca, Marchese di San Giacinto, looked curiously at his That young man took Donna Faustina''s hand and held it for "Let us be quick," said Corona, repeating Gouache''s words. "Giovanni," said Corona, gravely, laying her two hands on his He had seen Gouache kiss Corona''s hand in a corner of the drawing-room, When San Giacinto heard Corona''s explanation of Faustina''s "Donna Faustina is too young," said San Giacinto, calmly. But San Giacinto looks like a determined man. the hopefulness of a man thoroughly in love, Gouache looked forward to "Montevarchi looked as though he knew it," said Giovanni. id = 21317 author = Fenn, George Manville title = A Life''s Eclipse date = keywords = Barnett; Ellis; Grange; John; Mary; Mostyn; Mrs; Tummus summary = "Oh, indeed," said James Ellis sarcastically, "but poor old Dunton is Yes, I think so, Tummus," said the young man, turning to the dry, "Think so, Tummus?" said John Grange, with a forced smile. "Aye, that''s what I think, sir," said the old man, and then showing his John Grange walked away toward the head-gardener''s cottage to ask for "Poor old Dunton!" said John Grange to himself; "we shall miss him when Daniel Barnett, old Tummus, and Mary Ellis''s father at the foot of the "Do you hear, John Grange?" said Barnett. "Yes," said Mrs Mostyn, who was thinking of the poor fellow lying at "It never felt so beautiful before, old man," said John Grange sadly. "I do, old fellow," said John Grange quietly. "Yes, Mr Ellis, sir, that''s what I tell him," said old Hannah "James Ellis," said Mrs Mostyn gravely, "you are Mary''s father, and id = 46123 author = Mathews, Joanna H. (Joanna Hooe) title = Belle Powers'' Locket date = keywords = Ashton; Belle; Bessie; Bradford; Daphne; Mabel; Maggie; Miss; Mrs.; Walton summary = If Bessie said a thing, it must be so, according to Belle''s thinking; "Yes," said Belle, eagerly; "and the ofer day Maggie and Bessie''s papa turn out Mabel and her mamma," said Belle; "and I''m going to be very away, little miss," said Daphne, spitefully; for Mabel''s new whim did "Oh, yes!" said Belle: "I found that out; because to-day, when Mabel "I want a locket like Belle''s to keep for my own," said Mabel; "and "But, Belle, dear," said Dora, "what''s the reason you don''t want Mabel "Did you find any thing of my locket, Miss Ashton?" asked little Belle, "Mabel," said Mrs. Walton, suddenly, "did you see Belle''s locket after "You do not believe what Mabel says, Miss Ashton?" said Mrs. Walton. Mabel," said Belle, "Miss Ashton''s nose don''t turn up. "I think it was Belle that made me a better girl," said Mabel: "she id = 6676 author = Molesworth, Mrs. title = Rosy date = keywords = Beata; Bee; Fixie; Miss; Mrs.; Rosy; Vincent summary = said her mother, smiling a little sadly, as she drew Rosy to her. "I think we should take Beata upstairs to her room, Rosy," she said. "That must be it," said Rosy''s mother, who was too kind to feel vexed "But I don''t think I do feel lonely," said Bee, sitting up and looking "_I_ think she''s very kind," said Bee, "but I don''t like to say A little feeling of pain went through Bee. Perhaps Rosy _was_ "I''ll tell you," said Rosy, "but won''t you get into my bed a little, "But you do care, Rosy," said Bee, "I know you care. "But you won''t get good all of a sudden, Rosy," said Bee, feeling "Rosy''s only in fun, Fixie," said Bee. "Bee is right, Rosy," she said, her rather dolly-looking face flushing "What are you doing in Miss Rosy''s drawers?" said Nelson; and Bee, id = 35196 author = Reid, Mayne title = Gwen Wynn: A Romance of the Wye date = keywords = Boulogne; Captain; Chapter; Coracle; Court; Dempsey; Dick; Father; Ferry; George; Gwen; Gwendoline; Herefordshire; Jack; Joe; Lees; Lewin; Linton; Llangorren; Mahon; Major; Mary; Miss; Monsieur; Morgan; Mrs; Murdock; Rogier; Rugg; Ryecroft; Shenstone; Wingate; Wye; Wynn; french; know summary = Stepping into the boat, the other Gwendoline takes the oars, Miss Lees the same time he observes two boats approaching the little dock, where After a time, he again observes:--"You''ve said you don''t know the ladies Men as think that way a''nt like to stick at any sort of If the young lady be anythin'' like''s good-lookin'' as Mary Morgan--" "Not now; you shall know in good time--when you meet me with the boat. "Captain Ryecroft" and "Miss Wynn," instead of "Vivian" and "Gwen!" It "There was a day, Miss Wynn, when, standing on this spot, I thought "Wonder whose boat can be on the river this time o'' night--mornin'', I Captain Ryecroft, looking towards the door still ajar, sees a face Llangorren Court, by the boat-stair, and he knows the people now living the house, did not re-enter; his oars were in the boat, having just come id = 35784 author = Reid, Mayne title = Gwen Wynn: A Romance of the Wye date = keywords = Boulogne; CHAPTER; Captain; Coracle; Court; Dempsey; Dick; Father; Ferry; George; Glyngog; Gwen; Gwendoline; Herefordshire; Jack; Joe; Lees; Lewin; Linton; Llangorren; Mahon; Major; Mary; Miss; Monsieur; Morgan; Mr.; Mrs.; Murdock; Rogier; Rugg; Ryecroft; Shenstone; Wingate; Wye; Wynn; french summary = times so at the end of Captain Ryecroft''s line and rod; he having there "Joe, old boy, Miss Lees and I are going for a row; but, as the day''s Stepping into the boat, the other Gwendoline takes the oars, Miss Lees to the boat-dock in good time, and give Joseph the cue to hold his same time he observes two boats approaching the little dock, where but Men as think that way a''nt like to stick at any sort of "Not now; you shall know in good time--when you meet me with the boat. "Captain Ryecroft" and "Miss Wynn," instead of "Vivian" and "Gwen"! "There was a day, Miss Wynn, when, standing on this spot, I thought "Wonder whose boat can be on the river this time o'' night--mornin'', I the house, did not re-enter; his oars were in the boat, having just come id = 1127 author = Shakespeare, William title = The Tragedy of Othello, Moor of Venice date = keywords = ebook summary = THIS EBOOK WAS ONE OF PROJECT GUTENBERG''S EARLY FILES PRODUCED AT A TIME WHEN PROOFING METHODS AND TOOLS WERE NOT WELL DEVELOPED. IS AN IMPROVED EDITION OF THIS TITLE WHICH MAY BE VIEWED AS EBOOK (#100) at https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/100 id = 1793 author = Shakespeare, William title = Othello date = keywords = ebook summary = THIS EBOOK WAS ONE OF PROJECT GUTENBERG''S EARLY FILES PRODUCED AT A TIME WHEN PROOFING METHODS AND TOOLS WERE NOT WELL DEVELOPED. IS AN IMPROVED EDITION OF THIS TITLE WHICH MAY BE VIEWED AS EBOOK (#1531) at https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/1531 id = 21228 author = Walton, Amy title = White Lilac; or the Queen of the May date = keywords = Agnetta; Bella; Ben; Greenways; Joshua; Leigh; Lilac; Mother; Mrs; Peter; Queen; Uncle; White; Wishing summary = "How pretty your flowers grow!" said Lilac, stopping to look at it with Lilac felt that hers must be a vulgar taste as Agnetta said so, but "You''re _quite_ sure it''ll make me look better?" said Lilac wistfully. picture," Mrs Greenways had said it would be, and, no doubt, Lilac "I ain''t," said Lilac desperately, taking away her hands from her face "Good night, Peter," said Lilac at length, nodding to him, and this "They''ve been and chosen Lilac White; sneaking little thing!" said "Well, you look happy anyhow, Lilac White," she said mournfully. "Well now," said Mrs Pinhorn, "I will say Lilac looks as peart and neat It was just there she had turned to look at Mother on May Day. What a long, long time ago, and what a different Lilac she felt now! "Look here, Lilac," said Mrs Greenways carelessly, "you''ve been a good id = 45755 author = Zweig, Stefan title = The Burning Secret date = keywords = Edgar; baron; child; eye; feel; like; look; mother; room; time summary = It interested the baron to watch the child, and he looked on smiling as the baron promptly elicited that Edgar''s mother had expressed herself as The baron smiled as he looked after the boy dashing away. "Edgar," his mother interposed, "don''t forget that the baron can do air right down between him and the baron, his mother said, glancing at Edgar''s mother stayed at table with the baron a while longer. Edgar gave no smile, but looked at the baron with a yearning, searching The baron and Edgar''s mother were both sensible of a dumb opposition in The mother left the room with the baron, and Edgar followed behind, not his mother said to Edgar in the hall, while the baron was outside "You will ask the baron''s pardon." Edgar gave a start, but his mother Edgar, the whole time, had kept looking at his mother.