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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 8908 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 78 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 keat 7 John 6 Mr. 6 Hunt 5 Shelley 5 London 5 Leigh 5 Haydon 5 Brown 4 man 4 Wordsworth 4 Lord 4 George 4 England 4 Endymion 3 like 3 letter 3 english 3 Tom 3 Taylor 3 St. 3 Spenser 3 Shakespeare 3 Reynolds 3 Quarterly 3 Miss 3 Milton 3 Hyperion 3 Hazlitt 3 Hampstead 3 God 3 Fanny 3 Eve 3 Clarke 3 Charles 3 Byron 3 Bailey 2 time 2 great 2 good 2 Severn 2 September 2 Rome 2 Review 2 Poetry 2 Mrs. 2 Mrs 2 Lamia 2 Italy 2 Dilke Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2423 keat 1580 time 1565 man 1257 day 1152 letter 1087 poet 1058 poem 1019 life 952 thing 933 friend 917 year 841 mind 802 book 730 poetry 681 work 676 word 638 p. 633 line 624 love 595 way 582 death 578 world 572 part 570 verse 536 passage 527 thought 514 nature 513 one 478 nothing 476 sonnet 472 spirit 465 brother 454 power 451 sense 446 hand 433 place 432 eye 429 volume 427 beauty 410 heart 349 name 337 woman 337 soul 334 feeling 327 note 327 matter 318 character 311 head 304 subject 304 night Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 14237 _ 2069 Keats 1679 Hunt 1149 Shelley 638 Mr. 595 Brown 560 Byron 554 Haydon 528 Endymion 497 Dante 495 John 494 Wordsworth 437 London 418 George 397 Leigh 363 Reynolds 363 Milton 307 Lord 304 Mr 303 God 296 Severn 291 Mrs. 266 Spenser 260 Miss 256 Hampstead 253 Blackwood 251 pp 242 c. 241 Dilke 238 KEATS 238 Fanny 235 Tom 235 England 233 thou 232 JOHN 226 Charles 212 Adonais 202 Hazlitt 199 Brawne 198 English 196 Clarke 195 Quarterly 190 Bailey 189 Hyperion 185 Examiner 181 Eve 173 April 167 Taylor 167 Sir 164 Scott Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 9822 i 8893 he 7127 it 3007 him 2975 you 2392 we 2124 me 2016 they 1400 them 1084 himself 1001 she 835 us 697 her 338 itself 321 myself 249 one 191 themselves 116 thee 79 herself 53 yours 49 yourself 40 mine 38 ourselves 28 his 19 theirs 17 thyself 14 ours 9 ye 8 ''em 6 ib 5 oneself 5 em 3 hers 2 yourselves 2 thy 2 southey 2 ne 2 ''s 1 ys 1 you--(i 1 whereof 1 us:-- 1 unconcern''d 1 togither-- 1 thus-- 1 this:-- 1 these:-- 1 thee-- 1 song,''--which 1 sin,"[129 Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 26267 be 10710 have 2580 do 1901 write 1819 say 1740 make 1729 see 1240 go 1212 know 1206 think 1135 take 1121 come 1112 give 921 find 844 seem 736 tell 649 leave 615 read 613 call 586 feel 563 get 542 begin 533 live 506 hear 485 speak 483 let 477 follow 476 show 448 become 431 look 428 put 425 appear 402 keep 402 bear 356 die 352 send 345 pass 322 bring 315 set 300 turn 299 use 286 stand 286 meet 284 publish 284 mean 269 like 269 hope 268 love 265 receive 260 believe Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5767 not 2159 so 1958 more 1363 first 1282 very 1194 great 1186 well 1151 other 1074 own 1042 now 1009 much 996 only 977 good 977 as 924 little 919 most 912 up 892 then 890 same 779 such 753 never 713 out 710 even 709 last 670 long 657 ever 653 here 624 many 607 too 586 old 570 far 547 again 525 early 507 young 475 fine 472 new 472 also 468 still 458 few 447 perhaps 435 on 432 rather 426 full 406 high 382 yet 380 almost 376 there 376 later 369 less 364 always Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 275 good 212 least 164 most 107 great 94 high 65 fine 61 bad 60 early 32 late 19 pure 18 slight 16 near 16 deep 16 Most 15 noble 14 eld 13 close 12 young 12 happy 12 full 11 manif 11 low 11 dear 10 strong 9 wise 9 sweet 9 lofty 8 weak 8 rich 8 fair 7 true 7 sure 7 rare 7 long 7 light 6 poor 6 pleasant 6 lively 6 large 5 small 5 common 5 bright 4 witty 4 warm 4 temp 4 sad 4 lovely 4 innermost 4 fierce 4 dr Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 755 most 39 well 20 least 2 youngest 2 fainest 1 worst 1 tempest 1 squarest 1 lines:-- 1 latest 1 hard 1 goethe 1 brightliest 1 bloomiest 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/files/35698/35698-h/35698-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/35698/35698-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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 28 _ see _ 15 _ see also 11 _ was not 11 keats was not 10 keats did not 7 _ is _ 6 man does not 5 hunt did not 5 hunt left prison 5 keats does not 5 keats is not 4 _ is not 4 _ was _ 4 keats had already 4 keats had not 4 keats was very 4 man has ever 4 poem is not 4 poetry comes not 4 shelley does not 4 world is full 3 _ be not 3 _ do _ 3 _ felt _ 3 book called _ 3 book is not 3 book is very 3 brown went on 3 death came on 3 death is life 3 hunt does not 3 hunt had not 3 keats goes on 3 keats has not 3 keats is here 3 keats was always 3 keats was back 3 man is capable 3 man is not 3 man is superior 3 man was ever 3 men say things 3 poem called _ 3 poem has not 3 poetry is unnatural 3 shelley was not 3 time went on 3 world is proveable 2 _ are _ 2 _ did _ Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 poetry comes not as 3 poem has not at 2 _ be not grand 2 _ was not yet 2 friends had no succour 2 hunt is not deep 2 keats makes no mention 2 keats showed no particular 2 time has not yet 1 _ come not home 1 _ had no better 1 _ had no enemies 1 _ had no versification 1 _ is not equal 1 _ leaving no trace 1 _ was not only 1 book is no doubt 1 book is not so 1 books are not bibliophiles 1 books are not dry 1 brown had not less 1 brown was not best 1 brown was not slow 1 days knew no italian 1 days was no rake 1 days were not more 1 death was not available 1 hunt had no original 1 hunt has not yet 1 keats did not however 1 keats did not then 1 keats did not very 1 keats did not yet 1 keats do not soon 1 keats does not generally 1 keats does not wholly 1 keats had no better 1 keats had no irritable 1 keats is no doubt 1 keats is not likely 1 keats was no doubt 1 keats was no servile 1 keats was not well 1 keats was not yet 1 letter having no date 1 letter leave no doubt 1 letters give no hint 1 letters make no mention 1 life had no definite 1 life is no more A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 30451 author = Byron, May title = A Day with Keats date = keywords = Brown; Fanny; day; keat; man; sweet; young summary = About eight o''clock one morning in early summer, a young man may be Full of sweet dreams, and health, and quiet breathing. brown hair falls loosely over those eyes, large, dark, glowing, which Who hath not seen thee oft amid thy store? Think not of them, thou hast thy music too, Think not of them, thou hast thy music too, The young man, with his sweet and Breakfast over, the business of the day begins: and that, with Keats, is But "men of genius," Keats himself has said, "are as great as certain If the truth be told, Fanny Brawne is a fairly good-looking young woman, Yet Keats is young, and youth means buoyancy. effect upon the man whose love of beauty in the abstract makes him a Fair youth, beneath the trees, thou canst not leave Than ours, a friend to man, to whom thou say''st, id = 36356 author = Colvin, Sidney title = Life of John Keats: His Life and Poetry, His Friends, Critics and After-Fame date = keywords = Agnes; Apollo; Bailey; Beauty; Blackwood; Brawne; Brown; Byron; Chapman; Charles; Chaucer; Clarke; Coleridge; Cowden; December; Dilke; Edinburgh; Elizabethan; Endymion; England; Eve; Fanny; George; Hampstead; Haydon; Hazlitt; Hunt; Hyperion; Isabella; Italy; John; Lamb; Lamia; Leigh; Lockhart; London; Milnes; Milton; Miss; Mrs; Ode; Oxford; Poems; Poetry; Reynolds; Rome; Scott; Severn; Shakespeare; Shelley; Sleep; Spenser; Taylor; Thomas; Tom; William; Woodhouse; Wordsworth; english; greek; keat; letter summary = Let it be remembered moreover that the years of Keats''s school days and About the same time as Keats another young member of Hunt''s circle, John Some time after the turn of the year we find Keats presented with a copy Thy thoughts, dear Keats, are like fresh-gathered leaves, Turning to Keats''s next favourite among the old poets, William Browne of official form of verse; and among the most admired poets of Keats''s day, Quite in the last days of his visit Keats, whose mind and critical power its relation to the works of certain other poets and poems of Keats''s Pan no longer as a shepherd''s god but as a symbol of the World-All. Wordsworth, when Keats at the request of friends read the piece to him, admiration of other men.[3] One day early in the new year Keats took The work of Keats''s two mature years (if any poet or man in his id = 41688 author = Colvin, Sidney title = Keats date = keywords = Bailey; Brown; Charles; Clarke; Endymion; Eve; George; Hampstead; Haydon; Houghton; Hunt; Hyperion; Jennings; John; Leigh; London; MSS; Milton; Mrs; Reynolds; Severn; Shelley; Spenser; Taylor; Tom; Wordsworth; english; keat; time; write summary = 3. Life, Letters, and Literary Remains of John Keats. The Poetical Works and other Writings of John Keats. Thomas Keats was noticed in his life-time as a man of the most intimate friend of Keats during two later years of his life, Keats, being now nearly nineteen years of age, went to live in London, and In matters of poetic feeling and fancy Keats and Hunt had not a little in Libertas,'' meaning Leigh Hunt, in the verses written by Keats at this It was also at Hunt''s house that Keats for the first time met by about the same time as Keats, John Hamilton Reynolds also wrote him a irregular cast of beauty, and Keats on his own account had a great liking Keats''s friend Bailey had by this time taken his Haydon says to me, Keats, don''t show your lines to Hunt on any account, or id = 35698 author = Keats, John title = Letters of John Keats to His Family and Friends date = keywords = Abbey; April; BENJAMIN; Bailey; Book; Brown; Charles; December; Dilke; England; Fanny; February; George; God; HAMILTON; Hampstead; Haslam; Haydon; Hazlitt; Hunt; JOHN; January; July; KEATS; London; Lord; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; October; Place; Poetry; Reynolds; Rice; September; Shakspeare; St.; Street; Sunday; Taylor; Tom; Town; Wordsworth; brother; letter; man; mind summary = other members of the poet''s circle enjoyed unusual length of days--Mr. William Dilke, for instance, dying a few years ago at ninety, and Mr. Gleig, long Chaplain-General of the Forces, at ninety-two. Endymion, which I hope I shall have got some way with by the time you However in a few Letters I hope I shall be able to come letter gave me a great pleasure, for I think the invalid is in a better hope that, when a little time, a few years, shall have tried me more fully My dear Reynolds--I have parcelled out this day for Letter Writing--more My dear Brothers--When once a man delays a letter beyond the proper time, Mrs. Burns lives in this place; most likely we shall see her It looks so much like rain I shall not go to town to-day: but put it off know about them--Your Letter shall be answered like an echo. id = 8509 author = Lowell, James Russell title = Among My Books. Second Series date = keywords = Beatrice; Church; Coleridge; Commedia; Convito; Dante; England; English; Faery; Florence; God; III; Inferno; Italy; John; Lib; Lord; Masson; Milton; Monarchia; Mr.; Paradiso; Purgatorio; Queen; Shakespeare; Sir; Spenser; Vita; Wordsworth; christian; good; great; italian; keat; life; like; man; poem; poet; verse summary = the great triumvirate of Italian poetry, good sense, and culture called life of Dante, that Alighiero the father was still living when the poet certainly true, that the council and influence of Dante were of great time of Spenser, who, like Milton fifty years later, shows that he had The truth is, that it was only as a poet that Dante was great and Like all great artistic minds, Dante was essentially conservative, and, to Dante at this time,--the plan of the great poem for whose completion Perhaps it seems little to say that Dante was the first great poet who that he calls Dante "the great poet of Itaille," while in the [177] In his own comment Dante says, "I tell whither goes my thought, Wordsworth, like most solitary men of strong minds, was a good critic of Like Dante, Milton was forced to become a party by himself. id = 35733 author = Miller, Barnette title = Leigh Hunt''s Relations with Byron, Shelley and Keats date = keywords = April; August; Blackwood; Byron; Cockney; Contemporaries; Correspondence; Examiner; Haydon; Hazlitt; Hunt; Ibid; John; Journals; Keats; Leigh; Letters; Life; Literary; London; Lord; Moore; Mr.; Quarterly; Rimini; Shelley; Story; Works; York summary = The relations of Leigh Hunt to Byron, Shelley and Keats have been treated relations of Leigh Hunt with Byron, Shelley, and Keats, a brief survey of Lord Byron, Shelley and Leigh Hunt feeling."[3] Like Shelley, Hunt had so great an inclination to Hunt, like Byron and Shelley, had curious ideas about the relation of the The influence of Hunt''s poetry upon Keats and Shelley, in its general influence of Hunt''s diction and versification upon Keats and Shelley is Examiner_ of June 1, 1817, in Hunt''s review of Keats''s _Poems_ of 1817, ultra-liberalism," he, like Hunt, Byron and Shelley continued to wear the state of affairs between Byron and Shelley must have given Hunt great until your arrival."[374] April 10, Shelley wrote again to Hunt of Byron''s articles--Members of the Cockney group--Byron--Hunt--Keats--Shelley-Hunt, Shelley, Hazlitt and Keats were the chief targets in the Cockney Hunt''s services of friendship to Byron, Shelley and Keats, his able id = 31682 author = Rossetti, William Michael title = Life of John Keats date = keywords = Agnes; Brawne; Brown; Clarke; Endymion; Eve; George; Haydon; Hunt; John; Lamia; Leigh; London; Lord; Magazine; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Quarterly; Review; September; Shelley; St.; keat; work summary = Byron, Hunt, George Keats, Cowden Clarke, Severn; publicly announced that a life of Keats, which had been begun by Mr. Sidney Colvin long before for a different series, would be published at far as his school course extended, John Keats remained for some years. Hunts, Haydon, and Ollier, Keats had known John Hamilton Reynolds, his At the time when Keats wrote these words he had known Miss Brawne for a Something may here be said of the love-letters of Keats to Fanny Brawne. In February 1818 Keats, Leigh Hunt, and Shelley, undertook to write a The one great craving of Keats, before the love for Miss Brawne seen, one of Keats''s letters to Miss Brawne, written in 1820, contains Keats''s love-letters to her, 45-46, &c.; 53, 57, 60, 62, 102; ---Life and Letters of John Keats. ---Life and Letters of John Keats. id = 10119 author = Shelley, Percy Bysshe title = Adonais date = keywords = Adonais; Bion; Byron; Elegy; Endymion; Harriet; Hunt; Hyperion; John; Leigh; Moschus; Mr.; Pisa; Quarterly; Review; Rome; Shelley; Stanza; Urania; death; keat; like summary = young poet [Keats] long when Shelley and he became acquainted under my date, 4th February, that Keats, Shelley, and Hunt wrote each a sonnet on who was Keats''s friend from boyhood, writes: ''When Shelley left England Shelley''s feeling as to Keats''s final volume of poems is further volume: ''Keats, I hope, is going to show himself a great poet; like the of Shelley, Keats was principally and above all the poet of _Hyperion_; Shelley supposed that Keats was twenty-three years old at the beginning Shelley is here glancing at a leading incident in Keats''s poem of I give Shelley''s words ''true love tears'' as they appear in the therefore Shelley seems to intimate that the mind or soul of Adonais is British poets, whom Shelley represents as mourning the death of Keats. the deaths of William Shelley and of Keats; but I think the purport of id = 21272 author = Vincent, Leon H. (Leon Henry) title = The Bibliotaph, and Other People date = keywords = Bibliotaph; Dr.; England; Euphues; Gautier; God; Hardy; Heber; John; Lyly; Mr.; Priestley; Shakespeare; St.; Stevenson; book; english; good; great; keat; letter; like; man; read; time summary = one who has ever read the volume called _Books and Bookmen_ knows The name of Heber suggests the thought that all men who buy books are letter.'' He knew the solid comfort to be had in reading a book of like mind with his guests, said, ''The Bibliotaph doesn''t care for her holiday gifts for a certain year was a book from the Bibliotaph, a But in hunting rare books the time will be sure to come good-natured the great farmer-editor was; how he called the Bibliotaph collector could not be made happy in any other Way. The Bibliotaph liked the autograph of the modern man of letters Another time the Bibliotaph said to the Squire, calling to mind the A man''s choice of books, like One would like to know whether a first reading in the letters of Keats given occasion for an anecdote like that told of a certain book-loving