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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 11 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 9896 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 71 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Mr. 5 England 4 Lord 4 Ireland 3 irish 3 United 3 State 3 Parliament 3 Government 3 God 3 Dublin 3 Act 2 british 2 William 2 Union 2 Ulster 2 Society 2 Rule 2 Miss 2 London 2 Land 2 Kingdom 2 King 2 House 2 Home 2 Henry 2 Great 2 Frank 2 Elizabeth 2 Daly 2 Court 2 Commission 2 Britain 2 Board 2 Bill 1 poor 1 law 1 good 1 footnote 1 english 1 common 1 Wyndham 1 VIII 1 University 1 Unionist 1 Tyrone 1 Tyrconnel 1 Trench 1 Tom 1 Sussex Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2094 man 1727 land 1475 time 1358 year 1005 country 971 people 954 law 939 tenant 909 day 825 rent 741 power 738 way 731 part 712 case 707 word 695 money 691 father 684 house 675 landlord 670 nothing 667 thing 642 hand 614 system 599 right 582 place 548 property 541 life 499 question 485 state 471 work 460 order 452 person 445 fact 431 friend 423 mind 422 matter 421 brother 412 estate 411 subject 401 interest 393 duty 392 rate 389 class 383 one 381 head 379 member 376 room 375 condition 372 policy 367 government Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2884 Ireland 2619 _ 1986 Mr. 1258 Lord 1095 Irish 715 Parliament 704 England 611 Act 508 Government 507 Frank 483 Home 475 Barry 453 Rule 451 Indians 448 Anty 424 Fanny 419 Mr 397 Martin 396 Jones 389 Land 379 Sir 375 House 371 Ballindine 368 lord 356 Daly 339 United 331 Union 329 Great 311 Britain 309 Miss 307 Dublin 298 Commission 295 Lynch 291 State 281 Rachel 277 County 273 Edith 272 Kelly 271 Bill 260 Captain 257 Ulster 257 Court 256 English 251 Cashel 249 Moss 249 Catholic 241 Kingdom 234 O''Mahony 232 Gladstone 228 God Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 9667 it 9136 he 8423 i 5754 you 4312 they 3374 she 3364 him 2430 them 2017 we 1620 me 1457 her 847 himself 621 us 412 herself 371 themselves 224 myself 206 itself 188 yourself 75 one 60 ourselves 34 mine 27 yours 26 ''em 18 hers 15 his 14 theirs 7 ''s 6 em 5 yourselves 5 thee 5 ours 5 hisself 4 ye 4 i''m 3 oneself 3 d''you 2 you''re 1 £2,451,346 1 yourself.--learn 1 yestherday 1 yerself 1 ve 1 trench:-- 1 tietjens,--they 1 them,--she 1 ten 1 standi_--they 1 she''ll 1 says--''_they 1 saying-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 38041 be 14856 have 5412 do 3783 say 2734 make 1825 go 1703 think 1670 know 1539 give 1531 come 1502 take 1472 see 1159 tell 1101 get 816 find 763 pay 685 leave 633 become 591 hear 577 look 576 call 574 feel 570 bring 544 put 528 ask 510 let 481 want 476 hold 476 follow 468 believe 461 keep 447 speak 424 live 421 pass 411 send 404 carry 402 show 395 seem 373 suppose 367 wish 366 mean 361 write 355 receive 346 remain 342 turn 333 appear 324 stand 314 marry 308 begin 306 exist Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 8595 not 2689 so 1759 irish 1739 more 1610 very 1515 now 1388 well 1381 then 1354 other 1349 only 1276 much 1242 great 1214 own 1190 up 1165 good 1122 such 1074 as 988 most 890 out 866 many 845 never 826 poor 814 even 771 little 753 same 753 first 727 too 702 still 700 long 651 down 644 here 589 again 573 last 566 there 554 old 546 ever 540 however 525 also 509 large 500 all 499 far 480 just 478 present 464 bad 439 whole 437 away 435 few 427 new 418 young 411 yet Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 342 good 242 least 201 most 99 great 97 bad 47 high 25 strong 25 eld 24 slight 24 large 19 near 18 poor 18 able 16 low 14 deep 13 full 12 manif 11 young 10 simple 10 rich 10 Most 9 warm 9 small 9 fine 9 early 9 bitter 8 late 8 big 7 dear 6 wise 6 sure 6 long 6 grave 6 cheap 5 noble 5 brave 4 true 4 sweet 4 old 4 close 4 chief 4 bright 3 wide 3 vile 3 sharp 3 sad 3 rude 3 mean 3 heavy 3 gross Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 787 most 37 well 34 least 2 worst 2 says:-- 2 said:-- 1 section:-- 1 other,--almost 1 lest 1 illness,--which 1 hard 1 brightest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net 1 www.bnf.fr 1 visualiseur.bnf.fr Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/7/1/4/17148/17148-h/17148-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/7/1/4/17148/17148-h.zip 1 http://www.bnf.fr/ 1 http://visualiseur.bnf.fr/Visualiseur?nompage=WEBCCACAT&lan=FR&adr=68.96.117.117&Interne=false&O=30000000276083&Notice=37572002& Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 ireland was not 6 _ is _ 6 moneys are insufficient 5 _ are _ 5 ireland is not 4 _ see _ 4 men were not 4 people are not 3 _ do _ 3 _ was _ 3 father did n''t 3 father had not 3 father is not 3 father was not 3 ireland are not 3 ireland has never 3 ireland was still 3 land was not 3 law does not 3 man did not 3 man does not 3 parliament was nominally 3 people were not 3 tenants became owners 3 things went on 2 _ did _ 2 _ have _ 2 country is so 2 country was not 2 country were progressively 2 days gone by 2 england did not 2 father has not 2 father is present 2 father was still 2 ireland are well 2 ireland being mainly 2 ireland did not 2 ireland do not 2 ireland does not 2 ireland has always 2 ireland has not 2 ireland have not 2 ireland is much 2 ireland is so 2 ireland is still 2 ireland made nearly 2 ireland made shire 2 ireland were thus 2 land does not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ is no disadvantage 1 _ were not _ 1 country was not nearly 1 day is not far 1 england has no right 1 father had not yet 1 father is not here 1 fathers did not much 1 house was not as 1 ireland are not likely 1 ireland are not only 1 ireland did not much 1 ireland had no oxford 1 ireland has no valid 1 ireland is no friend 1 ireland is not altogether 1 ireland is not prosperous 1 ireland is not so 1 ireland pays no land 1 ireland was not as 1 ireland was not common 1 ireland was not exact 1 ireland was not excessively 1 ireland was not yet 1 land is not only 1 land was not too 1 land was not worth 1 landlord is not rich 1 landlords are not just 1 lands is not far 1 law is not strictly 1 law was no doubt 1 law were not merely 1 laws give no preference 1 laws were no longer 1 man had no reason 1 man was not worth 1 man were not ready 1 men do not always 1 men having no interest 1 men were no longer 1 men were not capable 1 men were not guilty,--by 1 money had no eend 1 money was no more 1 money was not forthcoming 1 money was not plentiful 1 parliament had no direct 1 parliament were no real 1 parliament were not yet A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 12486 author = Apess, William title = Indian Nullification of the Unconstitutional Laws of Massachusetts Relative to the Marshpee Tribe Or, the Pretended Riot Explained date = keywords = Apes; Barnstable; Boston; Court; Fish; Governor; House; Indians; Legislature; Marshpee; Massachusetts; Mr.; Overseers; State; William summary = friend of the Indian as well as of the white man, has raised up among fact the Marshpee Indians, to whom our laws have denied all rights of WILLIAM APES, an Indian preacher, of the Pequod tribe, regularly white man had that power over the Indian which knowledge and superior Marshpee Indians to avoid the meeting-house, if it did not belong to whites to take the gospel from the Indians, as they do in Marshpee, Marshpee Indians, and as we verily believe that tribe is in William Apes and the Marshpee Indians, who were tried before PETITION OF THE MARSHPEE TRIBE OF INDIANS. Indian lands have been taken to support schools for the whites, and But from that day, until the year 1834, the Marshpee Indians Indians, but in which Mr. Fish now preaches to the whites, (having but Are the Indians at Marshpee, protected in the same manner the whites id = 3799 author = Fisher, Joseph, F.R.H.S. title = Landholding in England date = keywords = Cap; Crown; Edward; Elizabeth; England; FREEMEN; HOMINES; Henry; King; LIBERI; Norman; Romans; VIII; William; law summary = Sir William Blackstone places the possession of land upon a different tenures, says: "The first English king divided the land into four parts. FREEMEN shall have and hold their lands and possessions in hereditary William I., yet it does not follow that the king took all the lands of years, the King retained the lands till the heir attained the age of holding lands of the king by knight''s service in chief were authorized Persons holding lands of the king by Persons holding lands of the king by according to common law in like manner as lands held by knight''s Land, arose the system of POOR LAWS. The changes effected in the land laws of England during the reigns of the claim which is set up of property in land, but the following law of likely to effect any great alteration in the land laws. id = 14562 author = Godkin, James title = The Land-War in Ireland: A History for the Times date = keywords = Armagh; Castle; Catholics; Connaught; Derry; Dublin; Earl; Elizabeth; England; English; Froude; God; Government; Henry; Hertfort; Ireland; James; John; King; London; Lord; Lough; Mr.; O''Neill; Pale; Protestants; Queen; Shane; Shirley; Sir; Society; Spain; Sussex; Trench; Tyrconnel; Tyrone; Ulster; footnote; irish summary = Irish Tenant League, which held great county meetings in most parts of lands of the O''Neills, ''_but held by tenants having estates in them rents the tenants of said lands were accustomed to pay, but they found had a number of tenants, who held their lands ''by lease of years for righting men among the Irish was continued till 1629, when the lord lord deputy, giving to his work the title, ''The Overthrow of an Irish and, as we have seen, the lord deputy promised the people ''estates'' in the Irish nation, all English and Protestants having lands there, who 1641''--the very year in which the Irish Houses of Lords and Commons with the working of the Irish land system, for he had been many years large proportion of the Irish House of Lords consisted of men who were large estates, and as a landlord, on the Irish land question. id = 59654 author = Hill, Octavia title = Our Common Land (and Other Short Essays) date = keywords = Act; Board; Charity; England; God; London; Organisation; Parliament; Society; common; good; poor summary = of open space you have left to these people is needed; take care you taking the place of a Common right over a little bit of English soil? duty to the poor was supposed to consist in giving large alms; once, individual gentle help which is so often needed in cases coming before about poor-law relief, little about the thousand and one societies for cover all the ground, and there is no place for the poor man''s cottage. gifts of open spaces to be made for the rich and poor to share alike in There are two great wants in the life of the poor of our large towns, workmen''s clubs, and, in fact, all common meeting-places of the poor, of small open spaces quite near the homes of the poor, than of their meeting-place, where workers for the poor shall be able to learn each id = 37853 author = Morris, William O''Connor title = Present Irish Questions date = keywords = Act; Bill; Britain; Catholic; Commission; Commons; County; England; Gladstone; Government; Great; Home; House; Ireland; Kingdom; Land; League; Lord; Majesty; Mr.; Parliament; Rule; State; Union; United; University; british; irish summary = ''Reports'' of the Loyal National Repeal Association; and from parts of Mr. Barry O''Brien''s ''Fifty Years of Concessions to Ireland,'' and ''Irish Wrongs of great value, on all the Irish Land Acts, has been produced by Messrs. the Irish land--Protestant Ireland--Fall of its old Estates Acts--State of Irish landed relations from 1848 to for the confiscation of the Irish land--Protestant Ireland--Fall of opinion--General survey of the present state of Ireland--Irish policy I pass from the material and general state of Ireland to that of the Irish space of time, this was to be certainly left to a body, which Mr. Gladstone had evidently thought would make short work of the Irish landed Encumbered Estates Acts--State of Irish landed relations from 1848 to Ireland for years; the Irish Catholic was admitted into Parliament at Ireland--Conduct of the Irish landlords--Progress of the Land [40] For the state of Ireland and of the Irish land at this period, see id = 17148 author = Royce, Charles C. title = Cessions of Land by Indian Tribes to the United States: Illustrated by Those in the State of Indiana First Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1879-80, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1881, pages 247-262 date = keywords = August; October; States; United summary = CESSIONS OF LAND BY INDIAN TRIBES TO THE UNITED STATES: time, within the present limits of the United States, by cession or a boundary line mentioned in the cession by the Cherokees by treaty of 1. The cession at the mouth of Chicago River, by treaty of August 3, 2. The cession at the mouth of the Illinois River, by treaty of 1795, limits of the Indian country by treaty of August 3, 1795. limits of the Indian country by treaty of August 3, 1795. Cession by the treaty of August 21, 1805, with the Miamis, Eel Cession by the Weas, August 11, 1820, of the tract reserved by As above stated, the Miamis, by treaty of October 23, 1826, ceded all Pottawatomie treaty of October 27, 1832, and cession of September 22, bands of Pottawatomies, of lands reserved for them by the treaty of 1832 id = 30606 author = Trollope, Anthony title = The Landleaguers date = keywords = Ada; Captain; Carroll; Castlewell; Clayton; Daly; Edith; Florian; Frank; Galway; Ireland; Jones; Lax; Lord; Miss; Morony; Moss; Mr.; O''Mahony; Pat; Peter; Rachel; Tom summary = "Flory, you know all about it," said Ada. Edith got up and went across the room and knelt down at the boy''s like a young girl myself," she had said to her father, "but I do love "I always regarded him as a good-looking young man," said Mr. O''Mahony. "My dear," said her father when the man had left the room, "do you Nor could there be a home for her father there as long as old Mr. Jones was alive, nor possibly when his son should come to the throne. "You won''t mind my fellow coming with us?" said Captain Clayton. "Florian and I have come to see the latter-day hero," said Edith "I like him better than Mahomet M.," said Rachel to her father. "I do feel, you know, Miss O''Mahony," he said, thus coming back "I don''t know much about it, father," said Rachel, "but I think you''d id = 4917 author = Trollope, Anthony title = The Kellys and the O''Kellys date = keywords = Abbey; Adolphus; Anty; Armstrong; Ballindine; Barry; Blake; Cashel; Colligan; Court; Daly; Dublin; Dunmore; Fanny; Frank; God; Grey; Kelly; Kilcullen; Lady; Lord; Lynch; Martin; Meg; Miss; Moylan; Mrs; Selina; Wyndham summary = them; but promised to turn in his mind what Lord Cashel had said "Well, Kelly," said Lord Ballindine, "how does Dublin agree with you?" "I want to see Mrs Kelly," said Barry; "d''ye hear? added as he went to the door--"to tell the truth, Fanny, I think Lord "I don''t think," said he, "that your sister will be likely to come back "You had better go in to Miss Lynch, mother," said Martin, "and ask her when Mrs Kelly said, "Martin says as how the man can''t hurt you, Anty, "Stay a moment here, Martin," said Lord Ballindine. "Besides," said Martin, "I know Anty would wish to see him: he is her "I''m sure Miss Wyndham won''t think any such thing, my lady," said "Tierney, my lord," said the son, "was good enough to come down with "What do you think, Mr Armstrong?" said Lord Ballindine. id = 15450 author = nan title = Against Home Rule (1912) The Case for the Union date = keywords = Act; Bill; Board; Britain; Church; Commission; Dublin; England; Exchequer; Footnote; Government; Great; Home; Imperial; Ireland; Kingdom; Land; Mr.; Parliament; Rule; Scotland; State; Ulster; Union; Unionist; United; british; english; irish summary = presents the case against Home Rule for Ireland. the case against Home Rule for Ireland, and to re-state Unionist policy grant of Home Rule to Ireland would bring to the safety of England, we Ireland, and by the aid of subsidies from an Irish Parliament, that Irish politics till revived many years later in the form of Home Rule. Ireland as to the form of the Irish Constitution," has argued in a work that, with "responsible" government existing in Ireland and Irish Irish true tax revenue as Ireland''s payment on account of Imperial scheme could possibly result from an Irish Home Rule Bill, which it Irish Parliament could be put in force in Ireland. government, but in a Home Rule Ireland it would not be strong for any Act of 1869, count for nothing in the eye of Roman Canon Law. In an Ireland ruled by a Parliament of which the vast majority would be