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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 8 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 78413 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 81 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 Rome 4 thou 4 roman 4 Caesar 3 time 3 poem 3 great 3 Venus 3 Ovid 3 Metamorphoses 3 Italy 3 Horace 3 Footnote 3 Book 2 work 2 thy 2 poet 2 line 2 life 2 greek 2 Virgil 2 Vergil 2 Tristia 2 Seneca 2 Romans 2 Pliny 2 Note 2 Medea 2 Lucilius 2 Love 2 Latin 2 Jason 2 Greek 2 Gods 2 Goddess 2 Fasti 2 Augustus 2 Ann 1 Æneas 1 world 1 thing 1 spirit 1 similar 1 shall 1 sense 1 satire 1 power 1 poetry 1 passage 1 old Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1129 man 1044 poem 1017 poet 1011 life 926 time 617 line 598 passage 568 work 561 word 530 age 465 poetry 462 day 455 hand 448 character 442 year 436 thing 432 sense 427 verse 420 book 415 death 407 power 404 love 401 name 388 friend 377 p. 375 art 363 part 362 footnote 356 world 353 son 353 mind 351 one 335 feeling 330 place 328 form 321 nature 320 satire 314 father 311 literature 306 ad 288 play 281 spirit 280 language 278 passion 270 way 252 nothing 249 war 246 fragment 245 use 245 god Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 23751 _ 1254 Footnote 1188 || 916 Ovid 908 et 543 est 521 Rome 509 thou 508 II 448 III 389 Tr 360 nec 357 Book 342 IV 342 EP 293 Met 271 Lucretius 266 cum 264 Horace 262 Catullus 256 C 252 i. 231 I 226 ii 225 Seneca 223 Greek 218 Heinsius 217 Ennius 213 Cicero 211 qui 207 V 193 te 183 Medea 183 Lucilius 179 Plautus 177 Romans 176 quam 175 vi 174 Caesar 172 si 170 Virgil 161 iii 159 esse 155 ut 152 Professor 151 Juvenal 151 Augustus 149 de 147 Martial 146 B.C. Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4947 he 3618 it 3285 i 2941 you 1503 him 1331 they 1288 me 1071 she 953 we 777 them 464 himself 458 us 434 her 178 thee 168 itself 147 myself 143 themselves 122 yourself 93 herself 79 one 27 mine 23 thyself 23 ourselves 20 yours 8 his 7 ours 6 ''s 5 thy 5 theirs 4 ye 4 ii 4 guelf 3 whence 3 pelf 2 yourselves 2 je 2 iv 2 ''--vi 1 urbem 1 trite 1 tollit 1 thou 1 theseus 1 tendo 1 temporis= 1 tamen 1 suspensos 1 sat 1 quae 1 polo= Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 19806 be 5590 have 1902 do 1089 see 980 give 949 make 797 say 670 let 637 take 608 seem 586 come 549 write 538 find 477 know 466 compare 434 bear 433 use 423 go 375 show 362 call 351 live 333 follow 327 bring 319 become 294 tell 275 speak 260 appear 253 die 252 leave 225 mean 224 mention 224 fall 221 think 208 address 207 read 202 describe 201 produce 195 receive 193 hold 191 cite 184 turn 181 stand 180 refer 178 learn 177 carry 175 hear 174 add 173 pass 172 suppose 172 love Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3286 not 1471 more 1063 great 1017 so 843 other 771 first 768 well 765 roman 728 now 693 only 670 own 642 most 613 even 610 such 607 same 594 too 562 as 533 many 531 old 530 much 502 also 492 early 488 then 459 long 450 here 446 out 433 good 410 still 400 up 364 greek 349 very 340 thus 336 little 314 new 303 less 302 yet 292 away 285 high 274 last 271 human 271 far 267 often 264 never 249 young 247 probably 243 again 241 true 240 later 239 ancient 238 rather Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 153 good 144 most 131 least 92 great 62 early 51 high 45 bad 25 fine 22 late 19 pure 19 low 19 e 18 true 18 Most 16 noble 16 long 13 slight 11 close 10 happy 9 manif 8 strong 8 old 8 near 8 deep 7 l 6 vile 6 small 6 rich 5 simple 5 j 5 furth 4 large 4 foul 4 fair 3 wild 3 wide 3 topmost 3 sincere 3 minute 3 may 3 lofty 3 grand 3 fresh 3 extreme 3 brave 3 bl 3 bitter 3 ad 3 ab 2 warm Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 498 most 23 well 20 least 1 worst 1 lest 1 highest 1 hearest 1 brightest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 15 _ compare _ 14 ovid does not 10 _ is _ 10 _ is not 8 _ does not 7 ovid is here 6 ovid did not 6 ovid uses _ 5 _ has _ 4 _ die _ 4 _ have _ 4 _ is often 4 _ was not 4 ovid is clearly 3 _ are _ 3 _ compare cic 3 _ do n''t 3 _ is also 3 _ is clearly 3 _ is metrically 3 _ is more 3 _ is similarly 3 _ seems rather 3 _ seems very 3 life is chaste 3 ovid compare _ 3 ovid is now 3 passages are probably 3 word is not 2 _ are not 2 _ compare caesar 2 _ is awkward 2 _ is common 2 _ is correct 2 _ is difficult 2 _ is generally 2 _ is inappropriate 2 _ is n''t 2 _ is possibly 2 _ is probably 2 _ is so 2 _ is strange 2 _ is virtually 2 _ known _ 2 _ used similarly 2 _ was _ 2 _ was never 2 _ was ovid 2 _ were _ 2 day is not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 ovid does not elsewhere 2 rome is no place 1 _ are not much 1 _ are not sufficiently 1 _ has no adjective 1 _ has no unique 1 _ have no _ 1 _ having no special 1 _ is no place 1 _ is no regard 1 _ is not clear 1 _ is not difficult 1 _ was not available 1 _ was not hereditary 1 age brings not alone 1 age was not only 1 life is no slight 1 life is not sufficiently 1 man be not covetous 1 man is no less 1 man is not unpleasing 1 ovid has no reason 1 ovid lived not far 1 ovid was no lover 1 passages has not only 1 poem give no idea 1 poem has no special 1 poems is not conclusive 1 poems is not m. 1 poems were not always 1 poet is not otherwise 1 poetry is not only 1 poets are not nearly 1 rome is no longer 1 rome knew no letters 1 rome were not very 1 time has not yet 1 time was no exercise 1 times had no sleeves 1 verse is not surprising 1 work shows no resemblance 1 work was not great 1 years is not frequent A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 9303 author = Butler, Harold Edgeworth title = Post-Augustan Poetry From Seneca to Juvenal date = keywords = A.D.; Age; Ann; Apollonius; Caesar; Calpurnius; Cato; Claudius; Domitian; Flaccus; GIFFORD; Greek; Hercules; Horace; Italicus; Jason; Juvenal; Latin; Lucan; Lucilius; Lyc; Martial; Medea; Nero; Octavia; Oedipus; Ovid; Persius; Petronius; Phaedra; Piso; Pliny; Pompey; Quintilian; Rome; Seneca; Silius; Silvae; Silver; Statius; Stoic; Stoicism; Sulpicia; Tacitus; Thebais; Thebes; Thyestes; Valerius; Vergil; book; death; great; iii; life; line; poem; poet; roman; satire; work summary = with a poem in praise of Nero.[45] Vacca, in his life of Lucan, states steeped in the great poets of the Augustan age: men of comparatively poet, almost deserves the title of Rome''s greatest satirist; the works Persius Flaccus, the satirist, than of any other poet of the Silver Age. Not only are the essential facts of his brief career preserved for us in the famous critic Valerius Probus, but there are few poets whose works heroic death.[228] As the work of his maturer years he left his satires. criticisms of the early poets of Rome.[234] Further, the third satire is If the work was written at the time when Seneca and Lucan first epic poets of the period--Valerius Flaccus, Statius, and Silius in the Silver Age--Seneca, Lucan, Martial, Quintilian, Columella--show The poet-father lived long enough to witness his son well on the way to id = 14020 author = Horace title = The Works of Horace date = keywords = Apollo; Bacchus; Caesar; EPISTLE; Italy; Jupiter; Maecenas; ODE; Rome; SATIRE; Sea; Tiber; Trojan; Troy; Venus; bear; day; friend; god; good; great; grecian; like; live; manner; roman; shall; thing; thou; time summary = So, whatever the east wind shall threaten to the Italian sea, let the That man is master of himself and shall live happy, who has it sea, as soon as it shall not be impious to return; nor let it grieve us vipers; and many more things shall we, happy [Romans], view with be wise, let him avoid talkative people, as soon as he comes to man''s What manner of living therefore shall the wise man put in practice, and introduce me to an audience [with this great man], whenever you shall go place, where shines a great fortune, the possessor being an old man: boys at play cry, "You shall be king, if you will do right." Let this be continue to live in such a manner, even if presently fortune shall flow And yet I, the same man, shall be inclined to know id = 35174 author = Miller, Frank Justus title = Studies in the Poetry of Italy, Part I. Roman date = keywords = Antipho; Chr; Creon; Dem; Demipho; Geta; Horace; Italy; Jason; Medea; Pho; Phormio; Phædria; Rome; Vergil; greek; roman; Æneas summary = Still from that day, for centuries to come, the Romans had sterner cases, however, the old Roman tragedy was upon subjects taken from the the fate of so many noble works!) of the entire field of Roman tragedy. [_To Medea._] Go, speed thy flight, thou thing of evil, But come, I''ll give thee grace to plead thy goodly cause. _Creon._ Thy life shall surely pay Medea comes rushing in bent upon using for vengeance the day which _Medea._ Now Jove, throughout thy heavens let the thunders roll! in all periods of Roman literature, both the word _satire_ and the thing his hands the spirit of satire, is traceable to the old Greek comedy. It was Vergil who in due time introduced Horace to another friend, a man This poem, the work of the poet''s old age, contained eighteen books, of Roman satire, had left his strong imprint upon his country''s life and id = 21920 author = Ovid title = The Last Poems of Ovid date = keywords = Aen; André; Ann; Augustus; Bac; Burman; Cac; Caesar; Carm; Cic; Cotta; Ehwald; Fast; Germanicus; Graecinus; Greek; Heinsius; Hor; III; Iac; Ibis; Korn; Latin; Lenz; Livy; Merkel; Met; NEC; OLD; Ovid; Owen; Pliny; Pompeius; Ponto; Professor; Prop; Riese; Rome; Sen; Seneca; Tarrant; Tiberius; Tomis; Tuticanus; VII; VIII; Vestalis; Virgil; Wheeler; XII; XIII; XIV; compare; est; non; poem; similar summary = verse of _mendum_ meaning ''error'' in this sense; Ovid in his poems of For the pattern compare _Tr_ III viii 12 ''quae non ulla tibi _fertque 841 ''mihi nec _quae sis_ dicere promptum est'', _Met_ XV 595 ''is _qui the ill-treatment accorded Ovid: _Tr_ II 571 ''nec mihi credibile est QVO NON TIBI CARIOR ALTER.= Compare _Tr_ III vi 3 ''nec te mihi carior LONGA VIA EST.= Compare _Tr_ I i 127-28 (the end of Ovid''s Ovid is here indirectly referring to his own situation: compare _EP_ III manuscripts at _EP_ III i 17-18 (Ovid is addressing Tomis) ''nec tibi xi 7 ''non ita dis placuit'', _Met_ VII 699, _Tr_ IV viii 15-16 (Ovid had NEC PIETAS IGNOTA MEA EST.= At xiii 19-38 Ovid describes an instance sense of the word Ovid seems to have used the plural (_Met_ III 19; Ovid only in the poetry of exile, and only in this sense: compare _Ibis_ id = 47676 author = Ovid title = The Amores; or, Amours Literally Translated into English Prose, with Copious Notes date = keywords = Book; Corinna; Cupid; ELEGY; Epistle; Fasti; Footnote; Goddess; Gods; Isis; Love; Mars; Metamorphoses; Ovid; Poet; Pontic; Romans; Rome; Second; Tristia; Venus; hand; let; mistress; thou; thy summary = soldiers, thou dost overcome both men and Gods; take away from thee cruel mistress draw me away, and Love triumphed over the Poet with his by thee; so long as I was thy flame, thou didst live." To her said [Footnote 014: Thy step-father.--Ver. 24. [Footnote 045: So close at hand.--Ver. 37. [Footnote 075: Love and wine.--Ver. 59. [Footnote 144: Cease to love.--Ver. 32. [Footnote 186: And day-books.--Ver. 25. [Footnote 235: So long as thou, Rome.--Ver. 26. [Footnote 307: Let him go.--Ver. 20. [Footnote 335: Her arms to time.--Ver. 29. [Footnote 347: Hand of a master.--Ver. 30. [Footnote 422: Thou who dost.--Ver. 7. [Footnote 433: Thy features.--Ver. 15. [Footnote 434: Thy appointed days.--Ver. 17. [Footnote 437: With thy laurels.--Ver. 18. [Footnote 471: Loves the vine.--Ver. 41. [Footnote 523: Of his mistress.--Ver. 17. [Footnote 610: Of thy own inspiration.--Ver. 5. [Footnote 628: Thy first love.--Ver. 53. [Footnote 629: With his failing hand.--Ver. 58. id = 47677 author = Ovid title = Ars Amatoria; or, The Art Of Love Literally Translated into English Prose, with Copious Notes date = keywords = Amores; Augustus; Book; Fasti; Footnote; Goddess; Helen; Metamorphoses; Note; Portico; Romans; Rome; Tristia; Venus; fair; love; man; thou; time summary = |Should any one of the people not know the art of loving, let him read me; and taught by me, on reading my lines, let him love. let no paramour be sought; but if thou wouldst rather deceive thy approaches; let the man use words of entreaty; she will kindly receive That is becoming; from your features, let the fair think Let the joyous lover present my lines with love with caution, let the poor man stand in fear of bad language, and The fair one that has but little hair, let her set a watch on her [Footnote 705: Wish a riper fair.--Ver. 63. [Footnote 724: Let the usual subjects.--Ver. 144. [Footnote 759: Of thy guiltless sons.--Ver. 339. Let the old woman come.--Ver. 329. [Footnote 1031: That art said.--Ver. 175. [Footnote 1053: And let the girth.--Ver. 274. [Footnote 1076: Let the smooth balls.--Ver. 361. [Footnote 1099: Thou, Venus--Ver. 451. id = 47678 author = Ovid title = Remedia Amoris; or, The Remedy of Love Literally Translated into English Prose, with Copious Notes date = keywords = Art; Book; Love; Metamorphoses; Note; footnote; thou; thy summary = wretched passion, let him desist; and then thou wilt prove the cause of Do thou cherish thy mother''s arts, which, in safety, we how to be cured; for you, the same hand shall cause the wound and the Go and read through my treatises on the art of Love; then may your bark [Footnote 1218: Nor let the Sabbaths.''--Ver. 219. [Footnote 1252: And let not this.--Ver. 513. See the Art of Love, Book iii. See the Art of Love, Book iii. See the Art of Love, Book iii. See the Art of Love, Book ii. See the Art of Love, Book ii. See the Art of Love, Book ii. See the Art of Love, Book ii. See the Art of Love, Book ii. See the Art of Love, Book ii. See the Art of Love, Book ii. See the Art of Love, Book ii. id = 38566 author = Sellar, W. Y. (William Young) title = The Roman Poets of the Republic, 3rd edition date = keywords = Accius; Aeneas; Aeneid; Annals; Athens; Augustan; B.C.; CHAPTER; Caecilius; Caesar; Calvus; Catullus; Cicero; Ennius; Epicurus; Euripides; Footnote; Gellius; Gods; Greece; Homer; Horace; Italy; Jerome; Lesbia; Lucilius; Lucretius; Mr.; Munro; Naevius; Nature; Pacuvius; Plautus; Punic; Republic; Rome; Scipio; State; Terence; Virgil; War; age; character; early; feeling; form; great; greek; human; italian; latin; life; line; old; passage; poem; poet; poetry; power; roman; sense; spirit; time; work; world summary = Roman poetry, from this point of view, appears to be the old Greek the Romans in early times possessed epic poems, ''which in power and Punic War, and thus must have reached manhood before the year 241 B.C. Cicero mentions that he lived to a good old age, and that he died and the Roman poet in their modes of representing human life and secret of the life of Nature, as the great contemplative poets of Greek spirit and art of their originals, the Roman poets seem to have works of the older poets and the appearance of the great poem of from later Greek life, or, like so much else in Roman literature, as conditions of Roman life in the last half of the second century B.C. The tone by which that form of poetry has been characterised, in human life, and some among them, like many great modern poets, were