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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 63991 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 8 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 time 3 man 3 Institution 2 wreck 2 sea 2 crew 2 boy 2 boat 2 Sands 2 Ramsgate 2 Nancy 2 Mrs. 2 Mr. 2 Lucy 2 God 2 Captain 1 wave 1 vessel 1 storm 1 right 1 lifeboat 1 life 1 illustration 1 british 1 Yardley 1 Warehold 1 United 1 U.S. 1 Trident 1 Tommy 1 Tod 1 Tillamook 1 States 1 Singleton 1 Service 1 Rock 1 Right 1 Point 1 Peake 1 Paul 1 Paris 1 Orrick 1 North 1 Mrs 1 Miss 1 Miami 1 Meg 1 Max 1 Martha 1 Margate Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2186 man 1898 boat 1312 life 1123 sea 1076 time 709 boy 666 vessel 641 way 632 hand 594 water 570 crew 561 ship 539 night 539 day 513 wreck 504 captain 440 eye 433 wave 427 head 401 steamer 396 light 391 year 365 face 349 work 345 moment 344 woman 338 side 337 wind 330 one 328 thing 328 storm 323 board 322 hour 320 friend 304 lifeboat 303 heart 298 coast 296 nothing 294 shore 282 foot 281 doctor 279 gale 272 place 267 child 266 line 266 danger 265 rope 264 beach 258 arm 250 word Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1568 _ 516 Jane 483 Lucy 445 Eric 436 Bax 367 Darry 261 Sands 245 Guy 223 Tommy 218 Martha 203 ye 190 Archie 176 Bart 170 Captain 166 John 154 Institution 154 Denham 148 Miss 143 Mr. 140 Coast 139 Ramsgate 138 Jim 135 Mr 134 God 131 Guard 130 Tod 119 Mrs. 112 Abner 98 Goodwin 97 Peake 97 Max 96 Miami 88 Bluenose 86 Holt 86 Esq 84 Jeph 84 Foster 83 Doctor 82 CHAPTER 74 Mrs 72 Orrick 72 Nancy 70 Paul 68 Fogarty 63 Deal 62 Coleman 58 Cobden 57 Meg 56 Long 55 Life Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4957 he 4881 it 3609 i 2969 they 2636 you 2512 she 1834 him 1414 her 1247 them 898 we 855 me 304 himself 254 us 149 themselves 130 ''em 121 herself 75 itself 66 myself 56 one 43 ye 32 yourself 24 ourselves 18 em 17 ''s 16 mine 16 his 14 yours 14 hers 7 thee 6 yerself 6 ours 5 theirs 4 yuh 4 hisself 3 meself 3 keepin 2 ha 1 yourselves 1 you''ve 1 you''ll 1 yer 1 ye!--hey 1 wrote:--"i 1 thyself 1 oneself 1 neptune''ll 1 me"--and 1 hez 1 hears 1 for"--it Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 16885 be 6251 have 2461 do 1423 say 1357 go 1224 come 1201 see 1198 get 1178 make 924 know 781 take 672 give 666 look 655 tell 617 think 540 find 499 save 419 hear 413 seem 406 keep 394 leave 388 hold 370 stand 358 feel 357 run 353 break 339 want 332 let 323 begin 305 ask 293 fall 277 pass 269 put 269 bring 267 send 264 answer 260 turn 257 call 250 lose 246 try 241 catch 237 carry 234 become 232 lie 227 work 223 throw 214 rise 212 watch 212 speak 206 cry Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3504 not 1321 up 1313 so 1145 out 992 now 839 then 787 more 712 old 656 little 649 only 639 good 618 again 617 down 567 well 566 other 557 as 524 away 504 too 501 much 498 never 489 great 477 long 473 here 472 just 469 very 455 back 448 still 434 on 426 first 421 many 420 there 397 off 389 right 370 in 365 last 364 soon 361 few 356 all 346 almost 332 own 324 most 317 once 308 ever 298 poor 295 such 295 over 284 even 280 enough 253 high 248 far Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 135 good 83 most 66 least 38 bad 36 great 27 near 18 j 15 slight 14 hard 12 Most 9 big 8 strong 8 stout 8 high 7 small 7 large 7 faint 5 sweet 5 happy 5 fine 5 early 5 deep 5 brave 4 low 3 warm 3 old 3 noble 3 long 3 late 3 heavy 3 fierce 3 dear 2 wise 2 wild 2 topmost 2 tall 2 stormy 2 stiff 2 short 2 rough 2 quick 2 mere 2 light 2 grand 2 funny 2 full 2 foul 2 farth 2 dense 2 dark Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 241 most 18 well 9 least 2 tempest 2 hard 1 o 1 near 1 jest 1 highest 1 heartiest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 _ is _ 5 darry did not 4 boat makes in 3 _ are _ 3 boat is again 3 boat is now 3 days gone by 3 eric was not 3 eyes were still 3 lives are annually 3 lucy did not 3 man did not 3 men are too 3 men do not 2 _ do _ 2 _ does _ 2 _ had not 2 _ tell ye 2 _ was _ 2 _ was almost 2 boat are away 2 boat is alongside 2 boat is not 2 boat is right 2 boat is still 2 boat was soon 2 boat was then 2 boy had not 2 boy said meditatively 2 captain does not 2 crew are ready 2 crew are well 2 crew took refuge 2 darry was glad 2 darry was sorry 2 eric had ever 2 eric took up 2 eric was as 2 eric was quite 2 eric was well 2 eyes were wide 2 jane did not 2 life does not 2 life had not 2 life is sweet 2 lucy had never 2 lucy had not 2 lucy has not 2 man had not 2 men are afraid Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 jane made no answer 1 bax is no exaggerated 1 bax made no reply 1 bax was no coward 1 boat is not directly 1 boat is not nearly 1 boat was no longer 1 boy had not even 1 captain had no boats 1 crew had no time 1 crew were not idle 1 darry had no fear 1 darry knew no other 1 darry was not foolish 1 day is not remote 1 days were not days 1 eric was not altogether 1 eric was not many 1 eric was not slow 1 jane was not surprised 1 life does not soon 1 life had not wholly 1 life had not yet 1 lights were no longer 1 lucy made no effort 1 man ''s not right 1 man did not actually 1 men do not again 1 men get no regular 1 men had no means 1 men had no thought 1 men have no protection 1 men tell no tales 1 men were not idle 1 night was not wholly 1 night were not yet 1 sea had not bax 1 sea was not more 1 sea was not nearly 1 ship is not only 1 water had not yet 1 waves has no effect 1 work does not merely 1 work is not so 1 work was no unknown 1 work was not much 1 wreck has no boats A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 21717 author = Ballantyne, R. M. (Robert Michael) title = Battles with the Sea date = keywords = Institution; Ramsgate; Sands; boat; crew; lifeboat; man; sea; time; wreck summary = would be far greater if we had no lifeboats and no life-saving rockets that the boats of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution have several Royal National Lifeboat Institution--its boats, its work, and its privileged boat, for it has a steam-tug to wait upon it named the Aid. Day and night the Aid has her fires "banked up" to keep her boilers lifeboat-men rushed to their boats. flash of the seas as they passed over boat and crew, without lifeboat, the men of which had observed our first rocket, had launched In _every_ case of putting off to a wreck in a gale, a lifeboat ships a the Ramsgate boat and steamer rescued men and women and little ones from their lives at any moment all the year round, to save men and women and besides 143 lives saved by shore-boats and other means, for which The duty of the boat''s crew was to save the id = 21744 author = Ballantyne, R. M. (Robert Michael) title = The Lifeboat date = keywords = Amy; Bax; Bluenose; Bogey; Captain; Coleman; Crumps; Deal; Denham; Foster; God; Guy; Institution; Jeph; Laker; Long; Lucy; Mrs; Nancy; Orrick; Tommy; Trident summary = "Mr Bax," said Denham, pompously, "you are too young a man to offer "Quite right, young man," said Captain Bluenose, nodding his head "Where away''s the boat, lad?" said Captain Bluenose to Bax, on "Starboard, old boy, starboard hard, steady!" cried Bax. With seaman-like promptitude the Captain obeyed, and thus escaped Tommy," said Guy, laying his hand kindly on the boy''s shoulder. "Come, attend to Guy," said Bax, in a deep, commanding voice. "It''s going to blow to-night, Bax," said Guy, on entering the hovel of "Hold the end of it, Guy, and pay out," said Bax, "mind you don''t haul "D''you think the ship will hold together long?" said Bax, going aft to "Whose fault is it, Bax?" said Tommy, looking up in his friend''s face. "Trust me, Bax," said the old man, grasping his friend''s hand. "Well, Bax, is the new ship a good one?" said Guy; "d''you think she will id = 42415 author = Gilmore, John title = Storm Warriors; or, Life-Boat Work on the Goodwin Sands date = keywords = CHAPTER; God; Goodwin; Jarman; Margate; North; Ramsgate; Sands; boat; crew; life; man; sea; storm; time; vessel; wave; wreck summary = present, to be saved from a wreck by the life-boat men is to him one of the wreck, the wave passes and breaks over the vessel; if the life-boat The life-boat makes good way, and soon runs across the Sands through the chance!" a sea throws the boat within a yard of the wreck, three men buried in the seas; the rescued men have never been in a life-boat wrecked sailors begin to shout to the life-boat men to come to their such a rushing breaking sea as this, and the little boat the six men are light-vessels, but no life-boat came, and the wreck might at any moment life-boat nearer to the wreck; but the heavy gale, the rush of the sea, life-boat ready for sea; that the crew of the steamer also made all Each time that the men on board the steamer and life-boat look at the id = 27322 author = Hillary, William, Sir title = An Appeal to the British Nation on the Humanity and Policy of Forming a National Institution for the Preservation of Lives and Property from Shipwreck (1825) date = keywords = Committee; Esq; Hon; Institution; M.P.; Right; british summary = great national and benevolent institutions in the kingdom, to the National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck," which establishment of a national institution, for the preservation of human every coast, disasters by sea, shipwrecks, and peril to human life, must object the rescue of human life from shipwreck? That a national institution should be formed, equally worthy of Great establishment of the Royal National Institution for the Preservation of Institution for the Rescue of Lives from Shipwreck._ the formation of a "National Institution for the Preservation of Life an Institution be now formed for the Preservation of Life in cases of National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck, held Royal National Institution, now happily established for the preservation Institution for the preservation of Life from Shipwreck. Institution for the preservation of Life from Shipwreck. As this great national measure shall continue to establish itself in the id = 31259 author = Rolt-Wheeler, Francis title = The Boy With the U. S. Life-Savers date = keywords = Bear; Cape; Coast; Eel; Eric; Father; Guard; Homer; Jarvis; Miami; Mr.; Point; Rock; Service; States; Tillamook; U.S.; United; boy; illustration; man; right summary = little volunteer life-saving station house, Eric Swift made a leap for Once Eric had worked for a solid hour over a man who had been brought in Eric had hardly got outside the station when the boys flocked to him in "Well," said Eric, "it''s a good thing for you it didn''t happen a long "So this is your last day, Eric," said the Eel, an hour or so later, as "It works mighty rapidly, my boy," said the old inspector. "Father," said Eric, a little later, when they had boarded the "You''re sorry to say good-by to the old light, Father," said the boy sea, took a notion they saw what looked like white ghosts o'' ships ''way "Right you are, boy," said the old keeper, and continued his story. "But that''s great!" said Eric, "how do you know it''s going to come out "I almost feel like that lieutenant now," said Eric, "and I''m not id = 4398 author = Smith, Francis Hopkinson title = The Tides of Barnegat date = keywords = Archie; Barnegat; Bart; Captain; Cavendish; Cobden; Doctor; Ellen; Fogarty; Gossaway; Holt; Jane; John; Lucy; Martha; Max; Meg; Miss; Mrs.; Paris; Tod; Warehold; Yardley summary = "Too fine, Miss Jane, for her old Martha," the nurse called back. "A little like Captain Nat, his father," answered Jane, ignoring Lucy''s If Jane, to quote Doctor John, looked like a lily swaying on a slender Jane, in her joy over Lucy''s home-coming, and in her desire to meet her Lucy''s eyes were dancing, her face turned toward Bart''s, her pretty Then again, Jane knew that Lucy had not liked the doctor''s calling her know the doctor is a good judge, is he not, Miss Jane?" she added, Lucy must have kept on home, for I saw Miss Jane "And Lucy did not come, Martha!" Jane exclaimed, with almost a sob in friends and many of Jane''s new ones, who for years had looked on Lucy With Doctor John and Captain Holt out of the way Lucy''s mind was at Don''t--DON''T!" Lucy was looking up into the captain''s face now, id = 22277 author = Webster, Frank V. title = Darry the Life Saver; Or, The Heroes of the Coast date = keywords = Abner; Darry; Dilks; Jim; Joe; Mr.; Mrs.; Nancy; Paul; Peake; Singleton; boy; time summary = paused long enough to wave his hand to the boy; after which Darry turned In fact, I like my present accommodations with Mrs. Peake so well that I may stay there right along," replied Darry, He could hardly believe his eyes when he saw that Darry had come off Be sure and let me know when that meeting is coming off, Mr. Squires," said Abner''s better half; and when he saw the fire in her eyes Darry saw him talking with Abner, who looked his way, and shook his head finding the little home undefended if Darry went away, might think it besides having a good time," said Darry, eagerly; though truth to tell, new home, things that had been wanting looking after for a long time; Abner was a little dubious about letting the boy depart, but Darry their time has come, Darry.