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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 7 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 61712 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 9 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 man 4 Mr. 3 Miss 2 look 2 God 1 log 1 little 1 like 1 good 1 father 1 come 1 boy 1 Zeb 1 York 1 Wright 1 Wind 1 William 1 Wilde 1 Ward 1 Virginia 1 Uncle 1 Tobin 1 Syndicate 1 Sue 1 Strong 1 Stewart 1 Steve 1 Socky 1 Slue 1 Sinth 1 Silas 1 Shan 1 Saturn 1 Saginaw 1 Rough 1 River 1 Raymond 1 Philip 1 Perkins 1 Pallas 1 Noda 1 New 1 Mrs. 1 Moore 1 Mike 1 Migley 1 Metzger 1 Mern 1 Master 1 Lost Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1895 man 631 time 621 way 607 hand 597 day 570 boy 531 log 478 eye 445 camp 394 thing 387 wood 365 girl 352 face 347 drive 338 business 324 water 306 moment 305 foot 300 river 295 word 294 head 286 father 275 night 264 child 255 crew 249 work 246 one 231 boss 227 nothing 227 heart 217 something 212 year 212 side 210 fire 200 voice 199 tree 198 door 197 arm 195 timber 191 life 180 matter 177 money 174 house 170 room 166 trail 166 office 162 place 162 job 162 end 161 woman Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 731 _ 560 Latisan 516 Joe 379 Mr. 354 Flagg 321 Connie 302 Frank 298 Hurley 288 ye 264 Craig 246 Miss 243 Kent 222 Strong 216 Alice 196 Mern 194 Saginaw 186 Philip 169 Master 166 Socky 161 Crowley 158 Silas 157 Jack 150 Slue 150 Emperor 144 Foot 142 Sinth 140 W. 140 MacNutt 132 Sue 128 Ben 124 Garwood 123 de 122 Johnston 119 Crooks 110 McCane 109 Lida 106 yer 106 Pallas 106 Ackerman 103 Locke 102 River 100 Ward 98 Comas 96 Kennard 95 Dunmore 86 Syndicate 84 dat 82 fer 78 New 77 Wilde Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6844 he 5317 i 4537 you 4164 it 2601 she 2242 him 1998 they 1362 me 1075 them 1058 we 996 her 428 himself 308 ''em 295 us 112 herself 105 myself 64 yourself 61 themselves 57 em 51 one 40 itself 39 ye 31 ''s 22 yours 18 mine 16 yerself 14 hisself 13 his 13 hers 12 theirs 9 ourselves 5 ours 4 you''re 3 yo 3 thee 2 yer 2 theirself 2 t''ink 2 ourself 2 i''m 2 delf 2 d''you 2 be''n 1 yourselves 1 you''ll 1 yit 1 ye''d 1 wo''k 1 well"--she 1 w''d Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 13328 be 5502 have 2556 do 1695 say 1591 go 1184 get 1149 come 1025 make 941 see 888 know 811 take 696 look 612 think 601 tell 580 give 460 want 453 put 401 ask 375 find 366 hear 358 stand 358 keep 346 seem 341 let 339 sit 335 turn 326 begin 325 feel 317 leave 290 run 267 hold 266 try 259 call 251 bring 225 follow 219 fall 212 answer 209 lie 203 show 201 set 196 work 196 speak 185 start 180 rise 174 wait 172 break 163 walk 161 like 159 return 154 mean Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3811 not 1248 up 936 out 844 so 719 down 714 now 697 then 696 good 648 little 618 here 607 more 514 back 481 young 480 old 473 away 469 well 424 as 395 long 392 just 381 much 380 big 372 right 371 only 369 other 362 own 356 too 345 on 343 very 335 never 331 off 328 there 307 again 293 in 280 great 272 first 254 strong 247 all 246 enough 243 soon 233 over 222 new 218 even 212 last 198 still 180 few 171 many 170 far 163 ever 159 full 154 sure Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 140 good 59 most 41 least 18 bad 14 near 10 j 9 Most 8 late 6 high 5 young 5 easy 5 big 4 farth 4 dear 3 tough 3 slight 3 manif 3 hard 3 handsome 3 great 3 fine 2 topmost 2 quick 2 pure 2 proud 2 plain 2 mere 2 furst 2 foremost 2 faint 2 cool 1 writhe 1 warm 1 vile 1 unlucki 1 tiny 1 thick 1 swift 1 sweet 1 smart 1 shrewd 1 sho''t 1 rich 1 remote 1 quiet 1 purti 1 pleasant 1 old 1 nigh 1 nice Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 68 most 12 least 9 well 1 worst 1 wer''n''t 1 oftenest 1 near 1 jest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 latisan was not 7 latisan did not 7 ye ai n''t 6 drive is down 6 ye do n''t 5 _ do _ 5 girl did not 4 _ do n''t 4 _ is _ 4 frank did not 3 _ was _ 3 business is business 3 days gone by 3 drive comes dow 3 drive comes down 3 drive was down 3 eyes is soft 3 eyes were full 3 joe did not 3 men did not 3 men standing around 3 woods ai n''t 2 _ am _ 2 _ are _ 2 _ got _ 2 connie did not 2 days were busy 2 eyes did not 2 eyes ran rapidly 2 face was so 2 face was very 2 face was white 2 flagg was no 2 frank felt quite 2 frank was more 2 frank was very 2 hurley do n''t 2 hurley was here 2 joe got details 2 joe was quick 2 joe were pleased 2 latisan was conscious 2 latisan was down 2 logs were ready 2 men do n''t 2 men were busy 2 men were now 2 moment looking down 2 river was deep 2 things do n''t Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 flagg was no longer 2 frank did not entirely 1 _ am not satisfied 1 business was no longer 1 camps was no better 1 connie did not even 1 drive was no longer 1 father is not so 1 flagg has no kin 1 frank had no chance 1 frank had no thought 1 frank made no reply 1 frank was no exception 1 joe was no more 1 latisan has no time 1 latisan is no longer 1 latisan was not able 1 latisan was not merely 1 latisan was not ready 1 latisan was not tactful 1 latisan was not through 1 man gave no heed 1 man had not oughto 1 men had no blankets 1 time was not far A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 50091 author = Bacheller, Irving title = Silas Strong, Emperor of the Woods date = keywords = Dunmore; Emperor; God; Gordon; Lost; Master; Migley; River; Silas; Sinth; Socky; Strong; Sue; Uncle; Zeb; little; look; man summary = The girl was baptized Susan Bradbury Gordon, but was called Sue. Their Uncle Silas Strong came to the funeral of their mother. Sue ran to tell Aunt Marie, the housekeeper, and Socky sat in his little he struck the bear," said Socky, remembering how strong men often The children began to dress while Strong went half-way up the ladder and Soon Socky and Sue sat in the little wagon on their way to Catamount "Well, captain," said the young man, as he turned to Strong, "if you''ll "Do you love Uncle Silas?" It was the question of little Sue. Socky answered, promptly, "Yes; do you?" trail, followed by Roc. A little distance away she turned, looking back at the young man. "N-now, t-try," said Silas Strong, as he gave her a little package. "There," said Socky, "that looks a little better." Strong looked into the face of the young man. id = 34775 author = Chisholm, A. M. (Arthur Murray) title = The Boss of Wind River date = keywords = Ackerman; Clancy; Cooley; Cottrell; Crooks; Edith; Garwood; Haggarty; Jack; Joe; Kent; Locke; Miss; Mr.; Rough; Shan; Tobin; William; Wind; Wright; come; log summary = "I''m going to run the business," said Joe. Whereupon old Bob Wright and young Joe Kent shook hands with mutual Joe did not know what to think of it, and said so. "I''m a business man now," said Joe. "Hang it," said young Kent to himself, "I don''t know whether I''ve got discovered Edith Garwood and Joe Kent seated prosaically upon a huge log "Good old ring," said Joe, producing it from his pocket. "In other words, you don''t think I can run the business?" said Joe. Hagel raised a protesting hand. "I''d rather not, thanks," said Joe, looking at the hand. "MacNutt is in camp," said Joe. "Your men say they won''t work," said Joe. "Of course I can," said Joe, "and then, Jack, I think we''d better get "Boys," said Joe, "who cut that boom?" "It''s a good proposition for me, Mr. Crooks," said Joe. id = 22667 author = Day, Holman title = Joan of Arc of the North Woods date = keywords = Adonia; Brophy; Comas; Craig; Crowley; Dick; Echford; Eck; Elsham; Flagg; Kennard; Kyle; Latisan; Lida; Mern; Miss; Mr.; New; Noda; Ward; York; man summary = "Yes, it looks like it," agreed young Latisan; he did not bang the door what might be going to happen; it was treating a right-hand man like a bold young man patterning after the Flagg methods in dealings with men. Flagg shifted his hand from Ward''s arm to the young man''s shoulder and Latisan went into the tavern after Flagg had marched away to the big Latisan smoked and reflected on the nature of Echford Flagg as Brophy old John Latisan''s grandson was a chief who had the real and the right sound when Brophy and Latisan and the other men came bearing Flagg into From behind his curtain in the morning he saw Latisan drive the Flagg In the silence Miss Kennard asked, "How do you spell Latisan, Mr. Craig?" "It was your offer to be my right hand, young Latisan--and I''m drive id = 41712 author = Hendryx, James B. (James Beardsley) title = Connie Morgan in the Lumber Camps date = keywords = Camp; Connie; Dogfish; Foot; Frenchy; Gillum; Hurley; Metzger; Mike; Saginaw; Slue; Steve; Syndicate; boy; man summary = Jest because a man''s got one good thing a-goin'', ain''t ain''t got the capital to log it, an'' he won''t sell to the Syndicate. "Why, haven''t you got your crew?" Connie glanced at the men who lay "Wish''t you''d slip over to the men''s camp an'' tell Saginaw I want to see Hurley, as Connie put on his cap and proceeded to the men''s camp, a long whoever bosses Number Two Camp--Slue Foot Magee, if I can git holt of Saginaw laughed: "Oh, yer goin'' out an'' git a deer--jest like rollin'' "I wish''t Hurley was here," said Saginaw Ed, as he and Connie returned "Fieldin''s logs was delivered on time an'' the old man handed Hurley a "I''ve know''d Hurley, man an'' boy, an'' they never was a Slue Foot turned to Connie: "An'' now, if ye hain''t got nawthin'' better "He''s all right, an'' the men like him--but he ain''t got the head the id = 9968 author = Oxley, J. Macdonald (James Macdonald) title = The Young Woodsman; Or, Life in the Forests of Canada date = keywords = Baptiste; Calumet; Damase; Frank; God; Johnston; Kingston; Mr.; Mrs.; Stewart; good; man summary = Frank had some inkling of his mother''s feelings, but, boy like, thought Frank''s got his heart so set upon going into the woods, I don''t know as this way:--Let Frank come to the woods with me this winter. "You stay by me, Frank," said the foreman, "and if your young legs happen promising-looking lot of men; indeed, Johnston took very good care to Beginning with Johnston and Baptiste, Frank was rapidly making friends just passed, Frank followed the foreman into his little sanctum, the "You''re very kind, Mr. Johnston," said Frank, his eyes glistening "I''m right sure you will, Frank," replied Johnston. "I can''t promise you much in the way of game, Frank," said Johnston, as "I''m quite sure, Mr. Johnston," said Frank. Johnston, on his part, looked upon Frank as having been in God''s hands "You went away a boy, and you''ve come back almost a man, Frank," she id = 46586 author = Victor, Metta Victoria Fuller title = Alice Wilde: The Raftsman''s Daughter. A Forest Romance date = keywords = Alice; Ben; CHAPTER; Miss; Moore; Mr.; Pallas; Perkins; Philip; Raymond; Saturn; Virginia; Wilde; father; like; look; man summary = as expects to marry Miss Alice?" his voice trembled, and he looked at "Come and look at my beautiful presents, Pallas," cried her young Alice looked up into the rough sun-burnt face of her father with a ''Pears to me dat young gentleum looks like missus'' family. The day after her father''s return, Alice Wilde sat down to try her new "You ain''t a little girl any longer, Alice Wilde, and I guess yer man shall never marry you, Alice Wilde." away, too, you know, and I shall have no one but good old Pallas." One day, about the time of his expected return, Ben had gone for Alice, Miss Alice, it looked like de judgment-day, when we sailed down mind; but when Alice looked at her anxiously she turned her eyes away, "What does that childish, ignorant young thing know of love, Philip? retired for the night, David Wilde, Alice, Philip, and Virginia sat up,