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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 9263 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 73 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 malay 4 Sumatra 4 Mr. 4 Java 3 man 3 island 3 european 3 chinese 3 India 3 CHAPTER 3 Archipelago 2 look 2 life 2 hermit 2 good 2 dutch 2 Winnie 2 Verkimier 2 Van 2 Spinkie 2 Sarawak 2 Roy 2 Rakata 2 Nigel 2 New 2 Nadgel 2 Moses 2 Moluccas 2 Massa 2 Macassar 2 Krakatoa 2 Kemp 2 Kathy 2 Kathleen 2 Government 2 God 2 English 2 Dyaks 2 Celebes 2 Captain 2 Borneo 2 Australia 2 Amboyna 1 world 1 white 1 tree 1 palm 1 native 1 mountain 1 moorish Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1472 island 1463 man 1184 time 1056 day 853 place 840 tree 743 house 743 country 705 bird 672 water 668 part 660 people 645 foot 624 sea 622 hermit 561 way 557 boat 542 forest 531 hand 524 mile 519 village 514 head 470 mountain 469 year 468 town 467 side 461 river 449 king 448 night 444 specie 421 captain 411 ship 407 life 396 one 385 native 365 der 343 ground 341 fruit 337 thing 329 friend 327 coast 325 land 321 animal 316 colour 312 eye 310 palm 308 woman 307 morning 305 hour 291 work Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2126 _ 1024 Nigel 547 Moses 382 Van 381 Kemp 380 Java 326 Mr. 237 Borneo 224 Moors 212 New 205 de 198 Krakatoa 190 Malay 189 Guinea 178 India 172 6d 170 Sumatra 164 Archipelago 163 King 142 ob 141 Islands 141 Crown 139 Celebes 132 Dyaks 129 Paradise 128 Winnie 125 Roy 124 Rajah 123 8vo 116 Captain 112 Aru 110 Malays 109 Moluccas 105 Timor 103 Ternate 103 God 103 Dyak 102 CHAPTER 101 Gentiles 100 Malabar 99 Portuguese 98 Australia 97 English 97 Amboyna 94 Spinkie 93 England 91 Brooke 90 Rakata 90 Ortelius 89 dat Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6177 it 4936 i 4513 they 3700 he 3204 we 2223 them 1945 you 1332 him 1126 me 792 us 371 she 333 himself 287 themselves 278 her 172 itself 167 myself 82 ourselves 64 one 40 yourself 25 herself 20 ''em 16 mine 15 ours 12 em 10 his 6 ye 6 ay 6 ''s 4 ve 4 theirs 3 yours 2 you''re 2 work--"perhaps 2 wi 2 truptin 2 mineself 2 hers 1 xxvii.--"blown 1 oneself 1 its 1 irregular-- 1 i''m 1 hisself 1 flora 1 dà 1 d''you 1 certeza Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 23519 be 7291 have 1861 do 1533 say 1462 make 1335 go 1221 see 1219 find 1066 come 1020 take 780 get 742 give 681 know 636 seem 600 call 593 leave 550 look 540 return 532 bring 482 carry 475 pass 427 think 414 form 412 become 364 keep 363 reach 359 obtain 352 fall 349 tell 338 hear 321 stand 320 ask 316 appear 310 cover 305 show 305 remain 305 put 305 follow 302 turn 294 send 278 begin 266 rise 264 use 258 speak 257 arrive 251 live 246 hold 244 feel 238 lie 231 run Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3395 not 2309 very 1639 so 1299 other 1298 more 1238 great 1220 up 1199 much 1137 many 1044 well 1044 little 1003 large 988 only 922 small 890 good 850 now 819 long 798 as 788 most 786 out 776 here 762 then 660 few 645 also 624 first 613 down 586 about 532 same 528 almost 519 there 475 off 459 away 457 however 424 fine 420 again 409 even 407 such 399 high 397 far 387 on 384 soon 384 quite 382 several 372 never 369 low 368 still 350 white 350 old 344 own 330 just Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 198 most 144 least 140 good 60 large 52 great 41 high 39 near 38 fine 25 slight 24 Most 21 small 19 rich 18 bad 15 low 11 eld 10 early 7 old 7 lofty 7 late 7 handsome 6 strong 6 strange 6 grand 6 farth 6 deep 6 big 5 wide 5 soft 5 furth 4 rare 4 poor 4 minute 4 hard 4 easy 4 dark 4 close 3 tall 3 simple 3 sharp 3 severe 3 safe 3 narrow 3 long 3 light 3 hot 3 heavy 3 fair 3 bright 2 young 2 wild Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 590 most 31 well 22 least 1 long 1 hottest 1 early 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 country is very 6 people are very 5 _ do _ 4 _ is _ 4 hermit did not 4 moses was quite 4 nigel did not 4 nigel had yet 4 nigel went forward 3 birds are now 3 country being very 3 islands are very 3 man is not 3 people are great 3 sea was calm 2 _ am now 2 _ are _ 2 _ are willing 2 _ did not 2 _ do n''t 2 _ do right 2 _ does _ 2 _ fall _ 2 _ give way 2 _ go forward 2 _ got good 2 _ got noses 2 _ have _ 2 _ knew _ 2 _ know _ 2 _ say so 2 _ see _ 2 _ seem _ 2 _ tell stories 2 _ were soon 2 birds are less 2 birds are very 2 boat fell back 2 boat was so 2 country is hilly 2 forest had once 2 hand is comparatively 2 head being unable 2 head brought moses 2 hermit came up 2 hermit had apparently 2 hermit had therefore 2 hermit was disposed 2 hermit was quite 2 hermit was silent Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 boat had no more 2 hermit took no note 2 hermit took no notice 2 moses was not so 2 nigel did not at 2 nigel had no doubt 2 nigel made no objections 2 river had no distinguishable 2 time become not only 1 bird does not ordinarily 1 birds had not yet 1 birds were not very 1 boat having no accommodation 1 house was no longer 1 houses are no further 1 island is not large 1 island was not entirely 1 islands are not fragments 1 islands have no intercourse 1 man is not able 1 men have no regular 1 people are not savages 1 people have no idea 1 people have no intercourse 1 rivers are not rapid 1 time is not disagreeable 1 tree is not here A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 15348 author = Ballantyne, R. M. (Robert Michael) title = Blown to Bits; or, The Lonely Man of Rakata date = keywords = CHAPTER; Captain; Crown; D.D.; God; Illustrations; Java; Kathleen; Kathy; Kemp; Krakatoa; MARSHALL; Massa; Moses; Mr.; Mrs.; Nadgel; Nigel; Rakata; Rev.; Roy; SUSAN; Spinkie; Story; Sumatra; Tale; Van; Verkimier; WARNER; Winnie; child; good; hermit; life; little; look; man summary = "Father," said the tall man to the short one, "I do like to hear the Nigel could not help laughing at the way she said this as he handed her "But--excuse me," said Nigel, "your man spoke of you as a hermit--a sort der Kemp laid down his paddle, and, looking round, asked Nigel if he "But you are not old," said Nigel, wishing to turn the hermit''s mind "Look out, Moses," said Van der Kemp. "We get along wonderfully fast, Van der Kemp," said Nigel, while resting "Look here, run that to the mast-head," said Van der Kemp, handing a red "You see, Nigel," said Van der Kemp that night, as the two friends paced "Will it come again soon?" asked Nigel, turning to Van der Kemp. "I have been told," said the hermit to Nigel, as they went down with "It seems to me," he said to Nigel and the hermit who stood close beside id = 23371 author = Ballantyne, R. M. (Robert Michael) title = Blown to Bits: The Lonely Man of Rakata, the Malay Archipelago date = keywords = Batavia; CHAPTER; Captain; God; Java; Kathleen; Kathy; Kemp; Krakatoa; Massa; Moses; Nadgel; Nigel; Perboewatan; Rakata; Roy; Spinkie; Straits; Sumatra; Van; Verkimier; Winnie; hermit; look; man summary = "But--excuse me," said Nigel, "your man spoke of you as a hermit--a sort der Kemp laid down his paddle, and, looking round, asked Nigel if he hermit replied with a wave of the hand--Moses and Nigel with an "But you are not old," said Nigel, wishing to turn the hermit''s mind "Look out, Moses," said Van der Kemp. "We get along wonderfully fast, Van der Kemp," said Nigel, while resting "Look here, run that to the mast-head," said Van der Kemp, handing a red "You see, Nigel," said Van der Kemp that night, as the two friends paced "Will it come again soon?" asked Nigel, turning to Van der Kemp. "It cannot be far off the time now, I should think," said Van der Kemp. "I have been told," said the hermit to Nigel, as they went down with "It seems to me," he said to Nigel and the hermit who stood close beside id = 26844 author = Marryat, Frank title = Borneo and the Indian Archipelago with drawings of costume and scenery date = keywords = Borneo; Brooke; Bruni; Dyaks; England; English; Europeans; Hong; Kong; Kuchin; Manilla; Mr.; Muda; Samarang; Sarawak; Sincapore; Sooloo; chinese; illustration; malay summary = town of Kuchin is built on the left-hand side of the river Sarawak going that could be obtained from the ship was brought up in the native boats, several piratical prahus, the look-out men in the European boats, gig left the ship to survey the island Ku-king-san, the nearest port of prahus in sight, full of men, and each armed with a long gun, pulling officers, left the ship with four days'' provisions to survey a portion men-of-war boats having been towed by the steamer, we arrived some time boat for some time, appearing to take a great interest in every thing One day, dining at the house lent us by the sultan, Mr. Brooke was talking with some of our party of a young Malay chief, who, boarded, the gun-boat returned to the island as wise as she came out. id = 27422 author = Richings, Emily title = Through the Malay Archipelago date = keywords = Archipelago; Boedoer; Boro; Celebes; East; English; Government; Hindu; Holland; India; Java; Nature; Sultan; Sumatra; chinese; dutch; eastern; european; forest; green; island; javanese; life; malay; mountain; native; palm; tree; white; world summary = where vast forests of waving palms, blue chains of volcanic mountains, red-stemmed Banka palms cluster on the green islets of lake and river, Amherstia trees forming aisles of dark green foliage, brightened with A mountain road winds through rice-fields and tree-ferns towards fold of the palm-forest, bowed beneath the weight of green and yellow nuts a island gives place to the ancient Javanese territory, and Malay half-hidden in the green shadows of a great tamarind tree. red road beneath towering palms, skirts rice-fields and bamboo thickets green spaces and luxuriant trees, appears a typical Dutch town, variety of colour, blue and yellow, orange and green, red and violet." white, gold and green, orange and red, wave interlacing branches of The vivid green of one palm-clad shore burns in the gold of Little _campongs_ of palm-thatched huts stand on piles at the water''s gleams whitely against the green gloom of the vast palm-forest on id = 2530 author = Wallace, Alfred Russel title = The Malay Archipelago, Volume 1 The Land of the Orang-utan and the Bird of Paradise; A Narrative of Travel, with Studies of Man and Nature date = keywords = Amboyna; Archipelago; Australia; Bali; Borneo; CHAPTER; Celebes; Dyaks; Europe; Government; India; Java; Lombock; Macassar; Malacca; Mias; Moluccas; Mr.; New; Rajah; Sarawak; Singapore; Sumatra; Timor; chinese; dutch; european; island; malay summary = perceive between Asia and Australia a number of large and small islands islands the years of the great earthquakes form the chronological is placed the large island of Borneo, in which no sign of recent connected the great islands of Sumatra, Java, and Borneo with the allied species of Java, the wild cattle of Borneo and the kind long islands of Java, Sumatra, and Borneo resemble in their natural In the interior of the island the Chinese cut down forest trees in the landing-place to the hill a Dyak road had been formed, which consisted Near the landing-place we found a fine house, 250 feet long, raised high the houses by little aqueducts formed of large Bamboos split in half peculiar species of birds and mammals in such an island as Banca is a The number of land birds in the island of Celebes is 128, and from these id = 2539 author = Wallace, Alfred Russel title = The Malay Archipelago, Volume 2 The Land of the Orang-utan and the Bird of Paradise; A Narrative of Travel, with Studies of Man and Nature date = keywords = Amboyna; Archipelago; Aru; Australia; Batchian; Birds; Bouru; Bugis; Ceram; Dobbo; Dorey; Gilolo; Goram; Guinea; Islands; Macassar; Moluccas; Mr.; Mysol; New; Papuan; Paradise; Ternate; Waigiou; european; malay; man summary = beautiful little long-tailed bird, ornamented with green, red, and a good place for birds, and as possessing a large population both of a completely new form of the Bird of Paradise, differing most remarkably island), where some Malays and Galela men have a small village, and have our resting-place there was a little bush-covered island in the middle number of species of birds at present known from the various islands of the small number of birds yet shot more than half were known New Guinea One day I get under a tree where a number of the Great Paradise birds day I went out, I obtained 10 new species; so that although I collected only two days'' water on board, and the small, rocky, volcanic island After three days, my man brought me the first bird--a very fine The large islands to the east of New Guinea are very little known, but id = 38253 author = nan title = A Description of the Coasts of East Africa and Malabar in the Beginning of the Sixteenth Century date = keywords = Aden; Arabia; Barbosa; Bramans; Calicut; Cambay; Cape; China; Christians; Gentiles; India; Indians; KINGDOM; King; Lisbon; Malabar; Malaca; Moors; Narsinga; Ormuz; Ortelius; Persia; Portugal; Portuguese; Ramusio; Red; Sea; country; good; great; island; moorish summary = time ago on account of the great trade in gold which they carry on country saw such great destruction of their people and ships, The King of Guzarat is a great lord, both in revenue and people, and This King possesses great cities in his kingdom, and especially the river, with a large town called Baticala,[167] of very great trade very large town, peopled by Moors and Gentiles, of the kingdom of said that many men come from all the other kingdoms to this king''s has a Moorish king, a great lord; and in former times this kingdom women relations of the kings and great lords come also to see the king lives, towards the south is a very good town called Cananor.] country-born Moors, and much shipping and a great trade of exporting The king and people of this kingdom are Gentiles. kingdom of Gentiles which has a king who resides in a very great and