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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 9 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2894 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 82 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 man 5 thing 5 life 5 great 4 good 3 nature 3 love 3 like 2 world 2 woman 2 time 2 people 2 old 2 mind 2 heart 2 footnote 2 fish 2 God 1 year 1 work 1 way 1 trí 1 truth 1 true 1 triad 1 thy 1 thou 1 soul 1 section 1 reason 1 power 1 pleasure 1 opinion 1 note 1 long 1 little 1 let 1 lead 1 kind 1 irish 1 instruction 1 illustration 1 human 1 honor 1 happiness 1 gen 1 game 1 french 1 fly 1 find Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1666 man 636 life 516 thing 433 people 408 time 369 world 336 mind 298 love 282 woman 279 nature 267 day 263 other 259 way 248 nothing 244 one 243 note 226 heart 219 kind 217 person 216 pleasure 205 word 202 power 199 hand 189 friend 187 reason 178 honor 175 work 174 year 171 part 170 matter 170 happiness 167 age 162 knowledge 159 thought 157 fact 154 truth 153 something 153 place 153 case 152 opinion 148 character 139 book 133 sense 133 footnote 132 action 131 society 131 death 130 soul 130 eye 126 virtue Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 6062 _ 168 N 160 God 132 Trí 126 Eliot 123 . 101 Lytton 100 f. 99 de 96 thou 94 et 90 nó 87 Rochefoucauld 80 BM 78 Ireland 70 L 66 Hérenn 64 gen 62 ar 56 m. 56 Sage 56 Buxton 55 la 51 Damsel 50 n. 47 fer 44 Ptah 43 B 42 le 40 Smith 39 tri 39 King 38 gan 38 H. 37 pl 36 heaven 36 M 36 Love 36 London 35 n 35 Nature 35 Maxims 35 M. 34 om 34 fri 34 cen 34 LL 34 Heine 32 I. 32 H Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3456 it 1809 he 1563 we 1212 they 972 you 938 i 740 them 633 him 609 us 294 himself 226 she 205 me 159 itself 148 themselves 136 ourselves 122 her 107 one 50 yourself 35 thee 29 myself 21 herself 13 oneself 11 thyself 8 theirs 6 yours 4 thy 4 ours 4 his 3 ''em 2 mine 2 hers 2 ha 1 ~party.~--he 1 yourselves 1 wi 1 us.--_rousseau 1 us.--_arsène 1 urbem 1 th{ose 1 produce.--_léves 1 pelf 1 morals.--_wellington 1 made.--_young 1 lxvii.--why 1 je 1 itself.--_shakespeare 1 it.--_johnson 1 it.--_addison 1 immortality.--_bancroft 1 huntsmen.--_locke Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 11643 be 2422 have 1140 do 765 make 546 say 441 give 421 see 392 find 376 know 363 take 344 come 277 go 271 think 233 become 200 look 190 show 185 let 166 love 166 live 157 speak 154 get 153 feel 146 leave 146 call 142 seem 141 bear 130 put 127 follow 127 appear 116 lose 112 keep 108 lie 106 bring 104 want 102 tell 100 use 100 fall 99 pass 98 mean 98 believe 96 possess 93 try 92 wish 92 set 89 happen 89 die 88 form 87 learn 82 write 82 remain Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2149 not 842 so 765 more 692 only 671 great 599 good 519 other 492 very 472 most 426 well 423 much 372 always 365 never 362 own 321 as 319 even 273 many 269 little 254 often 252 first 242 long 234 same 231 too 226 old 223 up 223 true 218 then 195 out 192 such 188 high 175 human 166 bad 164 less 161 still 159 just 153 now 150 far 137 ever 135 happy 135 few 125 last 123 yet 119 also 117 therefore 116 wise 113 small 112 real 112 once 111 away 110 soon Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 131 good 117 most 79 great 74 high 57 least 40 bad 21 happy 18 small 14 slight 12 strong 10 wise 10 Most 9 large 8 noble 8 mean 8 low 7 old 7 near 7 long 7 hard 7 early 6 true 6 fine 5 weak 5 easy 5 deep 5 black 4 wide 4 sweet 4 safe 4 rich 4 rare 4 loud 4 grand 4 brave 3 sure 3 simple 3 short 3 rude 3 quick 3 pure 3 pleasant 3 manif 3 late 3 fair 3 dark 3 common 3 bright 3 bitter 2 worthy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 355 most 15 well 13 least 2 hard 1 wrought.--_addison 1 worst 1 weakest 1 outnumber.--_schiller 1 long 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 man is not 5 _ do not 4 _ is _ 4 mind is not 4 nothing is so 4 people are so 3 life is so 3 men are not 3 men are so 3 people are pleased 3 people do not 3 women do not 3 world is full 3 world is so 2 _ do n''t 2 _ has _ 2 _ think not 2 life is not 2 life is short 2 love is as 2 love is not 2 man is always 2 man is old 2 man went about 2 men are apt 2 men do not 2 mind does not 2 nature has not 2 nature is not 2 one does not 2 one is never 2 people are more 2 people are very 2 persons are so 2 pleasures are accessible 2 things are impossible 2 woman is always 2 woman is never 1 _ are _ 1 _ are only 1 _ are very 1 _ be better 1 _ be brief 1 _ be not 1 _ be thou 1 _ be very 1 _ bear witness 1 _ comes next 1 _ comes only 1 _ do _ Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ has not that 1 friend is not always 1 honor has no essential 1 honor has no origin 1 life had no place 1 life is no more 1 love has no wherefore 1 love is not jealous.--_ninon 1 man has no critical 1 man has no harbor 1 man has no more 1 man has no opportunity 1 man is not exceptional 1 man is not only 1 man take no thought 1 men are not content 1 men are not so 1 men have no notion 1 men is not god 1 mind is not less 1 mind is not only 1 minds do not necessarily 1 nature is no sentimentalist,--does 1 nature is not so 1 one are no triads 1 others is not worth 1 people have no perspective 1 people have no thoughts 1 people put no trust 1 things are not equal 1 things is no satisfaction 1 time has no shore 1 way are not usually 1 way was not good 1 words have no effect 1 world is not sufficient 1 years does not easily A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 26604 author = Ballou, Maturin M. (Maturin Murray) title = Pearls of Thought date = keywords = Buxton; Eliot; God; Heine; Herbert; Hugo; Lytton; Musset; Petit; Senn; Smith; Swetchine; Taylor; come; day; find; good; great; heart; human; let; life; like; little; love; man; mind; nature; old; power; reason; soul; thing; time; true; truth; woman; world summary = namely, the mind and the soul of man.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ Man makes a death which nature never made.--_Young._ Blinded as they are to their true character by self-love, every man is humiliating, affection of the mind: we never reflect on the man we love ~Infirmities.~--Never mind what a man''s virtues are; waste no time in Loves change sure as man or moon, and wane like warm full days of The love of man to woman is a thing common, and of course, and at first I considered how little man is, yet, in his own mind, how great! not a man living who has not, some time in his life, admitted that envy, and wounds no man''s self-love.--_Bulwer-Lytton._ love of all things in the world, but there are very few men whom they To think of the part one little woman can play in the life of a man, so id = 20718 author = Glyn, Elinor title = The Damsel and the Sage: A Woman''s Whimsies date = keywords = Damsel; Sage; fish; man summary = And the Damsel said to the Sage: "And tell me, Sage, what became of the ear?" asked the Damsel. "No one," said the Sage; "the first man went about with only one ear; "I want to know," said the Damsel, "why a woman who has Diamonds and "It means, first of all," said the Sage, "that the woman is a fool, as desirable bird in the world; and when the man realizes he has lost it "Please open the door, Sage," entreated the Damsel, "and I will tell you you bite my hand!'' Now tell me, Sage, which was right--the man or the The Sage was fairly gracious, and to while away the time the Damsel "Thank you, Damsel," said the Sage, gently for him; "but the Fisherman "That would be for another day," said the Damsel; "and--for another Tell me, Sage, why did this action cure the Dove of its great love id = 30508 author = Kagemna title = The Instruction of Ptah-Hotep and the Instruction of Ke''Gemni The Oldest Books in the World date = keywords = Egypt; God; King; Ptah; instruction; man; thing; thou; thy summary = desire above all things that, in their humble way, these books shall be Ptah-Hotep--Concerning the Book--The Treatise of Ke''Gemni--Date of the give, among other matters, the place of the Instructions of Ptah-hotep thousand years old is no easy thing to translate; but _faute de mieux_ thou art grown, and hast taken to thee a wife, being master in thy thee with all good things, as did thy mother. Speak when he questioneth thee; so shall thy speech be good in his God shall make it great under thine hand. good before the God. If thou have known a man of none account that C. If thou obey these things that I have said unto thee, all thy instruct a man; how he shall speak, after he hath heard them; yea, he Instruct thy son [thus]; for the obedient man is one thine heart, what time thou speakest, to saying things such that the id = 9105 author = La Rochefoucauld, François duc de title = Reflections; or Sentences and Moral Maxims date = keywords = Cardinal; Duc; Duke; Maxims; Paris; R.II; Reflections; Rochefoucauld; french; good; great; life; love; man; mind summary = "As Rochefoucauld his maxims drew From Nature--I believe them true. life-time, yet in every English edition this Maxim appears in the body to be a wholly good man that my friend cannot afford me a greater He has great presence of mind, and knows so well how to turn and not by their mind; so that PLUS a great vanity, heroes are made like 25.--We need greater virtues to sustain good than evil fortune. 88.--Self love increases or diminishes for us the good qualities of our 93.--Old men delight in giving good advice as a consolation for the fact good qualities, and praise given to wit, valour, and beauty, tends to 422.--All passions make us commit some faults, love alone makes us 494.--What makes us see that men know their faults better than we I do not think that any man of good sense has ever yet believed in it. id = 16065 author = Leavitt, Thad. W. H. (Thaddeus William Henry) title = Wise or Otherwise date = keywords = great; heart; lead; life; love; man; woman summary = "Lead, kindly light." The words are gravely spoken by the middle-aged, His companion said, "Now will he be happy," but her own great heart "We hear men speak so frequently of womanly women, ending their praises There are women who consider the world well lost for the man whom they Take marriage, for instance:--A young woman marries a man who is A woman may defy the world for a man she loves, and imagine that he will human nature; gives love of oriental luxury to the woman with nothing a There is no music for man so sweet as that set upon a woman''s tongue. The promise of eternal sleep is not sweet to a live man. Nature must love woman to fashion her so beautiful. men and saddens the hearts of women. A woman without love is a tree without sap. The man who stains the purity of a woman tarnishes his own soul. id = 36821 author = Penn, Richard title = Maxims and Hints on Angling, Chess, Shooting, and Other Matters Also, Miseries of Fishing date = keywords = Mr.; Thompson; fish; fly; game; good; illustration summary = in the water, a good fish will always hook himself, on your gently only two cases in which a fish taking the fly will infallibly hook think that you can make a better guess as to where the fish is likely to If, during your walks by the river-side, you have marked any good fish, tired." Much valuable time and many a good fish may be lost by this man who seldom catches a fish at any other time, usually gets hold of Our angler, after much patient fishing, hooked a fine trout; and having Fishing for the first time with flies of your own making--and finding Being allowed to have one day''s fishing in a stream, the windings of fish; and then having the identical fly, lost by you on that occasion, or even to his friend Thompson, that the very fine fish, about which he id = 10715 author = Schopenhauer, Arthur title = The Essays of Arthur Schopenhauer; Counsels and Maxims date = keywords = Translator; age; footnote; great; life; like; long; man; nature; old; people; section; thing; time; way; work; world; year summary = after the pleasures of life and finds himself their dupe; the wise man way of happiness than any form of practical life, with its constant it may be said that solitude is the original and natural state of man, In making his way through life, a man will find it useful to be ready People of similar nature, on the other hand, immediately come to feel In the great moments of life, when a man decides upon In this way the earliest years of a man''s life lay the foundation of But why is it that to an old man his past life appears so short? that time of life a man can make more out of the little that he knows. man''s life; and yet often, in the one case no less than in the other, At that time of life, _what a man has in himself_ is of id = 10741 author = Schopenhauer, Arthur title = The Essays of Arthur Schopenhauer: the Wisdom of Life date = keywords = Greek; fame; footnote; good; great; happiness; honor; kind; life; like; man; nature; opinion; people; pleasure; thing summary = pre-eminently strong; a man placed like this will never feel happy all great development in man, whose intellect is Nature''s crowning point, knowledge, this intellectual life, like a slowly-forming work of art, The ordinary man places his life''s happiness in things external to the latter point of view, to be _a man of honor_ is to exercise what The feelings of honor and shame exist in every man who is not utterly Honor, therefore, means that a man is not _Official honor_ is the general opinion of other people that a man who military honor, in the true sense of the word, the opinion that people the man who is insulted remains--in the eyes of all _honorable application of the principle of honor: the man who recognized no human As a general rule, the longer a man''s fame is likely to last, the The truth is that a man is made happy, not by fame, id = 31672 author = nan title = The Triads of Ireland date = keywords = H^1; Hérenn; Ireland; Laws; Lec; O''Dav; fer; gen; irish; man; note; thing; triad; trí summary = Trí clochraid Hérenn: Ard Macha, Clúain Maic Nóis, Cell Dara. Trí díthruib Hérenn: Fid Mór hi Cúailgni, Fid Déicsen hi Tuirtri, The three desert places of Ireland: Fid Mór (Great Wood) in Coolney, Trí hátha Hérenn: Áth Clíath, Áth Lúain, Áth Caille. Trí maige Hérenn: Mag mBreg, Mag Crúachan, Mac Liphi. Trí hessa Hérenn: Ess Rúaid, Ess Danainne, Ess Maige. Trí fothirbi Hérenn: Tír Rátha Laidcniáin, Slíab Commáin, Slíab Trí hairderca Hérenn: Léimm Conculaind, Dún Cáin, Srub Brain. Trí gnátha Hérenn: Tráig Lí, Lúachair Dedad, Slíab Fúait. Trí dotcaid maic athaig: clemnas fri hócthigern, gabáil for tascor Three excellent things for a householder: proposing to a good woman, Trí ségainni Hérenn: fáthrann, adbann a cruit, berrad aigthe. Trí scenb Hérenn: Tulach na nEpscop, Ached Déo, Duma mBúirig. Trí ná dlegat athchommus: mac [et] a athair, ben [et] a céile, dóer Trí galair ata ferr sláinti: seola mná for mac, gríss bronn-galair trí clochraid 34.