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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 4 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 75985 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 79 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 french 2 Spain 2 Rock 2 Mediterranean 2 Gibraltar 2 England 2 Egypt 1 town 1 thy 1 thou 1 thee 1 spanish 1 roman 1 pretty 1 polydeuce 1 place 1 moorish 1 man 1 love 1 like 1 lacon 1 italian 1 illustration 1 greek 1 english 1 egyptian 1 Zeus 1 Venice 1 Valletta 1 Tom 1 Tangier 1 Sultan 1 Staunton 1 St. 1 Snow 1 Skyscraper 1 Sir 1 Seton 1 Sandgate 1 San 1 Rover 1 Rome 1 Riviera 1 Port 1 Porpoise 1 Pan 1 Old 1 O''Wiggins 1 O''Malley 1 Nile Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 660 man 535 time 489 day 422 sea 349 way 346 city 329 town 329 place 298 side 294 hand 284 water 258 eye 253 thing 250 people 250 boat 250 board 235 one 227 part 223 year 212 shore 211 world 211 street 210 coast 204 name 203 life 202 friend 200 house 198 vessel 195 lady 192 deck 182 line 179 night 170 foot 165 land 164 country 163 view 162 ship 162 officer 162 island 153 head 153 course 151 wall 145 rock 144 nothing 143 wind 143 point 133 woman 133 sail 132 end 131 mountain Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 759 _ 241 Hearty 162 Gibraltar 160 Miss 153 St. 134 Mediterranean 115 Egypt 112 Mr 110 Mrs 101 Genoa 99 thou 96 Marseilles 87 Mizen 85 Spain 85 Sandgate 85 English 84 Malta 82 Joe 77 England 77 Barcelona 76 Venice 74 Staunton 74 Nice 73 de 73 Cairo 69 Rock 68 Greek 65 Porpoise 65 Bay 64 Malaga 64 Alexandria 63 Port 63 Europe 61 Tom 61 Naples 56 Nile 56 Captain 55 Carstairs 55 Africa 52 Harcourt 51 Sir 51 Moors 51 Monte 50 Bubble 49 Tangier 49 Frolic 48 o''er 48 exclaimed 45 la 45 France Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2662 it 2519 i 2470 he 1758 we 1261 you 1210 they 887 she 852 him 776 them 634 us 537 her 499 me 210 himself 143 itself 118 one 96 themselves 65 thee 46 myself 42 ourselves 30 yourself 25 herself 14 mine 10 his 8 ''s 7 yours 7 ours 6 theirs 5 hers 4 ye 4 thyself 3 on''t 3 ''em 2 thy 2 t''you 2 oneself 1 tale:-- 1 out,-- 1 nay 1 monsieur 1 indistinct 1 i''m 1 himself,-- 1 em 1 ay Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 10463 be 3624 have 1089 do 758 see 639 say 615 make 566 go 554 come 457 take 431 know 410 look 368 find 352 get 347 give 316 think 283 stand 241 tell 238 seem 238 leave 224 run 203 pass 202 call 195 keep 192 hear 187 rise 179 bring 179 answer 168 lie 167 feel 167 fall 164 speak 162 let 150 begin 149 carry 144 ask 143 turn 142 become 140 show 138 appear 133 remain 128 reach 128 hold 125 bear 123 put 121 believe 117 send 111 return 110 want 109 observe 104 build Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2069 not 762 so 707 more 609 up 601 very 493 now 464 out 457 little 452 other 452 great 440 most 439 then 418 well 412 still 407 good 406 as 379 only 379 old 373 much 372 long 327 first 312 here 307 down 284 there 274 however 270 away 265 many 256 even 238 last 237 once 235 again 232 soon 227 just 225 few 224 too 222 far 210 off 209 never 200 own 200 high 195 white 192 such 181 back 177 almost 173 also 161 in 159 ever 158 young 156 on 150 indeed Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 120 most 120 good 50 least 28 great 26 bad 24 high 16 Most 15 early 13 large 12 slight 12 fine 11 near 10 old 7 small 7 low 7 late 6 rich 5 short 5 noble 5 lovely 5 eld 4 pure 4 proud 4 narrow 4 long 4 heavy 4 grand 3 wide 3 wicked 3 topmost 3 hot 3 farth 2 wise 2 wild 2 warm 2 strong 2 southernmost 2 remote 2 poor 2 pleasant 2 minute 2 handsome 2 fast 2 faint 2 dry 2 deep 2 clear 2 broad 2 bl 2 big Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 320 most 20 well 12 least 1 merest 1 latest 1 highest 1 finest 1 eldest 1 easiest 1 bluest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 men are not 2 day is not 2 hearty did not 2 men did not 2 one does not 2 one knows not 2 people had time 2 sea was perfectly 2 streets are as 2 streets are narrow 2 town was once 1 _ are _ 1 _ are as 1 _ are continually 1 _ did _ 1 _ do _ 1 _ go _ 1 _ had _ 1 _ has ever 1 _ is worthy 1 _ say _ 1 _ see _ 1 _ was _ 1 _ was full 1 _ were busily 1 board was peter 1 board was pleased 1 boat getting off 1 boat was alongside 1 boat was large 1 boat was strongly 1 boat were almost 1 boats going ahead 1 boats had not 1 boats had now 1 boats passed at 1 boats were busily 1 boats were instantly 1 boats were just 1 cities are not 1 city being again 1 city have civic 1 city is as 1 city is mainly 1 city is necessary 1 city is not 1 city is somnolent 1 city take up 1 coast are almost 1 coast are exceptionally Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 city is not likely 1 friend ''s no more 1 friends had no reason 1 men are not barbarians 1 men tell no tales 1 name ''s not cometas 1 street is not more 1 town is not devoid A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 39522 author = Davis, Richard Harding title = The Rulers of the Mediterranean date = keywords = Cairo; Egypt; English; Englishman; Gibraltar; Khedive; Mediterranean; Moor; New; Rock; Spain; Sultan; Tangier; egyptian; french; illustration; like; man; place summary = little colony and her six thousand men, very much like her forgetfulness doubly interesting when you walk the pretty streets of the Rock to-day, and grins disappear, and they pass you with eyes set like dead men''s What looks like a rock is a monster gun painted gray, or What looks like a solid face of rock is a hanging curtain the English understand the people they like to protect. Tangier''s beauty lies in so many different things--in the monk-like garb with stones and lined with bazars, and on market-days peopled with If I had seen horrible things in the Sultan''s prison--men starving, or and men in turbans and long robes, and negroes in what looked like The English, who have done so many fine things for Egypt''s good, and who What looks like the upper end of a black sight of this the soldiers cry "Long live the Sultan" three times. id = 41263 author = Griffiths, Arthur title = The Mediterranean: Its Storied Cities and Venerable Ruins date = keywords = Africa; Alexandria; Algiers; Barcelona; Bay; Canal; Castle; Egypt; England; Europe; France; Genoa; Gibraltar; Grand; Italy; Malaga; Malta; Mark; Marseilles; Mediterranean; Monte; Moors; Naples; Nice; Nile; Old; Port; Riviera; Rock; Rome; San; Spain; St.; Valletta; Venice; english; french; greek; italian; moorish; roman; spanish; town summary = vegetation in abundance near at hand, and noble views of coast and sea in from the city, on high ground between the open country and the sea. glorious view is obtained of city, port, and sea. the present day Marseilles is the chief maritime town of France, and the country, the genuine old light Greek type has left its mark to this day Mountain, I hardly know a town view in the world to equal that from Notre stretches its long array of cities and bays between Marseilles and Genoa. good Greek port of Limpia; if you want a grand view of sea and land and fringes the sea, we are still in old Genoa--the city of the merchant greatness, mere villages in the place of populous cities. These two towns have had their day of greatness. town--the city of the great Alexander, and the gate of that land of id = 34488 author = Kingston, William Henry Giles title = The Cruise of the Frolic date = keywords = Bubble; Captain; Carstairs; Cowes; Daggerfeldt; England; Frolic; Harcourt; Hearty; Hernan; Joe; Miss; Mizen; Mrs; O''Malley; O''Wiggins; Porpoise; Rover; Sandgate; Seton; Sir; Skyscraper; Snow; Staunton; Tom; pretty summary = "Hear that, young ladies," said Sir Francis, looking, however, at Miss fine-looking set of fellows, as they stood hat in hand, dressed in plain The ladies, old and young, soon got tired of doing any thing, and the "Remember, ladies, that time and tide wait for no man," answered Hearty. Manning the gig, we pulled on shore to pass away the time till before Sandgate could have time to carry Miss Manners on shore. nothing like the present time for a good thing when it can be got, and a sail appears in sight," said Captain Staunton, as he was quitting the By this time all hands were on deck, looking at the Greek brig; but all Hearty looked at Miss Mizen and thought he should very much mean time Hearty had been constantly on board the brig-of-war. "Yes, sir," answered Margaret, "he said he thought he might just look in id = 11533 author = Theocritus title = Theocritus, translated into English Verse date = keywords = BATTUS; Begin; COMETAS; CORYDON; DAPHNIS; GORGO; Heracles; IDYLL; MAIDEN; Maids; Pan; Zeus; lacon; love; polydeuce; thee; thou; thy summary = Thy piping; second thou to Pan alone. "So, Daphnis, thou must try a fall with Love! But stalwart Love hath won the fall of thee." Dead as alive, shall Daphnis work Love woe." I shall be with thee presently, and in the end thou''lt smart. Come on, I''ll sing it out with thee--until thou givest in. And thou, my good friend Morson, ne''er look with favouring eyes Thou listen, since the Muses like thee well. "Art thou for singing, Daphnis, lord of the lowing kine? hadst not thou thy lady-loves?" Spied as I passed her with my kine, and said, "How fair art thou!" I''ll give thee for thy schooling this ewe, that horns hath none: Hath love ne''er kept thee from thy slumbers yet? Gold-sculptured in Love''s temple; thou, thy lyre I loved thee, maiden, when thou cam''st long since, When thou didst fling thee to thy lair?