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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 75148 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 73 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 Lord 7 Nelson 7 Naples 7 Captain 6 Sir 5 british 5 St. 5 Hamilton 5 England 4 french 4 William 4 Mr. 4 Lady 4 God 3 spanish 3 Vincent 3 Troubridge 3 France 3 Emma 3 Admiral 2 Nile 2 NELSON 2 Mediterranean 2 Malta 2 King 2 Keith 2 Hood 2 HAMILTON 2 French 2 Earl 2 Cadiz 2 Admiralty 1 victory 1 ship 1 man 1 lordship 1 letter 1 West 1 Villeneuve 1 Victory 1 Vestal 1 Verner 1 Vanguard 1 Trafalgar 1 Toulon 1 Surgeon 1 Smith 1 Sigenok 1 Sidney 1 Sicilian Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2414 ship 1560 man 1388 day 1336 fleet 1288 time 1165 letter 1083 enemy 1073 lordship 810 order 807 officer 774 line 724 friend 638 service 613 country 611 board 558 battle 537 victory 529 gun 515 squadron 511 admiral 507 sea 505 command 493 war 490 frigate 484 commander 483 moment 481 action 459 part 451 life 449 honour 445 vessel 434 captain 427 hand 422 way 416 sail 415 year 415 boat 387 mind 383 wind 375 thing 366 force 364 nothing 353 hero 351 heart 350 shore 349 place 347 chief 332 power 330 fire 323 flag Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3957 Nelson 2190 _ 1264 Lord 1249 Captain 1127 Sir 614 Naples 613 French 598 Hamilton 588 Admiral 586 Lady 583 St. 557 Mr. 519 England 458 William 352 Malta 351 God 330 Vincent 311 King 299 Troubridge 299 Mediterranean 283 Admiralty 268 France 257 General 256 Majesty 248 Toulon 237 Earl 234 Cadiz 228 Emma 221 i. 218 Nile 208 John 207 Parker 206 ii 204 c. 200 Palermo 194 Egypt 184 London 183 Gibraltar 179 NELSON 178 Great 176 Hardy 166 Britain 164 Napoleon 164 August 163 Mrs. 162 British 158 Keith 158 Copenhagen 156 West 155 Enemy Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8702 he 6897 i 5565 it 2909 him 2781 they 2252 you 1888 them 1685 we 1409 me 825 she 762 himself 680 her 572 us 227 myself 212 themselves 92 itself 65 herself 62 yourself 54 one 34 ourselves 20 mine 15 his 10 theirs 10 ours 9 thee 8 yours 2 yourselves 2 your 2 hers 1 ye 1 words--"you 1 up.--"they 1 think,--or 1 smile--"they 1 save--(himself 1 pelf 1 our 1 on''t 1 mind--"they 1 him,--"your 1 go,--i 1 dy''d 1 collingwood,--i 1 ''s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 25225 be 10910 have 2194 do 1651 say 1548 make 1424 take 1264 go 1110 send 1061 give 989 see 951 get 937 write 903 know 856 come 781 leave 771 receive 727 think 648 find 519 tell 511 feel 495 keep 484 return 467 believe 462 follow 452 bring 418 carry 411 pass 407 put 395 hope 383 arrive 382 call 361 fall 356 lose 352 become 349 seem 346 appear 332 wish 331 hear 311 remain 309 join 299 sail 283 expect 282 wound 279 continue 266 prevent 264 stand 263 consider 259 look 255 order 255 bear Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4783 not 1648 so 1195 very 1186 great 1179 more 1080 most 1007 only 973 well 904 other 897 as 880 now 865 then 855 never 838 up 798 own 796 french 767 much 765 good 725 british 709 ever 683 first 673 out 636 soon 599 off 591 such 588 however 555 long 526 many 524 same 510 even 475 again 469 little 466 also 459 dear 437 few 430 last 420 therefore 406 thus 393 immediately 391 too 372 always 358 small 347 far 339 here 328 there 323 down 319 possible 319 about 317 spanish 314 still Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 209 good 170 great 168 least 129 most 79 small 77 high 53 dear 39 bad 37 fine 22 strong 20 slight 20 near 16 large 14 true 13 eld 12 full 11 manif 11 deep 10 warm 10 handsome 9 old 9 happy 8 young 8 noble 8 low 7 sincere 7 proud 6 loud 6 kind 6 headmost 6 brave 5 poor 5 late 5 early 5 bold 5 big 5 able 5 Most 4 wise 4 sweet 4 southernmost 4 rich 4 long 4 firm 4 close 4 clear 4 choice 3 short 3 safe 3 quick Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 951 most 31 well 15 least 2 soon 2 meanest 2 fast 1 hard 1 finest 1 bathurst Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/5/2/9/15299/15299-h/15299-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/5/2/9/15299/15299-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 14 nelson did not 13 nelson had not 11 _ see _ 10 nelson was not 5 battle was over 5 fleet did not 5 lordship did not 5 nelson received orders 4 _ was _ 4 enemy were not 4 nelson was now 3 _ did not 3 fleet was now 3 french are not 3 french be so 3 french were not 3 nelson does not 3 nelson had already 3 nelson had ever 3 nelson had never 3 nelson is not 3 nelson made answer 3 nelson was always 3 nelson was fully 3 nelson was never 3 nelson was so 3 nelson was then 3 nelson was thus 3 ship being about 3 ships did not 2 _ come out 2 _ did _ 2 _ do not 2 _ hopes _ 2 _ is _ 2 _ know _ 2 _ was not 2 battle was now 2 country had not 2 country is just 2 country was so 2 day is bad 2 enemy came out 2 enemy gets supplies 2 enemy have not 2 enemy was not 2 fleet ''s not 2 fleet has more 2 fleet was about 2 fleet was there Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 french have not many 2 guns are not better 1 _ was no manoeuvering 1 _ was no manoeuvring 1 _ was not _ 1 _ was not content 1 battle is not always 1 country had not always 1 country have no idea 1 enemy had no other 1 enemy was not great 1 enemy were not merely 1 enemy were not there 1 fleet ''s no more 1 fleet did not immediately 1 french are not soon 1 french were no match 1 french were not then 1 letter is not so 1 lordship did not fully 1 lordship is not insensible 1 lordship was no less 1 naples are not more 1 nelson did not then 1 nelson does not absolutely 1 nelson had no feeling 1 nelson had no idea 1 nelson had no need 1 nelson had not suddenly 1 nelson had not thoroughly 1 nelson had not yet 1 nelson is not only 1 nelson is not yet 1 nelson made no doubt 1 nelson made no mention 1 nelson made no reply 1 nelson received no news 1 nelson was no flatterer 1 nelson was not much 1 nelson was not sure 1 nelson was not there 1 nelson was not thus 1 nelson was not unmindful 1 nelson wrote no less 1 officer is not successful 1 officers had no such 1 orders were not now 1 service was not less 1 ship was no small 1 ships are not fit A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 15233 author = Beatty, William title = Authentic Narrative of the Death of Lord Nelson date = keywords = Captain; Enemy; Fleet; HARDY; LORDSHIP; NELSON; Surgeon; victory summary = known to His LORDSHIP, that all the Enemy''s ships had the iron hoops on Victory''s deck, formed in a close line of battle ahead on the starboard times said to Captain HARDY and Doctor SCOTT (Chaplain of the ship, and the Enemy in two lines, the British Fleet set all possible sail. Victory still continued to carry all her sail, he wished Captain HARDY ships of Admiral COLLINGWOOD''s line being engaged with the Enemy LORD NELSON and Captain HARDY walked the quarter-deck in conversation The Victory by this time, having approached close to the Enemy''s van, decks, upon the Enemy; when Captain HARDY represented to His LORDSHIP, opposite to the Victory; having also an Enemy''s ship, said to be La said HIS LORDSHIP, "none of _our_ ships have struck, HARDY."--"No, my some of Captain HARDY''S, who had come on board the Victory that day from id = 16912 author = Harrison, James title = The Life of the Right Honourable Horatio Lord Viscount Nelson, Volume 1 date = keywords = Admiral; August; Captain; Earl; England; Hamilton; Hood; Horatio; John; Lieutenant; Lord; Mr.; Naples; Nelson; Sir; St.; Troubridge; Vanguard; William; british; french; spanish summary = consequence of which, Captain Nelson was ordered to conduct the fleet Some time after Captain Nelson had joined Lord Hood, in the West Indies, who, immediately, says Captain Nelson, "had the goodness to order me to command; and, shortly after, Captain Nelson received orders from the much--"Captain Nelson, of his majesty''s ship Agamemnon, who had the that Captain Nelson had any idea they could have taken his ships; but, ship, till the coming up of Captain Nelson, in the Agamemnon, by whom it The six ships engaged were the Victory, Admiral Mann, and Captain soon after, Sir John Jervis immediately offered Captain Nelson the having a captain appointed to command under him in his new ship. Captain, on board of which Ship Commodore Nelson''s Pendant was letter, Rear-Admiral Sir Horatio Nelson received orders actually to Troubridge, Esq. captain of his majesty''s ship Culloden, and commander The following letter, from Captain Troubridge to Sir Horatio Nelson, id = 16913 author = Harrison, James title = The Life of the Right Honourable Horatio Lord Viscount Nelson, Volume 2 date = keywords = Admiral; Ball; Bronte; Captain; Earl; England; Foudroyant; General; Hamilton; Keith; Lady; Lord; Majesty; Malta; Mr.; Naples; Nelson; Nile; Palermo; Sicilian; Sidney; Sir; Smith; St.; Troubridge; Vincent; William; british; french summary = "Sir Sidney Smith," says his lordship, writing this month to Captain Three letters were this day written by Lord Nelson to the Earl of St. Vincent; one of them has a conclusion so forcibly interesting, on Lord Nelson had shifted his flag, having that day sent Captain Hardy to In a letter written the preceding day to Earl Spencer, Lord Nelson says, informed Lord Nelson, next day, in the following public letter. In a long letter, of this day''s date, to Admiral Duckworth, Lord Nelson On the 19th, Lord Nelson having been informed, by his friend Sir William French ships would venture out, his lordship wrote to Lord Keith, that Lord Nelson, and his friends Sir William and Lady Hamilton, were pledged and Lord Nelson, with Sir William and Lady Hamilton, two days presented to Lord Nelson by the captains of his majesty''s fleet who id = 23504 author = Kingston, William Henry Giles title = The Story of Nelson also "The Grateful Indian", "The Boatswain''s Son" date = keywords = Captain; Harry; Lord; Malcolm; Nelson; Pearce; Ripley; Sam; Sigenok; Verner; Vestal; french summary = Well, as I was going to tell you, my father followed Captain Captain Nelson leaped on shore, sword in hand, leaving The captain sprang on board, and soon had got the line-of-battle ships and a frigate were seen from the masthead. to bear away, and a French frigate came up and took the line-of-battle ships, four frigates, and a sloop of war, to look after the French ''Out boats!'' was the order, and each of our ships near at hand sent as red-hot shot, which several times nearly set our ships on fire. went away, only leaving a frigate or so to watch what took place; but we By noon the next day the young commander had got his ship ready for sea, Pearce Ripley!" The admiral received the young captain with every mark Sir Pearce Ripley commanded several line of battle ships, and took an id = 16915 author = Mahan, A. T. (Alfred Thayer) title = The Life of Nelson, Volume 2 The Embodiment of the Sea Power of Great Britain date = keywords = Admiralty; Battle; Bonaparte; Britain; Cadiz; Captain; Copenhagen; England; France; Gibraltar; Great; Hamilton; Indies; Keith; Lady; Lord; Malta; Mediterranean; Naples; Nelson; Nile; Parker; Sir; St.; Toulon; Trafalgar; Vincent; West; british; french; lordship summary = Nelson joins the fleet under Sir Hyde Parker, at Yarmouth Parker ordered home, and Nelson left in command Nelson''s hope of meeting the French fleet "I have wrote to Lord Keith, and home," said Nelson to Sir Sidney placed other ships where he thought best, and signalled Nelson to last preparation for a Russian war; while Nelson fancied that St. Vincent himself, as commander of the Channel fleet, had recommended Next day, after returning to his own ship, Nelson drew up the Nelson received the letter a few minutes before dinner-time," wrote The great command of time which Lord Nelson thus gave his small ships to watch the enemy''s fleet, and ordered them to return show what Nelson was among British admirals to the men of his day, and "Ça Ira," French ship-of-the-line, Nelson''s action with, "Captain," British ship-of-the-line, carries Nelson''s Nelson''s letter to, about his missing the French fleet, 280-282. id = 15437 author = Nelson, Horatio Nelson, Viscount title = The Letters of Lord Nelson to Lady Hamilton, Vol II. With A Supplement Of Interesting Letters By Distinguished Characters date = keywords = Emma; God; HAMILTON; Horatia; King; Lord; Mr.; Naples; Nelson; letter summary = Young Faddy, my Dearest Emma, brought me, two days ago, your dear and most kind letter of November 26th, and you are sure that I shall take good, dear, kind heart, must not think that I shall die one hour the Admiral Lutwidge is a good man; and, I like Mrs. Lutwidge--and shall, You may rely, my dear Emma, that nothing shall be wanting, on my part, He will return soon, when he shall have the letter and money. I am better, my dear Emma, than I have been, and shall get through the Sir William Bolton joined last night; and received his letters, takes as long to send a letter to Malta, as to England. I sent, my own Dearest Emma, a letter for you, last night, in a Torbay SIR WILLIAM HAMILTON, K.B. Letters OF LORD NELSON, &c. SIR WILLIAM HAMILTON, K.B. Letters OF LORD NELSON, &c. id = 15469 author = Nelson, Horatio Nelson, Viscount title = The Letters of Lord Nelson to Lady Hamilton, Vol. I. With A Supplement Of Interesting Letters By Distinguished Characters date = keywords = Emma; God; HAMILTON; LETTER; Lord; Mr.; Mrs.; NELSON; Naples; Sir; William summary = In presenting to the Public the Letters of LORD NELSON to LADY May God bless you, my dear Lady; and be assured, I ever am, and shall Your dear, good, kind, and most affectionate letters, from Saturday to I wish Sir William had come home a week ago, then I should have seen the distress, which Sir William must every day feel, in knowing that know, when my accounts are settled, at New Year''s Day. To be sure, we shall employ the trades-people of our village, in I thank you for the King''s letters, I shall write a kind line to write direct to Merton, till I hear that mine to Sir William, sent shall have our sea friends; and, I know, Sir William thinks they are dear, excellent letters, that I may know every thing which has passed This letter will find you at dear Merton; where we shall one day meet, id = 15299 author = Runciman, Walter Runciman, Baron title = Drake, Nelson and Napoleon date = keywords = Admiral; Cadiz; Captain; Collingwood; Drake; Duke; Emma; Emperor; England; France; French; God; Government; Hamilton; King; Lady; Lord; Naples; Napoleon; Nelson; Philip; Queen; Sir; St.; Victory; Villeneuve; William; british; man; spanish summary = I have given this book the title of "Drake, Nelson and Napoleon" terrible catastrophe to the great French line-of-battle ship, he Nelson''s great talents and his victories caused society outwardly to irresistibly Nelson''s influence permeated the fleet, for no man knew Parker, at a critical moment in the battle of Copenhagen, hoisted No. 39, which meant "Leave off action." Nelson shrugged his shoulders, and exist in this state." Lord Nelson conducted the British case with the and left Nelson to hoist his flag as commander-in-chief on the _St. George_, which was not ready, and was possibly being refitted after ships, Nelson sailed for Malta, and had the good fortune to sight a continuous protection of British men-of-war was with great difficulty part, Nelson''s sailors had great faith in his naval genius. to the sailing war vessels in Nelson''s time. French fleet, and the indignity of having a man like Sir John Orde put id = 947 author = Southey, Robert title = The Life of Horatio, Lord Nelson date = keywords = AGAMEMNON; Admiralty; Captain; Egypt; England; English; France; French; God; Hamilton; Hood; Lady; Lord; Mediterranean; Naples; Neapolitan; Nelson; Sir; St.; Troubridge; Vincent; british; ship; spanish summary = of." Accordingly orders were given to enforce the Navigation Act. Major-General Sir Thomas Shirley was at this time governor of the escaped; but Nelson bore in mind the admirable plan of attack which Lord the enemy was not great; but Nelson received a serious injury: a shot well."--"Now," said Nelson, "had we taken ten sail, and allowed the line," said Nelson, "is truly astonishing; but all men are alike, and Pennant in the MINERVE--Action with the SABINA--Battle off Cape St. Vincent--Nelson commands the inner Squadron at the Blockade of Cadiz sea as a rotten ship could be, Nelson sailed from Leghorn, and joined one morning on board Lord Nelson''s ship, with his hands tied behind him. The other ships of the line, looking only to Nelson, continued such ships as were fit for service, leaving Nelson to follow with the Nelson said, "That his admirals and captains, knowing