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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 87799 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 89 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 Miss 2 Mary 2 Lady 1 Zenas 1 Wilton 1 Willie 1 Wal 1 Uncle 1 Thorne 1 Ted 1 Sylvia 1 Stanley 1 Sir 1 Scatcherd 1 Saughleas 1 Ross 1 Roger 1 Portie 1 Petrie 1 Patience 1 Parliament 1 Oriel 1 New 1 Mrs. 1 Mrs 1 Mr. 1 Moffat 1 Marion 1 Marcia 1 Manners 1 Louis 1 London 1 John 1 Jean 1 Jason 1 Jack 1 Howe 1 Hortie 1 Horatio 1 Homestead 1 Hill 1 Henry 1 Heath 1 Harry 1 Greshamsbury 1 Gresham 1 God 1 George 1 Gazebee 1 Frank Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1145 man 871 doctor 843 time 806 day 699 father 647 way 642 thing 631 hand 572 word 533 house 508 nothing 479 friend 462 mother 445 heart 415 eye 413 life 393 squire 390 face 379 year 373 room 368 one 357 sister 356 girl 347 son 333 matter 330 something 324 money 321 love 318 moment 301 world 295 brother 290 woman 279 place 279 child 276 mind 264 lady 252 course 234 night 228 home 221 door 220 uncle 219 head 214 morning 214 letter 213 aunt 210 wife 208 thought 208 people 198 family 192 voice Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1201 Mr 1033 Mary 1033 Frank 898 Jean 820 Miss 719 Lady 647 _ 584 Thorne 458 Sir 431 Gresham 427 Dr 402 Greshamsbury 395 Arabella 384 Marcia 363 Dawson 356 George 353 Scatcherd 272 Mrs 268 Catherine 260 Louis 252 Marion 250 Roger 242 Beatrice 238 Heath 229 Sylvia 228 Courcy 225 God 210 Calderwood 201 Uncle 191 May 190 Moffat 174 Oriel 169 Dunstable 168 Elisha 165 ye 165 London 159 Mr. 151 Betty 148 Fillgrave 139 Gazebee 128 Augusta 127 Jack 127 Eleazer 125 Portie 125 John 117 Hill 114 Mrs. 114 Boxall 113 Willie 112 Barchester Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 7475 he 7451 i 6057 it 5588 you 5458 she 2803 him 2116 her 1600 me 1463 they 1130 them 944 we 706 himself 540 herself 279 us 160 myself 114 yourself 97 one 96 themselves 59 itself 39 ''em 35 his 29 yours 23 ye 23 mine 23 hers 20 ourselves 18 ay 14 ''s 11 thee 10 theirs 9 em 6 hisself 6 ha''e 3 ours 3 o 3 i''m 2 thyself 2 thinkin 2 herself,-- 1 you''se 1 you''re 1 were--`she 1 toilin 1 shinglin 1 oneself 1 it;--though 1 indifferent,-- 1 him!--and 1 gravely,-- 1 come-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 20009 be 8864 have 4223 do 3449 say 1813 go 1767 come 1451 know 1419 think 1341 make 1208 see 951 take 947 tell 735 look 730 give 645 get 589 speak 508 find 461 leave 454 hear 419 put 409 let 401 ask 387 love 356 feel 343 bring 335 stand 332 mean 329 seem 325 wish 321 like 319 sit 299 turn 298 keep 286 call 285 live 284 want 271 talk 271 marry 245 send 241 become 235 believe 229 begin 222 pass 221 understand 214 suppose 206 wait 201 fall 196 meet 196 bear 194 try Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 6322 not 2297 so 1219 now 1167 very 1096 then 1069 well 980 more 861 up 858 much 845 good 779 never 696 little 683 own 675 as 662 only 592 other 576 out 554 again 552 long 542 young 516 too 507 even 503 here 491 such 488 great 462 old 453 away 443 first 442 there 432 just 421 quite 420 down 384 last 368 still 366 all 350 yet 328 perhaps 327 back 327 also 324 indeed 324 always 318 enough 313 ever 299 once 294 sure 291 on 275 many 272 dear 270 soon 268 poor Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 221 good 181 least 76 most 39 eld 32 dear 24 slight 21 bad 18 great 14 near 13 high 7 wise 7 strong 7 happy 6 young 6 warm 6 deep 5 sweet 5 nice 4 rich 4 large 4 hard 4 fine 4 easy 4 Most 3 small 3 pretty 3 old 3 noble 3 low 3 grand 3 fit 3 early 3 close 3 bitter 2 vain 2 true 2 strange 2 stiff 2 sincere 2 sharp 2 quiet 2 pure 2 pleasant 2 late 2 l 2 heavy 2 bright 2 big 1 wintry 1 wily Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 173 most 37 well 17 least 1 soon 1 delightedly,-- 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 12 mary did not 10 _ is _ 10 jean did not 7 arabella was not 7 doctor did not 7 squire did not 6 _ do n''t 6 doctor was not 6 things were not 6 thorne did not 5 father had not 5 frank was not 5 gresham was not 5 jean said nothing 5 jean was not 5 mary had not 5 time went on 4 _ are _ 4 doctor had not 4 frank did not 4 jean came in 3 arabella had not 3 eyes were full 3 father did not 3 father had never 3 frank had not 3 frank was again 3 frank was too 3 heart was not 3 jean had not 3 jean looked grave 3 jean was silent 3 life is not 3 mary came in 3 mary was again 3 mary was not 3 mother said nothing 2 _ am _ 2 _ be good 2 _ did _ 2 _ do _ 2 _ have _ 2 _ know _ 2 _ was _ 2 arabella did not 2 arabella was now 2 day is long 2 eyes did not 2 father came in 2 father had so Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 arabella was not only 2 frank was not very 2 jean was not so 1 arabella had not yet 1 arabella has not yet 1 arabella was not equally 1 arabella was not very 1 arabella was not well 1 arabella was not yet 1 days were not longer 1 doctor did not at 1 doctor made no answer 1 doctor was no lawyer 1 doctor was not prepared 1 doctor was not very 1 eyes are not so 1 eyes were not brilliant 1 father had not as 1 father had not even 1 father had not yet 1 father is not yet 1 father made no remarks 1 father was not comfortably 1 frank found no opportunity 1 frank was not aware 1 friend was no friend 1 gresham had no ground 1 gresham was no more 1 gresham was not anxious 1 gresham was not ill 1 gresham was not unfrequently 1 hand is not in 1 hand is not mine 1 hands had not mr 1 heart has not yet 1 heart is not frail 1 house is not so 1 house was not peculiarly 1 jean had no answer 1 jean had no light 1 jean had not often 1 jean made no answer 1 jean made no reply 1 jean was not easy 1 jean was not there 1 life was not worth 1 man had no appreciation 1 man has no more 1 man was no longer 1 mary asked no further A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 43773 author = Bassett, Sara Ware title = Shifting Sands date = keywords = Abbie; City; Eleazer; Elisha; Heath; Henry; Homestead; Horatio; Hortie; Howe; Jason; Marcia; Mr.; New; Stanley; Sylvia; Wal; Wilton; Zenas summary = After days of fog Stanley Heath, a stranger whose power-boat runs "I shall not tell you one thing," Marcia replied. Why, within the week Sylvia''s been here, I happen to know Marcia''s Fortunately both Marcia and Sylvia were at the moment too far out of Sylvia stole a look at Marcia who had stiffened and now stood with eyes The moment the door banged behind them, Sylvia turned toward Marcia. Sylvia, meanwhile, had heard Stanley Heath call Marcia and hailed her Yes, Marcia and Stanley Heath were talking. The small, grey-haired man looked from Stanley Heath to Marcia, and for dear Marcia." Impulsively Sylvia bent her lips to the hands so tightly "Sylvia, come back here!" Marcia cried. Heath went to Sylvia and took her hand. Marcia and the--the--she and Mr. Heath love one "Sit down, Sylvia, and let us talk of Marcia," ventured Heath after a id = 36880 author = Hampden, Mary title = Niece Catherine date = keywords = Agatha; Arderne; Brian; Carmichael; Catherine; God; Jack; Mrs.; Ross; Ted; Uncle summary = ''Kiss the tiny fellow "good-night" for me, dear,'' said Mrs. Arderne, the manner of his brother (Catherine''s Uncle Jack), and this surprising Mrs. Arderne made Catherine give a full account of her visit to Uncle but oh, Uncle Jack, dear, until you offered me a home I had not realized Agatha''s dark eyes gazed wonderingly at Catherine''s sweet, smiling face. that he was glad Catherine possessed so true-hearted a friend, and Mrs. Arderne came to the conclusion that Brian was a man of delightful ''I want to come "home" to stay, dear uncle. ''God will answer our prayers, Uncle Jack, dear. During the following days Uncle Jack and Mrs. Arderne, Agatha, and the all but Agatha and Catherine, who could not help loving Ted best, though Catherine could not have much doubt--if Uncle Ross would but ask for ''My dear, Catherine has promised not to desert us,'' said Uncle Ross with id = 41831 author = Jewett, Sarah Orne title = Betty Leicester''s Christmas date = keywords = Betty; Christmas; Edith; Lady; Mary summary = But Lady Mary would be busy enough with her great house-party of said Lady Mary wistfully, as they began to go up the great steps and good-night, darling," said this dear lady, whom Betty had always longed The minute Betty Leicester looked at Edith Banfield next day she saw a great friend of his; then she looked for Lady Mary, who was at the dear friend Betty, who knows what American girls like best, is kindly A maid appeared to take Edith to her room, and Lady Mary patted Betty''s "So does papa," said Betty; "oh, so very much!--next to Lady Mary and "Why, of course," said Betty, with great pleasure. "Why, Warford, my dear!" said Lady Mary, with great delight, as he met Edith looked on with pleasure, and presently Lady Mary came toward them. for the ladies to go to the drawing-room, and Betty, feeling a little id = 38197 author = Robertson, Margaret M. (Margaret Murray) title = The Twa Miss Dawsons date = keywords = Calderwood; Captain; Dawson; George; Jean; John; Manners; Marion; Miss; Mrs; Petrie; Portie; Saughleas; Willie summary = "Here are the bairns," said Miss Jean softly as the two sisters came like a bird, and to ken her from our May, and Marion Petrie," said Jean, spared on an occasion like yesterday, I would think," said Miss Jean. "It has made an old man of your father," added Miss Jean in a little. "Jean," said her sister after a long silence, "do you think he would do his," said Jean, with a sound that was like a sob, her father thought. come to visit her there," Marion said, including both George and Jean in He grew more like his old self, his father said to Miss Jean, giving the Dawson was coming with you," said Marion with a little change of face "And Jean thinks there are few like George," said Marion smiling, as time on board," said Mr Dawson, as he took his way to Miss Jean''s house id = 3166 author = Trollope, Anthony title = Doctor Thorne date = keywords = Arabella; Augusta; Barchester; Beatrice; Boxall; Castle; Courcy; Dunstable; Fillgrave; Frank; Gazebee; Gresham; Greshamsbury; Harry; Hill; Lady; London; Louis; Mary; Miss; Moffat; Oriel; Parliament; Patience; Roger; Scatcherd; Sir; Thorne summary = "I know he used," said Lady de Courcy, looking very wise, and rather "His father, you know, died when he was very young," said Frank. "Come in, Mary," said Beatrice, "you know my cousin Alexandrina." "You know I never interfere," said the Lady Arabella; "I never liked "Much better, I would think," said the Lady Arabella; "but you know, "It is a great deal of money, certainly," said Lady Arabella. "Yes," said Mary, "I know he is rich; and a rich man I suppose can "Now, doctor, don''t let him talk that way, don''t," said Lady about the money, you know, doctor," said she; "of course Sir Roger "Shall I go now," said the doctor, "and send Lady Scatcherd to you?" "As I said before, Frank is, to my thinking, an excellent young man. "I am engaged to Frank Gresham," and having so said, Mary looked her