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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 70072 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 88 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Miss 3 good 3 Mrs. 3 Mr. 2 look 2 New 1 woman 1 love 1 little 1 edgerly 1 York 1 Wix 1 Wesson 1 Walford 1 Van 1 Turquand 1 Tom 1 Thomas 1 Statia 1 St. 1 Sam 1 Rudd 1 Rossum 1 Richetti 1 Princess 1 Porter 1 Pitt 1 Paul 1 Paris 1 Milliken 1 Marjorie 1 Madiana 1 Madame 1 London 1 Lancelot 1 Kranitski 1 Knolles 1 Kent 1 Kathleen 1 Humphrey 1 Howes 1 Gordon 1 Garin 1 Frieda 1 Frances 1 Eulalie 1 Eggert 1 Dupont 1 Don 1 Deane Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 575 time 551 man 491 thing 457 day 454 woman 383 room 345 hand 287 way 280 nothing 274 one 259 friend 236 something 230 year 227 life 227 eye 219 hour 214 book 214 anything 210 moment 209 door 199 story 191 people 190 word 189 week 188 letter 186 girl 181 night 178 face 168 morning 165 head 158 world 158 heart 157 love 154 work 149 name 148 place 148 baby 147 lady 146 minute 142 voice 142 matter 138 mind 138 evening 136 money 134 idea 133 child 132 france 132 fact 132 course 129 novel Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1033 _ 395 Miss 373 Kent 345 Mrs. 271 Mr. 233 Cynthia 213 Gordon 197 Frieda 130 Paul 126 May 119 Frances 117 Turquand 117 Humphrey 105 Walford 98 Kathleen 97 Wesson 95 Dave 92 Marjorie 89 Baby 88 Rudd 80 Anikin 79 David 79 Brandon 78 Princess 71 New 60 St. 58 Kranitski 57 York 57 Pitt 57 Deane 56 Tom 56 Eulalie 55 Van 55 Dr. 55 Cole 53 Dupont 52 Statia 51 Beaufort 49 Paris 49 London 46 Rossum 46 Milliken 46 Eggert 45 Arkright 44 Cæsar 44 CHAPTER 42 Wix 41 Porter 41 Aunt 40 God Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 9135 i 4282 he 4126 she 3975 it 3739 you 2098 me 1519 her 1410 him 878 we 801 they 499 them 304 us 195 myself 177 himself 131 herself 95 one 62 yourself 44 yours 44 mine 43 itself 25 ourselves 23 themselves 18 ''s 13 hers 8 i''m 8 his 8 ''em 3 ours 3 em 2 you''ll 2 ye 2 oneself 1 you''ve 1 you''re 1 trodden 1 theirs 1 hee!--we 1 eva 1 bookshelf Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 11743 be 5393 have 2302 do 2097 say 1260 go 921 know 901 think 881 come 794 make 781 see 718 take 664 tell 542 look 542 ask 476 get 468 give 421 want 367 find 362 feel 357 leave 343 write 302 put 266 seem 244 let 235 begin 230 hear 228 like 224 sit 219 call 214 read 200 meet 198 mean 197 answer 192 talk 186 keep 178 return 170 bring 168 speak 167 turn 166 wish 166 suppose 166 send 160 try 155 believe 142 pay 141 live 138 remember 138 appear 132 marry 129 show Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3237 not 911 so 734 very 590 more 582 little 556 good 509 up 501 then 500 now 496 well 448 out 429 as 418 never 401 only 398 much 398 again 350 long 308 just 306 other 299 too 285 first 285 ever 276 back 267 once 265 old 264 all 253 away 244 there 236 down 232 young 230 great 228 here 228 few 223 quite 222 last 221 rather 216 always 208 perhaps 208 on 200 most 200 in 199 own 190 even 184 next 177 such 177 still 172 same 171 soon 171 right 168 over Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 131 good 116 least 49 most 39 slight 19 bad 18 great 14 late 13 dear 9 high 7 near 7 happy 7 early 6 fine 6 big 5 long 5 Most 4 true 4 strong 3 warm 3 small 3 l 3 deep 3 bright 2 wise 2 sweet 2 soft 2 sincere 2 poor 2 pleasant 2 nice 2 new 2 mere 2 mean 2 low 2 light 2 large 2 kind 2 heavy 2 hard 2 full 2 easy 2 dull 1 young 1 wrong 1 wide 1 weeny 1 weak 1 topmost 1 tiny 1 sure Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 151 most 22 well 15 least 1 wisest 1 soon 1 near Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/33218/33218-h/33218-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/33218/33218-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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 _ is _ 6 _ was _ 6 door was open 6 kent did not 5 _ do n''t 4 _ are _ 4 frieda came in 4 kent was not 4 one does n''t 2 _ am _ 2 _ does _ 2 _ go back 2 _ has _ 2 _ is n''t 2 cynthia did not 2 cynthia had not 2 door was closed 2 eyes were open 2 gordon was always 2 hour was very 2 kent had not 2 man is so 2 men are not 2 people do n''t 2 room was not 2 women are more 1 _ ask _ 1 _ be _ 1 _ be precious 1 _ be young 1 _ came back 1 _ came out 1 _ coming out 1 _ did _ 1 _ did not 1 _ give up 1 _ had _ 1 _ have _ 1 _ is dead 1 _ is good 1 _ look _ 1 _ looks _ 1 _ read novels 1 _ take baby 1 _ take so 1 _ think _ 1 _ thinks _ 1 _ wanted _ 1 _ was already 1 _ was as Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 cynthia had no complaint 1 gordon has no soul 1 gordon made no answer 1 kent took no pains 1 kent was not regretful 1 man has no business 1 room was not extensive 1 things were not so 1 years was not too A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 42703 author = Baring, Maurice title = Overlooked date = keywords = Anikin; Brandon; Kathleen; Knolles; Kranitski; Lancelot; Miss; Mrs.; Princess; Rudd summary = "A very different kind of book," said Rudd, quite gravely. Princess Kouragine said that Miss Brandon was not that sort of girl. Miss Brandon asked him if he would like to know Rudd. "Not to Miss Brandon," I said, "nor really to her aunt: Mrs. Lennox She said she did not think that Mrs. Lennox would like her niece to Mrs. Summer said that Miss Brandon hated London almost as much. "I think," she said, "that Mr. Rudd is like that." "Yes, he might, be like that," she said, "only one doesn''t know quite I said that as things were at present Miss Brandon''s life seemed to me I said I thought people always got what they wanted in the long run. "You know how he wanted to marry Kathleen Farrel?" she said, after a "Very much, I think," said Kathleen, "but I liked the story best. id = 44465 author = Merrick, Leonard title = Cynthia With an Introduction by Maurice Hewlett date = keywords = Beaufort; Beholder; Billy; Cynthia; Cæsar; Deane; Garin; Humphrey; Kent; London; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Paris; Pitt; Sam; Turquand; Walford; Wix; good; look summary = Kent asked if they were going in to the concert, and Mrs. Walford said Cynthia _was_ "cut up." She liked Humphrey Kent very much--and "I said in ''twelve months,'' my dear." He turned to Kent, and added "He is very good-looking," said Mrs. Walford; "don''t you think so?" "I don''t know where the ''hard times'' come in, I''m sure!" exclaimed Mrs. Walford sharply. "The morning after we come back, darling," said Kent, "I shall go "It took a clever man some time to write," said Kent; "it might have "Oh, Humphrey doesn''t want to listen to that long story," said Mrs. Walford, "I''m sure?" shall I ever forget it?--and Dr. Roberts looked across at me and said, ''Well, you have a little son come "I think we''ll say ''good-night,''" said Mrs. Walford coldly; "I''ll be "I wish you had read the book, and liked it," said Kent, speaking id = 40937 author = Ross, Albert title = A New Sensation date = keywords = Barton; CHAPTER; Camran; Chambers; Don; Eggert; Howes; Madiana; Marjorie; Miss; Mr.; New; St.; Statia; Thomas; Tom; Wesson; York; edgerly; good summary = "Well, good day," he said, taking my hand in his and putting the other "I wish you would come up to dinner to-night," said Tom, wistfully. engagement at my rooms--a fiction, by-the-by--Tom said if I was going to "I am Miss May," said a bright voice, that I liked instantly. "Yes," I said, smilingly, "if Statia writes me a letter asking me to do going to masquerade as the cousin of a gentleman of means," said Miss "I think that is about all for to-day," said Miss May, drawing a long She consented, after a little thought, and also said she would leave the time tired of my bargain and wished Miss Marjorie May had never come "Have you told any one on the steamer that you are going to leave at St. Thomas?" Miss May asked me, soon after breakfast, when the outlines of id = 33218 author = Van Schaick, George title = A Top-Floor Idyl date = keywords = Baby; Cole; Dave; David; Dupont; Eulalie; Frances; Frieda; Gordon; Madame; Milliken; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Paul; Porter; Richetti; Rossum; Van; good; little; look; love; woman summary = indeed for a man to be able to look up to a woman, to know in his heart "And by the way," asked Gordon, a few days later, "how''s Frieda getting wondering why Frieda should ever think I could possibly know people in this time, the woman ate right out of Frieda''s hand, although the latter "You know good tea, for one thing," answered Frieda. "When our good little friend, Dr. Porter, who is the best-hearted chap you''ll meet in a long day''s came out, Frances''s door was opened and I looked in. So Frances ran away to her room, with Baby Paul on her arm. "My dear child," I said, "you will, for the time being, return to little good old soul, and may the son come back safely and give her the little And so, as I have said, Frances went away to a very decent little