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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 8 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 101496 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 69 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 time 6 man 6 Mr. 4 day 4 London 4 God 3 opium 3 great 3 case 3 Mrs. 3 Lord 3 England 2 year 2 patient 2 long 2 life 2 habit 2 effect 2 Sir 2 Quincey 2 New 2 Miss 2 Government 2 English 2 Dr. 2 Coleridge 1 week 1 treatment 1 tobacco 1 think 1 state 1 southern 1 reader 1 physician 1 pain 1 night 1 mother 1 mind 1 medical 1 look 1 little 1 like 1 greek 1 grecian 1 good 1 girl 1 german 1 french 1 form 1 footnote Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2837 opium 2357 man 1725 time 1233 day 988 case 837 girl 825 word 824 drug 810 way 809 year 805 life 780 hand 704 eye 685 friend 678 fact 665 people 616 habit 608 moment 607 nothing 604 mind 588 thing 584 part 569 one 540 place 514 face 513 effect 507 night 505 heart 483 mother 475 world 471 use 454 work 445 woman 442 patient 438 child 426 house 425 hour 402 father 400 matter 397 power 395 room 386 question 384 pain 378 nature 377 state 369 head 362 thought 362 condition 355 feeling 348 subject Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3147 _ 1194 Mr. 976 van 643 Mildred 617 Mrs. 584 Roger 566 China 474 Belle 448 Jocelyn 442 Anna 372 Resident 368 Gulpendam 357 Nerekool 335 Dalima 311 Lim 262 Verstork 255 Millie 246 Opium 223 God 221 Government 221 Chinese 214 Ho 212 Coleridge 212 Ardjan 210 Laurentia 203 Grenits 186 Santjoemeh 182 Rheijn 182 Atwood 181 Miss 164 Dr. 162 Charles 160 Chinaman 159 Meidema 155 London 149 Arnold 145 Anti 145 - 142 Sir 140 Society 140 England 138 Lord 135 Turner 124 Wheaton 124 Javanese 120 Beneden 117 India 116 De 113 Kong 104 Quincey Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 11870 i 8690 he 8149 it 5690 you 3798 she 2944 they 2830 me 2729 him 1648 we 1548 them 1310 her 757 himself 611 us 429 myself 315 itself 287 themselves 214 herself 179 one 136 yourself 53 mine 40 ourselves 27 yours 22 his 22 ''em 13 hers 7 theirs 7 thee 7 ours 5 talkee 5 oneself 4 ''s 2 yourselves 2 m`bok 2 hitherto 2 em 1 yerself 1 ye 1 ya 1 whosoever 1 w- 1 thyself 1 this:--they 1 this:-- 1 spot-- 1 pelf 1 pe 1 ow 1 one--_the 1 money''ll 1 meself Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 30395 be 13259 have 3842 do 2843 say 2024 make 1726 know 1720 take 1493 see 1436 come 1377 go 1322 give 1228 find 1030 think 882 seem 840 look 837 get 807 become 793 tell 777 feel 700 leave 626 ask 608 cry 573 begin 541 bring 506 hear 492 speak 492 let 481 call 464 continue 462 stand 460 put 444 follow 439 keep 423 show 419 believe 409 pass 398 reply 397 use 379 turn 379 try 355 appear 353 write 345 lie 325 wish 320 grow 318 suppose 316 carry 307 sit 303 mean 298 lose Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 6949 not 2948 so 1960 more 1953 very 1801 now 1487 then 1358 well 1343 much 1308 only 1284 most 1256 as 1246 up 1188 other 1122 little 1086 good 1051 even 1028 such 997 great 892 own 882 out 873 first 840 long 825 never 774 too 715 many 703 young 687 again 681 however 676 all 653 far 646 just 641 few 618 here 613 once 612 still 610 indeed 607 down 602 soon 588 there 584 ever 574 also 569 same 558 old 553 yet 553 poor 531 last 523 away 521 thus 484 almost 480 on Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 298 least 291 good 248 most 111 great 99 slight 90 bad 63 high 40 strong 32 deep 24 low 23 near 23 early 23 Most 21 dear 20 small 19 happy 19 fine 14 full 14 faint 13 large 11 pure 10 old 10 noble 10 mere 10 dark 8 wealthy 8 minute 8 heavy 8 fair 8 eld 7 rich 7 late 7 grave 7 close 7 brave 6 wild 6 simple 5 warm 5 true 5 proud 5 keen 5 hot 5 hard 5 easy 5 dire 5 common 5 bright 5 able 4 sure 4 strict Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1036 most 40 well 34 least 5 hard 2 worst 2 tempest 1 highest 1 fast Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://archive.org/details/opiumeatingauto00phil 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 ccx074@coventry.ac.uk Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 20 _ is _ 17 _ did _ 12 _ was _ 8 _ had _ 6 opium is not 5 _ do _ 5 _ has _ 4 _ are _ 4 man is not 4 mildred did not 4 roger did not 4 roger was not 3 _ does _ 3 _ was not 3 china is about 3 china is now 3 days gone by 3 man did not 3 men were so 3 opium are always 3 opium does not 3 opium is necessarily 3 opium is torpor 2 _ get out 2 _ have _ 2 _ is not 2 case was not 2 case was so 2 cases do not 2 china is as 2 day is over 2 eye is not 2 eyes were full 2 eyes were not 2 eyes were open 2 facts became known 2 friend did not 2 friends were not 2 girl gave way 2 girl is not 2 girl looked up 2 girl looks up 2 habit is not 2 habit was finally 2 life is very 2 man does not 2 man had not 2 man is as 2 man is completely 2 man was so Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 case was not impossible 2 habit does no physical 2 opium is no febrile 1 _ be no such 1 _ have no business 1 _ was no part 1 _ was not instantly 1 _ was not likely 1 _ was not probable 1 case is no evil 1 case is not encouraging 1 cases do not already 1 china is not sincere 1 day was not kindness 1 drug has no value 1 drug having no curative 1 drugs is not only 1 fact is not very 1 friend did not much 1 friends are not firm 1 friends were not altogether 1 friends were not safe 1 girl is not more 1 girls have no brothers 1 habit is no respecter 1 habit is not necessarily 1 life is not consistent 1 man had no business 1 man had no true 1 man had not even 1 man is not fully 1 man is not murder 1 man is not yet 1 men are not only 1 men are not very 1 men had not altogether 1 men had not long 1 mildred had not as 1 mildred was no better 1 mildred was not even 1 one does not altogether 1 one does not much 1 one is not responsible 1 one is not surprised 1 one sees no particular 1 opium is not always 1 opium is not easy 1 opium is not so 1 people are not aware 1 roger made no reply A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 43012 author = Anonymous title = Opium Eating: An Autobiographical Sketch by an Habituate date = keywords = Andersonville; CHAPTER; Coleridge; Confessions; God; Quincey; Shelling; condition; day; effect; long; man; mind; opium; time summary = Coleridge Defended.--Wretched State of the Opium Eater.--An The condition of the old prisoners at this time (say during the month of eater of opium, after taking much of the drug the day previous, ever The effect of opium, the reader must bear in mind, always lasts stimulation which obtains a short time after taking a dose of opium, but De Quincey speaks of Coleridge as though the latter had denounced opium, As the effect of opium passes off, a deep feeling of gloom of natural sleep and other suffering caused by opium can be called Opium puts a man under an influence which must pass away before natural The appetite for opium at this time is generally master But the opium eater''s general state of feeling, state of his body and mind as an opium eater. In De Quincey''s article entitled "Coleridge and Opium Eating," in the id = 44043 author = Brereton, William H. title = The Truth about Opium Being a Refutation of the Fallacies of the Anti-Opium Society and a Defence of the Indo-China Opium Trade date = keywords = Anti; China; Chinese; Christianity; Dr.; England; English; Government; Hart; Hong; India; Indo; Kong; London; Majesty; Mr.; Opium; Robert; Sir; Society; Storrs; Turner; british summary = years'' residence in Hong Kong.--Opium smoking as practised by the Chinese the Anti-Opium Society.--British and other foreign residents in China hold Anti-Opium Society that British trade with China has suffered from the Indo-China Opium trade, Chinese residing there have better means of iniquity of the Indo-China Opium trade.--Character of the Chinese as Opium smoking in China.--Although the Chinese are a spirit-drinking trade.--Missionaries detested in China.--Indian Opium welcomed.--Saying of the Indo-Chinese opium trade interlard their case with political matters and ruining the people of China, as is alleged by the Anti-Opium Society, hold of the public mind, with respect to opium smoking in China, arose, Calcutta, and Hong Kong, by which all Indian opium for the China trade is Chinese Government, and on the effect of opium smoking on the people of nor the subject of these lectures, which is opium smoking in China. missionaries and the Anti-Opium Society allege, China would not be the id = 7293 author = Day, Horace B. title = The Opium Habit date = keywords = Coleridge; Dr.; Edgerton; God; Island; London; Lord; Mr.; New; Quincey; Sunday; case; day; eater; effect; footnote; great; habit; life; long; man; opium; pain; patient; state; time; week; year summary = man, but the experience of the relieved patient, that the opium-eater, cases fragmentary, records of the experience of opium-eaters are Day I should have taken opium for the last time, and that any first time in many years I had lived for an entire day without opium, disuse of opium in this single case, leaving it to medical men to opium-eaters take the drug in small quantities or have made use of it nature; but the opium-eater (I speak of him who is not suffering from time I have been only a _dilettante_ eater of opium; eight years'' case is at least a proof that opium, after a seventeen years'' use and first day for nearly ten years that I had existed without opium. "Coleridge _began_ the use of opium from bodily pain When a man has used opium for a long time the condition of brain id = 2040 author = De Quincey, Thomas title = Confessions of an English Opium-Eater date = keywords = England; London; Lord; Mr.; Oxford; Saturday; Street; day; english; great; life; man; night; opium; reader; time; year summary = number of _amateur_ opium-eaters (as I may term them) was at this time man "whose talk is of oxen" should become an opium-eater, the probability of letting him know my mind in Greek, which, at the same time that it Wine robs a man of his self-possession; opium greatly other remote effects of opium) feels that the divines part of his nature reason to feel great respect, assured me the other day that a patient in assuring my reader that for ten years, during which I took opium at the reader may judge of the degree in which opium is likely to stupefy opium-eater is too happy to observe the motion of time; and sometimes in At my time of life (sixand-thirty years of age) it cannot be supposed that I have much energy to now is, I answer for him thus: The reader is aware that opium had long id = 6881 author = De Quincey, Thomas title = Note Book of an English Opium-Eater date = keywords = Addison; Antigone; Burke; England; English; God; John; Junius; Landor; London; Lord; Marr; Mary; Milton; Mr.; Mrs.; Paradise; Pope; Schlosser; Sir; Swift; Wellesley; Williams; Wordsworth; case; french; german; great; grecian; greek; man; time summary = door before it was opened prevailed generally, and for a long time served vigilance of household life would have had time to relax, some new murder, second case of the same mysterious nature, a murder on the same second atrocity took place; and many people thought at the time, that in secondary street, running at right angles to this public thoroughfare, Mr. Williamson was a well-known and respectable man, long settled in that the young man, at this critical moment, the murderer''s purpose too had reached the young man; but before she could repeat it, the murderer Yes, Marr''s murderer--the man of mystery--was again at work; at this of the case, supposing that only one man had been concerned in the affair. life; but what reasonable ground had a man of sense for _astonishment_-in the great master-science of man and nature.'' In the next page he id = 60751 author = Perelaer, M. T. H. (Michael Theophile Hubert) title = Baboe Dalima; or, The Opium Fiend date = keywords = Anna; Ardjan; Banjoe; Beneden; Bing; Charles; Chinaman; Controller; Dalima; Government; Grashuis; Grenits; Gulpendam; Javanese; Kaligaweh; Kandjeng; Karang; Khan; Laurentia; Lim; Meidema; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Murowski; Nana; Nerekool; Pahit; Resident; Rheijn; Santjoemeh; Setrosmito; Singomengolo; Verstork; Yang; Zuidhoorn; chinese summary = "I say," said Mrs. van Gulpendam, addressing her husband, "Dalima "Come, Dalima," said van Gulpendam, with some kindness in his voice, "Good evening, madam," said van Nerekool as he made his bow to the "But do you know for certain, Miss Anna," said van Nerekool, under Mr. van Nerekool," said Anna, "I really cannot tell you all "That is the man," replied van Nerekool, as he looked down anxiously "Oh so," said van Gulpendam, with a laugh, "the babah has come on Such was the state of things when Resident van Gulpendam gave Lim Yang young man''s time at college, Mrs. van Nerekool died somewhat suddenly, "Yes, madam, I hear," said van Nerekool, drily, "I know that he did "Come, Charles," said Verstork, laying his hand on his friend''s "Yes, my friend," said van Nerekool very sadly. "Don''t look at things so darkly," said van Nerekool. id = 5433 author = Roe, Edward Payson title = Without a Home date = keywords = Arnold; Atwood; Belle; Clara; God; Jocelyn; Martin; Mildred; Millie; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Roger; Susan; Vinton; Wentworth; Wetheridge; Wheaton; chapter; day; girl; good; like; little; look; man; mother; southern; think; time summary = "Father," said Mrs. Atwood, as soon as her husband came in, "Miss "Belle and I must go to work," said Mildred, with a resolute face, "My mind is made up," replied Roger--Belle looked at Mildred with Mrs. Jocelyn looked perplexed and worried, and in Mildred''s eyes mother, Mrs. Jocelyn, and Mildred waiting for him in the sitting-room. "Millie," said Belle indignantly, "I think you treated Roger "You had better tell the poor girl the truth, then," said Mr. Jocelyn. who appeared like good, well-meaning girls; and Mildred would either "Belle," added Mrs. Jocelyn gravely, "since Mildred feels as she told by Belle of Mildred''s burdened life, although the young girl The young man knelt beside her and said, "Mrs. Jocelyn, his life "Don''t mind Millie''s ways," said Mrs. Jocelyn, touching Roger''s When Belle took her astonished eyes from Mildred''s face, Roger, "Roger, you''ve got the eyes of a lynx," said Belle, and Mildred id = 35270 author = Towns, Charles Barnes title = Habits that Handicap: The Menace of Opium, Alcohol, and Tobacco, and the Remedy date = keywords = New; States; United; York; alcoholic; case; drug; form; habit; man; medical; patient; physician; time; tobacco; treatment summary = known; the man suffering from the drug habit presents unfamiliar and who is addicted to the use of habit-forming drugs or who uses alcoholic most desperate cases of drug habit that I have ever seen among physicians profession in regard to the use of habit-forming drugs is that the effect and alcoholic cases, followed naturally by improper medical treatment. Lack of definite medical help in cases of chronic alcoholism is likely to which needed intelligent treatment only for alcoholism or drug addiction. alcohol, habit-forming drugs, and tobacco. TOBACCO ADDICTION MORE DANGEROUS THAN DRUG HABIT OR ALCOHOLISM brief time any case of drug or alcoholic habit that is not complicated by physician who is considering the care or treatment of cases of a drug alcohol than in connection with the use of drugs; the physician may be medical treatment when the patient''s physical craving for alcohol has once