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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 75422 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 82 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Orkney 3 Mr. 2 Thora 2 Mrs. 2 Mistress 2 Kirkwall 2 Jack 2 Halcro 2 God 2 Captain 1 speak 1 ship 1 nay 1 man 1 like 1 illustration 1 hope 1 german 1 footnote 1 fitful 1 cruiser 1 Zetland 1 Yellowley 1 Westra 1 Vedder 1 Udaller 1 Troil 1 Triptolemus 1 Tom 1 Thule 1 Thou 1 Swertha 1 Sunna 1 Sumburgh 1 Stromness 1 Snailsfoot 1 Scott 1 Scotland 1 Scapa 1 Saint 1 STEPHENS 1 Runes 1 Robbie 1 Ranzelman 1 Rahal 1 Ragnor 1 RAFN 1 RAEIST 1 Provost 1 Norna Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1040 man 643 time 488 father 480 day 468 hand 405 way 402 sea 358 word 345 ship 341 thing 323 woman 320 boat 319 eye 282 life 258 name 257 place 256 sister 253 house 252 head 251 stone 242 water 234 foot 228 year 226 friend 225 one 219 part 217 island 214 nothing 210 illustration 206 mother 202 heart 200 night 197 side 197 lad 190 face 181 something 178 rock 177 vessel 175 morning 169 voice 169 moment 168 door 163 room 161 wind 155 hour 151 girl 149 mind 149 letter 148 sir 148 light Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 898 _ 525 Thora 504 Mordaunt 458 Cleveland 393 Minna 339 Norna 334 thou 316 Mr. 315 Captain 256 Halcro 256 Brenda 242 Kinlay 231 Magnus 228 Mertoun 225 ye 203 Kirkwall 198 Ragnor 194 Ian 191 Udaller 184 Orkney 170 Tom 165 Sunna 157 Troil 156 Boris 149 Zetland 147 Bunce 138 Rahal 136 Triptolemus 127 God 116 Stromness 112 Jack 108 Thou 104 Drever 97 Burgh 95 Duke 94 Gordon 93 John 91 Carver 90 Mrs. 89 Ericson 88 Yellowley 88 Westra 87 Jessie 86 Flett 83 Claud 82 Scotland 82 Colin 80 Edinburgh 79 Swertha 77 Bishop Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5872 i 3743 it 3482 he 2375 you 1993 she 1455 me 1412 him 1411 they 1287 we 998 them 769 her 526 us 336 himself 212 thee 169 myself 152 herself 84 themselves 73 yourself 66 itself 36 one 36 ian 32 ye 27 mine 23 thyself 19 yours 14 ourselves 8 ay 7 ''s 5 ours 4 thy 4 on''t 3 wi 3 theirs 3 his 2 thou 2 oneself 2 hers 2 d''you 1 yoursell 1 you;--the 1 you''re 1 you!--and 1 yerself 1 we''ll 1 told?--on 1 this?--here 1 them.--but 1 son?--what 1 out.--what 1 of.--what Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 13602 be 5570 have 2337 say 1400 do 1018 see 869 go 821 make 800 come 792 take 686 know 661 think 532 look 526 give 519 tell 495 find 464 hear 395 get 374 leave 367 speak 364 seem 360 call 349 ask 275 bring 267 stand 262 let 247 turn 244 reply 239 answer 238 put 230 keep 216 lie 200 hold 198 sit 197 believe 196 want 193 feel 186 become 182 pass 181 follow 178 carry 177 fall 169 show 166 use 158 return 155 begin 151 walk 148 suppose 148 remain 148 love 147 send Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2519 not 1233 so 977 then 743 more 695 now 660 well 616 good 592 old 554 little 545 very 539 as 496 own 492 other 490 up 466 out 456 much 446 long 432 only 382 such 368 here 364 great 363 many 344 down 340 never 321 young 321 even 319 first 308 most 303 just 294 there 278 away 277 far 267 too 260 same 259 again 250 still 239 yet 224 ever 222 once 218 last 211 few 206 small 198 soon 196 however 193 back 189 enough 185 large 184 also 183 off 179 high Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 126 least 112 good 63 most 21 bad 19 high 12 slight 12 large 12 eld 10 great 10 fine 10 deep 9 near 9 j 8 fair 8 early 8 dear 7 young 7 Most 5 happy 5 brave 4 wise 3 wild 3 stout 3 small 3 safe 3 pure 3 old 3 manif 3 light 3 dark 2 wide 2 warm 2 sweet 2 strong 2 soft 2 quiet 2 pleasant 2 noble 2 mean 2 lovely 2 late 2 innermost 2 handsome 2 furth 2 easy 2 bright 1 weary 1 wealthy 1 ugly 1 turn Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 245 most 27 well 12 least 1 surest 1 soon 1 sharpest 1 him?--who 1 hard 1 fast Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42389/42389-h/42389-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42389/42389-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/thepirate00scotuoft 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 _ is _ 3 boat put off 3 father did not 3 man is not 3 men do not 3 mordaunt did not 3 thing is sure 2 eyes were full 2 father is not 2 life has yet 2 man is there 2 men are willing 2 men went away 2 minna was too 2 mordaunt had not 2 mordaunt kept up 2 sister was not 2 sisters were not 2 thora had not 2 thora had so 2 thora stood up 2 thou think england 2 women were always 1 _ are _ 1 _ are very 1 _ come over 1 _ did _ 1 _ do so 1 _ is not 1 _ knew _ 1 _ looked very 1 _ see _ 1 _ seem rather 1 _ was _ 1 _ was just 1 _ were _ 1 boat came out 1 boat is kittle 1 boat is not 1 boat looked small 1 boat taken as 1 boat was afloat 1 boat was near 1 boat was stove 1 boats had also 1 boats had not 1 boats has boris 1 boats put out 1 boats putting out 1 boats was busily Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 boat is not due 1 boats had not yet 1 brenda had not yet 1 cleveland had no desire 1 cleveland is no more 1 cleveland made no further 1 day was no longer 1 day was not lucky 1 father did not entirely 1 father is no magistrate 1 father is not fond 1 man has no better 1 man is not as 1 man is not prepared 1 mordaunt did not quite 1 mordaunt had no right 1 mordaunt had no time 1 mordaunt was not long 1 sister was not more 1 sisters were not less 1 sisters were not only 1 things are not always 1 things were not rightly 1 thora had no exception 1 thora had no hoop 1 thora had not yet 1 thora was not there 1 thora were not interested 1 words have not yet 1 words were no sooner A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 29752 author = Barr, Amelia E. title = An Orkney Maid date = keywords = Adam; Bishop; Boris; Brodie; Conall; Edinburgh; England; God; Ian; Kirkwall; Macrae; Mistress; Mrs.; Ragnor; Rahal; Sunna; Thora; Thou; Vedder summary = "Art thou thinking of Sunna Vedder, Mother?" "He walked rapidly to Sunna, and he said, ''Miss Vedder, thou art To thee, my promise stands good for all my life days--and thou "Dost thou indeed believe thy aunt''s assurances?" asked Rahal. "In the drawing room thou wilt find Thora with Ian Macrae," said thee is already a perfect love; but I will be such a good girl if thou dance and said thou wanted me, and he made me come home with him and Almost in a whisper Sunna said "Good-bye!" and then went her way home. "Well, then, young man," said Adam, "thou must remember that God "Oh, Adam, Adam!" cried Rahal, "thou art the good man that God loves, "Tell us, then," said Thora, "wilt thou not say the words to us, our "When thou art an old woman, Thora," he said to her, "then id = 45583 author = Burrows, C. W. title = Scapa and a Camera Pictorial Impressions of Five Years Spent at the Grand Fleet Base date = keywords = Base; FLOW; Fleet; H.M.S.; Orkney; Scapa; cruiser; german; hope; illustration; ship summary = the German ships at Scapa Flow, their dramatic sinking on 21st June, GERMAN BATTLE CRUISER "MOLTKE" AT SCAPA FLOW 105 GERMAN BATTLE CRUISER "DERFFLINGER" AT SCAPA FLOW 106 GERMAN BATTLE CRUISER "HINDENBURG" AT SCAPA FLOW 106 Navy at the Grand Fleet Base at Scapa Flow, and, it is hoped, may reach [Illustration: THE GRAND FLEET BASE AT LONG HOPE, 1916, LOOKING TOWARDS Grand Fleet), and at Long Hope and Lyness by the Base ships, whilst [Illustration: GERMAN BATTLESHIP "KAISER" ENTERING THE BOOM AT SCAPA [Illustration: HOSPITAL SHIPS AT SCAPA FLOW.] [Illustration: THE INTERNED GERMAN SHIPS AT SCAPA.] [Illustration: THE INTERNED GERMAN SHIPS AT SCAPA.] [Illustration: GERMAN BATTLE CRUISER "SEYDLITZ." (One of the ships which [Illustration: GERMAN BATTLE CRUISER "MOLTKE" AT SCAPA FLOW.] [Illustration: GERMAN BATTLE CRUISER "DERFFLINGER" AT SCAPA FLOW.] [Illustration: GERMAN BATTLE CRUISER "HINDENBURG" AT SCAPA FLOW.] [Illustration: PLAN OF THE ANCHORAGE OF GERMAN SHIPS AT SCAPA FLOW.] id = 34816 author = Farrer, James title = Notice of Runic Inscriptions Discovered during Recent Excavations in the Orkneys date = keywords = MUNCH; Maes; Mr.; RAEIST; RAFN; Runes; STEPHENS summary = The passage leading to the central chamber is 2 feet 4 inches wide at its READINGS OF THE INSCRIPTIONS BY PROFESSORS STEPHENS, MUNCH, RAFN. _Tholf Kolbeinsson carved these Runes on High._--Professor RAFN. _Wemund engraved (these Runes)._--Professor MUNCH. _Vemund carved (the Runes)._--Professor RAFN. occasionally in use, and were known as Fish-runes.--Professor MUNCH. to shew that the letter [rune] or (a) is intended.--Professor RAFN. The word Saerth is of doubtful meaning.--Professor RAFN. _Ofram, the son of Siward, engraved these Runes._--Professor MUNCH. _Otar Fila carved these runes._--Professor STEPHENS. _Iotar Fila engraved these runes._--Professor MUNCH. Professor Munch reads Nos. XIII. _Arnfinn, glutton, carved these Runes._--Professor RAFN. _Haermunt Hardaxe carved these Runes._--Professor STEPHENS. _Hermund Hardaxe engraved these Runes._--Professor MUNCH. Gauk Trandilson, and was used by him in carving the runes.--Professor (_Note._--Professors Stephens, Munch, and Rafn, all agree that some Runes.--Professor STEPHENS. Runes.--Professor STEPHENS. derivation of the word Maes-Howe, suggested by Professor Rafn, is id = 14149 author = Leighton, Robert title = The Pilots of Pomona: A Story of the Orkney Islands date = keywords = Captain; Carver; Colin; Drever; Duke; Ericson; Flett; Gordon; Halcro; Hercus; Jack; Jessie; Kinlay; Lothian; Mr.; Orkney; Robbie; Stromness; Thora; Tom summary = "Thora Kinlay," he said, "finish the conjugation where Jessie Grey "Good morning, sir!" I said, looking fearlessly into Mr. Drever''s "It''s the old cow, sir," said Thora, apparently wondering at the "It was Tom Kinlay said he thought we should share them, sir. "And Kinlay?" said Mr. Drever, looking questioningly in my face. "Father was saying she''s a very good ship," said she; "but I think "Well, my lad," said he, "how d''ye think the Lydia looks for sea?" "Please, sir," said Thora, "I was to tell you that he''s not to come talked of Tom Kinlay''s work on his father''s new boat, and made way under sail," said Mansie; and then he turned to my father, "Hurry along, my lads; there''s Kinlay started," said my father, "Is this man a pilot, Ericson?" asked Captain Gordon, turning to "I never asked you to come aboard my ship, my man," said Captain id = 42389 author = Scott, Walter title = The Pirate Andrew Lang Edition date = keywords = Baby; Brenda; Bryce; Bunce; Burgh; CHAPTER; Captain; Claud; Cleveland; Factor; Fair; Fletcher; God; Goffe; Halcro; Heaven; Jack; Jarlshof; John; Kirkwall; Magnus; Master; Mertoun; Minna; Mistress; Mordaunt; Mr.; Mrs.; Norna; Orkney; Provost; Ranzelman; Saint; Scotland; Scott; Snailsfoot; Sumburgh; Swertha; Thule; Triptolemus; Troil; Udaller; Westra; Yellowley; Zetland; fitful; footnote; like; man; nay; speak summary = "Hear me, young Mordaunt," said Norna, "and depart from this house. "His sister, sir," replied Mordaunt, "and old Norna of the Fitful-head." "Fear not," said Norna, "it will come to man''s use. "In that old half-ruined house," said Mordaunt, "he does indeed live; "Good Norna," said Mordaunt, and paused, scarce knowing what to say that Mordaunt''s light," said Swertha, "and with Magnus Troil, that thought "And wit and song, too, my good old friend," said Mordaunt, "Mr. Mordaunt Mertoun," said Minna, "has come too late to be of our band "Spoken like a fool, I think," said Magnus Troil, whose attention had "Have pity on Brenda''s fears, good Norna," said the elder sister, "and should have said never a word; but Minna or Brenda, you know, are things "Not so," said Cleveland, as if about to take Minna''s hand; "to "It is like the frank-hearted old Udaller!" said Cleveland; "but is he