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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 40599 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 83 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 God 3 Padre 2 man 2 Bishop 1 young 1 tunnel 1 time 1 priest 1 nature 1 love 1 little 1 know 1 good 1 come 1 Ysabel 1 Whiting 1 Welsh 1 Wales 1 Village 1 Veronica 1 Tom 1 Tinnick 1 Suzanne 1 State 1 St. 1 Santa 1 Ruth 1 Rogier 1 Rogers 1 Ridoux 1 Rafe 1 Rabar 1 Poole 1 Peter 1 Pabo 1 Oliver 1 O''Grady 1 Norman 1 Nora 1 Nest 1 Mrs. 1 Mr. 1 Morwen 1 Moran 1 Monsieur 1 Monseigneur 1 Miss 1 Mass 1 Mary 1 Marcel Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1428 man 564 time 522 day 489 life 486 thing 418 way 409 priest 409 hand 398 eye 397 woman 390 girl 378 people 377 word 372 hill 357 heart 330 fire 323 nothing 282 face 266 one 255 head 242 night 238 letter 236 world 234 year 229 moment 227 thought 225 place 224 mind 217 road 217 house 203 soul 197 child 190 door 189 side 183 father 181 something 180 love 174 end 171 lake 168 voice 165 room 157 arm 156 church 153 everything 152 horse 149 story 146 light 145 country 145 anything 144 morning Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1182 _ 444 Father 419 Bishop 357 God 308 Jeffrey 252 Ruth 210 Oliver 209 Curé 203 Pabo 183 Marcel 166 Monsieur 146 Suzanne 134 Padre 125 Whiting 123 Nora 121 le 121 O''Grady 108 thou 106 Veronica 99 Church 91 Rafe 91 Gadbeau 90 Moran 90 Glynn 88 Rogier 87 Craig 81 St. 81 Poole 80 Cadell 78 Lansing 78 Eliza 76 Mr. 76 Caio 72 Rogers 71 French 69 Miss 69 Bernard 68 King 64 Howel 63 Gogarty 61 Welsh 58 Morwen 58 Heaven 57 Mrs. 56 Ireland 56 Gaston 54 Tinnick 53 Village 53 Peter 53 Archpriest Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6628 he 4426 i 4060 it 3778 you 2209 she 2084 him 1680 they 1362 me 931 her 904 them 769 we 510 himself 325 us 176 myself 149 herself 130 themselves 114 one 92 yourself 89 itself 67 thee 42 ourselves 36 yours 20 mine 17 his 11 hers 7 theirs 6 thyself 5 oneself 4 --they 4 --but 3 ye 3 ours 3 ''em 2 ha 2 ''s 1 yr 1 yourselves 1 regret-- 1 faith--"even Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 12799 be 6227 have 2155 do 1670 say 1266 go 1144 come 1128 know 1119 see 746 think 655 make 604 tell 592 take 493 look 466 give 393 hear 389 get 389 find 337 leave 331 seem 326 speak 314 ask 310 stand 295 begin 280 feel 260 let 259 pass 255 want 251 turn 248 put 244 write 230 believe 225 understand 222 fall 220 sit 218 bring 215 run 211 call 210 live 210 lie 199 try 184 rise 171 wish 171 talk 170 walk 167 love 166 remember 164 forget 164 follow 162 draw 160 return Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3567 not 806 then 723 so 690 little 679 up 658 now 579 more 512 only 494 out 471 very 464 well 456 long 447 again 434 there 426 down 417 here 416 away 408 other 403 good 393 back 353 young 349 never 347 old 327 great 301 just 285 as 268 own 259 too 255 even 253 first 250 much 245 still 227 always 226 on 225 once 218 last 211 many 200 all 192 ever 188 same 171 no 170 perhaps 166 few 163 most 161 far 154 enough 153 such 151 poor 144 in 136 soon Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 62 least 58 good 22 most 19 bad 15 slight 12 great 7 near 7 low 7 high 5 l 5 faint 5 deep 4 eld 4 Most 3 strong 3 small 3 rich 3 late 3 large 3 hot 3 fair 3 early 3 dear 2 wise 2 sure 2 queer 2 poor 2 noble 2 manif 2 long 2 farth 2 dark 2 bitter 1 young 1 wr 1 would 1 windy 1 wild 1 wide 1 wealthy 1 warr 1 ugly 1 twic 1 true 1 tak 1 sweet 1 swallow 1 strange 1 stiff 1 speak Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 141 most 7 least 4 well 1 tempest 1 handiest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 gallica.bnf.fr Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://gallica.bnf.fr Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 14 _ knew _ 4 _ had _ 4 _ was _ 4 one does not 3 _ know _ 3 eyes were full 3 eyes were red 3 god does n''t 3 god was good 3 jeffrey had merely 3 life is not 3 one does n''t 3 one is not 3 ruth did not 3 ruth stood there 2 _ did _ 2 bishop did not 2 bishop was already 2 day was very 2 fire had not 2 girl did not 2 girl looked up 2 girl was not 2 god does not 2 god has well 2 life is so 2 life is unendurable 2 man is not 2 man looked up 2 man was still 2 man went on 2 men are not 2 men are very 2 men did not 2 men do not 2 men do things 2 night was so 2 nothing is more 2 people are so 2 ruth was not 2 things were very 2 time was short 2 woman is life 2 woman is never 1 _ be coincidence 1 _ be proud 1 _ did not 1 _ do _ 1 _ go by 1 _ has not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ got no answer 1 _ was not far 1 eyes were not blue 1 fire had not yet 1 fire was not yet 1 girl had not yet 1 girl is not flattering 1 girl was not merely 1 hills had no quarrel 1 hills were no doubt 1 hills were not far 1 jeffrey had no ready 1 jeffrey said no more 1 life is not always 1 life is not life 1 life is not sufficient 1 life was not different 1 man had no eyes 1 man is not armed 1 man was no longer 1 men are not chaste 1 men have no time 1 night was not pitch 1 one has no more 1 one has no peace 1 one is not always 1 ones are not worth 1 ones were not yet 1 people were not much 1 priests are not alike 1 priests have no wives 1 ruth was no actress 1 ruth was not sick 1 thing is not worth 1 woman is not worse 1 words are no use A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 42011 author = Baring-Gould, S. (Sabine) title = Pabo, the Priest: A Novel date = keywords = Archpriest; Bernard; Cadell; Caio; Cynwyl; David; Gerald; God; Griffith; Henry; Howel; King; Morwen; Nest; Norman; Pabo; Rogier; Wales; Welsh summary = "It is well," said Bernard, signing imperiously to Pabo to draw near. Pabo heard his words, turned about and said--"I am reading the oracle of "Do not fear, my Lord Bishop," said Cadell, his chaplain and "Bishop," said Pabo, stepping before Bernard. "Lord bishop," said Pabo in hard tones, and the sound of his voice was And as Pabo looked at his wife he thought of the peaceful useful life The Archpriest rose and went to where the dead man lay; his long white "I go," said Pabo sadly; "but I shall take my wife with me." _imprimis_: That the said Archpriest, Pabo by name, shall surrender his "Cadell, Archpriest of Caio, to Bernard, Lord Bishop of St. David''s, "I shall go at once," said Cadell; "the bishop must be communicated with "Well," said he, "Pabo to me matters but little--so long "Yet," said Pabo, "my own wife knows me." "Come!" said Pabo. id = 38377 author = Carlile, Richard title = The Character of a Priest date = keywords = nature; priest summary = Nature pregnant with equality, with justice, and generosity, has given operations of Nature, the physical laws of men and of morality are universal laws; man forms an integral part of Nature, and must act in the power the Priests enjoy, are acquired by hypocrisy, by perjury, It is by inflexible truth, by the invariable laws of Nature, that the intelligent man among the whole body of Priests; bigots by education, God, acting always through Nature, always by universal other Priest, and all differ from the truth; the Deity does not operate more the Priests profess to believe, the greater is the iniquity, The people should believe the Priests when they profess principles consistent with Nature, and scorn them: when they the people had sufficient sense they would treat all Priests as All the Priests--all that live by the trade of hypocrisy, all that live id = 10963 author = France, Hector title = The Grip of Desire: The Story of a Parish-Priest date = keywords = Abbé; Althausen; Bishop; Captain; Church; Curé; Durand; Fortin; God; Jesus; Madame; Mademoiselle; Marcel; Mass; Monseigneur; Monsieur; Ridoux; St.; Suzanne; Veronica; come; good; little; love; man; time; young summary = chimerical phantom with the likeness of some young girl, with sweet look --I come, Monsieur le Capitaine, said Marcel, to pay you my visit as --Yes, Captain, I understand, said Marcel rising again, and this time fully her great dark eyes, one foresaw in this young girl, still a child to-day, --Ought not the priest''s house, said Marcel, to be open to all at any hour? respectable man, and one who never dared to look a young girl in her face, --Veronica, said Marcel, I hardly know what you want to arrive at; but I The Bishop, a frivolous old man, a great lover of little girls, who Holy Mother of God," I said to myself, "a man like him! the pretty little girl!" he said, "she is ill, poor dear child." And his --Monsieur le Curé, he said after a moment''s silence, you must be a little id = 62949 author = Gates, Eleanor title = Good Night (Buenas Noches) date = keywords = Alonzo; Loretta; Padre summary = infinite care, let it drop upon the open pages of Padre Alonzo''s book. When a second fuchsia came fluttering down to his hand, Padre Alonzo That way, in the heat of mid-afternoon, came Padre Anzar. "_Good-days_," she was vigorously trying her beak upon the padre''s fist. "Bah!" And Padre Anzar gave Loretta such a shake that she tumbled, "Yes, Tomasso has used thee badly." Padre Alonzo patted her head. shall put thee on thy perch," he went on; "though I trust good Anzar Padre Alonzo rose and turned, reaching up to stroke her. It was past the noon angelus when Padre Alonzo came waddling along "Buenos días," he said to Loretta, pausing a moment; "a good day, "Loretta," said the padre, in some concern, "hast anything in thy craw? Padre Anzar paused a moment, glowering up at Loretta. "I fear thou must mend thy ways, Loretta," he said. id = 61187 author = MacApp, C. C. title = All That Earthly Remains date = keywords = Brulieres; Craig; Padre; Rabar; tunnel summary = Craig looked at the brown face with interest. Brulieres said to Dientes, "The doctor and I must take some samples Craig realized Brulieres wanted to talk to him alone. Damn it, thought Craig, I know better than to argue with a priest. Craig, eyes fastened on the tunnel, realized vaguely It moved a little way toward Craig and Brulieres, then stopped. The priest picked up the weapon and turned toward Craig. Brulieres swept his flashlight along the tunnel walls, revealing a turn These tunnels were dark, and, Craig found, cold and Craig was watching Rabar and he thought the man looked disconcerted. Craig thought, How''s this for a theory: Rabar killed Noriega, took his Craig wondered if the priest shared his doubts about Rabar; but if he Craig looked where the priest pointed. He looked again at Brulieres, and was startled at the man''s face. the priest remained silent, Dientes turned desperate eyes to Craig. id = 30093 author = Maher, Richard Aumerle title = The Shepherd of the North date = keywords = Bishop; Brom; Cynthe; French; Gadbeau; God; Jeffrey; Lansing; Rafe; Rogers; Ruth; State; Tom; Village; Whiting; know; man summary = The little man looked up from his work long enough to point out a He told the young man that the girl, Ruth, had gone out into the cold, Then Jeffrey Whiting came back into the room leading Ruth Lansing by "That strange man that said he was the Bishop of Alden told my father "I came to you, sir," said Jeffrey when the Bishop had given him a "I came straight here all the way," she said, "to tell you, Bishop, hills, not forgetting your friend Ruth.'' That''s all," said Jeffrey, gone through the hills that day, and men would decide, as Jeffrey had When Ruth came to the top of the hill she saw the Bishop nearly a mile "You saw Rafe Gadbeau die," the girl said roughly, as she faced Ruth In a single night the hill men with Jeffrey Whiting at their head had id = 11304 author = Moore, George title = The Lake date = keywords = Catherine; Eliza; Father; Glynn; God; Gogarty; Ireland; Island; London; Mary; Miss; Moran; Mr.; Mrs.; Nora; O''Grady; Oliver; Peter; Poole; Tinnick summary = long, winding, mere-like lake, wooded to its shores, with hills little indignation Father Oliver began to think that public opinion After reading Father O''Grady''s letter he looked round, fearing lest long day in front of him; and he liked to think it would not end for him letter from Miss Glynn, telling me that a great chance had come her way. his thoughts, and went to his writing-table and began a long letter ''I don''t know what manner of man he is in his body,'' said Father Oliver, Father Oliver continued, like one talking to himself: ''I''m thinking that see her and write me a long letter, telling me what you think of her. The priests walked on again, and Father Oliver fell to thinking now what he was thinking that Nora Glynn had come into his life like a fountain, cart, and at this moment Father Oliver began to think that he would like id = 1388 author = Wister, Owen title = Padre Ignacio; Or, The Song of Temptation date = keywords = Felipe; Gaston; Ignacio; Padre; Santa; Ysabel summary = "I should have thought," said Gaston, looking lightly at the desert "I have seen a sight like this," said Gaston, "between Granada and "So you know Spain!" said the Padre. "I will make you a little confession," said Padre Ignacio, "and then you said, "our poor meal will be ready for you." The good Padre was "Come and convert me, then," said Padre Ignacio, and he led the way. Gaston stopped, and the Padre, looking keenly at him, saw the violence "That''s nothing dishonorable," said Gaston, answering the priest''s look. "Yes," said the Padre, looking at the anchored barkentine, "I remember "Perhaps you will," said Padre Ignacio, in a low voice. And coming to know this," said Padre said, "The Padre is unwell." And Felipe told them that the music seemed Gaston''s first coming was in the Padre''s mind; and, as the vespers bell