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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 6 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 53504 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 83 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 Mrs. 1 time 1 state 1 man 1 Yollop 1 Wesley 1 Theodore 1 State 1 Smilk 1 Sing 1 Parker 1 Paine 1 Oxford 1 Oliver 1 New 1 Mr. 1 Mazzini 1 London 1 Knox 1 John 1 Hutchinson 1 House 1 Henry 1 God 1 George 1 Garibaldi 1 France 1 England 1 Cromwell 1 Crittenden 1 Cobden 1 Church 1 Charles 1 Champney 1 Cassius 1 Calvin 1 Bright 1 Bradlaugh 1 Boston 1 America Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 570 man 292 time 258 year 196 life 170 people 160 thing 139 way 116 woman 116 child 113 work 111 day 103 religion 98 hand 89 world 88 law 87 name 83 word 79 death 79 book 76 fact 76 business 75 heart 71 church 70 mother 68 place 68 mind 68 friend 65 nothing 62 power 62 money 60 one 60 land 59 wife 58 truth 58 love 58 country 57 head 56 question 56 order 56 house 55 service 54 right 54 horse 54 boy 52 foot 51 part 51 month 50 matter 48 counsel 47 police Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 207 Mr. 181 John 175 Yollop 149 Smilk 114 Garibaldi 112 England 102 Paine 101 God 100 Mrs. 99 Wesley 94 George 91 Cobden 91 Bradlaugh 84 Henry 78 Parker 77 Cassius 73 Church 65 Charles 63 America 60 State 58 Bright 57 Oliver 57 Cromwell 55 Hutchinson 55 Hundred 51 Calvin 45 Theodore 45 Knox 45 Boston 43 New 39 House 38 Luther 38 France 36 Mary 36 London 35 Thomas 34 Mazzini 33 Lord 30 Oxford 29 Reverend 28 Italy 26 Richard 26 Emerson 25 Rousseau 23 York 23 Seventeen 23 Franklin 22 Dyer 21 Pope 21 Laud Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1535 he 1013 it 910 you 903 i 490 they 481 him 276 we 272 she 240 them 204 me 109 himself 109 her 98 us 47 themselves 38 ''em 17 myself 15 herself 14 yourself 14 one 13 itself 8 yours 6 thee 5 ourselves 5 mine 4 theirs 4 his 3 ''s 2 huh 2 hers 1 out,-- 1 on''t 1 em 1 brightened,--they Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 4657 be 1371 have 706 do 420 say 295 make 280 go 275 get 229 come 224 know 212 give 201 take 168 see 147 think 128 call 117 tell 116 find 109 write 105 live 92 want 90 believe 89 speak 87 hear 84 look 84 ask 77 begin 77 become 76 use 73 keep 72 send 71 read 71 bring 69 try 69 let 67 work 66 pay 65 stand 64 leave 64 hold 61 seem 61 follow 60 mean 59 put 55 carry 54 allow 52 die 51 grow 47 set 46 feel 45 bear 43 preach Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 969 not 333 so 215 then 211 up 198 only 163 out 163 great 161 now 153 very 152 good 149 more 148 never 146 well 133 much 118 here 116 little 112 first 110 just 109 own 105 other 105 as 93 back 91 many 90 ever 83 right 81 same 79 even 76 down 74 long 74 always 72 too 72 over 72 also 71 there 71 again 70 once 70 old 69 away 66 on 65 off 65 most 64 few 62 free 61 yet 61 still 58 all 56 young 48 true 48 new 47 strong Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 27 good 24 most 19 least 13 great 4 slight 4 high 4 eld 4 bad 4 Most 2 young 2 strong 2 early 1 wide 1 weak 1 warlike 1 sure 1 slick 1 simple 1 sane 1 rotten 1 quick 1 poor 1 near 1 manif 1 lowly 1 lovely 1 light 1 late 1 harsh 1 hardy 1 happy 1 goshdarnd 1 gentle 1 free 1 fit 1 fine 1 fast 1 faint 1 doughty 1 darnd 1 clear 1 bitter Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 41 most 7 well 2 least 1 talkfest 1 goethe 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 wesley did not 2 england did not 2 garibaldi did not 2 george did not 2 george was not 2 man has today 2 man was ever 2 people is supreme 2 time was not 2 years went by 1 bradlaugh did not 1 bradlaugh found guilty 1 bradlaugh had not 1 bradlaugh is too 1 bradlaugh was again 1 bradlaugh was down 1 bradlaugh was still 1 bradlaugh were never 1 child does not 1 children became famous 1 children do not 1 children were fully 1 cobden being now 1 cobden came up 1 cobden gave up 1 cobden had at 1 cobden made note 1 cobden took possession 1 cobden was then 1 cobden went over 1 cobden went up 1 days go by 1 days went by 1 days were so 1 england had practically 1 england is now 1 england is today 1 england was archbishop 1 england was now 1 england was supreme 1 england were catholics 1 garibaldi had nothing 1 garibaldi looked back 1 garibaldi took great 1 garibaldi took time 1 garibaldi was freedom- 1 garibaldi was not 1 garibaldi went at 1 garibaldi were totally 1 george found board Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 time was not yet 1 bradlaugh had not quite 1 children do not necessarily 1 george was not yet 1 god was no better 1 man had no natural 1 people had no rights 1 people had no voice 1 time is not far 1 times is no honor 1 wesley do not much 1 world was not ready A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 6449 author = Hubbard, Elbert title = Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great - Volume 09 Little Journeys to the Homes of Great Reformers date = keywords = America; Boston; Bradlaugh; Bright; Calvin; Charles; Church; Cobden; Cromwell; England; France; Garibaldi; George; God; Henry; House; Hutchinson; John; Knox; London; Mazzini; Mrs.; New; Oliver; Oxford; Paine; Parker; State; Theodore; Wesley; man summary = Wesley went one day to hold evening prayers at a village church near years have passed since men heard his voice, looked on his strong, Henry George was that rare, peculiar and strange thing--an honest man. "What Cheer House" was all right for a man getting good wages, but much faith in God. After his thirty-sixth year Henry George slipped by natural process and insist that men shall have the right to work out their lives in The Reverend Theodore Parker once said: "Every living man in America United States, offered Paine passage to America on board the man-ofwar "Maryland," in order that he might be safe from capture by the Paine thought Franklin quite the greatest man of his time, an opinion time is coming when a State Church will be unknown in England, and The man who said, "In a world where death is, there is no time id = 5866 author = McCutcheon, George Barr title = Yollop date = keywords = Cassius; Champney; Crittenden; Mr.; Mrs.; Sing; Smilk; Yollop; state; time summary = I think how I let a skinny, half-witted boob like you walk right "I''ll tell what I''ll do," said Cassius Smilk obligingly. "The thing that''s troubling me now," said Mr. Yollop, as Smilk hung "You were saying a little while ago," said Mr. Yollop, shifting his "I''m tryin'' to use common, every-day words, Mr. Shallop," said Mr. Smilk, with dignity, "and I wish you''d do the same." "Cassius," interrupted Mr. Yollop urbanely, "this is my sister, Mrs. Champney. "Put up your hands, Yollop!" ordered Mr. Smilk. "I say, Cassius," cried Mr. Yollop, "is this the woman you wanted to "See here, Smilk," said Mr. Yollop, "I cannot allow you to strike my "I was thinking of your roll of bills, Cassius," said Mr. Yollop. "I wish I had shot you, Smilk, when I had the chance," said Mr. Yollop sadly. The State: "Now, Mr. Yollop, I''m going to ask you to tell the jury,