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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 18 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 43715 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 82 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 man 4 Government 3 President 3 Mr. 3 King 3 Earth 2 german 2 american 2 Venus 2 State 2 Paris 2 Miguel 2 Emperor 2 Constitution 2 Assembly 1 world 1 state 1 spanish 1 socialist 1 russian 1 people 1 page 1 nature 1 nation 1 martian 1 look 1 law 1 italian 1 Zurk 1 Zuldi 1 Zoroaster 1 X-87 1 Wolf 1 Walthew 1 Volney 1 Vienna 1 United 1 Torio 1 Tiro 1 Syria 1 Supreme 1 Subaltern 1 Stuart 1 States 1 Soviet 1 Sorrento 1 Sir 1 Serono 1 Serbs 1 Secretary Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2464 man 1094 time 850 hand 765 people 664 power 594 day 555 eye 549 life 539 way 499 head 491 country 486 part 486 law 474 order 445 war 445 side 429 face 422 place 422 movement 421 world 421 word 421 thing 417 year 406 moment 404 class 394 room 388 force 379 voice 376 nothing 361 one 357 other 356 work 344 revolution 340 struggle 339 mind 338 feeling 332 soldier 323 state 323 question 323 city 321 party 319 door 318 something 316 government 315 name 314 nation 305 labor 302 idea 301 right 296 friend Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1816 _ 608 Clay 457 Grahame 404 Government 372 President 358 Walthew 351 King 337 Langham 330 Evelyn 284 God 283 Vienna 275 Kautsky 268 Metternich 268 Assembly 259 Mark 256 Savrola 252 Cliffe 244 Charles 243 Hungary 232 Hope 227 Mr. 219 Earth 216 Austria 212 March 210 State 210 MacWilliams 205 Constitution 198 Italy 197 Germany 196 Albert 190 Parliament 177 Gomez 170 General 169 Paris 165 Q. 165 A. 162 Emperor 159 Miss 155 Kossuth 152 Dirk 152 Council 143 France 137 Ferdinand 135 Europe 132 Macallister 131 Venus 130 Republic 129 Duane 128 Stuart 128 Carston Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8523 he 7048 it 5000 i 4282 you 3762 they 2640 him 2312 she 2202 them 2149 we 1021 me 855 her 798 us 578 himself 324 themselves 298 itself 152 one 102 herself 101 myself 76 yourself 52 ourselves 23 his 19 ye 19 mine 18 yours 18 ''s 16 thee 16 ours 13 theirs 8 hers 6 yourselves 6 oneself 5 ''em 3 thyself 2 i''m 1 ye''re 1 us,--i 1 follows:--"i 1 failure.--radetzky 1 em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 24563 be 10682 have 2824 do 2290 say 1339 see 1318 make 1305 come 1278 go 1196 know 1132 take 936 give 846 think 837 find 785 look 741 get 687 seem 571 leave 551 turn 549 become 525 begin 512 tell 510 feel 503 stand 486 rise 479 call 475 follow 471 ask 417 try 408 hold 396 show 396 hear 388 bring 370 speak 367 send 367 fall 365 pass 358 mean 355 lead 343 carry 327 answer 316 put 315 meet 315 let 312 want 296 run 293 sit 291 understand 289 remain 287 keep 282 wait Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5040 not 1426 then 1292 so 1261 more 1160 only 1147 up 1127 out 1115 now 977 other 877 first 807 great 716 very 703 even 673 well 644 most 623 still 609 back 608 long 606 down 603 own 596 here 567 good 543 much 528 as 524 new 481 little 479 same 469 many 452 away 447 there 436 again 433 too 420 few 412 on 408 last 404 just 395 such 375 old 355 once 352 soon 351 never 350 far 348 political 348 off 346 however 311 all 300 in 298 also 293 yet 288 perhaps Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 132 least 121 good 103 most 71 great 48 high 32 bad 25 near 16 strong 13 slight 11 late 10 low 9 small 8 Most 7 wide 7 rich 7 mean 7 large 6 fierce 6 easy 6 close 6 able 5 wise 5 simple 5 full 5 fine 4 short 4 reconqu 4 old 4 keen 4 happy 4 early 4 dear 4 bitter 3 pure 3 proud 3 poor 3 free 3 fast 3 brave 3 bare 2 wild 2 weak 2 vile 2 stern 2 severe 2 safe 2 new 2 minute 2 manif 2 lucky Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 541 most 32 well 23 least 2 near 1 slowest 1 shortest 1 quick 1 highest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 books.google.com Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/39540/39540-h/39540-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/39540/39540-h.zip 1 http://books.google.com/books?vid=Qo4MAAAAYAAJ&id 1 http://books.google.com Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 grahame did not 6 _ see _ 5 face was pale 4 men did not 3 _ did _ 3 _ do n''t 3 _ is _ 3 eyes were wide 3 grahame was glad 3 man did not 3 man had not 3 men are equal 3 things are not 3 war was not 3 world is full 2 _ does not 2 _ have _ 2 _ was _ 2 _ was not 2 class has not 2 clay did not 2 clay turned in 2 eyes were grave 2 eyes were pools 2 face was hard 2 face was impassive 2 face was livid 2 face was wet 2 grahame came in 2 grahame had not 2 grahame looked hard 2 grahame was not 2 grahame went down 2 hands were wet 2 life is only 2 lives were forfeit 2 man came out 2 man came up 2 man is not 2 man was obviously 2 man went down 2 men were already 2 men were not 2 men were still 2 movement was as 2 people are so 2 people were ready 2 place was as 2 things being equal 2 time is short Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 things are not likely 1 _ does not even 1 _ make no such 1 class has no intelligence 1 class has not only 1 class has not yet 1 clay made no answer 1 countries has not yet 1 country has not only 1 government did not so 1 government had no intention 1 government is not ready 1 grahame had no doubt 1 grahame was not quite 1 life ''s not forfeit 1 life is no longer 1 life was not very 1 man ''s not badly 1 man is no longer 1 man made no reply 1 men had no choice 1 men were not there 1 moment were not hostile 1 movement is not solely 1 movement was not yet 1 order were not soon 1 people are no longer 1 people had no opportunity 1 people have no idea 1 people were not idle 1 things are not quite 1 war was no longer 1 words were not fit 1 world is not there 1 years leaves no doubt A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 10613 author = Adams, Brooks title = The Theory of Social Revolutions date = keywords = Chief; Congress; Constitution; Convention; Court; Danton; France; Jefferson; Justice; King; Marshall; Mr.; Paris; States; Supreme; United; american summary = a new governing class, as every considerable change in human environment fifty years later the Court of King''s Bench gravely held that a royal the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court to the President of the United has no constitutional power to confer upon the Supreme Court original Court when it so decided made a serious political and social error. precedents the Supreme Court of New York decided that, under the _Police first presented to the Supreme Court of the United States, did not come The effect of the adoption by the Supreme Court of the United States of the Supreme Court of the United States under the Fourteenth Amendment, it the duty of every court of general jurisdiction, state or federal, to the Police Power, which was adopted by the Supreme Court of the United On March 10, 1793, the Convention passed a decree constituting a court id = 60460 author = Berry, Don title = The Raider date = keywords = Carroll; Joseph; Wolf summary = "My apologies, old man," said the raider. Extending his free right hand, the farmer said, "My name is Carroll. "Perhaps," said Wolf slowly, "we had better straighten this out right "No," said the man stubbornly, without taking his eyes away from Wolf. "Perhaps, perhaps," said Joseph Carroll, shaking his head dubiously. "A man must live for something," said Wolf, quietly. "It rather sounds as if you respect the man," said Carroll. "Good," said Wolf. "He will come to inspect this village in two days," she said. "Joseph," said Wolf softly, and the older man turned at the door. "I didn''t know," Wolf said, almost under his breath. "Joseph," said Wolf suddenly. "Joseph," said Wolf suddenly. "All right," said the old man. "We''ve got to go on," Wolf said. Wolfs hand slid down the old man''s back, came away warm and wet. "Sorry, Daimya," Wolf said under his breath. id = 37582 author = Bindloss, Harold title = The Coast of Adventure date = keywords = Agustin; Blanca; Cliffe; Don; Enchantress; Evelyn; Father; Frio; Gomez; Grahame; Macallister; Martin; Miguel; President; Rio; Sarmiento; Walthew; american; man; spanish summary = "Well," said Walthew, "they do not look busy; but things do happen here Don Martin looked thoughtful, but not disturbed; and Grahame saw that he The man looked hard at him, and Grahame carelessly dropped his hand upon "White''s conspicuous," Walthew answered, and Evelyn noticed Grahame''s Grahame glanced at Walthew, who sat nearest the door, and the lad looked Grahame turned and saw Walthew standing in the engine-room door. boat''s crew, who had come on board, and Grahame saw that Walthew was when he reached the door, but Grahame, looking round, saw Gomez walk "All right; I''ve had enough," Walthew said when Grahame touched him. Walthew came up when the engines stopped, and Grahame sat down on the Grahame thought of Cliffe, and wondered about his business with Gomez; Grahame looked thoughtful, and Evelyn quietly studied him. Grahame went to look for Evelyn, and it was noon when Walthew met him id = 62395 author = Bond, Nelson S. title = Phantom Out of Time date = keywords = Dirk; Earth; Emperor; Garroway; Lenore; Morris; Nadron; Overlord; Princess; Rima summary = Dirk Morris placed his lips close to Neil''s ear, whispered a brief "I know one thing," said Morris, "that is no secret. Dirk Morris opened his eyes. For a long, uncomprehending moment Dirk Morris gaped at his informant. As Dirk watched, Garroway turned and gestured to the guardsman object once more to his eyes, saw Graed Garroway lead the way from "What way, Dirk Morris?" asked the girl. It was enough for him that he had heard Dirk Morris'' voice, and The voice of Dirk Morris was not pleasant now. Will you give me the man, Dirk Morris, Rima said, "Dirk ... "Thus, you see," said Rima so softly that only Dirk could hear her, Dirk''s head turned slowly; his eyes met those of the Princess Lenore. "Surely _you_ should know, Dirk Morris, that one cannot pass with Dirk said, "You mean that you, as I did, have become a ... id = 50906 author = Churchill, Winston title = Savrola: A Tale of the Revolution in Laurania date = keywords = Colonel; Government; Laurania; Lucile; Mayoralty; Miguel; Molara; Moret; President; Republic; Savrola; Secretary; Sir; Sorrento; State; Subaltern; Tiro; look; man summary = "And I," said Savrola, "know the Lauranian people. "Perhaps you are right," said Savrola reflectively, "I am half inclined "Well," said Savrola speaking slowly and appearing to weigh his words, "Because I am going to the ball that night," said Savrola deliberately. "Moret," said Savrola with strange earnestness, "we have settled that; "Look at that statue," said Savrola suddenly, indicating a magnificent "If I thought that," said Savrola, "I should kill myself to-night out "Yes," said the Secretary, "in the City-Hall; Savrola is going to "Louis, come with me," said Savrola to Moret; "you can drop me and take "Look here, old man," said Molara familiarly,--he felt he wanted a "I shall be at the Mayoralty," said Savrola; "you may come and fetch me "Well," said Savrola, "Moret is there, and he has full powers." "Well," said Savrola, "you must take men as you find them; few are id = 61845 author = Cummings, Ray title = Space-Liner X-87 date = keywords = Blake; Earth; Mackensie; Mokk; Moon; Nina; Torio; X-87 summary = "Little Nina is going back to the Moon this voyage to take control of little Nina Blake so flooded with secret terror? trousered figure of Nina Blake emerged from the end corridor of the moon-faced little Peter Green, Second Officer, came puffing down from see the group of men around Nina on the fore-deck, a gay little party deck-triangle a level below, where the earth-light still was red like center of the dim room, Nina was standing--beautiful, slim little I remembered the location of the little magnetic control room; rushed The little magnet room was near it hand; its door turret, a figure appeared coming up the little catwalk ladder from the "The little Earth-girl fascinates you, eh, Torio? Her slim little hands gripped Torio by the shoulders. Torio, I figured, was still in the chart room, with Nina and Mackensie. Blake went at him like a little springing id = 403 author = Davis, Richard Harding title = Soldiers of Fortune date = keywords = Alvarez; Burke; Clay; General; Government; Hope; King; Langham; Madame; Mendoza; Miss; Mr.; Olancho; Palace; President; Rojas; Stuart; man summary = "I mind being called good-natured," said Miss Langham, smiling. He may be a most impossible sort of man, but, as I said to Mr. Porter, the people I''ve asked can''t complain, because I don''t know Miss Langham looked at Clay for a moment in silent dismay and with a Langham looked out to find Clay and MacWilliams knee-deep in the Langham dined with his people that night, Clay and MacWilliams having time herself, addressing what she said to Miss Langham, but looking at "If we are to continue good friends, Mr. Clay," said Miss Langham, in hurt and disappointed look in Hope''s face, and when Miss Langham asked "I hope not," Clay said, "but the soldiers are coming in from the Clay and Langham left MacWilliams and Stuart to look after their "I asked you not to come," Clay said to Hope, in a low voice. "Look back, Clay," he said. id = 62377 author = Hasse, Henry title = Alcatraz of the Starways date = keywords = Aladdian; Aladdo; Carston; Commander; Cynthia; Earth; Luhor; Mark; Marnik; Venus summary = Mark knew that these men wouldn''t last long, but he wondered if perhaps Then Luhor was touching his shoulder, and Mark opened his eyes. As they walked forward Luhor turned to Mark with a proud smile. you...." Mark turned to Carston, his face alight. A look at the Venusian''s smiling face told Mark it was true. "Only twenty-two men, Luhor?" Commander Cynthia Marnik stood very escape Mark that her voice was soft and that she smiled at Carston. Carston came over to give Mark a hand. "She blames Luhor for the oxygen business!" Mark murmured to Carston Carston looked baffled as the Venusian girl spoke, then turned to Mark "Tell the men to stop work," Aladdian said to Mark two days later, Mark was soon to know the reason for Carston''s silence, and to realize Aladdian turned with a satisfied smile to Mark and Cynthia id = 59259 author = Kastle, Herbert D. title = The Outer Quiet date = keywords = Adele; Conquerors; George summary = known as Punitive--the only Conqueror the trainees had ever seen. the second time, the thin beam of light had seared his eyes. Conquerors was in sight, they went out in one mad day of talk. time of the blast to the day he had passed through the new brick wall Adele helped him pick up stones, until his hands and her cradled arms followed the faces turned up to Conqueror Punitive''s window. By the time George and Adele followed, men and women stood George looked at the radio, then at Adele. the first trainees slipping toward the feeding hall; the women moving When George and Adele arrived in the kitchen, all the Americans were men sat talking, following the women with their eyes, trying to forget return to the rooms, George spoke his thoughts. Two months after George and Adele Lowery''s revolt, the trainees left id = 62043 author = Lewis, Richard O. title = Zurk date = keywords = Marene; Zuldi; Zurk summary = "Zurk!" The thought-wave went out with all the power of his brain. The trap door opened slowly some time later, and Marene came up into The thought of that black ship and what it meant sent Zurk into another Zurk watched Marene lead the young man to the table at the end of the Marene''s hand was upon the young man''s arm and she was looking up into window toward the far-away, dark horizon from whence the black ship Zurk''s photo-electric eyes saw the vibration of the charge slit through And once again Zurk''s eyes saw the vibration miss its mark by inches. Zurk tried with all his might to tell the young man that the gun was a out at the black ship and Bob was working frantically with the gun. one of the hand guns Zurk--or Guyard--had made in the secret furnace. id = 39540 author = Maurice, C. Edmund (Charles Edmund) title = The Revolutionary Movement of 1848-9 in Italy, Austria-Hungary, and Germany With Some Examination of the Previous Thirty-three Years date = keywords = Albert; Assembly; Austria; Austrians; Bohemia; Charles; Constitution; Diet; Emperor; Ferdinand; Frankfort; Government; Hungary; Italy; King; Kossuth; Lombardy; Magyars; March; Mazzini; Metternich; Milan; Ministry; Parliament; Pope; Prague; Prussia; Rome; Serbs; Vienna; german; italian summary = Effect of Napoleonic Wars on Italian Feeling.--Austrian promises General Nugent, the leader of the Austrian forces, followed up this persuading Charles Albert to declare war on Austria grew fainter and strong feeling of the Liberals of Italy, and to give Charles Albert new Constitution had not had time to bring about any better feeling year a passing struggle in Southern and Central Italy gave new hopes champion of Italian Liberty; German national feeling, which Metternich movement for reform, and its citizens tried to urge on Charles Albert the Austrian police compelled him to leave the State, people followed between the leaders of the German movement and the King of Prussia, people of Vienna had already been appealed to, by a placard on St. Stephen''s Church, to free the good Emperor Ferdinand from his enemies; war by Charles Albert.--Attitude of the Roman Assembly.--Mazzini''s the Austrian Government in Vienna, Hungary and Italy; and Rieger id = 62476 author = Pohl, Frederik title = Conspiracy on Callisto date = keywords = Andrias; Callisto; Duane; League; Peter summary = Revolt was flaring on Callisto, and Peter Duane He said, "Duane, Andrias is your boss, not mine. Duane said, "Do I have to kill you?" It was only a question as he asked Andrias straightened, turned a darkly-suspicious look on Duane. "Duane here is resisting arrest," Andrias said. Whoever this man Andrias was, thought Duane, he was certainly a man of "Who''s this man Andrias?" Duane whispered to the nearest guard. "Governor Andrias," he said, "is the League''s Somewhere, some time, a man had said to him, "_Andrias is secretly "All right, Duane." The deep voice of a guard came to him as the door Duane looked at the man''s eyes. Duane stepped over the unconscious man and looked around the room. Duane thought, then, that Andrias'' power could Duane jerked his gun at Andrias and his police. "Why--why, I''m Peter Duane, of course," he said. id = 61696 author = Repp, Ed Earl title = Martian Terror date = keywords = Arzt; Atarkus; Irak; Lolan; Mora; martian summary = Lolan, the Martian Sub-Commander, had no Lolan''s pen made the only sound in the stuffy barracks room. It was commanders like Arzt who let the Venusians suffer from Lolan''s hand, went spinning down into black nothingness. Lolan''s shocked eyes flashed to a pair of burning, amused ones. that these damned Venusian dogs are good enough for a Martian officer?" Lolan stood rigid, letting the idea revolve in his mind. Mora let the Martian place the Burly guards came running up to take charge of Lolan. "Irak--what the devil are you doing here?" Lolan coughed. Captain Irak stuck a skinny leg between Lolan''s running feet and Lolan''s eyes went a little wide at that. Lolan and Irak Lolan and Irak were back of the corner, now, waiting-At sundown, Lolan stood with Mora, Atarkus, and the others high in It was arranged the day Lolan came back from Mars!" id = 61499 author = Roberts, Scott title = Monopoly date = keywords = Brian; Crystal; Hanson; Serono; Venus summary = Brian Hanson looked disgustedly at Pete Brent, his lanky assistant. Brian Hanson, Chief of Research for Venus Consolidated, as dignified as For the nineteenth time Brian Hanson strode to the door of his cell and Serono Zeburzac, head of McHague''s secret police Brian followed Crystal into the smaller Crystal held the ship in its roll and completed the maneuver outside opening Crystal''s ship had left. Then Brian and Crystal cut loose with the drives of the Brian and Crystal struggled painfully to solid ground. Crystal looked at Brian with dawning horror behind her eyes. Crystal whimpered and stumbled forward before Brian could stop her. as Crystal''s feet slammed into his jaw and Brian''s clenched hands Brian boosted Crystal in, Brian Hanson was a rebel. Crystal laid her hand on Brian''s arm. Crystal watched in silence as Brian "No--" Crystal screamed, "Brian!" She turned and stumbled toward the Brian--" Crystal sobbed hopelessly. id = 38982 author = Trotsky, Leon title = Dictatorship vs. Democracy (Terrorism and Communism): a reply to Karl Kantsky date = keywords = Adler; Assembly; Bolsheviks; Commune; Constituent; Government; International; Kautsky; Marx; Mensheviks; National; Paris; Petrograd; Revolution; Soviet; State; german; page; russian; socialist summary = the working class means, at the present moment, an embittered struggle governments and Socialist patriotic parties, the working class was all represents the sole revolutionary class of the nation," wrote Kautsky Kautsky, says to the working class: "The question is not whether you At the present time, Kautsky has no theory of the social revolution. Soviets, the revolutionary organizations of the laboring masses the path of revolutionary dictatorship, the working class of Russia German Social-Democracy, Kautsky sees in organization first and as the community of the emancipated working-class proletariat, The Soviets, as a form of the organization of the working class, economic organs of the proletariat in power. political, economic, and social life by the organized workers, who Soviet country, where the working class is in power--a fact which our industrial productional organization of the working class, in the Kautsky represents the Soviet workers, and the Russian working class id = 1397 author = Volney, C.-F. (Constantin-François) title = The Ruins; Or, Meditation on the Revolutions of Empires and the Law of Nature date = keywords = Asia; CHAPTER; Christians; Egypt; Egyptians; Europe; Genius; God; Greeks; India; Jesus; Jews; Mahomet; Moses; Mr.; Mussulmans; Nile; Osiris; Persians; Plutarch; Syria; Volney; Zoroaster; law; man; nation; nature; people; state; world summary = forms, torment individuals and nations, or are they the passions of man? conformed to the true laws of nature; and because men, enjoying liberty laws of nature and reason--laws of a common and general mover--of a God accountable for it; that, kings or subjects, God has made all men equal, PEOPLE.--The law is the general will; and we will a new order of things. the earth contains of people and of nations; men of every race and of ideas of civilized people respecting God, the soul, another world, and a Is it not the first law of God that man should live?" world, the nature of God, the revelation of his laws, the manifestation law of nature forms an exact science, that men, born ignorant and living PRINCIPLES OF THE LAW OF NATURE RELATING TO MAN. PRINCIPLES OF THE LAW OF NATURE RELATING TO MAN.