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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 7 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 66678 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 74 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 York 3 Richard 3 Henry 3 Edward 3 Clarence 2 Warwick 2 Thomas 2 Sir 2 Margaret 2 London 2 King 2 Hastings 2 Gloucester 2 England 2 Elizabeth 2 Earl 2 Duke 1 William 1 VII 1 Tudor 1 Tower 1 Tirrel 1 Tewkesbury 1 St. 1 Seventh 1 Queen 1 Prince 1 Perkin 1 Mr. 1 Morton 1 Lord 1 John 1 III 1 Gairdner 1 France 1 Fourth 1 Duchess 1 Castle 1 Buckingham 1 Bosworth 1 Bishop 1 Bacon 1 Anne Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 506 time 464 king 421 son 371 death 356 brother 333 man 286 child 275 year 233 prince 230 day 228 queen 211 story 203 mother 198 p. 195 crown 188 battle 162 people 161 marriage 157 father 156 place 156 hand 156 daughter 152 murder 152 family 148 side 145 life 144 coronation 134 history 131 wife 128 letter 127 part 127 order 120 way 120 evidence 119 boy 117 power 114 army 113 party 113 friend 112 force 111 date 110 fact 107 truth 107 charge 106 head 106 enemy 105 throne 105 person 105 duke 103 crime Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1538 Richard 1311 _ 926 Edward 767 Henry 626 King 604 Sir 448 Lord 443 Duke 397 York 352 Earl 274 Warwick 271 Clarence 256 John 241 England 231 London 209 Margaret 207 Gloucester 200 Morton 191 Thomas 191 . 185 III 178 Tudor 175 IV 168 Elizabeth 160 Queen 158 Tower 149 Mr. 145 Buckingham 138 Anne 128 Hastings 127 William 121 Bishop 118 Gairdner 115 Tewkesbury 114 Castle 112 St. 112 Lady 108 Bosworth 102 Prince 101 VII 99 VI 95 Dr. 94 France 90 James 88 Duchess 83 Tyrrel 83 Rivers 83 George 82 Virgil 81 Polydore Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2426 he 1363 it 795 him 709 they 511 she 399 them 351 i 267 her 248 we 220 himself 99 us 91 you 68 me 54 herself 41 themselves 18 itself 10 one 10 myself 6 his 2 theirs 1 yours 1 ye 1 thee 1 ourselves 1 mine Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 8029 be 2351 have 538 make 476 do 408 take 345 say 303 give 295 come 239 see 222 know 207 go 173 bear 166 call 162 find 160 send 153 put 150 become 148 write 146 receive 137 die 136 bring 130 marry 127 think 124 believe 120 live 119 appear 118 tell 118 leave 107 follow 105 remain 99 show 98 form 96 keep 95 pass 94 lead 90 seem 87 set 84 fall 79 join 78 murder 77 hear 76 meet 71 allege 70 slay 70 begin 69 commit 69 arrive 67 declare 67 allow 66 destroy Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1007 not 446 so 389 very 349 other 349 great 310 young 261 more 256 only 249 then 214 now 203 first 197 most 193 own 192 up 176 well 170 as 168 much 167 also 162 old 157 many 155 out 155 last 148 long 143 same 142 such 141 little 127 good 123 true 122 even 121 never 119 there 117 still 117 soon 112 however 111 too 110 thus 100 second 95 royal 92 away 85 high 84 next 84 here 82 far 80 once 78 off 75 new 75 about 74 strong 74 afterwards 72 yet Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 42 least 31 most 30 eld 22 good 18 old 16 young 15 high 12 great 9 bad 6 early 5 near 3 slight 3 late 3 Most 2 strong 2 small 2 gross 2 foul 2 e 2 bitter 2 able 1 warm 1 true 1 thick 1 sure 1 short 1 noble 1 neer 1 low 1 large 1 l 1 integrity,[10 1 honest 1 happy 1 handsome 1 grand 1 goodly 1 fine 1 fair 1 designs.--arr 1 clear 1 cheap 1 bright Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 166 most 8 well 5 least 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 55 _ see _ 8 richard was not 7 richard did not 5 story put forward 4 edward was now 3 clarence was due 3 edward was only 3 henry was so 3 son did not 2 children were not 2 clarence is not 2 death was not 2 edward was very 2 henry was alive 2 king had not 2 king is very 2 king left windsor 2 margaret was not 2 princes were alive 2 queen did not 2 richard knew very 2 richard was certainly 2 richard was most 2 richard was very 2 richard went so 2 story was true 2 warwick had not 1 _ had never 1 _ have _ 1 _ made _ 1 _ was not 1 _ was probably 1 _ was secretly 1 brother was hard 1 brother was not 1 brothers sent abroad 1 brothers were illegitimate 1 child did not 1 child is born.--anne 1 child was margaret 1 children had not 1 children were bastards 1 children were cousins 1 children were horn 1 children were thus 1 children were young 1 clarence did not 1 clarence left children 1 clarence made unreasonable 1 clarence was dead Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 children were not legitimate 1 clarence is not specially 1 clarence left no enemy 1 clarence was not fully 1 days were not likely 1 death appeared no more 1 death had no appearance 1 edward gave no answer 1 edward had no fear 1 edward made no attempt 1 england did not soon 1 king had not then 1 king is not unpleasant 1 margaret was not only 1 queen had not only 1 richard had no longer 1 richard made no open 1 richard was no fool 1 richard was not lawfully 1 richard was not tall 1 richard was not well 1 richard was not yet 1 time had not yet 1 warwick had not only 1 warwick made no haste 1 york was not fully A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 28561 author = Abbott, Jacob title = Richard III Makers of History date = keywords = Clarence; Duke; Earl; Edward; Elizabeth; England; France; Henry; King; London; Margaret; Prince; Richard; Tower; Warwick; York summary = York.--Richard Plantagenet a prisoner.--King Henry VI.--His gentle and heir, and at Edward''s death Richard became king. at length, by the time that Richard was thirteen years old, the power short time before the great final contest between Prince Richard of York, King Richard''s father, and the family of Henry, when the prince meet the forces of Queen Margaret, he sent his oldest son, Edward, of the house of York, King Edward the Fourth, the two young men his been taken prisoner by Warwick, was brought to King Edward, who, at sanctuary.--Birth of Edward''s son and heir.--King Henry is fully King Edward, when he heard of the marriage of Warwick''s daughter with In the mean time, tidings were continually coming to King Edward from Clarence.--Edward and Richard sail for England.--Stratagems King Edward reigned, after this time, for about eight years. After the coronation, King Richard and Anne, the queen, went to id = 36451 author = Markham, Clements R. (Clements Robert), Sir title = Richard III: His Life & Character, Reviewed in the Light of Recent Research date = keywords = Anne; Bishop; Bosworth; Buckingham; Castle; Clarence; Duchess; Duke; Earl; Edward; England; Gairdner; Gloucester; Hastings; Henry; III; John; King; London; Lord; Margaret; Morton; Mr.; Queen; Richard; Sir; St.; Tewkesbury; Thomas; Tudor; VII; Warwick; William; York summary = King, Richard III., the younger brother of his two young friends Edward the people as son and heir of Richard, Duke of York, and by authority bodies of Richard Duke of York, and of his son, Edmund Earl of Rutland, men.[16] King Edward and the Duke of Gloucester returned to London the Richard Duke of York, of the Duchess Cicely, and of Edmund Earl of At the time of the King''s death his son Edward was residing at Ludlow in charge of his uncle Lord Rivers, his half brother Sir Richard Grey, Of the three Dukes, Suffolk was King Richard''s brother-in-law, King Richard was a young man in his thirtieth year when he came to the the ''York Records'' it appears that, six years after King Richard''s Clarence, Richard Duke of Gloucester, and William Lord Hastings, King of England, and there was John, the illegitimate son of Richard id = 17411 author = Walpole, Horace title = Historic Doubts on the Life and Reign of King Richard the Third date = keywords = Bacon; Clarence; Edward; Elizabeth; Fourth; Gloucester; Hastings; Henry; Perkin; Richard; Seventh; Sir; Thomas; Tirrel; York summary = I. Of the murder of Edward prince of Wales, son of Henry the Sixth. I. Of the murder of Edward prince of Wales, son of Henry the Sixth. of Henry''s death, Richard, then only duke of Gloucester, could not successor to Henry the Sixth and his son prince Edward. Richard Duke of York, his second son, Henry and of his son prince Edward, and, as appears by the informed Richard, that he had married king Edward to an English King Richard, "which proceeding," says the noble historian, "being Fourth; and that the deaths of the young'' king Edward and of Richard discovered himself to Sir Thomas More; and Hall says king Richard''s That the murder of prince Edward, son of Henry the Sixth, was Richard against the queen, and whom Sir Thomas More confesses Richard, probably put to death the true duke of York, as he did the