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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 74262 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 92 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 Robin 6 Hood 5 Little 5 John 4 Sheriff 4 Nottingham 4 King 3 nay 3 Sir 3 Sherwood 3 Richard 3 Bishop 2 thou 2 Town 2 Stutely 2 Scarlet 2 Queen 2 Friar 2 England 2 Allan 1 wait 1 man 1 Warrenton 1 Tangel 1 Stuteley 1 Story 1 Squire 1 Ralph 1 Prince 1 Monthermer 1 Montfort 1 Montfichet 1 Monceux 1 Master 1 Margan 1 Lucy 1 Lord 1 Locksley 1 Lindwell 1 Kate 1 Hugh 1 Harland 1 Guy 1 Greenly 1 God 1 Gloucester 1 Geoffrey 1 Gamewell 1 Fitzooth 1 Edward Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2636 man 1118 hand 999 day 940 time 662 head 641 eye 621 fellow 573 way 563 word 527 horse 512 friend 503 heart 485 face 464 voice 450 arrow 447 side 435 one 428 yeoman 422 life 404 arm 394 place 391 thing 380 tree 376 forest 373 father 363 band 357 knight 352 moment 344 master 328 lord 321 road 319 merry 302 name 301 other 299 door 298 bow 297 night 284 foot 284 boy 270 hour 269 part 268 brother 259 art 258 money 254 mind 252 sword 249 outlaw 239 ground 231 matter 221 thee Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3827 Robin 1995 thou 1272 John 1129 Hood 1051 Little 912 Sheriff 686 Hugh 684 King 649 Richard 614 Nottingham 604 Sir 496 de 468 _ 468 Ashby 448 Monthermer 439 Earl 414 Sherwood 337 Master 323 Lucy 303 Bishop 287 Prince 245 hast 239 lord 231 Friar 220 ye 211 Will 208 Town 202 Edward 188 Lord 187 Stuteley 176 Guy 176 De 176 Alured 175 Warrenton 174 England 172 Allan 170 Scarlet 162 Thou 162 Monceux 159 Knight 154 hath 154 Lincoln 153 Montfort 148 Hereford 142 Gamewell 141 wilt 138 quoth 138 Locksley 134 Tuck 132 Queen Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8301 he 7663 i 4313 it 3690 him 3669 you 2381 me 2345 they 1577 them 1234 we 1045 she 882 thee 696 himself 632 us 555 her 201 themselves 169 myself 106 one 88 thyself 82 mine 77 herself 73 itself 72 yourself 36 yours 31 ourselves 27 ye 14 his 14 ''em 8 thou 8 ''s 7 ours 6 hers 5 em 5 ay 4 thy 4 hey 3 yourselves 3 yer 2 theirs 1 you;--these 1 year---- 1 up.--they 1 this.--they 1 own--"you 1 mine?--have 1 it---- 1 it!--you 1 here?--your 1 her--"you 1 hands.--you 1 ellerby,"--so Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 14565 be 6844 have 3050 say 2284 do 2257 come 1701 go 1570 see 1334 take 1134 give 1133 know 965 make 877 look 859 cry 845 tell 756 find 664 think 647 let 629 turn 627 stand 623 hear 621 speak 615 bring 496 leave 489 call 488 get 461 reply 451 quoth 449 answer 430 hold 411 pass 407 sit 396 ask 395 seem 367 fall 351 meet 348 laugh 345 send 339 run 320 show 306 draw 305 put 298 shoot 291 lie 290 love 289 keep 284 follow 278 begin 273 hang 264 ride 252 feel Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3758 not 2501 so 2093 then 1744 now 1703 good 1040 up 1022 more 929 well 888 here 839 little 824 great 823 other 784 again 704 back 658 out 652 down 639 as 627 own 590 young 584 very 579 never 557 old 554 away 549 long 529 there 503 such 484 last 462 first 461 much 458 even 451 right 447 fair 415 only 408 many 403 too 400 once 390 forth 389 stout 386 ever 376 thus 374 still 327 soon 319 sweet 313 also 311 poor 310 all 308 yet 294 quoth 288 on 286 same Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 235 good 88 least 75 most 32 stout 18 j 17 slight 17 fair 16 great 16 fine 14 high 13 bad 12 near 11 sweet 11 mean 10 rich 10 noble 8 strong 8 saw 8 li 8 dar 7 tall 7 speak 7 bright 6 say 6 loud 6 like 6 l 6 cunning 5 talk 5 dear 4 tak 4 small 4 low 4 eld 4 com 3 sharp 3 seek 3 large 3 keen 3 gay 3 fat 3 early 3 deep 3 bold 3 black 3 big 3 Most 2 young 2 wise 2 wear Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 173 most 17 well 9 least 3 near 2 lest 2 boldest 1 speakest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 digital.library.villanova.edu 1 books.google.com Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://digital.library.villanova.edu/) 1 http://books.google.com/books?id=5fZLAAAAcAAJ Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 horse ''s back 9 men call robin 6 eyes were as 5 robin had so 4 day was fresh 4 day was warm 4 hood took little 4 robin had not 4 robin knew not 4 sheriff did not 4 thou doing here 3 _ did _ 3 day was bright 3 eyes are not 3 face was pale 3 heart go out 3 heart was as 3 hood is not 3 hood turns beggar 3 hood turns butcher 3 john was not 3 man was not 3 robin looked up 3 robin was glad 3 voice is as 3 voices were wondrously 3 word is not 2 _ was _ 2 arrow was as 2 arrow was not 2 arrows are as 2 ashby had not 2 ashby was not 2 day being warm 2 day give up 2 day is sweet 2 day was well 2 days are past 2 eyes are dim 2 eyes do thine 2 eyes were bright 2 face was as 2 face was dead 2 face was now 2 fellow coming along 2 fellow had always 2 fellows are there 2 fellows are ye 2 fellows had not 2 fellows was now Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 eyes are not bright 2 hood is not so 2 hood made no answer 2 hood said no more 2 john was not dead 2 robin had not yet 2 robin was not as 2 sheriff did not yet 2 thou be no good 2 thou have no cause 1 _ have no doubts 1 arrow was not too 1 arrow was not true 1 ashby had not yet 1 ashby saw no possible 1 day was no longer 1 day was not so 1 days was not so 1 eyes are not accustomed 1 face had not much 1 friend is no good 1 heart is no true 1 heart was no way 1 hugh is not so 1 john did not easily 1 john was not guilty 1 lord was not unwilling 1 man had no great 1 man is no liar 1 man took no offence 1 man was not guilty 1 man was not slow 1 man was not so 1 men are not few 1 robin is no laggard 1 robin made no reply 1 sheriff was no less 1 times were not so 1 voice was not ashamed A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 46190 author = Bush, Bertha Evangeline title = Stories of Robin Hood date = keywords = Dale; England; Hood; John; Little; Robin; Story; man summary = The father of young Robin Hood with his little son at his side, had "When I am a man," said the boy, Robin Hood, "I will make the rich give this boy, Robin Hood, when he became a man, did do just what he said, Here are a few stories of Robin Hood and his men, and a great many more hardship, and Robin Hood and his men came to love every tree that grew "Let us fight for it," said Robin Hood, who loved a good bout more than This is the story of a merry friar and how he came to belong to Robin "For," said Robin Hood, "we must look brave when we go to a wedding." "We have had no guests for a long time," said Robin Hood one day. "I wish I could see Robin Hood," said King Richard. *212 Stories from Robin Hood--_Bush_ id = 28700 author = Creswick, Paul title = Robin Hood date = keywords = Bishop; Carfax; Fitzooth; Gamewell; Geoffrey; Hood; John; King; Little; Locksley; Master; Monceux; Montfichet; Nottingham; Robin; Sheriff; Squire; Stuteley; Warrenton summary = Robin told her: and he began to ask Master Montfichet questions as to "Let me take your place, Robin," said Mistress Fitzooth, impatiently. The man opened his arms to the lad, and then Robin saw that ''twas no boy "Does Master Gamewell play at archery here, Warrenton?" Robin asked, "Robin of Locksley," said the Sheriff, scarce looking at him, "here is "I have no father, sir," said poor Robin, half in defense; for Gamewell "Have you killed four men, then, Warrenton?" said Robin, his blood Robin bade Warrenton and little Stuteley hide on either hand whilst he "We are the free men of Sherwood," said Robin, "and were coming to "Master," said the little man, who was none other than our friend "''Tis a very excellent name," said Robin, a little vexed. "''Tis Robin Fitzooth!" said old Montfichet, then. "Not so, Little John," Robin said then. id = 11097 author = Fenn, George Manville title = Young Robin Hood date = keywords = Hood; John; Little; Robin; Sheriff summary = "Steady, steady, my little Cock Robin," said the man, in his big "A young Robin," said the big fellow; "part of yesterday''s plunder." "It wasn''t a man," said the little fellow, "but a boy who minds "You''ve got to hit that every time you shoot," said Little John; "Think you can hit it?" said Little John, after showing the boy how "Like babies'' fingers," said Little John, smiling down at the boy "Well, let''s try," said Little John, stringing his bow, and then Well said, little one," cried Robin Hood, patting "Then try and make yourself happy, my boy," said Robin Hood, "for "Yes," said Robin Hood, patting the boy on the shoulder, "now But Little John did not stop at teaching young Robin to shoot, for "It looks like a little quarter-staff," said young Robin, "like all "Nothing could make my boy Robin tell a lie," said the Sheriff id = 45166 author = Hazard, Rowland Gibson title = How Robin Hood Once Was a Wait: A Miracle Play or Christmas Masque date = keywords = Robin; wait summary = singing of the Christmas carols. order to somewhat prolong the part played by Robin Hood and his men, How Robin Hood once was a Wait How Robin Hood once was a Wait Robin Hood and his merry men advance from left to joy yon lonely widow with songs of Christmas-tide. Waits--We be waits, good sir, and have ever license to sing the birth of Robin (appeased)--Waits, that''s better, and who gave word of this widow Robin (relenting)--What says''t thou, Long John and Watt and Jolly Tuck, (Robin''s men draw off and sing again)-this night and every Christmas-tide bearing gifts for all good children and a good gift for all, even Jesus'' love and Peace on here be Waits joined hands with Robin Hood in songs of praise for Praise God for this and all good deeds, and by such shall these wild Robin leads his men, exit to right. id = 49987 author = James, G. P. R. (George Payne Rainsford) title = Forest Days: A Romance of Old Times date = keywords = Alured; Ashby; Earl; Edward; England; Gloucester; God; Greenly; Guy; Harland; Hood; Hugh; Kate; King; Lindwell; Lord; Lucy; Margan; Montfort; Monthermer; Nottingham; Prince; Ralph; Richard; Robin; Sherwood; Sir; Tangel; nay summary = "Alack and a-well-a-day!" said the lord''s man, "that a gentleman like "No, Sir Richard, no," said Hugh de Monthermer at once, "the man is no "I shall do no such thing, sir," replied Richard de Ashby; "this good "My lord of Ashby," said Hugh de Monthermer, addressing the Earl, "I Robin Hood held out his hand to him, replying--"You said right, young Now, my good Lord Hugh, let us know, in a word, whether What it was that Lucy de Ashby said to Hugh de Monthermer I know not, of Hugh de Monthermer''s horse, and, looking up in his face, said a few "I fear, my young friend," said the old Lord of Monthermer, in a calm "We shall soon know more, my lord," said Hugh de Monthermer; "but this Hugh de Monthermer''s lady-love, your fair cousin, Lucy de Ashby." "None, but Hugh de Monthermer," said Richard de Ashby. id = 10148 author = Pyle, Howard title = The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood date = keywords = Allan; Bishop; Friar; Hood; John; King; Little; Nottingham; Queen; Richard; Robin; Scarlet; Sheriff; Sherwood; Sir; Stutely; Town; nay; thou summary = "Now stand thou back," quoth Robin, "and let the better man cross "Good morrow to thee, jolly fellow," quoth Robin, "thou seemest happy "Nay, Little John," quoth Robin, "thou art a sound stout fellow, yet "Now, thou great purse of fat!" cried Little John, "I ask thee not for said to Little John, "Well, good friend, I like thy plan right well; so, And art thou indeed Little John, and Robin Hood''s own right-hand "As for thee, Little John," said Robin, turning to him and laughing, Quoth Robin Hood to Little John, "Why didst thou not go straight to Robin Hood had done, "I do love to hear thee talk, thou pretty fellow, "Nay, good Little John," quoth Robin gently, for he liked ill to have "Why, so thou hast, Little John," said Robin. Then Robin turned to Little John, and quoth he, "Go thou and Will id = 964 author = Pyle, Howard title = The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood date = keywords = Allan; Bishop; Friar; Hood; John; King; Little; Nottingham; Queen; Richard; Robin; Scarlet; Sheriff; Sherwood; Sir; Stutely; Town; nay; thou summary = "Now stand thou back," quoth Robin, "and let the better man cross "Good morrow to thee, jolly fellow," quoth Robin, "thou seemest happy "Nay, Little John," quoth Robin, "thou art a sound stout fellow, yet said to Little John, "Well, good friend, I like thy plan right well; so, And art thou indeed Little John, and Robin Hood''s own right-hand "As for thee, Little John," said Robin, turning to him and laughing, Quoth Robin Hood to Little John, "Why didst thou not go straight to Robin Hood had done, "I do love to hear thee talk, thou pretty fellow, "Nay, good Little John," quoth Robin gently, for he liked ill to have "Why, so thou hast, Little John," said Robin. Then Robin turned to Little John, and quoth he, "Go thou and Will "Thou hast spoken well, Little John, and it shall be done," said Robin.