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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 9 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 76699 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 88 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 man 4 Mr. 3 God 2 sure 2 good 2 face 2 eye 2 Sergeant 2 Pierre 2 North 2 Mrs. 2 John 2 Inspector 2 Blake 1 tell 1 old 1 like 1 guess 1 fwhat 1 canadian 1 british 1 Yukon 1 Yorke 1 West 1 Wallie 1 Tung 1 The.= 1 Superintendent 1 Steele 1 Stanley 1 St. 1 Springs 1 Slavin 1 Shan 1 Seton 1 Roger 1 Rocky 1 River 1 Riel 1 Redmond 1 Reddy 1 Radisson 1 Post 1 Police 1 Philip 1 Pete 1 Perry 1 Olaf 1 O.C. 1 O''Connor Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 3063 man 1593 eye 1255 time 1131 hand 1062 face 1043 thing 863 way 860 moment 733 day 645 head 615 night 610 voice 605 life 576 year 532 something 523 door 520 foot 507 place 498 arm 446 hour 442 woman 428 horse 427 word 401 river 401 heart 392 country 389 side 363 mind 361 boy 358 trail 353 girl 347 room 345 thought 341 work 336 mile 335 hair 332 fire 327 window 324 world 320 end 316 body 310 cabin 304 lip 299 part 296 light 290 brother 287 nothing 279 one 274 people 272 sound Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 591 Kent 574 Kate 531 Pierre 510 Keith 496 Police 486 St. 455 _ 452 Charlie 443 Bram 423 Philip 389 Jim 371 Bill 359 David 340 Bob 339 Mounted 311 Inspector 298 Helen 278 Fyles 274 Carrigan 265 Kedsty 255 Marette 232 Bateese 229 Conniston 220 Yorke 218 Indians 216 Slavin 215 John 212 Mr. 207 Celie 197 Force 196 The.= 195 Marie 195 Fort 185 Anne 182 Redmond 182 McDowell 182 God 181 Sergeant 181 Canada 178 Roger 169 North 167 O''Brien 162 Shan 161 Tung 154 Mary 150 West 140 Black 137 Blake 134 tu 134 Josephine Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 13710 he 7911 it 5870 i 4960 you 4862 him 3531 she 2883 they 1640 them 1438 me 1405 we 1373 her 909 himself 372 us 216 itself 180 themselves 157 herself 108 ''em 80 one 79 ''s 63 yourself 58 myself 44 his 27 yours 21 ourselves 18 hers 16 mine 14 em 13 yu 7 ye 6 ours 4 oneself 3 yourselves 3 meself 2 you''ll 2 on''y 2 i''m 1 you''re 1 ya 1 word--"hiding 1 well!--time 1 ut''d 1 upi''s 1 theirs 1 that!--when 1 out''--we''ll 1 longer-- 1 jus 1 indistinct 1 hisself 1 grimly--"you Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 23145 be 9431 have 3031 do 2330 come 2073 go 1992 see 1928 say 1565 make 1549 know 1420 get 1148 look 1023 tell 992 take 832 think 832 give 747 find 679 seem 659 hear 629 turn 606 feel 590 stand 551 leave 487 want 479 hold 473 keep 425 bring 423 begin 399 cry 368 run 352 wait 348 speak 346 draw 341 reach 334 fight 334 call 334 become 330 follow 328 pass 326 rise 323 put 317 die 311 try 311 let 305 guess 304 kill 304 ask 302 smile 302 fall 300 lie 300 break Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4985 not 1976 up 1747 then 1590 out 1276 now 1262 so 1029 more 943 back 893 again 818 great 802 other 778 there 772 little 754 long 751 down 686 good 683 only 673 old 654 here 649 just 648 away 590 even 584 on 573 first 544 well 532 still 528 last 514 as 508 too 504 very 501 never 495 own 488 big 467 almost 458 in 455 right 406 suddenly 398 far 395 off 395 few 393 all 391 much 386 many 337 always 327 ever 322 white 316 over 309 close 304 same 302 later Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 103 good 93 least 78 most 41 great 31 near 30 bad 14 slight 14 fine 14 early 14 big 11 high 8 hard 8 faint 8 deadly 7 strong 7 small 6 low 6 farth 6 Most 5 large 4 late 4 j 4 deep 4 clever 4 brave 3 wild 3 warm 3 true 3 sure 3 quick 3 queer 3 old 3 noble 3 long 3 keen 3 hot 3 full 3 fierce 3 eld 3 easy 3 cheap 3 black 2 swift 2 sweet 2 southernmost 2 smart 2 shrewd 2 short 2 sane 2 safe Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 199 most 26 least 21 well 2 near 2 blackest 1 writhe 1 hard 1 greatest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 12 eyes took in 10 eyes came back 10 kent did not 7 kent went on 6 eyes were full 6 man went on 5 bram had not 5 door was open 5 eyes did not 5 eyes were still 5 kate went on 5 keith did not 4 bram did not 4 eyes were wide 4 face was white 4 kent had not 4 man had ever 3 _ are _ 3 charlie was not 3 door was closed 3 eyes were not 3 face was as 3 face was dead 3 keith is dead 3 keith was alive 3 keith was not 3 kent was not 3 man did not 3 man does n''t 3 man turned away 3 man was not 3 men did not 3 men were not 3 night was still 3 police did not 3 thing did not 3 voice was low 2 _ did _ 2 bram had evidently 2 bram was dead 2 bram was not 2 charlie had not 2 charlie looked up 2 charlie went on 2 eyes are blue 2 eyes had ever 2 eyes looked straight 2 eyes were alert 2 eyes were big 2 eyes were blue Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 kate made no answer 3 kent made no effort 2 men tell no tales 1 _ do not _ 1 bram made no answer 1 bram was not afraid 1 bram was not yet 1 charlie had no other 1 charlie had not yet 1 charlie made no answer 1 charlie made no effort 1 charlie was not only 1 eyes had no smile 1 eyes were no harder 1 face was no longer 1 faced was not desertion 1 hour was not right 1 kate had no liking 1 kate had no time 1 kate was no longer 1 keith had no time 1 kent had no intention 1 kent was not anxious 1 man did not even 1 man had no power 1 man made no answer 1 man made no difference 1 man made no spoken 1 man was not old 1 men are not even 1 men had not yet 1 night were not yet 1 pierre made no answer 1 pierre made no effort 1 pierre say no man 1 police had no more 1 police took no sides 1 police was not free 1 police were not asleep 1 thing was not uncommon 1 time is not convenient 1 voice held no trace 1 years was not so A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 45549 author = Craine, E. J. (Edith Janice) title = The Air Mystery of Isle La Motte date = keywords = Aunt; Belle; Bob; Bradshaw; Fenton; Hezzy; Highness; Jim; Mr.; Mrs.; Norman; sure summary = cock-pit of Her Highness, this time Bob took the pilot''s seat. "They look like good pals," Jim said into the speaking tube, and Bob "Let''s hop down on the turkey end of La Motte," Jim suggested, and Bob "Gosh, he looks a little like an Indian, a good one," Jim remarked. "Plenty." Jim helped him out of the straps, and by that time Bob stepped water." Jim busied himself with the task and Bob helped look things Jim in the back seat had time for observation, so he took a good look at looks like," Mr. Fenton invited that afternoon as the boys came up from a turkey farm looks like." Hezzy came down the steps and the boys eyed have liked to watch the "old boy" but he wanted to know what was going Both Jim and Bob would have liked nothing better than "Over there," Jim pointed, and Bob looked. id = 29958 author = Cullum, Ridgwell title = The Law-Breakers date = keywords = Big; Bill; Brother; Bryant; Charlie; Day; Fyles; God; Helen; House; John; Kate; Meeting; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; O''Brien; Pete; Rocky; Seton; Springs; Stanley; The.=; eye; good; guess; man; sure; tell summary = Fyles''s purposeful eyes surveyed the man with a thoughtful smile. McBain''s hard blue eyes looked straight into the half-breed''s face. The man''s eyes came back to the face he loved, and, for a moment, they I, Charlie?" she went on, turning to the smiling man. Helen knew that every man and woman in the village had had some voice Charlie looked into the earnest, good-natured face with eyes that read For a moment Helen looked into her sister''s eyes as though searching "I don''t think I ought to tell it in front of Helen," Kate said "You''re thinking of Charlie Bryant," the man said after a pause. "Sure," said Fyles, looking him squarely in the eyes. Kate''s eyes were turned on the great bulk of Charlie''s brother. Fyles waited, and, in a moment, Kate''s thought seemed to pass. For a few moments Kate looked into the man''s face as though waiting id = 29407 author = Curwood, James Oliver title = The Valley of Silent Men: A Story of the Three River Country date = keywords = Barkley; Cardigan; Father; Fingers; God; Inspector; Jeems; Kedsty; Kent; Landing; Layonne; Marette; Mercer; North; O''Connor; Radisson summary = Kent and of Marette, that wonderful little goddess of the Valley of nice little thing you''re promising happens to me, old man, I want to go In that instant Kent had seen in Kedsty''s eyes and that under his eyes," Kent had said a year before, when he and Cardigan moment Inspector Kedsty laid his eyes on that girl he was a little too "It''s a crime to come to you like this, Kent," he said, keeping his big He lighted a match in the cup of his hands, and Kent saw his face. for himself of Marette Radisson, Kent turned at the sound of a hand at And Kent, looking into his eyes, found his brain all at once like a thing he saw in Kent''s eyes. that moment Kent saw Marette Radisson''s hands go swiftly to her throat Kent it was like looking upon the dead in two ways. id = 4515 author = Curwood, James Oliver title = The Golden Snare date = keywords = Armin; Barren; Blake; Bram; Celie; Eskimo; Johnson; Olaf; Philip; Pierre; eye; face; man summary = With staring eyes he looked for Bram out where the wolves Philip choked back the cry on his lips, and in that moment Bram stopped In this moment Philip knew that the time to act was at hand. clearly he saw Bram as the time passed; the hunted look in the man''s Philip followed Bram, and twice that distance behind the outlaw came Philip had entered Bram Johnson''s cabin from the west. and Philip with his eyes on Bram. Then Philip faced Bram. Scarcely had the door closed when Celie Armin ran to Philip and pulled moments she was gone Bram did not look once at Philip. She went straight to Bram and before the wolf-man''s eyes held a long, For a space Philip thought that the cry must have come from Bram Celie gave an excited little cry and caught Philip''s arm, stopping him id = 4702 author = Curwood, James Oliver title = The Flaming Forest date = keywords = Andre; Anne; Audemard; Bateese; Black; Boulain; Carmin; Carrigan; Concombre; David; Fanchet; Jeanne; Marie; Pierre; Roger; St.; man summary = dead-white face and wide-open, staring eyes of Jeanne Marie-Anne this time he heard the voices of Jeanne Marie-Anne and Golden-Hair, and He held out his hand; and in that moment David Carrigan placed another rivers ees no man w''at can whip Concombre Bateese!" Suddenly his face seen Black Roger Audemard?'' Sometime--if you will, M''sieu David--I Marie-Anne looked up at him suddenly, and in her face and eyes he saw Marie-Anne waved the white thing in her hand, and David thought he "And St. Pierre is a powerful man," mused David, letting his eyes It was with Marie-Anne, St. Pierre, and Andre, the Broken Man. And also with Concombre Bateese. St. Pierre''s eyes did not for an instant leave Carrigan''s face. "Will you light the lamps, M''sieu David?" a soft voice came to him. David Carrigan found himself looking into the eyes of Carmin Fanchet! id = 4747 author = Curwood, James Oliver title = The River''s End date = keywords = Conniston; Derry; Derwent; Duggan; Englishman; John; Josephine; Kao; Keith; Kirkstone; Mary; Miriam; Shan; Tung; Wallie summary = looked into each other''s eyes, and this time it was Keith''s fingers "Keith, when a man knows he''s going to live, he is blind to a lot of isn''t Conniston!'' That''s all I''ve got to leave you, Keith, a dead man''s emotion passed over McDowell''s face, and Keith saw for the first time "It''s Larsen all right if Shan Tung says so," he told Keith. Keith saw the distended veins in McDowell''s clenched hands, and he knew IS JOHN KEITH DEAD?" Could Shan Tung meet those wonderful eyes as he little cabin in which Conniston had died, he was again John Keith. Keith lost no time in heading for Shan Tung''s. Looking into her eyes, Keith saw what told him his about John Keith, and in Mary Josephine''s eyes he saw more than once a "I have come to see Shan Tung," said Keith. id = 15940 author = Kendall, Ralph S. (Ralph Selwood) title = The Luck of the Mounted: A Tale of the Royal Northwest Mounted Police date = keywords = Blake; Burke; Cow; Eyah; George; God; Gully; Hardy; Kilbride; Larry; Lee; Moran; Mr.; O.C.; Post; Reddy; Redmond; Sergeant; Slavin; Yorke; face; fwhat; good; like; man; old summary = you can come the funny man all right, Mac--you''ve got a ''staff'' Teamster Sarjint there, an'' sure fwas a great man wid a four-in-hand "''Tis Yorke''s," said Slavin simply. "Let us go get ut!" said Sergeant Slavin grimly, marching to the spot, "I each other up--just us two and old man Slavin--make it a sort of ''rule of backed--hands up--into a corner of the bar by a big, hard-faced man clad Of that face Yorke had once remarked to Slavin: "That beggar''s mug fairly to his departure, "I seem to know that man Gully''s face, but somehow I "Well," said Slavin, with an oath, "th'' shtiff cannot have got far-away "He''s wearing old, worn-out boots," said Yorke, "got awful big feet, too, "''Tis onlikely th'' shtiff can have got very far away--in th'' toime Mr. Gully tells us," he said, "an'' he cannot shtay out in th'' opin for long id = 22220 author = MacBeth, R. G. (Roderick George) title = Policing the Plains Being the Real-Life Record of the Famous North-West Mounted Police date = keywords = Bay; Canada; Colonel; Commissioner; Dawson; Force; Fort; French; General; Government; Hudson; Indians; Inspector; Lake; Mounted; Mr.; North; Perry; Police; Riel; River; Sergeant; Steele; Superintendent; West; Yukon; british; canadian; man summary = I know that the men of the Mounted Police have been averse to saying great men of the country to deal with the Indians and make treaty which a mere handful of officers and men of the Mounted Police, with the Mounted Police, came to the farther North-West where the Indians "Three years ago, when the Mounted Police came to this country, I met Macdonnell, the Mounted Police officer in charge there, with a few men. Police tradition won its way steadily till great war camps came to Perry, of the Mounted Police, asking that a detachment of his men be put the numbers engaged, more men of the Mounted Police were killed or Officially, the officers and men of the North-West Mounted Police who from the North-West Mounted Police to the Militia service of Canada, as That year, 1916, Commissioner Perry reported that the Mounted Police had