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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 60045 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 83 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Russia 2 Miss 2 Grand 2 General 2 Count 2 Aunt 1 man 1 illustration 1 good 1 footnote 1 british 1 afghan 1 York 1 Wells 1 Uncle 1 Trewinnard 1 Toomey 1 Tillie 1 Thornsett 1 Stulnikov 1 Stella 1 Stanley 1 Sir 1 Simon 1 Siberia 1 Shad 1 Roumovski 1 Rosen 1 Roland 1 Rock 1 Richard 1 Rawson 1 Quaid 1 Petrovitch 1 Petersburg 1 Peter 1 Peggy 1 Pass 1 Nichols 1 New 1 Natalia 1 Mrs. 1 Mrs 1 Mr. 1 Medlicott 1 Markoff 1 Majesty 1 London 1 Litvinoff 1 Khan Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1325 man 569 hand 509 time 458 day 415 thing 411 night 410 eye 398 moment 392 face 389 room 375 way 360 door 320 life 306 nothing 291 friend 289 word 285 girl 273 voice 272 house 267 woman 263 one 260 something 242 head 213 hour 209 people 206 year 198 foot 197 name 192 arm 191 place 187 side 183 money 178 truth 174 road 174 anything 169 letter 168 world 168 heart 167 question 167 mind 166 brother 162 love 161 chair 156 thought 156 order 154 part 152 father 152 end 150 window 146 mile Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1607 _ 1368 Peter 500 Beth 495 McGuire 323 Litvinoff 239 Miss 237 Russia 231 Count 226 Emperor 222 Mr 212 Stella 203 Roland 197 Nichols 189 Shad 186 Majesty 184 Hawk 182 Grand 178 Mr. 176 Petrovitch 176 Markoff 161 Clare 159 General 150 Richard 148 Mrs 135 Stanley 130 Highness 129 Kennedy 125 London 125 Dick 111 Aunt 110 Petersburg 110 Mrs. 108 Duke 107 England 105 God 104 Russian 104 Cameron 104 Black 104 Alice 100 Rock 95 Trewinnard 94 Ferrier 93 Hatfield 90 Uncle 87 Roumovski 86 Coast 85 Hartwig 85 English 84 Wells 84 Imperial Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 7134 i 6030 he 4702 you 3931 it 2874 she 1884 him 1658 me 1231 her 1152 they 867 we 767 them 350 himself 309 us 160 herself 133 myself 104 one 77 yourself 65 itself 57 themselves 36 yours 30 his 29 ''em 27 mine 27 ''s 24 hers 13 ourselves 12 ye 10 thee 9 i''m 7 you''re 7 em 6 oneself 5 ours 4 theirs 2 yourselves 2 ha 2 bookshelf 1 you--_and 1 you----but 1 you''ll 1 ye''d 1 yabu 1 us.--yours 1 time---- 1 thowt 1 tha''ll 1 quietly,-- 1 must---- 1 month--''you 1 loon!--that Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 14003 be 6497 have 2596 do 1995 say 1361 know 1333 go 1034 see 953 come 837 make 772 think 750 tell 661 get 656 take 559 look 548 seem 525 ask 482 find 453 give 362 turn 348 want 335 leave 327 speak 315 feel 308 hear 296 mean 267 stand 248 put 248 let 236 pass 232 believe 231 meet 225 sit 216 keep 214 follow 200 send 200 fall 198 hold 196 try 195 bring 191 talk 189 call 184 wish 183 begin 176 like 174 answer 167 show 166 live 164 rise 158 reply 158 happen Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3884 not 1126 so 967 then 733 now 710 very 685 up 642 more 624 out 610 only 551 here 527 good 513 well 507 other 484 little 421 much 415 too 415 again 408 down 398 long 382 back 373 just 352 never 350 last 347 there 340 great 337 as 321 old 310 own 309 on 302 all 298 even 288 young 283 first 268 still 266 quite 260 away 257 always 256 most 242 once 234 ever 217 perhaps 217 enough 213 in 209 many 208 new 206 few 203 right 193 yet 191 same 180 far Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 107 least 101 good 78 most 36 great 35 bad 21 slight 16 high 12 near 10 late 8 strong 6 small 5 deep 5 dear 5 bitter 5 Most 4 long 4 easy 3 wild 3 warm 3 old 3 noble 3 mere 3 hot 3 grave 3 early 3 big 2 steep 2 southernmost 2 short 2 safe 2 poor 2 narrow 2 manif 2 large 2 keen 2 foremost 2 fine 2 fair 2 faint 2 eld 2 dark 2 clever 2 brief 1 young 1 sweet 1 sharp 1 severe 1 sad 1 rough 1 mean Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 178 most 18 least 8 well 3 hard 1 softly,-- 1 near 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 13 _ is _ 10 peter did n''t 9 _ did _ 9 peter was silent 8 _ was _ 8 peter had n''t 7 _ have _ 7 peter did not 6 _ had _ 5 _ do _ 5 peter got up 5 peter was aware 4 _ am _ 4 _ know _ 4 peter was n''t 4 peter was still 4 peter went on 3 _ are _ 3 _ did n''t 3 eyes had not 3 face was now 3 one does not 3 peter had never 3 peter was not 3 peter was now 3 peter was sure 3 peter went down 2 _ ai n''t 2 _ say _ 2 _ was about 2 beth did n''t 2 beth do n''t 2 beth had n''t 2 beth said nothing 2 beth was silent 2 beth was very 2 door had not 2 door was not 2 girl was silent 2 girl was very 2 house was very 2 litvinoff did not 2 litvinoff was not 2 man was beth 2 man was more 2 mcguire did n''t 2 mcguire had already 2 mcguire looked up 2 mcguire went on 2 men had not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 beth had no wish 1 beth was no weakling 1 beth was not there 1 day was no idle 1 door ''s no business 1 door had no knocker 1 door was not john 1 girl was no fool 1 life is not over 1 litvinoff was not altogether 1 man gave no sign 1 man had no connection 1 man has no right 1 man is no match 1 man is not ashamed 1 mcguire made no mention 1 mcguire was no more 1 mcguire was not yet 1 peter had no doubt 1 peter had no ear 1 peter had no humor 1 peter had no pity 1 peter was no longer 1 peter was not now 1 things are no one 1 time was not yet 1 voice was not particularly A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 55244 author = Bland, Hubert title = The Prophet''s Mantle date = keywords = Alice; CHAPTER; Clare; Count; Dick; Ferrier; Fludger; Gates; Hatfield; Hirsch; Litvinoff; London; Miss; Mrs; Petrovitch; Quaid; Richard; Roland; Stanley; Thornsett; Toomey; good; man summary = ''Yes, thanks,'' said Alice, hurriedly; ''and I think I would like to ''Yes,'' said Richard, looking straight at her for the first time that ''I think not,'' said Dick, shaking hands; ''I shall not be able to come.'' ''Is your brother in love with Miss Stanley?'' said Litvinoff, slowly and ''Good day,'' said the Count, shaking hands cordially. ''Good morning, Count Litvinoff,'' he said; ''can I be of any service to ''As I thought,'' said Litvinoff, as he advanced to meet Roland, and to ''I am very sorry,'' said Petrovitch, ''but I am sure poor Mrs Litvinoff ''Come in, Miss Stanley; you can do no good here,'' said Litvinoff, ''Oh, Count Litvinoff,'' she said, coming forward to meet him, ''I am ''So far as I know Mrs Litvinoff''s story,'' said Petrovitch, speaking ''Come, Roland,'' said Dick, who, knowing himself to have been in the id = 29617 author = Gibbs, George title = The Vagrant Duke date = keywords = Aunt; Ben; Bergen; Beth; Black; Cabin; Cameron; Coast; Duke; God; Grand; Hawk; Jim; Kennedy; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Nichols; Peggy; Peter; Rock; Russia; Shad; Tillie; Wells; York summary = "Peter Nichols," said the Grand Duke with a smile, "it''s as good as any "I came to see Mr. McGuire," said Peter amiably. "Mr. Nichols, Mr. McGuire," she said, and Peter entered. When Peter came into the room, Mr. McGuire closed the heavy doors of the McGuire got up and paced the floor slowly looking at Peter out of the "Aunt Tillie doesn''t know anything about McGuire," Beth said suddenly. _You_ will," said McGuire, watching Peter''s face craftily. Peter had said nothing to Beth or to Mrs. Cameron of what he had As this man saw Peter he turned his head and went down "I''ll present those facts when the time comes, Mr. McGuire," said Peter "Beth Cameron''s claim comes before his--or yours," said Peter quietly. "It looks very much, Beth," said Peter at last, with a smile, "as though "Tell him to move fast and to come to McGuire''s first," said Peter. id = 5310 author = Glyn, Elinor title = The Point of View date = keywords = Aunt; Caroline; Count; Ebley; Eustace; Medlicott; Miss; Rawson; Roumovski; Stella summary = Stella Rawson came in with her uncle and aunt, Canon and the Honorable "He does not appear to know he is funny-looking," Stella Rawson said, hour, while Stella saw Count Roumovski come in and sit down and Count Roumovski never said a word of love to her: he treated her with "I am sure it is getting very late," said Stella Rawson, and with "I feel that is true," said Stella, thinking of her own case. "Stella is not at all like herself," Mr. Medlicott said, when she had "Look, Stella, that dreadful man is talking to Royalty!" she said. "I will try to think of it like that," said Stella, greatly moved, and "I shall just answer as I please," said Stella, and felt almost "Stella, remain for a moment, I wish to speak to you," he said in the "Oh, I wish she would come, don''t you?" Stella said. id = 41091 author = Le Queux, William title = The Price of Power Being Chapters from the Secret History of the Imperial Court of Russia date = keywords = Colin; Danilovitch; Duchess; Emperor; Excellency; General; Grand; Hartwig; Highness; Imperial; Majesty; Markoff; Natalia; Petersburg; Rosen; Russia; Siberia; Trewinnard; Uncle summary = "From His Imperial Majesty the Emperor," he added in Russian. "_His Imperial Majesty the Emperor commands Mr Colin Trewinnard to "And General Markoff told Your Majesty of my friendliness with Madame tell you, Uncle Colin," she added, her fine, big, dark eyes fixed upon "Certainly, Uncle Colin," she replied, opening her big eyes in surprise. "Well," he said at last, putting on his overcoat, "so long, old man. thin, middle-aged man in dark clothes lift his hand high above his head. "But what shall I do, Uncle Colin?" asked the girl, her white hands "You ask me for the truth," the informer said, "and I tell you. the young man Richard Drury, whom Her Highness had told me she had known "A secret!" said the girl, looking straight into my face. ever told Your Majesty the truth," she said, looking straight at the powerful official, Markoff, the one-time Chief of Secret Police, the man id = 60664 author = Leiber, Fritz title = Pipe Dream date = keywords = Grushenka; Ivan; Simon; Stulnikov summary = It wasn''t until the mermaid turned up in his bathtub that Simon Grue which held a sort of pent-shack, a cylindrical old water tank, and During the 1920''s, old-timers told Simon, the house had been owned by Simon that the newcomers were clearly White Russians; he could tell it curt front-sidewalk acquaintance developed and Simon came to know their Simon assured himself that he had the Stulnikov-Gurevich face. old-timers assured Simon there was a link between the water supply of So, thought Simon as he groped and strained, if the Russians were Stulnikov-Gurevich had become problematical--indeed, Simon decided that transparent pipe running between the water tank and the shack, braced on the water tank too--it was too high for Simon to see, but there Staring at the pipe again, Simon got the Ducking under the pipe where it crossed the pent-shack, Ivan picked Wind was shaking the heavy pipe over Simon''s head, tossing him back and id = 7320 author = Rodenbough, Theophilus F. (Theophilus Francis) title = Afghanistan and the Anglo-Russian Dispute date = keywords = Afghanistan; Army; Asia; Central; General; Herat; India; Kabul; Kandahar; Khan; Pass; Russia; Sir; afghan; british; footnote; illustration summary = May 16, 1884, Lieut.-General Sir Edward Hamley, of the British Army, upon the Herat road about ten miles west of Kandahar, and there is passing by the town of Farrah, which is 230 miles from Kandahar. Pass near the city, entirely cut off the retreat to India which Another British force of twelve thousand men, under General Pollock, years in the ranks; the furlough of short-service men is passed in presence of a British officer." [Footnote: Indian Army Regulations.] _Routes_.--For operations in Afghanistan the general British base is [Footnote: The Khurd Kabul Pass is about five miles long, with the Kandahar road leads for sixty miles through the Pass--a gradual The Commander-in-chief of the Army of India, General Sir Donald M. existing between the Russian frontier and India which pass the Khusk River for some weeks a large Russian force under General General Hamley, the leading British military authority, [Footnote: