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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 4 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 131935 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 72 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 german 3 Schiller 3 Goethe 2 year 2 time 2 love 2 great 2 french 2 William 2 Weimar 2 Philip 2 Mr. 2 Körner 2 God 2 Footnote 1 work 1 robber 1 play 1 life 1 letter 1 invisible 1 greek 1 good 1 english 1 endnote 1 chapter 1 Württemberg 1 Wöllner 1 Wolzogen 1 Wilhelmine 1 Wilhelm 1 Wallenstein 1 Trude 1 Thalia 1 Tell 1 Stuttgart 1 Streicher 1 Stratford 1 Sir 1 Shakspere 1 Shakspeare 1 Rome 1 Rietz 1 Prussia 1 Posa 1 Pope 1 NOTE 1 Moritz 1 Moor 1 Milton Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 866 man 705 time 703 king 682 friend 657 life 638 heart 582 hand 567 year 525 love 506 day 471 poet 427 eye 384 word 376 nothing 316 letter 309 world 301 work 278 mind 278 character 271 woman 269 play 264 thought 264 soul 261 countenance 259 one 258 death 253 head 251 thing 240 mother 238 father 237 son 237 order 231 way 228 nature 223 name 216 voice 202 part 198 room 195 power 193 people 192 child 190 feeling 189 spirit 189 lip 188 door 187 book 186 lady 185 prince 185 fact 185 case Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1860 _ 1479 Schiller 529 Goethe 359 von 331 Charlotte 318 Frederick 268 Shakspeare 267 Pope 200 God 193 Marie 186 Mr. 162 Wilhelmine 154 Footnote 146 William 146 Carlos 135 Lamb 135 Germany 134 Weimar 133 Rietz 123 Madame 117 Don 109 Körner 92 Fiesco 88 Wallenstein 82 Mannheim 81 Philip 80 Trude 80 Leonora 78 King 72 Stuttgart 72 Italy 71 Duke 71 Charles 68 Karl 68 Count 67 Mary 66 Prussia 64 heaven 64 . 63 Moritz 63 Berlin 62 Wöllner 56 Prince 56 London 55 Posa 55 CHAPTER 54 Kalb 54 Bischofswerder 52 Sir 52 Moor Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4378 he 3894 i 3527 it 3001 you 1713 him 1528 me 1275 she 1226 we 862 they 625 her 600 himself 530 them 421 us 177 one 164 itself 163 myself 105 herself 98 yourself 95 themselves 48 ourselves 35 mine 30 thee 9 yours 8 his 4 ours 4 oneself 3 thyself 3 hers 1 yourselves 1 thy 1 theirs 1 rurik,--this 1 on''t 1 infanticide'',--that 1 goethe 1 dalberg,--mindful 1 bouche_(to 1 ''em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 14081 be 5717 have 1534 do 998 say 911 make 705 see 664 give 618 come 605 take 557 know 446 find 390 write 388 go 385 become 383 look 370 tell 364 love 325 seem 316 leave 300 feel 298 speak 287 stand 279 let 275 live 274 call 271 think 270 read 267 hear 254 cry 232 die 226 remain 226 bring 214 begin 207 wish 199 follow 191 turn 191 return 181 receive 179 appear 178 ask 174 bear 167 fall 159 hold 157 lie 153 show 151 regard 147 believe 144 arise 141 throw 141 lead Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3007 not 1269 so 840 more 796 now 742 only 740 great 649 very 592 then 565 little 537 other 525 good 505 own 499 well 487 first 428 long 424 much 401 up 382 such 376 even 369 most 362 never 359 still 344 here 333 young 332 too 327 out 300 last 294 also 284 however 282 yet 278 old 266 same 261 as 257 new 252 once 247 again 242 beautiful 235 high 231 many 230 dear 220 thus 220 down 218 ever 211 few 210 whole 210 true 205 german 204 all 203 far 202 no Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 147 good 113 least 68 great 49 most 38 high 35 early 20 bad 19 dear 17 noble 16 happy 15 late 11 eld 10 slight 10 near 9 deep 9 Goethe 8 strong 8 fair 7 holy 6 vile 5 pure 5 grand 5 full 5 fine 5 bright 4 wise 4 low 4 long 4 heavy 4 farth 4 dense 3 young 3 weighty 3 small 3 manif 3 lovely 3 large 3 j 3 grave 3 dark 3 close 3 Most 2 weak 2 warm 2 sublime 2 ripe 2 proud 2 lofty 2 brave 2 black Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 320 most 26 goethe 23 least 18 well 1 teilest 1 spirit,--either 1 shortest 1 greatest 1 askest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 14 schiller did not 9 _ was _ 8 _ is _ 8 schiller was not 5 schiller was able 4 _ had _ 4 goethe did not 4 goethe was not 4 schiller had now 3 _ did _ 3 _ did not 3 goethe is not 3 goethe was still 3 love does not 3 nothing is more 2 _ has _ 2 _ have _ 2 _ was not 2 _ were _ 2 charlotte did not 2 charlotte was too 2 eyes were still 2 friend had not 2 friends did not 2 goethe was pleased 2 goethe was so 2 heart is cold 2 heart is not 2 heart were not 2 love is eternal 2 love is not 2 man is not 2 play is only 2 poet was once 2 schiller is not 2 schiller looked up 2 schiller was evidently 2 schiller was very 2 schiller were both 2 thought did not 2 time had now 2 time was not 2 work was not 1 _ are _ 1 _ are scandalously 1 _ are silent 1 _ are slightly 1 _ are usually 1 _ be useful 1 _ die gewordenen Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 schiller was not entirely 1 _ did not always 1 _ had not yet 1 _ was not present 1 day had not yet 1 eyes are not so 1 frederick had not only 1 frederick is no more 1 frederick took no notice 1 friend have no further 1 friends have not all 1 goethe is not here 1 goethe was no less 1 goethe was not contemplative 1 goethe was not only 1 goethe was not that 1 hand has no right 1 hand is no better 1 heart had no part 1 heart is not cold 1 heart was no longer 1 heart were not altogether 1 heart were not yet 1 king hears no more 1 king is not present 1 king made no reply 1 king were no better 1 life did not altogether 1 life had no roses 1 life has no roses 1 life is no bauble 1 love has no need 1 love has not yet 1 love is no sin 1 love is not immortal 1 love was no longer 1 man does not greatly 1 man had no demoniac 1 man has not yet 1 man is not always 1 men are no more 1 play gives no very 1 play is not so 1 plays are not repetitions 1 poets are not so 1 poets were not welcome 1 pope was not long 1 schiller did not actually 1 schiller did not even 1 schiller did not fully A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 6314 author = De Quincey, Thomas title = Biographical Essays date = keywords = Addison; Charles; Dr.; Dryden; England; France; Frankfort; Goethe; Greek; Homer; John; Lamb; London; Lord; Milton; Mr.; NOTE; Pope; Schiller; Shakspeare; Sir; Stratford; William; endnote; english; french; german; great; life; time; year summary = great rival Pope, who had expressly studied Shakspeare, was, after Shakspeare was in fact the first man of letters, Pope five latter years of his life Shakspeare passed in dignified ease, power to Shakspeare''s female world, is a peculiar fact of contrast but Pope''s father was a man of sense and principle; he must have public favor, in the year 1709 Pope first came forward upon the In the year 1712, Pope appeared again before the public as the twenty years after the publication of the poem, in which Pope, in a Pope''s works; a monument of satirical power the greatest which man unhappy man had visited Pope for the last time. of Pope about four years before, by a defence of the Essay on Man, that which comes from the personal friends of Pope, little natural that an intellectual man like the Sergeant, personally made id = 46883 author = Mühlbach, L. (Luise) title = Goethe and Schiller: An Historical Romance date = keywords = Arnim; Bischofswerder; CHAPTER; Charlotte; Count; Footnote; Frederick; God; Goethe; Italy; Kalb; King; Körner; Leonora; Madame; Marie; Moritz; Mr.; Philip; Prussia; Rietz; Rome; Schiller; Streicher; Trude; Weimar; Wilhelmine; William; Wöllner; german; invisible; love summary = "Adieu, friend Schwelm!" said Schiller, extending his hand and gazing "I wish, my friend," said Schiller, pointing with a sad smile to the "No, you good, thoughtless man of the world," said Schiller, smiling; fellow-man has fallen upon and elevated him like the blessing of God. He enters Charlotte''s dwelling and passes through the hall to the door also the German princes, shall love and honor the poet Frederick Charlotte may have been right when she said that Schiller could love, "Yes, you know the hand that strokes you," said the king, smiling. "Long live King Frederick William the Second!" cried the valet Rietz, this great king," said Frederick William, in a low voice, while tears "I shall never forget the great king," said the prince royal, his "No, my true, my generous friend, come to my heart!" cried the king, as "Come, my friends, let us return to the house," said Schiller, smiling id = 9403 author = Thomas, Calvin title = The Life and Works of Friedrich Schiller date = keywords = Berlin; Carlos; Dalberg; Don; Duke; Fiesco; Footnote; Franz; God; Goethe; Jena; Kant; Karl; Körner; Leipzig; Lotte; Louise; Maid; Mannheim; Mary; Moor; Philip; Posa; Schiller; Shakspere; Stuttgart; Tell; Thalia; Wallenstein; Weimar; Wilhelm; Wolzogen; Württemberg; chapter; french; german; good; great; greek; letter; love; play; robber; time; work; year summary = view the essential, distinctive character of Schiller''s work; and where Weimar in Schiller''s time--Renewal of relations with Charlotte von Value of philosophy to a poet--Goethe''s opinion--Schiller''s early Ideal and Life''--Idealism of Goethe and Schiller--''The Walk''--Poems of good play in his life, with little help save from the poet''s eye in a Luckily for Schiller his work was not long left to make its way as ''mere of the youthful Schiller''s ideas of love and friendship the reader will play,--and that no other idea ever entered Schiller''s mind. and it was soon arranged that Schiller should read his new play to a observes that Schiller was not, like Goethe, a virtuoso in love. Schiller was concerned, the ''Philosophic Letters'' came to an end; but in The great play which signalizes the return of Schiller to dramatic thoughts of Schiller for some little time in the summer of 1804, until