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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 8 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 27449 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 86 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Mr. 2 little 2 illustration 2 Mrs. 2 Miss 2 John 2 God 2 Agnes 1 woman 1 wise 1 thing 1 sidenote 1 princess 1 look 1 White 1 Webster 1 Vicky 1 Stansfield 1 Squire 1 Selwyn 1 Schomberg 1 Sam 1 Rosamond 1 Riverton 1 Prince 1 Parker 1 Park 1 Oakley 1 Muff 1 Mary 1 Lion 1 Joe 1 Jane 1 James 1 Jacob 1 Jackson 1 Huxter 1 Horace 1 Hoot 1 Hall 1 Green 1 Geoff 1 Fred 1 Frances 1 Emilie 1 Elsa 1 Edith 1 Eames 1 Dobbin 1 Dawson Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 461 time 377 thing 329 way 310 boy 309 day 299 mother 292 woman 282 man 259 child 244 one 223 house 220 father 213 hand 207 room 189 eye 187 princess 182 friend 175 nothing 173 heart 170 word 165 something 164 home 160 work 160 door 159 face 156 place 148 night 146 horse 135 money 134 morning 129 moment 125 head 124 will 121 year 121 anything 120 mind 120 life 120 girl 116 letter 107 sister 107 school 107 bed 101 son 101 lady 100 aunt 99 squire 96 thought 95 sir 95 country 91 people Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 904 _ 900 John 522 Mr. 512 Mrs. 449 Ben 447 Oakley 364 Huxter 327 Geoff 271 Emilie 203 Edith 193 Miss 165 Fred 147 Joe 118 Elsa 100 Rosamond 98 God 87 Prince 85 Hall 84 Squire 82 Agnes 79 Vicky 75 Sam 72 Jacob 69 CHAPTER 66 Selwyn 65 Horace 63 Parker 62 Schomberg 59 James 59 Eames 57 Webster 53 Lion 53 Hoot 48 Master 47 Berry 46 Jane 46 Courtenay 44 Dobbin 42 Uncle 42 Stansfield 42 Hannah 39 Jowett 39 Byrne 38 White 38 Toot 38 Muff 37 Jackson 35 Tudor 35 Frances 34 Mary Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4416 i 3681 he 3285 you 3170 it 2560 she 1297 him 1024 her 989 me 788 they 488 them 378 we 227 himself 179 herself 143 us 84 myself 67 yourself 58 themselves 33 one 25 itself 20 yours 18 mine 16 ''em 10 ourselves 9 hers 8 his 6 thee 4 ''s 3 i''m 3 em 2 yourselves 2 ours 1 thy 1 p.s.--you 1 hope---- 1 hisself 1 herself,-- 1 harvey''ll 1 handsome,--she 1 described:-- 1 aloud,-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 8986 be 3869 have 2222 do 2131 say 903 go 775 see 746 think 689 come 664 know 629 make 523 get 495 look 474 take 421 tell 413 give 387 find 346 ask 339 feel 302 leave 271 want 227 begin 217 hear 213 keep 205 seem 197 like 191 try 182 speak 176 call 172 turn 170 mean 166 put 166 let 163 run 156 wish 155 stand 141 sit 134 suppose 133 grow 130 live 129 bring 124 love 124 help 112 set 111 use 110 understand 109 pay 108 believe 107 walk 100 hope 99 send Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3029 not 928 so 722 very 641 little 627 up 537 good 512 now 509 well 476 then 461 more 417 out 407 only 394 old 364 much 337 as 325 never 313 just 302 young 278 poor 277 again 263 great 261 too 259 own 257 long 257 down 227 away 226 here 215 first 195 wise 195 all 190 once 190 back 189 there 182 other 171 soon 170 many 168 on 167 quite 161 even 158 rather 156 right 151 enough 149 still 148 few 146 bad 145 sure 145 last 145 dear 142 always 139 ever Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 94 good 70 least 26 most 26 bad 13 great 8 lovely 5 old 4 young 4 eld 3 poor 3 high 3 hard 3 fine 2 wise 2 wild 2 ugly 2 true 2 tiny 2 slight 2 sincere 2 safe 2 near 2 mild 2 long 2 dear 2 big 2 able 2 Most 1 white 1 unkind 1 topmost 1 tall 1 sweet 1 sure 1 strong 1 sombre 1 small 1 short 1 rough 1 rich 1 remote 1 queer 1 pleasant 1 orkard 1 nice 1 manif 1 low 1 like 1 letter:-- 1 innermost Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 98 most 14 well 12 least 1 meanest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 purl.fcla.edu Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/29295/29295-h/29295-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/29295/29295-h.zip 1 http://purl.fcla.edu/fcla/dl/UF00001806.pdf 1 http://purl.fcla.edu/fcla/dl/UF00001806.jpg Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 _ is _ 7 _ do _ 7 _ was _ 7 john did not 5 emilie did not 5 john was not 5 oakley did not 4 geoff went on 4 huxter did not 3 _ are _ 3 _ has _ 3 edith did not 3 edith was very 3 emilie was not 3 geoff did not 2 _ am _ 2 _ had _ 2 _ try _ 2 ben came down 2 ben came off 2 ben did not 2 ben has not 2 ben is older 2 ben was not 2 ben was only 2 child was not 2 emilie went up 2 eyes were full 2 father does n''t 2 father was alive 2 geoff came in 2 geoff comes home 2 john had never 2 john knew enough 2 john went downstairs 2 man is not 2 nothing was there 2 oakley was alive 2 oakley was not 2 princess did not 2 things were different 1 _ are n''t 1 _ are not 1 _ ask _ 1 _ be nice 1 _ be society 1 _ being hungry 1 _ did n''t 1 _ did not 1 _ do n''t Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ are not always 1 ben had no claim 1 ben had no particular 1 ben has no claim 1 ben was not averse 1 child was not so 1 children had no idea 1 children were not angels 1 edith had no taste 1 emilie made no reply 1 emilie was not above 1 eyes were not pleasant 1 father was no longer 1 geoff ''s not naughty 1 geoff heard no more 1 house was not far 1 huxter ''s not very 1 huxter did not often 1 huxter had no real 1 huxter had not penetration 1 john had no desire 1 john had no difficulty 1 john had no more 1 john is no better 1 john made no reply 1 john was no coward 1 john was not long 1 john was not present 1 john was not quarrelsome 1 john was not surprised 1 man had no other 1 man is not easily 1 mother took no notice 1 oakley had no objection 1 oakley was not aware 1 oakley was not only 1 princess was not capable 1 thing was no rabbit 1 woman made no answer 1 woman made no reply A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 54265 author = Alger, Horatio, Jr. title = Luck and Pluck; or, John Oakley''s Inheritance date = keywords = Ben; Berry; Hall; Huxter; Jane; John; Mr.; Mrs.; Oakley; Sam; Selwyn; Squire summary = "Because," said Ben, reluctantly, "John got the whip away from me." "I came as soon as Ben told me you wished to see me," said John. "I have no wish to insult you, Mrs. Oakley," said John. "Why did you not make this change while my father was alive, Mrs. Oakley?" said John, significantly. John took his place at the supper-table as usual; but neither Mrs. Oakley nor Ben, though they spoke freely to each other, had a word to "I don''t know about that, Sam. I rather think, from something Mrs. Oakley said, that she means to sell Prince." "I don''t know that Ben is deficient in that way," said Mrs. Oakley, "Oh, of course he struck John," said Mrs. Oakley, not thinking it "Good-morning, John," said Mrs. Oakley; "you are just in time. "If you think I had anything to do with it, Mrs. Oakley," said John, id = 45164 author = Anonymous title = Village Annals, Containing Austerus and Humanus: A Sympathetic Tale date = keywords = illustration; sidenote summary = [Sidenote: Village Ale-House.] Sir Filmer, on his first entering, immediately "You must, at this inclement season," said Sir Filmer, "witness many replied the worthy man, the tear glistening in his eye, "to weep with "Small, however, sir, as the village is, it produces two characters, as _Austerus_ and _Humanus_; the former a man of callous soul; the latter [Sidenote: Character of Austerus.] "One would imagine," says Sir Filmer, "this man was destined by heaven, which--poor man!--how often have I witnessed the tear drop from his [Sidenote: Hard Treatment of the Poor.] that he is hard-hearted to the poor, and unfeeling to the sons of [Sidenote: Distressed Family.] "Besides the poor, Sir, the afflicted, who are tossed on the bed of [Sidenote: Pleasures of a Liberal Mind.] [Sidenote: Character of Humanus.] [Sidenote: The afflicted Cottage.] [Sidenote: Toil of the Villager.] characters, he would be an Austerus, or an Humanus?--a sordid, selfish id = 42366 author = Burnett, Frances Hodgson title = The Cozy Lion: As Told by Queen Crosspatch date = keywords = Green; Lion; little summary = When I got to the Cave, the Lion was sitting outside his door and "I am a poor sensitive lonely orphan Lion,'' he said. They never invite them to children''s parties--nice little He must have been rather a nice Lion because that minute he began little Skip just jumped up and stood on the end of the Lion''s nose minute I heard little children''s voices singing like skylarks farther down on the Huge Green Hill--actually little children a And the little children on the Huge Green Hill side were coming Little boys called out, "Hello, Lion! "Jump on to the Lion''s tongue," I said to him, "and smooth it off The fathers thought of the Lion the first thing, but the mothers up the Huge Green Hill to where the Lion''s Cave was and then they and right in front of the Cave there stood the Lion looking id = 11290 author = Geldart, Thomas, Mrs. title = Emilie the Peacemaker date = keywords = Agnes; Edith; Emilie; Fred; God; Joe; John; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Muff; Parker; Schomberg; Webster; White summary = Oh, a capital good rule, that of your''s, Miss!" "What," said Emilie "Well, we must say good night, now," said Emilie, "or we shall be late confused as Emilie bade her good-bye, and said--"Miss Schomberg, you The two boys, with Emilie and Edith, were on their way to pay aunt Agnes "Now, Emilie, what do you think of my life?" said Edith, one day after On their way to old Joe''s house that night, Emilie thought she would "Will you give up your walk to-night, Edith," said Emilie on her return "Fred, dear," said she, "will you keep your birds in my little room, "Muff won''t hurt the birds, Fred dear," said Edith, "she is not when Fred said, "Edith, I want some one to teach poor Joe love; will you "Will you not go and see Joe, Emilie?" asked Edith, one day of her said little Edith, "poor Joe! id = 5676 author = MacDonald, George title = A Double Story date = keywords = Agnes; Prince; Rosamond; little; look; princess; thing; wise; woman summary = standing in the door, and looking down upon the wise woman, saw never a princess struggling and screaming all the time, and the wise woman the sternness on the face of the wise woman came from the same heart the folds of the wise woman''s cloak--a very ugly little owlet she mouthful--only followed the basin with longing looks, as the wise woman "Look at me, Rosamond," said the wise woman. "I want to help you to do what I tell you," said the wise woman. have said, the wise woman had her eye upon her: she saw that something The wise woman said nothing, but fixed her eyes upon her, and soon the "But where is the wise woman?" asked Rosamond, looking all about. And Rosamond, looking again, saw the wise woman, folded as usual in her "Do not think," the wise woman went on, "that the things you have seen id = 29295 author = Molesworth, Mrs. title = Great Uncle Hoot-Toot date = keywords = Eames; Elsa; Frances; Geoff; Hoot; Mr.; Vicky; illustration summary = "That''s Geoff, I''m sure," said Elsa; "I always know his ring. "Elsa," said Frances, "I think you are rather hard upon Geoff. "I think mamma had better go to bed almost at once," said Elsa, "What are you talking about, Geoff?" said Elsa''s voice in the doorway. "But have you got sense enough, Geoff?" said Frances, gently. "Then you haven''t any wants at present, I should think, Geoff," said "Geoff," said Elsa, putting great control on herself so as to speak very "And why should I be angry with Geoff?" said the old gentleman, his eyes Geoff is a good boy in big things, and mamma thinks it is owing to her "Good little girl," said Great-Uncle Hoot-Toot, nodding his head "Great-uncle," she said, "I don''t want to make silly excuses for Geoff, "Geoff," said Elsa, "you shall not." there I''ll look up your place and find you your train," said Geoff, id = 21217 author = Power, Philip Bennett title = The One Moss-Rose date = keywords = Courtenay; Dobbin; Jacob; James summary = Many a time did James Courtenay''s old nurse, who was a God-fearing "Father," said Jacob, "I saw the young squire ride by on his gray pony "Ah, Jacob, my son," replied old Leonard Dobbin, "you may glorify God "Ah, Jacob," said the old man, "''tis in little common trials such as we the tree, as if he wanted to lay Jacob Dobbin''s blood at their young "Who ever said I did Jacob Dobbin any harm?" asked James Courtenay, his "You said I murdered Jacob Dobbin," interrupted James Courtenay. "Come, speak up, Jim," said old Meyers; "you were poor Jacob''s friend, rudely snatched away by the young squire, and how poor Jacob burst a "Leonard Dobbin," said the squire, after he had sat for some time "Thank you, young squire," said Leonard; "it was here that Jacob was "Ay," said James Courtenay, "and Jacob is up yonder; but I fear, with id = 21134 author = Wilson, Theodore P. title = Working in the Shade Lowly Sowing brings Glorious Reaping date = keywords = Bridgepath; Colonel; Dawson; God; Horace; Jackson; Mary; Miss; Park; Riverton; Stansfield summary = had occupied the house during that time, except an old man and his wife, The poor man had seen better days, having acted as steward the shade for poor Bridgepath,--some young lady friend who has a little "Well, it was dull work, uncle, I allow," said the young man, laughing. "Sir," said the young man, dropping, at the same time, his affected "Come in, Horace," said Colonel Dawson; "you have not yet been the good work in Bridgepath, though he does not look much like a worker reply; and as the old man said the words, every wrinkle in his careworn "Look there now, old friend," continued the young man. "It may be, friend," said the young man gently, "that the Lord took her "This is indeed joyful news, dear friend," said Horace Jackson, when he "Well, dear old friend," said Horace, "it shall be as you say, so far as