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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 108116 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 68 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 Mr. 7 Lord 7 London 7 House 6 Sir 6 Parliament 6 England 5 John 4 King 4 Government 4 France 3 man 3 Hunt 3 George 3 Commons 2 french 2 Whigs 2 Westminster 2 Sunday 2 Street 2 Sheriff 2 Samuel 2 Pitt 2 Napoleon 2 Law 2 God 2 Gladstone 2 Francis 2 Court 2 Committee 2 Colonel 2 Cobbett 2 Church 2 Burdett 2 Bristol 2 Bill 2 Bench 2 Bath 1 work 1 time 1 irish 1 great 1 father 1 everly 1 english 1 day 1 chapter 1 british 1 Woolwich 1 William Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2258 man 1794 time 1440 day 1285 year 1140 people 988 friend 892 meeting 723 life 709 country 696 person 647 thing 583 place 583 father 572 name 559 way 556 part 534 hand 522 law 487 mind 487 fact 485 work 475 power 472 letter 471 house 453 party 447 one 420 election 417 member 409 word 403 child 395 nothing 361 case 355 opinion 343 other 334 hour 332 principle 331 cause 329 speech 326 right 324 morning 322 order 321 duty 315 character 312 subject 306 number 306 county 304 family 301 reform 297 night 296 money Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 5968 _ 3342 Mr. 790 House 778 Sir 679 Lord 627 London 620 England 599 Parliament 438 Crooks 402 John 378 Government 378 Commons 337 King 316 Hunt 310 Cobbett 294 St. 289 Bristol 273 Poplar 241 Francis 238 Labour 207 Westminster 205 Burdett 202 Board 197 France 193 James 192 Church 189 Mrs. 188 Napoleon 183 George 182 Court 181 c. 181 God 179 Pitt 174 William 173 Committee 172 Law 167 Samuel 167 Ireland 165 Whigs 162 Thomas 160 Dr. 148 Bill 142 Prince 137 Brougham 137 Bath 136 Manchester 135 Fox 135 English 134 Reform 130 Charles Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 11123 i 8426 he 6482 it 3507 they 2944 him 2881 me 2217 them 1817 you 1643 we 797 she 581 himself 522 us 499 myself 356 her 301 themselves 90 itself 72 one 46 herself 44 ourselves 36 yourself 23 yours 23 mine 19 his 14 theirs 9 thee 7 ours 4 ''s 3 ''em 2 yourselves 2 ye 2 pelf 2 on''y 2 hisself 2 em 1 £690 1 youreself 1 yer 1 unhappy.--this 1 time?--at 1 time?--"i 1 rochdale:-- 1 passing:-- 1 office:-- 1 men.--they 1 hers 1 ha 1 follows--"you 1 defence_.--they 1 d''yer 1 62_l Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 27972 be 11734 have 2860 do 1969 make 1835 say 1679 take 1486 give 1212 know 1135 come 1120 see 1086 go 802 find 788 call 695 think 656 get 582 leave 558 receive 543 become 523 send 521 write 512 hold 512 bring 509 tell 507 pay 500 hear 499 put 493 appear 490 pass 456 follow 450 believe 428 keep 406 look 400 return 395 carry 375 attend 373 live 372 meet 371 ask 364 stand 355 speak 341 feel 320 begin 312 enter 303 declare 301 read 282 turn 282 bear 279 use 279 let 267 remain Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4546 not 1565 so 1527 very 1478 great 1379 more 1185 never 1169 most 1107 up 1076 well 1033 now 1031 as 1022 only 1000 other 868 good 841 public 824 much 817 first 807 then 778 many 761 such 729 out 720 own 667 ever 636 same 571 poor 559 old 544 little 541 always 534 down 508 long 491 however 467 soon 466 even 397 few 387 also 380 too 380 last 379 high 378 political 364 large 361 therefore 360 once 338 whole 338 again 335 young 331 next 321 there 316 off 304 rather 297 far Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 264 good 209 great 197 least 123 most 97 slight 52 high 47 bad 27 large 24 eld 19 early 18 small 15 fine 14 noble 14 low 13 young 11 poor 11 bright 11 able 10 full 9 pure 8 mean 8 brave 7 strong 7 rich 7 old 6 near 6 deep 6 base 6 Most 5 vile 5 rare 5 dark 5 black 5 bitter 4 loud 4 lofty 4 late 4 heavy 4 happy 4 dear 4 bold 3 wide 3 warm 3 staunch 3 proud 3 long 3 keen 3 handsome 3 foremost 3 fair Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1046 most 33 well 26 least 2 highest 1 worst 1 lest 1 clearest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 _ is _ 5 _ was not 5 meeting took place 4 _ know _ 4 _ was _ 4 lord have mercy 4 men are not 3 _ paid _ 3 day did not 3 father had always 3 people did not 2 _ did _ 2 _ had _ 2 _ had not 2 _ has _ 2 _ think _ 2 _ was only 2 _ went on 2 _ were not 2 country was profoundly 2 day was over 2 father was not 2 friends had free 2 house was up 2 law does not 2 man does not 2 man knew better 2 man was able 2 man was ever 2 man was more 2 meeting passed off 2 meeting was not 2 meeting was over 2 name was ever 2 name was never 2 parliament was not 2 people are always 2 persons were present 2 place are not 2 thing went off 2 things go better 2 time was not 1 _ appeared december 1 _ are _ 1 _ be desirable 1 _ be necessary 1 _ became successful 1 _ being temporary 1 _ believes _ 1 _ brought _ Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 _ had not yet 1 _ made no parley 1 _ was not able 1 _ was not worthy 1 _ were not only 1 country was not at 1 father was not merely 1 friends were not less 1 house had no right 1 law knows no other 1 laws were not beneficial 1 life were not utterly 1 london has no such 1 man ''s not worth 1 man was not easily 1 meeting was no sooner 1 meeting was not illegal 1 meeting was not only 1 men are not at 1 men are not capable 1 men are not numerous 1 men had not then 1 mind is not always 1 parliament is no more 1 parliament was not idle 1 people are not likely 1 people had no right 1 people had no share 1 people had no weapons 1 people have no voice 1 people knew no bounds 1 persons have no fervour 1 place are not necessarily 1 place are not synonymous 1 thing had no fears 1 thing was not quite 1 things were not at 1 time being no longer 1 time was not yet 1 times are no longer 1 year was not more 1 years is not much A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 41023 author = Haw, George title = From Workhouse to Westminster: The Life Story of Will Crooks, M.P. date = keywords = Bill; Board; Committee; Council; County; Crooks; Government; Guardians; House; Labour; Law; Local; London; Lord; Mayor; Mr.; Parliament; Poor; Poplar; Sunday; Woolwich; chapter; man; work summary = even remotely suggests the real labouring men of London; and that is Mr. Will Crooks. "I owe something to an old man who went round the poor people''s houses This time Crooks determined to try to find work outside his own trade. Crooks told the man to go home, promising to come to him presently. The day came when Crooks was offered work nearer Poplar. How came it that a working man like Crooks was able to give his whole So the Will Crooks Wages Fund was formed by the Poplar Labour League. London County Council, which was only three years old when Crooks joined The good people of Poplar expect Crooks to meet all their needs. All who labour and are poor in Poplar look upon Crooks as the unfailing As the two men came away, "I''m proud of the poor," said Crooks. Crooks''s Poor Law Policy Attacked--How a Local Government Board id = 36795 author = Holyoake, George Jacob title = Bygones Worth Remembering, Vol. 1 (of 2) date = keywords = Chartist; Cobden; Dr.; England; Garibaldi; George; Gladstone; Government; Holyoake; House; Italy; John; Kingsley; London; Lord; Martineau; Mazzini; Mill; Mr.; Newman; Parliament; Place; Professor; Sir; Street; Thomas summary = part of working men of London, that I was one of their way of thinking Mr. John Morley wrote an article in the _Fortnightly_ on Mr. Chamberlain, which first gave him a position before the public. day at a public meeting in the town hall, they drew an ass''s head on a Chartists of real life whom I knew, who were current in Kingsley''s days, Chartists--like the Co-operators--sought self-government for the people At a meeting in Castle Street, London, the Rev. Charles Kingsley and Mr. Thomas Hughes were present, working men comprising the audience, an old into politics than any other public man in my time. One day when Cobden came, he walked to the House of Commons after the Mazzini one day said to me, "A public man is often bound by his past. Knowledge of public life, law, and government, come as part of id = 36796 author = Holyoake, George Jacob title = Bygones Worth Remembering, Vol. 2 (of 2) date = keywords = America; Archbishop; Christian; Church; Cowen; Disraeli; England; George; Gladstone; God; House; John; Lambeth; London; Lord; Mr.; Newcastle; Palace; Parliament; Rev.; Sir; Spencer; Street; Sunday; man summary = A few years later it came into my mind that my expressions of respect days the house of John Chapman, the publisher, was the meeting ground known the publication of his work to persons whom I knew to be friendly would fill the ear of the world." He thought for a time on what I said end--as I have seen done in the House of Commons many times in my day. years later, at the House of Commons, Mr. Forster asked Mr. Cowen to Newcastle in the same train, Mr. Cowen said to him, "You know, Mr. Beaumont, we all like you personally, but you do not go far enough addressed mostly to working men, and to persons whom it was not thought "Sir,--No right-minded person can fail to be deeply impressed by Mr. Holyoake''s touching letter in your impression of to-day. For a time I sent presents of books to working-class friends in America id = 8461 author = Hunt, Henry title = Memoirs of Henry Hunt, Esq. — Volume 2 date = keywords = Baronet; Bath; Bench; Bristol; Burdett; Cobbett; Colonel; Commons; Court; Davis; England; France; Francis; Government; House; Hunt; John; King; London; Lord; Mr.; Napoleon; Parliament; Pitt; Samuel; Sheriff; Sir; Westminster; Whigs; french summary = right to perform an act of public or private duty, having once made up day when Sir Francis Burdett brought forward his long-promised, County Meeting, I called on Mr. Cobbett the first time that I went to monster, jealousy, in the Baronet''s breast, a dinner meeting of Mr. Paull''s friends was advertised for the next day, at the Crown and read a letter from his brother, Sir Francis, addressed to the meeting, On the other hand, I sent copies of our proceedings to Mr. Cobbett, who lived at that time at Botley, expressing a wish, if he riots took place in London, which lasted two days, in consequence of Sir Sir Francis Burdett was at this time the most popular man in England, at the time, I felt great pleasure in having it in my power to oblige the county of Wilts; almost all the country people having a great id = 8463 author = Hunt, Henry title = Memoirs of Henry Hunt, Esq. — Volume 3 date = keywords = Bill; Bristol; Burdett; Cobbett; Committee; Commons; England; France; Francis; House; Hunt; James; John; King; London; Lord; Major; Manchester; Mr.; Napoleon; Parliament; Paul; Philip; Prince; Regent; Royal; Samuel; Sheriff; Sir; St.; Watson; Westminster; Whigs; William summary = times assisted in turning Hunt out of the room at public meetings. In the mean time Mr. Cobbett published a second letter, as follows:-time having offered to poll for the said Henry Hunt, which votes were called the meeting, having taken the chair, Mr. Benett addressed appeared that the parties calling the meeting only intended to petition Exchange Hoax, a dead set was made by the Westminster Rump to get Mr. Brougham elected in his place; and many private meetings were held at Some time in the spring of this year, a public meeting was called of the the soup committee met, and called a public meeting in the city, for the and should return on the following day in time for the meeting. having, _before the meeting took place_, been called before the meeting called for that day; that these persons came id = 8685 author = Hunt, Henry title = Memoirs of Henry Hunt, Esq. — Volume 1 date = keywords = Bath; Bench; Clare; Clifford; Colonel; Cornet; England; France; God; Grant; Griffith; Halcomb; House; Hunt; King; London; Lord; Mr.; Mrs.; Salisbury; Sir; Waddington; day; everly; father; great; man; time summary = five years; nay, I always said this, seeing that a poor labouring man is shall state facts as they have been handed down from father to son by old In the confident hope that we shall live to see better days, our Country life time of his father, that this was a very poor property to live upon fathers to his son, a child of five years and a half old, and it speaks My father dropped the subject at that time; but he took an early several days, in order to give time for Mr. Gresley to send to my father. The day was fixed for the party, and my poor father little thought that time her voice returned, to the great joy of myself and all her friends. As my father''s house lay in my way home, I called on him, to inform him of id = 39104 author = Stanton, Henry B. (Henry Brewster) title = Sketches of Reforms and Reformers, of Great Britain and Ireland date = keywords = Britain; Brougham; Burke; CHAPTER; Catholic; Church; Commons; Court; Edinburgh; England; Fox; France; George; Government; Great; Grey; House; India; Ireland; John; King; Law; London; Lord; Mackintosh; Mr.; O''Connell; Parliament; People; Pitt; Reform; Review; Sir; Smith; State; West; british; english; french; irish summary = reforms in Church and State which have so blessed the common people of corn laws, Catholic emancipation, Parliamentary reform, and every other slave trade, and advocating the cause of Catholic emancipation, Mr. Canning sustained the worst Tory measures from his entrance into years'' labor of Jeremy Bentham in the cause of law reform. Law Reform--The Penal Code of England--Its Barbarity--The Law Reform--The Penal Code of England--Its Barbarity--The On the death of this great man, the cause of Catholic emancipation fell during the intervening ten years, a great reform meeting was held at general education, complete suffrage, church reform, corn-law repeal, Lord Brougham said: "I have always great pleasure in listening to Mr. Thompson, who is the most eloquent man and the most accomplished orator The next year after the passage of the West India abolition act, Mr. Thompson visited this country, where he remained till driven from our