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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 92864 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 86 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Mr. 2 work 2 Oxford 2 London 2 England 1 socialism 1 semi 1 man 1 illustration 1 good 1 design 1 chapter 1 William 1 Verriman 1 Troy 1 Sweater 1 Sunday 1 Street 1 State 1 Socialist 1 Slyme 1 Sir 1 Sigurd 1 Sawkins 1 Saturday 1 Ruth 1 Rushton 1 Rossetti 1 Rose 1 Red 1 Press 1 Poems 1 Philpot 1 Paradise 1 Paddington 1 Owen 1 November 1 Nora 1 Nimrod 1 Newport 1 Newman 1 Mrs 1 Morris 1 Moreton 1 Monday 1 Miss 1 Misery 1 Mary 1 Marriott 1 March Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1671 man 1174 time 1053 work 823 thing 621 people 611 day 572 room 565 hand 551 way 544 house 522 life 449 money 418 child 413 nothing 399 year 365 paper 363 place 357 other 350 duke 345 one 332 door 331 job 322 something 320 part 301 book 288 face 286 word 283 week 281 hour 280 night 274 side 271 world 252 anything 248 fact 242 woman 237 mind 235 boy 223 morning 223 eye 221 friend 216 class 210 end 203 number 202 art 201 voice 199 wall 199 father 198 lot 196 course 194 shop Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1857 _ 599 Owen 580 Crass 523 Morris 440 Mr. 374 Rushton 372 Easton 329 LAURA 300 Philpot 287 Harlow 265 Mary 263 | 254 Hunter 242 Mr 207 Sweater 192 Rose 176 HEGAN 170 Ruth 160 Lord 157 MONTAGUE 151 Ben 137 Barrington 136 Frankie 135 London 127 Miss 119 Linden 119 JACK 116 Bert 108 Misery 105 Kelmscott 104 e 103 Rossetti 102 Grinder 102 Cord 101 Eddie 100 Socialist 99 Oxford 98 Press 98 Crystal 95 God 94 Sir 94 Marriott 94 England 93 Didlum 92 William 91 Sawkins 90 Lady 88 Mrs 86 Socialists 85 Paddington Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6873 he 6137 it 3988 i 3530 you 3529 they 1782 him 1753 them 1495 she 1381 we 786 me 556 her 464 himself 350 us 222 themselves 114 ''em 108 one 94 itself 79 myself 65 herself 49 yourself 41 ourselves 28 ''s 24 mine 19 yours 19 em 16 his 12 meself 12 isself 12 imself 10 theirs 6 yerself 6 hers 5 yer 5 ours 5 hisself 4 oneself 3 yourselves 2 ye 1 you''re 1 whosoever 1 wear---- 1 theirselves 1 oo 1 him--"is 1 e 1 bookshelf 1 bandits Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 20026 be 6618 have 3449 do 2271 say 1653 go 1216 make 1150 know 1145 get 1068 come 1058 see 977 take 885 think 667 give 638 work 548 look 529 find 484 tell 430 seem 421 put 407 stand 398 call 379 want 377 begin 372 pay 348 hear 341 leave 309 ask 308 bring 305 live 302 use 297 speak 289 feel 280 reply 276 let 274 mean 270 become 264 keep 254 turn 254 try 229 write 227 sit 219 believe 218 hold 218 continue 209 like 206 pass 200 buy 200 answer 195 suppose 192 produce Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4261 not 1349 so 1083 up 1055 very 972 other 898 more 855 then 800 out 757 now 704 only 691 good 675 little 616 much 607 well 571 all 555 great 550 as 534 old 519 most 500 down 495 long 491 first 486 just 475 same 463 never 439 away 432 own 430 few 411 on 409 even 399 there 341 last 338 also 338 about 328 too 328 right 327 again 325 many 323 such 309 here 309 back 309 always 308 off 292 large 292 able 274 several 266 still 264 ever 263 once 254 young Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 255 most 163 good 59 least 59 Most 34 bad 28 great 21 high 19 low 13 fine 12 near 12 early 10 slight 9 large 8 late 7 big 6 loud 5 strong 5 small 5 close 3 simple 3 pure 3 old 3 noble 3 lovely 3 grand 3 full 3 eld 3 cheap 2 young 2 tall 2 sure 2 strange 2 happy 2 grave 2 foul 2 deep 1 would 1 worthy 1 wise 1 wide 1 warm 1 true 1 topmost 1 thin 1 thick 1 statesmanlike 1 stately 1 soon 1 smart 1 sincere Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 264 most 13 least 10 well 1 lowest 1 highest 1 halmost 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 easton did not 8 duke did not 6 owen did not 6 time went on 5 crass did not 5 duke had not 4 crass was not 4 crass went on 4 duke had never 3 _ am _ 3 _ is _ 3 _ looking backward 3 children are not 3 life was not 3 man was not 3 men did not 3 men were also 3 one had ever 3 owen had not 3 owen was not 3 owen went on 3 rushton did not 3 things were busy 3 time goes on 3 work came in 2 _ was first 2 crass ai n''t 2 crass was there 2 day was over 2 duke stood there 2 duke was quite 2 duke went up 2 easton came home 2 easton was not 2 easton was still 2 job came in 2 jobs going on 2 man had ever 2 man had not 2 man was about 2 man was more 2 man went on 2 men are identical 2 men had not 2 men went away 2 men were nearly 2 money ai n''t 2 morris did not 2 morris was never 2 morris was not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 easton made no reply 2 easton made no answer 2 people are not able 2 things were not very 1 _ had no evening 1 _ is not effective 1 child is not fit 1 children are not able 1 children are not as 1 children do not always 1 crass had not yet 1 crass knew no more 1 crass made no answer 1 crass was not able 1 crass was not much 1 crass was not there 1 duke had no hint 1 duke had not long 1 duke has no very 1 dukes are not exempt 1 easton had not yet 1 easton made no attempt 1 easton made no further 1 easton took no further 1 easton was not there 1 easton was not yet 1 house was not nearly 1 house were not so 1 job was not half 1 life is not entirely 1 life was not worth 1 man had not yet 1 man is not enough 1 man made no answer 1 man was not exactly 1 men are not equal 1 men have no knowledge 1 one has no power 1 one has no time 1 one was no use 1 others did not perhaps 1 others were not so 1 owen had no right 1 owen made no attempt 1 owen made no response 1 owen was not sane 1 owen was not so 1 owen were not well 1 people were not mentally 1 people were not suitable A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 39725 author = Cary, Elisabeth Luther title = William Morris: Poet, Craftsman, Socialist date = keywords = April; Burne; Chaucer; December; Ellis; England; February; House; Jones; Kelmscott; King; London; Mackail; March; Morris; Mr.; November; Oxford; Paradise; Poems; Press; Red; Rossetti; Sigurd; Sir; Troy; William; design; illustration; work summary = The personal life of William Morris is already known to us through Mr. Mackail''s admirable biography as fully, probably, as we shall ever know _William Morris, his Art, his Writings, and his Public Life_, by Aymer volume of Mr. Morris issued by the Kelmscott Press, under the title of _A _Early Design for Morris Wall-Paper "Daisy and Columbine"_ _84_ Morris went to him in the work of restoring ancient churches and designing Working Men''s College he for the first time saw Rossetti, and later heard [Illustration: PAINTED WALL DECORATION DESIGNED BY MORRIS] [Illustration: PAINTED WALL DECORATION DESIGNED BY MORRIS] [Illustration: EARLY DESIGN FOR MORRIS WALL-PAPER "DAISY AND COLUMBINE"] From the beginning of his work in decorative art Morris had clear to Morris that he himself worked "not the least in the world for the cut, Mr. Morris bought a copy of this book, printed by Wynkyn de Worde id = 13146 author = Miller, Alice Duer title = The Beauty and the Bolshevist date = keywords = Ben; Cord; Crystal; David; Eddie; Moreton; Mr.; Newport; Verriman summary = "Show him in here," said Cord, and added to Eddie, as Tomes left the Ben was a good-looking young man, but it was his expression--at once "Very likely," said Ben, "but that would be quite a change from the "So you were, Eddie, so you were," said Mr. Cord. "Well, I must tell you, father dear," said Crystal, exactly as if "Oh yes, you would, Ben," said Crystal, but he did not notice her. Ben began to say that he couldn''t, but Crystal said yes, that he would By the time Crystal stopped for him Ben had begun to feel like a child "Why, Ben," said Crystal, "you''re just a pacifist in other people''s "Well," said Ben, "he told me himself that he liked me better than "That''s it," said Ben. Cord turned sharply to Crystal. "You see the point of my plan, don''t you, Ben?" said Crystal. "No," said Cord, looking at Crystal. id = 3304 author = Sinclair, Upton title = The Machine date = keywords = HEGAN; JACK; JULIA; LAURA; MONTAGUE; Mr. summary = Yes. I expected a friend, but she can''t come until later. You know I don''t want to meet people like that. My dear Jack, the girl can''t help her father. [Sees LAURA; starts.] Miss Hegan! let other people talk and to read their thoughts.] Why, Mr. Montague, [Enters centre.] Good afternoon, Miss Hegan. I was very glad to come, Miss Hegan. Imagine a girl brought up in luxury, with a father whom she loves [Gravely.] Yes; I think he is, Miss Hegan. My dear, I think you might take your father''s word in such a I know that my father paid Mr. Grimes to influence the decision of that Court. Miss Hegan, you are a brave woman, and I would like to give way to I know that my father is not a happy man. Let Mr. Montague come to my father''s office tomorrow morning at [Takes HEGAN by the arm, and laughs.] Come, old man! id = 40734 author = Thorne, Guy title = The Socialist date = keywords = Aubrey; Burnside; Camborne; Constance; Duke; England; Fabian; Flood; Hayle; James; John; Lady; London; Lord; Marriott; Mary; Miss; Mr.; Oxford; Paddington; Rose; Socialist; Street; chapter; man summary = "Yes, please come, duke," said Lady Constance. "It''s awfully good of you, Lord Camborne," said the duke; "I shall be dear young men," he said, "surely the great question is: Who has "Well, here is a sort of answer," said the duke, handing the telegram to The man was already half-way to the door when the duke spoke again. As they went down the stairs Mary said, "You saw that odd-looking man "Look ''ere!" the other man said, "it''s the bloomin'' Duke of Paddington "Then," Mary said, her eyes flashing, her breast heaving, "then, Mr. Rose, I am a Socialist, too--from this day, from this hour." "The Duke of Paddington?" Rose said in a startled and incredulous voice. "But I think on this occasion you might have some difficulty, Mr. Flood," Mary answered, with half a smile--the man thought he had never "Miss Marriott," the duke answered, "I want to know all sorts of things id = 3608 author = Tressell, Robert title = The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists date = keywords = Barrington; Bert; Bundy; Charley; Christmas; Co.; Council; Crass; Didlum; Easton; Frankie; God; Grinder; Harlow; Hunter; Linden; Misery; Monday; Mrs; Newman; Nimrod; Nora; Owen; Philpot; Rushton; Ruth; Saturday; Sawkins; Slyme; State; Sunday; Sweater; good; semi; socialism; work summary = He was an old man when Frank Owen went to work for him. the war he was working for Rushton & Co. They had just finished their tea when Owen knocked at their front door. the drawing-room where Owen and Easton were and Rushton said: ''Now this ''ere drain work is really two separate jobs,'' said Rushton. They worked in silence for some time, and then Owen said: Easton laughed: ''I can''t understand how people pass such work,'' he said. ''Yes, I know it makes "work",'' replied Owen, ''but we can''t live on mere Another time Mrs Easton got her some work at a boarding-house where she Owen was working there at the same time, for the painting of the rooms This man had been out of work for a long time before he got a start at ''I can see ''ow it''s been worked,'' said Crass at last.