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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 7 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 4632 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 9 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 day 1 work 1 thy 1 spring 1 soul 1 sonnet 1 portrait 1 old 1 night 1 new 1 man 1 illustration 1 heart 1 good 1 fair 1 car 1 Xantoos 1 War 1 Smith 1 Slang 1 Pansy 1 Nawab 1 Murphy 1 Mr. 1 Mame 1 Love 1 Irwin 1 God 1 Gill 1 Beauty Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 91 heart 77 day 76 man 60 soul 58 life 47 love 43 eye 40 way 35 night 34 work 34 time 32 sonnet 31 year 31 word 29 spirit 28 poet 28 hand 26 joy 23 world 23 mind 23 line 21 thing 21 light 21 face 20 name 20 gold 20 death 18 thought 18 p. 17 music 17 head 17 beauty 16 one 16 lip 16 form 15 song 15 master 15 land 15 hope 15 earth 15 dream 15 car 14 star 14 nothing 14 end 14 art 13 something 13 sky 13 reader 13 pride Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 162 _ 61 Love 32 thou 25 Pansy 20 God 19 Murphy 19 Beauty 17 Mr. 17 Mame 15 oi 14 # 13 o''er 13 de 13 Sonnets 12 Sonnet 12 Smith 12 Slang 12 LOVE 11 Nawab 11 Irwin 10 England 9 ma 9 Thou 9 Gill 8 Willie 8 Heaven 7 thee 7 hath 7 William 7 War 7 Thy 7 SONNETS 7 New 7 Life 7 John 7 Grip 7 English 7 Book 7 A 6 twas 6 dat 6 XI 6 VI 6 Templeton 6 Street 6 STAR 6 Portrait 6 Poet 6 Old 6 November Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 529 i 240 he 220 it 211 you 175 me 150 she 123 we 102 they 70 him 63 her 37 us 33 them 15 thee 10 himself 7 mine 6 one 5 ''em 4 itself 3 yourself 3 yours 3 oi 3 myself 2 herself 1 you''re 1 thyself 1 themselves 1 tears,-- 1 pelf 1 ourselves 1 hisself 1 his 1 hez 1 hers 1 face''d 1 ''s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 967 be 245 have 109 do 104 say 87 come 82 get 80 see 78 make 68 know 68 go 60 take 59 give 47 think 40 let 35 find 32 stand 31 look 27 turn 27 seem 27 feel 26 put 26 keep 26 hold 24 love 22 leave 22 hear 20 write 20 wish 18 live 17 show 17 read 17 die 17 bring 16 set 16 play 16 call 15 shine 15 run 14 win 14 lose 14 grow 13 try 13 tell 13 lie 13 forget 13 follow 13 fill 13 bear 12 watch 12 throw Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 202 not 91 then 71 so 63 up 55 old 53 there 50 more 47 now 46 out 44 still 42 too 37 here 37 good 33 long 33 last 32 back 31 most 30 little 30 down 28 just 28 fair 27 yet 27 high 27 ever 25 only 25 never 24 sad 24 new 24 great 24 even 23 well 23 first 23 away 23 as 22 such 21 sweet 21 many 21 dead 21 all 20 poor 20 far 20 again 19 other 19 much 17 once 17 human 16 same 16 pure 16 perhaps 16 in Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 good 6 most 6 high 5 pure 4 least 3 noble 3 great 2 rich 2 fine 2 bright 1 weary 1 unbl 1 supreme 1 strong 1 spenderf 1 sorry 1 slow 1 sad 1 rough 1 right 1 lovely 1 j 1 gentle 1 fit 1 expr 1 early 1 deep 1 com 1 bl 1 bad 1 able Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 25 most 4 well 1 feelings,--lest 1 drest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ was originally 1 days gone by 1 eyes are blue 1 eyes look love 1 hand wrote terror 1 hands were niver 1 heart be still 1 heart is just 1 heart is thine 1 heart show such 1 heart turns over 1 heart was gay 1 life looks goshawful 1 love ''s trancèd 1 love is not 1 love is strong-- 1 love is truth 1 men are actually 1 men were strangers 1 mind be still 1 mind was open 1 minds is undeserved 1 name is legion 1 name is tim 1 name was john 1 night is sweet 1 pansy got on 1 sonnets are attributable 1 soul did laura 1 soul is blest 1 soul is exprest 1 souls are dead 1 spirit takes flight 1 things is loss 1 time is dead 1 time were more 1 words are too 1 words come back 1 work is coarse 1 work seems unfinished 1 works are old 1 world is better 1 world is full Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 love is not discoverable A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 33729 author = Calhoun, Howell title = The Lost Temples of Xantoos date = keywords = Xantoos summary = _The_ Lost Temples of Xantoos By HOWELL CALHOUN Celestial fantasies of deathless night, Enraptured colonnades adorned with pearls, Resplendent guardians of crimson light, Expanse of darkness silently unfurls Among colossal ruins on this shore, That once was purled by Xantoos'' rolling seas; Nothing remains upon this barren core Of Mars, but your palatial memories. Your altars and magnificent black gods Still flash beneath the sapphire torches'' flames, The fragrant ring of sacred flowers nods Beneath the monstrous idols'' gilded frames. Your jeweled gates swing open on their bands Of gold; within, a lurid shadow stands. TRANSCRIBER''S NOTE: This etext was produced from Weird Tales October Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed. id = 33674 author = Evans, Donald title = Sonnets from the Patagonian date = keywords = Beauty; War; portrait summary = _With the Allied cause crumbling away it is high time we thought of reply was a plea to let you write a preface for a new edition of my already lost the War and the dusk of the Anglo-Saxon is come. can find the beauty and the strength of the human soul with which to must be the German people we hate as an overshadowing race, if our fight Soul and Beauty. _Verily, verily, men are killed solely because they fear death, and turn Then Carlo came; he shone like a new sin-That let her smile because he saw she knew. For he had said long ere he came to earth And all the hours his heart like waving grain And the joys now dead But they were the last words that the poet said. To play gravedigger if the word be said. He said that love had but two words, the last id = 4756 author = Irwin, Wallace title = The Love Sonnets of a Hoodlum date = keywords = Irwin; Mame; Mr.; Murphy; sonnet summary = is as close to "Mame''s dress-suit belle" of No. VII as modern costume finds a rival in Mr. Irwin''s strong simile--"O Fate, thou art a In Mr. Irwin''s sonnet cycle, however, we have slang idealized, or as head of the school, and insistent upon the didactic value of slang, Mr. Irwin presents in this cycle no mean claims to eminence in the truly The sonnet is a very easy mark, Leaving poor Willie froze to beat the band, And Mame is mine some more, I do not think. ''Tis Murphy, night clerk in McCann''s drug store. I have another think a-coming. For love has got poor Willie groggy, too. I thought the cards were coming all my way, Were Mame and Murphy, diked to suit the part, At noon today Murphy and Mame were tied. If you don''t like it you know what to do. Perhaps you think I''ve handed out to you id = 5332 author = Irwin, Wallace title = The Love Sonnets of a Car Conductor date = keywords = Gill; Pansy; Slang; Smith; car summary = Smith, a car conductor, who penned his passion, from time to time, on between fares on the rear platform of a Sixth Avenue car. Of the human or personal record of William Henry Smith very little has "Remarks:--Car No. 21144, William Smith, conductor, ran into large that Pansy, Gill the Grip and Maxy the Firebug never existed in real THE LOVE SONNETS OF A CAR CONDUCTOR THE LOVE SONNETS OF A CAR CONDUCTOR Today the Pansy got aboard my ship I says to her, "Fare, please!" out loud like that, I got the zing from Pansy''s orb Pansy got on at Sixteenth Street last night, But Death rings up and says, "Step lively, please!" When I took Pansy''s fare from Gill the Grip. Wait till I ticket Pansy, then I guess ''Twas Pansy like a fairy in a bower Some like the Gas-car Gussie act, hot ton, id = 11266 author = Jung, Nizamat, Sir title = Sonnets by the Nawab Nizamat Jung Bahadur date = keywords = Love; Nawab; heart; soul; thy summary = "_Love is not discoverable by the eye, but only by the soul. utterances of the great minds and hearts whose words have been like "_Love wakes the soul and gives it wings to fly_." is the life,--and few who read these Sonnets will deny that the spirit Love gave her eyes the light of heav''n, and taught A Light-girt messenger of Love art thou-The thrice-pure fire of Love within thy breast! Love''s heart e''er made--thou com''st to show e''en _now_ And breathe, O breathe, thy love-breath o''er mine eyes Comes through thy hallowed lips whose pray''r is Love. Life''s hopes and joys, Love''s beauty, truth and grace, Each other''s soul''s fulfilment, makes Love shine Love wings the soul for Heaven whence it came. While my heart''s love is by sweet flow''rs averred. Of hearts that keep their faith amidst Love''s woes.'' Two hearts made one by Love that cannot die id = 38572 author = Kiser, Samuel E. (Samuel Ellsworth) title = Love Sonnets of an Office Boy date = keywords = day; illustration; night summary = It made you sad that he got dumped that way, And let you set and rest all day, instead This morning when that homely, long-legged clerk Come in he had a rose he got somewhere; He went and kind of leaned against her chair, I wish, when you was through your work some night She''s got an awful bad cold in her head-And say "Poor little girl!" to her, and set And every key she pounds looked kind of sad. I thought that her and me had went away This morning when we come to work I got And so the first blame thing I knew I said: I wish, some day, when she''s typewritin'' and And said: "She''s twic''t as old as you, you know-I''d like to let the tears come if I dast. And said: "The little fool''s got married!" Oh, The long-legged clerk must stay and work away, id = 37365 author = MacKeracher, William M. (William Mackay) title = Sonnets and Other Verse date = keywords = God; day; fair; good; man; new; old; spring; work summary = Scorn not the Old; ''twas sacred in its day, Of baffled seas, let in all fair delights Whose works are old and yet for ever new, Sweet Christian Sabbath-day of joy and rest. In fair Italian cities thou had''st heard Old Winter from the scene, and cried, "Make way! So grows the good man old--meek, glad, sublime; Is working men; she cries to let them in. He loved this good God''s world, the night and day, THE WORKS OF MAN AND OF NATURE. And each new spring seemed older not a day. You brought forth from your treasury things new and old, But no, to-day his spirit lives, and walks the crowded way; We''ll hail old England''s hearts of steel who man her iron walls. And thou, old Book, go down from sire to son; Bien, M''sieu; he''s come pass joos like dis way; a go out wit'' de boys