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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 54821 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 87 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Captain 3 Mr. 2 chapter 2 Miss 2 King 2 Jim 2 Jack 2 God 2 Ben 1 time 1 ship 1 look 1 little 1 good 1 girl 1 day 1 come 1 York 1 Yaque 1 Wilkins 1 Wednesday 1 Watty 1 Uncle 1 Trench 1 Tommy 1 Tom 1 Tanaki 1 Tabnit 1 Swanson 1 Suva 1 Story 1 Storm 1 St. 1 Senor 1 Sea 1 Samson 1 Rollo 1 Riley 1 Prince 1 Polly 1 Philosopher 1 Pete 1 Otho 1 Olsen 1 Olivia 1 Old 1 O''Rook 1 New 1 Nassaline 1 Mrs. Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 834 man 659 time 570 day 471 hand 459 way 393 captain 390 girl 369 boat 362 eye 361 island 351 sea 350 ship 343 thing 306 moment 298 night 292 face 287 water 268 boy 265 one 264 room 263 head 256 place 252 professor 236 side 229 something 227 prince 226 light 226 deck 224 hour 224 foot 216 nothing 215 word 210 life 200 sir 193 morning 191 father 183 tree 182 people 180 friend 179 voice 178 story 173 world 171 woman 167 heart 161 course 160 name 154 anything 150 arm 149 crew 146 mind Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 856 St. 849 George 785 _ 598 Tommy 471 Elizabeth 468 Jim 332 Mary 314 Captain 301 Jack 292 Olivia 252 Tom 220 Mr. 193 Amory 188 Mrs. 171 Yaque 163 Jo 151 Hastings 147 Berwick 133 Polly 132 King 131 Miss 130 Riley 119 Mr 118 Watty 111 Jarvo 103 Wilkins 102 Fangati 94 Juarez 92 Prince 90 Holland 89 Tabnit 89 Ben 88 Rollo 87 O''Rook 84 God 83 Frothingham 81 hut 80 CHAPTER 73 Sea 72 Bess 68 Samson 65 Uncle 63 Chillingworth 63 Charlie 62 Philosopher 61 Broome 60 New 56 Senor 56 Eagle 54 Mrs Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4115 i 3995 he 3928 it 2901 you 2148 they 1867 we 1859 she 1396 him 969 them 892 me 694 her 479 us 292 himself 114 herself 110 one 100 themselves 70 itself 67 myself 53 ''s 40 yourself 25 ourselves 20 ''em 17 his 12 yours 11 mine 5 meself 4 ye 4 theirs 4 em 3 shur''n 3 ours 3 hers 2 yourselves 2 oneself 1 you''ll 1 yerself 1 we''d 1 thee 1 ah Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 12611 be 4819 have 2170 say 2024 do 1224 go 948 see 948 come 885 know 840 make 746 get 723 look 658 take 651 think 489 find 483 tell 440 give 368 ask 351 seem 307 stand 300 leave 292 hear 292 cry 291 turn 278 let 253 feel 252 run 252 keep 238 speak 237 put 235 call 227 try 220 reply 219 lie 216 hold 213 return 208 want 191 bring 189 set 188 follow 187 fall 180 begin 178 become 177 sit 172 pass 165 catch 159 rise 158 mean 151 reach 148 carry 145 remember Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2902 not 915 up 833 so 726 now 713 little 631 then 612 more 611 out 552 very 494 down 463 only 461 here 446 good 444 well 442 there 433 long 428 old 391 away 383 much 356 other 347 back 340 as 327 again 320 great 306 off 305 just 304 first 300 never 295 all 287 too 266 last 252 few 248 once 240 still 237 own 234 on 226 even 219 far 192 right 192 many 188 almost 186 soon 186 enough 174 quite 173 same 168 in 166 white 165 high 161 ever 159 small Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 89 good 50 least 31 most 24 bad 16 high 12 near 10 eld 8 slight 6 late 5 young 5 great 5 fine 5 Most 4 farth 4 dark 3 wild 3 true 3 strange 3 manif 3 low 3 long 3 early 3 big 2 tough 2 tall 2 strong 2 simple 2 real 2 mere 2 keen 2 hard 2 fast 2 faint 2 easy 2 dear 1 wretched 1 wise 1 well--"this 1 vague 1 thick 1 temp 1 superb 1 stout 1 stiff 1 southw 1 soft 1 sober 1 small 1 short 1 serene Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 119 most 12 least 6 well 1 faintest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 _ is _ 6 _ did _ 6 george was silent 5 _ are _ 5 _ do _ 5 george did not 3 _ am _ 3 _ was _ 3 eyes did not 3 george asked eagerly 3 george looked down 3 george was certain 3 girls looked down 3 things are not 3 tommy had not 3 tommy was not 2 _ do n''t 2 _ went down 2 boat was not 2 captain did not 2 captain gave orders 2 captain was not 2 eyes were black 2 george had last 2 george looked away 2 george stood still 2 george went back 2 george went on 2 girls were amazed 2 girls were much 2 girls were not 2 girls were now 2 island is uninhabited 2 jim did not 2 jim is not 2 man did not 2 man was not 2 mary was still 2 olivia did not 2 olivia looked down 2 one does n''t 2 one does not 2 one has ever 2 sea was much 2 tommy did not 2 tommy was so 2 tommy was very 1 _ be right 1 _ be very 1 _ did n''t Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ was not incredible 1 _ were no longer 1 boat was not alongside 1 boys had no difficulty 1 captain was not very 1 eyes are not as 1 eyes were no longer 1 george had no doubt 1 george had no great 1 george had no time 1 girls had no sooner 1 girls have no real 1 hands was not at 1 island is not large 1 jim is not there 1 jim made no further 1 man did not quite 1 man made no reply 1 mary heard no more 1 mary was not conscious 1 men were not prone 1 olivia had no intention 1 olivia made no movement 1 olivia were not afraid 1 sea is no place 1 tommy made no reply 1 tommy was not so A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 43688 author = Allen, Grant title = Wednesday the Tenth, A Tale of the South Pacific date = keywords = Albatross; Chief; English; Jack; Jim; Macglashin; Martin; Nassaline; Tanaki; Wednesday summary = fellows swarming over them like ants; and poor Tom Blake got a bullet beach-comber (or degraded white man who lives like a native) for three half an hour the younger boy was sitting up in Jim''s arms with his eyes is an awful long stretch for two boys to come in an open boat. exclaimed in his very best Kanaka-English, "Boy come round again. "It used to be called ''The Long Reef,''" Martin said, looking up; "but "But we got away from Tanaki eight days ago," the boy declared strongly The business-like way they went to work, Jack and Martin told us, was "At least," he cried, "Chief, you''ll let us say good-by to our boys with axe, like Taranaka kill first missionary that come a Tanaki. Tanaki let go missionary, and boy, and white woman. native, who, Jack whispered to me, was the Chief of Tanaki, came up from id = 21756 author = Ballantyne, R. M. (Robert Michael) title = Philosopher Jack date = keywords = Baldwin; Ben; Black; Buckley; Captain; God; Jack; Mrs; O''Rook; Philosopher; Polly; Samson; Trench; Watty; Wilkins summary = "No, you won''t, Watty," said Ben, laying his hand on his friend''s "Oh, Baldwin," said Polly with a little laugh, "surely you can''t believe "We''re all right, Polly, thank God!" said the captain, earnestly, when "You''ll soon get ashore," said Polly, laying her hand on Ben Trench''s "Yes," said Edwin Jack, coming forward at the moment, "a coral island, "You don''t mean to tell me, Jack," said Baldwin Burr, "that this island "He''s all right if O''Rook is with him," said the captain to Polly, in "And yet he is a good, kind man, father," said Polly. "Polly is right," said Philosopher Jack; "I''d know Watty''s action among "Now, Jack," said Wilkins, "I''m not going to set up for a little "Poor fellow," said Jack, seeing Watty wince a little, "does it hurt open to Polly," said Jack quite warmly, "or Mr Wilkins''s, for the id = 13731 author = Gale, Zona title = Romance Island date = keywords = Aloha; Amory; Antoinette; Cawthorne; Chillingworth; Frothingham; George; Hastings; Holland; Jarvo; King; Little; Malakh; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Olivia; Otho; Prince; Rollo; St.; Tabnit; Yaque; York summary = St. George had sometimes told himself that the man looked like an knew his ways; but Chillingworth''s methods always told, and St. George turned away with all the old glow of his first assignment. "No, Mrs. Hastings," said St. George, "she did not say one word. "Prince Tabnit," said St. George, "I beg you not to jest with us. As Olivia gave St. George her hand he came perilously near telling "Lights!" said St. George, and gave the glass to Amory, his hand St. George''s eyes softened as he looked at the little man. But Jarvo found footing in an instant, and St. George and Amory pressed closely behind him, Rollo and little Akko "Rollo," said St. George, "go and look out the window and see if "Yes," said St. George, "I know a little lad of about five, I should St. George saw Prince Tabnit kneel before Olivia and place a ring id = 40572 author = Mason, Arthur title = The Flying Bo''sun: A Mystery of the Sea date = keywords = Captain; Charlie; God; Hell; Hindoo; Kane; Old; Olsen; Pete; Riley; Suva; Swanson; chapter; come; ship summary = "Never mind about anything," said the Captain, "get the damned old spare With a look of disdain at Old Charlie, he said, "To Hell with breakfast! "Sick, is he?" said the Captain, and pointed to me, saying: "Go forward About nine o''clock the cook came running aft, crying, "Mr. Mate, Swanson is very sick, and the crew think that he is going to die." "I saw Swanson on deck this morning," said the Captain. "To Hell with the cat," said the Captain, "this is no time to stand on "Riley," said I, "come on deck and throw a few buckets of salt water on "Riley," said I, opening the door to the Captain''s room, "I want you and There are instances where the Captain and mates of the old time sailing Before going on deck again, I looked in on the Hindoo in the Captain''s id = 32084 author = Roosevelt, Wyn title = Frontier Boys in the South Seas date = keywords = Berwick; Broome; Captain; Eagle; Jim; Juarez; King; Marjorie; Mr.; Sea; Senor; Storm; Tom summary = Jim Darlington and John Berwick, the latter the once time engineer of "Much obliged to you, captain," said Jim, when they had gone up on deck "The professor with the long name!" cried Jim and Berwick "That''s the professor," whispered Jo to Jim as the man came into the "Glad to know you, Mr. Berwick," said the professor. "That''s only a joke of the professor''s captain," replied Jim. "Why, it looked like that!" exclaimed the professor, taking the box Tom busy down in the engine room with Berwick, and Jim and the professor "Where do you think is a good place to make it?" asked Tom, looking The professor, before replying, looked at Jim inquiringly. "Where are you going to land, Jim," asked Berwick, who had taken the "Do you know of a Captain Beauchamp?" Jim asked. "Now," said the professor, "tell us about Jim." id = 37903 author = Strang, Herbert, Mrs. title = The Girl Crusoes: A Story of the South Seas date = keywords = Barton; Ben; Bess; Captain; Colour; Dan; Elizabeth; Fangati; Maku; Mary; Miss; Mr.; Story; Tommy; Uncle; chapter; day; girl; good; little; look; time summary = dark, handsome sister Elizabeth, whilst Mary, the second girl, drawing "Tommy darling, do try to be a bit sensible," said Elizabeth, with a "Yes," said Tommy; "he helped me down the side last time I saw you off." "Look out for a landing-place," said Elizabeth, as she rowed slowly Tommy was soon asleep, but the elder girls lay awake for a long time, "Mary dear," said Elizabeth, "we must look at the worst side and face "A good idea!" said Tommy, springing up and running to Elizabeth''s "Come, girls, this really won''t do," said Elizabeth briskly. Elizabeth jumped up, carrying the odd-looking paddle, which Tommy said "You first, Tommy," said Elizabeth. "She''s a dear, brave girl," said Mary, "and I shall like the oranges Elizabeth was afraid that Mary''s strength might give way, or that Tommy "Now you," said Tommy, pointing to the girl herself. "Don''t be ridiculous, Tommy," said Elizabeth, feeling it was no time