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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 78518 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 77 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 illustration 3 Thames 3 Oxford 3 London 3 Bridge 2 river 2 old 2 Windsor 2 Richmond 2 Park 2 Mr. 2 Mary 2 Lord 2 King 2 Kew 2 House 2 Henry 2 Hampton 2 England 1 year 1 wood 1 water 1 time 1 spring 1 reply 1 plant 1 nay 1 man 1 like 1 large 1 good 1 flower 1 faithful 1 english 1 day 1 come 1 bird 1 Winterbottom 1 William 1 Westminster 1 Weir 1 Valley 1 University 1 Turnbull 1 Tower 1 Tom 1 Thomas 1 Tagliabue 1 Surrey 1 Streatley Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1111 river 806 water 806 time 699 man 623 day 500 house 457 year 452 place 447 boat 397 side 337 hand 313 part 312 father 311 life 306 way 305 stream 283 bank 278 tree 258 illustration 251 bridge 248 church 238 name 234 head 233 sir 227 building 226 boy 218 one 215 bird 208 work 208 shore 200 mile 199 hour 197 town 197 nothing 196 wood 195 eye 188 morning 187 night 187 mother 186 ship 186 foot 186 fish 182 flower 178 wall 178 garden 175 bed 174 world 171 thing 171 ground 167 people Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1729 _ 921 Tom 780 Thames 556 Mr 506 Jacob 360 London 346 Dominie 338 Bridge 332 Mary 207 Drummond 198 Turnbull 188 St. 186 Oxford 157 Mrs 156 thou 152 House 142 Windsor 139 Lock 139 England 135 Church 134 Henry 129 Stapleton 121 Old 117 Sir 105 Hill 104 Park 103 River 102 Richmond 100 Sarah 95 Mr. 95 Lord 94 Abbey 91 Court 85 Fleming 83 John 82 | 82 Marables 79 King 78 Queen 77 Hampton 74 William 74 Abingdon 73 Weir 70 Kew 70 Duke 69 Westminster 69 I. 69 Hall 66 . 65 James Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5296 i 4112 it 2256 you 2047 he 1432 we 1327 they 1270 me 808 him 694 them 685 she 372 her 359 us 147 himself 134 itself 126 myself 106 themselves 90 one 66 thee 47 herself 46 yourself 25 ourselves 24 mine 15 ''s 13 yours 4 thyself 3 you''ll 3 his 3 hers 2 theirs 2 on''t 2 i''m 2 ''em 1 yourselves 1 you''ve 1 yew 1 this:-- 1 ours 1 have_--you 1 dutchman"--the 1 another-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 15855 be 4584 have 1526 do 1043 say 881 make 810 take 788 go 780 come 772 see 526 know 494 find 488 give 456 look 450 reply 401 think 360 leave 304 call 295 get 292 pass 284 tell 251 lie 248 put 236 keep 234 stand 233 hear 231 remain 229 become 227 appear 223 run 208 bring 203 seem 199 hold 195 feel 189 build 188 use 186 rise 186 follow 183 turn 172 let 170 live 169 fall 164 wish 163 pull 156 walk 154 sit 151 cry 149 show 148 suppose 148 grow 148 continue Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2685 not 1079 so 1078 old 989 up 893 very 880 now 868 more 718 then 633 well 606 little 595 out 585 other 558 down 546 great 545 good 538 as 532 only 501 much 482 first 470 long 469 still 467 most 462 here 455 many 385 never 365 again 340 even 323 last 311 there 311 away 304 too 289 large 282 own 280 few 271 young 268 off 258 just 245 such 243 same 238 almost 231 always 230 early 229 also 223 once 218 soon 209 new 207 far 203 in 202 ever 199 high Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 123 most 113 good 74 least 31 great 30 old 28 large 24 fine 17 early 17 bad 15 high 12 Most 11 near 8 late 6 noble 6 low 6 happy 6 eld 5 odd 4 wide 4 slight 4 poor 4 long 4 heavy 3 warm 3 sweet 3 smart 3 simple 3 narrow 3 keen 3 grand 3 fair 3 deep 3 dark 3 clever 3 bright 2 young 2 topmost 2 strong 2 strange 2 stately 2 sincere 2 short 2 say 2 ripe 2 rich 2 quiet 2 quaint 2 proud 2 pleasant 2 mighty Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 344 most 20 well 18 least 2 speakest 1 near 1 latest 1 gavest 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 _ 4 tom was not 3 _ make use 3 thames is not 2 _ are _ 2 _ know _ 2 _ seeing _ 2 _ think _ 2 _ was _ 2 bank is high 2 bank is most 2 dominie do n''t 2 dominie looked very 2 father came home 2 house was afterwards 2 house was not 2 life goes on 2 men were more 2 river is clear 2 thames are now 2 thames does not 2 thames was not 2 tom had just 2 tom is not 2 tom was silent 2 tom went aft 2 water is almost 1 _ are everywhere 1 _ are thin 1 _ be otherwise 1 _ call _ 1 _ go down 1 _ go off 1 _ had n''t 1 _ had not 1 _ have _ 1 _ have never 1 _ heard _ 1 _ keep _ 1 _ lie _ 1 _ lies _ 1 _ makes people 1 _ see _ 1 _ thinking _ 1 _ thought proper 1 bank has so 1 bank is full 1 bank is not 1 banks are always 1 banks are more Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 bank is not merely 1 boats are not unfrequently 1 boats were not able 1 days has no partiality 1 dominie made no answer 1 dominie made no remarks 1 house is not particularly 1 house was no doubt 1 house was not far 1 jacob has no other 1 river makes no exceptional 1 side are not absolutely 1 thames are no longer 1 thames is not so 1 thames was not so 1 time are not beautiful 1 time made no objection 1 time were not half 1 tom is not only 1 tom is not yet A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 8682 author = Cornish, C. J. (Charles John) title = The Naturalist on the Thames date = keywords = Bridge; Chiswick; England; House; Kew; London; Mr.; Oxford; Park; Richmond; Thames; Valley; bird; day; flower; illustration; large; like; old; plant; river; spring; time; water; wood; year summary = Thames chub, butterflies, eel-traps, fountains and springs, river shells river, what may we not expect in the upper waters of the silver Thames?[1] shells like small ammonites, fresh-water snail shells of all sizes, river the waters, the birds and fish and insects and flowers of the best of run below water, live on dry land, or fly in the air, and many are so Year''s Day. The big fish had wriggled up into the very shallowest water, The return of the birds, and especially of wild fowl, to the London river less than half a mile, on some ornamental water near the river, an even Water-cress growing is an increasing business in the Thames Valley, where or two of shallow water, and the fish at once left the river and crowded Thames to-day, but many more like those of a river in Borneo. id = 21549 author = Marryat, Frederick title = Jacob Faithful date = keywords = Barnaby; Beazeley; CHAPTER; Captain; Dominie; Drummond; Dux; Fleming; God; Jacob; Knapps; Latin; Lord; Marables; Mary; Mrs; Sam; Sarah; Stapleton; Tagliabue; Tom; Turnbull; Winterbottom; come; faithful; good; man; nay; old; reply summary = "This is old Tom, sir," said I to the Dominie, who stared with "No, I never did," said the Dominie, observing old Tom''s eyes directed took the other oar, and the Dominie, shaking hands with old Tom, said, "Well, you''ve guessed right this time," replied old Tom; "we shall lie "My father means _ledger_demain, I suppose," replied young Tom. This repartee from a quarter so little expected sent off the head clerk "Haul up the boat, Jacob, quick," said Tom, as his father went into the "Come, Jacob, a drop will do you good," said old Tom, filling me one of "Well but, father, I don''t like to see Jacob drunk," replied young Tom. "Jacob," said old Tom, "I likes your pride after all, ''cause why, I "Look out for Jacob, Tom," cried the old man, as the head of the "From your mother, Jacob!" said old Tom. id = 40020 author = Mitton, G. E. (Geraldine Edith) title = The Thames date = keywords = Bridge; Hampton; Henry; King; London; Oxford; Thames; Windsor; illustration; river summary = any one of his home rivers could swallow the Thames and never know it, the ranks as high among poets as among kings; in it he speaks of the Thames first is Cliveden, standing high above the woods and facing down the river interesting association it takes high rank among river mansions. beauty of the river scenery is shown by her revisiting the place when she grand old house, Lady Place, also on the site of an abbey. to be the oldest things on the river, though some of the bridges might run From the River Thames you see through my arch up a walk of the the river, hills, woods, and boats, are forming a moving picture in association with the river, by far the noblest name that Thames can boast and wide over the rich, well-watered land, down to the river''s banks with id = 54326 author = Sharpley, R. (Reginald) title = The Thames: A Sketch-Book date = keywords = illustration summary = A SKETCH-BOOK BY LIST OF SKETCHES 1 HENLEY-ON-THAMES (TITLE PAGE) 2 STRAND-ON-THE-GREEN. 3 KEY BRIDGE. 4 FERRY ROAD. 5 KINGSTON-"YE OLDE CURIOSITY SHOPPE". 8 WALTON BRIDGE. 9 BELOW STAINES BRIDGE. 10 WINDSOR CASTLE AND BRIDGE. 13 "YE OLDE BELL" INN. 15 HOUSE-BOATS AT HENLEY. 16 SONNING FROM THE BRIDGE. 21 SHILLINGFORD BRIDGE. 23 ABINGDON BRIDGE. [Illustration: HENLEY-ON-THAMES (TITLE PAGE)] [Illustration: STRAND-ON-THE-GREEN.] [Illustration: KEY BRIDGE.] [Illustration: FERRY ROAD. [Illustration: KINGSTON-"YE OLDE CURIOSITY SHOPPE".] [Illustration: HAMPTON COURT.] [Illustration: SUNBURY.] [Illustration: WALTON BRIDGE.] [Illustration: BELOW STAINES BRIDGE.] [Illustration: WINDSOR CASTLE AND BRIDGE.] [Illustration: IN BRAY VILLAGE.] [Illustration: IN WEST STREET. [Illustration: "YE OLDE BELL" INN. [Illustration: HURLEY. THE OLD BARN AND DOVECOT.] THE OLD BARN AND DOVECOT.] [Illustration: HOUSE-BOATS AT HENLEY.] [Illustration: SONNING FROM THE BRIDGE.] [Illustration: MAPLEDURHAM MILL.] [Illustration: GORING. THE BRIDGE.] THE BRIDGE.] [Illustration: STREATLEY MILL.] [Illustration: WALLINGFORD.] [Illustration: SHILLINGFORD BRIDGE.] [Illustration: DORCHESTER ABBEY. [Illustration: ABINGDON BRIDGE.] [Illustration: AT IFFLEY.] id = 46818 author = Various title = Rivers of Great Britain. The Thames, from Source to Sea. Descriptive, Historical, Pictorial date = keywords = Abbey; Abingdon; Berkshire; Bridge; Castle; Charles; Church; College; Court; Duke; Edward; Elizabeth; England; Ferry; Gravesend; Great; Hall; Hampton; Henley; Henry; Hill; House; Island; James; John; Kew; King; Lock; London; Lord; Mary; Mr.; Old; Oxford; Park; Queen; Richmond; River; Sir; St.; Streatley; Surrey; Thames; Thomas; Tower; University; Weir; Westminster; William; Windsor; english; illustration summary = Oldest Bridge--Old Father Thames--Disused Weir-pools--Bablock Oldest Bridge--Old Father Thames--Disused Weir-pools--Bablock the last half-century, the angling in the River Thames at the present River, from Medley Weir to Folly Bridge--The Houses of the River, from Medley Weir to Folly Bridge--The Houses of the century, there was already, besides the old foundation of St. Frideswide, at that time a house of Austin canons, the great monastic on the Oxford bank an old church with a very long nave and tall tower, Abney House, below the bridge, is one of those places by the river Buildings--Windsor Park--The Long Walk--The Albert Bridge--Datchet Buildings--Windsor Park--The Long Walk--The Albert Bridge--Datchet Thames and the little stream now called the Abbey River, or Bourne. of the River Thames, farewell to all natural beauty; its waters have he had left a little higher up the Thames--houses of quiet old sailors, lived, in a house built out of the stones of old London Bridge.