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. Eric Lease Morgan May 27, 2019 Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 2 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 11764 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 92 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 roman 1 like 1 eye 1 Wit 1 Verses 1 Thy 1 Thou 1 TCP 1 Sun 1 Reader 1 Poet 1 Poems 1 Muse 1 Eyes 1 English 1 Book 1 Bible 1 Author 1 Art Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 52 eye 48 man 47 t 42 verse 33 wit 33 time 28 work 28 text 28 art 27 ▪ 27 author 25 head 24 word 24 sense 23 soul 23 sight 23 other 22 doth 22 brain 21 hand 20 way 20 thy 20 none 20 day 19 self 19 light 19 body 18 friend 16 name 15 place 15 nature 15 l 14 reader 14 poet 14 night 14 life 14 face 13 water 13 thing 13 image 12 line 11 letter 11 judgement 11 history 11 death 11 character 11 book 10 world 10 spirit 10 foot Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 41 Thy 36 thou 35 Thou 31 Book 29 W. 29 Poems 26 Poet 25 Wit 25 J. 24 Muse 24 Mr. 24 English 23 C. 18 T. 16 TCP 14 Verse 14 Parnassus 13 Vpon 13 God 12 Sun 12 Sir 12 M. 11 le 11 c. 11 New 11 Muses 11 Minister 11 King 11 Authour 10 Oxon 10 London 10 John 10 F. 10 A. 9 e''re 9 Thee 9 Text 9 Son 9 Poets 9 Poetry 9 Physick 9 Lilly 9 Homer 8 Nature 8 N. 8 Love 8 Gods 8 Divine 8 Charles 8 Black Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 218 i 170 he 128 it 113 they 81 you 75 him 66 we 61 them 54 me 41 she 21 us 20 himself 19 thee 8 themselves 8 her 6 ''s 2 one 2 mine 1 yours 1 ye 1 tollit 1 theirs 1 l 1 '' Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 570 be 132 do 108 have 88 make 57 see 39 let 33 come 31 say 30 know 29 write 28 take 27 give 25 fall 23 read 23 go 21 think 18 lie 16 understand 16 put 16 bring 15 find 14 tell 14 cry 13 speak 12 rot 12 look 12 keep 12 appear 11 steal 11 praise 11 live 11 leave 11 call 10 wear 10 shew 10 hide 10 cast 9 stand 9 send 9 print 9 le 9 hear 9 finde 9 add 8 turn 8 show 8 publish 8 mean 8 learn 8 hold Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 170 not 97 so 94 then 53 now 46 such 42 up 40 more 39 out 38 other 35 good 31 roman 31 non 31 great 31 - 30 much 29 well 29 too 28 most 28 here 28 first 25 own 24 dark 24 as 22 onely 21 thus 20 long 19 yet 19 same 18 never 17 sure 17 off 17 ever 16 new 15 true 15 plain 15 many 15 also 14 last 14 hence 14 english 13 there 13 high 13 far 13 even 13 clear 12 together 12 still 12 several 12 away 11 very Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 12 good 8 most 3 sad 2 swift 2 least 2 high 2 great 2 easy 2 dr 2 choice 1 writ 1 woolsie 1 weak 1 tast 1 seek 1 quick 1 pure 1 proud 1 plain 1 nimble 1 mean 1 low 1 long 1 holy 1 fine 1 deep 1 dear 1 dark 1 costly 1 clear 1 chief 1 br 1 Most 1 Least Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 20 most 1 well 1 least Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 www.tei-c.org 1 eebo.chadwyck.com Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.tei-c.org 1 http://eebo.chadwyck.com Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 t is so 3 t is true 2 t is not 2 text is available 1 book is forth 1 english saw inver''st 1 eyes are lin''d 1 eyes are pregnant 1 eyes tell tales 1 head is bow''d 1 head is letter''d 1 head were heary 1 man did twist 1 men are difficult 1 men do hares 1 men go softly 1 muse is not 1 muse puts on 1 poems are defective 1 poet makes as 1 sight is not 1 soul is fit 1 soul is onely 1 t is dark 1 t is inspir''d 1 t is no 1 t is plain 1 t is thy 1 text has not 1 text was proofread 1 verse is somewhat 1 wit is dark 1 wits are now 1 works are eligible Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 t is no wonder 1 sight is not so 1 t is no great 1 t is no matter 1 t is not so A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = A84621 author = Flatman, Thomas, 1637-1688. title = Naps upon Parnassus. A sleepy muse nipt and pincht, though not awakened such voluntary and jovial copies of verses, as were lately receiv''d from some of the wits of the universities, in a frolick, dedicated to Gondibert''s mistress by Captain Jones and others. Whereunto is added from demonstration of the authors prosaick excellency''s, his epistle to one of the universities, with the answer; together with two satyrical characters of his own, of a temporizer, and an antiquary, with marginal notes by a friend to the reader. Vide Jones his legend, drink sack and gunpowder, and so fall to''t. date = 1658.0 keywords = Art; Author; Book; English; Eyes; Muse; Poems; Poet; Reader; Sun; Thou; Thy; Verses; Wit; eye; like; roman summary = A sleepy muse nipt and pincht, though not awakened such voluntary and jovial copies of verses, as were lately receiv''d from some of the wits of the universities, in a frolick, dedicated to Gondibert''s mistress by Captain Jones and others. A sleepy muse nipt and pincht, though not awakened such voluntary and jovial copies of verses, as were lately receiv''d from some of the wits of the universities, in a frolick, dedicated to Gondibert''s mistress by Captain Jones and others. Whereunto is added from demonstration of the authors prosaick excellency''s, his epistle to one of the universities, with the answer; together with two satyrical characters of his own, of a temporizer, and an antiquary, with marginal notes by a friend to the reader. Whereunto is added from demonstration of the authors prosaick excellency''s, his epistle to one of the universities, with the answer; together with two satyrical characters of his own, of a temporizer, and an antiquary, with marginal notes by a friend to the reader. id = A94018 author = Vincent, William, 1631 or 2-1678. title = Strange news from Stafford-shire; or, a dreadful example of divine justice Shown upon a young-man in that county, who having stolen a Bible, and being taxed therewith, fell to imprecating Gods judgements upon himself, wishing that his hands might rot off, and that he might rot alive if he touched it; which heavy judgement in a short time fell upon him, his hands and his arms rotting away, and his leggs from his body, he being not sick, yet appearing to all that see him the saddest spectacle that ever eyes beheld. This may warn others from wishing for judgements to fall upon them, when they know themselves guilty. This relation was given and attested by Mr. Vincent, Minister of Bednal, who discoursed with this miserable young-man, tune of, My bleeding heart, &c. date = nan keywords = Bible; TCP summary = Strange news from Stafford-shire; or, a dreadful example of divine justice Shown upon a young-man in that county, who having stolen a Bible, and being taxed therewith, fell to imprecating Gods judgements upon himself, wishing that his hands might rot off, and that he might rot alive if he touched it; which heavy judgement in a short time fell upon him, his hands and his arms rotting away, and his leggs from his body, he being not sick, yet appearing to all that see him the saddest spectacle that ever eyes beheld. Strange news from Stafford-shire; or, a dreadful example of divine justice Shown upon a young-man in that county, who having stolen a Bible, and being taxed therewith, fell to imprecating Gods judgements upon himself, wishing that his hands might rot off, and that he might rot alive if he touched it; which heavy judgement in a short time fell upon him, his hands and his arms rotting away, and his leggs from his body, he being not sick, yet appearing to all that see him the saddest spectacle that ever eyes beheld.