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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 10 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 11647 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 77 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 french 5 Wellington 5 Sir 5 Napoleon 4 Waterloo 4 Mr. 4 Major 4 General 4 English 4 England 4 Duke 4 Colonel 4 Captain 4 Brussels 3 british 3 Quatre 3 Mrs. 3 Lord 3 Guard 3 God 3 French 3 Bras 2 time 2 man 2 day 2 William 2 Prussians 2 Miss 2 Ligny 2 Lieutenant 2 Lady 2 Joseph 2 John 2 Hall 2 France 2 Emperor 2 Corps 1 spanish 1 soldier 1 prussian 1 order 1 history 1 good 1 enemy 1 come 1 chapter 1 Zébédé 1 Yeovil 1 Wylie 1 Wood Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 3059 man 2289 time 1952 day 1332 road 1120 place 1114 troop 1110 night 1067 order 1035 way 1023 hand 1001 officer 966 house 945 line 882 fire 869 moment 868 position 846 army 841 woman 832 morning 828 side 819 battle 815 soldier 811 part 807 regiment 765 friend 756 room 751 front 749 hour 748 enemy 747 right 736 lady 722 head 714 attack 705 force 700 nothing 695 horse 644 life 635 year 633 people 631 field 606 gun 600 rear 592 arm 589 one 584 point 579 ground 575 eye 563 left 553 face 544 retreat Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 5264 _ 1318 Mr. 1207 French 1192 Miss 1129 Corps 1059 Mrs. 1043 Crawley 1037 General 1016 Brigade 969 Cavalry 947 Sir 876 Major 789 Colonel 754 Captain 707 Army 705 George 637 Lieutenant 635 Amelia 625 Osborne 605 Emperor 603 Napoleon 571 Guard 565 Duke 546 Prussians 540 Rawdon 530 Ralph 530 Dobbin 527 Wellington 506 Rebecca 503 Lord 499 Enemy 487 w. 479 Regiment 473 Waterloo 471 Pitt 456 Battalion 455 Infantry 446 Lady 441 Brussels 435 Sedley 434 Line 429 Division 419 Becky 414 Jos 375 Quatre 368 British 353 NAPOLEON 350 Bras 348 Marteau 348 Allied Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 11351 he 11268 i 10127 it 5812 we 5484 you 5287 they 4694 she 4306 him 3267 them 2525 me 2114 her 1861 us 987 himself 419 themselves 394 myself 338 herself 239 itself 169 ourselves 130 yourself 122 one 45 mine 42 ''em 39 yours 36 ours 29 theirs 21 hers 13 his 12 ''s 8 thee 6 yourselves 6 je 2 you''re 2 em 2 ay 1 suspense:-- 1 perish.--napoleon 1 on''t 1 it:-- 1 imprecations;--by 1 i''m 1 horses-- 1 honour;--all 1 himself:-- 1 he''d 1 he!--not 1 gad 1 au 1 add--"ils Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 40331 be 17785 have 4441 do 4179 say 2835 go 2816 see 2716 come 2613 take 2587 make 1747 think 1652 know 1636 give 1477 get 1348 find 1260 look 1222 leave 1048 tell 925 hear 924 fall 852 pass 814 follow 774 send 755 bring 738 keep 708 stand 697 ask 665 begin 625 receive 623 turn 623 seem 622 advance 620 put 589 form 587 lie 584 call 571 remain 565 continue 563 reach 563 become 557 move 533 carry 532 hold 507 feel 505 arrive 494 lead 494 break 491 speak 488 drive 487 meet 472 return Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 7362 not 2907 so 2668 up 2275 very 2031 great 1979 little 1928 more 1750 now 1724 out 1647 good 1645 then 1595 old 1543 as 1518 other 1506 well 1384 only 1308 down 1269 most 1262 much 1199 first 1149 back 1090 never 1068 again 1065 long 1053 french 1051 young 1021 own 995 off 976 there 941 still 941 here 913 too 904 away 877 many 856 last 828 even 774 soon 742 same 742 just 726 however 712 on 702 about 693 such 677 poor 648 also 647 once 647 few 599 in 598 quite 590 whole Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 361 good 299 least 168 great 166 most 70 near 64 high 50 bad 45 slight 44 fine 30 small 28 dear 23 strong 20 late 16 eld 15 early 15 deep 13 old 13 bright 13 Most 10 young 10 wild 10 large 10 bitter 9 noble 9 manif 9 full 9 brave 8 hot 8 handsome 7 short 6 low 6 long 6 heavy 6 gay 6 furth 6 faint 6 close 6 clever 5 simple 5 poor 5 pleasant 5 new 5 grand 5 able 4 weak 4 warm 4 sweet 4 smart 4 rich 4 pure Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1103 most 52 well 35 least 3 near 3 hard 1 richest 1 quick 1 long 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 cavalry did not 5 french did not 5 place was not 4 _ see _ 4 french had not 4 man was not 4 men were not 3 army was not 3 crawley had not 3 crawley was now 3 fire was now 3 man did not 3 man is not 3 position taken up 2 _ falling asleep 2 _ get on 2 _ kept up 2 _ taken prisoner 2 _ was _ 2 _ was also 2 army came up 2 army coming up 2 army was only 2 army was so 2 brigade was still 2 brigade was thus 2 cavalry coming on 2 cavalry was now 2 corps did not 2 corps took up 2 corps was also 2 corps was now 2 crawley did not 2 crawley had always 2 crawley is not 2 crawley was always 2 crawley was quite 2 day is sunday 2 day passed away 2 day was over 2 fire was not 2 fire was principally 2 french had also 2 french had only 2 french were now 2 hand went up 2 hands went up 2 line was not 2 man coming up 2 man had not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ had no doubt 1 armies were not ill 1 army had not yet 1 army made no demonstration 1 brigade was no longer 1 brigade was not immediately 1 crawley had not long 1 crawley is not very 1 crawley was no longer 1 crawley were not caricatures 1 day had no affection 1 fire was not altogether 1 french had no means 1 general made no reply 1 houses were not only 1 man is not fed 1 man was not at 1 men are not palisades 1 men were not so 1 place was not long 1 position was not nearly 1 road did not precisely 1 road was not quite 1 time seen no fighting A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 32332 author = Belloc, Hilaire title = Waterloo date = keywords = Bras; Corps; Erlon; Ligny; Napoleon; Ney; Quatre; Waterloo; Wellington; french; prussian summary = Napoleon''s advancing army X Y Z, marching on Thursday, June 15th, strikes concentrates his main body in order to follow up Wellington''s western half Napoleon''s subordinates, Erlon, with the First French Army Corps, received at Ligny, the Prussian army escaped, still formed as a fighting force, and road than Napoleon had expected, and a far larger body of Prussians in Grouchy, Quatre Bras from Ligny, the left half of Napoleon''s divided army of Napoleon himself, to destroy the three Prussian Army Corps altogether. that one Prussian corps; and he had sent so large a force, under Ney, up of that Second Army Corps set out up the great road to cover the four or this Second Army Corps were ready to attack the position at Quatre Bras, When Erlon had almost reached Napoleon he turned his army corps right mass of Napoleon''s army, which would, after the defeat of the Prussians at id = 20515 author = Brady, Cyrus Townsend title = The Eagle of the Empire: A Story of Waterloo date = keywords = Blücher; Countess; Eagle; Emperor; English; Englishman; France; God; Guard; King; Laure; Lestoype; Marquis; Marteau; Monsieur; Napoleon; Russians; Sire; Yeovil; french summary = "May my life be forfeit, _Monsieur le Duc_," said the young soldier "Go on," said the Emperor, as the young man paused. "Sire," said Berthier in a low voice, turning to Napoleon, standing "Stop," said the Emperor, as the soldier turned to the door. "Now, mademoiselle," said the young man, advancing into the room, "I "My friend," said the young Countess gently, laying her hand on his arm. young sir," said the second Russian officer when he could be heard. "Monsieur is a very brave man," said Marteau smiling. "Monsieur," said Napoleon severely, "you are a young officer, although "I am ordered to report to you, sir," said a young man, coming into the "Mademoiselle," said Marteau, facing the Countess as the officer turned "Be advised," said the old soldier, laying his hand upon the arm of the "It takes a d''Aumenier to understand a Marteau," said the young man id = 31517 author = De Lancey, Magdalene, Lady title = A Week at Waterloo in 1815 Lady De Lancey''s Narrative: Being an Account of How She Nursed Her Husband, Colonel Sir William Howe De Lancey, Quartermaster-General of the Army, Mortally Wounded in the Great Battle date = keywords = Brussels; Captain; Colonel; Duke; General; Lady; Lancey; Sir; Waterloo; Wellington; William summary = COLONEL SIR WILLIAM HOWE DE LANCEY, _c._ 1813 " 38 father of Sir William De Lancey, was born in New York City about 1740; yielded.[13] Six weeks before the battle of Waterloo, Sir William day of the battle[15] Sir William was knocked from his horse by a Waterloo campaigns," edited by Major-General Sir Edward Sabine, R.A. On the 29th June Sir Augustus writes to Lady Frazer from Mons: "I Major-General Sir William Ponsonby, followed by a second _P.S._ [Illustration: COLONEL SIR WILLIAM HOWE DE LANCEY (_c._ 1813).] About two, Sir William went again to the Duke, and he was sleeping The day I went to Waterloo, Sir William told me the Duke(30) had The night I went, Sir William desired me to take some rest, for I Sir William said he wished to try what Dr Hume was speaking of, and I At that time Sir William De Lancey held an id = 52991 author = Eaton, Charlotte A. (Charlotte Anne) title = Waterloo Days: The narrative of an Englishwoman resident at Brussels in June 1815 date = keywords = Antwerp; Belgians; Belgic; Brussels; Buonaparte; Duke; England; English; Footnote; French; Major; Mr.; Napoleon; Prussians; Sir; Waterloo; Wellington; Wylie; british summary = of morning, we saw the Place Royale filled with armed men, and with could take place to-day, our anxiety for news, both of the French the French had won the battle, and that our army was retreating in the victory, that the remains of the French army were in full retreat, and field of battle, covered with thousands of the dead, the wounded, and streets we met numbers of poor wounded British officers, weak, pale, with wounded British officers; and how many, like our old friend Major been the consequences if the French and British armies had happened to dreadful news that the battle was lost, and the French advancing! morning after the battle, the house was surrounded with the wounded and that no other army than the British could have won the battles of [Footnote 20: The road from Brussels to the field of battle was not id = 31289 author = Erckmann-Chatrian title = Waterloo: A sequel to The Conscript of 1813 date = keywords = Aunt; Buche; Catherine; Emperor; English; Father; France; God; Goulden; Grédel; Guard; Joseph; Ligny; Louis; Mr.; Prussians; Zébédé summary = Emperor in such a way that Father Goulden, rising suddenly, said to him: said: "Good-morning, Aunt Grédel; Catherine is in town, she is coming "Listen, Joseph," said she, as she went toward the square, "Father "You did right," I said, "I love Father Goulden like my father, and you with his great red face, his beautiful uniform with his cross of St. Louis, and the commandant with his three-cornered hat under his arm, and Father Goulden, with his great head bent down as if thinking, said "Come," said she, "to the health of Mr. Goulden and Father Zébédé. We went home in silence, Father Goulden was lost in thought, when Aunt "And what do the other soldiers think of all this?" said Father Goulden. afterward, Father Goulden came in and we sat down to our work and said A great number of the old soldiers, on hearing these words, turned away id = 14313 author = Henty, G. A. (George Alfred) title = One of the 28th: A Tale of Waterloo date = keywords = Captain; Conway; Denis; Desmond; Hall; Herbert; Jacques; Mabel; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Napoleon; O''Connor; Penfold; Ralph; Tallboys; Withers; british; french summary = "I have written to ask Ralph Conway to come and stay for a time with "He is not an old gentleman, Ralph," Mrs. Conway said almost angrily. "You have just come at the right moment, Mabel," Mr. Penfold said as time all taken their places by the guns, and Ralph and the other boys "You don''t mean to say that he is coming all that way?" Ralph said in perhaps, I shall persuade Mrs. Conway to come up with Ralph to town "I shall bear it in time, Ralph," his mother said, trying to smile "I don''t think he will turn out a bad sort of fellow," Ralph said. "I think it is a nice change," Ralph said, "and shall be very glad to "Well," Ralph said, "just go a little way to the right and left, and "I shall come over and see you O''Connor," Ralph said, "as soon as I id = 29263 author = Lawrence, William title = The Autobiography of Sergeant William Lawrence A Hero of the Peninsular and Waterloo Campaigns date = keywords = Badajoz; CHAPTER; England; French; Lawrence; Lord; Portuguese; Sir; Spaniards; Wellington; day; enemy; man; spanish; time summary = After staying in the town for the time stated, a thousand of us were We remained here about a month this time, when General Whitelock came those men who were in action at the time he received his wound, but having taken the colonel''s command, he did so, and saw me placed on man from the time I was put on till I came off myself in the morning. Lord Wellington then ordered the town to be attacked on the night of to my wounds, which kept me in camp at the time the town was taken; that time and place, and we found that night''s meal as good a one as one day a French officer was seen coming up the mountain, having laid I then went on in search of my comrades, who had by this time left the took place than did there, for we were on the move the whole time, id = 58268 author = Siborne, William title = The Waterloo Campaign, 1815 date = keywords = Advanced; Allied; Anglo; Army; Artillery; BLÜCHER; Battalion; Battery; Bras; Brigade; British; Cavalry; Charleroi; Colonel; Column; Corps; Division; Duke; Enemy; Flank; Foot; Fourth; French; GROUCHY; General; Guard; Horse; Hussars; Infantry; Landwehr; Left; Lieutenant; Light; Line; Major; NAPOLEON; Prince; Prussian; Quatre; Regiment; Reserve; Second; WELLINGTON; Wavre; Wood; order summary = Advance of ROUSSEL''s Cavalry Brigade by the French left of Attack by a Column of French Heavy Cavalry upon the Anglo-Allied The Cavalry of the Anglo-Allied Army, commanded by Lieutenant General Lieutenant General Count PAJOL''s Corps of Light Cavalry formed the The right Column of the French Army, commanded by Count GÉRARD, having In the mean time, the main body of the French Army advanced in great Cavalry Regiments advancing against the Right Wing of the Brigade; Enemy had attacked Colonel MARWITZ'' Cavalry Brigade, on his right, and Division of his Light Cavalry Corps, under Lieutenant General Baron The Second general Line of the French Army was formed in the following body of the French Brigade having formed two Columns of Attack, which Brigades against the French Cavalry and Infantry which attacked the attack with the two Prussian Cavalry Brigades of the Third Corps, which Advanced Guard of the Prussian _Corps d''Armée_ (the Third Brigade), id = 599 author = Thackeray, William Makepeace title = Vanity Fair date = keywords = Amelia; Baronet; Becky; Briggs; Brussels; Bullock; Bute; Captain; City; Colonel; Crawley; Dobbin; Emmy; England; Fair; Gaunt; General; George; God; Hall; House; James; Jane; John; Jos; Joseph; Lady; London; Lord; Madame; Major; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; O''Dowd; Osborne; Pinkerton; Pitt; Queen; Rawdon; Rebecca; Russell; Sedley; Sharp; Sir; Southdown; Square; Steyne; Street; Vanity; William; chapter; come; french; good summary = away, Becky," said Miss Jemima, pulling the young woman away in great the green eyes looked up to Heaven and filled with tears; and Mrs. Sedley could not but own that her daughter''s friend had a charming kind "She shall go off to-morrow, the little artful creature," said Mrs. Sedley, with great energy. "Let us have some music, Miss Sedley--Amelia," said George, who felt at "You may be sure it''s Sir Pitt Crawley, young woman," said Mrs. Tinker, This worthy old lady took a fancy to Rawdon Crawley when a boy, sent liked to make her a little present," Osborne said to his friend in but she remembered all Miss Crawley had said; the old lady''s avowed "Suppose the old lady doesn''t come to," Rawdon said to his little wife, "And what do you think, my dear?" Miss Crawley said to the young lady, id = 62571 author = nan title = Wellington''s Men: Some Soldier Autobiographies date = keywords = Anton; Bras; Brussels; Captain; Colonel; Craufurd; Duke; England; English; Frenchman; General; Harris; Hill; John; Kincaid; Lieutenant; Lord; Major; Mercer; Mrs.; Napoleon; Peninsula; Quatre; Rifles; Rodrigo; Sir; St.; Toulouse; Trans; Waterloo; Wellington; british; day; french; history; man; soldier; time summary = to man four guns; and these, as the great battle came to its end, fell, that the Duke''s long nose on a battle-field was worth 10,000 men. Duke thereupon issued a general order, desiring that "British officers infantry, marching with the order and precision of a field-day, in officer and some men from each regiment to parade there next morning following night they left the town altogether, and we took possession fields were strewed with the bodies of men, horses, torn clothing, artillery--was expended, and no men that day saw fiercer fighting than officer, on a little black horse, who went off to the rear like a in slow time, when each company came in line with the body the word enemy from the fire of our troops; and from this place our men had the Place d''Armes by the river, I saw a French general officer