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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 9 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 6779 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 82 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 CHAPTER 2 Mr. 2 King 2 Indians 2 Hans 1 young 1 yager 1 tree 1 snow 1 smain 1 sea 1 roof 1 plain 1 northern 1 man 1 long 1 log 1 like 1 illustration 1 ice 1 hunter 1 house 1 end 1 door 1 day 1 cabin 1 bird 1 animal 1 american 1 Woongas 1 Wolstaston 1 Wolf 1 Winnipeg 1 Willem 1 Wahimas 1 Wabinosh 1 Wabigoon 1 Wabi 1 Vasco 1 Van 1 Tom 1 Tarkowski 1 Swartboy 1 Sudânese 1 Stas 1 St. 1 South 1 Snowball 1 Saba 1 Roderick Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1232 time 853 day 710 water 706 tree 700 fig 678 eye 661 foot 643 man 625 hand 623 side 611 head 588 night 586 bird 549 camp 543 animal 536 place 525 boy 512 moment 473 way 473 one 466 log 465 snow 450 end 446 rock 444 fire 426 hunter 390 house 367 ground 354 child 326 horse 324 part 322 mile 315 distance 312 country 302 mountain 299 hour 293 river 288 thing 288 life 287 rifle 282 other 279 wood 277 body 274 face 271 people 269 ice 267 kind 265 sea 261 dog 253 wind Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3369 _ 776 Stas 527 Nell 488 Rod 388 Kali 380 Wabi 352 Mukoki 312 Guy 284 Fig 238 Lucien 231 Mr. 231 Hans 199 Hendrik 196 Basil 188 Norman 182 Francois 179 Hartly 177 Idris 167 Willem 167 Groot 166 Indians 155 Mahdi 150 King 146 CHAPTER 135 Gebhr 129 Swartboy 128 Saba 128 Harwood 126 Africa 125 Indian 116 America 111 George 107 Chamis 104 Aggie 99 God 97 Klaas 94 Jan 93 Congo 90 Mzimu 87 Rawlinson 82 River 76 Mea 73 Marengo 73 Leda 73 Bay 73 A 72 North 70 Reeves 68 Wahimas 68 Minnetaki Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6115 he 5990 it 4185 they 3129 i 2570 them 1931 you 1901 him 1488 we 919 she 716 me 592 her 560 us 514 himself 258 themselves 179 itself 117 one 86 myself 57 herself 37 yourself 33 ourselves 13 mine 11 yours 9 theirs 7 his 6 thee 6 ours 4 em 4 ''s 4 ''em 3 ya 2 ay 1 you,-- 1 ye 1 wise,--you 1 oneself 1 hers 1 hens,--they 1 exclaiming-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 18865 be 6595 have 2079 do 1522 see 1383 make 1124 say 1006 come 965 know 892 go 848 take 744 find 584 begin 570 give 555 think 539 look 533 fall 531 get 525 become 505 leave 478 run 454 lie 449 hear 418 stand 405 pass 401 tell 400 show 385 follow 383 reach 378 appear 371 turn 351 seem 338 keep 330 cover 328 build 306 use 304 remain 301 hold 297 carry 293 call 291 kill 289 bring 283 rise 283 return 280 grow 274 ask 252 shoot 243 set 240 want 239 place 234 feel Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3984 not 1506 so 1145 more 1097 now 1029 little 1023 up 1021 then 983 only 975 other 934 great 866 long 842 very 735 as 676 out 672 well 629 even 594 first 536 down 526 old 523 many 520 again 512 there 505 off 505 good 503 much 489 far 478 still 469 also 456 white 455 away 453 same 445 small 439 large 437 few 431 young 422 however 416 once 389 soon 387 such 375 here 361 most 351 back 347 too 322 almost 308 never 303 about 293 whole 293 just 283 enough 280 last Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 111 least 103 good 76 most 53 great 40 large 33 slight 28 near 22 small 17 Most 12 young 12 high 11 bad 10 swift 9 long 8 simple 8 eld 7 strong 7 old 7 fine 7 early 7 deep 6 wide 6 easy 6 big 5 warm 5 short 5 low 4 late 4 farth 4 fair 3 wild 3 tall 3 shy 3 poor 3 odd 3 noble 3 lovely 3 light 3 l 3 keen 3 happy 3 full 2 wealthy 2 tough 2 straight 2 soft 2 safe 2 rare 2 healthy 2 hard Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 285 most 27 least 16 well 1 sharpest 1 near 1 faintest 1 crest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/63205/63205-h/63205-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/63205/63205-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/boystripacrosspl00presrich 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 ccx074@pglaf.org Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 22 stas did not 11 _ was _ 5 _ are _ 4 _ is _ 4 nell did not 3 _ did _ 3 _ see frontispiece 3 birds were already 3 boy did not 3 day was clear 3 hunters were now 3 nights were so 3 rod had never 2 _ appeared _ 2 _ do _ 2 _ had _ 2 _ is far 2 _ thought _ 2 animals are more 2 birds were not 2 day was cloudless 2 day was far 2 eyes became accustomed 2 eyes were constantly 2 eyes were instantly 2 eyes were wide 2 head does not 2 hunter was not 2 hunters did not 2 hunters were hungry 2 men did not 2 men do not 2 nell fell asleep 2 nell was not 2 night came on 2 night did not 2 night was far 2 one shown here 2 rod was not 2 rod was sure 2 sides were nearly 2 snow came down 2 stas became alarmed 2 stas was able 2 stas was glad 2 stas was not 2 trees were not 1 _ are too 1 _ be _ 1 _ be something Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ does not _ 1 _ was no better 1 animals was no longer 1 animals were not very 1 bird was no longer 1 birds do not _ 1 birds were not so 1 birds were not there 1 boy did not yet 1 boys do not often 1 boys gave no heed 1 day is not distant 1 eye had no object 1 eyes are no bigger 1 eyes reached not even 1 eyes were no larger 1 fire is not properly 1 fire was not so 1 foot is no match 1 hands are not clean 1 head does not even 1 hunter was not only 1 hunter was not superstitious 1 hunters had not yet 1 man had not trod 1 nell did not at 1 nell had no uncertainty 1 nell had not indeed 1 nell was not at 1 rod had not yet 1 snow was not wabi 1 stas did not yet 1 stas was not ashamed 1 tree have no fear 1 tree was no longer 1 trees are not plenty 1 water has no smell 1 water was not very 1 way is not always A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 28255 author = Beard, Daniel Carter title = Shelters, Shacks and Shanties date = keywords = Fig; Figs; New; american; cabin; door; end; house; illustration; log; roof summary = shelter (Fig. 13), or lay a number of poles as shown in the left-hand by building his tree-house on the _B_ sills (Fig. 94) and making them house and Fig. 97 shows a thatch-roofed cottage built among the top built of small logs on a platform, as shown by Fig. 111, and the bottom of log and the other end on the ground, as shown in Fig. 131, and then lads may use small poles in place of logs with which to build the camp and A one-room log cabin with double bunks at one end makes a good camp (Fig. 185) with room for two or four sleepers according to the width of the bunk your cabin as you would a log house, notching only the small ends of the shown above (_G_, Fig. 236); but when the ends of the side logs of the id = 20287 author = Carr, E. Donald (Edmund Donald) title = A Night in the Snow or, A Struggle for Life date = keywords = Mynd; Ratlinghope; Wolstaston; snow summary = In publishing the following account of "A Night in the Snow," which has different times been lost in the snow, scarcely any one has passed my wanderings on the Long Mynd in the snow during that night and the Many people have lost their lives among these hills at different times, great care to the bottom of the ravine, intending if possible to walk was lost among the hills, should have to spend the night there, and that, The depth of the snow made walking a very exhausting effort. Having climbed the hill, I walked along its crest for some distance, till Doubtless the head of a man protruding from a deep snow drift, crowned in the snow on the hill all night. the hill on the Sunday night to the limit of the enclosed ground, and to have my feet and hands well rubbed with snow. id = 12170 author = Curwood, James Oliver title = The Wolf Hunters: A Tale of Adventure in the Wilderness date = keywords = House; Indian; Minnetaki; Mukoki; Muky; Post; Rod; Roderick; Wabi; Wabigoon; Wabinosh; Wolf; Woongas summary = Wabi and Rod, together with a score of Indians and hunters, spent days Rod, who had opened his eyes, smiled faintly and Wabi gave a half-shout Wabi was under the other two Indians when Rod came to his the time he reached their old camp the trail left by Rod and Mukoki was Hudson Bay. Wabi came up and placed his hand on Rod''s shoulder. "We can''t travel without snow-shoes now," explained Wabi to Rod, "and "Then you believe we are far enough away from the Woongas?" asked Rod. Mukoki grunted. snow was packed by his own weight, so that when Wabi and Rod came to When Rod looked at Wabi he saw that the Indian boy''s eyes were wide and Wabi gave Rod a suggestive look as the old Indian bent over the stove. For a few moments Rod and Mukoki stared at the young Indian in blank id = 63566 author = Grant, James title = Jack Manly; His Adventures by Sea and Land date = keywords = Amoo; Baylis; Benin; Black; CHAPTER; Cape; Captain; Cuffy; Greenland; Hans; Hartly; Jack; John; King; Leda; Paul; Peterkin; Reeves; Snowball; St.; Tom; Vasco; day; ice; like; long; man; sea summary = "Captain Hartly''s friend, sir?" said the mate, touching his hat, and sails fell, their head canvas filled, and they broke into blue water; which shone white and drearily, as the sun came up from the blue sea. old and white-haired man; and one night, accompanied by three men snow-clad shore for seals, and the open sea for ice-floes. "And now, my lads, away for the brig," said Captain Hartly, as we half a mile distant lay the island of floating ice we had escaped sun shining on a sea covered by white ice, bewildered the vision of One day, at noon, I saw Hartly form a piece of pure fresh-water ice We left the brig about two o''clock, P.M. On this day the wind was blowing hard, the white scud was flying fast the eyrie of myriads of white sea-gulls and birds like the great "That little black pamphlet came from a wrecked ship," said Hartly, id = 63205 author = Preston, Laura title = A Boy''s Trip Across the Plains date = keywords = Aggie; George; Graham; Gus; Guy; Harwood; Indians; Loring; Mr.; Mrs. summary = Guy said nothing to the rude boy, but told Mrs. Harwood what he had "That I wouldn''t," said Guy, looking pityingly upon the frail little "You look like an energetic little fellow," said Mr. Harwood to Guy, "Guy," said Mrs. Harwood, who had just come from the wagon, with some George walked sullenly away, and Mr. Harwood, Aggie and Guy turned contentedly to her mother''s wagon, while Guy followed Gus and George to the Indians, Guy went to Mrs. Harwood''s wagon to assure her there was ferocity, which Guy said the little prairie dogs related. "Guy, my boy, you had better go into our wagon," said Mr. Harwood, as Guy was greatly troubled to find that little Aggie and his mother were Little Aggie often thought of these words of Guy in the days that "We have been talking about you, Guy," said Mr. Harwood. id = 23129 author = Reid, Mayne title = The Young Voyageurs: Boy Hunters in the North date = keywords = America; Arctic; Barren; Basil; Bay; CHAPTER; Francois; Grounds; Hudson; Indians; Lake; Lucien; Marengo; Norman; North; Red; River; Winnipeg; northern; tree summary = The Boy Hunters--Basil, Lucien, Francois--became orphans. As Francois spoke he pointed down-stream to a great white bird that was The canoe soon reached the bank; and Francois, accompanied by Basil and "How large a tree would it require?" asked Norman, who knew but little All three--Basil, Lucien, and Francois--looked to their cousin for an "And I, too, observed a dark foliage," said Lucien, "which looked like Basil and Norman ran to the canoe, and in a few minutes the little craft While Lucien was framing the skin, Basil and Norman occupied themselves And Lucien held up a vessel somewhat like a water-pail, which the day islands, looked to our travellers more like a continuation of lakes than As they came closer, first Lucien, and then Basil and Norman, saw As Basil looked over the hill, he espied a small group of animals near saw; but Basil, far more than Lucien--for the latter already knew the id = 34668 author = Reid, Mayne title = The Young Yagers: A Narrative of Hunting Adventures in Southern Africa date = keywords = Africa; Arend; Bushman; CHAPTER; Congo; Groot; Hans; Hendrik; Jan; Kaffir; Klaas; South; Swartboy; Van; Willem; animal; bird; hunter; plain; yager; young summary = rough-looking _buck-dogs_, might be seen in the camp--the oxen tied to immediate attack, Groot Willem and Hendrik mounted their horses, rode Now the hunters, Hendrik and Groot Willem, would have gone out to look Long time the lioness kept her close vigil, scarce moving her body from Of course Hans knew the three to be ostriches the moment his eye rested way, and may interest full-grown hunters, like Hendrik and Groot Willem, horse in a fair tail-on-end chase; but the bird makes "doubles" in and also the hunters Hendrik and Groot Willem, guessed what kind they Hendrik and Groot Willem knew the animal by the name of "aard-wolf," or Both Hendrik and Groot Willem had seen this bush, but on account While Hendrik and Groot Willem were flaying off the skin, Hans and Arend Should the ostriches allow time for Hendrik and Groot Willem to get to Groot Willem and Hendrik were likely to become great id = 30365 author = Sienkiewicz, Henryk title = In Desert and Wilderness date = keywords = Bedouins; Chamis; Fashoda; Gebhr; Idris; Kali; Khartûm; King; Linde; Mahdi; Mea; Medinet; Mr.; Mzimu; Nell; Nile; Rawlinson; Saba; Stas; Sudânese; Tarkowski; Wahimas; smain summary = "Do you know, Nell," said Stas Tarkowski to his friend, a little mainly in a conversation with Nell, so that Stas remained a little on night time, and early in the following morning took Stas and Nell to Stas was glad that he would pass the night on the desert, but Nell felt rifles to the desert," said Idris, placing Nell on the saddle. "Yes," said Pan Tarkowski, "Chamis must rest a little, and though Stas Nell held Stas with one hand and feared to let him go, but she overcame "Idris," said Stas, "I do not address Chamis whose head is like an The second day at noon after that long rest, Stas and Nell who rode Stas returned because the boy handed the weapon to him every little Kali, Gebhr''s slave, and Nell''s maid, called Mea upon Stas'' Stas and Nell for the first time