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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 8 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 76946 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 77 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 Mr. 4 fever 4 disease 4 Philadelphia 4 New 4 Mrs. 4 Dr. 3 case 3 blood 3 Pennsylvania 3 Miss 3 God 2 year 2 remedy 2 little 2 day 2 body 2 West 2 United 2 States 2 CHAPTER 2 August 1 water 1 time 1 system 1 state 1 produce 1 moral 1 love 1 look 1 long 1 like 1 life 1 leave 1 house 1 heart 1 gout 1 good 1 friend 1 effect 1 cure 1 consumption 1 come 1 cold 1 cloudy 1 child 1 action 1 account 1 Wortley 1 Winans Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2602 fever 2139 disease 1216 case 1174 day 1097 time 999 state 956 year 936 blood 866 life 791 body 773 part 753 man 707 person 707 patient 707 city 698 remedy 627 system 625 cause 615 effect 566 symptom 549 death 548 child 536 eye 519 action 514 water 513 place 497 hand 478 month 477 house 473 heart 448 pain 441 mind 440 medicine 428 physician 424 nature 421 pulse 421 instance 419 air 411 friend 403 people 394 use 390 country 379 woman 373 hour 365 night 358 mean 357 face 352 head 349 vessel 347 manner Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3136 _ 951 Dr. 790 | 422 Mr. 413 Mrs. 289 Philadelphia 242 Welbeck 209 Winans 200 Conway 157 New 150 Bruce 146 Lulu 143 Grace 140 i. 138 Pennsylvania 138 God 133 Miss 112 Clendenon 112 Agnes 109 Mervyn 109 Indians 102 August 101 West 101 United 100 States 100 September 97 I. 95 John 88 Doctor 86 Wallace 81 Fair 79 vol 78 York 78 Watson 76 ii 76 Thetford 76 CHAPTER 74 America 73 W. 73 October 72 London 72 Indies 71 Norah 69 July 69 Captain 68 Hadwin 66 Sydenham 65 Paul 65 Europe 63 St. Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 9142 i 7119 it 3390 he 2593 you 2364 she 2222 me 1955 they 1435 them 1354 him 1261 her 929 we 410 us 324 myself 229 himself 163 herself 159 itself 157 themselves 72 yourself 56 mine 49 thee 25 hers 24 one 23 his 21 ourselves 16 yours 7 thyself 4 ''em 2 theirs 2 on''t 1 yourselves 1 yer 1 ye 1 ya 1 wines;--they 1 whence 1 on''y 1 mildness:-- 1 me,"--and 1 man,--of 1 him,--that 1 heself 1 french:-- 1 for--_they 1 feliu;--she 1 face:--"i 1 answering:--"i 1 ''s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 23061 be 8326 have 1693 do 1167 say 1028 take 956 see 871 make 865 know 766 produce 759 give 758 come 689 appear 639 find 632 go 559 mention 491 call 481 leave 468 think 455 die 426 seem 423 follow 421 look 419 occur 416 tell 414 use 390 attend 371 affect 340 become 328 hear 324 cure 307 observe 300 bleed 299 act 297 prevent 296 pass 291 meet 280 answer 277 feel 275 believe 269 excite 268 fall 267 let 263 add 259 suppose 256 live 256 bring 237 render 236 return 235 continue 231 begin Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3874 not 1474 more 1360 so 1049 other 1045 only 920 many 869 same 786 now 768 great 737 most 700 first 674 as 658 much 637 well 597 yellow 569 little 551 few 549 long 547 very 536 such 497 several 486 often 476 then 470 own 454 cold 450 less 447 even 446 up 441 sometimes 441 never 428 old 408 good 407 common 385 too 368 different 366 last 362 small 357 always 355 still 348 new 323 young 321 perhaps 307 once 304 whole 304 here 304 frequently 303 out 288 human 280 far 279 away Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 195 most 155 least 80 good 74 great 41 high 35 bad 23 deep 18 strong 17 Most 16 happy 13 near 11 slight 11 low 10 eld 10 dear 8 young 8 small 7 warm 6 sweet 6 late 6 gross 5 safe 5 long 5 large 5 heavy 5 faint 5 early 4 wise 4 stout 4 old 4 mild 4 lovely 4 keen 4 gentle 4 fond 4 dark 3 hot 3 fair 3 easy 3 cold 3 brave 3 black 3 bitter 2 weak 2 true 2 strange 2 soft 2 rich 2 quick 2 pure Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 542 most 18 well 13 least 4 soon 1 eldest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 20 www.gutenberg.org 8 archive.org 2 www.letrs.indiana.edu 2 www.gutenberg.net 2 digital.library.villanova.edu Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 4 http://archive.org 3 http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/58862 3 http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/58861 3 http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/58860 3 http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/58859 2 http://www.letrs.indiana.edu/web/w/wright2/ 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/58862/58862-h/58862-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/58862/58862-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/58861/58861-h/58861-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/58861/58861-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/58860/58860-h/58860-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/58860/58860-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/58859/58859-h/58859-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/58859/58859-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/7/2/0/17200/17200-h/17200-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/7/2/0/17200/17200-h.zip 1 http://digital.library.villanova.edu/Item/vudl:440123# 1 http://digital.library.villanova.edu 1 http://archive.org/details/b21935142_0004 1 http://archive.org/details/b21935142_0003 1 http://archive.org/details/b21935142_0002 1 http://archive.org/details/b21935142_0001 Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 _ did _ 6 disease was not 6 fever did not 5 disease came on 5 fever came on 5 fever is often 4 _ do _ 4 _ is _ 4 action takes place 4 blood was sizy 4 fever was epidemic 3 eyes had not 3 fever does not 3 patients were able 3 symptoms were so 2 _ are _ 2 _ died _ 2 _ is generally 2 _ know _ 2 _ was _ 2 _ was sometimes 2 blood took place 2 body is _ 2 body is subject 2 disease did not 2 disease is _ 2 disease is as 2 disease is much 2 disease is sometimes 2 disease was evidently 2 disease was generally 2 disease was pestilential 2 disease was so 2 eyes had ever 2 eyes looked gravely 2 fever comes on 2 fever do not 2 fever has never 2 fever is always 2 fever is generally 2 fever was always 2 fevers are epidemic 2 life is vacant 2 patient is able 2 patients found relief 2 remedies are proper 2 remedies made use 2 remedies were _ 2 state was far 2 symptom is not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ see no unclean 1 cases were not common 1 city was no place 1 disease is no ways 1 disease was no longer 1 disease was not _ 1 disease was not immediately 1 eyes had not yet 1 fever appears not only 1 fever have not only 1 fever is not contagious 1 hand was not sufficient 1 life was no less 1 life were not masquerade 1 man has no business 1 person was not unmindful 1 remedies were not successful 1 remedy is not only 1 state was no longer 1 symptoms are not universal 1 time leaves no vestige A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 17200 author = Alexander, Charles Wesley title = Angel Agnes The Heroine of the Yellow Fever Plague in Shreveport date = keywords = Agnes; Arnold; God; Miss; Mrs.; Shreveport; Sister summary = and were laid away to sleep in the dust close by the little Agnes of "Ah," smiled Mrs. Arnold, kissing Agnes, gayly, "young hearts like "What do you mean, Agnes?" exclaimed Mrs. Arnold, glancing anxiously "God will bring me safely back to you, dear mother," urged Agnes, To Agnes Arnold going into Shreveport, the emotions must have been "I hope they will soon mend," said Agnes, fervently; "good day." "This is the place, Miss Arnold," said the man, "a young lady was time, "our nurse here, Miss Arnold, is the most wonderful lady I have Next door there was a Sister of Mercy nursing, and Agnes asked her to which Agnes was placed with her three patients to nurse, and an infant "In God''s good time, Agnes, dear," suggested the Sister. AGNES'' LAST LETTER TO HER MOTHER. written from a daughter to a mother than that which Agnes Arnold, id = 18508 author = Brown, Charles Brockden title = Arthur Mervyn; Or, Memoirs of the Year 1793 date = keywords = Arthur; Baltimore; CHAPTER; Clemenza; Eliza; Fielding; Hadwin; Lodi; Malverton; Maurice; Mervyn; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Thetford; Villars; Wallace; Watson; Welbeck; Wentworth; Williams; Wortley; come; friend; good; house; leave; time summary = chiefly engaged by his own thoughts, and little was said till the portrait of a young man who died three years ago at my father''s house, thoughts, till he reached his house, which proved to be that at the door said, turning to me, "A lady will enter presently, whom you are to treat time, at Welbeck; then I fixed terrified eyes on the distorted features house at a time when her husband and brother were hourly expected. appeared like return to a long-lost and much-loved home. fate of thy friend, and afford him the relief which he shall want." "Yes," said he; "his father left the house at an early period. reflections from Welbeck to my own state passed away in a moment, and a moment she removed her hand from her eyes, and looked at me with new Till this moment the uproar in Welbeck''s mind appeared to hinder him id = 717 author = Hearn, Lafcadio title = Chita: A Memory of Last Island date = keywords = Carmen; Chita; Creole; Feliu; God; Gulf; Island; Julien; Laroussel; New; Sea; Sparicio; Viosca; child; day; like; little; long; water summary = the little steamer strives to reach the grand blaze of blue open water steamer to the sea-islands to-day, you are tolerably certain to enter some long point of sea-marsh, widely fringed with billowing sand. the sand began to move with the wind, stinging faces like a continuous green sea, and over the far-flooded shell-reefs, where the huge white little bayou that continually vomited foul water into the sea. Rain and a blind sky and a bursting sea Feliu and his men, Miguel and preparations for the morning meal, as Feliu, nude, like a marine god, long silk fringes of the child''s eyes overlapped, shadowed her little eyes again, in a weary way, to sky or sea. --"The world is like the sea: those who do not know how to swim in it white shadow of the San Marco''s sail upon the blue water;--all day long id = 54134 author = Miller, Alex. McVeigh, Mrs. title = The Senator''s Bride date = keywords = Bruce; CHAPTER; Captain; Clendenon; Conway; God; Grace; Grey; Lulu; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Norah; Norfolk; Paul; Senator; Washington; Willard; Winans; heart; little; look; love summary = Conway''s dark eyes met hers for a moment with answering love in their "Oh, Grace, my darling, my wronged little love!" He knew his own mind "My love," he said, lifting the small, white hand, and toying with its "You may go, Norah," said Grace Winans, looking up from the child on one--heart, and soul, and body--your own loving, happy little wife." Winans'' mansion a love-song--yes, aunt," laughing a little as she A girl''s fair face looked across at him, her white hands "Mrs. Winans did not come, but she sent her representative, Mr. Conway," she said, thinking it would please him to see the pretty "Dear Grace," Mrs. Conway said, softly, "this is my young friend, Lulu, "Lulu, I have come to take you for a drive," said Grace Winans, as love in her heart, and the sunshine on her head, to the new life she id = 58859 author = Rush, Benjamin title = Medical Inquiries and Observations, Vol. 1 The Second Edition, Revised and Enlarged by the Author date = keywords = America; Delaware; Doctor; Dr.; Indians; Mr.; New; Pennsylvania; Philadelphia; States; United; account; body; case; cold; day; disease; fever; remedy; year summary = _An account of the disease occasioned by drinking cold water in _An account of the state of the body and mind in old age, with life among the Indians) they are plunged every day into cold water. (which is an Indian disease) comes under the class of fevers. Worms are common to most animals; they produce diseases only in weak, shall examine into the abilities of NATURE in curing their diseases. medicine, if given while the fever was in its forming state, frequently many persons being diseased by drinking cold water. _all_ seasons of the year, are less subject to this disease, than men When the disease is the effect of fever, the same remedies should be skins, in general escaped fevers and diseases of all kinds. place till a day or two before the time of communicating the disease. number and _time_ of your visits, the nature of your patient''s disease, id = 58860 author = Rush, Benjamin title = Medical Inquiries and Observations, Vol. 2 The Second Edition, Revised and Enlarged by the Author date = keywords = Dr.; Medical; Mr.; Pennsylvania; Philadelphia; action; blood; body; case; consumption; cure; disease; effect; fever; gout; life; moral; produce; remedy; state; system summary = occur in this disease, may be resolved into a morbid state of the mind, The tendency of general debility to produce a disease of the lungs most of the remote and exciting causes of both diseases produce their applied, in discharging water from the body in dropsies, I shall mention brain, as in other cases of disease, after the cause which induced it, the effect of causes which produce a less degree of that morbid action state of the pulse occurs in most cases in the beginning of the disease, the effects only of morbid actions excited in other parts of the body. diseases of the human body, for their causes are the same. probably prevent, during his life, the re-excitement of the disease. morbid appearances which follow disease in a dead body could not remedy for the weak state of life in many diseases, and shall relate id = 58861 author = Rush, Benjamin title = Medical Inquiries and Observations, Vol. 3 The Second Edition, Revised and Enlarged by the Author date = keywords = August; Dr.; Fair; John; Mr.; Mrs.; November; October; Philadelphia; September; Sydenham; West; blood; case; cloudy; disease; fever summary = the cases of local affection which occur in general fever. colic, and, baron Humboldt lately informed me, upon the authority of Dr. Comoto, of Vera Cruz, in the yellow fever of that city, when it proves the states appear at different times in the course of a fever. remedies of the liver disease of the East-Indies, as mentioned by Dr. Girdlestone, all prove that it is nothing but a bilious fever translated pulse attended the yellow fever even when it appeared in the mild form They occurred in the yellow fever of Jamaica, as described by Dr. Williams, and always with a happy issue of the disease[26]. "No instance has ever occurred of the disease called the _yellow fever_ stomach and bowels after death from the yellow fever, in cases in which diseases, did not, in those few cases in which it yielded to the fever, id = 58862 author = Rush, Benjamin title = Medical Inquiries and Observations, Vol. 4 The Second Edition, Revised and Enlarged by the Author date = keywords = August; Clear; Dr.; Indies; Mr.; New; Pennsylvania; Philadelphia; Physick; States; United; West; blood; disease; fever; year summary = _An account of sporadic cases of yellow fever, as they appeared _An account of sporadic cases of yellow fever, as they appeared yellow fever, excited a general alarm in the city. A disease prevailed among the cats some weeks before the yellow fever malignant state of the fever, in which the action of the blood-vessels was called to a case of yellow fever, which yielded to copious bleeding, About this time there appeared one and twenty cases of yellow fever in In September, cases of yellow fever appeared in different parts of the city of Philadelphia has furnished, in all our yellow fever years, many and the yellow fever, which has been mentioned, that the disease Blood-letting, as a remedy for fevers, and certain other diseases, having remedy is, when a fever of great morbid excitement affects persons of state of the pulse is common in the yellow fever.