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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 11 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 76406 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 79 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 french 6 Algiers 5 Algeria 4 day 4 God 3 illustration 3 arab 3 Sidi 3 English 3 Arabs 3 Africa 2 work 2 time 2 scripture 2 roman 2 moorish 2 man 2 good 2 carthage 2 Tunis 2 Thee 2 Paris 2 Oran 2 Morocco 2 Moors 2 Mademoiselle 2 Lord 2 Legion 2 Kabyle 2 Jean 2 France 2 Foreign 2 Dey 2 Church 2 Christ 2 Blidah 2 Bey 2 Ben 1 yes 1 truth 1 légionnaire 1 little 1 like 1 light 1 leave 1 horse 1 great 1 german 1 european 1 english Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2699 man 1824 time 1603 day 1575 thing 989 way 933 life 841 eye 740 place 718 nothing 716 woman 699 one 688 hand 676 word 672 heart 636 friend 605 house 598 girl 573 year 556 mind 554 night 514 face 497 world 497 soldier 486 soul 475 child 461 hour 458 head 456 part 449 work 441 people 421 desert 418 side 413 officer 408 town 404 light 398 something 389 water 388 room 384 other 382 name 379 country 368 moment 366 love 365 city 357 horse 357 body 351 wall 350 end 348 company 341 légionnaire Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4424 _ 1095 Thou 894 Thee 851 God 841 Thy 802 Stephen 731 Augustin 690 Legion 610 Victoria 426 Algiers 403 Maïeddine 396 Lord 394 Arabs 388 thou 379 Nevill 374 Arab 367 de 344 Arthur 321 Saidee 288 French 288 Algeria 275 Africa 269 Peter 226 Giulia 212 Foster 206 Foreign 202 heaven 200 Sidi 197 Tunis 196 Ben 188 France 167 Rome 157 Hester 143 Madame 140 Ray 130 Paris 128 la 126 Nicholas 123 English 122 El 117 Bey 116 Moor 116 Monnica 116 Church 115 Moors 115 M''Barka 115 Cassim 113 ob 113 Lanty 113 Estelle Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 10209 i 10179 he 8499 it 4260 they 4030 you 3868 we 3581 she 3406 him 3158 me 2179 them 1485 us 1413 her 881 himself 398 themselves 375 myself 333 one 288 itself 228 herself 198 thee 127 ourselves 57 yourself 54 thyself 53 mine 33 ours 29 ''s 28 his 25 ''em 24 theirs 21 hers 19 yours 11 oneself 8 ye 6 ob 3 je 3 i''m 2 yourselves 2 you''re 2 em 1 youself 1 you''se 1 yit 1 yerself 1 yar 1 wi 1 whereof 1 ultimately,--or 1 truth;--of 1 thou 1 ran 1 ourself Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 32659 be 11097 have 4176 do 2764 say 2143 see 2108 make 2060 go 2017 come 1969 know 1499 take 1341 give 1144 think 1099 get 1077 tell 999 look 969 find 769 seem 736 hear 710 speak 690 let 680 ask 674 leave 648 call 614 keep 593 pass 578 bring 568 feel 546 become 540 begin 515 love 498 live 486 put 485 stand 481 turn 438 fall 434 want 434 understand 406 believe 402 send 401 lie 386 try 382 hold 365 follow 365 carry 358 wish 336 answer 335 mean 326 return 323 sit 300 use Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 8134 not 2365 so 1863 more 1608 only 1599 then 1593 up 1577 very 1484 good 1476 little 1397 now 1362 out 1295 well 1231 even 1181 other 1167 great 1026 as 1024 long 984 much 841 first 837 too 835 most 811 own 808 old 788 never 785 away 782 many 731 again 726 there 726 here 724 down 676 still 620 far 615 such 611 yet 610 same 600 also 591 back 546 once 542 french 536 last 536 just 528 poor 526 on 518 few 517 arab 513 always 507 ever 504 almost 498 all 490 enough Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 251 least 242 good 202 most 61 great 57 bad 35 high 30 slight 23 near 23 fine 22 Most 15 low 13 small 13 late 13 dear 12 young 12 may 12 deep 10 hard 10 giv 9 rich 9 l 9 gav 8 early 8 big 7 would 7 long 7 fair 7 eld 6 strong 6 strange 6 old 6 cheap 5 wise 5 short 5 pure 5 noble 5 manif 5 large 5 faint 5 dark 4 work 4 simple 4 say 4 resid 4 j 3 will 3 wild 3 sure 3 speak 3 safe Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 633 most 43 well 34 least 3 hard 2 sayest 2 lest 2 gavest 1 worst 1 wishest 1 thunderest 1 sufferest 1 strangest 1 sawest 1 s''est 1 remainest 1 readest 1 near 1 long 1 hearest 1 fillest 1 fairest 1 cementest 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?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 ccx074@pglaf.org Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 14 _ is _ 13 one does not 13 victoria did not 11 augustin did not 10 god made heaven 9 stephen had not 8 augustin was not 7 _ do _ 7 _ was _ 7 stephen did not 6 _ do n''t 6 days gone by 6 stephen was glad 6 stephen was not 5 men were not 5 stephen had never 5 victoria had not 4 _ are _ 4 life is not 4 one was not 3 _ am _ 3 _ did _ 3 _ know _ 3 day is not 3 girl did not 3 legion has always 3 man was not 3 nothing is more 3 stephen was no 3 stephen went on 3 things were not 3 thou make heaven 3 victoria was not 3 women are not 2 _ be _ 2 _ does _ 2 _ does n''t 2 _ feel _ 2 _ felt _ 2 _ has _ 2 _ have n''t 2 _ is not 2 _ know something 2 _ think _ 2 _ thought _ 2 _ was not 2 _ were _ 2 _ were not 2 augustin came back 2 augustin does not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 legion gets no pay 2 augustin was not able 2 stephen had not yet 2 stephen was no longer 1 _ are not english 1 _ being no other 1 _ is not likely 1 _ was not exactly 1 _ were not _ 1 _ were not drill 1 augustin did not even 1 augustin does not even 1 augustin found no outlet 1 augustin had no illusions 1 augustin had no trouble 1 augustin has no shadows 1 augustin has no whit 1 augustin is not only 1 augustin is not so 1 augustin takes no heed 1 augustin was no longer 1 augustin was not there 1 day are not very 1 day is no more 1 day is not daily 1 day is not dear 1 eye are not churches 1 eyes saw not even 1 eyes were not as 1 face did not easily 1 friends found no fault 1 girl has no chance 1 girl was no stern 1 heart finds no rest 1 heart knows no guile 1 heart was not happy 1 heart was not satisfied 1 house was not good 1 houses had no eyes 1 legion are not quite 1 legion is no good 1 life ''s no snap 1 life has no other 1 life is not too 1 life was no longer 1 life was not worth 1 lives are no worth 1 man are not less 1 man had no idea 1 man had no money A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 3296 author = Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo title = The Confessions of St. Augustine date = keywords = Christ; Church; Creator; Father; God; Holy; Lord; Son; Spirit; Thee; Thine; Thou; Thy; Word; beginning; good; light; man; scripture; truth summary = God and Lord of all which Thou hast created: in Thee abide, fixed his own death for want of love to Thee, O God. Thou light of my heart, But now, my God, cry Thou aloud in my soul; and let Thy truth tell me, let me faint in confessing unto Thee all Thy mercies, whereby Thou and my confidence, my God, thanks be to Thee for Thy gifts; but do Thou and thank Thee, and confess unto Thy name; because Thou hast forgiven me thy love upon their Maker; lest in these things which please thee, thou But they knew not the way, Thy Word, by Whom Thou madest these things Thou hast stricken my heart with Thy word, and I loved Thee. confess unto Thee, my Lord God. For Thou art good, for Thy mercy seek Thee,--Thy Word, through Whom Thou madest all things, and among id = 21751 author = Ballantyne, R. M. (Robert Michael) title = The Middy and the Moors: An Algerine Story date = keywords = Ahmed; Algiers; Ben; Dey; Dinah; English; Foster; George; God; Great; Hester; Laronde; Lilly; Moor; Osman; Peter; Sally; Sommers; yes summary = "Massa," said the negro, without looking at Foster or changing a muscle A Moor, he observed, had taken his friend Peter the Great''s place at the "Look there, Peter," said Foster, pointing to the recumbent figure, The poor middy glanced round to see if his only friend, Peter the Great, "I know it won''t, Peter," replied the almost heart-broken middy, with a "Spade-work!" shouted Peter, laying his huge black hand on Foster''s "Geo''ge," said Peter solemnly, "you tell me you hab took ''vantage ob "Now you come yar wid me into dis room," said Dinah, taking Hester''s Then she looked suddenly at Peter the Great, and said-Hester Sommers in the little boudoir, Ben-Ahmed sent for George Foster "Geo''ge, come wid me," said Peter the Great one afternoon, with face so "That is true," said Ben-Ahmed, with the look of a man into whose mind a said that a man wanted to see Peter the Great. id = 9069 author = Bertrand, Louis title = Saint Augustin date = keywords = Africa; Africans; Alypius; Ambrose; Augustin; Barbarians; Bishop; Catholicism; Christ; Christian; Church; City; Confessions; Donatists; Emperor; Empire; God; Hippo; Madaura; Milan; Monnica; Patricius; Romanianus; Rome; St.; Thagaste; Thee; carthage; catholic; roman; scripture; time summary = "I loved to play," Augustin says, in telling us of those far-off years. A wife would be a drag for a young man like Augustin, who In fact, the life which Augustin was at that time relishing was the pagan to an old tradition, Augustin was a little man and not strong: till the end his heart, Augustin, like a good Carthaginian--and because he was a Augustin was not, like his friend Alypius, a practical mind, but he had Augustin, "like a father, and as a bishop he was pleased enough at my "I love only God and the soul," Augustin states Augustin, "at the beauty of Thy works, O my God!..." Rome was back there like a Christian, and turning to Augustin: Africans on the alert in those times, Augustin worked at his _City of God_, Like ourselves, Augustin, brought up by a Christian mother, knew it only id = 45380 author = Blackburn, Henry title = Artists and Arabs; Or, Sketching in Sunshine date = keywords = Algeria; Algiers; Arabs; Blidah; England; Kabyle; Moors; Place; day; english; french; illustration; leave; like; little; moorish; work summary = to one of those frail-looking little boats with white awnings, that form houses set in bright green hills, or as the French express it, ''like bright blue sky, Algiers seems to us to be _the_ place to come to. appearances, are little likely to do anything great. There are little shops and dark niches where the Moors sit cross-legged, us in the illustrated history of the Cid. In the midst of the Moorish quarter, up a little narrow street (reached little white house, overlooking a beautiful city, on the North African costume and variety of race, French artists seem to make little use of the neighbourhood of Algiers, sketching in winter time in the open air. little Arab cemetery, about six miles from Algiers; on the heights Blidah, half Arab, half French, with its little population of European master the subject, and with a sketch of the little Moorish café with id = 36348 author = Carleton, George Washington title = Our Artist in Cuba, Peru, Spain and Algiers Leaves from The Sketch-Book of a Traveller, 1864-1868 date = keywords = Calle; HAVANA; Lima; PERU; SPAIN; artist; illustration summary = [Illustration: The first volante driver that our artist saw in Havana.] [Illustration: Our Artist just steps around the corner, to look at a [Illustration: A midsummer''s night dream.--Our Artist is just the least [Illustration: The Great Cave near Matanzas.--Picturesque House over the [Illustration: First night at the "Gran Hotel Leon de Oro."--Our artist [Illustration: Alarm of Our Artist and Wife, upon going to their room to [Illustration: Sea-sickness being a weakness of Our Artist, he [Illustration: Our Artist before going to Lima, during little poetical [Illustration: Our Artist doesn''t want to say anything against the [Illustration: Our Artist, upon his arrival in "Sunny Spain," is [Illustration: Our Artist sees from the car-window, at a Rail-Road [Illustration: Our Artist discovers, one day, in the Calle Tunidores, [Illustration: Alarm of Our Artist, as he, for the first time, [Illustration: Merely a sketch (for the last page of this little book) id = 59084 author = Le Poer, John Patrick title = A Modern Legionary date = keywords = Algeria; Alsatian; Arabs; Black; Flags; Foreign; Giulia; Grand; Jean; Legion; Mac; Nicholas; Russian; Tonquin; company; french; good; man; time summary = good soldiers--men who respected themselves and the flag." "Very good; we have half-an-hour, let us walk about until it is time to in different places, all anxious to let us know in good time of the next day, so that we, his good comrades, the men who liked and loved this time by the men of our own company--soldiers of the first class, captain, who was passing at the time, laughed as if I had said a good day we came in at the hour of evening soup to a little camp where some heat of the day, and one of the men of my squad and I went to a little were--were yet good, honest, fighting men, and not bad comrades if one other sub-officers and other soldiers said good-bye to a fairly strong "But how do you know," asked a commandant one day, "that the dead men id = 46705 author = Mansfield, M. F. (Milburg Francisco) title = In the Land of Mosques & Minarets date = keywords = Africa; Algeria; Algiers; Berber; Bey; Biskra; Blida; Cairo; Constantine; France; God; Habib; Jews; Kabyle; Mediterranean; Mohammed; Morocco; Mosque; Mussulman; North; Oran; Paris; Prophet; Sidi; Tlemcen; Tozeur; Tunis; Tunisia; arab; carthage; day; european; french; great; illustration; moorish; roman summary = mosque-like tombs distributed throughout the Arab peopled lands, which The Arab of the town apparently spends a good part of his time in a With all his faults and virtues the Arab of to-day is not a great government by the Arab population, asking that the great trading-route The Arab''s French is much like our own--queer at times, but it is real head of the Arabs in Algeria, and the Tunisian French saved the day for France in Algeria, and perhaps by the time these lines The Algiers of to-day is a great and populous city. _patois_ something like the following,--it''s a queer thing, Arab-French, The Arab of Algeria to-day still looks forward to the time when he may The great gates of the inner Arab city of Tunis are most fascinating, great size of the many apartments of this Moorish-Arab house; but like id = 40479 author = Rosen, Erwin title = In the Foreign Legion date = keywords = Abbès; Africa; Algeria; Foreign; France; Ghetto; Herr; Jean; Legion; Morocco; Oran; Rader; Rassedin; Sidi; Smith; arab; chapter; day; french; german; légionnaire; work summary = French lieutenant : The enlistment office of the Foreign Legion Foreign Legion : Sidi-bel-Abbès : The sergeant is not pleased : "Yes, I am German, and intend to enlist in the Foreign Legion," I said, Half an hour later three new recruits of the Foreign Legion, the the Foreign Legion : What the commander of the Old Guard said at the Foreign Legion : What the commander of the Old Guard said at question concerning men or things of the Legion that the man from In the afternoon the old légionnaires went off on long marches or to The Foreign Legion, as an old troop of mercenaries, works like a In the garrison life of Sidi-bel-Abbès the work of the Legion took The Legion was there to work, and from the légionnaire one could ask citizens of Sidi-bel-Abbès and the légionnaires : How the Legion légionnaire--this citizen of the Foreign Legion''s town. id = 19108 author = Williamson, A. M. (Alice Muriel) title = The Golden Silence date = keywords = Algiers; Ben; Caird; Cassim; Caïd; Halim; Josette; Knight; Lady; Lella; M''Barka; Mademoiselle; Margot; Maïeddine; Miss; Nevill; Oued; Paris; Ray; Sabine; Saidee; Sidi; Stephen; Tolga; Touggourt; Victoria; Zaouïa; arab; french summary = his brother''s title writing begging letters to a young man like Stephen Stephen felt dimly sorry for the little thing, who looked so radiantly Stephen obeyed, and as she drove away the girl looked back, smiling at "One thing I do know, is that you are wonderful," said Stephen, his the Arab did not appear to turn; yet Stephen knew that he was thinking had left the ship, and would see no more of Victoria Ray. The chauffeur who drove Nevill''s car was an Algerian who looked as if he curiosity-shop, and ask about Ben Halim, the husband of Saidee Ray. Victoria was coming to luncheon, for she had accepted Lady MacGregor''s Maïeddine''s eyes lighted when he saw the girl in Arab dress. "I did not know that Arab men set women so high," said Victoria, "There''s Toudja," Stephen said, as the girl looked out again from the id = 30581 author = Windham, W. G. title = Notes in North Africa Being a Guide to the Sportsman and Tourist in Algeria and Tunisia date = keywords = Algeria; Algiers; Angelo; Arabs; B----; Bey; Blidah; Bona; CHAPTER; English; Hôtel; Nero; Tunis; day; french; horse summary = ON TO TUNIS:--Algeria in General--The Arabs and their the French occupation, the Algerian ladies, like the females in all Arab having killed a Frenchman there the day before. In the course of the day the Arabs brought in a boar which they had chatted away gaily in Arabic and French throughout the whole passage. Angelo''s Horsemanship.--The Bey''s Palace at Marsa.--The Arabs and sang_ horses, as the Arabs are afraid of the Bey''s taking a fancy to This Goulette appears to be the chief place for the Arab At one time the man and the lion were great friends, and the Arabs about some ruin, when another came up and said, "Why do you with his horse; and some Arabs, coming up, at the cries of the officer There are two ways of hunting the lion, by day and by night. Caid''s house at Solyman (about twenty miles from Tunis), an old Arab id = 4271 author = Yonge, Charlotte M. (Charlotte Mary) title = A Modern Telemachus date = keywords = Abbe; Algiers; Arthur; Bourke; Dey; English; Estelle; Hebert; Hope; Lanty; Lord; Madame; Mademoiselle; Marabout; Moors; Tam; Ulysse; Victorine; Yusuf; christian; french summary = Madame de Bourke bade the maids carry off the little Jacques, and Ulysse French subject like her husband and his brother; but Arthur was The last time Arthur saw Madame de Bourke''s face, by the light It was daylight when Arthur was awakened by poor little Ulysse sitting up ''A very old fishwife,'' said Arthur, ''who used to come her rounds to our ''You have been very good to me, Yusuf,'' said Arthur, his pride much ''Not now, not to-night, my dear little mannie,'' said Arthur, tears in his ''Well, Yusuf, my name is Hope, you know,'' said Arthur. Ulysse disported himself like a little fish, Arthur did his best to little master,'' he added, looking at Ulysse, who was standing by Arthur. ''We are come to save her,'' said Arthur in French. When Estelle reappeared, dressed once more like a little French lady (at