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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 48766 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 76 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Bacon 3 Sir 3 Shakespeare 3 Mr. 3 Lord 3 King 2 play 2 man 2 lordship 2 William 2 Thomas 2 Stratford 2 Spedding 2 Queen 2 John 2 James 2 God 2 English 2 England 2 Court 1 page 1 life 1 illustration 1 great 1 book 1 White 1 Thy 1 Southampton 1 Shakespeareans 1 Salisbury 1 Robert 1 Parliament 1 New 1 Miss 1 Malone 1 Majesty 1 London 1 Learning 1 Latin 1 Jonson 1 House 1 Holmes 1 Henry 1 Hamlet 1 Greene 1 French 1 Francis 1 France 1 Folio 1 Essex Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 784 man 545 time 517 play 457 year 447 work 396 day 378 book 359 letter 340 name 312 life 279 thing 269 page 253 word 249 part 235 hand 217 fact 214 author 213 way 209 mind 194 knowledge 190 age 181 history 180 friend 179 place 176 evidence 173 world 170 nature 162 nothing 159 matter 158 poet 158 law 156 edition 155 one 152 stage 152 form 145 question 142 line 137 course 129 note 127 writer 127 language 124 theory 124 o 122 truth 118 lordship 117 case 116 philosophy 116 p. 116 other 115 thought Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1588 _ 1333 Bacon 1179 Shakespeare 499 William 404 Mr. 209 King 207 Lord 183 London 182 Sir 175 Francis 174 Stratford 165 Essex 150 Queen 124 Jonson 122 John 121 James 119 England 109 Henry 104 English 102 Majesty 102 Burghley 100 Elizabeth 100 Buckingham 98 Ben 96 . 89 Court 85 Spedding 85 Coke 81 Latin 81 God 78 Hamlet 77 W. 74 Thomas 72 House 66 White 66 Greene 64 Parliament 64 Dr. 63 Shakespearean 59 French 59 Cecil 57 Robert 56 S. 55 Advancement 54 De 53 I. 50 New 48 State 48 Anthony 47 hath Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3025 he 2591 it 997 i 827 him 776 we 709 they 551 them 414 you 358 himself 276 me 219 us 187 she 99 itself 86 themselves 80 myself 58 her 33 herself 28 one 19 thee 16 his 15 yourself 12 ourselves 7 theirs 6 mine 3 ours 2 thyself 2 ''em 1 yy 1 yt 1 yours 1 ye 1 whereof 1 where--"procul 1 thy 1 termd 1 hers 1 037}they Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 9863 be 3205 have 921 do 644 write 617 make 604 say 428 find 417 see 409 know 366 take 302 give 293 come 260 appear 248 call 242 think 222 go 203 publish 202 follow 188 leave 187 use 179 print 173 seem 164 read 145 put 145 bring 143 live 142 bear 137 believe 136 become 130 show 121 tell 114 set 113 speak 110 let 109 look 101 contain 96 learn 96 begin 95 mean 94 pass 91 die 90 stand 89 suppose 89 receive 87 draw 84 hear 83 prove 83 get 83 accord 81 want Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1908 not 775 so 505 more 499 great 495 only 440 first 378 other 351 own 331 most 308 very 302 good 301 well 294 much 286 now 279 as 267 never 265 such 233 out 232 same 231 up 222 even 194 then 188 many 187 ever 177 too 166 little 162 long 158 yet 150 far 149 also 147 new 142 old 133 last 129 least 128 down 128 certain 125 still 120 here 116 shakespearean 116 less 115 young 108 again 105 just 105 high 104 once 102 able 101 on 100 however 99 perhaps 98 full Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 109 least 89 good 57 great 50 most 32 high 16 early 11 bad 10 near 10 deep 7 fine 6 strong 6 late 6 close 5 wise 5 mean 5 manif 5 just 5 able 4 true 4 slight 4 simple 4 rich 4 large 4 easy 3 mighty 3 low 3 l 3 keen 3 j 3 fair 3 faint 2 weak 2 temp 2 strait 2 rude 2 ripe 2 pure 2 proud 2 old 2 nice 2 grand 2 full 2 fit 2 chief 2 bright 1 young 1 wild 1 wide 1 weighty 1 vain Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 281 most 20 well 19 least 1 gavest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 _ did _ 8 shakespeare was not 7 bacon was not 6 shakespeare did not 5 _ was _ 5 bacon did not 4 bacon does not 4 bacon is shakespeare 4 king did not 3 bacon had not 3 bacon left cambridge 3 time went on 2 * see ante 2 _ are _ 2 bacon had nothing 2 bacon had so 2 bacon was always 2 bacon was most 2 bacon was thus 2 books are still 2 hand is heavy 2 mind was so 2 plays were not 2 shakespeare was dead 2 times were not 1 * see post 1 * see third 1 _ ''s together 1 _ be guilty 1 _ be merciful 1 _ being nothing 1 _ came out 1 _ come nearer 1 _ do _ 1 _ had _ 1 _ has also 1 _ is different 1 _ is far 1 _ is inadequate 1 _ knowing _ 1 _ made _ 1 _ printed _ 1 _ was only 1 _ was probably 1 _ was scrupulous 1 _ was small 1 _ were _ 1 _ were also 1 _ were mere 1 _ were satisfied Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 times were not ripe 1 bacon does not even 1 bacon does not instantly 1 bacon gave no proof 1 bacon had no public 1 bacon had no sympathy 1 bacon had not yet 1 bacon made no attempt 1 bacon was no more 1 bacon was not easily 1 bacon was not seldom 1 letter is not less 1 letters is not only 1 man had not yet 1 men were no sure 1 men were not only 1 mind was not qualified 1 name has not yet 1 pages left no impress 1 shakespeare has no direct 1 shakespeare is no unknown 1 shakespeare left no death 1 shakespeare took no trouble 1 shakespeare was no unimportant 1 shakespeare was not always 1 shakespeare was not author 1 shakespeare was not even 1 shakespeare was not only 1 william was no truant 1 works are not intelligible 1 works had not forever A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 13888 author = Church, R. W. (Richard William) title = Bacon date = keywords = Attorney; Bacon; Buckingham; Cecil; Chancellor; Coke; Commons; Court; Essex; God; House; James; King; Lord; Majesty; Mr.; Parliament; Queen; Salisbury; Sir; Spedding; great; lordship; man summary = men and affairs; and in them the great purpose and work of his life was grandly, "in the eyes of Bacon like the hope of the world." The two men, certainly gave Bacon good reason to think that his words meant nothing. Bacon had, as he says, "good reason to think that the Earl''s Bacon''s name also had come into men''s mouths as that of a time-server said for Bacon: a man keenly alive to Essex''s faults, with a strong showed the King, probably for the first time, what Bacon was. From this time Bacon must be thought of, first and foremost, as a Judge good offices beyond what Bacon thought just and right, and asked them Attorney-General of the time, Bacon saw but his duty, even as a judge was almost the only man in the Lords who said anything for Bacon, and, id = 39149 author = Crain, Dorothy title = Ciphers For the Little Folks A Method of Teaching the Greatest Work of Sir Francis Bacon date = keywords = Alphabet; illustration summary = XIV the phrase "Biliteral Cipher" is made to contain the hidden word "Key" into cipher by having the child place the dots representing the letters of The cipher word is "pasture," the red circles being the _a_ form, the blue The cipher word is "Barking," the red circles being the _a_ form, the blue The borders to the lines contain the cipher word "letter," the instead of writing letters and words as we do today. quarrel by making a letter which all the printers would use and he called Look at the other letters in this Alphabet (Plates III, IV, V, VI, and made his Alphabet of Roman letters he made more than one form of each different forms of the same letters, can you not? for the _b_ form you use for each letter of the Alphabet, both capital and contain the word "_the_" by using the two forms of letters which you see id = 47425 author = Durning-Lawrence, Edwin, Sir title = The Shakespeare Myth date = keywords = Bacon; Folio; Shakespeare; Stratford; William; page; play summary = Let us now return to the Folio of Shakespeare''s plays, published in On the title page appears a large half-length figure drawn by My book, "Bacon is Shakespeare," was published in 1910 (i.e., BACON SHEWN BY CONTEMPORARY TITLE PAGES TO BE THE AUTHOR OF THE SHAKESPEARE PLAYS. of the engraved title page of Bacon''s work, the De Augmentis, which was the title page that forms the frontispiece of Bacon''s Henry VII. translated Bacon''s essays into French, also published a book of Emblems, the Folio edition of the immortal plays, known as Shakespeare''s, first BACON SIGNED THE SHAKESPEARE PLAYS. be three pages numbered 53 in the Folio Volume of Shakespeare''s Plays. no play appeared the name William Shakespeare until that man had been in my book, "Bacon is Shakespeare," Chapter X., page 84, gives us * Note.--A few copies of my book, "Bacon is Shakespeare," In 1910 appeared my own book, "Bacon is Shakespeare," which, placed id = 47424 author = Morgan, Appleton title = The Shakespearean Myth: William Shakespeare and Circumstantial Evidence date = keywords = Bacon; Ben; Condell; Delia; Elizabeth; England; English; Greene; Hamlet; Henry; Holmes; James; John; Jonson; King; London; Lord; Malone; Miss; Mr.; New; Robert; Shakespeare; Shakespeareans; Sir; Southampton; Stratford; Thomas; White; William; man; play summary = of the immortal Shakespearean Drama was written by William Shakespeare that William Shakespeare was not the author of the plays that go by his hundred years more--from the day of William Shakespeare''s death down to theater, "William Shakespeare, who employed him to write Plays, and who To suppose that William Shakespeare wrote the plays which we call his, those years the man William Shakespeare _did_ live, and was a theatrical that William Shakespeare was not author of the plays is quite weak plays to-day with William Shakespeare, of Stratford, as we have already writes plays for William Shakespeare''s stage, and, as we have seen, he The days when William Shakespeare first appeared in London, happened others write the plays under the name of William Shakespeare?" question, "Did William Shakespeare write Lord Bacon''s works?" * as well as, "Did Lord Bacon write William Shakespeare''s work?" While not within id = 36650 author = Smedley, William T. (William Thomas) title = The Mystery of Francis Bacon date = keywords = Advancement; Anthony; Bacon; Burghley; Court; England; English; France; Francis; French; God; John; King; Latin; Learning; Lord; Mr.; Queen; Shakespeare; Sir; Spedding; Thomas; Thy; book; life; lordship summary = [Illustration: FRANCIS BACON AT 9 YEARS OF AGE. The standard work is "The Life and Letters of Francis Bacon," by James In 1627,[2] the year following Bacon''s death, he published the "The Lord Bacon''s judgment in a work of this nature." The chapter on published an edition of Bacon''s works, and wrote a Life to accompany it. believed that Francis Bacon was the author of these two books. Did Bacon mark his first work on philosophy and his last book by represent the work of Francis Bacon probably between the years 1577 and "Bacon''s Life and Letters" and in the edition of his works, it must be it bear to the names William Shakespeare and Francis Bacon, to the year some of the books on emblems printed during Bacon''s life, and to the In the emblem books written in Italian Bacon does not appear to have