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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 58803 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 78 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 John 5 Brown 4 man 4 God 3 Virginia 3 South 3 Kansas 2 United 2 State 2 Slavery 2 President 2 New 2 Mr. 2 Harper 2 Ferry 1 time 1 southern 1 slave 1 old 1 life 1 William 1 Washington 1 Villard 1 Union 1 Territory 1 Stuart 1 States 1 Sanborn 1 Sam 1 Ruffin 1 Robert 1 Richmond 1 Rev. 1 Redpath 1 Pottawattomie 1 Pottawatomie 1 Osawatomie 1 October 1 North 1 Mrs. 1 Missouri 1 Mason 1 Lord 1 Lee 1 Lawrence 1 House 1 Grant 1 Governor 1 General 1 Free Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1686 man 524 time 441 slave 440 day 419 life 348 hand 327 horse 301 year 274 night 269 letter 267 house 242 eye 234 son 230 way 221 friend 215 people 215 arm 209 word 205 thing 205 place 203 company 203 boy 199 war 194 plan 193 home 191 army 189 purpose 186 prisoner 181 child 178 mind 175 head 172 money 172 heart 171 fact 169 slavery 168 force 165 history 159 party 159 hour 157 father 156 country 155 sir 153 face 152 wife 152 blood 151 family 149 power 148 moment 147 question 145 order Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2015 Brown 1601 _ 692 John 672 Mr. 494 Kansas 407 Lee 336 Villard 315 State 297 God 238 South 235 Colonel 217 Virginia 211 States 204 Sanborn 202 B. 197 Free 191 Stuart 181 Ferry 177 North 171 Harper 155 Lawrence 141 Osawatomie 140 New 139 H. 137 Washington 136 General 136 Captain 123 Mrs. 120 United 117 Union 117 Cook 113 Sam 113 President 110 Governor 106 Slavery 106 Pottawatomie 95 Smith 95 Henry 95 F. 89 William 86 York 86 Missouri 86 May 84 House 82 W. 81 Stevens 81 J. 79 August 78 Frederick 78 Court Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4686 he 2485 i 2479 it 1499 they 1434 you 1288 him 854 them 716 we 506 she 506 me 224 himself 187 us 173 her 71 myself 64 themselves 33 itself 26 ''em 23 ourselves 20 yourself 19 herself 16 mine 15 yours 12 one 8 ye 8 thee 6 hers 6 ''s 5 theirs 5 sho 5 his 4 ours 2 genl 1 yourselves 1 you''re 1 yo 1 thee-- 1 hit''ud 1 em 1 abraham''--you Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 9879 be 4257 have 1271 do 689 make 668 say 576 come 551 take 527 know 486 go 462 give 450 see 345 get 311 write 275 hold 267 ask 241 find 237 tell 234 call 231 think 227 leave 218 hear 201 follow 192 kill 182 become 177 believe 176 begin 173 send 173 look 167 live 161 turn 161 intend 159 put 159 meet 158 fight 157 speak 157 lead 156 stand 154 feel 144 bring 143 move 131 try 130 receive 129 seem 127 concern 125 keep 123 pass 121 fall 119 use 119 die 117 draw Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2062 not 436 so 406 more 364 old 343 only 340 up 338 first 331 now 325 then 287 other 277 out 271 as 270 good 268 little 264 great 254 well 254 such 242 never 227 here 221 own 218 also 207 long 202 back 196 again 185 last 176 most 175 young 174 much 174 just 173 very 167 too 166 down 165 there 159 many 144 still 144 same 140 ever 139 yet 138 free 134 new 132 far 126 white 126 right 124 - 122 few 120 even 118 on 117 once 111 all 110 away Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 78 good 36 least 29 most 24 great 23 high 8 noble 8 fine 8 early 8 brave 7 young 7 late 7 bad 6 slight 6 deep 5 low 5 large 4 strong 4 small 4 dear 4 dark 4 bloody 4 able 4 Most 3 strange 3 poor 3 mild 3 foul 3 big 2 wild 2 warm 2 strict 2 stern 2 simple 2 rude 2 plain 2 old 2 near 2 mean 2 heavy 2 handsome 2 grand 2 gentle 2 game 2 full 2 friendly 2 faint 2 bitter 1 wide 1 weak 1 vile Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 147 most 12 well 8 least 2 near 1 lest 1 hard 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 16 brown was not 10 brown did not 7 men were not 6 _ is _ 5 brown had not 3 _ was _ 3 brown is not 3 brown was insane 3 lee was silent 3 man did not 2 _ are _ 2 _ be poor 2 _ do not 2 _ have not 2 _ think _ 2 brown gave out 2 brown was then 2 eyes were clear 2 eyes were now 2 god is love 2 john began early 2 john was _ 2 john was captain 2 john was somewhat 2 kansas is free 2 lee was not 2 men have only 1 _ are more 1 _ are not 1 _ be cautious 1 _ coming on_--i 1 _ found _ 1 _ gone up 1 _ had _ 1 _ had not 1 _ have _ 1 _ is god 1 _ know _ 1 _ live _ 1 _ lived _ 1 _ said june 1 _ telling lies 1 _ was practically 1 _ was sure 1 _ were _ 1 _ written _ 1 arms are empty 1 arms were busy 1 brown asked mr. 1 brown asked sharply Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ are not _ 1 brown did not _ 1 brown did not merely 1 brown had no concern 1 brown had no difficulty 1 brown had no malice 1 brown had no questions 1 brown had not definitely 1 brown had not yet 1 brown has no authority 1 brown is not dead 1 brown made no attempt 1 brown made no reply 1 brown was not interested 1 brown was not present 1 brown was not ready 1 brown was not seriously 1 brown was not sincere 1 brown was not so 1 brown was not sure 1 brown was not there 1 lee had no fear 1 lee was not only 1 letter has no public 1 life had no use 1 man has no liberty 1 man is not altogether 1 man made no answer 1 man was not slow 1 men were not credible 1 men were not even 1 slave was not familiar 1 south has no money 1 years do not often A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 8462 author = Dixon, Thomas, Jr. title = The Man in Gray: A Romance of North and South date = keywords = Ben; Brown; Colonel; General; God; Grant; House; John; Kansas; Lee; Mr.; Mrs.; New; North; Pottawattomie; President; Richmond; Robert; Ruffin; Sam; Slavery; South; States; Stuart; Union; United; Virginia; Washington; man; southern summary = The old man waved to his wife to look after the boys'' breakfast. "All right," Lee cheerfully answered as he drew one boy within each arm Lee to-day, but he''s my commander, sir, and I''ll say he''s right." "Has ye heard ''bout de old man, name John Brown, dat come ter lead de When the last man had signed, John Brown led in a long prayer to When they reached the house she turned to the old man with Southern Brown faced the man and held him in a silent look of his blue-gray eyes. studied John Brown with the interest of a soldier in the man who knows The old man hurried home, bowing right and left to his white friends and Colonel Lee, United States Army, commanding the troops sent by the Lee was silent again, looking at the face with flaming eyes in a new id = 31839 author = Douglass, Frederick title = John Brown: An Address at the 14th Anniversary of Storer College date = keywords = Brown; Ferry; Harper; John; Virginia; man; time summary = facts, as I can, of a grand, brave and good old man, and especially to Captain John Brown, the man who originated, planned and commanded the Much has been said of John Brown, much that is wise and beautiful, but we yet stand too near the days of slavery, and the life and times of other great men of his class, that will time certainly do for John To them John Brown and his men were prominent Anti-slavery men, the brave old man, not only avowed his the good old man''s life--had they said to him, "You see we have you in Slavery was the idol of Virginia, and pardon and life to Brown meant With John Brown, as with every other man fit to die for a cause, the caused, forty years afterwards, a John Brown and a Harper''s Ferry Slavery was a state of war, he said, to which the slaves id = 2050 author = Hawkins, Walter title = Old John Brown, the man whose soul is marching on date = keywords = Brown; God; John; Kansas; Lord; State; life; man; old; slave summary = sang ''John Brown died that the slave might be free'' they were singing ways of God rather than admiring John Brown, that will be just what he four years of John''s life worth mentioning save that at that early age twenty years old.'' ''John began early in life to discover a great hereditary sense the soul of John Brown may be said to have marched on. eventful days were at hand, and John Brown felt that his real life-work heart, and the ''Year of His redeemed was come''; and, said John Brown''s John Brown and, at one time, six of his sons were in the company. We now find John Brown busy for a while in the Northern States two-year-old child, saying, ''When John Brown is hanged as a traitor she prisoners were in the hands of John Brown. White House, it is evident that John Brown''s soul is marching on. march of John Brown''s soul. id = 28052 author = Roe, Alfred S. (Alfred Seelye) title = John Brown: A Retrospect Read before The Worcester Society of Antiquity, Dec. 2, 1884. date = keywords = Brown; God; John; Rev.; Slavery; South; man summary = the sample Pistols sent to John (not Capt) Brown Care of Massasoit cries out to him, passing along, "God bless you, old man; I wish I Brown, have seen colored men in both branches of the National since the war, who shall say that the soul of John Brown is not interpreters of the law in the days when the life of John Brown was upon the acts of John Brown with quite different feelings from those men who had in various ways assisted Brown in his work without knowing written words were: "I, John Brown, am now quite certain that the Greeley himself wrote the words: "John Brown, dead, will live in passively upheld slavery, alludes to the Hero as "Old John Brown, the In two years from the death of John Brown the Twelfth What think ye of John Brown? the land of John Brown. id = 41582 author = Wilson, Hill Peebles title = John Brown, Soldier of Fortune: A Critique date = keywords = August; Brown; Captain; Ferry; Forbes; Free; God; Governor; Harper; John; Kansas; Lawrence; Mason; Missouri; Mr.; New; October; Osawatomie; Pottawatomie; President; Redpath; Sanborn; South; State; Territory; United; Villard; Virginia; William summary = book, _The Public Life of Captain John Brown_, Mr. Charles Eliot Norton, his unmarried sons planned to abandon Kansas and the Free-State Cause author''s fine panegyrics concerning Brown''s devotion to the Free-State Free-State men who had preceded the Browns into the Territory. suggested it by arming the Free-State men in Kansas in the spring of Long before the coming of the Browns, the Free State leaders in the At the time Brown arrived, the Free-State cause in the Territory was behalf of the Free-State cause, then all the horses which the Browns Following this, John Brown and his band of Free-State Mr. Villard states[199] that John Brown and his party, with the exception of Brown was well received by the Free-State leaders, on his arrival at the men thereupon offered the command to John Brown, a In a letter addressed to "General John Brown" Lane said that