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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 104024 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 86 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 spanish 2 Spaniards 2 Island 2 Governor 2 God 2 Captain 1 sidenote 1 man 1 english 1 buccaneer 1 aye 1 Yoruba 1 Winston 1 West 1 Walter 1 Walrond 1 Viceroy 1 Tobar 1 Teach 1 Tartar 1 Spain 1 South 1 Sir 1 Senor 1 Sea 1 Rose 1 Robinson 1 Ramona 1 Point 1 Parliament 1 Panama 1 North 1 Mrs. 1 Mr. 1 Morris 1 Morgan 1 Mewes 1 Mercedes 1 Mary 1 Lara 1 King 1 Kimball 1 Katy 1 Katherine 1 John 1 Jeremy 1 Jamaica 1 Jacques 1 Jack 1 Inez Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1807 man 852 ship 799 time 534 hand 533 buccaneer 493 day 476 island 457 sidenote 434 way 390 place 374 sea 371 side 349 water 330 night 327 woman 326 part 318 eye 302 voice 298 year 277 shore 276 arm 267 moment 267 face 263 sir 262 girl 260 boat 258 nothing 254 word 254 land 249 coast 246 thing 245 head 241 town 239 one 238 musket 233 room 228 gun 223 life 219 something 216 name 210 prisoner 208 end 207 father 205 captain 198 vessel 192 crew 191 wind 189 rest 182 fire 180 foot Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 6458 _ 556 Winston 511 Island 494 Spaniards 494 Cora 489 Morgan 456 Jack 355 de 323 God 273 Briggs 263 Alvarado 253 Buccaneers 248 English 238 West 206 Islands 204 Barbados 197 England 193 Bess 191 Atiba 189 Katherine 188 Captain 187 Walter 184 Inez 175 South 175 Hornigold 165 Governor 159 Davis 155 Yoruba 154 Sea 154 Mercedes 154 Jamaica 151 Indies 150 Belle 149 Viceroy 146 Bay 141 Spain 140 Panama 137 French 136 Bedford 135 New 135 Dampier 134 Anthony 129 Assembly 128 John 121 Morris 118 Jeremy 115 Indians 115 Hugh 114 Walrond 111 King Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5488 he 4137 i 4128 it 3795 you 3388 they 2284 she 2145 we 1745 him 1673 them 977 her 860 me 465 us 355 himself 191 themselves 135 herself 63 ''s 55 myself 52 thee 51 itself 47 yourself 40 ourselves 30 yours 25 mine 23 one 17 his 14 hers 7 ours 7 ''em 6 ye 5 theirs 3 thyself 2 i''m 1 your-- 1 your 1 you''re 1 th 1 on''t 1 o 1 name)= 1 merchantmen 1 kegs 1 hides-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 15709 be 6384 have 2070 do 1132 go 1109 take 1088 say 1087 make 936 come 835 see 798 get 788 know 661 think 568 find 555 give 519 look 489 turn 459 tell 406 try 379 hear 374 want 368 keep 368 begin 363 stand 351 leave 341 seem 331 call 325 hold 316 cry 307 ask 299 send 297 put 296 let 291 bring 269 speak 240 watch 237 move 233 run 228 mean 227 kill 219 reach 218 lie 215 pass 209 follow 200 set 200 sail 199 wait 199 fall 194 feel 192 carry 182 rise Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3159 not 1210 then 1159 now 963 up 949 so 748 back 747 more 739 here 733 out 596 well 590 just 572 other 562 down 525 good 517 first 508 only 483 there 475 long 472 again 450 as 437 still 421 much 402 little 400 spanish 400 small 385 too 382 own 377 old 361 away 350 even 349 many 334 great 330 never 300 most 295 very 276 enough 264 new 261 on 259 last 252 same 249 off 247 over 246 soon 242 few 241 in 224 once 221 all 217 next 212 also 207 young Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 135 good 84 most 57 least 23 large 17 great 16 fine 13 rich 13 bad 12 near 12 late 11 Most 9 high 7 small 6 strong 6 slight 6 noble 6 low 5 farth 5 eld 5 big 4 young 4 wise 4 early 3 stout 3 staunch 3 mean 3 hard 3 handy 3 fast 3 easy 3 damned 3 bold 2 wicked 2 white 2 sweet 2 sure 2 sober 2 safe 2 pure 2 proud 2 palmy 2 old 2 lovely 2 long 2 j 2 hardy 2 handsome 2 fit 2 brave 2 able Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 216 most 53 well 16 least 1 worst 1 surest 1 stoutest 1 hard 1 close Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 creativecommons.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://creativecommons.org/ Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 28 _ see page 5 _ was not 5 winston was still 3 _ did not 3 _ had ever 3 _ had not 3 _ is about 3 _ was still 3 cora went on 3 god have mercy 3 jack was not 3 jack went on 3 place called _ 3 voice was almost 3 voice was still 3 winston looked up 3 winston turned back 2 _ are very 2 _ is not 2 _ was now 2 buccaneers being masters 2 buccaneers were also 2 buccaneers were not 2 buccaneers were then 2 cora did not 2 island was now 2 jack was very 2 men are here 2 men are not 2 men did not 2 men do n''t 2 men had already 2 men had not 2 morgan takes porto 2 morgan was not 2 ship is there 2 ships being then 2 spaniards called _ 2 spaniards were english 2 voice came again 2 voice was hard 2 way was clear 2 winston looked down 2 winston stood unmoving 1 _ are about 1 _ are as 1 _ are better 1 _ are expert 1 _ are legally 1 _ are nearly Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ has no inhabitants 1 _ have no family 1 _ is not _ 1 _ was not regularly 1 buccaneers gave no quarter 1 buccaneers had no other 1 buccaneers had no pursuit 1 buccaneers were not afraid 1 buccaneers were not immediately 1 island ''s no longer 1 island was not attractive 1 jack was not at 1 jack was not exactly 1 man made no answer 1 man was no longer 1 men are not so 1 men being no better 1 men had no reason 1 men made no answer 1 men tell no tales 1 morgan did not rigorously 1 shore is not large 1 spaniards had no idea 1 spaniards had no settlement 1 spaniards made no endeavour 1 spaniards were no longer 1 water having no channel 1 winston was no better A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 29316 author = Brady, Cyrus Townsend title = Sir Henry Morgan, Buccaneer: A Romance of the Spanish Main date = keywords = Alvarado; Captain; Caracas; Donna; God; Governor; Guayra; Henry; Hornigold; Lara; Mary; Mercedes; Morgan; Rose; Sir; Teach; Tobar; Viceroy; man; spanish summary = HOW SIR HENRY MORGAN IN HIS OLD AGE RESOLVED TO GO A-BUCCANEERING AGAIN HOW SIR HENRY MORGAN IN HIS OLD AGE RESOLVED TO GO A-BUCCANEERING AGAIN all men who had ever held office in Jamaica Sir Henry Morgan, sometime "God rest the soul of the King!" cried Morgan, lifting his hat from his "There''s one yonder, man," cried Morgan, pointing up the harbor, where "A good plan, Master Morgan," cried Hornigold, forgetting the title as "Long live Sir Henry Morgan, King of the Buccaneers!" cried a voice out "Look you, Captain Morgan," cried Hornigold, pointing to leeward. "Donna Mercedes," cried the unhappy young man, "I love thee, I adore "You have loved me," cried the young man, turning toward Donna Mercedes, "That''s well done!" cried Morgan, "Captain Alvarado, if that be your "Long life to Donna de Lara and Captain Alvarado!" cried old Agramonte, id = 37116 author = Burney, James title = History of the Buccaneers of America date = keywords = Bay; Cape; Captain; Commander; Dampier; Davis; English; Flibustiers; French; Governor; Hispaniola; Indians; Indies; Island; King; North; Panama; Sea; South; Spain; Spaniards; West; buccaneer; sidenote; spanish summary = Basque, both Buccaneer commanders, at the head of 650 men, took the towns [Sidenote: Account of the Mosquito Indians.] In this party of Buccaneers [Sidenote: At Quibo.] About the 21st, the ships anchored near the _Island [Sidenote: One of them killed by the Buccaneers.] The ship''s boat rowed in the English Buccaneers were seeking plunder in the _South Sea_, the French Spaniards knew of his being on the Island, and Spanish ships had stopped [Sidenote: Duke of Norfolk''s Island.] The two ships anchored near the ship given to the French Buccaneers, offered to Davis and Swan new Buccaneers were last at the Island, the Spaniards had put dogs on shore, [Sidenote: Swan and Townley.] The South Sea adventures of the buccaneer [Sidenote: Retreat of the Buccaneers over land to the West Indian Sea.] [Sidenote: Le Sage.] At the time that the English and French Buccaneers id = 34317 author = Hoover, Thomas title = Caribbee date = keywords = Americas; Anthony; Assembly; Atiba; Barbados; Bedford; Briggs; Calvert; Council; Cromwell; Defiance; England; God; Hugh; Jacques; Jamaica; Jeremy; John; Katherine; Katy; Mewes; Morris; Parliament; Point; Spaniards; Walrond; Winston; Yoruba; aye; english; spanish summary = "I made one mistake, helping this island." Winston glanced at the ship Winston felt Briggs seize his arm and heard a hoarse whisper. "Now sir, every man''s got a right to his own mind on a thing, I always "I still think it''d be better to settle this honorably." Winston looked Winston stood in the silence for a moment, then turned to Katherine. "God damn you, Winston." Briggs full-cocked his musket with an ominous Good God, Winston thought, Barbados'' famous Assembly has been reduced of the men forward, to help set the guns, then turned back to Canninge. the island''s militia lies in wait for us--God knows how many thousandmen used to this miserable heat and likely plump as partridges." Atiba watched him disappear into the dark, then turned back to Winston. Winston turned without a word and led the way as the group of blackhatted men moved out into the evening air. id = 7210 author = Penrose, Margaret title = The Motor Girls on Waters Blue; Or, the Strange Cruise of the Tartar date = keywords = Belle; Bess; Cora; Inez; Island; Jack; Kimball; Mr.; Mrs.; Ramona; Robinson; Senor; Tartar; Walter summary = adventures, Cora, and her chums, Bess and Belle Robinson, helped to Cora, Bess and Belle were real girl chums, but they never knew all, "And on your way, Cora dear," requested her mother, "stop at Dr. Blake''s office, and ask him to meet the train Jack comes on. "There''s Jack!" cried Bess, grasping Cora''s shoulder, and directing "I know, Jack, it is too bad," said Cora, sympathetically. "We couldn''t leave Jack!" said Cora, softly. Thus Belle, Bess and Cora questioned Jack''s chum, who stood in the "Oh, Jack, do you think we can do it?" asked Cora. "Oh, Inez!" cried Cora, and in such a voice that Jack, who was just "Do you think we''ll find any news at St. Croix?" asked Cora, of Jack, "Will you come to our motor boat?" asked Jack of the sailor, who said "It was Cora and Jack who had the idea," said Bess, when quiet had