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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 3 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 158248 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 79 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Emperor 3 Charles 2 Saracen 2 Rogero 2 Rinaldo 2 Paris 2 Orlando 2 Ogier 2 King 2 Jupiter 2 Italy 2 Huon 2 God 2 France 2 Duke 2 Charlot 2 Charlemagne 2 Bradamante 2 Bayard 2 Astolpho 2 Arthur 2 Angelica 1 roman 1 greek 1 frankish 1 footnote 1 christian 1 chapter 1 Vortigern 1 Venus 1 Ulysses 1 Troy 1 Trojan 1 Tristram 1 Thor 1 Thetralde 1 Spain 1 Sir 1 Round 1 Rodomont 1 Queen 1 Perceval 1 Owain 1 Oliver 1 Octave 1 Neroweg 1 Neptune 1 Namo 1 Morvan 1 Minerva Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1025 knight 937 man 894 horse 889 king 781 son 750 time 743 day 596 hand 499 sword 469 head 451 father 439 name 423 way 418 arm 417 daughter 393 life 375 brother 351 place 347 court 341 country 339 eye 336 death 331 god 328 side 328 sea 316 body 313 foot 312 city 308 word 307 night 301 wife 296 water 293 friend 270 year 269 part 269 love 267 lady 267 earth 262 power 262 castle 257 tree 255 mother 251 moment 250 army 246 prince 239 heart 239 battle 237 people 234 youth 234 one Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 981 Sir 658 thou 602 Arthur 595 Orlando 509 King 432 Rinaldo 430 Rogero 406 Emperor 395 Charlemagne 342 Ogier 332 Charles 282 Launcelot 229 Tristram 210 Angelica 208 Bradamante 202 Astolpho 190 France 188 Vortigern 188 Jupiter 186 Huon 177 god 156 Bayard 143 Duke 140 Geraint 140 Aeneas 138 Gawain 135 Apollo 131 lord 128 Charlot 122 God 120 Saracen 120 Hercules 117 Heaven 116 Ulysses 109 Saracens 107 Breton 103 ye 103 Merlin 102 Hector 101 Owain 97 Venus 97 Diana 94 Guenever 92 heaven 91 Perceval 91 Kay 91 Achilles 90 Isoude 89 Trojan 88 Gradasso Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6736 he 4245 him 3433 it 2926 i 2472 they 1888 she 1858 you 1582 them 1235 me 1069 her 821 himself 669 we 324 thee 302 us 214 herself 185 themselves 100 myself 77 itself 57 yourself 45 one 31 thyself 25 mine 19 ourselves 17 his 15 theirs 14 yours 8 ye 7 hers 5 ''s 4 thy 4 theseus 3 ours 2 fronti''no 1 yourselves 1 whosoever 1 thus,--his 1 thou 1 take-- 1 spars,-- 1 o 1 ne Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 13154 be 5014 have 1955 say 1435 see 1196 take 1192 do 1120 come 1034 make 852 give 847 go 668 find 566 know 534 fall 514 call 504 leave 496 tell 462 hear 431 bring 383 return 375 bear 353 follow 349 receive 347 turn 326 look 314 stand 310 become 307 seem 302 think 301 put 299 ride 299 meet 297 pass 292 hold 291 let 290 throw 290 send 285 seek 285 draw 270 carry 259 lead 256 set 255 ask 246 slay 244 lose 242 arrive 241 keep 241 die 240 feel 232 enter 229 strike Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2465 not 1374 so 1245 then 781 now 641 great 637 other 629 more 584 up 477 only 464 good 461 long 445 as 444 thus 439 first 423 there 418 own 412 young 410 well 407 out 391 such 378 down 374 away 361 last 356 soon 354 old 347 also 346 many 344 most 320 here 300 off 300 never 282 same 279 again 276 much 268 forth 257 fair 251 ever 246 still 238 very 222 back 208 little 201 too 201 no 194 next 193 together 190 yet 188 far 188 even 178 full 177 high Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 123 good 46 brave 41 most 36 great 31 least 28 high 25 fair 21 eld 20 near 15 young 12 early 10 wise 10 warm 8 rich 8 old 8 low 8 large 8 bad 7 small 7 handsome 7 deep 6 slight 6 late 6 fine 6 black 5 strong 5 noble 5 mighty 5 li 5 fresh 5 Most 4 pure 4 manif 4 fit 4 bold 3 true 3 thick 3 tall 3 stout 3 soft 3 short 3 saw 3 hot 3 gentle 3 fleet 3 farth 2 tough 2 swift 2 sweet 2 subtle Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 303 most 39 well 4 least 1 nepenthe 1 latest 1 hidest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 name is sir 4 charlemagne was too 4 orlando was delighted 3 man did not 2 arthur was mortally 2 arthur went forth 2 brothers came forth 2 brothers were completely 2 charlemagne are pulci 2 charlemagne called together 2 charlemagne had hardly 2 charlemagne had somewhat 2 charlemagne knew not 2 charlemagne received tidings 2 charlemagne saw ogier 2 day had nothing 2 day is wellnigh 2 days has not 2 emperor has already 2 emperor saw ogier 2 emperor was right 2 emperor was unreasonably 2 horse are unequalled 2 horse comes out 2 horse is no 2 horse turned about 2 horse was near 2 horse was so 2 horse was wearier 2 horses did not 2 king came also 2 king had not 2 king said again 2 king was delighted 2 king was great 2 king was there 2 knight brought news 2 knight rode up 2 knight was florismart 2 knights give ground 2 knights had only 2 knights put spear 2 life is as 2 life is not 2 life was reft 2 man is time 2 man received orlando 2 man was more 2 men are apt 2 men were lawless Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 horse is no longer 2 life is not dear 2 ogier made no answer 2 orlando took no notice 2 rogero is not here 1 arms made no gesture 1 arthur is not dead 1 arthur was not dead 1 brother had no harm 1 daughters are not married 1 day was not far 1 emperor is not able 1 father was no mortal 1 gods were not ignorant 1 king returned no answer 1 knight was not proof 1 men were not satisfied 1 time is no more A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 4927 author = Bulfinch, Thomas title = Legends of Charlemagne date = keywords = Agramant; Angelica; Arthur; Astolpho; Bayard; Bradamante; Charlemagne; Charles; Charlot; Duke; Durindana; Emperor; Florismart; France; God; Gradasso; Huon; Italy; Jupiter; King; Medoro; Namo; Ogier; Oliver; Orlando; Paris; Rinaldo; Rodomont; Rogero; Saracen; Spain; christian; greek summary = In "Stories of Gods and Heroes," "King Arthur and His Knights" and "The When Rinaldo had grown old enough to assume arms Orlando had won for of Orlando, and Bayard, the horse of Rinaldo. till he had taken from Rinaldo his horse, and from Orlando his sword, Astolpho next day encountered on his way a stranger knight, named Sir Rodomont, seeing this, mounted the horse of Dudon, left Rinaldo, who brave knights, called home to aid with our arms the great Emperor of in any way the cause of the young man''s death." Orlando, knowing the Astolpho reached Marseilles the very day when Orlando, Rinaldo, Oliver, thought Rinaldo, nor the good Orlando, and Charlemagne knew not which "How shall I need them," said Rinaldo, "since I have lost my horse?" When this was done, the king said to Charlot, "Son, I request that you Then Rinaldo took the horse Bayard, gave him to id = 4928 author = Bulfinch, Thomas title = Bulfinch''s Mythology date = keywords = Achilles; Aeneas; Angelica; Apollo; Arthur; Astolpho; Bayard; Bohort; Bradamante; Britain; Charlemagne; Charles; Charlot; Diana; Duke; Emperor; England; France; Galahad; Gawain; Geraint; God; Greece; Greeks; Guenever; Heaven; Hector; Hercules; Huon; Ireland; Isoude; Italy; Juno; Jupiter; Kay; King; Launcelot; Loki; Lord; Merlin; Minerva; Neptune; Ogier; Orlando; Owain; Paris; Perceval; Queen; Rinaldo; Rogero; Round; Saracen; Sir; Thor; Tristram; Trojan; Troy; Ulysses; Venus; chapter; footnote; roman summary = In "Stories of Gods and Heroes," "King Arthur and His Knights" and fellow," said King Arthur, "canst thou bring me there where this "Sir knight," said Arthur, "for what cause must die." "That were shame unto thee," said Sir Launcelot; "thou thou canst." "Alas!" said Sir Launcelot, "that ever a knight white knight, and said, "Sir, thou fightest wonderful well, as Sir Tristram, he ran unto him, and took him by the hand, and said, King Arthur made Sir Tristram knight of the Table Round with great it shall never be said, in court, or among good knights, that Sir you, fair lords." Then the old man said unto King Arthur, "Sir, I "Come forth," said Arthur, "if thou darest, and I promise thee I But when the year was passed, King Arthur and Sir Gawain came with acts of the said King Arthur, and of his noble Knights of the id = 33021 author = Sue, Eugène title = The Carlovingian Coins; Or, The Daughters of Charlemagne A Tale of the Ninth Century date = keywords = Amael; Breton; Brittany; Chapelle; Charles; Eginhard; Emperor; Franks; Gaul; Louis; Morvan; Neroweg; Octave; Thetralde; Vortigern; frankish summary = Having reached Amael, Vortigern cast his eyes in the direction pointed "Long live Charles the Great!" the grandson of Amael saw a troop of Octave said to the Bretons; "I shall notify the Emperor that you await Eginhard, Vortigern, Amael and Octave, Charles said to the elder Breton: savage young Breton, although wounded in one arm, manage his horse like Supported by Vortigern''s arm the Emperor slowly descended the steps of a turned to Amael: "Well now, seigneur Breton, you have seen Charles the The mass being over, Charles said to Amael: "Well, now, seigneur Breton, "Seigneur Breton," the Emperor said, as soon as the chamber was cleared, "Vortigern," answered Thetralde, returning the look of her companion the court of Charles, the Emperor of the Franks, to return to their home against the Franks, when Charles, the Emperor, lived." [A] "The daughters of the Emperor Charles always accompanied him on his