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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 111414 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 76 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 roman 4 Rome 4 Italy 4 Cicero 3 Senate 3 Quintus 3 Pompey 3 Greek 3 Clodius 3 Cato 3 Catiline 3 Atticus 3 Antony 2 Republic 2 Gaul 2 Cæsar 2 Crassus 2 Consul 2 Brutus 2 B.C. 1 verre 1 turkish 1 sidenote 1 like 1 life 1 history 1 great 1 good 1 friend 1 footnote 1 christian 1 canon 1 author 1 Zingis 1 West 1 Turks 1 Tribune 1 Timour 1 Tartar 1 Sultan 1 Sulla 1 State 1 St. 1 South 1 Sogdiana 1 Sicily 1 Sallust 1 S.J. 1 Roscius 1 Rev. Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1772 man 921 time 792 year 716 life 646 day 529 letter 513 word 457 power 452 people 425 friend 393 nothing 390 law 363 thing 360 work 342 way 330 country 324 history 316 speech 315 part 313 death 303 world 303 place 294 hand 291 city 290 name 286 matter 281 mind 271 nature 267 age 262 case 255 character 251 state 244 truth 244 other 231 province 226 subject 219 idea 213 question 213 course 212 one 209 book 199 story 196 enemy 192 fact 191 citizen 188 order 187 money 187 brother 186 reader 186 century Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2571 Cicero 1873 _ 915 Cæsar 785 Rome 689 . 428 Pompey 393 i. 344 Antony 343 ii 324 lib 318 Senate 315 De 295 Atticus 266 Catiline 265 Republic 228 Church 219 Clodius 215 Brutus 198 St. 194 8vo 191 Sulla 178 Romans 176 Consul 165 Turks 150 Cato 150 B.C. 150 Asia 146 Ad 142 Crown 129 Roman 128 Milo 123 Italy 123 Ibid 122 Quintus 121 net 120 God 119 Greek 117 6d 111 Mr. 110 Consulship 105 Verres 104 Crassus 103 ca 102 et 102 Consuls 101 de 95 Pro 87 Christ 86 Hortensius 84 Europe Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 7044 he 4741 it 2306 him 2161 i 2084 they 2061 we 1381 them 1059 himself 1028 you 908 us 435 me 321 themselves 170 itself 126 she 102 myself 56 her 53 yourself 52 ourselves 47 one 18 herself 16 his 15 yours 10 theirs 10 mine 9 ours 7 thee 3 thyself 2 yourselves 2 ii 1 you"--as 1 what!--do 1 old,-- 1 milo 1 hers 1 grævius[138 1 gestures;[283 1 afterwards:-- 1 aerius:-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 19440 be 8725 have 1945 do 1252 say 1200 make 839 come 816 take 759 know 718 give 682 go 601 tell 594 write 573 see 570 find 569 think 566 speak 457 seem 431 become 398 call 328 bring 303 leave 300 show 285 put 278 live 258 declare 236 use 231 hear 228 send 225 believe 224 let 223 suppose 222 pass 222 feel 221 carry 213 look 213 follow 211 get 203 read 192 hold 192 bear 177 die 175 remain 173 ask 172 understand 167 fall 161 turn 160 begin 158 defend 155 allow 154 receive Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3302 not 1545 so 887 then 822 great 814 more 767 own 695 such 668 well 664 very 642 other 638 only 614 now 557 much 547 first 547 even 540 as 450 good 430 roman 420 same 404 most 389 up 379 many 363 also 345 old 338 still 333 too 320 here 310 again 309 out 295 never 295 little 295 last 288 far 281 down 276 there 251 long 249 on 245 however 243 ever 239 young 238 indeed 236 high 232 public 219 true 214 political 212 no 211 probably 207 rather 206 certain 204 thus Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 133 good 94 least 77 most 49 great 41 high 25 early 17 bad 10 rich 10 noble 10 near 9 low 8 l 7 manif 7 brave 6 choice 6 Most 5 true 5 strong 5 long 5 happy 5 fine 5 bitter 4 slight 4 farth 4 easy 3 short 3 pure 3 late 3 j 3 hard 3 fit 3 close 3 able 2 wise 2 warm 2 sweet 2 sure 2 strict 2 stout 2 safe 2 sad 2 pleasant 2 light 2 large 2 handsome 2 grave 2 furth 2 eld 2 deep 2 dear Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 327 most 33 well 14 least 2 lest 1 it--"the 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 cicero did not 10 cicero was not 6 cicero does not 6 time went on 5 _ is _ 5 cicero was probably 5 cæsar was dead 5 cæsar was not 4 antony was not 4 cicero had not 3 cæsar had already 3 life is not 3 nothing is so 3 pompey was still 2 _ are _ 2 _ were _ 2 cicero came forward 2 cicero found time 2 cicero had again 2 cicero had never 2 cicero is very 2 cicero knew well 2 cicero left rome 2 cicero was always 2 cicero was ambitious 2 cicero was consul 2 cicero was indeed 2 cicero was more 2 cicero was silent 2 cicero was so 2 cicero was still 2 cicero was successful 2 cicero was very 2 cicero was wrong 2 cicero went down 2 cæsar did not 2 cæsar had not 2 cæsar was away 2 cæsar was consul 2 cæsar was lord 2 cæsar was now 2 day had not 2 man does not 2 man was dead 2 man was not 2 men are not 2 men had so 2 men were willing 2 pompey did not 2 pompey had so Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 antony was not present 2 cicero had no power 2 cicero was not able 1 antony was not as 1 cicero did not ostensibly 1 cicero does not often 1 cicero gives no authority 1 cicero had not as 1 cicero is no doubt 1 cicero is not content 1 cicero took no part 1 cicero was no doubt 1 cicero was not even 1 cicero was not present 1 country is not enough 1 cæsar had no real 1 cæsar had not then 1 cæsar was not false 1 cæsar was not there 1 day had not as 1 law is not extant 1 life is not devoted 1 life is not only 1 life is not so 1 life shows no trace 1 man does not often 1 man has no other 1 man was not content 1 man was not wholly 1 men are not unfrequently 1 men were not equal 1 pompey was no more 1 power was not adequate 1 power was not material 1 powers found no difficulty 1 rome are not uncommon 1 rome was no longer 1 senate had no power 1 speeches are not extant 1 things were no longer 1 time is no measure 1 years were not yet A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 11448 author = Collins, W. Lucas (William Lucas) title = Cicero date = keywords = Antony; Atticus; Caesar; Catiline; Cato; Cicero; Clodius; Forum; Greek; Italy; Pompey; Quintus; Rome; Senate; footnote; friend; good; great; life; like; roman summary = affections, the tastes of the Romans of Cicero''s day, were in many gentlemen, when a man asked me what day I had left Rome, and whether there no man knew how widely, and in which men like Julius Caesar and Crassus hast said true!" and Cicero went home a private citizen, but with that since Cicero''s day, to whom, as to the great Roman, banishment from province was, in fact, to a man like Cicero, little better than an flattering to men who, like Cicero, are naturally and essentially the day--not Cicero''s letters only, but those of Caesar and Pompey and its time to a man who had been consul of Rome, with how much more truth, great orators of Rome: and in the third we have Cicero''s view of what the Cicero evidently took great pleasure in his society, and his letters to old scholar when he says--"I feel a better man for reading Cicero". id = 21859 author = Newman, John Henry title = Historical Sketches, Volume I (of 3) The Turks in Their Relation to Europe; Marcus Tullius Cicero; Apollonius of Tyana; Primitive Christianity date = keywords = A.D.; Ambrose; Apollonius; Asia; Catholic; Christ; Christendom; Christianity; Church; Cicero; Constantinople; Crown; East; Emperor; Empire; Europe; God; Greece; Greek; Holy; Huns; Italy; L''Art; Lord; Minor; North; Ottoman; Pope; Rev.; Rome; S.J.; Sogdiana; South; St.; Sultan; Tartar; Timour; Turks; West; Zingis; author; canon; christian; history; roman; turkish summary = this day are Christian; but, whether we consider Huns, Moguls, or Turks, nationally lost to the world, as far as history goes, for long periods history.[41] Sixty-three years before this date, a Turk of high rank, of possession of the Holy Places by the Turks to this day is a proof of it. possession of Asia Minor, they profaned the churches, subjected Bishops very time that a Turk first came into the country, from the era of the at the very time the Turks were making progress, the Christian world was Providence of God to raise up for His Church such heroic men as St. Leo, of the fifth, and St. Gregory, of the eleventh century. have had their day; those European states, so great three centuries ago, subject-matter of certain Canons in the Church from time immemorial, we Christianity, then the Martyrs and Bishops of the early Church, the men id = 28676 author = Trollope, Anthony title = The Life of Cicero, Volume II. date = keywords = Antony; Appius; Atticus; B.C.; Brutus; Catiline; Cato; Cicero; Cilicia; Clodius; Consul; Crassus; Cælius; Cæsar; Decimus; Div; Dolabella; Gaul; Ibid; Italy; Marcellus; Milo; Piso; Pompey; Quintus; Republic; Rome; Senate; roman; sidenote summary = To Cicero''s thinking, both Pompey and Cæsar were certain letter which Cicero had written to Cæsar. In the spring of the year we find Cicero writing to Cæsar in apparently the day of danger came, he joined Pompey''s army against Cæsar, doubting, Then comes the passage in his letter on the strength of which Mr. Forsyth has condemned Cicero, not without abstract truth in his told, indeed, by Mr. Froude that the man was Cæsar, and that Cicero Cæsar''s control--because we know that on his return Cicero''s villas were mind of Cicero the idea of saying words which Cæsar might receive with The two men, Cæsar and Cicero, had agreed to differ, and had talked of have no means of knowing; but we feel that Cicero was not a man likely Not long after Cæsar''s death Cicero left Rome, and spent the ensuing declared that he, Cicero, had been the author of Cæsar''s death, in order id = 8945 author = Trollope, Anthony title = The Life of Cicero, Volume One date = keywords = Antony; Atticus; B.C.; Brutus; Catiline; Cato; Cicero; Clodius; Consul; Consulship; Crassus; Cæsar; Gaul; Greek; Hortensius; Italy; Marius; Mommsen; Mr.; Pompey; Prætor; Quintus; Quæstor; Republic; Rome; Roscius; Sallust; Senate; Sicily; State; Sulla; Tribune; roman; verre summary = Cicero''s death men had to doubt whether literature or the Republic had familiar; but in Cicero''s time the male free inhabitants of Rome did probably at work on his great poem, Cicero wrote an account of his Pompey the Great, was then Consul (B.C. 89), and Cicero was sent out to wonder how such a man as Cicero found time for the real work of his Verres had carried on his plunder during the years 73, 72, 71 B.C. During this time Cicero had been engaged sedulously as an advocate in state of things now in London, nor was it at Rome in Cicero''s time. None of Cicero''s letters have come to us from the year of his little was known in Rome of Cæsar till the time of Catiline''s Catiline, had been declared in the Senate by Cicero himself on that day Cæsar''s right-hand man in Gaul, was of the same politics as Cicero--so