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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 9 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 36461 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 81 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 illustration 4 clock 3 watch 3 time 3 London 3 Fig 2 hour 2 great 2 dial 2 day 2 George 1 year 1 work 1 wheel 1 tooth 1 staff 1 position 1 pivot 1 pallet 1 old 1 master 1 maker 1 look 1 long 1 line 1 japanese 1 hand 1 good 1 french 1 fig 1 dutch 1 degree 1 cuckoo 1 chapter 1 case 1 arc 1 William 1 Tom 1 Thomas 1 Tabitha 1 Stumpy 1 Reader 1 Randlebury 1 Phil 1 Newcome 1 Museum 1 Mr. 1 Miss 1 Liverpool 1 John Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1210 clock 1138 time 847 watch 681 day 640 line 623 wheel 621 point 602 pallet 546 hour 529 illustration 524 degree 517 tooth 497 balance 467 hand 457 escapement 429 case 428 cuckoo 422 dial 396 arc 384 work 376 way 366 year 365 position 348 part 343 face 330 escape 321 end 318 man 315 spring 292 maker 283 motion 282 center 271 action 264 pivot 257 place 246 jewel 244 cylinder 244 boy 239 fork 225 night 222 side 210 pendulum 210 form 209 one 205 half 204 master 203 minute 201 staff 201 piece 201 period Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 6430 _ 722 Fig 553 Griselda 403 Tom 379 Charlie 329 A 285 | 265 B 211 Jim 171 George 159 D 156 b 154 Drift 132 London 128 c 126 Miss 125 f 125 e 125 C 112 Grizzel 103 Clock 98 jewel 96 pin 92 John 91 g 89 Thomas 89 Phil 87 CHAPTER 85 arc 82 Dorcas 81 h 79 d 73 Gus 72 Time 71 m 67 English 66 F 66 . 65 k 64 l 63 England 63 CLOCK 61 s 61 Randlebury 60 William 59 Mr 58 P 57 Mr. 57 E 53 James Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3871 it 2604 i 2196 he 2025 you 1980 we 878 they 867 she 750 him 714 me 414 them 247 us 247 himself 195 her 77 itself 71 herself 59 themselves 59 one 59 myself 51 yourself 22 ourselves 17 yours 14 ''s 9 ours 6 mine 3 ye 3 theirs 3 his 3 em 3 ''em 2 you''re 2 hers 1 yourselves 1 you--''get 1 yer 1 whispered,-- 1 out,-- 1 example,--you Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 13178 be 3397 have 1460 do 1411 say 1167 make 700 show 676 see 635 go 612 come 604 know 517 take 483 find 453 give 398 get 382 look 339 think 336 set 306 draw 295 use 250 tell 243 turn 229 call 225 leave 213 hear 209 feel 202 pass 198 seem 196 let 195 put 190 hold 188 become 178 require 174 place 170 keep 169 stand 158 follow 157 suppose 152 represent 148 move 145 establish 144 lock 143 ask 142 carry 142 begin 139 obtain 139 indicate 137 strike 135 illustrate 135 cut 132 understand Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2343 not 851 so 678 up 625 very 571 now 569 then 559 more 547 good 536 little 491 only 481 long 470 old 455 well 434 great 429 other 428 as 423 first 406 out 361 much 351 same 330 such 326 just 300 again 295 too 275 down 273 here 263 never 254 still 241 small 237 most 235 new 231 even 223 many 219 right 219 also 211 about 207 off 206 all 204 back 201 on 197 next 197 however 196 last 194 large 187 short 180 there 178 early 174 once 173 quite 166 necessary Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 144 good 63 most 47 least 47 great 24 early 16 high 14 near 14 low 11 slight 11 Most 10 simple 10 fine 9 late 9 bad 7 small 7 old 7 long 7 dear 5 lovely 4 short 4 new 4 large 4 hard 4 clever 3 wild 3 poor 3 loud 3 happy 3 faint 3 deep 2 weak 2 topmost 2 strong 2 soft 2 rough 2 rich 2 quick 2 pale 2 mere 2 grave 2 grand 2 full 2 choice 2 bright 2 big 1 wr 1 wise 1 wide 1 white--"already 1 warm Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 174 most 13 well 13 least 1 thinnest 1 oldest 1 highest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 www.gutenberg.net 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/44838/44838-h/44838-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/44838/44838-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/7/0/2/17021/17021-h/17021-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/7/0/2/17021/17021-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/5/5/6/15569/15569-h/15569-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/5/5/6/15569/15569-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/timeitsmeasureme00arth 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 15 _ is _ 14 _ was _ 10 _ do _ 6 _ do n''t 6 griselda did not 5 _ is not 4 _ are _ 4 _ did _ 4 _ have _ 4 _ think _ 4 watches are not 3 _ am _ 3 _ is about 3 _ looked _ 3 clocks are generally 3 griselda had not 3 griselda was not 3 time went on 3 watches do not 2 _ be so 2 _ is also 2 _ is n''t 2 _ is usually 2 _ see _ 2 _ taken _ 2 _ turning on 2 balance is free 2 charlie had not 2 charlie was too 2 clock had not 2 clock has not 2 clocks are not 2 clocks are usually 2 cuckoo had time 2 escapement is really 2 griselda had never 2 griselda looked up 2 point is necessary 2 positions are not 2 teeth are not 2 time has never 2 tom said nothing 2 tooth is just 2 watch is not 2 watches are generally 2 wheel being firmly 2 work was as 1 _ are always 1 _ are beautifully 1 _ are bent Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ do not _ 1 _ has not really 1 _ is not compatible 1 _ is not divisible 1 _ is not necessary 1 _ was no doubt 1 _ was not very 1 balance is not absolutely 1 case is no exception 1 cases are not so 1 cases were no longer 1 cases were not so 1 charlie had no help 1 charlie had not dog''s 1 charlie had not long 1 charlie took no notice 1 charlie was not long 1 clock are not unfrequently 1 clock had not only 1 clock has no equal 1 clocks are not great 1 clocks are not merely 1 clocks had no pendulum 1 clocks have no wise 1 clocks is not fundamental 1 cuckoo took no notice 1 dial was not visible 1 griselda did not much 1 griselda did not particularly 1 griselda had no objection 1 griselda had not before 1 griselda said no more 1 griselda was not sorry 1 griselda was not sure 1 point was not always 1 positions are not permanent 1 teeth are not so 1 tom had no ambition 1 tom had no difficulty 1 watch is not isochronous 1 watches do not of 1 watches was not merely 1 wheel is not only A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 17021 author = Anonymous title = Watch and Clock Escapements A Complete Study in Theory and Practice of the Lever, Cylinder and Chronometer Escapements, Together with a Brief Account of the Origin and Evolution of the Escapement in Horology date = keywords = Fig; arc; degree; illustration; line; pallet; tooth summary = pallet at the point _f_; and the escape wheel turning in the direction the ratchet-tooth lever escapement: We draw the face of the teeth at an Fig. 9, two teeth of a ratchet-tooth escape wheel reduced one-half; This arc of one and one-half degrees of escape-wheel movement is a ratchet-tooth pallets so as to utilize but ten degrees of escape-wheel the arc of the escape wheel which is utilized by the pallet action. ratchet-tooth lever escapement with circular pallets and ten degrees of locking face of the entrance pallet as shown at Fig. 84, then the draw escape-wheel teeth and cylinder that each half of the tooth space shall indicated by the radial line _e x_ the point of the escape-wheel tooth of the tooth, and the arc passing through the point of the escape-wheel of an escape-wheel tooth we draw the line _C d_, from the point of the id = 44838 author = Arthur, James title = Time and Its Measurement date = keywords = clock; day; fig; hour; illustration; japanese; time; watch summary = Japanese Clock with Vertical Dial Having Curved Lines, Weight the clock half an hour forward." In those days work commenced at six best practical way in this day is to use a watch set to local time [Illustration: Fig. 14--Japanese Striking Clock with Weight and Short [Illustration: Fig. 16--Japanese Clock with Vertical Dial, Weight and [Illustration: Fig. 18--Japanese Clock with Vertical Dial Having [Illustration: Fig. 22--Dial of Japanese Astronomical Clock] given day, or night, this dial has a _last long hour_ in each case, point of time marked by the striking of the clock. our 24-hour clock time. One mean time clock day of 24 hours, which has been explained hours clock time; and since motion is relative, it is permissible to local day it would be 12 o''clock breakfast time in New York; but in [Illustration: Fig. 46--Universal Time Dial Set for Four Places] id = 45883 author = Benson, James W., active 1857-1887 title = Time and Time-Tellers date = keywords = ----------------------------------------------------------------------+; Company; London; clock; day; dial; great; hand; hour; illustration; time; watch; wheel; work; year summary = In Queen Elizabeth''s time the clock was changed for a dial 1. Toothed wheel-work was known in ancient times, and particularly to | [Illustration: Ancient Silver Dial and Gold-cased Watch. At this time of day, when watches strikes the hours even in the pocket; the _Clock-Watch Repeater_, The MERIDIAN WATCH shows the time of day in any number of places in REGULATOR CLOCKS are, as we have said, the most perfect time-pieces In order to set the Clock to the hour of the day, the minute-hand If, at any future time, the Clock should require regulating, the small which winding the clock could be made to keep time with great the dial to time, are two springs or keys to keep in place a wheel |Seconds which stand against that day, and make your Clock or Watch so| |the Dial marks just an hour, as 9, 10, 11, 1, 2, 3, or 4 o''clock. id = 20317 author = Hall, Eugene Edward title = A Treatise on Staff Making and Pivoting Containing Complete Directions for Making and Fitting New Staffs from the Raw Material date = keywords = Fig; illustration; pivot; staff summary = staff, from the steel to the jewels, and their relation to the pivots, points, not only as regards staffs, but pivots also, whether applied to a Select a piece of Stubb''s steel wire, say No. 46, or a little larger than the largest part of the finished staff is to too hard to work well under the graver nor too soft for the pivots. of a staff while in a split chuck, cut it off and turned and finished the apply the gauge to the new staff, as shown in Fig. 10, and the taper end finish all the lower portion of the staff while the work was held in the shown the correct manner of applying the graver when turning a pivot. When the staff is finished from the lower pivot to the seat of the undertake to do this work, there are but few who can pivot a staff in id = 45772 author = Hayden, Arthur title = Chats on Old Clocks date = keywords = Dublin; Edinburgh; England; English; Esq; George; John; Liverpool; London; Museum; Thomas; William; case; clock; dial; dutch; french; illustration; long; maker summary = CHAPTER III.--THE LONG-CASE CLOCK--THE PERIOD OF VENEER AND In _Old Clocks and Watches and their Makers_, by the late F. marquetry on long-case clocks--No common origin of design--Le marquetry on long-case clocks--No common origin of design--Le style réfugié--Derivative nature of marquetry clock-cases--The style réfugié--Derivative nature of marquetry clock-cases--The form the long-case or "grandfather" clock is as Dutch as the tiles Side showing panel in common use by cabinet-makers and clock-case THE LONG-CASE CLOCK--THE PERIOD OF LACQUER THE LONG-CASE CLOCK--THE PERIOD OF LACQUER [Illustration: LONG-CASE CLOCK WITH LACQUER DECORATION. period clock-case, we illustrate several types showing reflections Other names of Liverpool makers found on long-case clocks are William A long-case eight-day clock finely decorated in marquetry, in date [Illustration: LONG-CASE EIGHT-DAY CLOCK. [Illustration: LONG-CASE EIGHT-DAY CLOCK. [Illustration: LONG-CASE EIGHT-DAY CLOCK. [Illustration: LONG-CASE EIGHT-DAY CLOCK. [Illustration: LONG-CASE CLOCK WITH RARE OVAL DIAL. makers--Character of Scottish clocks--Irish clockmakers: Dublin, makers--Character of Scottish clocks--Irish clockmakers: Dublin, id = 855 author = Jerome, Jerome K. (Jerome Klapka) title = Clocks date = keywords = clock; great; old summary = and that knows it is wrong, and glories in it; and there is the clock thought the world had come to an end; everything was so death-like! The man who can live in the same house with one of these clocks, and there were any difference in time between that clock and the sun, you "Well, the clock in the dining-room says a quarter past two." simple truth concerning it, people think I am exaggerating. We discussed the clock, and Buggles said how he loved the sound of its we have a clock like that?" She said it would seem like having some one respect.) It was the quaintest and most old-fashioned clock he had They said that was my clock. The next day the clock struck thirteen four times and this cheered within the same hour, and at other times it will go for half-a-day id = 38340 author = Kleinlein, Walter J. (Walter John) title = Rules and Practice for Adjusting Watches date = keywords = Fig; chapter; position; watch summary = If a watch rates slow in heat compared to cold it is necessary to Wind and set the watch to correct time, place it in the heat box and watch requires a correction of + or the number of seconds indicated, alteration may be required before a close position rate can be _How to Find the Correct Collet Pinning Point for Any Watch._ _How to Find the Correct Collet Pinning Point for Any Watch._ close and the watch is in good condition with the balance in poise, it spread the pins slightly, re-time the watch and rate it in the same _Percentage of Watches Requiring Correction of Position Rates._ After timing the watch closely it was tested in three positions and pins caused a gaining rate of two seconds per hour in the mean time. correct and the next position test showed a variation of four seconds id = 15569 author = Molesworth, Mrs. title = The Cuckoo Clock date = keywords = Aunt; Dorcas; Griselda; Grizzel; Miss; Mr.; Phil; Tabitha; cuckoo summary = "It isn''t for that I want it," said Griselda; "it''s for the light I like "There is a cuckoo somewhere in the house," said Griselda; "I heard it "Good little cuckoo," said Miss Grizzel. "Dorcas, I''m tired of being told I''m like Miss Sybilla," said Griselda, "Good evening, cuckoo," said Griselda, when he had finished. "Good morning, then, cuckoo," said Griselda. "Hush!" said the cuckoo; and looking up, Griselda saw a number of Somehow, when the cuckoo said "eh?" like that, Griselda was obliged to "Shut your eyes for a minute, Griselda," said the cuckoo''s voice beside "Come up on to the bank," said the cuckoo to Griselda; "you''ll see them "What do you know about the cuckoo?" said Griselda. "Thank you, cuckoo," said Griselda again; "but I can''t say I like this "No," said Griselda, "I''m not cold; but somehow, cuckoo, I feel a little id = 21035 author = Reed, Talbot Baines title = The Adventures of a Three-Guinea Watch date = keywords = CHAPTER; Charlie; Drift; George; Gurley; Gus; Halliday; Jim; Joe; London; Newcome; Randlebury; Reader; Stumpy; Tom; good; look; master; time summary = "Good-bye, dear," said the old lady, as Charlie proceeded to get I say, do you think my watch is a good one?" said Charlie, "She was very kind to me," said Charlie, not liking to hear his friend "Not so bad as that, Joe," said Charlie; "but I say, isn''t Tom Drift a "Oh!" said Tom, "I had a new hat coming from Tiler''s, so I got old of fives with his friend Jim, a small boy came to him and said that Tom Jim, old boy, he''s made it up at last, and we''re friends, Tom Drift and "Here''s a go, Charlie!" said Tom, turning to his young companion. "Let''s have a last look at him," said Charlie, as Tom was getting into "Look here, Tom!" said Charlie, showing me. "Now, Tom," said Charlie, "you must look to my wound." "Charlie," said Tom Drift, "this little fellow is worrying me for a