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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 6 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 46872 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 78 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 coach 5 horse 5 Mr. 5 London 4 road 4 day 3 time 3 England 3 CHAPTER 2 stage 2 mail 2 illustration 2 coachman 2 St. 2 Old 2 John 2 George 2 General 1 year 1 travel 1 sign 1 old 1 mile 1 man 1 look 1 like 1 latch 1 journey 1 indian 1 hackney 1 great 1 good 1 english 1 driver 1 drive 1 carriage 1 accident 1 York 1 Worcester 1 Wonder 1 Washington 1 Virginia 1 Tavern 1 Sir 1 Shrewsbury 1 Salem 1 Road 1 Punch 1 Providence 1 Post Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1465 coach 1050 horse 744 day 730 time 725 road 537 man 481 mail 443 coachman 433 mile 432 stage 429 year 382 tavern 347 house 336 passenger 329 place 309 hour 280 way 279 sign 278 night 274 hand 261 town 252 side 248 board 241 driver 234 wheel 226 journey 215 illustration 212 carriage 207 gentleman 202 life 198 one 191 box 187 rein 177 team 177 country 171 name 169 head 167 traveller 167 guard 164 part 161 work 157 accident 156 foot 152 room 148 use 146 friend 145 case 142 word 137 rate 137 number Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1384 _ 310 Tavern 288 London 278 New 266 Mr. 233 Boston 232 England 125 John 122 York 120 et 102 Sir 98 Mass. 98 Inn 90 Massachusetts 89 Old 80 CHAPTER 78 General 72 America 71 St. 71 Shrewsbury 71 Philadelphia 71 House 62 George 61 Washington 60 King 58 Hotel 56 Worcester 55 Post 54 Road 53 Birmingham 52 Sign 52 Brighton 51 Mrs. 50 Street 49 White 49 Captain 48 Lord 48 Bridge 48 . 47 N. 47 Charles 46 Hill 46 H. 46 English 45 Hampshire 44 Mail 43 arr 42 Governor 42 Connecticut 41 Oxford Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2489 it 2113 i 2052 he 1182 they 715 we 634 him 632 them 461 you 313 me 239 she 173 us 120 her 117 himself 79 themselves 66 myself 37 one 29 itself 21 ''em 19 ourselves 14 herself 9 yourself 9 mine 5 ours 5 em 4 thee 2 yours 2 ye 2 isself 2 hisself 2 his 2 ''s 1 ung 1 them:-- 1 theirs 1 strangers"--this 1 prove:-- 1 my 1 holyhead 1 hers 1 described:-- 1 coachmen 1 au Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 10917 be 3267 have 837 do 632 make 606 say 574 take 505 go 418 drive 391 come 385 give 367 see 344 find 333 get 323 call 302 know 270 keep 266 run 258 carry 216 use 214 show 206 travel 203 leave 198 think 192 pass 191 put 191 become 181 tell 166 follow 161 start 155 appear 149 set 148 bring 145 hear 143 stand 143 look 142 turn 138 hold 137 write 136 pay 136 meet 131 break 127 stop 124 seem 120 arrive 115 fall 113 pull 112 ride 104 sit 100 return 100 let Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1535 not 680 old 627 so 597 very 536 good 477 up 473 well 443 other 416 more 416 many 410 great 407 then 381 much 379 only 377 out 347 as 340 first 321 now 307 long 298 most 283 down 268 never 256 little 243 same 224 few 215 such 194 still 193 too 192 off 192 also 189 however 184 always 180 here 178 own 178 even 170 ever 168 often 167 fast 166 once 157 last 157 about 156 again 152 early 147 large 146 young 146 small 145 high 143 soon 141 heavy 139 on Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 109 good 57 most 56 least 39 great 18 fast 18 early 18 bad 14 slight 13 high 9 large 7 low 7 long 6 near 6 lines:-- 6 heavy 5 simple 5 quick 5 old 5 Most 4 safe 4 fine 4 deep 3 strong 3 rich 3 pure 3 pleasant 3 noble 3 hard 3 dark 2 wise 2 wild 2 white 2 wealthy 2 warm 2 smart 2 slow 2 sad 2 plain 2 odd 2 mean 2 light 2 common 2 choice 2 cheap 1 wretched 1 ugly 1 strange 1 steep 1 staunch 1 smooth Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 241 most 7 well 5 least 1 worst 1 manner:-- 1 highest 1 hard 1 early Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/44864/44864-h/44864-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/44864/44864-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/coachingdaysways00cumi 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 coach did not 4 coach was not 4 coaches were not 4 mail was very 3 coachman is not 3 coachmen did not 3 horses started off 3 roads were so 3 tavern is still 2 _ going down 2 _ took place 2 coach came up 2 coach go by 2 coach was about 2 coach was full 2 coach was so 2 coach was upset 2 coach went forward 2 coaches running long 2 coaches were often 2 coaches were very 2 coachman was about 2 horse is as 2 horses are so 2 horses running away 2 horses taking fright 2 horses were so 2 houses were few 2 mail was always 2 mails was not 2 men did not 2 night being very 2 passengers were more 2 road was not 2 road was wide 2 time went on 1 _ be first 1 _ being very 1 _ did _ 1 _ gave birth 1 _ has many 1 _ is _ 1 _ is seldom 1 _ is so 1 _ says _ 1 _ seen _ 1 _ was often 1 _ were unknown 1 board was not 1 board was sometimes Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ had no brutal 1 board was not necessarily 1 coach had no lamps 1 coach had no other 1 coach is not so 1 coaches were not favourites 1 coaches were not so 1 coachman is not smart 1 coachman was no judge 1 driver had no more 1 driver showing no doubtful 1 drivers is not at 1 hour was not harder 1 mail was no less 1 mails did not often 1 passenger was not aware 1 place was not altogether 1 road is not more 1 roads being not then 1 stages are not full 1 time was not fully A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 43895 author = Corbett, Edward title = An Old Coachman''s Chatter, with Some Practical Remarks on Driving date = keywords = Birmingham; Bristol; CHAPTER; General; Holyhead; Liverpool; London; Mr.; Office; Post; Shrewsbury; St.; Wonder; coach; coachman; day; drive; horse; mail; road; time summary = The first mail coach was put on the road between Bristol and London in The general establishment of mail coaches took place in the spring of coach proprietors for horsing the mails was, with the exception of two mails had a pretty good time of it till the roads were sufficiently The mail coaches working out of London had a gala day every year. "London and Worcester mail coach accident caused through carrying an "As the mail coach was entering Broadway, the horses ran away; when run across the road nearest to the horses'' heads of the coach. The mail coach minute of the General Post-Office says: "Collision horsing a coach, and driving one side, as it was called, another a half hour on the journey; but on the mails and night coaches, the mail or stage-coach ever was timed at even eleven miles an hour during id = 44864 author = Cuming, E. D. (Edward William Dirom) title = Coaching Days & Ways date = keywords = Club; London; Mr.; coach; horse; mile; road summary = posterity, if only for that he altered the coach team from three horses June 1807 says: ''Lately one of the stage coaches on the North road ran ''The old-fashioned coachman to a heavy coach--and they were all heavy distance of 26 miles, both coaches changing horses at Loughborough. unmerciful rate!" "Change horses, sir!" says the proprietor; "why, we alarmed--is sure the horses are running away with the coach--declares says he, "have you any _slow_ coach down this road to-day?" "Why, of the present day--in other words, of a man who drives a coach which slow coach, she is timed at eight miles in the hour through a great of being the best five miles for a coach to be found at this time in horse, in 1791, trotted 17 miles in 58 minutes 40 seconds on the three horses in a gig, tandem fashion, eleven miles within the hour id = 37272 author = Earle, Alice Morse title = Stage-coach and Tavern Days date = keywords = Albany; America; Boston; Bridge; Connecticut; England; General; George; Governor; Hampshire; Hartford; Hotel; House; Inn; John; King; London; Massachusetts; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Old; Pennsylvania; Philadelphia; Providence; Punch; Road; Salem; Tavern; Virginia; Washington; Worcester; York; coach; day; english; illustration; indian; sign; stage summary = Old Mail-coach and Sign-board, Barre, Mass., 1840 280 Stage-coach and Tavern Days Stage-coach and Tavern Days Stage-coach and Tavern Days The relationship of tavern and meeting-house in New England did not end At one old-time tavern in New York little brown Jesse listened mail-coach into the Washington Tavern in a Pennsylvania town, a dashing [Illustration: Eagle Tavern and Sign-board, Newton, New Hampshire.] The sign-board of Walker''s Tavern, a famous house of entertainment in houses of New England had, as taverns, a peaceful end of their days. It is pleasant to note how many old taverns in New England, though no [Illustration: Old Coach and Sign-board, Barre, Massachusetts.] "The stages from _New York_ for _Boston_, set out on the same days, The story of the tavern and stage life of the town of Haverhill, New hours to travel the sixty-six miles, and the coach stopped at ten taverns id = 45372 author = Haworth, M. E. (Martin E.) title = Road Scrapings: Coaches and Coaching date = keywords = CHAPTER; England; Lal; London; Mr.; Old; coach; day; horse; illustration; latch; mail; man; road; time; year summary = In 1868 a coach was started to Brighton called the "Old Times,"[1] wheeler or leader, till, reminded by the White Horse clock that time Horses for a road-coach should have sufficient breeding to insure Many horses working in the coaches of the present day have occupied There is no doubt that horses, as a rule, enjoy coaching work, and many Having looked round his horses--a proceeding which no coachman should His coach loaded and passengers placed, he takes a careful look round in the case of "Old John," who drove a pair-horse coach from Exeter dismissal from my tutor in time to see the coach change horses conduced It is a pretty sight to see a team of coach horses at a roadside change For instance, every coach horse has a favourite place in a team, and In the good old coaching days, so id = 42948 author = Hunt, Leigh title = Coaches and Coaching date = keywords = coach; good; great; hackney; horse; like; look; old summary = come to itself) darts by the poor old lumbering hackney with as it were, for very breath, like the proud heads of the horses. Danger is a good thing for giving a fillip to a man''s The coach stops, the door opens, a rush of cold air announces the horses, and then turn round with his rosy gills, and an eye like a fish, Of the hackney-coach we cannot make as short work as many persons like A friend tells us that the hackney-coach has its countenance, with Of a pair of hackney-coach horses, one so much resembles the other that An old horse misses his companion, like an old man. If the old horse were gifted with memory (and who shall say he is not, The stage-coachman likes the boys on the road, because he knows they this time the hackney-coaches have all left the stands--a good symptom id = 43093 author = Lennox, William Pitt, Lord title = Coaching, with Anecdotes of the Road date = keywords = Bath; Brighton; CHAPTER; Duke; England; George; John; London; Lord; Mail; Mr.; Paris; Sir; St.; accident; carriage; coach; coachman; day; driver; horse; journey; road; stage; time; travel summary = a week from London to all the chief towns; but no stage-coach appears stage-coach left London for Oxford at seven o''clock in the morning, The fast coach had nearly a horse to every mile of ground it ran, miles, and the number of horses kept for the "Wonder" coach was one order of the day, it cannot be said that mails or coaches stood in a coach horse is action, and the second sound legs and feet, JOURNEY TO BATH IN THE PALMY DAYS OF COACHING--A DRIVING JOURNEY TO BATH IN THE PALMY DAYS OF COACHING--A DRIVING had not given way to the fast four-horse light coach. and stage-coaches, or travelled in their own carriages, thousands the time the coach had proceeded a quarter of a mile on the road to the inn, where the coach changes horses, and its proper time of days of the road, and of their delight when they went "coaching, a