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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 28955 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 74 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 wear 2 illustration 2 dress 2 costume 2 Mrs. 2 England 1 woman 1 white 1 roman 1 line 1 gothic 1 gold 1 glove 1 french 1 colour 1 century 1 art 1 York 1 Virgin 1 Switzer 1 Slack 1 Renaissance 1 Queen 1 Princess 1 Paris 1 PLATE 1 New 1 Mr. 1 Miss 1 Metropolitan 1 Mary 1 Leary 1 King 1 III 1 Henry 1 Europe 1 Duchess 1 Court 1 Cassidy 1 Carroway 1 Braydon 1 Bob 1 Anglo 1 Algernon Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 492 woman 322 costume 244 colour 206 line 196 dress 181 man 168 illustration 134 time 133 century 130 hair 129 head 115 day 114 fashion 106 period 105 art 99 hat 92 gown 88 room 88 gold 87 silk 86 hand 80 year 79 skirt 76 form 74 type 73 point 72 shoe 72 part 71 foot 70 way 67 glove 64 material 64 body 63 neck 61 one 60 life 60 clothe 59 garment 59 child 57 eye 55 sleeve 55 artist 53 shoulder 53 mind 53 figure 52 jewel 51 lady 51 lace 51 house 51 background Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 477 _ 147 Mr. 109 Leary 61 Mrs. 59 Queen 39 England 35 Paris 31 de 30 satin 30 York 30 PLATE 29 New 28 Miss 28 Europe 27 Slack 27 Court 25 Museum 25 Lady 25 Costume 23 white 23 London 23 Art 22 Virgin 22 Renaissance 22 II 22 Henry 21 WOMAN 21 Metropolitan 21 France 20 Woman 20 Marie 20 Duchess 20 Castle 20 . 19 Portrait 19 III 19 Elizabeth 19 Church 19 CHAPTER 18 Switzer 18 Middle 18 Madame 18 King 18 Edward 18 Antoinette 17 Empire 17 Bob 17 Ages 16 Russia 16 Princess Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 642 it 377 he 346 you 336 we 267 i 243 they 231 she 134 them 122 him 74 us 74 her 64 one 52 me 39 himself 37 themselves 28 herself 17 itself 14 yourself 4 yours 4 ''em 3 ourselves 2 theirs 2 his 1 á 1 wearer.--clothes 1 vocabulary.--portable 1 two''ll 1 ours 1 myself 1 mine 1 impertinence,--our 1 ''s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 3123 be 762 have 323 wear 243 make 207 do 155 see 124 give 119 know 111 go 108 take 102 say 92 come 91 use 84 show 66 appear 64 get 64 find 62 look 61 follow 58 dress 51 call 45 trim 45 tell 44 reach 43 carry 42 turn 41 keep 41 hold 40 put 39 become 38 stand 38 cut 37 work 37 mean 37 embroider 37 bring 35 cover 33 feel 32 fall 32 consider 31 speak 31 seem 30 think 30 pass 30 leave 30 bear 29 lead 28 set 28 line 27 throw Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 363 not 180 so 125 well 122 other 118 more 115 white 114 now 114 long 108 great 101 same 101 out 95 as 94 then 89 most 88 up 88 many 87 decorative 85 very 83 first 82 black 82 also 81 here 77 only 71 good 68 own 65 even 58 high 54 young 52 often 52 blue 51 such 51 in 51 down 51 always 50 low 49 too 48 old 48 modern 47 small 47 much 47 beautiful 46 still 45 short 45 large 45 few 44 present 44 early 42 on 42 just 42 back Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 23 most 20 good 14 least 12 great 8 high 8 early 5 near 5 fine 2 topmost 2 small 2 simple 2 rich 2 old 2 eld 1 sound 1 soft 1 smart 1 sheer 1 pure 1 proper 1 poor 1 plain 1 noble 1 low 1 late 1 large 1 j 1 hard 1 faint 1 easy 1 dear 1 choice 1 bad 1 Most Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 66 most 7 well 4 least Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net 2 hearth.library.cornell.edu Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/8/9/0/18901/18901-h/18901-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/8/9/0/18901/18901-h.zip 1 http://hearth.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=hearth;idno=4221758 1 http://hearth.library.cornell.edu/ Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 gown is white 1 _ be generous,--act 1 _ carrying power 1 _ dressed _ 1 _ is _ 1 _ is wrong 1 _ know _ 1 _ take seriously 1 _ were sometimes 1 art does not 1 centuries made familiar 1 century are still 1 century is unique 1 century was only 1 colour are more 1 colour has charm 1 colour is as 1 colour is familiar 1 colours are all 1 colours are masculine 1 colours was also 1 costume carried out 1 costume has gradually 1 costume has not 1 costume is adorable 1 costume is not 1 costume is seldom 1 costume is so 1 costume made exquisitely 1 costume made little 1 costume was often 1 costume was perhaps 1 costume were also 1 day are constantly 1 day goes in 1 day is efficiency 1 day wears rough 1 day were even 1 days are too 1 days did not 1 days following interment 1 dress is complete 1 dress was unimpeachable 1 dress were often 1 fashion has indeed 1 fashion wears out 1 fashions come from,--why 1 gold is necessarily 1 gold made round 1 gown is evidently Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 art does not always 1 day make no claim 1 hats were not commonly 1 man has no use A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 18901 author = Burbank, Emily title = Woman as Decoration date = keywords = England; Europe; Metropolitan; Mrs.; New; PLATE; Paris; Renaissance; Virgin; York; art; colour; costume; dress; french; gothic; illustration; line; wear; woman summary = costumes for modern woman--adorable lines, unbelievable combinations of Plate 23 in this collection shows a woman whose costume in _outline_ If this subject of background, line and colour, in relation to costuming art, demands a beautiful, interesting costume, if the woman in question _Woman in Gothic Art Portrait showing pointed head-dress_] for the sole purpose of studying woman''s costumes,--their colour, line We know women who have copied the line, colour and material of costumes Woman''s line is the result of her costume, in part only. decorative lines by wearing the correct costume for each occasion, as Colour is the hall-mark of our day, and woman decoratively costumed, and authority on line and colour in woman''s costume, have also the wisdom to with the Greek or mediæval lines in woman''s costume. The idea that man decorative, by reason of colour or line in costume, is our book--_Woman as Decoration_--beautiful _Line_. id = 27212 author = Cobb, Irvin S. (Irvin Shrewsbury) title = The Life of the Party date = keywords = Algernon; Bob; Braydon; Carroway; Cassidy; Leary; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Slack; Switzer summary = Leary & Slack, counsellors and attorneys at law, with offices at Number At least twice during the night Mrs. Carroway had told Mr. Leary this, only for a very few minutes Mr. Leary opened his eyes and sat up. garment from Mr. Leary''s helpless form and was backing away into the "Any price within reason--any price you felt like asking," said Mr. Leary, his hopes of deliverance rekindling. He was ten feet away when Mr. Leary, his wits sharpened by his So Mr. Leary came, endeavouring while coming to wear a manner combining At this moment Mr. Leary having sneezed an uncountable number of times, "It''s a gentleman calling on Mr. Slack," wheezed Mr. Leary with his head "Yes; a close friend of Mr. Slack''s," assured Mr. Leary, striving to put "Wait, please; I''m coming immediately," called out Mr. Leary. asleep upon the floor Mr. Slack caught from Mr. Leary the softly id = 34845 author = Gardiner, Florence Mary title = The Evolution of Fashion date = keywords = Anglo; Court; Duchess; England; Henry; III; King; Mary; Princess; Queen; century; costume; dress; glove; gold; illustration; roman; wear; white summary = The tight forms of dress now in common use among women were an incentive [Illustration: ANCIENT JEWISH HEAD-DRESS.] [Illustration: EGYPTIAN HEAD-DRESS.] [Illustration: ENGLISH HEAD-DRESS OF THE 13TH CENTURY.] [Illustration: HORNED HEAD-DRESS OF 15TH CENTURY. [Illustration: STEEPLE HEAD-DRESS OF 15TH CENTURY.] [Illustration: EARLY TUDOR HEAD-DRESS.] [Illustration: HORNED HEAD-DRESS OF EDWARD IV.''s REIGN.] head-dress among all classes of the Anglo-Saxons was a long piece of [Illustration: FASHIONABLE HEAD-DRESSES IN THE TIMES OF THE GEORGES.] Towards the middle of Queen Victoria''s reign, the hair was dressed in a presents his bride with the costume and jewellery worn at the marriage. [Illustration: WIDOW''S DRESS OF QUEEN KATHERINE DE VALOIS, IN THE YEAR [Illustration: COSTUMES WORN BY KING PHILIP II. black hat-band and another on the left sleeve of dark-coloured clothes. [Illustration: ENGLISH WIDOW''S DRESS OF TO-DAY.] [Illustration: CHILDREN''S COSTUME, PRESENT DAY.] head-dress consisted of a small jewelled crown and two white feathers.