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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 8 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 87376 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 8 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 illustration 4 Sir 4 Mr. 4 London 3 man 3 great 3 Plymouth 3 Mrs. 3 Miss 3 Exeter 3 Drake 3 Dartmoor 3 Cornwall 2 time 2 sea 2 old 2 little 2 West 2 Walter 2 Thomas 2 Lord 2 Lady 2 John 2 House 2 English 2 England 2 Devonshire 2 Devon 2 Dartmouth 2 Church 2 Castle 2 Captain 1 year 1 village 1 tree 1 sound 1 snow 1 long 1 like 1 life 1 hill 1 grey 1 green 1 good 1 day 1 come 1 bird 1 Yard 1 Windward 1 William Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1887 man 1211 time 955 day 920 thing 805 way 716 word 708 house 705 year 653 mother 642 place 584 nothing 577 hand 511 life 506 part 470 town 468 sea 465 eye 458 tree 443 night 440 head 439 foot 438 side 437 name 427 lady 423 people 416 one 384 church 381 water 374 mind 361 mile 356 woman 353 anything 352 world 351 room 346 moment 333 friend 331 work 321 money 320 country 315 girl 312 village 310 stone 310 heart 306 hour 303 face 300 river 298 letter 298 course 294 end 292 hill Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1800 _ 1666 Mrs. 1468 Mr. 870 Rachel 692 George 673 Tappitt 627 Sir 571 Miss 545 Ray 541 Rowan 360 Exeter 358 Devonshire 356 Drake 312 Nellie 298 Fox 285 Prime 285 Penniloe 284 John 283 Lord 274 King 269 Plymouth 269 England 268 Cornbury 263 Luke 229 Baslehurst 216 Devon 212 Yard 209 Jemmy 206 Kezia 193 Dr. 191 Bessie 178 London 178 Dartmoor 173 Captain 172 Monday 157 Percy 156 Waldron 155 Prong 153 Robert 153 Mr 153 Henry 152 William 146 House 137 Queen 136 Thomas 133 West 132 Lady 130 Cornwall 122 St 121 God Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 7981 i 7961 it 7029 he 5397 you 4498 she 2641 him 2380 they 1742 me 1617 her 1572 them 1216 we 638 himself 500 us 460 herself 181 themselves 164 myself 133 itself 132 one 105 yourself 92 ''em 36 yours 35 mine 32 thee 21 ourselves 17 his 17 hers 15 em 13 theirs 11 ye 7 oneself 6 ours 4 ha 4 ''s 2 theirselves 2 hisself 2 e 2 '' 1 you,--you 1 yeu 1 ye''--but 1 wronged,--she 1 wi 1 we''m 1 twice--''he 1 thyself 1 there;--he 1 them,--you 1 rachel;--she 1 o 1 money-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 28557 be 10598 have 4091 do 3419 say 2019 go 1904 come 1754 know 1683 make 1385 see 1354 think 1235 take 993 tell 947 get 858 give 833 look 785 find 697 leave 681 call 671 stand 548 speak 539 hear 484 put 446 ask 440 bring 428 seem 427 feel 426 show 418 keep 417 fall 407 want 396 mean 373 like 361 let 357 believe 352 begin 346 turn 345 become 344 pass 341 run 328 write 326 send 325 lie 319 suppose 314 live 305 hold 300 sit 279 follow 271 lose 267 break 266 use Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 6693 not 2289 so 2188 very 1568 now 1378 more 1345 up 1304 then 1213 great 1198 little 1194 well 1104 good 1082 much 1030 old 997 only 978 here 970 never 953 out 929 other 868 own 860 long 860 even 849 young 845 as 789 down 781 many 743 most 700 away 688 still 684 too 669 such 651 again 642 there 596 first 573 all 549 just 545 back 513 ever 491 far 480 perhaps 472 few 471 last 462 quite 431 almost 422 yet 416 also 407 high 398 off 394 once 392 fine 377 on Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 253 good 175 most 164 least 64 great 57 bad 53 fine 45 high 28 Most 27 large 25 early 24 eld 21 old 21 near 20 late 20 big 18 rich 14 topmost 14 slight 12 small 12 long 11 sweet 10 strong 10 noble 9 heavy 9 fair 8 young 8 low 7 warm 7 happy 7 deep 7 dear 6 wise 6 short 6 manif 5 soft 5 nice 5 dry 5 clever 4 wild 4 simple 4 sad 4 pleasant 4 mean 4 lovely 4 grand 4 bright 3 wet 3 true 3 sure 3 stout Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 568 most 31 well 21 least 3 hard 1 ¦ 1 slowest 1 face,--almost Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/2/4/8/22485/22485-h/22485-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/2/4/8/22485/22485-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 ray did not 6 ray had not 6 tappitt did not 5 rachel had not 5 rowan was not 4 george did not 4 george was not 4 mother did not 4 rowan did not 4 tappitt had not 4 tappitt was not 4 trees are down 3 george ai n''t 3 george does not 3 george went on 3 man did not 3 mother was not 3 rachel was well 3 tappitt is quite 3 thing is certain 3 things were not 3 time went on 2 _ is _ 2 _ was _ 2 day is long 2 day is over 2 eyes was not 2 george was about 2 george was so 2 head fell back 2 man is apt 2 man is n''t 2 man was not 2 men are not 2 men think so 2 men were not 2 men were ready 2 mother did n''t 2 mother said just 2 night was warm 2 place called drivelford 2 rachel did n''t 2 rachel did not 2 rachel was almost 2 rachel was alone 2 rachel was not 2 rachel was still 2 ray had now 2 ray is all 2 ray is very Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ is not uncommon 1 _ was not dead 1 days are not so 1 eyes are not blue 1 eyes was not unworthy 1 george had no difficulty 1 george had no intention 1 george had not time 1 george is no company 1 george said no more 1 george took no heed 1 george was not much 1 george was not surprised 1 life is no novelty 1 man is not always 1 man was no clod 1 man was not controversial 1 men are not nearly 1 men have not yet 1 men were not so 1 mother felt no indignant 1 mother is not quite 1 places are not ready 1 rachel asked no further 1 rachel did not once 1 rachel gave no positive 1 rachel had no alternative 1 rachel had no need 1 rachel had no opportunity 1 rachel had not as 1 rachel saw no more 1 rachel spoke no triumph 1 rachel was not now 1 rachel was not wrong 1 ray did not logically 1 ray did not quite 1 ray made no immediate 1 rowan had not quite 1 rowan saw no more 1 rowan was not idle 1 sea was not sufficient 1 tappitt made no answer 1 tappitt was not altogether 1 tappitt was not pleasant 1 things have no religion 1 things were not so 1 things were not yet 1 times showing no life 1 years had not as A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 45038 author = Blackmore, R. D. (Richard Doddridge) title = Perlycross: A Tale of the Western Hills date = keywords = Christie; Church; Crang; Doctor; Dr.; Fox; Frank; Gilham; God; Gowler; Gronow; Hill; Hopper; Jakes; Jemmy; Joe; John; Lady; London; Lord; Master; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Muggridge; Nicie; Old; Parson; Penniloe; Perlycross; Sergeant; Sir; Sunday; Thomas; Tom; Tremlett; Waldron; Webber; come; good; man summary = "You know Jemmy Fox pretty well, I think?" Dr. Gronow took a seat upon step)--"talking about doctors, I think it very likely that my old friend the two little dears, Master Michael, and Miss Fay. And by accident, of course, Sergeant Jakes had just dropped in. to my heart, though it felt like lead, to see three old Officers come "The first thing I saw, when I came back by south-gate, was a young man, "You must look it in the face, like a man, of course; though it is "Young man, you are sure," said Mr. Penniloe, placing his hand upon thought it was her mother coming--her eyes met those of the young man, Fox does not look at all like an old frump; though your poor mother of it long ago;" said Mrs. Fox, looking resolutely at Sir Henry "I am a sensible man, Jemmy Fox. I know a noble thing, when I see it. id = 43061 author = Knight, Francis A. (Francis Arnold) title = In the West Country date = keywords = Country; West; bird; day; great; green; grey; hill; illustration; life; like; little; long; man; old; sea; sound; time; tree; village; year summary = Its rightful lords themselves were, in the good old days, little twilight is full of the sound of the sea--"low at times, and loud night is brooding on this quaint old village, the song of the sea birds spread their beautiful wings, wheel round the house, and old bird on her nest of rushes under the bank, her dark figure meadow sails a dark, hawk-like figure, swift and silent, heaped over the old sea-wall, there stands a solitary cottage. Many a time has the old wall given way; never, perhaps, Each point of vantage on the hills has its time-worn lines of old little place out of the sunshine, a hollow walled half way round three little odd owl-like figures; while the old birds, their [Illustration: A GREY OLD HOUSE BY THE SEA.] nears the low horizon, and the grey grass of the old sea wall is id = 44738 author = Knight, Francis A. (Francis Arnold) title = Devonshire date = keywords = Barnstaple; Castle; Channel; Cornwall; Dartmoor; Dartmouth; Devonshire; Drake; England; English; Exeter; Frith; Norman; North; Phot; Plymouth; Point; Saxon; Sir; Somerset; South; Tiverton; illustration summary = Devonshire is a county in the extreme south-west of England, occupying Devonshire there is evidence, in raised sea-beaches, and, near Torquay, Black Down, six miles due south, reaching 930 feet; the Great Haldons, south-west of Exeter, 817 feet high; and Dumpdon Hill, about two miles border, near the source of the Tamar, flows south-west for nearly half shore; and the sea runs twenty feet deep over the once great shipping the alterations that have taken place on the south coast of Devonshire, over 200 miles of warmed water, has, by the time it reaches Devonshire, Devonshire is the south-east coast. Devonshire is fourteenth among the English counties, producing little The importance of Devonshire sea-ports brought the county into great Every Devonshire town of importance, a great Not one of the famous houses of Devonshire is entirely, or even in great county near Axminster, runs to Plymouth, especially serving the south id = 22485 author = Northcote, Rosalind title = Devon, Its Moorlands, Streams and Coasts date = keywords = Abbey; Bishop; Captain; Castle; Charles; Church; Colonel; Cornwall; Dartmoor; Dartmouth; Devon; Devonshire; Drake; Duke; Earl; Edward; Elizabeth; England; English; Exeter; France; French; Henry; House; John; King; Lady; London; Lord; Mary; Parliament; Peter; Plymouth; Prince; Queen; Richard; Sir; Thomas; Walter; West; William summary = years later they again besieged Exeter, but this time it held out great Shower, as the like, for the Time, had not been seen many years St Peter''s Church in Exeter by the King on one hand and the Queen on the Sir Gawen, who was in Exeter about this time, thought it best to return waye.'' Sir Gawen was arrested a few days later, and suffered a long not much more than one hundred years later it passed away from Sir took place in a long panelled room, with deep-set window, then called The river runs into the sea by the charming little town of Budleigh Sir John Drake, and here she returned when the Civil War was just ended, There is a fine picture of the Lord High Treasurer, by Sir Peter Lely, Some years later Edward I, now King, sent a second pardon to Sir Henry id = 36967 author = Phillpotts, Eden title = A West Country Pilgrimage date = keywords = Dartmoor; Devon; Ford; London; Sir; Walter; great; illustration; little; man; old; sea; time summary = rounded under forest of golden green oak and beech; while beneath them a this distance, masses in pure, cold grey beneath the glow of these great and valley, the modelling of the roof-tree, the walls and the great vanished century when the legions flashed where now the great trees a great green cup, whose slopes are crowned with fir and beech, whose begin to move and the old grey house broods, like a sentient thing, upon Upon this seaward-facing headland the great cliffs slope outward like great fortresses were piled by many thousands of busy hands, yet time of a little river grows great and bulks large to imagination. opens, and great rocks come kissing close, an arch of stone carries his this haunt of Pan. Upon one great rock in the open, with its grey face to the south-west The sky shone blue by the time I reached the old cross and weak sunlight id = 38521 author = Trevena, John title = A Drake by George! date = keywords = Aunt; Bessie; Captain; Dismal; Drake; George; Gibcat; Highfield; House; Hunter; Kezia; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Nellie; Percy; Robert; Sidney; Sophy; Windward; Yard summary = "Call Nellie and tell her to put Miss Sophy to bed," ordered Mrs. Drake. Nellie, quick!" cried the lady; for Miss Yard had got away from her "Miss Yard won''t live for ever either," said George, more confidently. When are you going to your station?" asked Mrs. Drake, while Miss Yard looked up plaintively and wanted to know what she "Nellie," said George heavily, "it is frivolous conduct like this which There is no mention of Miss Yard," said George firmly. "Mrs. Drake said to me a lot of times it wur to go to Miss Sophy." "Mr. George is sure to ask vor it," said Bessie, moving slowly towards "Best tell Mr. George a gentleman wants to see ''en," said Kezia, when "Mrs. Drake said I wur to look after Miss Sophy," muttered Kezia. "I think you ought to wait until Miss Yard comes back," said George, who id = 34000 author = Trollope, Anthony title = Rachel Ray date = keywords = Augusta; Baslehurst; Bragg; Bungall; Butler; Cherry; Comfort; Cornbury; Dorothea; Luke; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Prime; Prong; Pucker; Rachel; Ray; Rowan; Sturt; Tappitt summary = "I know she is going into Baslehurst after tea," said Mrs. Ray, "Rachel has not come home yet, of course?" said Mrs. Prime. "You talked about going away and leaving us," said Mrs. Ray, speaking "Mrs. Tappitt is going to give a party at the brewery," said Rachel, midst of one of the family conferences; "Augusta said that Mrs. Butler Cornbury would not like to meet Rachel Ray; but she is going "By-the-by," said Mrs. Cornbury, "what a nice girl Rachel Ray has he looked at his watch, and started off on his walk to Bragg''s End. It has been said that Rowan had not made up his mind to ask Rachel "He''d be sure to know it," said Mrs. Rowan, speaking of the young man any of those evil things which had been said about Rachel by Mrs. Tappitt. "I could not make Mr. Comfort come any sooner, Rachel," said Mrs. Ray. id = 43758 author = Unknown title = The Blizzard in the West Being as Record and Story of the Disastrous Storm which Raged Throughout Devon and Cornwall, and West Somerset, On the Night of March 9th, 1891 date = keywords = Cornwall; Devonport; Exeter; Falmouth; London; March; Monday; Mr.; Plymouth; St.; Station; Tuesday; Wednesday; Western; great; illustration; snow summary = Trains due at North Road Station, Plymouth, between mid-day and eight There was a heavy fall of snow on the night of Monday, and on train on Monday night was snowed up at Lidford, but the passengers were engine of the train when we left was completely covered with snow, After cutting through the snow for some miles the train reached Road Station when it encountered a drift of snow fully twenty feet Plymouth at five o''clock on Monday night and should have reached train had left Redruth at about ten o''clock on Monday night--an hour Snow fell there from Monday afternoon to Wednesday morning. passengers by the 6·50 P.M. snowed-up train from Plymouth on Monday Monday night became embedded in a deep snow-drift. nine o''clock on Monday night, when the down-train, due at Plymouth at As early as the Tuesday morning following the storm of Monday night,