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. Eric Lease Morgan May 27, 2019 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 26799 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 98 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 water 3 chap 2 white 2 vpon 2 time 2 shadow 2 haue 2 great 2 good 2 colour 2 White 2 TCP 2 Sea 2 Picture 2 Lake 2 Gum 2 Ground 2 Face 2 Colours 2 Ceruse 1 vse 1 manner 1 light 1 hath 1 hand 1 grind 1 glasse 1 body 1 Wax 1 Sunne 1 Sun 1 SECT 1 Red 1 Prints 1 Plate 1 Piece 1 Pensill 1 Pencil 1 Painting 1 Painter 1 Oyl 1 Nature 1 Master 1 Man 1 Lion 1 Light 1 Life 1 Lead 1 Latine 1 Landskip Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 667 colour 428 water 364 part 256 face 247 hand 243 thing 231 time 229 picture 223 place 222 side 217 light 210 shadow 206 line 202 eye 198 body 194 manner 192 work 187 art 183 ground 159 head 158 gold 150 way 145 man 143 lead 129 figure 127 proportion 115 use 115 piece 113 SECT 106 stone 105 other 104 painting 104 page 98 life 95 nature 90 painter 88 sight 87 end 87 drawing 85 rule 85 fire 84 faire 82 text 82 paper 78 peece 77 ▪ 77 reason 74 shell 72 name 71 word Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 910 〉 905 ◊ 836 〈 312 ● 191 Colour 129 Lake 127 c. 127 White 127 Colours 123 haue 104 CHAP 81 Plate 76 hath 76 Gum 69 English 64 Red 63 Blew 62 Oyl 61 Painting 61 Ground 60 glasse 59 Landskip 58 Indico 57 Head 56 Aqua 54 Oker 51 Eye 51 Black 50 Umber 50 TCP 50 Nose 50 Ceruse 48 Life 47 Master 47 Lead 46 Sun 46 Sea 46 Nature 45 Latine 45 Graver 45 Cosm 44 Water 44 Bise 43 Eud 41 Pen 41 Man 39 Book 39 Armes 38 beene 38 Wax Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2780 it 2387 you 827 i 578 them 393 they 245 he 156 we 113 him 68 me 62 she 46 her 28 themselves 22 us 11 himself 7 one 5 vp 3 vnto 3 thee 3 his 2 vvhat 2 theirs 2 ours 1 ● 1 yf 1 ye 1 vvith 1 s 1 oit 1 itself 1 indiffernt 1 hers 1 hee Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 4712 be 779 make 556 take 543 have 487 draw 420 do 244 let 236 see 234 put 194 lay 183 call 174 use 164 haue 161 say 154 set 152 shadow 151 observe 136 lie 133 grind 128 stand 128 come 126 work 125 temper 116 accord 108 shew 107 find 106 begin 92 burn 89 wash 89 paint 85 know 83 fall 82 express 79 blow 77 hold 71 write 66 become 64 hath 63 vse 63 give 62 note 60 go 60 finish 59 follow 59 describe 58 appear 58 add 57 〈 57 seem 56 mix Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 764 not 755 then 614 so 562 other 363 well 356 good 347 first 332 more 332 little 318 very 270 most 254 white 231 out 228 great 214 same 211 many 205 much 201 as 196 also 167 such 167 fine 161 off 149 together 140 too 136 only 125 red 123 now 123 fair 118 thus 118 excellent 117 black 116 small 114 light 112 up 112 long 106 therefore 102 right 96 true 92 hard 89 deep 87 second 84 whole 83 green 80 somewhat 80 before 79 over 79 onely 79 like 79 clean 79 away Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 143 good 89 most 34 least 28 great 19 light 18 dark 15 fair 13 pure 12 deep 11 fine 11 bad 10 near 10 high 9 faint 9 chief 8 white 8 strong 8 expr 8 br 7 low 6 neer 5 hard 5 furth 4 thin 4 small 4 noble 4 mean 4 easy 4 choice 3 thick 3 short 3 severall 3 seek 3 rich 3 large 3 black 3 able 2 true 2 rare 2 plain 2 midd 2 meet 2 long 2 l 2 fit 2 dear 2 clear 2 bright 2 bold 2 Most Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 181 most 20 well 1 neerest 1 least 1 highest 1 hard Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 www.tei-c.org 3 eebo.chadwyck.com Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 3 http://www.tei-c.org 3 http://eebo.chadwyck.com Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 works are eligible 2 c. being very 2 c. temper lake 2 colour be dry 2 colour be very 2 colour is dry 2 colours are not 2 head is lower 2 line is presently 2 sides are equal 2 things are necessary 2 water be not 1 art is ordinarily 1 art is there 1 arts haue alwais 1 bodies are simple 1 bodies are slow 1 bodies are temperate 1 bodies are violent 1 body be first 1 body be not 1 body beginning just 1 body come neerer 1 body stands firmest 1 c. are adiuncts 1 c. are hardest 1 c. be giuen 1 c. drawing cowcumbers 1 c. let not 1 colour be before 1 colour be clearer 1 colour be fai 1 colour be lamp 1 colour be sadder 1 colour called 〈 1 colour come off 1 colour does much 1 colour is cold 1 colour is most 1 colour is proper 1 colour is simple 1 colour is somewhat 1 colour is very 1 colour lies even 1 colour take brasill 1 colour tempered reasonable 1 colour wrought in 1 colours are best 1 colours are dry 1 colours are harder Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 bodies is no thing 1 colours are not profitable 1 shadow be not yellow 1 water be not stiff 1 water be not 〈 1 work is not so 1 〉 set not off A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = A41260 author = Browne, Alexander, fl. 1660-1677. title = The whole art of drawing, painting, limning, and etching collected out of the choicest Italian and German authors : to which is added exact rules of proportion for drawing the heads of men, women and children , of what bigness soever / originally invented and written by the famous Italian painter Odoardo Fialetti, painter of Boloign ; published for the benefit of all ingenuous gentlemen and artists by Alexander Brown ... date = 1660 keywords = Colour; Face; Ground; Head; Oyl; Plate; Wax summary = The whole art of drawing, painting, limning, and etching collected out of the choicest Italian and German authors : to which is added exact rules of proportion for drawing the heads of men, women and children , of what bigness soever / originally invented and written by the famous Italian painter Odoardo Fialetti, painter of Boloign ; published for the benefit of all ingenuous gentlemen and artists by Alexander Brown ... The whole art of drawing, painting, limning, and etching collected out of the choicest Italian and German authors : to which is added exact rules of proportion for drawing the heads of men, women and children , of what bigness soever / originally invented and written by the famous Italian painter Odoardo Fialetti, painter of Boloign ; published for the benefit of all ingenuous gentlemen and artists by Alexander Brown ... id = A28779 author = Dürer, Albrecht, 1471-1528. title = A book of dravving, limning, vvashing or colouring of maps and prints: and the art of painting, with the names and mixtures of colours used by the picture-drawers. Or, The young-mans time well spent. In which, he hath the ground-work to make him fit for doing anything by hand, when he is able to draw well. By the use of this work, you may draw all parts of a man, leggs, armes, hands and feet, severally, and together. And directions for birds, beasts, landskips, ships, and the like. Moreover, you may learn by this tract, to make all sorts of colours; and to grinde and lay them: and to make colours out of colours: and to make gold and silver to write with. How also to diaper and shadow things, and to heighthen them, to stand off: to deepen them, and make them glitter. In this book you have the necessary instruments for drawing, and the use of them, and how to make artificiall pastels to draw withall. Very usefull for all handicrafts, and ingenuous gentlemen and youths. By hammer and hand all arts doe stand. date = 1652 keywords = Lake; body; colour; shadow; water; white summary = A book of dravving, limning, vvashing or colouring of maps and prints: and the art of painting, with the names and mixtures of colours used by the picture-drawers. By the use of this work, you may draw all parts of a man, leggs, armes, hands and feet, severally, and together. By the use of this work, you may draw all parts of a man, leggs, armes, hands and feet, severally, and together. Moreover, you may learn by this tract, to make all sorts of colours; and to grinde and lay them: and to make colours out of colours: and to make gold and silver to write with. Moreover, you may learn by this tract, to make all sorts of colours; and to grinde and lay them: and to make colours out of colours: and to make gold and silver to write with. id = A39003 author = Dürer, Albrecht, 1471-1528. title = The Excellency of the pen and pencil exemplifying the uses of them in the most exquisite and mysterious arts of drawing, etching, engraving, limning, painting in oyl, washing of maps & pictures, also the way to cleanse any old painting, and preserve the colours : collected from the writings of the ablest masters both ancient and modern, as Albert Durer, P. Lomantius, and divers others ; furnished with divers cuts in copper, being copied from the best masters ... date = 1668 keywords = Colours; Copper; Face; Graver; Ground; Gum; Pencil; Picture; SECT; White; chap summary = The Excellency of the pen and pencil exemplifying the uses of them in the most exquisite and mysterious arts of drawing, etching, engraving, limning, painting in oyl, washing of maps & pictures, also the way to cleanse any old painting, and preserve the colours : collected from the writings of the ablest masters both ancient and modern, as Albert Durer, P. The Excellency of the pen and pencil exemplifying the uses of them in the most exquisite and mysterious arts of drawing, etching, engraving, limning, painting in oyl, washing of maps & pictures, also the way to cleanse any old painting, and preserve the colours : collected from the writings of the ablest masters both ancient and modern, as Albert Durer, P. EEBO-TCP aimed to produce large quantities of textual data within the usual project restraints of time and funding, and therefore chose to create diplomatic transcriptions (as opposed to critical editions) with light-touch, mainly structural encoding based on the Text Encoding Initiative (http://www.tei-c.org). id = A09192 author = Peacham, Henry, 1576?-1643? title = The art of dravving vvith the pen, and limming in water colours more exactlie then heretofore taught and enlarged with the true manner of painting vpon glasse, the order of making your furnace, annealing, &c. Published, for the behoofe of all young gentlemen, or any els that are desirous for to become practicioners in this excellent, and most ingenious art, by H. Pecham., gent. date = 1606 keywords = Ceruse; TCP; chap; glasse; good; great; grind; haue; manner; shadow; time; vpon; vse; water summary = The art of dravving vvith the pen, and limming in water colours more exactlie then heretofore taught and enlarged with the true manner of painting vpon glasse, the order of making your furnace, annealing, &c. The art of dravving vvith the pen, and limming in water colours more exactlie then heretofore taught and enlarged with the true manner of painting vpon glasse, the order of making your furnace, annealing, &c. Published, for the behoofe of all young gentlemen, or any els that are desirous for to become practicioners in this excellent, and most ingenious art, by H. Published, for the behoofe of all young gentlemen, or any els that are desirous for to become practicioners in this excellent, and most ingenious art, by H. Printed by Richard Braddock, for William Iones, and are to be sold at his shop at the signe of the Gun neere Holburn Conduit, id = A09198 author = Peacham, Henry, 1576?-1643? title = The gentlemans exercise Or an exquisite practise, as well for drawing all manner of beasts in their true portraitures: as also the making of all kinds of colours, to be vsed in lymming, painting, tricking, and blason of coates, and armes, with diuers others most delightfull and pleasurable obseruations, for all yong gentlemen and others. As also seruing for the necessarie vse and generall benefite of diuers trades-men and artificers, as namly painters, ioyners, free-masons, cutters and caruers, &c. for the farther gracing, beautifying, and garnishing of all their absolute and worthie peeces, either for borders, architecks, or columnes, &c. By Henrie Peacham Master of Artes. date = 1612 keywords = Aristotle; Armes; Ceruse; Church; Crosse; Dutch; Emperour; English; French; Greeke; Lady; Latine; Lion; Sea; Sunne; TCP; chap; colour; good; great; hand; hath; haue; light; time; vpon; water; white summary = The gentlemans exercise Or an exquisite practise, as well for drawing all manner of beasts in their true portraitures: as also the making of all kinds of colours, to be vsed in lymming, painting, tricking, and blason of coates, and armes, with diuers others most delightfull and pleasurable obseruations, for all yong gentlemen and others. The gentlemans exercise Or an exquisite practise, as well for drawing all manner of beasts in their true portraitures: as also the making of all kinds of colours, to be vsed in lymming, painting, tricking, and blason of coates, and armes, with diuers others most delightfull and pleasurable obseruations, for all yong gentlemen and others. As also seruing for the necessarie vse and generall benefite of diuers trades-men and artificers, as namly painters, ioyners, free-masons, cutters and caruers, &c. As also seruing for the necessarie vse and generall benefite of diuers trades-men and artificers, as namly painters, ioyners, free-masons, cutters and caruers, &c. id = A94194 author = Sanderson, William, Sir, 1586?-1676. title = Graphice. The use of the pen and pensil. Or, the most excellent art of painting : in two parts. / By William Sanderson, Esq; date = 1658 keywords = Art; Colours; Eye; Gum; Lake; Landskip; Lead; Life; Light; Man; Master; Nature; Painter; Painting; Pensill; Picture; Piece; Prints; Red; Sea; Sun; White summary = This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A94194 of text R208648 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason E1077_2). Textual changes and metadata enrichments aim at making the text more computationally tractable, easier to read, and suitable for network-based collaborative curation by amateur and professional end users from many walks of life. The annotation includes standard spellings that support the display of a text in a standardized format that preserves archaic forms (''loveth'', ''seekest''). Textual changes aim at restoring the text the author or stationer meant to publish. This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. Printed for Robert Crofts, at the signe of the Crown in Chancery-Lane, under Serjeant''s Inne, The use of the pen and pensil.: Or, the most excellent art of painting : in two parts.