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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 17 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 5136 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 82 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 plant 8 illustration 8 flower 7 leave 5 like 5 Mr. 3 March 3 June 3 Flora 3 English 3 April 2 water 2 tree 2 little 2 great 2 form 2 day 2 british 2 Yellow 2 Wild 2 White 2 September 2 Rose 2 Queen 2 Proserpina 2 October 2 Latin 2 Garden 2 Europe 2 England 2 CHAPTER 2 Bell 2 August 2 America 1 year 1 word 1 white 1 variety 1 time 1 think 1 talk 1 sweet 1 stem 1 sidenote 1 seed 1 rose 1 root 1 poppy 1 poet 1 petal Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 6245 flower 3352 plant 2274 leave 1362 inch 1156 stem 1089 root 1073 garden 1019 foot 1014 time 952 illustration 898 name 877 kind 875 water 856 year 853 form 822 foliage 816 tree 801 part 799 petal 784 colour 777 specie 756 variety 696 day 665 seed 664 soil 655 one 635 ground 619 sidenote 619 side 612 summer 610 cluster 593 place 563 house 541 leaf 511 wood 510 rose 505 stalk 491 color 480 size 471 spring 467 beauty 462 pot 461 shrub 455 bloom 447 winter 433 way 433 head 413 blossom 412 earth 401 bud Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 18471 _ 571 Frank 361 Spring 358 C. 354 Dick 347 S. 342 . 339 P. 335 Jimmy 311 White 292 Mr. 273 Ord 273 Nat 252 Yellow 248 H. 232 June 220 Rose 200 May 191 Summer 184 English 184 England 176 Pink 175 Lily 154 c. 153 L. 151 Fairy 148 M. 148 April 144 FIG 143 G. 143 D. 143 California 141 March 140 Europe 137 August 135 America 127 Flower 126 Green 121 September 118 A. 117 July 116 Thistle 116 B. 113 Violet 113 Queen 113 North 110 white 109 Wild 109 Greek 109 Fig Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8882 it 4912 they 3845 i 2684 them 1796 he 1741 we 1641 you 776 she 710 me 607 him 483 us 437 her 261 itself 235 themselves 147 one 145 himself 85 myself 40 thee 39 herself 26 yourself 23 ours 22 mine 17 ourselves 10 theirs 8 yours 7 eva 7 ''em 5 thyself 4 ye 4 oneself 4 ''s 3 his 2 yourselves 2 out,-- 1 £1 1 viz.--they 1 vine= 1 translated:-- 1 them:-- 1 stored,--you 1 southey 1 small-½in 1 o 1 na 1 is--"solomon 1 inferior.= 1 heaven,--there 1 ha 1 gravestone,--you 1 chapman:-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 30592 be 6812 have 2047 grow 1885 do 1498 see 1421 say 1294 make 1202 give 981 find 946 take 885 flower 869 come 793 leave 766 know 750 go 713 keep 708 look 701 call 664 form 566 become 506 think 474 produce 469 seem 469 plant 469 cut 434 put 430 get 428 cover 405 use 404 rise 386 tell 386 bear 367 let 362 shape 343 require 340 bring 321 turn 318 follow 308 begin 303 appear 296 set 288 show 281 bloom 271 stand 270 fall 261 place 237 resemble 236 mean 227 prove 227 pass Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4210 not 2592 very 2117 more 1928 so 1781 long 1590 well 1552 little 1499 large 1493 white 1330 small 1317 only 1314 many 1199 green 1135 most 1107 good 1104 much 1077 other 996 then 953 up 868 now 868 great 859 fine 831 as 811 out 772 bright 770 few 759 yellow 750 first 744 high 741 such 717 beautiful 682 pretty 676 also 651 often 640 common 619 about 593 old 576 rather 566 sometimes 554 dark 553 less 537 too 527 off 526 tall 515 down 508 several 500 same 492 pale 489 far 479 here Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 367 good 267 most 186 fine 174 least 69 great 66 large 44 small 42 early 38 fair 29 high 28 lovely 27 common 24 warm 24 easy 23 handsome 22 rich 22 Most 21 strong 21 bright 20 sweet 19 pure 19 near 15 soft 15 noble 15 low 14 old 14 bad 13 late 12 simple 12 hardy 11 slight 11 long 9 tall 9 cold 8 young 8 deep 7 wide 7 happy 7 dark 6 weak 6 grand 6 choice 6 broad 5 wild 5 true 5 poor 5 mean 5 light 5 dear 4 topmost Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 868 most 88 well 29 least 1 tallest 1 soon 1 proud,--almost 1 lowermost 1 long 1 latest 1 introduces,--without 1 infest 1 handsomest 1 farthest 1 fairest 1 early 1 brightest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 www.archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/31591/31591-h/31591-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/31591/31591-h.zip 1 http://www.archive.org/details/languageofflower00gree 1 http://www.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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 36 flowers are very 30 flowers are not 29 flowers are white 26 flowers are about 26 flowers are small 21 leaves are smooth 20 flowers are nearly 16 _ is similar 15 flowers are large 13 plant is very 12 flowers are more 12 leaves are very 11 flowers are bright 11 flowers are less 10 _ is very 10 flowers are rather 10 leaves are alternate 9 _ is now 9 flowers are larger 9 leaves are dull 9 leaves are small 9 stems are very 8 flowers are too 8 foliage is very 8 leaves are large 8 leaves are more 7 _ has large 7 _ is _ 7 _ is much 7 flowers are often 7 flowers are pretty 7 flowers are quite 7 leaves are dark 7 leaves are radical 6 _ does _ 6 flower is more 6 flowers are exceedingly 6 flowers are slightly 6 leaves are bright 6 leaves are long 6 leaves are much 6 leaves are rather 6 plants are often 5 _ are _ 5 flowers are fully 5 flowers are numerous 5 flowers are smaller 5 flowers are usually 5 flowers are yellow 5 leaves are all Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 flowers are not only 3 flowers are not showy 3 flowers are not so 3 flowers have no pedicels 3 roots are not only 2 flowers are not very 2 flowers have no petals 2 foliage is not so 2 plants are not so 1 _ has no hope 1 _ has no rays 1 _ has no such 1 _ has not only 1 _ is not too 1 _ is not very 1 _ was not so 1 _ was not wholly 1 colours are not showy 1 flower formed no objection 1 flowering plant not very 1 flowers are not alike 1 flowers are not bright 1 flowers are not brilliant 1 flowers are not especially 1 flowers are not exclusively 1 flowers are not hairy 1 flowers are not likely 1 flowers are not mostly 1 flowers are not often 1 flowers are not starlike 1 flowers are not sufficiently 1 flowers are not too 1 flowers have no rays 1 flowers have no spur 1 flowers have not yet 1 flowers is no longer 1 foliage has no particular 1 foliage is not only 1 foliage is not quite 1 forms are not more 1 forms are not only 1 garden plants not yet 1 leaves are not only 1 leaves are not toothed 1 leaves were not flat 1 name does not always 1 name is not so 1 one have no desire 1 parts are not yet 1 parts is not sufficiently A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 163 author = Alcott, Louisa May title = Flower Fables date = keywords = Bell; Elves; Fairy; Queen; Spirits; Thistle summary = turning to a lovely little Elf, who lay among the fragrant leaves never leave his dreary home, till the sunlight falls on flowers till at length he bade his Spirits bring the little Fairy from her prayer, and let the little Fairy go back to her friends and home; the flowers'' bright leaves there beats a little heart that loves looked on the lovely Elves, and no longer wondered that little Violet Soon through the long aisles came Violet, flowers and green leaves All Fairy-Land was dressed in flowers, and the soft wind went singing Rose-Leaf; you shall watch over little Eva''s flowers, and when she Fairy said farewell, and flew away to seek her friend, leaving behind At length, as he lay sleeping in a flower-bell, a little bee came "She will not say no to you, dear Bud," said the poor little Fairies; dark and dreary, on little Annie''s breast the fairy flower bloomed id = 23404 author = Anonymous title = A Little Girl to her Flowers in Verse date = keywords = illustration summary = LITTLE GIRL This little Daisy we all love, "I''m come to tell good girls and boys, The little Snowdrop, peeping through This is a pretty Primrose, Oh, beauteous, little May-blossom, How I do love the Violet! How snug it hides its little head In the green leaves of its low bed. "Forget me not:" no, lovely flow''r, The Tulip, with its varied hues Of crimson, brown, and rich dark blues, (Tho'' scentless,) splendid you appear, I cannot wonder that the Rose Is such a favourite flower; I don''t admire the Sunflower, FIELD-FLOWERS. the fields they are so sweet, GREEN-HOUSE. And now we''ll see the Green-house Plants: Are planted in the ground. Here are the rich Camellias; Oh, ''tis a splendid sight! PASSION-FLOWER. How gracefully the Passion-flow''r, Shows symmetry, with colours fair, But tell me now, who made these flow''rs, With thankful hearts, each day, each night, Gracechurch-street, London. id = 45389 author = Anonymous title = Two Yellow-Birds date = keywords = Lucy summary = |When Lucy Tracy was a very little girl, her mother had a beautiful bottom of his cage; for birds love a clean cage, as well as little girls would often say to Lucy, "It is a hard thing, my little girl, to be shut "But mother, if he don''t like his cage, what makes him sing so sweetly, "But, mother, if you think poor Black-pate is not happy, why don''t you see if Black-pate would like to bid us good bye this fine morning." empty, but soon heard Black-pate, and some other birds, singing most little birds chirp and sing; and Lucy enjoyed very much a variety of sad; but she remembered how happy the little birds were, that she had give him fresh seeds and water, and to clean his cage every morning. came home, he found her sewing with her mother She was a little sad; but id = 47971 author = Armstrong, Margaret title = Field Book of Western Wild Flowers date = keywords = America; Arizona; Asia; Cal; Canyon; Desert; East; Family; Grand; Nevada; New; Northwest; Spring; Stamens; Summer; Utah; Washington; West; White; Wild; Yellow; Yosemite; california=; flower; illustration; inch; leave; sidenote summary = bright green leaves, and exceedingly handsome flowers, over two inches and small yellow flowers, slightly fragrant and forming pretty clusters tall, bluish-green leaves, and flowers less than an inch long, with a inches to a foot and a half tall, with dark-green leaves, smooth, hairy leaves and usually blue or white flowers, very irregular in form, with An attractive plant, eight inches to a foot tall, with pretty flowers bright-yellow flowers, each about half an inch long, on slender hairy stems and leaves and pretty clusters of magenta flowers, each stems; pale, yellowish-green, downy leaves, about an inch long, Pretty little plants, from two to six inches tall, with small leaves, slender branches, dull green leaves, and pretty little flowers, an cream-white flowers, with long, yellow stamens, form handsome, with branching stems, dark green leaves, and pretty little flowers, with smooth branches and leaves and pale yellow flowers; growing in id = 42825 author = Buist, Robert title = The American Flower Garden Directory Containing Practical Directions for the Culture of Plants, in the Hot-House, Garden-House, Flower Garden and Rooms or Parlours, for Every Month in the Year date = keywords = April; August; Cape; China; Europe; Green; June; March; October; Rosa; September; flower; hot; house; plant summary = _pulchélla_ is a very handsome erect growing plant, flowers large and plants; flowers small, papilionaceous, and colour yellow. sweet-scented, double purple flowers, and the plant grows freely and does not flower until the plant becomes large; colour white and light there are beautiful flowers of several shades of colour on the plant. little plant, and flowers abundantly; colour yellow; shape star-like, heads of flowers of a brown colour in the centre of the plant, very like different plants; the flowers are of a blush colour, and the roots when The general appearance of the plant resembles No. 19, but the flowers in shape and colour are similar to the garden regular and large, the flower very double, plant strong, growing and plants are not so desirable for beauty of flower as the species of the allusion to the small flowers and large leaves of the plant. growing, double white flowering plants, and require a shaded situation. id = 23302 author = Coybee, Eden title = The Dumpy Books for Children; No. 7. A Flower Book date = keywords = Rusialka; illustration summary = _In order that each flower of my little story book should not "The New Year is come, Lady Elder; and we want you to grant us leave to singing a song the fairies love, till they came to a spot where the Ivy Ladies come to frolic on earth, and we want you, Ivy, to join in our "White Lady," said the Ivy, "if you like we will go and wake up our "Go then," said Rusialka, "and bring your sisters to me." another little sister-flower, the Yellow Jasmine. "If I bring a sad message," she said, "my sister the Snowdrop is ever Rusialka waved her crystal wand three times and said: "I can see a Rusialka waved her crystal wand and said: "Oh, do not weep then, sweet little sisters," said the Cornflower, The Lady Elder came out of her tree and smiled upon the flowers. "Good night, my children," she said. id = 40214 author = Davies, G. Christopher (George Christopher) title = The Swan and Her Crew or The Adventures of Three Young Naturalists and Sportsmen on the Broads and Rivers of Norfolk date = keywords = Bell; Broad; CHAPTER; Dick; Frank; Jimmy; Mary; Meredith; Merivale; Mr.; Norfolk; Swan; bird; boy; come; common; egg; illustration; like; look; nest; water summary = "It shall be done," said Frank decisively, and Dick looked up at him "That''s what all grebe''s nests look like," answered Frank; "they cover Frank will go in for birds''-nesting, Dick will catch "That is a teal," said Frank, "we shall find her nest here, so look Frank saw, by the way she went through the water, even when her sails "Oh, it must have been the hawks!" said Dick, and he and Frank went off "Come, Dick," said Jim, "let us go and birds''-nest in the wood while Frank had agreed to row in the race, and while Jimmy and Dick sailed the "Now it is time to turn in," said Frank; "take up the bucket, Jimmy, and "It is the same with birds''-eggs," said Frank. "Frank would give up anything for sailing," said Dick laughing, as he "Poor Jimmy," said Frank, "he does not like both of us going away, and id = 31591 author = Greenaway, Kate title = Language of Flowers date = keywords = Flower; Jasmine; Love; Pink; Plant; Red; Rose; Sweet; Tree; White; Yellow; illustration summary = Bud of White Rose _Heart ignorant of love._ Honey Flower _Love sweet and secret._ Rose, Austrian _Thou art all that is lovely._ Beauty, delicate _Flower of an Hour._ Beauty, delicate _Flower of an Hour._ Decrease of love _Yellow Rose._ Decrease of love _Yellow Rose._ Gratitude _Small White Bell-flower._ Gratitude _Small White Bell-flower._ Happy love _Bridal Rose._ Happy love _Bridal Rose._ Happy love _Bridal Rose._ If you love me, you will find it out _Maiden Blush Rose._ If you love me, you will find it out _Maiden Blush Rose._ Love is dangerous _Carolina Rose._ Love is dangerous _Carolina Rose._ Unity _White and Red Rose together._ Unity _White and Red Rose together._ Like doe in the noontide with love''s sweet want, _RED AND WHITE ROSES._ The sweets of love are washed with tears. HERE damask Roses, white and red, Where roses and white lilies grow; "O GIN my love were yon red rose, id = 12286 author = Richardson, David Lester title = Flowers and Flower-Gardens With an Appendix of Practical Instructions and Useful Information Respecting the Anglo-Indian Flower-Garden date = keywords = April; Bengal; Calcutta; D.L.R.; Dr.; England; Europe; Flora; Garden; God; Hyacinth; India; London; Lord; March; Milton; Mr.; Nature; Paradise; Pope; Queen; Rose; Shakespeare; Shenstone; Sir; Soil; Thomson; William; art; british; day; english; flower; good; great; ground; leave; like; little; native; plant; poet; sweet; time; tree summary = flowers of the field and garden, however lovely, are all outshone by Our neat little gardens and white cottages give to dear old England that flowers and a regiment of gardeners," he says, "bring no more pleasure flowers in his little garden that the greatest sovereign in the world little time, skill or taste upon the flower-garden. time our British gardeners, instead of humouring nature, loved to Limner of Nature is visible in every flower of the garden even to the She liked to plant a favorite flower in large masses of beauty. It is as natural for the mind, as it is for a tree or flower to cultivation of trees and shrubs and flowers; and the garden here is at maintaining our Indian flower gardens, in life and beauty, throughout _Flower-Garden_--Divide, and plant bulbs of all kinds, both, for border, beautiful appearance in a flower garden--that is, eight, ten, or twelve id = 15088 author = Ruskin, John title = Proserpina, Volume 2 Studies of Wayside Flowers, While the Air was Yet Pure Among the Alps and in the Scotland and England Which My Father Knew date = keywords = Danica; English; Figuier; Flora; Latin; Proserpina; Regina; Sowerby; Veronica; Viola; Violet; flower; form; leave; like; petal; plant summary = violet, that it sometimes produces flowers without any petals! Its flowers, of sweet scent, of a dark violet or a reddish blue, are indefinable leaves,--their colour a little more violet than the blossom. violet, and its leaf, you will find that the flower grows from the very with leaves long heart-shape, and its later flowers without petals--not a the idea of an upper and lower petal is always kept in the flower''s little scarcely distinct flowers forming a close head among the leaves; like a clustered upright gentian; has the same kind of leaves at its root, other form or function than that of petals, the flower is to be looked upon For the present, I should like the reader to group the three flowers, S. divided leaves: while the flower itself, like, as aforesaid, thyme in the another, and form masses of leaves and flowers in which the observer is id = 20421 author = Ruskin, John title = Proserpina, Volume 1 Studies of Wayside Flowers, While the Air was Yet Pure Among the Alps and in the Scotland and England Which My Father Knew date = keywords = CHAPTER; English; Fig; Greek; Latin; Mr.; Oxford; Proserpina; St.; flower; form; illustration; leaf; leave; like; little; order; plant; poppy; root; seed; stem; think; tree; word summary = adopted in this book will know the useful and beautiful names of plants Plants with fleshy leaves, and spikes of bright _yellow_ flowers, star-like groups of smooth, strong, oval leaves,--intensely green, and much like the young leaves of any other plant, except in this;--they all have a 1. Plants in their perfect form consist of four principal parts,--the Root, leaf; then in the flower and its fruit; and lastly in the stem. behave himself rightly: "He shall be like a tree planted by the river side, well know, innumerable shapes and orders of leaves;--there are some like green leaves unclose their points,--the little yellow ones peep out, like stems,--that of annual flowers growing high from among their ground leaves, of the flowers whose names I think good to change; but I look carefully parts: root, stem, leaf, and flower. leaves, forming the flower itself. id = 34380 author = Salt, Henry S. title = The Call of the Wildflower date = keywords = Alpine; Common; Flora; Gerarde; Mr.; Snowdon; Surrey; Sussex; Teesdale; Thoreau; Wild; british; day; flower; footnote; great; high; leave; like; mountain; plant; water summary = the flowers that grow by shore, meadow, bog, river, or mountain; on be said, is a locality where grows some rare and beautiful flower, one with the ordinary British plants that a flower-lover, thus educated late Of all the flowering plants of the Downs, the gorse is at once the search for a small flower on those far-stretching slopes is like the knowledge of Sussex plants many flower-lovers besides myself have been Alps rose to view; and lastly the planting of various mountain flowers wisp of a plant, is native there; the small-flowered crane''s-bill, which little plant with white flowers and a smooth unbranched stem so closely certain scarce and beautiful flowers, as has been pointed out in Mr. Reginald Farrer''s interesting books on Alpine plants. The haunts of the rarer flowers are not likely to be discovered in a day array of flowers, or even of a single gallant plant seen in some wild id = 36872 author = Saylor, Henry H. (Henry Hodgman) title = Making a Rose Garden date = keywords = Hybrid; Perpetuals; Teas; garden; illustration; plant; rose summary = ULRICH BRUNNER, A RED HYBRID PERPETUAL ROSE 4 The name Hybrid Perpetual is borne by an enormous group of roses which Tea and roses in the Hybrid Perpetual group. large, beautiful, hardy and continuously flowering roses. health, food and strength for your rose plants, and as a result you of time and effort to locate the rose garden where the hungry roots of that belongs to the rose garden, bearing its single blooms here and all the June-blooming roses together, with the Teas and Hybrid Teas off properly set out the rose plant is comparatively shallow-rooted, so needed, we shall do well to feed the rose garden liquid nourishment. An underground enemy that feeds on the roots of rose plants. The rose plants that we buy already budded on Manetti or brier are live plants in the rose garden as we rejoiced in during the previous id = 40534 author = Wellcome, M. D., Mrs. title = Talks About Flowers. date = keywords = Cannell; Dahlia; England; Garden; June; Mr.; Pelargoniums; Vick; color; flower; geranium; large; leave; plant; talk; variety; white; year summary = new color in double petunias; flower very large and deeply fringed. Flowered Perfection comes in nine colors; pink, scarlet, striped white white, and rose-flowered perfection, lavender color, buds when half flowers are larger, and the plant handsomer than when allowed to grow at of flowers for bouquets, and cuttings for new plants. Of the Sweet Scented Geraniums, we have none equal to the hybrid, Mrs. Taylor, for beauty of foliage and of flower. of a dark green color, and the small, delicate brilliant flowers are habit and small dark green foliage, rich pink flowers, are all fine the summer when planted out, and forms one of the best flowering shrubs flowered a small red variety, which had a very lively shade of color, are large flowering, and white, rose, crimson and blood-red in color. During the growing and flowering season the plant should have Planted out they will sometimes flower. id = 18913 author = Wood, J. G. (John George) title = Hardy Perennials and Old Fashioned Flowers Describing the Most Desirable Plants, for Borders, Rockeries, and Shrubberies. date = keywords = America; April; August; English; FIG; February; July; June; March; Nat; North; October; RANUNCULACEÆ; September; flower; illustration; leave; plant summary = afford great variety of form, foliage, and flower, and compared with growth, darker flowers and foliage, and more oval leaves--these form the of a fine apple green colour; the flowers are small but very beautiful, size, which is smaller, and the stalks are green, like the flower stems. autumnal flower; small sprays when cut look better than on the plant, as of ruby flowers topping a shrub-like plant of shining foliage and and tips with a bright pink colour, and forming a flower-like bract roote" before it produces any flowers, The habit and form of this plant leaves, and the general form of the small but double flowers resemble yellow; leaves of the flower stems few, small, and of irregular form, flowering plants, and last a long time in good form. of a dark green colour; it is not a plant worth growing for its flowers,