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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 4 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 35595 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 77 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 General 3 Corps 2 Meade 2 Haskell 2 Gettysburg 1 York 1 Wisconsin 1 Willing 1 Virginia 1 Sedgwick 1 Second 1 Schmidt 1 Rebel 1 Private 1 Potomac 1 Philadelphia 1 Pennsylvania 1 New 1 Mrs. 1 Major 1 Lee 1 July 1 Howard 1 Hooker 1 Hill 1 Henry 1 Hancock 1 Gibbon 1 Gen. 1 Emmeline 1 Eleventh 1 Division 1 Colonel 1 Christy 1 Captain 1 Brigade 1 Army Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 559 line 553 enemy 539 man 380 battle 353 brigade 325 division 301 time 271 position 269 army 238 right 227 front 219 order 217 field 207 force 205 day 198 left 198 battery 196 road 192 troop 182 gun 174 command 169 part 167 regiment 165 fire 142 way 141 corps 140 attack 138 flank 135 artillery 134 officer 130 soldier 129 mile 126 rear 119 place 118 cavalry 116 horse 113 side 112 crest 108 hand 107 night 106 ground 105 rebel 102 work 101 movement 101 morning 100 advance 96 arm 95 column 91 direction 88 body Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 557 _ 497 Corps 481 Colonel 469 General 305 Emmeline 190 Lee 180 Gettysburg 171 Meade 165 New 161 Hooker 159 Second 150 First 149 York 149 Brigade 143 Pennsylvania 126 Captain 125 H. 122 Haskell 118 Howard 117 Lieut.-Colonel 114 Third 110 J. 109 Eleventh 107 W. 107 Division 104 Major 102 Hancock 100 Army 98 Gibbon 97 Hill 95 S. 95 Private 94 Gen. 93 Christy 86 Union 85 Sickles 85 Lieutenant 82 Sedgwick 82 Mrs. 81 Wisconsin 81 Potomac 80 July 79 E. 77 Battery 76 GENERAL 74 Willing 74 Jackson 73 Virginia 70 Henry 69 States Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1098 it 1066 he 713 i 595 they 387 them 332 him 323 she 293 we 204 you 133 me 131 us 97 her 64 himself 34 themselves 20 herself 19 itself 14 one 10 ours 6 ''em 5 myself 3 theirs 2 yours 2 ourselves 1 yourself 1 musketry:-- 1 mine 1 hers 1 em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 5195 be 1850 have 493 do 350 make 326 come 296 see 291 go 280 take 229 wound 228 say 199 give 195 send 161 hold 160 leave 139 think 137 move 135 kill 133 fall 128 find 121 drive 116 form 112 hear 111 know 110 follow 110 advance 106 look 104 seem 104 post 101 command 94 get 94 attack 91 capture 89 turn 88 throw 88 bring 87 reach 85 fight 84 begin 82 become 80 pass 80 keep 78 occupy 74 tell 74 ride 73 stand 72 call 71 meet 71 engage 70 order 68 lose Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 838 not 315 up 266 now 265 great 264 so 248 back 246 there 224 then 182 more 180 first 175 out 168 other 161 very 158 soon 158 long 155 little 142 still 131 only 130 as 128 well 125 again 125 about 120 down 112 forward 109 on 108 good 106 much 106 away 100 too 99 far 97 almost 96 own 95 same 95 here 93 such 93 over 92 rebel 90 right 90 once 90 main 90 also 84 many 84 last 82 few 81 in 79 however 78 off 76 second 75 just 67 heavy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 25 least 25 good 12 great 9 near 9 most 7 high 5 slight 5 heavy 4 early 3 young 3 farth 2 wild 2 long 2 brief 2 brave 2 bad 2 Most 1 white 1 weak 1 tall 1 soft 1 slow 1 sharp 1 narrow 1 louder:-- 1 loud 1 light 1 hot 1 hard 1 gross 1 cr 1 bloody Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 52 most 4 least 1 near Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 emmeline did not 7 enemy did not 5 battle was over 3 _ go home 3 corps came up 3 enemy was not 3 men do not 2 army was still 2 battle is over 2 battles are over 2 corps took arms 2 division came up 2 emmeline looked up 2 emmeline was not 2 enemy were now 2 force is not 2 forces were now 2 left was too 2 line was too 2 line was very 2 men went forward 2 men were equally 2 order was not 1 _ get here 1 _ is _ 1 _ is fit 1 armies were about 1 army had _ 1 army left falmouth 1 army was about 1 army was dissatisfied 1 army was excellent 1 army was inevitable 1 army was less 1 army was much 1 army was ready 1 army was secure 1 army was successful 1 army were almost 1 army were heavy 1 batteries are plainly 1 batteries do not 1 batteries were entirely 1 batteries were fearful 1 batteries were several 1 batteries were so 1 battery did not 1 battery posted directly 1 battle had now 1 battle was almost Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 emmeline had no clear 1 emmeline was not afraid 1 enemy did not exactly 1 enemy did not yet 1 enemy made no other 1 enemy was not altogether 1 enemy were no better 1 enemy were not aware 1 force is not necessarily 1 general was no easy 1 gettysburg came no sound 1 gettysburg is no place 1 guns make no reply 1 man made no answer 1 meade had no idea 1 meade was not as 1 position is no longer A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 20762 author = Doubleday, Abner title = Chancellorsville and Gettysburg Campaigns of the Civil War - VI date = keywords = Captain; Colonel; Corps; Eleventh; General; Hill; Hooker; Howard; Lee; Major; Meade; New; Pennsylvania; Sedgwick; Virginia; York summary = force behind some river in an advantageous position on Lee''s line divisions to attack Jackson''s corps in flank and cut if off from his left, and Barlow''s brigade of the Eleventh Corps his right. Fitz Lee''s brigade of cavalry was left on the plank road to menace General Schimmelpfennig, commanding a brigade of Schurz''s division, posted in advance in the Plank Road,* and the command of his corps and a brigade from Humphrey''s division of Meade''s corps, and French''s ordered General John Newton of the Sixth Corps to take command of About 2 P.M., after the Eleventh Corps line was formed, General Brooks'' brigade charged almost up to the enemy''s line of batteries, lines, around to attack Sickles'' left, held by General J. regiment against the enemy, and posted a line of wounded men in General Trimble, who commanded a division of Hill''s corps, which _Second Brigade_.--(1) Colonel ROY STONE Commanding (wounded); id = 33121 author = Haskell, Franklin Aretas title = The Battle of Gettysburg date = keywords = Army; Corps; Division; Gen.; General; Gettysburg; Gibbon; Hancock; Haskell; July; Meade; Potomac; Rebel; Second summary = of the Second Army Corps, left Madison May 10, and seven days later was commanding a brigade in the assault upon the enemy''s lines at the battle coming fight, the line of battle would be formed, up near the town, right of the line of the army, resting near a small stream called "Rock left flank, all in battle order, in several lines, with flags streaming, reserve are posted upon the crest near the left of the Second Corps. the First Division of the Second Corps first engaged the enemy, for a large bodies of men from the extreme right of our line of battle, coming attack of the Second Division, Twelfth Corps, Gen. Geary, upon the enemy crest, save to the right of the Second Corps, no enemy, not even his of the Second Corps from that time, so that General Gibbon would again id = 33585 author = Philadelphia Brigade Association title = Reply of the Philadelphia Brigade Association to the Foolish and Absurd Narrative of Lieutenant Frank A. Haskell date = keywords = Brigade; Corps; General; Gettysburg; Haskell; Philadelphia; Wisconsin summary = Brigade, Second Division, Second Corps, Army of the Potomac, held at the On page 82 of the Haskell "Narrative" of the Battle of Gettysburg appears Loyal Legion of Massachusetts, and Wisconsin History Commission, Haskell to order the First, Eleventh and Twelfth Corps to charge his left General Roy Stone, of Pennsylvania, commanded the Second Brigade, Third the Brigade, and the Lieutenant-Colonel took command of the Regiment, and Philadelphia Brigade, records in his history regarding the battle at the Thus it was the Philadelphia Brigade reached Gettysburg, after marching Brigade, at the Battle of Gettysburg, was 1,573, and the total loss was LOSS OF PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE AND SECOND CORPS AT GETTYSBURG. The total loss in killed, wounded and missing of the Philadelphia Brigade of Gettysburg, by Frank Aretas Haskell, Wisconsin History Commission, the Philadelphia Brigade in the Battle of Gettysburg. In reprinting the Haskell "Narrative" the Wisconsin History Commission id = 55627 author = Singmaster, Elsie title = Emmeline date = keywords = Christy; Emmeline; Henry; Mrs.; Private; Schmidt; Willing summary = To Emmeline''s mother, Henry''s marriage had brought great care. Emmeline she continued to express her pity for Mrs. Willing. "I''ll take the baby down the street, Mrs. Schmidt," Emmeline offered. "Emmeline," commanded Mrs. Willing again, "be still!" Then from her To Emmeline''s dismay, she saw a little satchel in her mother''s hand. a voice too low for Emmeline to hear, said something to the soldier, to To Emmeline it seemed that she and Mrs. Schmidt and the children and the duck faced the combined armies of the Private Christy looked at Emmeline for a moment with a smile on his When Emmeline reached the gate, Private Christy called to her. Emmeline did not find Private Christy on the porch; he was apparently When Emmeline was out of sight, Private Christy went down across the to come Emmeline forgot her home, her mother, Sister Bertha, Henry. At Emmeline Willing''s house men and women and children gazed in awe.