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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 6 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 77979 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 84 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Sir 2 man 2 like 2 Welsh 2 Perceval 2 Lord 2 Lancelot 2 Knight 2 King 2 God 2 Gawain 2 Galahad 2 Castle 2 Arthur 1 think 1 saith 1 old 1 little 1 history 1 great 1 good 1 english 1 early 1 day 1 christian 1 celtic 1 boy 1 Wolfram 1 Williams 1 St. 1 School 1 Sangraal 1 Rowena 1 Rawson 1 Quest 1 Queen 1 Public 1 Perfidion 1 Peredur 1 Pelly 1 Parry 1 Paradise 1 Panurge 1 Old 1 Nasciens 1 Mrs. 1 Mr. 1 Money 1 Meyrick 1 Messire Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2021 knight 761 castle 720 damsel 711 man 515 time 495 day 493 land 413 head 409 forest 376 sword 369 story 352 way 334 place 330 world 318 horse 311 son 311 shield 310 body 305 hero 303 hand 295 version 293 year 283 name 278 form 277 none 269 legend 265 hermit 261 joy 250 one 249 night 248 life 248 court 243 tale 239 folk 238 father 232 part 229 thing 228 king 226 romance 226 brother 218 word 218 mother 217 adventure 216 death 213 hall 213 chapel 210 side 210 arm 207 incident 206 work Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1784 _ 1262 King 1079 Perceval 947 Sir 928 Gawain 873 Messire 718 Lancelot 665 Grail 553 God 434 Arthur 418 Graal 384 Joseph 343 Knight 319 hath 312 Chrestien 277 Castle 258 Lord 243 Lady 192 Mabinogi 190 Queen 188 Damsel 187 Mallory 178 Holy 178 Galahad 156 du 154 Quest 146 Queste 145 Conte 143 St. 136 Wolfram 136 Christ 132 de 129 Borron 126 lord 125 Fisher 117 Grand 114 Peredur 112 Ambrose 111 Welsh 107 Meyrick 106 Great 105 et 104 Gautier 102 saith 102 Lupton 102 Horbury 101 Red 101 . 97 whereof 96 Britain Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 7295 he 3712 it 3678 him 3381 i 2864 you 2001 they 1381 she 1074 them 1058 me 542 we 542 her 373 himself 237 us 112 one 86 itself 84 themselves 69 myself 57 herself 52 yourself 20 his 14 yours 14 thee 11 mine 9 whereof 7 ourselves 5 ye 4 theirs 4 ''s 3 ours 3 oneself 2 thyself 1 y 1 thereof 1 thanketh 1 je 1 i''m 1 hers 1 bookshelf 1 ''em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 13941 be 5202 have 1541 do 1454 come 1082 see 983 make 887 say 849 know 845 go 699 saith 660 find 659 tell 654 take 460 give 433 hear 380 slay 360 think 341 set 333 bring 290 seem 287 leave 287 hold 279 seeth 278 pass 261 look 260 ask 235 follow 234 call 228 enter 224 meet 220 bear 217 save 215 lie 202 depart 197 show 196 put 194 fall 194 carry 184 ride 184 get 183 return 172 love 172 become 164 lead 162 send 158 appear 157 sit 155 speak 154 draw 152 hath Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2477 not 1590 so 1173 great 908 right 777 saith 693 other 686 well 685 then 675 good 567 more 560 never 534 such 516 now 487 much 486 there 473 old 440 up 431 only 402 most 388 first 386 out 384 as 374 again 344 long 343 thereof 332 fair 330 back 329 forth 322 here 315 many 308 down 302 far 299 ever 263 little 247 very 241 same 239 thus 237 own 237 full 233 dead 225 away 223 off 220 sore 215 rich 213 last 210 cometh 209 celtic 200 early 197 all 185 still Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 166 good 103 most 55 fair 45 old 45 least 37 early 33 great 29 high 19 late 15 rich 12 comely 10 strong 10 bad 7 speedy 7 slight 7 noble 7 fine 6 young 6 eld 5 full 5 deep 4 weak 4 swift 4 large 4 l 4 hardy 4 bright 3 wise 3 wild 3 small 3 pure 3 fierce 3 false 2 thick 2 temp 2 sweet 2 sure 2 strange 2 soon 2 simple 2 remote 2 quick 2 plain 2 near 2 lofty 2 holy 2 healthy 2 hard 2 faint 2 close Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 299 most 22 well 6 least 1 worst 1 leapeth 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 13 story is silent 8 knight is there 5 story is here 4 _ do _ 4 _ is _ 4 knight is not 3 _ did _ 3 _ had _ 3 arthur was right 3 damsel was right 3 god be guard 3 god be well 2 _ come on 2 _ does _ 2 _ is more 2 _ see _ 2 arthur is not 2 damsel made great 2 damsel seeth perceval 2 damsels made great 2 damsels make great 2 day was fair 2 gawain took leave 2 gawain was minded 2 grail is celtic 2 hath been dead 2 hath been here 2 hath been ill 2 hath been there 2 king made great 2 knight was there 2 knights are dead 2 knights set forth 2 lancelot is not 2 man held up 2 man is there 2 perceval does not 2 perceval is son 2 place was right 2 story is now 1 _ are evidently 1 _ are not 1 _ be inconsistent 1 _ had not 1 _ has often 1 _ have _ 1 _ is also 1 _ is always 1 _ is generally 1 _ is most Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ are not yet 1 arthur be not more 1 arthur is no whit 1 arthur is not idle 1 arthur is not yet 1 arthur was not idle 1 castle be not over 1 castle have no dread 1 castle is not mine 1 god has no doubt 1 joseph is no genuine 1 king is no whit 1 knight is not easy 1 knight is not minded 1 knight is not willing 1 lancelot are not idle 1 lancelot had no mind 1 lancelot is not here 1 lancelot is not yet 1 lancelot says no word 1 lancelot took no account 1 lancelot took no notice 1 man is no man 1 man is not good 1 men are no longer 1 perceval does not apparently 1 perceval had no will 1 perceval was not willing 1 place were not as 1 times did not apparently 1 world are not even A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 35611 author = Machen, Arthur title = The Great Return date = keywords = Llantrisant; Mrs.; Parry; Welsh; Williams; like; man; old summary = lines dealing with Llantrisant, the little town by the sea in The old man looked at me strangely, and hesitated. I went up and down the ways of Llantrisant wondering, and came to the bright light shining from the dark, closed church at dead of night, as So far I have not told the story of the things of Llantrisant, but They thought that Mrs. Parry had got back her hearing suddenly--such things did happen now and So by evening time there had come to the old people the recollection of didn''t know that touching a thing like a mast could be better than a man said; and indeed there are a few odds and scraps of old painted chancel of Llantrisant Church and came hurrying into the nave could give I have said that the old people of Llantrisant had morning to "the old hive." One would have said, a church of the Middle id = 35637 author = Machen, Arthur title = The Secret Glory date = keywords = Ambrose; Chesson; God; Head; High; Horbury; London; Lupton; Meyrick; Mr.; Old; Panurge; Paradise; Pelly; Public; Rawson; School; Sir; boy; day; english; good; great; like; little; man; think summary = agree, and say there is nothing like our great Public Schools, and journalists said, "like hot cakes." Meyrick went to see him soon after all the ends of the world to the Great School, there to learn the secret came forth an old man, all in shining white, on whose head was a gold In the old days, when Ambrose Meyrick was being made a man of, the four "Look here, old chap," he said, "did you notice young Meyrick at Public School traditions knew little of the real man. comes to a great Public School with little or nothing about him to In an old notebook kept by Ambrose Meyrick in those long-past days there world who know; whether the real secret is lost like the great city that lovely old school and the wonderful English country-side.'' So you see "Nelly," said Ambrose, "I have a great inspiration!" id = 42205 author = Nutt, Alfred Trübner title = Studies on the Legend of the Holy Grail With Especial Reference to the Hypothesis of Its Celtic Origin date = keywords = Arthur; Birch; Borron; Britain; Brons; Castle; Chrestien; Christ; Conte; Didot; Fionn; Fisher; Galahad; Gautier; Gauvain; Gawain; Grail; Grand; Great; Hirschfeld; Holy; Joseph; King; Knight; Lancelot; Lord; Mabinogi; Nasciens; Perceval; Peredur; Quest; St.; Welsh; Wolfram; celtic; christian; early; history summary = Graal--Joseph d''Arimathie--Didot-Perceval--Queste del Saint Graal--Joseph d''Arimathie--Didot-Perceval--Queste del Saint The following are the forms in which the Legend of the Holy Grail has come the Holy Grail for the love of King Henry his lord, who had the story The legend formed of two portions: Early History of Grail, Quest--Two hero''s visit to the castle of a sick king, his beholding there the Grail In the A versions the Grail-keeper is the Fisher King, uncle to the hero (Joseph--Galahad), than the French (Brons--Perceval) form of the Quest, Perceval is a genuine folk-story, a great-fool tale, and had originally comes to the Grail Castle, the author is puzzled; his hero knows his uncle Perceval succeeds him as King of the Grail Castle. Perceval''s second visit to the Grail Castle. =GRAIL=, Quest of _by Perceval_: first seen at Fisher King''s =PC=3, =C=7, id = 30963 author = Young, Robert F. title = A Knyght Ther Was date = keywords = Easy; Galahad; Mallory; Money; Perfidion; Rowena; Sangraal; Sir summary = the big balconied room, Perfidion said, "Mallory, you''re wasting your "I''m not interested in right arms," Mallory said. corridor to thy left eftsoon ye enter the chief fortress, sir knight," noble steed indeed, fair sir," she said; "and worthy of a knight sir knight," she said, and started down the corridor. Presently Rowena said, "It were best that ye drew out thy sword, fair Sir knight, said she, ye have better sped than ye weened, for Mallory encephalopathed Easy Money to his side and pulled "I have great joy of thy swift recovery, fair sir," Rowena said. "Ye be a most noble knight indeed, fair sir," she said, When the knight saw Mallory, he brought his steed to a halt. Mallory''s spear struck Sir Galahad''s shield dead center--and snapped Sir Galahad''s spear struck Mallory''s shield dead center--and Sir knight, said she, ye have _Come on, Easy Money_, Mallory encephalopathed. _Come on, Easy Money_, Mallory encephalopathed. id = 750 author = nan title = The High History of the Holy Graal date = keywords = Arthur; Castle; Damsel; Fisherman; Gawain; God; Graal; King; Knight; Lady; Lancelot; Lord; Messire; Perceval; Queen; Sir; saith summary = "Sir," saith the damsel, "The knight of the white shield made great joy "Damsel," saith the King, "And God grant me to meet him, right fain "Sir knight," saith Messire Gawain, "No good you wish me, according to "Sir," saith the Lady, "Behoveth all good knights go see the rich King Messire Gawain is come, the good knight, and bid her make great joy." By this time, Messire Gawain is come, and saith: "Avoid, Sir knight! "Sir knight," saith Messire Gawain, "Thereof am I right heavy of heart, "Sir," saith Messire Gawain, "I met a knight in the forest that rode "Sir Knight," saith Lancelot, "thither shall I go where God may please; "Ha, sir," saith he to the Knight of the White Shield, "Right great ill "Sir," saith the King, "They tell me he is a right good knight?" "Sir," saith Lancelot, "Messire Gawain hath said, and right willingly