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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 7 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 41273 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 74 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 tree 4 time 4 day 4 Guiana 3 man 3 long 3 little 3 life 3 leave 3 black 3 bird 3 New 3 Indians 2 water 2 small 2 pass 2 night 2 nature 2 like 2 jungle 2 great 2 forest 2 foot 2 eye 2 ant 2 United 2 States 2 St. 2 Mazaruni 1 wing 1 watch 1 sidenote 1 nest 1 mind 1 look 1 leaf 1 large 1 illustration 1 home 1 head 1 find 1 come 1 chapter 1 animal 1 Trail 1 Spirit 1 Smith 1 River 1 Ram 1 Peter Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 582 tree 573 time 561 day 547 bird 407 man 396 water 360 foot 348 ant 333 night 332 life 309 head 293 forest 287 place 287 part 278 eye 275 way 275 jungle 250 hour 235 thing 221 year 206 river 205 nest 203 wing 201 world 201 hand 198 side 197 one 194 body 187 animal 178 nothing 178 insect 170 ground 169 end 169 branch 168 mind 164 leave 161 sound 156 wood 154 morning 153 nature 152 moment 151 sun 146 air 142 light 137 home 136 other 135 leg 134 snake 130 minute 130 leaf Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1138 _ 205 Indians 166 Guiana 106 Indian 100 Demerara 74 Lewis 73 New 67 Mr. 58 British 49 hut 49 St. 47 States 46 United 46 England 44 thou 44 York 44 Essequibo 41 Mazaruni 41 Atta 40 River 39 Attas 38 Georgetown 34 Linné 34 America 32 wourali 32 Kalacoon 30 Edmonstone 30 Captain 28 abdomen 28 Pecoe 27 jungle 27 Spirit 27 House 26 jaguar 26 God 26 CHAPTER 25 Great 25 English 24 Jimmy 23 de 23 Nupee 23 Nature 22 Cayenne 21 Society 21 Simon 21 Pernambuco 21 Guinevere 20 Kartabo 20 John 20 Colony Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3919 i 3095 it 1674 he 1434 they 1141 we 895 them 806 me 719 you 605 him 332 us 209 she 153 myself 130 themselves 129 himself 107 itself 101 one 73 her 40 thee 16 ourselves 10 yourself 10 mine 10 herself 6 theirs 3 ours 3 em 2 his 2 ''em 1 thyself 1 me?--none 1 hic 1 ''s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 8978 be 3532 have 661 see 637 make 593 do 585 come 484 take 415 find 398 go 342 seem 303 give 296 say 294 pass 288 look 284 know 273 become 259 get 243 leave 235 fall 230 appear 228 think 222 call 209 bring 186 begin 181 keep 174 watch 174 hear 160 turn 150 sit 147 reach 146 carry 144 live 138 put 134 remain 130 move 130 lose 130 follow 129 stand 128 show 128 rise 123 hold 121 form 120 cut 119 feel 114 fly 107 return 106 walk 105 set 103 use 103 tell Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1284 not 653 then 621 up 611 so 579 more 566 little 523 now 497 great 492 very 459 out 457 only 439 long 393 other 385 as 358 down 343 first 322 small 317 large 307 here 306 never 298 again 287 most 267 much 263 many 259 well 252 few 250 still 244 good 239 there 233 away 229 black 228 new 224 same 223 own 220 last 217 far 209 white 207 just 202 high 200 off 198 once 196 back 191 even 189 too 176 old 173 almost 168 such 164 close 163 on 163 ever Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 70 most 64 least 59 good 37 large 23 great 17 high 16 small 16 near 15 fine 13 low 12 Most 11 slight 10 rich 9 topmost 7 strange 7 deep 6 manif 6 bad 5 thick 5 long 5 heavy 5 early 5 choice 4 tiny 4 tall 4 strong 4 simple 4 pure 4 lofty 3 rude 3 mere 3 gentle 3 farth 3 dark 3 cool 3 close 3 bold 3 big 2 wide 2 white 2 swift 2 sweet 2 sorry 2 soft 2 slender 2 old 2 minute 2 mean 2 lovely 2 light Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 217 most 16 least 6 well 1 hard 1 chiefest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43051/43051-h/43051-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43051/43051-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/upmazarunifordia00lavarich 1 http://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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 _ see _ 4 one does not 3 day was now 2 birds are very 2 eyes are too 2 life was still 2 man is not 2 one did not 2 one has ever 2 one is not 2 water was smooth 1 _ has long 1 _ is also 1 _ is black 1 _ is jamaica 1 _ was _ 1 ant became suspicious 1 ant brings out 1 ant had faith 1 ants are always 1 ants are as 1 ants are blind 1 ants are functional 1 ants are totally 1 ants being immediately 1 ants came up 1 ants found great 1 ants is equivalent 1 ants take hold 1 ants was interesting 1 ants was unexpected 1 ants were constantly 1 ants were content 1 bird be still 1 bird called boclora 1 bird called cock 1 bird called here 1 bird called jacamar 1 bird called pi 1 bird called rice 1 bird called sun 1 bird comes near 1 bird did not 1 bird has probably 1 bird is laborious 1 bird is most 1 bird is quite 1 bird is very 1 bird was entire 1 bird was merely Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 ants have no insignia 1 ants have no rule 1 foot is not only 1 indians have not even 1 man has no habitation 1 man is not worth 1 men are not brutes 1 one is not strongly 1 one is not thus 1 ones were not immune 1 sides are not near 1 time is not far A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 37732 author = Anonymous title = The Emigrant''s Lost Son; or, Life Alone in the Forest date = keywords = God; Great; Pecoe; Spirit; animal; bird; day; forest; leave; life; man; mind; nature; night; sidenote; time; tree summary = only with the trees; or with the birds, and insects, and other tribes, My father and uncle shot several birds in the early part of the day, and animated nature as the day; differing not in their variety but only As I have in another place, under the head of a natural day in the This night I took possession of my lodging in good time, and, as I of birds, cutting down the trees that nature intended should supply at every turn; both day and night, every hour, yea, every moment, The morning opened with its usual bustle of animals, birds, and insects size of a man''s leg round trees, making the trunks look like a mast of In the forest, every hour of the night and day is the Creator present the length of time the impressions they leave remain on the mind--for I id = 25888 author = Beebe, William title = Edge of the Jungle date = keywords = Atta; Guiana; Guinevere; Kartabo; Linné; Mazaruni; New; ant; day; eye; foot; great; home; jungle; leaf; leave; life; like; little; long; nest; night; pass; small; time; tree; watch; water; wing summary = Across my doorstep a line of leaf-cutting ants was passing, each water receded slowly, and strange little things floated past had the jungle-life come past Hope''s unseeing eyes and found the tiny pool, the water lined with ant handrails, and in shallow places, white-headed workers, while the smaller ants transported small eggs paths of life from some new temporary nest deep in the jungle. water, then slowly taken a new reach upward and stretched forth great things, the wonderful emerald of my great tree-frog of last year came laboratory and rested quietly--a great queen of the leaf-cutting Attas somewhere in its heart a thread of ant-life; finally, two little that every ant that went out, cut his tiny bit of leaf, and returned, an enormous nest of Attas--the leaf-cutting ants of the British Up through mud and black trench-water came the leaf, like a tiny fist id = 37614 author = Beebe, William title = Jungle Peace date = keywords = Guiana; House; Indians; Kalacoon; New; Nupee; Ram; St.; Trail; ant; bird; black; day; eye; foot; great; head; jungle; leave; life; like; little; long; look; man; pass; small; time; tree; water summary = gang-planks, for all the world like leaf-cutting ants transporting their never-ending drift of weed has evolved about it a little world of life, brown frond with many long, narrow leaves and a number of berry-like gannets--great sea birds with wings six feet from tip to tip--an small green snake coiled as high as possible, and, serpent-like, waiting great water-constrictor long dead, entangled in some brush, half caught half-circles and crescents, heads of little old men and pods like commonest birds, and their little homes, like bits of tide-hung drift, great, strange creature--this Danger, this thing so wholly new and One could watch the changing seasons of the great tropical jungle from thousands of miles of voyaging to study the life of this great jungle, Only at my feet two ants still moved, a small worker and a great The tropical jungle by day is the most wonderful place in the world. id = 34579 author = Cockerell, Theodore D. A. (Theodore Dru Alison) title = Bees from British Guiana Bulletin of the AMNH, Vol. XXXVIII, Art. XX, pp. 685-690 date = keywords = Euglossa; Smith; black summary = 4. Hind margins of abdominal segments broadly black. _Euglossa decorata ruficauda_, new variety; female--K. _Euglossa decorata ruficauda_, new variety; male. Abdomen without black bands _Xylocopa fimbriala_ (Fabricius). Wasp-like bee, with fusiform abdomen, reddish wings and red red, the others black; female abdomen sharply pointed. Abdomen clear ferruginous; large robust bees 18. Hind legs with black hair _Centris personata_ Smith; male.--P. Hind legs with pale hair _Centris personata_ Smith; female.--P. with black hair; fourth and fifth abdominal segments purple Hair bands of abdomen broad; male with long antennæ and Hair bands of abdomen linear; integument of clypeus black. Thorax with ferruginous hair; integument of scutellum yellow. piliventris_ has long yellow hairs on the anterior margin of hind white hair; mesothorax and scutellum shining, but well punctured; base transversocubital; abdomen with thin pale hair, hind margins of segments small patch of fulvous hair on each side; apical part of abdomen id = 58749 author = Hildreth, Richard title = Inducements to the Colored People of the United States to Emigrate to British Guiana date = keywords = British; Carbery; Guiana; States; United summary = British Guiana is a colony, conquered some forty years since from the The greater part of the laboring population of British Guiana were the supreme law in British Guiana, that any laborer, on complaint of "British Guiana, a colony on the coast of South America, and one OFFERS MADE TO SUCH FREE COLORED PERSONS OF THE UNITED STATES, AS Knowing the great want of laborers in British Guiana, and the strong colored people of the United States to Guiana, not only might a great confidence, whom he would send to British Guiana, free of expense, in and the condition of the free colored people in the United States, had from the United States to British Guiana, free of any expense to There is now opened to the free colored people of the United States, should the free colored people of the United States, and those persons In this colony, sir, every laboring man of ordinary id = 43051 author = La Varre, William title = Up the Mazaruni for Diamonds date = keywords = Captain; Indians; JUNGLE; Jimmy; Lewis; Mazaruni; Peter; black; chapter; illustration; man summary = soon learned that to journey up a great river for hundreds of miles scouted around amongst them, found a good canoe, took three black men I stared at the black bank of the river whence came the weird sounds, "You acted like a veteran explorer," said old Captain Peter to me. call all blacks "boys"--thought that it was the white man''s natural [Illustration: THE FIRST JUNGLE INDIANS WE SAW] The Indians sleep without clothes, other than the mesh-like flaps of man''s country and not butt into the wild jungles of the Indians. On this trip one of our men had heard that Simon believed Lewis had "Ha-ha," laughed Lewis, "you''ve got some fine little wait coming." He While the Indians like the white men, they do not like the blacks. "Black night monkey," said Jimmy. Our Indians paddled into a small inlet of the river one day where id = 8159 author = Waterton, Charles title = Wanderings in South America date = keywords = America; Cayenne; Demerara; Edmonstone; England; Essequibo; Europe; Guiana; Indians; Mr.; New; Pernambuco; River; St.; States; United; bird; come; day; find; forest; large; little; long; nature; time; tree summary = of the river are at a place called Saba, from the Indian word which The trees which form these far-extending wilds are as useful as they At the close of day the vampires leave the hollow trees, whither they The day after passing the place where the white man lived you see a This is the place you ought to have come to two days ago, had the water One day, on asking an Indian if he thought the poison would kill a man, hard day''s walk, an Indian got his bow ready and let fly a poisoned the place a large tree had fallen into the river, and in the meantime Wherever there is a wild fig-tree ripe, a numerous species of birds On all the ripe fig-trees in the forest you see the bird called the bird; he will stand for hours together on the branch of a tree, or on