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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 4371 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 75 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 illustration 2 french 2 american 2 Toussaint 2 States 2 St. 2 Madame 2 Haiti 1 ship 1 haitian 1 brother 1 United 1 Turnbull 1 Town 1 Spartane 1 Sea 1 Rochambeau 1 Republic 1 Prince 1 President 1 Port 1 Playford 1 Pickard 1 Orpheus 1 National 1 Nat 1 Myra 1 Mr. 1 Monsieur 1 Louis 1 Lippincott 1 LETTER 1 Jago 1 Hill 1 Haitian 1 Government 1 Glover 1 General 1 GOD 1 French 1 François 1 France 1 Father 1 Duchesne 1 Don 1 Dinah 1 Cuba 1 Clara 1 Cape 1 Agile Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 604 man 518 time 389 day 298 place 268 negro 248 house 235 board 233 town 231 gun 229 hand 217 ship 207 way 197 officer 195 thing 187 sir 180 island 175 boat 169 side 151 captain 150 order 149 country 148 hour 146 nothing 144 lady 142 work 141 water 141 life 136 people 133 woman 132 arm 128 year 128 night 127 part 123 one 123 course 122 vessel 122 pirate 121 slave 120 fire 118 frigate 118 friend 115 morning 115 minute 114 mile 113 foot 112 schooner 112 head 111 girl 108 brigantine 106 crew Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 998 _ 547 Nat 313 Mr. 290 Haiti 172 Dinah 155 St. 151 Glover 147 Duchesne 145 Myra 144 Monsieur 137 Madame 111 Port 106 States 105 United 104 de 104 Clara 101 Haitian 101 Government 97 France 96 dat 95 Prince 93 Turnbull 92 au 87 French 85 Toussaint 83 Cape 76 dey 76 American 66 Louis 64 President 62 GOD 57 Pickard 55 Republic 54 National 54 English 54 Agile 51 Hill 50 Playford 50 Jamaica 49 Spartane 49 General 49 Adviser 48 Lippincott 48 Bank 47 Haitians 45 Occupation 45 Financial 45 England 44 François 37 ob Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3226 i 2191 it 2048 you 1942 he 1565 they 1459 we 997 she 868 them 723 me 602 him 577 her 490 us 116 himself 90 themselves 87 myself 51 one 41 herself 36 yourself 30 itself 26 ourselves 17 thee 9 theirs 9 his 4 ours 4 mine 3 yours 3 oneself 3 hers 2 ob 2 ''em 1 thyself 1 tears--"what 1 bookshelf Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 9834 be 4031 have 1024 do 985 say 854 go 677 take 603 see 572 come 482 make 476 get 435 think 397 know 336 give 327 find 250 tell 232 hear 226 leave 203 send 198 carry 186 bring 177 run 176 put 174 keep 170 look 166 pass 155 feel 146 ask 144 fall 143 follow 139 receive 134 return 125 arrive 123 kill 122 speak 120 seem 120 begin 113 want 113 hope 106 lie 99 meet 99 enter 98 remain 97 sail 96 become 94 break 93 suppose 93 join 92 let 91 live 88 call Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1586 not 581 so 547 up 438 very 437 now 416 well 400 as 391 out 381 down 361 more 346 here 333 good 327 then 317 great 306 other 278 only 277 first 272 soon 249 much 245 many 244 again 237 long 232 off 231 most 230 little 229 there 226 once 191 away 176 on 169 never 165 in 165 few 161 just 159 own 152 even 151 too 150 back 148 french 146 young 143 all 137 same 136 still 136 indeed 135 however 122 white 122 last 121 enough 119 sure 118 haitian 115 able Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 70 good 60 least 47 most 38 great 20 slight 18 bad 14 eld 9 Most 8 young 8 high 6 near 6 early 5 strong 5 large 5 deep 4 warm 4 small 3 low 2 stout 2 rich 2 keen 2 j 2 happy 2 fine 2 fast 2 fair 2 close 1 wild 1 wide 1 vile 1 veri 1 thick 1 sure 1 strict 1 smart 1 short 1 scanty 1 remote 1 quick 1 pure 1 poor 1 pleasant 1 old 1 mean 1 manif 1 lucky 1 long 1 late 1 heavy 1 hard Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 184 most 13 least 9 well 1 youngest 1 worst 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 _ following _ 5 nat went on 4 nat said gravely 4 nat said quietly 3 dinah took up 3 negroes came up 2 _ got up 2 _ says christ 2 boat came alongside 2 boat was too 2 boats were alongside 2 duchesne had already 2 duchesne was still 2 haiti is not 2 hands are as 2 men are not 2 nat said cheerfully 2 nat was glad 2 nat was still 2 nat went ashore 2 nat went out 2 negroes are not 2 negroes had already 1 _ are _ 1 _ came in 1 _ had nothing 1 _ has just 1 _ has not 1 _ have pretty 1 _ is fairly 1 _ is faster 1 _ is superb 1 _ passed along 1 _ sent ball 1 _ was afloat 1 _ was almost 1 _ was crippled 1 _ was ready 1 _ was scarcely 1 _ was still 1 _ went alongside 1 board were unable 1 boat was instantly 1 boat went back 1 boats are continually 1 boats had just 1 boats have not 1 boats was ashore 1 boats was uninjured 1 boats were already Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 nat had no doubt 1 _ was no more 1 dinah was not dere 1 haiti had not yet 1 haiti is not only 1 men are not sufficiently 1 men were not long 1 nat gave no answer 1 nat had no difficulty 1 nat is not so 1 nat made no effort 1 nat was not aware 1 negroes are not absolute 1 time are not fit 1 time had no effect 1 town are not generally A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 44974 author = H. L. L. title = A short account of the extraordinary life and travels of H. L. L.---- native of St. Domingo, now a prisoner of war at Ashbourn, in Derbyshire, shewing the remarkable steps of Divine providence towards him, and the means of his conversion to God date = keywords = Father; GOD; Sea; St.; Town; brother; ship summary = ill, in which state I remained for some days; at the same time the Captain of the Ship came to let my Father know that he could not wait Sea we saw a Ship, and chased her; in the mean time that we were for a long while, and having captured no Ships we went into the Town, I went and asked her for my money, that I wanted it to begin down: at the time I was pouring out my soul unto GOD in prayers, a to return the same day, I waited till morning: but what was my great I was for three weeks night and day fighting, some times came some times to see her; well, said I, if he comes I will be ready time hoping that some Ship would hear us and come to our assistance, I stay''d in that place for some time, and went home with id = 38764 author = Henty, G. A. (George Alfred) title = A Roving Commission; Or, Through the Black Insurrection at Hayti date = keywords = Agile; Dinah; Duchesne; France; François; Glover; Hill; Lippincott; Madame; Monsieur; Mr.; Myra; Nat; Orpheus; Pickard; Playford; Spartane; Toussaint; Turnbull; french; illustration summary = Taking half a dozen hands with buckets, Nat went on board the prize and As soon as they all came on board Nat said: "I thought they would hardly come up as far as this," Nat said; "negroes As soon as these were all housed in the cave, Nat said to Myra, "I will "I don''t like your going, Nat," Myra said when, the shawl having been "They thought rightly," Nat said, "though it has been a long time "You are looking very white, Nat," Myra said; "I am afraid that your "The negroes have been beaten," Nat said, "and our men are pursuing "Good-bye, Madame Duchesne!" Nat said, shaking the thin hand she held "I think we are going to have a good time," one of the others said as over it," Nat said; "let each fire as his gun comes to bear." There was id = 35025 author = Johnson, James Weldon title = Self-Determining Haiti Four articles reprinted from The Nation embodying a report of an investigation made for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. date = keywords = Adviser; Government; Haiti; Haitian; National; Republic; States; United; american summary = National City Bank of New York is very much interested in Haiti. part of the United States this government was seeking to compel Haiti to the American government unless Haiti accepted and signed the project of project the Haitian government submitted to the American commission a In Article I the United States promises to "aid the Haitian the financial engulfment of Haiti by the National City Bank of New York, With that American aid the Haitian Government defaulted its revenues collected in the name of the Haitian Government by the American Financial Adviser who is, according to the Haitian-American Convention, President of the United States, a Financial Adviser who shall President of the United States, a Financial Adviser who shall President of the Republic of Haiti and the Haitian Minister of Finance of the Government that the Financial Adviser, a Haitian United States and the National City Bank, the Government of the id = 47511 author = Kuser, John Dryden title = Haiti: Its dawn of progress after years in a night of revolution date = keywords = French; Haiti; Port; President; Prince; States; Toussaint; american; haitian; illustration summary = the Haitian-American treaty, part of the government is being run Port-au-Prince, Haiti, three are exclusively for Haitian ports, Haiti in the French days, and many of whose present inhabitants are of Haiti, to-day Port-au-Prince is the capital as well as the most throughout Haiti as "cacos," attempted to make a raid upon the chief in the mountain town of Mirebalais, became the caco leader. "new world." Ownership of Haiti has changed hands four times in this The men left in Haiti by Columbus and those who followed the forced the existing government of Haiti to accept a treaty which At the time the treaty was made between Haiti and the United States, were already at work and in town the "white wings"--an American In Port-au-Prince and all of southern Haiti we were in the Port-au-Prince, but it was the capital in the French days, and the id = 59533 author = Sansay, Leonora title = Secret History; or, the Horrors of St. Domingo In a Series of Letters, Written by a Lady at Cape Francois, to Colonel Burr, Late Vice-President of the United States, Principally During the Command of General Rochambeu date = keywords = Cape; Clara; Cuba; Don; General; Jago; LETTER; Louis; Madame; Rochambeau; St.; french summary = the town, ordering all the women to leave their houses--the men had On the third day the negroes evacuated the place, and the fleet entered Madame Le Clerc is very kind to general Boyer, and that her husband that the confidence General Le Clerc placed in the negroes was highly The general followed, and meeting her husband, asked Three of your letters arriving at the same time, my dear friend, have In the evening the general sent an officer to tell Clara that he had I know your conduct madam, he cried, on entering, you left the house He said that he had been sent by the general to take Clara to his house The general, thinking Clara was sent away against her will, and The general arrived first, and jumping from his horse, told Clara that than him, said Clara, trembling at the idea of having been seen by St. Louis.