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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 93672 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 75 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 foot 5 India 4 Himalaya 3 mountain 3 great 3 Tibet 3 Sikkim 3 Mr. 3 Kashmir 3 Calcutta 3 CHAPTER 2 tree 2 time 2 tibetan 2 temperature 2 place 2 look 2 long 2 european 2 animal 2 Teesta 2 Rajah 2 Parbat 2 Ossaroo 2 Nepal 2 Lama 2 Karl 2 Himalayas 2 Fritz 2 England 2 Dr. 2 Dorjiling 2 Dewan 2 Caspar 2 Campbell 2 Bengal 1 vegetation 1 tiger 1 rope 1 peak 1 observation 1 man 1 like 1 life 1 large 1 illustration 1 hunter 1 high 1 glacier 1 forest Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2697 foot 1555 mountain 1272 valley 1038 degree 974 tree 912 river 877 day 864 time 848 rock 747 water 747 man 725 side 705 plant 697 mile 692 snow 601 elevation 550 part 548 way 535 hill 526 air 525 place 519 forest 507 country 497 animal 482 temperature 464 glacier 459 north 455 peak 442 range 439 ground 435 year 396 head 392 bird 388 village 385 specie 382 night 380 top 380 observation 374 cliff 371 life 367 view 363 point 354 bed 353 kind 350 people 350 one 333 height 333 end 327 hand 322 pass Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 6092 _ 762 i. 659 ii 619 Sikkim 619 Karl 585 Caspar 542 Ossaroo 427 Kashmir 383 India 380 Himalaya 357 Dorjiling 348 Tibet 279 Mr. 266 Calcutta 242 Dr. 226 Rajah 224 Nature 219 Campbell 218 Air 214 Beauty 213 Mean 213 Lama 208 Diff 187 Nepal 184 Therm 183 CHAPTER 163 Fritz 159 Earth 155 Dewan 146 west 146 England 145 Khasia 144 May 143 . 141 Teesta 138 Donkia 131 Parbat 127 Locality 126 Nanga 126 Kinchinjunga 124 July 123 hut 115 Nov. 115 Lepchas 112 Singh 110 Bengal 109 Lachen 108 Natural 104 Srinagar 104 Lepcha Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6285 it 3604 they 3388 he 3365 i 2912 we 1647 them 1017 him 741 us 626 me 497 you 397 himself 331 itself 311 themselves 125 she 116 myself 114 one 112 her 111 ourselves 21 herself 10 mine 8 yourself 8 theirs 6 ours 2 yours 2 thee 1 yourselves 1 thyself 1 oneself 1 ob 1 kinds,--they 1 it?--they 1 high-- 1 hee 1 d''eau Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 24525 be 7427 have 1480 see 1226 do 1193 make 1015 find 816 take 693 come 689 know 633 give 595 go 551 rise 530 say 512 appear 507 leave 481 get 479 look 436 pass 436 grow 434 follow 418 form 411 become 402 reach 379 fall 375 lie 368 carry 365 stand 365 cover 341 bring 331 call 328 ascend 326 think 324 cross 319 keep 315 seem 281 run 271 feel 269 turn 265 use 263 observe 262 sink 262 remain 259 descend 248 set 243 climb 241 cut 238 return 236 show 235 arrive 221 lead Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3131 not 1588 very 1521 more 1412 great 1378 so 1157 up 1142 only 1022 other 983 most 912 long 907 high 883 many 860 now 817 as 810 much 796 then 698 out 688 well 669 large 658 also 634 first 625 little 606 far 603 still 577 even 560 same 537 down 529 here 525 few 522 small 517 good 507 such 484 low 472 however 471 again 404 once 401 several 399 too 399 about 394 never 381 there 358 wild 357 beautiful 347 broad 346 often 346 off 337 full 336 whole 334 deep 323 just Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 182 most 149 good 132 high 121 least 72 great 58 fine 51 large 35 low 33 near 33 lofty 28 slight 21 early 18 deep 17 small 17 hot 15 topmost 15 bad 12 farth 11 tall 11 old 11 cold 10 grand 10 dry 10 damp 10 Most 9 strong 9 close 8 simple 8 short 8 fit 8 big 7 warm 7 steep 7 rare 7 keen 7 hard 6 wide 6 fresh 5 wild 5 rich 5 minute 5 late 5 handsome 5 faint 5 common 5 bright 4 pure 4 long 4 holy 4 heavy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 801 most 27 well 27 least 5 highest 1 worst 1 sharpest 1 pleasantest 1 pictures;--the 1 noblest 1 near 1 merest 1 lowest 1 long 1 lest 1 fittest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45747/45747-h/45747-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45747/45747-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/39642/39642-h/39642-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/39642/39642-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/climbingonhimala00collrich 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 2 drthom@ihug.co.nz Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 _ was _ 7 ossaroo did not 7 ossaroo was not 6 karl had not 4 _ did _ 4 _ is abundant 4 caspar did not 4 karl was not 4 river is here 3 _ is _ 3 _ see _ 3 _ was common 3 caspar was not 3 karl had already 3 karl was as 3 man has not 3 mountains are so 3 ossaroo was about 3 ossaroo was as 3 valley is very 3 valley was very 2 _ had _ 2 _ had not 2 _ has _ 2 _ is also 2 _ was not 2 _ was now 2 _ was very 2 _ were _ 2 _ were common 2 _ were very 2 caspar had already 2 caspar had ever 2 caspar was just 2 elevation is probably 2 elevation is so 2 feet are not 2 feet is very 2 forest is full 2 karl was able 2 karl was far 2 karl was too 2 man is not 2 men do not 2 mountains are often 2 mountains is not 2 ossaroo had never 2 ossaroo had not 2 ossaroo was able 2 river is still Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 karl made no reply 2 caspar had no fear 2 man has not yet 1 _ was no longer 1 _ was not uncommon 1 air was no more 1 air was not very 1 caspar was not at 1 caspar was not out 1 degrees is no doubt 1 elevations are not capable 1 feet are not uncommon 1 feet are not very 1 feet lie no valleys 1 forest has no mean 1 forest is not so 1 karl did not yet 1 karl had no doubt 1 karl had no hope 1 karl had no measuring 1 karl had not only 1 karl knew not then 1 karl was no coward 1 karl was no great 1 karl was no longer 1 karl was not long 1 karl was not slow 1 man had not yet 1 man is not complete 1 men do not easily 1 mountain is no more 1 mountain is not so 1 mountains had no longer 1 mountains is not yet 1 ossaroo had no fear 1 ossaroo made no attempt 1 ossaroo was no longer 1 ossaroo was not long 1 ossaroo was not particular 1 parts is not so 1 plant is not now 1 plants had not yet 1 river is not great 1 rock was not immobile 1 sides had not yet 1 snow brings no chill 1 snow is not perennial 1 snows were not visible 1 tree had no other 1 trees are not so A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 45747 author = Collie, Norman title = Climbing on the Himalaya and Other Mountain Ranges date = keywords = Alps; Astor; Coolin; Diamirai; Hastings; Himalaya; Indus; Kashmir; Khan; Lofoten; Mazeno; Mount; Mummery; Mustagh; Nanga; Parbat; Ragobir; Rupal; foot; glacier; great; mountain; peak summary = spent their time in climbing snow-peaks and fighting their way through necessary to climb over the mountain range at a height of 22,300 feet, glacier to the old Mustagh pass will remain as marvels of mountain away, great boulders many feet thick had rolled down the mountain-side Just south of our camp rose a snow peak, about 19,000 feet, which we the head of the glacier, 12,000 feet below the summit of the mountain. valley for a pass on the ridge south-east of a pointed rock peak at of feet up, hidden away in the recesses of the great mountain. Rocky Mountains is the Howse pass, 4800 feet, and thirty miles north snow-peaks; in fact, probably more varied rock climbing can be found and there are many other mountain ranges where rock-climbing can be pines on the Himalayan mountains, when the snow peaks and the glaciers, id = 6476 author = Hooker, Joseph Dalton title = Himalayan Journals — Volume 1 Or, Notes of a Naturalist in Bengal, the Sikkim and Nepal Himalayas, the Khasia Mountains, etc. date = keywords = Bengal; Bhotan; CHAPTER; Calcutta; Campbell; Dewan; Dorjiling; Dr.; England; Ganges; Great; Himalaya; Hodgson; India; Kinchinjunga; Lama; Lepchas; Mr.; Nepal; Rajah; Ratong; Rungeet; Sikkim; Soane; Tambur; Teesta; Terai; Tibet; Tonglo; Wallanchoon; Yangma; Yoksun; european; fig; foot; temperature; tibetan; vegetation summary = west, about 1000 feet high, covered with a low forest of dusky green water, forms a dense foliaged tree, 30 to 60 feet high, some feet) is seen to the north-east, at eighty-four miles distance, great part of East Nepal, as far west as the Tambur river, and at a At 9000 feet we arrived on a long flat covered with lofty trees, Nepal mountain in the far west presented cliffs of black rocks. hot, open expanse, elevated 2250 feet, appeared many trees and plants We descended 200 feet, and crossed the valley and river At a little below 15,000 feet, we reached enormous flat beds of snow, the general mountain mass of 16,000 feet elevation, towering like a valley, and extended to 800 or 1000 feet above the river-bed; this Deep in the valleys the river-beds are but 3000 feet about 15,000 feet, south of Kubra, and north of a mountain that forms id = 6477 author = Hooker, Joseph Dalton title = Himalayan Journals — Volume 2 Or, Notes of a Naturalist in Bengal, the Sikkim and Nepal Himalayas, the Khasia Mountains, etc. date = keywords = Air; August; Bengal; Calcutta; Campbell; Choongtam; Churra; D.P.; December; Dewan; Diff; Donkia; Dorjiling; Dr.; Elev; Himalaya; India; July; June; Khasia; Kinchinjhow; Lachen; Lachoong; Lama; Mean; Mr.; Nepal; November; Obs; October; Rajah; September; Sikkim; Soubah; Teesta; Temp; Therm; Tibet; Zemu; elevation; foot; observation; temperature; tibetan summary = mountain valley, several miles long and broad, 12,000 feet above the miles off, and of great mean elevation (20,000 feet) the vast snowy low elevations -Choongtam -Landslips and debacle -Meet Dr. Campbell -Motives for his journey -Second visit to Lachen valley low elevations -Choongtam -Landslips and debacle -Meet Dr. Campbell -Motives for his journey -Second visit to Lachen valley My connection with the Indian government was first enquired into; next they came to political matters, upon which I declined entering; but I gathered that their object was to oblige Campbell to accept the Lassoo Kajee as Vakeel, to alter the slavery laws, to draw a new boundary line with Nepal, to institute direct communication between themselves and the Governor-General,* [They were prompted to demand this by an unfortunate oversight that occurred at Calcutta some years before. id = 21239 author = Reid, Mayne title = The Cliff Climbers A Sequel to "The Plant Hunters" date = keywords = CHAPTER; Calcutta; Caspar; Fritz; Himalayas; Karl; Ossaroo; animal; bird; cliff; elephant; foot; great; like; long; look; place; rope; time; tree summary = Karl, Caspar, and Ossaroo--sat down upon the rocks in front of the As Ossaroo drew near, both Karl and Caspar noticed an expression upon "You are sure, Ossaroo," said Karl, who had stood for some time silently So thought Karl and Caspar; but Ossaroo was of a different opinion. Karl and Caspar easily comprehended the meaning of Ossaroo''s broken but Karl and Caspar kept their seats upon the tree, looking down upon the No doubt in time such gallant hunters as Caspar and Ossaroo, and so Karl and Caspar did not choose to waste time in telling the shikaree how This was the reflection of Karl and Ossaroo; but Caspar thought from each in turn--from Karl, Caspar, and Ossaroo. Karl had thought of it, long before this time; and so had Caspar, just once more returned to the hut, that Caspar and Ossaroo found time to Karl, Caspar, and Ossaroo. id = 27981 author = Reid, Mayne title = The Plant Hunters: Adventures Among the Himalaya Mountains date = keywords = America; CHAPTER; Caspar; Fritz; Himalayas; India; Karl; Ossaroo; Sahib; animal; bear; foot; great; hunter; large; long; look; place; tiger; time; tree summary = "What''s the matter, Ossaroo?" demanded Karl and Caspar in a breath. Both Caspar and Ossaroo were good swimmers, but Karl could not swim a Ossaroo was chewing his betel-nut, and Karl and Caspar, both very tired, the eyes of Caspar by chance rested upon Ossaroo, whose body was more Karl and Ossaroo left their hiding-places, and hastened to the spot. Karl and Ossaroo kept along the bottom of the cliff, while Caspar time, Karl and Ossaroo were seen running forward to the spot; and soon Karl and Caspar could not conceive what plan Ossaroo intended to pursue; Of course Karl and Caspar now knew what Ossaroo purposed--to snare the moment thrilled within the hearts of Karl, Caspar, and Ossaroo. So saying Karl led the way, followed by Caspar, Ossaroo, and the Karl had not been very long gone when Caspar and Ossaroo both left the id = 27213 author = Younghusband, Francis Edward, Sir title = The Heart of Nature; or, The Quest for Natural Beauty date = keywords = Beauty; Earth; England; Geography; Heart; Himalaya; India; Kashmir; Natural; Nature; Sikkim; Tibet; Universe; activity; artist; forest; high; life; man; mountain summary = Natural Beauty, and in capacity for communicating that love, the great soul of Nature, and consequently see only shallow Beauty. Earth where the Natural Beauty is finest, and he would have had, too, beauty he has seen in plain or mountain, in flower, bird, or man, will heart into the enjoyment of Natural Beauty in a way that would have far-off ages when love first came into the hearts of men that Natural enjoyment of the Natural Beauty of the Earth should be regarded as And the reason why the Natural Beauty of the Earth the Natural Beauty of the Earth is one of which Geography should But men who have seen many varieties of Natural Beauty Geography, and because a love of Natural Beauty is one of the great not _only_ love of Natural Beauty that draws men on. natural features of the Earth by reason of their _beauty_ have upon id = 39642 author = Younghusband, Francis Edward, Sir title = Kashmir, described by Sir Francis Younghusband, painted by Major E. Molyneux date = keywords = Bagh; Dal; Government; Gulab; Gulmarg; India; Jhelum; Kashmir; Lake; Maharaja; Mr.; Parbat; Pass; Punjab; River; Sind; Singh; Srinagar; State; british; european; illustration; mountain summary = Coal Measures--Great reptiles--Mammals--Kashmir valley a combination of lake and mountain in which, I think, it excels Kashmir. revealing the mountain peaks; and the green of the little valley Irises and roses are the two especial beauties of Kashmir villages and looking away from the lake, there are views over the Kashmir valley to beauty in spring-time when the Kashmir lilac and the fruit trees are of Kashmir, then along the range of snowy mountains on the north, and Kashmir valley and the snowy mountains on either hand. All over the Kashmir valley there are remains of temples remarkable length both of the smiling Kashmir valley and of the snowy ranges In such a country as Kashmir, with a great river flowing through it, The mountain ranges which encircle the valley of Kashmir on those lovely Kashmir mountains, and on the mighty peaks which rise Kashmir mountains of the present day.