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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 86447 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 74 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Paris 5 England 4 Mrs. 4 Mr. 4 Miss 3 New 3 Henry 3 God 3 Europe 3 Boston 2 time 2 french 2 York 2 William 2 University 2 London 2 John 2 James 2 Harvard 2 Dr. 2 DEAR 2 Charles 2 Alice 1 year 1 woman 1 man 1 love 1 look 1 long 1 little 1 like 1 life 1 letter 1 good 1 german 1 day 1 chapter 1 american 1 Webster 1 Walden 1 Town 1 Thoreau 1 Thomas 1 Switzerland 1 Street 1 September 1 School 1 Russians 1 Russia 1 Ripley Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1190 man 1049 day 1036 year 1012 time 793 life 749 letter 706 thing 520 friend 513 way 486 house 483 book 457 one 424 mind 388 country 382 work 373 nothing 360 people 357 word 350 world 347 part 343 place 325 woman 308 father 285 hour 272 mother 271 thought 270 hand 268 love 265 room 260 week 257 child 253 idea 250 family 248 night 245 eye 244 fact 238 moment 232 month 231 something 229 person 222 sort 222 character 221 course 219 manner 217 death 211 name 209 end 207 truth 202 summer 202 lecture Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 6183 _ 740 James 488 Thoreau 462 Henry 455 Mr. 355 Mrs. 343 W. 287 Concord 232 Emerson 229 Paris 222 J. 222 England 217 New 212 Cambridge 211 de 208 Miss 208 Doris 189 France 180 H. 180 Dr. 172 John 169 S. 164 William 161 Bonaparte 158 Europe 157 Edgeworth 149 M. 147 God 142 Boston 130 London 127 Harvard 116 Alice 114 J.= 112 See 111 © 111 Russia 106 Charles 104 R. 101 French 98 America 97 York 96 English 95 DEAR 94 la 94 University 93 P. 92 May 92 C. 91 Harry 90 G. Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 9674 i 5469 it 4572 he 3471 you 2639 me 1712 we 1609 him 1474 they 1380 she 1074 them 739 her 623 us 434 himself 382 myself 283 one 178 themselves 169 yours 154 itself 104 herself 84 yourself 59 ourselves 39 mine 20 thee 13 his 13 hers 11 ours 9 theirs 9 ''s 7 oneself 7 ''em 4 je 4 hodgson,--i 3 pillon,--i 2 thyself 2 thoreau:-- 2 harry,--i 1 yourselves 1 williamson,--this 1 thy 1 pierpont:-- 1 pelf 1 miller,--i 1 lest---- 1 land,-- 1 huzzaed 1 him,-- 1 henry,--you 1 henry,--i 1 forgotten:-- 1 flournoy,--i Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 18517 be 7835 have 2243 do 1333 see 1315 make 1296 say 1277 go 989 come 984 think 962 write 943 know 784 get 774 take 749 give 738 seem 632 find 543 tell 519 feel 479 hear 460 read 414 begin 408 live 403 look 395 leave 341 send 340 become 319 believe 314 pass 301 wish 293 keep 292 call 291 ask 290 speak 272 hope 270 appear 256 use 256 meet 241 remember 230 return 230 follow 229 let 227 like 226 sit 226 bring 221 show 217 try 213 talk 208 grow 204 receive 202 put Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3845 not 1680 so 1334 more 920 very 903 only 873 well 853 great 843 good 823 much 767 other 755 now 710 little 696 up 691 most 675 never 659 first 642 as 640 old 628 long 559 out 544 last 541 own 537 then 524 ever 498 here 454 there 451 many 446 such 434 too 427 even 419 just 400 always 399 again 383 still 375 same 350 few 331 young 301 new 294 down 291 yet 290 far 286 also 273 all 269 back 261 next 259 perhaps 258 once 251 away 242 rather 238 however Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 185 good 182 least 121 most 70 great 25 high 21 bad 19 strong 17 Most 16 fine 16 eld 16 early 14 young 14 deep 13 slight 12 warm 12 noble 10 old 10 dear 7 simple 6 happy 6 full 5 small 5 near 5 low 5 late 5 faint 5 big 4 brief 3 true 3 topmost 3 sweet 3 stupid 3 solid 3 rare 3 pure 3 manif 3 large 3 l 3 innermost 3 fair 3 close 3 clear 2 wise 2 weak 2 vile 2 thick 2 sincere 2 rich 2 poor 2 minute Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 570 most 20 well 20 least 2 deepest 1 says:-- 1 lest 1 goethe 1 eldest 1 easiest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 19 _ see _ 18 _ is _ 6 _ are _ 4 _ do n''t 4 _ have _ 4 james was not 4 life is so 4 one does not 3 _ do _ 3 _ were _ 3 nothing is more 3 nothing is so 3 one does n''t 3 thoreau was not 3 year is not 2 _ being _ 2 _ does _ 2 _ done _ 2 _ feel _ 2 _ had _ 2 _ had just 2 _ is more 2 _ is too 2 _ know _ 2 _ read _ 2 _ tell _ 2 _ thought _ 2 _ write _ 2 country did not 2 country was ever 2 james did not 2 james had already 2 james was more 2 letter does not 2 letter was most 2 letters were often 2 life was too 2 man does not 2 men did not 2 one has yet 2 one sees farther 2 thing is better 2 thoreau came in 2 time went on 2 words were not 2 work goes on 2 world is not 2 world is very 1 * go thou 1 * was also Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ has not yet 1 _ have no _ 1 _ is not normal 1 _ were not along 1 book is not frankly 1 books had not yet 1 country did not at 1 country had not yet 1 friend was no longer 1 henry were not men 1 houses were not more 1 james did not often 1 james was not in 1 life is no more 1 life is not wonderful 1 man does not wantonly 1 man is not only 1 man was not vain 1 man were no longer 1 mind have no necessary 1 mind is no longer 1 mind was not quite 1 one has no habits 1 one has no idea 1 part is not yet 1 people are not poor 1 people is not so 1 people were not yet 1 place is not here 1 things are not so 1 thoreau being not quite 1 thoreau was not only 1 thoreau was not quite 1 woman was not so 1 words were not casual 1 work is not at 1 year is not equal A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 16951 author = Edgeworth, Richard Lovell title = Richard Lovell Edgeworth: A Selection From His Memoirs date = keywords = Darwin; Day; Dr.; Edgeworth; England; Honora; House; Ireland; Longford; Lord; Maria; Mr.; Mrs.; Paris; Town summary = volume by Edgeworth''s daughter Maria, who was her father''s constant When we remember that it was Richard Edgeworth, the father of Maria, Edgeworth and his friend Mr. Day were both great admirers of In passing through Paris, Edgeworth and Mr. Day went to see told Edgeworth the circumstance, saying, ''One day he took your boy Miss Edgeworth adds: ''I have heard my father say that he ever Edgeworth thought of writing his life, as he considered him She, however, hearing of Mr. Day''s promise, offered his library to his friend; but Edgeworth, in Maria Edgeworth adds: ''Generous people understand each other. He did not share his friend Mr. Day''s objections to literary ladies, and was a great admirer of Mrs. Barbauld''s writings: road toward Edgeworth Town, till at a tenant''s house we heard that ''My father''s and Mrs. Edgeworth''s families were both numerous, and id = 38091 author = James, William title = The Letters of William James, Vol. 2 date = keywords = Alice; America; April; Boston; Cambridge; Charles; College; Contents; DEAR; England; Europe; Flournoy; Gifford; God; Harvard; Henry; James; John; June; London; Miller; Miss; Morse; Mrs.; New; Paris; Philosophy; University; William; York summary = "In the course of the year he asked the men each to write some word of in the A.M. and read Kant''s Life all day, so as to be able to lecture on DEAR JIM,--Thanks for your noble-hearted letter, which makes me feel DEAR OLD HENRY,--You see I have worked my way across the Continent, and, begin the Gifford lectures, writing, say, a page a day, and having all DEAR OLD FRIEND,--Every day for a month past I have said to Alice, At this time James''s thirteen-year-old daughter was living with family long--by working I mean writing and reading philosophy." This estimate DEAR HENRY,--Thanks for your letter of the other day, etc. But I''m going to write one book worthy of you, dear Mrs. Agassiz, and of the Thayer expedition, if I am spared a couple of years thoughts and things, and the old-time New England rusticity and id = 40307 author = James, William title = The Letters of William James, Vol. 1 date = keywords = Agassiz; Alice; Boston; CAMBRIDGE; Charles; DEAR; England; English; Europe; Father; Harry; Harvard; Henry; Hodgson; James; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Paris; Professor; Renouvier; School; September; Street; Thomas; University; William; York; american; german; good; letter; time summary = absorbed in work, went to the door and said "he was sorry Mrs. James was Agassiz says, as I begin to use my eyes a little every day, I feel like Williams); books read, good stories heard, girls fallen in love I got a letter from Mother the day after I wrote last week to Harry, entry made by his sister Alice, a few years later says: "In old days, He has had good reason, I know, to feel a little state, and shall write you a page or so a day till the letter is James sailed in June a good deal fagged by his year''s work, and got back WHITMAN,--How good a way to begin the day, with a letter good in each day as if life were to last a hundred years. He was twelve years James''s senior; a man whose best work was id = 7789 author = Moore, George title = Memoirs of My Dead Life date = keywords = Albert; Coote; Doris; Forman; Gertrude; God; London; Madame; Manet; Marie; Mildred; Miss; Mr.; Octave; Orelay; Paris; Park; day; french; life; like; little; long; look; love; man; time; woman; year summary = the ship threw a little circle of light, moving always like life life is that "If she likes to come round to the studio when one''s work "Doesn''t she look like my picture now?" said Octave. The dear old man said of course he remembered, and that he As I looked across the bay, Doris seemed but a little thing, almost There were many little things which helped to pass the time away. Doris looked at me, and thinking her eyes more beautiful even than the "Yes, I like it, but I am thinking of the Doris that lived two "I am longing," said Doris, "to see that beautiful red drawing-room memories, I said, "Play me a waltz, Doris; I would hear an old-time "Will you come for a walk?" I said, thinking that the gardens might said made her look like an old gipsy woman, and the sunlight fell on id = 51426 author = Sanborn, F. B. (Franklin Benjamin) title = Henry D. Thoreau date = keywords = Alcott; Boston; Channing; Concord; Dr.; Dunbar; Emerson; England; God; Greeley; Hawthorne; Henry; Hosmer; John; Maine; March; Massachusetts; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Rev.; Ripley; Thoreau; Walden; Webster summary = Emerson read a few unpublished notes on Thoreau, made years before, I ''Miss Elizabeth Thoreau, Concord, near Boston,'' and dated In 1857, when Mrs. Thoreau was seventy years old, and Miss Emerson eighty-four, the Concord, to which John Thoreau had removed for three years, in the Mr. Bulkeley, from whom Mr. Emerson and many of the other Concord citizens of Thoreau''s day were Emerson, visiting his friends in Concord, wrote thus of what he saw It originated in this way: A lady connected with Mr. Emerson''s family was visiting at Mrs. Thoreau''s while Henry was in Concord, and a close friend of the Thoreaus, who at one time lived February, 1843, Mr. Emerson, writing to Henry Thoreau from New York, years after Thoreau''s death, when writing to another friend, this In a letter to his sister Sophia, July 21, 1843, written from Mr. William Emerson''s house at Staten Island, Thoreau says:-- id = 16245 author = Staël, Madame de (Anne-Louise-Germaine) title = Ten Years'' Exile Memoirs of That Interesting Period of the Life of the Baroness De Stael-Holstein, Written by Herself, during the Years 1810, 1811, 1812, and 1813, and Now First Published from the Original Manuscript, by Her Son. date = keywords = Alexander; Austria; Bonaparte; Coppet; England; Europe; France; Geneva; Germany; Moscow; Napoleon; Paris; Petersburg; Russia; Russians; Switzerland; chapter; french summary = Bonaparte''s power, by the state of France, and the progress of such a man ought to have formed his opinion of the government which respectable persons.--Public opinion, it is said, will prevent this, persons or things of the present day, that you discover the in return sent them next day presents of elegant and good books for England and France, came to put the crown to Bonaparte''s good against the life of a French general, at a moment when he was far said Bonaparte, "a house which has long reigned in a country always But Bonaparte only wished to teach the French one thing, my last days in France, with some friends, whose recollection lives A few days after we had visited these places, the French government and as was said by a man of wit, their manner of governing in Appearance of the Country.--Character of the Russians. Appearance of the Country.--Character of the Russians.