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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 4 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 135622 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 71 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 life 3 italian 3 Rome 3 Italy 3 God 3 Europe 2 time 2 roman 2 man 2 Venice 2 Tasso 2 Renaissance 2 Poliziano 2 Petrarch 2 Orlando 2 Novelle 2 Medici 2 Lorenzo 2 Greek 2 Giovanni 2 Francesco 2 Florentine 2 Florence 2 Ferrara 2 Dante 2 Court 2 Church 2 Christ 2 Carducci 2 Cardinal 2 Bologna 2 Boiardo 2 Boccaccio 2 Ariosto 1 year 1 world 1 work 1 woman 1 way 1 venetian 1 thing 1 poet 1 people 1 northern 1 love 1 latin 1 iii 1 great 1 french 1 footnote Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1581 man 1134 life 1052 note 715 time 599 poet 586 world 581 work 542 art 537 day 535 love 532 people 520 age 518 literature 465 poem 455 century 441 year 435 style 415 thing 402 book 395 character 385 death 368 p. 367 form 359 nature 356 poetry 344 place 327 woman 326 part 308 word 305 soul 304 thought 294 mind 286 beauty 285 one 278 history 276 writer 276 author 275 way 271 story 268 letter 266 spirit 264 language 262 point 262 nothing 253 name 252 country 248 power 246 sense 245 pleasure 240 hand Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 13474 _ 1120 i. 841 ii 835 Italy 510 Footnote 504 Florence 465 e 419 di 417 Rome 371 Ariosto 363 Renaissance 361 iv 357 S. 310 Aretino 307 Dante 295 iii 288 de 286 Boccaccio 282 Italians 271 da 245 che 236 la 222 Florentine 217 Medici 212 Machiavelli 205 il 200 God 199 Latin 198 Italian 193 La 188 Il 186 Lorenzo 184 Venice 183 Orlando 182 . 176 pp 173 Alberti 171 Love 167 Giovanni 164 Poliziano 164 Berni 162 del 156 vol 149 Francesco 147 Church 146 Petrarch 145 cp 139 Court 133 Boiardo 127 Naples Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4564 he 4189 it 2457 i 1949 they 1508 we 1376 him 1119 them 966 you 669 me 545 she 443 us 431 himself 346 her 235 themselves 207 itself 86 myself 79 one 72 thee 65 herself 48 ourselves 31 yourself 13 ye 10 theirs 9 yours 9 mine 6 thyself 6 ours 6 his 5 ii 4 ti 4 d''oro 3 oneself 3 iv 3 ''em 2 yourselves 2 ha 1 è 1 whosoever 1 thy 1 pelf 1 m''hai 1 iv.--jacopone 1 i''d 1 homeward 1 hitherto 1 guelf 1 do|no 1 ''s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 15938 be 4925 have 1230 do 1005 make 832 see 732 say 645 give 585 find 576 take 538 know 504 write 405 call 388 come 352 seem 334 live 323 go 316 think 316 become 306 follow 283 bear 264 show 264 leave 260 use 260 read 250 bring 248 form 248 feel 237 pass 224 die 223 speak 220 begin 211 seek 193 prove 190 believe 184 learn 181 tell 175 publish 171 put 169 remain 169 describe 165 compare 164 turn 161 hold 161 appear 159 regard 154 produce 154 hear 152 lose 146 love 144 lead Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2792 not 1094 so 1034 more 1027 italian 670 great 647 other 629 first 569 most 566 only 528 same 514 such 512 own 471 even 468 now 428 good 421 then 415 many 410 well 404 very 374 less 363 much 355 new 355 never 338 still 323 literary 322 human 317 also 308 as 307 little 305 here 303 long 295 far 279 true 279 thus 274 early 267 modern 265 last 256 too 253 old 248 yet 248 certain 226 up 221 few 217 common 215 however 209 again 203 high 200 therefore 200 popular 196 out Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 174 good 113 least 93 most 90 great 61 high 38 early 22 bad 21 noble 20 fine 19 pure 17 deep 15 late 13 small 13 low 12 slight 12 Most 10 strong 9 manif 8 fair 6 true 6 happy 6 full 5 young 5 vile 5 simple 5 lovely 5 lively 5 gross 5 eld 5 dark 5 choice 4 wise 4 free 4 dear 4 bitter 3 witty 3 sweet 3 sublime 3 soft 3 sincere 3 ripe 3 rare 3 near 3 fit 3 close 3 broad 3 bold 3 able 2 yellow 2 wild Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 476 most 35 well 18 least 1 wrest 1 tempest 1 long 1 fittest 1 eldest 1 deepest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 28 _ see _ 5 man is not 5 world has ever 4 _ is not 4 _ was not 4 life is not 3 _ is still 3 _ see also 3 book called _ 3 man is so 3 people do not 3 things do not 2 _ are _ 2 _ are rather 2 _ are so 2 _ becomes _ 2 _ does not 2 _ had not 2 _ have not 2 _ is due 2 _ is more 2 _ is sufficient 2 _ was first 2 age was then 2 day are not 2 day is not 2 italy had hardly 2 italy has more 2 life is very 2 men are not 2 people were not 2 style is not 2 time is short 2 world has always 2 world is not 1 _ are almost 1 _ are cantos 1 _ are devoted 1 _ are dramatic 1 _ are eminently 1 _ are essentially 1 _ are ever 1 _ are frequently 1 _ are here 1 _ are histories 1 _ are immeasurably 1 _ are latin 1 _ are lines 1 _ are little 1 _ are never Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ had not far 1 _ has no subject 1 _ is no _ 1 _ is no less 1 _ is no mere 1 _ is not distant 1 _ is not merely 1 _ is not only 1 _ was no unpardonable 1 _ was not great 1 century found no task 1 day are not story 1 day is not long 1 day is not yet 1 day was not yet 1 day were not content 1 florence did not long 1 florence had not wholly 1 italy had no voice 1 life be not happy 1 life have not yet 1 life is not unhappy 1 life was not on 1 life were not sufficiently 1 literature is no longer 1 man ''s not only 1 man are not only 1 man is no sooner 1 man is not competent 1 man is not easily 1 man was no mean 1 men are no more 1 men are not such 1 people have not yet 1 poems have not much 1 poet is not unworthy 1 poet was no servile 1 rome was not definitely 1 style is not so 1 style shows no servile 1 thing is not easy 1 works are not accessible 1 world had no poet 1 world is not beautiful 1 world is not wholly A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 41934 author = Collins, Joseph title = Idling in Italy: Studies of literature and of life date = keywords = America; Austria; Butler; Carducci; Christ; D''Annunzio; England; Europe; France; French; Germany; God; Italy; London; Mr.; Panzini; Papini; President; Rome; Signor; States; United; War; Wilson; day; great; italian; life; love; man; people; time; way; woman; world; year summary = Italian letters to greater numbers of people the world over than any The great romance-writer of Italy during the days of her resurrection poet of Italy in his day (1839-1875), but who abandoned writing to teach the world to know if in my life, filled with base instincts, there comes The Italians are a people of great emotional complexity, displaying a be likely to write of people and things, which, when others read them, The position which Panzini holds in the Italian world of letters to-day literary man new to Italy, a keen critic, a clear thinker, a master of Italy of to-day is a very new country. than Italy of to-day, and we have spent that time developing a "manner" that women can love all day long, but men only at times." And the After having lived two years in Italy I found many things about the id = 52356 author = Leopardi, Giacomo title = Essays and Dialogues date = keywords = Copernicus; DIALOGUE; Death; Earth; Far; Gnome; Goblin; Hour; Jove; Leopardi; Mal; Moon; Nature; Ruysch; Spirit; Sun; Tasso; Tim; footnote; life; man; thing; time summary = of the leading literary men of the day, and a man of varied experience Leopardi was now of age, and at the time of life when mans aspirations resulted before, and to induce men to esteem the good things they Men will also study your life and writings, and at is by most men considered to be the greatest good of life, and the love of life in men is unnatural, or rather unnecessary, think of the Now such things could not occur if man naturally loved life I am of opinion that a happy life is undoubtedly a good thing. half the time granted by nature to other men, would experience every their difference in manner of life and opinions from other men, who lived most of his life, and died a short time ago, leaving behind him reason, men, desiring to live, agree to consider life a delightful and id = 35792 author = Symonds, John Addington title = Renaissance in Italy, Volume 4 (of 7) Italian Literature, Part 1 date = keywords = Age; Alberti; Ariosto; Beatrice; Boccaccio; Boiardo; Bologna; Cardinal; Carducci; Christ; Church; Cino; Comedy; Court; D''Ancona; Dante; Decameron; Divine; Europe; Famiglia; Ferrara; Firenze; Florence; Florentine; Francesco; Giovanni; God; Governo; Greek; Guido; Ibid; Italy; Jacopone; King; Latin; Lombard; Lorenzo; Love; Mary; Masuccio; Medici; Morgante; Novelle; Orlando; Pandolfini; Petrarch; Poliziano; Provençal; Pulci; Renaissance; Rinaldo; Roland; Rome; Sacchetti; Sacre; Son; Tuscan; Venice; Venus; Vita; french; italian; life; northern; poet; roman; work summary = it is clear that they are forming students in the great Italian cities, Development of the Italian Language--Latin and Roman Memories--Political Poems--Followers of Dante and Petrarch--Political Poetry of the Guelfs Romance of Art, Love, Humanism--The Allegory--Polia--Antiquity--Relation Italian Prose--Abundance of Popular Poetry--The People in the 1513--Pageant of the Golden Age--Angelo Poliziano--His Place in Italian Poems--_Rispetti_--Florentine Love--La Bella Simonetta--Study and of Florence, the greatest work of the Italians in art and literature was developed by their legal studies, prepared men like Dante and Guido Italian nation with its master-works of epic poetry--the _Morgante_ and this new age Petrarch was the representative, as Dante had been the poet loved and served through twenty years of that exacting poet''s life, are three subjects of great poetry--War, Love, Morality--no modern had Italian Literature--Florence--Italy between 1373 and Italian literature.[467] Lorenzo does not write like a man ashamed of The poem which opened a new age for Italian literature, id = 36448 author = Symonds, John Addington title = Renaissance in Italy, Volume 5 (of 7) Italian Literature, Part 2 date = keywords = Academy; Alexander; Andrea; Antonio; Aretino; Ariosto; Aristotle; Bandello; Bembo; Bernardo; Berni; Boccaccio; Boiardo; Bologna; Borgia; Canto; Capitoli; Cardinal; Casa; Charles; Church; Colonna; Court; Dante; Doni; Duke; Europe; Ferrara; Florence; Florentine; Folengo; Footnote; Francesco; Furioso; Giovanni; God; Greek; Guicciardini; Italy; Leo; Lettere; Lodovico; Lorenzo; Machiavelli; Mantua; Maria; Medici; Michelangelo; Milan; Naples; Novelle; Orlando; Padua; Papacy; Petrarch; Pietro; Poliziano; Pomponazzi; Renaissance; Rome; Sannazzaro; Savonarola; Siena; Tasso; Trissino; Urbino; VIII; Venice; Vittoria; iii; italian; latin; life; roman; venetian summary = Character of Italian Plays--Court Pageants and Comedies borrowed from Greek and Italian Life--Il Lasca''s Critique of the Latinizing Philosophers--General Character of Italian Philosophy--The Middle Ages in and Art--The Italian Provinces--Florence--Lombardy and Venice--The of Italian Literature combined with Humanism--Greek Studies Italy--Parallels between Greek and Italian Life--Il Lasca''s age of England, formed the whole dramatic art of the Italians. a great Italian novel of life and character is the autobiography of Italian art had completed her cycle from early Florence to late Rome, Aretino''s Place in Italian Literature and Society--His Birth Aretino''s Place in Italian Literature and Society--His Birth the history of the Italian Renaissance Greek studies form but an Decorative Art, wealth of, in Italian palaces and Churches, iii. universal feeling for art in the Italians, iii. the Italian artists were contented to work out old motives, iii. Italian unity only attained in literature and art, iii.