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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 9 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 92027 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 89 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 Mr. 6 Miss 5 Mrs. 2 Street 2 Lord 2 Lady 2 George 2 Duchess 1 Wentworth 1 Walker 1 Villiers 1 Veno 1 Uncle 1 Tim 1 Theodore 1 Tait 1 Strong 1 Stewart 1 Squire 1 Sorley 1 Sir 1 Simone 1 Semiramis 1 Sellars 1 Scotland 1 Sargent 1 Roanoke 1 Ricardo 1 Ran 1 Portray 1 Phayre 1 Pentreddle 1 Paxton 1 Pavoya 1 Patricia 1 Pat 1 Naball 1 Mortimer 1 Morris 1 Moon 1 Monastery 1 Melbourne 1 Meg 1 Maud 1 Martha 1 Marie 1 Mara 1 Manners 1 Malton 1 Madame Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2431 man 1108 thing 1042 woman 957 time 938 nothing 909 room 889 way 851 hand 804 day 793 house 780 girl 769 eye 761 word 676 face 674 diamond 654 friend 644 money 569 moment 563 one 555 night 522 door 508 father 506 jewel 505 letter 500 something 494 matter 489 life 483 lady 458 wife 449 place 436 question 428 head 411 year 411 name 409 mother 409 anything 394 case 388 truth 384 world 383 course 382 mind 378 people 376 peacock 362 love 358 heart 346 cousin 332 box 327 child 325 voice 312 manner Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2710 Mr. 1321 Miss 1302 Lady 1295 Mrs. 1226 _ 1192 Lord 1165 Lizzie 1104 Fawn 1092 George 799 Lesbia 716 Alan 695 Eustace 638 Lucy 636 Frank 546 Sorley 539 Marie 505 Hale 496 Grison 448 Patricia 437 Carbuncle 429 Greystock 428 Fuller 426 Walker 413 Paxton 397 London 372 Charvington 366 Juliet 359 Sir 359 Camperdown 331 Naball 310 Theodore 305 Mara 272 Keith 266 Basil 265 Kitty 255 Lucinda 238 Colpster 216 Tim 214 Akira 211 Griffin 210 Bakche 209 Jack 204 Pat 201 Dick 194 Street 194 Hanaud 190 Fenton 180 Maud 180 Glencora 179 Inderwick Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 13857 i 11972 he 10463 you 9899 she 9172 it 4077 him 3572 her 3229 me 2101 they 1451 them 1124 we 893 himself 766 herself 345 us 263 myself 181 yourself 137 one 105 themselves 93 itself 68 yours 68 mine 67 ''em 36 hers 31 his 25 ourselves 13 ''s 10 em 6 ours 4 ye 4 theirs 3 you''ll 3 yes;--you 3 yes;--they 3 ay 2 yes;--that 2 oneself 2 no;--they 2 hisself 2 ha 2 bookshelf 1 £320 1 you---- 1 you''re 1 ye''r 1 y''wos 1 y''sir 1 y 1 work,--and 1 women,--they 1 whosoever Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 32627 be 14754 have 7473 do 6142 say 3306 know 2579 go 2307 come 2289 see 2064 think 1994 make 1972 tell 1680 take 1565 give 1385 ask 1349 get 1335 look 1075 find 844 leave 776 hear 769 speak 751 want 691 marry 675 seem 667 believe 626 mean 617 feel 596 keep 588 call 571 bring 556 put 525 wish 522 turn 521 let 465 love 460 like 448 understand 428 become 425 suppose 421 steal 387 send 379 talk 379 cry 375 sit 375 show 373 stand 370 write 368 return 344 reply 330 hold 326 lose Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 9736 not 3131 so 1926 very 1867 then 1537 up 1430 now 1245 well 1231 more 1124 good 1060 much 1057 never 1044 only 1023 out 906 own 885 as 823 again 752 down 750 little 720 here 709 other 691 quite 679 even 679 back 678 there 677 great 664 away 650 too 642 all 616 old 585 young 584 ever 581 still 577 just 540 such 532 long 528 always 518 perhaps 502 also 501 first 481 sure 481 almost 461 last 453 once 430 on 424 yet 419 certainly 407 poor 385 dear 371 enough 367 bad Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 243 good 155 least 58 most 44 bad 43 slight 34 great 21 dear 19 eld 13 high 12 near 11 late 9 sweet 9 rich 8 low 7 strange 7 faint 6 true 6 big 6 Most 5 young 5 strong 5 pleasant 5 fine 4 soft 4 small 4 mere 4 mean 4 manif 4 lovely 4 large 4 l 4 handsome 4 black 3 safe 3 pretty 3 poor 3 plain 3 old 3 nice 3 long 3 keen 3 happy 3 deep 3 cruell 3 common 3 close 3 bitter 2 wild 2 wide 2 wicked Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 233 most 36 well 36 least 3 worst 1 strongest 1 lest 1 hard 1 ability;--not 1 -the Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 books.google.com 1 www.archive.org 1 arrow.latrobe.edu.au 1 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.archive.org/details/affairatsemirami00maso 1 http://books.google.com/books?id=Rm9LAQAAMAAJ 1 http://books.google.com/books?id=3DcPAAAAQAAJ 1 http://arrow.latrobe.edu.au/store/3/4/6/2/6/public/B26994902.pdf 1 http://archive.org/details/36180099.2240.emory.edu Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 13 _ had _ 12 _ is _ 12 lizzie did not 10 fawn did not 9 _ did _ 8 diamonds were not 7 _ was _ 7 eustace did not 7 fawn was not 7 lesbia did not 6 lizzie was very 5 _ are _ 5 _ do n''t 5 george did not 5 lucy did not 5 woman was ever 4 _ do _ 4 _ have _ 4 _ know _ 4 eustace was still 4 lizzie had not 4 lizzie was not 4 lucy was not 4 man did not 4 man was not 4 things look black 4 woman had ever 3 _ has _ 3 _ knew _ 3 _ thinks _ 3 _ were _ 3 alan was not 3 diamonds had not 3 diamonds were there 3 eustace was not 3 eustace was very 3 eyes were full 3 fawn was very 3 george had never 3 george had not 3 girl was so 3 house was very 3 lesbia was too 3 lizzie was still 3 men do n''t 3 things ai n''t 3 things are very 3 things were very 3 woman did not 2 _ am _ Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 fawn had no right 2 woman had no right 1 _ am not there 1 alan had no hesitation 1 alan took no notice 1 alan was not quite 1 diamonds was not really 1 diamonds were no more 1 diamonds were not then 1 diamonds were not there 1 eustace had no backbone 1 eustace had no binns 1 eustace made no answer 1 eustace was not as 1 eustace was not just 1 eyes were not so 1 fawn asked no such 1 fawn did not immediately 1 fawn did not quite 1 fawn had no idea 1 fawn is not so 1 fawn made no offer 1 fawn was not clear 1 fawn was not clever 1 fawn was not there 1 friends are not easily 1 george is not plebeian 1 george was no longer 1 girl had no money 1 girl was not yet 1 house were not sufficient 1 lesbia had no great 1 lesbia had no right 1 lesbia saw no reason 1 lesbia took no notice 1 lesbia was not only 1 lesbia was not superstitious 1 lizzie did not at 1 lizzie had no one 1 lizzie had not quite 1 lizzie made no answer 1 lizzie was no more 1 lizzie was not so 1 lizzie was not surprised 1 lucy did not much 1 lucy made no reply 1 lucy was not present 1 lucy were not there 1 man is not fit 1 man made no remark A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 55378 author = Hume, Fergus title = Miss Mephistopheles: A Novel (Sequel to Madame Midas.) date = keywords = Bon; Caprice; Eugénie; Ezra; Fenton; Keith; Kitty; Lazarus; Malton; Meg; Melbourne; Miss; Mortimer; Mr.; Mrs.; Naball; Stewart; Street; Villiers summary = "I think you asked me that question last night," said Keith, smiling, "And bring the man," said Meg, glancing at Keith. "Do you think your father knows Caprice?" asked Keith, as they walked "In the House of Good, dear," said Kitty in a tremulous voice, touched "Very well, dear," said Kitty smiling; "the man will then know my "Every word," said Naball, looking straight at her wrathful face. "A good many people think the same way," said Kitty disdainfully, "but Keith, having said good-night to Mortimer, left the theatre. "Yes," said Naball bluntly; "I want to see Mr. Stewart." "Do you know?" said Naball, turning to Ezra. "Yes, I was," said Villiers angrily; "and who saw me--Keith Stewart--a "Isaiah," said Naball and Ezra with one voice, and then looked at one "Yes," replied Naball; "and Malton said it was given to him by you." id = 56230 author = Hume, Fergus title = The Amethyst Cross date = keywords = Canning; Charvington; Ellis; George; Hale; Jabez; Lady; Lesbia; Lord; Maud; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Sargent; Tait; Tim; Walker summary = "Your father is an odd man," said George ruefully, "and he certainly "I want to know exactly how she came to be my nurse?" said Lesbia. "What''s come to George, you mean," said Lesbia, looking up. "Lesbia," said Mr. Hale quietly, "gave you the cross yesterday evening "Listen, Mr. Hale," he said, when Lesbia''s father was on the point of "George is the only man in the world for me," said Lesbia firmly, "I never met your mother," said Mrs. Walker, dropping Lesbia''s hand "But you forget, father, that the cross has to be produced by Mrs. Walker''s nephew or niece," said Lesbia doubtfully. "I shall marry no one but George," said Lesbia obstinately. "I will do as I please and so shall Lesbia," said Mrs. Walker, "Is he, George?" asked Lesbia quickly, and she remembered what Mrs. Walker had said in the drawing-room. "About my father--that is about Mr. Hale," said Lesbia, who had been id = 56243 author = Hume, Fergus title = The Mikado Jewel date = keywords = Akira; Basil; Carrol; Colpster; Dane; Harry; Jewel; Mara; Martha; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Patricia; Pentreddle; Sellars; Squire; Theodore summary = "I don''t think so; you will go back to them some day," said Mrs. Pentreddle encouragingly, although the expression of her iron face "To Mara?" queried Patricia, remembering what Mrs. Sellars had said. "I used to look after my father''s house before he died," said Patricia "I don''t like your experiments, Theodore," said Mara quietly, and "And never mind continuing this unwholesome conversation," said Mr. Colpster, who had been opening letters, "it is not good for Mara. "Let us hope that Miss Carrol will love him also," said Theodore "Simply that Mara doesn''t like me," said Dane coolly, but Miss Carrol "Let us ask Mr. Colpster when he will arrive," said Patricia, rising. "One moment, Miss Carrol," said Theodore, when Patricia was about to "Tell me," said Mr. Colpster, when Mara and Patricia had retired to "Miss Carrol suspects Harry Pentreddle," said Theodore, lighting a I know," said Mara, looking at her father id = 56432 author = Hume, Fergus title = The Peacock of Jewels date = keywords = Alan; Bakche; Baldwin; Belstone; Dick; Fuller; Grison; Inderwick; Jotty; Latimer; Marie; Miss; Monastery; Moon; Mr.; Mrs.; Ran; Sorley; Uncle summary = "Marie won''t know anything save by hearsay," said Alan, shaking his "Miss Grison," said Marie, coming forward when she heard her lover''s "This is Mr. Fuller''s son," said Marie, introducing Alan. Miss Grison suspects Sorley of knowing both the secret of the peacock Fuller''s curiosity, and he thought that he would like to talk to Mr. Bakche as well as to Miss Grison. "You must come over to The Monastery during this week, Alan," said Mr. Sorley in a discreet whisper. "Question Miss Grison and learn if she took back the peacock," said "Dear Marie," said Fuller, taking her hand, "let us hope for the best. "We brought Mr. Sorley to see Miss Grison at his request," said Latimer. "What is that?" asked Miss Grison with a searching look at Alan. "If so," said Marie shrewdly, "someone--Miss Grison for one--may know "It is my house," said Marie quickly, "and if Miss Grison is down id = 40353 author = Marsh, Richard title = The Datchet Diamonds date = keywords = Baron; Brighton; Cyril; Daisy; Datchet; Duchess; Franklyn; Gladstone; Ireland; Lawrence; Miss; Mr.; Paxton; Strong; Wentworth summary = Scarcely had she uttered the words than she saw Mr. Paxton coming Perceiving that his friend appeared to be slightly nonplussed by Mr. Paxton''s manner, the German-American came a little forward, as if to This pleasing-looking person, coming to Mr. Paxton, raised a long, In spite of his disclaiming any knowledge of a man named Lawrence, Mr. Paxton had little doubt that both men had been "spotted." Mr. Paxton turned and looked at the speaker; Mr. Ireland seemed, as it fact is, Miss Strong, I heard an ugly story about Mr. Paxton, and--I "Pray, how did Mr. Lawrence come to know that Mr. Paxton intended to Franklyn, knowing his man, was more moved by Ireland''s words than he feel that Cyril Paxton, the man I love, who would not suffer himself Paxton asked himself, as he looked at him, if the man might not be id = 38663 author = Mason, A. E. W. (Alfred Edward Woodley) title = The Affair at the Semiramis Hotel date = keywords = Calladine; Carew; Hanaud; Joan; Mr.; Ricardo; Semiramis summary = "They would be," said Hanaud, unabashed, as Ricardo stalked from the "Mr. Calladine," said Ricardo. "There!" cried Mr. Ricardo in surprise, and Hanaud lifted a hand to "So you live here, Mr. Calladine?" said Hanaud, taking off his hat and "They come in during the day," said Calladine, and Hanaud looked at Hanaud shut the door upon Calladine, but he turned neither to the Hanaud chuckled with satisfaction when he saw the expression upon Mr. Ricardo''s face. "Yes?" said Hanaud, watching his friend closely. Mr. Ricardo and Hanaud exchanged a look. "Mr. Calladine is in?" said Hanaud. I spoke to you"; and to Hanaud he said: "This is Miss Carew." Ricardo listened for some note of irony in Hanaud''s voice, some look last Hanaud put down his glasses and turned to Ricardo with a look of "What a night!" said Hanaud. Mr. Ricardo and his friends rose to go, but at the door Hanaud detained id = 7381 author = Trollope, Anthony title = The Eustace Diamonds date = keywords = Benjamin; Bunfit; Camperdown; Carbuncle; Carlisle; Corsair; Court; Emilius; Eustace; Fawn; Florian; Frank; Frederic; George; Glencora; Gowran; Greystock; Griffin; Hittaway; John; Lady; Linlithgow; Lizzie; London; Lord; Lucinda; Lucy; Macnulty; Miss; Morris; Mr.; Mrs.; Portray; Roanoke; Scotland; Sir; Street summary = you seen Frank, lately?" said Lady Eustace, referring to her cousin "Indeed, Frank, I think Lady Fawn was right," said the mother. "My dear Lucy," said Lady Fawn, "if you discuss politics with Lord "Lord Fawn going to marry Lizzie!" said Lucy Morris, in a tone which Hitherto Lady Fawn had said very little, and Lizzie''s part was one "I told you Lord Fawn was to be the lucky man," said Frank. "Lady Eustace will not go to church," said Lord Fawn. "My dear sir," said Frank, "my cousin, Lady Eustace, is strong in her "Poor dear Lord Fawn!" said Lady Glencora Palliser to her dear friend the House than Lord Fawn," said Lady Glencora laughing, "and yet "I won''t hear Lord Fawn be-littled," said Lady Chiltern. "I will come soon," said Lord Fawn, and then he returned among Lady "I suppose Lord Fawn will--will come all right again now?" said Lady id = 56470 author = Williamson, A. M. (Alice Muriel) title = The Great Pearl Secret date = keywords = Circle; Claremanagh; Defasquelle; Duchess; Duke; Inner; Jack; Juliet; Lyda; Madame; Manners; Pat; Pavoya; Phayre; Simone; Veno summary = "Mr. Phayre''s man let me in," said the red-haired lady in widow''s license, and friends of Juliet Phayre and the Duke of Claremanagh had As Emmy West saw the look he gave Juliet, she felt as though her heart "Must have given the ring to Juliet," Manners thought, as he opened the Jack tried not to hear what Juliet''s husband and the Frenchman said to "Oh, Jack, it''s great to see you!" Juliet said, when a too-attentive "Madame is very late!" were Simone''s first words as Juliet flung open not do for Simone to know that Lyda Pavoya had called on the Duke of "Then you were jolly well mistaken," said Pat. They gazed at each other like two fencers, for a moment; then Juliet "Jack, I _did_!" said Juliet. Nickson, Juliet said, and Jack believed she might be right. "Yes," said Juliet, "I suppose I do know."