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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 28382 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 78 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 illustration 3 Wordsworth 3 Keswick 2 William 2 St. 2 Mr. 2 John 2 God 2 England 2 Church 1 note 1 mountain 1 man 1 like 1 life 1 lake 1 great 1 day 1 art 1 Windermere 1 Wilson 1 Westmorland 1 Ullswater 1 Thomas 1 Southey 1 Skiddaw 1 Sir 1 Scotland 1 Saint 1 Ruskin 1 Quincey 1 Oxford 1 Mrs. 1 Midsummer 1 Michael 1 Mary 1 Lucy 1 Lord 1 London 1 Lloyd 1 Linton 1 Lakeland 1 Lake 1 Lady 1 King 1 Henry 1 Helvellyn 1 Helm 1 Hall 1 Grasmere Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 342 year 321 time 313 man 304 day 256 mountain 249 life 224 place 190 house 189 side 179 name 147 lake 139 family 138 land 127 part 127 foot 121 son 121 age 120 water 119 country 118 heart 116 hill 115 stone 112 hand 110 way 105 book 102 mile 101 father 99 king 97 death 95 illustration 94 century 93 world 93 wind 92 friend 91 night 90 work 90 wall 88 word 88 home 87 daughter 86 thing 86 one 85 vale 85 shore 85 love 83 head 83 eye 81 story 81 soul 81 child Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 712 _ 148 Lord 132 Sir 122 St. 122 Mr. 114 King 111 John 103 England 97 Cumberland 96 God 88 William 81 de 78 Henry 76 lord 75 Church 74 Castle 73 Lake 67 Furness 66 Keswick 66 Earl 65 Hall 63 Wordsworth 61 Clifford 58 o''er 56 Lady 54 Scotland 54 London 52 Westmorland 52 Mary 51 Helm 51 Coleridge 49 Grasmere 48 Thomas 48 Fell 48 Abbey 47 Windermere 47 Coniston 46 Ruskin 46 Edward 45 Robert 43 Southey 43 English 43 Carlisle 42 Lucy 41 Derwentwater 40 Helvellyn 39 Egremont 37 Crag 34 Old 33 Abbot Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1493 he 1237 it 597 they 570 him 408 i 365 them 316 she 267 we 155 her 142 you 142 himself 129 us 103 me 46 itself 44 themselves 34 one 18 herself 16 myself 13 thee 7 his 6 mine 5 ourselves 4 yt 4 theirs 3 yourself 3 hers 1 yours 1 ye 1 thyself 1 southey Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 5437 be 1632 have 326 say 269 do 265 make 220 come 217 give 206 see 198 call 192 go 180 know 173 find 166 take 148 bear 142 live 137 lie 134 seem 133 stand 129 write 109 leave 106 die 105 become 98 fall 98 bring 95 hold 85 remain 84 think 84 tell 82 pass 82 follow 81 appear 79 look 75 hear 71 lay 67 rise 65 speak 59 keep 59 build 57 lead 57 form 56 marry 56 lose 56 grow 54 show 54 ride 54 read 54 break 53 send 51 reach 51 carry Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 609 not 402 so 328 more 280 old 263 great 225 long 218 many 217 well 212 other 207 most 203 little 202 then 184 only 178 still 177 now 169 up 169 first 167 own 153 very 152 good 149 much 148 as 144 here 141 high 140 such 134 far 130 too 127 out 125 there 125 even 120 also 117 never 116 ever 114 last 109 ancient 100 same 99 few 98 down 97 again 95 small 89 away 88 once 88 however 83 large 81 young 78 early 76 wild 76 almost 75 thus 72 about Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 58 most 52 good 35 least 22 great 17 high 12 fine 12 early 9 large 6 Most 5 noble 5 low 4 wise 4 old 4 late 4 farth 4 fair 4 eld 4 bad 3 wild 3 sweet 3 poor 3 bright 3 bl 2 true 2 topmost 2 small 2 remote 2 pure 2 narrow 2 manif 2 lovely 2 lofty 2 light 2 innermost 2 choice 2 brave 1 young 1 wide 1 wet 1 warm 1 vain 1 turvey 1 thin 1 thick 1 sunny 1 subtle 1 strong 1 stately 1 soft 1 simple Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 149 most 10 well 5 least 2 long 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 hands have power 2 heart is full 2 life is dull 2 man lying dead 2 water comes down 1 _ come here 1 _ gave lands 1 _ is inseparably 1 _ is nowhere 1 _ is sometimes 1 _ lay not 1 _ seemed _ 1 _ was _ 1 _ was in-- 1 age is evident 1 age is lonely 1 ages gone cleft 1 ages gone long 1 ages is plainly 1 country was full 1 country was not 1 day become epoch 1 day being far 1 day had something 1 day is only 1 day is worth 1 day seemed long 1 day was almost 1 day was as 1 day was christmas 1 days have well 1 days pass away 1 days were half 1 family are devoid 1 family were not 1 foot had willie 1 foot was first 1 hands held out 1 heart be gracious 1 heart is very 1 heart was not 1 heart was stainless 1 hill called gummershow 1 hill is fairer 1 hills are frequently 1 hills called pikes 1 house became ruinous 1 house called lyulph 1 house called skelwith 1 house called tent Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 country was not tempting 1 man has no rights 1 men have not spiritual 1 mountains are not inferior A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 42139 author = Bradley, A. G. (Arthur Granville) title = The English Lakes date = keywords = Buttermere; Helvellyn; Keswick; Lakeland; Skiddaw; Ullswater; Windermere; Wordsworth; illustration; lake summary = Those delectable little sister lakes of Rydal and Grasmere probably wood and water, of rugged crag and fern-clad slope, of velvety park-like larger lake of Grasmere with Rydal Water by a short half-mile display T. Coleridge, spent the years preceding his long married life at Rydal The little inn at Wythburn on the highway near the lake-head where the overhung with trees on the Kirkstone shore of the lake, long the abode do so, for in many visits to this delightful haven in the Lake country shore, give that exceptional touch of wildness to the great lake which, Patterdale Hall has now this long time been a large country of the Border foray tradition in the heart of the Lake country. mountain-bordered lake to the yet sterner heights looming at its farther background for the lake, as viewed from the Keswick end, Skiddaw, as associations of this rugged romantic Lake country with its simple, id = 54318 author = Home, Gordon title = The English Lakes: A Sketch-Book date = keywords = illustration summary = A Sketch Book 1 Langdale Pikes from a garden on Windermere [title] [Illustration: Langdale Pikes from a garden on Windermere [title]] [Illustration: Windermere from Bowness] [Illustration: Dove Cottage--Grasmere] [Illustration: Stone Circle near Keswick] [Illustration: Derwentwater from near Friar''s Crag] [Illustration: Derwentwater from Borrowdale] [Illustration: Buttermere] [Illustration: Scale Force] [Illustration: Among the summits of the Fells] [Illustration: Ennerdale Water from Pillar Fell] [Illustration: Wastwater & The Screes] [Illustration: Clouds on Scafell] [Illustration: Styhead Pass] [Illustration: Mickleden & Rossett Gill] [Illustration: Ullswater from the summit of Helvellyn] [Illustration: Hawes Water & Harter Fell] By J.C.M. Pike |LONDON AT NIGHT. Pike |RIVERSIDE LONDON. Keesey |ROCHESTER. Keesey |ROME. Hornby |THE THAMES. Sharpley | By Gordon Home |VENICE. Sharpley |WINDSOR AND ETON. Keesey |YORK. By Gordon Home | By Gordon Home | By Gordon Home | By Gordon Home | By Gordon Home | Woollard Woollard Hornby BLACK, LTD., 4 SOHO SQUARE, LONDON, W. id = 42476 author = Sessions, Frederick title = Literary Celebrities of the English Lake-District date = keywords = Ambleside; Charles; Church; Coleridge; Coniston; England; English; God; Grasmere; John; Keswick; Lake; Linton; Lloyd; London; Mr.; Mrs.; Oxford; Quincey; Ruskin; Southey; St.; William; Wilson; Wordsworth; art; day; great; illustration; life; like; man summary = my old home in the South; the later ones for my new friends in the till the last expiring day, aged seventy-four years.'' She lies among her youthful reformer, timid in old age, and desiring, as John Bright said children of days of long ago, when really good books for them were ''My dear friend, Mrs. Lynn Linton, had lived through a long and In fact, no other man has lived in recent years whose that fine old English institution, flogging in the great public schools, Wordsworth is, of course, the greatest poet of the English Lake school. friends--Coleridge, Southey, De Quincey, Charles Lloyd, John Wilson, and writings of the great poets of the Lake School, or of Charles Lamb or course was like the Borrowdale road, which an old guide-book says find myself old, and as if I had lost a great part of my life. id = 48207 author = White, John Pagen title = Lays and Legends of the English Lake Country With Copious Notes date = keywords = Abbey; Abbot; Bar; Broughton; Carlisle; Castle; Christmas; Church; Clifford; Cumberland; Dacre; Earl; Edward; Egremont; England; Fell; Fleming; Furness; God; Hall; Helm; Henry; John; Keswick; King; Lady; Lord; Lucy; Mary; Michael; Midsummer; Mr.; Saint; Scotland; Sir; St.; Thomas; Westmorland; William; note summary = built by an Abbot of Furness, in the first year of King Edward the This old castle stands at no great distance from the second cutting From his rude shepherd-life called Lord Clifford away. watching, like the Chaldeans of old time, the stars by night Earl of Cumberland, in the time of King Henry I., and made a cell of an ancient barrow at a place called Beacon Hill, near Aspatria places in Westmorland and Cumberland in the year of our lord god who lived in the days of King John at a place then called the ye yeare of our Lord, 1547, and died the second day of Marche, in the day time he lurked in remote recesses of the old houses which In King Henry the eight''s time the yong Lord Dacres heir of the Lord Dacres in King Edward the 4th time, before the id = 41430 author = nan title = English Lakes: Water-Colours date = keywords = illustration summary = [Illustration: Cover] WATER-COLOURS [Illustration: logo] 4, 5 & 6 SOHO SQUARE, LONDON, W. BLACK''S "WATER-COLOUR" SERIES ENGLISH LAKES. Published by A. SOHO SQUARE. LONDON. LONDON. _First Published, Autumn,_ 1919 LIST OF WATER-COLOURS 1. Grasmere--Evening Sun. _Frontispiece_ 2. Grasmere Church. 3. Dove Cottage, Grasmere. 4. Stepping-Stones, Far Easedale, Grasmere. 5. Rydal Water. 6. Brantwood, Coniston Lake. 7. Stepping-Stones, Seathwaite Derwentwater and Bassenthwaite. Raven Crag, Thirlmere. Lodore and Derwentwater. Derwentwater from Castle Head. Thirlmere and Helvellyn. [Illustration: GRASMERE CHURCH.] [Illustration: DOVE COTTAGE, GRASMERE.] [Illustration: STEPPING STONES, FAR EASEDALE, GRASMERE.] [Illustration: RYDAL WATER.] [Illustration: BRANTWOOD, CONISTON LAKE.] [Illustration: STEPPING-STONES, SOUTHWAITE.] [Illustration: SILVERY DUDDON.] [Illustration: WASTWATER AND SCAWFELL.] [Illustration: HEAD OF BUTTERMERE.] [Illustration: DERWENTWATER AND BASSENTHWAITE LAKE.] [Illustration: GRANGE IN BORROWDALE.] [Illustration: RAVEN CRAG, THIRLMERE.] [Illustration: LODORE AND DERWENTWATER.] [Illustration: DERWENTWATER FROM CASTLE HEAD. [Illustration: THIRLMERE AND HELVELLYN.] [Illustration: ULLSWATER FROM GOWBARROW PARK.] [Illustration: BLEA TARN AND LANGDALE PIKES.] [Illustration: DUNGEON GHYLL FORCE.] id = 41431 author = nan title = The English Lake District date = keywords = Wordsworth; illustration; mountain summary = Matthew Arnold on "Wordsworth''s Grave" and an extract from his poem Ltd., for an extract from "The Life of John Ruskin"; to Mrs F. "Farewell, thou little nook of mountain ground, [Illustration: DOVE COTTAGE, GRASMERE] off as high as it could be cut off, made the mountain look uncommonly His hills, his lakes, his streams are with him yet. [Illustration: STEPPING STONES, FAR EASEDALE, GRASMERE.] This spot is the scene of the lamb''s rescue described by Ye mountains and ye lakes, [Illustration: BRANTWOOD, CONISTON LAKE.] lake, and, near Gowbarrow Park, saw the daffodils which he has Lakes and mountains beneath me gleam''d misty and wide; Dark green was that spot ''mid the brown mountain-heather, O rock and torrent, lake and hill, [Illustration: LODORE AND DERWENTWATER.] Derwentwater and Lodore in view, and the fantastic mountains of [Illustration: DERWENTWATER AND BASSENTHWAITE LAKE.] There is a lake hid far among the hills,