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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 40582 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 76 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 illustration 5 garden 4 plant 3 flower 2 tree 2 old 2 line 2 good 2 english 2 Rose 2 New 2 June 2 Garden 2 April 1 year 1 wood 1 way 1 taste 1 prize 1 object 1 love 1 look 1 like 1 leave 1 lawn 1 large 1 landscape 1 kind 1 japanese 1 house 1 home 1 gardening 1 dial 1 colour 1 chapter 1 american 1 acre 1 York 1 William 1 White 1 Washington 1 Virginia 1 View 1 Van 1 Thyme 1 Temple 1 Sweet 1 Sun 1 Stowe 1 Stone Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2235 garden 1498 flower 932 plant 599 tree 580 year 451 foot 440 house 438 illustration 406 time 348 day 341 place 333 bloom 327 one 311 ground 303 border 302 thing 295 kind 294 leave 292 wall 291 colour 283 dial 283 beauty 281 way 281 side 275 name 274 home 256 bed 248 shrub 248 man 230 line 226 gardening 224 seed 223 variety 219 sun 219 page 216 root 212 spring 207 growth 206 winter 206 part 197 summer 197 gardener 192 lawn 188 country 185 end 185 blossom 183 form 180 work 178 wood 177 rose Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4000 _ 321 Garden 294 Rose 267 New 217 England 193 Box 166 Roses 142 Apple 121 June 117 Sweet 113 et 93 York 88 Mr. 86 See 83 English 77 White 77 September 73 America 71 Lily 71 July 71 Island 70 Massachusetts 69 April 67 Sir 66 Lilies 64 William 64 Mrs. 64 August 63 May 61 Lilacs 60 Polypth 60 Nature 60 Iris 60 Calloph 59 Sun 57 John 56 Old 55 Larkspur 53 Virginia 53 Phlox 53 F. 52 October 50 Scotch 50 London 50 Lilac 47 Flower 46 Salem 46 Esq 44 Washington 44 GARDEN Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3361 it 2344 i 1206 they 800 them 716 we 664 he 548 you 368 me 234 us 213 she 154 him 137 one 97 itself 84 her 58 themselves 46 himself 26 myself 22 mine 15 herself 11 yourself 10 ourselves 6 thee 4 yours 4 oneself 3 theirs 2 his 2 hers 2 ''em 1 you.----but 1 ay Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 10551 be 2919 have 758 do 703 make 696 see 596 grow 446 give 440 know 422 come 406 plant 360 find 358 say 325 look 315 show 303 take 281 seem 267 think 250 call 233 go 228 use 212 keep 199 cut 197 set 196 stand 175 leave 165 tell 161 love 148 get 147 flower 139 write 136 cover 136 become 131 lay 127 put 126 let 124 fill 120 bear 119 want 119 bloom 110 begin 105 live 104 form 104 bring 103 photograph 98 run 92 like 91 walk 91 gather 90 sow 90 rise Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1488 not 805 so 799 old 691 good 688 well 592 more 532 many 508 very 473 only 445 out 444 other 435 beautiful 430 great 427 little 409 most 398 white 390 much 389 up 373 as 356 then 344 even 343 large 335 never 330 first 311 such 311 now 288 long 277 also 272 here 269 still 262 few 258 always 252 high 252 fine 251 small 228 ever 227 early 225 same 214 too 208 green 208 full 203 own 201 often 199 just 191 wild 187 blue 181 down 172 there 168 lovely 167 yellow Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 274 good 76 most 58 least 36 great 31 fine 26 high 23 lovely 23 large 21 early 15 old 14 strong 14 bad 13 small 10 slight 10 near 10 Most 9 full 9 bright 8 pure 8 noble 8 low 8 light 7 sweet 7 simple 7 easy 6 poor 6 pale 6 handsome 5 wide 5 rich 5 long 5 deep 4 tall 4 rare 4 happy 4 grand 4 dark 4 clear 4 blue 3 hot 3 hardy 3 gentle 3 fair 3 faint 2 young 2 wise 2 white 2 weird 2 warm 2 showy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 333 most 43 well 11 least 1 waitest 1 oftenest 1 near 1 long 1 early Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45599/45599-h/45599-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45599/45599-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 _ is _ 3 bloom is over 3 flowers are not 3 garden is not 2 _ does not 2 _ is also 2 _ is very 2 beauty is _ 2 flower has never 2 flowers are very 2 garden are not 2 garden do not 2 garden is large 2 garden is now 2 garden was so 2 ground is still 2 one is often 2 plants are so 2 plants are well 1 _ are _ 1 _ are conspicuous 1 _ are just 1 _ are rather 1 _ do n''t 1 _ does more 1 _ gives patterns 1 _ grows about 1 _ had long 1 _ has about 1 _ has also 1 _ has large 1 _ has so 1 _ have gardens 1 _ have long 1 _ is inconsolable 1 _ is individually 1 _ is longer 1 _ is more 1 _ is overjoyed 1 _ is quite 1 _ is richly 1 _ is silver 1 _ is still 1 _ knows _ 1 _ made up 1 _ make _ 1 _ makes _ 1 _ planted alternately 1 _ see _ 1 _ see columbines Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 blooms are not distinctive 1 day is not always 1 days had no rivals 1 dial was not original 1 flower did not always 1 flower has no true 1 flower is not common 1 flower leaves no berry 1 flowers are not all 1 flowers are not deep 1 flowers are not so 1 flowers have no beauty 1 garden are not pleasantness 1 garden had no other 1 garden is not only 1 gardens is not well 1 gardens were no vanity 1 name being no doubt 1 name is not right 1 names are not definite 1 one has no scruple 1 one is not philosophic 1 ones are not so 1 place is no final 1 place is not indoors 1 plants is not enough 1 plants was not equal 1 plants were not always 1 trees does not merely 1 trees tell no tale 1 wall had not climbers 1 way do not exactly 1 way have not even A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 19408 author = Cable, George Washington title = The Amateur Garden date = keywords = New; Northampton; Orleans; acre; american; flower; garden; gardening; good; home; house; illustration; lawn; line; plant; prize summary = A flower-garden trying to be beautiful is a charming instance of new path has made it easier to bring up, for the lawn garden, sand, to promote Northampton''s "People''s Institute," of whose home-garden work steps in our American amateur gardens is the old fashion--so well got years an annual prize competition of amateur flower-gardens. determining what American flower-gardening had best be. For of course the very thing which makes the small garden different from I have a neighbor who every year plants a garden of annuals. A great new boon to the home gardener they are, these wire fencings and very easy to think of the plants, beds and paths of a garden as things Where to Plant Shrubbery; and the response of the free-line garden will private flower-gardening, to double or quadruple the town''s beauty and art farther on and in; but in a small garden, for mere want of room and id = 39049 author = Earle, Alice Morse title = Old-Time Gardens, Newly Set Forth date = keywords = America; Apple; Box; Dr.; England; Esq; Garden; Island; Larkspur; Lilac; Lilies; Lily; Long; Manor; Mary; Massachusetts; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Pennsylvania; Poppy; Rose; Salem; Shakespeare; Sun; Sweet; Thyme; Van; Virginia; Washington; White; William; York; dial; english; flower; illustration; love; old; plant summary = _Sun-dial in Rose Garden at Yaddo, Saratoga, New York. "garden plot" seeds and roots of homely English flowers and herbs, that cherished flowers, the old garden weeds, which quickly found a home and vase filled with old garden flowers--Tulip, Convolvulus, Harebell, Rose, England towns fine Peony plants in an old garden are a pretty good Planted with bulbs, these gardens in their flowering time are, as old of all edgings to our garden borders of old-time flowers. The universal flower in the old-time garden was the Lilac; it was the garden are scores of old-time favorites: Flower de Luce, Peonies, and Japan did not clash with the old garden flowers, they seemed like often planted at the edge of the flower garden, is called the Sapson, or old-time garden of flowers, such as these planted in this Shakespeare Flower de Luce in this garden are sixty years old, and the Box also; the id = 45599 author = Ely, Helena Rutherfurd title = A Woman''s Hardy Garden date = keywords = April; August; July; June; Lilium; October; Roses; September; garden; illustration; plant summary = More than half the time her little garden supplies flowers bloom in early autumn, is particularly good to plant by veranda posts Rudbeckias plant two feet apart; they will grow to a solid mass. flower garden, and the next place to plant is close about the house. makes a beautiful low-growing hedge; good plants can be bought for six is in rows, the only border in my garden where the planting is done in The plants are quite hardy, grow four feet high, plant of _Valerian_, which has a tall, beautiful white flower with a plants are covered with long-stemmed, yellow flowers with dark crimson in early autumn, and the plants will bloom the following year. Daffodils growing in my great-grandfather''s garden, that were planted Did everything planted grow and flourish, gardening would gardens and conservatories, and knows all about the plants and flowers. id = 39929 author = Gilpin, William title = A Dialogue upon the Gardens of the Right Honorouble the Lord Viscount Cobham at Stow in Buckinghamshire date = keywords = Calloph; Dialogue; Garden; Gilpin; Polypth; Polypthon; Sir; Stowe; Temple; View; object; taste summary = gardens,[1] and William Gilpin''s _Dialogue_ probably one of the most Gilpin''s path through the gardens at Stowe is recorded in the _Dialogue_ _Polypth._ Yes, indeed, I think the Ruin a great Addition to the Beauty see its Use by and by, in a Variety of beautiful Views: Let us pursue _Polypth._ Why here we entirely lose sight of the Garden; our elegant _Calloph._ I am admiring the fine View from hence: So great a Variety of more beautiful Figure in a Variety of fine Views from several Parts of _Polypth._ I agree with you entirely; nor do I think this other View _Calloph._ I assure you, Sir, I look upon this as a very great _Calloph._ It is the Temple, Sir, of Ancient Virtue; the Place I am now _Calloph._ You have the best View of it, Sir, from hence. Variety of other beautiful Objects, are brought into the Garden, and id = 36279 author = Jekyll, Gertrude title = Wood and Garden: Notes and thoughts, practical and critical, of a working amateur date = keywords = April; Clematis; Dahlias; Iris; June; Rose; Scotch; chapter; colour; flower; garden; good; illustration; kind; large; leave; like; look; old; plant; tree; way; wood; year summary = Late-blooming rock-plants -Autumn flowers -Tea Roses -Planting in difficult places -Hardy flower border for flowering shrubs, or special gardens of plants and trees with garden of one kind of plant in full beauty of flower and foliage. Beautiful colouring is now to be seen in many of the plants whose leaves when they are in beds or large groups, to plant the dark-flowered April, the flowers looking large for the size of the plant. end--is given to the kinds I like best of the large June-flowered like best to grow as garden flowers. white, pink, rose, and pale yellow of the double garden kinds. good garden plant, and about then began to grow the large yellow and few years, that the need of really good and beautiful garden flowers is liking for the good old garden flowers. But where the wood joins the garden some bold groups of flowering plants id = 37607 author = Robinson, W. (William) title = Garden Design and Architects'' Gardens Two reviews, illustrated, to show, by actual examples from British gardens, that clipping and aligning trees to make them ''harmonise'' with architecture is barbarous, needless, and inartistic date = keywords = Nature; english; garden; illustration; landscape; line; tree summary = simplest elements of design in landscape beauty or natural form. effective means of teaching the true art of landscape gardening, we see picturesque garden and park design, while bad work is common. [Illustration: _Group of trees on garden lawn at Golder''s Hill, charm of the garden that we may have beautiful natural objects in their [Illustration: _Example of formal gardening, with clipped trees and garden a beautiful foreground for the true landscape, instead of cutting houses like Haddon may be and are as beautiful as any garden ever made As to a natural school of landscape gardening, the authors say: in the efforts of the landscape gardener, and in old country houses, Nature study, and that is the only true path for the landscape gardener; gardens in the same city formed of miserable clipped trees in lines! old clipped gardens gravel and distorted trees are the only things seen id = 47688 author = Various title = The Brochure Series of Architectural Illustration, vol. 06, No. 02, February 1900 Japanese Gardens date = keywords = Stone; garden; illustration; japanese summary = But, though modelled upon an actual landscape, the Japanese garden Japanese gardener intends not only to present in his model the features Japanese garden of the best type is, like any true work of art, the to model his design, a pine tree grew upon the side of a hill. The Japanese artist who is called upon to design a new garden will furnished with natural hills, trees and water, the gardener will, of Showing some characteristic garden accessories,--stepping-stones, Extreme importance is attached to the use in gardens of natural stones, stones have been arranged, the distribution of garden vegetation is considered; for the garden rocks form only the skeleton of the design The architectural accessories of the Japanese garden,--bridges, Important accessories in the Japanese garden are Stepping-Stones. gardens such stones form one of the principal features of the design. numbers refer to the titles of the principal hills, stones, tree clumps