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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 2 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 158685 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 68 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 work 2 roman 2 life 2 greek 2 great 2 early 2 Virgil 2 Tiberius 2 Tacitus 2 Seneca 2 Rome 2 Republic 2 Quintilian 2 Pliny 2 Ovid 2 Nero 2 Lucretius 2 Livy 2 Horace 2 Cicero 2 Catullus 2 Caesar 2 B.C. 2 Augustus 2 Augustan 2 Aeneid 1 year 1 time 1 poet 1 latin 1 italian 1 iii 1 history 1 death 1 ciceronian 1 christian 1 book 1 Varro 1 Valerius 1 Trajan 1 Teuffel 1 Terence 1 Sulla 1 Suetonius 1 Statius 1 Scipio 1 Sallust 1 Propertius 1 Pro 1 Pompey Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 654 work 582 time 580 poet 560 man 541 life 538 year 490 book 406 poem 368 history 365 age 364 literature 345 style 341 writer 337 poetry 326 death 319 language 292 period 274 author 269 form 264 name 262 word 251 subject 233 letter 227 speech 225 world 221 century 220 power 215 art 211 character 210 line 202 point 198 thought 195 verse 195 part 194 mind 190 hand 189 place 177 other 173 philosophy 172 passage 170 school 169 way 167 law 165 view 165 genius 163 friend 161 day 160 interest 156 influence 156 fragment Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 7481 _ 561 Cicero 519 Rome 433 Virgil 301 B.C. 258 Latin 247 Horace 226 i. 218 De 211 Caesar 199 et 196 Seneca 180 Greek 169 Augustus 168 Pliny 167 Ovid 146 Cato 143 Varro 134 Nero 130 Tacitus 123 I. 116 Lucretius 115 Livy 113 Quintilian 111 Romans 104 de 103 Catullus 98 A.D. 97 Greece 97 Empire 96 Ennius 94 Ep 93 Lucan 89 est 88 Juvenal 83 iii 82 Roman 82 Plautus 80 Tiberius 80 Aeneid 79 c. 79 Augustan 78 CHAPTER 75 vi 75 Republic 73 senate 73 M. 69 Statius 69 C. 68 Pro Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3684 he 2720 it 1099 we 1094 him 824 they 544 them 444 himself 335 us 187 i 186 itself 109 themselves 95 me 89 you 74 ib 70 she 46 her 36 one 21 herself 12 ourselves 9 myself 6 thee 5 theirs 5 ii 4 his 3 yourself 3 iv 2 ours 1 trabe 1 thyself 1 sat 1 op''rae 1 oneself 1 mine 1 hic 1 hers 1 felicitas_--this 1 em 1 another-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 11362 be 3365 have 613 do 559 write 557 make 476 give 355 see 350 know 341 show 336 seem 322 find 307 say 295 take 245 call 236 come 234 become 218 follow 207 speak 187 begin 184 bear 166 use 161 read 160 bring 152 lose 152 leave 148 remain 146 live 146 form 144 think 141 go 140 mention 138 pass 130 appear 128 possess 118 rise 118 die 117 quote 110 hold 110 draw 109 regard 108 carry 107 publish 102 preserve 102 fall 99 turn 98 learn 93 refer 92 treat 92 study 92 keep Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1694 not 942 more 879 great 749 so 597 first 585 most 546 only 521 other 477 roman 435 well 434 even 426 early 422 own 325 good 323 such 322 much 321 as 315 many 315 greek 312 high 302 same 298 later 292 now 286 latin 273 literary 270 long 270 less 263 far 260 old 257 very 254 still 246 almost 228 perhaps 226 also 223 last 222 new 220 never 219 few 217 little 204 young 191 then 187 once 183 however 179 probably 175 out 169 often 166 second 165 rather 163 up 157 here Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 143 good 109 least 103 high 103 great 76 most 76 early 26 fine 15 late 15 bad 14 full 12 near 11 noble 10 pure 10 deep 9 large 8 lofty 7 Most 6 strong 6 low 5 sharp 5 old 5 long 5 fit 4 slight 4 rich 4 mature 4 happy 4 e 3 warm 3 subtle 3 simple 3 rare 3 proud 3 able 2 wide 2 true 2 sure 2 small 2 manif 2 light 2 keen 2 hard 2 furth 2 fair 2 f 2 eld 2 easy 2 dark 2 bright 2 brave Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 509 most 36 well 18 least 1 oldest 1 near 1 highest 1 greatest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 46 _ see _ 4 _ is not 4 death is not 4 poem called _ 4 poem is not 3 _ becomes _ 3 _ does not 3 _ was so 3 language is still 3 style is much 3 virgil was not 2 _ are so 2 _ is less 2 _ is really 2 _ is twice 2 _ was also 2 book is obviously 2 cicero is as 2 cicero was often 2 death is uncertain 2 language did not 2 language was not 2 literature is so 2 literature was now 2 name is not 2 poems called _ 2 poetry is not 2 poets did not 2 rome was full 2 style is not 2 virgil is already 2 work was long 1 _ are all 1 _ are also 1 _ are as 1 _ are broad 1 _ are different 1 _ are examples 1 _ are far 1 _ are full 1 _ are generally 1 _ are indeed 1 _ are more 1 _ are not 1 _ are only 1 _ are perhaps 1 _ are serpents 1 _ are worth 1 _ be _ 1 _ became very Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 death is not certain 2 language was not yet 1 _ are not more 1 _ is no longer 1 _ is not idly 1 _ is not virgil 1 _ remained not only 1 authors were not slow 1 book is not altogether 1 books show no inferiority 1 cicero did not scruple 1 cicero had no difficulty 1 cicero was not well 1 death is not quite 1 form was no longer 1 histories had not then 1 horace are not so 1 horace found no followers 1 horace made no pretension 1 language did not greatly 1 life had no resource 1 periods show no break 1 poem is not complete 1 poet had not yet 1 poetry has no such 1 poetry is not here 1 rome had no other 1 rome was no exception 1 style is not unclassical 1 subject was not unhappily 1 virgil was not altogether 1 virgil was not lucretius A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 7525 author = Cruttwell, Charles Thomas title = The History of Roman Literature From the Earliest Period to the Death of Marcus Aurelius date = keywords = A.D.; Aeneid; Antonius; Antony; Athens; Augustan; Augustus; B.C.; Brutus; CHAPTER; Caesar; Cato; Catullus; Cicero; Claudius; Crassus; Domitian; Ennius; Fronto; Gellius; Georgics; Greece; Homer; Horace; Hortensius; Juvenal; Latin; Livy; Lucan; Lucilius; Lucretius; Maecenas; Martial; Naevius; Nero; Ovid; Pacuvius; Persius; Plato; Plautus; Pliny; Pollio; Pompey; Pro; Propertius; Quintilian; Republic; Rome; Sallust; Scipio; Seneca; Statius; Suetonius; Sulla; Tacitus; Terence; Teuffel; Tiberius; Trajan; Valerius; Varro; Virgil; book; death; early; great; greek; history; iii; italian; life; poet; roman; time; work summary = Roman and Greek Literature have their periods of study--Influence of each Contrast between Greek and Roman tragedy--Oratorical form of Latin period the history of Roman poetry assumes a regular and connected form. prose writers of Rome, did not write in Latin at all, but in Greek. public amply recognised his genius; and if men like Cicero, Horace, and what time he came to Rome is not known, but he gained great renown there or a history of Greek and Roman poetry, and other kindred works, as well the Greeks that Roman history was worth studying; for the Latin language learn the Greek language and study the great writers. The study of Greek rhetoric had by this time been cultivated at Rome, and We have now traced the history of Roman Oratory to the time of Cicero, and At what time of his life Virgil turned his thoughts to epic poetry is not id = 8894 author = Mackail, J. W. (John William) title = Latin Literature date = keywords = Aeneid; Ages; Augustan; Augustus; B.C.; Caesar; Catullus; Cicero; Emperor; Empire; Horace; Italy; Livy; Lucretius; Marcus; Middle; Nero; Ovid; Pliny; Quintilian; Republic; Rome; Seneca; Tacitus; Tiberius; Virgil; christian; ciceronian; early; great; greek; latin; life; roman; work; year summary = heavier loss in his seven books of _Origines_, the work of his old age. great numbers at Rome, had been for years intimate with the literary Caesar''s death Latin history was raised to a higher level by the works of results into Latin poetry, to the same Celtic spirit which in later ages other hand, these books include fresh work of great merit, and some of At a time when literary criticism was so powerful at Rome, and poetry was The impulse given to Latin literature by the great poets and prose new school of writers in the reign of Nero, the history of Roman Rome, in the words of a poet of four hundred years later, that she had the Silver Age Latin literature, feeling a great past behind it, main work was in commenting on the great Latin writers. great work of the earlier Roman Empire to spread throughout the provinces