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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 36751 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 87 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Mr. 3 Mrs. 2 Frances 1 man 1 look 1 illustration 1 grace 1 daddy 1 Wastebasket 1 Walker 1 Vicky 1 Uncle 1 Trevor 1 Tait 1 Seabrooke 1 Sallie 1 Rush 1 Potshelter 1 Pink 1 Percy 1 Oldburgh 1 Neville 1 Montgomery 1 Miss 1 Master 1 Maitland 1 Maggie 1 Lord 1 Long 1 Lippett 1 Lewis 1 Lena 1 Legs 1 Lancelot 1 Lady 1 Krumbine 1 Julia 1 Judy 1 John 1 Jervie 1 Jerusha 1 Hoot 1 Herald 1 Hannah 1 Guilford 1 Geoff 1 Flagg 1 England 1 Elsa 1 Eames Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 372 time 355 thing 309 letter 293 man 279 way 276 day 269 boy 244 mother 218 one 191 room 188 girl 184 face 182 hand 165 night 165 eye 153 place 152 moment 149 money 147 something 144 woman 136 life 135 word 134 nothing 134 morning 134 head 130 house 128 child 127 anything 123 year 123 family 121 mind 118 door 116 school 110 daddy 105 heart 99 sister 99 matter 99 home 96 hour 94 people 92 father 91 voice 91 thought 86 name 86 friend 85 paper 84 week 84 trouble 81 course 79 world Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 902 _ 327 Geoff 306 Lena 295 Mrs. 278 Percy 234 Mr. 198 Seabrooke 182 Bessie 163 Maggie 153 Miss 126 Hannah 118 Elsa 98 Uncle 79 Vicky 78 Judy 76 Lewis 72 Neville 71 Rush 71 Daddy 69 Julia 68 Dear 67 Guilford 65 Long 61 Trevor 60 Sallie 59 Eames 56 Frances 53 Hoot 53 Christie 52 Master 51 Flagg 48 Legs 47 Tait 46 Jerusha 44 Ashton 42 Bradford 41 Charlie 40 London 39 Jowett 39 Colonel 39 Byrne 39 Abbott 38 Toot 38 Lord 38 John 37 Great 36 Tudor 36 Maitland 36 Jervie 35 Russell Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5088 i 2779 you 2702 it 2656 he 1620 she 963 me 810 him 614 they 580 we 543 her 388 them 152 himself 110 herself 91 us 84 myself 46 yourself 46 yours 44 one 36 themselves 28 itself 23 mine 11 ''em 7 ourselves 6 his 5 i''m 3 you''ll 3 theirs 3 ours 3 em 2 you''re 2 thee 2 ''s 1 yourselves 1 you--_you 1 theirselves 1 p.s.--you 1 imself 1 huh 1 hope---- 1 hisself 1 hers 1 here!--i''ll 1 harvey''ll Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 7778 be 3381 have 1740 do 1189 say 766 go 732 know 610 see 599 come 565 think 525 make 443 look 421 tell 418 get 377 take 327 ask 265 feel 225 give 221 write 220 want 209 keep 209 find 190 seem 186 hear 184 answer 176 turn 168 leave 165 send 160 put 148 begin 139 speak 138 let 134 try 132 like 128 mean 123 believe 116 stand 113 bring 112 call 111 wish 111 read 107 suppose 93 live 92 talk 90 wait 87 show 86 run 85 sit 78 help 76 meet 73 use Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2563 not 741 so 532 very 510 up 503 little 475 then 363 just 351 now 331 good 316 out 308 more 305 never 298 much 292 only 267 well 260 old 237 own 228 too 226 back 218 other 211 as 208 again 204 here 202 ever 181 away 180 all 179 down 179 always 178 first 173 long 172 still 171 great 170 even 169 there 152 rather 152 last 147 young 145 on 135 in 134 quite 131 sure 130 off 122 really 120 bad 117 most 115 new 114 once 108 right 106 such 101 next Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 80 least 61 good 21 most 16 bad 14 slight 9 near 8 great 8 big 6 Most 5 lovely 5 late 4 sweet 4 old 4 hard 4 full 3 wild 3 tiny 3 happy 3 deep 3 dear 3 brief 2 young 2 long 2 little 2 jolly 2 fine 2 bare 1 wise 1 warm 1 vague 1 tough 1 topmost 1 sunny 1 subtle 1 silly 1 rich 1 queer 1 pure 1 poor 1 po''try 1 pleasant 1 pale 1 orkard 1 new 1 mild 1 mere 1 mean 1 manif 1 lucky 1 l Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 96 most 15 well 6 least 1 oftenest 1 highest 1 felt 1 agreeablest 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/29295/29295-h/29295-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/29295/29295-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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 12 _ is _ 6 _ was _ 5 _ know _ 5 lena was not 4 _ am _ 4 _ are _ 4 _ do _ 4 _ do n''t 4 geoff went on 3 _ does _ 3 geoff did not 3 seabrooke was not 2 _ be kent 2 _ did _ 2 _ does n''t 2 _ had _ 2 _ has _ 2 _ see _ 2 _ think _ 2 bessie was not 2 eyes were full 2 eyes were very 2 geoff came in 2 geoff comes home 2 lena did not 2 lena has not 2 maggie did not 2 percy had not 2 something was wrong 1 _ are n''t 1 _ are so 1 _ be able 1 _ been _ 1 _ being hungry 1 _ did n''t 1 _ do not 1 _ get along 1 _ going away 1 _ gone _ 1 _ had never 1 _ have _ 1 _ have never 1 _ is too 1 _ know rip 1 _ knows _ 1 _ made up 1 _ saw flagg 1 _ see mamma 1 _ seen _ 1 _ send out Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 bessie felt no sympathy 1 bessie made no reply 1 bessie was not sure 1 eyes were not pleasant 1 geoff ''s not naughty 1 geoff heard no more 1 lena had no inclination 1 lena is not so 1 lena was not at 1 lena was not more 1 lena was not only 1 lena was not worse 1 maggie asked no questions 1 men are not necessarily 1 mother took no notice 1 percy had no proper 1 percy had not much 1 percy made no response 1 place is not exactly 1 seabrooke are not so 1 seabrooke had no confidence 1 seabrooke had no mental 1 seabrooke had not much 1 seabrooke was not hard 1 woman had no friends A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 51530 author = Leiber, Fritz title = The Last Letter date = keywords = Krumbine; Pink; Potshelter; Wastebasket summary = Black Sorter gulped down ten thousand pieces of first-class mail. a rather wooden-looking man named Krumbine, also bald, recognized "Sit down, Potshelter," the SBI Man said. "Krumbine, a letter turned up in the first-class mail this morning." Take another tranquilizer, Potshelter, and hand over the tray." Krumbine received it with trembling fingers, started to pick up a big You know, letters, characters--like books." "No, no, Krumbine." Potshelter nervously popped a square orange tablet "No code," Potshelter said darkly, proferring the envelope. advertisement--Boy Next Door or--that kind of thing--printed to look Then his gaze fell on the hand-addressed envelope on Krumbine''s desk "Great Scott, boy, where was Your Girl Next Door?" Potshelter, a faraway look in his eyes, said softly, "I think I''m But Krumbine thundered on at Richard Rowe with, "Good Lord, I can see boy, why did you--er--written this letter to this particular girl? "Well, I don''t know--" Krumbine began. id = 6569 author = Mathews, Joanna H. (Joanna Hooe) title = Bessie Bradford''s Prize date = keywords = Bessie; Flagg; Hannah; Lena; Lewis; Maggie; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Neville; Percy; Rush; Seabrooke; Trevor summary = "I know that Colonel Rush''s house was on fire, and that Miss Lena was "I''m sure, Miss Maggie," said Mrs. Richards, "that I am truly glad to Poor, dear little Lena!" said Russell, who was the "Dear, dear, child!" said the old nurse, as she saw that Lena''s hand Lena ventured to open the letter, knowing that Hannah, at least, was Drawing Percy aside again, he said that Seabrooke''s letter to the "Lena, dear," said Bessie, "is your brother Russell worse?" "Oh, papa," said Bessie again, "you know you sent me what I asked you "I was thinking," said Lena, with a little hesitation, very different "Maggie and Bessie, you are not just going, are you?" said Mrs. Rush. "My niece, Lena Neville, Miss Trevor," said Mrs. Rush. So nothing more was said till Percy should come, and Lena, seeing "No, they don''t know about that," said Percy, "only they think I id = 29295 author = Molesworth, Mrs. title = Great Uncle Hoot-Toot date = keywords = Eames; Elsa; Frances; Geoff; Hoot; Mr.; Vicky; illustration summary = "That''s Geoff, I''m sure," said Elsa; "I always know his ring. "Elsa," said Frances, "I think you are rather hard upon Geoff. "I think mamma had better go to bed almost at once," said Elsa, "What are you talking about, Geoff?" said Elsa''s voice in the doorway. "But have you got sense enough, Geoff?" said Frances, gently. "Then you haven''t any wants at present, I should think, Geoff," said "Geoff," said Elsa, putting great control on herself so as to speak very "And why should I be angry with Geoff?" said the old gentleman, his eyes Geoff is a good boy in big things, and mamma thinks it is owing to her "Good little girl," said Great-Uncle Hoot-Toot, nodding his head "Great-uncle," she said, "I don''t want to make silly excuses for Geoff, "Geoff," said Elsa, "you shall not." there I''ll look up your place and find you your train," said Geoff, id = 41581 author = Sharber, Kate Trimble title = Amazing Grace, Who Proves That Virtue Has Its Silver Lining date = keywords = Christie; Colmere; England; Frances; Guilford; Herald; Lady; Lancelot; Lord; Maitland; Montgomery; Mr.; Mrs.; Oldburgh; Tait; Uncle; Walker; grace; look; man summary = a living woman this mouth and chin are like Uncle Lancelot!--Think of "They''re not going to affect her future," mother said, but a little want to know--from the color of the bride''s going-away gown to the "Then, what is it?" he asked gravely, and mother looked on as eagerly thought--and I''ve had so little time since morning to get away by "Do you think for a moment that you look like an artist? I turned away, looking at the room''s furnishings with a feeling of I wrenched my eyes away from his--then looked quickly for Guilford. "I was coming to look for you--to say good-by," he said. "I''m not even a woman--I''m a child to let a little thing like this "Indeed?" said the mother, looking over my clothes with a questioning Mrs. Montgomery was looking at us all in turn, in some little id = 157 author = Webster, Jean title = Daddy-Long-Legs date = keywords = Abbott; Jerusha; Jervie; John; Judy; Julia; Legs; Lippett; Long; Master; Mr.; Mrs.; Sallie; daddy summary = world, like a huge, wavering daddy-long-legs. I meant to write a long letter and tell you all the things I''m learning (Mrs. Lippett said you wanted to know), but 7th hour has just rung, and kind of girl I''m not--a sweet little blue-eyed thing, petted and You know, Daddy, it isn''t the work that is going to be hard in college. Julia said she''d had a good time, but Sallie stayed to Daddy-Long-Legs, Esq. DEAR SIR: I am in receipt of a letter from Mrs. Lippett. Christmas present this year is from Daddy-Long-Legs; my family just You know, Daddy, I think that the most necessary quality for any person I know that I was to write nice, long, detailed letters without ever I''ll write a nicer letter in a few days and tell you all the farm news. It''s awfully funny to think of that great big, long-legged man (he''s