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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 3 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 61287 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 82 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 MSS 1 Ælla 1 wythe 1 wylle 1 write 1 work 1 word 1 time 1 thie 1 roman 1 mie 1 letter 1 iii 1 hys 1 history 1 hill 1 great 1 footnote 1 dyd 1 century 1 book 1 bee 1 author 1 XIV 1 VII 1 University 1 Tiberius 1 Thomas 1 Tacitus 1 Syr 1 St. 1 Speght 1 Skinner 1 Skeat 1 Seyncte 1 Second 1 Sallust 1 Rowley 1 Rome 1 Professor 1 Poems 1 Ossian 1 Oscur 1 Normannes 1 Niccoli 1 Nero 1 Mr. 1 Medici 1 Macpherson 1 Lyche Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 288 man 288 book 262 time 261 word 239 work 233 history 223 part 221 year 211 century 195 p. 174 author 164 writer 153 letter 141 poem 137 footnote 136 day 121 age 118 æ. 118 love 117 son 116 place 111 name 109 friend 106 forgery 105 character 102 passage 100 language 97 thing 96 account 93 way 93 number 91 hand 88 death 87 reader 85 nothing 85 life 83 writing 83 country 82 thie 80 fact 78 matter 74 hill 74 ad 73 people 73 copy 72 kind 71 manner 70 style 67 sense 67 historian Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4572 _ 812 Footnote 509 C. 456 Annals 452 Tacitus 372 Bracciolini 225 Chatterton 204 I. 177 mie 175 et 169 thou 169 hys 162 E. 141 H. 134 yn 124 Æ. 124 bee 113 ne 112 II 109 de 105 Rome 105 IV 98 Ælla 96 G. 93 doe 93 Rowley 85 Ep 81 wylle 77 Romans 76 Florence 75 mee 74 dyd 72 III 71 MS 70 Mr. 64 thie 64 Tiberius 62 ÆLLA 62 Roman 62 Livy 61 Niccoli 61 London 60 De 59 V. 59 Botte 57 ys 57 T. 56 ynn 56 thee 56 est Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1979 he 1164 it 870 i 432 they 391 him 387 we 232 them 166 you 155 himself 142 me 107 us 78 she 61 thee 36 her 35 themselves 27 one 24 ys 20 itself 12 ourselves 7 myself 5 yt 4 his 3 ne 2 ye 2 pyghte[41 2 ours 2 mine 2 ib 2 herself 2 hers 1 yttself 1 ytself 1 yspende[143 1 yourself 1 ynne 1 yn 1 virgil;--the 1 trite 1 thyself 1 thy 1 thou 1 this:-- 1 theirs 1 quae 1 pelf 1 mieself 1 me.--but 1 it:--all 1 government,-- 1 england"--that Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 5519 be 1732 have 442 do 388 write 371 make 324 see 270 say 228 give 224 find 215 know 196 come 190 take 157 use 138 go 116 fall 110 follow 109 speak 101 seem 100 show 98 believe 92 read 92 leave 89 tell 84 bear 78 hear 75 die 74 live 73 get 72 think 72 call 70 look 67 forge 66 mean 65 pass 60 place 59 put 59 bring 57 send 57 consider 55 want 53 suppose 51 stand 51 set 50 learn 48 occur 47 appear 46 return 45 hold 45 become 44 turn Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 905 not 388 so 331 more 289 first 274 then 240 very 235 other 229 great 206 same 199 as 194 only 189 now 186 most 182 such 149 well 138 here 129 last 125 ancient 124 much 119 out 114 also 110 never 110 good 109 thus 109 old 108 up 106 many 105 too 102 even 93 roman 89 own 83 long 82 still 81 fifteenth 80 second 78 there 76 far 75 ever 73 just 70 few 68 different 67 little 62 quite 61 true 61 high 59 once 56 whole 55 literary 54 therefore 52 further Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 30 most 28 good 26 least 20 high 20 great 16 old 9 slight 7 bad 6 late 6 early 5 fair 4 strong 4 pure 4 fine 4 eld 4 dark 4 brave 3 grand 3 fyn 3 dr 3 bright 2 would 2 whyl 2 se 2 mot 2 mighty 2 low 2 lofty 2 j 2 happy 2 h 2 gross 2 full 2 farth 2 do 2 close 2 bold 2 Most 1 wys 1 wurchethe 1 wuld 1 work 1 withe 1 wise 1 wide 1 white 1 wear 1 wealthy 1 ward 1 trembl Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 156 most 10 well 5 least 2 soon 2 hathe 1 waytethe 1 tremblest 1 lyest 1 liest 1 dethe 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 tacitus did not 3 _ is _ 3 bracciolini did not 3 bracciolini was not 2 _ falls _ 2 _ had _ 2 _ see introduction 2 annals did not 2 annals found also 2 annals is really 2 bracciolini does not 2 bracciolini gave way 2 chatterton did not 2 history is not 2 work given out 1 _ are modern 1 _ be _ 1 _ been Ælla 1 _ dies et 1 _ gotten _ 1 _ has fabulas 1 _ has probably 1 _ is as 1 _ is chaucer 1 _ is demum 1 _ is probably 1 _ is repertus 1 _ is sufficiently 1 _ is very 1 _ see note 1 _ was also 1 _ was ever 1 _ was obviously 1 _ was pope 1 _ was probably 1 _ was takin 1 _ were not 1 annals are copies 1 annals are verbs 1 annals does not 1 annals does so 1 annals had much 1 annals had not 1 annals is also 1 annals is not 1 annals is quite 1 annals is then 1 annals was not 1 annals was originally 1 author had not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 annals had not yet 1 bracciolini is not only 1 bracciolini was no exception 1 bracciolini was not only 1 bracciolini was not sole 1 poems had not only 1 tacitus lived no one 1 word has no authority A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 13037 author = Chatterton, Thomas title = The Rowley Poems date = keywords = BIRTHA; Barrett; Botte; Bristol; CELMONDE; CHARLES; Canynge; Catcott; Chatterton; Chaucer; Footnote; GODDWYN; Godde; HURRA; Harolde; Hee; III; Kynge; Lyche; MSS; Mr.; Normannes; Poems; Professor; Rowley; Seyncte; Skeat; Skinner; Speght; Syr; Thomas; bee; dyd; hys; mie; thie; wylle; wythe; Ælla summary = in the shape of more poems by Thomas Rowley (a secular priest of St. John''s, Bristol); or by his patron the munificent William Canynge [Footnote 5: Wilson believed that Chatterton never sent the _Ryse_, [Footnote 7: _An account of Master William Canynge written by Thos. Bie hym hys knyghtes bee formed to actions deene[77], Dydd throwe hys gauntlette-penne, wyth hym to fyghte, Hee falleth; nowe bie heavenne thie woundes doe smethe[91]; Goe notte, Ælla; wythe thie Birtha staie; For wyth thie femmlykeed mie spryte wyll goe awaie. Headed bie these thie wordes doe onn mee falle, Hys gentle wordes dyd moove eche valourous knyghte; Nowe bie the seynctes I wylle notte lette thee goe, Mie love wylle have yttes joie, altho wythe guylte; Botte doe reste mee uponne mie Ælla''s breaste; Where hee foule love unto mie eares dyd saie; Theyre deathe a meanes untoe mie lyfe shulde bee, 70 id = 8161 author = Macpherson, James title = Fragments of Ancient Poetry date = keywords = Blair; Fingal; Macpherson; Oscur; Ossian; University; footnote; hill summary = poems of the same strain" still extant in the Highlands; Blair like I" will serve to illustrate this tendency: _love, son, hill, deer, dogs, bow-string, wind, stream, rushes, mist, oak, friends_. The three last poems in the collection are fragments which the translator My love is a son of the hill. voice like the summer-wind.--I sit wind behind thee; thy bosom heaving my love, and bring thee to thy heard of thy death on the hill; I heard rest on the rock; and let me hear thy Though fair thou art, my love, as the was like a storm; thy sword, a beam warriours, Oscur my son, shall I see thee shall Durstan this night carry thy fair-one hear my voice, sons of my love! lost no son; thou hast lost no daughter Tall thou art on the hill; fair breasts like two smooth rocks on the hill id = 9098 author = Ross, John Wilson title = Tacitus and Bracciolini. The Annals Forged in the XVth Century date = keywords = Annals; Augustus; Beaufort; Bracciolini; CHAPTER; Caesar; Cardinal; Church; Cicero; Claudius; Cosmo; Duke; Emperor; England; Europe; Felix; Florence; Germany; Greek; Hist; Italy; Latin; Livy; London; MSS; Medici; Nero; Niccoli; Rome; Sallust; Second; St.; Tacitus; Tiberius; VII; XIV; author; book; century; great; history; iii; letter; roman; time; word; work; write summary = The author of the Annals and Tacitus differently illustrate I. The Annals and the History of Tacitus are like two houses in The belief is general that Tacitus wrote Roman history in the Tacitus wrote a number of books of the Annals. possibly write many books of ancient Roman History without, every the "Annals of Tacitus" lived),--and hearing a great deal of the if Tacitus wrote the Annals we should have heard in that work London author of the Annals did not write like the Romans, but that he author of the Annals and Tacitus differently illustrate Roman character of the Annals and the History of Tacitus as to be struck REASONS FOR BELIEVING THAT BRACCIOLINI WROTE BOTH PARTS OF THE ANNALS. REASONS FOR BELIEVING THAT BRACCIOLINI WROTE BOTH PARTS OF THE ANNALS. Bracciolini had forged the "Annals of Tacitus," he would have known Tacitus''s "History" and "Annals," when, down to the fifteenth