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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 100723 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 86 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Tom 3 Mrs. 3 Mr. 3 Miss 3 God 2 good 2 Williams 2 London 2 Clare 1 time 1 thing 1 present 1 place 1 person 1 mind 1 man 1 life 1 dear 1 day 1 Tyrrel 1 Towers 1 Sunday 1 Stowbury 1 St. 1 Square 1 Sir 1 Simon 1 Selina 1 Robert 1 Polly 1 Pamela 1 P.B. 1 Melville 1 Madam 1 Lyon 1 Lord 1 Longman 1 Locke 1 Leaf 1 Lady 1 LETTER 1 Johanna 1 Jewkes 1 Jervis 1 Jakeman 1 Jacob 1 Hilary 1 Henry 1 Hawkins 1 Harry Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1132 man 1023 thing 962 time 856 lady 640 day 634 mind 567 heart 539 life 512 person 511 way 481 child 480 hand 464 woman 464 gentleman 422 word 417 nothing 400 one 386 servant 380 eye 367 letter 367 girl 351 family 350 world 347 part 334 house 326 friend 322 year 312 place 311 face 310 sister 308 mother 302 love 298 reason 286 pleasure 282 hour 277 manner 277 ladyship 270 honour 262 case 255 subject 253 people 249 night 246 something 238 dear 238 character 231 moment 227 door 223 room 223 power 223 nature Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3876 _ 1992 Mr. 878 Miss 673 Hilary 665 B. 611 Sir 608 Mrs. 595 Elizabeth 494 Falkland 407 Tom 390 Ascott 344 God 335 Lady 269 Davers 254 Madam 239 Leaf 235 Pamela 222 Tyrrel 213 Johanna 211 Selina 174 London 145 Lord 125 Darnford 123 Lyon 114 Jervis 108 Robert 103 George 103 Eliza 101 Aunt 100 thou 100 Clare 99 Williams 90 St. 88 H. 86 LETTER 86 Eva 82 Countess 78 Jacob 78 Forester 75 Polly 69 Uncle 69 P.B. 69 Locke 68 England 67 Balquidder 66 Harry 64 Emily 63 Shelby 63 Ophelia 60 Topsy Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 12513 i 6067 you 5852 it 4908 he 3956 she 3824 me 2089 him 1917 her 1783 they 1298 them 1092 we 625 myself 607 us 424 himself 387 herself 163 one 148 themselves 136 itself 132 yourself 58 mine 50 ourselves 45 yours 43 thee 29 ''em 26 hers 20 theirs 18 his 11 ours 8 em 7 eva 7 ''s 4 thyself 2 yowe 2 ye 2 o 1 yourselves 1 you?--but 1 you!--no 1 wishing?--i 1 windsor-- 1 way--"you 1 was.--he 1 scorns--"you 1 neither!--they 1 men!--they 1 it.--o 1 is--"about 1 i?--to 1 horse!--i''ll 1 her?--she Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 19535 be 8611 have 3026 do 2611 say 1547 make 1388 think 1310 know 1221 see 1177 take 1092 give 1085 go 1029 come 745 tell 633 look 631 find 501 seem 492 let 429 hear 412 call 394 leave 389 put 386 hope 351 feel 339 write 334 wish 334 bring 332 speak 332 keep 325 love 322 get 286 believe 277 want 274 begin 272 ask 268 bear 266 expect 263 sit 262 live 260 become 257 stand 248 appear 244 set 241 pass 227 turn 222 return 222 oblige 222 answer 214 use 214 receive 209 try Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5363 not 2691 so 1300 more 1279 good 1112 well 1095 very 1005 now 996 little 934 as 898 then 878 much 847 never 833 own 820 up 790 dear 770 only 756 too 659 other 659 great 647 most 573 poor 558 ever 557 such 545 first 540 out 490 young 473 long 462 always 458 even 422 down 390 last 378 still 376 here 358 happy 348 yet 346 many 344 indeed 342 once 341 old 319 perhaps 318 thus 316 just 313 again 300 rather 280 bad 276 same 274 away 265 new 263 soon 253 sure Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 241 good 193 least 121 most 57 bad 53 great 43 dear 28 high 28 eld 24 small 22 slight 19 near 14 early 13 happy 12 deep 11 strong 9 wise 9 fine 8 young 8 sad 8 low 7 vile 7 noble 6 sharp 6 safe 6 minute 6 base 6 Most 5 sweet 5 old 5 j 5 foul 4 weak 4 warm 4 remote 4 pure 4 polite 4 mere 4 mean 4 hard 4 furth 4 fair 4 black 3 stout 3 severe 3 rich 3 proud 3 poor 3 nice 3 long 3 late Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 526 most 28 least 26 well 1 worst 1 highest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 _ was _ 8 _ have _ 7 _ do _ 6 _ hope _ 6 _ is _ 6 b. was pleased 6 falkland was not 5 _ am _ 5 _ are _ 5 elizabeth did not 5 hilary did not 5 tom did not 4 mind was full 3 _ did _ 3 _ love _ 3 _ think _ 3 _ thought _ 3 _ were _ 3 ascott did not 3 ascott was not 3 b. is just 3 elizabeth looked up 3 falkland was once 3 heart was full 3 hilary came home 3 hilary had ever 3 things are not 2 _ have none 2 _ know _ 2 _ make _ 2 _ say _ 2 _ seen _ 2 _ speak _ 2 _ speaking _ 2 ascott came home 2 ascott was very 2 ascott went out 2 b. came in 2 b. has not 2 b. is much 2 b. was abroad 2 b. was so 2 elizabeth had not 2 eyes were open 2 eyes were red 2 falkland is not 2 falkland was again 2 hilary had never 2 hilary looked up 2 hilary said nothing Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 falkland was not ignorant 2 things are not so 1 _ had no means 1 ascott did not either 1 ascott had no objection 1 ascott made no reply 1 ascott was not exactly 1 b. is not adverse 1 b. was no less 1 child has not good 1 day had not yet 1 days are not entirely 1 elizabeth had no time 1 elizabeth had no words 1 elizabeth made no answer 1 elizabeth were not happy 1 eyes are not very 1 falkland did not immediately 1 falkland had no false 1 falkland was no sooner 1 falkland was not just 1 falkland was not then 1 gentleman had no sooner 1 gentlemen take no more 1 hilary did not actually 1 hilary made no answer 1 hilary made no reply 1 hilary took no notice 1 hilary was not ashamed:--not 1 lady had no apprehension 1 lady had no more 1 lady has no great 1 lady is no longer 1 life was no life 1 life was not easy 1 life was not worth 1 man has no right 1 men are not consigned 1 men are not good 1 mind was not sufficiently 1 one has no aversion 1 one has no duties 1 one is not certain 1 ones have not yet 1 person are no small 1 person is no other 1 servant had no business 1 things are not yet 1 woman was not proof 1 women do not necessarily A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 13461 author = Craik, Dinah Maria Mulock title = Mistress and Maid: A Household Story date = keywords = Ascott; Aunt; Balquidder; Cliffe; Elizabeth; God; Hand; Henry; Hilary; Johanna; Leaf; London; Lyon; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Robert; Selina; Square; Stowbury; Sunday; Tom; good summary = just said, Elizabeth, my girl''--indeed, Hilary, I was talking to her "And I should like to know," said Miss Hilary, warming with her Miss Hilary at last came out, but much to Elizabeth''s surprise, went Thus within an hour or two of the receipt of Mr. Ascott''s letter Hilary went into the kitchen, and told Elizabeth that "Miss Hilary has told you our future plans, Elizabeth; now we wish to perhaps, to Elizabeth," said Miss Hilary, trying to get up, a little When Miss Hilary reached home Elizabeth opened the door to her; the To-day, for the first time in her life, she had not "told Miss Hilary her sick mistress, but to wait one day, till Miss Hilary came home. Now, if Elizabeth ever looked any thing like comely, it was when she "That''s right, Elizabeth," said Miss Hilary, softly. Oh, how Elizabeth longed for Miss Hilary, for any body, who would id = 11323 author = Godwin, William title = Caleb Williams; Or, Things as They Are date = keywords = CHAPTER; Caleb; Clare; Collins; Emily; Falkland; Forester; Gines; God; Grimes; Hammond; Hawkins; Jakeman; Melville; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Tyrrel; Williams; day; good; life; man; mind; person; place; present; thing; time summary = "Falkland," said he, after having appeared for a short period absorbed He had now been some time in bed, and, as every thing was still, Mr. Falkland hoped that he slept; but in that he was mistaken. Mr. Falkland had experienced the nullity of all expostulation with Mr. Tyrrel, and was therefore content in the present case with confining his not think it right in the present situation to leave Mr. Falkland. this time I could not get it out of my mind for a moment: "Mr. Falkland In no long time after the disclosure Mr. Falkland had made, Mr. Forester, his elder brother by the mother''s side, came to reside for a With a mind so accomplished and a spirit so susceptible as that of Mr. Falkland, Mr. Forester did not venture to let loose his usual violence I knew the inflexibility and sternness of Mr. Falkland''s mind in accomplishing the purposes he had at heart; but I id = 12958 author = Richardson, Samuel title = Pamela, Volume II date = keywords = Adams; Billy; Countess; Darnford; Davers; England; God; Goodwin; Jacob; Jervis; Jewkes; LETTER; Lady; Locke; London; Longman; Lord; Madam; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; P.B.; Pamela; Polly; Simon; Sir; Towers; Williams; dear summary = a watch-case: "For who knows," said he, "my dear, but we shall have "Dear good souls!" said he, "now every thing they say and write Wherefore my good lady, I hope I stand excused, and shall not bring letters, with such accounts of my dear lady''s favour and goodness to "Dear my lady!" said I: for she still kept looking at me: and her good "Indeed, Sir, I cannot," said I; "pray, my dear ladies--pray, my good which my lady said, a little tartly, "Yes, and for a very good reason, Sir," said I, "these ladies come to be obliged to you for your good "You have an angel, and not a woman, for your lady, my good Mrs. Jervis," said the countess. "Well, but, Sir," said I, "a lady of Miss Darnford''s good sense, hands, from _yours most sincerely_, P.B. Do, dear good Sir Simon, let Miss Polly add to our delights, by her id = 11171 author = Stowe, Harriet Beecher title = Uncle Tom''s Cabin, Young Folks'' Edition date = keywords = Clare; Eliza; St.; Tom summary = Uncle Tom and Aunt Chloe lived together in a pretty little cottage built Then Haley said, ''Give me that slave of yours called Tom--he is worth a ''I''m running away, Uncle Tom and Aunt Chloe--carrying off my child,'' sold my Harry, and you, Uncle Tom. The man is coming to take you away ''You don''t need to do that,'' said Mrs. Shelby, ''Tom won''t run away.'' ''Please give my love to Mas''r George,'' said Tom, looking round sadly. ''Thank you, my little lady,'' said Tom. Just at this moment, the boat stopped at a small landing-place to take ''Look up, Tom,'' he said to him, ''and see how you like your new master.'' ''Yes, Uncle Tom, it begins to look beautiful,'' said Eva, gazing on it ''Topsy,'' said Miss Ophelia, ''don''t you know it is wicked to tell lies?'' George and Eliza what Tom Loker had said. id = 28021 author = Stowe, Harriet Beecher title = Pictures and Stories from Uncle Tom''s Cabin date = keywords = Bird; Eva; George; Harry; Tom summary = wicked man was coming to take little Harry away from his mother, and at this moment that poor Eliza and little Harry came to his door. "Nobody shall hurt you here, poor woman," said Mrs. Bird. "When she wakes and feels a little rested, we shall see," said Mrs. Bird, who began to busy herself with her knitting. night before Eliza and little Harry came to their door. "Poor woman," said Mrs. Bird, "it is much further off than you think; wicked trader, and what his poor mother had suffered to bring him away. little Harry to him, and the rest of it was paid with poor Tom. Think "I''s older, ye know," said Tom, stroking the boy''s fine curly head with "Thank you, my little lady," said Tom. The boat here stopped at a small landing to take in wood, and Eva, From that day Tom and Eva were great friends.