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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 89563 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 84 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Mr. 4 Miss 3 like 3 Sir 3 Mrs. 2 look 2 good 2 come 2 Millicent 2 London 2 Lawrence 2 Laura 2 Davy 2 Clara 2 Charles 2 Benette 2 Auchester 1 time 1 think 1 tell 1 music 1 hand 1 face 1 eye 1 day 1 brother 1 american 1 Worth 1 William 1 Vicomte 1 Temple 1 Sunday 1 Stradivarius 1 Starwood 1 Spinks 1 Shiner 1 Seraphael 1 Schwarz 1 Schumann 1 Schilsky 1 Santonio 1 Royston 1 Richard 1 Reuben 1 Raoul 1 Poligny 1 Philippe 1 Persian 1 Penny 1 Paris Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1322 time 1199 hand 1039 day 1023 eye 948 man 937 room 816 face 735 word 682 way 678 door 671 voice 658 night 656 thing 654 one 639 nothing 593 head 552 music 503 moment 485 something 466 house 465 life 408 hour 408 arm 391 evening 383 friend 361 morning 360 side 355 table 344 heart 343 place 341 people 337 window 337 end 332 mind 330 light 329 thought 321 anything 313 part 308 woman 301 name 298 mother 292 year 291 brother 291 air 289 sir 276 lip 275 girl 274 child 264 foot 260 hair Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1067 Maurice 976 _ 510 Mr. 499 Louise 446 Miss 419 Madeleine 400 Christine 389 Davy 364 Raoul 355 Dick 342 Ephie 278 M. 261 Krafft 252 Erik 235 John 235 Dove 227 Fancy 205 Mrs. 193 Richard 191 Schilsky 180 Johanna 163 Opera 157 Benette 154 Persian 152 Charles 149 Millicent 149 Maria 145 Chevalier 137 Sir 135 Moncharmin 133 Schwarz 132 de 132 Daae 128 Seraphael 122 Clara 118 Temple 117 Chagny 114 Carl 108 Lawrence 106 England 102 thou 102 Dewy 98 Santonio 97 London 97 Laura 96 God 94 Giry 90 Mendelssohn 85 Shiner 85 Gaskell Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 13303 i 10176 he 8390 it 7234 you 6165 she 3761 him 3720 me 2669 her 1989 they 1791 we 1312 them 868 himself 749 us 448 myself 428 herself 258 itself 185 yourself 173 one 170 themselves 71 mine 66 thee 60 ourselves 52 his 43 hers 39 yours 34 ''em 16 thyself 15 theirs 13 ours 11 ye 9 ''s 7 em 4 oneself 3 you''re 3 ha 1 yourselves 1 you.--louise 1 you!--who 1 you!--or 1 yes.--that 1 yes!--that 1 work?--what 1 words,--for 1 wi 1 why?--you 1 what?--you 1 too!--i''ll 1 thought?--what 1 there,--did 1 there,--"i Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 24137 be 10816 have 4729 do 3186 say 2226 go 2127 know 1916 see 1850 come 1609 make 1356 think 1294 take 1277 look 1029 tell 975 hear 844 seem 843 feel 834 give 735 find 721 leave 708 stand 662 speak 655 ask 651 turn 617 sit 586 let 513 put 511 get 502 begin 454 believe 429 pass 428 want 426 play 426 call 410 mean 380 keep 372 hold 369 return 366 like 347 love 347 grow 341 open 340 bring 339 fall 332 lie 326 wish 322 laugh 318 walk 318 try 316 draw 312 rise Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 7424 not 2689 so 1593 very 1559 then 1411 now 1377 more 1317 up 1256 only 1226 never 1135 little 1039 out 1022 too 983 again 890 well 858 first 804 as 803 still 798 long 795 here 715 other 711 much 696 down 693 even 691 good 675 own 674 just 655 there 632 back 592 away 568 once 553 last 537 young 507 ever 489 great 484 old 476 on 474 all 444 same 436 most 429 such 413 always 399 enough 397 few 394 quite 391 in 390 also 378 off 376 alone 359 yet 333 rather Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 275 least 164 good 109 most 38 great 29 high 28 slight 21 bad 20 fine 17 near 17 dear 12 low 11 soft 11 eld 10 early 9 strong 9 old 9 Most 8 l 7 small 7 pure 7 lovely 7 late 6 young 6 happy 6 fair 6 deep 5 topmost 5 rare 5 large 5 hot 4 white 4 sweet 4 strange 4 gentle 4 dark 4 cool 4 bright 3 sad 3 rich 3 noble 3 may 3 manif 3 long 3 lofty 3 furth 3 black 3 big 2 wild 2 warm 2 true Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 327 most 34 well 25 least 3 hard 1 warmest 1 truest 1 opera,--the 1 lookest 1 long 1 lest 1 goethe 1 furst 1 fast 1 eldest 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?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 ccx074@coventry.ac.uk Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 16 maurice did not 9 louise did not 7 louise was not 5 _ is _ 4 _ do _ 4 _ was _ 4 madeleine did not 4 madeleine was not 4 man ''s not 4 maurice had never 4 maurice was not 4 one does not 4 one had ever 3 ... do n''t 3 _ know _ 3 days went by 3 eyes were bent 3 eyes were wide 3 face was red 3 face was so 3 maurice sat down 3 nothing is so 3 nothing was further 3 room was empty 3 voice was not 3 voice was there 2 ... look here 2 ... take care 2 _ did _ 2 _ feel _ 2 _ felt _ 2 _ had _ 2 _ have _ 2 arm was round 2 day went by 2 eyes did not 2 eyes were as 2 eyes were full 2 eyes were heavy 2 eyes were open 2 eyes were still 2 face came on 2 hands were so 2 hour had still 2 life is not 2 louise had not 2 louise is most 2 louise is not 2 louise looked up 2 man was m. Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 words had no power 1 _ is not so 1 days had not so 1 eyes were not visible 1 face told no tales,--her 1 face was no more 1 hand had no connection 1 life is not so 1 louise had no attention 1 louise has no eyes 1 louise made no rejoinder 1 louise makes no mystery 1 louise was no reader 1 louise was not fond 1 madeleine had no patience 1 madeleine had no umbrella 1 madeleine was not sure 1 man was no longer 1 man was not sure 1 maurice did not scruple 1 maurice had no idea 1 maurice made no answer 1 maurice made no mien 1 maurice made no rejoinder 1 maurice was not clear 1 maurice was not half 1 men had no wish 1 music has not many 1 music is not music 1 music is not thus 1 music was no longer 1 one ''s not satisfied 1 one felt no space 1 one had no tickets 1 one was no more 1 room had no carpet 1 thing was not natural 1 things are not instantly 1 voice was no more 1 voice was not so 1 voice was not there 1 words had no sooner 1 words knew no halt 1 words were not forcible A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 14107 author = Falkner, John Meade title = The Lost Stradivarius date = keywords = Areopagita; Constance; Gagliarda; Gaskell; John; Maltravers; Mr.; Mrs.; Naples; Oxford; Royston; Sir; Stradivarius; Temple; Worth; brother summary = in John''s rooms, he taking the violin part and Mr. Gaskell that for the and John sat for some time in a cushioned window-seat before the open It was shortly after nine that night when, supper being finished, Mr. Gaskell seated himself at the piano and John tuned his violin. Mrs. Temple readily accepted Sir John Maltravers'' invitation. Constance and my brother fell a little way behind, and Mr. Gaskell asked Vacation--John returning to Worth Maltravers and Mr. Gaskell going to John returning to Oxford for the summer term, Mrs. Temple making a short time my brother played very frequently on the Stradivarius violin, I said my brother was indeed unwell, that it would be better for Mr. Butler to give away the dole, and that Sir John would himself visit the John shut his violin into its case, took the music-book under his arm, id = 2662 author = Hardy, Thomas title = Under the Greenwood Tree; Or, The Mellstock Quire A Rural Painting of the Dutch School date = keywords = Day; Dewy; Dick; Fancy; Geoffrey; Leaf; Maybold; Mellstock; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Penny; Reuben; Shiner; Spinks; Sunday; William; come; good summary = The tranter looked a long time before he replied, "I fancy she will; and "Really, Reuben, ''tis quite a disgrace to see such a man," said Mrs. Dewy, with the severity justifiable in a long-tried companion, giving him comely, slender, prettily-dressed prize Fancy Day fell to Dick''s lot, in "''Tis only for want of knowing better, poor gentleman," said the tranter. "I''m afraid Dick''s a lost man," said the tranter. Fancy looked interested, and Dick said, "No?" "Whether or no," said Dick, "I asked her a thing going along the road." "Dick," said his father, coming in from the garden at that moment--in "Well, then," said Dick, coming a little to his senses, "you''ve been "I''ve come to ask for Fancy," said Dick. "Well, really ''tis time Dick was here," said the tranter. "I never can make a show of myself in that way!" said Fancy, looking at id = 175 author = Leroux, Gaston title = The Phantom of the Opera date = keywords = Angel; Box; Carlotta; Chagny; Christine; Daae; Erik; Mme; Moncharmin; Music; Opera; Paris; Persian; Philippe; Poligny; Raoul; Richard; Vicomte summary = not yet turned Christine Daae out of doors by hearing her this evening "Still, that doesn''t let us know how the Opera ghost came to ask you While the old man told this story, Raoul looked at Christine''s blue Little Christine asked her father if he had heard the Angel of Music. The first time that Raoul saw Christine at the Opera, he was charmed by While Christine remained locked in her room, Raoul was at his wit''s end in her hand, Christine, raising her head, saw the Vicomte de Chagny in seen coming out of Christine''s dressing-room one evening. Raoul saw Christine stretch out her arms to the voice as she had done, "Raoul," she said, "forget THE MAN''S VOICE and do not even remember its "Oh, Christine," said Raoul, "my heart quivered that night at every "Christine," said Raoul, rising, "you tell me that you love me; but you Erik!" said Christine''s voice. id = 3727 author = Richardson, Henry Handel title = Maurice Guest date = keywords = Avery; Cayhill; Conservatorium; Dove; English; Ephie; Frau; Furst; God; Guest; Heinz; Herries; Jensen; Joan; Johanna; Krafft; Leipzig; Louise; Lulu; Madeleine; Martin; Maurice; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Schilsky; Schwarz; american; come; day; eye; face; good; hand; like; look; tell; think; time summary = "Look here, Maurice," Madeleine said, when she had observed him for wish the young men good-night, but, in passing Maurice, she said in an you; it is like this." He laid his hand on Maurice''s arm, and drew him "Come, Maurice, let us go," said Madeleine, rising and shaking the Before going home that night, Maurice made the old round by way of the "Maurice Guest?" said Johanna, and laid her hands with stocking and Maurice went over to Louise and took her hand. "Suppose we went to-night." she said, and for the first time looked looking back, Maurice thought they had not exchanged a word all the way said, without looking up: "Maurice I want to tell you something." "Maurice Guest is quite able to look after himself," said Madeleine "Tell me, Louise," he said suddenly; "why do you look at me like that? id = 29361 author = Sampson, George title = A Day with Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy date = keywords = Bennett; David; Mendelssohn; Schumann summary = "Yes," said Mendelssohn, with a graceful gesture, "I shall be greatly "Well, David," said Mendelssohn, "it''s to be your Concerto, so I want "Thank you," said David with a smile of deep pleasure; and turning to me "Thank you," said Mendelssohn, with a smile; "Handel is certainly yours "Yes," said Mendelssohn; "and people know so little of him. "We shall all be glad if you will," said Mendelssohn, as he turned once "Come along and play it with me," said Mendelssohn to Bennett; "you''ve "Yes," said Mendelssohn, with a smile, "it was in Wales, and I wrote the "By-the-by," said Schumann, "David''s antics remind me that Mendelssohn "Ah," said Mendelssohn, "I don''t think the old poet would really have "Yes," said Schumann, warmly; "Goethe liked you because you were "I agree with Mendelssohn," said Schumann. Mendelssohn nodded with a smile, and, turning to me, said in id = 38949 author = Sheppard, Elizabeth Sara title = Charles Auchester, Volume 1 (of 2) date = keywords = André; Aronach; Auchester; Benette; CHAPTER; Charles; Clara; Clo; Davy; England; Germany; Laura; Lawrence; Lenhart; London; Lydia; Master; Milans; Millicent; Miss; Mr.; Santonio; Sir; like; look summary = their early enthusiasms, this little book will come like the perfume "Yes, I thought you came from a Jew, like us,--partly, I mean. "Sir," said I to Mr. Davy, "pray walk a little way, for I want to tell I should like to know whether Mr. Davy has seen her dance." "Miss Benette is very good to everybody," said Davy, earnestly, with a "Ah, Miss Benette!" said Davy, with a kind of exultation, "what will "I never heard one, sir, you know; but I should think that it was like Millicent did but dare, I know she would behave and talk like Miss "No, sir," said Davy, who had come back with Miss Benette. "Yes, I should think so," said Davy, cheerfully; "Santonio tells me "You wish to know what Milans-André is like, Master Charles "I know that a great many people live in one house,--my mother said id = 40259 author = Sheppard, Elizabeth Sara title = Charles Auchester, Volume 2 (of 2) date = keywords = Anastase; Auchester; Benette; Carl; Carlomein; Cecilia; Cerinthia; Charles; Chevalier; Clara; Davy; Florimond; Josephine; Laura; Lawrence; London; Maria; Millicent; Miss; Mr.; Seraphael; Sir; Starwood; like; music summary = You know how small he is: as he stood there he looked like a Millicent looked up at Davy with an unwonted expression, a new light "That was made at home, Charles," said Millicent, "and is exactly like "My dear Carl, how shall I feel when that moment comes?" pointing to to think of your coming into my room,--I shall always like "I like to hear you say ''my love'' to Millicent, Mr. Davy." "Oh, Carlino!" said Maria, "I hope no one is coming, for I feel I must "So proud that if love came to him without music, I don''t think he was a little as I felt when I saw that face, only instead of looking Maria, when you said music had nothing to do with love, I think you I know very little music yet, Maria, but I never found was like all we feel of music,--beyond all we hear, given to us in