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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 4 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 53771 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 84 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Mr. 2 look 2 Newport 2 Miss 2 Anne 1 water 1 man 1 little 1 like 1 life 1 house 1 day 1 child 1 armitage 1 Yeasky 1 Xury 1 Wellington 1 Verriman 1 Van 1 Valkenberg 1 Tom 1 Thornton 1 Sweepstakes 1 Storm 1 Severance 1 Sara 1 Sam 1 Ronald 1 Prince 1 Paul 1 Oldport 1 Newcombe 1 New 1 Navy 1 Mrs. 1 Moreton 1 Martha 1 Marian 1 Madam 1 Laura 1 Koltsoff 1 King 1 Kenmure 1 Johnny 1 Janet 1 Jack 1 Harry 1 Harding 1 Gerty 1 Friday Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 667 man 367 time 359 way 356 hand 325 thing 318 governor 285 eye 254 armitage 231 day 223 night 218 head 216 vessel 207 boat 204 side 201 life 189 boy 188 something 184 water 184 house 183 door 173 face 168 one 165 foot 163 girl 162 nothing 162 moment 153 band 142 room 141 woman 136 place 135 minute 135 child 134 yacht 132 word 131 schooner 128 island 126 sea 124 mind 119 hour 118 fire 117 world 117 idea 117 father 116 officer 116 deck 115 voice 115 light 113 arm 110 work 110 mother Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 415 Tom 358 _ 327 Anne 296 Wellington 255 Mr. 220 Johnny 217 Koltsoff 206 Crusoe 197 Jack 189 Sam 180 Prince 155 Ben 144 Mrs. 140 Sara 140 Armitage 137 Miss 133 Atkins 126 Harry 102 Cord 101 Newport 101 Eddie 98 Crystal 96 Newcombe 83 Friday 80 Xury 79 King 72 Storm 65 Sweepstakes 59 Harding 58 Jackson 51 Spaniard 51 Gerty 50 exclaimed 48 Moreton 44 Thornton 43 Henry 42 Yeasky 41 Delia 39 Will 39 New 39 Madam 39 Laura 37 Green 37 David 35 Van 34 Bill 33 Ronald 32 Jed 32 CHAPTER 31 Captain Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3592 he 3023 i 2549 you 2324 it 1337 she 1126 they 1035 him 869 we 657 them 588 me 495 her 309 us 277 himself 89 themselves 63 ''em 50 one 50 myself 45 herself 37 itself 26 yourself 19 ''s 18 ourselves 15 em 13 mine 11 hers 10 thee 8 his 5 theirs 4 ours 3 yours 2 yourselves 2 ye 1 you''re 1 thyself 1 this:-- 1 asho Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 7949 be 3526 have 1612 do 1244 say 830 go 653 see 651 know 604 come 481 make 455 get 445 look 442 think 418 take 322 seem 305 find 292 tell 257 give 239 turn 228 stand 224 want 220 ask 211 leave 189 hear 181 reply 176 keep 172 let 168 hold 163 begin 152 run 152 bring 146 put 145 speak 139 feel 138 believe 133 try 130 lie 128 pass 118 follow 118 call 109 talk 106 mean 105 smile 104 show 103 watch 103 stop 102 carry 99 walk 98 lead 98 catch 97 live Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2256 not 651 so 561 now 546 up 482 then 426 more 414 out 316 as 305 here 303 little 299 very 289 good 279 well 268 down 266 other 254 only 251 just 246 long 245 never 236 there 216 back 216 away 213 first 210 much 197 all 191 too 191 great 175 young 175 even 167 on 165 still 159 again 157 old 156 once 153 last 151 off 149 few 149 ever 148 enough 143 in 137 own 128 almost 127 such 123 always 122 right 119 yet 118 most 117 quite 117 far 110 over Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 70 least 60 good 34 most 16 bad 15 slight 10 near 7 high 6 old 5 deep 4 pure 4 great 4 farth 3 unlucki 3 strong 3 pleasant 3 low 3 long 3 happy 3 grand 3 faint 3 easy 3 early 3 big 2 topmost 2 still 2 soft 2 mean 2 late 2 grave 2 eld 2 coarse 2 Most 1 young 1 wise 1 wild 1 thin 1 swift 1 stern 1 southw 1 small 1 simple 1 short 1 scatter 1 rich 1 rare 1 queer 1 poor 1 pale 1 minute 1 mere Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 84 most 10 well 9 least 1 worst 1 drest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 _ is _ 5 governor did not 4 _ am _ 3 _ was _ 3 armitage did not 3 sam did not 3 tom was not 3 wellington did not 2 armitage said nothing 2 eyes were now 2 jack did not 2 johnny did not 2 johnny had never 2 koltsoff had not 2 koltsoff was still 2 men did not 2 men were not 2 men were well 2 thing being ready 2 thing was ready 2 tom did not 2 tom had only 2 tom was almost 1 _ did not 1 _ do n''t 1 _ get on 1 _ wanted _ 1 _ was down 1 _ was sufficiently 1 anne ai n''t 1 anne did not 1 anne do n''t 1 anne had proof 1 anne ran up 1 anne saying something 1 anne turning over 1 anne was not 1 anne was quite 1 anne was silent 1 anne was solid 1 anne was somewhat 1 anne was still 1 anne was swiftly 1 anne went out 1 armitage did n''t 1 armitage had half 1 armitage had never 1 armitage had not 1 armitage knew better 1 armitage knew enough Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 anne made no reply 1 anne was not entirely 1 armitage did not quite 1 armitage made no attempt 1 governor had no difficulty 1 governor made no reply 1 koltsoff is not pinchbeck 1 men had no desire 1 men were no less 1 sam made no attempt 1 time are not wholly 1 tom had no one 1 tom was no less 1 tom was not superstitious 1 water is not then A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 33226 author = Castlemon, Harry title = No Moss; Or, The Career of a Rolling Stone date = keywords = Atkins; Crusoe; Friday; Harding; Harry; Johnny; King; Mr.; Newcombe; Sam; Storm; Sweepstakes; Tom; Xury summary = "Call away the jolly-boat, and man her with an armed crew," said Harry. "I don''t like that way of getting over," said Tom, looking down at the The governor shut one eye, and looked at Tom through, the half-closed "O, I mean it, governor," said Tom, with a decided shake of his head. chief of the band, Tom captain of the vessel, and Xury, in view of the "Will Atkins," said Xury, "go up an'' tell the governor that if he wants and looked out into the passage-way that ran between the store and Mr. Newcombe''s elevator, and finally he examined the shutters that Johnny "Now comes the worst part of the business," said the governor, when Tom The governor glanced at Tom''s face a good many times "You had better hurry up, governor," said Tom, with a calmness that "Just leave this thing to me, governor," replied Tom. id = 2418 author = Higginson, Thomas Wentworth title = Oldport Days date = keywords = Anne; Comstock; Delia; Gerty; Janet; Kenmure; Laura; Madam; Marian; Martha; Miss; New; Oldport; Paul; Severance; child; day; house; life; like; little; look; man; water summary = turns out that you have come as a customer, people will look a little It is like visiting the houses at Pompeii, to enter the strange little great square building of rough gray stone, looking like those sombre wall, and looked in at the window of Paul''s little cottage, where the Meanwhile I watched the great house, day and night, sought for their sea-lost life, the sparks drift away like foam-flakes, the flames Little Marian came and went, a living sunbeam, a self-sufficing turned away; it was the very first time I had ever seen the little face of the soft green sea-weed, and the larger looking like motionless "The way is, you see," said Mr. De Marsan, "to take a place like appealing look which comes when mind and memory grow a little dimmer, At this point, Gerty waked up with a little murmur, looked up at Miss id = 13146 author = Miller, Alice Duer title = The Beauty and the Bolshevist date = keywords = Ben; Cord; Crystal; David; Eddie; Moreton; Mr.; Newport; Verriman summary = "Show him in here," said Cord, and added to Eddie, as Tomes left the Ben was a good-looking young man, but it was his expression--at once "Very likely," said Ben, "but that would be quite a change from the "So you were, Eddie, so you were," said Mr. Cord. "Well, I must tell you, father dear," said Crystal, exactly as if "Oh yes, you would, Ben," said Crystal, but he did not notice her. Ben began to say that he couldn''t, but Crystal said yes, that he would By the time Crystal stopped for him Ben had begun to feel like a child "Why, Ben," said Crystal, "you''re just a pacifist in other people''s "Well," said Ben, "he told me himself that he liked me better than "That''s it," said Ben. Cord turned sharply to Crystal. "You see the point of my plan, don''t you, Ben?" said Crystal. "No," said Cord, looking at Crystal. id = 22390 author = Perry, Lawrence title = Prince or Chauffeur? A Story of Newport date = keywords = Anne; D''Estang; Jack; Koltsoff; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Navy; Newport; Prince; Ronald; Sara; Thornton; Valkenberg; Van; Wellington; Yeasky; armitage; look summary = "Well, mother," she said, as the party stopped at Armitage''s car, "the When the maid returned, Miss Wellington smiled and nodded to Armitage, "Well," said Armitage smiling, "I was going to breakfast in the galley. "Life is relative, you know," said Mrs. Wellington. "Anne Wellington?" said Armitage ingenuously. "I know, Jack," said Thornton soothingly, placing his hand on "Good-night, Jack," said Thornton, placing his hand affectionately on As Armitage passed out, guided by Miss Hatch, Mrs. Wellington turned to "I don''t think I like Prince Koltsoff," said Miss Hatch. "But, Prince Koltsoff," said Anne, "is it so very important? "Anne," said Mrs. Wellington, as she came in from her drive a few "Mr. Armitage," said Anne in a low voice, "I want to thank you for many "But Prince Koltsoff is a man of wealth," said Mrs. Wellington quietly. "Frankly, I don''t know, Anne," said Mrs. Wellington.