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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 59187 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 84 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Telemachus 5 Ithaca 4 Zeus 4 Ulysses 4 Troy 4 Circe 3 man 3 Penelope 3 Menelaus 3 Athene 2 thou 2 Homer 2 Calypso 2 Alcinous 1 thy 1 thee 1 return 1 like 1 illustration 1 greek 1 great 1 god 1 footnote 1 Trojan 1 Suitors 1 Scylla 1 Polyphemus 1 Phæacia 1 Pallas 1 Odyssey 1 Odysseus 1 Nestor 1 Nausicaa 1 Minerva 1 King 1 Jove 1 Iliad 1 Homeric 1 Hero 1 Helen 1 Hades 1 Gods 1 Goddess 1 Family 1 Eumæus 1 Cyclop 1 Book 1 Antinous 1 Agamemnon Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1440 man 478 ulysse 452 hand 405 ship 402 day 399 son 383 father 379 time 365 sea 353 world 340 house 332 suitor 329 place 324 god 320 life 301 land 298 heart 289 way 257 eye 251 word 248 home 247 woman 240 poem 236 thing 228 part 226 island 216 side 215 spirit 212 wife 211 poet 208 mother 205 mind 200 deed 195 return 195 art 191 people 182 water 182 story 182 order 182 country 180 year 180 wind 176 voice 175 night 174 king 173 stranger 170 thought 166 wine 163 hero 163 form Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1096 Ulysses 893 thou 568 Telemachus 517 _ 438 Odysseus 328 Book 278 Homer 276 Troy 265 Ithaca 214 Zeus 204 Penelope 202 Circe 170 Gods 168 Menelaus 163 Trojan 156 Odyssey 155 Eumæus 152 Calypso 144 Athene 137 Pallas 122 hast 118 Polyphemus 118 Helen 115 Hades 115 Goddess 115 God 114 Iliad 112 ye 111 Suitors 110 god 108 Phæacia 107 Alcinous 105 Nestor 92 Cyclops 90 Antinous 89 Greeks 84 Nausicaa 81 Greece 81 Family 79 Phæacians 76 King 76 Greek 75 Agamemnon 72 Sun 71 Thou 71 Homeric 69 heaven 69 Neptune 69 Hero 68 Scylla Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4249 he 2254 it 1871 him 1852 i 1628 they 1223 she 1222 we 1012 them 868 me 449 thee 434 himself 397 us 368 her 354 you 124 itself 110 themselves 81 herself 50 thyself 42 myself 32 one 16 mine 15 ye 14 ourselves 12 yourself 7 his 5 yours 5 ours 5 hers 4 thy 4 theirs 1 yourselves 1 whosoever 1 thou 1 o Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 9802 be 3774 have 1042 come 886 say 879 see 797 go 797 do 722 make 635 give 611 take 456 know 409 tell 387 bring 377 hear 316 sit 316 find 274 lie 272 show 263 leave 254 call 251 let 247 stand 240 pass 231 set 230 fall 228 put 216 think 214 speak 213 return 209 send 193 answer 192 seem 188 hold 183 reach 179 keep 173 become 169 rise 168 look 165 get 165 begin 157 slay 143 turn 139 spake 139 follow 135 live 133 appear 132 bear 131 carry 130 eat 130 draw Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1891 not 898 now 894 then 813 so 612 great 460 still 441 up 439 own 410 here 389 also 387 first 384 thus 379 down 378 other 373 such 367 old 366 out 365 more 365 long 324 well 316 even 312 back 302 again 295 many 252 indeed 250 very 249 last 245 away 242 only 232 as 223 far 221 good 217 much 209 yet 208 greek 207 never 204 there 193 just 192 present 190 too 188 once 183 forth 177 new 173 ever 167 together 162 divine 155 little 152 most 151 true 151 deep Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 62 good 33 least 29 great 25 most 25 high 20 deep 12 strong 11 long 9 l 9 brave 8 noble 7 speak 7 fat 7 early 7 bad 6 manif 6 hard 6 fair 6 eld 5 young 5 wise 5 near 4 stout 4 say 4 mean 4 may 4 full 4 dear 3 wealthy 3 weak 3 swift 3 sweet 3 strange 3 said:-- 3 pure 3 poor 3 low 3 large 3 goodly 3 furth 3 fine 3 choice 2 tall 2 tak 2 small 2 slight 2 simple 2 sage 2 sad 2 mighty Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 127 most 11 well 8 sayest 1 surpassest 1 speakest 1 newest 1 long 1 least 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 13 ulysses made answer 9 ulysses is now 4 homer does not 4 telemachus made answer 4 telemachus made reply 3 homer is not 3 ulysses has now 3 ulysses was glad 2 book falls easily 2 book goes back 2 heart is harder 2 homer was not 2 life has not 2 man made reply 2 man was odysseus 2 men are not 2 men were there 2 ship stood still 2 ship went about 2 thou be indeed 2 thou come hither 2 time has not 2 troy is not 2 ulysses being alive 2 ulysses come back 2 ulysses comes back 2 ulysses did not 2 ulysses had not 2 ulysses has already 2 ulysses has not 2 ulysses is dead 2 ulysses is here 2 ulysses is not 2 ulysses is ready 2 ulysses made reply 2 ulysses was not 1 _ are soft 1 _ speak _ 1 _ spoken _ 1 _ takes up 1 _ were not 1 art come back 1 art is again 1 art is thus 1 book has essentially 1 book has not 1 book has thus 1 book is certainly 1 book is completely 1 book is devoted Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 time has not yet 1 book has no restoration 1 book has not so 1 eyes were not so 1 father is not present 1 homer is not demodocus 1 homer is not only 1 house is not altogether 1 land are no less 1 life has not yet 1 man is no cyclop 1 man is no wild 1 men have no pity 1 odysseus was not long 1 time was not such 1 ulysses does not now 1 ulysses has not yet 1 ulysses is not native 1 ulysses was not there 1 words were not proof 1 world has not yet A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 6370 author = Church, Alfred John title = The Story of the Odyssey date = keywords = Athene; Ithaca; King; Menelaus; Penelope; Telemachus; Troy; Ulysses; Zeus; footnote; thou summary = father Ulysses, if indeed thou art his son, and verily thy speech is indeed the son of Ulysses who is come to thee; perchance thou Then Telemachus said: "I have come to ask if thou canst tell me And when thou art come to the land, loose it from thee, and cast Then Laodamas said to Ulysses, "Wilt thou not try thy skill in Then Ulysses answered the King, saying: "What shall I tell thee thy comrades, and the ship of strangers shall carry thee; and thou said: ''My son, why hast thou come into the land of darkness, being But come now, old man, to my house, and tell me who thou Ulysses made answer, "I am no god; I am thy father, for whom thou To him the old man made answer, "If thou art my very son Ulysses, spake to Telemachus, saying, "I know thee well, my son, that thou id = 13725 author = Homer title = Stories from the Odyssey date = keywords = Agamemnon; Alcinous; Antinous; Athene; Circe; Eumæus; Ithaca; Menelaus; Nestor; Odysseus; Penelope; Polyphemus; Telemachus; Troy; Zeus; man; thee; thou; thy summary = he; tall thou art, and fair, and shouldst be a stout man of thy hands. shall lose thee too, for the suitors will plot thy ruin while thou art "Thou sayest well," answered Mentor, "and Telemachus shall be thy "''Hear, then,'' said he: ''thou hast forgotten thy duty to Zeus and the Thou hast thy wish; I will let thee go with all await thee before thou reachest thy home, and all the perils prepared surely thou hast not brought it with thee in thy voyage across the "Of a truth," said Odysseus, addressing Alcinous, "thou hast not the end of thy toils, and death shall come softly upon thee where thou thou must guide thy ship, Odysseus. "Thou sayest well," answered Odysseus; "and ere long the wooers shall Hast thou never heard how thy father came to this "It is hard," answered Odysseus, "to tell thee of what thou askest, id = 7768 author = Lamb, Charles title = The Adventures of Ulysses date = keywords = Alcinous; Circe; Cyclop; Ithaca; Jove; Minerva; Nausicaa; Scylla; Telemachus; Troy; Ulysses; illustration; man summary = strength to break from the enchantments of Circe, the daughter of the Sun. From Troy, ill winds cast Ulysses and his fleet upon the coast of the At a sight so horrid, Ulysses and his men were like any man''s wants; this Ulysses knew full well, and dividing his men (all leave, with tears, of Ulysses and his men that stayed, whose eyes wore the Ulysses, she rebuked them for their fear, and said: "This man is no He said, when he saw Ulysses, "Old father, how near you were to being torn and Ulysses said, "May Jove and all the other gods requite you for the in token that what I tell you is true," said Ulysses, "if your king come "I see," said Ulysses, "that a poor man should get but little at your maids saw Ulysses, they said, "It is the beggar who came to the court id = 26275 author = Snider, Denton Jaques title = Homer''s Odyssey A Commentary date = keywords = Book; Calypso; Circe; Family; Goddess; Gods; Hades; Helen; Hero; Homer; Homeric; Iliad; Ithaca; Menelaus; Odyssey; Pallas; Phæacia; Suitors; Telemachus; Trojan; Troy; Ulysses; Zeus; god; greek; return summary = man''s insight is just the word of the God. The remaining circumstances of the Book group themselves around the two present Book connects him intimately with the return of Ulysses, and Book several phases of the Return; Nestor, Menelaus, Ulysses are all instinctive pre-Trojan character still, being an old man; but Ulysses also the Old Man of the Sea tells him a few words concerning Ulysses, sea which stands in the way of the return of Ulysses is a deity, grand division of the poem, the Odyssey proper, or Return of Ulysses. The answer of Ulysses reveals the man in his present stale of mind. Book Ulysses and his companions were the Present to which the Past previous to the present Book: when Ulysses comes back to the world of Ulysses has both these worlds in him; he is the man of thought and the The second part of the present Book gives the movements of Ulysses, id = 41935 author = Thorne, Guy title = The Adventures of Ulysses the Wanderer date = keywords = Athene; Calypso; Circe; Homer; Ithaca; Penelope; Telemachus; Ulysses; Zeus; great; like; man summary = green islands set like emeralds in wine-coloured seas, the immortal Ulysses spent a year in the arms of Circe, and she gave birth to a son "Comrades," said Ulysses, "we are brought here by no chance of wind Three times during the long night did Ulysses draw his sword to So the giant took the bowl from the king, and as Ulysses went near Then from the stern of the boat Ulysses cried out in a great voice of "The great Athene has sent me to you, king," said the god, "for she Ulysses drew his great sword, and held it over her with menacing eyes. "Men call thee Ulysses!" said the goddess, and at that word something lee of the island Ulysses could hear no voices but those of the wind HOW ULYSSES LOST HIS MERRY MEN AND CAME A WAIF TO CALYPSO WITH THE "Now will we go to the palace," said Ulysses.