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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 10 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 3464 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 96 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 illustration 2 Editor 1 woman 1 sifer 1 love 1 like 1 leave 1 jes 1 dreamynge 1 author 1 Wife 1 Twas 1 Stuff 1 Rubaiyat 1 Pipe 1 Oxford 1 Omar 1 Love 1 Kitty 1 Kiss 1 Khayyam 1 Jr. 1 Jane 1 Doc 1 Commem 1 Book Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 86 illustration 62 o 55 man 45 day 30 time 29 thing 28 one 26 way 26 heart 25 year 23 woman 22 word 22 hand 21 life 19 work 19 poet 19 night 19 eye 19 dreamynge 17 love 16 line 15 friend 15 face 15 book 14 soul 14 lip 14 door 13 jes 13 author 12 nothing 12 hair 11 rose 11 name 11 head 11 girl 10 wuz 10 town 10 thought 10 street 10 sifer 10 shame 10 moon 10 mind 10 hour 10 end 9 yesterday 9 world 9 wife 9 week 9 tear Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 715 _ 84 Doc 38 Omar 23 Book 18 Love 17 Editor 16 jes 16 fer 14 Time 14 Thou 13 Jr. 12 Stuff 12 Oxford 12 Khayyam 12 Bill 11 o 11 Twas 11 Rubaiyat 11 New 10 fro 10 Lady 10 Kiss 10 Fate 10 A 9 ner 9 W. 9 Spring 9 Sifers 9 Pipe 9 Paradise 8 Kitty 8 Hand 8 Commem 8 Bridge 7 ye 7 bin 7 XXVI 7 Wife 7 VI 7 Sans 7 Jane 7 James 7 Gorgona 7 Cup 7 Blue 7 Bliss 6 twas 6 o''er 6 Zamperina 6 XXV Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 442 i 232 he 169 you 162 it 143 me 138 they 84 him 81 we 45 she 40 them 30 us 21 ''em 16 her 12 myself 9 mine 5 yourself 5 himself 4 thee 4 ourselves 2 yit 2 one 2 itself 2 his 2 ''s 1 yt 1 yours 1 weights,-- 1 tuk 1 thyself 1 themselves 1 ours 1 mayhap 1 keepin 1 hers 1 handlin 1 em!--you Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 721 be 233 have 108 say 90 do 82 go 80 know 78 make 76 come 62 see 49 take 43 let 39 get 34 find 32 leave 30 read 29 think 29 tell 29 give 25 write 24 sell 23 love 23 bring 22 hear 20 seem 19 look 19 die 18 show 17 turn 17 stand 17 pass 16 try 16 learn 16 keep 15 pay 14 feel 14 call 14 buy 13 swear 13 laye 13 hold 13 grow 12 wuz 12 use 12 live 12 git 11 spend 11 set 11 seek 11 play 11 lie Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 167 not 85 then 69 so 49 more 47 now 46 out 40 still 38 good 35 there 35 old 35 little 32 never 31 long 30 up 29 last 29 down 28 too 28 here 28 ever 27 only 26 well 26 such 26 same 24 yet 24 much 24 first 22 away 22 as 21 once 21 again 20 young 20 other 20 in 20 back 19 great 18 many 18 indeed 16 very 16 sweet 16 own 16 oft 16 new 16 just 16 even 15 thus 15 no 15 most 13 all 12 white 12 right Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 15 good 10 most 5 least 4 bad 2 squami 2 light 2 late 2 hard 2 great 2 Most 1 tall 1 sorry 1 small 1 sincere 1 short 1 loud 1 lazy 1 j 1 furd 1 fine 1 fair 1 dr 1 dark 1 cheap 1 brief 1 brave 1 afire 1 Least Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 5 most 1 well 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 davidsch@earthlink.net Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 thing is certain 2 _ got _ 2 _ is _ 1 _ come ''bout 1 _ died _ 1 _ do n''t 1 _ had _ 1 _ has _ 1 _ is doctor 1 _ knowed _ 1 _ knows _ 1 _ let _ 1 _ reads _ 1 _ tell _ 1 _ was _ 1 _ were _ 1 doc did n''t 1 editor came in 1 editor is inclined 1 eyes are bright 1 heart be light 1 heart is sair 1 heart were arrant 1 jes tell _ 1 life is much 1 life were paradise 1 men were eagerly 1 omar was bacchanalian 1 omar was socially 1 one is worse-- 1 poet is full 1 poet was ever 1 things give room 1 time is more 1 way is drink 1 year is much 1 years are great Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 28184 author = Burgess, Gelett title = The Rubaiyat of Omar Cayenne date = keywords = Book; Editor; Stuff; author summary = You know how little Stuff is going to live, The New York Times has oft a little Way The Publisher prints new books every Year; Yes, but who reads the Books of Yesterday? Booming''s the way," he says, "to make Books go! I sometimes think that never Prose is read In Smart Set--surely you know whom I mean-For some we''ve read, the month''s Six Selling Best Girls with Three Names, who know not Who from Whom! Are scatter''d, and her Books by Critics cussed. And many a Tale I read and understood, Who strikes for Art is looked at as a Jest. God knows the things they print are Rot, for Fair! Who buys--Who reads--the Stuff that boils _my_ Pot?" Is not the one that sells the most, God knows! Of Critic who _reads_ Books that he Reviews! In boiling down the Million Books we read Oh, rising Author, read Me once again id = 23338 author = Duff, J. L. title = The Rubaiyat of Ohow Dryyam With Apologies to Omar date = keywords = illustration summary = [Illustration: The Rubàiyàt of Ohow Dryyàm] Franklin OHOW DRYYAM _The Rubaiyat of Ohow Dryyam_ "Drink coffee, Lads, for that is all that''s left The Haigs indeed are gone, and on the Nose Come, fill the Cup, and in the Coffee-house We''ll learn a new and temperate Carouse-Yes, but where match the beer of Yesterday? Beside me sighing in the Wilderness-Sigh for Inebriate Paradise to come, While Moonshine takes the Cash (no Credit goes) Like Snow upon the Desert''s dusty Face, It lights us for an hour and then--is gone. The gilded Bar, and all my Lucre spent The gilded Bar ..._] Of Hooch, I wonder what Bootleggers buy One half so precious as the Stuff they sell. If I am garnered of the Law, wilt Thou, _And Bill the Bootlegger--the Infidel!--_] _And Bill the Bootlegger--the Infidel!--_] _Six_ Moons arise--who now seek _Two_ in vain. Six Moons arise ..._] id = 5408 author = Irwin, Wallace title = The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam Jr. date = keywords = Editor; Jr.; Khayyam; Kiss; Omar; Pipe; Rubaiyat; leave summary = The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám Jr. Translated from the Original Bornese into English Verse by Omars to translate; and what was his surprise to note that the work of a wonder, then, that not until the first Omaric madness had passed away were the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, Jr., lifted into the light after an Although little is known of the life of Omar Khayyam the elder, the Omaric kisses reason, and had Omar Khayyam lived in our own day he would doubtless Due doubtless to the preservative influence of smoke Omar Khayyam, Jr., The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám, Jr. He lets me have good tobacco, and he does not XXXVI Ibsen Boccacio; for a Persian poet of so remote a date, Omar Persia, Omar Khayyam, Jr., brought to Borneo many of the more refined cigar much favoured by the younger Omar. id = 26437 author = Little, Mary Wallace Bundy title = The Rubaiyat of a Huffy Husband date = keywords = Wife summary = _The Gorham Press, Boston, U. The Dreams of Happiness I have each Night, Then one and all will know the Reason why On Christmas day a good Friend did present My Wife a Book; no doubt with best intent. The "Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam" ''twas. Wife found the Time to revel in that Book, She soon possessed the dreadful Omar Fad, But now each time I come back to the House So deep absorbed in Omar''s Rubaiyat, To be amused, My Wife says, "I will read." And come not back till think she''s through with It. Have gained relief from Somewhere in the Sky. But Wife says, Omar''s reckoning proves it My Wife''s Love for him only more Intense. ''Tis only to dear Omar she pays Heed. Until this Omar--dead eight Hundred Years, Just so those happy Days of long ago She gets her Book, and says I must take Heed id = 16898 author = Quiller-Couch, Arthur title = Green Bays. Verses and Parodies date = keywords = Commem; Jane; Kitty; Oxford; Twas; dreamynge; love summary = Most of the verses in this volume were written at Oxford, and first Thy carefulle heart shall cease to ake My love is fled by garden-gate; Those little feet, in so much night?_ ''Twas all for love he would bring his figgers Though at heart I loved him, me arthist bhoy! Down the green hill-side fro'' the castle window Came a long train and, i'' the midst, a black bier, Hardly died Bill when, fro'' the Lady Jane''s grave, Crept to his white death-bed a lovely pumpkin: Blurted a free ''Good-day t''ye,'' left and right, Drags the slow Ladies'' School, consuming time Dear Kitty, but come to Commem. Dear Kitty, but come to Commem. Dear Kitty, but come to Commem. With the day, there shall come with its dawning ''Till the land of the lute and the love-tale Touch lips with ''The Times'' of to-day.-To come and play their little games id = 32944 author = Riley, James Whitcomb title = Rubáiyát of Doc Sifers date = keywords = Doc; illustration; jes; like; sifer summary = Ef you don''t know DOC SIFERS I''ll He''s jes _hisse''f Doc Sifers_--ner You know, ''at I think Doc''s to _blame_, They all like Doc, and got a smile Then jes a tetch o'' Doc''s old pa''m, _Dull_ times, Doc jes _mi_anders round, Said, stars at night wuz jes as good And yit, though Doc, as all men knows, ''At Doc gits things like that-un off: "No, Ike," says Doc, "this world hain''t saw And _I_ says, "Doc, you ''pear so spry, Doc run a bill there, don''t you know, ''at Doc hisse''f hain''t got fer murder," Doc says,--"then, fer Doc is when some show fer Doc is when some show Doc''s got a _temper_; but, he says, Doc says that''s what your temper''s fer-"And who wuz _wrong_," says Doc, "er To he''p Doc out, ef he wuz pressed Doc never wuz much hand to pay "I _met_ a great man onc''t," Doc says, id = 31467 author = Rowland, Helen title = The Rubáiyát of a Bachelor date = keywords = Love; illustration; woman summary = [Illustration: PROMISED TO PAY A WOMAN''S BILLS FOR LIFE.] You know how little while we have to Love-And Love''s light Hand is knocking at the door!" [Illustration: HIS WINTER GARMENTS HUNG--WHERE, NO ONE KNOWS!] A charming Woman--and the old Love-Game! Who laughed at Love, as but an idle jest, LOOK to the Married Men! Promised to pay a Woman''s bills for life-INDEED, ''tis better to have loved and lost-Than to have loved and married, and for aye, OFT, to some patient married man I turn, Turned gaily to the old Love-Game, once more. AND, much as I repented things like this, Would you cast a loving Woman hence? Would you cast a loving Woman hence? A MARRIED MAN, to rail in vain at Fate! Dost thou, to-day, of Man a puppet make! _Too oft_ to Love''s empyrean Font I stray, Up to the rose-decked Altar-Rail shall pass, id = 23792 author = Wells, Carolyn title = The Rubáiyát of Bridge date = keywords = illustration summary = HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS =When the Red Hand of Dummy is laid down, Before we lose the Lead, and let Them make Sans Lead, sans Score, sans Honor, and sans Stake! A Book of Bridge Rules underneath the Bough, But High or Low, as suits the Player shows; As where some Bridge Game has been badly Played. By the Fourth Hand,--your Smiles are somewhat Less! "With more than Three Hearts, always lead the Low!" =I''ve played with Players of all Sorts,--but I =And then,--and then came Three, and, Cards in Hand, =I often Wonder what Bridge Players gain One thing in Bridge is Certain,--''tis not Lore! The Hand that holds the Cards will win the Score! When You and I our Last Bridge Game have played, As the Heart Ace should heed a little Spade. Of Magic Dummy Hands that Come and Go. =Played to the Last Trump by the Hand of Fate,