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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 6 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 79584 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 73 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Oxford 4 University 3 illustration 3 Sir 3 Mr. 3 London 3 College 3 Church 2 little 2 Mrs. 2 Master 2 Lord 2 John 2 Hall 2 Dr. 2 Christ 2 Chapel 2 Bishop 2 Alice 1 young 1 time 1 room 1 print 1 mind 1 man 1 long 1 letter 1 hour 1 hand 1 great 1 good 1 day 1 course 1 child 1 Wycliffe 1 Wonderland 1 Wolsey 1 William 1 Uncle 1 Thomas 1 Sylvie 1 Street 1 St. 1 Sorell 1 Shelley 1 Rev. 1 Radowitz 1 Queen 1 Quadrangle 1 Pryce Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 738 man 673 time 613 day 525 year 474 book 417 college 412 life 410 hand 387 child 376 thing 373 room 369 friend 341 house 331 eye 321 way 304 scholar 300 letter 300 illustration 274 work 273 place 271 student 256 course 255 word 253 name 246 part 241 father 233 girl 228 head 224 night 218 side 218 building 216 face 205 one 203 school 199 mother 198 end 197 people 191 town 187 hour 184 church 182 wall 181 mind 179 nothing 173 century 170 something 166 order 165 moment 163 fellow 162 master 160 fact Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2602 _ 1098 Oxford 633 University 521 Mr. 508 Falloden 461 College 455 S. 406 Connie 360 Church 306 Dodgson 292 Nora 287 Constance 282 Alice 261 Mrs. 247 King 238 Carroll 233 Lewis 227 Radowitz 216 Hall 211 Christ 208 Sorell 186 Sir 185 Lady 180 Hooper 176 Chancellor 175 Shelley 173 London 173 John 164 Magdalen 159 Miss 158 Mary 154 Henry 147 Douglas 142 Street 137 Otto 133 Lord 132 New 126 Bishop 123 England 118 Merton 112 William 108 Queen 108 Master 101 St. 98 Charles 96 Dr. 89 Arthur 85 . 83 Ewen 82 House Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4773 he 3978 it 3783 i 2021 you 1661 him 1657 she 1462 they 1071 them 914 we 848 her 830 me 411 himself 288 us 144 herself 142 themselves 121 itself 107 one 71 myself 32 yourself 29 yours 28 his 24 mine 22 ourselves 17 thee 12 hers 12 ''s 8 ''em 5 theirs 5 oneself 3 thyself 3 ours 2 yourselves 2 you''ll 1 you?--never 1 you''re 1 yes-- 1 yerself 1 years,"--it 1 wh 1 unipantaloonicoat''--you 1 there!--you 1 them:-- 1 she''ll 1 o''er 1 o 1 manner--"what 1 it"--she 1 it!--you Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 14938 be 5229 have 1609 do 1322 say 870 make 772 go 743 come 726 take 695 know 684 see 681 give 588 think 484 look 484 find 412 seem 408 get 395 write 334 tell 281 call 273 begin 269 leave 263 stand 261 use 257 ask 247 send 240 hold 239 hear 232 bring 225 feel 223 put 220 want 215 read 211 pass 210 follow 209 sit 205 show 196 turn 190 meet 190 appear 188 become 185 keep 180 let 178 speak 174 mean 169 set 163 talk 162 draw 161 live 160 run 146 try Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2562 not 1078 so 723 very 710 more 699 up 620 then 600 first 586 now 584 only 575 little 574 other 556 great 544 old 500 most 486 out 471 good 456 much 450 well 388 never 373 as 369 long 358 own 358 many 336 last 332 new 304 still 302 young 302 such 301 again 281 there 279 same 274 just 272 here 272 few 264 down 261 also 257 even 255 too 255 once 240 ever 225 soon 224 away 223 always 208 back 201 however 197 all 194 on 192 small 192 early 191 perhaps Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 138 good 107 least 94 most 31 great 24 early 17 eld 16 high 16 fine 13 old 12 small 11 late 10 dear 9 slight 7 low 7 bad 6 young 6 large 6 happy 6 Most 5 noble 4 poor 4 near 4 mere 4 deep 3 strong 3 strange 3 pure 3 manif 3 lovely 3 lively 3 j 3 grand 3 gentle 3 able 2 true 2 topmost 2 smooth 2 slender 2 short 2 new 2 hard 2 handsome 2 grave 2 gay 2 easy 2 cold 2 chief 2 Least 1 writes:-- 1 wise Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 406 most 18 well 16 least 1 meetest 1 long 1 lest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/3/5/0/13501/13501-h/13501-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/3/5/0/13501/13501-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 _ is _ 8 _ do _ 6 _ have _ 5 _ did _ 4 _ was _ 3 _ be _ 3 falloden did not 2 _ am _ 2 _ are _ 2 _ do n''t 2 _ feeling _ 2 _ has _ 2 college was not 2 connie found nora 2 day was now 2 falloden had not 2 falloden looked down 2 falloden said nothing 2 falloden went back 2 friends are not 2 oxford ''s not 2 oxford was still 2 room was full 2 room was open 2 time had not 2 university was as 2 university was considerable 1 _ am still 1 _ be carlotta 1 _ be more 1 _ be so 1 _ being as 1 _ come over 1 _ did n''t 1 _ does n''t 1 _ feeling pain 1 _ felt hat 1 _ gave fresh 1 _ get rich 1 _ goes down 1 _ goin'' out 1 _ had _ 1 _ had not 1 _ has many 1 _ has n''t 1 _ has yet 1 _ have never 1 _ is almost 1 _ is altogether 1 _ is equal Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ was not much 1 _ were not _ 1 church was not so 1 college was no doubt 1 connie asked no questions 1 connie had no sooner 1 connie had no such 1 connie knew no one 1 day were not likely 1 days were not yet 1 dodgson had not sufficient 1 dodgson was no easy 1 friends are not men 1 life be not wholly 1 life has no doubt 1 man finds not pleasure 1 man is not exactly 1 men have no leisure 1 nora was not wholly 1 rooms were not more 1 university had no right 1 university was not in 1 year is not _ A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 11483 author = Collingwood, Stuart Dodgson title = The Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll (Rev. C. L. Dodgson) date = keywords = Alice; Bishop; Bruno; Carroll; Charles; Christ; Church; College; Common; Dean; December; Diary; Dodgson; Dr.; Euclid; God; Lewis; London; Macmillan; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Oxford; Press; Rev.; Sylvie; University; Wonderland; child; illustration; letter; little; print summary = two books I have seen was the answer of a little girl whom Lewis revelation to the undergraduate who heard for the first time that Mr. Dodgson of Christ Church and Lewis Carroll were identical. Death of Archdeacon Dodgson--Lewis Carroll''s rooms at Christ Death of Archdeacon Dodgson--Lewis Carroll''s rooms at Christ time (knowing the sad end of the dear little boy), the funny parts A little book, published during this year, "Alice (a dramatic version "For auld lang syne" the author sent a copy of his book to Mrs. Hargreaves (Miss Alice Liddell), accompanied by a short note. A letter written about this time to his friend, Miss Edith Rix, gives The following letter written to a child-friend, Miss E. In December, the Logical controversy being over for a time, Mr. Dodgson invented a new problem to puzzle his mathematical friends id = 46274 author = Headlam, Cecil title = Oxford and Its Story date = keywords = Archbishop; Bishop; Cambridge; Castle; Chancellor; Chapel; Christ; Church; College; Edward; England; Frideswide; Gate; Hall; Henry; High; John; King; Lincoln; London; Lord; Magdalen; Mary; Master; Merton; New; Oriel; Oxford; Paris; Parliament; Peter; Queen; Sir; Street; Thomas; University; William; Wolsey; Wycliffe; illustration summary = choir which now form the College Chapel of Christ Church. Oxford University borrowed from Cambridge its most learned men, who that there was established at Oxford a University, or place of general "the masters and the University of scholars at Paris" to come to study of the "College of the great Hall of the University," the name of King view to establishing a house at Oxford where students of their Order Blessed Mary at Oxford," afterwards known as King''s Hall and Oriel complaint against the master and fellows of Great University Hall college foundations of Oxford; and in those buildings of S. Oxford, offered a noble in the chapel of Magdalen College, and, by way schools of Oxford," by a lecture as prelector of New College, upon which when, a few years back, the colleges and other places of the University The Master of University College was one of id = 34525 author = Hogg, Thomas Jefferson title = Shelley at Oxford date = keywords = Hogg; London; Oxford; Plato; Shelley; University; course; day; good; great; hand; hour; little; long; man; mind; room; time; young summary = Thomas Jefferson Hogg''s account of Shelley''s career at Oxford first Hogg''s account of Shelley''s Oxford days is so far superior to that of his College, Oxford, in January 1810, a short time before Shelley. the tale of Hogg''s and Shelley''s Oxford life as told in the following soon as Shelley had quitted my rooms, and fell instantly into a profound "They are very dull people here," Shelley said to me one evening, soon ''You must read,'' he said many times in his small voice. Shelley frequently exercised his ingenuity in long discussions respecting welcome to Shelley at that time: he was young, and it is generally Shelley''s disputes, or who knew him only from having read some of the Shelley laughed also and waved his hand, and the little still more remarkably conspicuous in Shelley--his admiration of men of long course of life, and Shelley frequently and most pathetically lamented id = 45290 author = Peel, Robert title = Oxford date = keywords = Chapel; Church; College; Dr.; Hall; John; Mr.; Oxford; Quadrangle; Sir; St.; University; illustration summary = _History of the Colleges, Halls, and Public Buildings of the University Oxford is not a city of Colleges only, but of noble streets and wide to the twelfth century, but the present building, designed by Dr. Aldrich, a former Dean of Christ Church, has only been in existence University College owes its existence to William of Durham, who, at his Of the present buildings of the College none is of earlier date than the St. Mary Magdalen Church, on the site where part of the present College occupied with the building of Winchester College, the other great the Colleges--that fragment of the old City Wall which is shewn in Mr. Matthison''s third drawing. Halls, and Public Buildings of the University of Oxford_ (1810), proceed at once to build his new College; the times were disturbed, and |CORPUS--as this College is universally known among Oxford men--was |IF Magdalen is the most beautiful of Oxford Colleges, Christ Church id = 13501 author = Ward, Humphry, Mrs. title = Lady Connie date = keywords = Alice; Annette; Arthur; Aunt; Bledlow; Connie; Constance; Douglas; Duggy; Ewen; Falloden; Hooper; Lady; Laura; Lord; Marmion; Master; Meyrick; Mr.; Mrs.; Mulholland; Nora; Otto; Oxford; Pryce; Radowitz; Sir; Sorell; Uncle summary = Nora''s mind, as she and her sister sat waiting for the fly in which Mrs. Hooper had gone to meet her husband''s niece at the station, ran look of distant laughter came into Lady Connie''s eyes. "I don''t know why you should call Oxford dull, Ewen!" said Mrs. Hooper "I know Mr. Falloden of Marmion," said Constance, "and Mr. Sorell." "I don''t like such ways," said Mrs. Hooper, with sparkling eyes. "Why, _The Times_ is all about people I know!" said Connie, opening "There are several things I want to know," said Nora deliberately, not ever said that, Connie!--I know Mr. Falloden needn''t be a snob, because "Mr. Falloden," said Constance presently, "I want you to promise me "My dear--what has happened to Connie!" said Mrs. Hooper to Alice in "You''d better go, you fellows," said Falloden, looking round him. "Sit down, my dear Connie," said Lady Marcia, with a preoccupied look.