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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 60914 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 69 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Pope 4 St. 4 God 4 Christ 3 Rome 3 Peter 3 Leo 3 Church 2 roman 2 Pontiff 2 Lord 2 Council 2 Cardinal 2 Bishop 1 romish 1 popish 1 popery 1 father 1 church 1 catholic 1 Vatican 1 United 1 States 1 Spain 1 Roman 1 Protestants 1 Pius 1 Paul 1 Papists 1 Papal 1 Papacy 1 O''Connell 1 Nicholas 1 New 1 Napoleon 1 Naples 1 King 1 John 1 Jesuits 1 Italy 1 Ireland 1 III 1 Holy 1 Henry 1 Hadrian 1 Gregory 1 Germany 1 France 1 Footnote 1 Europe Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 550 year 527 man 498 church 426 power 423 bishop 414 time 409 letter 403 priest 372 authority 305 world 282 day 266 country 236 century 224 truth 224 faith 221 cardinal 215 life 209 order 208 word 208 people 207 thing 205 part 196 doctrine 188 work 186 fact 184 history 182 right 175 name 173 city 169 hand 163 father 159 matter 157 law 154 one 153 government 146 judgment 145 question 145 place 144 body 143 council 142 son 142 nothing 138 cause 133 successor 133 death 130 clergy 130 brother 130 age 129 heretic 128 point Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2775 _ 1274 Pope 963 Church 867 Rome 644 St. 483 Council 428 Leo 405 Peter 373 Bishop 362 Papal 345 Gregory 336 God 331 Footnote 298 Christ 294 John 271 Bishops 267 Papacy 257 . 240 Italy 227 Roman 215 Cardinal 214 Catholic 204 England 199 France 176 Pius 166 Emperor 161 See 157 Popes 145 King 143 Henry 142 Europe 135 Paul 134 States 134 Holy 130 Constantinople 129 III 127 Lord 123 Catholics 121 Ep 120 Pontiff 116 II 115 I. 112 Spain 111 Archbishop 105 Vatican 104 Charles 102 East 102 Alexander 101 Benedict 100 Nicholas Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3354 he 2638 it 1426 they 1036 him 1015 we 957 i 812 them 502 you 359 us 330 himself 218 she 169 me 164 themselves 122 her 112 itself 68 one 33 myself 28 thee 25 ourselves 14 herself 10 yourself 5 thyself 5 theirs 5 ours 4 oneself 4 ii 4 his 3 yourselves 3 mine 2 ib 1 yours 1 whosoever 1 hitherto 1 hers Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 10880 be 3661 have 824 do 674 say 620 make 463 give 448 see 357 take 315 find 313 know 280 write 261 come 260 receive 258 send 246 let 239 seem 218 go 216 call 209 hold 209 become 180 follow 177 believe 176 tell 172 leave 165 die 164 refuse 163 put 159 set 148 pass 138 bear 136 speak 135 live 134 think 134 show 133 declare 131 bring 129 read 127 hear 126 prove 119 fall 119 ask 111 remain 110 admit 108 teach 104 deny 102 claim 102 begin 98 keep 98 consider 96 use Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2149 not 700 so 594 more 518 most 509 great 507 other 428 now 416 only 402 even 362 very 345 first 338 then 321 roman 315 such 279 well 271 as 264 own 248 whole 248 same 227 many 222 long 221 new 221 catholic 207 up 201 still 190 however 187 little 187 few 181 much 181 ever 180 out 177 also 172 once 172 good 168 last 167 never 155 true 154 far 148 popish 144 old 139 too 139 present 139 holy 138 religious 135 spiritual 133 again 132 least 127 early 125 here 125 alone Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 121 least 78 most 47 good 46 great 20 high 10 strong 10 bad 9 low 9 fine 9 Most 7 able 6 manif 6 grave 5 late 4 slight 4 rich 4 large 4 gross 4 fair 4 eld 4 early 4 dark 3 warm 3 vile 3 simple 3 near 3 long 3 full 3 faint 3 deep 2 true 2 strict 2 strange 2 sorry 2 safe 2 rank 2 pure 2 proud 2 noble 2 mean 2 l 2 keen 2 innermost 2 farth 2 dire 1 wr 1 wild 1 weird 1 vague 1 sure Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 440 most 11 least 6 well 1 lest 1 latest 1 him[69]--to 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 church has always 4 church is not 3 leo did not 3 papacy had now 2 _ are not 2 _ is _ 2 _ is rather 2 bishop said mass 2 bishops were still 2 christ are obstinately 2 church does not 2 church has ever 2 church has not 2 church was then 2 gregory did not 2 leo was not 2 papacy did not 2 pope does not 2 pope had ever 2 pope was more 2 priests are not 2 rome became more 2 rome does not 1 _ are now 1 _ calls _ 1 _ comes beautifully 1 _ do n''t 1 _ goes on 1 _ has _ 1 _ has now 1 _ is generally 1 _ is now 1 _ is really 1 _ is sung 1 _ is too 1 _ seems unable 1 _ was _ 1 _ was certainly 1 _ was first 1 _ was probably 1 _ were not 1 _ were now 1 _ written _ 1 authorities are as 1 authorities are j. 1 authorities are not 1 authority be inherent 1 authority being most 1 authority is fast 1 authority is late Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 bishop had not only 1 bishop is not subject 1 bishops are not superior 1 bishops do not properly 1 bishops were not content 1 christ are not present 1 church has not only 1 church is not _ 1 church is not at 1 church is not infallible 1 church made no numerical 1 church were not idle 1 gregory did not at 1 gregory finds no trace 1 gregory had no share 1 gregory made no complaint 1 john had no serious 1 john was no idle 1 john was not wholly 1 leo did not adequately 1 leo did not even 1 leo had no right 1 leo had no slight 1 leo was not ambitious 1 men were not far 1 pope has no power 1 pope saw no retreat 1 power are not more 1 powers are not sufficient 1 rome does not yet 1 rome was not dead 1 time are not wholly 1 time was not ripe 1 world was not worthy;"--that A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 33765 author = Allies, T. W. (Thomas William) title = The Church of England cleared from the charge of Schism Upon Testimonies of Councils and Fathers of the first six centuries date = keywords = Apostles; Apostolic; Bishops; Christ; Church; Constantinople; Council; Cyprian; God; Leo; Lord; Peter; Pontiff; Pope; Roman; Rome; St.; father summary = Bishop of Rome, sends alms, according to the custom of his Church, to the the Church, as he will give an account of his acts to the Lord_." St. Stephen received this decision of the African Council so ill, that he would were read in a Council of thirty-six Bishops, at the head of whom was St. Cyprian, who answered in the name of all by a letter addressed to the the Council of Chalcedon to preside over the Church Catholic, that of Rome transmission of St. Peter''s primacy over the whole Church to the Bishop of Father, our fellow-minister, Coelestine, Bishop of the Roman Church,--we authority of Peter, as we read set forth and acted on in the same Council. Council of Chalcedon, the Bishop of Rome appeared at the head of the West, Peter: so that the most blessed Bishop of the Roman city may have power to id = 37709 author = Doyle, A. P., Rev. title = Leo XIII., the Great Leader date = keywords = Cardinal; Christ; God; Leo; Pope summary = on the occasion of the death of Pope Leo XIII. [Portrait of Pope Leo XIII.] LEO XIII., THE GREAT LEADER. LEO XIII., THE GREAT LEADER. greatest Popes the world has ever known. that he might be spared to the world for many years to come. was a man of great learning; but Leo any man''s life a blessing to the world. distinct revival in the devotional life of the church. of the Popes will last till the end of the world. As soon as the Pope breathes his last the Cardinal Chamberlain takes more prominent cardinals, who are well known to the world at large, pieces, and unless the next Pope opens wide the door of the church to knowledge of the great races of the world. Conclave shuts behind the last cardinal, the intrigues of the world name Pope Pius X., and forty years after his death in 1914, he was id = 37705 author = Hogan, William title = Popery! As It Was and as It Is. Also, Auricular Confession; And Popish Nunneries date = keywords = Americans; Christ; God; Ireland; Jesuits; New; O''Connell; Papists; Pope; Protestants; Rome; St.; States; United; catholic; church; popery; popish; roman; romish summary = Americans will bear in mind that Roman Catholics believe their church to be permitted to appoint bishop or priest to any church, diocese, living, Popes and priests forbid Roman Catholics from uniting with them? spiritual matters but my own conscience and the word of God. POPISH BISHOPS AND PRIESTS ABSOLVE ALLEGIANCE TO PROTESTANT GOVERNMENTS. Americans, that Roman Catholic bishops and priests teach their people the Pope of Rome, and by every bishop and priest in this country. I would again ask Americans whether Roman Catholic priests, or bishop, Every Irish Roman Catholic priest, who comes to this country, is Catholic bishops and priests still continue to assert that their church be governed by the Pope of Rome, and his priests, and bishops, I shall priest nor an Irish Roman Catholic, and _true_ son of the church, who holy Roman Catholic church would extend to you, your Protestant religion id = 61779 author = McCabe, Joseph title = Crises in the History of the Papacy A study of twenty famous popes whose careers and whose influence were important in the development of the church and in the history of the world date = keywords = Alexander; Benedict; Bishop; Cardinal; Charlemagne; Charles; Church; Council; Emperor; Europe; Footnote; France; Germany; Gregory; Hadrian; Henry; III; Italy; John; King; Leo; Naples; Napoleon; Nicholas; Papacy; Papal; Paul; Peter; Pius; Pope; Rome; Spain; St.; Vatican; roman summary = Bishop of Rome became a Pope, in the distinctive sense of the word, is incomplete _History of Rome and the Popes in the Middle Ages_[4] is III.--Leo the Great, the Last Pope of Imperial Rome 38 [Footnote 25: _History of Rome and the Popes in the Early Middle Ages_, LEO THE GREAT, THE LAST POPE OF IMPERIAL ROME "the holy and most blessed Pope, head of the universal Church, Leo the time of the Blessed Silvester, Bishop of Rome, the Holy Catholic and legates from Rome, he forbade his subjects to appeal to the Pope, See. Nine years later, in 914, he was elected Bishop of Rome. new Pope, Stephen X., and his fanatical Cardinal, Peter Damiani--both [Footnote 267: We learn from later letters of the Pope that he worked stick on his back will keep the Pope in order." Julius sent Cardinal The new Pope, Leo XIII., was nearly sixty-eight years old, and had id = 16242 author = Vaughan, John S. (John Stephen) title = The Purpose of the Papacy date = keywords = Archbishop; Bishop; Catholic; Christ; Church; England; God; Holy; Lord; Peter; Pontiff; Pope; St. summary = found in the person of the infallible Head of the Catholic Church, but from the Church of Christ the infallibility of the Pope would be like we have it on Divine authority, that the Church of Christ was to be as Church of Christ, with one truth, taught by one authority, received by THE ANGLICAN THEORY OF CONTINUITY IN THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND. THE ANGLICAN THEORY OF CONTINUITY IN THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND. THE AUTHORITY OF THE POPE IN ENGLAND IN PRE-REFORMATION TIMES. THE AUTHORITY OF THE POPE IN ENGLAND IN PRE-REFORMATION TIMES. Faith, the teaching, and the doctrine--in a word, the Church Cardinals exercising authority in the Church in England. Catholic, or less like the Anglican Church of the "Reformation," it present Church of England, which repudiates the authority of the Pope of their devotion and faith towards God and the Holy Roman Church".