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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 12 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 47652 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 78 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 England 3 Plymouth 3 New 2 illustration 2 Brewster 2 Boston 1 man 1 indian 1 carver 1 Williams 1 William 1 Tisquantum 1 Tasquanto 1 Standish 1 Squanto 1 Seven 1 Sarah 1 Sachem 1 Sacandaga 1 Roger 1 Rodolph 1 Pilgrim 1 Photograph 1 Peacemaker 1 Oriana 1 Nausetts 1 Nahma 1 Miantinomo 1 Mayflower 1 Master 1 Massasoit 1 Massachusetts 1 Maitland 1 Mailah 1 Longfeather 1 Kaweras 1 Jyanough 1 John 1 JONES 1 Iroquois 1 Indians 1 Indian 1 Hurons 1 Henrich 1 Helen 1 Governor 1 God 1 English 1 Edith 1 Coubitant Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 677 man 500 time 396 day 326 friend 280 life 277 place 260 eye 252 child 246 father 240 people 238 hand 218 village 217 home 209 land 194 tribe 192 year 189 son 186 brother 182 heart 177 water 173 warrior 163 way 160 word 159 death 155 illustration 154 spirit 153 party 150 side 147 savage 142 tree 141 forest 138 canoe 136 settler 136 companion 135 fire 133 feeling 132 house 131 moment 130 mother 129 wife 128 ship 121 night 121 ground 120 shore 120 mind 119 wood 118 hope 118 face 117 country 116 foot Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 554 _ 388 Henrich 312 Plymouth 288 Nahma 221 England 212 New 189 Oriana 171 Indians 171 Edith 171 Coubitant 157 Rodolph 144 John 144 God 140 Captain 135 Standish 131 Sachem 130 Tisquantum 130 Governor 125 Brewster 121 Bradford 117 Mayflower 112 � 111 Massasoit 106 Pilgrim 106 Master 104 Indian 100 Boston 99 Jyanough 93 Roger 90 Chief 88 Longfeather 85 Squanto 83 Winslow 83 English 76 Tasquanto 75 Iroquois 73 Sarah 72 JONES 64 William 63 Williams 63 Sacandaga 63 Maitland 62 Helen 61 Massachusetts 56 KIEFT 56 CARVER 55 Fathers 51 Robinson 51 Carver 50 Scrooby Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3609 he 1910 it 1574 they 1371 him 992 them 941 i 811 we 651 she 625 you 314 us 272 her 266 me 240 himself 130 themselves 43 thee 39 one 34 herself 19 itself 17 ourselves 15 ours 14 myself 11 yourself 7 his 6 yours 4 mine 3 ''em 2 ye 1 unstain''d 1 thy 1 theirs 1 hers Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 8139 be 3671 have 704 do 571 make 544 come 456 see 412 know 401 take 355 go 323 find 301 give 294 say 288 leave 249 bring 240 look 207 tell 207 feel 197 follow 190 return 187 call 184 seem 184 become 172 stand 170 hear 166 die 154 send 152 set 151 lead 143 remain 143 bear 142 carry 141 speak 139 fall 138 pass 138 meet 137 lie 123 think 123 believe 121 keep 116 begin 114 turn 114 learn 109 live 108 show 105 reach 102 seek 101 receive 101 hold 98 reply 98 draw Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1210 not 878 so 489 now 462 then 442 more 363 own 363 only 360 young 359 also 358 long 337 great 331 first 320 even 316 well 314 other 312 many 289 much 282 again 276 up 252 little 244 still 244 as 243 white 242 thus 234 out 229 indian 225 such 199 very 183 soon 182 away 179 never 171 most 165 good 163 once 161 same 161 back 159 here 155 therefore 148 there 145 new 141 down 138 ever 135 yet 134 old 128 already 127 small 125 far 121 too 120 few 111 several Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 32 good 25 least 24 most 24 great 11 slight 9 high 8 strong 8 near 8 early 7 eld 5 young 5 deep 5 bad 5 Most 4 short 4 old 4 brave 3 warm 3 small 3 long 2 wise 2 swift 2 quick 2 late 2 hard 2 foremost 2 farth 2 dear 2 close 1 wild 1 weak 1 warlike 1 topmost 1 tiny 1 tall 1 stout 1 soft 1 scanty 1 rude 1 rich 1 queer 1 pure 1 proud 1 pleasant 1 mean 1 low 1 lonely 1 light 1 l 1 keen Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 147 most 6 well 6 least 1 soon 1 near Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/62684/62684-h/62684-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/62684/62684-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/beltofseventotem00munr 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 henrich was now 3 _ going _ 3 _ see _ 3 henrich did not 3 henrich was not 2 _ calling _ 2 edith was too 2 henrich was also 2 henrich was happy 2 men came forth 2 plymouth did not 2 time was devoted 1 _ became unseaworthy 1 _ brought up 1 _ coming up 1 _ is also 1 _ knew not 1 _ left alone 1 _ see also 1 _ was only 1 _ went back 1 brethren were pale 1 brother called out 1 brother did not 1 brother is angry 1 brother is now 1 child are dearer 1 child became silent 1 child was happy 1 child was safely 1 children did not 1 children were afraid 1 children were punished 1 day had not 1 day is enough 1 day was closing 1 day was just 1 day was well 1 day were quite 1 days are past 1 days did sacandaga 1 days went by 1 days were chiefly 1 edith said no 1 edith seemed too 1 edith was greatly 1 edith was just 1 edith was less 1 edith was not 1 edith was thoroughly Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 nahma made no answer 1 day had not fully 1 edith said no more 1 edith was not unhappy 1 england had no right 1 hearts are not yet 1 henrich did not yet 1 henrich was not quite 1 henrich was not unobservant 1 land is not ours-- 1 life was not greatly 1 lives were not exempt 1 man had no hesitation 1 man were not over 1 men were not able 1 plymouth was not ready 1 son did not again A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 36756 author = Addison, A. C. (Albert Christopher) title = The Romantic Story of the Mayflower Pilgrims, and Its Place in the Life of To-day date = keywords = Boston; Bradford; Brewster; England; John; Massachusetts; Mayflower; New; Photograph; Pilgrim; Plymouth; William; illustration summary = John Robinson''s House, Leyden, where the Pilgrim Fathers (Pilgrim) Church at Plymouth, Massachusetts. sailing of the Mayflower, and thirty years before William Brewster was [1] Dr. John Brown in "The Pilgrim Fathers of New England and their day, and John Robinson and William Brewster, and other principal members JOHN ROBINSON''S HOUSE, LEYDEN, WHERE THE PILGRIM FATHERS WORSHIPPED] Bradford, John Carver, Edward Winslow, Isaac Allerton, Samuel Fuller, Pilgrims perpetuated the church founded at Scrooby in England. Mayflower company, the church of Brewster and Bradford, of Winslow and Fathers in New England." That devoted little Pilgrim band comprised, married Fear Brewster (his second wife), who died at Plymouth, December Billington, a son of John and Eleanor, born in England, died at Plymouth Love Brewster, son of Elder William, born in England, married (1634) John Carver, first Governor of the Plymouth Colony, landed from the John Robinson, the pastor of the Pilgrim church, as our own, and the id = 27357 author = Carlton, Henry Fisk title = The Landing of the Pilgrims date = keywords = JONES; carver summary = [_sound of opening door_] Good day to you, sir. Elder Carver, Master Kieft is waiting for us to sign the A company of seven London merchants has agreed to furnish ships and That, sir, is the land of the Dutch West India Company. those offered by the Dutch company, the Pilgrims accepted them and set I want to talk to the master of the ship. Perhaps not, but your company is not going to land on Dutch territory. I''ll see that the company is landed where you wish. of the five men of the company, Peter Brown, has come into the cabin Because your Elder, Master Carver, says fix the ship and go on. Elder Carver and the twelve masters have the voice; we have naught to Aye, do, Master Carver. Mayhap your company will have something to say to that, Master Carver. And so in the cabin of the _Mayflower_ the masters of the company, id = 62684 author = Munroe, Kirk title = The Belt of Seven Totems: A Story of Massasoit date = keywords = Aeana; Beaver; Champlain; England; Hurons; Indian; Iroquois; Kaweras; Longfeather; Massasoit; Miantinomo; Nahma; New; Peacemaker; Sacandaga; Seven; Tasquanto; man summary = that when the great canoe came again I should order the white men to Ere Samoset could answer, Nahma received word that Longfeather desired moon, and by the time of its setting Nahma had placed a score of miles Nahma concluded that the canoes had been taken by persons coming from was snugly hidden among its branches by the time Nahma gained the land. In the mean time, while all these events were happening, Nahma knew ordered him to accompany Nahma over the path the Huron had come. So Nahma guided the Iroquois canoes to the place where he had uttered "Come, lad, with me," added Champlain, turning to Nahma; "you shall eat So it came to pass that Nahma, son of Longfeather, now known as summoned to attend him, he came to Nahma''s prison-house in time to "I am the son of Longfeather, and I was Nahma," said the young man, so id = 44616 author = Otis, James title = Mary of Plymouth: A Story of the Pilgrim Settlement date = keywords = Brewster; Captain; England; Indians; Master; Plymouth; Sarah; Standish; illustration summary = having lived in Plymouth since the day our company landed from the children were afraid and cried, for Sarah''s father said he believed the Captain Standish led the company of men, among which was my father, two days, and each time on coming back to the _Mayflower_ for food or After making chase without coming upon the savages, Captain Standish Indians having chosen that place in which to live, our people believed The savages and our people were long in the half-built house, and both Massasoit said that if any Indians came to fight or kill our people, That which Captain Standish calls a fort is very much like our homes, work building homes for themselves, I heard father and Master Brewster Captain Standish and his men were absent three days before they came Captain Standish had come back only to set out again, for when Master id = 10222 author = Webb-Peploe, Mrs. (Annie) title = The Pilgrims of New England A Tale of the Early American Settlers date = keywords = Boston; Chief; Coubitant; Edith; England; English; God; Governor; Helen; Henrich; Jyanough; Mailah; Maitland; Nausetts; New; Oriana; Plymouth; Rodolph; Roger; Sachem; Squanto; Tisquantum; Williams; indian summary = I have a little sister at home,'' said Henrich--and the soft Indian desire to return to my home, and my friends, and the worship of my God. Among your people none know anything of the true God, and none believe ''Yes, Oriana, I do worship the one Great Spirit; the God and Father of is not thus that the great Mahneto calls His children to come to Him. Once I believed all these Indian stories; but now I know that they are by his father as by Helen and Edith; and when he returned to his muchloved home after the toils and cares of the day, his wife forbore to settlers; for they well knew that their Indian friends had long been And Henrich seated himself by the side of his young Indian wife, and Once more we must leave our Indian friends, and return to New Plymouth, Plymouth but must return to dwell with his Indian friends, and fill the