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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 4 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 6249 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 84 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Poe 4 Mrs. 4 Edgar 3 York 3 Virginia 3 New 3 Mr. 3 Clemm 3 Allan 2 Richmond 2 Helen 2 Heaven 2 CHAPTER 2 Baltimore 1 year 1 time 1 love 1 little 1 life 1 great 1 eye 1 enter 1 chapter 1 american 1 Washington 1 Valley 1 Theatre 1 Taylor 1 Shelton 1 Semiramis 1 Sem 1 Salm 1 Rob 1 Ninus 1 Muddie 1 Mother 1 Miss 1 Maximilian 1 Mackenzie 1 Lowell 1 London 1 Khosrove 1 John 1 Irving 1 Griswold 1 Graham 1 Goodfellow 1 God 1 England 1 Eddie Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 607 time 460 man 436 day 416 eye 379 year 379 life 357 heart 351 friend 336 hand 301 boy 286 word 279 love 265 mother 260 room 242 letter 235 world 225 way 224 work 222 face 214 night 207 poem 204 home 203 woman 202 poet 199 story 199 house 188 death 184 child 184 book 183 wife 162 place 158 soul 158 dream 157 voice 157 one 156 thing 154 door 151 head 139 mind 138 name 137 brother 135 lady 135 hour 128 spirit 128 girl 128 father 127 nothing 126 arm 124 beauty 123 money Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1220 Poe 1109 _ 633 Mrs. 543 Edgar 499 Mr. 320 Virginia 257 Allan 191 Clemm 161 New 152 Richmond 137 Max 136 York 129 God 125 Vir 116 C. 111 Khos 110 Helen 104 Dreamer 97 Graham 95 Lowell 91 Heaven 86 John 86 Irving 82 Hel 79 thou 79 CHAPTER 76 Khosrove 74 Baltimore 73 Semiramis 68 Maximilian 68 Dr. 67 Eddie 67 Char 66 Miss 63 Ninus 56 Raven 55 Mother 54 Muddie 54 Mackenzie 53 Salm 52 S. 52 Griswold 51 Sem 47 Charles 47 Artavan 46 France 45 Taylor 44 Tis 44 Fordham 43 Princess Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4397 he 2478 it 2475 i 1937 him 1735 you 1315 she 859 me 774 they 738 her 626 we 503 them 379 himself 168 us 84 herself 76 thee 55 themselves 49 itself 44 myself 27 one 25 yourself 18 yours 17 mine 17 his 11 theirs 6 ourselves 6 hers 5 thyself 5 ''s 4 yo 4 ours 4 ''em 3 sho 2 thy 2 husak 1 yourn,-- 1 you''ll 1 yes!--that 1 ye 1 them,--"they 1 thee-- 1 pelf 1 him?--had 1 hender 1 em 1 def 1 ay 1 '' Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 8590 be 3405 have 945 do 743 go 658 make 630 know 614 say 583 come 530 see 508 take 461 give 383 write 351 look 318 find 295 seem 280 tell 272 leave 238 think 236 hear 234 love 233 speak 217 feel 212 bring 196 call 196 become 194 read 184 keep 180 live 179 sit 178 enter 177 stand 177 die 168 turn 165 let 156 get 151 fall 148 follow 145 begin 145 bear 136 hold 132 pass 128 ask 126 appear 125 put 124 lie 120 send 116 receive 112 draw 110 set 109 meet Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1897 not 693 so 529 little 488 more 429 now 416 up 390 out 385 then 349 own 324 first 317 never 305 only 304 old 299 well 295 good 292 other 292 great 285 here 277 very 276 as 266 too 261 still 239 long 226 most 222 much 221 young 203 new 193 back 190 again 184 once 182 ever 182 even 179 many 178 sweet 178 just 177 always 175 down 169 there 161 such 160 beautiful 158 last 157 soon 151 true 151 away 137 dear 133 happy 127 enough 125 yet 121 same 121 in Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 80 good 51 most 49 least 25 great 21 high 14 slight 13 early 10 fair 10 Most 8 lovely 8 bad 7 young 7 simple 7 happy 7 dear 6 sweet 6 eld 5 true 5 noble 5 large 5 hard 5 fine 4 old 4 near 4 mild 4 bright 3 strong 3 strange 3 snowy 3 pleasant 3 late 3 holy 3 full 3 faint 3 deep 3 cheap 3 bl 2 wise 2 wild 2 weak 2 pure 2 proud 2 nice 2 lively 2 keen 2 grave 2 gentle 2 foul 2 extreme 2 dark Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 175 most 17 well 11 least 1 goest 1 easiest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 _ is _ 5 time went on 4 poe did not 4 poe was very 3 _ do _ 3 _ living _ 3 edgar was not 3 years went on 2 _ are _ 2 _ was _ 2 _ was again 2 allan did not 2 edgar was about 2 eyes took in 2 face gave place 2 heart did n''t 2 life is forfeit 2 life was not 2 life was so 2 life was very 2 poe had not 2 poe was never 2 poe was not 2 poe was now 2 poe was still 2 room was ready 2 virginia was delighted 1 _ are wonderful 1 _ be _ 1 _ be dumb 1 _ be happy 1 _ did not 1 _ do n''t 1 _ does not 1 _ doing _ 1 _ go _ 1 _ had breath 1 _ knew _ 1 _ know _ 1 _ lives _ 1 _ love _ 1 _ loved alone 1 _ see _ 1 _ spoken _ 1 _ take _ 1 _ was about 1 _ was all 1 _ was different 1 _ was home 1 _ was never Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ was not here 1 boy is not ready 1 day ''s not worth 1 edgar had no dogs 1 edgar was not fond 1 eye is not more 1 faces is not infallible 1 heart is no more 1 life was not so 1 man spoke no word 1 men had no idea 1 men were not as 1 poe had no idea 1 poe had no manuscript 1 poe had not only 1 poe had not yet 1 poe is no relation 1 poe was not popular 1 time ''s not ripe 1 virginia was not mentally 1 work was not at 1 world had no use 1 world was not yet A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 11249 author = Cody, Sherwin title = Four Famous American Writers: Washington Irving, Edgar Allan Poe, James Russell Lowell, Bayard Taylor A Book for Young Americans date = keywords = Allan; Bayard; Edgar; England; Irving; London; Lowell; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Poe; Taylor; Washington; York; american; chapter; great; life; time; year summary = As soon as he reached New York, Irving went to the governor and But now, fifty years after his death, we see how great a man Poe was. When Poe was young he was not a very remarkable poet; but, as years When one day he went home with this friend, he met Mrs. Stanard, a lovely, gentle, and gracious woman, was thrilled by the The next time his friend went to see Poe he In the preface to this volume, Poe says that the poems were written Says Poe: "He has been at all times a true friend to "The Raven" was published in New York just two years before Mrs. Poe write, his work was not at all good; as years went on, he learned by like Poe who writes to illustrate and explain some great principle. Poe had the hardest time of his life when he was at New York, living id = 23234 author = Dargan, Olive Tilford title = Semiramis, and Other Plays date = keywords = Artavan; Clemm; Edgar; God; Heaven; Helen; Khosrove; Maximilian; Mrs.; Ninus; Poe; Salm; Sem; Semiramis; Virginia; enter summary = Sol. My lord shall find me watching, night or day! Sem. Tear out thy heart Lest thou offend the gods that gave thee life, Sem. Wouldst save thy life? Come, and thy fallen father shall be brave Sem. Sir, I forgive thee, for thou knowest not Sem. I bring a hand, with yours inlocked, shall reach Sem. Thou art great Ninus! If thou dost Hope to know my love! Shall freely live, and die by no man''s hand! Shall freely live, and die by no man''s hand! Nin. Thou''rt welcome, and we thank thee for thy trust, Whose looks of love have brought our heart to rest! (Taking her hands) ''Tis you shall say, my wife. Poe. I would but touch the hand that soothes my blood--look in gently takes Poe''s hand from his face and kisses him) Re-enter Poe and Virginia from the garden as Mrs. Clemm id = 17389 author = Stanard, Mary Newton title = The Dreamer: A Romantic Rendering of the Life-Story of Edgar Allan Poe date = keywords = Allan; Baltimore; Billy; CHAPTER; Clemm; Dreamer; Eddie; Edgar; Goodfellow; Graham; Griswold; Heaven; Helen; John; Mother; Mr.; Mrs.; Muddie; New; Poe; Richmond; Rob; Valley; Virginia; York; eye; little; love summary = This study of Edgar Allan Poe, poet and man, is simply an attempt to white sleep, her little boy''s words of love and remembrance--though little boy from far Virginia, with the wistful grey eyes and the sunny went on opened a new world to Edgar the Dreamer, who now began, when he The boy grew pale, but made no reply, and in the eyes fixed on Mr. Allan''s face was a provokingly stubborn look. "For my little boy, Edgar, who must love Boston, the place of his birth, cathedral walked Edgar Poe, his pale face and deep eyes, passionate with For the first time since Edgar Poe had opened his eyes upon He, like Edgar Poe, had an open eye and the world and a red-letter day in the life of Edgar Poe. Edgar and Virginia Poe had known hard times in New York--the bitterness id = 33930 author = Weiss, Susan Archer Talley title = The Home Life of Poe date = keywords = Allan; Baltimore; CHAPTER; Clemm; Dr.; Edgar; Mackenzie; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Poe; Richmond; Shelton; Theatre; Virginia; York summary = church or family records is not known; and it is not likely that Mrs. Byrd, who was brought up with Rosalie Poe, could be mistaken on this account Poe saw very little if anything of Mrs. Stanard in the two Mackenzies and Mrs. Julia Mayo Cabell, wife of Poe''s schoolboy friend, evening of May 16, Mr. Cleland, with Mrs. Clemm, Poe and Virginia, left Another literary friend of Poe''s who visited the family in this time of According to Miss Poe, Mrs. Clemm was at this time dependent for her own husband or mother beside her, Mr. Poe reading a paper and Mrs. Clemm A lady who as a little girl knew Poe and his mother at this time said to We have seen that when Poe for the last time left Mrs. Whitman''s he went Some ten years after the death of Poe I received from Mrs. Clemm a