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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 8 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 5887 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 81 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 time 6 day 4 german 4 English 4 England 3 camp 2 turkish 2 good 2 british 2 Turks 2 N.C.O. 2 Huns 2 French 1 way 1 water 1 sentry 1 place 1 officer 1 look 1 know 1 frenchman 1 find 1 escape 1 come 1 belgian 1 Yozgad 1 Wood 1 Wolfe 1 Virginia 1 Union 1 Turkey 1 Trippe 1 Ted 1 Taylor 1 Sutherland 1 Ströhen 1 Smith 1 Sergeant 1 Russians 1 River 1 P.M. 1 Old 1 O''Brien 1 Nobby 1 Medlicott 1 March 1 Man 1 Looney 1 Lieutenant 1 Lewis Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1298 time 1186 day 845 man 819 night 712 way 625 hour 598 place 573 road 539 water 523 camp 507 officer 475 house 461 prisoner 444 mile 427 foot 424 room 423 one 392 sentry 391 side 389 thing 369 country 368 guard 348 food 332 wood 331 party 327 yard 315 morning 308 line 297 village 284 soldier 264 ground 256 minute 250 hand 250 door 235 war 234 part 228 light 224 prison 224 course 218 fact 218 direction 216 nothing 215 river 213 end 208 people 207 something 206 window 203 chance 201 tree 200 order Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 753 _ 369 Germans 185 Germany 148 English 132 England 131 Smith 131 German 105 Cochrane 96 Buckley 92 Kicq 88 Turks 76 Russians 76 Nobby 74 Grunt 73 hut 73 Johnny 72 Sutherland 70 Medlicott 70 Bromley 68 Trippe 67 Huns 66 Taylor 64 Commandant 61 French 60 Holland 60 Belgium 59 N.C.O. 58 Turk 56 Hun 56 Fox 55 Ted 55 P.M. 53 Yozgad 53 Fort 53 CHAPTER 52 Crefeld 52 Appell 50 C. 49 A.M. 47 Union 47 September 46 Huyliger 46 Hepler 45 British 44 Turkey 44 Lieutenant 42 Looney 42 John 41 May 41 July Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 7574 we 7131 i 4532 it 2790 he 2253 us 2017 they 1663 me 1185 them 955 him 628 you 212 myself 207 she 203 ourselves 143 himself 101 one 94 themselves 83 itself 78 her 30 mine 20 ours 12 oneself 8 theirs 7 herself 6 his 5 yourself 5 ''s 4 yours 1 we''ll 1 treatment.--when 1 thyself 1 thee 1 my 1 find 1 fellows!--they 1 em 1 ''em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 16811 be 6698 have 1630 do 1522 go 1354 get 1331 make 1325 come 1224 see 1065 take 855 find 755 know 743 think 735 say 661 give 598 look 574 leave 497 pass 475 tell 464 seem 415 hear 413 walk 400 keep 365 follow 356 feel 329 turn 321 put 321 begin 320 try 309 cross 306 reach 300 start 300 escape 295 lie 290 run 287 stand 279 ask 262 bring 256 eat 252 decide 247 carry 245 use 242 work 241 become 236 send 233 wait 231 call 217 show 209 fall 201 move 195 speak Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2734 not 1145 up 1082 very 1040 out 1027 so 896 then 866 more 737 only 656 good 594 few 581 german 576 about 569 down 566 first 562 much 560 other 544 as 538 little 518 well 518 on 502 soon 492 now 486 just 462 back 444 again 443 away 436 long 425 however 414 off 403 there 396 most 387 small 383 great 377 too 370 many 348 still 338 next 324 old 323 last 319 in 314 quite 311 far 300 once 299 almost 293 several 281 never 277 same 275 even 262 rather 254 over Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 146 good 145 most 78 least 40 near 37 bad 33 slight 31 great 26 Most 15 high 12 late 12 large 10 small 8 safe 7 long 5 hard 5 early 5 black 4 old 4 low 4 fine 4 eld 4 deep 3 short 3 pleasant 3 heavy 3 cold 3 big 2 wise 2 wild 2 tall 2 strong 2 stout 2 quick 2 mere 2 manif 2 light 2 hot 2 happy 2 game 2 farth 2 close 2 bright 2 bare 1 young 1 wet 1 warm 1 vile 1 true 1 tough 1 topmost Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 251 most 19 least 12 well 1 brightest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 digital.library.upenn.edu 1 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/ 1 http://archive.org/details/fourfiftymilesto00john Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 germans did not 6 feet were sore 4 country was very 4 germans were very 4 time went on 3 germans were not 3 guard did not 3 guard turned out 3 man came out 3 man was ready 3 night was clear 3 officer came up 3 water was very 2 _ took place 2 camp was about 2 country was so 2 day was close 2 day was very 2 feet did not 2 feet were so 2 germans are extremely 2 germans were so 2 germans were still 2 guard was not 2 men kept up 2 morning was faintly 2 night came on 2 night was dark 2 officers were not 2 officers were usually 2 one was busy 2 one was not 2 one was present 2 prisoners were well 2 road going south 2 road was smooth 2 room was about 2 thing was still 2 things were certainly 2 water was about 2 water was too 2 water was warm 2 woods were dense 2 woods were so 1 _ are _ 1 _ came small 1 _ do _ 1 _ had _ 1 _ had good 1 _ taking rounds Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 sentry took no notice 1 camp were not strong 1 country is not so 1 country was not so 1 food was no worse 1 germans did not therefore 1 germans had no rights 1 germans took no notice 1 germans was not only 1 germans were not so 1 night was no easy 1 officers made no effort 1 officers took no further 1 one had no passport 1 one has not time 1 parties were not popular 1 prisoners were not so 1 time were not so 1 water knew no bounds 1 way was not feasible A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 35724 author = Caunter, John Alan Lyde title = 13 Days: The Chronicle of an Escape from a German Prison date = keywords = Blank; Boche; Crefeld; England; English; Fox; French; camp; day; german; place; time summary = the time and place, and the type of German who comes into contact with Periodically the camp used to be visited by German officers on leave officer''s great-coat, he was dressed in it, when taken prisoner with moment when the German boy was looking the other way, and the old man then the German officers kept their eyes open for smoke for a time The Crab one day saw an English officer smoking and took his name, Germans turned the camp upside down, this time ordering its complete into the German half of the camp, and very soon after their arrival At about eight o''clock the German officer arrived, followed by a hours during which prisoners generally move, a fact that the Germans having crossed two rivers and got miles from the camp in which my only north of the place at which I passed through the German frontier line, id = 34421 author = Evans, A. J. (Alfred John) title = The Escaping Club date = keywords = Appell; Buckley; Commandant; English; Feldwebel; Fort; French; Germans; Ingolstadt; Kicq; Medlicott; N.C.O.; Turks; come; day; escape; frenchman; sentry; time; turkish summary = the Germans better than we did, had disappeared by the time he had got when things were looking really nasty an officer came up and took us best German camp for food that I was in, and I think it would be days afterwards the Germans got to hear of this, and gave orders that uniform, a prison guard I should think, turned round and looked at me in Two days later we went over into the old room in which Long, Nichol, and had escaped from his prison camp dressed as a German officer: another nuisance to the Germans at any time night or day with equal good humor. Germans said that they would be given out on Monday, as a certain time Five minutes later the Germans placed sentries in front of the I had left the prison camp by that time, but I believe the Germans id = 50425 author = Johnston, Maurice Andrew Brackenreed title = Four-Fifty Miles to Freedom date = keywords = A.M.; Angora; Bey; Changri; Cochrane; Ellis; Grunt; Johnny; Looney; Man; Nobby; Old; P.M.; Turkey; Turks; Yozgad; day; find; time; turkish; water summary = It was not possible to keep the work going at night, for from time to scheme miscarried, we took these boxes into the mess-room at the S.E. corner of the barracks; and as the time of departure drew near, went even went so far as to soak the feet several times a day in a strong join up with Nobby''s party, having arranged to come down to the water him the water Grunt took some opium and slept for half an hour in the we would come to water on that night''s march after four hours, and that south, marched for an hour, taking it in turns to carry Grunt''s pack. on Cochrane and Nobby went off to look for water near a small grove of fact about camels going for many days without water only holds good the way of villages or likely places for water, so that, with the short id = 27229 author = Knight, Gerald Featherstone title = "Brother Bosch", an Airman''s Escape from Germany date = keywords = England; English; Hun; Huns; Lieutenant; N.C.O.; Ströhen; Wolfe; british; camp; day; german; good; officer; time; way summary = pleasant." On arriving at a small house I was received by a German German coat I had received on the way had been again in its turn learning some new German words likely to be of use, such as "wire At a quarter to six a German flying officer entered our room and German flying officer on leaving had told the commandant that I was should have to walk to the camp, but the German officer was, luckily, that in three days'' time we were to proceed to an "All British" camp British officers arrived, bound for this camp, they received time five Italian officers were warned to leave the next day. Outside the camp, on our way to the station we looked back and saw the small group of German officers, in the centre of the camp. prison camp containing over four hundred German officers, it would not id = 50970 author = Newlin, W. H. (William Henry) title = An Account of the Escape of Six Federal Soldiers from Prison at Danville, Va. date = keywords = Childs; Company; February; Hepler; John; Lewis; March; River; Smith; Sutherland; Taylor; Trippe; Union; Virginia; Wood summary = fire-place we saw a woman in her night clothing, watching us pass. discovering it was nearly day, we halted in the woods, near the road went northward, still further from the road we had left at day-break, little to the left, we soon reached a point directly west of the and followed the road north-west a little more than a mile. rapidly through the woods near the road until we had gone another mile, South of the road, about half a mile, we saw a space of ground covered Just at dark we left our hiding-place and went directly to the road. to a cross-road near midnight we stopped a few minutes to eat a little left the road and entered the woods, going in a south-east course a road, not wishing to reach the first house too early in the night. Near eleven o''clock that night, March 8th, we left the house of id = 42490 author = O''Brien, Pat title = Outwitting the Hun: My Escape from a German Prison Camp date = keywords = Belgium; Courtrai; England; Holland; Huns; Huyliger; O''Brien; belgian; british; day; german; time summary = right his machine and come out of it; but if it happens over German I knew was when I came to in a German hospital the following morning at days, on account of the big push that was taking place at that time of German officers visited me that morning and told me that my machine The next day some German flying officers visited me, and I must say That same day a German officer was brought into the hospital and put in I asked him one day what he thought the German people would do after That night I came to a river, and as it was the first time my clothes German soldiers were passing the house at all hours of the day. so many days behind the German lines after I had escaped that they I came to just in time to hear the German guard coming, and the thought id = 12880 author = Simmons, Mervin C. title = Three Times and Out Told by Private Simmons, Written by Nellie L. McClung date = keywords = Barrack; British; Bromley; Canada; Edwards; England; English; Giessen; Russians; Sergeant; Ted; camp; day; german; good; know; look; time summary = When a young man whom I had not seen until that day came to see me at the time, though we wondered, as the day went on, why we got no Soon I saw, looking down into the trench, some of the boys I knew, looking out, saw the guard coming with a pail of water, and cried As soon as the morning came, I went outside and watched a dull red, Before long, the Canadian Red Cross parcels began to come, and I got One day, a fellow called Bromley who came from Toronto, and who was The day came when we were going to volunteer--Sunday at roll-call. each night about ten-thirty when the day-shift men came in. One night, when some of our fellows came in from work, cold, wet, and came on guard again, and I knew he did not want any of the other