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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 15 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 7715 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 94 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 illustration 3 little 2 child 1 mother 1 look 1 lesson 1 ing 1 hedgehog 1 good 1 doll 1 baby 1 Wolf 1 Sacajawea 1 Rabbit 1 Pokey 1 Monkey 1 Mary 1 MAYHEW 1 Lewis 1 LESSON 1 John 1 Jessy 1 Jack 1 Indians 1 HARE 1 Epaminondas 1 Clark 1 Christmas 1 Chimborazo 1 Brother 1 BAKER 1 Angel Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 573 illustration 364 man 304 child 227 day 172 time 159 boy 152 tree 136 way 129 bird 122 mother 105 water 102 hand 100 horse 98 thing 95 morning 94 head 92 king 92 baby 91 soldier 88 one 82 house 81 night 79 girl 79 eye 77 people 77 gold 73 father 71 brother 69 dog 66 foot 65 word 64 year 63 princess 62 friend 62 doll 61 book 60 field 59 river 58 door 56 home 55 duck 54 cat 51 wood 51 bell 49 woman 48 wife 46 sun 46 place 45 bed 44 face Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 409 _ 258 | 79 Indians 67 Sacajawea 63 Captain 62 Brother 53 John 50 Rabbit 50 LESSON 46 Clark 44 Pokey 44 Hokey 44 Angel 41 Wolf 40 Lewis 37 Mary 36 Epaminondas 36 Christmas 32 Monkey 30 m 30 Master 29 y 27 SACAJAWEA 27 Chimborazo 25 ing 25 Tom 25 King 25 HARE 25 Gray 24 Mama 23 West 22 Missouri 22 II 21 River 21 Little 20 e 20 New 20 Jessy 20 God 20 Donal 19 Pedro 19 Ann 18 ed 18 Hope 18 Falls 17 u 17 Nat 17 Betty 16 Sue 16 Robert Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1263 he 1153 i 1037 it 908 you 900 they 658 she 382 them 379 him 298 me 234 we 185 her 72 us 57 himself 23 themselves 22 one 21 myself 19 herself 10 yourself 5 yours 4 itself 4 ''s 3 ourselves 3 his 2 washed 2 theirs 2 thee 2 moc 2 mine 2 em 1 yer 1 ya 1 wigwam 1 ti 1 this:-- 1 think?--they 1 out,-- 1 ours 1 boldly,-- 1 bandits Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 3421 be 1084 have 812 say 658 do 545 go 461 see 439 come 286 make 231 look 203 take 200 know 189 give 174 get 163 think 162 run 159 tell 151 find 144 ask 140 put 136 cry 131 sit 121 hear 92 let 91 play 89 like 88 call 87 walk 86 stand 84 eat 77 keep 75 want 73 leave 73 bring 72 try 68 seem 68 fall 66 watch 64 grow 61 turn 61 live 60 begin 57 show 56 wish 56 sing 56 fly 55 wait 55 lie 55 carry 53 hold 53 cut Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 740 not 392 little 347 so 314 then 272 very 263 up 234 out 229 good 206 now 176 old 145 just 138 down 136 long 133 white 133 here 124 well 121 away 118 other 117 great 109 again 99 as 98 more 92 too 92 never 92 first 87 there 87 only 85 off 83 much 82 new 76 soon 76 many 76 fast 75 all 74 on 74 happy 73 dear 70 last 69 back 68 poor 66 large 61 in 61 beautiful 61 always 60 still 60 fine 59 next 57 hard 57 big 56 home Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 41 good 10 young 9 fine 7 little 6 least 6 eld 6 dear 5 most 5 great 4 small 4 bad 3 pure 3 large 3 big 2 loud 2 j 2 happy 1 wild 1 white 1 warm 1 temp 1 swift 1 sunny 1 said:-- 1 queer 1 pretty 1 old 1 midfor 1 mean 1 l 1 jolly 1 horrid 1 high 1 grand 1 farth 1 fair 1 dr 1 deep 1 dark 1 brave 1 black 1 Most Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 31 most 5 well Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 www.archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.archive.org/details/eightstoriesfori00portiala Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 children have just 4 people did not 2 baby is highly 2 birds are better 2 boy did not 2 children are out 2 horse is savage 2 indians did not 2 man went home 2 mother was very 2 soldiers were happy 1 * am eg 1 _ am _ 1 _ are _ 1 _ are pretty 1 _ do _ 1 _ have _ 1 _ think _ 1 _ walking off 1 babies do not 1 baby are always 1 baby did not 1 baby does not 1 baby is about 1 baby is busy 1 baby is so 1 baby is still 1 baby takes hold 1 baby was ill 1 bird came in 1 bird has big 1 birds are already 1 birds are much 1 birds sat silent 1 birds stood near 1 birds were big 1 birds were dead 1 birds were kind 1 birds were so 1 birds were very 1 boy ran on 1 boy run wild 1 boy sat still 1 boy sit down 1 boy stands still 1 boy went drip 1 boy went glad 1 boys are all 1 boys are out 1 boys came home Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 house was not far 1 indians were not ready 1 king had no other 1 king is no better 1 man made no reply 1 man was not so 1 times was not enough A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 11065 author = Anonymous title = Aunt Mary''s Primer Adorned with a Hundred and Twenty Pretty Pictures date = keywords = illustration; lesson; mother summary = When the child knows that word, then point to the next, best to pronounce each syllable separately, _car, pet_,--_po, ker_,--and the child reads the word, and indeed, wherever you can, try to associate Show a child the word _coach_ as a "Lesson on the Senses," make the child understand how to feel cold and [Illustration: A Black-bird.] Make a line like this *I. [Illustration: Here is a House close to a Country Church.] [Illustration: This is a Water-mill, and this is a Wind-mill.] [Illustration: A rustic Bridge, close by some Men making a Hay-stack.] [Illustration: A Man lighting a Gas-lamp.] [Illustration: A Man Ploughing.] [Illustration: A Man thrashing Corn.] [Illustration: Men and Women making Hay.] [Illustration: Betty milks the Cows, while John cuts down trees.] [Illustration: A Man on a Raft.] [Illustration: Men shoot Partridges.] [Illustration: The Horse runs fast.] [Illustration: This dog is called a Spaniel.] [Illustration: The Goldfinch is pretty.] id = 32467 author = Anonymous title = The Medley date = keywords = illustration summary = Large ships have four anchors, small vessels two. called the anchor of the soul, because, as the ship is held by the anchor which lies in the sea, so the soul is supported by Hope which is As the wings blow round, they carry There is a wind-mill in Boston, which stands in Sea-street, near the new There is a steam-mill next to the iron-works at South-Boston, which In war, the soldiers carry a Flag waving over their heads, Soldiers live in tents, when they march from home; and at night Four soldiers live in one tent, and When the cannon is fired only for the purpose of noise, no ball is put day it strikes twelve, and in the middle of the night also. The barge has what is called a round sweet, in a calm day, to sail on the water, feeling the soft wind id = 32662 author = Anonymous title = Eight Stories for Isabel date = keywords = illustration summary = Here is a Steam Boat sailing on the water. and strong that it can be made to move the great wheels which are on the outside of the boat, and these great wheels have wide paddles to them, I knew a little girl that got upon the back of a chair, when bucket, and a rope; and water is got from it by putting down the bucket, and pulling the rope over the wheel. This is the picture of a very strong Arm, holding a great hammer. fiery bull, and makes them obedient, to drag our carts and chaises. Puss is seeing her pretty face in the looking-glass. Cats will always wash their faces once a day, and look clean and neat, and face clean, and never play in the dirt. the chaise, he walks with the tracks and the carts, and he canters and id = 38115 author = Anonymous title = Book of 50 Pictures date = keywords = illustration summary = [Illustration: Chinese.] BOOK OF PICTURES. [Illustration: Peacock.] [Illustration: Cow and Calf.] [Illustration: A Fine Colt.] [Illustration: The Lion roars.] [Illustration: The Zebra is a small horse.] [Illustration: Monkey drinking from a glass.] [Illustration: Mule] [Illustration: Cow] [Illustration: Turkey] [Illustration: Goose] [Illustration: Duck] [Illustration: Turtle] [Illustration: Beehive] [Illustration: Lamb] [Illustration: Bell] [Illustration: Steamship] [Illustration: Boy and Horse.] [Illustration: Dog Barking.] [Illustration: An Ox.] [Illustration: An Ox.] [Illustration: An Ox.] [Illustration: An Ox.] [Illustration: Car] [Illustration: Engine] [Illustration: Engine] [Illustration: Cart] [Illustration: Vase] [Illustration: Pocket-book] [Illustration: Pitcher] [Illustration: Horse] [Illustration: Watch] [Illustration: Dog] [Illustration: Wheat] [Illustration: Bonnet] [Illustration: Rose] [Illustration: Hat] [Illustration: House] [Illustration: Moon] [Illustration: Ship] [Illustration: Stove] [Illustration: Kangaroo.] [Illustration: The Owl.] [Illustration: Fox and Owl.] [Illustration: Bird and Bee.] [Illustration: Cat and Dog.] [Illustration: Mouse and Monkey.] [Illustration: Bird Singing.] DIARIES for each year, FAMILY EXPENDITURE DIARIES, BLANK NOTE BOOKS, BLANK RECEIPT BOOKS, TOWN RECORDS, COUNTY RECORDS, COURT AND JUSTICE WRITS, id = 5742 author = Chandler, Katherine title = The Bird-Woman of the Lewis and Clark Expedition date = keywords = Clark; Indians; Lewis; Sacajawea summary = This Indian woman took the white men across streams. The white men Sacajawea went with were soldiers. Sacajawea showed the captains how to make friends with the Indians. Sacajawea told the soldiers how the Indians hunted them. One day six of the soldiers saw a big bear lying on a little hill near One day Captain Clark took Sacajawea and her husband with him to look Sacajawea told Captain Clark all about the yamp plant, as her tribe knew Sacajawea said the white men had many things the Indians would like. If they found a good way over the mountains, the white men would send Sacajawea said the white men were kind to her and her baby. Sacajawea came to Captain Clark and said, "May I go, too? The Indians on the bank across the river saw what the soldiers wanted. Captain Clark sent ten men down the Missouri River the way they had id = 14642 author = McGuffey, William Holmes title = McGuffey''s Eclectic Primer, Revised Edition date = keywords = LESSON; illustration summary = Ann can fan Nat. LESSON IV. [Illustration: Boy running and old man, with gout, sitting.] A rat ran at Nat. Can Ann fan the lad? [Illustration: Boy and dog watching cat on post.] [Illustration: Boy sitting on fence, watching frog sitting on log.] [Illustration: Boy and dog chasing horse.] [Illustration: Cat watching hen, watching eggs in nest.] [Illustration: Girl watching ducks on pond.] [Illustration: Girl lead old, blind man.] [Illustration: Two girls sitting by tree, playing with dolls.] [Illustration: Cat watching bird and eggs in nest on tree top.] [Illustration: Bird perched on girl''s hand.] [Illustration: Boys playing in snow by a canal. [Illustration: Two boys, one sawing, the other chopping logs.] [Illustration: Girl riding in small cart pulled by two goats.] [Illustration: Boys running in front of burning house.] The girls and boys all love Miss May; she is so kind to them. [Illustration: Boy fishing from log.] [Illustration: Small girl watching a tree. id = 43336 author = Richards, Laura Elizabeth Howe title = The Pig Brother, and Other Fables and Stories A Supplementary Reader for the Fourth School Year date = keywords = Angel; Chimborazo; Jessy; John; Pokey; child; little; look summary = "I don''t know what you mean!" said the child; but he went out into the One day the boy''s father called him and said: "You have been a good all about the playground, "to look like gold," he said. "Mother," said the child; "are there really angels?" "I am not little any more!" said the child. "You are the dearest little thing I ever saw!" she said. "I have been looking at the boat," said the first child. "Little boy," said the nurse one day, "you would be far better at work. "What is the matter, little boy?" she asked; for he looked like a "Nurse told me to weed my garden," said the little boy. "Little Boy," said his mother, "will you please go out in the garden "My dear child," said the Angel-who-attends-to things, "why are you oh dear!" said the child. "Look!" said the child. "Look!" said the child. id = 15170 author = Withers, Sarah title = The Child''s World: Third Reader date = keywords = Brother; Christmas; Epaminondas; HARE; Mary; Monkey; Rabbit; Wolf; good; hedgehog; illustration; little summary = Once at sunset an old man came through the forest where the poplar trees "Let us fly away together!" the mother bird said. One day Mary''s mother said, "Aunt Dilsey, Mary needs a new dress, and I The kind shepherd said, "I will." Then he led the old white sheep to the Soon the spinners said, "The little girl wants a new dress. emperor walked under the trees, she said, "I believe I could find a way Brother Rabbit said, "I''d like to know what they are talking about." So When Little Brother came to the great stone church and looked up at the One day Gray Wolf said to Wild Cat, "Let us watch the Rabbit and see Then the rabbit said, "Brother Wolf, I know a new dance. "Just as you please," said the old duck, and she went away. "Good morning, old man," said the stranger. "Good morning," said the old man. id = 11877 author = nan title = Monkey Jack and Other Stories date = keywords = Jack; illustration; ing summary = I think the lit-tle girl on her knees is pay-ing for-feits. Tom, Jack, and lit-tle Meg watched it for a long time. Old Win-ter is com-ing; a-lack, a-lack! A fun-ny old fel-low is Win-ter, I trow, Old Win-ter is blow-ing his gusts a-long, She looked back, and there were the laugh-ing fa-ces of Bell and Car-rie. a-bout af-ter the peo-ple like a lit-tle dog. To this farm-house came a boy and girl named Ned and Lau-ra, to spend the dark, and he was go-ing home, skates in hand, when a poor boy a-bout as The boy went glad-ly, and on the way Frank asked him ma-ny ques-tions. bed to sleep in that night, and next morn-ing the two boys went to see said that there was noth-ing like coun-try air to make him well a-gain. Then, com-ing back, he took the bas-ket and all the ap-ples that lay id = 22399 author = nan title = The Fireside Picture Alphabet or Humour and Droll Moral Tales; or Words & their Meanings Illustrated date = keywords = BAKER; MAYHEW; illustration summary = Publish the following list of new and beautiful Illustrated Juveniles, delightful moral stories, with comic Illustrations. With New and Original Comic Illustrations, Music, &c. Illustrated with Plans for Laying out the Grounds and forming Clubs, Also, Rules and Regulations which govern several Base Ball Clubs. [Illustration: LAUGH AND LEARN] Of imitation by the boy Illustrations of Natural History. BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED. "This book takes up the story of ''The Swiss Family Robinson,'' and story is preserved with admirable effect; and if any thing, ''Willis, "''The Swiss Family Robinson'' never seemed to quite finish its story, and the author of ''Willis, the Pilot,'' has hit upon a happy idea in who have been entranced by the tale of the Swiss Family, and will here THE NEW GAME MAYHEW AND BAKER, 208 WASHINGTON STREET, MAYHEW AND BAKER, 208 WASHINGTON STREET, MAYHEW AND BAKER, 208 WASHINGTON STREET, MAYHEW AND BAKER, 208 WASHINGTON STREET, id = 26164 author = nan title = Child-Land: Picture-Pages for the Little Ones date = keywords = baby; child; doll; illustration; little summary = Mama is giving little Mary her first lesson in walking. Our little friends are busy this morning, for dolly''s washing must be done Our two little friends have been out to-day with their mama, to buy some for papa would not like to find his little girls absent when he comes Little Lucy is helping mama to make the nice jams this morning. Baby is sitting in his little bathing tub, waiting for his sister to come The two little sisters are having fine fun in the nursery this morning. The little sisters have been giving dolly a ride in their basket-chaise. Even baby sister is going with her little dolly, and doggie Maria is waiting for her little cousin to come and play with her in papa''s knows her little sister will like the ride. Mama is always ready to please her little baby girl in any way she can.