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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 7117 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 93 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Mr. 4 God 3 Mrs. 3 Jim 2 PROJECT 2 Julia 2 Arthur 1 man 1 look 1 little 1 like 1 italian 1 good 1 come 1 York 1 YOUNG 1 William 1 Waring 1 WAITER 1 VALENTINE 1 Toland 1 Ted 1 Tarbury 1 Tanny 1 Studdiford 1 Street 1 Stephen 1 Sonia 1 Sister 1 Sisson 1 Sir 1 Senator 1 San 1 Sally 1 Robert 1 Richie 1 Reynolds 1 Ralph 1 Phil 1 Phebe 1 Page 1 PHILIP 1 New 1 Nanna 1 Mother 1 Monsignor 1 Mona 1 Miss 1 Mark 1 Marchesa Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1513 man 882 time 834 woman 739 thing 726 eye 722 day 706 life 690 face 630 mother 595 hand 550 room 545 child 542 way 522 girl 484 year 475 heart 455 nothing 447 people 419 love 400 moment 398 night 389 house 379 something 354 friend 351 voice 350 word 350 father 346 door 343 one 333 arm 327 boy 315 head 311 world 308 wife 290 anything 288 place 279 table 271 chair 245 sir 244 money 243 soul 241 morning 237 light 236 home 235 window 233 mind 229 husband 227 hour 221 work 220 name Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1799 Julia 1108 _ 1027 Jim 836 Aaron 771 Mrs. 724 Arthur 485 Miss 466 Lilly 450 God 414 Phebe 407 Mr. 379 Dillon 353 Toland 276 Barbara 268 Endicott 249 Bessie 228 Emeline 220 VALENTINE 181 Horace 179 Nanna 178 Honora 176 MRS 175 Mark 175 CLANDON 174 Valentine 173 DOLLY 170 Curran 165 Livingstone 159 Monsignor 159 George 159 Anne 147 CRAMPTON 145 Clandon 144 PHILIP 143 Crampton 142 Louis 138 Gloria 128 Anna 126 Richie 123 Josephine 122 Sonia 120 Ledwith 118 Aunt 117 Lord 115 Waring 115 Francis 114 William 112 Ralph 104 Judy 104 Edith Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8151 i 7513 you 6761 he 6248 it 5468 she 2719 him 2251 her 2037 me 1778 they 1280 we 998 them 519 himself 450 us 372 herself 197 myself 173 yourself 127 one 96 themselves 76 itself 45 mine 38 yours 33 ''em 26 hers 26 ''s 25 his 19 ourselves 17 thee 12 oneself 8 ye 5 you''ll 5 meself 5 i''m 4 you''re 4 yerself 4 ours 4 em 2 yourselves 2 you''ve 2 yez''ll 2 thyself 2 s''ll 2 hisself 2 d''you 1 ye''d 1 we''d 1 thy 1 this?--what 1 them---- 1 theirselves 1 theirs Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 18222 be 7251 have 4340 do 4187 say 2292 go 1858 know 1696 come 1314 see 1311 think 1223 get 1190 make 1104 look 1017 take 826 give 770 tell 747 feel 718 want 654 ask 599 sit 586 find 572 seem 474 leave 467 let 459 put 448 stand 444 love 406 begin 405 like 404 keep 403 turn 340 hear 319 bring 303 talk 297 call 293 mean 291 laugh 291 answer 287 rise 271 cry 261 try 260 speak 251 live 244 watch 225 help 222 fall 220 run 220 meet 215 show 213 play 212 smile Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5826 not 1801 so 1433 little 1287 then 1164 up 1065 now 1011 very 929 never 904 only 877 out 858 more 805 good 790 old 785 just 694 own 670 well 651 down 634 too 634 again 600 here 598 long 595 much 570 as 560 all 558 young 556 back 550 other 534 away 463 great 455 still 451 there 445 on 420 first 411 right 408 quite 394 in 386 even 363 always 347 off 338 ever 335 last 299 new 297 dear 290 enough 288 perhaps 287 rather 284 once 283 same 270 dark 265 really Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 128 good 79 least 61 most 23 great 22 dear 22 bad 16 old 16 near 16 high 16 fine 15 happy 13 slight 13 late 11 young 11 Most 10 lovely 9 faint 8 deep 7 sweet 7 clever 6 noble 5 wild 5 bitter 4 simple 4 nice 4 long 4 early 4 brave 4 big 3 warm 3 ugly 3 tiny 3 rich 3 proud 3 mere 3 mean 3 low 3 innermost 3 handsome 3 dark 2 wise 2 topmost 2 strong 2 southw 2 small 2 poor 2 loud 2 lofty 2 l 2 intense Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 169 most 14 well 5 least 1 writhe 1 near 1 humbled 1 hard 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 18 _ is _ 15 _ do n''t 12 julia did not 8 _ was _ 8 aaron did not 8 jim did not 7 _ are _ 7 julia said thoughtfully 7 julia was not 6 _ did _ 5 _ am _ 5 _ have _ 5 arthur did not 5 face was very 5 lilly did not 4 _ do _ 4 _ does _ 4 _ knew _ 4 aaron looked up 4 julia was silent 3 _ had _ 3 _ is n''t 3 face did not 3 god is good 3 jim came in 3 jim does n''t 3 julia said quickly 3 julia was too 3 julia went down 3 julia went on 3 julia went upstairs 3 life is n''t 3 life was not 3 men did not 3 phebe was quite 3 room was hot 3 woman came back 3 years went by 2 _ feel _ 2 _ have n''t 2 _ know _ 2 _ look _ 2 _ see _ 2 _ tell _ 2 aaron felt very 2 aaron sat alone 2 aaron sat down 2 aaron sat on 2 aaron sat still 2 aaron was almost Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 jim had no faults 2 phebe was not quite 1 aaron made no reply 1 aaron seemed not even 1 arthur found no difficulty 1 arthur made no comment 1 arthur made no inquiries 1 arthur was not striking 1 days are not long 1 face was no longer 1 girls are no good 1 girls are not med 1 girls had no time 1 god is not able 1 hand was not very 1 hands were no longer 1 heart is not perfect 1 jim has no preconcerted 1 jim was no less 1 jim were not angels 1 julia did not very 1 julia had no choice 1 julia had no excuse 1 julia had no feeling 1 julia had no idea 1 julia had no sooner 1 julia made no answer 1 julia thought no experience 1 julia was not late 1 julia was not quite 1 julia was not self 1 julia was not very 1 life had no problems 1 life was not dead 1 life was not very 1 life were no stronger 1 lilly are not common 1 lilly does not even 1 lilly standing not far 1 love were not dead 1 man gave no sign 1 man has no handicaps 1 man is not only 1 men have no discretion 1 mother is not here 1 people were not worried 1 room was not really 1 thing is no more 1 thing was no more 1 years were not as A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 4520 author = Lawrence, D. H. (David Herbert) title = Aaron''s Rod date = keywords = Aaron; Angus; Argyle; Arthur; Colonel; Florence; Francis; Franks; God; Jim; Josephine; Julia; Lady; Lilly; London; Major; Marchesa; Mr.; Robert; Sir; Sisson; Tanny; William; come; good; italian; like; look; man summary = "Don''t look at me like that--so long--" said Josephine, in her "I like looking at you," said Jim, his smile becoming more malicious. "You won''t stay long," said the old man, looking round a little "Doesn''t SHE love you?" said Aaron to Jim amused, indicating Josephine. "You believe in love, don''t you?" said Jim, sitting down near Aaron, and "Come up to Hampstead to lunch with us," said Lilly to Aaron. "You''ll go to bed, won''t you?" said Lilly to Aaron, when the door was "Mr. Lilly has gone away?" said Aaron. "It is certainly a good thing for society that men like you and Mr. Lilly are not common," said Sir William, laughing. "Why, yes," said Aaron, looking at her again. "Very likely," said Aaron. "Don''t you think," said Aaron, turning to Lilly, "that however you try "Or one leaves her, like Aaron," said Lilly. id = 4787 author = Norris, Kathleen Thompson title = The Story of Julia Page date = keywords = Alexander; Anna; Aunt; Barbara; Connie; Cox; Doctor; Emeline; Evelyn; George; God; Hazzard; Jim; Julia; Mama; Mark; Miss; Mother; Mr.; Mrs.; Page; Richie; Sally; San; Street; Studdiford; Tarbury; Ted; Toland; little summary = each child a dime, Julia kissed her little cousins good-bye, and Emeline "Say, listen, Con," said Julia, presently, "you know Mark Rosenthal?" _isn''t_ in love, it''s Jim!" said Miss Toland, who was a thin, gray-haired, "I-I''d like to have a cute little house," said Julia, with a shaky "I want you not to do that, Mark," said Julia gravely, moving a little "Mother, we want some air in here!" Julia said, going to a window. "Julia''s a great girl for fresh air," said Emeline. "You know you are nothing but a small boy, Jim," Julia said one day, "Look, Jim!" said Julia pitifully, not knowing whether to laugh or to "Happy?" Jim said to his wife one day, when Julia, looking the picture "Julia--of course I''ve not read Jim''s letter," Miss Toland said "Ask us to come again some day," Julia said. "Julia!" said Jim, at the door, "where are you?" id = 1125 author = Shakespeare, William title = All''s Well That Ends Well date = keywords = PROJECT summary = id = 1791 author = Shakespeare, William title = All''s Well That Ends Well date = keywords = PROJECT summary = id = 2175 author = Shaw, Bernard title = You Never Can Tell date = keywords = BOHUN; CLANDON; CRAMPTON; DOLLY; GLORIA; MRS; Mr.; PHILIP; Phil; VALENTINE; WAITER; YOUNG summary = PHILIP (throwing away Dolly''s arm and coming ill-humoredly towards Mrs. Clandon comes a little way into the room, looking round to see Mrs. Clandon takes the writing-table chair.) VALENTINE (looking dubiously at Mrs. Clandon). coming up to the terrace from the beach by the steps.) Here is Mrs. Clandon, sir. Mrs. Clandon comes forward looking round for her visitor, but passes (Gloria winces, and goes into the hotel without a word.) Come, Dolly. DOLLY (looking over Crampton''s right shoulder). (Mrs. Clandon and Gloria come (Mrs. Clandon and Gloria come places, Gloria next Crampton and Valentine next Mrs. Clandon.) Finch: table, Dolly next her mother, Phil next his father, and McComas between We know what Mr. Crampton likes here, sir. all rise a little.) Mr. Valentine: will you excuse me: I am afraid Dolly McComas, looking very serious, comes in quickly with Mrs. Clandon, whose id = 35383 author = Skinner, Charlotte title = The Little Missis date = keywords = Bessie; Black; Colston; God; Jack; Jim; Mr.; Mrs.; Nanna; Phebe; Ralph; Reynolds; Stephen; Waring summary = think," said she, "they are messengers come to tell me the old tree''s "But look here," said Phebe, laughing, "you don''t mean to say I have got "You are a naughty girl," said Phebe, trying hard not to laugh, "I think "I should like him to be called Ralph," said Phebe. "Yes," said Phebe, trying to laugh, "but it does not say a woman shall and kissing her, Phebe said, "Lizzie, dear, I''ll tell you all in a day "Look here, father," put in Lizzie, "it is like this: Ralph wanted Phebe "She will come in after tea," said Phebe--still no Bessie. "Poor old Bessie!" said Phebe, quite pained to see the change in her, "But, Bessie," said Phebe, "it is not kind, when you know the poor thing "I think the difference between us is this," said Phebe, taking Mrs. Marchant''s bony hand and gently stroking it: "I have put my life id = 27925 author = Smith, John Talbot title = The Art of Disappearing date = keywords = Anne; Arthur; California; Captain; Claire; Curran; Dillon; Edith; Endicott; Everard; God; Grahame; Honora; Horace; Ireland; Irish; Judy; Ledwith; Livingstone; Louis; Mona; Monsignor; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Senator; Sister; Sonia; York summary = mother; Arthur Dillon who had run away to California ten years before, "One thing," said Arthur as he took his hand and detained him. "Now, hold on, old man," said Arthur. "I shall have my share in the work," Arthur said with feeling. "Let me see," said Arthur, as he stood with Endicott''s photograph in his "I see," said Arthur Dillon smiling, convinced that Captain Curran knew "If it comes to a trial," said Arthur, "won''t Ledwith get the same "All your old friends of New York," said Arthur, "Birmingham, Sullivan, "I don''t know much about the ways of escaped nuns," said Arthur, "but I reason about this thing: Horace Endicott is now known as Arthur Dillon; people who are hunting for Horace Endicott think that Arthur Dillon is Wonderful, that Arthur Dillon should look so little like I am the man whom the world knows as Arthur Dillon."