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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 70395 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 81 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Salem 4 Mr. 3 William 3 New 3 God 3 England 3 Boston 2 York 2 Parris 2 Mrs. 2 Mather 2 Lady 2 John 2 Governor 1 little 1 girl 1 child 1 Witchcraft 1 Winn 1 Waters 1 Ursula 1 Thomas 1 Stevens 1 Squire 1 Sir 1 Seymore 1 Sewall 1 Saltonstall 1 Reviewer 1 Rev. 1 Raymond 1 Rachel 1 Putnam 1 Phoebe 1 Phips 1 Penn 1 Nurse 1 Mistress 1 Miss 1 Ministers 1 Master 1 Mary 1 Louder 1 Lord 1 Leverett 1 Leisler 1 Judges 1 Joseph 1 Indians 1 India Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 930 man 687 time 623 day 618 child 471 thing 423 hand 417 people 415 girl 411 woman 406 house 373 year 354 person 343 witch 338 father 336 eye 331 way 307 one 307 life 286 friend 282 mother 273 book 254 face 244 night 225 place 225 heart 216 word 211 mind 210 room 207 witchcraft 199 matter 195 trial 194 name 190 head 187 evidence 186 case 185 family 183 letter 180 part 176 other 175 work 175 wife 174 death 172 world 168 home 167 nothing 164 moment 155 side 155 minister 152 horse 152 country Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1450 _ 644 Mather 569 Mr. 546 Master 479 Charles 476 Salem 337 God 332 New 309 Boston 307 Putnam 281 Chilian 276 Raymond 261 Parris 254 England 254 Edith 251 Cynthia 251 Cotton 245 Stevens 234 Captain 220 Dulcibel 213 Cousin 194 William 194 Elizabeth 188 John 186 Cora 174 Joseph 172 Mistress 166 York 159 Leverett 159 Governor 158 Miss 154 Court 153 Eunice 140 Mrs. 136 Lord 131 Ministers 130 Nurse 128 Mary 128 Ann 119 Devil 116 Sir 112 Reviewer 112 George 106 Williams 102 Waters 101 Lady 96 Sarah 94 . 93 Phips 93 Calef Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4003 he 3953 it 3699 i 3071 she 2664 you 1776 they 1269 him 1183 her 1068 them 868 me 792 we 303 us 257 himself 137 herself 124 themselves 75 myself 72 one 45 itself 43 yourself 23 hers 19 yours 17 mine 13 ourselves 13 his 12 thee 7 ours 6 ''em 3 theirs 3 em 1 ye 1 womanhood,--she 1 magistrate.--"if 1 jehosaphat 1 fulfillment:-- 1 frettin 1 ''s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 14515 be 5840 have 2082 do 1484 say 1098 go 1010 come 896 see 887 make 791 know 700 take 618 think 611 give 427 seem 370 find 361 look 351 ask 326 tell 325 bring 315 get 281 call 278 leave 257 hear 234 feel 232 put 227 keep 223 begin 216 turn 215 live 214 hold 209 cry 208 want 194 become 193 like 192 let 192 believe 188 speak 187 stand 184 answer 182 send 180 meet 167 die 164 try 164 suppose 162 follow 158 afflict 157 sit 155 pass 154 accuse 153 show 150 grow Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3153 not 1139 so 819 then 704 very 695 little 640 up 554 more 548 now 545 out 532 much 517 good 512 other 504 old 467 well 467 great 448 young 397 as 390 only 377 such 373 never 364 many 363 long 341 first 335 own 298 down 297 even 295 here 290 away 281 most 260 too 258 again 245 last 240 there 238 just 225 ever 209 same 206 few 205 off 201 always 198 almost 197 whole 197 over 193 back 193 all 191 in 185 new 177 on 176 rather 175 enough 169 next Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 93 good 71 least 54 most 27 great 24 high 19 bad 12 wise 11 eld 10 deep 9 Most 7 old 7 near 6 young 6 small 6 large 4 slight 4 rich 4 pure 4 late 4 fast 4 dark 4 big 3 sweet 3 poor 3 mere 3 low 3 dear 3 close 3 bold 3 bitter 2 true 2 soft 2 sad 2 rare 2 noble 2 minute 2 long 2 light 2 l 2 hot 2 happy 2 fair 2 extreme 2 early 2 choice 2 base 2 able 1 wild 1 wealthy 1 weak Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 227 most 18 well 5 least 1 soon 1 lest 1 deepest 1 brightest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 _ was _ 5 mather did not 4 _ is _ 3 _ are _ 3 charles did not 3 charles was not 3 mather is not 3 men were not 2 _ did _ 2 _ do _ 2 child had always 2 children do not 2 father comes home 2 girls came in 2 girls do n''t 2 god does n''t 2 houses are so 2 life did not 2 mather does not 2 mather was not 2 mather was opposed 2 mother was glad 2 mother was there 2 people are superstitious 2 putnam was greatly 1 _ are just 1 _ be alone 1 _ be true 1 _ come down 1 _ do n''t 1 _ do not 1 _ had even 1 _ had just 1 _ have long 1 _ have only 1 _ is not 1 _ is off 1 _ is very 1 _ keeping schools 1 _ left out 1 _ makes _ 1 _ makes history 1 _ seeing _ 1 _ taking care 1 _ thinking _ 1 _ was finally 1 _ was not 1 _ was probably 1 _ was skilfully 1 _ was very Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 mather was not present 1 _ had no desire 1 boston is no longer 1 charles made no answer 1 charles took no part 1 charles was not long 1 charles was not slow 1 charles was not slower 1 child has no friend 1 child is not at 1 child was no worse 1 child was not attractive 1 children are not always 1 eye was not dim 1 father had no interest 1 girl is not so 1 god has not strangely 1 man had not squarely 1 man was not able 1 mather did not profess 1 mather makes no allusion 1 mather makes no mention 1 men were not generally 1 men were not much 1 men were not only 1 people had no voice 1 people have no more 1 persons were no impostors 1 putnam does not exactly 1 putnam had no answer 1 putnam made no answer 1 putnam made no reply 1 putnam was not present 1 salem was not exactly 1 witch was no laughing 1 witches have not only 1 woman are not less 1 woman is no better A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 20722 author = Douglas, Amanda M. title = A Little Girl in Old Salem date = keywords = Anthony; Boston; Chilian; Cousin; Cynthia; Elizabeth; Eunice; Giles; India; Leverett; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Rachel; Salem; Saltonstall; Winn; girl; little summary = "And this is Anthony''s little girl!" said Elizabeth. "Or is it a little girl, named Cynthia Leverett, who has queer ideas like Miss Eunice a little, but your other lady doesn''t want me," she "Be a good girl." Chilian kissed the soft red lips and then went his "We shall have a storm to-night," said Miss Eunice, "our three days'' good-night with a polite bow, adding, "She must come again, Mr. Leverett, we had such a very nice time." Chilian Leverett felt very careful of the little girl. two boys who wanted to come home with me, but mother said Ben must. She was Cousin Chilian''s little girl, so why Even Chilian wondered that the little girl took the death of her father "I wish you liked a few flowers every day," the little girl said am going to live in Salem with Cousin Chilian all my life long." id = 39176 author = Lee, Eliza Buckminster title = Delusion; or, The Witch of New England date = keywords = Dinah; Edith; England; God; Grafton; Lady; Mr.; New; Phoebe; Seymore; Ursula; child summary = said, "I fear your life is too solitary; your young heart yearns for It was beautiful to see the little Edith watching the mild and loving "Edith, my child," said her father, "what has happened?" "But what can we live for, if not for love?" said Edith. "And cannot you turn to God?" said Edith; "cannot you pray? Edith had felt herself all the comfort of opening her heart in prayer to "Poor child!" said the old woman; "you can weep for others, but yours is More than two years had passed since Edith''s visit to the old woman of "God grant I may be as faithful to my duty," said Edith; but this is not At the same time with Edith, a poor old woman, nearly eighty years of Edith looked in her face, and said, very kindly, "Tell me, my poor Edith thought she had touched the child''s heart, and continued: "I knew id = 26282 author = Musick, John R. (John Roy) title = The Witch of Salem; or, Credulity Run Mad date = keywords = Adelpha; Charles; Cora; England; George; God; Goody; Indians; John; Leisler; Lord; Louder; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Nurse; Parris; Penn; Salem; Stevens; Waters; William; York summary = At the mention of Charles Stevens, the young woman''s eyes grew brighter, When Cora left the church that day, she asked Mrs. Stevens why Mr. Parris hated her and said such hard things about her. face of Charles Stevens the moment Cora spoke of going away. Filled with wonder, Charles Stevens turned his eyes upon Cora, whose "Ho, Charles Stevens, where were you last Lord''s Day?" asked Louder. Louder slowly rose and slunk away, and Charles Stevens returned home. Charles Stevens and Adelpha reached New York on the very day the "The time may come when I will need your aid," said Charles Stevens. as Mr. Joel Martin, the man whom he had seen on that night with Mr. Parris, Bly and Louder, coming to arrest Cora''s father. It was some days before the news of Charles Stevens'' arrest reached would be slain by Charles Stevens, and that he went away to New York id = 20569 author = Peterson, Henry title = Dulcibel: A Tale of Old Salem date = keywords = Alden; Ann; Boston; Captain; Dulcibel; Governor; Hathorne; Joseph; Lady; Mary; Master; Mather; Mistress; Parris; Putnam; Raymond; Salem; Sir; Squire; Thomas; William summary = What do you mean, Master Raymond?" exclaimed Joseph Putnam; like "Come soon again," Dulcibel said softly, as the young man managed to "You are an unbeliever, and everybody knows it, Master Putnam," said one "Do you think it will come true?" said Master Raymond. "Well, Robie, how''s the little girl?" said Master Joseph. young men rode back the way they had come, to Master Putnam''s. "Our game is blocked!" said Joseph Putnam to Master Raymond as he rode Joseph Putnam and Master Raymond rode down to Salem that day--to the "I know a little witch of that kind," said Master Raymond, humoring the "I know everything about it," said Master Raymond, "I am the very man "Come with me," said she to Master Raymond; "but do not say "I will go down and tell Dulcibel," said Master Raymond. "This maiden is Mistress Dulcibel Burton," said Master Raymond, taking id = 26978 author = Upham, Charles Wentworth title = Salem Witchcraft and Cotton Mather: A Reply date = keywords = Boston; Burroughs; Calef; Cotton; Council; Court; Devil; England; God; Goodwin; Governor; John; Judges; Mather; Ministers; Mr.; New; Phips; Rev.; Reviewer; Salem; Sewall; William; Witchcraft; York summary = diabolical agency, possessions, apparitions, and the like, he says, "Mr. Increase Mather hath already published many such histories of things The Reviewer charges me with having wronged Cotton Mather, by sentence, referring to Cotton Mather''s agency, in the Goodwin case, in In considering Cotton Mather''s connection with the case of the Goodwin very decidedly, in the following passages: [_Pp. 95, 96, 101._] "Mr. Cotton Mather, no longer since than 1690, published the case of one after mentioning the fact that Cotton Mather had published an account of Cotton Mather to John Richards, called by the Reviewer "his Letter to In his _Life of Sir William Phips_, Cotton Mather has this paragraph: Examinations with the Trials--in stating that Cotton Mather rendered _Autograph Letter of COTTON MATHER, on Witchcraft, presented to the HISTORY OF OPINION AS TO COTTON MATHER''S CONNECTION WITH SALEM view given in my book of Cotton Mather''s connection with Salem