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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 67517 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 74 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Sand 3 Paris 3 Nohant 3 Maurice 3 Madame 3 George 3 France 3 Aurore 2 time 2 love 2 french 2 Musset 2 Indiana 2 God 2 Dupin 2 Dudevant 2 Chopin 1 year 1 world 1 work 1 woman 1 man 1 little 1 life 1 good 1 footnote 1 Venice 1 Tourgueneff 1 September 1 Saturday 1 Saint 1 Rouen 1 Revue 1 Odeon 1 October 1 Monsieur 1 Monday 1 Michel 1 March 1 Lélia 1 Louis 1 Liszt 1 Lelia 1 January 1 GUSTAVE 1 GEORGE 1 FLAUBERT 1 Dumas 1 December 1 Cruchard Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 608 time 532 life 483 day 479 man 403 friend 366 thing 362 work 359 one 338 people 324 year 312 woman 306 novel 302 book 289 letter 279 nothing 268 heart 260 child 227 way 221 idea 216 love 210 world 197 country 196 everything 195 mind 188 mother 180 nature 174 part 173 master 172 word 165 story 165 art 164 place 158 character 157 order 139 anything 136 house 135 play 135 evening 133 end 129 other 127 month 123 something 123 literature 119 night 119 author 118 moment 116 week 115 age 114 soul 114 society Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2059 _ 908 Sand 629 George 450 Paris 302 Nohant 293 Madame 213 de 191 GUSTAVE 182 FLAUBERT 177 Aurore 155 Maurice 151 G. 141 SAND 136 GEORGE 132 M. 121 France 119 Saint 113 La 105 Flaubert 102 Croisset 98 Musset 92 le 81 Dudevant 78 Chopin 74 God 65 Antoine 62 Indiana 61 March 58 la 58 Dupin 56 Michel 54 May 53 Beuve 52 Le 51 Sainte 49 Cruchard 48 September 47 Rouen 46 des 45 Venice 45 January 45 Bouilhet 44 Revolution 44 Berry 43 Revue 43 February 43 December 42 Tourgueneff 42 Monday 42 Dumas Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5204 i 3197 it 3122 you 2212 she 1635 he 1527 me 1144 we 926 they 763 her 714 him 582 them 503 us 320 one 248 herself 230 myself 139 himself 118 itself 112 yourself 109 themselves 67 ourselves 44 oneself 25 yours 23 mine 15 hers 8 ''s 4 theirs 4 ours 4 his 1 à 1 want,--you 1 troubadour 1 these:-- 1 subtle,--who 1 percemont.--marianne 1 make?--you 1 flaubert:-- 1 --but Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 11786 be 4425 have 1703 do 688 make 670 go 632 see 612 write 594 know 582 say 478 take 472 think 461 give 447 come 399 love 389 find 363 tell 328 seem 276 read 269 want 262 get 244 live 241 leave 225 become 192 put 188 feel 186 begin 185 embrace 179 work 171 like 163 let 156 call 147 bring 146 keep 142 look 141 send 139 understand 132 talk 132 ask 131 speak 129 pass 127 believe 124 appear 122 return 122 follow 115 lose 107 show 103 try 101 hope 100 hear 96 remain Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2935 not 755 so 742 more 689 very 573 good 551 well 548 little 444 then 440 great 434 only 407 much 405 too 394 now 393 old 340 first 336 up 328 long 314 other 300 dear 298 always 296 as 280 most 271 never 262 here 252 such 250 again 243 even 241 own 238 just 237 same 234 there 226 last 213 out 207 still 200 young 188 perhaps 182 many 166 also 156 on 155 less 155 all 148 poor 146 bad 135 no 134 new 132 ever 128 few 127 yet 127 certain 125 quite Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 103 least 77 good 45 most 34 great 22 bad 16 high 11 slight 9 late 8 strong 8 fine 7 early 5 young 4 pure 4 near 4 Most 3 weak 3 small 3 rare 3 old 3 low 3 long 3 full 3 common 2 strange 2 sick 2 noble 2 large 2 healthy 2 hard 2 happy 2 clear 2 choice 1 wise 1 wild 1 ugly 1 sweet 1 sure 1 subtle 1 sublime 1 staunch 1 sound 1 simple 1 silly 1 shrewd 1 short 1 serene 1 quiet 1 plain 1 noisy 1 new Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 235 most 14 least 6 well 1 goethe 1 farthest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 29 one does not 8 one is not 6 people do not 4 life is not 4 one did not 4 sand did not 4 sand was not 3 _ is not 3 heart does not 3 love does not 3 nothing is more 3 sand was quite 2 _ is still 2 book is not 2 country was not 2 heart is full 2 life is perhaps 2 men are ferocious 2 men are only 2 novel does not 2 one has always 2 one is good 2 one is happy 2 one is so 2 one is sure 2 one is surprised 2 one was surprised 2 paris does not 2 people are not 2 people do n''t 2 sand is well 2 sand was naturally 2 sand was no 2 sand was too 2 thing is very 2 woman has ever 2 woman is not 2 work does not 1 _ became unexpectedly 1 _ does not 1 _ gives proof 1 _ had just 1 _ had never 1 _ had virtually 1 _ has many 1 _ is entirely 1 _ is just 1 _ is observable 1 _ is only 1 _ was already Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 one does not really 1 _ is not only 1 country is not once 1 country was not yet 1 heart does not always 1 life is not amusing 1 life is not easy 1 life is not only 1 life was not charming 1 men are not cruel 1 men have no idea 1 one had no other 1 one is not armed 1 one is not haughty 1 one is not master 1 one was not there 1 people has no longer 1 sand had no idea 1 sand had no wit 1 sand is no longer 1 sand was no doubt 1 sand was no longer 1 sand was not hostile 1 sand was not successful 1 thing is no longer 1 thing is not worth 1 woman had not merely 1 woman is not surprising 1 work makes no progress 1 work was not entirely 1 works were no effort 1 world had no longer A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 138 author = Doumic, René title = George Sand: Some Aspects of Her Life and Writings date = keywords = Aurore; Chopin; Correspondance; Dudevant; Dumas; Dupin; France; George; God; Indiana; Lelia; Liszt; Madame; Maurice; Michel; Monsieur; Musset; Nohant; Paris; Sand; Venice; love; man; time summary = than any one about the life and works of George Sand, has been my guide a man who had married the future George Sand, and he complained, in all way of reply to this, George Sand''s advocate read the entire letter in seen in the following curious letter sent by George Sand to Up to this time George Sand''s ideas had not been put on to paper. When George Sand began to publish, she had already written a great deal. "People shall know my story," writes George Sand. eat, drink, or breathe, but I know I am in love." George Sand was afraid than their idea of love, and in the correspondence between George Sand "You have said it a hundred times over," writes George Sand, "and it a new chapter in George Sand''s life, and a little later on we shall be At the time when he came into George Sand''s life, Chopin, the composer id = 5115 author = Flaubert, Gustave title = The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert Letters date = keywords = Antoine; August; Aurore; Beuve; Bouilhet; Croisset; Cruchard; December; FLAUBERT; France; GEORGE; GUSTAVE; God; January; Madame; March; Maurice; Monday; Nohant; October; Odeon; Paris; Rouen; Saint; Sand; Saturday; September; Tourgueneff; footnote; good; love summary = really think that I am not going to live a long time, although I am Imagine, I received a little box filled with flowers gathered outdoors, five or six days ago; for the package followed me to Paris be to live a long life with a good and great heart like yours. Dear good friend, I spent three weeks in Paris with my children, in Paris that I do not know if I shall have the time. Dear master, dear friend of the good God, "let us talk a little of From far, or from near, dear old fellow, I think of you and I love "Show little ones only the sweet and the good of life until the time Come to see us, my dear old friend, I shall not go to Paris this We all love you and all my dear world embraces you with a GREAT GOOD id = 36040 author = McCarthy, Justin title = George Sand date = keywords = George; Sand; french; woman; world summary = might have happened if the woman whom all the world knows as George Sand of George Sand with that of even the greatest living authors of England as a power in every country of the world where people read any manner of that the story bore the odious name of George Sand; public opinion even the world of English Philistinism soon ceased to regard George Sand shocking episode than the publication by George Sand of the little book nature and man''s nature, except this George Sand. of a woman''s heart, George Sand is the only woman, so far as I know, who have the soul of man and the soul of woman at once,--George Sand might admitted as part of George Sand''s vindication,--that the marriage system Regarding George Sand, then, as an influence in literature, and on I think George Sand paints men as they are, and also not id = 28209 author = Thomas, Bertha title = Famous Women: George Sand date = keywords = Aurore; Berry; CHAPTER; Chopin; Châtre; Dudevant; Dupin; France; George; Indiana; Louis; Lélia; Madame; Maurice; Musset; Nohant; Paris; Revue; Sand; french; life; little; time; work; year summary = work, "The Story of My Life." Much of this book, written when she was When in the winter of 1832 Madame Sand returned with her little girl to The story, as told by George Sand in her later novel, _Elle et wrung from one of the characters in a later work of Madame Sand''s, may Madame Sand has described how it was written--as are all such works of country, apparently with very little anticipation on Madame Sand''s part "So you thought," wrote Madame Sand to a political friend, in 1849, original in humble life, which has made this little work a general 1851, it was revived during the last year of Madame Sand''s life in a Madame Sand''s productions, the stamp of a study from real life, true in George Sand lived to see her country pass through every imaginable "The execrable year is out," writes Madame Sand, "but to all appearances