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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 3 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 143952 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 78 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Mr. 3 Lord 3 London 3 England 2 Sir 2 Oxford 2 Mrs. 2 Miss 2 Lady 2 God 2 Baker 1 year 1 work 1 time 1 roman 1 life 1 great 1 footnote 1 chapter 1 Wilkinson 1 Waddington 1 Trieste 1 Todd 1 Stisted 1 Staple 1 St. 1 Society 1 Sheffield 1 Scented 1 Rome 1 Richard 1 Pritchett 1 Payne 1 Paris 1 October 1 November 1 Nights 1 Necker 1 Memoirs 1 Mary 1 March 1 Madame 1 M''Gabbery 1 Littlebath 1 Lionel 1 Lib 1 Lausanne 1 Kirby 1 Kama 1 June Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1317 man 693 day 677 time 542 friend 524 year 487 nothing 448 work 444 letter 438 word 428 life 402 way 371 world 368 hand 366 heart 325 woman 319 lady 319 eye 314 house 307 matter 302 mind 289 one 289 book 287 place 285 money 279 thing 278 love 271 room 262 wife 253 moment 251 father 243 course 231 subject 205 uncle 204 chapter 192 mother 187 anything 186 son 186 head 183 part 181 month 180 face 176 something 176 death 175 name 171 manner 171 husband 168 people 168 gentleman 167 translation 166 fact Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1954 Burton 1312 Mr. 1040 Miss 852 Sir 845 Bertram 680 George 606 Footnote 560 _ 546 Mrs. 516 Baker 447 Caroline 423 Lady 373 Lionel 346 Harcourt 324 Adela 308 Gibbon 294 Payne 275 Henry 250 Todd 245 Wilkinson 243 . 234 Nights 229 Richard 205 Arthur 204 Waddington 201 London 200 Lord 198 Littlebath 194 England 167 Dr. 144 God 130 Arabian 125 Pritchett 114 Hadley 111 Arbuthnot 99 Oxford 98 English 96 Jerusalem 96 F. 95 Trieste 88 Gauntlet 85 St. 85 Society 85 Garden 81 John 79 August 78 October 78 Ed 77 Stisted 72 May Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 7460 he 5249 i 4670 it 3340 you 3087 she 2434 him 1461 they 1274 her 1189 me 1066 we 852 them 704 himself 312 herself 292 us 177 myself 144 one 126 themselves 93 yourself 81 itself 44 thee 24 ourselves 23 yours 23 his 20 mine 18 hers 5 oneself 4 thyself 4 theirs 4 ours 3 ''s 1 ye 1 thy 1 or;--she 1 money-- 1 je 1 example:-- 1 ce 1 60_l Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 17477 be 7946 have 3120 do 2541 say 1162 make 1126 know 1081 go 1001 see 928 think 739 come 733 take 701 give 604 tell 538 write 514 find 465 look 414 get 399 speak 395 leave 377 call 362 love 324 seem 312 live 298 sit 297 ask 291 feel 282 become 275 hear 266 put 257 wish 232 let 227 use 224 want 220 talk 216 stand 214 follow 214 believe 213 show 210 read 202 bring 200 mean 200 marry 200 keep 195 suppose 193 understand 192 turn 188 pass 186 begin 185 meet 180 like Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4700 not 1952 so 1194 very 1098 now 1035 then 823 more 791 well 739 much 710 other 667 never 644 only 633 up 582 old 568 good 558 own 536 great 520 first 495 as 487 little 484 such 471 again 469 still 455 there 452 out 424 also 421 long 418 even 409 too 409 last 389 most 350 however 348 perhaps 348 always 326 down 319 ever 315 here 310 quite 306 once 297 many 284 yet 279 indeed 264 all 258 almost 256 same 249 just 243 young 238 rather 237 certainly 228 enough 219 over Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 170 least 146 good 86 most 33 great 29 high 28 bad 26 slight 23 dear 14 early 12 near 10 eld 9 fine 8 sweet 8 deep 8 Most 7 furth 6 strong 5 soft 5 small 5 low 5 full 4 simple 4 manif 4 large 4 j 4 happy 3 warm 3 safe 3 rich 3 noble 3 mean 3 late 3 hot 3 heavy 3 easy 3 dark 3 bright 3 bitter 2 young 2 weighty 2 true 2 sure 2 sorry 2 shunn 2 short 2 remote 2 pure 2 pleasant 2 plain 2 old Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 303 most 23 well 12 least 1 worst 1 nicest 1 boldest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 14 bertram did not 8 burton was not 5 caroline did not 4 baker was not 4 bertram said nothing 4 bertram was not 4 burton did not 4 burton had not 4 burton was then 4 george had never 4 george was not 4 lionel did not 4 lionel was not 3 baker did not 3 bertram had not 3 bertram was now 3 burton had never 3 burton was always 3 burton was now 3 caroline had never 3 caroline was not 2 _ was _ 2 baker is there 2 baker was therefore 2 bertram had never 2 bertram had now 2 bertram looked full 2 bertram was rather 2 bertram was there 2 bertram went up 2 burton had just 2 burton had long 2 burton had scarcely 2 burton left england 2 burton looked up 2 burton was as 2 burton was back 2 burton was just 2 burton was more 2 caroline had not 2 caroline was very 2 george did not 2 george said nothing 2 george was about 2 george was so 2 george was still 2 george was very 2 george went back 2 harcourt had already 2 harcourt had certainly Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 burton had not long 2 burton was not able 1 _ has no superior 1 adela had no more 1 adela had no wish 1 adela was not often 1 baker did not quite 1 baker made no attempt 1 baker was no subject 1 baker was not quite 1 baker was not unhappy 1 bertram did not so 1 bertram had no bearing 1 bertram had no ground 1 bertram had no profession 1 bertram is not very 1 bertram were not together 1 burton does not even 1 burton found no affinity 1 burton had no eyes 1 burton had no notion 1 burton had no opportunities 1 burton had no wish 1 burton had not payne 1 burton is no relation 1 burton is not content 1 burton made no retort 1 burton made no secret 1 burton makes no reference 1 burton makes no secret 1 burton was not at 1 burton was not slow 1 caroline had not yet 1 caroline made no opposition 1 caroline was no longer 1 caroline was not afraid 1 caroline was not only 1 day found no readier 1 friend does not usually 1 friends were not aware 1 george did not quite 1 george gave no answer 1 george was not able 1 harcourt was no whit 1 heart was not quite 1 hearts are not half 1 letter was not very 1 life was not always 1 life were not happy 1 lionel did not quite A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 18851 author = Morison, James Cotter title = Gibbon date = keywords = Belisarius; CHAPTER; Church; Constantine; Constantinople; England; France; French; Gibbon; Italy; Lausanne; London; Lord; Madame; Memoirs; Mr.; Necker; Oxford; Paris; Rome; Sheffield; footnote; great; roman; time; work; year summary = GIBBON''S EARLY LIFE UP TO THE TIME OF HIS LEAVING OXFORD. GIBBON''S EARLY LIFE UP TO THE TIME OF HIS LEAVING OXFORD. The saving of his life during these dangerous years Gibbon occupied by his great work had been already gone over by Gibbon before approached his sixteenth year, a great change took place in his lower condition as places of education than at the time when Gibbon The lucid order and admirable literary form of Gibbon''s great work are this juvenile work of Gibbon has little merit. the old days when Gibbon was a boarder in Pavillard''s house, and the Up to the year 1750 no great historical work had appeared Gibbon as a whole, as the encyclopædic history of 1300 years, as the Lausanne, Gibbon had four years of unbroken calm and steady work, of These closing years of Gibbon''s life were not happy, through no fault id = 26001 author = Trollope, Anthony title = The Bertrams date = keywords = Adela; Arthur; Baker; Bertram; Caroline; Cox; England; Gauntlet; George; God; Hadley; Harcourt; Henry; Hurst; Jerusalem; Lady; Lionel; Littlebath; London; Lord; M''Gabbery; Mary; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Oxford; Pritchett; Sir; Staple; Todd; Waddington; Wilkinson summary = "Come; open the door," said Bertram''s voice, "I know you are there." "This, Sir Lionel," said Miss Todd, acting cicerone, "is the fountain longer," said Sir Lionel, taking off his hat as he bowed to Miss "You are my guide, Miss Todd, in everything," said Sir Lionel. the privilege of telling how Mr. George Bertram and Miss Caroline some success, I trust?" said Miss Todd to Bertram, in a laughing said about money between George and Miss Baker up to this time; "Yes, Miss Baker," said Bertram; and the tone of his voice was hardly George Bertram had been told by Miss Baker that Caroline was the "Can you doubt, Caroline?" said Adela, and Miss Gauntlet''s eyes shone "Yes, dear Caroline," said Sir Lionel; "of course I can say nothing "I sometimes think that some women never love," said Sir Lionel. Adela said that she had met Sir Lionel at Miss Baker''s. id = 4315 author = Wright, Thomas title = The Life of Sir Richard Burton date = keywords = Africa; Allah; April; Arabian; Arabic; Arbuthnot; Arundell; August; Baker; Burton; Damascus; Dr.; Edward; England; English; February; Footnote; Garden; God; January; John; July; June; Kama; Kirby; Lady; Lib; London; Lord; March; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Nights; November; October; Payne; Richard; Scented; Sir; Society; St.; Stisted; Trieste; chapter; life summary = late Mr. Albert Letchford, illustrator of The Arabian Nights), Dr. Grenfell Baker (Burton''s medical attendant during the last three years The great object of this book is to tell the story of Burton''s life, to On January 19th, Burton, after asking for the remaining volumes of Mr. Payne''s Nights, says "A friend here is reading them solemnly and with [Footnote 2: Lady Burton to Mrs. E. [Footnote 29: Not at Elstree as Sir Richard Burton himself supposed and said, [Footnote 552: Mr. Payne had not told Burton the name of the work, as he did [Footnote 602: Life, by Lady Burton, ii., 444.] [Footnote 602: Life, by Lady Burton, ii., 444.] [Footnote 602: Life, by Lady Burton, ii., 444.] [Footnote 664: The same may be said of Lady Burton''s Life of her husband. [Footnote 670: In her Life of Sir Richard, Lady Burton quotes only a few