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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 70976 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 81 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Paris 2 Walter 2 Roy 2 Mr. 2 Marelle 2 Madeleine 2 Madame 2 Forestier 2 Duroy 1 woman 1 thing 1 pretty 1 mistress 1 good 1 girl 1 father 1 art 1 Year 1 Volanges 1 Viscount 1 Vie 1 Venus 1 Vaudrec 1 Varenne 1 Valmont 1 University 1 Tourvel 1 Suzanne 1 Susan 1 Sir 1 Seymour 1 September 1 Saint 1 Rue 1 Rosemonde 1 Rival 1 Prevan 1 Presidente 1 Potin 1 Ovid 1 Mrs. 1 Monsieur 1 Mme 1 Miss 1 Merteuil 1 Mathieu 1 Marchioness 1 Love 1 Laroche 1 Lady Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 798 time 651 day 564 woman 552 man 529 friend 487 hand 455 letter 433 thing 389 one 378 love 370 nothing 360 room 353 word 346 heart 328 eye 301 wife 296 moment 275 arm 257 door 255 way 238 night 233 pleasure 231 child 230 order 222 place 222 head 216 mind 213 reason 211 morning 207 father 196 evening 194 idea 194 face 189 voice 186 daughter 184 husband 184 house 171 mother 170 happiness 168 life 164 girl 163 hour 159 franc 159 bed 159 air 153 tone 153 lady 150 matter 148 name 146 people Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2807 _ 784 de 606 Duroy 496 Madame 342 Forestier 318 Walter 311 Agnes 236 Roy 229 Valmont 225 M. 224 Du 212 Paris 205 Mme 196 Danceny 192 Madeleine 169 Viscount 169 LETTER 169 George 165 Marelle 137 Merteuil 136 Monsieur 133 Volanges 123 Mr. 120 Georges 118 Fanny 118 Adieu 102 God 99 Tourvel 99 Fitzhenry 96 Madam 96 Cecilia 88 Marchioness 82 Clifford 82 Chevalier 79 Presidente 79 Francaise 78 Vie 76 Laroche 73 Rue 71 Rosemonde 67 morrow 67 Rival 66 Vaudrec 66 Sir 64 Charles 63 Prevan 63 Mathieu 61 Count 59 Susan 54 Seymour Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8357 i 6424 you 5439 he 4454 it 3779 she 2803 me 2073 him 1717 her 1271 they 906 them 803 we 381 himself 377 us 362 myself 238 herself 183 one 143 yourself 106 themselves 60 mine 43 yours 42 itself 21 ourselves 18 thee 11 hers 10 his 6 ours 5 oneself 4 ''s 3 thyself 2 theirs 2 on''t 1 yourselves 1 you?--not 1 whence 1 was!--but 1 voice:--o 1 thy 1 them?"--"sir 1 them:--they 1 rue-- 1 mine.--she 1 it.--"but 1 i''m 1 her.--"but 1 henry,--you 1 fear?--"i 1 amusement.--when Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 13068 be 5586 have 2156 do 1521 say 1022 see 1019 make 973 go 950 know 937 think 935 take 824 give 728 come 513 tell 513 leave 447 find 421 reply 408 ask 380 look 378 feel 357 love 356 speak 350 write 330 begin 327 seem 323 let 312 return 299 receive 286 hear 268 turn 250 get 248 wish 247 call 246 become 238 want 232 keep 228 believe 223 pass 220 follow 218 bring 211 enter 195 put 194 meet 187 add 186 remain 179 murmur 176 answer 170 appear 169 hope 166 walk 166 send Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4118 not 1230 so 1165 then 891 more 874 very 721 only 609 much 603 well 592 up 584 now 509 little 500 even 499 never 494 out 460 as 426 other 426 first 425 long 412 good 385 again 377 great 363 too 358 here 344 still 311 soon 305 same 285 no 285 most 280 once 275 perhaps 273 dear 266 however 262 young 262 always 255 on 247 own 240 down 226 old 225 alone 223 off 220 ever 219 last 206 such 206 away 204 yet 204 there 200 least 195 back 184 happy 184 also Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 185 least 54 great 54 good 28 most 12 strong 11 high 10 slight 10 dear 6 large 5 soft 5 small 5 j 5 happy 5 bad 4 fine 3 vile 3 sweet 3 strange 3 noble 3 late 2 proud 2 pleasant 2 near 2 long 2 faint 2 eld 2 early 2 bright 2 bitter 2 Most 1 young 1 wicked 1 wealthy 1 warm 1 tall 1 sure 1 supreme 1 strict 1 stout 1 slow 1 sincere 1 simple 1 sentiments?--Why 1 ready 1 quick 1 pure 1 old 1 nice 1 manif 1 low Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 257 most 15 least 7 well 1 worst 1 sweetest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 www.pgdpcanada.net 1 www.freeliterature.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.pgdpcanada.net 1 http://www.freeliterature.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 13 duroy did not 11 one does not 5 duroy had not 3 duroy went on 3 love does not 3 love is not 3 roy was surprised 2 day saw fresh 2 duroy asked mme 2 duroy felt somewhat 2 duroy said nothing 2 duroy saw nothing 2 duroy was startled 2 forestier did not 2 forestier had not 2 heart is full 2 love is only 2 man did not 2 man does not 2 man is only 2 man was short 2 men did not 2 one has not 2 one has nothing 2 one is always 2 one is old 2 rooms are not 2 rooms were already 2 roy was so 2 time is not 2 wife had not 2 wife has often 2 woman does not 2 woman was tall 2 words are not 1 _ being beloved 1 _ getting drunk 1 _ had great 1 _ had now 1 _ has no 1 _ is always 1 _ is never 1 _ is not 1 _ look _ 1 _ look fair 1 _ love _ 1 _ loved _ 1 _ thinking _ 1 _ took up 1 _ was accordingly Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 love is not eternal 1 _ has no longer 1 _ is not dangerous 1 agnes was not sorry 1 day left no room 1 forestier had not yet 1 heart is not so 1 love is not only 1 madame had no supper 1 men are not valmonts 1 men have no idea 1 one has not always 1 time is not entirely 1 time is not very 1 words are not necessary 1 words are not so A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 45512 author = Laclos, Choderlos de title = Dangerous Connections, v. 1, 2, 3, 4 A Series of Letters, selected from the Correspondence of a Private Circle; and Published for the Instruction of Society. date = keywords = August; Cecilia; Chevalier; Danceny; LETTER; Madame; Marchioness; Merteuil; Mr.; Paris; Presidente; Prevan; Rosemonde; September; Sir; Tourvel; Valmont; Viscount; Volanges summary = her wedding-day." Should all mothers think thus, I shall congratulate yesterday, I am not obliged to write to-day; and I shall see Madame de Madame de Merteuil, who is a woman that ought to know those things Madame de Tourvel''s reasoning virtue makes her know the value of the one had been all day expressing her wish to receive letters from Dijon, know; and she is so good natured, I can tell her every thing I think in vain to think that a correspondence by letter would answer the end. How is it possible, Madam, to answer your last letter; how shall I dare At length, my lovely friend, I shall soon call on you for the This instant, my lovely dear, I received your letter of the 11th,[1] letters, and shall have one or two more before the happy day. longer see you, at least answer this letter, let me hear you still love id = 33928 author = Maupassant, Guy de title = Bel Ami (A Ladies'' Man) The Works of Guy de Maupassant, Vol. 6 date = keywords = Charles; Count; Duroy; Forestier; Francaise; George; Laroche; Madame; Madeleine; Marelle; Mathieu; Monsieur; Paris; Potin; Rival; Roy; Rue; Saint; Susan; Varenne; Vaudrec; Vie; Walter; good; pretty summary = Forestier pushed the door open, saying, "Come in." Duroy entered, George Duroy opened his mouth, and said, feeling as much surprised at All the women had their eyes turned upon him, and Madame Walter said, in Forestier said to him in a low voice: "Pay attention to Madame Walter." "Ask Madame Forestier," said he, "whether she will receive me, and tell soon as Daddy Walter had won, he said: "Here is my friend, Duroy." As Duroy bowed to Madame Forestier she scolded him for not having come turning her head, and said: "Good-day, Pretty-boy!" Marelle, and looking her in the eyes, said: "Shall I see you home He was silent, and Duroy, who felt light hearted that evening, said with Forestier raised his head, and turning to his wife, said: "Let me have Then George said: "This is my wife," and the two country people looked id = 3733 author = Maupassant, Guy de title = Bel Ami; Or, The History of a Scoundrel: A Novel date = keywords = Ami; Bel; Duroy; Forestier; Georges; Madeleine; Marelle; Mme; Paris; Roy; Suzanne; Walter summary = Forestier pushed open the door and said: "Come in." Duroy entered; they Duroy did not know what to reply; finally he said: "I have never been As they disappeared, Forestier laughed and said: "Tell, me, old man, The latter advanced with the grace of the old school and taking Mme. Forestier''s hand kissed it; his long hair falling upon his hostess''s As he turned his head, he met Mme. Forestier''s eyes, in which he fancied he saw a mingled expression of Duroy replied: "Ask Mme. Forestier if she will see me, and tell her Forestier and Duroy returned to the room in which Georges had Forestier turned around in his chair and said, to Duroy: "Listen. Without a word, Duroy left the room, and entering his friend''s office, When the guests returned to the drawing-room, Duroy asked Mme. de When Mme. Forestier was alone with Duroy, she said to him: "You see, id = 49621 author = Opie, Amelia title = The Father and Daughter: A Tale, in Prose date = keywords = Agnes; Caroline; Clifford; Edward; Fanny; Fitzhenry; God; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Seymour; father summary = first time in her life Agnes learned to think her father unjust and misery?" Clifford promised every thing she wished; and Agnes tried to yet heard my story," replied Agnes: "but you shall know who I am soon; it--" said Fanny with hesitation--"It is my child," replied Agnes, friend, Fanny''s respect yielded to affection, and, falling on Agnes''s "My dear Fanny," said Agnes, "I have a question to ask, and I charge you Agnes wore away great part of the night in telling Fanny her mournful Caroline, again coming forward, but was again driven back by Mr. Seymour, who, turning to Agnes, bade her claim shelter from the man for first, when Agnes returned from visiting her father, Fanny used to "_I_ can do nothing for your father," said he to Agnes (when he had "It is time to go home," said Agnes to him just as the day began to id = 31036 author = Ovid title = The Lovers Assistant; Or, New Art of Love date = keywords = Father; Footnote; Lady; Love; Ovid; University; Venus; Year; art; girl; mistress; thing; woman summary = THE LOVERS ASSISTANT, OR, NEW ART OF LOVE The first edition, entitled _Ovid''s Art of Love Paraphrased and Verse." The modernization, as in his _Art of Love_, was of place hath been taken to preserve the Spirit and true Sense of the Author, Loving, let him come to my School; where, if he hath any Genius, he Ever since that time, the Theatre hath been consecrated to Love, and Man hath drawn considerable Advantage from handing[18] a Lady to Occasions; many a poor Man having lost his Heart, while he hath shall see thee, most lovely Prince, returning, thy Glories far _Bacchus_ in his tender Arms; and the Wings of the little God of Love [Footnote 44: The Original points at the Day in which the _Romans_ [Footnote 52: _Daphnis_ was the Son of _Mercury_; for his Love for Henry Fielding, _Ovid''s Art of Love_ (1760). Henry Fielding, _Ovid''s Art of Love_ (1760).