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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 56477 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 82 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 Prophet 2 Mr. 2 Miami 2 Indians 1 time 1 scene 1 look 1 irish 1 harrison 1 camp 1 british 1 Wolf 1 Winnebago 1 Wayne 1 Wabash 1 United 1 Tom 1 Terry 1 Tecumseh 1 TECUMSEH 1 States 1 Spirit 1 Smith 1 Shawanoes 1 Shawanoe 1 Shane 1 Sego 1 Riflemen 1 Proctor 1 Ozark 1 Oonamoo 1 Ohio 1 OFFICER 1 O''Hara 1 MAMATEE 1 Long 1 Linden 1 Lewis 1 LEFROY 1 Kentucky 1 Johnson 1 Indian 1 IENA 1 Huron 1 Harrison 1 Greville 1 Greenville 1 Great 1 GENERAL 1 Fred Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 510 man 505 time 269 hand 260 tribe 255 day 245 side 242 head 236 party 225 warrior 223 friend 223 chief 223 brother 219 way 202 wood 201 war 200 foot 199 eye 195 ground 194 fire 193 night 189 place 188 thing 187 part 185 moment 182 governor 167 river 166 tree 166 enemy 166 camp 164 point 163 year 162 hunter 162 face 160 mile 159 one 159 gun 156 land 155 battle 154 fort 150 boy 149 water 148 minute 139 stream 139 rifle 138 life 136 body 135 nothing 127 white 126 father 125 colonel Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 963 _ 601 Indians 554 Tecumseh 381 Fred 352 Terry 285 Deerfoot 241 Prophet 186 Shawanoe 155 Harrison 136 Edith 131 Shawanoes 131 Indian 124 Linden 109 O''Hara 109 Dernor 106 Ohio 104 Footnote 103 TECUMSEH 99 United 99 States 94 Great 91 ye 90 Wolf 89 Winnebago 87 Mr. 87 Miami 83 A 82 Clark 81 Lewis 76 Winnebagos 74 Huron 71 Spirit 67 Johnson 67 BROCK 65 Kentucky 62 Wayne 62 CHAPTER 61 Riflemen 61 Proctor 60 PROPHET 60 Oonamoo 59 Rifleman 58 fort 53 Wabash 52 Enter 50 Smith 48 LEFROY 47 IENA 47 General 46 Shane Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3396 he 2342 it 1706 they 1535 i 1156 him 1128 you 966 them 619 we 369 me 312 us 232 himself 218 she 134 her 110 themselves 38 itself 25 ''s 23 ''em 22 myself 20 ye 19 herself 14 yourself 14 mine 13 one 11 ourselves 10 yours 7 his 7 em 6 theirs 6 thee 6 ours 2 yourselves 2 meself 1 t''ink 1 nay 1 fifth.--an Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 8769 be 3375 have 1083 do 737 make 618 say 555 see 508 take 462 know 461 come 412 go 335 give 276 look 219 find 211 think 210 follow 207 leave 197 stand 196 tell 194 fall 183 reach 182 hear 179 keep 177 get 164 turn 157 ask 154 kill 153 let 150 show 144 feel 143 call 142 bring 127 pass 127 hold 126 send 126 return 125 become 123 speak 120 seem 118 strike 117 believe 116 meet 111 lie 111 lead 106 fire 98 run 96 walk 96 use 96 start 95 draw 94 remain Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1701 not 693 so 420 then 414 more 372 now 367 up 361 other 285 out 282 great 272 as 263 well 246 same 244 only 228 long 218 here 212 good 208 down 207 first 204 such 204 general 201 much 200 several 195 few 183 own 182 far 181 indian 178 back 174 off 171 most 170 very 167 never 166 too 165 white 162 enough 158 just 158 again 149 little 142 still 142 many 140 about 137 young 135 soon 133 away 129 british 125 however 124 once 119 latter 117 there 116 ever 115 last Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 48 good 38 least 33 most 16 great 14 near 12 high 10 brave 10 bad 9 slight 6 manif 6 j 6 Most 5 fine 4 wise 4 short 4 big 3 sure 3 strong 3 small 3 safe 3 full 3 early 3 deep 2 simple 2 shrewd 2 old 2 long 2 happy 2 close 1 wide 1 warm 1 warlike 1 thick 1 strict 1 sage 1 remote 1 proper 1 profound 1 poor 1 mere 1 mean 1 lucky 1 lowermost 1 low 1 lofty 1 late 1 keen 1 hungry 1 hot 1 gross Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 138 most 7 well 1 lest 1 least 1 jest 1 furthest 1 behind.--macaulay 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 deerfoot did not 3 indians were not 3 tecumseh was present 3 terry did not 2 _ are _ 2 _ did n''t 2 indians were again 2 parties were not 2 place called chatham 2 prophet had actually 2 tecumseh was not 2 warriors are brave 1 _ been interested 1 _ calls _ 1 _ coming up 1 _ do _ 1 _ do n''t 1 _ does n''t 1 _ goes down 1 _ goes forward 1 _ have _ 1 _ have strength 1 _ is _ 1 _ is sure 1 _ know _ 1 _ leave _ 1 _ look quick 1 _ stand _ 1 _ think _ 1 _ was _ 1 _ was now 1 brother had lately 1 brother is brave 1 brother is happy 1 brother is mistaken 1 brother is slow 1 brothers are hungry 1 brothers do not 1 brothers follow deerfoot 1 brothers know not 1 brothers make sure 1 brothers were not 1 chief had nothing 1 chief was thus 1 chiefs are heads 1 chiefs had unfortunately 1 chiefs were alive 1 chiefs were opposed 1 chiefs were still 1 day are alike Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 terry had no thought 1 deerfoot made no answer 1 deerfoot made no such 1 fred had no doubt 1 fred made no comment 1 friends had no means 1 ground left no doubt 1 ground was not too 1 indians was not far 1 indians were not shepherds 1 man ''s not there 1 man had no friends 1 man was no other 1 parties were not so 1 parties were not visible 1 party was not strong 1 prophet had not more 1 prophet made no reply 1 sides were not so 1 tecumseh making no answer 1 tecumseh was not only 1 tecumseh was not probably 1 terry was no unskillful 1 way was not much A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 15581 author = Drake, Benjamin title = Life of Tecumseh, and of His Brother the Prophet With a Historical Sketch of the Shawanoe Indians date = keywords = Footnote; Great; Greenville; Harrison; Indians; Johnson; Kentucky; Miami; Mr.; Ohio; Proctor; Prophet; Shane; Shawanoes; Spirit; States; Tecumseh; United; Wabash; Wayne; british summary = agent to prevent Tecumseh and the Prophet from assembling the Indians Indians--Tecumseh burns governor Harrison''s letter to the chiefs--great tribes--governor Harrison''s opinion of Tecumseh and the Prophet--murder of the Deaf Chief--Tecumseh visits the southern Indians Tecumseh participates in the battle of Brownstown--commands the Indians The day before general Harrison reached this place, the Indians Wells, the U.S. Indian agent, to prevent Tecumseh and the Prophet visited in 1808 by great numbers of Indians--Tecumseh and the Prophet visited in 1808 by great numbers of Indians--Tecumseh and the Prophet head chiefs of the Shawanoe tribe, by John Conner, one of our Indian Indians--Tecumseh burns governor Harrison''s letter to the On the following day, governor Harrison visited Tecumseh in his camp, Siege of fort Meigs--Tecumseh commands the Indians--acts with Siege of fort Meigs--Tecumseh commands the Indians--acts with persons present as Tecumseh: the next Indian was pointed out as having id = 22646 author = Ellis, Edward Sylvester title = The Hunters of the Ozark date = keywords = Bowlby; CHAPTER; Clark; Deerfoot; Fred; Greville; Indian; Linden; Mr.; Ozark; Shawanoe; Terry; Winnebago; Wolf; camp; irish; look; time summary = "Terry," said Fred, turning suddenly about and addressing his friend, steadily in the eye, said, "Deerfoot has a message for Fred Linden; does "He''s coming," quietly said Deerfoot, looking off to the left of Terry, "The Winnebago is a long ways off," said Deerfoot, with a shake of his "That will make us short-handed, and we need every one," said Mr. Linden; "I wish Fred was here to give us help." Fred Linden and Terry Clark were alarmed when, on their way home, they The beast that Fred Linden and Terry Clark saw in the path before them Deerfoot and Fred having turned their glances toward Terry, the latter Fred and Terry had formed a strong liking for the young Shawanoe, and It must be admitted that it looked like leaving Fred and Terry in great The night was far advanced when Fred Linden and Terry Clark reached the id = 27231 author = Ellis, Edward Sylvester title = The Riflemen of the Miami date = keywords = Dernor; Edith; Huron; Indians; Lewis; Miami; O''Hara; Oonamoo; Riflemen; Sego; Smith; Tom summary = you, Lew Dernor, sitting here sound asleep," said he, as the Rifleman The hunter followed young Smith to the camp, where, in a short time, he said by Dernor, this curiosity remained unsatisfied for a long time. men, O''Hara, Dernor and Allmat, stood on the banks of the Miami, "If you want your head broke, just say so," said O''Hara, savagely. "We fired at his _breast_ every time," said O''Hara. eye of a true hunter, O''Hara satisfied himself of the course his leader "It looks likely," said O''Hara, as he and Dick stood deliberating upon Lewis Dernor, the Rifleman, plunged into the forest with Edith Sudbury. "Well, young man, good-day to you," said Dernor, advancing toward him. minute," said O''Hara, as a new thought struck him; "I''d like to know "Look dere--knowed it," said he, pointing out a few feet from the "The Huron--Oonamoo?" asked the hunter, looking around him. id = 6843 author = Mair, Charles title = Tecumseh : a Drama date = keywords = BROCK; Canada; Enter; Exit; GENERAL; IENA; LEFROY; Long; MAMATEE; OFFICER; Prophet; TECUMSEH; harrison; scene summary = And followed by men''s love--whose very foes Your brother, great Tecumseh, has returned, And shall to-day--some dream disturbs my love. Whose head is warring ''gainst a heart that tells, _Enter_ TECUMSEH, _followed by_ MAMATEE. My heart downed softly with Tecumseh''s love-For this poor white, whose heart is full of love, If duty makes Tecumseh''s heart grow cold, let great Tecumseh My brother, this man loves our people well. Enter_ TECUMSEH _and his followers with_ LEFROY But let us hope ''tis yet a war of wits In some men''s goodness like the barren time The poor of every land shall come to this, The Prophet ere Tecumseh can return. SCENE SECOND.--TECUMSEH''S CABIN IN THE PROPHET''S TOWN. To let Tecumseh''s greatness grow, ''Tis this love nerves Tecumseh to unite And our great foe, Tecumseh, fired o''er his; Of great Tecumseh and high-hearted Brock. _Enter_ TECUMSEH, STAYETA, _and other Chiefs and