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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 12 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 48839 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 68 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 12 Shelley 6 man 5 love 5 like 5 Hogg 5 Godwin 5 England 5 Byron 4 Prometheus 4 Mr. 4 London 4 Harriet 3 Pisa 3 Oxford 3 Mary 3 Lord 3 Leigh 3 John 3 Hunt 2 woman 2 poet 2 mind 2 life 2 great 2 good 2 York 2 University 2 Trelawny 2 Rome 2 Queen 2 Quarterly 2 Mrs. 2 Medwin 2 Mab 2 Laon 2 God 2 Eton 2 English 2 Dr. 2 Christianity 2 Bysshe 2 Adonais 1 young 1 time 1 room 1 power 1 poetry 1 poem 1 nature 1 long Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1526 man 978 time 917 poet 781 life 727 year 679 friend 624 letter 609 day 607 poem 581 mind 573 p. 545 father 539 love 503 word 464 world 425 work 406 death 400 thing 400 nature 376 opinion 372 child 367 spirit 352 poetry 349 sister 349 book 347 woman 339 part 338 way 329 boy 327 hand 325 reason 321 son 321 power 314 matter 311 nothing 307 keat 303 school 301 view 300 thought 288 society 286 person 286 fact 283 place 283 author 277 name 276 soul 273 age 271 heart 271 evidence 269 wife Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 7899 _ 4584 Shelley 1018 Hunt 1002 Hogg 925 Mr. 647 Byron 508 Godwin 366 Harriett 356 Oxford 331 Miss 321 London 281 Keats 262 Westbrook 257 Place 256 Mrs. 238 Lord 236 Field 235 God 232 Adonais 228 Bysshe 225 University 211 Eton 203 York 201 Leigh 187 England 184 Mary 184 John 167 Harriet 164 Life 162 Medwin 160 Dr. 143 English 138 Queen 134 Southey 134 Examiner 129 Keswick 127 Sir 126 Prometheus 125 January 123 St. 122 c. 121 William 121 Timothy 118 Mab 117 Laon 116 Lady 114 Percy 114 College 113 Wordsworth 112 II Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 7531 he 5323 it 2841 i 2340 him 1617 they 1348 we 1072 them 850 she 734 himself 663 you 645 her 583 me 502 us 202 itself 201 themselves 122 one 110 herself 94 myself 48 ourselves 47 thee 24 yourself 18 mine 11 thyself 11 theirs 10 his 9 yours 5 ours 3 ye 3 oneself 3 hers 2 thy 2 southey 1 whence 1 these:-- 1 them:-- 1 song,''--which 1 oft 1 bookshelf 1 ay 1 adonis:-- 1 60_l 1 ''s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 20909 be 6932 have 1398 do 1182 write 1181 make 1043 say 781 see 694 take 670 think 658 give 630 know 606 come 548 find 517 go 460 seem 398 become 389 live 362 speak 351 leave 344 tell 344 appear 335 follow 330 believe 325 call 321 read 289 feel 288 show 287 use 285 bear 281 put 273 regard 265 pass 257 love 248 publish 236 send 230 look 228 hold 220 bring 220 begin 218 receive 215 hear 214 die 197 produce 195 fall 193 set 188 remain 188 consider 182 return 180 keep 172 declare Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3520 not 1414 so 1355 more 853 only 822 most 789 other 750 own 736 first 631 great 630 same 626 even 610 much 603 young 600 well 570 very 565 never 561 good 554 as 531 such 501 less 478 long 462 little 453 now 441 then 441 many 415 ever 394 still 376 up 374 too 373 early 367 old 367 last 350 far 348 also 313 human 295 few 292 thus 290 out 287 certain 282 however 279 high 273 later 266 soon 255 here 253 true 245 new 241 again 237 perhaps 232 often 230 no Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 156 good 152 least 116 most 82 great 65 high 48 early 42 eld 36 bad 26 strong 25 pure 22 fine 19 manif 19 late 18 near 17 slight 17 noble 15 Most 11 mean 10 low 10 lovely 10 grave 10 close 10 bright 9 happy 9 deep 9 dear 8 sweet 7 young 7 sad 7 lofty 7 dull 6 wild 6 long 6 fair 5 true 5 temp 5 small 5 fierce 5 faint 5 base 4 warm 4 sublime 4 simple 4 sharp 4 rude 4 rich 4 rare 4 j 4 hot 4 gentle Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 706 most 26 least 24 well 2 richest 1 writhe 1 writ 1 truest 1 smallest 1 sittest 1 near 1 madhouse:--the 1 latest 1 freest 1 dimmest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 www.archive.org 1 dp.rastko.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.archive.org/details/shelleyandthema00todhuoft 1 http://dp.rastko.net Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 ccx074@coventry.ac.uk Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 22 shelley was not 19 shelley did not 10 shelley had not 8 shelley does not 7 _ was not 6 hunt did not 5 hogg was not 4 _ did not 4 _ is _ 4 men are not 4 shelley had already 4 shelley was guilty 4 shelley was more 4 shelley was still 4 shelley wrote _ 3 _ is not 3 _ was _ 3 byron did not 3 hogg had not 3 hunt does not 3 shelley is not 3 shelley was certainly 3 shelley was deeply 3 shelley was far 3 shelley was no 3 shelley was so 3 shelley was too 2 _ did _ 2 _ see _ 2 byron was frequently 2 child appeared no 2 father was continually 2 friend was then 2 godwin was still 2 harriett was not 2 hogg had scarcely 2 hogg leave oxford 2 hogg was aware 2 hogg was guilty 2 hogg was so 2 hunt had not 2 hunt wrote mary 2 life was not 2 love is not 2 man be free 2 man is always 2 man was ever 2 men are naturally 2 men did not 2 mind are susceptible Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 child appeared no less 2 shelley had no sooner 2 shelley was no less 2 shelley was not likely 2 shelley was not wholly 1 _ be not grand 1 _ had no enemies 1 _ had no versification 1 _ had not old 1 _ is not equal 1 _ is not so 1 _ leaving no trace 1 _ was not more 1 byron did not correctly 1 children are no longer 1 father is no great 1 father was not likely 1 godwin did not yet 1 godwin has not yet 1 harriett read no less 1 harriett was not so 1 hogg had no doubt 1 hogg had no notion 1 hogg had no suspicion 1 hogg had no vice 1 hogg had not only 1 hogg makes no such 1 hogg was no regular 1 hunt did not even 1 hunt had no original 1 hunt has not yet 1 hunt is not deep 1 life be not wholly 1 life had no definite 1 life is no more 1 life was no question 1 life was not often 1 man are not invincible 1 man finds not pleasure 1 man has no property 1 man has no reason 1 man is not originally 1 man knows not only 1 men are not consigned 1 men are not fit 1 men are not yet 1 men believed no man 1 men did not yet 1 men have no leisure 1 mind had not yet A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 29978 author = Brailsford, Henry Noel title = Shelley, Godwin and Their Circle date = keywords = Burke; Condorcet; Dr.; England; English; France; French; Godwin; Holcroft; Justice; Mary; Paine; Political; Price; Revolution; Rights; Shelley; Society; Thomas; William; Wollstonecraft; man; mind; woman summary = reserved for William Godwin, a mind steeped in the French and English was a man of the people, and Godwin belonged by birth to the dissenting England of the French charter of the Rights of Man. Paine felt that he had made one Republic with a pamphlet, why not sense required by Godwin''s argument any human action ever is or can be generous mood, and men did not yet resent Godwin''s flattering suggestion Godwin and his school set out to show that the human mind is not Godwin hoped to "make it a work from the perusal of which no man occupation when his mind refused original work, Godwin in 1805 turned Lytton, the last of these admiring young men, left a note on Godwin''s Godwin formed Shelley''s mind, and that _Prometheus Unbound_ and _Hellas_ the French Revolution as Paine''s _Rights of Man_ or Condorcet''s id = 34525 author = Hogg, Thomas Jefferson title = Shelley at Oxford date = keywords = Hogg; London; Oxford; Plato; Shelley; University; course; day; good; great; hand; hour; little; long; man; mind; room; time; young summary = Thomas Jefferson Hogg''s account of Shelley''s career at Oxford first Hogg''s account of Shelley''s Oxford days is so far superior to that of his College, Oxford, in January 1810, a short time before Shelley. the tale of Hogg''s and Shelley''s Oxford life as told in the following soon as Shelley had quitted my rooms, and fell instantly into a profound "They are very dull people here," Shelley said to me one evening, soon ''You must read,'' he said many times in his small voice. Shelley frequently exercised his ingenuity in long discussions respecting welcome to Shelley at that time: he was young, and it is generally Shelley''s disputes, or who knew him only from having read some of the Shelley laughed also and waved his hand, and the little still more remarkably conspicuous in Shelley--his admiration of men of long course of life, and Shelley frequently and most pathetically lamented id = 41747 author = Jeaffreson, John Cordy title = The Real Shelley. New Views of the Poet''s Life. Vol. 1 (of 2) date = keywords = Byron; Bysshe; Castle; College; Dr.; Duke; Elizabeth; Eton; Field; Godwin; Grove; Harriett; Hogg; Irvyne; January; John; Keswick; Lady; Laon; London; Medwin; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Oxford; Percy; Place; Shelley; Shelleyan; Sir; Southey; Squire; St.; Stockdale; Street; Sussex; Timothy; University; Westbrook; York; Zastrozzi summary = Dear Boy''--Shelley offers his Sister to Hogg in believe that the poet''s great-grandfather (Timothy Shelley, of Fen Place, years later, the lady died after giving birth to three children, and Mr. Bysshe Shelley was at liberty to look out for a second heiress willing to Poet''s Likeness in Marble--Shelley and Byron--Peacock and Hogg on about the year appears also from divers of Shelley''s letters to Hogg. Shelley''s friend from Oxford, caused him in later time to write of Eldon, for Hogg, caused Shelley to think his father must have received a Writing from Field Place to Hogg on 16th June, 1811, Shelley says, ''I from Field Place on 21st June, 1811, to Hogg, at York, Shelley says, ''I After speaking of a letter Harriett has received from Hogg, Shelley says, Hogg''s affection for Shelley up to the time of the poet''s first marriage. in some way or other from Shelley, Harriett, or Hogg. id = 35495 author = MacDonald, Daniel J. title = The Radicalism of Shelley and Its Sources date = keywords = Christianity; Cythna; England; Essay; Falkland; God; Godwin; Harriet; Hogg; Islam; Laon; Luxima; Mab; Prometheus; Queen; Revolt; Shelley; Vol; Wordsworth; love; man summary = It is to his mother that Shelley owes his beauty and his good nature. In a letter to Hogg, Shelley says: "My father wrote to me, and I am now Shelley; he believed that the evils of society were man''s own creation. the old man of _The Revolt of Islam_, who represents Shelley''s teacher, because she thought her sentiments of love were true to all life''s natural Shelley sees one possessing beauty and virtue he cannot help loving that 1822, Shelley says: "I think one is always in love with something or This work may have suggested to Shelley the idea of making Laon and Cythna Godwin would reform society by means of education, so also would Shelley. Christianity_, Shelley writes "every man in proportion to his virtue God.[122] "I love to doubt and to discuss," Shelley writes, and it is for Intellectual Beauty is God. Since then Shelley''s Great Spirit, Spirit of Nature, Light, Beauty, Love, id = 35733 author = Miller, Barnette title = Leigh Hunt''s Relations with Byron, Shelley and Keats date = keywords = April; August; Blackwood; Byron; Cockney; Contemporaries; Correspondence; Examiner; Haydon; Hazlitt; Hunt; Ibid; John; Journals; Keats; Leigh; Letters; Life; Literary; London; Lord; Moore; Mr.; Quarterly; Rimini; Shelley; Story; Works; York summary = The relations of Leigh Hunt to Byron, Shelley and Keats have been treated relations of Leigh Hunt with Byron, Shelley, and Keats, a brief survey of Lord Byron, Shelley and Leigh Hunt feeling."[3] Like Shelley, Hunt had so great an inclination to Hunt, like Byron and Shelley, had curious ideas about the relation of the The influence of Hunt''s poetry upon Keats and Shelley, in its general influence of Hunt''s diction and versification upon Keats and Shelley is Examiner_ of June 1, 1817, in Hunt''s review of Keats''s _Poems_ of 1817, ultra-liberalism," he, like Hunt, Byron and Shelley continued to wear the state of affairs between Byron and Shelley must have given Hunt great until your arrival."[374] April 10, Shelley wrote again to Hunt of Byron''s articles--Members of the Cockney group--Byron--Hunt--Keats--Shelley-Hunt, Shelley, Hazlitt and Keats were the chief targets in the Cockney Hunt''s services of friendship to Byron, Shelley and Keats, his able id = 4695 author = Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft title = Notes to the Complete Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley date = keywords = Baths; England; Italy; Leghorn; MRS; Mab; NOTE; Pisa; Prometheus; Queen; Rome; Shelley; nature; poem summary = A wise friend once wrote to Shelley: ''You are still very young, and in fellow-collegian and warm friend of Shelley: they describe admirably the of Shelley''s mind, and his motives: it was written with entire summer-house at the end of the garden, which Shelley made his study, and In reading Shelley''s poetry, we often find similar verses, resembling, This poem is, like all others written by Shelley, ideal. truth and spirit of toleration which Shelley looked on as the sources of No poem contains more of Shelley''s peculiar views with regard to the books that Shelley read during several years. Shelley wrote little during this year. At this time, Shelley suffered greatly in health. Shelley''s favourite taste was boating; when living near the Thames or by With this last year of the life of Shelley these Notes end. that Shelley all this time was in brilliant spirits. id = 10119 author = Shelley, Percy Bysshe title = Adonais date = keywords = Adonais; Bion; Byron; Elegy; Endymion; Harriet; Hunt; Hyperion; John; Leigh; Moschus; Mr.; Pisa; Quarterly; Review; Rome; Shelley; Stanza; Urania; death; keat; like summary = young poet [Keats] long when Shelley and he became acquainted under my date, 4th February, that Keats, Shelley, and Hunt wrote each a sonnet on who was Keats''s friend from boyhood, writes: ''When Shelley left England Shelley''s feeling as to Keats''s final volume of poems is further volume: ''Keats, I hope, is going to show himself a great poet; like the of Shelley, Keats was principally and above all the poet of _Hyperion_; Shelley supposed that Keats was twenty-three years old at the beginning Shelley is here glancing at a leading incident in Keats''s poem of I give Shelley''s words ''true love tears'' as they appear in the therefore Shelley seems to intimate that the mind or soul of Adonais is British poets, whom Shelley represents as mourning the death of Keats. the deaths of William Shelley and of Keats; but I think the purport of id = 16872 author = Sotheran, Charles title = Percy Bysshe Shelley as a Philosopher and Reformer date = keywords = Christ; Christianity; England; God; Ireland; Lord; Shelley; christian; great; high; like; love; man; poet; power summary = tyrant, who lost America and poured out human blood like water to of nature, the great Wordsworth himself, confess that Shelley was always present to Shelley, the great idea ever uppermost to him was The idea of the _Supreme Power_ or _God_, as emanating from Shelley, "The thoughts which the word ''God'' suggest to the human mind his emotional impulses, Shelley possessed, like all true Hermetists a soul, that All which makes the-present life happy on earth, the hope the human race, ''For a nation to love liberty, it is Shelley considered that there was no real wealth but man''s labor, and Thus have the labors of Shelley, and other reformers for the good of Of such was Shelley''s philosophy of love, and I would ask if it be Believing, as I have explained, in the divinity of love, Shelley Shelley might, not have become, living for us even perhaps at this id = 4555 author = Symonds, John Addington title = Percy Bysshe Shelley date = keywords = Adonais; Byron; Bysshe; Cenci; English; Eton; Godwin; Harriet; Hogg; Hunt; Leigh; London; Lord; Mary; Medwin; Mr.; Mrs.; Oxford; Peacock; Pisa; Prometheus; Shelley; Trelawny; Williams; life; like summary = student of Shelley''s life, the sincere admirer of his genius, is almost friend Hogg, in after-years, Shelley often spoke about another reptile, When he was ten years of age, Shelley went to school at Sion house, time after the date mentioned in this letter, Shelley and Miss Grove We only know that in his early boyhood Shelley loved his father (See Shelley''s third letter to Godwin (Hogg 2 page 63) for Shelley family in their memorials of the poet, and through their friend, of what he thought swift-coming death above his head, Shelley worked Shelley''s time was therefore passed in study and composition. 1819 was the most important year in Shelley''s life, so far as literary Shelley "sought through the world the One whom he may love." Thus, while to any one else but Hogg and Mrs. Shelley, the students of the poet''s song, much loved in life by Shelley: Shelley''s life or poetry. id = 1336 author = Thompson, Francis title = Shelley: An Essay date = keywords = Church; Metaphysical; Nature; Shelley; child; like; love; poetry summary = Shelley is hardly possible, still less likely, on account of the defect Shelley''s life frequently exhibits in him the magnified child. Such a love Shelley''s second wife appears unquestionably to have given competence, poetry, love; yet he wailed that he could lie down like a Coming to Shelley''s poetry, we peep over the wild mask of revolutionary singer, qualified Shelley to be the poet of _Prometheus Unbound_, for it Shelley''s poetry. Shelley with the Lake poet is that he loved Nature with a love even more The Metaphysical School, like Shelley, loved imagery for Shelley''s success, and yet further did a later poet, so much further that poet mourned in true poetry. which we can go to but three poets--Coleridge, Shelley, Chopin, {8} and We spoke of the purity of Shelley''s poetry. until the tears run down it; then some air of searching poetry, like an id = 34085 author = Todhunter, John title = Shelley and the Marriage Question date = keywords = Shelley; love; man; woman summary = Now that marriage, like most other time-honoured institutions, has come The very idea of marriage implies some kind of bond imposed by society proceeded to abolish marriage that free love might regenerate mankind. And what is this modern ideal of love, of which Shelley is the exponent? To understand Shelley''s protest against marriage, we must life in this ideal love. Hang it all, sir, let a man make love to his own wife, and stick man, and them''s my sentiments." To all which, let Shelley reply as best world, that living of the most perfect life attainable by man, for which solution of the marriage problem was imperfect, not merely in practice, He does not like stray women and children going about the world. now that both men and women demand it. cease"--marriage without love being only a particular form of higher and more wholesome life all round; but the ascent of man is id = 1337 author = Waterlow, Sydney title = Shelley date = keywords = Byron; England; Godwin; Harriet; Hogg; Mary; Prometheus; Shelley; Spirit; Trelawny; good; life; like; love; man; poet summary = face of the world, while all Shelley''s pure and lofty aspirations left cabin--Shelley his novel, Mary a story called ''Hate'', and Claire a them--Mary, Claire, and Shelley--at once fell in love with the dusky in nature, or in passionate love, or in the inspiration of poetry. idealism on Shelley''s conception of love; here we need only notice that eternal ideal--Shelley called it Intellectual Beauty--which is the struggle between evil and good, or, what for Shelley is the same thing, and light, the true home of Shelley''s spirit, where the circling Shelley returned to the struggle between the good and evil principles, Here was a subject made to Shelley''s hand--a naturally pure Like the other poets of the Romantic Movement Shelley expended his Thus Shelley''s love-songs The literature dealing with Shelley''s work and life is immense, and no ''The Life and Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley'', by Mrs. Julian