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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 16 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 63355 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 85 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 like 3 great 3 Sicily 3 Santa 3 God 2 think 2 roman 2 look 2 italian 2 ebook 2 Vittoria 2 St. 2 San 2 Rome 2 Naples 2 Miss 2 Maria 2 Lady 2 Italy 2 Don 2 Co. 1 work 1 woman 1 wall 1 temple 1 signore 1 sicilian 1 scene 1 place 1 marquis 1 man 1 love 1 life 1 know 1 illustration 1 greek 1 good 1 foot 1 eye 1 door 1 dear 1 city 1 Zeus 1 Winston 1 White 1 Warren 1 Vincent 1 Vesuvius 1 Vereza 1 Venice Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2103 man 1272 time 1158 hand 1157 eye 1011 day 937 woman 785 life 784 way 731 face 695 nothing 693 thing 678 night 678 moment 608 voice 604 people 580 word 579 sea 575 something 574 one 551 head 543 house 539 heart 537 place 535 love 529 door 499 girl 496 boy 492 side 483 room 477 mind 472 world 457 friend 428 brother 427 wall 424 foot 406 light 403 year 397 hour 386 air 382 line 376 part 357 father 320 thought 320 stone 319 city 313 child 312 signore 310 mother 309 mountain 308 anything Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 5106 _ 901 l. 748 Maurice 599 Tebaldo 593 Orsino 557 Gaspare 512 Vittoria 480 Hermione 416 Julia 369 Sicily 316 Artois 312 God 306 San 285 Blake 282 Morgana 277 Ippolito 265 Rome 264 MASC 255 Maddalena 250 Norvin 246 Salvatore 245 Lucrezia 235 Francesco 215 Giacinto 205 King 191 Aliandra 185 LEL 184 Don 182 Phi 182 Ferdinand 176 Manella 167 Miss 157 Lady 156 Bernie 147 Sir 146 Pagliuca 142 Delarey 139 Italy 133 Hippolitus 132 Lord 130 Santa 128 Di 127 Sicilian 127 Martel 127 Corona 126 signora 121 Nell 121 Myra 119 Si 117 C Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 12556 he 9467 i 8875 it 8134 you 7023 she 4544 him 3100 they 2723 her 2545 me 2105 we 1612 them 853 himself 647 us 373 herself 210 one 208 themselves 198 myself 195 itself 149 yourself 72 thee 57 his 47 yours 47 mine 45 hers 35 ourselves 35 ''em 32 ''s 16 ours 7 theirs 6 i''m 6 him,-- 5 ye 3 you''re 3 thy 3 oneself 3 em 2 yourselves 2 you''ll 2 we''l 2 me"--she 1 your---- 1 you,--you 1 you''ld 1 yes!--that 1 women,--you 1 women,--they 1 woman,--she 1 where,--they 1 what?--against 1 watch--''you Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 28810 be 11799 have 4463 do 3146 say 2351 know 2316 go 2289 see 2130 come 1665 make 1513 think 1451 look 1312 take 998 give 956 tell 922 seem 912 feel 829 find 794 hear 760 leave 740 speak 727 get 639 stand 620 begin 615 let 592 call 573 love 572 turn 563 ask 466 answer 462 want 457 live 432 hold 419 keep 416 fall 414 believe 412 follow 404 understand 400 wish 400 bring 394 mean 385 sit 384 try 384 put 384 pass 367 lie 365 laugh 353 rise 345 meet 339 marry 323 wait Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 7049 not 2050 so 1679 now 1512 then 1487 more 1429 up 1331 very 1146 out 1128 little 999 only 938 great 937 here 930 well 915 good 911 long 896 down 892 never 857 other 839 again 819 much 792 too 765 away 725 even 722 own 702 there 694 almost 690 still 683 old 680 first 656 as 655 back 580 many 573 once 555 ever 545 last 508 most 504 just 496 always 491 all 474 such 463 far 455 young 452 perhaps 446 yet 398 alone 395 quite 376 off 371 same 355 small 348 white Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 184 good 160 least 140 most 50 great 33 bad 27 small 24 slight 23 high 18 strong 15 fine 15 deep 14 early 12 pure 12 Most 11 old 9 rich 9 large 9 dr 8 noble 8 eld 7 wise 7 lovely 7 late 7 handsome 7 faint 6 rare 6 near 6 low 6 dear 5 strange 5 short 5 keen 4 wild 4 topmost 4 ready 4 l 4 heavy 4 hard 4 happy 4 fair 3 vast 3 sure 3 simple 3 long 3 grand 3 gay 3 farth 3 bright 3 brave 3 big Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 368 most 30 well 30 least 1 ways,--most 1 strangest 1 purest 1 on--"love 1 meanest 1 lyest 1 long 1 lest 1 exprest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 www.gutenberg.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 2 http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/1539 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/0/1/5/20157/20157-h/20157-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/0/1/5/20157/20157-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 114 _ are _ 11 maurice did not 10 orsino was not 7 maurice said nothing 5 orsino did not 4 _ have _ 4 face was pale 4 face was very 4 life is not 4 man had not 4 men are not 4 one does not 4 orsino had never 4 orsino had not 4 orsino was silent 3 _ is _ 3 eyes did not 3 eyes were red 3 eyes were still 3 gaspare did not 3 gaspare said nothing 3 man was quite 3 maurice was conscious 3 one is not 3 orsino said nothing 3 tebaldo had not 3 tebaldo was not 3 things are possible 3 voice was not 3 voice was suddenly 2 _ is too 2 day seemed very 2 days went by 2 eyes were bent 2 eyes were restless 2 eyes were suddenly 2 eyes were very 2 eyes were wide 2 face was alive 2 face was almost 2 face was ashen 2 face was still 2 face was white 2 gaspare came out 2 gaspare looked up 2 gaspare said no 2 heart stood still 2 life is full 2 life is simple 2 love is not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 gaspare said no more 2 orsino was not very 1 _ am not married"--he 1 eyes had no smile 1 faces was no hint 1 heart was no longer 1 hearts have no space 1 life has not yet 1 life is not hopelessly 1 life is not more 1 love is no better 1 love is not unreal 1 man did not at 1 maurice had no great 1 maurice made no answer 1 maurice was not afraid 1 men are not forgetful 1 men have no luck 1 men were not cowards 1 night seemed no more 1 one has no idea 1 one has not yet 1 one is not free 1 one is not sure 1 one is not vulgar 1 orsino did not often 1 orsino is not at 1 orsino was not at 1 orsino was not even 1 orsino was not hungry 1 orsino was not imaginative 1 people have no will 1 people was not very 1 place was no longer 1 tebaldo had no intention 1 tebaldo was no spendthrift 1 tebaldo was not mean 1 thing was not yet 1 things are not possible 1 time was not favorable 1 voice was no longer 1 voice was not unpleasant 1 word is not strong 1 words were not carefully A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 6379 author = Beach, Rex title = The Net date = keywords = Bernie; Blake; Cardi; Chief; Countess; Donnelly; Dreux; God; Mafia; Margherita; Martel; Maruffi; Miss; Myra; Narcone; Nell; New; Norvin; Oliveta; Sicilian; Sicily; Terranova; Vittoria; Warren summary = heard me speak." The overseer raised his hat, and Blake took his hand, We look like an American sheriff''s posse, Martel," said he. "I know men in my country who cherish their enemies like friends. "It was very good of you to come so long a way," said the Countess at During the next few days Norvin Blake saw much of the Countess Blake went to the girl and laid a shaking hand upon her arm, "Do you know," said Bernie, "I have been thinking about this Mafia abruptly, he left the room, like a man who knows he must think of but "You''re just the man I''m looking for," Bernie Dreux told Norvin, whom hand like a blind old man and be told that two and two make four. girl had talked of little except Norvin Blake and the effect had not Norvin Blake I knew in Sicily, who, indeed, did not know his own id = 10850 author = Beaumont, Francis title = Philaster; Or, Love Lies a Bleeding date = keywords = Bell; Cle; Enter; King; Lady; Lord; Pha; Phi; Philaster; Prince; Sir summary = But boy, it will prefer thee; thou art young, Come Sir, tell me truly, does your Lord love me? ''Tis thy Lords business hasts me thus; Away. Ages to come shall know no male of him Let all that shall succeed thee, for thy wrongs, What ill bred man art thou, to intrude thy self Clear thou thy self, or know not me for Father. D--H and Folio print ''Enter'' after a space at the end of preceding line. lines ending _by, hand, Princesse, selfe_. lines ending _tongue, King, him, infections, brave, boy, else, Seven lines ending _know, head, king, word, attempts, me, friends_. lines ending _selfe, sufficient, loves, would, expect, violence, know, Ten lines ending _thought, Lady, pardon''d, Three lines ending _looke, Lord, selfe_. Three lines ending _me, boy, brave_. Four lines ending _me, gods, selfe, Two lines ending _thou, me_. B, C, D, E] two lines ending _you and King_. id = 3831 author = Corelli, Marie title = The Secret Power date = keywords = Aloysius; California; City; Don; Eagle; Gaspard; Giulio; God; Gwent; Kingswood; Lady; Manella; Marchese; Morgana; Plaza; Rivardi; Roger; Royal; Seaton; White; dear; eye; good; great; know; life; like; look; love; man; think; woman summary = "She looks like a witch," she said slowly--"One of those creatures they Manella stared in a kind of child-like wonderment,--her big dusky eyes "For women to love in!" he said, with a sudden warmth in his dark eyes. "You won''t always think so!" he said--"Such a charming little woman "But I think even a soul may grow tired!" said Morgana, suddenly--"so "Quite natural!" she said--"No man is ever ''interested'' in woman''s "She''s a good ''draw'' for male visitors"--said Gwent--"Many a man I know Manella''s great bright eyes opened wide like stars in the darkness. hand gently on her arm--"be a good girl and think over what I''ve said brilliant little creature like Morgana, if she could win "a good man''s "How small the world looks from the air!" said Morgana--"It''s not worth "I am a woman of to-day,"--said Morgana. "A great love is always on the woman''s side,"--he said--"Men are too id = 44311 author = Crawford, F. Marion (Francis Marion) title = Corleone: A Tale of Sicily date = keywords = Aliandra; Basili; Camaldoli; Corleone; Corona; Don; Ferdinando; Francesco; Giacinto; Ippolito; Messina; Miss; Moscio; Orsino; Pagliuca; Randazzo; Rome; San; Santa; Saracinesca; Sicily; Slayback; Tebaldo; Vittoria summary = ''Quite absurd, I suppose,'' answered Orsino, not looking at his brother. Ippolito laughed, watching his brother''s face, but he said nothing in ''I am thinking of going further before long,'' said Orsino gravely, as not like and did not trust Tebaldo, and thought his brother Francesco ''Goodbye,'' said Tebaldo, looking intently into her face as he opened the Vittoria''s father was said to have been a very good kind of man, ''I believe I heard something fall,'' said Orsino, opening the door of the Orsino got up and looked out again, as the man went away. ''That is a mere phrase, Orsino,'' said Corona, gravely, ''like a great ''Look here, Vittoria,'' said Tebaldo, more suavely. ''You know what you have said to Donna Vittoria,'' answered Ippolito. As Orsino had always said, Ippolito was more of a man ''A man cannot do better than marry the woman he loves,'' said Francesco, id = 20157 author = Hichens, Robert title = The Call of the Blood date = keywords = Africa; Artois; Delarey; Dio; Emile; Etna; Felice; Gaspare; God; Hermione; London; Lucrezia; Maddalena; Madonna; Marechiaro; Maurice; Pretore; Salvatore; San; Sebastiano; Sicily; Signorino; look; sicilian; signore; think summary = "Maurice," said Hermione, leaning her long arms on the table and leaning As if Gaspare had understood what Maurice said, he suddenly spun round "Maurice," Hermione said, at last, "does this silence of the mountains "I''ll go into the sea with Gaspare," said Maurice. "I wish I were a man, Lucrezia," said Hermione, when the voices at length "Courage, Gaspare!" said Maurice, putting his hand on the boy''s shoulder. Maurice looked up from the letter and met Gaspare''s questioning eyes. Gaspare said nothing, but he looked at Salvatore, and his wet face was "Come along, Gaspare!" said Maurice, hastily. Maurice went away with Gaspare in the night towards the white road where Maurice went by he thought of Gaspare''s words, "When a man cannot go any Maurice said nothing, but took her hand and looked at her. "We''ll never part from Gaspare," Maurice thought, as he looked and id = 6563 author = Molière title = The Blunderer date = keywords = ANS; Celia; LEAND; LEL; Lelio; MASC; MASCARILLE; TRUF; Trufaldin; scene summary = father becomes reconciled to his daughter having married a serving-man But let us endeavour to speak to Celia for a moment, to know what she SCENE III.--CELIA, LELIO, MASCARILLE. want now; let us make better use of our time; let us know of her quickly SCENE IV.--TRUFALDIN, CELIA, MASCARILLE, _and_ LELIO _in a have come to consult you to know whether his love is likely to meet with SCENE VIII.--TRUFALDIN, LEANDER, LELIO, MASCARILLE. SCENE XI.--LELIO, TRUFALDIN, MASCARILLE, _and his company masked_. [Footnote: Though Lelio says to Mascarille, "Enough, I know it all," he SCENE III.--TRUFALDIN, LELIO, MASCARILLE. SCENE VI.--TRUFALDIN, LELIO, MASCARILLE. SCENE VIII.--LELIO, TRUFALDIN, MASCARILLE. I shall stay as long as you like; I only wish to please you; let us SCENE IX.--CELIA, ANDRÈS, LELIO, MASCARILLE. I shall soon let you know what can be done. I shall go and inform my master of this, and let him know id = 7371 author = Radcliffe, Ann Ward title = A Sicilian Romance date = keywords = Abate; Count; Emilia; Ferdinand; Hippolitus; Julia; Louisa; Madame; Maria; Mazzini; Menon; Naples; Vereza; Vincent; door; marquis summary = On the following day Emilia and Julia dined with the marquis. breakfast-room in silence, and Julia almost feared to meet her eye. Julia waited the return of night with restless and fearful impatience. and Julia began to fear that Ferdinand had been discovered, when a Julia hastily followed the steps of the marchioness, and entered the Night returned, and Ferdinand repaired to the chamber of Julia to Ferdinand in passing from the marquis met Hippolitus. The duke, on quitting Julia, went to the marquis, with whom he The news of Julia''s elopement at length reached the ears of Ferdinand, closed--the duke did not appear, and the fate of Julia yet hung in The marquis made madame and Julia all the reparation in his marquis is coming.'' Julia''s heart sunk at these words; she paused not with the place of Julia''s present retreat, and upbraided the marquis id = 1134 author = Shakespeare, William title = The Winter''s Tale date = keywords = ebook summary = THIS EBOOK WAS ONE OF PROJECT GUTENBERG''S EARLY FILES PRODUCED AT A TIME WHEN PROOFING METHODS AND TOOLS WERE NOT WELL DEVELOPED. IS AN IMPROVED EDITION OF THIS TITLE WHICH MAY BE VIEWED AS EBOOK (#1539) at https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/1539 id = 1800 author = Shakespeare, William title = The Winter''s Tale date = keywords = ebook summary = THIS EBOOK WAS ONE OF PROJECT GUTENBERG''S EARLY FILES PRODUCED AT A TIME WHEN PROOFING METHODS AND TOOLS WERE NOT WELL DEVELOPED. IS AN IMPROVED EDITION OF THIS TITLE WHICH MAY BE VIEWED AS EBOOK (#1539) at https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/1539 id = 37979 author = Verga, Giovanni title = Under the Shadow of Etna: Sicilian Stories from the Italian of Giovanni Verga date = keywords = Agrippino; Alfio; Alfonso; Gramigna; Jeli; Joseph; Mara; Neli; Saint; Santa; Turiddu summary = "Yes," continued Jeli, "_massaro_ Agrippino''s daughter Mara, who used Jeli then let his grasp relax, and the little girl set to work to pick "We are going away," said Mara, when she saw him looking around. Jeli took hold and helped _massaro_ Agrippino and _la gnà Lia_ load up "Let him be," said Jeli, as white in the face as if it were himself Mara went holding _massaro_ Neri''s son''s arm, as if she were a fine mentioned as soon to marry _massaro_ Agrippino''s Mara, Jeli said not a When Mara said "_sissignore_," and the priest made her Jeli''s wife When Mara returned with the wood in her arms Jeli said to her, "Why one like _compare_ Neli was wanted to buy his Saint Joseph''s ass, at And _compare_ Neli, as he got behind the ass to drive it off, said,-"Every day that Saint Joseph''s ass lives," said he, "I make fifteen id = 18845 author = nan title = Seeing Europe with Famous Authors, Volume 7 Italy, Sicily, and Greece (Part One) date = keywords = Augustus; Campanile; Co.; Coliseum; Council; Doge; Ducal; Florence; Grand; Italy; John; Maria; Mark; Palace; Peter; Pope; Rome; Santa; St.; Venice; Winston; great; italian; like; roman; work summary = at least), churches, and a great temple all in the air, and beautiful of the walls were also covered with life-like paintings, so that the beautiful buildings of the modern city, is unhappily placed. On reaching the end of a long line of narrow streets, white walls, and great churches which come rolling past me like a sea, it is a small Rome--quarries in the old time, but afterward the hiding-places of the Old Palace; it is a great mass of stone, without columns, without laid in July of that year, with all the greatness of Florence looking the great dome he was to build--and so built it, all opposition Many of the fine old palaces of Florence, you know, are built in a Campanile, high above palace roofs, arcades and church domes, its bells The Ducal Palace, which was the great work of Venice, was built id = 19061 author = nan title = Seeing Europe with Famous Authors, Volume 8 Italy, Sicily, and Greece, Part Two date = keywords = Acropolis; Athens; Co.; Greece; Italy; Mount; Naples; Pisa; SICILY; St.; Vesuvius; Zeus; city; foot; great; greek; illustration; italian; like; place; roman; temple; wall summary = Senate House, round about any large building, little shops stick close, city; here, before the tombs of the great, people might well reflect wall is some forty feet high, built of stone from the Pisan hills, Stand at the bottom of the great market-place of Pompeii, and look up this watercourse were adorned with old houses and long walls, and trees, to the great Northern wall, we have a wonderful relic of those times; city that can never be ruined--for instance, the great stone quarries, that from the city below they look like the remains of two different There are very old and very beautiful little churches in Athens, remains of the ancient city are stones; for the massive square tower, The great gate of the city, a portion of the wall, and four of the projection of huge stones, looking like a square tower, on its right