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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 13 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 123346 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 78 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 Ceylon 6 King 5 tree 5 India 4 large 4 illustration 4 Kandy 4 Colombo 3 time 3 great 3 foot 3 european 3 elephant 3 Zool 3 Yaka 3 Turtle 3 Sir 3 Singhalese 3 Rakshasa 3 Queen 3 Province 3 Princess 3 Prince 3 Museum 3 Mr. 3 Hettiya 3 Gray 3 Gamarala 3 Europe 3 Dr. 3 CHAPTER 3 Buddha 3 Brahmana 3 Blyth 2 year 2 water 2 native 2 man 2 like 2 jungle 2 island 2 friend 2 footnote 2 country 2 come 2 Wlk 2 Westw 2 Vol 2 Vert 2 Vaedda Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 3688 man 3141 p. 3034 time 2555 day 2233 elephant 2226 water 2093 tree 2018 footnote 1883 foot 1729 house 1604 woman 1538 animal 1513 country 1481 part 1478 place 1370 head 1352 person 1253 body 1237 one 1233 king 1185 side 1184 year 1183 specie 1178 hand 1165 inch 1117 way 1107 rice 1041 ground 1018 island 1014 tail 993 jungle 936 form 887 city 858 food 852 river 837 fish 829 forest 827 work 823 story 815 village 811 son 786 night 782 order 763 hair 761 mother 753 manner 751 account 740 name 739 mile 738 number Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 44356 _ 2864 Ceylon 2819 King 2601 Wlk 2398 Prince 1486 Princess 1038 India 925 vol 813 Mr. 701 Linn 630 . 626 Dr. 560 Gamarala 540 Jerdon 497 tom 469 Fam 469 A.D. 460 S. 434 Mahawanso 426 Rakshasa 426 Nat 421 Jackal 411 Queen 411 Fabr 389 Singhalese 383 Guén 382 c. 377 Colombo 376 | 375 Soc 372 Spongilla 368 Indian 357 Zool 344 Province 339 God 335 thou 335 Sir 317 P. 316 i. 287 brown 279 de 278 ii 278 Yaka 265 Bengal 261 Blyth 259 Footnote 249 iii 246 M. 245 Syst 236 Minister Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 16653 it 11115 he 9310 they 8762 i 5464 them 4493 him 3386 we 2651 you 2375 she 2319 me 1432 us 1209 her 697 themselves 608 himself 357 itself 214 one 157 myself 144 thee 78 herself 38 ourselves 37 yourself 30 mine 23 ye 17 ours 14 theirs 11 yours 7 his 6 ib 6 d''eau 5 thyself 3 hers 2 whereof 2 thou 2 pedro.--jaffna.--northern 2 je 2 ii 1 yantrayak 1 ya 1 vp 1 trade.--at 1 thy 1 ran 1 raksi 1 o 1 lastly!--we 1 ionia.--_journ 1 has!--no 1 ha 1 died:--"she 1 cobras:--"i Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 56131 be 20316 have 7650 say 6738 go 4696 come 3929 give 3495 take 3483 do 2905 see 2704 make 2378 find 2014 eat 1696 bring 1639 ask 1620 become 1429 know 1419 look 1330 tell 1290 call 1227 kill 1196 get 1058 put 1007 form 969 carry 921 send 921 follow 914 fall 892 remain 866 place 836 cut 814 leave 804 think 784 run 776 appear 757 hear 744 keep 699 describe 689 use 678 speak 661 lie 657 bear 656 die 634 cover 628 return 618 grow 617 meet 610 pass 599 live 599 begin 572 throw Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 7184 not 3387 then 3246 so 2726 very 2660 other 2209 great 2196 more 2167 also 2031 there 2024 up 1898 only 1888 large 1705 long 1622 away 1546 little 1544 small 1415 much 1412 most 1390 same 1374 down 1330 out 1329 now 1327 first 1309 good 1292 as 1285 well 1225 young 1213 many 1158 thus 1154 such 1154 about 1071 off 1071 few 999 again 963 here 949 white 906 still 891 afterwards 882 even 810 back 802 low 774 old 769 black 767 never 750 high 749 together 729 far 718 short 702 however 691 certain Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 299 most 204 good 170 great 167 least 139 large 107 high 99 early 87 young 86 eld 76 near 63 fine 46 slight 42 small 33 low 26 Most 23 old 21 long 20 simple 18 bad 17 lofty 17 deep 15 common 14 thick 14 late 12 strong 11 hot 10 short 10 big 8 hard 8 easy 8 dry 7 rich 7 pure 7 noble 7 heavy 7 choice 7 broad 6 tall 6 rude 6 close 5 wise 5 poor 5 manif 5 keen 5 full 5 dense 4 wild 4 wide 4 steep 4 remote Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1113 most 43 least 42 well 4 infest 3 worst 2 youngest 2 highest 1 species,--thirty 1 near 1 long 1 greatest 1 dwelling''s.--forest 1 brightest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 www.gutenberg.net 2 www.archive.org 2 archive.org 1 gallica.bnf.fr Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/36504/36504-h/36504-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/36504/36504-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/3/5/5/13552/13552-h/13552-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/3/5/5/13552/13552-h.zip 1 http://www.archive.org/details/freshwatersponge00anna 1 http://www.archive.org 1 http://gallica.bnf.fr 1 http://archive.org/details/narrativeofopera00johnrich 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 16 _ see _ 13 prince did not 9 day is good 9 day was good 8 prince was not 7 _ has only 7 _ is closely 7 _ is only 7 man came home 7 man went away 6 _ is not 6 _ is usually 6 elephant did not 6 king was not 6 one was visible 6 princess was not 6 species are not 5 _ is also 5 _ is widely 5 king did not 5 king was about 5 king was pleased 5 man came up 5 prince became big 5 prince is not 5 prince was there 5 prince went away 5 time went by 4 _ are also 4 _ are not 4 _ does not 4 _ is abundant 4 _ is apparently 4 _ is more 4 animal is not 4 ceylon are generally 4 ceylon is as 4 country is flat 4 elephant was not 4 king does not 4 king gave permission 4 men come here 4 one does not 4 parts are white 4 princess remained there 4 tree does not 4 tree is not 4 woman came home 4 woman did not 3 _ has also Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 princess was not there 4 prince was not there 3 prince is not there 2 _ are not uncommon 2 _ has not yet 2 _ is not only 2 king was not there 2 man was not there 2 species are not numerous 2 species are not very 2 time has not yet 2 water had no connection 2 water was not more 1 _ has no crest 1 _ have no trace 1 _ have not as 1 _ is not quite 1 _ was not _ 1 animal had no brains 1 animal is not much 1 animal is not now 1 animal is not worth 1 animal was not unknown 1 animals are not afraid 1 animals are not arboreal 1 body be not thus 1 ceylon had no occasion 1 ceylon is not yet 1 ceylon was not earlier 1 ceylon was not so 1 ceylon were not entirely 1 country is not sufficiently 1 country was not good 1 day are no better 1 day are not more 1 day do not profess 1 elephant had no chance 1 elephant has no tusks 1 elephant have no attachments 1 elephant sees no water 1 elephant was not ready 1 elephant was not there 1 elephants had not yet 1 elephants made no attempt 1 elephants were not more 1 feet being not nearly 1 foot is not naked 1 king gives no order 1 king is not clever 1 king was not yet A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 36504 author = Annandale, Nelson title = Freshwater Sponges, Hydroids & Polyzoa date = keywords = America; Annandale; Bombay; Calcutta; Carter; Ephydatia; Europe; Footnote; Hislopia; Hydra; India; Mus; Museum; Plumatella; Rec; Skeleton; Spongilla; Zool; illustration summary = sponges in running water in India, and of these six species, five have polyzoa of the genus _Plumatella_ that occur in India, while of species and the gemmules of two sponges (_Spongilla carteri_ and _Ephydatia B=gemmule-cell of _Spongilla lacustris_ containing green corpuscles pass through a large specimen of such a sponge as _Spongilla carteri_ in The external form of sponges is very variable, but each species, In _Spongilla proliferens_, a common Indian species, the buds arise as _Gemmules_ usually numerous, lying free near the base of the sponge, town in which sponges of this species produce most spicules are those in some sponges that agree otherwise with the typical form of the species differs mainly in the form of its gemmule-spicules and the structure of closely resemble the gemmule-spicules of some species of _Ephydatia_ and Both forms of the species appear to be confined to water that is free id = 2036 author = Baker, Samuel White, Sir title = Eight Years'' Wanderings in Ceylon date = keywords = Bluebeard; CHAPTER; Ceylon; Cingalese; Colombo; Ellia; England; Newera; Plains; country; elephant; english; foot; forest; good; great; jungle; large; like; man; native; nature; time; tree; water; year summary = Appo--Ceylon Sport--Jungle Fever--Newera Ellia--Energy of Sir E. Appo--Ceylon Sport--Jungle Fever--Newera Ellia--Energy of Sir E. Newera Ellia lay like a level valley of about two miles in length by In a climate like that of Newera Ellia, even twelve months make a great All Ceylon people dread the wet season at Newera Ellia, which continues country, especially in an island like Ceylon, which, in every portion, rice-growing country like Ceylon, the periodical rains are jungle-covered country like Ceylon, diseases of the most malignant countries; and its good effects are already seen in Ceylon, where, for In a country with so large a proportion of forest as Ceylon, this is An African sportsmen would be a long time in killing a Ceylon elephant, jungle-covered country as Ceylon, where, in most cases, everything There is a great variety of this insect in Ceylon, from the large black id = 3231 author = Baker, Samuel White, Sir title = The Rifle and the Hound in Ceylon date = keywords = Ceylon; Ellia; Killbuck; Minneria; Newera; Palliser; Park; Smut; Veddah; Wortley; country; elephant; foot; jungle; large; shot summary = The game of Ceylon consists of elephants, buffaloes, elk, spotted deer, this wild country--through jungles, rivers, plains and deep ravines, Thought--Bull Buffalo Receives his Small Change--What is Man?--Long Shot Thought--Bull Buffalo Receives his Small Change--What is Man?--Long Shot little belt of trees I saw the elephant still in the lake, belly-deep, elephant, the main jungle being about a quarter of a mile from the shore gun, and we saw the ball splash in the water close to the elephants. Mr. Wallet was also killed by a rogue elephant; this animal was shot a A rogue elephant was bathing in a little pool of deep mud and water near a great day''s sport with buffaloes, when I saw a large herd in the rush of a large herd of deer coming through the jungle. good sport in elephant-shooting, we returned to the Park country. elephant-tracks in high grass, which we immediately followed up. id = 31923 author = Ballou, Maturin M. (Maturin Murray) title = The Pearl of India date = keywords = Adam; Anuradhapura; Buddha; CHAPTER; Ceylon; Colombo; East; England; English; Galle; India; Kandy; New; Ocean; Peak; Point; Singhalese; Tamil; Trincomalee; buddhist; european; foot; form; great; island; large; like; native; time; tree; year summary = King of Ceylon.--Ancient Ruins.--Aged Cave-Temples.--Gigantic Stone Character of Tamil Men.--Tree Climbing.--Native Children.--Numerical Banana-Tree.--Native Temples and Priestly Customs.--Vegetables and Famous Botanical Garden of Ceylon.--India-Rubber-Trees, Bamboos, and The Maldive Islands, situated five hundred miles west of Ceylon, are a people upon the island, while some authorities place the possible as large as an English sparrow, called the Ceylon bird of paradise, Ceylon.--Ancient Ruins.--Aged Cave Temples.--Gigantic Stone The native tribes of Ceylon cannot be said to form a progressive race, Ceylon Jungle.--Native Cabinet Woods.--Night in a Tropical thousand feet above sea level in this island, tea thrives at almost The beauty and value of the native woods of this island cannot fail Birds and Plants.--Native Fruit Trees.--The great beauties of Colombo, covering a broad expanse dotted with islands glimpses of rural island scenery, of birds, trees, flowers, and native the far past of the island''s history Ceylon was so long and so id = 44408 author = Johnston, Arthur title = Narrative of the Operations of a Detachment in an Expedition to Candy, in the Island of Ceylon, in the Year 1804 With Some Observations on the Previous Campaign, and on the Nature of Candian Warfare, etc., etc., etc. date = keywords = Candians; Candy; Ceylon; Coolies; Europeans; General; King; Lieutenant; Trincomalé summary = Of the Third Ceylon Regiment, then Captain Commandant of the Detachment. the persons of the officers commanding detachments of our armies in the enemy, of having always a considerable disciplined force, ready to On the following morning the troops crossed the great Candian river, post situated about sixteen miles from Candy, on the Trincomalé road), retaliate on the enemy; and detachments entered the country from 28.--Marched at daylight, the country continuing mountainous, but the 30.--The river having fallen considerably during the night, the enemy chief was wounded; that soon after, this detachment marched back to the march, our Coolies carrying a long train of sick and wounded. 17.--Continued our march unmolested by the enemy, and passed the night The other four divisions which entered the enemy''s country, had they detachment I had the honour to command during its march to Candy and in an incursion for a few days into the enemy''s country, when everything id = 14346 author = Knox, Robert title = An Historical Relation of the Island Ceylon in the East Indies Together with an Account of the Detaining in Captivity the Author and Divers other Englishmen Now Living There, and of the Author''s Miraculous Escape date = keywords = CHAP; Cande; City; Countrey; Court; Dutch; English; Father; Fort; God; Governor; House; Island; King; Land; Men; Palace; People; Portugueze; Rice; River; Water; Woods; child; corn; man; money; order; soldier; town; tree; woman summary = like unto Leather, and of great use unto the Countrey People. many times Commands to lay hold on and carry away great and Noble men, The great Officers tell the King, the People that accrue to the King from Corn-Lands.] So that in time all Houses the Land affords for the Kings use, and to send persons to Court, And the great Men are as ready when the King Commands, both King and People do generally like the Christian Religion better between the King and the great Men; and what Employment the People of [An Order comes from the King to bring them up into the Countrey.] For [Parted.] Order came from the great Men in Court to place us in like to which the King never gave to any White man in my time. who was at this time a great man about the King, was not a little id = 58889 author = Parker, H. (Henry) title = Village Folk-Tales of Ceylon, Volume 3 (of 3) date = keywords = Ane; Ayiwanda; Beater; Brahmana; Ceylon; Crow; Deer; Folk; Gamarala; God; Hettirala; Hettiya; Jackal; King; Kota; Lord; Minister; Parrot; Prince; Princess; Province; Queen; Rakshasa; Santal; Sokka; Tales; Turtle; Vaedda; Vedarala; Yaka; come; friend; time summary = Having come near the Lion he said, "We two remained on good terms At that time the King having arisen from the bed and gone, said, Then the boy said, "I having asked at elder brother''s hand must come," having said "Ha," the two Princes went with the widow woman. The Queen having come near the Prince, said, "Son, he must behead Having stopped them the woman went near the King and said, The King having come again to this boy''s house, said at the hand of The two persons having said "Ha," the two went with the King to the having gone to that man''s village, said, "Don''t come to look at me." near." Then a Prince having gone up a tree, when he looked said that and having gone he said to the King, "Last night a Prince and Princess The Prince having gone to his [father''s] city, said to the King, id = 51621 author = Perera, Arthur A. title = Sinhalese Folklore Notes, Ceylon date = keywords = Bali; Bandâra; Buddha; CHAPTER; Ceylon; Deviyô; Dewale; District; Kandy; Kapurala; Maha; Pattini; Perehera; Vol; Yakâ; day; house; leave; person; place; rice; service; sinhalese; temple; tenant; tree; village summary = A king cocoanut tree near the house brings bad luck to the owner''s The day after burial the dead man''s belongings are given away in and keep away from houses where a birth or death has taken place. The festival begins on a new moon day and lasts till the day there is a ceremonial boiling of rice in milk and a general feast. when they offer a present it is placed on a bundle of 40 betel leaves present the tenants of this class in Ninda villages supply betel a temple or for a Bali ceremony at a chief''s house forms one of the In temples their service comes under the kind called the which forms one of the services of the tenants of temple villages. forms one of the duties of every tenant of a temple village, and of given regularly once a month to a temple or chief by the tenants of id = 19550 author = Sterndale, Robert Armitage title = Natural History of the Mammalia of India and Ceylon date = keywords = Anderson; Assam; Bat; Bear; Bengal; Black; Blanford; Blyth; Burmah; Cat; Central; Ceylon; Dr.; Elliot; FAMILY; GENUS; Gardens; Gray; Himalayas; Hindi; Hodgson; India; Jerdon; Kellaart; MUS; Malayan; Mouse; Mr.; Museum; NATIVE; Nepal; Ovis; Professor; Rat; Seonee; Shrew; Sir; Society; Squirrel; Thibet; Thibetan; Wild; Yarkand; Zoological; figure; illustration; inch; large; tail summary = and tail dark brown, almost black; beneath yellowish white.--_Jerdon_. behind the ears is a small tuft of white hairs; the tail is long, SIZE.--Length of male, head and body 23 inches; tail, without hair, the base of the toes; feet small; calcaneum long; tip of tail free; body, inside of limbs and feet yellowish-white; tail brown, with a yellowish-white; head varied with black-tipped hairs; tail tail of the same colour as the body, the end dark, white-tipped; ears DESCRIPTION.--General colour, brown; hair ringed black and yellow, hands and face shorter; feet blackish brown; hair white-tipped; tail upper part of hind foot blackish; hairs of tail tipped black; ears hair; tip of tail black, forming a pencil tuft three inches long. under-parts; nose and feet flesh-coloured; ears dark brown; tail coloured at the base; tail above brown, below with white hairs; upper brown; the head is generally more grey; ears, nose, feet and tail id = 13325 author = Tennent, James Emerson, Sir title = Sketches of the Natural History of Ceylon date = keywords = Africa; America; Anim; Baly; Benn; Birds; Blyth; Boisd; British; Brug; Ceylon; Chemn; Colombo; Conch; Cram; Cuv; Dej; Dohrn; Dr.; Dutch; Europe; Fabr; Forsk; Gray; Greek; Guén; Günther; Hagen; Hist; Hope; Horsf; Hübn; India; Kandy; Kelaart; Lam; Lath; Latr; Layard; Leach; Linn; Major; Monog; Mr.; Museum; Nat; Neuera; Niet; Pasc; Pfeiff; Proc; Professor; Reeve; Serv; Singhalese; Sir; Smith; Sowerby; Steph; Syst; Templeton; Trincomalie; Vert; Westw; Wlk; Zool; animal; elephant; european; fish; footnote; illustration; tree; water summary = [Footnote 1: _Ceylon: An Account of the Island, Physical, Historical, [Footnote 1: There are two species of the tree rat in Ceylon: M. [Footnote 2: WOLF says that, in the year 1763, he saw in Ceylon two [Footnote 1: Among other eccentric forms, an elephant was seen in 1844, Ceylon elephant[3], says he saw one taken near Jaffna, which measured [Footnote 1: In the account of an elephant corral, chap. So long as the elephants of Ceylon were merely required in small numbers [Footnote 1: The fact of the elephant exhibiting timidity, on having a elephant in Ceylon has been known to remain out all night, without food, [Footnote 1: This remark regarding the elephant of Ceylon does not [Footnote 1: Two other species are found in the Ceylon waters, _P. [Footnote 2: _Fishes of Ceylon_, Pl. ix.] As regards the fresh-water fishes of India and Ceylon, the fact is now id = 13552 author = Tennent, James Emerson, Sir title = Ceylon; an Account of the Island Physical, Historical, and Topographical with Notices of Its Natural History, Antiquities and Productions, Volume 1 date = keywords = A.D.; Adam; Anarajapoora; Anim; Arabia; Arabs; B.C.; Bengal; Blyth; Boisd; British; Buddha; Buddhism; Buddhists; Ceylon; Chemn; China; Christ; Colombo; Conch; Cram; Cuv; Dej; Dohrn; Dr.; Dutugaimunu; Dynasty; East; Eastern; Epitome; Europe; Fabr; Galle; Gray; Greek; Guén; Hagen; Hindus; Hist; Hope; Hübn; Ibid; India; Jaffna; Journ; Kandy; Kandyan; Kelaart; King; Lam; Latr; Layard; Leach; Linn; Mahawanso; Malabar; Mr.; Nat; Neuera; Niet; Pali; Pasc; Peak; Pfeiff; Point; Pollanarrua; Portuguese; Prakrama; Proc; Ptolemy; REINAUD; Rajaratnacari; Rajavali; Reeve; Rohuna; Sanskrit; Sea; Serv; Singhalese; Sir; Smith; Steph; Syst; TURNOUR; Tissa; Trincomalie; Val; Vert; Vol; Westw; Wijayo; Wlk; Zool; chap; chinese; european; footnote; great; history; illustration; island; sidenote summary = Rice was imported into Ceylon in the second century B.C. The practice of irrigation due to the Hindu kings [Footnote 1: _An Account of the Island of Ceylon_, &c., by Capt. [Footnote 3: _Voyages and Travels to India, Ceylon, and the Red Sea_, by [Footnote 5: _A History of Ceylon from the earliest Period to the Year_ a remote period on the east coast of Ceylon, whereby the island of [Footnote 1: KNOX, _Historical Relation of Ceylon, an Island in the East [Footnote 1: There are two species of the tree rat in Ceylon: M. [Footnote 1: A Singhalese work, the _Sarpa Doata_, quoted in the _Ceylon [Footnote 1: Two other species are found in the Ceylon waters, _P. [Footnote 1: FORBES''S _Eleven Years in Ceylon_, vol. [Footnote 1: FORBES''S _Eleven Years in Ceylon_, vol. [Footnote 1: _Eleven Years in Ceylon,_ vol. present day regarding Ceylon, the following account of the island has id = 56614 author = nan title = Village Folk-Tales of Ceylon, Volume 1 (of 3) date = keywords = Brahmana; Cat; Ceylon; Crocodile; Gamarala; Hare; Hettiya; Indian; Jackal; King; Lion; Monkey; Prince; Princess; Province; Queen; Rakshasa; Turtle; Washerman; Yaka; friend summary = Afterwards Senasura, the Divine King, having given the man a book said, Having said this, Senasura, the Divine King, went away. Having gone to a village, he went along asking the way to a house into the house, and having placed it there, said to the Prince, Next day, the King''s Ministers having gone to the school said, "Let us The Rakshasa having come near the house, said, "Here are golden The guard having gone, said to the King, "Lord, a person called The Prince having eaten his rice in good time, went to the Yaka. eldest Princes of the King, having said, "Let us go," asked permission having come and stayed here, went away," they said. The Princesses having said, "We can," went with the King to his palace, man having said "Ha," went away. Having said this, the girl went with the man to his village. id = 57399 author = nan title = Village Folk-Tales of Ceylon, Volume 2 (of 3) date = keywords = Ane; Beater; Brahmana; Devatawa; Gamarala; Hettiya; King; Leopard; Minister; Parrot; Peacock; Prince; Princess; Province; Queen; Rakshasa; Tales; Tom; Turtle; Vaedda; Yaka; Yaksani; come; look summary = having come, she said, "Mother, to-day also the King came." Having given them, as they were coming away, the King said to the girl, One day, the Princes having said, "Let us also go to look at the The Ministers having come to the royal palace, said to the King, Having gone there, the man said to the youth, "Cut thou this tree at The man said, "Having gone up this tree, cut thou that plough which Prince said to the Princess, "Some day or other, having called Her bread, and having come near that tree, said on that day, also, just came, having said that he went to school, [the King], with the view At that time this giant having gone near the King, said, day the King alone went, and having said, "[After] looking [at the The King asks, "Why did you not come?" Then the Prince said, "I went