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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 8 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 166 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 96 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 illustration 1 man 1 great 1 Mamma 1 Johnny 1 FLAT 1 Betsy Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 142 illustration 83 man 27 freak 25 day 22 rocket 21 head 20 water 20 people 19 word 19 girl 18 town 18 cart 17 mother 16 way 16 go 16 eye 16 child 15 hand 12 soup 12 ground 12 face 12 boy 11 thing 9 time 9 sun 9 problem 9 need 9 clothe 8 thumb 8 one 8 nothing 8 match 8 hare 8 hair 8 grandma 8 cat 8 bed 8 arm 8 air 7 valve 7 tree 7 story 7 stone 7 sight 7 night 7 mud 7 mind 7 fun 7 death 6 year Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1052 _ 29 FLAT 21 Mamma 18 Johnny 10 Minnie 10 Bobby 9 ow 9 Story 8 Betsy 7 Riding 7 Philip 7 Miss 7 Hood 7 Earth 6 St. 6 Red 6 Nurse 6 Eurystheus 6 Christmas 5 cart 5 Wolf 5 Hero 5 Frederick 5 Charlotte 4 o''er 4 Tray 4 Son 4 Phoebe 4 Pauline 4 Mary 4 Harriet 4 Go 4 Conrad 4 Bob 4 Black 4 Augustus 4 A 3 Stag 3 Sophie 3 Papa 3 Nicholas 3 Little 3 Lady 3 L. 3 Head 3 HARPER 3 BROTHERS 3 Agrippa 2 u 2 twas Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 238 he 113 it 112 she 95 you 63 they 57 i 39 me 38 him 22 her 21 them 19 we 4 himself 2 us 2 herself 1 yourselves 1 yourself 1 one 1 his 1 hers 1 bear-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 366 be 90 have 77 do 72 see 55 say 41 go 38 come 33 make 27 think 26 look 25 take 25 cry 23 know 23 find 20 run 19 burn 18 hear 18 begin 17 tell 17 fall 16 walk 16 turn 16 feel 15 give 13 stop 13 scream 13 bring 12 stand 11 try 11 grow 11 get 10 shoot 10 seem 9 tear 9 stretch 9 live 9 lie 9 catch 9 bear 8 play 8 leave 7 teach 7 sit 7 set 7 laugh 7 fill 6 speak 6 show 6 rise 6 put Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 81 so 79 great 72 not 60 then 45 little 41 now 31 up 31 out 27 never 26 more 23 good 19 down 19 away 18 there 18 again 17 here 16 very 16 just 16 all 15 too 15 poor 13 still 13 soon 13 quite 12 as 11 well 11 old 11 by 11 always 10 such 10 once 10 on 10 off 10 no 10 nice 10 naughty 9 wild 9 right 9 red 9 pretty 9 high 8 thus 8 quickly 8 only 8 often 8 long 8 indeed 8 black 8 before 8 back Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 good 3 least 1 swell 1 slight 1 pure 1 long 1 clever 1 bad Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1 well 1 most Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net 1 www.archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/9/9/1/19915/19915-h/19915-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/9/9/1/19915/19915-h.zip 1 http://www.archive.org/details/twelvelaboursofh00londiala Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 bobby was delighted 1 child growing still 1 day was well 1 day went out 1 eyes were still 1 freak looked down 1 freak was indeed 1 girls were amazed 1 girls were there 1 head was more 1 mamma came home 1 mamma comes home 1 mamma did fret 1 mamma had scarcely 1 mamma is strict 1 mamma look quite 1 mamma looked very 1 man are unknown 1 man was far 1 man was indeed 1 man was not 1 men do heroic 1 men were indeed 1 minnie ran triumphantly 1 minnie was not 1 thing is plain 1 times gone by 1 town was not 1 town was now 1 water does not 1 way was slowly 1 words had merit Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 man was not willing 1 minnie was not satisfied A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 22529 author = Anonymous title = The Twelve Labours of Hercules, Son of Jupiter & Alcmena date = keywords = illustration summary = Published by Didier & Tebbett, 75, St. James'' Street; LABOURS OF HERCULES, By Juno''s hate urged on, Alcmena''s Son, Nemæa''s dreadful Lion first he sought, The savage slew & to Eurystheus brought, His arrows slightest wound is death to all. Forbid to wound, how take a Stag so fleet? To seize the Boar by incensed Dian sent, The fell destroyer bound he o''er him flings, And unto scared Eurystheus quickly brings, The trembling Tyrant shrinks aghast with dread, The task for man too great. He turn''d, & thro'' the stables urged its force, By Pallas'' aid the dreadful race subdued, But still Eurystheus'' envious hatred burns. And vainly struggling to Eurystheus brought. Fell Diomed, whose horses fat with gore, The Tyrant gave to his own steeds a prey, Which by Eurystheus'' order brought away Which bridal Juno gave to Heaven''s dread King. The Godlike Hero, saw his Labours done. id = 12116 author = Hoffmann, Heinrich title = Struwwelpeter: Merry Stories and Funny Pictures date = keywords = Johnny; Mamma summary = He caught the flies, poor little things, And whipped poor Tray till he was sore, Mamma and Nurse went out one day "Boys, leave the Black-a-moor alone! The Story of the Man that went out Shooting The little hare came, hop, hop, hop, He cries and screams and runs away; The Story of Little Suck-a-Thumb One day Mamma said "Conrad dear, To little boys who suck their thumbs; And caught out little Suck-a-Thumb. Mamma comes home: there Conrad stands, "Ah!" said Mamma, "I knew he''d come To naughty little Suck-a-Thumb." Next day, now look, the picture shows Look at him, now the fourth day''s come! The Story of Johnny Head-in-Air "Look at little Johnny there, Little Johnny Head-In-Air!" Came a little dog one day; Headlong in poor Johnny fell. And, to tease poor Johnny, said "Silly little Johnny, look, All good little girls and boys No one heard his screams and cries; id = 19915 author = Hoffmann, Heinrich title = Slovenly Betsy date = keywords = Betsy; illustration summary = Miss Betsy took no pains; Nice little boys and girls were there, THE DREADFUL STORY OF PAULINE AND THE MATCHES Mamma and Nurse went out one day, And kind Mamma and Nurse had told her, And Mamma often burns the same. And arms and hands, and eyes and nose; "Here, Charlotte," said Mamma one day. And soon upon the ground let fall While Charlotte hid her face and cried. Such was a kind mother''s advice. "I pray you now, my little child," The little girls whom now you''ll see The little girls whom now you''ll see Soon as she saw her mother stand, And many a little gift obtained; Now Minnie was a pretty girl, Now to her little sister Bess This Minnie longed for (envious child), One day, upon some bee-hives near how good it looks!" she cries, Upon her little bed, "Fie!" said her mother, "don''t you know, id = 13075 author = Kruckvich, Francis title = A Hero and a Great Man date = keywords = great; man summary = A great man walks. A great man talks. The great man saw this. But the great man could not bear it. The great man thus began. The great man the girls believed. To the great man the people went The great man saw this method would fail A great man must save this town! A great man must save this town! As the great man continued to give his speech To the freak the great man said. Stuck on the words the great man had said. He thinks he is a great man too! And this sent the great man into thought. Knowledge is power, the great man began. Great men are what this town needs... I am a great man, but a hero am I? I am a great man, but a hero am I? I am a great man, but a hero am I? The people hailed the great man and cheered. id = 17104 author = Newell, Peter title = The Rocket Book date = keywords = FLAT; illustration summary = came the rocket, unannounced, And, turning to his grandsons, said, Then through the pot the rocket shot "Well, now," said Jo, "I never thought When all at once that rocket, stout, The rocket thundered, flaring! That rocket, dread, went tearing Then came the rocket, fierce and bright, The family dog, with frenzied mien, the rocket flashed between, Then came the rocket and it smashed Fair Carrie promptly turned her head, Just then the rocket flared up bright The rocket flared and spluttered. "I said that hat was all too loud!" "Who would have thought that toy," said pap, "My dear," said he to Mrs. Pease, the rocket smote that clock "You have a fine alarm," said Doc, "Be careful, Gus," his good wife said; Just then the pesky rocket flared The rocket on its fiery course "Whoa, Spot!" said Burt. When suddenly the rocket, bright, That rocket''s wild career! id = 17254 author = Newell, Peter title = The Slant Book date = keywords = illustration summary = Where Bobby lives there is a hill-Once Bobby''s Go-cart broke away The careless Nurse screamed in dismay He clapped his hands, in manner rude, But down the Go-cart swiftly sped The Go-cart and the Lady met The Go-cart then came rushing in The Go-cart caught--and laid him flat, The Hat fell out and settled down "Say, I''m the swellest kid in town!" "A GO-CART BREAKS AWAY!" Then as the Go-cart speeded by, Then as the Go-cart speeded by, The Go-cart''s speed was so increased The Go-cart knocked her off her feet "Your fare!" said Bobby, with a shout, The Go-cart caught the rope midway The Go-cart skidded off the street On came the Go-cart down the grade To note the Go-cart coming Then came the Go-cart like a gale And so this Cart, you may depend, That chanced to block its way, And Bobby made a flying jump id = 31868 author = Very, Lydia L. A. (Lydia Louisa Anna) title = Red Riding Hood date = keywords = illustration summary = Red Riding Hood There dwelt Red Riding Hood. Little Red Riding Hood thought so, Little Red Riding Hood. Would walk the lonely wood, To grandmamma to day." And mind not stop and prattle An old, gaunt Wolf she spied, And said, "my little maiden, Where do you walk so far?" Then said the Wolf, so cunning, Then said the Wolf, "good by dear; Red Riding Hood soon entered; "Here," said the Wolf, well feigning, "I''m here, so sick my darling, Red Riding Hood obeyed her You are!" she quickly said "O what GREAT EYES my grandma! "That''s to see you the better my darling, "What a GREAT NOSE my grandma "That''s to smell you better, my darling; "And what GREAT HANDS my grandma "What a GREAT MOUTH my grandma! Then grandma hastened in-Red Riding Hood wept sadly To mind her mother dear. And mind your mother''s word!