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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 6 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 877 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 83 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Mrs. 4 Mr. 3 Miss 3 London 3 House 3 George 3 England 2 woman 2 Sunday 2 Smith 2 Lord 2 John 1 penny 1 look 1 little 1 like 1 liberal 1 american 1 York 1 Women 1 William 1 Whitewater 1 Washington 1 Wark 1 Vida 1 United 1 Union 1 Susan 1 Stonor 1 State 1 Stanton 1 Sophia 1 Sheridan 1 Senator 1 Sara 1 STONOR 1 Rev. 1 Remington 1 Prime 1 Peter 1 Parliament 1 Pankhurst 1 Noonan 1 New 1 Mott 1 Moore 1 Minister 1 Mary 1 Martin 1 MRS Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 3010 woman 1616 man 875 time 866 day 512 thing 504 child 480 people 470 year 464 life 451 way 443 hand 426 eye 412 girl 380 meeting 376 question 375 face 373 law 347 friend 339 one 307 word 306 member 297 work 297 lady 293 right 287 door 286 home 283 hour 282 night 280 place 268 house 267 something 262 bill 256 wife 252 police 251 world 244 prison 244 moment 239 room 238 nothing 235 crowd 234 head 232 vote 231 speech 226 voice 216 suffrage 215 party 209 side 207 country 206 part 201 fact Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4600 _ 876 Mr. 847 Mrs. 700 Miss 585 George 375 Government 360 John 318 MISS 287 JEAN 279 L. 267 House 261 Vida 261 Levering 257 Lady 239 Lord 206 England 200 Betty 193 JOHN 175 Stonor 175 LADY 172 London 172 Genevieve 170 Parliament 169 Jean 169 Anthony 164 New 159 STONOR 145 Freddy 140 Smith 140 Commons 134 Remington 129 MRS 125 York 124 Eliot 123 Women 120 E. 119 Minister 117 Ernestine 114 Borrodaile 113 Evans 109 Asquith 108 Woman 107 Geneviève 104 Geoffrey 101 Prime 99 Bill 97 Sunday 95 Suffrage 95 Doolittle 94 State Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6627 i 4234 it 4038 you 3074 she 3013 he 2878 we 2171 they 1267 me 997 her 966 them 876 him 759 us 187 himself 176 myself 174 herself 154 themselves 68 one 63 ourselves 46 itself 42 ''em 40 yourself 28 yours 23 mine 20 ''s 19 ours 19 hers 10 theirs 9 his 9 em 7 i''m 6 oo 5 thee 4 yourselves 3 yerself 2 you''ll 2 yer 2 well''--she 2 d''you 1 you''re 1 ye 1 y 1 with-- 1 well--(_she 1 up--''it 1 tone_)--you 1 time---- 1 this---- 1 there!_--where 1 them''--''you 1 smiled--''you Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 16186 be 6056 have 2817 do 2244 say 1440 go 1211 make 1098 see 1046 know 992 come 883 think 840 take 829 give 796 get 625 look 618 tell 464 find 463 hear 459 ask 395 turn 393 call 391 stand 385 want 375 hold 366 seem 354 speak 353 leave 335 keep 325 feel 278 talk 275 begin 272 try 268 sit 260 bring 258 mean 247 meet 247 let 244 put 224 read 221 show 205 work 204 pass 201 follow 200 send 198 wait 192 believe 191 write 172 carry 171 smile 164 use 161 laugh Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4166 not 1254 so 855 up 713 more 710 out 685 little 668 only 626 very 620 then 602 now 593 other 588 great 532 as 527 well 525 never 525 good 496 many 487 most 482 old 478 even 474 too 464 just 452 first 423 down 419 here 405 there 400 much 368 young 367 long 355 on 344 back 341 last 334 own 333 new 325 again 320 all 310 still 291 such 284 ever 282 few 264 away 258 always 241 in 240 same 234 quite 231 political 221 large 219 public 210 rather 204 off Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 118 most 100 good 77 least 46 great 28 bad 22 high 21 slight 17 near 15 small 13 Most 11 young 11 old 10 strong 10 early 9 low 8 poor 8 large 8 eld 8 deep 7 noble 7 j 5 happy 5 dear 5 brave 4 late 4 fine 4 able 3 wild 3 soft 3 keen 3 hot 3 fair 3 dark 2 weak 2 sweet 2 sure 2 subtle 2 stout 2 stern 2 sincere 2 simple 2 rare 2 odd 2 narrow 2 mere 2 loud 2 long 2 holy 2 grand 2 easy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 369 most 16 least 15 well 2 worst 2 near 1 quick 1 hard 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 23 _ do _ 16 _ are _ 13 _ do n''t 12 _ is _ 9 _ did _ 9 _ know _ 9 _ want _ 8 _ think _ 8 _ was n''t 7 _ is n''t 7 _ was _ 6 _ had _ 6 _ has _ 6 _ have _ 6 men do n''t 5 _ did n''t 5 _ say _ 4 _ does _ 4 _ give _ 4 _ got _ 4 _ knows _ 4 george went on 4 women are not 4 women do n''t 3 _ are n''t 3 _ done _ 3 _ said _ 3 _ see _ 3 _ turns away 3 george did not 3 man was not 3 men are so 3 men did n''t 3 one called out 3 time was not 3 women had never 2 _ ai n''t 2 _ be _ 2 _ be able 2 _ comes forward 2 _ coming down 2 _ coming forward 2 _ does n''t 2 _ feel _ 2 _ felt _ 2 _ has n''t 2 _ keep _ 2 _ look _ 2 _ looking round 2 _ made _ Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 women are not satisfied 1 _ had no home 1 _ had not so 1 _ were not too 1 child had no anodynes 1 children are not actors 1 children is not strong 1 day has not yet 1 day is not far 1 face was not readily 1 george did not directly 1 government made no reply 1 government were not dissatisfied 1 government were not willing 1 hand was not sufficiently 1 man had no mind 1 man has no shrewder 1 man was not apt 1 men have no longing 1 men have no right 1 men make no mention 1 men were not so 1 one sees no beggars 1 people are not so 1 people knew no bounds 1 thing is not cowardly 1 time was not convenient 1 time was not wholly 1 women had no special 1 women had no voice 1 women have no citizenship 1 women have no stake 1 women were not responsible A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 34856 author = Pankhurst, Emmeline title = My Own Story date = keywords = Asquith; Bill; Cabinet; Christabel; Commons; England; George; Government; Home; House; King; London; Minister; Mr.; Mrs.; Pankhurst; Parliament; Prime; Union; Women; liberal summary = break down opposition to suffrage by showing the men that women possess the women guardians'' demand for a reform of one part of the Poor Law. That section deals with the little children who are boarded out, not by opening day of Parliament, the association sent a deputation of women to responsible leaders that the new Government would make women''s suffrage Government, calling themselves Liberal, were reactionary so far as women Liberal Government would give women the vote. voice: "Will the Liberal Government give women the vote?" Liberal party until women are given votes on equal terms with men. Government still refused to notice the women''s question; they declared offenders in a common police court, and I said that we were not women women meeting outside the House." And that this committee said to the House of Commons not only that they must vote for a women''s suffrage id = 26420 author = Robins, Elizabeth title = The Convert date = keywords = Blunt; Borrodaile; Claxton; England; Ernestine; Farnborough; Filey; Fox; Freddy; Geoffrey; Heriot; Hermione; House; Jean; John; Lady; Levering; London; Lord; Miss; Moore; Mr.; Mrs.; Sara; Sophia; Stonor; Sunday; Vida; Wark; like; little; look; woman summary = eyes still on the young woman talking to Lady John and the foreign absurd things we women fill up the holes in our lives with!'' Vida said, ''I often think,'' said the young woman, ''that men--all except Paul--would ''Yes,'' said Lord John, ''he''s still a young man. ''Yes;'' Mrs. Freddy''s brother-in-law had met Lady John''s look with the ''Oh,'' said Lord John, thinking it well to generalize and spare Mrs. Freddy further rending, ''we''ve been talking about this public ''Yes,'' said Vida Levering; ''I almost think that was even worse!'' ''Oh, I don''t suppose _they_ mind,'' said Hermione--''women like _that_.'' ''Lady John''s new ally in good works!'' said Mrs. Freddy. ''I''ve got your book,'' Jean said, looking at Miss Levering over the top ''I''ll just see Miss Levering off,'' said Lady John, ''and then I''ll come ''Among those women up there,'' said Lady John, ''can you tell me, my man, id = 43502 author = Robins, Elizabeth title = Votes for Women: A Play in Three Acts date = keywords = FARN; JEAN; JOHN; LADY; LEVERING; LORD; MISS; MRS; STONOR summary = MISS JEAN DUNBARTON _Niece to Lady John want her to know the moment she comes down that the new plans arrived LADY JOHN (_taking_ JEAN''S _two hands_). Geoffrey Stonor isn''t going to be--a little too old for you? (_To_ LORD JOHN, _as she goes to writing-table._) Miss Levering wasn''t We''ve only got a few minutes to talk over the terms of the late Mr. Soper''s munificence before the carriage comes for Miss Levering---(LADY JOHN _lays her hand on_ MISS LEVERING''S _shoulder._) (JEAN _and_ LADY JOHN _stand close together_ (C.), _the girl (STONOR _turns to speak to_ JEAN. JEAN (_perplexed, as_ STONOR _turns away, says to_ GREATOREX). LADY JOHN (_turning and seeing_ JEAN. (JEAN, _a little confused, looks at_ MISS LEVERING.) JEAN (_looking at_ STONOR _to see how he''s taken it_). (JEAN _looks wondering at_ STONOR''S _sphinx-like face as_ VIDA (STONOR _makes a motion towards_ JEAN _and she turns away id = 11982 author = Stanton, Elizabeth Cady title = Eighty Years and More; Reminiscences 1815-1897 date = keywords = Albany; Anthony; Boston; Bright; Charles; Dr.; Elizabeth; England; France; General; George; Governor; Henry; House; John; Judge; London; Lord; Mary; Miss; Mott; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Peter; Rev.; Senator; Smith; Stanton; State; Sunday; Susan; United; Washington; William; York; american; woman summary = mercy; so, one day, by way of making a point, I said with great into new thought and action and gave rise to the movement for women''s about time some demand was made for new liberties for women." As Mrs. Mott and I walked home, arm in arm, commenting on the incidents of the One of the most striking women I met in England at this time was Miss large family I might, in time, like too many women, have become wholly town could meet to talk over the news of the day and read the papers and religion,--from the time of Moses down to the present day,--woman has in women''s political rights decided to make the Fourth a woman''s day, Miss Anthony, Mrs. Gage, and I worked sixteen hours, day and Miss Anthony and I went to Geneva the next day to visit Mrs. Miller and id = 8435 author = nan title = The Sturdy Oak A composite Novel of American Politics by fourteen American authors date = keywords = Alys; Betty; Brewster; Doolittle; Eliot; Emelene; Evans; Genevieve; George; Jaffry; Martin; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Noonan; Remington; Sheridan; Smith; Whitewater; penny summary = "George''s friends are going to take him in hand," said he. this community and we need a man like my cousin George Remington to--" "Mrs. Smith, there comes a time in every modern man''s life when he''s got "I don''t want to criticize you, dear," George said presently, in his "My dear girl, I''m the busiest man in the world!" George said. "But come now, Betty, be fair!" George said. "Why," said Betty, "George thought the reason you wouldn''t take the "That Miss Eliot--the real estate woman, you know--" George stiffened "Talking about money, George," said Alys, "have you seen to my houses "Well, George," said Uncle Martin, "how are things going?" "Look here, Uncle Martin," said George, who had had a good deal of this "Oh, George," she gasped finally, "I think I meant women when I said "My man says to tell the one who thinks she''s Mrs. George Remington that