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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 29799 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 93 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Miss 3 Mrs. 2 Philip 2 God 1 little 1 White 1 Webster 1 Vincent 1 Sophie 1 Schomberg 1 Rupert 1 Rosy 1 Rachel 1 Phil 1 Parker 1 Nancy 1 Muff 1 Mr. 1 Moses 1 Mervyn 1 Lovel 1 Lion 1 Kitty 1 Kerr 1 Katharine 1 Jonas 1 Johnny 1 John 1 Joe 1 Griselda 1 Green 1 Grange 1 Gabrielle 1 Fred 1 Frankie 1 Frank 1 Fixie 1 Emilie 1 Edith 1 Dashwood 1 Bunny 1 Bee 1 Beata 1 Avonsyde 1 Aunt 1 Agnes Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 626 mother 512 child 459 boy 371 lady 363 time 336 day 333 room 295 thing 295 girl 295 face 294 way 269 hand 239 one 234 eye 192 word 181 heart 167 forest 167 father 164 voice 164 nothing 161 night 161 door 153 house 143 something 136 head 134 friend 133 man 133 anything 131 place 124 aunt 123 bed 122 letter 120 heir 119 moment 115 morning 114 papa 108 people 103 year 102 side 100 tree 97 hour 93 lesson 93 arm 92 book 91 life 90 minute 90 mamma 90 course 89 tankard 87 tear Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1121 _ 802 Miss 769 Rosy 473 Phil 473 Bee 406 Bunny 403 Mrs. 344 Rachel 311 Lovel 271 Emilie 231 Kitty 228 Mervyn 223 Edith 205 Rupert 195 Mr. 186 Griselda 178 Kerr 171 Beata 169 Avonsyde 165 Fred 150 Vincent 147 Joe 138 Sophie 135 Katharine 130 Fixie 119 God 115 Nancy 111 Aunt 100 Nelson 99 John 96 Frank 94 Colin 89 Philip 88 Dashwood 88 CHAPTER 86 Martha 82 Gabrielle 74 Clementina 65 Pink 63 Parker 62 Schomberg 57 Webster 56 Moses 52 Lion 48 White 42 London 42 Grizel 42 England 42 Baring 41 Valentine Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4733 i 3448 you 3396 she 2736 it 2046 he 1172 her 879 me 841 they 831 him 604 them 575 we 220 herself 204 us 110 himself 55 myself 51 one 47 yourself 47 themselves 24 yours 20 itself 17 hers 13 ourselves 13 ''s 9 his 7 mine 7 ''em 4 yourselves 3 theirs 3 thee 2 ours 2 i''m 2 hisself 1 you''ll 1 ye 1 she''ll 1 oneself 1 me"--she 1 it?--when 1 done,--she Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 8773 be 3207 have 2217 do 2128 say 1097 go 879 come 727 see 711 think 678 know 585 look 557 make 553 tell 450 take 429 get 393 give 344 want 307 cry 298 ask 274 feel 270 like 258 find 236 put 228 speak 220 try 215 hear 211 let 207 begin 204 love 198 run 198 leave 189 seem 180 keep 175 wish 170 mean 165 sit 164 call 163 answer 143 turn 142 talk 130 bring 124 grow 120 forget 115 stand 115 help 110 read 108 remember 107 lie 107 hope 106 send 103 play Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3180 not 1283 little 1132 so 1122 very 670 up 610 good 512 then 493 now 406 well 386 old 381 out 380 much 373 more 367 never 348 just 326 away 317 only 312 quite 303 dear 288 great 286 again 271 too 269 down 254 as 247 poor 247 here 242 back 236 long 231 all 210 there 200 off 196 always 195 sure 184 young 181 nice 177 own 175 even 174 on 172 first 171 sorry 170 other 165 rather 158 really 155 in 147 many 147 ever 142 pretty 141 last 137 still 132 right Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 83 good 66 least 18 most 14 bad 11 slight 11 dear 10 eld 8 great 7 young 6 old 5 near 4 strong 4 early 3 small 3 nice 3 high 2 tiny 2 tall 2 sweet 2 strange 2 sad 2 rich 2 low 2 large 2 innermost 2 hard 2 happy 2 grand 2 gentle 2 furth 2 fair 2 deep 2 brave 2 able 2 Most 1 wild 1 ugly 1 soft 1 simple 1 silly 1 shrill 1 rank 1 quaint 1 pretty 1 pleasant 1 noble 1 new 1 mild 1 manif 1 lovely Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 111 most 8 least 7 well 1 meanest 1 close 1 brightest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net 2 purl.fcla.edu Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/4/5/4/14543/14543-h/14543-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/4/5/4/14543/14543-h.zip 1 http://purl.fcla.edu/fcla/dl/UF00001806.pdf 1 http://purl.fcla.edu/fcla/dl/UF00001806.jpg Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 14 _ do n''t 12 _ do _ 12 _ was _ 11 _ is _ 8 _ did _ 8 bee did not 6 _ love _ 6 rosy did not 6 rosy was not 5 _ are _ 5 _ had _ 5 emilie did not 4 _ want _ 4 mother did not 4 rachel did not 4 rosy came in 4 rosy looked up 4 rosy ran off 3 _ am _ 3 _ did n''t 3 bee went on 3 children are so 3 edith did not 3 edith was very 3 emilie was not 3 mother was so 2 _ be _ 2 _ been careless 2 _ did not 2 _ has _ 2 _ have n''t 2 _ think _ 2 _ try _ 2 bee had _ 2 bee had not 2 bee said nothing 2 boy is more 2 boy was very 2 children came down 2 children were now 2 edith had not 2 emilie went up 2 eyes were full 2 face did not 2 face was quite 2 girl is very 2 kitty is n''t 2 mother does n''t 2 mother had not 2 mother is downstairs Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ are not always 1 bee did not always 1 bee took no notice 1 boy is not ill 1 boy was not strong 1 bunny was no more 1 bunny was not as 1 child did not quite 1 children had no fear 1 children had no idea 1 children were not angels 1 edith had no taste 1 emilie made no reply 1 emilie was not above 1 girl was not at 1 kitty was no longer 1 lady was not remarkable 1 lovel is not inclined 1 mother did not yet 1 phil did not altogether 1 phil had no chance 1 phil is not delicate 1 phil was not strong 1 rachel was not at 1 rosy ''s not cross 1 rosy did not now 1 rosy gave no signs 1 rosy made no answer 1 rosy was not cunning 1 rosy was not fond 1 rosy was not greedy 1 rosy was not quite 1 rupert made no moan A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 42366 author = Burnett, Frances Hodgson title = The Cozy Lion: As Told by Queen Crosspatch date = keywords = Green; Lion; little summary = When I got to the Cave, the Lion was sitting outside his door and "I am a poor sensitive lonely orphan Lion,'' he said. They never invite them to children''s parties--nice little He must have been rather a nice Lion because that minute he began little Skip just jumped up and stood on the end of the Lion''s nose minute I heard little children''s voices singing like skylarks farther down on the Huge Green Hill--actually little children a And the little children on the Huge Green Hill side were coming Little boys called out, "Hello, Lion! "Jump on to the Lion''s tongue," I said to him, "and smooth it off The fathers thought of the Lion the first thing, but the mothers up the Huge Green Hill to where the Lion''s Cave was and then they and right in front of the Cave there stood the Lion looking id = 11290 author = Geldart, Thomas, Mrs. title = Emilie the Peacemaker date = keywords = Agnes; Edith; Emilie; Fred; God; Joe; John; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Muff; Parker; Schomberg; Webster; White summary = Oh, a capital good rule, that of your''s, Miss!" "What," said Emilie "Well, we must say good night, now," said Emilie, "or we shall be late confused as Emilie bade her good-bye, and said--"Miss Schomberg, you The two boys, with Emilie and Edith, were on their way to pay aunt Agnes "Now, Emilie, what do you think of my life?" said Edith, one day after On their way to old Joe''s house that night, Emilie thought she would "Will you give up your walk to-night, Edith," said Emilie on her return "Fred, dear," said she, "will you keep your birds in my little room, "Muff won''t hurt the birds, Fred dear," said Edith, "she is not when Fred said, "Edith, I want some one to teach poor Joe love; will you "Will you not go and see Joe, Emilie?" asked Edith, one day of her said little Edith, "poor Joe! id = 33522 author = Leslie, Madeline title = Little Frankie and His Cousin date = keywords = Frankie; God; Moses summary = "Come in here!" said Nelly to her little cousin, "and we will take out "Can''t we go up in Willie''s play room, then?" asked the little boy. "No," said Nelly; "I want to stay here, and see Sally put away my "MAMMA," said Frankie one day, "you promised to tell me a toly." boy''s naughty heart said, ''I would steal one of my mother''s oranges and eat it,'' he said, ''Yes; no one will know it, and if your mother asks Then Mrs. Gray told Nelly how the good dog had pulled Frankie out of the "Mamma," said Frankie, "I want to hear ''bout Moses ''gen. "I told you," said the lady, "that Moses began to wish he had not Moses, and said, ''I hope you have not eaten one of mother''s oranges, my she said; "come, now, be a good girl, and then I''ll tell you how Frankie "Now, my little Nelly," she said, "you must id = 39705 author = Meade, L. T. title = The Lady of the Forest: A Story for Girls date = keywords = Aunt; Avonsyde; Gabrielle; Griselda; Katharine; Kitty; Lovel; Miss; Mrs.; Nancy; Phil; Philip; Rachel; Rupert summary = little cousin Philip Lovel is coming to Avonsyde to-morrow." Rupert," said Miss Griselda, nodding at Rachel as she did so. "The mother has come here to make terms," said Miss Griselda. "God grant the little boy may be the heir," she said; "but, Griselda, I "Oh, don''t, mother, don''t!" said little Phil, looking full up into his "I am glad to welcome you, Mrs. Lovel!" said Miss Griselda as she came "Come into the drawing-room," said Miss Griselda; "your little boy and Mrs. Lovel tripped out of the room, and the two old ladies looked at one Rachel would steal away from Kitty and from little Phil, "Why, Rachel," said little Phil again, "you look just as if you were "Rachel," said little Phil, "just before you came up that time I was Mrs. Lovel did not know the forest as Phil and Rachel and Kitty did. id = 6676 author = Molesworth, Mrs. title = Rosy date = keywords = Beata; Bee; Fixie; Miss; Mrs.; Rosy; Vincent summary = said her mother, smiling a little sadly, as she drew Rosy to her. "I think we should take Beata upstairs to her room, Rosy," she said. "That must be it," said Rosy''s mother, who was too kind to feel vexed "But I don''t think I do feel lonely," said Bee, sitting up and looking "_I_ think she''s very kind," said Bee, "but I don''t like to say A little feeling of pain went through Bee. Perhaps Rosy _was_ "I''ll tell you," said Rosy, "but won''t you get into my bed a little, "But you do care, Rosy," said Bee, "I know you care. "But you won''t get good all of a sudden, Rosy," said Bee, feeling "Rosy''s only in fun, Fixie," said Bee. "Bee is right, Rosy," she said, her rather dolly-looking face flushing "What are you doing in Miss Rosy''s drawers?" said Nelson; and Bee, id = 19889 author = Mulholland, Clara title = Naughty Miss Bunny A Story for Little Children date = keywords = Bunny; Dashwood; Frank; Kerr; Mervyn; Miss; Sophie summary = "Oh dear, what a lot Miss Kerr has got to say!" cried the little "And now, Bunny," said Miss Kerr, as she led the little girl into "Oh, I will try, dear Miss Kerr, indeed I will," said the little "Come, Miss Bunny, don''t be a silly baby," said Sophie, "I''ll dress you," said Bunny, "and mama told Miss Kerr this very morning she was I like Miss Kerr much better than Sophie," cried Bunny, "But, Bunny, dear," said Miss Kerr, "you would not like poor mama Do come, like a good boy," cried the little girl "Dear Miss Kerr," said Bunny at last, as, growing impatient at the "Why don''t you go and play, Bunny?" said Miss Kerr looking up from "Well, my dear Bunny, they will soon be here," said Miss Kerr. "Come along, Bunny, like a good girl," said Mervyn, "let us run fast id = 14543 author = Unknown title = False Friends, and The Sailor''s Resolve date = keywords = Grange; Johnny; Jonas; Philip summary = [Illustration: LADY GRANGE READING TO HER SON. "Philip, your conduct has distressed me exceedingly," said Lady Grange, "Well, mother, I did not mean to vex you," said Philip, who was rather Lady Grange pressed her hand over her eyes, and a sigh, a very heavy "I shall not appear at the table," said Lady Grange, drawing herself up "But, Philip," said the lady earnestly again laying her cold hand on his "Friends!" faintly echoed Lady Grange, as she saw the door close behind My reader shall have the privilege of looking over Sir Gilbert''s The old sailor Jonas sat before the fire with his pipe in his mouth, weathered this day, old friend," said he; "we''ll be on the look out Jonas heard every word that passed between Johnny and Alie almost as of Johnny when he perceived that the book whose pages Jonas was turning "Perhaps he will not look at that picture," reflected Johnny.