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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 9 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 56382 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 83 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Mr. 2 prisoner 2 man 2 Zeb 2 Wizard 2 Tryon 2 Sorcerer 2 Sir 2 Princess 2 Ozma 2 Master 2 Mangaboos 2 Jim 2 God 2 Eureka 2 Dorothy 1 time 1 slave 1 regulator 1 like 1 illustration 1 hand 1 guilty 1 french 1 day 1 cowper 1 case 1 attorney 1 Zeib 1 Zac 1 Washington 1 Warwick 1 VERNON 1 Turner 1 Terry 1 Stout 1 Sidney 1 Sayres 1 Satan 1 Sandy 1 Russell 1 Raleigh 1 Père 1 Professor 1 Philadelphia 1 Peters 1 Pearl 1 Parliament 1 PRESIDENT 1 Nyedzviedz Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1254 man 1249 time 639 day 580 way 508 hand 495 horse 490 people 487 lord 481 house 449 word 436 thing 431 prisoner 413 head 404 place 384 witness 383 case 381 gentleman 374 king 367 friend 353 night 347 nothing 347 life 343 person 333 side 331 one 319 captain 298 eye 295 body 289 trial 286 name 279 water 279 money 277 evidence 276 order 274 law 271 year 269 question 266 hour 264 voice 264 part 262 matter 262 boy 258 chair 257 face 257 court 249 wife 237 room 228 country 227 death 226 arm Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1460 _ 698 Mr. 505 Dorothy 481 Claude 479 Wizard 471 Sir 388 Lord 358 LORD 327 Jim 288 Zac 284 Master 282 lord 277 Zeb 270 Court 263 Cazeneau 259 John 247 Tryon 239 Mimi 230 God 227 King 219 Warwick 216 Eureka 210 Sidney 186 i. 174 Cobham 170 GENERAL 166 Raleigh 160 England 157 Goodere 156 CHIEF 149 Princess 148 Ozma 147 sir 143 Russell 143 Coote 141 Mrs. 137 Turner 129 Oz 128 France 127 JUSTICE 124 Attorney 123 Cowper 122 James 120 Mahony 119 . 115 ii 113 JONES 113 General 113 French 112 Louisbourg Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 9536 i 6734 he 5414 it 4884 you 2786 they 2495 him 2450 we 2314 me 1707 them 1555 she 897 us 824 her 449 himself 305 myself 163 themselves 117 yourself 85 ourselves 83 herself 77 one 43 itself 39 thee 38 mine 22 yours 16 ''em 15 his 14 ''s 13 theirs 8 ours 8 hers 7 thyself 3 yourselves 3 ye 3 em 2 think?--they 1 yerself 1 wireless 1 ten 1 on''y 1 fright-- 1 before--"you Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 20739 be 7519 have 3504 do 2782 say 1766 come 1722 go 1415 see 1328 make 1278 take 1181 know 991 tell 938 give 836 ask 728 hear 685 find 615 think 580 call 555 get 518 bring 466 look 449 leave 426 seem 412 speak 380 send 364 stand 356 let 351 believe 348 become 341 put 337 keep 321 hold 317 begin 297 try 292 turn 291 carry 287 return 283 cry 282 answer 275 eat 269 follow 268 pass 263 remain 259 desire 255 set 248 draw 242 prove 236 reply 236 fall 230 appear 223 meet Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4839 not 1502 so 1364 then 932 up 865 now 860 very 857 more 796 out 727 other 676 here 644 good 632 there 611 great 608 little 606 well 568 as 566 only 564 much 551 down 541 long 511 again 493 never 486 away 475 first 400 same 389 own 388 back 387 all 384 such 357 old 356 many 350 once 331 most 327 last 326 also 315 just 310 soon 293 even 271 too 271 off 268 about 267 in 263 far 258 enough 251 together 243 still 238 several 232 ever 218 next 213 yet Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 144 good 110 least 53 most 29 great 27 bad 25 high 20 near 15 slight 14 eld 8 deep 7 young 7 lovely 7 early 5 small 4 safe 4 mean 4 large 4 l 4 hard 4 fine 4 dear 4 Most 3 wise 3 vile 3 tall 3 strong 3 strange 3 say 3 rich 3 low 3 late 3 j 3 easy 3 dire 3 brave 2 wide 2 sweet 2 stout 2 solemn 2 soft 2 short 2 rough 2 queer 2 quaint 2 proud 2 plain 2 old 2 noble 2 mere 2 furth Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 278 most 18 well 10 least 1 sayest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 _ was then 6 claude did not 6 man did not 4 head was long 4 wizard got out 3 _ see _ 3 claude was no 3 nothing is more 3 things went on 2 _ is _ 2 _ was not 2 _ was present 2 case was not 2 case was still 2 claude came up 2 claude was so 2 days are past 2 dorothy did not 2 dorothy kept hold 2 dorothy was almost 2 dorothy was awake 2 dorothy was first 2 dorothy was nearly 2 dorothy was not 2 dorothy was still 2 dorothy was sure 2 dorothy was surprised 2 dorothy was too 2 friend had n''t 2 friends did not 2 friends were dead 2 friends were not 2 friends were now 2 hand was bloody 2 hand was not 2 heads were too 2 horse came last 2 horse did not 2 horse had especially 2 horse made several 2 horse stood still 2 horse was about 2 horse was still 2 horses were unknown 2 house been so 2 king is not 2 lord have mercy 2 man called tik 2 man looked troubled 2 man was crazy Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 claude made no reply 2 claude was no longer 2 dorothy was not especially 2 friends did not often 2 heads had no hair 2 night had not yet 2 wizard was not so 1 _ gave no credit 1 _ was not cognizant 1 _ was not far 1 case was not just 1 claude had no eyes 1 claude had no other 1 claude had not zac 1 claude saw no other 1 claude was no more 1 day was not long 1 gentleman took no notice 1 king is no king 1 king is not only 1 king was not then 1 life does not so 1 life is not suited 1 man was not only 1 people saw no prospect 1 things were not ripe 1 witness asked no questions 1 word has no meaning 1 words had no effect A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 22566 author = Baum, L. Frank (Lyman Frank) title = Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz date = keywords = Dorothy; Eureka; Jim; Land; Mangaboos; Ozma; Princess; Sorcerer; Wizard; Zeb; illustration summary = the horse Jim--his head up in the air, his ears erect and his long legs "May be Jim will go," continued Dorothy, looking at the horse. buggy and joined Zeb and Dorothy, and the kitten followed demurely at "We didn''t ask to come down here; we fell," said Dorothy. "They look like doorways," said Dorothy; "only there are no stairs to "I will, too," said Dorothy, and chose a little room at the end of the "I don''t like these veg''table people," said the little girl. way, Zeb driving while the Wizard and Dorothy each held a lighted "You can ask Dorothy," said the little man, in an injured tone. "Then," said the Wizard, "you will be saved, little Dorothy; and I am "But, at that time," said the Wizard, thoughtfully, "there were two Good "You must come again, some time," said the little Wizard; and she id = 420 author = Baum, L. Frank (Lyman Frank) title = Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz date = keywords = Dorothy; Eureka; Gargoyles; Jim; Mangaboos; Ozma; Princess; Sorcerer; Wizard; Zeb summary = "What is your name?" said Dorothy, thinking she liked the boy''s manner "Maybe Jim will go," continued Dorothy, looking at the horse. said to Zeb, who was a little taller than Dorothy: the buggy and joined Zeb and Dorothy, and the kitten followed demurely "We didn''t ask to come down here; we fell," said Dorothy. "They look like doorways," said Dorothy; "only there are no stairs to "I will, too," said Dorothy, and chose a little room at the end of the "I don''t like these veg''table people," said the little girl. the way, Zeb driving while the Wizard and Dorothy each held a lighted "You can ask Dorothy," said the little man, in an injured tone. "Then," said the Wizard, "you will be saved, little Dorothy; and I am "He''s only a humbug Wizard, though," said Dorothy, smiling at him. "You must come again, some time," said the little Wizard; and she id = 31096 author = De Mille, James title = The Lily and the Cross: A Tale of Acadia date = keywords = Cazeneau; Claude; Count; Florian; France; Indians; Laborde; Louisbourg; Margot; Michel; Mimi; Montresor; Motier; Père; Terry; Zac; french summary = "But you know," said Claude, "you thought you could manage this for "Look here," said Zac, as he came up; "the old gentleman can''t walk. "Dear monsieur," said the old count, embracing Claude, "Heaven will which had already endeared him to Claude and to Zac. Several days thus passed, during which but little progress was made. "You did not wish to leave France then?" said Claude, who felt "I''m sure I don''t know," said Mimi; "but I don''t think he has decided "Dees Monsieur de Cazeneau," said she, drawing nearer to Zac, and Mimi looked at Claude with a very serious expression as he said this, You see, monsieur," said Cazeneau to Claude, "this "Monsieur," said the lieutenant, advancing to Claude, "I hope you asking about Laborde, Cazeneau, Zac, and Mimi. The Indian led the way; then went the priest; then Claude with Mimi; id = 10401 author = Drayton, Daniel title = Personal Memoir of Daniel Drayton, for Four Years and Four Months a Prisoner (for Charity''s Sake) in Washington Jail Including a Narrative of the Voyage and Capture of the Schooner Pearl date = keywords = Attorney; Congress; District; Mr.; Pearl; Philadelphia; Sayres; Washington; case; man; prisoner; slave summary = what state a vessel comes--than she is boarded, if she remains any The persons who had taken passage on board the Pearl had been held in the prisoners, during the day-time, the use of the passages, for the giving a pass to any slave, or person held to service, or shall be found of any slave or any person held to service, from this state, or by any based on this act, one for each of the slaves found on board the vessel, as a man likely to run away with slaves? The learned counsel who opened the case for the prisoner "This prisoner is charged with stealing two slaves, the evidence in this case bring the prisoner within the law slaves came on board Drayton''s vessel without his direct slave-holding public of that verdict which the District Attorney had so which the District Attorney had made so great a handle in the two cases id = 34770 author = Jókai, Mór title = Told by the Death''s Head: A Romantic Tale date = keywords = Alnissa; Baphomet; Baran; Begum; Berdiczov; CHAPTER; God; Hamburg; Holland; Hugo; India; Madus; Malachi; Malchus; Master; Meyer; Nimeguen; Nyedzviedz; Satan; Zeib; day; hand; like; man; prisoner; time summary = Oh, I tell you war was conducted in those good old days on economical "Well, mayor," said the prince, addressing the chair, "I think the position of our assaulting forces; but took good care every time to duke, laid her hand on his arm, and said with sudden friendliness: as a youth from his arm-chair, take his wife''s hand, and gallantly duke out of compassion for a good comrade orders your head to be cut perform the good deed Madus had told me was necessary in order to win "Why," said I, "the old man was a good manager; and his wife an meal-time came, and I took my seat at the head of the table, she could instant!" he commanded, at the same time placing the cap on his head. said the prisoner, continuing his confession the next day, was the not return; and when I placed it in the woman''s hand I believed, of id = 43714 author = Otis, James title = The Boy Spies with the Regulators The Story of How the Boys Assisted the Carolina Patriots to Drive the British from That State date = keywords = BOY; Carolinas; Edwards; Fanning; Governor; Hamilton; Hillsborough; Howell; Hunter; Husband; Master; Sandy; Sidney; Tryon; regulator summary = River this day, and he who comes is most likely one of Master "You cannot serve Tryon and the colony at the same time, Master Wells, with our general, Master Hamilton, and I remained alone a good hour or I," Master Hamilton cried scornfully, and our people set up a shout of "I''m held here by force, good Master Fanning, having been taken Not until we were eating did Sidney ask Masters Howell and Hunter "Sidney and I will saddle the horses when the time comes, and you and "How many do they number?" Sidney asked, and Master Howell said Then has come the time for Governor Tryon''s minions to be said that it was done by orders of the Regulation, and Tryon will Having said this Master Hunter went on his way, and we lads could do Master Hamilton, who yet remained in command of the Regulators, id = 59148 author = Riley, Frank title = The Cyber and Justice Holmes date = keywords = Anderson; Cyber; Judge; Professor summary = "Cyber justice!" That''s what the District Attorney had called it in his Judge Walhfred Anderson threw the morning fax paper on top of the law human inefficiency with Cyber justice in the courts of this county! Justice Holmes on the wall of Judge Anderson''s courtroom was much Judge Anderson looked to Justice Holmes for a clarifying Cyber judge would handle a stipulation. Go to hell, Holmes, thought Judge Anderson. As Walhfred Anderson belligerently led the Professor and the D.A. into Walhfred Anderson saw the D.A. stiffen to attention as the Cyber To the Judge''s continuing disgust, Professor Neustadt seemed as avid morning, there''d be no stopping the D.A.''s campaign for Cyber judges. The Judge turned to Cyber IX, then caught himself. Professor''s slip of paper to Judged Anderson. Professor Neustadt strutted up to Cyber IX, flipped on the vocader Professor Neustadt turned to Judge Anderson, and his voice dropped id = 27515 author = nan title = State Trials, Political and Social. Volume 1 (of 2) date = keywords = ATTORNEY; Amy; CHIEF; Cobham; Court; Dunne; England; God; JUSTICE; King; LORD; Mr.; PRESIDENT; Parliament; Peters; Raleigh; Sir; Tryon; Turner; guilty summary = LORD CHIEF-JUSTICE--Sir Walter Raleigh, Mr. Attorney is but yet Cobham said, if my Lord Chief-Justice LORD CHIEF-JUSTICE--Nay, we do not conceive the Law, but we know LORD CHIEF-JUSTICE--You have no law for it: God forbid any man LORD CHIEF-JUSTICE--It is the Case of sir Will. As the King went away, facing the Court, he said, ''I do not fear that'' LORD PRESIDENT--Sir, you have offered something to the Court: I Here the Lord President said, Sir, you must know the pleasure of LORD PRESIDENT--Sir, you have heard the pleasure of the Court, LORD PRESIDENT--You may answer in your time, hear the Court LORD PRESIDENT--Sir, you shall be heard in due time, but you are LORD PRESIDENT--Sir, you shall know the pleasure of the Court LORD PRESIDENT--The Court then, Sir, hath something else to say SIR EDWARD TURNER--My Lords, this man hath the plague all over LORD CHIEF-JUSTICE HYDE--Pray, Sir Thomas Aleyn, tell your id = 38088 author = nan title = State Trials, Political and Social. Volume 2 (of 2) date = keywords = Coote; GENERAL; Goodere; JONES; John; Lord; Mahony; Mohun; Mr.; Mrs.; Russell; Sir; Stout; VERNON; Warwick; attorney; cowper summary = evening; he saw no coaches; Lord Russell came both times. Russell went away together; and my lord Grey, and sir Thomas lord of Warwick calling for a chair again, who came towards the Mohun, and captain Coote went away in; and my lord Warwick and EARL OF WARWICK--My lord, I desire to know of this witness, In answer to Lord Wharton, the witness said that Mohun and Warwick had ATTORNEY-GENERAL--Pray, my lord, I desire he may be asked, Were ATTORNEY-GENERAL--Pray, my lord, I desire he may be asked, Were ATTORNEY-GENERAL--Pray, my lord, I desire he may be asked, Were ATTORNEY-GENERAL--Can you tell what time my lord of Warwick ATTORNEY-GENERAL--Can you tell who went with my lord Warwick? _William Cowper_ said that about a year and a half since, when Mrs. Stout was in London, his brother came to his chamber in the Temple, and Sir John went that way, and captain Goodere followed him;