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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 46944 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 87 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Mrs. 5 Mr. 2 Miss 2 Kathleen 1 testator 1 sidenote 1 property 1 person 1 penny 1 legacy 1 law 1 illustration 1 case 1 York 1 Wynne 1 Walter 1 Ves 1 United 1 Tyler 1 Sydney 1 Susan 1 Surrogate 1 Statute 1 States 1 Simcoe 1 Scott 1 Rupert 1 Roy 1 Roberts 1 Rex 1 Purcell 1 Phonny 1 Philippa 1 Pettigrew 1 Pell 1 Nichols 1 Nibson 1 New 1 Neville 1 Netta 1 Miles 1 Michael 1 Mathieson 1 Masterbrook 1 Mary 1 Martha 1 Malleville 1 Lord 1 London 1 Leeds Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1043 man 910 time 844 will 680 child 532 house 531 way 515 day 485 thing 482 case 448 penny 444 place 437 year 404 room 333 testator 307 letter 302 mother 301 one 299 hand 299 boy 292 girl 285 p. 282 name 282 money 278 word 277 nothing 270 law 264 door 257 person 252 matter 245 father 243 something 243 property 240 life 238 face 236 night 228 anything 225 brother 212 friend 207 woman 203 mind 200 minute 199 death 197 morning 193 side 186 head 183 hour 181 course 180 legacy 179 fact 175 work Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1093 _ 850 Mr. 666 Mary 548 Mrs. 533 Rex 449 Roy 410 Miss 382 Erskine 320 Hilda 304 Bell 294 Simcoe 292 Kathie 283 Crocker 276 Neville 267 Walter 247 Nichols 241 General 220 Kathleen 206 Netta 202 Clotilda 197 Penny 195 Sydney 168 Herman 167 Philippa 165 New 154 Susan 144 Dr. 143 Michael 134 John 130 Albert 127 Miles 114 York 114 Covington 112 Masterbrook 103 Pell 97 Pettigrew 93 Bella 92 Syd 91 London 86 Phonny 86 Leeds 86 CHAPTER 85 Dad 82 England 81 Roberts 80 Mathieson 78 Purcell 78 Appleton 76 Jack 76 Harrington Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 7413 i 5509 it 5466 he 4500 you 2856 she 1887 him 1674 we 1500 they 1298 me 935 them 882 her 439 us 283 himself 171 myself 159 herself 89 one 71 yourself 55 themselves 42 itself 39 ''s 28 mine 26 yours 20 ourselves 16 eva 13 his 10 ours 8 hers 5 theirs 3 ''em 2 yourselves 2 you''ll 2 twelf 1 you''re 1 will=--when 1 too,--''you 1 together-- 1 she''ll 1 oneself 1 more---- 1 know''-- 1 illness 1 i''m 1 grave--"you 1 as''ll 1 anything---- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 16414 be 6645 have 3204 do 2796 say 1952 go 1374 come 1183 see 1135 think 1123 make 1069 know 1047 get 937 take 775 tell 711 give 649 look 638 find 540 ask 447 leave 434 want 430 seem 400 hear 334 put 330 feel 315 keep 308 call 299 like 292 write 271 let 266 bring 262 begin 260 speak 253 suppose 239 reply 231 live 229 turn 227 pay 220 stand 213 send 207 talk 204 try 203 wish 203 hold 200 run 190 carry 189 sit 189 believe 188 wait 184 mean 173 die 172 walk Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4470 not 1208 so 1120 very 1058 up 964 then 858 out 757 now 681 down 628 good 615 well 607 only 596 here 595 little 587 other 583 more 558 old 530 as 483 much 476 there 471 just 408 never 393 again 390 first 383 on 381 all 373 back 360 too 348 great 345 long 327 in 319 off 295 sure 280 last 277 once 270 away 267 same 267 own 258 right 254 young 254 enough 248 always 241 such 241 over 238 quite 232 however 231 still 231 many 221 even 218 few 216 far Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 134 good 97 least 51 most 24 slight 22 bad 17 great 16 high 11 near 8 eld 7 Most 6 old 4 late 3 small 3 manif 3 fine 2 young 2 strange 2 simple 2 short 2 safe 2 quick 2 queer 2 low 2 long 2 large 2 jolly 2 hard 2 early 2 dear 2 able 1 wealthy 1 tiny 1 tall 1 soon 1 snakey 1 sharp 1 rumm 1 rotten 1 rich 1 pure 1 pleasant 1 noble 1 nice 1 new 1 mere 1 lowermost 1 lovely 1 lofty 1 little 1 kind Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 147 most 22 well 14 least 1 sharpest 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 will was not 7 rex was not 6 erskine did not 6 man did not 6 man is not 6 will be able 5 ''ll be back 5 ''ll be glad 5 man was not 5 rex went on 5 will be quite 4 ''ll be here 4 ''ll go down 4 _ have _ 4 _ is _ 4 roy did not 4 will be as 4 will be best 4 will be better 4 will be here 4 will be ready 4 will do so 3 ''ll be all 3 ''ll come back 3 _ was _ 3 bell did not 3 erskine was about 3 erskine was very 3 erskine went on 3 mother did not 3 penny asked quickly 3 penny was not 3 penny went on 3 rex did not 3 rex had not 3 rex said nothing 3 things went on 3 will be back 3 will be glad 3 will be right 3 will be so 3 will be very 3 will be well 3 will come back 3 will go down 3 will have plenty 3 will is not 2 ''ll be able 2 ''ll be there 2 ''ll be very Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 rex was not certain 2 will have no more 2 will was not good 1 ''ll have no luck 1 ''ll have no peace 1 _ had no doubt 1 bell was not aware 1 boy was not just 1 boys had no business 1 child is no longer 1 child is not there 1 child was no trouble 1 children had no doubt 1 erskine had no doubt 1 erskine had no reply 1 hilda had no longer 1 hilda was not entirely 1 house was not only 1 letter was not too 1 man is not conscious 1 man is not john 1 man is not sergeant 1 man made no comment 1 man was not simcoe 1 man was not true 1 mary had no opportunity 1 penny had no intention 1 penny made no reply 1 penny was not afraid 1 penny was not certain 1 penny was not very 1 rex felt no resentment 1 rex had not yet 1 rex was not afraid 1 rex was not sure 1 roy made no reply 1 roy said no more 1 simcoe made no answer 1 testator had no children 1 testator had no other 1 testator had no such 1 testator has no power 1 testator is not content 1 testator was not monomania 1 will be no fear 1 will be no occasion 1 will be no possible 1 will be no recurrence 1 will has no effect 1 will have no monument A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 14475 author = Abbott, Jacob title = Mary Erskine date = keywords = Albert; Beechnut; Bell; Erskine; Malleville; Mary; Mr.; Mrs.; Phonny summary = Mrs. Bell wanted Mary Erskine to help her in taking care of her own Mary Erskine became a great favorite at Mrs. Bell''s. "Good evening, Albert," said Mary Erskine. "Good evening, Albert," said Mary Erskine. Mary Erskine accordingly went to the stoop where Mrs. Bell was "Mary Erskine!" said she, when she got to the door of the house, "How would it do," said Mary Erskine, going on, however, all the time She had been, while Mary Erskine had lived at Mrs. Bell''s, very much interested in a young man named Gordon. before the time when Malleville and Phonny went to visit Mary Erskine, One day, when Albert came home from the village, he told Mary Erskine "No," said Mary Erskine, "I like this house very much. "Well, mother," said Mary Bell, "could not you give her a little "There," said Mary Bell, looking at the work with great satisfaction, about the house," said Mary Erskine. id = 33362 author = Appleton, Samuel title = The Will of Samuel Appleton, with Remarks by One of the Executors date = keywords = Appleton; Mrs.; sidenote summary = [Sidenote: To the children of Isaac Appleton, $60,000; viz.:--] brother Isaac Appleton,--the sum of three thousand dollars to each and brother Isaac Appleton,--the sum of three thousand dollars to each and brother Isaac Appleton,--the sum of three thousand dollars to each and brother Isaac Appleton,--the sum of three thousand dollars to each and brother Isaac Appleton,--the sum of three thousand dollars to each and brother Isaac Appleton,--the sum of three thousand dollars to each and brother, Doctor Moses Appleton, the sum of fifteen thousand dollars. brother, Doctor Moses Appleton, the sum of fifteen thousand dollars. deceased brother Eben Appleton, the sum of twenty-five thousand daughter of my deceased brother Eben Appleton, the sum of ten thousand To Mrs. Mary Mackintosh, daughter of my brother Nathan Appleton, I give and bequeath to Miss Mary Goodwin, daughter of the said Mrs. Maria Goodwin, the sum of one thousand dollars. id = 33383 author = Clark, Joan title = Penny Nichols and the Knob Hill Mystery date = keywords = Crocker; Herman; Masterbrook; Michael; Mr.; Mrs.; Nichols; Susan; penny summary = "We ought to tell Walter Crocker," returned Penny. "Old man Crocker''s cottage," the real estate agent said as he opened "Come along, Penny," said Mr. Nichols starting toward the door. Penny allowed the subject to drop, yet she wondered if Herman Crocker "You''re not Mr. Crocker''s little boy?" Penny asked, hoping to draw him "You''ll likely be going in to town sometime to-day?" ventured Mr. Crocker as Penny turned to leave. Penny noticed that Mrs. Masterbrook lingered not far away, evidently listening. better fate than life with a queer old man like Herman Crocker. "I thought that was the work of a detective," Penny said teasingly. "Good evening, Mr. Crocker," said Penny pleasantly. Before Penny could reply, Mrs. Masterbrook came to the porch. "I can''t do that," Walter Crocker replied, and Penny thought she "Susan," she said, "Mrs. Masterbrook evidently knew Walter Crocker." id = 36975 author = Henty, G. A. (George Alfred) title = The Lost Heir date = keywords = Bill; Colonel; Covington; Dr.; General; Hilda; India; John; Leeds; London; Mathieson; Miss; Mr.; Netta; Nibson; Pettigrew; Purcell; Roberts; Simcoe; Walter summary = course I did not notice the likeness; a man does not know his own face knows Miss Purcell well, and you like the place very much, I don''t think that man than she thinks, and that he had time to get a good way before "By the way, doctor," Hilda Covington said, "we have taken Roberts into "''I do not know whether I have done wrong, Miss Simcoe,'' I said, ''but I "Miss Simcoe said that he spent money like a prince, and gave a dinner "I cannot wait for Dr. Leeds to come round," Hilda said the next morning "I have told Walter''s nurse to come with us," Hilda said. was going to be nothing more, when the man said, ''By the way, Simcoe, I "Now, Walter," Hilda said, "we want you to come home with us; we have "Now I think that everything is in its place," Hilda said at last, "and id = 39833 author = Molesworth, Mrs. title = The Old Pincushion; or, Aunt Clotilda''s Guests date = keywords = Clotilda; Kathie; Kathleen; Martha; Miss; Mrs.; Neville; Philippa; Wynne summary = ''Kathie!'' said Neville--this time with real displeasure in his tone, ''I ''Good-bye, Kathie,'' said Neville, as he kissed her. ''Yes; I have lots to tell you,'' said Kathie, ''and no good news either. didn''t till Neville told me,'' said Kathie condescendingly. ''Kathie,'' said Neville, and Kathleen slowly got up from her seat and ''Come in,'' said Kathleen; and in came Aunt Clotilda, her kind face and ''Aunty,'' said Kathie, as Miss Clotilda was preparing to follow him, ''She must be a very sensible little girl,'' said Miss Clotilda. ''She''s a dear little girl every way,'' said Kathie. ''Dear Kathie,'' said Neville, ''you didn''t know her.'' ''Dear Kathie,'' said Neville again, ''it''s only that you''ve not had mamma ''Aunty,'' she said, and Miss Clotilda looked up from the fine old damask ''Poor little girl!'' said Miss Clotilda. ''She must be a dear little girl,'' said Miss Clotilda again. ''Come now, Kathie,'' said Neville good-humouredly. id = 41075 author = Proffatt, John title = The Curiosities and Law of Wills date = keywords = California; Court; England; Lord; Mr.; New; States; Statute; Surrogate; United; Ves; York; case; law; legacy; person; property; testator summary = wills of real as well as personal property; but the ecclesiastical courts had only cognizance of the wills of personal property; the common-law The statute law of almost every civilized state at the present time the New York statute is satisfied if a testator signs a will at one time, personal as for real property; and as a general rule, the age required is The bequest of all a man''s personal estate generally is not specific; the personal estate, the following is in point: A testator bequeathed to his When a testator leaves a legacy to "children,"[186] it is a general rule, case; which, it was held, should be governed by the law of New York, the law of the domicile of the testator at the time of his death, and This was the case where a testator, a resident of the State of New York at id = 59872 author = Waterworth, E. M. title = Our Den date = keywords = Edric; Harold; Jack; Kathleen; Rupert; illustration summary = "I think I shall like seeing Cousin Kathleen," I said, rather shyly; mother, when father had gone out to look at a new horse which he had We both laughed, and mother said something about believing father "It''s the other side of the water," said Rupert, laughing; "I know "Except when Rupert went into a rage and hit Harold, then father told "Let''s carry Edric upstairs," said Kathleen; "he can tell us where to "Now, what shall we do this afternoon?" said Rupert the next day, "You''d better sit down," said father, less sternly; but Rupert took "Of course, I know that," said Jack, recovering a little of his usual "Mischief again?" said father, just catching my knowing look across "Let''s have a good look at that chest," said Rupert, when Kathleen "So we shall dine here, then," said Rupert, with a look at Jack, who id = 4997 author = White, Matthew title = Two Boys and a Fortune; Or, The Tyler Will date = keywords = Harrington; Jess; Keeler; Miles; Mr.; Mrs.; Pell; Rex; Roy; Scott; Sydney; Tyler summary = The two Pell girls and their twin brothers, Rex and Roy, had gone down you say, one I can trust?" The old man looked in Roy''s face closely as "Rex," exclaimed Roy severely, coming out upon him suddenly. "Roy," said Rex suddenly, placing a hand on each of his brother''s When Rex and Eva had gone up stairs, and Jess and Roy were left to with Syd. Rex asked Harrington if he would like to come up in his "Miles will tell you the rest, Roy," said Rex. Roy returned home Monday morning, and Mrs. Pell went out to Rex that "Why, where are you going this time of night, Roy Pell?" demanded Rex. "Rex, you may come along if you like," said Roy, when they reached the "What do you mean?" exclaimed Miles, while Roy and Rex looked their "But what are we going to do, Roy?" Rex went on.