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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 15 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 68357 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 84 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 12 Mrs. 11 Mr. 9 Miss 6 New 5 York 5 John 4 life 4 God 3 woman 3 Maria 3 London 3 Lady 3 Jane 3 Green 3 England 3 Charlotte 2 man 2 little 2 friend 2 english 2 come 2 Washington 2 Tom 2 Stott 2 Smith 2 Shirley 2 Senator 2 Senate 2 Ryder 2 Rossmore 2 Roberts 2 Paris 2 Massapequa 2 Mary 2 Madame 2 Kate 2 Judge 2 Jefferson 2 Henry 2 George 2 Gaskell 2 Emily 2 Elizabeth 2 Edith 2 Edgeworth 2 Burkett 2 Brontë 2 Bagley 2 Austen 2 Alice Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2424 man 1992 time 1837 life 1794 woman 1770 day 1479 girl 1281 hand 1276 thing 1189 eye 1177 year 1154 father 1052 room 1024 letter 972 world 967 book 951 face 928 way 923 mother 911 friend 880 people 878 heart 862 child 828 story 794 house 791 one 771 work 717 night 710 nothing 703 love 688 place 681 word 681 mind 663 moment 604 character 599 something 590 head 587 money 557 name 537 paper 526 son 525 daughter 517 home 516 door 508 hour 493 voice 476 novel 467 wife 461 family 438 lady 437 thought Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 5287 _ 2091 Mrs. 1262 Mr. 1237 Miss 1086 Ryder 1015 Nancy 899 Shirley 792 Florence 779 Jefferson 660 de 640 Hagar 618 Mme 521 Anne 515 Marie 497 Aylmer 448 John 438 Sheila 432 Jane 421 Rossmore 352 New 349 Aldo 346 Bertha 293 Edith 278 Charlotte 277 Trevor 274 God 255 Edgeworth 253 Ted 246 York 241 Valeria 241 Peter 230 Judge 222 Michael 214 Stott 205 La 203 Kitty 201 Patsy 201 London 200 Smith 196 Colonel 194 Maria 192 England 188 Uncle 184 Nino 179 Paris 178 CHAPTER 175 Daragh 165 George 165 Franks 164 Fräulein Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 14630 i 14190 she 11680 it 10400 he 10037 you 4841 her 3867 they 3469 him 3156 me 2754 we 2247 them 997 herself 868 us 520 himself 346 one 298 myself 242 themselves 189 itself 169 yourself 92 yours 82 hers 64 ourselves 43 mine 35 ''em 31 his 28 ''s 18 theirs 15 thee 10 i''m 8 oneself 7 you''re 7 ours 6 ye 6 em 4 yourselves 4 you''ll 3 sho 2 together-- 2 ha 2 ay 1 you----you 1 yo 1 white--"you 1 water--"they 1 warnemünde-- 1 us:-- 1 trevor-- 1 thomasine 1 things?--i''ve 1 taste-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 39869 be 15715 have 6648 do 5678 say 3551 go 2728 come 2543 know 2489 see 2401 make 2227 think 1788 take 1659 look 1579 write 1531 give 1413 tell 1300 get 1123 find 1083 want 1042 leave 921 seem 921 ask 900 feel 898 read 799 turn 790 sit 776 speak 753 love 747 call 731 hear 719 put 681 live 642 stand 618 like 590 keep 589 bring 572 let 570 begin 529 mean 511 become 508 meet 505 pass 500 send 472 talk 471 wish 471 marry 456 run 454 hold 452 believe 449 try 425 add Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 10251 not 3365 so 2225 more 2144 little 2128 then 1988 now 1886 up 1764 very 1729 good 1579 well 1475 out 1437 only 1366 never 1236 much 1235 own 1194 old 1179 great 1147 long 1137 other 1136 too 1120 as 1052 first 1037 here 958 just 954 many 946 most 944 young 944 again 896 always 888 down 871 back 860 away 820 even 777 still 766 there 761 all 729 last 721 ever 623 on 589 new 588 few 562 once 559 quite 505 in 489 also 477 such 477 far 476 perhaps 469 same 468 over Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 349 good 264 least 182 most 107 great 62 bad 56 slight 34 high 30 near 30 eld 28 rich 28 Most 27 strong 25 dear 23 fine 22 late 19 early 18 big 17 young 17 deep 15 pure 15 lovely 14 noble 13 small 13 old 13 happy 12 sweet 12 clever 11 faint 11 bright 10 simple 10 dark 9 long 8 warm 7 soft 7 large 6 wise 6 poor 6 light 6 hard 5 wild 5 true 5 tiny 5 short 5 grand 5 farth 5 easy 5 clear 4 sunny 4 strict 4 strange Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 764 most 58 well 31 least 2 ¦ 1 worst 1 wit,--became 1 wisest 1 near 1 long 1 lest 1 latest 1 jest 1 highest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 19 _ is _ 19 _ see _ 14 nancy did not 10 _ was _ 9 _ are _ 9 _ do _ 8 ryder looked up 7 _ did _ 7 _ do n''t 7 eyes were full 6 _ am _ 6 face was pale 6 ryder was not 6 shirley was too 6 world is not 5 _ had _ 5 _ think _ 5 _ want _ 5 nancy sat down 5 shirley was not 4 _ know _ 4 day was warm 4 father is as 4 father is not 4 heart went out 4 man had not 4 nancy had not 4 nancy looked up 4 ryder did not 4 ryder had not 4 ryder took up 4 ryder was busy 4 world has yet 3 _ has _ 3 _ have _ 3 _ make _ 3 day was not 3 eyes were open 3 eyes were red 3 father was english 3 heart was full 3 life is full 3 life was devoted 3 man does n''t 3 men do n''t 3 nancy looked round 3 things go on 3 woman is freer 3 woman is not 3 world did not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 day was not far 2 face gave no sign 2 father is not man 2 girl ''s no good 2 man had not yet 2 man is no good 2 ryder gave no sign 2 ryder had no claims 2 ryder had no recollection 2 ryder made no answer 2 ryder was not fond 2 shirley made no sign 2 shirley was not beautiful 2 time is not far 1 _ had no contributions 1 _ had not even 1 _ has no equal 1 _ is not much 1 book has no intrinsic 1 books were not yet 1 child is not at 1 children are not unusual 1 day are not always 1 day are not forthcoming 1 face was not handsome 1 father was no more 1 girl was not really 1 girls had no such 1 heart was no longer 1 life found no little 1 life was no longer 1 man is not young 1 man was not well 1 men saw no reason 1 men were not likely 1 mother is not quite 1 nancy had no excuse 1 nancy had no material 1 nancy was no more 1 nancy was not there 1 people are not ashamed 1 people do not always 1 people do not readily 1 people have no time 1 people is not common 1 people is not necessarily 1 room had not greatly 1 ryder had no reason 1 shirley was not emily 1 thing was no longer A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 10059 author = Baum, L. Frank (Lyman Frank) title = Aunt Jane''s Nieces on Vacation date = keywords = Arthur; Beth; Hetty; John; Louise; Merrick; Millville; Mr.; New; Patsy; Peggy; Smith; Thursday; Tribune; Uncle; West; York summary = "Chump!" said Beth, drily; "you know very well why not, Patsy Doyle. amused glance at the girl; but Uncle John stared seriously into Patsy''s door of the booth and said: "Patsy, how big a thing do you want to "This is Patsy''s secret, and I''m not going to give it away," said Mr. Merrick. "Private wire from New York," said Mr. Merrick, as the girls hesitated "West," said he, "my girls are going to start a newspaper in Millville." "Come into the office," said Uncle John. Uncle," said Patsy to Mr. Merrick, "in starting the "Now about Thursday Smith," said the young man. "I got a conter-bution fer the paper," he said to Patsy, who asked him printing office, where they found Thursday Smith and Hetty working by "Here''s an item for your paper," he said to Patsy, who was busy at her "When you discover who Thursday Smith is," said she, "the Millville id = 5119 author = Hornblow, Arthur title = The Lion and the Mouse; a Story of an American Life date = keywords = Bagley; Burkett; Green; Jefferson; John; Judge; Kate; Massapequa; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Roberts; Rossmore; Ryder; Senate; Senator; Shirley; Stott; Washington; York; man summary = Jefferson Ryder was, in truth, an entirely different man from his Jefferson, too, had met Miss Shirley Rossmore and been much attracted Jefferson had met Shirley Rossmore two years before at a meeting of the And the more Shirley let her mind dwell on Jefferson Ryder womanhood, Judge Rossmore was to his daughter the ideal man and father. Realizing that the judge would like to be left alone with Shirley, Mrs. Rossmore invited Mrs. Blake to go upstairs and see the room she would that the judge was Shirley''s father, he admired him immensely as a man. said teasingly: "Good-bye, Mr. Bagley, I am going upstairs to Mrs. Ryder. "Bagley," said Mr. Ryder, "I want you to write a letter for me to Miss "Miss Shirley Rossmore?" said the man eyeing her interrogatively. John Ryder did not know was that Shirley Rossmore was not the kind of a id = 15902 author = Hurston, Zora Neale title = Poker! date = keywords = tush summary = At rise of curtain NUNKIE is at piano playing.... table with small stacks of chips before each man. the healer no trouble!*[Handwritten: last sentence crossed out in pencil] Four spot means the fourth time you tried that same old game-Five spot means five years you played me for a clown Six spot means six feet of earth when the deal goes down The Jack is three-card Charlie who played me for a goat The King stands for Sweet Papa Nunkie and he''s goin'' to wear the crown, Aw now, brother, two dollars for your seat before you try to sit in this (TUSH HAWG begins to deal for draw (Drawing three new cards) card playin'', all of you all goin'' to die and go to Hell. *[Handwritten: Last sentence crossed through in pencil.] I promised the devil one man and I''m goin'' to give him five! id = 49772 author = Johnston, Mary title = Hagar date = keywords = Ashendyne; Balm; Bob; Colonel; Darragh; Denny; Eglantine; Elizabeth; Fay; Gilead; Gipsy; God; Green; Hagar; Laydon; Lily; Maria; Medway; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Old; Rachel; Ralph; Serena; Sylvie; Thomasine; Thomson; York; come; woman summary = "I think that it is Hagar who may come to grieve others," said Mrs. LeGrand. going home.--Only"--Hagar looked at Mrs. Green with large, wistful Old Miss, who had had that morning a somewhat longish talk with Dr. Bude, stated that she would tell Mary Green to send for Thomasine and Old Miss, leaving the big chair, came and took Hagar and drew her back table, and little red candles, and in the afternoon she went with Mrs. Lane to a Christmas tree for poor children in the Sunday-School room of "I''m going to tell you what I''ve done," said Hagar, winding a red ball. "Yes, you are like your mother," said Mrs. Green. "That," said the driver, "''ll be Miss Hagar--Colonel Ashendyne''s "This morning," said Hagar, "we came through--miles, I think--of places When the two had said good-night and parted and Hagar, in her own room, "Hagar always _could_ do foolish things," said Miss Serena, looking up id = 14204 author = Klein, Charles title = The Lion and the Mouse: A Story of American Life date = keywords = Bagley; Burkett; Green; Jefferson; John; Judge; Kate; Massapequa; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Roberts; Rossmore; Ryder; Senate; Senator; Shirley; Stott; Washington; York; man summary = Jefferson Ryder was, in truth, an entirely different man from his Ryder''s son Jefferson, too, had met Miss Shirley Rossmore and been on the New World, appealed strongly to Jefferson Ryder as he sat Jefferson had met Shirley Rossmore two years before at a meeting that time neither John Burkett Ryder nor Judge Rossmore had been unexpectedly come upon him, Judge Rossmore was like a man "This is Mr. Jefferson Ryder--Judge Stott. actually sorry now that she had said so many hard things of Mr. Ryder in her book and she was worrying over the thought that her "By the way, Bagley," asked Jefferson, "when do you expect father "Bagley," said Mr. Ryder, "I want you to write a letter for me to "Miss Shirley Rossmore?" said the man eyeing her interrogatively. "Miss Green," said Ryder, Sr., addressing Shirley and ignoring The only thing that John Ryder did not know was that Shirley id = 32394 author = Marquis, Reina Melcher title = The Torch Bearer date = keywords = Alice; Caldwell; Charlotte; Eric; God; Lisbeth; Mrs.; North; Peter; Shadyville; Sheila; Ted; life; little; love summary = But Mrs. Caldwell resolutely shook her head: "Not like Sheila does. Sheila and Ted knew her well and no fear of her had ever touched them of Mrs. Caldwell watching for Sheila flashed across Ted''s mind and came to let you do it"--Sheila''s little house of pleasure suddenly woman--just like loving things that are little and helpless. Of the two girls, Sheila was the one to be loved, but Charlotte was the But now, for the first time since Ted''s return to Shadyville, Sheila''s "It will kill Sheila if Eric dies," she said to Ted. There came a night when they put Sheila out of the room--Mrs. Caldwell That moment came to Sheila--and Ted was He had not known that he loved Sheila until Mrs. Caldwell told him that had cried out to Mrs. Caldwell that Sheila must have loved Ted, but he dreamed that Ted came into the room and said, "Sheila needs you. id = 36641 author = Marshall, Emma title = Women Novelists of Queen Victoria''s Reign: A Book of Appreciations date = keywords = Brontë; Charlotte; Crowe; Eliot; Emily; Esther; Ewing; Ferroll; Gaskell; George; Henry; John; Lady; London; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Mulock; Norton; Paul; Wood; book; english; life; little; story; woman summary = is the one only character in Miss Brontë''s little world who has a real fortune that the one man whom she knew in her life, whom her story With the exception of her powerful "Life of Charlotte Brontë," Mrs. Gaskell wrote only novels or short stories. woman whose love-story had been spoilt by the home authorities reverses inner life of man; and in 1848 she published a book called "The Night of a young man who has very little story to tell and does not know how her work is far more a study of character than the story of "Paul middle life that Mrs. Wood began to write; and her first work,--perhaps, Miss Manning was familiar; and there were other stories of country life, little cares and joys, so in the "Story of a Short Life" we have the "The Story of a Short Life" was not published in book form until four id = 2528 author = Mason, Amelia Gere title = The Women of the French Salons date = keywords = Abbe; Deffand; Duchesse; Fayette; France; Hotel; Lambert; Lespinasse; Mademoiselle; Marquise; Mlle; Mme; Paris; Rambouillet; Rochefoucauld; Sable; Sevigne; Stael; Voltaire; french; friend; life; salon; woman summary = Salon--La Rochefoucauld-Talent as a Diplomatist--Comparison with Mme. De Maintenon--Her Literary Work--Sadness of her Last Days--Woman in Philosophy--Noted Salons of this Period--Character of Mme. Geoffrin--Her devoted friends through life, unable to live apart, or pass a day _Mme. de Sable--Her Worldly Life--Her Retreat--Her Friends--Pascal--The Princesse Palatine had charmed an earlier generation, and where Mme. Duplessis Guenegaud, a woman of brilliant intellect, heroic courage, The curtain falls upon this little world which the magical pen of Mme. de Sevigne has made us know so well. Political Power--Great Influence of Women--Salons Defined Literary President Henault, the life-long friend of Mme. du Deffand, whose light "She led him a life a little hard," said Mme. de Graffigny, after Mme. de Graffigny is known mainly as a woman of letters whose life had The life of Mme. de Stael was in the world. "To love what is great," said Mme. Necker "is almost to be id = 28862 author = Meade, L. T. title = The Time of Roses date = keywords = Aylmer; Bertha; Court; Edith; Florence; Franks; Keys; Kitty; Maurice; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Tom; Trevor summary = "But you have not told me yet where you slept last night, dear Mrs. Aylmer," said Kitty. "Oh, that," said Mrs. Aylmer--here she looked at both girls. said about Mrs. Aylmer''s queer suggestion; then suddenly Florence spoke Neither Kitty nor Florence said a word until the pair--the good-looking, "You have grown a good deal, Florence Aylmer," said Bertha, looking her "I have seen her to-day, mother; I know who she is," said Florence "Come out, Kitty," said poor Florence, turning to her companion. "Mrs. Aylmer has done a great deal for me," said the young man; "she has "You are not to come," said Florence, looking at him with her wide-open "By the way," said Trevor, after a pause, "is this girl Mrs. Aylmer''s As Mrs. Trevor spoke she looked full at the girl, and Florence found "Will you think over it, my dear," said Mrs. Trevor, "and let me know?" id = 20230 author = Mitchell, Ruth Comfort title = Jane Journeys On date = keywords = C.E.; Daragh; Ellis; Emma; Ethel; Farraday; God; Harrison; Hills; Irishman; Jane; M.D.; Michael; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Rodney; Sally; Sarah; Vail; Wetherby; York; come summary = little new house--expensive olive oil--home-coming husband in punning "Yes," said Jane, slipping her hand through Sarah''s arm. "Oh, Sally dear," said Jane, patting her, "it isn''t really going "Good gracious, Michael Daragh," I said, "you don''t suppose I like "Jane Vail will be trying her hand at Ethel for us," Michael Daragh said. Come," said Jane with a brisk heartiness she was far from feeling, "tell flight; she would wait for Michael Daragh and walk home with him to Mrs. Hills'' boarding house, and she would be very civil about it all, but she "Oh," said Jane, "I think I know who you are!" She was a little "We have, surely, God save you kindly," said Michael Daragh, and his face "That''s my little nephew," said Emma Ellis, seeing Jane''s eye upon it. "I wonder at you, Emma Ellis," said Michael Daragh, "the way you''ll be id = 30435 author = Ritchie, Anne Thackeray title = A Book of Sibyls: Miss Barbauld, Miss Edgeworth, Mrs Opie, Miss Austen date = keywords = Aikin; Amelia; Austen; Barbauld; Day; Dr.; Edgeworth; England; Honora; Jane; Lady; London; Madame; Maria; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Norwich; Opie; Paris; friend; life; time summary = first time Mrs. Barbauld (Miss Aikin she was then) saw something of real ''Life,'' which has brought a sense of ease and comfort to so many, Mrs. Barbauld has indeed deserved well of her country-people and should be Just that time three years before Mrs. Barbauld had lost her father, whom she dearly loved. Mrs. Barbauld, written to Miss Edgeworth about this time, declining to One may acknowledge the great progress which people have made since Mrs. Barbauld''s day in the practice of writing prose and poetry, in the art Years after, Edgeworth, writing to console Mrs. Day upon her Mr. Edgeworth quotes his friend''s reproof to Mrs. Day, who was fond of Maria Edgeworth was now about thirty years of age, at a time of life Miss Edgeworth desires me as a man of business to write to Mrs. id = 39145 author = Vivanti, Annie title = The Devourers date = keywords = Adèle; Aldo; Anne; Avory; Bemolle; Carlo; Carlotta; Clarissa; Doyle; Edith; Fräulein; Giacomo; Marie; Mrs.; Nancy; Nino; Osten; Rocca; Tom; Valeria; Van; Villari; Zio; german; good summary = "Your dear little daughter Nancy died many, many years ago," said Mrs. Avory. "No!" said Nancy, laying her pink cheek against Edith''s arm and smiling, "Fräulein came out and called Edith away," said the child, with a little little Nancy, sobbing, and clinging to Edith''s neck, had said "Good-bye, Valeria folded gentle hands; and Nancy said: "Peek-a-boo." So the baby, "But I am sure Nino could come," said Nancy, looking up at him Anne-Marie in her arms, and Nancy walked beside them, looking like the "That sounds like a long time away," said Nancy, laughing. At four o''clock Aldo, Nancy, Anne-Marie, and the doll went out, and down "I am afraid Anne-Marie is going to have measles," said Nancy, sitting One evening at bed-time Anne-Marie said to her mother: "I like the girl "Listen to Anne-Marie," said Nancy. "I am sorry," said Nancy; "but Anne-Marie never plays when she is id = 157 author = Webster, Jean title = Daddy-Long-Legs date = keywords = Abbott; Jerusha; Jervie; John; Judy; Julia; Legs; Lippett; Long; Master; Mr.; Mrs.; Sallie; daddy summary = world, like a huge, wavering daddy-long-legs. I meant to write a long letter and tell you all the things I''m learning (Mrs. Lippett said you wanted to know), but 7th hour has just rung, and kind of girl I''m not--a sweet little blue-eyed thing, petted and You know, Daddy, it isn''t the work that is going to be hard in college. Julia said she''d had a good time, but Sallie stayed to Daddy-Long-Legs, Esq. DEAR SIR: I am in receipt of a letter from Mrs. Lippett. Christmas present this year is from Daddy-Long-Legs; my family just You know, Daddy, I think that the most necessary quality for any person I know that I was to write nice, long, detailed letters without ever I''ll write a nicer letter in a few days and tell you all the farm news. It''s awfully funny to think of that great big, long-legged man (he''s id = 34613 author = Whitmore, Clara Helen title = Woman''s Work in English Fiction, from the Restoration to the Mid-Victorian Period date = keywords = Austen; Brontë; Burney; Charles; Charlotte; Edgeworth; Elizabeth; England; Gaskell; George; Jane; Lady; London; Lord; Madame; Maria; Mary; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Porter; Radcliffe; Scott; Shelley; Sir; Smith; William; english; novel summary = Like Mrs. Stowe''s novel it had a strong moral influence, as it years, so that Mrs. Behn''s novels, plays, and poems fell into disrepute. Mrs. Manley had been well trained to write a book like the _New The fashion for weeping heroines was at its height, when, in 1761, Mrs. Francis Sheridan published _The Memoirs of Miss Sidney Biddulph_. life." It was so pathetic a story that Dr. Johnson doubted if Mrs. Sheridan had a right to make her characters suffer so much, and Charles did not belong to any known style of writing: stories of real life, like venerable old woman called Luckie Forbes, who lived not far from Mrs. Porter''s house, used to tell her of the wonderful deeds of William Three years later Mrs. Trollope published her strongest novel, _The Life Mary Brunton, and Mrs. Shelley wrote novels of the inner life. id = 37471 author = nan title = Mind Amongst the Spindles. A Miscellany, Wholly Composed by the Factory Girls date = keywords = Abby; Alice; Ann; Eastman; Emily; England; God; Henry; Isabel; Joan; Lowell; Martha; Mary; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Rosina; Sabbath; Susan; girl; think summary = lady-like, I could not but feel my heart swell at the thought, of the girls, forming a good-looking array of books, the rocking chairs a year, said she to herself, and the time and money that my father at such a busy time, and she said, ''Mother, I will be at home to do it "I thought I had better leave it there," said Abby, and she placed her "Come, Jemima," said Henry L., "let us try to assist Abigail a little, "Truly it was at times," said Martha, "and fewer hours of labor would be "I know how prejudiced the people here are against factory girls," said "I know such things are said of them, deacon, but I do not think they Why is it, said a friend to me one day, that the factory girls write so old a girl as Lucy Cambridge." Another said, "she should as soon think