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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 102984 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 88 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Mrs. 5 Mr. 4 Miss 2 Madam 2 London 2 John 2 House 2 God 1 yes 1 time 1 look 1 little 1 good 1 dear 1 Yessir 1 Woodview 1 Williams 1 William 1 Weatherstone 1 Warden 1 Union 1 Towers 1 Thaddler 1 Street 1 South 1 Slamannan 1 Sir 1 Simon 1 Scott 1 Scotland 1 Sarah 1 Ross 1 Rosie 1 Ree 1 Porne 1 Polly 1 Peter 1 Pamela 1 P.B. 1 Orchardina 1 Mouncey 1 Mother 1 Mary 1 Margaret 1 Lord 1 Longman 1 Locke 1 Leopold 1 Leadbatter 1 Latch Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1051 time 953 man 934 lady 811 thing 684 girl 667 day 657 child 607 woman 587 way 561 mother 522 place 512 hand 506 house 500 year 489 life 487 one 452 gentleman 449 nothing 422 eye 384 room 382 heart 375 letter 373 friend 368 word 363 mind 357 servant 334 money 329 father 320 work 316 face 291 family 291 boy 289 person 288 people 279 wife 279 ladyship 275 sister 274 husband 269 brother 266 night 266 moment 263 hour 262 pleasure 259 week 259 part 256 home 244 door 242 something 233 dear 228 reason Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4145 _ 1368 Mr. 1317 Mrs. 963 Esther 664 B. 598 Sir 488 Miss 450 William 338 Lady 292 Madam 290 Mary 278 Diantha 275 God 269 Davers 258 Ann 235 Pamela 233 Lancelot 192 Sarah 152 London 147 Lord 147 Bell 127 Weatherstone 125 Darnford 114 Jervis 108 Barfield 106 John 104 Porne 93 Jenny 90 H. 90 Fred 89 Adelaide 85 Leopold 85 LETTER 83 Peter 82 Sunday 81 Countess 80 thou 79 Ross 79 Jacob 76 Polly 75 Journeyman 74 Jackie 72 yer 71 England 69 P.B. 68 Locke 66 Margaret 64 House 63 Thaddler 61 Jim Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 13935 i 7701 you 6444 it 5372 she 5324 he 3841 me 2373 they 2270 her 2015 him 1666 we 1436 them 662 us 425 myself 304 herself 268 himself 205 one 125 yourself 109 themselves 70 itself 56 mine 49 yours 46 ''em 39 ourselves 28 thee 23 ''s 17 his 17 hers 14 em 12 theirs 11 ours 8 you''ll 6 yer 4 yerself 4 thyself 3 yessir 3 she''ll 3 o 3 meself 2 yowe 2 tea''ll 2 i''m 2 erself 1 you?--but 1 you''ve 1 you!--you 1 you!--no 1 yer''ve 1 wonder-- 1 wishing?--i 1 windsor-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 20561 be 8493 have 4227 do 3463 say 2094 go 1970 see 1805 come 1745 think 1684 know 1528 make 1316 take 1122 give 1097 get 1040 tell 930 look 597 seem 579 want 576 let 569 find 522 leave 521 hear 482 ask 465 put 441 call 434 like 429 keep 415 hope 388 speak 385 bring 374 live 355 write 340 love 338 wish 323 feel 309 use 308 sit 307 pass 303 stand 298 begin 288 turn 268 answer 258 send 257 try 248 expect 245 meet 245 marry 245 help 239 run 238 set 235 bear Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 6510 not 2701 so 1348 good 1234 more 1228 well 1210 then 1136 up 1097 little 988 now 963 much 946 very 878 dear 858 as 800 out 793 only 779 never 760 too 645 own 615 other 596 young 584 great 555 long 547 down 519 there 499 here 487 always 470 just 466 old 463 first 460 again 451 ever 440 poor 424 back 422 such 416 away 416 all 396 many 390 last 376 most 372 on 366 happy 360 in 336 even 323 yet 312 enough 309 still 297 bad 284 once 279 new 273 off Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 267 good 120 least 97 most 46 bad 43 dear 35 great 20 high 18 eld 13 young 13 happy 12 fine 11 near 9 early 9 Most 8 low 6 hard 5 strong 5 noble 5 late 5 large 4 simple 4 proud 4 polite 4 j 4 big 3 slight 3 new 3 minute 3 mean 3 l 3 deep 2 weak 2 vile 2 sweet 2 poor 2 nice 2 lucky 2 genteel 2 faint 2 charming 1 wise 1 warm 1 usefull 1 ugly 1 sure 1 strict 1 strange 1 stony 1 stern 1 speedy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 279 most 18 well 12 least 1 youngest 1 worst 1 near 1 highest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 www.nla.gov.au 1 nla.gov.au Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.nla.gov.au 1 http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-358993523/view?partId=nla.obj-358994667 Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 31 esther did not 12 _ was _ 11 _ have _ 9 _ do _ 7 _ am _ 7 _ is _ 6 _ are _ 6 _ hope _ 6 _ think _ 6 b. was pleased 5 esther had not 5 william did not 4 _ did _ 4 _ know _ 4 _ were _ 4 esther did n''t 4 esther was surprised 4 heart was full 3 _ hear _ 3 _ make _ 3 _ thought _ 3 b. is just 3 esther was now 2 _ ask _ 2 _ go _ 2 _ have none 2 _ is not 2 _ liking _ 2 _ live _ 2 _ say _ 2 _ seen _ 2 _ speak _ 2 _ speaking _ 2 b. came in 2 b. has not 2 b. is much 2 b. was abroad 2 b. was so 2 esther told fred 2 esther was not 2 esther was quite 2 esther was still 2 eyes were full 2 eyes were open 2 eyes were quite 2 ladies were pleased 2 ladies were so 2 lady came in 2 lady was mrs. 2 life is full Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ had no means 1 b. is not adverse 1 b. was no less 1 child has not good 1 days are not entirely 1 esther was not quite 1 esther was not surprised 1 gentleman had no sooner 1 gentlemen take no more 1 girl was not as 1 girls had no hats 1 heart is not so 1 lady had no apprehension 1 lady has no great 1 lady is no longer 1 life brought no further 1 life had no other 1 life seemed no worse 1 life was no life 1 life was not absent 1 men are not so 1 one has no aversion 1 one is not certain 1 ones have not yet 1 place had no pretence 1 things are not so 1 time was no later 1 time was not much 1 william had not health 1 william were no longer 1 woman had no antipathy 1 woman is not there 1 woman made no answer A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 58239 author = Allen, J. S. O., Mrs. title = Memories of My Life From My Early Days in Scotland Till the Present Day in Adelaide date = keywords = Adelaide; Australia; Dr.; Glasgow; Government; House; John; Miss; Mouncey; Mr.; Mrs.; Scotland; Scott; Slamannan; South; time summary = On a busy day I got to be helpful, and went into the rooms to assist the The young men went back to Slamannan that night and told my father where To give some idea of how this kind of business paid, I may say that Mrs. Wilson had a summer-house in a place at the seaside, "doon the water," I had hoped when Mr. and Mrs. Scott came back that my father would have a house, and that I would live like being so far away, so when I got to Glasgow I saw Mrs. Stirling. belonged to the house lived on the place in some way for the time. room when I got home that night, and told her that Mr. White was coming not long been in the little house when my father came in and said, horse and cart came into the sea a good long way, and I got out of the id = 3016 author = Gilman, Charlotte Perkins title = What Diantha Did date = keywords = Bell; Club; Dankshire; Diantha; House; Madam; Miss; Mother; Mr.; Mrs.; Orchardina; Porne; Ree; Ross; Thaddler; Union; Warden; Weatherstone summary = "My mother always liked raspberry shrub," said Mrs. Warden; "and your "Yes," said Diantha, with a deeper note of feeling than her mother "I don''t agree with Mrs. Warden on that point, nor with Ross, nor with you, Mother," she said, "Diantha is naturally more frank with me than with--anyone," said Mrs. Bell proudly, "But she does not wish her--business--plans--made public "I take care of my baby myself!" said Mrs. Porne, thinking the new girl "I am very glad to meet you, Miss Bell, very glad indeed," said Mrs. Dankshire, shaking hands with her warmly. "I''m very glad I came to you, Mrs. Weatherstone," said the girl. "That Diantha Bell is a fine girl," he said to himself. "It won''t, altogether, till the end of the year I dare say," said Mrs. Bell, "but let''s get clear as far as we can. as Mrs. Warden said, went about frequently with Diantha Bell. Well I like that!" said Mrs. Weatherstone. id = 8157 author = Moore, George title = Esther Waters date = keywords = Barfield; Braid; Demon; Esther; Fred; Gaffer; God; Jackie; Jenny; Jim; John; Journeyman; Latch; Leopold; London; Margaret; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Sarah; Street; William; Woodview; yes summary = Demon threw his arms round Esther, and seizing her hands, said, "Now yer a Esther looked at her one moment, then she said, "Very well, mother, to the race-horses, and Esther saw on Mrs. Barfield''s face a look of "Good evening, Mrs. Randal," said Esther, glad to find someone to speak William said, "Let her sulk," and he went out with Sarah; and when Esther "Come, Esther, see how Julia is getting on," said Mrs. Saunders; "she "No, no," said Mrs. Saunders, "Esther ain''t well--she ''as come up for ''er Esther, whose breast was like a little cup, Mrs. Rivers said, "I hope you "Yes, I hear," said Esther, speaking like one in a dream; "don''t she care "This is just like old times," said William, moving a little closer. William asked Esther what she''d take to drink, and Mr. Leopold looked at his watch and said he must be getting home. id = 12958 author = Richardson, Samuel title = Pamela, Volume II date = keywords = Adams; Billy; Countess; Darnford; Davers; England; God; Goodwin; Jacob; Jervis; Jewkes; LETTER; Lady; Locke; London; Longman; Lord; Madam; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; P.B.; Pamela; Polly; Simon; Sir; Towers; Williams; dear summary = a watch-case: "For who knows," said he, "my dear, but we shall have "Dear good souls!" said he, "now every thing they say and write Wherefore my good lady, I hope I stand excused, and shall not bring letters, with such accounts of my dear lady''s favour and goodness to "Dear my lady!" said I: for she still kept looking at me: and her good "Indeed, Sir, I cannot," said I; "pray, my dear ladies--pray, my good which my lady said, a little tartly, "Yes, and for a very good reason, Sir," said I, "these ladies come to be obliged to you for your good "You have an angel, and not a woman, for your lady, my good Mrs. Jervis," said the countess. "Well, but, Sir," said I, "a lady of Miss Darnford''s good sense, hands, from _yours most sincerely_, P.B. Do, dear good Sir Simon, let Miss Polly add to our delights, by her id = 20078 author = Zangwill, Israel title = Merely Mary Ann date = keywords = Ann; Beethoven; Lancelot; Leadbatter; Mary; Mr.; Mrs.; Peter; Rosie; Yessir; good; little; look summary = The second time Lancelot saw Mary Ann he did not remember having seen her The third time Lancelot saw Mary Ann he noticed that she was rather "A piano!" Mary Ann opened her eyes, and Lancelot saw that they were "Oh dear no," said Mary Ann; "he lived on the ground floor!" "Peter!" said Lancelot, his flash of gaiety dying away, "I tell you these "She," said Mary Ann. Lancelot was taken aback. This little passage of arms strangely softened Lancelot to Mary Ann. It made him realise faintly what her life must be. "Please, sir, I''ve got to go out, and I''m in a hurry," said Mary Ann. Lancelot felt intense relief. "Lancelot," said Peter solemnly, "Mary Ann''s mashed on you." "Please, sir," said Mary Ann, "I don''t like them." "Mary Ann," he said, "I''m going to leave these rooms." "By Jove!" said Lancelot, starting up, "Mary Ann''s left her canary